**The Cockroach Plan**
I had to rent a place urgently, so I took the first one I found. It wasn’t perfect, but it was affordable, close to work, and available immediately. I moved in the same day.
Within **24 hours**, I regretted everything.
Cockroaches—big ones, tiny ones, fast ones—scuttled across the counters, the floor, even the sink. I opened a cupboard and three darted out like they owned the place. My skin crawled.
Furious and disgusted, I called the landlord.
“There are cockroaches everywhere,” I said. “You need to do something.”
He sighed dramatically, as if I were being unreasonable.
“I don’t harm living creatures,” he said. “Roaches are part of the ecosystem. I live by a code of kindness.”
“A code of cheapness, more like,” I muttered.
But out loud, I simply said, “I understand.”
And I did—just not in the way he intended.
Because if he wouldn’t remove the roaches, I’d remove **him**.
Not by violence, of course. By strategy.
—
## **The Plan**
Over the next few days, I didn’t kill a single roach.
Instead, I **collected them**.
Every time I saw one, I caught it under a cup, slid a postcard under it, and transferred it into a large plastic container with air holes. The thing was soon swarming.
By rent day, I had a small army.
When the landlord arrived, he gave his usual sanctimonious smile.
“Hello! Here for the rent,” he said cheerfully.
I stepped aside. “Come in.”
As he walked into the living room, I casually lifted the container.
“Before I pay,” I said, “I wanted to talk about the roach situation.”
“I told you,” he began, “I won’t harm—”
“I agree,” I said sweetly. “Neither will I.”
Then I **popped the lid open**.
A wave of scrambling, frantic cockroaches spilled out onto the floor, scattering in every direction.
The landlord froze.
I grinned. “Since you love living creatures so much, I figured you wouldn’t mind adopting a few more. I’ve been collecting them. For *you.*”
His face went pale.
“What—what are you doing?! Stop! STOP!”
“You won’t kill them,” I said innocently, “so I’m just returning them to the ecosystem. Your ecosystem.”
One roach crawled up his pant leg, and he shrieked—actually shrieked—and stumbled backwards.
“I’ll call the exterminator!” he yelled. “Fine! I’ll pay for it! Tomorrow morning!”
“Oh, no need,” I said. “I already hired one. The receipt is on the table. Deduct it from my rent.”
He blinked at me as if I were the devil himself.
But I wasn’t the devil.
Just someone who learned to negotiate.
—
## **The Satisfying Ending**
The next morning, a professional exterminator arrived—paid in full by my suddenly bug-averse landlord. The place was treated top to bottom, and within a week, every roach was gone.
A month later, the landlord approached me stiffly as I handed him the rent.
“No more… creatures?” he asked nervously.
“None,” I said with a warm smile. “But don’t worry.”
His eyes widened.
“If I ever find more,” I said lightly, “I’ll be sure to collect them for you.”
He swallowed hard. “Let’s… avoid that.”
“Agreed.”
I closed the door behind him.
And from that day on, the apartment stayed spotless—and the landlord, for the first time in his life, believed in pest control.