On a
weekend in Atlantic City, a woman won a bucketful of quarters at a
slot machine. She was ready to take a break from the slots for
dinner with her husband in the hotel dining room. But first she
wanted
to stash the quarters in her room. "I'll be right back and we'll
go
to eat," she told her husband and carried the coin-laden bucket to the
elevator.
As she was about to walk into the elevator she noticed two men already
aboard. Both were black. One of them was big, very big ...
an intimidating figure. The woman froze. Her first thought
was: 'These two are going to rob me.' Her next thought was:
'Don't be a bigot,
they look like perfectly nice gentlemen.' But racial stereotypes
are
powerful, and fear immobilized her.
She stood and stared at the two men. She felt anxious, flustered
and ashamed. She hoped they didn't read her
mind ... but they had to know what she was thinking! Her
hesitation about joining them in the elevator was all too obvious
now. Her
face was flushed. She couldn't just stand there, so with a mighty
effort of will she picked up one foot and stepped forward and followed
with the
other foot and was on the elevator.
Avoiding eye contact, she turned around stiffly and faced the elevator
doors as they closed. A
second passed, and then another second, and then another.
Her fear increased! The elevator didn't move. Panic
consumed her. 'I'm trapped,' she thought, 'and about to be
robbed!' Her heart
plummeted. Perspiration poured from every pore.
Then one of the men said, "Hit the floor." Instinct told her to
do what they told her. The bucket of quarters flew upwards as she
threw
out her arms and collapsed on the elevator floor. A shower of
coins
rained down on her. Take my money and spare me, she prayed.
More seconds passed. She heard one of the men say politely,
"Ma'am, if you'll just tell us what floor you're going to, we'll push
the
button." The one who said it had a little trouble getting the
words out.
He was trying mightily to hold in a belly laugh. The woman lifted
her
head and looked up at the two men. They reached down to help her
up.
Confused, she struggled to her feet. "When I told my friend here
to hit the floor," said the average-sized one, "I meant that he should
hit the
elevator button for our floor. I didn't mean for you to hit the
floor, ma'am." He spoke genially. He bit his lip. It
was
obvious he was having a hard time not laughing.
The woman thought: 'What a spectacle I've made of myself.' She
was too humiliated to speak. She wanted to blurt out an apology,
but words failed her. How do you apologize to two perfectly
respectable gentlemen for behaving as though they were going to rob
you? She
didn't know what to say.
The three of them gathered up the strewn quarters and refilled her
bucket. When the elevator arrived at her floor they insisted on
walking her to her room. She seemed a little unsteady on her
feet, and
they were afraid she might not make it down the corridor. At her
door
they bid her a good evening.
As she slipped into her room she could hear them roaring with laughter
as they walked back to the elevator. The woman brushed herself
off. She pulled herself together and went downstairs for dinner
with her
husband.
The next morning flowers were delivered to her room ... a dozen
roses. Attached to EACH rose was a crisp one hundred dollar
bill. The
card said, "Thanks for the best laugh we've had in years."
It was signed, Eddie Murphy and Michael Jordan.
Copyright
© 2006, Jace Carlton. All International Rights Reserved.
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