Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
your children will greet it. Toil for hours in the kitchen
producing something nourishing and delicious that hits
all the primary food groups and they’ll push it around
their plates until it gets cold and congeals and even the
dog wouldn’t want it. Guiltily throw frozen chicken fingers
and crinkle chips in the oven and they’ll rave about
it for weeks.
I shoot upstairs to get ready. I haven’t time for the long
relaxing bubble-bath I crave - I haven’t had that kind of
time since I fell for Sophie - or indeed even to wait for the
hot water to make its leisurely way through the ramble of
furred pipes from the tank in the outhouse to the calcified
shower head in the upstairs bathroom, a journey roughly
comparable in terms of time and complexity to the Paris
Dakar rally. Instead, I whip off my clothes and brace
myself for the ice-cold scourge that passes for a shower in
this house. A six-hundrcd-year-old thatched farmhouse
in two acres of breath-snatchingly beautiful Wiltshire
countryside is romantic and gorgeous and just oozing
with history and charm, and of course as soon as Nicholas
and I saw it - house-hunting when I was newly pregnant
with Evie - we just had to buy it, there was never any
question about that. But it is not practical. Overflowing
cesspits and lethally exposed live wires are neither
romantic nor charming, and there have been times never
publicly admitted to, Nicholas would be mortified
-when I have longed for something brand spanking new
in vulgar red brick and equipped with the latest in
efficient brushed-steel German appliances.
Gasping at the freezing water, I scrape a sliver of hard
soap over my chicken skin, able to differentiate between
my breasts and goosebumps only by the fact that two of
them sport shrivelled brown nipples. I try in vain to work
up a decent lather until I realize that it is not in fact soap
I am scrubbing over my scrawny pudenda but a piece of
the ceiling plaster which has come down again.
By the time I finish washing my hair - with supermarket
bubble-bath, yuk and bugger, since wretched Sophie
has once more pinched the wildly expensive shampoo
that Kit gave me last birthday - my lips are blue, my
fingers have frostbite, and I feel like one of Shackleton’s
Antarctic expeditionaries. My dratted hair will frizz into a
hideous Afro if I use the hairdryer, and since it’s already
after five I don’t even have time to let it dry naturally by
the Aga in the kitchen - the only warm room in the house
-as I usually do. I’m going to have to venture out into
the bitter November night with my head dripping wet; I
will no doubt catch my death of cold, double pneumonia,
pleurisy and tuberculosis, but obviously this is entirely
my own fault for forgetting about the party in the first
place.
‘Don’t say it,’ I warn Kit, as I race downstairs in the
safe but dull little black dress I’ve had since I was about
fourteen, ‘no time to dither, it had to be this.’ s
‘Quite sure?’
‘Not a word, thank you.’
I dispense kisses liberally amongst the girls, fling keys
and cash and lipstick into my bag and scramble into
Nicholas’s Mercedes, then scramble back out and go
back for the monogrammed humidor I bought for him to
give Will Fisher. I hate driving Nicholas’s car, I’m always
so scared I’ll prang it or something, and although it’s so
wonderful and safe and huge - I feel like I’m driving a
luxury tank - I’m also very aware that even a tiny scrape on the bumper will set us back hundreds of pounds. I am really much happier in my old Volvo, so much more
forgiving; and every little dent along its sides tells a
story, it’s like a metal photograph album really, I know
I’m going to hate it when I finally say goodbye. But the
Volvo’s still with Ginger, so it’s got to be the Mercedes,
and actually - I’d forgotten - it has heated seats, oh what
bliss, at least now I’ll have a warm bottom when I get on
the train.
When Nicholas and I first met, I didn’t even know how
to drive. At twentyfour I was still gadding about London
on the ancient sit-up-and-beg bicycle my mother Louise
passed on to me when I followed in her shoes to Edinburgh;
although Louise didn’t actually graduate, of
course, she dropped out in her second year to go to
California and ‘find herself with her boyfriend (who
naturally made sure he got his degree before decamping
to join the flower children). The swine stayed around
just long enough to get her pregnant with my sister
before scuttling home to a lifetime of accountancy in
Esher, his brief flirtation with the unconventional firmly
over. Louise, not in the least put out by his desertion,
joined a Californian lesbian commune and gave birth to
Cleo in a pool as the sisters sang ‘Kumbaya’ in a circle
around her. She then promptly fell pregnant again a few
months later - ‘the lesbian thing never really took, you see;
when we started having our periods together the amount
of hormones swilling around was positively lethal’ - by a
newly arrived waiter from Florence, who this time did at
least offer, in very broken English, to marry her. Louise
thanked him very gently for being so kind, declined
politely but firmly, and came back home to Salisbury so
that she could have me at Stonehenge; not quite literally much
to her chagrin, even in hippy 1970 they wouldn’t let
her do that - but in a little country hospital near by.
Once, not long after I met Nicholas, I asked my mother
why she had never married after she came back home,
fully expecting some sort of Germaine Greer rant about
marriage-as-patriarchal-ownership (before she recanted,
of course, my mother has never quite forgiven her for
that) but instead, ‘You think marriage is just about you
and him Louise said, regarding me steadily, ‘but it’s not, it’s not a private romantic thing at all. You take on so many other people, too, a whole network of them, all their
problems and fears and difficulties. I never wanted any of
that. I knew I didn’t have the patience to deal with it. I
just wanted it to be us.’
I realized then that I didn’t actually know my mother
at all.
Nor, in a very literal sense, did I ever know my father.
But it’s from Roberto - Louise never did catch his last
name - that I got the impossible hair and an overwhelming
desire to cook almost from the moment I could pick
up a spoon; it’s certainly not from my mother - Louise
feels overwhelmed if I ask her to open a can of beans. It’s
no wonder I’m so skinny, I was practically malnourished
as a child; learning to throw a meal together was probably
as much my survival instinct kicking in as my genetic
heritage. If I’d had my way I’d have run off at the age of
seven to become the culinary equivalent of the little drummer
boy, working my way up through the kitchen ranks
from pot-scrubber to saucier to, if I was very lucky and
worked longer hours than a junior doctor, executive chef.
And at least I’d have had enough to eat. But with typical
parental hypocrisy - don’t do as I do, do as I tell you Louise
refused to hear of me leaving school early; she
filled in the application to Edinburgh herself. Feeling it
would be deeply churlish if a second generation of Sandal
women turned down the chance of a university education,
I did actually complete my degree; though even as my
pen dutifully churned out analyses of Chaucer and Byron
and Nathaniel Hawthorne, my mind dreamed of the
perfect souffle and a hollandaise that, even in the steamiest kitchen, never broke.
. After three very dull years I finally marched into my
mother’s womb-red healing room at the top of our house
in Islington, brandishing my examination results, and
crying, ‘I’ve done it, I’ve got my First, now can I go to
culinary school?’
Louise lowered herself gracefully from full plank into
cobra, assumed the child’s pose and said, her face pressed
into her yoga mat, ‘I’ve been wondering how long it
would take you to find the courage to ask.’
However, I discovered at culinary school that I was
more my mother’s daughter than I had thought; thankfully
not in the actual cooking, that came easily - perhaps
I was a chef in a former life: Napoleon’s, maybe, or
some Eastern potentate’s, I’ve often wondered - but in
my response to the wretched rules and regulations that
hemmed you in and pushed you down and, it seemed to
me, got in the way of doing anything novel or creative.
I chafed unbearably against the restrictive syllabus
whose principal purpose seemed to be to show plump,
unimaginative young women in Alice bands and pearls
how to find their way to a suitable young man’s heart
through his stomach. After two terms I quit and moved in
with Kit and his latest boyfriend, a shark-like bond trader
with dead eyes.
Tor pity’s sake, what do you really want to do?’ Kit
demanded one night when the shark was working late
and I was driving him potty whining - yet again - about
the curdled mess I seemed to be making of my life.
‘You know what I want to do I said tetchily. ‘I’ve been
telling you since nursery school. Open my own restaurant,
of course.’
‘You were three. I thought you’d grow up and put
away childish things.’
‘So were you. You didn’t.’
‘Acting is different—’
‘I don’t see why.’
‘Put that bottom lip away and stop being such a spoilt
brat. Acting is different, as you well know, because you
oin still have a life whilst you do it. Have you any idea
what opening your own restaurant would really be
like?’ Kit demanded. ‘Three-quarters of new restaurants
fail within the first year. You’d be working at least eighty
hours a week with no evenings off, no holidays, not a
minute to call your own, in an industry which has the
highest percentage of drug addicts next to dentists—’
‘Dentists?’
He waved his hand. ‘Never mind that now. The other
kitchen staff would hate you just for being there. Half
the men in the restaurant business still think a woman’s
presence in the kitchen curdles the sauce. You’d be eating
sexual harassment for breakfast, lunch and tea.’
‘All right, all right,’ I interrupted. ‘I do know, Kit. But
you did ask—’
‘You have a First in English and you cook like an angel.
What you should be doing, my love -‘ Kit said, his eyes
alight with an evangelical zeal I knew well enough to fear,
‘I can’t imagine how we haven’t thought of it before what
you should be doing, Mai darling, is writing cookery
books, of course.’
When Kit gets hold of an idea, he’s like a dog with
a particularly juicy marrowbone. At his insistence, and
more to get him to leave me alone than anything else,
I put together a slim folder of my best recipes, illustrated
with glossy photographs - shot by the freelance
who succeeded the bond shark in Kit’s revolving-door
bedroom - and submitted them to an agent plucked
at random from the Writer’s Handbook by Kit, fully expecting
rejection with a generous side-helping of derision
by return of post. But, unbeknown to either of us, the
agent Kit selected just happened to open my submission
ten minutes after returning from lunch with a panicked
publisher who had been bending her ear for two hours
on the subject of the gaping hole in her upcoming list,
thanks to their star cookery writer - a household name
with his own TV show and flatware range - eloping to
Guatemala with his sous-chef and huge advance; and
without delivering his much-delayed, and increasingly
urgently needed, manuscript.
Serendipity really is very much underrated. My mother
always said it was better to be born lucky than clever,
‘although,’ she’d add serenely, ‘it does help to be both.’
At twenty-two, I had a three-book contract, and then a
small guest spot on a brand new satellite channel followed,
and when my first book reached number one in The Times bestseller list there was even talk of my own TV
show in a year or two. I was the Hot New Thing and
everything was going absolutely swimmingly and then I
met Trace and for a while nothing else mattered. It was
wonderful, it was beyond imagining; and then of course
it all collapsed into the darkest, most dreadful mess. It
was Kit who pulled me out and told me I would get over
it and forced me to get back to work when I just wanted
to crawl into bed and never come out again, my heart
shrivelling with misery against my ribs.
And then, of course, I found Nicholas.
I hover on the restaurant threshold, shifting my bag
to the other shoulder as I look for him, anticipating that
familiar lurch when I spot his clean, chiselled features even
now, after twelve years - that same strange jolt