She Paid for Dinner and Kept the Points
She put the whole dinner on her card so we could split it later... then kept every point.
This is an original fictional interactive webtoon case about money fights. Read the story, inspect the details, pick a side, and see the split.
Avery's birthday. Seven friends. One long table.
Pick your first lean.
One tap now. You can flip after the story.
First take: No first take yet. Story pressure only.
It sounded practical.
Exact shares. No drama. Or so it seemed.
One comment changed the vibe.
Nobody paid extra. But nobody agreed to the points either.
Paige said the card was hers.
Share the points. Keep the perk. Make a rule.
Pick your side before the split.
Check the details.
The checkout
The server said one card would make checkout easier, so Paige offered to pay first and collect each person's share.
The paybacks
Everyone sent Paige the exact amount they owed for dinner. No one says she added extra money to their shares.
The perk
Paige later mentioned the group dinner helped her earn card points. She says the perk belongs to the person who used the card.
Open the receipts
- The dinner was supposed to be easy. Morgan thought the hardest part of the night would be getting everyone to agree on appetizers.
- Paige offered a one-card fix. When splitting the check got messy, Paige offered to put the whole table on her card and let everyone send her their share.I can put it on mine.Perfect, thanks.I can put it on mine. / Perfect, thanks.
- Everyone paid her back that night. By the time they left the restaurant, Paige had collected each person's share and Morgan assumed the dinner math was done.
- Then Paige mentioned the points. The next day, Paige joked that the birthday bill had given her a big points boost.That dinner helped my points.Wait, all of ours?That dinner helped my points. / Wait, all of ours?
- The math was clean. The perk was quiet. Paige collected the exact shares. The part Morgan questioned was the private perk created by everybody's spending.
- Morgan said the perk came from everyone. Morgan told Paige the points felt like a hidden benefit. Paige said she had fronted the money, handled the math, and used her own card.That was group spending.It was my card.That was group spending. / It was my card.
- The group split fast. Some friends said Paige should share the value. Others said whoever pays gets the points. A third group wanted a rotation rule before the next dinner.
- So who gets the points? Paige made checkout easy. The group made the purchase possible. Morgan still cannot decide which fact matters more.