Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
She grins pertly. ‘Oh, dear. In the doghouse, are we?
What did you do?’
‘I didn’t do anything I say stiffly.
‘Never mind.’ She winks. “This should earn you a few
brownie points.’
Mai looks astonished when I walk into the kitchen with
the flowers, which are roughly the size and weight of a
small child. She tightens the belt of her ratty candlewick
dressing-gown before opening her arms to receive them.
‘What have I done to deserve this?’
‘Do I need a reason to give my wife flowers?’ I say,
stung.
She hesitates. ‘It’s because of what happened in London,
isn’t it?’
I thank God that her back is turned to me as she
reaches for a vase. The shock must surely register on my face. She knows. How can she know?
‘Ah - London?’
She cuts open the cellophane and buries her face in
the blooms. ‘Oh, gorgeous! The bombs, Nicholas. Post
dramatic stress or whatever it is. You come close to death
and suddenly you start to value what you could have lost,
it’s like you’re born again or something, there was an
article in the Daily Mail.’
My relief is such that for a moment I cannot speak.
‘Yes I stumble. ‘Yes. In a way
‘It’s dreadful about those poor people - they’ve identified
a hundred and seventy-nine, so far, and you know
there’ll be more, it doesn’t bear thinking about - but we
were lucky, darling, nothing terrible happened to our
family yesterday. We can’t let these people win, we can’t
give in to them.’
I smile awkwardly and reach past her for the pile of
post on the kitchen table. Mai turns back to the flowers,
giving a satisfied murmur as she tweaks the final bloom
into place.
‘I can drop you at the station on my way into Salisbury
she says, hefting the vase towards the sitting room. T guess you’ll be needed at the office to get things back up and running again.’ She hesitates on the kitchen
threshold. ‘Nicholas. I’ve been meaning to tell you, I saw
Trace Pitt yesterday, he stopped by to - actually, to offer
me a job.’
b
I sift through the brown envelopes, pulling out the
renewal notice for my subscription to the Lawyer. I must
make sure Emma doesn’t forget to deal with it. ‘Mmm?’
‘Working at - well, managing, really - his new restaurant.’
Emma
has sent out emails asking the staff to return to
work today; apart from the broken windows, which she
has already had replaced - ‘I know a charming man in
Epping, Mr Lyon, cash in hand, but he’ll get us sorted in
a jiffy’ - our office suffered little damage. I feel mingled
terror and reluctant excitement at the thought of seeing
Sara again.
‘He’s very keen - silly amounts of money really - and
he promised no late nights, plenty of staff to cover for me,
but of course I wanted to ask you first—’
‘Ask me what?’
‘If I should do it.’
‘Oh. Yes. Of course you should.’
‘I should?’ She sounds surprised. ‘Really?’
‘Absolutely I say absently. ‘I really do need to get
going, Mai.’
‘Sorry, sorry, yes, let me just go and get dressed.’ She
brushes by the cork noticeboard next to the Aga; a sheaf
of yellowing papers flutters to the ground and Mai picks
them up and re-pins them with infuriating slowness.
‘Oh, yes, that reminds me. It’s the girls’ Open House next
week, Nicholas, you need to be home early that day, we
absolutely can’t be late. Not after the school play.’
I don’t need reminding of that little fiasco. ‘Fine. I’ll
make sure I’m there. When?’
‘Friday the nineteenth. It starts at seven. And please
don’t be late, Nicholas. I’m not sure I can stand Evie
wearing her Wellingtons to bed for a month again in
protest.’
‘Friday the nineteenth?’
Sara grimaces. ‘I know it’s short notice, but press
tickets are always like that. Michele can’t go, she’s working
in Paris that weekend, but she knows how much
I love opera and wondered if I’d like them. I know it
doesn’t float everyone’s boat - Tristan und Isolde can be a
bit heavy—’
‘Good Lord, no, I love Wagner! My favourite composer,
in fact. And I haven’t seen Tristan for years.’
‘Really? How funny, he’s my favourite composer too.’
Christ, she looks amazing in that plum shirt. So
decadent; so bedroom. Tiny beads of sweat glisten in the
shadowy vale between her breasts.
I sigh. ‘It’s just—’
‘I’m sorry, Nick, you’re probably busy. I shouldn’t have
asked.’
‘Any other night and I might have been tempted,’ I say
truthfully. ‘But the nineteenth is out, one of my daughters
has a thing at school, I have to be there—’
She shrugs. ‘Another time. Probably just as well,’ she
adds, her grey gaze direct, ‘since I can’t guarantee you’d
have made the last train home.’
It sounds like a statement.
We both know it’s a question.
Sara
Fuck, I hate opera. I don’t know what possessed me to
suggest this; I must be off my head. And Wagner, for
Christ’s sake. So bloody dark and depressing. I’m not
exactly into the fat-lady oeuvre at the best of times, but at
least a cheery bit of Mozart would have been bearable. Figaro, maybe; I almost like that. Wagner was great mates with Nietzsche, according to my programme blurb; which
explains a good deal about the pair of them. No wonder
poor Nietzsche came all over nihilistic if he had to listen
to this misery all the time.
I pinch a sideways glance. Nick’s tipped forwards in
his plush velvet seat, long fingers steepled, absolutely still
as he gazes up in rapture at the stage. Bless.
I stifle a yawn behind my programme. The things
we do for love. Look at wfcer-citygirl Princess Diana
schlepping off to Balmoral in her green wellies to convince
Prince Charles there was nothing she liked better
than standing around in the pissing rain all day, whilst
men who smelled of horses and women who looked like
them took pot shots at innocent pheasants.
And OK, there’s no denying I have a developed a
certain fondness for Nick. A penchant, as it were. Or I
wouldn’t be here. Mind you, the grief he gave me over
the tickets! Jesus. He had a total shit fit when we were
shown to the best seats in the house, ranting that no
wonder the BBC was in trouble, we all end up paying
for these press junkets, it’s taxpayers’ money after all, do
I have any idea how much front row orchestra seats cost?
Er, yes, actually, Nick. Nearly four hundred quid. I
could have bought that gorgeous russet chiffon corset
from La Petite Salope; they had it in my size.
(Note to self: next time am inventing freebies from
imaginary journo friend to facilitate shameless seduction
of boss - again - make sure they v. cheap freebies.)
I swear I’ve aged ten years by the time the lights come
back up and the audience - average age: ninety-five and
three-quarters - creaks to its bunioned feet to applaud.
The fat woman next to me almost knocks me out as her
pink taffeta arms pump like fleshy pistons. Somebody
shoot me if I ever end up with bingo wings like that.
Another encore and she’ll take off.
Thank God I’m not married to Nick. Imagine having to
sit through this on a regular basis-And then he turns and smiles at me with such boyish
pleasure that my heart flips and trades places with my
stomach.
‘You really enjoyed that, didn’t you?’ Nick says fondly
as we thread our way along the crowded aisle. ‘You
looked as if you were absolutely lost in the music’
I’d sit through anything for you, lover. ‘Mmm.’
‘It’s unusual to find a woman who really appreciates
Wagner. He appeals to a more sophisticated musical
palate. Very much your red Zinfandel, as it were. Mai uh
- many women prefer something a little more frivolous.
Mozart is very popular. That’s if they like opera at
all.’ His hand on the small of my back guides me through
the crowded foyer. ‘Not that one can dismiss Mozart out
of hand, of course, but to my mind one cannot compare The Magic Flute with the solid genius of Der Ring I turn another yawn into a cough. Killing the sex buzz
here, Nick, with all the opera chit-chat: sweet-talk it is not. And don’t think I missed that little Freudian slip, either.
Ouch.
Not that hearing her name makes me feel guilty, or
anything. I mean, what goes on between Nick and his
wife isn’t any of my business. Is it? To be honest, I feel
sorry for both of them. She obviously can’t keep up with
him, poor thing. She must feel totally out of her depth
when she ventures into his world. And how frustrating
for a man as bright and sophisticated as he is to be stuck
with such a dull, suburban sort of woman. I mean, what
do they find to say to each other? Conversation in their
house probably revolves around the children and what
joint to have for Sunday lunch. He must be so bored: in
and out of the bedroom. No wonder he has to look elsewhere.
When
you think about it, I’m probably lightening
the load for her too. Having me to talk to must take the
pressure off, even if she doesn’t realize it. I bet he goes
home in a much better mood when he’s had a chance to
offload some of his stress with a woman who really
understands him. And it’s not like I’m ever going to break
them up, or anything. I’d never do that.
I thank God I boned up on the bloody opera at the
weekend. Got to stay one step ahead if I want to be Ms Simpatico.
‘Of course, you can’t ignore the fact that Tristan und
Isolde changed the course of musical history I offer.
‘Driven by his unconsummated passion for Mathilde, the
wife of one of his patrons, Wagner took the iconographic
adulterers of medieval literature, and underpinned their
tragedy with Schopenhauer’s quasi-oriental philosophy—’
‘—and as the end result rewrote the entire harmonic
rulebook! Absolutely! A woman who’s beautiful and bright. Now, tell me, do you think—’
Shit, don’t ask me any questions, I only memorized the
one paragraph from Opera for Morons.
But beautiful and bright: I like that. And I especially like that he likes it, too.
Why is it savvy women usually want men with smarts,
but most intelligent men are happy with the dumbest of
fuck puppets on their arms? Is our biological imperative
for a protective hunter-gathererpneumatic walking womb
(delete as appropriate) really that strong?
Nick Lyon is a very unusual man. I just hope his dippy
wife appreciates him.
I spin on my four-inch heels - I am so going to pay
for these tomorrow: I have blisters you could trampoline
on - and allow the jostling crowd to crush me right up
against Nick’s chest as we spill into the Covent Garden
piazza. ‘You know, Nick, all that passion has left me beyond starved I say. ‘I know this cool little sushi bar 758
round the corner, Yuzo’s, it’s always open late. Their
sashimi is out of this world, though of course if you don’t
like sushi—’
A pinstriped-wool rod of iron presses against my thigh.
‘Not at all Nick chokes out, turning puce. ‘Perfect choice,
actually: my favourite restaurant, in fact. Extraordinary
coincidence—’
Not that extraordinary, to be honest. Marvellous search
engine, Google. Can find all sorts of useful little nuggets
when you type someone’s name into it. Like interviews
they gave to law magazines a couple of years ago in
which they listed all their favourite things for some boring Desert Island Discs thing. What, you think I plucked the wretched German miseryguts out of thin air?
Sushi was a bit of a surprise, I must admit. I had Nick
down as a steak-and-kidney pie, spotted-dick-and-custard
school dinners kind of man. Still waters do indeed run deep.
My stomach rumbles as if I haven’t eaten for a day
(which I haven’t: it’s the only way to get the zip on this
satin cocktail dress of Amy’s to close) and now it’s my
turn to sizzle with mortification. Well, shit, a vociferous
digestive tract, that’s attractive. Men don’t like women
who actually eat to stay alive. At least raw fish is a
minimalist kind of food (as opposed to Italian, which
should only ever be eaten in front of people you never intend to have sex with). My enthusiasm for opera may be complete bullshit, but fortunately, I do really love sushi.
I’m not sure even Princess Di could’ve choked down raw
eel for love alone. Mind you, I suppose she could have
always thrown it up again.
As we reach the far side of the piazza, the general
vague thrum of background chatter suddenly distils into
the distinct sound of (female, screechy) yelling, and the
next moment I’m nearly knocked off my feet as a skinny
blonde girl in chocolate suede hotpants and bronze kinky
boots barrels out of a nearby shop and straight into me.
Without even bothering to apologize, she ricochets off