Toast Mortem (4 page)

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Authors: Claudia Bishop

BOOK: Toast Mortem
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Quill, who thought that drinkers came in all shapes and sizes and couldn’t be pigeonholed, had to agree that it wasn’t anyone’s business whether the WARP people drank all the gin in Tompkins County. Although if WARP’s bar bill was anything to go by, it had to be the most unsuccessful twelve-step program ever.
Marge pinned Quill with a steely gaze. “Looks like they got quite a bit of money to throw around. Why don’t you bring them on down to the Croh Bar for Happy Hour sometime this week?”
“Insurance business is a bit slow,” Harland said, by way of explanation. “Margie’s not one to pass up a good prospect.”
“Oh. Well.” Quill cleared her throat. Marge was perfectly capable of marching down the hallway to the Tavern Lounge and shaking Big Buck Vanderhausen by the scruff of the neck until he coughed up a premium on his dually. “When the organizers booked the rooms, they stressed the confidential nature of their group,” she said apologetically. “And they especially asked about how private we were here at the Inn.” Then, because she wasn’t certain what she had to apologize for, she added firmly, “I’m not sure that it’s a recovery program. They seem to be interested in small business. They asked me to give them a talk on how to run a bed-and-breakfast, for example.”
“This isn’t a bed-and-breakfast,” Marge said with a dangerous look in her eye. “And if they want to know anything about running a small business, why didn’t you tell them about me?”
“You don’t want to talk about business with a bunch of drunks,” Elmer said patiently.
“They aren’t drunks,” Quill said.
“Kayla Morrison found the Serenity Prayer in a wastebasket in that room two-twenty-five of yours,” Elmer said. “Told me so herself.”
Kayla was a new hire in housekeeping and clearly needed a reminder about the innkeeper’s number one rule: no gossiping. Although, come to think of it, not gossiping wasn’t as important as not belting the guests, so it’d have to be the number two rule.
“Serenity Prayer. Rehab. Stands to reason,” Harland said thoughtfully. “Drunks, huh?”
“I wouldn’t call the existence of the Serenity Prayer any kind of evidence at all, Elmer. Lots of people find the Serenity Prayer very soothing.”
Elmer looked smug. “Drunks, for example.”
“Look at the Irish,” Quill said. “You’ll find a copy of that prayer in every pub in Ireland.”
“Like I said. Dru . . .”
“Shut up, Elmer,” Marge said. “We’ve got enough troubles without you insulting the Irish. You planning on getting this meeting going anytime soon?”
“I have enough trouble with you insulting
me
,” Elmer said, with a certain amount of dignity.
The meeting descended into a squabble, a regular Chamber practice, and Quill drifted into a brief reverie.
The precise nature of the WARP group puzzled her a little, if only because none of the members were at all alike. A recovery program was a reasonable explanation for the wildly disparate personalities, so Elmer might be half right. The very urban Fredericks huddled in earnest conversation with Mrs. Barbarossa (seventy-two and a cross-stitching grandmother), who in turn spent most mornings with Big Buck Vanderhausen from Lubbock, Texas (forty-six and an expert in long-haul trucking). And then there was the odiously unctuous mortgage banker William Knight Collier, who had an
America for Americans!
sticker on his car. What all these people had in common she couldn’t imagine.
“Anyway!” Elmer whacked the gavel on the table leg. “I call this executive session of the Hemlock Falls Chamber of Commerce meeting to order. And if you can keep your opinions to yourself for a change, Marge Schmidt, I’d appreciate it.”
“Peterson,” Marge barked.
“Huh?”
Marge tapped the very large diamond on her ring finger with an admonitory air.
“Yeah, well. Whatever. Quill? You got the minutes from the last meeting?”
Quill gave a guilty start and patted the side pockets of her skirt. She pulled out her sketch pad (which was filled with charcoal drawings of Jack), a couple of tissues, the flash card for her cell phone, and a small tube of sunscreen. No minutes. She tugged at her hair and thought a minute. Since Myles’s assignment overseas was to last six months or more, she had moved out of their small cobblestone house and back into her old suite on the third floor of the Inn. She was pretty sure the minutes were on top of Jack’s clean diapers upstairs. Or maybe not.
“We don’t need the minutes,” Marge said, after a swift appraisal of Quill’s thoughtful face. “This is an executive session, and we’re here to approve the budget for the Welcome Dinner. We only need the minutes if we’ve got a full chamber meeting, and this isn’t it.”
“Lucky for us,” Elmer grumbled. “We’d be squashed like sardines if the full Chamber was to meet in here.”
Quill flipped to a clean page in her sketch pad. “Ready!” she said brightly.
“Finally!” Elmer said. “Okay, Margie. What we have is this amazing chance to offer a great big welcome to the best thing that’s hit this town since I don’t know what.”
“Since the Colonel Cluck’s Fried Chicken hut, maybe?” Marge asked sarcastically. “Or maybe MacAvoy’s famous nudie bar? Or the Church of the Rolling Moses?”
These references to past civic disasters failed to ruffle Elmer’s spirits. “I mean the Bon Gooty culinary place,” he said patiently. “You missed the last Chamber meeting, on account of Harland’s cows calving all at once, but we decided to give M’ser LeVasque a hearty how-do at Chamber expense.” (Under stress, Elmer’s Kentucky origins were obvious in his speech.)
Marge rolled a startled eye in Quill’s direction. “We did?”
“We did,” Quill said. “Since the culinary academy opened up, tourist revenues have gone up by . . . by . . .” She flipped through the sketch pad, in fruitless search for her notes on the exact percentage. “By a lot,” she finished.
“The man’s a genius.” Elmer’s expression of solemn respect nettled Marge, who grunted in a derisive way. But she said, reluctantly, “You might be right about that. He’s got out-of-towners flocking to that place. And when we get tourists, everyone benefits. I hear the resort’s booked through the summer. The Marriott down on Route 15 is doing well, too.” She swiveled her head and eyed Quill. “Even you guys are full up these days. And it’s all students and people wanting to slurp down wine and stuff their faces with this so-called gourmet food at Bernie’s academy.” She sucked reflectively on her lower lip. “Both my restaurants are doing okay, too, despite those damn parking meters. People’s guts need a rest from the fancy stuff.” Marge’s partner, Betty Hall, was in charge of both the All-American Diner (Fine Food! And Fast!) and the popular Croh Bar. Meg claimed that Betty was the best short-order cook in the eastern United States.
“Exactly,” Elmer said. “Everybody’s doing right well by this fellow.”
Marge’s steely gaze narrowed a touch. “Except Meg. Way I hear it, you got people stayin’ here at the Inn, but they ain’t eating here at the Inn.”
Nobody looked at Quill.
“Yeah,” Elmer said. “Well, that’s true. The way I see it, there’s a limit to how much gourmet food a body can take. You’ve got to take the bitter with the sweet, I always say. Anyhow!” He thumped the gavel against the chair leg, but since everyone in the room was paying attention to him already, it seemed quite superfluous to Quill, who was smarting a little at the cavalier dismissal of her sister’s concerns. “So here’s the thing. We’re giving M’ser LeVasque a thank-you from the town this Friday.”
“How much of a thank-you?” Marge asked.
Elmer addressed the air over his head. “Hello? Excuse me? Is this why we’re having an executive session here?” He lowered his gaze and looked just past Marge, concentrating on the oil painting hanging over the couch. Quill had painted it twelve years ago, just after she and Meg had purchased the Inn. The two sisters sat on the banks of the gorge, with the waterfall behind them. “I just got the numbers from M’ser LeVasque, and all we have to do is vote approval of the budget . . .”
Marge leaned forward and clapped a meaty hand on Elmer’s thigh. “Hang on a second. You got numbers from who? And for what?”
“A select dinner of the town’s most important officials.” Elmer slipped an envelope out of his shirt pocket. “LeVasque says he won’t cook for more than thirty people, though. So we have to keep the invite list pretty quiet. I got the menu and the budget right here.” He waved the envelope in the air. Marge grabbed it, removed the contents, smoothed it out on her knee. She looked up at Elmer and glowered.
There was a short silence.
“This would be you and Adela, attending this here dinner,” Marge said. Something in the tone of her voice reminded Quill of the very aggressive cat under the hydrangea bush outside.
Elmer nodded. “And you and Harland, of course, and Howie and Miriam.”
“The town justice and the village librarian,” Marge said. Since everyone in the room knew perfectly well who Howie Murchison and Miriam Doncaster were, Quill knew Marge was making a point. But where Marge was headed was anybody’s guess.
“Who else?” Marge demanded. “Dookie and them?”
Quill fiddled with her pencil. Then she started a quick sketch of a scowling Marge holding a panicked Elmer upside down by his heels. When Marge’s grammar started to deteriorate, you knew she was annoyed.
“Of course, the Reverend and Mrs. Shuttleworth will be invited,” Elmer said. “Most of the Chamber members. Thing is, he won’t cook for more than thirty people, being a particular person, so we won’t be able to have all of the Chamber members there.”
“That’s it?”
“That’s it.”
“We’ve got twenty-four members, and that doesn’t count the spouses. How are you picking and choosing?”
Elmer ran a finger under his shirt collar. “We have to decide that at this meeting. I was thinking that maybe you . . .”
Marge’s laugh was exactly like a pistol shot. “I’m supposed to pick out nine Chamber members and tell them we’re spending a ton of town money for a dinner by the best chef in the United States of America and they ain’t invited?”
“Well,” Elmer said feebly.
“And where is this banquet supposed to go on?”
“At Bonne Goutè, of course.”
Marge hunched forward, forearms on her knees, her teeth inches from Elmer’s face. “I’m looking at a bill that’s a hundred dollars a plate for thirty people. And that don’t include the drinks. Who’s paying for this, Elmer?”
“The town, of course,” Elmer said. “You know how much money we’re making from those parking meters?”
3
~Confiture de Tomates Rouge~
6 pounds medium-sized red tomatoes
4½ pounds finely ground sugar
Zest of lemon rind plus juice
Slice tomatoes, remove seeds, slice thinly, and arrange in large glass bowl. Sprinkle sugar attractively over all. Let sit for twenty-four hours. Cook over low heat for two hours after adding lemon seasoning. Cool. Spoon into sterilized jars and label.*
*Your personalized home-cooking jar labels may be purchased from my website.
—From
Brilliance in the Kitchen
, B. LeVasque
 
 
“What was the ruckus out front half an hour ago?” Meg stood at the birch prep table in her big kitchen, a cleaver in one hand and a clump of cilantro in the other. “Somebody get attacked by bees?”
“Marge got mad at the mayor.” Quill settled into the rocking chair by the cobblestone fireplace and propped her feet up on the cast-iron fender. “And then the mayor got mad at Marge. And then Harland Peterson settled it by yelling the loudest. And then everyone went home.” “That was all the car doors slamming.” Meg began whacking the cilantro into little pieces. “Now, in better times”—whack!—“I couldn’t have heard a thing”—whack!—“because my kitchen would be full of the happy sound of two sous
-
chefs prepping for dinner, the pot person scrubbing pots, and the bus person scrubbing the sinks.” Whack! Whack! Whack! “But, as you can see, I’m here in glory all by my silent lonesome.” She scooped up the bits and dropped them into a stainless-steel bowl. Then she folded her arms and glared at her sister.
Quill set the rocker going with a shove of her foot. “At least we didn’t have to lay anyone off. We’re always full for breakfast. And lunches aren’t too bad. And the dishwasher and the prep person will be in pretty soon.”
“How long do you think Bjarne and Elizabeth are going to hang around making scrambled eggs and rye toast?”
Both sous-chefs had been with Meg for years, and were fiercely jealous of the Inn’s reputation. They were even fiercer about their own reputations in the notoriously competitive world of gourmet cooking.
Meg correctly interpreted Quill’s look of dismay. “They’re professionals, for cripes’s sake. They need a challenge. And don’t even
hint
that breakfast can be as difficult as dinner.”
“Lunch . . .” Quill ventured.
“Hah. Lunch is day-trippers and campers wanting macaroni and cheese.”
This was true. Quill cast a wistful look around the kitchen. The twelve-burner Viking stove was polished to its usual brilliant sheen. A twelve-gallon pot of water simmered on one of the back burners, with a comfortably familiar sound. The herbs and spices hanging from the oak beams overhead scented the air with sage, thyme, and garlic. From her seat by the fireplace, she could see the vegetable garden out back, overflowing with early August bounty: tomatoes, green beans, cucumbers, onions, yellow squash, and manically over-productive zucchini. Meg had added edible flowers to her herb garden a few years back, and there was a glimpse of the bright orange reds of nasturtiums beyond the wire fence Mike had put up to keep out the rabbits. It was homey and beautiful. But it wasn’t as slick as the kitchens and gardens at Bonne Goutè. It wasn’t even close.
Meg grabbed a colander of ripe tomatoes, marched to the stove, and dumped the fruit into the pot.

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