rocking-chairs out hereâand a hammock swing. Andââ
âHurry up,â Celia said. âWe donât want mosquitoes getting into the house. Theyâve got those, too.â
âI like the hanging baskets.â Unburdened by luggage, Tessa skipped into the hallway. I went back to the car for the rest of our cases.
Celia had gone through the house snapping on lights. When I entered, the screen door slamming behind me, I found everyone in the large cosy living-room that ran parallel with the long wide porch outside. Two wide windows faced on to the porch and I could quite see how convenient it would be on rainy days to send the children out to play on the porch and still be able to keep an eye on them from the living-room. If we ever had any rainy days here. I said as much to Celia.
âThatâs a proper veranda,â she corrected me. âThe old-timers still call it a pee-azza.â She gave every letter full value, accentuating a Yankee twang. âMost of the older houses have them. I can see that theyâre quite attractiveâif
you like that sort of thing. We have a modern Cape Cod Cottage with a patio, ourselves.â
âI know. Youâve sent me pictures. Iâm looking forward to seeing it.â
âYouâd better see this house first.â I winced inwardly as Celia stubbed out a cigarette in a delicate glass bowl. She did not succeed in extinguishing it completely. She sailed out of the room without a backward glance at the thin acrid wisps of smoke still curling upwards from the smouldering stub. I hesitated, but the sides of the bowl were curved and steep; the cigarette could be left to burn itself out safely. Besides, she had halted in the doorway and was now looking back at me impatiently, waiting for me to follow her. It could look too pointedâperhaps reproachfulâif I stopped to extinguish the cigarette while she was watching.
âBring your cases,â Celia directed. âWeâll start upstairs. You can leave your things in the bedrooms.â
I picked up Tessaâs small case and my own; I would carry the heavy cases up later when the children couldnât watch. Already, Timothy was fretting because he was not big enough to manage them and Tessa was upset because her arm prevented her from carrying even a light case.
âRosemary, youâll have the master bedroom, of course.â Celia flung open the door and switched on the light.
âItâs beautiful.â I looked around the opulent room thus revealed. A dark red richly-patterned Oriental rug covered the gleaming pine floorboards, an enormous double bed dominated the room, reflected in both the dressing-table
mirror and a full-length pier glass in one corner. The ubiquitous rocking-chair was also present.
âI knew youâd like it,â Celia said with satisfaction. âNow, letâs get the children settled. Tessa, youâll have Donnaâs room. Timothy, youâll have Donaldâs.â
After that, it was a whirlwind tour. Celia raced us from room to room without giving us time to take them in.
âThe bathroom ⦠the guest roomsââ Celia opened doors briefly and closed them againââbut you wonât need to worry about that. You donât know anyone, so you wonât be having guests.â She shut the last door with finality and was half way down the stairs before we could follow.
On the ground floor, she rushed us from living-room to Arnoldâs study, to dining-room, to kitchenâand then down into the cellar.
Somewhere along the way, she had found time to light another cigarette but not to find an ashtray. A trail of ashes marked our progress through the house, not deliberately flicked off, just dropping off from their own weight and unnoticed by Celia in her overriding preoccupation.
âWhen I first came to this country,â Celia told us, âthey called basement rooms like this the