About 65 million packages are delivered every day in the United States, and we know how the drill works. Today's load of brown cardboard is deposited on the front steps, if we have them, or the package room of a building. The UPS or Amazon guy snaps a picture. We look outside, think, "Goodies!" and go collect them.
But what if they aren't yours? Some 2 or 3 percent — about a million packages a day — go astray. What do you do then? What is your responsibility for these goods you did not order and do not want? Call UPS? Open them? Keep them? If they're intended for a neighbor, the right and decent thing to do is walk them over — just last week, a magazine for someone living two blocks away ended up in our mail, and next time I walked Kitty, I took it with me and saw it to its proper recipient, feeling a little conspicuous when I walked up to his house and shoved it through the mail slot. People have been shot for less.
But a few days ago something strange happened. We got a long UPS box — at first I thought it was flowers, which sometimes come that way. But inside was a wooden play set for the new grandbabe and ... a separate UPS box, containing a 17 piece DeWalt combination wrench set. It was addressed to a tool shop in Mokena.
For a moment, I wondered if it was part of the gift — a play set for the babe, wrenches for grandpa. But that was daft. Nobody would do that. So what should I do? Having my own tools, plus tools inherited from my father-in-law, plus some from a neighbor moving far away, I am rich in hand tools, particularly wrenches, from tiny wrenches to big jobbies that look like they're for tightening bolts on an aircraft carrier.
I thought of gifting the wrenches — they were mine now, were they not? — perhaps bestowing them on the younger boy. But he has no need for them, now or in the foreseeable future. They would just be a burden, more crap from dad. The thing to do was send them on their way. Return them to UPS.
My wife was dubious — I think she viewed me as somehow now responsible for these wrenches. Possession is 9/10 of the law. She wondered whether UPS would just take them — but I pointed out the mailing label, with the all-important bar code. They were on a journey. The thing to do would be to speed them on their way. We were heading to Red's anyway, to load up on herbs and flowers and such. The UPS store was on the way.
When we pulled into the strip mall, I suggested she wait in the car. No, she said, she wanted to see how this goes down. Given my luck, she might have been worried that, without her cool head, some kind of Roger Thornhill chain of mistaken events would unfold, like in "North by Northwest." "He's here! The guy with the wrenches!" one of the UPS workers would cry, and I'd end up climbing down the face of Mount Rushmore with Eva Marie Saint.
We walked in.
"Can I help you?" the clerk said.
"You delivered these to me," I said, hefting the box onto the counter. "But I am not Pennsylvania Tools of Mokena." He took the box without a word. We walked out. She praised my honestly, but I was thinking of how the situation would have transpired had it been, not superfluous wrenches, but a DeWalt reciprocating saw. I really could use one of those.
But what if they aren't yours? Some 2 or 3 percent — about a million packages a day — go astray. What do you do then? What is your responsibility for these goods you did not order and do not want? Call UPS? Open them? Keep them? If they're intended for a neighbor, the right and decent thing to do is walk them over — just last week, a magazine for someone living two blocks away ended up in our mail, and next time I walked Kitty, I took it with me and saw it to its proper recipient, feeling a little conspicuous when I walked up to his house and shoved it through the mail slot. People have been shot for less.
But a few days ago something strange happened. We got a long UPS box — at first I thought it was flowers, which sometimes come that way. But inside was a wooden play set for the new grandbabe and ... a separate UPS box, containing a 17 piece DeWalt combination wrench set. It was addressed to a tool shop in Mokena.
For a moment, I wondered if it was part of the gift — a play set for the babe, wrenches for grandpa. But that was daft. Nobody would do that. So what should I do? Having my own tools, plus tools inherited from my father-in-law, plus some from a neighbor moving far away, I am rich in hand tools, particularly wrenches, from tiny wrenches to big jobbies that look like they're for tightening bolts on an aircraft carrier.
I thought of gifting the wrenches — they were mine now, were they not? — perhaps bestowing them on the younger boy. But he has no need for them, now or in the foreseeable future. They would just be a burden, more crap from dad. The thing to do was send them on their way. Return them to UPS.
My wife was dubious — I think she viewed me as somehow now responsible for these wrenches. Possession is 9/10 of the law. She wondered whether UPS would just take them — but I pointed out the mailing label, with the all-important bar code. They were on a journey. The thing to do would be to speed them on their way. We were heading to Red's anyway, to load up on herbs and flowers and such. The UPS store was on the way.
When we pulled into the strip mall, I suggested she wait in the car. No, she said, she wanted to see how this goes down. Given my luck, she might have been worried that, without her cool head, some kind of Roger Thornhill chain of mistaken events would unfold, like in "North by Northwest." "He's here! The guy with the wrenches!" one of the UPS workers would cry, and I'd end up climbing down the face of Mount Rushmore with Eva Marie Saint.
We walked in.
"Can I help you?" the clerk said.
"You delivered these to me," I said, hefting the box onto the counter. "But I am not Pennsylvania Tools of Mokena." He took the box without a word. We walked out. She praised my honestly, but I was thinking of how the situation would have transpired had it been, not superfluous wrenches, but a DeWalt reciprocating saw. I really could use one of those.





