I dialled the wrong number. It happens. Fat fingers. Small buttons. I was trying to call my brother. Instead, I reached a stranger. A woman with a soft voice and a confused “Hello?”
I apologised. She laughed. Said it happened to her all the time. We talked for two minutes. Her name was Anna. She lived in Manchester. She was waiting for a call about a job interview. I wished her luck. Hung up. Thought nothing of it.
An hour later, my phone rang. Unknown number. I answered. It was Anna. “You’re not going to believe this,” she said. “I got the job.” She was calling to thank me. For the luck. For the good wishes. She said I was her good luck charm.
I laughed. Told her to buy a lottery ticket. She said she didn’t believe in gambling. I said neither did I. That was a lie. I believed a little. Not in a big way. Just in the small stuff. The wrong numbers that turn into something else.
That night, I was thinking about Anna. About luck. About the strange ways the universe works. I was sitting on my sofa, scrolling my phone, when I saw a notification from a casino site I’d signed up for months ago and never used. “Your luck is waiting,” it said.
I clicked. The site was called vavada. Simple. Clean. No flashing lights. I logged in. My balance was zero. But there was a promotions tab. I opened it. A welcome-back offer. Free spins. No deposit. Just a gift for returning players.
I almost ignored it. Free spins are usually nothing. But I was thinking about Anna. About wrong numbers. About luck. So I clicked.
The spins were on a slot called “Gates of Olympus.” Bearded guy. Lightning bolts. The usual. I let them run. The first five won nothing. The next three won a few pence. I was down to my last two spins when the screen exploded.
Lightning everywhere. Multipliers stacked. The numbers climbed. Two pounds. Five. Nine. Sixteen. Twenty-four. Thirty-one.
Thirty-one pounds. From free spins. On a Tuesday night. Because of a wrong number.
I sat up. My heart was beating faster. Not from the money. From the coincidence. The wrong number. The good luck charm. The free spins that actually paid.
I didn’t withdraw immediately. I wanted to see if vavada had blackjack. It did. Low stakes. One pound bets. I played five hands. Won three. Lost two. My balance hit thirty-three pounds. I played five more. Won four. Lost one. Thirty-seven pounds.
I played one more hand. Dealer showed a six. I had a ten and a seven. Seventeen. Stood. Dealer flipped a ten. Sixteen. Dealer hit. Drew a five. Twenty-one. I lost. One pound gone. Thirty-six pounds left.
I closed the app. Withdrew thirty pounds. Left six in the account. The withdrawal took two days. When it landed, I transferred it to my main account.
I didn’t spend it on anything big. No shopping spree. No fancy dinner. I used it to buy a coffee for a stranger. That was the idea. Pay it forward. The wrong number. The good luck. The free spins. Pass it on.
I went to a café. Ordered a flat white. Told the barista to charge me for two. The second one was for whoever came in next. The barista looked confused. I explained. She smiled. “That’s nice,” she said. It wasn’t nice. It was just… fair.
Here’s what I learned. Luck is weird. A wrong number. A job interview. A free spin. Thirty pounds. A coffee for a stranger. None of it makes sense. But none of it has to.
I still think about Anna sometimes. The woman from Manchester. The wrong number that called back. I hope she’s happy in her new job. I hope she tells the story of the stranger who wished her luck. I know I tell the story of the stranger who bought a coffee for someone she’ll never meet.
Vavada didn’t change my life. But it changed my Tuesday. It reminded me that small things matter. A dialled digit. A free spin. A flat white for a stranger.
I still have the account. I don’t play often. Once a month, maybe. But every time I do, I think about Anna. About the wrong number. About the thirty pounds that turned into a coffee for someone I’ll never know.
That’s not a win. That’s a chain. A chain of small kindnesses. A wrong number. A good luck charm. A free spin. A flat white.
I hope the stranger liked the coffee. I hope they had a good day. I hope they passed it on.
That’s the thing about luck. It’s not about keeping it. It’s about sharing it. A wrong number. A vavada bonus. A coffee. A smile.
Not a bad chain. Not bad at all.