For my wife’s 40th birthday, I wanted to do something unforgettable. After years of putting our family’s needs before mine, saving every spare dollar, and
For my wife’s 40th birthday, I wanted to do something unforgettable. After years of putting our family’s needs before mine, saving every spare dollar, and working late into countless nights, I thought I finally had the chance to give her a gift she’d remember forever.
She’d always dreamed of going to Japan. We used to talk about it when we were younger—back when we lived in a one-bedroom apartment with a mattress on the floor and ate instant noodles for dinner. She’d show me pictures of cherry blossoms in Kyoto, the neon streets of Tokyo, and those tranquil hot springs where steam rose off the rocks like something out of a dream.
So, I saved for months. I even picked up extra shifts at the warehouse. By the time her birthday rolled around, I had booked an $11,400 family trip to Japan—flights, hotels, rail passes, everything.
I wanted our kids to see her face when I told her. I wanted her to know how much I appreciated her. But nothing—absolutely nothing—could have prepared me for the text that came three days before the trip.
It was a Wednesday evening. I was at work finishing inventory when my phone buzzed. I saw my daughter’s name on the screen and smiled.
“Hey, sweetheart,” I said when I picked up, but there was no answer. Just a text. “Dad, just letting you know we gave your spot on the Japan trip to Mom’s friend David.
He’s more fun to travel with. Don’t be mad, okay?”
I froze. Mom’s friend David?
I blinked at the message, half expecting it to disappear like it was a bad joke. But then another text followed. “Mom said you wouldn’t mind, since you don’t really like flying anyway.”
David.
The name hit me like a brick. I’d heard it before—several times, actually. He was my wife’s ex from years ago, a guy she’d dated briefly before we got married.
She mentioned him once when we ran into him at a coffee shop two summers back. I remembered the way her face lit up when she saw him, how her laugh changed slightly—brighter, a little too familiar. I brushed it off back then, telling myself it was harmless nostalgia.
But this? This wasn’t nostalgia. This was betrayal.
I didn’t even reply right away. I just sat there staring at the screen, my pulse pounding in my ears. After a long minute, I typed two words:
“Got it.”
Then I went home early.
That night, I sat at the kitchen table with the printed itineraries spread out in front of me. The reservations I’d spent months piecing together—the five-star hotel in Tokyo, the bullet train passes, the guided day trip to Mount Fuji. Every detail was planned perfectly.
And they had given my spot… to him. My hands were shaking, but my mind was surprisingly clear. I opened my laptop.
Logged into my travel account. And one by one, I began canceling everything. The flights—gone.
The hotel—refunded, with a cancellation fee that was worth every cent. The rail passes—voided. I didn’t even need to call anyone.
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