eventually gave in to her nurseâs injunction that she nap before dinner. Eddie took her arm and walked her inside.
Mr. Mallery insisted on caring for the horse himself and drove off to the stables, so Charlotte took Miss Charmingâs arm.
âCome help me look for the clue on the second floor. Though I donât know where he wants us to lookâinside our bedrooms?â
âOur bedrooms arenât on the second floor. Donât you speak British?â Miss Charming asked. âThey call the first floor the âground floor.â âSecond floorâ is what they call the third floor. And âbootyâ is what they call a car trunk.â
âThereâs a third floor?â
The ground floor housed dining room, morning room, drawing room, and such. The first contained bedchambers for guests and actors. What was on the second? She supposed sheâd noticed a third story of windows from outside, but sheâd never seen a way up. Miss Charming, veteran Pembrook Parker, led her to a hidden, spiral staircase on the west side.
âThis goes directly from the kitchen to the servantsâ rooms,â said Miss Charming. âYou know, so noble guests donât run into servants on the main stairway. Donât know why it mattered. Maybe way back when the servants smelled bad?â
They sneaked upstairs, giggling and scurrying away from servants. There was no need for the furtiveness, Charlotte thought, but it did make it more fun.
It was darker upstairs, with only a small window on the far end of the corridor to bring in daylight. Charlotte didnât let go of Miss Charmingâs arm.
âWhat exactly are we looking for?â Miss Charming whispered loudly.
âSomething to do with Mary Francis the scullery maid and the murders at the abbey.â
A single table with an empty vase stood against the wall. Above it was a painting depicting a man with a Friar Tuck haircut talking to a wolf. All the doors were shut.
âDo we open them?â Miss Charming asked.
âI donât know.â
âWell, I will.â She marched up to one of the doors and opened it wide. A girl inside was changing her shirt. She screamed and covered herself up.
âSorry!â Miss Charming yelled as she shut the door and ran for the stairs. âThat wasnât the ghost of Mary Francis, was it?â
âIâm pretty sure that was one of the maids,â said Charlotte, running down the stairs after her.
âGood, because I donât believe in ghosts.â
âNeither do I,â Charlotte said, still running.
Home, before
Charlotte had always had a thing for plants. Her yard was a laboratory where she constantly planted and replanted, moved things around, played with dirt and perennials like a child with candy-colored clay. It was just thatâplay. A hobby. Nothing to take seriously.
Sometimes sheâd help neighbors design their landscaping for fun. And just as soon as sheâd really get to know all the best plants for that climate, Jamesâs job would change and away theyâd go. They were living in their fourth state since their marriage when Charlotte first got the idea: a Web site for residential landscape architecture. There didnât seem to be one out there. She built a site with free information about the best plants for different climates and basic design strategies. Her Web site grew. Her readership e-mailed, wanting specific help with their own yards.
Inexpensive custom landscape design? She could do that. She just needed to create a detailed questionnaire for the clients and a template she could reuse with each new request, cutting down on the time sheâd have to spend. Her designs werenât as grand or detailed as those from a professional landscape architect whoâd visited the property in person, but they also cost a tenth as much. People loved it. She had to hire employees to help her create hundreds of designs
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