But there was one peculiarity none of the listings mentioned.
Her eyes flickered—just for a second—toward the kitchen pantry. Then back to me. “No,” she said. “The last time I drank tea, someone left.”
Retirees flock here for dry air and cheaper rent, but Hemet is also a working-class anchor—warehouse workers, nurses, and mechanics who watch the sun rise over Diamond Valley Lake. The town has known economic stops and starts, yet it endures with a quiet dignity. On any given morning, you might find old-timers nursing coffee at the Paradise Cove Café, arguing baseball scores or the price of gasoline. Come evening, the Ramona Bowl—a natural amphitheater cut into the hills—still echoes with the footsteps of its annual outdoor pageant, a tradition nearly a century old. Hemet- or the Landlady Don-t Drink Tea
No explanation. Just that.
She smiled—thin, practiced. “I don’t drink tea.” But there was one peculiarity none of the listings mentioned
At first I thought nothing of it. Perhaps she preferred coffee, or herbal infusions. But days turned to weeks, and I noticed: she never drank anything hot. Not cocoa, not soup, not even warm water with lemon. Her mornings began with a glass of cold milk. Her evenings with tap water, room temperature. On rainy nights, when the house creaked and the fog pressed against the windows like a lost guest, she would sit in her armchair perfectly still, hands folded, watching the steam rise from my mug as if it were a foreign creature.
Hemet is not polished, and it does not pretend to be. But for those who listen past the freeway hum, it tells a truer story of Southern California: one of hard earth, stubborn hope, and the slow, steady rhythm of a town that refuses to disappear. Mrs. Gable was the sort of landlady who appeared in advertisements for ideal flats: spectacles balanced on a neat nose, cardigan buttoned to the throat, hair in a tidy gray bun. Her voice was soft, her manners impeccable. She showed prospective tenants the gleaming kitchen, the fresh linens, the quiet garden where roses climbed a trellis like a promise. “No,” she said
“Tea?” I asked on my first evening, holding up the kettle.
I never asked again.
It turned out she had been a landlady for forty-two years. Forty-two years of tenants who came, unpacked, shared a polite cuppa, and then vanished—sometimes overnight, sometimes with a month’s notice, but always gone. Tea had become a harbinger of departure, a steeped farewell. So she stopped drinking it. And in doing so, she convinced herself that if she never raised a warm cup to her lips, no one else would ever leave.