Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
I won’t mind that he never makes the bed, I’ll devote
myself to being a perfect wife, a perfect mother, I’ll do
anything, only please, please keep him safe.
Kit arrives ten minutes after Liz. He scoops up the
children and whisks them home with him - ‘Who’s for a
sleepover at Uncle Kit’s? No, Evie, you appalling child,
you may not bring that revolting rabbit, not unless you
bring carrots and onions to have with him’ - and I sit
riveted in front of the television, gripping my towel to my
chest with white-knuckled fingers,, unable to tear myself
away from the horrific news footage, my mind blank with
fear.
The terrorists have outdone themselves this time and
blown up a power station too, it seems. So much of
London is blacked out and of course the telephones are
down, landlines and cell networks. There’s no way of
communicating, of finding out, and all I want to do is
leap in the car and drive up there and see; but of course I
can’t, the roads into central London are closed, half the
city is cordoned off, so I sit here, taut as a bow, not daring
for one second to stop the silent mantra in my head - keep him safe keep him safe keep him safe - in case I snap the thin thin thread connecting my husband to life.
I watch the live images with an eerie detachment. The
smoking ruins, the carnage - this is Tel Aviv, surely?
Baghdad, or Kabul; not London. Not again.
None of it seems real. In a moment that old woman,
covered in a blanket of grey dust, will open her eyes
again, they’ll wipe all the tomato ketchup off that dead
eyed teenage boy, those people will stop shivering under
the foil emergency blankets and get up for a cup of coffee,
laughing and complaining about the canteen sandwiches
as they stretch their legs and wait for the next take.
Except, of course, that those crumpled mounds beneath
blue sheets aren’t carefully arranged props, that isn’t red paint on the pavement there, that lost teddy bear - somehow there’s always a teddy bear, isn’t there? - belongs to
a real child.
Even though I know the lines aren’t working, I press
redial again and again until Liz finally takes the phone
away from me. ‘He’ll call you she says brightly, ‘as soon
as the networks are back up. He’ll be fine. You know
Nicholas, fit as a fiddle. Look at him snowboarding.’
So what! I want to scream. A whole orchestra of fitness
can’t protect you against nails and glass and bricks and
concrete!
By midnight, the news networks have shifted into
aftermath mode; their reporters, more composed now that
the initial adrenaline rush of ‘Breaking News!’ has eased,
tell us little new information as they stand in front of arc
lit heaps of smoking, blackened rubble, grim-faced rescue
workers slowly toiling in the background. In the studios,
terrorism ‘experts’ and politicians bicker. And still I have
no idea if my husband is alive or dead, if he is already
one of the two hundred people - dear God! Two hundred
- blown into flesh-and-bone smithereens by the blasts; or
if he will be a statistic added in later.
Eventually, I send Liz home, to cherish her own husband.
I call Nicholas’s parents again and promise to let
them know the minute I hear anything at all. ‘No news is
good news Edward says bravely, but I can hear Daisy
sobbing quietly in the background. And then I curl up on
the sofa, still in my bath towel, dry-eyed, wide awake,
waiting. Waiting.
Because we’ve all had to learn, haven’t we, that this is
how you find out that your husband, your child, has been
killed by a terrorist bomb on the way home from work;
there’s no flight manifest, nothing to say clearly, in black
and white, one way or another. You tell yourself there’s
more chance of someone you love being hit by a bus
than blown up on one, but fear washes through you as
you wait anxiously for the phone to ring, and an hour
l.ih-r you’re still waiting, and the dread coagulates in your
stomach; and yes, the lines are down, and yes, he’s probably
stuck in gridlocked traffic somewhere, but the hours
pass, and the next day breaks and he still hasn’t phoned,
and somewhere out there, for two hundred families the
worst has happened, even if they don’t yet know it. The
fear blossoms like a mushroom cloud in your soul and
you’re left clinging to a tiny shred of hope as if your
sanity depended on it: which of course it does.
And at quarter to seven the next morning, my phone
finally rings.
‘Mai? It’s me,’ Nicholas says.
Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you
thank-‘Mai, are you there? Dammit, these lines—’
‘I’m here,’ I whisper dizzily.
‘You saw the news, obviously. I’m fine, bit shaken up,
as you’d expect, but we were lucky, office lost a few
windows but the main damage was the other end of
Holborn.’ His tone is flat, leached of emotion. Shock,
obviously. ‘It’s not as bad as it looks on television, but
Christ, it’s bad enough.’
The words spill out of me with all the pent-up force
of twelve nightmarish hours. ‘But are you sure you’re all
right? Where were you when it happened? What did you
do? Where have you been, I tried to call you but—’
Tm fine,’ he says again. ‘Look, I’m sorry you were
worried but - hang on.’
There is a strange noise, like rushing water, and then a
clatter as Nicholas picks up the phone again. His voice
sounds muffled, as if he’s climbed into a wardrobe. ‘Mai,
it’s been a hell of a night,’ he says wearily. ‘I know you
must have been going frantic, bul it was out of my hands.
I’ll do my best to get home as soon as I can, but you can
imagine what it’s like trying to move anywhere at the
moment. I don’t even know if the trains are running yet.’
‘Waterloo’s open again, I heard on the news. Where
are you now?’
‘Oh. Yes. At the office, obviously. Spent the night here.
Look, Mai, let me go now, OK? I’ll be home when I can.
How are the girls?’
He sounds more shaken than I’ve ever heard him. He
clearly isn’t telling me the half of it, and a fist twists my
insides. Lord knows what he’s been through, what horrors he’s seen. How close I came to losing him.
“The girls are fine,’ I say, ‘they’re with Kit—’
‘Of course.’
‘Nicholas, please. He was worried sick about you - we
all were.’
‘Sorry. Yes.’
‘I love you,’ I say, suddenly overwhelmed. ‘I do love you, Nicholas.’
He hesitates, and I smile through my tears. Embarrassed
to say it in front of everyone at the office, even
now. How very Nicholas. ‘You too,’ he mumbles finally.
It’s only after he’s rung off that I realize I haven’t asked
if he’s spoken to his parents. I try to ring him back at the
office, but get a disconnected tone - clearly the phone
network is still very patchy, Nicholas must have been
lucky. I telephone the Lyons myself with the news, and
then drift slowly into the kitchen, suddenly rather lightheaded.
It’s
like I’ve been holding my breath for the past twelve
hours. I feel sick, elated, tired, anti-climactic, angry, foolish, all at once. I never want to have to go through a night
like that again. How dreadful that it takes something this
appalling to remind you how very much you have to lose.
I suddenly feel very small and ashamed of myself. I
spent most of yesterday mentally raging against Nicholas
simply because he was out working whilst I was stuck
slaving over a hot ironing board and picking up raisins of
rabbit poo from the fruit bowl. But his job nearly cost him
his life. What is a little boredom or the odd steam burn on
your wrist compared to that? A
thrill of pure happiness sweeps over me. He’s safe,
he’s alive. I do a little jig of relief and delight and pleasure by the Aga, I just can’t help it.
Which is why, when Trace Pitt pushes open the top
half of the kitchen stable door and sees me for the first
time since the day I lost our baby, I am standing there
stark naked with sparkles and glitter in my pubic hair.
Nicholas
Standing up was an egregious error. Not only is my
tent-pole erection now clearly visible should anyone care
to cast their gaze thither, but I am perfectly positioned to
see straight down Sara’s raspberry silk blouse - Christ
Almighty, no bra - thus profoundly exacerbating the problem
which I originally rose to alleviate.
I pick up the manila case folder on the conference table
and hide behind it: literally and metaphorically.
‘So. Ah. Mrs Stockbridge. We’ve heard from your husband,’
I say briskly to my client, ‘and it seems that he has
now made a sensible proposal to resolve our concerns
regarding your being divorced whilst your financial
claims remain to be determined. He has renewed his
commitment to nominate your son to receive his death
in-service benefit and, moreover, he has nominated
you—’
Sara’s eyebrow quirks. I have noticed that her eyebrows
attain particular mobility in response to my use of
such words as heretofore and whence. She really is the most
unlikely lawyer.
‘—he has nominated you1 continue hastily, ‘to receive
all funds payable under his Life Insurance policy. We are
told by his Counsel that this will produce two hundred
thousand pounds upon his death. This will remain the
status quo pending the resolution or determination of
your wider application—’
‘So he can go ahead and marry his floozie anyway?’
Mrs Stockbridge interrupts.
I regard my client in confusion, disconcerted by this
abrupt departure from the legal niceties. Stolid, powdered
and neatly dressed, she has that rather musty, fishy
smell of a woman on the Change. Mrs Stockbridge is not a woman I wonder about kissing. I do not imagine her slipping her tongue between my lips, if she’d run away, if
she’d stay, or if she’d melt into me, mouth to mouth, lust
to lust-Christ. That damn song Sara sent me. I can’t get it out
of my head.
Across the table, Sara shifts in her chair, her untrammelled
pink nipples jutting tightly against the silk.
I defy any man to remain unaffected.
‘Mrs Stockbridge, I realize this situation is distasteful
to you—’
‘Distasteful!’
Tears and raised voices: to my mind, Dante’s tenth
circle. When someone cries in front of you, anything could
happen. My discomfort is perfectly natural. I cannot
remember my parents’ fiery battles, as Malinche alleges, I
was only six months old; it is just normal, natural British
rectitude. Obviously.
I edge around the table, wondering how best to handle my emotionally imploding client. Perhaps some tea-With a slight shake of the head, Sara quells my ministrations
at the tea tray. ‘Mrs Stockbridge, I know it doesn’t
seem fair,’ she says quietly, ‘after thirty-four years of
marriage, for him to leave you for a girl who wasn’t even
born when you started your business together. And now
you have to sell it, and your lovely home, and move to a
little flat on your own, whilst he gets to walk away and
start a new life without looking back. I can quite see it
doesn’t seem right.’
Thank heavens. Sometimes a woman’s touch is essential.
A man can’t be expected to deal with waterworks
and precipitate emotional outbursts. It’s not in his nature.
‘She was our granddaughter’s babysitter Mrs Stock
bridge says thickly. ‘I thought he was going to our Sandra’s
house every night to see the new baby.’
‘We can’t make it right,’ Sara sympathizes. ‘But we can try to help you make the best of it. He’ll get his divorce, that can’t be helped, but we’ll make him pay dearly for
it. And sometimes,’ she adds shrewdly, ‘when you tell
people they can’t have something - or someone - they just
want it all the more.’
Mrs Stockbridge and I reflect on this for a moment.
Our client is no doubt thinking, perhaps with a modicum
of surprise, that her attractive blonde lawyer has a rather
sensible head on her strong young shoulders. Indeed, Sara
is quite correct in her supposition: I have helped sunder
many second marriages precipitated in no small measure
by contested, drawn-out first divorces. What may have
sliirti’d off as a brief fling is often forced to become
something far more serious than it warrants by the sheer
weight of chaos it has caused.
I, on the other hand, am wearily thinking, with a great
deal less surprise, how much I should like to take Mrs
Stockbridge’s attractive blonde lawyer to bed. And how very fortunate it is that the firm has no cases that are likely to be heard outside London in the foreseeable future.
‘Mrs Stockbridge I say, returning to the matter in
hand, ‘the offer is fair - certainly in financial terms - and
my advice would be that you accept it, albeit with reluctance.
It was only because there was no financial security