Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
New Year - always a beautiful piece of jewellery, some
years more expensive than others, but always a one-off,
commissioned especially for her: to thank her in advance,
he says, for spending the next three hundred and sixty
five (or sixty-six, if it’s a leap year, he’s nothing if not
precise) days with him.
I’m fed up with being single. I want someone to save me from the aunts and dance with me on New Year’s Eve. I’d like a special present and a first kiss and a man to drive me home when I’ve drunk too much to walk. I’m so tired
of having to put a brave face on being lonely. Dammit, it
must be so nice to be married this time of year.
As the sound of Big Ben blares from the speaker
system, I dig my new BlackBerry out of my bag and pull
up Nick’s details. Without giving myself time to think too
long, I download the song I want, attach it to an email,
and hit ‘Send’.
Malinche
Oh, heavens, it’s not often I wish this - Lord knows I’d
hate to tempt Fate, she has a nasty habit of taking you
a little too literally; I’m always afraid to wish I could lose weight in case I end up having my leg sliced off in a car crash: there, now you weigh less - but there are times
I can’t help thinking how wonderful it would be to be
single and child-free at this time of year.
No hot, desperate searches for must-have toys that
sold out last October. No three-trolley trips to Salisbury’s
for, amongst other things, nine pounds of spuds (which
you don’t have time to peel until three a.m. on Christmas
morning). No excruciating multi-faith carol concerts in
which you cannot even see your offspring because of the
shadow cast by the tallest child in the school who is
always placed right in the centre of the front row.
And, oh dear, no irate publishers left sitting alone in
expensive London restaurants because lunch clashed with
a carol concert and you forgot to let them know.
mm
That lovely young girl in the low-cut jeans and biscuit
suede jacket by the luggage rack, for example. She can’t possibly be Christmas shopping for three under-tens; not in sexy boots four inches high. She’s probably going to
be whisked away for Christmas to some glorious white
sugar beach in the Caribbean by a bedroom-eyed Adonis,
far from sticky-fingered children high on E numbers and
know-better husbands who throw out instructions and
then can’t put Barbie’s Own Recording Studio together.
I cling on to the spring ceiling thingy for grim death as the train barrels round a tight corner. I must be mad.
Heading into London to go shopping four days before
Christmas is like rowing back to board the Titanic for an
ice cube. My feet hurt already despite my sensible pumps,
and we’re only five minutes out of Salisbury station. The
train is packed - not a hope of a seat. As it is, I’m nose
to gabardine overcoat with the rather large businessman
squashed next to me.
And my knickers itch. Well, scratch, really. Can’t be the
label, I cut that out (it’s a bit embarrassing when your
pants say ‘Age 8-10’ and you’re more 36-38, but Sophie’s
undies are so much more comfortable than mine) so - I knew it. Real Christmas trees are much nicer, Nicholas is absolutely right; but-I don’t know why Gabardine Overcoat is looking at me
so strangely. They’re only pine needles.
Christmas is about children, of course it is. But three of
them does mean rather a lot of presents to buy, what with
FC (mustn’t call him Santa, Nicholas gets so terribly cross)
and then the aunts and grandparents and godmothers
who ring up and say, ‘Oh, darling, you don’t mind getting
I horn something from me, do you, you’ll know what they
I
want.’ And even though it’s very kind of them and f know they’ll pay you back, eventually, still now that‘5 something else you have to think of and find and b and wrap. Though after last year - just what my mothef thought three small children would do with a full-s potter’s kiln except try to bake the poor rabbit is beyo
me
I should have started shopping earlier, of course
meant to; but then I got distracted with planning
sorts of yummy Christmas eats - I thought this yea l
try goose stuffed with persimmon foie gras and a v Chateau d’Yquem sauternes reduction, though I m ra dreading what Nicholassuch a champion of trad
will say at the turkey’s non-appearance - and so ť & I’m rather desperately behind. About two months, to precise. Very sweet of Liz to mind the girls for me,
heaven knows where I’ll find a Barbie ski-suit far CN
Poor duck, she does rather take after Liz inJtajW
department, a size 16 at nine years old ť a bit tr
Luckily she’s stunningly lovely to look at - that del
pre-Raphaerite hair - but born in totally the Ť century, of course. Seventeenth would have beer,i pe Rubens would have loved her. Now if only Nic
could have nipped into Snow+Rock for me there s one
minutes from him in Holborn, bound to have some
but of course he’s away in Manchester. And even ť weren’t, presents aren’t exactly his thing. Although possession of two X chromosomes automatically
them mine, as Nicholas seems to think, he doesn t eV
The Christmas cards. I did put them in the P
didn’t I? Or - oh, Lord, I didn’t leave them on the l seat of the Volvo? Heavens, I’m not normally this sc
It’s Christmas, it does this to me every year. It’s like my
brain’s on fast forward, scrolling through everything I’ve
still got to do-I sent them. I’m sure I did.
I wish I was brave enough to copy Louise. She has a
three-year Christmas card cycle: she does A to H one year,
then I to P the next, and Q to Z the third, so that everyone
gets a card every three years. Just often enough that
people don’t sulk and strike her off their lists.
I stare out of the train window at the pelting rain as
we stop for another set of engineering works. It’s ten
already; I have to be back by four-thirty for Evie’s Bible
class recital. And as well as scouring London for inspirational stocking fillers I must make time to go to Harrods
Food Hall for some Spanish Roncal cheese (so tricky to
find, that creamy, buttery Navarre) for the potato gratin.
Pitt’s would have it, of course, quite certain to have it, but
obviously that’s not possible, Trace might be there, and
it’s bad enough that he’s moving back to Salisbury; even
after all these years-No, don’t think about that. Regrets are for cissies, as
Kit loves to say.
Another surge of passengers piles onto the train at
Woking, and suddenly it really is too crammed to breathe.
I feel like I’m on one of those cattle trucks to Auschwitz oh,
Lord, I didn’t mean it, that’s a terrible thing to say,
you can’t possibly compare-Tm not standing for this,’ Gabardine Overcoat suddenly
announces, levering himself out of the luggage rack
whence the latest influx has pushed him. ‘The amount
they ask for a ticket these days the least I expect is a
seat. If they don’t provide enough second-class carriages,
I think we’re perfectly entitled to find seats elsewhere.’
His accent and pale gold silk cravat are true-blue Home
Counties. When the much-put-upon silent majority finally
finds its voice, you know there’s trouble ahead.
Murmured assent runs around the carriage. It really is
stifling in here; we are all of us kitted out in our warmest
winter coats, mittened and buttoned and scarfed and
hatted, and the carriage is starting to smell somewhat
unwashed. A conspiratorial I-will-if-you-will camaraderie
seizes us; it reminds me of playing Knock Down Ginger
as a child. (My sister Cleo was always much braver than
me, she’d even dare to ring the doorbell of The Perv - I’m
sure he wasn’t a pervert really, just a lonely old widower
whose children lived too far away to visit much - and
count to three before running away.)
Two puddingy girls in sleeveless Puffa jackets - I can
only imagine what Nicholas would think of their silver
nose piercings - push open the connecting door to the
First Class corridor. Gabardine Overcoat helps a frighteningly
young mother manoeuvre her double pushchair
across the swaying threshold. Within minutes, we’re all
sinking into the posh seats with a delicious feeling of
naughtiness.
A pinstriped businessman opposite me snaps his clever
pink newspaper in front of his face with a disapproving
tut. I giggle and think: I do miss Nicholas.
There are many things I have learned from my daughters
over the years. For example, a king-sized waterbed holds
enough water to fill a three-bedroom Florida condo four
inches deep. (Evie, last summer.)
A seven-year-old girl can start a fire with a flint rock,
even though a forty-three-year-old lawyer insists it can
only be done in the movies. (Evie again.)
Brake fluid from the garage mixed with bleach from
the laundry room makes smoke; and lots of it. (Evie.
Followed by Kit, and then Nicholas, when they heard
about it.)
Always look in the oven before you turn it on - plastic
Fisher Price toys do not like ovens. (Incidentally, the
Salisbury Fire Department has a response time of a little
under four minutes.)
And this morning, we all discovered that the spin cycle
on the washing machine does not make earthworms dizzy.
It will, however, make pet rabbits dizzy.
Pet rabbits throw up twice their body weight when
dizzy.:
Cleaning up animal sick on your hands and knees
before breakfast is not necessarily the most festive way to
start Christmas Day, I think, scouring the flagstones with
unnecessary vigour. So when Nicholas sneaks up behind
me and slides his hands under my dressing-gown to
fondle my naked buttocks, I think I can be forgiven for
not responding with quite his level of amour.
It’s not that I don’t enjoy sex with my husband. Per se. Whisked away to a water villa in the Maldives for two weeks whilst someone else minds the children, with no
phones or cross publishers or school runs or laundry, I
would like nothing better - well, perhaps not nothing bHU’r; I must admit to a terrible weakness for homemade
bread-and-butter pudding and a fat Jilly Cooper - but
anyway, the idea of sex as recreation rather than chore
certainly appeals. Whereas these days I seem to find
myself thinking, as Nicholas rolls contentedly to his undamp
side of the bed: well, it’s Thursday today, so that
gives me until at least - oh, the weekend after next before
we have to do it again. Which is possibly not the most
romantic way to approach lovemaking with your soul
mate. But a hundred and fifty-two Christmas cards don’t
write themselves.
I remember, with unexpected nostalgia, surprising
Nicholas in his office one evening, not long after we’d
met, wearing nothing but a suspender belt and seamed
stockings under my raincoat. I’d persuaded the cleaning
lady to let me in (it turned out she was a huge fan and
had bought all my cookery books) and sat there in the
darkness for two hours, waiting for Nicholas to come
back from Court. He was terribly late; I nearly lost my
nerve and went home, but I’d gone to so much trouble, I
couldn’t bear to just leave. I’d painted my nipples with
special edible chocolate paint - I’d trekked all the way out
to a ladies-only erotic emporium called ‘Sh!’ in north
London to find it, it was the most embarrassing and
exciting tube journey of my life - and even dusted my
pubic hair with cocoa powder; I was terrified it’d somehow
melt or something before Nicholas got that far, but it
didn’t, it was perfect, it all went off exactly as I’d imagined, just like a late-night movie.
‘Don’t put on the light,’ I said in my most sultry voice,
as he walked into his office and reached for the switch.
He jumped about six feet as I moved forward into Jhe
amber puddle of a streetlight and unbuttoned my coat.
His mouth simply dropped open; I nearly ruined everything
by laughing at the astonished look on his face.
‘Close your eyes I said, trying not to giggle. ‘Now:
open your mouth.’
I fed him expensive Belgian chocolates I’d bought in
Harrods as I unbuttoned his trousers; one bitter-orange
truffle and a cognac-centre later, he laid me across his
desk and disappeared between my legs with the rapt
expression of a cat that had just got the (chocolate) cream.
I sigh now and reach for the persimmon foie gras. It’s
been a very long time since we made love anywhere but
between John Lewis’s finest Egyptian cotton (two-hundred
threads per square inch). I just don’t have the energy.
The rabbit incident aside, Christmas morning passes
off relatively well. There’s a slightly hairy moment after
Church when Louise presents Nicholas’s parents with a
spiky-leafed cannabis seedling; but fortunately to the pure
all things are pure, and Kit discreetly (if a little keenly)
appropriates it before it can be put in the back of my in