Then dessert arrived.
The waiter placed a pristine white plate in front of me, trimmed in gold. Written in elegant chocolate script were the words:
“Congrats on Your Promotion!”
I stared at it, confused.
Because I hadn’t gotten a promotion.
In fact, just weeks earlier, I’d been passed over for the role I’d worked toward for more than a year—given instead to a man I had personally trained. Office whispers suggested I was “about to settle down” and would be “too distracted” to lead.
Ryan knew all of this.
And yet, he leaned back in his chair, smiling.
“Positive vibes, babe,” he said lightly. “Just manifesting your success.”
Something inside me hardened.
This wasn’t encouragement.
It was mockery disguised as optimism.
The Moment I Stopped Shrinking
I didn’t cry. I didn’t argue.
I quietly paid for my half of the meal, stood up, and walked out—leaving Ryan alone with his fake celebration and untouched dessert.
He didn’t call that night.
Or the next.
By the third day, I understood something clearly: anyone who jokes about your pain isn’t confused—they’re comfortable minimizing it.
So I decided to return the favor.
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