Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
the heat building between my legs. Before I can come,
Nick spins me round and moves on top of me. I don’t
mind the change in position - but all of a sudden he isn’t
thrusting deep inside me any more. He loses his rhythm
and slips out of me. I put my hand between our legs to
help him back.
‘OhI say.
‘I’m sorry Nick mumbles.
‘Forget it. It happens. It’s not a big deal.’
He rolls away from me and stares up at the ceiling,
head resting on the crook of his arm. We both know
I’m lying. Whether I like it or not, sex is not just an
important part of our relationship: it defines it. If it goes
wrong in the bedroom then we are, forgive the pun,
screwed.
Or rather: not.
I get out of bed and grab my red kimono. I suddenly
feel very very sick and very, very scared. ‘Just getting a
drink of water.’
In the bathroom, I switch on the shower arid stand
beneath it, closing my eyes and leaning my head against
the cool tiles. How has it all gone wrong so fast? Or - or
was it always wrong, and I just refused to see it? Too
busy enjoying the thrill and the secrecy and the danger
and the unattainability to acknowledge the truth. Which
is that much as I love him - and I do, oh, God, I do - Nick
and I have nothing in common except the pleasure we
share in bed, and without that, there is absolutely nothing
holding us together.
Except that’s not quite true.
Instinctively, my hands curve protectively around my
belly. Soft, squishy, still looking exactly the same as it
always has.
But three-and-a-half weeks late isn’t nothing, much as
I’ve tried to tell myself it is. Three-and-a-half weeks late is something. Morning sickness, glowing skin, lustrous hair, and heavy, tender breasts are all something. And it has
nothing to do with questionable takeaways or insufficient
sit-ups or stress.
I can’t do this on my own. Alarm bells about Nick are
going off in all directions, but I can’t do this on my own.
The hot water starts to run cold. I step out of the
shower, and dry off. Knotting the belt of my robe, I pad
back towards the bedroom.
He’s whispering, but the flat is very small, and very
quiet. My footsteps don’t make a sound on the pale ash
floor. And so I overhear my lover tell another woman his
wife - how much he loves her, as he begs her to take
him back.r
When he finally ends the call and looks up, I tell him.
I find Dad in the greenhouse at the end of the garden,
tenderly separating a tray of tiny seedlings into individual
pots. Slumping onto a wooden bench out of his way, I
watch him press each small plant in gently with his
thumbs. He nods at me to show he’s noticed I’m there,
but quietly goes on with his work for ten minutes or so,
until the tray is empty.
Finally he straightens up, brushing his hands together
to get rid of the loose soil. He surveys the neat row of
pots with satisfaction. ‘Should do nicely this year he
says. ‘Good and strong, this batch are. And the beds
should be fertile, thanks to your mother’s compost. All
those potato peelings and such.’
‘Don’t let her hear you say that, Dad. She’ll have a fit
if she thinks she’s helping.’
He starts to tidy his tools away. ‘Well, that’s your
mother for you. Not likely to change now.’
I pick up a cloth rag and start to clean earth from a
small trowel. Beside me, Dad rolls a length of green
gardening twine into a ball. It’s hot and humid in here;
sweat collects beneath my breasts, and trickles between
my shoulder blades. The air is close and has the sickly
sweet smell of rotting fruit. A fly buzzes against a
window-pane, and Dad leans over me to open the window
and let it out. The cooler outside air brings with it
the familiar scent of freshly mown grass and blossom
from the may tree at the end of the garden. I’m reminded
of all those summer days I spent cooped up indoors,
frantically cramming for exams, whilst outside the rest of
the world turned, carefree.
‘If you could just talk to her, Dad I start.
I k% grunts. ‘Won’t make any difference.’
‘I know it’s not what she would’ve chosen for me, Dad,
but it’s my life. I love Nick, and he loves me. Can’t she
just accept that and be happy for me?’
‘She just worries about you, love. We both do.’ He
reaches up to hook the ball of a twine on a nail in the
wall. ‘When you have children, you’ll understand. It’s not
a question of whether we approve or not. We just don’t
want you to get hurt.’
I swallow a great big ball of guilt. I can’t tell them
about the baby, not yet. Christ, they haven’t even met Nick; the last thing they need to know is that he’s already knocked up their precious little girl.
I fold the cloth rag neatly into squares.
“The only person who’s going to hurt me is Mum, if
she keeps this up,’ I mutter.
Dad looks at me for a long moment, then sits down
heavily on the bench. He leans his hands on his knees,
rubbing his palms gently up and down the worn corduroy.
‘Love, are you sure you’ve really thought all this
through? I know you think you have, but it’s never that
straightforward. This man, this Nick, he’s not just older
than you. He’s done so much more. A wife, a family — love, you’ve got your whole life ahead of you. You’re only twenty-six. The world’s your oyster. I hate to see your
wings clipped before you’ve even had a chance to spread
them.’
‘He’s asked me to marry him,’ I say defiantly. ‘As soon
as his divorce comes through. And I’ve said yes.’
My father nods slowly several times.
‘I do love him, Dad,’ I say, crouching in front of him.
‘Please be happy for me.’
‘He’s a married man, love my father says softly.
There’s no getting away from it. You’ll be taking on a
man who’s already walked away from one family. What’s
to stop him from doing it to you?’
After Emma quit as Nick’s secretary, handing in her
resignation the morning our affair became public knowledge,
he hired a new girl. Twenty-two years old, legs up
to here, the spitting image of Scarlett Johansson. Nowhere
near as efficient as Emma; she seems to require a lot of
direction from Nick. A lot of hands-on, one-on-one attention.
‘He
wouldn’t do that to me, Dad. He loves me.’
Dad sighs, and pats the bench beside him. ‘Sit down,
Sara.’
I do as he says. For a long moment, neither of us says
anything.
Then, ‘When you were about three or four,’ Dad says,
‘your mother and I went though a bit of a rough patch.
Things were rather strained at home. She’d just started a
new job, and I didn’t much like coming home to fix my
own dinner. Caused a few rows, I don’t mind telling you.’
He smiles wryly. ‘Don’t forget, it was different then. A
man had certain expectations. It was my job to put bread
on the table, and hers to make something out of it. I didn’t
hold with her going out to work, and I told her so. But
you know your mother. She went out and got herself a
job anyway. Receptionist at some posh law firm in town.’
I stare at him in surprise.
‘I didn’t know Mum had ever worked.’
‘Yes, well, there’s a lot you don’t know about your
mum and me.’ He rubs his hand over his jaw. ‘I know
the two of you don’t get on, and you lay the blame for
everything that goes wrong between you at her door. She
can be difficult to live with, I grant you that. But it’s not
always been easy for her, either.’
A field mouse darts between the potting benches. We
both watch it skitter down the centre of the greenhouse
and disappear beneath an upturned terracotta pot.
‘Anyway. I used to get home earlier than your mother
did, and I took to stopping by a neighbour of an evening.
For a chat, sometimes a drink or two. She was married,
too, but her man was out late most nights. After a while,
we got to be friends. Good friends.’
The words hang in the air.
‘You had an affair!’ I gasp.
‘I suppose you’d call it that. Turned both our heads,
for a while, I’ll admit. I was all for upping and leaving
your mother, but she wouldn’t hear of it. Said she couldn’t
do that to a little ‘un like you. She was the better woman,
I’ll say that. I was so head-over-heels, I couldn’t see
straight.’ He swallows noisily. ‘Went on for the best part
of six months. I kept meaning to put an end to it, but I
could never seem to find the right moment. And I was so
angry at your mother. I never stopped to think of the
damage I was causing.’ He closes his eyes briefly. ‘And
then, of course, she found out. Caught us bang to rights here,
as a matter of fact, right in the middle of this
greenhouse. Jan had come over—’
‘Jan?’ I exclaim. ‘Mrs Newcombe?’
He nods.
‘Oh, Christ I say, covering my face with my hands.
‘Libby’s about four years younger than me. Please don’t
tell me—’
‘Of course she’s not mine! What do you take me for?’
‘Well, I’m beginning to wonder,’ I say bitterly. ‘I can’t
L
believe all this, Dad. It’s too much to take in. What did
Mum say?’
‘She gave me a second chance Dad says simply. ‘And
I took it. I’ve never regretted it for a moment. Yes, she
gave me a dog’s life for a year or two, and she still has
her moments, but we got past it in the end. And we’ve
been stronger because of it. It taught us to value what we
have, and look after it. She gave up the job, not because I
asked her to, but because she wanted to show that she
was willing to meet me halfway.’ He takes my hands
in his. ‘Sometimes a man makes a mistake, Sara. Gets
carried away. And when there are children involved, you
owe it them to think twice before you tear their lives
apart. I know you love this man, and you believe he loves
you.’ He shrugs. ‘Maybe he does, I don’t know. But are
you sure, are you really sure, that their marriage is over?
Because if you’re not, Sara, you’re ruining an awful lot of
lives for nothing; including your own.’
I pull the car over and peer at my A-Z. Stapleford has to
be around here somewhere, surely to God. I’ve gone up
and down this section of the A36 for forty-five minutes.
I must be missing the bloody turn-off.
Slamming the wheel with frustration, I move back into
the flow of traffic. This is terrifying enough to do as it is,
without getting fucking lost.
Nick asked me to marry him as soon as I told him I
was pregnant. And despite the conversation I had just
overheard, despite hearing him tell his wife he still loved
her and wanted to come back, despite all my doubts and
misgivings, I said yes.
I want this baby. I want his child too. Maybe this one
will be a boy. A son, someone he can take fishing and
teach to play cricket or whatever it is men do with their
sons these days. Giving him a child will make me just as
important to him as she is. I won’t just be his mistress, I’ll
be the mother of his baby. We can build on that, work at
it, fashion a real relationship out of the bits and pieces
we’ve got now. A child will make all the difference. He
loves me, in his own way, I’m sure of it. With a little time
and attention, that will grow.i
But not if she crooks her finger and he goes running
back. I can’t live like that. Can’t bring a child into that.
I have to know that the door’s closed for good.
Finally. I take the turning to Stapleford and sit behind
a horse-van, drumming my fingers impatiently on the
wheel as we crawl along at fifteen miles an hour. As we
stop altogether to let a herd of cows cross the road, I flip
down the sun visor and study myself in the mirror. Great.
A huge fucking zit, right in the middle of my chin. Just
what I need.
I flip the visor back up. It’s not only a question of
wanting to be sure of Nick. I never thought I’d say it,
but - I need absolution. I can’t go forward otherwise. It
may be impossible to turn the clock back and undo the
damage Nick and I have caused, but if I know his wife is
at least happy now, perhaps I’ll sleep better. Something
my mother once said sticks in my head: you can’t build happiness on someone else’s misery. I guess it’s a karma thing.
What am I talking about? Of course his wife is happy
now. She’s got the thinking woman’s tottie to warm her
bed. I just want her to promise she’ll steer clear of my
man.
Yes. The irony is not lost on me.
We reach a T-junction, and I turn into a narrow track
leading up a steep hill. Twice I have to pull over to allow
another vehicle to pass in the opposite direction. I open
the window and breathe in the dusty, grassy scent of the
hedgerows as I drive. A warm breeze dips the cow parsley
in my direction, and I sneeze at the sudden downdraught