The Art of Discretion
If one were to court
controversy, one could say that infidelity is congenital or consanguineous, but
rarely learnt or taught. The debate around that is for another forum.
However, the tendency
to stray must surely come with the essential common sense of, first and
foremost, not rubbing your partner's nose in it. This means according those
liaisons the respect of keeping them at a distance, and being as discreet as
you possibly can in order to avoid getting caught.
History, as I have
read it, would suggest that the Victorians and Edwardians who kept mistresses
made sure their spouses were not disadvantaged in dignity, position, attention,
or latitude. It was usually a case of knowing without feeling threatened.
A Cautionary
Commotion
What I cannot abide
are those who break the rules in wholly unforgivable ways, such as placing
their matrimonial bed at the very centre of the travesty whilst hoping not to
get caught. What on earth are you thinking? The follow-up question is
unprintable.
I was once privy to a
narrative relayed to me of a commotion that brought the police to a home, the
cacophony having included the shattering of glass, and whatever else might have
been flung, in both words and objects, when a hapless fool was caught in the
act.
His wife had gone
away and was not expected back until the weekend; she returned the previous
night, however, only to find her husband canoodling with another woman. There
is no need for a graphic replay, at the risk of sensationalising the matter
with the aplomb of a village rag.
A Failure to Plan
There must be a
reason why she did not telephone ahead to forestall what might have been her
suspicions of something untoward. Some people spare themselves the possibility
of such situations by making allowances, in the spirit of "out of sight is
out of trouble".
He, however, in his
careless and carefree manner, played the oily mouse whilst the cat was away. He
should have planned his rendezvous for a motel, or somewhere far from home, yet
he did not.
Stepping back to view
this from an objective angle, the effrontery and audacity required to bring
someone else home should always have come with the forward planning of a number
of things. First, an alert system that detects proximity, so as to avoid an encounter.
Then, easy sequestration, should your spouse enter the house when there is no
chance of escape.
Hiding the Evidence
You cannot put the
interloper on the window ledge outside if you are on the tenth floor,
especially if that was not intended as a final goodbye. Slipping them under the
bed, behind the curtain, or into the wardrobe are far too common as places to
hide, and so to be found. Just roll a bottle under the bed; if it does not come
out the other end, take a look.
Someone suggested the
oven or the fridge, which left me thinking of the double-jointed contortionist
who performs at the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront in Cape Town, doing such
unimaginable things with his body that the spectacle is too suggestive for a
polite audience, and yet impossible to look away from.
Perhaps the clothes
basket could help, and what you would need next is a snake charmer to play the
pungi as your quarry wriggles to the swaying hypnotism of the sound, lifting
the lid of the basket and unleashing the scandal that would ensue. You may not
be prepared for the confessions.
If you do not have a
number of well-planned escape routes, no amount of explaining would extricate
you from a complex situation that would serve as entertainment for your
neighbours, and inspiration for this very piece. You got caught, pants down,
and the only thing you might ever salvage is your dear life, by the skin of
your teeth.

