The March air had teeth that night, cutting straight through my hoodie as I stood on the back steps of a dark, overgrown house. I checked the address twice. The order note was simple: “Please knock loud.”
I rapped on the door. “Come in,” a weak voice answered.
I hesitated—every instinct told me to run—but I opened the door. The kitchen was lit only by the open fridge. It was colder inside than it was outside.
“Back here,” the voice called.
I found an elderly woman sitting in a worn recliner, bundled in layers of blankets. She looked at the pizza box like it was a treasure chest.
“I keep the heat low,” she whispered. “Medication comes first. It’s the only thing I can’t skip.”
She pushed a plastic sandwich bag toward me. It was filled with quarters, dimes, and pennies. “I counted twice,” she said, her hands shaking. “I think this covers it.”
I glanced at her fridge. Just water and a pharmacy bag. This wasn’t a treat; it was her only hot meal.
“It’s already taken care of,” I lied, pushing the coins back. “I own the place.”
She relaxed, closing her eyes as the steam from the pizza hit her face. I left feeling like I’d done a good deed, but as I sat in my car, I couldn’t shake the image of her shivering in the dark.
I texted dispatch: Flat tire. Need 45 minutes. Then I drove to the police station and requested a welfare check.
When I drove past her house on my way back, an ambulance was there. Neighbors crowded the sidewalk. As the paramedics helped her out, she spotted me.
“You!” she pointed, tears in her eyes. “This is your fault! I was managing!”
The neighbors glared at me. “You had no right,” one man snapped. “Who do you think you are?”
“I got her help,” I said, my voice shaking. “She had no heat.”
I drove away feeling sick. Had I destroyed her life?
A week later, I got another order. The address was hers.
When I arrived, the porch light was on. The door opened to reveal a woman I didn’t know. “Come inside,” she said. “Someone wants to see you.”
The house was warm. People were everywhere—neighbors unpacking groceries, kids playing on the rug. The elderly woman sat in her chair, but without the mountain of blankets. She looked stronger.
“I owe you an apology,” she said, reaching for my hand. “I was scared. At the hospital, they told me what could have happened if I stayed there.”
Her neighbor stepped forward. “We made a schedule. Somebody stops by every day. County services come twice a week.”
Standing there in that warm room, I realized something important: Doing the right thing doesn’t always feel good in the moment. Sometimes people hate you for it. Sometimes you interrupt the lie they tell themselves to survive.
But sometimes, you interrupt the thing that was killing them.