Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
for twenty minutes to get a demonic Metheny into
her snowsuit for the village creche, only to find Nicholas
has disappeared.
Evie lifts her face out of her breakfast bowl and displays
a Cheshire Cat hot-chocolate grin that reaches to her
ears. ‘Daddy said he’d see your pussy in the van show at
lunchtime she announces.
I look to Sophie for translation.
‘He’ll see you at Le Poussin for a vin chaud at lunch
Sophie sighs. ‘Evie, you’re useless. As if Daddy would
ever drive a van.’
In the event, had Nicholas arrived at the piste cafe at
the wheel of a white Ford transit demanding sexual
satisfaction, I would have been less surprised.
‘Snowboarding?’ Kit exclaims, when I called on my
mobile from the cafe lavatory to share the apocalyptic
news. ‘Nicholas?’
‘Snowboarding, Nicholas I confirm. ‘Not two words I
ever expected to use in the same sentence.’
‘Suddenly abduction by aliens is sounding perfectly
reasonable,’ Kit observes, ‘I’m looking at the whole business
of Roswell and Area 51 in a whole new light. By the
way,’ he adds meaningfully, ‘I noticed, when I was feeding
your rabbit, that you have rather a lot of messages on
your answer machine.’
‘Don’t, Kit.’
‘I don’t understand you,’ he says crossly. ‘How can
you not be curious, after all these years?’
Trace always did have the power to tempt, I think, as
his satanic smile fills my mind. But of course it’s out of
the question. I mean, the hours, for a start. The girls would need to keep photos of me by their beds so they didn’t think we were being burgled if they ran into me in
the hallway in the middle of the night.
But my own restaurant-Impossible. No point even thinking about it: so I very
carefully don’t.
No matter what hours Trace offered me, accepting
would be unthinkable; far, far too dangerous on every
level. I love Nicholas more than I thought possible; but
I’m not going to risk it all by putting myself in the line of
fire again.
It turns out he has rather a knack for snowboarding.
After two days in which he acquires a collection of bruises
that has Evie emerald with envy, it suddenly all comes
together for him, and on the third morning, he and his
snowboard join the rest of us ski-bound mortals on the
piste.
He’s even found time to buy a new khaki jacket and
grey cargo pants, I notice in astonishment. Thankful
though I am to see the back of the vile navy all-in-one
he’s had since we first met, this is all taking a bit of getting used to.
I’m also taken aback to see him sporting white earphones
- earphones. And this a man who resolutely
refused to switch from vinyl until 1994 - and listening to
a song by some girl I’ve never even heard of.
‘I wouldn’t complain Liz mumbles through her pain
au chocolat elevenses. ‘As mid-life crises go, buying an
iPod and taking up snowboarding is fairly harmless. And
you have to admit it suits him.’
Liz is right: the changes in Nicholas do suit him.
Watching my husband shooting past on his board, arms
outstretched for balance, knees bent, the wind whipping
back his hair - goodness, it needs cutting - I’m suddenly
punched by the thought: this is the real Nicholas. There
have been glimpses in the past - usually in bed - but in a
dozen years together I have never seen him as clearly as I
do now.
It’s always been the one sly disappointment of my
marriage, that I’ve never managed to breach Nicholas’s
fettered self-control. Edward and Daisy Lyon’s meticulous
British upbringing, it turns out, was more thorough than
I’d realized.
And yet - perhaps not thorough enough.
No. Trace Pitt can build the Taj Mahal in Salisbury
town centre and I’m still not going to return his calls.
‘Sophie, will you hurry up!’ I yell up the stairs, shifting
Metheny to the other hip. ‘I told you, I’ve got things to do
this morning, we’re going to be late!’
Sophie appears on the landing. ‘But Mummy, I can’t
find any clean knickers! They’ve all just vanished! I can’t go
to school without any knickers!’
Oops. ‘Darling, just grab any old pair from the clean
laundry basket. We can sort it all out tomorrow. The first
day back at school is always a bit of a rush, you know
that.’
Minutes later, Sophie thunders down the stairs past
me and piles into the back seat of the Volvo next to Evie.
I move round to the other side to strap Metheny into her
car seat. Scarcely have I secured the holdall-five-points
and-click-together-whilst-your-baby-squirms-resentfully
harness (I swear, it would defeat navy SEALS) than she
sicks up porridge all over herself, the car seat, me and -1
don’t believe it-‘Evie! What on earth is Don Juan doing in the car?’
‘But Mummy! It’s show and tell this morning—’
‘Take him back to his cage in the scullery. Now! Sophie,
help me get Metheny back inside so I can change her. Oh,
Lord, the phone—’
It’s my gynaecologist’s secretary, calling to reschedule
because an elective Caesarean has suddenly ‘come up’ for
which read an invitation to golf and a long lunch at
the nineteenth hole. Can I please come in an hour earlier
- earlier? oh, have pity - this morning for my well-woman
check. The secretary sounds deeply apologetic, but we
both know there is nothing to be done. The gynaecologist
is, after all, a man.
I could cancel my appointment altogether, but then the
gynaecologist will sulk, and make me wait three days to
see him next time I have an excruciating bout of cystitis
(which, if Nicholas stays on present bedroom form, may
not be too far away).
So instead I race to the girls’ school at breakneck
speed - ‘Mummy, did you see that lady’s face at the traffic
lights? She looked really funny, can we nearly hit someone
again?’ - deposit Metheny at Liz’s, and arrive back
home with two minutes to spare before I have to leave
again.
I usually like to make a little extra effort on the hygiene
front when I’m going to the gynaecologist (it’s like brushing
your teeth before having them cleaned, or Hoovering
under the bed before the cleaner comes) but clearly this
time I’m not going to have time for more than a lick and
a promise. I rush upstairs, throw off my kaftan - such a
sartorial lifesaver, I can’t imagine why these ever went
out of fashion - wet the flannel sitting next to the sink,
and give myself a quick wash down below to make sure
all is at least presentable. Flinging the flannel into the
laundry basket, I throw the kaftan back on, hop back into
the car, and race to my appointment.
And this headless-chicken chaos is just an ordinary
morning, I reflect as I spend the next twenty minutes
sitting behind a horsebox and grinding my teeth in
frustration.
I realize that Nicholas, like most husbands whose
wives don’t actually go out to work, secretly believes that
I lie around all day eating chocolate digestives and trying
on shoes. And he is right, to a certain extent, since this is
exactly what I would do - once I have taken the girls to
school, swept the kitchen floor, stacked the dishwasher,
hunted down dirty socks (my last sweep behind the Aga,
under Don Juan’s cage and, revoltingly, in the biscuit
tin, yielded four), put the washing machine on, dropped
off Nicholas’s dry-cleaning, played with Metheny on the
swings at the village green, put a casserole in the Aga,
mopped up the mess from the leaky dishwasher, called a
plumber, done all the washing-up by hand, pegged out
the laundry, put Metheny to bed for her nap, brought
in the laundry when it starts to rain, arranged a service
for the Mercedes, scribbled down a sudden idea for a new
sort of souffle, pegged the laundry back out again when
it stops raining, answered the phone four times to salesmen
trying to sell me double glazing, collected the girls
from school, glued cotton wool on a cardboard snowman,
written five sentences using adverbs ending in -ly, fed
the girls, bathed them, dressed them, read them a story,
put them to bed, discussed arrangements for his parents’
golden wedding anniversary party for forty minutes with
his mother on the phone, checked under Evie’s bed for
monsters with a torch, read them a story again, ironed
Nicholas a shirt for the morning, cooked our dinner,
washed up, tidied up, bathed myself and gone to bed.
Just line those shoes up for me to try on, I’m sure there’ll
be time tomorrow.
Kit says I should stop trying so hard, let Nicholas see
some of the frantic paddling below the surface instead of
just the cool, calm swan above; but I can’t, he thinks I’m
so capable, so organized, so unflappable. I couldn’t bear
his disappointment.
Thanks to the snail’s-pace horsebox, I’m ten minutes
late for the gynaecologist. The secretary whisks me
through to an empty examination room with a ratheryou-than-me
smile, and I whip off my clothes and pop up
onto the table, sliding my ankles into the stirrups and
trying to look suitably contrite. It doesn’t do to antagonize
megalomaniacs armed with cold specula.
I stare up at the ceiling, letting my mind drift. If I
were going to be Trace’s head chef - obviously I’m not, but if I were, there are some fascinating things happening in micro-gastronomy at the moment - oh, that sounds
dreadfully dull and scientific, not at all to do with making
strawberries taste of chocolate and potatoes taste like peas,
which is what it really is-(Relax, relax, he’s seen it all a thousand times.)
—and if anyone was going to take that sort of gastronomic
plunge, it would be Trace, I’m amazed it’s taken
him this long to open his own restaurant-(Oh, cold hands.)
—though obviously I can quite see how sardine icecream
in Salisbury might not-The gynaecologist chuckles between my thighs. ‘My,
my, Mrs Lyon, we have made an extra effort this morning,
haven’t we?’
I peer through my splayed legs at the top of his head.
‘I’m sorry?’
‘Always a pleasure when someone goes the extra mile.
All right now, try to relax, this’ll just take a jiffy—’
I puzzle briefly over his remark on the drive home,
squirming damply in my seat - so much lubricant, necessary
of course, unless one is turned on by the cold metal
probing of strangers; not that there’s anything wrong with
that, though it’s all a little Black Lace for me - but then as
I walk in the back door, the phone is ringing, and by the
time I’ve placated Ali, my increasingly tetchy agent, with
reckless promises of a dozen new recipes and a complete
synopsis (a dozen! By mid-February!) the entire incident
has completely slipped my mind.
The penny, however, drops with a resounding echo
when the girls get home.
‘Mummy,’ Sophie calls from the bathroom, ‘where’s
my flannel?’
‘What flannel?’ I yell back, my head still in the Aga
(from which I am extracting a slightly burned casserole,
not contemplating anything Sylvia Plathish).
‘The one that was here by the basin,’ Sophie says with
exaggerated patience. ‘It had all my glitter and sparkles
in it.’
I’m naked and about to step in the shower - oh, the
shame! - when Evie runs into the bathroom, her eyes
wide in her bleached, shocked face. ‘Liz is here and she
didn’t even see the shortbread you left out to cool she just
came running through the kitchen she’s still got her
slippers on and she says you have to come downstairs
and watch the TV now.’
A cold drool of fear slides down my spine as I grab a
towel. Instinctively, I know that something terrible has
brushed my family.
Liz is hunched forward on the sofa in front of the
television, her elbows on her knees. She leaps up and
rushes over as if to throw her arms around me - then, at
the last moment, seems to realize that this is inappropriate: for now, I think in terror, and stands there awkwardly fiddling with the hem of her bobbly old cardigan instead.
‘What, Liz? What is it?’
‘A bomb,’ Liz says helplessly. ‘Actually, five of them.
In London again, it seems they were timed to go off
together in the middle of the rush hour—’
‘Where?’ I say thickly, as if talking through a mouthful
of peanut butter.
‘Trafalgar Square, Marble Arch - it’s terrible there, oh,
God, Mai, the pictures - Victoria Station, Knightsbridge
and—’
She pauses. I can’t bear the pity in her eyes.
‘Holborn - oh, my God, Nicholas.’
How unoriginal, how desperate, the bargains we make
with God. Please keep him safe and I’ll go to church
every Sunday. Please keep him safe and I’ll give a hundred
pounds to charity. Please keep him safe and I’ll
never get cross when he leaves his clothes on the floor,