"Maxwell Grant - The Shadow - 304 - Alibi Trail" - читать интересную книгу автора (Grant Maxwell) ALIBI TRAIL
by Maxwell Grant As originally published in "The Shadow Magazine," June 1946. A strange Spanish playing card, a baggage check and a bank check are the only clue guiding The Shadow along a trail of crime and death. Can the Master of Darkness throw light on the forces of evil and bring them to justice? CHAPTER I The big private transport tricycled itself into a landing that was rather miraculous considering the thickening fog that was turning the ground flares into smudge pots. What made it all the tougher was the limited size of this little-used flying field on Long Island. It looked like an emergency landing, but it wasn't. The whole thing was planned and Jerry Reeth knew it. That was why he was here, waiting by the hangar, and trying to look inconspicuous. The plane had a good pilot, otherwise he wouldn't have made it, so on the pilot's account, Jerry was pleased at the nice landing. That was quite a concession on Jerry's part, considering that Brenda Van Dolphe was on the plane. She was one person toward whom Jerry Reeth extended anything but wishes for a happy landing, despite the fact he'd never met the girl. Right now, however, Jerry Reeth intended to meet Brenda Van Dolphe. the swirl of the night fog. Jerry hurried in the same direction, hoping he wouldn't be noticed. Lights indicated the transport's door, and a few people were stepping out, a muffled girl among them. Unquestionably she was Brenda Van Dolphe, the girl whose face was as great a mystery as the sources of her father's fortune. Jerry was a dozen yards short of the plane when the flanking men closed in on him. Then, for the first time, he realized that they weren't just curious to see the mysterious Miss Van Dolphe. They were wearing uniforms, representing either state police or some local constabulary, and they were here to form a cordon to crowd out people like Jerry. A pair of them picked Jerry for a starter and pounced on him. Instead of waiting for that pair to announce their authority, Jerry asserted his own. He did it with his fists, placing his punches well. The darkness swallowed the faces and the fog muffled their oaths, but a moment later another pair of officers was lurching after Jerry. As they grabbed him, he twisted almost free and nearly within reach of the girl from the plane. The Van Dolphe girl had stopped stock-still. Beside her, Jerry saw a sharp-faced man, probably Cedric Treat, the secretary who answered all her letters. In the background, a tall imposing man was helping a tubby lady from the plane and both had turned at the excitement. That didn't interest Jerry; he |
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