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My name is Oliver. I’ve spent two decades working the baggage reclaim and lost property desk at King’s Cross Station—a bustling, noisy hub at the heart of the city.

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My names Howard. For twenty years now, Ive manned the lost property and forgotten luggage desk at Victoria Station. If you can imagine chaos with British efficiencytea spilled precisely at platform three, announcements booming enough to startle the pigeons, and the scent of Cornish pasties fighting a losing battle with dieselfrom that, youll get the gist.

But I see the ones I call the Anchored. These arent your daily commuters or tourists staring at their phone maps upside down. The Anchored are the people who never seem to board a train. They linger on the benches, kitted out with three or four battered holdalls. They haul them to the gents, they lug them to Pret for a sandwich. Theyre homeless, or between lives, and everything they own is zipped up in those bags. You cant exactly wander in for a job interview draped in a sleeping bag or try viewing a flat while dragging your entire wardrobe. Storage lockers? Ten quid a day. May as well try buying Buckingham Palace.

Last December, a young chap named Tom started spending his days near my desk. He kept himself tidy, nice shirt, actually managed to look like he belonged, except for the Titanic-sized suitcases and his hiking pack. Sat by my counter, utterly stranded. One Tuesday, he said, panic lighting his eyes, Interview at two oclock, over in the light industrial estate. But theres no way I can take all this. Gave his case a resigned nudge with his foot. If I leave it here, someone nicks it. If I take it, theyll know straight off Ive got nowhere to stay. There goes the job.

I had a peek at the Lost & Found closet behind mea graveyard for soggy umbrellas and scarves forgotten since the Thatcher years. Give me your bags, I told him. Sorry? Pass them over. Ill tag them Found – Pending Claim. Buys you twenty-four hours. You do the interview. Pop back before closing.

The look he gave meyoud think Id handed him a winning lottery ticket. He practically hurled the bags at the counter. Next thing, hes standing tall, half a foot taller now hes let go of the weight. He legged it out the door. At five, he came back, beaming like hed scored for England in the World Cup. Got a second interview! he announced.

After that, I started quietly doing the same for others. Developed a bit of a system. If I spotted someone splashing about in the sinks, struggling with their rucksack, Id give them the signal. Tag it, Id mutter, conspiratorially. Kept a secret logbook under the counter: The Anchor Log. Wasnt so much storing umbrellas as minding burdens, giving these folks a shot at a few hours freedom.

Three months went by before management rumbled me. Mr. Smythe, my supervisor, spotted six illicit suitcases crammed in the storeroom. Howard, he sniffed, this is not a complimentary left-luggage service. Youre putting us at risk. Its not storage, I countered, its an employment initiative. That tartan bags at an interview for a job at the corner caff. The blue ones owner is taking his A Levels this very minute.

I whipped out my Anchor Log. That lad Tom? Came back last week. Didnt need his bags stashed; he was buying a train ticket. Got himself a flat. Off to see his mum in Manchester.

Smythe eyed the bags, scanned my face. Didnt sack me, though. Instead, he cleared out an ancient cleaning cupboard by the front doors, hung up a shiny new sign: Job Hunt Lockers Free for Interviews. See Howard.

Now we work with the local shelter. Got an interview? Get a locker token. Im sixty-two. Still tagging bags. But these years have taught me: nobody can step forward if theyre staggering under the weight of their past. Sometimes, the most useful thing you can give isnt cash. Its simply a safe spot to put their belongings, so theyre free to walk through an open door, head held high.

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