I delivered a pizza to an elderly woman. When I stepped inside her cold, dark house, I realized she was in trouble. So I made a decision I thought would help her. I didn’t expect her to look me in the eye minutes later and say, “This is your fault.”
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The March air that night had teeth.
And standing on those back steps, I already had the feeling that something about this delivery wasn’t right.
The house was dark, and the yard was overgrown. I had a large pepperoni pizza balanced on one hand and my phone in the other, checking the order again in case I had the wrong place.
The address was right. The note said: “Please knock loud.”
“This had better not be some kind of prank,” I muttered as I rapped on the door.
Something about this delivery wasn’t right.
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“Come in.”
I stood there for a second, every instinct telling me this was how people ended up on the news.
But I was already running behind, and the voice hadn’t sounded threatening.
So I opened the door.
The kitchen was dim, lit only by the open fridge door. I stepped inside and shivered. It was colder inside than it was out on the steps!
“Back here,” the voice called.
I stepped inside and shivered.
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I moved into a small living room.
An older woman sat in a worn recliner, lit by a candle flickering on a side table. She was bundled up in so many blankets that it made her head seem almost comically small.
Her eyes locked onto the pizza box in my hands.
“Ma’am,” I said hesitantly, “are you… alright? It’s pretty cold in here. Dark, too.”
“I’m perfectly fine. I keep the heat low because medication comes first. It’s the only thing I can’t skip.”
Then she leaned toward the little side table beside her and pushed a plastic sandwich bag toward me.
Her eyes locked onto the pizza box in my hands.
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It was full of coins.
Quarters, dimes, nickels, pennies. A whole life of scraped-together change.
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