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A Groom wirh a View

A Groom wirh a View

Titel: A Groom wirh a View
Autoren: Jill Churchill
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roses and a pink linoleum floor. The opposite door in the bath led to another identical bedroom.
    Shelley stepped out into the hall and opened a few other doors and came back. “They’re all exactly the same,“ she said. “I’ll bet these were the monks’ rooms and one out of every three was turned into a bathroom.“
    “They’re certainly...“ Jane sought the right word. “... serviceable.“
    “It was meant for hunters, Jane, and whatever few misguided wives who might occasionally come along. It’s a ‘guy’ place. They’d go out killing things all day, come back, and eat and drink all evening and tell fabulous stories of the woolly mammoth that got away, then fall into bed half-soused. A great-uncle of mine had a place like this when I was a kid. Not as big as this, but pretty much the same. My dad took me on one of the hunting trips when I was about seven. I had to sit around with my dad and uncles in a cold, wet duck blind all day. Worst trip of my life, but the men seemed to love it.“
    “I want to make a quick sketch of the rooms and assign them to the people who are staying here instead of the motel. Then let’s go see what’s upstairs,“ Jane said.
    “Ghosts of monks, I’ll bet,“ Shelley said cheerfully.
    Jane glared at her. “If you try to tell me a ghost story in this spooky old place, I’ll go home and stick you with the job of putting on this wedding!”

Two

    When they explored the upstairs, they discovered that the area over the main room on the ground floor had been divided into three good-sized bedrooms. Two were merely larger versions of the monks’ cells. But one of them, presumably that of the original Thatcher, was more furnished—not better furnished, just more. There were hunting prints and more animal heads on the walls and a large, molting bearskin rug on the floor next to the double bed. There were also two leather easy chairs and a desk that sat before a large window with a wonderful view out over the woods.
    “I guess I’ll put Livvy in here since the bride should have the best room,“ Jane said, “and move Dwayne in after the wedding. I’ll put Mrs. Crossthwait in the middle one so she has plenty of room for her sewing and fittings. She’s deaf enough that she won’t be offended by sleeping next door to newlyweds. And I’ll put Livvy’s father at the far end, since he’s the Big Cheese who’s paying for everything. The other relatives and the bridal party can stay in the broom-closet sized rooms.“
    “I wonder where that dear Uncle Joe lives?“ Shelley said.
    “Probably in a cave somewhere,“ Jane said. “I was hoping he’d be enthusiastic, maybe even have the urge to be helpful. He is, after all, employed by the father of the bride and apparently has nothing to do most of the time.“
    “Then you’ll have to just insist that he make himself useful,“ Shelley said. “What’s over the monks’ rooms?”
    They crossed the landing at the top of the stairs and found a room that was a gigantic attic. It had a long row of dormers along the front side, so it could have been made into more sleeping quarters, but apparently there had been no need and it had become the catchall. There was a whole floor down, but nothing but the studs on the walls.
    There were old hunting rifles, heavy wool jackets, a box full of warm hats, some traps, hardware, cleaning utensils—all of this visible from the doorway. Jane could only guess what else was stashed here. At least most of the stuff was along the walls and there was an aisle through the middle. Someone had once put down a pretty rag rug near the doorway, but the colors were dulled by a long accumulation of dust.
    “We ought to take those quilts downstairs out- side to shake and air,“ Shelley said. “Maybe we could persuade Joe to string up a clothesline somewhere.”
    Jane went out to the landing and bellowed, “Joe! Joe! Where are you? We need some help here.”
    There was no reply, so she kept shouting periodically as she and Shelley made their way back to the small guest rooms. When they took the first quilt off the bed, they realized there was no other bedding. No sheets or pillowcases. Jane stared at the naked mattress. “Oh, no! Now what do we do? There must be linens somewhere.”
    Shelley went to the door and shouted for Joe, and jumped when he appeared in the doorway of the next room. “I ain’t deaf, lady.”
    Shelley considered asking him what he was doing eavesdropping on them from
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