Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
amber. But it isn’t real. I have to keep telling myself that. None of this is real. However vivid and dizzying it seems.
Trace forgets that we aren’t irresponsible teenagers any
more. Other people are affected by the decisions we take,
and the mistakes we make. And so-‘Get up, you twit I scold, deliberately refusing to take
him seriously. ‘It’s a bit late for bended knee.’
His expression darkens. ‘Would it have made a difference?
If I’d asked you to marry me before you - before?’
‘No, Trace I say softly, ‘it was never about that.’
He gets to his feet, and throws wide the doors to the
roof garden. I follow him out onto the terrazzo. We stand
side by side without touching, gazing over the starlit roofs
of Rome, breathing in air that smells so very different
from the air back home: city air, yes, but with rich, deep
low notes of roast chestnuts and spicy lemon, mimosa,
bougainvillea and heady, feminine perfumes. Easy to get
intoxicated on a midnight terrace in a foreign country
with a man who, still, has the capacity to make your soul
sing.
‘You’ve put me in an impossible position, you know1
say quietly. ‘I can’t stay here in Rome alone with you.
Much less in the same room.’
‘You could.’
I sigh deeply. ‘Yes. I could. But we both know it would
be a terrible mistake. What happened thirteen years ago it’s
in the past, Trace. We can’t go back. Too many people
would be hurt; people I care about very much. You can’t
build happiness on someone else’s misery.’
Furiously, he swings round to face me. ‘What about
me? What about my misery?’ he says fiercely. ‘Tell me
you don’t still love me, and I’ll never mention it again.
I’ll be the dearest, most respectful friend a very proper
married woman could ever have. Just tell me, Malinche,
and I swear, I’ll never ask you for anything again.’
‘I love Nicholas,’ I say steadily.
‘More than me?’
He really is so beautiful. Tall, lean, just the right side
of louche with his bare feet and faded jeans and layered
T-shirts - really, he should be whizzing down a snowpipe
in Colorado - and that black, black hair sweeping back
from his forehead in a startling widow’s peak; and then
of course those extraordinary hazelnut-whirl eyes, fringed
with lashes that no man has a right to. It’s about symmetry,
isn’t it, beauty: our unconscious mind busy again,
matching, measuring, weighing up, looking for patterns
and points of reference. In a chiselled jaw or the curve of
a cheekbone; or a relationship between two people who
once believed themselves destined for each other.
‘I love Nicholas,’ I whisper.
He steps closer, so that we are drinking in each other’s
breath.
‘Then why the tears?’ he says softly.
Our gaze snags and hangs in the air, a dewdrop on a
blade of grass. The smell of him - cedar, spiced rum and
clean sheets - drifts over me like woodsmoke from an
autumn bonfire.
I shiver, and the next moment Trace has caught my
head with both of his hands and bent his lips to mine.
His kiss is so familiar, and yet so other. He tastes cool
and minty and smoky and honey-sweet. His stubble
grazes my chin; I feel the rough calluses of his thumbs
against my cheeks. My arm snakes around his back and
tangles in his hair and as he scoops me up and carries
me back into the bedroom without breaking our kiss, a
kiss that speaks roughly to every cell in my body, as he
lays me gently on that damask bedspread and starts to
unbutton my dress, it’s as if the long years without him
have been the betrayal, and this, this is where I’m meant
to be.
Of course I can’t stay in Rome now. I call Nicholas and
explain that we have, Trace and I, foolishly failed to take
into account the fact that it’s Easter, and this very Catholic
country has effectively closed down; apart, of course, from
those bits of it making huge sums of money fleecing the
hordes of devout tourists. I tell him I will be returning
home that afternoon; which Nicholas seems to accept
without demur, without any real expression of his opinion
at all, in fact, something I would find very perplexing
were I not so caught up in this hideous, hideous guilt.
Which is only exacerbated when Nicholas then organizes,
for the first time in our married life, a birthday party
for me the following week; and even includes Kit, which
must have pained him.
Grownup birthdays have never been very big in our
house; not for want of trying on my part. Nicholas belongs
to the half of the population (generally male) who thinks
they’re a big fuss about nothing. Which is rather a disappointment to the other half (generally female) who thinks
fax machines and new vacuum cleaners are not the way
to celebrate being another step closer to forty.
As we all sit down to dinner, which he has, astonishingly,
refused to let me cook, he hands me a long, thin,
scuffed cardboard box.
‘Oh, Nicholas!’ I exclaim, as I draw out the string of
exquisite hand-blown Venetian glass beads. ‘It’s the loveliest
thing you’ve ever given me!’
He fastens them about my neck, dropping a light kiss
on my cheek. I certainly can’t complain about his attentiveness.
I don’t think I’ve felt so cherished since our
honeymoon.
Which only makes me feel so much worse.
‘Come on, Evie,’ I whisper, as Nicholas moves to the
sideboard to carve. ‘It’s your turn to say Grace.’
‘I don’t know what to say,’ Evie hisses back.
‘Duh!’ Sophie says scornfully. ‘It’s only the same every
Sunday!’
‘Just say what I always do, sweetheart,’ I encourage.
Evie respectfully bows her head. ‘God,’ she intones
gravely, ‘why on earth did I invite all these bloody people
to dinner?’
‘It wasn’t funny,’ I say to Kit later as he helps me wash
up, whilst Nicholas drives his parents to the station to
catch their train back to Esher. ‘I know you and Louise
think it’s hysterical, but Nicholas’s parents probably won’t
accept an invitation here for the next five years.’
‘I would imagine—’
‘Sssh! Little pitchers, Kit.’
Sophie lolls against the kitchen island, ears waggling
avidly. Kit is always so wildly indiscreet; I dread to think
what outrageous gossip they pick up when he’s around.
‘Mummy?’ she asks. ‘When’s the right time to get
married?’
I’m grateful for the change of subject. I dunk a copper
saucier into the sudsy water.
‘I don’t know, darling. Why?’
‘Evie says she’s never going to get married. She says
you have to kiss boys if you get married. Mummy, when
is it OK to kiss someone?’
When your husband isn’t looking.
‘When they’re rich and handsome as sin Kit quips,
watching me carefully.
‘Kit! You have to date someone a bit first, Sophie
darling,’ I explain, elbowing him in the ribs. ‘Dates are
for having fun, and people use them to get to know each
other.’
‘On the first date, you tell each other lies, and that
usually gets people int’rested enough to come back for a
second date,’ Evie opines. ‘Even boys have something
int’restin’ to say if you listen long enough.’
I try not to laugh. ‘Not lies, exactly, Evie—’
‘Daddy wishes he wasn’t married,’ Sophie says casually,
running her finger around the birthday-cake plate to
scoop up the last of the icing. ‘I heard him on the phone
yesterday; he said everything would be different if he
wasn’t already married.’
My chest tightens. Nicholas was no doubt talking to
Giles, all boys together, moaning about the wife, that
kind of thing. But for no reason that I can think of an
image of the gold lipstick I found in Nicholas’s pocket a
month ago swims into my mind. He found it in the corridor
at work, he told me so. And of course I believe him.
That horrible feeling in the pit of my stomach is my guilt,
not his.
‘I can’t see why you feel guilty Kit complains, after I’ve
shooed the girls upstairs to bed and we stand on the
kitchen doorstep enjoying a furtive smoke. ‘It’s not like
you did anything to feel guilty about.’
‘Kit! I kissed another man! And what’s worse, I enjoyed
it - very much, if you want to know the truth.’
‘Darling girl, if that was the criterion for adultery,
there’d be very few people left married at all. Temptation
isn’t a crime.’ Thoughtfully, he watches me stub out my
cigarette and carefully wrap the butt in a piece of kitchen
foil. ‘You sweet romantic child, did you really think you
could sail through to your golden wedding anniversary
without the odd little slip now and again?’
‘I’m sure Nicholas hasn’t slipped1 say miserably.
‘Dear one Kit chides, ‘you didn’t go to bed with the
man, you silly girl: which if you ask me is where the
real crime lies, but that’s a different matter. In the end
you Just Said No, like the good little girl you are, and
ran back home to mother, no harm done. Although if
you’re going to cut up this rough about it, you might as
well have thrown caution to the winds and bonked him
silly.’
‘I very nearly did I admit. ‘Oh, Kit, you can’t imagine how much I wanted to—’
‘You’d be surprised.’ Kit sighs.
‘We were kissing and kissing and it was wonderful, and
then at the last minute he stopped and said, “Are you
sure?” and of course I wasn’t, and he was very sweet
about it, said of course he understood, it didn’t matter at
all, he didn’t want to rush me into anything I didn’t really
truly want—’
Kit exhales. ‘Oh, he’s good.’
‘He was,’ I say, deliberately misunderstanding. ‘He was
very good. He slept on the sofa - it was too late to book
another room - you should have seen him, his feet hanging
off the end. And then he very kindly ran me to the
airport in the morning and - and—’
Suddenly it’s all too much. I flee inside and crumple
on the kitchen sofa, wailing like a child.
Kit sinks down next to me and gently rubs my back.
‘Sweet girl, don’t cry. Not on your birthday. Nothing
happened, it was just a silly little kiss, everything’s going
to be absolutely fine—’
I raise my head. ‘But I wanted to sleep with him, Kit,
don’t you see? It doesn’t actually matter if I did it or not.
I wanted to go to bed with Trace, which is just as bad as
if I’d gone ahead and done it. It’s worse than if we’d had
meaningless sex and forgotten about it in the morning.
That would’ve just been physical, but I’ve betrayed
Nicholas emotionally. I’ve got involved with another
man: to all intents and purposes I’ve committed adultery.
Whether we got our kit off doesn’t really matter.’
‘Bullshit Kit says succinctly. ‘If you really believe
that’s true, why didn’t you sleep with him in Rome?’
I
hesitate, sniffing noisily. Kit hands me a tissue.
‘You don’t jail people because they think about robbing
a bank. This kind of self-flagellating nonsense is what
keeps the bloody Church in business. You didn’t fuck him.
You thought about it, you kissed him, and then you
backed off.’
‘But—’
‘Malinche, get over it already. Worse things happen at
sea. Just try not to call your husband Trace in bed; he
might not be quite as understanding as you were—’
We both startle as Nicholas lets himself in through the
kitchen door.
‘Well, I think I got them to see the funny side by the
time we reached the railway station,’ he says, shrugging
off his jacket. I’m not sure my mother’s entirely forgiven
us, but if we promise to—’ He stops, one arm still caught
in his sleeve, as he sees my reddened, blotchy face.
‘Malinche? What’s the matter? Has something happened?’
‘Bit of a ding-dong with Louise Kit says cheerfully.
‘I’m sure it’ll all blow over by the morning.’
Nicholas frowns. “Things seemed fine when I left.’
I feel absolutely wretched. Oh, what a tangled web we
weave! I hate deceiving him; and yet the lies keep growing,
spiralling out of control, each one sprouting two more like
some mythical Greek monster.
‘Mai?’
‘It’s nothing I mumble. ‘Like Kit said. It’ll all blow
over in the morning.’
1 hope so Nicholas says, hanging up his coat. ‘It’s the
Law Society dinner next week, and Louise said she’d babysit for us since Kit’s in New York. It’d be a nuisance if you couldn’t come, Will Fisher asked for you especially.
266
And with this mess over buying out his partnership, I do
really rather need you to be there.’
‘You are one of the few women I trust within a ten-foot
radius of my husband Meg Fisher tells me sadly. ‘Look
at him. Bee to a blasted honeypot
We both watch Will all but disappear into the cleavage
of a rather flashy young girl in a plunging blue dress. My
heart goes out to Meg. Does Will have no shame, that he