WAS IT A TOW TRUCK THAT SAVED THEM THAT SNOWY NIGHT,
OR WAS IT A 'SNOW ANGEL'?
<http://www.spiritdaily.com/snowangel.htm>http://www.spiritdaily.com/snowangel.htm

[from Joan Wester Anderson's Where Angels Walk]

Emacs!
It was just past midnight on December 24, 1983. The Midwest was 
shivering through a record-breaking cold spell, complete with 
gale-force winds and frozen water pipes. And although our suburban 
Chicago household was filled with the snug sounds of a family at 
rest, I couldn't be a part of them, not until our 21-old son pulled 
into the driveway. At the moment, Tim and his two roommates were 
driving home for Christmas, their first trip back since they had 
moved East last May. "Don't worry, Mom," Tim had reassured me over 
the phone last night. "We're going to leave before dawn tomorrow and 
drive straight through. We'll be fine!"

Kids. They do insane things. Under normal circumstances, I figured, a 
Connecticut-to-Illinois trek ought to take about eighteen hours. But 
the weather had turned so dangerously cold that radio reports warned 
against venturing outdoors, even for a few moments. And we have heard 
nothing from the travelers. Distressed, I pictured them on a desolate 
road. What if they ran into car problems or lost their way? And if 
they had been delayed, why hadn't Tim phoned. Restlessly I paced and 
prayed in the familiar shorthand all mothers know: God, send someone 
to help them.

By now, as I later learned, the trio had stopped briefly in Fort 
Wayne, Indiana, to deposit Don at his family home. Common sense 
suggested that Tim and Jim stay the rest of the night and resume 
their trek in the morning. But when does common sense prevail with 
invincible young adults?.The two had started out again.

They had been traveling for only a few miles on a rural access road 
to the Indiana toll way, when they noticed the car's engine seem 
sluggish. Tim glanced uneasily at Jim. "Do not---" the radio 
announcer intoned, "-repeat-do not venture outside tonight, friends. 
There's a record wind-chill of eighty below zero, which means that 
exposed skin will freeze in less than a minute." The car surged 
suddenly, then coughed and slowed again.

"Tim," Jim spoke until the darkness, "we're not going to stall here, are we?"

"We can't," Tim answered grimly as he pumped the accelerator. "We'd 
die for sure."

But instead of picking up speed, the engine sputtered, chugging and 
slowing again. About a mile later, at the top of a small incline, the 
car crawled to a frozen stop.

Horrified, Tim and Jim looked at each other. They could see across 
the fields in every direction...but there was no traffic, no refuge 
ahead, not even a farmhouse light blinking in the distance...And the 
appalling, unbelievable cold! Never had they experienced anything so 
intense. Even if shelter was only a short distance away, they 
couldn't survive. The temperature would kill them in a manner of 
minutes...."Well, God," Tim prayed, echoing my own distant plea, 
"You're the only one who can help us now."

Then, as if they had already slipped into a dream, they saw 
headlights flashing at the car's left rear. But that was impossible, 
for they had seen no twin pinpricks of light in the distance, no 
hopeful approach. Where had the vehicle come from? Had they already died?

But no. Miraculously, someone was knocking on the drivers' side 
window. "Need to be pulled?" In disbelief, they heard the muffled 
shout. But it was true. Their rescuer was driving a tow truck.

(Could he bring them back to Don's? He did, saying nothing, not 
asking for directions, finally maneuvering around the cul-de-sac and 
parking in front of the house.) Tim and Jim raced to the side door 
where Don was waiting. "The tow truck, Don," Tim began. "I have to 
pay him. I need to borrow--"

"Wait a minute," Don frowned, looking past his friends through the 
windows. "I don't see any tow truck out there."

Tim and Jim turned around. There, parked alone at the curb, was Tim's 
car. There had been no sound in the crystal-clear night of its 
release from the chains, no door slam, no chug of an engine pulling 
away. There had been no bill for Tim to pay, to receipt to sign, no 
farewell or "thank you" or "Merry Christmas..."

Stunned, Tim raced back down the driveway to the curb, but there were 
no taillights disappearing in the distance, no engine noise echoing 
through the silent streets, nothing at all to mark the tow truck's presence.

Then Tim saw the tire tracks in the windblown snowdrifts. But there 
was only one set of tracks marking the cul-de-sac. And they belonged 
to Tim's car...

Angels don't submit to litmus tests, testify in court or slide under 
a microscope for examination. Thus their existence cannot be "proved" 
by the guidelines we humans usually use. To know one, perhaps, 
requires a willingness to suspend judgment, to open ourselves to 
possibilities we've only dreamed about.

Was it an angel? Our family will never know for sure.

But on Christmas Eve in 1983, I heard the whisper of wings as a 
tow-truck driver answered a heavenly summons, and brought our son safely home.

[resources by Joan Wester Anderson: <books2.htm#inthearms>In the Arms 
and Angels and <books2.htm#guardianwester>Guardian Angels]



<*}}}>< <http://astore.amazon.com/halthekin-20>Catholic on Amazon <*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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