“It means
A ray of light shone into my primordial brain. “Ah! You’re referring to the Big Apple!”
“They are both fruit, yah?”
Sometimes I can’t help myself. “A pea and a head of cabbage are both vegetables, both green, and both round, yet they’re hardly the same thing.”
When Freni loses an argument, she first wipes her hands carefully on her starched white apron. Then she heads to the large ceramic pot that is kept on a bench beside the stove, and withdraws from it a lump of rising dough. She proceeds to punch every last microscopic air pocket from the dough, before placing it in a new location so that it can rise again. The result is a never-ending supply of the best bread, buns, and cinnamon rolls this tongue has ever tasted. Please believe me, it is seldom my intention to goad my sweet, elderly cousin, but if we didn’t disagree from time to time, I would have to buy commercial bread. Then we’d both lose.
Today, however, Freni didn’t budge. “Maybe you need to sit now, yah?”
“What ever for?
I’ve been lying in bed all day. It’s about time my feet got some blood.”
She sighed heavily, sending airborne those particles of flour that had not been captured by the grease. “Okay, but this is not such good news.”
“Freni, in the last six years, you have quit exactly one hundred and eighteen times. Given that you’ll be back here tomorrow morning, at the latest, quitting your job is hardly earth-shattering news.”
“Ach, this is no time for the lecture. Your Gabe is in trouble.”
“What?”
“He calls me this afternoon while I am making the shoofly pie. I am just pouring the liquid onto the crumbs, so I cannot
stop,
yah? So then he calls again in five minutes.
Maybe less.
He says that he tries to call you at the hospital, but can get no signal. He says to warn you that the contest is not going so well.”
“Don’t stop!”
“But that is where he stops.”
“Where is he now? Have you heard from him since then?”
Freni shrugged and shook her head at the same time, which, given her physiognomy, was an economy of motion. But not to worry; surely my Bubeleh was across the road being comforted by the stubby arms of you-know-who.
I dialed his number. His cell rang five times, and then switched me over to voice mail. If I had one of those dingleberry things, or whatever they are, I would have tried to send him a text message. But I didn’t. Instead, I did what every red-blooded, able-bodied, American woman would do: I prayed for wisdom. After sending up my smoke signal to the Almighty, I hiked up my skirts, retied my sensible black brogans, and ran the quarter of a mile to the farmhouse that my beloved still, if inexplicably, owns. Fit as I am-from repeatedly jumping to conclusions-I wasn’t the least bit winded upon my arrival.
Gabe’s car was in the long gravel driveway, parked next to the house, but that didn’t mean much. The one thing
At any rate, I checked the barn first, where he has his writing studio, before making a beeline for the house. Of course, I didn’t knock or ring the bell. Why should I? Not only is my beloved mine, so is his property. The Babester and I commingled our belongings before commingling ourselves, on the grounds that anything less was a vote of no confidence. Anyway, neither my spouse nor his meddling
ma were
on the ground floor, so I sprinted up the stairs to the bedroom that my Sweet Cakes used to occupy before our blissful nuptials. I screeched to a stop just inside the door.
What I saw turned my stomach.
28
Ida Rosen, clad only in her flimsy Jewish underwear, is not a pretty sight. Perhaps no mother-in-law would be. Ida apparently felt the same way, because she shrieked and fell into an open suitcase on the floor.
Let those who think I am mean-spirited pay special attention to the following: I did
not
close the suitcase, shutting her inside, and ship her off to a made-up address in Outer Mongolia. Instead, I helped her out, averting my eyes the entire time, even when she said, “Oy, the second shtrap just broke. So now vhat am I going to do?”
“Please just get dressed,” I said.
“Shtrap or no shtrap.
I’ll wait outside until you’re done.”
I could have single-handedly dressed an octopus with rigor mortis in the time it took the tiny woman from Brooklyn to slip a muumuu over her head. Then again, I shouldn’t have been surprised by her lengthy delay. By the time she told me I could peek, the suitcase was no longer in sight.
“Where did it go?”
“Vhat?”
“The suitcase, of course.”
“Dere is no suitcase.”
“Ida, I haven’t got time for games, and neither do you. I’ve come to look for my husband.”
“My son?”
“Something is wrong. I can feel it. If you don’t tell me where he is this minute, I’m going to make every ancestor of mine for the past five hundred years spin in his or her grave, by doing something violent to your person. After that, I’ll have to become a Southern Baptist, or maybe a Presbyterian-but
trust
me, it will be so worth it.”
I doubt if she understood my words, but something must have gotten through.
“
Nu?
Are vee
just going to stand here, or are vee going to look for my Gabeleh?”
“We’ll look. But if he isn’t here, and he isn’t at my-I mean,
our
-house, then where could he be?”
“
Mit
his girlfriend, perhaps?”
Just hearing the words was a stab to my heart. “
What
girlfriend?”
“How should I know? A son doesn’t tell his mother deese tings.”
“But are you saying that he has one?”
She clucked, sounding for
all the
world like my favorite hen, Pertelote. “Magdalena, look at you; you’re as tin as a slice of lox, yah?
And your hair-oy.”
“What’s wrong with my hair?”
“Da braids and da bun, you look like a
bubbee
already.”
No doubt steam rose from my bun. It certainly spilled out of my nostrils. I pawed the floor with a size eleven, and waggled a finger at the woman who had become the bane of my existence.
“A
bubbee,
you say? I most certainly do not look like a grandmother. There are times when I may look like a mare that’s been ridden hard and put away wet, and I know for a fact that there are grandmothers younger than I am, but I do not look like a stereotypical grandmother: I don’t have many wrinkles, my hair is still its natural shade of mousy brown, and only a few of them are to be found on my chin. And as for having a figure like a slice of smoked salmon, I’ll have you know that your son refers to my bosoms as bodacious, and claims to be quite happy with the junk in my trunk-to borrow a term from the vernacular.”
“And crazy too.”
“Your son,” I cried. “Shouldn’t we be concentrating on him? For all we know he could be lying in a ditch somewhere.”
“Yah?”
“Double yah. Vultures could be circling overhead. The Grim Reaper could be sharpening his scythe. And meanwhile, your only son, the fruit of your Looney Tunes, is murmuring, ‘Ma? Where are you, Ma? ’ “
Ida galvanized before my eyes. The transformation was amazing. One minute she was a meddling mother-in-law in a muumuu, the next she became the quintessential Warrior Mother, a lioness who would fight to the death for her cub.
“
Nu?
Vhy are vee standing here? Let’s get a move on, already.”
I was in need of some real moral support, so I called my normally levelheaded friend Agnes and asked her to come along. Pal that she was
,
I didn’t need to twist her arm more than once.
And so we did.
We began by phoning all the judges, organizers, and sponsors of what was supposed to have been the shining star in Hernia’s crown. Not only had my husband not hitched a ride with any of them, but no one had seen him since the closing ceremony. However, plenty of people-okay, virtually everyone-were as mad as hornets. You’d have thought I’d knocked down their nests and stomped on them, perhaps even spraying them first with DDT.
Lyudmila Prendergast, who’d donated twelve dollars towards our expenses, was particularly livid, and insisted that I come to her house and meet with her face-to-face. Only then, she said, would she reveal an “interesting tidbit” that might explain Gabe’s disappearance.
Normally, I would not agree to meet Lyudmila anywhere, except for a well-lit church that was packed to the gills with my friends and family. Lyudmila would be in the choir loft, and I would be positioned by the front door, with my brogans securely tied, just in case I needed to make a run for it.
To make a long story short, Lyudmila hates my guts. She’s hated my poor innards since the tenth grade when I wouldn’t let her copy my answers to an American history exam. After school that day, she called me “Goody Two-Brogans,” and started spreading the rumor that I had a crush on Danny Culp. That wouldn’t have been so bad had it not been the truth. The next day, to get back at her, I did what every Hernia High kid did as the ultimate act of humiliation: I sat on Lyudmila’s lunch sack.
I had no way of knowing that Lyudmila packed her own lunch, giving herself only Hostess Twinkies injected with booze. Needless to say, I thoroughly mashed the little crème-filled cakes, but in the process inadvertently invented a dessert the British refer to as trifle. Sadly, to date, I have not been accorded the recognition I deserve from our good friends across the pond. Inventing such a venerable institution is no trifling matter, and, at the very least, I think a title would be in order. Her Ladyship, Magdalena Yoder-Rosen, Countess of Hernia, practically rolls off the tongue, don’t you think?
At any rate, I was feeling only mild trepidation as I rang Lyudmila’s doorbell. Agnes and Ida were still in the car, happily trading insults. If I called for their help, they most likely wouldn’t hear me. On the other hand, if I plumb disappeared, they’d eventually get around to investigating. After all, I had the car keys.
Lyudmila snorted a greeting as she opened the storm door. It sounded to me like, “Hello, Goody Two-Brogans,” but, then again, I might have been listening for it. Be assured, I said something quite pleasant in return. I had no choice if I wanted to locate the Babester as soon as possible.
“Well, do you like it?” she demanded, before another second had passed.
“Like what?”
“This!” She gestured rapidly around the room, like a museum docent who’d worked a double shift, and was facing her final visitors of the day-ones that had shown up just before closing time.