I found our one and only pool table at a yard sale. Bargain time! Only $25 and I got the table, the balls, cue sticks, even chalk. The people at the yard sale were willing to deliver it. That should have alerted me. 

My patient husband hauled the pool table home for me and didn’t make snide remarks. We had room in our basement, and I knew this would be fun for our family.

And we played pool for at least a month before everyone lost interest.

An ignored the pool table morphs into other things.  It became a perfect place to throw outgrown clothes and appliances that quit working. There were at least two fried toasters in the pile. And why would you toss used batteries and used cereal boxes there? Imagine how this once-proud pool table had become a flat trash can. We were cruel to its heritage.

One day I had enough. I listed the pool table for sale. Finding all the balls was a challenge, but we found the last two under a workbench by the cat hair. 

I asked $35 for the pool table even though I paid $25 at a yard sale. It was a slate top pool table, and I hoped that would help get it sold.

A young man showed up with his buddy. He examined the table and did a fist pump. “Slate! I can sell this table anywhere for $200.”

I smiled. I just wanted it out of my basement and wouldn’t mind getting my $25 back. 

“Would you take $30 for it?”

“Sure,” I said.

“Well, I need to come back with a pickup. Could you hold it for me?”

“If you pay today.”

He studied the table and his buddy. Perhaps the $200 dream loomed before him. “I wonder if we can get it home now.”

They bustled around like a hen with newly hatched chicks. Their eyes lit up when they counted all the cue balls, even the hairy ones.The little boxes of chalk were a special bonus, I could tell.

Then they grabbed an end of the table and began pushing. The air was blue with words I didn’t want the kids to hear and the guys sweating before they and the table emerged from the basement.

I almost felt guilty that I didn’t help. 

Grunting and groaning like a mama pig in labor, they hoisted the pool table onto the top of their car. The table legs stuck in the air like a dead bug.

“We’re good now,” the new buyer assured me. 

They tied the table onto the top of the car, running the ropes through the open windows, and then stood for a long moment admiring their work.

At least I thought they were admiring their work. I quickly realized that they had tied their doors closed. After some discussion, the guys decided to worm their way around the ropes and through the open window. 

Soon they drove away with their car windows tied open and the pool table jutting into the sky.

They had a plan for big bucks but, after watching their first steps, I think my $30 sale was safer than their $200 dream.

Get A Free Short Story!

Snag a copy of my newest story, Escape, and join my group of newsletter friends to receive the latest news, updates, and resources. I hate spam, too, and will never spam you or sell your email address. And you can unsubscribe at any time.

You have Successfully Subscribed!