Ethel Lina White
THE COLLECTED WORKS OF ETHEL LINA WHITE
Mystery Novels & Detective Stories
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
musaicumbooks@okpublishing.info
2017 OK Publishing
ISBN 978-80-272-0254-6
Novels Novels Table of Contents
Fear Stalks the Village Fear Stalks the Village Table of Contents
Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) A MYSTERY NOVEL Table of Contents
Wax
The Wheel Spins (The Lady Vanishes)
Step in the Dark
While She Sleeps
She Faded into Air
Short Story
Cheese
Table of Contents Table of Contents Novels Novels Table of Contents Fear Stalks the Village Fear Stalks the Village Table of Contents Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) A MYSTERY NOVEL Table of Contents Wax The Wheel Spins (The Lady Vanishes) Step in the Dark While She Sleeps She Faded into Air Short Story Cheese
Table of Contents Table of Contents Novels Novels Table of Contents Fear Stalks the Village Fear Stalks the Village Table of Contents Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) A MYSTERY NOVEL Table of Contents Wax The Wheel Spins (The Lady Vanishes) Step in the Dark While She Sleeps She Faded into Air Short Story Cheese
Table of Contents Table of Contents Novels Novels Table of Contents Fear Stalks the Village Fear Stalks the Village Table of Contents Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) Some Must Watch (The Spiral Staircase) A MYSTERY NOVEL Table of Contents Wax The Wheel Spins (The Lady Vanishes) Step in the Dark While She Sleeps She Faded into Air Short Story Cheese
Chapter I. Drawn Blinds
Chapter II. Bicarbonate
Chapter III. The Herald
Chapter IV. Anonymous
Chapter V. Enter Fear
Chapter VI. A Country Walk
Chapter VII. The Extra Guest
Chapter VIII. Paying The Bill
Chapter IX. Coventry
Chapter X. The Second Letter
Chapter XI. Inquest
Chapter XII. Underground
Chapter XIII. Sick Flowers Of Secrecy
Chapter XIV. The Twitch Of The Twig
Chapter XV. Romeo From London
Chapter XVI. The Lost Initial
Chapter XVII. Postman's Knock
Chapter XVIII. The Trap
Chapter XIX. The Tail-End
Chapter XX. Postal Regulations
Chapter XXI. Happy Days
Chapter XXII. Life And Death
Chapter XXIII. The Lawyer Pulls Up A Blind
Chapter XXIV. The Snake-Head
Chapter XXV. Night-Scene
Chapter XXVI. Ultimatum
Chapter XXVII. The Stamp
Chapter XXVIII. Company
Chapter XXIX. The Philanthropist
Chapter XXX. The Envelope
Chapter XXXI. The Way Out
Chapter XXXII. Two Visits
Chapter XXXIII. Ignatius Explains
Table of Contents
The village was beautiful. It was enfolded in a hollow of the Downs, and wrapped up snugly—first, in a floral shawl of gardens, and then, in a great green shawl of fields. Lilies and lavender grew in abundance. Bees clustered over sweet-scented herbs with the hum of a myriad spinning-wheels.
Although the cottages which lined the cobbled street were perfect specimens of Tudor architecture, the large houses on the green were, chiefly, of later date. The exception was a mellow Elizabethan mansion—'Spout Manor', on Miss Asprey's printed note-paper—but known locally by its original name of 'The Spout'. This was the residence of Miss Decima Asprey, the queen of the village—an elderly spinster of beautiful appearance and character, and possessed of the essential private means.
Miss Asprey's subjects were not only well-bred and charming, but endowed with such charity that there was no poverty or unemployment in the village. The ladies had not to grapple with a servant problem, which oiled the wheels of hospitality. If family feuds existed, they were not advertised, and private lives were shielded by drawn blinds. Consequently, the social tone was fragrant as rosemary, and scandal nearly as rare as a unicorn.
A perfect spot. Viewed from an airplane, by day, it resembled a black-and-white plaster model of a Tudor village, under a glass case. At night, however, when its lights began to glow faintly, it was like some ancient vessel, with barnacled hull and figure-head, riding in the peace of a forgotten port.
It was a spot which was rarely visited. There was no railway station, no floating population, and a stagnant birth-rate. Even Death seldom knocked at its doors, for the natives resented the mere idea of dying in such a delightful place.
But local prejudice, which had discouraged the Old Gentleman with the Scythe, was not strong enough to bar the triumphant progress of the motor-bus. Denied passage through its streets, the reeling green monster dropped its fares just outside the village, before it looped back to the London road.
One afternoon, in early summer, it brought a woman novelist from London—a thin, fashionable, attractive person, who wrote sensational serials, in order to live, although sometimes, when slumbering dreams stirred, she questioned their necessity. Although her high French heels seemed literally wrenched from city pavements, she had made the sacrifice in order to visit a friend, Joan Brook, who was companion to a local lady.
At the invitation of Lady d'Arcy—Joan's employer—the novelist had been entertained at the Court, a massive biscuit-hued Georgian pile, surrounded with lush parkland, and about a mile from the village. During their tea they had both been conscious of mangled strands of friendship, as they talked of impersonal matters.
Each viewed the other from the detached standard of criticism. Joan thought her friend's lips suggested that she had been affectionately kissing a freshly-painted pillar-box, while the novelist considered that the girl had run to seed badly. But when they walked back to the village they had been insensibly welded together in harmony, by the waving beauty of the fields, ripening for hay and steeped in the glow of sunset. Joan's sunburnt face proclaimed the fact that she never wore a hat, but the novelist, too, took off her tiny mesh of crocheted silk, without a thought of the set of her wave. Smoking as they sauntered, they entered the shady tunnel of the Quaker's Walk, half a mile of chestnut avenue.
"Like it?" asked the novelist.
"Love it." Joan's blue eyes glowed. "I know you think I'm buried. But this corpse hopes the Trump won't sound just yet. I've never been so happy."
"Pray it may last...Any social life?"
"Tennis and garden-parties, later on. The three big houses are the Hall, the Towers and the Court. The Court is ours. The Squire lives at the Hall. The rich people of the neighbourhood live at the Towers, but they're always away."
"Any men?"
"Two. The parson and Major Blair. The Major's a manly man and he belongs to Vivian Sheriff, the Squire's daughter. Vivian and I are the only girls here."
The novelist raised her painted butterfly brows.
"Let me get this straight," she said. "There's the Vivian-girl and the biological specimen. That leaves you and the padre. What's he like?"
"Rather a thrill. Big and black, with a voice like a gong. You should hear him hammer and bellow on Sundays. But I believe he's the genuine thing."
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