Just for the Holy One, Blessed Be He, the club converted on Friday nights to game night. It used to be a trivia night, but eventually the bartender, Jerry Thomas, summoned the effrontery to tell the Eyn Od and Eyn Sof that people were tired of playing trivia with an omniscient. For three hundred years, a special table in the corner would be reserved with the same placecard on blue contact paper, and magic marker scrawling out the letters 'Yud-Key-Vav-Key'. When Ribbono Shel Olam arrived, Jerry would have a Wissotzky tea waiting for him, just the way Hashem liked it - with a twist of Slivovitz and heated to exactly 194 degrees. The brave among the club's regulars would converse the ultimate questions while playing the Tetragramaton in games like Go and Minecraft which cannot be won, or at very least, play him in partially solved games like Chess, Reversi, and International Droughts, at which G-d could wow knowledgable watchers by displaying a small corner of the games' infinite permutations.
And yet Shekhina was tired and just wanted to play a simple game of Mah-Jong, that Chinese game which, like so much Chinese food, had attained or been appropriated to honorary Jewish status. No regular would dare play him. Hashem knew the only player who would take him on, but Ha-Shaitan, 'the adversary', had been thrown out in 1667 for breaking a chair over Samson's head - Samson was an old friend of the owner, he'd helped tear down the old building and bought all the linens that decorated the walls (they'd looked really clean for the first 100 years). Truth be told, Samson didn't mind al-Satan all that much, but he was, after all, very particular about his hair, and the owner, Charles Kilkenny, thought it better safe than sorry to do Samson the favor to let Satan know through mutual acquaintances that he should lay low for a couple hundred years.
Nevertheless, it looks a bit spiteful to keep a local celebrity out of one's establishment for more than three-hundred-fifty-two years.
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