This is a continuation of "The Week From Hell". To get the full flavor of the story, I would recommend that you read that first, if you haven't already.
The Week From Hell -- Sara's Story
My name is Sara Moss, and I am married to Tom Moss -- or at least I am married to him in name -- we haven't lived together for several months, and it is all my fault.
Tom is a manager for a group of field service engineers. I am a senior purchasing agent for an entirely different company. Unfortunately, as you will see, we also resell products from Tom's company after adding in extras to justify the price increase.
Tom's boss, John, retired about a year and a half ago, maybe a little more than that, we were both excited about the prospect that Tom could take over John's position, and I know that Tom, as he put it, had his nose out of joint when someone from the outside was brought in to replace John.
Anyway, a little over a year ago, I met Keith, Tom's new boss at one of the company parties. Greg, the CEO had always seemed to feel that Tom's company should be somewhat like a family, so he put on several events every year, often including purchasing agents and other outside people so that the "family" could meet with them and make sure that everything was as smooth as could be. It seemed to work, because everyone I talked to seemed to feel that working with Tom's company was a pleasure.
In any event, I met Keith, and although he didn't initially seem to quite get it that I was Tom's wife, he was quite gracious, charming, and in all ways a gentleman.
It was a month or two later that Keith called me and invited me out to lunch to talk over any issues we might have with their products, and to ask me for any input I might have into how they could improve their product.
I knew that Tom thought that Keith was a "slimy, back-stabbing bastard", but I also thought that this was a chance to bring up several issues that we had wanted to be resolved for quite some time. The fact that I knew Tom had brought these same issues up to his management really didn't cross my mind, or at least I don't think it did. If it had, I probably would have written it off and thought that maybe if it comes in from two different directions, it would be received differently.
In any event, I accepted, and we started meeting for lunch. At first it was only every month or so, but as time went on, it evolved into lunch every two or three weeks, but I think I am getting ahead of myself here.
Over time, I begin to think of Keith as a friend. He was always gracious, charming, and a complete gentleman. There was never the slightest hint that he was interested in anything other than the good of the two companies.
After a few months, our lunches begin to take on a bit of a personal note. Keith would talk about how hard his job was with the engineers going off, and as he put it, "using company travel as an excuse to see their girl friends." This was always followed up by him saying that he was absolutely sure that Tom wasn't doing that, but that a number of the other engineers were. I do remember him telling me that he was actually getting ready to fire one of his managers, Bob, because his wife had found out that he was seeing someone on the side when he traveled, and he didn't want to expose the company to a potential lawsuit.
I knew Bob rather vaguely, and knew his wife Shirley a little bit better, and was surprised to hear this, as I had thought that Bob and Shirley had a very good marriage going, and Bob didn't seem to me to be the type to be playing around.
Keith was also always on about how wonderful Tom was and how he didn't know how he would do without him. He told me how Tom was always volunteering to take these trips to the suppliers whenever anything went wrong, and how much he really appreciated it.
We often talked about what plans we had for the coming weeks, and I discovered that Keith had an affinity for the arts that Tom really didn't have. Oh Tom would make sure to take me to anything that I wanted to go to, but I knew that he would be much happier staying home, or perhaps going out to dinner and dancing.
I found out that Keith was an orphan like my sister Tara and I were. It seemed like a small world. I knew that my parents had been killed in some kind of an accident, and our foster parents adopted my fraternal twin and me. I really didn't have a lot of interest in pursuing that, although Tara, my twin, was really into finding out about our family. Keith had also been adopted as a small child, but his adoptive parents had died before he turned twenty-one.
Every so often, Keith would call about a lunch meeting that we had planned, and tell me that he couldn't make it for whatever reason, and ask if we could substitute dinner, as he knew Tom was going to be out of town on one of his trips. I really didn't think anything about it; it was just another meeting to me, so I would tell him sure, not a problem.
My relationship with Tom had been rock solid until he started volunteering for these trips. At first I tried to keep my mouth shut, because I felt that these trips would be good for his career, and I didn't want to be the whiney wife that got in the way of his career. But as time went on I got more and more frustrated with his job, and to be honest, with Tom. We would have a great weekend planned, or a get-away to some place, and he would have to go to some supplier to get a problem straightened out. Hearing from Keith that he was volunteering for these special trips just made things that much harder for me to deal with.
When I would say something to Tom about it, he would tell me that he really didn't have a choice, and with two kids in college, he didn't feel that he could just quit his job and go looking for something new. The last part I agreed with, because we had a daughter and a son in college, and the expense was simply taking everything we had between the two of us to keep them there.
But I know I was turning a bit bitchy. It seemed like almost every single time we had something planned, he would volunteer to go off on one of his trips. I had even asked Keith if he could try to get Tom to cut back on the trips, but Keith told me that he really couldn't do anything about it, as Tom was always letting Greg know that he was volunteering, and it would cause problems for Keith if he did.
I was really looking forward to our 25th anniversary, and was quite pleased when Tom told me he had already gotten three days of vacation approved so that he wouldn't have to go on a trip. The play he had gotten tickets to was one I really wanted to see, and I had thought that this was going to be a wonderful anniversary, with an extended weekend, letting us perhaps get back to the life we had known before Tom had had to start traveling so much.
When Tom came home the day before our anniversary, and told me that he had to leave early the next morning to go to a supplier, I was livid. I was beyond anger; I was hurt, I felt that Tom was putting his job far before our marriage; I was almost speechless with my rage. For the first time I begin to really think that maybe Tom was like the rest of the engineers, and had someone on the side. Tom tried to talk to me, but I wasn't having any of it. Finally Tom went up to bed about 10:00, and I stayed downstairs because I simply didn't want to be where he could touch me. When Tom got up the next morning, about 2:30, I simply pretended to be half asleep, and when Tom leaned over to kiss me goodbye, I was less than responsive, still pretending to be almost asleep.