When my aunt invited me on a last-minute Disneyland trip
, I thought it was a nice surprise — until she vanished with my ID,
phone, and money, leaving me stranded with one of her kids in a foreign country.
By the time we boarded the train home,
I had already planned my revenge.
The trip was supposed to be a birthday celebration for her twins,
but she treated me like a babysitter while ignoring us.
On the last day, I trusted her with my bag — phone, ID, everything.
After a quick ride, she disappeared. Hours later, no sign of her.
She’d taken off with my essentials, leaving me alone to care for a sugar-crazed ten-year-old.
At the hotel, she’d checked in and left a note: “Gone to dinner. See you on the train.”
No apology, no concern — just abandonment.
On the train, she offered me a cold bread roll as “dinner.”
I ignored her and bought her son a big slice of chocolate cake. I was done being nice.
Months later, when the family planned a mountain trip,
I booked everything — except her. When she complained,
I reminded her of her Disneyland note.
She freaked out, but I just said,“You left me stranded with a bread roll. Now you get breadcrumbs.”
She hasn’t spoken to me since.
The trip was amazing without her,
and I made sure she saw every photo. Revenge tastes sweeter than Disneyland cake.