Title:   DEAD MAN'S CHEST

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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DEAD MAN'S CHEST

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

DEAD MAN'S CHEST .......................................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. DEATH FROM BEYOND...............................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. TRAILS IN THE NIGHT................................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. AT THE CLUB CADENZA........................................................................................10

CHAPTER IV. THROUGH THE WINDOW.......................................................................................14

CHAPTER V. JUNE GAINS A CLUE.................................................................................................19

CHAPTER VI. MEET SKIPPER MALLOY........................................................................................24

CHAPTER VII. DEATH TELLS A TALE...........................................................................................27

CHAPTER VIII. A LETTER TO THE SHADOW ...............................................................................32

CHAPTER IX. CRANSTON'S APPOINTMENT................................................................................37

CHAPTER X. TRAIL OF THE MERMAIDS......................................................................................42

CHAPTER XI. THE SHADOW COMES FIRST.................................................................................46

CHAPTER XII. DUEL IN THE DARK ................................................................................................50

CHAPTER XIII. THE RIGBY RECORD .............................................................................................54

CHAPTER XIV. THE VANISHING FIGHTERS................................................................................58

CHAPTER XV. QUEST OF THE MISSING.......................................................................................62

CHAPTER XVI. THE MAN WHO TALKED ......................................................................................66

CHAPTER XVII. GONE FOREVER, CLEMENTINE ........................................................................70

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW TAKES A TRAIL ........................................................................74

CHAPTER XIX. A QUESTION OF CHESTS.....................................................................................78

CHAPTER XX. IRON HEAD ...............................................................................................................82

CHAPTER XXI. LAST OF THE LONGBOATS.................................................................................85

CHAPTER XXII. OUT OF THE PAST ................................................................................................89

CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST .............................................................................93


DEAD MAN'S CHEST

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DEAD MAN'S CHEST

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. DEATH FROM BEYOND 

CHAPTER II. TRAILS IN THE NIGHT 

CHAPTER III. AT THE CLUB CADENZA 

CHAPTER IV. THROUGH THE WINDOW 

CHAPTER V. JUNE GAINS A CLUE 

CHAPTER VI. MEET SKIPPER MALLOY 

CHAPTER VII. DEATH TELLS A TALE 

CHAPTER VIII. A LETTER TO THE SHADOW 

CHAPTER IX. CRANSTON'S APPOINTMENT 

CHAPTER X. TRAIL OF THE MERMAIDS 

CHAPTER XI. THE SHADOW COMES FIRST 

CHAPTER XII. DUEL IN THE DARK 

CHAPTER XIII. THE RIGBY RECORD 

CHAPTER XIV. THE VANISHING FIGHTERS 

CHAPTER XV. QUEST OF THE MISSING 

CHAPTER XVI. THE MAN WHO TALKED 

CHAPTER XVII. GONE FOREVER, CLEMENTINE 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW TAKES A TRAIL 

CHAPTER XIX. A QUESTION OF CHESTS 

CHAPTER XX. IRON HEAD 

CHAPTER XXI. LAST OF THE LONGBOATS 

CHAPTER XXII. OUT OF THE PAST 

CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST  

CHAPTER I. DEATH FROM BEYOND

DOUG LAWTON paused along the Manhattan waterfront and looked for  the old Darien Pier. He saw it,

looming above the express highway, a  grim, gray, ghostly structure that looked like a monster with a

prehistoric past, ready to swallow any unwise wayfarer who might come  within its reach. 

Below the elevated highway lay the broad, roughsurfaced street  that ran along the waterfront, an esplanade

of darkness as black as the  river itself. Doug had followed that thoroughfare southward from  Fourteenth

Street; how many blocks he didn't know, for he had been  looking for the pier. 

Besides, it was difficult to count the blocks in this vicinity for  the streets were all deadends, some with

numbers, others with names,  that slanted to meet the veering edge of the Manhattan shore line.  Counting

streets would be the next task for Doug Lawton, now that he  had found the Darien Pier. But he would have to

wait until he heard the  tugboat whistles. They wouldn't come for several minutes yet, for when  Doug looked

at the luminous dial of his wrist watch, he saw that he was  ahead of schedule. 

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Pausing in the darkness, Doug studied the old pier which, though  obviously long empty, still bore the name

"DARIEN LINES" in faded  letters against its colorless background. Doug could now understand why  the

Darien Pier had been picked as his starting point for tonight. It  was about the only structure high enough to

catch the reflected glimmer  of Manhattan lights, for the low buildings on the near side of this  street cut off the

city's glow. Therefore, the pier made a conspicuous  landmark, when judged by its upper stories. 

What Doug didn't like was the lower portion of the pier, the  stretch beneath the express highway. As Doug

moved over beneath the  elevated pillars, the darkness absorbed him and he could picture  figures in the vague,

black entrance of the old forgotten pier. If Doug  could not see such figures, they in turn could not see him,

but that  was little comfort. Nevertheless, Doug did not intend to move into the  blackness where he might

suddenly be trapped; not while he was carrying  a thousand dollars cash in his pocket. 

Cars were speeding along the express highway above; an occasional  truck or taxicab came jouncing along the

broad waterfront street. None  of their lights could reach among the pillars where Doug had stopped  beneath

the superstructure. 

As he waited, Doug let his hand go to his hip pocket, not to clutch  the roll of bills that totaled a thousand

dollars, but to grip the  handle of a loaded sixgun that he had brought with him from Oklahoma. 

Doug Lawton had come to New York for a very specific purpose. For  several years, he had been looking into

a little matter of some Cuban  gold, which had been owing to his greatuncle, Artemus Lawton, since  the time

of the SpanishAmerican War. During a fruitless hunt in  Mexico, where he had hoped to trace the gold,

Doug had kept up  correspondence with various persons who had done business with his  uncle, years ago. 

Upon his recent return to Oklahoma, he had received a letter, a  letter which he now carried in his pocket. The

letter itself was  strictly anonymous, bearing no identification other than a New York  postmark. Its message

was brief, stating simply that if Doug Lawton  would come to New York City and call a certain telephone

number, he  would be told where and how he could obtain the information that he  wanted. 

The letter had stated the approximate time at which Doug was to  make that allimportant phone call and, in

addition, it carried another  definite proviso. With him, Doug was to bring a thousand dollars in  cash, as

payment for the information should it be what he wanted. 

So far, Doug had fulfilled the conditions. When he had called the  telephone number, a rough but otherwise

indefinable voice had told him  to go to the waterfront at Fourteenth Street and walk southward until  he saw

the pier bearing the name of the Darien Lines. There, at an  appointed time, Doug would hear tugboat

whistles. They would come in a  series, telling him how many blocks he was to go south, east, south,  east, and

so on until he reached the place where he was expected. 

Doug had hedged at those instructions. Over the phone, he had asked  the name of the man he was to meet.

The voice had hesitated, then  stated bluntly, "Tom Jeffrey." With that, the call had ended abruptly,  leaving

Doug to accept or reject the proposition as he chose. 

Doug had chosen to accept. 

Now, Doug was by no means sure that he had taken the wiser course.  The whole thing could be a hoax,

designed to put him at the mercy of a  gang of roving wharfrats who would slug and rob him. Should he

suffer  such an experience, Doug's only clue to the whole thing would be the  name of Tom Jeffrey, a man who

might not even exist. 


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To Doug's strained mind, the Darien Pier, with its boarded entrance  and higher sockets representing

permanently shuttered windows, had  taken on the aspect of a grotesque and massive death's head, as

forbidding as a bleached skull on a desert waste. Common sense advised  Doug to scram, yet having come this

far, he was loath to give up the  prospect of a final goal, should there happen to be one. 

From the river came sounds that in themselves goaded Doug to  remain. He heard the basso whistles of some

freighters; then the grand  diapason of a deepthroated liner. Amid these came the constant clang  of a

ferryhouse bell, answered by a trailing banshee howl from across  the Hudson, a sound that guided

ferryboats to their slips on the  Jersey side. The ferries themselves were giving intermittent blasts,  but none

of them could be the highpitched tugboat calls that Doug was  waiting for. 

Then the thought struck home: Why wait? 

Turning back into the darkness beneath the elevated structure, Doug  eased slowly past a pillar, then

quickened his pace beneath the  shelter. His gun halfdrawn, Doug kept swerving as he moved with long

strides. It wouldn't have been a happy coincidence for anyone to spring  at Doug in that gloom. Tall, rangy of

build, Doug had sidestepped  plenty of troublesome creatures in his time, rattlesnakes included,  and he was

now allowing for any breed that might be around. 

Yet this was not retreat; it was inspiration. 

The voice had said that the first signals would guide Doug south.  That was the direction he was taking now,

along the course that he  would have to go. Smart business this, for it was giving Doug a head  start on his

coming journey, in case the game proved fair. That in turn  meant that Doug would no longer be at the Darien

Pier at the time when  the signals were due. Hence, if the whole thing proved a trap, it would  lack its most

important feature, an intended victim named Douglas  Lawton. 

One block... two blocks  

Doug was counting them now, as he traced his way from pillar to  pillar, counting them by looking across the

wide street to the dingy  houses that lined the other side. All the while, Doug was listening for  shrill tokens

among the whistled throbs that pulsated from the river. 

They came, from back over Doug's right shoulder; high squeals from  some craft which Doug calculated must

be just off the end of the  deserted Darien Pier. Three shrills; then the voices of the bigger  boats took over.

Next, two more pipes, penetrating despite the  interference of the deeper tones. A pause; then one sharp

squeal. That  was all. 

Three blocks... two blocks...one block. 

Simpler than Doug had anticipated, for he had assumed he would have  to follow a longer trail. Already past

the second street south of the  Darien Pier, Doug slanted his course across the waterfront and rapidly  reached

the third. Turning that corner, Doug strode two blocks  eastward. There he made another turn and covered a

single block, to a  crossing of a small alley. 

Here the situation explained itself. The corners were occupied by  loft buildings and a warehouse, but to the

right the alley formed a  short deadend, terminating at the very door of an old, dilapidated  brick house. This

was the only residence that could be entered; above  and beyond its roof, Doug could see the higher floors of a

fairly  modern office building, which obviously fronted on another street.  That, however, was unimportant;

the house was all that mattered. 


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The door was open, the entrance lighted. Doug entered and saw a row  of pushbuttons with name cards;

above these, a placard that stated  "Buzzer Out of Order." Pushing through an inner door, Doug went up a

creaky stairway, looking for lights beneath doors. He saw none until he  reached the third and top floor; there

a light glimmered from beneath a  door at the back of the hall. Stopping at that door, Doug rapped on it,

duplicating the whistled signal that he had heard: 

Three... two... one. 

There was a halfopened window the hallway that led to a fire  escape, so Doug watched it as he listened for

sounds from within the  room. Quick footsteps came; as the door opened, Doug wheeled, then  relinquished the

hold that he had taken on his gun. 

The man who opened the door was of lean and flimsy build, half a  head shorter than Doug's sixfeettwo. He

was wearing an artist's smock  and had a paint brush in his hand. His face was sallow, wise of  expression both

in smile and eyes. Giving Doug an affable nod, the man  gestured for him to enter. 

The room itself was an artist's studio with tall windows at the  back. Those windows extended from low sills

almost to the ceiling and  they were pivoted crosswise at the center so they let in air as well as  light. Doug

scarcely noticed the windows for they formed a blackish  background. He was more interested in the contents

of the room, which  included canvases, some blank, others painted; a large easel at the  side of the room; a

drafting board over toward one window, with a chair  beyond it. 

Going to the easel, the sallow man laid aside the paint brush and  wiped his hands on a rag as he said, 

"I guess you must be Lawton." 

"That's right," returned Doug. "I take it you're Tom Jeffrey. But  you're not the man I talked to on the

telephone." 

Doug was standing just inside the door, arms folded, the expression  on his rugged face spelling business,

nothing more. His whole manner  gave the effect of a quiet patience, hanging on a balance point. 

"I have no telephone," explained Jeffrey, hurriedly. "That's why I  left that detail to a friend. But the business

is between us. You have  the letter?" 

Doug's arms unfolded, bringing his left hand into sight with a  letter from his coat packet. 

Jeffrey tightened his sallow lips nervously. 

"Here's the letter," said Doug. Then, coolly, he asked, "Did you  write it?" 

"Well, not exactly," parried Jeffrey. "I know what it says, though.  Did you bring the money?" 

"I'll have it when it's needed," Doug assured him. He replaced the  letter in his pocket. "Now what can you tell

me that's worth a thousand  dollars?" 

Going over to the window, Jeffrey pushed the chair aside; standing  behind the drafting board, he beckoned to

Doug who sauntered toward  him, but stopped a few paces short. 

"Here's the man you'll have to meet." Jeffrey began a rapid sketch.  "He knows something and says it would

be worth a lot to you. Whether  he'll tell it is your problem, not mine." 


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The sketch, though rough, was complete. Its penciled lines showed a  bearded face with gnarled forehead and

bristling eyebrows, carrying the  salty expression of an old sea captain. 

"There's one odd point," stated Jeffrey. "The skipper  I mean the  old gent  says that if he never tells what

he knows, it may mean more  than if he did tell it. Does that make sense to you?" 

"It might," replied Doug, "and it mightn't." 

"Maybe this will help." Jeffrey's quick pencil was making another  sketch. "It has a lot to do with it. That

much I know." 

The sketch consisted of wavy lines representing the ocean. Rising  from the water were the figures of two

mermaids, arms gesturing to  indicate a space between them. Jeffrey knew the sketch by heart for he  was

looking up as he finished it. Cannily, Jeffrey asked, "Would that  be worth a thousand dollars?" 

Doug had approached to watch Jeffrey's pencil work. Now, arms still  folded, Doug drew back a step, turned

slightly away, as though to  consider the question. 

"I suppose you know who the old gentleman is," said Doug, "and also  where I can find him." 

"Both," assured Jeffrey, "but I want the money before I tell you  those facts. That's fair enough, isn't it?" 

"Fair enough," replied Doug, turning toward the door, "provided  this all means something " Suddenly, he

swiveled on both heels,  bringing his right hand straight up with the gun. He'd sensed a move  from Jeffrey and

he hadn't guessed wrong. The sallow man was coming  forward across the drawing board, a distorted look

upon his face.  Jeffrey's hands were clawing ahead of him. If they'd been reaching for  a weapon, Doug

wouldn't have hesitated with his gun. But Jeffrey's  hands were empty, helpless even in their frantic grab. 

Falling, the artist crashed into the drawing board and the flimsy  uprights that supported it. In the midst of the

wreckage he sprawled  headlong on the floor, a gasp coming from his writhing lips, only to be  drowned by the

thud and splintering of the table and its board. Looking  beyond, Doug saw the closed window, black against

the night; then his  eyes returned to Jeffrey, wondering what sort of game the fellow was  trying to play. 

If a game, it was a grim one. 

Buried to the hilt in Jeffrey's back was a heavy knife, its rounded  handle the central spot of a slowly widening

circle that carried the  crimson dye of blood. 

Doug Lawton was standing alone in a room with a dead man whose  murder had come like a stroke from the

beyond! 

CHAPTER II. TRAILS IN THE NIGHT

THE stark reality of Jeffrey's death was slow in penetrating Doug  Lawton's mind. 

To Doug, the scene before him seemed strangely remote, like some  picture woven from his imagination. It

was like the drawings on the  sketch pad attached to Jeffrey's board, which had skidded ahead of him  in the

final moment of his sprawl. Doug was looking at those sketches  now, the portrait of the bearded skipper, the

figures of the beckoning  mermaids. 


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Those pictures were etching themselves into Doug's memory, for the  skipper represented a man that he must

some day meet, while the  mermaids in their tantalizing way, were luring him toward the discovery  of a secret

that he had long sought to learn. Somehow, they existed  without Tom Jeffrey, yet it was his hand that had

drawn them. 

Jeffrey's hand. 

It lay there, almost upon the drawings, as though seeking to pluck  them from the sheet. Magnetically, Doug's

eyes moved from that hand,  along the arm and past the shoulder to the center of Jeffrey's back, as  though

drawn by the steel of the very blade that was buried there. 

The crimson circle was widening further. Under the glare of a  hanging lamp which had been above Jeffrey's

drawing table, the blot  showed vividly against the light buff of the dead man's artist's smock. 

Yes, Jeffrey's death was very real. The only incredible part was  the manner of its delivery. Reaching up with

his left hand, Doug turned  the switch of the overhanging light, extinguishing it. There were other  lights in the

room, but they were over toward the door, hence there was  no longer any reflection from the window. Staring

out into the  darkness, Doug could see a drizzleswept space that represented either  a courtyard or a garden;

beyond it was a wall bounded by the dim lights  of an alley. Past that reared the dozen or more stories of the

office  building, dark except for the lights of a few scattered windows. 

Glancing down to the dampened window sill, Doug saw that the window  itself was solidly locked by an

automatic clamp. Again, Doug studied  the outer darkness, and calmly, since he was positive now that murder

could not have struck from there. It was singular, as Doug recalled it,  that he should have thought of that

darkness in terms of death, only to  have tragedy strike in the midst of a lighted room. 

From somewhere, a clock chimed heavily, announcing eight o'clock.  Doug didn't have to count the strokes.

He knew the hour, because he had  been told to wait at the Darien Pier at exactly ten minutes of eight.  Of

course, he'd had a few blocks start from there when he heard the  whistled signals. Correspondingly, Doug had

gained a few minutes  leeway, and those minutes had been enough to throw any followers off  his trail. 

Or had they? 

Granted that Doug had outdistanced any pursuers, they could have  overtaken him when he arrived here in

Jeffrey's studio. In that case,  the knife stroke could have been meant for Doug himself, not Jeffrey,  and the

only place it could have come from was the door. He'd turned  toward the door, but he remembered that he'd

been swinging slowly  around to face Jeffrey when he saw the artist fall. Maybe Jeffrey  himself had turned in

the direction of the window and had just started  to move back when the knife caught him. 

Odd that Doug hadn't heard the flying blade whistle past him; odder  still that it should have missed Doug and

so accurately found Jeffrey.  Yet those were minor objections compared to the impossibility of a  knife coming

through a tightly shut window. Therefore, the door was the  answer. 

All this had sorted itself in Doug's mind by the eighth stroke of  the clock. He'd folded his arms again during

that rapid contemplation;  now, thinking in terms of the door, Doug swung toward it instantly, his  arms still

crossed. 

Doug wasn't wrong in thinking of that door in terms of danger. 

The door had opened and in the doorway stood a girl with a gun. Not  a big girl nor a big gun, still both were

sizable enough to command  respect. They were about .32 caliber, as Doug rated them. He was more


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interested in the gun, though, than the girl, except for the one finger  that she held against the trigger of the

revolver. Trigger fingers  could tell a lot, particularly where nerves were concerned. 

The girl was rather beautiful, if Doug had wanted to notice it. Her  eyes were brown, like her hair, and her

firmly tightened lips were  naturally red. Those features stood out sharply against the white  background of her

rounded face, so sharply that Doug didn't realize  that the girl was deathly pale. Not having met her before,

Doug  couldn't be blamed for his lack of discernment. Besides, he was  watching that trigger finger. 

Doug idled a few paces in the girl's direction, then halted easily  as the gun came up. He met the girl's gaze

now, because it was sighted  along the revolver and in her turn, she was stepping forward to force  Doug back.

Just to please her, Doug relaxed with a backward slouch and  he was glad to see the girl's trigger finger lose its

momentary  tension. 

The girl's eyes darted briefly toward the figure on the floor, only  to center on Doug again. Though the corner

light was out, Jeffrey's  body showed clearly. 

"Whoever you are," the girl said coldly, "you came here to frame  him." 

"You mean Jeffrey?" queried Doug, with a lift of his broad  eyebrows. "Hardly that, lady. He's dead." 

"I don't mean Jeffrey," the girl snapped. "I mean Anjou." She  paused, watching to see if Doug showed

recognition of the name, then  gave it in full, "Anjou de Blanco." 

"I never heard of him," returned Doug, calmly. "But speaking of  frameups, there's somebody else who ought

to be considered first." 

The girl's lips widened in a gasp. 

"You... you don't mean me!" she exclaimed. Then, her tone  sharpening: "Why, that's just who you do mean!

You did something to  stop Anjou from coming here, because you guessed I would be along.  You're trying to

frame me!" 

As though to corroborate the girl's claim, a shrill sound broke the  quiet. It was the siren of a police car,

echoing in from the alleyway  on which the house fronted. Off in the distance came sharp blasts of  police

whistles in answer to the summons. A sudden color came to the  girl's face, her voice was low, challenging, as

she came another step  toward Doug, but he noted that her trigger finger still restrained  itself. 

"I see it now!" came the girl's words. "You're bringing the police  to blame Anjou for the murder. You'll

accuse me of having helped him.  You think you're framing me " 

"Or maybe it's just the other way about," put in Doug, suddenly.  "When I said somebody else, I meant

myself. A nice job, lady, to have  the police find me standing here and Jeffrey lying there." 

Doug turned his head half about to nod sideward toward Jeffrey's  body. That, however, was just the start of

his maneuver, a gesture that  he knew would bring the girl's gun a trifle forward. With a sudden  reverse spin,

Doug unlimbered his long left arm, carried it in a sudden  sweep that clamped his hand over the girl's, gun and

all. Then,  launching his right hand for her shoulder, he was spinning her about,  the gun pointing upward as

the girl's trigger finger acted. 

The arriving siren was drowned by the sharp barks of the .32 as its  bullets punctured the ceiling harmlessly.

Then the gun itself was  flying through the air and the girl was doing a headlong skid across  the room,


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knocking over Jeffrey's easel as she tried to halt her  spinning dive. Crashing into a stack of canvascovered

frames, the girl  sprawled against the wall, while Doug laughed an unfriendly good night  and wheeled out into

the hallway. 

Doug didn't take to the stairs. He knew the police would be coming  from that direction. Instead, he slid

through the open window and  started a swift trip down the fire escape. Not that he expected the  police to trail

him by this route; Doug was thinking in terms of the  girl and wanted to get a few layers of steel steps

between himself and  the window. 

Again, Doug was guessing right. 

The girl hadn't lost an ounce of her determination. Brushing aside  the canvases, seeing her gun in the corner,

she grabbed it, rushed out  through the door and turned directly toward the window, guessing that  Doug had

used it for his exit. Heavy footsteps were coming up the  stairs, but the girl didn't hear them. She was all intent

upon reaching  the window and blasting useless shots after a man who was out of range  and whose existence

she couldn't even establish, if questioned. 

It was then that blackness swooped from the head of the stairway. A  cloaked figure, arriving two flights

ahead of the police, flung itself  upon the girl, turning her full about. A gloved hand, more skillful  than

Doug's, wrenched the gun from the girl's fist before her finger  could even find the trigger. Amazed, the girl

was staring straight up  into a pair of eyes that seemed like live coals as they looked at her  from beneath the

brim of a slouch hat, strange eyes that commanded  silence. 

Then, carried by that same sweeping arm, the girl found herself at  the front of the hallway, past the stairs

from which clattering  footsteps were about to arrive. There the roof of the old house sloped  into a low alcove

that contained a skylight. A gloved hand pushed the  skylight upward, while a sibilant voice spoke from lips

that were  hidden by heavy folds of a cloak: 

"This way, before the police find us!" 

Before the girl could even nod, a powerful arm had literally  propelled her upward and she was groping along

the slight slant of a  tinsheathed roof, her gaze blurred by the drizzle. The skylight  settled noiselessly back

into place and again the cloaked stranger was  beside the girl, guiding her to a small window of a building

next door.  Climbing in the window, the girl found herself in a long passage that  stretched to a stairway far

beyond. All this was shown in the long,  thin glare of a flashlight that the cloaked rescuer pressed into the

girl's hand. 

Then came final instructions from the being in black: 

"Those stairs will lead you out the side door of this warehouse.  When all is clear, twist the end of the

flashlight to the right. Take  the cab that comes for you." 

The girl nodded, gasped a "Thank you," and turned to look for the  mysterious stranger. He was gone, like a

shadow. Nor was it strange  that such a thought should cross the girl's mind. For those very words,  The

Shadow, was the name by which this master of the night was known. 

Meanwhile, Doug Lawton had been faring less happily than the girl  whom he had left to explain matters to

the law. At the bottom of the  fire escape, Doug had turned toward the wall at the back of the space  which

proved to be a flagstone courtyard. Reaching that wall, he groped  along it until he found a gate. Gun drawn,

he eased the gate open, his  gaze turned up toward the tall windows that represented Jeffrey's third  floor

studio. 


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They were dim, those windows, but as Doug moved through the gate,  one window brightened suddenly. The

police had reached the studio and  had turned on the overhanging light. Against the panes, Doug could see  the

outlines of men in uniform, stooping to examine Jeffrey's body. 

With that, Doug performed a stoop of his own in the shelter outside  the wall. The gate clattered slightly as he

closed it and Doug wheeled  instinctively, recalling his former suspicion of spies. This time the  thought came

late. 

A powerful hand clamped Doug's wrist, shoving his gun hand upward.  In the glow of the street lamp Doug

saw a smooth, handsome face, dark  in the dull light, but with glittering eyes and shiny teeth that showed  in a

smile that was both grim and pleased. Before he could swing a left  hand punch, Doug was caught by a

grappling arm and a moment later he  was completely locked with this antagonist whose name sprang

spontaneously to mind. 

Anjou de Blanco. 

That was the name the girl had spoken, the name of the man she had  claimed that Doug had tried to frame.

The recollection filled Doug with  a surge of anger, partly toward himself. He'd misjudged the girl when  he'd

countered with an accusation of his own, for Anjou's absence at  that crucial time indicated that the fellow had

betrayed the girl who  trusted him. That gave Doug a double score to settle. 

Gun shots wouldn't do it. They would only bring the police and more  complications. What Doug wanted was

to bring his gun down on Blanco's  head. Letting one knee drop, Doug braced for a counterstroke as Blanco

pressed him downward. A sudden twist and Doug's hand was free, slicing  over to the left, to begin a

crossswing. 

But it wasn't Doug who swung. 

Catlike, another figure had sprung up behind him, and a deft hand  tapped a rounded implement against the

base of Doug's skull. Sagging,  Doug let the gun slip from his hand as he toppled forward, supported  only by

Blanco's powerful hands. Blanco gave an approving nod to a  little man who paused to scoop up Doug's

revolver, grinning in the  happy fashion of an ape. 

"Well done," said Blanco. "Hurry, we must take him to the car." 

Together, they halfcarried Doug through the outlet of the alley.  They were gone, when a cloaked form

vaguely outlined itself against the  roof edge above the very room where the police were discussing their

discovery of Jeffrey's body. Then the figure of The Shadow was moving  silently, obscured by the misty

drizzle, to the roof edge just above  the fire escape. 

From there, The Shadow made a noiseless descent by the very route  that Doug had taken. Reaching the gate,

he seemed to filter past it,  forming only a fleeting patch of blackness as he passed the dull glow  of the

lamplight. It was in the further darkness that The Shadow paused  to listen. There, he caught the faint sound of

a departing cab, from  almost a block away; but that was not all. 

There was another car that started from closer by, hardly around  the corner from the alley. Swiftly, The

Shadow moved through a passage  beside the office building, but when he reached the next street, the  car was

gone. All that he saw was a subway entrance, adjoining the  building itself. 

A low, whispered laugh came from The Shadow's lips. As it died  away, The Shadow, like the mirth itself, had

vanished into the night. 


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CHAPTER III. AT THE CLUB CADENZA

IT was quarter of nine when Lamont Cranston strolled into the Club  Cadenza, one of cafe society's newest

midtown night spots. Immaculately  attired in dinner clothes, Cranston didn't look like a man who had

recently been climbing over rooftops, but he had been doing exactly  that. For the leisurely Mr. Cranston was

a man who lived two lives, his  own and The Shadow's. Cranston made it a practice to keep the two  identities

widely separated. 

In the club, he hesitated and stared about in a puzzled fashion  until a head waiter approached and conducted

him to a table. Cranston  expressed surprise when he saw the bluntfaced man who rose to greet  him with a

firm, but brief handshake. As they sat down at a table for  four, the blunt man kept looking toward the door,

obviously expecting  someone else. 

"Sorry I was late, Belville," remarked Cranston quietly. "I thought  it would be better if your other guest

arrived first." He glanced at  the two vacant chairs. "Or should I say guests?" 

"Neither," returned Belville, in an annoyed tone. "I think our bird  has flown without waiting for the bait.

Perhaps it's just as well,  because it proves that the police commissioner was right. Still, it  leaves the fellow

free to work his crooked game somewhere else." 

"At least you've been expecting him," reminded Cranston, gesturing  to the chairs, "But who was he bringing

with him? The girl?" 

Belville's eyebrows raised, shoving heavy wrinkles up to the roots  of his dark, bushy hair. 

"How did you know there was a girl in it, Cranston?" 

"I said the girl," Cranston repeated. "There always is one, when  they work the Spanish prisoner swindle. She

is always some charming  senorita, who has to be brought all the way from Spain, or somewhere in  South

America, which costs money, and often an elderly duenna must  accompany her, which costs more money.

Then the senorita gets you alone  and pleads with you to rescue the poor prisoner, not just because of  the

fortune that will be yours, but because of some family tradition.  She doesn't love the prisoner; she never did.

She's merely sorry for  him. But now she has come to care for you, because your sympathy has  been so deep,

so real. You are just a wonderful Americano and a Grade A  sucker, only you don't find that out until later." 

Belville was now smiling broadly, chuckling despite himself, but at  the same time he was shaking his head,

raising his hands and spreading  them in mild protest. Then, as Cranston finished, Belville became  serious

again, though with a trace of a knowing smile. 

"It sounds as though they've taken you, Cranston," commented  Belville. "Maybe more than once?" 

"They've tried," conceded Cranston. "That's why Commissioner Weston  wanted me to look into your case

after you reported it to him. The  Spanish prisoner racket pops up after every revolution, political  shakeup, or

any minor pretext. There's always some unfortunate who has  to be bailed out of the calaboose in order to

show you where he's  buried a million dollars." 

"But this case is different," protested Belville. "I'll admit it  begins with a Spaniard, this chap who calls

himself Anjou de Blanco,  but there isn't any prisoner. There's just a man Blanco says he can  produce, who

has a halfinterest in a mighty lot of money that may take  some financing to find." 


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"And the man's name?" 

"Blanco won't give it," replied Belville. "He says he wants to be  sure of where I stand. Otherwise, he'll have

to try someone else." 

"Good," decided Cranston. "That's why the commissioner brought me  into it. You can let this fellow Blanco

switch over to me." 

"Provided he ever shows up again," returned Belville, dourly. Then,  his quick eyes steadying, Belville added,

"But if Blanco proves to be  on the level, it's my privilege to finance him. Understand?" 

A thin smile traced itself on Cranston's lips. 

"You talk as though you've already been taken," stated Cranston.  "However, it's all yours, if there's anything

in it. I'm merely helping  the police commissioner investigate a complaint. Now tell me, who  claims the other

half of the money?" 

"A girl," replied Belville. "She's the girl Blanco was supposed to  bring here. She's not a Spanish girl, either.

Her name is June Getty  and she has a claim on a lot of gold that was shipped out of Cuba at  the time of the

SpanishAmerican War. At least, that's what Anjou de  Blanco claims, but if there is a June Getty, I don't

think we're going  to meet her " 

"I think you are," interrupted a girl's voice. "That is, if you  happen to be Stephen Belville." 

Cranston was getting to his feet, so Belville did the same, turning  to face a girl who had just arrived beside

the table and was meeting  Belville's surprised gaze with a very determined look. Douglas Lawton  had noticed

this about her and so did Stephen Belville. 

For this was the girl who had been in Jeffrey's studio, the same  girl who had accepted The Shadow's advice

and help in making a quick  flight. 

From that brief interlude, Cranston was able to judge June's true  character much better than Belville could

now. Belville was taking the  brunt of the girl's indignation for having assumed that she might not  exist. Yet in

itself, June's indignation was her way of covering her  own uncertainty. Of that, Cranston was positive, for, as

The Shadow, he  remembered June's willingness to be guided in a moment of bewilderment. 

In his turn, Belville was registering the correct response. The  slight smile that flitted across his blunt features

was both solicitous  and apologetic. Belville wasn't saying a word as he listened to the  girl upbraid him. 

"I am June Getty," the girl repeated, "and everything Anjou told  you about me is true. I wouldn't be dealing

with Anjou if I didn't  trust him. But it's not to Anjou's discredit if I don't entirely trust  his judgment,

particularly when I knew he was dealing with someone like  you, Mr. Belville. 

"If Anjou hasn't told you the name of the man he says he can  produce, that's because he knows you're too

anxious to find it out. On  that point, Anjou is smart, because I told him to be. I could tell what  you were like

from the description Anjou gave of you and if you don't  want to deal with us, we can find someone else." 

The smile had faded from Belville's face; his hands were lowering  as he bowed. His expression now was one

of frank regret and when he  spoke, his tone was one of complete conciliation. 


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"May I introduce a friend, Miss Getty?" Belville murmured. "His  name is Lamont Cranston and he may be

the very person that you and  Senor Blanco would like to meet. Not only does your arrival here  nullify all the

doubts that I so unwisely suggested; I feel that I now  can fully recommend both you and Senor Blanco to Mr.

Cranston. Should  you so desire, I shall withdraw completely, if only to convince you  that I, too, can be

trusted." 

There was sincerity, concern in Belville's words and the effect on  the girl was electric. Her anger melting,

June sat down in the chair  that Belville politely drew back for her. 

"I... I'm sorry," the girl declared, "if I came to quick  conclusions " 

"Justified conclusions," put in Belville. "Cranston will tell you  that I was criticizing Anjou and yourself quite

heartily and that you  only heard the end of it." 

"But after all," continued June, "Anjou has been keeping you in  doubt. I just admitted that myself." 

"It was his proper policy to do so," argued Belville. "I realize  that, now that I have met you." 

"But since you hadn't met me " 

"The blame is all the more mine. To criticize a person one has  never met, is quiet inexcusable." 

With those words, Belville delivered the perfect touch. He was  admitting an unpardonable act in speaking

slightingly of June, but in  the same statement reminding the girl that she had been unjustified in  forming

advance conclusions regarding himself. June could only glance  toward Cranston as the arbiter who might

decide this dilemma and she  was startled as she met his eyes. 

Calm eyes, Cranston's, their easy gaze so complete a contrast to  the burning eyes of The Shadow, that it was

singular June should even  have compared them. The only similarity was the result that they  produced, though

under circumstances diametrically opposite. The Shadow  had literally compelled June to avoid a situation;

Cranston was  persuading her to accept one. 

It struck June that if Belville's recommendation stood for  Cranston, Cranston's should stand for Belville. So

June turned to  Belville who was still standing beside his chair and said: 

"Please sit down, Mr. Belville. I expect Anjou very shortly and I  know we shall both want to talk business

with you." 

Much pleased, Belville sat down, then asked: 

"Did Anjou mention why he was detained?" 

"No," replied June firmly. "I didn't ask him, but I suppose he was  going over some of the papers he intends to

show you." 

"You phoned him at his apartment?" 

"Yes. From my own apartment." 

Cranston would have been willing to endorse the last part of June's  statement. He knew June must have

stopped at her apartment on the way  here. Apparently, she'd intended to come directly from Jeffrey's to the


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Club Cadenza, for the blue dress with the bell sleeves was quite  suitable for evening wear. As for earrings

and bracelets, which were  now a conspicuous portion of her getup, June could have carried them  quite

readily in her handbag with the .32 revolver. But June was no  longer wearing the blue dress. She had changed

to a brown crepe after  her trip across the drizzle swept roof. 

"Anjou will soon be here," assured June, accepting a light that  Belville proffered for her cigarette. Then, her

eyes roving toward the  entrance of the night club: "Why, here he is now!" 

In the lights of the Club Cadenza, Anjou de Blanco was strikingly  handsome as he sauntered toward the table.

The glitter of his eyes, the  shine of his teeth, were modified by wellformed features of a  distinctly Latin

mold. His only giveaway was a tendency to appear  overhandsome, both by his smile and his unruffled

pose; but when he  spoke, his tone had a suavity that reduced his manner to a normal.  Introduced to Cranston,

Blanco bowed cordially and delivered a  convincing handshake. Then, as he sat down, he spoke to Belville in

a  tone of distinct sincerity. 

"I have news that will please you, Senor Belville," announced  Anjou. "I have heard from the man who has a

claim on the Cuban gold.  His name is Douglas Lawton and I am sure he will do business with us." 

"Do you mean," queried Belville eagerly, "that you found him  tonight?" 

"He has found me," corrected Anjou, "or at least he knows where I  can be reached. After all"  he swept an

expressive hand toward June   "Senorita Getty has the original claim. This man Lawton should be glad  to be

considered at all." 

Belville let his curved eyebrows ripple his forehead upward; then,  with a nod, he suggested: 

"Suppose you tell Cranston the details." 

"They are very simple." Anjou gave a slight shrug. "Fifty years  ago, in Havana, one million dollars in

Spanish gold was paid to an  American named Josiah Getty." 

"My grandfather," put in June. "He supplied the Cuban insurgents  with munitions to help their revolt against

Spain." 

Belville turned to Cranston. 

"A munitions runner," defined Belville. "Or perhaps we should  define Josiah Getty as a filibuster." 

"Call him what you want," snapped June, testily. "He was justified  because the United States declared war on

Spain and, therefore, he had  a legal right to the money or his share of it." 

"The senorita is right," Anjou put in. "Now we have only to find  the money. For that we need your help,

Senor Belville." 

Smiling blandly, Belville nodded. Then: 

"This chap Lawton," queried Belville. "How does he enter into it?" 

"The money for the munitions was supplied by gamblers in Havana,"  explained June. "They pretended they

were shipping it to Spain.  Actually, it was sent to the United States where part of it  mind you,  only part 

went to the man who supplied the munitions." 


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"A smuggler," smiled Belville. "I suppose he was Lawton's  grandfather?" 

"His greatuncle," supplied Anjou. "His name was Artemus Lawton,  but we have no proof that he received

the money. We are trying to learn  what we can from Douglas Lawton." 

Belville turned a questioning gaze toward Cranston. 

"What do you think, Cranston?" 

"It should be worth investigation," replied Cranston. "The question  is how much would it cost." 

"Not too much perhaps," put in Anjou, smoothly. "Of course, there  will be expenses. First, we must learn

what happened to the money." He  turned to Belville. "If you would be willing, senor, to pay for such  work,

you would be entitled to a share. Perhaps"  he eyed Belville  cagily  "we might be able to sell you Lawton's

share for the right  price." 

"Do you mean," asked Belville, "that Lawton might be willing to  sign it over?" 

Anjou de Blanco nodded. Belville's expression became interested as  he turned to Cranston. But before

Belville could again ask Cranston  what he thought, Cranston spoke. 

"I think, Belville," said Cranston, rising, "that I must be  leaving. I have an appointment with a friend of ours.

Before you come  to a final decision, let me know the details." 

That pleased Belville, because he was sure he knew the friend that  Cranston meant; namely, Police

Commissioner Weston. Watching Cranston  depart, Belville let his smile grow confident as though he felt that

Cranston had practically certified the quest of the Spanish gold. 

There was something, however, in Cranston's smile that Belville did  not catch, any more than June or Anjou. 

The nonchalant Mr. Cranston was not thinking in terms of treasure;  he was thinking of murder, though there

was much more than a chance  that the two might be related. Indeed, so certain was he of the  connection, that

he had timed his action almost to the dot. Before  Cranston could reach the phone booths in the entrance of the

Club  Cadenza, he was flagged by a head waiter, who announced that a call had  just come in for him. 

The call was from the police commissioner, who knew that he would  find Cranston at the Club Cadenza. It

concerned something more  important than the Spanish prisoner racket. 

Commissioner Weston wanted his friend Lamont Cranston to meet him  at the studio of an artist named

Jeffrey to look into a murder. 

CHAPTER IV. THROUGH THE WINDOW

LAMONT CRANSTON took a cab to Jeffrey's place. 

He had two reasons for doing this. First, he wanted to check the  time of a cab trip, allowing for a stopoff at

the apartment house  where June Getty lived. The second reason, which linked with the first,  was that

Cranston was riding in the same cab that June had used and,  therefore, the driver could inform him as to the

details of June's own  trip. 


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The driver of the cab was Moe Shrevnitz, one of the speediest  hackies in Manhattan. Serving as one of The

Shadow's agents, he was  familiarly known as Shrevvy to others of the clan. He was quite an  impartial

character, this Shrevvy. He made no distinction between The  Shadow and Lamont Cranston when one or the

other rode in the cab.  Shrevvy simply called them both "boss." 

It was The Shadow who had gone to Jeffrey's earlier this evening;  now it was Cranston. So Shrevvy took up

the details of what had  happened in between. 

"Say, boss," Shrevvy informed, "that dame you sent along her way  was sure in a hurry. Only she wasn't in as

much of a hurry to get to  the Club Cadenza as to a telephone." 

Cranston's silence was in itself a query for Shrevvy to furnish  further details. 

"She stopped at a drugstore about five blocks from where I picked  her up," Shrevvy continued. "I watched

her trying to put through a call  in a booth that was up against the window. She didn't get anything  except her

nickel back." 

"Busy signal?" asked Cranston. "Or no answer?" 

"I'd say no answer," replied Shrevvy. "She took it very  patientlike. If it had been busy, she'd have hung up

and tried again." 

"And after that?" 

"She gave me the address of an apartment house. Here it is right  now." Shrevvy pulled up beside a medium

sized apartment building. "From  the way she hustled into the place, I guess she was in a hurry to try  that

number again." 

"How long was she in here?" 

"About ten minutes. When she came out, she had me take her straight  to the Club Cadenza." 

"Good enough. Wait here, Shrevvy." 

Entering the Greendale Arms, Cranston found a pushbutton listing  the name of June Getty, Apartment 5C.

Also, Cranston noticed a "No  Vacancy" announcement, listing the name of the rental agent as J. B.  Morris

Co. Coming from the building, he crossed to a drugstore and put  in a phone call. 

The voice that answered was methodical. It said: 

"Burbank speaking." 

Cranston's voice became The Shadow's whisper as he returned one  word: 

"Report." 

The report came. Burbank was the contact man who kept check with  The Shadow's active agents and it

turned out that those active agents  had truly been active. In fact, Cranston's earlier operations as The  Shadow

were based upon facts that his agents had provided a few days  before when Commissioner Weston had asked

Cranston to look into the  Spanish Prisoner swindle, as reported by Stephen Belville. Cranston  purposely had

confined himself to interviews with Belville. But as The  Shadow, he had put his agents on the trail of Anjou


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de Blanco. 

They had located Anjou's apartment on the fringe of Greenwich  Village and had discovered that he had a

freakish looking companion or  servant who answered to the nickname of Perique. It was difficult to  classify

Perique exactly, since he only visited Anjou's apartment at  intervals and spent most of his remaining time

along the waterfront  where he was as difficult to follow as a wharf rat. This evening,  however, Cliff

Marsland, one of The Shadow's agents, had overheard  Perique phoning Anjou from a fishandchip place.

He'd given a name, an  address and an hour. 

The name was Jeffrey; the address was No. 10 Van Camp Lane, where  Jeffrey's studio was located; the hour

was eight. 

When Anjou had left his apartment shortly afterward, a girl had  picked up his trail. The girl was June Getty,

who had already been  observed by The Shadow's agents, though they hadn't learned where she  lived. Word of

all this had been relayed to The Shadow through Burbank.  Dropping his role of Cranston, The Shadow had

for the first time  entered the game, telling his agents to drop their respective trails. 

Obviously, June had been worrying about Anjou and had decided to  follow him herself. But it was only June

who had encountered The Shadow  at Jeffrey's. The man who had been there, and who The Shadow now

calculated must be Douglas Lawton, had not answered to Anjou's  description, in the brief glance that The

Shadow had had. 

There had been no sign of Anjou until Harry Vincent, another of The  Shadow's agents, had spotted him

stopping back at his apartment. From  Burbank's report, Anjou had reached there just about the time that

Shrevvy dropped June at her apartment. But Anjou's apartment was much  nearer Jeffrey's, ten minutes nearer

at least. 

Where had Anjou been meanwhile? 

That was the question The Shadow wanted answered. He gave  instructions as to how his agents might solve

it. Then, as Cranston, he  strolled out from the drugstore, entered the cab and was again on his  way to

Jeffrey's. 

When he reached the house at the end of Van Camp Lane, Cranston  found the police in charge, with the

commissioner's big car standing  by. The commissioner's chauffeur waved to him and a police officer

promptly ushered Cranston up to the third floor. There, Cranston found  Weston in command. 

Commissioner Ralph Weston was a brusque gentleman who had an  officious way that he mistakenly thought

showed his efficiency.  However, there was no question but what Weston got results, although he  usually

browbeat others into getting them. Important to the bristles of  his military mustache, he was using his regular

system and getting nods  from some wiselooking detectives standing by. 

The only unimpressed witness was a stocky man whose swarthy face  was buried chindeep in his hand. He

was Inspector Joe Cardona, ace of  the Manhattan force. Cardona knew his business and wanted to get about

it, but he also knew that the proper preliminary step was to let the  commissioner have his say first. 

"It's obvious what happened," decided Weston. "Somebody came here  with the express purpose to murder

Jeffrey. He got behind the fellow,  stabbed him in the back, and there is the result." 

With that, Weston gestured to Jeffrey's body which was still lying  on the floor. Cranston watched everybody

nod with the exception of  Cardona. 


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"Some friend of Jeffrey's phoned in the tipoff," added Weston,  "but, unfortunately, it was too late to prevent

the murder. The killer  fled, probably by the fire escape, just before our squad arrived." 

Taking a look at Cardona, Weston expected to see a nod, but didn't.  Sarcastically, Weston inquired: 

"You have a better theory, inspector?" 

"Jeffrey was stabbed from behind," stated Cardona. "From the  position of the body, the way Jeffrey smashed

the drawing table when he  fell, I would say that he was taken by complete surprise." 

"In that case," conceded Weston, "the murderer must have been  hiding here when Jeffrey entered." 

"Except that there is no place to hide," Cardona pointed out. "That  is, no place from which the killer could

have reached a position  directly behind the victim." 

"Would it occur to you," inquired Weston, testily, "that the  murderer might have rearranged the scene?" 

"He couldn't have," Cardona replied. "Look at the way that table is  jammed under Jeffrey's body. There's only

one answer, commissioner.  Jeffrey was killed from outside, by someone who hurled the knife  through the

window." 

"But the window is closed, inspector." 

"It didn't have to be at the time Jeffrey was killed." 

"Then somebody had to close it afterward and lock it from the  inside. So that incriminates Jeffrey's visitor,

whoever he was." 

Weston gave that as a final verdict, but Cardona still wasn't  convinced. He walked over by Jeffrey's body,

measured the narrow space  to the window by spreading his hands. Then Cardona shook his head. 

"Whoever came here was framed," declared Cardona. "At least he was  supposed to be. That's why the tipoff

was sent in. The actual killer  figured himself too clever to be suspected. I'll admit the details  still puzzle me,

commissioner, but my hunch is, we're dealing with a  frame." 

"Ridiculous," snapped Weston. "The whole thing is open and shut." 

"Speaking of frames," Cranston said, "what about the window frame?  As for the case being open and shut,

that applies to the window, too.  Suppose we test it." 

Cranston stepped to the window, unlocked it. He drew the bottom of  the window inward and at the same

time, the top half tilted outward,  since the tall window frame was crosspivoted at the center. As  Cranston

released the window, the weight of the heavy bottom clamp  caused it to swing back to the vertical, latching

itself automatically. 

"Say!" exclaimed Cardona. "That may be it!" He paused, then shook  his head. "Open it again, Mr. Cranston,

just like you did before." 

Cranston complied and Cardona's face looked bluntly disappointed. 


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"Something could have been holding it open," the inspector said,  "but that bottom half would still be in the

way if any one outside  tried to stab Jeffrey. The murderer couldn't have fixed the window the  way he wanted

it." 

"Except that he did fix it," declared Cranston, "and it was all  arranged beforehand." 

Weston began to flash an annoyed glance at Cranston, who paid no  attention. 

"I don't think I ever saw a window like this before," observed  Cranston, coolly. He turned to Weston: "Did

you, commissioner?" 

"Of course I have," Weston retorted. "It's a regular studio window.  A lot of them hinge crosswise, halfway

up." 

"So that the lower half swings inward?" 

"Why not, Cranston?" 

For answer, Cranston pointed to the damp sill and a stretch of  rainstreaked floor just beneath it. 

"In a heavy rain," remarked Cranston, "a window that swung outward  at the top would act like a water chute.

I would say that this studio  was a perfect murder trap, but that Jeffrey didn't realize it was a  trap for himself." 

Pulling the lower half of the window inward again, Cranston found  that it swung only a dozen inches, due to

a little block set on the  wall beside it. Turning, he looked at the remains of Jeffrey's drawing  table. Beside the

broken stand was a string, one end attached to a  portion of the table itself. Hitched to the other end of the cord

was a  rubber eraser that looked rather chewed. 

Holding the window inward, Cranston dropped the eraser over the  wallblock, released the window frame

but held the cord taut. The  window stayed open, braked by the eraser. Cranston gave the string a  sharp tug

and the eraser jounced free, letting the window drop back to  its closed position, its oiled catch silently

clamping itself. 

"That's what happened when Jeffrey fell forward on the table,"  asserted Cranston. "He crashed into the table

and the string jerked the  eraser clear. Now let's see where the knife could have come from." 

Opening the window again and blockading it, Cranston took the  position that Jeffrey must have had at the

time he'd been killed. His  back hunched forward, Cranston turned abruptly and pointed upward. His  finger

indicated a clear path at an outward angle past the projecting  slant of the upper half of the tall window to a

window of the office  building across the rear courtyard, a window on the sixth floor, three  stories above this

fatal window of the studio from which Cranston  pointed. 

"Better check that office," said Cranston to Cardona. "It's the  only place the knife could have come from." 

By now, Commissioner Weston was tremendously impressed. To  Cranston's suggestion, Weston added an

order. 

"Start a roundup of knife throwers," commanded Weston. "Only an  expert could have made a fling like that." 

"And probably even an expert couldn't have," added Cranston. "The  blade would have described too great a

curve. I would say the knife was  fired like a projectile." He turned, pointed down to the knife handle  that


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showed in the middle of Jeffrey's back. "Note the rounded handle,  the very type that would fit into a gun

barrel." 

Cardona was stooping to study the knife handle. 

"It would take a big barrel," decided Cardona. "Probably the size  of an elephant gun. That would have meant

a lot of noise." 

"More likely it was an airgun," Cranston stated. "They pack  sufficient power and are practically noiseless." 

Cardona nodded. Then: 

"I'll go over and have a look at that office," he said. "Meanwhile,  we may be able to get a line on Jeffrey from

some of the other artists  in the neighborhood." 

As Cardona spoke, Cranston picked up the sheet on which Jeffrey had  sketched the mermaids and the

grizzled skipper. 

"If this is Jeffrey's work," commented Cranston, "I think you can  limit your hunt to a certain class of artists. I

mean the kind that  call themselves tattoo artists." 

Both Cardona and Weston drew close to study the mermaid sketch as  Cranston tapped it. 

"This is the sort of picture a tattoo artist draws," declared  Cranston, "when he wants to show a customer the

kind of work he does.  And this man"  Cranston pointed to the portrait of the skipper   "looks as though he

might be one of Jeffrey's customers." 

Placing the sketch sheet in Weston's hands, Cranston nodded a "good  night" and left, satisfied that he had

given the commissioner enough to  work on for one evening. Besides, Cranston had some unfinished business

of his own to complete. 

As The Shadow, he intended to pick up the trail of Douglas Lawton,  the missing man whose name, though

yet unknown to the law, had just  been cleared of suspicion of murder. 

CHAPTER V. JUNE GAINS A CLUE

BUSINESS was about finished at the Club Cadenza at the time Lamont  Cranston was leaving Jeffrey's

studio. 

Not the night club's business, but the matter which Anjou de Blanco  was discussing with Stephen Belville. 

"And so, Senor Belville," Anjou was saying, "you have heard all  that I have to offer. Here we have June

Getty"  he gestured toward the  girl  "who has one claim on the missing gold. I can produce the one  man,

Douglas Lawton, who has the other claim. It is then a question of  locating the gold itself. That will cost

money." 

"Doubtless," agreed Belville, "but how much?" 

Anjou shrugged as if to say he didn't know. 


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"And how will the gold be divided?" queried Belville. "I mean after  it is found, if it is found." 

"Three ways," replied Anjou. "Thirty percent for each of the  interested parties: June, Lawton and yourself.

The other ten percent,  suppose we call it an agent's commission, for myself." 

Belville looked at June who nodded her agreement. But Belville  shook his head. 

"It won't do," he decided. "You say the gold presumably left Cuba  and was supposed to have arrived in the

United States. If so, it would  belong to June Getty and Douglas Lawton." 

"Even if it did not leave Cuba," amended Anjou, "it would still  belong to them." 

"Suppose it left Cuba, but never arrived in the United States,"  argued Belville. "Whose would it be then?" 

Anjou shrugged as though that possibility made no difference, but  for the first time, June looked worried. 

"It's possible," he went on, "that someone else might have a claim  on the gold for having handled it in

transit." He stared stolidly at  Anjou. "Can you supply the details regarding the transportation of the  gold, if it

ever was transported?" 

A wise smile flashed across Anjou's face. 

"That is part of the bargain," he declared, "but until it is  sealed, I must reserve such information." 

"What if such information brought up a new claim?" demanded  Belville. "How would the third party figure?" 

"Certainly for no more than June or Lawton," replied Anjou. "At  most, it would mean splitting the gold four

ways." 

"Less your ten percent." 

"Less my ten percent." 

Belville pondered the situation a few moments, then drew a fat  wallet from his pocket. His blunt face

showing a slightly speculative  frown, he drew ten five hundred dollar bills into sight and dangled  them in

Anjou's direction. 

"Five thousand dollars advance," offered Belville, "if you  guarantee to deliver all information as to all the

parties concerned.  Five thousand dollars to be refunded if you can not deliver. Of course,  you have the

privilege of spending this money toward tracing the  missing gold. I must know, though, how far you have

already gone." 

With a heroic gesture, Anjou waved the money away and his smile  became more suave than ever. June stared

almost horrified as Anjou  forced Belville to put his money away. 

"Not yet, amigo," declared Anjou. "Until I can deliver, as you term  it, I shall not ask for money. Besides, I

already have all the money  that I need." 

Some of the waiters and busboys at the Club Cadenza had gathered  close at the sight of the money and they

were quite impressed by  Anjou's refusal to accept it. Feeling that he had scored a slight  triumph, Anjou arose

and nodded to June, who said "good night" politely  to Belville. Together, Anjou and June left the night club. 


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Outside, June spoke in a low, anxious tone. 

"You did need the money, Anjou! You've used all that I could lend  you and you owe some pressing bills.

Why didn't you accept it from  Belville?"" 

Looking about, Anjou noted that the doorman of the Club Cadenza was  busy helping some customers from a

cab. Since the doorman couldn't  overhear him, he answered June's question. 

"Belville suspects me of being a swindler," said Anjou. "He's been  thinking in terms of the old Spanish

Prisoner game. If I had taken the  money and given him nothing in return, he could have called the police  at

once. That is why Belville had those waiters standing around; to be  witnesses." 

"But you could prove yourself legitimate," argued June, "by simply  producing Douglas Lawton." She

hesitated, frowned. "You can produce  Lawton, can't you?" 

"Of course," assured Anjou, blandly. "But I may not wish to do so,  not just yet. As for money, do not worry,

little one. A friend of mine  has promised to lend me a thousand dollars, this very evening. But  there is one

thing else. This question that Belville brings up, that  someone else may have an interest in the gold. It may be

true." 

"Who else could it be?" 

"We must learn." Anjou gave a slight shrug. "Perhaps it may prove  easy after I have talked with Lawton." 

"Why should he know?" 

"Because his greatuncle was the man supposed to receive the gold.  He should know how it was coming to

America, eh?" 

Such logic brought a nod from June. 

"You saw how anxious Belville was to learn everything," continued  Anjou. "That is because he knows

nothing. It is never good to tell too  much to a man who knows nothing. A little will make him think you

know  a great deal more." 

The doorman was returning, so Anjou lowered his voice. 

"When Belville comes out," he said to June, "I want you to follow  him. Perhaps he is trying to learn more

than is good for him. It is  always a mistake for anyone to do that." 

Anjou turned and flagged a passing cab. At the same time, a rather  handsome, welldressed man who had

been standing in the doorway of the  Club Cadenza, walked along the street and was lucky enough to suddenly

find a cab standing by. 

His name was Harry Vincent; he was another of The Shadow's agents.  The cab he found as if by chance

happened to be Shrevvy's. Harry was  taking up Anjou's trail. 

June was fuming a bit as she realized that Anjou's parting  admonition could be meant for herself. The

statement that it was a  mistake for anyone to try to learn too much could mean that Anjou  realized that June

had trailed him earlier this evening. Putting June  on Belville's trail was simply a way of getting rid of her.

June  realized that, but a trifle late. 


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"If Belville knows nothing," the girl muttered, "it's because he  never tried to find out anything. In that case,

there's no reason to  follow him!" 

Nobody was around to hear June's protest, not even Harry Vincent.  Apparently, he had already figured the

same thing himself, but hadn't  been stupid enough to wait until he mulled it over. Clenching her  gloved hands

angrily, June started to walk away; then halted and looked  back. 

Belville was coming out of the Club Cadenza, with a bus boy  following him, bringing a large suitcase.

Belville was about to speak  to the doorman so June stepped back and listened. Belville was asking  about a

place called the Cobalt Club and the doorman was telling him  that it was only a few blocks away. 

"Very good," decided Belville. "That's where I'll probably find  Lamont Cranston. It's on the way to Grand

Central Station where I'm  taking a train for New London. I can stop by there." 

That satisfied June. Since Anjou wanted her to follow Belville, she  decided that she would. Because of the

oneway streets, Belville's cab  would have to take a roundabout course, so as soon as it started, June  began

walking in the opposite direction. 

As June turned the final corner before the Cobalt Club, she saw  Belville's cab. A large officiallooking car

was already in front of  the club and from it, an important man with a shortclipped mustache  was alighting

and giving instructions to his chauffeur. Belville was  turning to greet the mustached gentleman, so June drew

closer to hear  what she could. 

"Commissioner Weston!" exclaimed Belville. "I was hoping I'd find  you here. Have you talked to Cranston?" 

"Oh, hello, Belville." The commissioner was taking a flat board  that his chauffeur handed him. "Yes, I've

seen Cranston." 

"He told you about his interview with me?" 

"On the Spanish Prisoner matter?" Weston laughed. "No. We had  something more important to discuss. A

murder." 

Emphatically, Weston tapped a sheet of paper that was pinned to the  board, to indicate a grizzled face with a

pair of beckoning mermaids  drawn beside it. 

Belville stared blankly, then inquired, "You mean that man was  murdered?" 

"Not this man," replied Weston. "Another. This picture shows a man  who may know something about it.

We're going to compare it with  photographs from our files. But it has nothing to do with your case,  Belville." 

"But I want to talk about my case. I'm not sure that it is a  racket. This chap Blanco wouldn't take money when

I offered it " 

"That's fine," interrupted Weston. "Then he isn't a swindler after  all." 

"I'm still not certain," argued Belville. "I'm leaving on the next  train to New London and I thought that while

I was gone " 

"While you are gone," interposed Weston, "you can let the whole  matter rest. I'll see you when you return,

Belville." 


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With that Weston practically pushed Belville back into the waiting  cab and turned to enter the Cobalt Club.

That left June quite alone and  rather proud, though puzzled, at the skill she had shown as an  eavesdropper,

until she realized that in the subdued gloom that fronted  the exclusive but unpretentious Cobalt Club, it would

be very hard to  see anyone. Belville and Weston had been standing in the only lighted  space and hence were

practically like figures on a miniature stage. 

Now that Belville's cab had gone and Weston had entered the club,  another figure stepped into the lighted

space, coming from the gloomy  sidewalk beyond. He was a stooped man, with shaggy white hair that  spread

in curly fashion beneath a wide, round hat. His face, though  wrinkled, was alert and, though he carried a cane

and used it as he  walked, the man was spry of action. His head turned rapidly toward the  street, as though

following the departure of Belville's cab; then he  looked swiftly to the door of the Cobalt Club to make sure

that Weston  had really gone in. 

All the while he was moving rapidly, his cane tapping ahead of him.  Realizing suddenly that the elderly man

would soon be looking her way,  June played the part of a chance passerby and walked directly toward  the

man without giving him a glance. 

She was conscious, though, that as the man passed her, he gave her  a thorough scrutiny. However, June kept

on her way, listening to the  taps of the cane dwindle behind her. 

Odd taps, with a singularly hollow sound, that cut off abruptly  when the man turned a corner. Swinging

about, June trailed after him,  spotting him by his shaggy hair when she, too, turned the corner. Then,  as she

saw the man enter a store which had a phone booth sign, June was  positive that he, like herself, had witnessed

that brief interview  between Weston and Belville. Not only that, June was convinced that  this man had been

waiting there, in the gloom beside the Cobalt Club,  until the commissioner arrived. 

June's belief was substantiated when she entered the store and took  the next phone booth to the elderly man.

The booths were set against a  window, hence there was a space past the edge of the intervening  partition.

Through it, June could hear the old man's voice, firm  despite a peculiar crackle. 

"Yes, this is Mr. Harkland," the elderly man was saying. "Now  listen, Klauder, I am going to see old Skipper

Malloy... Yes, they're  looking for him, and I want to settle matters finally before they find  him..." 

There was a pause, then Harkland cackled as if in answer to a  query: 

"That's right, Klauder. I want no interference... You know where he  is now... That's right, over the Green

Anchor, down by the Holland  Tunnel... Yes, bring the car, and leave it at the usual place." 

Finishing the call, Harkland emerged from the booth and was leaving  the store when June came cautiously

into sight. The girl decided to  give the shaggyhaired man sufficient leeway before following him, on  the

theory that Harkland wouldn't look back more than once, and that  within a half block. Considering Harkland's

hobbly gait with the cane,  June thought she timed it rather well. 

It happened that June was wrong. 

When she came out of the store, the girl was totally baffled to see  no sign of old Harkland. Momentarily, she

thought she caught the  distant echoes of his hollow cane, but its taptaptap was much more  rapid than

before. Before June could even trace the direction, the  sound was gone and all traces of Harkland with it. 

A cab was coming along the street, its toplights glowing to  indicate that it was empty. June hailed it, got in

and told the driver: 


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"I'm not sure of the street, but it's near the Holland Tunnel. Just  drive down near the tunnel and I'll tell you

where to drop me." 

Unfortunately, it wasn't Shrevvy's cab, since that particular cab  happened to be busy elsewhere. Otherwise,

the most important clue of  the evening could have been flashed directly to The Shadow. 

CHAPTER VI. MEET SKIPPER MALLOY

THE rumbling whistles from the river were jarring Doug Lawton from  a dull stupor, stirring the aches that

still throbbed through the back  of his head. The sounds were muffled, like the clang of the ferryhouse  bell

that beat dimly into Doug's tangled thoughts. 

All that was missing was the piping of a tugboat, the one signal  that Doug expected, as his mind backtracked

into the past. Doug was  still thinking that he had to keep an appointment with Tom Jeffrey.  Opening his eyes,

Doug tried to rise, then sank back on the cot where  he had been lying. 

Then Doug remembered. 

He'd kept his appointment. Jeffrey had been murdered. Doug had been  accused of the crime by a browneyed

brownette whose name he didn't  even know. After that, he'd been slugged by a man named Anjou

somethingorother. 

Anjou de Blanco. 

That was the name. Doug remembered it now and with good reason. He  propped himself up on the cot,

opened his eyes and he was staring  squarely into the suave, smooth face of Anjou de Blanco himself. 

In the light of the small, poorly lighted room, Anjou's face had  lost its darkish look; his eyes, in turn had less

glitter and his smile  no longer had its whitish gleam. 

"Good evening, Senor Lawton," purred Anjou. Then, as Doug fumbled  for his inside pocket, the sleek man

added, "If you are looking for  your thousand dollars, I have it here." 

Adroitly, Anjou drew the currency from his own pocket and began  counting it. Angrily, Doug tried to get to

his feet, then relaxed, as a  huddled man, with a grinning apelike face, sprang from the doorway,  swinging a

short, knobby club in his right hand. The sight of that  blunt instrument reminded Doug of his headache. 

"No, no, Perique," Anjou waved the man back. "Senor Lawton is our  amigo. It is only for his own good that

we treated him so roughly. But  for us"  Anjou turned toward Doug and gave a slight shrug  "you would  be

wanted for murder." 

"You should know," retorted Doug. "You were the only other person  around there, except " 

"Except for a young lady," Anjou broke in, "but neither of us was  in Jeffrey's studio at the time he was

knifed." 

Doug was silent. He had to admit that de Blanco was correct. But  there was another good reason why Doug

decided to keep quiet. His hand,  sliding for his gun, had found that the revolver was gone. 

"I have a letter here," remarked Anjou. "It was in your pocket with  the money. It says you can buy certain


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information for your thousand  dollars. Was this letter from Jeffrey?" 

Doug nodded, though he recalled that Jeffrey had stated otherwise. 

"Was Jeffrey the man who answered your phone call?" 

Again, Doug nodded. 

"Apparently, Jeffrey did not deliver," purred Anjou. "I don't  suppose he had time to mention a man named

Skipper Malloy." 

Doug's eyes opened momentarily at the term "skipper," but he  covered that brief flash. Now, eyes half closed,

he was conjuring up  the image of the bearded face that Jeffrey had sketched. Skipper  Malloy. That was a

name to remember. 

Evidently, Anjou de Blanco thought the same. 

"I can furnish you with your thousand dollars' worth," Anjou went  on, smoothly, "so suppose we consider this

money a loan until I prove  it. I shall return soon"  suavely, Anjou pocketed Doug's money and the  letter 

"and until then, I advise you to remain here, since you will  be safe. The police are looking for the man who

murdered Jeffrey and  you were seen in his studio. Remember?" 

Giving a nod, Doug leaned back on the cot. Anjou beckoned Perique  from the room and they spoke softly in

Spanish, in the hallway. Doug  knew the language, but the conversation was too low to be clear.  Besides,

something else had caught his ear. 

The shrill squeal of a tugboat whistle! 

It came once; after a pause, the whistle piped three times. There  was another pause, followed by three more

sharp blasts. After that,  silence. 

One... three... three. 

During the second pause, Doug had heard the closing of a door,  indicating that Anjou had gone out. Now

there were footsteps in the  hallway, telling that Perique was about to return. Evidently both were  sure that

Doug had accepted the invitation to remain, particularly  because of Anjou's convincing argument. Perhaps

they thought he  couldn't hear the tugboat signals; perhaps they thought Doug wouldn't  attempt a break, not

with Perique and his formidable club so close at  hand. 

They were wrong on all counts. 

As Perique swung into the room, Doug was on his feet, grabbing for  the room's one light, a hanging bulb on

its cord. Perique launched with  a savage snarl, waving his club ahead of him, but Doug gave the bulb a  faster

sling toward the side wall of the room. It crashed, filling the  room with darkness in which Doug, recoiling in

the opposite direction,  completely dodged Perique, who instinctively turned his drive in the  direction of

Doug's fling. 

Stumbling against the cot, Doug grabbed the only possible weapon,  the cot itself. Hoisting it with a heave of

his strong shoulders, Doug  swung the cot toward the spot where he expected Perique would be  and  was.

The cot crashed and Perique with it, his club clattering to the  stone floor. 


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Through the hallway, Doug found the outer door and stumbled through  it to a dark alley. Wavering toward a

patch of dull light, Doug reached  the street. Across the way he recognized a layer of solid black against  a

higher pile of faded gray. 

The black was the elevated highway, the gray was the old Darien  Pier that squatted above it! 

This was the original starting point from which Doug had made his  trip to Jeffrey's, ahead of schedule. The

tugboat's signals had called  for someone to start another trip to a different destination and though  Doug was

quite sure the call wasn't for him, he intended to follow it.  Since de Blanco was still a question mark, Doug

paused, looked  southward, to see if he could sight the fellow. Doug did glimpse moving  figures, magnified

by the mist, but they were lost almost immediately. 

The visibility was nearing zero, which pleased Doug, though it  didn't occur to him, as he headed one block

south, that he might be  dodging friendly followers as well as enemies. Pausing at the first  corner, he took

another look about and for a moment was puzzled as a  glowing light seemed to flicker on and off, as though

some indefinable  figure had moved in front of it. June Getty might have thought in terms  of a cloaked

personage known as The Shadow, had she been present to  witness that phenomenon; but not Doug Lawton.

Besides, the shape, if it  could be called such, was moving down the avenue, which wasn't Doug's  course. 

So Doug turned eastward, found that the third turn led only to the  right. Heading three blocks south, he came

to a corner that represented  the finish of the trail. There he saw his goal, a building which had a  restaurant on

the ground floor, its front clearly illuminated by a  large green neon sign representing a green anchor,

obviously the name  of the cafe. 

It could only be the Green Anchor. There wasn't another such  building within a half block; all the rest were

warehouses. Approaching  the Green Anchor, Doug stopped short of the lighted windows. He was at  a

doorway, opening directly onto the street. Within the doorway was a  flight of steps leading up to the floor

above the restaurant. 

The building itself was only two stories high, an old brick  structure that probably had once been a residence.

Doug decided to try  the second floor before letting himself be seen in the restaurant, so  he went up the steps

and found himself in a large, gloomy room filled  with bare tables and illuminated only by a red exit light.

There was  another stairway leading down into the cafe, so this was obviously an  upstairs dining room. 

At the back of the room was a chink of light which turned out to be  a door. Doug opened it, went through a

short passage with a tiny  private dining room on each side and came to another door which showed  another

crack of light. This door was locked so Doug rapped. He was  answered by the sliding of a bolt, then the door

opened and Doug was  confronted by a bearded, stoopshouldered man, who wore a halftoothed  smile of

welcome that changed suddenly to alarm. 

Before the bearded man could shove the door shut, Doug planked his  foot in it, then wedged his shoulder

through. As he closed the door,  Doug announced: 

"Don't worry, Skipper Malloy. My name is Douglas Lawton. All I want  to ask about is some business that

concerned my greatuncle. His name  was Artemus Lawton." 

It was Skipper Malloy, all right, for every detail of his gnarled  face answered to Jeffrey's sketch. At mention

of the name Lawton,  Malloy tilted his head and added a knowing nod when Doug emphasized the  name

Artemus. Then: 


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"Sit down, young man," invited Malloy. "I'm getting kind of old and  there ain't much I know and a lot less I

remember. Mebbe though,  there's a few things you've got a right to hear about." 

"Do you mean," asked Doug, "that somebody has stopped you from  getting in touch with me?" 

The skipper shook his head. 

"'Tain't exactly that," he said. "Fact is, I'd never heered of you  until right now. Only there's things I'm not

supposed to talk about,  mostly for my own good, and that might be for yours." 

As Malloy gestured to a chair, Doug looked around. The room was  simply but comfortably furnished and

apparently occupied the whole back  portion of the house. There was a bolted door at one side that  evidently

led to a pair of back stairs; across the room was a little  alcove, only a few feet in depth. There were two

windows at the rear of  the room, both with closed shutters outside them, a fact that Doug  specially noted. 

"Nice and comfortable here," chuckled old Malloy. "Better than the  Sailors' Home where I stayed a while

back." 

Doug nodded, but his thoughts were elsewhere. He was recalling  Jeffrey's studio and the security it had

seemed to offer, until death  had struck so suddenly and mysteriously. Doug was thinking now in terms  of

Malloy's safety, though the old skipper didn't know it. 

"I'd ruther be alone," added Malloy. "Nobody bothers me here. When  I want something to eat, they send it

right up to me from the kitchen,  except like now, late at night, when the kitchen is closed. So I don't  have

nobody to talk to, and that's the way it's supposed to be." 

Again, Malloy had tilted his head and was eyeing Doug cannily.  Snapping his train of recent recollections,

Doug came to the point of  his visit. 

"What I want to know," said Doug, "is the story behind the Cuban  gold that belonged to my greatuncle,

Artemus Lawton. Can you give me  any clue to it?" 

A happy gleam came to Malloy's eyes as he gestured again for Doug  Lawton to sit down. It was a strange

gleam, the sort that might have  indicated a demented mind, ready to plunge into its one peculiar mania.

Again, it might mean that an old man's recollections had been stirred  to the memory of a true but longburied

past. 

Doug Lawton had only one course. That was to listen. 

CHAPTER VII. DEATH TELLS A TALE

OLD SKIPPER MALLOY cleared his throat with a chuckle. 

"You've been talking to Tom Jeffrey, mebbe," Malloy decided, "and  there's lots I told him that warn't so,

because he was too inquisitive.  Then again, there's things I told him true." 

Doug responded with a serious nod. Since old Malloy apparently  hadn't heard of Jeffrey's death, there was no

use breaking the thread  of his present tale by mentioning such news. Besides, Doug himself was  not anxious

to admit that he had witnessed Jeffrey's murder. 


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"So I've promised to talk no more," declared Malloy. "Only I guess  there's things can be mentioned,

considering they was told by others  and writ down. Ever hear of Ben Rigby?" 

Doug shook his head. 

"Who was Ben Rigby?" 

"A sailor," replied Malloy. "Died fifty years ago after a  shipwreck. We found him dying in a boat, when I was

sailing in a  fishing schooner out of Gloucester. There was things he said and I writ  them down." 

As Malloy paused, Doug nodded for him to go ahead. It was an easy  nod, Oklahoma style, not too eager.

Apparently, it impressed Malloy,  for he proceeded. 

"You'll find it in the log of the Nancy Lee," informed Malloy. "She  was the fishership I sailed in. Only it

won't make sense to you, no  more than it did to me. He talked about 'Friday night' and 'Fifteen  Men.' He said

because he couldn't get water, he drank water, and he was  yelling about a bottle of rum." Malloy shook his

head. "We give him  water and rum, too, but nuther done him no good. He died." 

Doug decided he'd heard enough about Rigby. 

"I'm hunting for some Cuban gold," reminded Doug. "My father's  uncle, Artemus Lawton, had a partner

named Josiah Getty who went to  Cuba and arranged for the sale of munitions there. That was at the time  of

the SpanishAmerican War, which you doubtless remember." 

"Remember?" chuckled Malloy. "I enlisted in the navy right after  that trip on the Nancy Lee, because the war

had just begun. I was on  the old Vesuvius before they decommissioned her. That's why it warn't  for a couple

of years that I heard talk about the gold your father's  uncle never got." 

"Did you hear anything about Josiah Getty?" 

"Only that he died of swamp fever." 

"Unless he skipped with the gold himself," argued Doug, bitterly.  "I've been trying to trace him in Mexico,

but no luck." Doug shook his  head. "This stuff about a sailor named Rigby, floating in an open boat  off

Gloucester well, it doesn't just make sense to me. Sorry, skipper." 

Doug's normally steady face showed disappointment as he started to  rise from his chair, only to have the

skipper grab him by the lapels  and thrust him down again. 

"Nobody even knowed what ship Rigby came off'n," declared Malloy.  "Ain't that important?" 

"Why should it be?" 

"Because," said Malloy, "ships that nobody knowed about was the  kind that used to run munitions afore the

war, and anybody running  munitions might know who was paying for them, and when." 

Doug's eyes lighted with new interest regarding Rigby. He eased  back in his chair. 

"Somebody must have had those munitions ready on shore," argued  Malloy. The skipper was on his feet now,

pacing the room as if it were  a quarterdeck, the floor creaking under his stride. "You've looked up  all the

people your uncle did business with?" 


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"Lots," replied Doug, "but most of them are dead." 

The door of the room was opening. Doug's back was toward it and the  old skipper was over near the alcove,

facing Doug at an angle. Neither  of them saw the person who stood upon the threshold. 

It was June Getty. Her hands were gripping the brown bag that she  carried, the fingers of her right hand quite

ready to draw the gun with  which she had threatened Doug before. Rather than interrupt this  conference, June

was deciding to let it interrupt itself. Her hand  suddenly gripped the gun in selfprotection, as Skipper

Malloy turned  directly toward her. 

But the skipper didn't see June yet. His eyes were lowered, staring  directly at Doug, who was seated before

him. Malloy was laughing  heartily as though he had a joke in mind. June's alarm ending, she  closed the front

door of the room, slid its bolt home, as though to  prevent her own retreat. Actually, she did not want someone

to creep in  on her while she watched Doug Lawton and Skipper Malloy, neither of  whom she feared. 

"Twouldn't do to mention no names," Malloy was telling Doug, still  in that hearty tone. "All I'll say is, the

man I'm thinking of reminds  me of Jonathan Pound. Now I'll give you an idea of where to look him  up. I'm

facing south right now, ain't I?" 

Doug nodded. 

"See where I'm pointing?" Malloy extended his left hand, sidearm  style. He wagged his forefinger twice.

"There and there. Add them up.  That's where you've got to go." 

As Doug stared, puzzled, Malloy relaxed and shook his head. 

"That's all I can tell you," he said. "You got to figger the rest  yourself. But getting back to Rigby; he warn't

off Gloucester when we  found him. He knowed a lot, Rigby did, a lot he couldn't say. You want  to know the

answer?" 

There was an eager nod from Doug and June stared breathless.  Rearing erect, Malloy cackled crazily: 

"Dead Man's Chest!" 

Malloy was stepping backward as he spoke, turning as if to take  another stride. Doug's hollow voice repeated

those same words and June  found herself phrasing them with silent lips: 

"Dead Man's Chest." 

The words had a fatal sound, a promise of the ominous. What  happened was horribly in keeping with the

theme. Malloy's straightened  shoulders did a backward bend, as a sharp gasp sounded through the  room. Both

Doug and June were transfixed at sight of the skipper's  mouth distended grotesquely. Malloy's plucking hands

clutched at his  shirt front, ripped it wide, as he toppled forward. Twisting as he  fell, the old skipper struck

shoulder first and rolled halfway to his  back, his body propped on one elbow. 

Convulsively, Malloy's hands had pulled apart, leaving his chest  bare. There, gleaming full in the light, was a

sample of tattoo work,  done in red and blue. Malloy's whole chest was a panorama depicting a  pair of

mermaids rising from a waveswept ocean, who lifted beckoning  hands. 

Skipper Malloy was dead; of that there was no doubt. His bearded  face had been the subject of Jeffrey's first

sketch, a face now so  contorted that it was scarcely recognizable. Now the scene of Jeffrey's  second sketch


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was on display, a seascape with the mermaids. And through  Doug's mind ran a statement that Jeffrey had

attributed to Malloy, to  the effect that if Malloy didn't tell all he knew, somebody might find  out more than if

he did. 

Jeffrey had asked if that made sense. 

It made sense to Doug Lawton now. Malloy was proving the importance  of those words that throbbed

through Doug's brain and forced themselves  to his lips: 

"Dead Man's Chest." 

What didn't make sense was the crazy way that Malloy's body was  lying there, propped up by one dead

elbow. Groping forward from his  chair, Doug planked a numb hand on the skipper's other shoulder, hoping

vainly to shake him back to life. Malloy's form did a forward roll  under Doug's grip and landed face forward

on the frayed carpet. 

It was then that Doug Lawton saw the object that he feared was  there, a knife with a rounded handle, driven

hilt deep into Malloy's  back. 

A frightened gasp sounded close beside Doug's own shoulder.  Springing to his feet, he whirled and saw the

very girl who had thrust  herself into another death scene, at Jeffrey's. June Getty had come  forward; she, too,

had seen the tattooed message on the skipper's chest  and now was horrified at sight of the knife. June turned

her scared  gaze toward Doug. 

"I... I saw what happened!" June gasped. "You couldn't have done  it; you weren't to blame; it came out of

nowhere!" She hesitated, then  with eyes that shone a full apology, she added: "It was just like the  other time." 

The .32 was hanging limply in June's hand. Without a word, Doug  snatched the gun from the girl's grasp and

sprang to the windows, only  to find them tightly shut. Hearing a creak behind him, Doug spun about,  but saw

only Malloy's body with June staring motionless above it. Then,  his gaze sweeping to the alcove, Doug saw

what he hadn't observed  before. 

In that alcove was a panel that raised like a window sash. It was  the opening to a dumb waiter and a large

one, big enough for a person  to use as an improvised elevator. Malloy had mentioned having his meals  sent

up from the kitchen. Naturally, they would come by a dumb waiter,  and a large one, because this had once

been the serving room for the  big upstairs dining hall over the front part of the Green Anchor. 

The creaks, still audible, were coming from beyond the closed panel  of the dumb waiter. A murderer was

escaping by the same route that he  had used when he came to deliver death. 

Springing to the door across the room, Doug pulled the bolt and  yanked the door open. He dashed down a

flight of stairs and June,  suddenly terrified at being alone with Malloy's body, dashed after him.  Reaching a

darkened, deserted kitchen, Doug sped across it to a rear  door, hauled it wide and came head on upon a pair

of figures scuffling  in the alley. 

Who they were, Doug didn't know, but he was sure one was a  murderer. One man was lashing out with a cane

that glistened like a  sword blade in the gloom. The other, trying to drive past that guard,  was swinging a

heavy revolver. Hurling himself into the scuffle, Doug  became the center of it. Each fighter, thinking himself

outnumbered two  to one, turned suddenly upon the new combatant. 


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A blow from the cane knocked June's gun from Doug's hand, as a blow  from the other man's revolver glanced

the side of his head. Madly, Doug  grappled as he sagged, and from behind him, June pitched bravely into  the

struggle, trying to ward away the blows that were coming Doug's  direction. The girl was whirled back against

the door into the kitchen,  slamming it shut and jolting herself in the process. Finding herself  seated suddenly

and violently on the cement of the alley, June started  to scramble up, when she saw her gun come sliding

toward her, kicked by  flaying feet. Grabbing it, June got to hands and knees, just as a surge  of living

blackness swept in from the front of the alley. 

The Shadow! 

Whose trail he had picked to follow here, June did not know, but  she welcomed his arrival. She was sure that

in his uncanny fashion, he  would pick the underdog in the threeway fight and turn the odds in  Doug's favor. 

The Shadow did precisely that, but with such incredible speed that  June could scarcely believe what she saw.

As he hurtled forward with a  challenging laugh, the whole fight seemed to melt at his mere approach.  Then

June saw why. The man with the cane had broken free and was  darting through a gate at the rear of the alley.

In the glow of a light  from beyond the gate, June recognized the stooped figure and shaggy  white hair of the

man who called himself Harkland. She wasn't surprised  to see him here; after all, he'd made a phone call

saying he would be. 

But who was the other, the man with the gun? 

June saw three figures tangled now: The Shadow, Doug, and the  unknown. As they swirled, one man broke

away and darted through the  front of the alley. That left only one; he was swinging hard with a big  revolver.

June was pleased, convinced that Doug had shown sense enough  to get away, leaving The Shadow with only

one opponent, who still might  be the killer. 

Now the man with the gun was tugging at its trigger, but the shots  were stabbing upward, for The Shadow

had shoved the man's hand above  his head. Six useless shots marked in succession and by their spurts,  June

saw the face beneath them. The man who had stayed to give The  Shadow battle was Doug Lawton, fighting

with a gun that the unknown  grappler had shoved into his hand! 

His bullets spent, Doug buckled under a freehand jolt that The  Shadow applied to his chin. Catching Doug

as he wavered, The Shadow  steered him straight to June, who helped steady him. The girl gasped  quick

words: 

"There's been a murder... upstairs above the kitchen... but he's  innocent. That's why he attacked the others " 

A low laugh told that The Shadow understood. Helping June with  Doug, he pointed them both toward the

front of the alley, where the  lights of a cab were easing into view. June understood. The Shadow was  sending

both Doug and herself along another route into the clear, like  the one she had taken earlier, alone. 

Before the pair reached the cab, The Shadow had entered the kitchen  of the Green Anchor and was playing

the sharp beam of a tiny flashlight  through its darkness. He saw the dumb waiter at the bottom of its  shaft,

then picked out the door to the back stairway. Going up, The  Shadow reached Malloy's room, pocketed his

flashlight and went to the  windows that faced the back alley where he had indulged in recent  combat. 

Next, The Shadow noted the panel of the dumb waiter shaft in the  alcove. He studied Malloy's body,

checking its position in relation to  the shaft. Observing a portion of the skipper's shirt front beneath one  of the

dead man's arms, The Shadow lifted the body back to its propped  position, where the knife handle held it in

place. Intently, The Shadow  studied the tattoo of the mermaids emerging from the deep. 


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The Shadow's laugh came low, as sinister as a knell of doom. It  carried an avenging note, boding ill for the

murderer whose infernal  device had now struck down two victims. 

By then, the sirens of police cars were sounding from in front of  the Green Anchor. Opening the front door of

Malloy's room, The Shadow  went out through the passage to the deserted upstairs dining hall.  There, he noted

the front stairway that led to the street below, the  route by which both Doug and June had come to Malloy's

quarters, while  others were showing preference for the back way. 

Sliding the black cloak from his shoulders, The Shadow rolled his  slouch hat inside it, and draped the cloak

over his arm, like a light  overcoat. A police car had stopped out front and its crew was noticing  the steps that

led up from the street, so The Shadow went down the  inner stairs into the front room of the Green Anchor

itself. He arrived  unobtrusively as Lamont Cranston, unnoticed by the batch of regular  patrons who were

crowded at the bar, excitedly discussing the shots in  the rear alley. 

Without pausing to order a drink, Cranston strolled out through the  main door of the Green Anchor and past

the police car. So far its crew  didn't know there had been a murder. They took it for granted that  nobody in

the Green Anchor could have been shooting in the back alley.  The crew of the prowl car simply classed

Cranston as a passerby in  evening clothes, who stopped in at the Green Anchor to see how the  people in

such places lived. 

There was a slight difference, however. Lamont Cranston had paused  at the Green Anchor to learn how

somebody had died. 

CHAPTER VIII. A LETTER TO THE SHADOW

APARTMENT 5C at the Greendale Arms was much more comfortable than  the tiny waterfront hideout

where Perique had taken Doug Lawton. That  fact was quite evident to Doug as he leaned back in an easy

chair and  surveyed the tasteful surroundings that included a girl in brown as the  most charming decoration.

Even with a frown, the girl was very lovely. 

"And now that you're feeling better, Mr. Lawton," the girl was  saying, "perhaps you'll tell me why you've

been getting yourself into  so much trouble." 

"I have a question first," returned Doug with a slight smile. "You  might tell me who you are, since you've

made it your business to help  me out of that trouble." 

"My name," said the girl, "is June Getty." 

Doug did more than frown. He glowered, much to June's surprise. His  voice came sharply: 

"Not related to Josiah Getty?" 

"He was my grandfather." June's face went puzzled, then flushed  with indignation. "Why... why, you

wouldn't have nerve enough to think  my grandfather would have run off with all that Cuban gold!" 

"Artemus Lawton couldn't have," retorted Doug, proudly. "He  happened to be my greatuncle. He had half

the money coming to him, but  he never saw any of it. Josiah Getty had his hands on all of it." 

"But he didn't keep any of it," argued June. "He sent it to Artemus  Lawton and that's the last anybody ever

heard of it. After that, Josiah  died of swampfever in Cuba." 


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"Or maybe old age in Mexico." 

June's lips tightened, white with anger. 

"Would you like to see the death certificate?" she demanded. "It's  signed by a major in the American army,

who was in the Occupation  Forces. I have the certificate, along with letters from your dear Uncle  Artemus,

authorizing my grandfather to use his own discretion in the  handling of their mutual finances." 

Doug furnished an apologetic smile. 

"I'm really sorry," he declared. "I mean very sorry. It must have  been a real partnership, Getty and Lawton.

Apparently it was never  dissolved. Suppose we continue it. Agreed?" 

"Agreed," nodded June. Then, soberly: "But first we have to think  about old Skipper Malloy. I know one of

the men who may be his  murderer; that old man with the cane. His name is Harkland. Did you  ever hear of

him?" 

"No," replied Doug, "but I know the other. He's a friend of yours.  Anjou de Blanco by name." 

Disbelief spread over June's face. Before it could boil over and  become anger, Doug produced the evidence. 

"This gun is mine." From his pocket, Doug planked a .45 revolver on  the chair arm. "I didn't have it when I

went to see Skipper Malloy;  that's why I grabbed your gun when I needed one. My gun was taken from  me

out in back of Jeffrey's, after I ducked down the fire escape. It  was shoved on me again during the brawl in

the alley behind Malloy's  place." 

"Then Anjou had nothing to do with it," argued June. "He didn't go  to Jeffrey's at all." 

"No?" returned Doug. "Then how come I woke up and found him looking  at me in a little dump where that

monkeyface, Perique, is hanging out?  Anjou had a thousand dollars of my money; he showed it to me and

said  he was keeping it as a loan. What's more, he mentioned Skipper Malloy." 

June's face was really startled. Mention of the thousand dollars,  the sum that Anjou said he could borrow

from a friend, fitted perfectly  with Doug's claim. So did the fact that Anjou had told Belville he  could

produce Doug Lawton. 

"Then Anjou did go to Jeffrey's," said June, soberly. "I overheard  him give the address to Perique, but when I

followed Anjou, hoping he  wouldn't get into trouble, I lost him on the way. So I kept straight on  myself." 

"Anjou must have doubled around in back of Jeffrey's," declared  Doug. "The same as he did at Malloy's.

That's why you lost him. Only I  found him." 

"Afterward," mused June, "I phoned Anjou, but he wasn't home at  first " 

"Because he was dropping me at Perique's." 

"And when I finally did get him," June continued, "he said he  hadn't been near Jeffrey's. He was surprised

when I told him there had  been a murder in the studio. He said to say nothing about it when we  met Stephen

Belville at the Club Cadenza." 

"Who is Stephen Belville?" 


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"A man with a lot of money," replied June, "and a yacht up at New  London, where he went tonight. You see,

when I went to Cuba to trace  our gold, I talked to gamblers in Havana who might have known something

about it. That's how I met Anjou." 

"He looks the part," commented Doug. 

"According to Anjou," continued June, quite unruffled, "my  grandfather must have gotten the gold out of

Cuba. That was his main  mission, but he naturally kept the details secret. Since it never  reached your uncle,

the gold must have been dropped off some where.  That's why we need Belville, to help hunt for it with his

yacht." 

"But first you'll have to guess where it is," decided Doug. "It's a  long distance up the Atlantic Coast." 

"I know," agreed June, "and worst of all, there was a scare about  the Spanish fleet attacking the coast, only it

headed for Santiago  instead. Whatever boat was carrying the gold might have taken refuge in  any obscure

and deserted harbor. But unless we have somebody like  Belville ready, how would we get the gold if we

located it?" 

Doug pounded his fist against his palm. 

"Like a dope, I was wasting my time in Mexico," he said glumly,  "thinking that's where the gold had been

taken. Meanwhile, Anjou sells  you on an idea you already had, and you make a deal with Belville, who  may

not even be needed. The gold might be where we can pick it up  ourselves." 

"We can write off Anjou," conceded June, "considering the way he's  showed himself up. As for Belville, we

haven't closed a deal with him.  But we do need money to operate." 

"We can scrape up enough," decided Doug, "even if Anjou doesn't pay  back what he owes me. But we'd

better be careful. Our gold might be  anybody's gold. You know that, don't you?" 

"I suppose it would be," realized June, "if somebody else found it  somewhere. But if either of us gets a clue

"We're still partners," completed Doug. "What's more, I have a clue  already, if there's anything behind that

Rigby story that Skipper  Malloy told me." 

"Rigby," breathed June tensely. "Dead Man's Chest." 

"I guess you weren't there to hear the first part of it," stated  Doug. "Rigby was a sailor picked up by the

schooner Nancy Lee when  Malloy was practically only a cabin boy. He gave Malloy his story and  Malloy

wrote it down. It was mostly double talk, though." 

"Then how will it help us?" 

"Malloy only recited from memory. The rest is in the log of the  Nancy Lee. We'll try to get hold of it." 

"But there was somebody else who Malloy mentioned," reminded June.  "That was after I came in. Somebody

that reminded Malloy of Jonathan  Pound and lived over there." She extended her left hand and wagged her

fingers. "Who could that be?" 


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"We'll go through my greatuncle's letters," said Doug. "I have  them up at the Hotel Metrolite, where I'm

stopping. He did a lot of  legitimate shipping in the old days, so he corresponded with sailing  masters and

steamship companies. Of course, shipping munitions to Cuba  wasn't exactly legitimate." 

"It turned out to be," asserted June. "If we can prove that the  right people received the munitions, the whole

deal should stand. I'm  sure the partnership of Getty and Lawton was honorable, although it was  a secret one." 

"It still is honorable," declared Doug, "and we'll keep it secret  until we've handled our unfinished business,

that Cuban gold. And now,  since you've stated your case to date, I'll give you mine." 

Before Doug could begin, the telephone rang. June's face showed a  worried flicker, then steadied as she met

Doug's reassuring gaze.  Lifting the phone, June said, "Hello," then covered the mouthpiece  while she

whispered, "It's Anjou." Then June was speaking calmly,  mostly in monosyllables, finally concluding with a

pleasant "Goodby." 

Hanging up, June turned to Doug. 

"I don't think Anjou even suspects I was at Malloy's," said June.  "It was so dark there in the alley that I didn't

recognize him and I  was brushed out of that fight so fast that nobody realized I was ever  in it." 

Doug nodded. He himself didn't recall June's brief attempt to mix  in. 

"Anjou asked if I followed Belville," continued June, "and whether  Belville had left for New London. I told

him 'yes,' because both facts  were true. He said he'd met you and that you paid him to handle your  end of the

business, since you might be busy with other matters. He  added that if I should happen to hear from you, I

was to refer  everything back to him." 

Doug smiled rather grimly. 

"Here's my case," he stated. "I had written to about everybody who  might know anything about my uncle, but

with no luck. Also, I'd been  asking a lot of questions down in Mexico, mostly from old gamblers, as  you did

in Cuba. Then, a few days ago, I received an unsigned letter,  telling me to be in New York tonight and to

phone Meteor 63454 at  seven o'clock." 

Doug paused, while June dotted down the number. She had been taking  earlier notes during their

conversation and Doug had not objected.  Considering that he and June were partners, Doug felt it was a good

idea. 

"When I phoned," continued Doug, "a husky voice told me to be at  the Darien Pier at ten minutes of eight.

There I was to listen for  tugboat whistles, in terms of blocks, south, and east. They would steer  me to Tom

Jeffrey, the man who would sell me a thousand dollars' worth  of facts." 

June's eyes were wide with interest. 

"And did he?" 

"Not exactly. He sketched a portrait of Malloy and the two mermaids  rising from the sea. Afterwards, I

learned the skipper's name from  Anjou, while I was in Perique's room. There I heard the tugboat whistle

another signal. I socked Perique, ducked out, and found I was right  opposite the Darien Pier." 

"And the new directions brought you to the Green Anchor!" 


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Doug nodded as June dotted down her last notes. Then the girl  asked, "What were the other things that

Malloy remembered Rigby  saying?" 

"Friday night, fifteen men, something about having to drink water  because he couldn't get any, but mostly he

wanted a bottle of rum." 

While June was adding those notations, Doug rose, glanced at the  clock, and strolled toward the door.

Pausing there, he said: 

"It's getting late, partner. I'd better be dragging back to the  wagon yard. Only you won't be giving those notes

to anybody, I hope." 

"Not to just anybody," rejoined June. "Only to The Shadow." 

Doug's expression clouded, but June spoke before he could protest. 

"We've practically witnessed two murders," declared June.  "Remember? The Shadow  that's the only name I

can think of for him   arrived right after each death. He's about the only friend we'd have if  the partnership of

Getty and Lawton ever came to court." 

A slight smile cleared Doug's face. 

"Try and send those notes to The Shadow," he suggested. "Just put  them in an envelope, write 'The Shadow'

on it, and drop it in a mailbox  like you would a letter to Santa Claus." 

Doug's tone ended with a pleasant but indulgent laugh, which left  June frowning at her own stupidity. Doug

waved a "good night" and was  on his way. 

Getting out a portable typewriter, June began to type the notes,  adding comments of her own. Particularly,

June detailed the scene at  Malloy's, the point where she had entered, how she had bolted the door  behind her

and noted that the door to the back stairs was bolted, too.  How murder had struck at Jeffrey's, June couldn't

guess, for she had  arrived there late. But at Malloy's, she was convinced that the fatal  knife had been hurled

from the dumb waiter. 

The gasp that had accompanied the hit could hardly have come from  Malloy's lips. As she typed her

description of it, June could almost  hear the echoes and the recollection gave her shivers. Pausing, June

darted glances toward the doors and windows of her own room, fearing  that any of them might hide some

enemy who dealt in sudden death. 

Reason finally conquered dread. Jeffrey had known too much about  Malloy and the skipper had known too

much about other matters; that was  why they had been murdered. The killer's purpose had been to stop them

from telling all they knew. Apparently, he'd been in time where Malloy  was concerned; therefore, he'd have

no reason for dealing death to  persons who had heard only shreds of what Malloy knew. 

Finishing her typing, June sealed the notes in an envelope and did  the very thing that Doug had jokingly

suggested. She wrote "The Shadow"  on the envelope in big, bold letters, left the apartment house and went  to

the corner mailbox. But instead of dropping the envelope into the  box, June perched it on the top. Returning

to the apartment house, June  paused to look back from the entrance. 

The white envelope showed plainly in the gloom, though the mailbox  itself was only dimly discernible. As

June watched, she fancied that  she saw gloom swirl; then blackness, indefinable in shape but with the  action


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of a living hand, wiped the envelope from sight. June stared  harder for a dozen seconds more; then, the lights

from a car that swung  the corner showed the mailbox clearly. 

No one was near the box, but the envelope was gone. From somewhere  off in the darkness, June Getty was

sure she heard the tantalizing  trail of a parting laugh that left whispering echoes clinging in the  mist. 

Only one being could have delivered such a token: The Shadow. 

CHAPTER IX. CRANSTON'S APPOINTMENT

IT was late afternoon and Commissioner Weston was holding an  important conference in his favorite

rendezvous, the grill room of the  Cobalt Club. The commissioner preferred such an atmosphere to that of  his

office when he had weighty matters to consider and particularly  when he felt that his friend Lamont Cranston

might be of value in  cracking a case. 

Not that Weston considered Cranston's opinions too remarkable;  often the commissioner took quite the

opposite viewpoint. He regarded  Cranston as a man extremely well versed in unimportant subjects, and,

therefore, likely to come up with ideas which, sometimes through their  very triviality, might be overlooked

by more analytical minds. 

In this instance, Weston was willing to admit that Cranston's  observation of Jeffrey's studio window had

paved the way to the  detection of a most ingenious form of murder and since Cranston was  already that deep

in the case, it seemed advisable to keep him with it.  Hence this conference; but so far, Cranston hadn't put in

a word. The  floor was fully held by Inspector Joe Cardona, who was detailing his  findings in two murders,

those of Tom Jeffrey and Skipper Malloy. 

"The links are established," stated Cardona. "It's obvious that  Jeffrey knew Malloy, otherwise, he wouldn't

have drawn the skipper's  picture. He knew about those mermaids that were tattooed on Malloy's  chest,

because he drew them, too. The question is: How well did Jeffrey  know Malloy? Maybe Malloy was just a

customer who had got Jeffrey to  decorate him with those tattoo marks. Jeffrey might have been wanting  to

find out who Malloy was, but in that case, why?" 

Nobody seemed to know why. After all, it was Cardona's business to  find out. Looking at Weston, Cardona

decided that the commissioner was  a trifle irked, but a glance at Cranston revealed his features as  complacent

as ever. So Cardona was about to give more pointed comments  when an interruption came in the person of

Stephen Belville, who came  striding into the grill room, waving a copy of an evening newspaper. He  was

quite a contrast to the Belville of the night before, for his  broad, blunt face was all excited and his manner

was more than brisk;  it was hasty. Nor was Belville showing the austere dignity that went  with evening

clothes. He had turned sportsman and was wearing a fancy  yachting jacket, with an embroidered anchor

twined in the initials S.  B., and he was carrying a white cap with similar decorations. 

Belville didn't even notice Weston and Cardona. 

"Look at this, Cranston!" the yachtsman exclaimed, waving the  newspaper. "Two men murdered, a tattoo

artist and an old sailor who  served in the navy during the SpanishAmerican War! Could it have  anything to

do with that Cuban gold? Have you heard from de Blanco? Did  he produce that chap Lawton?" 

Cranston was shaking his head to Belville's eager questions. 

"You're nearly twelve hours behind the times, Belville," commented  Cranston. "All this was in the morning


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newspapers. I'm surprised that  you didn't hear about it earlier." 

"Belville would have heard of it," put in Weston, bluntly, "if  there had been any connection between the

murders and the swindle that  has been bothering him. I would have notified the New London police to

contact Belville immediately." 

"Why didn't you?" demanded Belville, turning to Weston. Then,  holding out the newspaper, Belville tapped a

photograph of Malloy that  appeared there. "And why did you tell me that this man hadn't been  murdered?" 

"Because he was still alive at the time," retorted Weston, "and if  it hadn't been for your stupid interruption,

we might have traced him  soon enough to save his life." 

Belville fumed indignantly. "I didn't interrupt you long. I  couldn't have, because I only had about ten minutes

to catch the New  London train. I spent the night on my yacht and today we cruised up the  Sound. This was

the first newspaper I saw today. But if I'm  interrupting you now"  Belville swept a blunt gaze around the

group   "I'd better be on my way, or you may be missing another murder." 

As Belville rose, Cardona halted him. 

"Wait, Mr. Belville," the inspector suggested. "It won't hurt for  you to be around; it might even help. I'm

summing the facts on these  two murders and I'd like you to hear them. Some slight detail might tie  in with

something you've heard de Blanco mention. You never can tell." 

Glancing at Weston, Cardona received no objection. The commissioner  always approved any process that

could be classed as methodical and  this came in that category. So Inspector Cardona proceeded: 

"The first victim, Tom Jeffrey, knew about everybody on the  waterfront. He was a tattoo artist and did special

work for sailors. He  had a little shop where he was in and out, with samples of designs all  over the walls. But

he'd always wanted to be a real artist, a painter.  That would account for his getting the studio where he was

murdered." 

Cardona's summary was all routine to Weston, so the commissioner,  to keep himself occupied, was slowly

tapping the table with the  extended fingers of his hand. Cardona was used to this, so it didn't  bother him, but

Belville became annoyed. At first, Belville didn't  realize that the noise came from the table; when he did, he

shrugged,  folded his arms and eased back in his chair, willing to put up with the  commissioner's foibles. 

In contrast was Cranston's reaction. 

From the start, Cranston had caught the tap of Weston's fingers;  then he had observed Belville tilt his head as

if to hear a more  distant sound. Now, Cranston was adopting the head tilt, completely  ignoring Weston's

drumming. There were other sounds; they came from the  foyer of the Cobalt Club. Rising, Cranston strolled

from the room,  gauged the direction of the sounds as he reached the door, then  governed his course

accordingly. Passing a pillar, Cranston crossed the  path of an elderly man who was stooped over a stout cane

which produced  the taps as he walked along. 

"Hello, Mr. Harkland." Catching the stooped man's elbow, Cranston  imperceptibly steered him toward the

grill room. "I haven't seen you in  quite a while." 

Harkland looked up at Cranston with a pair of eyes that gleamed  like gimlets from beneath his shock of white

hair. Lips that formed a  downward smile delivered a halflaugh. 


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"Perhaps you haven't been around the club lately, Cranston. I've  hardly been away from it." 

"I can understand it," nodded Cranston. "Your rheumatism seems to  be bothering you badly. Why not come

in and rest a moment?" 

Cranston was veering Harkland into the grill room, but the old man  hadn't yet noticed the group assembled

there. Still addressing  Cranston, Harkland said: 

"It's been bad for about a week, the rheumatism has. Too much  drizzly weather." 

"Drizzly weather? Here in the Cobalt Club?" 

Harkland snorted a reply to Cranston's query. 

"I'm not inside the club all the time, Cranston. I have to go back  and forth between here and my apartment.

It's only a few blocks, so I  hate to use a cab, but I can hardly hobble the distance. Just a taste  of damp weather

and I feel it here." Pressing his back, Harkland gave a  grimace and fairly doubled in a chair beside Weston's

table, letting  his cane clatter to the floor. "There!" Harkland added. "Another kink.  I've practically become an

invalid." 

Cranston was reclaiming the cane, which was thick, heavy, and made  of finely finished wood. 

"A nice walking stick," was Cranston's comment, "but rather heavy.  I thought you had been favoring metal

canes lately, Harkland." 

That brought another disdainful snort. 

"You haven't seen me for a long time, Cranston," declared Harkland,  "and now you tell me the kind of canes I

have recently preferred. My  choice is a wooden cane, solid wood." 

Taking the cane from Cranston, Harkland gave an emphatic rap  against the floor; then folded his hands on the

handle of the upright  cane, rested his chin on his hands and glanced with interest at the  group of men. 

"This is Oswald Harkland," introduced Cranston. "He is a member of  the club. I am sure you must have met

him, commissioner." 

Weston stared rather blankly at Harkland, unable to remember him.  In contrast, Harkland's sharp eyes

showed a look that mingled  recognition with surprise. 

"Why, I have seen this gentleman often," Harkland said to Cranston,  "but I never realized he was the police

commissioner. I presume you are  discussing those strange murders that occurred last night. Now if you  would

like my opinion " 

"Inspector Cardona is giving his opinion," interrupted Weston,  testily. "If you would like to hear it, you are

welcome to remain." 

Harkland bowed his acknowledgment and Cardona went on. 

"Since Jeffrey knew almost everybody with waterfront connections,"  the inspector stated, "almost anybody

with waterfront connections might  have murdered Jeffrey, provided they had a motive. That doesn't give us

much to go on or maybe it gives us too much. What I've been  concentrating on is the way Jeffrey's death was


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framed." 

On the table, Cardona spread an elaborate blueprint showing a  diagram of Jeffrey's studio, the yard in back of

it, and the office  building across the rear alley. 

"You were right, Mr. Cranston," Cardona affirmed. "A downshot from  a powerful airgun could have driven

that knife right into Jeffrey's  back. It would have had to come from the sixth floor; to be exact from  the

window of room 608 in the Mortimer Building." 

Old Oswald Harkland clucked a dry laugh. 

"The office of the Havana Exposition Corporation," remarked  Harkland. "I trust you found someone in the

place." 

Cardona gave Harkland a steady look, then said, "No, we didn't." 

"You wouldn't," returned Harkland. "There isn't going to be any  Havana Exposition. The public was finding

it out, so the people  promoting it skipped. We're still trying to collect the rent they owe  us." 

Harkland drew out a calling card, passed it to Cardona. It bore the  name "Riverview Realty Corporation" and

in the corner, it said "Oswald  M. Harkland, President." Pointing to his own name, Harkland chuckled  again. 

"The M is for Mortimer," he stated. "That building was named after  my mother's family. I know the office

you mention, but I doubt your  theory." 

"Why?" queried Cardona. 

"Because I know of no airgun which would combine enough power with  sufficient caliber to project a knife

that distance." 

"Apparently," said Cardona, "you are familiar with Jeffrey's  studio." 

"Not too familiar," declared Harkland. "We owned the building at  the end of Van Camp Lane for a while. We

sold it at a nice profit. But  it seems to me"  Harkland raised one hand to stroke his chin  "that  the studio

window would block any missile from above. It slants inward,  that window, doesn't it?" 

"Maybe it did once," replied Cardona, "but it doesn't now. Somebody  fixed it the other way by the simple

system of removing the entire  frame and turning it around. You didn't rent that studio to Jeffrey,  did you?" 

Harkland shook his head. 

"I thought the studios were practically empty," he replied. "The  new owners were allowing the leases to run

out so they could remodel  the house." 

"And who are the new owners?" 

"You'll have to ask the company," answered Harkland. He tapped his  business card. "You'll find the address

right there." 

Pocketing the card, Cardona abruptly changed the subject. 


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"Skipper Malloy was killed in his room over the Green Anchor,"  Cardona stated. "He was knifed, like

Jeffrey. Just like Jeffrey"   Cardona emphasized that for Harkland's benefit  "because from the  position of

his body, it was pretty clear that the knife thrust came  from a dumbwaiter in the corner of his room. The

murderer worked from a  cramped space; he'd have had to use an airgun and in this case the  range was close

enough to give the knife all the velocity it needed." 

Cardona was spreading another blueprint, a diagram of the Green  Anchor, with the floor plan. Joe indicated

the alley that ran in back  of the building; he pointed out the door into the kitchen and the  situation of Malloy's

room just above. 

"Granted that Malloy's front door was open," declared Cardona. "The  same thing applies in Jeffrey's studio.

In each case, the answer is  obvious. The murderer wanted to plant the crime on someone else. Only  whoever

else was there, got clear." 

Cardona was watching Harkland and in his turn, the shockyhaired  man was nodding as though he agreed

with every point. 

"Guns can be made in special sizes," reminded Cardona, "and that  applies to any kind, like airguns. Suppose

one had a barrel... well,  say as big as that cane of yours, Mr. Harkland " 

Still nodding as Cardona paused, Harkland lifted his cane as though  to study it, but his gaze was far away and

his voice carried an  absentminded tone. 

"Malloy," said Harkland. "Skipper Malloy. The name has a familiar  ring, but there are so many of them " 

"So many of whom?" put in Commissioner Weston. 

"Old, pensioned sailors," replied Harkland, "who live in the  Seaman's Fair Haven and other homes that my

family helped endow. Some  of them don't like such places. They are always requesting other  diggings and as

a director of the Haven, I have to approve new  allocations. Malloy's name rings a familiar note. He may have

been one  of the chronic malcontents who was never satisfied anywhere." 

Cardona was making notes on this; observing it, Belville suddenly  suggested a different point. 

"This office that you mention," said Belville. "It has something to  do with an exposition in Havana?" 

Cardona nodded. 

"Then Anjou de Blanco should know something about it," decided  Belville. "He may be able to tell us who

was connected with the  proposed exposition." 

"In that case," put in Weston, brusquely, "this man de Blanco will  probably turn out to be a swindler as you

originally suspected. Birds  of a feather flock together, you know, and since the exposition is  phony, de

Blanco is probably in the same class if he knows the men  behind the scheme." 

"Very probably," agreed Belville. "I shall ask de Blanco, when he  phones me this evening at the Manhattan

Yacht Club. I must get back to  the yacht now; I have it moored out at Whitestone. We shall bring it  into the

North River, where I have arranged for anchorage." 

Belville was leaving and old Harkland had decided to do the same.  During their comment, Cranston had

remained silent; now he was waiting  only for a brief chat with Commissioner Weston before proceeding on


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his  way. Cranston had already decided where that way would lead, for he had  been building new theories

during the recent conversation. 

In that, Lamont Cranston was not unique and he knew it. Casually,  Cranston had been watching Joe Cardona

and was quite sure that the ace  inspector had been gathering similar notions. 

Where Cranston was going, Cardona intended to go, too. But it was  Cranston who would arrive there first, as

The Shadow. 

CHAPTER X. TRAIL OF THE MERMAIDS

WHILE the conference at the Cobalt Club was reaching its  conclusion, June Getty was sitting at the window

of her apartment in  the Greendale Arms, looking out into the gathering dusk and wondering  what new hazard

it might offer. 

Until now, June had been pondering rather than wondering, though  there was little difference, at least in this

particular case. 

June had been pondering over that strange hodgepodge of data that  she had sent along to The Shadow. So

little progress had she made with  it, that June could come only to one conclusion, which she repeated  now, in

a low, awed tone, for probably the one hundredth time: 

"Dead Man's Chest!" 

The words gave June a shiver, for they brought a recollection of  Skipper Malloy and his untimely death,

which was much more horrible in  June's memory than the murder of Tom Jeffrey which she had not actually

witnessed. Yet those words could not be forgotten, because they stood  not only as crime's answer, but as a

key to the whole mystery involving  the Cuban gold. 

Dead Man's Chest! 

How could tattoo marks representing a pair of mermaids bring a  solution to a problem that had existed for

fifty years? That question  had an answer, perhaps; but if so, it lay in a larger series of  perplexities. That was

the tale of Sailor Ben Rigby, found only in the  log of the fishership Nancy Lee, with his talk of fifteen men

on a  Friday night, drinking water because they couldn't get it and calling  for a bottle of rum. 

All of which made no sense at all, probably because Ben Rigby had  been out of his mind when rescued

somewhere off the New England coast,  fifty years ago. 

But Skipper Malloy had sounded quite sane last night when he  pointed with his left hand, snapped his fingers

twice, and said that  was where Doug Lawton would find a clue to somebody who reminded him of  Jonathan

Pound. 

If only Doug could guess the answer to that riddle! But whether  Doug could or not, at least The Shadow

might. So far today, June had  heard from neither of them, but she was hoping that dusk would bring  one or

the other. Yet now, the dusk, as June gazed into it, carried a  threat of something ominous, so fearful that June

drew suddenly away  from the window. 

Then, as June groped for a lamp, the jangle of the telephone came  with startling suddenness at her elbow. The

ringing bell was  momentarily a shock, then it brought a relieved laugh from June's lips,  for she was sure the


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call must be from Doug. Picking up the phone, June  gave a glad, "Hello," then stifled a slight gasp as she

heard Anjou's  voice. 

Until today, June had rather admired Anjou's style of speech, but  his suavity now sounded oily. Anjou was

inquiring if June had heard  from Belville and June replied, "No," adding that Belville had gone to  New

London, in case Anjou didn't remember. 

"Of course, I know that Belville went to New London. But he  intended to return today. I thought he might

have phoned you." 

"You probably wouldn't guess it," returned June, "but I'm not in  the habit of giving out my phone number." 

"Of course not," agreed Anjou, "but this being a matter of  business, I thought you might have made an

exception." 

"You mean in Belville's case?" 

"Not entirely. Perhaps where this Cranston was concerned. After  all, Cranston came to the Club Cadenza to

judge the merits of the  proposition we were offering Belville " 

"If you're trying to find out if I heard from Cranston,"  interrupted June, "the answer is again 'No.' You can

save yourself time  by ending the list right there. I haven't heard from anybody all day.  But I might ask: Have

you heard from our friend, Mr. Lawton?" 

June's stress on the words "our friend" was intended for Anjou to  take as he preferred. Whatever his reaction,

he parried the question  neatly. 

"Lawton knows where to reach me if he needs me," answered Anjou. "I  told you about the deal he made with

me. He paid me a thousand dollars  to do some investigating for him. Remember?" 

"Yes." Despite herself, June made her tone a trifle sarcastic. "I  remember." 

"I've found a good lead," came Anjou's voice, as silky as ever.  "There's an office in the Mortimer Building

used by an organization  called the Havana Exposition Corporation. Ever hear of it?" 

"Not until now." 

"They might have something there in the files," purred Anjou.  "Regarding the history of the Cuban gold. Of

course, I wouldn't want to  go there, not after having met Lawton. I'm afraid he is involved in  those two

murders and it would be difficult for me to answer questions  if they know anything about him. In fact, it's

better for me to stay  out of sight myself until I hear from Lawton again." 

"Of course." 

June spoke those words mechanically because her thoughts had  wandered. Anjou was talking about hearing

from Doug again; June was  hearing from him right now. Somebody was tapping the apartment door and  from

the guarded rattattat, June was sure it must be Doug. So June  put a quick finish to the telephone

conversation. 

"I'll call you, Anjou," said June, "if I hear from anyone... well,  from anyone like Belville " 


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"Don't bother," rejoined Anjou, with a short laugh. "I'm not at the  apartment any longer. In fact, I'm not even

staying where Lawton thinks  I am, but I have somebody ready to spot him if he comes around.  Meanwhile,

I'll phone you if anything else develops. Adios." 

Hearing Anjou's receiver click, June hung up promptly, turned on  the lamp and hurried over to the door

where the guarded raps were being  repeated. Then, on the chance that the tapping might be a trick, June

whispered close to the door: 

"Who's there?" 

"Doug Lawton," came the tone that June recognized. "Hurry. Let me  in." 

Unbolting the door, June admitted Doug who gestured for her to lock  the door again. Then, to explain the

delay, June motioned toward the  telephone. 

"I was answering a call " 

"From Anjou, of course," put in Doug. "What kind of stunt is he  trying now?" 

"He says there's an office in the Mortimer Building," replied June,  "run by the Havana Exposition

Corporation. He doesn't want to go there  himself because he might be questioned about you." 

"Wait, June." Doug was thumbing through the telephone book. "Maybe,  it isn't too late to catch someone

there. Here's the number. I'll try  it." 

Dialing the number, Doug received an answer and hung up. He gave a  knowing nod. 

"Temporarily disconnected," stated Doug. "That's just about what I  expected." 

"Why?" 

"Because there isn't any Havana Exposition," explained Doug. "I'd  heard about it out in Oklahoma; in fact, I

saw some of the circulars  they were sending out, trying to sell stock in the thing. So I checked  it through the

Chamber of Commerce in Oklahoma City. They found out it  was a fake promotion scheme." 

"But why did you check on it?" 

"For the same reason you contacted Anjou," replied Doug. "I wasn't  missing any bets in hunting down that

Cuban gold, even though I did  think it had gone to Mexico. But the fellows behind this fake  exposition don't

have any important connections in Havana. They're the  type that just sell stock and skip." 

"It's rather odd," voiced June, "that New York is the last place  where their racket would be found out." 

"Not at all," argued Doug. "They worked out of here and sold stock  around the country, so the complaints

came from other places first. The  odd thing is why Anjou should be dragging in the Havana Exposition." 

As if looking for the answer, Doug was thumbing through the phone  book again. He found what he wanted,

the address of the Mortimer  Building. Doug slapped the phone book shut with a thud. 

"There's the answer!" Doug exclaimed. "The Mortimer Building is  practically in the same block as Jeffrey's

studio, probably just behind  it, and not too far from the Green Anchor. Cute of Anjou, trying to  drag you


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down into that area again." 

"But Anjou didn't try!" exclaimed June, hotly. "I found out for  myself that he was going to Jeffrey's and it

was Harkland who gave me  the lead on the Green Anchor, when he phoned somebody named Klauder.  Not

that I'm trying to defend Anjou"  June's tone became serious   "because I don't trust him any longer. Not

after the way he treated  you. In fact, if Anjou is trying to decoy anybody, it would be you." 

To that, Doug nodded. 

"You've got something," Doug declared. "Those tugboat whistles  guided me to Jeffrey's and Malloy's both.

Each time, Anjou showed up.  That might be more than a coincidence." 

"You mean Anjou might be behind the whistle business?" 

"Right," nodded Doug. "I'm going to call that Meteor number, the  one where I received my first instructions." 

Dialing Meteor 63454, Doug heard nothing but a series of  successive rings. While Doug listened, June

added something else. 

"Anjou said you'd know where to find him," the girl said, "and he  told me he'd have somebody watching to

contact you." 

"He wouldn't mean this number then," decided Doug, hanging up. "He  means Perique's place. But it's about

the same in either case. Perique  lives opposite the Darien Pier, or did live there." 

Going to the window, Doug stared out into the thickening dark.  There were occasional whistles sounding

from the river and amid them,  Doug could detect a few faint tugboat squeals. 

"It may be Anjou," said Doug, in a musing tone. "He could be trying  to reach me through you, June. Then,

again, he may be wanting you to  stick your neck out a third time, now that you've already tried it  twice. Only

you're staying right here instead. Understand?" 

June nodded. 

"You're not going in my place " 

"Of course not," interposed Doug. From his pocket he drew a bundle  of papers. "I want you to go over these

and see if you can find  anything that reminds you of Jonathan Pound. These are the papers that  belonged to

my greatuncle. I've already found something of interest." 

From the papers, Doug drew a letter. It was an old letter,  addressed to Artemus Lawton from the Port of

Gloucester, stating that  no records of the Nancy Lee were available and that he might inquire of  the Maritime

Library in New York. After June read that letter, Doug  produced another, also an old one, from the Maritime

Library, saying  that it, too, lacked any data on the Nancy Lee, a fishing schooner out  of Gloucester. 

"Just on a chance," declared Doug, "I phoned the Maritime Library.  it has grown tremendously since that

letter was written and is now  housed in an old mansion over on the East Side. They've bought up loads  of

collections on nautical subjects and the log of the Nancy Lee is  among them. The Maritime Library is open

this evening, so that's where  I'm going when I leave here." 

June's eyes widened eagerly. 


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"Shouldn't I go along?" 

Doug shook his head. 

"Stay right here," he insisted. "You can't tell who may call up or  why. If it's Anjou again, stall him.

Meanwhile, see what you can make  out of all these other papers." 

With that, Doug left, opening the door stealthily and gesturing for  June to bolt it as soon as he was gone.

From within the door, however,  June could hear the automatic elevator beginning its descent, and she

promptly went to the window of her darkened bedroom and stared out,  watching for further signs of Doug. 

He came in sight at last, crossing at the corner, turning his head  to look for any followers. Still staring, June

held her breath, for she  saw people that she thought might be on Doug's trail. One was a man who  could have

been a chance stroller; another was a furtive figure that  shambled around the corner. But June decided that

neither could be too  important. 

There was one figure that June sought but did not see, a cloaked  shape that she thought of only as The

Shadow. Then, managing a laugh at  her own expense, June turned from the window, realizing that she could

not have traced The Shadow even if he had picked up Doug's trail. 

Somehow, the mere thought of The Shadow gave June confidence. She  was convinced that his knowledge of

the case, amplified by the data  that she had furnished him last night would impel The Shadow to take up  this

important trail. Therefore, as June reasoned it, Doug at this  moment must be under The Shadow's personal

observation. 

Curiously, June Getty had begun to think more in terms of Douglas  Lawton than in those of Cuban gold and

the human factors that it  involved. With two murders already accomplished, the great problem was  to find the

murderer; then the question of individual protection would  become automatic. 

In thinking of Doug and his present mission, June was forgetting  the trail that Doug had decided not to take.

That was the trail to the  Mortimer Building, in the heart of the area where crime had struck  twice the night

before. 

That was the trail which The Shadow had taken for his own. 

CHAPTER XI. THE SHADOW COMES FIRST

THE door of room 608 opened softly, easily, and blackness filtered  through. It had just an ordinary lock, that

door which bore the name  "Havana Exposition Corporation" on its glass panel. Still, it should  have been

better equipped, even in an oldfashioned office building  like the Mortimer Building. 

The man who represented blackness never let such details pass  unchecked. Once he was through the door,

The Shadow closed it, locked  it with a skeleton key, and turned the beam of a tiny flashlight upon  the edge of

the door. The Shadow was looking for another lock, a Yale  job which was above the simple door lock, but

which for some reason had  not been latched from the inside. 

Under the focused glow, the reason was plain. The latch wasn't  simply open; it had been demolished.

Whether this was the work of the  departing promoters of the fake exposition, or that of some later  visitor was

a question. A minor question that might prove of major  importance later. Such questions, however, had a way

of settling  themselves when the time came. For the present, other matters engaged  The Shadow's interest. 


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First, The Shadow flickered his flashlight around the fairly large  outer office. The walls were covered with

murals depicting palm trees,  gay beaches with brilliant colored cabanas, a white skyline  representing Havana

and plenty of deep blue that stood for the  Caribbean Sea. More important than all this was a stenciled square

of  black lettering that The Shadow's flashlight picked out down in a  corner of one mural. 

The lettering said "Brookhattan Scenic Studio" and, therefore,  opened another avenue of inquiry regarding

the Havana Exposition  Corporation. However, The Shadow was quite sure that the promoters of  the fake

exposition had nothing in common with the quest for a million  dollars in Cuban gold. If they had been on the

trail of a Dead Man's  Chest, they wouldn't have bothered with their defunct promotion scheme. 

The inner office was reached through a connecting door that had no  lock. Entering it, The Shadow kept his

flashlight well muffled by the  folds of his cloak, for this room had windows, two of them. Except for  some

cheap and garish furniture which matched the tables and chairs in  the outer room, this private office offered

just one important item, a  padlocked cabinet in the corner. 

Naturally, this cabinet had not been opened by Inspector Joe  Cardona and his investigating squad. They

hadn't come here with a  search warrant authorizing them to tear apart the premises of the  Havana Exposition

Corporation. They had been simply tracking down a  window, the particular window that had enabled a

murderer with an  airgun to knife a shot at a human target named Tom Jeffrey. 

Now, however, with the Havana Exposition Corporation listed as a  fraud, the police wouldn't have to be so

careful. Sooner or later,  probably sooner, Inspector Cardona would be here looking for neglected  clues.

Therefore, The Shadow intended to make the most of the least  amount of time. 

As usual, The Shadow took an odd way of doing it. 

There was a telephone on the desk in the inner office, so The  Shadow promptly tried to make a call. Finding

the phone disconnected,  he moved into the outer office, flicked his light on a door that  connected with an

adjoining office. This door was locked and very  substantial, a contrast to the main door of the big office

itself. 

Rather than waste time with the lock, The Shadow went into the  private office, opened one of the windows

and stepped out to a ledge.  There, he closed the window behind him, a rather neat achievement  considering

that the ledge was only a few inches wide. Then, from that  precarious perch, The Shadow worked along to

another window, meanwhile  taking a survey of the dark scene below. 

There was enough light from the little alley to reveal some  interesting factors. From the ledge, The Shadow

could practically look  into Jeffrey's studio. Obviously, the murderer had planned a shot from  the sixth floor of

the Mortimer Building and had fixed the window  accordingly. 

As he moved along the ledge, The Shadow noted something else.  Jeffrey's window wasn't the only available

target; there were other  studios that would have served just as well. Old Harkland had admitted  that the studio

building was being abandoned and, therefore, was pretty  well empty, but he hadn't mentioned that the same

applied to other  houses that adjoined it. 

In brief, the situation was just the opposite of what would  normally be pictured. Instead of a murderer having

planted Jeffrey in a  studio, then looked for an office that would serve as a nice shooting  box, the office had

probably been chosen first and the studio deal  arranged afterward. 

This brought a low, whispered laugh from The Shadow's hidden lips,  though the laugh could have applied to

his next problem. The Shadow had  reached the window of another office and was finding it locked. This


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rather pleased him, for he made a specialty of tackling problems that  would have annoyed other venturesome

persons. 

Clinging to the ledge as if glued there, The Shadow produced a thin  wedge of metal, worked it through the

crack of the window sash and  jimmied the catch in a single action. He slid the window up, eased  across the

sill, flicked his inquiring flashlight, and found another  telephone which he hoped would be a live one. 

The Shadow dialed a number. After the second ring, a girl's voice  answered. The voice belonged to June

Getty. But when The Shadow spoke,  it was not in the whispery tone that befitted his attire. He spoke in  the

voice of Lamont Cranston. 

"Hello, Miss Getty... Yes, this is Lamont Cranston. I've talked to  your friend de Blanco... No, I didn't call

him; he called me... Yes, he  probably called me because Belville was away... Quite confidentially,  it was

about money " 

The Shadow paused. He was making up this Cranston speech as he went  along, gauging it to suit June's

reactions. Having read the report  which June had sent to him as The Shadow, he was naturally in a  position to

play the theme to the utmost. Right now, June was taking a  few moments to become indignant, which was

just what The Shadow  expected. Of course, she was indignant at Anjou, not at anyone else. 

"No, de Blanco didn't exactly want to borrow money," The Shadow  resumed in Cranston style. "He said he

already had received some, from  Lawton. Trouble was, de Blanco didn't feel that Lawton could spare  it...

Yes, he wanted me to meet Lawton personally and talk over the  matter... No, he didn't know where to find

Lawton and was sure you  wouldn't know either, but I asked for your number, thinking it worth a  try... Yes, if

you've heard from Lawton, I'd like to contact him at  once. I called you a little while ago, but your line was

busy " 

The final sentence was entirely correct, but June by this time had  taken everything for absolute. Worried

about Doug, convinced by  Cranston's calm, persuasive tone that he, like The Shadow, would think  in terms of

Doug's benefit, June promptly stated that she had heard  from Doug and that he was on his way to the

Maritime Library. 

Ending the call, The Shadow put in another. This time, his voice  carried the low, weird whisper which was

rightfully The Shadow's, for  he was talking to his contact man, Burbank. 

"Report from Hawkeye," stated Burbank. "Picked up trail of Doug  Lawton outside Greendale Arms after

relay from Vincent at Hotel  Metrolite. No further report as yet." 

"Instructions to Vincent," ordered The Shadow. "Go directly to  Maritime Library with camera." 

"Instructions received." 

"Instructions to Burke. Also go to Maritime Library as a reporter.  To take over if Vincent encounters any

problem." 

"Instructions received." 

"Further reports." 

"Report from Marsland," stated Burbank. "Phone call came to  paybooth Meteor 63454 at back of River

Garage. No one answered it." 


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"Report received." 

"Report from Crofton," continued Burbank. "No one has come in or  out of premises occupied by Perique, nor

has there been any sign of  Perique himself." 

"Report received." 

"Report from Le Brue," persisted Burbank. "Oswald Harkland did not  return home from the Cobalt Club. His

man Klauder went out with a  grocery basket. Has not returned." 

"Report received. Instructions to Le Brue. Go to Maritime Library  and remain outside to await contact." 

Having thus checked on the activities of his various agents and  arranged their further disposition, The

Shadow was ready to proceed  with his own plans. There had been no report from Shrevvy, because the  cabby

had been busy bringing The Shadow himself to this vicinity. 

Using the flashlight, The Shadow decided to take the short route  back to the office of the Havana Exposition

Corporation. This route  happened to be slower, but more convenient; it was through the heavily  locked

connecting door. Here was a challenge for The Shadow's skill  with locks, but it proved no great problem. By

means of a special  pincer pick, The Shadow probed the lock which gradually yielded under  his persuasive

touch. Then, edging the door open, The Shadow paused  abruptly, his flashlight unlighted in his gloved hand. 

A sound was coming from the outer door of the large office. It had  the selfassertive sound of a passkey.

The door swung open, a figure  entered and locked the door again. Dim in the darkness, the man stooped  as he

locked the door behind him and his manner was reminiscent of  Oswald Harkland. Still, anyone might have

stooped to lock a door. This  man, however, retained his stoop as he moved into the private office. 

It was Harkland, yet a much more agile Harkland than the one who  had behaved in such rheumatic style at

the Cobalt Club. As soon as  Harkland gained the private office, The Shadow heard a muffled sound  that had a

metallic clank, though dull. Harkland was smashing the  padlock on the cabinet in the inner office, subduing

the sound by the  simple process of wrapping the padlock in a handkerchief. 

Whatever his purpose, Harkland was partly defeating it. New sounds  were coming from the other door,

sounds which The Shadow alone could  hear. 

Somebody was working the outer door open with a skeleton key. Just  as Harkland finished, the outer door

opened. 

The man who entered was Anjou de Blanco. 

Even in the gloom, The Shadow could recognize the debonair Latin,  for Anjou's stealthy stride was a definite

exaggeration of his usual  dancefloor gait. Hearing sounds from the inner office, Anjou was  making a skillful

approach, yet he was so intent that he neglected  entirely to look toward the door where The Shadow stood. 

At that, Anjou could have seen nothing but blackness; nevertheless,  it worked to The Shadow's advantage.

Quite sure that Anjou would not  change his course, The Shadow moved in from the door and was close on

the sleek man's trail by the time he reached his goal. 

There, a peculiar sound greeted the two stalkers. It was a cross  between a snarl and a chuckle, the sort of

sound which only Oswald  Harkland could deliver. Harkland was at the office desk and had turned  on a light

above it. On the desk were two folders that he had taken  from the cabinet and he was spreading out the papers


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that he had found  in them. 

The Shadow observed all this very readily, because Anjou, reaching  the inner office, had made a quick

sidestep to reach the side of the  desk across from Harkland. Thus The Shadow, still in the doorway and

practically a part of its blackness, had full advantage of the scene  that was to come. 

Nor did The Shadow wait long. As Anjou leaned forward to study the  papers that Harkland had spread, he

came into the light. Instantly,  Harkland reared, delivering a repetition of his earlier gloat, but with  the accent

on the snarl. In return, Anjou gave an ugly laugh, one that  he made no effort to disguise. 

Face to face, these two men who had battled in back of the Green  Anchor were ready to resume their fight,

with The Shadow as an unseen  witness! 

CHAPTER XII. DUEL IN THE DARK

THIS sort of scene wasn't new to The Shadow. He'd witnessed dozens  like it during his career. What was

novel was the manner in which the  participants behaved. They almost outdid The Shadow. 

What The Shadow expected was a verbal outburst to be followed by  actual threat from both sides. Therefore,

The Shadow slid both hands  beneath his cloak, flipped them out again, each with a .45 automatic;  one gun to

cover Harkland, the other for Anjou, just to make sure they  both behaved. 

But neither man was waiting upon preliminary ceremony. With the  manner of a man reaching for a cigarette,

except that his action was  swifter, Anjou de Blanco brought a shiny revolver from his pocket and  leveled it

straight across at Harkland. With timing equally swift, old  Oswald Harkland snaked his wooden cane up from

beneath the table and  swung its clubby knob toward Anjou, stopping inches short of the other  man's head. 

The Shadow's guns were covering both by that time, but he couldn't  have stopped a death stroke by either

party. He was glad only that no  other witness was on hand to observe the fact, otherwise the word might  have

gone about that The Shadow was slipping in technique to let two  men  each a suspect in a matter of double

murder  get the bulge on  each other in such rapid style. 

If they'd canceled each other then and there, The Shadow would have  had but one potential solace; namely, to

prove later that one man had  murdered Jeffrey, the other Malloy. But that couldn't be and The Shadow  knew

it. So far, death had claimed two victims, with only one murderer,  for the definite reason that Jeffrey and

Malloy had been slain because  each knew too much about the same thing. 

However, Anjou and Harkland acted in a manner that was to be  expected from men so alert with weapons.

Anjou let his revolver swivel  downward by its trigger guard and Harkland withdrew his cane. Next,  Anjou

pocketed his gun entirely and Harkland copied the gesture by  replacing his cane beside the desk. Repeating

the laugh that was no  longer geared to a musical pitch, Anjou gestured to the papers on the  desk. 

"A cute trick, Harkland," said Anjou, "having papers made out for  me as a representative of this Havana

Exposition outfit. Actually, I  had no connection with the firm. But the police wouldn't believe me if  they

found the stuff." 

Cagily, Harkland eyed Anjou between narrowed lids. All he said was: 

"How do you know my name is Harkland?" 


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"By those other papers," rejoined Anjou. "Your name is on them.  They appear to be receipts for stock issued

to you by the Havana  Exposition Corporation." 

Harkland gave an acknowledging chuckle, a rather disarming one, but  Anjou was not deceived. 

"Very clever," continued Anjou. "If I had come here first and found  these, I would have assumed that both of

us were in the same boat. Then  my mind would have gone to someone else as a man of murder, say for

instance Douglas Lawton. But I am not a child, Harkland." 

"You talk like a child," retorted Harkland. "It happens that I came  here first instead of you. I found both

batches of papers planted. I  suppose I was to think that somebody else arranged it, even somebody  like June

Getty." 

At that, both men laughed, as though over a mutual joke, but the  only thing their tones had in common was a

decidedly sour note. It was  Anjou who queried, "Disappointed, Harkland?" 

"I might ask the same question," returned Harkland. "Are you?" 

Anjou shrugged. 

"I might have fallen for it," he admitted. "Yes, if I had found  these, I would have said: 'Poor HarkIand. What

could he know about the  Cuban gold? What could he have against Jeffrey or Malloy?' I think I  would have

taken your file of papers along with my own. Of course you  would have come around later, to plant another

set on me. Am I right?" 

"You are wrong," returned Harkland. "You probably thought I would  do the same when you planted this

double dish. What I intend to do, now  that I understand your scheme, is to leave the papers exactly where I

found them. I shall see to it that neither batch of evidence is  removed. Let the police decide which is true or

false." 

There was a pause; then Anjou spoke again. This time his tone was  not only suave, but with a note of

admiration. 

"I believe you would do just that, Harkland. Your position is more  secure than mine. Yes, I must give you

credit for an excellent idea,  except that it will not work, now that I have found it out." 

As he spoke, Anjou gave his hands an open spread, which bluffed  Harkland quite neatly, since it proved that

Anjou had no immediate  intention of reaching for his gun. Immediately, however, Anjou lashed  out one

hand, scooped his papers and planted them in his other fist,  leaving only Harkland's batch upon the table.

Angrily, Harkland  snatched up the papers that bore his name. 

"That makes us even," announced Anjou. "Whatever you know about the  Cuban gold, I can find out, now that

I am working on my own." 

"Cuban gold?" snorted Harkland. "I am not interested in something  that does not belong to me." 

"It belongs to anybody, Harkland." 

"That's something that anybody would say. But I am not anybody. I  have my own honest interests, nothing

more. In this case, I do not care  to be involved in something that pertains to murder." 


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Haughtily, Harkland picked up his cane and Anjou moved his hand  toward his pocket, only to withdraw it

when he saw that Harkland merely  intended to stalk from the office. All that Harkland was waiting for  was

Anjou; he gestured the fellow ahead. Thrusting his papers in his  pocket, Anjou waited for Harkland to do the

same, which Harkland did.  Then, and only then, was Anjou willing to precede the other man. 

By that time, The Shadow had wheeled to a corner of the outer  office to let the parade go by. Anjou went

first, with Harkland  hobbling behind him, and during the march, the two kept exchanging  reminders. 

"You are not coming back here," Anjou was saying across his  shoulder. "I'll see to that, Harkland." 

"Perhaps you should call the police," chortled Harkland. "They  would be glad to hear your story." 

"That's probably what you would do," began Anjou. "But it's too  late now, Harkland " 

At that moment, Anjou was opening the outer door. He paused,  wheeled about with a vicious cry that belied

his own words of "too  late." Hearing sounds from down the hallway, The Shadow knew instantly  what Anjou

had seen. Harkland had done the equivalent of calling the  police. The Shadow knew that Cardona must have

left the conference with  Weston and made a quick trip here. 

There wasn't time to wait for Cardona. No time to choose between  Anjou and Harkland. The Shadow's course

was to block them both, let  them both be captured to tell their respective stories, even though it  might cloud

the issue when determining the matter of a murderer. Both  guns drawn, The Shadow surged forward as Anjou

wheeled about. First to  act, his revolver already on the draw, Anjou was the man who would have  to be

slugged down first. 

The Shadow could have managed it, but he wasn't needed. Harkland,  much closer to Anjou, showed a

remarkable defensive style. Shooting his  cane forward, he grabbed the tip and swung at the same time. The

knobby  head hit Anjou's gun hand, numbing it before it came to aim. Anjou's  revolver struck the floor, just as

a shout came from Cardona, down the  hall. 

It was Harkland now who had to be stopped before he broke Anjou's  head with a swing of the cane. Whirling

Harkland's way, The Shadow  again found that his help was not required. Anjou, with a lash of his  free hand,

had grabbed the cane before Harkland could swing it and was  trying to yank it away. As they twisted,

Harkland caught the head of  the cane with his other hand and let Anjou complete his yank. 

What Anjou got was the cane, all except the head. That part,  Harkland retained and something that came with

it. The something was a  sword that formed the interior of the cane, which was simply a wooden  shell, serving

as a sheath. As Anjou reeled backward, Harkland lurched  after him, thrusting the sword point forward to

spear Anjou against the  wall. 

Instantly, the situation changed. As The Shadow hurled himself in  to divert Harkland's thrust, Anjou parried

it himself. Harkland had  overlooked one thing; he didn't know how to fence, but his adversary  did. With

swift, crisscross swings, Anjou literally lifted Harkland  backward, sword and all, each blow threatening to

knock Harkland's  weapon from his hand. 

At least neither could kill the other, not in the brief moments  which would remain before Cardona arrived.

For the first time, The  Shadow laughed, his tone sinister and challenging, producing a  startling effect upon

the two fighters who for the first time realized  that he was around. But again, the result went wrong in this

situation  where everything seemed to be working in reverse. 


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It wasn't Cardona who came through the doorway. Instead, a pair of  rookie detectives piled into the room.

Cardona's shout had been an  order for them to go ahead and they did. They heard The Shadow's laugh,  saw

him go swinging toward a pair of men who forgot their own fight to  dive away. He was a vague figure, The

Shadow, except for the guns he  swung in order to cower Anjou and Harkland. But the rookies didn't like  the

look of those swinging automatics. 

They sprang for The Shadow, aiming as they came. With an amazing  twist, The Shadow performed the

incredible feat of slashing one aiming  revolver upward with one hand, the other with his left. Those revolvers

spurted, a splitsecond apart, and it was luck on The Shadow's part  that he first had encountered the detective

who had the quicker trigger  finger. 

For the revolvers, spouting on the rise, whistled their shots  within inches of The Shadow's head. Again they

spoke, but their bullets  found the ceiling. Then, The Shadow was hurling the surprised  detectives back, out

through the doorway to the hall, so that he could  swing back and handle the situation with Anjou and

Harkland. 

It was then too late. Anjou had flung away the shell part of the  cane. Grabbing it, Harkland was racing in

crablike fashion through the  connecting door that The Shadow had left wide when he completed his

roundabout trail. Anjou in his turn grabbed up his revolver and dived  after Harkland. To take up that chase,

The Shadow would have put  himself in line for new shots from the baffled but still eager  detectives. 

What The Shadow did was wheel to a corner of the room and let the  headquarters men go surging past him on

the trail of the two fugitives.  Once the rookies had gone by, The Shadow doubled out through the  hallway,

hoping to head off the fleeing men himself. There, however,  The Shadow ran into a new fight; one that

explained why Cardona hadn't  personally entered the struggle. 

The stocky inspector was slugging it out with a pair of men who  suddenly broke and raced away in opposite

directions. One was Perique,  the apelike man who served Anjou de Blanco. The other, of brawnier  build,

answered to the description of Klauder, who worked for Oswald  Harkland. Each had brought a coverup man

with him, showing smart  judgment on the part of both Anjou and Harkland. Like their masters,  the servants

were making a quick getaway. 

Except for Cardona and the two detectives, only The Shadow remained  upon the scene. Harkland and Anjou

had fled their separate ways, losing  the pursuing detectives, who were now returning in summons to the

sound  of wild gun shots that Cardona had managed to fire after Klauder and  Perique. To go after either of

those underlings would have been futile  on The Shadow's part. Neither, if captured, could have told a

worthwhile tale. 

Harkland or Anjou would be a better catch. But in turning toward  the direction in which they had fled, The

Shadow came directly into the  path of the returning rookies. Wheeling about, he encountered Joe  Cardona

who was reeling blindly toward him in the gloomy corridor. He'd  encountered some heavy wallops, Joe had,

in tangling with Klauder and  Perique. Now he might mistake anybody for one of those two combatants. 

It was then that The Shadow performed a startling action. Twisting  from Cardona's path, he delivered a

titanic laugh, a lusty challenge to  friend or foe, that broke into a fierce crescendo and shivered away  like an

eldritch call. It brought Cardona to a halt, for he recognized  The Shadow's patented mirth. Joe shouted for his

men to hold their  fire, but the rookies were already blasting at the spot where they had  seen blackness whirl. 

Those bullets simply bombarded space. The Shadow had evaporated,  like a swirl of oily smoke. His laugh,

trailing away, might have come  from any one of the connecting corridors. It left even Cardona puzzled,  while

the two detectives were totally bewildered. Then, his senses  surging back to normal, Cardona bawled the only


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logical order for a  situation such as this. 

"Follow that laugh!" Joe shouted. "Don't shoot that fellow in  black, even if you do see him. Go after anybody

that he's after and  bring them in!" 

They went three different ways, each following what he thought was  the direction from which The Shadow's

laugh had faded. Hardly had their  running footsteps dwindled into echoes, before patchy blackness

materialized in a spot which Cardona and his men had all but surrounded  at the time The Shadow

disappeared. That blackness emerged from a  doorway almost across the hall from office 608. 

It was into that doorway that The Shadow had twisted just before  the detectives delivered their hectic fire. 

Muffling his face with his cloak, he had not only merged with  blackness; he had given his laugh that fading

effect which made it seem  to travel off along any of the corridors. Now, having sent the law on a  chase which

he hoped would bring luck, The Shadow made his own  departure. 

Shouts, sirens and whistles could be heard outdoors, telling that  patrolmen, posted earlier by Cardona, were

converging on the Mortimer  Building. Doubtless, though, Cardona had told them only to watch for  suspicious

characters around the neighborhood, not for fugitives from  the building itself. However, by now, all exits

would be watched, even  though the fugitives were gone. That left only The Shadow; he needed a  special way

out. 

The Shadow took it. He went right through to the inner office of  suite 608. Pausing there, he flicked his

flashlight into the broken  cabinet. Nothing important remained there; only pamphlets and form  letters

publicizing the nonexistent Havana Exposition. Harkland had  found the only documents of consequence and

like Anjou, had made off  with those pertaining to himself. 

Gaining the ledge, The Shadow reached beneath his cloak, brought  out four concave rubber disks, which

nested into a bundle no larger  than a dinner plate, though somewhat thicker. Affixing these to his  hands and

feet, The Shadow began a descent of the wall, using the  rubber suction cups as grippers. The only sound was

a soft sloughing  that had given these disks the nickname of "squidgers" by people who  had heard them. 

At the bottom, The Shadow removed the disks, and glided out through  the very alley where Doug Lawton

had engaged in his original encounter  with Anjou de Blanco and Perique. Soon, a tiny flashlight was blinking

green, a few blocks away from the Mortimer Building. The guarded flash  brought a taxicab from the corner.

The door opened and a shrouded  figure got in. 

Then Shrevvy, the driver of that cab, heard The Shadow's whispered  order that finished with a note which in

itself was a command for  speed: 

"Maritime Library." 

CHAPTER XIII. THE RIGBY RECORD

THE MARITIME LIBRARY was a massive pile of marble patterned after  the Pantheon in Rome.

Squarewalled, it had a domed roof that formed a  great curved skylight filled with panes of frosted glass,

except for  the exact center which was a circle of bronze. Divided into twelve  sections, the glass interior of the

dome had been painted with  semitransparent murals representing the signs of the zodiac. 

Situated on a secluded East Side avenue, partly surrounded by a  marble wall broken only by bronze gates, the


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edifice was a thing of  grace and beauty when viewed from the avenue or the streets in front or  back. From the

fourth side, which faced toward the east, it was a total  loss. There, the building was flanked by a row of

decadent brownstone  houses against which the marble wall terminated. Though lower than the  library, the

roofs of those houses cut off a view of it from the east. 

It was just another Manhattan story. Some tycoon of the '90s had  built himself a marble manse, but had

neglected to buy the row of  brownstones. A business rival who also dealt in multimillions had  grabbed them

up at a premium and had kept the houses there for spite.  So the man who had planned to dwell in marble halls

had announced that  he would use the building for his mausoleum instead of his home. 

This had been blocked by one generation of heirs who had turned the  edifice into a private library instead.

The next generation, confronted  by heavy taxes, had turned it into a public library rather than spend  money

tearing it down. By then, nobody cared about the spiteful  brownstones. 

In order to make the building a quasipublic institution, the  estate had invited the Maritime Library to occupy

it. This was a nice  deal, because few people ever bothered to browse around the Maritime  Library and there

was plenty of extra space where the present heirs  could keep the rare volumes belonging to the original

owner, none of  which could be sold until the year 1968. It was just another case of a  dead man's outdated

whims pestering the progress of posterity. 

Doug Lawton, however, was very glad it all had happened. Otherwise,  the building would still be known as

the Greckendorfer Memorial, in  honor of the builder's third greatgrandfather, who had been scalped on  this

very spot by Indians who discovered that he had watered six  barrels of rum which he was swapping them for

Governor's Island. Having  become the Maritime Library, it now housed all sorts of obscure records  including

the only known copy of a booklet called "Strange and  Unaccountable Nautical Experiences" which included

the log of the Nancy  Lee. 

The ground floor of the building was actually a museum, for it was  filled with great glass showcases that

formed a transparent labyrinth.  In these cases were models of ships dating from Carthaginian triremes  to

ocean liners, with samples of everything belonging to the centuries  between. The models were sizeable, some

more than six feet in length,  with many of lesser proportions. As a result, the showcases extended  clear to the

walls beneath the foursided balcony that formed the  second floor. The balcony itself was simply a narrow

gallery, with its  rail above the great, open central floor below. On the other side of  this gallery were shallow

alcoves, each with a reading table and short  rows of bookshelves reaching to the low ceiling. 

It was Doug's policy to survey every place where he intended to  stay a while, a practice he had cultivated

while roaming from Oklahoma  down through Texas and into Old Mexico. Such a procedure proved very

handy in avoiding such annoyances as spiny cactus, diamondback  rattlers and Gila monsters. So Doug had

taken the long way around in  coming to his particular alcove, just as he would have done if pitching  camp

somewhere near a waterhole. 

Hence Doug had discovered various things regarding this onetime  mausoleum which most persons would

have overlooked. 

In every corner of the building was a spiral staircase leading up  from the ground floor to the balcony. All four

of these stairways were  obscured below by the big showcases and the models which they  contained; while on

the balcony level, they were hidden by the  projecting alcoves. Anybody could do a sneak up or down, and it

wouldn't be difficult to move along the balcony without being seen from  below. A low stoop would manage

the trick. 


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There was something else about the balcony. The booknooks were  broken by a dividing space, halfway

along each wall. Those divisions  were like short passages or deadends. Each terminated in a big window

which was covered with a huge, brass grill, solidly locked in place.  There were four of these, of course, and

they differed only in their  ornamental grillwork. Those grills spelled the words North, East,  South and West,

according to the particular direction which they faced. 

The South entrance was over the main entrance of the library,  though there were also doors at the other sides.

At that particular  window, Doug had halted, faced it, raised his left hand and snapped his  fingers twice. He

still couldn't get Malloy's gesture out of his mind,  with the business about somebody like Jonathan Pound. 

From the South window, Doug had faced north and observed the great  floor below. At the rear of the

building, the north side, was a  stairway leading down into the vaults. That basement was the part of  the

building that had been intended as a crypt, but which now contained  the Gluckendorfer book collection. 

The only other exciting feature of the place was a great anchor  chain that hung from the bronze circle in the

dome, to below the  balcony level. The chain divided into four, near the bottom; those four  chains spread out

to support a huge circle of bronze, shaped like a  horizontal steering wheel. From the eight points of the wheel

hung  bronze anchors; on the tip of each was a glowing light bulb, sixteen in  all, which provided most of the

illumination for both the ground floor  and the balcony. 

Doug had plenty of time to take all this in, because he was waiting  for a wheezy old gentleman in a frock coat

named Pitcairn, who acted as  librarian, curator, caretaker, superintendent and whathaveyou. The  only other

occupant of the premises was a stout, sleepylooking guard  in uniform who answered to the name of Karson,

though Pitcairn had to  call him three times before he answered. Most of the time, Karson was  drifting around

the ground floor in zombie fashion. 

Pitcairn had told Doug to wait on the balcony for a few minutes,  because a reporter named Burke had just

arrived and wanted to write up  the library. That had given Doug time to walk around and notice  everything.

Then, Pitcairn had returned, taken Doug to an alcove  slightly north of the southeast corner, and had given him

the book that  bore the comprehensive title: "Strange and Unaccountable Nautical  Adventures." 

It was a yellowed pamphlet, nearly fifty years old, bound in  buckram. The last case in the book, hot news at

the time it had been  written, was entitled: "The Mysterious Instance of Ben Rigby, Sole  Survivor of an

Unknown Wreck, as Related to Absalom Malloy, cabin boy  of the Fishing Schooner Nancy Lee." 

Reading through the account, Doug took quick notes in a little book  he carried with him. The story fitted with

what Malloy had said and  gave further information. It stated that Rigby had been picked up  northwest of

Cape Sable, which formed the southern tip of Nova Scotia;  in other terms, somewhere off the coast of Maine. 

Then it came to Rigby's own statements, exactly as dictated to  Malloy. It ran as follows, lacking most all

punctuation marks except  dashes, for on the page facing it was the facsimile handwriting of  Skipper Malloy

himself, back in the days when they had called him  Absalom, the cabin boy: 

Twas Friday night  yes, Friday night  understand me, boy  Friday  night when we set sail  we warnt far

from land  so near, yo, ho, so  far, when the captain spied  the captain said, he said we needed water   so

we had to drink water  yes, we needed water so we could drink rum   no rum  not even a bottle  we'd

drunk it all up fifteen men  a  bottle of rum  fifteen men  so that night we was in the brig, all of  us in the

brig  next day the captain says to me, 'come along, Ben,'  says he  come along boat  we can watch the

boxers spar  yes, watch  the boxers spar  when the rocks sink  one rock then tother  heaveho   fifteen

men  yo, ho  a bottle of rum  then back to the brig,  mateys  


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There the maudlin account ended and Doug found himself staring at  the page, wondering how much was

jargon, how much might make sense.  Then, his notebook ready, Doug held his pencil poised, ready to

transcribe Rigby's statement in precise detail, when the buzz of voices  suddenly disturbed him. 

Stepping from the alcove, Doug looked over the balcony rail to the  great floor below. Karson had finished his

zombie routine and had  suddenly become alert. He was arguing with a wiselooking chap who  could only be

Burke, the reporter mentioned by Pitcairn. Only Burke  wasn't interviewing Karson; it looked the other way

about. Listening,  Doug caught enough of the buzzed conversation to learn that some  visitor had entered the

library and started off among the showcases,  but when the watchman looked for him he was gone. So Karson

was asking  Burke if he had seen him. 

To that, Burke shook his head; then pointed toward the stairs that  led down into the vault room. The

watchman pondered, finally nodded,  and decided to go down and have a look. Hardly had he gone, before

Pitcairn, the librarian, came stalking from the front of the great  room, bringing some scrapbooks to show to

Burke. Turning around, Doug  started back toward his balcony nook, then stopped short. 

Somebody had entered the alcove where Doug had left the Rigby  record! 

Doug could tell it because the shallow alcove had an overhanging  light that flung shadows of the table and

chair out to the alcove's  mouth. With them was a shadow that looked like a head and a pair of  shoulders, in

motion. It couldn't be due to any swinging of the light  because the other shadows did not move. This called

for quick action on  Doug's part, even where shadows were concerned; in fact, he didn't yet  trust shadows as

implicitly as did June Getty. 

Sliding his hand to his hip, Doug gripped his gun, sidled past the  edge of the alcove and came upon a young

man who was just turning in  his direction. He was a friendly, cleancut chap, who gave Doug a  serious smile;

but Doug wasn't in any mood to be receptive. Most  important to Doug was the way the stranger's hand was

dipped in a coat  pocket, as though he had just dropped something there. The hand came  out, empty;

whereupon, Doug's gaze went quickly toward the desk where  the buckrambound pamphlet was lying. 

It was still there, open at the page which bore the Rigby  statement. Clamping his free hand on the book, Doug

closed it. Without  relaxing his gun grip, he turned toward the other man and demanded: 

"What are you doing here? Do you have a pass from the librarian?" 

"That's who I'm looking for," the other man returned, "My name is  Vincent, Harry Vincent, and I want to

register." 

"You don't need to give your name," returned Doug, "only you do  need a librarian's pass. Here's mine" 

Doug brought out a slip that  Pitcairn had given him downstairs  "and you're supposed to get one in  the

office. Otherwise, you can't come up here." 

"Sorry," apologized Harry. "I looked in the office but nobody was  there. That's why I came up. I noticed that

this alcove was lighted " 

"So naturally you looked in," interposed Doug, still a trifle  suspicious. "Well, this is where I'm doing research

and I'm not  supposed to be disturbed. If you'll take those stairs, Mr. Vincent,  you'll find the librarian in the

big room, talking to a reporter. The  librarian's name is Pitcairn." 

Gesturing Harry along the balcony, Doug let the book drop idly on  the desk, then edged to the mouth of the

alcove and watched the  intruder go to the spiral steps at the southeast corner of the gallery.  Doug was sure


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that this chap Vincent hadn't been able to do more than  make a quick reading of the Rigby record. In fact, he

was inclined to  believe Vincent's story. 

To verify it, however, Doug kept watching over the rail to see if  Vincent actually went in search of Pitcairn.

Sure enough, Vincent did.  He appeared from the corner of the floor below, worked his way among  the

showcases and approached the spot where Pitcairn was talking to the  reporter, Burke. 

Pulling pencil and notebook from his pocket, Doug turned back into  the alcove, sat down and reached for the

little book that he had placed  on the table. A moment later, Doug was staring wideeyed as he sat

emptyhanded. 

The book was gone! 

CHAPTER XIV. THE VANISHING FIGHTERS

THE unexpected was becoming the commonplace in the life of Douglas  Lawton. From the moment when he

had accepted the summons of the tugboat  whistles near the Darien Pier, his career had been a checkered

series  of surprises that involved two murders, a meeting with a brownhaired  girl, a few slugfests and a

puzzling chain of riddles that dated back  to the last testament of Ben Rigby, a dying sailor picked up by a

fishing schooner, half a century ago. 

Not only had Doug's life become a whirl; others were involved in  similar circumstances and Doug knew one

person, June Getty, who could  testify as much. But now, in a vast marble building which was fantastic  in

itself, the strangest thing of all had happened. Just as Doug had  gained the evidence most needed, the log

book of the Nancy Lee, it was  gone as completely as if it had never existed. 

The whole thing was as maddening as a frustrated dream. It made  less sense than Rigby's record itself. Yet at

least the mystery was  confined to this little bookwalled nook on the balcony of the Maritime  Library. That

at least was something that could serve Doug as a  starting point or a finish. 

Staring now at the shelves about him, Doug was trying to fathom it  out. His first impulse was to blame

Vincent; then common sense, or what  little of it Doug could gather, made him realize that Vincent could not

have taken the book. In fact, Doug's whole action had been geared to  prevent just that. The book had been on

the table when Vincent left and  Doug had remained within the fringe of the alcove from that moment on. 

It was a fact, though, that Doug had not been watching the precious  book. Yet it could have been taken only

from within the alcove itself.  But how, considering that the nook was solid walled on all sides except  the one

that Doug himself had guarded? 

That question produced an answer. 

The alcove wasn't solidwalled, far from it. The walls, front and  back, consisted entirely of books. Indeed, on

one shelf there was a  slender space from which Pitcairn, the librarian, had taken down the  volume of "Strange

and Unaccountable Nautical Experiences." 

Doug was looking at that space, wondering if by some curious quirk  he had replaced the thin volume there.

As he looked, he noticed  something. In entering the alcove for the first time, Doug had been  impressed by the

meticulous manner in which the books were arranged,  all evenly, as if they had been fitted to the shelves.

Now their  appearance wasn't quite the same. 


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On a lower shelf, at just about the level of the table top, four  books were slightly depressed, nearly a full inch

inward from the line  which marked the others. Apparently those four volumes felt guilty  about it, for now

they were rearranging themselves, though almost  imperceptibly. Staring, Doug could see the books creeping

outward,  aligning themselves painfully. Books didn't act that way of their own  accord. 

Doug knew now where his book had gone. Somebody in the next alcove  had taken advantage of Doug's brief

discussion with Vincent to remove  books from that adjoining alcove and Doug's own. Then a stretching arm

had extended a creeping hand to Doug's table and taken the priceless  volume. Now the evidence was being

covered, but not soon enough. 

Starting a snatch at the creeping books, Doug halted and gripped a  group out of a shelf above. Putting them

on his table, he drove both  hands through the opening, forcibly launching a batch of books from the  shelf in

the alcove beyond. It was a quick trick that worked. Doug was  rewarded by a snarly grunt from the other side,

proof that he'd thumped  the book thief with those flying volumes. 

Only the jolt wasn't hard enough. 

Before Doug could draw his gun and shove it through the opening, a  single book came sailing through,

catching Doug squarely in the chin. A  sudden scuffle of feet told Doug that the thief was scooting from the

next alcove; rallying quickly, Doug took up the chase. 

Coming out from his nook, Doug raised a spontaneous cry as he saw a  stooped man take a flying dive into

another alcove several along, in  the direction of the north end of the building. At Doug's instinctive  shout,

Burke and Vincent swung about in the great space below, Pitcairn  turning with them. 

They didn't see the man who dived from sight, well along the  gallery. Stooped, he was sheltered by the

balcony rail. But they were  witnesses to the unexpected thing that happened next. As Doug started  to chase

along the balcony, he went past the short deadend that formed  a passage to the window on the east, for the

man he was after had  ducked beyond that point. As if timed for Doug's arrival, a trio of  roughclad men came

surging from that passage and hurled themselves  full upon him. 

It was most surprising, this attack, coming from a passage that  should have been empty, with no means of

entry. As Doug turned, and  tried to aim his gun, the crew shoved him hard against the balcony rail  and sought

to slug him down with guns of their own. 

Below, The Shadow's agents, Clyde Burke and Harry Vincent, were  hardly more than helpless onlookers.

They saw Doug's gun spurt twice;  pointed upward, it was more of a signal for help than anything else.  Then,

on the chance that they might be of help, Clyde and Harry raced  for the southeast corner of the building,

which afforded the nearest  flight of spiral stairs. They were hampered, however, by the  intervening rows of

model cases. 

At the same moment, the man who had ducked into a further alcove  came bobbing out. Taking a quick glance

across the balcony rail, he  raced for the northeast corner of the gallery. 

Nobody glimpsed his face, nor did they even see his flight, for he  was stooped as before. Like a scurrying rat,

he reached his corner just  as a mighty laugh came echoing through the huge building, a challenge  so fearful,

so powerful in its reverberations that it seemed a threat  from another world. 

That laugh froze everyone. Never before had human ears heard such a  token of The Shadow's avenging force.

Doug was petrified in the halted  clutch of the men whose gun hands stopped in midswing. The man who

had  fled to the northeast stairs was cowering, hidden in their shelter.  Pitcairn became a statue in the middle of


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the model room. Even Clyde  and Harry felt their footsteps falter as they neared the southeast  stairs. 

Eyes naturally went upward. The mighty laugh commanded it. Since it  seemed out of this world, the mirth

logically attracted observation  skyward. Those eyes saw The Shadow. 

The cloaked invader had chosen his own special mode of entry to the  Maritime Library. Thanks to his rubber

suction cups, he had scaled the  marble wall of the building, which was made to order for the squidgy

grippers. Once there, he had pried loose a section of the skylight.  Hearing the gunfire from within the

building, The Shadow had sped his  entry. 

The Shadow was a human beetle, big and black, making an amazing  crawl across the painted mural that

appropriately represented the sign  of Scorpio. He was using the rubber grippers to reach the brass center  of

the dome from which the great anchor chain hung. Seeing the battle  below, The Shadow had halted it by

delivering a strident laugh squarely  into the dome itself. A vast echo chamber, the dome had magnified the

challenge to titanic proportions, filling the entire space of the great  squarewalled building below. 

Now, as the booknooks tossed back reverberations of that  allpervading taunt, making the frozen men think

that living, laughing  shadows were everywhere about them, The Shadow reached the top of the  hanging chain

and literally threw himself about it, clutching it with  arms and legs as he removed his suction cups from

hands and feet. 

The chain was swaying, The Shadow with it, and the motion applied  to the top was increasing the impetus at

the bottom. Heaving back and  forth, The Shadow was turning the great chain into a mammoth pendulum.

Again, The Shadow laughed, but this time his laugh created frenzy among  the men who heard it. Having

spotted The Shadow, they were ready to  give battle. 

Wild shots barked upward from the balcony. Others sounded from the  front door of the building, where

another trio of roughclad men had  suddenly arrived from the front street. Not only was the range too long

for hasty fire; The Shadow was no longer at the spot where the gunners  aimed. He was sliding down the great

chain and its long, crosswise  swings were making him an impossible target, since he was moving both  on the

vertical and the horizontal. 

Harry and Clyde surged for the men who had come in by the front  way. At the same time another man of

stocky frame and strongjawed face  drove in from outdoors to aid them. He was Chance Le Brue, another of

The Shadow's agents delegated to this sector. Spotting the action at  the front, The Shadow gauged his own

course accordingly. The men on the  balcony were turning on Doug Lawton to subdue him, never suspecting

what The Shadow had in mind. Only The Shadow's agents guessed it, for  they knew the ways of their chief. 

Heaving hard away, The Shadow let himself slide with the chain as  it returned toward the east side of the

balcony. A living plummet, he  scaled off to a side chain as the swing was completed, released his  hold and

was catapulted clear across the balcony rail into the very  midst of the trio that surrounded Doug. So far, Doug

had warded off  their heaviest strokes, but they dropped him to attack The Shadow. They  changed tactics, too,

hoping to settle The Shadow with pointblank  shots. That was their mistake. 

Even as he landed, The Shadow was swinging hard and wide with heavy  guns that he'd whipped from

beneath his cloak. He didn't need to catch  his balance; he let his enemies take the burden of his weight. Guns

went flying, followed by their sprawling owners. The crew of three was  scattered, flattened, all in the time

required for the great chain to  do a pendulum swing across to the other gallery and back again. 

Diving over the rail, The Shadow caught the chain on its return.  This time, he slid through the big circle that

supported the dangling  anchors. Dropping, as the chain passed the perpendicular, The Shadow  landed on the


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ground floor between display cases and took a weaving  course toward the front door. The thugs who were

slugging it out with  The Shadow's agents had glimpsed the cloaked avenger's action. Losing  sight of him

amid the cases, they suddenly broke when The Shadow  appeared, driving in from another direction. Out

through the front door  they fled, with The Shadow's agents in pursuit. 

The Shadow had left the balcony situation to Doug Lawton, who had  only to round up three halfstunned

enemies. But Doug's thoughts still  concerned the unknown man who had escaped with the precious book.

Hurrying along the balcony, Doug was looking into alcove after alcove  until he reached the northeast stairs.

There he started down the  spiral, clutching his gun. 

At the bottom, Doug found himself surrounded by a cluster of  display cases. Sneaking among them, he kept

peering through the glass  sides. At last, in an obscure corner, Doug's gaze fell upon a long,  slender ship

model, a full six feet in length. It was a beautiful white  ship, graceful, but with a rakish touch. It was a single

funnel job,  with a space in front of the superstructure that apparently represented  an open hold. Though the

model looked like a war vessel, it carried no  guns. 

It wasn't entirely odd that Doug should forget his quest for the  moment. The name that appeared on a placard

beneath the long white ship  attracted his attention. On that card, Doug read the title : 

P. C. VESUVIUS 

The name Vesuvius struck home. Skipper Malloy had mentioned it as  the vessel to which he had been

assigned while in the navy. A minor  point, yet something to be remembered. It happened, however, that Doug

was immediately to forget it. Hearing a slight motion just behind him,  Doug started to swing about too late. 

Something as solid as steel slugged downward like a cudgel and  clipped Doug above the ear. Earlier he'd

parried revolved strokes, but  this was heavier and skillfully delivered. Doug folded to the floor and  lay quite

still. Next, hands were lifting him, hoisting him toward the  spiral stairway. Doug stirred and pressed a hand to

his aching head,  moving his feet mechanically. He was almost out, but not entirely. His  captor was taking

advantage of the fact. Up the stairs, they reached  the balcony and all the while Doug labored under the dulled

misapprehension that he was being helped by some friend, most probably  The Shadow. 

By then, however, The Shadow had followed his agents outdoors.  Pitcairn was in the office making a frantic

phone call to the police;  Karson had come up from the vaults and was on his way to the office.  Having left

Doug in charge of the balcony, The Shadow was quite willing  he should be found there. Doug had made a

legitimate visit to the  Maritime Library and the police would believe whatever portion of his  story he might

choose to tell. It was The Shadow's way of squaring an  innocent man with the law. 

Except that Doug wouldn't be around to tell his tale. By the time  his captor had steered him to the balcony,

the thugs that The Shadow  had clouted were in the process of recuperation. Groggily, they helped  prod Doug

into the little passage to the east window. There, their  leader swung the grillwork open and the whole tribe

moved across a  short planking through an opening that led into an empty brownstone  house. Afterward,

hands closed the grillwork and the window, locking  both in place. 

Police out front were arriving and picking up three very dazed  hoodlums who had been overtaken and bashed

into submission by The  Shadow's ardent agents. Only The Shadow himself could have been found  near that

scene, for he was watching to make sure that the law took  over. As soon as the police entered the Maritime

Library, The Shadow  glided away, intending to contact Shrevvy's cab in the street behind  the library. 

It was at the next corner that a strange incident occurred, one of  those rare events that changed the course of

things and produced a weak  link in the chain of crime. It wasn't a coincidence, for the whole  attempt was


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intended, provided opportunity afforded it. Opportunity was  present, doubly so; present in the person of The

Shadow and that of the  murderer he sought. 

Shrevvy's cab was coming down the avenue. As The Shadow started to  give it a green blink, he changed the

flashlight suddenly to red,  because he saw a police car coming from the other direction. Shrevvy  rolled past;

The Shadow stepped back, silhouetting himself against the  very end of the white marble wall, just where it

was flanked by a high  board fence that extended from the rear of the brownstone row. 

It didn't matter where the police car was concerned; it kept along  the avenue. But there was another car, a

sedan, that was close behind  Shrevvy's cab. Instead of continuing along the avenue, that car veered  into the

street and The Shadow was briefly in its headlights, against  his revealing background. 

It braked briefly, as it went past. If it hadn't, The Shadow might  not have caught his cue. But that slackening

speed, slight though it  was, called for instant action. The Shadow made a long, sprawling dive  along the wall,

away from the corner where it met the fence. 

A hollow, coughing sound came from the sedan as it went past, a  sound that could have been from the

spurting motor, under sudden  pressure of the accelerator pedal. But that didn't account for the  whirring sound

that went by The Shadow's shoulder. As the taillights of  the sedan disappeared around the next corner, The

Shadow came to his  feet, turned his flashlight on the meeting spot of the marble wall and  the board fence. 

The Shadow had guessed right. Noiseless death, or its equivalent,  had been aimed in his direction. The

murderer of Jeffrey and Malloy had  used his powerful airgun in an effort to gain an even bigger victim,  The

Shadow. 

Hilt deep in the very edge of the board fence was a roundhandled  knife, the first of those deadly blades that

had failed to find a  target. A murderer had tried and missed; that was all. 

All from the murderer's standpoint; not from The Shadow's. Until  now, The Shadow had been willing to call

it a night, on the theory that  all was serene. Now The Shadow knew that something had gone wrong and

badly, where his own plans were concerned. 

Nor was that all. The murderer had missed his chance to pin The  Shadow with a deaththrust. Now was The

Shadow's chance to pin the  crime on the murderer! 

CHAPTER XV. QUEST OF THE MISSING

INSPECTOR JOE CARDONA, arriving at the Maritime Library in response  to a hurry call, was surprised to

find Lamont Cranston entering the  door at the same time. The fact was that Cranston had merely come

around the block while Cardona was finishing the last leg of a fast  trip in a police car. But Cranston didn't put

it that way. 

"Hello, inspector," he greeted, casually. "I was just on my way to  the Cobalt Club when I heard the sirens and

thought perhaps the  commissioner would be along." 

"Not yet, he won't," returned Cardona. "He hasn't heard about this  case yet. If it's important enough, we'll call

him and tell him." 

Inside the library they were met by Pitcairn who gave a very  garbled story. Thugs had invaded the library but

had been finally put  to rout by a cloaked fighter who came sliding down the anchor chain  that held the great


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chandelier, aided by a reporter and a visitor. The  thugs, who looked like a crew from the waterfront, were on

display in  the custody of the police. 

It was Cranston who promptly ferreted out some details that  Pitcairn had forgotten. 

"You say a visitor," stated Cranston. "How many visitors did you  have this evening?" 

"Why, two," replied Pitcairn. "One was up in an alcove off the  balcony " 

"And did the shooting start there?" 

"I believe it did. First it was up there"  Pitcairn pointed to the  balcony  "then it was out by the main door." 

"What happened to the visitor upstairs?" 

Pitcairn stroked his chin, then shook his head. 

"I don't know," he finally replied. "He was looking through a book  that covered strange nautical incidents. I

can't recall the title, but  the catalogue number " 

"Never mind the catalogue number," Cardona broke in. "Let's go up  and have a look. The only way to deal

with any case is to start from  the beginning." 

"Which reminds me," put in Cranston. "This might interest the  commissioner. Suppose I phone him while

you are up there, inspector." 

Cardona gave the nod as he started for the spiral stairs. Cranston  went into the office and picked up the

telephone. He didn't call the  commissioner however; not at first, nor did he make his call as  Cranston. 

Instead, he phoned Burbank, and spoke in The Shadow's whispered  tone. The Shadow had instructions for his

agents and they were to move  fast. First, a quick check at Harkland's, to learn if he had returned  there and

also to check on Klauder. Next, and this was more difficult,  the agents were to track down Anjou de Blanco

and Perique. 

There was a way that the latter assignment might be handled in a  hurry. Anjou had told June Getty that Doug

Lawton would "know where to  find him" and that somebody would be "watching for Lawton." That meant

that somebody was watching Perique's place. Therefore, the system was  for one of The Shadow's agents to

start prowling around there, while  the other watched for chance loiterers who might be interested. 

Finished with that call, Cranston reverted to his own self and  phoned the club to tell the commissioner that a

lot of interesting  things had happened at the Maritime Library. That chore done, Cranston  phoned Burbank

again, to hear reports from agents. 

One report, the one that came from Harry Vincent, pleased The  Shadow very much. He then put in a

Cranston call to June Getty, learned  that she hadn't heard from Doug Lawton. By then, Cranston was ready to

see how Cardona and Pitcairn had been making out upstairs. 

They hadn't made out well. 

Pitcairn was distressed, utterly distressed, because one of the  library books was missing. It was the volume

that the visitor had been  reading, and now the visitor was gone, book and all. Pitcairn hadn't  seen him go out,


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didn't know who he was. It was all very unfortunate,  the worst thing that had happened during the entire

evening, in  Pitcairn's opinion. 

It was the worst in Cranston's opinion, too, though he didn't say  so. He waited while Cardona quizzed the

prisoners and learned that they  were simply a trio of waterfront fighters who had been hired to help  out if

anything happened in the Maritime Library. Something had  happened, so they'd helped. 

Cardona took time out for a conference with Cranston. They held  their chat between two cases which

exhibited the flagship of Columbus  and the frigate Constellation. 

"This crew doesn't know anything," Cardona asserted. "They're just  what they claim to be, a bunch of

wharfrats paid to handle a coverup  job. But that gang upstairs was different. They must know something." 

"Unquestionably," agreed Cranston. "For one thing, they probably  know who let them in here." 

"An important point," nodded Cardona. He looked across the great  room, beneath the huge anchor chain

which was still swaying very  slowly, like a stopping pendulum, as in mute testimony to The Shadow's  recent

exploits. "I don't think Pitcairn had anything to do with it. If  he'd wanted to steal that book, he could have

done it without anybody  knowing it." 

Cranston gave a slight smile. They were watching Pitcairn now as he  walked about in flubdub style,

wringing his hands over the disaster  that had struck the Maritime Library. Then Cardona gestured beyond, to

where Karson was standing, as if waiting orders. 

"That watchman looks all right, too," decided Cardona. "Of course  he was down in the vaults at the time

everything broke loose and that  was a nice way to keep out of trouble." Joe pondered briefly. "I may  have

something there. I'm going to give Karson a real quiz. If he  stands up under it, I'll take Pitcairn and put him

through the mill.  Maybe Pitcairn is trying to pin something on Karson." 

Cardona didn't mind changing opinions when he talked to Cranston.  That was why he was doing it now,

before Commissioner Weston arrived.  The commissioner was always calling Cardona short when Joe tried to

crack a case by talking over angles. 

"It amounts to this," summed Cardona. "Somebody either let that mob  in here, or they did a mighty neat

sneak. I've examined the upstairs  windows; all of them are firmly barred. Therefore, they must have come  in

by the ground floor, only its doors are barred, too, except for the  front." 

"There's the vault room," reminded Cranston. "You had better give  it a thorough inspection." 

"Right. That would mean Karson. Still, Pitcairn could have sent him  down there to be out of the way. You

know, though"  Cardona turned a  reflective gaze toward the front entrance  "sneaking in here would be  a

cinch. The real problem is how the upstairs mob got out. 

"Maybe they just beat it after the fight, while Pitcairn was  phoning from the office and Karson was still down

in the vault room.  No"  Joe shook his head  "we aren't getting anywhere with this stuff.  The big question is

why the mob came here at all. You don't need three  men to steal a book that anybody could shove in his

pocket, any more  than a coverup crew is needed to see that nobody stops them." 

Cardona was putting his finger on the answers and he followed with  another GradeA comment. Eyes roving

throughout the great building,  Cardona continued: 


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"The way I see it, the mob was supposed to lug away something  bigger than a book, something so big that it

would take a couple of  guys to handle it. Like one of those ship models, maybe. I'm going to  have Pitcairn

take an inventory and find out if anything is missing  besides that book." 

Something was missing and Cranston could have told Cardona exactly  what. 

The missing item was Douglas Lawton. He had been spirited away not  only because he had uncovered the

record of the Nancy Lee with the  complete statement of Ben Rigby, but also because he had learned other

things as well. Doubtless, Doug had not only encountered a murderer  engaged in theft; he could have told

something about the special crew  of handy men who had entered and left the library so mysteriously. 

As The Shadow, Cranston had personally handled that batch of  troublemakers and now he regretted that his

treatment had not been  permanent. But there was no use telling Cardona all this; quite the  contrary. Right

now, Doug Lawton might still be alive, but how long he  would remain so was something with a big question

mark. Doug would need  rescue and immediately. To mass the law in his behalf might only be a  giveaway

that would serve Doug with a quick death sentence. 

This was a job for The Shadow to handle with his agents. There was  just one way in which Cardona could

help, so The Shadow proposed it,  Cranston style: 

"Suppose you question that outside crew again, inspector. Find out  how they got mixed up in this, as far as

you can." 

Nodding that Cranston had a good idea, Cardona led the way to the  librarian's office where the three thugs

had been herded, pending the  arrival of Commissioner Weston. Bluntly, Joe put a question to the  group: 

"What brought you lugs here, anyway, and who? The more you speak  up, the better it will be for you." 

The men shifted uneasily; then one, catching glances from the other  two, decided to act as spokesman. 

"We can tell you why," the fellow said gruffly, "but we can't tell  you who. The reason is we don't know. We

don't mind saying that we hang  out around Morey's Fish and Chip House, because you'll probably find it  out

anyway. We hang out there because every now and then some guy  phones up and says he needs us. 

"It's legit enough, ain't it, for us to poke around some place like  the old Darien Pier, or a joint like this, just to

see that nobody  makes trouble for nobody? Well, that's the deal and until tonight we  liked it. When we get

back to Morey's, we find dough waiting for us,  that's all. 

"We didn't start nothing tonight, so why blame us? The shooting  started inside this joint and we came piling

in to stop it. Some guys  pitched onto us and while we were slugging it out, The Shadow came  after us. That's

why we scrammed. We didn't want no trouble from The  Shadow." 

The details weren't entirely correct, but they were near enough so.  They gave Cranston what he wanted, a

starting place; namely, Morey's.  The next step was to get there before Cardona decided to round up

everybody in the fishandchip house. That wouldn't happen until  Commissioner Weston gave the order. 

Casually remembering an appointment, Cranston told Cardona that he  would be back to meet Weston later.

Leaving from the library, Cranston  turned eastward, along the street that had the row of brownstone  fronts.

He twinkled a green light and Shrevvy's cab appeared from the  avenue just east. 


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Getting into the cab, Cranston drew a cloak and hat from a sliding  drawer beneath the rear seat, bringing a

brace of automatics with them.  Shadow style, he gave a destination to Shrevvy and the whispered order  ended

with a subdued laugh. 

The Shadow wasn't thinking of the fishandchips they served at  Morey's. He was looking at the brownstone

house, particularly the last  in the row, an empty one that flanked the marble wall of the Maritime  Library. 

There, The Shadow was sure he would find an answer to a pressing  mystery. That, however, was something

he would investigate later. Right  now, the rescue of Doug Lawton came first. 

CHAPTER XVI. THE MAN WHO TALKED

ON the way to Morey's, The Shadow stopped to pick up some of his  roving agents. These included Hawkeye,

a little wizened man with ferret  eyes; also Cliff Marsland and Miles Crofton, a pair of sock'em and  rock'em

chaps who looked like part of the waterfront itself, when  judged by the rough clothes they were wearing. 

From these agents, The Shadow received the latest reports that had  come through Burbank. Oswald Harkland

was back at the penthouse where  he lived, a few blocks from the Cobalt Club. Anjou de Blanco had  returned

to the apartment that he no longer intended to keep, according  to what he had told June Getty. 

In each case, the time element had allowed for a stopover at the  Maritime Library, covering the period when

Doug Lawton had disappeared  along with a trio of sluggers that The Shadow should have settled for  keeps. In

brief, neither Harkland nor Anjou had an alibi that would  stand up. 

Of course, either could furnish an excuse. It had probably taken  some neat dodging to slip the police cordon

which closed around the  Mortimer Building after the affray in suite 608. Therefore, both  Harkland and Anjou

would have been necessarily late in arriving home.  Yet neither would want to admit that he had ever been

near the Mortimer  Building. As for the time element, The Shadow could spike it with the  simple fact that he,

the last to leave the Mortimer Building, had  arrived at the Maritime Library before crime struck there,

allowing, of  course, for the few minutes The Shadow had required to scale the  building and appear through

the dome in the midst of the sign Scorpio. 

At present, however, the important factor was to locate Doug  Lawton. According to The Shadow's agents,

Harkland had arrived home  without Klauder; similarly, Anjou had been minus Perique. Either of  those two

servitors might, therefore, have had something to do with the  forcible removal of Doug. But neither was of

the caliber to manage the  deal himself and The Shadow was quite confident that a master's hand  had not only

stolen Doug's book, but had dispatched the murderous knife  intended for The Shadow himself. 

That was why The Shadow dismissed the names of Klauder and Perique  with a peculiar laugh which carried

something ominous in its sinister  note. His agents recognized the significance. If time ran out, this  rescue

expedition might turn into a mission of vengeance. Certainly  vengeance was already in the cards; the object

of The Shadow's wrath  was the man who had murdered Jeffrey and Malloy. But the problem was  first to

identify the murderer. 

Perhaps the killer would reveal himself tonight. If so, the agents  could only hope that The Shadow would

uncover him before he added Doug  to his list of victims. 

Now the cab was riding south along the elevated highway, slackening  speed as it neared the old Darien Pier.

Along the street below, dim  buildings showed across the way, one of them marking the former  residence of

Perique. Crofton, who had covered the place earlier,  described his progress or lack of it. 


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"I moved in and out," reported Crofton, "like I was Lawton, looking  for Perique. Some fellow was snooping

around, trying to check on me. A  little guy, quickmoving, like a rat." 

Cliff Marsland asserted an amendment. 

"More like a weasel," was Cliff's opinion. "I spotted him looking  for Miles, when I came down here from the

River Garage. I trailed him a  block or two, but he slipped me." 

"Look for him at Morey's," ordered The Shadow. "If he's the  gobetween in one case, he may be in another." 

Shrevvy coasted the cab down a ramp, did some turns through narrow  streets and pulled up behind the

fishandchip house, which was  appropriately near the river. There The Shadow melted into the darkness  of

which he was a part, while Miles and Cliff entered Morey's. As soon  as they were inside, Hawkeye sidled

into the place, as if a stranger to  the other two. 

There were plenty of customers in Morey's and they were a rugged  lot. 

Longshoremen, crew members from ships, with an assortment of  hangerson. None looked tougher than

Miles and Cliff, however, which  was why The Shadow's agents played the game they did. Moving among the

battered tables, they stopped at the bar and opened negotiations with  the man behind it. 

"Anybody leave anything for us?" asked Cliff. "We're part of the  bunch that went out an hour ago." 

"Joined them outside," added Miles. "They said to meet them here  when we got back, if we got back." 

The barkeeper looked uneasy. It was logical that this pair should  have joined the crew of wallopers who had

been summoned somewhere; they  certainly appeared tough enough. Only this wasn't his business and he

didn't want to be mixed in it. Cannily, he asked: 

"You know Weasel Clegg?" 

The name hit a familiar note; it was Cliff's very description of  the snooper that he and Miles had tabbed

around Perique's. So Cliff  answered: 

"Sure we know Weasel." 

"Better talk to him then," the barkeeper said. "That will make it  simple." 

As he spoke, the barkeeper gave a betraying glance. Following it,  both Cliff and Miles saw a slouchy man at

a table near the door who  fitted the appearance of the spy they had spotted earlier. The fellow  caught the

barkeep's eye and turned away. Evidently, he didn't take  this pair for extra members of the coverup crew,

though he could guess  from their looks that they were making that claim. 

Other signals passed rapidly. The man with the weasel face flashed  a look to some tough characters who were

sitting near. Cliff and Miles  gave gestures that were understood by Hawkeye, further away. Then, as  The

Shadow's brawnies moved over toward Weasel's table, the fight was  on. 

One of the hard guys got up from the table, stumbled against Cliff  and apologized by taking a swing at his

jaw. Cliff dodged; Miles came  through with a punch and flattened the troublemaker. Then three more  were on

their feet, swinging chairs, which was bad judgment. Miles put  a second punch between the chair rungs to

reach the man beyond; Cliff  wheeled, hoisted the table and bashed the other pair at once, chairs  and all. 


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They came back, the four wallopers, only to get more. Back to back,  Cliff and Miles were taking them as fast

as they came. During the  brawl, however, Weasel made his exit. So did Hawkeye, trailing the  fellow at every

turn, finally ducking from sight when Weasel stopped  beyond a corner and took a quick look around. It was

then that Hawkeye  heard whispered orders almost at his elbow. The Shadow was taking over.  Hawkeye was

to trail along and await blinked signals. 

Weasel Clegg hadn't a chance of covering his trail from then on.  When he finally ducked down some steps

into an old basement, Weasel  threw a satisfied glance back along the street, but saw nothing except

blackness. Once the fellow moved into his lair, some of that blackness  stirred. Signal blinks gave Hawkeye

the word he wanted. He was to go  back to Morey's and contact Miles and Cliff, who by this time had

probably finished the maulers who had made the mistake of pitting a  mere twotoone odds against the pick

of The Shadow's strongarm men. 

Meanwhile, Weasel had reached a squalid little room at the back of  the rattrap that answered for a basement.

From his pocket he took an  envelope stuffed with money, the payroll intended for the coverup boys  who

had been detained at the Maritime Library. Stuffing the envelope  beneath a shoddy mattress on a

brokendown cot, Weasel turned to the  door, intending to bolt it. 

Instantly, he recoiled, a sickly expression spreading across his  pointed face. He coughed two words: 

"The Shadow!" 

The cloaked avenger had entered silently, was standing motionless  with folded arms, just inside the door, like

an unreal nightmare  conjured up by Weasel's imagination and lack of conscience. Burning  eyes focused on

the rattish man; lips hidden by an upturned  cloakcollar delivered a low, whispered laugh that crept through

the  room as though emerging from every cranny and crack. A gloved hand  gestured a slight flip; now Weasel

was staring at the mouth of a .45  automatic that added its unblinking eye to the burning gaze above. 

To Weasel, the eyes of The Shadow were colder, more steely than the  gun itself! 

Weasel didn't just cower; he sagged. He sagged to the only corner  that offered a shred of security; a corner

behind an old, potbellied  stove that hadn't been used for years, judging from the rust that  adorned it. Beside

the stove was an old broken stovepipe lying in two  sections. The pipe had run up from the stove, formed a

right angle, and  continued to a hole in the wall that had once been stuffed with rags  against the weather, but

now needed a refill. 

Weasel looked as though he wanted to jump in the stove, crawl in  the pipe, so great was his desire to elude

The Shadow. 

Again came The Shadow's laugh, its tone relentless. 

"Now it is your turn, Weasel," spoke The Shadow. "You lured others  to their doom. Speak, as they tried to

speak." 

Shakily, Weasel's hands gripped the cold surface of the stove; he  drew himself up to face The Shadow. 

"I didn't kill them!" gulped Weasel. "I didn't even know what was  coming, so help me. I only knowed where

they was to be found." 

"Jeffrey first," toned The Shadow. "Then Malloy. Who next, Weasel?" 


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"Nobody's next," bleated Weasel. "I hadn't nothing to do with it. I  only gave the tipoff." 

"That a murderer might do his work " 

"I slipped word to Perique. So he could tell de Blanco. Each time I  found out where one of them was, Jeffrey

and then Malloy, so de Blanco  could get to them." 

"That paved the way to murder," declared The Shadow. "You are as  guilty as the killer, Weasel. The proof

lies in the way you lured  Lawton to each scene of crime." 

"Only I didn't," pleaded Weasel. "I've hardly even seen Lawton." 

"But you talked to him," stated The Shadow. "Over the telephone.  You were at the paybooth in back of the

River Garage when Lawton  phoned there. You told him to be at the Darien Pier " 

It was a hunch on The Shadow's part and he played it to perfection.  Weasel, literally wilting on the stove, was

impressed with the belief  that The Shadow saw all, heard all, and knew all. 

Immediately, The Shadow followed through. 

"Another death is due," The Shadow announced. "Douglas Lawton is  now a prisoner and he is to be the

victim. You are responsible, because  you hired the coverup crew that made it possible. I intend to see that

Lawton does not die, but I can spare you a few brief moments to tell me  what you know. By so doing, you,

too, will have a right to live." 

The Shadow wasn't asking a favor of Weasel; he was putting it the  other way around. Thinking that The

Shadow did know everything, Weasel  snatched the opportunity. Gripping the stove, he reared himself up,

licked his lips and spoke frantically. 

"I'll talk, Shadow! I didn't know they'd snatched Lawton. Only  since they did, I can tell you where they're

taking him, and what  they're going to do and why!" 

Weasel's voice had gone shrill, drowning all other sounds in this  stony, windowless room. The chug that

came hard on his words was like a  curious echo. Even more curious was Weasel's reaction. 

With a grimace that didn't belong on even his ugly face, Weasel  lurched forward, upward, lost his hold on the

stove and went rolling to  the floor. Even before Weasel struck, The Shadow's automatic was in  action,

sending bullets through the halfstuffed pipe hole in the wall  behind Weasel's back. For it was through that

sixinch opening that the  stroke had come, hidden by Weasel's body. The Shadow knew it when he  saw

Weasel do the crazy roll, for sticking from the gobetween's back  was the rounded handle of a knife, another

token of a murderer's skill  at airgunnery. 

Whether The Shadow's probing shots had reached the killer, was  still a question. Reaching the killer in

person was out of the  question, for there was no direct exit from this room to the rear of  the building. But

there was something more important at this moment;  having at least warned the murderer away with those

quick shots, The  Shadow had time to gain the facts that Weasel might tell before he  died. 

Cloaking his gun, The Shadow stooped beside the gobetween and  lifted the fellow's face. Eyes glassy,

Weasel managed to gasp two  words: 

"Wrecker... Clementine " 


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That was all. Upon those two words depended the fate of Doug  Lawton! 

The Shadow knew. 

CHAPTER XVII. GONE FOREVER, CLEMENTINE

THE door of the room was opening as The Shadow turned about and  taking it to be his agents, The Shadow

started to give a swift command.  But the man who hurled himself into the room was neither Cliff nor  Miles.

He was Harkland's blocky servant, Klauder, lashing his big hands  ahead of him for a grapple with The

Shadow. 

Driving up like a living piston, The Shadow met the thrust, wheeled  Klauder around and hurled him against

the stove, nearly knocking it  over. Klauder rebounded as if both he and the stove were made of rubber  and by

then The Shadow was meeting another attacker in the person of  Perique. 

Taking Perique with a twist, The Shadow converted him into a human  bludgeon, swinging the man's lighter

frame against the heavier form of  Klauder, by dint of a terrific overarm swing. Perique not only came  flying

back; with him, he brought his short Carib club, flaying it  wildly for The Shadow's head. Clamping Perique's

arms, The Shadow was  getting him under control when Klauder was in again, with a weapon of  his own. 

Klauder had armed himself by the simple expedient of planting a big  foot on Weasel's back, gripping the

knife handle that projected from  the dead man, and tugging it loose. He was slashing with the knife, but

clumsily. Around the room they spun; tripping over Weasel's body, they  tangled forcibly with the stove,

rolled it over with them. There The  Shadow left the battle, for as Klauder and Perique came to their feet,  they

heard a parting laugh that was suddenly muffled by the slamming of  the door. 

Reaching the front street, The Shadow ran into Cliff and Miles,  arriving with Hawkeye, and pointed them to

the attack. Then, finding an  alley to the back of the building, The Shadow sped there. 

No sign of the murderer when The Shadow flicked a flashlight around  a small courtyard, which had another

passage leading out. The chance of  trapping the killer had been more important than working on Perique and

Klauder; now there was something still more important. Cutting through  to a side street, The Shadow picked

up Shrevvy's cab with flashed  signals, boarded it and drove around to the front. 

Cliff and Miles were still there, but Klauder and Perique had  broken free and fled in different directions. 

Wearied by the heavy brawl which they had won at Morey's; The  Shadow's agents were not in shape for

pursuit, though they could still  give battle. As for Hawkeye, he had popped into Weasel's place to see  what

cooked there, other than an empty stove. Now Hawkeye was out  again, hopping the cab with the other agents. 

Promptly The Shadow stated what he had learned from Weasel,  counting on his agents to interpret it from

knowledge that they had  gathered while covering the waterfront. Nor did they fail him. 

"That name Wrecker rings a bell." It was Miles Crofton who spoke.  "Somebody said the other night that

Wrecker Chaffin was in town. He  operates out of Norfolk with a seagoing tug, doing salvage work. They  said

he was looking for a crew." 

"Clementine is the name of a tugboat," put in Cliff Marsland. "She  isn't a seagoer, though, far from it. She

hauls barges around from the  East River, except when she's broken down, which is most of the time.  They get

a laugh whenever she shows up; they say there goes the  Clementine on another trial run." 


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The whole thing linked quickly in The Shadow's mind. Wrecker  Chaffin wouldn't be needing a crew in New

York, not with plenty of  hands available in Norfolk. Therefore, he could well be the skipper of  the

Clementine, the tug that was never pulling barges and therefore  might have another mission. 

Such a mission as being off the Darien Pier at times when signal  blasts were needed to lure Doug Lawton into

trouble. 

Now Doug's trouble was of a deeper sort, but even more it fitted  with the ramblings of the Clementine. The

fact that the tug, whenever  working, hauled around the tip of Manhattan from the Hudson River to  the East

River, gave her a mobility useful in crime. There was a  perfect way of transporting a crew of crooks from one

side of the  island to the other, without running afoul of the police. True, there  were such things as police

boats, but they wouldn't be watching an  innocent tug like the Clementine unless crime came right to its

docking  place. 

Until tonight, all crime had happened on the West Side, close to  the Hudson. The raid on the Maritime

Library had been an East Side job.  The getaway car had feinted westward, rounded the block and finding

itself clear, had gone east. 

Now to locate the Clementine. 

At the Hudson waterfront, The Shadow scattered his agents, sending  them into various dives where they

could glean news of what was doing  on the river. They were back, and promptly, with the latest information

on the Clementine. She was overdue on a barge job up at Weehawken on  the New Jersey side of the Hudson.

They'd been putting her in shape  over at an East River dock and if she didn't make the grade this trip,  another

tug would have to be called. A couple of tug crews were waiting  and hoping for just such a call, which was

why The Shadow's agents  brought the information back so quickly. 

Word would be coming from the old Twentythird Street Ferry as to  whether the Clementine would complete

her trip. She was supposed to  make contact there if she had trouble or was late. 

Fate was playing The Shadow's way. Granted luck, only a fair share  of it; he would not only rescue Doug, but

perhaps deliver a crushing  blow that would crack crime apart while solving the riddle of the Dead  Man's

Chest. 

Hitting the elevated highway, Shrevvy zoomed for Twentythird  Street with The Shadow and his agents as

passengers. They were in time,  which was the luck The Shadow needed, for close to their goal, they  could see

a crawling tug, with low lights and a glow from the boiler  room. She was creeping toward the pilings at the

end of the old ferry  slip which was no longer used. Almost there, the Clementine, but she  was a snail

compared to Shrevvy's cab. Down the ramp, around and up to  the ferry, Shrevvy disgorged his passengers. 

They were expected. A mob was on hand like the bunch that had  covered outside the Maritime Library. Paid

sluggers, ordered to get  tough with anybody who wasn't wanted. They were here for trouble and  they got it.

Fully rested from their earlier brawl, Cliff Marsland and  Miles Crofton pitched right into them and were

promptly amplified by  Chance LeBrue, who had been ordered to make contact here. Harry Vincent  and Clyde

Burke were due later as reserves, so Hawkeye scurried off to  meet and guide them. 

All this was for The Shadow's benefit. Filtering right out of the  picture, he was through the ferry gate and

doing an amazing hedgehop  along the big pilings that flanked the old slip. As long as his agents  kept the

fight strictly on shore, The Shadow would be free to operate,  since the shore crew would think it was keeping

trouble away from the  Clementine. 


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Now the tug was practically under the massive end of the slip,  where huge pilings seemed to wallow in the

water. Atop those pilings  hovered a phantom shape, The Shadow, like a lone bird on watch for  prey. A

lantern swung from the ferry dock, deep in the slip and a voice  hailed: 

"Ahoy, Clementine!" 

"Ahoy," came the answer from the low bridge of the tug. "All's well  and on our way." 

"You've got thirty minutes time limit to reach that barge wharf.  Otherwise, the tug Hercules will take over." 

"We'll make it in twenty, or we'll blow this kettle." 

"On your way, then." 

The swash of the Clementine was mingling with the eddies about the  pilings. The stern of the tug was

swinging as her engine chugged. Bells  clanged, a whistle squealed; they came like signals for The Shadow's

takeoff. It was a long leap, with the Clementine a bobbing, squirming  target below. 

Then The Shadow was in midair, his cloak spreading like a  parachute, with black water widening between

the pilings and the stern  of the tug, as though to swallow the jetgarbed figure that was taking  this longshot

plunge. 

The Clementine seemed to gather herself up and back as her  propeller churned a white splotch in the murky

water. Then The Shadow  landed, not in the foam, but over the rail that rose to meet him.  Catching his

footing, he reeled ahead, planked himself hard against the  back of the engine house and merged with the dull

grime. He waited  there briefly while the Clementine got under way; watched while crew  members went past.

Then the Clementine was aiming out to midstream with  its unseen passenger. 

First of The Shadow's jobs was to size the crew, which he did.  There were five men on the craft and The

Shadow recognized three of  them. They were the batch that he had slugged down on the balcony of  the

Maritime Library. 

Next, The Shadow was peering up into the bridge house, at the face  of Wrecker Chaffin himself. On shore,

Wrecker rated as a solid  character, his weatherbeaten face the sort that never betrayed a mood.  Probably the

same applied whenever he was bound upon a legitimate  cruise. But now his face, with a twoday crop of

beard, was contorted  in a bloated leer, as ugly as the glint from his narrowed eyes. The old  cap that extended

its visor above his face, caught the light from  beside the wheel and reflected a livid scar that crossed the

man's  right cheek. That scar was jagged, like his leer. 

Wrecker snorted as he pulled the whistle cord. He wasn't sending  signals ashore tonight. He was drawing

attention to the Clementine. The  reason became plain when Wrecker clanged four bells for full speed  ahead.

He wanted other shipping to witness the Clementine going into a  spurt that nobody would believe the old tug

capable of. The Shadow  could feel the deck grind and strain beneath him. Ahead were lights of  moored

vessels. Wrecker was putting on a show for them, but why? 

Whatever the reason, it was time now to find Doug Lawton. The  Shadow went below, which on the

Clementine meant only one place, the  engine room. There, below the water level, he stepped aside while two

of the crew finished stoking the engine. As they turned, The Shadow  merged with the blackness of the

coalbin. The two men were putting on  life belts, adding baggy coats over them. The Shadow watched them

go up  to the deck. 


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A low moan came from an opposite corner. There, The Shadow saw Doug  Lawton. Doug was rubbing his

head in dazed fashion. He looked beaten up  or drugged; perhaps both. Doug mumbled as he heard the tug's

whistle  squeal. 

"Darien Pier... two blocks south, two blocks east, two blocks " 

The Shadow was helping Doug to his feet, guiding him toward the  hatchway. The Clementine was straining

until every inch of her planking  seemed to jar. Up the ladder, slowly, steadily, and then  

A snarl. 

The Shadow and Doug Lawton were face to face with Wrecker Chaffin.  The scarred skipper looked like a

Frankenstein creation, for he had put  on a life belt too, covering it with an oversized jacket. With his  snarl,

Wrecker yanked a revolver; up behind him popped two other  bulging men, who pulled guns, too. 

One hand steadying Doug, The Shadow had already drawn a .45 with  the other. He jabbed quick shots,

purposely wide by inches, for he  didn't want to cripple any of this crew, so they could lie around  trying to

shoot back. He wanted to scatter them, to send them  overboard, since they were already equipped for such

action. Then The  Shadow could take over the Clementine. 

Wrecker realized it and howled as he dodged for cover. He howled  for a mass attack and it came. The

Shadow had emptied one gun and was  shifting as he whipped out another. That was when the Clementine

yawed. 

Wrecker had got to the wheel and given it a slashing turn. 

Doug lost his balance and would have pitched headlong into the  engine room if The Shadow hadn't gone with

him. The two shots that The  Shadow delivered were wide; but landing safely with Doug, The Shadow  was up

on his feet, starting for the ladder, ready to chop all heads  that came in sight. 

None came. Instead, the crew above clamped a hatch shut and threw  its bolt. Then from the sides of the

engine room came a gushing roar.  Wrecker had opened a series of petcocks. He was scuttling the

Clementine! 

Only it wouldn't look like a scuttle job, not the way the tug was  racing. Once the water reached the firebox,

the whole engine room  would become a mass of scalding steam with an explosion to follow. It  was arranged

for a quick job, too, for the water was pouring in from  both sides like a creek flooded by a cloudburst. There

was no use  trying to time the sequel; the only thing was to escape it. 

Hauling Doug with him, The Shadow practically leaped up the ladder  to the hatch. He pumped his bullets at

the spot where he was sure the  bolt must be. Wood splintered, but the hitch did not yield. There was a  sizzle

below; the water was reaching the fire. Then, with the butt end  of his gun, The Shadow smashed hard into the

splintered wood. Metal met  metal; the gun had cracked the bolt. Prodding Doug into life, The  Shadow got

action from him. Shoulder to shoulder, they hit the hatch  once, twice, then lurched through to hit the deck. 

Not a sign of Wrecker nor his crew. They'd jumped minutes ago. Nor  did The Shadow tarry. Hauling Doug

with him, he lunged to the rail, hit  it hip high and somersaulted over, taking the rescued man with him. It  was

difficult to tell, though, whether they left the Clementine or it  left them. 

The whole interior of the tug lifted itself high in the air,  splitting the sides outward as if they had been

cardboard. Flying  chunks of beams and planking scaled over the heads of The Shadow and  Doug Lawton,


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splashing the water beyond them. All that was left of the  Clementine was a great cloud of steam and those

bits of floating  timber. 

Dragging Doug along, The Shadow swam to a small clump of debris,  buoyed Doug on the floating wood and

worked the improvised raft toward  the Manhattan shore. For a moment there had been one great burst of

flame, when the tug exploded. Now the fireworks were over and the river  was black again. Like everything

else, Wrecker and his crew had  vanished, but The Shadow was sure they had found a safe spot. That was

something they would have planned beforehand. 

Yes, the fireworks were over, but only for tonight. The time would  come when The Shadow would put on a

special brand of his own. It  wouldn't be healthy for Wrecker and Company to be around when that  happened,

but The Shadow intended to make sure they would be there. 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW TAKES A TRAIL

THEY were still taking inventory at the Maritime Library when  Lamont Cranston came back there to meet

the police commissioner. With  Weston was Stephen Belville, who had come in from his yacht, the  Pandora,

to stay over night at the Cobalt Club. 

Along with Cardona and Weston, Belville had been helping Pitcairn  check the various exhibits and they were

approximately halfway through  the ship models. Now, however, they had taken time out, with Weston

wondering if the job would prove worthwhile. 

"This never would have happened here," Weston was telling Cardona,  "if you'd handled things right at the

Mortimer Building. What has  Harkland had to say about it?" 

"He wasn't home a couple of times when I phoned him," replied  Cardona. "Finally, I talked to him and he

practically said, 'So what?'  He said he'd told us that the Havana Exposition bunch was phony and had  jumped

their rent. He guessed some of them had been around trying to  pick up some stuff they left there." 

Belville put a question of Cardona: 

"Any lead on Anjou de Blanco?" 

"The guy has skipped," returned Cardona, ruefully. "We'd located  his apartment and apparently he was in

there some time this evening,  packing up. He may have been around that office tonight, but there's no  way of

proving it." 

Belville walked out of the office, beckoning Cardona to follow. On  a bench among some of the exhibit cases,

Belville had a big suitcase  that he had brought into town with him. He opened it, produced a file  of papers. 

"All I know about de Blanco," said Belville. "It's not much, but it  may help some." 

"Thanks," said Cardona. As they walked back, he drew out a report  sheet. "Here's what we know about

Harkland, in condensed form. It would  take a file cabinet to cover him, and even then it would stack up one

hundred percent legitimate. Still, I wonder " Joe handed the report to  Cranston, who was standing by. "See

what you think of it, Mr. Cranston.  Anybody who gets tied up in so many businesses might have a hidden

one." 

Cranston read the report. Apparently, Harkland believed in putting  enough irons in the fire to smother it. He


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wasn't a man who started new  enterprises; he preferred to take over old ones. In fact, for a long  time, he had

auctioned off businesses, keeping a few plums for himself. 

Harkland at one time had been a shipowner, buying out small,  practically defunct lines in an effort to create

a big one. He hadn't  gone that far, but in selling most of his small companies, he had  broken about even. He

still owned one, the Indies Trading Packet Line,  but it existed in name only. Another of his abandoned

enterprises was  the Scotian Ship Yard, which hadn't turned out a vessel in fifteen  years. 

Those, however, were freaks of Harkland's past. Currently, he was  quite uptodate, having bought over an

independent movie studio that  operated under the name of Black Knight Productions. According to the  report,

Harkland was scheduled to take a trip to the Pacific Coast, to  arrange the first picture for the refinanced

organization. 

"We've checked on Black Knight," said Weston, looking over  Cranston's shoulder. "It sounds like a stock

promotion deal. But  Harkland has been in such things before. You can't tell whether he has  a lot of money or

whether he's short." 

"Perhaps I can," returned Cranston. "I'll phone Harkland and ask  him." 

Phoning Harkland, Cranston received a reply. He concentrated on the  subject of Black Knight Productions,

saying he was interested in buying  into it. Hanging up, Cranston smiled. 

"Harkland is coming right down," Cranston told the others. "Perhaps  the way to learn things from him is to

talk about business rather than  crime." 

Belville nodded as though thinking deeply on the subject; then he  announced: 

"I'll take my bag and check it at the club, commissioner, so I can  be back when Harkland arrives. See you

later." 

Cranston began killing time by checking over some of the exhibits.  This took him to the northeast corner of

the ground floor, a spot where  he was now convinced that Doug might have been intercepted after the

upstairs fight. This portion of the exhibit room was confined  exclusively to models of naval vessels beginning

with the era of  ironclads. Checking the models, from the original Monitor, Cranston  noted that every ship

was equipped with armament in miniature. Not a  thing was missing or out of place. 

Going out to the center of the room, Cranston found Pitcairn and  asked him about other naval models. 

"I'll show you some fine wooden ships," offered Pitcairn. "Over in  the southeast corner. I've been listing

them." 

They went to the corner and Pitcairn picked up some loose papers  that he had left on the display case. The

librarian then scratched his  baldish head. 

"That's odd," he said. "I was sure I had one sheet more. Let me  see, I was checking over here " 

Pitcairn stopped, his finger pointing first to one display case,  then another. He shook his head. 

"That's not right," Pitcairn decided. "Those two caravels should  not be in separate cases. They belong

together." 


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"I take it," decided Cranston, "that one caravel was used to  replace a model that someone removed from

another case." 

Pitcairn nodded. 

"Most distressing," he declared. "I can't begin to remember what  model it is. My mind runs entirely to

books." 

"You have no master list?" 

"None. These models came from different sources. We arranged them  in types, that was all." 

While Pitcairn searched his memory, Cranston moved along beneath  the gallery and swiftly. Reaching the

wall at the very center, he  placed his ear there and listened. He caught a faint clang that could  have been the

dull clash of bronze, carrying down from directly above.  Returning, Cranston walked past Pitcairn and out of

the library. 

It was time to investigate that house next door. Nor did Cranston  revert to The Shadow's guise. He was

anxious to draw attention, at  least from the person he sought. It was a long walk around to the back  street;

there, with pick and flashlight, Cranston opened the back door  of the empty house. Reaching the second floor,

he found a locked room,  opened it and discovered a closet that terminated in a hinged wall.  Swinging the wall

inward, Cranston found its surface covered with  imitation brick. Beyond was a frosted window which he

raised and  discovered the bronze grillwork that marked the eastern wall of the  library. 

On his side of the grill, Cranston discovered hidden catches,  ingeniously set in the frame. Springing them, he

opened the grill and  entered the library balcony. The grill locked from the outside when  Cranston closed it.

The inner clamps were solidly locked, because it  was the entire frame that swung. 

This answered the question of the stolen book, the mysterious  raiders and Doug's disappearance. It now

explained the theft of a ship  model that belonged to the days of wooden ships, so far as how it had  been done. 

But why? 

There The Shadow's analytical mind came to the fore. Why had  someone fixed a way to rob the Maritime

Library and yet waited until  this date? The answer was obvious: The perpetrator had been sure that  the library

contained some volume of great importance, but he did not  know what it was until Doug Lawton uncovered

the record of the Nancy  Lee. 

The next question was why had that same perpetrator failed to steal  the missing ship model at the time he had

taken the book. Again an  answer: Because only by reading the book had he discovered that the  ship model

was of equal importance. 

From this, The Shadow was divining certain peculiar factors in the  respective murders of Jeffrey and Malloy;

things that marked a  distinctive difference in the men as well as their cases. Those points  might prove

important later; at present there was other business. 

Oswald Harkland was arriving by the front door, proclaiming his  advent with the customary taptap of his

cane, which was a new variety,  a roughhewn stick with the look of a shillelagh. Pretence on  Harkland's part,

that hobbly gait, but such sham did not prove a man to  be a murderer. 

Neither was a lurking man necessarily a killer. 


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As he met Harkland at the door, Cranston saw a sneaking figure  across the street; knew from the man's swift

shifts that Anjou de  Bianco was watching developments here. A cab pulled up and Anjou sidled  from its

glare. Belville alighted from the cab and when it pulled away,  Anjou was gone. 

It wasn't Shrevvy's cab that had brought Belville back from the  Cobalt Club. Shrevvy was busy servicing The

Shadow's agents after  having taken Doug Lawton somewhere for a rest. 

Harkland warmed immediately to the subject of Black Knight  Productions, promising Cranston big profits if

he bought into the movie  company. The reason Harkland was offering stock was because he planned  a really

colossal picture, which needed more financing than he could  afford. 

"I'll make my share," clucked Harkland, happily, "so why should I  deny the same chance to others?" 

To Weston's amazement, Cranston agreed to buy a substantial block  of Black Knight stock, whereupon

Harkland declared that he could go to  the coast immediately, which seemed to please him. It wasn't until  after

Harkland left that Belville asked incredulously: 

"Why did you take that offer, Cranston?" 

"Because the picture will make money," assured Cranston. He turned  to Weston, who would have put the

question if Belville hadn't. "We  might just call it the Harkland story." 

"Or the de Blanco story," put in Belville. "I still think he's  deeper in this thing than Harkland." 

That was all for the evening, where the Maritime Library was  concerned. Pitcairn had about decided that he

was wrong regarding a  missing model; maybe his memory was at fault throughout. So the  librarian made no

more mention of the subject. 

Belville, though, had touched a neat point when he said that there  might be something in the de Blanco Story. 

At her apartment, June Getty was receiving a phone call from Anjou  de Blanco. 

"From now on, I'm on my own," Anjou told her. "Why do I have to  deal with Belville? Or why do I need you

or Lawton? I'm working with  Perique, and what we find, we'll keep. That's anybody's gold, if we can  uncover

it." 

A tapping at the door caused June to end the phone call. She heard  a whispered tone that she recognized;

opening the door, she was  grateful to find The Shadow there. Eagerly, the girl picked up some  notes that she

had typed, thrust them into The Shadow's hands. 

"Here are some names in a list Doug Lawton gave me," the girl said.  "They may prove useful to you. But

where is Doug?" 

"You'll hear from him within a few days," The Shadow promised. "Be  patient until then and afterward.

Meanwhile, here is a fair exchange  for the list you have just given me." 

What The Shadow gave June was a photostat of the allimportant book  that had been stolen from the

Maritime Library. Harry Vincent hadn't  missed his opportunity during his brief venture into Doug's nook at

the  Maritime Library. He had snapped a picture of the page that bore the  Rigby record. The object that Harry

had pocketed when Doug discovered  him was a camera. 


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Later, in his sanctum, The Shadow was studying his own photostatic  copy of the Rigby record. To him, its

meanings were very clear. It told  him, among other things, why a ship model had been stolen from the

Maritime Library and he could name the ship that the model represented. 

There was something else that furnished another clue: The list that  June had typed from data furnished by

Doug. Reading one name on the  list and some facts about the man, The Shadow gave a whispered laugh

which proved that his campaign was ready. Calling Burbank, The Shadow  gave detailed instructions for his

agents to follow. 

Toward dawn, Lamont Cranston arrived at LaGuardia Field, to board a  northbound plane. He picked up a

morning newspaper, read a headline  which told of a tugboat explosion. The tug was the Clementine, the  blast

was caused by overstraining the engine, which probably had a  faulty safety valve, considering the speed the

Clementine had been  making. 

There had been no survivors. That was a line Lamont Cranston liked.  It meant that a certain master hand of

crime would not be anticipating  further trouble from The Shadow. 

CHAPTER XIX. A QUESTION OF CHESTS

LATE the next afternoon, June Getty felt a break in the strain of  the past few days. In response to an

invitation from Stephen Belville,  she went on board his yacht, the Pandora, and there was introduced to

Police Commissioner Weston and Inspector Cardona. 

The police had located June through an address book found at  Anjou's apartment. They had let Belville phone

June to assure her she  would not be under crossexamination. They wanted June's report on  Anjou, that was

all, so the girl supplied it, but was unable to furnish  any new details, except Anjou's declaration that from

now on, he was on  his own. 

Belville's yacht was moored in the Hudson, above the George  Washington Bridge and the contrast of the

Palisades with their natural  scenic beauty and the city with its towering buildings, was a pleasant  sight,

indeed. In fact, June felt so lighthearted that Belville  invited her to join him on a cruise he was taking up

Long Island Sound. 

June was forced to decline the invitation, because of other  engagements. Though she didn't say so, by "other"

she meant just one.  She was due to meet Doug Lawton that evening. 

It was eight o'clock when Doug arrived at June's apartment. He was  rather patched and carried one arm in a

sling, but he looked very well  for a man who had been through a tugboat explosion from which there  were

presumably no survivors. Vaguely, Doug detailed the experience to  June. 

"It was like a volcano explosion," declared Doug. "Like  well,  like Vesuvius at its worst. Why do I keep

thinking of that name  Vesuvius? It seems I had it in mind, but something must have knocked it  out." 

"Just relax," suggested June. "You're going to have plenty of other  things to figure out." 

"The Shadow pulled me out of it," added Doug. "When I woke up, I  was under the care of one of the best

physicians in town. His name is  Dr. Rupert Sayre; he has a Park Avenue office. He insisted that I get a  full

twentyfour hours of rest." 

"Perhaps he knows The Shadow, too," said June, with a smile. "Don't  worry, Doug. Your business was being


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handled. Here is a sample." 

June handed Doug the photostat of the Rigby page and his eyes went  wide at recognition. 

"Say!" exclaimed Doug. "There was a fellow named Vincent " 

"Let's get right to the record," interrupted June. "I've been  trying to figure it out all day and I've gotten

somewhere, thanks to  this." 

June produced a secondhand book that bore the title "Old Sea  Chanties" and then explained why she had

bought it. 

"Read the Rigby record, Doug," said June, "and note the theme  running through it. Fifteen men  yoho 

bottle of rum. Just forget  all except that part. Does it hit a familiar note?" 

"It seems to." 

"Of course," nodded June. "It was the old chanty that was mentioned  in Stevenson's 'Treasure Island.' 'Fifteen

men on the Dead Man's Chest,  yohoho and a bottle of rum.' Remember?" 

"Dead Man's Chest!" exclaimed Doug. "That's what Rigby tried to  tell Malloy and only half a century later,

Malloy was trying to tell  me!" 

"Exactly." 

"Malloy said I'd understand it better," recalled Doug, "if he kept  the secret while he was alive. Jeffrey

mentioned that fact, too. I see  it now. Malloy had to be a dead man " 

"That was pretty obvious," broke in June. "But since I was thinking  of chanties, Doug, I looked through other

songs." She thumbed through  the pages of the song book. "Here's one, read it." 

Doug read: 

'Twas Friday night, when we set sail 

And we were not far from land, 

When the captain spied a lovely mermaid 

With a comb and a glass in her hand. 

"The mermaids!" exclaimed Doug. "Or one of them at least!" He  glanced at the Rigby stat and pointed out a

phrase. "First one then  t'other." Then, shaking his head, Doug said, "No, that applies to  rocks, not to

mermaids. It's all pretty deep, June. Apparently, though,  Rigby was drunk and the captain put him in the brig;

not once, but  twice. He talks here about seeing the boxers spar, which means he must  have watched a fight,

probably while on shore." 

Ruefully, Doug shook his head as though it ached, then the very  action awoke an inspiration. 

"We've missed the whole point, June!" Doug fairly shouted. "We're  thinking of the wrong Dead Man's

Chest!" 


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It was June's turn to be puzzled. 

"Don't you see?" continued Doug. "It was Rigby who talked about  mermaids and hinted at the chest, not

Malloy. Probably Malloy had those  mermaids tattooed on his chest later, just as evidence. We've got to  find

the chest that Rigby meant!" 

Things snapped home to June. 

"A chest belonging to the man who reminded Malloy of Jonathan  Pound," said the girl. "Wait, let's look in

the index of the song  book." 

Looking through, June gave another excited exclamation. She had  found the listing "Jonathan Pound" and

could hardly wait to reach the  right page. 

"Why, it isn't a song," she declared. "It comes under the heading  of 'Curious Epitaphs.' Look, Doug." 

Doug looked and read: 

Here lies the body of Jonathan Pound 

Who was lost at sea and never was found. 

"Give me that list!" exclaimed Doug. "The one you typed from my  greatuncle's papers. It has a couple of

dozen names of shippers, sea  captains and whatnot, but I know the very one we need." 

Though Doug didn't know it, he was picking out the very name that  The Shadow had spotted the night before.

June read her own typing, slow  carefully: 

"Hamilton Tuft. Called Commodore Tuft because of his interest in  longboat racing. Used to sell whale oil to

Artemus Lawton. Lived in  Eastport, Maine, until his unfortunate death in the summer of '99 while  on a

whaling expedition, when his ship was sunk by an iceberg; no  survivors." 

"No survivors," commented Doug, grimly. "I was in the same boat  last night, but in my case, it was only a

rumor. But let's stick with  Commodore Tuft. You get it now, don't you, June?" 

"Commodore Tuft," repeated June. "Jonathan Pound. They don't rhyme  " 

"No reason why they should," inserted Doug. "Commodore Tuft was  lost at sea and never was found, which

makes his case resemble that of  the fabled Jonathan Pound." 

"You may be right, Doug " 

"I am right!" Doug was on his feet; his ideas were snapping fast.  "Here's the proof!" Doug wheeled, gestured

to the wall. "Look, I'm  facing south, like Malloy was when he snapped the fingers of his left  hand twice, like

this." 

Doug gave the snaps and inquired, "Get it, Getty?" 

June Getty didn't get it. 


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"The first snap means east," interpreted Doug, "because that's the  direction in which my left hands points.

The second snap means port,  which is the left side of the ship. Eastport. That's where Commodore  Tuft

lived." 

June was more than convinced. She was thrilled to the point of  admiration. Then, gesturing to the Rigby

record, she asked: 

"How about cracking the rest of it?" 

"We've got enough," asserted Doug. "We're leaving by plane for  Eastport tonight. We've got to find a chest

that belonged to old  Commodore Tuft. That's where we'll find our fortune, if it isn't too  late. We'll take along

the Rigby record and that book of chanties, too,  in case we need to dig for other clues." 

June liked the idea. They phoned the airport, learned that a plane  left at dawn with connections to Eastport.

Then, in troubled tone, June  asked, "What about Anjou?" 

"He's on his own," reminded Doug. "That settles that." 

"I know," nodded June. "But can't he make trouble for us?" 

"I wouldn't know how he could." 

"Of course, Belville might help us," said June. "He might still be  interested in financing our quest." 

"Certainly he would," rejoined Doug, "considering that now we've  cracked the thing on our own. If we need

Belville, we'll offer him a  proposition. That's fair enough. It was the original idea, wasn't it?" 

"Yes, it was, the way Anjou proposed it. But since Anjou is openly  competing with us, that leaves us on our

own. There's only one other  reason though " 

"Oswald Harkland?" 

"Yes." June gave a shudder. "It frightens me, the way he came into  everything, so suddenly." 

"Forget Harkland," declared Doug. "We're on our own and we have the  facts. Our only worry is tracking

down that chest belonging to  Commodore Tuft. The Dead Man's Chest." 

Again, June shuddered, perhaps at the term Doug used so lightly:  "Dead Man's Chest." It occurred to her, too,

that some other factor in  this game, a murderer whose very name they had unquestionably  mentioned, might

have all their information and more. But June didn't  express that thought to Doug. 

June Getty was thinking of The Shadow, realizing that he, too, had  access to all the information from which

Doug Lawton had traced the  name of Commodore Tuft. Perhaps The Shadow had found the answer, too. 

All June could hope was that the coming events would cast their  shadow before. 

By that, June Getty meant The Shadow. 


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CHAPTER XX. IRON HEAD

THREE days had passed since the fast moving events in New York,  which had reached their peak with the

grand explosion of the tugboat  Clementine. 

To June Getty, they had been different days; the last two,  particularly pleasant, for she had been living in a

different world.  That world consisted mostly of Eastport, Maine, the most northeasterly  harbor in the United

States. 

Now, late in the afternoon, June was sitting in a coupe which she  and Doug Lawton had hired in Bangor. She

was looking over a sheaf of  notes which puzzled her, while she waited for Doug. Doug was around the  corner

at the town hall, checking some old records, which both he and  June hoped would give them the final trail to

old Commodore Tuft. 

June's reverie was interrupted by the opening of the car door. Doug  climbed in, gave June a grin and said,

"Iron Head." 

June was still puzzling over that one as Doug started the car and  turned it into a street that would take them

out of town. 

"It's the name of that big hill down the coast," stated Doug. "It  has another name now, but they used to call it

Iron Head, because of  the way it juts out into the bay. It's right next to Lobsterman's  Cove." 

June nodded. She remembered Doug mentioning Iron Head before, but  it hadn't seemed important at the time.

For days, Doug had been  gathering all sorts of local data, most of which seemed quite unrelated  to

Commodore Tuft. Now, apparently, Doug's research was producing  dividends. 

"Tuft used to live on Iron Head," exclaimed Doug, "and the old  house is still there. Only the property wasn't

in his name. I had to  track down his relations for a couple of generations back in order to  get this

information." 

"Does anybody live there now?" asked June. 

"No," Doug replied. "The house has been empty for several years.  I'll tell you how I spotted it. The

Commodore used to go in for  longboat racing. Well, Lobsterman's Cove is where they held the tests.  I began

wondering who lived on Iron Head, so finally I found out." 

Nodding, June gazed from the window on her side of the car. She  could see the expanse of Passmaquoddy

Bay, with the mouth of the St.  Croix River, though which was which, she wasn't quite sure. The tide  was low

and the mud flats spread along the shore. Apparently Doug was  taking the wrong direction to reach Iron

Head. June said so. 

"You always start in the wrong direction hereabouts," laughed Doug.  "It's a question of finding the right back

roads and generally they cut  off from odd places. We'll have to go past Quoddy Village and then  swing

around." 

They went past Quoddy Village, a city in itself. Built as part of a  gigantic project to harness the mighty tides

that pour in from the  great Bay of Fundy, the village was now basking in temporary abeyance,  almost

deserted, yet not a ghost town, for proponents of the Quoddy  Project were still working to revive the plan.

Doug commented on the  fact as he veered toward a side road. 


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"Those Fundy tides are tremendous," declared Doug. "As high as  sixty or seventy feet, I've heard.

Passmaquoddy Bay is an arm of the  Bay of Fundy and this would be the ideal place to turn tides into  power." 

Looking back, June saw the bay again and noticed a car pulling out  from the village. Probably there were

caretakers around the place, she  decided, but a minute later, June was curious enough to look back  again. She

noted that the car, an old roadster, was swinging onto this  same road. For a moment, June had qualms; then,

curbing them, she asked  Doug: 

"Where does this road lead, that is, except to Iron Head?" 

"It goes to an old hotel called the Bayview Inn," replied Doug.  "It's on this side of Iron Head. You can check

in there. I'll start  back to Eastport and swing around to meet you on the road that leads  over to the Head. We'll

wait until dusk, which won't be long." 

From what Doug said, June decided that the car from Quoddy would  have to show itself by the time they

reached Bayview Inn, so she didn't  bother to mention it. Nevertheless, as the coupe reeled off the miles  along

a winding dirt road, June kept noting the landscape. This looked  like old forest land which had been either

timbered or burnt out and  was now covered by a second growth, much of which was scrubby.  Evergreens

predominated and the dusk was already gathering in the  gullies and intervales which forced the road to make

so many twists. 

There were a few farmhouses, individually isolated, and it might be  that the other car intended to turn off at

one of those. At least, June  caught no further sight of it during the trip, but that wasn't too  surprising because

the wooded slopes cut off the view of the road in  back. 

They reached a fork that Doug indicated as the road leading around  the hotel and up to Iron Head. Taking the

other half, Doug skirted the  car along the bay, where the road now afforded a broad view of the  water with

Iron Head rearing further on, a wooded hill with a craggy,  brownstreaked mass of rock projecting from the

trees that covered the  summit. 

Like so many of the hills in this area, Iron Head became imposing  when viewed from a dip in the road. Such

a dip came when Doug took the  final swerve toward the hotel, which promptly came in sight from among  the

trees, an oversized firetrap consisting mostly of verandas. Doug  pulled the car beneath a portico, alighted

with June and carried her  bag into a big oldfashioned lobby where a drowsy clerk was seated  behind the

desk. 

As June registered, the clerk awoke. 

"Nice to see young folks stopping at Bayview Inn," he said. "Guess  that fellow was right"  he gestured to a

sign over his shoulder   "when he said the business would be coming if we made the place  uptodate." 

The placard that the clerk indicated was an advertisement for  seaplane flights, at prices from five dollars and

upward. It stated  that the plane could be hired at the hotel wharf. 

"I'll probably take a plane ride," informed June, playing along  with the clerk's notion. "But it's rather late

tonight. What time do  you serve dinner?" 

"Supper's most over now," replied the clerk. "The last gong rang at  five thirty." 

"I'll take breakfast tomorrow," decided June. She turned to Doug  and added, "I may want to go into Eastport

in the morning, so be sure  and stop out here for me." 


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Doug nodded, but before he turned away, a parade of guests came  from the dining room. June shuddered at

sight of one man; drew back  toward the desk. As Doug threw a quizzical glance, June undertoned,  breathless: 

"That can't be Oswald Harkland!" 

The man in question was stooped like Harkland, leaning heavily on a  cane. But when he turned his face in

passing, June saw that he wore a  pleasant, benign expression; smooth in contrast to Harkland's wrinkled

countenance. June remembered Harkland's eyes as shrewd, his whole look  canny; whereas, this man was

decidedly amiable. 

"That's Mr. Twambley," stated the clerk. "Isaac Twambley from  Boston. Reckon you know him?" 

"I reckon we don't," replied Doug. "Don't worry about Miss Getty's  bag. I'll carry it upstairs." 

That was Doug's opportunity to question June regarding the shudder  he had seen her give. 

"Why are you so afraid of Harkland?" asked Doug. "He wouldn't try  to harm us." 

"Not unless he's the man who murdered Jeffrey and Malloy," returned  June. "He could be, you know, and

we're getting pretty much in their  category, now that we're tracking down the actual Dead Man's Chest.

Besides, I was sure a car was following us here this afternoon." 

"I didn't see one," said Doug, leaving the bag outside of June's  room. "But if there was one and a murderer

was in it, my money would be  on Anjou de Blanco. Only he probably hasn't an idea that we came Down  East

any more than Harkland. Besides, Harkland was going to the  coast." 

"Maybe that meant the East coast, not the West." 

"And maybe not. Anyway, I'll take de Blanco. But whatever the case,  if any, we're playing it safe. Duck out

the back way to the other road  and watch for the blink of my lights." 

Doug went downstairs and out the front door alone. As soon as his  car drove away, June found a back stairs

and made her way to a rustic  path outside the hotel. The dusk was deepening and all was now quiet  around

Bayview Inn, except for the chirping of the crickets and the  occasional kerplunk of a frog. 

Inside all was quiet, too, except for the sound of old Twambley's  cane, rapping its way upstairs. The kindly

faced old gentleman was  carrying a large oblong package that he had just received by express. 

Twambley went clear up to the third floor; there he entered a  corner room that formed a sort of turret. Putting

down the package,  Twambley turned to a map that was hanging on the wall, a large scale  map of this portion

of the coast. There, Twambley moved various colored  pins, putting two of them in the close vicinity of Iron

Head. 

There were telegrams on Twambley's table; evidently they had  something to do with the placing of certain

pins. Next, Twambley opened  a letter attached to the package, read its contents and chuckled. The  letter bore

the scrawly signature of A. B. Pitcairn and the letterhead  carried the title of the Maritime Library, New

York. 

About to open the package, Twambley halted. He was looking from the  window, gaining a direct view of Iron

Head, now outlined black against  the afterglow that flooded the sky. He could see the sloping ridge that

formed a saddleback from the promontory to the mainland. Along that  ridge, Twambley caught the glint of


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a car's headlights that dipped  beyond, toward a road leading to Lobsterman's Cove on the other side of  the

Head. Then the same lights appeared again, making a sharp slant  upward. 

The car wasn't going to the cove. It was taking the winding road  that led up to the only house on Iron Head. 

Reaching to the map, Twambley set the two pins squarely upon Iron  Head. Still watching from the window,

he saw the lights of another car  go poking toward the saddleback. Guessing its destination, Twambley

planted two other pins on the Head. 

From a large suitcase, old Twambley took what appeared to be an  evening cape. He hurried from the room

and downstairs at a rapid rate  which he slackened only when he reached the lobby. Nodding to the clerk  as he

went by, Twambley hobbled out front, past a summerhouse filled  with elderly guests and off toward a lily

pond. Out of sight, old  Twambley became amazingly spry. He ploughed through bog and thicket,  hopped a

broad ditch and finally walked the whole length of a fallen  tree that formed a narrow bridge over a deep

gully. 

Finding a path on the other side, Twambley skirted a portion of the  Head and reached a lower ledge from

which he gained a view of an old  house in the distance, perched near the front side of the hill. There,

Twambley could see new glimmers of light; not from a car, but the  twinkles of a flashlight in the windows of

the house itself. 

Now car lights appeared, swinging up toward the house. Obviously,  this was the second car; the occupants of

the first were already in the  house, investigating it. 

A low laugh came from Twambley's dried lips; lips which gained  their appearance from a special makeup.

The cape fluttered in the dark  and took the shape of a black cloak. 

Isaac Twambley was The Shadow! 

CHAPTER XXI. LAST OF THE LONGBOATS

IT was a barny old house, this former home of Commodore Tuft.  Searching it was a long but comparatively

easy process for Doug and  June as they covered the rooms with their flashlights. On the first  floor, they

developed a system; each took an individual route, then  found the other by the latter's flashlight. 

When they reached the third floor, they had rummaged the house  quite thoroughly, but to no avail. The whole

place, closets as well as  rooms, had proven quite barren. 

"Down to the cellar," decided Doug. "That's where we'll find the  treasure chest, if there is one." 

"Which probably there isn't," rejoined June, ruefully. Then,  blinking the flashlight upward. "This house ought

to have an attic,  though." 

"I doubt it," said Doug. "It's built with a French roof. Flat on  top." 

"I'm not so sure," objected June. "When I first glimpsed it through  the trees, I was sure it had some upper

projection, like a tower." 

Doug threw his light straight up in the center of the third floor  where there was a little hallway. All the light

showed was ceiling and  Doug was about to swing it away when June halted him. 


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"Look, Doug, that crack, over toward the left!" 

There was a crack in the ceiling, only a slight one, but  significant, for the plaster itself appeared to be

unusually thick.  Finding an old curtain rod that was standing in a closet, Doug began to  thump the ceiling

while June pointed the light. The result was even  more than they anticipated. 

The crack not only widened, it lengthened, then made a turn at  right angles, ran a short space, turned into

another crack that  paralleled the first. Suddenly the whole ceiling gave way and Doug  swung to fling June

back. Plaster dropped, bringing woodwork with it,  but instead of coming with a crash, it made a peculiar

swing that  missed the astonished witnesses. 

Solid wood thumped the floor and June's flashlight was glaring  squarely against a hinged stairladder that

had dropped from the  ceiling leaving a gaping hole above! 

This was the route to the squatty tower that June had noticed from  the distance. The hinged ladder was built

in the woodwork of the third  floor ceiling and ordinarily would have escaped a cursory inspection.  But

someone, probably the commodore, had sealed it with plaster to  obscure it entirely. It had taken years of

moaning winds, heavy snows  upon the old roof, to produce the tiny crack that revealed the trick. 

Losing no time about getting upstairs, Doug and June found  themselves in a square room with lookout

windows. All about were old  pieces of furniture, enough to stock an antique shop and probably  valuable. But

the feverish hunt that Doug and June began was in quest  of one item only, a chest. 

They found it at last, under a pile of old hooked rugs. It was a  heavy wooden chest, bound with brass strips,

and its carved lid bore  the initials H. T., which belonged to the commodore. The chest had a  tarnished lock,

but the key was in it. This was fortunate in one sense,  since the chest could be opened readily; but on the

contrary, no one  would be likely to leave a million dollars in a chest without locking  it. 

Nevertheless, June could not refrain from gasping three words that  described their prize: 

"Dead Man's Chest!" 

Flinging the lid open, Doug turned the light into the chest. If  this marked the end of the quest, the answer was

defeat. The dead man's  chest was empty. 

Disheartened, June began to look elsewhere in the secret room, when  she heard a call from Doug. When June

came back, Doug showed her what  he'd found. 

"Look at the interior of the chest," said Doug. "It's short on  depth. That's a false bottom." Gesturing for June

to turn the light  into the chest, Doug bent forward and tapped. "I'll admit it sounds  solid, but I'll bet there's

something under it." 

Probing the brass fittings that bound the interior corners, Doug  suddenly gained results. One corner yielding

slightly, he tried the  other at the same time. That released a double catch, a heavy, rusted  spring groaned into

action. Up came the bottom of the chest, disclosing  a shallow compartment underneath. 

All that the hidden compartment contained was an old map. Bringing  it out, Doug closed the chest, spread the

map on top. The flashlight  revealed that it was a very old map showing the Bay of Fundy and the  surrounding

areas of Maine, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. 


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Most important was a heavy line, drawn with black ink. It started  at Lobsterman's Cove, though the name was

all but obliterated by the  wide inked line. It continued out into the bay, made a great long  curve, swung

between two dots that looked like tiny islands, described  a very slightly curved course that terminated in a

larger island,  shaped like a rectangle. 

"I have it!" exclaimed Doug. "That's the course of the longboat  races. The trial course, except boats didn't

race it!" 

"Why not?" asked June. 

"It covers too many miles," replied Doug. "So it must mean  something else. That's the course the munitions

followed when they were  shipped out. Commodore Tuft was the man who handled it for my  greatuncle,

Artemus Lawton." 

"And other ships must have picked them up from the island!"  expressed June. "That's where my grandfather

told them they would find  the shipments." 

"Plausible enough," agreed Doug. "Naturally, the less Uncle Artemus  knew about it, the better. Commodore

Tuft didn't know your grandfather,  so that broke the chain if anyone tried to track it down. It shows why  the

mystery was buried so many years." 

It fitted perfectly. First, the death of Josiah Getty; then the  disappearance of Commodore Tuft at sea; finally,

the death of Artemus  Lawton, had snapped the chain link by link, in reverse. 

"If your grandfather sent the gold to that island," Doug told June,  "the commodore wouldn't have known a

thing about it; therefore, he  wouldn't have gone to look for it. Then, when the commodore  disappeared, my

greatuncle was totally at a loss, because he didn't  know about the island. He was waiting for word from your

grandfather." 

"Word that never came," added June. "The team of Getty and Lawton  missed out. But what about that ship

that brought the gold from Cuba?" 

"It must have picked up the last order of munitions," asserted  Doug. "The shipment blew up through some

mischance and the only  survivor was Ben Rigby. Now we're making more sense from his disjointed  story.

Move your flashlight closer, June, so we can check the map  again." 

"My flashlight?" queried June. "Aren't we reading the map with  yours?" 

A suave laugh answered, ending in a clashy note, as the flashlight  was turned squarely in Doug's eyes. A

hand gripped June, flung her over  beside Doug and at the same time, a nimble figure leaped into the glow,

extending a scrawny hand which held a revolver. 

The man with the flashlight was Anjou de Blanco. His helper,  Perique, was covering Doug and June. 

"Very nice of you," spoke Anjou from the blackness behind the  light. "Finding this map reminds me of the

old Spanish term bonanza.  Only the bonanza is to be mine, not yours. I have said that we are  working on our

own." 

Doug's fists tightened, but June put out a hand to restrain him.  Under Anjou's light, with Perique wangling the

gun from a range of a  few feet, any false step might prove fatal. But June couldn't restrain  Doug's words. 


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"You've been working on your own a long while," Doug told Anjou.  "If you hadn't stolen that book from the

library and had your mob drag  me off to the Clementine, you wouldn't have found this place at all." 

"The Clementine?" queried Anjou. "Who is she? Not the yacht  belonging to Senor Belville. No, she is called

the Pandora." 

"Quit the stalling," snapped Doug. "What kind of a deal do you want  to make now?" 

"No deal at all," laughed Anjou. "Everything has been very simple  because you have been very stupid. I

telephoned to June the other night  and said I would be leaving town, so you forgot me. Instead of going  away,

Perique and I kept watching from across the street. One night you  came there; we followed you both when

you left. You went to the  airport; I learned where you were going from there." 

The flashlight wavered, proving that Anjou had added a  characteristic shrug to his statement. In Anjou's

opinion, the rest  should be quite obvious. He and Perique had come to Eastport, too, and  had picked up the

trail from that vicinity here to Iron Head. 

Knowing Anjou, June was ready to accept the story, but Doug  interrupted. 

"You moved in ahead of us," Doug argued. "Why try to tell us  something else? Anyway, this map is ours.

How much do you want for it?" 

"Not interested," replied Anjou. "I merely prefer to have both of  you come along with Perique and myself,

until we learn if the gold is  where it should be. After all, amigo, this might be  what is it they  call it? A bluff

on your part." 

Circling June and Doug with the flashlight, Anjou nudged Perique  and the group began what June suddenly

feared might become a death  march. June was beginning now to think that Doug's appraisal of Anjou  was

correct; that the debonair Latin was the man behind the airgun.  After all, Anjou hadn't fulfilled his promises

to June, so she was the  last person to insist that her original opinions were correct. 

Down from the attic, Doug and June maneuvered the steep stairs,  while long shadowy blackness seemed to

rise and greet them. Perique  came next with the revolver and behind him, Anjou with the light. Nor  did the

parade stop there. It continued down to the ground floor with  Anjou still master of the show. 

Out of the old house, Anjou steered them to a flight of rocky steps  hewn in the side of Iron Head. As they

descended they could hear the  splash and surge of water. To attempt a break would have been fatal. 

At the bottom of the cliff, the lights of a car appeared to greet  them. Then, for the first time, the prisoners

realized that Anjou had  maneuvered this march alone. Perique had dropped off to bring the car  down and

around the hill, for he was the man who stepped into the glow  of the headlights. When Anjou saw the surprise

of the prisoners he  laughed and quite contemptuously. 

"Cover them with your gun, Perique," Anjou ordered. "Move them  straight ahead into that boathouse. We

may find something useful  there." 

The boathouse was a battered structure with a door falling from its  hinges. Inside, however, was a stoutbuilt

rowboat, requiring four  pairs of oars, that had weathered the test of time. June recognized  that this must be a

longboat belonging to Commodore Tuft. The boat was  on rollers; it required only Perique's efforts to slide it

into the  water that entered the boathouse, for it was now close to high tide. 


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"Leave them to me, Perique," ordered Anjou, thrusting a hand with a  gun into the glow of the headlights that

streaked the interior of the  boathouse. 

"Go to the car and get the motor and the gasoline." 

June watched Perique go out to the car, which was facing straight  toward the boathouse. Again, weird

shadow shapes appeared to move into  the glow as though trailing Perique at every move. But those could

only  be cast by the surrounding trees, for The Shadow, if here in person,  would not be letting Anjou and

Perique get away with this; at least  June so reasoned. 

From the car, Perique brought back a large twocylinder outboard  and an extra drum of gasoline. He attached

the motor to the longboat,  put the drum aboard, and added a box of provisions. As Perique  clambered from

the boat, Anjou gave a nudge with his gun. 

"Get aboard." Anjou's voice came in a snarl. "We're taking you with  us." 

Doug helped June into the boat, then followed, still carrying the  map that Anjou neither needed nor wanted,

now that he had seen it. Both  prisoners looked up to the dock beside them, then stared, totally  amazed, at

what followed. 

Blackness wiped out the glow of Anjou's flashlight. A sibilant  laugh rose to a crash of sardonic mirth that

reverberated beneath the  weatherbeaten eaves. Then figures whirled in the midst of a  kaleidoscopic light,

produced by a flying flashlight. Guns shot futile  flames into the air, while the laugh reached a triumphant

crescendo  that shivered the very echoes which it had created. 

Doug was yanking the cord of the outboard motor. It started and he  was at the helm, ready to throw in the

clutch, waiting only for The  Shadow. Again came the mighty laugh, its tone a command. No words were

needed, for Anjou and Perique were dashing madly from the boathouse,  wild, fugitive figures as they dodged

the headlights of their own car. 

If The Shadow intended to come along, he would not be issuing that  command, which stood for one word: 

"Go." 

The longboat spurted from the old boathouse. Catching the full  tide, Doug veered it toward the mouth of

Lobsterman's Cove.  Simultaneously, a car went roaring off in the opposite direction, back  up the road that led

round Iron Head, telling that Anjou and Perique  were taking the shortest route to escape. 

Then, above the sound of Anjou's fading car; higher, more strident  than the roar of the motor which was

propelling the longboat out to  sea, June Getty heard the last notes of The Shadow's mighty laugh,  bidding bon

voyage to the prisoners he had rescued and was sending on  their way to a quest of wealth! 

CHAPTER XXII. OUT OF THE PAST

DAWN was streaking the Fundy sky when Doug Lawton and June Getty,  far from shore in their borrowed

longboat, sighted the first important  milepost of their journey. Riding out with the tide, they had made

remarkable progress; then, as their course veered, the incoming tide  had continued to give impetus. 

Now, at halftide, with the flow still traveling landward, they saw  a pair of rocks jutting from the sea itself,

one noticeably higher than  the other. Doug had cut off the motor; it was time to furnish more  gasoline from


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the drum. Meanwhile, the tide was drawing them toward  their goal, those two rocks. 

It was then that June had a happy inspiration. From her bag, she  took something as important as the map

which Doug had been consulting  all night by his flashlight; namely, the photostat copy of the Rigby  record. 

"Those must be the mermaids!" exclaimed June. "Yes, that would be  the right name for such rocks. Why, at

low tide, they would be rising  from the sea! It must have been off these rocks that Rigby was found  adrift!" 

"'Twas Friday night when we set sail,'" sang Doug, "'and we were  not far from land.'" He laughed, then

added, "But the captain only  spied one mermaid, June." 

"Naturally," June replied. "Because the bigger one would appear  first. Wait, here's something else. The

captain said: 'Come along, Ben   come along boat.' The last part isn't quite right. He meant: 'Come   a

longboat.' They must have taken a longboat to get to these rocks. 

"And here's more. The captain said: 'When the rocks sink  first  one, then t'other.' That's what they are doing

now, Doug. One rock is  sinking first because it's smaller. When it disappears, it will be time  to go through the

channel." 

Doug laughed, but his tone was an admission that June was probably  right. Then: 

"It's time to go through right now," said Doug. "Why wait,  considering that the tide will carry us? It would

take a bigger boat  than this to have trouble going between those rocks, the way they are  at present. But you're

doing all right, June. Tell me what Rigby meant  about watching boxers spar." 

"I don't know," declared June, absently. "Being in the brig   wanting water because he needed water 

watching the boxers spar. All  those things still are puzzling." 

The longboat was pointed toward the channel between the mermaids.  Doug was at the stern, gassing the

motor. Thus June, turned to face  Doug, was gazing out to sea. Doug heard June give a gasp; looked up to  see

that her brown eyes were wider than he had ever believed they could  be. Turning to look in the same

direction, Doug sat astonished, too. 

Heaving over the horizon was something belonging strictly to the  past. It was as if the firm of Getty and

Lawton had gone into business  again, not as the present generation, but as a reincarnation of the  original

founders, who had operated and dissolved a half a century  before. 

Climbing into sight were the great sails of a fullrigged ship,  which literally flew before the powerful wind,

coming shoreward, like  the tide. Then the hull was bulking, like the body of a manmade  narwhal, looming

down upon the tiny longboat like a monster seeking  prey. 

The ship had just two masts, both fullrigged. A sudden  recollection of things he had heard about such

vessels, stirred Doug to  the statement: 

"A fullrigged twomaster. It's called a brig!" 

"The brig!" echoed June. "They spent the night in the brig, to  await the tide!" 

"Because they needed water," declared Doug. "Water, to navigate  between the mermaids. Since they didn't

have water, they had to drink  water, because they couldn't get ashore to drink anything else!" 


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By then, the brig was almost upon them. Somehow, the reappearance  of this ship that shouldn't exist was

frightening, now that the thing  was proving more than a phantom shape. Madly, Doug tugged at the motor

cord, but the response was nil. Overheated, the motor needed a cooling  rest. Again, Doug tugged, and again.

Then, the brig was almost upon  them, its sails flurrying down from its masts as commands sounded  through a

microphone on the deck. The brig sidled past the longboat and  June saw the name that was painted on the

ship's stern. 

"The Boxer!" 

"If Malloy had only shown sense and used punctuation marks,"  groaned Doug, as he, too, looked toward the

brig. "Then we would have  known exactly what Rigby meant. Or maybe we were the people who didn't  show

sense. Rigby said he watched the boxers spar. What he meant was,  he saw the spar of the Boxer; the Boxer's

spar. That's what they call  the beam they hang the sails on, across the mast. Rigby and the captain  saw the

Boxer just like we did; saw the spar of her front mast!" 

"Ahoy, longboat!" A voice was calling from the Boxer. "Come aboard  or we'll fetch you aboard!" 

The brig had crossed the longboat's path, so Doug simply arose,  spread his arms and gave a helpless nod.

Members of the brig's crew  threw them a line, dropped a ladder, and soon Doug and June were on  board the

Boxer, where a couple of roughclad men with revolverfilled  holsters promptly escorted them forward. 

Near the bow they found the man in command. He was leaning on his  cane, chuckling at sight of the arrivals,

while the golden rays of the  dawning sun gave his shocky hair a glow of silver. 

The man was Oswald Harkland. 

"So you got here," Harkland chortled. "Well, well. This is a real  surprise." His sharp eyes narrowed in the

sunlight. "What is that you  have there?" 

Harkland was looking at June, so she handed him the photostat of  Rigby's record. Reading a few lines,

Harkland smiled. 

"I've known of this for several years," said Harkland. "Where did  you get this copy? From the Maritime

Library?" 

"Why ask us?" demanded Doug. "You're the man who ought to know." 

"I didn't know they had a copy," replied Harkland, blandly. "That  map in your pocket looks more interesting.

Let me have it." 

Argument being useless, Doug handed over the map, then turned to  watch the larger rock of the mermaids as

the Boxer swashed past it.  Doug had been right, too right, about a larger ship needing more  clearance. He

could picture the Rigby deal of fifty years ago almost as  though it were happening today. 

The Boxer had heaved to, off the mermaids. The captain had told Ben  Rigby to come in the longboat.

Probably they had taken soundings and  when the tide was rising above the two rocks, the captain had told

Ben  to watch the Boxer's spar and signal for the brig to get under way. But  this couldn't be the Boxer that

Rigby had meant. There was something  new about this craft. Doug could almost smell sawdust about her, as

though the brig had come fresh from a shipyard. 


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"Very helpful, this map," said Harkland suddenly. "If I had known  of it, I wouldn't have needed the Boxer.

Still, she is a fine ship and  will come in very useful. After you have breakfast, I shall join you in  my cabin

and tell you all about her." 

Two members of the brig's husky crew escorted Doug and June to the  cabin and stood guard while they ate a

hearty breakfast. Though the  meal was fine, Doug couldn't forbear a few pointed statements, such as  asking

June to pass the arsenic and asking her how much strychnine she  would like in her coffee. 

When Doug talked that way, June threw worried glances at the guards  but they didn't blink an eye. They

looked friendly enough, those  huskies, but they were Harkland's men. What orders he might give them,  June

feared they would obey. 

It would be asking too much to hope for The Shadow again,  particularly in broad daylight; but that wasn't the

only reason for  June's worry. Harkland had certainly progressed further than Anjou in  the quest for the Cuban

gold, otherwise, he wouldn't have gone to the  trouble and expense of building a brig, just to hunt for the lost

wealth. Therefore, Harkland must have been in the game all along. That  made him the most dangerous person

involved, in June's opinion. 

Harkland, that dangerous man, made an appearance while June was in  the midst of such reflections. He

ordered the crew members to step  outside but wait within call. Then, opening a cabinet set in the cabin  wall,

Harkland produced some papers, looked them over and put a few  back. 

Bringing the others to a table, he spread them out. Largest of the  lot was a complete plan of a fullrigged

ship. Others were printed  pages bearing woodcuts that pictured sailing vessels. 

"Let me tell you the Boxer story," declared Harkland. "She was a  fine brig, the original Boxer. She fought in

the War of 1812,  outdistancing frigates and overtaking merchantmen. Even toward the turn  of the next

century, squareriggers like the Boxer were in demand.  Therefore, the Indies Trading Packet Line decided to

have a duplicate  of the original Boxer built from the old plans, still in existence. The  new Boxer was built at

the Scotian Shipyard in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia." 

While he spoke, Harkland was studying faces cannily to note if  either listener recognized the names he

mentioned. They didn't, for  this was outside the sphere of the GettyLawton partnership. Not having  been at

the Maritime Library during inventory time, neither June nor  Doug had heard mention of those enterprises. 

"The new Boxer was a very handy craft," continued Harkland,  "particularly because she sailed the West

Indies and could put into  almost any hidden port. She made a practice of carrying munitions and  supplies to

the Cuban revolutionists. Just before America declared war  upon Spain in 1898, the new Boxer dispatched to

bring a cargo of  munitions to the insurgent leader, General Garcia." 

Here, Harkland was really striking home. Doug and June were  listening so intently that they almost

overlooked the crafty expression  which registered on the old man's wrinkled face. 

"The new Boxer never delivered that shipment," declared Harkland.  "Apparently, she was blown up at sea.

When I bought over the Indies  Trading Packet Line"  Harkland's eyes glittered wisely as he spoke   "I

gained a full claim on the Boxer. Not much was known about her fate,  but I traced down a crew member

named Ben Rigby; learned that he had  told a disconnected story to a cabin boy of the Nancy Lee named

Absalom  Malloy." 

The story was really coming up to date. June held her breath,  hoping Doug would hold back the accusations

that she knew must be on  the tip of his tongue. Apparently, Doug was getting smarter. He kept  quiet. 


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"Where the Boxer picked up her cargo was a mystery," completed  Harkland. "But it was likely that if she

carried a certain shipment of  Cuban gold, she would have left it at the rendezvous. So I decided to  build

another Boxer"  Harkland gave a sweeping gesture at the  surrounding cabin  "complete in every detail;

every detail, mind you,  to the original Boxer and the one that had been constructed according  to her plans.

This is the result. Now, in the third Boxer we are  repeating the cruise of the second Boxer, hoping to reach

the same  destination." 

Doug came to his feet, savagely. 

"So you murdered Malloy," Doug accused, "because he knew too much!  You killed Jeffrey first, because

Malloy had talked to him. Probably  you did know about the Rigby record, but you stole the one I found, so  I

wouldn't learn what you knew " 

Harkland was interrupting Doug by pounding the table. Now the  interruption brought results and in more

forcible style. Doug's speech  was cut off by a pair of sailors who piled through the door in answer  to

Harkland's summons and seized Doug bodily. They didn't slug him,  just dragged him up to the deck,

whereupon Harkland bowed to June and  gestured for her to follow. 

On the way up, Harkland said: 

"I am sorry Lawton proved so unreasonable. I was going to tell him  more. After all, I am indebted to him for

giving me that map. I wasn't  quite sure that this cruise would take me to the right goal. Now I am  sure I can

identify it." 

June turned away, her own face white with anger. Anjou's suavity  was pleasant compared to Harkland's

sarcasm. June hated the sound of  the crackly tone which she now was positive belonged to a murderer. The

kinder Harkland might speak, the more June felt that she would hate  him. She would have liked to hate him

forever, but that couldn't be.  Remembering Jeffrey and Malloy, June felt that she and Doug would not  have

very long to live, once Harkland found his chance to kill them,  away from any witnesses. 

That chance was coming soon; it was looming over the horizon. The  Boxer had been riding in with the tide at

a speed which full sail could  not have equaled. Ahead, a coffinshaped island was rising to block the  course

along which the tide had carried the brig. 

Old Oswald Harkland delivered a triumphant chuckle that June felt  was a double knell, foreboding the doom

of the partnership of Getty and  Lawton. 

CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST

NAVIGATING the Boxer to a mooring was practically an automatic  process. Timed to the tide, the trim brig

came into the lee of the  island, where eddying waters seemed to hold her and there was no breeze  to drive her

from shelter. 

The brig's deck was alive with crew members, all as hardy a looking  lot as the pair that had stood guard

outside Harkland's cabin. Now, as  a shiny new anchor chain was pouring itself from the ship's bow,  Harkland

was scanning the face of the blocky island with a glass.  Beside him was Klauder, who had appeared for the

first time. 

As the Boxer anchored fast, Harkland pointed to a streaky ledge  that slanted across the island's face. 


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"There's the landing place," announced Harkland. "It must have been  the one that Captain Yardley used when

he brought the second Boxer in  here. He arrived with the high tide as we did. Order the boat, Klauder.  We're

going ashore." 

The boat that Klauder ordered happened to be the one that Doug and  June had brought, which gave the

situation an ironical touch.  Apparently appreciating this, Harkland bowed to Doug and June,  suggesting that

they accompany him. 

"After all," chuckled Harkland, "you should witness the recovery of  the gold as well as its disposal. If it is not

here, however, you must  not hold me responsible." 

Grimly, Doug spoke in undertone to June. 

"This may be our one chance for a break," informed Doug. "We can't  afford to miss it." 

Harkland and Klauder took to the boat along with Doug and June.  Unfortunately, Harkland also had the two

guards man the longboat, which  made the odds four to one against Doug, should he decide upon the break

that he had mentioned. Coasting toward the ledge, the longboat reached  it and grounded upon the sloping

stretch of rock as neatly as if it had  been hewn for such a landing. 

Out of the boat, Harkland probed his way up the slant. His chuckle,  his beckon, proved that he had found

what he was after. Behind a clump  of juniper bushes that sprouted from amid the rock was a narrow crevice

that formed an archway. Keeping Doug and June under close surveillance,  Harkland marched them in

through that fissure. Within the rock, the  fissure widened into a large chamber with jagged walls. Using his

flashlight, the old man inspected the rocks carefully and finally  pointed with his cane to a stony bulge higher

up. 

"We'll try there," Harkland decided. "You lead the way, Klauder." 

Clambering up among the rocks, Klauder turned and beckoned  excitedly. Harkland forgot his cane in his

hurry to join the chunky  servant. Watching from below, Doug and June saw the two dig deep behind  the

bulging stone and come out with small leather bags that clanked  when they were dropped. The weight of

those bags indicated that the  clanking contents must be the longlost Cuban gold. 

Bag after bag came sliding down the irregular path that Harkland  and Klauder had climbed. Slipping almost

to the feet of Doug and June,  those bags represented a fortune that was theirs, yet which they were  powerless

to take. Peering down from his rocky perch, Harkland gave a  chummy chuckle which produced discordant

echoes. This to Doug and June,  represented the final touch of an old man's treachery. 

"Don't worry about my crew," called Harkland. "I have told them of  this quest and paid them well. They will

take the Boxer wherever I  order. I realize now what must have happened with the second Boxer. The  crew

realized that the master, Richard Yardley, had brought the gold  here. They must have mutinied, intending to

return, but in the fight  the ship was blown up by the munitions it carried, leaving Rigby as a  sole survivor.

But that will not happen this time. Not with my Boxer." 

In the light of an electric lantern held by Klauder, Harkland's  shadow loomed huge and grotesque among the

pointed rocks. As the old  man leaped down from his perch, that same shadow spread into two. Doug  took it

for an optical illusion; to June it provided sudden hope. The  girl gave a happy cry as a figure rose suddenly

from the rocks almost  at Harkland's elbow. Then, as a second figure followed the first,  June's elation ended. 

Two forgotten men had made their reappearance, Anjou de Blanco and  his helper, Perique. 


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Anjou and Perique had caught Harkland and Klauder flatfooted, as  flatfooted as was possible among these

irregular rocks. Guns drawn,  they were holding the other pair helpless; but the words Anjou uttered  were

meant for Doug and June. 

"You thought you'd left us where we couldn't find our way," scoffed  Anjou, "but we saw that map, too. We

hired the seaplane at the Bayview  Inn. It brought us here shortly after dawn. Like I said, it's every man  on his

own and I'm the winner. We saw you come in with the longboat,  Perique and I. Load the gold in it and we'll

pull away. We didn't keep  the seaplane; we didn't want to overload it." 

From Anjou's laugh it was evident that he had told the seaplane to  leave because he didn't want its pilot to

know his purpose for coming  here. There was no malice in Anjou's tone, however. Apparently, he was

willing to follow a "live and let live" policy, so long as no one tried  to stop him from carrying off the gold.

But Doug, by this time, had  reached a state of desperation. 

"We'll break for it now," Doug whispered to June. "If Anjou tries  to stop us, Harkland will take a whack at

him, or vice versa. Let's get  to the longboat and away. We'll figure out how to reclaim the gold  later." 

June nodded. Doug gripped her arm and spun her about. Next they  were zigzagging toward a corner of the

rocky chamber, where Doug hoped  they could find shelter. Apparently; Harkland's two crew members had

gone out to watch the stony archway, for neither popped into sight to  halt this madcap dash. But the very

shelter that Doug and June were  seeking proved itself another trap. 

As if at a concerted signal a dozen men arose to block their  flight. Recoiling at the sight of guns that shoved

out from behind low,  jagged rocks, Doug and June dropped back. Then, the same guns were  covering Anjou

and Perique, as well as Harkland and Klauder. Into the  glare of a whole battery of powerful flashlights

stepped another master  of the show. 

The new contestant for outstanding honors was none other than  Stephen Belville. 

His blunt face grim but not unfriendly, Belville waved for the four  men on the higher rocks to toss away their

guns. They did just that and  Belville promptly ordered his own crew members to gather up the bags of  gold.

Then, in a precise tone that produced a minimum of echoes from  the cavern walls, Belville declared himself : 

"I came here with my yacht, the Pandora. She is anchored on the  other side of the island. We shall go out by a

passage which my men and  I discovered. When we are on the Pandora, we can settle the claims  where the

gold is concerned." 

There was no other choice, but Doug for one felt satisfied now that  Belville had broken the dilemma. Doug

still had doubts as to which was  the man of murder, Anjou or Harkland. That question, he felt, could  also be

settled on board the yacht. But June was gripped by a new fear,  produced by the knowledge she had gained

regarding human cupidity. 

Belville seemed anxious enough to become the arbiter, but how would  he act once the claimants, as well as

the gold, had come under his full  control? 

They were practically under such control now and so far, Belville  was acting fairly enough. Yet here in this

underground darkness, June  could only wish that The Shadow would declare himself. As the  flashlights

swung, she saw great shapes elongate into shadowy streaks  that flickered on the walls and a thrill caught June

when one of those  fantastic outlines took the rough appearance of a cloaked form. But it  filtered away,

swallowed by the darkness of a side passage that showed  in the gleam of the flashlights. 


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This was the passage that Belville had mentioned. Slowly, the  procession started along it, Belville's men

bringing the gold as well  as the claimants. There were too many men in the yacht's crew to brook  any

argument. 

At the end of the passage, daylight struck with dazzling force.  Blinded by it, June could hardly make out the

faces of Belville's crew  and her companions were much in the same condition. They stumbled into  a pair of

motor tenders that were waiting beside a jutting rock and a  few chugs brought them around a corner of the

island to the yacht.  Long, sleek, white and shiny, the Pandora was nosed up to the island  itself, but Belville

had used the tenders to find a better landing  place. 

On board the yacht, they were conducted to a lavish cabin; there,  Belville gestured his guests around a table.

Not a member of the crew  remained, but they left the bags of gold, a million dollars' worth of  treasure,

heaped in a corner, since the table might have cracked  beneath the weight. 

Diesel motors throbbed and the Pandora was under way, veering  around the island to head out to the open

sea. The tide had not yet  changed, hence it was taking the full power of the yacht's engines to  buck the

seething waters. Blandly, Belville smiled at the people around  him. 

"We shall discuss our business privately," asserted Belville.  "Since all of you will hold conflicting notions

regarding ownership of  this gold, I do not need to have any of my own crew present. So let me  hear your

claims and I shall judge them." 

Before a person could speak, a door opened at the side of the  cabin. Through the doorway stepped a figure

cloaked in black, a slouch  hat drawn over his head, far enough to obscure his features, except for  a pair of

burning eyes that seemed to probe the very minds of every  person present. 

Those eyes, like the whispered laugh that came from hidden lips,  proclaimed the identity of the personage

who had usurped Belville's  position as judge. 

The Shadow had become the new master of the show. 

CHAPTER XXIV 

THE MESSAGE FROM GARCIA 

THE expressions on the faces of The Shadow's audience were strange,  indeed. They showed a mingling of

fear, chagrin and hope. June Getty  was, of course, the most hopeful; Doug Lawton a close second. They were

the first to whom The Shadow spoke. 

"I know your claims," declared The Shadow, his tone calm, yet with  just a touch of the sinister. "I also know

your stories. However the  past may stand, you became victims of the present. Our first question  is to decide

who is responsible for a series of recent murders. You are  both innocent." 

That verdict given, The Shadow looked straight at Anjou de Blanco. 

"Don't accuse me," Anjou protested, his suave tones shaky. "I'll  admit I was getting information from Weasel

Clegg, through Perique  here. Weasel tipped me off when Lawton was to visit Jeffrey and told me  later where

I'd find Malloy. I went down to the Havana Exposition  office to pick up some papers that were planted to

incriminate me, but  I didn't play a part in any crime. None  none except borrowing a  thousand dollars from

Lawton." 


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The Shadow turned his gaze upon Oswald Harkland. 

"I knew Skipper Malloy," admitted Harkland, with a nod. "But I was  protecting him, not trying to kill him.

That's why I moved him from one  home for old sailors to another and finally established him over the  Green

Anchor. He'd been talking to too many people, Malloy had, despite  the fact he'd promised me he wouldn't. I

had been paying him regularly  and handsomely, to keep silent on what he knew. 

"Somebody wanted that information, but was afraid to go after it  direct. That person planted Jeffrey and

framed him at the same time.  The idea was to murder him and pin the blame on Lawton or myself." So

saying, Harkland paused to glare accusingly at Anjou. "That paved the  way for a similar murder of Malloy.

From then on, I was hampered, while  Lawton was unable to talk to the police. The killer then had everything

his own way." 

To that, Anjou responded with a sharp, contemptuous laugh. 

"If you mean me," declared Anjou, "I was dodging the law, too, and  for the same reasons as Lawton." 

"You were dodging the law in the first place," reminded Harkland.  "I think Belville can testify to that." 

Belville started a slow nod, then halted. His eyes went from Anjou  to Harkland, back again. Belville shook

his head as though he felt  unsure. 

"Suppose we begin with the tugboat whistles," decided The Shadow.  "The man who handled those was

Wrecker Chaffin, who later sank the  Clementine to cover his part and dispose of the one man who knew

about  those signals, Douglas Lawton." Turning to Doug, The Shadow added,  "When you visited Jeffrey, you

arrived there early, by starting ahead  of the signals." 

Doug gave a nod. 

"Therefore," continued The Shadow, "you were not supposed to learn  about Skipper Malloy. Jeffrey's death

was set for your arrival; being  early, you gave Jeffrey time to talk too much. That forced another  murder, the

death of Skipper Malloy. Then came two other crimes, both  thefts at the Maritime Library. The book

containing the Rigby record  was stolen, so was a model of the brig Boxer." 

The last named theft brought surprised looks from around the table. 

"One model was missing from the old wooden fleet," declared The  Shadow. "The Boxer, the original Boxer,

was one of the most famous  ships of its era and should have been in the collection. Its absence  fitted with the

word 'boxer' in the Rigby record. 

"We can be reasonably sure that Anjou de Blanco did not take the  book or the model. His trail came by way

of Eastport, where he claims  he trailed Douglas Lawton and June Getty, which is very plausible.  Also, he

arrived on the island by air, locating it after he had seen  Tuft's map. 

"We know that Oswald Harkland must have seen the Rigby record long  ago. Otherwise, he would not have

been building a fullsized brig from  the actual plan of the original Boxer. By that same token, Harkland did

not need the model, since he had a completed ship awaiting him at the  Scotian Yard. 

"You must concede one thing, Harkland"  The Shadow's gaze fixed on  the shockyhaired man  "namely,

that if you knew the Maritime Library  had finally gained a copy of the book containing the Rigby record, you

might have wanted to remove that book. I take it, therefore, that you  had been to the Maritime Library." 


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"I had," admitted Harkland. "But finding the book was difficult. So  difficult that I didn't know the library had

it." 

"But you would have taken it if you had found it." 

"Probably. It would have been easy to walk away with anything from  that library, right out the front door.

That is, before the night the  shooting started there." 

"Then you could have taken the Boxer model beforehand," declared  The Shadow. "You knew it was in the

collection." 

"Of course," replied Harkland. "I saw it there. But what use was  it, even to anyone who found the Rigby

record?" 

The Shadow's answer was a whispered laugh. Harkland's admissions,  like his question, proved that he was

frank; indeed, a trifle puzzled. 

"The Boxer model did prove useful," stated The Shadow, "as useful  as the model of another ship, the

Vesuvius." 

Turning to a chair, The Shadow picked up a large oblong package and  it was Anjou's turn to stare. He had

seen such a package in the  seaplane; it had belonged to the pilot, Kent Allard. Anjou didn't know  that Kent

Allard, like Isaac Twambley, was a personality The Shadow  adopted when he did not care to appear as

Lamont Cranston. 

Opening the package, The Shadow produced the large model of the  Vesuvius and laid it upon the table. Now

Doug Lawton gazed in something  resembling astonishment. He had seen that model before. But it had been

different then. At the time Doug had been slugged, the Vesuvius model  had gaped with an open hold. Now,

from the front deck, loomed a  miniature gun, longbarreled and with a large muzzle, more than an inch  in

diameter. 

"The navy ship on which Malloy once served," remarked The Shadow.  "Somebody who heard about it had a

novel idea, which, incidentally,  could have been used against Harkland, who had been friendly with  Malloy.

Except that Harkland could not have murdered Malloy any more  than Anjou could have. 

"You two"  The Shadow's gaze roved from Anjou to Harkland  "were  fighting in the rear alley behind the

Green Anchor when Malloy was  slain. The murder took place above the kitchen, in Malloy's room, which

had a bolted front door. A door"  The Shadow looked at June  "which  you bolted. When you came

downstairs"  The Shadow was including Doug  in his gaze  "you went through the kitchen and ran into the

fight out  back. 

"From then on, nobody entered the kitchen of the Green Anchor  except myself. But when I went up through

Malloy's room, I found its  front door unbolted. I left it that way for the police to find; proof  that Malloy's

murderer did not flee by the alley, but came up again in  the dumbwaiter and through the dead man's room.

And that"  The Shadow  turned to the back of the cabin  "brings us once again to the matter  of the missing

Boxer model." 

Pressing a panel in the curved wall of the yacht's cabin, The  Shadow slid it open and turned with the model of

the Boxer in his  hands. But while The Shadow was producing the missing trophy, Stephen  Belville was even

busier. Snatching the model of the Vesuvius, he  flipped its deck open, hauling out the whole length of the

projecting  gun. From a table drawer, Belville snatched a knife with a rounded  handle and pushed it handle


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first into the gun. 

Belville's arms were actually filled with a squarish box from which  the gun of the Vesuvius projected.

Viewed in full length, the gun  barrel itself measured more than a foot, for much of it had been hidden  beneath

the model's deck. 

"You know too much, Shadow," sneered Belville, "but you also took  too long to tell it. Yes, this is a working

model of the gunnery device  used in the pneumatic cruiser Vesuvius. She was used during the

SpanishAmerican War to fire huge shells of dynamite from a mammoth  airgun, operating below deck. She

was sometimes termed a dynamite  cruiser on that account. 

"The Vesuvius had one fault. Her gun was stationary, so she had to  head directly toward her target. But this

smaller gun hasn't any flaw,  not as I'm handling it now. It has the same power in proportion as the  big gun on

the Vesuvius herself. It can drive a knife hiltdeep in a  human body, as I shall prove again, this time in front

of witnesses." 

Belville was aiming for The Shadow, wangling the amazing airgun to  follow the cloaked avenger's shift. No

one dared interfere, for fear  that Belville would fire. It was a duel between the murderer and The  Shadow,

except that the latter was unarmed. In fact, The Shadow  couldn't reach for an automatic, since his own arms

were filled with  the Boxer model. 

"I stole the book with the Rigby record," admitted Belville. "It  was easy, for I was watching every move

Lawton made. I had Wrecker and  his picked crew come into the library from the house next door and  carry

Lawton away. Unfortunately, Shadow, you saved Lawton from the  wreck of the Clementine. I say

unfortunately, because your bad fortune  is still due. 

"After I read the record, I stole the model of the Boxer while  Pitcairn was fussing over the inventory. I did it

while I was supposed  to be going to the Cobalt Club and back. I wanted the Boxer model in  order to estimate

her size and draft and make calculations as to her  course between the mermaids, in relation to the tidal

conditions. Look  there in the table drawer, and you'll find the evidence." 

Doug caught a nod from The Shadow and brought out the evidence.  Along with sheets of calculations were

two maps, one very old, the  other quite new. Belville was counting upon these to catch The Shadow's

attention and throw him off guard. 

"The new map shows soundings, tidal charts, everything that is  needed," stated Belville. "But it doesn't name

the island where the  gold was hidden. You'll find that on the old map, Lawton. Read it to  us." 

Doug found the mermaids, with their name printed on the map. He  traced through the bay until he reached the

rocky, coffinshaped island  where Belville had so recently taken control over the rival factions.  Reading the

name, Doug exclaimed, "Dead Man's Chest!" 

"That's right," laughed Belville. "That's the Dead Man's Chest that  Rigby talked about. Not Malloy's tattooed

chest, not an old wooden box  belonging to Commodore Tuft, but the island where I brought the  Pandora. The

island that we're leaving now, and to celebrate our  departure, you will see this knife buried in another dead

man's chest!" 

Belville meant The Shadow, who had stepped forward to lean toward  the map. Belville was quick with his

aiming of the pneumatic gun,  prompt to press the trigger that actuated the device. But the weapon  was too

clumsy, compared to The Shadow's move. Belville should have  limited it to knifing victims in the back. 


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As the gun chugged, The Shadow dropped back, flinging his hands  upward, outward, giving the Boxer model

a toss that was perfectly  timed. The whizzing knife caught the model amidships and was diverted  upward

with it. The result was a splintering of wood and a ruined ship  model, proof of the power the pneumatic gun

packed. But the knife,  deflected in midair, its force spent upon the tossed target, merely  became a harmless

weapon that clattered to the floor. 

Springing to the cabin door, Belville gained the deck and shouted  for Wrecker and the murder crew. They

were all on board the Pandora,  for her tenders had picked them up that night when they had blown up  the

Clementine. Anchored in the Hudson, the yacht had become the  perfect hideout for the tugboat crew. To a

man, they would have sworn  that Belville was actually in New London the night he was committing  murder

in New York. Now, to a man, they were ready to help him finish  The Shadow. 

From the cabin door, The Shadow was blasting away with two guns,  while Wrecker and a dozen more

enemies jabbed shots back. The odds were  all theirs; they had only to exhaust The Shadow's fire, then

overwhelm  him in a mass attack. The irony of the thing was emphasized by the  present location of the

Pandora. The yacht had rounded Dead Man's Chest  and was ploughing past the Boxer. On the brig, the crew

was hauling up  the anchor chain and hoisting sail, but their efforts looked hopeless. 

The tide had not quite turned. It was still coming in and the  motors of the Pandora could fight their way

against it, whereas the  sails of the Boxer could not, for the breeze was comparatively slight.  On the bridge,

the helmsman of the Pandora was keeping the yacht well  clear of the brig. Rifle shots could clear the gap, but

Wrecker and his  crew were allowing for such fire and keeping cover accordingly. As they  popped away at

The Shadow, they raised their heads to yell derision at  the frustrated men aboard the Boxer. 

Then, as before, when Doug and June had first sighted the Boxer,  the past invaded the present. 

Along the sides of the brig, wooden casings lifted open revealing  the shiny mouths of oldfashioned brass

cannon. Men sprang to the guns,  swung them and applied the fuses. Like the Boxer of yore, the original

warrior of 1812, the whole side of the ship belched flame that withered  the Pandora with a solid load of

cannon balls. 

One shot cracked the yacht's bridge. Others raked her deck. The  gingerbread trimmings were demolished

above the cabin, where some of  Wrecker's men had crept, planning to drop down upon The Shadow. Other

shots from the mighty salvo clipped low beneath the stern of the  Pandora, halting the spin of the yacht's

propellers. 

She drifted helplessly, the Pandora, while the Boxer gained sail  and came alongside her. The gunners on the

brig were swabbing their  cannon for a reload. Others of the brig's crew were ready with the  grappling hooks.

Belville and Wrecker shouted for their own men to meet  the attack; then, each from a flank, the murderous

partners drove in  upon The Shadow. 

Belville and Wrecker were firing as they came, but The Shadow's  shots were better placed. The Shadow held

an advantage his opponents  did not suspect. Instead of being an open target in the doorway, he was  crouched

amid the pile of fancy work that the cannon of the Boxer had  knocked from above the cabin. Out of white

woodwork came blackgloved  hands that loosed the fiery red tongues of automatic muzzles as a sharp

contrast to the gilt paint that formed the broken word Pandora. 

Stopped dead in their tracks, Belville and Wrecker sprawled and  stayed dead. The Shadow hadn't allowed

them time to place their shots.  It wasn't worth it. 


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As for the rest of the yacht's crew, they didn't attempt to stop  the boarding party from the brig. Matches were

being set to the fuses  of the cannon in order to rake the yacht's deck. Right under the brass  guns of the Boxer,

the Pandora mob flung their revolvers away and  yelled for quarter as lustily as any oldtime salts. The brig's

party  promptly cleared the rail and rounded up the crooks. 

While the gold was being transferred from the Pandora to the Boxer,  Doug and June recognized some of the

brig's crew. They were The  Shadow's agents; he had sent them to Yarmouth to ship aboard the Boxer  when

she started on her cruise. Harkland had unwittingly picked himself  a batch of fighters who could outmatch

anything that crime had to  offer. 

But the great surprise lay in the cabin of the Boxer. There, Oswald  Harkland displayed his prize exhibit,

prefacing it with a few pointed  words. 

"The Cuban gold was shipped aboard the second Boxer," stated  Harkland, "and Captain Yardley sent the

owners an allimportant  document, covering his operations, though it did not mention details,  You have

heard of the Cuban insurgent leader, General Garcia." 

"Of course," nodded Doug. "The United States government sent him a  message, assuring him of their

alliance. It was a famous thing in  history, the message to Garcia." 

"What I have here"  smiling, Harkland spread the document on the  table  "is a message from Garcia. It

states that he had authorized the  shipment of munitions by Josiah Getty and Artemus Lawton and that

payment in gold was made with his approval. Therefore, there is no  question of your claim. 

"The gold is all yours. If you care to pay Anjou a slight  commission for services indirectly rendered, that is

your privilege. My  connection is simply that of a ship owner, whose duty it was to carry  and deliver cargo.

And there"  Harkland waved his hand along the row  of gold bags that rested on the floor  "is the final

cargo. 

"I can't charge you for the loss of the second Boxer, model 1898.  Her shipments were paid in advance. She

was partly covered by  insurance; the rest of the loss was written off before I bought up the  packet line. As for

the present Boxer"  Harkland gazed about his cabin  admiringly  "she is already bought and paid for. I am

selling her to  Black Knight Productions to be used in the biggest historical motion  picture of all time. The

picture will be laid during the War of 1812  and I shall title it 'The Cruise of the Boxer.'" 

Strange in a way, that Harkland should have chosen the original  Boxer, great ship though she was. Her

namesake, commanded by Captain  Yardley, had encountered remarkable adventures in her own right, during

Cuba's struggle for independence. Living up to the name, the present  Boxer, with Harkland as the master and

The Shadow's agents as the crew,  had staged an epoch of modern history during her maiden voyage. 

Doug Lawton and June Getty went on deck to let the sea air clear  some of their bewilderment. Sails filled, the

Boxer was riding out to  sea, with the tide now pouring behind her. The longboat was gone,  though two of

The Shadow's agents had returned in it, to ready their  mates for the attack on the Pandora. It had obviously

gone back to the  island that was now dropping its coffinshaped head beyond the receding  horizon. 

As they watched, Doug and June saw a seaplane rise from near the  island. It circled the rocky mass before it

headed landward and the hum  of the motor came to them as if carried by the increasing breeze. A  distant

sound, reminiscent of a strange, weird laugh that vivid memory  produced as an echo of a very recent past that

now was beginning to  seem far away. 


DEAD MAN'S CHEST

CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST 101



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The laugh of The Shadow, marking another triumph over crime and the  solving of a triple mystery that could

be told in just three words: 

Dead Man's Chest. 

THE END 


DEAD MAN'S CHEST

CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST 102



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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. DEAD MAN'S CHEST, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. DEATH FROM BEYOND, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. TRAILS IN THE NIGHT, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. AT THE CLUB CADENZA, page = 13

   7. CHAPTER IV. THROUGH THE WINDOW, page = 17

   8. CHAPTER V. JUNE GAINS A CLUE, page = 22

   9. CHAPTER VI. MEET SKIPPER MALLOY, page = 27

   10. CHAPTER VII. DEATH TELLS A TALE, page = 30

   11. CHAPTER VIII. A LETTER TO THE SHADOW, page = 35

   12. CHAPTER IX. CRANSTON'S APPOINTMENT, page = 40

   13. CHAPTER X. TRAIL OF THE MERMAIDS, page = 45

   14. CHAPTER XI. THE SHADOW COMES FIRST, page = 49

   15. CHAPTER XII. DUEL IN THE DARK, page = 53

   16. CHAPTER XIII. THE RIGBY RECORD, page = 57

   17. CHAPTER XIV. THE VANISHING FIGHTERS, page = 61

   18. CHAPTER XV. QUEST OF THE MISSING, page = 65

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE MAN WHO TALKED, page = 69

   20. CHAPTER XVII. GONE FOREVER, CLEMENTINE, page = 73

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW TAKES A TRAIL, page = 77

   22. CHAPTER XIX. A QUESTION OF CHESTS, page = 81

   23. CHAPTER XX. IRON HEAD, page = 85

   24. CHAPTER XXI. LAST OF THE LONGBOATS, page = 88

   25. CHAPTER XXII. OUT OF THE PAST, page = 92

   26. CHAPTER XXIII. THE RIDDLE OF THE CHEST, page = 96