Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
‘I’m - I’m sorry. I didn’t mean for this to happen she
whispers.
I jump; I’d forgotten she was there.
‘You could have had anyone you wanted,’ I say helplessly.
‘Someone free to love you, without a wife and
family. Why did you have to take my husband?’
‘Because I fell in love with him she says simply.
For the first time, I notice the shadows beneath her
eyes, the fatigue and weariness in her face. I recognize in
her expression the fear and uncertainty that walk hand
in hand with love. I can’t bring myself to forgive what
she’s done. But with a sudden rush, I begin - just begin to
understand it.
‘It’s not just about love I sigh. ‘Marriage.’
‘No.’ She folds her hands in her lap. ‘No. I see that
now.’
My nose starts to run. Using the sleeve of my dressing
gown, like a child, I wipe my face.
‘I didn’t mean to hurt you she pleads. ‘I know that’s
no consolation. But I didn’t mean this. I’m not a bad
person. I didn’t mean for any of this to happen. I kept
thinking I could stop it, that no one would ever need to
know—’
‘Enough. Please.’ Exhausted, I collapse into a chair.
‘Why are you here, Sara? Does Nicholas know?’
‘No.’ She shoves herself back from the table and
stands up. ‘I told myself you were happy without him.
Convinced myself he wouldn’t have come to me if his
marriage had been a good one. But that’s not true, is it?’
I shake my head.
And then, ‘He loves you, not me she says clearly.
I can’t breathe.
‘He’s never loved me. Not enough, anyway.’ She rubs
the heels of her hands against her eyes, and I’m reminded
of Evie. Somewhere, deep inside, I feel a dim tug of pity.
‘He wasn’t free to love me. I thought it didn’t matter, that
I could love enough for the both of us, but it doesn’t work
like that, does it? And it turns out she attempts a smile,
‘that I have a conscience after all.’
She hitches her bag on her shoulder. Her hand shakes,
and I realize how much this confrontation has taken out
of her too.
‘What are you doing here?’ I ask again.
She shrugs, then gives me a sad half-smile. ‘I’ve been
trying to work that one out myself.’
A fragile tendril of intimacy unfurls between us. We
are linked, after all, by love: for the same man.
‘May I use the loo she says, ‘before I go?’
I point her in the direction of the downstairs lavatory.
She’s come all the way here to offer me a choice: take him,
or give him back to me. Free and clear.
But it’s not up to me. I can’t go to him. He has to come
to me. He’s the one who made the choice to leave: he is
the one who has to make the choice to come back. Otherwise
I’ll never know; it will undermine everything we try
to build. I have to hear that he loves me not from her, but
from Nicholas himself.
She opens the lavatory door, and dips her head around
it. Her expression is a strange mixture of pain, embarrassment
- and an extraordinary, fierce relief.
‘Do you have any Tampax you could give me?’ she
says. ‘I wasn’t expecting it, but my period just started.’
Nicholas
Divorce is a difficult business. Never more so, may I
suggest, than when your lawyer looks at you with an
expression that suggests in no uncertain terms that all
men are bastards, and you’re left shifting uncomfortably
in your seat whilst your penis tries to make itself scarce.
Janis Schultz does not have a single photograph or
personal memento anywhere in her spartan office. A thick
slab of polished glass separates us, atop of which rests her
computer and one slim manila folder: mine. Its contents
currently number a single appointment slip and two
sheets of foolscap upon which she has written her notes
during this meeting in a uniform, precise hand. I know
that once this process gets fully under way, that solitary
folder will spawn letters, faxes, forms to be completed,
affidavits to be sworn, until the paperwork fills a box
eighteen inches deep. We will each, Malinche and I, be
required to provide copies of bank and credit card statements,
insurance policies and share certificates, details of
our income and our outgoings - not just those you would
expect, the standard, ubiquitous expenses like school fees
and mortgages, but the intimate, private details of our
lives, the window cleaner and the osteopath, gym membership
and private proctology examinations: all of it laid
bare for consideration and dry judgement.
The carpet is clearly new: the room smells pungently
of rubber. It tastes acrid in my mouth. I pinch the bridge
of my nose, my head aching.
Ms Schultz is known for her cool, detached professionalism
and tempered approach. I haven’t met her
before - one reason I chose her - but by reputation she
chases neither headlines nor precedent, and whilst naturally
seeking congenial rulings for her clients, makes it
plain from the outset that confrontational terms such as
‘victory’ do not belong in her chambers.
She is perceived as a wife’s lawyer. Her legal obligation
will be to me; but her hand may be stayed from the usual
gladiatorial excesses by a modicum of sympathy for my
wife. It will, perhaps, go some way towards ameliorating
my natural advantage in being so familiar with this eviscerating process. I want, above all else, for this to be fair.
‘And your wife can’t be persuaded to file a petition
herself?’ Janis Schultz asks.
‘I haven’t asked her,’ I say.
She taps her pen against the pad. ‘You do not wish to
wait for two years.’
It is no longer a matter of what I wish, but what is right. Sara is pregnant with my child; I cannot leave her to twist in the wind. My marriage to Mai is over, that much is
clour. The only honourable thing now is to extract myself
from it and attempt to do the right thing by Sara; whose
only fault has been to love me.
‘Very well. The grounds for our petition, Mr Lyon?’
I hesitate. Even though Malinche has found solace in
the arms of another man, I cannot bring myself to sue her
for divorce on the grounds of her adultery: it would be
monstrously hypocritical. My options, however, as I am
only too well aware, are limited.
‘I find in instances such as this Ms Schultz says
carefully, ‘a charge of unreasonable behaviour is often
cross-petitioned, where there is cause.’
I sigh heavily.
“There is cause,’ I say.
We will provoke Malinche by charging her with
unreasonable behaviour - ‘On the fourth of this month,
the Respondent rinsed out the milk bottles with tepid
water instead of hot, as had previously been agreed with
the Petitioner from the outset of the marriage’ - and her
lawyers will no doubt advise her to throw the book at
me, to insist that she cross-petitions on the grounds of my
adultery. At which point I will concede the issue of blame;
and secure the divorce.
Ms Schultz recrosses her legs. Beneath the glass slab,
her crisp grey wool skirt rides up a little, exposing an
inch or two of thigh. She is close to sixty; my interest is
academic.
I glance up, to find her steely gaze upon me.
‘Mr Lyon. I think that’s all,’ she says knowingly.
Her handshake is firm, masculine. She ushers me
briskly from her office.
I pause at the door. Atop a low bookcase is a small
cream cardboard box, of the kind in which handmade
chocolates are presented. A gold label affixing a ribbon in
place suggests these originated in Belgium.
A memory ambushes me: Malinche, waiting for me in
my office, perhaps a month or two after we first met. It
was late; everyone else had already gone home. She had
persuaded the cleaner to let her in, and then sat in the
darkness until I returned from Court, whither Fisher had
despatched me with a vexatious case with which he did
not wish to be troubled.
I walked into my office and smelled it instantly.
‘Don’t put on the light,’ she said, as I reached for the
switch.
I jumped as she stood up and took the briefcase from
my hand. Streetlights gilded her skin as she unbuttoned
her coat. Beneath it, she was naked, save for a coffee
coloured suspender belt and a pair of dark seamed
stockings.
‘Close your eyes,’ she said, her voice curving. ‘Now:
open your mouth.’
It took a moment to discern the mix of orange and
bitter chocolate. As it melted to a creamy puddle on my
tongue, Mai sank to her knees and unzipped my trousers.
She took my cock in her mouth, reaching up and feeding
me another chocolate. Dark chocolate, this time with a
cognac centre.
When I pulled away from her, fearing I would come
too soon, and pushed her back onto my desk, kissing her
hard on the mouth, I tasted white chocolate and mint on
her lips. My cock throbbed as I moved lower. She had
painted chocolate on her nipples; cocoa powder dusted
her pubic hair. It seemed to me, when I bent my head
between her thighs and plunged my tongue inside her,
that she had become chocolate herself, her centre a rich,
creamy liquid that made me long for more with every
taste.
I can never smell chocolate without remembering that
night.
I leave Ms Schultz’s office and hail a taxi. Without
giving myself a chance to think, I tell the driver to take
me immediately to Waterloo.
Salisbury station is deserted when I arrive; I have to wait
more than forty minutes for a cab to collect me and drive
me to Stapleford. Forty impatient minutes in which the
certainty which impelled me here evaporates, replaced
by a knell of doubt and fear thudding in my stomach.
This is madness. Madness. Mai would be quite within her
rights not to permit me through the front door. May well
do precisely that, in fact.
‘Stop here,’ I tell the driver suddenly, as we reach the
village.
He pulls sharply onto the side of the road and I get
out. ‘Thirteen quid, mate.’
I hand him a twenty-pound note through the window.
As he fumbles for change, I glance up the hill. The house
appears to be in darkness; for all I know, she isn’t even
here.
I realize dispiritedly how ridiculous this enterprise is.
Mai isn’t going to want to see me. She’s made it quite
clear that she doesn’t need me in her life any more - for
which I have only myself to blame. I can’t expect her to
suddenly trade back, as if we are children in the play
ground negotiating an exchange of Yu-Gi-Oh! cards. And
there’s Sara to consider. She’s sitting in London even now,
wondering where the hell I’ve got to, pregnant with our
child. What does my presence here say about my future
with her?
I lean into the cab to tell the driver to take me back to
the station, just as he puts his foot on the accelerator and
roars away into the darkness.
A horse snickers softly in a nearby field. Shifting my
briefcase to the other hand, I step onto the grass verge
to avoid another car, headlights bucking and swaying as
it picks its way down the country lane. A wash of ditch
water puddles over my socks and shoes.
In two days’ time, my wife will be served with papers
informing her that due to her unreasonable behaviour, I
require a divorce. I know from experience that once that
happens, there is no turning back. Our legal mercenaries
will enter the ring on our behalf to do battle, and our
positions will become entrenched. Such tentative cordiality as we have now will disappear under a storm of
disclosures and Form Es and our client believes and Without
Prejudice. However much I give her, it will be less than
she needs or deserves. Whatever access I am permitted
with my children, it cannot be enough.
If there is a window, one chance to turn back the clock,
it is now. p;
Grasping my case more firmly, I strike out up the hill. love Mai. I have to convince her of that. Throw myself at her feet and beg her forgiveness, whatever it takes. I’ll
sleep in the scullery with the bloody rabbit if she’ll just
nree to give me another chance. Counselling, therapy,
rluirrh, castration, whatever she wants. I made one mis
I
take: a huge mistake, of course, the worst; but I’ve learned
from it. Surely she can understand that? Errare humanum
est, after all. Of course it’s going to take time to rebuild
trust, I can’t expect her to forgive me overnight, but if we
both work at it, if we both really want it to work-The front of the house is still in darkness when I reach
it, but light spills from the back, by the kitchen.
I make my way around the outhouses, my shoes
crunching on the gravel. God, my feet are cold. I brush
past a bank of lavender; the silky leaves stroke the back
of my hand, tickling. I have trodden this familiar path