It was fifty years ago, on a hot summer day, in
the deep south. We lived on a dirt road, on a sand lot. We were, what was known
as "dirt poor".
I had been playing outside all morning in the
sand. Suddenly, I heard a sharp clanking sound behind me and looking over my
shoulder, my eyes were drawn to a strange sight! Across the dirt road were two
rows of men, dressed in black and white, striped, baggy uniforms. Their faces
were covered with dust and sweat.
They looked so weary, and they were chained
together with huge, black, iron chains. Hanging from the end of each chained row
was a big, black, iron ball. They were, as polite people said in those days, a
"Chain Gang," guarded by two, heavily armed guards.
I stared at the prisoners as they settled
uncomfortably down in the dirt, under the shade of some straggly trees. One of
the guards walked towards me. Nodding as he passed, he went up to our front door
and knocked. My mother appeared at the door, and I heard the guard ask if he
could have permission to get water from the pump, in the backyard, so that
"his men" could "have a drink".
My mother agreed, but I saw a look of concern on
her face, as she called me inside. I stared through the window as each prisoner
was unchained from the line to hobble over to the pump and drink his fill from a
small tin cup while a guard watched vigilantly.
It wasn’t long before they were all chained
back up again, with prisoners and guards retreating into the shade, away from an
unrelenting sun. I heard my mother call me into the kitchen, and I entered, to
see her bustling around with tins of tuna fish, mayonnaise, our last loaf of
bread, and two, big, pitchers of lemonade. In what seemed "a blink of an
eye", she had made a tray of sandwiches using all the tuna we were to have
had for that night’s supper.
My mother was smiling as she handed me one of the
pitchers of lemonade, cautioning me to carry it "carefully" and to
"not spill a drop." Then, lifting the tray in one hand and holding a
pitcher in her other hand, she marched me to the door, deftly opening it with
her foot, and trotted me across the street. She approached the guards, flashing
them with a brilliant smile. "We had some leftovers from lunch," she
said, "and I was wondering if we could share with you and your men."
She smiled at each of the men, searching their dark eyes with her own eyes of
"robin’s egg blue." Everyone started to their feet. "Oh
no!" she said. "Stay where you are! I’ll just serve you!"
Calling me to her side, she went from guard to guard, then from prisoner to
prisoner — filling each tin cup with lemonade, and giving each man a sandwich.
It was very quiet, except for a "thank you,
ma’am," and the clanking of the chains. Very soon we were at the end of
the line, my mother’s eyes softly scanning each face. The last prisoner was a
big man, his dark skin pouring with sweat, and streaked with dust. Suddenly, his
face broke into a wonderful smile, as he looked up into my mother’s eyes, and
he said, "Ma’am, I’ve wondered all my life if I’d ever see an angel,
and now I have! Thank you!" Again, my mother’s smile took in the whole
group. "You’re all welcome!" she said. "God bless you."
Then we walked across to the house, with empty tray and pitchers, and back
inside. Soon, the men moved on, and I never saw them again.
The only explanation my mother ever gave me, for
that strange and wonderful day, was that I "remember, always, to entertain
strangers, for by doing so, you may entertain angels, without knowing."
Then, with a mysterious smile, she went about the
rest of the day. I don’t remember exactly what we ate for supper that night. I
just know it was served by an angel.
EDITORIAL NOTE "Entertaining Angels" is
a true story, "which illustrates my belief that a life not shared with
those less fortunate, is no life at all. Although my life has changed, from one
of extreme poverty, I know affluence will never feel as rich as the day my
mother taught me the secret of ‘entertaining angels.’"