By Jay Cameron
Telling this story is one of the most, if not the most difficult, and most important things I have ever done. You can laugh all you want, but it's important for my sanity, my state of mind, my ability to get out of bed in the morning. Not just for tomorrow morning, but for all the mornings I will face in the future.
Before I go any further, it's important you know who I am. My name is Norman Franklin. I was fortunate to be the second born, my parents named my older brother Benjamin, and he hates it. As you try and figure out what makes me tick, I'll save you a little time and effort. Looking at my life, such as it is, I grew up as the most naïve, ill prepared air-breathing sap in the world (at least that's how I feel about it.)
As of today, I'm a salesman.... I married a foxy little blonde named Betty. And, yes, there is no reason to put this off. She is the bung in my life. She removed the cork, tapped into my consciousness. She then set out to drain me of my soul and anything and everything she could pour into the toilet of my life.
Up until a fateful day, several months ago, I thought I had the perfect marriage (I said I was naïve). The marriage was four years along, and it did seem perfect, at least to me.
As I said before, I'm a salesman. I'm one of those guys that refuses to take no for an answer to anything. I don't sell cars or anything like a car. I sell advertising, Radio and Television advertising. If you sell a car, there is something the buyer can touch. He can put his hands on the steering wheel, drive it off the lot. I'm not that guy. I sell air. I sell time. It may sound a little mystic but when you get right down to it, it's kind of cool. I give you the opportunity to shout from the rooftop the name of your product. In a way your product or name becomes imbedded in the empty space in the dark reaches of our minds. You can't eat it or drink it, but you will benefit from it. Many of you say what I do annoys the hell out of you. But that TV or Radio program wouldn't be free if not for my efforts.
As for me and the guys I work with, the routine is very simple. On Thursday afternoon, all five members of our sales team gather at the office to get our marching orders for the next week. On Friday, we review and verify that all the work and travel for the past week has been finished, and every client will be able to see or hear their commercials as they wanted, or the way they visualized them when they bought them.
Fridays are the days we take care of the finer points of our efforts that week. On this particular Friday, I was done early so a co-worker, a guy named Mike Johnson, invited me to meet him for a drink at a nearby bar. Mike's a big black man that is really a great friend. When I showed up, he already had my drink waiting for me. We talked for a few minutes, saying nothing important. When I started relating a story of one of my clients, he stopped me in mid-sentence.
"Norman," calling me by my full name is a little unusual for this guy. He usually calls me Norm. "I have to tell you something important, and I'm not sure how to say this." He scanned the tables around us as though verifying he was not being overheard. "You know my wife, Nell?" Still showing signs of not knowing how to proceed. "Nell was out with a girlfriend last Tuesday having lunch."
"Good.... what has that to do with me?"
Again, Mikes' expression turned weird.... like he was reluctant to say anything.
"Jesus, Mike, tell me! What the fuck is the problem?"
"Like I was saying, Nell was out with a girlfriend of hers, and she saw Betty...
I interrupted... "She saw my wife, Betty?"
"Fuck this is hard to say. Yes, your wife Betty! She was having lunch with some guy Nell hadn't seen before."
Suddenly, my lungs quit functioning. "It couldn't have been Betty. Last Tuesday was the day she volunteered to chaperone the girls softball team to Hapsburg for their tournament."
"You guys don't have a girl on a softball team? You don't have any kids."
"No, the coach asked her to help because she played softball in college." I said, making the effort to prove him wrong when saying my wife wasn't where she told me she was.
"No, you're wrong. She was having lunch with another guy at the Fifty-Eighth Street diner," Mike insisted somewhat adamantly. "And Betty said they were a little more than just friendly." At that point he turned over his phone that had been lying on the table face down. There, in crystal clear color was a couple sitting in a booth, wrapped up in a passionate kiss. But then he swiped across the screen to reveal a second and more damning photo. There was no doubt, I could see a clear and undeniable photo of my wife. Mike made it even more gut-wrenching when he expanded the picture to better see the look of lust in my wife's eyes.
The bar became silent, the sound of the jukebox was gone. I was so stunned with what I was being told by my friend, my ears went into a state of silence. Without expressing a single word, I finished my drink with one motion and stood to leave. Before I left my friend, halfway to the door I turned and thanked Mike. For the life of me I don't know why I felt the need to thank him, but I did and then left the darkness into a blinding light.
I guess everyone has a special place they go when they are faced with the crisis of everyday life. When I was a toddler growing up my special place was my closet. Now that I was a man, or felt I was a man, I had to find a new "Crystal Palace". Mine was a peaceful hiding spot on the banks of a small lake outside of town.
Without even realizing what I was doing or where I was going, I ended up at my peaceful place. As my mind cleared, I found myself sitting in my car gazing, as in a trance, at the gentle wind whipped waves of the lake. My mind was filled with pain, then anger, disbelief and then reality. Was I to blame? What did I do to make her want another man. Or was I already out of her life? There had to be a reason, there just had to be. But what was that reason? What? What? What?
Tears had now made their presence known and I couldn't seem to stop them. I had tried so hard to do all the things a husband should do for his wife, his love, his family, his future.
After more than just a few minutes of self-pity, I took my phone and selected a number from the contact list. "Dad.... I have a problem and I need your help."
My father was never a man I would go to in my past for help, but he had faced the same battle before and I needed some guidance. At first there was only silence on the line. My father was known for facing adversity and I knew he could help. When I told him of my meeting with Mike, I could almost see the look on his face, even though he was so many, many miles away.
"Norman, are you sure? Are you certain without a doubt there's a problem?"
That's when I took my time explaining to him exactly what was in those pictures. I even offered to send him copies but thank God, he didn't want to see them. After a while he calmed the dragons fighting over me. He even made me smile and at one point he got a chuckle out of me. So, when emotions were under control, the call ended I had a better idea of how I would proceed.
First free minute I had, I started making the required contacts. I didn't call anyone that didn't have a need to know what was going on in my life. Then, I waited. I waited to see if she was really the woman I married, the real woman. Maybe she was just some cheating bitch that was using me as a prop to support her games. As long as I was blind to her activities, she was free to do as she wanted. She flew around flitting from one flower to another, from one man to another, from one cock to another.
Sex with her? Nope, that was not possible. I had a headache several times. I worked in my home office to write up proposals late into the night. I even told her one weekend I was going to a seminar in Richmond for a new sales technique. Really, I just drove to the nearby Holiday Inn and hid out.
I know you won't believe me when I say I didn't have a single drink of alcohol the entire time during this time. I didn't go out with friends or co-workers. I didn't even go to a movie. One thing my dad had drilled into my mind was to keep a clear head. If I made one mistake, just one miss-step, I would screw up the whole works.
Those phone calls I made? The first call was to a young firebrand divorce lawyer. My dad said she was the one that handled his last divorce; he's had three. After a longer than normal visit with her, I made contact with an investigator she recommended. I turned everything, and I do mean everything over to my lawyer and her comrades.