
Hello Readers, throwaway for obvious reasonsâthis could still get back to my old workplace, and I donât need the drama resurfacing. Iâve been out of that job for four months now, but I still get anxiety thinking about it. What started as a quick, innocent favor for a new coworker in June 2025 turned into a nightmare of harassment, accusations, and office politics that forced me to quit by October. I thought I was just being helpful; instead, it exposed how one small act of kindness can be twisted into something sinister. This is the full storyâbuckle up, itâs a long one.
Iâm 28F, a marketing coordinator at a mid-sized ad agency in Chicago. Iâd been there three yearsâgood team, creative projects, the kind of place where we had happy hours and inside jokes. Iâm the ânice oneâ: always willing to cover a shift, share templates, help with deadlines. No enemies, or so I thought. Single, live alone in a studio downtown, close friends outside work.
The âstrangerâ was âKyle,â 26M, who started as a junior copywriter in May 2025. Tall, charming, always smiling, quick with compliments. He was new to the city, said he moved from LA for a fresh start. Sat near me in the open office. We chatted casuallyâfavorite spots for lunch, Netflix recommendationsâbut nothing deep. He seemed eager to fit in.
The favor happened June 12, a Wednesday. Busy dayâclient pitch prep, everyone scrambling. Around 5:30 p.m., most people had left. I was finishing an email when Kyle came over, looking flustered.
âHey, sorry to bug youâIâm in a bind. My laptop crashed, IT wonât answer, and I have a deck due by 8 a.m. tomorrow. Could I borrow yours for like 10 minutes? I just need to grab my files from the shared drive and email them to myself. You can watch me the whole time.â
Company policy is clear: no sharing devices or logins. But the office was empty, he looked desperate, and it was the shared driveânothing sensitive. I thought: itâs quick, heâs new, be a team player.
âSure,â I said. âBut stay on the drive only. Donât open anything else.â
He nodded gratefully, sat at my desk. I stood behind him. He opened the drive, navigated to his folder, downloaded a few docs, attached them to an email from his personal Gmail, sent it. Thanked me three times, left.
I logged out, shut down, went home. Forgot about it.
That should have been the end.
Two days later: Kyle Slacked me: âThanks againâyou saved my life! Beers after work sometime? My treat.â
I replied politely: âNo problem, glad it helped. Busy this week, but maybe!â
He liked the message.
Next week: he started stopping by my desk. âHey, what did you think of that show we talked about?â âYou look nice todayânew haircut?â
Flirty, but subtle. I kept it professionalâshort answers, focused on work.
July: he asked for another favorâreview his copy for a pitch. I did; it was good. He sent a coffee gift card via email: âFor the best mentor!â
I accepted, but felt off. Told my work friend âLenaâ: âNew guyâs a bit much.â She laughed: âHeâs harmlessâprobably has a crush.â
August: things got weird.
Kyle started referencing personal stuff. âSaw on your LinkedIn you went to UCLAâme too! Class of â21.â (Iâd never mentioned it.)
Then: âYou live in Lincoln Park, right? Saw a cool bar thereâwant to check it out?â
How did he know my neighborhood?
I asked: âHowâd you know where I live?â
He laughed: âOh, from your email signature or something? Or maybe you mentioned it.â
No, I hadnât.
I started avoiding him. Short Slacks, no small talk.
September: escalation.
Anonymous office Slack message to me: âYouâre cute when youâre focused. âSecret Admirerâ
I ignored it.
Then gifts on my desk: chocolate (âSweet like youâ), a notebook (âFor your ideasâ).
No name, but I knew.
I confronted him privately: âKyle, if this is you, please stop. Itâs making me uncomfortable.â
He looked shocked. âWhat? No, Iâd never. But⌠do you think Iâm cute too?â
I said firmly: âNo. And if itâs you, it stops now.â
He apologized, said it wasnât him.
But it didnât stop.
October: worse.
Emails from a burner address: photos of me at my desk (taken from afar), âMiss seeing that smile.â
Then a package at my home address: flowers, card âThinking of you. âKâ
How did he get my address?
I went to HR October 15.
Told them everything: the favors, the flirting, the gifts, the emails.
They took notes, said theyâd investigate discreetly.
Kyle was called in that afternoon.
His story: Iâd been the one flirting with him since day one. Iâd lent him my laptop to âget close,â initiated personal convos, sent the gifts to myself to frame him.
HR checked camerasâshowed me standing over him during the laptop use, âsupervising closely.â
My Slack history: friendly messages that could be read as flirty if twisted.
No proof for the anonymous stuff.
HRâs conclusion: âInconclusive. Weâll monitor. Be professional.â
No consequences.
The office turned.
Whispers: âSheâs obsessed with the new guy.â âClassic HR drama.â
Lena distanced herself: âI donât want to get involved.â
Clients got reassigned âfor balance.â
I felt isolated, watched.
November: a final emailââIf you ignore me, Iâll make sure everyone knows who you really are.â
I quit November 20.
Gave two weeks, but HR let me go early with pay.
Police said no crime without threats.
New job starts next monthâremote, different city.
A simple favor for a stranger at workâlending my laptopâbackfired badly.
Because some people take kindness as an invitation.
And workplaces protect the status quo over the truth.
Iâm wiser now. No favors that break rules. Boundaries first.
Trust your gut when âniceâ feels off.
It might save you a nightmare.
Thanks for reading. Needed to vent this somewhere safe.