If you don't have too many corals (or if they're easily removable and not mounted to a large piece of rock), then I would suggest inspecting all of your corals, scraping off any eggs you find, and then trying to dip all of your corals on a weekly basis (I used Revive). Or at least dip once before you leave for two weeks, and do it again once you get back.
I personally dealt with AEFW AND Red Bugs almost a year ago, and have successfully gotten rid of both with only 1 casualty (from the AEFW). I actually already had a small holding tank and only placed the affected corals in their after dipping them in Revive since it wouldn't fit ALL of my corals (and continued to dip them religiously every week for about 2 months). Another trick that I'm not sure was the solution, but may have helped, is after scraping any eggs that you find, place a thick coat of superglue over the area to make sure that any leftover eggs are sealed and presumably die or never hatch (this is just a guess, so don't think this alone should do the trick). Knowing that there was likely eggs or AEFW still in the display tank, I also dipped all of the acros in there every week for the same period of time even though none of them showed signs of having AEFW. I then left both tanks untreated for two weeks, checking for any signs of AEFW before placing the holding tank corals back into the DT.
This worked (or at least I haven't seen any AEFW for the last 9 months or so), so I guess it wouldn't be too much of a stretch to believe that if you didn't even get a holding tank, but at least dipped on a weekly/regular basis for a couple of months, then it should have the same impact. My rationale is that you have to: 1) Kill the hatched AEFW by the initial dip in Revive, and 2) Kill the leftover AEFW eggs/hatchlings that end up hatching between dips via the repeated dips before they lay eggs of their own and start the cycle over.
Good luck! It's definitely a pain in the a$$, but hopefully you'll get through it unscathed.
-Chad