Twelve Friends Showed Up With an Invoice After Excluding Her From the Trip She Paid For-myhoa

When the doorbell rang, Claire did not move right away.

She stayed with one hand resting on the edge of the kitchen counter, the folded takeout receipt under her thumb, while the sound from the hallway faded into the low buzz of her phone. Rain tapped against the window behind her. The noodles on the counter had gone cold. The apartment smelled faintly of soy sauce, lemon dish soap, and wet wool from Megan’s coat still hanging over the back of a chair.

The bell rang again.

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Not frantic. Not apologetic. Just firm enough to say they expected the door to open.

Claire walked to the peephole without turning on the hall light.

All twelve of them stood outside.

Megan was in front, her blonde hair damp from the rain, one side tucked behind her ear in that careful way she used when she was trying to look calm. Jason stood behind her with his jaw tight, one hand braced against the wall. Talia held her phone at chest height, the screen lighting her face from below. The others filled the hallway in clusters, wearing wet jackets and the same stunned expression: not sorrow, not shame, but inconvenience.

In Megan’s hand was a printed invoice.

Claire recognized the logo at the top before she could read the total. The lake cabin. The same cabin she had found three months earlier, after everyone complained that every decent place was too expensive, too far, too small, too booked. She had spent her lunch break comparing cancellation policies, texting links, reading reviews, checking whether the dock had railings because Jason’s little brother sometimes came along and nobody else remembered details like that.

She had paid the $286 deposit at 12:14 p.m. on a Tuesday.

Nobody had thanked her that day. They had only sent heart emojis and moved on.

Now they were at her door.

Megan lifted the invoice with two fingers, as if it were evidence.

Claire opened the door only as far as the security chain allowed.

The hallway smelled like rainwater, elevator metal, and expensive perfume gone sharp under stress. Somewhere down the corridor, a neighbor’s television laughed through a wall. Water dripped from the cuff of Jason’s jacket onto the carpet.

Megan’s eyes went straight to the chain.

“Claire,” she said carefully. “Can we talk like adults?”

Claire looked at the invoice.

The balance was printed in bold. $1,742.68.

The host had charged the remaining rental balance, a weekend cleaning fee, a late-payment penalty, and a nonrefundable administrative charge because the backup card on the reservation had failed after Claire removed hers.

Jason leaned forward.

“You canceled the grocery delivery too?”

Claire did not answer.

Talia shifted behind Megan, her wet boots squeaking against the carpet. “And the dinner reservation. They said the deposit is gone.”

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