by Tamar Myers
Play It Again, Spam
An Amish Bed and Breakfast Mystery with Recipes
Tamar Myers
Copyright
This ebook is licensed to you for your personal enjoyment only.
This ebook 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.
Play It Again, Spam
Copyright © 1999 by Tamar Myers
Ebook ISBN: 9781943772926
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.
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Dedication
This book is dedicated loving memory of my baba, Tshiala.
One
Three months to the day after my husband left me, I landed face down in a cow patty. I am told that there was absolutely no connection between the two events. The fact that they both left the same taste in my mouth is supposedly coincidental.
At any rate, tornadoes are rare in central Pennsylvania, and the jury is still out on whether or not the windstorm that flattened my barn and demolished my house was indeed a twister. But I know what I saw. I was up in the north pasture collecting my two Holstein cows for their evening milking when I saw the dark funnel racing down Hertzler Road, and then suddenly turn and head right at my two-hundred-year-old farmstead. I made a beeline for the nearest ditch, but it was halfway between me and the approaching storm, and the storm was faster. I never made it. One minute I was running like the wind—into the wind—and the next I was out like the light on a squashed firefly.
When I woke up, I was intimately acquainted with bovine waste, my barn was as flat as my A-cup chest, and my house, in which I’d been born some forty-six years earlier, was a pile of kindling. I myself was a good twenty yards away from where I last remembered being.
Mercifully, the two Holsteins had been spared. Bessie and Matilda had been kind enough to wander over and keep me company until I regained consciousness, and in fact, Bessie was gently nuzzling my face with her large, moist lips—either that, or she was snacking on my hair which, quite frankly, was in need of a trim.
It took four and a half months to rebuild the house and barn, but a whole lot longer to rebuild my life. My once-thriving bed-and-breakfast business in Hernia, Pennsylvania, was kaput. Sure, I’d restored the inn, but it was unlikely I was ever going to restore that certain caliber of clientele. You see, ever since the rave review in The New York Times, I’d played hostess to the rich and famous. Folks with complicated lives paid big bucks to live simply for a few days. As a matter of fact, when the tornado hit I had a two-year waiting list, but of course I’d had to postpone or cancel everyone on the list. In the meantime, that fickle flock had discovered the joys of Montana and Wyoming. Dude ranches were back in vogue—Amish were definitely not. I briefly considered renaming the PennDutch Inn The Big Sky, which would have been a big lie, because from November to March you can’t even see the sky because of the clouds.
When the phone rang early that warm spring morning, I wasn’t sleeping, but I was deep in the slough of despondence. I must have let it ring ten times before answering.
“PennDutch Inn,” I said sourly.
“Fantastic! I didn’t think there could be more than one Hernia, Pennsylvania, and I bet there’s only one PennDutch Inn, right?”
“Get to your point, dear.”
“Well, I’d like to reserve your four best rooms, if I may.”
“April Fool’s was three weeks ago, buster.”
My caller chuckled. “My name is Bob Hart and I’m calling from Tulsa, Oklahoma. I want to make some reservations.”
I glanced at my bedside clock. The little hand was on the seven, and the big hand was two dust motes to the right of the twelve.
“It must be awfully early in Oklahoma.”
“Well, you know what they say about the early bird getting the worm and all that.”
“This is a high-class operation, Mr. Hart. Worms will not be on the menu.”
“Good comeback, ma’am.”
“I do my best.” Frankly, my tart tongue had been lolling about listlessly in my mouth for some time. Depression is the arch enemy of rapier wit, after all.
“So, do you have four rooms available?”
“For which dates?” I flipped the empty pages of a notebook I keep by the phone.
“Next week. My wife and I will be—”
“Next week? ”
“Perhaps I could speak with the owner,” Bob had the cheek to say.
“I am the owner, dear. I’m just checking my calendar. This is a very popular establishment, you know.”
“Oh, indeed I do. I read all about your place in People magazine. Last year, wasn’t it? They called it a ‘gem,’ I believe. 'The place to kick back and relax.’”
“Oh?” I sat up. My inn had been featured in so many articles I’d long ago lost count—but the People magazine spread, that I remembered. My personal phone had rung off the hook for a week after that, with half of Hollywood and the cream of Washington clamoring to get on my waiting list. Not that it did any good now. Those fickle friends of fortune were off frolicking in greener and higher pastures. No doubt some of them were dancing with wolves.
“Yes, ma’am. That was some picture they ran too.”
“You may call me Miss Yoder, if you wish,” I said generously. Thank the Good Lord news of my inn’s demise had not been the subject of a follow-up spread. “So you remember that picture?”
“Miss Yoder, how could I forget that picture? You were the tall, good-looking woman standing next to Barbra Streisand, weren’t you?”
“She lets me call her Babs,” I said, perking up considerably. “But I still have to call him James.”
“How about it, Miss Yoder? You think you can squeeze us in?”
“Four rooms you said?” My new PennDutch has six guest rooms, all of them as empty as my heart the day my Pooky Bear told me he had another wife stashed up in Minnesota.
“Yes, ma’am. There’ll be four couples. Do these rooms have private baths?”
I snorted. “Heads of state have stayed at my inn, dear. Of course, they have private baths. The question is, can you afford my rates?”
“What are your rates?”
I named the figure that was equal to the gross national product of your average third-world nation. It was, in fact, half of what I used to charge the rich and famous.
“That will be fine,” Bob said without a second’s hesitation. “Please make the reservation under my name, Robert E. Hart. My wife and I will be arriving Sunday night from Tulsa. Our flight lands in Pittsburgh, where we plan to rent a car. The other three couples will be flying in Monday morning.”
“Tulsa too?” I asked. Alliteration has always been my forte.
“No, ma’am. Jimmy and his wife—they’re the Hills—are from Arkansas. Frank and Marjorie Frost are from Missouri, but they live in Anchorage now. So guess where Scott and Dixie Montgomery are from.”
“Alabama?”
Bob hooted with delight. “No, Minnesota.”
I forced a polite chuckle. “Well, I’m sure you will find our little Amis
h and Mennonite community very interesting. We’re not overrun by tourists like those folks over in Lancaster.”
“Yeah, the wives are really looking forward to that. Sandy—that’s my wife—wants to buy some Amish quilts. But for us men, it’s more of a reunion. We haven’t seen each other in almost fifty years.”
“Fraternity brothers?” I asked in alarm. The only creatures allowed to swing from my chandeliers were spiders.
“We’re army buddies, ma’am. Retired officers. We were all members of the 43rd tank brigade in WWII.”
“Oh.” Perhaps I should explain that I am a Mennonite woman, born and bred. My grandparents were Amish. Both sects are strict pacifists, and have been so for hundreds of years. My deceased mother would roll over in her grave if she knew I was allowing a group of former warriors to sleep under her roof.
“Miss Yoder, I sense some hesitation. I mean, if there’s a problem—perhaps you could recommend another inn in the area.”
On the other hand, it wasn’t Mama’s roof anymore, was it? And they were retired from the military. I prayed for a sign from above, and instantly was hit with an inspiration.
“I have a special plan called A.L.P.O.—it stands for Amish Lifestyle Plan Option. For an extra twenty dollars a day per room I allow guests to do their own housekeeping. It makes them feel more like a part of the community.”
“That sounds like fun.”
“It does!”
“A little work never hurt anyone. Helps to keep the old ticker in shape, you know.”
I breathed a sigh of relief. “Will that be Visa or MasterCard, dear?”
“I got them both right here, little lady. One in each hand. How about you choose?”
“The one in your left hand.” At the rate he was paying, he deserved to be humored.
“That would be Visa. Say, little lady, I’d like to reserve a conference room as well.”
“Will an old-fashioned parlor do instead?” It was a new old-fashioned parlor, of course. The tornado saw to that.
“Uh, how much extra would that be?”
“Fifty dollars a day, dear. Believe me, that’s a steal.”
“Does it have a fireplace?”
“A real fireplace with genuine logs. None of those fake logs with a gas flame. In fact, I’ll even let you chop wood for me, and I won’t charge you a penny more.”
“Ah, a real log-burning fireplace. Well, in that case, you have a deal. You know, Miss Yoder, you’re a woman after my own heart. Hart—get it?”
I forced a polite chuckle. Of course, I got it. What I didn’t get was why four couples from west of the Mississippi would converge on Hernia, Pennsylvania. That was a long way to come just for quilts. Why not hold the mini-reunion some place more central like St. Louis? If I’d taken the time to ponder that question a little longer, I would have spared myself a whole lot of trouble—trouble that almost cost me my life. Alas, one of my guests was not to be so lucky.
Two
I barely had time to replace the receiver in its cradle when the phone rang again.
“A deal is a deal,” I snapped. “The A.L.P.O. plan stays.”
“I beg your pardon?” a woman said in cultivated tones.
“Mrs. Hart?”
“Excuse me, I must have a wrong number. I’m trying to reach the PennDutch Inn.”
“You’ve reached it, dear. How may I help you?”
“My name is Samantha Burk, and I’m calling to reserve a room for next week.”
“Just a minute, dear, while I check to see if there’s an opening.” Trust me, that is not the same thing as lying. I did check—the fact that I already knew the answer is irrelevant. “Well, you’re in luck, dear. I do happen to have a room available. Will it be just you?”
“No. My husband, Dr. John Burk, will be with me. We would like to arrive Sunday evening if it is at all possible.”
“That would be fine. It’s always good to have a doctor at the inn. Saves on the extra expense of house calls.” I chuckled pleasantly.
“Oh, no, John’s not a medical doctor. John has a Ph.D. He’s a retired professor of history. He taught at Duquesne University for twenty-five years.”
“Oh, so you’re Pittsburghers?”
“Yes. I mean, we live in Oakmont, just outside the city.”
“Close enough, dear. There’s a wonderful bookstore there—Mystery Lovers Bookshop. Do you know it?”
“I practically live there. Mary Alice Gorman and Richard Goldman are two of my best friends.” Samantha enunciated every word.
“Are you a teacher, dear?”
She laughed pleasantly. “No, I’m afraid not—but I get that question all the time. I’m a retired musician. We have to be precise in our work.”
“What sort of musician?” I asked warily. I have had many pleasant encounters with the musically gifted, but it’s obvious that some of the newer rock groups failed to learn manners at their mamas’ knees. Take, for instance, Defeated Moles and Stink Cabbage. And now that you’ve got them, keep them far away from me. And as far as I am concerned, they aren’t even musicians.
“I am a concert pianist,” she said. “Actually, I should say former concert pianist. I give only two performances a year now—it’s arthritis, you know. It’s getting harder and harder to span an octave. Say, you wouldn’t happen to have a piano at the inn, would you? I try to practice four hours every day despite the pain.”
“Mix a tablespoon of pectin with a glass of red grape juice. Drink two of those a day, and it should help with the pain. There is no charge for this advice,” I said generously. “Now as to the piano—I don’t own one, but there’s a perfectly good piano just down the road at Beechy Grove Mennonite Church. I’m a member, so you can just say I sent you.”
“Is it a Steinway?”
“I’m not sure about that. I do know there’s a henway in one of the Sunday school rooms.”
She bit. “What’s a henway?”
“Oh, about three pounds.”
Much to her credit, the good woman laughed out loud. This was almost too good to be true. Guests who possess a sense of humor and are cultivated and refined are as scarce as a henway’s teeth. And her husband was a historian no less! Perhaps I should have solicited customers from Pittsburgh years ago. I mean, who needs the glamour of Hollywood and the power of Washington when there is culture to be found in one’s own backyard?
“I look forward to meeting you,” I said cheerily. I hadn’t felt that good in weeks.
“I look forward to meeting you as well. Oh”—her voice was suddenly an octave higher—“will there be other people staying at the inn?”
“Of course there’ll be other guests, but we’ll find plenty of time to chat. Be a dear, will you, and bring me a copy of Selma Eichler’s latest mystery, Murder Can Singe Your Old Flame. In fact, pick out several other mysteries at random. Just make sure they’re new releases, so I won’t have read them. Better yet, get Mary Alice to help you. She knows my taste.”
“I’d be happy to. Now”— she paused to delicately clear her throat—“you said there will be other guests there this week. What sort of people will they be?”
“What?” I jiggled my pinkie in my ear to clear out the wax. Perhaps I’d heard wrong. Prejudice seldom rears its ugly head at my inn, but when it does, it always comes as a complete surprise. Rest assured, I always send it packing.
“You know, our sort.”
“And what sort would that be? Because for your information, I just happen to be a lesbian African-American woman with a Spanish surname who practices the Jewish faith—oh, did I happen to mention I was physically and mentally challenged?”
“No, what I—”
“And fat!”
“I mean older people. Mature adults.”
“Oh?”
“My husband is a very nervous man, you see, and some, of these young people today—well, to put it bluntly, we prefer an older crowd.”
“Is that it? No need to worry, dear, not unless yo
ur husband is bothered by the sound of clacking dentures. They’re all World War II veterans and their wives.”
“Well—”
“I hope you understand that silence doesn’t come cheap,” I said, presenting her with the last potential obstacle.
“I’m sure that won’t be a problem Ms.—?”
“Yoder,” I said, and then gave her a figure even higher than the one I’d quoted the veterans.
“That sounds fine. Do you take credit cards?”
“Yes. Oh, did I mention the Amish Lifestyle Option plan? For a mere fifty dollars extra you get to play Amish and clean your own room. Do your own laundry as well.”
“How charming! Put us down for that too.”
I took her credit card number, and then bid her adieu before I could yield to temptation. There’s a charming little stone bridge in Hernia that has theoretically changed hands several times in recent years. Rumors abound that I may have something to do with this.
I couldn’t contain myself; I just had to tell Freni. Five—no, make that ten—paying guests, and all within the space of ten minutes. And Freni said no one in their right mind would pay that kind of money to stay in a reconstructed inn!
Freni Hostetler is my cousin. We are not first cousins, but we share eight sets of ancestors seven generations back. By my reckoning that makes us closer than first cousins—possibly even half sisters—although Freni is thirty years older than I, a contemporary of my parents. The truth is my people are so intermarried that not only am I my own cousin, but I constitute a full-fledged family reunion. Throw in a sandwich, and I’m a family picnic.
I slipped on a blue long-sleeved dress that comes well below the knee, stockings, and a pair of sensible shoes. My undergarments are none of your business. My toilette consisted of using the device of the same name—I do not waste my money on makeup—and gathering my shoulder-length hair into a nice, conservative bun, over which I pinned a white organza prayer cap. The thermometer on my windowsill registered in the mid-fifties so I decided against a sweater. The two-mile hike to Freni’s house traverses a rather steep hill, and I eschew sweating. Perhaps that’s why I was never very good in—well, never mind. A brisk walk would keep me warm enough.