Jeb Bush, the former First Son and onetime first choice to reclaim the White House for the Republican Party, bowed out of the race on Saturday evening after failing to break fourth place in any of the three primary contests so far this year.

To add insult to a deeply bruising, personal injury, Bush’s campaign and super-PAC, Right to Rise, blew through $130 million along the long road to nowhere. A detailed breakdown of how the candidate burned that cash over the last seven months makes one thing abundantly clear: Bush spent money like the wealthy prep-school kid he always was.

No self-respecting rich kid with access to a credit card would go seven months without a stint in Las Vegas, and Bush and his staff did not disappoint. While Bush didn’t survive long enough to make it to Nevada, his campaign and super-PAC still poured nearly $50,000 into Sin City, specifically, at the Bellagio, the Wynn, and the Venetian hotels and casinos, according to a ledger re-created by The New York Times. Frankly, it could have been worse.

Most appropriately, Bush’s team racked up $94,100 clubbing throughout his campaign, the Times reported. Though, for those envisioning Jeb! teetering on a banquet spraying bottles of champagne, these clubs were more of the “country” and “Ivy League” variety than the “night” kind. It is familiar territory for Bush, who spent his formative teenage years tucked away behind the centuries-old walls of Phillips Academy, where Vanity Fair contributing editor David Margolick reported he hung around with a “clique of wealthy kids,” which could likely describe just about every one of his generation to attend the New England boarding school. His campaign team shelling out a pretty penny to court donors at the Yale Club, the Westmore Club in Nantucket, the Union League Club of Chicago, and more than two dozen other private, preppy haunts, probably felt just like a second home (or third, or fourth, or fifth) for the former tennis team captain.

It seems, then, that campaign, with its $130 million spending spree befitting the best trust-fund baby, was simply an attempt by Bush to live up to his boarding school’s motto: “The End Depends on the Beginning.” The nearly $5,000 pizza tab was just for kicks.