My Neighbor Doused My Car With Water In Freezing Weather – He Regretted It That Same Night
After deciding that my beloved vintage sedan was a “eyesore,” my affluent neighbor decided to take matters into his own hands and froze my car solid overnight. However, he received a hard lesson from karma that same evening.Nearby car dealerships
NEIGHBOR: “I demand you sell that old junk car! It’s polluting the air my kids breathe!”
ME: “Oh really? Are you offering to buy me a new one?”
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NEIGHBOR: “If you don’t get rid of it within a week, I’ll make sure you do!”
I laughed off his “threat,” BUT a week later, I went outside and found my car completely covered in ice! There hadn’t even been rain! And there he was, sitting on his porch, sipping coffee with a smug look, saying, “Careful — looks like it’s raining every night!”
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I spent five hours scraping all that ice off. He was so pleased with himself, but little did he know karma had its own plans for him that very night!
Around midnight, I woke up to a strange sound, like a huge blast of water. Thinking he was messing with my car again, I peeked outside.
But when I saw what was really going on, I burst out laughing!
A fire hydrant at the edge of Tom’s property had exploded, sending a powerful jet of water directly at his house. In the freezing night air, the water was turning to ice on contact, slowly encasing his perfect home and his precious German SUV in a thick crystal shell.
The streetlights caught each frozen droplet, turning his property into a bizarre winter wonderland.
By morning, half the neighborhood had gathered in order to gawk at the spectacle. While some were taking photos with their phones, others were whispering behind their hands.
Tom stood in his driveway, attacking the ice with a tiny garden shovel, looking absolutely miserable in his designer winter coat. His perfectly styled hair was finally out of place, plastered to his forehead with sweat despite the cold.
I watched him struggle for some minutes before sighing heavily. Dad would’ve known what to do.
He always said that kindness costs nothing but means everything. I grabbed my heavy-duty ice scraper and walked over.
“Want some help?” I asked. “I’ve got some experience with this sort of thing.”
Tom looked up, surprised and suspicious. “Why would you help me? After everything?”
I started scraping. “Guess I’m just a better neighbor than you.”
We worked for hours, gradually freeing his car and clearing a path to his front door. By the time we finished, the sun was setting, and we were both exhausted.
The next morning, there was a knock at my door. Tom stood there, shifting his weight from foot to foot, making his expensive shoes creak.
“I owe you an apology,” he said. “I was a jerk. You didn’t have to help me yesterday, but you did.” He thrust an envelope at me. “This is to thank you… and to make amends.”
Inside was $5,000 in hundred-dollar bills.
“It’s for your car,” he explained quickly. “Get it fixed up — or get a new one if you’d prefer. Consider it a peace offering. And… I’m sorry about what I said. About you not belonging here.”
I looked at the money, then at my dad’s old sedan sitting in the driveway.
“Thanks, Tom,” I said, tucking the envelope into my pocket. “I think I know exactly what I’m going to do with this.”
A week later, my old sedan was sporting a fresh coat of paint, new tires, and a completely rebuilt engine. It stood out even more now as a perfectly restored classic in a sea of modern luxury vehicles.
Every time I caught Tom looking at it, I made sure to rev the engine extra loud. Sometimes he’d even give me a grudging nod of appreciation.
Sometimes the best rev:enge isn’t re:venge at all.