“Here’s some clothes and food for a week. I’m going on vacation with my mistress, taking the kids with me,” my husband said, throwing the bag of clothes right onto the snow-covered porch of the dacha. But he couldn’t even imagine the surprise awaiting them at the airport. 😱😢
It was -15 degrees. The snow crunched underfoot, the air cut into my lungs. This dacha was fifty kilometers from the city—no neighbors, no transportation, no communication. The perfect place to get rid of the wife.
I stood in an old jacket, clutching a folder of documents, and silently watched as my husband hurriedly unloaded a bundle of damp firewood and a bag of grain from the trunk. He did everything quickly, nervously—as if he was afraid to linger around me for an extra minute.
“I changed the locks on the apartment! You won’t be able to come home,” he shouted from the car.
The children were sitting in the backseat. They didn’t look at me. They’d already been explained everything—in their own way.
The black SUV took off, its wheels spinning in the soft snow. The car slowly disappeared around a bend in the pine trees, leaving behind only tire tracks and the smell of exhaust fumes.
I watched it go… and smiled. After all, my husband and his mistress had no idea what a surprise awaited them at the airport. 😲🤔
My husband didn’t notice the most important thing. He didn’t notice how, at night, while he was sleeping, I opened his duffel bag. How I carefully rearranged the contents. How I placed an empty folder inside and took the entire contents with me.
Several hours passed. The snow fell harder. I lit a fire in the stove, made some tea, and waited calmly.
The phone rang late in the evening.
“Where are you?!” — my husband’s voice trembled with rage. “Where are my documents?”
I heard the noise of the airport, flight announcements, and his lover’s hysterical whispers somewhere nearby.
“What are you talking about?”— I asked calmly.
“There’s NOTHING in the folder! Passport, money, cards—EVERYTHING’S GONE!”
He almost screamed. “What have you done?”
I imagined the scene: the check-in counter, the confused man, his lover with a ticket in her hand and a cold gaze. They let her through. He—not.
“Has your lover already cleared security?” — I clarified.
He fell silent. The silence was sweet.
“She’s leaving alone”— he finally hissed. “And you… you’ll regret it. Where are you, anyway?”
I looked at the dark window, where snow was falling softly.
“It’s none of your business where I am.” I said. “The documents are where you left me. Come and pick them up. They’re already soaked through in the snow.”
And I turned off the phone.
