When three New York college students bought a $20 couch from a Salvation Army thrift store, they weren’t expecting much. In fact, they almost passed it over because it was so old and smelly, but it fit the dimensions of their home perfectly so they decided to get it anyway.
Once they took it home, however, they learned
the couch’s wonderful secret:
SUNY New Paltz student Reese Werkhoven and
roommates Callie Guasti and Lara Russo told WABC-TV they were shocked to find
$40,000 in cash after deciding to find out why the used couch was so
uncomfortable.
"At first we found the money but there
was no name or anything, and we're bugging out, like, what kind of boat are we
going to get, where are we going," Werkhoven said.
The trio found the money in envelopes stashed
in different parts of the couch. They said they instantly started discussing
the things they could do with the money, until they found a deposit slip,
according to the WABC report.
"Next door, they actually thought that
we won the lottery. Our walls are really thin between our wall and their wall,"
Guasti told the station.
The students tracked down the woman whose
name was on the envelope -- a 91-year-old who hid the money because she didn't
trust banks. The woman's children donated the couch when she was in the
hospital with a broken hip.
"It wasn't a debate, we immediately
reached a consensus that this is her money," Werkhoven told the station.
The woman gave $1,000 to Werkhoven, Guasti
and Russo as a reward for returning the $40,000, according to The Little
Rebellion blog.
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