Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
at which point a handsome, well-upholstered woman in
her mid-fifties - a fellow fixture of the seven-eight train
- enters the carriage. She is, like me, an avid enthusiast of The Times’s acrostic; over the years we’ve grown quietly accustomed to exchanging newspapers shortly after she
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boards the train so that we may compare notes, returning
them to one another five minutes before arriving at Waterloo.
I assume she is also a lawyer or barrister, since I have
occasionally observed her working on ribboned briefs
herself; but since we have never actually spoken, I can’t
be sure.
Since all the seats are taken, I yield mine; she nods her
thanks and takes it without fuss. How much simpler is
life when there are certain rules and all know and adhere
to them.
Two teenage girls in sleeveless padded jackets and
combat trousers - I’ve never warmed to this fashion for
down-and-out androgyny - exchange smirks as I take
my place in the aisle. I catch a glimpse of my reflection in
the train window and suddenly see myself as they must
do: a dull, old-fashioned, middle-aged businessman in a
buttoned-up overcoat whose idea of rebelliousness is putting
foreign coins in a parking meter. I wonder bleakly if
this is how I appear to Sara. She can’t be more than a
few years older than these two.
As every morning for the last month, I feel a guilty,
appalled thrill of anticipation as I walk into the office. I
refuse to look at the coat rack to see if her cinnamon wool
coat is already there.
A loop of wilting silver tinsel is suspended like a
hangman’s noose above Emma’s empty desk. I secure the
limp tinsel to the ceiling as I pass -1 daren’t leave such a
potent symbol in plain view of my less stable clients and
take sanctuary in my resolutely unadorned, unfestive
office.
‘Scrooge,’ Mai declared last weekend, when I refused
lo climb fifty feet up the decaying oak tree at the bottom
of the garden to cut some sprigs of mistletoe growing on
its upper boughs.
I refrained from commenting on the pagan nature of
this particular Christmas tradition, or the stickiness of the
bloody berries when trodden by three small children
throughout the house. Instead, I drew my wife’s attention
to the twin facts of our monolithic mortgage, in which we
have yet to make a significant dent, and my less-than
monolithic life insurance.
‘All right, you can buy a bunch at the garage down the
road she conceded, after a considered moment, ‘now
that’s not going to threaten our financial security, is it?’
‘You haven’t see the prices they’re asking I said
darkly.
At home, where I cannot hope to prevail against four
women, I have surrendered on the mistletoe - and the
rooftop fairy-lights, holly on the picture rails (and, shortly
thereafter, embedded in the bare foot), paper chains,
strings of gruesome Christmas cards, and the loathsome red poinsettias which Kit insists on giving us every year, just to annoy me; but my office is my own. I will have
neither tinsel nor cards depicting drunken elves being
pulled over on the hard shoulder of the M25. It’s not
that I’m a killjoy; actually, I love Christmas - the real Christmas, hard to find these days: homemade mince pies and mulled wine, satsumas in stockings and bowls of
Brazil nuts, carol singers who know more than the first two lines of ‘Good King Wenceslas’, midnight Mass; and most wonderful of all, the expression on my daughters’
faces when they race downstairs in the morning and
discover that Father Christmas (‘Santa Claus’, like trickor-treating and iced tea, firmly belongs four thousand
miles away across the Atlantic) has filled to overflowing
the pillowcases they left in the fireplace along with a raw
carrot and warming glass of Harvey’s Bristol Cream.
What I cannot abide is being wished a ‘Merry Xmas’ or,
worse, Happy Holidays - by a lip-serving atheist who
thinks it perfectly reasonable to put a plastic whistle into
a toilet-roll tube with a leftover fortune-cookie slip and
malfunctioning banger, and then charge me fifty pounds
for a dozen crackers without which my children will
consider their mother’s sublime Christmas dinner a bitter
disappointment. If that makes me Scrooge, very well - it’s
an epithet I can live with.
I sit down at my desk and slit open my post. For a
short while I deal with one or two urgent letters, dictating
responses for Emma to type up later, and return a couple
of telephone calls; but I cannot wall myself in my office
forever. Somehow, I have to learn to temper my atavistic
response to Sara. This situation cannot continue.
At two minutes to ten o’clock I gird my loins - rather
literally, given the permanent semi-erection I seem to be
sporting these days - and join the other partners in the
conference room for our weekly case review, suppressing
a flicker of irritation when I see that Joan and David are
not alone. Will Fisher may have technically retired, but
that hasn’t stopped him turning up every Friday for the
past four weeks; and since we are still in the process of
putting the finance in place to buy out his partnership, we
must perforce indulge his dead man’s hand on the tiller.
‘Nicholas, good to see you!’ Fisher exclaims as I set
down my files.
‘Good morning, Will. What a pleasant surprise.’
‘Just thought I’d pop in and see how you’re all getting
along without me,’ Fisher says jovially, as he has done
every week. ‘Probably all wishing I’d just bugger off and
play golf and leave you to get on with it, hmm?’
There’s a brief moment of silence before it becomes
apparent that denials are required. Naturally young David
is the first to slither up to the plate. He could save Fisher
a fortune in proctology examinations were he medically
qualified. It’s hard to believe he’s the son of one of the
most gifted and charismatic divorce lawyers I
have ever
met. Losing Andrew Raymond to leukaemia at the age
of just fifty-four was a tragedy on both a personal and
professional level; that this oleaginous, talentless squirt
should be his genetic legacy verges on the criminal.
The door opens behind me, and I tense at the faint
scent of ‘Allure’. I was at the Chanel counter in Harrods
buying Mai’s favourite - ‘No 5’ - for our wedding anniversary
last week, when a salesgirl near me sprayed
another fragrance onto a nearby customer’s wrist. I recognized
it instantly as Sara’s scent. On some insane impulse
I added a large bottle to my other purchases; even now
it is delighting the ladies of Oxfam, to whom I donated it
in panic on my way home.
‘Ah, the lovely lady herself!’ Fisher cries, leaping up to
usher Sara to the table. ‘Have a seat, my dear, have a seat.
Joan, if you wouldn’t mind moving along - there we are,
young lady, that’s right, next to me.’
Joan glares, but shifts to the next chair. As Sara takes
her seat, her skirt rides a couple of inches up her thighs,
revealing a tantalizing glimpse of lace stocking top.
I don’t return her pleasant smile, busying myself with
my case notes.
Joan launches into her usual polemic on the subject of
I
client credit; more precisely, our over-extension thereof.
A mediocre lawyer but stridently efficient manager, she
recognized early in her legal career where her true talents
lay and planned accordingly. A hefty legacy from her
father enabled her to harness herself to two able, but
impoverished, young lawyers, Will Fisher and Andrew
Raymond, who founded the firm with the happy combination
of her money and their talent; I came on board a
decade later. Effectively a sleeping partner, Joan rarely
interferes in client matters, but she is as abrasive in
manner as Fisher is genial. None the less, under her
watchful stewardship, Fisher Raymond Lyon has become
one of the most profitable small niche firms in the country.
Joan voted, unsurprisingly, against employing Sara.
However, with David so far up Fisher’s arse that he could
kiss his tonsils, and the old man chronically smitten by
Sara’s charms, it was evidently a case of two votes to one.
I don’t care to ask myself how I might have voted had
I not been detained by that case in Leeds. Such a dangerous
absence that is turning out to have been.
‘—no choice but to go to Court, then, Nicholas?’
I jump. ‘Sorry, Will. Miles away. You were saying?’
‘Will was talking about the Wainwright case in Manchester,
Nicholas,’ David says helpfully. ‘I believe he’s
correct in saying there’s been no response from the other
side to your last offer?’
‘None, unless we had something in this morning that I
haven’t seen yet—’
Sara shakes her head. ‘I called them first thing. Claire
Newbold’s out of the office, but when I spoke to her
Ni’iTftary, she said off the record that Claire thinks our
.—ŚM
offer’s more than generous, but the wife simply won’t
budge.’
‘Damn.’ I frown. ‘I was hoping this wouldn’t have to
go to Court. The assets just aren’t there to justify it. Two
or three days of wrangling in front of a judge and they’ll
both be lucky to end up with the cab fare home.’
‘As long as there’s enough to pay us,’ Joan interjects
sharply.
The thin toffee silk of Sara’s blouse tautens across her
breasts as she leans forward to reach for the file, grey eyes
intent. Her nipples jut against the fabric. Good God, is she even wearing a bra?
“The husband’s not going to get much change out of
thirty thousand if it ends up in Court,’ she says, scanning
her notes, ‘and that’s on top of the forty he already owes
us. It probably makes economic sense for him to give
the wife what she wants and walk away with whatever’s
left—’
I shift uncomfortably in my chair. Christ, my balls
ache. ‘Hasn’t got it. He made his money years ago from a
print shop franchise, but lost a lot of it when the stock
market plunged, and his business folded about the same
time. Apart from the house, his only other serious asset
is his pension. He’s fifty-six, what else is he going to do?’
‘What’s the wife asking for?’
‘She wants the house, which has no mortgage and
is worth about half a million, give or take, and sixty
thousand a year for her and the two youngest kids.
He’s earning thirty-three as a tree surgeon and living in
a rented bedsit over a chippie. She’s dreaming, but it’s
going to bankrupt him to prove it.’
‘Looks like you’re going to Manchester on Monday
Will says brightly to me.
‘Jesus. That’s all I need the week before Christmas.’
‘Why don’t you take Sara?’
I start. ‘What?’
‘Yes, it’s just what she needs, a meaty case to get her
pretty little teeth into Fisher enthuses. ‘It’ll be a great
learning experience for her, and it already sounds like
she’s got an in with the secretary which could be very
useful. You never know he says, leaning over towards
me with a wink, ‘you might even learn something,
Nicholas.’
‘But our client can’t afford one lawyer, never mind
two—’
‘This’ll be on us. No, Joan he says firmly as she opens
her mouth to protest, ‘think of it as an investment in the
firm’s future.’
I pinch the bridge of my nose. Two nights in a hotel a
long way from home with a woman I haven’t been able to
get out of my mind for four weeks.
My balls are going to be black by the time I get back.
My mood is not improved when, having raced to Waterloo
to catch the early train home, I discover that the
station has been temporarily closed because of flooding.
The wrong sort of rain, no doubt. By the time it opens
an hour later, I have no hope of making my daughters’
nativity play on time.
Tired and frustrated, I slink into the darkened school
.uiditorium at ten to seven, just as the Button Dragon and
all the little pterodactyls come on stage for their final bow
with the Eight Wise Men and the Cookie Monster. Treading
on toes and blocking video recorders, I manage to
take my seat next to Mai just moments before the lights
come up, and am clapping vigorously when our offspring
bound from the school stage into the audience with the
rest of the eclectic cast.
‘Did you see me?’ Evie demands.
‘I did. You were wonderful—’
‘Her tail fell off Sophie says scornfully. ‘Right in the
middle of the Birdie Dance.’
‘You mean that wasn’t supposed to happen? I never
would have known.’
‘It didn’t fall off. Susan Pelt trod on it.’ Evie scowls.
‘On purpose.’
Sophie looks superior. ‘You were in the wrong place
and going in the wrong direction, that’s why.’
‘Was not!’
‘Were too!’