Authors: Tamar Myers
For the first time, that horrible handgun was visible. I am not a political woman, and no expert on guns by any means, but if Wanda was the person who actually bought that gun, then either the seller was completely distracted that day or was someone without a conscience. I state this because Wanda practically had the word UNSTABLE branded into the skin of her pallid forehead. Seeing Wanda with a weapon of a duo's destruction made me sick to the stomach.
Unfortunately, my equine features are both expansive and expressive, for Wanda's subsequent smile undoubtedly reflected her deep satisfaction at the horror registering on my face. She lowered her pistol and pointed it directly at Alison's chest.
âI have a name for this little baby, and I call her Fanny,' she said. âDo you want to know why?'
âNo,' Alison said. âYou bore me.'
âWhat a naughty girl,' Wanda said, caterpillar eyebrows arched to stratospheric heights in surprise. âReally, Magdalena, if I were you, I'd spank that child.'
âYeah, right,' Alison sneered.
Generally speaking, the kids who come into the Sausage Barn have plump sausage arms and legs, and their focus is lining up to the grease trough that passes for the All You Can Eat Bar every Saturday and Sunday between ten a.m. and one p.m. They dare
not
sass anyone, lest they be left at home with a babysitter, and the opportunity to nibble on a frozen dinner the next time their All-American family goes off to graze. Wanda, it was clear, had no experience of thirteen-year-old girls with empty mouths.
âMagdalena,' she said to me, âare you going to let her get away with that?' Wanda's gun hand began to shake as her temper rose.
âOf course, dear,' I said. âWe don't respect murderesses in our family.'
âAnd
you
call yourself a Christian?'
âWanda, just be glad she hasn't stoned you yet. That's very biblical.'
âMom,' Alison said, â
can
I? Please? Just
one
stone â it won't be very big. I promise.'
I sighed. âWould that I could, dear, but undoubtedly this evil woman with the gun has other plans.'
Wanda's lower lip was trembling; I was so close to victory that I could almost taste it. But I couldn't think what to say next fast enough, so she beat me to it.
âMove,' she barked. âGet out of the booth. Now! Out! Leave your purses. Come! Move along.'
So, obediently, we slid across a conveniently greased banquette seat and tumbled out into the aisle of an eerily empty restaurant. Wanda then marched the pair of us â two hungry sacrificial lambs that we were â into the kitchen and bade us stand still while she unlocked a door at the far end of the kitchen. This door was equipped with a hasp with a rusty Yale lock stuck through it, and Wanda had to try at least several keys until she found the one that fit. She did that with her right hand, while her left hand waved wildly in our direction. I only briefly entertained the idea of throwing myself at her gun-wielding hand. BC (Before Children) I would have done so with no compunctions whatsoever; AD (After Dementia) I have a tendency to be less rash.
The door had apparently not been used in some time, and Wanda really had to tug on it to get it open. As I'm a fair-minded Christian woman, I believe in giving credit where credit is due, so I have this to say about the Hemphopple with the Tower of Doom: there are times when that woman sports a rather attractive bulging bicep. Now, where was I? Oh, yes, when this door finally became unstuck and swung open, it brought with it a rush of stale air. Chief amongst the foul odours was an acrid, chemical smell that was somehow familiar.
âGet in there! I want yinz to keep your hands up and get in there one at a time.'
âSpeak now,' I said as I nodded at her gun, âor forever hold your piece.'
âStop it! How the heck can I kill you if you insist on joking all the time? Even we whackadoodle psychopaths require the correct conditions.'
âPshaw,' I said. âOr do you suppose that is something his urologist instructed him to do during his declining days?'
â
What?
'
âPiss. Shaw. Now see what you did, Wanda? You made me say two dirty words, and your name was one of them. A joke is no good if it has to be explained.'
âCuckoo, cuckoo,' Wanda said, addressing Alison while making twirling motions beside her ear, all the while holding the gun in that hand. âYou much-loved Mom is a nut-job.'
âPerhaps so,' I said, âbut if that's the caseâ'
âShut up, Magdalena,' Wanda said, âor your frightened little squab gets it right between the eyes.'
âI ain't no squash,' Alison said. She was angrier than a two-headed snake with a one-toad dinner. I was afraid that if I didn't intervene, Alison was going to do something that would make Wanda actually pull the trigger.
âA squab is a cute little baby pigeon, dear,' I said. âThe Whackadoodle meant it as a compliment.'
Wanda fired her pistol.
Before I even heard the sound of the gun, I felt the breeze generated by the lead slug as it whizzed just above my scalp. My white organza prayer cap usually sits atop my coiled braids. However, the slug tore right through my braids, severing one in half, and pretty much demolishing my clean white cap. Whether or not Wanda meant to hit my head and missed, or was really aiming for my headgear, one thing was clear: the woman meant business.
Serves eight English, four Mennonites or two Amish
½ cup cold water
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
4 teaspoons instant coffee powder
¼ teaspoon salt
2 eggs, separated
1 package (6 ounces) butterscotch pieces
½ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1 cup whipping cream
1 baked nine-inch pie shell
Combine water, gelatin, coffee and salt in saucepan. Cook and stir over moderate heat until the gelatin dissolves and the mixture comes to a boil. Remove from heat. Beat egg yolks slightly; add the gelatin mixture gradually, stirring rapidly. Cook over low heat one minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Stir in butterscotch pieces, reserving one tablespoon for garnish. Beat egg whites until stiff; beat in brown sugar. Continue to beat until stiff and satiny. Fold in butterscotch mixture. Whip cream; reserve half cup for garnish. Fold in remainder. Spoon into pie shell. Garnish. Chill until set.
âM
om, mom!'
I awoke in pitch darkness with a throbbing headache and a teenager screaming in my ear. Forgive me then, if I momentarily thought that I had died and gone to you-know-where. Yes, I know that my salvation is assured, but I am also aware that I quite willingly listen to, and accept, the advice of a therapist named Luci Feragamo simply because I like what she has to say. Granted, this is how most people behave, but Magdalena Portulacca Yoder Rosen is
not
most people: she is far more inclined than most people to have just plain rotten luck. Hell, I posit, is not much to write home about.
âMom, I
order
you to stop being dead and get up!'
I chuckled. What a delightfully cheeky child I had! Imagine that: ordering her poor old mom to rise from the dead like Jesus did to Lazarus in the New Testament. Well, I would certainly give it a go.
âOomph,' I groaned. But as far as rising from the dead, I fear that I only managed to get closer to that point. In my pitiful attempt I just succeeded in giving my noggin yet another nut-cracking whack.
âBlimey,' I moaned. It is possible that I said a word far worse than that because I thought that I'd heard one. But since I couldn't see anything, and my ears were ringing like church bells on Easter Sunday, I couldn't be positive that it was me who said it now, could I? Besides, even if I did say that foul, four-lettered word, it must be remembered that it has been part of the English language since 1680, and was derived from a Danish word that had to do with cattle breeding. As it just so happens I am the daughter of a dairy farmer and keep two dairy cows, which I breed on a regular basis for milk production. Therefore, I believe that I should be absolved of that one, uh, somewhat unfortunate slipup.
âMom, that's awesome!'
â
What?
You heard that?'
âAw, Mom, ya rock! Just wait 'til the kids at school hear that you said theâ'
âBe a dear,' I said, âand help your old mom sit up â if indeed I am lying down. I can't make out heads nor tails in here.'
âYer lying down, Mom,' Alison said. âYer flatter than a pancake.'
âWhat happened?' I said.
âYa really don't remember? Ya don't remember nothing?'
âWell, I do remember how to speak English.'
âYa like fainted when Auntie Wanda shot your Jesus bun half off your head. But ya weren't hurt none; we both checked and then she went ahead and shoved ya in here anyway. It's so awful, Mom, and I'm so sorry ta hafta tell ya, but yer hair's lying out there on the floor.'
My hands flew to my head. â
All of it?
Where's the rest?'
Alison began to sob noisily. âShe cut it, Mom! And then she made me cut some of your hair too!'
For the first time in my life that I could remember, my hair was too short for braids. I felt violated. In a sense I felt as if I had been raped. Wanda Hemphopple had robbed me of the symbol of my religious identity and forced my child to participate in this fiendish act. Even worse than that, she was stirring feelings of revenge up in me. I wanted nothing more at that moment than to do something that would really hurt Wanda. I wanted to not only cause her pain; I wanted to cause Wanda
exquisite
pain.
Those were my initial feelings. There's probably not a child in the Western world whose mother hasn't told her, or him, to count to ten before responding to something negative. This advice holds for grownups as well. Those of us who are parents must be especially thoughtful about the examples we set in front of our children.
In the darkness I found Alison's arm and pulled her into an awkward âYoder embrace.' âThere, there, it will be all right,' I said. Those six words are obligatory in our family when giving comfort, as are giving back-pats. âYou did nothing wrong, dear. Those braids were hot. Where are we?'
Fortunately, âYoder embraces' are mercifully short, and we decoupled simultaneously like train cars. Alison has always run a degree warmer than average. Lately I've had sudden bursts of internal and spontaneous combustion of such intensity that, if wheels could be attached to my bony hips, and I used a child's scooter for steering, I could save a lot on my petrol bill. Perhaps I should also add that the room itself seemed to be stuffy.
âWe're in her cleaning supply closet, Mom. She said that she's coming back for us just as soon as she makes room in her freezer.'
âShe did?'
âYeah. Bummer, right?'
âBummer is an understatement. I can see the headlines now in the
Bedford Journal
: “Charming Innkeeper and Cherished Urchin Perish with Chapped Cheeks.”'
âMom, sometimes you're kinda geeky, ya know that?'
âThat, too. Alison, have you felt around to see if there is a light switch in here somewhere?'
âDuh, Mom. I'm not, like,
totally
stupid. There is a light switch, but it's on the outside. Auntie Wanda said that the tins and boxes didn't need no light, which was a good thing, because it was cheaper installing it on the outside, and now look how handy it was when storing two
shlubs
like us in here. Mom, what's a
shlub
?'
âUnfortunately, a shlub is anyone who isn't Wanda. And Alison, there is no need to call Wanda auntie anymore. In fact, please don't.'
âGotcha.'
âBut speaking of light; do you still have your cell phone?'
âAunâ Wanda saw me with it, and put it down her industrial-strength garbage disposal. Geesh, Mom, ya really don't remember nothing.'
âWell, at least I remember who you are, and what a brave young woman you've become. That was really something the way you were able to text for help while you had a gun pointed at you under the table.'
Alison said nothing, which didn't surprise me. At first.
âI just hope that you didn't send the message to Police Chief Toy. I have reason to believe that he is involved up to his armpits in this case.'
âYa think he slipped her the poison?'
âNo â I don't know. Anything is possible, I guess. So who did you text? Sheriff Crabtree?'
Alison giggled. She had a right to giggle nervously; that's what I thought for the first few seconds. But a mother
knows
when her daughter is stalling.
âWell, dear?'
âAin't that a funny name, like maybe a crabby tree, or a crab up in a tree?'
âAlison! This is important.
Who
did you text?'
âOK, ya ain't gonna get all, like, hyper about it if I tell ya the truth, are ya?'
â
Alison
, we
are
in a
life
and
death
situation
now
.'
âAll right, don't get your panties in a bunch, is all. I sent Sheldon a photo of the gun pointed at my hoo-ha under the table. But just the gun is all, so don't, like, get mad and think I'm a pervert like that guy who ran for President of New York.'
I could not believe my ears! âNew York has a mayor, for crying out loud, not a president!'
âY-Yes, but I should have texted the sheriff. We could die on account of I wanted Sheldon to pay attention to
me
for just one second, and I thought that maybe he would if there was a gun pointed at me.'
âMaybe he still will. Now all we can do is trustâ'