Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
the adultery club by Tess stimson
Life couldn’t be happier for Nicholas Lyon, divorce lawyer and
contented husband of the beautiful - if chaotic - Mai, a cookery writer who combines working from a comfortable home in Wiltshire with being mother to their three gorgeous young daughters.
And then Sara Kaplan, a bright, vivacious young lawyer, explodes into his life like a sexual hand grenade.
Nicholas is stunned and horrified by the extent of his attraction to her. But whilst the chemistry between them is palpable, it takes a terrorist attack to force him to recognize his own mortality and throw caution to the wind.
For Sara, what started as a harmless fling swiftly deepens into a painful battle for Nicholas’s heart with Mai, who is not quite as preoccupied in her world of food and school runs as
Nicholas had believed. As Mai faces temptations of her own, she realizes she has to decide what she wants - and whether it’s worth fighting for. The adultery club is the irresistible story of the perfectly balanced eternal triangle. It’s a club where membership comes at a very high price.
Also by Tess Stimson
Fiction
Hard News
Soft Focus
Pole Position
Non-Fiction
Yours Till the End:
The Biography of a Beirut Hostage
First published 2007 by Pan Books
an imprint of Pan Macmillan Ltd
Pan Macmillan, 20 New Wharf Road, London Nl 9RR
Basingstoke and Oxford
Associated companies throughout the world
www.panmacmillan.com
ISBN 978-0-330-44520-7
Copyright Š Tess Stimson 2007
The right of Tess Stimson to be identified as the
author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance
with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal
prosecution and civil claims for damages.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from
the British Library.
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In memory of my mother
Jane Theresa Stimson 3 February 1942 to 3 December 2001
‘In my Father’s house
There are many mansions.
If not, I would have told you;
Because I go to prepare a place for you.’
So many people help with stories and advice when one writes
a book, but some have to be singled out for their special
contribution.
Without Carole Blake, my agent, I would never have
found the self-belief to write this book. Her encouragement,
knowledge, meticulous editorial advice, support and - above
all - her friendship have been invaluable. I would fly (indeed, have flown!) across the world to have lunch with her.
Imogen Taylor is the editor of whom every writer dreams.
Her enthusiasm and vision have been stimulating and infectious, her advice pithy, constructive and perceptive. And she
giggles at all the right places. It is a joy to work with her.
Efficient, reliable and always fun to talk to, Oli Munson
has also achieved the impossible: rendered conversation
about international tax forms entertaining. For him and the
rest of the brilliant team at Blake Friedmann, I give thanks.
I am deeply grateful to Trisha Jackson, and to the amazing
Pan Macmillan team, including Fiona Carpenter, Emma Grey,
Anne Newman, Caitriona Row, Marie Slocombe, Anna Stock
bridge, Michelle Taylor and Fllen Wood, all of whose verve
and enthusiasm have boon inspiring. Thank you!
Every girl should fri’l likr a million dollars at least once.
That most tempting man, Hugo Burnand, gave me my moment, when he took my author photographs. Bliss.
For anyone enduring the horrors of divorce, let me recommend
two people. Firstly, Simon Pigott, of Levison
Meltzer Pigott, the most charming, decent and tenacious
lawyer in the business. He made my divorce bearable, and I
will be eternally grateful that his honourable style allowed
my ex-husband and I finally to make peace. And Danusia
Brzezina, a loyal and compassionate lawyer and friend. Her
legal advice regarding this book was invaluable; her company,
as always, is a pleasure.
Eileen Gaulter, of Gaulter Technologies, Inc., interpreted
my vague and unhelpfully abstract ideas for a website with
creativity, practicality and skill, and I love the result. Please check it out: www.TessStimson.com.
To Georgie and Charlie Stewart, for their endless generous
hospitality every time I fly to London, I cannot say thank you
enough. You provide the fluffiest towels and the best company.
Your friendship means the world to me.
Thanks, too, to my father Michael and stepmother Barbi,
for the dawn airport pick-ups and for allowing my family to
wreak havoc in their beautiful home; to my out-laws, Harry
and Sharon Oliver, for kidnapping their grandchildren so
that I can work, and for providing raspberry martinis as and
when required; and to Henry, Matthew and Lily, for tiptoeing
away quietly when Mummy has a writing crisis, and for not
crashing my computer too often.
Above all, to my husband, Erik, for his thousand little
kindnesses - and the one very big one: marrying me. Here’s
to Melville and Milton, and the lifetime in between.
Tess Stimson Florida, 2006
Nicholas
Divorce is a difficult business. Never more so, may I
suggest, than when your client authoritatively declares all
men are bastards, and you’re left shifting uncomfortably
in your seat whilst your penis tries to make itself scarce.
‘Not all men, Mrs Stephenson,’ I venture.
My client ignores my genial smile, grey eyes flicking
dismissively around my oak-panelled office. Her gaze
briefly snags on the silver-framed photograph of my
wife propped beside the leather blotter on my desk; her
expression of pity for my spouse places me foursquare
with those unfortunates whose parents neglected the legal
niceties before bedding down together. Since I have just
secured her an extremely generous seven-figure settlement
from her ex-husband, I find her disdain for my sex
in its entirety a little unfair.
She stands and I rise with her, straightening my silk
tie. She extends a scrawny pink tweed arm; her hand sits
like a wet fish in mine.
‘You may be right, Mr Lyon she says drily. ‘Maybe
it’s just the men I marry.’
Her scent is pungent and overpowering: synthetic cat’s
piss. Far too much make-up; I can’t imagine kissing the
jammy red lips. She’s the kind of woman one would find
smeared all over the sheets in the morning, the pillowcase
imprinted with her face like the Turin Shroud.
Good legs, though. Slender, neat calves, with nicely
turned ankles. But no meat on her bones, and breasts like
a boy.
My professional smile does not slip as I escort her to
the door. I endeavour not to morally judge my clients:
it’s distracting and unproductive. There’s no place in the
context of divorce law for emotion or sentimentality; one
has quite enough of that kind of thing from one’s clients.
My wife, of course - being a woman - begs to differ. I consider myself merely objective. Malinche, however, asserts that my ‘brutal kind of truth’, as she emotively
puts it, is akin to judging a woman’s skin only in the
harsh glare of daylight, rather than by the softening glow
of the fire. I can’t quite see her point.
My client stops suddenly in the doorway; I almost
run into the back of her. Her head dips as if in prayer,
exposing pale, downy vertebrae beneath the stiff blonde
bob.
The nape of a woman’s neck - so vulnerable, so quixotically
erotic.
1 always thought - hoped—’ she chokes back a sob,
‘he’d change his mind.’
I’m at a loss. I certainly did not have this woman
pegged as a clinger. Still the right side of forty, she
has already acquired a remunerative trio of wealthy
Śm:
ex-husbands, which - despite every effort at objectivity leads one to make certain assumptions. Put simply: the
last thing I expected was for love to come into it.
The woman’s skinny shoulders start to shake. Oh,
Christ. I’m so hopeless at this kind of thing. My arms
twitch uselessly. Inappropriate in the extreme to hug, but
what to do if - God forbid - she starts grizzling all over
the place?
Suddenly her head comes up and she squares her
shoulders, reminding me of my eldest daughter Sophie on
her first day at school. Without another word, she marches
through the open-plan secretarial pool and into the hallway
beyond. I breathe a hefty sigh of relief. Thank God.
What on earth was that all about?
As I move to close my door, my secretary, Emma,
waves.
‘Mr Lyon, it’s your wife on line two. She says she’s
sorry to bother you, but can she just have a quick word?’
‘Of course—’
I hesitate in the doorway. There’s something I can’t
quite…
‘It’s my hair, Mr Lyon,’ Emma says patiently. ‘I had it
cut this lunchtime.’
A pity. I rather liked it long.
I return to my desk, glancing at the photograph of
Malinche that so aroused my client’s compassion as I pick
up the phone. It was taken a couple of Christmases ago by
Kit, irritatingly, rather than by me - at the moment she
glanced, smiling, over her shoulder, half-bending to pull
the turkey from the Aga. I fit-1 a thud of gratitude every
time I look at it. It’s foolish, I know, but even after ten
years I still thrill to the words ‘your wife’. Quite how I
won the heart of this extraordinary and beautiful woman
is utterly beyond my comprehension. I am merely eternally
thankful that I did.
‘Chocolate-orange sponge cake flavoured with vanilla,
orange and lemon zest, or apricot chequerboard cake with
chocolate ganache?’ Mai demands without waiting for me
to speak.
I can tell from my wife’s strangled tone that she has
the handset wedged between her chin and chest and is no
doubt stirring something mouth-watering even as we
speak. ‘May one inquire—’
‘Heavens, Nicholas, don’t be so pompous Mai says
briskly. ‘You’re not in Court now. Your surprise birthday
cake, of course. Metheny insists we finish it this afternoon
before you get home.’
I smile at the mention of my youngest daughter, with
whom I share a birthday, preternaturally long toes and a
wicked fondness for pistachio icecream. I had hoped to
share a great deal more, but the ultrasound proved itself
less than infallible and my much-longed-for boy and
potential fishing and cricket companion turned out to be
a surprise third petticoat. As a consolation prize I was
allowed to name her for my lifelong hero, jazz guitarist
Pat Metheny.
Ś ‘Let me talk to her and ask her which she suggests I
posit.
‘Don’t be silly, Nicholas.’
‘You were the one who said she was insisting—’
“There’s more than one way to insist on something, as