Carl
was
a
quiet
man.
He
didn't
talk
much.
He
would
always
greet
you
With
a
big
smile
and
a
firm
handshake.
Even
after
living
in
our
neighborhood
for
over
50
years,
no
one
could
really
say
they
knew
him
very
well.
Before
his
retirement,
he
took
the
bus
to
work
each
morning.
The
lone
Sight
of
him
walking
down
the
street
often
worried
us.
He
had
a
slight
limp
from
a
bullet
wound
received
in
WWII.
Watching
him,
we
worried
that
although
he
had
survived
WWII,
he
may
not
make
it
through
our
changing
uptown
neighborhood
with
its
ever-increasing
random
violence,
gangs,
and
drug
activity.
When
he
saw
the
flyer
at
our
local
church
asking
for
volunteers
for
caring
for
the
gardens
behind
the
minister's
residence,
he
responded
in
his
characteristically
unassuming
manner.
Without
fanfare,
he
just
signed
up.
He
was
well
into
his
87th
year
when
the
very
thing
we
had
always
feared
finally
happened.
He
was
just
finishing
his
watering
for
the
day
when
three
gang
members
approached
him.
Ignoring
their
attempt
to
intimidate
him,
he
simply
asked,
"Would
you
like
a
drink
from
the
hose?"
The
tallest
and
toughest-looking
of
the
three
said,
"Yeah,
sure,"
with
a
malevolent
little
smile.
As
Carl
offered
the
hose
to
him,
the
other
two
grabbed
Carl's
arm,
throwing
him
down.
As
the
hose
snaked
crazily
over
the
ground,
dousing
everything
in
its
way,
Carl's
assailants
stole
his
retirement
watch
and
his
wallet,
and
then
fled.
Carl
tried
to
get
himself
up,
but
he
had
been
thrown
down
on
his
bad
leg.
He
lay
there
trying
to
gather
himself
as
the
minister
came
running
to
help
him.
Although
the
minister
had
witnessed
the
attack
from
his
window,
he
couldn't
get
there
fast
enough
to
stop
it.
"
Carl,
are
you
okay?
Are
you
hurt?"
the
minister
kept
asking
as
he
Helped
Carl
to
his
feet.
Carl
just
passed
a
hand
over
his
brow
and
sighed,
shaking
his
head
"Just
some
punk
kids.
I
hope
they'll
wise-up
someday."
His
wet
clothes
clung
to
his
slight
frame
as
he
bent
to
pick
up
the
hose.
He
adjusted
the
nozzle
again
and
started
to
water.
Confused
and
a
little
concerned,
the
minister
asked,
"Carl,
what
are
you
doing?"
"I've
got
to
finish
my
watering.
It's
been
very
dry
lately,"
came
the
calm
reply.
Satisfying
himself
that
Carl
really
was
all
right,
the
minister
could
only
marvel.
Carl
was
a
man
from
a
different
time
and
place.
A
few
weeks
later
the
three
returned.
Just
as
before
their
threat
was
unchallenged.
Carl
again
offered
them
a
drink
from
his
hose.
This
time
they
didn't
rob
him.
They
wrenched
the
hose
from
his
hand
and
drenched
him
head
to
foot
in
the
icy
water.
When
they
had
finished
their
humiliation
of
him,
they
sauntered
off
down
the
street,
throwing
catcalls
and
curses,
falling
over
one
another
laughing
at
the
hilarity
of
what
they
had
just
done.
Carl
just
watched
them.
Then
he
turned
toward
the
warmth
giving
sun,
picked
up
his
hose,
and
went
on
with
his
watering.
The
summer
was
quickly
fading
into
fall,
Carl
was
doing
some
tilling
When
he
was
startled
by
the
sudden
approach
of
someone
behind
him.
He
stumbled
and
fell
into
some
evergreen
branches.
As
he
struggled
to
regain
his
footing,
he
turned
to
see
the
tall
leader
of
his
summer
tormentors
reaching
down
for
him.
He
braced
himself
for
the
expected
attack.
"Don't
worry
old
man,
I'm
not
gonna
hurt
you
this
time."
The
young
man
spoke
softly,
still
offering
the
tattooed
and
scarred
hand
to
Carl.
As
he
helped
Carl
get
up,
the
man
pulled
a
crumpled
bag
from
his
pocket
and
handed
it
to
Carl.
"What's
this?"
Carl
asked.
"It's
your
stuff,"
the
man
explained.
"It's
your
stuff
back.
Even
the
money
in
your
wallet."
"I
don't
understand,"
Carl
said.
"Why
would
you
help
me
now?"
The
man
shifted
his
feet,
seeming
embarrassed
and
ill
at
ease.
"I
learned
something
from
you,"
he
said.
"I
ran
with
that
gang
and
hurt
people
like
you.
We
picked
you
because
you
were
old
and
we
knew
we
could
do
it.
But
every
time
we
came
and
did
something
to
you,
instead
of
yelling
and
fighting
back,
you
tried
to
give
us
a
drink.
You
didn't
hate
us
for
hating
you.
You
kept
showing
love
against
our
hate."
He
stopped
for
a
moment.
"I
couldn't
sleep
after
we
stole
your
stuff,
so
here
it
is
back."
He
paused
for
another
awkward
moment,
not
knowing
what
more
there
was
to
say.
"That
bag's
my
way
of
saying
thanks
for
straightening
me
out,
I
guess."
And
with
that,
he
walked
off
down
the
street.
Carl
looked
down
at
the
sack
in
his
hands
and
gingerly
opened
it.
He
took
out
his
retirement
watch
and
put
it
back
on
his
wrist.
Opening
his
wallet,
he
checked
for
his
wedding
photo.
He
gazed
for
a
moment
at
the
young
bride
that
still
smiled
back
at
him
from
all
those
years
ago.
He
died
one
cold
day
after
Christmas
that
winter.
Many
people
attended
his
funeral
in
spite
of
the
weather.
In
particular
the
minister
noticed
a
tall
young
man
that
he
didn't
know
sitting
quietly
in
a
distant
corner
of
the
church.
The
minister
spoke
of
Carl's
garden
as
a
lesson
in
life.
In
a
voice
made
thick
with
unshed
tears,
he
said,
"Do
your
best
and
make
your
garden
as
beautiful
as
you
can.
We
will
never
forget
Carl
and
his
garden."
The
following
spring
another
flyer
went
up.
It
read:
"Person
needed
to
care
for
Carl's
garden."
The
flyer
went
unnoticed
by
the
busy
parishioners
until
one
day
when
a
knock
was
heard
at
the
minister's
office
door.
Opening
the
door,
the
minister
saw
a
pair
of
scarred
and
tattooed
hands
holding
the
flyer.
"I
believe
this
is
my
job,
if
you'll
have
me,"
the
young
man
said.
The
minister
recognized
him
as
the
same
young
man
who
had
returned
the
stolen
watch
and
wallet
to
Carl.
He
knew
that
Carl's
kindness
had
turned
this
man's
life
around.
As
the
minister
handed
him
the
keys
to
the
garden
shed,
he
said,
"Yes,
go
take
care
of
Carl's
garden
and
honor
him."
The
man
went
to
work
and,
over
the
next
several
years,
he
tended
the
flowers
and
vegetables
just
as
Carl
had
done.
In
that
time,
he
went
to
college,
got
married,
and
became
a
prominent
member
of
the
community.
But
he
never
forgot
his
promise
to
Carl's
memory
and
kept
the
garden
as
beautiful
as
he
thought
Carl
would
have
kept
it.
One
day
he
approached
the
new
minister
and
told
him
that
he
couldn't
care
for
the
garden
any
longer.
He
explained
with
a
shy
and
happy
smile,
"My
wife
just
had
a
baby
boy
last
night,
and
she's
bringing
him
home
on
Saturday."
"Well,
congratulations!
"
said
the
minister,
as
he
was
handed
the
garden
shed
keys.
"That's
wonderful!
What's
the
baby's
name?"
"Carl,"
he
replied.
Author
Unknown
to
Me