I’d been dating my girlfriend, Claire, for just over a year when I asked her to move in with me. I was renting the apartment, and we agreed she wouldn’t contribute to rent or bills. She didn’t want to feel like a tenant, and honestly, I didn’t mind. I was just excited about waking up next to her every day.
Moving day finally came. I spent the morning helping her carry boxes up three flights of stairs. By the afternoon the place looked cozy—her plants by the window, her books stacked neatly on the shelves, her clothes filling half the closet.
I wanted the evening to be special, so I ran to the store to buy groceries for dinner. I even grabbed a nice bottle of wine and some candles. Nothing fancy, just something to celebrate this new chapter.
But when I walked back into the apartment, the wine literally slipped out of my hands and shattered on the floor.
Claire stood in the middle of the living room surrounded by open boxes.
And every single one of them was full of framed photographs.
Dozens of them.
Pictures of me.
Photos from my office Christmas party. A picture of me jogging in the park. One of me carrying groceries into the building. Even a few from outside my workplace—taken from across the street.
My stomach dropped.
“What… is all this?” I asked quietly.
Claire looked up at me, startled.
“Oh,” she said quickly. “I can explain.”
“You’ve been taking pictures of me?” I asked, trying to stay calm.
“They’re not creepy,” she insisted. “I just… I like to photograph people I care about.”
I stared at the photos again. Some of them clearly weren’t taken while we were together.
“Claire,” I said slowly, “some of these were taken before we even started dating.”
She sighed and sat down on the couch.
“Okay,” she admitted. “Technically… I noticed you a long time ago.”
“How long?”
She hesitated.
“About two years.”
I blinked. “You mean before we met?”
“Yes. I saw you every morning when we both stopped at that coffee shop on Main Street. You always helped the barista carry the milk crates. You tipped even when you just bought coffee.”
She gave a nervous smile.
“I thought you seemed like the kindest guy in the world.”
“So you started taking pictures of me?” I said.
“No!” she said quickly. “Not like that. I’m a photography student. I started practicing street photography, and you kept showing up in my shots.”
She opened one of the photo albums.
Inside were dozens of pictures of the city—people walking, dogs playing, street musicians… and yes, me sometimes passing through the frame.
“You were never the subject,” she said softly. “You were just… part of my favorite photos.”
I exhaled slowly.
The tension in my chest loosened.
“You scared the life out of me,” I admitted.
Claire laughed nervously.
“Sorry,” she said. “I guess it does look weird when they’re all in one place.”
I looked around the apartment again.
Then I picked up one of the photos. It was from months before we met—me helping an elderly man carry groceries across the street.
I didn’t even remember that moment.
But she had captured it.
“Well,” I said, smiling a little. “At least you got my good side.”
Claire grinned.
And that night, instead of kicking her out, we cleaned up the spilled wine… and celebrated our new home together.
