Authors: Tamar Myers
âGross,' Alison said. âNow I'm never eating pancakes again!'
âI should sue,' Wanda said.
âHush,' I said, not unkindly. âMy point is that you've not been the only one of us to have a difficult life. Alison has had a hard life as well; her birth parents abandoned her, shipping her off to live with me.'
âBut Mom,' Alison said, â
that
was a good thing! You and
this
dad are a million, gazillion times better than my other parents.'
âWho cares?' Wanda snapped. âYou're just some rug-rat from Minnesota, yet you still got mentioned in that awful book.'
Alison beamed. âYeah, that was sweet. That gorgeous Ramat lady wrote that I was a college graduate with a handsome husband, and Mom left us to run the PennDutch Inn while she sailed off to the antidotes.'
âYou mean “Antipodes,” dear,' I said.
âYeah, whatever,' Alison said.
âShut up, both of yinz,' Wanda said.
âMom,' Alison said, âI thought ya weren't gonna let her talk to us like that no more.'
âShe is a mite rude,' I agreed. âWanda,' I said, removing a pair of genuine, stainless-steel, police-issue handcuffs from my oversized handbag. âHold out your knobby wrists, Wanda, because I am hereby conducting a citizen's arrest of your person, Wanda Sissleswitzer Hemphopple, for the murder of the late Ramat Sreym.'
Alison gasped. âGive me yer phone, Mom. I gotta get me a picture of this!'
Wanda, however, hardly blinked. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if she didn't blink at all, given that reptiles seldom do.
âHa! The joke's on yinz,' she said. âBefore either of yinz makes a move, yinz might want to consider the fact that one of my knobby wrists is connected to a stubby-fingered hand, which is holding a gun, which is pointed directly at your daughter's hoo-ha under the table.'
âNow
that
is rude,' I said.
âMom,' Alison said, âI don't want to die yet. I didn't wash my hair last night when I showered, and I'm pretty sure my lipstick got all worn off at breakfast.'
âI don't blame you, dear â about your hair, I mean â but you know how I feel about you wearing that color lipstick at your age.'
âYeah, I know. “Only harlots and starlets wear scarlet.” Something like that.'
âExcellent,' I said. âNow, another one of my clever sayings that you may wish to commit to memory is this: “Only the hapless wear strapless.”'
â
Stop it!
' One of the cords in Wanda's short, bullish neck started pulsating; that's how angry she was. With her free hand she retrieved a smart phone from between the depths of her compact yet ample bosom and placed a call. About that same time I could barely hear a phone ringing through the kitchen doors behind her.
âLeroy,' she said, âI assume that you still want that raise you've been nagging me about. Yah? Here's the thing: I'll give you double that amount, but only on the condition that you take everything off the griddle, no questions asked. I said no questions, Leroy. I don't care. Just throw it all in the trash. Then exit through the
back
door and take the rest of the day off.
âYes, Leroy, don't be such an idiot; of course you should turn the stoves off. And remember to exit through the
back
door. I'm right here in booth fourteen, Leroy. If I see you walking past me, you don't get any raise. In fact, you get a pay cut. Is that clear? And Leroy, don't tell anybody about this, because if you do, you'll be fired.'
At this point, what could I do but pray? The Bible tells us that God hears all our prayers, and clever preachers say that He answers all of them â although perhaps not always in the way that we want Him to. But make no mistake about it, when there was a gun pointing in the direction of my daughter, I wanted not only an immediate response, I wanted action. I'll even go so far as to confess that this lifelong pacifist, with five hundred years of nonviolence inbred into her genes, had temporarily gone around the bend â so to speak.
âOh, Lord,' I prayed aloud, âif it please Thee, may the roof of this greasy establishment crash down upon the head of a certain murderess, rendering her incapable of committing yet another heinous deed.'
âHarrumph,' said Wanda, much to my surprise, âat least I'm
included
in that stupid prayer.'
I felt my hackles rise. How dare that pagan Presbyterian label my prayer â or any prayer â as stupid? If only her neck weren't too stout, and corded, to wring. Well, if being included was of paramount importance to her warped little brain, then that's what I would give her.
âBut Lord, on the other hand, Thou knowest that no one can serve up pig parts like Wanda, even though Thou hast forbidden us to partake of them in Thy word, forever and ever, amen. Thus it would be a shame if indeed this pigsty â oops, poor word choice â should disintegrate, and cause the death of our dear sister, Ms Hemphopple, née Sissleswitzer. Therefore, Lord, I ask that you give this woman the courage of Joshua and Caleb, whose story we read in the Bible last Sunday â at least in the
Mennonite
Church.'
âMom,' Alison whispered, âain't this an awful long prayer?'
âShut your trap, kid,' Wanda said. âIt's about
me
, isn't it?'
It's been said that the best defense is a good offense, and I can be as offensive as the best of them. âDid you hear that, Lord? Wanda Sissleswitzer deserves to sizzle you-know-where, although of course I don't make that call, sir; you do. But what I was about to say before she got super mean and slapped down one of your little lambs, is that Alison and I might be persuaded to forget about today's little misunderstanding
if
the foaming fruitcake here puts her gun on the table and her hands in the air.'
Neither Alison, nor God, nor the Foaming Fruitcake, made a sound for an unbearable length of time. We were, however, serenaded by a swarm of flies, whose musical repertoire was disappointingly monotonous given the size of their wings.
âDing, dang, dong, dab nab it,' I said at last, having been reduced to swearing like a drunken sailor. âHow about it, Wanda? Do we have a deal?'
One positive thing that I
can
say about my erstwhile friend is that she certainly has
chutzpah
. Her response was to call Swivel Hips on her cell.
âSwivel,' she barked, âwe're closing. No, and it's none of your business why. The kitchen's already closed, by the way â Leroy's already been sent home so don't go back there bothering him.' She paused, and her face contorted like a rag mop put through a wringer. âWell, then give them their stinking money back. I don't give a rat's hind end what they say. And I want you to get the
hel
-met out of here, too.'
To be honest, Wanda, being one of the more liberal types of Presbyterian, used language much stronger than that. Then again, if one is a confessed murderess, I suppose that one might not feel the need to hold back when it comes to language. I know that
if
I were ever to commit murder, which I would never, ever in a trillion light years do, I think I might experiment with the entire gamut of sins.
And why not? I could be like the Roman Catholics in those Mafia movies: I could commit a sin and then I could go to confession. Just as long as I could get to that little wooden booth before my number was up, I could have it made in the shade! Why, I could cavort, carouse, and I could even cuss while doing cartwheels in a carnival.
âMagdalena!'
It was that bothersome Wanda, always intruding on my imaginary sins. âGet a hold of yourself, Magdalena. You look like you're daydreaming again. Just like you used to do in Algebra II class.
This
' â Wanda waved a short muscular arm â âis supposed to be all about
me
. This is my crime, so it's my time.'
âWell, it is, dear,' I said. âI'm just trying to help you with planning some of the details.'
âDetails?' she asked coyly. âOf what?'
Her mocking smile made me want to do something very un-Mennonite to her person. âI am helping you to plan the details of our murders, dear. Already Alison here is the size of a small adult woman, and you could fit the entire village of Hernia in just one of my shoes. My point is that you are going to need to know how to dispose of us when we go to that final judgment in the sky.'
âAre we really going to die, Mom?' Alison said. She sounded eerily calm.
âYou can bet your bippy that we're not,' I said. âGod will take care of us. Remember the story of Abraham and Isaac? God sent a ram just in time, before Abraham could sacrifice his son.'
âI've always hated that story,' Wanda said. âNo father should ever be willing to sacrifice his child. Besides, that would have broken several of God's commandments right there.'
âJust like you're about to do,' I said. âWanda, if you reconsider your plans, I could make you a very rich woman.'
âYeah,' Alison said, âmy mom's rolling in dough.'
âJust like Scrooge McDuck,' I said.
âHuh?' Alison said.
âScrooge McDuck was a comic book character when we were growing up,' I explained. âI wasn't allowed to read comics, but when I had sleepovers at Wanda's house we would spend hours reading the stacks of comics that her older brother left behind when he joined the army.' My hope was that this childhood reference would jog a fond memory from back in the days when we were best friends
all
of the time.
âI didn't know that you had a brother,' Alison said. âThere ain't no Swizzlesticks going ta my school.'
âMy maiden name was
Sissleswitzer
,' Wanda hissed, âand my brother died in Vietnam.'
âOops,' Alison said. âMy bad.'
âSay you're sorry,' I hissed. We must have sounded like a nest of disturbed snakes.
âI
did
,' Alison protested. âI said “my bad.” What more do you want?'
My eyes couldn't help but stray from our captor to my distraught daughter, and given that the Good Lord has blessed me with phenomenal peripheral vision, I noticed for the first time that Alison was holding her new cell phone under the table where Wanda couldn't see it, and that she was texting away like nobody's business. What a
Dumkoph
I was! Here I'd been, worried about the kookaburra sitting across from us with her supposedly loaded gun, when all along I should have been trusting in the Lord, like I was supposed to do. In the biblical story, the Angel of the Lord interceded with a ram to save Isaac's life, but in
my
story it was Isaac â er, Alison â who was interceding with a cell phone. All I had to do was to continue to stall the whacko with the wobbly French twist until the sheriff arrived.
âWanda, dear,' I said, âyou must have loved your brother very much. Tell us all about him.'
My nemesis recoiled so fast that her teetering tower of doom nearly toppled. âYou ignoramus,' she said. âHow could you have forgotten? You must have a brain like a lump of overcooked noodles. Gilbert was a sadistic bully; he was the meanest brother who ever lived. Our parents doted on him but I danced a jig of joy the day he left for the army. You,
especially
, should remember that, Magdalena, because on one of your sleepovers at my house he ripped the head off your favourite doll and stuck it on a wooden stake. Gilbert claimed that he was a head-hunter and that your doll was a dead missionary. You bawled your eyes out after that for days.'
âGa-waw, Gilbert,' I growled softly. Sometimes it is merciful to forget.
âSo,' Wanda said brightly, having noticed my discomfort, âshall we discuss the time that I stuck the “Yoder with an Odour” sign on your back in
Senior
High School and you went home crying?'
Alison stopped texting. âMom, you didn't!'
âBoo-hoo,' Wanda said. âYour precious Mom was a world-class cry-baby.'
âThe entire school was laughing at me,' I said. âI have feelings too. Besides, the next day was when Iâ Uh, never mind.'
âWhen you what?' Wanda said.
âI forget, dear. But my, don't you look good in turquoise today, Wanda! You always did, you know. That color suits you to a tee; it really plays off your green eyes.'
âMy eyes are brown,' Wanda snapped. âBeady brown, you've always called them. Now get up, both of yinz, and move your lazy butts off out of my booth. We have someplace to go.'
âBut we have yet to eat, dear,' I said quite reasonably. âI realize that you sent the cook home, and that we're stuck here without a passable cook between the three of us, but couldn't we at least have some toast with jam and butter? And I'm speaking of real butter â not margarine, or some hybrid of the two, which in my opinion are worse for one than the good ole fashioned kind. Oh, and a nice hot pot of tea would really hit the spot. Again, I'm not speaking of those worldly herbal teas â their very names are meant to stir one's imagination and possibly even one's loins â but something Christian and sensible, like Earl Grey.'
âI prefer hot chocolate, if you please,' Alison said, doing a perfect rendition of the Duchess of Cornwall.
When we Americans pretend to be
la-de-da
, we â
la
' our way all the way up the ladder to the top rung. Frankly, I'd rather that the child continues to speak like a royal duchess than a low-class grammar school dropout, but I dare not encourage her. Push Alison a step in one direction and she'll push back three steps.
âStop it!' Wanda cried. âEnough!' Even though she'd been seated behind the banquette table of a booth, she managed to stand and clap her hands over her ears.