The Weekend Trips Led To One Door And A Marriage Split In Two-myhoa

Every weekend, Sarah folded David’s shirts on the bed and pretended not to notice how carefully he chose them.

He had never cared much about clothes before the travel started, but now Friday evenings came with new jeans, clean sneakers, and shirts that smelled faintly of cedar.

When she teased him about dressing up for industrial equipment clients, he kissed her cheek and said first impressions mattered.

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Sarah accepted that answer because marriage teaches people to trust the ordinary until the ordinary starts leaving fingerprints.

They had been married seven years, long enough to know each other’s grocery habits, sleep sounds, and silent moods.

They lived in Phoenix, paid bills, kept two aging cars running, and talked in careful circles about children they had not yet been able to have.

The disappointment of that had made both of them tender in some places and tired in others.

When David said his company wanted weekend client meetings in Tucson and Flagstaff, Sarah did not like it, but she understood money pressure.

He said the commissions would help, and she wanted to believe help was what he was bringing back.

So she made Sunday dinners and waited for the sound of his tires in the driveway.

At first, the weekends felt temporary, the way he promised they would be.

By November, temporary had started acting permanent.

David kept his phone with him even in the bathroom, which was new enough for Sarah to notice and old enough for him to explain.

He said an important client might call, and she told herself that sounded reasonable.

In December, the space between them in bed widened without anyone naming it.

He was tired, he said, and the drive was long, and the meetings were draining.

Sarah tried to be kind because kindness is easier than suspicion until suspicion learns your address.

By January, he smiled on Thursdays like a man waiting for a holiday.

By February, he came home on Sundays with a sadness he tried to hide by calling it exhaustion.

The receipt was in his jeans pocket on a Saturday morning, folded twice and soft at the edges.

Sarah was checking pockets before laundry, the way she had done a hundred times without finding anything worse than coins or gas slips.

This receipt was from a diner in Sedona, and the timestamp sat in her mind like a stone.

David had said Tucson.

The receipt said dinner for two.

She opened the hamper again and went through the clothes from the weeks before with a calm that felt borrowed from someone else.

Three more receipts appeared, all from the same Sedona diner, all on weekends David had described as client travel.

Sarah did not call him.

She did not want to ask a question that gave him time to build a better lie.

On Monday, while David was at work, she opened the location app they had installed years earlier for safety.

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