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Mary Turner stood in the doorway. “Honey, would you get Mrs. Pace’s luggage and take it up to the green bedroom? She’d like to get settled in.”

Henry Howard pushed up from his chair, and Dickce could tell he was not happy about something. He turned to face his wife. “The green bedroom? Why are you putting her in there instead of out in the annex?”

Mary Turner looked uncomfortable, Dickce decided. The young woman’s words confirmed that.

“She needs to be in the house in order to tune in to the vibrations, or whatever they are,” Mary Turner said. “If she really can help us, then I figured she might as well be on the spot instead of in another building.”

“Whatever.” Henry Howard walked past her and disappeared into the hallway.

After staring at her retreating husband’s back for a moment, Mary Turner approached the table and offered her guests an apologetic smile. “I’m sorry our lunch got interrupted like this. Have y’all finished? Are you ready for dessert?”

Dickce glanced at An’gel and Benjy, and they nodded. “I’m ready for dessert,” Dickce said. “I’ve been hankering after carrot cake ever since you first mentioned it.” An’gel and Benjy voiced their approval.

“I’ll ask Marcelline to bring it in, then.” Mary Turner headed back to the door. “I’ll start clearing away in a moment.”

Once Dickce thought Mary Turner was safely out of earshot, she said in a low tone, “I don’t like seeing Mary Turner and Henry Howard at odds over this. I wonder why he’s so reluctant to have that woman in the house.”

Benjy broke his extended silence. “Mary Turner told me when we took Peanut and Endora to the kitchen before lunch that this is about the only part of the year that they actually get any time to themselves. Usually, that is. They don’t take guests the first three weeks of November so they can have a rest.”

“And it’s bad enough that we’re here,” An’gel said, “even though we’re here to help. Then a stranger shows up and puts herself into the middle of it.”

“I would be unhappy myself,” Dickce said. “Running a bed-and-breakfast, especially in an old house, must be awfully hard work.”

“They do have some help,” Benjy said. “There’s the housekeeper, Marcelline. She’s really nice and loves animals. They also have a couple of ladies who come in three times a week to help clean when they’re open for guests.”

“That’s good,” An’gel said. “But back to the subject of Mrs. Pace. I really want to know what brought her here. I’m not sure I believe that she received some kind of psychic message that her services were needed.”

“We’ll work on that,” Dickce said.

Mary Turner reentered the dining room in the company of Marcelline. Dickce and An’gel remembered her from previous visits and greeted her with compliments on the delicious lunch. The housekeeper smiled in acknowledgment of their praise.

Marcelline must be near seventy by now, Dickce reckoned, because she had started working for the family as a teenager when Mary Turner’s father was a boy nearly fifty years ago.

Dickce dug into her slice of carrot cake with anticipation. She savored the first mouthful. It tasted heavenly. She told Marcelline so the moment she could speak.

“I’m glad y’all are enjoying it,” the housekeeper responded. “There’s plenty more if any y’all wants another piece.”

“I could probably eat half the cake myself.” Benjy grinned. “This is probably the best cake I ever ate.”

Marcelline beamed at him. “Well, you just come get more of it whenever you want, honey. Now, if y’all will excuse me, I got to go start thinking about dinner.”

As she resumed her place at the table, Mary Turner said, “Marcelline is happy to have someone besides me and Henry Howard to cook for. We make do with sandwiches, salads, and scrambled eggs a lot of the time.”

Dickce eyed her hostess’s trim figure and suppressed a sigh of envy. She wouldn’t mind losing a few pounds but the thought of giving up food like this depressed her. So she was a little plump, what of it? At her age, she decided, she wasn’t going to change the habits of eight decades of life.

Henry Howard returned and pulled out his chair. Once seated, he eyed the serving of carrot cake at his place, then pushed it away. Dickce thought he looked grumpy. His next words confirmed that as he cast a resentful glance at his wife.

“Madame Blavatsky loves her room, you’ll be delighted to know. Apparently she’s already feeling vibrations, or whatever the heck they are.”

“Who’s Madame Blavatsky?” Benjy asked with a frown. “I thought she said her name was Pace.”

Henry Howard scowled, and Mary Turner appeared embarrassed.

Dickce hastened to explain. “Madame Blavatsky was a famous spirit medium in the nineteenth century. She developed a large following, though of course, many people thought she was a fraud.”

“Okay, I get it,” Benjy said. “You don’t believe in this medium gig, do you?” He addressed his question to Henry Howard.

“No. Maybe. I don’t know.” Henry Howard shook his head. “Something has to explain what the heck’s been going on in this house the past couple of months. Either that, or Mary Turner and I have been hallucinating like crazy.”

“I’m about at my wit’s end,” Mary Turner said. “This house has made odd noises ever since I can remember, but the other strange things . . .” Her voice trailed off for a moment. “Maybe these things happened in Grandmother’s day, and even my dad’s when he was young, but nobody ever said anything.”

“No, I don’t remember any talk about supernatural happenings,” An’gel said, “and we knew your grandmother for many years. If anything of the kind occurred here, she never mentioned it to us.”

“What kinds of things have occurred?” Dickce asked. “Henry Howard mentioned problems with lightbulbs going out unexpectedly, and you told An’gel about issues with your computers and cell phones.”

“Those issues, yes,” Mary Turner said. “I’ve experienced one really peculiar thing.” She paused to nod in her husband’s direction. “Henry Howard hasn’t experienced it, and I don’t think he really believes me.”

“I never said that.” Henry Howard looked even grumpier. “It’s just so weird, that’s all. You’d think as often as I go up and down those stairs, I would have felt it, too.”

“Felt what?” Dickce remembered the sudden aura of cold she had felt earlier. She had to suppress a shiver.

“A sensation of cold near the bottom of the front stairs,” Mary Turner said. “It’s only happened a few times, but it’s always unnerving when it does.” She crossed her arms over her chest for a moment, as if hugging herself against the cold.

“I felt it, too,” Dickce said. “While An’gel was in the powder room.”

“Really?” Mary Turner looked at Henry Howard. “I told you so.”

Before Henry Howard could respond, Primrose Pace spoke from the doorway.

“I felt it, too,” she said as she advanced into the room. “I must warn you that the spirit causing this is an unhappy one, and if you don’t put it to rest, you could be in great danger, Mrs. Catlin.”

CHAPTER 5

Does the woman always have to make a dramatic entrance? An’gel wondered, then decided, Of course she does. Part of her stock-in-trade.

“Do you have any idea who this angry spirit is, Mrs. Pace?” An’gel asked after a glance at Mary Turner. The young woman appeared to be in shock after the medium’s announcement.

Mrs. Pace inclined her head a mere fraction. “Not as yet. She—and I’m pretty sure it’s she—isn’t willing to communicate that at the moment.” She paused—for more dramatic effect, An’gel was convinced—then continued in dark tones, “Sometimes the spirits have to be coaxed. We have to treat this one gently if we want her to confide in us.”