MY GARAGE KEY SNAPPED, UBER BAILED, AND I WAS ABOUT TO LOSE A MILLION-DOLLAR DEAL

Iโ€™d been prepping for this meeting for three months. It wasnโ€™t just any dealโ€”it was the deal. The kind that changes your life, that makes your mom stop worrying about rent and your LinkedIn blow up overnight.

I woke up early, suit pressed, laptop charged, contract folder in my bag. I even left the house a full hour early just in case. Only, I forgot one tiny thing.

My garage.

The key snapped in the lock.

Not just brokeโ€”snapped. Half of it in my hand, the other half stuck inside like it was mocking me. I stood there for a second, blinking, like maybe if I stared long enough it would fix itself. It didnโ€™t.

My car was inside, of course. And I live on a little side street where Ubers never show up without a 15-minute wait. I tried anyway. Opened the app, requested one. ETA: 19 minutes. Then it jumped to 22.

I paced. Tried texting Salomeโ€”she lives two blocks overโ€”but she was mid-shift at the bakery and didnโ€™t even see the message. I didnโ€™t know who else to call. Everyone I knew with a car was either working or unreliable.

I called the clientโ€™s assistant, stammering some excuse about โ€œminor transportation issues.โ€ She said sheโ€™d โ€œdo her bestโ€ to stall. Her voice didnโ€™t sound too hopeful.

At that point, I started debating whether I could bike there. Only problem? The last time I used my bike, it had a flat and the seat was all crooked. I didnโ€™t even know if it was still in the shed.

I was just about to sprint out barefoot and try anyway when my phone buzzedโ€”and it wasnโ€™t the Uber.

It was Yves.

We hadnโ€™t spoken in almost two years. Not since I accused him of screwing me over on that coworking space project. It wasnโ€™t pretty. Lots of pride, lots of yelling, and one very public unfollow.

I stared at the screen. My thumb hovered. Then I answered.

“Hey,” I said, voice tight.

“You stuck?” he asked. Just like that.

“What?”

“You look stuck. Iโ€™m down the street. I saw you pacing like a cartoon character. You still trying to do that software thing?”

It took a second for it to clickโ€”he was parked at the corner. In that beat-up gray SUV I used to tease him about. I didnโ€™t know whether to feel embarrassed or grateful or both.

โ€œYeah,โ€ I said. โ€œI have to get to downtown. Client meeting. Huge one.โ€

โ€œI figured. Hop in.โ€

Now, listen. Pride is a hell of a thing. But when itโ€™s a million-dollar contract on the line? You swallow it like bad cough syrup.

I jogged over, climbed in, and we peeled out.

The drive started awkward. No music, no chit-chat. Just tire hum and tension. After a while, I broke the silence.

“Why’d you text?”

Yves shrugged. โ€œBeen thinking about reaching out. Figured Iโ€™d just do it instead of overthinking it.โ€

I nodded slowly. โ€œTimingโ€™s… pretty wild.โ€

He smirked. โ€œLifeโ€™s weird like that.โ€

We hit traffic five blocks from the office. Classic. My meeting was in eight minutes.

Thatโ€™s when Yves did something totally Yvesโ€”he pulled into a delivery zone, threw on his flashers, and said, โ€œRun.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œRUN, man. Donโ€™t make this weird.โ€

So I ran. In a suit. Through downtown. Sweaty, winded, and looking like a Wall Street crash meme, but I made it. Two minutes late, but I made it.

The clientโ€”Tajendra, a sharp but kind logistics CEOโ€”looked me up and down, saw the sweat, the loosened tie, the wild eyes. He said, โ€œRough morning?โ€

I laughed, breathless. โ€œGarage key broke. Uber bailed. Old friend drove me halfway. I ran the rest.โ€

He raised an eyebrow. โ€œAnd you still showed up?โ€

โ€œHad to.โ€

He leaned back. โ€œGood. I hate people who flake. Letโ€™s see what youโ€™ve got.โ€

We went through the pitch. I stumbled once or twice, but I caught my rhythm. And when I pulled out the contract, his assistant handed him a pen without a word. He signed.

I stood there holding a signed deal worth more than Iโ€™d made in the last five years combined.

That night, I called my mom first. Then I Venmoโ€™d Salome for a bakery box and told her I owed her one even though she hadnโ€™t even seen my text.

And then I called Yves.

We met up the next night for drinks. Talked it out. Turns out, the whole coworking mess was a dumb misunderstanding we both handled badly. Two years of silence, just sitting there, waiting for one of us to grow up.

Weโ€™re talking about starting something new together now. Not just a project. Maybe a real partnership. One where we show up for each otherโ€”no matter what.

Pride can cost you everything. And sometimes, the people you cut off are the ones who still show up when it matters most. Donโ€™t let ego rob you of second chances.

If youโ€™ve ever had a day like thisโ€”or a friend who surprised you when you least expected itโ€”share this post. You never know who might need the reminder today.

(Thanks for reading! Drop a like if this hit home.)