PROMPT DAY 25:
You have been granted one wish.
Nathan had always said, if a Genie ever
appeared and told him he would grant him one wish, he would wish for unlimited
wishes.
He was in his office, a marketing-public
relations agency where he worked as an account manager. He had three clients: A
grocery store chain, a cigarette company, and a manufacturer of furniture. He
had one pro bono client, a charity that rescued animals.
Had was the right word. The CEO came in and
told Nathan they were dropping the pro bono work. When the bastard left, Nathan
turned his chair to look out the window. Looking down to the street below he
could see the top of trucks. One had writing on top that said “Genie movers and
shakers.”
Clever way to make every space commercial
he thought. I’d like to have a Genie at my beck and call.
There was a whoosh.
A genie appeared in his office. “Hello
Nathan.”
“Er, hello.”
“I guess you know why I’m here.” The Genie
gave a sigh. “I’ve become such a cliché.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Not your fault.” The Genie sighed again.
“My name is Omar. Could you tell me your wish. You're my last client today. I
wanta go home.”
“I’ve thought about this possibility for years. I want
unlimited wishes.”
“Damn. You’re a greedy one.”
Nathan sighed.
“No, I’ll do it. It’s in my Genie Contract,
although I can’t do any thing that will hurt or kill people.”
“OK, here goes. Replace my boss with a
woman who allows pro bono work.”
“Done.”
Nathan glanced at his computer. There was a
company announcement that a Marilyn Lake was going to be the new CEO. It was
followed by her statement of the new direction of the agency. Half pro bono.
Also, they would only deal with companies that practiced the highest ethics.
“Wow. I’d like to be able to go home and
surprise my wife.”
Nathan found himself in his kitchen. His
wife was in the living room with the writer from next door. Instead of the
cliché of finding a spouse in bed, they were only holding hands.
The writer left, Nathan and his wife argued
and she stormed out.
Nathan realized he hadn’t eaten at all that
day. He imagined a three course meal which he liked from his favorite restaurant. Walking
into his dining room, the table was set for one: linen, china, a candle. The meal from the restaurant was complete. “Not
bad, Omar.”
“Ya, I’ve got the duplicate in the
kitchen,” the Genie said. "A Genie has gotta eat, you know."
Nathan learned that he had to be careful.
When a man cut him off in traffic, he wished the police would catch him. Two
blocks later he saw a police car had pulled the guy over.
He wished for his wife to come back and
forget about the writer. She did. He wished his mother-in-law wouldn’t come for
Thanksgiving. The woman won two free trips to Florida and she went with her best friend rather than spend the holiday with her daughter and son-in-law.
He continued to work, but his clients were
all ethical and even paid on time. When he played golf, his handicap improved.
He did wish for holes in one but to have a score of 18 pissed off the other
golfers so he wished they would forget it happened.
Having unlimited wishes became boring and
at the same time he had to be careful that he really wanted what he wished for.
“Omar, come back."
The Genie appeared. “Now what?”
“Could I wish for only one wish a day.”
“Thank goodness,” Omar said. “I’m
exhausted. I have no time for anyone else.”
The next morning Nathan tested his limited
wishes. He wished his wife had made waffles and she had. It was raining. He
wished for it to stop.
It didn’t.
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