My Cheapskate Husband Gave His Mother and His Ex a $10K Beach Vacation, but He Had No Idea What I’d Do Next

I didn’t usually keep count of how many times I sighed in a day. But that night? I was already on sigh number five — and it wasn’t even 6 p.m.

The kitchen smelled like dry-erase marker and overcooked soup. I’d just finished grading 28 notebooks, all of them bleeding with red-ink spelling corrections, when a notification blinked to life on the table.

Overdue utility bill.

And from the living room, Steve’s voice called out with the enthusiasm of a kid on Christmas morning:

“Babe! The new Tesla just dropped! Zero to sixty in 3.1 seconds! It’s not even a car — it’s a missile!”

I didn’t move. Didn’t flinch. Just stared at the notification and asked flatly, “Will we even have power to boil water tomorrow? They’re threatening shutoff again.”

Steve didn’t turn. Didn’t blink.

“Just pay it. You always handle that stuff anyway.”

That’s how it always went. I paid the bills. I bought the groceries. I paid for the washer. The TV. The very Wi-Fi Steve used to watch his little car fantasies.

I was on my way to change into my softest pajamas when something slipped from the pocket of his coat.

A receipt.

An actual paper receipt — rare these days, right?

Curious, I bent down and picked it up.

$10,234. Luxury Seaside Resort. 2 guests. 14 nights.

I stood frozen, while my frugal-to-the-point-of-hostile husband munched popcorn and muttered about torque ratios.

“Steve?” I walked in slowly, receipt in hand.

He barely looked up. “Huh?”

“What. Is. This?”

He barely blinked. “Oh. That. Trip for Mom. And… her friend. A gift. She’s never seen the ocean.”

I waited for the joke. The wink. Some kind of explanation that didn’t sound like gaslighting.

Instead, he turned back to the TV.

“She’s turning seventy. She deserves something nice.”

“You didn’t even buy me flowers on my birthday.”

“They wilt.”

I stared at him. “I’ve been paying for your life. The phone you won’t upgrade, the bills, the insurance. Your ‘fragile’ mother gets luxury. And I get excuses.”

“You’re strong, El. You handle stuff. She’s… delicate.”

I didn’t argue. Not this time.

Because something else was gnawing at me now.

Two guests. Ten thousand. ‘Her friend.’

I went to the bathroom and sat on the edge of the tub, not crying — just… unraveling.

My brain played those words again and again, like a chorus I hadn’t written.

That night, I wasn’t even snooping. I just wanted to check if the camp had messaged me back about scholarships.

I teach twenty-two kids. The school had funded three spots.

How do you choose between a girl whose lunch is always crackers and a boy who shares shoes with his brother?

So I begged. Sent emails. Tagged camp sponsors like some kind of desperate algorithm glitch.

Nothing.

Until I opened Facebook during a free period — and the universe, in all her irony, handed me the truth on a silver story frame.

Lora.

Steve’s ex. The one with surgically sharp cheekbones and French-manicured claws.

A story: seaside, sunbeds, umbrella.

Steve’s mom dancing in linen. Beside her — Lora, glowing.

The caption?

“Girls trip with my almost mother-in-law 💙🌴 #blessed #familygoals”

Slide two: beach picnic. Champagne.

“Thank you, Steve 💋”

That was the moment the floor shifted.

I stood, dizzy. My colleague looked up. “You okay?”

“Yeah,” I lied. “Just… need some air.”

Later that night, my thoughts were crawling. The receipt. The story. The awkward shrug.

The locked bathroom door. Steve never locked the door.

And he took his phone into the shower.

I found his laptop, still open on the desk. Just sitting there. Almost daring me.

I hesitated. For maybe three seconds.

Then I whispered, “Please. Let me be wrong.”

One click.

Messages. “Mom.”

“The weather is divine. Lora’s glowing. We’re being treated like queens. Can’t believe you pulled this off!”

“But seriously, how long are you going to keep pretending with that woman? She drags you down. You deserve more.”

Steve’s reply?

“My two favorite girls. Enjoy every second. I’ll be there soon.”

There it was. The truth.

I wasn’t his wife. I was his placeholder. A subscription he forgot to cancel.

So no, I didn’t scream. I didn’t throw a mug. I smiled.

Because suddenly, I knew exactly what to do.

He’d spent $10,000 on an ex and his mother.

Fine.

He could keep them.


One week later, the bus jolted down a dusty road toward the lake. The windows were open. Laughter bounced around like popcorn kernels. Twenty-two voices. Every one of my kids.

No one left behind.

I’d paid for the whole trip — the camp, the food, the gear, even the t-shirts:

“Team Room 12 – We Did It!”

Turns out, $10K goes far when you’re not trying to impress women who call you a burden.

There was enough left over for a retainer.

Because the night before the trip, I’d packed Steve’s life into color-coded garbage bags, labeled like museum exhibits: Denial. Deceit. Delusion.

His golf clubs? Propped against the porch like sad scarecrows. Even his electric toothbrush waited faithfully on the mat.

And taped above everything?

A note.

“Dear Steve,

Hope you enjoy life with your favorite girls.

Don’t forget sunscreen. Wouldn’t want you to burn before the hearing.

See you in court. XOXO”

I didn’t stick around to watch him find it.

Because just then, the trees opened up, and a squeal erupted from the back seat.

“Miss El! Is that the zip line?!”

“Sure is,” I smiled. “And there’s an ice cream machine too.”

The bus roared with cheers.

And as I hit the gas and the summer wind whipped through my hair, I knew something for sure:

This time, I wasn’t the one being left behind.

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