Mum Mocked My £2,500 Flight Budget, Then Used My Card For Hers-heuh

“The flight is £2,500 each,” my mum said. “If you can’t afford it, stay behind.”

I nodded, because there are moments when arguing only gives cruel people an audience.

Three hours later, my phone lit up with a fraud alert.

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My “empty” card, the one I had left in my parents’ house five years ago, had just paid £10,000 for four business-class tickets to the Maldives.

Not for me.

For them.

I did not shout.

I did not ring my mother and give her the satisfaction of hearing my voice shake.

I opened my banking app, hit DISPUTE, locked the account, and waited for their airport selfies to load.

Because that was when the real investigation began.

My name is Jada, and by thirty I had learnt that my family preferred a simple version of me.

In their version, I was the quiet daughter with the old car, the plain clothes, and the dull job.

A woman who entered numbers all day, paid rent with difficulty, and ought to be grateful for any invitation to sit at the table.

They never asked much about my work.

That suited me.

The less they knew, the less they could use.

The truth was that I worked as a senior forensic accountant, the sort of person companies called when money had vanished and everyone suddenly had a very poor memory.

I read card statements like other people read gossip.

I noticed repeated charges, odd timings, false confidence, and the tiny administrative habits people left behind when they thought no one was paying attention.

Fraud is rarely as clever as fraudsters think it is.

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