Paul and his fiancée, Mia, had just picked up her mom when they returned home to find their garage blocked again. This time, the offender was Logan, a smug “creative consultant” Paul once met at a work party. Logan sipped a hard iced tea, refused to move, and escalated things by shoving Paul and faking being assaulted when Paul called the police.
Mia filmed everything, and when officers arrived, Logan’s act crumbled. They made him move and warned him about public drinking and obstruction. But before driving off, Logan smugly tossed Paul his business card: a glossy piece of arrogance packed with all his personal info. That was his mistake.
Paul, a systems guy, didn’t scream or retaliate. Instead, he got strategic. For a week, after quiet family dinners, Paul applied Logan to 84 jobs fast food, warehouses, gas stations using his real résumé and links. No lies, just volume. Weeks later, Paul’s mother casually mentioned Logan was spiraling bombarded with job offers from places way below his “standard.”
He even thought he was hacked. Soon after, Logan’s website went dark. His social accounts locked down. Paul never told anyone. But every time he thought of Logan fumbling through rejection emails and recruiter calls, he smiled. Because karma doesn’t always yell. Sometimes, it fills out online forms—and waits.