Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
the sink. Only by the whiteness of his knuckles can I see
that this is just an act.
‘Why don’t I go home and give you a call in the
morning?’ he says, his voice carefully neutral. ‘It’s late,
we’re all tired, and it’s been a long journey. Perhaps
next week we should—’
‘Trace,’ I say gently. “This isn’t going to work. Us. You
know that as much as I do.’
His eyes darken. A muscle moves in his jaw, but he
doesn’t speak.
‘You know I’m right,’ I press. ‘We’re just too different,
Trace. We want different things. It’s been fun for you
356
playing at being a husband and father these last few
months, and you’ve been wonderful with the girls, but it
isn’t you I say. ‘Not yet, anyway. We don’t really fit into
your life. I’m not the person you should have on your
arm. You should be escorting some glamorous, leggy
model up the red carpet, not an old married woman like
me.’ I touch his arm; he doesn’t respond. ‘That life isn’t me, Trace. Never was. It was exciting for a while, but it’s not my world. And this world -‘ I spread my arm,
taking in the paintings Blu-tacked to the kitchen wall,
the anoraks slung over the backs of chairs, the Lego in the
fruit bowl ‘ - this isn’t yours. We’ve both been stuck in
the past, seeing each other the way we were thirteen years
ago. But life has moved on since then. We’ve moved on.’
‘I’d learn all of this,’ he says, painfully. ‘The nappies
and the Pony Club and the rest of it, if that’s what you
wanted.’
‘It isn’t that—’
‘Nicholas he says heavily.
‘Nicholas I agree.
We both know there is really nothing more to be said.
Trace heaves himself away from the sink.
‘I should go he says awkwardly. ‘There is - there’s
someone I should call. Someone - nothing would have
happened if - anyway. I said I might ring. And I should
go’
We both know there isn’t anyone. But there will be.
‘Friends?’ he asks, his voice catching slightly.
“The best I whisper.
For a long time after he’s left, I sit at the kitchen table,
wondering if I have made the worst mistake of my life,
pushed away the man I love for a second time. And then
I finger the wedding band on my finger, and I know that
however terrifying it is to let him go, I’m right. I care too
much for Trace to condemn him to life as second best.
And for as long as I’m in love with my husband, that’s all
it would be.
Four days later Nicholas files for divorce.
I can’t believe he’s done this. Actually gone to a solicitor,
sat in an office and regurgitated the story of our marriage
to a virtual stranger, sifted through the dirty laundry of
our lives together for something to fling at me, to make
this outrageous charge of unreasonable behaviour stick.
How could he? How could he do this to me?
I bury my head on my arms, the ugly legal papers
scattered over the table in front of me. I can’t bring myself
even to read them through; the first paragraph was
enough. I can’t bring myself to move. I know I should eat,
get dressed, clear up the kitchen, but I’m unable even
to summon the energy to lift my head from my arms.
Thank God for Liz, answering my howl after I opened
the morning post and called her, dashing over to take the
girls to school.
It’s real. It’s really over. He isn’t going to come back,
throw himself at my knees and beg me to forgive him.
He’s left me, and he’s going to marry this girl.
A bloom of hatred wells in my heart, and as suddenly
dies, unable to find purchase. My despair and grief are so
all-consuming, I have no room for anything else.
Suddenly I can’t stop the tears. I keen like a wounded
nnitnal, crying for hours until I have no tears left, and still
I weep, dry, racking heaves. Darkness oozes through my
soul. I cannot even imagine how it might feel to smile.
Hours later, dimly, I register the sound of a car on the
gravel outside. A minute or two passes, and I become
aware of a presence behind me. I look round and see Sara
standing outside my kitchen door.
It doesn’t matter any more. Nothing matters any more.
I open the door, then retreat to the safety of the Aga,
wrapping my dressing-gown tighter about my body.
She takes a huge breath. I realize she’s nervous. How
strange. I can’t imagine feeling nervous, or anything else,
ever again.
‘Do you want him back?’ she asks.
She makes it sound as if she’s returning my ball. This landed in my garden, and I was just wondering-I stare at her for a few moments, at this girl - no, that
lets her off the hook too easily, as if she is too young to
know any better, as if she isn’t responsible for what
she’s done - this woman, I think, this woman who has so
casually picked up my life, shaken free what she wanted
from it, and cast the rest aside. An angry red spot, like an
insect bite, disfigures her chin.
I put the kettle on the hot plate of the Aga. ‘Tea?’
She hesitates, then nods.
‘It’ll take a while. It’s not like an electric kettle.’
‘That’s fine.’
‘I’m sorry I’m not dressed. I wasn’t expecting—’
T know. I should have called, but I thought you
wouldn’t see me—’
‘I wouldn’t I say, ‘if I had a choice.’
‘No.’
The silence spreads.
I gesture to the table. ‘Why don’t you sit down. I’m
sorry about the rabbit, one of the children let it out this
morning and I haven’t been able to persuade him to go
back in his cage.’ I rub at a patch of eczema on the inside
of my left wrist. ‘I can’t say I blame him, I wouldn’t want
to be cooped up in there all day myself, I’d let him wander
around in the garden but something might get him. Last
time he was let outside he was nearly eaten by next door’s
dog’
‘Evie?’ Sara hazards.
‘She wanted him to go organic,’ I say, sighing.
She smiles. Ambushed, I smile back.
We’re like tourists, trapped in a foreign land, trying to
find common ground - ‘From which part of Wiltshire?
Oh, how extraordinary, my son’s godfather lives not far
from you’ - so that we feel less alone. Safety in numbers.
The kettle boils; I busy myself making us tea, choosing
two mugs that aren’t chipped, setting out milk and sugar
on the table. Hurriedly, I heap the divorce papers into a
pile, and hide them beneath one of Metheny’s paintings.
The link between us, such as it was, dissolves.
‘What did you mean I ask abruptly, ‘when you asked
if I wanted him back?’
The grandfather clock ticks loudly in the hall. Somewhere
beneath my feet, Don Juan scrabbles, his claws
clicking on the stone floor. I don’t like her perfume: strong
and synthetic. It makes me feel slightly sick.
‘I need to know she says finally, staring into her mug.
‘I ain’t make a go of things until I do. I don’t want to
come home every night wondering if he’s gone back home
to you.’ The strap of her bag slides off her shoulder and
she pushes it back. ‘That’s all. I just want to know it’s over
between you.’
She isn’t here to put things right. She hasn’t come to apologize: if you want him back, here you are, he’s yours. She isn’t going to tell me it’s all been a terrible mistake. She’s here for reassurance: that I won’t steal him back from her.
A bubble of hysterical laughter rises to my lips. I cover
my mouth with my hand.
‘You expect me to help you?’ I demand incredulously.
Her cheeks stain. ‘I know it seems ridiculous, me
coming to you. I know you must hate me. I’ve given you
every reason. But you have Trace now she pleads. ‘You
don’t need Nicholas any more. Can’t you let him go?
Can’t you let him be happy with me?’
I lean both arms heavily on the sink, my back towards
her. ‘I’m not stopping him.’
‘But he needs to know you’ve moved on. He can’t shut
the door otherwise. You have to tell him—’
‘I don’t,’ I say coldly, ‘have to do anything.’
She swallows hard. I pull the edges of my dressing
gown a little closer.
I’m sorry,’ she mumbles. ‘I didn’t mean it like that. Of
course you don’t have to say anything. It’s just - I don’t
understand. Your marriage was dead, you have a new life
now, I know you must be upset that things worked out as
they did, but it wasn’t my fault—’
I spin round.
‘What makes you think my marriage was dead?’
‘But—’ she flounders. ‘But there’s Trace—’
‘No,’ I say tightly, ‘there isn’t. For a few weeks,
perhaps, after Nicholas left, he filled the gap. Or rather, -m tried to. Nothing, actually, can mend the rip in my heart that losing my husband to you has made. Nothing.’
She bites her lip. I’m suddenly reminded how young
she is; how little she knows.
Old enough.
‘Do you have any idea what you’ve done?’ I demand
fiercely. ‘Do you? The damage you’ve caused? Do you
know what it’s like to listen to your child sob herself to
sleep in the next room because her father’s left and she
thinks that somehow it must be her fault?’ My body
trembles with anger. ‘Do you know what it’s like to face her in the morning and see the accusation in her eyes, because you couldn’t protect her from this pain? You’ve
taken away from my children the one thing I wanted to
give them more than anything else: a happy, stable home.’
I close my eyes, misery rising in my throat like bile.
‘You’re not a mother: you can’t know. They’ll carry the
scars with them for the rest of their lives. They’ll take
this baggage with them into every relationship they ever
have. A mother wouldn’t do this. A mother wouldn’t
smash three little girls’ childhoods just for the sake of a
quick roll in the hay.’
She seems to shrink back in her chair with each word,
as if I’m pelting her with rocks. Good, I think bitterly. Let
it hurt. Good.
‘You think my marriage is dead because he slept with
you?’ I challenge. ‘Well, let me tell you something, Sara.
Marriage is hard work. Very hard work. If you don’t both
put everything you have into making it a success, it fails.
Sometimes it’s wonderful and romantic and everything
you ever dreamed it would be when you stood at the altar
and made your vows to love and cherish until death
parted you. And sometimes I say, my voice hard, ‘it’s
dull and frustrating and difficult and you can scarcely
bear the sight of each other. Sometimes you bore each
other to tears. It only takes one trip, one stumble, and it
can all come crashing down.’
I push my hair behind my ears, my hands shaking
with anger. What can she know of seeing ten years of your
life wiped out in a few short hours? Of watching the man
you’ve loved, whose children you’ve borne, walk away
from you to another woman?
‘My marriage was very much alive until he met you,’ I
hiss. ‘But you didn’t care. You saw someone you wanted,
and you took him. You took him.’
‘I didn’t make him,’ she protests. ‘He had a choice. He wanted me.’
‘What man wouldn’t?’ I laugh shortly. ‘You’re beautiful.
You’re young. You’re not his wife. Of course he
wanted you. But did he make the first move, or did you?’
She looks away.
‘You won’t always be twenty-six,’ I say bitterly, ‘with
your smooth unlined face and firm body. You think you’ll
be young forever at your age. Forty seems as far away
as a hundred. But it sneaks up on you when you’re not
looking. Nothing happens for years and years - and then
suddenly, wham!, you wake up one day and your hips
have got bigger and your lips have got smaller and your
breasts are halfway down to your stretch-marks and
what the hell happened? But he,’ I add, ‘he just gets
distinguished wings of grey at his temples and character in his face and secretaries’ eyes following him as he walks past their desks.’
I wrap my arms around myself, barely seeing her any
more. ‘You marry a man and give him children and tell
yourself it doesn’t matter that you’re not so young now,
that your body isn’t as taut, your face as clear, because he
loves you anyway. You let your guard down: you let him
see you snivelling with a cold or with your hair in rat’s
tails because you haven’t had time to wash it, and you
think it doesn’t matter.’ I pace the length of the kitchen,
frightening the rabbit under the table. ‘At work you get
out of the fast lane to make way for the bright young
things without families, reminding yourself that giving
him somewhere he wants to come home to is far more
important than a corner office or a promotion, that he’ll still find you interesting. You know that there are younger women than you, prettier women, more exciting women;
but you’re the one he chose to marry, you’re the one
he promised to love forever.’ I shiver. ‘You put him at the
centre of your life, at the centre of your heart, where
he should be; and then overnight, it’s all gone. Gone.’