…emerges carrying a translucent plastic bucket the size of a small toddler, sloshing with brine and packed to the brim with those distinct, crinkle-cut green disks of salvation.
He thunks it onto the stainless steel counter.
“Company policy says I can’t sell you just the pickles from the line,” he says, wiping his hands on his apron with an utterly deadpan expression. “But I can sell you a bulk condiment replacement tub. Thatβll be five dollars and forty-two cents.”
I could have kissed him. I slapped a ten-dollar bill on the counter, told him to keep the change as a tip for saving my marriage, and hauled the heavy, sloshing tub out to my car like I had just secured the Holy Grail. The sharp smell of dill and vinegar instantly permeated the interior of my sedan, but I didn’t care. I was a man on a mission, returning victorious from the battlefield.
When I walked through the front door, my wife was pacing the living room, looking like a tiger in a very comfortable maternity cage. Her eyes locked onto the bucket. She didn’t ask questions. She didn’t ask how much it cost, what I had to say to get it, or why I had brought home enough pickles to supply a small franchise for a week.
She just silently went to the kitchen, grabbed a fork, and sat heavily on the couch, lodging the bucket securely between her knees.
I sat in silence and watched her eat McDonald’s pickles for forty-five straight minutes while a true-crime documentary played in the background. When she finally put the fork down, she let out a deep sigh, looked at me with genuine tears in her eyes, and whispered, “You’re the best husband ever.”
Our kid is two years old now. I still don’t know what happened to the rest of the bucket, but to this day, the manager at that McDonald’s gives me a silent nod of respect whenever I go through the drive-thru.
