The $300 Manicure

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I work at a beauty salon. One day, a husband came in to pick up his wife, who was our client. She told him, “Pay for my manicure, honey. It’s $300.” I froze in shock—we only charge $50. The man paid, and they walked out. Just minutes later, the same client ran back into the salon, yelling, “You are a liar!”

I blinked, confused. “I’m sorry?”

She pointed at me, her face flushed. “You told him it was $300! You’re trying to scam us!”

“No, I didn’t,” I said slowly, trying to stay calm. “You told him that. I didn’t say a word. Our manicure is $50. He paid without asking.”

She huffed, looked around the salon, then stormed back out without another word. I stood there, stunned. My coworker, Nina, walked over and whispered, “What just happened?”

“She told her husband it was $300. Then blamed me.”

We were quiet for a second. Then Nina muttered, “Wow… She’s got guts.”

I thought that was the end of it. But it wasn’t.

Two days later, the same woman came back—alone this time. She walked in like nothing happened, asked for the same nail tech, and sat down.

I was still a little shaken by what had happened, but I kept things professional. As she flipped through nail polish samples, I couldn’t help but glance at the front door. Her husband hadn’t come in.

At the register, she smiled politely and paid the usual $50.

As she was about to leave, she turned back and said quietly, “Please don’t say anything if he comes back again.”

That’s when it hit me.

She had scammed her own husband.

I wasn’t sure how to react. I wasn’t involved, but I was now a witness to something… off. Over the next few weeks, she came in three more times. Each time, she asked for her usual service. Each time, she paid the regular price. And each time, she left without a fuss.

But then something changed.

One Saturday afternoon, a man walked into the salon. He wasn’t the same guy who had come in before. This one was younger, cleaner cut, and looked uncomfortable.

“I’m looking for Marissa,” he said, scanning the room.

That was her name—Marissa. She was sitting at the back, scrolling on her phone, mid-manicure. When she saw him, she stiffened.

“You can’t be here,” she hissed.

“I need to talk to you,” the man said.

The whole salon went silent.

She got up, nails half-done, and walked out with him. From the window, I saw them arguing in the parking lot. Hands flying. Faces red. Then she walked off alone, got into her car, and sped off. The man just stood there, watching her go.

I turned to Nina. “What do you think that was about?”

“Maybe the husband found out.”

“No,” I said. “That wasn’t her husband.”

And it wasn’t.

The next day, the original husband came in.

He looked tired, like he hadn’t slept. He walked up to the front desk and asked me, “How much does my wife really pay here?”

I hesitated. My heart pounded. I didn’t want to be the reason someone’s marriage fell apart. But I also didn’t want to lie.

“Our standard manicure is $50,” I said gently. “We never charge $300.”

He didn’t even look surprised. Just… empty.

“Thank you,” he said, and walked out.

After that, we didn’t see Marissa for a while.

A month passed.

Then one morning, she walked in again, wearing sunglasses indoors and a hoodie pulled up over her head. She looked like someone else entirely.

“Is Maria here?” she asked. That was our boss.

Maria came out of her office, arms crossed. “You need to leave, Marissa.”

“What? Why?”

“You tried to drag my staff into a lie, and now your husband’s been calling every day. You need to take care of your mess somewhere else.”

Marissa just stood there. Then, for the first time, she looked small. Not angry. Not smug. Just… small.

“Please,” she whispered. “I lost everything. I just want to get my nails done.”

Maria sighed. “We’re not the place for you anymore.”

Marissa left without another word.

I didn’t think I’d see her again. But life has a funny way of circling back.

Three months later, I was shopping at a small grocery store after work. I was picking out apples when I heard a voice behind me.

“You work at the salon, right?”

I turned. It was her.

But she looked different. Her hair was shorter, no makeup, wearing jeans and a basic t-shirt. She looked… real.

“Yes,” I said carefully.

“I wanted to say sorry. For everything. I wasn’t in a good place back then.”

I stayed quiet, letting her speak.

“I was juggling two lives. My husband—he’s kind, gentle. But I felt… trapped. Then I met someone else, and I thought I was clever, balancing it all. But lies pile up. And then they fall on you.”

“I understand,” I said softly. “But why the $300 lie?”

She laughed, a little bitter. “Because I wanted the affair to seem like an errand. I needed the money for hotel rooms and gifts. I used to tell him I was going to the salon, and then I’d sneak away.”

That twisted my stomach.

“I’m not proud,” she added quickly. “In the end, both men found out. One dumped me. The other moved out. I’m alone now.”

I didn’t know what to say. Part of me felt sorry for her. Another part didn’t.

“What are you doing now?” I asked.

She shrugged. “Working at a bakery. It’s humbling. My nails chip in two days.”

I smiled. “Maybe that’s what you need right now.”

She nodded. “Yeah. Maybe.”

As she turned to go, she paused. “You were always kind. I remember that. Even when I didn’t deserve it.”

And then she walked away.

I didn’t tell anyone about that meeting for a while. It didn’t seem necessary.

But then something else happened.

A few weeks later, a woman walked into the salon. She looked nervous. She explained she was new in town, looking for a job. She handed Maria a resume.

Maria scanned it, then paused. “You worked at Sweet Bloom Bakery?”

“Yes,” the woman said. “The manager there is a friend of mine.”

Maria raised an eyebrow. “I know her too. I used to work there before opening this place.”

Small world.

The woman got the job. Her name was Rina. She wasn’t flashy, but she worked hard. Always on time. Kind to everyone.

One day, as we were closing up, I caught her looking at the tip jar, eyes a little glassy.

“Everything okay?” I asked.

She nodded. “Yeah. Just grateful. I’ve had worse.”

Later, Maria told me Rina had left an abusive relationship six months ago. Started over from scratch. She was rebuilding her life, slowly but surely.

“She reminds me of someone,” Maria said.

“Me too,” I murmured.

Then one afternoon, guess who walked in?

Marissa.

This time, not for herself. She was with a little girl, maybe six years old, holding her hand. They came in for the kid to get her nails painted.

“She wanted pink sparkles,” Marissa said with a soft smile.

The little girl nodded eagerly.

We took care of them. No drama. No tension.

As they were leaving, Marissa looked at me. “I got custody. He didn’t want her. I’m doing it alone.”

“You seem… different,” I said.

She smiled. “I am. Some lessons come with bruises.”

She paused, then said, “I’m sorry again. For everything.”

I nodded. “Thank you for saying that.”

As they left, I noticed Rina watching from the corner. She didn’t say a word.

Later, she came to me and asked, “Was that the woman you talked about?”

I nodded.

“She’s trying,” Rina said simply. “That counts for something.”

It does.

Sometimes people fall. Hard. They lie. They break things. But sometimes… they build again.

Over time, Marissa became a quiet presence in town. She baked cupcakes for school events. Volunteered at the community center. She came back to the salon now and then—never fancy, just normal.

Rina, meanwhile, saved up for her own apartment. She got promoted to front desk manager. She still brought homemade lunch every day. Always offered the last cookie to someone else.

One day, Maria asked her, “Why are you so kind, even after all you’ve been through?”

Rina smiled. “Because I know what it’s like when no one is.”

I think that’s the biggest lesson I’ve learned working here.

People are messy. Complicated. But they’re also capable of change.

Marissa lied to the man who loved her. She lost everything. But she learned. She owned up to her mistakes. And she’s raising a daughter now with gentleness and truth.

Rina escaped pain and chose to heal by lifting others.

And me? I learned to stay kind. Even when it’s easier not to be.

Because sometimes, the $300 lie turns into a life lesson someone never forgets.

So if you’ve ever been burned, or if you’ve made mistakes you regret—remember: it’s never too late to change your story.

Share this if you believe people can grow. Like it if you know someone who needs to hear that forgiveness starts with truth.

Thanks for reading.

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One night, junior year, we were sitting in my dorm, surrounded by textbooks, when Camille grinned and said, “You have to be my bridesmaid someday.” I laughed. “I’ll be there with bells on.” “No bells,” she corrected, wagging a finger. “Only what I approve. It has to be perfect.” I should have known then what was coming. Years later, when her boyfriend Jake proposed on a beach in Maui, she called me immediately. “Ava!” she squealed. “He did it! Jake proposed!” “Oh my God! Congratulations!” I was genuinely happy for her. “I want you as my bridesmaid. Say yes!” “Of course! I wouldn’t miss it.” “Perfect! This wedding is going to be magazine-worthy.” I didn’t realize what that meant until I got my bridesmaid binder. Yes, an actual binder. Inside were pages of instructions: the three different dresses we had to buy, the exact shoes (dyed to match), the approved jewelry, even guidelines on hair and makeup. “The lavender looks a little different than in the catalog,” I mentioned during a dress fitting. Camille’s eyes narrowed. “It’s the lighting. The dress is perfect. Just get it tailored.” I swallowed my concerns about the extra cost and nodded. That night, the bridesmaids and I met at Leah’s apartment to assemble wedding favors. “I had to cancel my dentist appointment for this,” Tara whispered, tying ribbons on tiny boxes. “She sent me a calendar invite with a ‘mandatory attendance’ flag.” Leah snorted. “She asked if I’d considered getting eyelash extensions. I don’t even wear mascara.” “She means well,” I tried to say, though even I wasn’t sure I believed it. Megan, the bluntest of us all, sighed. “This is beyond stressed. This is control-freak insanity.” “She’d do the same for us,” I said weakly. 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