
Every grocery trip with Jason turns into an amusing yet slightly frustrating routine. Whenever it’s time to face the cashier, his phone conveniently rings with an urgent “work call.” This incredible timing leaves me alone to foot the bill. However, this time I decided to break this repetitive cycle with a little surprise plan.
Jason, my dear husband, is an absolute gem in many ways. He’s hardworking and full of humor, yet this quirky aversion to paying at the grocery store has been driving me batty.
Each time we reach the checkout, it’s as if he has a radar for something more pressing. “Oh, babe, I gotta take this,” he chirps, vanishing with silent footsteps and leaving me to manage the cart and the costs.
Initially, I thought nothing of it—after all, as partners we share responsibilities, right?
But then, realization dawned on me like clockwork: his mystery work calls always aligned with checkout. My suspicions were confirmed one day when he trotted back just as I was completing the transaction. When I asked about it, he simply muttered something about work and promised, “I’ll handle it next time.”
Well, “next time” was a long time coming. He never quite managed it — until I decided to take action.
One particularly bustling Saturday, after a hefty shopping spree of essentials and luxuries, I awaited his phone act. Sure enough, as the cashier began the total, the dreaded ringtone echoed.
Predictably, Jason’s hand shot to his pocket, his reflexes honed over weeks of practice.
“Jason…,” I began, just as he smoothly interjected with a sprinkle of urgency, “Oh, babe, I gotta take this — it’s work.” He then shifted out of the line with all the dramatics of negotiating a business affair.
The cashier, a kind older lady, exchanged a knowing glance with me, perhaps having witnessed this farce far too many Saturdays.
It stung a little, this acknowledgment of our routine antics, but the laughter boiling within me whetted my resolve. That night, fueled by simmering bemusement, I concocted a clever strategy.
While Jason dozed, I took a leap into the shadows of subterfuge. No, I wasn’t snooping—it was purely preemptive. I found my contact on his phone and renamed it to “Bank Fraud Department.”
Returning his phone with stealth worthy of a spy novel, I snuggled back into bed, visions of future retribution lulling me into sleep. The stage was set for a performance he wouldn’t forget!
The morning unfolded with usual normalcy as we glided through routine pre-shopping rituals. I had no inkling that today’s outing would leave a mark on Jason’s routine.
We filled our cart brimming with necessities and indulgences, engaging in our typical banter along the way.
As we neared the checkout, his hand began its slow, deliberate journey towards his pocket. It was showtime.
With my heart racing, I casually tapped my smartwatch.
RING. RING.
Jason’s face mirrored his conditioned relief at the sound, until his eyes scanned the “Bank Fraud Department” caller ID.
Panic transformed his demeanor. “Aren’t you going to answer?” I queried with wide-eyed innocence, nudging the drama along.
Swallowing hard, Jason hesitated. The audience—fellow shoppers—was riveted.
Taking control, I brushed a finger across his screen, revealing the farce I’d orchestrated.
“Hello, Jason,” blared the recorded message, “We’ve detected suspicious behavior on your account. Namely, duck-and-depart at grocery bills.”
The tomato redness flooded Jason’s face, causing the surrounding cluster of customers and staff to erupt into knowing mirth.
In a rare twist, Jason navigated the checkout on foreign territory, pulling out his wallet for the very first time in ages. He offered a shy grin as the cashier, the same one from every shopping memory, delivered her approval.
That night, in the car heading home, the silence was almost musical, each mile charged with contemplation of the day’s theatrics.
Upon arrival, we unloaded the bags in telling silence until Jason exhaled, “That was low.”
I smiled sweetly, “Lower than ducking out on your turn at paying?”
His face twisted in sheepish acknowledgment, our dialogues of jests barely covering the mutual understanding that filled the room.
“How long?” he asked, half-amazed, half-chastised. His surprise tugged at long-buried sincerity, the veil lifted on our automatic game-play.
“Not as long as you. End state: your chronic escape from the checkout,” I quipped back, arms loaded with milk and knowing looks.
“Truly ingenious,” he acknowledged with awe as we neatly stacked groceries.
“Cleverest con trick yet,” I boasted, a faux curtsey sealing the pact that from this day forth, Jason’s getaways from the till would be historical anecdotes.
Bonded anew by shared laughter, we laid the remnants of the day’s schemes aside.
“I’m sorry,” Jason’s voice cut through the clatter of cans. “I wasn’t right to do that.”
“Old habits die hard,” I mused aloud, setting down the last of the clementines.
So life presses on, with melodic trails of lessons learned, and shopping lists scanned through new perspectives. Jason even proudly palms over his card, those former “calls” now humorous footnotes in our busy lives.