The lottery ticket was an accident, in a way. I had stopped at the gas station on Route 9 on a Thursday afternoon in February, on my way back from my doctor’s appointment. The machine was right there near the register. I bought one ticket the way I’d done perhaps a dozen times in my life, with no real expectation.
I tucked it into my coat pocket and forgot about it for 4 days.
I found out I’d won on a Monday morning, sitting alone at the kitchen table with my reading glasses and a cup of instant coffee. I checked the numbers twice, then 3 times. Then I sat very still for a long time, looking at the backyard through the sliding glass door at the pool that had been covered for winter.
$89 million.
I did not make a sound.
I folded the ticket and slipped it inside my Bible between the pages of Proverbs, and I said nothing to anyone.
That was February.
The dinner happened in March.
It was a Tuesday. Unremarkable in every way. Roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans from a bag. Caleb was on his phone. Sophie was complaining about a girl at school. Daniel was tired from work and eating quickly, the way he always did when he was distracted. Renee was talking about a property she was closing on Friday.
I was passing the rolls when Daniel said it.
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