Title:   CRIME RIDES THE SEA

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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CRIME RIDES THE SEA

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

CRIME RIDES THE SEA.................................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. SHADOW ABOARD ........................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. THROUGH THE FOG....................................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. BEFORE DAWN ............................................................................................................8

CHAPTER IV. CRIME'S TRIUMPH...................................................................................................12

CHAPTER V. THE NEW CAMPAIGN...............................................................................................16

CHAPTER VI. OUT TO SEA ...............................................................................................................20

CHAPTER VII. THE FINGER MOVES ...............................................................................................23

CHAPTER VIII. MEN IN THE DARK................................................................................................27

CHAPTER IX. EXIT THE SHADOW ..................................................................................................31

CHAPTER X. IN NEW YORK .............................................................................................................35

CHAPTER XI. THE CORSAIR CREW...............................................................................................39

CHAPTER XII. POINTER CHANGES PLANS..................................................................................44

CHAPTER XIII. BROKEN BATTLE ...................................................................................................48

CHAPTER XIV. THE SALVAGE SHIP..............................................................................................52

CHAPTER XV. TIDES TURN.............................................................................................................56

CHAPTER XVI. THE OLD GARAGE .................................................................................................59

CHAPTER XVII. THE PIT BELOW ....................................................................................................63

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S EVIDENCE ............................................................................................66

CHAPTER XIX. STOLEN PROFITS ...................................................................................................69

CHAPTER XX. THE FINAL PROOF..................................................................................................72


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CRIME RIDES THE SEA

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. SHADOW ABOARD 

CHAPTER II. THROUGH THE FOG 

CHAPTER III. BEFORE DAWN 

CHAPTER IV. CRIME'S TRIUMPH 

CHAPTER V. THE NEW CAMPAIGN 

CHAPTER VI. OUT TO SEA 

CHAPTER VII. THE FINGER MOVES 

CHAPTER VIII. MEN IN THE DARK 

CHAPTER IX. EXIT THE SHADOW 

CHAPTER X. IN NEW YORK 

CHAPTER XI. THE CORSAIR CREW 

CHAPTER XII. POINTER CHANGES PLANS 

CHAPTER XIII. BROKEN BATTLE 

CHAPTER XIV. THE SALVAGE SHIP 

CHAPTER XV. TIDES TURN 

CHAPTER XVI. THE OLD GARAGE 

CHAPTER XVII. THE PIT BELOW 

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S EVIDENCE 

CHAPTER XIX. STOLEN PROFITS 

CHAPTER XX. THE FINAL PROOF  

CHAPTER I. SHADOW ABOARD

BULKY, blackish in the thick night fog, the steamship Ozark loomed  beside her North River pier, where

busy stevedores were loading the  last items of the freighter's cargo. 

Feeble pier lights were kindly to the Ozark. Dimmed by the fog,  their glow did not reveal the scratched,

unpainted portions of the  steamer's sides. Moreover, they gave the illusion that the Ozark was a  mammoth

vessel, whereas she actually rated at only eight thousand tons. 

Though a freighter, the Ozark carried passengers, a dozen or so,  who were bound on a vagabond cruise from

New York. One of those  passengers was standing on a side deck, at a level with the roof of the  pier shed.

Elbows propped upon the rail, he was watching the scene  below. 

That passenger's name was Harry Vincent. Quietmannered, cleancut  in appearance, he seemed the very

sort who would enjoy a voyage to  foreign lands, making many friends along the way. But Harry was not

thinking of the coming cruise. His thoughts had taken a drift, like the  outward trend of the river's tide. A drift

that carried him to a  definite past. 

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The rail upon which he leaned; the fog that hovered about him; the  dark water beneath  those were the

elements that stirred his  recollections. 

Harry could remember a bridge rail, a fog that shrouded the deed  that he had intended: a suicide leap into

dank water that awaited him.  But he had never taken that fatal plunge. Instead, a hand had clutched  him and

drawn him from the brink. 

The hand of The Shadow! 

Years ago, but unforgettable. More vivid in Harry's brain than the  shouts and scuffles of the stevedores that

came from the pier beside  the Ozark. For, on that night, Harry Vincent had entered the service of  The

Shadow, never to leave it. (Note: See "The Living Shadow" Vol. I,  No. 1.) 

A strange being, cloaked in black, whose hawklike face had eyes  that burned through you, as they peered

from beneath the brim of a  slouch hat. Such was The Shadow, master of darkness, who battled men of  crime

to their destruction. Harry had met him often since that first  night; yet, always, The Shadow's ways were

unfathomable. 

That very thought brought Harry to a rigid position beside the rail  of the Ozark. 

Again in the present, he was staring at a stack of empty packing  cases on the pier. The boxes formed an angle

from a large post that  supported the pier shed, and against that dull background, Harry  fancied that he saw a

silhouetted figure. For a full minute, he  watched, expecting some motion from the spot. None came. 

Harry decided that his imagination had tricked him. In thinking of  The Shadow, Harry almost believed that he

had seen his mysterious  chief. 

Footsteps pounded the gangplank, drawing Harry's eyes forward along  the freighter's side. A ship's officer

was coming on board; he glanced  upward as he reached the gangway. That was when Harry noted the

fellow's sallow face and recognized it. The man was Robert Pell, the  third officer, and he had shown that

suspiciouseyed attitude from the  time that Harry had first met him. 

Perhaps Pell was by nature nervous and overwatchful; but his  actions had aroused Harry's mistrust. Trouble

was due aboard the Ozark;  otherwise, The Shadow would not have ordered Harry to take passage on  the ship.

If Harry's guess was correct, when trouble struck, Pell would  be deep in it. 

THERE were lighter footsteps from the gangplank. This time, Harry  saw the last of the arriving passengers, a

girl who had just started to  board the ship. Harry knew her name, for he had seen the passenger  list. She was

Ruth Eldrey, from Chicago, but that listing had given  Harry no idea regarding her appearance. 

He was hoping that the girl would look up before she reached the  gangway. She did, when she had only a few

steps to go. Peering over the  rail, Harry caught a quick impression of an attractive face, with  bright eyes

topped by thinstreaked eyebrows that matched the girl's  wealth of jetblack hair. 

Unless her makeup was deceptive, Harry was willing to concede that  Ruth Eldrey was one of the most

attractive brunettes that he had ever  seen. But with that concession, he wondered why a girl of her charm had

chosen a lone voyage on so unattractive a ship as the Ozark. 

This was not the time to consider that question. A heavy rumble  from the pier announced an event that Harry

had anxiously anticipated.  He turned to see an armored truck roll up beside the Ozark, flanked by  four

motorcycle police. Dismounting, the officers stood with hands upon  revolver hilts, while the rear of the truck


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was opened. 

Moving on special rollers, a massive strong box was warped slowly  into sight. The thing almost filled the

truck, and Harry estimated that  it measured close to six feet in each dimension. 

The front of the giant steel cube was formed by two large doors,  with interior hinges that could not be

reached. The doors had a large  combination lock that would have suited a bank vault; and for added

protection, it was girded with chains clamped by heavy padlocks. 

Across the front of the double doors, Harry could read the gilded  legend: 

HUGH BARVALE CO. 

Imports Exports 

The strong box was halted before it was halfway out of the truck. A  derrick was swung from the deck of the

Ozark; workers began to hitch  its hooks to the chains around the strong box. A bellowed objection  came from

the rail. Looking forward, Harry saw Pell gesticulating for  the work to stop. 

The third officer's argument was that the derrick couldn't hoist a  load heavier than three tons until equipped

with a stronger chain.  Despite his mistrust of Pell, Harry was forced to mental agreement. The  old chain had

broken a while before, when lifting a threeton load. It  was patched with a link that was certainly no stronger

than the one  that had broken. 

It was important too, that nothing go wrong when the strong box was  taken aboard. Like Pell, Harry knew

what the great chest contained. It  was filled with bars and ingots of gold and silver, to a total value of  two

million dollars. It would be a serious matter if such freight broke  loose and splashed between the Ozark and

the pier. 

Nevertheless, Harry still mistrusted Pell. He wondered why the  third officer hadn't seen to the matter of the

new chain earlier. It  looked very much like a stall to keep the strong box on the pier and  delay the steamship's

departure. The cops apparently agreed with Harry,  for they were tightening their hands upon their holstered

guns. 

The men from the truck settled the argument. They shouted up to  Pell that the load didn't weigh over three

tons; that they would take  the blame if anything went wrong. They were as anxious to get the cargo  aboard as

Pell was to keep it off the ship. Fuming, Pell was forced to  let them have their way. 

THE derrick hoisted the great chest high above the deck, let it  sink gently into the open hatchway to the ship's

hold. Detached by men  in the hold, the hooks came triumphantly up to sight again, clanking  together like

empty hands warming themselves in congratulation over a  job well done. 

Climbing onto their motorcycles, the four policemen waited for Pell  to order the gangplank hauled aboard;

Harry watched the third officer,  expecting him to give the command. Instead, Pell's mouth gaped open,  his

eyes took on a bulging stare. Following the direction of the look,  Harry saw the old packing cases that he had

observed earlier. 

Creeping in upon the space beside the post were three roughclad  men who looked like dockwallopers.

They were troublemakers who had  stayed well in the offing, waiting for the police to leave. Something,

however, had lured them to a sneaky advance, despite the risk of a  fracas with the law. 


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Both Pell and Harry saw what it was; that darkened patch that  looked like a human figure. It was still there;

and this time, Harry  knew that he had not imagined it. The black silhouette, grotesquely  like the head and

shoulders of a human being, had begun to stir! 

It was drawing away from the advancing trio. They spotted it and  threw aside their stealth. As one man

whipped a long knife from his  belt, the other two bounded forward. With expert swing, the knife  wielder

flung his blade between his driving pals, straight for the post  that made a background for the fading figure. 

The flight of that knife seemed endless to Harry. Then the blade  arrived, point first, to dig deep into the post

and hang there,  quivering. The knife had found no human target, for such prey had  vanished. Instead, it had

come to a useless goal, a splintery mass of  weatherbeaten wood. 

While the knife still trembled, the other huskies reached the  packing cases. Their shouts told that they, at

least, had found the foe  they sought. But the sequel was not the sort they expected. As they  drove into the

wooden boxes, gloved hands gunsledged for their heads.  Amid a clatter of overturning crates, the

dockwallopers went  staggering, to finish with stumbly falls. 

Guns began to bark from the inner end of the pier. Other thugs were  coming up, to help the lone man who

had thrown the knife and who was  now trying to pull it from the post. Out from the scattered packing  cases

came answering tongues of fire from splitting shots of automatics   the same guns that had been used as

cudgels to drop the first  attackers. 

The Shadow was in action. Harry knew it from the way that his  foemen spilled, even though he could not see

his chief among the boxes  that served as The Shadow's improvised entrenchments. 

Stopped short by The Shadow's sudden counterthrust, crooks were due  for utter rout. Before they could

scatter, motorcycles were roaring  down upon them. The thugs became a medley of flying human forms,

landing dazed and wounded. A few managed to jump from the pier, among  them the fellow who had tried to

reclaim his knife. 

Harry Vincent saw all that. He knew that The Shadow had conquered  foemen on the pier. But Harry spied

danger from another quarter. Only  fifty feet away, Pell was aiming a revolver in the direction of the  packing

cases. Before Harry could reach him, Pell had opened fire. 

Fortunately, Harry did not have to show his own hand. After a few  wild shots, Pell saw the ship's captain

coming and pocketed his gun. He  muttered something about "helping the police," to which the captain

responded that they had taken care of matters on their own. He ordered  the third officer to have the gangplank

pulled in. 

TURNING away to escape attention, Harry Vincent happened to glance  toward that very gangplank. In so

doing, he glimpsed something that no  one else saw. In those last moments of chaos along the pier, while the

attention of persons on the Ozark was directed toward the police  roundup of the vanquished crooks, an

elusive figure glided up the  gangplank. 

It disappeared into the blackened gangway, a cloaked shape that  even Harry would not have recognized, had

he been other than an agent  of The Shadow. A whispered laugh was audible to Harry's ears alone. It  persisted

in his memory, a full two minutes later, when the gangplank  rattled as it was hauled aboard. 

The laugh of The Shadow! 


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To Harry Vincent, that tone meant more than triumph. It signified  that future crime, directed against the

twomilliondollar shipment,  would surely come to grief. Criminals, whoever they were, would find  matters

unpleasant on the Ozark. 

The Shadow was aboard! 

CHAPTER II. THROUGH THE FOG

DESPITE the fog, the Ozark was creeping slowly through the Lower  Bay, with hope for better progress

ahead. It had been bad in the North  River. There, Harry Vincent had heard the strident screech of sirens at  the

ferry slips, invisible in the mist. Even the mighty torch of  Liberty's statue had been a mere flicker when they

passed Bedloe's  Island. 

But the Ozark, at last, was nearing the open sea; and Harry had  found his chance to go forward from the

cramped quarters that housed  the other passengers. Close by a hatchway that led down into the hold,  he

awaited an important meeting. 

A man sidled across the slippery deck. Harry recognized him, gave a  low hiss. A few moments later, he and

the arrival were crouched  together exchanging comments on all that had occurred. 

Harry's companion was Cliff Marsland, another of The Shadow's  agents. Husky of build, pokerfaced in

expression, Cliff had shipped as  a member of the Ozark's crew. He hadn't seen the battle on the pier,  for Cliff

had been in the hold watching the delivery of the strong box.  After hearing Harry's account, Cliff gave a low

grunt. 

"Pell looks fishy," he agreed. "But so does that fight. Those birds  didn't have a chance to snatch the strong

box." 

"That sizes it," admitted Harry. "They'd have laid low, probably,  if they hadn't seen The Shadow. But why

were they around in the first  place?" 

"To bluff the cops," returned Cliff. "They wanted to cover the fact  that the real mob is aboard this ship!" 

Harry suppressed a low whistle. This was real information, from a  sound source. Of all The Shadow's agents,

Cliff Marsland was closest to  affairs in the underworld. Placed among a group of crooks, he could  invariably

spot faces that he knew. 

"There's plenty of gorillas in this crew," assured Cliff. "They  can't grab that strong box, but they can sink this

tub like they did  those other packets that carried exports from Barvale Co. With Hugh  Barvale collecting

insurance on every lost shipment, it looks like a  hot racket." 

"But how does Barvale manage it?" queried Harry. "He'd give himself  away, dealing with a mob." 

"He doesn't give the orders," returned Cliff. "Some bigshot is in  back of it. Who he is, I haven't found out.

But he's got to be reached  before anything can be done about Barvale." 

"It's funny that the underwriters still insure Barvale's  shipments." 

"They can't get around it. Nothing has been proven against Hugh  Barvale. Underwriters don't take stock in

Jonahs, the way crews do. But  I'm telling you, Harry, there are plenty of honest chaps in the  fo'c's'le of this


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ship who believe she was jinxed from the moment when  Barvale's strong box came aboard!" 

Crew members were coming along the deck. It was time for Harry and  Cliff to go their separate ways. As

they parted, Cliff undertoned a  final bit of information. Just below the hatchway where they huddled  was a

telephone that Cliff had wired to an unoccupied cabin. That  instrument would serve both agents, when they

made reports to The  Shadow. 

THE cabin that Cliff mentioned was no more than a squarewalled  box, the least desirable of all the cramped

passenger accommodations  aboard the Ozark. At the moment when Cliff and Harry separated, to keep  tabs on

crew and passengers respectively, that cabin was a mass of  stuffy darkness. 

Some minutes later, however, air stirred within those square walls,  as though a door had been silently opened

and shut again. A peculiar  swish moved through the darkness. Then came the twinkle of a  flashlight, tiny

pointed against the surface of an old table. A hand  adjusted a lamp shade that projected from the cabin wall.

Fingers  clicked a switch. 

There was a focused glare upon the table's rough surface. Into it  came longfingered hands that moved like

detached creatures. From the  third finger of the left glimmered a strange gem that ran the gamut of  myriad

hues from deep crimson to scintillating violet. That jewel was  The Shadow's girasol, a rare fire opal that

identified its owner. 

Keen eyes were peering from the darkness above, as the hands drew  papers into the light. First, The Shadow

methodically separated  clippings that had to do with Hugh Barvale. Culled from many newspapers  during the

past few months, those items formed a definite sequence. 

For years, the firm of Barvale Co. had carried on a wellbalanced  trade in imports and exports. Some months

ago, the imports had shown a  heavy excess. Rather than send cash abroad, Hugh Barvale had sold  several lots

of expensive machinery to foreign concerns. 

Those shipments had totaled half a million dollars. In addition,  Barvale had imported platinum valued at a

quarter million, from  Colombia, only to reship it to Europe at a small profit. But the  platinum, like the

machinery, had never reached its destination. 

Every ship that carried one of Barvale's compact cargoes had gone  to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. 

Four boats in all had been lost  an unparalleled series of sea  disasters. They had sunk too far at sea to permit

their salvage.  Survivors from the lost freighters had told conflicting stories; and in  every instance, there had

been some element of mystery in the disaster. 

Hugh Barvale had shown increased distress, as the clippings on The  Shadow's table told. True, he had

collected insurance money on his  losses, but he contended that the sums did not come to two thirds of  the full

amount. He claimed that his business was almost ruined, and  foreign creditors seemed to believe it, for they

had raised a demand  for prompt payment of all obligations. 

Thanks to a provisional lifting of the gold embargo, Barvale was  sending two million dollars to

Mediterranean ports. How much gold was  in his giant strong box, now tucked safely aboard the Ozark, no

one  knew exactly, because Barvale was satisfying some of his customers with  silver payments. The strong

box, however, was insured to the full value  of its content: two million dollars. 

Despite certain unproven doubts regarding Barvale's integrity, no  one seemed to think that anything could

happen to the cargo on the  Ozark. It was possible that Barvale could have secretly profited  through the loss of


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the machinery shipments; and even the platinum loss  could have helped him, since the value of that metal had

undergone  heavy fluctuations. 

But silver and gold were a different story. This time, the  operations of Barvale Co. seemed decidedly on the

level. 

One person had alone foreseen other possibilities. That person was  The Shadow. 

A whispered laugh crept through the tiny cabin. The Shadow had  finished with the Barvale clippings. He laid

them aside, reserving only  one. It was a photograph, showing Hugh Barvale and his daughter Edna  with a

group of friends. 

Portly, with a long face that hung with heavy jowls, Barvale had  the solemn look of a man who expected ruin,

although the picture was a  year old. 

Edna's face was a real contrast to her father's. She seemed a  smiling, carefree girl, with stubby nose and

determined chin. Her hair  was blond and fluffy, her lighthued eyebrows barely discernible in the

photograph. 

Several men were in the picture. Comparing their names with those  on the Ozark passenger list, The Shadow

found no duplicates.  Nevertheless, he placed the photo in an envelope that he marked for  Harry Vincent. It

was possible that Harry, covering the passengers,  might find some that resembled Barvale's friends. 

A BUZZER sounded beneath the table. The Shadow reached for  earphones, to receive a lowvoiced report

from Harry Vincent. In giving  it, Harry emphasized his suspicions of Robert Pell, the third officer.  While

listening, The Shadow ran his finger down the passenger list.  Then: 

"The girl on board," spoke The Shadow in whispered tone, "is Ruth  Eldrey, from Chicago. You have seen

her?" 

"Yes," came Harry's reply. "She arrived just before the trouble  started." 

"Describe her." 

Harry gave an effective sketch of the ravishing brunette who had  looked upward from the gangplank. Ruth

Eldrey did not answer the  description of anyone listed in The Shadow's report sheets;  nevertheless, The

Shadow evidently shared Harry's opinion that so  attractive a girl was an unlikely passenger aboard a

freighter. His  final instruction to Harry was specific: 

"Watch the girl!" 

Right after Harry's report, Cliff's came in. It provided The Shadow  with important information. Cliff had

sized up the crew quite  thoroughly, estimating the probable number of thugs on board. Moreover,  he had

overheard conversation between members of the gang. 

From those snatches, Cliff had learned that no important moves were  scheduled for tonight. That, perhaps,

was due to the late departure of  the Ozark; also to the fact that the freighter's progress was being  slowed by

fog. It fitted with The Shadow's theory, that crooks needed  to be far at sea before they started trouble. 

For The Shadow had made observations of his own, quite as important  as any that Harry or Cliff had

supplied. Proof of that was given when  he drew a folder into the light. The casebook was stamped with a


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lifesize human hand, with extended thumb and fingers. 

Opening the casebook, The Shadow studied two names, all that  remained of an original five: 

Thumb Gaudrey 

Pointer Trame 

Those were the names of crooks, lone wolves who had once been the  "fingers" of a combine known as The

Hand. Masters of many rackets, they  had separated to build up their individual organizations. One by one,

starting from the little "finger," The Shadow had finished the careers  of three. 

Next in order was Pointer Trame, last heard from in Havana, just  before the first of Barvale's carriers had

vanished in midocean. All  during his investigation of that sea disaster, and those that followed  it, The

Shadow had gotten no trace of Pointer Trame. 

He had proof, however, that certain smallfry crooks mentioned by  Cliff Marsland were thugs who had once

served Trame. From that link,  The Shadow supplied the answer to a most perplexing question; namely,  why

no one had been able to connect Hugh Barvale with the crimes at  sea. 

No matter how crooked Hugh Barvale might be, nor how devious the  ways by which the millionaire exporter

might be making profit from  supposed loss, it was certain that Barvale would not have to manage the  actual

crimes. True, he would be keeping close check upon all doings,  if he had a financial interest in them; but

Barvale could manage that  covertly. 

The actual control of criminal underlings lay in the hands of  Pointer Trame, a bigshot in his own right. As

Cliff had said to Harry,  a certain man would have to be reached before anything could be pinned  on Hugh

Barvale. The man in question was the fourth member of the  welldepleted band that had once styled itself

The Hand: the hiding  bigshot, Pointer Trame. 

First, however, there was other work more imperative at the moment.  That was to block whatever crime was

intended aboard the freighter,  Ozark. From his analysis of the circumstances, plus his knowledge of  the

freighter's cargo and the parts played by certain persons on board,  The Shadow knew how trouble might be

spiked. 

The light clicked off. The darkness of the tiny cabin was stirred  by the low tone of the whispered laugh. The

following silence told that  The Shadow had set forth upon ventures that were entirely his own. 

CHAPTER III. BEFORE DAWN

UNDER circumstances other than those aboard the Ozark, the task  assigned to Harry Vincent would have

been most pleasurable. In fact,  watching Ruth Eldrey was something that anyone would find it difficult  not to

do. Harry Vincent was merely one of a half dozen male passengers  who were all engaged in the same

process. 

Some of the passengers were playing cards in a corner of the small  lounge, but they, like the ones who

chatted with Ruth, were glancing  often toward the girl. It was obvious that the longer the voyage  continued,

the more would she occupy their attention. 

The brunette seemed oblivious to the fact that she had become the  main attraction. She listened a great deal to


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what the others said, but  stated very little regarding herself. Her bluish eyes, unusual for a  girl with such

jetblack hair, had sympathy for everyone. Gradually,  Harry became positive that she, of all persons aboard

the Ozark, must  be the most innocent of any doubledealing. 

He was convinced, too, that if a crisis came, his task of watching  Ruth Eldrey would become a matter of

protection. That thought pleased  Harry Vincent. 

Meanwhile, he had no difficulty in studying the other passengers,  for they had forgotten everyone but Ruth.

Harry had hopes of  identifying some of them, but they soon faded. Not one of the crowd  remotely resembled

any of the persons in the photograph that Harry had  found in his cabin, where it had been left by The Shadow. 

Friends of Hugh Barvale seemed completely absent from the Ozark.  Probably none of them would think of

taking a cruise on a dingy  freighter, any more than would Barvale or his daughter. 

From the photo, Harry had mentally classed Hugh Barvale as an  overbearing financier; his daughter Edna as

a dizzy blonde. Perhaps  that latter prejudice explained why Harry had taken such a liking to  Ruth Eldrey.

Certainly, all blondes would have suffered by contrast  with the vivacious brunette who had monopolized the

entire passenger  list of the Ozark. 

Of one fact, Harry was certain. Nothing would happen to Ruth while  she chatted with the other passengers.

That made Harry quite desirous  of learning what might be going on outside the lounge, while he had the

opportunity. Finding himself unnoticed, he stepped to the lounge door  and sidled out to the deck. 

Fog still hovered about the Ozark but the big searchlight was  cleaving a long path ahead. Above, Harry could

see the black smoke  steaming from the ship's single funnel; at intervals, the misty  atmosphere quivered with

the rumble of the deepthroated whistle. 

No answers came from the fogblanketed waters. The Ozark was plying  an unobstructed course out into the

Atlantic. 

With the dying echoes of one whistle blast, Harry caught a creaky  sound close by. He stepped promptly into

the shelter of a  corridordoorway, just as a man in uniform moved from another. A deck  light showed the

fellow's face, yellowish in the gleam. Harry  recognized Robert Pell. 

MOVING to the rail, the third officer nervously unfolded a small  sheet of paper that he held in one hand.

Lifting it toward the light,  he scanned written lines. A twitchiness came to his face; he began to  look

nervously along the deck. 

Forced back into hiding, Harry never had a chance to glimpse Pell's  message. The third officer crumpled the

sheet and tossed it over the  rail. 

Loss of one opportunity never fazed Harry, when he could find  another. Pell was sneaking forward, keeping

close to the cabins, which  made it apparent that he was following instructions received from the  note. A few

moments later, Harry was copying the third officer's mode  of locomotion. 

The course led to the ship's bridge. Harry was venturing into  territory where passengers were not permitted;

but he could see no  risk. Pell, too, was anxious to avoid observation, which made it simple  for Harry to

follow. But when they reached the bridge, Pell's manner  changed. 

After one quick glance, he confidently mounted the steps and  strolled in to chat with the officer who was on

the bridge watch. 


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His head poked on a level with the floor of the bridge, Harry  caught snatches of their conversation. Pell was

cagily fishing for an  excuse to take over the trick, and the other officer finally consented  to allow him a short

shift. 

Harry ducked away from the steps when the man came down from the  bridge. A few seconds later, he poked

his head above the steps again  and watched Pell. Pell had, on some pretext or other, dismissed the

quartermaster who had been at the wheel. He was alone now. 

The third officer wasn't concerned with the fog or anything else  outside. He was working feverishly near the

binnacles that contained  the ship's compasses, with his eye on a panel that held the automatic  steering

indicator. While Harry knew very little about ships' controls,  he soon guessed what Pell was doing. 

Veering slightly through the sea, the Ozark was taking a new course  under Pell's guidance; and while the

freighter shifted, the third  officer was adjusting the indicator so that the change would not be  noticed. 

Harry needed to know no more. He moved away before the other  officer returned. Reaching the hatchway

that he had before, Harry  hurried down the ladder and found the telephone that gave him contact  with The

Shadow. 

It was fully ten minutes before Harry received a reply to the  intermittent pushes that he gave a button beside

the telephone. The  interval indicated that The Shadow had not returned to his cabin until  the moment he

finally answered. Harry's tenseness ended when he heard  his chief's whispered tone. He gave a terse account

of what he had  witnessed. 

Two words constituted The Shadow's answer: 

"Report received!" 

Those were enough. Harry went aft to the passenger lounge,  confident that The Shadow would rectify any

damage done by Pell. 

DURING the next few hours, Harry noticed no alteration in the  freighter's course. That was not singular, for

he knew if The Shadow  nullified Pell's action, he would certainly do it as artfully as the  third officer had

performed his own deed. What bothered Harry was the  fact that he couldn't see any reason for Pell's original

action. 

There was no island to which the crooks could sail the Ozark, there  to rifle her two milliondollar strong box.

As for a possible  rendezvous with some modern pirate ship, it would be more sensible for  the other craft to

cut across the freighter's path. 

The whole thing baffled Harry to such a degree, that he took little  part in the merriment among the

passengers. 

They were making the most of this first night, and from their  chatter, it seemed that they intended to stay up

until dawn. Maybe the  fog would be gone that time, they agreed, and that would allow them a  look at the

ocean. Harry noticed, however, that Ruth Eldrey seemed very  tired. She was seated deep in her chair, staring

at a corner window. 

A sudden sparkle came from the girl's eyes. Her lips went  momentarily tight. She had seen something at that

window; but it was  gone, when Harry looked. 


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Had it been a face? Perhaps Pell's? 

Harry could picture the sallowfaced third officer sneaking along  the decks, peering into cabins to see what

the passengers were doing.  Perhaps the girl had sensed a menace, for Harry noted that she had gone  pale. But

she had rallied when he turned toward her again. 

Vincent saw her slip her hand into a small bag that she carried. He  could tell by the tightness of her fingers

that the girl had a gun at  hand. 

Ruth's next move compelled Harry's full admiration. Rising from her  chair, she politely said good night to the

other passengers; then,  smiling as they protested her departure, she started for her cabin. 

Harry couldn't follow at that moment; it would have attracted too  much attention. He hoped that the girl could

take care of herself for  the three minutes that he intended to wait. By that time, Harry  calculated, he could

slide out unnoticed. 

The moment came. While the other men were planning to begin a poker  game, Harry lighted a cigarette and

strolled out, without comment. He  listened for a moment, beyond the lounge door; satisfied that no one  was

worrying about his departure, he ducked down a companionway and  followed a corridor to Ruth's cabin. 

There, he observed a light beneath the door. He was contemplating  his next move when, suddenly, he was

forced to a single decision. From  back along the passage, he heard the low scuffle of footsteps, the  mutter of

voices. The arriving men couldn't be passengers; they must be  crew members, and perhaps Pell was with

them. Harry had to get out of  sight in a hurry. 

As he slid one hand instinctively to his gun pocket, Harry placed  the other on the handle of the cabin door, in

the hope that it was  unlocked. The knob yielded; the door swung silently inward at Harry's  touch. He

sidestepped into the cabin, pushed the door shut behind him.  Immediately, Harry turned about, hoping to

explain his presence to Ruth  Eldrey. 

What Harry saw left him motionless. 

The girl was seated at a little table in front of a mirror. She had  loosened her dress, so that it hung below her

bare shoulders while she  smeared her face and neck with cold cream. There was a whiteness to  those

shoulders that puzzled Harry, because it contrasted sharply with  the brunette's rather dark complexion. 

Then Harry saw the girl's face, emerging from the towel that she  used to wipe away the cold cream. The

darkness had gone entirely, and  with it, Ruth had lost those thin, black eyebrows that matched her  hair. 

Still too intent to notice Harry in the mirror, the girl reached  both hands upward and gave a tug. Her dark wig

came away, leaving a  shower of fluffy blond hair. That final transformation was so complete,  that her whole

face seemed to change. 

Instantly, Harry gauged the tilt of her nose, the slight thrust of  her chin; features that had previously escaped

his full notice. 

Coolly, Harry spoke from the doorway: "Good evening, Miss Barvale!" 

THE words had the effect that Harry wanted. Edna Barvale wilted.  Her face took on a terrified expression

which, somehow, added to its  beauty, though Harry was reluctant to admit it. He was chafing because  Edna

had tricked him with the brunette disguise that she had worn. 


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Harry no longer held sympathy for the girl. He saw her as a spy in  the service of her crooked father; perhaps a

gobetween who carried  orders from Hugh Barvale to the headman of the criminals aboard the  Ozark. Edna's

terror at finding her double part discovered, was  sufficient evidence for Harry's belief. 

While Edna cowered, Harry calmly planned his next move. He hadn't  drawn his gun; he was sure that when

he did, mere sight of the weapon  would make the girl obey orders. It wouldn't be difficult, once the  passage

was clear, to march Edna from her cabin and deliver her to The  Shadow. 

With that course in mind, Harry tilted his head to the door,  listening for sounds outside. 

He was off guard only for a second, but that was all that Edna  Barvale needed. In a flash, her paralyzed

pretense ended. Sweeping her  hand across the table, the blonde snatched a small automatic from  beneath the

black wig that she had discarded. Swinging around in her  chair, she aimed the pistol before Harry could yank

his own gun. 

The door handle jarred beneath Harry's elbow, as he shifted. The  door swung inward, thanks to the quiver

from the freighter's thrumming  engines. Harry made a sideward dive into the passage, yanking his own

automatic as he hit the floor. Rolling over, he aimed toward the cabin  door, to meet Edna when she arrived. 

Edna had reached the door. Instead of coming out, she slammed it.  Harry pounced to his feet, intending to

break in before Edna could turn  the key; but he didn't get that far. There was a surge of flinging  bodies from

the passage behind him. Harry went flat beneath the  smothering power of three crew members, who belonged

to the crooked  tribe aboard the Ozark. 

Flinging one arm above his head, Harry valiantly beat off the  slugging strokes that the thugs delivered with

their guns. A blow  against an elbow numbed his arm; he couldn't have warded away another  stroke. Harry

expected the next instant to be his last, for the thugs  were murderous in their fury. 

Then came the only token that could possibly have saved Harry from  his doom. It was a laugh, a mocking

tone that reverberated through the  narrow passage; a strident challenge that made the crooks forget Harry  in a

trice. 

As one, they wheeled to meet the author of that challenge. They  knew that laugh; it called them to a battle

more urgent than any other.  Harry's fate was something that could be deferred. 

There was no postponing battle with The Shadow! 

CHAPTER IV. CRIME'S TRIUMPH

WHEN wouldbe killers swiveled to meet The Shadow's thrust, they  saw a whirl of blackness that flung

itself from the steep steps of a  companionway. They fired to meet that mass, and shouted their elation  when

they saw it flatten in the passage. 

Crooks had a habit of falling for The Shadow's bluff, and these  three were no exception. 

Before they realized that their shots had spattered too late for  The Shadow's dive, a cloaked shape came half

upright. Resting on knees  and one hand, The Shadow shoved his other fist forward. From it poked  an

automatic that spat an immediate answer from its big muzzle. 

One crook toppled before he could yank his revolver trigger. The  next took a bullet as he fired; but his aim


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did not match The Shadow's.  The pellet from the revolver whined inches above The Shadow's slouch  hat, to

flatten against the steel companionway. 

The third crook was the man who had the actual chalice. His aim was  slower, but more accurate; he was

starting a trigger squeeze just as  The Shadow swung in his direction. In his eagerness, the thug went  forward

as he aimed; and that produced his downfall. 

From the floor Harry Vincent made an accurate grab at the thug's  ankle; the fellow took a hurtle as he fired.

His shot wasted, he  rallied, coming up to meet The Shadow in a frenzied grapple. 

Arms were swinging as Harry piled in to aid his chief, but the grab  that he made for the crook's shoulders was

unneeded. That last thug  sagged before Harry could reach him, stunned by a clanking blow upon  the head. 

His gun muzzle still smoking, The Shadow sprang for the  companionway, beckoning Harry to follow. There

wasn't time to think  about Edna Barvale, for Harry knew that heavy work was needed  elsewhere. Scrambling

up the stairway, he saw The Shadow speeding  forward along the deck. Following, Harry suddenly found Cliff

Marsland  beside him. 

As they ran, Cliff panted the news in quick disjointed phrases. 

The trouble had started in the wireless room. A crook had sneaked  in there, to send a message while the

operator was absent. He had been  spotted by the returning operator, who had promptly started to give an

alarm. From that moment, battle had begun. 

"They slugged him"  Cliff was referring to the wireless man  "and  got a call off. There was a flash that

came back  The Shadow caught  it." 

That explained why The Shadow had come to summon his agents. By  radio, from a hidden chief, criminals

had received orders to start  action many hours ahead of schedule, and they were following that  command.

Guns were popping along the decks below the bridge when Harry  and Cliff arrived there. 

Harry's impulse was to plunge in and help the loyal crew suppress  the traitors; but Cliff dragged him

elsewhere, for he had other orders  from The Shadow. Dropping through a hatchway, they saw The Shadow

pausing beside Barvale's big strong box. 

For a moment, Harry thought that battle was coming there; then he  saw The Shadow turn and make for a

destination deeper in the hold. His  guns were talking when the agents overtook him. Shooting through an

opening in a bulkhead, The Shadow had dropped a pair of guards who were  there to block him. 

Other crooks were in sight, scattering for distant outlets.  Thinking that The Shadow's gunshots were the

cause, the agents sprang  forward to begin pursuit. Whirling about, The Shadow threw his arms  wide; driving

with full force, he flung his own men to the floor and  took a rolling dive beyond them. 

All three were flat when a sheet of roaring flame scorched through  the hold, accompanied by a mighty

concussion that shook the rivets from  the plates of the old freighter. In that hollow confine, the blast was

tremendous, half deafening The Shadow and his agents. 

They could feel the withering power of the flames, as fierce as a  burst from a volcano's crater. Fortunately,

the singeing effect was  instantaneous; otherwise, they could not have survived the hellish  ordeal. 


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A few moments later, the explosion had become a quiver of  persistent echoes accompanied by utter

blackness. 

THE effect upon the Ozark was stupendous. The old freighter took a  heave that seemed to carry it from the

foam of the Atlantic, then  settled with a mammoth splash that clattered the freighter's split  sides. There was a

gush like the tune of many cataracts, as water  poured through the vessel's ruined hull. 

Too late to prevent the blast below, The Shadow had other work  above. Spurring Harry and Cliff to their feet,

he guided them through  the darkness, straight to the hatchway. They reached the deck  stumbling, for the

sinking Ozark had heeled to a steep angle. 

There was confusion all about. Sniping gunmen were harassing men  who carried flashlights, trying to prevent

them from getting to the  lifeboats. If those crooks had their way, all but themselves would  perish when the

freighter went down. It was The Shadow who provided the  antidote to that poison. 

Dispatching his agents to aid the loyal crew, he dropped to the  deck and introduced sniping tactics of his own.

Instead of flashlights,  he used the spurts of guns as targets. There were plops along the deck,  as sharpshooting

mobsters went flat. Some of them tried to find The  Shadow, but had no luck. He shifted elusively, after every

shot. 

Snipers gave up their effort. Aft of the bridge, Harry and Cliff  used flashlights to aid in gathering passengers

and crew. Lifeboats  were off their davits, reaching the water on the low side of the ship.  Battle, for the

moment, was forgotten. Though the Ozark could float but  a few minutes longer, rescue of all aboard seemed

sure, except for  forgotten crooks who had come out second best in battling The Shadow. 

The last boat offered an unexpected obstacle. It was sticking in  its davits, while a few excited passengers tried

to hurry the seamen  who were working with it. There was a creak farther forward; someone  shouted that a

boat had been lowered near the bow. Eager men started  forward, Harry and Cliff among them. 

A flashlight gleamed suddenly in their path. An instant later, a  finger flicked a transparent shutter across the

flashlight's lens. The  glow turned red. Understanding the signal, Harry and Cliff held back  the men who were

with them. 

That was The Shadow's signal. He had stopped the rush just in time.  The boat that was putting off was loaded

with crooks who would have  battled any boarders. It was a special boat, prepared for this  emergency; from it

came the sudden hum of a gasoline motor. 

A searchlight swung; in its passing glow, it turned to the interior  of the motorized lifeboat. From the deck of

the Ozark, clustered men  caught a glimpse of the mobsmen who had battled them. In with the gang  was Edna

Barvale. 

Some of the passengers recognized the girl, and shouted angrily.  For Edna was a blonde no longer. She had

found time to resume the wig  and brunette makeup which she used when she passed as Ruth Eldrey.  Harry

expected her to shout back at the men marooned aboard the  freighter, but Edna paid no attention to their irate

calls. 

The brief glimpse was ended. The motorboat was well away, its  occupants too eager for escape to bother

about firing shots at those  who seemed doomed on the Ozark's deck. Nor did The Shadow open fire. He  knew

that moments were too precious. 


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He was at a new spot, where the freighter's rail was level with the  water. Another flick of his special

flashlight; its gleam became green. 

Shouting for others to follow, Harry and Cliff reached the point  where The Shadow had signaled. They came

upon the last lifeboat, now  released in its davits by The Shadow. A minute's work, the craft was in  the water. 

In the darkness, The Shadow was helping launch the boat. His  flashlight, yellow again, showed that everyone

was aboard. The Shadow  swung across the stern of the tiny craft. 

It was in that final moment when the lifeboat put off, that an  accident occurred beyond The Shadow's reach.

Harry Vincent had hold of  the lifeboat's side; but his foot was caught in the rail that he had  left. He yelled to

Cliff, too late. Cliff was shoving away at the  lifeboat's bow. 

Another man heard the call. Reaching over the side, he clutched at  Harry's shoulders. His foot freed, Harry

was hauled from the water. It  was a fortunate rescue, for at that moment, any delay would have been  fatal to

all. 

AS Harry sprawled into the lifeboat, oars were lashing at the  water. The Ozark was settling for her final

plunge, threatening to  carry the lifeboat with her. 

Twisting away, the tiny lifeboat was dwarfed by the keeling bulk of  the freighter; which was outlined against

a dim dawn that cut faintly  through the lifting fog. It seemed that the huge superstructure would  crush the

eggshell craft beneath it. Above loomed the big single  funnel, swinging downward like a toppling tower. 

There was slowness, though, in the final dive of the old freighter.  Scudding as rapidly as oars could propel it,

the lifeboat cleared  before the freighter settled. Then came the moment when the Ozark  quivered like a

monster in its death throes. 

Twisting as she sank, the eightthousandton ship poked its stern  above the water. The lifeboat was a

hundred feet away, when the rudder  followed the big blades of the propeller into the ocean's depths. 

Spinning amid a sudden whirlpool, the lifeboat threatened to  capsize. Fortunately, that last boat was not

overcrowded; otherwise,  she could not have survived the maelstrom created by the suction of the  sinking

freighter. Bobbing on the surface, the lifeboat dipped  sufficiently to receive a brief deluge from the ocean, but

she  withstood that test. 

Soon, the little boat was sweeping into calmer waters, where she  rode the even swell of the Atlantic. While

rescued men plied the oars,  others strained their eyes toward the spot where the Ozark had  vanished. They

weren't thinking of the battered freighter, for the  Ozark was a ship that should have been junked before this

cruise. 

They were thinking of the freighter's cargo, that strong box with  its contents valued at two million dollars.

With human lives at stake,  they had forgotten the gold and silver that Hugh Barvale had shipped  aboard.

They were remembering it at last, and with awe, as their  murmurs told. 

Crime's purpose, strange though it might seem, had been to sink the  Ozark in order to get rid of the freighter's

precious cargo. That was  obvious, because crooks had made no effort to seize the strong box  before they sank

the ship. 

Therefore, crime had triumphed. Criminals had won a victory,  despite the presence of their mostfeared foe,

The Shadow. Furthermore,  those criminals had escaped unpunished, their evil work accomplished. 


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Yet there was something that told that crooks might be due for  future disappointment. That something was a

sound that stirred from  somewhere in the lifeboat, so evasively that, when men looked about, no  one could

tell whose lips had uttered it. 

The sound was the whispered laugh of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER V. THE NEW CAMPAIGN

THOUGH Harry Vincent had encountered a full share of surprises  while aboard the Ozark, he was due to

meet with more. The first came  within five minutes after the lifeboat had begun its shoreward haul. 

Harry remembered that someone had given him a very timely lift into  the boat. The man in question was right

behind the thwart upon which  Harry sat; and he certainly deserved thanks for his effort. Harry  turned around

to face him. 

Though his mouth was opened wide, Harry couldn't manage to pipe a  word of gratitude. 

He was staring at the sallow face of Third Officer Pell, the man  that Harry had picked as Traitor No. 1 aboard

the Ozark! 

Pell didn't guess the thoughts in Harry's mind. He supposed that  the rescued man was faltering merely

because he could not find suitable  expression for his thanks. Pell clapped a friendly hand on Harry's  shoulder. 

"Forget it, old chap!" he said. "We all did our part. You wouldn't  have been tangled on that rail, if you hadn't

worked at lowering the  lifeboat. I'm the one that ought to be thanking you." 

Pell's hand shoved forward, and Harry gripped it. The Shadow's  agent grinned, somewhat grimly. Again, Pell

didn't catch the  significance. 

Through Harry's brain were flashing many thoughts; a complete  sequence that explained the past. 

He had misinterpreted events back at the New York pier. Pell's  actions there had been produced by honest

worry. The third officer had  suspected that matters were wrong aboard the Ozark, but hadn't had  enough

evidence to go on. 

Pell had tried to delay the freighter's departure because he sensed  that fog, outside the harbor, would make

navigation difficult and  therefore be of advantage to anyone who tried to make trouble. 

When battle had begun along the pier, Pell hadn't been able to  contain himself. That was why he had opened

fire from the rail. But he  hadn't been shooting at The Shadow. He had tried to pick off some of  the thugs who

were making it tough for their blackcloaked foeman. 

From Harry's report, The Shadow had divined exactly how Pell stood.  That realization brought a startling

sequel. 

The message that Pell had read and tossed away, had been given him  by The Shadow! 

It was all clear at last; as plain as the early daylight that now  streamed upon the plodding lifeboat. Foggy

thoughts were vanishing from  Harry's brain as rapidly as the sea mist was dissolving in the dawn. 


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Pell had recognized The Shadow as a friend. Encountering him aboard  the Ozark, the third officer had taken

orders from the cloaked  stowaway. Those orders had been to change the freighter's course; and  Pell had done

so. 

But why had The Shadow wanted it? 

The answer came suddenly to Harry Vincent, as a shout broke from  the survivors aboard the small craft.

Swinging about, Harry saw other  tiny boats bobbing in the swells. They carried the first survivors who  had

left the Ozark, but the motorized crookmanned lifeboat was not  among them. It had vanished on another

course. 

It wasn't sight of the other boats that had caused the enthusiastic  shout. Men were pointing elsewhere, to the

west. Harry swung farther  around. Beyond the lifeboat's bow, he saw a splendid scene. 

OUT of the last wisps of mist projected a galaxy of tall spires.  mingled with high blockshaped buildings that

formed long, straight  line. 

At first, Harry blinked, thinking that the sight was a mirage, for  it seemed fantastic to suppose that a city

could be floating on the  waves, a hundred or more miles out to sea. Then he made out a sweep of  sandy

shore, a railed object that looked like a low bridge. 

Harry recognized that structure as a boardwalk. He knew where they  were, a moment before the men about

him shouted: 

"Atlantic City!" 

The Ozark had gone down only a few miles off the famous New Jersey  shore resort. If ill luck had not

thwarted The Shadow's plan, daylight  would have found the ship just past Cape May, almost in the shelter of

Delaware Bay. 

Crooks would then have realized their helplessness. Whatever fight  they started would have been useless. The

Ozark could have come to port  with mutineers in irons, its twomilliondollar strong box saved from a  trip to

the ocean's depths. 

Unfortunately, that hadn't been accomplished; but neither had the  criminals managed their own task. They

had sunk the Ozark, but that was  only half their duty. They had been instructed to do their evil work  many

miles off shore, in waters so deep that divers could never find  the old freighter. Supposing the ship to be due

east of New York, they  had figured that their work was sure. 

Instead, the Ozark had foundered in water no deeper than a dozen  fathoms, where she could be located and

her cargo salvaged. That would  be a jolt for the crooks when they learned it. Not only for the  smallfry, but

for the bigshot who had flashed the wireless call to  sink the Ozark promptly. 

And to Harry Vincent, that brought the satisfied thought that the  news would worry Hugh Barvale and his

doublecrossing daughter Edna,  otherwise known as Ruth Eldrey. 

OARS were pulling hard. The lifeboats were coming closer together,  as they approached the breakers. Along

the boardwalk, early promenaders  were pointing excitedly out to sea. Lifeguards were signaling from

canopied platforms on the beach. They shoved their own boats out into  the surf, to meet the survivors from

the Ozark. 


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The lifeboats pitched among the breakers, while shore guards  hovered near, ready for rescue if any boats

capsized. The precaution  proved unnecessary, for the surf was not overheavy. Pulling into a  beach between

two amusement piers that jutted out beyond the breakers,  the lifeboats stranded in the shallower water.

Leaping out, men hauled  them up to the dry sand. 

While Pell and other officers were telling of the disaster, Harry  observed a hawkfaced man who was talking

with police who had arrived  from the boardwalk. From his attire, it was difficult to tell whether  the individual

was a passenger from the Ozark, or a member of the crew.  Each group could easily have supposed that he

belonged to the other. 

Whatever the hawkish man had to say, it impressed the police. They  hurried away, and Harry Vincent had a

hunch that they would soon spread  the news of crooks who were riding the high seas, not many miles from

Atlantic City. 

That wasn't all, however. The police complied with a request made  by the hawkfaced spokesman. For,

shortly, uniformed attendants arrived  from a beachfront hotel and politely invited the men from the Ozark to

follow them. 

Soon, passengers and crew found themselves in a palatial lobby,  where clerks were assigning them to rooms.

A head waiter was also  present, bowing the way to the dining room, where a welcome breakfast  awaited. 

Cliff had joined Harry. Both were standing by the desk, looking for  the personage who had made these

excellent arrangements. Just then, a  clerk answered the telephone. The Shadow's agents heard him say: 

"Yes, Mr. Cranston. Their names... Mr. Vincent and Mr. Marsland...  I'll find them right away, sir..." 

Harry and Cliff promptly identified themselves. The clerk told them  that Mr. Lamont Cranston was having

breakfast in his suite on the sixth  floor and would like them to join him. They went up to the suite; when  they

rapped, a quiet voice ordered them to enter. 

Lamont Cranston stood awaiting them. His thin lips gave a slight  smile, for the benefit of the two men who

knew him to be The Shadow.  Both Harry and Cliff had met their chief in such a guise before. Yet  neither, for

the life of him, could have sworn that The Shadow was  Lamont Cranston. 

There was something masklike about his hawkish countenance, that  gave it the look of a wellformed

disguise when its owner stood in the  glare of daylight, as he was now doing, beside the wide windows of the

hotel room. 

True, there was such a person as Lamont Cranston, a wealthy  globetrotter who spent his leisure time in New

York. But there had  also been occasions  remembered only by The Shadow's agents  when two  Cranstons

had appeared in different places at the same time. 

As Harry and Cliff seated themselves at a wellstocked breakfast  table, their chief pointed from the window,

toward the wide expanse of  inlet at the north of Absecon Island. Off beyond the limits of Atlantic  City, trim

speedboats were putting out to sea, bound in search of the  crooks who had fled the sinking Ozark. 

Turning from the window, The Shadow picked up a wrapped roll of  thin canvas that a bellboy had brought

from the lifeboat. From it, he  took a rumpled cloak and flattened slouch hat, together with a brace of

automatics. He packed those in a table drawer, then joined his agents  at breakfast. 


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"Those crooks are likely to escape," declared The Shadow, in an  even tone that suited Cranston, "for there are

many inlets where they  might land, once they learn that they are close to shore. The pursuit  that I arranged" 

again he pointed out through the window  "is  scarcely more than a gesture." 

There was a pause, while The Shadow's eyes took on a faraway  glitter. 

"They will return to New York"  the even tone seemed one of  prophecy  "and there, I shall expect you to

find them. Keep in close  contact with Burbank. He will have full instructions, and will manage  matters during

my absence." 

HARRY glanced toward Cliff, to see surprise there that matched his  own. Both agents supposed that The

Shadow would be in New York also.  They couldn't understand what business would take him elsewhere. 

"Do not concern yourselves with Hugh Barvale," resumed The Shadow.  "However deeply he may be

involved, his part is a remote one, requiring  no contacts with the actual criminals." 

"But his daughter was aboard the Ozark!" blurted Harry, realizing  that he had not reported the fact. "She was

passing as Ruth Eldrey!" 

"I suspected it," answered The Shadow, calmly. "That is why I  ordered you to watch her. The evidence,

however, indicated that the  gang on the Ozark also believed her to be Ruth Eldrey, rather than Edna  Barvale.

As I said before, we may consider Barvale's part as remote." 

It was dawning on Harry that the very completeness of Edna's  disguise had been a giveaway to The

Shadow. The girl had overdone it,  as far as he was concerned. It had been worthy of notice, from The

Shadow's viewpoint, that whereas Edna Barvale was a pronounced blonde,  Ruth Eldrey had been an extreme

brunette. Women, when they disguised  themselves, invariably thought in terms of opposites. 

There was silence, while Harry and Cliff finished their ham and  eggs. They were swallowing their coffee,

when The Shadow again spoke in  Cranston's steady style. He had risen, had strolled to a front window  that

overlooked the ocean. 

"That wireless message"  The Shadow's tone was one of recollection   "came from somewhere at sea. It was

sent by the man who is in active  charge of all, criminal operations. That man"  there was a marked  pause,

before The Shadow gave the name  "is known as Pointer Trame!" 

The agents were electrified. They had shared in previous battles  with members of The Hand. They had

expected Pointer Trame to be next in  line, but had not connected him with recent crimes at sea. Yet they saw

the logic of The Shadow's discovery. 

Blackmail  rackets  murder; such had been the previous activities  of the different "fingers" who had met

their finish. Each had played  his own chosen game. The next to come was theft, for it was a specialty  with

Pointer Trame. These crimes at sea, despite their oddity, smacked  definitely of theft; and, therefore, of

Pointer Trame. 

Harry and Cliff had finished their coffee. They awaited further  words from The Shadow. He gave a quiet

order of dismissal. As they went  from the hotel room, both agents took a last glance from the doorway. 

They saw the figure of Lamont Cranston motionless at the window.  Keen eyes were staring out to sea;

beneath them were lips that held a  slight, but solemn, smile. It seemed that The Shadow's gaze was  reaching

off beyond the cleared horizon, ferreting for some hidden ship  commanded by a lone wolf crook. 


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There, again on the broad Atlantic, The Shadow would at last find  Pointer Trame. 

CHAPTER VI. OUT TO SEA

Two days had gone; with them, the law had no luck in its search for  the criminals who had wrecked the

Ozark. The one trace of them had been  the finding of the motorized lifeboat in the shoal waters of an inlet

some thirty miles north of Atlantic City; but that discovery was  fruitless. 

The fugitives had abandoned their craft long before, and there  wasn't a single clue that led to their trail.

Probably the band had  separated, and found their way back to New York. Preventing entry there  was almost

impossible, with so many ways of transportation available. 

Meanwhile, the law itself had investigated the wireless call  received aboard the Ozark just prior to the

freighter's loss. Many  vessels had been questioned, upon reaching port; others had been met by  coast guard

cutters and subjected to a quiz. Not one knew anything  about the mysterious message that had doomed the

Ozark. 

It was night in Atlantic City; with many hours gone, few remained  until dawn. Brilliance had ended along the

boardwalk, except for the  lights of a few intermittent lampposts. The big advertising signs that  topped the

piers were dark, for no one was abroad to read them. 

Viewed from below, the fronts of the large hotels were dark, too,  denoting only sleeping guests in those

choice rooms that faced the  ocean. There was one hotel, however, in which a light still burned  within a front

room on the sixth floor. The glow was not visible  outside, for drawn shades blocked it. 

There, The Shadow was at work above a large chart that showed the  New Jersey coast. He had marked spots

out to sea with pins that bore  heads of different colors. Each represented a different ship. 

One, a green pin, stood for a yacht that bore the name Marmora. 

That chart had changed often during the past two days, as different  ships had come to port or sailed farther

out to sea. The Marmora,  however, had always been in the offing; and that, to The Shadow, was  significant. 

His fingers resting on the green pin, The Shadow whispered a soft  laugh in the darkness above the light that

glowed upon the chart. 

Of all vessels near the Jersey coast, the Marmora was least open to  suspicion. Coast guards had given her a

clean slate, and with good  reason. She was owned by Jerome Trebble, a multimillionaire who spent  his life

at sea. The only time that the Marmora touched at a port was  when she needed supplies; and that, sometimes,

did not occur more often  than once in two months. 

As Lamont Cranston, The Shadow had once met Jerome Trebble. Very  few people had been granted the same

privilege. Despite his wealth,  Trebble was a recluse who hated the world, and had sworn that when he  died,

he would still be at sea. 

Had he been penniless, he would probably have chosen a hermit's  cave on the side of some isolated

mountain; but, being overburdened  with wealth, he had preferred a yacht. He spent many thousands annually

upon the upkeep of the Marmora, but that scarcely dented his tremendous  income. 

Since Trebble couldn't navigate his palatial yacht alone, he had a  crew aboard; also, a small retinue of chosen


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servants. Perhaps it was  such human contact that kept him from becoming a complete recluse. 

Once in a while, Trebble became sociable enough to invite visitors  on the Marmora, provided that he thought

they were interesting persons.  It was through one of those rare invitations, extended to Lamont  Cranston, that

The Shadow had managed to meet him, for a single  evening, when the yacht was moored in Long Island

Sound. 

Right now, The Shadow was wondering who else might have met Jerome  Trebble. He was drawing a line

along another chart, that showed the  entire seaboard, tracing back the course of the Marmora for the past  ten

months. 

New Orleans, Halifax, Savannah, Bermuda  The Shadow's line swung  southward again and stopped. His

laugh was repeated in the gloom. The  spot that he marked, the port where the Marmora had visited nearly

eight months ago, was Havana. 

Checking on a list beside the chart, The Shadow found that the  yacht's departure from the Cuban capital had

occurred at about the time  when Pointer Trame had last been seen there. 

REVERTING to the colored pins, The Shadow made a careful study of  other vessels indicated, for a special

reason of his own. He tapped a  red pin that stood for the Monarch of Bermuda, but decided that her  course

wouldn't suit him. He wanted to find a ship that would be  passing the Marmora at a specific hour; and the

second one he picked  was near enough to serve his needs. She was the New YorkSavannah liner  City of

Birmingham, approaching New York from the South. 

By The Shadow's calculation, the City of Birmingham would sight the  Marmora two hours after dawn, some

fifty miles off shore, east of  Norfolk, Virginia. 

Reaching for the telephone, The Shadow jiggled the hook, finally  disturbing the hotel operator. A sleepy

voice seemed to wonder who  would be calling at this hour. In Cranston's tone, The Shadow gave the  number

of the Atlantic City airport. 

That call was answered promptly. No surprise was evidenced when  Lamont Cranston stated that he wanted to

hire a plane, to begin a  flight at dawn. Many wealthy visitors to Atlantic City had pilot's  licenses; and early

morning was the finest time to view the ocean from  the air. The Shadow was assured that the ship would be

ready when he  arrived. 

It was. When The Shadow's taxi reached the airport, a light biplane  with an open cockpit was standing

outside the hangar. After identifying  himself as Cranston, The Shadow tossed a small bag aboard and climbed

into the plane. The propeller whirled; the plane made its takeoff, its  wings glinting as they caught the rays of

the rising sun. 

The plane was fast enough, although she wasn't new. Another summer  of heavy use, and she would be just

another crate, ready for the junk  heap. Not the sort of ship that The Shadow would have ordinarily  preferred;

but for this occasion, a knockabout craft was exactly right.  When The Shadow did what he intended to do, no

one who witnessed the  deed would be surprised. 

Whisking southward, the plane passed over the many resorts south of  Atlantic City. The last was Cape May;

there, the Jersey coast dwindled  as the plane struck out to sea. Those chaps back at the airport hadn't

supposed that Cranston was intending such a long trip. For an ocean  flight, they would have recommended a

seaplane. 


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But that didn't disturb The Shadow. Looking back from the cockpit,  he saw the coast line fade to obscurity. A

curious laugh issued from  his lips. 

A patch of yellow against the clear blue sky, the plane looked like  a stray bird that had lost its way. The sea

breeze was heavy, the going  bumpy; and below, the sea showed choppiness. Whitecaps were waving, as

though warning the plane back to land. Instead, The Shadow persisted in  his ocean course, following nearly

directly south 

Two hours were nearly gone. Miles out above the open sea, The  Shadow spied smoke along the horizon. He

strained his gaze, hoping for  a second token. At last he saw it, a fainter wisp than the first.  Coming closer, he

calculated a space of about three miles between the  two smoky pillars. 

He saw the City of Birmingham, bulking up below her own smoke;  which issued steadily from her funnel. He

could make out the boats  along her superstructure; on the deck, he saw moving dots that he knew  were

people. Heading straight for the coastal liner, The Shadow gave  another glance, obliquely to the right. 

That view showed him the yacht Marmora, smaller than the New  YorkSavannah liner, but more graceful.

She was a delicate thing of  white, taking easy, graceful dips through the choppy sea over which the  larger

vessel plowed. Not only could both ships see the yellow plane;  they were within each other's sight. 

THE SHADOW maneuvered the plane's controls. He was banking,  apparently beginning a half circle that

would head him back to land,  when the plane's motor sputtered. From then on, every action of the  yellow

plane indicated that it was in distress. 

Under the pilot's deliberate mishandling, the motor choked worse  than before. Leaning from the cockpit, The

Shadow gesticulated wildly  toward the liner that was just below him, to the left. 

He made a wellfaked effort to keep the plane in the air, as his  quarter turn took him away from the City of

Birmingham. He was heading  directly for the Marmora, covering those few miles in jerky, precarious

fashion, only a few hundred feet above the ocean. 

Then, with a last spasm, the motor died. The fragile plane started  a dive toward the sea. 

Leveling off before he struck, The Shadow piloted the plane across  a wave top. The jounce nearly threw him

from the cockpit. He hit  another wave, that gripped a ruined wing, half plucking it from the  plane's fuselage. 

Nose dipped deep, the yellow plane was a helpless wreck upon the  foam, its lone occupant climbing from the

cockpit to along the higher  wing, while he waved excitedly toward the yacht, no more than a hundred  yards

away. 

Men were peering from the yacht's rail, undecided what to do. The  Shadow could see their faces; he felt sure

that those aboard the  Marmora would gladly have kept the yacht along its course, leaving the  foolhardy

aviator to his fate. But they couldn't overlook the fact that  the City of Birmingham was on the scene. 

Her engines had stopped; the smoke from her funnel was thinning.  Her whistle sent inquiring blasts that the

Marmora was forced to  answer. 

The yacht dropped a tender with men aboard it. Clearing deftly, the  small boat headed for the waterlogged

plane. The little gig was  motored; it cut the water like a driving arrow. Watching its approach,  The Shadow

saw signals going up from the Marmora. The yacht was doing  the full duty that the law of the sea required. 


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Stooping to the cockpit, The Shadow brought out his bag and carried  it with him when he was lifted into the

tender. The motor roared again,  sweeping them away from the wreckage of the plane. A few minutes later,

Lamont Cranston stood aboard the Marmora, smiling very weakly as he  thanked his rescuers. 

The City of Birmingham had resumed her northward route; when she  reached New York, she would report

the rescue that she had witnessed.  By that time, if the skipper of the Marmora proved as wise as The  Shadow

believed him to be, the news would already be radioed from the  yacht. 

Though his presence was distinctly unwelcome, Lamont Cranston would  certainly be accorded excellent

treatment aboard the Marmora, under the  circumstances which had brought him here. 

The Shadow had found the one way to reach the Trebble yacht without  an invitation, and he intended to ferret

out new facts while he  remained as an unwanted passenger. 

CHAPTER VII. THE FINGER MOVES

THEY were inquisitive aboard the Marmora. They wanted to know who  The Shadow was, and what he was

doing in a land plane off the Virginia  Capes. They put those questions bluntly, and The Shadow answered

them. 

His name, he said, was Lamont Cranston, and he liked adventure.  When he flew a plane, he recognized but

one limitation: the capacity of  the gasoline tank. There had been times, in fact, when even that had  not

deterred him, so long as he knew that a landing spot would be handy  when he ran out of fuel. 

This hadn't been one of those occasions. His intent had been to  return to his starting point, the Atlantic City

airport, after meeting  the City of Birmingham. He had friends aboard that ship, and he had  promised to fly

out and greet them. His one mistake had been that of  hiring the wrong plane. 

The talk impressed the listeners, particularly the reference to the  imaginary friends on the New

YorkSavannah liner. One of the yacht's  officers promised to send an immediate radio dispatch, informing

the  world  with the City of Birmingham included  that Lamont Cranston was  safe aboard the Marmora. 

Listeners didn't know that Lamont Cranston was learning more than  they were. 

The Shadow recognized the Marmora, from his visit of a few years  back, but he didn't remember a solitary

face that he had seen before.  Possibly, some of the former crew members were below, but this crowd  weren't

of the caliber that Jerome Trebble usually hired. Something was  distinctly wrong aboard the Marmora. 

No expression on Cranston's masklike face betrayed suspicion. The  dapper officer who had done the

questioning became more courteous. He  was glad, he said, that they had been able to help Mr. Cranston. They

had a cabin that he could use, but they could not promise how soon he  would be taken ashore. This yacht, the

man declared truthfully, didn't  put into port often. 

Before going to his cabin, The Shadow picked up his bag. That was  when the first gleam of doubt showed in

the dapper officer's eyes. It  left, when he saw Cranston open the bag, to put away his aviator's  helmet. The

bag contained nothing but a lunch box, that fell open to  show some wrapped sandwiches. 

The striped interior of the bag made its depth deceptive. The  sharpest eye could not have detected that the hag

had a false bottom. 


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A few minutes after he had closed the cabin door, The Shadow heard  a rap. He answered it; the dapper officer

was back again. Twisting the  tiny points of his shortclipped mustache, the fellow asked: 

"Do you know whose yacht this is?" 

The Shadow shook his head. 

"It belongs to Jerome Trebble," said the officer. "You've heard of  him, haven't you, Mr. Cranston?" 

"I certainly have!" For the first time, Cranston's face displayed  signs of interest. Then, with a slight smile:

"This is a real  adventure, striking upon Trebble's ship." 

"You've never met Mr. Trebble?" 

The Shadow met that question with a negative headshake. It was the  direct opposite of the truth; but it served

a valuable purpose, one  that brought a different smile to the lips of Cranston, when the  officer had left. The

Shadow was confident that his answer would  produce prompt results. 

Jerome Trebble, it happened, did know Lamont Cranston. No matter  how exclusive Trebble might feel on this

particular morning, he would  certainly be anxious to see any man who claimed to be Cranston, but who

denied ever having been aboard the Marmora. Jerome Trebble had a  definite dislike for impostors, and was

always pleased at a chance to  expose them. 

Hence, The Shadow had taken the most direct method to meet Trebble,  if such proved possible. 

He had doubts, though, that Jerome Trebble was still aboard the  Marmora. Therefore, The Shadow's claim

that he did not know Trebble was  doubly valuable. It made it easier for him to meet the yacht's new  owner,

should there be one. 

STROLLING out to the deck, The Shadow met the dapper officer when  he returned with the announcement: 

"Mr. Trebble would like to see you. Come this way, Mr. Cranston." 

They went below and reached a door that The Shadow remembered. A  knock brought word to enter. The

Shadow stepped into a sumptuous cabin,  that was half living room, half bedroom. His gaze went directly to a

corner, where a man was seated at a desk. 

That corner had always been Trebble's favorite spot. The Shadow  could remember Trebble sitting there, half

hunched, with one elbow  propped to hold his long chin, while his eyes stared through  roundrimmed

spectacles that were wider than his thincheeked face. 

The man at the desk today had Trebble's manner, even to the propped  elbow. His chin, too, was long like his

face; but his cheeks weren't  thin. They made the spectacles look small, and through the lenses, The  Shadow

could see eyes that did not belong to Jerome Trebble. 

The owner of the Marmora had a blinking habit that gave him an  owlish expression. This man's eyes were

sharp; when their lids  narrowed, it was not to avoid a hurting light. It was a different  habit: a manifestation of

shrewdness. He didn't need the big spectacles  that he wore. 

He was Pointer Trame. 


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Those shrewd eyes caught no recognition from The Shadow's  expression. After a close scrutiny of the

uninvited guest, Trame  decided that he was just what he claimed to be  a wrecked aviator,  rescued from the

brine. 

In a wheedling voice, an excellent imitation of Trebble's style,  Trame suggested: 

"Have a chair, Mr. Cranston." 

Soon, The Shadow and Pointer Trame were clouding the air with puffs  from fat cigars. In their respective

parts of Lamont Cranston and  Jerome Trebble, crime hunter and crook were forming an excellent

acquaintance. 

Not once did The Shadow make the slightest sign that could have  alarmed Trame. In turn, Trame showed no

suspicion of his new guest,  Lamont Cranston. At moments, it struck The Shadow that his own pretense  might

be working too effectively. Perhaps it was an indication that  Trame's bluff also covered secret inklings

regarding The Shadow's true  identity. 

Subtly, in that cajoling tone that he faked so well, Trame was  suggesting reasons why Cranston should stay

aboard the Marmora for a  while. His excuse was that he seldom put into port; at present, he was  hoping to

extend this cruise into a fishing trip, which might be  spoiled if he left these waters. 

It would have been a logicalenough pretext, had it come from  Jerome Trebble, the millionaire who always

wanted his own way; but from  the lips of Pointer Trame, the excuse was flimsy. Nevertheless, Trame

received the reply that Cranston was in no hurry to go ashore; that he  would be glad to continue on the cruise. 

That pleased Trame. However shallow his suspicions might be, he  wanted to know more about Lamont

Cranston. In turn, The Shadow desired  further facts regarding Pointer Trame. 

The conversation ended when someone rapped heavily at the cabin  door. Trame recognized the knock, and

called: "You may enter, Raydorf!" 

Then, while the door was opening, Trame informed The Shadow: 

"Raydorf is my secretary, and a very competent man." 

FROM Raydorf's look, when The Shadow saw him, the man appeared very  competent, but not as a secretary.

The fellow looked to be more capable  in such pursuits as murder or mayhem. Seldom had The Shadow seen

an  uglier pair of eyes, or lips that carried such suggestion of latent  cruelty. 

There was a gloss to Raydorf's darkish countenance that somewhat  covered his villainous expression. When

he adjusted a pair of  spectacles to his highbridged nose, he gained a bit of superficial  dignity. His voice, too,

added some suavity to his manner, for it was a  velvety purr. 

To others, Raydorf's shammed smugness might have been deceptive;  but as The Shadow watched him, the

fellow seemed to ooze viciousness  from every pore. 

Thinking that his oily manner was as good a bluff as Trame's  wheedle, Raydorf politely inquired how long

Mr. Cranston would be  aboard the Marmora. With definite satisfaction, Trame replied that the  guest's stay

would be a long one. He turned to The Shadow, remarking  that if he cared to send any radiogram to New

York, it could be easily  arranged. 


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"Just call your steward," said Trame. "His name is Hartley. Wait"   Trame reached for a buzzer  "I'll send

for him and introduce you." 

While they waited, Trame reached into the desk and brought out a  sheaf of typewritten papers. 

"You will excuse us, I hope, for the next few hours," he said. "I  am dictating my memoirs to Raydorf. I

believe that the public will be  interested in the life of Jerome Trebble, since so few persons have  ever met me.

Don't you agree, Cranston?" 

Before The Shadow could reply, Hartley arrived. He was a man past  middle age, frail and grayhaired, who

supported himself in the doorway  by placing both hands against the sides. The yacht was pitching  slightly in

the heavy sea, which could account for Hartley's effort to  steady himself; but the steward also showed signs

of feebleness. 

His eyes were dull; they had difficulty noting faces in the gloom  of the cabin, where the shades over the

portholes were more than half  drawn. But there was a momentary change of Hartley's expression when he

heard Trame say: 

"Hartley, this is Mr. Cranston. You will attend to anything he  wants." 

"Very well, sir." Hartley's brief flicker of emotion faded. "You  may depend upon me." 

The Shadow followed Hartley from the cabin. Not once did the  steward turn about as they passed seamen

lounging on the deck. There  was a good reason why Hartley did not look back; the steward was  anxious not

to betray himself. 

He had recognized a face in that gloomy cabin; had heard a voice  that he remembered. Hartley was one man

who had been many years aboard  the Marmora, in the service of Jerome Trebble. He could probably recall

any person who had ever visited the eccentric millionaire yachtsman,  for guests, during those years, had been

very few. 

Hartley had not forgotten Lamont Cranston. 

The steward's change of expression had come when he realized that  at last a friend had come on board; one

who might see through the  pretenses of Pointer Trame. He had suppressed that look, hoping that  Trame

would not notice it. Right now, Hartley was carefully trying to  hide any interest in Cranston's presence. 

Reaching a companionway, Hartley descended, letting Cranston stroll  alone to the rear deck. There, seating

himself in a deep steamer chair,  The Shadow finished a last few puffs at the fine Havana cigar that  Trame had

given him. 

The Shadow's eyes roved out across the tossing waves that teemed  with bluish brilliance. He was content to

play the calm part of  Cranston, here aboard the Marmora, while daylight persisted. 

But when night came anew, his ways would match the darkness that  blanketed the Atlantic. Then, once more

The Shadow, he would pry deep  into the affairs of Pointer Trame and the crooks who served that bold

impostor. 


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CHAPTER VIII. MEN IN THE DARK

IT was midnight. In his cabin aboard the Marmora, The Shadow lay  upon his berth thinking over events of

the afternoon and evening.  Though far at sea, he had not lost contact with the world on shore. 

Before dinner, he had taken a most fortunate stroll along the  yacht's upper deck. It had brought him within

hearing range of the  Marmora's wireless room. The operator, one of Trame's tools, had picked  up an

important news flash that The Shadow had overheard. 

It told about salvage operations off Atlantic City. The wreck of  the Ozark had been located. Within a few

days, divers would be ready to  seek the strong box in the sunken freighter's hold: 

That news had certainly angered Pointer Trame. 

The bigshot had shown signs of it at dinner, although he had tried  to cover his ire. Whatever Trame's game,

he had intended that the  strong box be lost forever, like those other cargoes shipped by Hugh  Barvale. 

If those salvage operations went too far, Trame would have to take  a hand. That didn't quite fit with other

schemes that he evidently had  in mind. 

Later, after dark, The Shadow had made a brief foray to the  wireless room, where he had again heard

incoming messages. They came in  a special code, but The Shadow had deciphered them upon returning to  his

cabin. 

The messages were from Trame's workers in New York. They were  fitting out a ship, and would be ready

when needed. Included was the  fact that crooks had taken on new hands to replace those lost aboard  the

Ozark. 

The Shadow knew that his own agents would be among that crew. Cliff  Marsland had played the game well,

while on the Ozark. Though he hadn't  been a member of Trame's mob, he had hobnobbed with them; and

they had  been on the point of enlisting him, when the trouble broke out. 

In all that chaos, Cliff hadn't been identified with The Shadow. To  all appearances, the blackcloaked fighter

had played a lone game,  merely rallying loyal men about him. If Cliff, back in New York, looked  up his

crooked shipmates, they would give him a fullfledged welcome.  The fact that he had left the Ozark with the

others wouldn't matter. It  had been his only way to escape from the sinking ship. 

Those reflections ended as The Shadow heard footsteps pad past his  cabin door, which opened onto the

outside deck. 

They had come regularly, those sneaky shuffles, every thirty  minutes. The outside prowler who was keeping

watch on Cranston's cabin  thought that he could not be heard. Instead, he was simply giving  himself away.

He was practically stating that during the next thirty  minutes. Cranston's cabin, would be unwatched. 

Twisting from the berth, The Shadow, opened his bag. Prying into  the space beneath the false bottom, he

brought out his black cloak and  hat. He already had his automatics, holstered beneath his coat. Donning  the

black garments, he drew on a pair of thin gloves that had been  tucked within the hat. Silently, The Shadow

moved from the cabin. 

He became a gliding thing of blackness, a sablehued ghost  invisible in the night, as he groped his way along


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the rail. The  Marmora was rolling through a long cross swell, and The Shadow gauged  his progress to the

ship's motion. Picking a wellchosen course, he  disappeared below and suddenly emerged from a darkened

passage into the  lighted space outside Trame's cabin. 

The door of that cabin was unlocked, as The Shadow learned when he  tried the knob. The discovery caused

extreme caution on The Shadow's  part. Under his skillfulpressure, the door gave no perceptible motion  as it

inched inward. Using the narrowest of cracks, The Shadow surveyed  the scene. 

AS usual, the cabin was but dimly lighted. Trame kept it that way  for two reasons. First, because it had been

customary with Trebble;  again, it helped Trame get by with his impersonation of the vanished  millionaire. 

But Trame wasn't in the cabin at present. 

Instead, The Shadow saw Raydorf. The alleged secretary was seated  at the desk; he had turned on a small

light, that cast a sharp glow  upon white sheets of paper in front of him. So powerful was the light  that The

Shadow could see the numerals on a little desk calendar at  Raydorf's elbow. That calendar was correct, and

Raydorf was referring  to its date: Tuesday, the twelfth. 

In a curious way, Raydorf was Trame's secretary. Usually, though, a  secretary typed letters and let his

employer sign them. Raydorf was  doing just the reverse. He was carefully affixing a signature to  certain

documents. As the darkish man tilted one sheet into the light,  The Shadow saw its boldlettered signature.

The name that Raydorf had  written was that of Jerome Trebble. 

With Raydorf in his employ, Pointer Trame could go far with his  impersonation of Trebble. It was plain that

Raydorf was a skilled  forger, who could supply the one thing that Trame most required: a  satisfactory replica

of Trebble's signature. That, however, did not  clear the situation; contrarily, it actually perplexed The

Shadow. 

At this rate, Trame could bleed the vast riches that belonged to  Jerome Trebble. Why, then, should Pointer

Trame be working at other  crime? 

The Shadow wanted the answer to that question, and he was soon to  get it. Raydorf had finished with his

forgery. He laid the papers on  the desk and stepped toward the door. The barrier was tightening  imperceptibly

as he approached. 

Outside, The Shadow did a rapid fade into a darkened side passage.  Swallowed by gloom, he was gone like a

dispelling puff of black smoke,  when Raydorf stepped from the cabin. The evilfaced secretary was going  up

on deck to talk with Trame, hence did not bother to lock the cabin  door. 

Raydorf's footsteps were still echoing from a companionway when The  Shadow glided into Trame's cabin. 

The documents that Raydorf had signed with Trebble's name were  comparatively unimportant. They were

papers sent to the Marmora by  Trebble's lawyers. They had to be returned with Trebble's signature;  but there

was no rush about them. 

In the top drawer of the desk, however, The Shadow found a batch of  correspondence that explained the

matter that had puzzled him. Most of  those letters were a year old, written before Pointer Trame ever had  met

Jerome Trebble. 

From those letters, The Shadow learned that Trebble had disposed of  nearly all his vast estate. He had

cracked it into gifts and endowments  to friends and institutions, with the understanding that the donations


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should remain anonymous until after his death. He had put the small  remainder of his wealth into an ironclad

trust fund, simply to support  himself and cover the upkeep of the yacht Marmora. 

In meeting Jerome Trebble, Pointer Trame had not found a master of  many millions. He had simply come

across a man who had foresworn the  world, and was living on a comparative pittance! 

By taking Trebble's place, Trame had acquired possession of the  yacht Marmora, and nothing more.

Whatever money came from the managers  of the trust fund was immediately swallowed up by current

expenses. No  wonder Trame had found it necessary to play some other game! He would  be glad when he

could chuck the part of Jerome Trebble entirely. 

DIGGING into another drawer, The Shadow found more papers. These  were a discovery of a different sort,

but quite as valuable as the  first. They were letters and other documents, carefully arranged in  order of date,

all signed with the name of Hugh Barvale! 

Some of the papers bore the letterhead of Barvale Co. and every  document told a story. First, there were

letters and receipts  pertaining to the shipments of delicate machinery, with references to  when and how those

shipments should be taken from storage. 

Next were letters that covered the transfer of the platinum  shipment, brought in from Colombia and held for a

few days before it  was sent to Europe. There were letters, too, arranging for an armored  truck to carry

Barvale's strong box to the pier where the freighter  Ozark had been moored. 

Finally, The Shadow read a most important letter, addressed to a  concern called the Waterways Transfer Co.

The body of the letter read: 

In accordance with my previous instructions, you will dispatch 

the auxiliary lugger Welcome to acquire whatever cargo may be 

reclaimed by the salvage ship Hercules, at present operating on the 

wreck of the freighter Ozark. From said cargo, one item, namely a 

chained strong box, is mostly important, and must be held in your 

possession pending my further instructions. 

Sincerely yours, 

HUGH BARVALE 

Every letter in that batch dyed Hugh Barvale with the brush that he  had so completely avoided. Until the

present, The Shadow had not found  one scrap of evidence that could prove Barvale as the silent partner in  the

murderous activities that had produced several sea disasters,  culminating in the loss of the freighter Ozark. 

Visualizing Barvale as a hidden crime master, there was good reason  why Pointer Trame, the actual field

general, should retain these  important documents. 

Assuming that Barvale and Trame had agreed upon an equal division  of insurance money and other spoils,

Trame's only sure way to collect  his share would be through possession of these letters. Properly  brought to


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light, they would incriminate Barvale without involving  Trame. 

It looked like the old story of crook mistrusting crook; but behind  it, The Shadow could see another factor.

The laugh that eased from his  lips was barely audible. No one could have heard it outside the walls  of that

cabin. 

But The Shadow's wary ears could detect distant sounds and identify  them. He was hearing such tokens as he

replaced the Barvale  correspondence in its proper drawer. The sounds were those of footsteps  outside the

cabin. They signified that two men were heading in this  direction; probably Trame and Raydorf. 

The Shadow's hunch was right. 

He was scarcely outside the cabin, when he saw figures descending  the wide companionway. Their faces

were not quite in sight at the  moment of The Shadow's silent twist into the opposite passage. The  Shadow

saw them from darkness, Trame and Raydorf. As soon as they had  gone into the cabin, he made for the

companionway. 

Along the darkenedrolling decks, he skirted past the wireless  room, to check on any incoming calls. None

came during the five minutes  that The Shadow watched. It was time to be getting back to his own  cabin, in

case the patroller, making his halfhour round, should decide  to peer inside. 

FOOTSTEPS were already sneaking toward him when The Shadow edged  through his own doorway. In the

darkness of the little cabin, he  remained stockstill, knowing that the patroller would certainly knock  before

trying to unlock the door. In that case, The Shadow could use  Cranston's voice to inquire who was there. That

would satisfy the  patrolling deckhand. 

As it happened, the man didn't stop. His paces continued onward in  their methodical fashion. The Shadow

reached for the doorknob,  intending to step out again and use the next half hour to look in on  Trame and

Raydorf. 

Then, like the silent darkness itself, The Shadow became  motionless. The fade of those passing footsteps had

allowed him to hear  a closer sound  a tense, slow breathing that seemed no more than  inches from his

elbow. 

The Shadow was no longer atone in his cabin. Someone had entered  during his absence. Whoever the man

might be, he had learned, when he  entered, that Lamont Cranston was gone. That fact, once spread, could

place The Shadow in the worst predicament of his career. 

Alone on the Marmora, faced by Trame's picked crew of crooks, The  Shadow would be up against terrific

odds. He would be safe, only if he  could resume the part of Cranston without anyone learning that he had

temporarily been The Shadow. 

There was still a way whereby that could be accomplished. 

The way was to prevent the departure of the lurker who had not  managed to clear from the cabin before The

Shadow's return. That done,  The Shadow could take time to decide upon his next plans. 

Turning from the doorway, The Shadow moved silently inward, to  proceed with his momentous task. 


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CHAPTER IX. EXIT THE SHADOW

SEEKING that tense lurker was a matter that required utmost care.  The same darkness that aided The

Shadow also rendered his opponent  invisible. Moreover, The Shadow was running a risk that increased with

every moment. 

Once the other man suspected what was up, he could take measures of  his own. A wild shout would certainly

bring members of the crew to  Cranston's cabin. That would start the very battle that The Shadow  wanted to

avoid. 

Therefore, The Shadow applied special strategy. As he moved about  the cabin, first toward the porthole, then

in the direction of the  berth, he allowed slight sounds to reveal his approximate location. By  those, The

Shadow made it seem that he hadn't learned of the other  man's presence. 

Moreover, he was craftily coaxing his unknown quarry into a crucial  move. The Shadow was opening a path

toward the door, so that the fellow  would try to reach it, The maneuver was neat, but it couldn't be  overdone;

otherwise, the man would have a chance to actually slide out.  The thing to do was hold him, by some

different strategy, when he  reached the door. 

In any room, that crafty game of guesswork would have been  remarkable. In this cabin, it was doubly

momentous. In that darkness,  the participants were like caged creatures confined in a squarewalled  box that

some giant hand was tossing back and forth, to suit its  changing whims. 

For the Marmora, wending an idle northwest course, was neither  heading into the sea nor following the

troughs of waves. The yacht was  varying rolls with pitches, and to keep their footing, both The Shadow  and

his crouching visitor had to stay close to any fixed objects that  they could grab. 

The Shadow had reached the berth at last. He was confident that the  other man was near the door. Something

was needed to hold him there,  and The Shadow found the method. His bag was near the foot of the  berth,

which was toward the door. Extending one foot, The Shadow  supplied a short kick. 

The bag tipped over; the lunch box clattered tinnily, as it fell  out to the floor. The sound was fairly close to

the door; The Shadow  sensed that the other man was crouching still, not ready to move until  he heard some

further noise. 

Timing his action to the yacht's roll, The Shadow circled away from  the berth and came in toward the door

from the opposite direction! 

A pitch floundered The Shadow toward the wall beside the door. His  elbow thumped hard, but he disregarded

its sudden numbness. Knowing  that the man had heard his clatter, and would instinctively spin about,  The

Shadow launched forward. He came to an immediate grapple with a  wiry foe. 

One fist upon the fellow's throat, The Shadow prevented an outcry.  His numbed hand was clutching at the

gun which the fellow shoved  against him. Managing to push the weapon aside, The Shadow put one  finger

underneath the trigger to prevent its pull. 

Squirms lessened. The Shadow's throttling tactics were paying  dividends. Rolling away from the door, he

carried his foe with him.  They reeled against the berth. Plucking the revolver from the limp hand  that held it,

The Shadow flung the man on the mattress. 


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A tiny flashlight twinkled. It showed a grayish, haggard face  looking upward with frightened eyes, while

dryish lips gulped  voicelessly for air. 

The man on the berth was Hartley, the old steward. 

PROMPTLY, The Shadow flung aside his cloak and hat. He turned on a  light above the berth. Hartley's

expression changed at sight of  Cranston. The steward's fear was ended. 

"I... I didn't think it was you, sir!" he whispered. "I came in...  to talk to you " 

Hartley's pause showed traces of uncertainty. It was Cranston's  quiet nod that gave him courage to go on. 

"But you were gone," added the steward. "I was afraid that they had  captured you. So when you came back, I

didn't recognize you. I'm sorry,  Mr. Cranston!" 

Seated by the berth, The Shadow picked up the tin box that had  fallen from the bag. That box also had a

double bottom, that contained  a makeup kit. He replaced it carefully in the bag, the interval  allowing

Hartley to regain his breath. 

"Tell me the whole story," then suggested The Shadow, calmly.  "Everything about Jerome Trebble." 

The account wasn't as bad as The Shadow had anticipated. Though  Trebble was dead, he hadn't been

murdered. It had all started in  Havana, where some of the crew had gone ashore and gotten themselves  into

trouble. 

They had been jailed, and Trebble, testy because of ill health, had  refused to help them. He had followed the

advice of a very friendly  gentleman named Mr. Trame, who had obligingly found new seamen for the

Marmora. 

By the time the yacht left Havana, others of the old crew had quit,  leaving only a few of the original

personnel, Hartley being one. 

"Trame hoped to swindle Mr. Trebble," declared Hartley, "but he  never got to it. Two weeks after we left

Havana, Mr. Trebble had a  heart attack, and died. At least"  the steward spoke chokily  "he had  his last

wish. He was buried at sea. 

"That was done secretly, by Trame. Instead of continuing to be a  guest, he took Mr. Trebble's place. I was the

only one of the old crew  allowed to see him. My eyes are weak, and I must confess that I was  deceived, at

first. Only " 

"There was something that puzzled you," interposed The Shadow. "You  wondered what had become of

Trame." 

"Yes, sir," rejoined Hartley. "I talked with the others who had  been with Mr. Trebble. We figured it all out,

found the truth but we  have kept very quiet since. I always pretend that I think Trame is Mr.  Trebble. But

we're ready, sir, the four of us. We've hidden guns that  Trame doesn't know about. Let one man start it, we'll

fight!" 

Cranston's hand clapped encouragement upon Hartley's shoulder.  Reaching above the berth, Cranston turned

off the light. Hartley  understood the reason a few second later, when shuffly footsteps went  past the cabin

door. 


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By that time, there was a swish in the darkness. The Shadow was  putting on his cloak and hat. A tiny

flashlight came on, focused toward  the floor. It flicked red, changed to green, then went white again. 

"Stay here," came Cranston's low voice, "and watch for the light.  Move back if you see it red; come out when

it turns green. Then go to  your quarters, and say nothing. Your visit here must not be known." 

Drawing Hartley toward the door, The Shadow left him there and  glided out to the deck. Clutching the rail,

he took a look in both  directions. Suddenly, from the folds of his cloak, The Shadow flashed a  red light.

Hartley saw it, closed the cabin door. 

The Shadow had spotted someone coming along the deck. The fellow  hadn't seen the guarded gleam, but he

was brandishing a flashlight of  his own. A twist of his hand turned it slightly upward. The Shadow saw  the

sinuous lips and ugly eyes of Raydorf. 

THERE was a gloat upon the forger's face, as though he anticipated  something pleasant, which, in Raydorf's

case, would mean evil work. He  stopped at Cranston's door and listened. His flashlight, tilted under  his arm,

gave a view of his displeased scowl. 

Raydorf wasn't wearing his spectacles. Like Trame, he used glasses  only for show. His eyes were sharp, as

keen as his ears, and he was  disappointed because his suspicions were not proven. Raydorf had  evidently

stopped at Hartley's bunk room. Not finding the steward, he  had guessed that he might be with Cranston.

Raydorf, however, could  hear no voices. 

He turned to leave the cabin. The yacht gave one of its unexpected  pitches. Flung across the deck, grabbing

the flashlight so he wouldn't  lose it, Raydorf came into unexpected luck. He hit the rail, jounced  about, and

found his flashlight glaring directly upon a blackclad  shape that was standing with one arm crooked about a

deck post. 

Tilted almost beneath The Shadow's hat brim, Raydorf's torch  reflected the glint of burning eyes, revealed the

profile of a  hawkfaced countenance that was Cranston's, but which had a different  effect when seen above

the upturned collar of a jetblack cloak.  Raydorf, a crook by trade, couldn't be mistaken by that sight. 

His snarl told that he had recognized The Shadow. 

As the Marmora smacked hard between the waves, two forms were  precipitated together, partly by the yacht's

pitch, partly by their own  endeavor. 

Out from The Shadow's cloak whipped a hand that gripped an  automatic. Slashing that fist aside with his

flashlight, Raydorf yanked  a long knife from a sheaf beneath his coat. 

Reeling back and forth along the deck, the two engaged in a  ferocious grapple; perhaps the hardest duel that

The Shadow had ever  fought with a single opponent. 

A crook long banished to the tropics, Raydorf had learned many  native tricks with a knife, the sort of weapon

that suited his own  savagery. His handling of the dirk's point prevented The Shadow from  bringing in the gun

muzzle the way the cloaked fighter wanted. 

Suddenly, The Shadow took the upper hand. He had picked the very  chance he awaited. A shove of his fist

drove Raydorf back, prodded by  the gun point. His own hand twisted half in back of him, the crook  couldn't

bring up the knife. 


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A wayward lurch of the Marmora came to Raydorf's aid. The Shadow  was hurled back, striking

shoulderfirst upon the deck, with Raydorf  plunging toward him. The forger tried a long stab with his knife,

but  The Shadow rolled in under it. Hitting hard, Raydorf sprawled against  the rail. 

As The Shadow came to hands and knees, his fingers touched his own  little flashlight. It had dropped from

beneath his cloak. A glance at  Raydorf, who was moving very groggily, indicated an intermission too  good to

waste. 

The Shadow flicked the flashlight green, then extinguished it. He  turned to subdue any last struggle that

Raydorf might intend. 

Scooting from the little cabin, Hartley answered the "go" signal  that The Shadow had given him. In a glance,

the steward saw the cloaked  fighter looming above Raydorf. Thinking himself unneeded, Hartley  hurried

along the deck to the passage that led to his tiny bunk room.  Reaching the passage, he stopped; he couldn't

resist a look backward. 

Moonlight, struggling through an opening cloud bank, showed Hartley  a sight that he had not expected. 

THE SHADOW had hauled Raydorf to his feet, was starting the fellow  toward the cabin. But the crook still

had the elements of fight. 

With a spasm so vicious that it seemed a demon's fury, Raydorf  flung himself upon his cloaked captor and

battered The Shadow against  the rail. Clever as a madman, he snatched away the knife that The  Shadow had

taken from him. 

A downward dip of the yacht gave Hartley a less complete view of  the startling sequel. He saw Raydorf's arm

swing wide clear over the  rail, then inward. The knife slashed The Shadow's cloak from shoulder  to hip. The

yacht bobbed upward; the figures tangled against the  moonlight, the cloak drooping like a toga. 

Bodies shoved together; Hartley heard the muffled report of a gun,  barely audible amid the roaring of the

foam. 

What he heard, did not match what he saw. 

Raydorf's hand still moved. It stabbed its knife deep, close by the  rail, where The Shadow was trapped.

Tossed by the yacht's next lift,  both figures twisted; as the rail went downward, they stretched across  it. 

The steward saw a hand swing inward, to toss the knife across the  deck. Then, as The Shadow's cloak flipped

loosely from the shoulders  that wore it, one fighter gave a heave that sent the other plunging  into the ocean. 

Hartley saw the victor stoop, pick up the knife and wipe it on the  cloak. Frantically, the steward ducked for

his bunk room when he heard  footsteps come toward the companionway. Crouched inside, he trembled  when

a hand rapped on his door. 

"Who is it?" gulped Hartley. 

No words replied. All that Hartley heard was a chuckle, a snarling  gloat that bespoke a vicious triumph. That

tone was Raydorf's. Its only  tinge of disappointment seemed due to the fact that Hartley was in his  cabin,

where he belonged. 

Raydorf lacked evidence that would connect Hartley with The Shadow. 


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The footsteps went away. Hartley groaned a regret that he had not  been close enough to aid The Shadow in

those last moments of combat.  Weakly, he opened the bunk room's tiny porthole for a breath of fresh  air. 

As the Marmora slid upward to a wave's high crest, Hartley saw a  flickering, distant light that seemed to bob

and vanish. The moon was  gone now; but again, the steward caught glimpses of that tiny beacon. 

Perhaps that glimmer meant the coast! Miles away, but within a  strong swimmer's range. The Shadow might

reach that shore despite the  heavy sea, provided that he was not too badly crippled by Raydorf's  knife thrust. 

Feeble though the hope, it was all that Hartley could give. 

CHAPTER X. IN NEW YORK

IT was noon the next day, and Harry Vincent stood glumly beside the  window of his hotel room, in New

York. It seemed a day made for gloom. 

The weather was dismal, rainy, and it was the thirteenth of the  month, but those weren't the factors that

bothered Harry. He was  thinking of The Shadow, wondering what had happened to his chief. 

When last heard from, The Shadow, as Lamont Cranston, had made a  forced landing in a pleasure plane,

miles out at sea. The New York  newspapers had carried stories of that adventure; had also announced  the

later news, that Cranston was a guest of Jerome Trebble, whose  yacht had fortunately been on hand to rescue

him. Lamont Cranston, it  seemed, was at present very safe indeed. 

That was precisely what bothered Harry Vincent. 

He knew that there had been a purpose in The Shadow's air excursion  from Atlantic City. If things had

actually gone wrong, and he had met  the Marmora by chance, The Shadow was where he didn't want to be. 

That seemed very likely, for the Marmora, of all ships cruising the  Atlantic, was the last place that Harry

could imagine as headquarters  for Pointer Trame. 

However, Harry had long ago learned to accept the unlikely as the  plausible. It was possible, he admitted to

himself, that the Marmora  had been The Shadow's actual objective. That would be poor comfort for  it made

matters even more serious. 

The crux of the whole thing was that The Shadow's agents were at a  standstill. 

They had followed certain orders from Burbank, The Shadow's contact  man, but those had obviously been

prearranged. Harry's job had been to  visit certain wholesale districts, Cliff Marsland's, to look up crooks  who

had been aboard the Ozark. 

Neither had accomplished anything. Both had reported to Burbank,  but had received no new instructions. The

cold fact must be that  Burbank had heard nothing more from The Shadow. 

Harry Vincent finished his soliloquy with the very correct  conclusion that something serious must have

happened on the yacht  Marmora. He wondered how that would govern matters off the Jersey  coast. 

There, the newspapers said, strong winds had lessened. With the sea  calming, there would be results from

salvage operations on the  Hercules, the ship that had anchored beside the sunken Ozark. 


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By that time, Harry was sure, The Shadow would be needed. 

The jangle of the telephone brought Harry from the window. It was  Burbank, speaking in a methodical tone

that he always used. He was  giving instructions, a string of them, the very sort that Harry needed! 

Harry listed three names: 

Brighton Supply Co. 

Eclipse Garage 

Maritime Cafe 

IT was after lunch when Harry arrived at the place first listed.  The Brighton Supply Co. was located on the

East Side, below Fourteenth  Street, and it was not a pretentious place. It dealt chiefly in gas and  electric

fixtures, with an assortment of other objects that looked like  junk. 

A baldish, pudgy man named Casher was summoned when Harry inquired  for machinery, without specifying

the kind that he wanted. 

"What sort of machinery?" asked Casher in a croaky voice, tilting  his head as he spoke. "We've got power

generators, if you want to  install your own electriclight plant. But that's about all we carry." 

Harry wasn't interested. He was seeking such equipment as hydraulic  speed gears, gyrocompasses, and other

highpriced items that should  have puzzled Mr. Casher at mere mention of their names. They were the  sort of

machinery that Barvale Co. exported, although Harry didn't add  that fact. 

He simply ran through the list in confidential fashion, bringing a  succession of sideward nods from Casher's

tilted head. 

"Come into the office," suggested the baldish man. "We can talk  better there." 

Once in the office, Casher produced a typewritten list that  practically duplicated Harry's verbal lineup. 

"We aren't sending this out to everybody," informed Casher. "In  fact, we've been holding it back, expecting

people to come here, like  you did. Give us your order  we'll fill it. At about ten per cent less  than any other

firm will." 

"You have all these items in stock?" inquired Harry. 

"We can't keep them here," returned Casher. "We only handle cheap  fixtures. We haven't got protection

against burglary. To tell you the  truth, Mr. Vincent, we're only handling these items on a commission  basis.

So we don't keep them." 

"How soon can you make delivery?" 

"Within twentyfour hours; maybe less." 

"What are they  factory shipments?" 


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Casher shrugged at Harry's question. Frankly, he didn't know. That,  at least, was his story, and it sounded

plausible. Rather than arouse  Casher's suspicions, Harry left without acquiring further information. 

Taking a subway uptown, Harry walked a few blocks through the  drizzle and reached a street that was lined

with battered brownstone  houses. Some buildings had vanished from the row, to be replaced with  newer

structures, although even these looked old. One was the Eclipse  Garage. 

It was squatly, scarcely more than a single story in height.  Evidently its owner had found business very poor

in this locality, for  the place was closed. That didn't quite satisfy Harry. 

With Manhattan motorists clamoring for parking space, any garage  should show a worthwhile profit, even if

it only took an overflow of  cars from other places. The Eclipse Garage was near enough to traffic  areas to

have stayed in business. 

Another feature was the way in which the garage was boarded up.  Ordinarily a locked door would seem

sufficient to keep prowlers out of  a vacant garage; but this place was fitted as if it expected a foreign

invasion. Its front was barred by a metalsheeted door, and the tiny  windows just above had thick steel bars. 

Finding a passage beside the garage's solid brick wall, Harry went  through to the rear. He saw the back door;

it was of steel and had a  formidable lock. There were two windows in the rear wall, and they were  completely

shuttered. 

The door was a small one, used only by persons, not as a rear exit  for cars; hence Harry decided that it must

be the usual route by which  the garage was entered. 

There was only one other possible method; that would be to use the  roof. It could be reached from an empty

house on the other side of the  garage, for there the two walls joined. 

WHEN Harry turned toward the front street, he saw a head pull back  from the front corner of the garage.

Evidently there were persons in  this neighborhood who kept a watch over the place. It wouldn't be good

policy, therefore, to stroll out by the passage. Harry decided to go  through to the other street. 

Directly in back of the garage was a large house, most pretentious  of any in its row. The place was wellkept,

and still had the look of a  fashionable residence. Its owner must have disliked crowding, for the  house

boasted open passages on each side. Harry took the nearer of  those alleyways, and arrived at the next street.

He looked out to see a  limousine standing in the drizzleswept street, directly in front of  the mansion. 

The chauffeur must have stepped into the house, for the car was  empty. Harry sauntered past it, looking for

initials on the car's door.  He saw them, "H.L.B.," and discarding the middle initial, Harry made a  guess at the

name. 

So good a guess, he fancied it, that he stopped just past a flight  of brownstone steps, to look back and see

who came from the house. It  wasn't long before a tall man of heavy build came out to the car. He  was

wearing a gray overcoat, a derby hat, and he swung a large cane so  sweepingly that the uniformed chauffeur

behind him was warily keeping  out of range. 

Harry saw the face beneath the derby hat. It was stern and  dignified, despite the heavy jowls. Harry had seen

that face before, in  a photograph, and the picture in question hadn't erred in identifying  one person; namely,

Edna Barvale. 


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This time, Harry's recollection of the photograph fitted the girl's  father. The first and last initials of H.L.B.

stood for Hugh Barvale.  It was he who had just come out of the pretentious residence. 

When the limousine pulled away, Harry was already in a taxi at the  corner, but he didn't order the driver to

follow the big car. Where  Barvale was going didn't particularly matter. Again, Harry had acquired  more than

enough information; and this time, he had scored a double  hit. 

His observations at the Eclipse Garage gained high importance from  the fact that the place was right in back

of the house where Hugh  Barvale lived. In fact, it would be news to Burbank, and probably to  The Shadow,

to learn that Barvale had a home in Manhattan. 

The exporter's usual residence was on Long Island. When in the  city, he invariably stayed at a hotel or his

club. Just why Barvale had  moved to a town house, became a question that Harry believed could be  aptly

answered. Harry, himself, had found a suitable reason: the  proximity of Barvale's residence to the closed

Eclipse Garage. 

HARRY rode to his hotel; there, he phoned in his report to Burbank.  His watch showed five o'clock; time to

start on his final venture.  Changing to old clothes, Harry used a mirror to get the effect. He  looked

presentable enough to pass through the hotel lobby, if he didn't  stay there long. 

Once his trousers lost their slight crease from the rain; when he  unbuttoned his coat to display the old sweater

that he wore instead of  a vest, he would pass in the company with which he intended to  associate. 

The rush hour was still on when Harry boarded a subway express  train and traveled southward to Brooklyn.

He didn't take a cab, after  he reached his destination. Persons of his ilk walked to the  neighborhood where he

was going, along the waterfront. 

Through the hazy drizzle, Harry finally saw a grimy light that  shone upon a battered sign bearing the name:

MARITIME CAFE. The place  received its title from an abandoned dock called the Maritime Pier,  that bulked

across the way. 

Two men shoved into the eating joint, as Harry approached it. Both  were as roughly clad as himself. But

neither of the pair was in sight  when Harry entered and sat down at a table near the back of the cafe. 

As he ordered a cup of coffee, Harry was conscious of an eye that  peered from a door beyond his shoulder.

He paid no attention when the  door creaked open wider. He expressed no more than a curious look when  a

tough who looked like a wharf rat sidled over to take a seat at his  table. 

"Your name's Vincent, ain't it?" 

"Yeah," returned The Shadow's agent. "Harry Vincent." 

"Swallow that Java," suggested the wharf rat, "an' slide along wid  me." 

Harry drank his coffee, planked down a nickel in payment. They  didn't give tips in this portion of Brooklyn.

But there was plenty else  that they might do, particularly to anyone who didn't turn out to be  what they

termed a "right guy." 

This was the beginning of a new adventure. What lay ahead for Harry  Vincent? Who knew? 

Perhaps, Harry hoped, The Shadow knew! 


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CHAPTER XI. THE CORSAIR CREW

IT was fortunate for Harry Vincent, that he had lost his recent  concern regarding The Shadow's safety.

Confident that his chief was in  back of recent moves, Harry was nerved for anything. He needed to be. 

Harry's ratty guide urged him through the door at the back of the  Maritime Cafe. Coming through himself, the

fellow closed it and shoved  a bolt. That put them in a tiny room, completely dark. A good place for  a knife

thrust in the ribs, if the wharf rat chose. 

The man groped past Harry, found a door in the opposite wall. He  knocked, at the same time clutching

Harry's arm and shoving him  forward. The door was yanked inward from the other side, bringing a  jabber of

raucous voices along with a vast cloud of cigarette smoke. 

Harry was shoved into the light, to meet the nonetoopleasant eyes  of a dozen men who occupied the

hidden rendezvous. Conversation stopped  abruptly, as Harry's conductor stepped in beside him. 

In all his encounters with thugs, Harry had never met such an  uglylooking mob. Each member of that outfit

looked capable of murder;  everyone had a hard glare that carried malice along with suspicion.  They were like

a pack of wolves; let one start a yelp, the lot would  leap upon their prey. 

For fangs, they had weapons, as assorted as themselves. Harry saw  pockets that had the bulge of guns; knife

hilts poking out from belts.  One thug was slapping a blackjack against his open palm as though  testing it, in

case he had to use it on Harry's skull. 

The wharf rat gave a nudge of his thumb toward Harry. 

"This guy," he said, "is Vincent." 

"H'ar'ya!" gruffed Harry to the mob. Then, picking an empty chair  by the wall, he sat down in it. Once

settled, he took a slow look  around the group. Tilting his chair back, he let the handle of a .45  shift over from

his hip. 

The tough in the next chair pulled out a pack of cigarettes and  offered Harry a smoke. 

It wasn't until his eyes became accustomed to smokehazy  atmosphere, that Harry saw a face he knew. He

had missed the man at  first glance, because the fellow was placed inconspicuously in a  corner. But when

Harry happened to look his way, the man thrust a pair  of hunched shoulders forward and poked a crafty,

wizened face into  sight. 

That man was Hawkeye, another of The Shadow's underworld agents. 

Hawkeye, it seemed, wasn't supposed to know Harry; which meant that  they must have been recruited

separately. The most likely man behind  that little job would be Cliff Marsland. 

A bigshouldered hoodlum, who answered to the name of Pike, was  busy checking noses. Pike had a

squinteyed manner that might have been  caused by the cigarette smoke; but Harry vaguely remembered

having seen  him somewhere before. Finding that the whole mob was assembled, Pike  started the procession

out through a rear door. 

It was dusk along the waterfront, but the thugs were careful not to  cross the street in a crowd. They went


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singly, or in pairs; Harry chose  the latter arrangement. It gave him a chance to slide along with  Hawkeye. 

He asked if Cliff had fixed it. 

"Yeah," stated Hawkeye, in a sidemouthed whisper. "We've got  Tapper with us, too. Cliff wanted to bring

Clyde Burke along, but  couldn't swing it. Right now, he's trying to ring in Jericho." 

Tapper, Burke and Jericho were three more of The Shadow's many  secret agents. 

THEY reached the Maritime Pier, went through a thinwalled front  that brought them toward the outer end of

the wharf. Other mobbies were  awaiting them, bringing the total close to twenty. 

Alongside the pier was a lowlying craft with two stumpy masts.  Lights from the deck showed faces, and

Harry saw Cliff Marsland close  at hand. 

A chance came for Cliff to draw Harry aside. Hawkeye sidled up  beside them. Tapper wasn't near, because

Cliff had already talked to  him. 

"I met up with the mob this afternoon," undertoned Cliff. "I  wouldn't have found them, if Burbank hadn't

flashed me the name of  their ship. It's called the Welcome, and they call the thing a lugger." 

From the looks of the boat, Harry classed it as little better than  a mud scow; but his opinion changed, when

he heard Cliff detail a few  of the lugger's merits. 

The Welcome, he said, had an auxiliary motor to help her limited  sail spread. She'd have a slow time of it,

chugging out through the  Lower Bay, but once at sea, that motor would begin to purr. The  lugger's clumsy

superstructure was camouflage. Along the water line,  and below, she was shaped for speed. 

"We'll reach the Hercules ahead of dawn," completed Cliff. "We're  supposed to take over the salvage ship,

before they send the divers  down." 

"Who's in command?" asked Harry. 

"The skipper of the Welcome," answered Cliff. "His name's Bradden.  He used to have a big rep as a

rumrunner. He's been getting orders,  though, by radio. Probably from Pointer Trame." 

"How about Pike?" questioned Harry, remembering the man who had  counted the crew back in the

rendezvous. "What's he?" 

"A loud mouth!" returned Cliff. "He won't rate, after we're on the  lugger. That's when Bradden takes over." 

Hawkeye gave a warning that spread the cluster. Pike was swaggering  up to talk with Cliff. 

"There's a guy here says he knows you," announced Pike to Cliff.  "His name's Jericho Druke." 

"Bring him in," rejoined Cliff. "We need him. This outfit may have  to eat before we get back in port, and

Jericho knows how to cook." 

"Looks like he could fight, too." 

"He can!" 


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Pike went away, to return with Jericho. The new recruit was a giant  African, whose shoulders had a width

more than proportionate to his  height. Cliff motioned him aboard the Welcome, telling him that the  galley

was at the stern. 

SOMETHING was detaining the mob. Crooks were anxious to get aboard  the Welcome, but Pike hadn't

given the word. On the deck, Harry saw a  squatly man with a scarred face beneath the battered visor of an

official looking cap. Harry identified him as the skipper, Bradden; and  it was plain that the lugger's captain

was chafing at the delay. 

Away from the dock edge, Harry was keeping himself inconspicuous,  when he was suddenly conscious of a

glow behind him. He swung about,  straight into the glare from a pair of headlights. An automobile had  swung

onto the pier. 

Harry ducked away, as anyone would have, to avoid the car. But he  realized that the move had made him

very prominent, particularly to any  persons who might have noticed him from the car. When the headlights

clicked off, another light came on inside the automobile, showing it to  be a sedan. 

That wasn't all that Harry saw. In the rear seat, between a pair of  thuggish passengers, was a girl. Harry

couldn't mistake her darkhaired  getup. 

The girl was Edna Barvale, in her guise of Ruth Eldrey! 

Had she seen him? 

Harry wasn't sure; but he didn't like the sharp way in which the  false brunette was peering from the car. One

of the men in back was  getting out to join Pike, who had stepped over beside the sedan. Harry  was wondering

what to do next, when a quick hand plucked his sleeve. 

It was Hawkeye. The cagey little man had recognized Harry's  dilemma. 

"Slide aboard the lugger," whispered Hawkeye. "Tip off Jericho;  tell him maybe you've been spotted. Have

him keep an eye peeled. You  lay low!" 

Harry sidled to the pier edge and dropped aboard the lugger's  stern, close to the galley. 

Pike held conference with the man from the sedan, while the car was  turning around, to be ready to leave the

pier. Edna wasn't coming  aboard the Welcome, which was one good factor. Still, Pike hadn't given  the order

for the mob to move. 

Looking around, Pike saw Cliff. He introduced the husky who had  come from the car. 

"This is Jorgin," said Pike. "Maybe you remember him, Marsland?" 

"Sure!" nodded Cliff. "He was aboard the Ozark." 

"Yeah. We've been waiting for him to show up, so we could shove  off. Only, Jorgin's just told me something.

He says it looks like we've  got a phony in the outfit!" 

Pike was moving the trio toward the inner end of the pier, which  suited Cliff, because there was an old office

in the wall, only a few  yards behind the stern of the moored lugger. As they neared that door,  Cliff suggested: 


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"Let's step in there. So the guy, whoever he is, won't know we're  wise." 

Inside, Pike became direct. 

"You ought to know the guy," he told Cliff, bluntly. "because you  signed him up!" 

"Yeah?" Cliff was cool. "I signed up several others, too." 

"The mug I'm talking about is Vincent." 

"What makes you think he's phony?" 

It was Jorgin who answered Cliff's question. 

"This guy Vincent," he said, "looks a lot like a fellow that was a  passenger on the Ozark. And his name's the

same!" 

CLIFF, at that moment, would have liked to be in the sedan that  Jorgin had just left. He could fancy choking

a certain young lady who  was alternately a blonde and brunette. For Cliff knew that Edna  Barvale, or Ruth

Eldrey, whichever she chose to be, could well be the  person who had recognized Harry from the car. 

Maybe Jorgin was trying to take that credit for himself; but it  didn't matter. The jam was a bad one. 

Standing by a wide paneless window in the side wall of the empty  office, Cliff looked at the faces of Pike and

Jorgin. They were tough,  the two of them; as dangerous as any pair of cutthroats in the entire  murderous mob.

Between his teeth, Cliff drew a long, slow breath of the  salty waterfront air. 

He didn't like its flavor, any more than he did the situation. From  the faces that peered at him, Cliff also

realized that the worst thing  he could do would be to stall. 

"Wait here," grunted Cliff. "I'll send for Vincent right away." 

Before the others could object, Cliff crossed to the doorway and  poked his head through. He saw a shuffly

figure close at hand. It was  Hawkeye. 

"Hey, you!" gruffed Cliff. "Find Vincent. Tell him I want to talk  to him." 

Cliff gave a nudge in the opposite direction. Hawkeye understood.  He made a sneaking exit along the wall, to

reach the street that  fronted the pier. Cliff stepped back to join the men by the window. 

"I've sent for Vincent," he began. "When he gets here " 

Snarls interrupted. With them, Cliff felt his ribs nudged by gun  muzzles, as Pike and Jorgin shoved close. 

"Start to talk!" snapped Pike. "And talk fast! Since Vincent's  phony, maybe you're the same!" 

"Yeah," added Jorgin, "and we want to know!" 

Cliff's teeth gritted. A minute more, and Hawkeye would provide  enough diversion to make Pike and Jorgin

think of persons other than  Harry Vincent. But talking wasn't in Cliff's line; not in a spot like  this one. He

knew the moods of thugs like Pike and Jorgin. Sometimes a  command to talk was merely a comeon that


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would bring prompt bullets. 

Making a sudden wrench away from Jorgin's gun, Cliff drove an  uppercut for Pike's chin. In his hurry, Cliff's

fist merely glanced the  fellow's jaw, but it spoiled Pike's closerange aim. Twisting between  the pair, Cliff

grappled, knowing that they wouldn't shoot. 

They didn't want noise, if they could help it; and they had a  simpler way of handling Cliff. Individually, each

could have given him  an even battle. Together, they were pressing him down between them,  there beside the

window, to put him so they could slug him with their  guns. 

Flaying his arms about, Cliff hoped to ward off the coming strokes  until Hawkeye could produce the needed

interlude; but the fight was  hopeless. Pike and Jorgin showed teamwork. 

With their free hands, they gathered Cliff's arms behind him.  Twisted, his face half upward, Cliff could see a

gun fist rise on  either side, against the glow of the gaping window. 

Cliff's jaw set itself; his eyes went shut. He regretted that  afterward, for he didn't see what happened next. 

Through the window space came spreading arms that looked like  mammoth pincers. On the ends of them,

instead of claws, were objects  the size of hams. 

They were the hands of Jericho Druke. 

THE jolly African giant didn't reach for the raising guns. Instead,  he clamped his mighty fists on necks,

taking each in a choking grip  that practically encircled it. 

Gurgles issued from the mouths of Pike and Jorgin, They beat out  wildly with their guns, trying to whack

Jericho's head. Jericho dodged  those slashes, until Pike's gun grazed him. The big man gave an annoyed

grunt. He looked at the heads that stuck above his fists, as a  purchaser might examine a pair of coconuts. 

Swinging his arms outward, then inward with all his force, Jericho  cracked those heads together. Cliff heard

the sharp impact; it still  seemed to echo when Pike and Jorgin slumped beside him, their necks  released from

Jericho's terrific clutch. 

The thugs weren't gurgling any longer. 

Before Cliff could gulp words to Jericho, the sharp sound of  gunfire began outside the pier. Jericho moved

from beyond the window,  following the dock ledge back to the Welcome. Leaving the senseless  forms of

Pike and Jorgin, Cliff hustled out to the pier. 

The sedan's lights had come on again. Into their glare came  Hawkeye, on the run. He had fired the shots

outside, but his gun was  tucked away. 

"It's the cops!" bawled Hawkeye. "They're wise to something!" 

He gestured for the car to get started. and it did. Cliff caught a  startled look from the falsetanned face of

Edna Barvale, as the sedan  wheeled by him. From the distance came the timely whine of a police  siren. 

A patrol car had heard the gunfire, was heading for the waterfront,  giving corroboration to Hawkeye's wild

claim that the cops were on the  job. 


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From the deck of the Welcome, Bradden was taking charge. He was  motioning mobsters aboard, not

bothering to see if Pike, Jorgin, or  anyone else happened to be among these. 

Nor did the mob wait for orders from their missing pals. They  landed on the lugger's deck in droves, scurried

for the hold and the  forecastle like rats seeking holes. 

The Welcome was chugging forward when Cliff and Hawkeye leaped to  its deck, the last of the boarding

throng. While the police car's siren  still screeched inquiringly from somewhere on shore, the lugger lost  itself

in the hazy blackish drizzle out beyond the Maritime Pier. 

Cliff found Harry and drew him toward the stern, to tell him all  that had happened. They saw a light below a

short companionway, and  heard a sizzling sound. They looked down to see Jericho, stooped in a  galley hardly

bigger than himself. He was wearing an apron and a chef's  hat, and was leaning over a stove. 

Jericho looked upward. He saw the faces above him and grinned.  Deftly handling a skillet, Jericho divided its

contents into two  plates, which he thrust toward the companionway. 

"Ham an' eggs," announced Jericho, "coming up!" 

CHAPTER XII. POINTER CHANGES PLANS

SEATED near the stern of the Marmora, Pointer Trame watched the  drizzle smother the wake that churned

from the yacht's propeller. It  was well after midnight; time to turn in, if Trame expected to be up in  the

morning. 

By then, the Marmora would be entering New London harbor. As Jerome  Trebble, Pointer would have a

perfect alibi to cover the hour when the  Welcome met the Hercules, miles southward off the New Jersey

coast. 

There was another matter, too, that would be settled in Boston. It  was the disappearance of the yacht's

erstwhile guest, Lamont Cranston. 

Flinging his cigar across the rail, Pointer arose to stretch  beneath the canopy that covered the rear deck. Two

members of the crew  saluted as they passed; and Trame saw Hartley entering a companionway. 

It didn't matter if the steward noticed Pointer. Under the feeble  deck lights, the crook looked enough like

Trebble to deceive Hartley's  old eyes  so Pointer thought. 

As for the others who had once known Trebble, they were all below  deck. Pointer always kept these there. 

Stopping at the wireless room, Pointer picked up a sheaf of  messages that had come in and gone out over the

air during the day.  Raydorf had attended to those; these copies were duplicates. Since the  Marmora was

riding steadily through a sea much milder than that of the  night before, Pointer didn't have to grab for the

hand rail while  descending to his big cabin. He was able, too, to read the messages. 

Raydorf had handled them as well as usual. Into long, wordy  dispatches that purported to come from Jerome

Trebble he had introduced  occasional code words from the book that Pointer and his followers  used. No one,

so far, had even begun to guess that radiograms from the  Marmora contained the sparks that set off human

dynamite, in the form  of crooks. 


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Today, with crime reaching its climax, Raydorf had been  particularly careful to make the messages lengthy.

At present, Raydorf  was finishing another task, and a highly important one. Pointer was  hopeful that it had

come up to expectations. 

Reaching the cabin, Pointer found Raydorf seated at the desk. He  was doing a task that The Shadow had

viewed the night before: forging a  signature. Approaching, Pointer watched the man's handiwork beneath a

downtilted lamp. Raydorf gave a triumphant chuckle, and the bigshot  duplicated it. 

"Excellent, Raydorf!" said Pointer, in the wheedling tone that he  had cultivated. "That compares perfectly

with Cranston's signature. You  did well, finding those identification cards in his cabin." 

Raydorf arose from the desk, helped himself to one of Trame's  Havana cigars. He rubbed his eyes to ease

their strain, then put on the  spectacles, that arched so importantly from his highbridged nose. 

"It wasn't easy," he said, suavely. "Look at the first tries I  made. They were away off. But right now"  he

wiggled his fingers, to  end their cramp  "I could sign Cranston's name with my eyes shut!" 

Pointer agreed that Raydorf could. 

"Tomorrow," said the bigshot, "I want you to leave for Montreal.  Stay there a few days; then go West. Keep

sending letters, all in  Cranston's name." 

"Where to?" asked Raydorf. 

"To me, at first," replied Pointer. "Before you leave Montreal, you  will hear from me; giving further details.

By that time, I shall know  much more about Lamont Cranston." 

"How about cashing checks?" 

The question brought a chuckle from Pointer. 

"Always practical, aren't you, Raydorf? Yes, you can cash checks on  Cranston's account; but do it cautiously.

By all means, avoid meeting  anyone who knows Cranston personally." 

THERE was silence, while the yacht's engines supplied a  lowthrummed tune. Then Pointer, seated at the

desk, spoke suddenly in  a voice that was not Trebble's. His tone was a harsh one, tinged with  venom. 

"Five of us!" rasped Pointer. "We were The Hand. We had the whole  of New York just like that"  he

extended his hand, fingers upward, and  closed it like a clutching claw  "until The Shadow spoiled the game!

After that, it was every man for himself. 

"Pinkey Findlen went in for blackmail. He was fool enough to stay  in New York, and The Shadow got him.

(Note: See "The Hand" Vol. XXV,  No. 6.) Ring Brescott sold murder, in Philadelphia. He went too strong

with it; The Shadow finished him. (Note: See "Murder for Sale" Vol.  XXVI, No. 3.) Steve Bydle  Long

Steve, we called him  had a swell  racket out in Chi. But The Shadow bobbed up and ended it, along with

Steve. (Note: See "Chicago Crime" Vol. XXVII, No. 6.) 

Savagely, Pointer chewed off the end of a cigar, as if the deed  were a tribute to the memory of his vanished

pals. Then came his  chuckle, raucous. 


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"I dodged The Shadow," admitted the bigshot, "but he found me  finally. Found me, the Pointer, the Finger

that could always pick them  out! I fell for it; but I had the setup. This yacht was a bad spot for  The Shadow." 

"Not so bad," inserted the secretary, bluntly. "It was just luck  that I spotted him. If I'd gone over the side,

instead of him, where  would you be, chief?" 

"Right here!" snapped Pointer. "Even The Shadow wouldn't have had  the guts to knock me off, with a whole

crew in back of me! If he'd  gotten rid of you, Raydorf, I'd have known it inside of half an hour." 

Raydorf didn't dispute the point. There was merit in what Trame  said. The men aboard the Marmora worked

in a closeknit system. As it  happened, one of the crew had reported Cranston's final absence from  his cabin,

last night, only a few minutes before Raydorf had appeared  to tell Pointer of his battle with The Shadow. 

"I'm giving you credit, Raydorf," insisted Pointer. "You got rid of  The Shadow; that's all anybody could ask.

Before we get to New London,  we'll be rid of Hartley and the rest that we don't need. Right here"   he

yanked open a drawer at the left of the desk  "I've got all the  signed papers I need to pass as Jerome Trebble,

without the testimony  of a halfblind steward." 

There was a check book in the drawer; some of the checks were  unsigned. Pointer passed it to Raydorf, who

added Trebble's signature  to the remaining blanks. Shutting that drawer, Pointer yanked open the  one on the

right. 

"I'm taking these Barvale letters with me," he told Raydorf, "when  I go to New York. He's sitting prettier than

he ought to be, Barvale  is. If he doesn't like the terms the way I put them, I'll show him the  letters. 

"The way things have worked, he's got nothing on me and I've got  everything on him! Maybe"  Pointer's

eyes narrowed cunningly  "I'll  let these letters get around, no matter what Barvale says. They'd be  evidence

anywhere  and what use is Barvale, now that the jobs are  finished? 

"No use, except to be shown up as the guy in back of everything. He  can take the rap, while I stick to this

Trebble racket until I get sick  of it." 

WHILE Pointer was ramming the desk drawer shut, he heard a query  from Raydorf. The secretary wanted to

know what Pointer would do if he  required more signatures. Pointer had a prompt answer. 

"Those can wait," he said, "until you get back. It will only take  you a couple of weeks, Raydorf, to make it

look as if Cranston got lost  somewhere up around Alaska." 

Raydorf had opened a closet. He turned around, to question: 

"What about these?" 

The secretary was holding The Shadow's hat and cloak. Pointer gave  a sneer at sight of the bedraggled

garments. Empty, they looked very  pitiful. 

"I'll keep them," decided Pointer, with a snort. "Souvenirs of The  Shadow! The guy that scared everybody,

until he got his! He used to  worry them with his laugh. Well, that's all The Shadow is right now  a  laugh!" 

Pointer swung around to the desk. He saw the little calendar,  marked with its date, the thirteenth. But it was

after midnight, so the  date was wrong. Pointer began to change it. While thus engaged, he  heard Raydorf

speaking from his elbow. 


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"You're making one mistake, chief," came the oily tone. "You  oughtn't to be heading in for New London." 

"Why not?" demanded Pointer, still busy with the calendar. "That's  the best port we can make." 

"Maybe you'll be needed, along with the Welcome " 

"Not a chance! That's going to be a cinch! I checked on the coast  guard by wireless. There's no cutters near

enough to make trouble.  Besides, this New London trip is our alibi." 

Pointer spoke with an emphasis that should have settled the  discussion. He jammed the next date card in its

place and leaned back  to look at it. He was glad that the thirteenth was past. Like most  crooks, Pointer Trame

was superstitious. 

Again came Raydorf's argumentative tone: 

"If we gave up New London and made our course " 

"Are you crazy, Raydorf?" snapped Pointer. "I've told you that I've  made my plans." 

"And so have I!" 

It wasn't Raydorf's voice that spoke those words. The voice that  uttered them was one that Pointer Trame had

never expected to hear  again, in life. It was incredible, unbelievable, that it should have  spoken here, in this

cabin where Pointer and Raydorf were alone. 

The door was unlocked, yet no one could have entered stealthily  enough to have deceived both criminals.

Assuming, for argument, that  someone had entered, he couldn't be the person with that weird voice  that

awoke living shudders. The owner of that tone was dead! 

But was he dead? Grim doubt seized Pointer Trame. Wheeling, the  bigshot saw Raydorf; but the man's

appearance had changed. From  Raydorf's shoulders hung a black cloak; clamped upon his head was a  slouch

hat. 

A snarl slipped from Pointer's throat. 

This was Raydorf's idea of humor a masquerade in that black garb  that he had brought from the closet. The

bigshot expected the  secretary to fling aside the garments and give a rousing chuckle. 

Instead, a hand moved from beneath the cloak. It was gloved; it  clutched a heavy automatic. The muzzle

trained like a cold, unblinking  eye, straight toward Pointer Trame. 

Hidden lips delivered a laugh  a sinister taunt that Raydorf could  never have duplicated. A whispery

foretaste of doom, the mockery crept  through the cabin, stirring ghoulish echoes from the walls. 

Chilled by the gibe, Pointer scarcely saw the burning eyes that  bored upon him from above the leveled gun. 

Pointer Trame was hearing the laugh of The Shadow! 


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CHAPTER XIII. BROKEN BATTLE

BOTCHED thoughts bewildered Pointer Trame, as he realized that he  was faced by The Shadow, in actuality.

Out of that befuddlement sprang  recollections that began to explain The Shadow's presence. 

It all hinged on a supposition that had been expressed in this very  cabin, only a short while ago. 

If Raydorf, instead of Cranston, had gone overboard the night  before  

That was exactly what had happened! 

The Shadow's .45 had triumphed over Raydorf's knife, in that  struggle on the deck. Unstabbed, The Shadow

had punctured the crook's  heart with a bullet during the final moment of action. He had let  Raydorf's body go

from the rail of the dipping Marmora. 

From then on, The Shadow had followed victory with strategy. He had  taken Raydorf's place, and had done it

with consummate skill.  Nevertheless, it hadn't been a grueling task, as Pointer Trame reviewed  it. 

The only times that he had actually seen the pretended Raydorf were  when they had met in this cabin. Here,

the lights were always low, in  keeping with Pointer's role of Trebble. It had taken only ordinary  skill at

makeup, on The Shadow's part, to pass as the secretary. 

Had Pointer known of the makeup kit in Cranston's lunch box, he  would have classed the feat as very

simple. But Pointer, it happened,  was jumping to other thoughts. 

The Shadow's challenge was an answer to Pointer's own claim, that  the cloaked fighter wouldn't stand a

chance aboard this yacht. It  seemed that The Shadow felt he had a chance; so good a one, that he was  defying

the bigshot to offset it. Such a situation brought inspiration  to Pointer Trame. 

In the small drawer in the very middle of the desk, Pointer had a  loaded revolver. That .32 would be handy, if

he could reach it; but  there was no opportunity for a surprise move while he faced the muzzle  of The

Shadow's gun. Some surprise would have to be managed first. 

In his swivel chair, Pointer was holding his arms half raised. They  had gone to that position instinctively, and

it was good policy to keep  them there. His plight, however, did not eliminate his left elbow. It  was close

against the buzzer that Pointer used to summon members of the  crew. 

There were special calls for all of them; hence they would be alert  the moment that they heard a buzz.

Perhaps a signal not on the list  would give them an idea that something was amiss in the bigshot's  cabin. 

Bracing himself tighter in the chair, as though worried by The  Shadow's slowly approaching gun, Pointer let

his elbow rest against the  push button. 

He kept it there without another move. The Shadow was watching for  jogs of Pointer's elbow; when none

came, he supposed that Pointer had  lost nerve. 

MEANWHILE, in parts of the ship beyond hearing from the cabin, a  prolonged signal was causing

speculation among Pointer's crew. 

A full minute must have passed before Pointer suddenly weakened  under The Shadow's pressure. Slumping


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in his chair, the bigshot  adopted a hoarse tone that sounded like a plea. He was ready to call it  quits, he

claimed; to take whatever punishment The Shadow ordered,  provided it wouldn't be death. 

He wasn't a murderer, Pointer argued. If people had gone down with  ships that he had sunk, it hadn't been

intended. Pointer said that as  if he meant it; but the false note ended when The Shadow provided a  whispered

laugh. 

The Shadow had discovered half the truth; namely, that Pointer's  whines were a stall. As yet, however, he had

not divined what Pointer  expected to gain from such tiring tactics. It wasn't long before The  Shadow knew;

for the explanation arrived with sudden emphasis. 

A sound came from the cabin door. Sensing its meaning, The Shadow  spun around, to see the door fly

inward. In the doorway clustered a  trio of Pointer's thugs, all with revolvers. In numbers, they had The

Shadow instantly outmatched. 

His advantages, it proved, were greater. 

The arrivals hadn't expected to find anything more serious than a  dispute between Pointer and Raydorf; or

perhaps some trouble with a  third party, like Hartley. Sight of The Shadow was the last thing  possible their

onetrack minds could have conceived, and they weren't  prepared for it. 

Guns lowered, they couldn't fire at first sight, and therewith they  lost their only chance. The Shadow was on

the move before they actually  spied him, coming right their way. An avalanche of black, that sprouted  big

guns from both hands, was menace enough to throw them into chaos. 

They scrambled for the passage, aiming futilely as they went. Guns  popped, but the fingers that pulled the

triggers were yanking far too  soon. Shots spattered wide; then The Shadow was among them. He didn't  waste

bullets on such easy prey. He simply landed the dead weight of  his guns upon the dodging heads about him. 

Feverishly, Pointer Trame yanked open the middle drawer and found  his revolver, hoping to join the fray. He

fired two shots at the door,  but The Shadow was gone when he got there. His revolver still smoking,  Pointer

aimed at blackness on the companionway. He dropped back as a  gun tongued. That shot, The Shadow's first,

missed Pointer by a scant  quarter inch. 

Shouts were being raised above, prompted by the puny shots that  crooks had delivered below. That was why

The Shadow hadn't waited to  deal with Pointer. The space below was a coop; he wanted to be out of  it. So did

Pointer. 

Risking everything upon his guess that The Shadow wouldn't stop  again, Pointer followed. From the top of

the companionway, he took  another shot at a vague thing in black. The target was too elusive.  Pointer's only

reward was a returning laugh. 

From his own concealment in the entry to the deck, Pointer watched  a fray that brought him amazement,

which gradually developed into cold  fear. Not once did he have a chance to fire on his own, for always  there

were other figures between him and The Shadow. 

All that Pointer could do was witness The Shadow's meeting of the  very test that the bigshot had claimed

would be too great for anyone,  even for The Shadow. 

WHIRLING along the skiddy deck, The Shadow was everywhere, yet  nowhere. Everywhere, when he needed

to settle any of the dozen thugs  who tried to halt him. Nowhere; whenever one of them tried to pick him  off.


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He seemed a pivoting turret, delivering broadsides from a blackish  smoke screen. 

The only reason the fight persisted, was because his adversaries  thought they could fell him when he ran out

of ammunition. 

Like Trame, they didn't know that The Shadow was depending on  reserves. 

More members of the thuggish crew were piling into battle; there  were nearly a score of them, in all. Others,

however, were finding this  fray their promise of emancipation from the tyranny of Pointer Trame. 

They were ready, with guns that Pointer didn't know about  Hartley  and the other loyal men aboard. Nestled

in cabin doors and hatchways,  they supplied a sniping fire that took out some of The Shadow's most

dangerous foeman. 

Even Hartley, with his feeble eyes, was showing a good average.  Crooks were clustering so thick that the

steward couldn't miss. 

Like a wave, one batch of men drove along the deck, hoping to  overwhelm The Shadow before he could

handle more than half of them.  With the start of that rush came the jabs of sniping guns. Mobsters  stumbled;

their pals tripped over them. The wave disintegrated into a  straggly rush. 

Hoarsely, crooks were cursing one another; in their confusion, they  couldn't find The Shadow, until he was

flinging right into the remnants  of them, slashing down with gun blows alternated with timely shots. 

Such chaos produced another result, that Pointer saw with bulging  eyes. Men were shouting to The Shadow

that they would fight for him  against the crew. The man who started it was the dapper officer, a  fellow that

Pointer had always regarded as a misfit in the mob. He was  bringing others to his viewpoint, and The Shadow

was pointing them into  battle. 

They weren't crooks; nor were they turncoats. They were men who had  been hired by Trebble as genuine

crew members, after Pointer had looked  them over. The bigshot had counted upon making them into

desperadoes,  but had never found the need. He'd figured they would play along in  case of battle, as they

might have, in any strife that looked  legitimate. 

But they were inspired by the sight of one lone warrior staving off  a score of howling ruffians who had

openly revealed themselves as  murderers. No square shooter could resist the urge to join with The  Shadow's

side. 

Before Pointer understood it, the fight took a sudden shift. Men  were driving hard again in mass attack, but

bullets weren't being fired  to stop them. The men who had begun the drive were those who had joined  with

The Shadow. 

He was among them, pouring that human surge along the deck,  sweeping crooks toward the yacht's bow. His

newly enlisted men were out  from cover, shouting triumphantly as they joined the charge. 

They were flattening killers, trampling over them, taking their  guns right out of their hands; and moving to

the front was The Shadow,  stabbing his last few shots as spearhead of the human wedge. Pointer  Trame,

agape, was staring at an area which was deserted except for  motionless crooks. 

His crew was wiped out  or would be soon  except for the  halfgroggy men who were coming up the

companionway to join him. They  were all upon whom Pointer could depend. He shouted at them, tugged


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them onto the deck, where they could catch their wits. 

Suddenly aroused, those few last followers joined Pointer in a dash  for the tender that hung above the yacht's

stern. The bigshot  blundered when he tried to help them lower it, so he gave up that task  and stood guard

with his gun while they worked on the davits. 

THE Marmora's engines had stopped. In the calm sea, the dropping of  the boat was easy. Only a few

moments more were needed, and during  those, Pointer gave tense thoughts to the documents in his cabin

desk.  His reflections ended with a sneer. 

The Shadow could have those spoils, if he wanted them. On his  person, Pointer had credentials that bore the

name of Jerome Trebble,  and the ones still in the desk wouldn't matter. Raydorf's forgeries  were items of

perfection and would stand any test. 

As for the Barvale correspondence, Pointer wanted it, but  calculated that he could as well leave it where it

was. Those letters  would pin the goods on Barvale; which had been Pointer's own ultimate  intention. The

Shadow's hands would be the right place for that  evidence. He would turn it over to the law. 

The tender was ready to put off. Pointer heard its motor throbbing;  he rolled across the rail, to drop in among

its tiny crew. As he went,  Pointer spat final oaths toward The Shadow. Once again, he wished that  he might

have a chance to try his own hand at ridding crime of its  greatest foe. 

Out from darkness came the answer to that wish: The Shadow, driving  for the stern of the Marmora, alone! 

Attracted by the noise of the tender's motor, he had left his  followers at the yacht's bow, the place of final

victory. Knowing that  Trame was staging a getaway, The Shadow was coming back to halt it. 

He had his automatics. They were empty, but that did not deter him.  The Shadow's last leap ended in a

shortened lunge that spilled him  headlong by the stern rail. He had tripped over a wedgeshaped deck  cleat. 

From the force of the sprawl, Pointer saw that The Shadow had taken  a thump that left him groggy. It was

double luck for Pointer Trame. 

Not only was the bigshot safe; he had his chance to settle with  The Shadow. And Pointer put all his venom

behind the deed. Aiming his  revolver through the rail, he tongued three knifelike spurts straight  at The

Shadow's heart. At that short distance his bullets could hardly  fail. 

Men were shouting as they raced back to aid The Shadow. Pointer  snapped a command to the tender's crew.

The motorboat sped away,  Pointer crouching with the others, to avoid the barrage that came from  the

Marmora. Out of range, Pointer poked his head up above the gunwale.  Back on the yacht, he could see men

stooping above a flattened  motionless shape in black. 

Pointer forced a hoarse laugh back across the spreading water. It  was his answer to The Shadow's earlier

challenge; a raucous jeer that  pleased Pointer, even though he considered it unnecessary. 

The Shadow, Pointer reasoned, couldn't hear that laugh. People  didn't hear things after a triple dose of bullets. 

This time  the smoking gun in Pointer's hand was proof  The  Shadow was dead! 


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CHAPTER XIV. THE SALVAGE SHIP

THERE was one thing badly wrong with the lugger Welcome. She was  too fast. 

Bradden, the scarfaced skipper, wouldn't have agreed with that  opinion, for he was proud of the ugly ship's

speed. But the matter was  a source of worry to The Shadow's agents. 

"We'll be getting there before dawn," Cliff Marsland told Harry  Vincent. "An hour before, easily. That's

going to be bad!" 

They were at the lugger's bow, where the water slapped up from the  streamlined hull, to swash the crude slats

that served as camouflage.  Hawkeye and Tapper, a few paces away, were keeping watch while the  others

conferred. 

If Cliff's estimate proved correct, it wouldn't be long before the  Welcome reached the salvage ship Hercules. 

"Another thing," Cliff added. "Those wireless calls quit a while  ago. Bradden doesn't know where they were

coming from, except that the  bigshot sent them. I saw him checking in a code book, to find out what  they

meant. 

"We know, though, that they came from the Marmora. I don't like the  way they stopped. It doesn't worry

Bradden, because he heard all he  needed. But there should be more of them." 

Harry had a suggestion: "Maybe The Shadow has taken over." 

"Let's hope so," chimed Cliff. "But that's all the more reason why  he'd flash a few calls through." 

"Unless some of Trame's mob happened to put the wireless out of  order." 

Harry's suggestion eased Cliff's worry. It sounded plausible; and  it was actually better than a guess. That very

thing had happened  aboard the Marmora. 

But there were other things that had occurred on the yacht. Could  The Shadow's agents have seen a picture of

them, the result would have  been severe. That scene, for instance, where Pointer Trame had jabbed  three

pointblank shots at a helpless figure in black. Trame's last  glimpse back, too, from the fleeing tender. 

"If we can stall things off," Cliff finally decided, "it will help  a lot. Bradden might listen; because I've been

getting along with him  well enough. He's boss, though, and everybody on this packet knows it." 

They went down to see Bradden, in a partitioned portion of the hold  that served him as a cabin. Cliff

introduced Harry and the scarfaced  skipper shoved out a friendly paw. He looked interested when he saw a

member of the mob who seemed to have more than a fighter's  intelligence. 

Cliff had impressed Bradden, but chiefly by his bluntness. Harry  was a different case, in the skipper's

opinion. It was plain that he  studied faces, rather than attire. But if he was wondering what had  brought Harry

into the outfit, nothing that he said could have  indicated it. 

"WHAT'S the lay, skipper?" queried Cliff. "Going to hold back the  mob until we see how things look?" 

Bradden shook his head. 


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"As soon as we get there," he declared, gruffly, "we crack down.  I've got orders to take over that salvage

scow, or whatever sort of rig  she is, and the sooner it's done, the better." 

"It may be tough, working in the dark," suggested Cliff. "We found  it that way on the Ozark." 

Bradden scowled. It was Harry who caught the reason why. The  skipper of the Welcome evidently thought

that the wrecking of the Ozark  had been a dirty job. He could stand for piracy, which was his present  mission;

but he apparently regarded the Ozark affair as mutiny, which  went against his halfway code of ethics. 

Despite himself, Harry couldn't dislike Bradden. He felt that if  they could have reached the fellow before this

expedition started,  Bradden would have listened to reason. His nature, though, was well  sprinkled with

stubbornness; the sort that wouldn't turn back. 

"When we do take over," remarked Cliff, "what about the diving job?  Who's going to handle that?" 

"The diver they've got aboard the Hercules," returned Bradden.  "Were you ever on the bottom in one of them

diving suits?" 

Cliff said that he hadn't been. 

"I have," announced Bradden, "and when you're down there, you're  hoping nobody's going to forget you!

We'll tell the diver we won't  forget him, if he brings up that strong box in a hurry!" 

Bradden smacked his open palm upon a stack of boxes that served him  as a table. From the way the pile

rattled, he evidently meant what he  said. 

"I'm telling you this," gruffed the skipper. "I don't like the  racket you fellows are in. That ain't criticizing

neither of you  personally, because a man's got a right to do what he chooses. But I  don't see sticking dirks in

people's backs and poking guns in their  bellies. 

"That's why I say the sooner done, the better. Because the sooner  it's done, the easier. Which means less

people hurt. Maybe none." 

Cliff supplied a leer that would have befitted the ugliest mobbie  aboard the lugger. He was trying a different

tack with Bradden. 

"You don't know this outfit," said Cliff. "Give them the dark,  that's when they go to it. If you're feeling soft

about those boys  aboard the salvage ship, you're making a big mistake. There won't be  one of them left when

this crowd of gorillas gets through. This bunch  will bring back everything but their scalps!" 

Bradden wasn't convinced. 

"I'm following my judgment," he persisted. "Maybe you're right,  maybe you ain't. I still figger I'm right." 

A head poked down the hatchway. It was one of Bradden's crew,  announcing that they had sighted the lights

of the salvage ship. 

"Cut off them motors!" bawled Bradden, through to the hole that  served as engine room. "And tell the man at

the helm to ease  alongside!" 

Rubbing his chin, Bradden turned to Cliff. 


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"Maybe there's something in what you say," said the skipper. "So  I'll leave it to you to line up that mob. Tell

'em we don't want no  massacre; that we may have to use them fellows on the salvage ship.  Only, get a move

on! I'll be up, if you don't!" 

Cliff took to the hatchway. As he went, he shot a nod to Harry that  Bradden didn't see. Harry caught the idea. 

WITHOUT a light to betray her, the lugger eased in as Bradden  ordered. Up on the deck, Cliff was buzzing to

the crew. They were to  lay low, he told them; to wait for word from Bradden. If it didn't  come, Cliff would

give it. 

"Those lights aren't enough," said Cliff to the thugs beside him.  He was referring to a few electric bulbs that

glowed from the deck of  the Hercules, flat against the water. "We're going to lay to for a  while. Maybe until

daylight." 

Nobody objected. But Cliff was counting heavily on matters down  below. He wanted to send Hawkeye to

work along with Harry, but he  couldn't get a word to the wizened man. Too many thugs were close. 

Below, Bradden was coolly slicing a cud of chewing tobacco from a  plug. He shoved the tobacco in his

mouth. turned toward the hatchway.  He stopped, mouth half open, the cud distending the lower half of his  left

cheek. 

Harry Vincent blocked the way with an automatic in his hand. 

"Mutiny, huh?" mouthed Bradden, when he finally found his voice. "I  didn't take you for a rat, young

fellow!" 

Harry's persuasive nudge forced Bradden back to a corner. Rat or no  rat, Harry meant business, and the

skipper knew it. He chewed his  tobacco meditatively. 

"Maybe you ain't got nerve enough to shoot," said Bradden. "Let's  see about it." 

He started a half circle toward the hatchway ladder. A brisk order  from Harry stopped him. Bradden changed

tactics. He moved slowly toward  Harry, giving his lifted arms a crablike motion. 

"One step more," Harry told him, "and it's curtains!" 

As he spoke, Harry thrust his gun forward, at the same time making  a neat calculation. He was moving the

weapon to where Bradden could  make a grab at it, but there was a trick to offset that. The method was  to take

a backward step, that Bradden wouldn't notice because his eye  was on the gun. 

It would have been perfect, if Harry hadn't forgotten Bradden's  manyboxed table. As he went back, Harry

bumped the thing. 

He grabbed for the wall, trying to get his balance, and Bradden was  charging on him like a wild bull. Harry's

gun hand had gone up; he  slashed it downward. But the scarfaced man ducked, poked a big fist  right for

Harry's eye. 

Floundering among the tumbling boxes, Harry lost the gun and rolled  across the floor. Bradden grabbed the

automatic and pocketed it.  Springing to the ladder, he shoved his head out through the hatchway,  saw the

salvage ship right alongside. 


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"All right!" bellowed Bradden. "Board her!" 

Dropping below again, Bradden looked for Harry, saw him getting up  from the floor. Both fists circling, the

skipper did a half dance  forward, intending to batter the man who had tried to cross him. Harry  swung in to

meet him, and ducked the first hook that Bradden flung. 

Coming up, he showed the lugger's skipper just how it should be  done; only, Bradden learned very little from

the lesson. All of Harry's  weight was behind the punch that met the skipper's jaw. 

Nothing was left of the overturned boxes after Bradden struck them.  He hit like a lump of iron, and he was

out cold when he struck. 

HARRY reclaimed his gun and took to the ladder, just as the Welcome  scraped the Hercules. He saw startled

men bob up aboard the salvage  ship, blinking at sight of aiming guns. It was Cliff's shout, alone,  that stayed

the massacre: 

"Let's get them!" 

That order wasn't for the mob. It was taken by The Shadow's agents.  With Cliff, they flung themselves upon

the closest thugs, slugging  hard. They had guns, all except Jericho, who sprang from the galley  with a pair of

skillets, that he ruined upon convenient skulls. 

The attack on the Hercules was forgotten in the midst of that  uprising. Snarling mobbies wheeled about, to

battle the fighters in  their midst. Guns barked; though wild, those shots predicted death for  the scattered

fighters who served The Shadow, for the odds were more  than five to one against them. 

Intervention was the only hope. It seemed impossible, but it came. 

From beyond the side of the lugger that faced the open sea, a vivid  glare sprang across the water. The

brilliance of a mammoth searchlight  was cutting a widespread swath from less than a hundred yards away.

The  fringes of that glow revealed the whiteness of a yacht that had crept  up through the dwindling drizzle. 

It was the Marmora! 

Crooks couldn't help turning toward that glare, for it captured all  attention. It blinded them for the moment,

until something partly  intercepted it. What they saw then, riveted them even more. 

Against the brilliant spotlight stood a silhouetted shape, a weird  figure in the gleam. It showed the outline of

a cloaked figure, head  topped by a slouch hat. Even the hawkish profile was discernible, as  the black form

turned. 

As crooks jabbed their revolvers toward the sight they hated, they  heard the tone that was the final token of

their challenger's identity. 

From the deck of the Marmora came the unmistakable laugh of The  Shadow! 

The Marmora had reached the scene of the salvage ship by coming  south at terrific speed under forced draft. 


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CHAPTER XV. TIDES TURN

FROM the tangle aboard the Welcome, many marksmen were shooting for  The Shadow. Crooks were

imbued with one idea: to finish him first, then  take care of the few battlers in their own midst. It seemed, for a

moment, that they had chosen the proper policy. 

With the first barrage the cloaked shape vanished from in front of  the searchlight, like a huge bat seeking

darkness. Exultant shouts from  the Welcome proved that crooks thought they had seen The Shadow drop,

when he faded. 

But the big light still burned. 

It couldn't be that they had clipped The Shadow, for additional  shots would certainly have extinguished the

searchlight. He was  somewhere else along the yacht's rail, and the only game was to pepper  more bullets

through the blackness. 

Those crooks might as well have used peashooters. 

The Marmora was beyond revolver range; a fact they hadn't  recognized. The light that cleaved the drizzle was

deceptive. It gave  no indication of the exact distance. The mob was simply wasting  ammunition. 

The men aboard the Marmora weren't. 

They were beginning a return fire, inspired by The Shadow. Their  weapons were highpowered rifles, that

whistled shells at an angle  across the lugger's deck. Foolishly, crooks kept up their own barrage,  thinking it

would bring results. 

A red light blinked a tiny, vivid dot from near the yacht's stern.  It was The Shadow's flash. It told his agents

what was coming.  Instantly, they gave up their handtohand struggle with the nearer  mobbies and made

hurried dives for the hold. 

Only one man didn't go. Tapper had taken a bullet in the leg. He  looked all right, until he stumbled near the

galley; there, a pair of  thugs forgot The Shadow long enough to pounce on Tapper. But Jericho  was quicker. 

He had ripped the small stove from the galley floor; he flung it  from the hatchway against the pouncing

crooks. They flattened to the  deck; before they could get up again, Jericho's big paw plucked Tapper  down

into the galley. 

Rifles were getting results. As crooks began to flounder, cool  heads among them realized the predicament.

They couldn't make for the  hold, because The Shadow's agents had taken it over and were protecting  the

hatchways. 

They saw an easier objective; one that offered them a double  opportunity: the deck of the salvage ship

alongside. The space between  was short enough to bridge, and it would require the mobbies only a few

minutes to overwhelm the skeleton crew that manned the Hercules. 

During such a fray, they would be immune from The Shadow and his  riflemen. They would have to halt their

fire, to avoid injuring members  of the salvage crew. 

AS the first thugs turned to make that drive, The Shadow stepped  into the fringe of the searchlight. His move


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seemed a trick to make the  mobbies forget their new plan, but they weren't falling for that game  again. They

were out to get those men aboard the Hercules, a pitiful  group who couldn't stand an armed onslaught. 

The Shadow held a rifle; he was raising it. He had targets, but  they were too many. With all his skill, The

Shadow could not drop a  dozen men before they had gone a similar number of paces. 

That was all the distance the crooks needed to go to reach the deck  of the Hercules. The salvage men were

grimly expecting them, but with  no weapons better than belaying pins. Those would be chaff against guns

and knives. 

Cliff Marsland wanted to make a sortie from the hold, to stop the  coming massacre. Harry Vincent held him

back. He still remembered The  Shadow's red light. 

The next moment proved Harry's wisdom. 

The Shadow's left hand had moved to the muzzle of the rifle. Plain  in the bright light, it pressed an object to

that muzzle. The object  was shaped like a pineapple. 

Quickly, the hand swung away, leaving the bulging thing at the  rifle's end. The long gun spoke; there was a

flash as the projectile  speeded on its way, coming straight for the deck of the Welcome, an  enlarging dot like

a sunspot on the searchlight's face. 

The thing was a rifle grenade! 

Finding such ammunition in the yacht's wellstocked arsenal, The  Shadow was using the grenade as a petard

against Pointer Trame's own  followers. He could have chosen nothing better than that missile, which  he had

reserved for this emergency. 

The grenade struck at the heels of the bellowing, charging cluster  that was making for the salvage ship. It

caught the crooks at the last  possible instant, just when they were starting a rapid fire that seemed  destined to

clear the way before them. The grenade did more than end  their desire for fight. 

It blasted them. 

The explosion was terrific. It cleared a swath along the lugger's  deck, ripping timbers, flinging them along

with flying bodies. Half a  dozen of the murderous mobsmen were withered by that shot; the rest  were jarred

by the concussion. Seeing The Shadow, they watched him with  terror in their eyes. 

Coolly, the blackclad fighter affixed another of the deadly  grenades to the mouth of his perfectshooting

gun! 

Mobsters made a wild scramble for the nearest cover: the hatchways  that The Shadow's agents guarded. They

were met by pointblank shots  that sent them reeling back. One cluster, rallying toward the stern,  was

planning on a drive, when The Shadow's rifle sent its second  message. 

This time, the grenade blasted a chunk of rail from the lugger's  stern. It wounded a few thugs, who were very

close, and it scattered  the others. The Shadow had purposely lessened the power of that shot,  offering the

thugs the alternative of surrender. 

Stepping swiftly from his place near the searchlight, The Shadow  used his small flashlight to send a green

glimmer. His agents on the  lugger understood. They sallied from their hatchways, to complete the  victory


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over the badly jarred survivors of the scattered mob. 

PERHAPS it was an aftereffect, a sort of shell shock, that drove  the crooks berserk. They didn't yield as

meekly as The Shadow had  expected; instead, they offered wild resistance. 

But their efforts had no teeth. They were tugging at triggers of  empty guns, reaching for sheaths that held no

knives. The Shadow's  agents  Harry, Cliff and Hawkeye  were shouldering them right and  left. 

Behind came Jericho, grabbing up those rolling forms, flinging them  over the lugger's sides, sometimes in

pairs. Once the water had cooled  them, they would be meek enough for rescue. That task, however, was to  be

left to others. 

The Shadow's flashlight was white again. As the searchlight  suddenly vanished, the little glow began a signal.

Harry saw it, and  made for the hold. He arrived in Bradden's cabin, to find the skipper  sitting by the wall. 

The jaw that Harry had punched was equal in size to the cheek where  Bradden kept his tobacco cud. The

lugger's captain was still very  groggy. 

"Get this scow going!" snapped Harry. "It's your only chance,  Bradden. The mob's wiped out!" 

"Going?" Bradden blinked as he spoke. "Where to?" 

"To shore," Harry told him. "If you beach us in a hurry, maybe  you'll have a chance to go your own way from

there." 

Bradden stumbled to his feet. He bawled an order to the engine  room, where a couple of his crew had been

lying low, throughout the  battle. Those fellows weren't mobbies; they were glad enough that the  attack had

failed. They went to work with a will. 

The Welcome was chugging forward, when Harry shoved Bradden to the  deck and made the fellow take the

helm. Harry ordered a circling course  past the Marmora. Behind them, the men on the salvage ship were

hauling  crooks aboard, one by one, wagging iron pins above the heads as fast as  they appeared, demanding

absolute submission with each rescue. 

The lugger gained speed; it veered past the stern of the Marmora.  As the clumsy ship passed, a figure made a

long leap from the framework  that supported the canopy over the yacht's rear deck. No ordinary  jumper

would have made that distance, but The Shadow cleared it. 

He had the advantage of a higher level for a start; the steps he  took across the framework were like the start

of a broad jumper's run.  He timed the veer of the Welcome to perfection, clearing the low rail  at the instant

when it was closest to the yacht. 

Out from the shore, lights were sweeping the sea, announcing the  approach of fleet coastguard cutters,

attracted by the sound of  gunfire and explosions. Soon they would arrive, to find the crew of the  salvage ship

in charge of captured crooks, with the Marmora moored near  by, to help suppress any foolish break that the

prisoners might  attempt. 

But the real victors would be gone. The Shadow and his agents were  leaving the scene of this new triumph, in

complete command of the very  ship that had brought a tribe of desperate mobsmen to the battle! 


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Motor humming, the lugger was showing speed. Her low hull was black  against the water, her course wide of

the path along which the cutters  came. Only a few miles ahead lay breakers; beyond them, the sand where

Bradden could beach his ship. 

Having ended crime at sea, The Shadow and his aids would soon be  shaping new events ashore! 

CHAPTER XVI. THE OLD GARAGE

IT wasn't long after dawn, but Harry Vincent was already back in  New York. It rather amazed him, when he

recalled how much had happened  in so little time. The voyage of the freighter Ozark, the sea trip on  the

Welcome, had been plodding journeys that made distance seem long. 

Things had been quite different, after Bradden had beached the  lugger. 

They had come ashore at Brigantine, the resort just north of  Atlantic City before the sun had risen. Lights had

guided the lugger   the lights of a fishing pier, where early risers and allnight  fishermen were trying their

luck. 

Near that pier was a modern hotel, the only structure of any size  along the beach, and there were taxicabs

beside it. Those cabs had come  over from Atlantic City at a phone call, the supposition being that  certain

hotel guests were to take an early train out. 

Instead of those imaginary guests, the cabs received The Shadow and  his agents as unexpected passengers.

The taxi men were told to drive  for the airport in terms that made them obey. Bradden and his crew had  been

left to go where they pleased. 

At the airport, a transport plane was waiting. The hop to Newark  took less than an hour. Then cabs again, into

Manhattan ahead of the  morning traffic. Others had dropped off, but Harry had continued to the

neighborhood of the Eclipse Garage. 

Here he was now, in the old empty house alongside, keeping watch  from a rear window. It was scarcely

daylight in the courtyard. It  strained Harry's eyes, when he studied the small door in back of the  garage. 

Across the courtyard loomed the old house where Hugh Barvale lived,  silent, sullen, as though all was

deserted within it. Even Barvale's  servants hadn't risen to begin their morning chores. 

Harry's vigil was important. 

He was to watch for anyone who might enter the old garage; to make  a full report regarding all he saw. But

he was not the only agent in  this vicinity. Two others were also on the job. 

Cliff and Hawkeye were cruising about in a car, ready to trail any  vehicle that might emerge from the front of

the old garage. 

Apparently, The Shadow didn't consider the Eclipse Garage to be as  empty as its appearance indicated. 

Harry was resigned to a long, monotonous watch. That did not lessen  his ardor. He would have been willing

to wait a week, if the result  would help crack the final issue in the crime game manipulated by  Pointer Trame. 

He remembered very well, Harry did, that there were others mixed in  this thing besides Pointer. Hugh


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Barvale was one; his daughter Edna was  another. It was Edna, in particular, who interested Harry. 

He'd been fooled once by the girl who could change from blonde to  brunette with the speed of a chameleon.

But he wouldn't be fooled  again, not even if she showed up as a redhead! 

While he was thinking thus, Harry saw something that brought his  vigil to a much earlier finish than he had

expected. 

A figure was stealing up to the back door of the garage! 

Where the person had come from, Harry couldn't guess, at first.  Then, as elation gripped him, he was sure

that the prowler had started  from the Barvale mansion that stood so near at hand. For his steadying  eyes had

recognized the arrival. 

It was Edna Barvale! 

SHE was here as Ruth Eldrey, and Harry figured that she had adopted  the disguise to simplify her prowl.

Edna's fluffy blond hair would have  been conspicuous in the courtyard, where daylight was beginning to

show. The brunette wig, on the contrary, was scarcely visible. 

There could be another reason, too. 

In working with her father, helping him in his crooked plans, Edna  would have to watch out for friends or

servants who might not be in the  game. It was very reasonable to suppose that there were certain times  when

Edna would want to be anyone but herself, while operating in this  vicinity. 

This was definitely one of those times. The Eclipse Garage wasn't  the sort of place that a society girl would

ordinarily visit. 

Edna was making some sort of rapping signal against the door. At  last it opened, and she slid inside. From

above, Harry could hear the  muffled grate of rusted bolts. 

The girl wasn't the only person in the garage. Perhaps the others  might be quite as important. Possibly Edna

had come here to meet  Pointer Trame! 

Harry had heard all about Pointer's flight from the Marmora, and  The Shadow had not yet learned where

Pointer had gone. If Harry could  solve that mystery, he would score a doublebarreled hit. Gripped with  that

hope, he hurried to a side room and took a look at the roof of the  low garage. 

As Harry had hoped, the roof had a trapdoor; it looked rather  flimsy. There would be no risk in trying it. The

roof was easily  reached from the window where Harry peered. 

Huddling low after he dropped, Harry began to creep toward the  trapdoor. It was fastened, but had evidently

been poorly inspected, for  it gave as Harry wrenched it. Moreover, it made such little noise, that  Harry was

tempted to see what lay below. 

Lifting the trapdoor, he looked into a little loft, saw a black  spot in the corner that appeared to be some sort of

opening. Harry  dropped inside, closed the trapdoor above his head. He didn't fasten it  again, for he might

need to use it in a hurry. 


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The corner blackness was an opening, with a steel ladder going down  from it. Everything was black below,

and Harry didn't care to use a  flashlight. Nevertheless, he felt it safe to try a cautious descent.  The downward

journey brought new results before he had reached the  cement floor of the garage. 

Raspy voices were undertoning words, a dozen feet away. Harry could  barely distinguish the shape of a big

van planted in the very center of  the garage, with boxes and other cratelike objects stacked near it. The

talking men were beyond the boxes. 

Feeling for the floor, Harry found it with his feet and began a new  creep. Soon, he was close enough to make

out the words of the men  beyond the boxes. 

"We're ready to lam, ain't we?" questioned one. "All right, then  why did we have to wait for the moll to show

up?" 

"Because the bigshot says to!" snapped another voice. "Ain't that  enough reason?" 

The first man muttered that he didn't like taking orders from a  dame. That brought an argument from the

others  there were two of them   who didn't agree with him at all. 

"This Eldrey dame's got guts," declared one. "She ain't dumb; maybe  because she ain't a blonde. Anyway,

she's showed what she can do." 

"Sure thing!" chimed in the fellow who was in agreement with him.  "Wasn't she on the Ozark? And with that

coverup crew last night, when  they gave the cops the slip at the Maritime Pier? She's got more to  brag about

than we have!" 

THAT brought on a new discussion. Among themselves, the talkers  admitted that they hadn't done much to

further crime, except to look  after this garage. They changed their tune, somewhat, when they boasted  that it

had been an important job, although it had involved no gunwork. 

They finally came to the vital point, however, when they admitted  that they hadn't shown the bigshot

anything sensational. 

"You can't blame the bigshot," was one speaker's verdict. "He  never makes a move without having

somebody responsible. He's trusting  us to take the van where it's supposed to go, but he wants somebody to

call him back and say it was done the way he ordered it. The moll's the  only person he's got left." 

Harry wasn't sure whether the term "bigshot" meant Hugh Barvale or  Pointer Trame, until he heard

references to the fact that these thugs  had recently received a call from somewhere on Long Island, which

indicated that it had been from Pointer Trame, who had arrived ashore  there after leaving the Marmora when

she had been headed for New  London, Connecticut. 

In that call, the bigshot had told them that he intended to  contact Ruth Eldrey; that she would give them

further orders when she  joined them. 

Harry was wondering where the girl was at present. That question  was answered, when one of the hoodlums

remarked: 

"Say, the bigshot must be sweet on that Eldrey dame! That call  she's making from here has taken her about

ten minutes. He must be  telling her a lot that we ain't going to hear." 


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The jest brought guffaws, that ended when a flashlight appeared  from another corner of the garage. It was

Edna, coming from the little  room where she had made the telephone call. 

When she arrived, the girl spoke briskly. Harry could see her face  in the glow of the flashlight. It was set

firmly, and it impressed the  thugs, as Harry could tell by the respectful looks on their rough  faces. 

"The bigshot says to start," declared Edna, "and to do it in a  hurry. I'm giving you"  she paused, to glance

at her wrist watch   "just fifteen minutes." 

"That won't be enough," put in the thug who had objected to a  moll's supervision. "We ain't more than a

quarter loaded." 

"You're not going to load," snapped Edna. "You're going to unload!" 

"But the bigshot said only to leave them boxes that was marked " 

"He's changed that order. You're to leave everything." 

There were doubtful mutters, that had the tone of mutiny. Edna  settled those objections in a firmtoned

fashion. 

"What I say goes"  her chin shoved out in a manner that suited her  actual personality  "and the bigshot

stands in back of it! What's  more, you know it  all of you!" 

The thugs exchanged shifty glances; they finally admitted that they  did know it. Edna was mollified. 

"Here's the dope," she said, indulgently. "The van is going out as  decoy, that's all. Take it to wherever it's

supposed to go, because  you've got orders on that already. But things have been going bad, so  the bigshot

isn't taking chances. Once I report that you've moved out  O.K., he'll send another truck in for the load." 

THAT explained the matter. The toughs growled their appreciation,  and added praise for the bigshot's brain

work. Climbing into the van,  they began to bring out boxes, adding them to the stack behind which  Harry was

hidden. 

That made it better for Harry. So much better, that he resolved  upon a measure of his own during the coming

fifteen minutes. He could  use that quarter hour to get to the telephone, here in this very  garage, and put in a

call to Burbank. 

It was a clever move, and would have been perfect, if Harry had  managed it. Unfortunately, bad luck was still

at Harry's heels. He had  scarcely started to sneak across the garage when a box, dropped  accidentally from

the van, took a bounce and cracked open. One of the  thuggish truckers flicked a flashlight, to see if the

damage had been  bad. 

Mere chance caught Harry in the glow of the swinging light. There  was a sharp yell from the van, the sudden

leap of men. Harry, swinging  around to meet them, was downed by pounding fists before he could pull  his

gun. 

Harry's head met the floor with a crack that finished any thought  of his reporting to The Shadow. 


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CHAPTER XVII. THE PIT BELOW

BRIEF minutes of unconsciousness ended when Harry Vincent heard  voices just above him. He opened his

eyes; blurred, they at first saw  nothing but a lot of light flickering before them. At last, faces  appeared in the

glare. 

The voices, too, were plain. The thugs were deciding the best fate  for their prisoner. It was generally agreed

that since the van was to  travel unloaded, it would be a good vehicle in which to transport a  corpse. 

Three guns poked into the light. Each thug wanted the privilege of  planting the first bullet in Harry's heart.

They were running true to  the example set by Pointer Trame, when he had fired at The Shadow,  helpless on

the stern of the Marmora. 

For some curious reason, The Shadow had survived that situation.  Harry, too, was to be in luck, when it came

to escaping death. Before a  killer could pull a trigger, Edna Barvale intervened. 

There was no pity in her voice. She was merely applying cold logic  to Harry's case. Logic that was very cold

and very ugly. 

"Why croak the guy?" she questioned. "There's a lot of better  things could be done with him. The bigshot

knows a few." 

Thugs paused long enough to comment that dead men didn't talk; but  that didn't fit with Edna's logic. 

"I know they don't," she sneered, "and that's just it. Maybe this  boob is a dick who's working for somebody

we don't like. If he is, it's  a cinch he won't ever get a chance to talk to the bird that hired him.  But he might do

some blabbing  for us!" 

That was a real idea. The truckers volunteered to "put the heat" on  the prisoner, just to see how it worked. By

that time, Edna was tired  of their suggestions. 

"No wonder the bigshot stuck you away in this dump!" snapped the  pretended brunette. "You boys are all

right, but you don't use the  bean. It's bad enough having a onetrack mind, but when you've got one  you

ought to keep it where it belongs. 

"Your job is to get that van out of here. I've already told you  that it's a decoy, and that means you may have

trouble with it. Suppose  some smart cops stop you and want to take a squint inside  how would  you feel then

with a stiff laying in there?" 

The "boys" didn't know just how they would feel under such  circumstances. About the only thing they did

agree on, was that Edna  was talking sense and that they were wasting time, for they had a long  way to go.

The decision was unanimous, without an objection from the  hoodlum who had previously disliked taking

orders from a moll. 

They couldn't leave, though, without fixing matters so that Harry  would give no trouble after their departure.

They bound and gagged him  and did a good job of it despite their haste. Edna suggested that they  stow the

prisoner in some place where he couldn't possibly make  trouble. 

"What this rat needs is a hole," she said, looking first at Harry,  then around the dim garage. "You guys ought

to have found one, all the  while you've been around here!" 


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One of the toughs obligingly pointed his flashlight toward the side  wall of the garage, where a large grating

was fixed in the cement. Edna  looked through and saw a goodsized pit beneath. The fact that it was  carpeted

with three inches of slimy muck seemed to please her  immensely. 

"Dump him," she said. "He oughtn't to complain"  her chuckle was  harsh  "at the nice soft place we're

giving him!" 

THE crooks pried up the grating and dumped Harry through. As he lay  sprawled in the ooze, he could see

them stamping with their heels to  wedge the grating back in place. 

Footsteps and lights went away; Harry heard the scrapes of final  boxes being unloaded. Next came the

starting of a motor, the screech of  the metalsheeted door that fronted the garage. The van rolled out into  the

street. 

Harry hoped that the van crew would not wait to close the door.  Since Edna had said that another truck was

due later, it might be that  they intended to let the old garage remain open. Such was not the case. 

While he listened to the faint throb of a standing motor, Harry  heard the door shove shut. Edna, herself, must

have attended to the  inside bolts, for there were sharp thumps when they went into place. 

During the next half hour, Harry fumed over the folly that had  brought him into this fix. There were

moments, though, when he had  hopeful thoughts. It might be that Burbank would wonder why he had made

no report, particularly if Cliff and Hawkeye trailed the empty van and  found a chance to send back word

about it. If such occurred, Harry  could count on aid from The Shadow. 

More thought convinced him that the other agents must certainly  have trailed the van; but from the way the

truckers had talked, it was  going on a very long trip, that might require many hours. Cliff and  Hawkeye were

therefore being dragged along a blind trail. 

That was another tribute to the devilish cleverness of Edna  Barvale. It gave Harry new cause for worry.

Under the existing  circumstances, his report was more necessary than ever; yet he was in a  predicament that

Edna had very well defined. 

He was like a rat in a forgotten hole, and the place was more like  a rat hole than any cell in which Harry had

previously been confined. 

More minutes passed, many of them. So many that Harry gave up  trying to count them. The only stir that he

occasionally heard came  from Edna's footsteps pacing the garage. Evidently, the girl was  keeping lone watch

over the place. Maybe she wouldn't have long to wait  before the bigshot arrived. 

That thought wasn't very comfortable. Harry wasn't counting on  pleasant proceedings when he met Pointer

Trame. 

Harry began to remember the trapdoor in the roof. He had left it  open; that was fortunate. It would be found

unlocked, if anyone  investigated Harry's absence from the house next door. 

True, the trap had been so loosely fixed that someone might reason  that it had not been clamped at all. But if

The Shadow came, Harry was  confident that his chief would see some telltale trace. 

Perhaps it was because Harry had his thoughts focused on The  Shadow, that he fancied he heard a swish

somewhere above the grating.  Could that token from the darkness mean The Shadow? 


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Harry knew that it could, but there was nothing for him to do but  wait. There wasn't any sound from Edna,

however, and that was a very  bad sign. 

Enlarged in Harry's estimation, the girl's wits had become a  standard of evil cunning. She was one of a very

small number of people  that Harry had met who might have the genius to stay clear of The  Shadow. Harry

could picture her listening in the darkness with ears  keen enough to hear The Shadow's approach. 

It might be that if rescue came, Edna could forestall it. There  were plenty of hiding places among those

unloaded boxes, where the girl  could weave in and out. 

The swish seemed closer. Harry was sure that it was more than  imagination. 

Then as a living glow to match Harry's hope, a tiny flashlight  pointed down into the pit! The range was long

and the light that  reached Harry was feeble, but he was sure that should it be The Shadow,  the cloaked

rescuer would see him. 

Suddenly, the light blinked off. 

HAD it been The Shadow? Could he have seen Harry, during that brief  survey? Those questions remained

unanswerable for the moment. Certain  it was that whoever had looked into the pit, had heard something that

diverted his attention. 

It might be that The Shadow had spotted Edna. If so, all the  better, for that was the one thing that had

bothered Harry. It would be  preferable if The Shadow first trapped Edna and then came to Harry's  rescue. 

There were sounds from above, like figures creeping among the  boxes. Then a sharper sound, as if one box

had tumbled. There was a  hollow echo; during it, Harry thought that he heard a girl's startled  scream. Silence

after that. 

Why did nothing more happen? 

Again it seemed that Harry's imagination was at work. He thought he  heard sounds so vague that they seemed

hardly real; like whispers in  the darkness. If they were sounds, Harry didn't realize when they  ended. He

knew only, at last, that everything was totally silent above. 

He was sure, as he reviewed it, that The Shadow had actually been  here. But he was equally positive, though

he hated to admit it, that  The Shadow had gone. The only explanation that fitted so unusual a  result, was that

Edna had actually outwitted The Shadow in the  darkness. 

It was possible that the sounds that Harry heard had carried down  into the pit, yet remained inaudible above.

Perhaps it was The Shadow  who had accidentally tipped that box. 

The Shadow had other work to do. That was why he had delegated his  agents to their various tasks. Having

spent too many precious minutes  investigating the old garage, The Shadow could have gone his way. He

might believe that Harry's absence from the house next door meant  simply that the agent had gone

somewhere in order to telephone Burbank. 

Bound on some new mission, The Shadow might not learn for hours  that Harry had actually disappeared. By

that time, all of Edna's  threats could be accomplished. It wasn't a pleasant outlook for Harry.  His hope was

almost gone. 


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It was awakened, momentarily, by sounds above. Footsteps, then a  light, larger than the one before. Harry

turned a last look upward. His  hope went as rapidly as it had come. He could see a face outlined in  the glow;

a face that should have been topped by blond hair, but which  was covered by a jetblack wig instead. 

It was the face of Edna Barvale, still in the makeup of Ruth  Eldrey. The girl wore the wise smile that Harry

had noted before, an  expression as deceptive as her disguise. The smile made Harry feel that  it very definitely

concerned his fate. 

Edna shifted a gun to the hand that held the flashlight. With her  other fist she tugged at the grating and pulled

it loose. Gun and  flashlight both were pointed down toward Harry. From them, the prisoner  feared immediate

doom. 

Harry Vincent closed his eyes. His plight had reached a climax that  even The Shadow could no longer

change! 

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S EVIDENCE

IT was three o'clock in the afternoon of the same day. In the big  belowdecks cabin aboard the yacht

Marmora, a mustached man sat talking  to the commander of a coastguard cutter. The man with the

mustache  wasn't highly pleased, but he tried to suppress his feelings. 

He was Vic Marquette of the F.B.I., and he had been called in to  handle a case that should have introduced

results long hours ago.  Instead, everyone had awaited his arrival, although they held evidence  in hand. 

"These papers"  Marquette gestured toward the drawer on the left   "belong to Jerome Trebble. They have

his signature, and it looks  genuine." 

"There's a chap on board," reminded the cutter's captain, "who  isn't so sure that it was Trebble who got away

last night." 

"You mean that steward Hartley," returned Marquette. "I've talked  to him, but we can't take his testimony.

The fellow's half blind! As  for the others, they won't admit that the man wasn't Trebble." 

Turning to the drawer on the right, Marquette methodically lifted  out a stack of papers and spread them on

the desk. 

"These were here before that fight began," he declared. "That point  is certain. There's no way in which they

could have been brought aboard  afterward. You agree with me?" 

"Absolutely! The shooting was all over when we arrived, but no one  could have boarded this yacht. I checked

on the matter with the men who  helped stop that raid on the salvage ship." 

Inasmuch as the men mentioned had shown themselves on the law's  side, there was no doubting their

testimony. Working from that basis,  Vic Marquette interpreted the importance of the papers that lay on the

desk. 

"These show us," he said, "that Hugh Barvale was behind all those  wrecks at sea. He's collected his insurance

money, which makes it bad  enough. But from all this evidence, the thing may go a lot deeper.  However,

there's something else we must consider. That is how these  papers got here. 


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"It's obvious that they were in the possession of Jerome Trebble.  He had money, nothing much to do, and he

spent his time at sea. There's  every reason why Trebble should have put some investigator on the job,  just to

find out what lay behind all those wrecks. 

"Suppose that Barvale found out about Trebble. His only course  would have been to put men aboard this

yacht and start some trouble.  That's exactly what happened. And what would Trebble have done? He'd  have

cleared out. Which is what he did." 

Vic Marquette ended his summary decisively. It carried weight, and  convinced the man who listened. Like

Vic, the commander of the cutter  agreed that Hartley's testimony, honest though it might be, had been

disproven by the facts. 

VIC MARQUETTE spent the next half hour in transmitting wireless  messages ashore. He was hoping that

they wouldn't be too late, that  there would still be time to prevent Barvale's flight from New York. 

The odds, Marquette believed, were very much in the law's favor.  From all appearances, Barvale would try to

bluff matters through. 

In fact, Barvale would very probably believe that all the documents  aboard the Marmora had been destroyed.

The longer that he remained  unmolested and unquestioned, the more confident would he become. That

probability pleased Marquette. It explained the care with which he sent  his messages. 

Hugh Barvale was to be closely watched by Federal men, but under no  circumstances was he to gain the

slightest inkling that he was under  observation. All that, Vic decided, would lead to a complete surprise  for

Barvale, particularly if something else turned out the way that  Marquette wanted it. 

Collecting all the papers from the desk, the Fed packed them in a  folder. Going on deck, Marquette boarded a

small boat that took him to  the salvage ship Hercules, which was less than a quarter mile away. 

The salvage crew had sent divers down to the Ozark, but there had  been difficulties reaching the sunken

freighter's hold. The explosion  had wrecked the ship badly, blocking the hatchways. That was something  that

Pointer Trame had not foreseen and which would have made trouble  for his own outfit, had they taken charge

of operations. 

Vic Marquette, however, was not thinking about Pointer Trame. He  hadn't even connected the bigshot's

name with this chain of crime. The  one person who occupied Vic's mind was Hugh Barvale. He was the

owner  of the strong box that soon would be reclaimed. 

There were signals from the divers; then more delay, until finally  the word was given that all was clear. Big

winches worked. Huge cranes  labored with the massive weight, tightening as the burden reached the  water's

surface. 

Slowly, a bulky object was slung over the side. Settling with a  resounding thump upon the deck, the

reclaimed strong box stood in view.  Brought from the deep, that object had an electric effect upon the men

who saw it. 

They remembered the strife that the strong box had caused; the  lives that had been lost in efforts both to lose

and to reclaim it.  There were plenty of guards on duty  men brought from the coastguard  cutter  and all

were ready with their guns, as if expecting crooks to  spring from anywhere and make another foray. 


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Suspicious eyes looked upward, to an autogiro that was circling  overhead. To all appearances, that plane was

merely bringing curious  observers from Atlantic City, but there was a remote chance that it  might contain

enemies, ready to drop a bomb upon the salvagers. 

What no one guessed, was that the lone pilot of that giro was the  personage whose work had actually led to

the reclaiming of the strong  box. 

The Shadow was on hand, should his efforts again be needed at this  crucial time. 

EAGER hands grabbed for the chain that girded the strong box. They  were anxious to smash the padlocks, to

blast the box open and actually  bring to light the two million dollars in gold and silver. No one  expected

interference, for with government men aboard, it seemed the  proper time for such work. 

Intervention came, however, from the very man who should have been  most desirous of viewing the wealth. 

Vic Marquette gave an order so sharply that it literally brushed  all hands away. Turning about, Vic picked out

a man close by. The  fellow was Robert Pell, once the third officer of the illfated Ozark.  Pell had been

assigned to duty with the salvage crew. 

"Can you identify that strong box?" questioned Vic. "Would you  swear that it was the same one that was

shipped aboard the Ozark?" 

Pell studied the faded letters that spelled the name of Barvale Co.  He examined the chain with meticulous

care, clanked the big padlocks.  After a look at the combination dial, he turned to Marquette and said: 

"It is the same strong box." 

There were others who supported Pell's identification of the box,  but most of them were more puzzled than

the former third officer of the  Ozark. Something had occurred to Pell; it was linked with the  recollection of

the time when the strong box had been brought aboard   something he had forgotten because of other

worries. 

The next question voiced by Marquette was one that Pell expected. 

"How much would you say that box weighed?" asked Vic. "It seems to  me those cranes swung it on the deck

very easily. Too bad we haven't  got a scales on board, but we'll attend to the weighing later. I'll  make a bet,

though, that the thing weighs less than four tons." 

"Less than three!" 

Marquette was startled by Pell's statement, because of the  assurance it carried. Vic's eyes sped sudden

suspicion, a moment later.  Then Pell began to explain his reason for the statement. He told Vic of  the

weakened chain back at the pier in Manhattan; how he would have  changed it if the men from the armored

truck had not objected. 

Vic realized that Pell's story could be corroborated by many  witnesses, and reasoned, therefore, that the man

was telling the exact  truth. Pell's valiant efforts aboard the Ozark, at the time of battle,  also stood him in good

stead. Vic Marquette was pleased, knowing that  he had found the very man he needed to clinch the case. 

The Fed ordered the strong box to be put aboard the coastguard  cutter exactly as it stood. The cutter drew

alongside the salvage ship  and the transfer was completed. Vic went aboard the cutter and took  Pell with him. 


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All the while, the wingless autogiro was hovering above the scene.  Meeting a light head wind, it was throttled

down to a point where it  was practically stationary in the air. It had settled to less than a  hundred feet above

the Hercules, and the sharp eyes of the pilot had  been busy watching all that happened around the strong box. 

As the cutter headed northward, the autogiro followed. Soon, it  passed the ship and was lost far ahead in the

dim distance. It would be  dark when the cutter reached New York; long after the autogiro had  arrived there. 

Zooming above the ocean, The Shadow set the giro's controls and  considered matters which interested Vic

Marquette. He could analyze all  Vic's purposes; he knew exactly what they would produce. Vic was  gunning

for Hugh Barvale, trying to arouse the man's confidence, only  to dismay him. 

That game was aiding The Shadow; but his plans went further. All  that Marquette was sure would apply to

Barvale would also influence  Pointer Trame. Crime's evidence was coming home. It was to prove a  greater

boomerang than either Barvale or Pointer could realize. 

The Shadow's laugh toned to the hum of the giro's steady motor. The  Shadow knew! 

CHAPTER XIX. STOLEN PROFITS

EVENING had settled in New York, when a large car pulled up in  front of the town house where Hugh

Barvale lived. The driver of that  automobile was uniformed like a chauffeur, but his natty attire didn't  offset

his face. He had all the marks of a thug. 

However, the driver wasn't close enough to any light for his face  to be noticed by certain watchers who were

on the ground. Alighting,  the fake chauffeur stood close to the car as he opened the rear door. 

The man who stepped out was very presentably attired. He had an  important air, as he gestured with his cane

to dismiss the car. He  adjusted his beribboned spectacles as he turned to look at Barvale's  mansion. 

When the car pulled away, watchers opposite could see the man quite  plainly. He answered the description

that they had of Jerome Trebble.  In fact, he was playing the part of Trebble very well, for he had  practiced it a

long while. 

The man from the big car was Pointer Trame. 

Trame rang the bell at Barvale's door, was admitted to the mansion.  Immediately, men across the way went

into motion. They were Feds,  posted here to see who called on Barvale. One of them entered a nearby  house

and put in a phone call to a certain East River pier. He learned  that a coastguard cutter had just arrived there.

It didn't take the  operative very long to report to Vic Marquette. 

Within fifteen minutes, a taxi came screeching up to Barvale's  door. Marquette sprang from it, motioned

across the street and raised  two fingers. A pair of Feds came up behind him, when he rang for entry  at

Barvale's. 

The servant who admitted Vic began to say that Mr. Barvale couldn't  be disturbed. Marquette brushed the

fellow aside and headed for a door  at the rear of the firstfloor hall. From the light beneath that door,  Vic had

a hunch that it was the entrance to Barvale's study. 

It was very black, near that door, and for a moment Vic hesitated,  shoving his hand to his gun pocket. A swell

place for a lurker, thought  Vic; and the possibility stirred memories to mind. 


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Vic Marquette remembered a certain personage who had often  cooperated with the law. That being was The

Shadow. His hand had  certainly been evident in recent thrusts against men of crime. 

Could it be that The Shadow was here ahead of Vic Marquette? 

That darkness near the door was made to order for the strange  fighter who garbed himself in black. Marquette

spoke in a low, tense  voice, as though addressing some friend in the gloom. There was no  response. 

Somehow, the blackness didn't look as thick as it had. In a sense,  it had receded along the hallway. Marquette

drew closer, still staring,  but he saw nothing more. Then his attention was captured by voices that  came from

within Barvale's study. 

"I TELL you, all this means nothing!" The booming tone belonged to  Hugh Barvale. "You are saying that the

law can hold me responsible for  crime. Bah! All that has been thrashed over, long ago!" 

"You have collected a few millions in insurance money," returned a  wheedling voice, that Marquette

identified with Jerome Trebble. "That  is sufficient to incriminate you." 

"If so," rumbled Barvale, "why have you come here to tell me?" 

"Because, Mr. Barvale," began Trame, persistent with his tone of  Trebble, "there is something that I have to

settle " 

His voice broke off. Marquette didn't guess the reason, although  Vic had supplied it himself. Pressing closer

to the door, Marquette had  joggled it. Hearing the sound, Pointer Trame suspected the presence of  a listener. 

"Something that I have to settle!" repeated Pointer, more  emphatically. His voice carried a note of accusation.

"Last night,  there was a fight aboard my yacht Marmora. Criminals, secretly joined  with my crew, tried to kill

the loyal men who served me. 

"I escaped with my life. Since there was every reason why you  should suppose me dead, I decided that it

would be safe to come here,  to confront you with the proof of crime that you engineered." 

"What crime?" demanded Barvale. "And where is the proof?" 

"I have certain documents " 

"Let me see them!" 

"I have left them elsewhere"  Trame's faked wheedle was a canny  one  "for the law to find. That evidence,

Barvale, was not destroyed,  as you hoped. My purpose is to aid justice; therefore, I intend to hold  you here

until I can summon the police." 

There was a roar from Barvale, the thump of overturning furniture.  Vic Marquette yanked at the knob, found

the door unlocked. He  shouldered into the study, to find the two men in a furious tangle.  Barvale was the

aggressor; he had driven his visitor halfway to a  corner of the room. 

Marquette ended that with a commanding challenge that he backed  with a drawn gun. Barvale's fingers

slipped loosely from Trame's neck.  Rubbing his throat, Pointer resumed the manner of Jerome Trebble. 

"Thank you," he said politely, to Marquette. "Your arrival was most  opportune!" 


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Hugh Barvale seemed to think the same, when Marquette showed his  F.B.I. badge. 

"Arrest this impostor!" he stormed, motioning toward Pointer. "He  claims to be Jerome Trebble, but he is

nothing but a cheap crook trying  to blackmail me!" 

A cackly laugh came from the lips of Pointer Trame. He fiddled his  glasses, blinking as he did, then studied

Barvale as though examining a  human curiosity. 

"A most ridiculous charge!" declared Pointer, his tone caustic.  "Mr. Barvale might just as well claim that I

belonged to his criminal  organization!" 

There was a tightening of Barvale's fists, then the exporter calmed  himself. Folding his arms, he faced

Marquette and the other Feds who  had come into the study. 

"Put your questions," said Barvale. "I can answer them." 

"I'll do better than that," snapped Vic. Head tilted, he could hear  the rumble of a motor from in front of the

house. "Come out into the  hallway. I think your front door will be wide enough for what I want." 

WHEN they reached the hall, they found a crew of men at the  doorway. They were bringing a very heavy

burden into the house: the  strong box that had been reclaimed from the sunken freighter Ozark. 

With the aid of block and tackle, they hoisted it along rails that  they had placed upon the front steps. The

strong box finally thumped  the hallway floor. 

"You have keys to these padlocks?" demanded Marquette, facing Hugh  Barvale. 

The exporter hesitated, then admitted that there were duplicates in  his desk; that the other keys had been sent

abroad. Vic ordered him to  bring them, and Barvale did. When the padlocks were opened, Vic ordered

Barvale to work the combination. 

The door of the strong box swung wide, to reveal stacks of metal  bars wrapped in burlap. Some were silver;

others had the glint of gold,  from what little could be seen of them. Barvale made a bow, that meant  he

wanted his visitors to go. 

"A funny thing," said Vic. "Pell said that strong box weighed less  than three tons, and it does. If those bars

are gold and silver, their  value is a lot short of two million dollars. Was that your racket,  Barvale  to send

out half value and collect insurance in full?" 

As he spoke, Vic stepped to the strong box and ripped away some  burlap. He gave a sharp exclamation, then

yanked two bars free, one in,  each hand. He let them clatter to the floor, where the light struck  them. They

were neither gold nor silver. Both bars were lead. 

The dullness of the pretended silver bar was proof of its base  metal. As for the fake bar of gold, it was lead,

too, but with a  coating of gilt paint. 

"Three tons!" voiced Vic. "Just about right, for that amount of  lead. The heaviest metal you could find,

Barvale, but it doesn't have  the weight of either silver or gold. It wasn't just a halfway job, like  I thought. You

went the whole hog!" 


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Hugh Barvale seemed totally bewildered; to Marquette, it looked  like fakery, for that was the logical game

that the fellow would play.  Vic's opinion gained conviction, when Barvale took the tack that the  Fed

expected. 

The exporter sputtered that this couldn't be his shipment; that  somebody else was responsible. He even

charged Vic Marquette with  having a hand in the dirty work. 

Ordinarily, that would have angered Vic, but on this occasion, it  didn't. Vic was expecting something else to

come. 

Barvale produced it, suddenly. His fuming ended, he steadied,  shrugged his shoulders. 

"What does this prove?" he boomed. "Nothing! Except that I have  been robbed! You are trying to accuse me

of stealing from myself. Very  well; where is the wealth I stole?" 

As he made that demand, Barvale looked around the group. His eyes  fixed on Pointer Trame, as though

asking him to answer. Pointer, serene  in his part of Jerome Trebble, merely gave a coldglanced return. 

"Find the stolen goods!" stormed Barvale. "Produce any items from  my machinery shipments! Show me

some of the platinum that came from  Colombia! Let me see some real silver, some genuine gold!" 

VIC MARQUETTE acknowledged the request with an obliging bow. He had  two of his men range beside

Barvale. Accompanied by Pointer, Marquette  led the way out through the front door. 

Barvale was storming that he didn't want to go where they were  taking him, but Marquette told him to be

patient. It wouldn't be very  far. 

They turned through a passageway beside the mansion, reached the  back door of the Eclipse Garage. The

front of that garage was being  watched by Feds on the other street, so Vic went at his own task with

assurance. He had men batter down the little door at the back of the  garage. 

With flashlights blinking, the first men who entered went through  to the front of the garage and unbolted the

big street door. By the  time they had slid that door open, Marquette had found a light. He  pressed a switch

that brought a dull illumination throughout the  garage. 

Viewers saw stacks of boxes everywhere. Vic ordered men to rip them  open. As box sides slithered apart,

machinery came into sight. They  were from Barvale's earlier shipments: the goods that had been reputed  lost

at sea. 

Other boxes, small ones, contained the platinum. At last the  workers came to crates that were packed tight

with small containers, so  that they could be loaded piecemeal. Ripped apart, the first of those  final boxes

displayed their contents as being the bars of gold and  silver that should have been shipped aboard the Ozark. 

Here was the swag that Hugh Barvale had challenged Vic Marquette to  produce. The proof of crime, ready to

be pinned upon the man to whom  the blame belonged! 

CHAPTER XX. THE FINAL PROOF

WITH enough boxes open to satisfy him that the swag was intact, Vic  Marquette turned an accusing eye upon

Hugh Barvale. In brief detail,  Vic summed up the elements that branded the exporter as a supercrook. 


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"Those shipments were faked," declared Vic, "and the swag was  stowed here. You collected the insurance,

Barvale, which just about  left you even. All you had to do was peddle the swag. 

"You intended to fence the machinery through the Brighton Supply  Co., as we know from letters that you

wrote them, although they claim  that they never heard of you. The platinum offered easy outlets in this

country; we have memos that you made regarding that matter. 

"As for the gold and silver, you planned to ship it abroad with  other exports. We have documents showing

that you intended to ship  certain items in oversized boxes that you were ordering from various  concerns. 

Barvale's expression showed that he wanted to offer argument but  couldn't find the right words. Marquette

decided to present a clincher. 

"Most damaging of all," declared Vic, tapping a briefcase that he  carried, "is your letter, of the thirteenth, to a

fake outfit called  the Waterways Transfer Co. ordering them to send the lugger Welcome to  attack the

salvage ship Hercules. 

"That letter bears your own signature, Barvale. The man we have to  thank for it"  he turned to Pointer

Trame  "is Jerome Trebble. By  this time, Mr. Trebble, you have realized that we found all those  valuable

documents that you were forced to leave in your cabin on the  Marmora." 

Pointer Trame nodded, almost mechanically. His eyes were looking  past Vic Marquette, toward the opened

boxes on the garage floor. Those  eyes had lost their fake blink, although Marquette didn't notice it. 

Somehow, Pointer Trame wasn't as pleased as he should have been, at  clearing himself and shifting the entire

blame to Hugh Barvale. His  lips showed slight signs of a great fury that was stirring him. He was  tightening

one hand against his hip, when he looked past the boxes to  stare toward the front street. 

"Come along, Barvale," suggested Marquette. "You've seen enough  here. I'm taking you back, to let you look

over the other evidence   the papers that Mr. Trebble spent a lot of money to gather." 

By way of precaution, Vic started to slap a pair of handcuffs on  Hugh Barvale. With the glimmer of the

bracelets, there came a hurried  stir from beyond the farthermost stack of boxes. 

"Wait!" 

It was a girl's voice. Any other tone might have roused Marquette  to action, but he simply stood back and

looked, when he spied a  blackhaired brunette who was scrambling into sight. Whoever she was,  she had

something to tell, and she couldn't make trouble alone. 

THE girl reached the group. Hugh Barvale was staring without  recognizing her. He wasn't the man that she

intended to accost. She was  facing another man, the one whom Vic Marquette believed was Jerome  Trebble. 

"Do you know who I am?" demanded the girl. "Tell me, Mr. Trebble"   she gave the name sarcastically 

"did you ever hear of Ruth Eldrey?" 

Pointer Trame began to shake his head. 

"Another lie," declared the girl, scornfully. She turned to Vic  Marquette. "This man who calls himself Jerome

Trebble is actually a  crook named Pointer Trame! He, alone, is responsible for all these  crimes! 


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"I know, because I worked for him. His final plan was to ship all  this swag away, leaving only a few boxes as

evidence that would convict  my"  she caught herself  "that would convict Hugh Barvale. 

"He happened to place that task with me. I sent the van away empty.  Along with these marked boxes"  the

girl was pointing them out  "I  kept all the rest. That is why Mr. Trame, alias Mr. Trebble, looks very

unhappy at present!" 

Pointer Trame did look unhappy, but he rallied from that mood. He  wasn't beaten entirely; he still had a

trump card. Pointer turned to  Marquette. 

"This girl," said Pointer, "is evidently Ruth Eldrey. By her own  admission, she is a crook. We have trapped

her, and she is trying to  bluff out of it. How else can she explain her actions?" 

For answer, the girl whipped away her dark wig. The transformation  was startling, as her blond hair shook

half down to her shoulders. It  was Hugh Barvale who solved the riddle of that sudden change in  identity. 

"Edna!" he exclaimed. "My daughter!" 

"Now you should understand," interposed Edna, turning to Marquette.  "I knew that my father was worried

over his losses. I suspected that  men he trusted were crooks. As Ruth Eldrey, I met men who were working  in

his warehouses. 

"I learned that they were switching shipments before they went  aboard the boats. Unfortunately, they knew

that I had found it out. I  had to join the mob for my own protection. I had to wait until I could  safely inform

the law. Today, I found my first opportunity." 

There was sincerity in Edna's tone, but it merely brought a chortle  from Pointer Trame. The bigshot gave the

laugh that was a perfect  imitation of what Jerome Trebble's had been. 

"The girl is working for her father," announced the bigshot. "She  is trying to help him, that is all. She

knows, for instance, that  Barvale owns this garage " 

"Which he rented," put in Edna, "to persons who were working for  you." 

"She knows he moved into his town house," added Pointer, blandly,  "so that he could be close to the swag.

Why else would Hugh Barvale  have left his home on Long Island?" 

"Because he had to sell it," snapped Edna. "His insurance was not  sufficient to meet his coming debts. Yet

you wanted to bleed him of the  funds that he owed to others, and declare himself a total bankrupt!" 

THAT shot scored. It brought an exclamation from Hugh Barvale, who  realized, at last, the reason for

Pointer's recent visit. There was  something so genuine in Barvale's cry, that Pointer knew it would carry  far. 

Forgetting his part of Trebble, Pointer started to spring for Edna,  intending to throttle the girl. 

Sight of a gun muzzle stopped Pointer. The weapon was poked from  above a stack of boxes; behind the gun

was Harry Vincent, coolly  announcing that another move would bring severe damage to Pointer  Trame. The

bigshot halted his surge. 

Edna smiled. That meant a lot to Harry. He and Edna had become real  pals, during the hours that they had

waited for this climax. He'd  wondered what was coming next, when she had released him from the pit  below


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the grating, a long, long while ago. 

Then Edna had told him. 

Harry had misjudged her all along. She hadn't wanted to shoot him  in her cabin on the Ozark; she'd merely

wanted to keep her disguise  unknown, by getting him away before crooks dropped in to talk to her.  She

hadn't given that tipoff at the Maritime Pier. It had been the  work of Jorgin, who had actually recognized

Harry. 

In having the truckers throw him in the pit, Edna had been putting  on an act to make the thugs admire her

toughness. But after Harry had  been imprisoned, she hadn't known what to do next, for she had no idea  what

Harry's actual purpose was. 

The Shadow had solved Edna's dilemma. He had actually entered the  garage. Trapping Edna, he had heard

her story and, for some reason, had  already known its truth. He had written a message to Harry, and had

given Edna the duty of releasing the prisoner, to hand him those  instructions. 

Teamed together, Edna and Harry had followed orders with  exactitude. They had broken Pointer Trame,

making the bigshot give  himself away. Nor was that all. Edna still had something to tell the  helpless master

crook. 

"All that I hadn't known," said the girl, "I learned today  from  The Shadow!" 

Pointer went stiff; then gave a snarl that showed disbelief. He  wouldn't fall for that statement, he was sure

that The Shadow was dead.  But Edna's testimony was backed, a moment later, by a low laugh that  crept

through the old garage. 

Turning, Pointer saw The Shadow stepping in from the rear door. The  arrival was no masquerader; Pointer

could tell that, when he saw the  burning eyes above The Shadow's cloak. To Pointer, that weird laugh

brought recollections; told him suddenly why his shots aboard the yacht  had failed. 

Passing as Raydorf, The Shadow had been alone in Pointer's cabin.  The first thing that he had done there had

been to take the bullets  from Pointer's gun and substitute blank cartridges in their place. All  during the fight

aboard the Marmora, The Shadow had been totally immune  to any shots delivered by Pointer Trame! 

THE SHADOW arrived beside Vic Marquette, reached for the briefcase  that the Fed held. From it, gloved

hands extracted two sheaves of  documents. The Shadow placed the first batch upon a box, where Pointer

Trame could see them. 

"These bear the signature of Jerome Trebble," declared The Shadow,  in a sibilant tone. "Let this man who

calls himself Trebble try to  duplicate them." Pointer's hand recoiled from the pen that The Shadow  thrust

toward him. It was plain that the bigshot knew the task would  be useless. 

"Those signatures were forged," added The Shadow, "by a man named  Raydorf, who is dead. One clever

forgery could lead to another. These  faked letters"  he tapped those that bore the signature of Hugh  Barvale

"were also signed by Raydorf. They are valueless." 

As proof, The Shadow lifted the letter that bore a date of the  thirteenth; the letter that concerned the cruise of

the lugger Welcome. 


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"This letter," The Shadow announced, "was in the possession of  Pointer Trame on the twelfth, the day before

which it was purportedly  written. It is the most obvious forgery of all, for it was prepared in  advance!" 

Quick understanding came to Vic Marquette. His own testimony could  support The Shadow's. Vic hadn't

seen the letter until later, but there  was no way in which it could have been brought aboard the Marmora after

the date The Shadow had named  the twelfth! 

The Shadow had turned to Pointer Trame. 

"Theft was your motive," he told the bigshot. "Theft that was  covered, because the stolen goods seemed

gone forever; in ships sunk  too far at sea for salvage. Your first setback came when the Ozark was  brought

close to land, through my design. 

"You tried to recover Barvale's strong box, to sink it deeper; but  you foresaw that the attack on the salvage

ship would partly reveal the  game. No longer would the swag be totally forgotten, as you had hoped.

Prepared for such emergency, you let crime come to light, but tried to  shift the burden to Hugh Barvale." 

Vic Marquette lifted the unclamped handcuffs from Barvale's wrists,  then turned to slap them on Pointer

Trame. But the bigshot was too  quick for him. 

Wrenching free, Pointer made a mad dash past the boxes, hoping to  reach the front door of the garage. It was

a wild flight, seemingly  hopeless; but there was luck that traveled with Pointer Trame. 

As he ran, the bigshot uttered a highpitched call. A big  automobile, cruising along the street, took a jerky

swerve straight  into the garage. Pointer dropped where he was temporarily safe. His  pursuers scattered as

bright headlights bore down upon them. 

From across the street, Marquette's reserves were hurrying over to  attack the crooks who had so suddenly

rolled in from nowhere, to make a  last fight in behalf of Pointer Trame. But they couldn't arrive in time  to

stop the coming slaughter, threatened by a big machine gun that  poked from the interior of the car. 

Only one living being could halt such carnage. He was The Shadow.  While others dived for cover, he stood

stockstill. His lips pealed a  challenge, to bring the machinegun muzzle in his own direction. Eager  crooks

swiveled their weapon toward The Shadow. 

The cloaked figure faded, but they followed it. The Shadow was  diving for the side wall, away from everyone

else. Once at that wall,  he could not turn away. Crooks saw him roll for the floor; as he hit,  they started the

machine gun into action. They thought its rattle meant  The Shadow's doom. 

Instead, they were shooting at blankness. The Shadow was gone! 

He had dived into Harry's "rat hole," which no longer had a  grating. 

STREAMING bullets battered the wall beyond The Shadow. A gun  resting on the inner edge of the depressed

opening, The Shadow jabbed  shots from the level of the garage floor. 

There was a furious cry from Pointer Trame. Behind the boxes, he  had seen what happened. He spotted the

outline of the pit and saw his  chance to attack the lone fighter who had chosen it as a fort. Along  the wall

came Pointer, lunging for that hole. 


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He was above it, driving his gun downward. This time, his revolver  held real bullets. He thought he saw The

Shadow in that lower  blackness. Pointer tugged the trigger, delivering a rapid fire. His  bullets spattered the

slime. 

From another corner of the pit, the spurt of a gun flashed upward,  knifing a bullet into the body of Pointer

Trame. The bigshot wavered,  gripping his side. Just then, the machine gun resumed a last spasmodic  burst. 

Its muzzle faced the bigshot. His sagging form was flayed by a  metal hail. Swept from his feet, the

bulletriddled body of Trame  tumbled into the pit beside The Shadow, dead before he struck. 

Sidestepping that shattered corpse, The Shadow again aimed for the  machine gun. No shots were needed. Vic

Marquette and his reserves had  ended the brief outburst. 

Placing his automatic beneath his cloak, The Shadow strode to the  darkness at the rear of the garage and

merged with the night beyond. 

Harry Vincent remained. There was a blond head on his shoulder, a  hand plucking at his arm. The tension

over, Edna Barvale was sobbing  happily, seeking comfort from the new friend who had helped her through

the final effort that cleared her father. 

Then Edna's bravery returned. Like Harry, she heard a token from  the outer darkness, that told the triumph of

the master fighter to whom  Edna and Harry  like the others who stood near them  owed their  lives. 

It was the parting laugh of The Shadow. Strange mockery that  trailed into the distance, then faded into

nothingness, save echoes  that seemed to cling within the brick walls of the old garage. 

Echoes that settled as though they had found the pit that Edna  termed the "rat hole," there to dwindle upon the

unhearing ears of  Pointer Trame. 

Another Finger had defied The Shadow. The result was one less  member of The Hand! 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. CRIME RIDES THE SEA, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. SHADOW ABOARD, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. THROUGH THE FOG, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. BEFORE DAWN, page = 11

   7. CHAPTER IV. CRIME'S TRIUMPH, page = 15

   8. CHAPTER V. THE NEW CAMPAIGN, page = 19

   9. CHAPTER VI. OUT TO SEA, page = 23

   10. CHAPTER VII. THE FINGER MOVES, page = 26

   11. CHAPTER VIII. MEN IN THE DARK, page = 30

   12. CHAPTER IX. EXIT THE SHADOW, page = 34

   13. CHAPTER X. IN NEW YORK, page = 38

   14. CHAPTER XI. THE CORSAIR CREW, page = 42

   15. CHAPTER XII. POINTER CHANGES PLANS, page = 47

   16. CHAPTER XIII. BROKEN BATTLE, page = 51

   17. CHAPTER XIV. THE SALVAGE SHIP, page = 55

   18. CHAPTER XV. TIDES TURN, page = 59

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE OLD GARAGE, page = 62

   20. CHAPTER XVII. THE PIT BELOW, page = 66

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S EVIDENCE, page = 69

   22. CHAPTER XIX. STOLEN PROFITS, page = 72

   23. CHAPTER XX. THE FINAL PROOF, page = 75