"Grant, Maxwell - Road.of.Crime" - читать интересную книгу автора (Grant Maxwell)

ROAD OF CRIME by Maxwell Grant As originally published in "The Shadow Magazine," October 1, 1933. The Road of Crime. It leads through various ways - but in the end it comes to The Shadow, creature of justice and vengeance! CHAPTER I A GENTLEMAN OF CRIME "UXTRY! Uxtry! Read about the big bank holdups!" Graham Wellerton stopped as he heard the newsboy's cry. He proffered a few pennies and received the final edition of a New York evening newspaper. He glanced at the headlines as he walked along in the bright illumination of Forty-second Street, then thrust the sheet under his arm as he entered a subway kiosk. While he waited on the platform for an uptown local, Graham Wellerton again surveyed the headlines. His eyes ran rapidly down the columns. After a few short minutes of swift perusal, the man quickly learned that no new clews had been gained by the police relative to the crimes that had struck at noon that day.
Subway riders were reading their newspapers with avid interest when Graham Wellerton boarded his local and took a seat in a corner. His own newspaper tucked under his arm, Graham surveyed the composite crowd in the car and wondered what their varied reactions might be concerning the chief news of the day. For New York sensation seekers had been treated to a contrast. The columns in the evening journals were, in themselves, food for a grim debate on crime. Was crime profitable? One news account said no; the other said yes. Two hordes of bank bandits had struck at noon, in different parts of Manhattan. Those who had invaded the Parkerside Trust Company had been routed in a spontaneous fray which had left half a dozen mobsters dead and wounded. But those who had entered the Terminal National Bank had gained swift success. With the aid of tear gas, they had eliminated tellers and bank patrons. The robbers had escaped unscathed with thousands of dollars in currency. STUDYING his fellow passengers, Graham Wellerton placed them in two definite classes. One group, he felt, consisted of those who gloried in the victory over crime - who gained high satisfaction in the outcome of the fray at the Parkerside Trust. The others, Graham decided, were those who held a secret envy for robbers who had looted the Terminal National and had made so perfect a get-away. Idly, Graham played a game of human analysis. He noted the people who were reading about the thwarted robbery. Most of them possessed an air of stability. Those who were eagerly perusing the accounts of the successful raid, however,