I figured they'd knock on the front door, have an embarrassing talk with the slut, and at the least I'd get a good laugh out of it that would carry me through the next few weeks as I filed divorce papers. Oh no, it went much better than that! When the cops saw that she really did resemble the robber to a remarkable degree and she couldn't explain where she was at the time of the robbery, they took her to the station for what they euphemistically referred to as "an interview" where she was forced to admit to where she'd been and who she'd been with. It wasn't hard for anyone who heard her to guess what she'd been doing. By the way, that's how I eventually got shithead's name.
They kept her while they checked out her alibi. That's a sanitized way of saying they put her in a cell and went to the shithead's house looking for him. When they didn't find him, his wife gave them his work address. The interest in her husband did not escape the attention of his wife. When he tried to deny the affair, they went to the motel and pulled the records. His electronic signature did not help his credibility with the police, but it did provide them both with an alibi. It turns out that lying to the police really is a crime, and so they returned to his home that evening to charge him with a minor offense. I secretly suspect they waited until he was home so they could arrest him in front of his wife. It didn't result in any great fine or jail time for shithead, but it did get him divorced.
The story was just too juicy to contain, and the matter of the cheating bandit became a running joke at the station that was soon told to the spouses. The spouses told their friends, and their friends told their friends, and pretty soon my wife and shithead were the laughingstock of the town. Even the judge who heard my divorce plea laughed when he realized who she was.
Eventually, the divorce was final. She did all the expected things and said all the usual clichΓ©s, but trust was broken, and it wasn't going to mend in this lifetime. She heard the whispers and the stifled laughs behind her back wherever she went, and she soon left town not far behind shithead. I have no idea where she is or whether they are together, and I can no longer care. I am moving forward.
Looking back, I sometimes wonder if it was worth the effort. I knew she cheated on me, and I was content to divorce her for it, but I wanted to hold her up to public ridicule as the cheater who had to confess her affair to avoid being arrested for armed robbery. I imagined her having to admit, "Sure, I'm a liar and a cheat, but I'm not a thief!" There was less satisfaction in it than I had hoped, but I have to admit that I would do it again if faced with the same situation.
Eventually, two police officers paid me a visit. You can't do anything with anonymity anymore, so they knew full well it was me who called them and tipped them off to my wife. Officially, they were not amused. Unofficially, I offered to buy them each a beer and we decided to call it even. It seems one of them was divorced and the other was getting divorced, and they admired my creativity. "Just don't do it again" was all they told me. I wasn't sure whether they meant reporting my wife as a bank robber, or marrying her in the first place, but either way I agreed to both.
So here I am a year later. I've rid myself of the deception that plagued me, and I'm rebuilding my life. I had a few minor friends, who were really friends of my wife, that knew about her betrayal, so I had no difficulty cutting them from my life. Then I doubled down on the good friends who stood by me. I didn't date until the divorce was final. I took that time to work through my emotions. Then about a month ago I met a delightful woman my age. She, too, is divorced from a cheat. We have that much in common. She, too, is rebuilding her life, and she, too, has made it her life's work to find the very best bourbon made on Earth. We consider it our sacred mission and we take our mission very seriously. Maybe we'll make it and maybe we won't. We're taking it very slow. For now, I'm enjoying every minute I get to spend with her and tonight she's helping me celebrate my divorce. Wish me luck.