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“Bad reception, I’m at the site”: My husband left for a work trip, but a week later Mum spotted him in another neighborhood pushing a stroller. I went to investigate

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Poor signal, Im at the site: my husband left for a work contract, but a week later, Mum spotted him in another part of town with a pram. I went to check.

Two weeks ago, I stood shivering on the chilly platform, wrapped tight in my coat, waving goodbye to Simon. He lugged a huge sports bag, stuffed with thermals, thick socks, and tins of food. He was heading off for a work stint. Far away. To where, he claimed, the conditions were tough, the labour grueling, and the pay substantial.

Dont be sad, Maisie, he said, giving me a calm, strangely distant peck on the forehead. Only three months. Well clear the mortgage, and get you a new car after. The signals rubbish up there, you knowmiddle of nowhere, industrial sites. Ill call when I can. Just wait for me.

So I waited. I lived like a devoted dog, phone glued to my hand even in the bath. Simon rang only every few days, always over video call, but the camera never worked or was covered up.

Internet barely exists here, Mais, his voice crackled through static. Only one mast in miles. Love you, miss you. Gotta run, the foremans calling.

I believed him. More than thatI was proud. My husband, the provider, the hero, enduring hardship for the family. I pinched pennies, careful not to touch the money he supposedly earned for our future.

Yesterday started out ordinary. At work, Mum called. Her voice was oddquiet, tense, as if she was searching for words.

Maisie, are you sitting down?
Mum, whats wrong? Is Dad alright?
Dads fine. Im at the Metropolis shopping centre, in the North district. Came to find a present for the grandson… Maisie, I saw Simon.

I laughedloud, nervous, almost hysterical.

Mum, you must be mistaken. Simons on his job up North. Weve got a seven-hour time difference. Hes either in the snow or at work, or asleep.

Maisie, she cut me off, sharply. Ive known him ten years. I know how he walks, how he scratches his head, his jacket. It was him. He was in the food court. With a young woman. And… they were pushing a pram.

The world didnt collapseit just froze. Flat, grey, silent. I made my excuses at workmigraineand jumped into a taxi. It was a forty-minute ride to Metropolis. The whole way, I called Simon. The reply: This number is temporarily unavailable. Of course. Hes in the wilderness.

Mum waited by the entrancepale, clutching a bottle of water, drops of herbal tonic sloshing inside.

Theyre in the cinema, she whispered. The film ends in twenty minutes.

We waited. I hid behind a pillar, feeling like a low-budget detective heroine. The doors swung open, crowds spilled out. And among themI saw him. My contractor. My so-called hero. He strolled, arm-in-arm, with a young woman around twenty-five, visibly pregnant with a rounded bump. Beside, Simon pushed a pram holding a little girl about eighteen months old.

He didnt look tired or battered. He looked well-fed, relaxed, and pleased with his life. He smiled at her the way he hadnt smiled at me in years, leaning over to kiss her on the temple.

At this, I stepped out from behind the pillar.

Hello, contractor, I said, loudly.

Simon glanced up, and colour drained from his face. He jerked, as if to run, but the pram got in the way.

Maisie?… What… what are you doing here?
Me? Im here to greet my husband back from a work contract. Did your flight get in early? Or have you taken up teleporting?

The young woman tensed, darting her gaze between us.

Simon, who is this? she asked, irritation in her voice. Is that the ex whos making it hard for you to pay child support?

I looked straight at her.

Ex? Im his lawful wife. Ten years married. And, by the way, hes supposed to be onsite now, earning for our mortgage.

Simon said nothing. All his carefully built story collapsed in one minute. It turned out every work stint for the last three years was fiction. He hadnt gone anywhere. Hed simply lived two lives. One area of the citywith me, anotherwith her. The money? He took funds from our joint account, took out loans and debts, and spent them on supporting his second family.

I turned and left. Mum followed. Behind us echoed shouts, the child crying, the womans hysteria. I didnt care.

Look at it clear-headed, and this is classic fake business tripsthe highest form of narcissistic deception. To lie for years about cities, wilderness, time zones while being only forty minutes away is more than a lie; its a calculated web of manipulation.

Firstly, the illusion of distance. The farther, the harder to reach, the easier it is to make excuses: expensive, far away, bad signal, time gap. The perfect alibi.

Secondly, dissociation. These people seem to live as different personas: one with one partner, another with the next. These worlds never meet, theres no guilt.

Thirdly, gaslighting the second partner. By her words, he told her tales about an ex who made his life tough and blocked the divorce. To each, a separate fairytale.

Fourthly, financial abuse. The worst isnt even the cheatingits the money. The wife saves, thinking of the future, while in reality, shes funding someone else’s life. Thats economic violence.

And lastly, the power of chance. Sometimes its an outsidermum, a friendwho shatters the illusion. When facts contradict your faith, you must follow the facts, no matter how painful.

What next? No heart-to-heart talks. With someone capable of such grand deceit, theres no use negotiating. Whats needed are clear actions: divorce, full financial audit, change the locks. His work contract is over, finished for good.

Would you believe your husband if he said he was leaving for a job in a distant part of the country? Or would you check his tickets and geolocation?

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