I’m Lauren. I’m 37, married to Derek for ten years, and we have three kids: Emily, Max, and Lucy. At the time, Lucy was still a toddler, and I was deep in maternity leave, surviving on caffeine, crumbs, and whatever sleep I could steal between tantrums and night feedings. Life was loud, messy, and exhausting, but I believed we were a team. I believed that even when things were hard, we were in it together. That illusion shattered two weeks before Christmas, when Derek casually announced he had booked holiday tickets for himself and his mother. Business class.
I laughed at first, waiting for the punchline. “And me?” I asked. Derek hesitated just long enough to make my stomach tighten. “You’ll fly economy. With the kids,” he said. When I stared at him, stunned, he shrugged. “Either that, or you don’t go at all. Take it or leave it.” Business class for him and Cynthia. The cheapest seats for me and three children. It wasn’t a joke. It was an ultimatum, delivered like it was the most reasonable thing in the world.
The week before the trip was chaos. I was up before sunrise every day, packing snacks, wrapping presents, organizing documents, calming meltdowns, and making sure Lucy didn’t hurt herself while I wasn’t looking. Derek floated through it all untouched. At the airport, he and Cynthia arrived polished and relaxed, matching scarves, champagne flutes already in hand. Derek kissed my cheek and smiled. “Have fun,” he said, as I dragged three overtired kids toward cramped economy seats.
The flight was miserable. Emily cried when her screen stopped working. Max refused the food and kicked the seat in front of him. Lucy threw up all over my coat. I held it together with clenched teeth and forced smiles. Derek texted once from business class: “Hope they’re good. Lol.” That was it. The trip itself was worse. I hauled the kids through crowds, snow, and endless lines while scrolling past Derek’s photos of luxury dinners, skiing, and glasses clinking with his mother. Every post felt like a reminder of where I ranked.
On the final night, Cynthia walked into our small hotel room and slid a piece of paper across the table. “I hope you enjoyed the trip, Lauren. Here’s what you owe me.” My eyes scanned the page. Business-class flights. Economy tickets. Hotel costs. Excursions. Holiday surcharge. Total: $6,950. When I asked if she was serious, she smiled coolly. “Of course. You don’t work. If you don’t have it, think of it as a loan.” In that moment, everything became clear. Derek wasn’t clueless. He was complicit. And Cynthia wasn’t entitled. She was cruel.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I smiled, folded the paper, and thanked her. What she didn’t know was that Derek had made one mistake he couldn’t undo. Years earlier, during a refinancing, he’d put the house temporarily in my name because my credit was better. It had never been switched back. While they slept that night, I emailed a lawyer. Two weeks later, Derek returned from work to find the locks changed and divorce papers taped to the door. I paid Cynthia’s bill in full—using money from selling the house. Karma didn’t rush. It waited until the timing was perfect.