Cruel words can cut deeper than knives, but sometimes, the right person knows how to stop the bleeding. When three wealthy women mocked a waitress for “smelling poor,” the room froze. No one moved, no one spoke, until my boyfriend stood up and changed everything.
My name is Anna, and I never imagined that a broken printer at the library would lead me to the person who’d change my life. Jack wasn’t flashy or loud, he had a quiet steadiness that drew me in from the start. I thought I knew the depth of his character, but one night at a fancy restaurant showed me there was much more to him than I ever expected.
I was having one of those days where nothing seemed to go right. My coffee had spilled in my bag, my bus had broken down halfway to campus, and now, as if the universe had decided to play a final cruel joke, I found myself locked in battle with a stubborn printer at the library. The machine blinked defiantly, spitting out half a page before freezing with a groan.
I smacked the side of it, muttering under my breath, “You’re doing this on purpose, aren’t you?” A small line of students gathered behind me, their impatience buzzing louder than the machine itself. And then a tall guy with messy brown hair and a calm, almost amused smile stepped out of the line. He didn’t laugh and didn’t roll his eyes like the others.
Instead, he crouched down beside the printer like it was a puzzle waiting to be solved. “Mind if I try?” he asked, his voice low and steady, the kind that made you want to trust him immediately. “Please,” I groaned, stepping aside.
“But good luck. This thing clearly has a personal vendetta against me.”
He chuckled softly, not at me but at the situation, and pressed two buttons with the ease of someone who’d done this a thousand times. Within seconds, the machine whirred, spat out the paper, and went back to life as if it hadn’t been taunting me for the last fifteen minutes.
“Magic,” I whispered, wide-eyed. “Not magic,” he said with a shrug. “I work in IT.”
Like that explained everything.
And in a way, it did. It wasn’t just that he knew how to fix machines, he had this quiet, patient confidence about him that made me feel, for the first time that day, like maybe things were going to be okay. I ran into him again a week later, and this time, I didn’t let the moment slip by.
After printing my stack of notes without a single hiccup, I found him tucked away at a corner table with his laptop. I marched right up, balancing my papers like a peace offering. “Hey,” I said, a little too brightly.
“Thanks for saving me from the evil printer the other day. I owe you one.”
He glanced up, smiled that calm, steady smile, and replied, “You don’t owe me anything. But… if you really want to say thanks, maybe grab a coffee with me sometime?”
We exchanged numbers, and soon enough, coffee became our thing.
Then coffee turned into dinners. Then dinners melted into real dates, the kind where you lose track of time because being together feels so natural. Jack wasn’t flashy.
There were no over-the-top gestures or cheesy lines. His kindness showed up in small, steady ways: showing up with my favorite pastry without asking, walking me home when it rained, fixing my laptop while making sure I didn’t feel like a complete idiot for breaking it in the first place. By the time three months had passed, I felt like I’d known him for years.
So when he told me he’d made a reservation at one of the fanciest restaurants in town, I knew it wasn’t about chandeliers or champagne. It was his quiet way of saying, this is serious. I was nervous, of course, but mostly, I was excited for this big step.
What happened next changed everything…
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