Walter and his wife, Ethel, went to the state fair every single year. And every single year, without fail, Walter would stop, stare up at the helicopter circling overhead, and sigh.
“Ethel,” he’d say dreamily, “I’d sure love to take a ride in that helicopter.”
And every year, Ethel would give the same practical reply. “I know you would, Walter. But that ride costs fifty dollars… and fifty dollars is fifty dollars.”
Time passed, as it does.
One year at the fair, Walter looked up at the helicopter again, then turned to Ethel with unusual seriousness.
“Ethel,” he said softly, “I’m 87 years old now. If I don’t take that ride this year, I might never get another chance.”
Ethel folded her arms. “Walter, that helicopter is fifty dollars… and fifty dollars is still fifty dollars.”
The pilot, who had been standing nearby, overheard the exchange and walked over with a grin.
“I’ll tell you what,” he said. “I’ll take both of you up for free—on one condition. If you can stay completely silent the entire ride—not one word, not one sound—I won’t charge you a penny. But if either of you says even a single word, it’s fifty dollars.”
Walter and Ethel exchanged a look. Deal.
Up they went.
Once airborne, the pilot decided to test them. He swooped low over the fairgrounds. He banked sharply left and right. He climbed high, then dropped fast. He spun, dipped, and pulled off every dramatic maneuver he could think of.
Not a peep from the back seat.
He tried again—tighter turns, steeper dives, faster spins.
Still… complete silence.
Finally, they landed safely. The pilot turned around, shaking his head in amazement.
“I’ve got to hand it to you,” he said to Walter. “I did everything I could to make you yell. But you didn’t say a single word. I’m impressed!”
Walter nodded calmly.
“Well,” he said, “to be honest… I almost said something when Ethel fell out.”
The pilot’s jaw dropped.
“But,” Walter added with a shrug, “fifty dollars is fifty dollars.”