Title:   BLUE FACE

Subject:  

Author:   Maxwell Grant

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



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BLUE FACE

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

BLUE FACE ........................................................................................................................................................1

Maxwell Grant.........................................................................................................................................1

CHAPTER I. MAN HUNT ......................................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. DEATH IN THE DARK ..................................................................................................6

CHAPTER III. CHALLENGE OF EVIL..............................................................................................11

CHAPTER IV. SICK MAN ...................................................................................................................17

CHAPTER V. A GRIM DISCOVERY.................................................................................................23

CHAPTER VI. A RIDE WITH SLUG ..................................................................................................29

CHAPTER VII. THUGS' STRONGHOLD ...........................................................................................34

CHAPTER VIII. KILLER'S TRAP.......................................................................................................40

CHAPTER IX. DEATH IN BLUE ........................................................................................................45

CHAPTER X. A CUNNING FOE .........................................................................................................50

CHAPTER XI. THE FINAL CLUE......................................................................................................54

CHAPTER XII. SNATCH JOB .............................................................................................................60

CHAPTER XIII. RIVER PIRATE........................................................................................................66

CHAPTER XIV. HIDDEN FOE...........................................................................................................73

CHAPTER XV. THE SHADOW KNOWS ...........................................................................................77

CHAPTER XVI. THE SHADOW LAUGHS ........................................................................................81


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BLUE FACE

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. MAN HUNT 

CHAPTER II. DEATH IN THE DARK 

CHAPTER III. CHALLENGE OF EVIL 

CHAPTER IV. SICK MAN 

CHAPTER V. A GRIM DISCOVERY 

CHAPTER VI. A RIDE WITH SLUG 

CHAPTER VII. THUGS' STRONGHOLD 

CHAPTER VIII. KILLER'S TRAP 

CHAPTER IX. DEATH IN BLUE 

CHAPTER X. A CUNNING FOE 

CHAPTER XI. THE FINAL CLUE 

CHAPTER XII. SNATCH JOB 

CHAPTER XIII. RIVER PIRATE 

CHAPTER XIV. HIDDEN FOE 

CHAPTER XV. THE SHADOW KNOWS 

CHAPTER XVI. THE SHADOW LAUGHS  

CHAPTER I. MAN HUNT

THE policeman turned the corner of the dark street quickly. He  moved without sound, as if he hoped to

surprise some prowler. 

He could see nothing along the black sidewalk to justify his  caution. Nothing moved except a gaunt cat near a

trash barrel. The cop  sighed with relief. But the ugly nickname of a dangerous criminal  stayed in his mind. 

Blue Face! 

The cop continued down the deserted street. His heels clicked  loudly. The sound helped to reassure him. He

passed the trash barrel  from which the cat had fled. The sound of his solid heel echoes  vanished. 

From behind the barrel, a black figure rose. The figure seemed  formless. Then suddenly it straightened. A

hiss of sibilant laughter  was audible. The figure moved swiftly past a light. For an instant, it  was revealed. 

The Shadow! 

Police were not the only ones on a grim prowl tonight. The Shadow,  too, was taking a hand in the stalking of

a dangerous criminal. The  Shadow was hunting the man known as Blue Face! 

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Certain precautions The Shadow had taken emphasized the seriousness  of the situation. Every agent of The

Shadow was on duty somewhere  throughout the city. Stationed at various key points, they were in  constant

telephone communication with Burbank, contact man for The  Shadow. The Shadow was ready to race in a

swift car to whatever point  Blue Face might strike tonight. 

For Blue Face struck somewhere every night! Nine times the police  had almost caught him. Nine times Blue

Face had escaped. 

The police attributed this to luck. The Shadow believed otherwise.  Nor did The Shadow believe a second

police theory concerning Blue Face.  He didn't think that Blue Face was a smalltime burglar who killed

people because he was jittery. 

In these strange burglaries of Blue Face, The Shadow sensed  something challenging. They seemed to be the

work of a moron. Most of  the people who had been robbed were of small importance. 

A list of the victims revealed them to be people like bus  conductors, longshoremen, petty clerks, laborers. A

few were  businessmen. But there was no connection between any of them to  indicate a planned motive on the

part of Blue Face. 

Proceeds of the robberies made even less sense. Blue Face usually  escaped with less than ten dollars in loot.

The police would not have  paid too much attention to these queer robberies had it not been for  the vicious

tactics Blue Face displayed. 

Out of his nine previous raids, seven people had been wounded by  the snarl of Blue Face's nervous gun; two

had been killed. 

The Shadow ducked from the dark street into a vestibule. An inner  door opened and closed without sound. A

moment later, The Shadow had a  telephone receiver at his ear, was giving a number. 

"Burbank speaking," a voice said. 

"Report!" 

The messages of The Shadow's agents were transmitted by Burbank.  They were dishearteningly alike. No

news! 

But when Burbank's voice ceased, The Shadow's face was grim. One  agent's report was missing. 

"Report from Hawkeye," The Shadow said. 

"None," Burbank replied. 

"That is all." 

The Shadow's voice revealed nothing of his grim tension. Hawkeye's  silence had significance. He never

disobeyed orders. He was a genius at  trailing crooks. In fact, it was this very cleverness that had given

Hawkeye his nickname. 

Had Hawkeye run Blue Face to earth somewhere in the blackshrouded  vastness of New York City? 


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The Shadow wasted no time considering the answer. Soon, the hum of  a fast car was audible. Behind the

wheel of a dark sedan, The Shadow  raced to the place where Hawkeye had been stationed. 

It was a rundown neighborhood of tenements and alleys. The Shadow  knew exactly where to look.

Hawkeye had been posted in the front  hallway of a slum tenement. The hallway was dirty and poorly lighted.

But it had one virtue. It contained a coinbox telephone from which  Hawkeye could report. 

The Shadow didn't enter the building. His breath hissed when he saw  his motionless agent. 

Hawkeye was lying on the sidewalk near the entrance to a dark  alley. His face was paperwhite and smeared

with blood. He had been  dealt a vicious blow. 

STOOPING close to the sprawled figure, to pick up his unconscious  agent, The Shadow hesitated. His sharp

eyes detected something lying on  the sidewalk. His gloved fingers picked up the object. One swift glance  and

The Shadow shoved it into his pocket. 

The clue told The Shadow certain things. Hawkeye had been struck  down by Blue Face! Blue Face wanted

the police to find Hawkeye. Blue  Face wanted police to trail him down the nearby alley! 

The Shadow decided to shortcut police help. They might ruin his  plans. 

With Hawkeye's unconscious body across his shoulders, The Shadow  ran silently into the darkness of the

tenement alley. 

He was not quite in time. A policeman had rounded the corner. He  caught a vague glimpse of something. The

cop wasn't sure whether he had  seen a human being or not. But the nerves of the cop were on edge.  Every

policeman in town had been given special orders to be on the  alert for Blue Face. His capture meant certain

promotion. 

The cop blew his whistle to attract other cops. He started  cautiously toward the alley, gun in hand. 

There was little time for The Shadow to decide how to vanish with  his unconscious agent. But his eyes

helped him. 

Close to the alley wall of the tenement was a barrel filled with  tin cans. Alongside the barrel was a small

square grating in the  pavement. The grating covered a pit, evidently used to slide coal into  the cellar. 

A sharp tool from beneath the robe of The Shadow made a faint  click. The click was the severing of the chain

that fastened the  grating from the lower side. The grating lifted and Hawkeye was lowered  quickly into the

dark pit. Then The Shadow moved the barrel close to  the edge of the opening. 

A quick downward spring, and The Shadow vanished. The grating was  lowered without a sound. Through the

bars appeared black gloved hands.  They caught at a hoop of the barrel and pulled it over the grating. It  was

slow work, but The Shadow was helped by the approaching cop's  caution. The bluecoat came on slowly,

expecting gunfire from a  cornered criminal. 

By the time the cop entered the alley, the barrel of tin cans  covered the grating. The cop sneaked past. He

found nothing but a high  fence at the other end. He came back. He was joined by another cop, who  had heard

the blast of his whistle. 


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Unaware that The Shadow and Hawkeye were almost under their feet,  the two cops conferred briefly. The

Shadow listened grimly. 

"Are you sure it was Blue Face?" 

"I don't know. He looked like a patch of darkness sneaking into the  alley, carrying somebody on his back." 

"Did you see his face?" 

"I saw almost nothing. But there's a smear of blood on the  sidewalk. Somebody ran into this alley carrying a

wounded guy. I think  it was Blue Face!" 

The voice of the second cop was tense. 

"If it was Blue Face, why wasn't he dressed the way he always is?  Why wasn't he wearing a darkblue suit, a

blue cap? Why didn't he have  that stuff like blue Cellophane over his head? And why didn't we find a

marijuana cigarette? Blue Face is a hophead! He's always dropping those  damned reefers! It's what makes

him so jittery and quick on the  trigger." 

"I don't know any more than I told you. But I know my orders. I'm  going to phone headquarters. Stick around

till I get back. And keep  your gun out!" 

There was a quick sound of his retreating feet. The second cop  moved back to the mouth of the alley. 

The Shadow emerged soundlessly from concealment. He had profited by  the delay to revive Hawkeye, and to

clap a hand over his agent's mouth.  A whisper in Hawkeye's ear transmitted orders. 

Hawkeye faded away. He scaled a fence. A moment later, he was in a  cellar, streaking grimly for a back

street. 

Left alone, The Shadow examined the object he had picked up on the  street close to where Hawkeye had

fallen. 

It was a marijuana cigarette. 

Blue Face had left that clue as bait for police to pursue him. He  wanted police to see him in the very act of

robbery  as they had done  on nearly every one of Blue Face's previous crimes. But this time, fate  had played

a trick on a cunning criminal. The Shadow was taking a hand! 

THE SHADOW was no longer in the alley. He had scaled the same fence  over which Hawkeye had vanished.

But he did not enter the dark cellar.  The Shadow climbed another fence, dropped into the back yard of a

different tenement. 

It was not guesswork. Before he had scaled the fence, he had bent  close to the ground. At the base of the

fence he found what he grimly  expected: a second cigarette. Another "reefer." 

Crouched in the tenement yard, The Shadow examined both those  halfsmoked cigarettes. He examined their

tips, made an interesting  discovery. 

The ends were not wrinkled and damp as they would have been had  Blue Face had them between his lips.

Both of the marijuana cigarettes  had been lighted, but they had not been smoked. The theory of the  police


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was wrong. Blue Face was not a hophead at all. He was a very  clever criminal posing as a dope addict! 

Glancing upward, The Shadow stared at the lowest ladder of a fire  escape. Its lower rungs hung just above his

head. He saw something that  revealed that someone had recently climbed that ladder. 

There was a smear of dirty water on the courtyard pavement from the  top of an overfilled garbage pail.

Someone had stepped in that smear.  There was a similar smear from a man's shoe on the lowest rung of the

steel ladder above The Shadow's head. 

He leaped high. His gloved hands caught a rung and swung him  upward. He began to climb. 

Darkness protected him. Shades were drawn on most of the tenement  windows. The few that were open

caused him no concern. He could hear  the snores from tired men and women. The people who lived in this

shabby structure were workmen who labored long hours. Nothing would  stir them from sleep except the peal

of their alarm clocks in the gray  dawn. 

Just below the slanting iron steps that led to the top floor, The  Shadow halted. The window above him was

closed, but its shade was not  drawn. The lower pane of that dirty window looked peculiar. 

The glass pane had been cut out! 

Twin .45 automatics appeared in The Shadow's hands. He began to  move silently upward. But he had hardly

moved halfway when there was a  startling end to his secrecy. Something light and taut stretched  against his

chest. He felt the pressure and guessed what it was  a  black thread of some strong material. 

He tried to throw himself back, but it was too late. The thread was  attached to an empty milk bottle on the

platform above. 

The bottle fell to the courtyard below with the crash of smashed  glass. 

As The Shadow raced upward at top speed, the bedroom above suddenly  blazed with light. A pistol shot

roared inside the room. 

A pajamaclad man was lying on the floor inside, with blood coming  from a hole in his neck. Alongside the

victim stood the snarling figure  of Blue Face. 

IT was impossible to see the criminal's face. Over his head was a  helmet that looked like wrinkled blue

Cellophane. But it was not really  Cellophane. It was opaque, impossible to see through. It fitted closely  over

his head, giving him the ugly appearance of an Egyptian mummy. 

Through narrow slits in this queer headgear, the eyes of Blue Face  burned like flame. 

"Die, copper!" he snarled. 

His gun flamed toward the window. But as he fired, Blue Face  received the shock of his life. Instead of a

policeman, he saw the grim  face of The Shadow. 

Unnerved, he jerked back. The move sent his bullet wide. It thudded  into the wooden sill of the window. 

The answering shot of The Shadow went wide, too. He had fired, not  to kill Blue Face but to wing him and

take him alive. Blue Face's  recoil carried him backward, unharmed. He fled. 


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An instant later, The Shadow was racing through the apartment. He  darted out into the tenement hall. He

could hear pounding feet above  him on the stairs. Blue Face was heading toward the roof. 

The Shadow pursued swiftly. 

He was delayed by the door leading to the roof. Blue Face had  dropped a hook into a stout staple on the

outside, locking the door.  The Shadow's .45s roared at the barrier. Wood splintered. There was a  rip as

blackgloved hands yanked a board loose. The Shadow unhooked the  latch and flung the door open. 

Blue Face was cornered in a bad spot. 

He had raced across the black roof to the opposite edge. He seemed  gibbering with terror. Both hands were

lifted above his ugly  blueswathed head in token of surrender. 

Below him was an unbroken fall of six stories to a stone pavement  in the rear courtyard. 

The Shadow shouted an order to surrender. His .45s emphasized the  order. 

With a yell of fear, Blue Face went down on his knees. Then  abruptly he dropped backward. The desperate

criminal had slid over the  edge of the high roof. He was hanging on only by his clenched fingers. 

A moment later, the gripping fingers vanished. 

Blue Face had let go! His body was hurtling downward to death! 

CHAPTER II. DEATH IN THE DARK

AS the body of Blue Face hurtled out of sight, The Shadow darted  forward. Bracing himself at the edge of the

roof, he stared down. 

He received a stunning surprise. No crumpled and bleeding body lay  dead down below. That wild plunge of

Blue Face from the coping of the  roof had been a fake to elude the guns of The Shadow. 

The Shadow dropped to his knees. Turning his back to the dizzy  canyon below, he grasped the edge of the

roof. He allowed his body to  swing into space, held only by the stretched arms above his head. 

The Shadow was duplicating the tactics of Blue Face. The spot where  he hung was the same spot where he

had last seen the vanishing  criminal. 

He was rewarded by an instant discovery. 

A rope was stretched from a spot below the roof cornice to the open  window of a topfloor apartment. Down

this taut life line Blue Face had  slid. He had wriggled through the open window to safety. 

A glance showed The Shadow that the window below belonged to an  apartment on the side of the building

opposite that in which Blue  Face's crime had occurred. 

Far down in the black street, police whistles were already  shrilling. Cops, drawn to the scene by the phone

call of the patrolman  on the beat, had heard the roar of gunfire above. They were racing  toward the tenement. 


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The Shadow was already sliding down the rope. His gloves protected  his hands from friction burns as he

followed swiftly after his vanished  foe. 

His feet hit the window sill. He grabbed wildly at the casing. 

He was met by a choking blast of smoke that rolled outward from the  window. The Shadow was caught

unprepared, with his mouth wide open. 

There was hellish potency in that smoke. It carried a noxious odor.  The Shadow's brain reeled. His fingers

slipped on the window casing,  his body started to plummet backward to death. 

But although The Shadow was for a moment only half conscious, his  will was strong. His clawing fingers

managed to grab another hold on  the window casing. He rolled inward, and fell safely to the apartment  floor. 

He was holding his breath, now. With lips tightly compressed, he  sent the ray of his flashlight cutting through

the fog of death smoke. 

The beam showed him the origin of the smoke that filled the room.  It rose in black clouds from a circular

chemical bomb on a table in the  middle of the room. The table was the only piece of furniture visible.  There

was no carpet on the floor. The walls were dingy and bare of  decorations. The apartment looked as if it had

been empty for a long  time. 

Quickly, The Shadow raced from the apartment to the corridor  outside. He could hear the voices of tenants

who had been aroused by  the shooting and had poured out into the hallway from other apartments. 

Suddenly, there came the roaring echo of a shot. A moment later,  The Shadow leaped out into the hallway. 

He almost fell over the bleeding body of a man dressed only in his  underwear. It was one of the tenants who

had rushed into the hall. The  Shadow saw the direction of the wounded man's pointing finger. He raced  down

the stairs. 

None of the other tenants tried to stop him. One glance at the  blackrobed figure, and the people who had

raced into the hall vanished  back into their apartments with cries of terror. 

"The Shadow!" 

Sound of those shouts brought grim laughter from The Shadow's taut  lips. He had already reached the street

hallway. By the light of a dim  ceiling lamp he could see no sign of Blue Face. There were three routes  the

elusive criminal might have taken: The front doorway to the street.  The rear doorway to the back yard. Or the

stairway to the cellar. 

Instantly, The Shadow decided on the cellar. The onrushing figures  of armed cops gave him the answer. They

were racing into the building  from both the front and rear doors. Blue Face could not have passed  them

unseen. 

Bullets ripped through the dark hallway from both ends. The Shadow  fired back. But he used his guns merely

to delay the policemen, not to  harm them. While he fired, he was jerking at the knob of the cellar  door. 

It opened. He flung himself inward to a dark landing. The Shadow  shot a bolt on the inside. He could hear a

bluecoat crash his body  against the door. But it was strong and solid. It would take tools and  time to burst

through the stout barrier. 


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The Shadow raced down the cellar stairs. 

THE cellar was pitchdark. The Shadow halted an instant, to avoid  the possible spurt of bullets from the

unseen criminal. 

But again, Blue Face was unnaturally silent. The only sound The  Shadow heard was a strange clang. It

sounded exactly like the dropping  of a steel bar into a slot on the inside of a cellar door. 

The sound was not repeated. Silence filled the blackness of the  cellar. 

Soon, the beam of The Shadow's torch located the electric switch on  the cellar wall. He flooded the place

with light. 

Blue Face had vanished! 

Turning his gaze toward the two doors that guarded the front and  rear exits from the cellar, The Shadow saw

that both portals were  locked. On the inside! 

Was Blue Face still in the cellar? The Shadow did not believe it. 

And yet, the evidence of the two locked doors showed that Blue Face  could not have escaped either to the

street or to the back yard. For  one thing, both doors were locked by heavy steel bars that rested in  solid metal

supports on the inside of each door. 

The Shadow gave each door a lightning scrutiny while the shouts of  policemen trying to break through from

the top of the cellar staircase  rang like doom in his ears. He was looking for signs that might  indicate that

Blue Face had rigged a cunning mechanical device to  enable him to slam a cellar door behind him  and also

drop a ponderous  steel bar in its metal slot on the inside. 

He found no such evidence. 

Indeed, added proof that Blue Face could not have escaped from the  cellar to either the front street or the rear

yard was given to The  Shadow in the form of yells from cops outside each of those doors. 

"Open up! In the name of the law!" 

Blows began to rain on the outside of the barriers. The Shadow  could hear the splintering of wood. 

He remembered the strange metallic clang he had heard on reaching  the cellar. That sound was the only clue

Blue Face had left behind him.  What did it mean? 

The Shadow sought for the answer in a furnace that stood in a dark  corner of the cellar. It seemed an

impossible place for a man to use as  an escape. But to The Shadow, nothing was impossible that was logical. 

Opening the furnace door, The Shadow found the firebox was cold and  empty. The dustcovered grates

offered no clue. 

Dropping to his knees, The Shadow swung open the lower door of the  furnace. This was the door to the

ashpit. Here he found the clue for  which he was seeking. 


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Across the film of dust and dirt on the ashpit floor was the  unmistakable trace left by the body of a man. Blue

Face had crawled  straight into the ashpit. 

But where had he gone? 

The Shadow followed the trail of his cunning foe. It was a tight  squeeze, but he made it. Upstairs he could

hear the smash of police  sledges. The cellar doors were being attacked, too, by heavy tools  rushed up in a

police emergency truck. 

At the back of the ashpit, The Shadow found a metal panel that was  not as immovable as it should be. He was

able to pivot it with the  pressure of his wrist and forearm. The panel moved aside. The Shadow  wriggled

through a narrow opening into the foundation wall of the  building. 

At the end of a short passage was a vertical pit. The pit was dark.  The Shadow couldn't see to the bottom. But

he saw at his elbow a loop  of wire that looked like an oldfashioned bellpull. 

He yanked it. Instantly, he understood the meaning of the clang he  had heard earlier. He heard it now behind

him. The wire loop had closed  the open ashpit door of the furnace. The Shadow's disappearance from a  sealed

cellar was covered  exactly as had been Blue Face's, a few  minutes earlier. 

THE SHADOW'S electric torch showed him the bottom of the vertical  pit into which Blue Face had

descended. It was about ten feet deep, but  easily reached by the rungs of a wooden ladder. The bottom was

greasy  with slime and filled with the odor of rats and decay. 

A single glance told The Shadow the nature of a tunnel that  stretched from the pit through the earth in the

direction of the nearby  East River. 

It was a length of abandoned sewer pipe. The tenements of this  neighborhood were in an old section of town.

New sewers had been  installed a few years earlier by a reform administration. The old trunk  line was not

worth reclaiming. The pipes had been abandoned. People had  forgotten they ever existed. 

But not Blue Face. 

The Shadow crawled noiselessly ahead through the nauseous film of  slime on the base of this old sewer line.

Around him he could hear the  squeak and scurry of rats. One of them bit savagely at his arm. He  flung it

quickly aside. The hungry rodent smashed against the slimy  wall of the tunnel with a dull thud. 

Soon, a pale glow was visible at the end of the sewer. It marked  the spot where the ancient pipe line ended on

the mud flats below the  shore end of an East River pier. 

The Shadow emerged cautiously. He stepped into the soft mud that  sucked at his shoes. It forced him to walk

carefully. 

He was underneath the flooring of a covered pier. Beyond him, he  could see a line of muddy footprints that

showed where Blue Face had  retreated a few moments earlier. The prints were backward, indicating  that Blue

Face had hoped for the appearance of The Shadow, in order to  send a hail of bullets into the body of his

blackrobed nemesis. 

But Blue Face's eagerness to escape was stronger than his lust to  kill. He was afraid of The Shadow! His

flight proved that. 


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The footprints ended suddenly. They ended far short of the tide  mark where the dirty water of the East River

lapped at the mud flats  under the pier. Blue Face had taken another twist in his cunning  flight. 

He had gone upward. 

In the rough pier planks over his head, The Shadow found the square  edges of a trapdoor. He climbed up on a

cleat to brace himself. The  cleat had evidently been placed there for just such a purpose by the  amazingly

foresighted Blue Face. The Shadow forced the trapdoor open. 

As he did, he heard a distant shot. 

The roar came from the river end of the pier. The Shadow raced  forward. He had a difficult time getting to

the scene of the shot. The  pier was jammed with piles of merchandise in heavy cases. Several  times, The

Shadow had to turn back and find another route through the  darkness. 

When he reached the river end of the pier, he found the wounded  body of another victim of Blue Face's

determination to escape. This  time, it was a pier watchman. A bullet had hit him in the back. 

The end of the pier where the watchman lay reeked with the smell of  oil. An oil drum had been upset; the

greasy liquid formed a puddle all  around the watchman. His clothing was soaked. Had a match been applied

to that sinister puddle, the watchman would have been burned alive. 

A grim thought entered The Shadow's mind. Only the swiftness of his  arrival had prevented a horrible death

for a helpless man. 

He sprang to the stringpiece and peered into the darkness of the  East River. He had heard a rhythmic sound. It

was the noise of oars  working desperately in oarlocks. 

Suddenly, The Shadow's laughter rang ominously. He was staring  directly at Blue Face! 

He could see a hideous blue helmet that looked like wrinkled  Cellophane. He could see fiery eyes glaring at

him from the slitted  holes in that opaque blue mask. 

Blue Face was rowing swiftly toward where a slim speedboat was  moored. He redoubled his efforts to row

faster. 

The Shadow's automatics barked. He didn't aim at Blue Face. He was  determined to capture this unknown

criminal alive. He fired at the  rowboat. Two smashing impacts sent water flooding into the craft. Two  more,

and the rowboat began to settle, fast. 

Blue Face dived overboard. The tide was strong. He didn't appear to  be a very good swimmer. 

Diving from the pierhead in a clean splash, The Shadow, too, took  to the water. He began to swim swiftly

toward the criminal who was  floundering near the speedboat. 

But The Shadow had made an error. He discovered his mistake when  his head appeared above the surface of

the river. All around him, the  water was coated with oil from the overturned drum on the pier edge. 

Blue Face stopped swimming the moment he saw The Shadow's dive. His  hand produced something from his

pocket. It was a waterproof match  case. There was a small spurt of flame in the air as the criminal  handled the

case. He flung the lighted match backward. 


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The next instant, the spark became a roaring sheet of fire. The  oilcovered surface of the river spouted

blueandyellow flames. They  raced like hungry serpents toward The Shadow's head. 

THE SHADOW dove instantly. 

Kicking vigorously with his upended legs, he fought to keep his  head below those roaring flames on the

surface. Lungs that were nearly  bursting forced him soon to the surface. He dove again. But he felt the  agony

of the flame before the river engulfed him again. 

He struck out underwater with a desperate power that sent him  through the water like a champion swimmer.

When he again rose to the  surface, he was past the area of the blazing oil. 

Turning dizzily, he tried to locate the moored speedboat aboard  which Blue Face had already climbed. 

The speedboat was under way. The throb of its engine sounded dimly  from the foggy murk. Soon it was

gone. The silence was broken only by  the swish of the tide against the spongy spires of the pierhead. 

A moment later, The Shadow's safety was threatened by a new danger.  Policemen had appeared on the end of

the pier. They had been drawn  there by the roar of the shot that had wounded the watchman.  Flashlights

bored out into the river. One of the beams barely missed  The Shadow's head. He dove under the surface just

in time. 

The Shadow let the fast current carry him away from danger. He  reached another pier, and climbed swiftly

out before the police could  spread up and down the river front and trap him. 

He had fought Blue Face and lost. 

But The Shadow's initial defeat was only an apparent one. His grim  laughter whispered as he vanished among

the dark streets of the water  front. The laughter indicated that The Shadow had found out many things

unknown to the police. 

This duel between Blue Face and The Shadow was only just beginning! 

CHAPTER III. CHALLENGE OF EVIL

IN pitchdarkness was the room. Silence filled it. It was a place  of black nothingness. 

The Shadow was in his sanctum  a room hidden away in the heart of  New York City. 

Darkness afforded no hint of how The Shadow had entered this  wellguarded sanctum. Nor when he left

would there be any betraying  sounds to indicate his method of departure. 

Many criminals had plotted countless schemes for locating this spot  and destroying The Shadow and all his

works. No crook had ever  succeeded in achieving this ugly ambition. The Shadow was still  supreme! 

A ghostly rustle of laughter ceased in the darkness, its echoes  dying into silence. Then, suddenly, a blue light

glowed. Its  illumination was thrown downward, lay like an oval pool of brilliance  on the polished surface of a

desk. 

In that oval, the hands of The Shadow were visible. Above the hands  gleamed the blur of The Shadow's face.


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His powerful beaked nose  betokened strength of character. Deepset eyes held a strange inner  light of their

own. 

The Shadow was ready to sum up certain facts he had obtained the  night before. Some of these facts he had

learned at the risk of his  life. These risks were now forgotten. Brain work counted now. 

His fingers moved beyond the oval of light on his desk. When they  returned into view, they held a small

packet of newspaper clippings. 

The Shadow examined the clippings first. 

News of Blue Face's latest burglary had created a sensation in all  the newspapers. The robbery committed in

the tenement near the East  River was described as the work of a criminal lunatic. Or, at the very  least, a

dopecrazed moron. 

The total value of the loot which Blue Face had stolen last night  was six dollars and seventeen cents. 

To gain this pitifully small sum, Blue Face had seriously wounded a  man, had broken the jaw of the victim's

wife with a blow of his gun  butt. He wounded another tenement dweller who had tried to block his

helterskelter race down the tenement stairs to freedom. He had shot a  pier watchman. 

The victim of the robbery and his wife could tell little of the  events that had thrown an entire neighborhood

into an uproar. Blue Face  had appeared in the tenement apartment without warning. He had forced  the

awakened man and wife to hand over a small amount of cash. 

Dazed, they had stood alongside their bed. Blue Face had forced the  woman to enter a small bathroom. He

had struck her savagely in the jaw  with his gun butt, and had locked her in. 

Then he had waited, his gun trained on the husband. Finally, a  sound came for which he seemed to be

waiting. It was the crash of a  milk bottle from the fire escape outside. 

At the sound, Blue Face fired instantly at his helpless captive.  That was the last the man remembered until he

had awakened in a city  hospital. 

His name was Peter Kolchak. He worked in a small bakery not far  from the Brooklyn Bridge. His pay was

pitifully small. Nothing about  the man, his job or his prospects could possibly attract an intelligent  burglar. 

Considering this, The Shadow laughed. He pondered another peculiar  aspect of Blue Face's tenth robbery. 

Blue Face had succeeded in involving The Shadow himself in the  crime. The victim and his wife insisted

they had seen only Blue Face.  But all other tenants and every policeman who had participated in the  grim

pursuit of the fleeing criminal had a different story. 

All of them had seen only one figure. The Shadow. 

Was Blue Face a sinister disguise of The Shadow? Some of the  newspapers speculated on this possibility.

They also noted the presence  of a mysterious rope that had stretched like a life line from the  tenement roof to

the window of a deserted apartment on the top floor. 

This apartment had been rented a short while before the crime by a  man who had paid a small deposit. He had

obtained a key from the  janitor  and had never been seen again. 


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THE sensitive fingers of The Shadow picked up another sheet of  paper. This paper contained a list of names.

They were the names of ten  victims of this strange burglar. 

Two of the ten were dead. Eight had been wounded. None had been  robbed of more than ten dollars or so.

The Shadow could discover no  connection between any of the names. All lived in different parts of  the city.

Some were married. Some single. Three of the victims had been  wealthy. The other seven had only poor jobs. 

What was the hidden unity behind this strange menace? 

The last document The Shadow examined was a written report. It had  been forwarded by Rutledge Mann.

Mann was The Shadow's financial and  realestate expert. He posed as an investment broker to conceal his

real work  which was the trusted service of The Shadow. 

Rutledge Mann had furnished The Shadow with the details of the  management of the tenement from which

Blue Face had escaped. The ease  of the escape told The Shadow that Blue Face must have had an excellent

knowledge of the building, gained from previous study. 

The tenement was operated by a realty company owned by a man named  Harrison. The Harrison company

managed property for largescale owners  of real estate. The man who actually collected the monthly rent

from  the tenants was someone named John Shipton. 

Already, The Shadow had acted on this report from Rutledge Mann.  The disguised voice of The Shadow had

talked over an untraced telephone  line to Inspector Joe Cardona at police headquarters. The Shadow had

pretended to be a denizen of the underworld. He advised Cardona to  invite Richard Harrison to police

headquarters for a conference about  the robbery. 

The Shadow intended to sit in on that conference. He wanted to get  a look at Harrison. He was also eager to

find out who the real owner of  the building was. Rutledge Mann had been unable to discover this. 

Clippings and the report were replaced out of sight. The light over  The Shadow's desk went out. The sanctum

lapsed into instant darkness. 

Through that silent darkness The Shadow moved toward an unseen  exit. No sound betrayed any motion on

his part. A listener with a sharp  pair of ears would have heard nothing. 

But The Shadow was now gone! 

A short time later, a man named Lamont Cranston appeared on the  street and stepped into a custombuilt car.

No one paid any particular  attention to him. Occasionally, on his ride downtown, he nodded to a  traffic cop.

The cop invariably smiled and saluted. For Lamont Cranston  was a citizen with wealth and social position.

He enjoyed membership in  the exclusive Cobalt Club. 

Nobody realized the truth. Lamont Cranston was a convenient  identity assumed sometimes by The Shadow!

He was on the way now to  police headquarters, to meet his friend Inspector Cardona 

He had a plausible excuse for the visit. Cranston intended to offer  a reward for the arrest of Blue Face. He

could do this in his role of a  publicspirited citizen. 

CARDONA greeted Cranston warmly in his private office. He had known  him a long time. He thanked

Cranston for his liberal offer of a reward. 


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"What about this talk of Blue Face being The Shadow?" Cranston  asked. 

Cardona frowned. 

"That bothers me," he admitted. "I was there last night with the  police. I saw The Shadow! I hate to believe it,

but the evidence points  strongly to the fact that The Shadow shot at the pier watchman." 

Joe continued in a worried vein. 

"It sounds screwy. The Shadow never before has done anything  criminal, to the best of my knowledge. Just

the opposite, in fact.  There have been many cases I could never have solved without The  Shadow's help. I

swear, Mr. Cranston, I don't know what to think. The  newspapers are beginning to yell at me for action." 

"What do you think about Blue Face?" 

"That part's easier," Cardona said. "It's just a question of time,  before we nab that rat. I have good reasons for

saying so. In the first  place " 

Cardona broke off. His phone was ringing. He answered it casually.  Then The Shadow saw Joe's eyes bulge

with a startled light. His finger  jabbed a desk button. 

A police attendant rushed in and Joe made grim gestures. The Shadow  understood. Cardona wanted an

immediate tracer put on this phone call  to which he was now listening. 

Joe's voice on the wire was soothing. He spoke slowly, evidently  trying to keep his caller from hanging up.

But a moment later, Cardona  swore as he put down the instrument. 

"Gone!" he growled. "I couldn't kid him. He hung up." 

"Who was it?" The Shadow asked in the cultured voice of Lamont  Cranston. 

"Blue Face! I tell you that guy's crazier than a coot! You'll never  believe what he just had the gall to phone

in." 

"What is it?" Cranston asked lazily. 

Cardona explained. Blue Face had called up to insist that he  himself had committed the crime last night at the

tenement. He denied  that The Shadow had anything to do with the robbers. The Shadow,  according to Blue

Face, was just an intruder. 

"What do you know about that?" Cardona growled. "Blue Face wants  all the credit. He's due for the electric

chair when we nab him  and  he wants the credit for murder! Did you ever hear of anything whackier  than

that?" 

"What else did he say?" Cranston murmured. 

"He said that he'd bump off anyone who tries to interfere with him.  He said that warning applies to The

Shadow, as well as anyone else. And   listen to this  he promised to commit another of his crazy  burglaries

tonight!" 


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There was a sudden interruption. A policeman hurried into the  office. He made a breathless report, and

Cardona swore. The tracing of  the phone call had been fruitless. Blue Face was gone long before a  police car

roared to a stop in front of an East Side drugstore. 

The drug clerk could give no information. The cops found the clerk  unconscious. He had been slugged over

the head from behind just before  Blue Face had made his mocking call to headquarters. 

There was an uneasy silence in the headquarters room. 

"You spoke about reasons why Blue Face should be caught fairly  soon," The Shadow said in the voice of

Cranston. 

"Oh, yes. Let's see. First, a hophead is usually easy to nab. And  we know Blue Face is a hophead. He smokes

marijuana cigarettes." 

The Shadow nodded. But he knew that Cardona was wrong. Blue Face  did not smoke the "reefers" the police

always found. He merely lighted  them, carried them a while, then left them as fake clues. 

"In the second place," Cardona went on, "Blue Face is nervous. He  always botches things. One time he upsets

a vase. Another time he trips  over a rug. His victims always wake up and have a chance to yell for  the cops.

A nervous guy like that can't duck cops forever." 

Wrong again, The Shadow thought. Blue Face had nerves of steel. He  was the most clever foe The Shadow

had faced in a long time 

"Thirdly," Cardona concluded, "Blue Face is lucky. Each time he has  escaped, luck helped him. Luck like

that can't go on forever." 

Luck? The Shadow mentally said no to that. The rope from the  tenement roof, the furnace tunnel from the

cellar  it was far from  luck. It was the result of careful planning in advance. 

The Shadow was saved from making a comment on Joe's false  deductions by the appearance of a visitor. A

welldressed man was  announced. 

It was Richard Harrison, owner of the realty company that managed  the tenement where Blue Face's last

outrage had occurred. 

HARRISON shook hands with Lamont Cranston. Cardona explained that  Cranston had come to offer a

reward for the capture of Blue Face.  Harrison nodded. 

He was a tall man with a pleasant face. His eyes twinkled shrewdly  behind pincenez eyeglasses. The lenses

of the glasses were strong  ones, The Shadow noted. Evidently Harrison was nearsighted. 

The realty man was friendly in his replies to Cardona's questions.  He knew nothing about the sewer tunnel

through which Blue Face had  escaped. He knew nothing of the unknown man who had rented the empty

apartment on the tenement's top floor. 

"I've never been near that building," Harrison said in his pleasant  voice. "As you know, inspector, I manage

hundreds of pieces of  property, some shabby like this tenement, other important office and  hotel buildings." 


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"Who is your rent collector?" Cardona asked. "Who actually visits  the tenants and collects their rent? Is he

reliable?" 

Harrison laughed. 

"I won't have to convince you of John Shipton's integrity, I'm  sure, when I tell you that he married my

daughter. John Shipton is my  soninlaw, and a fine young man. The thought of Shipton being  connected

with a rat like Blue Face is preposterous!" 

Cardona scratched his nose. 

"I'm merely asking for information. Who owns the tenement?" 

"David Barfield." 

It was an important name to mention. Barfield was a wealthy man. He  was as prominent as Lamont Cranston

himself. 

As Cranston, The Shadow had met Barfield often. It was unthinkable  that any link could exist between David

Barfield and Blue Face.  Moreover, Barfield could scarcely be accused of sliding down ropes and  racing

through sewer pipes, since he was now confined to his home as an  invalid. 

Yet, The Shadow wondered. There was some mystery about the illness  of David Barfield. He was in his early

fifties and a man of  considerable athletic ability. Up to a few months ago, he and Cranston  had played many a

game of handball at the club to which they both  belonged. 

The Shadow mentioned this to Harrison. He received an immediate  impression that the realty agent was

uneasy. Harrison's eyes held a  strange inner flickering behind the screen of his pincenez glasses.  Was it

fear? 

"Interviewing Mr. Barfield would be a waste of time," Harrison  murmured to Cardona. "He has a weak heart.

There's something wrong with  his legs that keeps him constantly at home. You'd have to go there to  see him.

He sees few people by day. And no one at all at night." 

"What's his phone number?" Cardona rasped. He was annoyed at the  millionaire's inaccessibility. 

"He has a private number," Harrison said. "I'll be glad to give it  to you." 

He took a memo book from his pocket. Cardona reached into his own  pocket for a fountain pen. Then,

suddenly, Cardona's eyes popped. His  face was muddy with shocked surprise. He was holding something in

his  hand which he hadn't realized was in his pocket. 

It was a jagged piece of thin plastic material that looked like  Cellophane. It was opaque. Its slightly wrinkled

surface couldn't be  seen through. 

Its color was a dark shade of blue. 

The color and the appearance of this sinister scrap of plastic  material made all three men in the room think

instantly of an ugly  figure. 

Blue Face! 


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"Where did this thing come from?" Cardona gasped. 

His amazement was reflected in the staring face of Richard  Harrison. It was The Shadow who replied. His

voice was silky as he  spoke to Cardona in the tones of Cranston. 

"Someone must have stood very close to you at some time this  morning, inspector. Can you remember any of

those people you  interviewed at the scene of Blue Face's latest crime?" 

Cardona shook his head. 

"How can I tell. I interviewed dozens of people in and around that  tenement. Do you think " 

"I think," Cranston continued smoothly, "that you've had the rather  terrifying privilege of talking face to face

this morning with  Blue  Face himself!" 

Silence followed. It was like a cold breath of fear in the heart of  police headquarters. 

CHAPTER IV. SICK MAN

AN hour or so after the interview in the office of Inspector  Cardona at police headquarters, a limousine pulled

up to the curb of a  fashionable street and halted. 

Lamont Cranston got out. 

His goal was the ornate entrance to a private dwelling. The Shadow  was not wasting any time investigating

the strange illness of David  Barfield. He was about to climb the short flight of stone steps that  led to

Barfield's door, when he halted suddenly. 

The door was opening. A spruce, welldressed man emerged and  started toward the sidewalk. It was Richard

Harrison, the realty agent  who handled all of Barfield's business. 

Cranston smiled and held out his hand. Harrison blinked behind his  thicklensed glasses. He seemed

exceedingly glad to meet Cranston  again. But The Shadow noticed the same expression of worry back of his

eyes. 

"How do you do? Were you coming to inquire after the health of Mr.  Barfield?" 

The Shadow murmured a reply in the affirmative. 

Harrison glanced quickly over his shoulder at the millionaire's  house. He seemed afraid that someone might

be watching from behind the  curtained window alongside the entry door. But his glance apparently  reassured

him. 

"I'd like to talk to you about Barfield," he said in a quick,  nervous whisper. "Do you mind if I use a little

deception, in case  someone is watching? Pretend that we're discussing this book." 

He handed Lamont Cranston a popular novel he was carrying under his  arm. The Shadow looked it over

gravely. He pretended to discuss the  book with Harrison. 

"What's the trouble?" he asked under his breath. 


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"It's about this fake illness of Barfield's." 

"Fake?" The Shadow's tone was sharp. "Why did you tell Inspector  Cardona only an hour or so ago that you

thought Barfield was genuinely  ill?" 

"I didn't do otherwise," was the reply. "Barfield has just had me  on the carpet. He found out I had been

summoned to police headquarters.  Don't ask me how he knew. I can't understand it. But he threatened me,

just the same." 

"Threatened you?" 

"Yes. Barfield told me that if I caused him any personal publicity  with the police in connection with the Blue

Face crimes, he would  cancel his contract with my firm and turn his business over to some  other realestate

firm." 

Harrison's face was pale. He lifted his glasses from his nose and  rubbed at his eyes. 

"I'm talking frankly to you, Mr. Cranston, because I know that you  are a loyal friend of Barfield's. He may be

in some serious trouble.  When I just talked with him, I got the impression he was frightened. He  seems to be

worried for fear I might have told Inspector Cardona too  much. He asked me two or three times if I had made

light of his present  illness." 

"What did you tell him?" 

"I told him the truth. That I had done nothing more than give  Cardona his private phone number. I finally

soothed Barfield into still  retaining me as his realty agent." 

"What about his illness?" Cranston asked. 

"It's a ridiculous pretense! You yourself know, Mr. Cranston, that  up until a few weeks ago, he was a hard

man to beat at handball. Heart  ailments don't develop as quickly as that. And this business about his  legs!" 

"Yes?" 

"He claims his legs are partially paralyzed. Sits a lot of the time  in a wheel chair. He has even retired into a

side wing of his house,  where he keeps himself isolated, both day and night. Why should a man  do that? He

claims it's because he needs rest and quiet." 

"How does he manage to get up and down the stairs of his home, if  he's as paralyzed as he claims?" Cranston

queried. 

"He has put in a private elevator," Harrison said. "The whole  installation was done very suddenly. The

elevator is an automatic one.  I complimented Barfield on its convenience and asked him who had  installed it.

But he turned as mum as a clam. He pretended he hadn't  heard my question. I think he was afraid I might go

to the contractor  and ask questions. 

"And what in Heaven's name would there be to find out, anyway? I  tell you, I'm worried about the whole

setup in Barfield's house! I  don't even like the looks of his doctor!" 

"Who is he?" Cranston asked. 


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"Dr. Mortimer. Do you know him?" 

The Shadow knew a little about Mortimer. He had met him socially  once or twice, in his role of Lamont

Cranston. He was aware that  Mortimer possessed a good reputation. But he made a noncommittal reply. 

Harrison drew in a deep breath. He took back the book he had handed  to Cranston. 

"Please keep everything I have said confidential," he begged.  "Perhaps I can talk to you more about this later.

Where can I see you?" 

Cranston named the Cobalt Club. Harrison nodded. He got into his  parked car and drove away. 

It was all very queer. 

THE SHADOW walked up the stone steps of the Barfield dwelling and  rang the bell. The door was opened

quickly by the butler. It was opened  so promptly, that The Shadow wondered whether Briggs had been

standing  behind the street door during The Shadow's brief talk with Harrison. 

But Briggs' face was bland. 

"Good afternoon, Mr. Cranston. Mr. Barfield expects you, sir. If  you'll follow me to the east wing " 

The Shadow started to follow, when a voice greeted him suddenly  from the drawing room, whose door was

partly open. 

"How are you, Mr. Cranston? Glad you've come to visit my patient. A  good thing for Mr. Barfield. He needs

visitors. It will do him a lot of  good." 

The man in the doorway was dressed in a suit of expensive tweeds.  He held a Homburg hat and a small black

medical case in his left hand. 

It was Dr. Mortimer. 

"I was just on the point of leaving," he said. He gave a sudden  exclamation. "Oh, bother!" He turned swiftly

to Briggs. "I find I have  forgotten my gloves. I left them in the east wing. Will you fetch them  for me,

please?" 

Briggs hesitated. He looked as if he preferred to stay. But there  was nothing else to do. 

The moment he was gone, Dr. Mortimer leaned closer to Lamont  Cranston. 

"You're a friend of Barfield's," he whispered. "I'd like to stay  here until you've seen him. Do you mind if I

ride along with you, when  you leave here? There's something I'd like to tell you." 

Cranston agreed. A moment later, Briggs came back with the gloves.  Mortimer gave the butler an innocent

smile. 

"Thank you. I believe I'll wait a few minutes more, Briggs. Mr.  Cranston has very kindly offered to give me a

lift in his car when he  leaves." 

Briggs blinked. 


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"Very good, sir... This way, Mr. Cranston." 

The Shadow followed the servant to the east wing of the roomy old  house. He noted that Briggs fished out a

key before they could proceed  into the east wing. The door was kept locked. It seemed a queer way to  take

care of an invalid. But The Shadow kept his thoughts to himself. 

He rode up with Briggs in the automatic elevator. Cranston seemed  bored. He turned his back to Briggs and

stared without any seeming  interest at the chromium fittings of the luxurious little lift. 

He could see nothing unusual. 

Briggs announced him with frigid dignity at the doorway of the  topfloor suite in the east wing. 

DAVID BARFIELD was sitting in an invalid's chair near a sunny  window. 

"Thank you for coming to see me," he said. 

He seemed weak. His words were low. But he didn't look like a sick  man to The Shadow. His face was as

ruddy as it had ever been. His  shoulders were broad and vigorous. The legs stretched out in front of  him,

Cranston couldn't see. They were covered by a steamer rug. 

The Shadow wondered if Barfield had thrown that rug hastily over  his legs a few seconds before his visitor

had been announced. 

Barfield talked eagerly about his physical condition, giving  Cranston hardly time to say a word. His heart, he

said, had gone  suddenly bad. His legs, too, were afflicted. 

"Mortimer can't understand what is causing the trouble," he  murmured. "It may be caused by acute physical

strain. You remember how  active I used to be, eh, Cranston? Well, that's all over now." 

"Can't you leave the house?" 

"Impossible! My legs would buckle under me if I took more than a  few steps." 

There was a knock on the door. A pretty girl dressed in a nurse's  uniform came in. 

"Did you want me for anything, Mr. Barfield?" 

"No. I'll call you if I need you." 

The nurse withdrew. The Shadow asked a quiet question. 

"Do you keep a day and a night nurse? 

"Just a day nurse," Barfield said. His eyes were veiled. "You see,  at night I need quiet. Dr. Mortimer says so.

A night nurse would be a  nuisance. I sleep better when I have no one to bother me. I've even  taken out my

phone." 

His voice hurried a little. 


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"You may have noticed that I keep the door that connects with this  east wing always locked. Does that seem

silly?" 

"Not at all," Cranston said, without much interest. "I hope Dr.  Mortimer's treatments will benefit you.

Perhaps I had better go now. I  don't want to tire you." 

"Wait," Barfield said. "Mr. Harrison was here just a few moments  ago. He's my realty agent, you know. I

understand you met each other  down at police headquarters. Rather shocking, these Blue Face crimes,  eh?" 

It was a sudden, and rather grim, change of subject; but The Shadow  pretended no interest. 

The two men talked vaguely about Blue Face for a while. Then  Barfield volunteered another surprising

statement. 

"Did you know that one of Blue Face's victims was my nephew?" 

Cranston hadn't known that. His brain was suddenly alert. 

"Yes," Barfield continued. "One of the men Blue Face robbed was my  nephew, Charles Clee. Poor Charles

tried to resist, and was killed. I'm  afraid that his shocking death hasn't helped my heart." 

Charles Clee was one of the two wealthy victims of Blue Face. He  was also one of the two victims who had

actually been killed. The rest  had only been wounded. Was there some sinister meaning in all this? And  why

was Barfield volunteering this information? 

"You think your nephew might have been deliberately murdered?"  Cranston asked. 

"Gracious, no! The whole thing was accidental. Blue Face is some  sort of a degenerate hophead, the papers

say. If poor Charles had only  let the fellow steal the money he was after, he might have been alive  today. But

he was always courageous. And he paid for it with his life.  Too bad! I... I hope the police nab this Blue Face.

You offered a  reward for his arrest, I understand?" 

Cranston nodded. Soon, Barfield seemed to lose all interest in the  subject. He placed his hand to his heart and

uttered a faint moan. He  rang for his nurse. The Shadow took the hint and departed. 

Briggs escorted him down in the automatic elevator. Again, The  Shadow gave detailed attention to the inside

fittings of the lift. 

Dr. Mortimer was waiting impatiently in the drawing room. He drove  away in Cranston's car. 

MORTIMER wasted no time in coming to the point. His remark was  almost a duplicate of the words uttered

by Richard Harrison. 

"There's something queer about Barfield's illness," he said. "There  isn't a thing wrong with his heart. I've

tested it. It's as sound as a  dollar. But Barfield simply won't believe that. He told me he'd get a  new physician

if I was as stupid enough not to recognize a bad heart  when I saw one." 

"What about his legs?" 

"Sound, too. I think that Barfield's whole trouble is mental. He  imagines he's sick. Why, only Heaven knows.

I've tried to humor him,  hoping he'd snap out of it. I've fed him harmless pills. I've tried to  persuade him to


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see a psychologist. But he's a very stubborn man. 

"I'm telling you these things because you're a friend of his, Mr.  Cranston. Someone ought to know what is

going on. His heirs don't seem  to care." 

"Heirs? How many does he have?" 

"Two. He had three nephews. But one of them is dead. He was killed  accidentally in a burglary by that

criminal who calls himself Blue  Face." 

The Shadow made no more comments. He didn't even ask the names of  the other two heirs. He dropped off

Dr. Mortimer and went on to the  Cobalt Club. He stayed there only a short while. 

When The Shadow left, he returned to the home of David Barfield. 

This time, cloaked in robe and slouch hat of black, The Shadow's  method of entrance was less conventional.

The afternoon sunlight was  shining. A forced entrance was risky. But The Shadow knew how to  achieve the

goal he wanted. He had come prepared with certain highly  ingenious tools. 

Presently, he found himself unseen and unheard in the very spot  where he was most eager to investigate. He

stood like a black and  soundless figure on the lower floor of the locked east wing of the  Barfield mansion. 

The elevator drew his first scrutiny. This newly installed lift  seemed to The Shadow like a reversal of logic.

The Shadow did not  believe that the elevator had been installed just because Barfield was  sick. Barfield was

sick to make it easier and more natural to install  the elevator! 

Entering the automatic lift, The Shadow examined the flooring. When  he had ridden in it before, his scrutiny

of the side walls had  convinced him that there could not be any secret exit except through  the floor of the

elevator. 

By using a sharpedged tool, The Shadow was soon able to lift the  covering on the floor of the cage.

Underneath the deceptively solid  covering was the square outline of a small trapdoor! Looking downward

through the opening, The Shadow could see the dark bottom of the shaft. 

He pressed a button. It brought the lift down to the cellar. It  didn't quite touch the base of the pit. There was

room enough for a man  to squeeze through the trapdoor to the pit. 

The Shadow's flashlight disclosed a block of concrete at the side  of the shaft, that moved easily aside under

pressure. 

Advancing through a horizontal passage, he was not surprised when  he discovered another concrete block. It,

too, moved aside when he  pressed it. 

Sunlight made The Shadow blink when he squirmed through the  opening. He was in a grasscovered court at

the back of the Barfield  home. The angle of the house kept the court from being observed from  any spot

except the east wing. 

There was a door in the high board fence that inclosed the grassy  court. It looked as if it might have been cut

out recently. 


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The Shadow's laughter whispered briefly. Barfield's lack of a night  nurse, the strange isolation of a sick man

at night  it was all clear,  now! 

Barfield's "illness" was a device for him to sneak unseen out of  his house at night. Only The Shadow was

aware of the real truth. 

Was David Barfield Blue Face? 

The Shadow didn't answer that question. It was premature. He  returned quickly through the cellar tunnel,

emerged from the elevator  shaft through the concealed door in the floor of the lift. 

He was preparing to leave the house as silently as he had entered  it, when he heard a sudden furtive step. The

Shadow whirled. The sound  came from the staircase that led downward from the topfloor suite that  Barfield

inhabited. 

The Shadow ducked into obscurity. He glided in the direction of a  heavily curtained groundfloor window.

But before he moved, he did a  peculiar thing. He uttered a loud and mocking laugh at the very door of  the

elevator. 

The next instant, he saw the figure that had been sneaking down the  staircase. It was David Barfield! 

THERE was nothing weak or sick about Barfield now. In his hand was  an automatic pistol. His face was

tense with suspicion. 

He ran in the direction of the laughter he had heard. He stepped  into the elevator. Soon, The Shadow heard

the elevator move downward,  heard the hidden trapdoor lift. Then came the solid thump of Barfield's  feet as

he leaped to the bottom of the dark shaft. The Shadow knew what  Barfield was doing. A fake sick man was

crawling murderously through  the tunnel looking for an intruder he wanted to kill. 

Barfield was hunting The Shadow! 

But The Shadow didn't want to observe the disappointment on  Barfield's face. He took advantage of the

millionaire's absence to  leave the east wing as secretly as he had entered. 

Soon, The Shadow was listening to a calm voice over a wellguarded  private telephone wire: 

"Burbank speaking." 

To Burbank, The Shadow issued orders. They were orders that would  be transmitted to Harry Vincent. Harry

Vincent was a personable young  man, who lived at the Metrolite Hotel. Harry's real business was  something

he never talked about to outsiders. He was a secret agent of  The Shadow. 

Tonight, Harry was going to have an interesting job. He was going  to keep a sharp watch on the rear of the

Barfield mansion! 

CHAPTER V. A GRIM DISCOVERY

RICHARD HARRISON was angry. He took off his pincenez glasses and  rubbed at his tired eyes. 

He sat at his desk in the private office that he occupied as  president of his realtymanagement company. He


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was signing letters that  had been prepared for him by his secretary. His pen scrawled badly when  he signed

the sheaf of letters. He had forgotten to put on his glasses  again. It added to his anger. 

He growled under his breath: "Damn David Barfield! He's nothing but  a hypochondriac! Worse than that, he's

a stubborn, pigheaded fool!" 

Harrison's concern came from a simple cause. It was his business to  show realestate profits, instead of

losses. Unless profits were shown,  clients could not be blamed for taking their realty business elsewhere. 

But Barfield was making it tough for Harrison to do his job  properly. 

The time was late in the afternoon. It was the same day on which so  many annoying things had happened to

Harrison. For the first time in  his life, he had been summoned to police headquarters. He didn't like  that. It

annoyed him to have Inspector Cardona asking curt questions. 

The second annoying fact had been Harrison's visit to Barfield's  home. Again the realty agent's back had been

rubbed the wrong way.  Barfield had talked in a nasty manner. Indeed, he had threatened  Harrison. 

Now, it looked almost certain that David Barfield was deliberately  throwing away a realestate opportunity

that was worth a half million  dollars a year. Barfield's only excuse was that he was a sick man and  couldn't be

bothered. 

Harrison clenched his jaw. His job was to protect Barfield's  holdings whether Barfield cooperated or not. He

intended to try a  different method of persuasion on his stubborn client. 

Two wealthy young gentlemen had been summoned this afternoon to  Harrison's office. He expected their

arrival soon. The name of one was  James Whorter. The other man's name was Elliot Peabody. 

Whorter and Peabody were nephews of David Barfield. They enjoyed  his favor. They were, in fact, Barfield's

only heirs, since Charles  Clee's murder. 

A moment later, Harrison's pretty secretary opened the door of his  office. The two nephews of Barfield had

arrived. 

They were both handsomelooking young men. Whorter was a bit taller  than Peabody. He was less

pleasantlooking, too. His face had a sullen  mouth. There were unmistakable marks of dissipation around his

eyes.  Peabody, on the contrary, had a pleasant smile and a firm handshake.  His face looked almost boyish. 

Harrison described to them both the rental situation that was  driving him crazy. 

A certain big office building in town was owned by David Barfield.  It was in a section from which tenants

had moved away, drawn by the  lure of a huge new office district. For a long period, this office  building had

been half empty, in spite of low rentals. Now, there was a  chance to get the building off Barfield's hands and

take the red ink  out of Harrison's books. 

A realty operator from Chicago wanted to buy the building. He  offered a fair price. Tonight, this prospective

purchaser was flying  from Chicago to New York to sign the contract and close the deal. In  the morning he

intended to make a quick return trip to Chicago. He was  forced to move quickly in the matter because of the

pressure of  important work in Chicago. 


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"Your uncle has refused to meet this man," Harrison told the two  heirs. He removed his glasses and gestured

emphatically with them.  "Your uncle is willing to let the whole deal fall through." 

"Why?" Peabody asked. 

Whorter said nothing. He scowled, and drummed his fingers on  Harrison's desk in bored fashion. 

"Because of this nonsense about your uncle's illness," Harrison  answered. "He refuses to leave his home at

night. He won't come here to  my office to meet the client. He won't even permit me to bring the man  to his

home. He claims that he needs rest and quiet. As you may know,  your uncle retires to the east wing of his

home at night and isolates  himself. He doesn't even have a telephone in the east wing." 

THERE was a brief silence. 

"So what?" James Whorter finally said. His tone was unimpressed.  "What do you want us to do?" 

"I'd like you to persuade your uncle not to lose the opportunity of  closing a profitable deal. Unless he sees

this client tonight, the man  will fly back to Chicago in the morning and the whole deal will fall  through." 

Whorter laughed curtly. The sound of it made Harrison flush. 

"Sorry," Whorter said. "I've got better things to do than get in  the bad graces of my uncle. Besides, I've no

time. I've a social date  tonight at the home of a good friend of mine. Howard Blair, in fact." 

He shrugged indifferently, and rose to his feet. 

Harrison was disgusted. He knew Howard Blair. Blair was a gilded  young man of the stamp of Whorter. They

knew plenty about liquor, race  horses, chorus girls and very little about anything else. But Harrison  tried to

hide his annoyance as Whorter walked out. 

Elliot Peabody was more reasonable. 

"I'm sorry uncle is such a stubborn cuss," he murmured. "Perhaps  I'm only causing trouble for myself  but

I'll see what I can do. Let  me have your phone." 

He called up his uncle. Harrison, listening, felt his heart sink.  All he could hear Peabody saying was "Yes,

sir," and "Excuse me, but " 

Finally, Peabody hung up. There was chagrin in his face. 

"Uncle almost bit my ear off! Told me to mind my own business and  let him alone. Said he was a very sick

man. Said that if your client  from Chicago can't wait a day or two, the hell with him!" 

"Well, at least you tried," Harrison murmured. His eyes blinked  behind his glasses. "That's more than I can

say for Mr. Whorter." 

"You mustn't mind Whorter too much," Peabody replied. "He's been  upset lately. The death of poor Charles

Clee at the hands of Blue Face  has bothered him more than he cares to admit. Clee was a great pal of  his.

They spent a lot of time together." 


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There was some small talk. Then Peabody took his departure, after  promising to do anything in his power to

help the disturbed realty man. 

Harrison's pretty secretary noted the baffled anger of her  employer. 

"Maybe Mr. Barfield will change his mind," she said. 

But Harrison knew differently. He was still annoyed when he left  the office and drove home. Anger against

Barfield stirred in his mind,  as he opened the front door of his home. 

But the moment Harrison was inside, his anger changed to startled  concern. His daughter came to meet him

with outstretched arms. Her eyes  were red. She had been weeping. He could feel a frightened quiver in  her

body as he soothed her. 

"Elaine! For Heaven's sake! What is wrong?" 

"Dad, I'm almost crazy with worry! It's about John. I'm afraid he's  involved in something nasty! I'm worried

sick at the thought that he  may have something to do with this horrible criminal whose name is in  all the

papers." 

"Criminal?" Harrison's voice was sharp. 

"Blue Face." 

"What!" 

His tone indicated that he thought his daughter must be losing her  mind. John Shipton, his soninlaw, was

the very last man to be thought  of in connection with crime. 

Elaine put her hand in her purse, gave her father something. 

It was a package of cigarettes. 

The box was plain. There was no name on it, no revenue stamp,  nothing to identify it. 

Harrison's breath hissed when he opened the package and examined  one of the cigarettes. 

The thing was a "reefer"  a marijuana cigarette! 

"I found it in John's pocket," Elaine sobbed. "I didn't mean to spy  on him. I was looking for a postage stamp.

I knew that John sometimes  kept spare stamps in the wallet in his suit that hangs in the closet.  When I

reached in his pocket, I found  this!" 

HARRISON was stunned. He took off his glasses and polished them, to  gain time for thought. When he put

them on again, he tried to murmur  some reassuring remark. 

"That isn't all," Elaine continued in terror. "John has been acting  very queerly for the past couple of weeks.

Ever since the first robbery  of Blue Face was reported in all the newspapers." 

"How do you mean?" 


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"He's been staying out late every night. He won't tell me where  he's been or what he's doing." 

Her father tried to laugh reassuringly. 

"Nothing remarkable about that, Elaine. John is an ambitious young  man. You know as well as I where he

goes at night, and what he does.  He's attending night classes at the university, studying realestate  law. He's

been doing that for months. He wants to get ahead in the  business world. What's strange about attending night

classes?" 

"His classes end at eleven o'clock," Elaine replied. "John used to  come home before midnight. Now, it's

sometimes two or three o'clock in  the morning before he comes in. And the way he comes in frightens me,

although I usually pretend to be asleep. 

"Father, he creeps in! He sneaks in his stocking feet, as if afraid  I might wake up and question him. And the

look on his face scares me!  So strained and ugly! As if he were a... a criminal!" 

Elaine stared wanly at her father. Both were thinking of the same  thing. John Shipton worked as a rent

collector for his fatherinlaw.  His job was to visit the various buildings whose tenants paid their  rent in

cash. His was mostly the tenement trade. 

Shipton had visited the tenement where Blue Face had struck, the  night before. If anyone knew all the ins and

outs of that particular  building, it was John Shipton. 

Harrison remembered his interview that morning in Joe Cardona's  office at police headquarters. He

shuddered. He had assured Cardona  that Shipton was his daughter's husband and above reproach. But was

he? 

Awkwardly, Harrison attempted to soothe Elaine. He tried to change  the subject. He promised to talk to

Shipton privately. 

"Leave it to me," he said. "Whatever the trouble is, I'll get to  the bottom of it. Just leave us alone after we

finish dinner. Pretend  you have a headache and lie down. Let me talk to him." 

Elaine agreed. Having unburdened her mind, she felt better. 

When John Shipton returned home, a short while later, she greeted  him with a smile and a kiss. The scowl on

his face disappeared. He was  in a humorous mood at the dinner table. 

But his eyes narrowed again when Elaine spoke haltingly of a sudden  headache, and excused herself. 

Harrison lit a cigar and offered one to his soninlaw. Shipton  refused. Harrison removed his glasses and

polished them nervously for a  moment with his handkerchief. 

"What's on your mind?" Shipton asked. 

Harrison showed him the plain package of marijuana cigarettes, and  watched him. Shipton examined it

without much interest. His face was  expressionless. 

"Where did you get this?" 

"In your pocket," Harrison said bluntly. 


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If he expected Shipton to cringe he was fooled. Shipton laughed as  if the matter was a joke. He talked

smoothly. He talked so glibly, in  fact, that Harrison wondered if his soninlaw might not have rehearsed

this speech in advance, in case he ran into this very situation. 

Shipton's explanation about the presence of the drugged cigarettes  in his pocket was slightly incredible.

According to his story, he had  been mixed up in an unexpected bit of excitement in the subway, a few  days

earlier. A shabby man sitting next to him in the subway car had  jumped to his feet and run. After him raced a

grimfaced pursuer, who  flashed a detective badge as he shouldered other passengers aside. 

The train was standing in a subway station when the incident  occurred. The fugitive raced to the platform and

vanished up the  stairs, pursued by the plainclothes detective. 

"The fellow must have been a narcotic peddler," Shipton said. "I  can see now what happened, although I

didn't suspect it until you just  showed me this package of marijuana cigarettes. When the dope peddler  ran, he

tried to get rid of his evidence. He must have slid the package  in my pocket just before he jumped to his feet." 

Harrison didn't voice any disbelief. There was a short silence.  Then he brought up the matter of Shipton's

strange lateness in  returning home at night from his classes at the university. 

Shipton changed his tune. His smile faded. He refused to discuss  the matter at all. 

"It's none of your business when I come home. You have no right to  spy on me. Perhaps I like to take long

walks. Perhaps I find it easy to  digest my law studies on such night walks." 

He shot a sneering glance at his fatherinlaw's disturbed face. 

"Or perhaps I'm Blue Face! That's what you're thinking, isn't it?" 

Harrison denied it. He gave up the attempt to talk frankly with his  soninlaw. His eyes blinked unhappily

behind the sheen of his glasses. 

"You'll have to trust me," Shipton growled. "And now, I've got to  be going. I have my classes at night school

to think of. Tell Elaine  I'm sorry about her headache. I'll be home as soon as I can." 

SHIPTON left the house, a tight smile twisting his lips in a hard  curve. He walked to the corner where he

always took the bus to the  university. But he didn't wait for the bus. He hurried around the  corner and walked

toward a garage a few blocks away. 

There, he was greeted as "Mr. Jones" by the garage attendant. 

Shipton got into a small coupe. He drove to the other side of town,  halted outside a shabby rooming house

and entered, using a key he took  from his pocket. In the lower hallway, he met the frowzy landlady.  Again he

was addressed by his assumed name. 

"How are you, Mr. Jones?" the landlady smiled. 

Shipton went up to a room he had rented a couple of weeks earlier.  He locked the door and drew the shades.

Going to a locked closet, he  unlocked it. Inside was a small suitcase. 

From this suitcase, "Mr. Jones" took a businesslike little gun. He  pocketed the gun, locked the suitcase, the

closet, and the room, and  went down to his parked car. 


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He drove to a drugstore. There, he made a couple of lowvoiced  phone calls. First, he telephoned the

apartment of James Whorter and  asked a servant if Whorter was going to be at home that night. 

The servant replied that Whorter would be out tonight. Shipton's  next question elicited the place where

Whorter expected to be later on  in the evening. It was the home of a man named Howard Blair. 

A grimace twisted Shipton's thin lips as he wrote down the  information. Next, he telephoned the home of

Elliot Peabody, the second  heir of David Barfield. He learned that Peabody would be at home all  evening. He

wrote this second address down, too. 

Shipton's next three hours were uneventful. He went to evening  school and attended all his classes. After

school was over, at eleven  o'clock, he drove aimlessly around until he found a movie theater that  suited him.

He went inside and killed time watching the late show. 

It was well past midnight when Shipton again entered his car. He  examined a small slip of paper. On it was

the penciled information he  had obtained earlier concerning James Whorter and Elliot Peabody. His  hand felt

the pocket where he had hidden his gun. 

He drove off through the darkness. 

Another car followed the one driven by Shipton. Shipton was unaware  of this. The man in the trailing car was

careful. 

He was Richard Harrison! 

Harrison had been on the trail of Shipton all evening. He had  shadowed him to the garage, to the furnished

room, to the movie  theater. 

There were stubborn lumps at the hinges of Richard Harrison's jaw.  Behind his pincenez glasses, his eyes

were very bright. He was  determined to find out what this sly young husband of his daughter  Elaine was up

to! 

CHAPTER VI. A RIDE WITH SLUG

AT almost the same time that Richard Harrison was so carefully  tailing the strange movements of John

Shipton, events of an equally  sinister character were in the making in a much more respectable  section of

town. 

The handsome residence of David Barfield was dark from cellar to  roof. Since his sudden "illness," Barfield

always made it a habit to  retire early. His servants had gone to bed. The street in front of the  house had few

passersby. 

The street in the rear of the Barfield home was even quieter. A  street light threw a small circle of brilliance on

a deserted pavement.  A high board fence closed off the rear of the mansion's grounds. The  fence was tall

enough to keep curious people from peeping into the  property of the millionaire. Its coating of dullgray

paint made the  fence blend into the darkness. 

There was a small door cut into the smooth surface of that fence.  Its location had been carefully noted by The

Shadow on his secret  invasion of the Barfield home early that same afternoon. He was aware  that the fence

door had been cut about the same time that the automatic  elevator had been installed for Barfield's


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convenience in the isolated  east wing of the house. 

Harry Vincent was watching that rear fence. He was in a spot where  he could not readily be observed. 

There were two empty cars parked at the curb of that rear street.  One was not very far from the outline of the

door in the gray fence.  The other was halfway down the block. Vincent was hidden in this second  car. He was

there on the orders of The Shadow. Harry was ready to carry  out a highly discreet job that had been intrusted

to him. 

Suddenly, his keen eyes saw what he had been so patiently waiting  for during his long vigil. 

The fence door was slyly opening. 

It didn't open much. The movement was accomplished swiftly. For an  instant, the open door showed a small

aperture. A man dressed in dark  clothes slipped out. With a quick gesture, he closed and locked the  fence

door. He darted through the darkness to the car that was parked  nearby. 

The man was David Barfield. 

He moved like a man who had considerable muscular strength as well  as excellent health. It proved what

Harry Vincent had already been  warned by The Shadow  that Barfield's bad heart and his paralysis of  the

legs were fictitious. 

Barfield got into the car. It moved away from the curb and rolled  onward to the corner. An instant later, it

rounded the corner and sped  up the avenue at a fast clip. 

Vincent lost no time. His own car got under way as smoothly as  Barfield's. He slowed at the corner and

peered north. He didn't want to  tip his hand by getting too close to the fugitive millionaire. But a  quick glance

made him crowd on more power. Barfield was streaking up  the dark avenue at a rapid pace. 

Suddenly, Harry grunted. His foot moved from the gas pedal to the  brake. The car ahead had slowed without

warning. Harry dawdled, keeping  a couple of blocks between him and his quarry. He divined what was  going

on. 

Barfield was taking nothing for granted. The millionaire's eyes  were glued to the rearvision mirror, to make

sure that his sly sneak  from his mansion had been unobserved. 

Evidently, his backward glance reassured Barfield. This time, there  was no doubt about the fact that Barfield

was in a hurry. Vincent had  to feed gas in a hurry, to make sure that he was not left behind. 

Soon, Barfield slowed again. His tires shrieked as he swung his  wheel to make a quick turn into a side street.

The fugitive car  vanished eastward in the crosstown street. 

HARRY made ready to duplicate the same skid trick. But his maneuver  was never completed. Another car

was taking a hand in this grim chase. 

The second car roared suddenly out of obscurity along the avenue.  It came from the opposite direction to

which Harry was heading. 

There was no need for a collision, had the other driver kept to the  side of the avenue on which he belonged.

But this driver was a man with  a hard face and reckless eyes. He was there to protect the flight of  David


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Barfield. 

As Vincent started to make the turn around the corner, the second  car roared straight toward him at a terrific

pace. 

Harry realized his danger. He tried to veer and swing up on the  sidewalk to avoid a bad crash. His tug at the

wheel came an instant too  late. The other car struck his coupe a terrific impact. Caught in the  act of turning,

Harry's vehicle was struck squarely in the side by the  front bumper of the pirate car. 

There was a crash. Vincent's car was hurled against a streetlight  standard. The pole bent like a melted stick

of cheese. The light  overhead went out, the heavy glass globe fell to the street. It smashed  with a loud jangle

of broken glass. 

For an instant, nothing happened. Harry didn't move, because he was  senseless. The impact had knocked him

into an inert heap. Blood  streamed down his face from a cut across his scalp and forehead. 

But the criminal wrecker was by no means out of action. He had  known exactly what to expect. A heavy pad

on the steering wheel  protected his stomach. He had braced himself for the collision. 

A moment later, he darted out of the crumpled front of his car. He  limped a little as he ran, but the limp was

only a slight one. He raced  diagonally across the avenue, toward the entrance to a dark flight of  cellar steps

below a shop that had been closed for the night. 

In an instant, the man was gone. 

His flight was not seen by the unconscious Vincent. But eyes  sharper than Vincent's had noted both the

assailant and the direction  of his flight. The Shadow had no intention of allowing this hitrun  specialist to

escape. 

The Shadow had not appeared earlier, for a good reason. He had  expected trouble. Aware that Barfield would

have certain precautions  planned in case of trouble, The Shadow had held himself in reserve, to  take over in

case Harry muffed his assignment. 

He was aware that events tonight were only in the preliminary  stage. Somewhere in Manhattan, Blue Face

was preparing to make another  of his vicious raids! 

There was no proof yet that David Barfield and Blue Face were the  same. But The Shadow was taking no

chances. 

A farther tailing of Barfield was impossible. He made good use of  the wreck behind him. His car had already

vanished at high speed toward  the east side of town. 

But Barfield had left behind him a direct link to his unknown game:  the thug who had fled down the cellar

steps across the silent avenue. 

The Shadow darted toward the steps. He had one advantage. The thug  was unaware that he was being

followed. He thought that Harry Vincent  was the only foe he had to consider. He had taken no chances in

abandoning his smashed car. The license plates were stolen. The car  itself had been stolen a week earlier, in

Pennsylvania. 


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As The Shadow descended the cellar steps, his black robe seemed  part of the darkness. The brim of his black

slouch hat covered his  forehead and dimmed the flame of his eyes. He stood utterly motionless  in the gloom

below the street, waiting for some sight or sound to  betray the presence of the hitandrun driver. 

He knew that the man was somewhere in the blackness of the cellar  ahead of him. 

Suddenly, he heard a sigh. It was a sound of relief. A moment  later, a ceiling light glowed in the cellar. 

The Shadow, crouched in a black angle of the cellar wall, had a  quick view of his foe. The man was peering

back, a gun jutting  menacingly from his hand. His face was a brutal one, in spite of his  natty appearance. 

The Shadow recognized that face. The man was Slug Narvo. 

NARVO was a bigshot figure in the underworld. He headed an  important mob. His mob controlled a lot of

criminal business. Police  had never been able to put much of a finger on them. They were cagey. 

It looked as if Slug Narvo might know plenty about the secret  identity of Blue Face. 

Narvo left the cellar light on only for a second or two. The light  convinced him that no one was trailing him.

He snapped it off and  continued his flight from the rear of the cellar. 

The Shadow pursued, silently and unseen. 

The chase led over a rear fence, through a yard littered with  rubbish and tin cans. It brought The Shadow

through the cellar of still  another building. Narvo walked slowly westward along a side street. The  Shadow

paralleled him through the darkness on the other side. 

Finally, he saw the goal toward which Narvo was heading. It was a  large openair parking lot. The place was

filled with empty cars. They  were parked in long rows, separated only by narrow aisles to permit the  cars to

be driven out to the street. 

In the front of the lot was a small, lighted shack. Here the owner  of the lot received his parking fees and

issued receipt tickets. 

Narvo walked to the shack. His voice was casual. 

"Hello, pal. Got my car ready?" 

"Sure!" 

Nothing more was said. Narvo stayed where he was. The man walked  back along one of the dark aisles. 

The Shadow was a grim spectator of where the man was going. The  Shadow had entered the lot from around

the corner. He had found it not  too hard to get over the wovenwire fence that closed off the lot from  the

sidewalk. 

He was anxious to know where Narvo intended to go next. The best  way to find out was to ride along with

Narvo himself. 

It seemed like an impossible task. The parkinglot attendant seemed  suspicious. His eyes kept glancing here

and there in the darkness, as  if he sensed danger. But he saw nothing to alarm him. 


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Presently, he stopped alongside a sedan. This was the car Narvo was  going to use. But it still seemed an

impossible task to get into the  trunk at the rear without the man knowing it. 

It was necessary to get the man out of the car for a few moments,  while The Shadow got in. 

The engine of the car began to hum. The parkinglot man had  switched on the motor. His next move was to

turn on the lights. The  moment he did so, he gave a little grunt of surprise. The beams of the  headlights threw

a bright glow on the dark exit aisle directly in front  of the car. 

On the concrete, a crumpled piece of paper was visible. There was  something about its look and its color that

brought that quick grunt  from the lips of the attendant. 

He jumped out and picked the paper up. It was a fivedollar bill,  dropped by some careless motorist. At least,

that was what the finder  thought. 

"This sure is my lucky night!" he muttered. 

He went back to the car. A moment later, it got under way. He drove  it to the front of the lot and turned it

over to Slug Narvo. 

"Anything stirring?" Narvo whispered 

"Not a thing." 

"Swell! Keep your trap shut. So long." 

Narvo drove away, chuckling. In the trunk carrier at the rear, his  chuckle was echoed by a tiny sound of

sibilant laughter. The sound of  the motor covered that mocking laugh of The Shadow. 

Unknowingly, Slug Narvo was very obligingly taking The Shadow along  as a passenger! 

THE SHADOW lifted the lid of the trunk a trifle. Through the crack  he could observe his progress without

himself being noticed. 

He saw that Narvo was driving aimlessly about the city. He knew  why. Narvo was dawdling around to make

doubly certain he was under no  scrutiny before he proceeded to his real goal. 

After fifteen minutes of this timewasting, Narvo shoved his foot  harder on the gas pedal. He drove over to

the West Side and continued  downtown. He paused finally outside an allnight garage. The door was  open. 

Slug drove right in. 

There were a lot of cars in the garage. There seemed to be a lot of  helpers, too. Most of them had faces that

seemed tough. The overalls of  some of them bulged slightly at the hip. 

A man who seemed to be in charge walked over to where Narvo sat in  his car. The man was grinning. There

wasn't much mirth in his smile. 

"Wanna park overnight, pal?" 

"Yeah." 


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A repair job was being done on a car nearby. The driver, obviously  a lawabiding citizen, was watching

Narvo and the garage owner. Their  small talk was for his benefit. 

"The garage is filled," the tough guy in overalls said. "But we can  accommodate you, if you don't mind

parking out in back." 

"Suits me," Narvo said. 

He drove deeper into the garage. A metal door at the rear was  hoisted by a mechanic. Through the opening,

Narvo drove his sedan out  to the rear. There was a paved courtyard between the back of the garage  and what

looked like a brick loft building. 

The garage door dropped downward with a metallic clang. Narvo got  out of his car, walked across the dark

courtyard to the rear door of  the brick building. The door looked as if it were made of solid steel,  painted to

disguise this fact. 

All the windows above  as many as The Shadow could see from the  cautiously opened crack in the trunk of

the parked car  were closed by  heavy steel shutters. The place looked like a veritable stronghold. 

It was, in fact, the headquarters of Slug Narvo. 

A man lay asleep on the stone steps that led to the door of this  building. He was dressed in ragged clothes and

looked like a bum. But  his appearance was as deceptive as his sleep. 

He got up when Narvo approached. There was a brief, whispered  conversation between them. Then both

chuckled. Evidently things were  happening that pleased them. 

Slug opened the steel door with a key he took from a leather  container in his pocket. The key wasn't the only

method he used to  unlock that door. He did other things with his busy fingers, after he  had turned the key in

the lock. But The Shadow was unable to see. The  crook's body masked the rapid movement of his hands. 

As soon as Narvo had disappeared inside, the "bum" resumed his lazy  sprawl on the stone steps. He made no

further pretense of sleep,  however. His beady eyes were bright. 

He kept his glance moving restlessly toward the parked car, toward  the rear of the garage, toward the

entrance to a narrow alley that ran  alongside the headquarters of Slug Narvo's mob. Evidently, Narvo had

warned his henchman to keep a special vigil tonight. 

Something big was brewing inside those sinister walls! 

CHAPTER VII. THUGS' STRONGHOLD

THE SHADOW was still inside the trunk of Narvo's parked car in the  dark courtyard. 

Certain things were now clear to him. An entry through the  formidable door of Narvo's headquarters was

almost impossible. Even if  the guard were put out of action, it would be a hopeless task to attack  both the

lock and the hidden gadgets which Narvo had so cleverly  screened with his body when he had made his

entrance to the gang  stronghold. 

Besides, The Shadow still wanted secrecy. His plan was to gain an  entrance to that building without allowing


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Narvo and his men to realize  what was going on. It was clear enough now that an association of some  kind

existed between Narvo and David Barfield. The Shadow desired to  learn more before showing his hand. 

The car in which he was hidden was parked diagonally, so that the  guard on the stone step opposite could not

see the slight crack of the  partly lifted trunk. The Shadow's problem was exactly the opposite of  the one he

had faced at the parking lot. There, he had to force a man  to get out of the car so that he could get in. Here, he

had to force a  man to get in the car so that he could get out! 

He used the open crack of the trunk lid to work his new scheme. 

A blackgloved hand projected briefly. It held a length of  lightweight cord, at the end of which was a running

noose. There was a  peculiar knot in that noose. It would enable The Shadow to loosen it  with a quick jerk,

after the noose had accomplished what he wanted. 

One hand held the lid of the trunk slightly up, while the other  skillfully tossed the noose. It dropped over the

handle of the front  door of the car on the side tilted away from the sharp eyes of the  "bum." 

The Shadow pulled slowly, with an evenly applied pressure. There  was a faint click as the door of the car

swung partly open. A jerk of  The Shadow's wrist loosened the noose. He drew the thin cord backward  and

pulled it inside the trunk. 

Almost instantly, he heard a grunt from the thug on guard. The thug  had noticed the open front door of the

car. He didn't dream that the  thing had been done purposely. He figured that Narvo had closed the  door too

gently, and that it had swung open again. He came over to  investigate. 

What he did was what any normal man would've done. Having found the  door faulty, he turned his attention

to the car itself. He climbed in  and tested the brake. He glanced at the instrument panel. Then he got  out

again, slamming the door hard to close it properly. 

His inspection took only a few seconds. When he passed the rear of  the car, his glance at the trunk carrier

showed him that the lid was  closed. He opened it just to make sure everything was all right. 

The trunk carrier was empty! 

The Shadow had moved even faster than a suspicious crook. He was  now underneath the car. 

Flat on the dark ground, his black robe melted into the pavement.  His black slouch hat covered the blur of his

face. Even if the thug had  peered under the car, it was a probable that be would never have  detected the

presence of The Shadow underneath. But he didn't even  look. 

Satisfied that nothing was amiss, the thug went back to his post  outside the rear door of Narvo's hangout. 

While he was doing this The Shadow was on the move again. 

NOISELESSLY, The Shadow bellied out from the front of the parked  car and crawled swiftly across the

black pavement to a spot close to  the wall of an adjoining warehouse. He lay still, waiting his next  chance. 

It didn't come for quite a while. But presently the face of the  guard shifted. He yawned noisily and produced a

cigarette. There was a  spurt of a match. The crook inhaled a big lungful of smoke. The flare  of the match

blinded him for a precious second or two. During that  interval, The Shadow was again on the crawl. This

time, he rounded the  corner of the alley alongside Narvo's headquarters, moved completely  out of sight. 


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Windows on this side were like the ones at the rear. They were all  tightly covered by the stout steel shutters.

Not a ray of light showed  from any of those upstairs rooms. To get inside through one of those  steelcovered

windows would be a long and difficult task. And the risk  of alarming the thugs inside was too great. 

The Shadow wasted no time trying to reach one of the shuttered  windows. He used the drainpipe that ran

vertically up the side of the  brick building, in an angle of the alley wall. His goal was the roof.  The angle of

the wall helped him climb the pipe to the roof. 

It was a tough task. Several times, The Shadow had to halt, and  blink the sweat out of his eyes. But he finally

made it. He was able to  reach above his head and catch a projecting cornice. 

Then he was on the roof, lying prone to relax his strained muscles.  The roof was flat, and covered with tar

paper. There was no guard  posted up here. Evidently the location of the building made the roof  seem

invasionproof. The courtyard and the alley separated Narvo's  hangout from other roofs. The street end of the

alley was closed off by  a high fence that made an attack from there unlikely. 

Indeed, The Shadow suspected that the alley fence out in front was  probably rigged up with some sort of

alarm device. 

He crawled carefully toward the roof scuttle. It was a square  scuttle, with an ordinary chain and hook

underneath. It was added proof  that Slug Narvo and his henchmen were not worried about the raids from

above. 

The Shadow made a faint rap with his knuckles. He listened. The  faint echo from below told him something

of what lay below the scuttle.  The echo was too loud to come from a small closet. The place underneath  was

probably a windowless room of the storeroom type. 

The sound of the echo from below told The Shadow one more thing.  The room itself was undoubtedly empty. 

Gently, he forced the edge of the scuttle upward. He used special  tools that he always carried. When the

scuttle covering had been forced  high enough for The Shadow's hands to slide in through the crack,  another

tool, with lean steel jaws of terrific cutting capacity, took  care of the chain and hook that fastened the scuttle

on the inner side. 

He stared down into a bare and empty room. The door was closed. A  light in the ceiling showed The Shadow

that he had nothing to fear from  any watchful thug. 

He produced a slim, tough rope from below his robe. Fastening it to  the scuttle hook, he slid quietly

downward so as to avoid any betraying  jar of his feet when he landed on the floor. 

He had barely started to slide down, when something happened that  no foresight on his part could have

anticipated. A man entered the room  from the hallway outside! He was just in time to see the blackrobed

figure of The Shadow halfway down the dangling rope! 

THE thug was petrified with astonishment. For an instant, he stood  staring upward with gaping jaws. Then

his hand darted to his hip for a  gun. At the same time, he tried to scream a warning to his pals in  other parts of

the house. 

He had no chance to do either. The Shadow was on the floor at the  foot of the rope when the thug made his

first movement. A swift bound  took The Shadow toward his foe. A blackgloved hand clamped tightly  over

the opened mouth of the criminal. Another hand clutched at his  halfdrawn gun. 


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The Shadow knew he was fighting for his life. Mobsters would come  pouring into the room in an instant, if a

scream or a shot were  permitted. The knowledge of his peril gave added strength to the hands  of The Shadow.

The gun was wrenched loose as the struggling thug fought  to tear himself away from the throttling hand

across his mouth. 

He collapsed without a sound, when the butt of the captured gun  thudded against the back of his skull. The

Shadow caught the tumbling  body before it fell to the floor. 

His glance moved backward over his shoulder, toward the rope that  still dangled from the open roof scuttle.

There was nothing else to do  but to carry the prisoner up that rope and hide his unconscious body on  the roof.

Any other course would be suicidal. 

And there was an excellent chance that the captured thug would not  be missed until The Shadow had

accomplished his purpose inside this  stronghold of crime. 

Slowly, he went up the rope, the limp body of the thug draped  around his shoulders. It made his previous task

of climbing the water  pipe seem trivial by comparison. But The Shadow made it at last. He  laid the captive

crook on the tarred roof and fixed the scuttle so that  it fitted fairly well into place. Then he slid down the rope

again. 

This time, he jerked gently to left and right until the trick knot  he had tied came loose. The fallen rope was

wound around his body  beneath his black robe. 

The Shadow slipped from the storeroom to a dim topfloor hallway.  He advanced cautiously in the direction

of a stairway that led below. 

From behind closed doors he could hear the snores of sleeping men.  Evidently there was no thought of peril

inside this wellguarded house.  The thug on duty below and the one on the top floor were expected to  give a

swift alarm in case of trouble. 

As The Shadow crept down the stairs to a lower floor, he observed  the hallway was only dimly lighted. 

The Shadow noticed a closet door in the hall. There were two other  doors that led to closed rooms. One of the

rooms seemed to be in  darkness. But from beneath the crack of the other door  the room  opposite the hall

closet  a bright band of light showed that the room  was occupied. 

A hum of talk from within was dimly audible. The Shadow crept  closer. Dropping to one knee, he was able to

press his ear tightly  against the panel near the tiny gap of the keyhole. 

As he did so, he heard a familiar voice within. The voice of the  speaker was shrill with a note of worry. 

It was David Barfield! 

" not so sure about that," Barfield was saying. "Are you positive  that the man who tried to trail me last night

was not a... a  detective?" 

"It's my job to know every plainclothes dick in the city!" The  second voice was heavy with impatience. "I

had a good look at that mug  in the wrecked car, before I ducked out of sight. I don't know who the  sap was,

but he wasn't a plainclothes bull. You can take my word for  that!" 

The Shadow recognized that ugly second voice. It was Slug Narvo's. 


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The keyhole opening gave The Shadow an opportunity to watch the  faces of the two men within. The

millionaire was hunched forward at the  side of the mob leader's desk, his face tense with worry. 

Narvo, behind the desk, seemed to be more at ease. There was a  suspicion of a sneer on his lips as he stared at

the millionaire realty  owner. 

"What the hell are you worrying for? I'm not!" 

"Suppose that man whose car you wrecked was an agent of The  Shadow?" 

"Why should he be?" 

"Because The Shadow suspects something! I can't prove it, but I'll  swear The Shadow was inside my home

this afternoon. I'm afraid he may  have discovered the secret passage from my private elevator to the  street in

the rear of my home." 

"What!" 

NARVO'S tone changed. There was surprise and rage in it. He  listened, with a scowl, while Barfield talked

further. 

"I heard a faint sound from my suite in the east wing," the  millionaire went on. "I sneaked downstairs with a

gun. I couldn't find  a thing wrong. But the elevator was at the ground floor and its door  was open. The tunnel

door was closed, however. There was no trace of  anyone in the passage." 

"Then why do you suspect The Shadow?" Narvo growled. 

"Because I heard him laugh. It was as plain as any sound I ever  heard in my life! He was there, I'm sure of

that! Yet, when I searched  every nook and cranny of the ground floor, there was no trace of him." 

"You imagined it," Narvo said. "Your nerves are on edge. Forget it.  Just remember that you and I are working

together. Nothing on earth can  stop us. Not even The Shadow!" 

Narvo blew smoke from an expensive cigar. 

"Let's get back to business. Let's talk about your heirs. Clee is  dead. Blue Face bumped him. That leaves two

more. One of them is James  Whorter, the other guy is Elliot Peabody. Right?" 

"Right," Barfield whispered. 

"They share your estate, every penny of it, if you croak before  they do. On the other hand, if they croak first,

their money goes to  you. Correct?" 

"That's right. But what has that got to do with it? I've told you  already what my only interest is in this matter.

I'm paying you plenty  for the help of you and your gang. Tonight, I'm going to need that  help. May I suggest

that it is already getting quite late? Why don't we  get going?" 

"We got time. What about your rental agent, this fellow Harrison?  Do you think he suspects anything? And

what about John Shipton? I think  it's high time me and my boys handled Shipton!" 


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"Harrison knows nothing," Barfield remarked. "He has no idea who  Shipton really is. I didn't know about it

myself until long after  Shipton had married Harrison's daughter Elaine. Then I discovered it  purely by

accident." 

"Shipton is one of your heirs, eh?" 

"Not my heir!" There was anger in Barfield's curt growl. "But he is  one of my nephews. I had four sisters.

When I started in business years  ago, I had very little money. Three of my sisters agreed to  ah   cooperate

when I asked them for their savings. The fourth sister  accused me of some regrettable things, and refused to

let me have a  penny. John Shipton is her son." 

"And now all your sisters are dead, including the one you didn't  like," Narvo said softly. "And Shipton

blames you for the later death  of his father and mother. He hates your guts, in fact." 

"That is true," Barfield said. "Shipton would do anything to get  revenge for what he thinks is my  ah 

heartless treatment of his  mother. A false accusation, of course. 

"I believe he would not hesitate to kill me, if he got the chance.  Or to kill my other two nephews and leave

himself as my only living  relative in the event of my death occurring before his." 

"Maybe Shipton is Blue Face," Narvo said. 

"Perhaps," the millionaire replied slowly. 

"Perhaps! That's all you ever say! You're sure you don't know who  Blue Face is?" 

"What does it matter who he is, as long as you and your mob carry  out your contract with me?" 

"O.K. Leave it that way. But I'd like to ask one more question." 

"What?" 

"If this guy Shipton is such a damned nuisance to you, why don't  you let me and my boys handle him right

now?" 

"No!" Barfield spat it harshly. "Your job tonight is to do what  I've arranged. We're going to take care of

James Whorter tonight!" 

Narvo grinned, and expelled a mouthful of smoke. 

"O.K. You're the boss. You sure Whorter won't be in his own  apartment tonight?" 

"I'm positive! He's visiting a man named Blair." Barfield's words  were bitter with contempt. "No doubt,

they've got together to discuss  their chief interest in life  horses and women!" 

HE rose impatiently. So did Slug Narvo. They moved toward the door. 

The Shadow had to beat a quick retreat. A moment before the door  opened, The Shadow faded inside the

closet across the hall. 


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Barfield shook hands with the mob leader and went down the stairs.  Narvo remained in the open doorway of

the lighted room opposite the  closet. 

The Shadow would have liked to keep on the trail of David Barfield,  but that opportunity was denied him by

the presence of Narvo opposite  the closet. From downstairs came a heavy clang of metal. The Shadow  knew

what it meant. Barfield had left the house by way of the guarded  back door. 

A moment later, the sound of a car motor was dimly audible from  outside. Barfield was wasting no time in

getting away. 

Narvo turned and went back into his room. But by some ill chance he  did not close his door behind him.

Sitting at his desk, he was visible  in the lighted room opposite the hall closet. The closet, of course,  was also

visible to Narvo from where he sat. 

Fate had marooned The Shadow at an instant when he wanted  desperately to be on the move! 

But he had no choice. It was still of supreme importance to keep  Narvo and his gang from realizing that The

Shadow was already inside  their fortified hangout. 

The Shadow waited. 

CHAPTER VIII. KILLER'S TRAP

ALTHOUGH The Shadow had to wait inside a stuffy closet, he was not  idle by any means. His senses and

perceptions were grimly on the alert. 

The closet was different from an ordinary closet. For one thing, it  was curiously shallow. For another, it

contained no shelves, no hooks  on the back walls on which to hang clothing. The Shadow examined that  rear

wall with the tips of sensitive fingers. 

After a brief interval, he snapped on the light of a tiny electric  torch. The torch was no larger in diameter than

a pencil. It threw only  a thin beam. 

But the beam was powerful enough to show The Shadow certain aspects  of the rear wall in the closet, that

confirmed the judgment already  made in the darkness by his fingertips. The rear closet wall was a  farce. It

was, in fact, a camouflaged door that could be opened by a  persistent man whose patience was only matched

by his sharp  intelligence in matters of this kind. 

The rear wall of the closet finally slid aside into a groove in the  house wall. A large inner room was

disclosed. 

Again, the tiny beam of The Shadow's light probed the stuffy  darkness of an inclosed space. This inner room

was like the one on the  top floor. No windows cut its walls. There were no other doors. The air  smelled close

and stale. 

But it was at the floor of the room that The Shadow gazed in grim  understanding. The place was a veritable

arsenal! 

The Shadow could see racks of guns. Some of them were sawedoff  shotguns. Others were even more deadly

weapons: automatic rifles. There  was ammunition piled neatly in many boxes. There was a case of teargas


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cartridges. There was something even more deadly  small incendiary  bombs, that suggested Slug Narvo and

his gang were proficient in the  art of arson. 

However, there was one fact about this secret room that puzzled The  Shadow. It had no exit except the one

through the closet in the hallway  of the house. 

This seemed a queer fact to the shrewd brain of The Shadow. If  police ever raided this house, it would be an

impossible task to get  rid of all this damning evidence quickly. The capture of it by police  would mean long

jail terms for Slug Narvo and his mobsmen. There must  be some swift way for them to dispose of all this

contraband armament  in the event of a swift police raid. 

Where was the secret exit? 

It must be an extraordinary efficient one, for it would have to be  designed to get rid of the criminal evidence

almost in the twinkling of  an eye. 

The Shadow began to search with patient care. His eyes lifted from  the deadly merchandise of death on the

floor to the walls of the room.  The walls were bare, with only one exception: a cheap calendar tacked  to the

plaster. 

Or rather, a calendar that was not tacked to the plaster. The tack  was fully two feet above the top of the

wiresuspended calendar. 

The Shadow moved forward to investigate. 

Then, suddenly, he whirled. He had heard the voice of Narvo from  the open room across the hallway outside

the closet entrance. Narvo was  talking loudly into a telephone. The Shadow retraced quick steps to  listen. 

"Hey, Joe!" Narvo was shouting into the phone. "What's the matter?  Can't you hear?... We got a job tonight!

Wake up the boys on the top  floor. Tell them to get ready. Hey  Joe!" 

There was no answer. The Shadow realized the reason for the silence  from the upper floor. Joe was the guard

whom The Shadow had put out of  action. His unconscious body, gagged and bound, lay out of sight on the

roof of the crooks' hangout. 

At almost the same instant. Narvo sensed that something was wrong  with his topfloor sentry. He pressed

another button on his desk panel,  switched to somebody downstairs. 

"Pug! You there?... Listen! Something phony is going on! I don't  know what, but Joe ain't on duty up above.

He don't answer." 

There was an inaudible reply. Narvo spoke again. 

"Put a guard on the downstairs door. Blast anyone who tries to  escape from the house!" 

He raced from the lighted room and tore swiftly up the stairs. The  Shadow could hear Narvo's furious shouts.

Other shouts answered. The  "boys" were all wide awake now. There was a terrific commotion. 

THE SHADOW profited by this brief delay. He dashed boldly across  the hall from the closet, raced into

Narvo's office. 


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From beneath his cloak, he snatched a diamond cutter. Its hard  point bit into the glass pane of Narvo's

window. The glass was laid  aside. The steel shutters that screened the window were opened by the  swift

hands of The Shadow. He looked like a man eager to make a  desperate leap to freedom from a high window.

But that was merely an  illusion. 

Instead of leaping to the alley below, The Shadow tossed his cloak  downward. He weighted it with an object

snatched from Narvo's desk. The  cloak landed almost exactly where The Shadow intended it. From above,  it

looked like the crouched figure of a man bent close to the dark base  of the alley wall. 

The Shadow darted back across the hallway and into the closet. He  retreated through the wall of the closet,

into the windowless arsenal  room. He headed for the calendar that hung from a thin wire on the  plaster wall. 

By this time, the mobsters on the top floor had discovered what had  happened to the mysteriously vanished

Joe. A quick search disclosed  that the roof scuttle had been forced by a clever intruder. 

Joe's boundandgagged body was found writhing on the roof. Swift  knives slashed his tight bonds. The gag

was ripped from his mouth. He  uttered a hatefilled snarl: 

"The Shadow!" 

Narvo listened to the discomfited guard's story. One thing was  instantly clear to Narvo and the rest of his

mobsters. 

The Shadow was still inside the house! 

He had not escaped by way of the roof. It was also impossible for  him to have sneaked past that steel rear

door downstairs through which  David Barfield had departed. 

"Search the whole damned place!" Narvo shouted. "You boys start  here from the top floor. The rest can work

upstairs from the cellar  with me. And don't miss a crack or a knothole. If you see The Shadow,  blow him to

pieces!" 

The search began  a deadly search by enraged crooks. It took  considerable time. But it yielded no captive. 

The thugs moving from above and those from below met in the hallway  outside the closet into which The

Shadow had vanished. Narvo pointed to  the closed door. 

"Look in there! It's the only place he could have gone." 

His hand was on the closet door, when there came a startling  interruption. One of the prowling mobbies had

entered Narvo's office.  His yell brought the rest pouring in. He pointed to the cutout  windowpane and the

open shutter. Heads peered watchfully into the alley  below. 

It was Narvo who saw the cloak at the base of the alley hall. His  gun pointed at what he thought was the

crouched figure of The Shadow. 

"Freeze!" Narvo snarled. "One move, and I'll rip your guts with  lead! Go get him, boys!" 

Narvo didn't fire for fear the noise of shooting might attract  attention from the street in front of the house. It

cost him an effort  not to pull the trigger. He was wild with rage at the way The Shadow  had penetrated into

his stronghold. 


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But soon his rage increased. His henchmen, racing from the house,  had surrounded the cloaked fugitive. They

sprang closer, to capture  him. Then they yelled with dismay. 

They found themselves grappling with an empty black cloak weighted  with an object from Narvo's own desk. 

They were called back into the house by the mob leader. His rage  had changed to grim understanding. He

began to sense what lay behind  The Shadow's strategy. Once more, he sent his men toward the hall  closet. 

A hand flung open the door. The closet was empty. At Narvo's nod,  one of his henchmen manipulated the

mechanism to open the closet's fake  rear wall. Guns lifted in readiness to blast The Shadow into bloody

shreds. 

THE SHADOW, however, was not idle. His trickery had given him a  precious margin of time. He wasn't

wasting it. 

A silent leap toward the wall of the arsenal room had carried him  to the calendar that had excited his

suspicion. He jerked at the thin  wire that suspended it from the tack. 

The result was startling. 

Except for a narrow strip along the base of the wall where The  Shadow stood, the whole floor of the arsenal

room hinged suddenly  downward. Everything on that tilted floor slid into a black chute! 

It happened with appalling swiftness. Guns, cases of ammunition,  incendiary bombs  the whole deadly

cargo of death hidden in this  windowless room vanished downward into blackness. 

One object, however, remained. Before The Shadow had yanked at the  wire, he had seized one of the arson

bombs. It was clutched in his hand  as he stood on the narrow strip of flooring at the base of the wall. 

Holding the bomb, The Shadow stared downward. He had no idea what  lay below. But logic told him that the

safest course for him to take  would be to follow the vanished evidence. Crooks had arranged the chute  device

to enable them to get rid of contraband evidence in a hurry.  Somewhere in that darkness below, there must be

a way of getting the  stuff out of the mob headquarters in rapid fashion. 

The Shadow prepared to leap to the slippery slant of the chute. 

It was at this instant that Narvo's mobsters appeared. The sight of  The Shadow brought a yell from the first

thug to emerge from the hall  closet. His gun spat flame. 

But the mobster was too eager. Lead flicked past the face of The  Shadow, a slug thudded into the plaster wall

close to his face. 

The Shadow fired in return. His bullet caught the thug in the leg.  The crook staggered backward. His place

was taken by two more of his  pals. They fired as fast as they could jerk triggers of their guns. 

No shots were returned by The Shadow. He had pulled the pin  mechanism in the arson grenade which he had

salvaged from Narvo's  deadly collection. He threw the bomb toward his enemies. 

There was an instant burst of flame. It was a whitehot brilliance  that dazzled the eyes. No smoke came from

it. The thing was evidently a  thermite bomb. 


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The woodwork of the closet began to blaze vigorously. Wherever the  deadly liquid inside the arson bomb

spattered, more flames began to  lick along dry woodwork. 

A wall of flame roared and spread between The Shadow and his  pursuers. The thugs flung themselves

backward to escape from the hot  inferno. The Shadow, too, was in danger of roasting to death. 

He fled the flame by leaping feet first into the chute. 

Downward into darkness he whizzed at terrific speed. He could see  nothing. He braced himself for a

bonenumbing crash. 

But the end of that queer slide was as strange as its beginning.  The Shadow found his fall broken by a padded

floor. As he staggered to  his feet in darkness, his forehead cracked against the sharp corner of  a wooden case.

On the padded floor in front of him he could feel a  jumble of the cases and boxes that had slid down the chute

ahead of  him. 

For a brief moment, The Shadow flashed his light. What he saw  brought understanding laughter to his lips. 

He had slid downward to the padded floor of a covered truck! 

Climbing over the wooden cases, he reached the cowled front seat of  the truck. It was empty. In front of the

parked truck was only  blackness. The Shadow switched on the truck's lights. 

Ahead of the motionless vehicle was a long concrete tunnel. There  was just enough clearance for the wheels

of the truck. There was just  enough headroom for its top. 

The Shadow started the engine drove the truck onward through the  tunnel. 

He emerged where he expected. The Shadow was in a basement below  the garage through which he had

ridden earlier as a stowaway in Narvo's  automobile. 

AN elevator platform showed how the truck could be lifted to the  garage for a quick getaway to the street.

The Shadow drove the truck  aboard the elevator. He started the mechanism. The lift rose slowly. 

At the top, he found thugs waiting for him. The whine of the  ascending cage had warned the garage pals of

Narvo. Their guns snarled. 

The Shadow, crouched low in the truck's seat, heard the whistle of  bullets ripping dangerously close to his

body. He gave his steering  wheel a desperate whirl and fed the engine gas. 

One of the thugs screamed as a heavy tire crunched over his foot.  The rest ducked out of danger. 

As his truck thundered toward the open front of the garage, The  Shadow fired only a single shot. He fired at a

crook who had raced to  the side of the doorway. The thug was trying to lower the ponderous  vertical door. 

The Shadow's bullet ruined that smart idea. The man at the doorway  toppled with a wounded leg doubled

under him. Before the steel barrier  could descend, The Shadow and the stolen truck were out in the street. 

With a roar of power, The Shadow drove westward. 


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Shooting had attracted the attention of a patrolman. He blew his  whistle and raced toward the garage. Back of

the garage, a red stain  was spreading across the black sky overhead. The Shadow's arson bomb  had doomed

the headquarters of Narvo. 

Racing toward The Shadow, the cop thought he was dealing with a  criminal. He fired as quickly as he could

bring his gun into play. The  Shadow, hunched low, drove his heavy vehicle in zigzags. 

A ponderous rear wheel grazed the curb. The onrushing cop had to  leap swiftly aside to save his life. 

The Shadow swung around a corner. He fed gas to the powerful  engine. The truck's speedometer needle

climbed. 

It was high time. Squad cars, warned by radio, were on the move.  The sirens of fire apparatus were audible as

the red glow in the sky  began to assume more threatening proportions. 

The Shadow had no further use for his stolen truck. He got rid of  it in a spot where police would be sure to

recover it. He drove it off  the end of an open pier into the Hudson River. 

Just before the truck leaped from the stringpiece, The Shadow  jumped to safety. He raced into the darkness of

a waterfront street. 

Soon he was in another car. He had a definite goal to reach. He  drove as fast as he dared without attracting

attention. He was heading  toward the apartment of a man named Howard Blair. 

The Shadow knew that James Whorter, one of the two surviving heirs  of David Barfield, was visiting Blair

tonight. 

He knew that Barfield, using his "invalid" alibi, had sneaked  secretly from his mansion. Barfield was in

league with Narvo's mob.  Barfield was also probably heading for the Blair home. Perhaps he was  already

there! 

The Shadow had destroyed Narvo's stronghold, but his achievement  had wasted considerable time. The stage

was set for another appearance  by Blue Face. 

Was The Shadow too late to intervene? 

CHAPTER IX. DEATH IN BLUE

HOWARD BLAIR wasn't exactly drunk. But neither was he exactly  sober. He smiled owlishly at James

Whorter, as he poured out more  drinks from a bottle of very expensive whiskey. 

"I am feeling no pain whatever," Whorter chuckled. 

Their faces were flushed. They had been discussing topics that  appealed to both of them. Race horses, yachts,

polo ponies, lovely  ladies. 

Whorter was trying to interest Blair in a fishing cruise to the  Gulf of Mexico. That was why he had called on

his fellow playboy this  evening. The living room of the apartment was filled with maps and  guide books on

tropical fishing. The rest of the apartment was dark. 


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It was from one of these dark rooms that an unlookedfor  interruption came. A vase fell from a table and

crashed to pieces on  the floor. 

"What the devil was that?" Whorter asked. "The wind must have blown  something over." 

"There's no wind to blow anything," Blair replied. "All the windows  in there are closed." 

Whorter yawned, and displayed no further interest. But Blair looked  alarmed. He had drunk as much as his

visitor, but he could hold his  liquor better. 

"Sounds like a burglar," he growled. "I'm going in and have a  look." 

He got to his feet. In his mind was an uneasy remembrance that  there had been a lot of burglaries lately. The

papers had been full of  news about a marijuanacrazed criminal who had wounded a lot of people,  and killed

a few, too, in order to steal a few paltry dollars in loot. 

Blair walked unsteadily toward a desk, where he kept a small  automatic pistol. He never reached it. A voice

from the doorway of the  dark room beyond was rasping an ominous order. 

"Stand still!" 

Blair whirled. So did Whorter. Then both men uttered a choked cry  of alarm. Their hands lifted in terror

above their heads. 

They were staring at a hideouslooking intruder. His head and face  looked like the shriveled skull of an

Egyptian mummy. A helmet of blue  plastic material, like wrinkled Cellophane, fitted closely over the

burglar's skull. Unlike Cellophane, it couldn't be seen through. It  merely emphasized the sharp jut of nose and

ears and chin behind the  opaque covering. 

Twin slits permitted the man to see. His hidden eyes gleamed like  flame. 

He wore darkblue clothing. In one hand he gripped the gun that was  aimed ominously at the two men he had

surprised. In his other hand was  a lighted cigarette. 

The odor from the cigarette made Blair and Whorter sniff sharply.  Their faces paled. They knew what sort of

cigarette the burglar was  holding. A "reefer"! 

The identity of the burglar was clear to these two frightened  nephews of David Barfield. They shuddered as

they remembered the fate  of their fellow heir, Charles Clee. 

"Take it easy," Blue Face snarled, in a highpitched whine that was  obviously a disguise. "I want money!" 

"We don't have much cash," Blair faltered. "Matter of fact, neither  of us has more than a few dollars in our

wallets." 

Blue Face snickered. 

"Your wallets will do. Don't you read the newspapers? I'm just a  cheapskate. I don't bother about big money." 

His voice changed to a menacing growl. 


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"Toss your wallets at my feet. And be careful. I shoot people who  annoy me by trying to be smart!" 

The wallets were tossed on the floor at his feet. Blue Face made no  move to pick them up. 

Not once had the lighted cigarette in his left hand touched his  lips, where a narrow slit in the blue covering

permitted Blue Face to  breathe and to talk. Without removing his eyes from either Whorter or  Blair, he

dropped the cigarette on the expensive rug near where the  wallets had fallen. 

His foot crushed the cigarette flat, extinguishing it. He didn't  pick up the butt. He allowed it to lie there. 

His victims didn't realize it, but Blue Face was calmly waiting for  something to happen that he wished to

encourage. 

BLUE FACE was aware of the exact positions of the two men who stood  in motionless terror under the

menace of his gun. Whorter stood almost  in the center of the room, his face like chalk. He was still thinking

of Charles Clee. 

Blair was thinking of Clee, too. But Blair's position in the room  was more favorable for defensive action. He

stood almost at the edge of  an open doorway. The doorway gave access to a little sitting room. In  that room

was a telephone. 

Blair began showing a lot more terror than he actually felt. He  swayed sideways. His side glance showed him

that he was in a spot from  which he could leap into the sitting room and slam and lock the door. 

Suddenly, he whirled. His backward leap was swift. The door slammed  behind him under the terrific jerk of

his hand. The key turned on the  inside of the lock. 

Blair leaped for the telephone. His excited voice could be heard  dimly outside the locked room. He was

telephoning police headquarters  to tip them off about Blue Face. 

Blue Face knew this. It was exactly what he wanted. But he  pretended otherwise. 

He sent a couple of bullets ripping through the panel of the door.  The fact that he fired much too high to hit a

man inside the room, was  lost on Blair. Blair was crouched over the telephone, in the inner  room, yelling an

excited call for help to the police. 

Blue Face hadn't moved an inch since the moment he had so coolly  mashed out the lighted marijuana

cigarette he had dropped on the rug.  He continued to stare out of slitted eyes at the rigid figure of James

Whorter. There was something in that gaze that made Whorter's blood run  cold with terror. He didn't move.

He hardly dared breathe. 

Blue Face's chuckle was like the rasp of a saw. 

"Excuse the shots, please. That was just to prove to the police  that my reputation as a jittery burglar is a

deserved one. Actually, I  prefer Blair to remain alive. You're the one who's going to die, my  friend!" 

"Why?" Whorter gasped. 

"Because it's time for another accident to happen. You don't know  it, but you tried to grapple with me, see? I

was forced to shoot you in  order to get away from the police, whom Blair has so conveniently  summoned.

Blair will tell the police that it was another robbery by a  nervous hophead. You, of course, will tell them


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nothing. You, Mr.  Whorter, will be dead!" 

Blue Face's breath hissed. 

"And do you know why? Because I began planning to kill you a long  time ago. Not for the contents of your

wallet, either!" 

Whorter moaned. He knew he was doomed. But the realization of his  peril served to give him a kind of

desperate courage. 

It was a case of die like a rat  or like a man. In that last  instant of his life, Whorter chose to be a man. He

leaped toward the  leveled gun of Blue Face. 

He almost succeeded. He got one hand on the barrel of the gun and  tried to twist it aside. Blue Face and his

victim swayed together. 

Then the gun roared. 

Blue Face darted backward with quick agility. Whorter remained  upright for a second, his face blurred. Then

he toppled to the floor.  There was a thud as his forehead hit the polished wood. He never moved. 

WITH the death of Whorter accomplished, Blue Face changed to a  dynamo of swift energy. The two wallets

that still lay on the rug were  picked up and stuffed carelessly into his coat pocket. He turned to  flee. 

It was high time. The shots which Blue Face had pumped through the  closed door of the sitting room had

attracted attention outside the  apartment. 

It was clear to Blue Face what was probably happening out in that  corridor of the building. A tenant had

notified the elevator operator.  The operator had dropped his car swiftly to the street level to get a  policeman. 

The rear exit from Blair's apartment seemed like the best bet for a  burglar on the run. Yet the choice made by

Blue Face was exactly the  opposite. 

Walking almost as calmly as if he were taking a stroll in Central  Park, he unlocked the front door of Blair's

apartment and stepped out  into the corridor. 

There was no one in sight. The tenant who had given the alarm had  ducked back into his own suite. But there

was a tiny bit of movement in  the corridor that did not escape the slitted gaze of Blue Face. 

The arrow indicator at the door of the elevator shaft was moving.  The elevator was rising from the street level

at a fast pace. 

Blue Face knew what to expect. A policeman from a nearby beat was  coming up to shoot it out. Other police,

summoned over the telephone by  the barricaded Blair, were racing to the scene in swift squad cars. 

Blue Face had planned on all of this  and more. He was ready! 

When the elevator halted at the floor level, Blue Face was not in  sight. He remained hidden until the door of

the lift slid open. 

A uniformed policeman sprang out with drawn gun, raced toward the  door of Blair's apartment. 


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He never reached it. A bullet from the hidden killer struck him in  the back, badly wounding him. The cop

pitched to the tiled floor of the  corridor. The gun slid from his nerveless fingers. 

An instant later, Blue Face was inside the elevator. His leap  carried him there before the terrified operator

could slide the door  shut. 

"Down!" Blue Face snarled. 

His voice and the horrible blue mask over his head brought prompt  obedience from the terrified operator.

Blue Face leaned closer. He  brought the butt of his gun down on the back of the operator's skull.  There was a

sickening thud. The man collapsed to the floor of the  swiftly descending car. 

Blue Face took over the control handle. He stopped the car at the  street level. Blue Face knew all about this

building. He had scouted it  beforehand, to be ready for just such an emergency. 

He knew that the elevator shaft was in the rear of the lobby. The  lobby itself was a long one; the switchboard

desk was located at the  front, as were the leather chairs for the convenience of visitors. 

The elevator shaft at the narrow Lshaped rear of the lobby could  not easily be seen from the street. 

Blue Face added to the darkness by extinguishing a ceiling light. 

His next move was utterly fantastic. There seemed to be neither  sense nor meaning in it. 

He reached up over the door of the elevator shaft. In the darkness,  he could feel the shape of a small metal

arrow  the floor indicator. 

Blue Face gave that arrow a quick, muscular jerk. He broke the  electrical contact that operated it. When he

was sure the mechanism was  broken and the arrow couldn't be moved except by a push of the hand, he  set the

arrow at a spot he wished. 

He could feel the raised letter "B" on the darkness of the dial.  "B" stood for "Basement." That was the

location in which Blue Face left  the broken arrow pointer. 

HE tiptoed to the angle of the foyer and peered toward the front.  There was only one dim light burning there.

The light was in the  ceiling over the desk where the switchboard man usually sat. The desk  was now empty. 

Blue Face had counted on that, too. He knew that at night, as in  most other apartments, the switchboard man

had to run the elevator,  too. 

Blue Face moved stealthily through this dimly lit area toward the  street door. 

There was no longer a gun in his hand. He had shoved the weapon out  of sight with the two wallets he had

stolen from Blair's apartment. He  carried something else in his clenched right hand. 

The manner in which he had transferred it from his pocket to his  hand indicated that the object might be very

fragile. It was small,  too. It couldn't be seen in the crook of Blue Face's curled fingers, as  he advanced toward

the safety of the street. 

Suddenly, Blue Face halted. 


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He had heard nothing, nor had he seen anything to alarm a normal  person. But he was like a wild beast

skirting the edges of a trap. 

He sensed that a foe was waiting for him beyond the dim confines of  the lobby. He turned suddenly, as if to

retrace his steps. 

The turn was pure fake. Blue Face had no intention of fleeing by  the back exit from the. building. He

anticipated correctly that the  rear exit would be one of the first spots reached by the police. 

But the apparent retreat of the wily Blue Face accomplished its  purpose. A figure appeared suddenly from the

vestibule of the street  lobby. It was a figure that seemed part of the darkness itself. 

Twin .45s gleamed in blackgloved hands. Eyes that matched the  power in the eyes of Blue Face stared at the

halfturned criminal. A  voice uttered a grim command: 

"Stop!" 

Blue Face froze in his tracks. His hands lifted above his mummified  head in token of surrender. 

He was facing the only foe he dreaded. It was the supreme foe  against whom Blue Face had made so many

cunning preparations. 

The Shadow! 

CHAPTER X. A CUNNING FOE

FOR what seemed an eternity, a master of evil and a master of  justice stared at each other. The eyes of The

Shadow were like molten  steel boring into the slitted eyeholes of Blue Face's mask. 

Blue Face's terror was only partly assumed. In spite of himself, he  felt a chill of fear chase up and down his

spine. His upraised arms  quivered. 

But his evil will conquered his fear. He had come prepared to elude  The Shadow. Inside one of his clenched

hands was the fragile pellet  which he had palmed after he had left the elevator. 

Under the menace of The Shadow's .45s, Blue Face didn't dare move  either of his hands. But movement

wasn't necessary to achieve the  surprise he had planned. He merely opened his left hand. 

The object of his grasp fell to the tiled floor of the apartment  foyer. It smashed with a faint tinkle of shattered

glass. 

As it smashed, Blue Face leaped backward. He vanished instantly  into a cloud of smoke that spread rapidly in

a thick and blinding fog.  The smoke was whitishyellow. It gave off a choking, acrid odor. The  fumes bit

into the lungs of The Shadow and made him cough horribly as  he leaped forward in pursuit of Blue Face. 

It was impossible for The Shadow to see, to breathe. But he struck  out fiercely with a clubbed gun. The

blindly delivered blow found a  mark. It landed with a glancing impact against the bluewrapped head of  the

criminal. 

Blue Face uttered a shrill cry. He staggered aside. The Shadow  tried to clutch at him in the smoke fog, and


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missed. The thick  yellowish vapor was like the bite of flame in The Shadow's lungs. He  coughed rackingly as

he stumbled blindly ahead. 

His eyes were useless. But his ears gave him a clue that his eyes  denied him. He heard the slam of an elevator

door at the rear of the  foyer. 

The sound galvanized The Shadow into action. He fought his way  through the choking smoke to the elevator

door. The shaft door was  closed. It was impossible to tell whether Blue Face had fled upward or  down in the

car. 

Using his sensitive fingers as a guide, The Shadow reached up over  the door of the shaft and felt the pointer

mechanism. The metal arrow  that showed the position of the elevator in the shaft pointed all the  way over to

the left of the dial. Above the point of the motionless  arrow was a raised letter. The letter was "B." 

The Shadow made a logical deduction, that Blue Face had descended  to the basement and had left the car

there. 

He raced a few feet farther along the rear foyer, to where a tiny  red glow indicated the location of the fire

stairs. 

Down those steelinclosed stairs, The Shadow ran. He hoped to head  off Blue Face before the fleeing

criminal could reach the rear court  behind the apartment building. Once in that court, Blue Face had only  to

scale a fence. It was the last barrier between him and freedom. 

Blue Face heard the mistaken pursuit of The Shadow, from a spot  where he waited in grim silence. He was

crouched against the darkened  foyer wall, in an angle of the lobby that was not more than a few feet  from the

closed door of the elevator. His slamming of the shaft door  had been, of course, only a sly trick to deceive

The Shadow. Having  slammed the door, Blue Face had merely retreated a few feet and held  his breath. 

Over his nostrils and mouth was a small cloth that had been dipped  in something that smelled faintly of

cloves. Its protective moisture  kept him from revealing himself by agonized coughing caused by the  dense

smoke. 

A moment later, Blue Face was walking with catlike silence toward  the street door of the building. He opened

the door cautiously, then  slipped calmly to the dark sidewalk outside. 

He glanced up and down the street. 

There were four cars parked at the curb. All were empty. Blue Face  ducked into obscurity. It was impossible

to say whether he had entered  one of the cars, or had faded down a flight of cellar steps near the  fourth and

last car. 

That was the last time that Blue Face was visible. Minute followed  minute. He did not reappear. 

THE SHADOW, in the meantime, was far from idle. Unaware that he had  been cunningly sent on a false

trail, he raced to the cellar of the  apartment building. He darted his flashlight into every nook and cranny

where the elusive Blue Face might have hidden himself for a final  desperate stand. 

The flashlight showed nothing. The Shadow raced out the back door  and into a concretepaved court. It was

the only place to which Blue  Face could have fled from the basement. The other two doors of the  cellar were

locked on the inside. 


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The Shadow ran for the high fence at the rear of the court. An  attempt had been made to beautify the court by

a wide flowerbed,  planted along the base of the rear fence. 

Ignoring the flowers, The Shadow planted his feet firmly and leaped  upward. His fingers caught the top of the

fence and hauled him up. He  sent the beam of his torch along the ground on the other side. 

Instantly, he had an unpleasant thought in the back of his mind.  The Shadow's senses were trained to detect

the slightest trace of a  fleeing man on a trail as fresh as this. He could discover nothing to  show that Blue

Face had vaulted over the fence to which The Shadow now  clung. 

For the first time since the yellowish smoke had hidden Blue Face,  The Shadow began to suspect the truth. 

He leaped backward to the courtyard. The ray of his torch flitted  over the flowerbed at the inner base of the

fence. It showed the deep  imprints of The Shadow's shoes in the soft earth. 

But it showed nothing else. 

Blue Face would have had to stand in the flowerbed to make a  similar leap upward. The fact that his prints

were not there was proof  that he had never entered the courtyard at all. Blue Face had not raced  out of the

building through the rear door in the cellar. 

Having rectified his logical, but mistaken, first deduction, The  Shadow wasted no time. 

He knew now the cellar was empty. He questioned whether Blue Face  had ever been in the cellar at all. 

The Shadow darted swiftly through the basement, to the elevator  shaft. He looked at the indicator arrow

above the basement door of the  shaft. The arrow pointed to the figure "1." 

It meant that the car was still at the ground level. The arrow  upstairs had lied. Blue Face had only seemed to

enter the car! 

The Shadow was at last certain of what had happened. He hurried up  the fire stairs to the lobby. The place

was still filled with the  yellowish smoke from Blue Face's glass pellet. But the fumes were no  longer so

dense. The Shadow was able to breathe without agony. 

It was still impossible to see the arrow pointer on this floor. But  The Shadow didn't need sight to tell him

what the situation was. He  merely grasped the metal arrow, and it moved easily in his grasp. 

The Shadow knew at once that the electrical connection had been  broken by Blue Face. He understood, too

late, why the arrow had pointed  to "B" when the car had actually been at the groundfloor level the  whole

time. 

Prying at the closed door of the car, The Shadow was able to move  it aside, finally, in its oiled groove. Blue

Face, forced to slam it  from the outside, had not done a very good job of locking it. The door  was meant to be

closed by the operator from the inside. The mechanism  had jammed before the door clicked. 

The open elevator showed the unconscious and bleeding figure of the  operator, whom Blue Face had slugged.

All that The Shadow needed to  know was now clear. He darted through the foyer and out the front door  of the

building, into the dark street. 

As he expected, the street was empty. 


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Blue Face had made a bold getaway. His method of escape gave The  Shadow added evidence of what he had

long since suspected  that in  battling BlueFace, he was battling one of the shrewdest criminals he  had ever

locked horns with! 

EVERY move Blue Face had made, since his first encounter with The  Shadow, showed him to be a man of

infinite cunning. 

In regarding him a hophead with a nervous trigger finger, the  police were badly underestimating a genius of

crime. Blue Face never  pulled a trigger without long calculations beforehand. Nor was he the  cheap burglar

that Inspector Cardona imagined. 

Burglary, The Shadow knew, had nothing to do with these strange  crimes. It was simply camouflaged to

cover certain wellplanned  murders. 

The real victims of Blue Face were the nephews of David Barfield.  Charles Clee had died first. Now James

Whorter was dead. 

Was the third nephew, Elliot Peabody, destined to be the next  victim? 

The Shadow stared at a line of parked automobiles at the curb near  the apartment house. There were three

cars in the line. And yet The  Shadow was positive that when he had entered the building, a short  while

earlier, the number of parked cars had been four. 

Where was the fourth car now? 

The Shadow examined the spot where the missing car had stood. He  made a quick scrutiny of the asphalt. He

looked at the marks of the  turning tires. He studied the stone edge of the curb along which the  car had stood. 

A brief burst of laughter welled ominously from The Shadow's tight  lips. It was impossible to tell from his

face the nature of the  information he had obtained. 

He melted backward toward the line of the building. His sharp ears  had heard the distant wail of a police car. 

The Shadow knew how Blue Face always worked. Police had been tipped  off by some "error" Blue Face had

committed. They were on their way now  to pick up a cold trail. They would find another marijuana cigarette. 

It would be awkward if they found The Shadow. 

Gliding from sight, The Shadow descended into a cellar opposite the  apartment house where Whorter had

been killed. 

By the time police cars were screeching to a halt in the dark  street, The Shadow was a good distance from the

scene. He was spared  the ironic sight of Inspector Cardona darting hopefully inside to  capture Blue Face. 

The Shadow had made a pardonable blunder. But he had also achieved  a certain success. He was appreciably

closer to a knowledge of the  identity of Blue Face. Was Blue Face the driver of that mysterious  fourth car that

was no longer parked in the street? 

Laughter from The Shadow indicated that perhaps he knew. His  fadeout from the apartment house where

Whorter had been killed didn't  take him far. 


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Soon he was driving back to the murder scene in an expensive car.  But not as The Shadow. 

It was time for Lamont Cranston to make an appearance. 

CHAPTER XI. THE FINAL CLUE

THE fourth car, to whose movements The Shadow attached considerable  importance, was at no great distance

from the apartment building where  James Whorter had just been murdered. 

It was parked at the curb of a street about a half mile to the  north. Not far from where the car stood was a

street intersection.  There was a local subway station underground at this point. The exit  was directly behind

the parked automobile. 

The man in the car kept watching the subway exit. He was David  Barfield. The face of the millionaire

realestate owner was taut. His  hands were clenched into angry fists. Oaths came in a lowtoned mutter  from

his lips. 

The man for whom Barfield was waiting was late. 

Presently, there was a rumble underground. Another subway local was  pulling into the station below. Barfield

leaned forward eagerly. A few  people emerged from the subway exit and scattered in the darkness. 

After they were gone from sight, another figure appeared from  below. It was Slug Narvo 

Narvo lost no time sliding into the seat of the parked car. He  looked as angry as Barfield. There was a sullen

glow in his eyes as he  faced the millionaire. 

"O.K. I'm here. So what are you glaring about?" 

"Is Whorter dead?" 

"Yeah. Dead as a mackerel! You know all about it, pal. Why the hell  do you have to ask me?" 

The snarl of the mob leader touched off afresh the rage in  Barfield. He didn't mince any words. He bawled

out Narvo with a  lowtoned fury that made Slug's face darken. 

"Take it easy!" Slug warned. 

"Easy? What do you think I've been paying you for? What have you  been doing tonight? Where have you

been? I've a good mind to " 

Barfield's hand moved slightly. It might have been a move toward  his hip pocket. Narvo didn't take any

chances. His own gun leaped into  view. Its muzzle prodded deep into Barfield's middle. 

"Shut up! One more word out of you and I'll blast you! I'm getting  sick of your big mouth!" 

Barfield gulped. He licked his lips and forced an unpleasant smile. 

"Sorry. I didn't mean to ride you. Let's cut out the argument and  get down to facts." 


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"Any way you like. Only, don't think you can bulldoze me." 

"You let me down tonight," Barfield said harshly. 

"The hell I did!" 

"If you didn't  where were you? And where was your blasted mob?" 

"Wait a minute!" Narvo snapped. 

Barfield continued to spit grim words. 

"And what about The Shadow? The Shadow showed up at Blair's  apartment. I warned you he would! I told

you he had sneaked inside my  home and found out it has a secret exit. Do you know what we missed  tonight

through your stupidity?" 

"What?" 

"A perfect chance to wipe out the damned Shadow! I wanted him wiped  out. He's a nuisance. I thought I

made that clear to you." 

"Lemme make something clear to you, Mr. Barfield," Narvo rasped. As  he spoke he watched the realty owner

closely. "My gang wasn't around  the Blair apartment tonight  because I haven't got any gang! It's been

wiped out  liquidated! Get that?" 

"What do you mean?" 

"Maybe you know already, wise guy!" 

BARFIELD, listening with veiled eyes, heard the curt story of the  events that had occurred earlier that

evening at the headquarters of  Narvo. He learned about the secret oneman raid of The Shadow. Narvo  told

him of The Shadow's escape, of the burning of the gang's hideout  by an arson bomb tossed by The Shadow. 

Barfield made a sound of astonishment. 

"Are you kidding me?" 

"Kidding, hell! The building is a charred wreck! Half of my mob are  croaked. The rest are on the run.

Cardona has a warning out to pick me  up on sight." 

David Barfield blinked. He spoke rapidly. 

"There's only one thing to do. You've got to lie low. Get out of  town. Find some spot where you can spend a

month or two under cover.  Maybe somewhere up in the country." 

"Yeah? And how about you?" Narvo sneered. He was regaining his  composure. 

"I don't have to sneak, my friend. My position is considerable  better than yours, at the moment. Besides, I've

got to remain in town  to find out certain things. I've got to learn how much The Shadow  knows." 

Narvo's chuckle was nasty. 


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"Sometimes I get to thinking about all this Blue Face stuff.  Sometimes I say to myself, 'Wouldn't it be funny

if it turned out that  Blue Face was David Barfield all the time?' Good joke, huh?" 

Barfield didn't laugh. His expression, for an instant, was  poisonous with fury. But the look faded swiftly. 

"A ridiculous notion! I've told you who Blue Face is. He's John  Shipton. The soninlaw of my rental agent." 

"Maybe." 

"Shipton was there tonight. I saw him! He sneaked into the building  about ten minutes before hell broke loose

in Blair's apartment. He  sneaked out right after the killing." 

"What were you doing?" 

"Watching," Barfield said stonily. 

"Yeah. Me, too. I watched the bustup of my gang. I watched my  headquarters burn down. The heat was

turned on me tonight. I'd like to  turn the heat on someone else." 

"What do you mean?" 

"This Shipton guy. Why don't you let me handle him?" 

"No!" Barfield's tone was peculiar. "Shipton is tough." 

"Nobody can be tough who has a wife he's fond of," Narvo growled.  "I've handled tougher mugs than

Shipton, by putting the heat on their  wives." 

"No! You'll do as I say. Get out of town and give me a chance to  think things over." 

Narvo shrugged. "How will I keep in touch with you?" 

"Where will you go?" Barfield asked him. 

Narvo named a small town upstate. 

"You can reached me in care of General Delivery under the name of  Albert Perkins," Barfield told him. "I'll

arrange to have someone I can  trust pick up any mail you send me. There'll be no way to trace any  connection

between us." 

"Fine!" 

Narvo got out of the parked car as quietly as he had entered it.  Their conversation had attracted no attention.

Narvo went back into the  subway. Barfield drove away. 

The moment the car had turned the corner, Narvo grinned. It was a  nasty grin. He had no intention of obeying

Barfield's order to skip  town. There were certain ideas in Narvo's mind about Barfield that he  wanted to

investigate further. 

But first, he wanted to do something about John Shipton. 


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He rode a short distance in the subway. When he emerged again, he  headed for a discreet place where he

could make a safe telephone call.  He called up Shipton's home. 

A woman answered. Her voice sounded panicky over the wire. Narvo  knew who she was. It was Shipton's

wife, Elaine. 

He put on a gruff, official tone; asked to talk to Shipton. 

"Who are you?" Elaine quavered. "It's late at night. What business  do you have with my husband?" 

"Police business," Narvo clipped "I'm a plainclothes detective,  working out of headquarters. I want to ask

your husband a few  questions. About this Blue Face case. Your husband is the rent  collector in some of the

buildings where Blue Face has made raids. He  might know something that would help to solve the case." 

"I... I see." The terror in Elaine's voice increased. "I'm afraid  you can't speak to my husband now. Couldn't

you see him tomorrow?" 

"Why not tonight, madam? Isn't your husband home?" 

"Oh, yes... yes! Of course he is!" She was lying. The tone of her  voice proved that. "But I can't really rouse

John to talk to you  tonight. He... he has insomnia. I gave him a sleeping tablet. You  understand?" 

"O.K.! I'll talk to him tomorrow." 

Narvo's grin was cruel as he hung up. He had found out all he  wanted to know. Shipton was not at home.

Nobody to worry about but the  guy's wife. 

The coast was clear. 

JOHN SHIPTON was a long way from the bed where he was supposed to  be asleep. He stood

inconspicuously at the outer edge of a street  crowd. 

The crowd had gathered outside the apartment house where James  Whorter had been murdered. 

Shipton was less excited than the rest of the spectators bunched  behind a line of uniformed police. He did

more listening than talking.  He was trying to find out if anyone in the crowd had heard anything  definite

about Blue Face or his method of escape. 

No one had. The information produced no noticeable change in  Shipton's expression. But he kept his face

averted whenever a cop  glanced over the crowd. Shipton didn't care to be noticed here tonight! 

Presently, he slipped out of the crowd and went back to where he  had parked his car. He drove swiftly away. 

His goal was the garage from which he had originally taken the car.  A night employee greeted Shipton with a

smile. 

"How are you, Mr. Jones? Have a nice trip tonight out to Jersey?" 

"Yeah. But I sure am sleepy." 


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With a yawn, Shipton left the garage. But again he delayed his  return home. He headed on foot to the

rooming house where he had rented  a room under the name of Jones. He unlocked the front door and went

upstairs without anyone seeing him. Once he was safely in his room, his  tension vanished. 

He unlocked the door of a closet and took out a suitcase. From his  pocket he produced a wickedlooking gun.

The gun went into the suit  case, which was in turn locked inside the closet. 

Shipton left the rooming house as stealthily as he had entered it. 

He hurried along dark streets, keeping as close to the building  line as he could. His face was no longer

expressionless. There was cold  triumph on it. 

THE SHADOW, also, was triumphant. But he concealed his elation  under the sleepy exterior of Lamont

Cranston. 

As Cranston, he had entered the building where James Whorter had  been shot to death by Blue Face. He had

a glib excuse for being in the  neighborhood so late at night. His friendship with Inspector Cardona  made it

easy for him to get a look at the scene of the crime. 

He found the apartment of Howard Blair in considerable confusion.  Cops and plainclothes men were on the

job. Newspapermen waited out in  the hallway, growling at the delay before they could be admitted. 

The body of James Whorter had been photographed by a police  photographer. It now lay, covered with a

sheet, in Blair's bedroom.  Fingerprint work had been finished. The report on that was a  disappointment. Blue

Face had left no prints. 

All the clues the police had were the two bullet holes in the  sittingroom door through which Blair had fled

to telephone the police.  And a crushed marijuana cigarette which Blue Face had left on the  livingroom rug. 

Howard Blair, his face pale, was talking to another man who had  been hastily summoned by the police. His

companion was Elliot Peabody. 

Peabody was more at ease than Blair. He talked readily to the  police. He seemed anxious to please anyone

who accosted him. The  Shadow, in his role of Cranston, spoke to both Peabody and Blair. From  Blair he

obtained a complete picture of the crime as it seemed to the  police. From Peabody he gleaned not much of

anything. 

Cardona, it was evident, had the same old theory of the "nervous  burglar." 

"Blue Face was lucky again," Cardona told Cranston. "We're sure to  nab him. Look at those bullet holes in

the sittingroom door. He fired  miles too high to kill Blair. Too jittery even to aim straight! A  hophead! And

here's another of his damned reefers. Half smoked again." 

The Shadow didn't point out to Cardona that although the marijuana  cigarette had been half consumed, it had

not been between the lips of  Blue Face. He asked in the polite voice of Lamont Cranston about the  effect of

Whorter's death on his uncle. 

"Poor Barfield is all broken up," Cardona said. 

"You saw him tonight?" 


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"Not exactly," Cardona replied. "Barfield is an invalid. He was at  home asleep when the crime here took

place. I tried to reach him on the  phone, but his phone is disconnected every night so he won't be  disturbed.

So I sent a cop over. The cop broke the news. Barfield took  it pretty hard. It's tough to have two of your

nephews accidentally  killed." 

"You think it was an accident?" 

"Of course! Blue Face didn't even know that Whorter was here. He  came to pull another of his twobit

robberies on this fellow Blair." 

The Shadow moved about the room in his role of Cranston, apparently  bored. But his eyes missed nothing.

He saw the things that Cardona had  seen, and a few other things that Inspector Cardona had missed. 

After a while, he made a polite excuse and departed. 

HE descended in the elevator to the street lobby. 

There he managed to examine again the indicator arrow above the  door of the shaft. Nobody had noticed that

the arrow didn't work,  although many people had ridden up and down since the murder had  occurred. The

Shadow suspected that considerable strength must have  been exerted by Blue Face in order to break the metal

arrow. 

He checked on this belief by slipping unseen to the basement. There  he deliberately broke the arrow at the

shaft door. It took a quick jerk  to snap the thing loose. 

The Shadow laughed. 

His visit tonight, in the role of Lamont Cranston, had been  worthwhile. The arrow incident was interesting.

So were the clues of  the cigarette and the bullet holes in the door of Blair's sitting room.  But the reason for

the ominous laughter of The Shadow lay in an  entirely different direction. 

He looked at something that lay in the palm of his hand. It was a  tiny fragment of smooth glass. The Shadow

had found it on the floor of  the lobby, close to the elevator shaft. 

Blue Face had left that tiny fragment of glass behind him. Staring  at the clue, The Shadow remembered every

detail of his desperate  encounter with the sly supercriminal. He knew what the fragment of  glass was and

where it had come from. 

He knew, at last, the real identity of Blue Face! 

But knowledge was not proof. A way had to be found to trap a  criminal of infinite cunning. The names of

various people flitted  through The Shadow's mind. He considered Barfield and his nephew,  Elliot Peabody.

He thought about Richard Harrison and John Shipton. Nor  did he forget the welldressed and affable Dr.

Mortimer. 

One of these was Blue Face! Which one it was, was still The  Shadow's secret. Ugly events were in the

making, but The Shadow was  ready to cope with them! 


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CHAPTER XII. SNATCH JOB

ELAINE SHIPTON was frightened. 

She sat alone in the living room of her home, scarcely able to  control the cold tremors that ran through her

body. The room was  lighted with every lamp she could turn on. But the brightness gave her  little comfort.

She had a feeling of impending danger. 

Elaine glanced at the clock above the mantel. It was long past  midnight. 

She thought of the harshvoiced detective who had telephoned to  demand an interview with her husband.

Elaine had lied to the detective.  She had said John Shipton was asleep in bed. 

Actually, Elaine had not the faintest idea where John Shipton was! 

She wished that her father was at home to comfort her. But Richard  Harrison was away, too. He had left the

house immediately after Shipton  had departed for his classes at the evening law school. 

Harrison had kissed Elaine hurriedly, and taken up the trail of his  soninlaw. He had promised to be careful,

to run no risks of letting  Shipton know he was under surveillance. 

Elaine could have stood the loneliness of waiting for news in this  empty house, if it had not been for that

unexpected phone call from a  detective. Had the police learned something suspicious about John? How  could

Elaine hoodwink the plainclothes man, if he came to see her and  insisted on seeing Shipton in bed? 

Was her husband really Blue Face? 

The more Elaine thought about how she might handle the detective if  he called, the less she could make up

her mind. She was no closer to a  solution, when suddenly she heard a light tap at the front door. 

She sat rigidly in her chair, both hands clenched tightly. She was  unable to move. 

The tap was followed by another sound. A key was turning in the  lock of the door. 

Elaine swayed to her feet. 

Then the door was open and a man was coming toward the living room,  with a hasty step. He stopped at the

threshold of the room. Elaine gave  a quick cry of relief. 

It was her father, Richard Harrison. 

The realty agent for David Barfield looked pale and tired. He put  an arm about his trembling daughter and

kissed her. He dropped into a  chair as if his weary legs could no longer support him. Father and  daughter

stared at each other. 

"Any... news?" Elaine whispered. 

"Nothing. I tried to trail him. He went to a furnished rooming  house in a car. Then he drove away. I followed

him to Harlem, but he  gave me the slip. It was afraid to get too close to him, for fear he  would discover I was

trailing him." 


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Harrison sighed. He took off his glasses and wiped them. 

"God knows where he is now, and what he is doing!" 

Neither of them mentioned John Shipton by name. Another name was in  both their minds. An ugly name that

terrified Elaine. 

Blue Face! 

She told Harrison about the phone call from a detective. Harrison  tried to make light of it. 

"Probably just a routine checkup," he muttered. "Don't forget it's  long after midnight. The detective will

probably not come here at all.  He'll wait until morning. He'll never discover that you lied to him. It  will give

your husband a good alibi for tonight." 

Elaine tried to smile. It was a ghastly attempt. Harrison could see  that she was close to the breaking point. He

stood up and put an arm  around her. Gently, he forced her to walk with him to her bedroom. 

"Get some sleep. You'll collapse, if you don't. I'll promise to  wake you the moment John comes in. I'll sit up

in the living room with  a book. Forget about everything except your own health. You can't  afford to tear your

nerves to pieces like this." 

IN the end, Harrison had his way. Elaine slipped on a robe and lay  down. Harrison fixed her a glass of water.

Before he gave it to her he  managed to drop a mild sedative into it. It wouldn't drug her, but it  would dull her

mind a little. It would make it easier for her to fall  into a natural sleep. 

He put out the light and tiptoed out. In the living room, he picked  up a magazine and tried to read. 

The clock ticked monotonously. Harrison listened to its ticking as  he turned over the pages of the magazine.

Without realizing it, his  head began to droop. 

He removed his glasses and took a more comfortable position on the  sofa. Soon he was dozing. 

He didn't hear a faint sound from the rear of the house. It was not  very loud. It sounded like a gentle

scratching. Harrison, stretched on  the couch, with his pincenez glasses laid aside, continued to stare  with

nearsighted eyes at the blurred cover of the magazine he had let  slide to the floor. 

Then, suddenly, he realized something was wrong. 

From the room behind him he heard the quick thump of feet. Someone  was coming swiftly toward the living

room from the rear of the house. A  sudden draft of air warned the alarmed Harrison that one of the rear

windows was open. 

In an instant, he was bounding to his feet. He whirled toward the  rear doorway of the room. 

"Quiet!" a voice whispered in an ugly undertone. "One sound out of  you and I'll let you have it!" 

A man was standing on the threshold of the door to the rear  corridor. A gun was pointed at Harrison. The man

had a tight mouth and  sullen eyes. He hadn't bothered to mask his face. 

It was Slug Narvo. 


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Harrison stood frozen in watchfulness. He could tell death when he  saw it. He knew that the armed thug who

confronted him meant what he  had said. 

"Don't shoot!" Harrison begged. "I won't make any noise. Take  whatever you want. My money is in my

wallet." 

"The hell with your money," Narvo snarled. "Keep that trap of yours  shut! Back up toward me. Slowly, pal!

And keep those hands high  just  the way you got 'em." 

Harrison obeyed. Narvo moved aside with a pantherish motion. He was  in front of Harrison, now. His gun

was like a steady rock. The muzzle  pointed at Harrison's heart. 

"Keep backing up slowly along this corridor. Stop when you get to  the third doorway on your left." 

The third doorway led to a bathroom. The door was open. Narvo had  noticed all this on the way in. He had

cut a pane from a rear window  and made his entrance that way. 

The grim parade halted outside the bathroom. Not a sound reached  the ears of the girl who was fast asleep in

the bedroom beyond. 

"Face inside," Narvo whispered. "Take one slow step into the  bathroom." 

As Harrison slowly obeyed Narvo stepped swiftly toward the back of  his victim. The gun in his hand moved

toward Harrison's skull. Harrison  sensed what was coming and tried to dodge. The blow was a glancing one.

But it cut his scalp and toppled him. 

He fell forward. Narvo caught him before the realty agent toppled  to the tiled door. He lifted Harrison and

laid him in the bathtub. The  shower curtains were drawn swiftly together. 

Slug Narvo grinned. He hadn't earned his nickname for nothing. He  was an expert in putting people out of

action without any fuss. 

There was no mirth in Narvo's grin. He tiptoed from the bathroom  and moved toward the nearby bedroom.

His job was only half finished.  Harrison didn't interest him. Elaine Shipton did! 

He stared down at her bed, watching the slow rise and fall of her  bosom. With his gun trained on her, Narvo

reached quietly down and  tapped her on the bare shoulder. 

Elaine awakened with a start. 

"Get up!" Narvo said. 

For an instant, Elaine was too drugged with sleep to realize what  was happening. Then suddenly she became

aware of the gun pointing at  her heart. She could see the wolfish gleam of Narvo's eyes, the cruel  smirk at the

corners of his lips. 

She sat up with a terrified jerk. Her mouth opened to emit a  scream. Narvo had expected this. His free hand

clamped over Elaine's  open mouth. The scream was suppressed 

Holding her tightly, Narvo swung the girl bodily from the bed and  jammed her on her feet. He said in a

deliberate and horrible whisper,  "I'm going to kill you!" 


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It produced the effect he desired. Elaine's overburdened nerves  gave way. Her body went lax in the grip of

Narvo. She fainted. 

NARVO picked Elaine up, with her dressing robe trailing and her  bare feet dangling. He was an expert at

snatch jobs. An unconscious  girl was a lot easier to kidnap than one who was wide awake. That was  why

Narvo had deliberately frightened her into a fainting spell. 

He dropped her to the ground from the open rear window whose pane  he had cut. It was not much of a fall.

The window was on the ground  floor. But Narvo gave a grunt of relief when he picked Elaine Shipton  up

again. 

From the crooked way her head lay on the ground, the thug was  afraid for an instant that she had broken her

neck. Narvo didn't want  Elaine's neck broken. He wanted her alive to answer questions. 

There were a lot of things Narvo wanted to know about her husband.  He intended to force Elaine to tell all

she knew about John Shipton, as  soon as he could get her to the place he had made ready for her. 

He shoved her into a dark sedan that was backed behind the rear of  the house. He drove swiftly through silent

streets without attracting  any attention. 

His goal was on the other side of town. Here was a region of cheap  frame houses. Each house had its own

individual garage in the basement.  Narvo had bought one through a dummy purchaser, for jobs such as this. 

He drove down a concrete incline into the garage. He had left the  garage door open, so as to waste no time

getting himself and his  prisoner out of sight. 

He locked the front door of the garage and removed Elaine from the  back of the sedan. There was a small

door at the side of the garage,  and he headed for it with his burden. The door connected directly with  the

cellar of the frame house. 

A certain room upstairs was soundproof. A girl in that room could  scream for hours and not be heard outside.

It contained a chair that  looked like a dentist's chair, but wasn't. There were some ugly tools  on a side table,

that were useful in making stubborn prisoners talk. 

The upstairs room was where Narvo intended to question Elaine. 

He shifted his grip on her. His free hand fumbled with the lock of  the small door that connected the garage

with the cellar of the house. 

It was then that he heard the car. It seemed to be racing up the  quiet street outside at a terrific pace. In barely

an instant, or so it  seemed to Narvo, the unseen car was outside his garage. It halted above  the slant of the

concrete entrance, with a loud screeching of brakes. 

Footsteps raced recklessly down the slanting ramp to the locked  garage. A fist pounded cautiously on the

door. 

"Open up!" a low voice whispered. 

Narvo was like a snarling beast at bay. He dropped his unconscious  captive to the floor of the garage.

Standing beside her, with drawn  gun, he faced that locked door, uncertainty on his face. 


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The cautious whisper outside was repeated. 

"Hurry up, Slug. Let me in! I couldn't get back to my own place.  The cops are watching it." 

The voice was urgent. It sounded like David Barfield's. 

Barfield had told Narvo not to make any move against Shipton. There  would be a nasty scene when Barfield

caught a glimpse of the kidnapped  Elaine. But Narvo knew how to handle trouble with a client  even a  client

who paid as much as Barfield. 

With a cold grin, Narvo unlocked the garage door. 

The moment the door opened, he was given a violent thrust. It sent  him staggering backward against the

bumper of his parked car. With a  quick bound, a figure leaped inside and slammed the garage door shut. 

It was a figure that made Narvo utter a strangled yell of fear. He  tried to whip his gun upward. 

His visitor was Blue Face! 

BLUE FACE was like a horrible automaton. Not a sound came from  behind the ugly plastic covering that

swathed his head and face. Before  the paralyzed Narvo could recover his wits, Blue Face was at grips with

him. 

His strength was prodigious. A bluegloved hand caught at the  barrel of the halflifted gun in Narvo's grasp

and wrenched it away.  The twist was so ferocious, it almost dislocated Narvo's arm. 

He fell sideways to the floor, dizzy with the pain of his wrenched  shoulder socket  and Blue Face fell with

him. 

A terrible battle started. It was all the more terrible because of  its utter silence. Slug tried to use every ugly

trick he had learned in  a lifetime in the underworld, to beat off the deadly assault of Blue  Face. It was in vain.

The gun that Narvo had dropped lay out of his  reach. Blue Face had kicked it, skidding, under the car. 

There was a knife in Narvo's inner coat pocket, tucked inside a  leather scabbard. He twisted away from Blue

Face, trying to draw the  weapon. But he was unable to tug the knife free. 

His rolling jerk played into the hands of Blue Face. Crouched on  top of Narvo, battering at him with

sledgehammer blows, Blue Face was  able to twist with more ease than his victim underneath. He succeeded

in the same stratagem which Narvo had failed at. 

From beneath his blue suit came the flash of a drawn knife. 

It had a long, narrow blade, not much wider than the shaft of an  icepick. Each side of that knife had been

honed to a cutting edge of  murderous sharpness. 

The knife lifted upward. It struck deep into the body of Slug  Narvo! 

Narvo died without uttering a sound. Even the expression of his  face didn't change. The long point of the

blade had pierced deep into  his heart. 


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Very little blood welled from the tiny wound in Narvo's breast.  Blue Face took only a single look, to make

sure that the knife had gone  in where he intended it to. Then he darted to the crumpled body of  Elaine

Shipton. 

He snatched her up into his arms. The swift jerk roused her. But  the sight of the blue mummylike face

peering into hers robbed Elaine  of every thought except the terrible knowledge that she was a captive  of Blue

Face. 

Her body went limp. Blue Face darted with her to the door of the  garage. 

His car was parked outside, its engine still throbbing. In a  moment, the rescued girl was in the machine. Blue

Face drove away with  her as swiftly as he had arrived. 

He headed back to the home of John Shipton. He parked his car in  the same spot from which Narvo had

kidnapped the girl. The sight of the  cut pane of the rear window drew an ironic chuckle from Blue Face. Soon

he had the limp figure of Elaine inside that window. He carried her to  her bedroom and laid her on the bed. 

Then he raced back to the rear of the house, dropped out of the  window. The sound of the car motor indicated

that Blue Face was getting  rid of an automobile in some nearby hiding place. 

Silence enveloped the house. Elaine Shipton lay on her bed like a  dead woman. But after a long time color

began to come back into her  paperwhite face. Slowly, she began to rouse from her faint. 

She lay, half conscious, hearing the slow tick of her bedroom  clock, without realizing where she was or what

had happened. 

Then, with shocking swiftness, a horrible memory came into her  mind. She remembered the blue

mummylike mask of Blue Face! 

With a cry of fear, she sat up in bed, began to tremble. She  remembered, now, all the horrible events that had

happened. She could  see again the ugly thug who had forced her to leave her bed at the  point of a gun. A

merciful blank had followed that. She must have  fainted, Elaine realized. 

Then Blue Face had rescued her. Blue Face had killed Narvo! That  much, she was certain of. She had caught

a dazed glimpse of Narvo's  bleeding body on the floor of the garage before she had fainted again. 

Why had Blue Face rescued her? Was it because Elaine was his wife? 

A moan came from her lips. 

THE moan was echoed by another sound. A man was groaning in another  room of the silent house. The groan

seemed to come from the direction  of the bathroom. 

It changed Elaine's thoughts to her father. What had happened to  him? She had left him sitting in the diving

room, waiting for her  husband to return from his mysterious prowling. Had Blue Face harmed  him? 

Before she could force her trembling legs to carry her down the  hall, she heard the click of a cautious key at

the front door.  Whitefaced, she swung about. The dark folds of a drape hid her from a  direct view of the

man at the door. She could see him, but he couldn't  see her. 

It was her husband! 


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Shipton's face was like granite. He sneaked in cautiously, making  no sound. He removed his shoes, started to

tiptoe toward the bedroom. 

With a sob, Elaine stepped suddenly from behind the curtain to  confront him. 

He gave a clipped cry. His hand jerked toward his pocket. Then he  recognized his trembling wife. He tried to

smile, but it was a dreadful  imitation. His eyes were like hot coals. 

"What's happened?" he demanded. "Why are you not in bed?" 

Her glance dropped to his hand. There was a fresh cut on it. From  it was welling a slow flow of blood. 

Shipton muttered a vague excuse about the cut on his hand. He  continued to question his wife about what had

happened in the house. He  made Elaine repeat everything she could remember before he allowed her  to

accompany him to the bathroom. 

Harrison was still lying in the bathtub where Slug Narvo had placed  him after knocking him over the head.

Like Elaine, there was little  Harrison could tell Shipton, after his soninlaw had completely  revived him

with some cold water from the bathroom faucet. 

It was Harrison who asked Elaine the question that Shipton had  avoided asking: 

"Are you sure you recognized this man who rescued you in the  garage?" 

She shuddered. 

Harrison put his arm about her. He avoided looking at his silent  soninlaw. 

"Who was it?" 

"Blue Face," Elaine whispered. 

Shipton's lips parted. He spoke sharply. 

"That's nonsense! You must have imagined it. Blue Face is a  criminal! Why should he save you from another

crook?" 

Elaine looked at her husband, but she didn't dare voice a reply. 

There was an uneasy silence in the room. Father, husband, wife  stared at each other wordlessly. 

"You'd better lie down," Shipton told Elaine, finally. 

He leaned forward and kissed her The touch of his lips made her  shudder. They were like ice. 

CHAPTER XIII. RIVER PIRATE

THE SHADOW was in his sanctum. 

On the polished desk in front of him, the blue light beat downward,  forming a concentrated oval of brilliance.


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Into that light projected  the face of The Shadow. 

His beaked nose was hawklike. His eyes flamed with an inner light  of their own. There was calm intelligence

in those eyes, the reflection  of an indomitable will. 

Never had The Shadow tasted complete defeat in any of his countless  battles against criminal brains of the

underworld. He had no intention  of allowing Blue Face to mar that record. 

Newspaper clippings and reports lay in a neat pile close to his  sensitive fingers. The Shadow was mentally

fitting together the last  pieces in a dangerous criminal puzzle. 

He read the newspaper clippings first. 

They all dealt with the mysterious death the night before of Slug  Narvo. All the newspapers had the same

solution. They asserted that the  murder of Narvo was undoubtedly the result of a mob quarrel. 

The mob leader's death had occurred only a few hours after the  destruction of his headquarters by fire. A

search of the hideout,  after the blaze had been finally quenched, proved that the fire had  been incendiary.

Police stated that there had been fierce gunfire near  the house at the height of the blaze. 

A truck had fled, driven by a rival mobster. This unknown fugitive  had driven the truck into the Hudson

River and fled. When the truck had  been hoisted from the river, police found that it contained a veritable

arsenal of lethal weapons. 

Judging all this evidence, Inspector Cardona announced his theory  of civil war in the underworld. A rival

mob had attempted to raid  Narvo's mob. The murder of Narvo that same night was added proof,  according to

Cardona, that crooks were preying on crooks. 

The laughter of The Shadow made a mocking whisper in the silence of  his sanctum. Only The Shadow was

aware of the truth. He alone knew that  the murder of Slug Narvo was the work of Blue Face! 

A report from Cliff Marsland, an agent of The Shadow and a  specialist in affairs of the underworld, lay on

The Shadow's desk. The  report had been forwarded to The Shadow through Burbank. The Shadow's  laughter

was ominous as he read it. 

Marsland's report concerned a smallfry crook named Dolan. Dolan  had seen certain things that had scared

him, the night before. He lived  in a shabby rooming house on the street where Narvo had been killed.  The

window of Dolan's room was directly opposite the house owned by  Narvo. 

Dolan, in hiding because of a stickup he had committed, was on a  nervous watch for plainclothes men that

night. He was wide awake when  Narvo's car rolled up to the private garage opposite. He saw Narvo  drive into

the garage with a woman prisoner. 

Dolan had watched carefully from his darkened room opposite,  because he sensed there might be a chance to

blackmail Narvo, later, on  the basis of what he saw. 

But soon Dolan's greed changed to terror. A second car sped up to  the closed garage at a terrific pace. A man

leaped out. It was Blue  Face. Dolan heard Blue Face gain admittance to the garage by using the  name of

David Barfield. 


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He had seen him emerge later carrying the girl whom Narvo had  kidnapped. He saw the bloodsmeared blade

of a long knife. Then Blue  Face had driven off through the darkness with the rescued girl. 

Dolan had related these secret facts to other crooks in his  confidence. It was this way that Cliff Marsland

managed to get the  information. Cliff had excellent underworld connections. 

Crooks like Dolan thought that Cliff was a criminal. They didn't  realize the truth  that, having paid his price

to society for previous  crimes, Cliff was now on the level. He was one of the most trusted  agents of The

Shadow. 

A final report from still another agent completed the news, and  made the eyes of The Shadow flash with

triumph. This report came from  Rutledge Mann, The Shadow's expert on business and financial affairs. 

Mann had found out that David Barfield was leaving New York. The  millionaire owned a luxurious yacht,

which was now anchored in the  Hudson River, ready to depart. It would remain at its anchorage  tonight.

Tomorrow, at the turn of the tide, Barfield's yacht was  scheduled to head southward, headed for the Gulf of

Mexico for some  tropical fishing. 

Barfield was already aboard the yacht. So were a couple of guests  he was taking with him. One of them was

Elliot Peabody, the last legal  heir of the millionaire realty owner. The other was Dr. Mortimer, who  had been

caring for Barfield during his recent period of "invalidism." 

That period of "invalidism" seemed to be over now. Dr. Mortimer had  issued a statement that Barfield was

much improved. Electric massage  had aided the muscles in his legs. His heart, too, was better,  according to

Mortimer. To complete the "cure," Dr. Mortimer had  prescribed a fishing trip to the Gulf of Mexico. 

Elliot Peabody was going along because he claimed that the recent  deaths of his cousins had unnerved him. 

The Shadow laughed. Peabody was not the nervous type. The Shadow,  in the role of Lamont Cranston, had

observed him on the previous night,  at Blair's apartment. Peabody, in spite of his show of grief and worry  at

Whorter's death, had been as calm as Cranston. 

The blue light vanished suddenly above the desk in the silent  sanctum. The Shadow was ready to depart. 

A moment later, he was gone without a single betraying sound from  the concealing blackness of the sanctum. 

IT was just as black in the spot where The Shadow presently  reappeared. High over The Shadow's head was a

night sky in which but  few stars gleamed. Below him and all around him was the inky surface of  the Hudson

River. 

The Shadow was in a rowboat. The oarlocks were muffled, to prevent  any sound of his rowing from being

heard. The boat was an old one. It  looked fit for little more than scuttling. 

Scuttling was exactly what The Shadow had in mind. But not quite  yet. 

He allowed the fast ebb tide to help carry his rowboat along in  utter silence. The boat seemed part of the dark

surface of the river.  The black cloak and the lowered brim of The Shadow's slouch hat helped  to merge his

figure with the invisibility of his small craft. 

He was headed toward the anchored yacht of David Barfield. 


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The easiest place to board the yacht was close to the bow. The  surge of the tide had swung the motionless

yacht to the end of its  heavy chain. It made a taut ladder of heavy links up to the hawsehole  at the bow of the

yacht. 

The Shadow had no further use for his rowboat. He pulled a plug.  Water gurgled faintly into the craft. It filled

and sunk rapidly. The  Shadow had fastened the oars tightly to the boat. He had made certain  that the rowboat

would sink completely to the mud bottom of the river,  by weighting it with a few heavy chunks of iron. 

Climbing up the slanting line of the anchor chain, The Shadow  reached the dark peak of the bow and

surveyed the spot. He was in luck.  There was no sign of life on deck. 

Light from an open porthole of a starboard cabin showed the  probable location of Barfield and his guests. The

Shadow faded quickly,  to do a little preliminary spying. 

He was aided by a narrow ornamental ledge that ran along the dark  hull of the yacht from stem to stern. It

was an easy matter to lower  himself on the starboard rail and inch a slow and cautious way  amidships along

the ledge, toward the lighted porthole of Barfield's  cabin. 

Reaching the porthole The Shadow was able to hear the voices of Dr.  Mortimer and Elliot Peabody, as well

as the gruffer voice of David  Barfield. 

By turning precariously on his narrow ledge, The Shadow was able to  move his eye close to the rounded edge

of the opening. Blackgloved  hands anchored him in his dangerous perch above the blackness of the  river. 

He could see Barfield pacing up and down the lighted confines of  the cabin. Barfield showed no trace of leg

weakness. Dr. Mortimer and  Peabody sat lazily in comfortable wicker chairs. 

Mortimer didn't seem astonished by the amazingly quick recovery of  his patient. There was a slight smile on

his heavy lips. He seemed  amused by some inner joke. 

Peabody's face, as usual, betrayed no hint of what he might be  thinking. He looked boyishly handsome. 

"When do we sail?" Mortimer asked. 

"Tomorrow at dawn," Barfield said. "We ought to have some nice  tarpon fishing." 

"It will do you good," Mortimer said. "Plenty of tropical sunlight.  Plenty of sleep and relaxation." 

"It will do us a lot more good," Peabody remarked gently, "to get  away from the attentions of the gentleman

who calls himself Blue Face." 

He said it idly, almost as a joke. His companions turned to stare  at him. But Elliot Peabody continued to gaze

serenely across the cabin. 

The line of his gaze brought his vision close to the rim of the  porthole outside which The Shadow clung so

precariously in darkness.  But Peabody's face remained unsuspicious. He didn't seem to have a care  in the

world. 

"DO you believe the deaths of Clee and Whorter were deliberately  planned murders?" Dr. Mortimer asked

him. 


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Peabody didn't answer. It was Barfield who replied. 

"I'm sure of that! I'm certain that Blue Face is after big game,  instead of the little burglary profits that

Inspector Cardona talks  about so much. Blue Face killed Clee to get rid of one of my heirs. He  killed Whorter

for the same reason. All the rest is bunk!" 

"Then why didn't he kill Peabody?" Mortimer asked. 

"Didn't have time, I suppose." 

"I can't see any motive for Blue Face," Mortimer asserted. He  didn't seem to want to drop the subject of the

master criminal.  "According to your arrangement, as I understand it, the money of your  three legal heirs

comes to you in the event that they die first. All  Blue Face has done is to make you richer." 

"Granted." Barfield gave his physician a cold stare that was not  entirely friendly. "But can't you see what

Blue Face is up to? With  Clee and Whorter dead  and Peabody, too, perhaps  the estates of four  wealthy

men would be concentrated in one person. Me! Blue Face would  have only to kill me in order to " 

"To what?" Dr. Mortimer said irritably. "How could Blue Face  inherit, assuming he did kill you? All your

legal heirs would be dead!" 

"Not all," Barfield rejoined. "You forgot John Shipton, the man  Peabody and I suspect." 

Peabody didn't turn his head. He seemed inattentive, half asleep. 

"Shipton is not my heir, but he is my nephew," Barfield said. "With  no other blood relatives alive, Shipton

would collect all. My guess is  that Shipton is Blue Face. Why else do you suppose he married the  daughter of

Harrison, my rental agent?" 

"I wouldn't know," Peabody murmured softly. 

"Because Shipton wanted the job of rent collector. He wanted an  opportunity to study the layout in those

buildings where most of the  Blue Face robberies have occurred. Do you know something that Inspector

Cardona hasn't had the sense to figure out? Most of the Blue Face  crimes have occurred in buildings owned

by me!" 

"Forget about Blue Face," Dr. Mortimer muttered. "Why don't we sail  tonight? The tide is favorable. Why

wait?" 

"I have to," Barfield said. "By delaying, I shall make a neat  profit. Harrison has dug up a client from Chicago

who wants to buy a  white elephant of an office building that I foreclosed on during the  depression. He wanted

to close the deal last night, but I was  not  well. 

"Harrison talked this purchaser from Chicago into staying over one  more night. He finally got the fellow's

signature to the contract. He's  coming out to the yacht tonight to get my signature." 

Barfield chuckled. 

"Otherwise, we'd be on our way to the Gulf of Mexico right now   and to hell with Blue Face!" 


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Peabody yawned. He put down the drink he had been toying with, and  lighted a cigarette. He got lazily to his

feet. 

"It's stuffy in here. I'm going out on deck for a spot of fresh  air." 

On the narrow ledge beyond the open porthole of the cabin, The  Shadow stiffened. He had seen a peculiar

expression in Peabody's sleepy  eyes. That expression warned The Shadow to beat a quick retreat. 

Peabody was smart! He had spotted the presence of an intruder. He  was slipping outside very quietly to nab

The Shadow. 

SWIFTLY, The Shadow inched along the ledge. He vaulted over the  rail, moved aft to the darkness beyond

amidships. He had little time to  fade. He could hear the swift patter of Peabody's feet hurrying up the

companionway from the cabin below deck. 

A canvascovered lifeboat was close to where The Shadow stood. He  vanished into what he knew was, at

best, but a precarious hiding place.  From beneath a crack at the edge of the canvas, he watched Peabody

emerge on deck. 

Peabody jerked a gun from his pocket, began a grim search of the  deck. He was a cool, efficient searcher. He

wasted only a brief glance  over the side of the ship in the direction of the porthole of  Barfield's cabin. Then

he began to work his way aft. His beady eyes  missed nothing. 

Bit by bit, he approached the lifeboat where The Shadow lay tensely  quiet. Finally, his left hand reached out

to pull the canvas loose. 

The Shadow felt grim anger. He didn't want to be discovered at this  premature juncture. His plans for the

proof of Blue Face's real  identity had not yet matured. He stiffened himself for a silent battle  with a man he

knew was dangerous. 

Then, suddenly, The Shadow's muscles relaxed. 

Fate had taken an unexpected hand. Elliot Peabody whirled away from  the dark outline of the covered

lifeboat. He had heard a sound, that  reached The Shadow's ear also. 

The sound came from the stern of the yacht. 

Peabody raced silently aft. Just before he reached the stern, he  ducked out of sight behind a projecting

bulkhead of the yacht's  superstructure. He waited, gun in hand. 

A figure squirmed over the rail at the stern. A man began to tiptoe  forward. He, too, was armed. He headed

along the starboard passage  toward the companionway that led below to Barfield's cabin. To do this,  he had

to pass a shielded light on deck. The light illumined his  features for a second. 

The intruder was John Shipton! 

An instant later, Shipton sprang backward. His gun muzzle lifted,  spat flame and lead. 

Peabody, who had tried to sneak up behind Shipton, uttered a snarl  of rage that was drowned out by the bark

of his own gun. Neither bullet  found a mark. Both men were keyed to a nervous pitch that ruined their  hasty

aim. 


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Shipton struck savagely at Peabody with the barrel of his gun. The  blow sent Barfield's nephew staggering.

Shipton fled toward the  darkness of the stern. 

A moment later, there was a heavy splash. Shipton had dived  overboard! 

Peabody, a bit groggy, reached the rail a moment later. He pumped  bullets into the dark water in a blind effort

to kill the escaping  intruder. But he had no visible target. The black water was like a  dense curtain. Darkness

hid everything more than a few feet from the  rudder of the yacht. 

The crash of gunfire and the yells of Peabody brought help quickly.  Dr. Mortimer and David Barfield raced

aft. With them came a couple of  sailors. Mortimer was gripping a heavy flashlight. He sent its beams  stabbing

over the black surface of the river, while Peabody gasped out  an account of what had happened. 

Peabody told of his suspicion that someone had crouched outside the  porthole of Barfield's cabin. He

identified the fugitive as Shipton. He  began to shudder. Peabody was suddenly very unlike the ruthless

manhunter of a few moments earlier 

Mortimer soothed him. 

"Forget it! It's all over now. Fortunately, you took prompt action.  Shipton got away, but I don't think he'll be

back. He'll be lucky if he  isn't drowned in that treacherous ebb tide before he reaches shore." 

"I told you Shipton was Blue Face!" Barfield muttered. 

He kept saying it over and over again. He seemed afraid his two  companions might not believe him. Finally,

the three men went forward,  descended the companionway to Barfield's cabin. 

An instant later, The Shadow stepped lightly from the covered  lifeboat. 

THE SHADOW wasn't as positive as the others that John Shipton was  in danger of drowning. He knew that

Shipton had not dived into the  black Hudson. 

Near the stern of the yacht was a heavy wooden kit of tools. There  had been two kits of tools near the taffrail

when The Shadow had made  his preliminary inspection of the deck. Now, there was only one. Where  was the

other? 

The Shadow had no hesitancy answering that question. The missing  tool kit was at the bottom of the river. It

was this that had made the  splash at the moment that Shipton seemingly had disappeared over the  stern. 

Lowering himself over the stern rail, by hanging precariously with  his hands, he was able to peer below the

sharp slant of the hull. He  didn't see any sign of Shipton. But he did see the method Shipton had  used to make

his getaway. 

A rope was suspended below the inward slant of the stern. By  hanging invisibly to that rope, a man of

muscular ability could easily  swing himself sideways. The pendulum swing of the suspended rope could

carry a man to the port side of the stern. There, the ornamental ledge  began that ran forward along the dark

hull on either side of the ship. 

The Shadow alone knew the truth. While Barfield and his two  companions were stabbing the water vainly

with a flashlight beam, the  cunning Shipton had inched swiftly forward toward the bow of the yacht  on a

ledge The Shadow had already made use of. 


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Shipton was still aboard! 

A moment later, The Shadow, watching from a sheltered spot, saw a  hand grasp the dark rail near the bow.

Shipton climbed noiselessly  inward to the deck. He flitted toward a narrow companionway just to the  rear of

the entry that led to the fo'c'sle. 

Shipton ducked downward. 

The Shadow waited a moment or two longer. Then he, too, was on the  prowl. His black cloak protected him

from discovery. The brim of his  slouch hat shielded the watchful flame of his eyes. He went down the  narrow

flight of steps that Shipton had taken. 

At the bottom, The Shadow found a narrow corridor. There were two  closed bulkhead doors, one opening

forward and one aft. Opening the  doors gently, The Shadow peered through the darkness in either  direction. 

The forward corridor led to a large chain locker. The rear passage  led directly past storage space toward the

engine room of the yacht. 

Moving with utter stealth, The Shadow took the rear passage. He  began to creep toward the engine room. 

CHAPTER XIV. HIDDEN FOE

THE SHADOW'S disappearance along a narrow and unlighted passage  that led to the engine room was not

noted. No one on the yacht was even  aware that he was aboard. 

His skill in eluding the sly search of Peabody had borne fruit.  Peabody had been convinced, at first, that he

had seen The Shadow  hiding on the narrow ledge outside the cabin porthole of David  Barfield. But the

unexpected appearance of John Shipton had swiftly  changed the direction of Peabody's suspicion. 

Peabody was satisfied that he had been mistaken about the presence  of The Shadow. 

A second wrong deduction completed an entirely false picture in  Peabody's mind. He assumed that John

Shipton, having been caught in an  attempt to hide aboard the yacht, had leaped overboard. 

It was a dangerous swim toward the dark shore against a swift ebb  tide. The odds against Shipton reaching

the shore safely were  considerable. The yacht was anchored well out in the middle of the  Hudson. Shipton

was not much of a swimmer. 

Peabody grinned. There was little mirth in his expression. His  teeth showed in that twisted smile. He didn't

descend to the cabin with  Dr. Mortimer and Barfield. He murmured a brief excuse and remained on  deck. 

As soon as Barfield and the doctor were out of sight below deck,  Peabody began to move stealthily toward

the bow of the yacht. 

He disappeared down a narrow flight of steps. It was the same route  that Shipton had taken after his fake leap

overboard. 

It was the route also taken by The Shadow! 

In Barfield's cabin there was seemingly no knowledge of these fresh  developments. Barfield and Mortimer sat


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in comfortable chairs, enjoying  a highball. 

Barfield's hand shook a little as he held his glass. He drained the  drink quickly, then glanced toward the bottle

and the small bucket of  ice cubes on a side table. Dr. Mortimer smiled indulgently. 

"Have another one, if you like." 

"I was afraid you were going to say 'no,' doctor." 

"You've had a bad shock. Gunfire doesn't do nervous people any  good, particularly people with heart trouble.

The liquor will stimulate  your heart. I'd be a poor physician if I didn't use common sense about  things like

that." 

He fixed a second highball for Barfield. Mortimer was still sipping  his first drink. He didn't seem to be in any

hurry to finish it. 

"Do you think Shipton meant to kill me?" Barfield whispered. 

"Try to forget about it, and calm down." 

Mortimer's tone was evasive. He shrugged, and stared out the  porthole. But in spite of the advice to his

patient, he kept to the  subject of Shipton. 

"Are you sure Shipton is Blue Face?" Mortimer asked. 

"I'm positive!" Barfield growled. 

"In other words, you believe," Mortimer continued smoothly, "that  Shipton has faked all these burglary

attempts in order to cover up his  real objective? Your opinion is that Shipton killed Clee and Whorter in  order

to eliminate them as heirs to your estate?" 

"Yes." 

"That sounds bad for Peabody!" 

"It's one reason why I invited him on this cruise," Barfield said  huskily. 

There was a gleam in his averted eyes, which faded before Mortimer  could notice it. Barfield continued to

gulp his second highball. 

"THE whole affair still seems queer to me," Mortimer persisted,  after a while. "Blue Face is really doing you

a favor by killing off  these nephews of yours. Under the terms of their wills, I believe, the  estates of Clee and

Whorter went to you because their deaths preceded  yours. Isn't that a fact?" 

Barfield turned his head. His gaze at the physician was calm. His  fingers were tight on his highball glass. 

"There is nothing odd about such an arrangement. The same thing  holds true for Elliot Peabody. There is

entire confidence between all  of us. Why should my nephews not make out their wills in favor of me,  since I

have made mine in favor of them?" 

Mortimer didn't reply for a moment. When he did, his voice was  casual. 


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"If I understand your suspicions correctly, you believe that even  if Peabody should be killed by Blue Face,

the murders would still not  be at an end?" 

"Correct," Barfield growled. "Blue Face is after big game! He'd  like to inherit the total wealth of myself, plus

that of my three legal  heirs." 

"But John Shipton is not an heir. If he were really Blue Face " 

"He's not an heir," Barfield grated, "but he's my nephew, damn him!  The only son of my fourth sister. If

Peabody and I were murdered, all  our combined family holdings might go to Shipton, regardless of the  fact

we don't want him to possess them. He might force the issue in  court, and collect as my sole living relative." 

Barfield drained his drink. 

"But let him try to follow this yacht to the Gulf of Mexico! He'll  get short shrift! Don't forget that once we are

on the high seas, I  shall have complete maritime authority over everyone, including any rat  who sneaks

aboard without permission. I shall be judge and jury and  prosecutor! Shipton will find out what I can do to

him, if he's fool  enough to try a Blue Face appearance outside the threemile limit!" 

"Of course," Dr. Mortimer said soothingly. 

The silence on the deck above was profound. The few deck lights  cast only a feeble glow in the darkness. The

river was like a velvet  blanket stretching toward the dim glow of Manhattan's shore and the  black heights of

the Palisades on the opposite side of the river. 

Through that river darkness a light began to grow. It moved  steadily toward the halfinvisible shape of the

anchored yacht. The  chug of a motor became audible. 

Presently, the approaching craft swung closer to the yacht. A voice  shouted through cupped hands: "Yacht

ahoy!" 

The shout was heard down in the cabin. Mortimer's face jerked with  an expression that was like a grimace of

disgust. He got to his feet.  So did Barfield. 

They went up on deck. For a moment, both men stared at the craft  alongside. Then Barfield grunted. 

"I forgot. It's Richard Harrison, my rental agent. He's coming  aboard with those contract papers I promised to

sign before we sailed." 

Harrison's figure was visible now. He stood up in the motorboat  while it was made fast. Then he sprang to the

accommodation ladder of  the yacht and climbed nimbly to the deck. He shook hands with Barfield  and

nodded pleasantly toward Dr. Mortimer. 

"I've brought the realtytransfer papers to be signed," he said. 

"Thanks," Barfield murmured. "Your client from Chicago isn't making  any mistake in buying that office

building. It's a good piece of  property. The building hasn't been profitable for the past couple of  years only

because of a trend in real estate to the midtown section. A  trend which, in my opinion, is merely temporary." 

Barfield's tone was oily. He was getting rid of a white elephant,  and he knew it. So did Harrison. It made his

voice edgy with annoyance. 


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"Perhaps. At any rate, the deeds are here. And small thanks to you,  if I must say so, Mr. Barfield! If I hadn't

used infinite persuasion  and tact on the client, he would have taken a plane back to Chicago  last night and

allowed the deal to fall through. I must say, I don't  appreciate such cooperation from a man for whom I'm

trying to save  money." 

"The loss would have been mine, had the deal fallen through,"  Barfield growled, his face red. 

"I don't give a damn about that," Harrison rejoined. "There's such  a thing as business prestige. I can't afford to

keep redink property  like that on my books. Other clients might decide that I don't know my  own business!

Had this Chicago deal fallen through, I should have been  forced to end our association and ask you to hire

some other agent to  attend to your realestate holdings." 

His face was angry. Behind the lenses of his pincenez glasses was  a glare of cold anger. Barfield forced a

soothing chuckle. He patted  Harrison mildly on the shoulder. 

"I'm sorry. I've been ill, as you know. I am considerably better  now, eh, Dr. Mortimer? Bring the papers down

to the cabin. They shall  be signed immediately, and I'll give you a drink. I promise you I  shan't be so stubborn

in the future." 

HARRISON shrugged. He went down to the cabin with Barfield and the  physician. The millionaire signed

the papers. The signature was  witnessed by Mortimer and Harrison. Harrison accepted a drink. He  seemed

mollified. But his face twitched when Mortimer asked him a  casual question. 

"By the way, how is your soninlaw doing at law school?" 

"Very nicely indeed," Harrison replied, after a pause. "He's an  ambitious young man. As a matter of fact, he's

at his evening law  classes right now." 

"That's odd," Mortimer said. 

"Odd? What do you mean?" 

"Shipton was aboard the yacht a short time ago!" 

Harrison looked startled. There was apprehension on his face. He  took off his pincenez glasses and slowly

polished them. He replaced  them on his nose with an unquiet hand. 

"You must be mistaken, Dr. Mortimer. I have told you where Shipton  is." 

Barfield explained what had happened aboard the yacht. The news of  an armed intruder who had leaped

overboard to escape a hail of bullets  produced a quick reaction on Harrison. Apprehension changed to anger.

For a moment, the eyes behind his twinkling glasses were flamelike.  Then he shrugged. 

It was a case of mistaken identity, he declared. Someone had  impersonated Shipton. Or perhaps the intruder

was a thug who looked  superficially like Shipton. 

"If you wish to delay your sailing for twentyfour hours," Harrison  concluded in a steady voice, "I can easily

rid your mind of this wrong  notion. I can have fellow members of Mr. Shipton's law class testify  that he was

there tonight studying with them in the classroom." 

"I can't delay my sailing," Barfield said. "Perhaps we were  mistaken. It's quite dark up on deck." 


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Harrison's face showed relief. His bluff had been successful. He  knew that he could not produce any alibi for

Shipton. He had counted on  Barfield's eagerness to get the yacht under way in the early morning. 

He shook hands with Mortimer and the millionaire realty owner and  prepared to take his departure. But

before Harrison could leave, there  was a grim interruption. 

A voice was shouting excitedly up on deck. Feet came racing down  the companionway toward the cabin. A

wildly excited man burst into  view. 

It was Elliot Peabody. 

"Quick!" Peabody shouted. "Down to the engine room! There's a  killer aboard!" 

CHAPTER XV. THE SHADOW KNOWS

BARFIELD leaped to his feet. So did the other two men. Mortimer  ducked out of the cabin and into his own

adjoining room, came back with  a gun. 

"The engineer!" Peabody gasped. "He's been knocked on the head! I  found him lying near the engine

gratings, unconscious!" 

"What were you doing down there?" Mortimer snapped. 

"I didn't believe that Shipton actually had left this yacht,"  Peabody muttered. "I decided to make a quiet

search below decks. I  sneaked into the engine room and found the ceiling lights had been  extinguished. When

I turned them on, I found the unconscious body of  the engineer, with blood streaming from a gash in his

scalp." 

He turned and led the way to the engine room. Barfield and Dr.  Mortimer followed him. So did Harrison. 

The slugged engineer was lying motionless near the silent machinery  of the big engines. He had been dealt an

ugly blow on the head from  behind. But his skull had not been fractured, and the hurt was not a  mortal one.

Evidently his assailant had struck hastily and with a poor  aim. A torn scalp had made the injury bleed badly.

But in a few minutes  Dr. Mortimer was able to revive the man. 

He groaned. Mortimer's curt voice rallied his wits and made him  talk. 

There was little the engineer could tell. He had found the engine  room in total darkness when he had

descended from his quarters to make  a routine inspection. He had turned on the light switch. A moment  later,

he was slugged viciously from behind and dropped. That was all  he knew. 

Mortimer helped the victim to his feet. Barfield started to walk  toward the switch that controlled the lights.

Harrison moved along with  him, but Barfield shook his head. 

"Better wait right here until we can discover if the criminal is  still down here. Maybe he hasn't had a chance

to get away." 

He moved along toward a dark corner of the engine room, a gun  glinting in his hand. Elliot Peabody moved

away, too. So did Mortimer.  The engineer stood by, swaying a bit on his feet. He started to say  something,

but what he had intended to say was never finished. 


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With startling suddenness, the engine room was plunged into  pitchdarkness. 

Someone had slyly turned off the current that fed light and power  to this steel chamber deep in the bowels of

the yacht. 

Barfield yelled out in the darkness, his voice shrill with panic. 

"Who has a light? Strike a match, someone! Find the switch!" 

"Where is it?" Mortimer shouted. 

"Over here somewhere." 

"Are you sure?" That was Harrison's scared voice. "I thought the  switch was on the other side of the engine

room, where you were  heading, Barfield! Wait! I think I have it! Yes  here it " 

His voice ended as if someone had cut through the shouted sentence  with a sharp knife. There was an ugly

thud, followed by a groan. A body  struck the invisible deck of the engine room. 

Dr. Mortimer cried out in the blackness: 

"Harrison! Are you all right? Where are you? Harrison!" 

There was no answer. Silence filled the black room. It was broken  by a strange noise. The clang of metal

broke the silence for an  instant. It sounded like the slam of a steel door. Then the silence  returned. 

A few seconds later, the engine room was flooded with light. The  bulbs in the ceiling had come on again. 

Mortimer was standing only a few feet from the injured engineer.  Peabody was across the room, near the

humming dynamo. Barfield stood in  a seeming daze halfway toward the corridor door that led forward to the

bow of the ship. 

Their eyes jerked with one motion to the light switch that  controlled the flow of current in the engine room. A

man was standing  there. An uglylooking gun jutted from his hand. 

It was Blue Face! 

HE looked unreal and horrible in the dimness of the engineroom  lights. Over his skull was the plastic mask

that looked like wrinkled  blue Cellophane. 

Under that opaque covering. his nose and ears showed like those of  a bluefaced corpse. He seemed like a

dead mummy risen from a tomb.  Darkblue gloves concealed his hands. His eyes stared through slitted

openings in the mask. 

Harrison had vanished. There was no trace of him. 

"Don't move, gentlemen!" Blue Face warned. 

His voice was a metallic whine. It sounded lifeless and dead,  fitting in with his corpselike appearance. 


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"I'm sorry to startle you," Blue Face snarled. "If you stand where  you are, and make no foolish moves, only

two of you will perish! I have  a little murder campaign to finish. That was why it became necessary to

remove your overly smart friend, Harrison, and toss him into the  bilgepump compartment!" 

Blue Face's eyes didn't move. But the eyes of the rest did. They  could see the outline of a metal door in the

steel bulkhead directly  behind the jeering criminal. The wounded engineer knew where that door  led. Behind

it was an inclosed space, used by sailors to clean and oil  the mechanism of the bilge pump. It was the slam of

that metal door  that had made the clanging sound a few moments before Blue Face had  switched on the lights

again. 

Blue Face gave a horrible chuckle. His penetrating gaze above the  barrel of his gun kept the engineer and Dr.

Mortimer motionless. But it  was at Barfield and Elliot Peabody that the killer's gun really  pointed. 

"I want each of you two gentlemen to lower his uplifted left hand,"  he told Peabody and Barfield. "Do it

slowly. Barfield first. Then  Peabody. Each remove your watch from your pocket. Toss it over here on  the

deck, close to my feet." 

"Don't shoot!" Peabody moaned. 

Barfield didn't say anything. His lips were like gray putty. 

"I don't really want those watches," Blue Face sneered. "But I  always like my murders to look like burglaries.

For that reason, I  shall take your timepieces with me when I leave. It would be a shame to  disappoint

Inspector Cardona. Cardona is so positive that I'm a nervous  hophead with a desire to commit cheap

burglaries!" 

His mocking whine changed to a snarl. 

"All right, Barfield! You first." 

Awkwardly, Barfield detached his watch with his lowered left hand,  tossed it to the deck of the engine room.

The impact smashed the  crystal and delicate works inside the gold case. Blue Face chuckled as  he heard it. 

"Peabody! Your watch, please." 

The last remaining legal heir of Barfield obeyed. 

The muzzle of Blue Face's gun swerved a hairbreadth. He made no  attempt to pick up the watches at his feet.

The steady gun muzzle  pointed straight at the heart of David Barfield. 

Blue Face pulled the trigger. 

There was no explosion. No flame leaped from the muzzle of the  murder gun. In the dreadful silence of the

lighted room, the only sound  audible was the harmless click of the gun's hammer. 

Blue Face snarled an oath. In a split second, the muzzle swerved  toward Peabody. Again the trigger was

pulled. 

No bullet ripped into Peabody's heart. Swaying with terror, Peabody  heard only the click of a useless weapon. 


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The paralyzed victims of Blue Face recovered their wits. With a  single motion, they swayed forward on their

toes, to make a concerted  rush for the criminal with the defective gun. 

Laughter stopped them before they could take a step toward Blue  Face. 

It was an ominous sound. There was amusement in it, and challenge.  It came from a dark corner of the room.

Out of that darkness, a moving  patch of blackness appeared. 

The Shadow! 

TWIN .45s gleamed in hands that were covered by black gloves.  Fierce eyes stared with a flamelike scrutiny

toward the stiffened  figure of Blue Face over near the light switch. 

Through the slits of his ugly headgear, Blue Face peered as if he  couldn't believe the evidence of his cloudy

vision. He recoiled against  the steel bulkhead at his back. 

"Surrender!" The Shadow intoned. "Resistance is useless!" 

It was a fact that Blue Face realized. The gun in his grasp had  been emptied by a foe who took nothing for

granted. The Shadow had been  secretly in that engine room earlier. 

He had not wasted his time. A patient search had disclosed the  hiding place where the mask and the gun of

Blue Face had been cached,  in readiness for a murderous appearance. 

Blue Face quivered. His hands lifted above his helmeted skull, in  token of surrender. 

"Unmask!" It was a stern command from The Shadow. 

Blue Face hesitated. In the deathlike silence, the strained faces  of his victims watched the cornered criminal.

Barfield found his  tongue. 

"Shipton!" he screamed. "It's John Shipton!" 

"No!" 

The Shadow silenced Barfield with that curt word. He spoke another  name. It was a name that brought

astonishment to every face in the  engine room that was turned toward the blueswathed criminal. 

The name that The Shadow intoned like a knell of doom was  Richard  Harrison. 

The Shadow proved the truth of his assertion by forcing Blue Face  to rip the ugly covering from his head.

The eyes of Richard Harrison  glared at The Shadow from behind a pair of glasses fitted to lie  perfectly flat

against his face behind the blue mask. 

The laughter of The Shadow deepened. It was like a trumpet call of  victory. He ordered Blue Face to remove

his glasses, forced him to dash  them to the concrete deck, where they shattered into pieces. 

Harrison blinked. Without the glasses, his shrewd eyes looked dull  and bulging. Blue Face was nearsighted! 

The Shadow had known this fact ever since he had picked up a broken  sliver from a polished lens near the

elevator door of the apartment  house in which Whorter had been murdered. The Shadow had struck Blue


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Face a blow in the face that night before the criminal had fled to  safety under cover of the choking smoke

screen. The blow had shattered  Blue Face's glasses beneath the plastic mask. 

Harrison was the only man among The Shadow's list of suspects who  wore glasses. That sliver of polished

glass had given The Shadow his  final clue. Now the unmasked face of Richard Harrison had given The

Shadow his final proof! 

He began to glide cautiously toward the captured criminal. 

BUT Harrison was not yet manacled. He was a nervy and desperate  criminal. He had been prepared for

danger ever since he had discovered  that The Shadow had taken up his trail. He had expected possible

disaster, and was ready for it. 

"Stop where you are, damn you!" Harrison snarled. 

One of his upraised hands uncurled a trifle. He was holding  something which he permitted The Shadow to

see. It was a small, fragile  sphere of glass. It looked similar to the smoke bomb that Blue Face had  shattered

on the floor of the apartmenthouse lobby. 

But this wasn't a smoke weapon. The crazy triumph in Harrison's  snarl warned The Shadow. He halted, his

automatics still aimed at the  tense body of the trapped criminal. 

Harrison had turned slightly. He was facing the fuel tanks. He  stood with his deadly little pellet poised ready

to throw. 

"If you move an inch," he cried, "I shall smash this liquid bomb at  the fuel tanks! I'll blow everyone to pieces,

including myself! I  intend to escape, do you understand? Either you allow me to back out of  this engine room

alone, and lock the door behind me  or I'll take  everyone in here to hell with me!" 

His words were a strident shriek. Harrison meant what he was  saying. There was no doubt of that. 

"It won't help you to try to shoot me!" he snarled at The Shadow.  "Go ahead and fire your guns. You can't

prevent me from smashing this  bomb, even if you plug me. If you don't believe that, pull your  triggers!" 

The Shadow didn't answer. He was checkmated, and he knew it. The  life of every man in the room depended

on his obedience to a dangerous  criminal. He stood where he was, his eyes bleak. 

The trump card was in that uplifted hand of Harrison! 

CHAPTER XVI. THE SHADOW LAUGHS

THE SHADOW allowed no hint of his dismay to reach the desperate man  a few feet in front of him. 

Derisive laughter came from his lips. The Shadow's laughter in the  face of mortal danger puzzled Harrison.

So did the words which he  whispered to a desperate and cornered criminal. 

They were taunting words. They told Harrison that his game was up,  that he had made too many serious

errors to hope to escape from a  foeman of the caliber of The Shadow. 

Harrison didn't believe that. And yet he hesitated. The Shadow had  known who Blue Face was before the


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mask had been ripped from Harrison's  face. Harrison's gun was useless; The Shadow had cleverly taken the

sting from those bullets, unknown to a shrewd criminal who had fancied  himself completely unsuspected. 

The Shadow continued to talk. His words were addressed to the  terrified victims of Blue Face, as well as to

Harrison himself. The  Shadow acquainted them with the clue of the broken eyeglasses. He  disclosed for the

first time that he had penetrated to the engine room  of the yacht well in advance of the attack on the engineer. 

Then The Shadow mentioned something that made Harrison stiffen with  rage. He described the cunning

cache where Blue Face had hidden his  disguise and his gun aboard the yacht. It was the discovery of this

cache that had enabled The Shadow to render the gun harmless. 

All the while he was talking, The Shadow kept edging imperceptibly  forward. 

There was clever psychology back of this apparently infinitesimal  advance. No step that The Shadow took

was big enough to cause Harrison  to hurl the deadly glass sphere he held so nervously in his upraised  hand.

Yet every move The Shadow made, during his mocking speech,  brought him nearer to his foe. 

"Keep back!" Harrison screamed. 

Elliot Peabody's face was like a sheet of dirtywhite paper. Sweat  stood out on his forehead. 

"Let him escape!" he begged The Shadow. "He means what he says.  He'll kill every one of us, along with

himself!" 

Barfield added his plea to that of his nephew. So did the suave Dr.  Mortimer. Except that Mortimer was no

longer suave. Terror made his jaw  sag. Mortimer was a goodenough physician to recognize the signs of

madness when he saw them. 

Harrison had reached the point where his taut nerves had begun to  crack. Without his glasses, his eyes glared

cloudily at the blackrobed  foe who was fearlessly edging closer to him. 

This very lack of fear on The Shadow's part induced a growing wave  of terror in the cornered criminal. His

teeth ground together. Saliva  trickled from his lips. 

Harrison had reached the emotional point where he was satisfied to  die himself, if only he could take the

hated Shadow along with him. 

"You can't talk a bomb out of existence," he snarled. "You can't  kill me quick enough to prevent my throwing

it!" 

The calm laughter of The Shadow applied more mental pressure to the  tortured mind of Blue Face. 

Suddenly, The Shadow spoke again. His gaze lifted to the glass  sphere in Harrison's grasp. He uttered a

single contemptuous word. 

"Useless!" he said. 

"You're crazy!" 

"Not I. The madman is yourself!" 


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As patiently as if he were addressing a slowwitted child, The  Shadow made explanations. He had

discovered the secret gun cache of  Blue Face, he pointed out. The proof of that was the fact that the gun  had

clicked harmlessly when Harrison had tried to murder Barfield and  Peabody. 

He had also ruined the potency of the glass bomb, he declared. 

"You're a liar!" 

Harrison spat it venomously. He knew The Shadow's statement was a  lie. The bomb had not been cached

with the gun and the plastic  disguise. Harrison had carried the deadly thing on his person, wrapped  in a

wadded cotton nest to guard against a premature jar that might  explode his horrible missile. 

But the clever psychology of The Shadow had already built up the  mental effect he desired. In spite of his

knowledge that The Shadow had  lied, Harrison was uneasy. His mind, dominated by The Shadow's, was no

longer sure of itself. 

Despite himself, Harrison stole a quick, instinctive glance at the  bomb before he threw it. 

In that split second of time, The Shadow leaped! 

HIS leap carried him forward over the lessened distance that  separated the two deadly antagonists. The

Shadow dropped both his guns.  He dared not risk shooting. The strength in his fingers and wrists and  arms

were all that separated The Shadow and the victims of Blue Face  from destruction. 

One of The Shadow's hands clamped like a steel vise around the  upraised wrist of Harrison. The other

whipped off the slouch hat from  his, The Shadow's head. 

Harrison struggled like a wild beast. The fragile bomb tightened in  his grasp, as he tried to throw it. But he

was unable to. The  bonewrenching grip of The Shadow on his wrist prevented Harrison from  moving a

muscle in that tortured arm. 

He opened his convulsive fingers, let the glass vial drop toward  the concrete deck! 

It was then that The Shadow swung his slouch hat forward. He had  turned it upside down. The falling glass

bomb dropped into the soft  open crown of the hat. 

There was no earthshaking explosion of pentup fury. 

The Shadow whisked the hat backward before Harrison could make a  blind, desperate grab for it. 

Behind The Shadow, a pair of frightened hands reached for the hat  as it was held to the rear at arm's length.

Hat and bomb were taken  gingerly by Elliot Peabody. 

Peabody darted swiftly away from the foaming lunge of Harrison. He  leaped to a sheltered spot behind David

Barfield. At Barfield's side  stood the wounded engineer of the yacht. Blood was still staining his  face from

the scalp wound that Harrison had dealt him earlier. 

But this engineer was a man of courage. He had seized a spanner. He  held it in a tight grip, ready to dash out

Harrison's brains if the  screaming criminal tore loose from the clutch of The Shadow. 


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An instant later, Harrison was free! He had bent his frenzied head  suddenly, had sunk his teeth deep into The

Shadow's wrist. Agony made  The Shadow release his grip. The teeth of the furious murderer had  almost met

in the flesh of The Shadow. 

Harrison fled toward the exit door of the engine room. But his lack  of eyeglasses was a fatal hazard to his

hopes. Unable to see clearly,  he darted toward the square outline of a steel door which he mistook  for the exit. 

He discovered his fatal error only after he had thrown open the  door. It led into a shallow paintstorage

closet. 

That was the end of Harrison's bid for freedom. With the threat of  the bomb eliminated, The Shadow was

able to battle Blue Face without  risking the lives of the other men in the engine room. 

He fought fiercely with the maddened criminal. Back and forth they  struggled, over the steel confines of the

room. Harrison's furious  attack prevented The Shadow from reaching his dropped guns. But by the  same

token, the criminal was prevented from drawing the sharp steel  knife which had pierced Slug Narvo's heart on

the previous night. 

Presently, Harrison groaned. The Shadow, master of jujitsu, had  achieved the hold he wanted. He increased

the pressure. Harrison's  groan changed to a scream. For an instant, he stiffened. Then there was  a sharp crack,

like the snapping of a twig. 

Harrison toppled to the floor. Above him, his face streaked with  sweat and exhaustion, was The Shadow.

From beneath his black cloak he  pulled a stout length of cord. It was tied tightly around the wrists of  the

captured criminal. The wrists were doubled downward and trussed to  the ankles. 

When The Shadow rose to his feet, Harrison was as helpless as a  chicken ready for market. 

THE SHADOW paid no attention to the pale faces of Barfield and  Peabody and Dr. Mortimer. He leaped past

them, approached the bulkhead  at a point near the light switch. 

Close to that switch was the outline of a steel door that was set  flush in the bulkhead wall. It was the entrance

to the bilgepump  repair chamber. It was the slamming of this door that had made the  clanging sound in the

darkness a moment before Harrison had vanished to  become Blue Face. 

The Shadow opened the barrier, entered the chamber. He was gone  only a short while. When he strode back

again into view, The Shadow was  carrying the limp figure of a man. 

There was a gasp from the other men in the engine room when they  recognized the pale features of the hidden

victim of Blue Face. 

The rescued man was John Shipton! 

Obeying a curt order from The Shadow, Dr. Mortimer revived  Harrison's soninlaw. Shipton was helped to

his feet. There was terror  in his wideopen eyes as he saw the blackrobed figure of The Shadow.  But his

terror changed to grim understanding when he turned and saw the  trussed body of Harrison on the concrete

deck of the engine room. 

"You knew?" The stern question came from The Shadow. 

"I suspected him," Shipton whispered. "I couldn't prove it." 


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"Is that why you tried to trail Blue Face, night after night?" 

Shipton's face was ghastly. He nodded. Haltingly, gasping for  breath, he disclosed everything he could. 

Shipton had first suspected Harrison when he had found the package  of marijuana cigarettes at home. That

finding was pure chance. He had  gone into his fatherinlaw's room to get something he thought he had  left

there. Looking unsuspectingly into the bureau, he had found the  "reefers." 

It was then that the ugly truth had burst upon him. For along with  the unmarked package of dope cigarettes,

Shipton had found a damning  document written in his fatherinlaw's hand. 

It was a complete financial statement of the entire holdings of  Barfield. With it were three other statements,

listing the assets of  Barfield's three legal heirs  his nephews, Charles Clee, James Whorter  and Elliot

Peabody. 

At that instant, Shipton realized why Harrison had been so eager  for him to marry his daughter. Harrison

wanted to profit from murder  without having an apparent motive. He knew that Shipton would possibly

inherit everything if Barfield and his three nephews could be killed.  If Shipton proved hard to handle later on,

Blue Face would have  committed one last "robbery" and murdered him. 

If anything went wrong beforehand, Shipton was an excellent fall  guy. That was why Harrison had so

cleverly helped to build up his own  daughter's suspicion of her husband. 

Shipton had no proof of all this. He was afraid to go to the  police. He was also afraid to confide in his wife.

So ever since he had  found the evidence that pointed to his fatherinlaw as Blue Face, he  had been

conducting a desperate oneman hunt to put the guilt squarely  where it belonged  on the shoulders of the

hypocritical, murderous  Harrison. 

The Shadow's face swung toward Barfield. He asked a curt question. 

Barfield admitted his "illness" had been a fake. He had suspected  Shipton. He had played invalid in order that

he might slip from the  house every night in an effort to catch Shipton redhanded. He had  hired Slug Narvo

and his mob for added protection in what he realized  was a dangerous task. 

It was a foolish thing to do, and Barfield realized it now. He hung  his head as he listened to the biting reproof

of The Shadow. 

ON the deck of the engine room Harrison, fettered and helpless,  knew that his game was up. He laughed

harshly. The madness was gone  from his staring eyes. He knew now that he had made fatal mistakes. It  made

him the more eager to brag of the clever things he had actually  accomplished. 

"You may as well give me credit for the death of Slug Narvo, along  with the rest of them," he sneered. "It

was a neat job. I had no idea  Slug intended to kidnap my daughter. But I was too smart for him. I  ducked

when he struck me down in the bathroom. The blow didn't knock me  out. I only pretended that. 

"As soon as Narvo drove away with Elaine, I sped after him in the  fast car I used as Blue Face. I killed

Narvo, rescued Elaine, and was  back in the bathroom, unconscious, before Shipton arrived home after  his

unsuccessful attempt to catch me in the act of murdering James  Whorter." 

There was horror in Shipton's eyes. David Barfield turned to face  him. 


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"I owe you an apology. I was wrong about you." 

Shipton glared at his uncle. "I never wanted a penny of your damned  money! You hounded my mother to

death! You hated her, and I hate you! I  " 

"That is not true," Barfield whispered. He looked worn and tired.  "I was wrong about you. You have been

wrong about me. I never harmed  your mother. I had nothing to do with her death. I'd have advanced her

money when she needed it, but she was too proud to ask for help. I  couldn't locate her until it was too late." 

He took a deep breath. 

"There has been too much hate in this family. I'm going to make a  new will. I want to divide everything I

have between you and Elliot  Peabody. Will you shake hands with me, John?" 

Shipton's eyes bored into those of his uncle. What he saw there  made the harsh tightness leave his jaw. He

uttered a choked sound,  gripped the hand the older man was tremulously holding out to him in  friendship. 

The Shadow nodded. 

A moment later, there was a hail from a boat approaching the  anchored yacht. The Shadow glided aloft to the

deck. The others  followed. 

The hail was in a voice The Shadow recognized. It was Inspector  Cardona's. A moment later, Cardona was

aboard the yacht. With him came  Clyde Burke, star reporter for the Daily Classic. 

The Shadow had melted backward into the gloom of the deck. Cardona  didn't see him. But he saw David

Barfield. 

Cardona explained quickly. He had received a telephone tip from  Clyde Burke that something was amiss on

the Barfield yacht. According  to Clyde, someone had phoned the tip in anonymously to the newspaper.  The

tipster promised that a valuable clue to the whereabouts of Blue  Face could be obtained by a quick visit to the

Barfield yacht. 

Clyde didn't reveal that the alleged phone message was a myth. Nor  did he tell Cardona that he was acting on

a time schedule furnished him  in advance by The Shadow himself! That Clyde Burke was also a secret  agent

of The Shadow. 

Cardona listened to the excited gasp of Barfield. He raced swiftly  below to the yacht's engine room. 

When he returned, his face held a delighted look. 

Blue Face was at last in the hands of the police. All the credit  for the capture would go to Inspector Cardona. 

Barfield explained that the capture of Blue Face had been the work  of The Shadow. But The Shadow was not

to be found when dazed eyes  glanced around the dark deck. The Shadow had faded. He was satisfied to  let

Cardona take the credit. 

Results were all that interested The Shadow! 

He would remain shrouded by darkness, until fresh challenges from  the forces of evil brought him back to

battle anew for the cause of  justice. 


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THE END 


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   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. MAN HUNT, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. DEATH IN THE DARK, page = 9

   6. CHAPTER III. CHALLENGE OF EVIL, page = 14

   7. CHAPTER IV. SICK MAN, page = 20

   8. CHAPTER V. A GRIM DISCOVERY, page = 26

   9. CHAPTER VI. A RIDE WITH SLUG, page = 32

   10. CHAPTER VII. THUGS' STRONGHOLD, page = 37

   11. CHAPTER VIII. KILLER'S TRAP, page = 43

   12. CHAPTER IX. DEATH IN BLUE, page = 48

   13. CHAPTER X. A CUNNING FOE, page = 53

   14. CHAPTER XI. THE FINAL CLUE, page = 57

   15. CHAPTER XII. SNATCH JOB, page = 63

   16. CHAPTER XIII. RIVER PIRATE, page = 69

   17. CHAPTER XIV. HIDDEN FOE, page = 76

   18. CHAPTER XV. THE SHADOW KNOWS, page = 80

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE SHADOW LAUGHS, page = 84