Lgdi 50 07 03 (199) The Scream Of The Eagle
# The Scream Of The Eagle
When George Valentine answers the telephone late one fog-shrouded evening, the voice on the other end isn't asking for help—it's *demanding* it, breathless and terrified. A woman's scream cuts through the static, sharp as broken glass, followed by the unmistakable cry of an eagle that echoes through the wires like a phantom. George is plunged into a case that twists from a simple missing persons plea into something far darker: a remote mountain sanctuary where nature itself seems to harbor murderous secrets, and where the line between protection and predation blurs in the gathering darkness. This episode crackles with genuine menace—the kind only old-time radio could conjure—as George peels back layers of deception to discover that some hunters are hunting far more than game.
*Let George Do It* defined the golden age of detective noir on radio, and by 1950, the show had perfected the formula that made America tune in religiously during the late evening hours. Bob Bailey's understated performance as George Valentine became the voice of post-war urban skepticism, the everyman detective unafraid to wade into moral ambiguity. The Mutual Network's commitment to atmospheric sound design—those piercing screams, that uncanny avian shriek—transformed listeners' living rooms into stages of psychological suspense. "The Scream of the Eagle" stands as a masterclass in radio drama's capacity to unsettle, proving that what you cannot see is far more terrifying than what you can.
Don't miss this spine-tingling adventure. Tune in as George Valentine confronts an evil that dwells in the high country, where civilization seems impossibly distant and danger wears a perfectly civilized mask.