Showing posts with label Wife Cheating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wife Cheating. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Divorce, Wife Cheating

 

Divorce, Wife Cheating

James Brogan sat in his cramped office above the pawn shop on 9th, nursing a lukewarm coffee and staring at the rain streaking the window like it had a personal grudge. The neon sign outside buzzed and flickered—half the letters burned out—so it just read “BRO AN – NVEST GAT ONS.” Good enough.

The door opened without a knock. A man in an expensive gray suit stepped in, shaking water from a black umbrella that probably cost more than Brogan’s rent. Mid-forties, thinning hair, eyes that looked like they hadn’t slept in weeks.

“James Brogan?” the man asked.

“Last time I checked.”

“I’m Richard Harlan. I think my wife is cheating on me.”

Brogan leaned back in his creaky chair. “You ‘think,’ or you know?”

Harlan dropped a thick envelope on the desk. “Photos. Credit card statements. She’s been distant for months. Late nights. New lingerie I’ve never seen her wear. I want proof. Ironclad. For the divorce.”

Brogan thumbed through the photos. Standard stuff—blurry shots of a stylish woman in her late thirties getting into a silver Lexus with tinted windows. Nothing conclusive.

“Three days,” Brogan said. “Two grand a day plus expenses. Half up front.”

Harlan didn’t blink. He peeled off ten crisp hundreds and laid them down. “I want her followed starting tonight. She’s having dinner at La Fontaine at eight.”

Brogan took the cash. “You’ll hear from me.”


That night, Brogan sat in his old Buick across from the upscale French restaurant, collar turned up against the drizzle. Eleanor Harlan emerged at 8:45 on the arm of a tall, silver-haired man in a tailored coat. They laughed too easily. He helped her into the Lexus, his hand lingering a little too long on her back.

Brogan followed at a distance. The Lexus wound through the city and pulled into the underground garage of a sleek new high-rise downtown. Brogan parked on the street and waited.

Two hours later, Eleanor came out alone, fixing her hair in a compact mirror before driving off. Brogan noted the time, snapped a few shots of the building’s entrance.

The next two days were more of the same. Secret lunches. Hotel bars. One afternoon at a boutique hotel where the silver-haired man—identified quickly as Victor Lang, a corporate lawyer with a reputation for winning ugly cases—booked a suite under a fake name. Brogan got photos of them entering together, leaving separately. He even sweet-talked a maid for confirmation on the room service order for two.

On the third evening, Brogan met Richard Harlan at a quiet bar near the harbor.

Brogan slid a thick manila envelope across the table. “It’s all there. Names, dates, times, photos. They’ve been seeing each other for at least four months. He’s her old law school professor. Turned business associate. Turned something else.”

Harlan’s face went pale as he flipped through the evidence. His hands trembled slightly. “That son of a bitch.”

Brogan sipped his whiskey. “You wanted proof. You got it. She’s good at covering tracks, but not good enough.”

Harlan stared at a particularly clear photo of his wife kissing Victor Lang in the hotel elevator. “I loved her, you know. Really loved her.”

Brogan didn’t say anything. He’d heard that line too many times.

“What now?” Harlan asked quietly.

“Now you talk to your lawyer. File the papers. Use this to get whatever you want in the settlement. And try not to do anything stupid.”

Harlan nodded, paid Brogan the rest of the fee in cash, and left without finishing his drink.

Brogan stayed at the bar a while longer, watching the boats rock in the harbor. Another marriage down the drain. Another paycheck in his pocket. He wondered, not for the first time, if anyone ever really beat the house in this game.

He finished his whiskey, left a tip, and stepped back out into the rain. The city didn’t care. It never did.

Monday, May 4, 2026

The Case of the Divorce, Wife Cheating

 

The Case of the Divorce, Wife Cheating

James Brogan was replacing a blown fuse in his office lamp when the client arrived—forties, expensive haircut, tailored suit that couldn’t hide the exhaustion underneath. Daniel Whitaker, partner at a downtown law firm.

“I want proof,” he said, sliding an envelope across the desk. “My wife, Vanessa, has been distant for months. Late nights, new ‘gym clothes’ that still have tags, phone locked tighter than a bank vault. We’ve been married twelve years. I’d rather know the truth before we tear each other apart in court.”

Brogan took the case. He didn’t love divorce work, but the retainer was solid and Whitaker seemed more broken than bitter.

He started simple: tailing Vanessa for three days. She worked part-time at a gallery in the South End. On day two she left early, drove to a sleek new condo building in the Seaport, and used a key fob to enter. She didn’t come out until nearly midnight, hair slightly mussed, checking her phone with a small smile.

Brogan ran the address. The unit belonged to a hedge fund manager named Marcus Hale—mid-thirties, married himself, known for aggressive deals and an even more aggressive social life.

The next afternoon Brogan caught them together at a quiet café in Beacon Hill. They weren’t holding hands, but the way they leaned in, the way Vanessa touched his wrist—it was intimate in the way only long-term affairs get. Brogan snapped clear photos from across the street, including the kiss goodbye in the alley behind the café.

He spent one more day confirming details. Hotel receipts on a joint card Vanessa thought she’d hidden. Messages recovered from a deleted cloud backup. Enough to paint a complete picture.

Daniel met him at a quiet booth in a Back Bay steakhouse that evening. Brogan slid the envelope over—photos, timelines, a short written summary.

“She’s been seeing him for four months,” Brogan said quietly. “He’s not the first, but he’s the current one.”

Daniel stared at the photos for a long time, jaw tight. No explosion. Just a slow nod and a heavy exhale.

“I knew,” he admitted. “I just needed it real. Thank you.”

Brogan stood. “Get a good lawyer. Don’t drag it out nastier than it has to be.”

He left Daniel sitting with his scotch and the evidence that would end his marriage.

Later that night, Brogan walked along the Charles River, collar up against the spring chill. Another marriage fractured. Not every case ended with a rescue or a victory—sometimes it just ended with the truth, ugly as it was.

The city lights shimmered on the water like scattered diamonds. People kept living, cheating, hurting, and starting over.

Just another Saturday night for James Brogan.

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