I found myself in the doll aisle.   Out of the corner of my eye I saw a   little boy about   five-years-old, holding a lovely doll.   He kept touching her hair and   held her so gently.  I could not seem to help myself.   I just kept   looking over at the little boy and wondered who the doll was for.  I   watched him turn to a woman, and he called his aunt by name.  He asked,   "Are you sure I don't have enough money?"

     She replied a bit impatiently, "You know that you don't have enough money for it!"   The  aunt told the little boy not to go anywhere because she had to go get some other things and  would be back in a few minutes.  She then left the aisle. 
      The boy continued to hold the doll.   After a bit, I asked the boy who   the doll was for.   He said, "It is the doll my sister wanted so badly   for Christmas.   She just knew that Santa would bring it." 
      I told him that maybe Santa was still going to bring it.   He said, "No ... Santa can't go  where my sister is.   I have to give the doll to my Mommy to take to her."  

     I asked him where his sister was.   He looked at me with the saddest   eyes and said, "She has gone to be with Jesus.   My Daddy says that   Mommy is going to have to go be with her."
      My heart nearly stopped beating.   Then the boy looked at me again and said, "I told my  Daddy to tell Mommy not to go yet.   I told him to tell her to wait until I got back from the  store."

     He then asked if I wanted to see his picture.   I told him I would love   to.   He pulled out some pictures he'd had taken at the front of the   store.   He said, "I want my Mommy to  take this with her so she doesn't ever forget me.   I love my Mommy so   very much and I  wish she did not have to leave me.   But Daddy says she will need to be   with my sister."   
   I saw that the little boy had lowered his head and had grown so very   quiet.  While he was not looking I reached into my purse and pulled out a   hand full of bills.   I asked the little boy, "Shall we count that   money one more time?"
      He grew excited and said , "Yes!   I just know it has to be enough!"  So   I slipped my money in with his and we began to count it.   And of   course , there was plenty for the doll.   He softly said, "Thank you,   Jesus, for giving me enough money."
       The boy then told me, "I  just asked Jesus to give me  enough money to   buy this doll so  Mommy can take it with her to give to my sister.   He heard my prayer!     I wanted to ask Him for enough to buy my Mommy a white rose, too, but I   didn't think I should ask for too much.   But He still gave me enough   to buy the doll and a rose for my Mommy.  She loves white roses so very   very much."
 
     
     A few minutes later,  the aunt came back and I wheeled my cart away.   I   could not keep from thinking about the little boy as I finished my   shopping in a totally different spirit than  when I had started.   And I kept remembering a story I had seen in the   newspaper several  days earlier about a drunk driver hitting a car,  killing a little girl,   and laving the mother in serious condition.   The family was deciding   on whether to remove the life support system.   Now surely, this little   boy did not belong with that story. 
        Two days later, I read in the paper that the family had disconnected the life support and  the young woman had died.   I could not forget the little boy and just kept wondering if the  two were somehow connected.   Later that day, I could not help myself and I went out and  bought some white roses and took them to the funeral home where the young woman was.    And there she was ... holding a lovely white rose, the beautiful doll, and the picture of the  little boy in the store.
 
      
  
      I left there in tears ... my life had changed forever.   The love that   little boy had for his little sister and his mother was overwhelming.      In a split second, a drunk driver had ripped the life of that little   boy to pieces.
 

 
