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Peewee had the temerity to burst out laughing, although the flow from Cowabunga did not let up even then. “But that presupposes that all Hindus are headed for Hell! Isn’t that being a tad judgmental of you, Miss Yoder?”

“Indeed, it is not! It isn’t me who makes the rules; they’re in the Book.”

“Ah, but not everyone goes by your book. Take that so-called Russian woman-or the aforementioned Hindus, for that matter-what if they never had the chance to read your book?”

“That is a problem,” I conceded, “which is why I give generously to the church mission fund. I once briefly considered becoming a missionary myself, but they wanted to send me to the Congo. The Congo! Can you imagine that?”

He smiled but said nothing.

“It’s not that I couldn’t have survived,” I said defensively.

Still nothing.

“So what makes you think she’s a fake Russian?” I asked.

“She doesn’t speak Russian, that’s why.”

I stared at him. “How do you know?”

“I was a Russian major in college. Russia was still the big bugaboo then-communism was going to take over half of the world, and we needed to be prepared. Nobody anticipated China. Anyway, I went into advertising and never used my Russian except to eavesdrop on the odd conversation, and the one trip we took to St. Petersburg, but I still remember enough to make myself understood.” He snorted with laughter. “So I used the basic introduction stuff on Her Imperial Highness, but I may as well have been speaking Swahili. She made some excuse in English about not feeling well and then hightailed it out of there like a deer coming face-to-face with a wolf.”

“You don’t say! When was this?”

“This morning, just after she checked in. Wherever she’s from, don’t you think that get-up of hers is a little over the top? By the way, I can tell you right now that the ladies don’t much like her.”

“Oh?” After returning to the inn to check in Surimanda Baikal, I’d hurried straight over to Yoder ’s Corner Market to engage in a little of what I call “good gossip,” and so had missed out on whatever might have gone on back here at the PennDutch.

I know, there are those who probably frown on “good gossip,” but frankly, I see the dissemination of good gossip as my civic duty. After all, a timely and accurate dispersal of facts may well prevent the spread of erroneous commentary that could hurt both the feelings and reputation of the subject. Better to defuse the malicious gossip vendors with the truth, I always say.

Peewee laughed happily. It was Cowabunga who snorted now.

“Yeah,” Peewee said, “at least I can speak for Tiny. I tell you, Miss Yoder, she got her nose out of joint the second she laid eyes on that woman. ‘A phony,’ that’s what she called her.”

“A phony what?”

“A phony Russian, of course.”

“But you hadn’t spoken to her yet, had you?”

His head swiveled enough to show me his scowl. “Well, anyone could see that she was dressed up to look like she’d stepped out of the pages of Dr. Zhivago. Besides, my Tiny is an excellent judge of character; she certainly had you pegged.”

I stiffened. “Excuse me?”

“Yeah, she said that she could see right off that you were tough on the outside-which made you a brilliant businesswoman-but inside you were one fabulous human being. Her words exactly.”

My fabulous insides were suddenly glowing like the interior of a coke furnace. “You don’t say?”

“Yeah,” he said, “you’re a big hit. From what I gather, the others seem to feel that way as well.”

Moi, a big hit! Finally, a group of guests who appreciated me for who I was and the inn for what it was supposed to be. It was a moment I sinfully wished to savor-I’d even laminate it if I could-but then, thankfully, I remembered that Proverbs 16:18 warns us that pride goeth before destruction. The ten-gallon pail that Peewee was attempting to fill was now two-thirds full, which meant that Cowabunga was almost dry. A dry Cowabunga wouldn’t take kindly to some stranger tugging on her teats, and unless I intervened on her behalf, Peewee Timms could possibly be kicked as far as the Maryland border-and him without provisions!

“Time to let up on the big gal,” I cried.

As he stood, he flexed his fingers and craned his neck. “I can’t remember when I’ve had so much fun.”

“You really enjoyed that?”

“Oh yeah!”

“Then how about a repeat performance tomorrow morning-at, say, six o’clock?”

“You got yourself a deal, Miss Yoder.”

Knowing that I was a big hit with everyone did not prevent me from saying grace at the dinner table. The Good Lord should be properly thanked, and if perchance we should lose some of our admirers by doing so-well, so be it.

“Bow your heads and close your eyes, please,” I said. “I am about to subject you folks to a full-length Protestant grace.”

“What does that mean?” Carl Zambezi said. “Olivia and I are Catholic.”

“It means that her prayer will be much longer than anything you’re used to,” my Jewish husband said.

“It means that the food will get cold,” my little munchkin said. “Won’t it, Papa?”

“Shhh.”

“But last time you said the mashed potatoes was like stones they was so cold.”

“Well, there was that-and the gravy was more like a ball of Silly Putty by then.”

Little Jacob giggled. “And tell them what you said about the peas, Papa.”

“You mean that they were so cold and hard, I could have shot them out of your pellet gun-if your mother hadn’t taken it away from you.”

I stood up, inadvertently dragging a good third of the tablecloth with me. Thank heavens I don’t serve my guests anything other than water with which to wet their whistles before dessert is served, because I hear that red wine can be difficult to remove from fine polyester blends. As for the Silly Putty gravy that spilled hither, thither, and yon, in a day or two it would harden enough for me to take hammer and chisel to.

“A pellet gun is not an appropriate gift for a four-year-old! Or for anyone, for that matter!”

“You see what I have to put up with?” the Babester said, but he winked.

Little Jacob, who was sitting at the far end of the table, next to his father, tugged on his arm. “Papa, tell ’em what you said about the wice pudding.”

I stamped a slender but exceptionally long foot. “Stop it! Gabriel, just because you mother doesn’t cook for you anymore is no reason to say vicious things about Freni’s food.”

“It’s not Freni’s cooking, dear; it’s your interminable prayers.”

“Papa, what does ‘termin’ble’ mean?”

“Oy vey!” I said, clapping my hands to my cheeks.

Olivia Zambezi was seated to my immediate left. Perhaps because she was the oldest female present, she felt she had the right to lean toward me and whisper behind the back of her hand. It was, however, a stage whisper that could have been heard in a back bleacher-with a military jet flying maneuvers overhead.

“Really, Miss Yoder, your behavior at the moment is a bit over-the-top.”

“Uh-oh,” the Babester said.

“Uh-oh,” my little man said.

Nobody likes to be chided, much less in front of others, and least of all by a complete stranger. Okay, so maybe some folks go in for public scoldings, but certainly not this mild-mannered Mennonite woman. At the moment my hackles were hiked so high, they scratched my armpits.

“You are absolutely right,” I said to Olivia Zambezi, as I settled back into my seat. “Gabe, darling, pull the cloth down at your end.”