My Stepmom Gave Me Fake Plane Tickets So I Couldn’t Attend Her and My Dad’s Wedding – She Didn’t See the Ending Coming

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I’m Isabel, 23, and last month my dad, Jonathan, remarried—or at least, he tried to.

His fiancée, Patricia, had been in our lives for a few years. On the surface, she was polished, charming, and knew how to put on that “perfect hostess” smile when Dad was around. She’d compliment my shoes, laugh politely at my jokes, and chat lightly about work.

But when it was just the two of us, her whole attitude changed. Her smile faded, her voice turned sharper, and she’d slip in little digs—questions that sounded innocent but carried a sting. Things like, “Do you think your job is really stable enough long-term?” or “Funny how you and your dad are close now… after all those years your mom raised you.”

It was like she wanted to remind me where I stood. If I ever pushed back, she’d twist it to make me look paranoid.

Still, it was my dad’s wedding. I told myself I wouldn’t let tension stop me from supporting him.

“Show up, smile, support Dad, Is,” I said out loud in my mirror one morning. “Maybe Patricia and I can actually find some common ground.”

A month before the ceremony, an email from Patricia landed in my inbox.

The subject line read: “Travel Details for All Guests.”

I groaned, half-laughing. “Here we go.”

The message started sweet: “Since it’s an out-of-state wedding, Jonathan and I have decided to cover travel costs for all our guests. We want to make it easy for everyone to celebrate with us.”

I blinked. That was… generous. And expensive.

I texted my dad immediately:
“Wow, I just saw the email. Thank you so much! That’s really kind, Dad.”

He replied with a heart and a thumbs-up emoji. Typical Dad.

Attached was my flight e-ticket. My name, airline, flight number, seat assignment—all looked legit.

But at the bottom, a line made me pause:
“I got a special deal by booking through my travel agent, so please don’t call the airline or make changes. It could mess up the group rate.”

It felt odd. But I pushed away the doubt. I didn’t want to be “difficult” before the wedding.

“Thank you so much, Patricia! I can’t wait to celebrate,” I texted her.

She sent back a champagne emoji and a smiley face.

The weeks before the wedding flew by. Between work deadlines, laundry, and finding the right dress—beautiful but not too flashy—I barely had time to think. Every phone call with Dad reminded me why I had to be there.

“You’re going to love the venue, Izzy,” he told me one night. “They’ve got string lights everywhere. You always loved those when you were little.”

“I remember,” I said, smiling. “Even when it rained, you’d hang them up in the backyard for my birthdays.”

“You made me do it,” he chuckled.

The morning of the flight, I felt ready. I even wore a nice travel dress so I’d arrive looking put together. Suitcase in one hand, coffee in the other, I walked into the airport.

At the kiosk, I typed my name and confirmation code.

Beep.

NO RESERVATION FOUND.

I frowned and tried again. Same result. A knot formed in my stomach.

I rolled my bag to the airline counter. The agent, Marlene, smiled politely.

“Morning, darling. Let’s see what we’ve got. ID, please?”

I slid it over. She typed… and then her smile slipped.

“That’s strange,” she murmured.

My chest tightened. “What’s strange?”

“This ticket isn’t valid,” she said softly. “There’s no record of you on this flight. Or on any flight under this booking today.”

“What? That can’t be right. My stepmom booked it. She emailed me the confirmation!”

She studied the paper I handed her. “Ma’am… this isn’t a real confirmation code. It’s random letters. This hasn’t been issued by us.”

My hands trembled. “But—she said not to call the airline, that it was a group deal—”

“I’m sorry,” Marlene interrupted, voice firm but kind. “We have to treat this as possible ticket fraud. I need to call security.”

“Fraud?” My voice cracked. “I’m just trying to get to my dad’s wedding!”

Within minutes, two security officers appeared. A tall man with a calm face, and a woman who looked like she’d seen situations like this before.

“Ma’am, please step aside,” the man said.

Dragging my suitcase, I stood off to the side as people stared. Someone muttered behind me, “Another scammer.” Heat burned my cheeks.

“Where did you get this ticket?” the officer asked.

“My stepmom, Patricia. She said she and my dad were paying for all the travel. She sent me the ticket and told me not to call the airline. I didn’t know it wasn’t real!”

The woman officer glanced at the paper, then at me. “Looks like you’ve been scammed. And the scammer is someone close to you.”

The real ticket price? $800 one way. I couldn’t afford it. Rent and bills were waiting at home.

I sat on a bench, watching planes take off one by one, tears stinging my eyes. My phone buzzed. A text from Dad:

“Can’t wait to see you later, Izzy.”

Then, minutes before the ceremony, Patricia’s name flashed on my screen:

“Oh, you’re really not coming? Too bad, Isabel. At least your dad will know you ignored our invitation and that you don’t respect us.”

My heart stopped. She had planned this. She wanted me humiliated and absent.

For a second, I wanted to just cry in the bathroom. But then I imagined my dad under those string lights, searching the crowd for me… and Patricia whispering lies in his ear.

No. Not this time.

I forwarded Dad Patricia’s email with the fake ticket. I attached the police report. Then I sent a screenshot of my earlier thank-you text—proof I thought the ticket was real.

“Dad, I wanted to be there more than anything. Patricia sent me a fake ticket. Airport police got involved. I’m so sorry.”

Fifteen minutes later, my phone rang. Aunt Susannah.

“Where are you, Izzy?” she asked urgently.

“Airport. Did Dad get my email?”

“Oh, he got it,” she said. “He went pale. He walked away in the middle of his vows. He showed everyone the police report. He’s calling you.”

Seconds later, Dad’s name lit up.

“Dad?”

“Where are you?” His voice was steady, but tight.

“Still at the airport. I tried, Dad. The ticket wasn’t real. They called it fraud.”

“I saw,” he said, exhaling. “Izzy… I’m so sorry. I’ll call you back.”

Later, Aunt Susannah told me what happened. Dad confronted Patricia in front of the guests.

“You tried to humiliate my daughter on our wedding day,” he said loudly. “You forged travel documents. You embarrassed her in public. We’re done.”

Patricia snapped back, “I was testing her commitment to this family! She never tried with me!”

Dad laughed bitterly. “The only thing you tested was my commitment to you. And you failed.”

Half the guests followed him out. They went to a restaurant across the street and turned it into an impromptu reception. Aunt Susannah FaceTimed me in.

“We know you tried, Isabel,” an aunt told me.
“We’re glad the truth came out,” an uncle added.

Later that night, Dad called from his car. “Baby, Patricia ruined everything. But you— you saved me from a marriage built on lies.”

The next day, he spoke with a lawyer. Because the official registration had been signed the day before, and Patricia’s stunt happened before the reception, they moved fast enough to get an annulment.

We also discovered Patricia had pulled similar stunts with another partner’s kids. Word spread. Friends stopped talking to her.

Dad canceled the honeymoon and rebooked it as a father-daughter trip.

“We’ll make up for lost time,” he said.

On the trip, we talked the way we used to. About work, life, boundaries. He told me, “Sometimes the boundary isn’t for them, Izzy. It’s for the version of you that kept being polite while getting hurt.”

When we got home, Dad held a family dinner. He raised a glass of iced tea.

“To Isabel,” he said proudly. “For telling the truth. And to a future where we trust our instincts instead of keeping quiet.”

Everyone clapped. I laughed and cried at the same time.

A week later, Patricia texted me once: “I never meant to hurt you, Isabel. But you made me look terrible in front of everyone.”

I didn’t reply.

Because sometimes silence is the clearest answer you can give.