Honestly, I didn’t think much of it. I believed in live and let live. I had plenty to keep me busy—especially with my 12-year-old son, Ethan. I figured Mrs. Johnson was just a private person, and there was no harm in that.
Then, one day, Ethan came home completely exhausted. He was dripping with sweat, and his shirt was soaked.
“Ethan, what happened?” I asked as he collapsed on the couch.
“Mrs. Johnson asked me to mow her lawn,” he panted. “She said she’d pay me twenty bucks.”
I glanced out of the window at Mrs. Johnson’s yard. It was the biggest in the neighborhood—no small task. Ethan had clearly put in a lot of effort; the lawn looked perfect, with neat lines and not a blade of grass out of place.
“It took me two whole days,” Ethan said, wiping his face with his shirt. “But she said she’d pay me when I was done.”
I smiled at him, proud. Ethan was always willing to help out, and he had been saving up for weeks to buy a food processor for his grandma’s birthday. The twenty dollars would help him get a bit closer to his goal.
“Did she pay you yet?” I asked, still looking out the window.
“No, but I’m sure she will,” Ethan replied, his voice hopeful.
I nodded. Mrs. Johnson might be distant, but stiffing a kid out of twenty dollars seemed unlikely. Or so I thought.
A few days passed, and I noticed Ethan seemed quieter than usual. He wasn’t his cheerful self, and it worried me.
“What’s wrong, honey?” I asked one evening as he sat by the window, staring at Mrs. Johnson’s house.
“She hasn’t paid me yet,” he said softly.
I frowned. “Did you ask her?”
Ethan nodded. “Yeah, I went over yesterday, but she told me she was busy and to come back later. Today, I went again, and she told me to get lost.”
“What?” I gasped. “What do you mean ‘get lost’?”
Ethan looked down at his hands, his voice trembling. “She said I should be grateful for the lesson I learned mowing her lawn—that learning to work hard was the real payment, and I didn’t need the money.”
My heart sank, and anger rose within me. This woman had conned my son into doing two days of hard work and then refused to pay him. How dare she?
I clenched my fists, trying to stay calm for Ethan’s sake, but inside, I was boiling. “Don’t worry, sweetheart. I’ll handle this.”
Ethan gave me a small, trusting smile. But in my head, I was already planning what I’d do next. Mrs. Johnson might think she was teaching my son a lesson, but she was about to learn one herself.
The next morning, I sat on my porch, watching Mrs. Johnson pull out of her driveway, polished and perfect as usual. My decision had been brewing for days, and now, there was no hesitation. My son deserved justice, and if Mrs. Johnson wasn’t going to do the right thing, I would make sure she learned her lesson.
I picked up my phone and made some calls. About an hour later, my old high school friend Mark, who now ran a landscaping business, called me back.
“So, you want me to trim her hedges into weird shapes?” he laughed.
Mrs. Johnson took great pride in her yard, especially her hedges. Every Saturday, she would spend hours pruning them into perfectly symmetrical shapes. To her, those hedges were a statement of her meticulousness.
“Exactly. Nothing destructive—just enough to make them look ridiculous. I want her to notice,” I replied.
Mark laughed again. “You got it. I’ll swing by later today.”
With step one in place, I moved to step two. I grabbed my laptop, found a local mulch delivery service, and called, mimicking Mrs. Johnson’s tone.
“Hi, this is Katherine Johnson. I need three large truckloads of mulch delivered to my address. Yes, right in the driveway. Thank you.”
Later that afternoon, three large trucks pulled up, unloading piles of mulch right onto Mrs. Johnson’s driveway. I watched as the workers filled it, blocking her car’s way in or out.
The neighborhood started to buzz. A few neighbors peeked out, whispering. They had heard about Mrs. Johnson not paying Ethan, and now they were seeing my retaliation unfold.
Around 6:30 p.m., Mrs. Johnson’s shiny black car turned the corner. When she saw the mulch, her car screeched to a stop. She sat there, stunned, before slowly driving up to the pile.
She got out, her face flushed with confusion and anger. She went over to her hedges, staring at the strange, lopsided shapes Mark had trimmed them into. She realized she was being watched, with a few neighbors pretending to chat while really watching her reaction. Her eyes locked on me.
She stormed over, her heels clicking furiously. “Did you do this?” she snapped.
I smiled. “Me? I don’t know anything about landscaping or mulch deliveries.”
Her face turned bright red. “You think this is funny?”
I put my cup down, meeting her gaze. “Not as funny as stiffing a 12-year-old out of twenty dollars.”
She knew exactly what I meant.
“Maybe it’s just the universe teaching you a lesson,” I added. “Hard work is its own reward, right?”
Mrs. Johnson clenched her jaw, realizing she had no choice. She stormed back into her house and returned with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill.
She handed it to me, but I shook my head. “Give it to Ethan.”
She walked over to Ethan and handed him the money. “Here,” she muttered.
Ethan took it, surprised. “Uh, thanks.”
Mrs. Johnson hurried back to her car, likely to call someone to clear the mulch. But I wasn’t worried—my job was done.
Ethan’s smile was huge. “Thanks, Mom.”
“Don’t thank me,” I said, ruffling his hair. “You earned it.”
Mrs. Johnson never asked Ethan for help again. The hedges grew back, the mulch disappeared, but the story of how she learned a lesson stayed in the neighborhood.
Sometimes, people need a reminder that you don’t mess with a mother protecting her child.