Read The Wurst Is Yet to Come Online
Authors: Mary Daheim
“Coz!” Judith used her free hand to grab Renie's wrist. “Stop it! You two are creating a scene.”
Renie and Suzie both looked around. At least a dozen people, including Connie and George Beaulieu, were gaping at the pair.
“Screw it,” Renie muttered. She took another swig from her stein and stalked off toward the stuffed tiger.
Judith felt a hand on her arm. “Mrs. Flynn, are you okay?”
Feeling slightly dazed, Judith didn't recognize the young man at first. “Gabe! I'm fine. I think.” She saw Suzie stomping in the opposite direction from where Renie had gone. The Beaulieus had melted into the crowd. “My cousin and Mrs. Stafford got into an argument, that's all.”
“Why don't I get you a refill on your wine?” Gabe offered. “I think you spilled some of it when you grabbed your cousin.”
“Oh!” Judith looked down at the serviceable carpet and saw a large stain. “Goodness, I didn't mean to make a mess. You're rightâmy glass is almost empty. I'll go with you.”
Gabe glanced at his watch. “We'd better hurry. It's six-thirty. Mr. Gruber is giving his mayoral spiel in a few minutes. I don't know if he's tending bar solo or . . . he isn't. There's the other Fritz from Wolfgang's.”
Judith had also spotted Barry. “Hi,” she said as Gabe approached Fritz Gruber. “I thought you had to work at the Gast Haus tonight.”
Barry shook his head. “I'm only filling in. Between this event and everybody waiting for the beer tasting, there's not much action at Wolfgang's. This is a short gig. Then I'll take Jessi to the beer garden.” He lowered his voice. “How's Mom?”
Judith blanked. “Mom?”
“OhâSuzie. Guess I didn't formally introduce myself at the bookstore. I'm Barry Stafford, Suzie and Bob's son.”
Â
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udith was stunned. “I'd no idea. I'm sorry about your father.”
“Me, too.” Barry shrugged. “That's why I came back from Germany sooner than I expected. I couldn't leave Mom alone. She seems tough, but . . . she looked upset when she was talking to you and your cousin.”
“Serena and your mother kind of got into it,” Judith said reluctantly. “My cousin's feisty and your mom is obviously walking a thin line. Not that I blame her.”
Barry nodded. “I noticed Mrs. Jones doesn't take prisoners when I was at the bookstore. Was she ever in Roller Derby?”
The idea of the uncoordinated Renie zooming around competitors on a fast rink made Judith laugh out loud. “Oh, no! She's not athletic.”
“Ah . . .” Barry was looking beyond Judith. “I won't comment on that. Hi,” he said to Renie. “You need a refill for that stein?”
“I sure do,” Renie said, barging past Judith. “Fill 'er up. I just faced off with a tiger. I won. I have bigger teeth.”
“Bigger mouth, too,” Judith muttered, stepping aside to join Gabe.
“You make friends easily,” he said, handing over the wineglass. “That's a must for an innkeeper. I have to force myself to be outgoing.”
Judith shrugged. “I like people. I always have.” Her gaze followed Fritz Gruber, who was putting on his blue Bavarian jacket. Moving from behind the trestle table, he paused to greet several guests before exiting the hall. “Where's he going?” she asked.
“Upstairs to the balcony,” Renie said, holding her refilled stein. “They have a stage behind those movable panels in back of the bar setup, but Barry told me they didn't want to bother moving everything. Fritz will be mercifully brief. For a German.”
“Watch it,” Judith warned.
Renie frowned at Gabe. “You're German, too?”
Gabe laughed. “No, I'm English and Swiss.”
A cowbell sounded over the crowd's chatter. Judith looked up to see Fritz Gruber on the balcony, smiling benignly at the gathering.
“Willkommen!”
he called. Virtually all of the guests applauded.
“Good,” Renie said under her breath. “If the whole thing's in German, I can nod off.”
But Fritz immediately switched to English. “We are delighted to have so many fine exhibitors at Oktoberfest. Each year we attract more visitors as well as merchants and organizations. We only have one main street, but it goes both ways . . .”
“Double yawn,” Renie murmured. “Civic blah-blah. Same as corporate blah-blah. I'm bored. Maybe I'll go hit somebody.”
“Don't embarrass us,” Judith said through clenched teeth.
“Okay.” Renie gestured at the entrance to the hall. “Here comes Fat Matt and Hernandez. Are they going to arrest me?”
Judith turned around to look. “Maybe. They're headed this way.”
Fritz Gruber was winding down with a final German phrase that Judith translated as “Let's party!” but for all she knew, it could've been “Avoid catching a social disease!” Whatever it was, the crowd cheered and applauded. Taking a short bow, Fritz headed back to the staircase.
Gabe Hunter looked anxious. “What the . . .”
Judith turned her gaze away from the balcony and gave a start. Hernandez was holding a pair of handcuffs. “Gabriel Philip Hunter, you're a person of interest in the murder of Dietrich Wessler. Will you come along quietly or do I need to cuff you?”
All eyes shifted away from the balcony. The gathering was stunned into silence. No one looked more shocked than Gabe Hunter.
“I . . . I don't know what . . . yes, of course . . . but . . .” he babbled.
Duomo nodded once. “Then let's hit it.”
The chief walked on one side of Gabe, Hernandez on the other. Judith realized that Duomo hadn't seen her standing next to Gabe or, if he had, didn't care. Her perplexity concerning the local top cop was growing blurrier by the minute.
Or maybe it's the wine,
she thought, noticing that her second glass was half empty.
“Hey,” Renie said, “I could use a refill. How 'bout you?”
“You're cross-eyed,” Judith said.
“Can't be,” Renie said, rocking a bit on her heels. “Never been able to eyes my cross. I meanâ”
“No more refills,” Judith declared. “Not for both of us. I mean,
either
of us.” She frowned. “Don't I?”
“Don't you what?”
“I don't know,” Judith admitted. “Let's get out of here.”
“Okay.” Renie drained her stein. “Let's go to the beer tasting.”
“We can't,” Judith said. “I mean, we shouldn't.” She winced. “Oh, what the hell . . . why not? We can walk it off.”
“Good idea,” Renie said, thrusting her empty mug at a startled silver-haired dowager. “
Wiedersehen,
Frau Chump.”
A soft rain was falling when the cousins reached the street. Being natives, they hardly noticed. Judith suddenly realized she was still holding her wineglass. “Damn! I have to take this back.”
“Just put it on top of that parked . . . wowâit's a mega Mercedes!”
Judith gazed at the sleek dark blue sedan. “Oh, why not?” She walked to the curb and placed the glass on the car's hood. Glancing at the windshield, she gasped before scurrying back to where Renie was waiting. “Good grief! I just caught part of an X-rated show!”
“What kind of show? Live or taped?”
“Live, very much alive. It was just . . . bodies,” Judith said, hurrying to the corner crosswalk. “Moving bodies.”
“Moving's good,” Renie said. “That means they aren't dead.”
“I wonder who it is,” Judith mused as they crossed the street and passed their own inn. “There's your boar, cavorting with those kids and some guy in a blue-and-white-checkered shirt.”
Renie followed her cousin's gaze. “That's a sixteenth-century tabard with the Bavarian colors. If
I
were an actual sleuth and not a cross-eyed sot, I'd say that vanity license plate on the Mercedes is a . . . what do you real detecting types call those things? A clue?”
Judith stopped abruptly to stare at her cousin. “What was it?”
Renie spelled it out. “W-E-S-L-E-R.”
Judith put a hand to her forehead. “As in âWessler'?”
“Yes. You know that with this state's vanity plates, you can't use more than six numbers or figures.”
“Of course.” She narrowed her eyes at Renie. “You're not drunk.”
“Of course I'm not,” Renie replied impatiently. “I just wanted to get out of there. I'll bet the next thing we would've had to endure was another oompah . . . oh, no!” she cried as the sounds of a brass band could be heard from farther down the street. “They're coming this way!”
“We're going the other way,” Judith said. “Keep walking.”
The cousins did just that, wincing slightly as the oompah band tromped past them a few yards away from the now-shuttered B&B booth.
“It's not that I don't like the music,” Renie murmured as they approached the beer garden. “It's just kind of
loud
.”
“What?” Judith said, the cheerful noise from the tented area in front of them seeming to resonate off the mountains.
Renie merely shook her head.
The beer-tasting event was jammed. Boisterous laughter filled the tent, though no one seemed to be openly intoxicated. Judith noticed that a table had been set up with food, including various
Bratwürste
.
“I'm hungry,” she said in Renie's ear. “I'm getting something to eat. How about you?”
Renie eyed the offerings with distaste. “Sorry, coz. Bill likes bratwurst, but I don't. I'll just stand here and starve. As my mother would say, âDon't worry about me.' ”
“I won't,” Judith said, making her way to the table. The selection was mouthwatering. When Judith and Dan McMonigle had lived in the otherwise bleak Thurlow neighborhood, one of the few stellar attractionsâunless you counted the hookers near the airportâwas a shop featuring German delicacies.
“What do you like best?” Eleanor Denkel inquired.
Judith hadn't noticed her fellow innkeeper behind the table. “Ellie! I thought you were at Hanover Haus.”
“Or in a prison cell?” Eleanor retorted. “You must think I'm insane.”
“Hardly,” Judith replied, distracted by trying to choose between the Kulmbacher and the Würzburger brats. “I think you signed a false confession to divert the police. Duomo doesn't take you or Franz Wessler seriously. Nice try, though. I'll have a Würzburger with the works.”
“You would,” Ellie muttered. “If you're not FATSO, how do you know that?”
“I told you, my cousin is
FASTO
. And don't stint on the mustard.”
Ellie glared at Judith. “Which kind?”
“The hot one.”
“You would,” Ellie repeated. “Does your cousin know who killed my grandfather?”
“She's working on it.” Judith glanced over her shoulder, but couldn't see Renie anywhere in the crowd. “She's been interrogating suspects. You might not think so to look at her, but she's very smart.”
“She hides it superbly,” Ellie growled, slathering condiments on the brat. “I should ask Ingrid what she thinks about your claim not to be the innkeeper who can't keep her guests alive.”
Judith shrugged. “Go ahead. It's very hard to disabuse Ingrid of an idea once she gets it in her head. I gave up years ago. It's not my fault if I happen to be with Serena every time she comes across a corpse.” She paused. “I assume you know that a person of interest was taken from the town hall to headquarters just minutes ago.”
Ellie almost dropped the meat fork. “No! Who?”
“Another innkeeper,” Judith said casually. “You may know him. Gabe Hunter from the Kingfish Peninsula.”
Ellie handed over the bratwurst and its lavish condiments. “I've met him,” she said, puzzled, “but he hasn't been in the business very long. His parents were the former owners. That doesn't sound right. Has the chief lost his mind?”
Judith cradled the plate and leaned closer. “When's your grandfather's funeral?”
The other woman's face tensed. “Why? Do you plan to attend?”
“I assume you wouldn't hold it during Oktoberfest.”
Ellie had regained her aplomb. “It's scheduled for Saint Hubert's feast day. I believe you're Catholic, so you realize the local church is named for him. In fact,
Grossvater
was a member of the Knights of Saint Hubert, awarded for his service in postwar Germany. Saint Hubert's feast day is November third. That's almost two weeks away. I trust you'll be gone by then,” she added with apparent pleasure.
“Yes. Are you and Uncle Franz making the arrangements?”
Ellie's face tensed again. “No. Klara is in charge. She knows the priest who says the weekend Masses. Father Dash will be here Sunday.”
Judith wasn't sure she'd heard correctly. “Father Dash?”
Eleanor nodded. “That's what Klara calls him. Excuse me, Judith. Other people are waiting to be served. Please move on.”
And just when it was getting interesting,
Judith thought, clutching her plate and searching among the beer tasters for Renie. The red sweater ought to have been easy to spot, but there was no sign of her cousin. Judith contented herself with standing near the tent opening and enjoying the bratwurst and its numerous accompaniments.
She had finished eating when she felt a tap on her shoulder. “Hi, coz,” Renie said, entering the tent with a big bag of popcorn and a large Pepsi. “How's the brat?”
Judith recovered from her surprise. “You mean what I ate or Eleanor Denkel?”
Renie scowled. “Eleanor's here?”
“She's manning the
Bratwürste,
” Judith said. “Ellie admitted she didn't kill Herr Wessler. But it seems as if he's really dead.”
“No kidding,” Renie said, after slurping down some Pepsi. “Have they got him propped up here with the beer kegs?”
Judith shook her head. “They'll hold the funeral at Saint Hubert's Church. The way Ellie talked about it, I don't think she was lying. That means we really have to sleuth.”
“I thought we already were,” Renie said, before tossing a big handful of popcorn in her mouth.
“Well . . . I always hedge my bets.” Judith couldn't quite quell her mixed emotions. “It has to be the most peculiar case I've ever come across. And I'm not just talking about the local cops. What on earth does Gabe Hunter have to do with Herr Wessler? I wonder what kind of background check Duomo ran on him.”
Renie had stuffed more popcorn in her mouth. “Mebedint.”
Judith had learned to translate her cousin's eat-and-speak long ago. “He must've checked out Gabe. The chief would need to make a connection in order to find a motive. As for witnesses, we know what a zoo that must've been like at the cocktail party.”
Renie swallowed the popcorn. “We would? We left, remember?”
“Now I wish we'd stayed.” Judith took her empty plate to a nearby bin. “Where did you get popcorn and Pepsi?”
“I remembered I didn't like beer that much,” Renie explained. “Besides, you have to buy tickets to sample the various different kinds. I'll only drink beer if it's free.”
“Good thinking,” Judith said. “So where'd you get your snack?”
“They're showing old German movies on a screen in a tent down the street. I've seen plenty of Fritz Lang, so I stayed only for the food and pop part. Hey, you look gloomy. Want to go have some real dinner?”
“Huh?” Judith had only half heard her cousin. “Ohâdinner? No, I'm full. Ellie didn't cheat on the serving. Maybe we can have a late supper. Can you last that long?”