When my husband died in a car crash three years ago, my life fell apart. I juggled two jobs to support my kids while my mom helped with childcare. Then my old minivan gave out in a grocery store parking lot — just one more thing I couldn’t afford. That’s when my neighbor Cheryl swooped in with her “perfectly working” Toyota and a $2,500 offer I couldn’t resist.
The car ran fine at first — clean, quiet, smooth. But the next day, I was stranded with my kids on the side of the road, smoke billowing from the hood. Frank the mechanic told me the engine had been failing for months, and I’d been scammed. Furious, I confronted Cheryl, but she slammed the door in my face with a smug “no returns” speech.
Later, as I cleaned out the car, I found a hidden leather bag under the seat. Inside: $7,000 in cash and an envelope labeled “Cheryl.” Turns out, she’d forgotten her shady stash. When she came begging for it, I quoted her own words right back: “That’s how the real world works,” and shut the door.
Cheryl disappeared days later, and karma swept her off like yesterday’s trash. I sold the car for parts, bought a reliable Honda, and rebuilt my emergency fund. When my daughter asked why Cheryl moved away, I smiled. “Sometimes, sweetheart, people make bad choices — and karma handles the rest.”