I looked in the closet the other day and spotted our old
board game "Monopoly" on the top shelf. The Scotch tape on the
corners was yellowed and cracked, and money and game pieces were scattered in
the box, but the game brings back memories.
As kids, we loved playing "Monopoly," but over
the years, we amended the Parker Brothers rules and played by the Hebert rules.
First, a $500 bill goes in the middle and all fines go in
the middle. The first person to land on Free Parking gets all the money.
Anybody who rolled "snake eyes" – two 1's on the die – got $500.
By the book? Nope. But it sure was fun.
In Scrabble, players could switch out tiles if the word
still made sense. That way, we could use the high-ranking letters like
"J" and "Z" more than once. Best of all, we could brag we
racked up over 300 in Scrabble, conveniently leaving out that lagniappe Hebert
rule.
We played board games for years, mostly on Sunday
afternoons where we'd all settle around the kitchen table and decide we could play
a friendly game to pass the time.
We were lying.
When Heberts play board games, we play for blood.
"Jeopardy" was our favorite because we all
thought we knew more than anybody else in the room. Since we broke the plastic
clickers the first time we played – repeated, heavy clicking will not ensure
you are heard – every player had to find something to bang on the table to
indicate they were ready to answer.
That worked fine until my brother-in-law – as competitive
as the rest of us – dragged in something that weighed five pounds and we all
screamed foul.
Usually it was the guys against the girls, but mostly it
was who didn't want Dad on their team. He was a compulsive but fun cheater and
would always try to con his way out of a wrong answer.
Partial answers were dismissed as wrong by the opposing
team; and no matter who won the argument, the loser would mutter that only
people who didn't have a life would know the answer to the question.
We also knew each others' strengths and weaknesses. My mother
knew movie trivia as if she'd written every word about Hollywood glamour. My
father remembered everything about the 1950s and 1960s. My brothers were good at science, my sisters
at literature and my brother Jeff at everything.
Most of our Jeopardy games were evenly matched until we
got to the Final Jeopardy question and each team had to decide how much to
wager on the final question.
We girls were conservative and would only bet half of our
winnings. The guys, my maverick dad overriding everyone else's objections on
his team, always bet the whole pile of money and yelled out an answer before
they could discuss the question.
When they got it wrong – which was most of the time – no
amount of protest on their side would get us to let them give a second, group
answer. We'd walk away, high fiving each
other, leaving the boys to pick up and vow revenge the next week.
As I put all the faded Monopoly money back in the right
holders, I thought about those Sunday afternoons. Before I grew too nostalgic,
though, I remembered my sister's favorite trick at the end of a Monopoly game
after she'd win.
She'd pick up the game board by both ends and flip all
the money, hotels and playing pieces into the air proclaiming "Loser picks
up."
Gotta love those Hebert rules.
1 comment:
Of course if she LOST, she'd flip the board into the air scattering all the pieces while yelling "WINNER picks up!" That girl.
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