Sound Business Advice

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I asked for advice, and she gave it to me. Now what?
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Copyright 2009 by PostScriptor

*

It was around 6:00 PM when I walked into the house to the smell of dinner cooking. Nothing fancy, I suspected, but tasty — one of those 5-bone pot roasts, cooked for hours in the slow-cooker with potatoes, onions and carrots. Wouldn't be surprised if Audrey had picked up one of those salads from the store with all of the fixings including pieces of cheese, corn, taco pieces — the little add-ons that make a salad unique — as well as the dressing.

Not that labor intensive cooking was normal around our house during the week. Both Audrey and I worked, and not having kids yet, there was no reason that we had to be home early from work. We'd been talking about changing that recently, as Audrey's biological clock was, as they say, ticking.

Yeah, those 5-bone roasts weren't the finest cut of meat, but they're flavorful.

When I walked into the dining room, Audrey came over and smiled and kissed me.

I suspect that I didn't look too happy at that moment.

"Hey Jim, what's wrong? You look kind of upset," she asked.

"I am," I replied, "I could really use some of your advice."

Audrey looked at me and nodded. It wasn't that unusual for me to ask her for her wisdom. She was one of those really bright people who ate school up; before we were married, she had completed a combined MBA/JD degree that they offered at the university. That's right — she had both a law degree and an MBA with an emphasis in accounting.

Out of school, Audrey had gone to work for one of the larger regional CPA firms, and after passing her exams and spending her two years doing audit, was a CPA as well. Audrey Masters, CPA, JD, her cards read. She was working in business law, where her accounting credentials added a bunch to her salary.

"Let's eat first, and then after dinner, you can run your problem by me, and I'll put my two-cents in!" she laughed as she spoke and we headed towards the dining room.

We had a pleasant dinner, telling each other about what had gone on during our day, chatting about the news, a few tidbits about friends, and the normal sort of discussion that we had around the table every evening. The roast was falling off the bone, and I was certainly satiated when we pushed our chairs back from the table, and did the clean up after dinner.

Living in the warm and humid environment of Florida meant that we had bug issues — everything from fire ants, to huge cockroaches — so Audrey and I were meticulous about cleaning off our plates and utensils, and putting them into the dishwasher right after we ate.

Audrey grabbed a diet soda, walked into the living room, and sat in the brown leather sofa where she could tuck her feet up under her, and sit kind of sideways with a couple of pillows to keep her comfortable. I had actually stopped in my office briefly to grab a yellow notepad, before following her into the room. I took the upholstered chair opposite the couch so we were facing each other. Had we not been talking about business I would have shared the couch with her, and some personal contact sport might have followed.

"OK," Audrey started, "tell me what's bothering you."

I looked at my wife, her dark, wavy hair and green eyes twinkling as they always did when she knew that she would be presented with a difficult problem. Her light complexion always accentuated her lips, and somehow in the light there in the living room, they always looked fuller and redder. Her smile could light up any room for me. It was hard to imagine that we'd been married almost seven years already.

"Honey, its concerns George," I started, and I could see Audrey's slight grimace as soon as I said his name. George Green was my partner in our citrus business, "Finest Kind Citrus Company" — an inside joke on the phrase used in the original MASH movie.

I was pretty much expecting Audrey's response, because I knew that she had never really cared for George, but he and I had been partners in the business predating my marriage to Audrey. It was a good partnership, with George running the sales and marketing as well as the packing house operations, and I ran the groves (including getting the crop picked and to the packing house), and the finances for our operation.

Not to brag — I did mention that Audrey was smart, but I had an undergraduate degree in Ag from Gainesville, and had an MBA in Finance as well, so I could hold my own.

"I've run across evidence that George is doing some unreported deals on the side, shipping off product and getting paid under the table. What do you think I should do about it?" I asked.

"How long has it been going on?" she asked.

"Since the beginning of the season — maybe three months," I replied, "but I'm not entirely sure. Maybe it started earlier and I just didn't hear about it."

"How many customers do you think he's making these side deals with?"

"I think only one. But at this point who knows. Maybe this isn't even the first time. But I'm hard pressed to believe that, because you can't keep something like this secret, at least for long. Someone talks to someone, someone sees something that doesn't look kosher; you know. Word gets around," I concluded. Audrey was nodding sagely in agreement with me as I spoke.

I continued.

"I don't think George understands all of that new technology that we've been using, either. My suspicion is that he does his deals when I'm out of town for the day — like last week when I had to go to Miami for that Ag Department update on citrus canker, or he does a run when he thinks that it's too late at night to expect me to swing by the packing house. I don't think that he grasps that each load of the fruit is tracked with GPS units and computer ID chips that have to tie to our shipments. If he doesn't enter a load into the computer system manually it doesn't mean that it goes unnoticed. It leaves a big gap in the sequence that an audit will pick up.

"Plus, he clearly doesn't have a clue how the minicams that we installed last year to prevent thefts from the packing house work either. He is of the impression that once the security company removes the old tape and puts a new one in, that after a day or two, it is destroyed. But they're not; they are filed for a year in case we need to go back over them.

Audrey continued to think quietly about what I was telling her.

"So how did you catch on to what he was doing?" she asked, wanting clarification.

"A combination of things, really. First, one of the women at the packing plant said something about suddenly having to work late all the time to her brother, who works on the grove. Then he mentioned it to me, because it sounded a little odd to him, and he knows that this business is rife with theft. Once I started looking, it wasn't hard to use the GPS data, and the minicams to confirm what was happening. Plus, as if that wasn't enough, I started asking around, and it turned out that there were a lot of folks who had heard rumors to the effect that George was stabbing me in the back. None of them had proof in hand, but the grapevine was correct.

"In fact, honey, I'm really appalled to say this, but he hasn't just done this with other folk's crops that we were brokering; he's pulled his little stunt with fruit from the family grove!" What we called the 'family grove' was the section of mixed citrus that I'd inherited from my father when he passed, a couple of years before I met Audrey. Selling fruit from my family grove would mean that he wasn't just taking the 10% brokerage fee; he'd be pocketing the entire price for the fruit — which was stealing directly from me.

"So now the big question: what do I do about it?" I said as I sat back, and got my yellow-pad ready to take notes as my wife gave me her thoughts, in her stream-of-consciousness style.

"First," she began, "the partnership is over. You can't go on with doing business with someone who you can't trust, who has tried to pull a fast one on you already. You can't ignore what he's done, so the status quo isn't an alternative, but once you confront him with the fact that you know how and what he's doing you can't just let it go. If you do he'll just avoid repeating his mistakes that let you catch him and conceal it better the next time.

"Second, luckily, you run the company finances, so you should pay off all of the bills, and take out all of the money that you are entitled to from the accounts. That includes the draw you should be getting, and compensation for the fruit that he stole from you. And you need to cut off the credit cards, ASAP."

George was a gambler, and once several years ago he had used one of the company credit cards to take a cash advance when he'd run short at a casino in the Bahamas. He had repaid the money, and I'd told him not to do it again. But Audrey remembered, and could never quite bring herself to trust that he might not do it again in the future, and run up a big gambling debt on the company card — in effect leaving me with his gambling debt.

I started writing down on my pad:

"Pay off outstanding bills; Withdraw cash that I'm entitled to; Close credit card accounts — ASAP"

Audrey's list was getting longer, and started including all of the little legal niceties that I would need to do to split the partnership. Actually I had no intention of doing those things myself; I would leave that to the lawyer.

It was about an hour later when Audrey was finished with her strategy for ending the partnership. It had involved both what needed to be done, and also the timing, in order that I not tip my hand too early and have George grabbing assets to which he was not entitled. Unfortunately, despite what the courts say, possession is frequently the greater part of the law.

We both sat there, silent for a moment, before I started to speak.

"Audrey, are you sure that breaking up the partnership is the only solution? I mean, George and I have had a successful working relationship for longer than you and I have been married. As far as I can tell, until a couple of months ago, he never did anything like this," I queried, my voice low and getting emotional over the idea of having to destroy the partnership.

"Jim Masters, you are just too soft. This is one of those situations when you will be better off if you just deal with it, get it over, put it behind you, and get back to living your life. You can hire other salesmen, and get other people to run a packing house for you. You still have your grove, and I'll bet that most of the farmers whose fruit you've been brokering will go with you and not George," she exclaimed.

"For one thing, you know George, and he has never saved a dime in his life. What he earns he spends. I suspect that without you, he would have a hard time qualifying for his bonds or insurance. And without those he can't even sell anyone else's fruit!" she told me with a surprisingly hard look in her eye.

I looked at her.

"Do you think that would be fair? I want to be fair to George; I'm not out to destroy him," I retorted, "I could easily let him keep the bond and insurance until he could get himself established on his own."

"Your loyalty is admirable, Jim, but misplaced. He hasn't shown you the same kind of loyalty. It's just not your problem anymore. What he's done is unforgivable," she concluded, with an air of finality.

"Oh no," I whispered, with tears rolling from my eyes, "I may not forget what's happened, but I hope that I will be able to forgive someday."

Audrey looked at me like I was crazy; crying for a lost partnership. I was choked up for a couple of minutes. I went in to the kitchen and got a glass of water and took a couple of sips, and returned to the living room, glass in hind.

When I was able to speak again, I put down my pad of paper, and turned to Audrey to speak.

"Audrey, I apologize, but I've misled you tonight. I'm not having any problems with George or our partnership. It isn't George cheating in the business, or giving away what's rightly mine. The real problem is you, and what you're doing with your 'managing partner.' That is what we've really been talking about."

Audrey was looking horrified, and her open hand flew up to her face, covering her open mouth. As she understood what I was telling her, tears began to flow down her cheeks. The way she just started crying, without even bothering to deny it, would have told me everything I needed to know.

I wiped away the tears in my eyes with my knuckles.

"Did you really think that you could keep it a secret? You thought that if I was out of town, or if you suddenly had to 'work late', I wouldn't catch on? That no one would notice, and that the rumors wouldn't get around, and back to me? Do you know how easily you were tracked with a GPS unit on your car, or the pictures and video of you going into your bosses' condo for hours 'working'?

"Well?" I asked her, "You've recommended a pretty hard-line approach — at least when you thought that George was the subject of your analysis. What do you have to say for yourself?"

"Oh god, Jim," she finally sputtered out, "Jim, I never meant... it wasn't really anything important...I don't love him...Oh god!" From that point forward, I couldn't really understand what she was trying to say, she was too choked up, the way you get when the tears and emotions swell up your throat, and your nose begins running.

Audrey was an emotional wreck still sitting on the couch, unable to even stand up. My impulse, my inclination, even now, was to go over to the couch and comfort her. But that didn't seem to be an appropriate role for me anymore. After all, I was devastated too, and there was no one to whom I could turn for comfort.

She understood that she had condemned herself with her own words. Split up the partnership; cut my losses and move on; play hard-ball, and never forgive.

I stood up, and handed her a set of papers. They weren't official; she would be formally served with the 'official' set in the next couple of days. Audrey didn't even need to look at them to know what they were. Then, I took a tissue out of the box and wiped her eyes, and nose for her like you would a child, and handed her a second tissue which she took into her hand, which was now clenched into a fist.

"Audrey, dinner was real tasty. I guess if I'm doing my own cooking it will be awhile before I eat that well again," I mentioned, as I turned to leave. Like Audrey, my throat was closing from the emotional stress.

"Jim," she called after me, in the kind of hoarse voice that comes from crying, "where are you going? Don't leave me. Could you please stay? Can we please talk? We need to talk!"

I couldn't answer, I couldn't speak. I just closed the door gently behind me.

George had helped me move a used AirStream travel trailer out onto the grove, next to the barn where we kept the tractors and other farm equipment. We'd hooked it up to water, electrical, septic system — even to cable TV. So it was comfortable enough. I'd replaced the old mattress with a fairly decent new one, with a thick layer of that comfort foam, just like I'd had at home. Or maybe I should say my former home.

Honestly, I'm a pretty forgiving guy. Despite what Audrey had said, if I'd caught George selling fruit on the side, I would have confronted him, and we would have split up the partnership, but I wouldn't have tried to crush him. Betrayal by good friends, a group into which I would have counted my wife, seems to make me sad, rather than angry.

Funny thing, too — although Audrey had advised me to take a hard line with George, George actually pleaded with me against being too quick to dump Audrey. We had been his idea of a perfect couple, and he thought that I should at least make an effort to see if I could salvage my marriage. He reminded me that he and I had done plenty of stupid things in our lives, and that in a number of cases there were other people who had plenty of forgiving to do before we were back in their good graces.

Heck, once or twice even the local Sheriff caught us doing one fool thing or another. He let us know that if we ever did something that stupid again, there would be hell to pay; but for now just get out of his patrol car and go home and hope that our dads never heard about our shenanigans.

Jesus, just thinking about it still scares me — my dad would have walloped me good. But that was in 'the good old days' when the law could be enforced with some common sense; today, there would be lawsuits, official complaints and who knows what else, if the Sheriff didn't go strictly 'by the book.'

Anyway, neither Audrey nor I have been doing anything to move the divorce along. She quit her job, and found work in a CPA office run by a woman. She's pleaded with me to move back into the house with her, but I'm staying in the trailer for awhile.

We talk on a regular basis, and Audrey makes sure to get me over a couple times a week for dinner. She knows my weakness for a home cooked meal. She claims that she just wants to be sure that I'm eating right, and not living on fast-food.

She has told me about her affair (without going into all of the gory details, at my request), and it sounds as if there was less to it than my imagination might have conjured up, but still enough. I explained the amount of pain that I was suffering with a quotation: Romeo says, "Courage, man; the hurt cannot be much, " to which Murcutio replies, "No, 't is not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church-door; but 't is enough, 't will serve." She smiled a sad little smile at me quoting from Shakespeare, but she understood that I meant it.

I still love her, and I believe her when she tells me that she loves me. She tells me that she would do anything to bring us back together and repair the damage that her thoughtless acts have caused. She has expressed a desire to have a child, if we could reconcile.

But in truth, I can't think of what she could possible do that would somehow 'fix' things up again. The biggest roadblock remains what Audrey, herself, told me, in slightly different words:

"The partnership is over. You can't go on in a marriage with someone who you can't trust — who has tried to pull a fast one on you by having an affair. You can't ignore what she's done, so the status quo isn't an alternative. And if you confront her with the fact that you know what she's doing, and you let it go this time, she'll just avoid making the same mistakes, and conceal it better the next time."

Alas, it was damn good advice.

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49 Comments
AnonymousAnonymousabout 2 months ago

Good tale told well. Yes you could see it coming but I also thought George might be involved. You wrapped it up correctly with the last paragraph and bottom line. He'd be a fool to trust her again.

AnonymousAnonymous5 months ago

Would have been better if he had taken her advice and implemented it as a surprise. Have her served and work etc.

But not a bad story overall.

AnonymousAnonymous9 months ago

I figured he was talking about his marriage and assumed she was cheating but I also assumed it was with George. So I was partly right and a lot wrong lol. Good story. Not surprisingly once she was confronted her advice to dissolve the partnership wasn't suddenly appropriate anymore lol. But as he said without trust no relationship business or personal can hope to succeed. BardnotBard

NoBullAlNoBullAl9 months ago

Yeah!! I was one of the few (apparently) that didn’t tumble to the “twist” until at least the point of the reveal!!

Good story though!!

AnonymousAnonymousabout 1 year ago

A well written and thought out enjoyable story. Unfortunately about a third of the way into the story I suspected his tale of his friend's deception was in fact about hers and he was allowing her to name her own execution..even suspecting but not knowing with what and how involved she was, kept the story alive for me...4stars..JZK..You did not ruin the tale by having your MC respond as a real husband would. Not forgive.

AnonymousAnonymousover 1 year ago

Eloquent. Though more as a narrative than a real life confrontation with emotions. Still go the point across. 5 stars.

woodwardwoodwardover 1 year ago

I read some other comments and thought what are they talking about. Just move on. 5!

jsch1947jsch1947over 2 years ago

While this is great advice,... Solutions and problems aren't as simple as black and white.

Complicating factors that were not addressed

Submissive women, and their vulnerability to a skilled seducer.

How long did the affair go on?

How deeply was she impacted? Is her contrition genuine and profound?

If she gave up her career, taking another position with no potential for relapse.

She was brought the full wrath of consequences....

Every single one of us is capable of mistakes.

Penance, for an unspecified period of time, letting her reaction be a guide, might be enough to help rebuild trust.

The circumstances need to be the guide.

I'm not saying stay the divorce,..

Taking her back, is the question.

The cuckold formula, where an eager slut is always just waiting in the wings, is unrealistic.

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 3 years ago

Painful truth. The author was clever. He tipped off the whole story line when he started with "It's about George"

Good authors know that some readers get their greatest pleasure in predetermining the plot or solving a mystery early on. It giv a real satisfaction.

Thanks 5.0

AnonymousAnonymousover 3 years ago

Stupid, arrogant woman.Never struck her that her affair had been discovered.. And now, 'Hoist on her own petard'. 5*s.

Dnvrdave58Dnvrdave58over 4 years ago

I enjoy your stories this 1 is the most disappointing 1 I read. So what ended up happening?

AnonymousAnonymousabout 5 years ago

Very good story, even with the telegraphing of the ending.

tazz317tazz317about 8 years ago
EVEN SHAKESPEARE HIMSELF

is a pragmatist, TK U MLJ LV NV

rightbankrightbankabout 8 years ago
interesting variation

keep your own counsel

Ib_SaysIb_Saysabout 8 years ago

Good on him to stick to his guns, and good advice, a shame she didn't use that thoughtfulness before starting her affair.

AlberothAlberothabout 8 years ago
What he (they) should do...

Is dissolve the marriage and start again. She would have to work very hard to rebuild the trust she has destroyed. And if things don't work out in the long term... Then they both walk away at least having tried.

And if things work out, there would be some harsh conditions in the pre-nup for the new marriage!

AnonymousAnonymousover 9 years ago
the most fitting punishment is..

often best decided by the recipient, that is if you can employ the right methods to let him/her reveal it to you...

excellently done.

AnonymousAnonymousover 9 years ago
5 stars, it was almost perfect!

That of course could be amended to perfect, if one gives more thought to the repercussions. My second thought was that by not moving the divorce along was truly was a beautiful thing, in that the whore believes there is a chance!

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 10 years ago
5 stars

Jim took exactly the right steps. Let the whore hang herself.

Years ago, I was ready to marry. I'd grown up next door to the perfect girl and we were girlfriend/boyfriend off and on over the years. I was head over heels in love, but she was the first one to ever say it. It didn't take long and we were married, talking babies and buying that house with the white picket fence.

Then I came home one day and she was sitting there with her suitcases packed. She needed her 'space'. We needed to make sure we wanted to be married for the next seventy years. I was devastated, not sure what to do. Before I had a chance to make any decisions, she took it away by walking out the door. I cried like I've never cried in my life, before or since. Life felt as if it had ended.

The next time I saw my wife, Jodi, she didn't happen to notice me. Why? I was seated in a corner booth and was watching her sitting close to her boyfriend, Tom, who I'd heard about. Sure enough, they left no doubt they were a couple. I was done with her but since we didn't own anything, I was going to leave divorce for her.

The first thing I did was move out of our rental. Her stuff that she hadn't taken was donated to Goodwill. My stuff, well, I'd taken an add out in the paper and it said I was no longer responsible for her shit so I bought myself a house. Well, property and a damn shack. It was only a 16x20 cabin but me and my fellow workmates tore into it like we only had a week to do it and no one was getting paid. Which was all true! The guys were great, our boss gave us the week off, paid, and I used every nickel I could get my hands on to fix the place up.

It sat on 20 acres with a nice big pond on it. There was a well asnd septic and those I had a company come in and check out and make repairs. It didn't cost much, which I was thankful for, when he declared everything good to go. The place wasn't hooked up to electricity, so we had the company generator to run our equipment. We had a 30' flatbed trailer loaded with everything I'd ordered. And a week to use it all up.

First, we tore off the inside walls, replaced any damaged studs and began insulating it. While we did that, some of the guys tore the roof off, built the walls higher and rebuilt a pitched roof/ceiling. We went with metal for the roofing, something I've never been unhappy with. Then we put in a loft with a relatively steep staircase to save space. We also put in three windows upstairs for airflow and so I could see out. downstairs, when we installed the knotty pine interior, we put in the kitchen cabinets one of my coworkers built at home and charged me for anything he had to buy, which was little. Most everything was discarded from other jobs. How he made it so nice is beyond me!

The only additions were a back porch that was built in. We insulated it too, it would be a pantry, also a bathroom was built on the same side as the kitchen, to keep the plumbing together.It had a nice toilet, big corner shower and sink, cabinets and big assed mirror. In the living room we put in a big picture window and then we put down beautiful hardwood flooring. Also in the kitchen, we put in a small wood cookstove my parents had in their barn, after having it rebuilt and it looked like new! Last but not least, we built a covered deck off the front and then a covered area off the back corner of one side for a woodshed. We had wired it so I could just plug in a Honda generator and have all the power I needed! Electricity, plumbing and a wood stove, I was set.

After we got back to work for the boss, I started hearing that Jodi had moved in with Tom. Well, that was fine, I wasn't taking the cheating whore back. They were trying to keep it hidden though I guess, it didn't matter to me, I spent my time at work, getting all the overtime I could and then going home to my new place. I had a company come out and they put in propane for me, a tankless water heater and a small wall heater.

I never saw Jodi for six months. During that time I also never once tried calling her number but if she tried to call me, it would have been for naught. I changed it and gave it to my boss, coworkers and family. Winter was coming on and besides work, I was cutting firewood and storing it, along with any dried lumber pieces from work. I had a satellite internet provider come out and when he left, I was hooked up to the world wide web!

My first rumblings things weren't right came when someone mentioned Jodi wasn't nearly as happy as she had been. She had tried coming by my work, but I'd gotten rid of my almost new F250 and traded it for a smaller pickup that I didn't have any payments on. No one talked to her and she was unable to see the truck she thought I had. The new one was still 4 wheel drive but all that old truck money was going to paying off my place. You see, I'd put the whole place in my parents name and as far as the world knew, I only owned my $3000 truck with 200K miles on it. The contract I had for my new place was 5 years but it took every nickel I earned. Hence, all the overtime so I could buy groceries.

Finally, one of Jodi's close friends, Lisa, caught me in the local grocery store. When she started to read me the riot act about pulling a disappearance so that Jodi couldn't get ahold of me, I turned and walked away. She caught me outside and apologized. She said Jodi had been looking for me, she was wanting to get back together, she realized what we had and wanted it back. I just smiled and told her to let Jodi know I was happy she was living with Tom, I'd heard he had a horse cock. That made her flustered and she hemmed and hawed until I took pity on her. I just told her to tell Jodi I didn't want any cheating whores around me, so for her to stay away. Lisa asked where I lived, Jodi found out I had moved. I just told her I lived with a friend. Before she got in her car she asked where all the stuff Jodi had left behind was, she was hoping to get it. I told her to shop at Goodwill and she'd find it all. What hadn't been bought by others, that is!

Lisa had just began to pull away when all the sudden she backed up next to where I stood. She had forgotten to ask me about all of our pictures, Jodi hadn't taken any with her and she wanted some to put on the TV and in her wallet. She had to wait until I stopped laughing and then asked me what was so funny. I told her I burned them all, including every wedding picture too. I didn't want to be reminded of the cheating cunt.

Winter was cold that year. We saw temps in the double digit minus range. My little cabin was snug and I absolutely loved it. We were laid off for about 3 months but I used that time to start a little internet business that almost made up for what I lost, on unemployment only. When spring came and the snow melted away, I was ready for work!

I don't know who introduced us, but it turned out there was a woman in town who was interested in making my acquaintance! come to find out, she was related to a coworker and we really hit it off. She came out to my place a few times and thought it was absolutely perfect! By the time the grass was growing, she'd helped me build a garden area with great soil and we soon had all sorts of vegetables coming up! She promised to teach me how to can too. Judging by what was coming up, I was going to have a lot of Yukon Gold potatoes!

Jodi finally caught me when I was walking out to my truck after work. She didn't look good, she looked tired and haggard. I mentioned it and before she could answer, I mentioned Tom must be keeping her up every night with that big horsecock. By the time I was done, she hadn't said a word but turn and ran for her car, shooting gravel up when she tore out. Through the grapevine I heard he cheated on her repeatedly and finally left town. She was living with Lisa when she caught me.

The next time we came face to face was when I'd taken Ellie Mae to dinner. It turned out, Jodi had been hired and was working there that night. I didn't notice her, talking with Ellie Mae like I was, until Ellie asked me who the woman was who kept staring at us. That was when I saw Jodi looking right at us. I casually looked back at Ellie Mae and in a voice loud enough so Jodi could hear me, I told her, "that's just my whore ex-wife."

Over the summer Ellie Mae and I became very close. Our relationship became sexual and she was everything my ex wasn't. Open, kind, giving and most of all, trustworthy. I finally broke down one afternoon when we were sitting on the front deck and asked her if she could ever see herself living in a little tiny cabin. A cabin so small you can hardly turn around without bumping into something. She surprised me by saying she couldn't see herself living anywhere else. We sealed the deal with a kiss and went to her apartment and packed up her stuff and moved her personal stuff to my place and everything else into storage. We were officially a couple.

Jodi tracked me down. When she got the divorce papers, from what I understood she went ballistic. Ellie Mae and I were sitting on the front porch watching our chickens work their way around the yard, Ellie had brought home a dozen, when Jodi pulled in. She looked around and then headed right for us. Stomping up the stairs she stopped in front of us, but before she could say anything, she began to cry. I mean, CRY. One of those ones where if you saw someone doing it, you'd think someone had died.

When she finally got control of herself, she told me she didn't want to get a divorce. I answer with "well, I didn't want to be married to a cheating slut either." That didn't help anything and she started crying again. Finally, she pulled out a chair and sat down. And began apologizing. And apologizing. She blamed just about everything for her lack of self control. She admitted to moving in with Tom, that she loved his, as she put it, horse cock. He began cheating on her and then left and she wanted her life back.

I asked her if she was serious. That I should wait around while my WIFE went and moved in with another guy and lived with and fucked him. Should I thank him or her for her sloppy bored out disease filled cunt? I really laid it on her. Ellie Mae? She just sat there and watched, then went out and fed her chickens and rabbits, before starting the little generator and going inside the cabin. When she came out, I was still explaining what a whore Jodi was, and Ellie gave us each a cup of coffee. The three of us sat there that afternoon, drinking coffee, having snacks that Ellie made and talking our way through it.

I found out how hurt she was that I burned all our pictures. I told her good. She said she wanted something to remember our good times together, I said I didn't want to remember her at all. After everything, she admitted she wanted to live with me in my little cabin, it would be just like the old days. I told her it would be nothing of the kind, my cock wouldn't even know I'd put it in. She still wanted to have kids with me, I told her she didn't deserve kids, if any were girls they would probably grow up to be whores. By the time she left, I'd give her a tour of my house and place. When she acted like she was going to sit or lay on Ellie and my bed, I told her if she disrespected it by even sitting on it, I'd throw her over the bannister.

She signed the papers before leaving. Before Christmas came, we were officially divorced. I heard she headed south to California looking for Tom. Some said she found him and was hooking. That was fine, Ellie Mae and I were so in love, I didn't even remember Jo...Jodi?

Pappy7Pappy7over 10 years ago
Well written

To be married or not to be married, that is the question presented here. Whether it's nobler to suffer the slings and arrows of betrayal or just curb the bitch.

I say curb.

TavadelphinTavadelphinover 10 years ago
Hoist on her own petard

She may well have learned from her mistakes - is it worth the risk??

Hard to answer for another - and there is no true wrong answer without the history the future represents -

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 11 years ago
So true

Right on the money.

chytownchytownabout 11 years ago
Good Read***

Thanks for sharing.

Slowride_Slowride_about 11 years ago
Perfect.

You nailed this one PS.

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