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George Strait moved the audience by dedicating a powerful song to his wife.

We’re talking venues that hold maybe 500 people. Very exclusive. I want you to do a feature series, behind the scenes, access, interviews with George and Allan, maybe even Norma if she’s willing. I want you to explore what makes these marriages work in an industry where they usually don’t. The irony wasn’t lost on Emily. Here she was, her own marriage crumbling, being asked to write about successful long-term relationships.

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She must have hesitated a moment too long because Patricia leaned  forward, her expression softening. Everything okay at home, Emily? Emily considered lying again, but found she couldn’t.  Patricia had always been more than just a boss. David and I, we’re struggling. He’s always at the studio, and when he is home, he’s not really there, you know. Patricia nodded slowly.

10 years of marriage, nine next month if we make it that long. Maybe this assignment is exactly what you need, Patricia said gently. Sometimes we need to see what’s possible before we can find our way back to it. George and Norma have been through hell. They lost a daughter, dealt with the pressures of fame,  and yet they’re still standing.

Maybe their story will give you some perspective. Emily picked up the folder, flipping through the press releases and tour dates. The first show was in 3 days at the Ryman Auditorium. The Mother Church of Country Music. You’ve already arranged access. Their publicist, Jennifer Hayes, is a friend. You’ll have backstage passes for all three Nashville shows, plus an opportunity to sit down with George and Allan for interviews.

Jennifer mentioned that Norma might be willing to talk too, but she’s more private, so no promises. “This is incredible access,”  Emily admitted, feeling the first genuine spark of professional excitement she’d had in weeks. “You’re the best feature writer I have,” Patricia said simply. “Now go do what you do best. Tell the story behind the story.

” Emily stood, tucking the folder under her arm. As she reached the door, Patricia called out, “Emily, whatever is happening with you and David, don’t give up without a fight. The best things in life are worth fighting for.” Back at her desk, Emily opened the folder and began reading through the materials.

George Strait’s career statistics were staggering. 60 number one hits,  countless awards, soldout stadium tours. But it was the personal information that caught her attention. He’d married Norma Voss in 1971 when he was just 19 years old and still in the army. They’d lost their 13-year-old daughter Jennifer in a car accident in 1986, a tragedy that would have destroyed most marriages.

Instead, by all accounts, it had made theirs stronger. She pulled up her email and composed a message to Jennifer Hayes, the publicist, introducing herself and expressing her enthusiasm for the project. Within minutes, her phone buzzed with a response. Jennifer’s message was warm and professional, providing contact information, and suggesting they meet for coffee tomorrow morning to discuss the interview parameters.

Emily spent the rest of the morning researching, pulling up old interviews, watching concert footage, and  reading everything she could find about George Strait’s personal life. The man was notoriously private, which made Patricia’s coup in securing this access  even more impressive. At lunch, she sat alone in the breakroom picking at a salad while scrolling through her phone.

There were no messages from David. She typed out a text three times and deleted it three times. What was there to say that hadn’t already been said or left unsaid a hundred times before? Her colleague Brandon Mitchell, a music critic who covered the rock and pop scenes, poked his head into the breakroom. “Hey, M. You coming to Happy Hour Friday? A bunch of us are hitting the Bluebird.

” “Maybe,” Emily said non-committally. I’ve got a big assignment starting  this week. The straight thing? Yeah, Patricia mentioned it. That’s huge. You know, he almost never does press like  this. I know. I’m still wrapping my head around it. Brandon grabbed a soda from the fridge and leaned against the counter.

You doing okay? You seem a little off lately. Emily forced a smile. Just busy. You know how it is. Brandon nodded, clearly not buying it, but respecting her boundaries. Well, if you need to vent over a beer, you know where to find me. After he left,  Emily sat in the quiet breakroom, staring at the institutional beige walls.

She thought about what Patricia had said, about not giving up without a fight. But what did you do when you felt like you were fighting alone? When every attempt at connection was met with exhaustion and distance? She picked up her phone and tried again. Hey, I know you’re busy, but can we try to have dinner together tonight? Just us.

No phones, no work talk. I miss you. She hit send before she could overthink it. The afternoon dragged by as Emily conducted phone interviews  with a couple of upand cominging artists for a piece due next week. She checked her phone compulsively, but David didn’t respond until nearly 4:00. camp tonight. Session running late.

Tomorrow? Emily stared at the  message, feeling something inside her crack just a little bit more. She typed back a simple, “Okay,” and set her phone face down on her desk. At 5:30, she packed up her things and headed out to the parking lot.  The autumn evening was beautiful with the sky painted in shades of orange and purple  as the sun began its descent behind the Nashville skyline.

She sat in her car for a moment before starting the engine, looking at the building where she spent so much of her life pursuing other people’s stories. When was the last time she’d felt like the protagonist in her own story instead of just an observer in everyone else’s? The drive to their house in the East  Nashville neighborhood took 20 minutes through rush hour traffic.

The small craftsmanstyle home they’d bought three years ago had seemed like such a promise back then, a place to build a life, maybe start a family. Now it just felt like a house filled with silence  and missed connections. Inside, Emily dropped her bag on the kitchen counter and stared at the refrigerator, trying to muster the energy to cook dinner for one.

Instead, she poured herself a glass of wine and walked out to the back porch, settling into one of the wicker chairs they’d picked out together at a flea market during happier times.  Her phone buzzed. For a moment, she hoped it was David, saying he’d gotten away early, but it was Jennifer Hayes. looking forward to meeting tomo

rrow. How about 900 a.m. at Barista Parlor? We can discuss the interview schedule,  and I’ll give you the full background on what George is hoping to accomplish with these shows. They’re really special, very personal for him and Norma. Emily replied, confirming the meeting, then set her phone aside and took a long sip of wine.

The evening air was cool, and she could hear the distant sounds of Nashville’s nightife beginning to stir. live music drifting from the honky tonks on lower Broadway. Cars passing on the street, neighbors coming home from work. She thought about George and Norma Strait, two people who’d been together since they were teenagers, who’d built  a life through military service, struggling years, unprecedented success, and unimaginable tragedy.

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