When Mia set me up with her boyfriend’s friend, I said yes mostly to stop her from insisting. Still, I was cautiously optimistic — the guy, Eric, actually wrote full sentences, held a normal conversation, and didn’t treat texting like a chore. When he suggested dinner at a quiet Italian restaurant, it felt like the kind of date that could restore a little faith in modern dating. He even arrived with roses, pulled out my chair, and brought a small engraved gift with my initial on it. For a moment, I actually thought I might be telling people one day that this was how I met someone good.
Dinner felt easy and pleasantly ordinary — the type of night you replay on the drive home because nothing felt forced or uncomfortable. When the bill came, Eric waved my hand away and paid, insisting that “a man pays on the first date.” After he walked me to my car and waited for me to drive off, I actually texted Mia saying she might have been right about him. Everything about that night looked textbook “gentleman.” And then morning came.
Instead of a “Had a great time” message, I woke up to an email titled: Invoice for Last Night. I opened it assuming it was a joke — until I saw it formatted like a formal document with listed “charges” for dinner, flowers, even the engraved keychain. At the bottom, a bold line suggested I “repay” those gestures with planned forms of affection on a future date — and warned that if I didn’t, he might involve Chris, Mia’s boyfriend. It was detailed, deliberate, and unsettling in a way no first date should ever be.
I sent it to Mia immediately. She and Chris stepped in, responded to Eric with their own parody “invoice,” and cut him off after seeing his reaction. Meanwhile, I blocked him and moved on — grateful that his true nature surfaced before a second date ever happened. The night that started like a slow-build romance turned into a reminder: some people use generosity as a contract, not kindness. And catching that early is worth more than any dinner someone could ever pay for.