The Spiral Staircase

A chilling classic thriller from the 1930s in which a young woman is stalked about an isolated country house by a murderer

“Astonishing and diabolical shock. . . Required reading”  — New York Herald Tribune


The Summit—a mansion buried deep in the countryside, on the Welsh Borders. Somewhere outside, a murderer lurks in the darkness. Four young women have already been killed, and each murder has been closer to the house than the last. . .

Now a storm is coming. Professor Warren decides to batten down the hatches for the night—no one may come in or go out until morning. But what if the killer is already inside?

This atmospheric classic brought Ethel Lina White to the attention of the world and went on to be adapted for the screen three times (1946, 1961, 1975).

A creepy, gothic thriller, this is another sensational rediscovery of the classic crime genre. The author, Ethel Lina White, was one of the best-known crime writers of the 1930s and 40s, ranking alongside greats of the Golden Age such as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Many of her thrillers were adapted for film, most famously The Lady Vanishes (originally titled The Wheel Spins) which became one of Alfred Hitchcock's greatest triumphs as a director.
Helen realised that she had walked too far just as daylight was beginning to fade.
As she looked around her, she was struck by the desolation of the country. During her long walk, she had met no one, and had passed no cottage. The high-banked lanes, which blocked her view, were little better than steep mudslides. On either hand rose the hills – barren sepia mounds, blurred by a fine spit of rain.

Over all hung a heavy sense of foreboding, as though the valley awaited some disaster. In the distance – too far away to be even a threat – rumbled faint, lumpy sounds of thunder.
Fortunately Helen was a realist, used to facing hard economic facts and not prone to self-pity. Of soaring spirit, yet possessed of sound common sense, she believed that those thinly veiled glimpses of hell – heaviness of body and darkness of spirit – could be explained away by liver or atmosphere.

Small and pale as a slip of crescent moon, she was only redeemed from insignificance by her bush of light-red springy hair. But, in spite of her unostentatious appearance, she throbbed with a passion for life, expressed in an expectancy of the future which made her welcome each fresh day and shred the interest from every hour and minute.

As a child, she pestered strangers to tell her the time, not from a mere dull wish to know whether it was early or late, but from a genuine curiosity to see their watches. This curiosity persisted when she had to earn her own living under the roofs of fortunate people who possessed houses of their own.

Her one dread was being out of work. She could estimate, from experience, the scores of replies which had probably been received as a result of the advertisement for a lady-help at Professor Warren’s country house; she guessed, as soon as she arrived at The Summit, that it was its very loneliness that had helped to remove her from the ranks of the unemployed.

The house was tucked away in a corner, somewhere at the union of three counties, on the borderline between England and Wales. The nearest town was twenty-two miles away – the nearest village, twelve. No maid would stay at such a forsaken pocket – a pocket with a consequent hole in it – through which dribbled a steady stream of domestic labour.

Mrs Oates, who, with her husband, helped to fill the breach, summed up the situation to Helen, when they met, by appointment, in the Ladies’ Waiting Room at Hereford station.

‘I told Miss Warren as she’d have to get a lady. No one else would put up with it.’

Helen agreed that ladies were a drug in the market. She had enjoyed some months of enforced leisure, and was only too grateful for the security of any home, after weeks of stringent economy – since ‘starvation’ is a word not found in a lady’s vocabulary. Apart from the essential loneliness of the locality, however, it was an excellent post, for she had not only a nice room and good food, but she took her meals with the family.

The last fact counted, with her, for more than a gesture of consideration, since it gave her the chance to study her employers. She was lucky in being able to project herself into their lives, for she could rarely afford a seat at the cinema, and had to extract her entertainment from the raw material of life.

The Warren family possessed some of the elements of drama. The professor, who was a widower, and his sister and housekeeper Miss Warren were middle-aged to elderly. Helen classified them as definite types, academic, frigid and well bred, but largely devoid of vital human interest. Their stepmother, however, old Lady Warren – the invalid in the blue room – was of richer mould. Blood and mud had been used in her mixture, and the whole was churned up, thrice daily, by a dose of evil temper.

She was the terror of the household; only yesterday, she had flung a basin of gruel at her nurse’s head. It had been her natural and ladylike protest against this nourishing substitute for the rare steak, which she preferred but was unable to chew. As her aim was excellent, it had achieved the desired result; that morning Oates had driven the departing nurse into the town, and was coming back, in the evening, with a fresh target.

Helen, who had not yet been brought into contact with the old lady, rather admired her spirit. The household was waiting for her to die, but she still called the tune. Every morning, Death knocked politely on the door of the blue room and Lady Warren saluted him in her customary fashion with a thumb to her nose.

Besides this low-comedy relief, Helen suspected a triangular situation, as represented by the professor’s son, his daughter-in-law and the resident pupil, whom the professor was coaching for the Indian Civil Service. The son – a clever, ugly youth – was violently and aggressively in love with his wife, Simone. She was an unusually attractive girl, with money of her own, and a wanton streak in her composition.

To put it mildly, she was an experimentalist with men. At present, she was plainly testing her powers of seduction on the pupil, Stephen Rice – a good-looking casual young sprig, rejected by Oxford. Helen liked him instinctively, and hoped he would continue to resist the lady.
Although her curiosity hovered around The Summit and its inmates, her duties were her chief interest. The reminder that she had a new job to hold down made her pull a face as she glanced at her watch.

Already the first shadows were beginning to creep, as prelude to the lighting of the lamps. Very soon it would be dark.

A long walk stretched between her and The Summit. She could see the house, in the distance, blocked with solid assurance against the background of shrouded hills. But dividing them yawned a bowl of empty country, which dipped down for about a mile into a tree-lined hollow before it climbed up a corresponding slope to the young plantation on the opposite crest.

In spite of her stoicism, Helen’s heart sank faintly at the prospect of toiling back through that choked dell. Since she had come to The Summit, she had been struck by the density of the surrounding undergrowth. When she looked out of the windows, at twilight, the evergreen shrubs on the lawn seemed actually to advance closer to the walls, as though they were pioneers in a creeping invasion.

Feeling secure as in a fortress, she enjoyed the contrast between the witched garden and the solid house, cheerful with lights and voices. She was inside and safe. But now, she was outside, and nearly two miles away.

‘Idiot,’ she told herself, ‘it’s not late. It’s only dark. Scram.’

As she was denied the employer’s privilege of abuse, she got even by saying exactly what she liked to herself. She whipped up her courage by calling herself a choice collection of names as she began to run cautiously, slipping on the slimy camber of the lane, since the rutted middle was too stony for safety.

She kept her eyes fixed on her goal, which seemed to be sinking gradually into the ground as she dipped lower and lower. Just before she lost sight of it, a light gleamed out in the window of the blue room.

It seemed to her a signal, calling her back to a special duty. Every evening, at twilight, she had to go around the house, locking the doors and putting the shutters over the windows. Hitherto, she had derided the job as involving excessive precaution; but, here, in the tenebrous solitude, it assumed an unpleasant significance.

There was a connection between it and a certain atmosphere of tension – excitement in the kitchen, whispers in the drawing-room – which emanated from a background of murder.

Murder. Helen shied instinctively at the word. Her mind was too healthy to regard crime as other than fiction, which turned newspapers into the sensational kind of reading-matter which is sold on railway-station bookstalls. It was impossible to believe that these tragedies happened to real people.

She forced herself to think of a safer subject.
‘Suppose I won the Irish Sweep.’

But, as the lane dropped deeper, its steep banks shutting out the light, she found it difficult to focus her mind on mere supposititious wealth. Simple pleasures appealed to her more at that moment – the safety of the kitchen at The Summit, with Mrs Oates and the ginger cat for company, and dripping-toast for tea.

She made another start.

‘Suppose I won the Irish Sweep. Someone’s got to win. Out of all the millions of people in the world, a few people are marked out to win fortunes. Staggering.’

Unfortunately, the thought introduced another, equally stupendous.

‘Yes. And out of all the millions of people who die in their beds, a few are marked out to be murdered.’

She switched off the current of her thoughts, for before her crouched the black mouth of the hollow.

When she had crossed it earlier in the afternoon, she had been chiefly concerned with picking out a fairly dry passage over the rich black mould formed by leaf-deposits. She had only marked it down as a sheltered spot in which to search for early primroses.

But the promise of spring was now only a mockery. As she advanced, the place seemed an area of desolation and decay, with windfalls for crops. In this melancholy trough – choked with seasonal litter – sound was reduced to furtive rustles; light was shrunken to a dark miasma, through which trees loomed with the semblance of men.

Suddenly, murder ceased to be a special fiction of the press. It became real – a menace and a monstrosity.

Helen could no longer control her thoughts as she remembered what Mrs Oates had told her about the crimes. There were four of them – credibly the work of the same maniac, whose chosen victims were girls.

The first two murders were committed in the town, which was too far away from The Summit for the occupants to worry. The third took place in a village, but still comfortably remote. The last girl was strangled in a lonely country-house within five miles of Professor Warren’s residence.

It was an uncomfortable reminder that the maniac was growing bolder with success. Each time he penetrated closer into the privacy of his victim.

‘The first time, it was just a street-murder,’ thought Helen. ‘Then, he hid in a garden. After that, he went inside a house. And then – right upstairs. You ought to feel safe there.’

Although she was determined not to yield to panic and run, she ceased to pick her way between cart-ruts filled with water and plunged recklessly into muddy patches, whose suction glugged at the soles of her shoes. She had reached the densest part of the grove, where the trees intergrew in stunting overcrowding.

To her imagination, the place was suggestive of evil. Tattered leaves still clung to bare boughs, unpleasantly suggestive of rags of decaying flesh fluttering from a gibbet. A sluggish stream was clogged with dead leaves.

Derelict litter of broken boots and rusty tins cropped out of a rank growth of docks and nettles, to mark a tramp’s camping-place.

Again Helen thought of the murders.
‘It’s coming nearer – and nearer. Nearer to us.’
Suddenly, she wondered if she were being followed. As she stopped to listen, the hollow seemed to be murmurous with faint sounds – the whisper of shrivelled leaves, the snapping of twigs, the chuckles of dripping water.

It was possible to fancy anything. Although she knew that if she ran her imagination would gallop away with her, she rushed across the soft ground, collecting poultices of mud on the soles of her boots.

Her heart was pounding when the opposite lane reared itself in front of her, like the wall of a house. The steepness however proved deceptive, for, around the first bend, it doubled, like a crooked arm, to relieve the steepness of the gradient.

Once more, Helen’s normal courage returned, for her watch told her that she had won her race against time. The precious new job was safe. Her legs ached as she toiled upwards, but she cheerfully reminded herself that a merry heart goes all the way – that the longest lane has a turning – that every step was bringing her nearer home. Presently she reached the top of the rise, and entered the plantation, which was thinly planted with young firs and larches and carpeted with fallen needles. At its thickest part, she could see through it, and, suddenly, she caught sight of The Summit.

It was no longer a distant silhouette, but was so close that she could distinguish the colour of the window-curtains in the blue room. The vegetable garden sloped down to the wall which bounded the plantation, and a coil of rising smoke, together with a cheerful whistle told her that the gardener was on the other side, making a bonfire.

At the sight of her goal, Helen slackened her pace. Now that it was over, her escapade seemed an adventure, so that she felt reluctant to return to her dreary routine. Very soon she would be going round locking up in readiness for curfew. It sounded dull – already she had forgotten that in the darkness of the hollow she had realised the importance of those shutters.

The rising wind spattered her face with rain, and increased her sense of rebellion against four walls and a roof. She told herself that it was blowing up for a dirty night as she walked towards the front gate.

At its end, the plantation thinned down to a single avenue of trees, through which she could see the stone posts of the entrance to The Summit, and the laurels of the drive. As she watched, fresh lights glowed through the drawing-room windows.

It was the promise of tea – calling her home. She was on the point of breaking into a run, when her heart gave a sudden leap.


She was positive that the farthest tree had moved.
She stopped and looked at it more closely, only to conclude that her fancy had tricked her. It was lifeless and motionless, like the rest. Yet there was something about its shape – some slight distortion of the trunk – which filled her with vague distrust.

It was not a question of logic – she only knew that she did not want to pass that specific tree.

As she lingered, in hesitation, her early training asserted itself. She began to earn her living, at the age of fourteen, by exercising the dogs of the wealthy. As these rich dogs were better-fed, and stronger than she was, they often tried to control a situation, so she was used to making quick decisions.

In this instance, her instinct dictated a short way home, which involved a diagonal cut across boggy ground, through a patch of briars, and over the garden wall.

She carried through her programme, in the minimum of time, and with little material damage, but complete loss of dignity. After a safe, but earthy, landing in the cabbage-bed, she walked around to the front door. With her latchkey in the lock, she turned, for a last look at the plantation, visible through the gates.

She was just in time to see the last tree split into two, as a man slipped from behind its trunk, and disappeared into the shadows.
Born in Abergavenny in 1876, Ethel Lina White was one of the best known crime writers of the 1930s and 40s, ranking alongside greats of the Golden Age such as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Many of her thrillers were adapted for film, most famously The Lady Vanishes originally titled The Wheel Spins) which became one of Alfred Hitchcock's greatest triumphs as a director. Originally published as Some Must Watch in 1933, The Spiral Staircase has since been adapted for the screen three times.

About

A chilling classic thriller from the 1930s in which a young woman is stalked about an isolated country house by a murderer

“Astonishing and diabolical shock. . . Required reading”  — New York Herald Tribune


The Summit—a mansion buried deep in the countryside, on the Welsh Borders. Somewhere outside, a murderer lurks in the darkness. Four young women have already been killed, and each murder has been closer to the house than the last. . .

Now a storm is coming. Professor Warren decides to batten down the hatches for the night—no one may come in or go out until morning. But what if the killer is already inside?

This atmospheric classic brought Ethel Lina White to the attention of the world and went on to be adapted for the screen three times (1946, 1961, 1975).

A creepy, gothic thriller, this is another sensational rediscovery of the classic crime genre. The author, Ethel Lina White, was one of the best-known crime writers of the 1930s and 40s, ranking alongside greats of the Golden Age such as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Many of her thrillers were adapted for film, most famously The Lady Vanishes (originally titled The Wheel Spins) which became one of Alfred Hitchcock's greatest triumphs as a director.

Excerpt

Helen realised that she had walked too far just as daylight was beginning to fade.
As she looked around her, she was struck by the desolation of the country. During her long walk, she had met no one, and had passed no cottage. The high-banked lanes, which blocked her view, were little better than steep mudslides. On either hand rose the hills – barren sepia mounds, blurred by a fine spit of rain.

Over all hung a heavy sense of foreboding, as though the valley awaited some disaster. In the distance – too far away to be even a threat – rumbled faint, lumpy sounds of thunder.
Fortunately Helen was a realist, used to facing hard economic facts and not prone to self-pity. Of soaring spirit, yet possessed of sound common sense, she believed that those thinly veiled glimpses of hell – heaviness of body and darkness of spirit – could be explained away by liver or atmosphere.

Small and pale as a slip of crescent moon, she was only redeemed from insignificance by her bush of light-red springy hair. But, in spite of her unostentatious appearance, she throbbed with a passion for life, expressed in an expectancy of the future which made her welcome each fresh day and shred the interest from every hour and minute.

As a child, she pestered strangers to tell her the time, not from a mere dull wish to know whether it was early or late, but from a genuine curiosity to see their watches. This curiosity persisted when she had to earn her own living under the roofs of fortunate people who possessed houses of their own.

Her one dread was being out of work. She could estimate, from experience, the scores of replies which had probably been received as a result of the advertisement for a lady-help at Professor Warren’s country house; she guessed, as soon as she arrived at The Summit, that it was its very loneliness that had helped to remove her from the ranks of the unemployed.

The house was tucked away in a corner, somewhere at the union of three counties, on the borderline between England and Wales. The nearest town was twenty-two miles away – the nearest village, twelve. No maid would stay at such a forsaken pocket – a pocket with a consequent hole in it – through which dribbled a steady stream of domestic labour.

Mrs Oates, who, with her husband, helped to fill the breach, summed up the situation to Helen, when they met, by appointment, in the Ladies’ Waiting Room at Hereford station.

‘I told Miss Warren as she’d have to get a lady. No one else would put up with it.’

Helen agreed that ladies were a drug in the market. She had enjoyed some months of enforced leisure, and was only too grateful for the security of any home, after weeks of stringent economy – since ‘starvation’ is a word not found in a lady’s vocabulary. Apart from the essential loneliness of the locality, however, it was an excellent post, for she had not only a nice room and good food, but she took her meals with the family.

The last fact counted, with her, for more than a gesture of consideration, since it gave her the chance to study her employers. She was lucky in being able to project herself into their lives, for she could rarely afford a seat at the cinema, and had to extract her entertainment from the raw material of life.

The Warren family possessed some of the elements of drama. The professor, who was a widower, and his sister and housekeeper Miss Warren were middle-aged to elderly. Helen classified them as definite types, academic, frigid and well bred, but largely devoid of vital human interest. Their stepmother, however, old Lady Warren – the invalid in the blue room – was of richer mould. Blood and mud had been used in her mixture, and the whole was churned up, thrice daily, by a dose of evil temper.

She was the terror of the household; only yesterday, she had flung a basin of gruel at her nurse’s head. It had been her natural and ladylike protest against this nourishing substitute for the rare steak, which she preferred but was unable to chew. As her aim was excellent, it had achieved the desired result; that morning Oates had driven the departing nurse into the town, and was coming back, in the evening, with a fresh target.

Helen, who had not yet been brought into contact with the old lady, rather admired her spirit. The household was waiting for her to die, but she still called the tune. Every morning, Death knocked politely on the door of the blue room and Lady Warren saluted him in her customary fashion with a thumb to her nose.

Besides this low-comedy relief, Helen suspected a triangular situation, as represented by the professor’s son, his daughter-in-law and the resident pupil, whom the professor was coaching for the Indian Civil Service. The son – a clever, ugly youth – was violently and aggressively in love with his wife, Simone. She was an unusually attractive girl, with money of her own, and a wanton streak in her composition.

To put it mildly, she was an experimentalist with men. At present, she was plainly testing her powers of seduction on the pupil, Stephen Rice – a good-looking casual young sprig, rejected by Oxford. Helen liked him instinctively, and hoped he would continue to resist the lady.
Although her curiosity hovered around The Summit and its inmates, her duties were her chief interest. The reminder that she had a new job to hold down made her pull a face as she glanced at her watch.

Already the first shadows were beginning to creep, as prelude to the lighting of the lamps. Very soon it would be dark.

A long walk stretched between her and The Summit. She could see the house, in the distance, blocked with solid assurance against the background of shrouded hills. But dividing them yawned a bowl of empty country, which dipped down for about a mile into a tree-lined hollow before it climbed up a corresponding slope to the young plantation on the opposite crest.

In spite of her stoicism, Helen’s heart sank faintly at the prospect of toiling back through that choked dell. Since she had come to The Summit, she had been struck by the density of the surrounding undergrowth. When she looked out of the windows, at twilight, the evergreen shrubs on the lawn seemed actually to advance closer to the walls, as though they were pioneers in a creeping invasion.

Feeling secure as in a fortress, she enjoyed the contrast between the witched garden and the solid house, cheerful with lights and voices. She was inside and safe. But now, she was outside, and nearly two miles away.

‘Idiot,’ she told herself, ‘it’s not late. It’s only dark. Scram.’

As she was denied the employer’s privilege of abuse, she got even by saying exactly what she liked to herself. She whipped up her courage by calling herself a choice collection of names as she began to run cautiously, slipping on the slimy camber of the lane, since the rutted middle was too stony for safety.

She kept her eyes fixed on her goal, which seemed to be sinking gradually into the ground as she dipped lower and lower. Just before she lost sight of it, a light gleamed out in the window of the blue room.

It seemed to her a signal, calling her back to a special duty. Every evening, at twilight, she had to go around the house, locking the doors and putting the shutters over the windows. Hitherto, she had derided the job as involving excessive precaution; but, here, in the tenebrous solitude, it assumed an unpleasant significance.

There was a connection between it and a certain atmosphere of tension – excitement in the kitchen, whispers in the drawing-room – which emanated from a background of murder.

Murder. Helen shied instinctively at the word. Her mind was too healthy to regard crime as other than fiction, which turned newspapers into the sensational kind of reading-matter which is sold on railway-station bookstalls. It was impossible to believe that these tragedies happened to real people.

She forced herself to think of a safer subject.
‘Suppose I won the Irish Sweep.’

But, as the lane dropped deeper, its steep banks shutting out the light, she found it difficult to focus her mind on mere supposititious wealth. Simple pleasures appealed to her more at that moment – the safety of the kitchen at The Summit, with Mrs Oates and the ginger cat for company, and dripping-toast for tea.

She made another start.

‘Suppose I won the Irish Sweep. Someone’s got to win. Out of all the millions of people in the world, a few people are marked out to win fortunes. Staggering.’

Unfortunately, the thought introduced another, equally stupendous.

‘Yes. And out of all the millions of people who die in their beds, a few are marked out to be murdered.’

She switched off the current of her thoughts, for before her crouched the black mouth of the hollow.

When she had crossed it earlier in the afternoon, she had been chiefly concerned with picking out a fairly dry passage over the rich black mould formed by leaf-deposits. She had only marked it down as a sheltered spot in which to search for early primroses.

But the promise of spring was now only a mockery. As she advanced, the place seemed an area of desolation and decay, with windfalls for crops. In this melancholy trough – choked with seasonal litter – sound was reduced to furtive rustles; light was shrunken to a dark miasma, through which trees loomed with the semblance of men.

Suddenly, murder ceased to be a special fiction of the press. It became real – a menace and a monstrosity.

Helen could no longer control her thoughts as she remembered what Mrs Oates had told her about the crimes. There were four of them – credibly the work of the same maniac, whose chosen victims were girls.

The first two murders were committed in the town, which was too far away from The Summit for the occupants to worry. The third took place in a village, but still comfortably remote. The last girl was strangled in a lonely country-house within five miles of Professor Warren’s residence.

It was an uncomfortable reminder that the maniac was growing bolder with success. Each time he penetrated closer into the privacy of his victim.

‘The first time, it was just a street-murder,’ thought Helen. ‘Then, he hid in a garden. After that, he went inside a house. And then – right upstairs. You ought to feel safe there.’

Although she was determined not to yield to panic and run, she ceased to pick her way between cart-ruts filled with water and plunged recklessly into muddy patches, whose suction glugged at the soles of her shoes. She had reached the densest part of the grove, where the trees intergrew in stunting overcrowding.

To her imagination, the place was suggestive of evil. Tattered leaves still clung to bare boughs, unpleasantly suggestive of rags of decaying flesh fluttering from a gibbet. A sluggish stream was clogged with dead leaves.

Derelict litter of broken boots and rusty tins cropped out of a rank growth of docks and nettles, to mark a tramp’s camping-place.

Again Helen thought of the murders.
‘It’s coming nearer – and nearer. Nearer to us.’
Suddenly, she wondered if she were being followed. As she stopped to listen, the hollow seemed to be murmurous with faint sounds – the whisper of shrivelled leaves, the snapping of twigs, the chuckles of dripping water.

It was possible to fancy anything. Although she knew that if she ran her imagination would gallop away with her, she rushed across the soft ground, collecting poultices of mud on the soles of her boots.

Her heart was pounding when the opposite lane reared itself in front of her, like the wall of a house. The steepness however proved deceptive, for, around the first bend, it doubled, like a crooked arm, to relieve the steepness of the gradient.

Once more, Helen’s normal courage returned, for her watch told her that she had won her race against time. The precious new job was safe. Her legs ached as she toiled upwards, but she cheerfully reminded herself that a merry heart goes all the way – that the longest lane has a turning – that every step was bringing her nearer home. Presently she reached the top of the rise, and entered the plantation, which was thinly planted with young firs and larches and carpeted with fallen needles. At its thickest part, she could see through it, and, suddenly, she caught sight of The Summit.

It was no longer a distant silhouette, but was so close that she could distinguish the colour of the window-curtains in the blue room. The vegetable garden sloped down to the wall which bounded the plantation, and a coil of rising smoke, together with a cheerful whistle told her that the gardener was on the other side, making a bonfire.

At the sight of her goal, Helen slackened her pace. Now that it was over, her escapade seemed an adventure, so that she felt reluctant to return to her dreary routine. Very soon she would be going round locking up in readiness for curfew. It sounded dull – already she had forgotten that in the darkness of the hollow she had realised the importance of those shutters.

The rising wind spattered her face with rain, and increased her sense of rebellion against four walls and a roof. She told herself that it was blowing up for a dirty night as she walked towards the front gate.

At its end, the plantation thinned down to a single avenue of trees, through which she could see the stone posts of the entrance to The Summit, and the laurels of the drive. As she watched, fresh lights glowed through the drawing-room windows.

It was the promise of tea – calling her home. She was on the point of breaking into a run, when her heart gave a sudden leap.


She was positive that the farthest tree had moved.
She stopped and looked at it more closely, only to conclude that her fancy had tricked her. It was lifeless and motionless, like the rest. Yet there was something about its shape – some slight distortion of the trunk – which filled her with vague distrust.

It was not a question of logic – she only knew that she did not want to pass that specific tree.

As she lingered, in hesitation, her early training asserted itself. She began to earn her living, at the age of fourteen, by exercising the dogs of the wealthy. As these rich dogs were better-fed, and stronger than she was, they often tried to control a situation, so she was used to making quick decisions.

In this instance, her instinct dictated a short way home, which involved a diagonal cut across boggy ground, through a patch of briars, and over the garden wall.

She carried through her programme, in the minimum of time, and with little material damage, but complete loss of dignity. After a safe, but earthy, landing in the cabbage-bed, she walked around to the front door. With her latchkey in the lock, she turned, for a last look at the plantation, visible through the gates.

She was just in time to see the last tree split into two, as a man slipped from behind its trunk, and disappeared into the shadows.

Author

Born in Abergavenny in 1876, Ethel Lina White was one of the best known crime writers of the 1930s and 40s, ranking alongside greats of the Golden Age such as Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers. Many of her thrillers were adapted for film, most famously The Lady Vanishes originally titled The Wheel Spins) which became one of Alfred Hitchcock's greatest triumphs as a director. Originally published as Some Must Watch in 1933, The Spiral Staircase has since been adapted for the screen three times.