The Gift That Lives On
Teddy Stallard certainly qualified as "one of the least": disinterested in
school; musty, wrinkled clothes; hair never combed; one of those kids in
school with a deadpan face; an expressionless, glassy, unfocused stare. When
Miss Thompson spoke to Teddy he always answered in monosyllables. Unattractive,
unmotivated, and distant, he was just plain hard to like.
Even though his teacher said she loved all in her class the same, down inside
she wasn't being completely truthful. Whenever she marked Teddy's papers,
she got a certain perverse pleasure out of putting Xs next to the wrong answers,
and when she put the Fs at the top of the papers, she always did it with
a flair. She should have known better; she had Teddy's records and she knew
more about him than she wanted to admit. The records read:
1st Grade: Teddy shows promise with his work and attitude, but poor home
situation.
2nd Grade: Teddy could do better. Mother is seriously ill. He receives little
help at home.
3rd Grade: Teddy is a good boy but too serious. He is a slow learner. His
mother died this year.
4th Grade: Teddy is very slow, but well-behaved. His father shows no interest.
Christmas came and the boys and girls in Miss Thompson's class brought her
Christmas presents. They piled their presents on her desk and crowded around
to watch her open them. Among the presents there was one from Teddy Stallard.
She was surprised that he had brought her a gift, but he had.
Teddy's gift was wrapped in brown paper and was held together with Scotch
tape. On the paper were written the simple words, "For Miss Thompson from
Teddy." When she opened Teddy's present, out fell a gaudy rhinestone. The
other boys and girls began to giggle and smirk over Teddy's gifts, but Miss
Thompson at least had enough sense to silence them by immediately putting
some of the perfume on her wrist. Holding her wrist up for the other children
to smell, she said "Doesn't it smell lovely?" And the children, taking their
cues from the teacher, readily agreed with "oohs" and "aahs."
At the end of the day, when school was over and the other children had left,
Teddy lingered behind. He slowly came over to her desk and said softly, "Miss
Thompson...Miss Thompson, you smell just like my mother...and her bracelet
looks real pretty on you, too. I'm glad you liked your presents." When Teddy
left, Miss Thompson got down on her knees and asked God to forgive her.
The next day when the children came to school, they were welcomed by a new
teacher. Miss Thompson had become a different person. She was no longer just
a teacher; she had become an agent of God. She was now a person committed
to loving her children and doing things for them that would live on after
her. She helped all the children, but especially the slow ones, and especially
Teddy Stallard. By the end of that school year, Teddy showed dramatic
improvement. He had caught up with most of the students and She didn't hear
from Teddy for a long time. Then one day, she received a note that read:
Dear Miss Thompson:
I wanted you to be the first to know. I will be graduating second in my class.
Love, Teddy Stallard
Four years later, another note came:
Dear Miss Thompson:
They just told me I will be graduating first in my class. I wanted you to
be the first to know. The university has not been easy, but I like it.
Love, Teddy Stallard
And four years later:
Dear Miss Thompson:
As of today, I am Theodore Stallard, M.D. How about that? I wanted you to
be the first to know I am getting married next month, the 27th to be exact.
I want you to come and sit where my mother would sit if she were still alive.
You are the only family I have now; Dad died last year.
Love, Teddy Stallard
Miss Thompson went to that wedding and sat where Teddy's mother would have
sat. She deserved to sit there; she had done something for Teddy that he
could never forget.