Carl's
Garden
Carl was a quiet man. He didn't talk much.
He would always greet you with a big smile
and a firm handshake.
Even after living in our neighborhood for
over 50 years,
no one could really say they knew him very
well.
Before his retirement, he took the bus to
work each morning.
The lone sight of him walking down the street
often worried us.
He had a slight limp from a bullet wound
received in WWII.
Watching him, we worried that although he
had survived WWII,
he may not make it through our changing
uptown neighborhood
with its ever-increasing random violence,
gangs, and drug activity.
When he saw the flyer at our local church
asking for volunteers
for caring for the gardens behind the minister's
residence,
he responded in his characteristically unassuming
manner.
Without fanfare, he just signed up.
He was well into his 87th year
when the very thing we had always feared
finally happened.
He was just finishing his watering for the
day
when three gang members approached him.
Ignoring their attempt to intimidate him,
he simply asked, "Would you like a drink
from the hose?"
The tallest and toughest-looking of the
three said,
"Yeah, sure", with a malevolent little smile.
As Carl offered the hose to him,
the other two grabbed Carl's arm, throwing
him down.
As the hose snaked crazily over the ground,
dousing everything in its way,
Carl's assailants stole his retirement watch
and his wallet,
and then fled.
Carl tried to get himself up,
but he had been thrown down on his bad leg.
He lay there trying to gather himself
as the minister came running to help him.
Although the minister had witnessed the
attack from his window,
he couldn't get there fast enough to stop
it.
"Carl, are you okay? Are you hurt?"
the minister kept asking as he helped Carl
to his feet.
Carl just passed a hand over his brow and
sighed,
shaking his head. "Just some punk kids.
I hope they'll wise-up someday."
His wet clothes clung to his slight frame
as he bent to pick up the hose.
He adjusted the nozzle again and started
to water.
Confused and a little concerned, the minister
asked,
"Carl, what are you doing?"
"I've got to finish my watering.
It's been very dry lately", came the calm
reply.
Satisfying himself that Carl really was
all right,
the minister could only marvel.
Carl was a man from a different time and
place.
A few weeks later the three returned.
Just as before their threat was unchallenged.
Carl again offered them a drink from his
hose.
This time they didn't rob him.
They wrenched the hose from his hand
and drenched him head to foot in the icy
water.
When they had finished their humiliation
of him,
they sauntered off down the street,
throwing catcalls and curses,
falling over one another
laughing at the hilarity of what they had
just done.
Carl just watched them.
Then he turned toward the warmth giving
sun,
picked up his hose, and went on with his
watering.
The summer was quickly fading into fall.
Carl was doing some tilling
when he was startled by the sudden approach
of someone behind him.
He stumbled and fell into some evergreen
branches.
As he struggled to regain his footing,
he turned to see the tall leader of his
summer tormentors
reaching down for him.
He braced himself for the expected attack.
"Don't worry old man, I'm not gonna hurt
you this time."
The young man spoke softly,
still offering the tattooed and scarred
hand to Carl.
As he helped Carl get up,
the man pulled a crumpled bag from his pocket
and handed it to Carl.
"What's this?" Carl asked. "It's your stuff,"
the man explained.
"It's your stuff back. Even the money in
your wallet."
"I don't understand," Carl said. "Why would
you help me now?"
The man shifted his feet, seeming embarrassed
and ill at ease.
"I learned something from you," he said.
"I ran with that gang and hurt people like
you.
We picked you because you were old and we
knew we could do it.
But every time we came and did something
to you,
instead of yelling and fighting back, you
tried to give us a drink.
You didn't hate us for hating you. You kept
showing love against our hate."
He stopped for a moment.
"I couldn't sleep after we stole your stuff,
so here it is back."
He paused for another awkward moment,
not knowing what more there was to say.
"That bag's my way of saying thanks for
straightening me out, I guess."
And with that, he walked off down the street.
Carl looked down at the sack in his hands
and gingerly opened it.
He took out his retirement watch and put
it back on his wrist.
Opening his wallet, he checked for his wedding
photo.
He gazed for a moment at the young bride
that still smiled back at him from all those
years ago.
He died one cold day after Christmas that
winter.
Many people attended his funeral in spite
of the weather.
In particular the minister noticed a tall
young man
that he didn't know sitting quietly in a
distant corner of the church.
The minister spoke of Carl's garden as a
lesson in life.
In a voice made thick with unshed tears,
he said,
"Do your best and make your garden as beautiful
as you can.
We will never forget Carl and his garden."
The following spring another flyer went
up.
It read: "Person needed to care for Carl's
garden."
The flyer went unnoticed by the busy parishioners
until one day when a knock was heard at
the minister's office door.
Opening the door,
the minister saw a pair of scarred and tattooed
hands holding the flyer.
"I believe this is my job, if you'll have
me," the young man said.
The minister recognized him as the same
young man
who had returned the stolen watch and wallet
to Carl.
He knew that Carl's kindness had turned
this man's life around.
As the minister handed him the keys to the
garden shed,
he said, "Yes, go take care of Carl's garden
and honor him."
The man went to work and, over the next
several years,
he tended the flowers and vegetables just
as Carl had done.
In that time, he went to college, got married,
and became a prominent member of the community.
But he never forgot his promise to Carl's
memory and
kept the garden as beautiful as he thought
Carl would have kept it.
One day he approached the new minister
and told him that he couldn't care for the
garden any longer.
He explained with a shy and happy smile,
"My wife just had a baby boy last night,
and she's bringing him home on Saturday."
"Well, congratulations!" said the minister,
as he was handed the garden shed keys.
"That's wonderful! What's the baby's
name?"
"Carl," he replied.
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