While tidying the kitchen counter, I spotted the Mega Millions ticket I’d hastily bought the day before, stuck to my shopping list notepad with dried yogurt from Jabari’s breakfast. I’d bought it at a small liquor store next to Kroger when I’d ducked in from pouring rain, and an elderly woman with wrinkled hands and an Atlanta Falcons cap had pitifully asked me to buy a ticket for good luck. I’d never believed in these games of chance—they seemed like a tax on people who couldn’t do math—but I felt bad for the woman and spent five dollars on a quick pick ticket.
Looking at it now, I chuckled at my own foolishness. It was probably trash. But as if by fate, I pulled out my phone and went to the official Georgia lottery website to check it as a joke, expecting nothing, prepared to throw it away and forget this small moment of weakness.
The results of the previous night’s drawing appeared on the screen in crisp black numbers against white background.
I started mumbling them aloud: “Five… twelve… twenty-three…”My heart skipped a beat. The ticket in my hand also had 5, 12, and 23.
Trembling, I kept checking: “Thirty-four… forty-five… and the Mega Ball… five.”My God.
I had matched all five numbers and the Mega Ball. Fifty million dollars. Fifty. Million. I tried to count the zeros in my head—seven zeros, more money than anyone in my family had ever seen, more money than seemed real—and my hands shook so hard I dropped my phone. It clattered on the linoleum floor, screen-down, and I sat down hard on the cold kitchen tile, head spinning, the world tilting on its axis.
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