When my best friend Mia set me up with her boyfriend’s friend, I hesitated—blind dates weren’t my thing. But Eric seemed polite in our messages: thoughtful questions, full sentences, no pressure. After a week of easy chatting, he asked me to dinner at a popular Italian spot downtown.
The date itself went smoothly. He showed up early with roses, dressed nicely, and acted sweetly old-fashioned—pulling out my chair, complimenting my dress, even giving me a small engraved keychain. Over dinner, we talked about travel, work, and awkward dating stories, and it all felt relaxed and natural.
When the bill arrived, he waved me off with a confident “A man pays on the first date.” It felt traditional but not alarming. He walked me to my car and waited until I drove away, and I went home thinking the night had been genuinely promising.
The next morning, instead of a nice follow-up text, I found an email titled “Invoice for Last Night.” I laughed at first, assuming it was a joke—until I saw the itemized charges for dinner, flowers, the keychain, and even “emotional labor.” It was very real, and very unsettling.
Worse, he added that if I didn’t “comply,” he might tell Mia’s boyfriend, Chris. I texted Mia immediately, confused and irritated. She didn’t hesitate: “He’s insane. Do not respond.” She and Chris sent him a joking invoice back, which only made his messages spiral from defensive to angry to self-pitying.
I ignored him completely, and Mia and Chris cut ties with him soon after. What started like a rom-com ended as a clear lesson: generosity isn’t a contract, and kindness isn’t a debt. I didn’t pay his invoice—but I paid attention.