By Denise DeSio, author of Rose's Will.
For
some people, sports are like soap operas. They watch one or two games and the
next thing you know, their brains turn to mush and all they can think about is
the next episode. Unfortunately, my wife has become one of them. The few
pennies we have go to Mercury tickets and when she's not at a game, she pulls
up a chair 18 inches from our 52" TV set and acts like she's in the first
row.
It's
a progressive disease. First it was just women's basketball. Now it doesn't
matter who's playing or what game it is. If it has "ball" at the end
of it, she's interested. I stood at the stove, preparing rice pilaf and
asparagus tips for friends who were on their way to our house with steaks to
cook on the grill, when the phone rang.
"Hello!
This is Angela from One Community. Congratulations! You've won two tickets to
the Mercury Playoff game."
"This
is a joke, right?" It's a well-known fact that I have as much interest in
sports as a centipede has in shoes.
"No
joke," said Angela. "We just pulled your card out of our
fishbowl."
"Really?"
I vaguely remembered dropping cards around town to advertise the publication of
my novel, Rose's Will. "Thank you," I said, trying to sound as
grateful as a sports-o-phobe could be when she's told that she's won the
equivalent of a coffee enema. "Do I have to pick them up, or will you mail
them?"
"Well,
it's tonight," she said in a tone that clearly indicated the answer should
have been obvious. "The tickets will be at the window."
"Oh,
no!" I said, this time sounding genuinely excited instead of sadly
disappointed. "Not tonight! We're expecting company for dinner any minute.
Can we exchange them for another night (a night when Carol can go with somebody
else, I thought)?"
She
paused. "Um, this is the playoff. If the Mercury don't win, there might
not BE another night.
"Oh
boy," I said, "this is the worst good news my partner is ever going
to hear."
Carol
was standing in front of me listening to my side of the conversation and doing
what she normally gets mad at me for doing: "What? Who is it? What
news?"
I
asked Angela to hold on for a second. "We won two tickets to the Mercury
game," I paused for effect, "tonight". Her face turned from
happy clown into a horror mask. I knew that she knew that we couldn't leave our
friends standing in the doorway with four enormous T-bones while we scampered
off to the game.
"I'm
sorry Angela (I really wasn't sorry), but we just can't." Carol groaned
loudly in the background.
I
was right in the middle of saying "thanks anyway" when Angela said
the dreaded thing:
"We
could give you FOUR tickets instead of two if your friends want to go with
you."
"I
don't know about that," I said. "I'd have to ask them."
Carol
stopped groaning. "What? Ask who? What did she say?" I ignored her.
"Listen,
take my number," Angela said. "Ask your friends and call me
back." Our friends were avid sports fans and as I wrote down the number, I
realized that our plans were about to shift drastically.
So,
yes it's true. That was me on the JumboTron, sitting in the 3rd row eating
peanuts while four perfectly delicious steaks sat in fridge.
Sometimes
you just have to give in.
READ MORE from Denise DeSio at her website. If you're a writer, an aspiring author, you'll enjoy reading about her own journey publishing her debut novel, Rose's Will. There's an excerpt on her website and book review. And lots of entertaining stories from her own (embellished?) life!
Buy ROSE'S WILL for Kindle
Buy ROSE'S WILL for Nook
Buy ROSE'S WILL to read on your PC or laptop (use PDF file)
But ROSE'S WILL for all other devices (PDF, MOBI, EPUB)
Buy ROSE'S WILL for Nook
Buy ROSE'S WILL to read on your PC or laptop (use PDF file)
But ROSE'S WILL for all other devices (PDF, MOBI, EPUB)
Inspired by Denise? Want to share your own story about taking one for the team? Details for how to submit to My Embellished Life are here.
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