04/01/2026
My ex-mother-in-law took 25 relatives to Paris using my credit card and tried to spend $35,000. Then she called me, laughing, âEnjoy paying for itâyour account will be drained when weâre done.â
I calmly replied,
âYou might want to prepare yourself⌠I canceled that card the day the divorce was finalized.â
It had been exactly eleven days since the divorce when Patricia Monroe boarded a flight to Paris with twenty-five relativesâand my old credit card details in her purse.
I didnât know.
I was still in Chicago, surrounded by boxes and paperwork, trying to process how ten years of marriage ended in a quiet courthouse and a handshake from my lawyer.
In truth, the marriage had ended long before that.
Daniel had become just like his motherâentitled, dismissive, and unwilling to respect boundaries.
And Patricia?
She treated my finances like a shared family resource.
During the marriage, she constantly âborrowedâ things and called it affectionâjewelry, travel points, passwords, even my time.
Daniel always said, âJust keep the peace.â
But in their world, âpeaceâ meant unlimited accessâand zero accountability.
When I filed for divorce, Patricia called me selfish.
But what they really brought into my lifeâ
was chaos.
The night before their trip, my bank issued a replacement card to my old address due to a subscription I had forgotten to cancel.
But the account was mine.
Always had been.
And after the divorce, I made sure of one thingâ
every card linked to it was being shut down.
The bank confirmed everything would be deactivated within 24 hours.
I thought that was the end of it.
Then at 6:10 a.m., my phone lit up with alerts.
Luxury hotels.
Designer stores.
Group dinners.
Cruise bookings.
Paris.
Over and over.
The total passed $35,000 in less than an hour.
Before I could reactâ
Patricia called me.
Her voice was loud, full of laughter and clinking glasses.
âThanks for paying,â she mocked. âBy the time weâre done, youâll be broke.â
I stood there, looking out over the city.
And instead of panicâ
I felt calm.
Divorce had taught me that.
I let her laugh for a moment⌠then said quietly:
âPatricia, you might want to confirm your payment with the hotel first.â
Silence.
Then I explained.
The card hadnât just been canceled that morning.
It was shut down the moment the divorce became official.
Every charge she made?
Temporary.
And once the system updatedâ
every payment would be declined.
Every reservation would fail.
And every place she used that cardâŚ
would come back to her.
For the first timeâ
she had no response.
Then I heard it.
Voices behind her.
Confusion.
Staff asking for another form of payment.
Family members questioning what was happening.
Her breathing shifted.
The confidence disappeared.
Replaced by panic.
She called me petty.
I answered calmly:
âNo⌠prepared.â
And just before I ended the call, I heard the hotel manager say the words that turned her luxury trip into a disaster:
âMadam, if payment cannot be completed immediately, your reservation will be canceled.â
đ To be continuedâŚ