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The Key
Guideposts
|December 2017
We’d been besties since college. Now she needed me more than ever
I wanted to scream. right there in the middle of the mail store. I’d been guaranteed nextday delivery of my package. By 10:30 a.m. even. But here I was, 24 hours later, and the package I’d expressed was undelivered and unaccounted for. Unbelievable.
I tapped my foot and glared at the long line of people in front of me, many holding Christmas presents. I wasn’t much in the spirit of the season.
The package—a key to the vacation house my parents owned in Houston— had been meant for my friend Jen, who lived in Dallas. I lived in San Antonio. Jen and I had been besties ever since our freshman year at Texas A&M, some 20 years earlier. Tall, blonde and striking, Jen was amazing—a force of nature. Back then, she’d talked me into going to Bible study, where I met my husband. I’d never known any person who had a faith as strong as hers.
That’s why when, just shy of 40, she’d told me she had breast cancer, I was certain she’d beat it. Only months earlier, she’d given birth to her first child, a son. She’d been nursing him when she felt the lump. She’d done the treatments exactly as her doctors advised: lumpectomy, chemo, radiation. We’d all prayed for her. Almost a year from the date of her diagnosis, in August 2014, she’d gotten the all-clear. A miracle. Or so we believed.
Four months later, the first week of December, I was Christmas shopping when I got a text in the gift wrap aisle of Target. Jen’s cancer was back. The news took the breath right out of me.
This story is from the December 2017 edition of Guideposts.
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