"Maxwell Grant - The Shadow - 279 - The Freak Show Murders" - читать интересную книгу автора (Grant Maxwell) The butler grabbed Steve first. Together they went reeling toward the
window. Oddly it wasn't any thought of escape that made Steve swing the struggle in that direction. His own plight seemed mild compared with the fact that The Harlequin was escaping, and he hoped that at the window, they might spot the fleeing murderer. But when the butler tried to haul Steve back, using his throat as a handle so he couldn't even talk, the folly of it maddened Steve. Driving the heel of his hand right to the butler's chin, Steve sent the fellow back against the desk. Finding himself free, Steve vaulted the sill in The Harlequin's style, beckoning, for Treft's men to follow. What followed was a big-throated blast from the shotgun. Fortunately Steve was below the window level when it came, but he remembered that the shotgun had two barrels. Rather than take chances with the second, Steve made for the magnolias and was flattening among them when the second blast came roaring from the window. The tree boughs crackled overhead and amid a shower of withering blossoms, Steve decided not to wait until his pursuer reloaded. Besides, Steve wanted to find The Harlequin, so he took off down the driveway, which seemed the logical path that the murderer would have taken. From then on, the real nightmare began. gunfire from the mansion had roused all drowsing retainers. Dashing down the driveway, Steve saw flashlights glaring from a gateway through which he had driven on his way here. Turning, he fled back to the house, just as shotguns ripped; thanks to the curve of the driveway, the volley didn't reach him. But there were other lights ahead and they meant gunners from the mansion, so Steve took to a side driveway that he fancied would lead him to a distant gate, which it would have, if he followed it. He didn't because he saw other lights approaching him, so in desperation, Steve stumbled off among the trees, hoping he would arrive anywhere except among Treft's men. By then, Steve had lost all sense of direction. He was combining two policies; one, to keep going as fast as he could run or stumble; the other, to avoid all lights. As a result, his course became a swift but uncertain zigzag that must have turned him full about. For the lights seemed everywhere, blinking distantly through the trees, and Steve shied from them as if they were the shotguns that they represented. There were shouts, too, that seemed to indicate some diabolical design on the part of Steve's misguided hunters. They were trying to box him somewhere and wherever it was, Steve didn't want to find the place. He remembered that Treft's extensive estate was fenced with high iron pickets, because he had driven half way around it to reach the front road. Obviously Treft's aggregation was |
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