Faith Works 12-28-19
Jeff Gill
 
The Package – a story
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[This is a piece of fiction, fourth of four parts, for the  Christmas season]
 
On the way into his town's only shoe repair shop, Jerry  reflected on all the twists and turns that had taken him to this place.
He had gotten a package on his front porch, nicely wrapped  in Christmas paper, which after some hesitation he'd opened up, to find a box  re-used from another address, which he visited in hopes of clearing up the  mystery of the gift.
The lady in a wheelchair there had confirmed that the box  inside the wrapping paper was something she'd discarded, and together they'd  opened it up to find a used but well repaired pair of boots. They enjoyed their  conversation over the puzzle, talked about their personal history a bit, and  agreed to meet again; Jerry had also agreed to deliver a load of boxes she had  waiting on her porch to the Salvation Army, filling in for a church friend whose  vehicle had broken down.
He'd ended up eating at the soup kitchen, making more  friends with the cooking crew and had offered to come back next month to help  them cook – he'd make more new friends in the last 24 hours, Jerry reflected,  than he had in the last fifty years. And then he was about to introduce himself  to the cobbler whose tag was still attached to the boots he'd received without  any other information.
Inside the shop, he did just that, explaining his curiosity  about the nearly-new boots that had come to him in such a seasonal but  surprising fashion. The cobbler at the counter turned the boots over, looking  at the soles and nodding in agreement: "yes, that was my work." And he flipped  around the tag, where only a number remained above the missing part below the  perforation.
"Do you know who had you fix up these boots?" Jerry asked.
  
  "Well, yes," said the cobbler. "I have the records, and I know who, but I'm not  sure about telling you. It seems almost, well, unethical."
"Oh," replied Jerry. He hadn't considered the possibility  that the shoe repair place wouldn't tell him. The trail ended here.
"Look," the cobbler said, leaning across the counter. "I  don't think I can tell you his name or give you his phone number, but . . . you  see him every week."
Jerry walked out, holding his boots, and went back home  thinking through what he'd learned at the shoe repair place. The package came  from someone he saw every week. Not the mail delivery person, that was someone  he saw multiple times a week, ditto the paper delivery. He was lucky, he didn't  see his doctor every week like some did; he didn't attend church, or hadn't for  years, anyhow, but it wasn't a pastor. So who was it? And then it hit him.
The next time Jerry took his trash tote out to the curb, he  waited until he heard the rumble of diesel around the corner; he stood there  with it as the garbage truck came up and the driver swung down out of the cab.  His beard was broad and white and bushy, and while his tan coveralls were  stained and a bit ragged on the cuffs, he had a bright red stocking cap with a  bright fuzzy snowball on the top.
"Hey there, Jerry," said the garbage man. 
  
  "Hello, um – I don't think I ever learned your name," he answered. 
  
  "It's Nick. Good to meet you official, like; don't shake, I'm sticky," replied  Nick, offering a fist bump. Jerry bumped him back, then pointed down.
"How do you like my boots?"
"They look good on you. Hey, I hope you didn't mind; I pick  up all kinds of too good to toss stuff and throw it in the cab. You came  running out a few weeks ago with your trash late, and your boots looked so ratty  I thought, hey, why not. You seem like a nice guy, and they looked like your  size. They fit?"
  
  "They do. But those were just my, sort of, slipper boots for shoving my feet  into. I have a good pair."
"Oh, I'm sure you do," said the garbage guy, having swung  the totes into the truck as they talked, and as he was about to jump back into  the cab. "If you really can't use 'em, pay it forward, I always say. You never  know what good you do by passing your blessings along."
As the truck moved on down the street, Jerry thought, no,  you never really do, do you?
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking  County; tell him how you've learned about paying it forward at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow @Knapsack  on Twitter.
 
 


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