Best Friend Betrayl
If you
couldn't trust your best friend, then who could you trust?
"We've been friends since third grade." Ted bragged
whenever he introduced or talked about Christian.
"Indeed, best friends for life," Christian would back up
Ted's story." Been through everything together."
They trusted each other.
Implicitly.
"Ted might be a low-life-hick," Christian would joke.
"But I would die for that hick."
Christian, a dirty-dealing lawyer, lived on the luxurious East
Bench of the city. Ted lived in the heart of suburbia, a recent move he had
just made, afforded by his new promotion.
As the two friends strolled along the historical district,
Christian said, "Just a few more promotions, Teddie boy, and then you can
afford Italian suits like mine."
"Hey, I take pride in my thrift store finds. You might spend
thousands on your suits, but I only spend twenty bucks on mine."
"And it shows, Teddie boy."
The two friends crossed in front of the Good Time Hotel, the
oldest building in the city. Ted had spent his honeymoon there with Angela. He
couldn't help but smile whenever he passed it.
"I actually have more closets filled with clothes than you
do," Ted said.
Christian's eyes raised, "Do tell."
"The girls' room has a closet full of clothes. The boys' room
has a closet full of clothes. I have Angela's closet and then mine. That's four
closets stuffed with clothes."
Christian clicked his tongue. "You know, Teddie, you might
have a little more money if you quit having so many kids. What do you have,
twenty now?"
"Just five," Ted snorted. "You're just jealous cuz
you don't have kids," Ted's jab lacked effect.
They stopped in front of Christian's black Lamborghini. Christian
rubbed his hand across the slick top. The fresh wax reflected the sun into
Ted's eyes, and he squinted and looked away. "Jealous of five whiny kids
and a demanding wife. You are right, Teddie boy. I would trade this exquisite
car in just to have your life."
Ted dropped his eyes. He didn't have a come-back burn for
Christian. In truth, Ted loved his wife and kids. He didn't need Christian's
empty life of material goods. He had love from his family. However, a few more
trailing zeros on his paycheck could help.
Back at work, Ted sat in a straight chair, the hard plastic
compressing his spine.
"I am sorry, Ted," Marshall said, avoiding Ted's eyes.
Marshall, his boss coward behind the cherrywood desk as some sort of shield.
The tension dripped off Marshall's unusually rigid body.
"It's no problem," Ted replied, squirming in the hard
chair that ground into his tailbone. The humidity in the office made Ted's polo
shirt stick to his back.
"Ted, you see. Well, I guess I…I guess…well what I mean to
say…I don't know how to say."
Marshall moved out from the barrier of the desk and walked past
Ted, and opened the door.
"You are laid off," Marshall said as he zoomed out of
his office.
"What!"
Ted stared at Marshall's empty chair.
"Five kids and no job. How will I tell Angela?
How can I face my kids?"
Ted's soul darkened. "What about Robby's insulin?" Ted's
middle child had brittle diabetes. "I can't lose my insurance."
Thirty pounds of worry filled Ted's stomach. He dragged it along
the office floor as he walked to his cubicle.
"Good thing we just bought a huge home and doubled the
mortgage payment last year. Will my home be foreclosed upon as I lose
everything"?
Four months passed, leaving Ted to pump gas at the Metro down the
street. He hated his job. No, hate was too nice of a word. He detested his job.
But Ted didn't have pride. He had kids to feed. He would do whatever it took to
provide food for his family. The next day the realtors would be over to take
pictures of his house. Ted would move into a worse dump than they lived in
while he went to college, except now, they had five kids to stuff into it.
Ted tried to forget his problems when he met with Christian.
"How are you doing, Ted?" Christian asked.
The two friends sat together at their favorite fishing hole. Ted
chugged his root beer as he cast out his line. Rain dribbled down his face.
Since pumping gas in the rain all day, Ted had become used to being constantly
soggy.
"Can I be honest with you?"
Christian wiped the water off his face. "That's what I am
expecting."
"I don't know how much I can take. Sometimes I think Angela
and the kids would be better off without me if I weren't around, if you know
what I mean. My life insurance policy would be enough where Angela could move
into a decent home, and she would have enough to live off until our youngest
moved out. Plus, she could get health insurance."
"Don't say that." Christian looked down at the power
bait he put on his hook.
"All right. I am done talking. You told me to talk, and then
you undermined my thoughts. If I wanted a fluffy conversation, I would talk to
Angela."
Christian looked at Ted, "Sorry, you are right. Go on, Teddie
boy."
Heartburn radiated in Ted's chest, and he secretly hoped it was a
heart attack that would end it all. "I just don't think I can do this for
much longer."
"Listen, I will drop some deer steaks off tomorrow."
"I can't take your food." Ted's swollen fingers felt
stiff as his head pounded. The body aches increased daily along with the
stress.
"I love you, Teddie boy. We've been best friends forever. You
cannot stop me. How about we don't talk about the steaks anymore. Just know
they will be there."
Ted couldn't say thanks, for he hated being a charity case. Yet,
his bosom swelled with warmness from his friend's offer. Next to Angela,
Christian was the most incredible person in his life.
"Listen, Teddie. You need a break. Next weekend I will take
you camping to clear your mind."
Christian and Ted camped all the time as kids, but as Christian
had risen in status, he abandoned camping.
"Wow, are you sure you are willing to make such a
sacrifice?" Ted joked. "You might get your manicure dirty."
"My buddy has a cabin we can use. No dirt. Just
relaxation."
Christian's offer sounded terrific. Maybe the break would settle
Ted's nerves.
The day of the campout arrived. "Thankfully, Angela let me
come," Ted said as he jumped into Christian's Lamborghini at their pit
stop. Ted had wondered if Angela would try to stop his trip with Christian, but
she seemed glad to see him take a break from stress.
"What's that?" Christian asked about the paper Ted
gripped.
"It's the Million Mingle Lottery. Man, if I won this, this
could change everything."
Christian focused on the lottery ticket and watched Ted slip it
into his wallet. "You know what, that sounds like a great idea. Give me a
minute. I believe I will accrue a few myself." Christian dashed back into
the convenience store, then returned with a handful of tickets.
"What will you do with your millions?" Ted asked.
"Well," Christian contemplated as he peeled out of the
driveway. Within seconds, he flew down the freeway. Ted proudly smiled at all
the cars they passed. He loved when Christian took him for rides in the Lamborghini.
Christian said, "I'm sitting pretty. I don't know what I
would do. Maybe buy an island somewhere. My home is paid off. Maybe I would get
a fleet of classic cars." Christian swerved dangerously close in front of
another car. "I would take several trips around the world and lavish in
fine wine and women."
Ted shook his head. Christian's ideas sounded so short-sided,
trivial.
"What would you do?" Christian asked.
"Insurance! For sure. The first important thing. Then, I
would buy a decent house for my family. I would set up college trusts for my
kids. My brother works hard and could use some assistance." Ted didn't
need all the fancy stuff that defined Christian's already empty life.
Ted gasped when he saw the lavish cabin surrounded by trees. So
serene. Christian and Ted spent the evening fishing in the private pond off the
deck.
"They draw the lotto numbers tomorrow. I can't wait! I know I
won this time." Christian watched the water skitters move across the lake.
Ted replied, "You can't win when I actually hold the winning
ticket." He chuckled as his face lighted up." And I can't stop
thinking about the premium insurance plan I will buy for Robby. We are already
forty thousand in debt with Robby's medical bills. I will use that money for my
son." Ted leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes. It didn't seem
fair. He had worked hard to provide for his family, and in the end, he was left
destitute for no fault of his own. Everywhere, engineers were being laid off,
just like him. But they probably didn't have a sick child to care for.
Saturday evening came, and Christian watched the lotto draw.
"All my tickets were a bust." He moaned. "Fifty tickets and I
didn't even score two dollars. I will never buy lotto tickets at that
convenience store again. Come check your ticket, Ted."
Ted stood before the enormous bookshelf, looking for a book to
read. "Nah, I am good."
"Why don't you want to see if you won?"
"Because, right now, in my heart, I am a winner. Once I check
those numbers, my dream dies. Right now, I still have the high from hope
surging through me."
"But that doesn't matter because, you see, Teddy Boy, you did
win."
"It's okay, Christian. I will check on Monday."
"That is stupid."
Ted shrugged.
That night, Christian woke up to use the bathroom. As he passed
the formal room, he noticed Ted's wallet on the side table. Christian tiptoed
to Ted's bedroom and could hear his best friend snoring behind the door.
Christian snickered. Ted had snored as long as he knew him. Christian tiptoed
back into the family room and picked up Ted's wallet. He looked through it and
found Ted's lotto ticket.
Christian opened the lottery web page and checked Ted's numbers.
He had to stick his shirt sleeve in his mouth to keep from screaming. Ted had
won the 346-million-dollar lottery!
Christian stared at the lotto ticket for twenty minutes. Then, he
did the unthinkable; he slipped one of his losing lottery tickets into Ted's
wallet while pocketing Ted's winning ticket. Christian had switched lottery
tickets with his 'best friend'.
The relaxing trip rejuvenated Ted, and it ended way too soon.
"Guess what," Christian said on their drive home.
"I looked in my luggage and found five lottery tickets I hadn't checked. I
guess I will check them when I get home." Christian's voice came out tight
and robotic. Ted didn't notice.
"Wouldn't that be funny if I won after all?"
"Won what?" Ted asked.
"The lottery. Wouldn't that be funny if one of those tickets
I found was really the winner?"
"I guess," Ted said as he imagined his ticket winning.
He soon would know. What a relief it would be to have insurance for his son and
a lovely house for his wife.
Monday, as Ted checked the losing lottery ticket from his wallet,
he heard on the radio, "One of our own residents won the
346-million-dollar lottery. Christian Thimble brought the ticket and his lawyer
in early this morning."
"I'll be; Christian won!" Ted said, jumping up.
"Way to go, Christian. You are a great guy. No one deserves it more than
you," and Ted kissed the top of his sick son's head and headed to pump gas
for eight hours in the Oregon rain.
______________________________________________________________
Best Friend Betrayl
by Stephanie Daich
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