My husband went on a work trip with his female colleague. Hours later, he called me in tears.
So, my husband has this female co-worker he’s super close with—basically his assistant. But here’s the thing: they’re both going after the same promotion. And I’m not gonna lie, I was jealous. He spends more time with her than with me, and tells me he’s going on a week-long business trip WITH HER. What he didn’t tell me? They’d be sharing a hotel room. I didn’t blow up, though. I had a plan. But just a few hours after they left for the airport, he called me in tears.
“Baby,” he said, his voice cracking through the receiver. “I just wanted to say goodbye.”
My heart did a strange, cold flutter. “Goodbye? Mark, what are you talking about?”
“HR was waiting for us at the gate during our layover,” he choked out, the sounds of a busy airport terminal echoing behind him. “They fired us both. Effective immediately.”
I kept my voice completely level. “Oh no. Whatever for?”
Of course, I knew exactly what for. My plan hadn’t been a screaming match in our driveway. It had been a meticulously timed email. Three days prior, while he was in the shower, I had finally cracked the passcode on his iPad. It wasn’t just proof of a physical affair—it was a digital paper trail of embezzled company funds they were using to finance their little luxury “work trips,” all disguised as client entertainment.
I didn’t just forward the files to his CEO. I sent them to the entire Board of Directors, carbon-copying his department head. I timed the email to send exactly one hour after their first flight took off, ensuring maximum corporate panic while they were completely unreachable at thirty thousand feet.
“They knew about the shared suite, Sarah,” he sobbed. “They knew about the company card. They knew everything. She’s screaming at me in the terminal, blaming me, saying I manipulated her. They’re talking about pressing fraud charges. I’m ruined.”
“That’s terrible, Mark,” I said, taking a slow sip of my coffee. The house around me was entirely silent. Because it was entirely empty.
“I’m coming home,” he wept. “I need you right now. I’m booking the next flight back.”
“That’s why you’re saying goodbye, Mark,” I replied, dropping the facade of the concerned wife. “Because you aren’t coming home. There is no home.”
The line went dead quiet. Just the faint sound of a boarding announcement in his background.
“What do you mean?” he whispered.
“I sold everything of value yesterday while you were at the office. The movers took the last of the furniture this morning. My name is off the lease, and the landlord knows you’re breaking it. Your clothes are in black trash bags on the front porch. Oh, and Mark?”
He let out a pathetic, shuddering breath.
“The divorce papers are sitting on top of the bags. Don’t call this number again.”
I hung up, blocked his number, and grabbed my own suitcase. I had a flight of my own to catch, and a brand new life waiting on the other side.