I Kept Coming Home to a Toothpick in the Lock—Instead of Calling the Police, I Took Revenge on My Own Terms

I came home from work one evening and found a toothpick jammed in my lock. Then it happened again. Picture me outside my own house, wielding tweezers like some deranged locksmith. I didn’t report it. I set a trap… because if someone wanted to play weird little games, I had one better.

After 14 hours of bedpans, vomit, and a guy who insisted his “friend” was the one who “accidentally” sat on a remote control, I dragged my scrub-wearing, caffeine-depleted body home. All I wanted was a hot shower, half a frozen pizza, and blessed silence.

Instead, I found myself standing in thirty-degree weather, staring at my front door like it had just slapped me… because my key wouldn’t go in.

A woman trying to unlock the front door of her house | Source: Pexels

A woman trying to unlock the front door of her house | Source: Pexels

I tried again. Nothing. Wiggled it. Nope. I turned it upside down because sometimes keys are just moody like that. Still nothing worked.

“Come on,” I muttered, jiggling harder. “I’ve had patients at the ER less difficult than you today.”

That’s when I noticed something small wedged deep in the keyhole. I squinted, using my phone flashlight to get a better look.

There was a toothpick jammed in the lock.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” I groaned, poking at it helplessly with my car key. I jiggled, cursed, even tried poking it out with a bobby pin. Nothing worked.

Close-up shot of a key in the keyhole of a door | Source: Pexels

Close-up shot of a key in the keyhole of a door | Source: Pexels

Fifteen minutes later, I was still standing there with frozen toes and a colorful vocabulary that would make my patients blush.

I gave up and called my brother.

“Danny? It’s me. I’m locked out.”

“Again? Did you lose your keys at the hospital? Because last time—”

“No, there’s a toothpick stuck in my lock.”

“What the hell? I’ll be right over.”

A woman talking on the phone | Source: Pexels

A woman talking on the phone | Source: Pexels

Ten minutes later, Danny’s rusted pickup rolled into my driveway. He hopped out wearing sweatpants and a T-shirt that read “I PAUSED MY GAME TO BE HERE.”

“Shouldn’t you be wearing a coat?”

“Shouldn’t you be inside your house?” he countered, brandishing a miniature toolkit like he was about to defuse a bomb.

I watched as he examined the lock, his breath forming little clouds in the cold air.

A man holding a toolkit | Source: Freepik

A man holding a toolkit | Source: Freepik

“Yep! That’s a toothpick in there,” he said, fishing a pair of tweezers from his kit. “And it didn’t get there by accident.”

“What do you mean?”

“Someone put it there… on purpose.” He worked silently for a few minutes, then triumphantly held up a tiny wooden splinter. “There we go. Try it now.”

The key slid in smoothly and I sighed with relief.

A man opening a door | Source: Pexels

A man opening a door | Source: Pexels

“You think it was just kids?” I asked hopefully.

Danny shook his head. “Kids don’t have this kind of patience. Call me if it happens again, okay?”

“It won’t!” I said confidently.

“Famous last words,” he called over his shoulder as he headed back to his truck.

And yup! It happened again. Exactly 24 hours later.

“You’re kidding me,” Danny said when I FaceTimed him. I could hear the clinking of beer bottles in the background.

A stunned man looking at his phone | Source: Pexels

A stunned man looking at his phone | Source: Pexels

“Maybe I have a really dedicated enemy at the homeowners’ association? I did put up those Christmas lights in February.”

Danny showed up looking mildly insulted at the universe. “Alright,” he said, brushing past me, “now I’m interested.”

“This is targeted. Want to catch them?”

“With what? A mousetrap?” I said, rolling my eyes.

“Better. I’ve got a security camera. Used it to catch the raccoons that kept knocking over my garbage cans. I’ll set it up tomorrow.”

A security camera mounted on the wall | Source: Unsplash

A security camera mounted on the wall | Source: Unsplash

The next morning, Danny arrived with a camera that looked like it had survived several wars and a fall from a cliff.

“This thing still works?” I asked dubiously.

“Of course it works. It’s built like a Nokia phone.” He climbed the maple tree in my front yard with surprising agility for someone whose exercise regimen consisted mainly of walking to the fridge.

“Perfect angle. It’ll catch anyone coming up to your door, and you’ll get the footage straight to your phone.”

A camera mounted on a tree trunk | Source: Pexels

A camera mounted on a tree trunk | Source: Pexels

That evening, I sat in my car, hunched over my phone like a teenager waiting for a text back from their crush. At 7:14 p.m., my phone buzzed.

One new video popped up, and my stomach did a somersault when I watched the footage.

“JOSH??”

Yup! My ex-boyfriend. The one I’d caught sending late-night texts to his “work friend” Amber while I was pulling double shifts at the hospital. The one who’d been “working late” at the office when his credit card was busy buying dinner for two at restaurants I’d been begging him to take me to for months.

A man walking on the street | Source: Pexels

A man walking on the street | Source: Pexels

I watched the video three times, not believing my eyes. There he was, in his stupid puffy jacket, carefully inserting a toothpick into my lock with the precision of someone performing microsurgery.

“What the hell?” I gasped.

I’d broken up with him six months ago. No screaming, no dramatic scene… just a quiet conversation where I laid out the evidence and walked away. I thought we’d parted civilly. Apparently not.

I was fuming. But I didn’t call the cops. I called Connor.

A woman on a phonecall | Source: Pexels

A woman on a phonecall | Source: Pexels

“He did what?” he barked.

Connor is six-foot-four with tattoos and bad decisions that somehow always work out. He runs a custom auto shop with my brother, rides a motorcycle that sounds like a dragon with indigestion, and looks like he could bench-press a small car.

We dated for about three weeks five years ago before mutually deciding we made better friends than lovers… though the “friend” label occasionally blurred after particularly lonely holidays or wedding receptions.

A man with a tattoo on his arm | Source: Pexels

A man with a tattoo on his arm | Source: Pexels

“He put a toothpick in my lock. Twice,” I repeated, still staring at the paused video of Josh’s face, illuminated by my porch light.

“That’s… creative. Want me to talk to him?”

“By ‘talk,’ do you mean threaten him with bodily harm? Because I’m not bailing you out of jail again.”

“That was one time, Reggie. And I didn’t actually hit anyone.”

A prisoner holding metal railings in a jail | Source: Pexels

A prisoner holding metal railings in a jail | Source: Pexels

“You threw a man’s toupee into a fountain.”

“It attacked me first. But no, I’ve got a different idea. Does Josh still drive by your place sometimes?”

“Probably. He lives three streets over.”

“Perfect. Here’s what we’re going to do…”

***

The next evening, I made a show of leaving my house at 6:45 p.m. I even called someone loudly on my phone as I walked to my car: “Yeah, I’ll be there in twenty minutes! Save me a seat!”

A woman walking on the street | Source: Pexels

A woman walking on the street | Source: Pexels

Then I parked around the corner, sneaked back through my neighbor’s yard, and entered through my back door. Connor was already inside, grinning like a kid on Christmas morning.

“Wait… Is that my bathrobe?” I asked, eyeing the pink monstrosity that barely covered his chest, let alone anything else.

“Yep. And I’m not wearing much underneath, so let’s hope this works.”

“You’re enjoying this way too much, Connor!”

“You bet I am. Now shh… your creepy ex should be here any minute.”

A man wearing a pink bathrobe | Source: Pexels

A man wearing a pink bathrobe | Source: Pexels

At precisely 7:11 p.m., my phone buzzed. I pulled up the camera feed to see Josh tiptoeing up my front walk, toothpick in hand like a tiny wooden dagger.

Connor grabbed a wrench from his toolbox and positioned himself by the door.

“Wait for it,” he whispered.

Josh reached for the lock, toothpick poised… and Connor flung the door open.

I peered through the crack in the curtains, watching as Josh’s face transformed from focused concentration to absolute horror.

“You must be the toothpick fairy!” Connor said, stepping onto the porch. The bathrobe gaped open, revealing far more tattooed torso than a PG-13 movie would allow. “Got a message for you from the lady of the house, pal.”

A startled man | Source: Freepik

A startled man | Source: Freepik

Josh’s mouth opened and closed like a fish out of water. Then he turned and ran… full sprint down the driveway, arms pumping like he was qualifying for the Olympics.

I burst out the door behind Connor. “JOSH! STOP!”

Miracle of miracles, he actually did. He turned around, pale as a ghost, hands raised like I was pointing a gun instead of just my finger.

“WHY? Why mess with my lock?”

“I just… I thought maybe you’d call me for help. If you couldn’t get in, you’d need someone, and I’d be right there. Then maybe we could talk and—”

“So you sabotaged my lock… to play hero?”

An angry woman | Source: Pexels

An angry woman | Source: Pexels

“It sounds dumb when you say it like that, Reggie.”

“That’s because IT IS dumb!” Connor interjected.

Josh looked like someone had deflated him. “I messed up, okay? I thought if I could just help you again… you’d remember the good times.”

“The good times?” I laughed. “You mean before or after you were taking Amber to Vincenzo’s while telling me you were seeing a therapist?”

“It was a mistake. I’ve been trying to tell you that for months.”

A sad man | Source: Pixabay

A sad man | Source: Pixabay

“Yeah, well,” Connor said, flexing unnecessarily, “mission failed, buddy. Leave before I call the cops.”

Josh turned and slunk off into the night, his shoulders hunched like a scolded child.

Connor closed the door behind us, grinning. “That was fun.”

But I wasn’t done.

“What are you doing?” Connor asked the next morning, peering over my shoulder at my phone.

“Creating a TikTok account,” I said, uploading the video footage.

“Savage! I didn’t know you had it in you, Reggie.”

“There’s a lot you don’t know about me,” I replied, typing out a caption: “My ex keeps jamming my door lock with toothpicks. Here’s what happened when we introduced him to my new man. 🤣😈

A woman holding her phone | Source: Pexels

A woman holding her phone | Source: Pexels

“New man, huh?” Connor raised an eyebrow.

“Artistic license,” I said, hitting post. “For dramatic effect.”

Two days later, the video had 2.1 million views and counting. Josh sent me a rambling email about privacy and how I’d ruined his life. I didn’t respond.

Instead, I forwarded the video to his boss—who happened to be Amber’s father. Turns out Amber didn’t know about me either. The plot thickened, then quickly thinned again when Josh was suddenly “pursuing other opportunities” according to the company website.

A shaken man looking at his phone | Source: Pexels

A shaken man looking at his phone | Source: Pexels

Two weeks later, Danny helped me change my locks… not because I needed to, but because it felt symbolic like closing a chapter.

“You know,” he said, tightening the final screw, “you could have just called the police.”

“And miss all this?” I gestured vaguely at the chaos of the past week. “Where’s the fun in that?”

***

That afternoon, Connor brought over pizza and coke to celebrate what he called “The Great Toothpick Revenge.”

“To small victories,” he said, clinking his can against mine.

“And to idiots who think tampering with locks is a good flirting strategy!” I added.

A woman laughing | Source: Pexels

A woman laughing | Source: Pexels

“You know,” Connor said, leaning back on my couch, “I’m still waiting for my cut of the TikTok fame.”

“How about I don’t tell anyone you wore my bathrobe? That’s payment enough.”

He grinned. “Deal!”

My phone buzzed with another notification. The video had just hit three million views.

Turns out revenge doesn’t always need a sledgehammer… sometimes a toothpick and a viral post work just fine.

A case of toothpicks | Source: Pexels

A case of toothpicks | Source: Pexels

Here’s another story: They say love is blind—mine came with an $8,437.63 bill and a disappearing act. My partner planned his exit, but karma doesn’t wear blindfolds… and she hits where it hurts.

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