by Tamar Myers
“I know.”
I started to open the door, but he grabbed my arm. “This really isn’t such a good place, Magdalena. I know the owners. They buy from the dairy. Friends of Arnold, I think. There is a better place just down the road, once you cross the interstate highway. A busy place, lots of customers. You can call the sheriff from there.”
“Tough cookies, toots,” I said. What good is having a younger sister if you can’t borrow a phrase from her now and then?
I should have gotten right out of the car, but I guess I really am a sucker. Either that, or too proud to stop trusting my instincts. So even though I knew that Stayrook Gerber was a Judas and a snake, I let the sound of his voice and the hurt in his eyes give him one more chance.
There was indeed a very popular spot just east of 1-77. The twelve-foot-high black concrete pot with the words “Dutch Kettle” painted in white on it must have been easy to see from the interstate, because the parking lot was jammed. A smaller sign advertising “authentic Amish cooking” was held rigidly in place over the door by two very tall wooden Amish figures, one male, one female.
“Cigar-store Indians,” I said.
“Ach, the English will do anything for a dollar.”
“Do I hear the pot calling the kettle black?”
Stayrook blushed a pleasing shade of red.
We had to circle the parking lot three times before a van of Canadian tourists, their funny vowels trailing them, left me a spot right next to the front door with its two behemoth guardians. The fact that it was a handicapped space does not make me feel guilty one whit. If a middle-aged Mennonite in an Amish costume, with an arm full of water, who is running for her life from a diabolical dairyman does not qualify as handicapped, then who does?
I insisted that we leave Susannah and Danny sleeping peacefully in the backseat. In case it was a trap, it was better that we split up. Although just what the two of them could do to protect themselves was anybody’s guess. Throwing Molotov cocktails is a learned, not an instinctive, behavior.
Just inside the door a massive woman, no doubt the inspiration for the figures outside, stopped me with an outstretched arm. Like me, and the statue, she was supposed to look Amish.
“You my replacement?”
“Pardon me?”
“You’re seven minutes late, dearie. Being late your first day as hostess is definitely not cool. Thelma’s gonna stick you back in the kitchen if this happens again.”
I glared up at her. “I am not a hostess. I just want to use your phone.”
“The phone is for customers only, dearie.”
“Then I’m a customer. Where’s the phone?”
“Ah, a customer. You have reservations?”
“For breakfast? You’ve got to be kidding!”
“Big Bertha doesn’t kid, dearie. You don’t have reservations, then scram. And take him with you. This here is a very popular place.”
I tried to push gently past her, but Bertha the Hun wouldn’t budge.
“You want me to throw you out myself, dearie?”
“No dear, certainly not. Call the police instead.”
The crabby colossus wouldn’t cooperate. “All right, dearie, it’s out on your ear, if that’s the way you want it.”
I folded my arms across my meager chest and puffed it out as much as I could. “You wouldn’t dare throw out the entertainment, would you?”
“Huh? What kind of entertainment? I don’t know anything about any entertainment, and I’ve been working here going on four years.”
“We’re Amish folk singers, dear. Hired just last night.”
Brunhild grunted and eyed Stayrook suspiciously. “He don’t look Aymish to me.”
I smiled patiently. “He’s a Mennonite, dear. You can tell by the nose.”
“Funny, but the owners didn’t say nothing to me about no folk singers. You sure this is for real?”
“See for yourself, dear. These folks have come for miles around just to soak in the atmosphere. That’s why Johnny, here, and I have been hired. We’re your breakfast duet. In fact, you were supposed to help us set up.”
“Ach!” I had the feeling Stayrook would rather be staring down the barrel of Arnold’s gun.
“Who hired you?”
I pointed to a mean-looking woman in a gray business suit that I had observed slip behind the register counter several times to harangue the cashier.
“Mrs. Wilson?”
“Herself. Can we get started now?”
“ ’Spose so. Where would you like me to set up?”
“Drag a couple of chairs over by the breakfast buffet,” I said. “Now may I use the phone? I need to call our manager.”
“After you perform, dearie.”
I was just about to tell Goliath’s mother what she could do with her phone—in a ladylike manner, of course—when the door opened and in walked Arnold and Marvin.
Chapter Thirty-five
Ohio River-Bottom Sludge Cake
1 cup flour
2/3 cup sugar
3 tablespoons cocoa
2 teaspoons baking powder lh teaspoon salt
½ cup milk
3 tablespoons melted butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
Topping:
½ cup brown sugar
¼ cup white sugar
3 tablespoons cocoa
1 teaspoon vanilla
¼ teaspoon salt
1 ¼ cups boiling water
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Sift dry ingredients in the first list together. Add liquid items in first list and blend well. Pour mixture into an 8-inch-square greased glass baking dish. Combine ingredients in second list and sprinkle evenly over the “cake” mixture. Pour the boiling water over this but do not stir. Bake for 40 minutes. A fudge crust will form on top, with a thick sauce underneath. Allow to stand for 15 minutes before serving. Delicious served warm or cold, with or without whipped cream or ice cream.
Chapter Thirty-six
Stayrook didn’t even know the words to “Kumbayah,” so I gave him a half-filled water glass and a greasy spoon and told him to tap out a rhythm. Any rhythm. He looked at me like a lost puppy, so I patted him on the head and told him to hop on his chair.
I hopped up on mine. “Velkommen to de Deutsche Kettle,” I said in my best fake German accent. “Dis morning vee haf—”
“Mama, who’s the weird lady in the black clothes?” an obnoxious urchin asked. Even Miss Progel, my high school gym teacher, didn’t have a voice that loud.
“Hush, Jamie. I think she’s Aymish.”
“Are they like witches?” The wicked boy made a face at me.
“No, dear. I think they’re very poor, though.” She handed her son a few coins. “Go ahead and give them to her.”
I glared at them. “Dis morning I veel be singing zee traditional songs of my people. Hit it,” I said to Stayrook.
He looked like a sheep who’d been asked an algebra question.
“Tap on your glass.”
The boy was in front of me then with his sticky handful of quarters. Since it is a sin to reject charity, I reached for the money. The boy, true to type, dropped all the coins at my feet except one. “Better fork it all over, buster, or you’ll find out firsthand why it is that chickens have no lips.” Please understand that it was the stress talking. I’m usually far more creative.
“Mama!” The little devil ran back to his mother.
At the same moment I saw the mean-looking woman in gray threading her way to me through the packed tables with Brunhild hot on her heels. Coming at me from a slightly different direction were the Farmersburg fiends. Marvin, ever the coward, was not wearing his uniform.
It was then or never.
“Oh give me a home,
Where the pacifists roam,
Where the Amish and Mennonites play.
Where seldom is heard—”
My pursuers were closing in too fast. It was time to switch songs.
“De Camptown rac
es five miles long, dooda, dooda, Dial nine one one all morning long, oh dooda day. Dial nine one one, dial nine one one,
Some bad guys are after us with a gun,
Dial nine one one.”
The mean-looking lady in gray was the first to reach me. “Get off that chair right now!”
I obliged her. “Where’s the back exit?”
“Oh, no you don’t. Not so fast.” Brunhild had me by the arm.
“Ach! Ach!”
Stayrook was flailing around helplessly on his chair, clearly immobilized by genetics. Or was he? After all, his ancestors had only recently adopted the pacifist creed. Perhaps his repressed instincts could still be tapped. I am not one to advocate violence, mind you, but surely a display of fist cuffs would inspire someone to call for help.
“Punch out the big one, Stay. I’ll take care of the mean one.”
That’s all it took to undo just one generation of genetics. Not that Stayrook could bring himself to hit the woman, but he did the next-best thing. He leaped into the air like a cougar and landed on the giant bison’s back. I once saw a still-life display of the same scene at the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh.
The bison bellowed and bucked, but the brave cougar clung on tightly.
“Call the sheriff!” I screamed. “Somebody call the sheriff!”
“I am the sheriff!” Marvin had the audacity to pull a badge out of his coat pocket and wave it pompously at the patrons. “Everyone stand back now.”
“Eeeeeyah!”
My ninety-pound sister came sailing out of nowhere to land on Marvin’s back, and like a proper she-cat dug her claws into his scalp. Marvin moaned before collapsing, the first victim of the hunt.
The second victim to fall was Arnold Ledbetter. A well-placed whack across the kneecaps with an empty bottle was all one could expect from Danny Hem, given his condition, but he performed well. Although judging by the sounds Amie made as he went down, the acoustics in the Dutch Kettle left much to be desired. The mean-looking lady in gray was going to have to do some major remodeling if she expected me to come back and give a serious performance.
Fortunately, Stayrook was able to cling to the bison long enough for me to convince the owner, who really wasn’t as mean as she looked, that we were the real victims, and that the fellows on the floor were the felons. The sheriff was immediately summoned, and justice prevailed.
Of course, it was a tremendous relief to finally be safe and sound, but nothing could match the relief I felt when I saw Aaron Miller come through that door, just minutes after the sheriff. My Pooky Bear still loved me.
“Everyone knows that Amish farms produce the richest milk,” Freni said from the backseat.
“Flirting with pride, aren’t we, dear?” I chided gently.
“Pride, shmide, it’s true. That dairy was going out of business. It needed Amish milk. Imagine that! One of the largest dairies in the country, and it couldn’t exist without Amish milk.”
“It needed milk from local farms, but not necessarily Amish. It’s the soil and climate of Farmersburg County that make the local milk special, not the religion of the farmers.”
“Ach, that’s practically sacrilegious! And you a Mennonite yet. I would have expected such a comment from Susannah, but not you, Magdalena.”
“Leave me out of this, please.” Susannah, with Shnookums safely returned to her bosom, was acting alarmingly mellow. If she didn’t perk up by the time we got home, I was going to insist that she see a doctor.
“I suppose you think that Stayrook is innocent just because he’s Amish.”
“Your words, not mine.”
“Stayrook was greedy, that’s all there was to it, dear. He was the one who gave envelopes with LSD in the glue to Levi and Yost. Envelopes that perfectly matched the cooperative’s stationery.”
“Yah, but it was that Ledbetter fellow who gave Stayrook the envelopes. And it was Ledbetter who put the idea in Stayrook’s head about buying up all the farms.”
I was fit to be tied. Ledbetter was quite possibly the devil himself in upside-down glasses, but Stayrook was certainly no angel.
“What is this, blame-it-on-the-English day?”
“If the shoe fits,” Freni said smugly.
“No one forced Stayrook to do what he did, Freni. We are all responsible for our own choices.”
“Yah, and that English—what was his name? You know, Susannah’s boyfriend?”
Susannah groaned. “His name is Danny Hem, and he isn’t my boyfriend.”
“Yah, anyway, he chose to be drunk all the time, which is why Ledbetter was able to take over the business. A big business too, worth millions of dollars, they say.”
“Was, dear. Though maybe if Danny dries out the Amish will start supplying him again.”
“Ach, the English and their alcohol,” Freni said sanctimoniously.
“Ha! There you go again. The English this, the English that. Marvin Stoltzfus took a bribe to look the other way, which makes him just as guilty as Arnold Ledbetter. Maybe even more so, because Marvin was sworn to uphold the law.”
“So?”
“So, Marvin Stoltzfus shares enough of your genes to practically be your son. He even looks like you.”
“Why, I never!”
“If the shoe fits, dear. And one more thing, Freni. Stayrook knew that Arnold, not Danny, was harassing Elsie Bontrager. But he didn’t say anything, did he? He didn’t even say anything when Arnold got Elsie to sample some LSD in a slice of cheese, just so she would appear crazy. If that doesn’t make Stayrook guilty, then I don’t know what does! In my opinion the guilty parties should be strung up by their thumbs and pelted to death with cheese balls. And that includes Stayrook!”
“Ach du Heimer! How you talk. Your mama—”
“Leave Mama out of this!”
“Ladies, please,” Aaron said patiently.
To please my Pooky Bear I bit my tongue and pretended to be interested in the snow-covered hills of western Pennsylvania. In less than two hours I would be home, back at the PennDutch Inn, empress of my domain. I had a lot to be thankful for. Just hours before I had almost bought the farm, on a farm, and now I was seated next to the person I loved most in the whole wide world, with the two people I loved next sitting right behind. I could afford to be generous.
“I love you, Susannah,” I said impulsively.
“Huh?”
“I love you, dear.”
“Yeah, right. Same here.”
“I love you, Freni.”
“Ach!”
“Do you love me?”
“Ach!”
“I’ll take that as a ‘yes.’ ” I turned to Aaron, who was driving my car. “I love you, Aaron.”
Aaron carefully pulled the car over and parked it under a sign that read BEWARE OF FALLING ROCKS.
“I love you too, Magdalena Portulaca Yoder. Will you marry me?” Without waiting for an answer, my emperor pulled me to him and kissed me hard and full on the mouth.
“Yuck, gross,” Susannah had the nerve to say.
Freni held her tongue, but I knew she was watching us with intense interest, no doubt thinking about her Mose.
Oh, for the record, I said, “Yes.”
Discover Tamar Myers
An Amish Bed and Breakfast Mystery with Recipes Series (PennDutch)
Too Many Crooks Spoil the Broth
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, and Crime
No Use Dying Over Spilled Milk
Just Plain Pickled to Death
Between a Wok and a Hard Place
Eat, Drink, and Be Wary
The Hand that Rocks the Ladle
The Crepes of Wrath
Gruel and Unusual Punishment
Custard’s Last Stand
Thou Shalt Not Grill
Assault and Pepper
Grape Expectations
As the World Churns
Hell Hath No Curry
Batter Off Dead
Butter Safe than Sorry
B
elgian Congo Mystery Series
The Witch Doctor’s Wife
The Headhunter’s Daugther
The Boy Who Stole the Leopard’s Spots
The Girl Who Married an Eagle
Den of Antiquity Series
Larceny and Old Lace
Gilt by Association
The Ming and I
So Faux, So Good
Baroque and Desperate
Estate of Mind
A Penny Urned
Nightmare in Shining Armor
Splendor in the Glass
Tiles and Tribulation
Statue of Limitations
Monet Talks
The Cane Mutiny
Death of a Rug Lord
Poison Ivory
The Glass is Always Greener
Non-Series Books
Angels, Angels Everywhere
Criminal Appetites (anthology)
The Dark Side of Heaven
About the Author
Tamar Myers was born and raised in the Belgian Congo (now just the Congo). Her parents were missionaries to a tribe which, at that time, were known as headhunters and used human skulls for drinking cups. Because of her pale blue eyes, Tamar’s nickname was Ugly Eyes.
Her boarding school was two days away by truck, and sometimes it was necessary to wade through crocodile infested-waters to reach it. Other dangers she encountered as a child were cobras, deadly green mambas, and the voracious armies of driver ants that ate every animal (and human) that didn’t get out of their way.
At sixteen, Tamar's family settled in America, and she immediately underwent culture shock: she didn’t know how to dial a telephone, cross a street at a stoplight, or use a vending machine. She lucked out, however, by meeting her husband, Jeffrey, on her first day at an American high school. They literally bumped heads while he was leaving, and she entering, the Civics classroom.
In college Tamar began to submit novels for publication, but it took twenty-three years for her to get published. Persistence paid off, however, because Tamar is now the author of three ongoing mystery series: One is set in Amish Pennsylvania and features Magdalena Yoder, an Amish-Mennonite sleuth who runs a bed and breakfast inn; one, set in the Carolinas, centers around the adventures of Abigail Timberlake, who runs an antique and collectable store (the Den of Antiquity); and the third is set in the Africa of her youth, with its colorful, unique inhabitants.