Private Investigator Exposed The Husband Who Hired Him To Lie-myhoa

James wanted one paper from me.

A surveillance report saying Sarah cheated, so the divorce would leave her with no alimony.

He did not say it that clearly when he first walked into my office.

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Men like James Collins rarely say the cruel part out loud at the beginning.

They dress it up as heartbreak.

They sit across from you with a wedding ring still on, a tight jaw, and the kind of voice that asks to be believed before it earns anything.

He was forty-two, owned a construction company, and wore wealth like armor.

His suit was too sharp for a man supposedly falling apart.

His watch caught the light every time he moved his hand.

“My wife is cheating,” he said.

I had heard those four words hundreds of times.

I had built a career around those four words.

I was Marcus Gray, thirty-eight, a private investigator in Seattle, and most of my work was boring adultery surveillance.

Follow the target.

Photograph the meetings.

Write the report.

Send the invoice.

Most suspicious spouses were wrong about the details but right about the rot.

James gave me a photograph of Sarah Collins and a schedule printed so neatly it felt rehearsed.

Sarah was thirty-five, a nurse, dark-haired, warm-eyed, and smiling in the kind of picture people choose when they still want the world to think things are normal.

Her shifts ran early.

Her errands were listed.

Her coffee shop was listed.

Her gym, her pharmacy, her route home.

James wanted reports every three days.

He wanted photos, timestamps, and anything that could support a divorce filing.

“The sooner the better,” he said.

Then he leaned forward and added, “She hides well.”

The first week gave him nothing.

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