My family told me I wasn’t invited to the cruise I paid for because Dad wanted “just family”—so I kept my penthouse suite, downgraded their rooms to the cheapest cabins, and watched them discover what happens when the family ATM finally stops working. — Part 2

I sat on my couch until sunrise with every booking confirmation open on my laptop. Billed to Millie Miller. Cardholder: Millie Miller. Contact email: Millie Miller. My name was everywhere. That was when the pain hardened into clarity. They thought I was useful only until the payment cleared. They forgot the booking still belonged to me.

At 8:01 the next morning, I called the travel agency. A woman named Brenda answered. I gave her the confirmation number.

“Looks like a wonderful family trip,” she said.

“It was supposed to be,” I replied. “I need to make some changes.”

First, I canceled every premium dining package. Then the drink passes. Then the Wi-Fi. Then the excursions. Snorkeling, ziplining, private beach cabana—all canceled, all refunded to my card. Then Brenda asked if there was anything else.

“Yes,” I said. “I need to change the cabin assignments.”

There was a pause.

“What kind of change?”

“The five balcony cabins under Richard Miller, Susan Miller, Vanessa Miller, Brandon Smith, and the other Miller guests. Move them to the cheapest interior cabins available.”

“The most basic rooms?”

“Yes.”

“I have several on deck two,” Brenda said carefully. “No windows. Near the engine area.”

“That’s perfect.”

“And your suite, Miss Miller? Would you like to cancel that?”

I looked at the sunrise outside my window.

“No,” I said. “Keep mine.”

For the first time in twenty-four hours, I smiled.

“I’ll be there.”

Two weeks later, I boarded the ship alone. Not embarrassed. Not hiding. Alone. My penthouse suite was larger than my first apartment. It had a marble bathroom, a private balcony, champagne in an ice bucket, and a welcome note addressed to Miss Miller. For once, something I paid for belonged only to me.

I did not see them on the first day. But on the second evening, I walked into the main buffet and spotted them near the dessert line. They looked miserable. Dad’s jaw was tight. Mom looked exhausted. Vanessa was waving her hands, complaining. Then Mom saw me. She froze with a slice of cake halfway to her plate. Dad followed her stare. Vanessa turned around. For once, none of them had anything clever to say. I sat by the window, took a slow bite of salad, and smiled. They stormed over. Dad spoke first.

“What are you doing here?”

I wiped my mouth with a napkin.

“I’m on vacation.”

Vanessa’s eyes dropped to my wrist. My gold suite band. Then she looked at her own cheap blue one. Realization hit her face like a slap. I stood calmly.

“Well,” I said, picking up my plate, “enjoy the buffet.”

That night, they tried to enter the steakhouse. I was already seated inside with lobster bisque and a glass of wine. The hostess asked for their reservation. Dad gave his name. Nothing. Mom said,

“Our daughter booked it for us.”

The hostess asked for their cabin number. Then her face changed.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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