Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
so from me.’
I flush.
‘Do you have to make it sound so sordid, Mum?’
Scrape. Scrape.
‘Those poor children. Never mind his poor wife. I don’t
know how you sleep at night.’ A soft phlish, as she drops
a potato into the pan. ‘Imagine how you’d have felt, if
your father had upped and—’
‘If you ask me, it’s a bloody miracle he didn’t,’ I retort,
‘I certainly don’t know how he’s put up with you all these
years.’
I fling the phone on the sofa. Shit, I shouldn’t have said
that. Now I’m doubly in the wrong. I’ll have to phone her
back and apologize for being rude and hanging up on
her; and then sit through another of her pocket sermons
on Sins of the Flesh and Why Married Men Are Not Fair
Game.
I don’t know why I feel so bloody guilty about it. After
all, I’ve been praying for months that Nick would leave
his wife. OK, the thought of his three little girls sobbing
themselves to sleep at night because Daddy’s gone didn’t
exactly make me feel good about myself - I’m not Cruella
De Vil - but I never thought it’d bother me this much.
Some nights, I toss and turn for hours, picturing their
pale, tear-stained faces, whilst Nick sleeps like an innocent
babe next to me. It seems my mother has managed to
hamstring me with a bloody conscience after all.
I kick the damp towel Nick has left in the middle of
the sitting room floor out of my way and go into the
kitchen. Coffee grounds are scattered all over the counter,
and the sink is full of dirty cups and plates from last
night. He made enough bloody noise clattering around in
here at six this morning when I was trying to have my
Saturday morning lie-in. You’d have thought he could’ve
managed to load the freakin’ dishwasher, for fuck’s
sake—
I shriek as a cockroach the size of a small cat shoots
out from behind the fridge.
It stops in the middle of the floor halfway between me
and the door, its disgusting antennae things twitching
back and forth. I shudder, acutely conscious of my bare
feet. If that thing runs over them I’ll have a fucking heart
attack, I swear.
Gingerly I reach for something to throw at it. Christ
Almighty, where’s a man when you need one? Although
Nick’s more the type to leap up on the kitchen counter at
the sight of a mouse. Somehow I can’t quite imagine him
scooping up cockroaches with his bare hands.
I lob a wet J-cloth. The cockroach skitters beneath the
sink. Well, that’s washing up out for the rest of the day.
I’m not going near the sink till I know that thing’s dead.
Keeping a wary eye out for other roaches hot to party,
I make myself a mug of tea - ‘Good God,’ Nick said, ‘not
tea-bags, don’t you have any loose Earl Grey?’ - and curl
up on the sofa, keeping my feet safely tucked up under
my bottom. The cushions still smell of puke. I’ve bleached
the sofa so many times it’s started to hang out white flags
when I approach, and I still can’t get rid of the stink.
It kills me to say so, but I’ve got to give Nick’s wife
props. Spewing all over the pristine white nof-bought-in
the-sale Conran is one helluva way to diss your rival.
Aw, sod it. She can have the sofa. After all, I’ve got the
man.
A swirl of pleasure whisks its way down my body and
I grin into my mug. Conscience be damned. He actually
left his wife. OK, so he was pushed a little bit; but still, I
urn the stuff of urban legends. The mistress who got to
waltz off into the sunset with her man. No wonder Amy’s
spitting blood.
I couldn’t believe it when she crashed my flat and
handed him to me on a plate. Just like that. Didn’t even
put up a fight.
Nick muttered something about finding a hotel, but of
course he was just saying that so I didn’t feel I had to ask
him to move in. As if I was going to let an opportunity
like that slip through my fingers. It’s not quite the way I
would’ve liked it to happen - it would’ve been nice if
he’d left his wife by choice and told me he couldn’t live
without me, begged me to let him stay, rather than ended
up here by default; but it comes to the same thing in the
end. The important thing is we’re together.
Every relationship has a few teething troubles at the
beginning. It’s only to be expected. Things are a bit
cramped with two of us in the flat, and Nick isn’t exactly
house-trained. Too many years having someone run
around after him, cooking him hot dinners and ironing
his shirts. And it’s a bit of a strain having to look sexy
and fabulous twentyfourseven; I keep having to get up
early to sneak in the bathroom and shove on some slap
before he sees me. He looked a bit shocked when he beat
me to it the other morning and caught sight of me au
naturel. It’s his own fault: I was having my own There’s
Something About Mary moment after some rather pervy
sex the night before.
But actually, I think he’s finding it all rather romantic,
really. Bohemian. Sort of like being a student again, young
and footloose and carefree. I bet it makes a nice change
from all that family responsibility.
I pick up the phone and dial. ‘Hey. S’me.’ v Ś
‘If you go all loved-up on me again, I’m hanging up
Amy says warningly.
‘Sorry, doll, the honeymoon’s over. Didn’t I tell you?
He leaves dirty clothes all over the floor and wouldn’t
know an ironing board from a vibrator.’
She snorts. ‘No wonder you need a king-size bed.’
‘D’you fancy going to Camden Market this morning?’
I ask. ‘If we get a wiggle-on we could get there before
eleven. I was thinking about trawling round the covered
market for some silver earrings, I think I lost one of my
Indian ones at the gym.’ I giggle. ‘Roj probably nicked it
for his Prince Albert.’
‘Eeuuw. Do you mind? I haven’t finished my breakfast.’
‘Meet you there?’
‘I don’t know. I was going down to my parents’—’
‘Oh, live dangerously, Ames,’ I wheedle. ‘C’mon, it’s
a lovely day. And we could do lunch at the Dome, we
haven’t been there for ages.’
I feel her weaken at the thought of bouillabaisse.
‘Where’s lover boy, then?’
‘He’s seeing his kids. It’s the first time since they split
up; his wife is dropping them off at his Mum’s for the
weekend. He won’t be back till tomorrow night. Please,
pretty please? I’ll lend you my new James Blunt—’
‘Throw in your Oasis dress for a week and I’ll see you
in forty minutes.’
She’s already waiting for me when I reach the entrance
to the covered market. We stroll round the stalls of knickknacks, bric-a-brac and vintage crap for while, pawing
over the junk of yesteryear and muttering ribald remarks
to each other. For some reason, a kitsch nest of chamber
pots - his ‘n’ hers - reduces us to tears of mirth. Eventually, I buy a delicate pair of amber and silver earrings
- ‘God, look at the tiny fly stuck in that one Amy
marvels, ‘can you imagine how old it must be?’ - whilst
she bargains for an antique game of bagatelle for Terry’s
next birthday. ‘I know it’s not very romantic Amy
admits, “but at least he can take this home without his
wife suspecting it’s from another woman.’
‘I have to say she adds crossly as we sit down to
lunch, ‘you look positively glowing. Living the happyever-after, are you?’
‘More or less I grin, flipping open my menu.
‘Tell me the less she sighs, ‘I don’t think I’ve the
stomach for more right now.’
‘Well, his father died last week, so to cheer him up I
dressed as a schoolgirl and shagged him over the back of
sofa in full view of the neighbours I start.
Amy chokes on her sparkling water.
‘And I whisper, leaning across the table, ‘he shoved
his - you know - up my bloody arse.’
‘You’re kidding? What, without even asking?’
‘Without any bloody lube, either1 say feelingly. T had
to perch on one cheek for three days.’
‘Well, he did go to public school. I suppose it’s only to
be expected.’
We drop the subject of anal sex as the waiter takes our
order. I don’t really feel like wine, though Amy opts for a
glass of Sancerre. I guess I’m not in the mood.
I snap a breadstick between my fingers. ‘Joking apart,
I do sometimes wonder, Amy. I know Nick and I have
always been about sex. I mean, obviously: that’s the whole
point of having an affair. But sometimes, especially lately,
it seems so impersonal. We do all this wild stuff in bed and
out of it, come to that - and generally I’m cool with
whatever he wants to try as it doesn’t involve lit cigarettes
or live goldfish up my fanny.’ I lick my forefinger and
dab restlessly at the crumbs. ‘But there’s not much tenderness.
He hardly ever kisses me. I just - I don’t know,
Ames.’ I surprise myself by suddenly feeling close to
tears. ‘It’s just this feeling I have. It’s like he doesn’t even see me sometimes.’
There’s a short silence. Amy looks understandably
bewildered at the speed of my transition from smug
unmarried to oops-worms-in-Paradise.
I’m a little confused myself. I didn’t realize that was
there until I opened my mouth and it all spilled out.
‘Are you sure it’s not just you,’ she says, ‘wanting more
from him? Now that you’re living together.’ She moves
the bread basket out of my reach. ‘Having an affair is one
thing. Now you’re in a relationship. Everything’s changed
all of a sudden. Of course you want more than a good
seeing to over the back of the furniture. And I’m sure it’s
going to be fine, but it’s just going to take a little time,
that’s all. It’s a big adjustment for both of you.’
I recover quickly. After all, I’m the poster girl for Other
Women. The proof it can all work out in the end.
‘I’m sure you’re right I say brightly. ‘After all, what
goes on in the bedroom says a lot about the rest of
your relationship, doesn’t it? As long as things are good
there, everything else will fall into place eventually.
It’s just a question of us getting used to living with each
other.’
‘I’m sure everything’s going to be fine she echoes.
I narrow my eyes. ‘What? Spit it out’
She leans back as the waiter places her soup in front of
her, choosing her words.
‘It’s just - I’m not sure I’d let him spend quality time with his wife and kids yet. No need to remind him what he’s missing, if you see what I mean.’
I stare at her, surprised.
‘Look she says. ‘The kids are his one weak point.
Come on, Sara, how many times have you had a client
change his mind and go back to his wife once it gets
down to custody and a week at Christmas and two in the
summer?’
I realize Amy has prodded precisely where it hurts.
‘I’m not saying for a minute he’d go back to her,’ she
reassures me. ‘But why take the chance? She knows
him better than anyone, remember. She’ll know which
buttons to press. She could be cosying up to him in
the kitchen right now, dandling that cute little baby on
her lap, getting him all nostalgic for family life.’ She stirs
her bouillabaisse. ‘It’s a really delicate time, the first few
weeks after they leave. And he’s just lost his dad. If I were
you, I wouldn’t let him out of my sight.’
‘I can’t stop him seeing his kids - I wouldn’t want
to—’
I’m not saying you should. Just make sure you’re
part of the picture, that’s all, rather than her. The battle’s
not over yet. Don’t give her a chance to talk him round.
I know kids aren’t your scene, but you’ve got to play it
like they are for a bit. Take them out to - I don’t know,
Chessington or something. You can always ease up later,
once things are more settled.’
I look down at my plate of calamari. ‘I don’t feel all
that hungry, Ames. I think it’s your fish soup, it’s making
me feel a bit sick.’
Amy cheerfully digs her fork into a deep-fried baby
octopus.
‘At least it’s not morning sickness she grins.
Ten days late. That’s not much, surely? I know I haven’t
missed a pill. I checked. There could be lots of reasons my
period’s a few days late. That dodgy Chinese, for example,
I was as sick as a dog for two days. Lack of exercise:
I’ve barely seen the inside of the gym since Nick moved
in. He likes me to be there when he gets home. Not
to mention the bloody stress. This flat is a little on the
crowded side with two adults sharing; throw in three
children every weekend as we’ve been doing for the past
few weeks and it’s total fucking chaos.
I part the blinds with my finger and peer down into
the street as Kat winds around my ankles. Chessington
was a freakin’ fiasco, it pissed with rain and the kids
hated me, but at least I was there. And I suppose I should
be grateful Nick’s wife lets the children come and stay here
at all. His mother refuses to allow me to darken her doors