Fox
on Despicable Husbands
by
Humberto Fontova
by Humberto Fontova
With
one hand I’d just popped open a cold one. With the other I wielded
the basting brush, a magic wand of sorts or so it seemed from
the aroma that rose from the sizzling coals. The marinated Deer-k-bobs
had just been drenched with the teriyaki/butter sauce. The grouper
fillets got the same but with a dash of lime. The edges of the thick
luscious fillets were just browning and I was preparing to turn
them. The coals, laced with (green) pecan limbs, got a generous
dose of the drippings and the entire backyard was enveloped in a
mouth-watering miasma.
Pelayo,
Artie and the rest of my chums were consumed with ribald banter
while sucking suds on the gazebo. The women were inside, sucking
down the Sauvignon Blanc while glued to the TV......Wait a MINUTE!...I
thought it was the other way around? The women yakked away and the
guys watched TV?
But
ah! The Laci Peterson thing was on! No Super Bowl heck, no lap-dancer
ever captivated us like this thing captivates the women. Not even
close. And from the little I’ve heard and seen, the case does
strikes me as truly tragic.
I
needed a little more basting sauce and went inside where I turned
briefly to the TV. Yep, some stern looking Fox commentator-ette
had the case all figured out. I nodded at the wives, frowned and
rolled my eyes.
"Never
mind!" Shirley snapped. " Hurry with the food!...Git!"
"Yeah!"
Cindy barked. "We’re hungry!"
Walking
back out with the sauce I turned back to the TV for a second. The
flashy yuppie blond had gone into that frown of theirs. "What
husband?!" she asked indignantly. "Would go fishing
and leave an 8-month pregnant wife at home?! And on Christmas
eve!"
"BWA-BWA!-HOO-HA-HA-HOO!"
My den erupted with uninhibited female mirth. "BWA-BWA-HA!-HA!"
They could barely breathe.
"What
the hell’s goin’ on in there?!" Pelayo laughed as the guys
crammed through the back door. They looked in to see the wives all
doubled over, covering their mouths like women do when laughing.
Cindy’s
eyes were crunched closed and wine leaked from her mouth. Her torso
heaved with convulsions. "Every husband here!" She cackled
after catching her breath.
"Yeah!"
Shirley shrieked while clutching her friend’s arm. "They didn’t
miss a ONE!"
"Does
duck hunting count?!" Becky yelled raising her wine glass.
"How
bout deer-hunting?!" Tanya seconded.
"How
‘bout BOTH!" an they broke down again.
"At
least they made it home for midnight mass!" Tanya laughed as
they toasted with wine glasses
"Wanna
let us in?" Artie snorted as he popped another brewskie. So
I explained what provoked the outburst. The Beltway reasoning of
the Fox-babe struck our wives as a bit askew a bit provincial might
be more accurate.
"WOW!"
Pelayo cut in. "It sure didn’t seem that funny to y’all when
we were DOING IT!"
Pelayo
nailed it. Indeed the wives had sounded a lot like Greta (or whoever
it was) back then. Heck man, Christmas Eve’s a holiday and smack
at the peak of Louisiana’s prime hunting and fishing season. Why
waste it? If the wives were waddling around the house like little
hippos, holding their backs and whining etc. well, all the
more reason to go!
Becky
was laughing now but I still remember poor Artie getting his bell
rung. It wasn’t Christmas Eve but she was probably no more than
a month away from parturition, if memory serves, and still doing
the laundry, leaning against the dryer for a short breather as I
recall....wiping her brow and blowing an errant wisp of hair from
her eyes. "Seen my beer-hugger in here?" Artie grunted
while rummaging through a shelf above her head, knocking over the
Tide, the Mr Clean and several bottles. He turned to leave as they
rattled to the ground. "I coulda sworn the damn thing was....?"
From
the corner of my eye I caught swift movement. Then WHOA! Artie
ducked. Just in time too. Becky came around with the Clorox bottle,
swinging it like mallet and aiming for his head. The deafening "BONNNGGG!!!"
when it hit the dryer told us: "get out, FAST! and NOW while
she’s recocking her arm!"
Turned
out we caught a beautiful box of Reds that day. And as we’d just
seen, the wives DID get over it. Took a while, though.
In
truth, the Fox commentator-ette’s Beltway logic was impeccable.
Living where they do, hobnobbing with their ilk, they’d never HEARD
of such a sexist outrage. Why absolutely nothing they read or heard
from John Gray, Donahue, or Dr Phil, not to mention Oprah or Dr
Laura had prepared them for such a horror!
"Tell
ya what, honey," Tanya took a drag on her smoke and addressed
the TV screen after the hilarity subsided a bit. "Ya better
stay in New York!" And she nodded and pointed her wine glass
at the screen.
"Yeah,
toots, " Cindy toasted after a hearty wine-gulp. "You
wouldn’t make it in Bayou country, that’s for damn sure."
My
father-in-law used to crack me up. "Ya goin’ in that delivery
room again, Hom-Boy-Da?"(Humberto in New Orleanian, similar
to Brooklynese. See the hilarious Confederacy of Dunces for the
ethnic explanation.) Heck, man...."’
"I
know, Pops" I’d sigh, "Y’all’s generation, y’all waited
in the waiting room. But it’s different now. We...."
"Waiting
room?" he’d snort. "Heck man, we wasn’t even in the hospital!
We was down the street at the bar!" They knew were to
find us though, when the time came to announce whether it was a
boy or a goyl."
Interestingly,
most old hospitals in New Orleans have several old bars nearby.
Same for funeral homes. The men paid their respects and went down
the street to bend an elbow while the women stayed and to mourn
and commiserate. Sounds like a good deal to me....seems I was born
too late.
July
15, 2003
Humberto
Fontova [send him mail]
holds an M.A. in History from Tulane University. He’s the author
of Helldiver’s
Rodeo described as "Highly entertaining!" by Publisher’s
Weekly, as "Terrific!" by Salon.com, and as "Just
what the doctor ordered!" by Ted Nugent.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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