Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
you should know.’
Her mellifluous voice takes on an unmistakable bedroom
timbre, and there’s a sudden rallying cry in my
trousers as images of well-toned caramel thighs, silk
stockings and coffee-coloured lace flash unbidden across
my mind’s eye. My witch of a wife is well aware of the
effect she’s having on me, to judge by the laughter that
now replaces the come-hither tone in her voice.
‘Anyway she lilts, ‘you can’t talk to her or it won’t be
a surprise.’
I’ll give you a surprise—’
‘Now, it wouldn’t really be a surprise, would it?’
‘Someone’s feeling cocky I say. ‘What makes you
think I’m not talking about the latest council tax bill?’
‘What makes you think I’m not?’
yAre you?’
‘I’m talking cakes, Nicholas. Come on, make up your
mind before I have to put two candles on Metheny’s
instead of one.’
‘Will I get candles too?’
‘Yes, but not forty-three or the cake will melt.’
‘Cruel woman. You too will be forty-three one day,
you know.’
‘Not for another six years. Now, Nicholas.’
‘The chocolate-orange sponge cake, of course. Would
it be possible to request bitter chocolate shavings with
that?’
‘It would. Metheny, please take your foot out of
Daddy’s bowl. Thank you. How did the lovely Mrs
Stephenson’s case go?’
‘Seven figures I report.
‘Almost double her last divorce. How wonderful. I
could almost consider a divorce myself.’
I hear my wife lick her fingers and my erection nearly
heaves into view above the desk. ‘If I thought you could
procure seven figures from it, darling, I’d draw up the
papers for you I offer, groaning inwardly as I rearrange
my balls. ‘Can’t get blood out of a stone, unfortunately.’
‘Oh, that reminds me: Ginger rang from the garage this
morning about the Volvo. He said he’s fixed the whateverit-was
this time, but it’s on its last legs. Or should that be
wheels?’ Her voice ebbs and flows in my ear as she moves
about the kitchen. ‘Anyway, he doesn’t think he’ll be able
to nurse it through its dratted MOT in January. So there’s
no help for it, I’ve just got to gird my loins and finish the
new book, get the rest of my advance—’
‘Darling, I think I can afford to buy my wife a new
car if she needs one,’ I interrupt, nettled. ‘Sometimes
you seem to forget I’m a full equity partner now, there’s
absolutely no need for you to knock yourself out writing
cookery books these days.’
‘I like writing cookery books,’ Mai says equably. ‘Oh,
God, Metheny, don’t do that. Poor rabbit. Sorry, Nicholas,
I have to go. I’ll see you at the station. Usual time?’
I suppress a sigh of exasperation.
‘For God’s sake, Malinche, it’s William’s retirement
party this evening! Don’t tell me you’ve forgotten! You’re
supposed to be on the five twenty-eight from Salisbury to
Waterloo, remember?’
‘So I am,’ Mai agrees, unperturbed. ‘I hadn’t really
forgotten, it just slipped my mind for a moment. Hold on
a second—’
In the background I hear a series of strange muffled
thumps, and then Metheny’s contagious, irrepressible
giggles.
Life can be full of surprises. When we learned that Mai
was unexpectedly pregnant for the third time I was absol
utely horrified. Sophie and Evie were then eight and five;
we’d just got them to the stage where they were recognizably
human and could do civilized things like skiing or
coming out to dinner with us without spending most of
the meal crawling around under the table. Now we were
to be plunged back into the grim abyss of sleepless nights
and shitty nappies. It was only the thought of a son and
heir at last that consoled me, and when even that silver
lining turned out to be a mirage, I despaired. And yet
this last tilt at parenthood has been the sweetest of all.
Metheny holds my hardened lawyer’s heart in her chubby
starfish hands.
An echo of small feet on worn kitchen flagstones; and
then a squeal as Mai scoops her up and retrieves the
telephone receiver. ‘I really must go, Nicholas,’ she says,
slightly out of breath.
‘You did remember to arrange a babysitter?’
‘Mmm. Yes, Kit very sweetly said he’d do it.’
I have absolutely nothing against those who choose
alternative lifestyles. There is, of course, more to a person
than their sexuality. I just don’t quite see why it must be
forced down one’s throat, that’s all. I do not parade my
red-blooded heterosexuality to all and sundry, although
it’s self-evident. I simply cannot understand why certain
sections of the so-called ‘gay community’ - so sad, the
way that decent word has been hijacked - feel the need to
rub one’s nose in their choice of bedmate. However.
I accepted long ago that when I asked Malinche to
be my wife, Kit Westbrook was a minor but salient part
of the package. Praetmmitus pracmunitus, after all: forewarned, forearmed. And I am not the sort of man to start
objecting to his wift-‘s friendships, however unsavoury;
and in any event, Kit is certainly not, and never has been,
a threat.
We met, the three of us, twelve years ago in Covent
Garden. I had taken my parents to the opera - La Bohbne, if memory serves - to mark my father’s seventieth birthday.
Having hailed them a taxi, I was strolling alone
through the pedestrian piazza en route to the tube station
and thence to my rooms in Earls Court; I remember rather
wishing that for once there was someone waiting at home
for me. Despite the lateness of the hour, the square still
boasted its usual collection of street performers, and I was
just fending off a rather menacing young man mocked up
in heavy black-and-white face-paint and thrusting a collection
hat under my nose, when I noticed a unicyclist
start to lose control of his cycle. It swiftly became clear
that this wasn’t part of his act, and for a moment I
watched with morbid fascination as he swung back and
forth like a human metronome before waking up and
pulling myself together. I barely had time to pull a young
woman out of the path of his trajectory before he toppled
into the small crowd.
At the last moment, he managed to throw himself clear
of the spectators, executing a neat forward roll on the
cobbles and leaping up to bow somewhat shakily to his
audience.
I realized I was clasping the young lady rather inappropriately around the chest, and released her with some
embarrassment. ‘I do apologize, I didn’t mean—’
‘()h, please don’t! If it weren’t for you, I’d be squished
all over the cobblestones. You must have quick reflexes or
something, I didn’t even see him coming.’
She was startlingly pretty. Unruly dark hair the colour
of molasses, sparkling cinnamon eyes, clear, luminous
skin; and the most engaging and infectious smile I had
ever seen. In her early twenties, at a guess; fine-boned and
petite, perhaps a full foot shy of my six feet two. I could
span her waist with my hands. I find small, delicate
women incredibly attractive: they bring out the masculine
hunter-gatherer in me.
I noticed that the top two buttons of her peasant-style
blouse had come undone in the melee, revealing a modest
swell of lightly tanned bosom cradled in a froth of white
broderie anglaise. My cock throbbed into life. Quickly, I
averted my eyes.
She stood on tiptoe and gripped my shoulder. At her
touch, a tumult of images - that glorious hair tangled in
my hands, those slender thighs straddling my waist, my
lips on her golden breasts - roared through my brain.
‘Oh, Lord, you’ve ripped your coat,’ she exclaimed,
examining my shoulder seam. ‘It’s all my fault, wandering
around in a complete daze, I was thinking about the
walnuts, you have to be so careful, of course, don’t you,
not everyone likes them, and now look at you—’
I have no idea what nonsense I gabbled in return.
‘Malinche Sandal,’ she said, thrusting her small hand
at me.
I returned her firm, cool grip. ‘Ah. Yes. Nicholas Lyon.’
I coughed, trying not to picture her hands wrapped
around my— ‘What a very unusual name I managed.
‘I know.’ She grimaced. ‘My mother is this total hippy,
she’s convinced our names determine our characters and
the entire course of our lives - too much acid in the Sixties
if you ask me, though perhaps she’s right, you can’t
imagine a romantic hero called Cuthbert, can you, or King
Wayne, it just doesn’t work - but anyway, she decided
better safe than sorry, just to be quite sure. My older sister
got stuck with Cleopatra, so I suppose I should be grateful
I ended up with Malinche, it could have been Boadicea!’
She glanced down, and I realized I was still holding
her hand.
With a flush of embarrassment, I released it, praying
she hadn’t noticed the tent-pole erection in my trousers.
‘Of course! I knew it rang a bell. Malinche was the
Indian girl who learned Spanish so that she could help
Cortes conquer Mexico in the sixteenth century; without
her spying for him he might never have succeeded—’
I gave a sheepish smile. ‘Sorry. Don’t mean to go on.
Oxford history degree, can’t help it.’
Malinche laughed delightedly. ‘No, it’s wonderful!
You’re the first person I’ve ever met who’s actually heard of her. This is amazing, it must be Fate.’ She slipped her arm through mine and grinned up at me with childlike
trust. I stiffened, my loins on fire. ‘Now, how about you
let me cook you dinner to say thank you?’
‘Oh, but—’
‘Please do. You’d be quite safe, I’m a trained chef.’
‘But how do you know you would be? You don’t even
know me.’
‘I can always tell,’ she said seriously. ‘You look like the
kind of man who would be honest, fair, and most importantly,
optimistic’
‘Well, that is most kind, but—’
‘Do you like walnuts?’
‘Yes, except in salads, though I don’t quite—’
‘We were meant to meet this evening, don’t you see,
you knew all about my name and that has to be a sign.
And you like walnuts - well, except in salads, which don’t
count, no one sensible likes walnuts in salads. It’s serendipity.
You can’t turn your back on that, can you?’
‘It’s not a question of—’
‘The thing is,’ she added earnestly, tilting her head to
one side and looking up at me with those glorious toffee
coloured eyes, I’m trying to write a cookery book and my
entire family is just fed up with being fed, if you see what
I mean. Even my friends say they’d give anything just to
have pizza and I’m simply desperate for a new guinea pig.
You seem a very kind, decent man, I’m sure you’re not an
axe-murderer or anything—’
‘Ted Bundy was handsome and charming and murdered
at least thirty-six women,’ a laconic voice drawled
behind us.
Malinche swung round, spinning me with her. I was
beginning to feel a little bemused by the unexpected
direction my evening was taking.
‘Kit, at last! Where have you been?’
A saturnine young man in his twenties thrust a paper
bag at her. ‘Getting the bloody blue mood crystals you
wanted,’ he responded tartly. ‘Who’s the new arm candy?’
‘Nicholas Lyon,’ I said, overlooking his rudeness and
extending my hand.
The young man ignored it, taking possession of Malinche’s
free arm and glaring at me as he linked us together
in an ungainly mbiage a trois which - though I didn’t
know it then - was a precursory metaphor for our
relationship down the years.
‘Oh, Kit, don’t be difficult,’ Malinche sighed. ‘Mr Lyon,
this is Kit Westbrook, my oldest and apparently crossest
friend, and one of those very weary guinea pigs I was
telling you about. Kit, Mr Lyon just saved me from being
squashed by a runaway unicyclist, and tore his very smart
coat in the process. So stop being so dog-in-the-manger
and help me persuade him to come back with us for
dinner, he’s being far too polite about it all.’
‘Nicholas, please.’
‘I don’t mean to be rude,’ Kit said, clearly meaning it
very much, ‘but Mai, you don’t know this man from
Adam. You can’t just go round inviting strange men home
for dinner, even if they do rescue you from certain death
by circus performer.’
‘Your friend is right,’ I concurred regretfully. ‘You
really shouldn’t take such risks, although I’m not actually
a psychopathic serial killer; which suddenly makes me
feel rather dull—’
Malinche pealed with laughter. ‘See?’ she said, as if
that settled everything. As, in the end of course, it did.
I realized right from the start that Kit wasn’t a rival for
Malinche in the usual sense of the word. There was too
much of the Sebastian Flyte about him, and he was always
too flamboyantly dressed to be anything other than homosexual