Home Funny My husband, Chris, posted an online ad to sell our car.

My husband, Chris, posted an online ad to sell our car.

My husband, Chris, posted an online ad to sell our car.

This morning he went outside to make it shine — polishing, scrubbing, buffing until it looked like it had just rolled out of the showroom. He left his phone on the hallway table.

Our little boy was playing under the car, and I was sitting inside when suddenly Chris’s phone rang.
I thought, Great! First buyer!
So of course, I picked up — who wants to lose a sale, right?

— Hi, — a man said on the other end. — Are you the one selling the car?

I smiled. Jackpot. I may not know much about engines, but I can talk.
— Yes, we are! It’s a great car — a real treasure. It’ll make your mornings brighter and serve you faithfully, twenty-four seven.

— Oh yeah? And what year is this “treasure”? — he asked.

I had no clue. And yelling out the window to Chris felt like too much work. So I went with the logical option — adapt to the buyer’s expectations.

— What year would you like it to be? — I asked sweetly.

— The newer, the better, of course.

— Perfect! It’s a 2021. And if you buy today, I’ll throw in a free upgrade to 2022, — I said without blinking.

He burst out laughing.

— All right, funny lady. And what’s the mileage?

I straightened up even though he couldn’t see me.
— And… where do I find that again?

— On the dashboard, ma’am. The odometer.

— Oh, great! — I sighed in relief. — Chris was tinkering with it last night. When he finished, he said: “There. Good as new. Not a single mile on it.”

The guy was laughing so hard I could hear him choking.

— So, how well has this car been taken care of? — he asked.

— Sir! My husband treats this car better than he used to treat me! — I said, genuinely offended. — He once hauled gravel from the river, and afterward he swept the interior with a tiny broom. Then he said, “Any other car would’ve fallen apart. But this one? A tank.”

— And how’s the undercarriage?

— Perfect. Right now Chris is under there filling it in with some kind of black goo and foam. I even heard him hammering. He said, “Whoever buys this baby is getting a real treasure.”

The man was wheezing from laughter.

— One more question, — he said. — How’s the gas mileage?

— Let’s just say… it eats like a linebacker after a wedding. If we don’t sell it soon, we’ll have to start walking everywhere.

— Honestly, — the man said between laughs — I’d rather buy you than the car.

— Tempting, but I’m not for sale, — I replied. — Chris is keeping me for a rainy day.

— Has the car ever been in an accident?

— Not officially. But there was… an “internal incident.”

— Internal?

— My mother-in-law once asked Chris to give a young bull a ride from the farm. The bull got nervous and rammed the roof, made a hole.

— In the roof?!

— What? Wouldn’t you panic if a pig in a seatbelt was sitting next to you?

— A pig?!

— Yes, but strapped in properly — safety first. But when the bull made the hole, the pig freaked out, and Chris hit the guardrail. A cop nearby jumped into a tree to save himself.

The man was laughing so hard I thought he might pass out.

— So how’s the car after all that?

— Excellent! Chris replaced the roof. Found one in a junkyard, patched it up with modeling clay, and it drives like a dream.

When Chris came back inside, I proudly told him I’d almost sold the car and walked him through the conversation.

He didn’t find it as funny as I did. He changed his phone password and now takes it with him even to the bathroom.

All I wanted was to help.

So if any of you ever plan to sell a car — call me.
I’ll find you a buyer… or at the very least, make them laugh until they cry