“The courts will decide,” An’gel said, “but I believe you’re right.”
“He’s welcome to it,” Mary Turner said. “I hope he’ll see that Serenity’s boys get some of it, though.”
“I bet he’ll do the right thing,” Henry Howard said. “He’s an okay guy, I think.”
No one spoke after that until Benjy broke the silence with a question directed to Alesha Jackson.
“Is the spirit still here?” He looked uneasily around the room as if he might spot the ghost, An’gel thought.
“I don’t believe the spirit is here any longer,” Alesha said. “I think we persuaded her that it was okay to move on, especially after what she did.”
“I will kind of miss her,” Mary Turner said with a faint smile. “The things she did, that is, and not the silly pranks you played.” She poked Henry Howard in the side.
“That reminds me,” An’gel said. “I won’t ask you to explain the cold spot, but what about the shadow I saw?”
“And the parlor door closing by itself?”
Henry Howard laughed. “I can explain the door easily. The shadow I know nothing about.”
“What about the door?” Benjy asked.
“If you stand back and look at it long enough, you’ll probably see that it’s at a very slight angle, just barely noticeable,” Henry Howard said. “Part of the front of the house has shifted a tiny bit over the years, and when the door is left open at a certain spot, it will start moving. The weight of it makes it close from that point, or near enough to closing.”
“I’m relieved to hear that,” An’gel said. “I wish you could explain that shadow, though.”
“Sorry.” Henry Howard shrugged. “That must have been the spirit’s doing.”
An’gel glanced at Benjy. He appeared more at ease now, though she could tell he was still bothered by something. After a moment’s thought, she decided she knew what might make him feel better.
An’gel didn’t wait to consult Dickce. If it made Benjy happier, she knew Dickce would be all for it.
“Alesha,” An’gel said. “I’d like to talk to you about coming to Riverhill for a little professional visit.”
Miranda James is the New York Times bestselling author of the Cat in the Stacks Mysteries, including Twelve Angry Librarians, No Cats Allowed, and Arsenic and Old Books, as well as the Southern Ladies Mysteries, including Digging up the Dirt and Dead with the Wind. James lives in Mississippi. Visit the author at catinthestacks.com and facebook.com/mirandajamesauthor.
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