
One day, I left my garage door open for 10 minutes. When I returned, my Cuisinart Ice Cream Machine had vanished; someone had stolen it. The thing is that the machine was stolen, but not the bowl to make the ice cream.
They didn’t take that. 14 months later, right in the middle of the garage, I found the machine again—clean, plugged in, humming softly. I stood there with my keys still in hand, half-convinced I was dreaming.
The machine was on. Not just returned—running. There was a sticky note taped to the side with four words: “Thank you.
I’m sorry.”
That’s it. No name. No explanation.
Nothing else in the garage had been touched. It was the same machine—I could tell by the tiny scratch on the side where I’d once dropped a spoon into it while it was churning pistachio gelato. At first, I thought it was some prank.
Maybe one of my neighbors with a weird sense of humor. But no one ever said a word. And if it was a prank, who spends over a year keeping an ice cream machine just to sneak it back in, turn it on, and leave an anonymous apology?
I didn’t say anything to my family. Not yet. I just turned it off, unplugged it, and carried it back inside like I was holding some kind of fragile truth.
It still worked. That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept thinking about the weird timing.
The way the machine was left—on and purring like it had something to tell me. I finally sat down and started scrolling through the neighborhood app, hoping for clues. Nothing.
Then I remembered something odd from the week before. A scraggly teenager had come to the door selling candy bars for a “school trip.” He didn’t have a flyer, barely made eye contact. I had no cash, so I sent him away.
But there’d been something in his eyes—like he was about to say something and changed his mind. The next afternoon, I left the garage door open again. On purpose this time.
I sat on the porch with a book and waited. Nothing happened. But three days later, I found a second note in the mailbox.
No envelope. Just a torn corner of notebook paper:
“She died last week. I didn’t know who else to tell.”
No name.
No return address. I felt like someone had shoved a stone in my chest. It had to be connected.
So I asked around. Quietly. I stopped by the corner market and casually brought up the candy bar kid to Farid, the clerk who seemed to know every kid in the neighborhood.
He furrowed his brow and said, “Tall kid? Always wore that too-big Lakers jacket?”
I nodded. “That’s D’von.
His grandma used to live over on Hadley. Sweet lady. He’s had a rough time.
In and out of group homes, I think. But he was always polite to me.”
I hadn’t realized someone even lived in that old mustard-colored house anymore. I passed it every day on my walks, but the curtains were always drawn.
I walked past it that evening. There were wilted flowers on the porch and a faded condolence card tucked in the doorframe. That was the first time I put it all together.
D’von had stolen my ice cream machine. Probably on a dare or maybe out of desperation. Maybe he and his grandma had used it.
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