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Authors: Tess Stimson

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I get in the car, wondering if Xan is a secret agent, a
grass, an ex-con, or all three. This is the weirdest first date I’ve ever had.

“Your bird’s a bit overdressed.” Brendan leers, glancing in his rearview mirror. “She won’t be tackling many villains in that getup.”

“I’m undercover,” I retort.

Xan’s hand slides up my bare leg. “Now there’s an idea.”

The police radio crackles, and we pull out into the road. I wait for the screaming tires and sirens, but for the next two hours, we schlep from one boring false alarm to another. Burst water mains, a “domestic,” two teens pelting rocks onto the road from a building under construction.

Finally, a call comes in alerting us to a shop robbery in progress.

“Fancy the blues and twos?” Brendan asks.

“Are you
kidding?”

He switches on the lights and sirens. We tear down the King’s Road, jumping red lights and ignoring zebra crossings. I cling to the seat for dear life as the car corners on what seems like two wheels. Xan’s fingers slip beneath the edge of my knickers, and I nearly come with excitement.

The radio crackles again, telling us the thieves have fled the scene and run into an underground car park. We do an immediate one-eighty, and turn sharply into the multistory we just passed, jolting over the speed hump at the entrance. Two figures are racing towards a low wall at the far side.

“Stay here!” Lee barks.

He doesn’t have to tell me twice. I watch breathlessly as
the two cops leap out of the police car and give chase, Xan’s fingers stroking my clitoris with infuriating slowness. Almost immediately, they catch up with the fleeing figures. The cops slam them none too gently against the wall, yanking their hands behind their backs and cuffing them just like they do in the movies.

“Guess we’ll have to make our own way home,” Xan says, releasing me and opening the car door. “Brendan and Lee will need the backseat for the villains.”

For fuck’s sake!
I so need to get laid!

I sit up and straighten my skirt. “Where the hell are we, anyway?”

“Darkest Fulham.” He grins at my expression. “Don’t worry, we’re not far from my flat.”

Twenty minutes later, we fall through his front door. I fumble for his belt buckle, hampered by the impressive erection straining his zip. Buttons skitter noisily on the floor as I yank his shirt off his shoulders. He pulls my dress to my waist and slides the straps of my bra down my arms, freeing my breasts. Mindful of the lifetime it will take me to pay for the Alaïa, I quickly shimmy out of it before it becomes another casualty of lust.

Half hopping with his jeans around his knees, he carries me into the sitting room, throwing me in a magnificent but slightly painful gesture onto the leather chesterfield. Winded, I squirm impatiently against the cold leather, spreading my legs ready. He shucks off the remainder of his clothes, and slides between my thighs, his cock nudging my knickers.

At the last moment, he stops. “Are you sure?”

“Christ,”
I pant.

“I won’t be around for long,” he warns. “This isn’t the start of something.”

I grab his buttocks with both hands and pull him towards me. “Would you just fuck me already?”

He fumbles under the sofa. Seconds later, I hear the sound of a condom wrapper. Clearly the chesterfield has seen plenty of action. I don’t care; actually, it’s rather sexy. I’ve had enough of grown-up relationships to last me a while. I want some dirty, uncomplicated sex from a man who’s been around enough to know exactly what he’s doing.

Xan’s turquoise eyes fasten on mine as he pulls my knickers off and thrusts into me in one seamless, practiced movement. No need, now, for foreplay. The pulse of his cock inside me is all I want. I come moments later in thunderous waves, screaming my appreciation with scant regard for the neighbors.

“Now
that’s
over,” Xan murmurs against my neck, “the fun begins.”

On Sunday evening, I stagger up Clare’s front steps like John Wayne. It wouldn’t be accurate to say we haven’t got out of bed all weekend.
Au contraire:
We’ve made full use of the kitchen table, the bathroom cabinet, the sofa (four times), the staircase, the fridge and (once) the bed. I have blisters, friction burns, and a blossoming case of cystitis. I have never been so sated, sore, or hungry.

The house is cold and silent when I let myself in; Clare
and Marc aren’t yet back from Davina’s. I offer up a silent prayer of thanks. The last thing I need is for her to recognize Xan’s shirt and cutoffs.

I stumble down the hall, knocking my elbow on the under-stairs cupboard door. I yelp, hopping up and down and rubbing it as my funny bone tingles painfully. Flicking on the lights, I try to shut the door, but it jams on something. I bend down and pull on the end of a leather holdall, trying to wedge it back in amongst the jumble of tennis rackets, umbrellas, wellies, and baby crap. I succeed only in upending it into the chaos, spilling the contents.

You’ve got to be fucking kidding me
.

I crouch down among the odd shoes and tennis balls and pick up the large, rectangular block of money in disbelief. I don’t think I’ve ever seen this much cash in one place before. I run my fingers down the side of the brick, swiftly calculating the number of zeros I’m holding in my hands.

A hundred thousand U.S. dollars. At least.

Why on earth would Marc have so much money in his gym bag?

Fisher • Raymond • Lyon
8–12 Andrew Street, London EC4A 3EA •
Tel 020 7668 3100 • Fax 020 7668 3101
[email protected]

Mr. M. Elias

97 Cheyne Walk

London SW3 5TS

Our Ref: TDR/1653-1/ea               June 15, 2009

Dear Mr. Elias,

Many thanks for your letter dated June 11, 2009. I am afraid we are unable to represent you in your matrimonial proceedings on this occasion.

If you wish us to refer you to an alternative family law firm, please do not hesitate to contact our offices again.

Yours sincerely,
Nicholas Lyon

CHAPTER TWELVE
Marc

Maybe it’d be different if she hadn’t cut off my balls over the money.

Shit, I know I screwed up. I wouldn’t have blamed her if she’d freaked and gone off the deep end when she found out; I was ready for flying crockery, tears, a slap around the face. After months lying awake worrying about it, I was almost looking forward to having it out in the open. She’d yell, I’d apologize, hopefully she’d get over it, and that would be that.

But no. She had to be so fucking superior and
disappointed
.

I cling onto the strap as the subway rattles round a sharp corner. Must be nice and sunny up there on the moral high ground. Where the fuck does Clare get off? Telling me I can’t “handle” my job. Banning me from seeing Hamish and the boys. Christ! Who does she think she is, grounding me like a fucking eight-year-old?

Felix is right. I
am
pussy-whipped.

When I was a kid, Mom took charge of all the household stuff. She picked out curtains and decided if we could
afford a new sofa. She was the one who yelled three ways to Sunday if any of us came home with bad grades, not Dad. It was much easier to hit him up for cash, rather than Mom; it was him we went to when we were in trouble with her and needed someone to fight our corner.

But there was no doubt Dad called the shots when it really mattered. Mom might choose the color scheme, but Dad picked the house. He let her win the small battles, because he knew damn well who’d come out on top in the war.

I realize women expect marriage to work differently these days. I never minded Clare working and building up her business till she was ready to have kids. I guess I just expected that when the babies came along, the flowers would take a backseat for once.

The subway train rattles into Sloane Square station. I elbow my way through the crush of commuters up into the daylight, ignoring the newspaper guy as I pass through the ticket barrier. He ignores me right back. I love the British. You’d never know we spent Christmas Eve sharing a bird’s eye view of my wife’s cunt.

It’s a pleasant evening, with a mild summer chill in the air. I cut down a couple of side streets and stroll along the Embankment, thankful I’ve survived another Friday cull. Four dealers on the trading floor had to clear out their desks today. Clare has no idea the pressure I’m under. Doesn’t she read the bloody newspapers? It’s carnage out there. Every Monday, a few more faces are missing from the trenches. Any one of us could be next.

As I mount the front steps and let myself into the
house, I hear shouting from the kitchen. I drop my briefcase in the hall, and walk into total fucking chaos.

Clare, covered with some kind of chocolate Jell-O, is screaming at Rowan at the top of her lungs. The poor kid bursts into tears as Poppy cowers in a corner, terrified and bewildered. An upturned bowl drips more shit on the floor. Every surface is covered with dirty plates and cups. We could be on a sink estate in Peckham, rather than in a multimillion-pound house in one of the most expensive streets in London.

I snatch up my son before Clare does anything worse than scream. “You don’t have to shout at him. He’s only a baby. He didn’t mean to do it.”

Clare glares venomously. She’s hated the poor bastard from the start. “I’ve been dealing with them on my own for the past four hours!” she yells. “I’ve put in a full day at work, too, Marc! The last thing I need is to come home and clear up after these two monsters!”

“Monsters?”

“They’ve been absolute horrors! As soon as I get one settled, the other one starts. It’s a total nightmare—”

Rowan hiccoughs miserably in my arms. There’s something wrong with Clare if she can’t see how helpless and vulnerable the kid is. “Can’t you control two small babies for five minutes?”

“It’s not that easy!”

I wipe Rowan’s snotty nose. “My mother had six children under eight.
She
managed.”

“She didn’t work!”

I could point out that when Clare didn’t work, the
situation at home was even worse, but I can’t be bothered. “Your choice.”

“If I didn’t have the company, we’d be on the streets right now,” she sneers.

Change the fucking record, you ball-breaking
bitch
.

“Has it ever occurred to you,” I snarl, “that you
drove
me to take chances? Flaunting how much more money you earn, how successful you are. Too successful to look after your own children—”

Clare throws the scrubber, with which she has been trying to sponge her ridiculously impractical white linen skirt, into the bowl of chocolate sauce and splatters it further around the kitchen.

“You try it,” she shrieks. “It’s impossible.
They’re
impossible. They hate me. They’ve been fine all day with Jenna. It’s
me
they can’t stand. I’m a terrible mother.”

She bursts into noisy sobs, heedless of the children whimpering in confusion. I scoop Poppy up along with her brother, sheltering the two kids in my arms.

What does she want me to say?
Don’t be ridiculous, darling. Of course you’re a good mother, of course your children love you. You’ve just had a bad day; it’ll be better tomorrow
.

Like hell. First all the fuss over breast-feeding, then the near-hysteria when she had to cope with them on her own at home. She practically ignored Rowan; poor bastard was lucky he didn’t starve to death. And the house looked like a bomb had hit it. Heaps of filthy laundry all over the place, dirty plates piled in the sink, stinking diapers in the bathroom, and nothing to eat in the damn cupboard. Clare bloody gave up. Most days, she was still wandering around
the house in her crappy dressing gown when I got in from work. Hardly the kind of home a man wants to come back to.

Admittedly, Jenna knocked things back into shape, but Clare took her arrival as
carte blanche
to drop her mothering charade once and for all. Until the salt business with Poppy put her front-and-center stage again.

Call it Munchausen’s, depression, neglect—I don’t give a shit why she did it; I’m just damn sure it wasn’t an accident. She can’t be allowed to spend time on her own with them again. Jenna’s a bolshy little cow, but I know she’d die for the twins. Much as I’d like to get rid of her, I need her to keep an eye on things when I’m not there. Until I come up with a better plan.

Poppy and Rowan bury their damp faces in my chest. I stare coldly at my wife over their heads. If Clare’s waiting for reassurance, she’s not going to get it from me. It’s my children I care about now.

“I should never have had them,” Clare whines. “They’d be better off without me.”

“Yes. Maybe we would.”

I leave her to stew in self-pity and take the twins into my study, settling them on the thick silk rug in front of the unlit fire. They immediately roll onto their tummies and start to trace the vibrant colors with fat fingers, burbling nonsense at each other. I watch them play happily for a few minutes, my anger at my wife building. I’d give my right arm to be able to stay at home with the twins, to be there for every smile. How can she not want this?

I pick up the phone. “Hamish? Look, I’m sorry to bother you on a Friday night, but I need a favor.”

“I wish I could say it’s a level playing field, but I’d be doing you a disservice,” Stephen Morton tells me. “In this country, the woman still holds all the cards when it comes to custody.”

“But I’ve explained. Clare doesn’t
want
the children—”

“Look, Marc,” the lawyer says, getting up from behind his vast mahogany desk and perching cozily on one corner, “I don’t want to rain on your parade. If your wife is as agreeable to your having full custody as you say she will be, we won’t have a problem. I just want you to be fully cognizant of the situation should she prove less accommodating than we hope.”

Stephen Morton wasn’t my first choice. He’s smug, patronizing, and smarmy. But Nicholas Lyon refused to represent me; his wife Malinche is an old school friend of Clare’s, though as far as I know they haven’t seen each other for years. Lyon is also notoriously conservative, which could have made things a little sticky when it came to the business over the second mortgage and my borrowings from Clare’s company. Morton didn’t bat an eyelash. I just hope Lyon extends the same scruples if Clare approaches him. There’s no question he’s the best in the business; although, from what Hamish says, Morton comes a close, if less fastidious, second.

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