Read Tess Stimson - The Adultery Club Online
Authors: The Adultery Club
with his thumb. He doesn’t look up. ‘And it’s a bit safer
here, Sara. More anonymous. I could be meeting any
number of clients in a hotel restaurant, especially during
the day. If I was spotted coming out of your flat again, it
would be a lot harder to explain.’
We had another near miss a couple of weeks ago, when
Joan, the office battleaxe, walked straight into Nick as he
was leaving my building one evening. He managed to
flam up some excuse about dropping off some paperwork,
but I’m not sure she was convinced. She’s been giving
me some very suspicious looks recently, especially when
I’m working on my own with Nick. : I can’t believe how complicated having an affair is. I thought the big adultery dilemma was supposed to be
about morals, not bloody logistics. Christ, his wife doesn’t
even live in the same county as me. How on earth women
manage to have affairs with their brothers-in-law two
doors down without getting caught is beyond me. Homeland
Security or MI5 or whatever they are now could do
worse than start looking for double agents in the adulterous
Tmrbs, if you ask me.
Several times, we’ve come to Claridge’s for wickedly
sexy afternoon romps when clients settled out of Court; I
almost prefer those quick impromptu trysts to our carefully
planned evening rendezvous. I always feel a bit flat
when Nick has to leave in time to get the last train home.
He picks up his watch from the bedside table and
fastens the leather strap around his wrist. As he gets
up from the bed, I suddenly slither forwards on the
crumpled, damp sheets and take his semi-hard cock in my
mouth, pulling his buttocks towards me. For a moment
he resists, and then I feel him yield, his body shuddering
against me as he grips my shoulders hard enough to leave
handprints.
Just as I taste his salty pre-cum, he pulls himself free,
pushing me back down on the bed. For a moment I think
he’s about to walk away; and then, in a sudden, erotic
change of pace, he flings himself down beside me and
starts to trail kisses between my breasts, over my stomach,
his tongue darting into my belly button - ‘Christ, what
the hell is that?’ he said the first time he saw my piercing.
‘Doesn’t it chafe?’ - before snaking wickedly lower; but
not yet low enough. He drops kisses on my eyelids, my
nose, my checks, my lips, my throat, his eyelashes butter
flying my skin .is In-moves. My breasts are squashed hard
against his rlu’Nl. lie smells so sweet and warm, like
cinnamon in mulleil wine, like cloves in oranges, like pine contvt on a Intnliiv.
Treated willi Mtiih expertise, the whole of my body is
an erogenous zone. The skill with which he’s holding
back, controlling the pace, not giving in to my craving to
go faster, have him now, drives me absolutely wild.
Just as I’m about to scream loud enough for the entire
hotel to hear, he plunges his head between my legs and I
tangle my hands in his hair, my body bucking electrically
as he tongues my clitoris. Feverishly I wrap my legs
around his shoulders. He thrusts two fingers inside me,
moving them like leaping fish against my inner wall,
still lapping my clitoris, and it’s a sensation like nothing
I’ve ever known, an erotic roller-coaster speeding ever
upwards. Stars explode behind my eyes. Lightning rips
along my nerve endings. I come faster and harder than I
have ever done in my life, my body ricocheting against
the bed as the waves break, and keep on breaking, across
my body.
Finally, Nick lifts his head and moves a little further
up the bed, resting his cheek against my stomach as I
quiver with spent passion. ‘I love - I love to be here,’
he says quietly. ‘I feel safe, safer than anywhere else in
the world.’
Did he - did he nearly say the L word just then?
He rolls onto his back next to me. After a few minutes,
I envelop him with my body, and cover his face with
kisses, his stubble sandpapering my mouth. Straddling
him, I kiss my way down his chest, nibbling little fish
kisses, relishing the salt and sweet taste of his skin. I suck
his left nipple and he groans his appreciation. An answering
beat throbs between my legs as I grasp his cock, steel
covered in velvet-His mobile telephone rings, and I don’t have to ask
who’s calling.
I stretch languorously on the bed, trying to look unruffled
by the fact that he bothers to answer it. A sexy,
cool mistress, not a frustrated and demanding girlfriend.
Nick throws me an embarrassed half-smile as he clumsily
pulls on his clothes, gripping his phone between neck
and ear.
‘I’m on my way. Just finished now. Yes, I know, and
I’m sorry, but—’
I hand him his shoes. He doesn’t meet my eye, his
expression closed as the phone squawks. She doesn’t
sound very happy to me. Poor Nick, the last thing he
needs is some nag of a wife bitching at him after he’s
worked his arse off all day keeping her in bloody bonbons.
If I were married to him, I’d never gripe at him
like that; after all, I know from the inside what he has to
go through, the stress he’s under, every day. I’m in the
business. She can’t possibly understand.
‘I don’t know what time. I might be working, anyway.
Yes, I realize that, but it can’t be helped. Look - look, Malinche. I said I’m sorry, but the Court doesn’t see February the fourteenth as anything other than the day
that happens to fall between February the thirteenth and
February the fifteenth.’ Wearily, he rubs his hand over his
face. ‘I know; I know you have, but—’
Another burst of indistinct babble. He stalks over to
the mirror, running his fingers through his hair and
checking his suit jacket for tell-tale blonde hairs. It’s lucky he’s cautious. I’m glad he is. I don’t mind it in the least.
‘Look, we’ll talk about it when I get home.’
‘Are you sure tomorrow night’s going to be OK?’
I ask, knotting my bathrobe. ‘Wr can always do it another
evening if it’s going to t ;uiw a problem, I won’t mind.’
‘Of course you will Nick says, with unexpected
shrewdness. ‘And I wouldn’t blame you. I promised I’d
take you out for Valentine’s Day, and I will. Now his
voice softens, ‘hand me my briefcase and lock yourself in
the bathroom, you temptress, or I might just find myself
unable to let you go.’
I feel shivery and glittery inside, like this is our first
date. In a way, it is; well, our first special event date, anyway.
I spent last year’s Valentine’s Day in Andorra with
Amy, the two of us trying to drown our mutual despair
over our romantic ineptitude by hiding out somewhere
Hallmark-free. We weren’t to know an internet dating
agency had chosen our hotel for their annual Celebration
of Love weekend. Forty-two loved-up couples holding
hands and smiling all the time. It gave me a migraine.
I scan the sushi menu again, sipping my mimosa and
hoping Nick hurries up and gets here. I’ve been stuck in
bloody Birmingham on a case all day, so I haven’t seen him since he left the hotel last night. I can’t wait to give him his present. Well, wear it for him, at least.
I tick off my sushi and sashimi choices - I’m glad Nick
picked Yuzo’s again; let’s hope we break the jinx this time
- and dither over seaweed or cucumber salad. Maybe I’ll
wait till Nick gets here and see what he wants. Actually,
now I come to think about it, we haven’t ever had a
proper dinner date at all, unless you count Manchester
that time. It’ll be quite nice to sit and talk, like a normal
couple, before jumping into bed.
Quarter past eight. Fifteen minutes late. Oh, come on, Nick, I hate waiting at a table on my own. There’s only so
long you can fiddle about with a menu trying not to look
sad and stood-up, even one as complicated as Yuzo’s.
A waiter hovers discreetly by my elbow. ‘Are you
ready to order, Miss?’Ś!Ś
‘No, I’m just waiting for someone. I was a bit early; he
should be here soon.’ I glance hopefully towards the door
as it jangles open. My whole body fizzes with pleasure
and relief. ‘Oh, look, there he is!’
‘Whenever you’re ready, Miss.’ Thank God. For a moment there I thought— The welcoming smile on my face dies as Nick walks coolly towards my table, which suddenly seems very
prominent and exposed.
Two paces behind him is his wife.
Malinche
A woman always knows, doesn’t she - it’s an intuition
thing. Nicholas doesn’t believe in intuition, he says it’s
just your unconscious mind picking up subtle signals and
body language that your wide-awake self hasn’t noticed,
putting two and two together and then pingl presenting
you with four; so then of course you think (when four
turns out to be the right answer) oh, four! How amazing,
it must be my intuition.
So perhaps it wasn’t a psychic sixth sense at all, but
my clever old unconscious mind jabbing me in the mental
ribs: look, he’s wearing jeans, he’s always hated jeans;
look, he’s packing his own suitcase for business trips
these days instead of leaving it to you; look, is that a different after-shave, a new shirt, has he always locked that drawer, since when has he been interested in playing squash?
If it had been your best friend sitting at your scrubbed
pine kitchen table, a mug of cooling coffee untouched in
front of her, fretting aloud over her latest psychic poke,
adding it to the catalogue of sharp, pointed little prods
and digs and nudges of the last weeks and months - an
affair, you’d have said (inside your head, of course,
because this isn’t something you can say aloud until she sees it too), an affair, he’s having an affair!
Kit being Kit, however-‘He’s having an affair, darling he’d said baldly,
heedless of the social niceties vis-a-vis other people’s
cheating lovers, calmly blowing smoke rings across the
table. ‘It’s as obvious as the very pretty freckled nose on
your face.’
‘Kit!’
He thunked the kitchen chair back onto all four legs.
‘Sweetheart. Staying out late: check. New haircut, new
clobber - not sure about the black jeans, but however new
and hitherto unprecedented desire to play sweaty
macho sports: check. Either he’s having an affair or,’
he’d smiled evilly, ‘he’s crossed to my side of the street
and can’t bear to tell you.’
‘For heaven’s sake, Kit, Trace isn’t gay.’
Kit had spread his elegant hands: I rest my case.
‘But Kit,’ I’d whispered, wrapping my arms about the
barely-there bump beneath my shirt, the bump only Kit
yet knew about, ‘how can he be having an affair, are you
sure, are you quite, quite sure?’
‘It’s not that I don’t care, darling girl. I love him
too, you know. I realize this is absolute hell; but at
thi end of the day, it is best to know he’d sighed,
getting up to make some fresh coffee. ‘All the signs
are there, I’m afraid and with those few words my safe,
glorious, perfect young life had teetered on the brink for
the final time and then crashed irreparably about my
shoulders.
I stop now beside a bush of winter sage, drawing in a
deep gulp of perishing February air as the thirteen-year
old memory pounces, landing a blow to my solar plexus
so powerful that for a moment I can’t quite breathe. Kit
was absolutely right, of course. All the signs were there.
And I hadn’t even told Kit about the dropped phone calls,
the taking up smoking, the new willingness to walk the
dog for hours each Sunday afternoon on the common.
Classic, textbook signs. Trace was having an affair. It was
obvious.
Obvious.
And wrong.
I push open the latch gate - trust Trace to have the
most sweetly picturesque cottage in the village, all
thatched roof and creeping roses and winding Wizard-of
Oz brick pathway - and do my best to feel like the happily
married thirty-something mother-of-three I am, and not
the distraught pregnant rwenty-two-year-old child I was
when last I stood at Trace’s front door.
Butterflies whisk around my insides. I take short,
choppy steps to avoid slipping on the path, my breath
gusting in icy plumes. I should have worn sensible flat
boots, of course. Kitten heels sound so chic and girly,
don’t they, and with their pretty sequins and bows - but
so hopelessly lacking in traction, I could break my leg or
my neck, or worse.
Kit tried to stop me from going to confront Trace that
day, of course, but I wouldn’t listen, I locked him out of
my car; I can still hear him hammering on the passenger
window as I screeched recklessly down the gravel drive,
determined, now that the poisonous thought was in my
mind, to have it out with Trace immediately. It was a
miracle I didn’t crash and smush myself into jelly on the
way; though of course there were times in the next few