Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
DVD in one sitting. I don’t know if it was the chronic
sleep deprivation or if I’ve got a fraction more emotionally
involved with Nick than I thought I had: but when I
found his red braces under my bed I couldn’t help thinking
about the last use we put them to; which made me
remember the easy way our hips slotted together when he
pulled me towards him, and how he smiled in his sleep
when the sunlight slid through the blinds and striped his
face, and before I knew it I was howling for two hours
straight.
I lower my bottom back onto the mat. How can I miss
him this much when the two of us barely even got off the
ground? It’s not like I was falling in love with him or
anything. I mean, it was just a fling, after all. Just sex. And I was going to give him back.
Just not quite yet.
A pair of ridiculously tiny feet stop ominously beside
my left ear. (Christ, does he bind them or something?)
‘Miss Kaplan. If you can’t be bothered to squeeze your
tush, how can you expect anyone else to want to?’
Oh, please. Give me a break and go back to California.
‘Up. Up! Better. Everybody, dynamic squeezing. And hold.’
I was so convinced Nick was henceforth going to treat
I
bme like I’d got an advanced case of bird flu, I’d (almost)
resigned myself to that night together having been a great
one-off.
A really great one-off. But a onetime-offer, no-repeat
special all the same.
So the flowers on Monday threw me a bit. It was a
very lovely thing of Nick to do - if a little cliched - but
since he didn’t include a note, I had no idea what they
bloody meant. Kiss-and-make-up or kiss-off?
The boxed set of Wagner on Tuesday was a very
romantic thought (and, fortunately, easily exchanged for
the Arctic Monkeys). By Wednesday - a book of First
World War poetry: how sweetly resourceful, he must’ve
checked out my book shelves to see what I like - I was
getting the picture; and then the La Perla yesterday dotted
the i’s for me. I’m absolutely not going to get drawn back
in by his unexpected and rather touching twelve-days-of
Christmas routine, I’ve made up my mind: it’s over, it’s
too complicated and dangerous and messy, and more
importantly my mother would kill me if she ever found
out; but all the same, I can’t help it, I’m curious as all get
out to know what he’s got planned for today-‘It’s not how many you do, it’s the quality Roj scolds
as I fake quick little crunches.
I hiss at Amy, ‘Are we talking men or muscles here?’
Nick slipped a Claridge’s keycard in with the silk
knickers; very sexy, very discreet, very not allowed. I’ve
never stayed at Claridge’s. I’d love to try their health
and fitness spa: it’s supposed to be fabulous. Not that I’m
going to change my mind, obviously.
I can’t believe this is the same man who practically
hid in the document vault every time I walked into the
room just a few weeks ago. Now it’s like he’s one part
Mr Chips to two parts Casanova. It’s a bit disconcerting,
to be honest. There’s hidden depths; and then there’s
schizophrenic.
Or maybe - and this thought gives me the kind of rosy
glow Pilates has never achieved - maybe I just bring out
the crazy wild romantic in him.
Amy is exactly the kind of friend a girl needs when she’s
having an inconvenient attack of conscience.
‘Passion isn’t something you can help she says for
the ninth time. ‘It’s not like you wanted any of this to
happen.’
Not entirely true, as I recall, bringing to mind the lethal
little Donna Karan dress I wore in Manchester. But let’s
not split hairs.
There’s a ping from my computer, and I switch the
phone to my left ear so that I can access my emails while
I talk. ‘He’s sent me another one. I can’t believe he’s doing
this at work. Supposing someone else saw them?’
‘What’s it say?’
‘Hang on, let me open it - God, something in Latin,
he’s always doing that. It’s weird, but kind of cute, really. Amans, sicutfax, agitando ardescit magis. Whatever the fuck that means.’
‘Say again?’
‘Amans, sicutfax, agitando—’
‘“A lover, like a torch, burns brighter when shaken.”
Oh, that’s clever. After the shock of what happened on
Friday at the sushi bar, he—’
‘Yes, yes, I get it. How’d you know what it means?’
‘Classical education says Amy. ‘I blame my parents.’
‘You’re the one who should be having the affair with
him I grumble. ‘You’ve got the temperament, not to
mention the languages, for it.’
‘But it’s you he’s buying Tiffany bracelets for Amy
points out crossly.
When I got back from the gym earlier, Friday’s present
was waiting on my mouse mat in its trademark yummy
blue box and white satin ribbon. I wiggle my left wrist
back and forth delightedly. I have wanted this silver
bangle - from the 1837 collection, natch - for about half
my life. It’s the one thing my mother’s always been
annoyingly firm about: no matter how much I pleaded,
she insisted a woman should only ever be bought jewellery
by a lover. Not that a bangle is going to change my
mind about ending it with Nick, clearly.
Amy showed commendable told-you-so restraint when
I informed her of my latest love token; though she
couldn’t resist emailing me the link to Tiffany solitaires.
‘But he’s married I tell her again, without much conviction.
‘And
you said you’re happy for him to stay that way.’
‘Ye-e-e-ss1 say.
‘So what harm can seeing him do? Let’s face it, if they
break up over you, it can’t have been much of a marriage,
can it? It’s not like you’re dragging him into bed. He’s a
grown up, he’s made his own decision. And if it isn’t you,
it’ll be someone else she adds cynically. ‘Once they start
screwing around, they don’t just stop.’
I gel Ih’ living Amy i? enjoying my comeuppance
,i lilllc loo iiiik’Ii-I r.uikly, I .ml Miime her; my hubris
regarding affairs with married men has certainly invited
it. But it doesn’t mean I have to like eating humble pie.
And I’m not going to change my mind.
‘You think I should see him again, then?’
‘Oh, for Christ’s sake she snaps, sounding uncannily
like me in a previous life. ‘You’re going to do it anyway,
and you know it. End it, my arse. What are you waiting
for, me to talk you into it so you don’t feel bad later?’
Yes, actually.
‘Fine. I’ll write you a note. Look-‘ she sighs- ‘if you
really like him and you want this to work, take some
advice from someone who’s been there, bought the T-shirt
and knitted a matching sarong—’
‘What? What? Don’t mention his wife? Never ask him
to stay the night?’
‘Don’t ever forget to wax.’
Amy is a professional mistress (I don’t mean she’s got an
S & M dungeon in her basement or anything; just that
she’s been doing this for four years now, so she presumably
knows what she’s talking about) and I therefore take
her at her word. If she says wax, I’m saying how high.
I glance up at the clock. I’m supposed to be meeting
Nick at Claridge’s in an hour. Buggery buggery fuck. A
little notice for our much-postponed hot second date
would’ve been nice. But I suppose he wasn’t to know that
his new client would suddenly cancel and create a nice
hotel-bedroom-shaped hole in his schedule. The kind a
wife doesn’t notice.
I open my bathroom cabinet and dig around until I
locate the cold wax kit Amy gave me two Christmases
ago. (Now I think about it: an odd choice for a present.)
No way am I putting hot wax on my bikini line, thank
you very much. With this you just rub the strips together
in your hand until they’re warm, peel them apart and
press them to your inner thigh (or wherever). No muss,
no fuss. I’ve never done this myself before, I usually go to
the salon, but how hard can it be?
I nip back into my bedroom and use the hairdryer
instead of rubbing the strips together to save time. Would
my new fuchsia silk dress be too much? It’s a bit tight,
but it makes my cleavage look sensational. And I could
always tone it down with a pair of kitten heels instead of
my usual skyscrapers.
Back in the bathroom, I put my hair straighteners on to
heat, get naked and prop one foot on the toilet. I scan the
instructions again, then apply the warmed wax strip to
the right side of my bikini line, covering the right half of
my girly bits down to my thigh. I brace myself for the
pain. God, these strips are long-Jesus H fucking Christ! I’m blind! Blinded by pain!
Slowly the world stops spinning and my vision returns.
I glance down, and realize I’ve only managed to pull half
the strip off. Another deep breath, and the bathroom disappears into a renewed swirl of lights and stars.
When consciousness returns, I peer at the wax strip for
evidence of my endurance. It’s as blank as a newborn’s
diary.
I look down. The hair - and the wax - is still there. On
me. The most sensitive part of my body is now covered
with congealing wax and matted hair. Oh, for God’s sake.
I’m just going to use my razor and have done with it.
With any luck, my shaver’s rash will blur with stubble
rash if I play my cards right tonight.
I take my foot off the toilet, put it down, and instantly
realize my mistake.
I am now - not to put too fine a point on it - sealed shut.
I penguin-walk around the bathroom trying to figure
out what to do. Six-twenty-five. Oh shit, oh fuck. Water!
Hot water, melt the wax. Then shave, dress, run. I’ll get
into the hottest water I can stand, the wax will melt, and
I’ll just wipe it off with a sponge. Simple.
I run a bath hot enough to sterilize needles, and step
into it. Not the fuchsia dress, I decide, as I start to steam.
Nick won’t be able to see where it leaves off and I begin.
It’s at this point I discover there’s one thing worse
than having your nether regions glued shut with wax:
and that’s having your nether regions glued shut and then
sealed to the bottom of a cast-iron bath of scalding water
- which, by the way, may sear human flesh but does not melt cold wax. So I am now stuck to the bottom of the fucking bath. Ťť
When I call Amy for help on my mobile - thank God
I brought it in here with me in case Nick called - it takes
her a full two minutes to stop laughing long enough to
take a breath. ‘Have you tried calling the customer help
number on the side of the box?’ she suggests eventually.
‘Great idea, Amy,’ I say, leaning over the side of the
bath and trying not to pass out from the heat. Steam billows
around my shoulders and I nearly drop my phone into the
water. ‘I could be the joke of someone else’s night.’
‘What about emptying the bathtub and just yanking
yourself free?’
Five minutes later, I am still glued to the bottom of an
empty and rapidly cooling bath. I start to shiver. This
could only happen to me. It makes forgetting to change
out of your bedroom slippers look positively chic. ‘OK.
Next bright idea?’
‘Is there a lotion in the box?’ Amy queries. ‘They
usually give you one to get rid of excess wax. You could
try rubbing that on—’
It takes a complicated bit of maneuvering with a
loofah, but eventually I knock the bottle of lotion near
enough for me to reach it from the bath. I take a sniff as
I open the lid: it smells foul. I rub it on my bits doubtfully, hoping I haven’t just ruined my chances of multiple orgasms forever.
‘It works! It works! Oh, thank God, thank God. Amy,
you are a star. And if you ever, ever tell anyone about
this, I will strangle you with your own intestines.’
‘How very interesting,’ Nick says, raising his head from
between my thighs an hour later. ‘I don’t think I’ve ever isn’t there a name you girls have for this?’
7 believe the technical term is Monumental Fuck-up. ‘It’s called a Brazilian wax.’
‘Ah. After the girl from Ipanema and her thong, presumably.
Doesn’t it hurt?’
‘Less than being superglued to an cast-iron bathtub I
sigh. ‘Never mind. It’s a long story.’
Nick grins, and dips his ht’iid again. ‘Well, it looks very
tender to me. Very much in need of some careful attention.
Here. And perhaps here—’
‘I think you missed a bit I say, arching my back
against the pillows.
‘You can always stay here, if you want Nick offers; as
he has done on each of our five previous visits to the
hotel. He towels his hair dry, then drops it carelessly on
the bathroom floor. ‘You don’t have to leave with me. I’ve
paid for the night, you might as well enjoy it.’
‘I’ve told you, we could just go to my place, this must
be costing you a fortune.’
‘Not your problem.’ Naked, he sits on the side of the
bed and picks up my hand, tracing patterns on my palm