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I Was Upgraded to a Free First-Class Seat — But My Entitled Husband Claimed He Deserved It Just for Existing, and Shockingly, My Family Took His Side

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When the gate agent called my name and handed me a new boarding pass, I thought the universe had finally thrown me a bone. “Congratulations,” she said with a practiced smile. “You’ve been upgraded to first class.

Enjoy your flight.”

I blinked down at the golden ticket in my hand. Seat 3A. First class.

I had never flown first class in my life. My work trips always stuck me in economy with my knees jammed against the seat in front of me, a lukewarm cup of coffee if I was lucky, and a headache from the crying baby behind me. But not today.

Today, I was going to be sipping wine in a wide leather chair at the front of the plane, with real cutlery and maybe even a warm blanket. I practically floated back to where my husband, Paul, and my parents were waiting at the gate. We were traveling together to my cousin’s wedding, a rare family trip.

My parents hadn’t flown in years, and Paul was already complaining about the long layover we’d had earlier. “You’ll never believe this,” I said, holding up the boarding pass like a prize. “I got upgraded.

First class!”

My mom gasped. “Oh, honey, that’s wonderful!”

My dad chuckled. “Looks like you’ll be the fancy one this trip.”

But Paul didn’t smile.

His brow furrowed, and he gave me a look like I’d just insulted him. “Wait,” he said flatly. “You got upgraded?”

“Yes,” I said, still riding the high.

“Isn’t that crazy? I’ve never even—”

“Then give it to me.”

The words came out so casually, like he was asking me to pass the salt at dinner. I froze.

“Excuse me?”

“Give me the seat,” he repeated, holding out his hand as if I should just hand him the pass. “You don’t even care about stuff like that. I do.

You’d be fine in coach.”

I laughed, certain he was joking. “Nice try. You can enjoy economy with everyone else.”

But his hand stayed out, palm up.

His face was serious. “Come on,” he said. “It’s only fair.

I’m taller, so I need the legroom more. Plus, I work harder than you. I deserve it.”

My jaw dropped.

“Are you serious right now? This wasn’t some raffle you entered. They gave it to me.

My name was called. My boarding pass was changed. Not yours.”

Paul glanced at my parents, as if expecting them to back him up.

And, to my horror, they did. “Well…” my mom began slowly, “he does have a point about his height. He’s always so uncomfortable on planes.”

“And you’re still young,” my dad added.

“You can manage the economy better than he can. Maybe it would be generous to let him have the seat.”

I stared at them, stunned. “You’ve got to be kidding me.

You think I should just give away something I was gifted, just because Paul wants it?”

Paul folded his arms smugly. “Exactly. It’s about practicality.

Why waste the extra space on you when I’ll make better use of it?”

I felt like I was suffocating. This wasn’t just about a seat. This was every argument we’d ever had condensed into one moment.

Paul always thought the world owed him comfort, and my parents had spent my whole life teaching me to step aside, to “be the bigger person,” to give up what I wanted for someone else’s benefit. Not this time. “No,” I said firmly.

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