Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
treats his loyal wife of twentyfive years like this in front
of everyone? And yet, in every other respect, he’s a very
likeable man.
‘He doesn’t mean anything by it I say kindly.
Meg sighs. ‘You’re so lucky with Nicholas.’
I glance at my husband, talking shop with Sara. I know
Nicholas wants to buttonhole Will this evening, to get
to the bottom of this problem over his partnership share;
now would be the perfect time to distract the old rogue
from his shapely companion.
‘So nice to meet you again, Mrs Lyon Sara says
brightly as I join them. ‘I love your dress.’
Heat rises in my cheeks. Kit said it was silly to refuse
to wear the dress just because Trace had bought it when
it’s so perfect for me; but I feel as if I have a huge red ‘A’
for Adultery painted on my frock.
‘You don’t think it’s a little, well, orange?’ I say, flustered.
1 was in Rome a few weeks ago - the Italians wear
colour wonderfully, don’t you think, but then the light
there is so luminous - of course I got it home here, not the
same light at all.’ I tweak my skirts. ‘I feel rather like a
giant nasturtium. Rome is such a wonderful city, but don’t
ever go over Easter weekend, just heaving with tourists, I
can’t imagine what I was thinking.’
It’s quite clear from her bemused expression what she is thinking, and I can’t blame her. I have verbal diarrhoea.
Even Nicholas is looking at me strangely.
‘Nicholas gave me the necklace for my birthday last
week1 add, a little desperate to get off the topic of Trace’s
dress. ‘Venetian glass. It’s antique; very extravagant of
him. I don’t know what I did to deserve it, but I shall
have to keep on doing it, evidently.’
Oh dear. Too much information. Nicholas hates me to
talk about anything personal, and Sara seems equally
embarrassed by my domestic prattle.
Suddenly I feel acutely uncomfortable, as if I’ve walked
into the wrong classroom. I’ve accompanied Nicholas to
these dinners for years, I know almost everyone here. And
yet unexpectedly I feel like a fish out of water, as if I don’t belong any more, and the sensation is unnerving.
I chatter to fill the silence.
‘I do love the Law Society dinner, every year, don’t
you? Such fun catching up with everybody. Oh, look,
Nicholas, there’s Will Fisher, talking to that pretty little
thing in blue; what an amazing dress, positively gravity
defying, one wonders how it stays up. He really is so naughty, his poor wife.’ I slip my arm through his, pretending not to notice him stiffen. ‘Come on, darling, we
need to go and save him from himself before he actually
climbs into the girl’s cleavage. He could be lost for weeks.’
Will Fisher obligingly desists from pawing the young
lady chatting to him, and tries instead to work out if he
can actually see a nipple through the flimsy silk of my
dress.
His plump hand rests on my bottom as Nicholas talks
to him about the partnership, and I resist the urge to
tweak his willy to even things up a bit.
I already know from Meg that Will has no plans to
come back out of retirement, as Nicholas fears; the only
reason he hasn’t signed over his share of the firm before
now is because he can’t quite bear to give up his chance
to attend dinners like these. If the partners offer him a
sinecure of some sort within the firm that keeps the social
door propped open, he’ll hand over the shares without a
murmur.
‘Thank Christ for that Nicholas says fervently, when I
explain this to him later, ‘I thought the old bugger was
going to keep a grip on our balls forever.’
‘He just doesn’t want to be shut out of the sand-pit,
darling I say. ‘If you talk to David and Joan I’m quite
sure - oh, blast. I hate strapless bras. Nicholas, I’m just
nipping to the Ladies to do a quick bit of repair work
before my bosoms fall out, or Will Fisher will have a field
day.’
‘Well, hurry up. They’ll be calling us in to dinner in a
minute.’
I bolt to the toilets. The ordinary cubicles are too
cramped for me to take off my dress and put my bra on
properly, so I slip into the disabled cubicle at the end are
we allowed to say disabled these days? Isn’t it supposed
to be ambulatorily challenged, or something? - and
cross my fingers that no one in a wheelchair comes in
during the next five minutes.
I’m twisted like a pretzel trying to hook up my bra
when two girls enter the toilets, chattering nineteen to the
dozen. At first, I can’t hear what they’re saying through
the noise of running water and the whirr of the hand
drier. Then suddenly the drier stops, and I recognize
Sara’s voice.
And she’s talking about my husband.
Nicholas’s accident saves our marriage; for the time being.
Even as I’m struggling to digest the conversation I have just overheard - I don’t understand why Nick just doesn’t leave her - the news that my husband is hurt instantly overrides everything else.
I scrabble stupidly with the lock on the cubicle door What
does he see in her, when he could be with me? It must be the children - and run out of the ladies’, moments behind Sara and her friend. A thousand images race through my
mind: Nicholas crushed beneath an ornate chandelier;
Nicholas crumpled on the floor, clutching his heart; Nicholas
choking on a canape.
Nicholas kissing Sara on her full lips, his long legs
entwined with her brown ones, his hand on her breast,
his penis buried inside her.
A small crowd has gathered at the head of the marble
staircase. Nicholas - I’m sure he’d leave her otherwise. He’s
practically said as much - is being carried up it by two burly
rugger-buggers in dinner jackets who have made a seat
for him from their mammoth forearms. He looks pale but
is already laughing ruefully at his plight.
My heart slows a little. He’s all right then. Not dead.
Not mortally injured.
‘Sprained an ankle, that’s all,’ one of the men says, as
they carefully put Nicholas down on a gilt chair someone
has whisked from the dining room. ‘Missed his footing on
the stairs. Going to hurt like hell in a bit, but it looks
worse than it is.’
‘Hurting already, if you must know,’ Nicholas
manages.
‘What was it then?’ someone asks. ‘Banana skin?
Cleaner left her mop out?’
A ripple of amused laughter. ‘Picked a good night to
get themselves sued, didn’t they? The bloody Law Society
dinner!’
‘Need someone to call you a cab, old man?’ Will Fisher
asks.
I’m not leaving now,’ Nicholas says, uncharacteristically
jovial. ‘Takes more than a sprained ankle to keep a
good lawyer down. Just make sure the port gets passed
my way first, that’s all I ask!’
The two men pick Nicholas up again, gilt chair and all,
and carry him into the main stateroom, and it looks for all
the world as if he’s being hoisted up on their shoulders,
the wounded hero held aloft by his loyal team mates, the
man of the hour, as they laugh and josh and banter their
way in to dinner.?;
Kit was right. Wanting to go to bed with someone and
actually doing it are very different things. I see that now.
Somehow I stay serene through dinner. I talk to the
man on my left for the first course, the man on my right
for the second. I acknowledge compliments passed Nicholas’s
way through me, and pay a few in return. I join in
the laughter and general bonhomie as Nicholas is carried
back downstairs like a Little Emperor and put carefully
into a cab, and even though I have to curl my fingers into
my palms until they bleed tiny little half-moons, I don’t
throw myself at Sara and scratch her silver cat’s eyes out
as she leans into our taxi and solicitously wishes him well,
much as I want to.
The moment for confrontation with Nicholas passed
with the words ‘There’s been an accident and even though
his injury turned out to be nothing, far less than he
deserved, in fact, it created a diversion, just long enough
for my mind to clear. And so I say nothing to my adulterous
husband: because I have yet to work out what, if
anything, I want to say.
I’m in shock, I know that. I am sure the pain and grief
and anger will come flooding soon; but in the meantime I
am like a man who has lost a limb, foolishly staring at the
bloody stump, unable to feel it even though he knows it
must hurt like nothing he has ever known.
Nicholas doesn’t notice my quiet mood on the train
home. Why would he? His mind is filled with images of
his lush young mistress, her gym-honed body unmarred
by bearing his children, her strong shoulders unburdened
by the responsibilities of wifedom and motherhood.
And I was nice to her, I tried to put her at her ease. How
could she look me in the eye and make polite small talk when all the time-Silently I help Nicholas hobble into the house; though
away from his friends and colleagues, it appears he can
actually manage rather well without me, limping up the
garden path with surprising energy. We don’t speak as
we undress on opposite sides of our double bed, and I am
saved the dilemma of whether to avoid his goodnight kiss
by the fact that he doesn’t bother to give me one. Now
that I think about it, he hasn’t kissed me goodnight for
quite some time, a habit that had carried through a decade
of marriage; shame on me, for not noticing before. Was
that when the affair started: when those goodnight kisses
stopped?
Nicholas rolls onto his side, his back towards me, his
bad ankle propped on my spare pillow, and within
moments he is asleep. Whilst I lay wide awake, eyes
staring into the greyness, spooling back every moment of
our ten years together, sifting for signs of his affair. I sort the good memories from the bad, the pros from the cons.
The look in his eyes as Sophie was handed into his
arms, still slick with vernix and blood. The camping trip
in Oxfordshire five years ago, when a swan chased us all,
screaming with laughter, into the river. The strength of
his grip around my shoulders when we waited for Evie
to be tested for meningitis a week before her second
birthday. The twentyfive-year-old he has bedded and to
whom he has made Lord-knows-what snake-in-the-grass
promises, before coming back home to me.
I wish I knew when it started. Which is our last true
memory, before the lies began. If there have been other
affairs, before her. If he still loves me.
If he is planning to stay.
As dawn steals into our bedroom, I have two unequal
heaps of memories before me: reasons to stay with
Nicholas and reasons to leave.
And the second pile is dwarfed by the first because it
contains the one immutable fact that overshadows and
overrides everything else: despite everything, I still love
him.
The days bleed into each other, long and sluggish. At
night I go to bed exhausted, reading for a short while
before falling into a heavy slumber or tossing restlessly
half the night and waking too early. And still I say
nothing.
The blessed numbness doesn’t last. When the pain
comes, it is so lacerating I want to eat my own soul. I feel
hugely, blindingly angry. At both Nicholas, for being so
spineless and weak and just like a man; and at myself, for
having allowed this to happen.
How could I have not seen it coming? Everyone says1
the wife is always the last to know, but even still. I’ve -m I
been such a fool. The wretched lipstick, for example. If
Nicholas had erected a neon billboard in the back garden
which proclaimed I’m Having an Affair, it couldn’t have
been more obvious.
And Valentine’s Day. How they must have laughed at
me in bed together later, the poor silly wife believing their
stories of ‘coincidences’ and ‘who would have guessed!’
Blind to their lies, because she didn’t want to see-Oh, God. The beautiful sexy underwear from La Perla,
and the earrings for pierced ears. They were never for me
at all.
I sob as I force them down the waste disposal, first the
fragile wisps of lace and silk, then the delicate silver
earrings. They rattle like a trapped teaspoon and I cover
my ears. Why was I so determined to believe in him? The
signs were all there-But of course I’ve been here before, haven’t I? When
the signs have all been there.
I can’t cope with seeing Trace when I’m this vulner
able, so I fib that the girls are ill, I tell him that I can’t possibly consider working just yet. A part of me yearns to
run to him and cry on his shoulder, but I daren’t. I only
held out against him last time by the skin of my teeth.
And two wrongs don’t make a right. They don’t.
I can’t tell Kit what’s happened when he gets back
from New York either, because he would refuse to sit idly