I woke up to a knock on the door

I woke up to a knock on the door. I opened it and it was my neighbor, looking worried and sad.

Her: “Gosh, I’m so sorry, Rachel… How are you holding up? If you need anything, I’m here.” Me: “Help?! With what? What do you mean?” Her, confused: “You haven’t seen your fiance’s car?”

I immediatelly ran outside and… just froze when I saw what she was talking about! WHAT THE HELL?!! Someone had spray-painted on our car: “YOU PICKED THE WRONG GUY, GAVE HIM THE WRONG FINGER!” I was furious.

I rushed inside and woke my fiancé up. He denied everything—said he had no idea what it was about. Sure, we hadn’t gotten around to installing cameras in our yard yet. Lord, I was so disappointed.

But then I got it—our neighbor’s cameras face our driveway! So, I rushed over there, heart pounding. The neighbor pulled up the footage right away. And, oh God… Should I even be MARRYING THIS MAN after what I saw?!!

The grainy footage blinked onto the screen. At first, nothing—just the quiet hum of the streetlights and the silhouette of my fiancé’s car under the soft halo of the porch lamp. Then, around 2:47 a.m., a figure emerged.

My breath caught.

It was him. Wearing a hoodie, yes—but I recognized the way he walked. The slight limp in his left foot from an old soccer injury. The way he looked over his shoulder, twice, like he always did when he was sneaking snacks in the middle of the night.

I stared in disbelief as my fiancé crouched down near our car, pulled a can of red spray paint from his pocket, and scrawled—no, violently slashed—the message across the driver’s side:

“YOU PICKED THE WRONG GUY, GAVE HIM THE WRONG FINGER!”

He stepped back to admire his work for a moment—admire it—then walked calmly back into our house, like nothing had happened.

I felt sick.

The neighbor, who had been silently watching next to me, gave me a look I couldn’t quite read—somewhere between sympathy and rage.

“I… I don’t understand,” I whispered, almost to myself.

But my brain was already spinning. The phrase on the car. The late nights he’d been “working late.” The strange, defensive way he acted when I mentioned an old friend from college who recently moved back into town—Zack. Zack, who I ran into at the bookstore two weeks ago. We grabbed coffee. Just as friends.

My fiancé had been jealous, sure—but I thought that was just… normal relationship stuff.

This? This was unhinged.

I stood up and thanked the neighbor with a voice that didn’t feel like mine. Then I marched back into the house.

He was sitting on the couch, pretending to scroll through his phone like nothing was happening.

I stared at him. “You want to tell me what the hell I just watched?”

He didn’t even try to lie. He shrugged. Shrugged.

“You made me feel like a joke, Rachel. Talking to that guy like I wasn’t even part of the picture. What was I supposed to do?”

I blinked. “You were supposed to talk to me. Not vandalize your own damn car and try to play the victim. What, was I supposed to feel bad for you?”

He didn’t answer. That silence was enough.

I picked up my phone, hands shaking.

“What are you doing?” he asked, suddenly alert.

“Calling off this engagement. And a locksmith. And maybe a therapist. For you.

Because if there’s one thing worse than someone who breaks your trust—it’s someone who tries to make you feel guilty for it.

I walked to the bedroom, grabbed my things, and left.

That was the last time I saw him in person.

Sometimes the truth comes at you like a knock on the door—quiet at first, but loud enough to change everything once it’s opened.

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