"Grant, Maxwell - The.Grove.of.Doon" - читать интересную книгу автора (Grant Maxwell)

THE GROVE OF DOOM by Maxwell Grant As originally published in "The Shadow Magazine," September 1, 1933. Death lurked in this grove of beautiful trees - death that stalked an estranged family. How did The Shadow learn the answer? CHAPTER I THE ARRIVAL LONG ISLAND SOUND lay blanketed with a dense, sullen mist. From the shore, the heavy fog appeared as a grimy mass of solid blackness. The scene was one of swirling, impenetrable night, for not a gleam of light disturbed that omnipresent darkness. No eye could have discerned the spot where shore ceased and water began. The rocks beside the beach were invisible, and so was the man who stood near them. The only token of his presence was the sound of his slow, steady breathing, broken by the low, impatient growls that came muffled from his throat. Beneath his feet, this man could feel the crunch of sand. Listening intently, he could catch the faint lapping of the water as it gnawed the fringe
of the sloping beach. Every noise that came from the fog-covered reaches of the Sound caused this man to stop his slow pacing. The faint chugging of a motorboat; the distant deep-blasted whistle of a passing steamship - these evidences of human beings far out upon the water were not what the man awaited. He was watching uselessly, listening vainly, hoping for a more subtle signal. A dimly luminous circle showed upon the man's wrist. It was the dial of a watch. It registered three o'clock. The man growled angrily. This vigil had persisted for three hours, but no result had been obtained. The fog that had imperiled navigation upon Long Island Sound was evidently playing hob with well-calculated plans. No ray of light could reach this shore. Even sounds were muffled by the shroud of never-ceasing mist. The waiting man did not end his watchfulness. His slow, incessant paces dug deep into the dampness of the sand. He scruffed the granular material with his toes, as though to obliterate the marks that he had made. Suddenly, he came to a standstill, listening once more. Through the fog came a strange, awesome sound. It was a low, penetrating whistle that carried a peculiar note. In this environment, that floating noise was frightening as it came from the seemingly solid sand bank. But fear was not the emotion that possessed the man who heard the whistle. That was the signal he had expected. With fingers to his mouth, the waiting man emitted a similar sound. A LONG pause followed. A chance drifting of the fog opened a momentary space out beyond the shore. Glimmering lights, high up, cast a dull glare that