My Friends Set Me Up on a “Joke” Date… Then She Walked In and My Whole Life Changed.…-mdue - Chainityai

My Friends Set Me Up on a “Joke” Date… Then She Walked In and My Whole Life Changed.…-mdue

I almost didn’t go. That’s the part my friends would laugh at the most because they know me.

They know I’d rather spend a Sunday afternoon sanding a chair in my workshop than sit across from a stranger and pretend I enjoy small talk.

They call me the lone wolf, like it’s some joke, like I’m secretly sad about it. The truth is, I’ve always liked quiet. The kind that smells like pine and fresh cut wood.

The kind that lets you breathe. But when my phone buzzed on Friday night and Derek wrote, “Blind date.” Sunday, 300 p.m. Lake View Coffee by the Water, I knew I was in trouble.

Not because I wanted it, because they wanted it for me. My friends have this habit of treating my single life like a group project. Like, if they just push hard enough, they can force me into something romantic and then take credit for it.

They’ve pulled stunts before. One time they signed me up for speed dating and I got stuck with a woman who spent 20 minutes talking about her pet iguana like it was her child.

I still hear Dererick’s laugh when I think about it. So when he texted, “Trust us, you’ll thank us later,” I stared at the message and shook my head. “Fine,” I typed back.

“But if this is another iguana situation, you’re buying rounds for a month.” Derek replied with a bunch of laughing emojis and a promise that felt suspiciously vague. Sunday came too fast.

I was in my workshop behind my cabin, halfway through sanding a cedar chair. Sawdust clung to my arms. The air smelled like sap and wood glue. Harley, my rescue mut, was sprawled out on the floor like he paid rent.

He lifted his head when I stood up, tail thumping once, then dropped it again like he knew I was about to do something dumb. My cabin sits on the edge of Colorado Springs, tucked against a hill of pines.

It’s small, wooden, creaky in the winter, but it’s mine. Most nights I sit on the porch with a beer and listen to the wind whistle through the trees. No drama, no noise, just the life I built with my own hands.

That’s why a blind date felt like a prank waiting to happen. I checked the time, 2:20. I could still bail, claim my truck wouldn’t start, pretend I forgot. Nobody would be shocked.

But something in me didn’t want to give my friends the satisfaction of calling me scared. So I washed my hands, changed into clean jeans, a flannel shirt, and my scuffed work boots.

I didn’t try too hard. Trying too hard is how you lose. Harley followed me to the door, ears perked like he wanted in on the adventure. “Not today, buddy,” I told him, scratching his head.

“Guard the cabin.” He blinked slow like he didn’t believe me, then flopped back down. The drive to Lake View Coffee took 20 minutes. The closer I got, the more it felt like a setup.

I kept expecting Derek’s truck to be parked outside waiting for me with a camera and some stupid sign. But when I pulled into the lot, it was just a normal Sunday afternoon.

Families walking by the lake, couples on benches, a guy jogging with a golden retriever, no Derek, no prank crew. Lake view coffee was cozy. all wooden beams and big windows facing the water.

The lake outside looked like glass, reflecting the pale blue sky. Inside, it smelled like roasted beans and cinnamon. The kind of place where people sit for hours with laptops and pretend they’re writing novels.

I ordered a black coffee and picked a table near the window. 300 p.m. came. Then 3:05. Then 3:10. I sipped my coffee, staring at my phone like it would explain what was happening.

No texts, no updates. Typical. My friends probably thought it was hilarious, letting me sit here alone, waiting like the punchline of their joke. At 3:15, I decided I was done.

I grabbed my cup, stood up, and that’s when the door chimed. I looked up, ready to see Derek or one of my buddies walk in laughing. Instead, I saw her.

She stepped inside like she belonged there, like she wasn’t nervous, like she wasn’t trying. Her presence made the room feel quieter, even though nothing actually changed. She was older, probably close to 40, with brown hair pulled into a loose bun, soft strands curling around her neck.

She wore a long floral dress that moved gently with every step and a cream colored cardigan that looked warm enough to sleep in. She wasn’t flashy. She wasn’t loud. She was calm in a way that made my chest tighten.

She scanned the room and when her eyes landed on me, they didn’t slide away. They stayed and then she walked straight toward my table. My first thought was that she had the wrong guy.

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