I met her when I was a boy. It was a double-dog dare. I drew the short straw—I have a history of drawing the short straw.
She was standing outside the supermarket, ringing a bell, wearing a Santa hat. I’d heard my mother say she was a little “off.” My father called her plumb nuts.
“Merry Christmas,” she said. She handed me a dollar bill, smacked my hindparts, then shook her bell.
I ran back to the gang. They hollered, “Did she give you a dollar? Did she smack your hiney? Is she REALLY crazy?”
Yes. Yes. Not sure.
We inspected the George Washington. On it were hearts, drawn in red marker. And red words: “For prayer, call this number…”
She must’ve handed out mountains of those bills to folks coming and going. People all looked at her with confused looks.
When I hit college, I had to write a semester paper on misunderstood people who were “different.” Miss Martha was the first who came to mind.
I found the old woman through a friend of a friend. The
woman’s daughter answered the phone and said, “Mama’s been gone for years now, but I can tell you about her.”
It went like this:
She worked as a custodian. And one December, she volunteered to be a bell-ringer.
Her first day, she ran into a young man who said he was depressed. She took the man aside and prayed with him for an hour. Before they parted ways, she wrote her number on a piece of paper and said, “Call me, anytime.”
The man never called. He took his own life days later.
It changed her. She started cashing paychecks into one-dollar bills, scribbling her number on them.
“Mama,” her daughter asked. “Why not write your number on plain paper?”
“Folks throw away paper,” she said. “Nobody throws away a dollar.”
She was right. Phone calls trickled in for nearly a…