{"id":2996,"date":"2026-06-20T17:19:46","date_gmt":"2026-06-20T17:19:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/?p=2996"},"modified":"2026-06-20T17:19:46","modified_gmt":"2026-06-20T17:19:46","slug":"my-wife-got-pulled-over-for-speeding-but-the-officers-warning-was-about-something-much-worse","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/?p=2996","title":{"rendered":"My Wife Got Pulled Over For Speeding But The Officer\u2019s Warning Was About Something Much Worse \u00a0"},"content":{"rendered":"<header class=\"bwp-single-post-header\"><\/header>\n<div class=\"bwp-single-post-media-container\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"bwp-single-post-content\">\n<div class=\"bwp-content entry-content clearfix\">\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The patrol car\u2019s lights washed red and blue across the inside of our Honda, turning the windshield into something like a slow strobe. This was the kind of stop that happens a thousand times a day on American highways and almost always ends the same way, with a ticket or a warning and a slightly irritated story told later over dinner. My wife, Sarah, had been doing seventy eight in a sixty five zone on Route 35, not recklessly fast, just fast enough to catch a trooper\u2019s radar from behind an overpass as we drove out to see her mother in Millbrook on a flat gray Saturday afternoon. She handed over her license and registration with the easy calm of someone who had been pulled over before and always walked away with nothing worse than a fine and a brief lecture. When the trooper asked if she knew why he\u2019d stopped her, she gave him the same small, apologetic smile that had charmed me in a crowded coffee shop near Columbia more than ten years earlier, back when I still believed our life together was built entirely out of the truth, because that was the only kind of life I knew how to build.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The officer, whose name tag read Martinez, took our documents back to his cruiser. I watched him in the side mirror, expecting the usual minute or two of typing, the small bureaucratic pause between inconvenience and release. Instead something in the way he sat changed. He leaned closer to his screen. He stayed there far longer than a routine stop should require. Traffic hissed past us on the highway. Sarah adjusted the rearview mirror, brushed a piece of lint from her sleeve, glanced at the clock. When Martinez finally got out of his car, he didn\u2019t walk back to her window. He came around to mine and tapped lightly on the glass.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cSir, could I speak with you for a moment? Just step out here with me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">There was nothing sharp in his voice. That, somehow, made it worse.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I looked at Sarah. She looked puzzled but not afraid. I opened my door and followed Martinez a few steps behind the car, far enough that our voices would dissolve into the hum of passing traffic. The shoulder smelled like hot asphalt and exhaust. The afternoon sun pressed warm against the side of my face. Martinez turned to face me directly, and something in his expression made my stomach tighten before he said a single word.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cSir, I need you to listen to me carefully,\u201d he said. \u201cDon\u2019t go home tonight. Get somewhere safe. A hotel, a friend\u2019s place, somewhere she doesn\u2019t know about.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">For a full second I genuinely believed I\u2019d misheard him.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cWhat are you talking about?\u201d I said. \u201cIs Sarah in trouble?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">His jaw tightened. Rather than answer, he reached into his shirt pocket and pulled out a small folded piece of paper, pressing it into my hand. \u201cRead this later. When you\u2019re alone. And be careful who you trust right now.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I looked down at the paper, then back up at him. \u201cWe\u2019ve been married ten years. We\u2019re just driving to see her mother.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">He lowered his voice even further. \u201cHer name triggered something serious in our system. I can\u2019t explain it here, but I\u2019m telling you this because it matters for your safety.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I turned and looked back at the car without meaning to. Sarah sat exactly where I\u2019d left her, one hand resting on the wheel, the other tucking a strand of hair behind her ear. In the pulse of the cruiser\u2019s lights her face looked subtly different to me, sharper somehow, like a photograph of someone I knew that had been slightly retouched. Martinez walked back to her window, returned her license, gave her a standard verbal warning in the same easy professional tone he\u2019d used from the start. Nothing in his manner would have told a passerby that he had just cracked the foundation of my entire life open on the shoulder of a state highway.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">We pulled back into traffic. Sarah was quieter than the rest of the drive should have made her. Her hands stayed tighter on the wheel than usual. She checked the mirrors more than she needed to. When I asked if she was upset about the warning, she smiled and said no, but the smile moved across her face without ever quite landing. The folded note sat in my pocket like a coin pulled straight from a fire, impossible to ignore and impossible yet to explain.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">By the time we reached her mother\u2019s house, I had already begun looking at my wife as though the edges of her had shifted slightly, and I was only just starting to notice.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Dinner that evening passed with an almost cruel normalcy. Sarah laughed at the right moments. She helped clear the table. She listened with bright, easy attention to family stories I\u2019d heard a dozen variations of over the years. If there was any danger in that room, it wore lipstick and passed the salad with perfect manners. But once suspicion enters a marriage, it changes the texture of everything around it. Her laughter sounded a touch too polished. Her warmth felt placed rather than spontaneous, like furniture arranged for a photograph. She wasn\u2019t acting strangely, exactly. She was acting with the precision of someone who understood exactly how to seem unremarkable.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">We slept that night in the guest room upstairs, the one with the floral curtains and the slightly lumpy mattress and a crooked watercolor of a harbor above the dresser. I waited until her breathing slowed and deepened before slipping into the bathroom and locking the door behind me. I sat on the edge of the tub and unfolded the note under the glow of my phone.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Seven words, written in tight block letters on a torn sheet of notepad paper.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">She isn\u2019t who she says she is.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Below that, a phone number, and one more word.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Detective.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I read it again and again, as if rereading might somehow soften what it said. It never did. I stayed awake the rest of that night beside my sleeping wife, watching the ceiling and letting memory rearrange itself under this strange new light. I thought about how little I actually knew of her work. She told people she did marketing for a pharmaceutical company called Meridian. I had never once visited her office. Never met a coworker. There had been no holiday party, no casual after work drinks, no names of colleagues that ever became familiar to me over the years. When I asked about clients or projects, she answered in vague, polished generalities that discouraged any real follow up question. At the time I had simply taken that as ordinary privacy, the kind even good marriages leave room for. Lying awake in her mother\u2019s guest room, it began to feel less like privacy and more like architecture, something built on purpose, with load bearing walls I had never been allowed to see.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The next morning, once we\u2019d driven home and Sarah had left for what she called a Saturday client meeting, I dialed the number.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">A man answered and introduced himself as Detective Adam Reynolds, organized crime division. The phrase alone made my hands go cold around the phone. I explained who I was and how I\u2019d gotten his number, and there was a pause on the line long enough that I could hear my own pulse in the quiet kitchen. Then he asked if I was alone, and when I said yes, he told me to listen carefully.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cYour wife has been under surveillance for eight months,\u201d he said. \u201cShe\u2019s a person of interest in an ongoing money laundering investigation. We\u2019re talking about millions of dollars moved through shell businesses and personal accounts tied to organized criminal operations.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The kitchen seemed to tilt slightly around me.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cThat\u2019s not possible,\u201d I said, though even as the words left my mouth they sounded thin. \u201cShe works in marketing. She travels for clients, she has a laptop with the company logo, she\u2014\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cThere is no company called Meridian Pharmaceutical Marketing,\u201d he said, not unkindly. \u201cWe checked. The job is a cover. The laptop, the business cards, the travel schedule, all of it is staged. Your marriage has been useful to her because it made her look stable and respectable, the kind of person banks and institutions don\u2019t think twice about.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I sat down hard at the kitchen table where Sarah and I had spent years sharing coffee and grocery lists and small ordinary intimacies that now felt, in retrospect, like a performance staged for an audience of one. Her mug still sat unwashed in the sink. Outside, a neighbor\u2019s leaf blower whined to life, absurdly normal against the quiet collapse happening inside me.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cAre you telling me I\u2019ve been used as cover?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cI\u2019m telling you your wife has been living two lives,\u201d Reynolds said. \u201cAnd the one she showed you appears to have been built specifically to protect the one she kept hidden.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Once Reynolds started asking questions, the shape of my own blindness became almost unbearable to look at directly. Had I ever seen her office. No. Had I met a supervisor, a coworker, anyone from this company she supposedly worked for. No. Had I seen tax paperwork that clearly named her employer. Not really, now that I thought about it. Did she take calls in other rooms, door closed. Yes. Did she travel more than seemed reasonable for a marketing job with no clear scope. Yes. Had she grown irritated whenever I asked one question too many about her work. Also yes, though at the time I had filed all of it under stress, or fatigue, or simply the private corners every adult is allowed to keep for themselves.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Reynolds explained it to me slowly, in plain terms. Sarah had allegedly been working as a financial intermediary inside a laundering operation, moving illegal money through transfers and shell companies built to look ordinary. Money from drugs. From illegal gambling rings. From extortion. Money that came in dirty and needed someone careful, patient, and unremarkable enough to wash it clean. According to the investigation, my wife had been exactly that person. And our marriage, the house, the routine, the predictable suburban rhythm of our life together, had functioned as the perfect disguise.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Then came the part that hollowed me out completely. Reynolds told me they had evidence Sarah was preparing to leave. Funds quietly rerouted over recent months. A second financial identity. Documents suggesting an offshore account and a possible relocation plan already in motion. She hadn\u2019t only lied to me about who she was. She had been quietly preparing to take what she could and disappear, with or without warning.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Reynolds didn\u2019t ask for my help right away. He laid out the risks first, plainly, the way I imagine he\u2019d done with other frightened spouses before me. If I wanted nothing to do with it, the investigation would continue without me, and I could simply leave, find a hotel, start somewhere new and let the case unfold from a distance. But if I was willing to help, to quietly document what happened inside my own home, they could move faster and build a stronger case, not just against Sarah but against the wider network she was tied to. There would be risk either way. If I did nothing, I would be living in a house with a woman who had used trust itself as a kind of currency for a decade. If I agreed to help, I would become a witness against the person I had loved more intimately than anyone else in my life.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Put that way, it wasn\u2019t really a choice at all.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Over the six weeks that followed, I became something close to a stranger inside my own home. Reynolds and his team taught me how to set up small cameras disguised as ordinary household objects, how to quietly copy files from Sarah\u2019s laptop while she showered, how to leave my phone recording on the kitchen counter during her private calls, how to sit across the dinner table from her and keep my face arranged into something normal while I helped, piece by piece, take apart the life she had built underneath our marriage. The technical part wasn\u2019t what nearly broke me. It was the performance. It was kissing her goodnight knowing that hours earlier I had watched footage of her discussing cash movements in careful, coded language with men whose names had already surfaced in organized crime files. It was nodding along while she complained about a difficult client when I was holding printed ledgers proving she had moved sums of money neither of us had ever honestly earned. It was finding, buried in encrypted folders, messages where she referred to me not as her husband but as cover, the way someone might describe a useful prop, something convenient to keep around as long as it served its purpose.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I had loved Sarah with the uncomplicated faith of a man who believed intimacy meant being equally known by the person beside him. I understood now that I had been entirely exposed while she remained, for ten years, professionally hidden, and that the imbalance had never once been accidental. It had been the entire design.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The night everything finally came apart began like any other. I came home from work to find Sarah already in the kitchen, a glass of wine beside her laptop, her reading glasses pushed up into her hair the way they always were when she was deep in something she didn\u2019t want me to see. She closed the screen the moment I walked in, smooth and practiced, a gesture so familiar by now that I almost didn\u2019t notice it anymore. We ate dinner. We talked about nothing important. I asked about her week, and she gave me an answer built entirely out of soft, comfortable fiction, the kind she had clearly perfected over years of practice.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">What she didn\u2019t know was that Reynolds had called me earlier that afternoon. The investigation had reached its final stage. Federal agents, working alongside the organized crime unit, had enough now to move. There would be arrests within days, not just of Sarah but of several men further up the chain she had been quietly serving for years. Reynolds told me to behave exactly as I always had. One more ordinary night. One more performance. Then it would be over.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I remember looking at her across the table that night, watching her laugh at something small and inconsequential, and feeling something strange settle inside me. Not hatred exactly. Something closer to grief for a version of her I now understood had never fully existed, alongside a kind of cold clarity about the version that had.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">They came for her three days later, on a Tuesday morning, while she was finishing her coffee in the kitchen in her robe, completely unaware that the front door was about to open onto the rest of her life. I had been asked to be elsewhere when it happened, partly for my own protection, partly because Reynolds didn\u2019t want her seeing my face the moment she understood what I had done. I sat instead in an unfamiliar diner three towns over, drinking coffee I didn\u2019t taste, watching the door, waiting for my phone to ring.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">When it finally did, Reynolds\u2019s voice was steady and almost gentle. They had her. The operation had gone smoothly. Several other arrests had followed within hours, men whose names I would later see attached to federal indictments involving sums of money so large they stopped feeling like real numbers at all. He told me I could go home now, that agents would need a statement from me in the coming days, but that for tonight I should simply rest.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I didn\u2019t go home that night. I went instead to my brother\u2019s place across town, sat on his couch with a beer I barely touched, and tried to understand how ten years of my life could fold so completely into something I had never been allowed to see. My brother didn\u2019t ask many questions. He just sat with me, the television murmuring something neither of us watched, until it got late enough that sleep finally took me out of pure exhaustion rather than peace.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The weeks that followed were strange in the way grief is strange, because in some sense I was grieving, even though the person I was grieving had never really existed in the form I\u2019d loved. There were depositions, meetings with federal prosecutors, careful explanations of financial documents I had helped collect without ever fully understanding what they meant in the moment. Sarah\u2019s lawyer reached out once, early on, suggesting we might find some quiet arrangement, some way to keep the worst of it out of public record, but I had nothing left in me for protecting her reputation. I gave the prosecutors everything I had.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I saw her once during the proceedings, across a courtroom rather than a kitchen table, and the distance felt right in a way I hadn\u2019t expected. She looked smaller than I remembered, stripped of the soft authority she\u2019d always carried so easily. She didn\u2019t look at me, not once, and I found that I didn\u2019t need her to. Whatever explanation I might once have wanted from her, some neat accounting of how she had managed to love me, or perform loving me, while building an entire second life in the shadow of our marriage, never came, and eventually I stopped waiting for it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">She was sentenced the following spring to a long stretch in federal prison, the exact number of years feeling almost beside the point by then. The network around her, the men whose voices I had listened to on recordings made in my own dining room, were sentenced alongside her, some for considerably longer. Reynolds called me after the sentencing, not because he had to, but because over those months he had become something closer to a friend than an investigator, the kind of relationship forged only by going through something that strange together.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">\u201cYou did the right thing,\u201d he told me. \u201cI know it didn\u2019t feel that way most days.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">He was right on both counts.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">It took the better part of a year to feel like myself again, or perhaps to feel like a slightly different version of myself, one with a clearer, harder edge where there used to be only trust offered freely and without much thought. I sold the house. There was no way I could keep living inside the stage set of a marriage that had never been entirely real, surrounded by furniture we\u2019d chosen together for reasons I now understood had partly been about appearances. I moved into a smaller place across town, simpler, entirely mine, with nothing in it that carried a history I needed to question.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I started seeing a therapist, something I\u2019d resisted for years out of a kind of stubborn pride, and slowly began to understand that what had happened to me wasn\u2019t a referendum on my own judgment or worth. I had simply loved someone who was extraordinarily good at being loved without ever truly being known. That isn\u2019t a flaw in the person who loved. It\u2019s a particular kind of cruelty practiced by the person who allowed it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Detective Reynolds and I still talk occasionally, mostly just checking in, the strange camaraderie of two men who had once spent six weeks quietly dismantling the same lie from opposite sides. He told me once, almost in passing, that cases like Sarah\u2019s were rarer than people assumed, that most people swept up in organized financial crime didn\u2019t bother building entire marriages as cover, because most people weren\u2019t patient enough, or cold enough, to commit to a decade long performance. I\u2019m not sure that detail made me feel better exactly, but it did make me feel less foolish, which mattered more than I expected it to.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">It\u2019s been two years now since that afternoon on Route 35, since Officer Martinez tapped on my window and quietly handed me seven words that ended one life and, eventually, began another. I think about him sometimes, that trooper who had no real obligation to tell me anything at all, who could have simply written the warning and sent us on our way and let the investigation run its course without my involvement. I never got the chance to properly thank him. I tried once, reaching out through the department, but he had transferred to another county by then, and the message I left never found its way back to me. I like to think he knows anyway, in the way people sometimes do, that the small kindness of a folded note changed the entire shape of someone\u2019s life for the better, even if that someone never got to say so out loud.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">These days I live alone in the new place, and I\u2019ve found that I don\u2019t mind it the way I expected to. I cook dinner most nights without an audience to perform for, and there is something quietly restorative in that, in eating a meal that doesn\u2019t require explanation. I\u2019ve started seeing someone new recently, slowly and without urgency, a woman named Claire who teaches middle school and laughs easily and has, as far as I can tell, absolutely nothing to hide, mostly because her life is exactly as unremarkable and visible as she presents it to be. I don\u2019t say that as an insult. After everything, unremarkable has become the highest compliment I know how to give.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Last week Claire asked me, gently, why I sometimes go quiet in the middle of an ordinary evening, staring at nothing in particular. I told her the truth, or as much of it as felt fair to share so early. I told her that I\u2019d once been married to someone I thought I knew completely, and that I had learned the hard way that love isn\u2019t the same thing as truth, that two people can share a bed and a mortgage and a decade of ordinary Tuesdays and still, somehow, be living in entirely different stories.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">She didn\u2019t flinch from that, or ask for more than I was ready to give. She just reached across the table and took my hand, the gesture so plain and uncomplicated that it nearly undid me. There was nothing hidden in it. No second meaning. No architecture built to disguise some other purpose underneath.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I think that\u2019s what I was actually looking for, in the end, more than safety or even justice. Not a guarantee that nothing bad could ever happen to me again, because no one gets that guarantee, but simply the chance to sit across a table from someone and trust that what I was seeing was, finally, the whole and entire truth of who they were.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">I still keep the note. It\u2019s folded inside an old wallet I don\u2019t use anymore, tucked into a drawer I rarely open. Seven words in a stranger\u2019s handwriting that gave me back a version of my own life I hadn\u2019t known I was missing. Some nights, when I can\u2019t sleep, I take it out and read it again, not because I\u2019ve forgotten what it says, but because it still feels important to remember how close I came to walking back into a house that was never really mine to begin with, and how grateful I am, even now, that someone cared enough to stop me at the door.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The patrol car\u2019s lights washed red and blue across the inside of our Honda, turning the windshield into something like a slow strobe. This was the kind of stop that &hellip; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2997,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2996","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2996","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=2996"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2996\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2998,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2996\/revisions\/2998"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/2997"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=2996"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=2996"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/edmpackz.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=2996"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}