these things.
âYour conscience is tuned like a violin,â he said pensively. âDo you really like having them here, the strangers, the Christmas and Easter guests, under your own roof?â
âItâs cheerful,â I admitted. âThereâs always light and movement. There are voices and the dull vibration of the busy stairs. Sometimes guests complainâthe grits is watery or the gravy is lumpyâand in the old days, my grandmother Sweetheart would cry over those complaints, and my grandfatherâPops, we all called himâwould privately slam his fist down on the kitchen table; but in the main, the guests love the place . . .
â. . . And now and then it can be lonesome here, melancholy and dismal, no matter how bright the chandeliers. I think that when my grandparents died and that part of it was all over I felt a . . . a deep depression that seemed linked to Blackwood Manor, though I couldnât leave it, and wouldnât of my own accord.â
He nodded at these words as though he understood them. He was looking at me as surely as I was looking at him. He was appraising me as surely as I appraised him.
I was thinking how very attractive he was, I couldnât stop myself, with his yellow hair so thick and long, turning so gracefully at the collar of his coat, and his large probing violet eyes. There are very few creatures on earth who have true violet eyes. The slight difference between his eyes meant nothing. His sun-browned skin was flawless. What he saw in me with his questioning gaze, I couldnât know.
âYou know, you can roam about this house,â I said, still vaguely shocked that I had his interest, the words spilling anxiously from me again. âYou can roam from room to room, and there are ghosts. Sometimes even the tourists see the ghosts.â
âDid that scare them?â he asked with genuine curiosity.
âOh, no, theyâre too gung ho to be in a haunted house. They love it. They see things where there are no things. They ask to be left alone in haunted rooms.â
He laughed silently.
âThey claim to hear bells ring that arenât ringing,â I went on, smiling back at him, âand they smell coffee when there is no coffee, and they catch the drift of exotic perfumes. Now and then there was a tourist or two who was genuinely frightened, in fact there were several in the bed-and-board days who packed up immediately, but in the main, the reputation of the place sold it. And then, of course, there were those who actually saw ghosts.â
âAnd you, you do see the ghosts,â he said.
âYes,â I answered. âMost of the ghosts are weak things, hardly more than vapor, but there are exceptions. . . .â I hesitated. I was lost for a moment. I felt my words might trigger some awful apparition, but I wanted so to confide in him. Stumbling, I went on:
âYes, extraordinary exceptions . . .â I broke off.
âI want you to tell me,â he said. âYou have a room upstairs, donât you? A quiet place where we can talk. But I sense someone else in this house.â
He glanced towards the hallway.
âYes, Aunt Queen in the back bedroom,â I said. âIt wonât take more than a moment for me to see her.â
âThatâs a curious name, Aunt Queen,â he remarked, his smile brightening again. âItâs divinely southern, I think. Will you take me to see her as well?â
âAbsolutely,â I answered, without the hesitation of common sense. âLorraine McQueen is her name, and everyone hereabouts calls her Miss Queen or Aunt Queen.â
We went into the hallway together and once again he glanced up at the curving stairs.
I led him back past it, his boots sounding sharp on the marble, and I brought him to the open door of Aunt Queenâs room.
There she was, my darling, quite resplendent, and very busy, and not in the least disturbed by our
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