Story: ‘Offences against the Person’ 
Hilary Mantel
Her name was Nicolette Bland, and she was my father’s mistress. I’m going back to the early 1970s. It’s a long time now since he was subject to urges of the flesh. She looked like a Nicolette: dainty, poised, hair short and artfully curling: dark, liquid, slightly slanting eyes. She was honey-coloured, as if she’d had a package holiday, and she looked rested, and seldom not-smiling. I put her at 26. I was 17, and filling in the summer before university as a junior clerk in my father’s chambers. Devilling, he called it. I never knew why.
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Hilary Mantel whose books include A Place of Greater Safety, Giving up the Ghost and Beyond Black, is working on a new novel called Wolf Hall.
Other articles by this contributor:
Saartjie Baartman’s Ghost · The New Apartheid
Giving up the Ghost · My Life as a Boy
The Shape of Absence · The Bondwoman’s Narrative
Is the particle there? · Schrödinger in Clontarf
Some girls want out · spectacular saintliness
Is it still yesterday? · Children of the Revolution
If you’d seen his green eyes · The People’s Robespierre
‘What a man this is, with his crowd of women around him!’ · Springtime for Robespierre