‘What DID he do?’ Man finds $399 box of red and white roses – and a grovelling apology – dumped in the rain on a New York street
- Harry Hill, from New York, shared his rainy day find – a seemingly very expensive apology – on Twitter, asking his 8,000 followers: ‘What did he do?’
- The box of red and white roses from luxury New York florist Venus et Fleur retail at $399 but were left dumped on the sidewalk during a downpour
- Hill also found a soggy note admitting that the sender had made ‘mistakes’ and a a copy of a book about the band Alice in Chains
- Do you know who the roses belong to? Email [email protected]
A New Yorker has shared how he spotted the detritus of a romance gone wrong left strewn across a New York sidewalk.
Harry Hill posted on Twitter photos of a very expensive bouquet of roses he spotted wilting in the rain – alongside a soggy apology note – while out walking.
The extravagant box of $399 (£305) red and white blooms – a grand romantic gesture perhaps normally reserved for Valentine’s Day or a special birthday – was clearly designed to make amends in this particular scenario.
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Twitter user Harry Hill revealed how he stumbled across what appeared to be a romantic gesture firmly snubbed, after finding a box of red and white roses dumped on the sidewalk in his New York neighbourhood
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/17/34330202-8834349-image-m-37_1602604895564.jpg)
The sender looks to have paid an eye-watering $399 (£300) for the box of discarded flowers from high-end New York florist Venus et Fleur.
On the flower shop’s website, a ‘classic’ black vase of flowers from Venus et Fleur includes 42 to 49 roses, with arrangements ‘uniquely handmade’ by the brand’s designers.
Hill posted under his Twitter handle, @veryharryhill, that he’d spotted the unwanted roses alongside a copy of a book about the band Alice in Chains.
He told his 8,000 followers on the social media platform: ‘Today I stumbled across this $400 box of roses, a copy of Alice In Chains, and an insurance card, all tossed on the rainy sidewalk.’
![Not forgiven! The accompanying note - printed not handwritten - alluded to 'mistakes' that the sender had made](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/11/34330200-8834349-Not_forgiven_The_accompanying_note_printed_not_handwritten_allud-a-12_1602584842016.jpg)
Not forgiven! The accompanying note – printed not handwritten – alluded to ‘mistakes’ that the sender had made
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/11/34331404-8834349-image-a-15_1602584917278.jpg)
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/11/34331406-8834349-image-a-16_1602584920669.jpg)
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/11/34331408-8834349-image-a-14_1602584913722.jpg)
![A classic black box of flowers from Venus et Fleur includes 42 to 49 roses, with arrangements 'uniquely handmade' by the brand's designers](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/10/13/11/34330198-8834349-image-m-18_1602584940648.jpg)
A classic black box of flowers from Venus et Fleur includes 42 to 49 roses, with arrangements ‘uniquely handmade’ by the brand’s designers
He added: ‘This was the note that went with the flowers…my question is: What did he do?’
The printed note, in florid font, read: ‘I don’t know much. And I know I’ve made mistakes. Please never doubt that I love you.’
The theories that Hill’s followers came up for why the sender offered the flowers in the first place largely focused upon infidelity.
@AriReadyForIt was convinced of the answer, suggesting: ‘That man cheated on her with her sister or best friend.’
@heymisskelsey added: ‘I hope you took those flowers.’