I devoted years to a man I thought would be my forever, only to realize he saw me as the butt of his cruel joke. On the night I thought he’d finally propose, he embarrassed me in front of strangers. But I wasn’t going to let the story end with me being the victim.
Yesterday was our three-year anniversary. I was convinced Ryan—my boyfriend, also 29—was going to propose. He even dropped hints by making a reservation at a downtown restaurant fancier than anywhere he’d ever taken me. Candlelight, white tablecloths, folded napkins—everything screamed “big moment.”
He told me to “dress nicely” and teased that he had a surprise for me. That was all it took for my imagination to run wild.
I got my nails done, curled my hair, and slipped into a green dress he once told me made me look “like I belonged in a film.” I could already picture the ring box on the dessert plate.
That week had been awful for me at work. I’d been up for a promotion—something I’d sacrificed nights, weekends, and sanity for—only to watch it handed to Matt, the brand-new grad I’d been mentoring.
The reason? Rumors. The whispers that management didn’t want to “invest in a woman who’d probably get married and have a baby soon.” No one admitted it outright, but I knew. A 29-year-old woman was a liability in their eyes.
I smiled through it at work, then cried in my car. Ryan had been the one I vented to. He held me while I sobbed and told me he understood. Or so I thought.
That’s why I needed that anniversary night to be something good. Something real.
Dinner started out perfect. He complimented me, we ordered wine, shared appetizers. I kept waiting for the moment. My heart raced when dessert finally arrived.
But instead of a ring box, the waiter set down a plate holding a slice of chocolate cake with pink icing across the top:
“Congrats on Your Promotion!”
I froze.
Ryan beamed, like he’d pulled off the greatest surprise. “Cute, right? I figured we’d manifest it together.”
The waiter, confused, asked what position I’d gotten. I stumbled, embarrassed, while Ryan chirped, “She’s just being modest—it’s happening soon!”
Heat climbed up my neck. As soon as we were alone, I whispered, “Why would you do this? You know I didn’t get it.”
He grinned. “That’s why! I thought it’d lighten the mood. Positive vibes, babe.”
“No,” I hissed. “You made me a liar in front of a stranger. That’s humiliating!”
His smile dropped. “Oh, come on. You’re taking it too seriously. If you’d actually gotten the promotion, maybe I wouldn’t have had to fake it.”
My stomach twisted. “You weren’t supporting me. You were making me a joke.”
He shrugged. “You’re being dramatic.”
That’s when I slid my credit card across the table. “I’ll pay for myself. You can go.”
He stormed out muttering about me “ruining the vibe.” I stayed, ordered another glass of wine, and sat until I calmed down.
Three days later, he was still texting. I ignored him. My friends split into two camps—half said he meant well, half said he was cruel. My best friend Hannah simply texted: “Girl, you need a revenge party.”
So I threw one.
Ryan loves attention, especially for his birthday. He obsesses over his hair, constantly spraying and checking the thinning spot at the crown. That gave me the perfect idea.
I invited friends—mine and his—and decorated the apartment in black and gold balloons. A giant banner stretched across the living room:
“Congrats on Becoming Bald!”
On the table sat a cake identical to the one from the restaurant, except it read: “Manifesting It Early!”
Ryan arrived smug, certain I’d apologize. He walked in and froze.
“What the hell is this?!”
I smiled sweetly. “Just shifting the energy. Good vibes, right?”
His buddies cracked up, one nearly spitting out his beer. “Dude, she got you good,” another laughed.
Ryan’s face turned red. “This isn’t funny!”
“Didn’t you think it was funny when you faked my promotion?” I asked. “I just returned the favor.”
He sputtered. “This is petty.”
“No,” I said calmly. “Mine’s a joke. Yours was cruel.”
Even his friends muttered agreement. One shrugged. “Man, you kind of asked for it.”
Ryan stomped out, yelling that we were over.
“Okay,” I said, sipping my drink.
The party fizzled, guests trickled out. But one person stayed—Zach, one of Ryan’s quieter friends.
“You know,” he said, leaning against the counter, “Ryan always claimed you had no sense of humor. But honestly, that was legendary.”
I raised an eyebrow. “You’re not mad I embarrassed your friend?”
He shrugged. “He had it coming. And… for the record, I always thought you deserved better.”
I blinked, surprised.
He grinned. “So, what are you doing this weekend?”
I laughed. “Are you seriously asking me out right now?”
“Depends. If I lose my hair, are you gonna throw me a party?”
“Only if you earn it,” I teased.
For the first time in weeks, I laughed for real. This time, the punchline was mine—and it felt good.