its faded slipcovers of flowery chintz, the bowls of fresh flowers and the small, cheerful apple-wood fire leaping companionably beneath the old-fashioned stone mantel.
âMiss Durand said you didnât have any servants. Do you suppose sheâd like me to help with supper?â Shelley suggested uneasily.
Jim grinned as he offered her a chair.
âMamâ Cleo would have a fit and fall into it,â he assured her. âMamâ Cleo has been here ever since she was a pickaninny two years old and her mother was cook. She must be close to seventy now, but sheâs most definitely not a servant. She, Aunt Selena and I are a family, and itâs a toss-up whoâs the bossâbut I think Mamâ Cleo has a faint edge on the job.â
âShe sounds like quite a person,â Shelley answered. âI didnât know that âold family retainersâ still existed.â
âThe race is fast dying out. Thatâs one reason Aunt Selena and I treasure Mamâ Cleo so fondly.â
âI donât suppose it would be possible for me to find a Mamâ Cleo to help get my place cleaned up, but what about a reasonable facsimile?â asked Shelley.
Jim looked down at his cigarette for a moment and she saw a curious expression touch his mouth, before he looked up and straight at her. And now that curious expression was in his eyes.
âI hardly think itâs likely,â he said quietly, âsince the colored folk hereabouts are very superstitious. They always detour widely around any place thatâs reputed to be haânted.â
Shelley stared at him, startled, momentarily offended; and then suddenly she laughed with honest mirth.
âOh, for Heavenâs
sake!
â she protested derisively. âYouâve tried every other way to make me leave Harbour Pines, surely you donât think me childish enough to be frightened away by ghost stories!â
âYou, being a Yankee, wouldnât understand.â Jim was unimpressed by her mirth and his eyes were still grave and steady. âBut in these parts where livable quarters are so hard to find, a house that has been unoccupied, deserted for many years, where ruin and desolation have had their way, gets itself a lot of legendsand rumors as time goes on. âGhosâes trailing long white garments and wailing in the dark oâ the moon; and strange sounds as one passes on a midnight.â â
Shelley couldnât be quite sure whether there was a slightly mocking note in his voice; whether there was a bit of special significance there. She stared at him for a moment, and Jim stared back at her and his expression did not alter.
âOh, but thatâs perfectly ridiculous,â she burst out.
âSure.â And now, to her secret, intense relief, Jim grinned, and suddenly looked startlingly younger, more boyish. âItâs impossible to convince the colored brethren that since the
Journal
plant and the cottage are on the edge of low, swampy ground, thereâs ground-mist that the slightest breath of air twists into odd, floating shapes; or that even on a still night there is a certain amount of air stirring in the pines to make sad, sighing sounds; or that a whippoorwill or an owl sending forth his midnight call has a weirdly human sound.â
Shelley laughed at him in swift relief.
âWell, thanks a lot! Of course I donât believe that there are such things as ghosts. But I do appreciate such a logical explanation just the same!â
Jim chuckled.
âOh, Iâve never for a moment thought you stood in any danger from anything as unreal as ghosts, goblins and the like. What worries me is that youâll go into bankruptcy and break your heart trying to educate Harbour Pines up to its need for a paper.â
âYou neednât worry about that,â Shelley assured him gaily. âEver since I was a kid Iâve wanted to run a small-town paper; and while I