Everything was ready the night before. Three suitcases lined up by the door. My daughter’s sunhat hooked to her backpack. My husband’s passport zipped neatly into the travel folder. Mine too—at least, I thought it was.
This trip to Aruba wasn’t just a vacation. It was a long-overdue escape. Work had drained me. Emma had just finished a tough school year. Nathan had barely looked up from his laptop in months. We needed sun, ocean air, and nothing to do but breathe.
And then Donna, my mother-in-law, happened.
She called two weeks before we left, voice trembling with performative loneliness. “I’d hate to be alone while you all go off and have fun,” she said to Nathan. “Maybe I could tag along?”
I smiled tightly and told Nathan it was fine. What else could I say without looking heartless?
The night before the flight, Donna insisted on sleeping over so we could all leave together. Convenient, right? But instead of going to bed, she pulled Nathan aside with a fake-helpless smile, asking him to show her how the Echo speaker worked in the guest room.
I watched from the hallway while she giggled over voice commands she’d used a dozen times before. It was the usual Donna move—steal Nathan’s attention and play the damsel in need. I rolled my eyes and focused on the important thing: tomorrow, I’d be on a beach.
Until I wasn’t.
The next morning, I went to grab the travel folder from the kitchen. It was where I’d left it. But when I opened it, my passport was gone.
At first, I thought I was being clumsy. I checked again. Then I tore through drawers, flipped laundry baskets, emptied Emma’s schoolbag. Nothing.
Nathan helped me look, calm at first, then concerned. Donna came downstairs in full smug serenity, clutching her tea like a prop.
“Oh no,” she murmured, her voice too sweet. “Is something wrong?”
I told her my passport had vanished.
She tilted her head, like a curious parrot. “Well… maybe you weren’t meant to go.”
That’s when I knew. She took it. She had to have.
But saying it out loud would get me nowhere. Nathan always gave her the benefit of the doubt, no matter how many times she made herself the center of his universe.
So instead, I told him to go. Take Emma. Go to Aruba. Enjoy it. “I’ll figure things out here,” I said.
Donna looked disappointed that I didn’t burst into tears on the floor. I smiled as she walked out the door.
Once the house was empty, I stormed into the guest room.
I searched every drawer, checked behind books, inside bags, even the back of the closet. Finally, buried beneath a stack of home magazines in the nightstand drawer, tucked into a Ziplock bag, I found it.
My passport.
I could almost hear Donna’s smug little voice in my head. “Maybe you weren’t meant to go.”
But I was. Oh, I was.
So I called the airline. Miraculously, there was one seat left. I booked it. I didn’t tell Nathan. I didn’t text. I wanted Donna to think she’d won.
Three hours later, I landed in Aruba, checked into a separate suite, and waited.
I knew their dinner reservation. I knew where they’d be. And as the sun dipped over the island and torches lit up the outdoor restaurant, I walked in.
Emma saw me first. “Mommy!” she shouted, throwing her arms around me.
Nathan looked stunned. “You found your passport?”
Donna dropped her wine glass. “But… how—?”
“It was exactly where you left it,” I said calmly. “In the nightstand. In the Ziplock. Under the magazines.”
Nathan turned to her. “Mom?”
Donna flailed. “I don’t know what she’s talking about.”
I smiled and held up my phone.
“You know what’s funny? Echo devices record everything. Especially when you’re asking them to change the temperature.”
I hit play.
Alexa’s voice came first. “Setting temperature to 72.”
Then Donna’s voice, clear as day: “If she can’t keep track of her own passport, maybe she shouldn’t come. Natie will finally relax without her nagging.”
Silence.
Donna turned ghost white. Nathan just stared at her, his entire face slack with betrayal.
That night, after Donna stormed off, Nathan and I sat on the balcony. Emma was already asleep in the other room.
“I didn’t want to believe it,” he said softly. “But now I can’t un-hear it.”
I nodded. “She’s been pulling strings for years. You just finally saw the wires.”
When we got home, Donna tried damage control. First the tears. Then the blame. “You’re poisoning him against me!” she shouted one day through the screen door.
“No,” I said. “You did that all by yourself.”
I shut the door. And this time, for good.
A few weeks later, I booked a solo spa weekend. All-inclusive. Quiet. And blissfully, gloriously Donna-free.
Paid in full—with the refund from the flight she tried to keep me off.