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An Unexpected Letter
by: LeAnn R. Ralph
It was a couple of
weeks after Christmas, and I was standing by my mailbox in the
vestibule of the apartment building where I lived in Lexington,
Kentucky, holding a letter I had just received. The handwriting was
not familiar and neither was the return address, although it was
postmarked Seattle, Washington, the same place where Hannah Paulson
used to live.
Many years ago when I
was a little girl growing up on our dairy farm in west central
Wisconsin, the Paulsons had lived next door to us. The two farms
were the only residences located on our mile-long stretch of
isolated country road, and during the summer, I journeyed down the
hill a couple of times a week to visit Hannah. With her hair
arranged in waves swept back from her forehead and kindly blue eyes
twinkling from behind wire-rimmed spectacles, she wore cotton
shirtwaist dresses in the summer and a blue-and-white or
pink-and-white checkered apron.
Going to see Hannah
was the highlight of my summer vacations. There was just something
about Mrs. Paulson that drew me to her like the bees that were drawn
to the wild roses growing around her big, old-fashioned farmhouse. I
never considered that it might be rather unusual for me to enjoy
visiting our elderly neighbor, even though there were no other
neighbors with children for me to play with, and no other children
in my family (my brother is twenty-one years older than me and my
sister is nineteen years older).
During the summer,
Hannah and I would cut and arrange flowers because Mrs. Paulson
loved to have flowers in her house. At other times I would find her
working on a project, like cleaning out the old chicken coop, or
painting the barn, or weeding her garden. No matter what Hannah was
doing, she always let me “help.”
On days when it was
too hot to be outside, we sat in Mrs. Paulson's kitchen and ate
homemade oatmeal cookies. Hannah would ask me about the books I was
reading (I loved to read), and she would tell me about the books she
had liked to read when she was a little girl.
Hannah and her
husband, Bill, had lived in Seattle before they bought the farm next
to ours. The farm had belonged to a relative of theirs, and they had
wanted to live in the country again. At one time, they had owned a
farm in South Dakota. Hannah had been a kindergarten teacher when
they lived in Washington, although she was retired by the time they
were our neighbors. As the Paulsons grew older and the farm became
too much for them to take care of, they decided to move back to the
west coast and settled in Oregon. And yet, as I contemplated the
letter I had just received at my apartment in Lexington, I still
couldn’t figure out who would be writing to me from Seattle.
Especially since I knew it wasn’t Hannah.
I took the letter
upstairs to the apartment to read it. I sat down at the kitchen
table, and inside the envelope was a single sheet of note paper
covered with elegant, spidery handwriting. I glanced at the name on
the bottom but didn’t recognize it, then I went back to the top and
began to read —
“Thank you for all of
your kind words to my sister, Hannah Paulson. I don’t know who you
are, but you must have had a special, wonderful relationship with
her. Unfortunately, Hannah died the day before your letter arrived…”
I sat there for a few
moments, stunned.
Hannah was dead? And
she hadn’t read my letter?
You see, for some
inexplicable reason, a few weeks before Christmas I was overcome by
the strongest feeling that I ought to write to our former neighbor
and thank her for being so kind to me when I was a little girl.
Although — the longer I considered the idea — the more ridiculous it
seemed to write to someone I hadn’t seen in about fifteen years just
to say thank you for being nice to me when I was a kid. So, I kept
telling myself I didn’t have to do it right now — that I could
always do it “tomorrow.”
I knew my mother still
occasionally exchanged letters with Hannah, and when I finally
concluded the nagging feeling was not going to go away, I called my
mother in Wisconsin, got Hannah’s address, wrote a letter and sent
it in a Christmas card. After I mailed the envelope, I felt a
certain sense of satisfaction, as if I had finally paid off an old
debt.
Except that now Hannah
was dead. And she hadn't read my letter.
As soon as the shock
wore off a little bit, I called my mother. And when I told her that
Hannah had died, we both began to cry.
“All those years when
I could have written, but I didn’t,” I said in a choked voice. “And
now she’ll never know—"
I heard Mom heave a
deep sigh. “Oh, sweetheart, of course Hannah knew. Besides, she
enjoyed your visits as much as you enjoyed going to see her.”
Nothing my mother said
made me feel any better. If only I had written a week earlier. Or
even just a day…
Twenty years later, I
still can’t help wishing that Hannah had been able to read my
letter. She was one of the best friends I've ever had, but I never
told her what her kindness meant to a lonely little girl who had no
one to play with.
Then again, maybe that
was Hannah's greatest gift to me. Through my procrastination in
writing one simple letter, I learned that I should never put off
until tomorrow telling my dearest friends and loved ones how I feel
about them. No one knows, after all, when there might not be any
more tomorrows.
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About The Author
LeAnn R. Ralph is the author of the book: Christmas In
Dairyland (True Stories From a Wisconsin Farm). Share the view
from Rural Route 2 and celebrate Christmas during a simpler
time. Click here to read sample chapters and other Rural Route 2
stories —
http://ruralroute2.com
bigpines@ruralroute2.com |
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