One
night in April, flatmate and student Reese Werkhoven, of New York City,
opened a zipper on one arm and found an envelope containing $4,000
(£2,385) wrapped in bubble wrap.
Opening the other compartments,
Cally Guasti, Mr Werkhoven and third roommate Lara Russo discovered
$48,800 (£24,330) in cash-filled envelopes.
“We just pulled out
envelopes and envelopes,” said Ms Guasti, a social worker for the US
charity Family of Woodstock, who shares a flat with her two friends in
New Paltz, 75 miles north of New York City.
“My mouth was literally hanging open - everybody's was - it was an unfathomable amount.”
“We
put it all on a bed,” Ms Guasti said. “We laid it all out and started
counting. And we were screaming. In the morning, our neighbours were
like, 'We thought you won the lottery.”
But when the group later found a deposit slip with a woman’s name written on it, Ms Werkhoven called her the next morning.
“She said, 'I have a lot of money in that couch and I really need it,”' Ms Guasti said.
They drove to the home of the woman, who cried in gratitude when they gave her the cash she had stashed away.
The woman's family had donated the couch to the Salvation Army while she was having health problems.
Ms
Guasti said the three had considered the option of keeping the money,
but decided they could not bring themselves to go through with it.
“At the end of the day, it wasn't ours,” she said. “I think if any of us had used it, it would have felt really wrong.”
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