Our stories today center around the Inn by the lake and a busy summer day for the Innkeeper. We’ll follow her from the moment she wakes up, up in her third floor bedroom, through her morning duties, serving coffee cake on the screened in back porch. Then we’ll join her as she fills the bird feeders and spies an unexpected visitor coming down the drive. Finally we’ll sneak up to the sleeping porch on the second floor with her and settle in for a quiet read while the guests nap by the water.
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Welcome to Stories from the Village of Nothing. Much like easy Listening, but for fiction. I'm Catherine Nikolai. I write and read all the stories you'll hear on the Village of Nothing. Much. Audio engineering and sound design is by Bob Wittershein. In our show notes, you'll find links to our ad free premium version, our other shows, and our new wind Down Box. It's a quarterly sleep subscription box full of products I've handpicked to bring a little more joy and ease to your bedtime. If you have ever wondered if anyone out there is writing happy little stories about practically nothing, and if they might be nice to listen to, to lower anxiety, to help you become a bit more mindful and enjoy more day to day pleasures, Let's be friends. I started writing these stories for my bedtime story podcast, Nothing Much Happens, and it was lovely to hear how other people shared my love for ordinary magic and became invested in these characters. I created the little village they lived in and the simple storylines I jumped up. So we've made them less sleep inducing. Hopefully you know, pull over if you feel a nap coming on. We've added a soundscape, and if you stick around after, I'll share some behind the scenes thoughts with you now, just because I think it's pretty much always a good idea. Let's take a big breath in through the nose and sigh from your mouth. Do it one more time, Breathe in and let it all go good. Our stories today sent her around the Inn by the Lake and a busy summer day for the innkeeper. We'll follow her from the moment she wakes up up in her third floor bedroom, through her morning duties, serving coffee cake on the screened in back porch. Then we'll join her as she fills the bird feeders and spies an unexpected visitor coming down the drive. Finally, we'll sneak up to the sleeping porch on the second floor with her and settle in for a quiet read while the guests nap by the water. Summer at the Inn, full summer was upon us. The trees across the lake were decked with thousands of waving green leaves. The tadpoles i'd been watching at the water's edge had grown through their awkward adolescence and were now hopping through the high grasses, and their croaking was loud enough to hear from the porch at night. The days got hot by ten or eleven, and the hammocks in the shady side yard filled up. After lunch, the inn was booked up, and I'd had to hang the no vacancy sign at the end of the long drive. Many of our guests were returnees, and some had come when they were children, long before the inn's renovation. I loved watching a car roll down the circle drive to stop at our front door, the occupants tumbling out to stretch their limbs after a long drive, and smile up at our beautiful old house, excited to settle in for their stay. Most folks came in late on a Sunday to stay for the week, And when I woke up on Monday morning and pushed open the window in my third floor room to see clear skies and the calm blue lake, I would feel a burst of giddiness in my stomach for them. Their vacation was just beginning, and it would be a beautiful week for them at the Inn. People don't realize often, but you can borrow another person's joy, share it around, and still it doesn't run out. After all, we borrow each other's anger and worry, so why not their excitement? And today was a perfect day for giddy vacation joy. It was warm and with that lush summer feeling as soon as the sun came up. We run a breakfast service from seven till nine, though we usually had the coffee hot and ready in a big silver samovar in the hall by six point thirty for any early risers. We weren't a big hotel. When we fired on all cylinders, we had nine guest rooms, and our small staff managed it all very well. I like to think that not being big gave us a chance to tend to the details with even more care. So in the mornings, while chef was setting up the coffee and baking their signature cinnamon crunch coffee cakes, I set the table on the screened in porch with a level of precision that I took pride in. I had crisp white tablecloths that came from the launderers, with sharp iron creases in them, and I tossed them out over the tables one by one. We had a huge collection of china that I'd been buying from estate sales for years, and while we might only have a few pieces in each pattern. We matched them up where we could, and I laid out plates and napkins and cups turned over in their saucers. I set out salt and pepper shakers, and beakers of chilled water and glasses, and lastly a simple bud vase with a single stem of whatever was blooming in our flower garden. When the tables were set, I walked through the long hall toward the front office. We got a half dozen copies of the local paper delivered each morning, and I collected them from the front step. I liked to fan them out beside the samovar for guests to pick up and read with breakfast. As I passed through the hall, I could hear some folks sleepily coming down the stairs, and I ducked into the office to press the call button. Our old house had once been a private residence fancy enough to have these buttons, and I sometimes imagined the lady of the house sitting in her parlor, ringing for tea. When I'd begun to renovate the inn and had found the remnants of the ancient system in the walls, I'd been determined to get at least some of them working again. I didn't want them for the guests use, but for ours. I had one behind the front desk that rang down in the kitchen, and I press the toe of my shoe down over it. I was letting Chef know that our first diners were sitting down, and I always laughed when I did this. Chef had their ducks in a row better than I ever did, and I like to imagine them standing front of a counter full of pastries and freshly cut fruit, their apron pristine and the work surface already cleaned, just shaking their head and waiting for me to come pick up the plates. It was our joke. Breakfast went smoothly, and as our guests headed out to sit in the lounge chairs by the water or borrow bikes from the shed, I helped our housekeeper clean and make up beds. Since most of our guests stayed for a full week, it meant there wasn't much to do at the front desk, and I could flit through the rooms, changing the water in the flower vases, running the sweeper over the old and slightly threadbare rugs, and opening windows to let the lake air in. When the house was in order, I stepped out to one of the outbuildings and pried open a big pay of bird feed. I caught up a galvanized scoop and filled it with safflower seeds and white proso millet. I carried it out to the feeders hung from the oak tree outside the library window, and as carefully as I could, I filled them all up. When I had become the innkeeper here the first after years of the house sitting empty, I'd had quite a lot of work ahead of me to bring this place back to life. One day, i'd been cleaning in the kitchen for hours. It had been a long week in which we'd found a leak in one of the second floor bathrooms and more broken windows in the attic than we'd imagined. I'd been worn out and worried and come out here for a breath of fresh air. I'd sat down beneath this oak and leaned my head back against the trunk, and among the branches I'd spotted a bird feeder, very old and handmaide and long empty of seed. But on the feed rail was a tall blue jay. He sat as if waiting patiently for me to fill the feeder. I felt like a gentle nudge toward patience to keep going. Even after things have sat empty for a long time, they can still come back to life. They aren't forgotten. The work is appreciated. I'd saved that feeder, repainted it and hung it with a new wire, and I kept it full as a way to say thank you for that moment of encouragement. With a scoop now empty in my hand, I strolled around the side of the inn and found Chef in their garden, pulling radishes from the dirt and checking on the eggplants which were just starting to appear from their flowers. I could hear kids splashing in the water, low voices and drowsy conversation, and could smell lake and the hawthorn trees still in bloom. Here's the patience, I thought, Part two. I heard the crunch of tires on gravel coming from the circle drive at the front of the inn. I still had the bird seed scoop in my hand from refilling the feeders as I rounded the edge of the house. We weren't expecting any new guests today, so I wondered who might be stopping by occasionally, Folks from the neighboring streets came to have a cup of coffee on the porch and share a bit of local gossip, but they usually showed up on foot or rode their bicycles. I spotted a dusty pickup truck coming up the drive, and I smiled as I recognized it. We bought a lot of our produce from nearby farmers. Whatever chef couldn't grow in our vegetable patch, and there was one farm. They were famous all through the county for their giant vegetables. They won the Blue Ribbon at the fair nearly every year for their enormous pumpkins and boulder sized cabbages. We hadn't placed an order for anything recently, but sometimes they just drove up with their truck bed full of goodies to see if there was anything we needed. As the truck stopped at the front door and I peered into the bed, I knew we'd be taking some today. A woman in worn jeans and a flannel shirt stepped out of the cab and smilingly said, watermelon season has begun. I can see that. I laughed, looking down at the giant fruit piled among blankets to keep them from breaking open. Beside the watermelon there were a few cantelopes, and I thought of the cantelope ice cream Chef had made last year, how delicious and creamy it had been, with nothing but the pure flavor of the fruit. Chef had served it in perfect quannels on our fancy patterned china plates. But I to eat in the last bites straight from the container at midnight in my slippers, while the whole inn slept. Chef must have heard the truck as well, and they came around to inspect the fruit. We were at full capacity for the foreseeable future, and we talked about what to buy, what we might serve. The days were hot, and platters of chilled water melons set out by the beach chares would always hit the spot. But Chef would also make a salad with the fruit, with mint and lime and smoked almonds. We had a breakfast service each morning. Then we did platters of sandwiches and salads at lunchtime, and set out some nuts and olives with drinks in the afternoon. By then, our small staff had already put in a full day's work, so our guests drove into town to find their dinner. Still every now and then, Chef was inspired to make a special supper, like on the summer solstice, or on a night when we were predicted to have clear skies and an abundance of shooting stars, when eating on our porch by the lake would be irresistible, or just when there was a confluence of excellent fresh things to cook and gastronomic inspiration. We began to pick out melons. I added a few cantelopes with a hopeful smile, and from the cab the farmer brought out baskets of asparagus and spring onions, rainbow charred, and the season's first ears of sweetcorn. I could see the gears turning in Chef's head and thought we might be in store for a treat after all. The farmer helped us carry everything down into the kitchens and we worked out the cost, which was somewhat lessened when we added several jars of Chef's spicy pickled watermelon rind that had been put up the year before with the same farm's melons. Once the produce was all laid out on the counters, we talked through some ideas. It was nearly lunchtime and Chef had made sandwiches as soon as breakfast was done, we took them from the fridge and I set neatly cut triangles out on pretty platters so the guests could serve themselves. There was a big dish of cucumber salad topped with pickled red onions, and chef set about slicing a couple of watermelons to go along with it. I carried the platters and dishes up to a long table laid with a white cloth on the screened in porch. I fussed with the napkins and stacks of plates and bowls, and went back down for more. There was a tray of warm, soft flatbreads topped with slices of yellow tomatoes and garlic spread, and crafts of lemonade and hibiscus iced tea. Lastly, I laid out the watermelon and pushed the screen door open. I rang the bell that hung from the porch eaves to let our guests down by the water know that lunch was served. Some sprang up from their towels chairs and headed up the grassy hills straight away. Others were deep into novels or naps and just starting their first laps in the lake. We'd keep the platters fall till everyone was fed and happy. I liked to watch the guests come in and survey the table, and excitedly pick up a plate and begin to fill it. We had a loosely enforced rule that if you were in a bathing suit, especially if you had just gotten out of the water, you'd carry your meal to one of the shady picnic tables outside, and on a day like today, nearly everyone chose to eat alfresco. I kept an eye on our diners, bringing out pictures of water to some of the tables and carrying in the dishes as they emptied. As our lunch service was ending, I felt my own stomach rumble and realized it was time for my repast. Sometimes the staff met for family meal in the late morning or early afternoon, depending on how busy we were. If it was a day when the whole inn would turn over from one group of visitors to another, we'd often just fill a plate whenever we could. Today, our schedule had been displaced by the truck rumbling up the drive, and when I got back down into the kitchens, I found that chef and our housekeeper had already lunched and were sipping tiny cups of espresso to finish their meal. They laughed when they caught my expression, hungry and pouting. I fixed you a plate. Don't worry, said chef, and lifted a plaid kitchen towel to show me one piled with all my favorites. I pulled up a chair and drew the plate toward me, as Chef passed over some silverware in a napkin. The kitchen was cool and smelled already of whatever our special supper would be tonight. I spread the napkin over my lap and let out a contented sigh. The summer was busy, but in all the best ways. Part three. I had about an hour to myself. Most afternoons gifted me a little time to go for a bike ride, or drive into town and browse the shops, or sometimes to fall asleep with my bedroom window open, high on the third floor where the breeze was cool. Today, I had a book that I'd stayed up late reading the night before. It had taken all my discipline to finally put it down and turn out the light, and it had been calling to me since then. Sitting tucked under the counter at the front desk, I remember reading this way when I was a child, being pulled into books so deeply that I could barely stand to come up for air at meal times. But as a grown up that happened less and less. Maybe younger brains are just more given to disappearing into other worlds. So when I found a book that I couldn't put down, well, what a gift. I made it last as long as I could, so all morning, while I'd tended to my innkeeping duties, serving breakfast on the porch, helping make up beds, and filling the bird feeders, I'd been thinking about it, thinking about finding a shady spot to settle down and read a few more chapters. But the day had been busy. We'd been visited by one of our local farmers, bought fresh produce from the open bed of her truck, and laid out lunch for our guests on the back porch. Then I'd eaten a plate of sandwiches and cucumber salad down in the cool kitchen while Chef shuffled pots and pans around on the stove. Chef was a firm believer in the importance of finishing most any meal with a small cup of sweet, strong espresso, but By the time I'd pushed my plate back, the mocha pot had gone lukewarm. I'd volunteered to drink it as it was, but Chef took it from the counter, saying they would make me a fresh pot. I watched them take a large container from the freezer and add the tepid coffee to it. Oh I recognized that perfect on a hot afternoon, Chef would serve up espresso granita, the sweet whipped cream, the top scattered with fresh coffee grounds, or dotted with a couple of chocolate covered espresso beans. They sealed up the container and slid it back into the deep freeze, and set about washing out the pot and refilling it for me. While I waited for it to perk, we talked about the menu for dinner, grilled zucchini pasta with our homemade pesto and watermelon salad. Chef was still talking about which dishes to use and when we'd ring the dinner bell, but my mind was wandering back to my book. It was one of those books that I'd seen a few times over the years. Maybe it had been in the window of the bookshop. I definitely seen guests read it hungrily like I was, but it wasn't one of those titles that was on every bestseller list. Sometimes, when too many people tell me to read something, I just can't. It's too much pressure, and by the time I finally get to it, I have a bunch of expectations and they interfere with me being able to just enjoy. So when I found this book in a guest room after their stay, set on the dresser beside a note saying couldn't put it down, please share with anyone in need of a good book, I figured it was time to give it a go and slipped it into my pocket. Still it had sat for weeks in my room till I'd finished a few other novels I'd been dipping in and out of. It had been waiting for me, so patient and quiet, and all the time, holding a story that felt like it was written just for me. It made me wonder about the other books in my stack. I might not yet have read my favorite book. I might not read it for another ten years. And isn't that exciting. Chef set my cup of espresso down in front of me and leaned their elbows on the cap. Drink up and go do whatever it is you're thinking about. I chuckled and did as they said. The coffee was sweet and delicious and did feel like it put a period at the end of my meal. I was seated and ready for my book. Chef waved me out of the kitchen and I ran up the stairs to the landing. I had it down the long hallway that ran the length of the house, where portraits hung and the polished wood paneling shone in the afternoon light. In the front office, I checked for messages, and happily there weren't any. No one needed me just now. I took the book out from under the counter and tucked it into the crook of my elbow. I thought about where I wanted to read. I stepped to the window and pushed aside the thin curtain. Bright sunlight was shining down through the leaves. The hammocks were probably full by now, and the lawn chair by the water didn't have shade. It wasn't that I minded running into guests while I read, but sometimes I liked a bit of privacy, just to not be noticed for a bit. Then I remembered the sleeping porch. It was up on the second floor, a small screened in Veranda, with a glider and a few wicker chairs, with all the lovely spots to sit and relax around the inn. It was often forgotten by our guests, and I had a feeling it would be empty now. I carried my book up the great winding staircase and down the hall to the porch. Just as I'd hoped, it was empty, and I pulled open the door and stepped out. The inn was full of smells when I'd started renovating, most of them very nice, the scent of old wood, books and curling wallpaper. But with all the work we'd done, most rooms had lost those bits of atmosphere, which sometimes made me a little nostalgic. But this porch had barely been touched. We'd replaced the screens where they'd rotted away, and brought down the chairs from the attic, cleaning and polishing and adding new cushions. Once the space was swept out and set up, we'd left it, and it held the scent of nearly one hundred and fifty summers. I smelled the dry wood of the screen frames and the cool stone floors. I caught the sunlight in the morning, but by design, in the afternoons. It sat on the shaded side of the house and the temperature was perfect. I settled onto the glider and tucked my feet underneath me. I had an hour at least maybe more before anyone was likely to need anything. I opened my book. Now, before you head back home, if you have time, let me tell you a little more about these stories and the inn and the staff. I love writing about the inn. I think they are my favorite storylines to write about. I spend time every summer in a small town on Lake Michigan, and one day, as I was out for a walk, I passed this beautiful old bn B. It doesn't look or function anything like the one in our stories, but it just sent my imagination spinning. Is there anything more romantic than a small town inn than being an innkeeper? I mean, there's a reason they feature so heavily in Hallmark Christmas movies. Hallmark, if you are listening, I've got some ideas to pitch you lots actually call me anyway. These stories let me dig a little deeper into day to day life out of the inn. And I liked thinking about the little quirks of an old house. The samovar in the hall, the call bells under the old carpets, the dinner bell outside. Now that I'm thinking about it, bells play heavily in my stories. I love a wind chime, a train whistle, a bell on a cat's collar. These fall into magical item category for me. If this was a video game, they'd be highlighted so that your avatar could pick them up and add them to their pack. I also love writing about chef, who, just to be clear, is a non binary person and uses the them pronounce. They are a calm presence even in a busy kitchen, and in these stories they say a variation on a phrase I sided in the story Over the River and through the Woods as one of the friendliest sentences anyone can speak, which is sit down and I'll fix you a plate. I think the innkeeper and chef make a perfect team. At the end, she is a little dreamy, they are a bit more practice, but together the inn becomes full of charm and solid caretaking. Lastly, I want to say that I also love writing about food and lists of things to eat, a whole table full of dishes, and I think that can be very therapeutic if you've had a dicey relationship with food. Sometimes people listening to my bedtime stories will write me and ask me to stop writing about food because they get hungry hearing it, and to them and to you in case you need to hear it today, I say, my dear, if you are hungry, please eat. Please eat multiple times a day, every day, for the rest of your life. I am speaking from a place a personal understanding here and as a healed person well into recovery. So let me be the gentle voice that reminds you that food is meant to be more than few. It is culture and medicine and comfort. It is a way to share a moment and to enjoy the experience of being human. So if you are hungry, even if you just ate, maybe it seemed like enough of the time, but your body is grumbling for more, you go ahead and eat good. Thank you for coming out to the end with me. I wish you a week of blue skies, good books, special suppers, and sweet dreams.