Read Hell Hath No Curry Online
Authors: Tamar Myers
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Women Sleuths
“That simply isn’t true. It was on account of a Methodist boy she met during her
rumshpringe
. That one she married but is now divorced from.”
“Guess again. That was how she covered it up.”
192
Tamar Myers
“Covered up what?”
“The fact that she was pregnant with Cornelius’s baby.”
“You mean the darling Clementine?”
“You got it. From what I could tell, now, after almost four years, Drustara had finally pressured Cornelius into marrying her. Then she writes the tell-all book and appears on
Oprah
. Suddenly the wedding’s off, and the next thing we know, Cornelius takes frying lessons.”
“You mean
flying
lessons, right?”
“No. I meant what I said. That philandering scoundrel is taking frying lessons in preparation for Hell.”
“Which are you, the pot or the kettle?”
“I only fantasize about cheating on my Dorothy; I’ve never actually done it. There’s a difference.”
“You should talk to Jimmy Carter, dear. But never mind that now. When was this conversation you overheard?”
“Just a day or two before Cornelius died.”
“Hmm. Since Drustara was forced into exile almost four years ago, and her family banned from speaking to her, that would mean there is a go-between.”
“A younger sibling maybe? One too young to be covered by the ban.”
“Most likely. Sam, if I didn’t know any better, I’d say you were a genius.”
“Same back at you.”
“What was the bigger worry her mother referred to?”
“I honestly don’t know. Another customer walked in, and that was the end of the conversation. So, what do you think? Was that worth a foot rub?”
I sighed. Having known Sam my entire life, I knew there was no backing out of our deal. As for putting off the inevitable, that would be like delaying a root canal.
“Okay, I’ll do it. But get me some rubber gloves and a clothespin. And, of course, lock the door.”
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193
Sam rubbed his hands together. “Sounds kinky already. I love it.”
“The clothespin is for my nose, and the gloves are so I don’t have to touch your feet. And two minutes is all you get.”
I will pay for those two minutes for the rest of my life.
30
Garden Delight Curry
Ingredients
¼ cup oil
Water as needed
½ teaspoon mustard seeds
2 large potatoes, cut into 4 pieces each
½ teaspoon fenugreek seeds
(bigger pieces prevent potatoes
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
from being mashed)
2 medium onions, finely chopped
2 carrots, peeled and cut into small
2 medium tomatoes, finely diced
cubes
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1 zucchini, chopped into small pieces
½ teaspoon ginger-garlic paste
1 medium green or red bell pepper,
2 green chilies, split in half
diced
¼ teaspoon turmeric powder
1 head cauliflower, cut into small
½–1 teaspoon cayenne pepper (or to
florets
taste)
1 cup peas
1 teaspoon sugar
Coriander leaves, finely chopped, for
Salt to taste
garnish (optional)
Yield: 6 servings
HELL HATH NO CURRY
195
Preparation
1. Heat oil in a saucepan and add mustard, fenugreek, and cumin seeds. Cook till they begin to splutter, then carefully add onions. Mix well and sauté till onions are soft.
2. Add tomatoes, tomato paste, garlic-ginger paste, green chilies, turmeric powder, cayenne, sugar, and salt. Mix well. Cook this masala for 5 minutes. Use water as needed to keep masala from drying out.
3. Add all the rest of the vegetables except cauliflower and peas. Stir well and cook till vegetables are slightly tender.
4. Add cauliflower and peas; add very little water (¼ cup) to help steam vegetables. Stir well.
5. Cover and cook on low heat till potatoes and cauliflower are fork tender. The time could vary depending on your preference for doneness, 10–20 minutes. Add a little water if curry is too dry.
6. Garnish with coriander leaves and serve with naan and raita.
31
How was I to know that Sam did
not
lock the door? And how was I to know that Agnes Mishler would decide to bake anise seed cookies and find that her larder was low on exotic flavorings? I will, however, accept the blame for being stupid enough to kneel on the floor behind Sam’s counter while I rubbed his cursed foot.
“Oh, my heavenly stars!” Agnes said between gasps.
“Nit not whant nyu nink,” I cried, and then thought to rip the clothespin off my nose. “Honest!”
“It was awesome,” Sam said, his face shining with pleasure.
I grabbed Sam’s left foot and, struggling to my feet, managed to take it with me. Of course Sam, who’d been leaning back against the counter, had the somewhat unpleasant experience of feeling his noggin hit first the edge of the counter, and then the concrete. It was only the second time in my life that I heard a grown man cry.
“You see?” I wailed. “His foot is bare, and I’m wearing rubber gloves.”
“Magdalena, you’re my friend,” Agnes said slowly, “so I’ll try to keep an open mind. What
were
you doing down there?”
“I lost a bet—although strictly speaking it wasn’t a bet, since HELL HATH NO CURRY
197
I don’t bet, but more of a friendly wager. Anyway, I lost, and as a consequence I had to rub his disgusting foot.”
“Whatever you say, Magdalena. But really, would it be too much to ask of younz to lock the door?”
“It was locked,” I bellowed. “Well, at least it was supposed to be locked.” I glared at Sam, who was moaning on the floor.
Agnes leaned over the counter. “Yuck. You really were rubbing his feet, weren’t you?”
“Desperate times call for desperate measures. I needed to get some info from him.”
“Why didn’t you just ask me?”
“Next time I will.”
“What is it you want to know?”
“The latest scuttlebutt on Cornelius Weaver. Are there any new rumors, that kind of thing.”
“The latest I’ve heard is that Norma Kleinfelder saw Alice Troyer’s new comedy act in Bedford last night. It was at the Holi-day Inn lounge, or someplace like that. They call it a comedy club, but I hear that it’s mostly just filth. At any rate, Alice was telling jokes about Cornelius. How callous is that? Magdalena, she must have hated him something awful.”
“Believe me, she wasn’t the only one.”
“Oh, but that’s not the half of it. Guess who else was at the show?”
“I give up. Who?”
“Veronica Weaver, that’s who. She was there with some guy—
some redneck, Norma said—and she was fit to be tied. She ran up on the stage and started swinging at Alice. Called her a liar and every other name in the book. Veronica’s date and the manager, or some guy like that, tried to keep the two women apart. They succeeded, but not before Alice got herself a black eye. Frankly, I’ve never been a fan of Veronica, what with her hippie ways and such, but between you and me, and Sam there, I say Alice got what was coming to her.”
198
Tamar Myers
“Spoken like a true pacifist,” Sam said from his position on the floor.
I gave him a gentle kick to the ribs. “Judge not, dear. You know, what I don’t get is, what was Veronica doing at a comedy club when her only child had yet to start pushing up daisies.”
“What is she supposed to do,” Sam growled, “roll around in sackcloth and ashes?”
“For a while, yes.”
“I agree with Sam,” Agnes said. “When Daddy died, I did nothing
but
watch TV. It took my mind off my sorrow.”
“Cleaning house does the same thing,” I said. Honestly, I wasn’t trying to be mean, merely helpful. For the record, Agnes hasn’t cleaned her house since her daddy died nine years ago in a coal-mining accident. Neither has she thrown anything out.
The result is that every room, with the exception of the kitchen, is stacked to the ceiling with stuff, and she has to get around through a maze of unstable tunnels. How Freudian is that?
“Too bad we’re not all as perfect as you,” Sam said. He seemed content to remain sprawled on the floor.
“I’m not perfect.”
“Yes, you are,” Agnes said. “Sometimes I think we should re-name our town; call it Magdalenaville, instead.”
“Would I get a statue?”
“On one condition,” Sam said. “That we import pigeons.”
“If only domestic turkeys could fly,” Agnes said. “Jonah Speicher has some big ones.”
I suppose that was a joke—possibly even a filthy joke—but I didn’t find it particularly funny. But the way Agnes and Sam laughed, you would have thought they’d been drinking. Every now and then one of them would repeat a hilarious word such as
turkey
or
statue,
and they would both dissolve into puddles of quivering jelly—all at my expense, of course. It wasn’t easy for me to remain dignified and calm, like the mature adult that I am.
What’s more, it was downright weird to see them bond that fast, HELL HATH NO CURRY
199
given that they’d known each other their entire lives and up until now had barely exchanged
hello
s.
Finally Sam staggered to his feet. “So, Agnes, what can I get for you?”
“Do you carry anise seed?”
“He doesn’t,” I said.
“Excuse me?” they said in unison.
“Trust me, dears. Anise seed would be found on Sam’s specialty shelf, which really isn’t all that special, but at any rate, I was just looking at it, and there isn’t any anise seed.”
“Magdalena knows all,” Sam said, not without sarcasm.
For some unfathomable reason, this rude comment drew more paroxysms of embarrassing laughter. I might even have lost my cool, as Susannah says, had not our town’s extraordinarily handsome, but heterosexually challenged, policeman entered the store. The laughter ceased immediately.
“What’s going on?” Chris said. “I could hear you across the street in the station.”
“Oh, nothing,” Agnes had the nerve to say. “We just seem to be in a jolly mood today.”
“The we,” I said, “would not include yours truly, although I have been known to laugh in years past. Nineteen sixty-four was a particularly good year, if I recall correctly. Rather a fine, dry laugh, with fruity undertones.”
Chris nodded. “Miss Yoder, I need to speak to you.”
“Then you shall,” I said, grateful for the interruption.
“Privately, if you don’t mind. At the station.”
I have been to Hernia’s police station innumerable times, once even as an inmate, but I’ve never found it pleasant—until recently.
The chief and her handpicked deputy are both native Californians and have brought with them from the West Coast a certain je ne sais quoi. I know they brought it with them, because
quoi
is a scarce commodity east of the Allegheny River.
200
Tamar Myers
What used to be uninspired white walls are now sea foam green, and once-bare windows now sport balloon shades and fringed curtains with matching valances. The fabrics are soft shades of green with sophisticated accents of silver and gray. The lamps all have new shades, and instead of carpet remnants on the concrete floor, one is privileged to tread upon genuine olefin area rugs depicting abstract patterns. Even the cells have been spruced up, and the bunk beds are now covered in duvets that came with matching pillow shams (alas, one sham has been swiped). As one Hernia wag is reported to have said, “Our city jail has been redecorated by Queer Eye for the Crooked Guy.” I believe this is a television reference, so I am still not sure what it means.
Although, to my knowledge, there was no one else in the building, young Chris Ackerman closed the door to his office.
“Can I get you a cup of coffee or anything, Miss Yoder?”
“Well, some hot chocolate would be nice. I’ve got some leftover biscuits and thick-cut bitter marmalade—”
“Forgive me for interrupting, Miss Yoder, but I only said that to be polite.”
I felt my heart do a belly flop in the acid pit that had suddenly replaced my stomach. “Look, I know I have a lead foot, but if I promise never, ever to speed again, and double my pledge on Support Our Local Police day, can you overlook it this one last time? I promise it’s the last.”
“Triple your pledge?”
“Okay,” I said smugly, “but you drive a hard bargain.”
“Yeah, I guess I do, because I don’t know what it is that needs overlooking.”
“But you said—”
“And you said you’d triple your donation, and that’s fine by me. Now, if you don’t mind, I’d like to tell you why I asked you over.”
With my thumb and forefinger I pretended to lock my trou-blemaking mug and throw away the key.
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201
Chris didn’t even chuckle. “I’m afraid I have some bad news.”
“Did I do it? Am I being sued?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Then quit burning daylight and sock it to me.”
“Miss Yoder, sometimes you don’t sound even vaguely like a Mennonite.”
“But I am one, so however I sound, that’s how a Mennonite sounds.” I threw back my head and did a marvelous rendition of a rooster crowing. “You see? That was a Mennonite sounding like a rooster. I can do a passable cow, a great sheep, but my best is a hen that has just laid her egg.”
Tears filled the sergeant’s eyes.
“Oh, don’t get me wrong,” I hastened to say. “The hen didn’t feel any pain passing that egg. Childbirth pain is a punishment only we humans have to bear, thanks to Eve sinning in the Garden of Eden. It says so right in the Bible. Of course not all of us will have to experience that, because not every woman is fertile. My garden will forever be as barren as the Mohave Desert—”