by Calvin Strong » Thu Jan 13, 2011 11:44 pm
There was nothing to see, really, on her way down through the hall, then through the library. In the parlor, standing in front of the old-style record player, was an old woman, likely the one the girl had been referring to. She was swaying and looking more than a little tipsy, and as she swayed a little more...
...Her head snapped toward Taliyah, empty eyes fixing on her from a face framed in sparse, wet hair...
...And laughed a little drunkenly as a parrot in the corner squawked on its perch.
The final character in the act found, there was a sound from the hall as all the members of the house were called down for dinner. The old woman made her way mostly steadily past Taliyah and to the dining room across the hall. The others, the ones who were upstairs, could be seen making their way through as well.
Listening in on the serving staff as the family prepared to eat would answer any questions about the family members. The old man was the master of the house, and old Army officer who had a grip on all the family's money. The attractive blonde man, the ghost from the bedroom, was Clarence, his lawyer, who'd been here for the past week both because he got on well with the family and because he was helping the old man prepare his estate. The maid assisting Henry, the first ghost Taliyah had seen, was Celia, his personal servant, and oh did the rumors abound about what services she offered. The old nearly-drunk woman was Henry's sister Gertrude, and the young couple were her son Rudolph (or Master Rudy) and his wife Gloria. Their daughter Lillian was the girl Taliyah had seen reading in her room.
From all the things Taliyah could see, the family was civil, at best. Very few people liked each other at the table. Henry was a domineering asshole that gained him resentment, Celia was a gold digger that the women, at the very least, seemed to despise, Gertrude was a drunk that irritated everyone and rode her son's family hard with her disapproval, Rudy was a ne'er-do-well who only seemed to get on with his wife and with Celia, Gloria was the subject of her mother-in-law's constant scrutiny, Clarence seemed charmingly endearing, which didn't cover the fact that everyone thought he was trying to get some of the old man's money which he probably was, and Lillian was a rebellious girl that seemed bored with and disapproved by her relatives.
It wasn't hard to imagine a murderer among this bunch.
