Chapter One
The New Guests
Keith, the boy in the rumpled shorts and shirt, did not know he was
being watched as he entered room 215 of the Mountain View Inn. Neither
did his mother and father, who both looked hot and tired. They had
come from Ohio and for five days had driven across plains and deserts
and over mountains to the old hotel in the California foothills twenty-five
miles from Highway 40.
The fourth person entering room 215 may have known he was being
watched, but he did not care. He was Matt, sixty if he was a day,
who at the moment was the bellboy. Matt also replaced worn-out light
bulbs, renewed washers in leaky faucets, carried trays for people
who telephoned room service to order food sent to their rooms, and
sometimes prevented children from hitting one another with croquet
mallets on the lawn behind the hotel.
Now Matt's right shoulder sagged with the weight of one of the
bags he was carrying. "Here you are, Mr. Gridley. Rooms 215
and 216," he said, setting the smaller of the bags on a luggage
rack at the foot of the double bed before he opened a door into
the next room. "I expect you and Mrs. Gridley will want room
216. It is a corner room with twin beds and a private bath."
He carried the heavy bag into the next room where he could be heard
opening windows. Outside a chipmunk chattered in a pine tree and
a chickadee whistled fee-bee-bee.
The boy's mother looked critically around room 215 and whispered,
"I think we should drive back to the main highway. There must
be a motel with a Vacancy sign someplace. We didn't look long enough."
"Not another mile," answered the father. "I'm not
driving another mile on a California highway on a holiday weekend.
Did you see the way that truck almost forced us off the road?""
"Dad, did you see those two fellows on motorcycles-"
began the boy and stopped, realizing he should not interrupt an
argument.
"But this place is so old," protested the boy's mother.
"And we have only three weeks for our whole trip. We had planned
to spend the Fourth of July weekend in San Francisco and we wanted
to show Keith as much of the United States as we could."
"San Francisco will have to wait and this is part of the United
States. Besides, this used to be a very fashionable hotel,"
said Mr. Gridley. "People came from miles around."
"Fifty years ago," said Mrs. Gridley. "And they
came by horse and buggy."
The bellboy returned to room 215. "The dining room opens at
six-thirty, sir. There is ping-pong in the game room, TV in the
lobby, and croquet on the back lawn. I'm sure you will be very comfortable."
Matt, who had seen guests come and go for many years, knew there
were two kinds-those who thought the hotel was a dreadful old barn
of a place and those who thought it charming and quaint, so quiet
and restful.
"Of course we will be comfortable," said Mr. Gridley,
dropping some coins into Matt's hand for carrying the bags.
"But this big old hotel is positively spooky." Mrs. Gridley
made one last protest. "It is probably full of mice. "
Matt opened the window wide. "Mice? Oh no, ma'am. The management
wouldn't stand for mice."
I wouldn't mind a few mice," the boy said, as he looked around
the room at the high ceiling, the knotty pine walls, the carpet
so threadbare that many of its roses had almost entirely faded,
the one chair with the antimacassar on its back, the washbasin and
towel racks in the corner of the room. "I like it here,"
he announced. "A whole room to myself. Usually I just get a
cot in the corner of a motel room."
His mother smiled, relenting. Then she turned to Matt. "I'm
sorry. It's just that it was so hot crossing Nevada and we are not
used to mountain driving. Back on the highway the traffic was bumper
to bumper. I'm sure we shall be very comfortable."
After Matt had gone, closing the door behind him, Mr. Gridley said,
"I need a rest before dinner. Four hundred miles of driving
and that mountain traffic! It was too much."
"And if we are going to stay for a weekend I had better unpack,"
said Mrs. Gridley. "At least I'II have a chance to do some
drip-drying."
Alone in room 215 and unaware that he was being watched, the boy
began to explore. He got down on his hands and knees and looked
under the bed. He leaned out the open window as far as he could
and greedily inhaled deep breaths of pine-scented air. He turned
the hot and cold water on and off in the washbasin and slipped one
of the small bars of paper-wrapped soap into his pocket. Under the
window he discovered a knothole in the pine wall down by the floor
and squatting, poked his finger into the hole. When he felt nothing
inside he lost interest.
Next, Keith opened his suitcase and took out an apple and several
small cars-a sedan, a sports car, and an ambulance about six inches
long, and a red motorcycle half the length of the cars-which he
dropped on the striped bedspread before he bit into the apple. He
ate the apple noisily in big chomping bites, and then laid the core
on the bedside table between the lamp and the telephone.
Keith began to play, running his cars up and down the bedspread,
pretending that the stripes on the spread were highways and making
noises with his mouth-vroom vroom for the sports car, wh-e-e wh-e-e
for the ambulance and pb-pb-b-b-b for the motorcycle, up and down
the stripes.
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