Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
had answered—’
‘I was bored,’ Trace says carelessly, and I can’t help
thinking, amused and frustrated in equal measure; no
wonder Kit loved him, they’re both so much alike. ‘And
you wnbore me. Besides which, I have to talk to you about
sourcing.’
‘Can’t it wait until the morning?’
‘Not if you’re coming with me, it can’t.’
‘Coming where?’
I’ve just unearthed this amazing new supplier in Normandy, fantastic cheeses, Mai, out of this world, you’ll love them. If we get the first Chunnel train after six, we
can—’
I laugh. ‘Trace, don’t be absurd, I can’t do that. It’s
Saturday tomorrow, Sophie has Pony Club, though I must
say I rather think she’s growing out of this particular
phase, thank God, you have no idea how expensive it is;
and then Evie’s got a birthday party in the afternoon.
I’m sure Metheny’s getting a cold, too, it’s just out of the
question, I’m afraid.’
‘Bugger. Can’t Nicholas look after them for the day?’
Nicholas is a good father, a good husband, but the idea
of leaving him to cope with the three girls all day on his
own whilst I gallivant off to France in search of cheeses of
course, Trace has never actually met Nicholas-‘He isn’t even home from work yet, Trace, I can’t
expect him to mind the children tomorrow. He needs a
break, he works incredibly hard.’
‘So do you,’ Trace says, ‘harder, actually, I should
imagine.’
For a mildly hysterical moment I think of the laundry
room, the dirty clothes hamper filled to the brim, the
overflowing ironing basket practically an archaeological
ili. Of the dishwasher still full of dirty plates from last
nif.’,lil I just haven’t had a spare moment to crawl in it
.tiiiI Itsh out the soggy spaghetti clogging the filter - and
the kitchen bin squished full with so much compacted
rubbish I can’t actually get the plastic liner out. The empty
larder - ‘Mummy! These Cheerios aren’t Cheerios, they’re dust, we’re going to starve, Evie says she’ll call social services’ - the overdue car insurance, the forgotten dry
cleaning, the late birthday cards, the unreturned library
books. The burnt-out bulb in the fridge that I keep meaning to replace, the dirty bed-sheets I simply must get round to’
changing before they climb off the beds themselves. The
Christmas thank-you letters I haven’t written, the name
tapes I need to sew in, Sophie’s science fair project, the
manuscript I still need to deliver, oh God, oh God-‘Where is your husband at this time of night, anyway?’
Trace asks. ‘Didn’t you say Evie had a school thing on
tonight?’
I don’t often feel angry - it’s so demanding: time,
energy, I don’t have enough of either to squander on just
being cross - but I could have cheerfully killed Nicholas
this evening. I chose him precisely because he seemed like
the kind of man who would never let you down.
‘He had to work, some eleventh-hour settlement that
needed to be thrashed out I say through gritted teeth.
‘Poor Evie, she was so disappointed. They’ve been doing
a special project on Stonehenge and she spent hours on it.
All the girls in her class did presentations and of course
she was the only one there without a father watching. It
broke my heart’
‘Bring her with you tomorrow,’ Trace suggests. ‘Go on,
why not? Nicholas could cope with the other two, surely,
and it’d cheer Evie up, a trip to France.’
When Trace says it like that, it seems so do-able.
Everything always seems so simple, so easy, to him. He
has such energy, such passion and determination: enough
to cany you with him even when you know, in your heart
of hearts, that it’s not that straightforward.
He fills the world with such possibility. Whereas
Nicholas-But I can’t start to compare them. Or I really will be in
trouble.
Kit must think me still twenty-two, foolish and wide
eyed. I do know why he exerted himself to persuade me
to take the job with Trace; and it has nothing to do with
the fantastic career opportunity, the dream come true, that
it absolutely is. Kit has never really forgiven Nicholas
for coming into my life when he did, closing the door on
Trace and thus any chance Kit might have had to redeem
himself. When I said I was marrying Nicholas, Kit insisted
it was too soon, I hadn’t yet worked Trace out of my
system, I needed Nicholas for all the wrong reasons.
When what he really meant was that he didn’t want to
live with his own guilt.
‘Come on, Mai,’ Trace wheedles, ‘come to Normandy
with me.’
‘It would be nice to just drop everything for once I say
longingly.
‘And it is business. We can be there and back in a day.
You know it’ll be fun, Evie can play chaperone - oh, shit.
Look, I have to go—’
Over the distant thrum of street noise, I hear a girl’s
high-pitched voice; I can’t make out the words, but her
sentiments are clear. 1 smile, wondering what hot water
Trace has got himself into now. Over the years, I’ve
spotted him popping up now .mil ;gain in the odd gossip
column - one of Lomlon’M most eligible bachelors,
II)!
apparently; not that I’m jealous, of course - usually
accompanied by one in an interchangeable series of whippet-thin girls with ribs like famished saints. I suppose it
was only a matter of time before it all caught up with
him.
‘See you tomorrow Trace says quickly, clicking off the
call.
‘We’ll see I reply to dead air; that favourite parental euphemism for No, but I’m too tired to argue any more, smiling despite myself as I replace the phone.
He could always do this to me. Make me smile, make
me believe that whatever insane idea he’d come up with
- write a book, run a restaurant, marry me - was the right,
the only, thing to do. Which is why I didn’t dare see him
again for thirteen years, until I was sure I was quite, quite safe.
I don’t leave Nicholas’s office for a long time, staring
at the framed picture of the two of us on his desk. Our
wedding day, ten years ago; we look so young, so carefree,
so certain.
Kit wasn’t entirely wrong in his assessment. I was a
little bit reboundish when I met Nicholas; after what had happened with Trace, who wouldn’t be? But I knew without doubt that he was the right man to marry, in a
way that Trace never had been. Not quite as dashing, perhaps, not as knicker-wettingly, stomach-churningly disturbing; but you can’t live on a perpetual knife edge of
excitement all your life, can you? If Trace was the ideal
lover, I knew instantly that Nicholas was the ideal husband.
Men are like shoes: you can have sexy or comfortable,
but not both.
Not that Nicholas wasn’t sexy, too. In his own way.
There was a depth to him that was shadowed and dark, a
carnal, sensual undercurrent of which he seemed totally
unaware. All it needed was the right woman to tap into
it. And I was so sure then that that woman was me.
‘You didn’t tell me Liz gave you a lift back from London
last night I say, bending to pull off Metheny’s muddy
wellies as Nicholas comes down the stairs a little after ten
the next morning. ‘She said it was well past midnight
by the time you all got back. I think she could’ve done
without taking Chloe to Pony Club this morning, to be
honest, she looked done in when I saw her—’
‘How could I have told you? I’ve only just woken up.’
I look up in surprise. ‘No need to bite my head off.’
‘Christ. I’m barely downstairs before you’re giving me
the bloody third degree. Didn’t realize this had become a
police state. Where are we, Lower Guantanamo?’
‘Mummy! That’s ow-eee!’
‘Sorry, sweetpea. There we are, all done.’ I watch
Metheny toddle happily towards the sitting room, then
follow Nicholas into the kitchen, unwinding my scarf
and pulling off my woollen gloves. My nose starts to run
in the warmth. ‘Nicholas? Is something the matter?’ He ignores me, flinging open cupboard doors at random. ‘I don’t suppose there’s any danger of a decent
coffee in this house?’
‘There’s a jar in the end cupboard, by the cocoa.
Nicholas, is everything at work—’
‘Not bloody Nescafe! I meant real coffee! You would
have thought I could get a decent cup of proper coffee in
my own bloody house! Is that really too much to ask?’
I stare at him in astonishment as he crashes and
slams his way around the kitchen. Nicholas has always
been a tea-drinker; rather a fastidious and demanding
tea-drinker, actually, a warming-up-the-pot, milk-first,
Kashmiri Chai kind of tea-drinker, to whom tea bags are
anathema and Tetley’s a four-letter word. I cannot recall
him ever drinking coffee in his life.
In another life, I might wonder if Nicholas - but no; if
nothing else, the disaster with Trace taught me the value
of trust.
There’s a knock at the kitchen window, and the
window-cleaner waves cheerily. I sigh inwardly. I’d forgotten
he was coming today; and he only takes cash.
Things seem to be a little bit tight this month - we must
have spent rather more at Christmas than I’d realized that
wildly extravagant Joseph coat, of course. I can’t wait
for a chance to wear it. And Nicholas has been taking
rather more cash out than usual recently; expenses, I
should think - they’ll be reimbursed eventually; but in the
meantime— And I had been hoping to get to the beginning
of February without having to dip into the housekeeping
money for any extras-‘Nicholas, do you have any cash on you?’
‘God, I suppose so. Never bloody ends, does it? In my
wallet, should be on my desk. I’m going to have a shower
before this place turns into Piccadilly Circus.’
Pausing only to grab his mobile phone charger from
the kitchen counter, he stalks up the stairs, his stiff paisley back screaming resentment. I wipe my streaming nose on
a wodge of paper towel. Resentment at what I’m not quite
sure. He wasn’t the one up at six with three children.
His battered leather wallet is lying on his desk. I pull
out a couple of twenty-pound notes, dislodging several
till receipts and a photograph of the children as I do so.
I stop and pick up the snap, my irritation melting. I love this picture. It was only taken a couple of months ago; Evie has a large purple bump right in the centre of her
forehead, forcing her fringe to split in two around it like a
shallow brook around a rock. She did it running down
Stokes Hill with Chloe and Sophie; she was so determined
to win the race, she couldn’t stop and ran full-tilt into the
side of a barn at the bottom. Absolutely refused to cry, of
course. It took two weeks to go down. And Sophie, just
learning to love the camera, her head tilted slightly to one side, looking up from under those dark lashes - oh dear, she’s going to be devastating sometime really rather soon.
And Metheny, cuddled in the centre. My milk-and-cookies
last-chance baby. So plump and sunny, beaming with
wide-eyed, damp-lashed brilliance at me. The photograph
is a little out of focus and all three of them could have
done with a wash-and-brush-up first; but it captures them,
the essence of them. This is who they are.
Judging from the creases in the picture, Nicholas
loves it too. I can see marks in the print where he’s traced
his thumbnail fondly over their faces, just as I’m doing
now.
A childish shriek emanates from the other room, followed
by a crash and the sound of running feet. I shove
the picture back in the wallet, and pick up the folded till
receipts scattered across Nicholas’s desk.
A name on one catches my eye. I pause. La Perla? I
didn’t I’vcn know hc’il vvvn he.ml of them. certainly
wouldn’t h.tvr il Kil diiln’l keep me tvurnnt. And he spent I lilam I) hum minli!
iw
Good Lord. How very sweet and generous and romantic
of him; and how very, very lovely. Things have been
rather - well, quiet, in the bedroom recently. After the
sexual feast at Christmastime, it has been very much
famine this last month or so. This is clearly his way of
putting things right.
Smiling inwardly, I fold the receipt carefully and
replace it, so that Nicholas won’t know I’ve seen it and
spoilt his Valentine’s Day surprise.
It takes me ten days to find a dress worthy of bedroom
naughtiness from La Perla. I used to love shopping, of
course, but these days I’m always so conscious of the cost.
Sometimes I look at my yummy Gina strappy sandals or
the silly pink Chloe bag I just had to have the summer I
met Nicholas, languishing at the back of my wardrobe
now, pockets filled with coins that are probably out of
circulation, it’s been so long since I used it; and I think,
that’d pay for the girls’ school uniforms for the entire
year. How could I be so wickedly extravagant, what was
I thinking?
But Nicholas has obviously gone to such trouble. So