The $154,000 Lindström Flat — Forgotten Cash in an Abandoned Balcony Lounge


The Lindström flat carried a modest market value of $154,000, but the enclosed balcony lounge had quietly become a place where spare cash was counted and set aside. The narrow table served as a ledger desk of sorts, where envelopes and receipts were sorted at the end of long days.

Oskar Lindström, Bicycle Courier

Oskar Lindström, born 1993 in Malmö, worked as a bicycle courier delivering food and packages across the city.

Eight traces outline his routines: a bright delivery backpack slumped beside a chair; a reflective cycling jacket hanging from the railing; a cracked phone mount resting on the table; a helmet with worn padding; a pocket notebook of delivery totals; a pair of cycling gloves folded neatly; a thermos still half-full; and the envelope labeled “cash.”
Evenings often ended on this balcony. After cycling through cold streets, he would sit beneath the string lights, counting the day’s tips and folding small bills into envelopes. His temperament appears careful—numbers written in tidy columns, receipts clipped together with small metal clips.

Winter Crash

One winter evening a cycling accident halted his work. Medical papers rest unopened on the living room table. The notebook of daily totals ends abruptly, the last line listing only half a day’s deliveries.

On the balcony table, the final notebook entry reads: “Deposit cash Monday.” Monday passed quietly. The balcony lounge remains intact, chairs unmoved, herbs long dried. The envelope of cash still rests where it was last counted, the modest flat silent around it.

Back to top button
Translate »