During my vacation, I accidentally ended up staying at the same hotel as my boss. It was pure coincidence — I didn’t plan it, and honestly, I tried my best to avoid any awkward encounters. We didn’t speak, we didn’t share a meal, and I spent most of my time minding my own business by the pool.
But apparently, that wasn’t good enough.
When I got back to work, he called me into his office. His tone was smug, almost rehearsed. “You’re not fitting in with the company culture,” he said. “You’re not… sociable enough.”
And just like that, I was fired. No warnings, no explanations — just gone.
I was angry, but more than that, I was disappointed. I’d given years of my life to that job, only to be dismissed because I wasn’t “fun” enough on vacation. But here’s the thing — he must’ve forgotten that during that same trip, I saw him getting very sociable with women who definitely weren’t his wife.
I hadn’t planned to get involved. But after what he did to me, I decided to let the truth handle it. I sent his wife the photos — clear as day, no mistaking it.
A week later, I got a call from a number I recognized immediately — the company HR department. They told me my former boss had resigned “for personal reasons.” They also mentioned that his wife had filed for divorce.
I didn’t gloat, I didn’t celebrate. I just sat there quietly, realizing that sometimes life has a way of balancing things on its own.
Justice doesn’t always come from revenge — sometimes it just comes from letting the truth speak for itself.