89th of Fall, 517
Madeira rapt the knocker smartly on the door of the squat little manor. It was a heavy brass thing made to look like a snarling, highly stylized gargoyle, set within a handsome mahogany door edged in filigree. Perhaps Ionu shared her opinion that the whole thing
was ostentatious, because the knocker made a squeaky noise like a rubber duck at her knock.
Almost immediately the heavy door flew open.
"Oh Miss Craven! Thank you for coming!"
A pretty human woman around her own age, dressed in a bonnet and a maids starched uniform, ushered her in with a hasty bow. She took the cloak from her shoulders and hung it on a stand by the door, but the Spiritist silently insisted on keeping her rucksack on her. The inside of the manor was quite as over-the-top as the exterior. The foyer was a riot of colour. From the paintings in elaborate frames that hung from every available wall space, to the soft furnishings and decorative plants that were all draped in discarded pieces of flamboyant clothing, as if the wearer got bored of them halfway out
the door.
"May I get you some refreshment? Some tea, perhaps?" she continued, and Madeira couldn't help but notice the way her hands trailed nervously over the fraying edges of her long brown braid.
"No, thank you, that's quite alright. Perhaps you should be announcing my arrival to the master of the house?" she pointed out gently. “I'm expected."
"Oh." at this the maid's ears began to glow a startling shade of red. "Oh. Actually, he doesn't know you've been summoned. I- I was the one who sent the letter..."
Madeira stared. The maid began to fidget even more uncomfortably under her pale gaze. Finally, the Spiritist stuck out her hand to shake.
"I think I will have that tea after all, Miss...?"
"Abagail." the maid smiled in relief and shook her hand. "The parlour is this way. We won't be disturbed, the master is painting in his studio..."
Word Count: 335