by Tamar Myers
Eat, Drink and Be Wary
An Amish Bed and Breakfast Mystery with Recipes #6
Tamar Myers
Copyright
This e-book is licensed to you for your personal enjoyment only.
This e-book may not be sold, shared, or given away.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the writer’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Eat, Drink and Be Wary
Copyright © Tamar Myers, 1998
Ebook ISBN: 9781625173348
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
No part of this work may be used, reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without prior permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
NYLA Publishing
350 7th Avenue, Suite 2003, NY 10001, New York.
http://www.nyliterary.com
Dedication
For Marsha Bassel Holowinko
Chapter One
I was an adulteress. An inadvertent adulteress, to be sure, but an adulteress nonetheless. This is not an excuse for the tragic events that were about to unfold here at the PennDutch Inn, it is merely an explanation for my muddled state of mind. A clearheaded Magdalena would have put her big foot down the second Freni Hostetler came to me with her outrageous request. But even under normal circumstances, that’s easier said than done.
Freni smiled pleasantly, a warning sign if there ever was one. “It’s only a little cooking contest.”
“How little?”
“Five contestants is all.”
“And you’re one of them?”
“Ach!” Freni beamed with pride and stroked the blue ribbon she wore pinned securely to her ample bust.
“Hochmut,” I said in Pennsylvania Dutch. It means pride. It is one of the few dialect words I know, but one I am not likely to ever forget. Mama used it on me all the time. It is, perhaps, the worst epithet one can ascribe to someone of Amish or Mennonite persuasion.
Freni Hostetler colored. “It isn’t prideful to use the talents God gave you, Magdalena.”
I will confess to enjoying the woman’s discomfort.
The short, stout woman is both my best friend and my employee. I have known her my entire life, although I will confess to being uncertain of her age. Freni is one of the few women I know who actually pads her age, in a misguided attempt to gain more respect. I suspect that Freni is pushing seventy, although she would have you believe that she’s a half-dozen years older. At any rate, ever since Mama and Papa died an untimely death in a tunnel, squished between a milk tanker and semitrailer hauling state-of-the-art running shoes, Freni has functioned as a substitute parent. Nevertheless, the woman drives me crazy.
“Your slow-baked bread pudding is very good, Freni. I’m sure it deserved to win first place at the Pennsylvania State Fair. But isn’t wearing the ribbon going a little too far?”
Freni is Amish, you see. She is required to adhere to a strict dress code—a plain, long-sleeved dress of modest length, topped by an apron. Her head must be covered at all times by a prayer cap. Even buttons are considered too worldly for her sect.
I, however, am a Mennonite. My religious denomination has close spiritual and historic ties with the Amish. There are many varieties of both sects, so it is hard to make comparisons. In general, we Menonites are more liberal than the Amish, but far more conservative than your average Protestant. My dresses have buttons, a few even short sleeves. Although some women in my church wear slacks at home, I choose not to. If the good Lord wanted me to wear pants, he would have given me hips upon which to hang them.
“The State of Pennsylvania awarded me this ribbon,” Freni said. “It is my civic duty to wear it.”
“Does the bishop know?”
“Ach, you’re jealous,” Freni said, and made an awkward attempt to cover the ribbon with her small, plump hand.
"Me?” Perhaps I was—but just a little. I don’t have any discernible talents. Sarcasm is not a sanctioned skill, after all.
“We were never legally married,” I wailed. “Since he was already married, our marriage license was totally meaningless.”
“Totally?”
“As worthless as last year’s corn husks, I’m afraid.”
“You don’t mean?” She waggled her scant eyebrows. I hung my head. “Go ahead and say it. I’m a trollop, a tramp, a—”
“Harlot?”
I drew myself up to my full five feet ten inches. “I most certainly am not that! I paid all the bills, remember? Aaron was as broke as a teenager on vacation.”
Freni nodded. “The man didn’t have a penny to his name. So, you aren’t a harlot. But you’re still an adulteress, aren’t you?”
“Inadvertent! There is a big difference between a deliberate adulteress and someone like me. Not that most folks seem to care. I’m branded, you know. I waited forty-six years to give myself to the right man, and see what happens?”
“Yah, but look on the bright side, Magdalena. At least now you know what all the fuss is about.”
“You mean sex?”
“Ach! So direct!”
“But that’s what you mean, right?”
“Yah. So now you know?” Freni pretended to be examining her fingernails, but I knew she was intently interested in my answer.
I blushed, remembering my wedding night. The male anatomy proves that the Good Lord has a sense of humor.
“Yes, I know what it’s all about, and it’s a wonder the human race doesn’t just die out.”
Freni nodded solemnly. “It is a wonder.”
Her unexpected sympathy made me feel suddenly charitable. “So when is this little cooking contest of yours?”
“November.”
That was three months away. There would be plenty of time to back out if I changed my mind.
“Fine. So what is it you’re really after, the use of my kitchen for a couple of hours?”
“Yah.”
I sensed a “but.” “Okay, I get it. You want me to be the judge, right?”
She fidgeted, shifting from one short, broad foot to the other. “They have their own judges.”
“Who is they?”
Freni reached deep into a pocket of her navy blue dress and extracted a color brochure. I snatched it from her.
“It’s all in there,” she said.
I scanned the glossy pages. “East Coast Delicacies? I’ve never heard of that company before.”
“They make gourmet foods.” She pronounced the word so that it rhymed with sour pet.
“Goor-may,” I said, although it didn’t really matter how she said it, Freni knows as much about gourmet cooking as I do about writing mysteries. Although she is the cook at my very popular inn, the dear woman is gastronomically challenged. For her, there are two food groups: meat and other. The latter is a broad category centered around starches—usually potatoes, but often noodles. Fruits and vegetables are relative terms. For instance, Freni considers cheese a fruit, because she frequently serves it with apple pie. Butter, which she dollops liberally atop any cooked vegetable, becomes by extension a vegetable.
“That means fancy food, Magdalena.”
“I know what it means, dear.”
“Read about the prize, Magdalena.”
I read, not believing my eyes. “A hundred thousand dollars?”
“Yah. And I’m going to win.”
“Wait a minute. It says here that contestants are by invitation only. Who invited you?”
“A very
nice young man named Mr. Anderson. He’s the one who gave me that.” She tried to snatch the brochure out of my hand, but at five feet two, she was no match for me.
“Freni, this sounds like a scam.”
Brown beady eyes blinked. Freni is not well versed in the ways of the world.
“It means that someone is trying to take advantage of you financially.”
“Ach, don’t be ridiculous, Magdalena.”
I scanned the rest of the brochure. Except for the preposterous prize, money wasn’t mentioned.
“Freni, did this nice Mr. Anderson ask for money?”
“No!”
“Well, there’s got to be a catch somewhere.”
Freni was fit to be tied. “You should be ashamed of yourself, Magdalena,” she said, waggling a finger at me. “Just because I’m old doesn’t mean I’m stupid. Mr. Anderson was one of the judges at the state fair. When he tasted my bread pudding, he said it was the best thing ever to pass his lips.”
I hoped humble pie was half as tasty. “Well, in that case, I’m terribly sorry. You’re absolutely right. I should have trusted your instincts.”
“Apology accepted,” Freni said graciously.
I handed the brochure back. “Sure, you can use my kitchen for the contest. Just make sure they clean up after themselves, and that it doesn’t interfere with serving our guests.”
“There won’t be any guests, Magdalena.”
I jiggled a pinkie in my left ear, just to make sure it was functioning properly. Ever since Miss Enz, my fourth-grade teacher, clapped me up the side of the head with a chalkboard eraser, that ear has been unreliable. “What did you say?”
Freni cleared her throat. “I’m afraid you’re going to have to cancel your regular guests, Magdalena. I promised Mr. Anderson that the contestants, and some of the judges, could stay here. The sponsors will pay your normal rates, of course.”
“Over my dead body!” I screamed, and then immediately regretted it.
Those four words invariably mean deep trouble for me.
Chapter Two
I took a couple of deep cleansing breaths. Maharishi Lophat Yoggurt stayed at my inn once, and although he swiped one of my best sheets, he taught me some wonderful breathing techniques.
“The PennDutch is booked solid for the next three years,” I said calmly.
It was the truth. I have, in some ways, been a very fortunate woman. My parents’ untimely death left me with a dairy farm and a younger sister for whom to care. I am still caring for Susannah, but I sold all the cows but two, and turned the farm into a full-board inn. As luck would have it, one of my first guests was a travel writer for the New York Times, and she declared my establishment “quaint, but chic.” It has been easy street for me ever since.
The first hordes of over-washed and heavily scented visitors were East Coast yuppies. Washington bureaucrats began beating a hot trail to my door soon after. The last great influx has been from Hollywood. Confidentially, they are the easiest to dupe.
I offer a special package I call A.L.P.O. (Amish Lifestyle Plan Option), whereby guests may clean their own rooms and do their own laundry by paying extra for the privilege. I explain to them just how lucky they are to be honorary Amish for a week, and without having to give up all of their many vices (I will not allow drinking or smoking!). If that doesn’t work, I tell them that housekeeping will be the “in thing” for the new millennium, and don’t they want to express their individuality by getting a jump on the rest of the country? That invariably clinches it for the celluloid crowd. There is nothing quite like the prospect of being an individual to start a stampede down from the Hills.
“Now this is a broom, and that is a mop,” I’ll say, and with every “ooh” and “ah” and look of wide-eyed wonder, my bank account grows. But please don’t get me wrong. I give most of my profits away to charity, because as a Mennonite woman, my needs are very simple. A decent meal, a good book, a pair of comfortable shoes (dare I add a bra that fits?)—a body requires little else in the way of earthly pleasures. Still, I couldn’t just back out of my obligations to the glitzy-ditzy bunch, now could I?
Freni seemed to think so. She tried her usual litany of guilt trips, stopping just short of recounting a long and arduous labor. Although she is not my mother, I fully expect to hear that one someday.
“Freni, Freni, Freni,” I said, shaking my head. Perhaps I was grinning as well.
“Don’t you Freni me, Magdalena. When your friends found out you were an adulteress and dropped you like a hot potato, who stood up for you?”
That was a low blow. It wasn’t entirely true, either—my real friends never dropped me. Sure, a few folks at Beechy Grove Mennonite Church gave me the fish eye, but only until Reverend Schrock reminded them that the church needed a new organ, and that yours truly was the most likely person to donate one. It was true, however, that whenever tongues wagged—at least within earshot—Freni readily silenced them. If a tongue is indeed sharper than a two-edged sword, Freni wields a mouth full of scalpels.
“All right,” I said, worn down to a mere nub. “I’ll make some calls and see what I can do. But Bill and Hillary are going to be mighty disappointed. This is the second time I’ve had to cancel out on them. Who knew Dole was going to lose?”
Freni smiled happily. “So it’s settled then?”
I pretended to glare. “Just as soon as I make the calls. But tell me, Freni, what is a—uh—elderly Amish woman, who lives with her son and daughter-in-law, going to do with one hundred thousand dollars?”
“Ach, Magdalena, some things are personal!”
“I haven’t made those calls yet, dear. Besides Bill and Hillary—and of course their usual entourage—I have a rock star booked.”
“Pat Boone?” The woman knows nothing about music, but she and Pat enjoy praying together.
“Not Pat. Someone of indeterminate age and gender called Roach Clip. I heard he—or was it she— flashed the audience at Madison Square Garden last week. Even after the flashing, folks weren’t quite sure.”
Unlike me, the poor woman is clueless when it comes to modern-day lingo. “What does this flashing mean, Magdalena?”
“To take off your clothes in public.”
Freni froze.
“But, like you said, you have been very supportive of me in my time of need, so I really do owe you. If you’ll just tell me—”
“Ach! All right, already!” She turned away and mumbled something that an elephant with a hearing aid would have had trouble deciphering.
“I can’t hear you, dear.”
“I said, ‘It’s for Barbara.’ ”
“Barbara? Your daughter-in-law?”
“Yah.”
“But you don’t even like her, Freni. In fact, you despise the woman.”
“Ach, that’s not true. The Bible tells us to love our enemies, and I do my best, Magdalena. Think of this money as love.”
Perhaps I snorted. “She’s not your enemy. Her only crime is that she married your son.”
She glanced at me and hung her head. “I thought maybe if I gave her the money she would go home.”
“But she is—”
“I mean back to Kansas.”
I furiously jiggled both ears. “You’re trying to buy off your daughter-in-law? You want to pay her to leave your son?”
She looked up. “Ach! You always had such a harsh way with words, Magdalena. If the money makes her happy, what’s the harm?”
“And what about your son, Jonathan? If Barbara leaves him, it will break his heart. They’ve been married twenty years, and he still adores her.”
She looked stricken, as I suppose only a mother can look. But it was a fleeting look, an emotional flash, if you will.
“Okay,” I said, satisfied. “I’ll make the calls.” Freni remained rooted to her spot. A stout, but very short oak.
“Yes?” I asked, with admirable patience.
“There’s one more thing, Magdalena.”
�
��Oh, I get it. You have to pay a huge fee to enter this contest, and you want to borrow a bundle.”
“Ach, a bundle!”
I didn’t bother to find out what she presumed. “Money. You want a loan, right?”
She shook her head vigorously. “It doesn’t cost a thing… except, well, the guests will be arriving on a Sunday.”
“This Sunday?”
“Ach, no, in November, like I said.”
“So?” Guests often arrived on Sunday, but after church.
“They’re coming from all over, Magdalena, and they’re providing their own transportation. Mr. Anderson said they could arrive anytime.”
I thought about that while Freni beat a nervous staccato on the floor with one of her brogans. Doing business on a Sunday morning was a sin, pure and simple, but this wasn’t strictly business. Sure, some money would be changing hands, but that could all be done later. Besides, it was a contest to see who was the most talented cook, and doesn’t the Bible say we should use the talents the good Lord has given us?
November came right on schedule that year, and I really had to scramble to get the inn ready for Freni’s contest. It wasn’t just a simple matter of letting a few people use my stove for a day. This was a much bigger deal than either Freni or the brochure let on. The winner of the East Coast Delicacies Cook-off, as it was now being called, would not only receive one hundred thousand dollars, but their winning recipe would be marketed by the company up and down the East Coast. To do this successfully required attention from the media. Neither Freni nor Mr. Anderson, with whom I had had several conversations by now, bothered to mention that last detail.
It is no secret that I loathe the press. I truly strive to live up to the Christian ideal, but some of those folks who claim to have ink in their veins have pulp for brains. Dealing with celebrities as I do, I know whereof I speak. You wouldn’t believe some of the things they’ve said about me.