She wrote to Joan West thanking her for her invitation, but saying that she would not be leaving Dillmouth at present since she wanted to keep an eye on the workmen. Then she went out for a walk along the front and enjoyed the sea breeze. She came back into the drawing room, and Taylor, Mr. Simsâs leading workman, straightened up from the corner and greeted her with a grin.
âWonât be no difficulty about this, Mrs. Reed,â he said. âBeen a door here before, there has. Somebody as didnât want it has just had it plastered over.â
Gwenda was agreeably surprised. How extraordinary, she thought, that Iâve always seemed to feel there was a door there. She remembered the confident way she had walked to it at lunchtime. And remembering it, quite suddenly, she felt a tiny shiver of uneasiness. When you came to think of it, it was really rather odd ⦠Why should she have felt so sure that there was a door there? There was no sign of it on the outside wall. How had she guessedâknownâthat there was a door just there? Of course it would be convenient to have a door through to the dining room, but why had she always gone so unerringly to that one particular spot? Anywhere on the dividing wall would have done equally well, but she had always goneautomatically, thinking of other things, to the one place where a door had actually been.
I hope, thought Gwenda uneasily, that Iâm not clairvoyant or anythingâ¦.
There had never been anything in the least psychic about her. She wasnât that kind of person. Or was she? That path outside from the terrace down through the shrubbery to the lawn. Had she in some way known it was there when she was so insistent on having it made in that particular place?
Perhaps I am a bit psychic, thought Gwenda uneasily. Or is it something to do with the house?
Why had she asked Mrs. Hengrave that day if the house was haunted?
It wasnât haunted! It was a darling house! There couldnât be anything wrong with the house. Why, Mrs. Hengrave had seemed quite surprised by the idea.
Or had there been a trace of reserve, of wariness, in her manner?
Good Heavens, Iâm beginning to imagine things, thought Gwenda.
She brought her mind back with an effort to her discussion with Taylor.
âThereâs one other thing,â she added. âOne of the cupboards in my room upstairs is stuck. I want to get it opened.â
The man came up with her and examined the door.
âItâs been painted over more than once,â he said. âIâll get the men to get it open for you tomorrow if that will do.â
Gwenda acquiesced and Taylor went away.
That evening Gwenda felt jumpy and nervous. Sitting in the drawing room and trying to read, she was aware of every creak ofthe furniture. Once or twice she looked over her shoulder and shivered. She told herself repeatedly that there was nothing in the incident of the door and the path. They were just coincidences. In any case they were the result of plain common sense.
Without admitting it to herself, she felt nervous of going up to bed. When she finally got up and turned off the lights and opened the door into the hall, she found herself dreading to go up the stairs. She almost ran up them in her haste, hurried along the passage and opened the door of her room. Once inside she at once felt her fears calmed and appeased. She looked round the room affectionately. She felt safe in here, safe and happy. Yes, now she was here, she was safe. (Safe from what, you idiot? she asked herself.) She looked at her pyjamas spread out on the bed and her bedroom slippers below them.
Really, Gwenda, you might be six years old! You ought to have bunny shoes, with rabbits on them.
She got into bed with a sense of relief and was soon asleep.
The next morning she had various matters to see to in the town. When she came back it was lunchtime.
âThe men have got the cupboard open in your bedroom,