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March 2002
Issue - Essay # 3

An
Angel That I Know
By Lisa Browning

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the front hall of my house hangs a cross-stitch that I made several
years ago; one that holds a special place in my heart among my most
cherished possessions. It is a small, simple cross-stitch, worked on
dark blue
cloth, depicting a winter scene of barren trees and a sky filled with
stars.
On the mat which frames the picture is inscribed in calligraphy the
words "I believe in angels." On the back of the frame is a tribute I wrote
to
the woman for whom I did the cross-stitch, a woman who began to change
my
life from the day I met her over thirty-five years ago.
My family moved
to the outskirts of Toronto the winter before I was born. My parents, my
14-year-old brother and my 10-year-old sister packed up
all their belongings, hired a mover, and drove in their 1959 light
turquoise Pontiac from London to Etobicoke. They bought a red-brick
split-level
house on a quiet, tree-lined street, and went on with their individual
and collective lives while waiting for my arrival.
The first three
summers of my life were as eventful as any infant's life could be--learning to walk, talk, and gain a perspective on the world. Then, in
the summer of 1963, something different happened. A new family moved in
to the yellow house on the corner, right next door to ours. Formerly
inhabited by three young boys, the newest family on the block boasted
two exceedingly well-groomed little girls, with shoulder-length curls
pulled back tightly in elasticized baubles, and crisp pinafores
that you dare not get too close to, for fear of soiling them. Forever
etched in my consciousness is the vision of these two sisters standing
at their back gate, staring at me with stern faces. As theireyes rested briefly on my grass-stained pants and mud-encrusted T-shirt,
I noticed a confusing mixture of jealousy and disdain. Although the
differences between us seemed insurmountable at first, gradually we all
became friends.
Elaine and Kathleen's mother found
me entirely frustrating. From the day I pulled all of her carefully
placed border plants out by their roots, until the day I locked her
oldest daughter in our tool shed for a joke, then forgot to let her out,
Mrs. Sutherland would beg, scream and plead with my mother to "tame
your child." But I was not to be tamed.
One hot July morning shortly
after the flower-pulling incident, my parents awoke to very loud,
metallic banging
in our backyard, and went out to find Mr. Sutherland putting up a fence
between our previously open-access backyards.
"If you think that's
going to
keep Lisa out," my father said, almost defiantly, "youčre
wrong."
The fence
went up anyway. As the years passed, I still managed to get both Elaine
and Kathleen
into trouble on a regular basis, but a lasting bond began to develop
between
us as well. Perhaps they envied my carefree attitude, or perhaps they
were simply afraid to cross me.
Mrs. Sutherland kept an impeccable
house. Without fail, she apologized
for messes whenever I entered her front door, and I looked around in
confusion, finding not one item out of place. I can't imagine whatever
possessed me to violate such sanctity, yet I managed to do so on a
rather grand scale, I thought.
The entire Sutherland family were sitting
on their front porch when I, together with my accomplice Stephen, the
boy from two doors down, snuck
in through the back door. With grubby fingers but meticulous care, we
placed all of Mrs. Sutherland's expensive collection of Royal Doultons
under
the tables on which they formerly stood, and we removed all of the
linens
from the beds in each of the three bedrooms in the house, placing these
on
the floor as well. Hearing noises in her house, Mrs. Sutherland came in
and discovered both Stephen and I cowering on the floor of one of the
bedroom closets. One
look at her face, twisted with rage and disbelief, was all it took to
make
us bolt out of the house without a backward glance.
My mother made me go
back to apologize, and it was the hardest thing
I ever had to do. Perhaps it was having to explain why I did what I did
that
made me realize that there was no excuse for my behaviour, then or in
the
past. Or perhaps it was the fact that Mrs. Sutherland was actually
gracious
when accepting my apology.
I looked at her incredulously, and finally
asked, "Why dončt you hate me?"
"My dear
child," she said, "I know
that you can be better."
Mrs. Sutherland eventually became my most
stalwart supporter. With a
grace that I have yet to match, she saw through the mischief to the
potential
that lay within me, potential that I would like to believe I have lived
up
to. She saw me through years of boyfriend problems, career and lifestyle
choices, she wrote me letters and we accumulated endless hours of
telephone time. Through it all, her underlying concern was always my
happiness.
The day after my daughter was born, she came to the hospital to see me.
She took my face in both her hands, brought her own face close to mine,
looked me straight in the eyes and asked, more forcefully and with more
feeling than ever before, "Are you happy?!" In my drug-induced state,
I answered yes.
Mrs. Sutherland passed away very suddenly, several years
ago, in her
early 60s. She had suffered a massive aneurysm, and Kathleen found her
when
she arrived for her weekly visit. I had just come in from church when I
got a call from my father, telling me the news. The bite of the
submarine sandwich that I had brought home for lunch became like cement
in my mouth, and the remaining portion fell to the floor. It took me
little more
than half an hour to make the trip from Guelph to Toronto, and I walked
into
that same impeccable house that I had known for years. Words unnecessary
and unavailable, Kathleen, Elaine and I held each other and cried, tears
of anger, sadness and desolation.
The reception after the funeral was
held in the Sutherland's house.
Still numb from shock, I walked aimlessly from room to room, not wanting
to believe that I would never see Mrs. Sutherland again. Visions of the
past kept appearing before me, and I was again that little girl I once
had
been, longing desperately for guidance and affirmation. As I reached the
family room, the sight that greeted me stopped my feet
in mid-step. On the family piano stood three graduation pictures: one
of Elaine, one of Kathleen, and one of me.
I heard it said once that
when we lose someone we love, we gain an angel that we know. I still
miss Mrs. Sutherland, desperately at times. But
I believe that she is watching over me, and the thought warms my soul.
My cross-stitch will always hold a special place in my home and in my
heart, and will serve as a constant reminder of that fateful day, so
many years ago, when my family moved from London to Toronto, leading me
to the woman who changed my life forever.
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Author's Biography
Lisa Browning received a
B.A. in English from Toronto's York University, and has been involved in
creative writing for over twenty years, specializing in creative
non-fiction and the personal essay.
In addition to her
writing, Lisa is also the founder and president of a home-based business
in writing, editing and desktop publishing, and an active volunteer in
her community.
She lives in Guelph with
her daughter Carrie, and enjoys reading, creative arts, and as much
physical exercise as she can get! Please visit her website at http://ww.sky-arc.com.
E-mail Lisa at lbrowning@sky-arc.com
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10
11
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