Easter: Eggsact Position -- Schrute Farms by Too Late Kev
Summary: Jim and Pam take their children to an egg hunt at Schrute Farms one Easter. Like any time spent at Schrute Farms, it's not what they expect.

Categories: Jim and Pam, Future Characters: Dwight/Angela, Jim/Pam, Mose
Genres: Holiday, Married
Warnings: None
Challenges: None
Series: Holiday: Just One Day Out Of Life
Chapters: 3 Completed: Yes Word count: 5934 Read: 7422 Published: March 22, 2008 Updated: April 06, 2008

1. Good Friday: The Phone Call by Too Late Kev

2. Easter Sunday: Clipboards and Compasses and Chickens, Oh, My! by Too Late Kev

3. Easter Sunday: Chicken Jane, I Presume? by Too Late Kev

Good Friday: The Phone Call by Too Late Kev
Author's Notes:
Jim gets an unexpected call from an old friend.

Good Friday, March 25, 2016

"Jim Halpert, Halpert Interior Design. Pink is our specialty, princess rooms our pride!"

Jim had thought about letting the call go to voice mail when he saw who was calling his cell phone, but he couldn't resist the urge to mess with Dwight. And even though Jim's current job was similar to his Dunder Mifflin job, but for more money and with more normal coworkers, Dwight might not know that. He might be just gullible enough to believe that Jim now had a career in interior design. The silence on the other end of the line indicated success; Dwight had been rendered speechless, until finally --

"Girl. I should have known."

"Who is this?" said Jim. "Were you looking for a girl? I assure you that all our girls are discreet and very clean. Some of them have gone on to marry beet farmers -- not the best of the girls, of course, but beet farmers can't afford to be choosy."

Jim heard sputtering on the other end of the line, and then a whispered conversation he couldn't quite make out. He could tell Dwight was talking to another man, though, and after thirty seconds or so, he heard Dwight say, "All right. All right. I'll ask him. All right. Shut up."

"Jim, this is Dwight Schrute."

"I'm sorry?" said Jim, smiling as he did so. Messing with Dwight had gotten him through many mundane days at Dunder Mifflin, and at one time had been a safe excuse to spend time with Pam. He missed it -- not so much needing an excuse to spend time with Pam, but the pranking. With a wife and two kids to think about now, he took his current job much more seriously than he had ever taken his sales job at Dunder Mifflin. The chance to take a few moments to play with Dwight's brain was a rare and welcome diversion.

"Dwight. Schrute." The words were louder and over-enunciated this time.

"Oh, yes, I heard you -- I'm just sorry it's you." Jim heard a huge sigh from Dwight, and then,"Ask him, ask him," in the background from the other voice.

"I'm calling" Dwight continued, sounding resigned, "because Mose wants you and Pam to come over to Schrute Farms on Sunday to hunt for eggs."

"This Sunday? Easter?"

"Of course, Easter. Angela will be at the sunrise Easter service, so that's when we'll hunt for the eggs," Dwight said, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world.

"Won't Angela want to see the egg hunt?" asked Jim. Pam had been talking for a while about how she wanted to have an Easter egg hunt for the kids and take a lot of pictures. It was hard for Jim to imagine that Angela wouldn't want to watch her children finding their Easter eggs, but then again, Angela wasn't the easiest person to understand.

"Angela is not to know about this," corrected Dwight. "This is important, Jim. Do not confirm my belief that Mose's faith in you is horribly misplaced."

Jim shook his head. If nothing else, it would be interesting to see Schrute Farms again. It had been a long time since he and Pam had stayed there in Dwight's brief agrotourism phase. "Okay, we'll be there. I'm sure Laura will be glad to see your daughter Heike -- they're in kindergarten together."

"You're going to bring the children? Your girl's rather young to be able to help, and don't you have a baby? He's going to be useless."

"Yeah, I think we'll bring the kids for the Easter egg hunt," Jim replied. He had forgotten that there was no sense trying to understand Dwight. "I'm sure they'll do their best."

Dwight exhaled loudly. "Fine. Bring them along. Just be there at 6:30 A.M. sharp, ready to hunt eggs. I only hope that your powers of observation have improved since the last time I saw you."

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Jim arrived home and found Pam sketching in the study, five-year-old Laura drawing at her desk nearby. He kissed both his girls hello and learned from Pam that their son Joey was having a late nap. After catching up a bit on the day, he broached the topic of a visit to the land of beets.

"Pam, you know how you wanted to find an Easter egg hunt for the kids?" he asked.

Pam's eyes lit up, but she didn't have a chance to answer as Laura squealed in delight and ran to hug her father. "When, Daddy, today? Can I go wake up Joey?"

"No, not today, Laura. Sunday."

"Is it a good one?" Pam asked. "With some of them you have to pay a lot of money to do it, and then only the bigger kids end up with more than a couple of eggs."

"Well, Pam, it's at Schrute Farms, so..." Pam's bark of laughter made Jim laugh as well. When he could talk again, he explained the odd conversation he had had with Dwight.

"At the very least," Pam said, "it should be unique. I wonder why Mose wants us there so much."

"You mean I get to meet Mose?" said Laura, jumping up and down and clapping. "Heike talks about Mose all the time, and her barn, and her sisters, and her outhouse. I really want to go to Heike's house! Yay!"

Jim and Pam exchanged a grin. "Maybe Mose will show you his trampoline moves," said Jim.

"Ooh, fun!" said Pam teasingly. "So do you suppose there are other kids coming, or is it just our two kids, their girls, and Mose?"

"No idea. But it's weird that Angela's not going to be there for the egg hunt, right?" asked Jim.

Pam shrugged one shoulder and hesitated before answering. "Maybe...it's not religious enough, or something? Like, it's just for fun?"

"Yeah, fun and Angela don't really mix," said Jim. "Which is probably why she and Dwight get along so well, because he's also no fun."

"Daddy, Heike's mom and dad have to be fun," Laura insisted.

"Nope, they're not," replied Jim. Pam shook her head ‘no,' as well.

"But Heike's a lot of fun -- we laugh all the time in school."

"That's probably why your teacher told me she has to separate you all the time," answered Pam.

"Yeah. But how can Heike be so much fun if her mom and dad aren't fun?" asked Laura.

Jim hugged his daughter and laughed. "Mutation?"

End Notes:

Coming up, Easter Sunday...

Thanks to Betas Azlin and Swedge.

Disclaimer: All publicly recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their respective owners. The original characters and plot are the property of the author. The author is in no way associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media franchise. No copyright infringement is intended.

Easter Sunday: Clipboards and Compasses and Chickens, Oh, My! by Too Late Kev
Author's Notes:
The hunt begins.

Easter Sunday, March 27, 2016

"Who has an Easter egg hunt this early?" Pam asked Jim, peering out the car window as they rode along the dark road. There was only a hint of brightness in the sky, and sunrise was still a half-hour away.

"Dwight. Schrute." Jim grinned as he answered, still concentrating on the road. It would be difficult to find the turns to Schrute Farms with so little light, but at least that situation would improve. "Don't ask me to explain the ways of a Schrute, Pam. They're inschrutable."

Pam laughed, but five-year-old Laura piped up from the back seat, "Daddy, is that a real word?"

"Nope," replied Jim. "Sorry, honey, I was just making a joke. The real word is ‘inscrutable.' It means ‘hard to understand,' and Dwight Schrute can be very hard to understand, so I changed it to ‘inschrutable.'"

"Oh." Laura was quiet for a moment. "Is that kind of like name-calling, though, Daddy? Because Mommy always says not to name-call."

Jim gave a quick look over to Pam, who mouthed ‘sorry,' before answering. "Well, Mommy's right that you shouldn't name-call, Laura, because she's trying to bring you up to be a nice, caring person. But I am already not a nice, caring person, so I can say things like that."

Pam nodded at Jim. "Nice." To Laura she said, "So what Daddy is saying is ‘Do as Mommy says, not as Daddy does.'"

"Exactly," agreed Jim. "I can try to be nicer, though, Laura. But it's going to be really difficult today, because...it's Dwight."

"But he's having an Easter egg hunt, so doesn't that mean he wants to be friends?" asked Laura.

"You'd think so," said Jim. "But there's really just no knowing, with Dwight."

Pam whipped her head around to watch a car passing on the other side. "I think that was Angela!"

"Well, Dwight did say she was going to a sunrise service. And hey, I guess this means I haven't missed the turn!"

"Yet," said Pam.

 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

 

"You're late," said Dwight, as the Halperts got out of their car. "And your baby is crying." He stood in front of the farmhouse wearing heavy canvas pants, gloves, a sheepskin-lined coat and hat, and thick rubber boots. In the crook of his arm was a pile of clipboards, and he wore four compasses on chains around his neck.

Jim decided to say nothing about the outfit; it would conflict with his attempt to be nicer. "We're two minutes late, Dwight, and the baby's name is Joey."

Dwight peered at Joey. "Like Joseph Stalin?"

Jim and Pam shared a look, silently deciding who should answer. Pam did. "No, Dwight. Like Joe Beesly, my dad."

"Ah." Dwight nodded.

"We're watching him, though," said Jim. "If he starts some kind of regime of terror, we'll shut it right down."

"Good," said Dwight. "I'm glad to see you're willing to take a firm hand with the children. Our girls know who's boss. Angela and I don't tolerate bad behavior."

In the growing light, Jim could see the barn nearby. One by one, three people swung on a rope from the door on the second level down to the ground in front of the barn -- Dwight's cousin Mose, a girl who Jim assumed must be Heike, since she was about Laura's size, and a slightly bigger girl. Once all three were down, they engaged in some sort of frenzied hay fight. Jim wondered if that sort of thing was considered good behavior, or if Dwight was just oblivious to what went on when he wasn't looking.

Dwight suddenly concentrated on Laura. "You must be Laura, then. My Heike says very nice things about you." He gave a little bow. "You are welcome at Schrute Farms anytime." His expression changed, as if something had just occurred to him. "Depending on what Angela says," he added.

"I guess Angela rules the roost," Pam commented, shivering a bit. Sunrise and its potential warmth couldn't come soon enough.

"Nonsense," said Dwight. "I rule the roost. And that brings us to the problem. Oh, hello!"

Mose and the two girls had come up to the group, bits of hay poking out from various places. Laura and Heike exchanged an exuberant hug, and introductions were made all around; the older girl was named Greta, and Dwight pointed out little Liesel toddling nearby. All the girls had the white-blond hair of their mother; they were miniature Angelas in looks, if not in temperament. Mose looked much the same as when Jim and Pam had met him years before, but with a bit of white in his hair now, and a few more lines on his face. He had ducked his head shyly as he shook Jim's hand, and blushed as he shook Pam's. After that, he hovered by Jim, too close for comfort behind his right shoulder.

Dwight looked to the eastern horizon and said, "We may as well start with assignments. The sun will be rising soon, and it's bright enough now to see the maps."

Jim kept glancing at Mose and inching to his left. Mose inched with him. Giving up, Jim tried to ignore the fact that he was being shadowed. He only hoped it wouldn't continue through the entire visit here.

Dwight handed a clipboard to Mose and one to Jim. "Pam, since you and Jim are new to egg hunts at Schrute Farms, you should probably partner up."

"Good idea." Pam nodded as if she knew where Dwight was going with this. Jim was fairly certain that none of them knew where Dwight was going with this. Maybe Dwight knew.

"Okay. So, I've assigned you a quadrant and marked it on your map. Search very carefully for eggs and mark on the map where you find them before picking them up. Here are your compasses." He took two from his neck and again gave one to Mose and one to Jim. "It's very important to mark first, pick up after. Don't forget."

Dwight looked up suddenly to see Laura and Heike, now a few yards away, holding hands and bending down a bit as Laura reached for an egg. Dwight ran toward the girls, yelling, "No! We didn't map it yet!"

 

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

 

Joey fussed a little in Pam's arms as Jim and Pam looked down at the brown egg nestled in the grass.

"He didn't color the eggs?" asked Pam. She looked over to the other egg hunt ‘quadrants' - Mose in one, Dwight in a second, and Greta, Heike, and Laura in the third. Everyone seemed to be busily searching for, mapping, and picking up eggs, unbothered by the fact that they were brown instead of brightly colored.

"Maybe he figured the brown eggs wouldn't color well?" Jim guessed. "Or maybe he couldn't find time to color them, since he doesn't want Angela to find out."

Pam glanced over to see Dwight heading toward them from his quadrant. "We can ask him, I guess. Meanwhile, mark this one on the map, and let's see if Joey will pick it up." She set Joey down next to the egg as Dwight reached them.

"What's wrong with him? Why isn't he walking around searching for himself?" asked Dwight. "You'll never get your quadrant cleared at this rate."

Jim looked at Dwight quizzically, shaking his head. "He's only ten months old, Dwight. He can't walk yet."

"Pfft," said Dwight, looking around. Behind him, he spotted his youngest daughter, wandering nearby. "Liesel, come here." Little Liesel started to toddle over to them with a big gummy smile.

Dwight turned back to Jim and Pam, saying, "Eight and a half months old. Perfect balance." Behind him, Liesel fell on her face and then struggled again to her feet; he didn't notice. "Schrute genes."

"That's great, Dwight." Pam, trying to hide her smile, looked down at Joey. "Pick up the egg, Joey!" she encouraged.

Joey grabbed for the egg with both hands. It exploded in a mess of eggshell and goo and he burst out crying. In the distance, Mose looked up at the noise and came running.

"Oh, my God, Dwight! That one's raw!" said Jim, crouching down to help Joey wipe his hands off in the grass. Pam took a packet of baby wipes from her bag and applied them to cleaning Joey's hands. Mose arrived at the scene and started patting Joey on the head, making soothing "psh, psh" noises.

"Well, of course it's raw," Dwight replied. "You don't think Chicken Jane lays cooked eggs, do you?"

"What are you talking about? Didn't you hide the eggs?" asked Pam.

"Hide them? Don't be ridiculous. We're trying to find the eggs," Dwight scoffed. "Chicken Jane has been laying her eggs wherever she wishes, instead of in the hen house, and she hasn't gone there at night to roost, either. Only in finding the eggs and tracking the patterns can we determine where the hen is hiding. We take mavericks very seriously at Schrute Farms."

Jim picked up Joey, finally all clean and no longer sniffling. "You said you were having an Easter egg hunt, Dwight. That's why we came."

"I said no such thing. I asked you, at Mose's insistence, to come for an egg hunt. I don't know why he thinks you're some sort of a pied piper who can help us find Chicken Jane, but..."

Mose interrupted, "I call her DHW, for..."

"Long story, no time, Mose," said Dwight, waving a clipboard at his cousin. "The important thing is that Chicken Jane is Angela's favorite hen, and we have to find her before Angela realizes she's missing. Mose and I have been looking since Thursday and we haven't found her. We're lucky Angela hasn't noticed her absence, but she's been busy with all the Easter services -- Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and of course, sunrise, and 9 o'clock services today."

"No 11 o'clock today?" asked Pam innocently.

"No, I convinced her that two services today was enough," answered Dwight. "I told you that I rule the roost, didn't I?"

"I can see that now," Pam said solemnly.

"Yes, excellent job, Dwight," Jim agreed.

Dwight looked at the two of them with a little frown. "Hmph. Get back to work and finish your quadrant. You too, Mose. We'll meet on the porch when we're done and then look for patterns." He tapped his clipboard. "Angela's ETA is 10:47 A.M. We need to find this rogue hen before that. Look sharp."

 

 

End Notes:

One more chapter to go.

Thanks to betas Azlin and Swedge.

Disclaimer: All publicly recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their respective owners. The original characters and plot are the property of the author. The author is in no way associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media franchise. No copyright infringement is intended.

Easter Sunday: Chicken Jane, I Presume? by Too Late Kev
Author's Notes:
The result.

Easter Sunday, March 27, 2016, continued

Dwight stared down at the four maps he had spread out on the ground, muttering to himself about patterns, and quadrants, and where the missing hen's eggs had been found. Mose tugged Jim and Pam over to the maps and they all crowded around. Pam held Joey, and Jim absent-mindedly picked up Liesel when she bumped into his leg.

"Do you know where she is? Do you?" Mose asked Jim, tapping him on the arm.

Jim looked over at Mose and shifted Liesel to the side Mose was on, hoping her presence between them would help Mose keep his distance. Instead, Liesel turned her gummy smile at her uncle, resulting in him inching even closer. Jim made up his mind to ignore Mose's shadowing and answered, "I'm not really an expert at this..."

"I knew it!" Dwight exclaimed triumphantly.

"But it seems like there are a lot of eggs over here on this side of the house." Jim pointed to a clear cluster of eggs marked on the map. "Is there anything special over there that would attract a hen?"

Dwight looked disappointed that Jim had come up with something. "There are only two rooms on that side, Mose's bedroom and an extra room where Angela keeps some of her things."

"Those are the only two rooms with kitty doors, too," said Mose proudly. "Any time the cats want to come in or out, they have to come through my room."

"Or Angela's spare room," corrected Pam. Mose looked hurt by her comment.

"Could a hen fit through a kitty door?" asked Jim. When he woke up this morning, he certainly hadn't anticipated asking that question today. Or ever, really.

"Theoretically," answered Dwight. "The width of an average hen is about five inches and the width of a kitty door is..." he looked at Mose.

"Ours aren't standard," answered Mose. "About eight inches."

"Maybe we should we look at the kitty doors to see if it looks like Chicken Jane's been going in and out," Pam suggested.

"Yeah, that sounds good," agreed Jim. He was sort of hoping they could avoid actually going into the inner sanctum of the farmhouse.

Dwight sniffed. "Waste of time. We'll investigate the rooms for scat. But Angela would have noticed if Chicken Jane had gone into her storage room. We'll check Mose's room first."

"Yeah, c'mon, Jim and Pam! Come see my room!" Mose said eagerly, seemingly untroubled by Dwight's implication that he wouldn't have noticed a hen taking up residence in his bedroom. He looked over to where the girls were playing and yelled, "Laura, come see my room!" Then he scampered up the porch steps and into the house.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Jim and Pam stood in Mose's bedroom, each holding an infant, watching Mose and the three older girls playing with some of Mose's sculptures. They were interesting conglomerations of whittled wood, goose and chicken feathers, small animal bones, and wire, artfully arranged and shellacked. Jim knew that feathers and bones weren't exactly at the top of Pam's approved toy list for Laura, but he wasn't surprised when she whispered, "When at Schrute Farms, do as the Schrutes do." Not to be outdone, Jim whispered back, "What happens at Schrute Farms, stays at Schrute Farms." Pam flashed a smile.

It had been fairly clear to Jim almost immediately that the missing hen hadn't been in Mose's room -- it was sparsely decorated and extremely clean. Dwight was nevertheless conducting a comprehensive investigation starting with the kitty flap and moving clockwise around the room. Every once in a while he would stop and write furiously on his clipboard or, finding someone in his path, impatiently gesture for them to move aside.

Meanwhile, Jim and Pam looked around the room. The only decorations, beyond Mose's sculptures, were photographs and children's drawings on the walls. When he noticed their interest, Mose jumped up from playing and proudly showed off his family: Granmutter Schrute, a fierce looking matriarch who, strangely, seemed to resemble Angela; Granvater Schrute who looked like he never ruled a roost in his life; Mose's parents and Dwight's parents; and many aunts, uncles, and cousins with odd names and even odder Schrute-like qualities. The picture frames themselves were perhaps earlier, more utilitarian versions of Mose's sculptures; the plain wooden frames were adorned with hay, feathers, and little pictures of beets.

Jim and Pam went on to look at the children's drawings, such a normal sight in any house with children. This wall depicted more livestock, cats, and root vegetables than an average art wall, but it was sweet that Mose chose to display his nieces' artwork. Jim noticed a few drawings on another wall; he smiled to see them labeled "Mose" and "Dwight," imagining a time when Mose and Dwight were young boys running around the farm instead of grown men running the farm.

His thoughts were interrupted by Mose saying, "If Laura wants to draw something, I'll put it up on the wall."

Laura and Heike overheard and squealed with delight. Dwight, however, who had finally finished with his examination of the room, declared, "That wall is for Schrutes!"

Mose looked at Dwight defiantly. "She can be an honorary Schrute. Besides, it's my wall. I can put up anything I want on it."

"Fine," Dwight said. "But she's not an official Schrute, and if the bizarre subject matter of her drawing gives you nightmares, don't come crying to me." He looked around at everyone and announced, "I've finished my investigation. There is no sign that Chicken Jane has ever been in this room. Let's move on to Angela's spare room."

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Mose had excused himself to check on Easter dinner; although it was still early, the smell of ham was already wafting through the farmhouse. Laura had gone off to see Heike's and Greta's rooms, so only Jim and Pam were left to investigate Angela's room with Dwight.

Dwight stood with his hand on the door handle and looked sternly at Jim and Pam. "It's just as well that Mose and the children left. Angela doesn't like anyone to go into her extra room. The only reason we're going in is to rule out Chicken Jane being there. Don't wander around poking your noses into everything."

"Nope. Wouldn't dream of it," said Jim. He was actually trying to decide between looking straight ahead to avoid seeing anything at all and taking in every strange detail to discuss later with Pam.

Dwight opened the door and stepped a few paces into the room, then stopped. His arms dropped to his sides, and the clipboard and pen he'd been holding clattered to the floor. Jim and Pam stepped inside the room as well, looking around to see what had prompted Dwight's reaction. The grain scattered around the floor would have been indication enough that some sort of animal had been here, but the sight of a hen sitting on a roost made it rather obvious that Angela had been well aware that her favorite chicken was absent from the hen house.

"Chicken Jane, I presume?" asked Jim.

"I don't understand it," said Dwight, looking confused. "Why would Angela have Chicken Jane in here?"

"I'm sure if Angela hid the hen in here, she had a really good reason, Dwight," Pam said comfortingly.

"Do you think so?" Dwight said. "You're probably right. Or maybe Mose put Chicken Jane in here, so I would think it was Angela! Or maybe they're in on it together, like that time they plotted to plant Red Ace hybrid beets in the west field!" He looked wildly at Jim. "The Chioggias had always done so well there!"

Jim looked at Pam in dismay, wondering exactly how they had gotten mixed up in Schrute family politics. "I don't know, Dwight. Mose seemed to be searching pretty seriously. I'm sure there's no reason to suspect foul play," he said, raising his eyebrows at Pam. He was rewarded by her smile at the pun, which fortunately seemed lost on Dwight.

Dwight nodded and said with conviction, "Then we'll wait for Angela to come home, and we'll ask her to explain herself." He stared off into space for a moment and then suddenly looked at Jim and Pam. "There's something she can't explain!" he said, pointing to a bag propped against the wall. "That's organic chicken feed! Do you know how much that costs?"

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Later, Dwight sat on the front porch of Schrute Farms in a big, green rocking chair, holding Chicken Jane on his lap and rocking slowly back and forth. He had hardly said a thing since finding the hen in Angela's spare room. Mose and the three older girls were engaged in a game of ‘goose tag,' the rules of which were beyond Jim's comprehension, but somehow well within Laura's. Liesel and Joey had both been put down for a morning nap in Liesel's room, which Jim had been glad to see looked like a normal baby's room, except for the ancient cribs with ‘Dwight' and ‘Mose' carved into the headboards.

Jim and Pam stood out of Dwight's hearing, discussing the other things they'd seen in Angela's room besides Chicken Jane: a rack of clothes with off-season outfits, complete with matching hats above and what looked like little plastic doll shoes below; a vast collection of crosses; a pillow embroidered with the words "In Heaven, the beets are outnumbered only by the cats;" and an entire shelf of a bookcase devoted to Bibles. All in all, it was much more normal than Jim had expected.

Everyone was awaiting Angela's imminent arrival. Jim and Pam had tried to go home to avoid seeing an awkward confrontation, but Dwight wouldn't hear of it.

"No, you're staying," he had said. "She'll be surprised to see you, so she'll have no time to make up an excuse for holding Chicken Jane in her room."

Just then, Pam nudged Jim and indicated the dirt road with her chin. "Here she comes." Jim turned to see Angela's sturdy little car making its way toward the farmhouse, Angela peering through the windshield at the unfamiliar car in the drive. She pulled her car up behind Jim's car and got out. Meanwhile, Dwight and Mose had noticed Angela's arrival as well. The four adults converged upon her.

"Angela, I hope you have an explanation for this." Dwight held Chicken Jane out in front of him.

Angela looked frostily at Dwight. "That's a chicken, Dwight."

"But why was she in your spare room?" demanded Dwight, inching closer to tower over her.

She looked up at him, not giving an inch. "Why were you in my spare room?" she asked.

"We were looking for the missing hen," Dwight sputtered. "It was Jim's idea!"

Angela turned her attention to Jim, whose eyes widened; he felt fixed in position by her glare. It was hard not to feel like he had done something wrong, even though he knew he hadn't. "Nope. Dwight asked us here for what we thought was an Easter egg hunt."

"True Christians don't give Easter egg hunts," Angela chastised primly. "Colored Easter eggs are like little dyed graven images. Good morning, Pam," she said, turning suddenly to Pam.

"Good morning, Angela." Pam looked over at Dwight, who seemed deflated and unable to continue his line of questioning. ‘You know, Dwight only asked us here to help because he knew Chicken Jane was your favorite hen and he wanted to find her for you."

Jim was proud of Pam for sticking up for Dwight to Angela. He was also glad, because that meant he didn't have to do it; being too nice to Dwight was still something he'd rather avoid.

Angela, however, was not impressed with Pam's little speech nor Dwight's consideration of her feelings. "Then why was he going to let Mose kill Chicken Jane for Easter dinner?" she cried.

"I would never!" declared Mose among a chorus of ‘What?'s.

"Don't be ridiculous, Angela. I wouldn't let Mose kill Chicken Jane," said Dwight. "Look how well she's been laying!" He indicated the basket of eggs sitting on the ground near the porch steps.

The relieved expression that momentarily swept Angela's face was replaced with a look of anger when she seemed to realize the hen's only safeguard was a high egg production.

Mose seemed just as angered by Dwight's approach. He said, "She's one of my favorites, too, Angela. I wouldn't have cooked her without checking with you."

Angela rounded on Mose and took a few steps forward until she was right in front of him. Jim wasn't sure how she gave the illusion of having the height advantage. "You liar! I know you were going to kill her -- I heard you! You called her ‘Dead Hen Walking'!"

"She was a dead hen walking," Mose protested, almost in tears. "She died on Monday, but I revived her with CPR, one of Granmutter Schrute's remedies."

"You gave CPR to a chicken?" asked Jim, wondering how that would work.

Mose and Dwight both looked at Jim like he was an idiot, then looked at each other and shook their heads. Dwight set Jim straight: "What else would you use the Chicken Pounding Remedy on if not a chicken?" Dwight gave a mocking laugh.

"Oh," said Jim, "that CPR."

Angela had received the news with a sob, grasping Mose's hands in hers. "She died? And you didn't tell me?"

"I didn't want to worry you. Besides, you know Granmutter's remedies don't always last long. Dead Hen Walking may not have much time left."

"I was never taught any of the remedies, but Mose learned them all at Granmutter's knee," Dwight explained proudly to Jim and Pam.

"The left one," Mose clarified.

"Oh, of course," Dwight agreed. "Granmutter's right knee was deformed. Nobody wanted to learn anything there."

Jim put his hand over his mouth to try to hide his amusement and raised his eyebrows at Pam, who was also having trouble keeping a straight face. The bizarre nature of Schrute Farms seemed unending.

Angela had let go of Mose's hands and crossed her arms in front of her. She looked around, red-faced but defiant. "I assumed Mose was going to kill Chicken Jane for Easter dinner, so I lured her into my room with better feed than she usually gets. I see now I didn't have anything to worry about." She addressed Mose directly, softening a bit. "I'm sorry, Cousin Mose, to have doubted you. Your life-saving heroics were an Easter miracle."

"That's all right, Angela. I'm just glad DHW has been safe."

"Hear, hear!" said Jim. "And now, I think we should wake Joey up from his nap and get going."

"Don't be silly," said Angela. "You'll stay for Easter dinner. Heike will be very pleased."

Pam glanced over at Jim. He shrugged slightly; there was probably little point in trying to decline.

"That sounds nice. Thank you, Angela," said Pam.

"Good, that's settled. Mose is a very good cook. He always makes something that I'll like, and there's probably something for meat-eaters like you, Jim."

"Thanks, Angela," Jim said. He wasn't sure how much of an insult Angela had meant for that to be, but it didn't matter. At this point, they had committed to Easter dinner; the only option was to get through it as painlessly as possible. He turned to Mose. "It smelled good. Ham?"

Mose nodded nervously, while Dwight smiled widely and said, "It ought to be good. Real fresh, too. And huge. There'll be plenty for everyone, and leftovers for days. Plus, we're testing out a theory that the meanest pig makes for the sweetest ham." He looked at Jim and Pam. "Let me know if you think this ham is extra sweet."

Jim had noticed a dawning look of horror come over Angela's face as Dwight was talking. Angela suddenly turned and walked toward the barn, slowly at first, and then faster until she was running stiffly in her Easter outfit and good shoes, finally slowing down and stopping at a fenced-in area near the barn. She looked over the fence, calling, "George Pig! George Pig! Heeeeeere, George Pig!"

"Oh," said Dwight, flatly. "I forgot about that." He explained to Jim, "George Pig was Angela's favorite swine. She may not take this well."

By the pig pen, Angela raised her tormented voice again. "George Piiiiiiig!" She looked back toward the farmhouse and her anguished face turned to one of red-hot fury. "Mose Karl Schrute!"

Mose bounced up and down on the balls of his feet, a study of nerves and fear. Dwight looked at him calmly and said, "You'd better run." Dwight's words were like the pulling of a trigger; Mose took off, flying away from the house and the barn. Angela kicked off her shoes and started after him, passing Dwight, Pam, and Jim in less time than Jim would have imagined possible. Apparently, hell hath no fury like a woman whose favorite pig has been killed for Easter dinner.

Dwight looked cheerfully at Jim and Pam. "We should go on in and relax a bit. They'll be a while."


 

End Notes:

Thanks to betas Swedge and Azlin.

Disclaimer: All publicly recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their respective owners. The original characters and plot are the property of the author. The author is in no way associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media franchise. No copyright infringement is intended.

This story archived at http://mtt.just-once.net/fanfiction/viewstory.php?sid=3326