Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
‘whisking your adorable little girls off to theme parks and
playing dress-up and braiding their hair. Easy to play the
fairy godmother when you can throw money at the problem
for a couple of hours and then send them home. It’s all a
little different when you have to live with them twentyfourseven.’:?
I’ve never quite got used to my mother’s easy appropriation
of teenage slang.
‘Tell me about it I say crossly, going into the scullery
to soothe Don Juan. ‘Metheny slept in my bed for
two nights after they got back, and Sophie was an
absolute swine for days. Wouldn’t do her homework,
refused to clean out the rabbit’s cage, was beastly to her
sisters—’
‘Real life, in other words. Something Nicholas must be
missing.’
I toss a carrot into the rabbit’s cage. ‘What are you
getting at?’
Her mouth twitches. ‘I think perhaps it’s a little unfair
to refuse to allow them to stay over at Madam’s flat after
all. Nicholas said his mother found it all a bit much, so
soon after losing Edward. Maybe you should let them
spend the weekends with the lovebirds at their bijou little
nest after all. Their charming, one-bedroom, no-garden,
white, minimalist London flat.’
I gasp delightedly. ‘Louise, I can’t, they’ll run amok—’
‘Well, come on, Malinche she says robustly. ‘It’s one
thing to put the children first, but no one said you had to
be a saint. The little trollop pinched your husband from
right under your nose. It’s about time you rubbed hers in
a little reality. And it won’t do any harm at all if you drag
that ridiculously handsome new man of yours with you
either. Nicholas could do with a taste of his own medicine.
And before you start in about turning the other cheek and
the rest of that nonsense,’ she adds tartly, ‘I’m not the one
who threw up all over her sofa.’
Trace and I sit in darkness, the three girls asleep, finally,
on the back seat behind us. He cuts the engine, but neither
of us can summon the energy to get out of the car.
‘Well. That was a big hit, wasn’t it?’
I start to laugh, end up on a half-sob. ‘I’m so sorry. I
don’t know what else to say.’
‘I think unmitigated disaster just about covers it. Hey
he says, as I dissolve into tears, ‘hey, relax. It’s OK. No
one expects children to be angels all the time. The more it
matters to you that they behave, the less likely it is to
happen, you know that. Come on, Mai. I hate it when you
cry.’
‘But they were awful!’ I wail. ‘The worst they’ve ever
been! I don’t know what got into them, I bet they’re not
like that for their father—’
He wraps his arms around me and I rest my head
against his shoulder. I can feel his heart beating, strong
and steady, beneath my cheek. ‘Look he murmurs into
my hair, ‘it’s been a tough time for them. Perhaps it was
too soon for us to all go away together to France. I know
they’ll have to get used to it eventually, but maybe it was
just too much, what with having to deal with Nicholas
and Sara too. Give them a little time, and it’ll sort itself
out.’
I dash the back of my hand across my nose. Trace is
right. The past few weekends have been dreadful; certainly
for me. Watching my children - my children, minel - walk into that woman’s arms. Well, not literally, Nicholas did at least have the decency to keep her out of sight:
but it might just as well have been. I don’t know how I’d
have borne it if it hadn’t been for Trace.
And I deserve an Oscar for my performances on the
doorstep. Smiling, laughing like I haven’t a care in the
world, refusing to let Nicholas see the pain splintering
my heart. I do have my pride.
I dress more carefully to drop off my children than for
anything since my wedding day. I am not a victim. I am
not.
‘You’ve cut your hair,’ Nicholas said, shocked, one
Saturday.
‘Kit persuaded me to go to his stylist in London.’
Without thinking, I added, ‘Do you like it?’
I could have kicked myself for sounding so needy. But,
to my surprise, ‘I love it,’ Nicholas said. It’s very short,
very gamine, but it really suits you. I don’t think I’ve ever
seen you with your hair short like this before.’
It’s funny how the pain catches you unawares, just
when you think you are ready for it, have steeled yourself
for the worst. In bed, Nicholas would often twine my hair
around his fingers, telling me how much he loved it long,
making me promise never to cut it. He said he loved the
way it fell across my face when I was on top of him,
claimed it made me seem wild and abandoned.
‘I used to have it this way, before we met,’ I said
steadily. ‘But you never let me cut it. You always insisted
I keep it long.’
‘Did I?’
He didn’t even remember. Oh, dear God, when will the
pain stop?
I smiled sadly. ‘You used to insist on a lot of things,
Nicholas.’
I got back into the car and sobbed for the entire hour it
took us to drive to the beautiful country manor house in
Kent that Trace had booked for the weekend. To his great
credit, he never once indicated that he was anything other
than thrilled to be rubbing my back as I snivelled and
hiccoughed like a child. I don’t know if I’d have been so
phlegmatic if the boot had been on the other foot and it
had been Trace bawling his eyes out over an ex-girlfriend.
When Nicholas rang last week to ask if I could keep
the children this weekend, I was thrilled. Mondays to
Fridays are such a slog, getting the girls ready for school,
cleaning, laundering, helping with homework; it’s the
weekends with them that are the real treats. Well, usually.
I’ve really missed them the past few weeks when they’ve
been with their father. Nicholas and I are clearly going to
have to come to some sort of arrangement to divide our
time with them more fairly; perhaps a midweek visit and
alternate weekends. Oh, Lord, the horrid, soul-destroying
business of divorce.
Trace and I extended our original romantic reservation
at the farmhouse in Normandy to include the children,
and I had thought it might be the perfect time to introduce
them properly to Trace. Not just as Mummy’s friend, but
as - well, Mummy’s friend.
It started to go wrong the moment we got into the car.
First the non-stop battery of questions - ‘Why aren’t we
going to Daddy’s this weekend? Doesn’t he want to see
us? Are we going next weekend? Why don’t you know?
Can we ring and ask him? Why can’t we ring? Can we
ring later? When?’ - and then the sulks, punctuated by
demands to stop the car every five minutes for the lavatory,
a drink, to be sick. When Trace finally insisted that
everyone do up their seatbelts and hold their bladders
and their bile until we got to the Eurotunnel train, Sophie
muttered, audibly, ‘You’re not our father. You can’t tell us
what to do.’
Once in France, it just got worse. The girls hated the
farmhouse: the sheets were scratchy, the room too cold,
the food too foreign; they were bored, they couldn’t watch
television, they had nothing to do. Did they want to go to
the beach? Duh, raining! Well, how about a nice long walk
along the river? I’ve got your anoraks, in some places it’s
shallow enough to paddle in - oh. All right. Maybe a
pony ride, then; wouldn’t that be nice? It’ll be dry in the
forest, under the trees. They’re very friendly, you can feed
them if you - well, what do you want to do? No, I’ve told
you. Your father is busy this weekend. I don’t know what
he’s doing. No, I can’t ring and ask him. No!
When, on Sunday, the owner of the pension apologetically
explained that her mother had been taken ill, she was extrSmement desoU, she couldn’t cook us our lunch after all, c’est bien dommage, she’d quite understand if we.
wanted to leave early: we all leapt at the chance.
The drive home has been the only peaceful part of the
entire trip, I think ruefully, glancing at the sleeping children in the back.
Trace carries the bags into the house, whilst I rouse
Sophie and Evie, who stumble, drowsy and grumbling,
up the garden path, and carry Metheny, still sleeping,
upstairs to her bedroom. She doesn’t wake even when
I undress her and lay her gently in her cot.
For a long moment, I stand looking down at her, my
hand resting possessively on the side of the rail, moonlight
gilding the plump curve of her cheek, warm as a
ripe peach.
Our last-chance baby: named for the jazz guitarist
Nicholas loves so much. She still isn’t yet two. What happened to us? How did it all go so wrong, so fast?
I sink onto the window seat, watching Trace unloading
her pushchair from the car below. He looks so competent
and assured, it’s as if he’s been doing this for years. But
he hasn’t, I remind myself. He isn’t the father of your
children. However much you have, at times, wished he
were.Kit was right when he said I hadn’t got over Trace
when I met Nicholas. That I loved Nicholas, I had no
doubt. But I didn’t give myself time to heal. I simply
papered over the cracks, and threw myself headlong into
Nicholas; used him, perhaps, to get over Trace and so
started everything out on the wrong foot from the beginning.
When Sophie was placed into my arms, even as
Nicholas and I gazed at each other in awe at what we had
made and I drank in her pink-and-white perfection, greedily,
a tiny part of me wondered what my lost baby would
have looked like: how it would have felt to give birth to
Trace’s child. Once a year, I slipped away to the tiny
Catholic church in Salisbury to light a candle for him - it
was a boy, I’m sure it was a boy - and thought of Trace.
Every time Nicholas and I ever had a row, and we were
married ten years, of course we rowed, a secret, black part
of my heart turned, disloyally, towards Trace. Wondered
if he would have cancelled a skiing trip because of work,
or failed to buy a single Christmas present again, or
undermined me with the children: whatever silly, domestic
niggle had triggered the fight. My internal calendar
observed his birthday, the day we met, the date we
p.irk’d. I followed his exploits in the gossip columns,
I
telling myself the ugly swirl of jealousy was maternal
frustration at his refusal to grow up. I never acknowledged
it, even to myself; but he was as much a part of
my marriage as I was, an undercurrent always tugging,
tugging me away from Nicholas.
If I hadn’t been so focused on Trace, on his sudden
physical presence in my life after a decade of imagining,
I would have seen what was happening with Nicholas.
Perhaps, even, in time to stop it.
I reach up to close the curtains. Trace glances up as he
locks the car, smiles, lifts his hand. He really is startlingly handsome.
All these years, I’ve secretly believed Trace was my
soul mate, wrenched from me by Fate. I’ve thought of
Nicholas as the sensible choice, the husband of expediency,
the safe, steady, reliable option; loving and loved, of
course, but not passionately, not in the wild, untamed
way I had loved and was loved by Trace.
But Trace and I weren’t destroyed by jealous gods. The
rather prosaic truth is that we were never right for each
other. I was always convinced I didn’t deserve him: which
is why I was so ready to believe the worst. And he just
wanted to fix me.
Nothing has changed. He is still racing around, bending
life to suit him by sheer force of will. And if I no
longer feel inadequate, I can see how wildly unmatched
we are. Have always been. I don’t want a saviour; I want
a partner. A friend, an equal. I want Nicholas.
My hand shakes. All this time I’ve spent missing
something I never had, letting what really mattered slip
through my fingers.
Nicholas is the love of my life, not Trace. It is Nicholas I
love with a real passion, born of years of loyalty and
laughter and shared love; of tears and hardship, too.
Frustration and joy, contentment and boredom: that’s
what makes up a marriage, that’s what real love is all
about.
I close Metheny’s door softly. It’s not that I don’t love
Trace: I do. But not enough to make this work, however
easy and safe it would be for me.
He glances up as I walk into the kitchen and pushes a
mug of tea towards me. ‘Here, thought you could do with
this—’
My eyes fill. This is going to be so hard.
‘No,’I say softly.
He knows immediately that I am not talking about the
tea. A shadow crosses his face, replaced in an instant
by his usual, easy smile. ‘It was just a bad day, Mai,’ he
soothes. ‘A bad couple of days. It doesn’t mean anything.
Next time, it’ll be easier—’
‘No.’
Outwardly relaxed, smiling still, he leans back against