Title:   PRINCE OF EVIL

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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PDF Version:   1.2



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PRINCE OF EVIL

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

PRINCE OF EVIL ..............................................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. THE MADNESS OF JOHN HARMON ...........................................................................1

CHAPTER II. CHALLENGE OF CRUELTY........................................................................................7

CHAPTER III. DANGEROUS BLOND ...............................................................................................13

CHAPTER IV. THE SECOND BOTTLE .............................................................................................18

CHAPTER V. DOUBLE DECEPTION ................................................................................................24

CHAPTER VI. GREETINGS FROM HELL........................................................................................29

CHAPTER VII. UNDERGROUND CHALLENGE .............................................................................35

CHAPTER VIII. THE CLOSED CIRCLE ............................................................................................42

CHAPTER IX. THE BLUE PARROT..................................................................................................48

CHAPTER X. THE BATHTUB CLUE................................................................................................55

CHAPTER XI. SILVER AND BLACK ................................................................................................61

CHAPTER XII. TWO IN ONE.............................................................................................................68

CHAPTER XIII. VICTORY  AND DEFEAT....................................................................................74

CHAPTER XIV. TRIPLE DOOM........................................................................................................81

CHAPTER XV. BITTER TRIUMPH...................................................................................................86


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PRINCE OF EVIL

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. THE MADNESS OF JOHN HARMON 

CHAPTER II. CHALLENGE OF CRUELTY 

CHAPTER III. DANGEROUS BLOND 

CHAPTER IV. THE SECOND BOTTLE 

CHAPTER V. DOUBLE DECEPTION 

CHAPTER VI. GREETINGS FROM HELL 

CHAPTER VII. UNDERGROUND CHALLENGE 

CHAPTER VIII. THE CLOSED CIRCLE 

CHAPTER IX. THE BLUE PARROT 

CHAPTER X. THE BATHTUB CLUE 

CHAPTER XI. SILVER AND BLACK 

CHAPTER XII. TWO IN ONE 

CHAPTER XIII. VICTORY  AND DEFEAT 

CHAPTER XIV. TRIPLE DOOM 

CHAPTER XV. BITTER TRIUMPH  

CHAPTER I. THE MADNESS OF JOHN HARMON

JOHN HARMON'S hands were trembling as he took out his spectacle  case and put on his glasses. He picked

up the check which David Chester  had just laid smilingly on the desk. There was a blur of tears in  Harmon's

eyes that made it hard for him to see clearly for a moment. 

Chester misunderstood the older man's emotion. He thought that  Harmon was jittery with eagerness to close

the deal and take the money. 

"A tidy sum," he chuckled. 

It was. The check was for five hundred thousand dollars. Chester  had already signed it. His signature was like

himself  tight, angular  and excessively neat. It was the price agreed upon for the sale of John  Harmon's

business. Harmon was getting every penny he had asked for. 

But he was far from happy. 

He stared around the quiet, booklined study where he and his  visitor sat, as if trying to think of some way to

postpone the deal.  Harmon's life had been wrapped up in his business. He had always known  that, some day,

he'd have to quit and sell out. That time had now come. 

Six weeks earlier, John Harmon had had a frightening experience. He  had closed up his desk one evening and

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walked out of his downtown  office into nothingness! 

Twelve hours of living death had followed. When he came to his  senses, he was lying on a cot in the public

ward of a hospital. There  was a horrible buzzing in his head, and no knowledge of a single event  during those

twelve blank hours of aimless wandering. 

The doctors had called it amnesia. Too much work; not enough rest  and relaxation. It was taking its toll from

a tired man sixtytwo years  old. 

That was when Harmon began negotiations to sell his business. Not  because of himself, but because of his

wife. Martha Harmon was an  invalid. She had never uttered a complaint; but life had not been too  pleasant

for her, either. Business had swallowed both their lives.  Neither had ever had time for a vacation. 

Yet John Harmon had a queer, intuitive feeling that he ought not to  sell. It was a strange, frightened

sensation. He stared at David  Chester. 

Chester was harmlesslooking. There was a smile on his thin face.  He had been easy to deal with, generous

in his offer. His reputation  was good, his business rating excellent. 

"Let me think about it a moment," Harmon muttered. 

He began to pace up and down his quiet study. 

Behind his back, Chester's smile hardened. He fumbled in his pocket  and took out a stick of chewing gum. 

The gum was in a plain wrapper. He popped it into his mouth and  began to chew. 

As his jaws worked, his face turned startlingly unpleasant. His  eyes blazed coldly. His lax fingers on the desk

clenched into a sudden  fist. He seemed at the point of leaping toward his unsuspecting host  and taking him by

the throat. 

Harmon saw nothing of this. He came back and sat down. Chester had  regained his selfcontrol. He was

friendly and sympathetic. 

"After all," he pointed out softly, "you had a warning from nature  that you'd be foolish to ignore. A mental

breakdown such as you  suffered " 

"It wasn't a mental breakdown," Harmon said sharply. "It was  amnesia." 

"A man over sixty has to be careful. It would be different if your  son could take over the business. But you

told me he has no interest in  it." 

"You're right," Harmon said dully. "Bob wants to be an engineer. He  still has another year before he

graduates from college, and then he'll  have to go to a technical school. That takes money, and, unfortunately,

my funds are frozen. And yet I hate to sell!" 

"You have a daughter, too," Chester said. 

"Yes, Jane is a fine girl. She wants to be a physician. She  deserves my support." 

"You can do it handsomely with a half million," Chester smiled.  "How much are you in debt?" 


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"I owe a hundred thousand." 

"A hundred thousand will clear up your debts, leaving you four  hundred thousand dollars to invest in good

securities. You and your  wife can take a world cruise and have plenty left to enjoy yourself  when you return.

Surely, your wife deserves a little pleasure for the  remaining years of her life?" 

"You're right," John Harmon said slowly. "Martha's heart is set on  that trip. And she may be right about my

health. I haven't felt right  lately." 

Chester's reply was amused. "And still you hesitate! You pass up  the chance to step out of the grind and

pocket a cool half million.  Why?" 

"I don't know," Harmon admitted with a sigh. He rubbed his gray  head with a troubled gesture. 

"Suppose we call off the whole thing," Chester said curtly. "You  keep your business and I'll keep my half

million. I'm sorry you have  wasted my time." 

He reached for the check to tear it up. Harmon uttered a faint cry  and clutched at his hand. 

"Don't be angry! I just want time to " 

"I've brought the sales contract and the check. Do you wish to  sell? Yes or no!" 

There was silence for an instant. 

"Yes," John Harmon said. 

Chester exhaled a tiny breath of relief. "Good!" 

FROM his briefcase Chester took two duplicate documents. They were  legal contracts, for the sale of John

Harmon's business to David  Chester for the sum of five hundred thousand dollars. Chester signed  both sheets

and handed them to Harmon. 

Harmon had dictated the contract himself. The document needed no  witnesses to make it legal. Having read

the terms carefully, Harmon  signed both sheets. 

Chester retained his own copy. Harmon placed the other one and the  check in his study safe. His worry

vanished. The deal was finished, and  his wife would be happy. He got a bottle of sherry from a cabinet. The

two men smilingly toasted each other. 

Chester glanced at his watch and arose. "Good night and pleasant  dreams." His voice was like silk. He left at

once. 

A few minutes later, Martha Harmon came into the study at her  husband's excited summons. He was smiling

and happy. So was Martha,  when she learned that the deal was finished. It meant peace and comfort  for the

few remaining years of their lives. 

She had a sweet, pleasant face with a mass of silverywhite hair  drawn back from her soft forehead. She

leaned heavily on a cane.  Arthritis had bent her straight figure in the last few years. But to  John Harmon she

was still the slim, lovely girl he had married forty  years earlier. He kissed her and patted her arm. 


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"From now on my only job is to see that you're happy. Better write  in the morning for some travel folders.

We're going to visit some of  the places we've wanted to see all our lives." 

"How much did Chester pay?" Martha asked. 

"The price I asked. Five hundred thousand." 

Smiling, he turned to the sate and opened it. He handed his wife  the signed copy of the agreement and

Chester's check. He relaxed in his  leather chair. 

His wife's sudden cry brought him to his feet. Martha face was  deathly pale. She was staring at the check as if

she couldn't believe  her eyes. Her husband sprang to her side. 

"What's the matter?" 

"Look! The check! It... it " 

She couldn't speak. Harmon snatched the check from her. Then his  own face paled. For a moment, he

wondered if he had gone suddenly  crazy. 

He had examined that check only a few minutes earlier. He had  placed it in the safe with his own hands. No

one but his wife had  touched it since. And yet, a horrible transformation had occurred. 

The check was correctly drawn to John Harmon. It was signed  correctly with the neat signature of David

Chester. But the sum was for  fifty thousand dollars! 

"Fifty thousand!" Harmon cried. "It should be five hundred  thousand! There must be some mistake." 

He snatched at the sales agreement. It too, was like the check.  John Harmon had agreed, according to the

signed document, to sell his  business to David Chester for the sum of fifty thousand dollars! 

Harmon clutched at his temples. His head seemed to be splitting.  His eyes were glassy. Then he pulled

himself together. 

"I saw the amount clearly. I looked at both check and agreement  before Chester left. It was for a half million

dollars." 

He saw, to his horror, that his wife didn't believe him. His memory  had been uncertain since the amnesia

attack a month earlier. Martha  Harmon knew the business was worth every penny of a half million. But  she

knew, too, that its assets were hopelessly frozen. 

Had John become mentally confused under the strain of selling it?  Had he agreed to sacrifice his holdings for

a ridiculous sum like fifty  thousand while he was temporarily incompetent? 

The quick thought showed in Martha's tragic glance. It shocked  Harmon into action. He sprang to the

telephone. 

"Chester's copy of the contract will show the truth!" 

But he couldn't, get Chester on the phone. The bell buzzed  monotonously, without answer. 


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"Perhaps he hasn't returned to his apartment yet," Harmon said  thickly. "I'll go and see him. He'll probably be

there by the time I  arrive. In five minutes, we'll have that silly mistake in figures  rectified." 

HARMON grabbed his hat and coat and rushed from the room. He raced  to the corner and called a taxi. 

His thoughts were in wild turmoil. Was Chester a crook? Had he  changed the figures in some way? Or was

Harmon himself losing his mind,  as his wife's frightened glance had indicated? 

Panting, he rang Chester's apartment bell. Chester himself opened  the door. He was cool, smiling, very

friendly. 

"Well, this is a surprise! Come in, Mr. Harmon. What in the world  has brought you here?" 

"The check! It's wrong! There's been some ghastly mistake! I... I  want to see your copy of the agreement." 

"Why, certainly." 

Chester got his copy of the contract out of a small wall safe and  showed it. 

"Naturally, mine is the same as yours. Fifty thousand dollars.  That's the price we agreed on." 

The document proved his words. Harmon glared at the figures with  bloodshot eyes. 

"But... but that's wrong! The price on the paper when we signed it  was a half million dollars!" 

"Sit down," Chester said gently. "Let me fix you a drink. You've  had another mental attack, I'm afraid. Does

your wife know you left the  house?" 

He was like a grownup reasoning with a child. His voice was like  soothing syrup. Dazed, Harmon hardly

heard what Chester was saying. 

Chester was asserting that the deal was legitimate. He had bought  the business at a low figure because it was

so hopelessly frozen in its  assets. He suggested that Harmon ought to go home at once and summon a

physician. He advised rest and sleep until the dazed old man felt  better. 

Harmon, without realizing exactly how it happened, found himself  eased quietly from Chester's apartment to

the street. 

The hour was late, but he didn't hesitate. Into his tortured mind  swam the name of Hubert Jackson. Jackson

was a lawyer, and Harmon's  friend. At this hour of the night, Jackson was probably already in bed.  But

Harmon called a taxi. He drove at top speed to the lawyer's home. 

Dressed in pajamas and bathrobe, Hubert Jackson listened to the  wild story Harmon poured out. He shook his

head when he saw the check  and the sales contract. 

"They look perfectly normal to me. Are you sure " 

Harmon screamed at him. "Of course I'm sure! He's a crook, a  swindler! I want him arrested!" 

Jackson's voice became soothing. 


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"Better let me take care of this. Go home and get some rest.  Inspector Cardona, of the police, is a friend of

mine. I'll get  permission from him tomorrow to take the check and the contract to the  police laboratory in

Brooklyn. If there has been any criminal  tampering, the police scientific gadgets will uncover it." 

He guided his agitated visitor to the door. 

"I'll also investigate David Chester. There's no need for you to  worry. Go home to Martha and relax." 

"You're a true friend, Hubert," Harmon gasped. 

After he had left, Jackson looked thoughtful. The lawyer glanced at  the check and shook his head. It seemed

perfectly legitimate. He was  convinced that John Harmon had experienced a second mental breakdown,  this

time a more serious one. 

The story about the changed figures was too silly to believe.  Chester was hardly fool enough to risk going to

jail with a swindle  that could be easily detected. 

Harmon was obviously unbalanced. 

The lawyer was sure of it at the close of the following day. From  the police laboratory came a definite

statement. There was no evidence  that the ink on the check or sales document had been changed. The  texture

of the paper showed no sign of tampering or erasure! 

Jackson's investigation of David Chester also gave the lie to the  old man's wild accusation of fraud. Chester's

financial rating was A1.  His business was that of purchasing shaky firms at cheap prices.  Jackson

interviewed a half dozen former clients of Chester and all of  them said they had been completely satisfied in

their dealings with the  man. 

JACKSON'S face was sorrowfully grim when he visited the home of  John Harmon the following evening. 

He advised Harmon there was nothing further he could do. Harmon's  business was the legal property of

Chester. A suit for fraud would be  thrown out of court. Harmon's only course was to deposit the fifty

thousand dollars and have himself examined by a competent psychiatrist. 

There was a pathetic scene between John Harmon and his weeping wife  after the lawyer left. Their lives were

ruined. All Harmon had left was  a check for fifty thousand dollars and he owed twice that! 

Dazedly, he listened to the comforting words of his wife. Over and  over, he tried to explain to her what had

happened. It was useless. He  allowed his wife to guide him upstairs to his bedroom. He undressed and  turned

out the light. Martha went to her own room. 

But after she was gone, Harmon got out of bed again. A sudden  desperate thought had come to him. He got

the tin box in which he kept  his valuables, took out a thick envelope. The envelope contained his

lifeinsurance policy. He was insured for one hundred thousand dollars. 

John Harmon shuddered, then he clamped his jaws. He knew now that  this was the only way out. The

insurance policy would pay his debts.  The check from Chester would leave enough to take care of his wife,

and  allow his son and daughter to finish their college educations and get a  decent start in life. 

Harmon walked slowly into his wife's bedroom. There were tears in  his eyes as he bade her good night. She

was puzzled by the tightness of  his embrace and the slow fervor of his kiss. But he seemed calmer and  she


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was glad of that. Perhaps he'd feel better in the morning. 

"What I need is sleep, Martha," Harmon told his wife huskily. "Good  night, and God bless you!" 

He left her quickly. 

Ten minutes later, Martha Harmon heard a sound that brought her out  of bed with a frightened cry. The

nature of that muffled explosion from  her husband's room was unmistakable. 

Seizing her cane, she hobbled painfully down the darkened hall. Her  husband's room was ablaze with light. 

He had fallen back on his bed after firing the fatal shot into his  temple. A little blood had soaked into the

pillow, but not much. 

The agony of despair had left his tortured face. He looked gray and  peaceful  and very tired. 

Martha Harmon stood frozen for a moment, leaning painfully on her  cane. Then she managed to totter to the

window. Her scream for help  awoke the neighborhood. A man shouted. A policeman's whistle shrilled.  Feet

pounded along the dark sidewalk. 

But what help would that bring to the tired suicide on the bed or  the moaning woman at the window? 

Crime that was too clever to be recognized as crime had brought  tragedy to a peaceful couple who had lived

cleanly and righteously all  their lives. 

The dead man alone knew there had been crime and no one, not even  his wife, had believed him. 

There was only one person on earth brilliant enough to solve this  strange enigma of cruelty and greed. 

The Shadow! 

CHAPTER II. CHALLENGE OF CRUELTY

THERE was a frown on Lamont Cranston's usually pleasant face as he  sat perusing a newspaper in the quiet

of the Cobalt Club. He sensed  there was something peculiar about the pathetic suicide of John Harmon. 

Cranston had not been a friend of Harmon's, but had met him several  times in the course of business. He

knew the old man had suffered an  attack of amnesia a month or so earlier. But amnesia was a long way  from

insanity. And Harmon's strange story of fraud before he committed  suicide certainly sounded insane. 

Cranston raised his newspaper to hide the sudden glint that came  into his keen eyes. It was an expression that

abruptly transformed his  appearance from that of an amiable millionaire clubman to something  grim and

relentless. For a moment his face, shielded by the newspaper,  bore an uncanny resemblance to an altogether

different personage. 

The Shadow! 

The look was gone in a flash. Cranston lowered the newspaper. He  had heard a man calling his name. A

fellow clubman was approaching the  comfortable chair where Lamont Cranston sat, the picture of lazy ease. 


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The man was Hubert Jackson. Cranston was glad to see him. He knew  that Jackson had been John Harmon's

attorney, as well as his personal  friend. The story of Harmon's visit to Jackson's apartment the night  before

his suicide had been described in the newspapers. 

"A shockingcase," Cranston said. 

The lawyer nodded. "Poor Harmon was obviously insane. There's no  other answer. His sudden suicide proved

it." 

"He left a family, didn't he?" 

"Yes. An invalid widow and a son and daughter. Bob and Jane Harmon  have still a year to go before they

graduate from college. They're on  the way home now, but I'm afraid they'll find precious little when they

arrive." 

Jackson sighed. 

"The boy hoped to be an engineer. Jane was studying to be a  physician. That means, of course, additional

years of training. Unless  something is done, I'm afraid Bob and Jane will have to sacrifice their  careers." 

"Why can't something, be done to help them?" Cranston suggested. 

"I was hoping you'd say that," Jackson replied. "It's the very  thing I want to talk to you about. I thought I'd

take up a private  subscription among some of the people who knew poor Harmon. It would  bring some

measure of relief to a family stricken through no fault of  their own." 

"Are you quite sure that Harmon's story of fraud was a figment of  his imagination?" Cranston inquired

slowly. 

"Positive! The police laboratory experts scrutinized both the check  and the bill of sale and discovered they

were O.K. I visited Chester at  his office and found him a perfect gentleman. He offered me every  facility to

examine his books. He gave me the names of other clients  whose business he had purchased. There's no

doubt about it whatever.  David Chester had nothing to do with Harmon's unfortunate suicide. " 

There was a pause. Lamont Cranston seemed to be too shocked to talk  more about the matter at the moment.

But behind his quiet countenance,  the shrewd, intelligent brain of The Shadow was formulating a plan for

further investigation of this strange case. 

"I'll be glad to contribute my share to your charity fund," he  said. 

"I knew I could depend on your generosity." 

Other club members were staring at the two men. Cranston used this  as an excuse to rise from his chair. He

wanted to discuss the case  further with Jackson, but he had no intention of doing so in the  reading room of

the Cobalt Club. 

"Could we go to your apartment?" Cranston asked. "I'll write you  out a check there, and you can tell me more

about this unfortunate  tragedy." 

Jackson agreed. They got their hats and coats and left the club.  Cranston's car was at the curb outside, and

both men got in. 


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"I'M glad you're coming to see my apartment," Jackson said  smilingly. "I have a rather good collection of

paintings on which I'd  like to have your judgment. And then there's Pippo." 

"Pippo?" Cranston asked curiously. 

"My dog. A little wirehaired terrier. He's been twice a prize  winner at the dog show. A finer animal never

lived." 

Cranston smiled and nodded. He drove his car with swift ease  through the midtown traffic to the apartment

house where Jackson lived. 

At the curb where he parked a childish voice spoke up hesitantly,  as the two friends alighted from Cranston's

car. 

"Hey, mister! Lemme watch your car for you, huh? Only ten cents.  I'll wipe off the windshield and shine up

the hood. Only a dime,  mister!" 

The boy couldn't have been more than eight years old. A thin,  undersized little waif, with pipestem legs and a

pale, halfstarved  face. His clothes were ragged. His cap looked as if it might have been  fished from a barrel. 

Cranston's sympathy was touched. 

"I'll make you a proposition, sonny. If you wipe the windshield and  keep a good watch, so that no other cars

scratch up my paint, I'll give  you a dollar when I come back." 

For a moment, the kid thought he was being fooled. Then he realized  that the tall, smiling gentleman meant

what he said. A grin of delight  almost split his dirty face in half. 

"A buck! Gee, whiz! Oh, boy, will I watch this car! I'll shine it  up like it was just outta the factory!" 

Cranston felt warm inside as he ascended in the elevator with  Jackson to the latter's apartment. He liked to do

things like that for  stray kids. 

His face reflected the kid's grin as Jackson opened the door to his  apartment and led his guest toward the

ornate living room. 

Suddenly, Lamont Cranston stopped short. The smile disappeared from  his face. 

Jackson had uttered a shrill cry of horror. He was standing  stifflegged in the doorway of the living room,

staring at a scene of  brutal chaos. The paintings on the wall which he had promised to show  Cranston hung in

tattered shreds. Someone with a wanton knife had  slashed the canvases. 

The furniture had been converted into junk. Some of it had been  attacked with an ax. Other pieces had been

splashed with acid that had  eaten into the fabric and discolored the beautiful surface of the  antique wood. 

But the bloody object that lay in the center of the floor was what  had drawn that horrified cry from Jackson. It

was the corpse of the  lawyer's beloved wirehaired terrier, Pippo. A knife had ripped across  the animal's

throat, almost severing the terrier's head. 

Jackson fell on his knees beside his pet. Tears streamed from his  eyes. He forgot everything except the fact

that his prized dog had been  brutally slain. 


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And for no reason! 

That was what Jackson kept mumbling over and over in dazed grief,  after Lamont Cranston had helped the

stricken lawyer to a chair.  Cranston seemed as shocked as Jackson. But his mind was working grimly.  Why

had this thing been done? 

There was only one possible answer. Jackson had no personal  enemies. Of that he assured Cranston in a

trembling voice. Yet his dog  Pippo, the one thing in life that he prized, had been wantonly slain. 

Cranston was certain, even before he found the Bible, that the  attack had been made because of Jackson's

goodnatured effort to help  the family of the dead John Harmon. 

THE Bible lay on the rug beneath an overturned chair. The book had  been opened to a particular page. The

page was ringed with red crayon. 

It drew attention to the story of the good Samaritan! 

Even Jackson understood the import of that sneering message, when  he had recovered from the shock of his

dog's brutal murder. He realized  that he was being punished for trying to help the family of John  Harmon. His

charity had brought a cruel reprisal. 

To Cranston it was proof that the suicide of John Harmon had been  willed by a criminal. He asked a swift

question. 

"How many people besides me did you approach with your charity  appeal so far?" 

"Only David Chester," the lawyer replied slowly. His face was pale.  "I can't believe that Chester had anything

to do with this. He was too  decent when I called on him. He promised me a contribution later." 

"Perhaps this is his idea of a contribution," Cranston said grimly.  "At any rate, we know one thing: you've put

yourself on the spot!" 

Jackson shuddered. "What shall I do?" 

"I'd advise you to make a public statement resigning from the job  of collecting charity for the Harmons. It's

the only way you can save  yourself from further attack. Let me attend to it for you." 

Cranston picked up the telephone. In a steady voice, he called the  number of the City News Association. He

knew that this was the quickest  way to publicize what he wanted known. 

"Mr. Hubert Jackson wishes to announce that, because of ill health,  he is resigning from the chairmanship of

the fund to help the family of  the late John Harmon," Cranston said over the wire. 

His voice hardened. 

"You may state that his place is being taken by a friend. From now  on, Lamont Cranston will accept

contributions to the Harmon fund." 

He hung up and smiled. Cranston was deliberately offering himself  as bait. He was determined to come to

closer grips with an unknown  criminal. It might be David Chester; it might not. But The Shadow was  certain

that Harmon's wild story of fraud was a true one. 


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A cunning and ruthless scoundrel who delighted in evil had raked in  a cool profit of four hundred and fifty

thousand dollars. 

Cranston advised Jackson not to tell the police what had happened  in his apartment. Jackson was glad to

agree. He was heartbroken by the  loss of his prized dog. He was terrified of further attacks if he dared  to

undertake an investigation. 

Cranston left the apartment, convinced he had everything arranged  the way he wanted it. He had moved fast.

He awaited an answering move.  But Cranston had no idea of the appalling speed that answer to his  challenge

over the phone would take. 

He didn't even realize it when he saw the man at the curb. The man  was mistreating the boy whom Cranston

had left to watch his parked car.  The boy was crying. The man had grabbed him by the arm and was twisting

it. It looked as if he were trying to break the frightened lad's arm. 

Cranston felt a quick surge of anger. He darted forward and shoved  the man away. 

The man reeled, and recovered his balance. He was a nasty looking  individual, with a mop of coalblack hair

and a ragged black mustache.  He was chewing gum vigorously. 

"Mind your own damn business!" he growled. "This kid belongs in  school. That's where I'm taking him. I'm a

truant officer." 

He didn't look like one. There was something savagely unpleasant in  the way he chewed his gum. Cranston

had a cold feeling of disgust and  repulsion. 

"If you're a truant officer, let me see your credentials." 

"O.K. Here they are!" 

His hand had dipped slyly into his pocket. He pivoted and struck at  Cranston's chin. There were brass

knuckles on his clenched fist. Had  the blow landed squarely, it would have shattered Cranston's jaw. 

But Cranston had swerved aside. The movement didn't completely save  him, however. The blow landed on

his neck. It was powerful enough to  paralyze him, send him reeling backward to the sidewalk. 

As he fell, the thug uttered an oath and struck at the boy. This  time, he landed his blow with a horrible

impact. It hit the boy on the  temple and knocked him unconscious. 

Cranston, dazed, tried to stagger to his feet. Before he could do  so, the thug had picked up the limp figure of

the boy and was darting  out into the street. 

There was a scream of horror from pedestrians. A heavy truck was  racing at top speed along the avenue.

Straight into the path of the  truck, the thug threw the senseless boy! Then he turned and ran. 

THE driver of the truck jammed on the brakes. But it was too late  to halt the heavy vehicle. The broadtired

wheels rolled toward the  limp head of the lad on the pavement. 

An instant before it could crush out his life, Lamont Cranston  dived headlong into the path of destruction. His

shoulder struck the  boy, rolling him toward the curb. A quick wriggle, and Cranston swerved  aside from the

grinding death that loomed over him. 


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He picked up the boy. One glance and he knew there was no time to  lose. The attempted killer had leaped

into a waiting sedan and had  already made his escape. The boy was all Cranston could see or think  about. 

Brass knuckles had fractured his skull. He had suffered a  concussion of the brain. A glance at his bluish lips

and the fixed  glaze of his staring eyes told Cranston that unless the boy was  operated on immediately, he

would die. 

A leap, Cranston was in his car. He laid the boy gently on the seat  beside him, then headed the car toward the

nearest hospital. 

Traffic lights were ignored. A cop, who had arrived too late to  catch the vanished killer, leaped to the

opposite running board of the  car. He cleared a path for the speeding sedan with his shrill whistle. 

Cranston rushed into the hospital with his limp burden. He got  quick action. The boy was taken to an

emergency operating room and a  skilled surgeon went to work. When it was over, Cranston asked only one

question: 

"Will the child live?" 

"Hard to say. We'll do our best." 

"Spare no expense. Put him in a private room. Engage day and night  nurses." 

Cranston's face was pale. He knew that he himself was indirectly  responsible for the boy's attack. A

supercriminal had made a prompt  answer to Cranston's message over Jackson's telephone. 

That telephone must have been tapped. The attempt to kill the boy  was a vicious warning for Lamont

Cranston to mind his own business  about the Harmon family. 

It was a followup of the attack on Jackson's dog. But this time,  cruelty had singled out a human life as a

pawn. 

Cranston felt a surge of hot anger. He kept it under control while  he answered routine police questions. He

told all he knew  which was  nothing. His wealth and social position enabled him to get away from  the

hospital without too great a delay. 

He had only one angry thought. He intended to drive straight to the  office of David Chester. He'd get the truth

out of the sleek Chester,  if he had to batter him with vengeful fists! 

Cranston was actually halfway to Chester's office before common  sense returned to him. He realized he had

lost his sense of balance. He  was behaving exactly as the crooks wanted. He was playing their game,  not his! 

He parked, and the hot rage drained slowly from him. He stopped  thinking about the limp figure of a young

lad on a white operating  table. 

He found a public telephone in a place where no one could overhear  him. He called a number not listed in

any phone book. 

"Burbank speaking," a quiet voice answered. 


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Burbank was the contact man in The Shadow's organization. His duty  was to receive orders and transmit

them to other secret agents of The  Shadow. 

The Shadow explained what he wanted done. He mentioned a name. The  name was that of Clyde Burke, one

of his agents. 

CHAPTER III. DANGEROUS BLOND

THE office of David Chester was located on one of the upper floors  of a big skyscraper in the midtown

district. 

Clyde Burke took a good look around as he stepped in from the  corridor. He had a plausible excuse to enter.

He was an ace reporter on  the Daily Classic. He had come to interview Chester on the subject of  the strange

suicide of John Harmon. 

That was what he told the pretty blond secretary who sat in the  outer room. She was very friendly. In fact, she

was so friendly that  Clyde looked her over with quick interest. 

Her hands were soft and white. Her complexion was flawlessly  lovely. Clyde was no judge of the quality of

women's clothing, but he  guessed that the outfit this blonde was wearing had come straight from  Paris. It

emphasized her luscious figure. And she was well aware of it.  She smiled boldly. 

"Are all reporters as goodlooking as you, Mr. Burke?" She pushed  back from her desk to rise. "I'll tell Mr.

Chester you'd like to see  him." 

She walked into the inner office. After a moment, she returned to  her desk. Chester emerged from the inner

room. He didn't seem annoyed  by Clyde's intrusion. He shook hands smilingly, as he said: 

"A sad case, that of poor Harmon. I'm afraid there's nothing I can  add to what I've already told the press.

Harmon was obviously insane  when he pulled the trigger that ended his life. However, I'll be glad  to discuss

the case with you, if you don't mind waiting. I have an  appointment with a gentleman whom I expect at any

moment." 

Clyde said he'd be glad to wait. He was puzzled by this Chester.  Under the man's smiling exterior was a hint

of tension. 

The corridor door behind them opened suddenly. A man's harsh voice  said: "Hello, Mr. Chester. I didn't know

you were busy. I'll come back  later." 

"No, no! Don't go, Charlie. Mr. Burke has agreed to wait until  we're finished." 

The man grunted. Chester introduced him hastily as Mr. Charles  Horn. 

Clyde didn't like Horn's looks. He was chewing gum vigorously. He  had sharp black eyes in a pallid face.

Everything about him looked  thin: his lips, his high cheekbones, his sparse sandy hair. But the  thing that

Clyde noticed most was the pattern of the suit the man was  wearing. Also his blueandwhite striped tie. The

tie looked badly  rumpled. 

However, Clyde gave no indication of his own tension. But as he  stared at the man, he was mentally placing

on that sandy hair a black,  tousled wig. He tried to think of Horn with a black mustache. 


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He was convinced he was facing the unknown thug who had thrown an  innocent child under the wheels of a

speeding truck! 

The pattern of the man's suit tallied with the description Burke  had received from The Shadow. The

blueandwhite tie had been twisted  out of shape when Cranston had clutched at the fake truant officer

outside the apartment of Hubert Jackson. 

As Clyde watched the two men disappear into Chester's office, the  blond stenographer began to click busily

at her machine, making a loud  racket. Clyde wondered if she was doing this to drown out any echoes of

conversation between Horn and Chester in the inner office. 

Clyde left the chair to which Chester had waved him. He crossed  over to another and picked up a newspaper

that was lying there. The  chair's back was directly against the inner partition. The newspaper  made a good

excuse for sitting there. 

Clyde spread the paper wide and pretended to read. Behind the  shield of the paper, he rested his ear against

the partition. The click  of the typewriter made hearing difficult, but he could pick out a few  phrases in the

snarling murmur of Charlie Horn: 

" working fast  trained nurse  not a chance that Mrs. Harmon " 

Suddenly, the noise of the typewriter ceased. 

"Oh  darn!" the typist said. 

Clyde lowered his paper. He was afraid to keep it raised, for fear  of exciting the blonde's suspicion. She was

staring directly at him, a  sugary smile on her red lips. 

"The ribbon on my machine has broken. Do you mind helping me fix  it? I just hate to get my hands soiled." 

Regretfully, Clyde left his eavesdropping post. There was nothing  else he could do. The blonde's smooth

fingers were very warm on his.  She sat on the corner of her desk, while Clyde took her chair to  examine the

machine. 

The ribbon had not been broken. It had been cut. And the job had  been done by the blonde! A paper knife

was visible in the open end of  the desk drawer she had not quite closed. The edge of the knife was  smeared

with carbon. 

THE girl pushed the drawer shut with a quick pressure of her knee,  and tried to divert Clyde by patting his

hand. Her game was obvious.  She was trying to take his attention from what was going on in the  inner office. 

Clyde decided to play the blonde's own game. By the time he had the  ribbon removed and a new one in place,

he had all the appearance of a  man who was thoroughly smitten. He asked the blonde what her name was,  and

she giggled and told him. Dorothy Bruner. 

"Why do you want to know my name?" she asked archly. 

"Because I always like to know the name of the girl I take out to  dinner. How about it? Tomorrow night?" 

She hesitated. But Clyde knew that was a bluff. Finally, she  nodded. 


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"It's a date." 

Clyde's hands were smeared with carbon, and Dorothy Bruner showed  him where the washbasin was. The

moment he had finished, he made test  No. 2. He grinned and took Dorothy in his arms. 

She didn't resist his embrace. The pressure of her lips and the  warmth of her body made Clyde dizzy. But he

was grimly cold inside.  This blonde might be the means of finding out plenty later on,  concerning the suave

David Chester and the ugly Charlie Horn. 

Clyde was worried by the fragment of talk he had overheard. It was  something about a trained nurse and Mrs.

Harmon. Was more evil brewing  for that illfated family? Clyde would have been even more worried, had  he

overheard the full import of the conversation which Dorothy Bruner  had so cleverly interrupted. 

"I'm working fast," Charlie Horn had told Chester, with a twisted  grin. "I've got the trained nurse. There's not

a chance that Mrs.  Harmon or the doctor will suspect a thing." 

"What about the regular nurse?" 

"I sidetracked her. This other nurse has been in trouble before.  Her name is Peggy Dooley. It's the first job

she'd had since the  hospital fired her. She'll make an ideal sucker." 

"Swell!" Chester muttered. "Where is she now?" 

"Downstairs in a cab. I've coached her what she's to tell the  doctor. She's supposed to be a girl friend of the

real nurse." 

"Be careful to cover your own tracks," Chester warned. 

"I won't have to," Horn chuckled, "if the thing works out the way  you predicted." 

"I'll bet a thousand to one it will," Chester said. There was cruel  anticipation in his narrowed eyes. "O.K. You

beat it. Let me take care  of that dumb reporter outside." 

The two men walked into the outer office. Clyde was still sitting  near the stenographer's desk, talking to her.

He would have liked to  have followed the departing Horn, but Chester gave him no opportunity. 

Chester, inviting him into his private office, began a longwinded  discussion of the Harmon case. He said

nothing that Clyde didn't  already know. Clyde guessed that the only purpose of the talk was to  keep him from

following Horn. 

There was an ash tray on Chester's desk, but the man kept rising  nervously and leaning out the window to

dispose of his ash. It made  Clyde instantly suspicious. 

He picked up a cigarette from a desk box and lit it. When he blew  out the match, he leaned toward the

window. His gaze dropped in the  same direction that Chester's glance had taken. 

He was just in time see a dirty figure emerge from the lobby of the  building. The man stared up as he hurried

across the sidewalk to the  curb. It was Charlie Horn. 

A taxicab was parked there. A woman was waiting for Horn in the  rear seat. Clyde could see her clearly

because the cab was an openair  type. Its roof panel had been tilted back. He caught a glimpse of a


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bluishgray jacket and skirt. There was a small leather bag in the  woman's hand. 

She was a trained nurse. 

Clyde's heart skipped a beat. He turned slowly from the window, and  through his brain darted the fragment of

talk he had overheard through  the office partition: 

" working fast  trained nurse  not a chance that Mrs. Harmon " 

He glanced at his watch, uttered a faint exclamation. 

"I didn't know it was so late! I'll have to rush back to the  office, if I'm going to catch the presses for the next

edition. Thank  you for your interview, Mr. Chester. You've been very helpful." 

CLYDE delayed in the outer office a minute or two, to smile at  Dorothy Bruner. He still intended to date her

for the following  evening. He had hopes of using her to get a line on Chester. 

Dorothy's eyes were bright and flirtatious. She pinched his palm  playfully under cover of the handshake.

Clyde congratulated himself  inwardly that he had made quite an impression on her. 

He'd have been less satisfied, could he have seen the expression on  Chester's face. Chester stood behind the

reporter, staring fixedly at  the blond. The moment he caught her eye, his fingers touched his lips.  He made a

quick pantomime of chewing. 

Dorothy saw the signal. 

"Have a stick of chewing gum?" she asked Clyde. 

He took it, rather than argue. He was in a hurry to follow Charlie  Horn to the Harmon house. He didn't notice

that the stenographer took  the stick of gum from its wrapper before she handed it to him. She  crumpled the

wrapper in her palm. It was plain paper, without any brand  name on it. 

Again, Chester gave the blonde a sharp look. This time, Clyde  caught the wordless exchange. He said

nothing, but it put him on his  guard. 

Chewing on his borrowed gum, he walked down the corridor toward the  elevators. His heels made a clicking

sound on the tiled floor. But  Clyde was using that noisy departure as camouflage. The moment he  reached the

elevator shaft, he turned and tiptoed back toward Chester's  office. 

Crouching outside the closed door, he placed his eye at the  keyhole. He was just in time to witness a scene of

grim activity. 

"Quick!" Chester whispered to Dorothy. "Get the starter in the  lobby!" 

All the prettiness had vanished from Dorothy Bruner's rouged  cheeks. She looked hard and vengeful. Her

hand clawed at the telephone.  She whispered an urgent message over the wire to the elevator starter  in the

building lobby downstairs. 

"Hello  Pete? Emergency! We've got a sap up here on the eleventh  floor we want taken care of in a hurry.

Send up Car No. 3. Hold the  other cars... Who's on No. 3... Smitty? That's fine!" 


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She hung up with a chuckle. 

"That'll do it! Give your baby a kiss, David!" 

Chester swept her into his arms. They clung to each other in a  long, passionate embrace. 

Clyde Burke didn't wait any longer outside the closed door. He  darted noiselessly back to the elevator shaft.

When the doors of Car  No. 3 slid open, Clyde stepped innocently inside. His hand rested near  a coat pocket

where a small gun nestled. He wasn't taking any chances  on Smitty. 

Smitty ignored the button calls from lower floors. When Clyde  mentioned it, he said curtly: "This is an

express, buddy." 

Clyde began to slide his gun toward the flap of his pocket. To his  horror, he found he was unable to move it.

His hand felt cold and  paralyzed! There was a queer buzzing in his ears. He tried to cry out,  but no sound

came from his throat. 

Too late, he remembered the chewing gum Dorothy had given him. He  felt his knees buckle. He fell to the

floor of the car. 

Dimly, he was aware that the descending car had halted below the  street level of the shaft. It stopped at the

basement. The grinning  Smitty picked up Clyde, carried him down a whitewashed corridor to what  looked

like an empty coal bin. He threw Clyde inside and locked the  door. 

That was all Clyde remembered for a while. 

WHEN Clyde recovered his senses, he was on his feet with a broom  tightly gripped in his hand. He felt a

sense of wild, savage cruelty in  his blood. He was pursuing a mouse around the coal bin, but there  wasn't

anything funny about it. 

Clyde wanted to kill that mouse! He had blocked off the rodent's  tiny escape hole in the wall. His fingers

itched with the mad desire to  smash that mouse with the broom! 

It was only after he had killed it that Clyde recovered his sanity.  Horror flooded him. His temples ached.

There was a sickish taste in his  mouth. He spat out the wad of gum he had been chewing. He realized  vaguely

what the gum had done to him. 

It was a powerful drug! It had knocked him out at first because he  wasn't used to it. But its later effect was

more hideous than an  ordinary narcotic. It had turned him for a few unwitting moments into a  savage killer. 

Had the mouse in the coal bin been a man, Clyde realized, with a  shudder, he would have killed him just as

readily. 

The shock sobered him. He still had a feeling of wild, unleashed  strength, but he put the drug's effect to better

use than it was  intended. He found an iron bar and got to work on the lock of the door. 

The padlock was a cheap one. Clyde levered until he had snapped off  the heavy iron hasp. With the bar in his

hand, he tiptoed toward the  cellar exit. 

He could hear the snoring of a man sleeping inside a cellar  apartment. Clyde halted. His fingers tightened on

his iron bar. He  guessed that the man asleep inside was the building janitor. He fought  against a hot impulse


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that flared anew in his blood. 

He wanted to kill that janitor! He wanted to smash at him with the  iron bar until the man was battered and

dead! 

Murder seemed so exciting. And so easy! Clyde could picture the  terror of his victim as he struck at him. It

would be sheer delight to  maim the fool before he killed him. 

The thing that saved Clyde was the thought of the chewing gum. He  knew that the savage whisper that urged

him on to murder was not his  own brain talking, but the voice of a powerful drug. 

Laying the bar on the concrete floor, he ran for the cellar exit.  He didn't glance back. He was afraid that if he

did, he'd be tempted to  pick up the bar and commit a senseless and brutal crime. 

A steep flight of stone steps brought him out into the open air of  an alley in the rear of the office building.

The cold bite of the  breeze was like a draft of cooling water against his parched lips. He  began to get a grip

on himself. Once more he was Clyde Burke, a normal  human being who would go out of his way to avoid

hurting a fly. 

But the memory of those dreadful minutes in the cellar made his  face pale. He realized now how a man could

do so horrible a thing as  throw a boy under the wheels of a speeding truck. Or cut the throat of  a pet dog.

Drugs had done it! 

Clyde raced to the sidewalk beyond the alley. He flagged a taxi and  got in. Charlie Horn and a trained nurse

had gone already to the home  of John Harmon's invalid wife. Treachery was planned  and perhaps  murder! 

Clyde gave the driver Mrs. Harmon's address. A glance at his watch  showed him that more than a half hour

had elapsed since he had lost  consciousness in the coal bin. Was it too late? 

He leaned forward and shouted a harsh order; The taxicab's speed  increased. 

CHAPTER IV. THE SECOND BOTTLE

IT was dim and quiet in the sickroom of Martha Harmon. The shock  of her husband's death had been a cruel

blow to her. She lay with  closed eyes in her bed, too tired to pay any attention to the  whispering of a man and

a woman who stood near her medicine table at  the other side of the sickroom. 

The man was Dr. Pemberton. He was tall, with irongray hair and  gentle, competent hands. One of the best

physicians in New York. Hubert  Jackson, the lawyer and friend of John Harmon, had paid Dr. Pemberton  to

take care of the dead man's ailing widow. 

The woman was dressed in the starched white uniform of a trained  nurse. Her name was Peggy Dooley. She

was the nurse who Charlie Horn  had planted in the sickroom under the orders of David Chester. 

Dr. Pemberton had accepted her rehearsed story without suspicion.  He accepted the fact that his regular nurse

had been prevented from  attending the case by circumstances beyond her control. 

However, Dr. Pemberton had a queer sense of uneasiness. He thought  that perhaps it came from the fact that

his memory was bothering him.  He was trying to remember where he had seen this Miss Dooley before. He

asked her about it. 


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"You must be mistaken," she said quickly. "I've done most of my  work outside of New York. You've

probably confused me with some other  nurse." 

Pemberton's frown faded. But he didn't smile. He turned toward the  medicine table that stood alongside the

wall near a curtained window. 

"I think that Mrs. Harmon is resting easily. But the effects of the  sedative I've given her will wear off soon.

When she awakes, give her a  hot compress with one of the tablets in this bottle. Just dissolve one  of the

tablets in boiling water to make the solution." 

"I understand," Miss Dooley said. 

Dr. Pemberton hesitated. He still had that peculiar feeling of  uneasiness. He pointed to two bottles that stood

side by side on the  table. They were the same size, exactly alike, except that the bottle  with the white tablets

for the compress treatment had a warning red  label on it, with a skull and crossbones The sedative tablets in

the  other bottle had a plain white label. 

"Be careful you don't confuse them," Pemberton whispered. "The  sedatives are harmless. The others are a

deadly poison, if taken  internally. You understand?" 

"Of course," Miss Dooley said. 

She said it quietly. But there was a cloudy look in her eyes. It  was as if she remembered something horrible. 

Dr. Pemberton realized that this nurse must have once been a very  pretty girl. She was pretty no longer.

Something had happened to dull  her eyes, and put a streak of premature gray in the hair that showed at  the

edge of her starched cap. 

Pemberton wasn't particularly interested. Miss Dooley's personal  affairs didn't worry him. Having given his

orders and written out a  prescription, Dr. Pemberton took his leave. 

The nurse busied herself with the patient. She was deft and gentle.  Her hand on the forehead of the sleeping,

woman was like a cool caress.  The tight look gradually left Peggy Dooley's mouth. It was good to be  on a

case again! This was the first assignment she had had in over  three years. 

The thought made her eyes blur with tears. She was doing the thing  she loved, caring for the sick and the

helpless. She blessed the good  luck that had put her in touch with Charlie Horn. She didn't mind  fooling Dr.

Pemberton. Her conscience was clear. She was an efficient  nurse  no matter what anyone said to the

contrary! 

Presently, Mrs. Harmon stirred. The nurse bent over her. 

"How do you feel?" 

"Better," Mrs. Harmon said feebly. 

"That's because of the sedative Dr. Pemberton gave you." 

Mrs. Harmon shook her head, said, "You're entirely too modest. It's  you I have to thank. That massage you

gave me relaxed every muscle in  my body. Could you give me another?" 


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"Of course!" 

MISS DOOLEY sat beside the bed. Her deft fingers went to work with  gentle persistence at the base of Mrs.

Harmon's neck and along the bony  ridges of her spine. 

"It feels so good," the widow murmured. "Do you think my son and  daughter will arrive soon?" 

"There was a telegram from them earlier today. Their train should  reach New York in an hour." 

"I can hardly wait. They're such good children. I want Bob to take  the cash in the bank and continue his

education. Jane, too." 

"You mustn't excite yourself." 

"Will you send Bob and Jane in the moment they arrive?" 

"I surely will. Now forget about it. It's almost time for your  medicine." 

The old woman leaned over and patted the nurse's hand. 

"You're very sweet to take such care of me. I... I've had so much  trouble and grief that I... I " 

"Trouble is something that comes to all of us," the nurse said. 

There was something in the way she said it that made Mrs. Harmon's  head turn. She saw that there were tears

in Miss Dooley's eyes. 

"My dear! You're crying! What's wrong?" 

"Nothing." 

"Tell me about it." 

"It doesn't matter." 

"But it does!" She took the nurse's hand in a feeble grip. She was  getting excited again and Miss Dooley

didn't want to upset her. She sat  down and they talked in low toned murmurs. 

The older woman's gentle persistence broke the nurse's resolve not  to discuss a secret she had locked in her

heart for three tragic years.  She found herself talking without shame or restraint. 

"Miss Dooley isn't my real name," she confessed, with a pale face.  "I'm a fraud! My license as a nurse was

taken from me. I have no right  to practice." 

"You did something wrong?" 

"They thought so at the hospital. A fatal error was made in the  treatment of a patient. He was given the wrong

hypodermic injection. He  died as a result of it. It ended my career." 

"But you didn't really make that error, did you, my dear?" Mrs.  Harmon said in her frail, gentle voice. 


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The nurse stared at her. 

"What makes you say that? How did you know?" 

"I know that I trust you. I've lived long enough to know good from  bad. You're too good a nurse to have

made a mistake like that. You  sacrificed yourself for someone else. Whom were you protecting?" 

Peggy Dooley wept. The old woman patted her hand. 

"You'll feel better if you confide in me." 

"It's been hell for three long years. I won't tell you the name of  the actual culprit. He was a young doctor. I

was in love with him. He  begged me to cover his guilt  and there was no other way except to  take the blame

myself. After I was discharged from the hospital I went  to see him. He had promised to marry me. Instead, he

offered me money!" 

There was a sob in the nurse's voice. 

"He begged me not to expose him. How could I? Rotten as he was, I  still loved him. I left New York and tried

to make a living any way I  could. I washed dishes and scrubbed floors. Half the time, I nearly  starved." 

Her voice was barely audible. 

"Then I came back to New York. Nursing is the only profession I  know. I wanted to help people who were

sick. I stole credentials and  forged them with the name of Peggy Dooley. I registered at a small  nursing

agency. No one recognized me. Yesterday, a man came looking for  a nurse." 

She stared wildly at Mrs. Harmon. 

"How can you ever trust me again?" 

"I wouldn't have any other nurse but you. Perhaps it's because I,  too, have suffered. I know what suffering

means." 

Peggy Dooley leaned impulsively forward and kissed her. 

Neither of them were aware of a motion across the dimly lighted  room. 

A gloved hand slid quietly across the sill of the opened window.  The curtain helped to hide its stealthy

progress. It reached the small  medicine table on which stood the two bottles left by Dr. Pemberton.  The hand

picked up the harmless sedative tablets. Then the other  bottle. 

Behind the folds of the window curtain a hellish thing took place.  The white sedative pills were dumped into

a murderous palm. The poison  tablets intended for use with a hot compress were transferred to the  bottle with

the plain label! 

In a moment the double transfer was accomplished. The bottle with  the skull and crossbones now contained

harmless medicine. The poison  was in the bottle with the plain label. 

The hands vanished. 


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AFTER a long time, Peggy Dooley stirred gently from the feeble hold  of Mrs. Harmon. She glanced at her

watch. 

"Time for your medicine. I'm afraid I've excited you with my silly  troubles." 

"I'm more excited about the arrival of my son and daughter. Surely,  they should be here?" 

"I'll tell you, the moment they arrive," the nurse promised. 

She pickled up the bottle with the plain label from the medicine  table. She carefully made sure it was the right

bottle, then took out  one of the tablets. She brought it in a glass of water to Mrs. Harmon. 

"Drink it, please." 

"It smells funny." 

"It's perfectly safe." 

The glass tilted. Mrs. Harmon opened her mouth  then suddenly she  pushed the glass from her lips. The bell

at the front door had begun to  ring. 

"It's Bob!" Mrs. Harmon cried excitedly. "Jane and Bob! Let them in  quickly!" 

Her hand shook so that some of the liquid in the glass spilled. The  nurse set the drink down on a bureau,

started to answer the bell. 

Then she stopped. She was watching the patient's face. There was an  alarming red flush on Mrs. Harmon's

cheeks. Her body was twitching.  Peggy Dooley came back and picked up the glass. 

Her motive was honest. She knew that unless a sedative were  administered at once, her patient might go into

a nervous convulsion.  Without realizing the terrible thing she was doing, she held the glass  of poison to Mrs.

Harmon's pale lips. 

Mrs. Harmon drained it. 

The nurse hurried downstairs. She smiled at the thought of how good  the arrival of the son and daughter

would be for her patient. 

But she had a shock when she opened the door. It wasn't Bob and  Jane. A young man with a pale face was

staring at her. He shoved the  nurse aside and forced his way in. He slammed the door behind him. 

The man was Clyde Burke. 

"Where's Mrs. Harmon, I've got to see her, at once!" 

"You can't. She needs absolute quiet." 

Something in the sound of the nurse's voice made Clyde stare at her  more sharply. He had been trying to

identify her face. Where had he  seen it? And that voice! So low and sweet. He had heard it somewhere

before, somewhere where a sweet voice had seemed curiously out of  place. 


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His jaw tightened. He remembered now. The thought sent horror  through him. 

Three years ago. She had been younger then, prettier. She had stood  in terror on the brightly lighted stage of

the police lineup at  headquarters. She stood accused of manslaughter because of the death of  a hospital

patient. 

"You're Claire Weston! You're the nurse who was discharged from  Mercy Hospital!" 

She tried to deny it, but her lips failed to frame an audible word.  Clyde seized her by the arm. 

"What are you doing here? What are you up to?" 

She gasped from the pain of his clutching fingers. But another cry  cut through her faint exclamation. It was

shrill and agonized. It came  from the bedroom at the top of the staircase. 

Clyde sprang up the stairs. Behind him raced the terrified feet of  the nurse. She knew that something terribly

wrong had happened in the  sickroom. 

Before either of them could reach the bedroom, a quick  transformation took place at the medicine table near

the open window.  The gloved hands that had willed death for Mrs. Harmon were busy again.  This time, they

were reversing the deed they had accomplished earlier. 

The poison tablets went back into their proper bottle. The harmless  sedative pills were replaced in the bottle

with the plain label. A  swift twist removed the cork from the poison bottle. 

The loose cork was left lying on the table, as if the poison bottle  had just been opened by the nurse. 

A MOMENT later, Clyde Burke was in the room. He bent over the bed.  One glance showed him that Mrs.

Harmon was dead. Her face was horribly  contorted. 

Clyde sniffed at her lips. There was a faint odor, which he  recognized. It was the odor of a corrosive poison! 

He sprang toward the medicine table and looked at the two bottles  there. He saw that one had its cork

removed. A glance at its warning  label and he swung accusingly toward the nurse. She, too, was staring  at the

label with the skull and crossbones, at its cork lying on the  table. 

"You gave her the wrong medicine!" Clyde cried. 

"I didn't! I swear I didn't!" 

She read Clyde's eyes, knew what he was thinking. She had done the  same thing once before in a hospital.

She had done it again. 

"No, no!" she moaned. "You've got to believe me!" 

Clyde didn't reply. With a set face, he walked across the room,  picked up the telephone. 

"Police headquarters," he said. 

Peggy Dooley watched him with stark, tragic eyes. There was doom in  his voice as he reported Mrs.

Harmon's death. There'd be doom in the  voices of the police who would arrive presently. How could she


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explain  to them what she couldn't understand herself? Who would believe her? 

Peggy Dooley made a sudden rush for the medicine table. Before  Clyde could drop the telephone to intercept

her, she had seized the  poison bottle. 

She thrust a tablet in her mouth, crunched it, swallowed it. 

Clyde was unable to stop her. He heard a choking cry at his ear. 

"Before God... I... am innocent!" 

It was the last word Peggy Dooley uttered. Her body writhed  suddenly in Clyde's arms. The undiluted tablet

worked fast. She slipped  from Clyde's arms and lay in a lifeless huddle on the floor. 

Again, evil had struck at the Harmon family. A supercriminal with a  passion for cruelty and horror had

successfully murdered John Harmon's  widow. This time, he had ruthlessly sacrificed the life of an innocent

nurse to hide a planned crime. 

He had fooled Clyde Burke. Could he fool The Shadow? 

The Shadow was facing the supreme test of his career! 

CHAPTER V. DOUBLE DECEPTION

THE SHADOW was in his sanctum. It was a place of utter darkness.  The roar of the city's traffic in the

streets was hushed here. No clock  ticked. Darkness and silence. 

Suddenly, the stillness was broken by a whisper of sibilant  laughter. There was no mirth in that laugh. It was

a challenge to  organized evil. The cold, measured laughter of The Shadow! 

A blue light came on. Its glow revealed the polished surface of a  desk. It reflected the vague glimmer of a

face. Piercing eyes stared at  the desk with calm assurance. A powerful, hawklike nose was visible. 

The rest of The Shadow was invisible. His arms, his clothing, the  chair on which he sat, were part of the

darkness. 

A hand appeared on the surface of the desk. One of the fingers  seemed to glow like flame. A gem of unusual

size and beauty was set in  a ring on the third finger of The Shadow's left hand. 

The precious stone in that ring was a girasol  a fire opal that  was unique in the world for size and beauty. It

was the hallmark of The  Shadow's power. Whenever it was seen by an agent of his, it commanded  instant and

loyal obedience. 

The hand of The Shadow moved. A pile of newspaper clippings came  under the glow of the desk light. 

These clippings contained accounts of the death of Mrs. John Harmon  and the suicide of the nurse named

Peggy Dooley. They were all alike.  They attributed Mrs. Harmon's death to a tragic blunder. The suicide of

the nurse proved it. Her fingerprints showed that once before she had  made the same fatal error in a New

York hospital. 


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The Shadow disagreed with this theory. He suspected murder. He was  content for the police and the

newspapers to drop the case. He had  instructed Clyde Burke to make no mention of certain facts. 

The names of David Chester and Dorothy Bruner appeared in none of  these newspaper clippings. Nor did that

of Charlie Horn. The Shadow  preferred to shield them from premature arrest until he was ready to  move

against them himself. 

He knew that the poison tablets had been switched in that tragic  bedroom of Mrs. Harmon. Clyde had given

him a complete description of  the room. He could visualize the location of the bed, the medicine  table, and

the window. 

He had discovered that a narrow ledge ran along the rear face of  the building. A sly hand at the window could

easily have murdered Mrs.  Harmon and planted the blame on an unfortunate nurse. 

Mrs. Harmon's death was linked to the suicide of her husband. The  technique was the same. A switch in

medicine tablets  a switch in the  figures on a check and on a bill of sale! 

Someone who took a fiendish delight in pain and agony was behind  this growing tragedy. Even outsiders who

tried to help the Harmon  family were included in the attack! 

The killing of Hubert Jackson's dog proved that. So did the wanton  slashing of his valuable paintings. And

the moment that Lamont Cranston  had assumed charge of the charity drive to help the Harmon family, the

attack had turned toward him! The ruthless attempt to maim and kill a  street boy in whom Cranston had

shown friendly interest was another  proof of the delight in evil of an unknown criminal. 

Victims were attacked not directly, but through the things they  most loved. 

Was David Chester the real genius of crime behind all this planned  horror? The Shadow's answer was no. 

Remembering the testimony of Clyde Burke concerning the passionate  embrace he had witnessed through the

keyhole of the door of Chester's  office, The Shadow sought further for the real enemy. This enemy was a  man

of cold and twisted intelligence. He would never give way to the  charms of a blonde like Dorothy Bruner. 

Charlie Horn was probably a gobetween. 

The situation could be demonstrated mathematically. The Shadow drew  a sheet of blank paper under the

gleam of the desk light. With an  antique quilltopped pen, he wrote a mathematical formula: 

(Chester + Dorothy) + Horn = X 

There was one other factor in the mystery that The Shadow had not  forgotten. Under the equation he had set

down, he wrote two additional  words: 

Chewing Gum 

The gum, of course, was a drug. A peculiar drug, which apparently  had the power to whip those who used it

to a pitch of brutal sadism. 

It seemed queer that Dorothy Bruner should risk giving Clyde the  stick of gum. But The Shadow knew the

real answer. Clyde's collapse in  the elevator was the clue. Unused to the powerful drug, he had fainted  and

become an easy prisoner. 


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Dorothy Bruner had counted on that. She and Charlie Horn were  veteran addicts by now. They were better

able to control themselves  after chewing the gum. They would do cruel, vicious things, but they  would retain

the ability to reason clearly. 

Charlie Horn, for example, had been able to escape with  extraordinary skill after his attempt to kill the street

boy. 

It was Horn who seemed to The Shadow to hold the key to the mystery  of X. 

THE SHADOW decided to pick up Horn's trail by seeking a link  between him and the blond stenographer.

Dorothy Bruner's apartment  address was already known to The Shadow. 

His hand moved suddenly. The light over the polished surface of the  desk vanished; darkness flooded the

sanctum. There was no indication  that The Shadow had risen from his desk. 

And yet The Shadow had moved. He was already gone. 

Lamont Cranston appeared presently on the street. No one paid any  attention to his trim, welldressed figure.

The hour was late. Workers  had already taken subways and elevated trains to their homes. 

Lamont Cranston turned west through one of the narrow canyons. He  had parked his car under the shadow of

the Ninth Avenue elevated. His  reason for this precaution was simple. He was eternally on the alert. 

If Lamont Cranston's automobile was recognized by criminal eyes,  The Shadow preferred the recognition to

come in a neighborhood that was  not too close to the building in which was hidden the sanctum of The

Shadow. 

Turning the corner where his car was parked, Cranston saw no one in  sight. Dark warehouses loomed like

enormous packing boxes on either  side of the avenue. The structure of the elevated cast a deep gloom on  the

pavement. A few empty trucks waited here and there for morning  loading. 

Cranston's movements were unobserved. 

Such was his first thought. A moment later, he stiffened with the  grim knowledge that he was being watched. 

A man was standing in the gloom of a locked doorway. It was the  doorway of the warehouse that faced the

curb where Cranston's car was  parked. 

The man had every indication of a halfdrunken loiterer. His  clothes were trampish. He leaned heavily

against the door casing, as if  in an alcoholic stupor. But his eyes were clear and alert. They were  vicious eyes.

The mark of the criminal was stamped unmistakably on that  lean, pallid face. 

Cranston's hand dropped swiftly to his pocket. He turned and  advanced with a quick stride toward the

warehouse door. 

But quick as he was, the thug in the dark entry was quicker. He  whirled without a sound and clutched at the

door handle. It opened and  closed with a bang. As it closed, a bolt shot home, putting an  effective barrier

between Cranston and the thug. 

It was a queer situation. Why had the thug fled so swiftly? He had  made no attack on Lamont Cranston. He

hadn't even drawn a gun. The  Shadow felt a quick surge of suspicion. This meeting and flight must  have been


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deliberately prearranged. 

Cranston reached the doorway only a few seconds after the thug had  beat his successful retreat. There was a

dim overhead light burning in  the ceiling of the ground door of the warehouse. 

A glass panel in the doorway revealed the flitting figure of the  fugitive inside. He had crossed the floor at a

swift pace. He was  already disappearing through a door over which a red exit lamp burned. 

The Shadow realized that the thug had entered a staircase. But had  he gone up or down? And why had the

whole strange incident happened at  all? 

Cautiously, Cranston started to retreat toward his parked car. He  could see nothing wrong with it. It was

exactly the way he had left it.  He knew that no one had forced an entry in the car or had moved it,  because

there were certain precautions he always took. Any tampering  with the car would have been instantly

noticeable to him from a dozen  feet away. 

The sudden tinkling of a bell diverted him from his path toward the  car. The bell sound came from behind

him. Whirling, he recognized its  source. It came from beneath the sidewalk. 

It was a bell that rang to warn pedestrians that the warehouse's  outdoor freight lift was rising to the sidewalk.

These outdoor  elevators were a common thing in the district. They were used mostly  for the removal of ashes

and garbage to the street. 

A city ordinance required the bell to sound every time the elevator  rose, in order to avoid injury to

pedestrians who might be standing on  the flat metal panels that formed its sidewalk covering. 

The panels were already pushing upward. The platform below them was  rising. 

Cranston guessed that the thug he had chased had gone directly to  the cellar. He was now returning for some

unknown method of attack. 

Shielded by the tilted panels in the sidewalk, Cranston leaned over  the exposed pit, gun in hand. He received

an instant shock of surprise.  The elevator platform was empty! 

At the same instant, the rapid thud of feet behind Cranston warned  him of danger from the rear. Before he

could whirl, hands circled his  throat with terrific pressure. His twisting face caught a glimpse of  his attacker.

Then he was forced to fight for his life. But he knew now  who his assailant was. 

Charlie Horn! 

HORN seemed possessed of superhuman strength. The gun was twisted  from Cranston's grasp and fell

clattering to the empty platform of the  rising elevator. With a heave and a grunt, Horn kicked Cranston's legs

from under him, forced his victim into a sitting position at the edge  of the sidewalk pit. 

He held him there with a grip of steel. Cranston was unable to  move. The elevator ascended slowly, like an

instrument of doom. 

Cranston knew, too late, the fate that was in store for him. His  dangling legs hung over the edge of the pit.

The rising elevator would  crush them to bloody fragments of splintered bone. He would not be  killed, but he

would be horribly crippled for the rest of his life! 


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The thought of his peril galvanized him into action. Already, he  could feel the rising platform of the elevator

pressing inexorably  against his dangling feet. With a desperate surge of strength, he bent  forward. Unable to

break Horn's strangling hold, he threw himself  deliberately into the shaft. 

Charlie Horn fell with him. Maddened by drugs, he was unwilling to  relinquish his grip. Their bodies turned

over as they fell. Horn struck  the platform of the rising elevator with a horrible impact. Cranston  landed on

top. Cushioned by Horn's body, he retained his senses. But  Horn was out cold. 

The Shadow grabbed his gun. As he did so he saw a blur of movement  in the street doorway of the

warehouse. The thug who had started the  elevator machinery in the basement had returned the same way he

had  vanished. He fired at Cranston as the elevator reached the sidewalk  level. The slug creased The Shadow's

thigh. 

Cranston gave the thug no time for a second shot. His own gun spat  flame. The man in the doorway clutched

at his stomach. He pitched  forward on his face and lay very still. 

Cranston raced to the curb, to his car. He made no effort to carry  the unconscious Charlie Horn with him.

Before he kidnapped him for  questioning, there were certain necessary things to accomplish inside  The

Shadow's car. 

Unlocking the door, Cranston busied himself in the back of the car.  He worked fast, knowing that the snarl of

gunfire had awakened  thunderous echoes in the deserted street. Police would arrive soon.  Cranston had no

desire to be detained for questioning or to allow  Charlie Horn to be taken by police. 

Opening a secret recess under the rear seat, Cranston removed the  black cloak and slouch hat of The Shadow.

He also took from a small  drawer a tiny glass capsule filled with a colorless liquid. The walls  of that capsule

were frail. Cranston pocketed it very carefully. 

With a rolled blanket under a heavy lap robe, he faked the presence  of a man on the rear floor. He planted his

gun at the edge of the  bundle, as if a man hidden under the lap robe were pointing the weapon  at the front

seat. Over the gun barrel, Cranston fixed the slouch hat  of The Shadow. 

It was done almost in an instant. To a casual eye, the bundle on  the floor suggested that The Shadow was

hidden as a grim stowaway in  Cranston's car. 

Cranston raced to the front seat and started the engine. Then he  did a peculiar thing. He uttered the word:

"No!" in a voice utterly  unlike his own. The sound seemed to come from the edge of the lap robe  in the rear. 

Satisfied with his ventriloquism, he darted across the sidewalk and  picked up the senseless body of Charlie

Horn. He was just in time. As  he retreated with his burden to the car, a cop pounded into view around  the

corner. 

Before the cop could see anything clearly, Cranston drove him to  cover in a cellar opening with a hail of

bullets. He fired over the  cop's head. It gave him a few seconds' respite. 

By the time the cop peered cautiously from concealment, Cranston  had Charlie Horn propped in the front seat

of the car. Cranston's foot  kicked the gas pedal. The car darted away. 

It vanished through the night at terrific speed. 


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TWENTY minutes later, in a totally different neighborhood, Charlie  Horn recovered consciousness in the

front seat. The car was parked.  Horn was still dazed, but not too dazed to recognize the aristocratic  face of

Lamont Cranston beside him. 

Cranston questioned him sternly. But Horn's lips closed stubbornly.  He refused to talk. 

"All right," Cranston said calmly, a gun pointed steadily at the  crook. "If you won't talk, we'll try the police.

I'm going to hand you  over to the police for attempted murder!" 

"No!" 

The sound came from the rear seat. Cranston turned with a simulated  cry of amazement. So did Charlie Horn.

He saw a menacing gun barrel and  a black slouch hat at the edge of the bulky lap robe on the floor. His

fuddled mind worked exactly the way Cranston hoped it would. "The  Shadow!" he gasped. 

"Drop your gun, Mr. Cranston!" a metallic voice from the rear  ordered. "I'm taking Horn myself! I have

methods to make this rat talk   and I don't want police interference!" 

Cranston obeyed the voice he himself was creating. He dropped his  gun over the back of the seat in apparent

panic. He also dropped the  fragile glass capsule which was concealed in his left hand. It smashed  soundlessly

on the floor. 

No liquid spurted from it. The liquid was converted to gas the  moment it was exposed to the air. The gas

swirled upward in invisible  fog, directly into the panting mouth and nostrils of Charlie Horn. 

Half dazed, he was an easy victim. He had time only for a single  choked cry. Then his head sagged. He

collapsed against the tense figure  of Cranston. 

The Shadow's lips were tightly shut. He had held his breath from  the moment he had broken that glass

capsule. A quick thrust opened the  car door. The invisible vapor was dissipated by the cold breeze from

outside. The gas was highly volatile. In a few more seconds it was  possible to breathe without danger. 

Cranston closed the door. He was parked in a deserted spot. No one  had witnessed his strange deception. His

flight from the cop had been  successful. The cop had failed to note his license number. Charlie Horn  was

again unconscious. 

But with an important difference. Horn had been completely  deceived. He thought that he had been captured

from Lamont Cranston by  The Shadow. When he awoke later in the place where Cranston intended to  take

him for questioning, no power on earth would make Horn believe  that Cranston and The Shadow were the

same person. 

That was exactly what Cranston wanted. His laughter made a sibilant  sound of triumph. It was the grim mirth

of The Shadow. 

CHAPTER VI. GREETINGS FROM HELL

CHARLIE HORN emerged dazedly from unconsciousness. He was lying  flat on his back on a padded floor.

To his groping hands, the floor  covering felt like the padding used on the inside of moving vans to  protect

furniture from damage. 


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Horn's face was soaking wet. He could smell a pungent odor in his  nostrils. A quick sniff and he identified it.

Ammonia. 

The reek of the liquid cleared his brain. He remembered now what  had happened  or thought he did. He had

tried to kill Lamont Cranston.  The Shadow had captured him from Cranston! 

The memory brought Charlie Horn staggering to his feet. He clawed  for his gun, half expecting it to be

missing. It wasn't. A quick  inspection showed him that it was fully loaded. 

He eyed the chamber in which he had recovered his senses. It was  swathed entirely in black. The padded

floor covering was inky. So were  the hangings that draped the four walls and the ceiling. A dim light  glowed

in the ceiling. The glass that protected the bulb was stained  black. The illumination that streamed downward

held a darkgrayish hue. 

There was no sign of any doors or windows. 

Instinctively, Horn groped in his vest pocket. The gesture was a  matter of habit. In that pocket he always kept

a supply of chewing gum   gum that could not be purchased at any candy store. It was wrapped in  a plain

covering. 

When he chewed it, Horn always felt an excess of brutal strength.  It sharpened his mind and made it cruel

and cunning. 

His hand emerged empty from his pocket. The drugged gum had been  taken from him. His loss made him grit

his teeth with anger. 

The cry he uttered brought an instant echo. The sound of soft  laughter mocked him. It came from a spot

across the shrouded room,  almost directly in front of him. 

Horn could have sworn he saw a section of the velvet black drapes  that lined the wall twitch a little, as if a

hand behind it had brushed  at the fabric. 

He fired instantly. He saw a hole leap through the velvet. Then the  roar of his shot died into silence. 

Charlie Horn sprang forward and tore the drape away. There was no  human being, behind it. All that was

visible was a steel wall. The slug  that Horn had fired through the black curtain had flattened itself  against the

wall. It lay in a warm, shapeless chunk on the floor. 

Horn began to whimper. His terror returned. He was not used to  fighting against a foe who had the ability to

vanish into thin air. He  searched every inch of the wall and could find no trace of an opening.  No door. No

window. 

The other three sides of the room were the same. Flat steel,  shrouded by black drapes that hung from the

ceiling to the padded  floor. 

A shriek of rage came from Horn. He was beginning to miss the acrid  taste of the chewing gum that made

him cruel and strong. 

The Shadow knew this. He intended to break Horn's will and force  him to confess certain facts. The theft of

the drugged gum was his  first bit of scientific torture. There would be more torture if Horn  continued

obstinate. 


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Suddenly, the blacktinted light in the ceiling went out. The room  became pitchdark. In the blackness, faint

whispering sounds became  audible. The words could not be understood. They seemed to come from  spots all

over the room. 

Horn heard a whisper behind the curtain at which he had fired. It  was answered from a point opposite. The

room seemed filled with unseen  figures jeering at the captured crook. 

A whisper sounded behind Horn's shuddering back. 

He whirled. His fingers closed on empty space. Wildly, he fired his  gun. It roared three times. He knew he

had hit nothing. But at the  crash of his gun, the horrible whispering ceased. Horn thought his  torture had

ended. 

Then light came again to the room. 

It was clear and white, the whitest light Horn had ever seen before  in his life. It came from what looked like a

crystal ball. The ball was  about six inches in circumference. It hung from the black ceiling on  what looked

like a sliver chain. 

There was a face visible in the depths of that translucent ball.  The face of The Shadow! A calm, quiet voice

spoke! 

"Who ordered you to kill Lamont Cranston? Confess!" 

Horn clamped his lips. 

"Was it David Chester?" 

Horn was silent. The gun in his hand began to lift slyly toward the  crystal ball that hung high above his head,

with the face of The Shadow  within its silvery depths. 

Suddenly, Horn's lifting hand froze. The crystal became suddenly  empty. The face of The Shadow was gone! 

But only for an instant. In its place appeared a blackgloved hand.  The hand was held palm uppermost. On

that black palm, lying there like  a tempting mirage to the tortured man below, was a stick of chewing gum

sealed in a plain wrapper. 

With a spasm of rage, Charlie Horn emptied his gun into the heart  of that glowing sphere above his head. 

Bullets ripped through the ball. The sphere swayed on its silver  chain. But no holes appeared in its lustrous

surface. It was like a  strange sort of gelatin. It took the impact of the bullets, allowed  them to whiz through

and clang against the steel ceiling. 

But the sphere itself showed no hurt. Nor was the gloved hand in  the depths of the globe harmed. It faded

gradually from sight and was  replaced by the calm features of The Shadow. 

"Confess!" 

CHARLIE HORN was disarmed now. He had fired every bullet in his  gun. But he had no intention of

talking. 


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The Shadow realized it. Sitting quietly in a spot outside those  four steel walls, with his image reflected in the

crystal ball that  hung on a liver chain from the ceiling, The Shadow divined the reason  for Horn's stubborn

behavior. 

Horn was afraid to betray what he knew and incur the wrath of the  unknown criminal leader he served. 

The Shadow wasted no time. The light in the crystal ball began to  get stronger and stronger. It was like the

blinding stab of the sun. It  flooded every nook and cranny of the chamber with an intolerable  brilliance. 

No matter where Horn crouched, he was unable to avoid it. Closing  his eyes availed him nothing. Light beat

in dizzy waves through his  eyelids until he could feel it pricking at his brain like the stab of a  sharp lance. 

Then it stopped. Blinded, he waited. Nothing happened. Horn's sobs  were the only sound in the blackdraped

chamber. Gradually, he found  himself able to see. Then he heard a sound. It came from the crystal  overhead. 

It was a low, musical whistle. The sound of the whistle increased.  It got shriller, louder. The volume of

increasing sound put Charlie  Horn's teeth on edge. He could feel his skull vibrate with that hellish  clamor.

And it kept steadily getting louder and still louder! 

He jammed his fingers in his ears. Useless. The shrill screaming  penetrated as if his ears were wide open. It

was like the drill of a  dentist, penetrating with agonizing force into the tissue of Horn's  brain. 

He flung himself flat to the floor. He rolled over and over, vainly  trying to shut out the unbearable sound. He

felt himself going mad. 

His lips opened and he shouted. The sound from the crystal made his  words inaudible. But The Shadow,

watching his criminal captive from  outside the chamber, sensed that Horn's will was broken. 

The hellish sound of the shrill noise ceased as suddenly as the  dazzling bright light had vanished. Charlie

Horn's groaning voice  became audible. 

"For God's sake, stop! I'll... I'll talk!" 

"Confess!" came the grim voice of The Shadow. 

"What do you want to know?" 

"The name of your employer." 

"David Chester." 

"How did he trick John Harmon and force him to commit suicide?" 

"He used secret ink. Two kinds  white and black." 

"Did Chester invent this ink?" 

"No. I brought it to him from  someone else." 

"Who?" 


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Charlie Horn's face became suddenly livid with terror. He could  barely mouth the three words. 

"I don't know." 

The Shadow believed him. The quiet voice from the crystal asked  another question. 

"You act as a gobetween from Chester to this criminal chief whose  identity you don't know?" 

"Yes." 

"This unknown man gives you money and drugs and orders, which you  transmit to David Chester at the

latter's office?" 

"Yes." 

"But you've never seen his face?" 

"No. It's pitchdark at the meeting place where I get my orders." 

"Where is this place?" 

Charlie Horn hesitated. There was terror in his face at the thought  of betraying a supercriminal. But his fear

of The Shadow was even  stronger. 

He whispered a street and an address. It was on the upper West  Side. The address was that of a Chinese

restaurant. The restaurant  occupied the second floor of a twostory brick building. It was in the  restaurant

that Charlie Horn made contact with Chester's invisible  chief. 

"How?" The Shadow barked. 

"There are dining booths in the rear for special customers. He  waits in the last one on the left. That is, I wait,

and then he comes   I don't know how!" 

"Is there a password necessary to get into this last booth on the  left?" 

"Yes. It changes every week." 

"What's the word for this week?" 

"Shanghai!" Horn gasped. 

THE crystal went suddenly dark. A cool breeze seemed to blow softly  on Horn's tortured face. With it came

the scent of fresh grass and  budding flowers. It was so lovely that Horn drew a deep breath.  Another. He

didn't realize that his senses were fading. 

The soft padding of the floor muffled his collapse. There was not a  single bruise on his body. The torture he

had received from The Shadow  had been scientific. A matter of nerves and senses. It had been  bloodless and

efficient. 

A half hour later, the boundandgagged body of Charlie Horn lay on  a cheap bed in a furnished room on the

lower East Side. The Shadow, in  the guise of a whitehaired old man, had taken the crook there. 


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He explained in a piping voice to a frowzy landlady that the man  with the overbright eyes and the dragging

feet was a nephew of his. 

The landlady eyed The Shadow's money and asked no questions. It was  that kind of place. Having locked the

window and drawn the shade, The  Shadow tied and gagged his victim. When he left the rooming house, the

key to the locked room was in his pocket. 

The old man shambled to a drugstore and entered a phone booth. He  called police headquarters and asked for

Inspector Joe Cardona. 

When Joe answered the call, his jaw dropped. He was listening to  the mysterious voice of The Shadow! The

Shadow had an amazing message  for Cardona. He informed him that he had located the killer who had  tried

to murder a street boy that Lamont Cranston had befriended. He  told where the killer could be found. 

"Wait!" Cardona cried. "I don't understand. I " 

He found himself talking to an empty wire. When a radio car drove  with screaming siren to the drugstore

from which the call had come,  there was no sign of the whitehaired old man. 

He was on his way uptown in a fast car that was licensed in the  name of Lamont Cranston. 

The Shadow parked a half block away from the address that had been  furnished him by Charlie Horn.

Turning the corner, he saw a flashing  electric sign that advertised a Chinese restaurant on the second floor  of

a twostory brick building. 

Horn had told the truth. 

The old man climbed a flight of worn stairs to the second floor. A  Chinese waiter smiled at him and gestured

toward a nearby table. 

Shaking his head, the old man continued to the back of the  restaurant. A partition separated the large room in

front from a  smaller area in the rear. Behind the partition a narrow aisle separated  a double row of closed

dining booths. 

The old man headed straight for the last booth on the left. Before  he reached it he was stopped. A fat Chinese,

who had hurried from  behind the cashier's cage, was staring wickedly at the old man. 

"Out of order," he said. "No can be used." 

The old man's lips brushed the yellow ear. 

"Shanghai," he whispered. 

The result was magical. The fat Chinaman grinned suddenly. He waved  away scowling waiters who had

begun to crowd closer. With fawning  ceremony, he conducted The Shadow to the last booth on the left. He

unlocked the door with a flourish, closing it quickly as The Shadow  stepped inside. 

The key grated in the lock. The Shadow was a prisoner! 

But he was not worried. He had expected that. If an unknown master  of crime used this spot as a meeting

place, he would hardly risk the  danger of interruption during a conference. 


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At first, The Shadow could see nothing inside the booth. The bulb  in the ceiling was either defective or

disconnected. Then he turned on  a small electric torch he had brought with him. It showed four bare  walls, a

table, two chairs. 

The table filled the whole width of the booth. It was impossible to  step around it. The outside chair, where

The Shadow stood, was riveted  to the floor. So was the table. 

Suspicious, The Shadow leaned over the table and tried the inner  chair. This one was not nailed down. He

was able to tilt it from the  floor. But the moment he had done so, he realized he had made a serious  blunder.

The legs of the chair which he had tilted were metal. There  was a plate of metal in the floor on which they

had rested. 

Instantly, The Shadow guessed the significance of what he had done.  Those metal chair legs and the plate

underneath were grim proof to him  that an electrical connection existed between floor and chair. By  moving

the chair, he had broken the connection. 

It stood to reason that Charlie Horn would never tamper with the  furniture. He knew what to expect. The

Shadow didn't. By his action, he  had warned a supercriminal that a stranger was in the dining booth. 

There was no chance to retreat. Nor would The Shadow have done so,  even if the booth door behind him was

unlocked. He was determined to  identify the face of his unknown foe. 

THE SHADOW didn't sit in the chair that was nailed to the floor. He  suspected there was purpose in that

peculiar immovability. 

When he snapped off his torch, he noticed that behind the chair in  the darkness, at a point almost in line with

where a man's head would  be, was a strange blur of paint on the inside of the booth door. 

The blur seemed to glow faintly, as if a small amount of phosphorus  had been mixed with the paint. 

In pitchdarkness, The Shadow crawled under the table. He waited,  every sense alert. 

Minutes passed. Not a sound came to his listening ears. And then,  suddenly, without any physical evidence to

support his belief, The  Shadow had a strong certainty that someone was now inside the booth  with him! 

He listened for the slight sound of a man's controlled breathing,  but could hear nothing. He could feel the hair

bristle on the back of  his scalp. He held his own breath, to keep from betraying his position  under the table. 

Suddenly, there was a rasping snarl in the darkness: 

"Greetings to The Shadow  from hell!" 

CHAPTER VII. UNDERGROUND CHALLENGE

THE snarl of that hoarse voice was drowned out by another sound. 

A faint hiss, like a spurt of escaping steam, became audible. Or  perhaps it was the fizz of charged water. The

Shadow, crouched unseen  beneath the table, couldn't be sure. 

The two images he thought of were the first that came to his tense  mind. The soft purring of steam  the faint


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hiss that a bottle of club  soda makes when the cap is suddenly removed. 

The Shadow suspected the nature of the attack. 

He uttered a choked cry of agony. But the cry didn't came from  beneath the table where he was crouching. He

threw his voice as  accurately as he had when he had been in his automobile with the  captured Charlie Horn.

His cry echoed from the immovable chair where he  was supposed to be sitting. 

Silence followed. The Shadow listened. He had no wish to engage in  battle in this unfavorable spot with an

unseen adversary. The odds were  too strongly against him. Outside the tiny dining booth were scores of

Chinese waiters. Everyone of them was adept in the use of jujitsu and  the knife. A direct attack now could

have only one outcome  the death  of The Shadow. 

Besides, he had a more intelligent plan in mind. 

It was obvious that the killer had some secret method of entering  and leaving the dining booth by the inner

wall. The sound of his  withdrawal would give The Shadow the clue. 

By following the trail of the unknown genius of crime, The Shadow  might be able to track him to his secret

headquarters and be able, with  a greater degree of success, to uncover his identity. 

He waited in utter darkness for a betraying noise. 

Suddenly, a queer smell began to tickle his nostrils. The odor of  scorched wood! But he paid no attention to

the smell. He guessed what  had caused it. The certainty of a different fact filled him with  amazement and

dismay. 

Except for his crouched body beneath the table, the dining booth  was now empty! His unseen enemy was

gone! Without a single sound, his  assailant had withdrawn as deftly as he had entered. The Shadow  realized

this as clearly as if he could see every nook and cranny of  the dark alcove. 

He rose to his feet and snapped on the light of his torch. One  glance and he shuddered. 

The inner side of the door behind the fixed chair where The Shadow  had been intended to sit, was sheathed

with a strip of metal. The metal  was wet where brownish liquid had splashed against it. The liquid had  run

down the metal and dripped to the floor. 

Grayish vapor rose from it. The wooden floor was burned and pitted  by the stuff. It was this charred wood

that the nostrils of The Shadow  had smelled. 

Acid! A caustic and corrosive acid, the identity of which The  Shadow easily recognized. Had he been sitting

in the nailed chair, he  would have been hopelessly blinded. He would have gone through life  with a face like

a mask of horror! 

He was not surprised by the method of attack. Cruelty was the  hallmark of the criminal in this strange case. 

It tied in with the attack on the Harmons. It recalled the wanton  slaughter of Hubert Jackson's dog and the

hellish cruelty that had  maimed an innocent street boy. It had nearly smashed the legs of Lamont  Cranston to

bloody pulp in the shaft of a rising sidewalk elevator. 

Someone with a warped lust for evil was behind this whole cycle of  horror. And now he had vanished! 


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The Shadow stared at the table in the center of the dining booth. A  familiar looking leatherbound book lay

there. It was a duplicate of  the book that Lamont Cranston had seen on the floor of Hubert Jackson's  library

after the death of Jackson's pet dog and the slashing of his  valuable paintings. 

A Bible! 

THE SHADOW opened the religious tome at the proper page. There was  no difficulty finding the place. A

silk bookmark indicated it. A line  of red crayon had been drawn around one of the parables in the New

Testament. 

It was the Parable of the Uninvited Guest. 

The Shadow recognized the sneer in that challenge. His clever  substitution of himself for Charlie Horn had

availed him nothing. He  had been checkmated by a foe as smart as himself. 

And Charlie Horn had paid for his unwilling confession with his  life! 

The Shadow realized Horn's doom when he read the newspaper  clipping. The clipping was tucked inside The

Bible. It read as follows: 

The body of a man cruelly mangled was found early this morning on 

the tracks of the East Side subway, just south of the Bowling Green 

Station. Police believe he was an underworld stool pigeon who  attempted 

to betray the chief he worked for. They had expected to find him in  a 

furnished room on the lower East Side, but when they arrived the  man was 

gone. 

The tip the police received is reported to have come from a  busybody 

detective who calls himself The Shadow. The stupid blunder of The  Shadow 

has made him lose face  in more ways than one! 

The Shadow looked grim at the vicious pun. Had the corrosive acid  touched him he would indeed, have lost

face! Then he noticed something  strange about the printed clipping in his hand. It was dated for  tomorrow! 

It had been handprinted on rough paper by a man with a sardonic  sense of humor. A little sneering morsel to

toss the bewildered police. 

The Shadow pocketed the clipping. He turned his attention to the  inner wall of the alcove. It was obvious that

an exit of some sort  existed. But where? And how was it operated? It had been done in the  dark without

sound. Not the slightest squeak had betrayed the arrival  or departure of the criminal. It smacked of magic. 

The Shadow didn't believe in magic. What one man could do, another  could do also. 

Sensitive fingers went over every inch of that inner wall. The  result was complete failure. 


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The Shadow tried to reconstruct the method that must have been  used. The man had hurled acid at the chair

opposite the table.  Therefore, he must have stood with his back to the wall. 

In that case, he'd have scarcely had time to whirl and explore the  wall behind him with his fingertips. He had

escaped with extraordinary  speed. Some other method must have been used. 

Could he have used his feet? 

The thought of the man's feet emphasized an important fact to The  Shadow's keen mind. There had been no

sound of any kind. Surely, a pair  of shoes should have made some noise! Leather should have squeaked.  Even

rubber soles would make a tiny thump when they were shifted  swiftly by a man in a terrific hurry to maim a

victim and vanish. 

Had the criminal been barefooted? 

The Shadow believed he had the true answer. He removed his shoes  and socks, tied the laces of the shoes

together and slung them about  his neck. With his back to the wall, facing the spot where the acid had  been

hurled, he took approximately the position that must have been  taken by the unseen criminal in the dark. 

Could the edge of the table hold the secret of a noiseless panel in  the rear wall? 

The Shadow tried everything in reach of his questing fingertips. He  even squirmed around and groped at the

wall behind him with his left  hand. He was assuming that the acid thrower had been righthanded. 

Failure! 

An ordinary investigator would have quit at this point. But not The  Shadow. Stubbornly, he continued to

search for something he knew must  be found with patience and intelligence. He shifted his feet, moved  along

the mocking surface of that blank rear wall. 

It was one of his bare feet that gave him the clue. He felt a tiny  sensation of coldness against the flesh under

his toes. It felt like  the smooth head of a nail. 

He looked down. It was a nail. A nail with an unusually large head,  that rested flush with the worn surface of

the wooden floor. With a  gasp of triumph, The Shadow dropped to his knees. 

He wondered if there were other nails of the same kind in the  floor. He found another. It was about six inches

to the left of the one  he had stepped on with his bare foot. 

They were the only two nails in the entire floor. The Shadow proved  that by examining every inch of the

worn boards. Faint laughter bubbled  from his lips. He divined that he had the explanation of a magical

disappearance. 

The sense of touch that had guided a criminal standing in  pitchdarkness with his back to the inner wall, was

the feel of two  tiny nailheads against the flesh of his bare feet. Knowing where the  nails were, the criminal

could easily locate them in the dark. The  double pressure probably worked an electrical connection. 

The Shadow tried it. No sound was audible. But when he turned  toward the wall behind him, there was an

oblong opening in its surface! 

IT was pitchdark beyond that opening, except for the glow of The  Shadow's torch. He peered in. 


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He was gazing into a narrow corridor, scarcely wider than the width  of a man's body. It had been built into

the wall that separated the  Chinese restaurant from the adjoining building. 

The Shadow stepped through. Instantly, the wall panel slid back  into position. The Shadow had duplicated

the magic vanishing of his  unknown foe. 

He squeezed silently on bare feet along that strange passage inside  the wall. It led in the direction of the front

of the building. He knew  that, unseen, he was paralleling the line of dining booths at the rear  of the Chinese

restaurant. 

Then he came to the staircase. 

The staircase was as narrow as the passage. The steps led downward  in a steep slant. Descending, The

Shadow realized he was now on the  groundfloor level. He recalled that there was an empty store adjoining

the restaurant building. It had whitewashed windows and a "For Rent"  sign hanging inside the glass of the

locked front door. 

The bottom of the secret staircase ended in a blank barrier. But  The Shadow had now learned the secret of

passing through solid walls.  He eyed the floor by the light from his torch. There were two nail  heads flush

with the wood; he placed a bare sole on each of them. 

Again, a noiseless panel slid aside. The Shadow stepped out of his  narrow prison into an empty store. 

His memory had been correct. The windows of the store were coated  with a thick layer of soap. No one on

the sidewalk outside could look  in. The store had been empty for a long time. There was dust on the  walls,

cobwebs in the corners. But The Shadow noticed a grim fact the  moment his eyes surveyed the floor. 

There was no trace of dust underfoot. Someone had gone to the  trouble of sweeping that dingy floor

absolutely clean. 

The Shadow knew why. He had hoped to find a trail of footprints in  the dust. That hope was now denied him.

His criminal foe seemed to  outthink him at every stage of the game. The man was a genius who  overlooked

nothing. Only the shrewd skill of The Shadow had enabled him  to stick to the trail thus far. 

He put on his socks and shoes again. The need for caution was now  gone. 

He stared at the back of the "For Rent" sign that hung in a tiny  cleared space on the glass of the soaped door

of the store. He'd have  liked to turn the placard and read the address of the owner or the  agent of the

premises. But he was afraid to. 

There might be a furtive watcher outside on the sidewalk. The  turning placard would warn criminal eyes that

someone was inside the  empty store. The truth of The Shadow's amazing escape from  disfigurement and

death would become known too soon. 

Turning, The Shadow retreated to the rear of the store. He found a  back door and tried the knob softly. The

door was not locked. 

Opening it on a cautious crack, The Shadow stared into the  blackness of a rear yard. Behind the yard were the

brick walls of a  towering warehouse. To the left was an alley that evidently connected  with the side street. 


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The Shadow slipped into the cool air. There was no sign of a  lurking foe. No one attacked the stealthy figure

of the old man who  slipped silently through the alley to its exit. He squirmed past a pile  of empty ash cans

and walked with shambling steps toward a car that was  parked at the curb halfway up the block. 

The old man got into the car. A moment later, he had disappeared  forever. In his place behind the wheel sat a

man with faultlessly  tailored clothes and the mark of wealth and distinction. 

Lamont Cranston. 

He drove slowly around the corner and past the front of the empty  store. He didn't halt the car, but his eyes

missed nothing of the  placard that hung behind the glass of the door. It was the only clean  spot in the entire

soaped area of the glass. The placard contained  nothing but the words: "For Rent." 

The lack of the name and address of a realestate agent had been  expected by The Shadow. The sign itself

was a device to explain to  curious passersby why the store remained without a tenant so long. The  Shadow

suspected that if a legitimate tenant applied  and could locate  anyone to do business with  the rent

demanded would be ridiculously  high. 

The store was intended to remain vacant. 

LAMONT CRANSTON speeded up his car. When he halted, finally, it was  outside a drugstore. He went in,

and made a lowtoned telephone call to  an unlisted number. 

He was answered at once by the dry, unemotional voice of Burbank,  The Shadow's contact man. To Burbank,

The Shadow gave swift orders.  Burbank repeated them accurately. His job was to transmit those orders  to

Clyde Burke, ace news hawk of the Daily Classic. 

In approximately a half hour, Clyde would appear at the office of  Inspector Cardona in police headquarters. 

Lamont Cranston got back into his car and drove swiftly to the same  address. Cardona was delighted by the

unexpected visit. Cranston was an  old friend of Joe's. He had a habit of dropping in at odd times.  Cardona

assumed that Cranston had been bored at some expensive social  function and had visited him for an

oldfashioned chat. 

They were still talking when Clyde Burke arrived. He came in with a  rush and an air of grim excitement. He

knew Cranston and gave him a  nod, but it was purely a formal glance. His excited talk was directed  wholly at

the startled Cardona. 

What Clyde said brought Cardona bounding to his feet. A mysterious  phone call had come into the Daily

Classic office. The night city  editor was away from his desk and Clyde Burke had taken the call. It  was a

confidential report of a murder. 

"Murder?" Cardona growled. 

"Yes. Somebody in a disguised voice said that there was a man's  body lying in the subway. On the tracks just

south of the Bowling Green  station. You know  where the tunnel begins under the East River." 

"Did you trace the phone call?" 

"I tried to. No use. It came from a public booth in a cheap little  store uptown. When I investigated, the guy in

the store said the man  who made the call had left in a hurry." 


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"What did the fellow look like? Did the clerk remember?" 

Clyde glanced at Cardona with a wry smile. 

"He gave me a rather complete description. But I don't know what  good it's going to do us. The guy that made

the call, according to the  clerk, looked a lot like Mr. Cranston here." 

Joe Cardona's eager face fell. He uttered a growl of disgust. 

"Nuts! That isn't going to help us a bit!" 

"I'm afraid not," Cranston agreed dryly. "Crime is something for  which I have no aptitude whatever. I had

been hoping for a quiet talk  with Joe about nothing in particular. And now " 

He shrugged with an expression of complete boredom. 

"Let's go," Cardona snapped to the Daily Classic reporter. "Want to  come along, Mr. Cranston?" 

"Anything to break the monotony," Cranston yawned. 

They made the run to the Bowling Green station of the East Side  subway in record time. On the way

downtown Cardona picked up two cops  for an escort. They raced down the stairs to the subway platform, past

the startled eyes of the man in the change booth. They descended to the  tracks. The cops snapped on their

pocket flashes. 

It wasn't hard to find the victim. He lay between the tracks, a  quarter mile south of the station. He was

horribly mutilated. It looked  as if train after train had run over his torn body. 

But the theory of an accident was not a sensible one. The dead man  could hardly have crawled to the

sheltered spot between the tracks  where they found his corpse. 

The gashes on his body suggested systematic torture, rather than  the steel wheels of a train. 

There was no way to identify the man. Only Lamont Cranston realized  that the hideously mutilated victim

was Charlie Horn. He had proof of  it when he picked up a tiny scrap of paper that lay under the bloody

bundle in the dark tunnel. 

No one saw Cranston pick up that scrap of paper. Cardona was  uttering swift commands to the two cops.

Clyde Burke had turned away  from the horror of the sight. Lamont Cranston slipped the paper into  his

pocket, after a glance at the brief sentence that had been typed on  it. 

The message gave him a cold feeling of rage. There was sneering  challenge in that note. It was a sneer that

was directed at The Shadow,  and a mocking requiem sermon for the death of Charlie Horn. 

Horn had committed the unpardonable sin of the underworld. He had  squealed to The Shadow. He had tried

to betray an unknown genius of  crime under the compulsion of The Shadow's scientific torture of bright  light

and unbearable sound. 

The typed sentence on the paper in Lamont Cranston's pocket was a  criminal reply. It was a quotation from

The Bible. The message read: 


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"The way of the transgressor is hard." 

CHAPTER VIII. THE CLOSED CIRCLE

ON the following morning, Lamont Cranston put thoughts of crime out  of his head in order to attend to a

humane duty. 

The body of John Harmon's widow had been taken to the cemetery and  laid gently in its last resting place.

Cranston had attended the  funeral with Hubert Jackson and one or two close friends of the family. 

He had met Bob and Jane Harmon, the son and daughter, who had  arrived home from college. He took a

quick liking to both of them. 

They were stunned by the swiftness of the double tragedy that had  made them orphans. But Cranston,

watching the tall Bob and his lovely  sister, realized they were both thoroughbreds. They said nothing of the

fact that they were now practically penniless. Their father's life  insurance policy had been used to wipe out

his debts. 

Some of the fifty thousand dollars which had been received from  David Chester went for funeral expenses. A

lot more went for additional  obligations of John Harmon, about which he had forgotten and which had  to be

met after his death. 

Cranston was well aware of the financial plight of Bob and Jane,  when he spoke gently with them in the quiet

living room of the Harmon  home. 

He mentioned the charity fund which he said he had taken up. The  "fund" to which Cranston referred was a

white lie on his part. After  the attack on Hubert Jackson had terrified the lawyer and induced him  to withdraw

from the chairmanship of the fund, Cranston had made no  effort to collect more money. He didn't want to

expose anyone else to  peril. 

Every penny of the substantial amount which Lamont Cranston now  offered as a free gift to Bob and Jane

Harmon came from his own pocket. 

His gift was politely refused. Bob shook his handsome head. 

"It's good of you, sir," Bob said huskily, "and we'll never forget  your generosity. But Jane and I can't take it." 

"Why not?" 

"You tell him, Jane." 

"We've talked it over, Bob and I," Jane said, her sweet smile  making her look very lovely. "We prefer to

stand on our own feet." 

"What about your college careers? Bob wants to be an engineer. You  have years of medical training before

you in order to qualify to be a  physician." 

"That's all finished," Jane said. "We'd both rather be independent,  earn our own way. Bob already has a job.

I'm trying to get one, too.  Later on, we'll be ready to go back to college with money we've earned  for

ourselves." 


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Cranston's admiration for Bob and Jane Harmon increased. But he was  puzzled by the quickness with which

Bob had found employment. Jobs were  scarce. How had he been so lucky? 

"I really had two offers," Bob said smilingly. "One was from David  Chester." 

Lamont Cranston's face became expressionless, as he said. "Did you  take it?" 

"No sir. To tell the truth, I didn't like Mr. Chester's looks very  much. He was too sleek, too eager to hire me. I

didn't trust him.  Besides, I couldn't help thinking it was Chester who indirectly caused  my father's death even

though Chester, of course was innocent of any  blame." 

Cranston didn't say anything. 

"I'm glad you took the other job, Bob," Jane said. 

"What other job?" Cranston asked with quick interest. "Who hired  you?" 

"I had a rare piece of luck. I was hired by none other than Mr.  Benedict Stark." 

"Benedict Stark!" Cranston's interest changed to astonished wonder.  "Do you know Mr. Stark?" 

"No, sir. He sent for me through one of his secretaries. He said he  had read about the deaths of father and

mother and felt sorry for me.  He offered me a wonderful salary to start with, and a chance to train  myself to

be one of his secretaries. Naturally, I took the offer at  once." 

"Naturally," Cranston echoed in a queer voice. 

Benedict Stark! What in the name of all that was mysterious had  brought him into this tangled case? 

BENEDICT STARK was probably the richest man in America, which made  him the richest man in the world.

Cranston, who was himself a  millionaire, was not in the class of Benedict Stark. 

Stark owned railways and steamships, factories and mills all over  the United States. His investment company

on Wall Street was not  rivaled. He was a billionaire. 

And yet, with all this wealth and power, Benedict Stark was  literally the man nobody knew. 

He had an aversion to newspaper publicity. His picture had never  been printed in the social columns or in the

Sunday rotogravures. Stark  attended no public functions. When he traveled, it was always by  special train or

by private yacht. 

His huge mansion in Manhattan was a showplace. But no one except a  select few friends of the billionaire

had ever been inside its palatial  doors. 

Cranston, who went everywhere and met everybody who amounted to  anything, had never laid eyes on

Benedict Stark. 

He felt a queer twinge of uneasiness at this peculiar offer of help  to Bob Harmon. Stark had never, so far as

Cranston knew, contributed a  penny to charity. He was interested only in himself and the piling up  of more

dollars to swell his already enormous fortune. 


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Why should a man like that suddenly go out of his way to befriend  an orphaned young college man, a lad

with no particular training for  business life? 

There was no sensible answer to it. 

Lamont Cranston kept his uneasiness to himself. He congratulated  Bob, advised him to accept the job. He left

the Harmon house as soon as  possible and went back to the Cobalt Club. He walked in order to have  time to

think about this new and unexpected development. 

What did the strange kindness of Benedict Stark mean? Was it  connected with the peculiar chain of events

that had made the  newspapers refer to the Harmon family as the "Unlucky Harmons"? Was  Stark in any way

behind the criminal attacks that had begun with the  sale of John Harmon's business to David Chester? 

It seemed ridiculous. But to The Shadow, nothing connected with  crime was too ridiculous to investigate. 

He racked his brain to try to figure some way in which he might  meet Benedict Stark face to face. He wanted

to study this selfish  billionaire who had become so suddenly charitable toward Bob Harmon. 

He was unable to devise a scheme. With a grunt of annoyance, he  entered his room at the Cobalt Club. There

was a letter waiting for  him. When he opened it his jaw sagged. 

The note was from Benedict Stark! 

It was brief, but friendly. It was an invitation for Lamont  Cranston to call on Benedict Stark at the latter's

downtown office. The  Shadow read the note with narrowed eyes: 

DEAR CRANSTON: 

The pressure of business has hitherto denied me the pleasure of 

making your acquaintance. I'd like very much for you to come and  see me 

at my office. I have a practical reason for this belated request.  I'd 

like to accept a kindness from you  and to return one. 

With best personal wishes, 

BENEDICT STARK 

Cranston whistled softly as he stared at the note. What was this  peculiar reference to "a kindness"? What

kindness could Cranston  possibly perform for a man as wealthy and powerful as Stark? And on the  other

hand, what was Stark's interest in Lamont Cranston, a man he had  never before taken the trouble to meet? 

It sounded interesting. 

Cranston acted on the note at once. He hurried from the Cobalt Club  and got into his car. He drove downtown

to the towering skyscraper that  housed a few of the farflung business enterprises of Benedict Stark's

industrial empire. Stark was busy when Cranston arrived. He had to wait  in an outside office that seemed

almost as large as a railroad  terminal. While he sat there, his eyes were busy. 


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One fact struck him instantly. The employees who worked in the  outer office were certainly an unusual lot.

The Shadow had a queer  feeling that he had blundered by mistake into a Hollywood movie studio. 

The girls, who busied themselves with typewriters and adding  machines and filing cabinets were gorgeously

lovely. Their faces and  figures were something to look at. Anyone of them, Cranston thought  softly, could

without any trouble at all win a beauty contest by the  simple process of donning a tight onepiece garment

and facing the  dazzled eyes of a beauty judge. 

There were redheads, blondes and brunettes. They had poise and  charm. Cranston suspected that Benedict

Stark must pay these beauties  plenty to keep them satisfied with the humdrum jobs they where so  calmly

attending to. 

And the men, too, matched the girls. Not a single man was  middleaged. They answered telephones and

dictated correspondence like  a superior tribe of Greek gods. Bob Harmon, handsome as he was, was not  in

the class of these male office assistants of the great Benedict  Stark. 

Cranston was more eager than ever to get a look at Stark. He rose  with alacrity when he was finally

summoned to the billionaire's private  office. 

He received an instant shock. He found himself staring at what was  undoubtedly the ugliest man he had ever

seen in his life! 

STARK was seated at his desk dictating to his personal secretary.  He sat humped forward like a welldressed

ape. He glanced up briefly,  grimaced with what was intended to be a smile of welcome, and then went  on

with his rapid dictation. 

Cranston sat down in a nearby chair and watched Stark. The more he  stared at the billionaire, the more

amazing the man's ugliness became. 

His body was barrelchested, like a gorilla's. He was so short in  stature that his chair had extra long legs to

bring his head well above  the level of his desk. 

One of his arms was shorter than the other. Evidently the  malformation had occurred at birth. It made using

the left hand  difficult and awkward. But Stark continually used it to pick up papers  and to fiddle with pens

and pencils. It almost seemed as if he enjoyed  drawing attention to his deformity. 

His head was enormously large on a short neck. The weight of that  huge head made it sag forward toward his

chest. He had a jutting lower  lip, which gave him a sullen, unpleasant pout as he wrinkled his beady  eyes to

concentrate on the material he was dictating to his lovely  secretary. 

The girl made Benedict Stark's ugliness more hideous by merely  sitting next to him. 

Watching her, Cranston revised his enthusiastic approval of the  girls in the outer office. If they were queens

of loveliness, this girl  was an empress! She was, without exaggeration, the most gloriously  perfect beauty that

Cranston had ever seen. No woman he had ever beheld  on stage or screen, or in the most expensive

nightclubs, could compare  with this girl. 

She finished her task presently. Stark uttered a croaking murmur. 

"That will be all, Millicent. You may go." 


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She rose obediently. Cranston could detect no flaw in her from head  to foot as she walked gracefully to the

door. The room seemed dark and  dingy after she had gone. 

Benedict Stark laughed briefly. 

"Tell me, Cranston, what has impressed you most since you entered  my private office a moment ago? Be

honest about it, please." 

Cranston didn't hesitate a moment. He had gauged the billionaire's  character. He knew what Stark wanted to

hear. 

"Your ugliness," he said calmly. 

Stark threw back his head and laughed. His outthrust, pouting lip  quivered. He was pleased by what he heard.

A vain man, he was proud of  his ugliness. 

"I was afraid you'd refer to Millicent's beauty," he admitted. "She  is lovely, isn't she? She'd be in Hollywood

right now, if it were not  for the fact that I instantly double every offer Millicent receives  from movie

producers  and I will continue to do so indefinitely." 

His wrinkled eyes gleamed with sardonic amusement. 

"I keep Millicent here at my side to emphasize my own ugliness.  After a certain point has been reached,

ugliness becomes an art. Don't  you think so?" 

Cranston nodded politely. 

He was aware that behind the apparently aimless talk of Stark was a  cool, searching brain. Every change of

expression on Cranston's face  was being checked and analyzed. He felt those small eyes boring deep  into his

personality. Ordinarily, he prided himself on his poker face.  Now he wasn't so sure. He felt naked under the

searching gaze of Stark. 

Lamont Cranston had never before met a man whom he considered his  intellectual equal. That state of affairs

was no longer true. 

"You wish to do me a kindness, according to your note, Mr. Stark,"  Cranston reminded his host suavely. 

"So I do. And I hope in return to receive a kindness from you. I've  already performed my good deed. Permit

me to explain." 

His explanation was brief. He referred to his hiring of Bob Harmon  at a generous salary. He linked it with

Lamont Cranston's visit to him,  by alluding to the fact that Cranston had been publicly identified with  efforts

to aid the Harmon family. 

"I, too, wanted to help," Stark said smoothly, "but not by a gift  of money. I don't believe in charity, as you

perhaps know. A job and an  opportunity to climb the ladder of success are things that an  independent minded

lad like Bob Harmon can appreciate." 

Cranston had a feeling that Benedict Stark was jeering at him  behind the trite words he was uttering. 

"You mentioned a kindness I could do for you in exchange," Cranston  said curtly. 


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"True. And it is this. I am not a man to waste words getting to the  point. I'm very anxious to meet Kent

Allard. I've heard that you are  Kent Allard's best friend. I want you to introduce him to me." 

THE SHADOW tensed inwardly. But he managed to keep his lips curved  in a careless smile. Kent Allard

was a famous American aviator. It was  natural for Benedict Stark to desire to meet so famous a celebrity.

And  yet... 

Kent Allard was the Shadow! 

Where the name of Allard was a household word, few, if any, persons  knew he was The Shadow. 

The Shadow himself was a creature of darkness. When a public  appearance became necessary that

information on pending crime might be  obtained, The Shadow sometimes assumed the name and social

position of  Lamont Cranston. 

Was Benedict Stark suspicious of this state of affairs? Cranston  tested Stark with a vague reply. 

"I'll be very glad to tell my friend Kent Allard how anxious you  are to meet him." 

"I'm extremely interested in aviation," Stark continued. "Allard  has enjoyed the romance and adventure that

I've missed by being chained  to a business man's desk. I'd like to talk with him and ask him  technical

questions about flying that only a genius of aviation like  Allard could properly answer." 

"I'm sure I can arrange a meeting," Cranston replied. "At present,  Allard is in Washington. But he's flying to

New York in the next day or  so, for a brief stop before he goes on to Boston. It will be a delight  to tell him

you wish to meet him. I'll send him over to your home for a  brief visit." 

Stark shook his head to that. Something like a monkeyish grin  twisted his pouting lips. 

"That won't do," he murmured in a silky voice. "It would be only  half a pleasure. I want both of you to come!

I'm arranging a small  party at my home. You're entirely too modest, Mr. Cranston. As a world  traveler and

biggame hunger, you're quite a celebrity yourself. We'll  call it a date, eh? You shall bring Kent Allard and

introduce him  yourself to me and my guests." 

"I shall be very glad to," Cranston murmured. 

He could see he was being drawn into a trap. But there was nothing  to do but accept the ugly situation. 

He knew now why Benedict Stark had sent for him. If Stark's  suspicions about The Shadow were correct, he

was forcing an impossible  showdown. The Shadow would have to appear at the same time, in the same  place

in the role of two entirely different human beings! 

Could such magic be accomplished? The Shadow realized he had been  placed in a grim situation. And yet he

had to go through with it, if he  were to continue to play the role of Lamont Cranston in public with  impunity. 

He rose to his feet and excused himself. Stark rose, too. But he  detained his guest for a moment longer.

Waddling on his short legs, he  led Cranston to a sunlit window that overlooked the busy turmoil of New  York

harbor. 

It was a magnificent view. But Benedict Stark drew attention to  something closer. With a smile, he pointed to

the shadow of Cranston's  arm in the warm sunlight on the window sill. 


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"Are you interested in shadows?" 

"Not particularly," Cranston murmured. 

"I am. I'm quite an amateur photographer. I like to play with  photographic effects of light and shade. You, of

course, have been to  Africa as a hunter and explorer. Have you ever heard the amusing  African superstition

about a man and his shadow?" 

Cranston's lids dropped suddenly, to hide the gleam in his eyes.  His tone remained casual. 

"Oh, yes. The natives believe that if a man were to lose his  shadow, he would at the same time lose his life.

An amusing notion. Not  very important, I think." 

"I'm afraid I'm boring you. Thank you for coming to see me. I'll  expect you and Kent Allard at my mansion

tomorrow night for the little  reception I'm giving. Goodbye." 

CRANSTON gazed idly about the room before he departed. He allowed  his eyes to range over the filled

bookcases that lined the walls of  Stark's palatial office. 

It was an impressive collection. There were books on literature and  art, medicine and chemistry, criminal and

civil law. Almost every  subject an intelligent man might busy himself with. And this  uglyvisaged Mr. Stark

was undeniably intelligent. The framed diplomas  from some of the biggest American and European

universities proved  that. 

Was Benedict Stark the evil brain that directed the activities of  the sly David Chester? There was nothing to

prove it  and yet, The  Shadow's eye held a reflective gleam when he reached the street and got  back into his

car. If Stark were secretly a criminal behind the  fortress of power and wealth, he was the most dangerous foe

The Shadow  had ever encountered. 

The Shadow hoped to have a partial answer when he returned to the  Cobalt Club. He had ordered his

financial agent, Rutledge Mann, to  investigate the ownership of the building in which the Chinese  restaurant

was located. 

Rutledge Mann's report was ready when Cranston reached his desk.  But it was a report that made Cranston

grit his teeth with helpless  disappointment. The building that housed the Chinese restaurant, and  the one next

door, were both owned by the same corporation. The man who  controlled that corporation had a familiar

name. 

David Chester! 

Cranston uttered a clipped oath. He knew now that Chester was  merely a stooge. The vicious circle had

closed again, leaving The  Shadow no wiser than before. 

Was Benedict Stark checkmating The Shadow at every turn? The Shadow  did not know! Only the future

would tell. 

CHAPTER IX. THE BLUE PARROT

ON the following evening, a taxicab drove slowly eastward on one  of the best residential streets of

Manhattan. Its goal was a towering  apartment building in the swanky society section over near the East  River. 


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Wealth and social prestige had transformed what was once a slum  river district into the most desirable

neighborhood in town. There was  a float at the river's edge to accommodate the speedboats of wealthy

tenants. A few seaplanes rode at anchor. 

The streamlined taxicab looked like one of a thousand others on the  busy highways of Manhattan. The driver

was Moe Shrevnitz. He was a  secret agent of The Shadow. 

Moe drove slowly, because a conference was going on between his two  passengers  a conference in which

Moe took a necessary part. Certain  facts had to be discussed before the cab reached the building in which  a

blonde named Dorothy Bruner maintained an expensive apartment. 

Clyde Burke was keeping a promise he had made Dorothy a couple of  days earlier. He was taking her out on

a date in his role of an amorous  reporter. 

Clyde's companion in the taxicab was older. He looked like a  successful lawyer or a man familiar with stocks

and finance. In the  telephone book he was listed as an investment broker. His name was  Rutledge Mann.

Actually, he was an undercover financial agent of The  Shadow. 

Mann's job tonight was to take advantage of the absence of Dorothy  Bruner after she departed on her date

with Clyde. The Shadow was  certain that hidden somewhere in that swanky apartment of Dorothy's  were

vital documents that might throw a revealing light on the  activities of the sleek David Chester. He had

instructed Rutledge Mann  to make a careful search of every inch of the place. 

A statement by Moe Shrevnitz confirmed one of the facts The Shadow  had already deduced. The real name of

Dorothy Bruner was Mrs. David  Chester. She and her employer were secretly man and wife. 

"I found it out by jawing with the building doorman," Moe said with  a grin of satisfaction. "The renting agent

is a notary public and the  doorman is his brotherinlaw. Last year, Chester took his income tax  report to the

renting agent to be notarized. It was a joint return for  David and Dorothy Chester." 

His grin hardened. 

"Chester is up in the blonde's apartment right now! I saw him  sneaking through the delivery entrance about a

half hour ago. Unless he  went away in the last five minutes or so, he's still there." 

"Dorothy probably told him about her date with me," Clyde growled.  "My guess is that Chester will hide

somewhere out of sight and try to  listen in while Dorothy pumps me. I'm afraid they both suspect by this  time

that I'm a lot more than a reporter for the Classic." 

He didn't sound worried, however. 

"I've figured a scheme to get rid of them both tonight," he told  Rutledge Mann, "so you can get in and have

plenty of time to search the  empty apartment. I'm going to pull a stunt to scare this Chester guy  and send him

out on a wildgoose chase." 

"How will I know if your scheme works?" Mann asked. 

"We'll use the old 'match pad' trick," Clyde said. "I'll ask Moe  for a match when I bring Dorothy down to the

taxi. Moe's job will be to  watch the delivery entrance of the building and make certain that  Chester has

sneaked out. You'll be waiting in a dark doorway to take  the message. It's a cinch!" 


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Rutledge Mann nodded. He was familiar with the trick to which Clyde  alluded. It had been used before in

similar situations. 

The taxicab increased its speed toward its destination. 

MEANWHILE, an interesting conversation was taking place between  David Chester and his blond wife in

the expensive apartment rented  under the name of Dorothy Bruner. 

"Be sure you pump this damned newspaper reporter for all he's  worth," Chester growled. "I'll be listening in

the usual spot. Ask him  particularly about Lamont Cranston and Kent Allard. I had an emergency  telephone

warning from the boss. There's a possibility that Cranston  and Kent Allard are the same man!" 

"Why so much interest in Cranston?" Dorothy Inquired. 

"Because Lamont Cranston may be  The Shadow!" 

Dorothy uttered a peal of silvery laughter. She was amused and  scornful. 

"Don't be silly! You're forgetting something, aren't you, darling?  Charlie Horn spilled his guts before he was

tortured to death in the  subway. He explained exactly how he was trapped and forced to confess  all he knew.

His story proved that Lamont Cranston and The Shadow can't  be the same! The Shadow kidnapped Horn 

from Lamont Cranston!" 

She laughed again, but there was an edge in her mirth. Both she and  Chester were worried. Queer events had

been taking place lately, events  that might mean disaster for a couple of smart crooks. 

"What about this man Benedict Stark?" Chester snapped. 

"Now, you're being silly! Stark's already a billionaire. What  earthly reason " 

"Lamont Cranston paid a visit to him. We know that. Perhaps this  Benedict Stark might be tied in with

Cranston. He might be hiring  detectives to investigate us. By the lord, Benedict Stark himself might  be The

Shadow!" 

"You're crazy!" Dorothy rejoined. "You're getting jittery. Take my  advice and " 

Her words were cut short by a ring of the apartment bell. Both  stiffened and glanced grimly at each other.

They knew what that ring  meant, Clyde Burke had arrived for his date with Dorothy. 

Chester darted from the room to take up his post in an unseen  hiding place. Dorothy preened herself at a

mirror, to make herself more  alluring. Then she walked to the door with an arrogant sway of her  hips. 

Clyde's eyes popped at sight of her. He didn't have to fake his  admiration. 

"Like me?" Dorothy said with an enticing smile. 

Her evening gown had been designed by a foremost dressmaker. Only a  woman of superb figure would have

dared wear it. It was strapless and  backless. It made a perfect foil for Dorothy's blond beauty, the creamy

softness of her shoulders and arms. The clinging fabric of the gown  drew attention to the fact that Dorothy

had a slim perfectly molded  figure. 


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With a faint pressure of warm fingers on his, she led Clyde to a  small reception room. It was a spot that gave

the hidden David Chester  a perfect opportunity to listen and to watch unseen. 

Cleverly, Dorothy tried to pump the reporter on a variety of  topics. Clyde, however, was on the alert. He gave

her plenty of  misinformation on the subject of Lamont Cranston. He didn't seem to  know very much about

the famous aviator, Kent Allard. But he talked  freely on every subject the blonde brought up. 

When he got the chance, he even introduced a subject himself. He  spoke with assumed eagerness about the

discovery of the body of an  unidentified victim on the tracks of the East Side subway. He had found  a clue,

Clyde revealed excitedly. 

"A clue?" Dorothy said. "How interesting! What was it?" 

Clyde worked his gag, after a show of reluctance. 

"The clue was on the dead man himself. It was a scrap of paper  inside one of his shoes. By a rare piece of

luck, I got hold of it. The  police don't know I have it. I expect it to lead to a tremendous scoop  for the

Classic!" 

"What was it? A note?" 

"A rather important message," Clyde nodded. "It was a reference to  a Chinese restaurant. I think the victim

knew he was about to be killed  and meant the police to see it. Unfortunately, the message was so  blurred with

blood that the name and the address of the Chinese  restaurant can't be deciphered. But I'll fix that soon. 

"I'm going to take the paper to a chemical laboratory and have the  bloodstains dissolved. That can be done,

you know, without spoiling the  writing underneath." 

"How thrilling!" Dorothy cried. There was a faint gasp in her  voice. "Have you got it with you?" 

"Yes," Clyde lied. 

"May I see it?" 

She leaned forward, her whole body sweetly alluring. Her warm  nearness, the fragrance of her perfume made

Clyde's blood pound. But he  shook his head. 

"Sorry. After all, I'm a reporter, and it is a tremendous scoop. I  can't show it to you." 

He didn't tell Dorothy the real reason for his refusal. His whole  buildup about the clue was a bluff to reach

the ears of the hidden  Chester. There wasn't any paper in his pocket. The clue was imaginary! 

CLYDE saw a flick like flame in the eyes of Dorothy. She stopped  her wheedling tactics at once. Clyde knew

what that meant. 

She hoped to get him drunk later on and steal the evidence that  pointed to the Chinese restaurant. Or if that

failed, Chester himself  might organize a fake holdup at some prearranged spot. 

Clyde had a grim hunch that the invisible Chester was already on  his way out of the apartment. He was sure

of it, when Dorothy pointed  impatiently to her jeweled wrist watch. 


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"Time is flying, darling," she said softly. "There are so many  interesting places I'd like to see tonight. It isn't

often a girl has a  chance to do the town with the guidance of an ace reporter. Will you  show me all the spots

that we ordinary people miss?" 

As Clyde agreed, he noticed her eyes were on his dinner jacket,  staring at the slight bulge his wallet made in

an inner pocket. He knew  that Dorothy didn't care about the money that wallet contained. From  her

appearance, she had no cares about money. 

The thing that worried her was a bloodstained note that linked a  murder in the subway to a certain Chinese

restaurant. Dorothy had  fallen for Clyde's imaginary clue. 

Downstairs, Moe Shrevnitz's taxicab was waiting at the curb. 

The smiling couple got in. Clyde delayed telling Moe where to go.  He took a cigarette from a silver case and

reached for a match. Then he  swore under his breath. He had, it seemed, run out of matches. 

Moe was watching him with pretended anxiety to please his swanky  customers. 

"Need a light, mister? Here's a match pad." 

"Thanks." Clyde took the paper pad, then he uttered a quick  exclamation of dismay. "Wait. There's only one

match left in it. I  don't want to use up the last match you've got." 

"That's O.K. I got plenty more in some of my other pockets." 

Clyde struck the match and lit his cigarette. He turned so that he  faced away from Dorothy for an instant. In

the quick glow of the  flaring flame he glanced at the paper pad in his cupped palm. What he  saw soothed out

the wrinkle on his forehead. 

He tossed the empty match pad carelessly to the sidewalk. 

"Hotel Monmouth," he told Moe Shrevnitz. 

The cab rolled swiftly away. 

A few moments after it had dwindled in the darkness, a man stepped  out of a nearby doorway. He walked

slowly along the sidewalk past the  ornate entrance of the apartment house. He kept close to the curb. 

The loiterer was Rutledge Mann. 

He picked up the empty match pad. The doorman had gone back into  the building foyer. Mann's eyes glanced

swiftly up and down the quiet  street. Satisfied that his brief halt had been unobserved, he ducked  into the

service alley of the apartment building and descended concrete  steps to the basement. 

The moment he was out of sight, he read the hastily scrawled pencil  message on the inside of the match

folder. Moe Shrevnitz hadn't wasted  any words. The message read: "O.K." 

It meant to Mann that Moe had watched the side entrance of the  building while Clyde was busy upstairs with

the glamorous Dorothy. Moe  had seen David Chester make a quick sneak. The coast was now clear for

Rutledge Mann to make a careful, and painstaking, search of the  apartment upstairs. 


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He reached his goal by using the service elevator from the rear of  the basement. He got himself upstairs with

utter secrecy. He had little  trouble with the kitchen entrance of the Bruner apartment. Skeleton  keys took care

of that. 

Closing the door gently behind him, Mann got busy at once. He knew  he could rely on Clyde Burke to delay

the return of Dorothy  indefinitely. 

Chester, too, would not return, until he got his itching hands on  the clue he was certain was in Clyde Burke's

wallet. Clyde would see to  it that the fake holdup attack he expected would take plenty of time to  develop. 

It was a perfect setup for Rutledge Mann. 

MEANWHILE, Clyde and the glamorous Dorothy had sipped a cocktail at  the Monmouth and were on their

way to another famous hotel. 

Dorothy gave the reporter a sidelong glance. Her red lips curved  in a pouting smile. 

"I thought you were going to take me to some of the unusual night  clubs." 

"We've got plenty of time." 

"I think you're mean! You promised me a thrill tonight. You said  you'd take me to some of the places where

they put on a really hot  show. Places where it's hard for ordinary people to get in." 

"For instance?" 

Clyde was conscious of the girl's repressed eagerness. 

"The Blue Parrot," she said. 

"The Blue Parrot! You wouldn't want to go there. It's a regular  underworld hangout. It's full of mobsters and

cutthroats." 

"I'm not afraid. Please! Be a good boy and take me." 

Clyde allowed himself to be persuaded. But he made one reservation  before he agreed to drive downtown to

the notorious night spot in  Greenwich Village. 

"Let's stop first and have another drink." 

"All right." 

They stopped at a hotel grill, and Clyde excused himself after he  had finished his cocktail. He disappeared

into the men's washroom. 

His heart was pounding with excitement. One glance around the tiled  interior of the room and he uttered a

silent prayer of thanks. He was  all alone. 

He had to manufacture the fake evidence which he knew Dorothy and  Chester were hoping to steal from him.

Unless they found it, they might  suspect they had both been deliberately lured away from their  apartment. 


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Clyde tore a sheet from a small notebook he carried. On it he wrote  hurriedly in pencil the name and address

of the Chinese restaurant  where The Shadow had had so amazing an adventure in a locked dining  booth. 

With tightening lips, Clyde reached for his penknife. Glancing  about him to make sure he was unseen he

drew up a trousers leg,  exposing his sock and the bare calf above it. 

With the sharp point of the small blade Clyde pricked his skin. 

Blood welled from the tiny incision. Clyde rubbed the fake note  against the small puncture until the address

he had written was  hopelessly smeared with blood. Then he dropped his trousers leg and  placed the paper

inside his wallet. 

He was all set now. He wanted that paper to be stolen from him. It  would establish him all the more securely

in his role of a dumb  reporter who talked too much. Chester and the blonde would never dream  that the whole

thing was a plant. 

When Clyde returned to Dorothy's table she was waiting impatiently.  They went at once to Greenwich

Village. 

The Blue Parrot was outwardly a ramshackle little dive. But once  they passed its narrow portals, even Clyde

was impressed. The place  reeked with expensive furnishings. It was decorated entirely in pale  tints of blue. 

A waiter gave Clyde a sharp look, but he conducted him and Dorothy  to a table at the very edge of the tiny

stage. 

Clyde noticed some of the faces of the guests as he walked behind  the waiter. He saw notorious crooks on

every side of him. Most of them  were bigshots, the sort whom the law never seemed to be able to lay a  hand

on. 

Too, Clyde was conscious of murmurs in his wake. The word was being  passed around that he was a

newspaperman. But no one objected to his  presence or attempted to stop him. At any other time, he'd have

been  tossed out on his ear. Now, the sullenlooking waiter seemed positively  glad to welcome him. 

THE lights were already beginning to dim. Clyde and Dorothy were  just in time for the daring specialty

dance that gave the night club  its picturesque name. 

Darkness dropped like a sudden cloak. Above the unseen stage a  spotlight glowed abruptly. Its light was blue.

It made a dim moonlit  circle on the floor. 

Into that circle swayed a lithe and lovely figure. 

The girl's hair was blueblack. So was the swirling costume she  wore. A blue parrot was perched on her left

shoulder. The girl began to  dance with sinuous skill. The blue spotlight followed her every  movement. She

seemed unaware of the bird perched sleepily on her  gracefully draped shoulder. 

But Clyde was well aware of the significance the parrot played in  the dance. So were the rest of the unseen

customers. Clyde could hear a  faint sigh rustling through the hidden audience as the parrot fluttered  upward

in the air. The bird circled above the head of the whirling  dancer. 

The dancer paused. The parrot swooped downward in answer to some  unseen signal. Its beak seized the

trailing edge of a blue scarf. The  scarf was jerked loose and fluttered to the floor, leaving the exposed  throat


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and shoulders of the dancer gleaming like snowy marble. 

Again the girl danced. What she was really engaged in was a novelty  strip tease. Her act had been imported

from Paris. It was an act well  suited to the ideas of a wealthy underworld audience, Every time the  parrot

swooped, a lightly clasped garment fluttered away in the dim  blue brilliance of the spotlight. 

At the climax, the dancer was seemingly completely disrobed. She  posed rigidly, her arms flung upward like

a frozen statue. It was  impossible to detect even her breathing. For the space of ten throbbing  seconds, she

held that daring pose of marble nudity  then the dim  spotlight winked abruptly out. 

Darkness dropped. A roar of applause thundered from the audience.  When again light returned, the stage was

empty. 

"How did you like it?" Clyde asked Dorothy. 

"I'm frightened!" Dorothy whispered. 

"What's the matter?" 

"I... I don't like the people here. They look tough, vicious. Maybe  we ought to leave." 

Clyde stared at her. He was puzzled by her sudden desire to leave.  No one had harmed her. She had known

the sort of audience to expect  before she had entered. Why this sudden change of tactics on her part? 

He turned and followed the direction of her gaze. She was staring  at a thinfaced, tightlipped man who sat

almost directly behind Clyde.  The man's face was expressionless. But Clyde was as not deceived. His  quick

turn had surprised an unspoken signal in the man's heavylidded  eyes. 

The crook had just sent a wordless nod to Dorothy Bruner. Clyde was  certain it was a signal. 

CHAPTER X. THE BATHTUB CLUE

RUTLEDGE MANN stood alone in Dorothy Bruner's living room. He  cursed with disappointment. His

search of the apartment had ended in  complete failure. 

Not a single inch of the place had escaped his vigilant eye. And  yet there was no evidence of the secret

business records that The  Shadow had ordered Mann to locate. 

Bureaus had been explored, rugs lifted, pictures shifted on the  walls. Even the medicine cabinet in the

bathroom had not been  overlooked by the resourceful Mann. He was positive that he had not  missed anything

in sight. 

And yet, he had met with failure. 

Another man would have acknowledged defeat at this point. But not  Rutledge Mann. A powerful impulse

urged him to make a second and even  more thorough search  the belief of The Shadow that there were

secrets  to be found here. 

This time, Mann used a different approach to his problem. Having  restored everything to normal, he began to

look for some evidence of a  hidden room. He was guided in his new hunch by the architectural  peculiarity of


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the apartment. It seemed laid out in haphazard fashion. 

A small sitting room between the living room and Dorothy's bed  chamber didn't serve any understandable

purpose. Also, it seemed much  too small for the full extent of the floor plan. 

The bathroom was unusually small, too. Its entrance was through  Dorothy's bedroom. Mann began to suspect

there was still some added  space unaccounted for. He took a tape from his pocket and began to  measure

distances. 

When he had finished, he was convinced that there was a secret  Lshaped chamber hidden somehow between

the walls of the bedroom, the  bathroom and the small sitting room. 

He concentrated finally on the bathroom. The sight of an opened  tube of tooth paste on the lower shelf of the

medicine cabinet made him  smile grimly. He himself had taken off the cap and squeezed a tiny  portion of the

tooth paste from the tube. It was a signal he had agreed  on beforehand with Clyde Burke. 

Mann expected Clyde to return to the apartment later on, with  Dorothy. The appearance of the tooth paste

tube would determine Clyde's  subsequent behavior. If it was neatly capped, Clyde would know that  Mann's

search had been successful. He would make a hasty goodby to the  amorous Dorothy and depart as soon as

possible. 

If, however, the cap of the tube remained off, with a half inch or  so of paste protruding, Clyde would

recognize it as a signal of failure  on the part of Rutledge Mann. It would be a message to Clyde to delay  his

departure and try to uncover something himself. 

Having still found nothing, Rutledge Mann left the cap off the tube  of tooth paste. 

Again, he examined the bathtub. This time, he saw something he had  missed on his first inspection. Added

vigilance on his part brought the  clue to his notice. 

It was the faint  very faint  impression of a rubber heel in the  bottom of the orchidcolored tub. But the

size of the ghostly print of  that rubber heel made it stranger still. No woman could have made it.  It was the

large heelprint of a man. 

David Chester? 

Mann didn't waste any time wondering. He knew the precious minutes  were passing fast. If he delayed too

long, he might find himself caught  in an awkward trap by the return of the sly Chester. 

The mark in the tub indicated that someone had stood there with his  back to the wall. Mann took the same

position. Standing thus, he tried  to reach every point within reach of his fingertips. 

It didn't do him a bit of good. There was practically nothing he  could reach except the sleek edge and side of

the tub itself. If there  was a hidden mechanism, this was certainly no way to discover it! 

Suddenly, Mann uttered an exclamation of disgust at his own  stupidity. He had been misled by the footprint.

It must surely have  been made by Chester when he had left his secret hiding place, not when  he had entered

it! The very fact that Chester had been careless enough  to leave the print was proof of this supposition. 

Leaving, Chester must have been in a tremendous hurry. He had  overheard Clyde's story about the fake note.

He had sneaked out with  swift eagerness to some prearranged spot where he could steal the  "restaurant clue"


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from the Classic reporter. 

HAVING figured this, Mann turned around in the tub so that he faced  the tiled wall of the bathroom. 

He found that in this position he could easily reach various  objects  the lower hot and cold water handles

and the faucet for the  tub; the upper handles that controlled the flow from the overhead  shower; the

showerhead itself; part of the chromium bar that supported  the shower curtain on its hooks. 

Mann manipulated all these objects hopefully. He ended up no better  than he was before. But he didn't quit.

Admitting failure on an  assignment was not one of the habits of an agent of The Shadow. 

Mann finally turned his attention to the soap niche built into the  tiled wall. It interested him because it was

one of the things within  reach of his questing hands from where he stood. 

It had a short porcelain bar above the soap enclosure, for a bather  to steady himself when he rose from a

sitting position. Mann tried to  work the bar. No use. 

There was a cake of scented soap in the niche. He removed it and  persisted grimly. He was rewarded for his

incredible patience. 

He found, by inserting his fingers, that the bottom of the niche  was ribbed to keep the soap from melting in a

puddle of its own making.  That was normal enough. But behind the last ridge was something not so  normal. 

Four tiny depressions were at the rear of the niche! They were  large enough to accommodate the tips of

Mann's four fingers. He pressed  steadily. 

Over his bent shoulder he heard a faint click. To his amazement the  tiled wall at the end of the tub began to

shift. It rose vertically in  a solid sheet. Behind it, an oblong opening was disclosed. 

Mann had found the camouflaged entrance to a secret chamber! 

He didn't put back the cap on the tube of tooth paste in the  medicine cabinet. Perhaps his search of the secret

chamber might not  lead to the discovery of important clues or documents. A methodical  man, he decided to

wait until he was sure of success before leaving the  O.K. signal for Clyde. 

He crowded into the black opening beyond the bathtub, squeezed  along a narrow passage that turned an

abrupt corner inside the wall. It  led to what looked like a completely equipped laboratoryandoffice. 

On a flat zinccovered table were all sorts of chemical instruments  and glass vessels. Racks of test tubes

stood in a wooden holder. Most  of the tubes were empty, as were the glass retorts. But two of them  were

filled with liquid. 

Mann examined these two. One of the liquids was jetblack. The  other was a pale, smoky silver. With

trembling fingers, Mann removed  the corks from the open ends of the tubes. He was tremendously excited,  so

nervous that he accidentally spilled some of the stuff on the zinc. 

A drop of the silver liquid mingled with the black. Or rather, it  didn't merge! The two colors in that tiny

spilled puddle remained  entirely distinct and separate. The silver seemed to run in swift dizzy  threads through

the black. 


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In a moment, both colors were gone. They didn't evaporate. The  action was too quick for that. They simply

vanished through some  chemical action of their own. 

Mann couldn't understand the meaning of the strange behavior of  those two fluids; but he had no time to

speculate. There was a safe at  the other end of the room. He saw also a filing cabinet whose unseen  contents

he was eager to explore. 

He tried the handle of the safe, but it was securely locked. He  knew it could take an expert safecracker to

make an impression on that  tough steel. So he turned toward the filing cabinet. 

But before Mann reached it, he noticed a tiny indentation on one of  the two inner walls of the room. It looked

suspiciously like a  peephole. It was! 

BY pressing an eye to the peephole, Mann was able to peer through a  cunningly embedded lens that gave him

a clear view into the bedroom of  Dorothy Bruner. A similar lens, sunk flush with the surface of the  other

wall, commanded a view of the tiny sitting room. 

The sitting room was where Clyde had told Dorothy about his "clue"  taken from the shoe of a dead man on

the subway tracks below the  Bowling Green station. 

A microphone earpiece on a nearby shelf showed how easily Chester  had been able to listen, unobserved, to

the interview between Dorothy  and Clyde. 

The filing cabinet drew Rutledge Mann's eager attention. It was  made of thin, ordinary sheet metal. The

drawers were locked, but they  didn't offer too great an obstacle to The Shadow's agent. Compared with  the

safe, the filing cabinet was a cinch to crack. 

Mann produced a thin bar of tempered steel. It was edged at one end  like a cold chisel. The edge was almost

as sharp as the blade of a  knife. Mann was able to insert it between the locked end of the drawer  and the

frame of the cabinet. 

He applied pressure with slow, even strength. The bar gave him  powerful leverage. There was a sharp snap of

broken metal. He had  cracked the lock. 

Eagerly, he slid open the drawer. But as he did so he gave a shrill  cry and flung himself backward. It was too

late! 

The cry Rutledge Mann had uttered was a yelp of pain. Both his  extended wrists had been caught in a grip of

steel. They looked like  steel handcuffs, but they had a more cruel and torturing power than  ordinary police

bracelets. 

On the inside of the steel circlets were notched teeth like the saw  edges of a bear trap. They bit into Mann's

flesh with a cruel agony,  that brought the blood dripping from his writhing fingers. 

Feebly, he tried to free himself. 

He could see through a haze of pain that the drawer he had forced  open was empty. The cabinet was a burglar

trap. The concealed cuffs  worked automatically when the drawer was opened. 

Already, Mann's fingers were numb. He could scarcely move them.  They felt like chunks of wood. Terror

filled his heart as he realized  how hopelessly he was caught. He knew he had no chance to break that


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agonized grip on his bleeding wrists. 

It was only a matter of a short time before David Chester would  return. 

Rutledge Mann was doomed! 

AT the Blue Parrot night club, Clyde Burke continued to stare at  the sleekly dressed criminal at a nearby

table. He knew the fellow was  a criminal, because he recognized the hard, thinlipped face. The  fellow had a

long police record, but no convictions. His name was Harry  Marco. 

Marco was the man whom Dorothy Bruner was pretending to be afraid  of. Yet Clyde knew this was merely

part of a cunning buildup. He had  seen a quick, wordless signal pass between Marco and the blonde beside

him. 

"Let's get out of here," Dorothy whispered. "I'm frightened!" 

Clyde agreed. He summoned a waiter and paid for the drinks. He  adjusted Dorothy's wraps and was about to

walk with her to the  cloakroom to get his own coat and hat, when he felt her trembling hand  on his. 

"Look! That man is waiting for us to leave. He's going to follow  us!" 

Clyde followed Dorothy's glance. He saw that Marco had left his  table and hurried to the foyer beyond the

cloakroom. Marco had already  donned his coat and hat. He was lingering in the shadow near the exit  door. 

Dorothy whispered to the waiter. The waiter nodded. He asked Clyde  for his hat check, and hurried off with it 

"What's the idea?" Clyde inquired under his breath. 

"I asked the waiter to let us out by a different exit," Dorothy  explained. "It's the only way we can dodge

trouble on the way home." 

Clyde didn't reply. He knew that the blonde was lying. Her trick  was to force a holdup opportunity, not to

avoid one. Her fright and  uneasiness were part of a deliberate buildup. 

Keeping his face impassive, Clyde accepted his hat and coat from  the tough waiter. He followed the waiter to

a side aisle of the dimly  lit night club. Above a narrow door, a tiny red exit lamp gleamed like  a smear of

blood. 

The next moment, the door closed softly behind Dorothy and Clyde.  Cool, fresh air was blowing on their

overheated faces. They were in a  dark alley that ran between the night club and the building next door.

Dorothy clutched tightly at Clyde's arm. 

"Let's hurry out the rear end," she breathed. "We can be in a cab  and away before that fellow out front

realizes that we've given him the  slip." 

Clyde allowed her to guide him, although he expected quick  treachery. His guess was correct. 

As they passed a heaped pile of empty ash cans at the read end of  the alley, a dark figure rose noiselessly to

confront them. 

A gun gleamed in the dim light of the alley. Its muzzle was aimed  accurately at Clyde's heart. 


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"Freeze  both of you!" a sullen voice whispered. 

Dorothy didn't utter a sound. Her arms lifted in prompt and silent  obedience. Clyde raised his own, under the

menace of the gun. 

"If it's money you want " Clyde began. 

"Shut up!" 

The thug stood perfectly still, his gun gleaming. He made no move  to attack or to search Clyde. He seemed to

be listening. 

In a moment, the soft padpad of running feet was audible from the  front end of the alley. A man raced into

view. 

It was Harry Marco. 

MARCO wasted no time. He stepped behind Clyde, out of range of the  thug's gun, and began to search him.

His expert fingers unbuttoned  Clyde's overcoat and Tuxedo jacket. They dipped into the inner pocket  where

the reporter kept his wallet. 

At the reporter's side, Dorothy kept moaning. But it was a moan in  a remarkably low key. It couldn't be heard

three feet away from the  holdup tableau. 

Harry Marco snapped open the wallet. He pretended to gloat over the  currency he found inside it. But Clyde

knew exactly what Marco was  after. He saw the quick motion of the man's left hand. 

It dipped for an instant into the crook's pocket. With it went the  bloodsmeared note that Clyde had

manufactured in the privacy of a  hotel washroom. 

Marco said in a hurried snarl, "O.K. Sammy! Hold these punks here a  minute or two. If they make any

squawk, blast them both!" 

He turned and fled down the dark alley, the same way he had come.  The sound of his racing feet died into

silence. Sammy kept his gun on  the two captives. He waited five minutes, with quick glances at his  wrist

watch. 

Finally, his stained teeth showed in a triumphant leer. 

"So long, stupid!" he told Clyde. "If you try to yelp for help or  follow me. I'll dig a subway through your

belly with a lead shovel!" 

He faded with stealthy steps, his gun gleaming ominously in the  hall darkness. Dorothy's hand tightened

instantly on Clyde's arm. 

"Don't try to follow him. You'll only be killed!" 

She was playing her part in the conspiracy with great ease, Clyde  thought bitterly. She should have been an

actress. But he was content  to follow her lead. He was no longer interested in the gunmen. What he  wanted to

do was to get back to Dorothy's apartment and find out  whether the search of Rutledge Mann had been

successful. 


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As soon as he had located a taxi and helped Dorothy inside, he  suggested that they return to her home.

Dorothy demurred at once. Her  nerves were completely shattered, she said. What she needed was a  drink. 

Clyde knew that what she needed most was time to allow David  Chester to get the loot from Harry Marco

and sneak back to a hiding  place in the blonde's apartment. 

But Clyde didn't mind the delay. Mann had had plenty of time to  search the apartment and scram. Clyde

stopped off with the blonde at a  nearby night spot and they both had a couple of drinks. 

Then they started home. 

In the cab, Clyde became very drunkenly amorous. He wanted an  excuse to go upstairs with Dorothy, so he

could get a good look at the  apartment. If nothing was out of place, Clyde would know that Mann's  search

had been successful. His own assignment would be done. He kept  insisting Dorothy invite him up for a

nightcap. 

"I think you had better say goodnight down here in the cab," she  whispered, when the taxi stopped in front

of the apartment house. 

"Don't be silly, darling," he breathed. "One more little drink  won't hurt either of us. I promise I'll stay only

five minutes." 

"I'll see you some other time. I'll... I'll give you a date any  night you want. Not now  please!" 

"Come on," Clyde insisted. "Be nice! One more drink upstairs, and  then I'll go home and dream about you." 

"All right." 

Clyde paid off the taxi driver. A smile of satisfaction curved his  lips. But he had no idea of the ugly turn

events had taken inside that  sleek apartment of Dorothy Bruner. 

He was entirely unaware that Rutledge Mann was in frightful peril! 

CHAPTER XI. SILVER AND BLACK

RUTLEDGE MANN gave up hope when he felt his imprisoned hands begin  to lose all feeling in the cruel

grip of those sawtoothed steel cuffs. 

He was unable to make the slightest move to free himself. He stared  with dull despair at the drip of blood

from his imprisoned wrists. He  had been too hasty in his search. A mind smarter than his had trapped  him. 

Death for Mann would come with slow torture. With a shudder, he  closed his eyes. He thought of the bloody

death that had come to  Charlie Horn in the blackness of a subway tunnel. That was a sample of  the treatment

he would receive. 

He didn't expect death at the hands of Chester. It was the unknown  supercriminal who ruled and directed

Chester, that Mann feared. His  head sagged with pain; he was close to fainting. But a sudden sound  made his

eyes blink wide open. 

Chester was returning to the secret room! 


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Mann could hear the faint thud of feet in the bathtub beyond the  secret passage. The sound nerved him to a

wild struggle. He fought  dizzily to tear his bleeding hands loose from their encircling steel  bands. 

The pain clouded his vision. But for an instant he had a blinding  stab of uncomprehending wonder. 

The intruder had bounded into sight from the concealed passage. It  wasn't Chester. Mann found himself

staring at a calm face, with a  strongly beaked nose and blazing eyes. 

"The Shadow!" 

It was a cry wrenched from pale lips barely able to frame the  words. The shock of his unexpected deliverance

was too much for  Rutledge Mann. He fainted. 

The Shadow sprang to his assistance. There was pity in those  deepset eyes, but The Shadow didn't allow

pity to interfere with  speed. He had entered the apartment because Mann's delayed departure  seemed to

indicate trouble. Now he found grim confirmation of his worst  fears. Minutes, perhaps seconds, would herald

the arrival of David  Chester. 

The Shadow didn't wish either Mann or himself to be discovered in  the secret room. 

He freed the unconscious prisoner without too much trouble. A sharp  cutting instrument took care of the

jointed, tubular rods that  controlled the action of the automatic handcuffs. The Shadow didn't  attempt to cut

the cuffs themselves loose from Mann's bleeding wrists. 

Time. He needed every second! 

A glance at the safe showed that it was useless to attempt to force  it open quickly. There remained the filing

cabinet. All the drawers  were empty. The cabinet was merely a burglar trap. 

The Shadow turned his attention to the zinctopped table on which  stood the two test tubes that had so

puzzled Mann. Flame kindled in The  Shadow's eyes as he stared at the silvery liquid in one and the  jetblack

liquid in the other. 

Like Mann, he uncorked the glass vials and spilled some of the  liquid. Unlike Mann, his move was not

accidental but deliberate. 

He saw how quickly the two spilled drops vanished. He knew the  action was too fast for ordinary

evaporation. Mixing another drop of  the silver and the black liquid, he noted how each color stubbornly

retained its own identity. The silver again spread in wriggling  filaments through the black, as Mann had

observed earlier. 

The Shadow suspected that these two queer substances were new and  completely unknown types of ink. The

black liquid contained no carbon  judging from its external appearance. And certainly the silver stuff

contained no carbon either, dyed or otherwise. 

DARTING to a nearby desk, The Shadow picked up a pen. Having  divined the fact that the two liquids were

unknown types of ink, the  mind of The Shadow leaped to a more daring surmise. 

He wrote on a sheet of paper with the silver ink the following sum:  $50,000. It faded quickly to nothingness.

Then, carefully cleaning his  pen, The Shadow dipped it into the black liquid. This time he wrote a  larger

figure. He wrote it over the blank space where he had inscribed  the first sum. The new sum read, $500,000. 


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For five slow minutes, The Shadow stared grimly at those second  figures. Then they faded. But a strange

thing happened  a thing that  brought a gasp from The Shadow. He had expected this result, but the

cleverness with which it worked filled him with unwilling admiration  for the genius of an unknown criminal

foe. 

As the black figures faded, the hidden silver ones reappeared. They  were silver no longer. Something had

happened to the pale ink while it  was latent on the white surface of the paper. It reappeared as  jetblack! 

And now, instead of $500,000 The Shadow was staring at a smaller  sum: $50,000. 

It was startling evidence of the way in which the swindle against  John Harmon had been worked. It was proof

of something even more  startling. The Shadow, as a master of chemistry, was familiar with  every known type

of secret writing. This stuff was absolutely new to  him. 

No wonder the police had been fooled when they had tried to analyze  Chester's check and bill of sale at the

crime laboratory in Brooklyn! 

With a quick gesture, The Shadow placed the recorked test tubes in  an inner pocket of his black cloak. He

stuffed the pocket with a  handkerchief, to prevent a breakage of his precious loot. Then he bent  over the

unconscious figure of Rutledge Mann. 

He brought back Mann to his senses with methods that here painful  but necessary. Mann groaned. He glanced

appealingly at his cuffed and  bloody wrists, but The Shadow shook his head. The final freeing of Mann

would have to come later. With a hand under each of the victim's  armpits, The Shadow guided his agent from

the secret chamber. 

He manipulated the mechanism in the soap niche of the bathtub. It  closed the entrance to the wall passage at

the end of the tub. 

The Shadow sprang to the medicine cabinet, where a tube of tooth  paste lay uncapped. He capped the tube

and disposed of the protruding  inch of paste. By this action, he removed the only sign of disorder in  the

apartment. It would be a wordless signal to Clyde Burke, when he  returned with the blonde, that the search

had been successful. 

The Shadow had barely accomplished his purpose when he seized Mann  and hustled him quickly from the

bathroom to the adjoining bedroom. His  palm stifled the cry of pain that bubbled on Mann's pale lips. 

Someone was entering the apartment by way of the front door! The  click of a turning key was distinctly

audible. 

In a moment, the door slammed. Hasty footsteps rushed through the  apartment. They came straight to the

bedroom. 

The taut face of David Chester was disclosed. 

He saw no sign of The Shadow or of Rutledge Mann. Both had vanished  behind a heavy drape that hung near

the window. The Shadow had  punctured a tiny hole in the thick drape. He was able to watch unseen  the

triumphant grin of Chester. 

The man sprang at once into the bathroom. He headed for the bathtub  and the secret passage that lay beyond

the tiled wall. 


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He was gone only a short while. When he returned, a startling  change had come over him. The grin was gone

from his lips. Rage gleamed  in his eyes. 

Chester had discovered that his secret hideout had been searched  during his absence. He had seen the open

filing cabinet, the snapped  ends of the handcuffs. There were telltale drops of blood on the floor  from

Rutledge Mann's torn wrists. 

And Chester had missed the test tubes that contained the silver and  the black ink! 

His whispered oaths were like a croon of death. But there was  terror in him, too. The Shadow realized it from

behind the security of  the heavy drape. David Chester was obviously thinking of the  consequences he might

face from the pitiless leader he served. 

The Shadow had no proof of the identity of that unknown leader. But  he remembered the books on chemistry

he had seen in the magnificent  sunlit office of Benedict Stark. Was Benedict Stark the evil genius  behind this

amazingly concealed criminal organization? 

THE SHADOW had no time to speculate. Again, there was a faint click  from the front door of the apartment,

as someone inserted a key. 

Presently, the voices of a man and a woman echoed softly from the  living room. Dorothy Bruner's coy giggle

was audible. So was the more  throaty laugh of Clyde Burke. Both were apparently in high spirits. The  giggle

was abruptly muffled by a kiss. 

Then Dorothy said, "Sit down, and I'll mix us up a drink." 

The face of David Chester was ghastly with rage as he listened in  his bedroom. He tiptoed to a dresser and

wrote a quick message on a  slip of paper. 

The Shadow watched from behind his concealing curtain, with a hard  concentration. His gaze would have

availed him nothing, were it not for  a lucky accident. The mirror above the dresser was tilted. Dorothy had

obviously tilted it earlier, in order to take a final admiring glance  at her slim silken legs before she had gone

out on her date with Clyde  Burke. 

The mirror reflected Chester's hasty scrawl upside down. 

To The Shadow, the mental rightening of that scrawl was not too  difficult a task. By the time Chester tiptoed

to a wardrobe closet  opposite where The Shadow lurked, the words of that hastily scrawled  note were tucked

away in the mind of The Shadow: 

Get rid of him quick without making him suspicious. 

Chester placed the paper in the pocket of a negligee that hung from  a hanger in Dorothy's closet. Then he

tiptoed noiselessly into the  bathroom. 

Dorothy came in a moment later. Her red lips were curved in a  smile. She had no idea of the hidden drama

going on all about her. With  a quick gesture, she removed her wrap. For a moment, she hesitated  before the

open door of the closet. Then her smile deepened as she took  out her negligee. 

She removed her evening gown. 


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Would she find and read the note in the pocket of her negligee? The  Shadow wanted her to. He wanted to get

rid of Clyde, in order to  facilitate the escape of himself and Rutledge Mann. 

Dorothy donned the flimsy robe. Her smile faded when she slid her  hand into the wide pocket of the negligee.

Her face turned deathly pale  as she read the note. She knew that something had gone seriously wrong! 

Instantly, she changed her plans. Instead of detaining Clyde, she  used her wiles to get rid of him. It wasn't an

easy task. Clyde was  determined to find out if the search of Rutledge Mann had ended  satisfactorily. The only

way he could tell was by examining every room  in the apartment, to make sure nothing was as out of place. 

To humor him, Dorothy agreed to his peculiar request. Clyde looked  drunk and stubborn. She figured it was

the quickest way to get rid of  him. 

She even permitted him to enter her bedroom. Clyde saw nothing out  of place. But he was taking no chances.

There was still one room he  hadn't seen. 

"How about the bathroom?" 

"It's probably very messy," Dorothy said quickly. "Wait till I see  how it looks." 

She went in hurriedly, carefully closing the door behind her. The  Shadow, observant behind the bedroom

curtain, knew why the blonde was  so careful. She wanted to make sure that Chester had not left the tiled  end

of the tub open, disclosing the entrance to the secret chamber. 

Evidently everything was in good order. Smilingly, Dorothy beckoned  to Clyde to take a look. He made

admiring comments. His smile was  fuddled, as if he had taken too many drinks. But his eyes were alert.  He

could see no sign of anything out of place. 

Satisfied, he withdrew. Dorothy saw him to the door, and after a  long, lingering kiss, Clyde departed. 

THE moment Clyde was gone, the blonde raced back to the bedroom.  David Chester was waiting for her. His

grim news brought a cry of alarm  from Dorothy. 

"Are you sure?" she gasped. 

"Of course, I'm sure! My secret room was searched. Two vials of ink  have been stolen. Whoever made the

search was caught by the handcuffs  in the filing cabinet. But someone else released him!" 

"Who could it have been?" 

"Who else but The Shadow!" Chester snarled. "He sent one of his  damned henchmen here, and when the

fellow fell into my trap, The Shadow  saved his bacon." 

"What does it mean?" 

"It means," Chester replied with deadly slowness, "that the  reporter you thought was so dumb is pretty smart!

I don't believe that  note we went to so much trouble to get away from Clyde Burke is  genuine. I think it was a

trick to lure both of us away from the  apartment." 

With an oath, Chester crossed the bedroom and picked up the  telephone. 


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Had he walked three steps farther and moved the heavy window drape  aside, he would have discovered both

Rutledge Mann and The Shadow. But  he was too frightened to think of anything but the urgent need to get  in

touch with his mysterious chief. 

The number Chester dialed was one familiar to The Shadow. It was  the number of the Chinese restaurant

where the Shadow had come within  an inch of having his face destroyed by acid. 

"Hello! Is this Ho Fang...? I've got to get in touch with the chief  immediately. What's the special phone

number for tonight?" Chester  listened carefully, nodded to himself. 

"Thank you." 

He hung up, and wiped the sweat from his forehead. His hands were  trembling. Evidently the prospect of

reporting his blundering behavior  to his unknown chief filled him with forebodings. He dialed again, with

such quick nervous haste that The Shadow, in spite of his strained  attention, was unable to distinguish the

separate clicks of the rapidly  twisting dial. 

He had no idea what number Chester had called. Even if he had, it  would have availed him little. From the

scrap of talk he had already  listened to, he was aware that the telephone link to a master criminal  was

changed daily. 

Chester's conversation was brief. He did more listening, than  talking. When he hung up, he looked like a

corpse. His eyes were sunk  in his head. 

"The note was a fake!" he screeched. "There was no paper left in  Charlie Horn's shoe for anyone to find!

Horn's body was stripped and  searched before he was killed, in order to make sure there would be no  hidden

clue for the police." 

"What else did the chief say?" Dorothy whispered through terrified  lips. 

"He said that you and I had forfeited our lives by making this  blunder tonight." 

"No, no! He can't kill us! We've served him too well. It's the  first mistake we've ever " 

"One mistake is a death sentence." Chester replied hollowly. "We  were warned of that before we began. But

there's a ray of hope. Maybe  we can yet save our lives, if fate is with us." 

"How?" 

"He said he may wish to use us later on, in a scheme to take care  of The Shadow. He'll let us know our fate

tomorrow." 

"I can't stand it," Dorothy shuddered. "Why don't we pack up and  flee? Get out of the country! Europe 

South America  anywhere!" 

"What good would that do? You know what always happens to people  who try that. Remember the man who

was blown to pieces in Paris? And  the woman who was found dead of poison in Buenos Aires last year? I  tell

you, it's hopeless!" 

"He won't kill me!" Dorothy cried. "I'll fight back! I'll " 


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"Fight back? Against whom? We don't even know who our chief is! You  can't fight nothing! Or flee from it,

either! We've got to wait until  he decides what he wishes to do with us." 

Chester groaned. 

"Fix me up a stiff drink. I need one!" 

They walked slowly from the bedroom like pale figures cut from  cardboard. They disappeared in the

direction of the pantry. 

THE moment they were gone, the cloaked form of The Shadow slid  quietly from behind the window curtain.

His strong arm supported  Rutledge Mann. 

Mann was suffering torture from the steel teeth of the handcuffs  that bit into his wrists. But he uttered no

sound. The Shadow guided  him noiselessly through the empty living room to the front door. They  vanished

without a single betraying sound. 

The Shadow didn't ring for the elevator. He assisted Mann to  descend flight after flight of fire stairs, until

they reached the  secondfloor level. Only then did the finger of The Shadow press the  button to summon the

elevator. 

When the car ascended and stopped, there was no one in the  corridor. The operator scratched his head and

waited. 

This delay gave The Shadow all the time he needed to beat an  unobserved retreat with Mann. The two drove

swiftly away in The  Shadow's speedy car, which was parked nearby at the curb. 

At a place reserved for just such emergencies as the one that now  confronted him, The Shadow found tools to

free Rutledge Mann from the  cruel bite of the steel cuffs. Then he undressed his fainting assistant  and put him

to bed. 

Quickly, The Shadow raced downstairs to his waiting car. But before  the car started, The Shadow had

vanished. In his place was a  calmfeatured, welldressed gentleman with a faint smile on his lips. 

Lamont Cranston. 

Cranston drove swiftly toward the Chinese restaurant. 

The restaurant was the focal point of this whole conspiracy! He had  heard the name of Ho Fang, mentioned.

He identified Ho Fang as the fat  Chinaman who had stopped him when he had tried, in his disguise as an  old

man, to enter a certain dining alcove without first giving the  password. 

Ho Fang was evidently a contact man for the criminal organization.  To the Chinaman was entrusted the

knowledge of the telephone numbers by  which members of the gang could get in quick touch with the Prince

of  Evil. 

That was the name by which The Shadow now thought of his powerful  and unknown foe: Prince of Evil! 

By seizing Ho Fang, he might at one quick blow attain the means of  ripping the shroud of mystery from the

most dangerous supercriminal he  had ever battled against. 


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But he was doomed again to failure. Cranston sensed it long before  he reached the restaurant. There was a

sullen red glow in the night  sky. His arrival at the restaurant found the street jammed with fire  apparatus. 

The building was a spouting inferno of flame. So was the building  next door  the one that contained the

empty store on the ground floor. 

As Cranston fought nearer through the crowd, there was a sudden  yell from the spectators. The crowd swayed

back. With a thunderous  roar, the whole front of the building collapsed. The wall at the side  toppled a

moment later. 

The Shadow suspected explosives had helped along the work of the  flames. He suspected more. Deep in the

heart of those flames lay the  blackened body of the Chinaman, Ho Fang. 

The ruins would disclose no hint of secret passages in that rat's  nest of crime, by the time the fire cooled

enough to permit an  inspection of the ruined premises. 

The roar of the mounting flames made a sound like sardonic laughter  in Cranston's ears. Prince of Evil! Who

was he? Could he really be the  billionaire figure of Benedict Stark? 

Into The Shadow's eyes came a deep gleam, as if he were looking  into the future. 

CHAPTER XII. TWO IN ONE

THE New York home of Benedict Stark was an imposing mansion at the  northerly tip of Manhattan Island,

near Inwood Hill Park. It overlooked  the broad sweep of the Hudson River. A parklike lawn surrounded the

mansion. 

On the evening following the terrific fire that had destroyed the  Chinese restaurant of Ho Fang, Lamont

Cranston rang the bell at the  imposing portal. 

This was the evening of the reception to which Stark had invited  both Lamont Cranston and Kent Allard. He

had placed The Shadow in an  unpleasant situation. 

The Shadow would have to be both Lamont Cranston and Kent Allard  tonight! More difficult than that, as

Cranston, he had to introduce  Allard as a separate individual! 

It seemed like a task requiring magic. But The Shadow smiled as he  rang the doorbell. He had figured out an

amazingly clever scheme. It  would require nerve and proper timing. Much would depend on Harry  Vincent,

his main secret agent. 

Stark's grayhaired butler looked startled as he opened the door. 

"Good evening, sir. You're rather early. You're the first guest to  arrive." 

Cranston's smile was bland. His early arrival was no accident. He  wanted to be the first at the party. 

He found the huge living room empty. There was no sign of Benedict  Stark. The butler had a quick

explanation for the discourteous absence  of the billionaire. Too quick an excuse, Cranston thought instantly. 

"The master is asleep, sir," the butler said. "He usually takes a  nap before his guests arrive. He tires easily,


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you know. I have strict  orders not to disturb him." 

Cranston nodded carelessly. But, inwardly, he became alert. Stark  was mentally keen, physically strong.

Wherever he was, it was certain  he was not asleep. 

After the butler had departed to the rear of the house, Cranston  walked quietly through an arched doorway

into Stark's magnificent  picture gallery. He had smelled cigarette smoke. He suspected someone  else had

already arrived, in spite of the butler's denial. 

He found a tall, goodlooking young man admiring the paintings. One  glance, and Cranston felt a sharp stab

of concern. The young man was  Bob Harmon, who had been hired so mysteriously by Stark after the  tragic

suicide of Bob's father and the "accidental" poisoning of his  invalid mother. 

Was more crime in prospect? Was Bob destined to be a new victim of  the "unlucky curse" that seemed to

hang over the Harmon family? 

The young man didn't seem worried. He looked cleancut and handsome  in his evening clothes. 

"Mr. Stark is training me as one of his personal secretaries," he  said. "He thought I ought to have plenty of

social experience. So he  invited me here tonight. I think he's a remarkable man." 

Cranston agreed dryly. As soon as possible, he found a convenient  excuse to leave Bob. It was not difficult.

The young man was deeply  interested in the paintings. 

Cranston retreated through the living room and gained the quiet  expanse of the dimly lighted front hall. 

After a quick glance to make sure that he wasn't observed, he  slipped soundlessly up the staircase. 

His goal was the master bedroom of Benedict Stark. He knew exactly  where it was, because he had pumped

Bob in his lazy conversation with  the lad. 

The door was closed and locked. There was no light burning inside  the bedroom, as Cranston discovered

when he applied a cautious eye to  the keyhole. But there was enough moonlight coming through the window

to show that the bed was unoccupied and the room empty. 

The window had been raised from the bottom. Stark, for some unknown  reason, had furtively left the

mansion! The rungs of a ladder outside  the moonlit window sill showed how Stark had departed  and would

presumably return. 

Crouched outside the door in the dimly lighted corridor, The Shadow  waited. 

He didn't have to wait long. 

The face of Benedict Stark appeared suddenly on the ladder outside  the window. He squirmed inside. The

ladder vanished. Cranston suspected  it was being promptly removed by the sly butler. 

A click, and the bedroom was filled with light. Stark's face was  revealed in all its ugliness. There was more

than physical ugliness in  it now. Cruelty gleamed in his small eyes. He uttered a malevolent  laugh. 

The next instant, Stark whirled and stared at the looked door of  his room. The Shadow hadn't uttered a sound

outside the keyhole, yet  Stark sensed peril. He seemed to have the incredible sense perceptions  of a wild


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beast. He began to tiptoe swiftly toward the locked door. 

Lamont Cranston fled to the staircase. 

As he descended, he heard a door close in the rear of the house. He  was afraid of the return of the butler. It

increased his speed. He  heard a muffled exclamation from someone hurrying toward the front  hallway from

the pantry. 

But Cranston had already reached the shelter of the living room. He  slowed his pace and went through the

arched opening to the picture  gallery. Bob Harmon smiled at him. Cranston was deep in conversation  with the

lad when the butler peered in. 

"I... thought I heard someone on the main staircase," the butler  said, with a sharp glance at Cranston. 

"Really? Perhaps your master has awakened and is coming to join  us," Cranston yawned. 

It was the right thing to say, for almost at the next instant  Benedict Stark himself entered the room. He was

bland and smiling. No  trace of hate remained in his unpleasant eyes. He laughed when Cranston  apologized

for his early arrival. 

"It's quite all right. You didn't wake me." 

He got rid of the butler with a curt order. Then his voice became  very bland. To Cranston's amazement, Stark

calmly disclosed that he had  not been asleep upstairs. Staring at his visitor, he admitted that he  had been away

from his home until a few moments ago! 

He was either badly rattled by his suspicion of Cranston, or  hellishly clever. Cranston decided on the latter

explanation, as he  listened to the billionaire's story. 

Stark explained that he had had to attend an important business  conference at the home of his lawyer. A vast

financial merger was being  arranged, one that required secrecy. 

So Stark had pretended to go to his bedroom for a nap in order to  be able to deny that he had taken part in a

merger conference, if a  rumor of what was going on reached Wall Street. He mentioned the name  of his

lawyer  Richard Liophant. 

"I know I can rely on your discretion," Stark concluded. "Otherwise  I wouldn't have told you this." 

Cranston nodded courteously. But his mind was working swiftly, to  discover the real answer to Stark's

amazingly frank confession.  Cranston was convinced that Stark suspected his hidden presence outside  the

locked bedroom door. Being smart, Stark had neatly killed  Cranston's hot clue with an alibi that included his

lawyer, Richard  Liophant. 

Liophant enjoyed an excellent reputation. It was inconceivable that  he would lie to protect Stark and cover

crime. 

There was a faint sneer on Stark's lips as he abruptly changed the  subject. He asked about Kent Allard. 

"I thought you were bringing Allard with you, to introduce him to  me." 


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Cranston was ready with a smooth explanation. He asserted that  Allard was flying from Washington and was

due very soon at Newark  Airport. Allard intended to come straight from the airport to the Stark  mansion, for

a brief visit before he took the air again to fly to  Boston. 

Cranston paused. Then, with an innocent tone he exploded his well  planned little bombshell. 

"Why don't you send your chauffeur to the airport to meet Allard?"  he told Stark. "I'm sure that Allard would

appreciate it, if your  chauffeur greeted him the moment he stepped from the plane and drove  him here

without loss of time." 

FOR a moment, Benedict Stark looked thunderstruck. It was plain  that he suspected Kent Allard and Lamont

Cranston were the same man.  But how could that be, if Cranston's suggestion was genuine? 

Stark's small eyes gleamed. He called his chauffeur and told him to  drive to the airport at once. With a

tightlipped smile, he further  instructed the chauffeur not to wait outside the field in the car, but  to be on

hand when Kent Allard stepped from the transport plane. 

His excuse was that Allard might be missed in the confusion of  landing. But Cranston knew the real reason

for this maneuver. Stark  wanted to be sure that Allard actually arrived in the plane. 

The chauffeur departed. Cranston smiled dimly. His welllaid scheme  to fool Stark was ticking like a clock. 

Guests began to arrive at the mansion. There were not very many,  but all of them were important. The

governor of the State was there,  with his wife. So were a couple of senators. There was a famous screen

actress, a few corporation officials, and one or two prominent social  figures. 

Cranston enjoyed meeting them. 

Meanwhile, Stark's chauffeur had met the Washington plane at Newark  Airport. He saw Allard step from the

cabin, recognized him at once from  his description. He bowed and escorted him to the waiting limousine. 

The arriving air traveler, tipped off by The Shadow, had expected  this. He made no objection to the

arrangement. 

The smiling, goodlooking young aviator was not, of course, Kent  Allard. Harry Vincent was playing a role

in which he had been well  tutored. His face had been deftly altered to fit the part. A young man,  he was able

to make the change to Kent Allard without too much trouble. 

He was calm as he rode to the Stark mansion. But there was anxiety  beneath that calm. The most dangerous

part of the trick was still to  come. Harry Vincent knew nothing about the technicalities of aviation,  and

Benedict Stark did. 

It was important for Harry to avoid talk with the billionaire.  Harry's job was merely to convince Stark that

Allard had actually  arrived from Washington by air, and that Allard and Cranston were two  separate persons. 

After that, the rest was up to The Shadow. 

There was a hush of interest as Harry entered the Stark living  room. The fame of Kent Allard was

tremendous. A shy man, he seldom went  anywhere. Everyone present was anxious to meet him. 

Particularly the tightlipped Benedict Stark!


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After Stark had shaken hands with the handsome visitor, he  attempted to sound him out on a subject

concerning which Harry Vincent  knew practically nothing. 

Harry parried the attempt skillfully. He announced that he was  tired and dusty after his journey Could he

retire for a moment and make  himself presentable? 

A servant was called to direct him. As he left on the heels of his  guide, he turned back for an instant. 

"Oh, by the way, Cranston! Do you mind coming with me while I clean  up? I've arranged everything for that

hunting trip by air we planned to  take next month. I'd like to tell you some of the " 

Cranston said deftly to the others, "Excuse me." He followed his  agent up the broad stairs, to a beautifully

tiled washroom the second  floor. 

As soon as the servant departed, a swift transformation took place. 

Cranston, with a few deft motions around his face, got rid of the  outward appearance of Lamont Cranston.

This was easy, because the role  of Lamont Cranston was merely a convenient coverup for the real  identity

of The Shadow. 

The Shadow's real identity was Kent Allard! He himself was the  famous aviator so renowned for shyness and

inaccessibility. 

Facing Harry Vincent, he congratulated himself on the skill with  which he had transformed his agent. The

two looked like peas in a pod. 

The Shadow took the white gardenia from Harry's lapel. His voice  changed as he whispered final instructions.

It was younger, more  vibrant  the voice of Allard. 

Harry Vincent went out the washroom window. He dropped noiselessly  to the soft turf in the rear of the

mansion, sneaked through the  darkness toward the empty limousine parked out front. The chauffeur had  gone

inside the servants' quarters for a smoke and a cup of coffee. The  coast was clear. 

Vincent entered the parked limousine. He stretched himself as flat  as he could on the floor, and covered

himself with a lap robe. 

Part 2 of a clever substitution had been accomplished safely. Part  3 still remained. 

THE SHADOW left the washroom as Kent Allard. He hurried to the  living room and mingled socially with

the guests, particularly Benedict  Stark. Stark was completely unaware that in the space of ten minutes he  had

greeted two different men as Kent Allard. 

Stark began to pump The Shadow on the subject of aviation. The  Shadow welcomed the test. He was amazed

by the tremendous technical  knowledge Stark had concerning planes and problems of flying. But smart  as

Stark was on the subject, The Shadow was smarter. Why not? He  himself was actually Kent Allard! 

A long talk between him and Stark soon put the billionaire  hopelessly out of his depth. The suspicious gleam

faded from Stark's  small eyes. He was satisfied he had been mistaken in his theory about  Allard. He allowed

other people to chat with the famous aviator.


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But The Shadow didn't deceive himself. He knew he was still in  peril. At any moment, Stark would realize

that Lamont Cranston was not  to be seen anywhere. Allard would have to leave instantly to make the

deception perfect. 

The Shadow glanced at his watch and uttered a regretful  exclamation. His plane, he explained, was waiting to

take him to  Boston. He had an appointment there, that couldn't be broken. He had  enjoyed his visit with

Stark, and hoped to come again. Would Stark  excuse him and accept his apologies for having to leave so

soon? 

Stark himself accompanied The Shadow to the door. He watched him  get into the limousine. He heard him

say in a brisk tone: "Newark  Airport." 

Stark was satisfied. He went back into the mansion and rejoined his  guests. 

However, if he had remained outside and glanced toward the nearest  corner, Stark might have observed Part 3

of The Shadow's masterpiece of  deception and substitution. 

The limousine halted for a red traffic light. The moment it did, a  taxicab scraped fenders with it on the left

side. Angrily, the  chauffeur's head turned. The cab driver was deliberately insulting; he  kept the chauffeur

busy arguing. He was Moe Shrevnitz. 

Under cover of the interruption, the rear door of the limousine  opened gently. The Shadow slipped unseen to

the pavement. The moment he  did so, Harry Vincent rose from his concealment beneath the lap robe on  the

floor and slid swiftly to the seat vacated by The Shadow. 

It was done so neatly that the chauffeur was unaware of the change.  Glancing back as the traffic light

changed to green, he saw Kent Allard  still sitting calmly where he was supposed to sit. The faint click of  the

door was what had disturbed the chauffeur. 

"I'm afraid it's improperly closed," he said through the speaking  tube, to his distinguished passenger. 

"Quite so," Vincent replied smoothly. He slammed it tightly shut. 

The car gathered speed. It sped southward and through the Holland  Tunnel to the Newark Airport. Vincent

smilingly took his seat in a  plane. 

The chauffeur watched until the ship was a speck in the black sky.  Satisfied, he drove homeward, to make his

report to Benedict Stark that  everything was normal. 

He had no idea that the real Kent Allard was still in the Stark  mansion. The Shadow had sneaked back to the

house through the washroom  window in the rear. 

The Shadow wasted no time. He had thrown away Harry Vincent's white  gardenia. His dark evening clothes

didn't have to be touched. A few  deft touches with grease paint and putty dimmed his youthful  handsomeness

and added the slightly older appearance of Cranston. 

AS Cranston, The Shadow hurried downstairs. He glanced about for  the prettiest woman he could find. He

was deep in conversation with the  movie actress, in one of the adjoining rooms, when he felt the hand of

Benedict Stark touch his shoulder lightly. 

"I've been looking for you, Cranston, ever since your friend Allard  left. Where in the world have you been?" 


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"You'll have to excuse us for our rudeness," the actress said  smilingly. "Mr. Cranston is a fascinating talker." 

Innocently, she had given The Shadow the alibi he needed. It  sounded as if he had been flirting with her

during the entire time he  had been out of Stark's sight. 

Cranston was completely triumphant. But, suddenly, he had a strange  feeling of impending evil. A servant

had approached Stark with eager  haste. 

"You're wanted on the telephone, sir. Something important." 

To Cranston, it seemed that Stark had expected that interruption.  His eyes were, for an instant, like cold,

pitiless flame. 

"I'll take the call here in the living room. Plug in the phone,  please." 

Cranston wondered why the servant had brought a portable phone. If  the message was so important, why did

Stark answer it before the eyes  and ears of his guests? Did he want them to hear what was said? 

Cranston watched Stark. He saw the billionaire's face register  surprise, shock  then terror. 

"Oh, that's horrible! It can't be! Are you sure? Yes  he's here.  But I  I can't bear to tell him!" 

He turned to stare at two people  Lamont Cranston and young Bob  Harmon. 

"It's the police," he whispered. "Inspector Cardona is calling.  There's been a terrible murder! The police have

just discovered the  crime." 

Stark hesitated. Then with a harsh rasp, he spoke again. 

"The victim is Jane Harmon  poor Bob's sister. Her body was found  in her bedroom, horribly mutilated!" 

Cranston seized the phone. He suspected a trick of some kind. But  the voice at the other end of the wire was

Inspector Cardona's. He  verified what Stark had said. 

Bob Harmon was staring dazedly at Cranston. "My sister! Is it...  true?" His face was as white as chalk. 

Cranston didn't reply, but his silent nod was a death warrant. 

Bob Harmon tried to take a faltering step toward the door. He  reeled and fainted. Someone ran to his aid. 

Cranston kept his gaze on Stark. There was a sparkle in the eyes of  the billionaire host, a gloating gleam that

was quickly masked.  Cranston wasn't even sure that he had read the expression rightly. 

Prince of Evil! Was Benedict Stark that unknown supercriminal? Had  he struck again at the doomed Harmon

family; this time, directly under  the baffled eyes of The Shadow? 

CHAPTER XIII. VICTORY  AND DEFEAT

A LIMOUSINE sped swiftly through the darkness of upper Manhattan.  It was driven by Benedict Stark's

chauffeur. It was heading at  breakneck pace for the Harmon home. 


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Bob Harmon sat in limp horror on the rear seat, supported by Stark  and Lamont Cranston. The news of his

sister's murder had transformed  him into a rigid ghost of his former self. Whenever he could force  himself to

speak, his trembling lips framed bitter curses at himself. 

"I shouldn't have left Jane alone at home," he gasped. 

"You shouldn't be going there now," Stark said. "You've had a  terrible shock. You ought to spare yourself a

worse one." 

Bob Harmon shook his head. 

"I've got to find out why Jane was killed  and by whom! Perhaps I  can find a clue." 

"I still think you ought to have remained at my home, to get a  better grip on your nerves," Stark insisted. 

Cranston wondered why Stark stuck to the point so persistently. He  had done his best to dissuade Bob from

looking at the body of his  sister. He had declared that it was better to leave things in the hands  of the police.

But when Bob had insisted on rushing to the scene of the  crime, Stark abruptly changed his tactics. He

decided that he, too,  would go. 

His excuse was that he could help Lamont Cranston take care of the  griefstricken lad. Cranston wondered if

that was Stark's only reason. 

The limousine made a swift trip southward along the darkened  avenues of the West Side. It drew to an abrupt

halt outside the Harmon  home. 

A policeman was on duty at the front door of the house. A small  crowd had already collected, drawn together

by the lure of tragedy and  crime. The cop scowled at the three men who raced across the sidewalk  from the

swanky limousine. 

"Sorry. No one's allowed in! Orders." 

But he changed his mind when he learned the identity of the trio.  Orders didn't apply to men of the caliber of

Lamont Cranston and  Benedict Stark. The cop nodded respectfully. There was pity in his eyes  as he realized

who the pale young man was. 

"Her brother, eh? O.K. I'll speak to the inspector." 

The inspector was Joe Cardona. He greeted Cranston and Stark  crisply. He gave Bob a slower, more

sympathetic stare. 

"You better stay downstairs, son. It's not exactly a pretty sight  to look at." 

But Bob shook his head. 

"I've got to see my sister... to know how she... was killed." 

"All right," Cardona said. "The body's upstairs in the bedroom." 

He stayed close to Bob's elbow. Upstairs, a cop moved aside.  Cardona opened a door. His hand was firmly on

Bob's arm when the boy  stepped into the room. Cardona's caution was needed. Bob uttered a  shrill cry as he


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recognized the bloodstained clothing of the girl on  the floor. 

"Jane!" 

Cardona caught him as he fell. He carried the limp figure to the  bed. 

Lamont Cranston looked grim as he stared at the victim of a vicious  murderer. The corpse lay on the floor

midway between the dressing table  and the rear window. It would have been impossible to identify her  except

for her clothing. 

Her head had been chopped from her body! 

"We haven't been able to find the missing head," Cardona said, in  answer to Cranston's unspoken question.

"The killer carried it off with  him. God only knows why! He must have been a madman  a degenerate of

some kind." 

"Surely he left a clue?" Benedict Stark said softly. 

"Nothing," Cardona growled. "We went over this room with a  finetooth comb. No fingerprints. No

understandable motive. No  nothing!" 

"A pity," Stark said. "I wonder why he chopped off the unfortunate  girl's head." 

CRANSTON wondered about that, too. He didn't voice the quick  thought that flamed into his keen mind.

There was no sense to the  horrible beheading of the corpse. It had gained the murderer nothing  except an

added problem of disposing of the severed head elsewhere. 

That was the simplest view of the puzzle. But suppose the stealing  of a dismembered head had gained the

murderer something! Could it be  the attempt of an infinitely clever criminal to fool Bob Harmon and the

police? 

Suppose the dead woman were not Jane Harmon at all! A maimed body  dressed in Jane Harmon's clothes! 

With the head missing, it would be a difficult substitution to  prove. An examination of the corpse's

fingerprints wouldn't help. Jane  had never had her prints recorded. Bob would identify the clothing as  that of

his sister. To the police, there would be nothing wrong with  that identification. They would merely widen

their search to locate the  missing head. 

The Shadow doubted if they would ever find it. 

His unspoken deductions went a step further. If his theory were  correct, he could guess who that unfortunate

victim on the floor really  was. Dorothy Bruner, the blond wife of the crooked David Chester! 

The Shadow remembered certain terrified words he had heard spoken  in the bedroom of the Chester

apartment while he and Rutledge Mann had  lurked in hiding behind a heavy window drape. Chester had

telephoned  his unknown chief, to report the discovery and search of his secret  room. It had brought a prompt

death sentence to Chester and Dorothy. 

Was this headless corpse in the Harmon home the answer? And if so,  why had Jane Harmon been kidnapped

to make it look as if she herself  was the killer's bloody victim? 


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It seemed to hint at a cruelty far more ugly than murder. The  Shadow suspected a plot directed not only at a

kidnapped and living  Jane, but at her brother Bob. 

Bob had been carried downstairs after his collapse. When he  recovered, he found Benedict Stark talking

gently to him. Stark urged  the young man to return to his, Stark's, mansion in order to rest and  recover from

the shock of his sister's death. 

But Cranston quickly intervened. 

"I'll take care of Bob," he said firmly. "He'll be quite  comfortable in my suite at the Cobalt Club. There's no

need for you to  trouble yourself, Mr. Stark." 

"It will be no trouble," Stark replied. 

Then he saw the expression in Cranston's cool, level eyes. There  was challenge in those eyes, an unspoken

determination not to let Bob  out of his sight. Stark shrugged. 

"Whatever you think best," he agreed, his voice like silk. 

He was driven away, presently, in his limousine. After Bob had  regained some measure of control over

himself, Cranston took him to the  Cobalt Club. 

In his quiet suite at the club, Cranston spoke sharply to the dazed  lad. 

"I've got to leave you here for a short while," he said. "Whatever  you do, do not for any reason whatever

leave this room! Keep the door  locked. You're in deadly peril! Do you understand me?" 

Bob nodded dully. Tears were streaming down his cheeks. He walked  to a couch and threw himself face

downward. Cranston felt sorry for  him, but he was powerless to ease the boy's agony. He dared not tell  Bob

that he suspected his sister was still alive. It might ruin  everything, by some premature move of the

griefstricken lad. 

Meanwhile, Cranston had an important visit to make. 

When he left the Cobalt Club, he carried a small brief case with  him. He drove swiftly to the East Side

apartment building where Dorothy  Bruner lived. He entered by the tradesmen's alley and vanished into the

dark basement. At this hour of the night the basement was deserted. 

In the darkness, Cranston made a quick change of garments, taking  others from the brief case. When he

stepped into the empty rear service  elevator, he was robed entirely in black. A slouch hat shaded his keen

eyes. The collar of his cloak covered his throat and chin. Black gloves  were on his tapering fingers. 

He had become The Shadow! 

THE SHADOW got into Dorothy Bruner's apartment by the rear door.  Not the slightest sound betrayed his

cautious movements. He passed from  the kitchen to the pantry, stowed the briefcase there, and continued

down a long, narrow corridor to the living room. 

The living room door was closed. But there was light, beyond that  closed door  the only light in the entire

apartment. 


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Kneeling, The Shadow peered briefly through the keyhole. What he  saw stiffened him into immediate action.

With a quick movement, he was  on his feet. His gloved hand whirled the knob and threw open the door. 

A gun menaced the surprised and snarling figure of David Chester. 

Chester was on his knees alongside a large leather suitcase. The  suitcase was open. Chester had been engaged

in packing it with bundles  of currency. The bundles were piled helterskelter on the floor. 

"The Shadow!" he screamed, as he recognized the blackrobed figure. 

He cringed backward, upsetting one of the packages of currency. The  Shadow saw the denomination of the

topmost bill. It was a  thousanddollar bank note! 

It was as evident that Chester had been interrupted just at the  moment when he was prepared to flee with a

fortune. Greed was stamped  on his face. He uttered an oath as he heard grim laughter from The  Shadow. 

His voice edged to softness, The Shadow said: 

"You're a fool!" 

His sharp eyes, staring at the packages of currency, had detected  something not yet realized by Chester. 

"Look!" 

A blackgloved finger of The Shadow's left hand pointed toward one  of the bundles of money. 

"Open it!"' the voice of The Shadow continued. 

Hypnotized by the strange mockery in that voice, Chester broke open  the seal of the package. Instantly, he

uttered a cry of amazement and  rage. Only the top and bottom bills in that bundle were, genuine

thousanddollar notes. The rest was blank and worthless paper. 

Chester had been doublecrossed! 

He knew it now. The sharp eyes of The Shadow had proved it to him.  Instead of fleeing with a fortune,

Chester was packing a suitcase with  worthless junk. 

The gun of The Shadow remained pointed grimly at the deluded crook. 

"Talk!" said his measured voice. "Confess!" 

Chester was afraid to utter a sound. He feared The Shadow, but he  feared his unknown chief even more. 

He said nothing, until the crisp words of The Shadow informed him  that Dorothy Bruner had been trapped

and killed. 

"Murdered? Where? How do you know?" 

"In a bedroom in the Harmon home. She was beheaded." 


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Chester uttered a cry of terror. There was no mistaking The  Shadow's sincerity. Chester knew that Dorothy

had gone to the Harmon  house and why she had gone. He realized, too late, that, like himself,  she had been

doublecrossed. Dorothy's reward for service had been a  horrible death. 

The shock of that knowledge unlocked Chester's pale lips. He began  to babble fiercely as much as he knew.

He had forgotten his dread of  The Shadow and the law. All he wanted now was revenge. 

He admitted that Dorothy Bruner had been sent to the Harmon home to  kidnap Jane. The plan was to ship

Jane to South America and keep her  there by force, unknown to anyone. Dorothy had obeyed the chief's

order, hoping to join Chester as soon as she had attended to the  kidnapping of Jane. 

Dorothy intended to flee with Chester aboard a ship leaving for  Europe. Chester was bringing with him every

penny of cash he could lay  his hands on. But the unknown chief must have suspected that Chester  planned to

skip. He had tampered with every package of money hidden in  the safe within Chester's secret chamber. 

There was more loot than that, Chester gasped. Since the fire at  the Chinese restaurant, Chester had been

unable to contact his secret  chief directly. Money from various crooked enterprises had piled up. 

"Where?" The Shadow rasped. 

Chester ripped open the front of his shirt. A key was disclosed on  a gold chain suspended about his neck. He

snapped the chain and tossed  the key at The Shadow's feet. The Shadow bent and seized it. 

With pale lips, Chester whispered an address. He was eager to  cooperate now  to bring about the exposure

of a fiendish supercriminal  who had used Dorothy as a pawn and then killed her. 

"His name?" The Shadow said harshly. 

Chester wrung his hands in despair. He didn't know. He had never  known! Not once in his entire association

with the Prince of Evil had  he ever laid eyes on the man. 

But the next question of The Shadow brought an understandable gleam  to Chester's revengeful eyes. 

"How was your wife instructed to go to the Harmon home tonight? A  message? A man?" 

"A man. He came here after I had been warned by phone to obey  whatever " 

"Describe him." 

Chester's mouth opened; but no sound came from his lips. There was  a queer blue circlet on his forehead. It

had been stamped there with  appalling suddenness. A bullet hole! 

From the doorway of the living room had come a faint sound, like a  wheeze. 

David Chester crashed to the floor, stonedead, with a bullet in  his brain. A bullet fired from a silenced gun. 

THE SHADOW saw the gun as he whirled. A hand was visible at the  frame of the doorway. A second bullet

from the concealed murderer  whizzed past The Shadow as he flung himself downward. He escaped death,  but

it gave the hidden marksman a chance to flee. 

There was a swift race of disappearing feet. 


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By the time The Shadow reached the outer hall, the spinning arrow  above the elevator shaft showed that the

car was dropping at full speed  toward the street level. 

The Shadow raced down the stairs. When he reached the lobby, he  found the car resting quietly in the shaft,

its door wide open. The  operator was dead. He had been shot through the temple. 

The switchboard operator at the front of the lobby was dead, too.  The escaping murderer had taken no

chances on leaving a living witness  behind him. There was no clue to tell who he was or what he looked  like. 

Further pursuit was useless. 

The Shadow leaped into the elevator and raced it upward. He found  his briefcase where he had secreted it in

the pantry of Chester's  apartment. He changed back to the, welldressed appearance of Lamont  Cranston.

Using the rear service elevator, he made a quick retreat from  the building. 

He was just in time. A police whistle was blowing shrilly on the  sidewalk. Someone had already discovered

the dead switchboard operator  in the apartment building lobby. 

Before the police radio cars began to arrive, Lamont Cranston  walked quietly to a hack stand in an adjoining

street. Once in a cab,  he instructed the driver. 

Presently, The Shadow saw the lights of a telegraph office. He told  the driver to stop, went in the building. 

He picked up a telegram envelope and slipped a key into it. It was  the key that had been on a thin gold chain

around the neck of David  Chester. 

On a telegraph blank. The Shadow wrote an address. The address had  been gasped out hurriedly by Chester,

but The Shadow was certain that  he remembered it correctly. 

Below the address he wrote a hurried note, explaining in quick  detail certain instructions he wanted obeyed at

once. He sealed and  addressed the envelope after making grimly sure that it contained the  key and the

message. 

Then he smiled at the sleepy night manager, told him he wanted  messenger service. 

A uniformed boy rose from a long bench in the rear. 

"This envelope is to be delivered at once to Mr. Rutledge Mann,"  Cranston said. 

He paid the service fee, added extra money for taxi fare, and  included a big tip. 

Cranston left the telegraph office with a lighter step. He had put  certain forces into motion. His next move

would be to explain a little  of what was going on to the griefstricken Bob Harmon. He could tell  Bob

enough to assure him that his sister was still alive. 

The Shadow had a hunch he was going to be able to rescue Jane  before too long. Bob Harmon was the

keystone of his whole plan. 

He entered the Cobalt Club and went hurriedly to his suite. One  glance, and his face paled. Again The

Shadow had received an unexpected  blow from a cunning master of crime. 


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Bob Harmon was gone! 

CHAPTER XIV. TRIPLE DOOM

FAR downtown, on the lower East Side of Manhattan, stood an ancient  and sagging frame house. 

High above it, like a gaunt shadow, stretched the shore span of the  Brooklyn Bridge. Over the East River, the

bridge was a thing of beauty.  But here inshore, where it spanned narrow streets and the roofs of  dingy

tenements, the bridge looked down on ugliness and decay. 

The frame house was flanked on either side by taller brick  buildings. Their closeness seemed to be the only

thing that kept it  from collapsing. Paint hadn't been applied to it in years. Its chimney  sagged. The windows

were boarded up. 

From its appearance, no human being had set foot across that dusty  threshold in many years. 

Its appearance, however, was deceptive. There was a man hidden  inside the house. He was opening the street

door with stealthy care. 

The man peered out cautiously, to make sure that there was no one  in sight along the narrow street. Then he

picked up two heavy objects  and emerged. 

The heavy objects were two suitcases. He hurried quickly westward,  panting as he lugged his heavy burdens. 

The stealthy figure was Rutledge Mann. 

He had obeyed the orders of The Shadow brought to him by the  telegraph messenger. The address in the

message was that of this  ancient frame house in the shadow of Brooklyn Bridge. The key from the  gold chain

about the neck of David Chester had opened the front door of  the disreputable old shack. Rutledge Mann had

searched its crumbling  interior with swift thoroughness. 

Under the worn floor boards in an upper room, he had found what The  Shadow had anticipated. Money! A

whole secret cache of it. More than  four hundred thousand dollars in bank notes! 

It represented profits from some of the cunning business deals that  had been made by the sly Chester. Chester

had been unable to turn it  over to his chief for a simple physical reason. 

Charlie Horn, his usual gobetween was now dead, killed for  attempting to squeal to The Shadow. The

Chinese restaurant where Horn  had made his contacts with the unknown supercriminal, was now burned

down. The Chinaman, Ho Fang, had been burned to death. 

All direct contact between Chester and the Prince of Evil had been  temporarily blocked. That was why

Rutledge Mann had been able to fill  two suitcases with a hoarded sum of cash that amounted to nearly half a

million dollars. 

He was in double peril as he hurried stealthily along these narrow,  crooked streets under the shadow of

Brooklyn Bridge. Men had been held  up and murdered in this grim neighborhood for the price of a few

drinks. If a hint of the contents of those suitcases became known to  the ratfaced dwellers of cellars and

dives, Rutledge Mann's throat  would be slashed in the twinkling of an eye. 


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Police interference was an added peril. For Mann to be halted and  arrested now, would spoil The Shadow's

planned scheme for restitution  and justice. The money would be impounded. There would be a long,  futile

investigation. Worse than that, Mann's secret connection with  The Shadow would become known to the

authorities, ruining his future  usefulness. 

The ears of Rutledge Mann were keyed to sharp tension as he hurried  westward toward the comparative

safety of City Hall Park. Suddenly, he  heard the brisk slapslap of steady feet. It was the echo of a

patrolman's brogans. He was approaching the corner which Mann had  almost reached. 

A moment later, the bluecoat came into view. He stood there,  peering suspiciously through the darkness. He

thought he had heard  something. But he could see no sign of a living being. Mann had already  gained the

shelter of a doorway. 

He stood there, scarcely daring to breathe, as the cop stared  directly toward his refuge. The cop took a step or

two down the street,  then stopped. His beat was along the avenue. He didn't relish the  notion of butting into

trouble on some other patrolman's post. His own  tour was almost completed. 

He crossed the street at the corner and continued down the avenue. 

After a slow fiveminute wait that seemed like centuries, Mann left  his hiding, place with a beating heart.

The heavy suitcases dragged at  his arms, but he increased his pace. He didn't slow down until he  reached the

stairs of the pedestrian exit from Brooklyn Bridge. 

He headed toward City Hall Park as if he had just emerged from the  bridge. A nighthawk taxi was parked

nearby. The hacker paid no  particular attention to Mann. He assumed that the tiredlooking guy  with the two

bags had just descended the exit stairs from a bridge  train. 

The address Mann gave was further proof that his possession of  traveling bags at this hour of the night was

entirely normal. 

"Grand Central Station," Mann said. 

ARRIVING at Grand Central, Mann walked through the terminal proper,  to a baggage check room. He

checked his two suitcases and received a  receipt tag. 

He didn't keep the tag long. He drifted unobtrusively to the part  of the terminal where public lockers were

located. There were two tiers  of lockers, one above the other. Mann counted ten from the left and  dropped a

dime in the slot of the top locker. 

Inside it, he stowed the luggage check and a small piece of paper  on which he had scribbled something with

neat precision. Having closed  the locker, he placed its key well back out of sight on its dusty top.  The key

would remain there entirely invisible, except to someone who  would know where to look. 

That someone was The Shadow. 

Rutledge Mann's dangerous job as finished. With a sigh of relief,  he left the terminal and hailed another night

cab on Fortysecond  Street. But he did not go home yet. 

A methodical man, he still had research work to do in reference to  some of the facts he had found out. He had

the cabby drive him to a  building where he maintained an impressive office, in his role of  investment broker. 


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Entering the office, Mann moved toward the massive, burglarproof  safe where he kept his records. But as he

did so, his step halted. His  roving, glance noticed the closet door. 

The door was not completely closed. Mann knew he had closed that  door tightly the last time he was in the

office. He suspected burglars  had paid a visit during his absence. 

Reaching for his gun, he wrenched open the door. 

It was a fatally rash action. Before he could level his hastily  drawn gun to menace the palefaced intruder he

saw in the dark closet,  a pair of brass knuckles struck Mann a terrific blow on the forehead. 

The gun slipped from his relaxed fingers. He pitched backward to  the floor, lay there without motion. 

With catlike tread, the thug who had slugged him emerged. Behind  him came another man. The second thug

had been crouched in the back of  the closet. Both had been waiting there for more than an hour. Robbery  was

not their motive. They were expert snatch artists. 

The closet door had been deliberately left ajar to induce the  victim to peer in. It had worked like a charm.

Mann lay on the floor  like a dead man, a slow trickle of blood oozing from his forehead. 

It was a matter of seconds to gag and bind the helpless victim. He  was picked up like a sack of grain and

carried down a deserted corridor  to a rear elevator. The elevator took the thugs and their captive to  the cellar. 

At the end of a rear alley, a car was waiting, its engine purring  softly. A third thug was hunched over the

wheel. 

The car rolled off presently. It didn't hit up too much speed. This  trio of snatch artists were experts at their

ugly trade. 

Unknown to The Shadow, Rutledge Mann was in the grip of agents of  the Prince of Evil! 

WHEN The Shadow discovered that Bob Harmon was missing from his  rooms at the Cobalt Club, he felt a

cold premonition of disaster. He  had given Bob strict orders not to move until he returned. He had  impressed

on the lad's mind the dangerous spot he was in. 

Yet Bob had deliberately disobeyed Cranston's orders. He had left  the Cobalt Club of his own free will. 

Cranston knew this, when he saw the torn half of the note that Bob  had dropped on the floor in the haste of

his sudden departure.  Evidently, in cramming, the note into his pocket, Bob had lost one of  the torn pieces. 

The Shadow was able only to guess at the full import of that  message. But he could see at a glance several

things that increased his  apprehension of disaster. For instance, the fragment of a name at the  bottom, typed

in capital letters: "STON." 

Obviously Cranston's name had been signed fraudulently to that  note. It was a lure to lead a griefstricken lad

into a murderous  ambush. 

Phrases on the torn fragment hinted at the nature of the lure. They  indicated unmistakably that Jane Harmon

was not dead. She had been  reserved for a fate worse than death. Kidnapped, she was about to be  secretly

transported to South America and held there  for what  terrible purpose, only the Prince of Evil knew. 


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The Prince of Evil had used the name of Lamont Cranston to acquaint  Bob with the situation. He knew the

lad would rush instantly to the  address mentioned in the note. 

But what was that address? Only part of it was left on the torn  fragment of paper in The Shadow's hand. It

read: 

ge 1274B East River 

Forgetting everything else, The Shadow tried to concentrate with  every atom of his brilliant mind. 

The words "East River" narrowed the problem considerably. But it  was still a task almost hopeless. Where,

along the black waters that  washed the east shore of Manhattan Island, was "ge 1274B"? 

It couldn't be a street; the number was too high. Manhattan streets  that ran to the East River, ended shortly

above 125th Street. Nor could  it be an address. The highest house number possible fell considerably  short of

the fantastic sum of 1274B. 

The East River piers? That, too, was unthinkable. There weren't  anything like a thousand piers along the East

River. 

It was something more simple than that. Something connected with  the mysterious letters "ge." 

The Shadow closed his eyes in deep thought. He made no progress  until he began to think of things

connected normally with a river. 

Then, suddenly, his eyes opened in a piercing gleam. He had it! 

A barge! That was it. Barge! A lot of barges had names,  sometimes very fancy ones, given them by

their captains. But all of  them had registry numbers! Somewhere in the darkness along the East  River shore of

Manhattan, a barge numbered 1274B was tied up at one of  the docks. 

Bob Harmon was already rushing there, lured by a fake note. But  where? 

There was no immediate answer to that question in The Shadow's  mind. There could be none without an

intensive examination of marine  records in the dock department. 

Even if the dock department were open at this late hour, the task  would take hours. And to attempt to locate

the barge by a personal  waterfront search was even more hopeless. 

Lamont Cranston was faced by defeat. But facing defeat and  accepting it were two different things. He raced

downstairs and located  the night doorman of the Cobalt Club. He was acting on a desperate  hunch. 

As he anticipated, Bob had left the Cobalt Club in a mad flurry of  haste. The doorman remembered his fierce

yell for a taxi. Bob had not  been content for the cab to slide to the curb in response to the  doorman's whistle.

He had darted out into the street, wrenched open the  door and slammed himself in. 

The doorman wondered what the devil was going on. The whole episode  seemed so curious, that he had no

trouble remembering for Lamont  Cranston the exact words Bob had shouted to his hackman as the cab  raced

away: 

"Drive like hell to Fulton Street and turn east!" 


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THAT was all Lamont Cranston needed to know. His own car was parked  outside the Cobalt Club. In another

instant he was behind the wheel,  driving swiftly downtown. 

But he broke his journey briefly, in order to satisfy himself about  the safety of another person  Rutledge

Mann. The Shadow had given Mann  a dangerous assignment. Had he completed it successfully  or was

Mann  too, a victim of the lightning like moves of the Prince of Evil? 

The Grand Central Terminal was on The Shadow's route downtown. He  hurried through the station and

headed for the corridor where the  public lockers were located. He counted ten from the left. Making sure  that

his movements were unobserved, he ran a hand along the top of the  tenth locker on the upper tier. 

He found the key Mann had left there. 

Opening the locker, Cranston discovered a luggage check and a slip  of paper. Written on the paper, in

Rutledge Mann's precise handwriting,  was a sum of money: $439,752.17. 

The Shadow's eyes gleamed. It was proof that Mann had succeeded.  The sum he had stored away in two

suitcases in the baggage check room  at Grand Central was almost as large as the amount swindled from Bob

Harmon's dead father. Restitution of that money would be prompt and  just. 

But would Bob and his kidnapped sister Jane be alive to receive it? 

Cranston crammed the luggage check into his pocket. Moments later,  he was back in his fast car, driving with

reckless speed on the trail  of the deluded lad. 

Lower Broadway was like a black, deserted canyon. So was the dimly  lit expanse of Fulton Street. Ordinarily

crowded at noontime with  hundreds of thousands of clerks and business men, it was now an echoing

emptiness between the dark fronts of tall skyscrapers. 

Cranston parked his car a block away from the East River piers. He  didn't anticipate too difficult a search.

The supercriminal who had  lured Bob would have made things as easy as possible for Bob to find  the barge. 

North of the Fulton Street pier, where ships left for Central and  South America, was a smaller dock. It was

old and disused. It had  fallen into rotting decay. 

Cranston slipped closer in the darkness. One side of the dock was  empty, except for floating driftwood;

greasy water faintly gurgled  against greenscummed piles. But on the other side was the squat shape  of a

moored barge! 

The Shadow stared at its stern. He was, indeed, The Shadow now!  Lamont Cranston's welldressed figure

had vanished. In its place was  the black slouch hat and the dark, enveloping cloak of The Shadow,  master

avenger of crime. 

Easily visible from the stringpiece at the edge of the street were  the registry numbers on the stern of the

barge: 1274B. 

The Shadow boarded the craft without sound. He moved on tiptoe,  like an unseen part of the night itself. An

added blackness along the  narrow deck near the cabin of the craft was all that denoted the  presence of a rising

being. 


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There were shutters on the only window that offered a view of the  interior of the cabin. With infinite care,

The Shadow moved the slats  of the shutter. He was able to see through the slats, but his feat  availed him

nothing. The window inside the shutter impeded his view. 

The glass was lined on the inside with black tar paper. 

Turning soundlessly, The Shadow retreated on tiptoe to the cabin  door. His gloved fingers tightened gently

around the knob. With  infinite care, he prepared to turn it with one hand, while his other  gripped the butt of

an automatic. 

Suddenly, his hand left the knob of the door as though it were the  smooth head of a poisonous adder. 

His pursuit of Bob had been too easy! So easy, in fact, that The  Shadow now knew that it had been planned

that way by a supercriminal. 

Why should Bob Harmon have dropped that torn half of a note so  conveniently on the floor of Cranston's

room at the Cobalt Club? Why  had the dropped fragment been the one that contained the allimportant

number of the barge? 

To The Shadow, the answer was grimly clear. It was not a lucky  accident. The Prince of Evil made no

blunders. Bob had not dropped that  torn fragment of a forged message. It had been left as a lure by the

kidnapers of Bob and Jane Harmon. 

Three people were destined to die tonight aboard this sinister  barge. 

The third victim was to be The Shadow himself! 

CHAPTER XV. BITTER TRIUMPH

THE realization that the barge was a death trap spurred The Shadow  to grim speed. He was certain now that

the cabin door was unlocked. The  knob was meant to be turned and the door opened. The knob controlled a

death device of some sort. 

Noiselessly, The Shadow tiptoed along the narrow deck of the barge. 

The cabin was sunk almost flush with the deck. Not more than a foot  or two of its squatroofed shape

projected above the hold of the  ungainly craft. It was the roof that engaged The Shadow's attention. 

He vaulted upward. His rubbersoled shoes made a slight bump, but  he paid no attention to the sound. He

was no longer afraid of betraying  his presence to enemies within. The setup convinced him that there  were

no enemies inside that dark cabin! 

A cunning death contrivance awaited the entrance of The Shadow  through the doorway. Criminals would not

expose themselves to  destruction. Only Bob and Jane were within! 

Such was the thought of The Shadow as he busied himself with the  task of forcing an entry from above. 

The weatherbeaten condition of the ancient barge was an aid to The  Shadow's efforts. The roof planks had

been warped by the rain and snow  of many years of service along the water front. A plank end at the edge  of

the roof began to lift with squeaking reluctance under the pressure  of The Shadow's grip. 


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The nails gave slightly. Leaping to the deck, The Shadow searched  for, and found, a short iron bar lying near

the barge's rusty capstan.  The bar enabled him to pry the loosened plank farther upward. It broke  with a snap

of rotted wood. 

Another plank followed. And another  a narrow hole was disclosed  between the sloping beams of the roof. 

The Shadow peered inward. He lowered himself feet first through the  narrow hole. It was tough work

wriggling through. Rusted nails ripped  at his straining shoulders. But he was unmindful of the pain those

rusted nails made as they drew blood. 

He dropped to the floor of the cabin. 

Two pairs of terrified eyes stared at him. Bob and Jane Harmon were  lashed securely to a pair of wooden

chairs that were tied back to back.  The ropes that bound them were drawn cruelly tight. Arm or leg motion

was impossible. 

The only chance left to them was to upset the chairs and try to  crawl together, chairs and all, in a desperate

effort to reach the  cabin door. 

They had not dared to do this. Staring at the two victims, The  Shadow knew why. 

He saw the taut wire  and the explosives. 

The explosives were in two open canisters that stood on either side  of the bound captives, just out of their

reach. A third canister stood  just inside the door. 

That third canister had been planted there to take care of The  Shadow, the moment he turned the knob on the

outside! 

There were enough explosives in the cabin to blow the entire barge  into a flaming mushroom of destruction.

The Shadow himself would have  perished in that rivershaking roar, had he entered as a master  criminal had

intended. 

The taut wire that had prevented Bob and Jane from daring to  overturn the chairs in which they were bound

and gagged, led in a  straight line to the knob of the door. A crossed wooden spindle had  been attached to the

inner knob. The slightest turn of the knob would  have turned the spindle. 

The wires were attached to a mechanical device that controlled a  hammer like contrivance poised above a

percussion cap. 

All three canisters would have exploded simultaneously! 

The Shadow clipped those trigger wires with infinite care. Sweat  beaded his forehead as he steadied the

strands of death with his free  hand. The slightest vibration from the snip of the tiny cutters he had  produced

from an inner pocket of his robes would have set off that  deadly blast. 

It was a test of nerve that Bob and Jane couldn't bear to watch.  But when they opened their closed eyelids at

the sound of sibilant  laughter, The Shadow was holding the harmlessly severed ends of the  wires. 

THE SHADOW ripped the gags from the mouths of the brother and  sister, and slashed their bonds loose.

They pitched woodenly to the  floor; long confinement had paralyzed their limbs. 


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But under the quick ministrations of The Shadow, they were able  presently to regain their feet. They stood

staring in wonder at their  strange rescuer. 

"The Shadow!" Bob gasped. 

There was fear, as well as joy, in his eyes. He had no knowledge  that the slouch hat and the black coat

masked the personality of his  friend and benefactor, Lamont Cranston. 

The Shadow reassured Bob and his trembling sister. His calm voice  explained certain facts. 

Jane Harmon had not been destined to be kidnapped into South  America. David Chester and Dorothy Bruner

had thought so, but they were  wrong. It was merely a cunning device to lure Bob to the barge. The  real intent

was murder  a giant explosion that would have wiped out  the last survivors of the unfortunate Harmon

family. 

"But why?" Bob faltered. "What harm did our parents ever do to a  living soul on this earth? Why should Jane

and I " 

It was a question that The Shadow had pondered many times. He was  silent. The only answer lay in the mind

of the unknown Prince of Evil. 

Was he a maniac smarting under some fancied wrong? Had he become  enraged at some innocent action on

the part of John Harmon? There could  be no answer, no knowledge, until the mask of mystery was ripped

from  an unknown foe. 

The Shadow was positive this foe was Benedict Stark. But there was  not the slightest shred of proof to justify

the suspicion. All The  Shadow was certain of, was that Jane and Bob Harmon had been saved from  death. 

He had ripped the closeknit organization of the Prince of Evil  apart. David Chester was dead. So was the

dangerous Dorothy. The  gobetween, Charlie Horn, lay buried in a nameless grave in potters  field. Ho Fang,

the Chinaman, had been roasted alive in the restaurant  fire. 

Even the clever swindling device that had caused the suicide of  John Harmon could never be repeated on

another victim. The silver and  black inks were now in the possession of The Shadow. 

He had analyzed them in his laboratory, with chemicals and reagents  unknown to the ordinary methods of the

police laboratory experts. The  Shadow knew the secret of the composition of those strange inks that  faded

and returned and left no trace of their appearance on the fiber  of the paper underneath. 

All that remained was the restitution of the money stolen from John  Harmon  money he should have gotten

for his business. 

In the palm of wondering Bob, The Shadow laid a luggage check.  Alongside it he placed a slip of paper. The

sum on that paper was  $439,752.17. It represented the cash that Rutledge Mann had deposited  in two bulky

suitcases at the check room of Grand Central Station. 

The sum fell a little short of the amount that had been stolen from  John Harmon, but it was close enough to

constitute a complete  restitution. 

In a quiet voice, The Shadow told Bob to present the check in the  morning and claim the bags. The money

was rightfully Bob's. Its return  would hurt no one but thieves. Another page in the annals of The Shadow  had


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been successfully turned. 

But there was anger in his deepset eyes, as he watched Bob and  Jane step from the dark deck of the barge

and melt away into the gloom  of Fulton Street. He had won everything  except the final triumph. 

The cleverest and most dangerous criminal in the history of The  Shadow's career was still at liberty! 

Grimly, The Shadow went over every inch of that sinister barge at  the edge of a rotting East River pier. But

he found nothing to connect  Benedict Stark with the case. No clues of any kind. Not the slightest  shred of

evidence. 

AN hour later Lamont Cranston walked with tired steps into his  suite at the Cobalt Club. Tired as he was, he

was determined not to  eat, drink or sleep until he had figured out a move against Benedict  Stark. 

He might have spared himself the task. A move had already been  made. A move that utterly puzzled Lamont

Cranston. And Stark himself  had made the move! 

The proof of it was a letter that lay on Cranston's desk. It read: 

MY DEAR CRANSTON: 

I wonder if you'd mind joining a few of my most honored friends in 

wishing me bon voyage. Tomorrow evening I'm leaving on my private  yacht 

for a wellearned vacation in Bermuda. I don't suppose I need tell  you 

that I'm rather tired after certain business exertions of late. My 

farewell party would be incomplete without you. Do come  if only  to 

give me the opportunity to gratify my vanity. 

BENEDICT STARK 

Cranston read that note many times in the next twentyfour hours.  There was an undercurrent that puzzled

him. He was still puzzled when  he boarded the long, white yacht of the billionaire the following  night. 

Stark was as sleek as butter. There were many important social  figures at the party, but none received greater

attention than Lamont  Cranston. Stark went out of his way to flatter him. 

But his words and actions were like the letter he had sent to the  Cobalt Club. There was a faint undercurrent

of triumph, a veiled sneer  in everything Stark said or did. 

Mockery! 

When it was time to leave the yacht, Cranston was the last guest  down the gangplank. Stark chuckled, as he

gripped his hand for the last  farewell. 

"Stop frowning, my friend. You look positively sad! One would  almost think you had lost your best friend!" 


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It was a gibe that Cranston paid no attention to. But he remembered  it later, as he stood on the pier and

watched the graceful shape of  Stark's yacht blend with the darkness of the lower Hudson on its way to  a

warm tropic playground. 

A man touched The Shadow's shoulder. 

"Mr. Cranston?" 

"Yes." 

"I have a package for you. It was sent to the pier by special  messenger." 

The Shadow took the bulky parcel. He carried it to a pier light to  examine it. There was no address on it; no

mark to identify from whom  it had come. When he looked about him, he saw no sign of the man who  had

given it to him. The follow had vanished. 

The Shadow took the parcel to his parked car. He felt an icy sense  of foreboding. His dread was justified

when he opened the package. It  contained the complete set of a man's garments. Hat, coat, shirt, shoes  and

socks, underwear. Suddenly, he remembered the parting gibe of the  sleek Benedict Stark: 

"One would almost think you had lost your best friend." 

He knew now why he had been summoned to the bon voyage party, why  he had received that sinister bundle. 

The clothing belonged to Rutledge Mann! 

With a sinking heart, The Shadow realized, too late, that Mann's  apparent success in carrying out orders had

ended in failure. Mann had  been captured by the Prince of Evil. Naked and helpless, he awaited  doom! 

Was Mann a prisoner aboard the swanky yacht of Benedict Stark? Or  was he lying in some rat hole in

Manhattan awaiting the return of a  cruel supercriminal from a pleasant vacation in the tropics? 

To accuse Stark without proof would merely brand Lamont Cranston as  insane. 

He drove away from the pier with a grim face, deep in thought. In  the darkness ahead of his slowly moving

car he seemed to see the naked  body of Rutledge Mann, its pale face pleading mutely for help. 

The Shadow had thought his battle with the Prince of Evil had  resulted in a stalemate. Now, he knew that the

supercriminal had  triumphed. 

In Rutledge Mann, the Prince of Evil held a winning ace. Unless  Mann was located and rescued, The Shadow

would be forced to cease all  attacks on crime in order to save the life of his kidnapped agent. 

The real battle with a titanic foe was only just starting! 

Was The Shadow for the first time in his career doomed to defeat?  Only time would tell! 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. PRINCE OF EVIL, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. THE MADNESS OF JOHN HARMON, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. CHALLENGE OF CRUELTY, page = 10

   6. CHAPTER III. DANGEROUS BLOND, page = 16

   7. CHAPTER IV. THE SECOND BOTTLE, page = 21

   8. CHAPTER V. DOUBLE DECEPTION, page = 27

   9. CHAPTER VI. GREETINGS FROM HELL, page = 32

   10. CHAPTER VII. UNDERGROUND CHALLENGE, page = 38

   11. CHAPTER VIII. THE CLOSED CIRCLE, page = 45

   12. CHAPTER IX. THE BLUE PARROT, page = 51

   13. CHAPTER X. THE BATHTUB CLUE, page = 58

   14. CHAPTER XI. SILVER AND BLACK, page = 64

   15. CHAPTER XII. TWO IN ONE, page = 71

   16. CHAPTER XIII. VICTORY - AND DEFEAT, page = 77

   17. CHAPTER XIV. TRIPLE DOOM, page = 84

   18. CHAPTER XV. BITTER TRIUMPH, page = 89