Three women arrive at the gates of Heaven, where St. Peter greets them with a simple rule:
“Welcome to Heaven! There’s just one thing — DO NOT step on the ducks!”
As they enter, they realize the place is full of ducks. Ducks waddling, ducks napping, ducks blocking paths — like someone spilled an entire farm across the clouds.
No matter how careful they are, the first woman accidentally steps on one.
QUACK!
St. Peter appears immediately, dragging along the ugliest man she has ever seen.
“Your punishment? Spending eternity chained to this man!”
The second woman becomes extra cautious, tiptoeing around like she’s defusing bombs. But the next day — squish.
Another duck.
St. Peter appears again with another extremely unattractive man.
“Same rule applies!”
Now the third woman is absolutely terrified. She walks slower than a sloth on vacation. She sleeps standing up so she doesn’t roll onto a duck. She refuses to blink if she’s near feathers, just in case.
Months go by. Not a single duck is harmed. She’s proud. Confident. Victorious.
Then one day, St. Peter appears…
And he’s not alone.
St. Peter stands beside a stunningly handsome man. Not just good-looking — this man is sculpted like a marble statue that fell out of Heaven’s gym. The third woman gasps.
Tall. Broad shoulders. Eyes like blue lightning. A smile that could melt glaciers.
Before she can speak, St. Peter takes her hand and chains her to the gorgeous stranger.
She feels her soul levitate.
“W-wait,” she stammers. “Is this… is this my reward? I didn’t step on any ducks!”
The handsome man sighs deeply — almost tragically.
“I’m sorry,” he says with a defeated shake of his head. “I don’t know what you did… but I stepped on a duck!”
Her jaw drops.
St. Peter grins, gives them both a pitying shrug, and disappears into a cloud of feathers, leaving the two of them alone.
She stands frozen, mind spinning. Months of effort… only to end up chained to a man who looks like he was handcrafted by divine artists — but apparently isn’t too bright.
The handsome man looks around awkwardly. “Uh… sorry again. I’m kind of clumsy. And blind in one eye.”
The woman blinks in surprise. “You’re blind?”
“Well,” he corrects, “not blind-blind. More like… visually spontaneous.”
“That’s not even a real phrase,” she mutters.
“Exactly,” he says proudly. “I made it up.”
She stares at him. “Oh no.”
A JOURNEY BEGINS — AND IT’S NOT WHAT SHE EXPECTED
Days pass.
Despite his looks, the man is chaotic.
He trips over clouds.
He forgets which way is “forward.”
One time he tried to pet a duck and accidentally tackled St. Francis.
He apologizes constantly.
He rambles about random things like cloud density and celestial cheese inventories.
He sings terribly — terribly — but with so much enthusiasm she can’t even be mad.
Against her will… she starts to like him.
She finds his clumsiness charming. His innocence refreshing. His smile addictive.
Every time he laughs, she feels something tug at her heart. And every time he apologizes for stepping on the duck that cursed them together, she notices he means it. Really means it.
One afternoon, as they walk across a field of shimmering white feathers, she asks quietly:
“What were you doing before you… stepped on the duck?”
He sighs and sits down.
“I was looking for someone.”
“Someone? Who?”
He turns to her, eyes soft. “My soulmate.”
Something inside her flips.
“But why Heaven?” she asks. “Why not Earth?”
He smiles. “St. Peter told me she’d be here.”
Her heart drops.
“He said she’d be smart,” the man continues, “and stubborn, and kind. And that I’d know her the moment I met her.”
Now her soul feels like pudding.
“You… think that’s me?”
He shrugs. “Well, you’re chained to me for eternity. Hard to get closer than that.”
She laughs — really laughs — for the first time since she arrived.
And that’s when St. Peter appears again.
THE TWIST
St. Peter smirks. “I see you two have bonded.”
The woman frowns. “Is this… some kind of test?”
“Oh no,” St. Peter says cheerfully. “Just cosmic irony. The universe loves that.”
She crosses her arms. “So you chain us together randomly?”
St. Peter chuckles. “Nothing in Heaven is random.”
She raises an eyebrow. “Then why punish the others with ugly men?”
He shrugs. “Because their punishment was vanity, not ducks.”
Her eyes widen. “Wait… WHAT?”
He walks closer.
“You avoided stepping on ducks,” he explains. “But you’re here for a reason. You were shallow… incredibly shallow.”
She sputters, “I— I am NOT shallow!”
St. Peter gestures to the handsome man beside her. “You didn’t even try to get to know him before assuming you deserved him as a reward.”
She blushes deeply.
“And HE,” St. Peter says, nodding at the man, “stepped on a duck on purpose.”
“What?!” she gasps.
The man grins sheepishly. “I saw you. You were tiptoeing around like a nervous ballerina. I figured… if we were chained, you’d have to talk to me.”
“You stepped on a duck… for ME?”
He shrugs. “Worth it.”
She tries to respond, but her heart is suddenly full — annoyingly, overwhelmingly full.
St. Peter claps his hands.
“Good. Lesson learned.”
The chains dissolve.
The woman gasps. “We’re free?”
“You are,” St. Peter says. “But whether you stay together is up to you now.”
He disappears into a cloud of ducks.
THE ENDING — A HEAVENLY SURPRISE
The man stands shyly, rubbing the back of his neck.
“So… uh… now that we’re not forced to be together… do you still want to…?” He trails off nervously.
She steps closer.
“I think,” she says, “that maybe I stepped on a duck too.”
He blinks. “But you didn’t.”
She smiles softly.
“No. But I stepped on my pride. And maybe that’s better.”
He grins — that warm, ridiculous, heart-melting grin.
“So… date in the Cloud Garden?” he asks.
She nods. “Only if you promise not to accidentally fall into a duck pond.”
He laughs. “No promises.”
They walk toward Heaven’s glowing horizon together — not chained, not forced, but choosing each other.
And somewhere behind them…
QUACK!
She freezes.
“Did you step on—”
“Nope!” he says quickly. “That one wasn’t me.”
They both turn slowly…
And see St. Peter, smiling mischievously, holding a single duck under his arm.
“Relax,” he says. “Just keeping you humble.”