cle in the area prior to last Saturday? He poses all this as if it would never occur to him that she would tarnish the truth.
We know, of course, that Chandonne could not have been here after Saturday. He has been in custody since then. Kiffin is no help. She claims she was aware of nothing out of the ordinary except that early one morning she went out for firewood and noticed the tent was gone but the family’s belongings were still here, or at least part of them. She can’t swear to it, but the more Marino prods her, the more she believes she noticed the tent gone around eight A.M., last Friday. Chandonne murdered Diane Bray on Thursday night. Did he then flee afterward to James City County to hide? I imagine him appearing at the tent, a couple and their small children inside. One look at him and it is believable they would have jumped into their car and sped off without bothering to pack.
We carry the trash bags to Marino’s truck and put them in back. Again, Kiffin awaits our return, hands in the pockets of her jacket, her face rosy from the cold. The motel is straight ahead through pine trees, a small, boxy white structure, two stories with doors painted the color of evergreens. Behind the motel are more woods, then a wide creek that branches off from the James River.
“How many people you got staying here right now?” Marino asks the woman who runs this dreadful tourist trap.
“Right now? Maybe thirteen, depending on whether anybody else’s checked out. Lot of people just leave their key in the room and I don’t know they’re gone until I go in to clean up. You know, I left my cigarettes in the house,” she says to Marino without looking at him. “You mind?”
Marino sets down his toolbox on the path. He shakes a cigarette loose from the pack and lights it for her. Her upper lip crinkles like crepe paper when she sucks in smoke, inhaling deeply and blowing out one side of her mouth. My lust for tobacco stirs. My fractured elbow complains about the cold. I
can’t stop thinking about the family in the tent and their terrorif it is true that Chandonne showed up and the family exists. If he did come directly here after murdering Bray, what happened to his clothes? He had to have gotten blood all over himself. Did he leave Bray’s house and come out here covered with blood and frighten strangers out of their tent, and no one called the police or said a word to anyone?
“How many people were staying here night before last, when the fire started?” Marino picks up his toolbox and we start walking again.
“I know how many were checked in.” She is vague. “Don’t know who was still here. Eleven had checked in, including him.”
“Including the man who died in the fire?” It is my turn to ask questions.
Kiffin throws a look at me. “That’s right.”
‘Tell me about his checking in,” Marino says to her as we walk and pause to look around, and then walk on. “You see him drive up like we just did? Appears to me cars just pull right up to the front of your house.”
She starts shaking her head. “No sir. Didn’t see no car. There was a knock on the door and I opened it. Told him to go next door to the office and I’d meet him there. He was a nice-looking man, well-dressed, didn’t look like the usual I get, that much stands out clear as day.”
“He tell you his name?” Marino asks her.
“Paid cash.”
“So if someone pays cash, you don’t get them to fill out nothing.”
“Can if they want. Don’t have to. I have a registration pad you can fill out and then I tear off the receipt. He said he didn’t need a receipt.”
“He have an accent or anything?”
“He didn’t sound like he was from these parts.”
“Could you place where he sounded from? Northern? Maybe foreign?” Marino keeps on as we pause again beneath pines.
She looks around, thinking and smoking as we follow her along a muddy path that leads to the motel parking lot. “Not deep South,” she decides. “But he didn’t sound like he was from a foreign country. You know, he didn’t say much. Said as little as he had to. I got a feeling, you know, like he was in a hurry and sort of nervous, and he sure wasn’t chatty.” This sounds completely fabricated. Her tone of voice actually changes.