The Delivery Driver Who Found Out Why A Widow Kept Ordering Junk-yumihong

I used to think house number 427 was the kind of stop that ruined a delivery route.

It sat on a quiet suburban street in Michigan, the kind with wet sidewalks in November, trimmed hedges gone brown for winter, and mailboxes that all looked like they had been dented by the same snowplow.

There was a small American flag clipped near the mailbox, faded at the edges, and a front porch with two chairs nobody ever seemed to sit in.

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The woman who lived there was named Margaret.

I did not know that at first.

At first, she was just a recurring address on my scanner.

427.

Another tiny package.

Another delay.

Another stop that made my route numbers worse.

I was twenty-eight years old, working delivery while trying to keep my student loans from swallowing me whole.

Every day felt like a race I had already lost before I turned the engine on.

The company app tracked everything.

It tracked when I pulled up.

It tracked when I scanned.

It tracked when I walked too slowly, sat too long, or took a wrong turn because road work had closed the street two blocks over.

At 2:17 p.m. that Thursday, my scanner buzzed and told me I was thirty minutes behind.

The little warning banner looked harmless, but I knew what came after it.

My manager would call me into the office, fold his arms, and say things like, “We need to talk about efficiency.”

Efficiency, in that job, meant moving like a machine while pretending you were still a person.

So when I saw Margaret’s address appear again, I muttered under my breath.

I am not proud of what I said.

It was not cruel enough to be remembered by anyone else, but it was cruel enough that I remembered it later.

Another one.

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