Title:   THE DEATH SLEEP

Subject:  

Author:   Maxwell Grant

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE DEATH SLEEP

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

THE DEATH SLEEP.........................................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. THE SLEEP......................................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. A GENTLEMAN IN BLACK.........................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW DEDUCTS ...........................................................................................9

CHAPTER IV. THE BIG SHOT ...........................................................................................................14

CHAPTER V. DEATH AT DUSK ........................................................................................................18

CHAPTER VI. TWO GUINEA PIGS ...................................................................................................22

CHAPTER VII. FURTHER DEDUCTIONS ........................................................................................29

CHAPTER VIII. PLANS FOR CRIME................................................................................................34

CHAPTER IX. AIDS OF THE SHADOW...........................................................................................38

CHAPTER X. OUT OF THE DARK ....................................................................................................43

CHAPTER XI. THE SILENT HOUSE.................................................................................................47

CHAPTER XII. THE BIG SHOT PLANS ............................................................................................50

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S MOVE.........................................................................................54

CHAPTER XIV. THE NEW MOB.......................................................................................................60

CHAPTER XV. CARDONA FINDS LUCK........................................................................................63

CHAPTER XVI. THE RAID .................................................................................................................67

CHAPTER XVII. THE BIG SHOT DECIDES .....................................................................................71

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW'S THRUST ...................................................................................76

CHAPTER XIX. AT THE HOSPITAL .................................................................................................80

CHAPTER XX. STRANGE QUARTERS ............................................................................................84

CHAPTER XXI. THE FINAL STROKE..............................................................................................87


THE DEATH SLEEP

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THE DEATH SLEEP

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. THE SLEEP 

CHAPTER II. A GENTLEMAN IN BLACK 

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW DEDUCTS 

CHAPTER IV. THE BIG SHOT 

CHAPTER V. DEATH AT DUSK 

CHAPTER VI. TWO GUINEA PIGS 

CHAPTER VII. FURTHER DEDUCTIONS 

CHAPTER VIII. PLANS FOR CRIME 

CHAPTER IX. AIDS OF THE SHADOW 

CHAPTER X. OUT OF THE DARK 

CHAPTER XI. THE SILENT HOUSE 

CHAPTER XII. THE BIG SHOT PLANS 

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S MOVE 

CHAPTER XIV. THE NEW MOB 

CHAPTER XV. CARDONA FINDS LUCK 

CHAPTER XVI. THE RAID 

CHAPTER XVII. THE BIG SHOT DECIDES 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW'S THRUST 

CHAPTER XIX. AT THE HOSPITAL 

CHAPTER XX. STRANGE QUARTERS 

CHAPTER XXI. THE FINAL STROKE  

CHAPTER I. THE SLEEP

IT was nearly midnight when a taxicab stopped in front of the  exclusive Vanderpool Apartments. Two

persons alighted from the car. One  was a gentleman attired in a fulldress suit; the other a lady who wore  a

magnificent leopardskin coat. The door man bowed as they entered the  lobby of the Vanderpool. 

Clark Doring and his wife were frequent visitors to this apartment  house. When they stepped into the

elevator, the operator bowed and  pressed the automatic stop for the fifth floor. He knew that these  arrivals

were coming to join the party in progress at the apartment of  Seth Tanning. 

Arrived at the fifth floor, Doring and his wife turned right and  walked to the end of the single corridor. They

stopped at the last  door. Doring smiled. Sounds of hilarity were coming from within.  Clinking glasses, voices

of men and women were audible to the arrivals  in the corridor. 

"The game of bridge," chuckled Doring, "as they play it at the  Tannings. Time out between hands for a round

of drinks and a lot of  chatter. Well, Mabel, I approve of the idea. I never could take bridge  seriously." 

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"Why bother to go in?" questioned Mabel Doring. "They won't be able  to continue the game, with an odd pair

of " 

"I promised Tanning we'd drop in after the theater," interposed  Doring. "Only the Westcotts are there. Seth

said they would be tired of  bridge by the time we arrived." 

With this remark, Doring rapped at the door. The sounds of  merriment increased. The rap was not heard by

those within. Doring  waited a few moments; then pounded with increased vigor. Again, his  summons passed

unheard. 

"It's a stout door," laughed Doring. "I don't think I shall smash  it. So here goes." 

Clenching his fist, he delivered three terrific smashes against the  panel. The sound of the blows echoed along

the corridor. Yet the  laughter kept on. 

Doring drew back to resume his pounding. He stopped with upraised  fist. The hubbub from the apartment had

come to a sudden finish. 

"That did it," said Doring to his wife. "Seth must have heard those  knocks. He will be here in a minute, to let

us in." 

THE visitors waited patiently. Doring's minute passed. Complete  silence pervaded. Yet no one came to open

the door. Doring glanced  toward his wife in puzzled fashion. 

"Perhaps, Clark," suggested Mrs. Doring, "they only thought they  heard someone knocking. They may be

waiting to hear you rap again." 

Doring nodded in agreement. He delivered several sharp raps upon  the panel; then paused for the answer.

Silence persisted during another  minute. Doring became impatient. He pounded. 

"Curious," observed Mrs. Doring. "I wonder what can have made them  behave in such odd fashion?" 

Doring shook his head. He was puzzled. He decided to knock again,  when an unexpected sound broke the

silence that lay within. It was the  ringing of a telephone bell, quite close at hand. 

"The phone in the entry," stated Doring. "Someone will come to  answer it from the living room. Then I shall

rap again." 

The dingle of the bell came with monotonous regularity. Like  Doring's raps, it went unanswered. Doring

looked at his wife, more  puzzled than ever. One minute  then the ringing ceased. 

"Ah!" said Doring, listening. Then, in an awed tone: "That's more  curious than ever, Mabel!" 

"What, Clark?" 

"I heard no footsteps coming to the door. No one is speaking at the  telephone " 

Doring broke off as the ringing of the telephone bell resumed. It  continued for another minute; then stopped.

Again, there was a short  interval. After that, the bell sounded its mechanical call, ring after  ring. 


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When the bell stopped for the third time, both Doring and his wife  were breathless. They still expected some

response, yet none came. Even  the telephone bell had silenced this time. Two tense minutes passed.  Doring

pounded the door; then stopped and shrugged his shoulders. 

"Something has happened, Mabel," he said, in a solemn tone. "Go to  the elevator and speak to the operator

when he arrives. I can't  understand this." 

As Mrs. Doring walked toward the elevator, the car arrived. A  passenger stepped forth. Mrs. Doring stopped

him and the operator.  Breathlessly, she began to explain the mysterious happenings at Seth  Tanning's

apartment. The man who had come from the elevator walked over  to join Doring. The operator followed. 

"My name is Brooks," stated the passenger, speaking to Doring.  "Just coming up to my apartment  at the

other end of the hall. What's  the trouble here, old man? Something that worries you?" 

"Yes," nodded Doring. "Listen. That place is as silent as a tomb.  When we arrived  about five minutes ago 

there was plenty of noise.  It stopped. I knocked. The telephone rang. Yet no response." 

Brooks knocked at the door. He listened; then shrugged his  shoulders. He drew a key from his pocket and

motioned toward the other  end of the hall. 

"We'd better call the police," he said. "Come on, old man. We can  use the phone in my apartment." 

"Stay here, operator," ordered Doring, as he followed Brooks. "You  wait here also, Mabel. Knock

occasionally. If they give any signs of  life, let us know." 

"They couldn't possibly have gone out," put in Mrs. Doring. "They  might have been leaving the living room

"Not a chance," insisted Doring. "It's only a oneroom apartment   nothing but alcoves for dressing room

and kitchenette. There is no exit  other than the door to this corridor." 

BROOKS hurriedly conducted Doring to his apartment. There Doring  put in a call for detective headquarters.

He held a short conversation  while Brooks listened. Finally Doring hung up and prepared to make  another

call. 

"Talked with an acting inspector," he explained to Brooks. "Chap  named Cardona. He's coming up here. But

he told me to put in a call to  the precinct in the meantime." 

Doring then called the precinct. He and Brooks left the latter's  apartment. They relieved the operator and sent

him down to inform the  door man what had happened. Doring and Brooks lighted cigarettes and  paced

nervously back and forth in front of Tanning's door. At  intervals, Doring stopped to knock upon the panel. As

before  no  response. 

The clang of an elevator door announced the arrival of a tall,  haggard man who introduced himself as the

superintendent of the  apartment building. He explained that there was no master key to  Tanning's apartment.

He rapped at the door; hearing no answer, he  deliberated. While the superintendent was thus engaged, an

elevator  arrived and a bulky police sergeant stepped forth, followed by two  bluecoats. 

These men were from the precinct. The sergeant listened to Doring's  story; then looked at the closed door. He

heard the superintendent's  statement that there was no master key. The sergeant hesitated. 


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"I don't like to break into the man's apartment," he declared. "You  heard no unusual noise. Nothing to

indicate violence " 

"This silence is worse!" protested Doring. "I am sure, sergeant,  that there are four people in the apartment.

All were laughing and  talking. Then came silence." 

"Perhaps they jumped out the window," suggested the superintendent,  in a worried tone. "I don't see any other

answer." 

"We came through the alleyway," returned the sergeant. "I left an  officer down there. If you were right about

some people being in there,  Mr. Doring, it's a sure bet they're still there." 

"Then batter down the door," urged Doring. 

Before the sergeant could reply, an elevator arrived and a swarthy,  stocky man strode forth. This arrival

needed no introduction. One  glance showed that he was the man they all expected: Acting Inspector  Joe

Cardona. 

It took Cardona less than one minute to render a decision. With  blunt questions, he gained answers that added

to the information Doring  had given him over the telephone. Cardona turned to the police  sergeant; then

nudged his thumb toward the door of Tanning's apartment. 

"Smash it," ordered Cardona. 

The bulky sergeant launched himself shoulder forward. The door  quivered. A husky bluecoat joined the

attack. As the men struck the  door together, the hinges crackled. This time, Cardona shot forward  between the

two officers and sent the barrier clear. Half sprawling,  Cardona staggered into a little entry. Officers and

witnesses crowded  after him. 

It was on the threshold of the living room that Joe Cardona came to  an awed stop. Though amazed, he stared

stolidly, despite the mumbles  and gasps of those who had followed him. 

THE only motion in this living room was that of window curtains  that wavered slightly in the mild breeze

from a halfopened window. But  this meant nothing to Cardona for the moment. His eyes were upon the

center of the room, viewing the strange sight that showed in the mellow  light of a bridge lamp. 

The illumination shone directly upon a card table in the center of  the room. There were four persons at that

table: Seth Tanning, his wife  and two guests  the Wescotts. In all his experience as a member of the  force,

Cardona had never observed so startling a tableau. 

The group still formed the participants in a convivial bridge game.  Four tricks had been taken by Seth

Tanning. The little heaps of cards  lay beneath his right hand; the man was staring at a fan of cards that  he

held in his left. 

Across the table lay the spread out cards of the dummy. Mrs.  Tanning was resting back in her chair, holding a

halfemptied  gingerale glass in her right hand. Her gaze was toward her husband;  her lips wore a slight

smile. 

The other players were looking intently at their friends. They were  holding cards; but their expressions

indicated that the play had ceased  for a period of banter. They, too, were smiling. Had this group been  active

and in motion, there would have been no occasion for  astonishment. 


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But every position was one of absolute rigidity. Each of the four  was as stony as a statue. To Joe Cardona, the

players looked like a  group of figures chiseled by some madcap sculptor; or, even more, they  resembled a

bizarre exhibit in a waxwork museum. 

No terror  no surprise  no expressions of excitement were  reflected on those countenances. Yet something

had chilled the entire  group into their present state of being. Whatever the cause, the result  had been

simultaneous. It was this that made Cardona sense that danger  had passed. 

Boldly, the acting inspector advanced to the card table, while  those who had followed him remained clustered

at the entry. With  furrowed brows, Cardona stared at the immobile faces of the group. He  stepped back, more

awed than ever. He heard an inquiry  in Clark  Doring's voice  that came from the entry. The question was a

hoarse  one: 

"Are  are they dead?" 

"No." Cardona's response was oddly firm. "I do not think so. It  can't be a state of paralysis  at least I don't

believe so. It looks  like death  but it can't be death. They look like they were asleep   yet no one could sleep

like that and " 

"Then what is it?" gasped Doring. "Not dead  not asleep  what has  struck them?" 

Staring, the acting inspector pondered. Not dead  not asleep  yet  both. Such was the thought that passed

through his mind as he gazed  upon the frozen victims of an unknown force. As Doring's hoarse  question

came again, Cardona  almost mechanically  formed the phrase  that was to make tomorrow's headlines. 

"What is it?" asked Doring. "What has struck them?" 

"A death sleep," replied Joe Cardona. 

CHAPTER II. A GENTLEMAN IN BLACK

BRIDGE, as played at Seth Tanning's, was different from the game  that was relished at the Cobalt Club. The

members of that exclusive  organization had no time for conviviality. They took their game  seriously; and the

struggle of wits invariably reached its height after  the hour of midnight. 

Yet on this particular night, a game had ended abruptly, shortly  before one. Three players were seated about a

table in a tobaccoladen  card room, indulging in a post mortem. Suddenly deprived of a fourth  player, they

had been forced to end their game. 

The door of the card room opened. The three men looked up to see a  tall arrival dressed in evening clothes.

They viewed a firm,  steadyfaced countenance that they all recognized. That hawkish visage  was

wellknown at the Cobalt Club. The arrival was Lamont Cranston, the  celebrated globetrotter who

frequented the club whenever he was in New  York. 

"Here's our fourth!" exclaimed a player. "Come on Cranston! Sit in  the game. You'll be a worthy successor to

the chap who just left." 

"Who was that?" The question came evenly from Cranston's lips. 

"Wainwright Barth," chuckled the player who had spoken. "Playing in  good luck, too, but he had to quit." 


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"Very unusual," remarked Cranston. "Barth usually stays in to the  end when he is winning." 

"Not since he was appointed police commissioner," put in another  player. "That job has put a crimp into his

bridge game. He left here in  a big hurry about fifteen minutes ago." 

"A call from headquarters?" inquired Cranston, in a quiet tone. 

"He didn't say," was the reply. "He just mentioned that he had  received word of an important case. Needed

his personal attention. So  the big boss of the bluecoats beat it. Come on, Cranston. How about  taking Barth's

place?" 

"Sorry," was the response. "Early appointments tomorrow. I am just  leaving for my home in New Jersey." 

Lamont Cranston strolled from the club room. He crossed the quiet  lobby and moved toward a telephone

booth. 

A SINGULAR phenomenon occurred during Cranston's progress. His tall  form cast a blackened shadow on

the tiled floor. A long, fantastic  splotch of darkness, that shadow ended in a profiled silhouette that  did not

dwindle until Cranston had entered the telephone booth. 

A long, thin finger dialed a number. A short pause; then came a  quiet voice across the wire: 

"Burbank speaking." 

"Report." 

The order came from the lips of Lamont Cranston; but it was not in  the tone that others had heard the

globetrotter use. The voice of  Lamont Cranston had become a strange, sinister whisper that Burbank

recognized. 

"Report from Burke," acknowledged Burbank. "He is following a tip  received at the Classic office. Cardona

is investigating case at  Apartment B 5, Vanderpool Apartments. Police commissioner summoned  there.

Burke promises further report later." 

"Report received." 

Lamont Cranston strolled from the telephone booth. He crossed the  lobby and passed bowing attendants as he

neared the outer door. The  automobile starter saw him coming and signaled with a whistle. A  magnificent

foreign limousine drew up in response to the starter's  call. A uniformed chauffeur alighted and opened the

door for Lamont  Cranston to enter. 

As the car started along the street, Cranston raised the speaking  tube that connected with the front seat. He

spoke in a quiet, even tone  to Stanley, the chauffeur. He instructed the driver to turn uptown and  to park on a

certain street just west of Seventh Avenue. That  designated spot was within a block of the Vanderpool

Apartments. 

The limousine rolled onward. Its single passenger was shrouded in  the darkness of the rear seat. The spark of

a cigarette was glowing; at  intervals, a soft laugh whispered from the tonneau. As the car neared  its appointed

parking place, long hands lifted a thick briefcase from  the floor. Folds of dark cloth emerged. A cloak slid

downward over  shoulders. A slouch hat settled on a head. Black gloves were drawn on  limber fingers. 


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When the limousine came to a stop, the rear door opened  simultaneously. A blackened form glided free of the

car. The door  closed silently. The emerging figure blended with the darkness of an  old house front. Stanley

remained stolid behind the wheel. He would  wait here until he received new instructions. 

STANLEY had not heard the sound of his master's departure. That was  not unusual. For Lamont Cranston

had become The Shadow. From a  leisurely, almost indolent club man, he had transformed himself to a  quick,

alert being of semiinvisibility. Blending with the night, The  Shadow had fared forth to learn of the events

that had brought Joe  Cardona and Wainwright Barth to the Vanderpool Apartments. 

Unseen  his very identity unknown  The Shadow was a master who  battled crime. Through contact with

the underworld, he learned when  evil was brewing. Frequently, his thrusts from the dark came before  crooks

had gained opportunity to begin their nefarious operations.  There were times, however, when strange events

occurred without The  Shadow's ken. On such occasions, The Shadow was forced to follow the  initial lead of

the police. 

Tonight, Joe Cardona had encountered a most amazing mystery. The  acting inspector had notified

Commissioner Wainwright Barth. Only by  minutes had The Shadow missed learning of the mystery. Barth

had left  the Cobalt Club just before his arrival. But in the meantime, Clyde  Burke, alert reporter of the New

York Classic, had discovered that  Cardona had set out on an important case. 

It was Clyde's business to keep in touch with detective  headquarters. He was more conscientious in that work

than was any other  police reporter in Manhattan. For Clyde served more than the New York  Classic. He was

a secret agent of The Shadow. Immediately upon learning  of Cardona's destination, Clyde had communicated

with Burbank, hidden  contact man who also served The Shadow. Thus The Shadow, too, was  arriving at the

focal point. 

Two courses lay open. To follow one, The Shadow could have entered  the Vanderpool Apartments in his

guise of Lamont Cranston. As a friend  of the police commissioner, he could have listened in on Cardona's

findings. But The Shadow had rejected that system for this night.  Having missed Barth at the Cobalt Club, he

did not care to stroll in on  the police investigation. The guise of Cranston was one that he did not  care to

overstrain. 

The second course was to arrive as The Shadow. That was the choice  that he had taken. Hence the supposed

Lamont Cranston had become a  gentleman in black: The Shadow. His course was taking him toward the

scene of mystery. If difficulties proved too great, The Shadow could  rely upon Clyde Burke's report, for the

newspaper man was on the job.  But with The Shadow, difficulties seldom proved insurmountable. 

A BLACKENED shape reached the paved alleyway beside the Vanderpool  Apartments. Footsteps were

clicking on cement. A policeman was pacing  this area. The Shadow could trace the man's movements in the

dark. On  the right was the looming bulk of the Vanderpool Apartments, with its  scattering of lighted

windows. On the left was the brick wall of an old  warehouse building. This was solid in its blackness. 

The pacing officer neared the spot where The Shadow stood. A  flashlight swept its beam along the wall. The

rays passed by the tall  form that stood motionless against the wall. The officer missed sight  of the cloaked

figure of The Shadow. His footsteps sounded down the  alleyway. 

The Shadow moved. His hands pressed against the wall. A squidgy  sound  too soft for the policeman to hear

announced a vertical  ascent. With suction cups attached to hands and feet, The Shadow was  making

upward progress, avoiding the windows where lights were showing.  His phantom figure neared the third

floor. 


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Here The Shadow paused. He had reached a small balcony  scarcely  more than an ornamental railing  that

projected from an apartment  window. He needed the suction cups no longer. Similar rails showed  dimly

above. The Shadow's hands gained a hold above. One story  two   he settled upon the fifthfloor balcony,

just outside an opened window.  He was outside the apartment of Seth Tanning. 

Straight across the alleyway was the roof of the warehouse, marked  by a whitened parapet of moulding stone.

Above that was the dull glow  of the Manhattan sky. Crouched at the side of Tanning's window, The  Shadow

carefully avoided the background of the skyline, for it would  have revealed his blackened shape. His keen

ears caught the sound of  voices, just within the window. Shifting slightly, The Shadow gazed  into the lighted

room. 

There The Shadow spied the figure of Wainwright Barth. The police  commissioner was tall and slightly

stooped; he carried his bald head  thrust forward in eaglelike fashion. Upon his nose, Barth wore a pair  of

pincenez spectacles. His eyes, gleaming through the lenses, were  surveying the swarthy countenance of

Detective Joe Cardona, here in  capacity of acting inspector. 

THERE were others in the room: a police sergeant and two officers;  a gentleman and a lady whom The

Shadow was later to identify as Mr. and  Mrs. Clark Doring; also another man who proved to be Handley

Brooks,  the occupant of a front apartment on this floor. Clyde Burke was not in  sight. Evidently Barth had

decided that the reporter must wait outside  until the investigation was complete. 

"Tanning was seated here"  Cardona was indicating a chair at the  bridge table  "and his wife was opposite.

Wescott over here  his wife  in this chair. They were rigid, commissioner, stiff as statues. For a  moment, I

thought they were dead." 

"What made you decide otherwise?" inquired Barth. 

"The way they were sitting," responded Cardona. "Holding cards   glasses  like they were in the middle of a

game. Then it hit me that  they were asleep  but that didn't answer, either. A death sleep   that's what it was." 

"So you had them removed?" 

"Yes. It's only one block over to the Talleyrand Hospital. I sent  for an ambulance and took them there in a

hurry. No report from the  doctors yet; they're sending for a specialist  Doctor Seton Lagwood   who's

connected there. Knows all about paralysis, sleeping sickness and  all that." 

"I should have liked to have viewed these subjects," decided Barth.  "Nevertheless, Cardona, I must commend

your action in sending them to  the hospital even before you called me. Now that I have arrived, I  shall sift

this mystery. Let us proceed with those who first arrived." 

With this assertion, the commissioner turned to Clark Doring and  his wife. The two began to tell their story.

Wainwright Barth adjusted  his pincenez and cocked his bald head to one side as he listened. When  it came

to fathoming mysterious events, the police commissioner  imagined himself without an equal. 

In this assumption, he was wrong. Within a dozen feet of the  commissioner, another listener was stationed,

silent and unseen. The  Shadow, cloaked in darkness, was ready to catch statements that would  pass unnoticed

by Wainwright Barth. 

For the police commissioner, despite his egotism, was a poor hand  at solving crime. There were many in New

York who could have beaten him  at that game. But none could have equaled the master of deduction who

lurked outside that open window. 


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The Shadow, himself a living enigma, was one to whom all mysteries   no matter how baffling  would be

revealed once he had learned the  details that accompanied them. 

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW DEDUCTS

CLARK DORING and his wife proved to be an excellent pair of  witnesses. Despite the fact that they had

been beyond a closed door,  their description of events within this apartment was both graphic and

illuminating. It was Doring who told the story in accurate detail,  while Mrs. Doring affirmed the truth of her

husband's statements. 

"An odd fact about the commotion," remarked Doring, as he finished  the preliminary details. "The noise

stopped after I had pounded rather  heavily. It ended with uncanny suddenness." 

"So you believe someone heard you?" questioned Barth. 

"That is what I thought at the time," replied Doring. "But  afterward, I changed my opinion. The noise did not

stop while I was  hammering at the door. It finished just as I was about to beat away  again." 

"Ah!" interjected Barth. 

"From then on there was silence," resumed Doring. "I rapped after  an interval of about one minute; then I

waited another minute and  pounded. After another pause, I was about to knock again when the  telephone

commenced to ring." 

"Then you waited?" 

"Yes. To see if someone answered. I thought for a moment that  someone had done so. There was an

intermission in the ringing; but it  resumed again." 

"There's a point, commissioner," put in Cardona. "Someone could  have answered that phone. Picked up the

receiver and let it down  again." 

"But I would have heard footsteps," insisted Doring. 

"How do you know?" demanded Cardona, sharply. 

"There is no rug in the entry," explained Doring. "I have visited  here before; whenever Tanning has answered

the door, his approach has  been quite audible. The telephone is almost at the door." 

"Proceed," ordered Barth. "The pause in the ringing is not an  important point, Cardona. It requires no

explanation. What happened  next, Mr. Doring?" 

"The ringing continued," replied the witness. 

"With another pause," added his wife. "Like the first one  quite  brief." 

"You see?" Barth turned to Cardona. "That proves my opinion.  Proceed, Mr. Doring." 

"When the ringing suddenly ceased," stated Doring, "I told Mabel   my wife  to summon the elevator

operator. When the elevator arrived,  Mr. Brooks stepped off. We told him and the operator about the mystery.


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I went to the front apartment with Mr. Brooks and called detective  headquarters." 

"Very well." Barth began to pace back and forth across the room. He  paused to study the card table, cocking

his head as he did so. He  adjusted his spectacles and turned to Cardona. 

"Everything is as you found it?" inquired the commissioner,  sharply. 

"Yes," replied Cardona, "except for the victims. The window was  open, commissioner." 

Barth turned in the direction indicated. He could see the outline  of the balcony rail against the sky that

showed above the parapet of  the warehouse. 

"A balcony," observed the commissioner. "Did you inspect there,  Cardona?" 

"Yes. No sign of anybody. We made an inspection up from the bottom   using a man that the sergeant posted

down there  and we didn't find  a trace of any intruder." 

"Hmmm." Barth removed his spectacles and polished them, blinking  owlishly as he did so. "Well, the

evening has been quite warm for this  season. An opened window would be expected. Have you searched the

other  apartments on this floor?" 

"Yes," responded Cardona. "There are four, altogether. Two have no  occupants; the superintendent has the

keys and he let us in. Nothing  wrong in any of them." 

"This one and two others," observed Barth, wisely, as he put on his  pincenez. "That makes only three. What

about the fourth?" 

"Mr. Brooks lives there. We looked around thoroughly. Nobody  hiding. I don't see how any outsider could

have been in this,  commissioner  and yet I " 

"Yet what?" 

"The telephone. It must have been a dialed call, the way Mr. and  Mrs. Doring describe it. I can't see why it

made those two breaks. No  one could have been responsible " 

"Preposterous!" interjected Barth. "Every iota of testimony points  to the contrary, Cardona. Someone must

have approached the telephone to  touch it. Mr. Doring would have heard him." 

"Someone could have been there to begin with." 

"Then Mr. Doring would have heard him move away." 

Cardona was silent. Barth's testy comment damaged the detective's  theory. 

CONVINCED that no one had been in the room  except, of course, the  victims  Cardona began to realize

that he was only complicating  matters. Having squelched the detective, Barth raised his head  imposingly. 

"We are dealing," he declared, "with a remarkable mystery that must  be solved by science; not by the law.

We have encountered the  phenomenon of four persons suddenly struck by an unknown ailment which

Cardona has aptly described as a 'death sleep.' The victims of this  amazing malady are receiving medical

attention. 


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"We shall examine the contents of these glasses here upon the  table. Possibly some toxic substance was

surreptitiously introduced. A  chemical analysis will answer that question. But I feel certain, in  advance, that

the liquids will show nothing extraordinary. 

"I base this assumption upon the fact that the victims were  overcome simultaneously. As you can observe, all

were not drinking.  There are only two glasses upon the table at present. Were this an  ordinary case of foul

play, the persons would have succumbed one by  one. It remains a strange case; and we must depend upon the

medical  authorities for their answer." 

Finished with his statements, Wainwright Barth reached for the  notations that Cardona had prepared. The

commissioner read them aloud.  The notes consisted of statements by witnesses, in which the time of  the

peculiar occurrence had been established as precisely midnight.  Barth checked on other details. The party had

apparently been in  progress since eight o'clock. Doring and his wife, leaving for the  theater at that hour, had

received a call from Tanning asking them to  stop in when the show was over. 

"The death sleep," commented Barth, as he dismissed the witnesses  and prepared to leave. "An apt title,

Cardona. I believe that I shall  go to the Talleyrand Hospital and view the victims. Let me state again,

however, that we are dealing with a malady. This mystery has naught to  do with crime. 

"Motive seems absent. This apartment is isolated; no one could have  gained access and departed unobserved.

The presence of persons in the  hallway  people who heard sounds of life; then silence  is proof that  crime

has no connection." 

A few minutes later, the apartment was deserted. The bridge lamp  had been turned off. Darkness was broken

only by the dull glow of the  skyline beyond the warehouse. It was then that blackness obscured a  portion of

the window. The form of The Shadow moved into the apartment. 

THE SHADOW had heard all the statements. The probing ray of a tiny  flashlight was his means of checking

on the details. Gloved fingers  touched the surface of the card table. They lifted; the cloth seemed to  restrain

them slightly. 

The same effect resulted when The Shadow stooped to the floor and  examined a rug just beyond the table.

The bare floor, however, produced  no such effect. It was only in the vicinity of the table that The  Shadow

discovered this slight trace of stickiness. 

Yet as he traced, The Shadow discovered that the area formed a wide  circle. Its center was not the table itself,

but a spot just to one  side and beyond. The wall at the right of the room, looking in from the  window, was a

trifle sticky to a point three feet above the floor. 

When The Shadow stood at the center point of this odd circle, he  found himself facing directly toward the

window. The card table was a  slight space away from that line. A soft laugh came from The Shadow's  hidden

lips. The cloaked form moved to the window, through the opening  and to the balcony. 

The patrol had been ended below. Yet The Shadow did not descend.  Instead, he rose upon the rail, grasped

the bottom of a balcony above  and swung up to the next floor. Outside the window of a darkened  apartment,

he stared across the alleyway. 

The roof of the warehouse was visible from here. The Shadow spied a  trapdoor opening that showed beneath

the glare from the sky. Again the  laugh as The Shadow looked beyond the parapet. It was less than twenty

feet from warehouse to apartment building. 


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The Shadow descended. He resorted to the suction cups after he had  passed the thirdfloor balcony. He

merged with the darkness of the  paved space between the buildings. From then on, The Shadow's course  was

untraceable. 

A CLICK in a darkened room. Bluish light shone upon a polished  table. The Shadow was in his sanctum. A

white hand began to move from  the darkness; holding a pen, it inscribed words upon a sheet of paper.  Written

inscriptions faded as the blue ink dried. Such was the way with  the special fluid that The Shadow used when

putting his deductions on  paper. 

The first jotted words were notations of the testimony that The  Shadow had heard. Then came agreement that

no one had entered Tanning's  apartment. After that, The Shadow marked down the result of his own  findings. 

Outside factor. 

The Shadow was thinking of the warehouse roof. He was visualizing a  lurker there. The opened window was

an easy target for the projection  of some substance from the parapet. The Shadow knew that this alone  could

account for the simultaneous effect that had been produced upon  the victims. 

Gaseous substance. 

This was a logical assumption. The stickiness had indicated a wide  range. A disintegrating bomb, loaded with

poisonous gas, could well  have overpowered the people at the card table. The interval between  that

occurrence and the arrival of rescuers had given the atmosphere  time to clear. 

A soft laugh from The Shadow's lips. Visualizing the person upon  the roof, The Shadow could see two

reasons why he had chosen to attack  from that range. First, because it made entry into the apartment

unnecessary; second, because it kept the attacker free from the effects  of the gas itself. The Shadow's next

statement was a followup. 

Choice of victims. 

Nothing indicated any reason for an enemy to overpower the four  persons who had been in the apartment. It

followed, therefore, that the  deed had been of an experimental nature. This fitted with The Shadow's

deductions. No better spot could have been chosen for a test. 

The attacker had evidently found it necessary to keep out of range  of the gas. That meant the tossing of a

bomb. Why had he picked this  one apartment? The answer was simple  to The Shadow. Only apartments  on

the fifth floor of the Vanderpool were accessible to the  bombtosser. Only two of those apartments were

tenanted; and of the  two, only Tanning's had been occupied this evening. Handley Brooks had  not returned

until after midnight. 

The telephone calls. 

Again, the whispered laugh. The Shadow had correctly analyzed the  ringing that Doring had heard. Cardona

had been right, the bell should  not have made its pauses. But the detective had failed to guess the  truth. 

Those calls had been prearranged to follow the zero hour at which a  lurker had tossed his projectile, namely,

at midnight. There had been  three calls  not one  but all by the same person. The man on the roof  had not

waited to see the effects of his work. Instead, he had relied  upon some other worker. 


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That person had dialed Tanning's number, probably from a pay  station. Receiving no response, he had hung

up, waited a few seconds,  then put in another call, perhaps from a different booth. He had again  hung up; then

repeated the procedure. 

In this manner, he had assured himself that the victims had  succumbed. He had used three calls to be positive

that he was ringing  the correct number. Thus the effect of the experiment had been learned.  The Shadow

laughed as he wrote down the name of Handley Brooks and  crossed it out. 

The arrival of Brooks might have meant complicity. Brooks could  have come to see if the scheme had

worked. But the telephone calls  cleared him. They proved that a simpler and less dangerous system had  been

used to check up on results. 

The location. 

With these words, The Shadow linked his thoughts to his first  written statement. Why had Tanning and his

guests been overpowered? Why  had these four been chosen? The accessibility of the apartment did not

account entirely for it. There were many other places in New York where  victims could have been found. 

WAS it random choice; or did it have a meaning? The fact that the  Vanderpool Apartments were located

close to a hospital had resulted in  a prompt and definite removal of the victims. This was a point that

impressed The Shadow. His soft laugh indicated that he intended to  observe events at the Talleyrand

Hospital. 

Motive. Crime. 

There were the final words. They disagreed with the decision of  Commissioner Wainwright Barth. The

Shadow had found a motive where  Barth had failed. For the commissioner had been considering the  present;

while The Shadow was looking toward the future. 

The Shadow saw purpose behind the loosing of the death sleep. Some  evildoer had gained possession of a

formidable instrument that could  mysteriously overpower those who might oppose him. Not only that: the

method, itself, had baffling features. 

Seth Tanning and his guests had been chosen as victims for various  reasons. The accessibility of the

apartment, its location were two  points. The fact that the bridge players had been persons of some  social

consequence was another factor. The apparent absence of a  criminal motive was a feeler to learn what the

reaction of the law  might be. 

So far, the law was baffled. That would please the perpetrators of  the outrage. Somewhere in New York, men

of crime would be sitting back,  watching and waiting. They knew that the appearance of the death sleep

would crash the front pages of the newspapers. Posted, these evildoers  would be ready for new action. 

A grim laugh sounded in the sanctum. The Shadow was planning a  counterstroke against impending events.

He knew that the death sleep  would be delivered to new victims. More than that, when it again  appeared,

crime would follow in its wake. 

A tiny light appeared upon the wall beyond the table as The Shadow  reached for a pair of earphones.

Burbank's voice came over the wire.  The Shadow's whisper sounded. Through Burbank, the master who

battled  crime was giving orders to his agents. Those relayed messages would  reach capable operatives. 


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The Shadow, too, would be active. Foreseeing unparalleled crime,  The Shadow was launching his campaign.

Evil would be due. It might  strike, despite The Shadow. But the perpetrators of crime would meet  opposition

other than that of the baffled police. Before their schemes  were completed, they would face the power of The

Shadow. 

Whispered orders ended. The tiny light went out. The earphones  clattered to the wall. Then came a click; the

sanctum was plunged in  darkness. From the Stygian gloom came a sardonic laugh that cleaved the  blackness.

Shuddering echoes answered. 

When the last sounds had died, the sanctum was empty. Deductions  ended, orders given, The Shadow had

fared forth from his secret abode. 

CHAPTER IV. THE BIG SHOT

NOON in Manhattan. A short, stocky, uglyfaced rowdy was seated by  the window of an apartment living

room, chuckling over a newspaper. He  was attired in a garish dressing gown with bright green trimmings that

clashed with the dull maroon furnishings of the room. 

The ugliness of the fellow's countenance was increased by the grin  that he wore. Fanglike teeth showed

between bloated lips. They gave the  man an expression that an observer would easily remember. In the

parlance of the underworld, no one could have failed to "spot that  mug." The man by the window was "Wolf"

Barlan, notorious racketeer. 

Seated a short distance away was a welldressed, craftyfaced  fellow whose shrewd eyes watched the

expression on Wolf's face. This  individual was also known in the bad lands. He was "Spud" Claxter,  suave,

persuasive mouthpiece who had served a dozen masters. His  presence here had double indication: first, that

Spud was working for  Wolf; second, that no one knew that the pair had teamed. 

For Spud had that marked ability of appearing to be on his own. He  knew how to keep underlings in line, to

make them think that he was  planning action of his own accord. That was why Spud had profited by  shady

business. Actual big shots who wanted dirty work accomplished  could always depend upon Spud Claxter.

Yet he, like Wolf Barlan, had  been inactive recently. This fact was to come out during their  conversation. 

"DEATH sleep strikes four," chuckled Wolf Barlan. "Say, Spud, the  news hounds have got something to

think about. This is just the sort of  hooey we want. Physicians puzzled by the mysterious malady. They got

that specialist on the job  Doctor Seton Lagwood. That's the way I  figured it would work." 

"Yeah?" questioned Spud. "Well, that's the part I don't like. That  croaker is a smart guy, Wolf. Knows all

about sleeping sickness and  paralysis. The newspapers have been talking about the cures he's worked  on. I'd

have fixed it so those stiffs were shipped to some different  hospital, instead of the Talleyrand. Then some

dumb doc might have got  hold of them  not this fellow Lagwood." 

"Listen, Spud." Wolf's voice was a growl. "I'm running this racket   not you. It ain't your job to pass out

advice. I'm leaving the  strongarm end to you." 

"All right, Wolf." 

"But I ain't saying you're not smart." Wolf paused cannily. "And  it's not bad dope to get opinions from a guy

like you. You take what I  order; if there's any explanation coming, listen in and talk when I ask  you. Get

that?" 


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Spud nodded. 

"Let's look the lay over," resumed Wolf, as he plucked a cigarette  from a box on a table beside him. "I've

been mighty careful with my  plans. I brought you in because I needed some smooth workers and I  wanted

you to get them." 

"Which I did," reminded Spud. 

"Yeah," agreed Wolf. "First there was Skeet Wurrick. He lamped the  lay down at Valdan's. Made sure the old

boy went out of town yesterday  afternoon. That gave Zug Poley the chance to go in and grab the stuff  we

wanted. He got it to the hideout like be was supposed to. 

"Meanwhile, Skeet picks that apartment of Tanning's. A cinch from  the warehouse across the way. Near the

Talleyrand Hospital. Skeet tips  off Zug to heave the bomb at midnight. Zug does it. He beats it while  Skeet is

watching the time and making phone calls to see if the stuff  worked. 

"All goes great. Too late for the morning papers. When Valdan gets  back to New York, he won't be wise until

he picks up one of these  afternoon sheets"  Wolf rustled the newspaper that he was holding   "and the

chances are he won't get a chance to read one." 

"On account of Zug being ready," chuckled Spud. 

"That's it," agreed Wolf. "Skeet swiped Valdan's papers. Zug moved  out the stuff. Even if Valdan does read

an afternoon newspaper, he  won't do nothing until he gets back to his joint. Then it's curtains." 

Wolf leaned back and puffed his cigarette. He eyed Spud, who was  nodding; but he caught a questioning

glance in his henchman's eye. Wolf  laughed. 

"It's all clear to you," chuckled the big shot, "except the reason  why I picked the Talleyrand Hospital. You

can't see no reason for it.  Well, I'm going to put you wise. What happens at any hospital when they  get some

kind of a case that they can't figure out?" 

"They call in a specialist  some croaker who knows more than the  rest of them." 

"Sure. But where do they get him?" 

"They pick the best bird who's hooked up with the hospital, don't  they?" 

"You guessed it. But suppose he don't get anywhere with the job.  What happens then?" 

"Well"  Spud paused speculatively  "I guess the croaker goes out  and talks things over with some other big

boys. Looks for advice." 

"That's it," nodded Wolf. "A consultation. All the smartest  croakers come in on the case. Do you get the point

now?" 

"Not yet." 

"Here's the answer. Sooner or later, this Doctor Lagwood would get  called on. See the idea? He's a hotshot

on this sleeping sickness,  like you said. Runs a sanitarium out on Long Island. Comes into the  Talleyrand

Hospital certain days every week. Now if there's any croaker  who might figure out this gag of ours  the


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death sleep, they've begun  to call it  the one guy is Doctor Lagwood." 

"That's what I said in the beginning." 

"All right," Wolf leered. "Suppose other croakers got the victims  first. They'd be stumped; then Lagwood

would horn in to help them out.  Since they called him in, he'd have to tell them any ideas he got,  wouldn't

he?" 

"Sure." 

"Then suppose he doped out something that would make trouble for  us. A lot of croakers would be wise right

away, wouldn't they?" 

"Yeah." 

"All right." Wolf tossed his cigarette stump into an ash stand.  "That's why I wanted those four people to go to

the Talleyrand  Hospital. This wise croaker, Doctor Lagwood, will handle the cases all  by himself. Without

telling nobody, see? 

"Then if he makes trouble, we'll have a cinch. Rub Lagwood out and  the other croakers will have to start in at

the beginning. By shoving  this under Lagwood's nose right away, we've fixed it so we've only got  one bird to

deal with." 

WOLF reached for another cigarette, grinning with satisfaction.  Spud's crafty eyes had opened in

understanding. When the underling  spoke, it was with profound admiration. 

"Say, Wolf!" blurted Spud. "You've doped it out nifty. I get the  whole idea now. That's why you've got Skeet

hanging around, up there at  the hospital. Watching to see how Lagwood makes out!" 

"Sure," laughed Wolf. "But that ain't all. Look here; if the stuff  works the way it's supposed to, those saps are

going to wake up inside  of fortyeight hours." 

"Yeah." 

"And who'll get the credit?" 

"Lagwood." 

"Sure. Then, when we put the death sleep on some new victims, what  will the police do when they find the

stiffs?" 

"Take them to some hospital." 

"Yeah; but what hospital?" 

"I get it!" exclaimed Spud. "They'll ship them to the Talleyrand,  on account of this croaker Lagwood. He'll be

the big noise  the one  doc they'll leave in charge." 

"That's it," affirmed Wolf. "We'll be playing the same alley all  the way along. These croakers are smart boys,

Spud. They don't tell  each other all they know. They call in help when they're stuck; but  when they're riding

high, they keep mum and let the rest of the  profession guess. 


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"So the more luck Lagwood has, the better. We've shoved the whole  works his way. It'll be a cinch for Skeet

to watch what's going on at  the hospital. Maybe he can get one of those attendant jobs; he says  some mugs

were fired for hitting the booze last week. Well  if he  manages that, he can keep mighty close to what

Lagwood's doing." 

"And if the croaker finds out too much," put in Spud, "we can have  Zug rub him out." 

"That's the ticket," assured Wolf, "but we're leaving Mr. Sawbones  alone as long as we can. Skeet reports to

you. From you, the word comes  to me. Then I give the orders back to you." 

Spud Claxter nodded as he arose. He knew his business. He was the  gobetween; and he was too wise to

aspire to any higher office. Serving  as leader of Wolf Barlan's minions was already a profitable job. Spud

knew that he had been chosen because Wolf knew of his previous services  to big shots. Spud was smiling

wisely when he left the apartment. 

WOLF BARLAN remained smoking by the window after Spud had gone. The  big shot showed his fanglike

smile. It increased the ugliness of his  yellow, unshaven face. Wolf Barlan was pleased. He felt that he had

accomplished something by his talk with Spud Claxter. 

The ring of the telephone interrupted the big shot's reverie. Wolf  reached for the instrument  it was on the

table beside him  and held  a short, grunted conversation over the wire. Laying the telephone  aside, he

resumed his smile as he stared toward the skyline of  Manhattan. 

Wolf Barlan was in the money. His rackets had been shot; he had  retired to obscurity waiting for better times.

Then had come  opportunity. Wolf Barlan was a big shot who had contacts. He had  learned of a new

instrument that could serve in crime. He had called in  Spud Claxter; through the services of this lieutenant, he

had gained  what he required. 

Last night had been the test. The death sleep had worked. The  future lay open. New henchmen would be

needed; Wolf could acquire them  through Spud. Hidden, the big shot could launch a campaign of terror  and

profit that would be under constant control. 

He could pick his victims. He would know where they were going for  treatment. He could learn the results

and act accordingly. Wolf had  made money from his old rackets. So far as the law knew, he was extinct  

retired from crooked games and living in luxury purely upon his  previous profits. 

Another ring of the telephone. Wolf answered it and held another  abrupt conversation with the new speaker.

His smile had increased when  he hung up the receiver. Secret informants  men unknown to Spud  Claxter 

were giving Wolf the tips he needed. 

Swift crime  effective strokes  these were the policies with  which Wolf Barlan expected to defy the law.

The big shot felt confident  of sure success. He could foresee nothing that might obstruct his path. 

Wolf Barlan, however, had not as yet given thought to powers that  lay beyond the law. Elated by the result of

last night's experiment, he  believed that the death sleep would remain a perfect weapon for the  commission of

crime. There was no one, in the big shot's opinion, who  could challenge the methods that he planned to use. 

Such confidence had caused Wolf Barlan to neglect consideration of  one important factor. In all his careful

planning, the big shot had  studied the methods of the law, alone. He had not considered the power  of The

Shadow. 


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CHAPTER V. DEATH AT DUSK

LATE that same afternoon, a taxicab pulled up in front of an old  house that fronted on a quiet street of the

upper East Side. A  grayhaired man alighted and brought out a satchel. He paid the driver  and ascended the

brownstone steps of the old house. 

Urchins, at play on the opposite side of the street, had stopped  their frolic to gawk at the old gentleman from

the taxi. It was an  event when a cab delivered a passenger in this street. The only  respectablelooking house

in the entire block was the one that the man  was entering. All the other buildings were either empty or

tenanted by  clustered families that lived in tenement fashion. 

A solemnfaced servant answered the grayhaired man's ring. He  reached for the satchel, then stood aside

while the arrival entered.  The servant followed in obsequious fashion. No words were uttered until  the

grayhaired man had reached the inner hall and the servant was  ready to go upstairs with the satchel. 

"Anything unusual, Crowder?" inquired the old man, speaking for the  first time. 

"Nothing, Mr. Valdan," replied the servant. 

"Where is Benzig?" asked Valdan. 

"Below, sir," replied Crowder. "In the laboratory." 

"Very well. I shall go there at once." 

The grayhaired man descended a flight of stairs. When he reached  the bottom, he arrived in a large room

that was fitted with work tables  and other items of equipment. Large beakers, Bunsen burners, racks of  test

tubes and shelves stocked with bottles announced the place as a  chemical laboratory. 

A wanfaced man was at one of the tables. He was pounding with a  pestle, grinding powder in a mortar. He

stopped work as Valdan arrived.  Removing a pair of rubber gloves, this assistant stood by, as though

expecting orders. 

"Good afternoon, Benzig," greeted Valdan, in a crackly tone. "What  progress have you made during my

absence?" 

"Quite a bit, sir," responded Benzig. "I have completed the three  compounds which you required. The

quantity of the first seemed  insufficient, so I am preparing more." 

"Very good. Has all been well since yesterday?" 

"Yes, sir." 

"Have there been any visitors?" 

"Only the delivery men, sir." 

"What delivery men?" 

"They brought three boxes, sir," explained Benzig. "Large cases,  they were, with laboratory equipment. They


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were sure that the  consignment was intended for you." 

"I ordered no new equipment." 

"That is what I told them. But they were argumentative. So I went  upstairs and questioned Crowder to learn if

he knew anything of the  matter. I thought perhaps you had forgotten to tell me that a  consignment was due.

Crowder knew nothing about it, so I sent the  delivery men away." 

"With the boxes?" 

"Yes, sir." 

"Hmmm." Valdan looked perplexed. He stared across the laboratory,  toward a bolted door. "You have

been careful to keep the outer door  locked?" 

"Yes," replied the assistant. "Of course I opened it for the  delivery men; but I bolted it as soon as they had

gone. Then, today,  when they brought the guinea pigs " 

"The guinea pigs?" 

"Yes, sir. The same men. They came back with a crate of guinea  pigs. They said they had been mistaken

about the shipments. The  equipment was for another laboratory. The guinea pigs were consigned to  you." 

"I ordered no guinea pigs." 

"No?" Benzig looked surprised. "There were only a few left, sir! I  thought of course this second consignment

must be a correct one." 

"Where did you put the guinea pigs?" 

"In your private laboratory, sir, where you always keep them." 

VALDAN stalked across the big room. He reached an inner door and  opened it. He stepped into a small

laboratory where a confused array of  boxes was strewn on a table. Benzig followed his employer. He pointed

to a crate of guinea pigs which lay in a corner at the right side of  the room. 

"Probably a duplicate assignment," crackled Valdan, in a querulous  tone. "What did you do with the few

cavies that I still had here?" 

"I put them in this crate with the new guinea pigs," replied  Benzig. "I let the delivery men take the old box

away with them." 

Valdan nodded. He looked about the room while Benzig watched him.  This small laboratory was a curious

place. Its small amount of  equipment was located in the center, directly opposite the door, at the  spot where

the boxstrewn table stood. 

There was a door to a closet at the left side of the room. At the  right, just beyond the box of guinea pigs, the

entire wall formed a  huge file cabinet that went up to the ceiling. The drawers were marked  with cards that

listed numbers. A stepladder was handy, as a means of  reaching the higher files. 


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To Benzig, this small laboratory was a room of mystery. Like the  outer door of the large laboratory, it was

fitted with a bolt. Whenever  Troxton Valdan used this room for experiments, he invariably entered  and bolted

the door behind him. 

When Valdan was absent from the house, the door of the little  laboratory remained unlocked, for it was fitted

with bolt alone. On  these occasions, Benzig was very careful about the outer door of the  large laboratory, for

it opened between this house and the next and  might easily prove a lurking place for intruders bent on

robbery. 

Troxton Valdan registered annoyance as Benzig watched him. The  grayhaired chemist seemed perplexed by

these matters of delivery. When  he spoke again, his tone was critical. 

"I have confidence in you, Benzig," declared Valdan. "I chose you  as an assistant chiefly because I was sure

you would not pry into my  private experiments." 

"I have never done so," reminded Benzig. 

"I am sure of that," agreed Valdan, "but I also had faith in your  discretion, Benzig. I am disappointed. You

must be more careful in the  future. You must not permit delivery men to prowl about these  laboratories." 

"I am sure that they touched nothing, sir " 

"How can you be sure? You admitted that you went upstairs to speak  to Crowder." 

"That was yesterday, sir. But today, I remained in the outer  laboratory while the men brought the crate in

here." 

"Stupid of you! You should have came in here with them." 

"But they were only in here long enough to leave the crate of  guinea pigs. I entered as they were leaving.

That was when I  transferred the extra guinea pigs and called the men back to take the  old crate." 

"That is sufficient." Valdan moved over toward the table. "Where is  my afternoon newspaper, Benzig?" 

"It should be on the table, sir. Crowder invariably brings it  here." 

"Did he do so today?" 

"I think so, Mr. Valdan." 

"Think!" cackled the chemist, in an irritated tone. "If you did any  real thinking, Benzig, you would know

whether or not Crowder placed the  journal here. I hired you as an assistant, Benzig, not as a dummy." 

Valdan was rummaging among the boxes on the table. He uncovered one  that was partly obscured by others.

He raised the lid and peered  inside. The box contained two guinea pigs. Both of the cavies were  motionless.

Valdan rapped at the side of the box, tapping with his  fingers upon punctured air holes. The guinea pigs did

not budge. Valdan  replaced the cover of the box. 

The chemist turned suddenly, expecting to see Benzig. The assistant  was no longer in view. Valdan stared

about suspiciously; then closed  the door of the laboratory and shot the bolt. He stooped and peered  below the

table. There, an old piece of carpeting was draped over a  wooden box. Valdan chuckled and began to rise.


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Then, to make sure, he  stooped again and pulled away the old carpet. 

A gasp came from the chemist's lips. Apparently, this was not the  box that Valdan had expected to find. He

was puzzled by its shape and  its appearance. The lid was nailed in place. Seizing a hammer that lay  upon the

table, Valdan pried away a board. He stared into the box. Its  only contents were some short lengths of rusted

iron pipe. 

THE chemist scrambled to his feet. He stared wildly at the door  that he had bolted; then looked toward the

file cabinets at the end of  the room. Hurrying in that direction, Valdan seized the little ladder  and mounted to

the highest step. With quivering hands, he pulled open a  drawer that bore the numbers: 96115. 

Large folders filled the drawer. Valdan rummaged through them,  muttering numbers half aloud. His voice

became a hoarse, anxious  whisper: 

"One hundred and nine  one hundred and ten  one hundred eleven " 

The chemist stopped short. The number that he had just named was  missing. He gripped an envelope that

bore the number 110. The next one  in the drawer was 112. 

"Benzig!" The chemist blurted the name, in a wild call for his  missing assistant. "Benzig!" 

Valdan had forgotten that he had bolted the door. A slight sound  from behind him made him think that his

assistant had returned.  Scrambling downward from the ladder, Valdan began to turn. A click from  the door;

the little laboratory, windowless, was plunged in darkness. A  form sprang forward; Valdan grappled with an

unseen assailant. 

The struggle was shortlived. Valdan toppled to the floor. Hands  gripped his head and pounded it fiercely

upon the stone flooring.  Fierce panting sounded in the darkness. Then the vicious assailant held  his breath

and listened. No further sound came from Troxton Valdan. 

The killer arose. Though he tiptoed, his footfalls clicked  strangely in that darkened room. Then came the

grate of the bolt as  Valdan's attacker drew it back. Eyes peered into the deserted outer  laboratory. The killer

moved forth and closed the door behind him. 

Deep stillness reigned in the inner room. Minutes passed; then the  door opened and an astonished

exclamation came in the voice of Benzig.  The assistant seemed surprised to find the room in darkness. 

"I  I thought Mr. Valdan was in here!" Benzig was speaking to  Crowder, who had come with him. "But 

but the light is out " 

Crowder's hand pressed the switch. Then came blurted exclamations  from both servant and assistant.

Standing just inside the doorway, they  stared at the prone form of their employer. Troxton Valdan was lying

face up on the floor, at the bottom of the ladder. His feet were beside  the lowest step. 

The chemist's head was resting in a pool of blood. His skull had  been fractured by that smash against the

floor. Crowder and Benzig  staring, both had the same thought. The servant was the first to voice  it, in an

awed gasp. 

"Dead!" whispered Crowder, tensely. "The master  Mr. Valdan   someone has killed him!" 


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CHAPTER VI. TWO GUINEA PIGS

ONE hour after Crowder and Benzig had discovered the body of  Troxton Valdan, Police Commissioner

Wainwright Barth emerged from a  telephone booth at the Cobalt Club. He hurried excitedly to the cloak

room and thrust his head across the counter while he pointed out his  coat and hat. He wanted the garments

quickly. 

Seizing his coat from the attendant, Barth began to put it on as he  hastened toward the outer door. As he

neared the exit, the commissioner  bumped into another person who was entering. Grasping his spectacles  just

as they were about to drop from his nose, Barth found himself face  to face with Lamont Cranston. 

"Sorry, commissioner," remarked the millionaire, in his quiet  manner. "What is the trouble?" 

"An important police case," responded Barth, pausing long enough to  explain his haste. "A strange death that

requires my personal  investigation." 

"You have your car here?" 

"No. I intend to take a cab." 

"Not at all. My limousine is outside. At your service, Mr. Barth." 

Turning, Cranston accompanied the commissioner to the sidewalk.  Stanley caught the door man's signal. The

limousine rolled over to the  curb. Cranston motioned Stanley to remain at the wheel. While the  Cobalt Club

attendant was opening the door of the car, Cranston gave  instructions. 

"Drive Commissioner Barth wherever he orders," said Cranston, to  Stanley. "Keep the car at his disposal.

Simply telephone me, Stanley,  so that I shall know where to reach you." 

"This is fine of you, Cranston!" exclaimed Barth, as he was  stepping into the limousine. "But I shall not

accept the latter part of  your offer. As soon as I have reached my destination, I shall send the  car back here.

That is"  the commissioner paused  "unless " 

"Unless what?" queried Cranston, quietly. 

"Unless you should care to go along," completed Barth. "Perhaps"   the commissioner's tone was slightly

condescending  "perhaps you might  be interested in observing the law at work." 

"Very well," responded Cranston, with the slightest trace of a  smile upon his thin lips. "Suppose I accompany

you, commissioner." 

With that he entered the car and passed the speaking tube to Barth.  The commissioner gave Stanley the

address of Troxton Valdan's home. The  limousine rolled northward, while Barth talked to Cranston. 

"I WAS summoned last night," explained the commissioner, "to view  the scene of an extraordinary mystery.

Of course you have read about it  in the newspaper, Cranston. I refer to the strange death sleep that

overpowered four victims." 

"I glanced at the headlines," responded Cranston, "but I did not  read the details. Are the victims recovering?" 


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"Their condition had not changed at three o'clock this afternoon. I  received a report from the physician in

charge  Doctor Seton Lagwood." 

"I have heard of him. A specialist in such maladies as sleeping  sickness." 

"Yes. Somewhat radical in his methods of treatment, I understand,  and therefore the very man to handle these

cases." 

"Why so?" 

"Because the victims were overcome by what appears to be a new  malady. A more conservative physician

would not give these cases the  thorough attention that Lagwood has exhibited. I believe that the  coincidence

was most fortunate." 

"To what coincidence do you refer?" 

"The episode," explained Barth, "took place in an apartment  building not far from the Talleyrand Hospital.

Hence the victims were  taken there for treatment. The Talleyrand chances to be the one  Manhattan hospital

that relies solely upon Doctor Lagwood in cases of  this sort." 

"Quite a coincidence," responded Cranston. "What of the case which  now summons you, commissioner?" 

"It concerns the death of a chemist named Troxton Valdan," stated  Barth. "Nothing to do with last night's

occurrence. We proved  conclusively that crime was absent at the apartment of Seth Tanning.  But there is

evidence of crime at Troxton Valdan's. 

"Detective Cardona  acting inspector for the present  is under  instructions to notify me of any unusual

cases that he encounters. He  called me at the club to tell me of this one. It appears that Troxton  Valdan was

found dead in his laboratory; and the evidence balances  between foul play and accidental death. The very

type of case that  requires my personal attention." 

WHEN the limousine pulled up in front of Valdan's house, a  policeman appeared and saluted the

commissioner. The officer led the  way up the brownstone steps and down the inner stairway into the large

laboratory. Here Barth and Cranston were met by Joe Cardona, who led  them into the smaller room. They

viewed Valdan's body. Barth looked  toward the police surgeon who had just completed an examination. 

"Death was instantaneous, commissioner," reported the physician.  "Caused by a fracture at the back of the

skull. His head must have  received a terrific blow." 

"A fall from the ladder would have been sufficient?" 

"Yes. The man looks like he was a healthy specimen; but he is  certainly well along in his sixties. Vertigo

would not be unexpected.  The effort of climbing the ladder could have caused it." 

"Then the evidence points to accidental death." 

Barth made this statement in a tone of assurance. It brought a  smile from Cardona, who was standing by. The

detective invariably  encountered a problem when he dealt with the police commissioner. Barth  had a

tendency to be overcritical of Cardona's judgment; to form  conclusions that were designed to belittle the

detective's theories. In  this case, Cardona had waited for Barth to form a halfbaked decision;  and the

commissioner had fallen for the ruse. 


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"Quite simple," amplified Barth, turning to Cranston. "One must  avoid the usual tendency that is a common

fault of police  investigators. The average detective attempts to connect crime with  every death that he views. 

"Here we have a dead man  well advanced in years  lying with  fractured skull at the foot of a ladder. It is

obvious that he opened  that high drawer"  Barth pointed toward the ceiling  "and lost his  balance. The fall

killed him. Of course, Cardona"  the commissioner  smiled indulgently as he turned to the detective  "I

must commend you  for notifying me so promptly regarding this case. Even though my  judgment merely

supports the obvious conclusion, you showed wisdom in  bringing me to this scene." 

"Just a moment, commissioner," remarked the detective. "There is  one point about this case that I didn't have

a chance to explain. This  room is not exactly as it was just after the death of Troxton Valdan." 

"Ah!" Barth's countenance changed suddenly. "You mean that you have  found some piece of evidence? Or

that something has been removed?" 

"Neither," replied Cardona. "I have touched nothing." 

"But you have made some change since your arrival?" 

"None. The room is exactly as I found it. But it is not as it was  when these men"  Cardona indicated Benzig

and Crowder  "when these  employees of Valdan's entered." 

"What!" exclaimed Barth. "You mean that they deliberately muddied  matters?" 

"Not at all," declared Cardona. "On the contrary, commissioner,  they performed a very simple and necessary

action immediately after  they opened the door." 

"What was that?" demanded Barth, perplexed. 

"They turned on the light," responded Cardona, with a smile. 

WAINWRIGHT BARTH stood staring. His bald head glistened, while his  eyes blinked through the

pincenez spectacles. Caught off guard, the  commissioner was still puzzled. While Barth stood silent,

Cardona  spoke. 

"Taking the obvious, commissioner," the detective stated, "we can  agree that Valdan was on that ladder,

looking through the file. But it  is not logical that he was doing it without any light. You can't go  through a

filing cabinet in a pitch dark room." 

"You should have told me this when I arrived," snapped Barth. "This  places a different aspect on the entire

case. Come; let me hear what  the witnesses have to say." 

"Here are their statements." 

"Let them repeat them, in brief." 

Cardona beckoned Benzig forward. The assistant was nervous. Cardona  introduced him, then ordered the

man to repeat his story. 

"I was in here with Mr. Valdan," testified Benzig. "He had just  returned from a trip out of town. He was

annoyed because he did not  find the evening newspaper on his table. So I took the opportunity to  go and find


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Crowder." 

"Why?" quizzed Barth. 

"Because it was Crowder's duty to leave the newspaper here, I  crossed the outer laboratory. Then I heard the

door of this room close.  I decided that Mr. Valdan wanted to be alone. In fact, I thought sir   but I can not be

quite sure  that I heard Mr. Valdan slide the bolt  after he had closed the door." 

"Was that his custom?" 

"Yes, sir." 

"Why?" 

"Because he had experiments of his own. I never ventured to inquire  into their nature. My work was in the

outer laboratory. Mere routine,  sir." 

"What did you do after the door closed?" inquired Barth. 

"I continued upstairs," resumed Benzig. "I looked for Crowder. I  called but he did not answer. So I went up to

the second floor  that  is, the third floor, if you count this as the first " 

"I understand. Proceed." 

"When I came down, I found Crowder. He had come from the kitchen,  sir. I mentioned the matter of the

newspaper. He was quite surprised.  He stated that he had placed it in this little laboratory. So he came  along

with me, to inform Mr. Valdan of the fact." 

"Then you both returned together?" 

"Yes, sir. We should have knocked at the door; but I opened it  without thinking. I was surprised to note that

the light was out.  Crowder pressed the switch, sir. Then  then we saw the body." 

BARTH cocked his head and studied the mildfaced assistant. Benzig  seemed to shrink under the

commissioner's eagle gaze. Barth waved  Benzig aside and spoke to Crowder. 

"Your story," ordered the commissioner. 

"I was in the kitchen," stated the solemn servant. "I was preparing  a light supper for Mr. Valdan. I chanced to

come out into the hallway;  I found Benzig there. He told me that he had been calling for me and  that he had

looked about on the upper floor. 

"Then he mentioned the newspaper, sir. So I came down here with  him. Benzig opened the door. I turned on

the light. I saw Mr. Valdan's  body." 

Barth studied the servant in the same fashion as he had eyed the  assistant. He paced back and forth beside

Valdan's body. He swung  suddenly to Benzig and snapped a question. 

"You think that Valdan bolted the door?" questioned the  commissioner. 


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"Yes," replied Benzig. "But it may have been my imagination. You  see, sir, Mr. Valdan had spoken about the

outer door  the one in the  large laboratory  the door that leads to the little alleyway between  this house and

the next " 

"What did he say about it?" 

"He made sure that it was bolted, sir. That was before he came in  here." 

"Is that outer door bolted now?" demanded Barth, turning to  Cardona. 

"No," replied the detective. "The bolt is drawn." 

"But I bolted it, sir!" exclaimed Benzig. "After the delivery men  left the box of guinea pigs. I am sure I did

so, for Mr. Valdan checked  on it." 

"Delivery men?" questioned Barth, of Cardona. "Who were they?" 

"I have Benzig's complete statement here," declared the detective.  "There was a wrong delivery of equipment

yesterday; today the same men  brought an unordered crate of guinea pigs. Shall I have Benzig repeat  his

statements?" 

"No," snapped Barth, suddenly. "Remove these witnesses. We must  examine this room at once." 

POLICEMEN conducted Benzig and Crowder from the room. Barth closed  the door and studied the bolt very

closely. Cardona remarked that there  were no finger prints. Barth shot the bolt and turned to the detective. 

"Tell me about the delivery men," ordered Barth. 

"Yesterday," stated the detective, referring to his notes, "several  men showed up with three boxes that they

said contained laboratory  equipment. This is according to Benzig's testimony." 

"I understand. Proceed." 

"Benzig says he unbolted the outer door and let them in. Valdan had  gone away; he had said nothing about

the equipment. So Benzig went  upstairs and asked Crowder. The servant knew nothing. Benzig returned  and

sent the men away with the boxes." 

"I see. And they returned today?" 

"Yes. With a crate of guinea pigs. Benzig let them put the crate in  here. This is it  over here by the body." 

"Why did Benzig accept the consignment of guinea pigs? Did he say?" 

"Valdan used guinea pigs for some purpose. Had them around the  laboratory. Benzig thought the shipment

was O.K.  so he says." 

Cardona expected another question from the commissioner. It did not  come. With one of his abrupt changes

of tack, Barth began to pace  across the room. He stopped by the table. Cardona joined him, while  Cranston

remained quietly observant. 

"Here's a box with two guinea pigs in it," declared the detective.  "They're dead ones." 


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"Humph," grunted Barth, disinterested. 

"And this big box drawn out from under the table," added Cardona.  "Nothing in it but a lot of lead pipe." 

"Humph," repeated Barth. 

"Folders in the filing cabinet drawer," added Cardona. "They're  arranged according to numbers. One of them

is missing. Number one  hundred and eleven." 

"Ah!" exclaimed Barth. "Did you question Benzig on that matter?" 

"Yes," replied Cardona. "He said that Valdan had him arrange  folders according to their numbers. That was

about a month ago. The  only trouble  and I checked on this by examining other drawers  is  that a lot of

numbers are missing." 

"Why?" 

"Benzig says they represented old experiments, formulas and so on.  Valdan chucked a lot of them that were

no use any more and left the  spaces blank." 

"Then we can assume that number one hundred and eleven was  destroyed with the others. That is, unless we

can positively assure  ourselves that something has been taken from this room. Did you  question Benzig on

that score?" 

"Yes. He looked around while I was watching him. But he couldn't  figure anything missing." 

Lamont Cranston had strolled over to the table. He lifted the cover  of the box that contained the two guinea

pigs. Barth saw him and smiled  indulgently. The commissioner was concerned with matters more important

than dead guinea pigs. 

"We must quiz Benzig and Crowder," decided Barth. "However,  Cardona, we need a starting point. We must

find it. If we could prove  that something is missing from this little laboratory  something that  we know

should be here but " 

"You have already gained such proof," interposed Cranston, quietly,  as he leaned above the box that held the

two guinea pigs. 

"What?" questioned Barth excitedly. "You say that something is  missing, Cranston? What makes you believe

so?" 

"The testimony of the witnesses." 

"But they knew of nothing that has been removed." 

"On the contrary," remarked Cranston, turning toward the  commissioner, "they were very specific in their

statements. In fact,  their arrival at this room was prompted by the disappearance of an  object that should most

certainly have been here." 

"You mean " 

"The copy of the afternoon newspaper." 


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THE commissioner laughed. He seemed to take Cranston's remark as a  jest. Then, recalling the importance of

the case, he became serious. 

"This is no time for trifles, Cranston," rebuked Barth. "Why should  a murder have been committed over an

afternoon newspaper? Assuming that  some unknown person did remove the journal, how could that act have

aided him in his attack on Troxton Valdan?" 

"The answer is quite simple," responded Cranston. "It is possible  that Valdan, had he seen the newspaper,

might have had some occasion  for immediate alarm." 

"What could that have been?" 

"The headlines." 

"You mean " 

"I mean," asserted Cranston, firmly, "that the phrase 'death sleep'  might have caught the eye of Troxton

Valdan. That seeing it, the  chemist might have instantly placed himself on guard." 

"Absurd," interjected Barth. "Your imagination is tricking you,  Cranston. There is no connection between

that episode at Seth Tanning's  apartment and this death of Troxton Valdan." 

"No connection?" Cranston's lips formed a thin smile. "I must  disagree with you, commissioner. I have just

been examining the  evidence that proves the very connection of which I have spoken." 

"Where is it?" cried Barth, in excitement. 

"Here," responded Cranston, tapping the cardboard box. 

"Two dead guinea pigs?" barked Barth. "What is this, Cranston  a  hoax? Two guinea pigs  dead ones 

have nothing to do with murder." 

"Two guinea pigs," repeated Cranston, "but not dead ones. Examine  them more closely, commissioner. Tell

me, did you ever before observe  dead animals that were on their feet  in a state that resembles  suspended

motion?" 

Barth stared into the box. Cardona joined him and stared also.  Cranston's even tones came in quiet regularity,

while his companions  studied the cavies in the box. 

"The two guinea pigs," remarked the firmfaced millionaire, "are  not dead. On the contrary"  the tone was

unchanged, but the words came  more slowly, drilling home the thought that they expressed  "on the

contrary, those guinea pigs are paralyzed " 

As Cranston's voice paused, Joe Cardona came bobbing up from the  cardboard box. His usually stolid face

betrayed sudden excitement. The  detective needed no more to complete the idea that Cranston had begun. 

"He's right, commissioner!" exclaimed Joe. "The guinea pigs are  paralyzed. Like those people were last

night! It's the death sleep  again!" 


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CHAPTER VII. FURTHER DEDUCTIONS

ONE hour after Lamont Cranston's startling discovery, a taxicab  pulled up in front of Troxton Valdan's home.

A tall, longfaced man  alighted, carrying a small bag. He was immediately accosted by the  policeman on

duty. 

"Doctor Lagwood?" questioned the bluecoat. 

"Yes," replied the arrival. "Where is the police commissioner?" 

"In the basement laboratory," said the officer. "I'll take you  there, sir." 

Three men were in the little laboratory when Doctor Seton Lagwood  arrived. Police Commissioner Barth,

Detective Joe Cardona and Lamont  Cranston were still upon the scene of the crime. Troxton Valdan's body

remained in the spot where it had been discovered. 

"I received your message, commissioner," stated Lagwood. "It was at  the hospital when I arrived there. I was

told that you had discovered  new developments." 

"We have," assured Barth. 

"Is this another victim?" queried Lagwood, indicating Valdan's  body. 

"We are not sure," returned Barth. "Our examination has centered  upon this cardboard box. Could you give

us your opinion on these two  guinea pigs, doctor?" 

Lagwood brought the box into the light. He frowned in a quizzical  manner. He lifted one of the guinea pigs

and shifted the stiffened  creature from hand to hand. At last, he replaced the guinea pig in the  box. 

"The condition of this rodent," declared the specialist, "bears a  marked resemblance to that of my patients at

the Talleyrand Hospital.  These cavies certainly appear to be in a state of suspended animation.  I cannot,

however, state positively that they have succumbed to the  same malady until after I have made a blood test." 

"Ah!" exclaimed Barth. "You have found an unusual blood condition  in the victims at the hospital?" 

"I have discovered such traces," assured the physician. "I have  also applied various methods of treatment. But

as yet, there has been  no result. The victims are alive; their state of rigidity appears to be  lessening. I hope for

their recovery, that is all. 

"So far, I have been unable to diagnose the exact nature of the  malady. To some extent, it resembles

Trypanosomiasis, the African  sleeping sickness; or it might be an acute form of epidemic  encepholitis, to

which the term sleeping sickness is also applied.  These diseases, however, show manifestations of lethargy or

torpor,  more than complete coma. 

"Seth Tanning and the other three patients are in a marked state of  catalepsy; they have assumed that unusual

trance condition which, in  past years, frequently led to burials of living persons, under the  impression that

they were dead. 

"Most perplexing is the fact that this action was simultaneous. At  first, I was inclined to believe that they

were victims of general  anaesthesia, a condition from which they should by now have recovered. 


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"This, commissioner, should give you a brief idea of the  complications which I have encountered. I have

hesitated to apply any  one method of treatment in unlimited fashion. In fact, I am still  experimenting with

pharmaceutical preparations, in hopes that a mild  dosage of one prescription may give indications of success. 

"These cavies"  Lagwood smiled as he surveyed the two inert guinea  pigs  "may prove to be the very

subjects that I require for  experiment. I can take risks with them that I would not consider in the  case of my

human patients. First, the tests. If they coincide with my  findings in the hospital, I may be able to find the

solution to the  problem." 

IT was plain to the listeners that Doctor Lagwood was forgetful of  crime in his hope of medical progress. He

viewed the guinea pigs as an  important discovery because they might aid his work at the hospital. It  was

Commissioner Barth who brought the physician's attention back to  the important question of the present. 

"We have a dead man here," stated Barth, pointing to Valdan's body.  "Apparently, he had climbed up that

ladder when something overcame him.  Do you believe, doctor, that he could have succumbed to this same

mysterious malady that has affected those two guinea pigs?" 

"Certainly," responded Lagwood, promptly. "There is every  indication of it. The fact, however, would be

difficult to prove." 

"Why so?" 

"Because the victim is dead. We may assume, however, that he was  overcome simultaneously with the guinea

pigs. My belief is based upon  last night's occurrence. Had any of those victims at Tanning's been  upon a

ladder, they would have fallen in the same manner as this man." 

"Then you believe that the death was accidental?" 

"In a sense yes. In a sense no." The physician's long face showed a  furrowed smile at his own paradoxical

statement. "I should say that the  fall from the ladder was accidental. But I cannot speak for the  condition

which induced that fall. You are faced by the same problem  that you found at Tanning's." 

"That's right," asserted Joe Cardona. "Commissioner, I've got a  theory about last night. Four people going out

all at once. It must  have been some gas that knocked them out." He turned to Lagwood.  "What's your opinion

on that, doctor?" 

"I had the same idea," responded Lagwood, seriously. "In fact, I  had planned to try vapor treatments in an

endeavor to neutralize the  blood conditions of the patients. But my observations in this  laboratory lead me to

believe that we may be concerned with some  amazingly virulent bacillus, not with a noxious gas." 

"That sounds incredible!" exclaimed Barth. "Last night, four  persons were overcome simultaneously. Here

we have the evidence of the  guinea pigs, to indicate that Valdan was overcome by the same cause.  Cardona

may be right, doctor. A gas " 

"What of these guinea pigs?" interposed Lagwood, indicating the  crate upon the floor. 

A SMILE showed upon Lamont Cranston's lips as Barth and Cardona  turned toward the crate. Commissioner

and detective had forgotten all  about the shipment that had been delivered. The guinea pigs in the  crate were

all alive. 


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"The hypothesis of a poison gas," stated Lagwood, "is one that I  now find it necessary to reject. I shall,

however, make experiments  upon one of these rigid guinea pigs, utilizing a vapor as a  neutralizer. 

"But it is evident that a poison gas, loosed in this closed room,  would have had effect upon all life

simultaneously. None of the rodents  in this crate show any signs of lethargy. Besides that, commissioner,

there is another point to be considered. How soon after death was the  body discovered?" 

"Almost immediately," replied Barth. 

"Was the door of this room opened or closed?" questioned Lagwood. 

"Closed," stated Barth. "Valdan's assistant opened it and entered  with the servant." 

"Did either of them experience any dizziness?" 

"They made no statements of that sort." 

"Which proves," concluded Lagwood, "that no noxious gas was  present. In this small room  with no open

windows  the atmosphere  could not have cleared before those persons arrived." 

"That is true," agreed Barth. "Tell us, doctor, what would you  propose as the next step?" 

"For my own part," responded Lagwood, emphatically, "I should like  to return to the hospital and begin

experiments upon these guinea pigs  at once. This dead man is a problem for the police. My duty is to

consider the welfare of four who are still alive." 

"You are right," said the commissioner. "Cardona, call a cab for  Doctor Lagwood. Tie up that box with the

two guinea pigs. Human lives  are still at stake." 

The specialist departed with the guinea pigs boxed beneath his arm.  The commissioner seated himself at

Valdan's table and began to strum  upon the woodwork while Cranston looked quietly about the room. 

"A new quiz may bring the answer," speculated the commissioner.  "Either Benzig or Crowder could have

been in this room. Their meeting  upstairs did not take place until some time after Benzig claims to have  left

here. 

"Benzig might have remained; or Crowder might have been hidden in  that closet. Benzig could have taken

the newspaper; or Crowder could  have failed to place it here. The hidden man could have attacked  Valdan;

then unbolted this door and left. Do you follow me, Cranston?" 

"Yes," came the quiet reply. 

"Leaving, the murderer could have unbolted the outer door to make  it appear that someone had fled." Barth

was picturing a scene involving  one of Valdan's employees. "The delivery men could hardly have had

anything to do with Valdan's death. Why should they have made two trips  here?" 

This time, Cranston had no reply. He glanced at his watch and  appeared surprised at the lateness of the hour.

Barth sensed that his  friend was anxious to leave. He arose from his chair. 

"I can come back to the club by cab," declared Barth. "I doubt that  the coming quiz would be of but little

interest to you, Cranston.  Should you care to learn about them, I can tell you of our findings  when I see you at


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the club." 

"Very well," agreed Cranston. "I believe that it would be best for  me to leave, commissioner." 

FIVE minutes later, Lamont Cranston's limousine rolled away from  the home of Troxton Valdan. After a

southward trip, it turned into a  secluded side street. Stanley parked at his master's bidding. A  blackened form

emerged silently from the rear door. 

The light clicked in The Shadow's sanctum. Hands appeared beneath  the bluish glow. A soft laugh sounded

as deft fingers began to inscribe  written thoughts that faded in mysterious fashion. The Shadow was

considering facts that he had noted at Troxton Valdan's. 

Valdan. Guinea pigs. 

To Commissioner Wainwright Barth, this written statement would have  meant the connection that had been

discussed with Doctor Seton Lagwood:  namely, the simultaneous overpowering of the chemist and the

rodents in  the box upon the table. To The Shadow, however, it inspired a new  deduction. 

Why had Troxton Valdan kept guinea pigs in his little laboratory?  Obviously for experimental purposes.

Benzig had not been surprised at  the delivery of a fresh supply. Therefore, The Shadow knew that Valdan

must have been gradually eliminating the cavies that he kept on hand. 

This indicated that Valdan himself had applied the paralytic  treatment to the two guinea pigs in the cardboard

box. The chemist was  not a victim of the death sleep. The living guinea pigs proved that  fact. Instead,

Valdan, with his secret experiments, was logically the  discoverer of the gas that produced a rigid slumber! 

Delivery men. 

Two visits. Again, The Shadow laughed softly. He could see the  purpose. Yesterday, men had come with

boxes. Benzig had gone upstairs  while they were in the laboratory. The men had taken the boxes away.  But

they had left one of the three and taken another in its place. They  had stolen the complete supply of gas

containers that Troxton Valdan  had concealed beneath the table in his little laboratory! 

Cardona had found a box with pieces of pipe inside it. Beside the  box, a carpeting that had served to hide it

from view. The box with its  useless contents had meant nothing to Cardona; but it had meant much to

Troxton Valdan. Opening the box, the returned chemist had learned that  his precious chemicals had been

stolen! 

The newspaper. 

The Shadow combined this new thought with an unfinished one  the  matter of the second appearance of the

delivery men. The first visit  had been to accomplish theft. The second, to offset Valdan's discovery.  Last

night, Valdan's gas had been tested. Seth Tanning and three others  were the victims. 

Today, Valdan was due to return. There was only one course open to  men of crime. Valdan had to be silenced

forever. The second delivery   the crate of guinea pigs  had been a blind to enable a killer to  conceal

himself in the closet of the inner laboratory, there to await  the return of Troxton Valdan. 

Someone  either the killer or a member of the crew  had seen the  newspaper upon Valdan's table. That

journal had been removed. This was  proof that someone in the crew  probably the killer  knew the  contents

of the box that had been stolen on the previous day. That same  man might have been the one who had


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precipitated a gas bomb into Seth  Tanning's apartment. 

The murderer. 

The Shadow was analyzing the final situation. He was picturing the  attack upon Troxton Valdan. The chemist

had returned. No newspaper had  been there to give him an inkling that his stolen discovery had been  used for

crime. Yet he must have suspected trouble because of Benzig's  report concerning the delivery men. 

Valdan had brought out the hidden box. He had found it to be a  substitute for the one that he had left. He had

climbed the ladder, to  see if his files were intact. He had learned that one  number 111   was missing. Then

the killer had attacked. 

The murderer had chosen darkness. His work done, he had fled,  probably fearing the prompt return of

Benzig. 

He had probably not seen the two guinea pigs in the cardboard box.  He had made no attempt to turn on the

light again. 

That oversight marked him as a man of brute strength who lacked  craft. 

The Shadow could see the scheming of a master brain; but he knew  that the actual murder of Troxton Valdan

had been left to an underling.  The big shot was out of sight, trusting to crooks of gangster type to  do his

bidding. 

THE bluish light clicked out. The Shadow had gone far in his  analysis of crime. He knew that some crafty

superfiend had learned of  Troxton Valdan's experiments; that this schemer had called in the aid  of ordinary

criminals to gain the weapon that he wanted. 

There had been strategy in last night's test. Had it failed, the  stolen box might have been replaced. Troxton

Valdan would have been  left in ignorance, to proceed with his experiments. But the test had  succeeded; the

result had been Valdan's death warrant. 

A fading laugh trailed through the sanctum. That sinister taunt  marked the departure of the blackgarbed

investigator. But its ominous  challenge carried a thought as well. The Shadow, ready to wage war with  men

of evil, had considered the strength of his foe. 

As yet, there had been no indication that those who had gained  Valdan's secret possessed a means of

protecting themselves against its  power. Though their test had succeeded, crime must wait until they  could

guard against the boomerang effects which made others succumb. 

Did friends of crime possess this second secret that they needed?  If they did, The Shadow must act swiftly to

offset their coming  thrusts. If they did not, there would be time for The Shadow to prepare  a wellformed

counterstroke. 

The Shadow's deductions had carried him to this final point. All  else had yielded to his keen reasoning. While

investigators of the law  remained perplexed by baffling mysteries, The Shadow had reached the  period of

action. 

Crime was coming. Crime with a purpose. Preliminary strokes had  involved men of the underworld. Such

minions would be used in the  thrusts that were to come. With this conviction, The Shadow had mapped  his

campaign. As yet, the odds lay with those who defied the law. But  The Shadow, unseen, unsuspected, was


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swinging the balance to his favor. 

CHAPTER VIII. PLANS FOR CRIME

"LOUSY business." 

Wolf Barlan growled this assertion as he glowered at Spud Claxter.  The big shot was seated by the window

of his living room, holding a  morning newspaper on his lap. Spud, his shrewd face dejected, was  eyeing his

chief. Spud ventured a remark. 

"The bulls ain't wise, Wolf," protested the lieutenant. "Zug got  away with it. That's what you wanted, wasn't

it? He croaked Valdan,  didn't he?" 

"Sure he did," returned Wolf, "but it's a wonder everybody else  don't know it, along with us. Zug got the

breaks  but he didn't make  them for himself." 

"He was smart when he swiped the newspaper." 

"And dumb after that. He had every chance to make the whole job  look like it was an accident. But he flivved

it when he turned the  lights out." 

"Zug wasn't so dumb doing that," put in Spud. "Suppose something  had gone wrong. Suppose Valdan had got

away from him. If the lights had  been on, the old geezer would have spotted Zug  and remembered him,

maybe." 

"Yeah?" questioned Wolf. "So Zug was kind of weak in the knees, eh?  Thought maybe he was going to slip?

I didn't figure he was yellow." 

"Zug ain't yellow. He just played it safe. Putting out the lights  left Valdan in a mess. He didn't make no

trouble after Zug grabbed  him." 

"No. But Zug made trouble for himself. Why didn't he shoot the  lights on again?" 

"You'll be asking me next why he didn't walk off with the two doped  guinea pigs that the papers are talking

about. Who made the slipup on  them?" 

"I didn't," growled Wolf. He paused suddenly as he saw a quizzical  look on Spud's face. "What I mean is, I

didn't figure that they were in  the place. Listen, Spud. This wasn't the first trip Valdan made out of  town.

Every other time he went, he took his guinea pigs along with him.  The ones that he'd gassed. You

understand?" 

"Well, if he didn't have them this trip " 

"He did have them. That's the catch to it. But he must have doped a  couple more before he left. That was

something we didn't figure on   something I didn't know about." 

"All right," grinned Spud. "Zug didn't figure on the light either.  And what's more, Wolf, it wouldn't have

made so much difference. He  couldn't have bolted that outer door in back of him. Maybe Zug ought to  have

croaked this fellow Benzig, along with Valdan." 


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"The police are holding Benzig," observed Wolf, somewhat mollified.  "Material witness, the papers say, but

I'll bet they've got the guy  under suspicion. It would have been better though, if the lights had  been on." 

"Anyway, we got a break. It was a bad setup, the way Zug left it.  Lights off, bolts loose, two doped guinea

pigs. Say  it's lucky we  shipped that crate of live guineas in there instead of the glass  beakers I thought about

sending. 

"They've hooked up Valdan's death with those people we knocked out  the night before. But they're off the

track of gas. That was on account  of the live guinea pigs. Did you read this statement by Doctor  Lagwood?" 

"Yeah," Spud chuckled. "The croaker pulled a bull, didn't he? You  couldn't blame him though. He thought he

was pretty smart, I guess,  when he said any gas would have doped the whole lot of guinea pigs  instead of just

two." 

"It worked out nice for us," asserted Wolf. "Gave Lagwood a big  boost, which means there won't be a lot

more medicos horning in on the  case." 

"Only the one guy to watch," added Spud. "Well  when you want the  croaker rubbed out, pass the word." 

"I'm not worrying about Lagwood," observed Wolf, narrowly, as he  lighted a cigarette. "The guy is going to

be worth more to us than your  whole gang. Say  he'll rate ace high when those saps wake up around

midnight. Everybody will think he brought them out of the trance. They  won't know that the crowd was due

to wake up in fortyeight hours.  That's the way the gas works." 

"But suppose Lagwood figures it out?" 

"What difference does that make? Do you think any croaker would go  around refusing credit? You bet none

of them would. That sawbones will  hog all the medals he can get." 

"That's right, Wolf. He'll probably figure he woke up the dummies  anyway. But just the same  I can't see

where Lagwood is going to help  the game. Skeet slipped me the word that he's been working heavy on  these

mugs that we put under." 

"Yeah?" Wolf's inquiry came with a puff of cigarette smoke. "I was  just going to ask you about Skeet. He's

got more brains than that guy  Zug. What's Skeet got to say?" 

"He landed that job up at the hospital. Pushing wheel chairs in and  out of a store room. Bringing up packages.

Running errands. Sort of a  general handy man. Got a look in on Doctor Lagwood's experimental room,  but

didn't have a chance to snoop around it. I told him to lay off." 

"That's right. Has he seen his nibs?" 

"Yeah." Spud pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket. "Lagwood sent  him down to a drug store to bring back

some prescriptions. Here's a  list of the stuff." 

WOLF received the sheet of paper. Instead of being listed as  prescriptions, in the usual pharmaceutical

fashion, the items bore  special names that were apparently of Doctor Lagwood's devising. These  were odd

abbreviations and each bore a number. 

"That's funny," observed Wolf. "Wonder why the medico made up a  list like this?" 


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"He explained it to Skeet," stated Spud. "Told him that if Hoffer   that's the old druggist  wasn't in the shop,

to give it to anybody  there. Said he always had his preparations marked so that a dumb clerk  could locate

them." 

"Not a bad idea." 

"That ain't all. Skeet got talking to one of them men nurses  a  trained seal, Skeet called him  and asked him

about this drugstore  guy, Hoffer. Skeet found out that Lagwood and a couple of other fussy  croakers won't

have nobody else mix their prescriptions except that old  timer. All the stuff that Lagwood gets comes from

there." 

Wolf began to eye the list. He noted that a line had been drawn  through one item. He read the abbreviation

"NeutNumber 6." He pointed  it out to Spud. 

"Skeet have anything to say about this?" questioned Wolf. 

"Yeah," responded Spud. "Lagwood crossed it off. Told Skeet to tell  Hoffer that he wouldn't need no more of

it. Not for a while, anyway.  Wanted the old boy to tuck it off in some safe place." 

"Did Skeet see Hoffer?" 

"Yeah. Old wizened guy about eighty years old. Skeet told him about  this line that Lagwood crossed off.

Showed him the list." 

"What did Hoffer do about it?" 

"Dug under a counter and pulled out a gallon jug of some green  stuff. When Skeet went out, the old boy was

taking it down into the  cellar. Going to put it with the cobwebs, I guess." 

To Spud, the matter was of little consequence. Wolf, however, had  another impression. The big shot studied

the list; then stared from the  window and a smile appeared upon his bloated lips. He picked up the  newspaper

and began to turn the pages. Spud wondered what was up when  he heard Wolf chuckle. 

"A couple of dumb clucks, you and Skeet," affirmed the big shot.  "Say  what time does Skeet get off duty

up there at the hospital?" 

"Eight o'clock tonight," answered Spud. "Why? Got something for him  to do?" 

"You bet I have. It means he chucks that job. Get hold of him and  have him do something dumb enough to

get fired. Crack up a wheel chair   anything  just so he can fade out in a neat way." 

"But then he won't be watching Lagwood?" 

"I don't want him to watch Lagwood," Wolf glowered savagely. "He's  done enough of that. Look here. Did

you read this statement that the  medico made?" 

"About sleeping sickness and all that With all them long words, in  letters that lay over on one side?" 

"That's it." 

"I passed it up," admitted Spud. "Couldn't figure out that it meant  anything." 


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"It means plenty," growled Wolf. "Here's where Lagwood says he has  abandoned the theory of a gas causing

this death sleep. Says that he  had been working on a vapor treatment, using a neutralizer that he  doped out

after making blood tests." 

"Yeah? What's a neutralizer?" 

"It's stuff that would kill the gas fumes if you had it ready. They  used neutralizers in gas masks over in

France. A gas mask ain't just a  bag that you put over your head. It's got a nozzle that you put  chemical in; but

you've got to have the right stuff." 

"You mean that Lagwood may have doped out the stuff we want?" 

"You bet I do. For his vapor treatment. But he's quit that. Here it  is  this thing that he crossed off the list.

Neut. That's short for  neutralizer. There's a gallon of it down in the cellar of that drug  store." 

"And you've got a lot of funny looking gas masks over in the  hideout!" 

"Yeah, just waiting for the right stuff to go in them. Listen.  Here's Skeet's job. He's got to crack that drug

store, see? It's a one  man job. Nobody'll get him if he hits a cellar window. Tell him to find  that gallon jug

with the green stuff. Bring it to the hideout. Then  we're set. That is, if the stuff works." 

"You mean that we'll be able to follow in after we heave the gas  bombs that we swiped from old Valdan?" 

"You guessed it. But we're not going to work it too strong at  first. I've got two jobs in mind. Not heavy, but

plenty of swag if  they're worked right. And after that  well"  Wolf chuckled as he  reached for a cigarette 

"it's anything, bo, up to the United States  Mint." 

Spud Claxter sat staring from his chair. His shrewd brain was  visioning the possibilities that the big shot had

suggested. Wolf  Barlan was leering, with his yellowish teeth displayed to their full.  Then the big shot's

countenance changed. Wolf snarled an order. 

"Scram," he said to Spud. "Get to Skeet and give him the lay. Then  start out and pick that mob you've been

talking about. You know the  gorillas you want. You've already got an inside crew. But we need some  tough

mugs for the outside." 

Spud lost no time. He was rising as he nodded his understanding. He  turned toward the door and was halfway

there before Wolf stopped him. 

"Don't get too cocky," reminded the big shot. "Remember, this stuff  is more important than those gas bombs.

With that formula the boys  swiped out of Valdan's place, I can get more bombs made up after we've  used the

supply. But this neutralizer stuff is precious. 

"It ought to work on account of a smart croaker like Lagwood  figuring it out. But don't forget, those masks

will have to be loaded  each time. Remember, the bottle's made out of glass, and a clumsy guy  can spill stuff

when he's pouring. 

"Those masks don't take much and a gallon will be plenty if we  don't waste it. But if it runs out, we can't go

around to the  Talleyrand Hospital and send in our cards to Lagwood. We can't say  'Hello, doc. Got any more

of that green neutralizer? We used up all we  swiped.' Do you get me, Spud?" 

"I get you," nodded the lieutenant. 


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"Well," added Wolf, "tell Skeet it'll be curtains for him if he  busts the bottle. I've had guys put on the spot for

a lot less." 

SPUD departed promptly after the final admonition. Wolf Barlan  remained leering by the window. Then,

with a chuckle, he reached for  the telephone. The big shot was ready to proceed with crime. 

Spud Claxter was the head of the strongarm crew. But Wolf had  other associates upon whom he depended.

The big shot was wary when it  came to mixing his affairs. He had already picked places for crime. He  had

been waiting only for the opportunity. 

Confident, Wolf dialed a number. He chuckled as he heard the bell  ring across the wire. This call was his first

step. He was passing the  news where it would be well received. He knew that this first recipient  would be

pleased to learn that Doctor Lagwood's neutralizing  preparation would be gained tonight by men of crime. 

CHAPTER IX. AIDS OF THE SHADOW

SHORTLY before eight o'clock that evening, a young man of marked  professional appearance made his exit

from the portals of the  Talleyrand Hospital. As he was descending the stone steps, he  encountered an elderly

man coming upward. The arrival paused and thrust  out his hand to the young man. 

"Rupert Sayre!" exclaimed the old man. "What are you doing in this  bailiwick? Don't tell me that you have

joined the staff of the  Talleyrand Hospital!" 

"Hello, Doctor Derry," responded the younger man. "I haven't seen  you since the year I graduated from

medical school. No, I'm not on the  Talleyrand staff. Just happened to drop in to see Freddy Lawson." 

"A fine physician, that young man," nodded Doctor Derry. "I believe  that Lawson will become the finest

dermatologist that we have ever had  in this institution. Well, well, Rupert. It is a pleasure to see you.  Still

engaged in general practice." 

"Yes, sir." 

The two men parted. Rupert Sayre walked along the street to an  obscure spot and entered the driver's side of a

parked coupe. A low  voice spoke from the darkness: 

"Did you learn anything, Doc?" 

"Yes," replied Sayre. "I don't know how important it is, Vincent;  but it may be exactly what you are looking

for. I had a long talk with  Lawson; he spent an hour showing me around the place." 

"You saw the death sleep patients?" 

"Yes. I did not meet Doctor Lagwood, however. But I remembered your  request  to catch the details of any

unusual incident. I learned of  one that has reference to a new attendant." 

"What was it?" 

"A fellow named Charles Dowther  at least that was the name he  gave for himself  was given a job only a

few days ago. It appears that  several attendants were discharged for drunkenness quite recently. This  man

managed to gain employment without giving details of previous  experience. Being shorthanded, the


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institution was ready to take on  almost anyone who applied." 

"I see." 

"Dowther was put to work moving wheel chairs and running errands.  He worked on the floor where Doctor

Lagwood's laboratory is located and  I believe that he must have been in a position to observe what was  going

on there. Well, Dowther held his job fine until this afternoon." 

"What happened then?" 

"He let a wheel chair get away from him coming down a flight of  stairs. First of all, he had no right with it

there; he should have  taken it down by elevator. As luck had it, the wheel chair bounced  across the hallway

and bowled over a plaster statue of Hermes  a  lifesized object. To make matters worse, the statue fell upon

a glass  case that contained an architect's model of the hospital building and  smashed that beyond repair." 

"Was Dowther discharged?" 

"No. That is the odd part about it. Since the matter appeared to be  an accident, he was severely reprimanded

for not obeying rules  regarding wheel chairs in the elevator. But he apparently thought that  he would be

dismissed, for he returned late after going out to supper.  He arrived only twenty minutes ago and he was

creating a great scene.  That was how Lawson happened to tell me all about him." 

"What was the matter with him?" 

"Drunk. He came in through the attendants' entrance and began to  argue with everyone in sight. 'Fire me will

you? Who's going to fire  me? I'll resign.' That was the burden of his theme. So they were firing  him when I

left." 

"You mean he was still putting up an argument?" 

"Yes. Refusing to take the pay that they were giving him. Said they  could keep the money and buy another

statue of a guy with wings on his  derby hat." 

"It must have been funny, Doc." 

"It was, Vincent. Particularly because the man was faking  intoxication." 

"You are sure?" 

"Positively," affirmed Sayre. "But I was the only person who  detected it. Vincent, that fellow wanted to be

fired"  the doctor  paused to catch his companion's arm  "watch there! By that lighted  entrance. Here comes

the chap now." 

A HUNCHED figure was staggering from the side of the hospital. In  one hand the man held several dollar

bills; in the other, he waved a  derby hat. He paused to turn back toward the entrance, where attendants  were

watching his departure. Then, with a final gesture of contempt,  the man staggered to the street. 

He passed the parked coupe, muttering to himself and balking in his  gait. He stopped suddenly; turned about

and looked back. Satisfied that  no one was still watching him, he steadied suddenly and laughed. He  moved

off into the darkness, shuffling out of sight. 


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"I told you that he was faking, Vincent " 

"So long Doc. I'm following him. Thanks." 

Sayre's companion opened the door and stepped to the sidewalk.  Sayre waited until he had passed from view;

then started the motor and  drove off in his coupe. 

To Doctor Rupert Sayre this episode had been both unusual and  important. He had come to the Talleyrand

Hospital in response to a  telephone request from a friend named Lamont Cranston. On the way,  Sayre had

stopped at the Metrolite Hotel to bring along a man named  Harry Vincent. This had been in accord with

Cranston's request. 

Once  it seemed long ago  Rupert Sayre had been saved from death  by a mysterious personage cloaked in

black. He had never guessed the  exact identity of that being; but he connected his mysterious  benefactor with

a friend whom he had gained at the same period: Lamont  Cranston. 

Ever since then, the young physician had been ready to conform to  any course that Cranston might suggest.

He had served this important  friend more than once. Thus Doctor Rupert Sayre had become an aid of  The

Shadow. 

HARRY VINCENT, trailing the attendant dismissed from the Talleyrand  Hospital, was a young man who

had played a much more active part in The  Shadow's enterprises. Harry had been assigned to the task of

watching  events at the Talleyrand Hospital. Handicapped, he had reported his  difficulties to Burbank. His

meeting with Rupert Sayre had been the  answer. 

As Harry moved easily but rapidly along the streets not far from  the hospital, he realized that he was trailing a

product of the  underworld. This was a correct assumption; for Harry was in pursuit of  none other than

"Skeet" Wurrick. This underling of crime had used the  name of Dowther when he had gained the job at the

Talleyrand Hospital. 

It had required two offenses for Skeet to be fired. His smashing of  the statue had been deliberate. Skeet had

made it look like an  accident. Reprimanded but not dismissed, he had feigned drunkenness in  order to carry

out Spud Claxter's orders. Skeet was now bound for the  little drug store that bore the name of Hoffer's

Pharmacy. 

Skeet made a shifty detour that brought him to the entrance of a  blind alley. He ducked out of sight. Harry

Vincent, coming from the  corner that Skeet had just turned, was deceived by the ruse. The  Shadow's agent

kept along the block. 

Skeet had not suspected that someone was following him. At the end  of the alley, he found a basement

window at the back of the pharmacy.  He pried it loose, slid his wiry body into the opening and found  himself

in Hoffer's cellar. Skeet inspected with a flashlight. 

Luck favored the gangster. He found the door of a closet, opened  it, and spotted the gallon bottle on a shelf.

Skeet recognized the  greenish liquid and examined the label. Extinguishing his flashlight,  he grabbed the

prize that he sought and made his way back to the  window. Three minutes later, he sneaked from the blind

alley and  hastened across the street. 

It was then that Harry Vincent spotted him. The Shadow's agent was  returning from the opposite direction.

He caught sight of Skeet's  shifty form passing beneath an isolated street lamp. He saw the bottle  that the

fellow was carrying. Then Skeet reached the corner. 


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Harry pursued, swiftly, but with caution. He reached the corner and  spied Skeet nearly a block away, just

about to turn another corner.  Harry hurried forward. He was too late. He reached the corner just in  time to see

a car shoot away from halfway down the block. 

The Shadow's agent was chagrined at his failure. There was only one  course left to him. That was a report to

Burbank. Harry walked along  until he found a cigar store near a corner. He put in a call to the  contact man,

made his report, and received orders to return to the  Metrolite Hotel. 

WHILE Harry Vincent was encountering this failure, another agent of  The Shadow was at work within the

confines of the underworld. Seated at  a table in a dive called the Black Ship, a sturdy chap with a chiseled

countenance was listening to the boastful talk of a husky mobster  sitting opposite. 

The firmfaced man was Cliff Marsland, The Shadow's agent in the  underworld. Cliff had gained a name for

himself in the badlands. It  commanded the respect of tough gorillas. The fellow opposite him  Luke  Gonrey

was the type of gangster whom Cliff could make talk freely. 

"I'm sayin' nothin' to nobody," Luke was confiding, in a low growl.  "But that don't mean you, Cliff. You're

somebody. I know when an' how  to keep mum; but I know the few gazebos it don't hurt nobody to talk to  

an' you're one of 'em." 

Cliff shrugged his shoulders. A bottle was beside him; he shoved it  across the table and watched Luke fill his

glass. Cliff knew that  something was in the wind. He had been watching for gorillas who were  spending

money. He had spotted Luke, begun a chat with the fellow and  let Luke do the talking. 

"I got a good break, Cliff," asserted Luke. "That's why I'm tellin'  you about it. Real dough in it. Got some

mazuma slipped to me in  advance. That means there's more comin'." 

"It generally does," observed Cliff. "Sometimes it means a catch." 

"Not this trip," retorted Luke. "I'll tell you why. The guy that  slipped me the cash"  he leaned across the

table and reduced his voice  to a whisper  "was Spud Claxter." 

"Thought he was out of town," responded Cliff. 

"Spud?" chuckled Luke. "Guess again. This wad of dough"  he  exhibited a bankroll  "means that Spud's in

the city. An' this green  ain't all fins an' sawbucks, neither. Say, Cliff  I'm goin' to wise up  Spud. He ought to

have you in the outfit." 

"Yeah? What's the game, Luke?" 

Luke grinned. 

"Might as well spill it," he decided. "Spud's givin' me half a  grand. Two centuries in advance  that's the wad

I just showed you.  Well  Spud picked me because I know how to use a smokewagon. No Boy  Scouts in his

crew. No argument about the dough. He coughed up what I  asked for." 

"Not bad." 

"You bet it ain't. Say  there's plenty of gazebos would bump off  their whole family for half a grand. But that

ain't the point. What I'm  drivin' at is this. If Spud wanted me, he'll want you. Savvy?" 


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"For half a grand?" 

"Naw. That's where I was dumb. Thought I was shootin' high, but  found I was low. Say  Spud won't find no

better guy with a rod than  you. I'm goin' to tell him that. Savvy?" 

"And what then?" 

"You'll get a bid from Spud. Hold out for a grand. He'll come  through. Then"  Luke's tone was wary  "you

an' me make a divvy." 

"On the grand?" 

"Half of it," responded Luke, eyeing Cliff warily. "Half a grand is  yours. The other half goes two ways. You

an' me, fiftyfifty. Worth it,  ain't it, for the tip?" 

"Maybe," said Cliff. 

"Say," argued Luke, "if Spud come to you straight an' wanted to  talk turkey, you'd hook up with his outfit for

half a grand, wouldn't  you? Well  I'm tellin' you how we can both split half a grand  besides." 

"When are you going to see Spud?" questioned Cliff. 

"That's the tough part," growled Luke. "There ain't no chance of  your hookin' in on this first job, because

we're goin' out tomorrow  night an' the outfit's all set. But there's more jobs comin'. 

"Same dough for each job. All right. Tomorrow night I buzz in  Spud's ear. Fix it for you. You'll be in the

outfit next trip  an' I  figure Spud'll have plenty more dough by then. You get the grand. We  split half of it " 

"On the first job I'm in on? Only that one?" 

"All right," agreed Luke, reluctantly, seeing he could get no  further. "Are you in?" 

"Yes," replied Cliff, "if you tell Spud that I won't work for less  than a grand." 

"I'll fix that. Listen. Spud wants me to be here tomorrow night.  This is where I'll get word where to meet him.

See? I'm to be here  every night, because this is the joint where I hang out most of the  time. 

"Tomorrow, I go out with Spud's crew. The next night, I'll chew the  fat with you. Right here, at this table." 

Cliff nodded. He made a warning gesture; then arose and strolled  from the Black Ship. 

Luke smiled approvingly. Good business, not to be seen with Cliff  any longer. The gorilla crinkled his roll of

bills. He was looking  forward to the rest of his five hundred; then another payment, plus a  cut from Cliff

Marsland. 

Outside, Cliff sauntered along until he reached a dilapidated store  some distance from the Black Ship. He

entered, found a battered  telephone booth and put in a call to Burbank. 

LATER, The Shadow entered his sanctum to find the tiny bulb glowing  on the far wall. His invisible hands

lifted the earphones. He heard the  prompt voice across the wire: 


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"Burbank speaking." 

"Report," ordered The Shadow. 

The word came through. The earphones moved to the wall. The Shadow  did not turn on the blue light after

the call was finished. Instead, he  uttered a whispered laugh; the token that brought the silence of his

departure. 

Two reports. Harry Vincent had admitted failure; Cliff Marsland was  counting on prospects only. Yet The

Shadow's laugh denoted  satisfaction. His keen brain had divined the reason for the theft made  by Skeet

Wurrick. The information gained from Cliff Marsland was  sufficient for his plan of campaign. 

The Shadow knew that crime was due. It would strike tomorrow night.  When crime arrived, The Shadow

would be present at the scene of action. 

CHAPTER X. OUT OF THE DARK

EARLY the next evening. Newsboys were shouting the merits of the  final editions when Lamont Cranston

sauntered from the entrance of the  Cobalt Club. The millionaire purchased a newspaper. He entered his

limousine, gave an order to Stanley, then turned on the dome light and  began to peruse the journal. 

The big feature of the day's news was the recovery of the four  patients at the Talleyrand Hospital. Doctor

Seton Lagwood had gained an  unprecedented triumph. He had varied his treatments during the  preceding

evening and results had followed. 

Shortly before midnight, one of the death sleep victims  Mrs.  Tanning  had shown definite signs of life.

Her cataleptic condition  had relaxed. Respiration had become normal. The trance had changed to  peaceful

slumber. 

At intervals of less than half an hour, the other patients had  shown similar response. Then they had awakened,

one by one, to stare in  bewildered fashion at their surroundings. Doctor Lagwood had remained  in attendance.

At nine o'clock in the morning, he had allowed Seth  Tanning to make a brief statement. The others had also

spoken before  noon. 

Though the recovered victims showed but little ill effect from  their experience, none of them could shed light

upon the strange event  that had overpowered them. They could only remember that they had been  playing

bridge. It seemed evident that they had lost all recollection  of the time period just prior to the fall of the death

sleep. 

Doctor Lagwood's statement was a brief one. He declined to discuss  the cases until later. He was fatigued and

ready for sleep himself. He  left instructions to be called if any of the patients showed signs of  relapse.

Otherwise, he was not to be aroused until eight o'clock in the  evening. According to the final newspapers, no

call had been necessary.  The patients had improved constantly during the day. 

Lamont Cranston turned off the dome light as the limousine neared a  glittering East Side thoroughfare. When

the car rolled beneath the  steel structure of an elevated, black cloth came tumbling from a  briefcase in the

back seat. When Stanley pulled up beside a secluded  curb, Cranston's voice gave new instructions. 

THEN a rear door opened silently; a phantom shape emerged and  glided off into darkness. Stanley was

holding a watch. Two minutes  passed. The chauffeur started the car and headed back toward the Cobalt  Club. 


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Narrow alleys; grimy street lamps; fronts of buildings where  streaks of light issued through cracked window

shades  such were the  surroundings that The Shadow had chosen. Skulking forms were moving  through the

gloom. Pasty, ratlike faces showed at every corner. Yet  none of these furtive passers spied the cloaked figure

that moved with  the stealth of night. 

The Shadow had reached the heart of the underworld, that district  where every person was his enemy. Yet he

remained unseen in the midst  of this hostile terrain, moving stealthily toward a desired  destination. 

Had any pair of beady eyes glimpsed that shrouded passing shape,  the alarm cry would have risen on the

instant. Rats of the underworld  dreaded The Shadow; yet the cowards felt security within their own  domain.

It was in these parts that The Shadow had been hunted; where he  had been forced to use every possible

measure to escape the hordes that  sought him. A soft laugh, whispered in the darkness of a secluded  alley,

formed The Shadow's mirthful recollection of those desperate  adventures. 

For The Shadow, his presence unknown, expected no molestation. Only  when shrewd crooks had scented his

approach had he been forced to  combat in this region. Tonight, he was on a mission of stealth. Though  ready,

on the instant, to match any challenge that the underworld might  offer, The Shadow was deliberately keeping

clear of all encounters.  Those would come later  else where. 

The Black Ship. The Shadow paused in darkness opposite the  notorious dive. His keen eyes, closed to narrow

silts, kept tabs on  those who entered and left the joint. At last a bulky figure appeared  upon the steps. The

Shadow recognized Luke Gonrey. Someone had slipped  the word to the gorilla. He was on his way to join

Spud Claxter's crew. 

Luke was cautious. He looked over his shoulder as he stalked along  the street. But he did not spy the

blackgarbed form that followed him.  The Shadow, stealthy as ever, was lost in the surrounding blackness.

Even when he glided past lighted corners, The Shadow remained unseen.  The only manifestation of his

presence was a splotch of blackness that  moved across the lighted sidewalk. 

The Shadow was working alone tonight. He had left Cliff Marsland  out of the game. The agent's turn would

come later. It would have been  impossible to bring Cliff along the course that The Shadow  no one  else 

could follow. 

Luke Gonrey reached the back of an old garage. The place was  supposedly empty; its sliding doors had long

since been ripped away and  used as firewood. But the garage was not empty tonight. Luke seemed to  know

that fact, for he entered through a blackened door. 

Edging from a brick wall, The Shadow followed. This course was to  his liking. Mobsters had chosen

pitchdarkness for their rendezvous.  Unknowingly, they had formed ideal conditions for The Shadow. 

LUKE blundered into the back of a touring car. A gruff voice  challenged him. Luke made reply and was

recognized. A group of men  clustered close together. Silently, The Shadow approached and stood  within five

feet of the assembled mob. 

"We're goin' out in two cars," announced one mobster. "Louie's  drivin' the first. Gabby follows with the

second. Four in each boat.  Louie's goin' to pick up Spud. We follow where he leads." 

Growls of approval. Then came a final admonition from the  spokesman: 

"No lights 'til we get out of this joint. Get that, Louie? An' you,  Gabby?" 


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Grunts of understanding. Mobsters entered the touring cars. Louie's  automobile coasted down an incline of

planks; the motor did not start  until the car had reached the street. Gabby's car followed with its  crew. 

As motors roared in the street, lights came on. The two cars filed  through narrow thoroughfares, with

cautious mobsters slouched deep in  the seats. The back of Louie's car was revealed by Gabby's headlights.

But the rear of the second automobile was visible to none. 

Hence not one of the armed mobsters knew that a stranger was  accompanying them. The Shadow had chosen

his course. His cloaked form  was resting upon the rear bumper of the second car, huddled motionless  over the

spare tire, unrevealed by the tiny glare of the tail light. 

The Shadow had chosen this perch with the assurance that the  gangster cars would keep away from

thoroughfares where traffic was  heavy. This proved correct at first. While the two machines were  rolling

along an isolated street, a coupe suddenly appeared in front of  them. Blinks of the tail light told Louie that

this was Spud Claxter's  car. 

The touring cars fell in line. A half mile more along the almost  deserted street. Then came the contretemps

that forced a change in The  Shadow's mode of travel. The three cars were nearing the approach of a  huge

bridge across the East River. 

As the touring car slowed for a traffic light, The Shadow dropped  to the street. He quickly glided toward the

curb. He saw that the three  cars were about to make the turn on to the lighted suspension bridge,  where rows

of cars were thick in both directions. 

A taxicab was parked near the corner. The Shadow entered it. The  driver, halfasleep, was surprised by the

quiet voice of an unexpected  passenger. The Shadow ordered the jehu to drive across the bridge to  Long

Island. 

The driver shrugged his shoulders. He started the cab and obeyed  the unusual instructions. The taxicab fell

automatically into line  behind the gangster cars. When the far end of the bridge was reached,  The Shadow

ordered the taximan to keep on. 

After a journey of about two miles, the gangster cars swung from  the main highway. They followed a street

where traffic was lighter than  on the boulevard. Peering from the cab, The Shadow saw Spud's coupe  pull up

in preparation for a left turn. He hissed an order to the  driver. The taximan stopped at the curb, thirty feet

behind the last of  the two touring cars. 

A tendollar bill fluttered into the driver's hand. While he was  examining it, the door opened silently on the

street side of the taxi.  Traffic had cleared; Spud's coupe was waiting only for a swift car that  was approaching

from the opposite direction, beyond the intersection.  Quickly, The Shadow glided across the street and

merged with the  darkness of signboards on an unbuilt corner. 

Spud's coupe swung left. The touring cars followed. As the last one  swung past the corner signboards, a bolt

of blackness sprang from its  lurking place. With swift strides, The Shadow gained his former perch   the rear

bumper of the final car. 

From then on, The Shadow's position was secure. Spud was leading  the way along secluded roads. When the

cars finally came to a stop,  they were on a dirt lane beside a hedge that marked someone's estate.  It was here

that gangsters dropped to the ground to hear their leader's  orders. 


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"Through the hedge," growled Spud. "Keep clear of the house. We're  going to cover the bunch that's going in.

Let 'em get away an' don't  use no rods unless you have to." 

Mobsters responded their understanding. They scrambled through the  hedge and gained positions as Spud had

ordered. Louie and "Gabby"  remained in the touring cars, watchful, while Spud went with the crew.  It was

shortly afterward that The Shadow followed. 

Unseen, unheard by either Louie or Gabby, The Shadow glided through  the hedge. He paused in a darkened

spot to view the bulk of a huge,  square stone house that occupied the tract of ground inside the hedge. 

DIM lights from lower windows indicated hallways. Upstairs, blocks  of light showed an occupied room. That

spot, The Shadow knew, must be  the point of attack. Moving forward, slipping past the forming cordon  of

mobsters, The Shadow reached the side of the looming house. 

He knew that he must reach that lighted room. He decided that the  best mode of entry would be from the back

of the house. Moving along  the wall, The Shadow reached a secluded spot where a darkened window  showed

above. Clinging vines of ivy offered a rapid means of ascent. 

The Shadow knew Spud Claxter's scheme of action. Chosen workers  were due to enter this house and

perform some crime. Meanwhile, the  squad of gorillas that included Luke Gonrey were posted as an

emergency  crew. They would cover the escape of the actual raiders. 

The Shadow's plan was to enter; to surprise the raiders on their  arrival. Working from the inside, he could

throw terror into the ranks  of mobsters. After driving the raiders back, he could resist any  invasion by the

outer cordon. 

The Shadow had started up the wall. He paused suddenly. From within  the house, he caught the dull sound of

a slamming door, the scuffle of  feet upon a stairway. The Shadow recognized the noise. It meant that  men

were going down  not coming up. 

Instantly, The Shadow dropped from the wall. Instinctively, be  swung along the ground, heading for the far

side of the house. As he  gained the corner, he heard a crash near the front of the building.  Swinging doors

were hurled open from a sun porch. Out from the house  leaped four ruffians, masked and carrying boxes. 

These were the raiders. They had come ahead of the cordon. There  had been some mistake in timing. Spud

Claxter and his gorillas had  arrived after crime had been consummated  not before. The Shadow's  scheme of

defense was balked. 

As the scurrying raiders landed on the ground, they swung toward  the front of the house and turned a stone

corner. This course was a  lucky one. Had they cut across the side lawn; had they headed toward  the back of

the house, they would have been targets for The Shadow's  aim. As it was, they gained an immediate

protection. 

An automatic barked. The last of the four raiders staggered but  dodged on beyond the front wall. The

Shadow's quick shot had wounded  the raider but had not dropped him. Thus it was due to cause new

complications. The flash of the automatic had been seen by two of  Spud's outside crew; the report of the gun

had been heard by all. 

As The Shadow sprang forward to pursue the raiders who had rounded  the front of the house, revolvers

barked from all about. Powerful  flashlights glimmered toward the stone walls of the house. Shouts arose  as

mobsters sprang inward across the lawn. Half a score of gorillas  were ready to trap the enemy who had


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delivered the surprise shot. 

The Shadow, balked in his plan to frustrate crime, was enmeshed  within the sharpshooting cordon that Spud

Claxter had summoned from the  underworld. 

CHAPTER XI. THE SILENT HOUSE

HAD The Shadow paused to fire from a spot along the side wall of  the house, his predicament would have

been magnified. The revealing  flash of an automatic would have betrayed his exact position. Had he  dashed

on in pursuit of the fleeing raiders, he would also have become  a target for the closing cordon. 

Mobsters were everywhere, acting with skillful promptness. Those  who had seen the flare of The Shadow's

first shot were shouting the  news to their comrades. Bullets were flattening against the side wall.  A barrage

was forming; mere seconds alone promised safety to The  Shadow. 

Ducking as he passed the dull light of the sun porch, The Shadow  gained the front corner of the house. Here

an open porch extended, with  a stone parapet. It was the bulwark that The Shadow needed. With a  quick

spring, The Shadow gained the top of the wall. There, his  temporary flight changed to challenge. 

Upon the parapet, The Shadow paused. At that spot, he delivered a  mocking laugh. The taunt rose high above

the scattered gunfire of the  sniping cordon. Stout gorillas paused as they heard the gibing tones.  They knew

that laugh  the mirth of The Shadow! 

Wild, eerie mockery, clear through the night air. Notes of sinister  merriment that brought shuddering echoes

from the gray walls of the  house. From about came snarled curses, the responses of aroused  mobsters who

knew the mettle of their hidden foe. 

The fleeing raiders had gained the front of the lawn; they were  diving into a clump of trees, carrying their

swag and aiding their  wounded comrade. The Shadow had no thought for them. He was concerned  with the

surrounding foemen who had placed him in a trap. 

A flash of the automatic would have revealed The Shadow's position.  Hence he had delivered his sardonic

laugh instead. Its tones did more  than spur the escaping raiders to swifter flight. It brought Spud  Claxter's

crew out toward the front of the house. Their flashlights  spun toward The Shadow. 

The laugh had given them an idea of The Shadow's position. It had  also made them stay their shots for the

moment. They wanted to locate  this dread enemy. Individual mobsters who would have cowered at the  sound

of The Shadow's taunt were relying upon mass strength. They knew  that they had put The Shadow on the run.

This burst of defiant mirth  incited them to solid attack. 

"Hold it!" came Spud Claxter's cry. "Hold it until you spot him.  It's The Shadow " 

At that instant, a swinging flashlight found the corner of the  front porch parapet. There, half crouched, was

The Shadow. A laugh came  from his hidden lips as wild revolvers barked. Then The Shadow dropped

suddenly behind the parapet; and upon that instant, his weird mirth  lost its crescendo. Silence followed the

laugh. 

MOBSTERS came piling forward toward the corner of the porch. Their  object was to scale the wall, to

pounce upon their common enemy.  Suddenly, their shouts of triumph changed to snarled oaths. From the

corner of the parapet came tongues of flame, accompanied by the echoed  roar of automatics. Dropping


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flashlights marked the spots where cursing  gorillas crumpled. 

They had learned The Shadow's strategy too late. The Shadow had  known that the first shots would be wild.

He had deliberately been  waiting for a chance light to reveal him on the parapet. With the first  shot, he had

dropped. Other bullets had whistled above, after he was  safe behind the wall. 

The Shadow worked in split seconds. His fall had been with the  shots; not after them. The breaking of his

laugh had been the final  touch. The end of the strident mirth had given the mobsters the  impression that they

had clipped The Shadow. 

All had chosen the shortest route to the front porch parapet. They  had scurried in from the open. Then The

Shadow had changed his method.  He had lured the enemy into a frontal attack. All but a few late  gorillas

were in the spot he wanted them. 

The Shadow's position had become a stronghold. It was a perfect  redan, where two parapets met in a salient

angle at the front corner of  the porch. The Shadow covered an area equal to three quarters of a  circle. 

Mobsters dropped to the ground. Heaving their betraying  flashlights, they opened vicious fire. Bullets

chipped chunks of stone  from the walls that formed The Shadow's bulwark. Shifting, gaining new  vantage

points, The Shadow returned the fire, choosing the spots where  revolver flashes showed. 

Gorillas groaned. Their fire lessened. Half of the crew was silent.  The others faltered. One of the men leaped

to his feet and fled. Others  copied the example. The Shadow's laugh rose high as his head and  shoulders came

up from the wall. His automatics thundered as they sent  slugs after the scattering crooks. 

Mobsters turned in flight, to deliver wild shots in response.  Whenever a revolver barked, The Shadow's

probing aim chose the flash  for a new target. Ensconced in his chosen stronghold, The Shadow had  won the

fray. From the moment that he had coaxed the mobsters out into  the open, the victory had been his. 

Yet The Shadow sensed other danger. He had ended the frontal  attack. Some of the gorillas lay motionless;

others were crawling,  wounded, for cover. The Shadow wheeled to face the unprotected area of  the long

porch. He was expecting an attack from the parapet at the  other end. 

THE SHADOW'S action was well timed. During the fray, two fighters  had escaped the frontal attack. They

had circled the house, knowing  that a rear attack was the one method of entering The Shadow's  improvised

redan. As The Shadow swung, a revolver barked from the  distant end of the porch. A bullet singed the

flowing side of The  Shadow's cloak. 

Luke Gonrey was the mobster who had fired that shot. He had come up  the parapet, boosted there by Spud

Claxter. The gorilla had taken quick  aim, just as The Shadow whirled. Had The Shadow merely spun about,

Luke  might have dropped him. But The Shadow, ever alert, had swung toward  the front parapet as he turned. 

Before Luke could deliver a second bullet, The Shadow pressed the  trigger of an automatic. His aim was

hastier than Luke's; it was also  better. The slug clipped the gorilla's shoulder and sent Luke groaning  from the

parapet, into the arms of Spud Claxter. 

The Shadow's laugh resounded. Spud did not wait for more. Shoving  Luke to his feet, the mobleader started

for the hedge, dragging his  henchman with him. Meanwhile, The Shadow was weaving swiftly along the

porch, firing shots at the blackness above the parapet, to stop any new  attackers. 


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The Shadow had exhausted one brace of automatics. He had drawn a  second set and still had slugs remaining.

As he neared the end of the  porch, he dropped to the new shelter that the wall afforded; then  suddenly arose

and peered into the darkness below. He sensed that the  last attackers had fled. Then, as proof of The

Shadow's belief came the  roar of starting motors from beyond the hedge. 

The Shadow fired through the darkness. Had the path been clear, he  might have stopped the final flight. A

cluster of big trees stood  between this end of the porch and the hedge. Bullets lodged in massive  trunks; those

that sped clear were not sufficient to halt the cars in  which Spud and others were escaping. 

The Shadow knew that the raiders were beyond reach; the men with  the swag had probably gained a car

parked in the road below the house.  Staring though the darkness, The Shadow saw lights glaring from a house

three hundred yards away. He knew that the gunfire had caused an alarm.  The police would soon be here. 

The Shadow tried the front door of the house. He found it open. He  crossed a gloomy hall and ascended a

flight of stairs. He found an open  door; a light from an inner room beyond it. The Shadow entered. Close  by

the inner door, he stumbled across the body of a servant. The man  was rigid. 

Peering into the inner room, The Shadow saw four other figures. One  was that of a second servant, sprawled

upon the floor. The man held a  gun. There was a desk in the center of the room; there The Shadow  observed

the other three. 

One was a man some sixty years of age. He was seated behind a  mahogany desk. His hands were resting

upon the woodwork. His dignified  face, embellished with a white mustache, was straight toward a younger

man who sat opposite. This fellow, too, had been caught in the midst of  conversation. 

The third man was at the side of the table. He was middleaged,  with a thickset, hardboiled countenance.

His position was the most  unusual of all. The man had half risen from his chair. He was leaning  heavily upon

the desk, his weight supported by his left hand. 

The man's right hand was just above his pocket. It clutched the  butt of a gun; The Shadow could see the

glimmer of the halfdrawn  revolver. Like the others, this man was stiffened in the stupor of the  death sleep. 

THE SHADOW did not enter the room. His keen eyes could see tiny  drops of moisture upon the surface of

the mahogany desk. These were  rapidly evaporating. They were the last traces of the condensed gas  that had

produced this strange scene. 

There was still a chance that fumes remained; if so, they would be  gone when the final drops had dried. The

Shadow did not need to enter.  He looked across the room and saw the closed door of a safe. That told  the

final story. 

The swag had come from this room. The raiders had entered after  delivering the knockout bombs. The

Shadow's laugh was soft but grim.  He knew the reason for the handkerchiefs that had been upon the faces  of

the fleeing raiders. 

Those had not been necessary so far as the victims were concerned.  They had been used to hide something

that chance, distant witnesses  might otherwise have observed. Beneath the covering of large bandanna

handkerchiefs, the successful raiders had worn small gas masks to cover  their nostrils. Goggles, perhaps, in

addition, to protect their eyes  beneath the handkerchiefs. 

Shouts from in front of the house. Police had been summoned by the  neighbors. The Shadow took a last

glance at the desk in this silent  room. The final drops of moisture had dried. The Shadow moved into the


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outer room, found an unlocked window and emerged. He descended by the  heavy ivy on the stone wall. As

he reached the ground, he could hear  thumping footsteps pounding up the inner stairway. 

The arriving rescuers had made straight for the house. They had not  yet begun to search the grounds.

Ghostlike, The Shadow moved off  through the hedge. His hidden shape followed the side lane. The Shadow

had found no need to linger. 

The raiders had escaped; the surrounding mobsters had been  overpowered. The Shadow had seen the new

victims of the death sleep. He  had learned the motive of crime  the robbery of that safe in the  second story

room. 

Though he had not frustrated crime, The Shadow had wreaked  vengeance upon a horde of mobsters. He had

broken up the forces which  opposed him. He had forced a change in coming plans; he had made it  necessary

for Spud Claxter to produce a new crew before further crime  would be possible. 

But most important of all, The Shadow had verified a fact which he  had suspected. The scene of the crime

had told him the definite truth.  The raiders had been equipped with more than the gas bombs that had  been

used as Seth Tanning's. They had worn masks that had proven an  efficient protection against the fumes that

they had loosed. 

The crooks had gained the neutralizer that they needed. How? Where?  The Shadow knew; and that

knowledge inspired the whispered laugh that  sounded in the darkness of the little lane. The Shadow was

thinking of  Harry Vincent's report. 

He knew that the false hospital attendant had been a crook. He knew  why Skeet Wurrick had visited the blind

alley in back of Hoffer's  Pharmacy. Crooks had profited through the experiments made by Doctor  Seton

Lagwood. 

A preparation had been stolen; it had served as an effective  neutralizer. Men of crime were ready for new

endeavor. The law was in  ignorance of their methods. But not The Shadow. When crime again rode  high, The

Shadow would be prepared to meet it with an unexpected  thrust. 

CHAPTER XII. THE BIG SHOT PLANS

ONE hour after the fray at the house on Long Island, Spud Claxter  arrived at Wolf Barlan's apartment. Spud's

face was glum. When Wolf  received him in the lighted living room, he knew at once that disaster  had been

encountered. 

"Well?" snarled the big shot. "Did you fliv the job? What happened  out at Currian's?" 

"They got the swag," returned Spud. "Skeet and Zug  the two guys  with them  knocked out Currian and the

others who were in the house.  What happened after that was the trouble." 

"Let's hear it," growled Wolf. 

"Well," reported Spud, "there was a lucky break to begin with,  Skeet must have got the glim before I showed

up with the outside crew.  Any way, he and the bunch were in before we got there." 

"Skeet got the signal all right," acknowledged Wolf. "I told you I  had a good guy planted in there. It don't

hurt if you know his name  now. His part of the job is done. It was Tully Newel, working in  Currian's as a


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servant. He scrammed as soon as he flashed the glim.  Gave me a call and hopped a rattler to Buffalo. Well 

that's that. Go  on with your story." 

"We covered the house," related Spud. "Seen the inside crew come  out. Then somebody fires a shot alongside

the house. Wings one of the  bunch with Skeet. That started us." 

"It ought to have. What did you do? Close in?" 

"Yeah. We knew the guy was by the house. We was out to get him,  Wolf. Then all of a sudden we hear a

laugh. Handed me the shivers, that  laugh did. Somebody spots the front porch with a flashlight  and there  he

was." 

"Who?" 

"The Shadow." 

Wolf Barlan had paused to pluck a cigarette from the box on the  table. His fingers relaxed when he heard

Spud's statement. The  cigarette struck the table and bounced to the floor. 

"The Shadow!" exclaimed Wolf. 

"Big as life," responded Spud. "Up on the stone rail of the porch,  giving us the haha." 

"And I suppose you dummies took it on the lam, eh?" 

"No. That's where we made our big mistake. Those gorillas I picked  wouldn't run from nobody. They began

to open up with their  smokewagons. The Shadow did a nose dive." 

"Clipped him!" 

"That's what they thought"  Spud's tone was rueful  "until they  barged in on that porch. Then the boys got

theirs. The Shadow had  pulled a stall  that was his trick. Up he comes and gives the outfit  the works." 

"Yeah?" barked Wolf. "What was the mob doing? Standing by and  giving him a college cheer? Where was

their gats? Did they throw them  away?" 

"They used their rods," retorted Spud. "But they couldn't do no  more than knock off hunks of rock from that

porch wall. The Shadow was  behind it, picking off every gazebo that fired at him. I saw what was  happening.

I ducked around the house with a gorilla named Luke Gonrey.  Tried to plug The Shadow from in back. Luke

took a pot shot at him and  missed. Then The Shadow crippled Luke." 

"So you scrammed?" 

"Yeah, dragging Luke with me. There was one other gorilla managed  to get back to the cars. We beat it in a

hurry." 

WOLF grunted. The big shot's face was troubled. Wolf was picturing  the events that Spud had related. He

realized that Spud's mob had at  least covered the getaway of the raiders who had the swag. Spud caught  the

thought. 


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"I came in to the hideout," he stated. "Found Skeet and the others  there. They had the guy that The Shadow

wounded. He ain't bad off. But  Luke Gonrey and that other gorilla  well  we got to get them  somewhere." 

"Where'd you leave them?" 

"The other side of the bridge. Lucky I did, too. There's cops on  the bridges looking over all the cars that are

coming in. Guess The  Shadow scrammed and after that the bulls showed up at Currian's." 

Wolf Barlan paced back and forth across the floor. He was worried;  but his mental state seemed to spur his

planning. A fierce leer showed  on his ugly face. 

"Figuring on something, Wolf?" queried Spud. 

"Yeah," returned the big shot. 

"Don't forget them two guys," reminded the mobleader. "You ought to  know some place where I could lug

them. There's a sawbones I know down  on the Bowery; I don't think the bulls have been watching him." 

"Leave that to me," assured Wolf. "I got a couple of places where I  could send them. Used to have plenty of

gorillas get in trouble when I  was handling that nightclub racket. I'm just thinking of the best  place. 

"But I'm thinking of a lot besides. I'm thinking of The Shadow.  He's trying to crimp the game. That means

we've got to shift our plans.  Sit down, Spud, while I go over this. I'm working it out." 

Spud seated himself in an easychair and watched Wolf pace back and  forth. At times the big shot's

expression denoted worry; at intervals  it cleared, finally it showed a triumphant grin. Wolf took a chair

opposite his henchman. 

"Listen, Spud," announced the big shot. "When you deal with The  Shadow, you've got to be smart. That's

why I'm making new plans. First  of all, I'm trying to figure out how he got wise about tonight's job.  There's

only one way he could have." 

"Trailing my mob?" 

"Yeah. It's a cinch he don't know about the hideout; but he  probably knows you're in the game. That worries

you, eh? Well, it  worries me just as much; but I see an out for both of us. I know a way  that'll fix everything." 

SPUD managed a sickly grin. Wolf's words had actually worried him;  the assurance that the big shot had

some scheme began to give him  restored confidence. 

"The Shadow don't know you're hooked up with me," stated Wolf, in  positive fashion. "That's something that

he's not going to know. I was  wise when I picked you"  Wolf paused to chuckle  "on account of your

having worked for a lot of guys that were running rackets. How's The  Shadow going to know which one

you're with? Get that idea?" 

"But if he trails me here, Wolf " 

"He won't. You're not coming here. You're not going round the  hideout, either. Leave that to Skeet and Zug.

Say"  something  important occurred to the big shot  "did you look over the swag?" 

"Yeah. A couple of hundred grand, mostly in securities." 


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"Including the bonds that Throckmorton brought with him?" 

"Yeah. Skeet grabbed them first." 

"All right. We'll leave them lay at the hideout. You stowed them in  that hidden safe, didn't you?" 

"Yeah." 

"Either of us can get them when we want them. They're hot right  now; we'll let them cool. When I say you're

not going round to the  hideout, I mean not unless there's something special that's got to be  done. Don't chance

it unless you're sure The Shadow's not on your  trail." 

"I get it." 

"We're going ahead with the next job," assured Wolf. "Skeet and Zug  work from the hideout. They're safe

enough. But you keep on the move;  never let nobody track you." 

"I got to get a new mob," reminded Spud. 

"Yeah," agreed Wolf, "to do the cover up on the outside. But you  can do that on the quiet. Be careful of the

gorillas you pick. Don't  get any more than you have to. Send messages to them, like you did  before. And pull

that stunt of having them start out from the garage  and come across you on the way." 

"I did it tonight, Wolf. But The Shadow wised " 

"Maybe he'll wise again. All the better. You and the mob will be  watching for him. If we've got to blot out

The Shadow, we'll do it.  Anyway, the big point is that no matter what he does, he can't find the  hideout

through you and he can't trace me. 

"You're safe, too"  Wolf was prompt in adding this assurance  "if  you use your noodle. Let the gorillas do

the heavy work. Stand back and  keep the old skull working. You used good judgment tonight. Say, Spud,

maybe you'll get The Shadow." 

The thought seemed to please the mobleader. Wolf grinned, satisfied  that he had aroused his chief

henchman's eagerness for new combat. The  big shot arose from his chair. He walked over to the door. Spud

arose  and followed. 

"Scram," advised Wolf. "Phone me, but don't come around. Be  careful, all the time." 

"What about Luke?" 

"I'm thinking of him. Give me a call when you get back to where he  is. I'll tell you where to take him and that

other gorilla." 

"We may have to dodge the cops at the bridges." 

"Don't worry about that until you hear from me." 

As soon as Spud had gone, Wolf went to the telephone. He put in a  call and held a short, cryptic conversation.

That completed, he settled  in his chair, to await telephoned word from Spud. 


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THE mobleader had been wary when he left the apartment house where  Wolf lived. Spud had parked his

coupe half a block away. He reached the  car and drove eastward. He crossed a suspension bridge and noted

bluecoats still on duty, inspecting westbound cars that looked  suspicious. 

Spud reached a small cluster of stores that fringed a portion of  the boulevard. He stopped the coupe and

alighted. He entered a store  and put in a call to Wolf's apartment, hoping that by this time the big  shot had

decided what to do with the wounded gorillas. 

"That you, Wolf?" queried Spud, speaking into the mouthpiece.  "Yeah... This is Spud... Over on Long Island.

Say, about those two  fellows. Yeah, they're right near here..." 

Spud paused. He was listening to the orders that clicked through  the receiver. His eyes began to blink; his

mouth opened as he heard the  unexpected instructions which came from the big shot. When Wolf was

through, Spud could not find his voice for the moment. Then he blurted  his understanding. 

"I get it, Wolf," were Spud's words. "Say. That makes it soft...  Sure... I'll have Louie and Gabby boost the two

of them in my coupe...  Yeah, I'll send Louie and Gabby in with the empty touring cars...  That's right, they

won't have no trouble passing the bulls at the  bridge... 

"That's right. I won't have no trouble either... This makes it a  cinch... Luke and the other mug? Say  they

won't have no idea what I'm  going to do with them... No. They won't know where I'm taking them...  Sure. I'll

tell Louie and Gabby that I'm looking after the two  gazebos... Yeah. That's all Louie and Gabby need to

know." 

Spud hung up the receiver. He left the store, chuckling as he went.  He drove his coupe from the boulevard

and took a side road that led to  the spot where he had left Louie and Gabby with the wounded men in the

touring cars. 

From now on, Spud would look after Luke Gonrey and the second  gorilla who had been dropped by one of

The Shadow's slugs. Spud was  elated by the cleverness of Wolf Barlan's orders. He had gained new

confidence in the big shot's craft. For of one thing, Spud was sure. 

The mobleader felt positive that when he had followed Wolf Barlan's  instructions, the two wounded gorillas

would be safely stowed in a spot  where not even The Shadow would think of finding them. 

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S MOVE

AT noon the next day, Police Commissioner Wainwright Barth  encountered Lamont Cranston in the lobby of

the Cobalt Club. Barth had  come there for lunch. By mutual consent, he and Cranston went to the  grill room

and there took a secluded corner. 

Barth needed the quieting calm of a chat with Cranston. For the  police commissioner had been on the go ever

since midnight. Crime on  Long Island had kept him busy. The new appearance of the death sleep  had made

him anxious. 

"Think of it, Cranston!" exclaimed the commissioner. "Five men  overpowered. Helpless victims left in the

grip of a terrible paralysis.  There is only one consolation. Only one." 

"The recovery of the previous group?" 


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"Yes. We removed the five new victims to the Talleyrand Hospital  where they are under the personal

supervision of Doctor Seton Lagwood.  He believes that he can restore them to consciousness." 

"What was the motive of the crime?" 

"We do not know as yet. We know that crime was involved, because of  the terrific gunfight that took place

outside the home of Felix  Currian. Half a dozen dead mobsters there  all, apparently, members of  the same

band. 

"We believe that they tried to interfere with the activities of  those who actually entered the house. Therefore

we estimate that there  must have been at least one dozen of the original raiders." 

"Why one dozen?" inquired Cranston. 

"It would have required that many," assured Barth, staring upward,  through his spectacles, "to have

eliminated so many enemies. That is my  opinion." 

"Does Detective Cardona share it?" 

"He seemed rather doubtful at first. He was rather reluctant, but  he finally agreed with me." 

A thin smile showed on Cranston's lips. Joe Cardona would naturally  have been reluctant to state his own

theory. For Joe Cardona was one  member of the Manhattan force who had previously viewed the results of

The Shadow's work. Well did Joe know of The Shadow's power. 

Commissioner Barth, however, had branded The Shadow as a myth.  Barth's term of office had been short. It

would probably end when Ralph  Weston, the previous commissioner, returned from the Republic of  Garauca,

where he was restoring order as head of the National Police. 

Barth, as yet, had not learned what experience had taught Weston:  namely, that The Shadow actually existed

and was active in the  eradication of crime. All of Barth's success as commissioner had been  due to the regime

that Weston had so effectively established in New  York. Weston's success, in turn, had been made possible

through the  hidden service of The Shadow. Though Weston was gone, The Shadow still  remained. 

"FELIX CURRIAN is a millionaire," explained Barth, unwittingly  giving facts to The Shadow, "and his guest

last night was a man named  Gerald Throckmorton. We believe that they were discussing financial  matters

and that certain sums of money may have been in view. 

"Throckmorton is from Boston. A third man present was from the same  city. His name is Parker Howland,

and he is in the employ of a private  detective agency in Massachusetts. A wire from Boston has informed us

that Howland was assigned by the agency to accompany Throckmorton on  his trip to New York." 

"What about the others?" questioned Cranston. 

"Two servants," replied Barth. "We have learned their names from  Mrs. Currian, who returned from

Washington when informed of the case.  There was a third servant, however, whom we have not yet located.

He  was employed there under the name of Thomas Devin; but we believe that  he was a crook, working for

the ones who made the raid." 

"I see. What about the victims, commissioner?" 


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"You mean their condition?" 

"Yes." 

"It is unchanged. When Detective Cardona reached Currian's, he  ordered them to be taken to the Talleyrand

Hospital. Then he put in a  call for Doctor Lagwood. He was just too late; Lagwood had left the  hospital after

sleeping there all day. He was on his way to his  sanitarium on the Sound. 

"The hospital called the sanitarium. Word was left for Doctor  Lagwood to call back. After Cardona reached

the hospital with the new  batch of victims, the return call came in from the doctor. He gave  orders concerning

the new patients; then he came back to New York. He  has been with the new victims since midnight. I am

going up to the  hospital immediately after lunch." 

The topic ended for the time being. 

When the two club members were finishing their dessert, Cranston  put a quiet question to Barth. 

"You learned no more about the dead man, Troxton Valdan?" 

"Not a great deal," replied Barth. "He had made a trip to  Providence, Rhode Island, and stayed there in a hotel

over night. It  was not the first time that he went to that city. We believe that he  may have held a conference

with someone there," 

"On what subject?" 

"Chemical inventions. Valdan was a queer sort. His field of  investigation seemed unlimited. He was living on

royalties gained from  formulas that had shown commercial value. Paper bleaching, elimination  of carbon

monoxide in garages, other ideas of various description. 

"We crossexamined Benzig and Crowder to assure ourselves that  neither of the men knew more than they

had said. We have made no  further progress with the case. It still remains a mystery. We have  been utterly

unable to trace the delivery men of whom Benzig spoke." 

With this statement, Commissioner Barth arose and glanced at his  watch. He remarked that he must hurry to

the hospital, as he wished to  be there when Doctor Lagwood examined the patients. He added that the  only

other physicians whom Lagwood had allowed to be present were  members of the hospital staff. With that,

Barth departed. 

LAMONT CRANSTON finished a cigarette. In deliberate fashion, he  arose and strolled upstairs to the lobby.

He put in a telephone call  and spoke in the quiet tones that were Lamont Cranston's accustomed  voice. But

when the receiver dropped in place, a soft, whispered laugh  came from those thin lips. It was the laugh of The

Shadow. 

There was a reason for the quiet mirth. The Shadow knew that it  would require Commissioner Barth fully

thirty minutes to reach the  Talleyrand Hospital. But the man whom The Shadow had called would be  there in

fifteen. The Shadow  using the tones of Cranston  had spoken  to Doctor Rupert Sayre. 

TWENTY MINUTES after he had received Cranston's call, Rupert Sayre  was seated in the little office which

formed the headquarters of his  college friend, Freddy Lawson. The two men were engaged in brief

conversation. 


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"Speaking of these death sleep victims," Lawson was saying, "the  rule is that only staff physicians can view

them. Then, of course, only  when Doctor Lagwood permits it. They are in his charge. There have been  times,

though, when the rule has been stretched. 

"Some of the staff are going up there now; and I think that it  would be all right if you came along with me.

After all, half the  members of the staff hardly know each other. Simply act as if you were  accustomed to the

place and I don't think you will be challenged by  anyone." 

They went upstairs. They found a small group of doctors studying  the patients. Doctor Lagwood, tall and

dignified, was making a few  remarks. Sayre listened while the specialist briefly dealt with  different modes of

treatment that he had applied. A few minutes after  Sayre's arrival, Commissioner Barth appeared. 

Lagwood completed his discussion. The staff physicians left. Sayre,  however, plucked Lawson's sleeve and

held his friend in the hallway  just as Lagwood appeared with Barth. The specialist was nodding; he  crossed

the hall to his experimental room and made a beckoning gesture.  Barth followed. Sayre also stepped forward,

drawing Lawson with him. 

Lagwood seemed a bit surprised when he saw the two doctors who had  followed the commissioner. Then,

recognizing Lawson as a staff  physician, he made no objection to their presence. The question which  Barth

was putting referred only to matters which Lagwood had already  discussed. The specialist was merely

pointing out items of equipment  with which Barth was not familiar. 

"I used this for the vapor treatment," explained Lagwood,  indicating a little tentlike object. "I tried a special

compound"  he  picked up a small, empty bottle  "that I prepared after making blood  tests. A neutralizer. I

used it but sparingly. It produced no  noticeable results. 

"That, of course, was when I still believed that the effects of  some gas might have been experienced by the

victims. I knew that the  use of a neutralizer was entirely experimental; but it was worthwhile  if only as a test.

I abandoned it, however, when the Valdan case proved  so conclusively that noxious gas was not the cause of

the death sleep." 

Sayre had edged forward. He was looking at the bottle. Lagwood saw  his interest and handed it to him. Sayre

noted that the label merely  bore the word "Neutralizer" and the number 6. These were typed beneath  the

printed title: "Hoffer, Pharmacist." 

"Does Hoffer prepare your prescriptions also?" questioned Lagwood,  still accepting Sayre as a staff

physician. 

"Yes, indeed," responded Sayre promptly. 

"A remarkable pharmacist," commented Lagwood, receiving the bottle  and replacing it on the shelf.

"Exacting in his methods, thoroughly  reliable. His one fault is the fact that he will allow no other  pharmacist

to work with him. 

"That is why I use my own titles for his compounds. For instance, I  have called this particular prescription

'Neutralizer Number Six!'  Should I require more of it while Hoffer is absent from his place, any  one of his

inexperienced clerks could find the large bottle and pour  out the quantity desired. 

"I use that method with all of my prescriptions. It saves me a  great deal of delay. When experimenting, I

frequently need fresh  supplies. Well, commissioner"  Lagwood paused to turn to Barth  "I  can only say

that I hold the same hopes for these patients that I did  for the others. I doubt that we shall have results within


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fortyeight  hours; after that, we can look for prompt recoveries." 

Sayre strolled out while Barth was following. Lawson followed. He  smiled as he spoke to his friend. 

"I'll bet Lagwood would have hit the ceiling if he'd realized you  weren't on the staff," remarked Lawson.

"He's a great stickler for  rules. I nearly fell over when he handed you that bottle. You fixed it,  though, when

you chimed in about Hoffer." 

"How?" 

"Lagwood thinks that Hoffer is the only real pharmacist in New  York. So that made it fine when you agreed

with him. No one ever argues  about Hoffer when they talk with Lagwood. After all, Hoffer does know  his

business." 

"Where is his place?" 

"Two blocks over. Very conveniently located." 

WHEN Rupert Sayre drove away from the Talleyrand Hospital, he drove  past Hoffer's Pharmacy. When he

reached his office, he put in a  telephone call and talked with Lamont Cranston. Sayre's face, usually  serious,

wore a smile. The young physician knew that his millionaire  friend was pleased. 

For Cranston had particularly requested Sayre to learn if Lagwood  had tried any vapor treatments; and if so,

to find out regarding the  particular compound used and the quantity that had been prepared. Sayre  had

learned that Hoffer had made up such a prescription; and that only  a small quantity of it had been sent to the

hospital. He told Cranston  that Lagwood had none left; but that Hoffer probably had a large amount  available. 

AT the Cobalt Club, The Shadow made another telephone call promptly  after he had talked with Rupert

Sayre. A thick voice came over the  wire. The Shadow spoke; but he used neither his own whisper nor the

quiet tones of Lamont Cranston. Instead, he talked in a voice that was  a remarkable imitation of Doctor Seton

Lagwood's. The Shadow remembered  the physician's accents, as he had heard them at Troxton Valdan's. 

"Hello. Mr. Hoffer?" There was a slight upward inflection in the  pretended voice of Lagwood. "Yes... This is

Doctor Lagwood... Ah. You  recognized my voice..." 

"Tell me this, Mr. Hoffer. The neutralizer... Yes, number six. I  wish to be sure of its exact quantity... Yes...

You are sure? I see...  Ah, yes, I had forgotten that I told you to store it away... I think it  would be best to

make certain. Yes, I shall hold the wire..." 

Thin lips framed a smile as minutes passed. The Shadow knew that  Hoffer was searching the cellar for the

stolen neutralizer. He prepared  for the conversation that was to follow Hoffer's return. The thick  voice

suddenly recurred, in apologetic fashion. Feigning Lagwood's  tone, The Shadow became indignant. 

"What! You cannot find it..." The Shadow paused to hear Hoffer's  sputtered excuses. "I cannot understand

your negligence... No. No... I  do not need it today, but it should be available... What is that? Ah   you still

have the formula... Of course... I see. You will make up a  new supply... The same amount... Very good, Mr.

Hoffer... Yes, store it  until I require it... This time, be sure of where you place it..." 

Afternoon passed. The Shadow remained at the Cobalt Club. No calls  came from Burbank. The efforts of the

agents were in temporary  abeyance. Yet The Shadow, calm in his guise of Cranston, was quietly at  ease. 


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He had learned data regarding Troxton Valdan, but he saw no reason  to trace the dead chemist's previous

actions. If Valdan's visits to  Providence concerned the gas that induced the death sleep, the schemer  who had

met the chemist in the Rhode Island metropolis would certainly  have covered up his tracks. 

The Shadow had also learned details regarding Felix Currian and  those who had been at the house on Long

Island. Those facts merely  backed up The Shadow's knowledge that crime had been perpetrated. The  battle at

Currian's was now no more than a past episode. 

THE SHADOW was looking toward the future. He was planning his own  actions; he was counting on the aid

of one agent, Cliff Marsland.  Through Cliff, The Shadow had already gained information that had led  to a

thrust against crime. He was positive that Cliff would play an  even more important part in the next epoch. 

Dusk arrived. Lamont Cranston left the Cobalt Club. He became a  cloaked being of blackness. As The

Shadow, he emerged from his  limousine and arrived in the vicinity of Hoffer's Pharmacy. He entered  the

blind alley that Harry Vincent had described. He used the same  method as Skeet when it came to dropping

into Hoffer's cellar. 

A tiny flashlight blinked. The Shadow, as readily as Skeet,  discovered the closet shelf. A new jug had

replaced the stolen one. The  Shadow noted its label. His flashlight went out. Silently, The Shadow  left the

place and returned to the limousine, parked a few squares  away. 

Stanley drove to a new destination when he heard the bidding of his  master's voice through the speaking tube.

Again, the chauffeur parked  and waited while a shrouded form glided from the car. 

Stanley knew his master for an adventurer. He was accustomed to  these peculiar trips in the limousine. He

also was used to the extended  periods of absence  months at a time  that marked Lamont Cranston's

globetrotting tours. Stanley, like Cranston's other servants, had been  trained to obey orders and to avoid all

speculation regarding his  master's affairs. 

Stanley had never once suspected that there were two Lamont  Cranstons. The real one and another who

frequently took his place while  the genuine Cranston was abroad. At present, Lamont Cranston was  actually

journeying in the vicinity of Timbuktu. The master whom  Stanley was serving was dwelling as an impostor at

Cranston's New  Jersey home. 

Knowing nothing of this, it was not surprising that Stanley had  never identified these limousine trips in

Manhattan with the activities  of The Shadow. Blissfully ignorant, Stanley was parked within half a  block of

the most carefully hidden spot in all New York  the entrance  to The Shadow's sanctum. 

One hour passed. Stanley was dozing. Again came the quiet voice of  Lamont Cranston, ordering Stanley to

return to the uptown street near  Hoffer's Pharmacy. The chauffeur obeyed in his accustomed fashion. Once

more, he was oblivious when the figure of The Shadow left the car. 

The tiny flashlight glimmered through the cellar of the drug store.  It approached the closet. Then came

darkness. A pause; a trifling  noise; a final glimmer. The rays revealed the big bottle on the shelf,  exactly as

The Shadow had found it. The green liquid glistened while  the flashlight blinked. 

The Shadow departed. He laughed softly as he moved through the  blind alley. The Shadow had completed his

task. He had discovered the  new supply of neutralizer. He had gone to the blackwalled laboratory  that

adjoined his sanctum, there to make the tests that he desired. 


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The bottle was back upon the shelf, where it could be found when  again required. Nothing in its position or

appearance could reveal the  fact that a mysterious intruder had temporarily removed the bottle and  replaced

it. 

Out in the limousine, Stanley sat up promptly as he heard the voice  of Lamont Cranston ordering him to drive

the car to the Cobalt Club. 

CHAPTER XIV. THE NEW MOB

"HELLO, Cliff." 

Cliff Marsland looked up from a table at the Black Ship. He  recognized the hardfaced rowdy who was

sliding into an opposite chair.  The fellow was known as "Muggsy" McGilly. He was another gorilla of  Luke

Gonrey's ilk. 

"Hello, Muggsy. What's new?" 

The rowdy looked about. Seeing no one close by, he leaned across  the table. His tone was both cautious and

confidential. Cliff sensed  that serious business was afoot. 

"Luke Gonrey was talkin' to you two nights ago," informed Muggsy.  "Right here at this table. Supposed to

meet you last night, wasn't he?" 

Cliff made no reply. Muggsy laughed. 

"It's O.K., Cliff," he assured. "Spud Claxter sent me here." 

"Spud Claxter?" Cliff acted as if he had never heard the name. 

"Sure," chuckled Muggsy. "Luke was workin' for him. You know all  about it." 

"Yeah?" Cliff was still quizzical. "Say  where's Luke? Have you  seen him?" 

"Luke got crippled in that fight out at Currian's," stated Muggsy.  "Him an' a lot of other guys. He told Spud

about you. Spud needs a new  mob. I'm in it. So are you." 

"For when?" 

"Tonight. Listen. There's real dough in it. One grand. Are you on?" 

Cliff nodded. 

"Up in Soklow's old garage," stated Muggsy. "Half an hour. The  mob's goin' out. Be there." 

Muggsy started to rise. Cliff stopped him. He had one question  a  natural one. 

"Say," he inquired. "What's come of Luke?" 

"I don't know," answered Muggsy. "Spud says he's been taken care  of. But I ain't seen him. Maybe he's in a

badder way than Spud wanted  to say." 


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"When did you see Spud?" 

"Half an hour ago. I've been sort of hidin' out, lately, an' he  knew where I was. Snook in there an' slipped me

the word. Told me to  see you." 

Cliff sat silent after Muggsy had left. He had figured that Luke  Gonrey had been dropped in the battle with

The Shadow. But Cliff,  following his chief's instructions, had made the Black Ship his habitat  in hopes that

the missing mobster might show up. This news from Muggsy  explained why Luke had not arrived. It also

gave Cliff the very break  he wanted. 

HALF an hour from now; at Soklow's garage. Cliff knew what his task  would be. He was to serve as one of

the outside crew, just as Luke had  served in the raid on Currian's. This was better than before. It would  be to

The Shadow's liking. Cliff got up and strolled from the dive. He  reached the store with the battered phone

booth and put in a call to  Burbank. 

The contact man ordered him to remain. Five minutes passed. The  bell rang in the phone booth. Cliff

snatched the receiver from the  hook. He spoke. Burbank responded. The contact agent had communicated

with The Shadow; the orders were for Cliff to go along with the mob. 

It had been after nine o'clock when Muggsy had dropped into the  Black Ship. It was nearly ten when Cliff

entered the old garage and  growled his name to the first mobster who challenged him. He was being  initiated

into Spud Claxter's methods. Louie and Gabby were again  assigned to the wheels of the touring cars. They

were to pick up Spud's  trail somewhere along a certain street. 

The cars started from the garage. Tonight, however, the second  touring car had no excess passenger upon its

rear bumper. One block  from the old garage, a small sedan took up the trail of the touring  cars. It followed

slowly, nearly a block behind. It was still trailing  when Spud Claxter's coupe appeared up ahead. 

"Say"  a voice growled beside Cliff, in the rear seat of the  second touring car  "there's a rattletrap sedan

tailing us. What about  it, Gabby?" 

"Watch it," ordered the driver. 

The touring car turned a corner. Back in the sedan, a tail light  blinked. A trim coupe, one block behind, came

speeding forward. It  followed close as the sedan turned the corner. The mobsters were  turning another corner

up ahead. Again the tall light blinked as the  sedan swung to the curb. 

The coupe pulled up alongside. A man leaped from the driver's seat,  out into the seat. At the same instant,

blackness arose from behind the  wheel of the sedan. The Shadow shifted swiftly to the coupe. The trim  car

shot forward. Harry took charge of the sedan. 

The Shadow's new car swerved the corner. It gained rapidly upon the  mobster cars, but did not approach too

closely. The effect was apparent  in the car wherein Cliff was riding. 

"See anything more of that mug in back?" queried Gabby. 

"There's a car coming along," informed the fellow beside Cliff. "A  coupe. Goodlooking buggy, what I can

see of it." 

"I thought you said an old sedan was tailing us." 


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"That's what was. But it ain't anywhere around." 

"Then it wasn't tailing us," decided Gabby, with a short laugh.  "That's that." 

The other mobster agreed. Nevertheless, he cast wary glances toward  the coupe as it still kept along in back.

The mobster cars had reached  a lighted thoroughfare; they shot forward in procession just as a  traffic light

changed. The coupe was lost on the other side of the  crossing. It pulled up to the curb, just behind a taxicab. 

WHEN traffic changed, the cab sped forward. The driver had a  passenger. The Shadow had abandoned his

coupe and taken the taxi  instead. Within a few blocks, his keen eyes spied the last touring car  as it swerved a

corner to the right. 

"Take that street," ordered The Shadow, in a quiet tone. The driver  obeyed. 

Up in the touring car, Gabby was still thinking about sedan and  coupe. Chuckling, he shot a remark to the

silent gunman who was seated  beside Cliff. 

"Hey, Goofy," laughed Gabby. "What's following us now? A delivery  truck?" 

"There's a taxi coming along in back," growled the disgruntled  mobster. 

"About twelve thousand of them in New York," snorted Gabby. "Say  you can't go anywhere in this burg

without a taxi being on your trail.  What kind of a cab is it?" 

"I'll look. No"  the gangster paused as he stared from the rear  window  "I can't make it out. What did you

want to know for?" 

"Thought maybe it was one of them with a radio in it," chuckled  Gabby. "If it was, I'd slow up so it could

come alongside. Get a little  free music." 

The mobster growled an oath from the rear seat. Gabby laughed and  turned another corner on to a wide

avenue. Here a medley of cabs came  into the picture; the mobster in the rear seat could not have  identified

The Shadow's if he had tried. 

Cliff Marsland felt sure that the cars were nearing their  destination. Spud's coupe had led a shifty course,

northward and  westward. At last the front car swung toward the blackness of a side  street, negotiating a left

turn that gave difficulty to the touring  cars. While Gabby was maneuvering, a taxi cut left with a wild swing

and headed over toward the far curb of the side street. 

"Right here," came a quiet order. 

The driver stopped short in front of a gloomy, oldfashioned  apartment building. He did not know what it

was all about. His  passenger had given one new order after another. On the last avenue, he  had called for a

sudden left turn, in a hurry. Now it was stop. The  driver turned to express an opinion. A hand thrust him a

green bill. 

"Keep the change," said the quiet voice. 

The first touring car had swung past the cab; the second, freeing  itself from traffic, negotiated the turn. As it

coasted close by the  cab, the street door of the taxi opened. While the taxi driver was  still fondling the money

that he had received, the figure of The Shadow  performed a series of swift leaps. 


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The cloaked shape gained the touring car just as Gabby gave it the  gas. Once more, The Shadow was riding

with the mob. Like Cliff, he had  sensed that the end of the journey was close. Along this darkened  street, he

could risk another trip on the rear bumper. 

THE three cars swung right. They came to a stop upon a short, wide  street  one of those peculiar, littleused

thoroughfares that run  parallel with the upper avenues in Manhattan. Mobsters came to the  sidewalk. They

followed Spud's lead through a passageway between two  old apartment buildings. 

It was here that Spud gave his instructions as he pointed ahead. He  was explaining the location of an

oldfashioned apartment building, the  corner of which was just visible from this spot. Spud was terse. 

"We've got to cover it all around," said the mobleader. "Muggsy and  Marsland pick the fire tower. The rest

keep farther off. Two of you  opposite the front door. Louie and Gabby will do. We don't need you in  the cars

tonight." 

Mobsters moved toward the designated positions. Cliff found himself  with "Muggsy," in a short, blind alley

that was by the bottom of the  fire tower. Muggsy moved forward to inspect the darkness. Cliff was  about to

follow when a soft hiss restrained him. Cliff caught a  whispered command. It was from The Shadow, unseen

in the darkness. 

Muggsy returned, passing the lighted entrance to the tower. Cliff  put a prompt question, one that The Shadow

had inspired by his  whispered command. 

"Say, Muggsy," suggested Cliff. "Get out to Spud and ask him what  floor the job is on. We ought to be

posted. Somebody might start a fool  racket upstairs. If we don't know the floor, we won't know what to do

about it." 

"Guess you're right, Cliff." 

Muggsy sidled out from the alley. Cliff caught sight of a blackened  shape that moved swiftly into the fire

tower, unseen by the departing  gangster. Once inside, The Shadow's form became unseen. Muggsy  returned.

He had found Spud across the street. 

"Fourth floor," informed Muggsy. "Side toward this street. Number  4G, Spud says." 

Within the fire tower, The Shadow moved into the blackness of the  stairs. Silently, his form was gliding

upward. His keen ears had caught  Muggsy's words. The Shadow was moving to his post. 

CHAPTER XV. CARDONA FINDS LUCK

WHILE The Shadow was trailing mobsters bent on new crime,  Commissioner Wainwright Barth and

Detective Joe Cardona were concerning  themselves with old events. The two representatives of the law were

at  the Talleyrand Hospital, in conference with Doctor Seton Lagwood. 

The first of the deathsleep patients had recovered. The others  were showing signs of life. Doctor Lagwood's

hopes had been realized.  As with the first group of victims, the time element of fortyeight  hours had done its

helpful work. 

"My former patients"  Doctor Lagwood was speaking from his chair  in the experimental room  "recovered

at midnight. We allowed them  until morning before they were questioned regarding their experience." 


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"Would you advise the same in this case?" asked Barth. 

"I would," nodded Lagwood. "Unquestionably their minds will be  clearer then. Of course, if it is imperative,

we could allow one or two  of them to speak. But I advise the utmost caution for the present." 

"Very well," decided Barth. "Come, Cardona, let us leave." 

"Just a minute, commissioner," insisted the detective. "I want to  find out which one of that bunch woke up

first. Which one was it,  doctor?" 

Doctor Lagwood picked up a chart from the table. He consulted it  carefully, then made his reply. 

"Gerald Throckmorton," stated the physician. "Let me see  he is  the man from Boston, is he not?" 

"Yes." Cardona turned to Barth. "Commissioner, I'd like to ask that  fellow just one question. Why he came

down here with a private  detective." 

"Could we allow that?" Barth asked Lagwood. 

The physician pondered. At first, he seemed on the point of  refusing the request. Then, after giving more

thought, he decided that  it would be allowable. He conducted Barth and Cardona along a hallway  and into a

private room. There they saw Gerald Throckmorton propped,  whitefaced, upon the pillows of a cot. 

Despite his pallor, Throckmorton seemed very much awake. His eyes  were clear as they saw the visitors. His

lips opened and he smiled as  he put a greeting to Lagwood. 

"Hello, Doc," said the young man, "you're back again, eh? Who are  your friends?" 

"Commissioner Barth," introduced Lagwood, "and Detective Cardona.  The latter has a question which he

would like answered. You were  accompanied to New York by a private detective. Why was he with you?" 

"That's a long story," smiled Throckmorton. 

"Just give the primary reason," urged Lagwood. "Did you fear  robbery? Did you have valuables with you?" 

"Yes," responded the young man, half closing his eyes. "Securities  to deliver to Currian." 

DOCTOR LAGWOOD turned to Cardona. The detective nodded. This gave  him the start he wanted.

Throckmorton had been robbed, but apparently  did not know it. Lagwood's gesture indicated that it would be

unwise to  worry him with the news. 

Barth turned toward the door. Cardona was about to follow when  Throckmorton opened his eyes and again

smiled. He spoke, half in a tone  of surprise. 

"You're leaving?" he queried. "I wanted to talk longer " 

"Wait until the morning," interposed Lagwood. "Detective Cardona  will be back then." 

"All right," agreed Throckmorton. "Tomorrow morning will be all  right. Just so long as I can talk before

Wednesday night." 


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Joe Cardona stopped abruptly. Almost involuntarily, he spoke aloud,  responding to the statement that

Throckmorton had made. 

"Wednesday night?" he queried. "This is Wednesday night." 

Throckmorton swung in the bed and propped his head on one elbow. He  was completely aroused from his

lethargy. His tone, though bewildered,  was clear. 

"Wednesday night?" he echoed. "It  it can't be. Why I was at  Currian's last night  Monday night. I  I 

have been asleep for two  days? I thought it was only one." 

Doctor Lagwood stepped forward anxiously. Commissioner Barth was  also apprehensive. Joe Cardona

remained stolid, as Throckmorton blurted  objections to the two men who tried to quiet him. 

"I've got to talk!" he cried. "I know that crooks must have grabbed  my securities. Currian's safe was open.

They could have rifled it, too.  But that's nothing! Tonight  Wednesday night  you can't stop me! I'm  going

to talk!" 

"The result might be serious," warned Lawgood, turning to Barth.  "He can speak if you order it; but the

consequences will be your own. I  speak as a physician." 

"Quiet him," agreed Barth. "His life may be at stake." 

"Perhaps," broke in Cardona, thrusting forward between the  physician and the commissioner, "but maybe

other lives are already at  stake. I'll stand for the consequences, commissioner. I want to hear  this man's

statement." 

For an instant, Barth boiled with indignation. He glared at Cardona  while Doctor Lagwood stood by, shaking

his head in troubled fashion.  Angered at Cardona's insubordination, the commissioner was ready to use

forcible measures. It was Throckmorton who changed the situation.  Already the recovered patient was

gripping Cardona's coat, pouring out  his story to the detective. 

"Somebody knew I was coming to Currian's," blurted Throckmorton. "A  servant there  one Currian was

suspicious about  that's why he had  armed the others. I had the dick along with me. He was armed, too. 

"But nobody  not even the dick  knew why I was bringing those  securities to Currian. Even Currian didn't

know. He knew I wanted to  borrow as much as I could get on them; he was giving me a check. But he  didn't

know why I wanted the money. 

"I'll tell you why. Did you ever hear of Rufus Galder? Big  millionaire who collects rare jewels? Well, he's

selling some of them  tonight. Going to have the whole lot at his apartment. Here in New York   Wednesday

night  Rufus Galder." 

THROCKMORTON paused for breath. He was defiant as he looked toward  Barth and Lagwood. They could

not stop him now. He spoke again to  Cardona. 

"Nobody knew I was borrowing money from Currian so I could show up  at Galder's and bid for some of

those gems. A friend up in Boston told  me about the sale. Big banker there, Tony Sharman. He couldn't make

it.  Said to use his name when I called on Galder. 


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"Sharman seemed worried. Said Galder had been pulling these private  sales too often." Throckmorton was

talking in syllabic utterances.  "Told me to hire a dick. Said to call Galder. Advise him to have police  there.

Sharman's advice to Galder. As a friend. 

"I never called Galder. Went to Currian's. Woke up here. When you  came in, the whole thing came back. Idea

hit me. Crooks must have got  us at Currian's. If they knew there was money loose at his place, they  ought to

know there would be jewels at Galder's. Get it? Only a few  people at Currian's  two of us, detective,

servants. Lot of people at  Galder's maybe. Crooks found out about Currian's " 

"And you figure," interrupted Cardona, "that there's a bigger  chance they'd know about Galder's." 

"That's it!" exclaimed Throckmorton, dropping back on the pillows. 

"It's what I figure, too," asserted Cardona, turning to  Commissioner Barth. "We're up against hot crime. The

crooks are moving  fast to keep ahead of us. There was an inside man at Currian's, a  servant, and you can bet

there'll be an inside man at Galder's." 

Cardona turned to Doctor Lagwood. He indicated Throckmorton,  propped in the bed. 

"The patient's yours, Doc," declared the detective. "Hope he didn't  overtax himself, but he looks better now

he's got that worry off his  chest." 

Without further hesitation, Cardona strode toward the door.  Commissioner Barth, excited, stalked after him.

Barth had forgotten the  insubordination. He was willing to follow Cardona's lead even further,  in face of this

possible crisis. 

"You're calling headquarters?" questioned Barth, as they reached  the hall together. "Getting some men up

there?" 

"You're the boss, commissioner," replied Cardona, stopping short.  "But if you want a suggestion, I've got it.

The first person to call is  Rufus Galder. If you do that, to put him on guard  he'd listen quick  to you  I can

be on another phone starting the ball rolling." 

"The radio patrol," nodded Barth, "all the available police in the  vicinity, squad of plainclothes men. Form a

cordon around " 

The commissioner had reached a room where a telephone showed on a  table. Cardona kept on while Barth

went in to send his call to Rufus  Galder. Seizing a telephone book, the commissioner found the number  that

he wanted. Rufus Galder was listed as living at the Castellan  Apartments. His phone number was Drury

83155. Barth picked up the  telephone. 

GERALD THROCKMORTON'S story was bringing prompt results. It was no  shot in the dark. For the

Castellan Apartments were located in the  building that Spud Claxter's mob had already surrounded; and the

number  of Rufus Galder's apartment was 4G. 

Joe Cardona had found luck. The detective's insistence was bringing  the forces of the law to a combat with

Wolf Barlan's minions. Cardona  had heard Throckmorton out. Following the Bostonian's hunch, Joe was

getting somewhere. 

Commissioner Barth had caught the contagious excitement of the ace  detective. Instinctively, he was

following the hunch. Like Cardona,  Barth believed that crime was due at Rufus Galder's. The commissioner


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was out to stop it. 

So was The Shadow. Whereas the law was springing to belated action,  on the supposition that evil was

impending, The Shadow had already  learned the truth and was present on the scene. 

CHAPTER XVI. THE RAID

THE SHADOW had reached the fourth floor of the fire tower. Here he  had found a steel door that opened

outward. Its outer knob would not  turn. It was latched. Yet it had not troubled The Shadow. 

Using blackened tools, he had removed the knob, then probed within.  The latch had yielded; The Shadow had

ended its usefulness. Yet The  Shadow, after entering, had paid but a short trip to the hallway. 

He had satisfied himself that all was well in apartment 4G. He had  heard muffled voices from within. Then he

had returned beyond the steel  door. It was opened only to a narrow slit. The Shadow, through this  crevice,

commanded a view of the hall. 

The Shadow had deduced facts concerning the raid at Currian's. He  was sure that the masked crooks had

entered the millionaire's house  ahead of the time appointed. That was why The Shadow had been too late.

Tonight, The Shadow was sure that the cordon of outside mobsters had  arrived in advance. 

How did the crooks intend to enter? Not by the fire tower. Cliff  would have been tipped to that fact; besides,

the steel doors were too  formidable. They must be coming either by the front door, where Spud  could tip off

Louie and Gabby of their arrival; or else they were  already in the building. 

This last supposition was a logical one; for apartments in this  district were only partly tenanted. The squad of

raiders could easily  find a hiding place until the zero hour. That, however, did not matter.  All that concerned

The Shadow was the fact that the crooks attack  through the hallway that he was guarding. 

INSIDE Rufus Galder's apartment, nearly a dozen guests were  enjoying a collation. Two servants were

producing trays from a buffet,  serving hors d'oeuvres and fancy liquors to the visitors. Most of those  present

were men; only three ladies were in the throng. 

Rufus Galder, tall, portly and genial, was talking to two guests  when a servant approached and spoke in a low

tone. The millionaire put  a question; receiving a cautious reply, he walked hurriedly from the  living room and

entered his study. 

"Did you hear that, Huring?" questioned one of the two men to whom  Galder had been talking. 

"What?" inquired Huring, a tall, darkbrowed fellow whose coarse  face seemed out of place in this group. 

"What the servant said," repeated the speaker. 

"I didn't catch it, Pelman." 

"He said"  Pelman's tone was a whisper  "that the call was very  urgent. From the police commissioner, Mr.

Wainwright Barth." 

"Odd, wasn't it?" questioned Huring. 


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With that he walked away. Pelman, a pudgy, lethargic individual,  showed sudden keenness. He watched

Huring stroll toward the little  entry that led from the living room to the outer door. A moment later,  he noted

a slight darkening from the entry, as though someone had  extinguished the light. The glow came on again.

Huring came back into  the living room. 

Pelman grew suddenly suspicious. He did not like Huring. The man  looked like an interloper, despite his

smooth fitting fulldress suit.  He wondered how the fellow had crashed into this high social gathering.  Then

he recalled that Huring was reputed to be a man of considerable  wealth. 

Several persons here were interested in the jewels which Galder  shortly intended to display. The millionaire

was anxious to dispose of  part of his collection. That was the real purpose for the gathering.  Had Huring been

invited here as a potential buyer? Probably. Was that a  blind on Huring's part? 

While Pelman was still pondering on this question, he kept his eyes  toward Huring. Hence he did not see the

cause of the sudden gasp that  came from nearly everyone present. Pelman turned. Rufus Galder had  stepped

from his study, followed by a servant. Both the millionaire and  the menial were holding leveled revolvers. 

"No one is to move," ordered Galder sternly. "I am acting with  authority of the police commissioner. My

instructions are to hold  everyone in place; and I have full right to take any measures that I  believe necessary." 

A hush fell over the group. Galder looked from man to man. The  millionaire had grit. So had the servant

beside him. Satisfied that he  had full control, Galder resumed. 

"Fortunately," he said, "I have not displayed my jewels. Hence the  moment of danger has not yet arrived. The

commissioner has warned me  that someone present may be the agent of criminals who plan an attack  upon

this apartment. The police are already on their way to offset such  a raid. 

"My servants are trustworthy. I can vouch for their honesty. I can  do the same for certain of my guests. But

there are others whom I might  suspect. I am looking for one man, some person who plans to make an  escape

when the crooks attack. If anyone can aid me in that search, I  should be greatly obliged." 

Pelman looked toward Huring. The heavybrowed fellow was calmly  lighting a cigarette. In that very

attempt to show poise, Pelman saw  new suspicion. 

"There's the man!" he exclaimed. "Huring! He heard the servant say  the commissioner was on the wire." 

Huring raised his head to stare at the accuser. His forehead  furrowed. He was momentarily nervous; then he

retorted quickly. 

"I heard nothing," he growled. "You were the man who heard what the  servant said. You heard him, Pelman,

and you mentioned it to me " 

Huring broke off, suddenly realizing that this statement was a  boomerang. He had admitted that he knew who

was on the telephone. He  shifted nervously. 

"And then," asserted Pelman, stepping forward, "you went out into  the entry. You turned the light off and

turned it on again. I saw the  reflection against the wall. It was like a signal." 

"Enough!" exclaimed Galder. "Huring is the man we want. Cover him,  Rinehart"  this to the servant  "and

shoot to kill if he makes a  move. Come, Huring. Let us hear you talk. Who are the others behind  this game?" 


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OUTSIDE, in the hallway, a door had opened on the side opposite to  Galder's apartment. From it came three

roughly clad men, wearing  bandanna handkerchiefs about their faces. The Shadow could detect the  bulge of

gas masks beneath. Each raider was armed with gun and small  bomb shaped like a pineapple. 

The trio came forward with a suddenness. They were making for the  door of Galder's apartment when a

sudden hiss brought them to a pause.  From the door to the fire tower came a figure cloaked in black. Crooks

stared as they saw The Shadow. 

A fourth man was coming from the door of the empty apartment. His  left hand held a revolver, his right a

pineapple bomb. He did not  hesitate for an instant. He threw the bomb. Its interior came lobbing  down the

hall and struck the floor three feet in front of The Shadow. A  soft shell burst; a thick cloud of green vapor

rose about the shrouded  figure. Pungent fumes filled the end of the hallway as the cloud  disintegrated. 

The figure of The Shadow, back against the steel door, was standing  as rigid as a statue. The crooks were

silent; to have uttered a laugh  might have meant inhalation of those paralyzing fumes. But elation  seized them

as they stared at the motionless automatic muzzles that  projected from The Shadow's blackgloved fists. 

These fiends knew the stilling power of the gas that one had  loosed. They realized its shortcomings also.

There had been no occasion  to deliver death to previous victims; but there was cause to slay The  Shadow. 

Almost with one accord, the three crooks in the hallway swung their  guns, intent to riddle The Shadow with

bullets that would spell his  certain doom. The raid was forgotten in that moment. Death to The  Shadow! The

desire of every gorilla was about to be achieved. The  password of the underworld could be made a reality! 

As guns swung, the incredible happened. The Shadow's form moved  forward. The automatics broke the

silence before a single finger  pressed trigger of revolver. As crooks staggered in the gasfilled  room, the

collar of The Shadow's cloak fell loose. The light revealed  what lay beneath; but it did not show the face of

The Shadow. Instead,  it enabled the staggering mobsters to glimpse a gas mask that The  Shadow wore. He,

too, had prepared himself against the deadly fumes  that he knew would play a part in tonight's raid. 

As three wounded mobsmen went sprawling away from the door to  Galder's apartment, the man at the

opposite door managed to fire one  quick shot in behalf of his overpowered companions. The bullets  whistled

past The Shadow's shoulder. An automatic spoke; the crook came  tumbling head foremost into the hallway.

Then came a slam of the door  behind him. The Shadow stood triumphant. Two of the first three crooks  had

staggered to the far end of the hall. They had collapsed. The third  lay moving weakly close by Galder's door. 

THE SHADOW'S shots had meant destruction to the masked raiders. But  to the crook within Galder's

apartment, it had given inspiration.  Hearing the shots in the hall, Huring made a sudden leap in that  direction,

yanking a revolver from his pocket as he fled. Rinehart  fired. His shot went wide. Huring reached the door,

yanked it open and  staggered back. 

He was face to face with The Shadow. The master fighter had heard  the shot from within. Cloak collar raised,

he held an automatic  straight between Huring's eyes. The crook moved backward; then dropped  his gun.

Rinehart and Galder pounced upon him. 

The Shadow had reached the edge of the living room. He wanted to  make sure that Galder's jewels were safe.

He saw that the situation was  in control. At that instant, he whirled as he heard a sound behind him. 

The last wounded raider had risen and was staggering in dizzy,  hopeless fashion. His hands were clutched to

his body. He could not  have aimed his revolver even had he held it. But as The Shadow wheeled,  the crook

performed a last, hopeless action. Sprawling forward, he  launched one arm and sent a gas bomb hurtling into


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Galder's living  room. 

The missile sped low past The Shadow's forward sweeping form. It  struck squarely at the feet of a milling

group, where Huring had  wrested free and men were trying vainly to clutch him. One second  later, the shouts

of the strugglers had died, with the screams of  excited women. The Shadow stared. 

Every person had stiffened. The few who were seated or who were  close to the wall remained balanced, in the

very poise wherein the gas  had captured them. But the others could no longer stand. Bodies thudded  to the

floor and rolled into grotesque positions. The place looked like  an overturned wax museum, with exhibits

strewn willynilly. 

Crime had failed; but the death sleep had struck. Though The Shadow  knew these victims would recover as

had the others, the episode gripped  him and held him, unmoving. Even to The Shadow, master of the

impossible, the prompt and irresistible lull of the incredible death  sleep was a sight that crowded out all other

thoughts. 

OUT in the hall, the mobster who had made the final thrust was  crawling on hands and knees away from

Galder's door. He reached the  nearest of the other silent raiders and sprawled dead on the floor. The  gas had

cleared from the hallway; its action seemed as short as it was  certain. 

The door of the opposite apartment opened. A crouched figure  emerged. This man, like the other raiders, was

wearing a bandanna  handkerchief about his eyes. His gait told his identity. The man was  Skeet. There had

been five raiders tonight. Skeet, canny and cautious,  had sent the others ahead. 

Skeet stared toward the far end of the hall. It was from there that  he had heard the shots that had laid low his

crew. He saw the closed  steel door. He formed an opinion that was only partially correct. He  was sure that

The Shadow had stopped the raiders, but he believed that  the master fighter must have done his shooting from

the edge of the  door in order to avoid the gas fumes. Skeet had no inkling that The  Shadow, too, had worn a

mask. 

The raid was off. Flight was the only course. But Skeet had a quick  task to perform. Stooping, he loosed the

gas masks from his dead  comrades. He seized their unused bombs. The work was quick. Within a  half

minute, Skeet had gained these objects. He scudded along the hall,  heading for the stairway inside the

building. 

The Shadow broke suddenly away from the strange sight which his  eyes commanded. He swung out into the

hall. He saw the unmasked  raiders, their bandannas tumbled above their heads. Swiftly, he started  in pursuit,

knowing that someone must have escaped. Skeet had reached  the stairs before The Shadow arrived. His

pursuer heard his footsteps  pounding downward. The Shadow followed. 

Whistles were shrilling round about the apartment building. Barking  revolvers; shots outside. Spud's outfit

had spotted the arrival of the  police. They were taking it on the run. As Skeet came plunging down  into the

gloomy lobby of the apartment building, the front doors swung  open and half a dozen policemen arrived face

to face with the fleeing  mobster. 

Revolvers spat. Skeet ducked back. The gas masks went bouncing down  the steps. An officer sprang for

them, recognizing what they were. The  others fired wildly. Then Skeet chucked a bomb. It burst in the center

of the lobby. 

Bluecoats became rigid. The stooping man held his position; the  others toppled, all save one who was just

within the door. He wavered  sideways and stood leaning in crazy fashion, revolver leveled, finger  on trigger. 


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Skeet scudded forward. He grabbed the gas masks and sprang toward  the door, just as The Shadow arrived at

the head of the stairway. An  automatic barked. Its shots, clipping downward from an angle, was  deflected by

a brass bar just above the door. That bit of luck saved  Skeet's life. 

A taxicab was standing in the street. Skeet pounced into it and  rammed a revolver against the driver's neck.

The cab shot away as The  Shadow reached the door. A radio patrol car was rounding the corner.  The Shadow

waited as it swung in between him and the cab. Revolvers  barked from the patrol car; then came a burst of

greenish smoke. 

The car went skidding across the street and smashed against the  wall, just as the cab rounded the corner.

Skeet had tossed another  bomb. The men in the patrol car had passed out instantly. They were  seated rigid in

their wrecked car. 

Skeet had eliminated the police squad. He had stopped the patrol  car. For the moment, no other forces of the

law were near. The Shadow  took that opportunity to make his own departure. Swiftly, he glided  across the

street and chose a darkened spot between two buildings. 

A SINISTER laugh sounded through the gloom. It carried no mirth.  The Shadow had held the winning hand

tonight; yet his efforts had not  brought the full success he should have gained. 

Men of crime were still at large. Shattered hordes would rise  again. More grim work lay in The Shadow's

path. The fading laugh,  however, carried a foreboding note. 

Strategy had served The Shadow well. He had used the unexpected to  defy the gas bombs and strike down the

raiders. His methods of surprise  were not yet ended. The Shadow could foresee new ways with which to  quell

the rising foe. 

He would not wait for men of crime to strike. The next thrust would  be The Shadow's own. After that would

come the settlement. With  underlings eliminated, The Shadow would force the hand of the master  who had

designed this evil game. 

CHAPTER XVII. THE BIG SHOT DECIDES

ON the following morning, Wolf Barlan was seated by the window of  his living room reading the torrid

details of last night's raid. An  involuntary snarl came from the big shot's lips. Wolf knew that crime  had

failed; he could not, however, understand all that had happened. 

The latch of the door clicked softly. Wolf looked up and gripped a  shortnosed revolver that he carried in the

pocket of his dressing  gown. The door opened. It was Spud Claxter. The mob leader had a  duplicate key to

the apartment. 

"What's the idea?" quizzed Wolf, as soon as Spud had closed the  door behind him. "I told you to stay away

from here, didn't I? Say " 

"It's all right, Wolf," interposed Spud. "I used my bean. Nobody  followed me here. Listen, Wolf  I couldn't

give you all the low down  over the phone. I had to get here, to tell you about last night." 

"Yeah? Well, what's the dope?" 

"The Shadow again." 


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"The Shadow? Where did he horn in?" 

"That fight up in the hall. The news hounds got it from the police  that some of the guests must have put up a

battle. But that wasn't the  lay at all." 

"Shoot it, quick." 

"Here's what happened," explained Spud. "Skeet and the five guys  with him were over in the empty

apartment. They got the signal all  right. From the inside man. It meant to come in five minutes, if there  wasn't

no other sign. That was it, wasn't it?" 

"Yeah. That was the dope I had you pass to Skeet. Go on." 

"Skeet sends the boys out ahead. Back in the empty apartment, he  knows there's something wrong. The last of

the crew chucks one of the  bombs." 

"In the hall?" 

"Yeah. He heaves it from the door of the empty apartment. Then  comes shots. This guy uses his rod. It was

Zug. Skeet seen him fire.  Then comes another shot. Zug pitches flat. Out in the hall. So Skeet  slams the

door." 

"Yellow, eh?" 

"Yellow nothing. Didn't he see Zug toss the bomb? Skeet knowed it  was some sniper out there, shooting from

where the gas couldn't get  him. He figures The Shadow, so he waits. When he does sneak out, the  gas is done.

The four guys are lying in the hall. Door of the apartment  is open. Skeet knows they must have heaved a

bomb in there, because  there's no noise. 

"He sees the steel door of the fire tower and figures it was from  in back of that The Shadow does the

sharpshooting. No sign of The  Shadow no longer. So Skeet moves quick. He snatches the masks off them

dead gorillas and takes the couple of bombs they got left. He heads  down the stairs in a hurry." 

"Where were you all this time?" 

"Outside, laying back, with gorillas all around the apartment  house. I spotted the bulls coming up. I knowed

there was going to be  trouble. Some tipoff. So I busted loose with my gat. Give the boys the  alarm. I beat it

over to the coupe and made a getaway." 

"The others?" 

"They was quick. Put up a running fight and took it on the lam.  Nobody scratched. But wait'll I tell you the

rest about Skeet. He  heaved another bomb in the lobby, square into the middle of a lot of  cops. Knocked them

out. Grabbed a cab; plugged a bomb into a patrol  car. Made his getaway." 

"Did anybody see him work?" quizzed Wolf. 

"Only the taxi driver," replied Spud, with a grin, "and Skeet fixed  him right. Picked a place to drop off and

told the guy to slow down.  Just as Skeet slid from the cab, he laid another bomb in the front  seat. 


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"Boy! That cab goes right through a traffic light, hits the curb,  and busts through a plateglass window.

Traffic cop goes piling over to  give the driver blazes. Finds him sitting at the wheel, stiff as a  board." 

"That meant another mug for the hospital. The taxi driver was the  only one that saw Skeet use the bomb. It

gave Skeet a chance for an  easy getaway besides. I met him over at the hideout. He slipped me the  whole

story." 

WOLF had risen. He was pacing back and forth, recalling all that  Spud had related. The big shot was

tabulating losses, considering  consequences. Spud watched him hopefully. He started to speak once or  twice,

but caught himself each time. When Wolf spoke, his tone was  analytical. 

"First off," declared the big shot, "you're out a raiding crew. The  only guy left is Skeet. He looks to be the

best of the lot. You're  right about him using brains last night. We can count on him to lead  the next raid.

You'll have to pick the four best gorillas you've got in  the outside crew. Who are they?" 

"Louie and Gabby, to begin with," returned Spud, promptly. "Then  there's two other guys. Muggsy McGilly

and the fellow that came with  him  Cliff Marsland." 

"Marsland, eh? I've heard of him. Did time up in the big house.  He's been doing good since he got out of stir.

Say  how'd you land him  for the outfit?" 

"Luke Gonrey knew him. Luke fixed it." 

"Well, he's worth a couple of ordinary gorillas. Get hold of those  four bimboes tonight. Send them up to the

hideout. Skeet can break them  in." 

"For a job tonight?" 

"Yeah. Listen, Spud, we're going to pull something that'll turn  this town upside down. Something I just got

wind of from a smart guy I  know. Did you ever hear tell of Teladron?" 

"Who is he? One of them Greeks that owns a chain of restaurants?" 

"The name's Greek all right," snorted Wolf, "but it don't refer to  a person. Teladron is the name of a play.

What they call a modernized  version of a classic tragedy. Here's the dope on it. In the newspaper." 

Wolf fumbled through the pages of the journal that he had been  reading. He noted an advertisement and a

column article. He chuckled. 

"This play opened in Philadelphia," he stated. "They tried it down  there and it clicked like wildfire. All the

ritzy folks were making  weekend trips to Philly just to see that show. Well, Teladron closed  in Philadelphia,

and it's opening here tonight. 

"The promoters have opened the old Galloway Theater. Seats fifteen  hundred people, and you know what the

prices are going to be? Five  bucks up to twenty bucks top; and there won't be a seat empty." 

"How come?" questioned Spud, amazed. 

"The censors weren't going to let it open," explained Wolf. "The  box seats were sold; before the regular

advance sale started, the  censors put the ban on it. They'd seen the show down in Philly. They  said nix. Then

the promoters pulled a smart one. They got an injunction  against the censors on the grounds that they couldn't


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pass decision on  a show that hadn't appeared in New York." 

"So it's opening?" 

"Yeah. Teladron tonight at the Galloway. Maybe it'll be toned down;  maybe it won't. The whole cast may be

pinched. But the show runs this  one night, at least. That's why the prices skyrocketed. The promoters  aren't

going to deal with agencies. Ticket sale starts at five o'clock,  at the theater." 

"Where do we come in?" 

"First of all on the box office receipts. I figure they'll take  between ten and fifteen grand. That goes up to the

manager's office.  One guy with a gas bomb can take care of that. But that's chicken  feed." 

"I told you the boxes have been sold. I've learned who's got them.  This show is going to be as big as the

opening of an opera season,  except that it'll be flashy as well as ritzy. You've heard of Peter  Caldoon, haven't

you?" 

"Yeah. The South African diamond king. Has a couple of Pinkertons  with him for a bodyguard." 

"That's the guy. The rocks he wears are worth fifty grand, and he  never carries less than that amount of dough

with him. Well, he's got  one box, with the dicks there with him. In another box we'll find  Halwood, the

banker. His wife's due to show up with a big layout of  sparklers. That ain't all; but there's no use in going

through the  whole list. The point is, we're going to get all the swag in sight." 

"By gassing the boxes, eh? But what about the rest of the folks in  the theater? What about the actors?" 

"Listen, Spud. You know what those bombs will do. Their action is  terrific. The gas goes everywhere; then

drops. Valdan invented it for  war purposes. Claimed that a bigsized bomb could cover the area of  half a city

block. 

"Maybe he exaggerated; but it's a bet that if your outfit chucks a  half dozen, there won't be nobody left to

squawk. The newspapers say  that the audiences in Philly were paralyzed with laughter when they saw

Teladron. Well, we'll give this New York crowd a taste of real  paralysis. Actors along with the audience. 

"You've got five men. One comes in from back stage. One goes up to  the manager's office, while another

covers the lobby. The other two cut  down in by the boxes. The first guy busts a bomb square on the stage.

Changes the action into a still picture. That's the cue. 

"The guy that's after the box office dough is watching from the  balcony. The mug from the lobby is lamping

the stage from downstairs.  The fellows by the boxes are looking in too. Masks ready; on they go.  Out come

the bombs." 

SPUD was staring openmouthed. The tremendous scope of this scheme  stunned him. His lips moved, but

made no utterance. Wolf watched him,  chuckling, while Spud finally found his voice. 

"You  you mean"  the mobleader stuttered  "we're going to hand  the death sleep to everybody in that

theater? Fifteen hundred of them  " 

"That's it," returned Wolf, leering. "Customers for a lot of  hospitals this trip; not just the Talleyrand. When

the gas hits, the  fellow upstairs hops for the manager's office and drops another bomb.  He grabs the dough

and comes downstairs. Meanwhile the two by the boxes  are making grabs for bank rolls and jewelry. 


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"There's two ways out. Across the stage and through the back alley;  or out by the lobby. Remember  both

those ways are covered. The  fellows there have extra bombs. The pineapples will work in the open if  they're

needed. 

"You be around, but not too close to the theater. The crew heads  for the hideout with the swag. That's where

you meet them. Remember,  the bulls don't know yet that we're using gas. They won't be thinking  about the

death sleep hitting in a whole theater. If they got the gas  idea at all, they'll figure it's limited. Not big enough

to paralyze  fifteen hundred people all at once." 

"What about an outside crew?" inquired Spud. 

"Get one," ordered Wolf, "but do it cagey. A big bunch of cheap  gorillas; have them report in different places

near the theater and  stay there. They won't know what job we're pulling. Tell them if they  see any guys with

masks making a getaway, they're to help out. Get it?" 

"I've got it," nodded Spud. "Even if The Shadow does get on the  trail of some small fry, he won't be able to

figure out what's  happening until it's over." 

Wolf motioned with his thumb. Spud arose and moved slowly toward  the door. It was the signal to scram. On

the way, he paused to put a  question on a different matter. 

"Say, Wolf," he remarked. "There's one guy in that bunch of victims  from last night  lying up there at the

hospital  one guy who might  blab " 

"The taxi driver?" 

"Well, him, too. But he wasn't the one I was thinking about. I mean  the inside man you had at Galder's. He

didn't have no chance for a  getaway. Suppose Cardona picks him out and begins to quiz him after he  wakes

up. It may lead back to you " 

"Don't worry," interrupted Wolf, with an evil leer. "He's not the  only bird I know. The fellow you mean is

Bud Jardell; he was at  Galder's under the name of Huring. He's being watched by another fellow   an inside

man  that I've got planted at the hospital." 

"But Skeet ain't up at the place no longer " 

"I know that. I was only using Skeet to keep tabs on Doc Lagwood.  This other guy I refer to is watching the

patients. I've tipped him to  see that Huring doesn't pull anything. We didn't know about this guy

Throckmorton being wise to the Galder setup, or we'd have handled  Throckmorton like we're going to do

with Huring." 

"And the taxi driver?" 

"I'll pass the word about him. If Cardona is still dumb enough not  to know we're using gas, the taxi man won't

get a chance to squawk. But  after tonight, there won't be much doubt about the bomb business.  Fifteen

hundred dummies in a theater will tell their own story." 

"Maybe Cardona knows it already. There was a dozen people at  Galder's the " 

"What if he does? He won't figure the big scale job that's coming  tonight. If he knows already  if he finds

out tonight  well, then we  won't have to worry about the taxi fellow. But Bud Jardell, that  Cardona knows as


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Huring, well  it's going to be too bad for him." 

"After tonight?" queried Spud, his hand on the door knob. 

"We're leaving New York," chuckled Wolf. "Remember what I said  about the United States Mint? Well 

that wouldn't work; but there's a  job that will, even though it ain't in this country. 

"We're going abroad, Spud. You and me and  well, others that we'll  need. To London. Take it easy for a

while; then we'll tackle the Bank  of England. That crib can be cracked when we've made up a new supply of

bombs. We'll pick a new crew over there." 

Spud grinned. Then he delivered one more parting remark, based upon  Wolf's previous statements. 

"Say," mentioned the mobleader. "About this inside man up at the  hospital. You mean that when Lagwood

was " 

"Scram," ordered Wolf. "I'm taking care of things up there. Lay low  until dark, Spud. Then round up your

new raiding squad and get them to  the hideout. After that, grab any bum gorillas for the outside mob." 

Spud departed. Wolf picked up the telephone. Chuckling, the big  shot settled back in his chair, satisfied that

all was well. Tonight,  so Wolf pictured it, crime without parallel would strike in Manhattan. 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW'S THRUST

DUSK. Cliff Marsland was standing by a table in a tawdry room. This  was a place that The Shadow's agent

used for temporary living quarters  in the underworld. The door was locked; Cliff was holding a small

package that he had brought in his pocket. 

An hour ago, Cliff had left the confines of the badlands.  Respectably garbed, he had visited the office of an

investment broker  named Rutledge Mann. There, Cliff had received the package with  instructions not to open

it until he was safely alone. 

Mann served as a contact agent of The Shadow. When Cliff opened the  package, he was, therefore, not

surprised to find a folded envelope  accompanying the small cardboard box that lay within. 

Last night, Cliff knew, a crew of selected raiders had met their  Waterloo in the service of Spud Claxter.

Shock troops eliminated, it  was obvious that Spud would have to draft new raiders from his outside  crowd.

Cliff knew that he was eligible. He had reported that fact to  The Shadow. 

This was The Shadow's answer. Cliff placed the little box upon the  table. He opened the envelope. He read

coded lines that had been  inscribed in ink of a vivid blue. Cliff was familiar with the code. He  read the

message easily, then watched the writing vanish. That was the  way with orders from The Shadow. Cliff tore

the sheet of paper, tossed  the blank pieces into a cracked wastebasket and stood in thought. 

The Shadow had planned a clever thrust. The delivery depended upon  Cliff Marsland. The agent was

picturing the work that lay ahead. He  fancied that he would encounter no great difficulty, provided, of  course,

that Spud chose him to act as a raider. Would that be tonight  or later? Cliff considered. 

Spud knew where Cliff was located. But Cliff had no idea where Spud  could be reached. The mobleader's

orders were to stay either here or at  the Black Ship. One thing had bothered Cliff. He imagined that contact


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with The Shadow might be difficult should he receive a sudden summons  from Spud. But that worry was

ended. 

The Shadow's instructions had placed Cliff on his own. Should Spud  require him for the new band of raiders,

The Shadow would know that  Cliff had accepted the job. Lack of a call to Burbank would establish  the fact.

Once with the inner group of mobsters, Cliff could follow The  Shadow's orders. 

The task might be easy. If so, Cliff would be able to report after  he had accomplished what The Shadow

required. The one hitch would be an  emergency. Work done, the thrust made, Cliff might find himself in a

position from which there was no immediate escape. If that difficulty  arose, there would be an out. Cliff

smiled as he picked up the  cardboard box. Within this container  according to The Shadow's note   lay an

instrument which Cliff could use in emergency. The Shadow had  provided for whatever might occur. 

Cliff opened the box. Inside was a tiny leather bag. From the bag,  Cliff drew a cylinder of metal. It was a

hypodermic syringe, fully  loaded. Cliff examined it carefully, then replaced it in the bag. He  put the bag in

his coat pocket. 

A cautious knock sounded at the door. Cliff tossed the little box  in the wastebasket. He went to the door and

growled a challenge. A  whispered voice gave a password. Cliff unbolted. A scrawny, pastyfaced  gangster

entered. 

CLIFF knew the fellow. Skeet Wurrick. He realized instantly that  Skeet must be a member of the selected

raiding squad. Spud had not  informed him that Skeet was in the game; but Spud had told Cliff to  follow

anyone who gave the password. 

Skeet beckoned. Cliff followed. They went down the stairs of the  rickety building that Cliff had chosen for a

rooming place. Skeet  glanced cautiously about as he stepped into the darkened street. Then  he whispered to

Cliff to follow. The little mobster led the way through  an alley. 

Cliff wondered if The Shadow were nearby. He doubted it. The Shadow  probably had other work to do. He

had left this task to Cliff alone.  The odds were that Cliff could report back. If something went wrong,  Cliff

could take care of himself, thanks to the completeness of The  Shadow's plan. 

Cliff and Skeet reached a touring car parked on the next street.  They climbed in and the vehicle set out.

Growled voices told Cliff the  identity of his companions. Louie, Gabby and Muggsy were the other  three who

had been chosen to work with Skeet. 

Louie was at the wheel. He followed the twisting course that Skeet  ordered. When the car came to a stop, it

was north and west of Times  Square. Louie pulled into a wide, blind alleyway in back of an old  garage. 

The wall of the building had no windows. No one could have seen the  crew that alighted. Skeet used a

flashlight. He led the way to a  grating and raised the bars of metal. He ordered the others to drop in  and push

their way through the open window beneath. Skeet followed  last. 

They were in a portion of the cellar. This part of the garage had  evidently been abandoned. Skeet's flashlight

showed where archways had  been walled on the right. They followed a narrow passage and came to an  iron

door that Skeet unlocked. The passage continued on the other side,  but at the left were small doors, also of

iron. All were closed. 

Skeet turned on a light that hung from the ceiling. Its rays could  not be seen, for Skeet had closed and locked

the outer door. The  scrawny mobster led the way to the final door on the left of the  passage. He unlocked it,


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turned on a light and introduced the new crew  to a small, stonewalled room, where a table stood in the

corner. 

Upon the table was a heavy wooden box. Skeet lifted the lid and  showed the interior. It was divided into

sections like an egg crate.  Half of the compartments were empty; the rest contained small objects  shaped like

pineapples. 

"Bombs," explained Skeet. "Loaded wid stuff dat'll knock you cuckoo  in a jiff. One of dese'll put you under

for two days. Worser dan a  sniff of snow. Dat's wot's been de matter wid all dem mugs up in de  hospital. 

"Dere ain't no trick to usin' dem. Just give a heave; de end pops  off an' goes blooey." He picked up one of the

pineapples. "Like dis.  Only let de ting go. Don't hang on to it like I did. Get me?" 

The others nodded. They formed a tense group in this little room  behind the iron door that Skeet had locked

as an additional precaution.  Skeet dived under the table and fetched up a stack of gas masks. They  were

provided with goggles that projected above a small cylinder that  was made to cover the nose. 

"Dese take the stuff dat queers de gas," explained Skeet. "We wear  dem under big handkerchiefs so no guy

gets no chanct to lamp dem, see?  Now dese masks ain't no good if dey don't have de stuff in dem." 

"You got to empty dem after each trip. De stuff keeps, just so long  as it don't get hit by de gas. But dat puts it

on de blink. De gas  does. Dese masks are empty. Watch while I fill dem." 

FROM beneath the table, Skeet brought out a gallon jug, which was  about one third empty. It contained a

greenish liquid. The bottle was  corked; a tin funnel was inverted on top of it. Skeet ordered Muggsy to  hold a

gas mask with the cylinder open. He set the bottle on the table;  produced a small sponge which he thrust into

the cylinder of the mask;  then inserted the funnel. 

Carefully, Skeet uncorked the big bottle and poured a small  quantity of the fluid into the mask. He replaced

the bottle, leaving  the cork out. He showed the gorilla how to close the cylinder and lock  it. Then he took the

mask from Muggsy's hands. 

It was Skeet's intention to replace the mask on the table and  proceed with the filling of others. Before Skeet

could do so, however,  Cliff reached forward and took the gas mask from Skeet's hands. He  examined it in the

light. 

"This thing is all set?" questioned Cliff. "Ready to use when we go  out?" 

Skeet nodded. 

"And all you've got to cover is your eyes and nose?" 

"Dat's right. But keep your mouth shut. Don't breathe dat way. We  ain't got no piece to cover de mouth

because we want de bandannas to  cover de whole mask. See?" 

"I get you." 

In natural fashion, Cliff attached the gas mask to his head. The  others looked on curiously, interested to see

how easily the job could  be done. Skeet paused with his hands on the large bottle, figuring that  this was good

instruction for the new crew. Grins appeared when the  others saw Cliff in his outfit. 


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"All set," remarked Cliff, smiling in return. "All I need"  he  looked toward the table and thrust his hand in

the big box  "is one of  these." 

"Look out dere!" exclaimed Skeet, as he saw Cliff pluck a bomb from  the box. 

"Don't monkey wid dem pineapples yet. Easy dere, easy " 

Cliff had stepped back with the bomb. Skeet started forward with an  expression of alarm, which the others

shared. Before the little crook  had taken more than a single step, Cliff performed the unexpected. He  had

raised his hand; now, with a quick motion, he swung his fist  forward and hurled the pineapple to the stone

floor. 

The bomb burst with a seething hiss. Instantly, a green cloud  filled the room, obscuring the figures of those

who stood therein. The  vapor settled. Cliff, staring, saw the amazing result. His companions  were rooted to

the floor. 

Skeet had settled back toward the table. Muggsy was leaning up  against the wall, in a rigid pose. Gabby and

Louie, away from table or  wall, were balanced oddly on their feet in strained positions. Their  bodies were

swaying. Gabby's toppled as Cliff stared; then Louie's form  lost its balance and went tumbling. 

Only Cliff had evaded the death sleep. This was by virtue of the  mask that he had donned. Cliff stepped over

and found Skeet's keys. He  unlocked the iron door to the hall. It opened inward. Cliff saw no need  for hurry.

The gas had subsided promptly; drops of moisture were drying  on the floor. 

One task remained. Cliff went back to the table and pushed the big  bottle over the edge. The jug smashed; the

precious neutralizer  splashed across the floor and formed greenish streams that trickled in  the direction of the

doorway. 

THE atmosphere had cleared. The neutralizer was following the  evaporation process that had marked the

disappearance of the gas drops.  Cliff removed his mask, pulled out the sponge and dropped it down a  grated

drain that he found in the corridor. 

His job was done. He had orders to leave the bombs untouched. The  whole affair was to look like an accident

as if Cliff had not been  here. A bomb set off by mistake; the neutralizer spilled  that would  be all. But it

left Spud Claxter without a crew; and it meant that no  new raiders could fare forth protected against the

fumes of the bombs  that they might throw. 

As Cliff turned back into the little room, he heard a click from  down the hall. Someone was opening the door

in the passage. Cliff dived  back into the little room and shut the door. He locked it. Then he  realized the

futility of his action. 

This must be Spud, coming alone, to see if the crew had assembled.  Had Cliff drawn a gun, he could have

made a break for it. That was too  late. The light in the passage told Spud that Skeet and the others were  here.

The fact that Spud had a key for the outer door indicated that he  had one for this door also. 

Spud would be on the alert. He would see trickles of green that had  gone out through the doorway. The

chances were that Cliff would be  trapped. A fight offered the way out even yet; but Cliff feared that it  might

injure The Shadow's plans. The game was to make this whole affair  look like an accident. 

Quickly, Cliff drew the little bag from his pocket. He brought out  the syringe and jabbed it in his forearm.

Someone was pounding at the  door: Spud had arrived. He was announcing himself by name. Cliff was  grim. 


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The keys! He had almost forgotten them. He shoved them back in  Skeet's pocket. The syringe! He must

dispose of it. Cliff thrust the  needle through the bag; leaning against the table, he reached beneath  and pressed

the point deep into the woodwork. 

Neither object would be found. Spud could come in any time. He was  still pounding at the door, but that

meant nothing to Cliff. The opiate  from the syringe was working. Cliff swayed dizzily and slumped softly  to

the floor. Consciousness faded. 

Two minutes later, Spud Claxter decided to unlock the door. The  barrier swung inward. The mobleader

started in consternation. Five  henchmen  all in a stupor. The neutralizer gone! Fierce curses came  from

Spud's evil lips. 

Crime was off for tonight. This crew of rookies had made some  blunder. A dropped gas bomb; a broken jug.

That ended the game that  Wolf Barlan had planned. Spud fumed; then became calm. He knew that he  would

have to take care of these henchmen. That meant a call to Wolf  for instructions. 

Spud looked the crowd over before he left to call Wolf. Cliff  Marsland, like the others, was lying in a rigid

posture. He passed  Spud's inspection. The mobleader took Cliff  like the others  for a  victim of the death

sleep. 

That emergency measure, the use of the quickacting hypodermic, had  been the final touch of The Shadow's

scheme. It had served Cliff  Marsland when he needed it. The thrust was made. All was well. Through  his

agent, The Shadow had delivered a stroke to forestall crime. 

CHAPTER XIX. AT THE HOSPITAL

EARLY the next evening, Lamont Cranston's limousine drew up in  front of the Talleyrand Hospital. Two

persons alighted; one was  Cranston, the other, Commissioner Wainwright Barth. They were chatting  as they

went up the steps. 

"It is nearly fortyeight hours since the crime was attempted at  Galder's," Barth was explaining. "If the

present victims responded as  did the others, they should be recovering very soon." 

"Do you intend to quiz them immediately?" inquired Cranston. 

"Yes," responded Barth. "Throckmorton showed no ill effects after  making his statement two nights ago.

Hence we will question the  recovering patients. But upon one point only." 

"And the point?" 

"The identity of the inside man who was working with the crooks.  There were indications of a melee at

Galder's. Detective Cardona  believes that they had discovered the malefactor." 

They had reached the elevator and were riding upward when Barth  resumed his statement. 

"Some supercrook is in back of it all," assured the commissioner.  "Once we have discovered which of the

victims was in the game, we shall  quiz that particular man when he awakes. Through him we will learn the

identity of the big chief." 

THEY arrived at Doctor Lagwood's experimental room. Joe Cardona was  there alone. The detective arose to


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greet the commissioner. He stated  that Lagwood was visiting the various patients. While Joe was making  this

explanation, the physician entered. 

Lagwood smiled wearily. He nodded and extended his hand when Barth  introduced him to Cranston. The

specialist sank in the chair that was  in front of his desk. 

"I am thoroughly exhausted," declared Lagwood. "I thought that  those last cases would end this trouble. Two

nights ago, I was ready to  go home to Long Island and take a good rest. Then a dozen victims came  here." 

"We hope these will be the last," stated Barth. 

"I share the hope," smiled Lagwood. "Another siege like this could  make me a fit subject for my own

sanitarium on the Sound. By the way,  commissioner, when these new patients recover, it might be advisable

to  send a few of them out there." 

"For further observation?" 

"Yes. There is a possibility that the death sleep may leave some  ill effects. If I have a few patients

convalescing under my personal  observation, I shall be able to note any tendency toward recurring  symptoms. 

"There are several persons out there now who have partly recovered  from various forms of sleeping sickness.

Others are paralytics who have  shown recurrent tendencies. There is one woman who is subject to  occasional

trance conditions. It is my practice to study all new  ailments even after the patients have apparently gained

complete  recovery." 

"A wise procedure." 

The talk had become too medical for Joe Cardona. The detective's  mind could not deviate from crime.

Finding opportunity, Joe put in a  remark. 

"I was talking with Doctor Lagwood before you arrived," asserted  the detective, to Barth. "You know what I

said last night,  commissioner. Twelve people knocked out in the middle of what looked  like a brawl. I think

some form of gas got them." 

"We disproved that theory at Valdan's," objected Barth. "What is  your opinion, doctor?" 

"The gas theory has merit," replied Lagwood, propping his head  wearily upon his hand. "But the blood

condition of the victims does not  prove it. I am inclined to reject it for the present. Later, perhaps, I  may make

tests with the convalescents." 

"How?" 

"By my vapor treatment. I tried it with but little success. I did  not care to apply it too strongly while the

victims were still in their  cataleptic state. But with convalescence, at my sanitarium, I might  make more

concentrated experiments." 

Doctor Lagwood paused. His eyes closed; he seemed half dozing. Yet  his ears detected the approach of

footsteps from the hall. Awaking from  his catnap, Lagwood was the first person to witness the entry of a

younger interne. 

"Ah, Jennings!" exclaimed the specialist. "You have a report to  make on the patients?" 


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"Yes, sir," replied the interne. "Rufus Galder is showing the first  signs of consciousness." 

"Good. We shall go into his room promptly. What else, Jennings?" 

"I called Hoffer, sir, to ask about the neutralizer. You said you  wanted some to take to the sanitarium." 

"Yes, in case I try the vapor treatments on the convalescents. I  wanted to be sure that he had the full supply

available." 

"He has it, sir. Hoffer was not there, but one of the assistants  told me that he had made up a new supply from

the formula." 

"A new supply? I asked about the old." 

"Apparently something happened to it, from what the assistant said.  He told me that Hoffer raised a big fuss

the other day because he could  not find it and that the old man immediately made up a duplicate  amount." 

"Very well. So long as Hoffer has some ready when I need it." 

"I am sure that it is available, Doctor Lagwood. I made certain of  the fact when I talked with the clerk." 

Jennings left and Lagwood smiled wearily as he spoke to the police  commissioner. 

"There is an efficient helper," remarked Lagwood. "A new interne,  that young chap, Jennings, yet he is the

most capable man in the  hospital. I have hesitated to call other physicians in on these last  cases; but twelve

persons are more than I can attend. Other physicians  might want to prescribe according to their own methods.

Not so with  Jennings. 

"He has carried out my instructions to the letter. In fact, some of  the patients have been almost entirely under

his care. Well, gentlemen"   the physician arose  "let us go in and view the first man to  recover. If Rufus

Galder appears strong, I can permit you to question  him." 

LAGWOOD led the way while the others followed. They found a nurse  arranging pillows in back of Galder's

head. The millionaire had come  out of his trance in surprising fashion. Though Jennings had reported  but a

few moments before, Galder was already wide awake. 

Doctor Lagwood motioned the others to remain in the corridor. He  entered and made a brief examination. He

came to the door, just as  Jennings appeared beside those who were waiting there. 

"Three others are recovering," said the interne. "I think you  should see them, Doctor Lagwood." 

"At once," replied the specialist. "All right, commissioner. You  may enter and talk to Rufus Galder." 

Barth and Cranston entered. While they stood beside the bed, the  commissioner gave the nod to Cardona. The

detective had questioned  Throckmorton; Barth wanted him to do the same with Galder. Joe  approached, told

the millionaire his name and came to the point. 

"I want to know about what happened at your place," explained the  sleuth. "Tell me this, Mr. Galder. After

the commissioner called you,  did you make any effort to learn if a crook was among your guests?" 

"I did," affirmed Galder, steadily. "What is more, I learned the  man." 


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"You mean you got the fellow?" 

"Yes. One of my servants  Rinehart  aided me in trapping him. But  he made no statement. He would not

tell the name of the man who had  sent him on his mission of crime." 

"He'll tell it to me," growled Joe. "Wait until he comes out of his  snooze. He's right here in this hospital.

Leave it to me, Mr. Galder.  Say  what was the fellow's name? Which one was he?" 

"His name is Huring." 

With this statement, Galder closed his eyes and rested easily back  upon the pillows. Joe Cardona swung

abruptly toward the door. His  purpose was obvious. He was going to make prompt use of this  information.

Joe reached the corridor. Barth and Cranston arrived just  as the detective ran squarely into Doctor Lagwood. 

The physician pressed Joe aside. He approached Commissioner Barth  and spoke in a low, serious tone. 

"Bad news," declared Lagwood. "I am sorry, commissioner, but I have  come to report my first failure. One of

the patients succumbed just as  he was coming from his trance." 

"Dead?" 

"Yes." 

"Who was he?" 

Lagwood turned to Jennings who had just arrived. The interne had  caught the commissioner's question. He

was holding a list, which bore  the numbers of the patients. He referred to it. 

"The name of the dead man," declared Jennings, quietly, "was  Huring. James Huring." 

TWENTY minutes later, Commissioner Barth and Lamont Cranston were  riding back to the Cobalt Club.

Barth was glum. He had left Cardona at  the hospital, to quiz other recovering patients. 

"They're all coming out of it," remarked the commissioner, "all but  the one man we wanted. I wonder,

Cranston, why this misfortune should  have befallen us." 

"Huring was a crook," came the quiet reply. "It is better that he  should have died than an innocent victim." 

"That is true," agreed Barth. "We should naturally have expected  some deaths among so many patients. I am

afraid that Lagwood was forced  to leave too much work to that chap Jennings. Yet I must not criticize.

Lagwood has gained marvelous results. His work has been magnificent." 

The car was at the club. Barth alighted. Cranston remained. The  millionaire, presumably, was returning to

New Jersey. The limousine  drove off. After it had traveled two blocks in the direction of the  Holland Tunnel,

Lamont Cranston's quiet voice sounded through the  speaking tube. 

Stanley promptly turned a corner. He drove in a new direction and  parked at the same spot where he had gone

before  the point so near  The Shadow's sanctum. A black shape glided from the rear door of the  limousine.

Lamont Cranston had become The Shadow. 


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CHAPTER XX. STRANGE QUARTERS

CLIFF MARSLAND awakened. He sat up and rubbed his forehead in a  dazed fashion. He felt dopey as he

looked about. He was in strange  surroundings: A room, lighted by a single dull lamp. Windows, below

ground, barred with heavy gratings. 

Cliff was on a small cot. In the same room were others. He made out  the faces of Skeet and the three crooks

who had been in the underground  hideout. It was then that Cliff began to realize what had happened. 

Spud must have engineered the removal of the victims. He had  decided that Cliff was one of those overcome

by the gas fumes. Cliff  grinned. He owed thanks to the injection with which The Shadow had  provided him.

Moreover, he had recovered in advance of the others. 

Though still half groggy, Cliff managed to make a time calculation.  It was night; at least twentyfour hours

had elapsed since the affair  in the hideout. That was it. He had been snowed under for one day.  These others

would not waken until tomorrow night. Cliff would have  plenty of opportunity to escape before they aroused

and testified  against him. 

Cliff arose from his cot. Fully dressed, he moved groggily toward  the single door of the room. He tried the

barrier and found it locked.  He rattled the knob; gaining no result, he returned and sat down on the  edge of his

cot. He began to study the rigid poses of the men whom he  had gassed. 

A key turned in the lock. Someone had heard Cliff's rattle at the  door. A solemnfaced young man entered.

Cliff stared at him. The man  was wearing a white coat. He looked like a physician. He approached and

studied Cliff. Since the man did not speak, Cliff took that task upon  himself. 

"Where am I?" he questioned. 

"Never mind," was the response. "How do you feel?" 

"Dopey," admitted Cliff. 

"Weak, also?" 

"Yes." 

"Lie down a while. I'll take care of you later. Don't worry. You're  all right." 

Cliff caught a glint of suspicion in the man's eye. He watched the  whitecoated visitor turn and go out of the

room. The man apparently  left the door unlocked. Roused to sudden action, Cliff followed. 

Beyond the door, he found a short, stonewalled passage. There was  another door ahead. Cliff approached

and listened. He could hear a  voice on the other side, but he could not make out the words. Phrases  were short

and interrupted. Then the discourse ended. Cliff heard  footsteps moving away; then came the sound of a

closing door. 

CAUTIOUSLY, Cliff opened his own door and moved through. He found  himself in what appeared to be an

office. This room also had barred  windows. Cliff moved to the opposite door and found that it was locked.  He

looked around the room. He spied a telephone. 


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That was why the man had been talking. Making a report  to someone  else  a report that might have

concerned Cliff. The Shadow's agent was  momentarily dizzy. He steadied; then headed for the table in order

to  use the telephone himself. He stopped as he heard footsteps from beyond  the far door. A key grated in the

lock. Cliff dived out through the  portal by which he had entered. He closed the door behind him. 

With effort, Cliff tiptoed back into the room where the cots were  located. He dropped on his own bunk. He

was just in time. The door  opened and the solemnfaced man reappeared. He came to take a look at  Cliff and

the others. Without comment, the man departed. This time he  locked the door. 

Cliff scented danger. He had a hunch that his position was  precarious. He felt in his pocket. His revolver was

gone. He frisked  the rigid forms of the silent crooks. Their pockets, too, were  weaponless. Finally, Cliff

decided that rest would be advisable.  Drowsily, he dropped back upon his cot. Escape still dominated his

mind; but it was hopeless for the present. 

WHILE Cliff was thus concerned with his strange surroundings, a  different episode was taking place in the

apartment of Wolf Barlan.  There, the big shot had just completed a telephone call. He was hanging  up the

receiver when the door opened and Spud Claxter appeared. 

"I got the stuff, Wolf," informed the mobleader. "Out of Hoffer's  cellar. Took it to the hideout. We're all set

again. It won't be no  trick to line up that new crew." 

"How soon can you get them?" inquired Wolf. 

"Inside an hour," responded Spud. 

"Listen"  Wolf's tone was serious  "we're moving out. Get that?  Moving out. There's been dirty work.

We're taking no chances from now  on." 

"Dirty work? Who by?" 

"This fellow Marsland. There's something phony about him." 

"He was knocked out with the others." 

"Yeah? Well, he's waked up ahead of them. You know what that  means?" 

"That he didn't get the gas?" 

"That's it. Nobody's recovered in less than fortyeight hours  before this. Here's a guy that's back on his feet

inside of  twentyfour. What's more, he's dopey." 

"Shouldn't he be?" 

"No. That gas don't leave a guy groggy. They come out of it just as  fine as when they went under. That is" 

Wolf chuckled  "most of them  do." 

"Who didn't?" 

"Bud Jardell didn't. He croaked up at the hospital. I got the tip  from the inside man. But let's get back to

Marsland. I've got a hunch  he's been working for The Shadow." 


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"Marsland? A guy with his rep?" 

"That's just it," decided Wolf. "It's a cinch that if The Shadow  picked birds to help him, he wouldn't use guys

like police stoolies.  He'd use a fellow like Marsland, wouldn't he? 

"Well, there's one way to find out. That's to get to Marsland and  make him talk. That's what I'm going to do.

I'm through with this  place. We're taking it on the lam. Heading for London later." 

"Then you don't want the new mob?" inquired Spud. 

"Get the mob," ordered Wolf. "Listen. I'm going to the place where  Marsland is. I won't be the only one there.

We're going to make him  talk. Meanwhile, you line up the mob. 

"Take the crew to the hideout. Fix them up with masks and bring the  gas bombs. You, like the rest of them.

Bring all the pineapples. You  carry the swag. Come and join up with me." 

"But if The Shadow trails us " 

"How's he going to trail you if he was using Marsland to get his  dope? We've got Marsland, haven't we?" 

"That's right." 

"Have the masks ready, just in case something funny happens.  There's no telling about The Shadow  and the

way things are hitting,  the bulls are liable to horn in on the game, too. That's why I want the  crew to be ready

with the pineapples." 

"I get you." 

"All right. Scram." 

Spud left. Wolf put in a hurried phone call, scowling as he made  short, disgruntled statements. That

completed, the big shot moved  about, packed a bag and left the apartment. 

MEANWHILE, a trim coupe came to a stop near Hoffer's Pharmacy. The  Shadow had abandoned his

limousine. He had sent Stanley back to New  Jersey. Swiftly, The Shadow entered the blind alley and made

his way  into Hoffer's cellar. His light glimmered on the shelf of the closet.  The bottle of neutralizer was gone.

A grim laugh whispered from The  Shadow's lips. 

The Shadow moved from the cellar. He regained the coupe and drove  eastward. The next token of his

mysterious presence came when Joe  Cardona, slouching in a corridor of the Talleyrand Hospital, received a

summons from an attendant. 

"Someone on the wire, sir," was the information. "Detective  headquarters, they said." 

Joe followed the attendant. He picked up the hanging receiver of  the telephone and growled a hello. He

expected to hear the response of  some dick at headquarters. Instead, he caught the tones of a sinister  voice.

For a moment, Cardona stiffened like a victim of the death  sleep. He knew that whispered tone. The voice of

The Shadow! 

Steady, hissing words came over the wire. Cardona still stood  dumfounded. At last he found his voice, after

The Shadow's speech had  ended. 


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"I get it..." Cardona was gasping. "Right away... Here, yes. About  the death of Huring..." 

The line was dead. The Shadow's tip had been given. Cardona hung up  and sprang out into the corridor. He

hurried at first, then slowed his  pace as he reached Doctor Lagwood's experimental room. He found  Jennings

there. 

"Hello," growled the detective. "Say, where's Doctor Lagwood? I  thought he was still about." 

"He has left for the sanitarium," replied Jennings. "All of the  other patients have recovered. He required rest

so he left as soon as  possible. Is there anything that I can do?" 

"No," responded Cardona. "You'll be here, won't you, if I come back  to make another quiz?" 

"On duty until nine in the morning," responded the interne. "You're  sure there's nothing " 

"Nothing at all," interposed Joe. "I'm going down to headquarters.  Just wanted to say so long to the Doc

before I left. I probably won't  be back until the morning"  Joe was eyeing Jennings while the interne  poured

a liquid into a test tube  "and I can wait to see Doc until  after he comes back here." 

Cardona sauntered from the room. He descended in an elevator. He  hurried from the hospital and put in a

telephone call. He ordered a  squad of men to cover the Talleyrand Hospital, another to meet him for  a

different mission. 

A grim smile had formed upon Cardona's lips. He had forgotten the  unfortunate death of the man called

James Huring, who had been the  inside crook at Rufus Galder's. The Shadow had supplied information  that

would offset the testimony that Huring had never given. 

Thanks to The Shadow, the ace detective was on the trail of the big  shot; and in his quest for the supermind of

crime he had hopes of  capturing the lesser lights as well. 

CHAPTER XXI. THE FINAL STROKE

"COME along." 

Cliff Marsland looked up from his cot. The man in the white coat  had returned; it was he who had given the

terse summons. Cliff arose;  dizzily for the moment, he straightened and followed the course that  the other

led. They went through the passage. The man opened the door  to the little office and ordered Cliff to enter.

Cliff obeyed and  slumped into a convenient chair. 

The whitecoated man went to the far door. He opened it and Cliff  observed the broad, lowroofed space of

a cellar room, with a passage  beyond it. Then his gaze concentrated on a newcomer who entered the  office

and stepped forward while the whitecoated man closed the door.  Cliff knew that arrival. It was Wolf Barlan,

onetime racketeer. 

Wolf approached and stood leering. Cliff, his grogginess ended, met  the big shot's gaze. He knew that this

man was to be his inquisitor.  Wolf had lost no time in making that fact evident. The big shot  snarled. 

"With The Shadow, eh?" quizzed Wolf. "Well, you're the mug we've  been gunning for. We knew somebody

gave him the tipoff. We've picked  you for the guy." 


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"I don't get it," retorted Cliff. 

"You will," sneered Wolf, "before I'm through with you. You're  slated for the spot. But you're going to talk

first  get me? You're  going to spill all you know about The Shadow." 

Cliff's reply was a contemptuous smile. 

"Grinning, eh?" gibed the big shot. "Well, it won't be so funny   that mug of yours  when they find you

stretched out on a pile of tin  cans in some Long Island dump." 

"So that's where this place is located," parried Cliff. "I was  wondering about that, Wolf. Thanks for the

information. I'll know which  way to head when I start back to town." 

"Smart guy, eh?" 

Cliff retained his grin. He knew that Wolf wanted to make him talk.  The longer that Cliff could stall, the

better. His best policy would be  to side step all mention of The Shadow. Cliff, despite his predicament,  had

confidence in the infallibility of his mysterious chief. The Shadow  had saved him from death in the past;

there still might be hope for the  present. 

Wolf fumed oaths. He saw that he was getting nowhere. Cliff was  ready to face death. He was different from

the yellow welchers whom  Wolf had cowed in the past. This fellow  the big shot realized it   was no

ordinary gorilla. Tough on the surface, cowardly at heart: such  was Wolf's analysis of the average mobsman.

Cliff was not of that  brand. 

"If you talk," snarled the big shot, with a scowl, "there may be an  out for you yet. Savvy? Spill the dope and

I'll give you a break. If  you don't, I'll have Spud and his crew use you for target practice " 

Wolf broke off suddenly. The outer door had opened. The big shot  turned; so did Cliff. Wolf recognized the

man who had arrived, but  Cliff did not. Tall and dignified, the newcomer wore a suave smile on  his lips. It

was an expression, however, that Cliff did not like; for  the smile was twisted. 

"Hello, Doc," greeted Wolf, shortly. "This is the guy." 

THE newcomer nodded. He closed the door partly, but left it  slightly ajar. He had heard Wolf's final speech

to Cliff. He motioned  the big shot to one side; then took upon himself the task of quizzing  The Shadow's

agent. 

"Your name is Marsland?" quizzed the tall arrival, studying Cliff  with a shrewd, steely gaze. "Allow me to

introduce myself. My name is  Seton Lagwood. Doctor Seton Lagwood." 

Cliff stared in astonishment. Lagwood smiled in dry fashion. 

"You are my guest," purred Lagwood, smoothly. "You have been  confined in the cellar of my sanitarium,

which is located on Long  Island Sound. This portion of the establishment is kept well covered.  The actual

sanitarium is upstairs." 

"A blind!" blurted Cliff. 

"Precisely," agreed Lagwood. "This gentleman"  he indicated the  whitecoated fellow  "is Mr. Carson. I

should say Doctor Carson, for he  bore that title until he was disbarred for unethical practice. It was  then that


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he took his place as resident physician in my underground  hospital." 

Cliff stared. Doctor Lagwood continued to smile. He knew that this  open form of discussion would produce

more results than a tirade of  threats. Wolf looked on, half puzzled, half lost in admiration of  Lagwood's

suavity. 

"I have played a game," resumed the unmasked physician. "So have  you"  Lagwood paused to eye Cliff with

a glittering gaze  "and in  order to be fair as well as impartial, I shall sketch my activities for  a beginning. 

"I have known Wolf Barlan ever since his racketeering days. This  underground hospital was used for

treatment of convalescent gangsters.  Then that game ended. I resumed my ethical practice; but I still

maintained this hidden establishment." 

"I gained a reputation for the treatment of paralytics and victims  of trance conditions. Because of that, I was

approached by a chemist  named Troxton Valdan. He had devised a gas that induced that strange  condition

which has been termed the death sleep. 

"Valdan and I met secretly. He brought me guinea pigs that he had  gassed. He wanted my opinion of the

efficacy of the gas before he took  it to the War Department at Washington. Valdan was indiscreet. He

mentioned that he had a supply of gas bombs in his laboratory and that  file one hundred and eleven contained

two formulas: one for the gas,  the other for the neutralizer." 

The physician paused. He saw that Cliff was drinking in these  revelations. This pleased Lagwood. He

resumed. 

"I contacted with Wolf Barlan," declared Lagwood. "Valdan was to  meet me in Providence. While the

chemist was away, Wolf operated  through Spud Claxter. Henchmen stole the gas and the formulas. The

bombs went to the hideout. The formulas came to me from Wolf. The gas  was tested on Seth Tanning and the

persons in his apartment. It proved  its merits. Tanning's place was chosen because of its proximity to the

Talleyrand Hospital. 

"When Valdan returned, he was murdered by one of Spud's minions.  Guinea pigs in the laboratory nearly

gave the police a clue to the gas.  I diverted their suspicions. Meanwhile, I had a pharmacist make up the

neutralizer, supposedly for a vapor treatment. Spud sent a man to steal  it. 

"Then"  Lagwood paused and resumed in a cold tone  "then came  crime. With it, The Shadow. Your

friend, Luke Gonrey, was wounded,  along with another mobsman. Spud reported it to Wolf, who called me in

turn. I said to bring the men here and let Carson take care of them.  When you and four others were found

paralyzed in the hideout, this was  the logical place to bring you. But"  again Lagwood paused  "you made

the mistake of recovering too soon. That fact, coupled with your dopey  condition, proved that you had not

been gassed. Carson called me at the  hospital to inform me of his discovery." 

LAGWOOD became silent. Chaotic thoughts were passing through  Cliff's brain. He saw the whole game.

Lagwood had devised it and had  left the work to Wolf. The big shot had hired Spud. Wolf also had other

workers, unknown to Spud. They were men who spotted opportunity for  crime. An inside man at Currian's;

an inside man at Galder's. Yet Wolf,  who managed crime, was but a tool for the man higher up. Doctor Seton

Lagwood! 

The physician had both formulas. More gas could be manufactured  when needed. Lagwood had been crafty

in the matter of the neutralizer.  He had ordered it made by a pharmacist, as an experimental  prescription. The

green liquid had been stolen by Skeet, who knew  nothing of Lagwood's connection with crime. Subtlety had


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been Lagwood's  watchword! 

"Tonight," remarked Lagwood, seeing that the time had come for  further speech, "one of the death sleep

victims died because he knew  too much. I refer to a man who called himself Huring, who worked inside  at

Galder's. 

"You, too, shall die if you prove dangerous. But not by the simple  method that my friend Wolf has suggested.

Suppose Marsland, that you  should experience the death sleep. Two days of oblivion; then recovery.  Just long

enough to make you feel that life is good  that recovery.  For promptly upon it, you would receive the death

sleep once again. 

"Think of it! Life worse than death! Up from beneath the surface  long enough to gain respite; then submerged

again. So on, for weeks,  for months, for years. What would you do? I shall tell you. After a few  periods of

that sort, you would talk. You would tell your story as I  have told mine. You would frankly give us full word

concerning The  Shadow. 

"Why not confess and save yourself that dread existence? Do you  wish to become a dead man who lives?

Hardly. You have your opportunity  to avoid the fate that I have outlined. You have served The Shadow. We

can use you in our service. Take your choice: life or the death sleep." 

Lagwood's tone had become almost hypnotic. Cliff was staring into  the physician's cold eyes. He found

himself yielding to the persuasive,  purring words. It required an effort to break that spell. 

"No!" challenged Cliff. 

Lagwood made a gesture with his left hand. Carson stepped forward  to take Cliff away. Wolf Barlan leered.

Let Cliff be snowed under for  fortyeight hours. Maybe the fellow would talk after that interval. The  big shot

saw the merits of Lagwood's scheme. Wolf was gloating when he  heard a sound from the outer door. He

turned; the other followed his  example. 

THE loose door had swung open. There, cloaked in black was an  ominous figure. The Shadow stood upon the

threshold. Burning eyes  glared from beneath the brim of his slouch hat. Automatics loomed from  his gloved

fists. 

The men in the room stood silent. The Shadow's whispered laugh  broke the stillness. There was meaning in

the mirth. The Shadow had  heard all that Doctor Seton Lagwood had said to Cliff Marsland. 

"Your confession, Lagwood," sneered The Shadow, "was unnecessary. I  had divined the truth of your evil

game. Two events, today, were the  conclusive points. Your order for new neutralizer, to replace that  which

had been destroyed at my command. Your deliberate murder of the  tool who called himself James Huring. 

"I took no chances when I prepared my final stroke. I gave the  police an inkling of your nefarious game. They

covered the hospital,  while I came here. At either place, your apprehension was made certain.  It has been my

privilege to effect the capture." 

As The Shadow's tones ended, Lagwood acted with sudden fury. Like a  madman, the treacherous physician

hurled himself forward toward the  cloaked avenger. His spring was made with amazing swiftness. It left  The

Shadow but one course. An automatic barked. Lagwood's long hands  clutched The Shadow's cloak; they lost

their hold as the physician  slumped to the floor. 


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Wolf and Carson had yanked gats, aiming for The Shadow. The second  automatic thundered; its bullet found

Wolf's heart before the big shot  could discharge his revolver. At the same instant, Cliff Marsland,  leaping in

Carson's path, delivered a left hook to the man's jaw. As  Wolf crumpled, Carson slumped. 

Echoes died. Then the silence was broken, by the croaking voice of  Seton Lagwood. Mortally wounded, the

supercrook was gloating even  though he faced death. His words were directed to the Shadow. 

"You will die," was Lagwood's prophecy. "You are trapped. This  house is surrounded. Those shots will bring

Wolf's henchmen. You have  no escape. For you"  Lagwood coughed  "for you, the death sleep   then 

death itself." 

The Shadow's cloak collar fell to reveal a gas mask beneath.  Lagwood stared with blurred eyes as the cloaked

avenger brought forth a  second mask and passed it to Cliff Marsland. Yet Lagwood managed  another chuckle

as Cliff donned the device. 

"They are coming"  footsteps echoing from stony corridors proved  the statement  "and you have no retreat.

You may avoid the death sleep   but death  will be  yours." 

Lagwood lay gasping, his life almost ended. The Shadow's cloak  collar moved up under pressure of his hand.

The gas mask was hidden.  Whirling, The Shadow, swung to the outer door. His gesture warned Cliff  not to

follow. Then, with a shuddering laugh, The Shadow opened the  barrier and stepped into the vaulted room

outside. 

LAGWOOD was right. The place was a trap. Stepping into full view,  The Shadow was covered from three

corridors. Each passage contained  four mobsters. All held revolvers. Superfighter though The Shadow was,

the situation offered impossible odds. Yet The Shadow laughed. 

Someone barked an order. It was Spud Claxter. He and all his new  mobsmen wore gas masks, as Lagwood

had predicted. Spud did not know The  Shadow was also masked. As he gave the word to fire, the mobleader

performed the first action  one that he believed would assure The  Shadow's doom. He hurled a pineapple. 

The bomb burst at The Shadow's feet. Its greenish vapor spread on  the instant, filling the room, sweeping into

the corridors. Cliff saw  the cloud; he knew that it would be the target for the gunmen. He  expected quick

shots from the automatics and replies from the revolvers  that gorilla's wielded. 

Instead, there was silence. The green cloud cleared. The Shadow,  moving forward, beckoned Cliff to follow.

Amazed, Cliff obeyed. When he  reached the big room, he stood astounded. In every corridor were rigid

mobsters. They had toppled, to a man, overpowered by the death sleep  before they had time to launch a single

bullet! 

The Shadow strode through the central passage, pushing forms aside.  Cliff followed and his brain found the

answer to the climax. Cliff knew  that the mobsters had gained a new supply of neutralizer; that they had

stolen it from the same place as the first. He realized, of a sudden,  that The Shadow had been there before

them. 

The Shadow had removed the fresh supply for his own use. In its  place, he had substituted an impotent

liquid! The Shadow's mask   Cliff's mask  both were protection against the gas fumes. But Spud and  the

mobsmen were equipped with useless masks! 

The Shadow had known that a bomb would come before the shots. He  had counted on Spud chucking the

pineapple. That was why The Shadow had  stepped deliberately into the trap, ready to face the threeway


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odds  that were against him! 

They reached the outer air. The Shadow hissed. Cliff edged beside  his chief, into darkness away from the

building. Cars were arriving.  Cliff heard the growled voice of Detective Joe Cardona. The police had

followed The Shadow's tip. They were here to raid the fake sanitarium. 

The Shadow led Cliff through the darkness, off toward his coupe,  parked a hundred yards away. Men of the

law did not hear that stealthy  departure. They were entering the building. There they would find Seton

Lagwood and Wolf Barlan, the team of supercrooks, dead in the lower  office. Carson unconscious. Spud and

his mobsmen rigid in the death  sleep. 

BUT before then, they were to learn of The Shadow's presence. Joe  Cardona, ordering his men into the

sanitarium, stopped short as he  heard the sudden roar of a motor. The lights of a car twinkled from  among the

trees. Then the automobile shot away. 

Cardona was about to order prompt pursuit when the token came to  his ears. It was the sound of a fading

laugh, a trailing burst of  triumphant mockery that died as the throb of the motor lessened.  Cardona withheld

his order. He knew the laugh of The Shadow. 

More than that, Cardona knew that the way was clear. No need for  caution any longer. Gruffly, the detective

ordered his men to enter the  silent building. For Joe Cardona knew that where The Shadow had been,  no man

of crime could linger except in death or helplessness. 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE DEATH SLEEP, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. THE SLEEP, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. A GENTLEMAN IN BLACK, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW DEDUCTS, page = 12

   7. CHAPTER IV. THE BIG SHOT, page = 17

   8. CHAPTER V. DEATH AT DUSK, page = 21

   9. CHAPTER VI. TWO GUINEA PIGS, page = 25

   10. CHAPTER VII. FURTHER DEDUCTIONS, page = 32

   11. CHAPTER VIII. PLANS FOR CRIME, page = 37

   12. CHAPTER IX. AIDS OF THE SHADOW, page = 41

   13. CHAPTER X. OUT OF THE DARK, page = 46

   14. CHAPTER XI. THE SILENT HOUSE, page = 50

   15. CHAPTER XII. THE BIG SHOT PLANS, page = 53

   16. CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S MOVE, page = 57

   17. CHAPTER XIV. THE NEW MOB, page = 63

   18. CHAPTER XV. CARDONA FINDS LUCK, page = 66

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE RAID, page = 70

   20. CHAPTER XVII. THE BIG SHOT DECIDES, page = 74

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. THE SHADOW'S THRUST, page = 79

   22. CHAPTER XIX. AT THE HOSPITAL, page = 83

   23. CHAPTER XX. STRANGE QUARTERS, page = 87

   24. CHAPTER XXI. THE FINAL STROKE, page = 90