She’d seen it hundreds of times as she passed it on the street. It was a little storefront with a sign saying simply Chiromancy. This time, though,her steps slowed as she
approached the window. What would be the harm in seeking out a fortune-teller; more to the point, a palm-reader?
There was enough of the unknown in her life that she wished to peer into tomorrow. Perhaps it would relieve some of her stress or give her a new lease on life! Heaven
knew she needed something; something to steer her in the right direction. But with the way everything was going, that would take a miracle. Even at Christmas, the season of miracles, she doubted one would appear to her, of all people. God, if He did exist, had more important things to do.
Clink. A little round piece of something rolled up against her boot. It was funny she even felt it. She bent down and retrieved it. It was a token, something like you would get at a carnival or party. She turn the gold piece over in her hand. One side was gold and the other held the image of a manger scene. A manger scene? She peered more closely, trying to imagine what sort of person or gathering it came from; then looked around to see if someone had dropped it. There wasn’t a pedestrian to be seen, but a scraggly dog trotted near her; abandoned from the looks of him.
She called to him with a click of her tongue and he came near enough for her to reach out and pet him. Her palm would be dirty now, and she wondered what the palm-reader would think. The dog nuzzled closer and licked her hand. Then he trotted a few steps down the street, looking back, as if inviting her to follow him. Her gaze alternated between the storefront and the dog. She really wished for direction; direction a fortune-teller might be able to give her! But the dog came back and nudged her knee for a pet. She absently reached down and gave him one. He nudged her again, and she patted him. He rolled onto his back and she gave him a good tummy rub. Her hand slowed as she felt his heartbeat.
And it was that heartbeat that spoke to her. If God had created even the heart of a scraggly dog and kept it beating day in and day out, did he care for small things as well as big, important things? And she was more than a dog, wasn’t she? She turned the coin over in her hand and studied the manger scene. How in the world had it rolled to hit her boot? Where did it come from? Did God know her heartbeat?
A new thought occurred to her as she followed her new friend down the street. She still wanted to know what her future held. But maybe it wasn’t to be found in the palm of her hand.

fun, and after she and her cat 


S



By the time everyone had either experienced or witnessed the plagues, Israel had crossed the Red Sea on dry ground while God parted it in two, and Moses had gone up on the mountain and fasted 40 days, there was some water under the bridge, you know? So when he came down and saw the folks that he’d led out of Egypt – the ones he’d put his own neck on the line for, the ones God was doing all sorts of beyond amazing things for – had made a golden calf and were worshiping it – worshiping it – you might understand his distress, frustration, and anger.
slammed those commandments down so hard, they shattered. Stone shattered! He must’ve really crushed it. He was mad. Witnessing corruption will do that to a person. But think how embarrassing it would be to be the one to shatter the 10 Commandments. It makes me like him even a little more. Fortunately, God made a second set for him to give to the people, and he put it in the Ark. Safe and sound.
first time ever, its blooms are brilliant.
first time I had met the previous owner. I’d seen an ad on Craigslist for an end table and had come to take a look at it. She’d invited me in, and we actually had begun something of a friendship of convenience. Every once in a while she’d call me to do something for her – burn a leaf pile or change her furnace filter – and then we’d sit down to tea and cookies and she’d send some home with me. I’m not much of a baker, so it was a nice little perk.
plant delightful little plants in even rows. And as the spring turns to summer, I watch them die a slow death. It’s tradition. But I digress.