Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
of pollen. I know country life isn’t all bucolic vistas and
pastoral idylls, I’ve seen abattoir footage, but it seems so
beautiful and meandering out here - a world away from
the rush and dirt of London.
Nick’s farmhouse is the only one for several miles,
bounded on three sides by fields and meadows, and on
the fourth by a small copse of young saplings. It looks
old and picturesque, if - as I drive nearer - rather in need
of some TLC and modern wiring. No wonder he could
hardly bear to leave it.
The gate is open. I park in the wide gravel space at the
front of the house. My heart thumps wildly in my chest as I get out of the car. Oh, shit. Suddenly I don’t know if I’ve got the balls to go through with this.
I can’t bring myself to ring the doorbell. Instead,
threading my way around several outhouses, I peer
through the grimy kitchen window at the back. Inside, it’s
smaller and messier than I expected: I’d had visions of
some Sunday Times Nigella Lawson supplement kitchen all
gleaming surfaces and shining saucepan racks. She is a
bloody celebrity chef, after all. But the only things suspended above this ancient-looking Aga are some rather
grey bras and several pairs of Bridget Jones knickers.
The stone floor is covered with newspapers and what look
like rabbit droppings, and dirty crockery is piled high in
the sink. A few chipped pots of dead herbs lino Ihi
windowsill.
Sitting at the scrubbed pine kitchen table, head buried
on her arms, is a small figure in a filthy, ratty old dressing
gown. Her wild tangle of dark hair is unbrushed. Every
now and again, her thin shoulders heave.
Oh, God, I shouldn’t have come. This was a huge
mistake-She looks up, and I feel a stab of shock. I barely
recognize her. Her eyes are swollen and red from crying.
Misery is etched on her face. Dark circles under her eyes
speak of sleepless nights and long hours waiting for
dawn to break. She looks bereft and heartsick, shrunken
by grief. There’s no trace of the flirty, lively woman who
drops off the children every weekend before skipping
merrily down to the car and her hot new lover.
I swallow. I’ve done this to her.
She unbolts the door, and turns back into the kitchen
without speaking, wrapping her skinny arms around herself.
I step gingerly over a heap of muddy Wellingtons.
And then I blurt out the question I came all this way
to ask.
Malinche
Anger can take you a frighteningly long way, I discover:
far from those who love and hurt you, far from everything
that’s familiar, and - it’s this last I find so terrifying - far from everything you thought you knew about yourself.
After I have vomited on Sara’s sofa, I wipe my mouth
carefully on the back of my wrist. Without even glancing
at my husband, now frantically throwing on shirt and
shoes and jacket, or his mistress, still standing frozen in
shock by the door, her cheap red kimono gaping, I walk
out; and keep on walking.
I walk down New Fetter Lane towards Fleet Street, my
feet starting to blister in the ridiculous gardening clogs I
grabbed in haste from the scullery as I ran from the house,
desperate to get to Nicholas before it was too late. Barely
noticing the traffic or the fumes or the lewd remarks from
hooded teenagers loitering in doorways, I concentrate on
putting one foot in front of the other, terrified to stop even
for a moment in case I cannot start again. My feet are raw
and bloodied by the time I reach the Strand, and the left
turn that will take me across Waterloo Bridge, back to the
railway station and home; such as it is, now.
But I turn right. I hadn’t known where I was headed,
until now; but I keep walking, up Bow Street, with
renewed purpose, and then, ducking through a maze of
small narrow streets, I emerge abruptly in Covent Garden.
His beautiful gourmet shop is easy to find; but it is in
darkness, of course, closed, and I realize with a shock that
it’s after nine-thirty, late; that if he is anywhere, he will be at home now: or else out of my reach entirely. Jostled by
tourists and theatre-goers, I take a side turning out of the
piazza, and within moments find myself in an elegant old
street, lined with tall, narrow white houses; graceful,
sophisticated houses that seem to close their eyes with
pained expressions at the litter and the down-and-outs
and the youths urinating into the street.
I mount the steps of his townhouse, knowing that if
he’s not in, or turns me away - we’ve barely spoken, after
all, since Rome - I shall simply curl up in a corner and
wait to be blown away, like the rest of the unwanted
rubbish bowling along the street like urban tumbleweed.
But he is in. And when he opens the door, and I
stumble across the threshold in my bare, bleeding feet,
clutching the silly clogs in my hand, my hair whipped
wild by the wind, my face streaked with tears I hadn’t
known I was weeping, he simply picks me up without a
word and carries me upstairs.
I awake to the sounds and smells of a summer a long
lime ago. Nancy Sinatra’s ‘Sugartown’ plays distantly in
another room. Coffee and freshly squeezed orange juice
scent the air - I sit up, realizing he has placed a breakfast
tray at the foot of the bed, complete with croissants and
muffins and a single white rose - and sunshine streams
across the high, white brass bed from the bank of French
windows, casting rhombuses of light on the hand-finished
planked floor. One pair of doors is flung wide open; white
muslin curtains billow in the light breeze, catching on
the iron railing. Overhead, a woven plantation fan slowly
turns. I feel like I have stepped into a Flake advert; all I
need now is a lizard on the Bakelite telephone.
I sink back against the marshmallowy pillows, pulling the fluffy cloud of duvet up to my chin. Even my British winter pallor looks fetchingly honeyed against this much
eye-watering white.
My thighs ache; there is a raw, sticky, unfamiliar throb
between my legs.
Last night, after Trace ran me a bath in his clawfooted
movie-bathroom tub, and soaped my back, and rinsed my
hair free of vomit and street grime and tears, he took me
to bed; and made love to me with such controlled passion,
such gentleness, that the ice storm in my heart finally
ceased blowing its frozen winds through my body.
At the thought of that erotic, blush-making sex ‘Lights on,’ Trace said firmly, T want to see you, all of you, I want to see your face when you come’ -1 suddenly
realize I’m ravenous.
I sit up in bed and pull the tray towards me. I am on
my third croissant and raspberry jam when Trace comes
in, towelling hair still damp from the shower. His white
linen shirt and cornflower-blue linen pants would look
outrageously Men’s Vogue on anyone else. His feet are
i
bare. Despite the satiating gymnastics of last night, a pulse
beats somewhere in the region of where the knickers of
a thirty-something married mother-of-three should be which
is not twisted inside out and hanging on the bedpost
of her lover.
‘Sleep well?’ he asks, throwing aside the towel to sit on
the edge of the bed.
I rescue my glass of orange juice as it tilts on the tray.
‘Oh, yes,’ I purr, stretching lazily, ‘I can’t remember when
I last—’
I bolt upright, nearly sending everything flying. ‘What
time is it?’ I grab his wrist to see his watch. ‘Eleven-thirty!
Trace, you should never have let me sleep in that long! the
children! - I need to get home. And Edward, poor Edward, I must speak to Daisy, I—’
‘All taken care of he says, ‘I rang Kit. He’s arranged
for Liz to keep the girls until tomorrow evening, they’re
all going to some gymkhana or another, having the time
of their lives. And Kit checked with the hospital: no news
yet, he’ll call me back as soon as he hears anything. But
in the meantime you,’ he says briskly, taking the locusted
tray from my lap and flipping back the duvet, ‘need to
get up. I have plans for you today.’
His gaze lingers appreciatively. Blushing furiously, I
grab back the bedclothes.
He laughs and stands up.
‘I took the liberty of getting Alice - my right-hand,
Alice, couldn’t manage without her - to nip along to
Whistles and get you something fresh to wear. Five minutes,
downstairs. And don’t bother to shower he adds,
with a wink, ‘you’re not going to need it where you’re
going.’
I wait until he leaves the room before getting out of
bed (thirteen years and three children is a little too much
water under the bridge in the cold light of day) and open
the bag he’s left propped against a beautiful cherrywood
armoire. Alice, whoever she is, has taste; and common
sense. In addition to the simple turquoise tunic and loose
fitting cropped cream trousers, she’s included some flat,
non-blister-rubbing (oh, bliss!) sandals, a pretty pair of
pink-and-white knickers and a matching bra. All in the
correct sizes. If I didn’t know better, I’d think she’d done
this kind of errand for Trace before.
I catch myself. Of course she has. He’s hardly been living
the life of a monk for the past ten years whilst I’ve been
marrying and giving birth to three infants. I catch up my
hair with a clip, feeling a little disoriented by the speed
things are moving.
‘Come on. You have no idea how many strings I had to
pull to get you in at this short notice,’ Trace urges, as soon
as I come downstairs. He tenderly wipes a splodge of jam
from the corner of my mouth with his thumb. ‘Luckily the
girl who takes the bookings is a friend of mine.’
That ugly twinge of jealousy again. I give myself a shake. It was this kind of absurd paranoia that ruined everything last time.
Five minutes later, I’m being propelled across the
cobbles towards the glass door of the Sanctuary, a girls
only oasis of spoiling I have visited only in my dreams.
Liz and I always said we’d treat ourselves and book a day
there for our fortieth birthdays, get Giles and Nicholas to
mind the children-A fist of pain winds me. I take a deep breath, and open
my eyes again.
Dear Lord, what am I doing here? Wandering around
Covent Garden in strange clothes with aches in strange
places from, a night of sex with a man who is not my
husband whilst my children are somewhere in the wilds
of Wiltshire and Nicholas is - Nicholas is-‘Go on Trace prompts, ‘I can’t go in with you.
You’ve got an entire day, booked and paid for - massage,
aromatherapy, toe painting, belly-button cleaning, the
works—’
‘Belly-button cleaning?’
He grins, and my heart lurches as if I’ve just driven
over a hump-backed bridge.
‘Well, I don’t know what they do in there, do I? I’ll see
you at five, a new woman.’ His eyes gleam wickedly. ‘Not
that there’s anything wrong with the old one, if last night
is anything to go by—’
He kisses my flushed cheek, and I follow his longlimbed
stride as it eats up the cobbled street.
There are so many confused thoughts whirling around
my head, tangling into a Gordian knot of fear and panic,
that the only way I can prevent myself from splintering
into a thousand pieces is by refusing to acknowledge
any of them. And so I meekly go inside and submit to the
pampering that has been arranged for me, deliberately
emptying my mind until it’s as blank and cloudless as the
sky on a sunny day.
At five, pummelled and polished and smoothed and
painted, I am collected as promised, and taken straight to
Michaeljohn, where my hair is smoothed and tamed and
coiled on my head. And then to Gucci, where he has
picked out a dress - black, thank heavens - which fits me
beautifully, and is perfect for the film premiere (a premihreK) in Leicester Square, where I try not to hang on his arm too adoringly, too obviously. And then to Boujis, to
dance until four a.m., when he finally takes me, drooping,
home, and to bed; and, eventually, to sleep.
On Sunday, we drive out to Oxford for an afternoon
picnic - roast pheasant, grilled asparagus, truffles stuffed
with Bermuda onion confit and the smallest, sweetest early
strawberries, washed down with a bottle of cold Krug
Tete de CuvŁe - lolling on a riverbank across from a
beautiful, mellow stone college; not the one Nicholas went
to, that was further in town-Don’t think don’t think don’t think.
Trace finally drives me home to Wiltshire a little before
eight; and then calls me on his mobile before his car has
even pulled out of the gravel driveway.
‘I miss you,’ he says.
‘You’ve only been gone two minutes!’
‘I miss you,’ he says firmly.
‘You too,’ I say, sifting through the clutch of envelopes
on the floor, hoping Liz will bring the children back soon,