"They called them 'the haunted shores,'" "These stretches of devonshire and cornwall and ireland," "Which rear up against the westward ocean." "Mists gather here, and sea fog, and eerie stories." "That's not because there are more ghosts here" "Than in other places, mind you," "It's just that people who live hereabouts are strangely aware of them." "You see, day and night, year in, year out," "They listen to the pound and stir of the waves." "There's life and death in that restless sound," "And eternity too." "If you listen to it long enough," "All your senses are sharpened." "You come by strange instincts." "You get to recognize a peculiar cold," "Which is the first warning." "The cold which is no mere matter of degrees fahrenheit," "But a draining of warmth in the vital centers" "Local people tell me they would have felt it," "Even outside that locked door." "We didn't." "They can't understand why we didn't know what it meant" "When our dog wouldn't go up those stairs." "Animals see the blasted things, it appears." "My sister Pamela and I knew nothing about such matters..." "Not then, we didn't." "We had the disadvantage of being londoners," "Just down for a fortnight's rest." "That 10th day of may, 1937," "Was the end of our holiday." "We seem to be in somebody's garden." "What was somebody's garden." "What a marvelous old house." "Better get out before we're had up for trespassing." "Where on earth did we leave the car?" "That direction, i think." "Look, a squirrel." "Grab Bobby!" " Too late!" "Bobby, come back here!" "You bad dog!" "Bobby!" "Rick, he's got the poor little squirrel trapped." "He'll kill it." " My dear sweet sister," "It's more likely he's having his way with our Bobby." "Fine way to spend a holiday... chasing a dog!" "Where is he?" " Under here, I think." "Oww!" "I thought you had him." "Had me." "There he goes!" "Hang on to Bobby!" "I can't!" "Rick: well played, sir." "Do you suppose he can get out?" " Certainly." "He's on the roof by now." "That's a smart dog." "He'll be back any minute." "Rick, have you noticed anything?" "Only that I'm in no shape to join the hunting set." "No, I mean this house." "It's the loveliest thing I ever saw." "Look at that staircase." "Oh, boy, what banisters for sliding." "Oh, Rick." " What is it?" "Your saying that, and the house... it took me back." "Yeah, it's quite a bit like..." " The rose bowl there," "The grandfather clock there," "And Mother in her best gray moire" "Sweeping down the stairs." "You'll be howling in a minute." "Come on out." "Not on your life." "I'm going to see the rest of this." "Come on, Rick, let's pretend we're buying it." "I'll toss you for the bedroom with the best view." "They've all got best views." "How lovely." "Why does it make me feel like I'm on a boat?" "It's the light on the ceiling." "That's the sea." "It's nice to wake up and see that." "Oh, how I do hate living in a London flat." "I suppose if you're brought up in an old house," "You always hanker for one." "It's stuck." "You try it." "It's locked." "Family skeletons, probably." "Oh, what a bore." "Rick, the bathroom." "Open fire while you bathe." "What luxury." "You know, this is a saturday-Night-Only bathroom." "You boil yourself as red as a lobster" "Then hurry to bed to avoid a chill." "Rick." " What?" "I've had one of my 'feelings.'" "We're really going to buy this house." "Oh, yes?" "Did your feeling tell you what you're going to buy it with?" "Well, if we both put in everything we have," "Maybe we can get it." "It's terribly out of the way," "And it hasn't been lived in for years." "What would we do with it?" "We can't drive nearly 300 miles" "Just for weekends." "We'll live here all the time and you'll work at your music." "My poor, lunatic sister, i happen to have a job." "And what a job... going to concerts," "And telling your readers how bad the music was." "It's not good enough, Rick." "Chuck it." "Down here, you'd" "Write your own music," "As you always should have done, and as you've always wanted to." "Rick, it isn't as if you were even a good music critic." "Thank you, very much." "Anyway, I get paid hard cash." "But doesn't the idea attract you at all?" "Attract me?" "You come out of here, you're dangerous." "Don't you know how rare houses like this are?" "I like the banisters." "How Lizzie would love that kitchen." "That little beach must belong to it." "It's in good condition too, not a sign of damp." "We'll get our furniture out of storage." " Now be calm, Pamela." "A change like this would have to be discussed." "Oh, nonsense." "Important decisions have to be made quickly." "Well... my paper has asked me to do a series... 'lives of the great musicians...' reading time, two minutes." "There you are, that will feed us." " Until I run out of musicians." "How do we know this place is for sale?" "Rick, life isn't as cruel as that." "It's got to be." "Now remember, Pam, no signs of keenness." "We're just mildly interested." "Mildly." "Shh." "Good afternoon." "We'd like to see commander Beech if we may." "He's not in at the moment." "Could we wait for him?" "Won't you come in?" "There's a fire in the study." "I think I can catch my grandfather by telephone." "Who shall I say wants to see him?" "He wouldn't know our name." "It's Fitzgerald." "My sister Pamela Fitzgerald and I'm Roderick Fitzgerald." "How do you do?" "I'm Stella Meredith." "Won't you sit down?" "Thank you." "Not in that chair!" "It's got a lumpy seat." "Oh." "Do you mind?" " Oh, no." "Oh, dear." "Will this do?" " Thank you." "What an awfully unsmoking house." "Grandfather had a cigar blown straight down his throat once" "When he was on the foredeck." "He lost his taste for tobacco." "Can I help in any way?" "We wanted to talk to the commander about a house he owns" "On top of the cliff." "Windward?" " Yes." "You see, we've fallen head over heels in love with... i mean, it might just do for us." "Really?" "We understand from Mrs. Brown at the inn it's for sale." "Mrs. Brown is mistaken." "I'm sorry you've been put to the trouble of coming here." "Perhaps if we could speak to your grandfather about it?" "It wouldn't be the slightest use." "I'm sorry, but there's really no point in your waiting." "Man:" "Stella, are you there?" "Yes, grandfather." "In here." "Well, what is it?" "Some people who came here by mistake, grandfather." "They're just leaving." "We heard the windward house is for sale." "Yes, it is." "Won't you sit down?" "I'll be with you in a moment." "Thank you, very much." "Grandfather, please." "I thought I made myself quite clear on this point, Stella." "Yes, grandfather... i don't understand you." "A house you haven't lived in since you were a child." "A piece of property we can't afford to maintain." "But it was my Mother's house... i can't put it into words, it's... nonsense." "Grandfather, please." "I don't believe many repairs will be necessary." "The roof is sound," "The walls have withstood the atlantic gales for two centuries." "Thank you." " Thank you." "There was a considerable sum" "Spent on the house 20 years ago," "When I gave it to my daughter." "I understand." "Well, I'm sorry," "But I'm afraid #1200 is our absolute limit." "Is that a definite offer?" " Yes." "And you would pay the entire sum immediately?" "You mean, you'd sell for that?" "Yes." "I suppose you ought to have the property surveyed before..." "Oh, Rick." "There's no need to get suspicious." "The house is worth far more than that," "But I have a very young granddaughter," "And #1200 in the bank for her" "Would ease my mind considerably." "We understand perfectly." "And you would not be nervous in such a lonely house?" "No, indeed." "Or of the wind at nights?" "It plays odd tricks in old houses." "Are you trying to tell us the house is haunted?" "No, Miss Fitzgerald, no house is haunted." "But I had some tenants five years ago who complained of... disturbances." "What was the trouble..." "ladies carrying their heads under their arms?" "I declined to discuss it and cancelled the lease." "But I couldn't cancel a sale." "We wouldn't want you to." "Of course, one does feel that a story like that should bring the price down." "I've already made a very considerable reduction, Mr. Fitzgerald." "Perhaps we both need time to think the matter over." "But our offer's definite." "Isn't it, Rick?" "Oh, yes, yes." " Very well, then." "I accept it." "Title deeds and checks will be exchanged by our solicitors." "In the meantime, I have your word" "And you have mine." "It's wonderfully simple to buy a house, isn't it?" "Pam, where are you?" "Here I am." "Look, our own roses." "Rick, it's all ours." "Isn't it wonderful?" "Hmm." "You know, it's bigger than I thought." "I can't wait to see what's in that bluebeard room." "Probably the housemaid's cupboard... slops, mops, dripping taps." "I wonder how soon we can get cleaners and painters in?" "You'll go back to London, of course, while I stay here." "What, rolled up in a blanket like a squaw?" "At the inn, idiot, until you ship me the furniture." "Did the old boy tell you why it was locked?" "I never thought to ask him." "Well, now we know." "It's the one ugly room in the house." "Oh, it's not so bad." "But that window, it's like a cucumber frame." "They put that in later to make a painter's studio." "Even the view doesn't cheer it up." "What will we do with it?" "What?" "My workroom, of course." "It's ideal." "Put the piano over there with shelves for music," "Plenty of space to walk up and down, manuscripts all over the floor," "Hot pincers to tear the flesh from people" "Who keep telling me luncheon is ready," "Stacks of checks from my publishers and... do you think this room is damp?" "It needs airing." "It's funny it should strike so cold" "In here after such a warm day." "Oh, law." " What, Rick?" "I suddenly felt completely flattened." "Do you suppose I'll ever be able to write any music here or anywhere?" "What on earth are you talking about?" "You don't suppose we've made the most howling mistake, do you?" "Oh, Rick, have we?" "Why did the commander suddenly come down on his price like that?" "The 'disturbances.' Rumors like that are dynamite" "If you're selling a place." "Pamela, you're not going to get scared of this ghost business, are you?" "Of course not." "I don't believe in them really," "And i'd be interested, not scared." "Wouldn't you?" "Me?" "No, disturbances wouldn't disturb me," "Not for a single second." "Why, it's Bobby." "Of course, it's Bobby." "Don't go getting imaginative." "It is a filthy room, isn't it?" "We're here, Bobby." "He's trying to tell us about the squirrel, I expect." "What's the matter?" "Didn't he keep his date with you, Bobby?" "Why don't you come up, stupid?" "Rick, look at that lamb of a window!" "Never thought Bobby was a killer at heart." "Who's that standing out there?" "Looks like the old boy's granddaughter." "Oh, don't waste a wave on that one." "Because she didn't want us to buy the house?" "Oh, Rick, I think she'd been crying." "Had she?" " Don't you see?" "She adored the house, and we've cast her out." "Isn't it awful?" "Stop making up stories." "She didn't live here." "She just doesn't want us to." "She's an iii-Mannered little dog-In-The-Manger." "All right, Bobby, all right." "We'll take you back to the inn and let you order your dinner." "Have you forgotten something?" "No." "On second thought, my landing gear" "Isn't what it used to be." "Morning, sir." " Morning." "20 turrets, please." " Yes, sir." "Isn't this windward house?" " Yes, sir." "A fine house too." "Glad to hear there'll be folk in it again." "You have a dozen of these?" " Likely, I have." "Oh, maybe you're the new owner." "Yes, my sister and i bought the place yesterday." "Well, well." "I hope you'll bring it back to itself again." "The last lot that lived there weren't no good." "Went away owing money." "Got out of their lease starting ugly stories about the place." "So that's how the rumors started." "That's what I do say." "Here you are, sir." "Nine seems to be all I have." "That's all right." " Of course, there are others who say different." "There are?" " That's only natural," "After the way the lady of windward house died." "God rest her soul." "You mean the commander's daughter?" "Only child." "It came near breaking the gentleman's heart." "He's never been the same since." "How did she die?" " Fell off the cliff." "Accident?" " That's what i'd have said." "Good morning, Mr. Hardy." "A copy of amateur gardening, please." "Yes, Mrs. Coatesworthy." "The best of luck to you, sir." "If you have a favorite tobacco, I'll be glad to stock it for you." "Thank you." "Goodbye." "The gent that just bought windward house." "You don't say?" "Mr. Fitzgerald?" " Yes?" "Oh, it's you." "May I speak to you for a moment?" "Look here, young lady, if you want to talk me out" "Of windward house, you might just as well save your breath." "It isn't that." "It's about me, yesterday afternoon." "My behavior was inexcusable." "Come now, it wasn't as bad as all that." "Thank you, very much." "Your grandfather made you apologize, didn't he?" "Oh, no, it was my Mother." "Your moth... but I understood that..." "I beg your pardon?" "I kept looking at her last night, thinking how i'd let her down." "But isn't your Mother dead?" "Yes, but I know all about her..." "from grandfather, of course." "I was only three when she died." "But I thought you said you looked at her." "Her portrait hangs in my room." "My father painted it." "Oh, then it was his studio." "Yes, and she was so beautiful." "Let's go for a walk." "Grandfather will never get over her death." "He's hated windward ever since." "That's understandable." "But it isn't fair to hate a house because someone's died there." "I love windward because she lived there" "For three years and those were my years." "And that's why you don't want anyone else to live in it?" "That's foolish, isn't it?" "No, just one thing is foolish." "You're living somebody else's life." "How old are you, Stella Meredith?" "20." " You're 20, and you're pretty." "You shouldn't waste a single second" "Looking back on three little years." "You should be having fun." " I am." "Oh, nonsense." "What are you doing today, for instance?" "Oh, just things." " Facts, details, come on." "Oh, dear." "I've got to match some wool." "Then I have to stop at the lending library" "And get a copy of bleak house." "Grandfather and I are reading dickens." "You're not going to do any of those things." "I have a better idea." "Isn't this better than reading to grandfather?" "Oh, it's wonderful." "Ever get seasick?" "Fortunately, I have a stomach like gibraltar." "Not externally, of course." "Are you asleep?" "No, just wondering if our national confidence" "In gibraltar isn't misplaced." "Shouldn't you get out of the sun?" "No, i'd... i'd rather... remain here." "Oh, please... the tiller... please!" "Oh!" "Smells good." "That's mimosa." "It was my mo... oh, I forgot, I'm not supposed to talk about that." "Why?" " Out of the past." "Oh, go ahead." "It was my Mother's favorite perfume." "My father sent me a bottle before he died." "I've made it last a long time." "Mimosa." "Ever see it growing?" " No, I haven't." "Like a million little yellow bells, like... like sleigh bells." "It's smooth again." "Are you feeling better?" "Oh, yes." "I was about to resume command." "Bring her about sharply." "Head straight for the jetty." "Avast the boom." "Scuttle the funnels." "Oh!" "Lady, please." "I thought you'd gone off for London, Mr. Fitzgerald." "Just leaving now, ben." " That'll be half a crown." "You doing up your hair again?" "Yes." "No, no, no." "Come on." "It's wonderful like this." "All loose and free and windblown." "What am I doing?" "Talking high poetry" "Or selling hairstyle advertising?" "You laugh at everything, don't you?" " Too much?" "Oh, no." "I've never known anyone who laughed much." "See a lot of Pamela while I'm away, will you?" "How long will you be gone?" " Oh, about three weeks." "Perhaps she'll let me help her with curtains and things." "Get her to talk about me... in a respectful way, of course." "None of those anecdotes where I'm the family halfwit." "I hope you have a nice trip." "I'll take you home first." " You're so late starting." "Might as well." " I'd rather break it gently" "To grandfather about our sail." "If you don't mind." "All right, gently but firmly, mind." "Goodbye." " Goodbye." "Oh, Mr. Fitzgerald!" " Yes?" "I almost forgot to say it." "I'm awfully happy you and your sister are going to live at windward." "Why, thank you, Stella Meredith." "Well, here we are." "What a grand house, master Rick." "'Tis a mansion, so 'tis." "Are you worthy of it," "Lizzie Flynn?" "That's what I keep asking myself." "'Tis on top of the world." "Rick!" " Hello, Pam." "Lizzie!" " Baby, darling." "You devil for being late." "I wanted you to see" "Everything while it was still daylight." "Master Rick and his friends and their cocktails." "We got Lizzie drunk." " Get on with you, master Rick." "Bobby!" "Oh, Bobby!" "Where's our Bobby?" "Don't, Rick." "Something happen to him?" " Nothing tragic." "He just wandered away." "I suppose I haven't enough dog appeal." "No, seriously, Pam." "He loathed the country." "You know, no nice dust bins," "No sporting interest in finding a tree." "Hmm... never heard of a terrier walking out." "Ah, Miss Pamela, I'm dreaming on me feet." "Pam, it's perfect." "You're practically straight." "There's soup in the kitchen." "Look at whiskey now." "He knows where the food is." "How did the furniture fit in?" " Oh, beautifully." "I saw the grandfather clock." "It waved both hands at me." "If the soup's burned, Lizzie will spank me." "Get on with you, Miss." "The saints be praised." "There's me old rocker." "It's been 10 years since you nestled your bustle in that." "You've done wonders, Pam." " Thanks." "What does Stella think of the changes?" "You mean Stella Meredith?" " Mm-Hmm." "I haven't set eyes on her." " You haven't?" "I did write and ask her to tea." "Got a reply from the commander," "Saying she wasn't strong enough to accept invitations." "Not strong enough?" " I expect it's us." "We just aren't nice to know." "But that's not Stella." "She was crazy to make friends with you." "She told me." " But where did you see her?" "Hmm?" "Oh, uh, just before I left for London." "Why, you colossal bluff!" "You were just as sorry for that child as I was." "Stop pushing her into the nursery." "She's 20, she said so herself." "You like her." "I can't help it." "There's kind of a sleeping beauty magic about the kid." "I'd thought i'd done something towards breaking the spell." "Seems not." "'Prince charmless,' that's me." "That'll do for tonight, Mr. Roderick." "It's time for Miss Pamela to go to bed." "She looks tired out." "You're an old tyrant, Lizzie Flynn." "But you're perfectly right." "Put the lights out, Rick." "Now, let's see." "I think I turn it down and blow down the chimney." "I haven't done that since I was a kid." "Come on, whiskey." "Oh." "Are you having him in your room?" "He's used to it, the creature." "Get along up now." "Haven't I carried you enough this day?" "Get on up, now." " I'll give him a start." "What in the name of all the saints?" "Oh, well, he's not used to traveling," "And strange houses." "He'll find me if he wants me." "I've not slept with the sound of the sea" "In me ears since I left ireland." "Would you like to go back there?" "I'd sooner see myself dead." "Rick: aw, go on with you!" "Why, whatever ails these candles?" "It seems to be a rather drafty staircase." "Rick, I've had a swim every day from our own beach," "And I've started to make a garden." "You learn the oddest things when you... when you garden." "Did you know there was an upside-Down to seeds?" "No." "Good night." "Good night, Rick." " Good night, master Rick." "Good night, liz." "Come in!" "I thought you were asleep." "It turns cold in the night here sometimes." "Oh, thanks." "There's something I want to talk to you about." "Do you have any nice cast-Iron" "I can swap for this mattress?" "We'll give you another tomorrow." "Nothing will keep me awake tonight." "What price our house?" "Pretty good, hmm?" "You're really pleased with it?" "I was never so happy in my life." "You started to say something." "What?" "Well, it was just... just that I was" "The one who got you to buy the house... and I didn't appear very appreciative." "Is that it?" "It'll wait till tomorrow." "Bless you, Rick." "Sleep well." "You, too." "These are pretty good apples." "That concludes our broadcast for today." "Good night, everyone." "Good night." "Pam, is that you?" "Rick." " Pamela!" "We don't want to wake Lizzie." "But, isn't it Lizzie?" "No, it isn't Lizzie." "It's coming from downstairs." "It comes from everywhere, and nowhere." "Now, take hold of yourself, Pam." "I'm going down and search the place." "I've searched." "There's never anything there." "Never?" "Do you mean you've heard it before?" "Yes." "It's true, isn't it?" "The sound, I mean." "You're hearing it, too?" "Of course I'm hearing it." " You see, I wasn't sure." "Pam!" " I thought I might be going crazy." "Was that why you didn't tell me?" "Yes, that... it's your home." "It's all we've got to live in." "It sounds so heartbroken." "Now don't get rattled." "There's a logical explanation for this." "Such as?" " You can't expect me to give it to you offhand?" "But it stands to reason." "Does it come every night?" "No... but just when you begin" "To think you've dreamt it, it comes again." "Be calm, Pam, be calm." "I'm all right." "It'll stop soon now." "How do you know?" "It dies away at dawn." "Listen." "That's the dawn breeze." "Well, that's all for tonight." "That's a pity, really." "Hardly gives one time to look into it." "Now listen, dear..." " Look, let's talk tomorrow." "I'll die if I don't get some sleep." "Pam, leave your door open in case you're nervous." "All right, Rick." "Remember, you haven't a thing to worry about." "This business can be scientifically explained." "Probably a loose wire hidden around the house somewhere," "Acting as an aerial, picking up the sound" "Of some woman in the village crying." "Was she crying when the last tenants were frightened out?" "Well, maybe she had a sad life." "Anyway, I'm here now," "And I'm not the least rattled." "Not the least little bit in the world." "It's just silly to be upset." "Last night I heard a perfectly appalling sound of crying." "Mr. Fitzgerald, windward house belongs to you now." "Why do you bring this matter to me?" "Because we want information." "I, for practical reasons, and my sister" "Because she believes it's a ghost." "She'd like to know what the ghost wants." "What utter bosh." " Bosh, I agree." "But when did the noises start?" "You inherited the house, I believe?" "From my grandmother." "And there were no disturbances in her time?" "None." "And if there are any noises now," "They're from perfectly natural causes." "An echo from a subterranean cave, perhaps." "That would have been heard in your grandmother's day." "Erosion may have changed the structure of the cliffs." "Well, it's not a bad suggestion." "May I come in, grandfather?" "No, you run along to church." "I'll join you in just a few minutes." "But I want to see Mr. Fitzgerald." "I'm awfully glad you're better." "Better?" "But I haven't been ill." "Stella merely suffers with a general delicacy." "She doesn't accept invitations." "Never?" "Perhaps i'd better frankly state" "She's not strong enough to make new friends." "Grandfather?" "!" " Run along, my dear." "We're discussing something private." "Is there anything else?" "No, just one more question." "Was Stella's Mother ever troubled at windward house?" "What do you mean?" " Did she hear the crying?" "My daughter was not one to circulate ridiculous rumors." "If she'd heard this, she'd have mentioned it," "And she never did?" " Certainly not." "Then the trouble must have begun since her death." "Do you mean to imply..." " Oh, no, I'm merely trying to set the date." "I didn't mean that your daughter haunts... how dare you suggest such a thing?" "Really, I'm most desperately sorry." "Please forgive me." "Very well." "I accept your apology." "But please understand one thing." "Your purchase of the property" "Doesn't establish a social bond between us." "What's the matter with us?" "Why don't you allow Stella to see us?" "Because I don't want to." "And I must ask you for your word" "Not to send her any more invitations." "I'll give you no such undertaking." "Very well, I know how to deal with the matter." "Stella is not going inside that house." "Great scott," "You believe the place is haunted." "I hoped you'd come along." "I wanted to talk to you." "Quick, drive around the next corner." "Get in." "You had four freckles on the boat." "They've gone." "I couldn't go to see your sister." "Grandfather's been ill." "Turn here." "Now, what is this about you not seeing Pamela?" "At the mere mention of me coming to windward," "Grandfather almost had an attack." "You feel your Mother never would have left him?" "Never." " Yet she did when she married," "He seemed to survive very nicely." " He was younger then." "So you're going to turn into one of these dim little ladies" "Who fill hot-Water bottles for elderly relatives?" "Goodbye, Stella Meredith." " I'm not now." "You're here now." "That's practically the nicest sentence that ever was spoken." "Would you and your sister be in if I came to windward tonight?" "Yes." "Supper's at 8:00," "But please come as early as you can." "Bob down." "He's passing the end of the lane." "He's gone." "How will I ever get to church?" "Sit on the floor of the car." "I'll drive you past him." "Drive to the side gate, please." "Yes." "Like a lift, commander?" "No, thank you." "What a moment." " Were you scared?" "Yes, but it was wonderful." "Well, goodbye." "Say a little prayer for me." "How am I ever going to feel meek enough for church?" "Oh, Stella!" "Here's your prayer book and purse." "Goodbye." " Goodbye." "Thank you, Mrs. Carlton, colonel." "Until next sunday." " Yes." "Goodbye." " Goodbye." "You seem very silent." "What have you against the fitzgeralds?" "Well, they're hardly our sort." "I've decided to make friends with them." "You'll do no such thing." "Why do you say that, grandfather?" "I do not consider it suitable for you" "To visit windward house." " Not suitable?" "I can't discuss the matter." "Then that's all the reason I'm going to get from you?" "It will have to suffice, yes." "No, grandfather, I'm 20 and I'm... it's time I stopped living somebody else's life." "I shall go to windward whenever I please." "Did you hear what I said?" "It isn't any good." "I'm on strike." "Go to your room." "No use trying to lock me in." "There isn't any key." "Don't be impertinent." "Hello, annie." " Dinner will be late, Miss." "I'm having ever such trouble with the lamb." "You'd better tell the commander." "Yes, it's very urgent." "Will you try to hurry the call?" "Thank you." "I'm telephoning." "Close that door." "It's just that dinner will be late." "It's the lamb being awkward." "I won't be here for dinner." "Take some to Stella on a tray." "And close that door!" "May I speak to Miss Holloway?" "It's a trunk call, Miss Holloway." "A commander Beech." "Thank you." "Yes, commander Beech." "I want to consult you about Stella, Miss Holloway." "It's a matter of the utmost urgency." "I can be with you late this afternoon." "I can't see you until this evening," "But I shall be glad to put you up for the night." "Isn't it a little late to consult me about Stella?" "Yes, yes, I know that, but I beg you to help me." "You're the only human being in the world to whom I can turn." "The only person who wouldn't think me demented" "Because I believe a house can be filled with malignity... malignity directed against a certain child." "The dining room isn't finished yet." "How glad this house must be to be lived in again." "I must dash back to Lizzie." "We're fighting over how much sherry you put in a tipsy pudding." "She wants to make it dead drunk." "Do you like tipsy pudding?" " I think I like everything to eat." "Show her the rest of the house, Rick, before it's dark." "You've really never been here since you were three?" "Not inside." "But I walked here once when I was 10 and peered in at the windows." "There was a stupendous row." "And the next week I got packed off to a school in brussels." "Did your grandfather give you any reasons?" "Reasons?" "If i'd ever been reasoned with," "I might have been a better child." "My old nursery's through there, isn't it?" "I should think so, it had nursery wallpaper." "How pretty your sister's made it." "What is it?" "Something I've forgotten." "When I was little," "I used to have a dream about this room." "You did?" "I'd be lying here," "And it would be dark and cold and frightening." "And then... a little flame would come... just a tiny point of light so big... and yet suddenly... everything would be warm" "And light and peaceful." "And then... someone would come and put the flame out and i'd be terrified." "Perhaps your Mother used to bring you a night-Light." "But who'd take it out?" "May I see the studio before it's dark?" "It's rather messy in here." "I was thinking of skipping this." "This is where my father painted my Mother's picture." "Strange to think of them here." "My father would have his easel to the light, wouldn't he?" "And perhaps my Mother would sit there in a soft, white dress." "But sometimes, of course, he'd paint the other one." "The other one?" " He had a model... a foreign girl." "I've never been able to find out much about her." "People get awfully hush-Hush when I ask them." "Between you and me and the grand piano," "I suspect father was a bit of a bad hat." "Artistic temperament?" "Very artistic, I'm afraid." "Sometimes, you know, it's quite a comfort to me." "In what way?" "If father had been as good as Mother," "Think how good i'd have been." "It's getting almost too dark to see you properly." "Won't you play something?" "It's about time you asked me that." "Please go on." "Just a second." "You made that up?" " Yes." "But you must be brilliant!" " Oh, dazzling!" "People have to wear sunglasses." "What's it called?" "It's a serenade." "'To Stella by starlight.'" "You mean, this Stella?" " Mm-Hmm." "It's the most exciting thing that's ever happened to me." "Is it?" " Please go on." "You see, this is the only way I can paint you." "Some black keys and some white," "And fingers that are much too clumsy," "But you're in it, somehow." "It's gone awfully sad." "Why have you changed it?" "It just came out that way." "What's the matter?" "What is it, Stella?" "You're trembling!" "Oh, I was wicked." "How could I ever have laughed in her house?" "But it's my house now..." "Pam's and mine." "But she was so young and she died so cruelly." "Stella!" "Stella!" "Rick, what is it?" "I don't know." "It's that blasted room!" "Stella, stop!" "Stella!" "For heaven's sake, Stella." " What's the matter, Rick?" "You were going over the edge." "Was i?" " If I hadn't caught you." "I hadn't any sense of danger at all." "Look." "I think this is where my Mother fell." "By the dead tree." "Are you all right?" "Quite, thanks... except dying of hunger." "Then you must come and get some food." "Do you know this is our very first party" "In this house?" "Is it?" " Shall we sing her the song?" "His introduction to music." "La!" "Wee chickabirdie, tra la la, laid an egg on the vundysull" "The vundysull began to crack" "Wee chickabirdie, la, la, la, wee chickabirdie... stay here." "Lizzie, where are you?" "What's the matter?" "Lizzie:" "Mr. Roderick!" "Mr. Roderick!" "What is it, Lizzie?" "Are you hurt?" "The studio door." "There's something there." "Look, Lizzie, there's nothing there." "There was!" "I saw it with me own two eyes." "What?" "It was like a mist... a crawling mist." "You imagined it, just because you heard the house was haunted." "I heard nothing of the sort, Mr. Roderick." "Holy saints, are you tellin' me it is?" "For heavens sake, Rick, what is it?" "Oh, Lizzie's dreamed up a ghost for herself." "Come along, Lizzie." "Oh, darling Lizzie." "I had just come upstairs to turn down the beds," "And there it stood by the studio door, looking down at me." "A woman, it was." " Four steps back, it was just a mist." "It was a woman, i swear it." "The ghost of a woman!" "Come sit down." "You'll be all right." "Have some sherry, Lizzie." "Just a drop." "I'll not sleep in this house another night, Mr. Roderick." "Come now, Lizzie." " I will not!" "I'd sooner die." "She can go to the jessup farm." "What's happened to Stella?" "She was with me when I came in." "Stella?" "Stella, where are you?" "Stella, are you in the house?" "Stella!" "Pamela!" "Pamela!" "Stella, darling." "Yes, Rick, what's happened?" "What is it?" " She's in a dead faint." "This room is like an icebox." " Colder." "We'll have to get a doctor." "There's one at the first house in the village." "That's the girl." "Well, what kind of bogey did you see?" "I didn't see anything." "Fainted out of sheer cussedness, huh?" "I can only remember the cold coming." "Hello, Stella." "Hello." "You suddenly felt cold?" "It wasn't just that." "The room went cold and I was frightened." "Yes." "Well, you just forget about it for a bit." "Miss Fitzgerald has got some soup for you." "See if you can get her to take some." "She'll do all right." "But it's quite a nasty case of shock." "That's all?" "You're quite sure?" "Sit down." " You see, I brought her here." "Take that neat." "Can't she stay the night here?" "Oh, yes." "But suppose that spook starts howling." "Oh, your spook." " It's just an echo from a cave probably," "But it sounds like a spook." "I'd rather risk it than move her tonight." "There was some rather queer business earlier this evening." "The cliff is so close and she walked right to the edge," "And if I hadn't caught her..." " We'll keep a close watch." "Well, did she take her soup?" "Eight spoonfuls, and then drifted off to sleep." "Splendid." "She'll sleep for hours now." "We'll keep on watch here." "You better go to bed, Miss Fitzgerald." "You're looking all in." "I'd rather watch with you." "Would you like some coffee?" " Oh, thanks." "Oh, Pam, who do you think's moved in with dr." "Scott?" "Our Bobby." " No!" "I found the poor dog in the street one day." "He was in a pitiable state of nerves." "How is he now?" " Fine." "Bobby was the very first to see the ghost." "Pamela believes it." " Stop hiding your head in the sand." "You heard the sounds last night." "Lizzie's been half frightened out of her wits" "And Stella's been in deadly danger twice." "Everyone in the village knows the house is strange." "I expected support from you." "You must tell us everything you know about the place after I've made the coffee." "Unfortunately, I'm a newcomer to biddlecombe." "You see, I've only lived here 12 years." "Oh!" "It's not ancient history to us." "Please go on." "The model's name was Carmel." "She was spanish... a spanish gypsy, and a thorough bad lot." "So was Meredith, from what I can gather." "Didn't Mrs. Meredith suspect?" " She must have, the thing was an open scandal." "The girl and he'd have been stoned out of the village" "If it hadn't been for mary Meredith." "She was very much admired." "I suppose she just accepted the situation." "And she's still sobbing her heart out about it." "Where's Carmel now?" " Dead." "She died in this very house," "A week after mary fell from the cliff trying to save her from suicide." "Ironic, wasn't it?" " Is it known why the girl tried to kill herself?" "Meredith's said to have tired of her." "Think of it... those two women struggling on the cliff." "I wonder if mary's death could have been murder?" "It's been hinted at, all right." "The whole story was dug up and embroidered" "When Stella's father died." "When was that?" " Three years ago, abroad." "He never came back to windward." "All of them dead with their secrets." "One of them's not quite dead enough for me." "Don't say that about the poor soul." "I tell you, Rick, if a spirit comes back," "It's for some particular purpose." "That's my sister's special crotchet." "We've got to find out what it is." "I wish I knew some more, but I'm afraid I don't." "What time is your wailing lady due?" "About dawn." "Well, we ought to know each other pretty well by then." "21 hand." "I'm out." "Is it my deal?" " It was two hours ago." "5:30." "Yes, moaning martha seems to have missed her cue." "Rick, have you brought some more flowers in?" "No." "Why?" "Don't you notice the scent?" "It's overpowering." "Dr. Scott: extraordinary." "Heliotrope, isn't it?" "No." "No, it's mimosa." "There's a light!" "Where did that come from?" "It's like a night-Light." "She's gone!" "Rick, the window!" "What is it?" " Where are you, Stella?" "Don't be afraid, Stella." "Afraid?" "Well, we were a little." "I wanted to see the dawn... with her." "Her?" "Don't you know who it is in your house?" "It's my Mother." " You saw her?" "I didn't see her," "But when I woke, she was here in the room." "It was full of her scent." "I could feel her presence everywhere." "And there was something else... something I've never known in my whole life." "Rick: what?" "The knowledge that... someone loved me very dearly." "Now, come on, young Stella, I'll take you home." "But I don't want to go." "Sorry, but I've got to get some sleep, you know." "But I can come back?" "No." "What do you mean?" "You couldn't want to keep me away from her." "Stella, remember how ill you were last night?" "But that was nothing to do with her." "I was just frightened after what Lizzie said." "I tell you, my Mother would never hurt me." "I shan't be afraid again, please." "I'm sorry." "It's just that my knees are wobbly." "Come along." "Dr. Scott will drive you home." "I wonder what I've done to her, Pamela," "Bringing her here." "Don't blame yourself." "But that look in her eyes... that terrible happiness." "Oh!" "Wait a minute, Rick." "Perhaps she's nearer right than we are." "She's what?" " Perhaps she's right in being happy." "Supposing mary Meredith's spirit had been searching for Stella," "And now that it's found her, it's found peace." "Suppose we haven't a ghost anymore." "Where are you going?" "To the studio." "How has it always shown itself in the past?" "Sobbing sounds downstairs" "And cold and depression in the studio." "There wasn't any sobbing tonight," "Only warmth and fragrance." "But why the studio?" " I'll know in there." "I'll know whether it's a decent human room." "Won't you?" "It may not be quite so cold, really." "Stop it, Pam." "It's clammy and rotten." "Whatever it is, it's in here with us." "Let's get out." "Mary Meredith, please." "Please!" "We're sorry you had to suffer." "Isn't that enough?" "What more do you want?" "You were right about one thing, Pam." "We haven't a ghost anymore..." "we've got two of them!" "Is commander Beech at home?" "He won't be back until this evening, sir." "It's Stella that I really want to see." "Won't you come in, sir?" "I'll tell her." " Thank you." "Miss Stella's in her room, sir." "I'll..." "Rick." " Stella." "I knew you couldn't mean it." " Mean what?" "Haven't you come to take me to windward?" "No, Stella." "You mustn't go there again, ever." "Listen, darling," "I've thought this thing out," "And you must go away from here." "Go away?" " Yes, forever." "You wouldn't care?" "Not in the least, because I'll be coming with you." "It won't be luxury... just the smallest London flat... but it will be ours." "And no unseen, uninvited guests." "And windward?" " We'll tear it down and forget it." "And my Mother?" "But Stella, you're talking of a dream and a memory." "I'm talking about my Mother." "She's been waiting for me." "In some queer sort of way," "I always knew it." "But what about me?" "I was under the impression that you cared for me." "This hasn't anything to do with you." "You talk about destroying that house... you'd be tearing me apart." "Stop it, Stella." "Do you care for me, or don't you?" "I can't think about you, not while she's out there." "Take me there, Rick." "But this is horrible, unhealthy stuff." "Put it out of your mind, Stella." "Turn your back on the past and run, run hard!" "I'll go there somehow." "You won't, I promise you." "I hate you for that." "Stella!" "You shan't make me forget her!" "You shan't!" "Oh!" "That's enough, Bobby, that's enough!" "You'll get lipstick poisoning." "He's got a passion for hard-boiled eggs." "Did you know?" " And turnip tops." "I don't think he has any idea he's a dog." "Not really." "Of course, he thinks he has a rather odd figure for a man." "I didn't question him very closely about where he belonged." "You see, I was afraid I might find out." "I'm sorry now." " You're sorry?" "Yes." "I should have met you sooner." "Rick: are you there, scott?" "In here." "Did you see Stella?" "Yes, I did." "Scott, you've got to do something about that girl." "She's on the edge of a nervous collapse." " You're telling me?" "This is hardly a case for a country doctor, you know." "When does the commander get back?" "Last train tonight." "Heaven help young Stella then." "Can't you convince her that her Mother" "Wouldn't want her to go near that blasted house?" "Not i." "She's been listening for a voice" "That's been still for 17 years." "I can give her a sedative." "Why don't we try to get a message from mary Meredith?" "Do what?" " We could hold a seance." "You're not serious!" "That's how the dead are supposed to communicate with the living." "According to the idiot fringe." "You have no right to say that." "Many intelligent people believe in spiritualism." "Have you ever been to a seance?" "I have." " Shaded lights, the alphabet laid out on a table," "An upside-Down wine glass, messages from somebody's uncle oswald," "How to find a mislaid toothbrush... oh!" "Oh, stop scoffing, Rick." "Not all seances are faked." "All right, we'll have a seance." "It shouldn't be difficult to move a wine glass around and say it's mary Meredith." "What do you think, scott?" " Leave me out of this." "I won't let you cheat Stella." "But what do you expect mary Meredith to tell her?" "Entrust your life to a tall, dark man, excruciatingly handsome?" "Crikey, no!" "I want to set Stella's mind at rest." "She's about torn in two." " Well, I will say this... unless the conflict inside her is stopped," "It may even affect her reason." "Well, here's a message that might do it..." "Stella, this is your Mother." "Since I've found you, I've found peace." "Stay away from windward house." "But Stella would have to be at the seance." " Naturally." "It'll have to be at windward, and it's dangerous for her to be there." "But we'd be with her all the time." " It may be worth a try." "The important thing is that we should all believe... isn't it, dr." "Scott?" "So I understand." "What now?" "Everybody puts a finger on the glass." "Perhaps you should ask some questions, Stella." "Is anybody here?" "Stella: are you my Mother?" "You don't want me to stay away from windward, do you, Mother?" "I knew it, Mother." "I want to be near you, too." "Is that why you stay here, just to be near me?" "But you're holding it, Rick." "And you, dr." "Scott, holding it hard." "Take your fingers off." "Is that your reason, darling," "Just to be near me?" "But what else?" "I... g... u... a... 'i guard.'" "You mean, you guard me, from some danger?" "But what?" "C... a... r... m..." "Rick, 'Carmel'!" "That's enough." " It is, indeed." "Let's go into the other room." "Stella, what is it?" "!" "Are you ill, Stella?" " Quiet." "Leave her alone." "Oignan." "Oignan!" "Stop her, scott." " Shh." "She's in a trance." "I saw this happen once before at a seance." "I thought it was a fake." "But this isn't." " I know, and it's dangerous." "May I ask her some questions?" " No, no!" "It may be best to try and reach her mind." "Now keep your voice quiet and reassuring." "Are you mary Meredith, Stella's Mother?" "Eya no'e." "Eya no'e." "No le crean na!" "No le pongan oidos que esta mintiendo." "Don't ask her anymore!" "That's the doorbell." "Shall I answer it?" "Lizzie's at the jessups." "No, don't move until she's over the worst of this." "So ladrona!" "Ladrona de mi carino!" "That's spanish, isn't it, scott?" " I don't know." "Rick, the mimosa scent!" "The room's full of it!" "Mary Meredith's in here, too!" "The cold." "It's never been cold in here." "Candles!" "Look at the candles!" "I'd better answer it." " All right." "Stop, Pamela!" "Don't go near that door." "It's coming toward us!" "What in thunder is this?" "!" "Stella!" "Stella, it's all right now." "We must get her out." " Yes." "What have you been doing to the child?" "What's the meaning of this, dr." "Scott?" "I can't explain now, commander." "This is incredible behavior!" "Quietly, Stella, quietly." "There's nothing to be frightened of." "Control yourself, child!" " Don't speak to her like that!" "You're responsible for this..." "you and your criminal meddling." "I am and so are you." "Why didn't you tell us the truth about the house?" "I warned you." " Only of idle gossip!" "Perhaps you'd like your money back." "You shall have it..." "the entire purchase price." "No, thank you, commander." "I know this now..." "Stella will never be well until this house is cured." "And somehow, we're going to cure it!" "Dr. Scott, have the goodness to drive us home." "There." "Now you'll sleep all right." "I'll be here early in the morning." "Stella is no longer your patient, nor am i." "But someone must look after her." "That is not your concern, dr." "Scott." "I shall be at your disposal at any hour, remember." "Thank you." "Everything will be all right." "Won't you come in, Miss Holloway?" "Is she asleep?" " Not yet." "Hello, Stella." "Miss Holloway." "Go to sleep, Stella." "Dr. Scott tells me she went into a trance tonight... spoke some words they thought were spanish." "How did she happen to be at windward?" "The people who bought the place are searching into its past." "Are they indeed!" "Can you make the child well again?" "I hope so." "It won't be a short process." "She's far more ill than you imagine." "She won't want to go with you." "She's never outgrown her childish fear of you." "I could have cured it years ago if you'd let me have her," "As mary would have wished me to." "Her place was in mary's home." "I've taught her to be like mary in every way." "How can you say such a thing?" "!" "She's not so beautiful, of course." "Miss Holloway: mary was a goddess!" "Her skin was radiant, and that bright, bright hair!" "How this room brings her back to me." "The nights we sat talking in front of that fireplace," "Planning our whole lives." "It wasn't flirtations and dresses we talked about." "We were no silly, giggling girls." "We intended to conquer life." "You at least did." "Will you try to take mary's place with her now?" "I'll do my best." "Miss Holloway: she's asleep." "If you'll call my chauffeur, he'll carry her downstairs." "It will be better for her to wake at my place." "I'm deeply grateful to you." "So they're searching into the past?" "They shan't ever find out, my darling... i promise you!" "Rick: elizabeth Flynn, where are you?" "I'm here, Mr. Roderick." "And will you please come here at once?" "Don't we get any breakfast?" "What's the matter?" "Oh... oh, that!" "That happened last night." "I am not talking about that." "I am talking about this." "The anagram letters?" "Yes, yes." "Anagrams, is it?" "Don't you try to bluff me, Mr. Roderick." "'Tis a heathen device to call devils out of hell." "Stop looking at me as though you were going to take away my bicycle." "I will not stay in a house where it goes on," "And that is an ultimato!" "Oh, come now, Lizzie." "From now on we're through with all this rubbish." "We're going after the facts." " What facts?" "The facts about this blasted haunting." "Rick, why burden Lizzie with this?" "Whisht now, Miss Pam." "Where will we start, Mr. Rick?" "I don't know." "Everybody seems to be dead." "The trained nurse isn't." " What trained nurse?" "She was here when it happened... the friend of the poor lady that went over the cliff." "Where did you hear all this?" "Now what do you suppose we talk of at the jessups?" "It was the trained nurse that shouted down" "To Mr. Jessup on the shore." "Was jessup in on the tragedy?" "He was after some lost sheep." "The tide was out, so he went down." "And as he passed under the dead tree," "He heard a scream." " Mrs. Meredith?" "No, 'twas the scream of a terrified child." "And as he ran towards it," "The poor lady came crashing down." "'Twas then that the nurse called." "Lizzie Flynn, you're a gold mine." "Now if we could only get the name of this nurse." "Sure, that's easy." "Wait now." "Mr. Jessup!" " Yes, Mrs. Flynn?" "What was the name of Mrs. Meredith's" "Trained nurse... the one that got so famous and grand?" "Miss Holloway." " Ah!" "Miss Holloway." "She's a big, fine place of her own now... a hospital, like." "'Tis on bodmin moor." "She calls it 'the mary Meredith retreat.'" "Mr. And Miss Fitzgerald?" " Yes." "Won't you come in?" " Thank you." "Wait in there, please." "I will announce you to Miss Holloway." "The place is quite stunning, isn't it?" "Why are you whispering?" "Why are you?" "Ooh!" "A gentleman!" "How very unusual." "Good afternoon." " Oh, dear me... yes." "Good afternoon." "Good afternoon." "Are you by any chance waiting to see Miss Holloway?" "Yes, we have an appointment." "What lucky people." "And what luck for me, too," "Because I'm sure you won't mind... but perhaps you will." " Is there something we can do?" "Oh, if you'd be so very kind." "You see," "This isn't my day for an interview," "And I want her to have these." "What are they... bird's eggs?" "Ooh!" "But that's very funny," "Because you see, I'm Miss Bird." "They're just little stones," "Because she likes simple things," "And she has so many flowers." "There isn't much else one can find." "Well, I'll give them to her." "Thank you." "And now, I... think I'll just go out for a little walk." "Go back to your work at once, Miss Nird!" "Don't forget!" "Woman: will you come this way, please?" "Shall I take them?" " No, I'll deliver them." "As you wish." "Come in." "How do you do?" " How do you do?" "This is so kind of you." "I was asked to give you these by a Miss Bird, I believe." "Poor Miss Bird." "Our saddest case." "They're really very fine stones, aren't they?" "I must remember to thank her for them." "She comes to me once a week for a little chat." "Won't you sit down?" " Thank you." "Miss Holloway, forgive our ignorance, but we know so very little of your work." "Is it with mental patients?" "Not patients, Miss Fitzgerald, just guests." "In a way this is like a hotel... where there are beautiful things to look at, music to hear," "And a little sympathy." "But don't let's talk about me." "You told me on the telephone about disturbances at windward." "How can I help you?" "We thought, perhaps, you could tell us" "What mary and Carmel were really like." "They were extraordinary women, both of them." "Mary Meredith was the finest human being I even knew." "Is that she?" " Yes." "And Carmel?" " She was exceptional, too." "I never saw such intensity of evil." "She was a spanish gypsy... crafty, cruel!" "I'm sorry." "Why did Mrs. Meredith put up with it?" "She thought Meredith should be the one to end the wretched affair." "And did he?" " Oh, yes, in time." "She and Meredith took the girl to paris," "Found a position for her, left her well supplied with money." "Then they came back here with their baby." "For a time it seemed as if" "There was some possibility of happiness." "And then?" " Carmel came back." "She still wanted mary's husband." "You know how it ended." "A neighbor of ours spoke of something we can't quite understand." "He mentions a child crying on the cliff that night." "A terrified child." "Oh." "That's a part of the story so... ugly I've never mentioned it before." "We're sorry to distress you." "That night, the girl Carmel" "Had been told she must leave windward." "If she could have killed both mary and her husband she would have done so." "A better plan flashed into her wicked little brain." "She went into the nursery," "Picked up their baby, and raced to the cliff." "Good heavens!" " Mary was after it in a second," "Meredith and I close behind." "Carmel reached the cliff by the dead tree." "For a moment, I saw them struggling," "Then Carmel raised her arm..." "and struck mary down." "Then it was murder?" "The will to kill had always been there, I think." "Directed against Stella." "Can that be what survives?" "Maybe that accounts for Stella's queer business on the cliff." "What was that?" "Something in that house drove her out toward the edge," "And if I hadn't caught her, she'd have gone over." "Would she indeed?" "How very curious." "Please finish your story." "It was finished." "Everything was finished." "Meredith went down the cliff." "Mary was dead when he reached her." "And Carmel?" "She ran out into the storm." "Next morning she crawled back in the early stages of pneumonia." "I fought for Carmel's life, day and night," "Hating her all the time!" "How awful for you." "I'm sorry, I discipline others... i can't discipline myself." "There." "Have I told you everything you want to know?" "All except one thing." "That last night, who told Carmel she must go?" "Why, mary... i should say Meredith." "It's the one decent thing i ever knew him to do." "This is all extremely..." "I'm sorry." "May I offer you tea?" "Thank you, but we must get back before our maid leaves." "She won't stay at windward after dark." "I'm afraid I haven't been much help with your problem." "Thank you anyway, and goodbye." "Goodbye." "Good afternoon, my dear." "Do you want to see me?" "I've been asking for you all day." "I'm being treated as though I were insane." "Has anyone used that word?" "I've told them a thousand times... it isn't a question of a word." "My door's kept locked and there's a queer look in their eyes." "Oh." "You feel persecuted." "No." "About the cliff at windward, Stella... what did you feel as you ran toward it?" "I didn't feel anything." "I was sad in the house... was it as though some will were directing you," "A will stronger than yours?" "The sea sounded loud and beautiful." "I just went in that direction." "In fact, you don't quite know." "I want to see my grandfather, Miss Holloway." "You will, in time." "Does grandfather know what this place is like?" "That woman who laughs." "I hear laughing all night!" "And that other woman that... your grandfather's sorry that you have to be here," "But he knows you'll be better soon." "Better?" "But I'm perfectly all right!" "I wouldn't say that, Stella, dear." "And please don't keep asking to see me." "Why do you hate me, Miss Holloway?" "You see... you do feel persecuted." "Rick, if I should ever happen to lose my mind... i don't think you'll lose it." "It might rattle to one side." "But if I do, no mary Meredith retreat for me." "Plain, old-Fashioned lunatic asylum," "Not that creepy horror!" "You'll have a lovely talk with Miss Holloway once a week." "Brrr." " You think she was lying to us?" "About the past?" "Why should she?" "She wasn't going to tell us about the baby." "And later, she made that one break." "Admitting it was mary who told Carmel to go." "Why try to hide it?" "It was a normal human reaction." "Made me like mary better, as a matter of fact." "I was getting awfully bored with her perfection." "Why would Miss Holloway want to turn her into a plaster saint?" "Maybe she likes plaster saints." "She's one herself." "Thank you, doctor." "I assure you that when that healthy young man laughs," "He isn't being delirious." " Goodbye, doctor." "Oh, hello!" "Come in." "Hello." "What news with Stella?" " None, and I won't be having any." "Her grandfather's kicked me out." "Where have you been all day?" "To the middle of bodmin moor and back." "Seeing a Miss Holloway." " What?" "Holy Holloway" "Of 'wealth through harmony'?" "What do you know about her?" " Nothing really," "Except that dr." "Rudd, my predecessor," "Had some sort of prejudice against her." "She says Carmel killed mary Meredith." "Yes, she was there." "Nursed Carmel afterwards." "Could we talk to dr." "Rudd about her?" "Only if we have another seance." "I wonder..." " What?" "It's only the very faintest chance," "Of course, but come on upstairs." "1908 to '11, '12 to '15, '16 to '19." "Here we are." "It happened in the winter." "Yes, let's start with november." "From his handwriting," "Dr. Rudd must have been 200 years old." "Measles, measles, measles," "Whooping cough, measles, appendicitis." "Pleasant change for the old boy." "Here we are." "Called to windward house." "Meredith's model, Carmel quesada, double pneumonia." "Quesada girl much worse." "No attempt to warm the bedroom." "Found traces of snow on the floor." "Snow?" "Then the window was left open." "Spoke severely to nurse." "Returned to windward this evening." "Patient dead." "Nurse Holloway threatened me" "With legal action when I used the words," "'Criminal negligence.'" "But that means..." " To a doctor of rudd's generation," "It was very apt to mean murder." "Miss Holloway murdered Carmel?" "Doctor." " In a quiet, ladylike way." "Doctor!" " Yes, edith?" "The commander's maid's on the phone." "You're to come at once." "Is it Miss Meredith?" " It's the commander." "Took awful bad, the maid says." "All right, edith." "You take this home." "There may be some other details." "I'll be along later." "He's in here, doctor." "I undid his shoes." "It was all I knew how to do." "Bad one this time, scott." " Yes, I know." "Hold that under his nose." "Want an apology, scott?" "You'd get it," "If you stuck out for it." " No, thanks." "I'll have you right in a jiffy." "Who's there?" "!" "Now who do you suppose is there?" "Hello, Lizzie." "I'm sitting in your Mother's chair," "And if any ghost comes along," "I'll let out a scream that would frighten the life out of it." "What's happened?" "I feel the wickedness of this house gathering around." "Come on, now." "Hop off to the jessups." "I'm not going." "I'll be found dead in me bed in the morning," "Stiff with fright, and me death will be on you." " Me?" "!" " How do I know what devilment" "You'll be up to when me back is turned?" "I promise you we'll do nothing tonight" "That the priest wouldn't approve of." "Lord bless you, Mr. Rick." "I was hoping you'd say that." "I'll go and get me hat and coat." "Find anything new?" "Nothing after that entry." "How about a whiskey and soda?" "Less soda than usual, thanks." "Awful if we took to drink, both of us." "Well, it's an ideal house for delirium tremens." "Before you take a sip," "Don't you smell mimosa?" "Yes." "Are you scared?" "I wish i'd wake up." "It came from the nursery last night." "You have the great nose of the family." "Not a trace of it now." "It's strongest here." " It's almost overpowering." "I wish you'd tell us what you want, mary Meredith!" "Mr. Rick?" " Yes?" "I forgot to ask." "Did you find out anything today?" "Just turned up a couple of murders." "Holy saints preserve us." "Answer the door." "It's probably dr." "Scott." "Good evening, dr." "Scott." " Evening, Lizzie." "In here." " Good night, Miss Pam." "Good night." " Good night." "I'm glad to find you here." " How's the commander?" "It's not him I'm worried about." "It's Stella." "What's the matter with her?" " She's at Miss Holloway's." "We can't let her stay there." "We've got to get her tonight." "That's the way I feel, but don't let's get hysterical." "Miss Holloway was her Mother's best friend." "The idea of her spending an hour in that place is horrible." "Can you get the old boy's permission?" "He's far too ill." "We've no authority whatever." "Then we'll do it without." " Shall we take the casebook?" "We might be able to frighten her with it." "Yes." "No, wait..." "We'll describe what we found and then pile it on a bit, huh?" "Let's go to a telephone." "Yes?" "Yes." "It's no bother at all, Miss Fitzgerald." "I'll be glad to see you again." "Are you motoring?" "In two hours." "Goodbye." "Bring in Miss Meredith." "I may need the car this evening." "Good evening, my dear." "Come in." "Sit down." "I thought you'd feel more at home here." "I do, Miss Holloway." "I've been giving your problem" "The most serious consideration." "It's not much of a problem." "I just want to go home." "To your grandfather's?" "I couldn't permit that." "You've never been very happy there." "Where would you really like to be?" "You mean windward?" "That's the basis of all your trouble," "Being kept away from there." "Do you think she wants you there?" "Yes, I think she does." "And what she wants, I want." "I've talked with the fitzgeralds." "They're very fond of you." "They'll let me stay there with them?" "For the present, your grandfather's" "Not to know that you've left here." "It would worry him." "You must go straight to windward." "Is that clear?" "Miss Holloway," "I'm the happiest person in the world." "There's a train in 40 minutes." "My car will take you to the station." "Good evening." "Won't you come in?" "Oh, but I must announce you!" "Don't bother." "We'll announce ourselves." "Good evening." "So you've thought of some more questions?" "Why didn't you tell us Stella was here?" "The presence of my guests is confidential." "We've come to take her." " This is Stella's doctor." "Oh, I begin to understand." "This is a rescue party." "I must ask you to take me to Stella at once." "There was a time when I would have resented" "Such impertinence, particularly from a doctor" "Whose conduct leaves so much to be desired." "Please stop beating about the bush." "I couldn't be angry with anyone tonight." "You know those moments when the light is very clear," "When the scales at last swing" "Into perfect balance." "Where is Stella?" "!" " Tell them, Miss ellis." "She's on the train for biddlecombe." "The 9:20." "On her way home." "Is that true?" " She'll be there long before you." "What happened?" " Nothing happened." "She wasn't very happy here." "I can't be of any help to people who are unhappy." "She went to her grandfather's?" "No." " Not to windward house." "Better than that." "To the cliff... and the rocks below the cliff." "You let her?" "!" " That's were mary went." "That's where she died." "She's out of her mind." "Come on!" "Stella has a 20-Minute start!" "She had such a lonely sound." "Every seventh wave." "You'd better look after her." " Miss Holloway!" "What's the matter, Miss Holloway?" "Get out of this room!" "I've done what she wanted at last." "Haven't i, mary?" "It's all straight now." "There are no frayed edges." "No loose ends." "All straight." "All smooth." "These local trains are very slow, you know." "But this one had a head start." "You needn't worry." "She can't get into the house." "You did lock the door, didn't you, Pam?" "No, I thought you did." "Will you be all right?" " Oh, yes." "I'll be all right, now." "I'll be with my friends." "Pamela!" "Rick!" "Pamela, are you there?" "Rick!" "Where are you, please?" "Lizzie?" "Is that you?" "Stella." "Stella." "Grandfather!" "Grandfather!" "Stella, my child." "What's the matter?" "What are you doing here?" "Someone telephoned" "From Miss Holloway's." "And you walked all that way?" "Well, I had to get here." "Don't try and talk, darling." "I'll get dr." "Scott." "Oh, dear there's no telephone in this house." "Go." "Go!" "You can't be left alone." "But the danger is for you." "Please get out of this house, now." "Now lie back quietly." "I'm not afraid of anything here." "Then be afraid!" "Be afraid, for heaven's sake." "When you were a little child," "After her death," "The evils of this house reached out for you." "I took you away then." "If I could only take you now." "It's all right, we're together." "Stella!" "Go!" "Grandfather!" "I won't be afraid, Mother." "Stella!" "Stella!" "Stella, stop!" "Hold on, darling." "We've got you now." "Hang on." "Are you all right?" "Yes." " Sure?" "Dr. Scott, grandfather's in the studio." "He's terribly ill." "We'd better get to him at once." "There's nothing I can do, my dear." "I knew." "She killed him just as she tried to kill me." "My own Mother!" " No, Stella." "But I tell you I saw my Mother" "Just as my father painted her." "It must have been Carmel." " It wasn't." "Steady, Stella." "Unless... unless perhaps Miss Holloway was right." "Perhaps it's my mind." "Oh, Rick!" " No, darling, no." "The mimosa scent, it's flooding the room." "It's all right, darling." "Nothing will hurt you." "But I'm not frightened." "This is what I felt in the nursery that night." "The book!" "What's doing it?" "The wind." "But what about the mimosa?" "We're letting our imaginations" "Play hob with our senses." "11:15 a.M. Mary ann hardy." "Broken arm." "Second this year." "It's imagination, all right." "What did I expect?" "Wait a minute." "3:20 p.M., Called to windward house" "To attend Meredith's model who had fainted." "It didn't take much skill to find the reason." "Girl in poor physical condition," "But I'm sure her great happiness will carry her through." "Then Carmel had a baby, too?" "5:10 p.M. Mrs. Meredith came to see me." "Expected tears, hysteria." "Instead, icy control and a dominating desire" "That the girl's condition be kept secret." "I should have more sympathy with the lady" "If I did not know how she herself has feared" "And refused motherhood." "What can it all mean?" "Where were you born, Stella?" "In paris." " Where they took Carmel" "Before they came back with their baby." "But surely you don't think... i think mary adopted Carmel's child," "Gave her a home and a name on the condition" "Carmel never came back here." "She couldn't live up to it." "She had to be near her baby." "But Rick, it doesn't fit." "The mimosa scent that comes with the gentle ghost," "That was mary's scent." "Stella's father told her." "No." "No, my father only wrote it was my Mother's scent." "I'm Carmel's child." "Stella, don't mind too much." "Mind?" "Can't you see what it's done for me?" "Always there's been something fighting in me," "Something that couldn't be calm and cold like Mary." "I can be myself now." "That's what she's waited all these years to tell you." "Oh, Mother, now I know!" "She's happy now." "The scent's gone." "She won't cry anymore." "She's gone forever." "Will you come back to my house now?" "Please, Stella." " Come along, darling." "All right." "Get her out through the nursery, quick!" "What is it, the cold?" " Go on, Pam!" "What are you going to do?" "!" " Help Stella, please." "Mary Meredith," "Where are you?" "It's time somebody faced that icy rage of yours." "What do you want?" "It's Stella, isn't it?" "It's too late, mary." "You see," "We're on to you now." "You told Carmel to clear out and leave her baby," "But Meredith wouldn't stand for it." "And to spite them, you tried to kill their child," "And instead went hurtling over the cliff yourself." "Gives your saintly legend rather a black eye, doesn't it?" "Oh, so you don't like the sound of laughter, do you?" "But that's all you'll get from now on." "I should think you'd be on your way now." "We've had enough." "We're not frightened of you anymore." "From now on this house is for the living!" "Rick, are you all right?" "Let me in, Rick!" "Oh, Rick!" " You all right, Fitzgerald?" "Yes, fine." "She's gone, Stella." "Look!" "He'd never go near those stairs before." "Bobby'll be back tomorrow." "I think we'll be having other plans for Bobby." "You're still shaking, Rick." "Well, I've had a narrow escape." "She might have been my mother-in-law."