I was fifteen minutes late arriving at an upscale bistro in Scottsdale when I overheard my fiancé Garrett mocking me to our friends Simon, Meredith, and Jenna. My job as a busy corporate attorney specializing in debt restructuring often made me late, but I was stunned to hear Garrett telling the table he felt sorry for me and thought I was pathetic. As I stepped around the mahogany partition to confront them, the laughter immediately died down, and the color drained from Jenna’s face. Without a single tremor in my hands, I slid off the massive diamond engagement ring he had bought me and firmly placed it on the table next to his glass of bourbon.
Rather than making a scene, I calmly told Garrett that he no longer had to marry me and declared that I was officially withdrawing all my professional support for his struggling company. For two years, Garrett had cultivated a false image of a brilliant founder while his tech consultancy secretly hemorrhaged cash, relying entirely on my free legal labor to survive. I had quietly renegotiated his bank loans, secured emergency funding, and drafted his contracts while he took all the credit to maintain his public reputation. I informed the stunned table that his business would not survive without my signature on a major upcoming compliance audit before I turned my back and walked out of the restaurant.
On the drive back to my apartment in North Scottsdale, I immediately made phone calls to my law firm, his bank executive, and his top client to officially sever my involvement with his business. By the time I arrived home, my phone was blowing up with missed calls and a frantic voicemail from Garrett begging me not to throw everything away over his stupid mistake. Over the next few days, I formally documented my withdrawal from his accounts, which prompted his bank to accelerate their financial review and effectively collapse his carefully built facade.
On the fourth day, Garrett arrived at my office for a formal appointment looking completely exhausted and desperate for my help to save his failing business. He never mentioned our canceled wedding or our relationship, proving to me that he only viewed people as tools for his personal success rather than actual partners. I professionally handed him a business card for a different restructuring specialist and informed him that I was no longer the right person to assist him. After managing the logistical nightmare of canceling our June wedding and moving out of our shared apartment, I finally felt the profound peace of being free from the heavy burden of supporting a hollow man.