
"Vaguely," Candy said.
"All kinds of strange things happen at hotels. And the Comfort Tree has been around since… oh, I don't know. You ask Norma, she'll tell you."
"Is she the one with the white-blond hair, who always wore too much lipstick?"
Melissa looked up at her daughter with a little smile. "Don't you go saying anything rude to her now."
"I wouldn't do a thing like that."
"I know how these things slip out with you."
"Mom . I'll be really polite."
"Good. You do that. She's the assistant manager there now, so if you're real nice to her, and you ask the right questions, I bet you she'll give you something for your project that nobody else in class will have."
"Like what?"
"You go over there and ask her. She'll remember you. Ask her to tell you about Henry Murkitt."
"Who's Henry Murkitt?"
"You go and ask her. It's your project. You should get out there and do some legwork. Like a detective."
"Is there much to detect?" Candy said.
"You'd be surprised."
She was. The first surprise was Norma Lipnik herself, who was no longer the tacky woman that Candy remembered: her hair teased high and her dress too short. In the eight years or so since Candy had seen Norma, she had let her hair go naturally gray. The bright red lipstick was a thing of the past, as were the short dresses. But once Candy had introduced herself, Norma's new professional reserve was soon cast to the winds, and the warm gossipy woman Candy remembered emerged.
"Lord, how you have grown, Candy," she said. "I never see you around; you or your mother. Is she doing okay?"
"Yeah, I guess."
"I heard your dad lost his job at the chicken factory. Had a little problem with the beer, so I was told?" Candy didn't have time to agree or deny this. "You know what? I think that sometimes people should be given second chances. If you don't give people second chances, how are they ever going to change?"
