
"No. She didn't mention anything about a room. She just gave me the name."
"Well, I can tell you the tale," Norma said. "But I don't know if Murkitt's story is the kind of thing your Miss Schwartz will be looking for.
"Why not?"
"Well, because it's rather dark ," Norma said. "Tragic, in fact."
Candy smiled. "Well, Mom says I'm morbid, so I'll probably like it."
"Morbid, huh? All right," said Norma. "I guess I should tell you the whole darn thing. You see, Chickentown used to be called Murkitt."
"Really? That wasn't in any of the books about Minnesota."
"You know how it is. There's the history that finds its way into the books and there's the history that doesn't."
"And Henry Murkitt?"
"—is part of the history that doesn't."
"Huh."
Candy was fascinated. Remembering what her mother had said about doing some detective work, she took out her notebook and began to write in it. Murkitt. History we don't know .
"So the town was named after Henry Murkitt?"
"No," said Norma. "It was named after his grandfather Wallace Murkitt."
"Why did they change it?"
"I guess Chickentown fits, doesn't it? This place has got more damn chickens in it than it has people. And sometimes I think folks care more about the chickens than they do about each other. My husband works over at the factory, so that's all I ever hear from him and his friends—"
"Chicken talk?"
"Chickens, chickens and more darn chickens." Norma glanced at her watch. "You know I don't have much time to show you Room Nineteen today. I've got a big party of folks coming in. Can we do this another day?"
"I've got to have the report in by tomorrow morning."
