Home / Urban / I WON THE LOTTERY!! / I really won !??!
I really won !??!
last update2025-07-07 08:40:28

The bar was dim, filled with the thick scent of beer and old wood, the kind of place people came to when they wanted to forget the world outside. Jack sank into the stool at the far end of the counter and didn’t bother to remove his coat. He slouched over the bar like a defeated man, and in truth, that’s all he felt like. Defeated. Exhausted. Hollow. The bartender glanced at him once, said nothing, and silently placed a glass of whiskey in front of him. Jack took a sip and winced. The burn felt good.

Time blurred. He didn’t know how long he sat there, staring into the golden liquid like it held some kind of answer. The bar was half full now, and the voices around him rose and fell like waves. Two guys sat beside him, already well into their cups. They were laughing loudly, slapping each other’s backs, and talking nonsense about how they’d blow a hundred million dollars if they ever got lucky.

“I swear, man, if I win that lottery, I’m disappearing,” the bald one said, slurring every other word. “Straight to Bali. I’m gonna marry three women and buy a yacht for my dog.”

The second one laughed and nearly spilled his drink. “Nah, bro. If I win, I’m buying a damn city. Imagine it. A whole city, named after me. Bobville.”

They cracked up, laughing so hard one of them choked on his drink. Jack gave a small, bitter smile and took another sip. He didn’t intend to join their conversation. He didn’t have the energy. But somehow, one of them noticed his silence.

“Hey, you there,” the guy with the buzzcut said, leaning toward him. “You play tonight? Got a ticket, huh?”

Jack chuckled under his breath, the sound dry and hollow. “Yeah,” he muttered. “Got one somewhere.”

“Oooh,” the bald guy said, leaning forward. “Let’s see it, my guy. C’mon, make us all jealous.”

Jack sighed and reached into his pocket without thinking. He pulled out the ticket, wrinkled from being crushed in his jacket, and slid it across the counter toward them like it meant nothing. “Here. Knock yourself out.”

The first dude snatched it up and squinted at the numbers. “You wrote these down or quick pick?”

“Quick pick,” Jack said flatly, staring at the wall.

Baldy pulled out his phone and opened the lottery app. “Let’s see, let’s see. Winning numbers just dropped twenty minutes ago.”

They were clearly joking at first. Just drunk guys having fun. But the laughter died off fast. The more numbers they read, the more quiet they became.

“One... seven... twenty-four...” Buzzcut read slowly. “Thirty-two... forty-nine... fifty-five... and Powerball is sixteen.”

Jack barely heard them. He was lost in his drink. But something shifted in the silence beside him. He looked up and saw both men frozen. The ticket was still in Buzzcut’s hand, but his eyes were locked on the screen. Baldy looked like he had just seen a ghost.

“Bro,” Baldy whispered. “This guy just hit the whole thing.”

Jack blinked. “What?”

“No, like, dude. You just won. This is the winning ticket. You hit the jackpot.” Buzzcut shoved the phone in front of him. “Look for yourself. Every number matches.”

Jack stared at the screen. The numbers matched. Not one or two. All of them. He looked at the ticket again, then back at the phone. His heart stopped. Then, he started racing so fast he thought it would burst through his chest. He read the numbers out loud to himself. Once. Twice. Then again.

There was no mistake.

He had won.

His hand trembled as he picked up the ticket and stared at it like it might vanish if he blinked. The room felt smaller. Louder. The light seemed brighter. He was struggling to breathe.

Buzzcut grabbed him by the shoulder. “Man, listen. We gotta celebrate. You just won the freaking lottery. This is once in a lifetime, brother.”

Baldy raised his glass and shouted. “Drinks on Jack!”

Jack didn’t even remember telling them his name.

Before he could speak, the two men were suddenly his best friends. They patted his back like they’d known him for years. They laughed and called him “big money” and offered advice like he had asked. One was telling him to get a lawyer. The other was suggesting real estate investments. Someone handed him a fresh drink. Then another.

But Jack’s mind had already left the bar.

He wasn’t thinking about drinks or celebrations. He wasn’t even thinking about the jackpot.

He was thinking about Samantha.

She hadn’t answered his calls for days. She had been cold, distant, disrespectful. She made him feel like nothing. She embarrassed him. Ignored him. Let another man touch her, laugh with her, and eat with her. But now things were different.

Now he was rich.

Now he had power.

He stood up so fast that the stool fell behind him. His breath was shallow and fast. The men beside him were still laughing, still trying to high-five him, but he wasn’t listening anymore.

He held the ticket tight in his hand and turned for the door, his steps long and urgent. He pushed through the bar like a man possessed. The night air hit his face like a slap, but it didn’t slow him down. He knew exactly where he was going.

Home.

To the apartment he had shared with Samantha.

She would be there this time. He was sure of it. She had to be. And if she wasn’t, he would wait. He would show her the ticket. He would tell her everything had changed. That he was a new man. and everything she ever wanted, he could now give her.

He was certain, with all his heart, that she would finally accept him.

Now that he was rich. She would love him.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Recuse mission

    This was all his fault, and most of all he had hesitated when he could see the backs of the two men and had a gun. He rushed over to Christa and cradled her body with trembling arms, her warmth fading as fear clawed at his chest. It was so simple, how did he not see it. The truth had been staring at him, yet he had frozen in the moment where a single pull of the trigger might have changed everything. Hesitation had been the source of all his problems, the quiet parasite that had eaten away at his chances. His previous poverty-stricken condition had begun with hesitation, the moment he failed to take the risks that could have saved his family. His father’s death still burned in his mind because hesitation had stopped him from acting sooner, from saving him when it mattered. The loss of the only property his father had given him had come in the same way, his failure to act quickly leaving him stripped of everything. Then the capture of Ava and now Christa being shot. The pattern was car

  • Christa or Ava?

    Before the man who had flanked Jack, the criminal Terrance could even pull the trigger, a sharp, piercing welp echoed from the corner of the hallway. It was Christa. She couldn't contain herself after seeing the man creeping behind Jack. In a way, that sound saved his life. The sound was high-pitched, almost childish, and yet loaded with fear that sliced through the chaos like a knife. Jack’s stomach turned over, a frozen weight settling in his gut. His heart didn’t just race. It seemed to stop, then slam against his ribs like it wanted out. He spun, gun raised, and saw her immediately. Christa was out there, fully exposed, standing just far enough from cover that any bullet could end her in an instant. Her eyes were wide, glimmering with tears, catching the harsh color of the light, and scattering it across her face like fragile glass. Funny enough, Jack’s brain couldn't even think in that instant. His gaze locked on her, and the message was clear without words: “Didn’t I tell

  • Christa or Ava?

    Before the man who had flanked Jack, the criminal Terrance could even pull the trigger, a sharp, piercing welp echoed from the corner of the hallway. It was Christa. She couldn't contain herself after seeing the man creeping behind Jack. In a way, that sound saved his life. The sound was high-pitched, almost childish, and yet loaded with fear that sliced through the chaos like a knife. Jack’s stomach turned over, a frozen weight settling in his gut. His heart didn’t just race. It seemed to stop, then slam against his ribs like it wanted out. He spun, gun raised, and saw her immediately. Christa was out there, fully exposed, standing just far enough from cover that any bullet could end her in an instant. Her eyes were wide, glimmering with tears, catching the harsh color of the light, and scattering it across her face like fragile glass. Funny enough, Jack’s brain couldn't even think in that instant. His gaze locked on her, and the message was clear without words: “Didn’t I tell

  • The key? Be ruthless (part 2)

    “Hey, hands where I can see them!”Jack’s voice cracked. He tried to make it sound strong, commanding, like he was in charge. But that was not how it sounded. It came out sharp and shaky, and it betrayed how scared he was.His arm trembled as he pointed the gun. He could feel the sweat on his palm, the weight of the weapon pulling down on him like it wanted to fall from his hands and clatter to the floor. He had never done this before. Never aimed a real gun at anyone. But here he was, finger shaking over the trigger.The two men froze. Their backs were turned when they first heard him, and for that split second, there was tension in their bodies, stiff like prey caught off guard. They didn’t know who it was behind them. Could’ve been the cops. Could’ve been one of their victims finding a sudden spine. Or maybe someone else entirely.They turned around slowly, deliberately, eyes cutting into the room until they landed on him.They didn’t drop their weapons.“Hey!” Jack barked again, l

  • The key? Be ruthless (part 1)

    After the man said that, he grabbed Ava by her chest and yanked her out with shocking force. The movement was so sudden and violent that her body jerked forward like a ragdoll. Jack and Christa, still pressed tightly against the wall behind them, felt their stomachs clench as though the air itself had been ripped out of their lungs. Fear washed over them in waves. Both could practically hear their own hearts hammering in their chests, loud and frantic, like war drums in their ears.The guard, oblivious and overconfident, did not even think to check behind the very same wall where the other two had been hiding. He was too focused on Ava. His ignorance, however, felt like a thin thread stretched taut, ready to snap at any second.“Kpaaa!” The sharp sound of a slap echoed through the space. Ava’s head whipped to the side as the man’s hand left a red mark across her cheek. His voice followed, deep and harsh, the kind of voice shaped by years of smoke and gravel, the sound of a throat that

  • Life and death satuation

    Bullets rained down on the car like an avalanche, relentless and unforgiving. The sharp cracks of gunfire echoed through the air, each bullet punching holes into the metal frame with sickening impacts that rattled the entire vehicle. Jack, Christa, and Ava kept their heads ducked low, hearts hammering wildly, their eyes fixed somewhere inside the car because there was no time to glance at the road ahead. Their survival depended on raw instinct alone.The assailants showed no sign of stopping. While the bullets riddled the Rolls-Royce, their car aggressively rammed the side, trying to push Jack’s vehicle off balance, to force it into a deadly collision. Jack’s mind raced even as his hands tightened around the steering wheel. He knew the car’s body offered only partial protection. The metal could block some shots, but the high-velocity 9mm rounds from the Uzi could very well punch through and hit one of them. It was a chilling possibility he refused to let happen.Jack’s eyes flicked to

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App