As the World Churns (29 page)

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Authors: Tamar Myers

Tags: #Mystery

BOOK: As the World Churns
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    Agnes was the only one who was hungry, but since the Sausage Barn is as good a place as any to collect one’s thoughts and put together a plan, I acquiesced to dropping by. In a similar vein, Ida needs no special venue in which to vent her intense dislike of yours truly.

    Only Wanda Hemphopple seemed to disapprove of our plan. “What are you doing here, Magdalena?” she demanded. “We only serve breakfast, and it’s almost suppertime.”

    
“Too true, dear.
But the breakfast you do serve is available until
ten p.m.

    “Humph.”

    “That’s
harrumph
, dear.”

    “I beg your pardon?”

    “Look it up in Webster’s, if you don’t believe me.”

    “As it so happens, I
did
look it up. They’re both in there, and ‘humph’ is exactly what I mean in this context.”

    Agnes, ever the friend, stepped in to rescue me. “Can we please dispense with the semantics before I starve to death?”

    Ida stepped back in alarm. “Oy, and now dis von is anti-se-mantic.
Vhen vill it ever shtop?”

    I extended a rakelike arm, and pulled the little woman back into the conversation. “Wanda, what will it
be
?
A big fat tip for some mediocre food and bad service, or no coins for your coffer, which, by the way, seems to be mighty hungry tonight as well?”

    Wanda glanced around at her practically empty restaurant, and then zeroed in on me with a glare. “Okay, I’ll seat youse, but just so youse know, the Fat’s Where It’s At Platter is unavailable this evening on account of the new fry cook threw up in the grease catcher, so there’s nothing with which to adequately grease the griddle.”

    “Grease the griddle, wear a girdle,” I said gamely, in an attempt to patch things over. Just because Wanda hates my guts, is no reason that I shouldn’t be concerned that our relationship might deteriorate to the point where she despises me.

    “Was that supposed to be a joke?” she snarled.
“Because if it was, I don’t get it.”

    “Magdalena, Magdalena,” Agnes chided. “Fat jokes are so not in.”

    “But it wasn’t a joke; it was merely a witticism, and not aimed at anyone in particular. Honestly, Wanda, you’re almost as touchy as that Pearlmutter woman.”

    “Jane Pearlmutter? The one
whose
Holstein took first place in the competition?”

    
“The very one.
It makes you wonder what that very handsome husband sees in her. By the way, how do you know who won? I mean, the competition has only been over for a couple of hours. Were you there when the prize was presented?”

    “Humph. Some of us have to work, Magdalena. Besides, this is Hernia we’re talking about. I bet you a dozen people either called with the news, or stopped in before the guilty party itself showed up.”

    “The Pearlmutters were
here?

    “You sound surprised. You think them
New York
types are too highfalutin for my establishment?”

    I glanced at Ida. “I certainly wouldn’t say that; I’d be more likely to say that the word ‘establishment’ is a bit highfalutin for a place like the Sausage Barn.”

    
“Oh yeah?
They must have liked my food, because they weren’t gone more than twenty minutes when they came back for more. You should have seen what they carried out with them.”

    “Wanda, dear, asking for a doggie bag is not the same as endorsing one’s cuisine. Maybe they just didn’t want to offend you by leaving it on their plates.”

    She rolled her eyes-and I’m not exaggerating when I say that the left one almost got stuck in the “up” position. “These were orders to go, you idiot.”

    “When did you start offering carryout service?”

    “Only for the last eight years. I’m sure it’s skipped your notice because you’re too busy licking the last speck of my terrible food off of your plate.”

    “Well, I must say that no restaurant in the tri-county area can cook bacon like your guys.
Nice and crisp on both ends, with just a little play in the middle.”

    She grinned happily. “Just the way you like it. Now these people-the Pearlmutters-how many children do they have?”

    
“None, as far as I know.”

    “Humph. Well, when they came in the first time, they ordered regular meals: eggs, bacon, toast, juice, coffee. But the second time around, when they did the takeout order, they asked for three orders of pancakes-one buttermilk regular, one buttermilk silver dollar style, the third one buckwheat-regular toast, cinnamon toast, French toast-both plain and stuffed, like them fancy places like IHOP make-scrambled eggs, and four orders of sausage links. Oh, and two large milks. Two juices as well. I just assumed they had kids with them this time, and they were waiting in the car.”

    
“Buckwheat?”
Agnes asked. “I didn’t realize you still offered those. I haven’t had a buckwheat pancake in ages.”

    “They’re by request only.” Wanda tipped her beehive hairdo at some invisible spies and lowered her voice. “They’re from a mix. I keep some on hand because every now and then some relic from the past shows up and
asks
for them. ‘We Aim to Pleez.’ That’s our motto.
Says so right on the menus.”

    In the interest of saving both time and energy, I bit my tongue so hard that I felt it all the way to my toes. How will kids these days learn to spell if their computers automatically correct them, and if they are constantly subjected to what I call bizspell? The clever names that companies think up for
themselves
are, in fact, signposts on the road to literary perdition. And to what end?
Puns?
I eschew puns, viewing them as nothing more than intellectual laziness!

    But I digress. Something Wanda had said was percolating through my brain. Buckwheat pancakes-particularly the ones the Sausage Barn served-were Gabe’s favorite. As for Alison, she could never make up her mind, so I always ordered both kinds of French toast for her, knowing that the Babester would happily polish off what she couldn’t finish. After all, my sweet pseudo-stepdaughter was in the middle of a growth spurt, and invariably started her breakfasts at the Sausage Barn with sil-ver-dollar pancakes, followed by a small stack of buttermilk flapjacks.

    Both of them loved Wanda’s link sausage, and commonly ordered double helpings. Milk and juice were also staples of a visit to the Hemphopple Temple of Icky Stickiness (as Alison calls it, in reference to all the maple syrup she spills, which never gets cleaned up). That left just the scrambled eggs and plain toast unaccounted for, but on the days when Gabe is particularly stressed, or decides to work out, his appetite soars.

    The thought that was beginning to make my blood run cold was simply this: what were the odds that the Pearlmutters would eat breakfast at the Barn, and return twenty minutes later and order the same meal my sweet patooties habitually consumed?

    It just didn’t seem like a coincidence.
And if it wasn’t a coincidence, then the Pearlmutters had to know the whereabouts of my darlings.
But beyond that, it could also be that the half-dashing
duo from the
Garden
State
were
holding Gabe and Alison against their will.
But why?

    A poke in the arm from Agnes brought me back to my surroundings.
“You in there somewhere,
Magdalena
?
If I wasn’t a practicing Methodist, especially one of Mennonite extraction, I’d say you’ve been abducted by aliens, and this is only a shell I’m looking at.”

    “Humph,” Wanda said, just to spite me, and then turned her venom on Agnes. “I thought you Methodists believed in the possibility of extratesticles-or whatever they’re called.”

    “I don’t think we have an official position. Personally, I find it hard to reconcile the gift of salvation through Jesus with alien life forms. It doesn’t say anywhere in the Bible that Christ died for them as well.”

    “That’s because they don’t exist. Frankly, Agnes, you wouldn’t have this crisis of faith if you’d remained a good Mennonite.”

    “I’m not having a crisis of faith! And as long as we’re being frank, Wanda-”

    My shell sprang into action.
“Ladies!
I have reason to believe that there’s been a real abduction. Those people, the Pearlmutters, for whatever reason, have taken Alison and Gabe hostage.”

    

Hostage?
My Gabeleh?
My only son?”
It was as if Ida, who had been behaving herself up until then, had stuck her finger into a light socket.

    “Ida dear, that’s not for sure. I’m just jumping to conclusions like I usually do. Who knows, maybe they’re off playing peewee golf somewhere.”

    “
Oy veys
meer
,” Ida said. She looked ready to faint.

    There was no reason to tell the Babester’s mother the rest of my theory. Her eagle-eyed son, the famous heart surgeon, had detected something unkosher-if I may be pardoned the incorrect usage of this term-about the Pearlmutters’ entry. As Jane was a plastic surgeon, and udder enhancement was
the
most common way to cheat in dairy cow competitions, it followed that my husband had spotted a suture line in the bovine’s feminine expres-sion-so to speak.

    It had also occurred to me that Alison was the first to be abducted, and that they’d used her as a pawn to get Gabe to move the competition along at lightning speed, just as fast as a dog wants out of a roomful of mother cats. It was possible that Gabe might have been able to save his own handsome neck at any point along the way by calling the police, but as long as the welfare of his pseudo-stepdaughter was at stake, he would have cooperated with Satan himself. My heart glowed with love.

    “Magdalena,” Agnes said, “are you in there someplace?”

    “
What?
Of course I’m in here! I don’t believe in astral projection; I barely know the word.”

    “Well, you said they could be playing peewee golf, right?
But what if they’re really tied up in an abandoned lumberyard somewhere.
A giant table saw with two-inch teeth is spinning just in front of them. Suddenly, two hooded men in black grab Gabriel and push him in the direction of the blade-”

    “Agnes!” I barked. “This is not your creative writing class. What you just said could be really happening.”

    
“Sorry,
Magdalena
.
I guess I got carried away. What would you like me to do?”

    “Call Sheriff Dewlapp, and tell him that I have a hunch that the Pearlmutters have my missing husband and foster daughter. If he refuses to take it seriously, tell him I said that a hunch from a woman is as good as two facts from a man, and remind him of all the times I’ve been right.” I turned to Wanda. “In the meantime, I’m going to stock up on provisions, because I feel a trip to
Maryland
coming on.
Wanda, dear, lead the way to your pantry.”

    Wanda’s ominous do teetered and tottered as she shook her head. “I don’t even think so. This is isn’t a grocery store, you know.”

    I patted my pocketbook. “Have you forgotten that I am a very wealthy woman?”

    “Okay, but I’m going to
Maryland
with you.”

33

    “Who is this Mary Lynn?” Ida demanded.
“Eez she my Gabeleh’s girlfriend?”

    “No, Ida,” Agnes said. “
Maryland
is the state directly to the south of us. For some reason that only she can fathom, Magdalena thinks it’s akin to the wild and wooly west.”

    

Mit
Indians and vagon trains, yah?”

    
“Not exactly.”

    “Den how is it?”

    “It’s very much like here, except that it’s thirty miles south.”

    “It’s across a
border
,” I hissed. “Do we need passports?” Wanda asked. Believe
me,
I was so tempted to lie that I would have given one of my silver-filled molars for the opportunity to do so, and without guilt. Alas, those opportunities seldom come my way. Besides, my cell phone was ringing and the caller was Chris Ackerman.

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