Preceding notes from the author:
This is another cheating wife. She's found out.
Her husband takes appropriate action.
And my customary admonitions. Is it long? It is long. I like to talk. You may find something ever so slightly political or religious. Do not take umbrage; they're there for the fun of it and to entertain the reader.
Carvohi
Hope you enjoy...
*****
"And So...the Worm...It Doth Turn."
I never would have believed it. What is it they say? It couldn't happen to...I should've seen...think of Occam's Raz...there's a sucker born...oh yeah buddy that was me. Well it happened, and when it did it was like that dead Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver said once way back in the day, "Somewhere in the universe a gear shifted".
The name's Steve Cornish. I guess I'm just a regular kind of guy. In fact I'm probably the most regular guy anyone would ever meet; just turned thirty-four, five nine and a half, one hundred eighty pounds, brown hair, brown eyes, M.Ed. in elementary education, just a fifth grade teacher in one of the better schools in a neighboring county. How's that for a typically bland resume?
Oh yeah, I'd been married to a beautiful five foot three, blue eyed blond paralegal named Myra. We had got two marvelous little boys; Michael who was nine and Jeremy eight.
I'd met Myra my senior year in college. Any of this sound familiar? She was twenty working as a legal secretary for a large law firm down in the center city. We met at a dance club; she was with a passel of girls, I was hanging with my school chums. I asked her to dance, and well, things took off from there.
The month of June right after I got my diploma we tied the knot. I already had a job; same place then as now. Her mom and dad put on the big spread; the church wedding, five bride's maids, flower girl, ring bearer, reception with open bar at the country club. We honeymooned in Vegas; never saw the casino, barely took time to eat.
For the next eleven years we did all the right things; had the two boys, rented a small apartment, saved, and bought that first home, everyone knows what I mean the old 'equity property'. We scrimped and saved. She stayed home until the boys were old enough for school then she went back to work, at first just between the morning bus pick up until the afternoon when the bus dropped them off. At night I babysat while she took the classes that got her that paralegal status. I made a little extra in the spring coaching lacrosse at the high school, and I worked for a construction company hammering nails during the summers. By the late winter of our eleventh year, sixth in the equity home, we were ready to trade up.
We scouted around and found our 'dream home' in one of those new bedroom communities about thirty miles out. It made my commute a little longer, but it put us right in the center of one of the best places imaginable to raise kids.
~~v~~
It was a slow thing at first, but as we planned for our new home Myra's behavior changed. Up till the early stages of the move we'd always looked at things as a team; we'd discuss things and come to a decision that usually involved some level of compromise. But Myra's attitude shifted; she started to become the 'boss'. She said she was being more decisive. I felt she was more tyrannical, and maybe a little discourteous if not disrespectful. But I loved her so I let it ride.
The house we found was on a two acre lot on the edge of an established development. I preferred a house at the end of one of the cul-de-sacs, but Myra was firm, she wanted the bigger lot. She planned on a pool in the not too distant future.
Like I said Myra really took charge. We needed all new furniture so that meant trips to Frobisher's the best store of that ilk in the area. I'd need a lawnmower; without any consultation she ordered one of those brand new John Deere tractors. I would have been happy with a used Cub Cadet, but Myra would have none of it; she's checked Consumer Reports and I guess Better Home and Gardens. She decided John Deere was the way to go. There was a shed on the property; that wasn't big enough, carpenters were hired and a newer bigger shed soon sat on the site of the original. I thought stuff like sheds and lawn tractors were man things? Well what did I know?
~~v~~
Myra was worried about the boys; especially with regards to issues of her availability. If there was ever a problem she rightly felt she'd need to get home or to school fast. Back before we'd lived close to their school. Now things were different.
Myra couldn't stay with her old employer and feel safe. She scanned the papers, and found a law firm in the county seat that was advertising for a paralegal. She applied, and got the job almost on the spot. That put her just fifteen minutes from her work, and less than five miles from the kids' school.