I received this story in e-mail and liked it so much that I wanted to post it here on my blog for all to see.
My Traveling Companion
By Edmund W. Boyle
I've spent most of my career as a traveling salesman, and I know that
there's nothing lonelier than a bunch of salesmen eating their meals in a
motel coffee shop.
One year, my five-year-old daughter pressed a gift into my hands. The
wrapping paper was all twisted, and it was bound together into a shapeless
mass by at least a mile of tape.
I gave her a big hug and sloppy kiss--the kind that all daddies give--and
proceeded to unwrap the little package she had bestowed on me. The contents
hidden within felt kind of soft, and I was very careful not to cause any
damage. With excitement radiating from her face, little brown-eyed Jeanine
stood attentively beside me in her too-small pajamas while I completed the
process of unraveling my surprise.
A pair of black, beady eyes peeked out from their papery hiding place, then
a yellow beak, a red bow tie, and orange feet. It was a stuffed toy penguin
that stood about five inches tall.
Attached to its right wing with still wet paste was a tiny, wooden sign, and
a hand-painted declaration, "I Love My Dad!" Beneath it was a hand-drawn
heart, colored with crayon.
Tears welled up in my eyes and immediately I gave it a special place on my
dresser.
Seldom did much time pass before I had to leave on another business trip.
One morning when I was packing, I tossed the penguin in my suitcase. That
night when I called home, Jeanine was very upset that the penguin had
disappeared. "Honey, it's here with me," I explained. "I brought it
along."
After that day, she always helped me pack, and saw to it that the penguin
went in along with my socks and shaving kit. Many years have gone by since
then, and that little penguin has traveled hundreds of thousands of miles
all across America and over to Europe. And we have made many friends along
the way.
In Albuquerque, I checked into a hotel, dumped out my bag and dashed to a
meeting. When I returned, I found the bed turned down and the penguin
propped up on the pillow.
In Boston, upon returning to my room one evening, somebody had perched it in
an empty drinking glass on the nightstand--it never did stand up that well.
The next morning I left it sitting in a chair. Again that night it was in
the glass.
Once, at New York's Kennedy airport, a customs inspector coolly asked that I
open my bag. And right there, on top, was my little pal. Holding it up,
the agent quipped, "That's about the most valuable thing I have seen in all
my years on the job. Thank God we don't charge tax on love."
Late one night, after driving over a hundred miles from my previous hotel, I
unpacked my luggage only to discover that the penguin was missing.
Frantically, I phoned the hotel. The clerk was incredulous and a bit aloof.
He laughed, saying it hadn't been reported. Nonetheless, a half an hour
later, he called back to say that my penguin had been found.
The time was late, but not that late. I got back in my car and drove the
couple of hours to retrieve my two-toned touring buddy, arriving near
midnight.
The penguin was waiting at the front desk. In the lobby, tired business
travelers looked on at the reunion--I think with a touch of envy. A few of
them came out to shake my hand. One man told me that he had even
volunteered to deliver it to me the very next day.
Jeanine is in college now and I don't travel as much anymore. The penguin
spends most of its time sitting on my dresser--a reminder that love is the
best traveling companion. All those years on the road, it was the one thing
I never left home without.
Wednesday, January 09, 2002
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment