My husband didn't excel at any one sport; he watched them all equally. He could work his way through a jar of pickled onions in an afternoon. It's thirsty work, and several beers were required, forming a lethal cocktail of yeast and vinegar. He had two mates who were unfailing in their support of this. They would arrive on Saturday at 12.15, just in time for lunch, then settle into watching the match. Actually it's unfair to say they only watched â their participation in the game fell just short of actually playing it. They yelled, they writhed, they spear-tackled each other across the couch and slid crunchingly over the rug, rising with faces of serious concentration and pieces of corn chip clinging to their hair. They even dressed the part, in tracksuits and expensive running shoes. Their hair was damp and tousled as if they'd just stepped from the shower in the gym; they carried with them a misleading but unmistakable hint of liniment. Macka, Chooka and my husband, Barry. Or Barra, as he was known. They were a club. A testosterone club.
I made up this name myself. It wasn't so much because of their adoration of sports and each other, the aggressive pawing as one would playfully spring the other in a headlock. It was more to do with their complete confidence in their own majestic sexual magnetism. They woke in the morning with this confidence; it accompanied them into every sphere they stepped, assured and unshakable. Together, they entered a room pelvis-first; it made them sit with legs stretched wide apart to accommodate their mythic proportions, so much so that fitting on the couch together was often tricky. It made them offer me a drink with burly protectiveness as they pulled their own from the fridge and noticed me working in the kitchen, preparing snacks for the third quarter. It made Barry look at me with beery pride when I came in, like I was something he'd won unexpectedly in a raffle.
One of these club members I was married to, which was worrying enough. But it was from Macka and Chooka that the hormone in question truly asserted itself.
One Saturday, Macka entered the kitchen and watched me for a few moments at the bench. I was peeling onions and could feel his eyes on me, sizing me up.
âEverything okay, Macka?' I said finally.
âYeah, sure, sweet. Everything okay with you?'
I glanced up and nodded. He strolled around the counter.
âNo, I mean, everything okay with you and Barra?' he said meaningfully.
âSure. It's the onions, Macka.'
âYeah, yeah. Just wondering, you know, because he's a top bloke, and well ... you're' â he fiddled with the ring-pull on his can â âyou're really nice,' he finished.
I wiped my eyes with the back of my hand. âWell, thanks, Macka.'
âAnd if you ever need anything, Monica, you know who you can call. You know what I mean?'
His eyes were boring into me under his brows â well, brow, really.
âWell, yeah, I think I know what you mean. Thanks,' I said, tears streaming down my face. I turned and stepped into the pantry for something when I was overwhelmed by a cloud of liniment. Macka was behind me. A millimetre behind me, and closing fast on the inside flank.
âI knew it,' he whispered, enfolding me in his arms but careful not to spill his beer. For a second or so I was too stunned to move.
âGet off me,' I said, blinking still from the onions.
âI always knew you liked me,' he was saying.
âI mean it.' I broke his grasp and wrestled free. âDon't be ridiculous.'
He smiled, cocked his head towards the living room and nodded. âI get ya,' he said. âSome other time, eh? You give me a ring.' He strolled back to the television, chewing a handful of peanuts.
And I let it go â call me an idiot, but I did. I had a chance to bring it up the following evening, when Barry and I were lounging on the couch watching the Sunday night movie, full of fruit-and-nut chocolate and cosy bonhomie.
Hey, Barry
, I could have said, snuggling up to him,
have a guess what Macka said to me yesterday. Can you believe it?
I could have tried for a tone of affectionate amusement. I tried the approach on for size, staring at the TV, then left it unsaid. The moment passed.
I was hanging out the washing the following Friday when Chooka strolled into the backyard.
âHi,' I said with a smile, struggling with a sheet. âWhat are you off work so early for?'
âLet me give you a hand with that,' Chooka said, reaching up and straightening the sheet uncertainly. He stared at the pegs like Marco Polo first glimpsing chopsticks, then selected a singlet and arranged it carefully next to the sheet. I smiled encouragingly.
âThanks a lot. Want a cup of coffee?'
âYeah, okay. Barry not home?'
I looked at him. Chooka knew Barry's schedule better than I did.
âNo â why? Should he be?'
He laughed, a gurgling, strained laugh. âJust wondered.'
âHaven't you guys got plans to go to the club tonight?'
I was inside by now, plugging in the kettle, reaching for the biscuits, watching Chooka as he strolled around the kitchen, toying with the eggtimer.
âYep. We're meeting down there at 7.00. I just got off work early and thought ... I'd come and pay you a visit.'
âThat's nice.' There was a pause that couldn't be called anything but awkward as we both listened to the kettle reach boiling point then turn itself off.
âThat kettle going alright, is it?' Chooka said suddenly, and I remembered he had given it to us as a wedding gift.
âYes, yes, it's great. Use it every day.'
We sat on the couch. As I sipped my coffee a sweaty hand landed across my shoulders.
âSo how you doing then?' Chooka said, giving my shoulder an affectionate squeeze.
âGood ... thanks.'
âYou must get a bit lonely here by yourself of a day, eh Monica?' As he spoke, his hand moved down the space between my arm and my side, the fingers wriggling. A grope. Or, in Chooka's books, single-step foreplay.
âCut it out, Chooka.'
âJust bein' friendly.' He gave a ghastly grin, then put his cup on the table and grabbed my hand teasingly.
âYeah, well ...' I began, then my hand was deposited on his groin, and held there. I yelped, trying not to spill my scalding coffee in his crotch. Again, I was speechless. After all, first Macka and now Chooka â was it something I'd said? I pulled my hand free and very deliberately wiped it on my jeans.
âI think you should leave,' I said.
âYou won't tell Barry about this, will ya?' he said as he stood, at a loss. Rejection hadn't occurred to him; the script was written and directed by testosterone.
âI might.'
âWell, I wouldn't. Whatever's gone on between you and me, Monica, that's private, okay? Barry doesn't need to know about this.'
He stalked out before what romance novels call his visible male hardness could return to its normal dimensions. I sat there, winded. Now what? As I emptied the dishwasher and washed Chooka's mug, I wondered how I was going to break this to Barry. Again, I had my chance. He came home with a box full of jars the cleaner at work had given him, ready for sterilising for home preserves. On the way he'd stopped off and bought a half-case of vinegar and kilos of mustard seeds, ready for the weekend markets. He'd even bought me a new book,
The Home Preserver: Everything You Need To Know About Putting Food By.
On the cover was a woman in a frilled apron, who had the simpering, scrubbed look of a fundamentalist sect member, gazing adoringly at a line of neatly labelled jars. Barry seemed filled with an almost evangelical fervour as he glanced through the pages.
âSee, look at this, Monica. Snap and colour, that's what the experts say. That's what you should be striving for. So we need to get cucumbers no bigger than that, okay?' He held up a thumb and forefinger. I looked and nodded. These would not be mere baby cucumbers, these were to be premature cucumbers, snatched from the vine before full term, plunged into the humidity crib of the sterilised jar. I nodded, while in my mind sang the sentence that had been hanging there immobile:
Hey, guess what happened this afternoon, Barry? Your mate Chooka put the hard word on me. Macka tried the same thing last Saturday. That makes both of your mates, Barry.
I stared dreamily at the gap he was emphasising, letting his words drift over me.
âGot it, Mon?' he was saying.
âSure,' I said with a bright smile.
The next day it was footy as usual â hot dogs and mustard, stubbies of beer and lots of shouting. Macka and Chooka didn't meet my eye much. At half-time they made a pretence of watching the cheer squad march onto the ground and do high kicks in the drizzle. The three of them went out to the club that evening and I was idly watching an old video when Barry returned. I heard the front door slam and Barry thumped into the bathroom. He re-emerged five minutes later, storming through the kitchen swing doors like Wyatt Earp into a saloon, only in a short white towelling dressing gown decorated with his initials.
âSomething wrong?' I said.
âBloody oath there's something wrong. I got a nasty surprise tonight, Monica, a very nasty surprise.' I looked enquiring. The parking ticket in the glove box? But no.
âWhen a bloke can't trust his own wife, Monica, there's gotta be something seriously wrong.'
âI'm sorry?'
âFirst Macca tells me while we're having a game of pool, then blow me if Chooka doesn't have the same thing to say while we're putting a few dollars through the poker machines.'
I made my face go blank. âTell you what?'
His eyes flashed. âDon't pretend you don't know. About you. You propositioning them.'
âWhat?' I made the mistake of letting an incredulous laugh escape me, and sat up on the couch. âListen to me, Barry. Your mates were the ones that came on to me, and did it with all their Neanderthal allure, let me tell you. And now that I've been nice about it and haven't embarrassed them â¦'
âAre you trying to tell me my best mates propositioned you?' There was a high note of disbelief in his tone.
âBarry, use your brain for a moment and tell me which seems more likely to you. I mean really. Think about it.'
I could hear his teeth grinding. And his brain. âWhen, then?'
âFriday and last Saturday.'
âThen why didn't you tell me?'
I laughed again, bitterly, slumping back helplessly on the scatter cushions. âBecause it just seemed so ridiculous. And I thought you'd be embarrassed, too.' I threw a cushion at him. âAnd because I made the mistake of thinking they'd maybe want to forget all about it, if you want the truth. But I should have known better, I guess.'
Good old Barry. There he stood, the man who wore a ring that matched mine, who slept next to me every night, who was at this very minute weighing up my word against that of his two drinking buddies. It was me against the testosterone club. But Barry, I told myself, Barry was the man I was married to. Surely Barry couldn't be that dumb.
âDon't bullshit
me
, Monica,' said my husband.
Snap and colour. Barry was as insistent about it as he was about them being no bigger than that. Pickled cucumbers made at home can occasionally go greyish and flabby. You will have noticed how well commercial pickles take lurid food dyes â Barry wasn't having any of that. After three days of stony, wounded silence, he brought home a box of chocolates and a much larger one of very small vegetables, led me to the chapter in
The Home Preserver
about old-fashioned ways to keep snap and colour, and left me to it. I could sense this was my test, my chance for redemption. I bowed my head and read it humbly.
Basically, you add a preserving agent in powder form. My grandmother used to keep some of the powders listed to retain snap and colour in her laundry cupboard. I recognised one she used to put on her hydrangeas, one she applied in a pinch to mouth ulcers, even one, I think, that she used to make her own mothballs. This alarmed me. Surely you shouldn't eat tincture of iodine sulphate?
I went to the library, in the interests of the perfect cucumber pickle, and asked for a reference book on chemical compounds â can you believe how conscientious I was? â and waited while they dithered around getting one with fragile, rice-papery pages from out of the archives. I dragged this book over to a window seat and looked up the effects of the chemical agent, âavailable at any reputable chemist or apothecary', which the cookbook had recommended for pickling.
I sat back, surprised. Then read it again. I looked at the date of the reference book â1879.
Used in cases of excitability
, said the book,
initially stimulates gastro-colic reflex, direct enervating and cumulative effect on male's production of testosterone, decreases vigour over long period of application, useful in hysteria.
Snap and colour, Barry?
I thought as I gazed out the window.
You shall have them
. I returned the book and went to a reputable apothecary.