For years, my wealthy in-laws had a shameless habit: inviting people out to fancy restaurants, ordering lavishly, then conveniently “forgetting” their wallets. Every time, someone else—usually us—got stuck with the bill. When they invited my mom to a luxurious birthday dinner while my husband and I were out of town, I warned her. She calmly assured me she could handle it.
And did she ever.As predicted, my in-laws pulled their usual trick, disappearing one by one when the $1,500 bill arrived. But my mom didn’t panic. Instead, she ordered dessert and called the restaurant manager—one of her former students, now the owner.
Together, they devised a plan. He called my in-laws, informed them they’d need to return and settle the tab—or the authorities would be contacted. They rushed back, humiliated, and paid the full bill—plus a 25% “inconvenience fee.”After that, something miraculous happened: my in-laws started paying their own way. Turns out, even the rich will change… when it hits their wallet hard enough.