Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
piece from the Duke’s Head. She’s a bit upset about it,
they’ve been together since New Year’s Eve.’
‘She should be bloody grateful,’ I mutter.
‘The thing is, Libby, love, you’ve got to play a bit hard
to get,’ Dad says, resuming his role as Dr Phil with
disturbing ease. ‘Chap’s not going to pay for the cow if
he’s getting the milk for free, is he?’
I’m not sure I can deal with this fresh insight into the
dynamic of my parents’ marriage this early in the morning.
Early for a Saturday, I mean.
I slouch back out of the kitchen with my tea, once Dad
remembers his manners and gets up to make it for me.
And thus passes the rest of the weekend. I skulk,
mooch and saunter, occasionally interspersing this frenzied
activity with a bout of ambling, meandering, roaming
or rambling, as the mood takes me. There are even
moments of slumping and drooping, just for variety.
I check for text messages so often I’m surprised my
phone doesn’t howl, ‘Gerroff Me!’ and leap out of sight
behind the sofa when I walk in the room.
On Sunday I call Amy. ‘What?’ she says sharply.
‘Way to go, Ames. I love you too.’
‘I’m waiting for a call she snaps.
‘Who from?’
She hesitates. ‘Terry, if you must know.’
‘You’re at your parents’ again, aren’t you?’ I speculate.
‘How did you know?’
I sigh. ‘Lucky guess. So, did Terry say he’d ring you?’
‘No. But he might.’
‘Does he usually call you at weekends?’
‘Does Nick usually call you?’
There’s a silence as we contemplate our respective
adulterers. Not for the first time, I am struck by our self
deluding masochism. There are plenty of men out there
h.iving affairs with married women, but I bet they’re not
benched at their parents’ houses chewing their fingernails
back to the elbows waiting for her to ring. I bet they’re
having a good ole time, hanging with their mates down
the pub, sinking a few whilst they wait till it’s late enough
to go clubbing, where they’ll undoubtedly end up pulling
a fit teenager and getting laid just to keep their hand in.
Sure as shit they’re not riding the pine in suburbia.
‘Are you going to the Law Society dinner next month?’
Amy asks suddenly.
‘Hadn’t thought about it. Probably. Why?’
‘Well. It’s plus spouses,’ she says meaningfully.
So Nick will bring the ditz. ‘Maybe we can take turns
with him I suggest.
‘You won’t be so flippant after four years Amy
reproves. ‘Look, I have to go. Terry might be trying to get
through. I’ll talk to you on Monday.’
I wander disconsolately into the kitchen, where my
mother is peeling potatoes for Sunday lunch. There’s no
way I’ll still be doing this in four years. Jesus, I don’t
intend to still be doing it in four months. I’m not going
to end up like Amy, wasting my life waiting for a man
who’s never going to make the break. It should never
have got this intense in the first place. It was supposed to
be a bit of fun, good conversation and some way-fantastic
sex. I wasn’t supposed to fall in love with the bastard.
‘Don’t hover, Sara, it’s distracting says my mother.
‘Sorry.’
She hands me a knife and points to the vegetable rack.
‘Might as well make yourself useful with the sprouts now
you’re here.’
For ten minutes or so, we peel and chop in silence.
I can’t say it’s companionable; my relationship with my
mother is, at best, a wary truce. At worst, it puts the
Middle East conflict to shame.
‘Man trouble, is it?’ my mother sniffs.
‘Is what?’
She reaches past me to put another potato in a saucepan
of cold water. ‘You’ve been mooching round the
house all weekend with a face like a wet Sunday. That
phone is practically attached to your hip. You were like
this over young Martin, as I recall.’
‘I was notY
‘Have it your own way.’
I slice sprout stalks with unnecessary vigour.
‘Not interested, is he?’ my mother says after a moment. Scrape, peel.
‘Who?’
She plops another spud in the pan. ‘The man you’re
eating your heart out over.’
‘Yes, he’s interested, thank you,’ I say, stung.
‘Married, then?’
‘Dammit, Mum! Now look what you made me do!’
‘Don’t bleed on the sprouts, dear.’ She hands me a
piece of kitchen towel; I ignore it and suck my finger.
‘Girls your age don’t choose to spend the weekend with
their parents unless he’s either not interested or married.’
I’m shocked: both by the unexpected perspicacity of
what she’s said and the fact that she’s said it at all. My
mother and I don’t go for soul-baring and girlie intimacy.
She tells me she loves me with Hermes scarves and Prada
backpacks. I show her I love her by wearing them.
I’ve always envied Amy’s warm, close relationship
with her mother. She told me once that when she goes
home at the weekend, her mother sits on the loo seat and
chats to her whilst she’s in the bath. The image of cosy
familiarity it conjured up made me so jealous I couldn’t
speak to her for a week.
My mother never asks me about my love life; presumably
because she has a pretty good idea of its nature. And
in fairness, I’ve always returned the compliment.
‘Married men aren’t fair game, young lady she says
sharply.
‘Mum, I know—’
‘Wanting someone is no grounds for trampling all
over another woman’s marriage. And falling in love is no
excuse either. Pass the salt cellar, please.’ She grinds with
swift, angry movements. ‘We all have choices. Men are
fools. It doesn’t take much to tempt them. It’s up to us not
to let each other down.’
I don’t know why she sounds like she’s talking from
experience. My dad would never cheat on her. He said so.
‘And they never leave their wives,’ she adds coldly.
‘Whatever sweet words they tell you to get you into bed.
Remember that.’
‘I’ve no idea what you mean,’ I say. ‘Is there any wine
open?’
She nods, purse-lipped, towards the fridge. I pour
myself a heftier glass than I want just to annoy her, and
go out into the back garden. It’s surprisingly mild for
March; I sit on the stone bench near the greenhouse,
sipping my wine - passable, given that it came from a box
not a bottle - and enjoy the play of watery sunshine across
my face. Dad has already turned the earth for his broad
beans; the air smells rich and peaty. Maybe I’ll offer to
help him plant them this year. I haven’t done that since
I was about twelve. I used to love crouching beside him
in my red wellies, pushing the big beans into the freshly
tilled soil with my thumb. I remember when I was six,
I couldn’t wait for them to grow, and snuck out of my
room every night with a torch to check on them until I
trod on a slug in my bare feet and screamed so loudly
I woke the neighbours. My mother hates that Dad grows
his own vegetables, of course; she calls it his ‘allotment
fetish’. She thinks the neighbours will assume we can’t
afford to buy them shrink-wrapped and genetically modified
at the supermarket. Poor old Dad. I don’t know how
he puts up with her.
I drain the wine glass and set it down on the bench.
My mobile is burning a hole in my pocket. The trip to
Rock might have been a last-minute thing. Maybe Nick
didn’t even know about it; maybe it was all her idea. Like
Valentine’s Day. It’s not as if he actually said he was going
to be in Wiltshire as usual this weekend. I just assumed.
In the beginning, I never used to really think about
Nick and his wife together. Now I can’t stop.
It was seeing them both at Yuzo’s. What I should have
done after I bugged out of the sushi bar was take a cab
home, eat a full tub of Cherry Garcia, and finish the bottle
of vodka in front of The Way We Were. What I actually did was skulk around Yuzo’s for two hours in the freezing cold feeling sorry for myself and dreaming up ways to
castrate the bastard with piano wire. I saw them come
out, his arm wrapped protectively around her teeny-tiny
shoulders. They stopped for a moment in the street and
kissed. Brief, but affectionate: you could tell. He stroked
her cheek afterwards. Not the actions of a man who’s
sleeping with his junior partner on the side. Not the
actions of a man who isn’t sleeping with his wife.
Watching them, I felt as if I’d been punched in the
stomach. My head hurt. How could he lead me on like
this; how could he lie to me like this? Make me think-Think what, exactly?
He never said he’d leave his wife. What did you expect, you love-struck cow? That he was going to fall in love with you too and suddenly it’d all be different?
I finger my phone through my fleece pocket. He could
it least ring. That couldn’t be too hard, could it? To make
one simple phone call now and again?
I should never have let it all start up again. I’d been
doing fine up to that afternoon in the conference room,
even if I’d nearly passed out from the pain of not peeing
so he couldn’t catch me by the toilets. Well, not fine; but I’d managed to avoid being alone with him, anyway.
1 hadn’t slit my wrists.
And then he touches me, and every sensible, lookboth-ways,
self-preserving thought flies out of my head.
Some men never listen to you in bed; in the end you
give up asking for what you want. It’s like when you
mishear someone’s name, and you ask them to repeat
themselves: do it more than twice and it starts to get
embarrassing. Why do some men always think they
know what you want better than you do? You can be getting
it on, moments away from orgasm, and you moan,
‘Right there, don’t stop!’ and they think, oh, she likes that,
then she’ll really like this; and they stop and do something
different. I want to take out a full-page newspaper
ad’: when I say, ‘Right there, don’t stop!’, I mean, ‘RIGHT
THERE, DON’T STOP!’
With Nick, sex just gets better every time. I’ve never
felt so connected to another person in my life; it’s like he’s
inside my head. But now scary, grownup feelings have
got all jumbled up with that mind-blowing sex. I don’t
want to give him back any more. I don’t want to share
him. Everything’s changed. And I don’t know what to do
about it.
Suddenly I desperately need to hear his voice. I just
want to know he’s missing me, too. I break my cardinal
rule: I drink and dial.
It rings twentyfour times before he answers. And
then-‘Sara, what the hell are you doing calling me at home?’
Talk about reality check. He sounds really annoyed.
Dammit, this was a fucking, fucking stupid thing to do.
What was I thinking?
‘Oh, God, Nick, I’m so sorry,’ I say quickly. ‘I didn’t
mean to call you; I must’ve hit redial by mistake. Jesus,
I hope I didn’t cause a problem - I’m really sorry.’
To my intense relief, he actually buys it. ‘Never mind,
I’ve done that enough times myself. Is everything OK?’
‘I suppose. I’m at my parents. Dullsville, you have no
idea. They want me to come down on Easter Sunday for
some village egg race or something; as if I pause, steeling myself to ask the question. Don’t lie to me, please don’t lie. ‘How’s it going in Wiltshire?’
‘What? Oh, yes, Wiltshire. Fine, fine. Look, I’ve got to
go. I’ll see you on Tuesday—’
‘Can you come round after work?’
I slam my fist against the stone bench. I hate how weak
and desperate that sounds. What’s happening to me? I
should be tearing him a new one right now, not going
back and begging for more.
‘Maybe. Look, I have to go.’
Bastard. Bastard, bastard, bastard.
Staying with a man who lies to someone else is dumb
enough. Staying with a man who lies to you is just plain
retarded.
Maybe he was telling the truth about Valentine’s Day;
perhaps she did just turn up at his office. Which is a little
out there in itself. Either she’s a suspicious bitch or their
relationship isn’t quite the Cold War standoff he likes to
make out. But he sure as shit lied to me about spending a
long weekend alone with her in Cornwall.
And I’m not going to call him on it.
Without even noticing it happen, I’ve crossed the line.
I can’t give him up now; it’s as simple as that. I want him
for myself. I want him to leave his wife, walk out on his
kids, move in with me and for us to live happily ever
after. I want his ring, his name, the whole shebang. Even
though I know it’s selfish and wicked and will break the
heart of not just his wife, but the three innocent little girls whose picture he touches, like a talisman, every time he
opens his wallet.
It’s not that I don’t care. I used to think I was a decent
person; before I met Nick, the worst thing I’d ever done
was to back into a white van in the multi-storey car park
and not leave a note. (Which, if you think about it, is