“We Gave Your Ticket to My Mom – The Grandkids Love Her More.” Just Moments Later…
Closing the Bank
They were probably already unfastening their belts anticipating champagne. Sterling most likely stretched his legs into the aisle. He always did that believing rules were written for economy class.
The waiter placed the snifter before me. The amber liquid swayed catching the glint of the airfield lights. I took a sip.
The warmth spread through my chest but didn’t melt the ice crystal that had formed there half an hour ago. I took out my phone. The screen lit up reflecting in the glass.
The private capital app loaded instantly greeting me with a black minimalist interface. For years I lied to myself. I called it support, a startup, help for a young family.
I let Sterling think his consulting firm was a successful business. But the only client of that firm in essence was me. I ran fictitious consultations through his accounts, paid for non-existent reports just so he would feel like a man, a provider.
His platinum card was linked to my main account. He never saw the real bills for the apartment, for the grandkid’s private school, for the lease on his black SUV.
I wasn’t a mother. I was an ATM with a heartbeat. And today this ATM decided to close for maintenance. My finger hovered over the family access management icon.
Two names were listed there: Sterling Vaughn and Valencia Vaughn. The limits were set to unlimited. I chuckled.
What irony. Boundless love converted into unlimited credit. And they decided it would always be this way. I pressed edit field: credit limit.
I erased the infinity symbol and entered a single digit: zero. Then I went to the current transaction section. There it was, the largest sum for today: $25,000 resort prepayment.
The payment went through two hours ago as a gift to family. In banking terminology this meant I was voluntarily covering the expenses of third parties. I pressed the dispute transaction button.
In the drop-down menu of reasons I selected: unauthorized overdraft, expense classification error. The system issued a warning.
“Attention: changing the category will result in the immediate revocation of the bank’s guarantee obligations to the merchant. The amount will be billed to the additional card holder as a personal debt. Are you sure?”
I looked out the window. The plane lifted off the ground carrying them to the paradise they had stolen. “Yes,” I said aloud and pressed confirm.
The screen blinked green. Changes accepted. Link to additional cards severed.
I knew what would happen next. I could see it as clearly as if I were sitting in the adjacent seat. Somewhere up there at 30,000 feet a flight attendant in a red uniform with a practiced smile was rolling a cart with drinks.
In business class alcohol is included in the price but Sterling always loved ordering something special that wasn’t on the menu just to show off. He probably said casually, extending that platinum card, “A bottle of Cristal, please.”
Valencia was likely already taking a selfie with a glass and Odessa was loudly admiring the service glancing at the neighbors. The flight attendant inserted the card into the terminal. A second of waiting.
Sterling smiled anticipating the first sip of freedom from maternal supervision. The terminal would have beeped, short and nasty. Red indicator.
The flight attendant’s voice became a bit drier. “I apologize sir, transaction declined. The terminal writes: card confiscated, lost.”
Sterling must have laughed waving it off casually. “That’s nonsense. The chip got demagnetized. Try again or enter it manually. It’s unlimited.”
She tried again. Same result. “Sir, the bank is blocking the transaction. We need another form of payment.”
The smile slid off Sterling’s face. He probably frowned feeling the other passengers starting to look at him. He reached into his wallet, pulled out the second card, the reserve one I gave Valencia for household expenses.
“Try this one.”
The flight attendant took the plastic. Waiting again. Beep again. Decline.
“Sir, insufficient funds.”
Sterling’s voice cracked into a squeak. “This is a bank error. I’m going to complain. I have millions in there.”
The flight attendant took the bottle back onto the cart. “Unfortunately, sir, I cannot provide you with the service. And I will have to ask you to pay for the already opened snacks in cash. Otherwise upon arrival the police will meet us.”
I finished the cognac in one gulp feeling the harshness of the alcohol finally matched the harshness of my intentions. The plane turned into a small dot in the sky. Their flight had only just begun and they were already falling.
Paradise Turned Into a Pumpkin
I paid for the cognac in cash leaving a generous tip and headed for the airport exit. My phone was silent. There was no signal on the plane giving me a few more hours of blissful silence.
I got into my car which I had left in long-term parking and drove slowly toward the city. The interior smelled of leather and my perfume but I sensed the phantom smell of tropical humidity and salt.
I knew what was happening on the other side of the world at Velana International Airport in Malé. They landed. Sterling, Valencia, the kids, and Odessa stepped out of the cool cabin into the stifling enveloping heat of the Maldives.
After the incident with the cards on board their mood was likely spoiled but not destroyed. Sterling, the master of self-deception, convinced himself and his wife that it was just a technical glitch.
Some error in the bank’s security system that I would of course fix as soon as I saw the missed calls. They went through passport control and headed to the transfer desk for the Azure Bay Hotel.
Usually guests of this level are met with iced towels soaked in lemongrass and fresh coconuts. The captain of the private boat in a snow white uniform should have personally taken their luggage.
But this time the captain stood with his arms crossed over his chest looking not at them but at his tablet. He asked, not even trying to fake a welcoming smile, “Mr. Vaughn?”
Valencia tried to slip forward adjusting her wide-brimmed hat. “Yes that’s us. We had a terrible misunderstanding on the plane but we are so glad to finally—”
The captain interrupted her, not looking up. “Your reservation is cancelled.”
A pause hung in the air. The noise of arriving tourists, the lapping of water against the pier—everything suddenly became deafeningly loud. Sterling tried to give his voice authority but it came out pathetic.
“What do you mean cancelled? Do you know who my mother is?”
The captain finally looked at them. “Ulalia Vaughn, the owner of the primary account. Madame Ulalia revoked the authorization 40 minutes ago.”
In his gaze one could read the weariness of a man who had seen too many rich loafers whose credit cards suddenly turned into pumpkins.
The captain added, “I cannot take you on board. The boat is only for guests with a confirmed reservation.”
Valencia flushed. Her face went splotchy red contrasting with her white linen dress. She shrieked, attracting the attention of the line.
“You have no right! I will sue! This is arbitrary! We are with children! You are obligated to take us!”
The captain cut her off. “I am obligated to follow the bank and hotel instructions, ma’am.”
He turned to the next group of tourists, smiled at them in a way he hadn’t smiled at Sterling a minute ago, and gestured for them to board. “Please, welcome to paradise.”
