Am I The A-Hole For Installing A GPS Tracker On My Husband’s Car?

My husband “David” (62M) and I have been married for forty years. I thought we had a good, stable life. But for the past year, he’s been distant and secretive. He claims he’s been going to a “poker night” every Tuesday, but he always comes home smelling of cheap coffee, not cigars, and looking sad, not excited. But there’s a bigger reason for my suspicion, a detail from his past that has always worried me.

Our finances have also taken a strange hit. Small, unexplained cash withdrawals. A few hundred dollars here and there. When I ask, he just says “household expenses.” Last week, I had enough. I bought a magnetic GPS tracker and put it on his car. I feel disgusting and ashamed of myself, but I feel I have no other choice.

Tonight, I watched the tracker on my phone. He didn’t go to his friend’s house. He drove to a community center in a rough part of town. He’s been there for two hours. I couldn’t take it anymore. I drove here and I’m parked across the street.

Just now, the meeting let out. I saw David walk out, talking with another man. It’s not a poker game. It looks like some kind of support group. But the man he’s with… I know him. It’s my sister’s ex-husband, “Frank,” the man who ruined her life and who we all despise. David and Frank are shaking hands. Frank clapped him on the shoulder and then got into his own car and drove away. David is walking to his car now. He just saw me parked here. He’s frozen, staring right at me.

I didn’t know what to do. I just sat there like a statue, my fingers still curled tight around the steering wheel. David started walking toward me slowly, like he was afraid I’d vanish if he moved too fast.

He tapped on my window gently. “Can we talk?” he asked, voice low.

I unlocked the door. He climbed into the passenger seat and shut the door quietly. We sat in silence for a minute. I could hear his breathing, heavier than usual, and mine, shallow and uneven.

“You followed me?” he asked, not angry—just tired.

“I put a GPS on your car,” I whispered. “I’m sorry. I didn’t know what else to do.”

He sighed and rubbed his hands over his face. “I guess I deserve that.”

“I thought you were having an affair,” I admitted, ashamed. “Or gambling. Or… something worse.”

He looked at me, not surprised. “I know I’ve been distant. And I should’ve told you. I just didn’t know how.”

“What is that place? Why are you meeting him? Frank?”

David looked down at his hands. “It’s an addiction support group. For gamblers. That’s why Frank is there. He hit rock bottom two years ago. He’s been clean since. He’s actually the one who told me about the group.”

I couldn’t believe it. I stared at him, trying to make sense of what I was hearing.

“You’re… gambling again?”

He nodded slowly. “It started small. Online stuff. Just to take the edge off after retirement. Then I lost a couple hundred. Then a few thousand. I thought I could fix it. Win it back. You didn’t notice at first, so I kept going.”

My heart ached. “We’ve been through this before, David. After your brother died. Remember how hard it was to climb out of that hole?”

“I know,” he said, almost in a whisper. “That’s why I finally joined the group. I didn’t want to drag you through it again. And I didn’t want to admit I failed.”

I couldn’t tell if I was more relieved or more hurt. All the lies, the sneaking around, the stress—it suddenly made a terrible kind of sense. But Frank? Of all people?

“You trust him?” I asked.

“I didn’t. But he’s been clean longer than anyone in the group. He sponsors three men. He’s actually… helping people. I didn’t want to believe it either. But the man’s different now.”

I was quiet for a long time. Then I asked, “How much did you lose?”

David swallowed hard. “Around eleven thousand. It was spread out. Over months. I’ve already started paying it back from my pension, bit by bit.”

Eleven thousand. That wasn’t pocket change. That was a bathroom renovation. A used car. A year of groceries.

“And you weren’t going to tell me?” I said, my voice cracking.

“I wanted to. But every time I looked at you, I saw disappointment. I thought if I fixed it first, you’d never have to know.”

I took a deep breath. I could scream. I could cry. I could tell him to sleep somewhere else. But all I did was say, “Let’s go home.”

The ride back was quiet. David kept wringing his hands, glancing over at me like he wanted to say something, but didn’t dare. I was still too raw, too torn between fury and heartbreak to speak.

At home, he made us both tea. Chamomile, the only one we both liked. We sat at the kitchen table, the one we bought when our youngest left for college. The silence between us wasn’t angry, just heavy.

“I’ll start being transparent,” he finally said. “I’ll show you every bank statement. I’ll give you access to my accounts. And I’ll keep going to the group.”

I nodded. “I want that.”

He reached into his wallet and took out a crumpled business card. “This is the group’s info. In case you ever want to come. They do family sessions too.”

I didn’t take the card. Not yet. But I didn’t push it away either.

That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept thinking about Frank. About my sister, Melanie, and what she’d gone through. Frank had gambled away their savings, crashed her car while drunk, and left her to raise two kids on her own. The damage he caused was so deep we all swore we’d never speak to him again.

And now, he was some kind of recovery guru?

The next day, I called Melanie. I hadn’t told her anything yet.

“I saw Frank,” I blurted before I could second-guess myself.

There was silence. Then, “What? Why?”

I told her everything. The group. David. The tracker. The money.

She didn’t get mad. She didn’t curse. She just said, “You know, Frank wrote me a letter last year. Apologizing. Saying he’d joined a program. I tore it up. Thought it was some manipulation trick.”

“Maybe it wasn’t,” I said quietly.

“Maybe not,” she replied. “But I’m not ready to forgive him. Not yet.”

“I get that.”

A few days later, David invited me to come to a family night at the center. I almost said no. But something told me to go.

The community center was a modest building with cracked pavement and flickering lights. Inside, though, it was warm. The walls were covered in handmade posters with words like Courage, Accountability, and Hope. People sat in a circle, some with family, some alone.

Frank was there, handing out coffee. He caught sight of me and froze for a moment, then nodded. He didn’t try to speak to me. Just gave me space.

David shared his story that night. I listened with tears in my eyes. He talked about shame, guilt, and how he felt like a burden to the woman he loved. That part broke me.

I spoke too. I told the group I had betrayed his trust too, by tracking him. That I wasn’t proud. That I was scared. And that I still loved him.

There wasn’t a dry eye in the room.

Over the next few months, things slowly started to change. David gave me access to every account. He handed me receipts, even for gas. He let me hold his debit card for a while.

And every Tuesday, he went to group. Sometimes I joined. Sometimes I stayed home and baked, just like I used to when the kids were little.

One Tuesday, David came home excited. “Guess what?” he said, holding up a certificate. “Three months clean.”

I hugged him hard. “I’m proud of you.”

He kissed my forehead. “I couldn’t have done it without you.”

The twist came six months later. I got a letter in the mail. From Frank.

I almost tossed it. But curiosity got the better of me.

It was an apology. A long, detailed one. He acknowledged everything—what he did to Melanie, the drinking, the gambling, the lies. He said he didn’t expect forgiveness. He just wanted me to know that watching David change had reminded him how badly he needed to make amends.

There was a photo attached. Frank with two of his grandkids. Clean. Smiling. Healthy.

I put the letter away in a drawer. Maybe one day I’d give it to Melanie.

So… am I the a-hole for installing a GPS tracker on my husband’s car?

Maybe.

But I did it out of fear, not hate. Out of love, not control. And it ended up being the thing that forced the truth out. A truth that hurt, yes—but also healed.

Sometimes the hardest truths are the ones that bring us back together.

And sometimes, even the people we write off can change—if they really want to.

So maybe I wasn’t an a-hole.

Maybe I was just a wife who still believed in the man she married.

What would you have done if you were in my shoes? If you think more people should hear stories like this, feel free to like and share.