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Authors: Tamar Myers

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BOOK: The Crepes of Wrath
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“Is that so? Well, that would still do the trick, wouldn’t it?”

I nodded in agreement. “So, Joe, may I start with the questions?”

He held up a callused hand. “Yup, but I can save you a whole lot of time. If you’re thinking my Lizzie’s death was no accident, you’re right. What’s more, I know exactly who killed her, and why.”

8

 

“You do?”

“Yup. It was the neighbors.”

“Your
neighbors
?”

“Amish,” he said with surprising vehemence.

“What is that supposed to mean? Your ancestors were Amish, for Pete’s sake.”

“Yup. But what I mean is the Keims have ten children.
All
sons.”

“So?”

“Rumschpringe. You know what that is?”

“Yes, I do, but—”

“The oldest two Keim boys are of that age. Hellions on earth, if you’ll forgive my language.”

“Just barely, dear. Please elaborate.”

“I can’t keep their names straight, but the two older ones have a car, a dilapidated bright yellow Buick they keep hidden behind a haystack up in the north forty. Anyway, they tear around in that thing at night and don’t give a damn who or what they hit.”

“Now that’s too much.”

“It’s the truth.”

“I meant your language, dear.”

“Sorry. I was in the army.”

My eyes widened. Not many Mennonites serve in the armed forces. Both we and the Amish have a centuries-old tradition of being pacifists. This is based directly on scripture, like Matthew, chapter five, verse thirty-nine: “But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other.”

It is this staunch belief that set the stage for the massacre of some of my ancestors in 1750. True, my great-great-great-grandmother, Mrs. Jacob Hochstetler, wasn’t following the Lord’s teachings when she refused water to a hunting party of Delaware Indians at the height of the French and Indian War. But when the homestead was attacked that night, it was to my ancestors’ credit that they refused to fight back. Granny Hochstetler was stabbed and scalped, an infant daughter scalped as well, and Jacob and two sons were taken hostage.

At any rate, a Mennonite with army credentials is a rare beast. “Were you drafted?” I asked.

“Yup, it was the Vietnam War. I could have gotten a deferment, but some of my buddies from high school were getting drafted, and it didn’t seem right for me to get out of serving when I wasn’t really a pacifist.”

“You
weren’t
?”

“Not then. Not at eighteen.”

“Are you now?”

He shrugged. “That depends on the situation—so I guess the answer is ‘no.’ ”

That explained why Joseph Mast seldom darkened the door of Beechy Grove Mennonite Church. I took a deep breath and asked a question that was none of my business, but one which I’d been dying to ask.

“Did you ever kill anyone? In Vietnam, I mean.”

Red lashes blinked. “Yup.”

I waited patiently for him to expound. When he didn’t, I reluctantly got back to business.

“So, we were talking about the Keim kids. You said they don’t care who or what they hit with that old jalopy
of theirs. What exactly did you mean by that? Have they tried to hit you?”

“Nope. But they ran over Queequeg.”

“Who?”

“Our pot-bellied Vietnamese pig.”

“Oh.”

“And Dora.”

“Dora!” The parrot’s sharp voice made me jump. “Watch out for Dora!”

Joseph smiled sadly. “Dora was an albino ferret. Friendliest thing you could ever hope to meet, although Benedict hated her. I think he thought Dora wanted him for lunch. Anyway, Dora would crawl right up your pants leg if you let her.”

I shuddered. “Did the Keims apologize? Did they offer to pay for replacements?”

Joseph picked up the sandpaper and resumed sanding with vigor. “You can’t replace friends.”

I thought of Little Freni. Big Freni too.

“You’re right,” I said. “That was insensitive of me. But did they at least offer to compensate you for new animals?”

“Nope.”

“That’s a shame.”

“Yup.”

“Oh no,” I wailed, “we’re not back to single syllables, are we?”

He grinned sheepishly. “Sorry. I tend to shut down when I feel threatened. It’s a Nam thing.”


Moi?
Threatening?”

“Like I said, Miss Yoder, you have a reputation.”

I smiled proudly, then gave myself a mental slap. “Please, call me Magdalena. Now, if you don’t mind telling me, what did you do after they killed Dora?”

“Dora,” the stupid parrot squawked. “Dora lunch. Dora lunch. Dora lunch.”

Joseph made a futile attempt to stare his bird into silence. Finally he gave up and turned to me.

“I scattered nails on the dirt road that leads up to their house. The driveway, if you want to call it that.”

I gasped. “For shame! You could cripple their horses. And I thought you liked animals!”

“I do. The horses weren’t ever in any danger. I sprinkled the nails along the sides of the road. The horses trot down the middle. Anyway, it didn’t do any damn good. They changed tires a couple of times, then they just took to driving across the fields.” He smiled. “So, I resorted to a more direct method.”

“What could that be?” I braced myself for the answer.

“I shot their tires.”

“You
what
?”

“Of course they weren’t in the car at the time. But they knew I did it. They even told their beloved father that I’d taken potshots at them. Only they didn’t bother to tell him about the car.”

“He doesn’t
know
?”

“Apparently not. The old man—Benjamin—came over, and he was as mad as I’ve seen an Amish man get. He wanted me to apologize to his sons for shooting at them. I started to tell him about the car and what his boys had done to my animals, but I couldn’t get a word in edgewise. He just kept screaming at me in Pennsylvania Dutch. To tell you the truth, Miss Yoder, it was all I could do not to shoot at him.”

I pondered this for a couple of minutes while he sanded. It is, of course, quite easy to see the sins of others. And given that I still have almost perfect vision, I occasionally see some of my own. In the end I decided that chastising the carpenter wasn’t going to get me anywhere.

“And Lizzie?” I asked calmly. “What were her relations like with the neighbors?”

Joseph blinked, and then wiped his eyes on the back of a freckled hand. “Lizzie was a saint. She baked them a beautiful cake and took it straight over.”

I stifled an impulse to snicker. “And?”

“Well, that’s what mystifies me. They cut a couple of slices and sent the rest back with one of the young ones.”

“Ouch.”

He gave me an odd look.

“What I meant is, that was a very rude gesture on their part.”

“Magdalena rude!” the parrot trilled. “Magdalena very rude on their part.”

The macaw was no match for my glare. He side-stepped to the far end of his perch, tucked his head under his wing, and feigned sleep. Come to think of it, my pseudo-ex-husband often did the same thing.

“Sorry about that,” Joseph said. He was actually blushing.

“No problem. Look, you said earlier that the Keims killed Lizzie. Did you mean that literally?”

He nodded. “Yup. It’s a gut feeling, and I’m seldom wrong about those. Sometimes in Nam that’s all that kept me alive.”

“I see. Joe,” I said to put him at ease, “the day before your Lizzie died—”

“She was murdered.”

“Yes, but the day before that, did she receive a threatening letter in the mail?”

The sparse red brows met briefly while he frowned. “Thelma Hershberger call you?”

“She paid me a visit. Is it true?”

“The woman’s a gossip and a liar. Lizzie never got a letter like that. She would have told me. Magdalena,” he said, using my given name for the first time, “don’t let that woman’s lies distract you. Lizzie’s killers live right next door.”

His tone convinced me he was telling the truth. As
he
saw it. But since we all know there are three sides to every story—mine, yours, and God’s—I wasn’t convinced of his Amish neighbor’s guilt.

“I know you believe the Keims killed your wife,” I said gently, “but it doesn’t make sense. They’re pacifists.”

Joseph put the wood and sandpaper carefully down. His blue eyes glittered through the dusty lenses.

“I already told you why. It’s because I shot their tires.”

“But that’s ridic—” I stopped myself just in time. “Well, how do you think they did it?”

“Booby traps,” he said. “They’re all over the place. Got to watch your step, you know. The war may be over, but Charlie’s still got it in for you.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Animals. Get lots of animals. They step on the mines first.”

I realized, sadly, that there was little else to learn from Joseph Mast. At least not on that occasion. Perhaps a quick visit to the Keims was in order.

9

 

It was almost five o’clock. A prudent Magdalena would have waited until the next day. An amorous Magdalena would have driven straight home, taken a scented bubble bath, and put on her best broadcloth dress and a fresh white prayer cap. But alas, I am who I am. That is to say, I carefully navigated the menagerie—took no additional lives (at least none that I am aware of)—and drove to the adjacent farm.

There are many varieties of Amish, the subtleties of which would not be readily apparent to the outsider. But having grown up surrounded by Amish, and myself belonging to a denomination with many divisions, I am able to pick out the differences quite readily. The Benjamin Keim family belongs to the most conservative group of Amish in this part of the state.

The South Fork Amish, as this congregation is known, forbid their members the use of electric- and gas-powered energy sources. Muscle power, both animal and human, is how the Keims get their chores done. Since it was probably milking time, I knew Benjamin and the majority of his sons would be in the barn, their heads pressed up against cows, their fingers busily squeezing the teats of gentle Jerseys.
Therefore, I headed straight for the back door of the house.

“Hello!” I called cheerily.

Catherine Keim appeared momentarily behind the neatly mended screen door. “Yah?” She sounded as wary as a cat at a dog show.

“My name is Magdalena Yoder and—”

“Ach, the detective!”

“I am not a detective,” I wailed. “I’m simply asking a few questions on behalf of Melvin Stoltzfus, the Chief of Police.”

Catherine simply stared at me. I stared back. I had often seen her from a distance—riding in the family buggy, or shopping at Miller’s Feed Store—but had never been privileged to have a close-up look.

The Bible instructs us not to judge others on their physical appearance, and I try not to. We cannot help the looks the Good Lord has chosen to give us. Were that the case, I would have no room in my bra for a feline, my feet would be four sizes smaller, and no Amish man would have to stifle his desire to hook me to a buggy and yell “giddyap.”

That said, please allow me the following charitable observations about Catherine Keim. The woman is no beauty. For one thing, she is a good twenty-five pounds overweight. For another, she has teeth like a jackrabbit. And did I mention that her ears protrude straight out from the sides of her head? And as long as I’m being frank, there is the not-so-small matter of her eyebrow. She only has the one—never mind that it stretches from temple to temple.

Having said that, I’m sure it will come as a big surprise to you that virtually everyone I know talks about how beautiful the woman is. “Too beautiful for her own good,” they say. “Gorgeous.” “Just like the English.” “God made the rose, and then he made Catherine Keim.” That sort of thing.

Now that I had seen her close up, albeit through the screen door, I knew for a fact that all this profuse praise
was unjustified. The woman was
interesting,
I’ll grant you that. Exotic even. But what made Catherine so interesting was not her face, nor was it her rather lumpy body. It was her coloring; Catherine Keim was unusually dark-complected for an Amish woman. Her skin was olive, her hair almost black, and her eyes glittered under that single brow like twin lumps of wet coal.

As a result of all this unexplained pigmentation, rumors abound about Catherine’s origins. Some say her people came from the Amish community in Paraguay, where they intermarried with the Indians. Other folks claim that she is of Middle Eastern origin. Still others hypothesize that she was left behind by a wandering band of gypsies.

But it just so happens that birth records show that Catherine was born in the environs of Hernia, as were her parents and grandparents before her. No doubt we share the blood of the same limited set of ancestors, only in different proportions. Unfortunately the dark and mysterious stranger who climbed into our family tree generations ago never made it over to my limb, and I was born a dishwater blonde whose locks eventually faded to plywood brown. I’m not jealous, mind you—I just don’t think it’s fair that everyone goes around calling her beautiful.

At any rate, although I may be able to stare down a parrot, I was no match for Catherine Keim. She stared at me calmly under her brow until I, fearing that I might be late for my date with Gabe the babe, finally cracked.

I looked away. “It is imperative that I speak with you.”

She remained silent.

“Well?” I said, demanding some response.

“What does this imperative mean?”

“It means I
must
speak to you.”

“About Lizzie, yah?”

“Yah—I mean yes!”

“Then we speak,” she said, but made no move to invite me in.

I sighed. It had been a long day and my dogs were barking. A rocking chair and a nice glass of lemonade would have been very welcome. Still, the woman was willing to talk.

“Correct me if I’m wrong, dear, but from what I understand, your relationship with Lizzie was a good one, despite—how shall I put this—some disagreements with her husband?”

“Yah. Lizzie Mast was a kind woman.”

“Were you friends?”

She nodded almost imperceptibly. “I have ten sons, Miss Yoder. No daughters. Yah, Lizzie was a friend.”

“What did you think of her husband?”

“Ach! Not all God’s children are easy to love.”

“Apparently he feels the same way. Is it true that your sons ran over some of his animals with their car?”

“Car?”


Tch, tch,
Mrs. Keim. Pretending to be innocent is the same thing as lying.”

Her olive skin took on rose accents. “It is only a temporary thing, Miss Yoder. The boys are young. This thing will pass.”

“I’m sure it will, but does the bishop know?”

The rose accents deepened. “Benjamin says it is best not to bother the bishop with such small matters.” She paused. “And one must obey the husband, yah?”

I gave her a meaningful stare through the screen. “That depends on whether or not one’s husband is right. If one’s husband is a fool, then it would be foolish to obey him.”

“Ach, Miss Yoder, you speak so plain.”

“I do tend to get right to the point, don’t I? But anyway, running over pets is no small matter.”

“Yah, I understand, but these animals—these pets—they are all over the place. They come into our fields, even our barn, and eat what is meant for our cows.”

“I see. Well, this sounds like a problem that could be
solved simply by checking the zoning laws. Surely, at least the larger animals have to be fenced.”

“You think that is so?”

“Quite possibly. I could check, if you like.”

“You would do that?” The sound of hope in her voice was touching.

“No problem. Now back to Lizzie, if you don’t mind. Joseph Mast said she baked a cake—a peace cake, as it were—but that you sent it back. Is that true?”

Catherine mumbled something that even these sharp ears couldn’t pick up.

“What’s that, dear?”

She mumbled again.

“Speak up, please.”

“It is wrong to say what I said.”

“Maybe not, dear. Why don’t you let me be the judge? After all, I am a Sunday School teacher.”

“Yah?”

“Every Sunday at Beechy Grove Mennonite Church. I teach the seventh and eighth grades.”

My credentials apparently impressed her. Either that, or she had an overwhelming need to confess.

“Like I said, Miss Yoder, Lizzie was my good friend, but she was—ach, how do I say such a thing—”

“The world’s worst cook?”

The screen door flew open, banging my prominent and somewhat probing proboscis. “Come in!” she cried, as if greeting an old friend after a long absence.

I stepped into the Keim kitchen. It was like stepping back into the nineteenth century. The large cast iron stove was fueled with wood. At the sink there was a hand pump that drew its water from a well. Hot water could only be had by heating a heavy cast iron kettle. Some Amish use gasoline- or kerosene-powered refrigerators, but the Keims’s sect forbids this. They had, instead, an insulated metal and wood box into which they put ice from time to time. Apparently Häagen-Dasz was not high on their list of priorities.

Catherine motioned for me to sit on a simple wooden chair, one of the eighteen arranged neatly around a massive oak table. She took a chair closer to the door, and I could see by the light that played along her face that I had been right in my initial assessment; no beauty there. But like I said, it wasn’t her fault.

“So tell me about Lizzie’s cooking,” I said.

“Ach, even the pigs wouldn’t eat it.”

We both giggled.

“But still,” I said, switching to my grave voice, “it wasn’t very nice to send the cake back. Not after you’d taken a few slices.”

Catherine hung her head in shame. “Yah, that was not the right thing to do. My Elam took it back. He is the oldest. He said Joseph was trying to poison us and was using Lizzie to do it.”

“That’s quite an imaginative boy.”

“Yah. I was not home at the time, or I would have stopped him. But then, Miss Yoder—”

“Please, call me Magdalena.”

“Yah, Magdalena. So my Benjamin whips Elam. He breaks even a buggy whip. The boy has been punished,” she said firmly.

I nodded. The Amish might be pacifist in their dealing with the outside world, but the Biblical injunction not to spare the rod is taken seriously.

“Was that the end of your friendship with Lizzie?”

“Ach, no! It was not her fault she had a crazy husband. She still needed a friend, yah?”

“I don’t think Joseph’s crazy,” I said kindly. “I think he suffers from flashbacks.”

Her brow puckered like the hem on a badly sewn dress. “What is this flashbacks?”

“Bad memories, dear. Joseph Mast fought in Vietnam. A lot of those men went through horrible, indescribable experiences. For some, the experiences have been impossible to let go of. Joseph is one of those.”

She nodded again. “Yah, these wars the English make, always there is so much suffering.”

“You’re preaching to the choir, dear.”

“What is this choir, Magdalena?” The Amish use neither choirs nor musical instruments in their services.

I smiled and explained.

“Does this choir visit the sick?”

“The pastor does that. And we have teams of volunteers that see shut-ins as well.”

“And who visits the lonely, Magdalena?”

“Well, uh—anyone I guess. Why do you ask?”

“Because Lizzie Mast was very lonely and I did not see visitors.”

I should have seen that one coming. My guilt quotient soared to dangerous levels. Any higher, and I would find myself washing dishes in a Bedford soup kitchen or changing sheets in the hospice.

“Didn’t she have any visitors? Any friends besides you?”

“Two times only do I see someone visit, but I do not think they are friends.”

“Oh? Who were they?” Catherine was volunteering more than I’d hoped for.

“Gertrude Troyer—”

“Which one?” I could think of half a dozen.

Catherine glanced around the room. It was a guilty look if ever I saw one.

“The one who is married to Jacob the Handsome.”

I winked. “Gotcha. And who was the other, dear?”

“Thelma Hershberger. The post office lady.”

“When were these visits?” I tried to make it sound like a casual question, but even to my own ears I sounded like the Gestapo.

Catherine jumped to her feet. “Ach, I have the manners of the English! You must be hungry, yah?”

“I’m ravenous but—”

“The supper is not yet ready but there is some shoofly pie here on the counter”—she scratched her
thick dark braids with a finger the color of honey—“ach, it is gone! The boys,” she said, turning with a smile. “Jonah has sweet teeth.”

“You mean a sweet tooth.”

“Yah, at Miller’s Feed Store he wants always the candy with the English soldiers on it.”

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