Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
in place for you that we had any chance of resisting his
application for the Decree to be made Absolute.’
‘Don’t let him see how much it hurts, Joan,’ Sara urges.
‘Walk away with your head held high. And don’t forget,
this isn’t over yet. By the time we’ve finished, he’ll have
to send his new wife out to work just to pay his maintenance
to you.’
I am not entirely comfortable with Sara’s fiercely
adversarial attitude, but it appears women know each
other better: Mrs Stockbridge certainly seems to respond
to it. Betwixt us, we prevail upon our client to accept the
advice for which she is paying us handsomely, and having
signed a brace of documents, the lady finally takes her
leave. I feel deeply sorry for her. It is most unfortunate
that she caught her husband and the babysitter inflagrante on her daughter’s sofa; had she not done so, I am quite sure the young woman would never have induced her
foolish middle-aged lover to quit his three square meals
a day and neatly ironed shirts for her own undeniable,
but fleeting, bedroom charms. No doubt the entire affair
would have petered out within a very short while of its
own accord. Now, however, the damage is done. Instead
of the comfortable retirement which should have been his
in less than three years, he will no doubt soon find himself
treading upon Lego in the middle of the night once more.
Emma, my secretary, knocks and puts her head around
the door. ‘Mr Lyon, I have the Wilson Form E, it’s been
notarized. Did you want me to send it out to Cowan Finch
in the morning?’
‘We’re getting a little tight for time on the Wilson
hearing.’ I glance at my watch. ‘It’s nearly six now; I’ll
drop it off at Cowan’s on my way to the station, earn us a
couple of days’ grace. Could you give them a call and let
them know to expect it before you leave for the day?’
Emma nods and withdraws. As I gather the Stock
bridge files and follow her out of the conference room,
Sara falls into step beside me. I don’t say anything:
because I cannot think of anything safe to say.
The song she sent me at New Year changed everything.
It said that Manchester was not an aberration, the result
of too much alcohol or the temptation of proximity. It said
that I wasn’t imagining the subtext of her invitation to come up for a nightcap. Sara knew precisely what she was doing when she used a song to ask a married man to
imagine what would happen if we kissed.
I don’t want this. I love my wife. I love my wife.
I want this. I want to sleep with this woman more than
I want to breathe. But I am still not going to do it. I am
Renaissance man, not a brute animal.
I exchange the Stockbridge files for the substantial
stack of documents destined for Cowan Finch, shrug on
my overcoat, and reach for my briefcase.
‘Here, let me take some of those Sara says, forming a
tray with her forearms.
I hesitate, but I am indeed heavily laden. To refuse
would be ostentatiously churlish. With a curt nod, I heft
the Wilson deposition into her arms. A breath of Allure
washes over me, and something else I cannot readily
identify - a sweetness that is Sara’s alone.
We exit the office and walk towards Holborn in tandem.
As we cross a narrow side street a short distance
from the underground station, Sara’s heel sticks in the
gutter. She stops to free it, slipping her foot from the shoe
and laughing as she tries to balance without touching
her stockinged toes to the wet pavement or dropping
the documents. Naturally, I pause beside her. And so we
are protected by the two solid office buildings on either
side of the street from the full force of the blast that tears
through High Holborn a split second later.
Had it not been for Sara’s shoe, we would have been
ten feet further down the main road. Precisely where a
thousand lethal shards of plate glass skewer down, any
one of which would have been enough to kill us.
It’s quite extraordinary, how your instinct for survival
takes over. I throw myself across Sara and propel the two
of us into a shop doorway, our ears ringing from the
explosion. The blast has sucked up all the air and ripped
the oxygen from our lungs. We crouch against the wall,
tenting our overcoats above our heads to block out the
choking brick dust billowing around us, gasping great
gulps of dry air as our eyes stream.
And then our ears pop and we flinch at the abrupt
wail of a thousand car and burglar alarms. Within minutes,
fire engine and ambulance sirens fill the air. The
injured city itself seems to be groaning. It takes me a
moment to realize the muffled sound is the collective
moans of the trapped and dying.
Sara and I look at each other. Our faces, hair and
clothes are thick with grey dust. I see no fear in her silvery
eyes: just curiosity, relief - and a spark of adrenalinfuelled
excitement.
‘D’you think it’s over?’ she asks calmly.
Her savoir faire in the face of such crisis is startling.
I can only imagine Mai’s panic in a similar position;
although, of course, it would be for the children rather
than herself. But Sara has the emotional self-control of a
man; I find it both refreshing and dangerously attractive.
We both jump as more glass and debris crash to the
ground.
‘I think it probably is, unless they’ve booby-trapped it
so another one goes off once the rescue services are here
I say, wondering when we all became so terrorist-aware.
“This may just be one of several in the city, like last
time—’
Another crescendo of shattered glass, this time just feet
away.
‘We shouldn’t stay here,’ I urge. ‘Christ knows how
unstable the blast has left the buildings.’
Sara stands up, brushing brick dust from her clothes.
‘My flat’s in Theobald’s Road she says, ‘ten minutes
away.’
A close brush with death has a salutary effect. One is
forcefully reminded of one’s mortality; the brevity - and
fragility - of life.
Carpe diem. Seize the day.
A brief glance down the road confirms that our office
building has survived relatively unscathed, apart from a
few shattered windows. My first instinct is to run to the
scene of the blast, where I will no doubt prove a hindrance
rather than a help; but a lone police car is already barricading the through road. And so there is nothing to save
me from myself.
ŚŚ.ť, My mobile phone has no signal - standard procedure,
these days, to shut down the networks during terrorist
attacks to prevent further remote-controlled blasts - but I
turn it off anyway.
Holding hands, Sara and I run towards High Holborn
in an instinctive - if absurd - half-crouch against further
onslaught. We jolt to an appalled halt as we reach the main
thoroughfare, stunned by the sheer level of destruction. It
is as if our capital has metamorphosed into the stricken
streets of Baghdad. Upended cars, pulverized buildings,
toppled street lamps; and over it all, a pall of thick, heavy
dust and smoke. I’m astonished by the speed of the rescue
services, who have cordoned off the entire site; but then
they have had a grimly thorough apprenticeship.
We cross Holborn, broken glass crunching beneath our
feet, and up Hatton Garden, paying little heed to the
eviscerated shop fronts of the diamond district. We barely
register the eerie silence in the undamaged backstreets,
the dearth of traffic and pedestrians. I am too busy unbuttoning her blouse even as we run, her hands are too
frantic against my belt buckle as we skirt cars abandoned
in panic in the middle of the road.
We burst through the front door of her apartment
building, and I push her down on the grubby communal
stairs. Shoving her skirt up to her waist and peeling off
her knickers, I thrust my knee between hers and spread
her thighs as I yank down my trousers. And then I’m
inside her, and my blood is pounding, roaring, thundering as I come.
After a moment, I pull out of her and grip the newel post to haul myself upright, panting as I shove my wilting cock back into my pants.
‘Well, that may have been good for you,’ Sara says
drily, Tjut it didn’t do a thing for me
She wriggles upright, pulling her skirt down smartly
and picking up her knickers. I rub my chin ruefully, a
little appalled - and thrilled - by the brutishness of my
behaviour. ; ‘Sorry. Couldn’t help it.’
‘Fuck you couldn’t.’
‘Fuck I couldn’t,’ I acknowledge. ‘But don’t worry. I’ll
make it up to you.’
‘You bet your sweet arse you will,’ she says cheerfully.
I
‘Here?’
‘Yes—’
‘Here?’
‘Christ, yes—’
‘Like this?’ She kneels up between my thighs,
strawberry-tipped breasts glistening with sweat. ‘Nick.
You have to tell me what you want. How else am I going
to know?’
No woman has ever asked me that before.
‘I love that thing you did - on my - with your nails,’ I
mumble finally.
‘This?’ she purrs.
‘That I gasp.
Sara talks during sex. Not mindless chatter or Nazi
instructions or porn-movie dirty; she talks to me.
Do you like this? What about this? Faster? Slower?
Is this better? Does this turn you on? I love it when you
do that. Can you put your mouth where your fingers
just were? Amazing, that’s amazing. Would you like to try
this? Or that? Let’s see if we can. I think we. God, that’s
making me wet. If you could just. Maybe we should try.
Oh, perfect, perfect.
Nothing bothers her. She giggles when our sweatslickened
bodies fart against each other. She laughs when
we get stuck in a particularly gymnastic position and
have slowly to unwind from one another limb by limb as
if from a game of Twister. A condom is produced from
her bedside drawer - ‘Lucky my period is due in two
days, or that fuck on the stairs could have been a frigging disaster’ - with insouciant efficiency: ‘Lemon-and-lime or plain?’
Afterwards, she rolls onto her side and lights a cigarette.
I stare at her, more shocked by this than by the huge
(black) dildo I found whilst groping for a box of tissues
under the bed.
‘I didn’t know you smoked!’
‘I don’t. Only after sex.’ She flips the box open. ‘Ah.
Just one left. Seems a shame to keep a whole packet for
just one cigarette.’
‘It does?’
She reaches for my cock again. ‘Yes, Nick. It does.’
I
It is only as daylight streams through Sara’s begrimed
bedroom window that I allow myself to think of Mai.
My wife. The woman I have just betrayed in the most
unforgivable of ways; four times, to be precise. Though
obviously this is nothing to be proud of.
An excoriating wave of shame swamps me. Christ Almighty, what have I done?
I get out of bed, careful not to disturb Sara, grope in
my jacket pocket and switch on my mobile phone. I listen
to the fourteen messages on my voicemail - all but one
of them from my wife - feeling increasingly sickened as
I register Mai’s mounting panic. Jesus, I shouldn’t have
turned off my phone. What must she have gone through
last night?
Glancing once more at the bed, I move quietly into
the sitting room - extraordinary how the girl manages to
be simultaneously minimalist and messy - and call home.
She picks up on the first ring.
‘Mai? It’s me.’
Silence. I wonder if my phone battery has just died and
check the display. ‘Mai, are you there? Dammit, these
lines—’
‘I’m here,’ she whispers, sounding half-asleep.
‘You saw the news, obviously I say, trying to sound normal. What is normal, when you’ve just broken every promise you ever made? ‘I’m fine, bit shaken up, as you’d expect,
but we were lucky, office lost a few windows but the
main damage was the other end of Holborn. It’s not as
bad as it looks on television, but Christ, it’s bad enough.’
‘But are you sure you’re all right? Where were you when
it happened? What did you do? Where have you been, I
tried to call you but—’
I feel a surge of guilt-stewed impatience. Does she have
to make such a drama out of it?
And then appalled remorse: she’s been up all night
sick with worry. Whereas I-‘I’m fine. Look, I’m sorry you were worried but - hang
on.’
Sara has stumbled out of bed and into the bathroom,
leaving the door ajar. I don’t particularly want her to
know I’m phoning my wife - no need to rub salt into the
wound - but more importantly, I don’t want Mai to hear
another woman’s ablutions. I move into the tiny hallway
and shut the door. ‘Mai, it’s been a hell of a night I
mutter, cupping the phone. ‘I know you must have been
going frantic, but it was out of my hands. I’ll do my best
to get home as soon as I can, but you can imagine what