"The towels were so thin I could read the newspaper through them, which was great because the TV only played static."

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"The towels were so thin I could read the newspaper through them, which was great because the TV only played static."
Hells Bells mystery guest #2
Earl walked into the Sunrise Diner looking like he'd been dragged through a gravel pit and hadn't shaken off the dust. His hair was a stringy, dirty mess escaping from under a ball cap--but it was his hands Gladys noticed that stayed with her --thick, restless hands with grease ground so deep into the knuckles they looked like bruised iron.
He didn't order much, just sat there with a twitch in his jaw everytime the door creaked, looking less like a handyman and more like a man who'd just finished a job he didn't want to talk about.
That's why Gladys was still watching an hour later from the diner window as he crossed the street to the Hells Bells Motel and hauled a greasy tool bag into Room 4. He spent half the night "fixing" things that weren't broken. By 3:00 a.m. he was lurking behind the diner's dumpster, burying a heavy package in the dark with a frantic heavy step. When the sun finally crawled over the horizon, Earl was gone. He left nothing behind in Room 4 but a single rusted skeleton key sitting dead-center on the nightstand.
Gladys saw the patch of fresh dirt by the dumpster when she took the trash out at dawn. She looked at it for a long minute, then turned her back and walked away. Gladys had seen enough of Earl to know that some things are better left buried.
Hells Bells mystery guest #1
"This is Gladys. She's been a waitress at the Sunrise Diner across the street from the Hells Bells Motel since the day the neon sign flickered on in 1964. Since then, she's survived three divorces and her ten-thousandth cup of black coffee, but she's still got one eye on the door. She's not waiting for Arnold, her latest traveling salesman, to come back with those Luckies he promised since she was running low on smokes--she's just waiting to charge him sixty years of interest on the check he stiffed her with."