A Single Dad Gave His Last $18 to a Stranger—Next Day, a Billionaire Came for Him – Part 1

A Single Dad Gave His Last $18 to a Stranger—Next Day, a Billionaire Came for Him

Part 1:

Friends, today I’m going to tell you a story that I believe will make you think long after you hear it. A single father lost his job on the coldest day of October with only $42 left in his pocket and a young daughter waiting at home. Yet, he still gave his last penny to a stranger huddled at the bus stop. 24 hours later, four black SUVs pulled up in front of his house.

If you want to know what happened, please like, leave a comment letting me know which city you’re watching from, and follow this story to the very end. The heater in the break room had been broken for 3 weeks, and Ryan Hale could see his own breath curling in front of him as he signed out of his shift at 6:47 in the morning.

The clipboard was cold against his fingers. The pen didn’t work at first, and he had to scribble hard circles in the corner of the page before the ink came through. Hale, the voice came from behind him. He didn’t turn around right away. He recognized it the way a man recognizes the sound of a dog that’s bitten him before.

Hale? I need you in Mr. Delaney’s office. Ryan turned. Carl Voss was standing in the doorway of the break room with his arms crossed over his chest wearing the same navy polo he’d worn yesterday and probably the day before that. Carl was 46 years old with thinning hair combed forward to hide a receding hairline that had already given up on being hidden.

He had a way of standing that made every room feel smaller than it was. “It’s the end of my shift,” Ryan said. “I know when your shift ends. I’m telling you, Delaney’s office. Now.” Ryan set the pen down on the clipboard. His hands had that specific kind of ache that came from 12 hours of lifting, the kind where the joints didn’t hurt so much as the spaces between them.

He was 32 years old, and most mornings he felt 45. “What’s this about, Carl?” “He’ll explain.” Ryan looked at him for a second. He’d been working under Carl Voss for 2 years and 7 months. In that time, he’d noticed that Carl never said anyone’s first name. He’d also noticed that Carl kept a spare key to the temperature-controlled unit on a lanyard under his shirt, where nobody could see it, even though the company protocol said the key was supposed to stay in the supervisor’s lockbox.

He’d never mentioned it to anyone. It wasn’t his business. He started thinking maybe it should have been. The walk from the break room to Martin Delaney’s office was about 400 ft past the loading dock, where two guys from the night crew were still finishing up a shipment, past the row of forklifts lined up like sleeping cows, past the bulletin board where someone had pinned up a birthday card for a woman named Brenda, who Ryan didn’t think worked there anymore.

The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead. Everything smelled like cardboard and diesel and the faint chemical sweetness of the floor wax they used. Delaney’s door was open. That was never a good sign. When Martin Delaney closed his door, it meant he was on the phone with his wife or eating a sandwich.

When his door was open, it meant he wanted people to see who was going in. Ryan, come in. Shut the door behind you. Ryan did. He sat down in the chair across from Martin’s desk without being asked. Carl came in behind him and stood against the wall, arms still crossed. Martin Delaney was a big man, maybe 6 ft 3, with the kind of belly that had been a beer belly in his 20s and had slowly become just a belly in his 50s.

He had a photograph of his grandson on his desk and a coffee mug that said “World’s Okayest Boss”, which his daughter had given him as a joke and which he’d taken slightly too seriously. Ryan had always liked him. Not the way you like a friend. The way you like a man who remembers your name and asks how your kid is doing. “Ryan”, Martin said.

He was looking at the desk, not at Ryan. That was the first bad sign. “Martin, there’s been a situation with the Regious Hollister shipment that went out Tuesday.” Ryan nodded. He remembered the shipment. It had been a big one. 42 pallets of medical grade equipment, insulin pumps and surgical tools, and a couple of crates of something Ryan hadn’t been cleared to know about.

He’d helped load six of the pallets himself. What about it? 11 of the crates didn’t arrive. Ryan waited. Martin was still looking at the desk. Didn’t arrive where? Anywhere. They signed in here. They signed out of the dispatch log. The truck made it to the distribution center in Albany, but 11 crates weren’t on the truck when it got there.

Okay, Ryan said slowly. That’s a lot of weight to lose between the loading dock and Albany. That’s what the insurance company is saying. Ryan was starting to understand what kind of conversation this was. He could feel it in the way Martin wouldn’t look at him, in the way Carl was standing against the wall like he was enjoying a movie he’d already seen.

Martin. Ryan. Are you firing me? Martin finally looked up. He had the eyes of a man who had been up all night arguing with himself. There’s footage, Martin said. From the dock camera. Tuesday night at 11:47. You were on that dock alone for about 6 minutes. I was closing up. I close up every Tuesday. I know. I was doing my job.

I know, Ryan. Then what’s the problem? The problem, Carl said from against the wall, is that the paperwork shows you signed the last four crates onto the truck at 11:51. 4 minutes after the camera picked up what it picked up. And what did the camera pick up? You, Carl said, moving crates around, off camera some of the time.

Ryan turned in his chair to look at him. Carl had the kind of face that could be very expressive when it wanted to be, and right now it wasn’t expressing anything, and that was the most expressive thing about it. Carl. You were here Tuesday night. I left at 10. No, you didn’t. I did. Carl, I saw your truck in the lot when I You’re mistaken.

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