Author's note
I originally published this as three short stories some ten years ago but felt it was missing something so have now merged them and added new material which I feel makes it a better read.
I hope you enjoy it.
Coolpen
Prologue
Part One
Chapter One
Dinner with Mike and Elaine
Chapter Two
Jen's story
Chapter Three
Rob meets Elaine in the mall
Chapter Four
Rob's story
Chapter Five
Mike and Elaine come for supper
Part Two
Chapter Six
Sped Hall
Chapter Seven
Rob and Jen reminisce about swapping with Mike and Elaine
Chapter Eight
Walter wraps up the estate and has dinner with Pattie
Chapter Nine
Jen's account of the evening with Mike and Elaine
Chapter Ten
Pattie has fun with Sally's vibrator
Chapter Eleven
Walter comes to lunch
Part Three
Chapter Twelve
Jen tells Rob she's found an ad
Chapter Thirteen
Rob's account of their first visit to Sped Hall
Chapter Fourteen
Jen's account of their first visit to Sped Hall
Chapter Fifteen
Rob again after Sped Hall
Chapter Sixteen
Jen Looks for Jerry
Epilogue
Prologue
How would it start? What would we say? Is it something that we'd plan or just something that would turn up unexpectedly, not unwelcome but not invited either?
Here we are, Rob and Jen, well into middle age now and married for a long time, the kids gone and the end of the mortgage in sight, happy and contented and, more than anything, comfortable with each other and yet, and yet there are the what ifs: what if we'd met someone else all those years ago; what if I'd accepted that offer from the wife of those friends of ours from two houses and two towns ago; what if you hadn't come back to us after the break you took while struggling with our young family and the feeling that you'd lost yourself?
And what if we play out the fantasy of being with someone else, the fantasy that was tossed into the conversation at dinner with some new friends a few nights ago, tossed into the conversation as easily as a joint is passed around with the cognac?
I remember we were both a little uncomfortable at first, not because of the tone of the conversation - hell we're both broad minded - but because, inadvertently, we were in danger of speaking an unspoken truth between us: that now, after all the years of struggle and hard work, we've finally arrived at a place with no worries and a rosy future before us except that although we wouldn't
be
with anyone else, we both wonder what it would be like
being
with someone else.
Is it too late for us to find new excitement in our relationship?
Before it's too late?
Chapter One
Dinner with Mike and Elaine
"Are you ok to drive hon?" Jen asked, glancing at me and smiling.
"Yeah I'm fine."
I was concentrating on driving the ten or so miles home from dinner with Mike and Elaine. That's one of the big advantages of being our age, enough money to buy the seclusion and quietness of a house in the country and that also means that our neighbours are of a similar age and outlook. We'd met Mike and Elaine on holiday just after Christmas and as we'd got on well together, we'd swapped email addresses with them after discovering that they lived not very far from us.
I glanced over at Jen.
"What do you think of Mike and Elaine now that we've met them again?" I felt my belly tense with excitement as I asked, hoping that Jen's reply would be favourable.
"They're a really nice couple, very friendly. It was a lovely evening."
I waited a while, allowing my breathing to settle before continuing.
"That was an interesting conversation at dinner wasn't it?"
There was a pause before Jen answered.
"Which one? D'you mean about the swapping?"
"Yes." I paused again choosing my words carefully. "Do you think that they were trying to tell us something that they...?"
I left the question hanging in anticipation of Jen's answer.
"Oh, I don't know, perhaps, but why us if they were?" Jen replied. "They hardly knew us before this evening and I'm sure they have their own arrangements if they're into that." There was the merest hint of a catch in Jen's voice as she continued. "Unless they were propositioning us, y'know, testing the water?"
I didn't answer, just waited for Jen to continue.
"Anyway, whatever they were after, they were good fun, I liked them, especially Elaine and I'm sure we wouldn't be the first people to turn them down if that's what they were after."
Again I didn't reply so Jen continued.
"And in any case, I'm sure we'll bump into them again sometime so if they proposition us then we'll know won't we." She laughed and poked me in the ribs to let me know she was making a joke.
"Yeah I guess." I said as casually as I could but wondering at Jen's reply. Was she hoping that Mike and Elaine would proposition us? I thought about the evening.
From the moment we'd walked into their house it had felt easy, like we'd known each other for years; a couple of drinks before dinner and then Elaine's wonderful cooking, plenty of wine and lots of noisy conversation punctuated with laughter. At one point I'd had tears rolling down my face as I laughed at something Mike had said and in the middle of this Elaine had just said "Hell we're laughing like a foursome at a wife-swap party" and we laughed all the harder until exhausted, we quietened down and Jen asked with a smile "Is this how people laugh...when they're... when they're doing that?"
As Jen told me later, it had been on the tip of her tongue to ask "Now how would you know that Elaine?" but she'd thought better of it and quickly re-phrased her question to the less intrusive one she had asked.
And that was how the conversation had changed from careless laughter to intense conversation, at times almost philosophical, deep and probing.
Jen had asked:
"Do you think a marriage can really survive infidelity, even when it's condoned and mutual?"
"But it's not infidelity if you both agree to it. Infidelity is literally a breaking of faith and if you both agree then you're not breaking that faith are you." Elaine sounded almost exasperated, as if she wanted Jen to agree with her.
"But how would you feel if you knew that Mike was having sex with another woman?" returned Jen. Mike seemed almost startled that he had been included by name in the conversation.
"But it's not like that either; it's not 'another woman'." Elaine exaggerated the words, making quote marks in the air with her fingers.
"It's the wife of the man that you're having sex with at the same time."
The way that Elaine had answered Jen made me pay more attention; it was as if she knew about swapping from experience rather than just speculating on how it might be.