Be forewarned:
First, this is not a BTB story.
Second, there's no revenge. Revenge is a troubling word isn't it. A spouse cheats. They get caught. A marriage and a happy home is destroyed. Can anyone ever really 'get even'? If you think so then stop reading now, because no one 'wins' no one 'gets even' here.
Third, can a man lose his happiness, feel sad, even cry, and still not be called a wimp?
Last, I write for myself first. If you think you can skim through this and get something out of it you'll be wasting your time. I'm long winded. If that bothers you, go no further.
*****
Joe Diffie got it right when he said he wished he could've been the 'Big Bad Wolf' instead of just another sheep in the fold. That's what I wish; it irks me that I've ended up just another sheep. I know what really irks me, but I didn't realize it until it was way too late. Now I know; I've been sheared, taken to the cleaners, cleaned out, mopped up, just name it, and it hasn't been about money either, it's been my life.
Look, I'm a good guy. I've always played by the rules. I did all the right things. I graduated high school. I belonged to the Forestry Club. I was a Boy Scout. I enlisted in the National Guard and used the support money to go to college where I majored in Forest Technology. I went to Grad School, got a job with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources with the forestry division and did it even right in my own home county. I got a part-time job teaching forestry at the local Community College. I even got married.
Name's Francis Campbell by the way; kind of skinny, wiry's the word. Got brown hair, brown eyes, clear complexion, and lots of determination, or I thought I did.
I'm no kid, not anymore; forty-five, been married twenty-two years, got two kids in high school, a house, sort of, on a small farm, two pick-ups, a jeep, and until recently what I thought was a pretty good life. Not quite so good anymore; but that hasn't been my fault.
The problems been my wife. What'd my dad tell me? God put two things on this earth to torment man; women and cars. I can handle the cars, but women, forget it.
My wife Leslie hasn't always been the disappointment she's become. Once she was the love of my life, but well, everyone knows, the same old same old.
Leslie was a great girl, intelligent, pretty, long brown hair, blue eyes, nice figure, taller than me. I'm 5'8"; she's 5'9".
I'm from the westernmost county in Maryland; Leslie's from the city, that's, ugh, Baltimore, for the uninformed. Leslie went to college just outside Baltimore. She majored in English Literature, and managed to wangle a job out here in the west. It's the west too; our largest town is Oakland! Don't believe me? Look it up.
We found each other right after she moved out. We met at one of the fall festivals. I was already employed and working a stand where I was explaining some of the intricacies of forest life. I had a glass case with a Timber Rattler. I had some pictures of Bob Cats, and a few other odds and ends for the tourists to gape at.
Leslie was new to the area; she had on a brightly colored lavender blouse and some very expensive, and very powerful perfume. She should have known better; it was October in the 'mountains', the queen wasps had already shut down and their little workers were out in search of anything good to eat. Nothing attracts those little yellow striped buggers more than vivid colors, strong aromas, and hamburger goo. Add to that an open soda can and you've got yourself a real invite to some particularly unpleasant company. Well our girl put that soda can to her lips without looking just one time too many, and one of those nasty little critters got her right on the upper lip. Poor girl, she swelled up like a balloon.
Lucky thing I was there. I rushed to the rescue. I popped her some Benadryl, slapped on some worthless salve, and tendered her with all the TLC an unattached twenty-three year old could muster. She wasn't happy, but I did my best and pretty soon, wasp's sting and all we were hooking up pretty good. It turned out to be the start of something that lasted more than twenty years.
She'd come out to the festival with several girlfriends, all new teachers. They'd taken one car, and ridden the commuter bus to the Festival. I had an old jeep at the time so I left my stand in the care of a partner and took the pretty young thing home to her apartment. I got her phone number, and set up a date for the next week. There was some pretty stiff competition for a while, but I fought them off, and the following spring we tied the knot. Two years after that Richard popped up, and a year after him little Victoria made her appearance. Leslie gave up her job and became 'Mamma Campbell'.
For the next eighteen years it was 'happily ever after'. Then the 'Big Bad Wolf' made his appearance.
I hadn't changed much, maybe a little more frost around the temples, but I'd kept my weight down and my muscle tone was good. Leslie had held up pretty well too, actually damn well. The two kids, the pregnancies, had increased her boob size, and her hips were a little broader, but she still had the old sex appeal. I liked to watch other men stealthily stare at her when she sashayed down the aisles of the supermarket. She could really swing those hips; I bet more than a few men went home and jerked off to thoughts of my wife. It was a great feeling; I had her, she was mine, and everybody else could just go home and pretend.
She was every bit as good in bed as she looked too. In bed, in the kitchen, out back in the yard, it didn't matter; we tried it everywhere. Leslie liked the doggy. She liked the old sixty-nine too. She kept her pussy well-trimmed, and I'd get down there and sop up those succulent juices that oozed from between her thick outer labia. She was like some mountain spring, only hot.
She did me too; oh could she do me. She liked to get down on her knees in front of me when the kids were in bed. She'd pull down my fly, reach in, pull me out, and take me in her mouth. She was a true artist. Oh yeah, she kept my motor running, and she kept it running for twenty years. And then...
I found out these things don't just happen overnight; it's not like Monday you're blindly bouncing away and Tuesday it's "not tonight Francis". I thought I was happily married. I thought my wife was happy. I thought we'd stay that way. I thought we'd grow old together. I thought I thought...
~~v~~
Usually, from the things I read on the Internet later, there's some kind of trigger; some sort of event or mechanism that stirs the evil engines of suspicion, the old 'something's fishy' metaphor. Like a fart in church I smelled something that just wasn't quite right.
Since my wife hadn't worked most of our married life handling the day to day chore of managing the budget had fallen to me. No big deal right? It was no big deal as long as there wasn't anything that looked like a big deal. I mean the checkbook, the bank books, the Mutuals, the mortgage, the VISA.
VISA? What's this with the VISA?
We didn't keep a gas card. All our credit expenses we kept on VISA; that included gas. Sure no big deal. I use about a tank every week or so. I had a state truck when I was on duty. Leslie uses a little less. Then when Victoria was up and about more, Leslie got herself a little part-time job at the town public library. OK, sure, two, three afternoons or evenings a week Leslie would be at the checkout counter stamping, or electrocuting, or tazing, or whatever it was they did when they checked books in and out. I guess that took a little more gas; still no big deal.
But it became a big deal when her gas bills almost doubled! Come on, four miles in and out of town three times a week didn't add up to an added $70.00 in gas costs. Something didn't smell right.
I started to give things some thought. For real, I understood it's not like we lived in an area where everybody gets married and stays married to the same person all their lives. What was the line in that old Alan Jackson song; a song I think he lifted from someplace else. How did it go, "Who's cheatin who, who's being true, and who don't care anymore? Who's doin right with someone tonight, and whose car is parked next door?" Not that I thought Leslie was up to something, but gee, that was a lot of gas. I had to look a little deeper.
Leslie has a GPS in her car, and she has an IPhone, but I didn't want to play with her stuff. Gosh what if I got caught? What if she'd been doing something nice? I sure didn't want to look like some creep spying on his wife. Not me. I went out and bought a second GPS and sneaked it in the back of Leslie's car down where her spare tire was. I wasn't being naughty, or nosy, and I sure wasn't spying; I just wanted to know where all the gas was going. I found out.
The gas, along with her car were going to Martinsburg every day or so. It looked like Leslie was getting Victoria off to school, and then slipping down to Martinsburg for a few hours. By the way our son Richard has a vehicle of his own but due to other early morning commitments Victoria had to ride the bus.