Ethel Lina White

STEP IN THE DARK


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       Ethel Lina White

      STEP IN THE DARK

      A British Mystery Classic

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-0253-9

      Table of Contents

       Chapter I. Reflections

       Chapter II. Behind The Curtain

       Chapter III. The Countess Leaves Town

       Chapter IV. Signature

       Chapter V. Introduction To The Island

       Chapter VI. Flowers For The Bride

       Chapter VII. Discreet Inquiries

       Chapter VIII. Touch Wood

       Chapter IX. Presentiment

       Chapter X. Sweden In A Day

       Chapter XI. A Viking's Bride

       Chapter XII. The Visitor

       Chapter XII. Recognition

       Chapter XIV. A Dark Lady

       Chapter XV. The Plot

       Chapter XVI. No Return

       Chapter XVII. Happy Eyes

       Chapter XVIII. Fiction

       Chapter XIX. A "Good" Horror

       Chapter XX. The Message

       Chapter XXI. The Lost Luck

       Chapter XXII. The Prisoner

       Chapter XXIII. Enter Mrs. Yates

       Chapter XXIV. Sea-Trip

       Chapter XXV. The Executioner

       Chapter XXVI. A Postcard From Bruges

       Chapter XXVII. The Fee

      CHAPTER ONE. REFLECTIONS

       Table of Contents

      Across the table, Georgia Yeo looked at her hostess with timid admiration.

      "I wonder," she thought, "if the time will ever come when that face will be familiar to me, at meals?"

      She was acutely nervous, for she realized that the little dinner-party was a formal occasion when she was on exhibition. This was her great moment—her chance to grasp a future which blinded her with its brilliancy.

      At present, she felt almost breathless by the rush of events, as though she were another Alice, whirled relentlessly through the air. It was only ten days since she had left England, for the first time in her life. Since then, much had happened—and it had happened too quickly.

      She had come to Brussels and met the Count.

      History was made on her first night. She chose to stay at an old-established hotel, patronised by those who preferred an atmosphere of tradition to ultramodern plumbing. Once the mansion of a wealthy family, it preserved its original grandeur of yellowed marble walls and vast gilt-framed mirrors as a background for solid nineteenth-century furniture.

      It was situated in the town, amid a tangle of dark narrow streets, so that Georgia was able to gaze through the revolving doors of the lounge and watch the people passing outside. A fine rain was falling so imperceptibly that it was visible only as a sliver through the darkness. It glistened on a procession of umbrellas and the statuary of a fountain, set in the middle of the road.

      Inside was the brilliancy of branching electric lights—a constant flux of visitors—a babel of voices speaking an unfamiliar language. As she sat and watched, the novelty of her surroundings thrilled her to excited expectancy. For six years she had looked out, at twilight, always upon the same scene—an empty grey waste, with a distant white line of crawling foam, marking the sea.

      She opened her cigarette case, which was the signal for the Count literally to leap into her life, forestalling the waiter with a match.

      "Can it be really true?" he asked a minute later. "The clerk at the Bureau tells me that you are Mrs. Yeo—the celebrated writer of so many detective thrillers?"

      Faster, faster...When she admitted her identity, the Count swept her away on the current of his exuberant spirits. In his stimulating company, she saw Brussels as a whirling confusion of ancient buildings, cobbled streets, statues, still life paintings of carcasses and dark arcaded dress-shops.

      Out of the swarm of impressions there emerged a few indelible impressions. The mellow glory of the gilded houses of the Grand Place seen in a red, watery sunset. The twin towers of St. Gudule's floating in a silvery mist. The massive grandeur of the Palais de Justice, challenging the shock of Judgment Day. The soaring figure of St. Michael glittering in the morning sun. The horror of a picture in the Wiertz Museum—"The Age of Innocence"—which depicted two children burning a butterfly's wings.

      Faster, faster...The Count rushed her from place to place, with cyclonic energy. He remained volatile, impersonal and adventurous—running risks with regulations and stamping on convention up to the moment when he formally expressed his wish that she should meet his family.

      The pace increased