It was a quiet evening, just dinner with a man I’d been seeing for a few weeks. Everything was going perfectly — the wine, the laughter, the way he looked at me like I was the only person in the room.
Then the waitress came back with the bill. Her smile had faded.
“Sir, your card was declined,” she said softly.
He looked confused, embarrassed even, and began searching for another card. But before he could, she said quickly, “Don’t worry, it’s all taken care of.”
We left, and as I stepped outside, the waitress followed us out the door. She caught my arm and whispered, trembling, “I lied.”
Then she slipped the folded receipt into my hand and hurried back inside.
I unfolded it as we walked to the car. On the bottom, written in hurried, shaky letters, were just two words:
“Get out.”
My stomach dropped. I looked up at him — the man I thought I knew — and something in his eyes made my blood run cold. They weren’t warm anymore. They were empty.
I mumbled something about forgetting my purse and ran back inside. The waitress was waiting by the door, pale as a ghost.
“He’s been here before,” she whispered. “With different women. Every time, they never come back.”
That night, I drove straight home — shaking the entire way. And I’ve never gone on a blind date again.