The Third-Floor Deliveries That Made A Driver Stop Rushing-Tep

I hated that third-floor walk-up with no elevator before I ever really knew anything about the woman who lived there.

That is the ugly part I have to admit first.

My name is Gabe, I’m twenty-nine, and for the last few years I’ve delivered packages in a quiet American town where the lawns are trimmed, the porches have old rocking chairs, and almost everybody thinks the delivery guy is part of the background.

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I don’t mean that in a bitter way.

Most days, I liked the work enough to keep showing up.

There was something simple about it.

Scan the box.

Find the porch.

Ring the bell.

Take the picture.

Move on.

The route app gave me names, addresses, apartment codes, estimated drop times, and little red warnings when I was slipping behind.

It did not give me stories.

It did not tell me who was grieving behind a door, or who was waiting at a window, or who ordered something tiny just to make the building feel less empty for half a minute.

At the time, I thought that was not my job to know.

My job was to deliver.

My job was to stay on schedule.

My job was to keep the packages moving, even when my back hurt, even when the van smelled like cardboard, dust, and the sandwich I forgot to eat, even when the coffee in the cup holder had gone cold before 9:30 in the morning.

There was one address that always made my stomach tighten a little when it appeared on the screen.

Building 14.

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