"Not a word of this is to be breathed to anyone," Adeline said, her hand clamped firmly around the wrist of the girl. "This is my home." The iron gate creaked open, and she pulled the small party of people through to the inn grounds, a small ball of light leading the way and clearing a path for them. The lonely, night wind howled through the blackened remains of one half of the inn, while Adeline approached the stoop up to the door and sidestepped rotting planks to kick open the entrance to the Crown.
With a dismissive wave of her hand, the ball of light split into smaller spheres, which dispensed themselves around the various rooms on the first floor. Dark, crooked halls were suddenly illuminated, insects skittered out of the way, and much to the new patrons' surprise, a chorus of moans and much groaning could be heard all around them.
"Shut it," Adeline shouted as the group entered further and they passed the stairs. "It's not as though you need the sleep, idjits. Just keep at whatever you were doing."
"I refuse to put up with these constant interruptionsn! I tell you, I won't use the bedpan!" A shrill voice from the very top floor was audible.
"You already don't, you old coot! You're still dead!" Adeline had paused at the foot of the stairs, barking up at the voice.
"You're the worst bar maid I've ever had!"
Adeline's hands balled into fists, and it appeared as though she was doing her darndest to keep her temper in check in front of the other three. "Ghosts," she said flatly, turning down a hallway plastered with moldy, peeling wallpaper. "Senile old bat doesn't even know he's one of them yet."
She opened one of the doors to a bedroom, where a fair-faced woman sat feeding an infant atop a bed, a pale breast exposed while the baby suckled. When the mother looked up, her visage pulsed with a faint glow. The child in her arms stirred, and began to fade from vision.
"Sorry to interrupt," Adeline said a bit gruffly, standing in the doorway. "I need to use the extra bedroom, and mine is already taken for obvious reasons." The mother ghost nodded silently, and breezed past the two men and women with her child in her arms.
"She'll stay here," Adeline continued, pointing to Nadiye. "And both of you can beat it. Thank you for your assistance thus far."