Some love stories are written in the stars. Ours was written in spilled coffee, sarcastic banter, and one unbelievable revelation that turned everything I thought I knew about my boyfriend upside down.
Jack and I met in the least romantic way possible—by me spilling an entire iced latte all over his neatly stacked paperwork at a coffee shop. Mortified, I scrambled for napkins, but he just chuckled. “Guess this is fate telling me to take a break!”
We ended up talking for hours, and from that moment on, we just clicked.
Jack always preferred hanging out at his place, which I didn’t question since my roommate wasn’t a fan of guests. His tiny studio apartment was in a rundown part of town, and everything about it was, well… interesting.
The heater had a mind of its own, the couch looked like it had survived a war, and his kitchen consisted of a single hot plate. But I wasn’t in this for luxury—I liked Jack for who he was.
Fast forward to our first anniversary…
I was expecting something low-key, maybe a homemade dinner or a cheesy rom-com night. Instead, I stepped outside to find Jack leaning against a sleek, expensive car, holding a bouquet of roses.
I blinked. “Whose car is this?”
“Mine,” he said with a grin.
I laughed. “No, seriously.”
He didn’t laugh back.
That’s when he confessed—he wasn’t just a logistics guy scraping by. He was the heir to a multi-million-dollar family business. The crappy apartment? A test. He wanted to see if I was with him for him and not his wealth.
I just stared. “I’m sorry… WHAT?”
“Every relationship I’ve had changed the moment they found out about the money,” he explained. “I needed to be sure you loved me for me.”
I gawked at him. “So your solution was… pretending to be broke?”
Jack winced. “When you put it that way, it sounds—”
“Manipulative? Like something out of a bad romance novel?”
He sighed and pulled out a small velvet box. “But now I am sure. Giselle, will you marry me?”
Most people might have screamed “YES” right away. But I had my own secret.
I smirked, snatched the car keys from his hand, and said, “Let me drive. If what I show you next doesn’t scare you off, then my answer is yes.”
Confused, Jack let me take the wheel.
I drove us out of the city, past quiet suburbs, and up to a towering set of iron gates. Jack’s brows furrowed. “Uh… where are we going?”
“Remember when I said I grew up in a modest house?” I asked innocently.
“Yeah?”
“I may have stretched the definition of ‘modest’ a bit.”
I punched in a code, and the gates swung open, revealing an estate with pristine gardens, fountains, and a hedge maze.
Jack’s jaw dropped. “Giselle… what the hell?”
“Welcome to my childhood home,” I said, grinning.
He stared at me, stunned. “So… you were testing me while I was testing you?”
“Looks like it.”
Jack exhaled in disbelief. “Wait… all those times you acted impressed by my hot plate cooking—”
“Oh, that wasn’t acting. I was genuinely amazed anyone could cook on that thing.”
For a second, I thought he’d be mad. But then, Jack burst out laughing. “We’re ridiculous,” he said. “I was testing you, and you had a palace this whole time?”
“Basically.” I smirked. “Guess we both passed the test.”
Jack shook his head, still chuckling. “So… does this mean your answer is yes?”
I tapped my chin. “Hmm… I guess I’ll marry you.”
He kissed me. “You’re impossible.”
“And you love it.”
Six months later, we got married in a small, beautiful ceremony. The only problem? Our families wouldn’t stop talking about how we had “tricked” each other.
And just like that, we were back to being us—two ridiculous people who fell in love over instant ramen, broken heaters, and a couch held together by duct tape.