I wondered if that was typical of this place or motels and hotels in general. “Will Beau be working tonight?”
“Yep.” She nodded. “But don’t be put off when you meet him. He looks kind of squirrelly, but he’s all right. He’s got a good heart.”
“I appreciate your help.”
“I didn’t do much,” she said. “What I can do is leave a note for Beau, telling him to expect you and to help you out if he can.”
“I appreciate that.”
“What’s your name again?”
“Trevor Benson.”
“I’m Maggie,” she said. “Thank you for your service. And sorry I couldn’t be more help.”
*
With hours to kill, I drove back to Greenville and spent some time browsing at Barnes & Noble before having a steak dinner at Ruth’s Chris. Figuring I’d need to stay overnight, I arranged for a room at the Marriott. While the Evergreen might have been fine by my grandfather’s standards, I preferred a place with a few more amenities.
I returned to the Evergreen Motel at a quarter past eight. By then, it was dark and my headlights illuminated four cars in the parking lot. They weren’t the same as the ones that had been there before, the afternoon delights long since over. I parked in the same spot and entered the lobby. Again I heard the television blaring before Beau emerged from the back room.
My first thought was that I understood what Maggie had meant: The man who approached the counter looked exactly like the kind of guy who worked the night shift at a place called the Evergreen Motel on a quiet highway in the middle of nowhere. I suspected he was about the same age as or younger than me; he was rail thin, with a scraggly half beard and hair that probably hadn’t been washed in a week. His white T-shirt was stained and he had a small chain hooked from a belt loop to his wallet. His expression flickered between indifference and irritation and I could smell beer on his breath.
“Are you Beau?”
He wiped his chin with the back of his hand and sighed. “Who’s asking?”
“Trevor Benson,” I said. “I came by earlier and spoke to Maggie.”
“Oh yeah,” he said. “She left me a note and said that I should help you because you’re a veteran. Something about your grandfather.”
I went through the story again. Even before I finished, he was nodding. “Yeah, I remember him. Old guy—like really old, right? Driving a beater truck?”
“Probably,” I said. “It sure sounds like him.”
He reached under the counter and pulled out a notebook, the kind you might find at any office supply store. “What was the date?”
I told him, watching as he began flipping back through the pages. “Thing is, we only require an ID if they pay with a credit card. With cash and the key deposit, we don’t bother checking. There’s a lot of John Does in here, so I can’t guarantee anything.”
No surprise there. “I’m sure he would have used his real name.”
He continued thumbing back, finally zeroing in on the appropriate date. “What was his name again?”
“Carl Haverson.”
“Yep,” he said. “Paid cash for one night. Returned the key and got his deposit back.”
“Do you remember anything he might have said? Where he might have been going?”
“I can’t help you there. Sorry. Guests kind of run together, you know?”
“Can you tell me what you do remember?”
“I remember finding him,” he said. “He was in his truck, with the engine still idling. I don’t know how long he was there, but I remember looking out the window and seeing the truck about to turn onto the highway. A couple of minutes later, the truck was still there. I remember because it was belching out a lot of smoke. But anyway, the truck was blocking part of the exit, so I finally went out there and was about to knock on the window when I saw him slumped over the wheel. I opened the door and he didn’t look good. I wasn’t sure if he was dead or alive, so I went back inside and called 911. The police showed up and an ambulance came and the crew did their thing before loading him into the back. He was still alive at that point, but it was the last I saw of him.”
After he finished, I glanced through the window toward the exit, visualizing the scene. Squirrelly or not, Beau had been helpful.
“Do you know what happened to the truck?”
“Some of it.”
“Just some?”
“I asked the sheriff if I could move it so it wasn’t blocking the exit. Like I explained, it was still running. He told me to go ahead, but to put the keys in an envelope, in case the guy came back. So I moved the truck into the lot over by the end and did what he told me to do.”