Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
I was spending the summer with my parents in the
Rh6nes-Alpes, in a tiny village called La Palud, half an
hour north-east of Grenoble.
I awoke one morning to find my parents had gone
hiking, leaving me alone with my law books (whose
spines, I regret to say, had yet to be cracked; a state of
affairs presumably noted by my all-seeing mother). This
being Jean de Florette country - a simmering feud between
the villagers over the communal well had led to scythes
at dawn just a few weeks before our arrival - if you
wanted a reviving morning shower before turning to your
neglected studies, you had to make the short walk from
our remote mountain chalet to an impossibly photogenic
lake near by.
And so began the headiest ten days of my life.
The erotic imprint left by Kristene as she rose naked
from the lucent water, a modern-day siren, is such that
even now, nearly twentyfive years later, I grow hard at
the thought. Her skin glistened in the morning sunlight as
if she’d been dipped in syrup. I watched as she smoothed
back her wet hair from her face with the palms of her
hands, her back arched, presenting high, firm, raspberrynippled breasts to the sky. A burl of chestnut hair wisped
between long, endlessly long, brown legs.
When she saw me standing there, open-mouthed and
overcome, she simply smiled, winked, and dived gracefully
backwards into the water.
She was twenty-nine, her mood as pliant as her warm
and willing body. I’d shed my burdensome virginity at
seventeen to a girl my own age scarcely more experienced;
two years on I still knew less about the way a woman
worked than I did about a jet engine. Kristene rectified
my woeful ignorance. She guided my hands, my tongue,
my cock, my mind, with wanton, audacious confidence,
unashamedly taking as much pleasure as she gave.
It was clear from the beginning that our relationship,
which occupied no dimension other than the gloriously
physical, had no life outside this particular time and
space. I was being admitted to a sensual Eden for reasons
I neither knew nor cared to discover; soon, the door would
close again. So I greedily slaked my thirst whilst I could. I
returned to that lake day after day, gorging myself on her,
determined to wring every moment of pleasure from her
body in the hope that the memories would be enough to
sustain me when she was gone.
They were not. For years afterwards, sex with every
woman I bedded seemed as dry and stale as week-old
biscuits when you have tasted nectar.
I’d forgotten how Kristene made my body feel until I
met Sara. One remembers the taste of a strawberry: but
even the most vivid memory is but a faint, dull facsimile
compared to the sybaritic pleasure of biting into the
strawberry itself.
That one night with Sara has reawakened senses I’ve
not felt since those halcyon days by the lakeside when
I was a priapic nineteen-year-old. How to describe the
indescribable? Losing myself in her lush, ripe body, it was
as if I was all cock, every muscle and sinew of my body
throbbing with the heat of her. I felt her sweet wetness
down to the tips of my toes. For the first time in my life, I
actually lost my mind when I was inside a woman; even
Kristene hadn’t come close to this. I was conscious of
nothing else but the need to possess, and be possessed by,
her.
A need utterly at odds with the fact that despite everything
I still love my wife.
‘Not really on, is it, old man?’ Giles says. ‘With the best
will in the world. Not blaming you, of course, old chap,
seen the girl myself; hard for a fellow to resist, absolutely.
But the thing is, Nicholas, Mai’s a lovely woman.
Man would be a fool to lose her for a pretty face.’
I stare morosely into my pint. ‘She’s a wonderful
woman. I don’t deserve her.’
‘So what’s this all about then?’ .ilin nnyN kindly. ‘Not
like you. Always such a HvmiMt 1ťŤ
;
‘Not so sensible now, it would seem.’
He nods at the landlord. ‘Same again? Look, Nicholas,
we all make mistakes. Fellow’s got to be a saint sometimes
- the girls these days. Lot more forward than they used to
be. Had a bit of a brush myself a few months ago, matter
of fact. Girl on the seven-nineteen, always sits in the first
carriage behind the engine, same as me. Charming girl.
Works in advertising. Got chatting after a while, as you
do. Quite brightened up the journey, if I’m honest. Anyway,
next thing I know, she’s asking me to come with her
to a gallery opening.’
‘What did you say?’ I ask curiously.
‘Said no, of course,’ Giles says briskly. ‘Look, old chap.
Don’t mean to be a killjoy. But once you open that door well,
who knows where it’ll lead? I know I’m not every
girl’s cup of tea, never been an oil painting, I know that;
but Liz is rather fond, you know. Break her heart if she
found I’d been dipping my wick elsewhere. Thing is,
you and Mai have a good thing going. And there are your
girls to think of. Why take the risk?’
I’ve asked myself the same thing a thousand times.
Sleeping with her once, after the bombings, I could almost
explain away; danger makes us all do things we wouldn’t
normally. And perhaps that would have been it, if Sara
hadn’t produced the opera tickets - how magnificent, that
she should love Wagner! - and made it clear she was interested in a repeat performance, after all. If we hadn’t run into Liz and Giles, I would have taken her to bed
again. And this time, the only danger would have been of
my making.
‘Liz told Mai about last night, you know, Giles. Said
you’d run into me in London and given me a lift back.’
‘You were jolly lucky there, Nicholas. Jolly lucky.
Could’ve been very different if it’d been anyone else. But
Liz is a good woman. She takes things at face value. You’ll
be all right with her.’
I drain my pint and set it down. Giles is absolutely
right. Five minutes earlier, and Mai’s best friend would
have seen Sara all over me like a cheap suit. I should
never have let her touch me in public; it was pure bloody
recklessness. I should never have gone out with her again
at all.
Amare et sapere vix deo conceditur. The gods never let us love and be wise at the same time.
The thing is, one night with Sara wasn’t enough. Nowhere near enough.
I know this thing has to end, and soon; the stakes are
too high. I could lose everything I care about. Christ
Almighty, I deal with marital train wrecks every day of
the week. I had a client in my office just last Friday, been
married two years and nine months. Wife had a couple
of miscarriages, and the bloody fool ended up in bed with his secretary. He’s now looking at giving his wife his house and a rather nasty slice of the next few years
of his life; and that’s a best-case scenario, if we pull the
right judge. Meanwhile, the secretary has taken one look
at the interim maintenance order and made for the hills.
I have to get Sara out of my system, once and for all.
But denying myself only seems to feed the fever. Perhaps
if she stops being forbidden fruit, if I let this thing run its natural course, it’ll burn itself out. I’m sure of it.
Valentine’s Dny. l,iss than a month away. I’ll give
myself till Valentine’s Day, the day associated with love
and romance the world over; and then I’ll put an end to
it. We’ll have a final passionate liaison, and then bid each
other a regretful, but amicable, farewell.
Somehow, putting a time limit on the affair eases my
excruciating guilt. I’ve already broken my vows; the damage
is already done. A few weeks longer, that’s all I ask.
I’m not leading Sara on under false pretences. She’s a
young girl with everything going for her. It’s not like she’s
in this for the long haul. She’s a smart woman; she knows
I’m not a good bet for the future. And at her age, she’s
probably not even thinking about the future anyway.
She’s enjoying this for what it is: fun, good conversation,
and bloody fantastic sex.
I send her half a florist’s stock on Monday by way of
an apology for our ruined evening; and then a boxed set
of the Wagner she loves so much the next day. I haven’t been caught up in such a romantic rush for years; on Wednesday I surprise myself by tracking down a rare outof-print book of poetry - a revelation, that, to discover a
dozen well-thumbed volumes of First World War poets
on her book shelves; I had expected airport bricks of the
type Mai favours - whilst Thursday’s gift is inspired by a
comment from one of my female clients.
‘La Perla!’ the woman says furiously, as she storms
towards my office waving what turns out to be an
American Express credit card statement. ‘I was married
to the bastard twenty-seven years, and he never bought me bloody La Perla!’
Google divulges the nature of this particular feminine
Holy Grail; unfortunately, I’m left to fend for myself when
it comes to the delicate matter of making the actual pur
chase. I have no idea what size to buy Sara; cupping my
hands in a broadly indicative mime elicits more hilarity
than helpfulness. However, eventually we establish the
parameters of my quest by dint of a rather unseemly comparison
with several shop assistants’ embonpoint; soon I am
left to choose between a coffee-and-cream all-in-one lace
confection, and an enticing plum brassiere and panties set
so flimsy it looks as if it will barely last the anticipated
five-minute interlude between revelation and removal.
I buy both: one for now, and one for Valentine’s Day.
It will be my farewell gift to her; a memento of one last
spectacular night together before we say goodbye.
Into the folds of the coffee-coloured silk, I slip a
Claridge’s key card. And it is at Claridge’s that our affair
moves up a gear, the day after I give her my final gift: a
silver Tiffany bracelet I know she covets.
Valentine’s Day creeps ever closer as, over the course
of the next few weeks, we meet up at the hotel again and
again. I daren’t risk a late night more than once or twice
a week, but there is the occasional afternoon tryst, when a
client cancels; almost more passionate for its spontaneity.
It’s costing me a fortune (my credit cards are near their
limits; thankfully the firm’s profit share at the end of the
financial year in April will clear them before Mai notices)
but with the recklessness that characterizes this whole
liaison, I find I don’t care. It’ll be over soon. When I run
out of credit, I will simply pay cash.
I can’t tell Sara that I already plan to end our affair,
that would be unkind; but I am careful, very careful, not
to offer her more than I can give. Beyond the pleasure
our loverrwiking affords mo, I like her; very much. The last
thing in the world 1 want to do is hurt her.
But none the less, there is a moment, the day before
Valentine’s Day, when I almost slip.
I’m about to leave for the last train home after another
wonderful evening with her when Sara takes it upon
herself to treat me to one of her mind-blowing blow-jobs.
I should leave - I’m late already - but oh, God, it’s as if
she has a dozen tongues, all conspiring to drive me out of
my mind. Train times and anxious wives mean nothing.
Promises, lies, love and truth - nothing matters but the
woman on her knees in front of me. Hot, warm, wet … Jesus Christ Almighty.
I let her take me to the brink, then abruptly pull away
from her. More than anything, I want to drive her to lose
control the way she does me; I want her writhing on the
bed frantic for my touch. I taste her hot sweat when I kiss
her skin, my mouth moving from breasts to belly-button
to her strangely naked mound. It’s like the whole of her
body is an erogenous zone as she squirms erotically
beneath me. I hold back, carefully controlling the pace,
deliberately refusing to let her breathy little cries spur me
faster.
Finally, when I know I’ve got her where I want her, I
tongue her where she’s aching to be touched.
After she comes, I slide up the bed and rest my cheek
on her belly, relishing its soft, cushiony feel. A relaxed
warmth seeps through me as her heartbeat thuds, slowing
now, a little above my ear. Unbidden, words float to the
surface. ‘I love—’
I want to bite my tongue off. Good God, the blood
rush to my cock must have caused a severe lack of its
flow to my brain.
In the here and now I love her, certainly. But a woman
reads far more into those three overused words than a
man often means her to hear.
‘I love to be here I amend hastily. ‘I feel safe, safer
than anywhere else in the world.’
She’s quick to hide it; but not quick enough. I see