Title:   DEATH'S MASQUERADE

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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DEATH'S MASQUERADE

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

DEATH'S MASQUERADE...............................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. DEATH TO COME ...........................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. MOLTEN DOOM ............................................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. GHOST OF THE FUTURE ............................................................................................9

CHAPTER IV. THREE MEN OF REASON........................................................................................13

CHAPTER V. GUESTS AT THE MANSION ......................................................................................18

CHAPTER VI. BRIGHT PENNIES ......................................................................................................21

CHAPTER VII. DEATH'S HOLIDAY.................................................................................................26

CHAPTER VIII. THE COSTUME SHOP............................................................................................29

CHAPTER IX. VANISHED VICTIMS................................................................................................33

CHAPTER X. PROGRESS AND POVERTY......................................................................................38

CHAPTER XI. MURDER UNMASKED.............................................................................................42

CHAPTER XII. MISGUIDED VENGEANCE .....................................................................................46

CHAPTER XIII. MURDERER'S PROOF............................................................................................50

CHAPTER XIV. CRIME'S HOLOCAUST..........................................................................................54

CHAPTER XV. CRIME RETRACED ..................................................................................................58

CHAPTER XVI. SETTING FOR MURDER ........................................................................................61

CHAPTER XVII. DRAMA OF DEATH..............................................................................................65

CHAPTER XVIII. DEATH DEALS DOUBLE ....................................................................................69

CHAPTER XIX. TRAIL FINDS TRAIL..............................................................................................72

CHAPTER XX. PARTNERS IN PROFIT............................................................................................75


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DEATH'S MASQUERADE

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. DEATH TO COME 

CHAPTER II. MOLTEN DOOM 

CHAPTER III. GHOST OF THE FUTURE 

CHAPTER IV. THREE MEN OF REASON 

CHAPTER V. GUESTS AT THE MANSION 

CHAPTER VI. BRIGHT PENNIES 

CHAPTER VII. DEATH'S HOLIDAY 

CHAPTER VIII. THE COSTUME SHOP 

CHAPTER IX. VANISHED VICTIMS 

CHAPTER X. PROGRESS AND POVERTY 

CHAPTER XI. MURDER UNMASKED 

CHAPTER XII. MISGUIDED VENGEANCE 

CHAPTER XIII. MURDERER'S PROOF 

CHAPTER XIV. CRIME'S HOLOCAUST 

CHAPTER XV. CRIME RETRACED 

CHAPTER XVI. SETTING FOR MURDER 

CHAPTER XVII. DRAMA OF DEATH 

CHAPTER XVIII. DEATH DEALS DOUBLE 

CHAPTER XIX. TRAIL FINDS TRAIL 

CHAPTER XX. PARTNERS IN PROFIT  

CHAPTER I. DEATH TO COME

THE man at the darkened window was anything but nervous. At most,  he was impatient, and to some degree

annoyed by the luxury of his  surroundings. For Creep Hubin, specialist in murder, wasn't used to  hiding out

in firstclass hotels like the Progress House. 

It simply chanced that the Progress House was the only hotel in the  model city of Industria, where everything

revealed a perfect system of  civic planning. Not only was money plentiful in Industria; the town's  income was

properly applied and always had been. Hence the Progress  House, community owned, provided luxury along

with economy and thus  crowded out all competition. 

Such fine points did not interest a specimen of human riffraff like  Creep Hubin. He was staring from his

window like a rat from its hole.  He formed a hunched figure, his ugly face and narrow neck thrust  forward

from the shoulders. The lights from the side street below  showed sallow features with leathery lips and

beaded eyes, plus a  pointed nose that suited Creep's character as a human rodent. 

Off beyond parks and boulevards, Creep could see the huge buildings  that had brought prosperity to

Industria. One was the great foundry,  the town's original industry. Another was the dyeworks, in operation

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more than a quarter century. The third, a comparative newcomer, was the  chemical plant that had recently

switched from the profitable  manufacture of plastics to the more lucrative production of synthetic  rubber. 

Each on a hillside, these three plants formed a golden triangle  that had become Industria's horn of plenty. But

that concerned Creep  Hubin only because somebody in the model town was wealthy enough to pay  Creep's

price, two thousand dollars, for the prompt and efficient  elimination of some other resident of this ideal

community. 

This elimination, otherwise murder, was to occur at a time and  place that would be stipulated upon delivery

of the cash. Meanwhile,  Creep remained a guest in the fastidious Progress House, occupying a  room to which

his unknown client had assigned him. Needless to say,  some proxy had signed the register under an alias that

went for Creep,  because a stranger of his thuggish ilk would have excited too much  comment if seen in the

luxurious lobby. 

Not having heard further from his client, Creep was naturally  impatient. It was evening, about half past eight,

a time when Creep had  hoped to be started on his mission. 

Just around the corner of the hotel was the parking lot containing  the "borrowed" automobile which Creep

had brought to Industria. If the  job didn't go through tonight, that stolen car might be traced too soon  to suit

Creep's future plans, a thing which bothered the assassin more  than a mere matter of murder yet to be

committed. 

There was more that should have worried Creep Hubin, had he been  acquainted with recent events in

Industria, which he wasn't. 

In a pretentious office building several blocks from the hotel, the  directors of Gault Consolidated were

holding an important meeting. Now  the name, "Gault Consolidated," meant nothing to Creep, but it counted

much in Industria. For Gault Consolidated was the holding company that  controlled the three industries on

which the model city thrived. 

The nominal head of the holding company was old Ellery Gault,  nephew of the man who had founded

Industria back in the '80s. Ill  health had caused Gault to retire a few years ago, and he seldom left  the family

mansion, which dominated another hillside. Thus the  directors were running Gault Consolidated through an

official known as  "Vice President in Charge of Coordination," and this evening they were  choosing a new

man for that office. 

The last vice president had died very suddenly. So had the vice  president before him, and the one before that.

Not only suddenly, but  swiftly, which meant that the office of vice president was a jinx job.  It paid well, that

office, but who wanted a job that led to heart  failure, an airplane crash, or a fatal automobile accident? 

One man wanted it. His name was Ferris Dane, and he was likely to  get the job. Dane was the only supervisor

who had served in all three  factories, and was therefore qualified to handle their various  interrelations. And

Dane was a man who laughed at any mention of the  word hoodoo. 

Perhaps that accounted for Creep Hubin being in Industria. If  design lay behind the deaths of three successive

vice presidents, a  stronger dose might be needed in the case of Ferris Dane. By the same  token, if Dane didn't

happen to be chosen for the jinx job, Creep's  services might not be necessary. Which meant that Creep's two

thousand  dollars was hanging from a tantalizing line that might be yanked away  before he could grab the

prize. 


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KNOWING nothing of the possible situation, Creep stayed at his  window and glared at what he saw of

Industria. His beady eyes went  narrow, like his face, when he saw a sleek, expensive roadster pull to  a stop

near the parking lot. 

Creep was afraid that it was going to park across the littleused  exit by which he intended to leave the lot.

But the driver noted the  obscure exit and pulled past it. 

Watching, Creep saw a tall, welldressed man alight from the car  and glance up at the hotel. It was odd how

Creep shrank instinctively  into the deeper darkness of the room. Nobody could possibly have  spotted a figure

at a blackened window four stories above, yet Creep  felt that eyes were searching for him. 

Unused to such sensations, Creep gave a snarl, which turned to an  oath when he stumbled across a chair in

the middle of the dark room. He  was rubbing his shin and muttering half aloud, when a knock at the door

interrupted. 

Reaching the door, Creep opened it a crack. A bellboy was holding a  small package, announcing that it was

the order from the drugstore. It  bore Creep's room number, 415, so the ratfaced thug dug into his  pocket and

tipped the bellboy a quarter in return for the package. 

Locking the door, Creep started for the window; then, changing his  mind, he sidled to a deep corner of the

room and turned on a table lamp  beside the telephone. 

Among other items, the package contained a box holding a tube of  tooth paste, a luxury which Creep never

used. Intrigued by such an  oddity, Creep opened the cardboard box. Instead of a toothpaste tube,  a roll of

bills slid into his hand. Gleefully, Creep counted the money  and found that it came to just two thousand

dollars. 

No instructions were included, because they weren't needed. Timed  to Creep's puzzlement came a jangle of

the telephone bell. Answering  the call, which he would earlier have ignored, Creep heard a voice he

recognized. It spoke coldly, steadily, giving explicit instructions;  but Creep was forced to call for a halt. 

"Wait a minute," he undertoned. "I gotta draw a pitcher. I don't  want to miss nothing important." 

"You may use a diagram," affirmed the voice, "but be sure to  destroy it later. I would suggest " 

Creep grinned as he heard the suggestion, for he'd begun to have  the same idea. He was still grinning when he

completed the diagram and  tore it from the telephone pad. By then, the voice had finished too. 

Creep dropped his own receiver in response to a click from the  other end. Running his hand along his belt, he

stopped and shifted it  to his hip pocket. From a chair, he slid a dark sweater over his  shoulders, dropped his

diagram in a cap and planted the latter on his  head. 

Opening the door, Creep looked warily along the corridor, then  sneaked for the fire exit that led down to the

parking lot. 

In the lobby, the tall man from the roadster was checking into the  Progress House. As he wrote his name,

Lamont Cranston, on the hotel  register, his eyes ran down the list of guests. Strange eyes, those,  keen, boring

in their gaze, though the hotel clerk did not notice it,  since Cranston's glance was lowered. What did impress

the clerk was the  expression upon the man's features. 


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Calm, immobile, the new guest's face was masklike. As Cranston  turned away, the clerk noted his hawkish

profile and decided that it  was the mark of a distinguished visitor. There was something cryptic in  Cranston's

manner, as though, in mere moments, he had learned something  of importance that he was keeping to

himself. 

Since Cranston had noted nothing except the hotel register, the  clerk studied the names he saw there. All but

Cranston's had been  inscribed before this clerk came on duty; still, nothing seemed amiss  in any of them.

What the clerk should have observed were the room  numbers alongside the names. 

One of those numbers, 415, showed figures slightly smaller than the  rest. Someone other than the preceding

clerk had written in that  number, while putting a false name on the register. Whoever was hiring  Creep Hubin

for murder hadn't wanted the sneaky assassin to be  disturbed during his sojourn at the Progress House. 

How promptly Cranston could put a clue to use was demonstrated when  he reached his own room, on the

sixth floor. The departing bellboy was  still closing the door when Cranston plucked a brief case from amid

his  luggage, inverted it, and opened a compartment beneath. 

Wedged between the sections of the brief case, this hidden  compartment disgorged a black cloak and a slouch

hat. From the rolled  cloak came a brace of .45 automatics, which Cranston placed in holsters  beneath his coat.

Then, with a single sweep, the tall hotel guest  blotted himself from sight. 

It was an amazing process, though simply accomplished. All Cranston  did was put on the cloak as he stepped

toward a corner of the room. His  stride carrying him away from the light, the cloak did the rest. Merged  with

the corner's gloom, Cranston became a voice, nothing more. 

Singularly, the voice was Cranston's own. Usually, when cloaked in  black, he spoke in sinister accents

befitting the personality of The  Shadow, which he now represented. The reason for the Cranston tone was

explained by the ensuing conversation. The Shadow was using the  telephone to inform the hotel operator that

any calls for Mr. Cranston  should be switched to Room 415. 

A FEW minutes later, darkness stirred within the room that Creep  Hubin had so recently deserted. Next, a

tiny flashlight licked the  gilded furniture, finally concentrating its narrow beam upon the  telephone desk.

Expecting a call, The Shadow was naturally interested  in that corner, but he was further intrigued by sight of

the pad that  lay beside the telephone. 

Such pads could carry clues, even though their surface was blank.  This pad was no exception. Under the

beam that focused to silverdollar  size, The Shadow's long, deft fingers produced a tiny bottle of fine  black

powder, sprinkled some grains upon the paper and gave a spreading  rub. Under such treatment, Creep's crude

diagram appeared, its lines  tracing black amid the gray, like a carbonpaper replica. 

The Shadow's hidden lips phrased a lowtoned laugh, a whisper that  befitted his mysterious personality.

Facing toward the window, his keen  eyes picked out a portion of the distant landscape that Creep Hubin had

earlier ignored. 

All three of Industria's factories were visible, for they were  running night shifts and hence were well

illuminated. The one which The  Shadow chose was most conspicuous of all, for, as he gazed, a puff of  light

rose from amid its buildings, revealing the whole plant with its  glare. Those buildings belonged to the old

foundry, the keystone of the  Gault fortunes. 

The glare came from a blast furnace, and at this distance it  chopped the buildings of the foundry to the

proportions of Creep's  diagram. Though the drawing was rough, there was no mistaking the  buildings that it


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represented. 

As if in response to The Shadow's lowthrobbed mirth, there was a  ring from the telephone bell. Answering it

promptly, The Shadow again  used Cranston's tone, until he recognized the voice that he expected. 

"This is Burke," informed the caller. "They finished the director's  meeting. Ferris Dane gets the vice

president's job, but they've got to  notify old Ellery Gault in order to make it official." 

"Continue." 

This time the tone was The Shadow's own, and it spurred Burke to  the delivery of further details. 

"They're phoning Gault's house," informed Burke, "but it's hard to  get hold of him. The servants say he's busy

and won't be disturbed.  They're going to call again and talk to his niece, Diana. She's the one  person who can

interrupt him when he's cutting paper dolls, or whatever  else he thinks is important." 

"And then " 

"That's about all," declared Burke, "except that when the directors  receive Gault's approval, they're going to

inform Dane that he's  elected. Their messenger is a chap named Traymer, and he's going over  to the foundry

where Dane is supervising the new night shift that goes  on at nine o'clock." 

"Report received." 

The Shadow's final words carried a tone that startled Burke, for he  had never heard his mysterious chief end a

call so abruptly. It was as  if Burke's last statement had simply corroborated something which The  Shadow

already knew. 

Such was the actual case. 

Thrusting Creep's duplicate diagram beneath his cloak, The Shadow  was gliding from the room that the

murderous crook had left earlier.  More than that, the red light of the fire tower was guiding The Shadow

along Creep's short route to the parking lot below. 

The Shadow, master of vengeance, was on the trail of death to come.  His hand was to play its part in shaping

crime's pattern into a mold of  justice! 

CHAPTER II. MOLTEN DOOM

LIKE a beckoning beacon, another vivid flare lifted amid the  foundry buildings, then dwindled, leaving

blackness. A minute passed;  again the glare was repeated. Ominous things, those flaming bursts from  the

blast furnace. 

They were tolling off the minutes that marked a race between life  and death, wherein The Shadow, master of

night, was hard on the trail  of Creep Hubin, the sneaky assassin whose purpose was to murder an

unsuspecting victim named Ferris Dane! 

How Creep intended to enter the foundry grounds was plain from his  diagram. Once inside, the route that he

would take was also marked. It  was The Shadow's task to clip the start that Creep had gained, then  choose a

short cut to the spot marked for murder, something that he  knew would be quite possible from his brief study


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of the diagram. 

Naturally both Creep and The Shadow were avoiding the main entrance  to the foundry, where big gates were

guarded by armed watchmen. Those  gates, however, were open to anyone who had normal business in the

place; hence a third factor injected itself into the race. He was a  human factor named George Traymer, who

arrived in his own car just as  another puff from the blast furnace lighted up the scene. 

Recognizing Traymer, the guards passed him through. Everybody knew  Traymer by sight, because he served

as secretary to the directors of  Gault Consolidated and acted as gobetween in matters involving the  various

plants. But Traymer wasn't familiar with the operation of the  individual industries, hence he wasn't qualified

for the vice  presidency that had just been given to Dane. 

Nor was Traymer the executive type needed for such an office. He  was a studiouslooking man, who peered

through tortoiseshell glasses  and spoke in a weak, unoffending voice. The factory hands dubbed him  Lady

Traymer, and the nickname was rather appropriate. 

When Traymer inquired for Dane, the guards gestured toward the  supervisor's office. Whereupon Traymer

drove ahead very carefully,  giving wide berths to building corners, slowing his car to avoid ruts  that big

trucks had dug, even proceeding cautiously through puddles  that might splash water up through the radiator. 

Indeed, the car looked ladylike, the way Traymer handled it.  Commenting on the fact, the guards were too

busy watching Traymer's  driving technique to notice the hunched figure that slipped past  another building

corner. Nor did they look toward the high wall where a  blackcloaked shape was dropping in from outside. 

They might have spotted Creep Hubin, but they couldn't have sighted  The Shadow. He timed his drop

between two of the furnace flares that  marked the minutes in his race against time  and death! 

Alighting near the supervisor's office, Traymer skirted some  rubbish to avoid damaging the patentleather

shoes. Finding two brawny  foremen in the office, Traymer inquired for Dane. A foreman glanced at  the office

clock, then gave a nudge. 

"Gone up on deck," the foreman said. "Gone up to size the pour.  You'll find him there, unless you want to

wait until he gets back in  about ten minutes. You know where the deck is, though " 

Traymer knew, all right. The "deck" was a small platform reached by  a fifteenfoot ladder, a dizzy climb in

Traymer's estimate. But the  climb was itself a trifle compared with the terrors of the platform.  The deck was

situated just above a channel through which molten steel  flowed when released. That such a flood was due,

went without saying,  otherwise Dane wouldn't have gone to size the pour. 

The mere thought of molten steel made Traymer shudder, and that in  turn pleased the foremen. But they

didn't reckon with Traymer's  obedience to duty. Having heard from Ellery Gault right after Burke's  call to

The Shadow, the directors had instructed Traymer to contact  Dane without delay. Hence this was a case

where duty counteracted  Traymer's natural timidity. 

To the surprise of the hornyhanded foremen, George Traymer turned  on his heel and strode boldly toward

the terrifying platform that was  perched on the far corner of a big foundry building. 

ALREADY on the platform, Ferris Dane was finding none of the  horrors that Traymer pictured. To Dane,

this trip to a perch that  measured six feet square was a matter of routine. A flare of light  revealed him leaning

from the platform, holding to its narrow end rail.  He was looking along the deep canal toward a buffer, much

like a dam,  which retained a lake of steel, ready for the nine o'clock pour. 


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The brief glare showed Dane's face was solid and squareset, like  his build. Ruddy light rendered his tawny

complexion florid, otherwise  the glow showed Dane's features in their proper detail. He was a  handsome man

in a careless, rugged way. 

His eyes, though deepset, had a flash that offset their hollows.  His lips were thickish, like his nose, but not

overly so, considering  his heavy jaw. Dane's hair was a tangled shock, but it was the  lightbrown sort that

couldn't be kept sleek. 

In brief, Dane portrayed a natural toughness that accounted for his  popularity among the workmen, except in

those rare cases where he  settled an argument with his fists and won out the hard way. Such  incidents,

however, had only served to increase his prestige with the  majority. 

As Dane gazed, the buffer lifted. Down through the channel poured a  flood of living steel, like lava disgorged

from an erupting volcano.  Near the bottom of the ladder, Traymer heard the roar of the unleashed  deluge and

hesitated. He'd hoped to reach Dane before the floodgate  opened. 

Again a flare of vivid light. This burst showed Dane still leaning  from beside the rail, coolly surveying the

whitehot stream that gushed  past below him. It was a good pour, this, and Dane was sizing it by  marks

along the channel edge, caring nothing for the hellish heat that  seared upward from the flow. 

This flare showed another figure than Dane's, that of a man who was  doing something far more daring than

leaning from a platform above the  molten flood. 

Along the building wall which formed one side of the channel was a  narrow ledge, on the platform level. That

narrow path was no more than  two feet wide, and it literally hovered above the deadly stream. Yet a  man was

using that dangerous walk. 

The man was Creep Hubin. 

Creep's nickname fitted. He was creeping along the ledge, the last  lap of the route on his diagram. He was

accomplishing his crawl in  sidewise fashion, so his weight wouldn't shift from the wall. There  were moments

when he paused, but even then he was disdainful of danger.  That was proven when his hand gave a careless

fling that sent a wad of  paper into the molten flow below. 

The wad was the diagram that Creep no longer needed. The bubbling  steel swallowed it as a living mouth

would. 

Next, Creep was at the very corner of the platform. He clutched the  building edge with one hand, using the

other to draw a revolver from  his hip. A blast of light disclosed Creep rising to aim his gun  straight at Dane,

who needed only the shock that a bullet could  provide, to be pitched into the foaming steel below! 

The flare revealed still more. 

Diagonally across the gulch of molten metal, a black figure was  outlined against a building wall. Reaching a

corner by his short cut,  The Shadow was ready to drop back from sight at the moment of this  fateful flare.

Only for an instant did he pause to get a flash view of  the scene, and that one glimpse was enough. 

Seeing Creep take aim at Dane, The Shadow forgot darkness. His  gloved hand whipped an automatic from

his cloak with a deft swing of  the wrist. Through the thin cloth, his finger tightened in an immediate  trigger

squeeze. The .45 stabbed, but its bark was drowned by the  tumult of the steel cascade. 


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What Dane heard was the whiz of a bullet past his ear, the ping as  the slug bashed the corner of the wall

beside the platform. Turning  from the rail, Dane saw Creep, who was more startled than himself. 

The huddling assassin knew that the shot was meant for him. There  seemed a purpose in the fact that it had

missed its mark. For Creep was  definitely on the spot, a thing he realized. If he tried to retire  along the ledge,

he would become easy prey. If he lunged forward to the  platform, an unseen gunner could rake that square

deck as the flare  subsided. 

In that case, Creep would become a wounded victim, easily captured  when Dane returned with others. For by

rights, Dane should have swung  down the ladder the moment that The Shadow's shot whizzed past. It was  a

warning, that bullet, which even a man of stout heart should have  accepted at face value. 

Not Ferris Dane. 

Imbued with the same purpose as The Shadow  that of bringing a  creeping assassin into the open and

softening him for capture  Dane  lunged Creep's way. Witnessing Dane's drive, The Shadow withheld his

fire, but swept forward on his own just as the last flicker faded from  the flametonguing blast chimney. 

DANE reached Creep before the killer could aim anew. The pair  locked in a struggle that provided the

weirdest of imaginable settings.  More, perhaps, than Dane had bargained for when he ignored the safety  of

the ladder and launched his foolhardy attack. 

Two men were beginning a death grapple on a corrugated platform six  feet square. Their figures were

vaguely visible, by the lurid gleam of  the molten steel that flowed below them, its whitehot surface raising

an unearthly glow, like the phosphorescence of a rotted tree stump. 

This struggle had its obbligato  the loud hiss of the simmering  steel itself, which had all the threat of a

rattlesnake's deathly  welcome. Molten death was begging for its prey, caring little which  victim reached its

craw, hoping perhaps that both would tumble into its  bubbling oblivion. 

The luminous metal revealed another figure, visible only because he  was closer to the scorching stream. The

Shadow was straight across the  channel from the platform, but on a brink that stood a scant two feet  above

the molten flow. Looking upward, with his gun following their  gyrations, the cloaked avenger was trying to

distinguish between the  fighters who twisted in their fray of doom. 

Precariously, they writhed toward the brink; then, as if by mutual  consent, they reeled against the rail and

caromed across to the wall.  In those zigzag tactics, they avoided the ladder where Traymer had at  last begun

his climb, too worried by the sizzle of the steel to notice  or interpret the clatter from the deck above. 

No halfway measures would suffice with Dane or Creep. They were  going to see it to a finish on the

platform, until one had the other  utterly at his mercy. Of the two, Dane, whose cause was justified, was

winning an advantage through his ardor. That much The Shadow discovered  when an arm went flinging

wide, to have its wrist clutched by a  following hand. There was a twist and something scaled from tortured

fingers. 

The object landed in the molten stream and was gulped as a pool  would take a pebble, or rather a hailstone.

For the liquid steel was  absorbing a chunk of the same alloy in solid state: Creep's gun. So  instantly did the

revolver vanish, that it seemingly was melted at the  moment when it struck. 

Dane having chopped the struggle to equal terms, Creep was quick to  counter. His gun gone, Creep

exaggerated the twist that Dane began and  wrenched free from his antagonist. Driving his head against the pit


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of  Dane's stomach, Creep butted his burly foe against the wall, then made  a crablike dart to the rail at the far

edge of the platform. 

They were like two prizefighters about to resume their contest  after a devastating round. Instead of a gong, a

flare from the furnace  marked the start of another minute. It showed Dane still slumped, but  beginning a slow

rise, with Creep starting a forward dive to reach him.  Bad enough for Dane, but to make it even worse, Creep

wasn't coming  unarmed. 

From his belt, the assassin had whipped out a longbladed knife and  was starting an underhand stroke for

Dane's ribs, intending to  literally pitchfork his victim into the steel sea that was just beyond  the platform's

edge. 

One hand alone could block the thrust that would slide Dane into  the flood of molten doom. It belonged to a

cloaked marksman on the  lower brink, that hand that never failed. 

The Shadow's big gun spoke. 

CHAPTER III. GHOST OF THE FUTURE

IMMEDIATE events upon the fateful platform were witnessed by a man  in no mood to fully understand. The

witness was Traymer, coming up the  ladder, his head and shoulders rising above deck level just as The

Shadow fired to stop Creep's drive toward Dane. 

From Traymer's distorted viewpoint, events were like a nightmare.  The lurid flare etched everything in

fantastic proportions. 

Straight across the platform, beyond and below the torrent of  threatening steel, stood a ghostly,

blackcloaked figure. Traymer saw  The Shadow first of all, viewing him as a blackened silhouette traced

against a building wall. 

From that mass of blackness that looked strangely human came a stab  of flame that Traymer somehow knew

must be a gunshot. With The Shadow  furnishing the background, the fiery thrust was plainly visible. It  wasn't

directed Traymer's way; instead, it was angled slightly to the  left. Thus it wasn't until the stab occurred that

Traymer saw its human  target. 

Turning his head as he heard a clatter on the platform, Traymer  spied Creep almost within reach. The

assassin's long, low drive ended  with the gunshot, for the bullet stopped Creep's charge. Jolted by the  wallop

of a .45 slug, Creep bounced erect and staggered across  Traymer's path of vision, blocking further sight of

The Shadow. 

Traymer couldn't have seen The Shadow again, because at that moment  the flare from the chimney vanished.

Even Creep was blotted from sight,  except as a stumbling mass that cut off the luminous glow of the  flowing

steel. Imbued with the thought that Dane was the only person on  the platform, Traymer naturally mistook the

staggered assassin for the  intended victim. Half reclined against the wall, Dane wasn't in  Traymer's sight at

all. 

Thinking that the marksman across the steel stream had deliberately  shot Dane, Traymer could only hope that

the staggered man would halt  his lurch before he tottered from the far edge of the platform. Creep  might have

managed it but for Dane, the man unseen by Traymer. Dane  hadn't seen The Shadow's shot; its sound was

lost amid the roar of  steel. With the vanishing flare, Dane glimpsed Creep alone and caught  the glint of the


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raised knife that the staggering man still gripped. 

Without guessing why the assassin had chosen such halfcrazed  tactics, Dane gave a forward slide along the

platform, thrusting his  foot across Creep's path. Tripping headlong, the thwarted killer  pitched from the brink,

sending back a shortlived screech as he  plunged into the foaming steel. 

There wasn't any splash. Knife and all, Creep Hubin was absorbed by  the molten mass so suddenly, that he

vanished more completely than The  Shadow. 

Still shaken from his impact against the wall, Dane lay panting on  the platform, while Traymer, gaping from

the ladder, was still  convinced that his friend, and no one else, had found a molten doom. 

Horror, more than reason, stirred Traymer to the proper course. He  did the thing that The Shadow had

expected Dane to do. Dropping from  the ladder, Traymer bounded from rung to rung until he reached the

bottom. Shakily, he started running toward the supervisor's office to  summon the foremen. 

They were already in sight. They'd come out to learn if Lady  Traymer had nerve enough to scale the towering

height of fifteen feet  up to the deck. Spying them, Traymer shrieked that Dane had plunged  into the molten

depths. Remembering the figure across the steelfilled  canal, Traymer turned and pointed just as the blast

furnace gave  another of its everyminute flares. 

It wasn't only Traymer who saw The Shadow this time. Any chance  that the cloaked shape belonged to

Traymer's imagination was dispelled  by the view the foremen gained. 

Following Traymer's wild point, the foremen saw the corner of the  opposite building that The Shadow had

used as his original base. The  cloaked avenger had wheeled back to that station, but he still held an  automatic

in readiness. The Shadow, too, was awaiting the telltale  flare, in order to make certain that Dane, not Creep,

was the survivor  on the platform. 

From their angle, the foremen could see past the corner. There  wasn't a chance for The Shadow to dwindle in

the sudden light. The gun  in his gloved fist, the very weapon that had saved Dane's life,  erroneously marked

The Shadow as a creature of murder. 

The foremen had revolvers. Like the watchmen, they were armed  because rumors of sabotage had started

recently. Having guns, the pair  were quick to use them. They opened an earnest, but blind, fire in The

Shadow's direction. The shots were haphazard because the brief flare  that disclosed The Shadow ended itself,

quite freakishly, the moment  the foremen began to shoot. 

BY then, alarm was rife. 

Succeeding flares showed watchmen and workers arriving from many  directions, some crossing bridges over

the canal of turbulent steel,  others swinging into view beyond outlying buildings. All were shouting  the word

of a phantom fugitive who had come and gone like a ghost. 

At intervals, pursuers glimpsed The Shadow, but the flares weren't  sufficient to insure the chase. The call

went out for searchlights, and  they were switched on, sharp brilliant beams that swept the foundry  yard from

several angles. One glare caught The Shadow near the wall; he  reversed his dash; then, as the searchlight

wavered, he continued for  his original objective. 

The effect was amazing  that of a black ghost shaking moonbeams  from its shoulders. The path of light

stayed brilliant, but it revealed  only a blank wall, through which The Shadow had seemingly vanished.  Then


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the searchlight was on the move again, but its probe showed  nothing. 

That was, nothing except a few depleted junk piles, too shallow to  hide a human figure. The searchlight

handlers didn't realize that The  Shadow could blend with anything that afforded patchy darkness.  Crouched

behind an odd assortment of old iron, the cloaked unknown was  half hidden by the discarded equipment, half

in the stretch of gloom  that lay beyond it. 

He was part of the shadows, this mysterious being who gained his  title from his ability to merge with fleeting

blackness. He was The  Shadow in fact as well as name! 

Searchlights widened hastily to the far reaches of the foundry  premises. Where buildings cut off the beams,

small groups of armed men  started an intensive search, only to meet each other coming around  corners. The

hunt began to spread like the streaks of light that guided  it. In widening, the searchers left huge gaps between

them   innumerable outlets for The Shadow, had he sought immediate departure. 

Instead, The Shadow continued his unexpected tactics by choosing  the place where all was placid  the storm

center from which the surge  of pursuers had whirled. He was no more than a blot of blackness when  he

crossed a narrow bridge above the lessening stream of steel. When  the chimney flared, its glow was absorbed

by the searchlight beams,  focused to distant points. 

There wasn't a trace of The Shadow as he slid beneath the platform  ladder to the sheltering wall of the

building where the supervisor's  office was located. Gliding farther along, The Shadow passed the door  of the

office itself. 

The office wasn't quite deserted as The Shadow expected. It  contained one man, but he was too occupied to

observe the cloaked shape  that paused momentarily at the door, then sidled past a corner to  choose the black

background of an opened window. 

The man in the office was George Traymer. He was at the telephone,  trying to put through a call to the

directors of Gault Consolidated. 

All the foundry wires were busy, flashing the word for a general  manhunt. While Traymer waited for a line,

he kept staring at the office  window. Blackness faded oddly as a searchlight beam reflected its  distant sweep.

Traymer stared harder at the window and stepped forward  with the telephone, only to halt as his call came

through. 

"Hello... hello " Traymer's voice was strained, highpitched with  tension. "No, I haven't talked to Dane...

Yes, I saw him, but something  happened before I could " 

A cool voice interrupted. It didn't come from the receiver; it was  speaking in Traymer's ear. It said: 

"I'll take that telephone, Lady." 

The phone actually fell from Traymer's hand, to be caught, receiver  and all, by the man beside him. Reeling

around, Traymer flattened  against the wall, his shoulders hiding the very window where curious  blackness

had alarmed him when it receded. Traymer was no longer  thinking of the window, nor any menace that it

might provide. 

Traymer was staring at something far more fearsome, the ghost of a  man who had died before his very eyes! 


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It was Ferris Dane who held the telephone. Speaking in the same  cool tone, Dane announced himself, learned

what the directors had to  offer him and gave an immediate decision. 

"Certainly I shall accept," spoke Dane. "I have wanted that office  for a long while. As vice president of Gault

Consolidated, I can double  the efficiency of all our industries. Accept my thanks  or shall I put  it the other

way about?" 

SUCH speech was so characteristic of Dane, that Traymer's nerves  began to settle. This was Dane, in the

flesh, for no ghost would  converse in such mundane tones. As Dane laid the telephone aside and  turned

toward Traymer, a feeble smile flickered on the studious  secretary's lips. 

"You do look as if you'd seen a ghost!" laughed Dane. Then, his  deep eyes fixing steadily, he added: "Is that

what you thought I was,  just now?" 

Traymer gave a weak nod, then licked his dry lips. 

"I thought I saw you pitch from the deck," he began. "I was on the  ladder when it happened. You see " 

"It's what you saw that matters," interposed Dane. "There was  another man on the platform. He came along

the ledge, intending to  murder me. Instead, he went where he meant for me to go." 

"But there was someone else!" exclaimed Traymer. "A man across the  channel. I thought he fired that shot at

you." 

"You mean the shot that missed?" 

"It couldn't miss. It hit this assassin that you mention!" 

A prompt gleam appeared in Dane's deep eyes. 

"So that's what jolted the killer!" acknowledged Dane. "I wondered  why he took that sudden stumble. It

seems that I owe my life to an  unknown friend. What did he look like, Traymer?" 

"Like"  Traymer hesitated on the word "ghost" and offered a  compromise  "like a shadow. He faded away

when they started after him.  He's gone, that's all." 

Dane glanced from the door and tilted his head, realizing for the  first time what the chase was all about.

Satisfied that the unknown  avenger had eluded all pursuit, Dane delivered a grim smile as he  declared: 

"So much the better." 

Traymer didn't quite understand. He was stepping toward the door,  saying that he'd call the foremen and give

them the full facts, when  Dane caught his arm in a powerful grip. 

"Stay right here, Lady," prompted Dane. "Not a word of this to  anyone. Understand?" 

Traymer's eyes were thoroughly bewildered. 

"Somebody sent that killer to get me," explained Dane. "On account  of that jinx job. Whoever is behind it can

wonder what went wrong. That  may help us find out who is behind it." 


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"But this other chap who tried to help you " 

"He's taken care of himself," decided Dane, referring to The  Shadow. "He makes it all the better. It will look

as though a killer  failed and fled." 

"But the man behind the game, what will he think when he doesn't  hear from the assassin again?" 

"When a murderer misses," philosophized Dane, "he usually avoids  the man who hired him. Let me handle

this my way, Lady. It will be best  for both of us." 

"For both of us?" 

Dane smiled at Traymer's echoed words. 

"Suppose I'd gone into that mess of steel," observed Dane.  "Wouldn't people have supposed that someone

tripped me from the  ladder?" 

Traymer had spoken of ghosts. He began to look like one, the way he  paled. He'd been on that ladder, and by

Dane's logic would have been  the likely man to take the blame for murder. Mechanically, Traymer gave  the

nod that meant he would follow Dane's lead from now on. 

"Let's go," spoke Dane abruptly, nudging Traymer through the door.  "The directors are holding the meeting

until we arrive. There's  somebody in that crowd who really thought I'd be a ghost by this time.  So I'll be one

a ghost of the future!" 

Dane was still chuckling grimly as he walked with Traymer to the  latter's car. Though Dane didn't know it,

his mirth was answered by a  subdued laugh from the darkness outside the office window. Living  blackness

edged from the wall and followed the darkened path that Dane  and Traymer were taking. 

Dane's theory was right. It fitted The Shadow's belief that hidden  crime was at work in the model city of

Industria. The idea of stalking  crime in ghostly style was excellent, but Dane, the target for such  crime, was

not the person for the task. 

His own hand hidden, his very presence still a mystery, The Shadow  was qualified to be the ghost of the

future. As such, he could crack  crime's riddle and the hoodoo that went with it. 

The Shadow knew! 

CHAPTER IV. THREE MEN OF REASON

THE directors of Gault Consolidated accorded Dane a warm ovation  when he arrived with Traymer. They

were a fossilized lot, these  directors, old gentlemen appointed by the original Gault to keep his  fortune intact.

None of the lot looked capable of planning murder, nor  could they logically have a motive. 

The same applied to various stockholders who were present at the  meeting, including one who arrived very

late. The newcomer was Lamont  Cranston, no longer The Shadow. Having recently acquired a few loose

shares of Gault Consolidated, Cranston had a business reason for coming  to Industria other than the crime

hunting activity of The Shadow. 

However, the directors' meeting was not entirely a collection of  stuffed shirts. There were three men present


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who were quite the  contrary, active men of means and ability who had every right to attend  this gathering.

They were the men who kept the holding company alive,  the heads of the three industries that stood on the

surrounding hills. 

Three men of reason, who dealt in hard, cold facts. In meeting  them, Cranston studied each individual

closely. 

Warren Helm was president of the foundry. He looked a man of steel,  with his firm jaw and glinting eye.

Even his grizzled hair fitted his  occupational appearance. But Helm's manner was quite at variance with  his

looks. When he shook hands, he restrained his heavy grip; his face  relaxed in a beaming smile, while his

steely eyes showed a definite  twinkle. 

Next in line was Laird Woburn, president of the dyeworks. Woburn  was older than Helm, having headed his

particular industry from the  time it started. Woburn was roundfaced, genial, almost careless of  manner, but

he gave the impression that all those features were an  outward pose. In a final analysis, Woburn, despite his

flabby way,  might prove of tougher stuff than Helm. 

Last of the trio was Roy Rexford. 

A youthful type, Rexford, handsome of face, with sleek black hair.  But there was much of the poker face in

his wellsculptured features,  plus a gaze that could take in all about him. There was this  peculiarity about

Rexford: his eyes looked shifty until someone tried  to test them. Then, in a flash, Rexford would give his

challenger a  straight, steady gaze that shattered all false impressions. Rexford was  a man who could meet

issues squarely, if he so chose. 

Though he rated as head of the chemical plant, Rexford lacked the  official title of president. He held the

office of general manager  while the business was being converted to a new field. The old  officials had gone

when the chemical works ceased the manufacture of  plastics and turned to synthetic rubber, which came

within Rexford's  special scope. 

Rexford's future depended upon the success of the new venture. It  was a foregone conclusion that the

business would build, since the law  of supply and demand was highly in its favor. But it was up to Rexford  to

meet the stipulations of his contract before he could officially  become the president of the chemical works. 

That Rexford was running far ahead of schedule was evident by his  selfimportant attitude. When speaking

of the future that belonged to  synthetic rubber, he blandly condescended to listen to Helm and Woburn  when

they mentioned steel or dyes. 

They represented the past, extended to the present. Rexford was the  man of the hour that marked a growing

future. Perhaps he realized that  he might some day be like one of them  the veteran head of an  established

industry confronted by a young gogetter who was years  ahead. But Rexford was too selfspoken, too

ambitious, to let anyone  overlook his status as the mainspring of progress. 

That was Industria's watchword: progress. 

Within a few days, the city would hold its annual Pageant of  Progress, the one event important enough to

produce a fulltime  holiday. There was only one man who might outshine Rexford on that  occasion: Ferris

Dane. 

It was significant how Dane fitted into the scheme of things.  Superficially it seemed that he, more than

anyone else, had profited by  the successive deaths of the lamented vice presidents of Gault  Consolidated. 


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An interesting situation, from The Shadow's viewpoint. His purpose  was to learn which man of three  Helm,

Woburn or Rexford  might be  the brain behind a scheme of wholesale death. Yet, in this meeting  room,

circumstance actually pointed to Dane, the man who would have  become the latest victim but for The

Shadow's timely intervention! 

Creep's attack couldn't have been fakery on Dane's part. Dane  hadn't been equipped to meet it. The setup

involving Traymer pointed  definitely to an evil hand more eager to dispose of Dane than any of  the previous

coordinators. 

The question still was: whose hand? 

REFLECTIONS on that subject were broken when the directors and  their associates arose to greet an

important and unexpected visitor.  Into the meeting room stepped Ellery Gault himself, arriving after a

surprise trip from his mansion on the hill. 

A remarkable personality, Ellery Gault. 

Though leaning on a heavy cane, Gault entered the room imposingly.  His face was sharp and keen, belying

the age that his snowwhite  mustache and flowing hair betrayed. His eyes sparkled eagerly as he  spied

people he knew, and he gave each friend a vigorous nod. 

Striding to the directors' table, Gault found the chairman's seat  awaiting him. Taking it, he addressed the

group in a loud, booming  voice: 

"And now, gentlemen, your choice?" 

"We already informed you, Mr. Gault," put in Helm. "We have elected  Ferris Dane as vice president of Gault

Consolidated." 

"A capable man, Dane," added Woburn. "He has served as a supervisor  with each of our manufacturing

plants." 

Only Rexford remained silent. He could have felt that Helm and  Woburn had said enough. Contrarily, his

silence could mean that he did  not join in endorsing Dane. 

Old Gault stroked his chin. 

"Ferris Dane," he remarked musingly. Then, glancing along the  table, he saw the man in question. "Ah, yes,

you are Ferris Dane. Allow  me to congratulate you." 

Dane advanced to receive Gault's handshake. During that formality,  Cranston glanced toward a corner of the

room and gave a slight  restraining gesture. As The Shadow, he was instructing his agent, Clyde  Burke, to let

other matters wait until later. Clyde was a New York  newspaper reporter, admitted to this meeting only on

sufferance. 

Cranston's gesture was more than timely. Because of it, both he and  Clyde looked toward the head of the

table soon enough to see the  amazing thing that happened there. 

Finished with congratulating Dane, old Gault drew himself to full  height, as though to begin an address. As

suddenly, the whitehaired  man deflated. His shoulders bowed, his head dipped between them.  Gault's face

displayed an inane smile, while his eyes turned happily  from one director to another. Lifting his hand from


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the cane, he turned  the palm upward. 

"And now, gentlemen," spoke Gault, in a wheedling tone that matched  his smile, "how many bright pennies

have you brought me?" 

Even to Cranston, the thing seemed momentarily a jest. Indeed,  Gault could have carried the travesty farther,

if travesty it were. But  there were others present familiar with the symptoms. Two in particular  were quick to

humor Gault. 

Quite provided for a situation that they understood too well, Helm  and Woburn dipped their hands into their

pockets and brought out half a  dozen pennies each. All shiny pennies, the kind that Gault requested.  The two

executives dropped the bright coins into Gault's palm and  nodded pleasantly when he mumbled his thanks. 

Then the directors were copying the act. Pennies galore were  falling on Gault's grasp and he was cupping

both hands to receive them,  happily crooning his thanks. 

Small wonder Gault looked young. He had dropped enough years to  become a child of five! 

Stockholders unfamiliar with this scene gaped in an awe that  resembled horror. Directors thronged among

them, whispering sad facts.  This was why Gault had so suddenly retired from active participation in  business

affairs. Pennies were his mania. 

It was a flashback to his childhood, when his uncle, founder of the  Gault enterprises, had pounded home the

one word: thrift. 

Ellery Gault had begun his financial career with pennies. From  dozens they had grown to hundreds,

thousands, millions. He had learned  to talk in terms of dollars, but always in the back of his expanding  mind

lay the memory of the pennies that he had been taught to covet in  his babyhood. 

One day, Gault's mind had cracked. 

At home, in his elegant mansion, he could value things of luxury  for their intrinsic worth. But the mere

mention of money hurled him  back to fundamentals: pennies. 

No one talked cash when he attended a directors' meeting. Sometimes  he weathered such affairs. But the

mere linking of faces with the  finance that they represented could be enough to throw the old man out  of gear. 

It had happened again  Gault and his pennies. 

Helm and Woburn were soothing old Gault, ushering him into a  private room, while he jingled his pennies as

if they were coins of  gold instead of mere copper. Rexford, remaining on the scene, suggested  that the

meeting be adjourned, to which the directors agreed. 

Clyde Burke caught Cranston's gesture to come along. Outside,  Cranston suggested that Clyde remain in the

car, on the basis that  reporters wouldn't be welcome persons at present. Clyde followed the  advice, expecting

Cranston to join him, but when the reporter turned,  his chief had gone. 

Only a patch of vanishing darkness betrayed the fact that Lamont  Cranston had become The Shadow! 

AS yet, The Shadow had been unable to gauge the reactions of three  men who represented reason: Helm,

Woburn, Rexford. The maudlin mind of  Ellery Gault had supplied an untimely interruption. On the chance


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that  he might learn something of special import, The Shadow was resuming his  cloaked guise. 

A magnificent limousine was parked in front of the Gault  Consolidated building. Framed in the car's window

was a girl of equally  fashionable type, a creature patterned for the sort of luxury that such  a limousine could

provide. The girl was Diana Gault, old Ellery's  niece. Her face was as flushed as her reddish hair, and her

blue eyes  mingled horror with anger. 

Diana Gault was listening to Ferris Dane, who had just come from  the directors' meeting. Beside Dane stood

George Traymer, nodding in  owlish fashion to everything Dane said. The two moved along, and  Diana's gaze

went toward the pillared doorway of the building where Roy  Rexford was stepping into view. 

Voicing her indignation for Rexford's ears, the girl was too  occupied to notice the blackness that the pillars

absorbed, as though  some human shape had suddenly gone ghostly, thus remaining close enough  to overhear

all that passed. 

"I've learned what happened at the foundry, Roy," asserted Diana.  "Ferris just told me." 

"The foundry?" queried Rexford in a puzzled tone. "Was Dane there?  Oh, of course! That's where Traymer

went to get him." 

"And where Ferris was nearly murdered," snapped Diana, "while you  were talking on the telephone to me.

What was the idea, Roy? Was it one  of those things they call an alibi?" 

Rexford started an ardent protest, insisting he knew nothing of  matters at the foundry. Diana cut him short. 

"You're making it worse, Roy," the girl argued. "It looks as though  you called me to keep the wire open, so

my uncle couldn't phone the  directors and find out what they wanted. You certainly should have  known that

such a delay would bring on another of his spells. Ferris  tells me that one just seized him." 

What Rexford thought of Dane and his meddlesome opinions was  something that would soon have been

expressed, if Helm and Woburn had  not appeared, bringing old Ellery Gault between them. Rexford

personally interrupted the expletives that he was applying to Dane,  though Diana heard enough of them to

conjecture what the rest would be. 

At Diana's imperious gesture, a polite chauffeur brushed Rexford  aside and Gault was helped into the car,

happily jingling his precious  pennies, while Helm and Woburn were promising him more. Diana suggested

that they come along to the house, to hold Gault in his present humor,  but she didn't extend the invitation to

Rexford. 

When the limousine pulled away with its passengers, Rexford turned  on his heel and strode off angrily. It was

then that watching blackness  resumed the cloaked shape of The Shadow and returned to Cranston's car. 

From hidden lips came a low, sibilant laugh, telling that The  Shadow had uncovered one rivalry  a

controversy existing between Roy  Rexford and Ferris Dane, over Diana Gault. 

Such a rivalry could be a cause of crime, even to the degree of  murder. 

The Shadow knew! 


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CHAPTER V. GUESTS AT THE MANSION

THE same qualities that made Clyde Burke a good reporter rendered  him a useful agent of The Shadow.

Clyde had a photographic mind that  could register details and retain them, even when they did not promise

immediate conclusions. Moreover, Clyde never trusted his memory too  far. Though many of his notes were

necessarily mental, he put them into  writing at the first opportunity. 

This was proven the next afternoon, when Lamont Cranston sat idly  by the window of his hotel room

surveying the beautiful city of  Industria by daylight. Though his thoughts seemed elsewhere, Cranston  was

listening quite intently to Burke's version of what was wrong in  this city where all looked right. 

Clyde had been in the foundry, the dyeworks, and the chemical  plant. The foundry was still buzzing over the

vanished marksman of the  night before, who, according to popular belief, had tried to murder  Dane, but

failed. It was generally conceded that the masquerader must  have been some malcontent dismissed by Dane.

But the foundry employees  argued that the thwarted killer must have worked at one of the other  plants, when

Dane was a supervisor there. 

Naturally, Warren Helm held that opinion. As president of the  foundry, he was one hundred percent satisfied

with Dane. He declared  that Gault Consolidated had obtained an ideal vice president, but that  the foundry had

lost the best supervisor in its history. 

At the dyeworks, Clyde had talked with Laird Woburn. Quite  tactfully, Woburn avoided mention of Dane. He

didn't want to criticize  the management of the foundry, which in so many words meant Warren  Helm. 

Smilingly, Woburn had referred Clyde to Gault Consolidated, which  was like telling the reporter to get his

story from Ferris Dane in  person, since that dynamic gentleman was now an important adjunct of  the holding

company. 

There, Clyde's report ended. He'd been to the chemical works but  couldn't see Roy Rexford, because

important tests of synthetic rubber  were in progress. 

As for interviewing Ferris Dane at the offices of Gault  Consolidated, it was quite impossible. Dane was far

too busy getting  adjusted in his new capacity. Even George Traymer wasn't available,  because Dane had

taken him as chief assistant in the business of  coordinating the various industries. 

"Very good, Burke," approved Cranston dryly. "Now, tell me the  vital facts in the case." 

"The vital facts?" queried Clyde. "Why, I've just stated them!" 

"'Skipped them' would be a better term," answered Cranston. "I  refer to last night. Tell me what happened at

the directors' meeting  immediately after Dane was elected vice president of Gault  Consolidated." 

A glimmer dawned on Clyde. 

"You mean what did the big men do," he expressed. "Well, Helm and  Woburn went to have a smoke while

the directors were trying to get  Gault on the telephone." 

"State where they went." 

"Into that little room just off the big one," declared Clyde. "The  place where you saw them rush old Gault


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when he began whining for  pennies. Old Gault must really be a mental case. If he still had any  sense, he'd

have brought a piggy bank along to impress the directors." 

Cranston's eyes turned reproval upon Clyde, reminding him that such  digressions were not in order. 

"Sorry, chief," affirmed Clyde. "Anyway, Helm and Woburn were in  there all the while. I looked in on them.

Helm was wondering how he'd  get another supervisor like Dane, if Dane took the vice president's  job.

Woburn was wishing Helm luck, but doubting that he'd get it. He  said he'd never been able to really replace

Dane after he switched from  the dyeworks to the foundry." 

"Neither of them tried to telephone Gault?" 

"They couldn't. There wasn't any telephone in the little room. The  directors were using the only telephone 

in the meeting room." 

CRANSTON'S eyes maintained a steady gaze, that Clyde decided was a  further inquiry. Referring to

penciled notes, the reporter tallied  events in systematic order. First the directors had called the Gault  mansion.

They'd asked to speak to Gault, but couldn't because he was  busy and wouldn't be disturbed. They'd stated

their business to the  servants, but had reserved any mention of Dane's election until they  talked to Gault in

person. 

That prospect hadn't been promising, though the servants offered to  do their best. So one of the directors had

suggested phoning Diana, on  the chance that she could reach her uncle. They'd tried the line again,  but it was

busy. 

"That's when I slid out," explained Clyde. "I hustled down to the  lobby to phone you from a pay booth.

Rexford was down there alone,  smoking a cigarette. He gave me the cold eye when I went into the  booth. I

got the idea that he'd just finished a call himself and was  going to make another." 

"Rexford phoned Diana," commented Cranston. "I learned that last  night." 

"Say, chief!" exclaimed Clyde. "That would explain why the line was  busy! But if Rexford was talking to

Diana while the directors were  trying to reach her, why did he still stick around? If he had another  call to

make " 

Clyde cut short. He knew about Creep Hubin, for The Shadow had told  him. Smashing into Clyde's thoughts

was the recollection of a phone  call that Creep must have received, sending him on an errand of murder. 

Rexford's call to come! 

It struck Clyde hard, for until this moment he hadn't connected  Rexford with the attempt on Dane's life. Helm

and Woburn were certainly  innocent  and that, in Clyde's mind, had eliminated Rexford, who  seemed a

superior person to either of the oldline executives. But the  thing was shaping itself into odd proportions that

might lead anywhere. 

Bearing hard upon his own theory, Clyde looked for a corroborating  gleam from The Shadow's eyes. There

was none; they were the eyes of  Cranston: steady, but passive. Eyes that merely called upon Clyde to

proceed. 

Clyde did proceed, though all the while his mind was bubbling with  its discovery. Roy Rexford was

interested in Diana Gault; that fact  established, it followed that Rexford, youthful head of a local  industry,


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was the most eligible man in town, miles ahead of any other  suitor. 

At least, that case existed until Ferris Dane had been named vice  president of Gault Consolidated. Likewise

youthful and aggressive, Dane  could logically be Rexford's rival. The very vote that had rendered  Dane a

keyman in the Gault empire, put him on equal terms with  Rexford, where Diana was concerned. 

This put a fresh bearing on the jinx job. Prestige, rather than the  job itself or any finance that it represented,

could be the matter at  stake: the reason why Creep had been hired to dispose of Dane before he  even assumed

his new office! 

"I went back up to the meeting room," proceeded Clyde,  mechanically. "The directors were talking about

calling the house  again, to see if they could get Diana. They thought Rexford ought to  speak with her; but he

wasn't around. So they decided to ask Helm or  Woburn. They were just taking it up with those two when the

phone rang.  Gault was on the wire " 

"An interruption, Burke," put in Cranston quietly. "How long was it  since you had called me?" 

"About five minutes," replied Clyde, referring to his notes.  "Anyway, the servants had gotten Gault to the

phone. He gave his yes to  the vote, and the directors sent Traymer to inform Dane. Traymer was  with the

directors all the time, but he hadn't anything to say." 

Nodding calmly, Cranston picked up a newspaper and began to turn  through its pages. It was the local daily,

the lone evening paper that  Industria boasted. Clyde couldn't quite contain himself. 

"Say, chief," began the reporter. "Suppose Dane was a social  climber like Rexford. Suppose he thought he

rated with Diana Gault.  Suppose she was willing to consider Dane " 

"Suppositions are dubious, Burke," Cranston interrupted. "Let us  confine ourselves to facts. Tomorrow is an

important day in Industria.  The day when the annual Pageant of Progress will be held." 

CLYDE gave a nod as Cranston thrust him the newspaper. The local  sheet was filled with froth about the

coming pageant; so much of it,  that Clyde was bored. Nevertheless, he glanced at the page that  Cranston

showed him. 

"Big doings at the Gault mansion," commented Clyde. "Dozens of  guests are arriving from out of town. That

happens every year. It says  so." 

Cranston nodded, then remarked: "Read further." 

"Tomorrow night, the Mardi Gras," continued Clyde. "King Progress  and Queen Industry will ride in state

together. Here's a picture of  Queen Industry. I could have guessed that she would be Diana Gault. Who  else?" 

"What about King Progress?" inquired Cranston. "His picture should  be there somewhere." 

"It's here, all right," began Clyde. "Big as life " 

Clyde's eyes went big, like the photograph they viewed. His mouth,  opening even wider, gulped the name: 

"Ferris Dane!" 

Cranston's smile was indulgent, but his hand was firm, approving,  as he clapped it on Clyde's shoulder. 


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"Your conjecture was excellent, Burke," he said. Gradually, the  hand lifted. "But you took a long while to

come to a conclusion that  you could have reached with ease. There is a rivalry between Dane and  Rexford.

However, you have discovered only half of it." 

Cranston's finger pointed to another photo in the lower corner of  the page, a small one that bore the somewhat

ignominious title: "Prince  Poverty." This time, Clyde's eyes narrowed. 

Prince Poverty, whatever his part might be, was none other than Roy  Rexford. Instantly, Clyde's mind sprang

to a new supposition. 

"Dane already rates tops with Diana!" exclaimed Clyde. "Why that  means Rexford has been second fiddle all

along!" 

"No more conjectures, Burke," rebuked Cranston. "We are dealing in  facts, and facts are where you find

them. Come." 

There was a cryptic tone to Cranston's order, that Clyde didn't  understand until they left the hotel and were

riding away in the  roadster. When Clyde saw which hill the car was climbing, he turned an  astonished look

toward his companion. 

They weren't going to the foundry, the dyeworks, or the chemical  plant. Serenely Lamont Cranston,

otherwise The Shadow, was driving to  the Gault mansion, that he and Clyde Burke, the roving reporter,

might  join the guests assembling there in anticipation of the Pageant of  Progress tomorrow. 

CHAPTER VI. BRIGHT PENNIES

THE Gault mansion provided a succession of eye openers for Clyde  Burke. Though accustomed to homes of

the wealthy, having visited them  often in quest of stories, Clyde had never before experienced the  thrills of

the genuine society reporter. 

Such thrills were provided at Gault's. 

The mere name of Lamont Cranston provided an open sesame. With his  tall companion, Clyde was ushered

through a reception room furnished in  ornate Victorian style; next, through an equally oldfashioned music

room; finally, through a gorgeous sun porch that seemed bejeweled by  the sunset that was glowing from the

distant hills. 

Then they were out of the house again, in the midst of a garden so  lavish and luxuriant that it actually

outshone the mansion. 

Diana Gault was giving a cocktail party in the garden. She was  utterly radiant in such a setting, and knew it.

Otherwise, she wouldn't  have chosen the marble bench where the sunset skimmed the barbary  hedges and

gave her auburn hair a burnished glory that hadn't been  apparent in the darkness of the night before. 

Seated with Diana, totally refuting Clyde's pet theory, was Roy  Rexford, the man supposed to be in

conference at the chemical works. As  for Ferris Dane, rated so highly by Clyde, the new vice president of

Gault Consolidated wasn't even at the garden party. 

Cranston's arrival proved quite an event. Though Diana had never  met him, the moment she heard Cranston's

name buzzed, she hurried  forward to extend a warm greeting. Rexford was equally anxious to  welcome the


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new guest. Left in the background, Clyde stared in  continued bafflement, until a girl's voice spoke beside

him. 

Clyde Burke turned to see Margo Lane. 

Margo wasn't a product of Industria. She came from New York, where  she knew the ins and outs of cafe

society. Her main ambition was to  make herself useful in the service of The Shadow. Sometimes Margo

managed it, and this was one of those occasions, as her smile  betokened. Margo's smile was very nice to look

at, being attached to a  very personable brunette. 

Clyde undertoned the query: 

"You fixed this for the chief?" 

Margo nodded. 

"Lamont wired me last night," she confided. "He told me about the  Gault's house party and said for me to see

what could be done with it.  Take a look." 

Looking, Clyde recognized half a dozen faces, all belonging to  Manhattan's cafe set. Evidently Margo had

found the right strings to  Industria's society and given them a tug that had produced wholesale  invitations to

the house party. 

"And I thought this town was selfsufficient," expressed Clyde.  "All this chatter about industry and progress

simply adds up to wealth,  in the end." 

"Of course," assured Margo. "The people here get tired of showing  off to each other, just like everyone else

does. They're like kittens  in catnip over the fact that a lot of sophisticated New Yorkers would  come to

Industria to witness their wonderful pageant." 

"You're all staying here at the mansion?" 

"Yes indeed! And Diana is trying to persuade Lamont to join the  house party. Listen to her gush." 

Diana wasn't having much success. She was apologizing because she  hadn't known that Cranston was in town

the night before, and he was  politely stating that he had come to Industria on business. He would  stay over for

the pageant because business would hold him, but he  couldn't join the guests at the mansion. It would mean

neglecting  business appointments. 

True to local tradition, Diana subsided, while Rexford gave an  approving nod. Business was more than

business in Industria; it was the  keystone of society. 

Clyde strolled away, much pleased by Cranston's decision to remain  a guest at the hotel. The Shadow's scope

would be too limited if  confined to the Gault mansion. That would be Margo's territory. 

For the present, however, the territory was also Clyde's. In the  capacity of a society reporter, he could wander

about wherever he  chose. As a preliminary, Clyde contacted a few of the local newspaper  men whom he saw

among the guests; but they proved a diffident lot. 

In fact, it irked Clyde to see how they were awed by the Gault  wealth. He remarked to one that Industria, the

perfect community,  wasn't much different from any place else. That comment started an  outburst. 


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The local newshawk explained that Industria was a singletax  community, where property was put to use.

Idle land was taxed so  heavily that the town soon acquired it and sold it to enterprising  people, whose taxes

lessened the more they improved the property. 

Detaching himself from the ardent journalist, Clyde thought over  what the chap had said. Since all the

enterprise in town was controlled  by Gault Consolidated, it followed that the more the Gault industries

expanded, the greater their profit ratio became. Industria was  therefore the answer to a plutocrat's prayer. 

No wonder old Ellery Gault had lost his reason. His dreams couldn't  keep up with actuality. Remembering

the way Gault had cracked the night  before, Clyde found himself wondering where the old man was at

present. 

Gazing toward the mansion, Clyde saw a tier of windows hung with  magnificent purple drapes, like a royal

suite. Gault's own quarters,  without a doubt. 

Instantly, the reporter's instinct took hold of Clyde. He'd land an  exclusive story that would confound the

local bunch: an interview with  Ellery Gault himself! 

LOOKING for a way into the mansion, Clyde saw a basement doorway  near the rear of the great house.

Carefully skirting a prickly hedge,  he reached the door in question. 

Gault's quarters were toward the front. Working through a maze of  basement passages, Clyde thought he'd

find a stairway to the front  section of the mansion. He might have if he'd been able to reach the  front section,

but every passage brought him to a dead end. 

Remembering the outside appearance of the house, Clyde recalled  that one half looked newer than the other.

Evidently the two sections  had been built at different periods, leaving a wide stretch of solid  foundation

between them. Finding himself in the wrong half of the  basement, Clyde finally took a back stairway that

brought him to one of  several kitchens on the ground floor. 

Ducking away at the approach of servants, Clyde reached a pantry  and started through to a dining room, only

to see half a dozen servants  setting tables in a place the size of a banquet hall. They didn't spy  Clyde, for dusk

was settling and he managed to hop back into the gloomy  pantry. Taking another doorway, Clyde crossed a

hall and reached the  music room. 

There, he hadn't time to duck away before someone saw him. He  stopped short as a girl spoke laughingly: 

"I thought you'd have trouble finding Gault's apartment! Come  along, Clyde, and I'll show you how to get

there." 

It was Margo. She'd come in by the sun porch. So Clyde went the way  she showed him, back through the

hall, around a corner into a little  side passage that terminated in a purple curtain. 

"This marks the beginning of Gault's own preserves," explained  Margo. "Diana mentioned that none of the

guests was to go past this  curtain. But since you aren't a guest, Clyde, the rule doesn't apply.  Good luck!" 

Stepping through the purple curtain, Clyde found a stairway that  led up to the second floor, above the

midsection of the house. All was  quiet on the floor above; hazy, too, for the rich velvet drapes clouded

every window. Ahead, Clyde saw a dim light underneath a door. Gingerly  opening the door, he stepped into a

small reception room which, despite  its compact size, was far richer in furnishings than any room that  Clyde

had ever viewed. 


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Goldfrescoed chairs and tables, filigreed screens, a mantel of  delicate carving topped by a jewelstudded

clock, were but a few  symbols of the room's splendor. There were objects of ivory and ebony,  a candelabrum

of solid silver, along with paintings that proved to be  jeweled mosaics when Clyde studied them closely. 

The lighting came through thin shades that were formed of genuine  pearl shell, matched to perfection. In the

glow, the silent purple  curtains looked almost a jet hue. Which curtains covered windows, Clyde  could not

tell, for all the drapes were tightly drawn. The curtains  bothered Clyde, for they gave him the uneasy

impression that eyes were  watching from behind them. 

Deciding that the interview could wait, Clyde turned toward the  door. A hiss sounded behind him; with it

came a flood of light.  Swinging about, Clyde found himself faced by Ellery Gault. But instead  of showing

anger at sight of an intruder, the old man was all smiles.  The hiss, Clyde suddenly realized, was merely the

parting of the  curtain, which Gault had flung back to admit stronger light from  another room. 

"A visitor!" Gault's tone was gleeful, suiting the childish mood he  had displayed the night before. "I like

visitors. They always have a  reason to see me. What is yours, young man?" 

"I'm a newspaper reporter," put in Clyde. "I'd like to interview  you, Mr. Gault." 

"Good! Come into the counting room." Gault gestured to the doorway  behind him. "I can show you

something very wonderful." 

IT was wonderful, in a sense. Not the counting room, but what it  contained. The place itself was plainly

furnished, but on a huge table  Clyde saw stacks of pennies in tall piles. Bright pennies, thousands of  them,

the playthings of a doddering mind. 

"'A penny saved is a penny earned,'" quoted Gault happily. "I have  saved thousands of pennies. To be exact"

he paused, to pick some  coppers from a small heap and add them to a pile  "I have eighteen  thousand,

seven hundred and sixtytwo pennies. There... I have finished  counting them again, and none is missing!" 

Clyde calculated. The total of shiny onecent pieces came to  something less than two hundred dollars. A

single piece of bricabrac  in Gault's reception room would be worth far more than all the copper  treasure.

But Gault's mind was set on pennies. 

Gathering the coins by handfuls, he jingled them, declaring that it  kept the pennies shiny. He went to an

alcove in the deep wall of the  room and dropped the coins into an iron coffer that occupied about half  the

space of the fivefoot niche. 

"I began life saving pennies," crooned Gault, his voice tuned to  the jangle of the dropping coins. "Pennies,

pennies, and more pennies.  I forgot them for a while, but I came back to them. I began with  pennies, I shall

end with pennies!" 

He kept on filling the coffer, until his supply was almost  finished. Taking a last handful, Gault glanced shyly

across his  shoulder and detected sympathy in Clyde's gaze. It was sympathy that  the old man seemed to

misunderstand. 

Dropping pennies one by one, Gault weighed Clyde with his glance.  Pausing, the old man turned about and

placed a shiny cent in Clyde's  hand. He continued to drop more into the coffer, but seeing Clyde's  smile, he

paused again and gave him another copper coin. So it  progressed until the coffer was filled, at which time

Clyde was holding  five bright pennies. 


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Gault clamped the lid of the coffer; closed a door that turned the  alcove into a strong room. Beaming, he

approached Clyde and clapped a  thin hand on the reporter's shoulder. 

"There is your story," began Gault. "You can write how an old man  gave you pennies from his life's savings

and taught you the true lesson  of wealth. Save your pennies, my boy, and you will never be in want. I  have

saved so many pennies that I now have eighteen thousand, seven  hundred and"  Gault stopped to note that

Clyde's hand held five coins,  whereupon he added:  "and fiftyseven. Please mention that fact in  your

story." 

"I most certainly will " 

"You most certainly will not!" came an indignant voice, that  interrupted Clyde. "There isn't going to be a

story!" 

Clyde turned to find himself confronted by Diana Gault. Her manner  was fiery as her hair, and her eyes were

thoroughly ablaze. Behind the  girl stood Rexford. As Clyde stepped back, the sleek man stepped  forward,

saying: 

"I'll handle this, Diana." 

There was plenty of power in Rexford's grip as it fastened on  Clyde's arm. Alarmed, Diana rallied suddenly to

Clyde's support, when  she undertoned: 

"Be careful, Roy, while we're here with Uncle Ellery." 

Nodding, Rexford swung Clyde about and marched him straight to the  stairs. Diana followed, still murmuring

for Roy to be careful. When  they reached the ground floor, Rexford still clutched Clyde's arm and  steered

him straight to the front door. Overtaking them, Diana changed  her tune. On the front porch, she was again

indignant as she said to  Clyde: 

"If you mention one word of this " 

"Don't worry," put in Rexford harshly. "He won't!" 

Wheeling Clyde about, Rexford drew back a fist that looked as tight  as steel. Diana started to tell him that the

dinner guests were  arriving, but it didn't matter with Rexford. Thrusting Clyde at arm's  length, Rexford

poised for a punch that threatened to be murderous.  Clyde heard a girl's quick cry and recognized Margo's

voice. 

A TALL figure suddenly stepped in to ward off Rexford's swing. It  was Cranston, swift despite his leisurely

way. His intervention looked  insufficient, but it was quite the opposite. The Shadow had a system of  plucking

punches in midair, without even ruffling his Cranston pose. 

This was once The Shadow's effort wasn't needed. A hand hooked  Rexford's from behind before the swing

could start. Turning angrily,  Rexford was confronted by a man as hardmannered at himself: Ferris  Dane. 

"Easy, Rexford," admonished Dane. "This isn't your own house, you  know. At least... not yet." 

Perhaps Diana's presence was the reason why Rexford's vicious wrath  subsided. He'd shown himself badly in

contrast to Dane, the night  before; a repetition wasn't the proper course this evening. But Rexford  couldn't

calm himself without a final glare. While he was staring at  Dane, Clyde found himself free of Rexford's


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clutch. 

Another hand took over and Clyde was on the way to Cranston's car,  guided there by its calmmannered

owner. Without wasting time to  inquire what had happened, The Shadow gave Clyde the car keys and told

him to drive back to the hotel. 

On the way, Clyde wondered why his left hand felt so cramped as it  tried to clutch the steering wheel. He

opened his fist and stared. He  was still holding five bright pennies, the gift of Ellery Gault! 

CHAPTER VII. DEATH'S HOLIDAY

THEY were in Cranston's hotel room. It was the afternoon following  the affair at Gault's, which had placed

Clyde in disgrace among the  elite of Industria. Cranston was juggling in his hand the five pennies  Clyde had

gotten from old Gault. 

"Don't worry, Burke," spoke Cranston. "Since you didn't write the  story, they'll forgive you. Tonight you can

watch the pageant without  being recognized. Everyone will be masked, so I ordered a costume for  you, too.

It's in your room." 

Clyde muttered something about Rexford. 

"Speaking of Rexford," observed Cranston, "I found out why he's  playing second fiddle. It appears that King

Progress is elected by  popular vote and that the runnerup becomes Prince Poverty. It happens  that Ferris

Dane is very popular, having worked in all three of the  local plants, so he naturally won the contest. 

"The real surprise was the vote that Roy Rexford polled. He is a  comparative newcomer and wasn't figured in

the race at first. But he's  such a gogetter, people could not ignore him. Rexford has done wonders  with the

chemical works. The first year's output of synthetic rubber  will double the previous production of plastics." 

Clyde wasn't interested, except to remark that if he lived in  Industria, Rexford would have missed one extra

vote. Sympathizing with  Clyde's mood, Cranston told the reporter not to miss the parade. As The  Shadow,

Cranston wanted it checked to every detail, and he was  depending on both Clyde and Margo to do their part

in the process. 

That point expressed, Cranston left the hotel and began a business  trip. He intended to talk financial matters

with both Helm and Woburn,  but it was useless on this holiday of holidays in Industria. 

Helm was in his office at the foundry, but he was busy adorning  himself in the costume of a cavalier. Stalking

about with his square  jaw projecting from a ruffled collar, the foundry president tilted a  feathered hat to hide

his steelgray hair. Planting his hand on the  hilt of an ornamental sword, he asked: 

"Frankly, Cranston, how do I look?" 

"Quite the Sir Walter," replied Cranston. "That must be an  expensive costume, Helm." 

"It is," declared Helm. "But I'll wear it again, in the pantomime  we're giving in the opera house, a few nights

from now. You've heard  about it?" 

Cranston said he hadn't. 


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"A bizarre thing," declared Helm. "Based on the opera of 'Faust.'  Traymer wrote it. He's a versatile chap,

Traymer, though he doesn't  show it. However, I like quietmannered men. They know their place." 

The costume still interested Cranston. He asked where Helm had  purchased it. 

"Amon supplied it," said Helm. "He runs the local costume shop. He  carries everything, including scenery for

the opera house. We all buy  our costumes from Amon. He rents them, too, at pageant time, and he has  an

enormous supply. Still, if you want a good one, I wouldn't advise  you to wait too long. The sooner you get to

Amon's, the better." 

Thanking Helm for the advice, Cranston was smiling as he left the  office. He wasn't worried about getting a

costume for tonight. Cranston  already had a costume. It consisted of a black cloak and a slouch hat,  with

hidden automatics as an adjunct. And Lamont Cranston, otherwise  The Shadow, rather fancied that his

chosen costume would be appropriate  when the parade began. 

Cranston's next stop was at the dyeworks. There he found Woburn  decked in the regalia of a Turkish sultan,

his round face looking very  foolish. Woburn didn't want to talk business; he wanted an opinion on  the

costume. Cranston said it looked excellent. 

"Maybe the costume does," conceded Woburn, "but I don't. I'm not  the sultan type. Still, with a mask it's all

right." Turning to a  mirror, he placed a domino mask across his eyes and decided that his  features were

improved. Then, removing the domino, he added: 

"Anyway, I'll rattle this scimitar of mine. That's something Helm  can't do with the tin sword that goes with

his cavalier costume. It  would fall apart." 

Then, quite as seriously as Helm, Woburn advised Cranston to get  over to Amon's and pick himself a

costume. Some good ones would surely  be available, but the earlier the choice, the better. 

Instead of going to Amon's, Cranston returned to the hotel. He  stopped at Clyde's room long enough to find

the reporter admiring  himself in a handsome harlequin costume. Clyde's grin proved that he  was catching the

Mardi Gras spirit. So Cranston continued to his own  room, where, in the gathering dusk, he donned his own

costume  that  masquerade that transformed him into his other self, The Shadow. 

ONE office in town was actually busy. It was the office of Gault  Consolidated. Two men were there, in an

inner office: Ferris Dane and  George Traymer. Dane was already grooming himself for vice president in

charge of coordination, and he was finding Traymer a valuable  assistant. 

Thumbing through reports of the three big companies, Dane put a  query to Traymer. 

"Since the foundry and the dyeworks have turned in their final  figures," said Dane, "why shouldn't the

chemical plant have done the  same?" 

"It has," replied Traymer. "That is, the plastic company did.  You'll find the figures up to the time when

Rexford took over." 

"But these figures aren't complete to the end of the fiscal year." 

"They will be as soon as the reorganization is finished. Rexford  has been very busy." 

Dane amended Traymer's statement with a "Humph." 


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"Busy at what?" demanded Dane. "Attending pink teas, like  yesterday's garden party? I could hardly find

time to go to Gault's for  dinner." 

Dane didn't add that he hadn't been invited to the garden party  that preceded the dinner. Traymer, who knew

the delicately balanced  rules of Industria's society, was wise enough to refrain from adding  that point. Dane

reverted to the report sheets. 

"Steel and dyes were making money," he remarked, "with plastics  just about breaking even. Well, I wish

Rexford luck with his synthetic  rubber. There's a limit on profits nowadays, so he shouldn't have much

trouble ringing the bell." 

Running through the sheets supplied by Helm and Woburn, Dane kept  muttering one word: "Taxes." He

shifted the reports closer to the  light, when his hunched shoulder threw a streak of darkness across the  sheets.

Dane was too engrossed to realize that the darkness promptly  faded farther than it should have. 

Dane's shoulder wasn't entirely to blame. A figure had arrived at a  halfopened door just behind Dane's desk.

A cloaked figure, its burning  eyes obscured by the brim of a slouch hat. Traymer, turning about, saw

blackness recede and thought of a strange living shape that had rescued  Dane that night on the foundry

platform. 

But when Traymer stared at the doorway, he failed to see The  Shadow's outlined form. Traymer's eyes

weren't strong, even with his  glasses. Still, he felt relieved when merely thinking of The Shadow's  possible

presence. He hadn't forgotten the mortality rate among vice  presidents of Gault Consolidated. Dane was

holding a jinx job, though  he wouldn't admit it. 

Just why it was a jinx job, Traymer did not know. He only hoped  Dane could find the reason. 

"Taxes and more taxes," repeated Dane. "Years of them, all bundled  into a lump sum. We'll have to break

down these figures some day, Lady.  When we do, I'm going to recommend that Industria drop the singletax

system." 

Traymer stared as though Dane had spoken heresy. 

"I mean it only for our own good," explained Dane. "Here's how the  thing would work. Each plant could be

charged a huge local tax rate and  the money would go to the community. We're the only city that operates  on

the singletax basis. So it would be quite legitimate, to gear  ourselves with the rest of the country. Why

should we list our own  money as excess profits?" 

Traymer didn't answer. He was grasping the idea. An excellent  thing, if Dane could swing it. In five or six

years, the town could  acquire a million dollars by the process. Such, at least, was Traymer's  estimate and he

was inclined to be conservative. 

"The jinx is off this job," chuckled Dane, referring to the hoodoo  for the first time. "I've settled it for keeps.

Put these sheets in the  safe, Lady. We've worked long enough, considering that this is a  holiday." 

It happened that they'd worked too long. The telephone bell was  ringing and when Dane answered the call, he

learned how late it was.  Diana Gault was on the wire, tartly reminding Dane that he was to be in  the parade

this evening. Very mollified, Dane accepted Diana's  reprimand and promised there would be no more delay. 

Hanging up, he turned to Traymer. 


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"Miss Gault is in a dither," expressed Dane, "and I don't blame  her. She called Amon and learned I hadn't

picked up my costume. We're  to go over there right away and get it. She'll call for us in the  limousine. We

can get your costume at the same time." 

Traymer shook his head. 

"I didn't intend to join the masquerade tonight," he said. "I felt  I would be needed here." 

"Suit yourself," returned Dane, "but you might as well pick a  costume and join the fun. But it doesn't matter,

so long as you don't  sulk like Rexford." 

Traymer's gaze showed inquiry. 

"Rexford hasn't stopped for his costume, either," laughed Dane.  "Either he doesn't want to be Prince Poverty,

or he's trying to worry  Diana. Well, if he wants to spoil the parade, let him!" 

Rising, Dane turned to the door from which The Shadow watched.  Solid blackness withdrew before Dane

arrived there, with Traymer close  behind him. But when the two left the building, the cloaked shape of  The

Shadow was close behind them, keeping to patchy darkness to remain  unseen. 

From facts that he had gleaned, The Shadow suspected that something  other than revelry might take place

during the coming Mardi Gras.  Death's holiday was in the making, the sort of holiday that Ferris Dane  had

taken, one that meant work instead of play. 

If such were true, Dane was again slated to be death's target. Once  more, it would be The Shadow's part to

intervene! 

CHAPTER VIII. THE COSTUME SHOP

AMON'S costume shop was the oldest building in Industria, located  on a forgotten street, with an empty lot

behind it. Vacant lots were  ordinarily taboo in Industria, as were old buildings. These eyesores  existed simply

because the ground belonged to the city and was intended  for a park. But Amon's business was so

helterskelter that he required  time to remove it. 

Dane and Traymer entered by a flight of old stone steps that were  badly off level and difficult to find in the

darkness. The front room  was big, and so poorly lighted that its walls scarcely showed the rows  of costumes

that lined them. The only bright spot was the counter near  the back of the room. 

Behind it sat Amon, a bluntfaced man with an overbalanced  forehead. He looked as though he'd started

business by simply sitting  on a stool and letting the building sprout around him. 

Squinting in the light, Amon made out the faces of Dane and Traymer  when they arrived. But he couldn't see

the gliding figure that trailed  them. Amon's shop was made to order for The Shadow. Once inside the  door, he

simply joined the row of costumes on the most convenient wall,  and became so motionless that he was in fact

invisible. 

"So, Mr. Dane!" greeted Amon in a guttural tone. "You have come for  the king's costume at last! The queen,

Miss Gault, was very angry when  she telephoned and found you had not been here." 

"There is still time," declared Dane. "That is, provided you  haven't lost the costume. I hope it didn't go out


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with any of your junk  upstairs." 

"This is not a junk shop," reproved Amon. "Upstairs, I have  scenery. Fine scenery, for the opera. With many

things that people have  forgotten, but will remember some day and want again." 

"You mean those nymph costumes you talk about?" 

"Yes, and the machinery that goes with them. My wood nymphs  disappear, Mr. Dane. And then, when they

are gone, they come back again  like magic! It is very wonderful. Some day, you shall see " 

It was Traymer who interrupted. He remarked that at present they  would like to see the costume that Dane

was to wear as King Progress.  Opening a little cupboard behind the counter, Amon promptly and proudly

produced the costume on a hanger. 

The regalia of King Progress was really magnificent. Its chief  component was a robe of purple satin and pure

white ermine,  extravagantly designed with great folds that hung like pleats. Under  the robe were knee

breeches and jacket, which Amon removed and handed  to Dane. While Dane was trying on the jacket, Amon

produced a square  box that contained a gilded crown and white wig, along with a purple  mask,

erminefringed. 

Dane wasn't overjoyed by the costume. 

"I'll look like a face card in this outfit," he grumbled. "Spades  are trump and I'm the king. Or am I?" 

He finished the query by tugging at the jacket. It came three  inches short of buckling across his chest. 

"What's the matter here?" demanded Dane. "Wasn't this costume made  to my measure?" 

"Try the robe," suggested Amon in a troubled tone. "If it fits, the  jacket won't matter." 

The robe proved quite as limited as the jacket. Dane hunched his  shoulders forward and tugged with full

force, but he couldn't get it  buckled. Finally he hurled the robe to the counter. 

"I order a costume," snapped Dane, "and you make me one of  Traymer's size. How did that happen, Amon?" 

"We took the measurements of the suit you sent us, Mr. Dane " 

"Because I was too busy to come here. But that still doesn't  explain it, unless"  Dane paused, reflectively 

"unless I sent you  one of my old suits by mistake. Anyway, this costume won't do. Haven't  you another?" 

Amon cocked his head wisely. 

"You might wear Mr. Rexford's. He's about your size." 

"But I'm not Prince Poverty!" 

"I don't mean the Poverty costume, Mr. Dane. He ordered a King  Progress costume, too." 

Dane stared a moment, then gave a chuckle. 


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"You mean Rexford thought he was going to be elected King Progress?  That's really funny! No wonder he's

sore because he's only Prince  Poverty in this parade!" 

BEFORE Amon could reply to Dane's outburst, Traymer offered an  explanation. Always tactful, Traymer

was seeking to ease the rivalry  between Dane and Rexford. 

"Rexford is your alternate," Traymer told Dane. "He simply followed  the usual procedure, when he ordered a

duplicate Progress costume. Of  course, it wasn't necessary, but if anything had happened to you, then  Rexford

Traymer stopped abruptly, gulping his tongue as though he wanted to  swallow it. Dane's face stiffened into

its hardest lines. 

"Then Rexford would have filled my place," supplied Dane. "Very  farsighted of him, I should say,

considering that something nearly did  happen to me at the foundry!" 

Traymer tried to finish his gulp. 

"I've had tough things happen," continued Dane. "Castings landing  on my ankle, and whatnot. But nobody

ever tried to murder me until the  other night. And now I find that if I had been murdered, the parade  could

still have gone on, with Rexford as King Progress." 

Since Traymer's tact had carried him nowhere, Amon supplied some.  Shrewdly, the squinty man turned to

another shelf and brought down a  large box. 

"Here is Mr. Rexford's costume," declared Amon. "Suppose you try it  on, Mr. Dane." 

Not only did the costume fit, it was even finer than the one that  Dane had ordered. Complete to wig and

crown, Dane strutted about in  grandiose style, then told Amon that he'd take Rexford's costume along  with

his own. 

Amon was willing to exchange one for the other, but Dane wouldn't  hear of it. He intended to show his

liberality by buying both. It would  be worth it, he said, as a triumph over Rexford. 

Traymer had a different thought. He was picturing how Rexford's  costume could be evidence in a case

against the man himself. Watching  from the costume rack, The Shadow could see the furrows in Traymer's

studious forehead, indicating the conclusion that he had reached. Dane  also noted Traymer's attitude,

whereupon Dane's own manner changed. 

"Get yourself a costume, Lady," suggested Dane. "One of those  courtier outfits over on the side rack. I'll give

you a free ride on  the royal float." 

Disposing of Traymer in somewhat jestful fashion, Dane was free to  talk to Amon. Though Dane used an

undertone, The Shadow's keen ears  could catch his words. 

"Let me know if Rexford fails to call for his Poverty costume,"  said Dane. "I wouldn't want him to spoil the

parade. Miss Gault  wouldn't like it." 

"I don't think that will happen, Mr. Dane," began Amon. "You see " 


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Amon had just finished a notation in a large, oldfashioned ledger  marking the sale of the duplicate King

Progress costume to Dane. He was  thumbing through the pages of the same book, when he stopped abruptly. 

Dane's query was sharp: "See what, Amon?" 

Old Amon merely shook his head in a forgetful style. But Dane  pressed home the query, this time with

amplifications. 

"You mean someone else will play Prince Poverty if Rexford balks?"  queried Dane. "That's logical enough. If

Rexford could fill my place,  somebody would have to step into his. Let me see that ledger, Amon." 

For reply, Amon clamped the big book shut and thrust it under his  arm. It was a timely move, for at that

moment, Traymer provided an  interruption in the form of a sharp cry. Dane looked toward the costume  rack

and demanded: 

"What's the matter, Lady?" 

"Nothing," replied Traymer, somewhat abashed. "I... well, I just  came across a costume that was too realistic.

It was like a huge black  bat hanging from the wall. I thought it moved, but I guess it just  swung when I

brushed it." 

Amon gave an odd squint. There wasn't any costume of the sort that  Traymer mentioned. But Amon was too

concerned with another matter to be  bothered with trifling mistakes. He was glad that Traymer had provided

a diversion. It gave Amon a chance to hide the ledger that Dane was too  anxious to examine. 

Going over to the rack, Dane found the courtier's costume. It was  some distance from the spot where Traymer

had encountered the bat  costume. That fact pleased The Shadow, because he happened to be the  costume in

question. Traymer's description of a mammoth bat clinging to  the wall wasn't far wrong, for in his black

cloak, The Shadow looked  the part, and he had drawn deep among the costumes when Traymer  approached. 

Amon had wrapped both King Progress costumes when Dane and Traymer  returned with the courtier outfit.

Silently, old Amon wrapped it, too,  finishing just as a horn honked outside the shop. Amon turned to a  shelf,

to bring down a box already packed. 

"This is Mr. Rexford's costume," explained Amon. "The one he will  wear as Prince Poverty. I'll take it out to

him " 

"Never mind, Amon," interrupted Dane. "That isn't Rexford's car. I  recognize the imperious blast of the Gault

limousine. It is summoning  Traymer and myself." 

HESITANTLY, Amon laid Rexford's package on the counter and followed  the others to the door. Peering

past them, he saw the Gault limousine,  with Diana peering from the window, waving for Dane to hurry.

Risking a  glance from the costume rack, The Shadow saw that Diana had a  companion: Margo Lane. 

Burdened with their bundles, Dane and Traymer were going out  through the door. They were quite visible,

for the sky was aglow with  brilliant lights from Industria's main streets, the special  illumination provided for

the Pageant of Progress. But those lights  didn't show the rough, uneven steps leading down from the costume

shop. 

"We'd better hurry," Traymer was telling Dane. "The parade lights  are already on." 


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"They always light them in advance," returned Dane across his  shoulder. "The parade doesn't begin until nine

o'clock, so we have  plenty of time. Watch out for these steps, Lady." 

Dane didn't follow his own advice. Looking back, he missed a step  as he spoke. With a wild stumble, he

landed in the darkness below the  steps, scattering packages as he fell. Traymer sprang out to help Dane  to his

feet, while Amon hurried along to pick up the packages. 

The Shadow heard a hearty groan from Dane. 

"It's my ankle," Dane was saying. "The bad one that the casting  injured. You'll have to help me in the car,

Traymer." 

"You'll need a doctor?" 

"If you can find one. Get me over to the office first. Diana can  drive up to the house and bring one of those

specialists who are  holding powwow about her uncle  if any of them know anything about  dislocated ankles.

Chances are they don't, so you can scout around town  for a local doctor who isn't at the parade." 

Diana and Margo were coming from the car to help Traymer lift Dane.  The chauffeur was taking the

packages, including those that Amon held.  Meanwhile, The Shadow was making an opportune glide from the

costume  rack to the space behind the counter. 

There, The Shadow picked up the telephone and, in the quiet tone of  Cranston, called the hotel. Getting Clyde

on the wire, he told the  reporter to come to the costume shop. Before The Shadow could give  further

instructions, Amon reappeared, coming around the end of the  counter. With amazing swiftness, The Shadow

placed the telephone aside  and shifted to a dark space beside the shelves. 

Amon didn't even look The Shadow's way. With hasty hands, the  costumer snatched the big ledger from

beneath some odd costumes. His  head cocked, he was listening to the Gault car drive away as he thumbed

through the pages. Finding the one he wanted, Amon tore it cleanly from  the ledger. 

Leaving the bound book beside the box containing Rexford's Prince  Poverty costume, Amon folded the loose

sheet and hurried from behind  the counter. Opening a door, he went up a pair of steep stairs to the  second

story. 

In his haste, Amon didn't bother to look behind him. Hence he  failed utterly to glimpse the shrouded form

that followed. If he had  looked, he might have believed that one of his own costumes had come to  life to trail

him; but since Amon didn't look back at the vital moment,  he completely lost all opportunity. 

Once blended with the darkness of those stairs, The Shadow was  utterly invisible. Silent as a ghost, the

cloaked master of darkness  was hard on the trail of a riddle that might spell crime's full answer. 

A riddle involving the page that Amon had torn from his ledger the  moment Ferris Dane was gone! 

CHAPTER IX. VANISHED VICTIMS

THE floor above the costume shop was much like a loft. It was  stocked not only with costumes, but the

scenery that Amon had  mentioned. Nor had Amon exaggerated when he declared that his loft held  forgotten

things that would some day be wanted. 


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Costumes and scenery belonged to the age of spectacles. They were  relics from operas and other huge stage

productions popular in the last  century. Even those that were too blemished to be used again were  valuable as

patterns, should anyone wish to reproduce those epics of  the past. 

There were stage properties, too, a maze of them, in the form of  tables, execution blocks, stands of imitation

marble, and other  contraptions galore. Picking his way through the jungle of junk, Amon  kept turning on

lights as he reached them, but the hanging bulbs were  too few to give more than a feeble view of this land of

fantasy. 

All the lights were controlled by a single switch that Amon had  pressed when he entered the loft, but he

preferred to operate the bulbs  independently, after turning on the main control. The reason was simple

enough: there were bulbs in every corner of the loft, and Amon saw no  use in wasting light, except in the

particular direction that happened  to suit him. 

Stopping in the blackness of the doorway, The Shadow stood beside a  low table and looked along Amon's

path. The costumer was at the rear  wall of the huge room, turning on a final light. Brighter than the  rest, that

bulb revealed a battered desk, a stove with an open grate,  and a gaudy tapestry that covered half the wall  a

stage prop that had  probably been used in some opera like "Madame Butterfly." 

The first thing that Amon did was tap the pocket where he had  stuffed the folded page of the ledger. Next, he

lifted the tapestry,  found a door behind it and made sure that the door was bolted. Dropping  the tapestry,

Amon crumpled some old newspapers, stuffed them into the  stove, and added a few sticks of wood. Striking a

match, he started the  fire and began to warm his hands in front of it. 

In the firelight's glow, Amon's face showed shrewdly. He brought  the ledger sheet from his pocket, unfolded

it and gave it a closerange  squint. His smile gleamed wider, as though he had uncovered a prize of

tremendous value. 

Perhaps he had. 

Tonight, Dane had made a very pointed remark within Amon's hearing,  a remark pertaining to attempted

murder and possible evidence of it.  Traymer had somewhat nullified Dane's view of what Rexford's duplicate

costume of King Progress might signify. 

But the mere suggestion had awakened some thought in Amon's mind,  something that also related to

costumes, otherwise the link would not  have formed so rapidly. That was why Amon prized a certain page in

the  old ledger. 

At present, Amon seemed to be debating the value of the telltale  sheet. He remembered Dane's liberality in

taking both the King Progress  costumes. Perhaps that was a sign that Dane would pay well for anything  he

wanted. But Amon's face also reflected doubt; probably he was  considering Dane's financial limits. 

All this while, The Shadow was gaining a better view of Amon's  changing features. 

Step by step, The Shadow was coming closer to the back wall of the  loft, along the very path that Amon had

taken. At no time, however, was  The Shadow in the open. Always, his cloaked shape kept something for a

background: strewn costumes, old pieces of scenery, or various stage  props belonging to this indoor junk

yard. 

The Shadow's pause took place at an open stretch of floor about six  feet from Amon's desk. The costumer had

evidently cleared this space to  serve as a private office. Had The Shadow advanced farther, he might  have


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roused Amon's attention. Despite the shrewd expressions that  altered his wrinkled face, Amon was in a very

skittish mood. 

Hence The Shadow waited; while he did, he prepared a surprise for  Amon. A gloved hand coming from The

Shadow's cloak brought out a tiny  rounded box instead of a gun. The box had two lids; removing them, The

Shadow peeled away his glove, as well. With his thumb, he took a dab of  ointment from one side of the box;

his second finger obtained a  different substance from the other half. 

His hand in readiness, The Shadow waited. He could allow Amon ten  minutes more to make up his mind

about the ledger sheet  the time that  Clyde Burke would require to arrive from the hotel. Whatever Amon's

part in crime, past or future, it was probably minor. 

Should Clyde arrive, The Shadow could step aside and let the  reporter confront Amon. Backed by The

Shadow, Clyde might be able to  talk Amon into making up his mind. It would be better than to have  recourse

to ghostly measures, which The Shadow preferred to reserve for  more important occasions. Clyde had made

out all right with Ellery  Gault, as far as he had gone. 

In Amon's case, The Shadow intended to see that Clyde was not  interrupted. 

Unfortunately, Amon himself was to have a hand in spoiling a plan  about which he knew nothing. 

JUST before the ten minutes were up, Amon lost his indecision. The  fire was burning busily by this time, and

its crackle commanded  attention. Perhaps the lure of the flames was the final element;  whatever the case,

Amon suddenly brought out the ledger page, crumpled  it, and stepped forward to fling it in the blaze. 

Blackness wheeled between Amon and the stove, cloaked blackness  that was The Shadow. Seeing the strange

shape swoop in upon him, Amon  recoiled clear to the desk. Dropping the crumpled paper, he lashed his  hand

into an open drawer and brought out a long, sharppointed knife. 

It was instinct on Amon's part. He thought he was seeing an unreal  creature. But Amon had dwelt so long

among dustcovered memories, that  imagination was his spurring motive. Perhaps his mental pictures had a

habit of coming to life; in that case, his scare was due purely to the  fact that an unwanted image had

appeared, to act in unexpected fashion. 

At any rate, Amon didn't quail. He flung himself toward The Shadow,  thrusting his knife as he came, only to

be stopped by something that  exceeded his imagination. 

It began with a longfingered hand that gestured from a mass of  blackness, finishing with a snap of thumb

and finger. The friction  united the two pastes, components of The Shadow's own favorite chemical  formula.

(Note: Because The Shadow's explosive powder used in this  instance is too dangerous for any but the most

experienced to use, we  do not reveal the nature of its formula, so that the inexperienced  might not attempt this

experiment and thereby suffer harm.  Maxwell  Grant.) A burst of flame scorched Amon's face; with it came

a report  that echoed like a cannon shot from the rafters of the old loft. 

Reeling away, Amon let his knife drop with a clatter and clutched  for the table. He missed it in his blind

stumble and almost impaled  himself upon an upright iron rod that projected from the floor, a dozen  feet

distant. Gripping the rod, Amon brought himself shakily to his  feet, blinking in The Shadow's direction. 

Amon's dazzled eyes saw huge black spots, but they didn't drift.  They were segments of The Shadow,

connecting themselves to gradually  form a solid shape. To let Amon know that this was no illusion, The

Shadow delivered a weird laugh, the lowtoned sort that could turn  surprise into horror. 


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Reverberating mirth produced a remarkable effect upon Amon. Still  blinking, the costumer gave the same

reflective smile that he had shown  when he discussed stagecraft with Dane. The business of disappearing

wood nymphs and similar marvels of the opera had suddenly come back to  Amon's mind. 

The Shadow saw Amon's facial flicker and noted the change that  followed it. From a smile, Amon's face

contorted into the wince of  terror that The Shadow anticipated. Amon was something of an actor, as  well as a

backstage man. His faked horror actually fooled The Shadow  for a few seconds. 

Those few seconds were enough. 

Amon's shrink was quite in keeping with his wince. The fact that he  clutched the metal rod more tightly was

also in keeping with the  situation. But when the big rod yielded in the fashion of a lever, it  proved that the

unexpected was due. 

The Shadow made a forward lunge  too late. 

Actuated by the lever, the floor parted in slithery style. Each  half of a finely built trapdoor whisked from

beneath The Shadow's feet.  Though The Shadow could do many wonderful things, walking on air wasn't  one

of them. 

The cloaked invader went into a rapid backward whirl that  somersaulted him through the open floor. He

made a grab at the edge,  but it was out of reach. Below, he saw the yawning blackness of a pit  that was

certainly as deep as the basement, which meant thirty feet.  Hanging ropes were dangling down the sides of

the hole and The Shadow  grabbed at them, gaining a passing clutch that slightly delayed his  plunge. 

But the last rope  or the thing that looked like it  was a metal  pole, one of four that marked the corners of

the shaft. The Shadow's  head jarred the pole so forcibly that his grip weakened with his  senses. Hands and

arms half tangled with the thin metal pole, The  Shadow became a human whirligig that finally spun free and

landed with  a stunning crash at the bottom of the pit. 

The blackness that engulfed The Shadow was more than mental. It  began before he finished his sliding

plunge. Amon had released the  lever to let the floor slide back in place, which it did, rapidly and  smoothly. 

Scurrying forward in crablike fashion, Amon snatched up the ledger  sheet from what had been the brink of

the pit. His laugh was as crackly  as the fire into which he tossed the crumpled paper. He kept laughing  as he

watched the incriminating page burn. At least, The Shadow had  made up Amon's mind. 

Stepping away from the stove, Amon didn't bother to test the floor  through which The Shadow had

disappeared. He knew the trap was solid,  for he'd made it that way. Such mechanics were Amon's pride. He

kept  this loft the way it was because it reminded him of his early  environment  the backstage of a mammoth

opera house. Only when  stagecraft dwindled to oblivion had Amon gone into the costume  business. 

Amon had always hoped to use that trap in startling fashion. He'd  succeeded beyond his ordinary ambitions.

The discordant note to his  cackle proved he didn't care what had happened to an interloper known  as The

Shadow. Indeed, it indicated that the worse the result, from The  Shadow's standpoint, the better Amon would

appreciate it. 

Murder didn't worry Amon. He didn't believe that ghosts could rise  to accuse him of such crime. At least he

thought he didn't, until he  heard a footfall from the lighted pathway leading from the stairs.  Frantically, he

made a grab for his lost knife, only to hear a cold  voice tell him: 


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"Stay where you are, Amon, if you want to live!" 

PEERING weakly across his shoulder, Amon expected to see the  returned form of The Shadow. Instead, he

viewed a masked man clad in a  fantastic array of rags and tatters. Amon knew the costume, though he

couldn't recognize the person in it. 

This new intruder was wearing the masquerade of Prince Poverty, the  role that Rexford was to play! 

Though he had left such a costume downstairs, expecting Rexford to  call and pick it up, Amon took nothing

for granted. He squinted hard at  the masked face, then recoiled at sight of a glinting revolver that  Prince

Poverty pointed his way. 

"There is a page missing from your ledger, Amon," spoke the  masquerader, advancing with the gun. "What

became of it?" 

"Nothing!" blurted the costumer. Though still on the retreat, he  squinted shrewdly. "There was someone who

wanted it, but I wouldn't let  him have it. He went away " 

"I want that page!" 

"But I burned it," argued Amon. "Look, you can see the ashes in the  stove. I knew you'd want me to burn it." 

"Were you sure, Amon?" 

Prince Poverty put the query just as he reached the center of the  trapdoor. At that moment, Amon was

gesturing toward the stove with one  hand, reaching for the lever with the other. Having already tricked The

Shadow, Amon thought he could deal similarly with this new masquerader. 

It wasn't the murder in Amon's mind that gave him away. It happened  that Prince Poverty, in his final query,

forgot to disguise his normal  tone. Instantly, Amon knew whose face was behind the mask. Despite  himself,

Amon's own face gleamed recognition. 

Instantly, the pointing revolver stabbed. 

Straight to Amon's heart went three bullets, as fast as Prince  Poverty could pump them. Staggering, Amon

pitched forward, plucking at  the lever as he sprawled. 

Those final, futile twitches of Amon's hands impressed the  masquerading murderer. Stepping across the

costumer's body, Prince  Poverty pulled the lever. Seeing the floor spread wide, he showed the  same impulse

as with the revolver shots. Gripping Amon's body beneath  the shoulders, the murderer spilled it forward

while the halves of the  trapdoor were poised like yawning jaws. 

Sped by its own dead weight, the body tumbled between the sliding  sections just before they clapped shut.

Stepping forward, Prince  Poverty found the floor as solid as before. A smile was curling the  lips beneath the

mask as the disguised killer retraced his path through  the old scenery. 

Reaching the door, the masked murderer pressed the light switch  that blanketed the entire loft in darkness.

For a minute, all was  silent, then faint creaks occurred. They seemed to travel back through  the loft, to be

followed by a rustling sound that ended in a thump, as  if a door had closed. 


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After that, all was still in this place where two victims had so  suddenly vanished. Only the occasional crackle

of the fire came as a  disturbing element. The same flames that had devoured the evidence from  Amon's

ledger seemed to gloat over the retribution they had witnessed. 

Strange retribution, wherein Amon, slain by an unknown murderer,  had gone to join the very victim that he

had pitched into the pit: The  Shadow! 

CHAPTER X. PROGRESS AND POVERTY

THE steps up to Amon's costume shop were a real hazard in the dark.  Clyde Burke found it so when he

stumbled over them. However, the fault  was partly Clyde's, for he was in too much hurry, trying to make up

for  time he'd lost coming from the hotel. 

The trip had taken double the ten minutes that it should have.  Traffic was jammed along the principal streets

of Industria, because  people from miles around had come to town to see the pageant. Clyde's  cab had been

forced to make detours at a snail's pace. 

In a way, Clyde's stumble was fortunate. It placed his chin right  on the level of the door sill; otherwise, he

wouldn't have gained a  long view of the stairway leading to the loft. Because of the peculiar  angle, Clyde saw

something happen at the stair top. 

What seemed to be solid darkness was suddenly changed to a dull  glow of light. Someone was upstairs taking

a look around. Just who it  was, Clyde didn't know, but he suspected it wasn't The Shadow  whose  own

measures of looking around usually involved a tinybeamed  flashlight rather than a flood of illumination. 

Quite as suddenly, the lights went off. By then, Clyde was on his  feet in the midst of Amon's shop. He knew,

too, that the person  upstairs wasn't The Shadow, for the footsteps that were starting down  came heavily and in

rather blundering fashion. 

Looking for a place to step out of sight, Clyde saw the costume  rack. It was made to his order, because he

was wearing one of Amon's  costumes, the harlequin outfit that The Shadow had hired for him.  Though Clyde

didn't know it, he was copying The Shadow's own process,  when he stepped to the rack and stood there like

something hanging on a  hook. 

Footsteps were steadier when they reached the bottom of the stairs.  Though the shop was dim, Clyde

recognized the arrival. The man from  upstairs was Roy Rexford; he was carrying a costume that looked like a

batch of rags, and the odd thing was that Rexford was smoothing the  costume as though he thought its looks

could be improved. 

Crossing to the counter, Rexford carefully placed the ragged  costume in an open box that was lying there.

When he put the cover on  the box, the action disclosed a large bound ledger that was lying  beneath the box

top. Rexford paid no attention to the book; he simply  tucked the package under his arm and went out by the

front door. 

On arriving here, Clyde had noted a car parked out front. It proved  to be Rexford's, for the sleekhaired man

entered it and drove away. As  soon as Rexford was gone, Clyde decided to go upstairs himself. There  was

just enough light from below to guide him to the top, and when he  reached the loft, Clyde immediately found

the light switch. 

A simple click produced the same effect that Clyde had witnessed  from below. A whole string of lights


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appeared, forming a pathway  through scenery and props that Clyde immediately classed as junk. The  only

item that seemed of any account was a fancy tapestry that hung  from the rear wall, near a battered desk. 

Rexford couldn't have gone to that far wall while Clyde was  watching from below, because it was a long trip

there and back. Seeking  an explanation for Rexford's brief use of the lights, Clyde saw a table  just within the

stairway door. He decided that Rexford could have  picked up the tattered costume from that table. Maybe he

had been  trying it on, for across from the table was a fairsized mirror. 

Still, Rexford hadn't been wearing the costume when he came  downstairs. That meant he might have taken it

off in the dark. 

Such speculation was rather futile. Clyde's job was to find The  Shadow; to learn why his chief had so

abruptly summoned him. But there  was no sign of The Shadow, Cranston, or anybody else anywhere in the

widespread loft. Therefore, Clyde became convinced that his delayed  trip had changed the situation. The

Shadow must have left without  waiting for his arrival. 

There was much more to that than Clyde realized, as he turned out  the lights and made his way downstairs.

Reaching the street, he looked  for some answer to his problem and saw one. 

Lights were gleaming from an office building only a block away.  Those lights represented the offices of

Gault Consolidated. Possibly  The Shadow had dropped in there, as Cranston, to have a chat with  Ferris Dane. 

Starting for the Gault building, Clyde was pleased with his own  policy. If anybody could be blamed for

Clyde's present unpopularity,  Rexford was the man, because it was Rexford who had practically pitched

Clyde out of the Gault mansion. 

Dane was quite the opposite of Rexford. It was Dane who had stepped  to Clyde's aid, saving Cranston the

necessity of intervention. Since  Dane didn't particularly like Rexford, it was obvious that he would not  be

prejudiced against Clyde. Thus a visit to Dane's new headquarters  could hardly bring Clyde any trouble. 

EFFICIENCY was paramount in Industria. The elevator in the Gault  building was of the automatic type, and

Clyde operated it personally in  reaching Dane's floor. He knocked at the door, heard a voice say to  enter. So

Clyde entered and found Dane. 

In pained fashion, Dane was limping about the office, leaning his  weight against desks and chairs. He finally

settled in one chair,  raised his leg and placed it on another. From the way he winced, it was  plain that he had

suffered more than a slight injury. 

Clyde inquired the trouble. 

"It's my trick ankle," complained Dane. "I tripped coming down  Amon's steps. Traymer is looking for a local

doctor and Miss Gault is  trying to get one of the specialists up at the house." 

"The specialists?" inquired Clyde. 

Dane gave a pained smile. 

"You should ask," said Dane. "It's because of you they brought the  specialists there. Poor old Gault! They

thought he'd gotten over the  penny craze, until they found you in his counting room." 

"But Gault was penny mad the night before " 


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"Not as mad as when you saw him," interposed Dane. "He's never  handed pennies to anybody until you came

along. The psychiatrists they  imported call it a new complex, but between you and me, their opinions  aren't

worth much. If there was one real doctor in the whole carload,  he'd be down here looking at my ankle." 

Just then the door opened and Traymer hurried in, accompanied by a  local physician, who promptly

proceeded to examine Dane's ankle. When  the doctor pressed the swelling, Dane gave a suppressed groan,

then  tightened his lips and inquired: 

"Is it dislocated, doc?" 

"I don't think so," replied the physician. "It is more like a bad  sprain. Aggravated, no doubt, by your previous

injury. Have you tried  to walk on it?" 

"Only a little." 

"A little might be too much. I should advise you to stay off this  foot for at least a week." 

Traymer began a protest. 

"But the pageant tonight!" he exclaimed. "Mr. Dane is supposed to  play the principal part " 

"Don't worry the doctor," interrupted Dane. "We can settle that  question ourselves. Right now, I hear the

elevator, so wait a minute,  doc, before you put on the bandage. I want some of those New York  specialists to

know what a sprained ankle looks like." 

Dane turned a grin toward Traymer, but his expression sobered when  it reached Clyde. Hastily, Dane waved

the reporter toward the door. 

"Better get scarce, Burke," said Dane. "If Miss Gault sees you, she  won't like it. As for you, Lady"  this was

to Traymer  "I want you to  keep Miss Gault occupied while the doctors are here. Don't let her know  my

ankle is really bad, or she'll suggest that Rexford take my place in  the pageant as King Progress." 

Following Dane's advice, Clyde departed the office and was around  the corner when the elevator stopped. He

saw Diana and Margo step from  the elevator, followed by a pair of the specialists that Dane had  mentioned.

Traymer came from the office to hold the girls in  conversation while the physicians joined the ankle

consultation. Seeing  a handy flight of stairs, Clyde used them to reach the street. 

There didn't seem much use in phoning for a cab from the phone  booth in the building lobby. With traffic as

it was, Clyde decided to  walk back to the hotel. He quickened his pace when he looked back and  saw Diana

and Margo coming from the building. Clyde wasn't anxious to  have another encounter with the fiery Miss

Gault. 

The girls entered the limousine, and it sped them away along a side  street to avoid the city traffic. Obviously,

it was taking them to the  starting point of the parade, and would return later to pick up the  doctors. How Dane

would manage with his bad ankle, was a problem in  itself. It might handicap him seriously as King Progress,

unless there  would be very little footwork necessary. 

However, that was Dane's problem. 

Clyde's job was to contact The Shadow. Having missed him at the  costume shop, he decided to try the hotel.

Arriving there, the reporter  phoned his own room and Cranston's, but to no avail. 


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Looking about the lobby, Clyde saw throngs of people, mostly in  costume, for all here, bystanders as well as

paraders, were joining in  this evening of carnival. 

It struck Clyde suddenly that The Shadow might have decided to  forego his black garb and wear some

masquerade. A sensible theory,  considering that The Shadow had visited the costume shop. So Clyde  entered

the swirl of masqueraders, studying what little he could see of  their masked faces. The throng carried him in

the direction of the  hotel's most popular spot, the taproom. 

THE taproom clock showed nine. A stentorian voice announced, by  loudspeaker, that the parade was

starting. Immediately, people  finished their drinks, put on their masks, and hurried from the place.  Clyde

found himself staring at one lone customer who remained, a figure  in fanciful rags and tatters. 

The man was Prince Poverty, otherwise Roy Rexford. His mask hanging  from his neck, Rexford was standing

at the bar calling for another  double whiskey. Clyde saw the bartender stare askance, whereupon  Rexford

uttered: 

"Don't worry about me. I know my part in this parade, and I'll play  it just as far as I like, and no further!

Understand?" 

Rexford's tone sounded firm and sober. He was in a mood that  nullified the effect of the drinks he had stowed

away. The bartender  nodded, but politely reminded Rexford that it was nine o'clock. 

"I know it," snapped Rexford. "But Prince Poverty doesn't have to  do his act until the parade reaches the

reviewing stand. And after  that, he's finished... if he wants to be. So keep the belt line moving  on the

whiskey. I'll do my stuff between drinks." 

Distant music announced the approach of the parade. Clyde hurried  out to intercept the floats before they

reach the reviewing stand. He  wanted to see the act that Rexford intended to do. Taking a short cut  in back of

the reviewing stand, Clyde suddenly sighted the parade. 

On the largest float of all Clyde saw King Progress and Queen  Industry, surrounded by courtiers and ladies in

waiting. Since the king  and queen were seated on thrones, the part wasn't too difficult for  Dane, even with his

bad ankle; though Clyde noted that Diana Gault,  masked as Queen Industry, was showing considerable

concern for her  royal consort. 

Clyde wondered how Rexford would like it when he saw Diana worrying  over Dane. The thing to do was

watch and learn. Strife between Progress  and Poverty, as represented by a magnificent king and a tattered

prince, threatened to mark the climax of a personal grudge. 

There was no need to analyze the possible outcome. Clyde was  leaving that to The Shadow, confident that his

unseen chief would be in  the thick of things. 

The Shadow was definitely in the thick of something. 

Still in the pit where Amon had dropped him, The Shadow was lying  in thick blackness, which covered him

more like a coffin than a shroud.  The world had forgotten The Shadow and he had forgotten it. 

And the world included the city of Industria, where amid the spirit  of carnival death's masquerade was in the

making, promising more than a  sham result in the annual duel between King Progress and Prince  Poverty! 


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Whatever The Shadow knew or suspected, there was nothing he could  do to offset it, on this occasion when

gaiety and music offered cover  for a stroke of death! 

CHAPTER XI. MURDER UNMASKED

THE royal float had reached the reviewing stand, located in a large  square near the hotel. In the stand were

the judges, passing on the  merits of the various floats, but they laid their notebooks aside and  rose to salute

the royal float. 

The judges were not in costume, unless evening clothes could be  termed such. Nor were they masked, these

elderly and respected citizens  of Industria. They formed a dignified group, though one important face  was

missing  that of old Ellery Gault. 

Absence of the town's most prominent citizen was almost as serious  as a rainstorm, where the success of the

pageant was concerned; but the  human element was something that could be altered at will. Of a sudden,  a

murmur sounded among the masked throng that watched the parade from  across the square. It carried to the

reviewing stand, to be picked up  by the masqueraders who were banked in tiers above the judges. 

The stand quivered as people came to their feet, craning forward,  even removing their masks to see better

what was happening below. A  loud cheer suddenly roared throughout the square. Pushing his way among  the

judges was old Ellery Gault himself! 

His white hair flowing, Gault received the handclasps of the  judges; scanning their faces, he saw their

surprised expressions.  Shouting in their ears, Gault told them how he happened to be here.  Amid the tumult,

only snatches of his shouted statement were audible. 

He was saying something about doctors. "Fool doctors," Gault termed  them, though he used a few adjectives

to embellish the word "fool."  They'd told him to stay home and count his pennies, instead of  attending the

parade. But when two of the specialists had been summoned  on an emergency case, Gault had given the rest

the slip. 

He wanted to see the parade. He wanted to be with his friends, the  judges. He hadn't forgotten them; as proof,

he handed each a nice  bright penny. Thanking Gault for his liberality, the judges gestured  toward the royal

float. With a nod, Gault forgot his pennies and beamed  happily at the gorgeous tableau that approached. 

King Progress, in his thickly pleated robe and ermine mask, was  seated proudly on a throne that matched the

gilded crown that topped  his ample wig. Beside him, Queen Industry occupied a similar throne;  her costume,

too, was purple trimmed with ermine, but her mask was  daintier, her crown smaller. 

People knew King Progress as Ferris Dane only because the program  called for Dane to play the part. But

Queen Industry was obviously  Diana Gault, because much of her face was visible and she hadn't hidden  her

gorgeous red hair under an oldfashioned wig. 

Grouped about the king and queen were courtiers and ladies in  waiting. Among the latter was Margo Lane, in

suitable costume. She was  a late addition to the float, but there was another passenger who had  almost missed

it. He was an extra courtier, perched on a lookout  pedestal behind the throne. 

Ferris Dane had delegated George Traymer to that post as a  lastminute novelty. The pedestal lacking a

ladder, it had simply been  lowered to the float so its occupant could perch upon it. Then half a  dozen

courtiers had hoisted the lightweight pedestal in place,  occupant and all. 


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It was too bad that The Shadow hadn't been around to witness that  proceeding. He might have credited

Traymer with a new supply of nerve  that wasn't in his system that night he hesitated on the ladder to the

foundry deck. Or The Shadow might have come to some conclusion  typically his own. 

However, in the present commotion, the lookout was forgotten along  with the others on the royal float. The

only person who didn't grasp  the situation was Diana Gault. Forgetting the dignity of Queen  Industry, she

turned to King Progress and tugged his erminedecorated  sleeve. 

"What's happening, Ferris?" queried Diana. "People usually applaud  the royal float, but never so wildly as

this." 

Retaining his dignity, King Progress gestured his glided scepter  toward the reviewing stand. Diana's gaze

followed; she exclaimed in a  startled gasp: 

"Uncle Ellery!" 

Queen Industry would have left her throne and jumped from the  moving float, if King Progress hadn't halted

her. Then, as Diana  subsided, her qualms faded. Her uncle, for the moment, had become his  sane self. The

cheers of the crowd brought dignity to his keen face. A  smile showed beneath his white mustache, and in

imposing style, Gault  gestured toward the royal float and began applauding on his own. 

The crowd understood. Gault wanted them to forget him and cheer the  parade; so they did. 

Clyde Burke saw all this from near the reviewing stand. He wondered  briefly why such men as Helm and

Woburn weren't among the judges; then  he realized that they were too active to belong to the group of

oldtimers. Thoughts of Helm and Woburn brought Clyde's mind to  Rexford, and produced a new and timely

proposition. 

If Rexford planned to queer the parade by not appearing as Prince  Poverty, he would lose caste forever in

Industria. It would be bad  enough ordinarily, but since old Gault had shaken himself free from the  tribe of

doctors just to put in an appearance, Rexford would be a piker  indeed if he failed to play his part. 

Clyde actually felt sorry for Rexford and hoped the fellow had left  the hotel bar in time to get here. But it

didn't seem that way, because  the royal float was almost past the judges. Then to Clyde's genuine  relief, there

was a stir in the crowd near the reviewing stand and  Rexford pushed through. 

IT was Rexford, all right. He was in costume, but he hadn't yet put  on his mask, because it handicapped him

in finding his way through the  bystanders. The crowd spread, then squeezed together, and Rexford was

popped like a bottle cork toward the royal float. Turning hastily, he  faced Clyde's way while he put on his

mask. Then, completely Prince  Poverty, Rexford strode toward the float. 

Immediately, the show began. 

Ladies in waiting shrieked and cringed as the tattered terror  bounded among them. This was the usual act:

Poverty creating  consternation in the court of Progress. Courtiers sprang forward,  drawing imitation swords,

but Prince Poverty brushed them roughly  aside. All was feverish commotion on the float, while the

witnessing  crowd howled its approval. 

Having plunged himself into the act, Rexford did it in style.  Courtiers took real sprawls as the fanciful

scarecrow flung them from  his path. Seeing the lookout on the pedestal behind the throne, Rexford  started to

scale the summit, turning Dane's innovation to his own  benefit. 


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The tower, a mere frame covered with papiermache, threatened to  collapse, and its occupant made warning

gestures quite violent for  Traymer to display. 

Courtiers dragged Prince Poverty back and steered him on his proper  route toward the throne of Queen

Industry. Rexford remembered his part;  as Prince Poverty he was supposed to seize Queen Industry, which he

did, in a fashion more realistic than specified. 

Diana gasped, then set her lips firmly as Rexford literally hauled  her from the throne. Through his mask, he

glared a challenge at King  Progress, who stared blankly. Dane certainly couldn't have expected  Rexford to

overdo the pantomime to this extent. 

Rexford was on an edge as ragged as his costume. So far, he had  literally stolen the show before the

approving gaze of Ellery Gault,  the biggest man in Industria. But if he actually carried Queen Industry  away

as prisoner, Prince Poverty would be exceeding the limits of  propriety. 

Still, there was an angle to it that might have stirred Rexford's  bucolic mind. Too much zeal on the part of

Prince Poverty would point  to a lack of that quality in King Progress. In playing the buffoon,  Rexford was

throwing the burden on Dane, whose business it was to  prevent such foolery. 

Courtiers rallied and wrenched Diana from Rexford's grasp. They  shoved the obnoxious figure of Prince

Poverty into the lap of King  Progress, who raised his scepter when his rival made a grab for it. At  that

moment, Clyde Burke wouldn't have been surprised to see the  scepter turn into a cudgel. Nor would he have

blamed Dane for cracking  such a bludgeon over Rexford's head. 

But King Progress didn't swing. He warded with his other hand,  brushing Prince Poverty aside just far

enough for the tattered clown to  stumble from beside the throne and flatten on the float. The crowd  liked it,

this representation of Progress banishing Poverty and saving  Industry. 

Still, the acclaim was for Rexford rather than Dane, for the sprawl  looked intended. Only Clyde had counted

the drinks that Rexford took  before the pageant and recognized the effect as something of their  origin. 

In trying to shake off the courtiers who dragged him to his feet,  Rexford reeled the wrong direction and

tumbled from the float itself.  Coming to his feet, he staggered in a semicircle while the float rolled  on ahead.

Finding the crowd instead of the parade, Rexford clutched at  people all about him and was swallowed in the

mass. 

Great cheers arose for Prince Poverty. The crowd wanted Rexford to  return and repeat the act, the best that

any knave of rags and tatters  had ever demonstrated in the history of Industria's pageantry. 

Unless the experience had somewhat sobered Rexford, Clyde doubted  that the prince would reappear. If

Rexford did sober, he'd have another  reason for ignoring the parade. The royal float had turned a corner,

leading past the hotel, and was where Ellery Gault couldn't see it.  Rexford would have nothing to gain by

merely playing to the mob that  banked the farther route of the parade. 

However, shouts were coming for Prince Poverty, and the tumult  traveled ahead of the parade. Pushing along

to see what might happen,  Clyde saw the crowd open wide. Again, Prince Poverty reeled into sight,  this time

with a novelty to please the populace. 

The tattered buffoon was carrying an oldfashioned flagon that he  could have picked up in the hotel bar, for

he came from that direction.  The thing looked like an oversized pewter mug and it was full of wine  that kept

splashing from the brim. Mounting the passing float, the  prince waved the courtiers back and approached the


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throne of King  Progress in humble, bowing style. 

The abject manner was disarming. King Progress bowed and received  the flagon from his penitent subject.

Raising the huge mug, the king  was about to drink, when he realized it wouldn't be in character to  accept

anything from the hands of Poverty. 

With a toss, King Progress sent the wine at Prince Poverty, who  dived away to avoid it. Again, his haste

carried the tattered rogue  clear past the float edge, but despite his mask he saw the brink in  time to avoid a

bad fall. 

Now it was King Progress who was gaining the acclaim. Bowing  profoundly, he placed the nearly emptied

flagon beside his throne. 

IT was only logical that Rexford would seek a last meeting with  Dane, considering that the flagon stunt had

proved a dud. Still  trailing the parade, Clyde saw Prince Poverty appear a block farther  on, near the end of the

route. Rexford must have shown speed to  overtake the float, for the sidewalks were so packed that detours

through alleys were necessary. 

Furthermore, Prince Poverty arrived from the other side of the  street when he boarded the float,

emptyhanded, and approached King  Progress with somewhat scheming manner. Close to the king's ear, the

prince went through a whispering pantomime, with side gestures toward  Queen Industry. 

Dipping his hand into his tattered costume, Prince Poverty brought  out boxes containing tawdry imitation

jewels, which King Progress flung  aside as fast as he received them. 

There was to be a final gift. Prince Poverty was reaching for it  while whispering anew in the ear of King

Progress. They were close  together, the tatters of Poverty mingling with the ermine of Progress. 

Then, suddenly, Prince Poverty drew away. Apparently, King Progress  would accept no gift, for the royal

hand swung from a raised position  into an outward fling that seemed a token of dismissal. Head bowed,

hands twitching, Prince Poverty made a slink to the edge of the float  and left it. 

The parade was at the finish line. Diana beckoned to the courtiers  and they crowded around the throne of

King Progress. The finale was to  be a procession from the float into an auditorium, where a reception  was

scheduled. Diana remembered that Dane must be handicapped in such a  march. 

"Help Ferris to his feet," she whispered to the courtiers.  "Remember, he has a very bad ankle " 

Already offering assistance to King Progress, the courtiers did not  hear him complain personally about his

ankle. In fact, he didn't  complain about anything. His ankle didn't bother him in the least. The  real trouble

was that King Progress had a very bad heart. 

Like a mass of lead, he slid from the hands that lifted him and  rolled heavily forward from the throne.

Clutches coming unequally, King  Progress turned as he fell and landed face upward with a jolt that  shook the

float platform. 

Diana saw a dark stain spreading across the kingly robe and thought  it was wine from the discarded flagon,

until the blot crept from purple  satin to white ermine, where it became a deep crimson. At that moment,

Diana screamed. 


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Two of the courtiers stooped to learn the cause. One lifted a broad  fold of the purple robe; the other pointed

in horror to the object that  the oversized pleat had hitherto concealed. 

The object was the handle of a knife, with just enough glitter  below its hilt to prove that the blade itself had

been driven straight  to the victim's heart. King Progress lay slain, finally conquered by  Prince Poverty in a

duel that had begun as sham and ended in stark  realism. 

A man in harlequin costume pulled his mask away as he reached the  float. Recognizing Clyde Burke, a lady

in waiting unmasked and clutched  the reporter's arm. The girl was Margo Lane. Tensely, she breathed the

news that Clyde expected. 

"Dane is dead!" spoke Margo, "A knife in his heart!" 

"Put there by Rexford," said Clyde grimly. "I should have known it  at the time it happened!" 

There were other things that Margo and Clyde should have known:  facts that would belie even their present

suppositions  as they were  to learn very soon. 

But the only person who could have known the whole truth was The  Shadow, had he been present to view all

that occurred. Only the hand of  The Shadow could have saved King Progress. 

And a grim question still existed: whether the hand of The Shadow,  like that which so recently had clutched a

royal scepter, would ever  move again! 

CHAPTER XII. MISGUIDED VENGEANCE

STUNNED by the grim sight of death, the men on the float drew back  from the motionless figure of King

Progress. It was natural to recoil,  because when they did, men saw the body as a thing in costume and mask,

rather than a human shape so lately active like themselves. 

Reaching the horrorstricken circle, Clyde Burke leaned over the  body and looked at the deepburied knife.

But it didn't occur to him to  remove the mask. Like other witnesses, Clyde was beginning to hope that  this

murder was too grotesque to be real; that the dead form of King  Progress might be simply a play figure, some

part of a travesty staged  by Prince Poverty. 

Such hope was futile. Roy Rexford had been real enough as Prince  Poverty. This motionless figure on the

royal float must certainly be  Ferris Dane, attired as King Progress. 

Sudden sounds from above brought Clyde to his feet. The high tower  behind the throne was swaying; from its

perch, the courtier who served  as lookout was sliding, almost falling. Others came to their senses and  turned

to break his tumble. Coming into their arms, the man from the  tower stumbled toward the dead figure of King

Progress. He stooped to  look at the murderous knife projecting from the victim's heart. 

To see the weapon better, this new arrival whipped off his mask.  Then, realizing that death had actually been

done, he lifted his  unmasked face and stared aghast at the people surrounding him. 

They stared back, their own faces spread with an amazement that  even masks couldn't hide. 

In a trice, murder had seemingly been undone. 


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The man who stared from beside dead King Progress. The lookout who  had been atop the tower during the

entire ride was the very person they  supposed to be the victim: Ferris Dane! 

Then who was the dead man? 

Dane himself supplied the answer when he solemnly removed the  victim's mask. At first, the dead face wasn't

easy to recognize,  because it lacked the glasses that it usually wore. 

The dead man was George Traymer! 

To listeners, Dane began an explanation, that was very obvious to  Clyde. Similarly, Margo and Diana could

quickly grasp it as soon as  they learned that Dane's ankle injury was more serious than he had let  them know. 

Behind it, however, was that same rivalry between Dane and Rexford.  Only, in Dane's case, it involved

nothing more than a desire to hold  his place in the parade, whereas Rexford's attitude was tainted with  the

insidious crime of murder. 

"The doctors told me to stay off my foot entirely," brooded Dane.  "That meant I'd have to give up being King

Progress, turning over the  role to Rexford, of all people!" 

"But Roy was your alternate," began Diana. "You should have called  him " 

"And where would I have found him?" demanded Dane. "He was still  overdue at Amon's when we left there;

remember? Anyway, I phoned Amon  before the doctors left, but I didn't get an answer." 

Dane paused to survey Traymer's body, sadly. 

"Poor Lady," he mused. "It was his idea. He said he'd play the part  of King Progress during the parade and

through the procession. When the  reception began, I was to take his place." Dane gestured to the  auditorium.

"A few limps were all I'd have needed to reach the throne  in the reception hall. Of course, I was first to put on

the other  costume " 

Diana gave a quick interruption: 

"What other costume?" 

Dane gestured to the tower on which the courtiers had earlier  perched him, thinking he was Traymer. One of

the courtiers brought down  a sizable sofa pillow that Dane had been using as a cushion. Opened,  the pillow

disgorged a complete King Progress costume in duplicate.  There was a square box on the pedestal, too. It

contained the other wig  and crown. 

Understanding showed on Diana's face. 

"This must belong to Roy Rexford," the girl said slowly. "I'd  almost forgotten that he ordered a king's

costume, too, just in case he  might have to play the part. It was customary, of course " 

"Of course," agreed Dane, as Diana hesitated. "It's lucky Rexford  did order one, because mine didn't fit. Or I

should say 'unlucky'"   Dane's strong face went solemn  "because my costume did fit Traymer.  Poor chap,

he took the knife that was meant for me." 


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Clyde couldn't doubt that Dane's grief was genuine. Nevertheless,  the question of luck, good or ill, was

debatable. Quite certainly, Dane  was alive, whereas Traymer wasn't. 

MURDER having been done, the question was to find the killer. It  was Clyde who expressed that point

impersonally, when he gestured  toward Traymer's body and asked the group around him: 

"Did any of you see the actual knife thrust?" 

None had, but Diana, sensing much from Clyde's tone, took it that  he was accusing Rexford. 

"Roy wouldn't have murdered anyone!" stormed Diana. "He couldn't  have!" 

Defiantly, she looked about as if inviting dispute. Meeting Dane's  deepset eyes, Diana took it that they

carried accusation toward  Rexford. Diana's own eyes sparked. 

"Don't look at me that way, Miss Gault," spoke Dane steadily. "I'm  not the murderer!" He gestured upward. "I

was on that tower all the  time. Those witnesses know it, because they put me up there." 

Dane propped himself against the side of a throne to take the  weight from his swollen ankle. People surveyed

the papiermache  pedestal and were convinced that Dane was more than right. He couldn't  have left his perch

without being noticed. If he'd flung the knife,  hundreds of people would have seen the throw. Furthermore,

the knife  would have glinted in the brilliant lights during its tenfoot flight. 

An added point was that Dane's tower stood behind Traymer's throne,  so a blade tossed from that direction

couldn't possibly have reached  the victim's heart. 

"We're getting somewhere," observed Clyde tactfully. "We know that  Dane couldn't possibly have used that

knife." 

"I know someone even less likely than myself," volunteered Dane. 

He was looking at Diana. She stared blankly, then brightened as she  queried: 

"Do you mean me?" 

"I mean your uncle," replied Dane. "He was on the judge's stand,  and he must certainly still be there." 

Diana's forehead puckered. Mere mention of Ellery Gault was  preposterous; but Dane must have some

purpose in it. The answer began  to dawn: Dane didn't want to name Rexford, so he was taking a long way

around. By stating names that couldn't possibly be those of Traymer's  murderer, Dane was stimulating people

into naming probable candidates  for the dishonor. 

At least, it worked that way. There was a buzz about the float, and  from it rose the name: 

"Roy Rexford!" 

It could only be Rexford. His clowning as Prince Poverty was the  perfect coverup. Frantically, Diana tried

to stem the tide of  accusation, and found a sudden inspiration from the way Dane had  parried her recent

question. 


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"It wasn't necessarily Roy!" Diana exclaimed. "Why... why, I could  have stabbed Traymer! Yes, that's it" 

her head was turning, her eyes  flashing  "that's what Ferris is trying to say. I did it, and he knows  why!" She

turned straight toward Dane and uttered fiercely: "It's  because I hate him, and I thought he was in the costume

of King  Progress!" 

Limping from the throne, Dane smiled despite a painful wince. He  steadied himself by resting a hand on

Diana's shoulder. His courtier's  costume fitted the manner that Dane displayed, a softness of nature  quite

foreign to his usual pose. 

"You don't hate me, Diana," declared Dane, "and you didn't murder  Traymer. You're trying to help Rexford,

and no one is fooled. I admire  you for it, and I think you're right." 

As Diana stood astonished, almost in Dane's arms, her new champion  turned to the group about him. 

"Diana wasn't the only person close to Traymer's throne," asserted  Dane. "As I recall it, you all clustered

around just after Rexford  left. Anyone of you"  Dane's circling gaze took in a dozen  "might be  the killer.

Think that over, and maybe you'll decide to show fair play  toward Rexford." 

To Clyde and Margo, it was plain that Dane was playing for Diana's  favor. Dane's real rivalry with Rexford

concerned the gorgeous redhead,  though Diana herself did not realize it, this being the first time that  Dane

had really advanced his cause. 

He was doing it subtly, was Dane, yet his whole manner carried  sincerity. He liked to do things in a generous

way, if only as a form  of policy. Nothing could be finer than winning a girl's love by  clearing her former

suitor of a murder charge. Hence Dane could afford  to show ungrudging tendencies toward Rexford. 

DANE certainly sold his listeners. 

Not only did they begin to doubt Rexford's guilt; they took Dane's  word that Diana must be innocent. To top

that, they began to suspect  themselves. By this time, half the group was unmasked; those whose  faces showed

began to flush guiltily, then, as if by common accord,  they stared coldly at the masked courtiers as though the

latter were  hiding something. 

Another buzz began. A few witnesses, anxious to provide new  evidence, remembered the gesture with which

King Progress had dismissed  Prince Poverty just before the knife was uncovered. Both Clyde and  Margo

recalled the flap of Traymer's arm and realized that it had  fallen when the killer released it. 

If anything, it was evidence against Rexford, but the other  witnesses, all thinking themselves to be suspects,

interpreted the  whole thing wrongly. Some began to exclaim that Rexford couldn't have  slain Traymer, which

only packed the burden more heavily on themselves. 

Amid the increasing murmur, Dane smiled broadly, except for slight  winces at the corners of his lips, inspired

either by his paining ankle  or his regret for poor Traymer. Yet Dane couldn't help but smile. By  this time,

Diana was really in his arms, packed there as though she  belonged permanently. 

Then came the inevitable swing of the pendulum. 

Men were springing on the float to learn what had been happening  the last five minutes. They saw Traymer's

deathfrozen face, the knife  handle showing from the folds of the kingly robe. They demanded facts,  and

when they heard them, their opinion was summed up by a firmjawed  man with glinting eyes, who boomed

the order: 


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"Find Rexford!" 

The speaker was Warren Helm, wearing a cavalier's costume. Helm was  a man of reason, free of maudlin

sentiment and freakish doubt. He  brought matters back to the obvious that persons had foolishly begun to

doubt. 

"Find Rexford!" 

The cry swelled, and with it the news spread. King Progress had  been literally eliminated by Prince Poverty.

Maybe the victim wasn't  Ferris Dane, the proper King Progress. But that didn't prove that Roy  Rexford wasn't

the murderer who cavorted as Prince Poverty. For one  thing, Rexford couldn't have known that Traymer had

substituted for  Dane. 

Vengeful masqueraders were swarming from the sidewalks, to start  the manhunt. Helm was shouting after

them, trying to control the mob,  but it was going beyond the bounds of reason. From the float, Clyde saw

another man of rational ideas, who was shouting something, too. The new  arrival was Laird Woburn, his

round face glaring from beneath a fez  that topped a sultan's costume. 

Woburn, too, was learning that reason had its limits. A block away,  he'd heard the hue and cry. Informed of

its purpose, he'd also raised  the shout: "Find Rexford!" 

Now Woburn, like Helm, was trying to hold mob violence within the  restrictions of a legitimate manhunt,

and finding it wouldn't work. The  two of them, meeting near the float, began yelling at people to summon  the

police chief, the county sheriff, and any other officials who might  be at large. But nobody cared to listen. 

However just the hunt for Rexford might be, it could prove  misguided vengeance when mob law took over.

Should Rexford be found,  one thing alone could prevent the pack from lynching him. 

The Shadow would have to rise alive from the depths to which he had  been banished, to meet this fearful

issue. 

Only the hand of The Shadow could annul misguided vengeance! 

CHAPTER XIII. MURDERER'S PROOF

LEFT in the wake of the surging mob, the people on the float stood  horrified. Diana Gault spoke first, as she

wrenched from the embrace of  Ferris Dane. She hadn't lost her admiration for the man; rather, her  action was

a tribute. 

"You must do something, Ferris!" exclaimed Diana. "You must save  Roy, even if he did murder Traymer!" 

With a firm nod, Dane took a step toward the float edge. His ankle  gave, sprawling him helplessly. Still, he

wasn't going to desert the  cause. Crawling to one foot, he shouted: 

"Get me a car, quickly! I'll show that mob that I still have fists,  even if I have to do it sitting down!" 

A better idea struck Clyde Burke. Grabbing Margo Lane, he told her  to come along; then, noting the wine

flagon beside the Progress throne,  Clyde paused to pick it up. He handed Margo the flagon as they left the

float. 


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"Rexford was going back to the hotel taproom," informed Clyde. "He  still may be there. Maybe the barkeep

is smart enough to hide him. If  so, we'll find out." 

Margo raised the flagon. 

"And will this help us?" 

"I think so," nodded Clyde. "It may have come from the taproom. If  we bring it back, we can pass as

Rexford's friends. But don't spill any  of the wine that's left. It might be evidence." 

Around the corner, Clyde and Margo saw the mob gathering in size as  it roared past the reviewing stand.

About the only people still in the  stand were the judges. They were trying to quiet Ellery Gault as he  waved

his arms and cheered, as though he thought the mob was part of  the parade. 

Clyde led Margo along a short cut to the hotel. As they entered the  taproom from the lobby, there was a bang

of the street doors. Tables  and chairs were overturned, with the barkeeper staring as though dazed. 

"We want to find Rexford." Clyde gestured to the flagon that Margo  held. "He asked us to give him this. It's

important." 

"Just follow the crowd," advised the barkeeper. "They're looking  for Rexford, too. He's either getting mighty

popular, or he promised to  buy drinks for the whole parade. They came in here like a cyclone." 

Evidently the bartender hadn't learned why the mob wanted Rexford.  Clyde inquired quickly if the fellow

knew where Rexford had gone. The  barkeep nodded. 

"Rexford finished a few more drinks and left," he said. "He was  taking that whacky costume back to Amon's

shop. Said he wouldn't need  it. He wasn't going to the reception. So I told the boys they'd find  him at Amon's,

if they hurried." 

Clyde hauled a key from his pocket and slapped it in Margo's hand. 

"Put that flagon in my room," said Clyde. "Then start to barricade  the place. If I can reach Rexford first, I'll

bring him there." 

Nearing Amon's, Clyde saw he hadn't a chance. The mob was surging  into the costume shop. There was a car

out front, and from its window  Dane was exchanging punches with all comers. Diana was at the wheel and

every time the going became too tough for Dane, she started the car  into the mob itself. 

That policy served only to bring Dane against a fresh field of  fighters, because the car didn't travel far enough

to mow anybody down.  Every time Diana shoved it into gear, a dozen members of the mob picked  up the rear

wheels and let them spin, cutting the net mileage down to  about a dozen feet. 

The only thing Clyde could do was chase around to the vacant lot in  back of the rickety old building; so he

did. At least, he was the first  person to have that idea. The mob was too busy trying to pack itself  through the

front door. 

In the crush, Clyde saw the faces of Helm and Woburn, still bawling  for the mob to desist. They were getting

hearty jeers in return and a  great, hollow echo of the battle cry that they themselves had so  foolishly begun: 

"Find Rexford!" 


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Clyde took two things for granted: first, that Rexford had not been  found; second, that no man of reason

could hope to do anything with  that mob. 

ON both counts, Clyde was wrong. Rexford was found, and he was  managing something through reason.

Rexford was on the stairs leading up  to Amon's loft. Across his arm, he was dangling the Prince Poverty

costume, while he gave the crowd a pokerfaced stare. 

Despite the dim light, Rexford could make out individual faces in  the mass confronting him. Recognizing

persons who should have been his  friends, he singled them out as he spoke in his selfconfident style. 

"It seems you're looking for me," he asserted. "Very well, I'm  here. We'll decide what we're doing next after

you've told me what this  ovation is about." 

Voices howled their responses. They were amplified by a flourish of  weapons, that ranged from monkey

wrenches to metal pickets that the mob  had ripped from the fencedin flowerbeds surrounding the hotel.

Rexford  ignored the bludgeons, while picking out the men who shouted loudest. 

They were telling Rexford that he knew why they wanted him. They  were jeering the news that Dane was

still alive, forgetting that  members of the mob itself were still outside, trying with punches to do  to Dane

what a knife had failed to deliver. 

Others were telling Rexford that he was coming along. Some were  suggesting that he be made to carry the

rope with which the mob  intended to hang him. More bawled that a rope would be too good; that  somebody

ought to provide a knife bigger than the one that butchered  Traymer. 

The loudest shouts dwindled automatically, for the simple reason  that Rexford, in his cold but assured style,

looked directly at the  persons who gave them. He was nodding, Rexford was, and speaking names  aloud. The

people that he named were quick to duck their faces and  sidle toward the door. 

The citizens of Industria weren't geared to lynchings, and Rexford  recognized it. He was on the point of

quieting the unruly mob  an  achievement that might have won him lasting fame, whatever the legal  verdict

might be in the case of Traymer's death. But Rexford had  forgotten the outoftowners in the throng that

faced him. 

The rabble from the hinterlands had let the local talent show them  the way to the costume shop. Now the

outlanders were pressing into the  place. They'd seen the parade, as advertised, but it had turned into a  double

feature and they weren't going to miss the second half. 

Hearing the shouts for knives, these newcomers produced them.  Rexford's eyes, as glittery as the blades, were

quick to spot the  rounded muzzles of revolvers appearing along with the knives.  Instantly, he switched his

policy. 

Flinging the Prince Poverty costume into the mob, Rexford made a  quick scramble up the stairs. Guns

barked, knives came flinging, but  all were far too late. The second wave of missiles, bullets included,  bashed

the iron front of a strong door that Rexford slammed and bolted  from the other side. 

Therewith, the whole mob went into action. 

Reaching the bolted door, men found that it was merely sheathed  with metal. It might have stalled a crew of

burglars, but it couldn't  do more than slow this human wolf pack. Clyde's thoughts of a  barricaded hotel room

would have made him feel quite silly, had he  witnessed what happened to Amon's strong door. 


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Revolvers punched it with bullets; metal spikes drove through the  holes. Crowding hands pried with the

improvised levers, using shoulders  as fulcrums. The maddened mob treated the heavy hinges as a strong man

would a pack of cards, tearing them in half with a single twisting  operation. 

Rexford had scarcely passed the top of the stairs, to dive headlong  into the debris of scenery and stage props

collected by old Amon, when  the door went with a smash and the stairway rocked under the feet of an

ascending herd that no longer yelled of ropes and knives. 

All they wanted was to treat Rexford as they had the door  to  batter him, rip him, and carry his head on one

of the picket spikes in  a parade that would inform Industria that Progress was as dead as the  costumed king

who had so unwisely represented it in the recent pageant. 

SUCH tumult was enough almost to rouse the dead. 

Inasmuch as The Shadow wasn't dead, it roused him. Down in the  cellar pit, he'd been gaining his senses

slowly, very slowly. The  Shadow was enjoying a state very close to coma, which rose gradually to  the dream

stage, then dwindled. 

It was a serious condition, the sort that could have prolonged  itself into a lethargy. Continuing such, The

Shadow's dwindling  strength could have left him helpless in this forgotten abode. Any  physician, even

Gault's overadvertised specialists, would have  prescribed just one treatment for The Shadow: namely, to

shock him from  his present daze and set him into motion. 

The mob furnished the needed treatment. 

Howls, bashing feet, the quiver of the entire building, stirred The  Shadow like a tonic. He came half upright

in the thick darkness,  clutched a metal post beside him and shoved away something that was a  heavy burden

on his shoulder. 

No longer was The Shadow on a physical dead center. He was himself  again, the cloaked fighter who could

challenge all comers.  Instinctively, his famous laugh came from the lips that needed no  hiding from the hat

brim that jammed his forehead, since all was  blackness anyway. 

True, The Shadow's thoughts were in a weird whirl. He wanted  action. As proof, his bare hand slid into its

glove and finished by  gripping an automatic from beneath his cloak. But The Shadow couldn't  place himself,

nor did he understand why tumult and shouts of murder  were everywhere except the place he wanted them,

which was here. 

The Shadow recognized the monstrous turbulence of a mob  unrestrained. It was the sort of thing that needed

settlement, and his  specialty lay in providing such balance sheets. Wherever this inhuman,  murderous mass

might be, The Shadow preferred the shortest way to find  it. Without bothering to use his tiny flashlight, he

groped in  darkness. 

Finding a hanging rope, The Shadow tugged it. Oddly, his action  took place just as the vanguard of the mob

reached Amon's loft and  pressed the light switch by the door. Pushed by those behind them, men  with all

sorts of weapons were pouring into the loft, looking for  Rexford along the lighted path toward the far wall. 

That happened all at once, but so did The Shadow's own experience.  He'd found the shortest way to meet the

human wolf pack, and the  quickest. The moment he tugged the rope, his path was straight upward  on the

fastest elevator he'd ever ridden. 


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It was silent, too, this flat platform between four posts that old  Amon had invented to bring a flock of wood

nymphs on the stage so fast  that eyes could not detect their arrival. In fact, the elevator was  intended for their

disappearance, too, but it had been at the bottom  when Amon opened the trapdoor wide. 

Whizzing upward with a speed that clocked itself in tenths of  seconds, the platform clicked a special tripper

that whipped the  sections of the trapdoor wide. The pause that those sections made was  just sufficient for the

elevator platform to replace them as a solid  floor. 

Arrived from forgotten depths, The Shadow was standing in the  glare, fully visible against the butterfly

backdrop that old Amon  prized. So rapid was his appearance, that the men who sought Rexford  thought

surely that this cloaked figure had been awaiting them while  they battered their way upstairs. 

And the bloodlust of the mob, based at least on the initial premise  that vicious death was the right fate for a

killer, could apply to The  Shadow even more than Rexford. If ever maddened men had sought a  murderer's

proof of his crime, this mob had found it. 

For on the solid floor beside The Shadow lay the weighty burden  that he had shoved aside in darkness and

forgotten  the body of old  Amon, its head twisted so that the face delivered a grotesque stare of  death

toward the flood of unbridled cutthroats who were here to seek a  victim! 

CHAPTER XIV. CRIME'S HOLOCAUST

WITH one engulfing motion, a wave of fiery humanity enveloped The  Shadow. Driving straight into the

opposition, The Shadow met the  blanketing surge with a spurt. He was the spearhead of his own attack,  his

gun delivering what his opponents tried to give, slashing swings  that counted hard. 

His other hand was out from the cloak, bringing a second automatic.  Downward, sidearm or backhand

slashes, all were alike to The Shadow.  His pommeling guns rang an anvil chorus against the assorted

hardware  that came slinging at him. 

The Shadow's strokes carried through, whereas the others didn't.  That was the simple reason why a human

whirlwind in black continued to  revolve unscathed, while his dazed opponents cluttered up the floor.  One

against many could be the best of odds, the way The Shadow  operated. 

The cloaked fighter could slug everywhere without a miss, whereas  his foemen had to find him. Which they

did, but in reverse style.  Crowding in each other's way, pausing too long or swinging too  hurriedly, those who

actually reached The Shadow found him whirling  their way before they could do him damage. 

In clearing a space about him, The Shadow sent men scattering among  the junk that was piled throughout the

loft. The fighters who dived for  such shelter didn't look back to witness the further devastation that  The

Shadow wreaked. 

However, there was a man who viewed the progress of the lopsided  fray. 

That man was Roy Rexford, who should have been a reliable witness,  whatever his other shortcomings.

Rexford at least could judge things  sanely, having demonstrated that ability when he faced the mob earlier.

But Rexford was ready to doubt his own sanity as he peered through the  eyehole of an old theater curtain

hanging deep in Amon's loft. 

It didn't seem possible that any single fighter could flay a horde  as The Shadow did. Rexford was learning


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how a mob could really be  handled. He must have remembered, though, that he'd done quite well up  to a

certain point, when things had gone amiss. 

Perhaps The Shadow's formula would fail. Whether Rexford hoped so,  his face didn't tell. In any event, he

was forgotten by the mob, though  it might have struck him that if the howling tribe managed to find The

Shadow's weakness and dispose of him, all pressure would be off. 

Already branded as Amon's murderer, The Shadow could easily be made  the scapegoat for Traymer's death.

Still, Rexford was a man who  calculated coolly. He might consider it to his own advantage if The  Shadow

shook loose from the mob, especially if it carried the wouldbe  murderer off to a farther chase, away from

Rexford's present location. 

So far, the only heads that were taking punishment belonged to men  who carried picket spikes on which they

hoped to impale a victim. The  Shadow had battered those pikemen badly by slugging in between their  clumsy

weapons. In so doing, he was paving the way to what might prove  his own disaster. 

Rexford saw it coming, but didn't budge. A return of common sense,  rather than antagonism toward The

Shadow, accounted for Rexford's  immobility. There was simply nothing he could do to aid The Shadow,  even

if he'd wanted. 

Into the space that The Shadow had cleared sprang the husky  outlanders with their knives. They came a

dozen strong, all slashing  with weapons that were made for closerange massacre. The Shadow looked  like a

blackclad Caesar falling beneath the stabs of assassins when  that avalanche hit him. 

Seeing the cloaked figure disappear under the flood of assorted  costumes, Rexford thought it was all over. 

It almost was. 

A shout rose from the stabbing throng. Rexford saw men rise and  point at a figure that had squirmed from

their surrounding ranks. It  was The Shadow, stumbling as he reached his feet, pitching his guns  ahead of him

as he tried to break his fall. Men spun about with their  knives, thinking they could pounce upon the elusive

victim before he  could regain his guns. 

At that moment, The Shadow grabbed a handier weapon. Most of the  throng mistook it for a pike that had

fallen, propped where some  fighter lost it. A few saw that it was a lever, but they didn't guess  its purpose until

after The Shadow pulled it. 

With one quick tug, The Shadow banished a dozen foemen. Old Amon's  dead face seemed to grin from the

floor, as though his sightless eyes  viewed the disappearance from the corner where trouncing feet had  pedaled

his body. 

The men with the knives evaporated as wood nymphs should have.  Amon's elevator trap was perfect. 

The platform went with a downward whiz, the side sections slapping  shut to replace it, all so rapidly that

witnesses were wondering why  the men with knives weren't stopping The Shadow from picking up his  guns,

only to look and see that the assassination crew was gone. 

Other men, lunging forward to be present at the kill, stopped short  when they found the vanguard missing.

They were so stupefied, that The  Shadow could have pulled the lever again and literally dropped them

without benefit of the elevator as a brake. 


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That would have crippled a few dozen who deserved it  those who  fell, and the crowd on which they landed.

But The Shadow wasn't holding  the mob responsible for its own murderous mood. He preferred that these

fools should suffer only minor injuries. 

SO far, The Shadow had beaten sense into numerous thickheads and  had dazed others with a ride resembling

a tailspin. He felt that he  could convince the rest regarding their folly. Therefore he whirred  upon the rooted

tribe, shoving his regained guns ahead of him. 

This time the automatics blasted. The shots they jabbed had the  appearance of a pointblank fire. The

Shadow was aiming at narrow  spaces between his enemies and giving his shots an upward angle to  avoid

persons in the background. But it didn't look that way. 

From the dives men made, the stumbles they took over Amon's props,  The Shadow's gunnery seemed to be

clipping fighters two to a bullet.  He'd have cleared the loft immediately, if routed men could have found  an

exit. It happened that there was no exit. 

The door from the stairway was still teeming with an incoming mob.  The human maelstrom couldn't reverse

itself, even though it wanted.  Things were happening as Rexford expected. He'd seen how pressure had

prevented the mob's retreat; this time, The Shadow was experiencing the  thing that soured victory. 

Indeed, The Shadow had put himself in an utter dilemma. 

The very shots that he fired so freely were ruining his cause. He'd  exhausted his guns with rapid fire to

complete the rout that couldn't  happen. Like a tribe of apes, this mob was quick to copy any measure  that it

could. Amid the mass that jammed the doorway were men with  revolvers. They took over where the vanished

knife crew had left off. 

Slicing in from various angles, the gunners opened fire toward The  Shadow. From his peephole, Rexford was

counting the shots, calculating  that by ten the frenzied shooters would have found the range and The  Shadow

would be receiving bullets for the shots that he had wasted. 

Rexford's calculation was fairly accurate. It was the ninth shot  that clicked. But it didn't find the range. 

It found the stove. 

With a speed that showed inspiration, The Shadow had plucked Amon's  loftwarmer from its moorings and

was using it as a shield. It was a  sizable stove, but it wasn't overly heavy. Its one fault was its heat,  for the

wood with which Amon had stoked it was now burning briskly. How  long The Shadow could keep crouched

and swing it, keeping himself well  covered, was something that Rexford hadn't time to calculate. 

The spreading gunners did that for themselves. Having put The  Shadow on the absolute defensive, they

converged upon him, springing  out of the maze of scenery like wild cats from the woods. And The  Shadow,

finding the stove even hotter than the battle, promptly  employed his improvised shield as the last thing the

attackers  expected: an offensive weapon. 

Upward, forward lunged The Shadow, sweeping the stove sideward as  he came. The open front disgorged

fire, not the sort that guns gave but  a kind that could thoroughly scorch. Live coals and flaming chunks of

wood were flying everywhere. The jolts that the stove made helped the  process. 

The jolts came when the stove thudded men who shoved into its  sweeping path. Next thing, the gunners were

diving back into the  lighted path that led to the door, all choosing it as the way that  would give them the


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greatest distance from the redhot weapon that The  Shadow wielded. 

By then, The Shadow was finding the stove too hot to handle  further, so he flung it. Howling men dodged the

flamebelching missile  as it struck the floor amid a terrific deluge of sparks. But the  bloodthirsty pack

seemed as inexhaustible as The Shadow's own measures.  A final flood, that had followed the gunners, came

for The Shadow like  a human tidal wave. 

There were too many for the trapdoor treatment, even if The Shadow  had applied it. As a last resort, the

cloaked fighter sprang for the  butterfly tapestry that adorned the wall of the loft. He was gone  behind that

flimsy backdrop when a score of hands ripped it from its  hooks. Then, in the tangle of the curtain, men were

grabbing for The  Shadow, while all about, scattered flames were beginning to gulp the  other scenery. 

Several heads were soundly thumped while the mob tore the butterfly  masterpiece to shreds. But none of

them belonged to The Shadow; they  were simply heads of men who had helped tear down the flimsy hiding

place. The rest of the mob stared bewildered in the glow of the fire  that was spreading through the loft. 

The Shadow was gone, vanished like a batch of blackness! 

ONE thing, at least, had worked in The Shadow's favor. He had  reached the door that he knew was behind the

butterfly curtain, and he  had been lucky enough to find it unbolted. The Shadow had gone through  as he

opened it, and therewith yanked the barrier shut behind him. 

Only Rexford saw the outline of the door. The mob was still looking  for The Shadow. That search ended

abruptly as flames rose with a  surprising roar. The whole loft was catching fire, and nobody cared to  stay. 

Following the stampede that went down the front stairs, Rexford was  forced to concede that The Shadow had

finally provided the sure cure  for a human horde gone berserk. 

Oddly, The Shadow hadn't done too well for himself. 

He was through the door, into welcoming darkness, when he found its  greeting was none too pleasant. What

The Shadow hit was space like the  blackness that engulfed him when Amon pulled the trap. This door was in

the rear wall of the loft. It didn't lead to another room, nor even a  stairway. It opened right outside, with a

sheer drop to the ground. 

At least, the plunge was shorter, promising a better landing. That  thought flashed to The Shadow as he took

the fall. His midair twist  helped him somewhat, but the best break came when he struck. He landed  in a group

of men, odd members of the mob, who had picked up a ladder  and were trying to use it as a short route to the

loft. 

They sprawled as The Shadow struck them, but they were quick to  grab at their unexpected prey. The

Shadow was punching back at them,  when another man tore in furiously. Clyde Burke was on the job. The

first man to reach the back of the building, he'd bided his time when  the others arrived to dispute his claim. 

Clyde's punches helped. They lacked weight, but their sincerity  made up for it. Men forgot The Shadow, the

fighter they couldn't see,  and turned to suppress Clyde. That was their big mistake, for it gave  The Shadow a

chance to get in motion. Once he did, he scattered them  with gunweighted fists and plucked Clyde from the

ground where four  men had flung him. 

When Clyde became himself again, he was in his hotel room. He  recognized the place and wondered why it

wasn't barricaded. Clyde's  mutters were heard by a blackcloaked friend who sat beside the window.  Hearing


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the tone of a whispered laugh, Clyde turned over on his pillow,  satisfied and reassured. 

In fact, Clyde didn't even open his eyes. Therefore, he failed to  see the spectacle that The Shadow was

watching from the window. 

Huge flames were rising from the outskirts of Industria, and the  fire marked Amon's costume shop. Fire

engines were clanging to the  scene, where a maddened mob had found its senses and was helping combat  the

mammoth blaze. 

Crime's holocaust had become a real conflagration that was wiping  out all ideas of lynch law, along with

Amon's premises. Rexford, the  hunted man, was safe, with the question of Traymer's murder to be  decided

later. 

Even safer was The Shadow, the unknown battler whose identity still  remained unknown, the master who

could provide the proper vengeance for  a crime as yet unsolved! 

CHAPTER XV. CRIME RETRACED

THE SHADOW wasn't in his sanctum. 

Usually he preferred his sanctum for the work he was doing at  present. The sanctum was a hidden room,

blackwalled and secret, that  only The Shadow entered. But it was in New York, and at present The  Shadow

was in Industria, a town that he did not intend to leave until  an important case was settled. 

However, this hotel room, occupied in the name of Lamont Cranston,  might as well have been the famed

sanctum. Its shades drawn, the room  was completely dark except for a corner where a blue light glowed.

Under that special bulb, longfingered hands were busy sorting evidence  on the surface of a table. 

There was this about the blue bulb. It had ultraviolet properties,  very useful at times. For instance, when The

Shadow held a small glass  to the light, the liquid in it showed a dull brown instead of the  colorless effect that

certain purple substances gave under ultraviolet  light. 

The tiny glass contained the residue of the wine from the flagon  that Prince Poverty had handed King

Progress during the parade. The  brown color was evidence of a virulent poison that would have been  quite as

effective as the knife that Prince Poverty used later. In  brief, there had been two attempts at murder during the

pageant that  had taken place a few nights ago. 

At present, The Shadow was reviewing facts in an effort to retrace  crime. His hands were sorting clippings,

and all the while a strange  gem shone from one of The Shadow's long fingers. Its hues changing in  the light,

the fire opal, known also as a girasol, seemed to reflect  the chameleon traits and the mysterious moods that

were famous with The  Shadow. 

The first batch of clippings referred to Ellery Gault. 

Being the principal citizen of Industria, it was only right that  Gault should take precedence. Officially all

affairs, large and small,  should come under Gault's personal notice and final jurisdiction,  whether those

affairs were good or bad. 

The fact that Gault left so much to others caused him to be  publicized as a man of liberal ideas who had no

trend toward  paternalism. The clippings on Gault all registered that theme. They  mentioned the directors'


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meeting, stating that Gault had presided  there. In connection with the pageant, Gault's name topped the list of

judges. At the coming pantomime, to be held in the opera house, Gault  would be on exhibit in a private box,

unless the pressure of important  business interfered. 

Important business of counting pennies by the thousands. Such was  the story that the clipping didn't tell. 

The Shadow was sure that Gault would not attend the pantomime. He  wouldn't be able to sit still long

enough. Directors could overlook his  behavior at their meeting; judges could cover for him during a parade.

But if Gault's inevitable mania seized him in the opera house, the  truth would become public. 

Easy to picture Gault breaking up the show by suddenly rising and  tossing pennies by the handful to the

audience, tuning his cackle to  the clatter of the coins. However, Gault wouldn't have his chance at  it. The

specialists had put the clamps on him, establishing a cordon of  servants to keep him in the counting room

whenever he went there,  because Gault's visits to that chamber were a sure sign that his mind  was wandering. 

As a subhead under the name of Gault, The Shadow stacked the  clippings referring to Diana. 

They were social notices, mostly. Descriptions of her part in the  parade were limited to Diana's marvelous

portrayal of Queen Industry,  in glowing accounts that took up a few pages, had The Shadow bothered  to

assemble all the clippings. 

There was chitchat about the house party, the pink teas and other  minor events on schedule. The final theme

again was the pantomime,  because Diana was to play a part in it. She was to be Marguerite in a  silent show

based on the opera "Faust." Tactfully, the newspapers did  not mention that George Traymer, lamented and

forgotten, had written  the adaptation. Instead, there were a few columns on the life of  Gounod, the composer

of the original opera. 

Next, three names in order of local importance. 

WARREN HELM was in the news. As president of the foundry, he was  demanding a thorough investigation

of a preliminary event which he  regarded as the first symptom of local crime. Helm wanted facts on a  cloaked

marauder who had tried to murder Ferris Dane with longrange  shots from across a channel of flowing steel. 

Find that malefactor and the law would hold the culprit who later  had driven a knife to the heart of George

Traymer. Said murderer would  likewise prove to be the person who had blasted Amon with bullets in  the loft

of the costume shop. 

Laird Woburn echoed the opinions of Warren Helm. In due course,  Woburn would make a checkup of the

personnel at the dyeworks in quest  of a suspicious character who might be the killer in black. Woburn,  too,

was stressing Dane's preliminary experience as the thing first to  be unraveled. 

In every interview, both Helm and Woburn came back to the  beginning. They wouldn't express themselves on

the pageant murder, nor  the riot that had followed it. Though they didn't term him by his  proper name, they

were practically shouting, "Find The Shadow," just as  they had once cried, "Find Rexford." 

Two clippings formed a link between Helm and Woburn. In each, the  two men suggested that a blackclad

killer had somehow secreted himself  upon the royal float and managed to knife Traymer. Likewise, Helm and

Woburn took it for granted that the cloaked marauder had murdered Amon  later: namely, when he reached

the costume shop ahead of the excited  mob. 

The next name was Roy Rexford. 


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Totally unmentioned by Helm and Woburn, the last of the Big Three  occupied a unique position. 

As usual, Rexford was handling his affairs in a manner as  noncommittal as possible. He'd simply played

Prince Poverty; nothing  more. Traymer's death was a shock to him, but he expressed no surprise  over the fact

that Traymer, and not Dane, had worn the King Progress  costume. 

Rexford simply stressed his first trip to the royal float,  considering all the rest to be byplay. He intimated that

if he'd wanted  to murder anybody, he'd have done it then. By casually classing Traymer  as a close friend,

Rexford let people imply what they wanted, where  Dane was concerned. 

Reading between the lines, checking Rexford's omissions as much as  his actual statements, The Shadow saw

how cleanly the scales were left  in balance. Offsetting the supposition that Rexford might have wanted  Dane

put away was the inference that Rexford had recognized Traymer  despite the latter's mask. If that had

happened during their first  encounter on the royal float, the right Prince Poverty would have had  no reason to

murder the wrong King Progress later. 

The last batch of clippings covered Ferris Dane. 

The new vice president of Gault Consolidated had only one statement  to make. He considered Traymer's

death an irreparable loss to the  community. Dane, in particular, could feel it, because he had counted  on

Traymer to handle the accounts and finances of Gault Consolidated,  so that Dane himself could concentrate

on coordinating the three  industries. 

Traymer's death hadn't altered Dane's plans. He intended to go  ahead with his own program. Financial

matters being bottlenecked until  the chemical works supplied its final figures, Dane intended to let  them

wait until he found another man like Traymer. 

Mention of the chemical plant and its tardy accounts could be a  subtle dig at Rexford. Dane made an even

broader one when he expressed  the hope that Helm and Woburn might provide him with a man as good as

Traymer, for in that statement, Dane actually ignored Rexford as a  member of the Big Three. 

But Dane had softened those points. In mentioning the chemical  works, he'd made allowance for its

reorganization and expansion. In  speaking of Helm and Woburn, Dane had termed them "men of long service

and prestige" in Industria, whose "choice of capable subordinates" had  included Dane himself. So Rexford, a

comparative newcomer, was not  exactly slighted. 

Furthermore, Dane had never worked under Rexford. Dane had left the  chemical plant, gone to the dyeworks,

and graduated to the foundry  before Rexford arrived in Industria. 

From a large clipping, The Shadow sheared little strips that  dropped, one by one, on other heaps. The big

clipping was the one  referring to the pantomime. Since Diana was to play Marguerite, one  slip went on her

clippings. 

The others fell respectively on the press clips of Helm, Rexford  and Dane, since all were likewise to appear in

the gala show, in  various roles. One name was absent from this list: Woburn's. But at the  very bottom of the

large clipping, The Shadow found mention of Woburn  as one of the guests who would be at the box party

arranged by Ellery  Gault. 

Though Gault wouldn't be there, Woburn would. So The Shadow lopped  a final item to go with Woburn's

clippings. 


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Then, with an undertoned laugh, The Shadow did a most singular  thing. He took three stacks of clippings and

piled them all together.  Those were the heaps belonging to the Big Three: Helm, Woburn, Rexford. 

As industrial leaders, those three belonged in the same category;  but The Shadow wasn't making a business

survey  he was investigating  crime. His classing of Rexford along with Helm and Woburn meant that  the

three must have something in common that had so far escaped the  average eye. 

Perhaps the reports of The Shadow's agents were responsible. From  beside the clippings, The Shadow was

picking up a sheet that Clyde  Burke had compiled. The telephone on the table was ringing and when The

Shadow answered it, speaking in the calm tone of Cranston, he heard the  voice of Margo Lane. 

Clyde's description of death's masquerade was a leadup to the  information that Margo was at present

providing. The call finished, The  Shadow left the pitchblack room, his lips phrasing a whispered laugh. 

Out into the night, The Shadow became a gliding, unseen figure.  Roving the streets of the very town where

he was sought as crime's  scapegoat, The Shadow was on his way to obtain new data toward the  solving of

two murders which, when explained, would clear him of false  blame! 

CHAPTER XVI. SETTING FOR MURDER

BACKSTAGE lights were glimmering in the old opera house which had  once been Industria's pride, and still

was an imposing building.  Unfortunately, opera had never become an established attraction in the  model city,

and its failure had accounted for Amon's thwarted ambition. 

However, the opera house was occasionally used, particularly around  pageant time, and Traymer's

pantomime of "Faust" had been arranged  accordingly. The lights backstage were proof that things were being

put  in readiness for the big night to come. 

This evening, the main attraction was to be The Shadow. Like a  ghost from a longforgotten past, he

approached the stage door, where  he became visible only as a mass of blackness during the moments he  took

to enter. The door closed and The Shadow showed as a batlike  figure, human size, until he glided from the

lighted entry. 

He went through another door connecting with the auditorium itself.  Passing a row of boxes, The Shadow

circled into the orchestra seats.  From the far side of the blackened footlights, he saw two persons  standing on

the great stage. They were in the light of extension lamps  that reached from the wings. 

One person was Ferris Dane; the other, Diana Gault. The Shadow  expected to see them here, because Margo's

call, made from the Gault  mansion, had informed him that Diana was to meet Dane on the  operahouse stage. 

Dane was discussing the coming show with Diana. 

"Traymer did more than adapt the story of 'Faust,'" declared Dane.  "He threw in a dash of 'Pygmalion,' too.

Anyway, the scenes are simple  enough, and brief. It will be a good prelude to the feature picture  that the

audience will prefer to see." 

Diana nodded. She knew the local tastes. 

"There are three scenes," explained Dane. "I appear with Helm in  the first. I'm Mephistopheles and he's Faust,

so I tempt him into  carving a statue which I shall bring to life." 


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Pausing, Dane turned through the pages of a script. He found it  difficult, because he was leaning on a crutch

to rest his injured  ankle. 

"The second scene shows the statue," continued Dane. "I am standing  behind it as Mephistopheles. Old Faust

shows up, bringing young  Valentin to witness the transformation. The scene ends with a flash of  lightning, a

roar of thunder. The statue crashes when I wave my hands,  along with the lightning flash." 

"And the third scene?" inquired Diana. 

"It shows Faust and Valentin looking at the fallen statue. Rexford  is Valentin and, like Faust, he thinks the

experiment has failed. But  you have replaced the statue during the brief blackout. So you come to  life as

Marguerite. 

"Old Faust has fallen in love with you, of course. That's the  Pygmalion slant. But when you see Valentin, you

fall for him instead.  In fact, you both fall  into each other's arms. While old Faust tears  what hair he has, I

appear as Mephistopheles, giving a final gloat to  prove that the devil always serves his due." 

Before Diana could express her opinion of the script, a rumble came  from offstage. A stoopshouldered man

appeared, dragging the lifesized  statue of Marguerite, a demure figure in a medieval costume, with a  carved

veil hanging from her head and shoulders, above an elaborate  costume. 

"This is Marguerite," introduced Dane, referring to the statue.  Then, turning to the man with the stoop, he

added: "And this is  Barlow." 

DANA had heard of Barlow. He was a character like Amon, but less  ambitious. When opera became a past

issue in Industria, Amon had  entered the costume business, but Barlow was content to serve as  caretaker at

the opera house. 

He was part of the place, Barlow. He acted as janitor, handy man,  stage manager, everything else that might

be required except ticket  seller. Barlow was too slowwitted to work in the box office. He  belonged

backstage and stayed there. 

"The statue came from Amon's," explained Dane. "Fortunately, it was  shipped here with most of the scenery

and props before the fire. We  salvaged the rest from Amon's cellar, but it's too bad we don't have  Amon, too.

He might have arranged an instantaneous transformation to  take the place of the blackout between Scenes

Two and Three. However,  it's pretty fair as is." 

Dane gestured to Barlow, whose drab face showed some understanding.  Barlow pushed the statue to the

center of the stage, standing it  beneath an open archway flanked by two imitation pillars that were  simply

wide slats of painted woodwork. 

"Set it at an angle, Barlow," ordered Dane. Then, when the  caretaker stared dumbly, Dane hobbled over on

his crutch. "Here, I'll  show you. It has to be at an angle so they can see me behind it." 

Turning the statue, Dane took his place behind it, in the archway.  Stepping forth, he took a look at the statue's

face. 

"It doesn't look enough like you," Dane told Diana. "However, I  think we can sculpture it a bit... Paint and

brushes, Barlow, and a  chisel." 


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As soon as Barlow shambled from the stage, Diana gripped Dane's  arm. Her words were an undertone, but

the acoustics of the opera house  were perfect. Her voice carried to The Shadow. 

"You said you had something to tell me, Ferris," expressed Diana.  "Something about Roy Rexford " 

Dane interrupted with a quick nod. Leaning against the statue of  Marguerite, he spoke to its living duplicate. 

"You probably wondered a lot the other night," he said. "I mean  when I took Roy's part " 

"You were grand, Ferris," inserted Diana. "Why, the way you punched  the mob from the car window, without

letting anyone give a real blow in  return " 

"I mean before that," put in Dane. "When I didn't accuse Rexford of  murdering Traymer. Didn't you wonder

then?" 

"Frankly, I did wonder." 

"That's because you didn't see what I saw from the tower behind the  throne. I was looking along the street and

I saw Prince Poverty twice." 

"Why, so did I!" began Diana. "We saw him more than twice. He came  on the float three times." 

Dane shook his head as he smiled. 

"What I mean," he declared, "was that I saw Prince Poverty twice at  once  though that's an odd way to put it.

The one that leaped from the  float was still in sight behind us when the second barged on the scene  with that

big flagon." 

Diana's eyes showed the amazement that Dane expected. But there  wasn't any surprise on the part of Dane's

unseen audience, The Shadow.  This was the very thing that The Shadow had analyzed from Clyde's  report.

Prince Poverty, by Clyde's own description, had reappeared too  suddenly to be the tattered clown that Clyde

had first seen! 

There was a sudden exclamation from Diana. 

"Then Roy had a double!" 

"He may have had two doubles," suggested Dane. "Prince Poverty  popped up too far ahead the third time, and

from the wrong side of the  street. The first man might have taken a short cut, but I don't think  so. Let's say

there were three." 

"And only one was Roy." Diana paused, her forehead furrowed  anxiously, the wrinkles disappearing into her

red hair. "But which of  the three was he? Not the third man, I hope!" 

"I'd say he was the first," decided Dane. "The others wouldn't have  risked showing themselves until they

thought Roy's act was over. What's  more, I'd say that each took a turn at killing Traymer, thinking he was  me.

One man failed, the other succeeded." 

DANE'S analysis was perfect, as The Shadow could testify. The  cloaked investigator held the very evidence

needed. Clyde Burke had  seen Roy Rexford putting on his mask to make his appearance as the  first Prince

Poverty. The poison in the wine from the flagon proved  that the second Prince Poverty had tried to murder


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King Progress before  the third prince settled the situation with his knife. 

"Tell me, Ferris," insisted Diana earnestly. "Who could the two  other men have been?" 

"In my opinion," replied Dane slowly, "one was Warren Helm, the  other Laird Woburn." 

Mere mention of such important names left Diana quite agape.  However, she gradually began to realize that

since suspicion had fallen  on Rexford, it could be tossed on them as well. What Diana wanted was a  reason,

so Dane provided one. 

"You wonder why those two would want to murder me," he said, in an  impersonal tone. "I would say that

they were simply jealous of Rexford;  so jealous, that they wanted to ruin him." 

"Then why didn't they try to kill Roy?" asked Diana. 

"I was a more logical victim," replied Dane. "I'd just taken the  jinx job. My death would have made the

earlier accidents look like  murder, too; all Rexford's work." 

"Of course!" exclaimed Diana. "And I remember something else"  the  girl's eyes were flashing furiously 

"the way Helm and Woburn stirred  that mob into going after Roy!" 

"I've been looking for their motive," continued Dane, accepting  Diana's statement at face value. "My talk of

letting financial figures  wait was just bluff. I've gone through Helm's accounts and Woburn's  with a

finetooth comb." 

"And there was something wrong with them?" 

"Not a thing." Dane shook his head. "That was a puzzler while it  lasted. Then I struck the answer. Rexford's

accounts are still to be  delivered." 

"But Roy's accounts would certainly be in order!" 

"That's just it," assured Dane. "Too much in order to suit Helm and  Woburn. Rexford is doing so well with

synthetic rubber that his total  will exceed those of the foundry and the dyeworks combined." 

Herself a product of Industria, Diana could see the logic. She knew  that in this model community, all men,

large as well as small, were  slaves to a great master called "output." She was ready to believe that  men like

Helm and Woburn would go to any limit to eliminate a man whose  output might exceed their own. 

Between them, they had branded Rexford a murderer, and had  therewith stirred a mob to take immediate

vengeance upon him. The  actual murder, which one of the conspirators had perpetrated, was  merely the

wedge to Rexford's doom. Had the mob caught him, Rexford  would not have lived to state his innocence. 

Diana's eyes met Dane's, as the girl queried: 

"Does Roy know this?" 

"He must," answered Dane. "If I could reason it out, he could do so  even better, because he didn't have to

argue his own innocence." 

"But the man in black, the mysterious person who is now blamed for  Traymer's death, and Amon's " 


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"He was trying to help Roy," inserted Dane. "I know, because he did  the same favor for me. I'll tell you all

about it later, Diana. Here  comes Barlow." 

The return of the human relic belonging to the opera house was the  cue for The Shadow's exit. Skirting the

boxes, he left the stage door  while Barlow stood watching Dane remold the features of the Marguerite  statue. 

A laugh whispered in the outside darkness. Its strange sibilance  seemed to summarize all that The Shadow

had heard. But it carried an  individual note that bespoke The Shadow's own opinions on the final  points that

Dane had mentioned. 

The matter of motive went deeper than Dane had stated. In  considering Rexford as crime's target, Dane had

forgotten factors that  concerned himself, or at least let them dwindle. There could still be  reasons why Helm

and Woburn wanted to dispose of the man who held the  jinx job as vice president of Gault Consolidated. 

If Dane happened to be free from danger for the present, that was  explainable, too. Indeed, Dane himself had

provided the key to his own  safety, in the course of his statements to Diana. 

The Shadow knew, and his knowledge was the sort to prove valuable.  For The Shadow had already picked

the setting where crime's next stroke  could be expected. 

That setting would be the stage of the old opera house; the time,  the evening of the scheduled pantomime! 

CHAPTER XVII. DRAMA OF DEATH

ELLERY GAULT was polishing his pennies, twenty thousand of them,  for he'd added to his total recently. It

was a long, arduous task, the  polishing, and the psychiatrists regarded it an excellent sign. 

They declared that Gault's complex, or fixation, was reaching a  crisis or crux. Unless it retrogressed or

deteriorated into a new  phobia or psychosis, Gault's condition would become the equivalence or  simulation of

a norm or level. 

Such, at least, was the general verdict of the specialists, who had  finally agreed on everything except the use

of words that meant the  same thing. All they had to say was that Gault would either get better  or worse; but

that would be putting it too directly. 

As for Gault, he didn't care. Apparently, he didn't realize that  the doctors' bills would cost him many dollars'

worth of nice bright  pennies. On a basis of words alone, the fees would climb to great  proportions. But Gault

was happy. 

They'd said he could keep his pennies. He could polish them all he  wanted, so their lovely coppery color

wouldn't tarnish. Gault could  even invite people to his counting room and show them his hoard of  pennies. If

he wished, he could charge admission in the form of new  pennies themselves. 

Thus it happened that when Lamont Cranston called at the mansion  for Margo Lane, an invitation was

extended him to visit Gault's  quarters. This was on the evening when the pantomime was to be held,  but

Cranston was well ahead of time. So he and Margo went up to see  Gault. 

Faithful retainers were on duty, stolid servants specially assigned  to Gault. One of them ushered the visitors

through the room with pearl  lamps and purple curtains, into Gault's counting chamber. There, Gault  was

busily polishing pennies with little squares of chamois, slowly  building stacks of coins. 


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Gault gave his visitors a delighted smile when they laid some  pennies on the table. He kept polishing his

coins, breathing on them  before he rubbed them, holding them to the light after he shined them.  When the

visitors were about to leave, Gault forgot that he was  collecting pennies and became generous. 

"You'd each like a penny, wouldn't you?" he queried, with a tilt of  his head. "A nice bright penny?" 

Jingling some coins as he spoke, he extended his hand and opened  it. With a bow, Cranston reached to take

two pennies, one for himself,  the other for Margo. His hand had a faster approach than Gault  realized. With a

sudden reversion to his miserly self, Gault whipped  back his hand, doubling it tightly. 

Then, gingerly opening his fist, he let pennies drop one by one to  his other hand, all the while watching

Cranston warily. There was a  fanatic glint in Gault's old eyes, but gradually it faded. As he  dropped the sixth

penny, he stopped suddenly, and thrust the coin to  Margo. Then, counting more coins one by one, he regained

his trust of  Cranston and gave him a penny also. 

Downstairs, Ferris Dane was showing Diana Gault a sheaf of account  sheets that he'd brought from his office.

They hadn't time to go over  the sheets in detail, so Dane thrust them into a brief case, which he  placed

beneath a desk. Dane was speaking when they came out to the  hallway. 

"I can't find a flaw," he declared glumly. "Helm and Woburn have  accounted for everything to the last

penny." 

Diana gave a shudder. Mention of pennies made her think of her  uncle and his obsession. In Diana's opinion,

Ellery Gault was getting  worse instead of better. 

"I'm sorry," said Dane, realizing his slip. "What about your uncle?  Wouldn't a sanitarium help him, Diana?" 

"We're ready to send him there," the girl confided. "What's more,  he'll go if I think best, because I asked him.

All he insists on is a  private ambulance, with his own servants as attendants. There's one  waiting out in the

garage. I only hope it won't be needed." 

Cranston and Margo arriving, the group left in the big limousine.  Looking back from Gault's commodious

car, Cranston studied the great  stone mansion. There was something about the place that reminded him of

Ellery Gault. 

That blank section, where a wide, solid buttress formed the  connecting foundation of the mansion's two

sections, seemed barren of  reason, like Gault's mind. Yet above that grim base were glimmers from  the

windows of Gault's own apartment, which was directly over the solid  foundation. 

Faint glimmers, shaded by purple curtains, just as Gault's own mind  was clouded by fantastic ideas that

shrouded its pearly glow. But where  there was light there could be reason. The Shadow was convinced that

Ellery Gault could still be stirred to sanity, under proper treatment  and with the right conditions. 

AT the opera house, Cranston conducted Margo into the private box,  to find Laird Woburn already there.

Usually flabby, Woburn was rather a  revelation on this occasion. He seemed dignified, selfimportant, quite

the perfect host. For Woburn was taking the place of Ellery Gault, and  was therefore in the public eye. Even

when the house lights dimmed, to  mark the start of the pantomime, Woburn was posing for the benefit of  the

audience at large. 

By then, the box party lacked one member. 


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Lamont Cranston had stepped out through the box curtains. Reaching  the door that led backstage, he plucked

a black cloak and slouch hat  from beneath a small table. Putting on those garments, he became The  Shadow. 

This blackclad stranger that everyone was seeking was actually to  be a participant in the coming drama. His

part, however, would be an  invisible one. Hundreds of onlookers from the auditorium of the opera  house

would never dream that a cloaked actor was stalking behind the  scenes. 

Backstage, The Shadow contacted Clyde Burke, who was standing near  the switchboard where Barlow

handled the lights. His arms gripped by an  unseen hand, his ears catching a low whisper, Clyde let himself be

drawn into deeper darkness, where he heard The Shadow's instructions. 

The Shadow intended to keep close watch on the Big Three: Helm,  Woburn and Rexford. If the trio was

under surveillance, a fourth man,  Dane, would be cared for automatically, since none of the big three  could

encounter Dane without the fact being noticed. 

Should any member of the watched trio attempt to revive the jinx  that failed the other night, the murder

attempt could be forestalled by  The Shadow. The cloaked guardian was sure that either Helm or Woburn

would give away their intentions if they planned murder. 

Thus The Shadow was instructing Clyde to exert his reporter's  privilege and stay backstage for the express

purpose of watching Helm.  As a member of the box party, Margo was already keeping tabs on Woburn.  Each

agent was to notify The Shadow immediately if either of the  suspects showed symptoms of a criminal move. 

The Shadow would be watching Rexford. 

There were still some doubts regarding Rexford. He could have made  that call to Creep Hubin, the night of

the foundry episode. Rexford  could have murdered old Amon, for Clyde had seen him coming from the

costume shop and found Amon missing from the loft. Those points made it  possible that Rexford had been

the first Prince Poverty and the third  on pageant night, though The Shadow doubted it. 

However, it wasn't right to overlook the fact that Rexford's  accounts had not yet been delivered to Gault

Consolidated. In brief,  Rexford was by no means in the clear. 

Such factors, by The Shadow's analysis, were actually in Rexford's  favor, because they pointed to a frameup

on the part of Helm and  Woburn. Therein lay The Shadow's strongest reason for watching Rexford.  Having

failed to pin blame for Traymer's death on Rexford, Helm and  Woburn might be planning to murder Rexford

himself, to prevent him from  some day bouncing guilt back on them. 

There was still another reason why The Shadow was personally  handling the Rexford situation. It might

prove more important than all  the rest combined. However, The Shadow was keeping that reason strictly  to

himself as the pantomime began. 

THE first scene was between Dane and Helm. Attired in a deepred  costume, Dane appeared as

Mephistopheles and whispered satanic wisdom  in the ear of Helm, who represented Faust. Helm was wearing

the  cavalier's costume that he'd used in the pageant, but it had undergone  some alterations since then. 

There were no masks in this drama, but Dane's features were made up  heavily, with the ruddy color and the

exaggerated eyebrows that suited  Mephistopheles. In pantomime, Dane put across the idea that Helm was to

hew a lifesized statue; and the first scene ended. 


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The shift to the next was rapid. Hustling Barlow from the  switchboard, Dane had him roll the Marguerite

statue on the blackened  stage. There were voices in the darkness as Dane set the statue's angle  by clamps

nailed to the stage. Then came the quick setting of the  powder pan that was to produce the lightning flash. 

The Shadow saw Barlow rig a wire to a rumbler that was to produce  the thunder. Then Barlow took his place

at the switchboard and turned  up the stage lights. Checking on Clyde, The Shadow saw him close to  Helm,

who was pacing nervously in the wings. Looking for Rexford, The  Shadow saw him knocking at the door of

Diana's dressing room, to tell  her that the second scene was on. 

Barlow fixed a final gadget, a wire from the rumbler to a cutoff on  the switchboard. It made the setup perfect,

this arrangement. A flash  of lightning would be Dane's cue to lunge at the statue and overturn  it, amid a roar

of thunder which would produce a blackout without  depending upon Barlow to gather his slow wits and pull

the switch. 

From the audience, there came an approving murmur as the lights  revealed the second scene. Midstage

stood the Marguerite statue, a  fair resemblance of Diana. Behind the statue was Mephistopheles,  motionless

in the archway. The distorted leer that Dane had practiced  was showing at its best, or worst. 

Not only would this tableau hold the stage alone; it would continue  when Helm returned as Faust and

beckoned for Rexford to appear as  Valentin. Helm was in the wing, timing his cue by a stop watch, with

Clyde watching him from close by. The Shadow, shrouded completely in  the backstage gloom, was checking

Rexford's departure from Diana's  door. Helm was depending upon Rexford to catch his proper cue. 

From her seat in the box, Margo was fascinated by the tableau. Dane  was stealing the show, as a wave of

applause indicated. To retain an  utterly immobile pose was an art in itself, but Dane was accomplishing  it

under exacting circumstances. His slightest waver would form a bad  contrast to the rigid statue that stood

before him. 

Dane didn't waver. Moreover, his Mephistophelian figure was well in  view, because he had set the statue at a

proper angle to reveal the  archway, particularly to those persons on the side of the house where  the box party

was located. 

In her fascination, Margo almost forgot that her business was to  watch Woburn. Fortunately, when the box

curtain stirred, it brushed  Margo's shoulder and made her turn. 

Old Barlow was peering into the box. He saw Woburn, gave his  shoulder a tap and whispered something to

him. With a look of  annoyance, Woburn arose and followed Barlow from the box. Quickly,  Margo left her

seat and started to overtake them on their way to the  door that led backstage. 

Margo had a pretext ready. All she'd have to say was that Diana  expected her. Woburn would certainly be

gentleman enough to let Margo  precede him backstage. Her mere arrival there would tell The Shadow  that

Woburn was coming next. 

It was all very simple, even though the connecting door was  completely dark. At least, it would have been

quite simple if that  darkness hadn't held a menace that Margo couldn't see. Barlow was the  first person to

encounter the thing; he dropped back with a puzzled  grunt. Pressing past the slowwitted man, Woburn met

the hidden issue. 

Or rather, the issue met him in a style inhuman. 


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A tongue of flame stabbed straight to Woburn's heart as sharply, as  suddenly as a knife thrust had once

jabbed Traymer. Woburn's lunge was  useless, like his grab. He collapsed heavily, hitting vacancy as he  fell

forward. 

For the door had slashed open, and through it the killer was  darting backstage, gone so quickly that neither

Margo nor Barlow had a  chance to identify him as more than a vague, darkish shape. 

Horrified, Margo stumbled across Woburn's body to reach the closing  door, wondering, despite herself,

whether she'd be right in carrying  word of this unexpected tragedy. 

For the figure that had dodged from sight after dealing death to  Laird Woburn, was showing speed and

manner far too similar to those of  an unseen actor whose avowed purpose was the prevention of crime,  rather

than its delivery. 

The Shadow! 

CHAPTER XVIII. DEATH DEALS DOUBLE

COMMOTION was beginning backstage when Margo Lane arrived there.  Nor was she the only person who

saw the reason for it. Clyde Burke saw  the thing that happened, too late to prevent it. 

First came the clang of the connecting door, caused by a figure  that swooped past in the dimness. Then,

before Clyde could even budge,  Woburn's murderer had reached Helm. 

Even more than Margo, Clyde gained a horrified impression of The  Shadow. The figure that seized Helm

looked cloaked, though Helm's own  costume, with its Faust cape, might have caused the illusion. Whoever

the attacker, Helm must have recognized him by the light from the  stage, for Clyde heard Helm bleat a cry of

recognition. 

There wasn't time for Helm to voice a name. In the midst of their  grapple, his attacker gave him the same

treatment that Woburn had  received  a shot straight to the heart. Leaping forward, Clyde was met  by Helm's

slumping form as the killer flung it toward him. Cutting  between Clyde and the wing, the murderer was away

again. Margo's view  of that darting shape was no better than Clyde's. 

Two pointblank shots, each a token of instant death, yet neither  had reached the audience nor the stage. The

first was lost in the  passage by the connecting door; the second was muffled by the body that  received it.

Except for persons backstage, people hearing those dull  blasts would never have defined them as gunshots. 

On stage, the tableau still held full attention, though the  audience was getting restless. People didn't want to

look at a statue  all night, even though Dane, the Mephistopheles behind it, was setting  an endurance record

for perfect immobility. 

The audience wanted other contrast. People were awaiting Faust and  Valentin. If Helm and Rexford came on

stage and went through their  motions, it would add to Dane's portrayal of a frozen Mephistopheles.

Handclaps were beginning with precision beats. Voices from the gallery  called: 

"Bring on Faust!" 

It wouldn't have done to bring on Faust, Helm's present state not  being suited to public display. As for

Valentin, his business was to  await the beckon that this Faust would never give. Still, with Dane  holding his


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onstage pose so well, Rexford might have helped the cause  by coming on alone. 

The trouble was that Rexford had begun an unrehearsed show of his  own. Not far from where Helm's body

lay, Rexford had put in a sudden  appearance to begin an offstage struggle. He was grappling with a vague

figure that matched his strenuous efforts, and the two were disputing  the possession of a glimmering revolver

unquestionably the gun that  had slain both Woburn and Helm. 

The tussle was very brief. As the pair reeled toward a rear wing,  they tripped across a sandbag that formed a

curtain weight. Hitting the  floor they rolled apart, the gun skidding from their combined clutch  and bounding

off to a corner. 

With that, the unknown assailant disappeared in the darkness by the  deep wing. Rexford, however, remained

visible; plainly so. He was  diving for the revolver, hissing a sharp, vengeful snarl. Reaching the  gun, he

scooped it up and wheeled to look for his adversary. He saw  Clyde springing toward him, and either through

mistake or sheer  madness, Rexford would have done some trigger tugging there and then,  if intervention

hadn't come. 

A cloaked shape whirled from darkness. It seemed that this figure  must have circled Rexford to reach him.

Gloved hands caught Rexford  with a speedy hold, wrenching him full about and sending his gun upward  as

its muzzle spoke. Then Rexford was doing a somersault combined with  a sideward twist, the gun flying from

his hand again. 

Witnessing this climax, Margo hadn't any doubt regarding the  identity of Rexford's present antagonist. Only

The Shadow could deal  out such timely and efficient treatment. Likewise, The Shadow was  unique in the way

he disappeared. He didn't dive for darkness; he  simply twisted and let it gather him. 

Arriving from her dressing room, Diana's reaction differed. Her  thoughts were all for Rexford. Seeing him

land with a sprawl that left  him groggy, Diana rushed over to help him to his feet. About to stoop  and pick up

the revolver, Clyde desisted when he heard a whisper close  beside him. 

Things were due to follow double death. The Shadow knew, and his  instructions to Clyde were specific. The

same applied with Margo, when  The Shadow contacted her a moment later. In keeping with The Shadow's

prediction, things did happen  rapidly. 

THE stage tableau ended with a lightning flash, a peal of  artificial thunder, and a total blackout, all

automatically produced.  By then, the curtain was already hissing downward. 

Barlow's wits were slow, but capable, when once he gathered them.  As the curtain struck, Barlow pulled a

switch that lighted the entire  stage. 

People were coming through the connecting door, a flood of them.  Ushers had started back to find out why

the tableau had been prolonged.  Finding Woburn's body, they'd naturally summoned other persons,  including

members of the box party. 

Arrivals were pointing excitedly toward Helm's body. Others,  looking beyond, saw the stage itself. There,

Dane was stepping from the  open archway behind the Marguerite statue. His costume, blackish in the

background, showed its maroon hue as he reached the light. His face,  too, lost the expression he used for

Mephistopheles and showed anger  that was rightfully Dane's own. 

"Who ruined the scene?" demanded Dane. "Helm or Rexford? How could  I finish the Mephistopheles act

without either Faust or Valentin on  stage? What was I to do  dump the statue for a laugh?" 


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Looking past stunned faces, Dane saw Barlow. Striding over, he  thumped the old stagehand on the back. 

"Good work, Barlow," complimented Dane. "You showed judgment when  you dropped that curtain. I saw it

falling when the flash went off, so  I held my pose right into the blackout." 

Barlow nodded, but his face looked twitchy. Dane thought that the  devil costume scared him and started to

laugh. Then, as Barlow pointed,  Dane saw Helm's body. He sprang over to stoop above the motionless  form. 

It was weird, that sight, considering Dane's costume. Almost as if  a real Satan had arrived to claim a victim

that belonged to him. The  grotesque act was completed when Dane heard word of Woburn's death and  went

to view the other body. When Dane returned, he was grimly peeling  off the Mephistopheles costume. 

Bluntly, he demanded: "Who murdered them?" 

Eyes turned toward Rexford, who was coming from his daze. Staring  back, Rexford slowly shook his head. 

"I don't know," he declared in halting tone. "There was somebody...  somebody I grabbed... all in black " 

People expected Dane to continue the quiz. He was certainly the man  most eligible, considering that he had

been in view of an entire  audience all during the drama of death that took place backstage. So  Dane

proceeded to question whatever witnesses he could find. 

Clyde Burke was first. He declared he'd been backstage, and he  stated how he'd seen an unknown assassin

murder Helm, then spring to  darkness past the wings. He remembered a bouncing gun, with Rexford  going

after it, to finish with a headlong sprawl. 

Margo Lane told how she'd started backstage behind Barlow and  Woburn. She'd seen the shot that killed

Woburn and had glimpsed an  assassin flee through the connecting door. Arriving backstage, Margo  had

witnessed Helm's death, exactly as Clyde described it. 

Diana Gault could add nothing of consequence. Everything was over  when she came from the dressing room.

She'd seen Rexford's flying  tumble as he finished it. That was all. 

Rexford became suddenly coherent. 

"You mean I imagined everything?" he demanded, with a glare that  included Diana with the other witnesses.

"You're all crazy, I tell you!  I saw the killer and I grabbed him, back by the rear wing. I'd gotten  his gun,

when we spilled and fell apart. 

"I went after the gun and was looking for him when he hit me from  in back, where I never expected him to

be. Who he was, I don't know,  but he was all in black, like"  Rexford hesitated, then continued  boldly 

"like the man who murdered Traymer and Amon!" 

The looks Rexford received were wooden. People were beginning to  think that Rexford himself was the very

figure that he mentioned. After  all, Rexford could have grabbed a black cloak for a disguise, that time  he

raced to Amon's loft ahead of a bloodthirsty mob. If so, he'd  logically have killed Amon when the latter

witnessed his attempt at  disguise. 

Even Diana's face had lost all sympathy. The only countenance that  Rexford could consider impartial was

that of a calmmannered member of  the box party: Lamont Cranston. 


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Not for an instant did Rexford connect Cranston with the cloaked  mystery man upon whom he wanted to pin

guilt for four murders. Perhaps  that was why Cranston's face remained so impassive that Rexford

characterized it as friendly. 

But Rexford couldn't look for help from Cranston. Instead, he swung  to Barlow and asked what he'd seen. 

Barlow shook his head. His eyes weren't too good in dim light.  However, Dane realized that Barlow's

testimony could be valuable. So  Dane picked up where Rexford left off. 

"Miss Lane said you came out to the box," reminded Dane, "and that  you asked Woburn to come backstage.

Who sent you, Barlow?" 

"I don't know," replied Barlow slowly. "Somebody tapped my  shoulder, here at the switchboard, and said to

get Mr. Woburn right  away. It couldn't have been Mr. Helm; he was at the wing, timing his  cue. It couldn't

have been you, Mr. Dane, because you were on the  stage. 

"It wasn't Miss Gault. She was in her dressing room. Besides this  was a man's voice that spoke to me, very

low." Pausing, Barlow looked  about as though his slowmotion thoughts had just completed a long  train.

Jabbing a finger at Rexford, the stoopish man exclaimed: 

"It was you, Mr. Rexford!" 

THAT settled it. A dozen hands gripped Rexford. They were firm but  not violent, because Dane, limping

forward on his weak ankle, announced  that he'd settle the first man who showed any trend toward mob law.

Dane intended to see that Rexford received fair play. 

Two persons present stared benumbed: Clyde Burke and Margo Lane.  They knew another factor in this game

their chief, The Shadow. He,  even more than Rexford, could have been the person who whispered in

Barlow's ear. For if Rexford had really sent for Woburn, The Shadow  would have stopped crime at that

moment. 

Clyde and Margo didn't doubt The Shadow; that would have been  impossible. It was their lack of doubt that

left them so at sea. It  seemed as though crime had at last provided a riddle too great even for  The Shadow to

unravel! 

CHAPTER XIX. TRAIL FINDS TRAIL

AS soon as everything was quite controlled, Ferris Dane went out to  the box office and phoned the local

police chief. When he returned,  Dane found Diana Gault awaiting him. She'd changed from the Marguerite

costume and wanted Dane to take her home. 

Margo was to go along  which she did, after looking toward  Cranston to receive his nod. Diana didn't see

the nod because she was  giving Roy Rexford a cold, final stare as she passed him. Rexford  scarcely caught

the glance; he looked too bewildered. 

All this had taken about fifteen minutes; it was another ten before  the police chief appeared. Cranston gave

Clyde a signal to slide from  sight, rather than be taken along as a material witness. Later, Clyde  could be

summoned if needed; for the present, The Shadow might find his  services useful. 

Following the throng out through the front of the opera house,  Cranston dallied there, awaiting his chance to


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stroll away. As soon as  all had thinned out indoors, Cranston intended to return backstage,  reclaim his black

garb where he had secretly placed it, and again  become The Shadow. 

Though the bodies of Woburn and Helm had been removed, there were  still some curious prowlers around

the stage when Clyde poked his head  through the archway where Dane had posed as Mephistopheles. He saw

the  Marguerite statue right beside him; it had been moved back against the  scenery. Before Clyde had time to

study the statue closely, men arrived  to take it away, along with the rest of the scenery. 

They were truckmen, who asked for Barlow, only to learn that he'd  gone to police headquarters. So the

truckers took the stage set without  further question, which rather puzzled Clyde. The stuff could not be  going

back to Amon's shop, because it was no longer in existence. So  Clyde followed along to have a look at the

truck. 

The truckmen had to set the statue upright when they worked it  through the stage door. A dozen feet behind

them, Clyde halted and gave  an amazed stare. Barlow's eyes weren't the only ones that were bad in  dim light;

that, at least, was Clyde's first opinion. Then, as the  statue was swung through to the alley, Clyde was more

than ever anxious  to learn facts about the truck. 

No time to wait for The Shadow. Sliding through the stage door,  Clyde reached the darkened alley and

approached the truck. The statue  was lying in with the scenery, and Clyde crept alongside for a closer  look. 

Then, from the darkness, two husky men sprang upon Clyde, taking  him totally by surprise. Pitched forward,

his head hit the side of the  truck and Clyde went completely limp. 

Promptly, the stunned prisoner was placed in the truck, alongside  the statue. The truck pulled away, its

occupants quite satisfied that  their departure would remain unchallenged. Thinking in terms of the  load, the

truckers forgot the empty stage that they had left behind  them. 

At that very moment, The Shadow, returning by the connecting door,  paused in Cranston's guise to view the

vacancy. The last of the curious  crowd was leaving, but none of them was carrying fragments of scenery  as

souvenirs. 

Reaching for his cloak and hat, The Shadow overheard the truck's  departing rumble. Three steps toward the

stage door and his stride  became The Shadow's, as did his garb. 

All in one sweep, that transformation. In the gloom of the alley,  The Shadow continued his swift transit

toward the parking lot where he  had left his roadster. He could hear the truck fading in the distance,  but the

direction told him the logical road that it would be taking out  of town. 

Three miles from Industria, the truck swung to a side road on the  far side of a hill. There, its crew began to

unload. It didn't take  them long to stack the stage equipment on the ground, because none of  the set was very

heavy, not even the wooden statue. 

Finding Clyde still unconscious, the truckers left him with the  stuff. That done, they backed around and

started for the main road. 

Into the glare of headlights came a thing that made the driver  falter. It looked like the most enormous bat that

he had ever seen,  rising with a swoop so startling that the driver jammed the brakes and  almost ditched the

truck. 


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That pause was enough. The thing, whatever it was, came lunging  into the truck itself, slashing with claws

that felt like prongs of  steel. Men dived from the truck and fled for the road, unwisely  entering the glare of

their own headlights on the assumption that the  mammoth creature would stay in the dark. 

Folly, it proved, was better than wisdom. Delivering a laugh that  made the fugitives falter and look back in

horror, The Shadow swept  into the glare. For the first time, the scared truckers saw that the  bat was human,

its steel claws looming guns. They turned with their  hands raised, seeking mercy. 

Guns talked. Screeching men flung themselves to the ground. But The  Shadow's guns hadn't opened the

barrage. The shots were coming from the  spot where the truckers had left the load for others to pick up.

Those  others were on hand, and they were shooting at The Shadow. 

Wheeling into darkness, The Shadow returned the gunfire, at the  same time shifting toward his foemen. There

was a dart of whiteclad  figures in the night; then a vehicle was speeding away along the side  road, taking the

curve of the hill. Murderous men were off, along with  the transferred load that they had gathered. 

Meanwhile, the original crew was back in the empty truck, making a  mad getaway by the highroad. 

This business of unarmed truckmen shifting a burden to a crowd of  crooks merely fitted with The Shadow's

wellformed theory. His laugh,  though grim, seemed actually to approve the getaway, particularly of  the men

in white. 

WHEN Margo Lane heard The Shadow's laugh, it was like a whispered  echo of the earlier mirth. Margo was

in the music room at the Gault  mansion, waiting for Ferris Dane and Diana to finish a private  conference.

Turning, Margo saw the blackness of the garden terrace just  outside the door. Knowing that The Shadow

must be there, she went in  that direction. 

From the darkness, The Shadow asked if Margo had heard any cars  arrive. At first, she started to shake her

head, but then she  remembered: 

"Why, yes! One did. But it was only the ambulance. It is to stay  here, in case Mr. Gault gets worse." 

The Shadow's eyes looked across the garden toward a garage where  dim lights were burning. His hand took

Margo's arm, as he queried in a  tone quite like Cranston's: 

"If you dropped a penny somewhere, how would you go about finding  it?" 

"Why, I'd drop another and see where it fell," replied Margo. "Some  people might call it silly, but I'd say that

where one rolled, the  other would go, too." 

"I've lost a penny named Clyde Burke." The tone was much more The  Shadow's own. "If you would like to

be the other penny, go to the  garage and snoop around that ambulance." 

Going straight to the garage, Margo learned how quickly things  could happen. In the ambulance, she rounded

a folded theater curtain,  the only remaining item of a load already removed. She'd just unfolded  the curtain

far enough to find that it belonged to the "Faust" set,  when hands clapped across her face and bent her arms

behind her. 

Dragged from the ambulance, Margo found herself gripped by two of  Gault's confidential servants,

recognizable despite the white coats  that they wore while posing as ambulance attendants. Since Margo didn't

struggle, the pair weren't overly rough when they marched her to the  house, going in by an obscure door that


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led to Gault's own apartment. 

The Shadow followed by the same route. About to ascend the stairs,  he heard voices outside the hallway

curtain. Dane was speaking to  Diana. 

"I'm going up to see your uncle," declared Dane. "I think he ought  to know all that has happened. It can't hurt

him, and it might actually  shock him into sanity." 

Gliding upward, The Shadow entered the room with purple curtains  and chose a corner away from the

pearlhued lights to let Dane pass.  Coming through, Dane entered the counting room without knocking. 

Reaching the door almost as it closed, The Shadow turned the knob  slowly, deftly, and peered through a

narrow crack. One glance was  enough to prove his full theory regarding crime, plus a few recent

developments which fitted closely to the pattern. 

One trail had found another. The rule didn't just apply to Margo  Lane and Clyde Burke, though they were

deeply involved. What was more  vital, in its way, was that the trail of Ferris Dane had disclosed the  trail of

Ellery Gault! 

CHAPTER XX. PARTNERS IN PROFIT

THERE were no longer any pennies in Gault's counting room, unless  Margo Lane could be termed one. She

was in the custody of Gault's  whitejacketed servants, and when Dane saw Margo, he gave his eyebrows  a

surprised lift. 

"Burke saw your truck," Gault told Dane, "and the Lane girl found  my ambulance. So my men brought them

here." 

"That makes it even up," said Dane, with a cold laugh. "However, we  did better, transferring the stage props

to the ambulance. Thanks for  the suggestion. The truck was my only worry." 

Old Gault cocked his head. His gaze was so shrewd, so sane, that it  proved his mania was all a fake  as The

Shadow had long suspected.  About to speak, Gault noted Margo and gestured to his men. They took  the girl

into the alcove where Gault kept his penny coffer. 

Gault closed the door, drew back a small panel and pressed a  button. The Shadow heard a faint rumble,

proving that Gault's penny  closet was an elevator, going down to a secret cellar in the  foundations that made

the midsection of the mansion. 

"Now, Dane," said Gault, "what about this stage equipment? Did it  have anything to do with the ironclad alibi

you mentioned over the  telephone?" 

"It did," replied Dane. "I knew you'd be glad to hear that I'd  disposed of your two partners. One good partner

is better than two bad  ones." 

Gault clucked his appreciation. It was obvious that he preferred  one partner on a fiftyfifty basis, to a pair

who demanded onethird  each; hence Dane was better than the combination of Helm and Woburn.  Having

put that point, Dane pressed another. 

"Of course, I went over the accounts," he declared. "It was all  bluff, my saying that I'd have to wait until I had


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another man like  Traymer. I found that Helm and Woburn had anticipated an idea of my  own. They'd marked

up their taxes to correspond to the local rate  elsewhere, and were pocketing the difference. 

"Those two had grabbed better than half a million dollars, while  you were playing with pennies. It didn't

make sense, if you'll pardon  the pun. I couldn't figure Helm and Woburn teaming on such a  proposition,

unless you were the man higher up. So when I found I  really had a jinx job, as the man who could ruin the

game, I turned it  the other way." 

All the while, Gault was nodding approvingly. He stopped when Dane  put the blunt query: 

"And now, Mr. Gault, where is the cash we're going to split? I mean  half a million dollars, not twenty

thousand cents." 

Gault pressed the elevator button and brought the car up. He  gestured Dane to a seat on the penny coffer. 

"We'll go down to my strong room," declared Gault. "I shall show  you how I put half a million dollars where

no one would suspect it. In  turn, you can reveal your system of committing murder while in plain  view. I

should say that we have much in common, Dane." 

The two went down in the elevator. Hearing the faint rumble fade,  The Shadow was about to enter the

counting room when footsteps came  from the outer hall. Deftly avoiding the many furnishings, The Shadow

blended with the deep hue of a purple curtain. 

In from the hall came Diana Gault, bringing Roy Rexford, whose  present residence should have been a jail

cell! 

Roy was protesting his innocence. He'd broken away from the police  in the hope that he could prove it. He

wanted to talk to Dane, and  Diana was granting him the privilege. 

"I don't think Ferris will believe you," declared Diana firmly.  "And I know my uncle can not help.

Nevertheless " 

Opening the door of the counting room, Diana was surprised to find  it empty. A horrible thought gripped her. 

"Uncle Ellery may have locked himself in with the pennies!"  exclaimed Diana. "Perhaps Ferris is trapped

there with him!" 

Seeing the panel that Gault had forgotten to close, Rexford pressed  the button. He tried the door, but it didn't

open until after a short  buzzing. Then the door came free so suddenly, that Roy saw the slight  jolt of the

stopping elevator. When he told Diana what the room was,  she wouldn't believe him. 

"Step inside," suggested Rexford, "and I'll prove it." 

This time, The Shadow was at the door of the elevator when its  downward trip began. His ear against the

panel, he could detect the  entire trip. Listening for any commotion from below, he heard only the  opening of

another door, which slid shut a few moments later. With a  satisfied laugh, The Shadow pressed the button to

bring the car up. 

THOUGH Roy and Diana found their trip quite enough, there was  plenty awaiting them when they stepped

openly from the elevator. Two of  Gault's servants heard the clang of the door and covered the arrivals.  As the

door slapped shut, Roy and Diana found themselves prisoners with  Clyde and Margo. 


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From beside a machine that stood on heavy mountings in the center  of a concretewalled room, old Ellery

Gault gave an angry glare that  was meant for his niece as well as Rexford. Then, calming himself,  Gault

sneered: 

"Well, you've found this place at last, so you might as well know  the whole story  Dane's as well as mine." 

"An excellent idea," agreed Dane, who was standing by. "Since none  of these prisoners will ever leave here,

they are the proper persons to  appreciate our methods. Go on, Gault. We know that Helm and Woburn fed

you a hundred thousand dollars by faking the records they gave to Gault  Consolidated. But how did you

invest the money?" 

"I put it into gold," gloated Gault. "There is plenty of gold  obtainable if you know the right people, as I do.

Gold will always hold  its value, as nothing else will." 

"But the gold itself, where is it? Certainly your former partners  would have insisted that it be available." 

For answer, Gault turned to the machine beside him and pressed a  switch. Smooth wheels began to turn, a

stamping device thudded, and out  from a chute clanked pennies, shiny pennies, that dropped into a pan

below. The device was a counterfeiting machine! 

Dipping his hand into the pan, Gault brought out a batch of coins.  His scheming laugh was a contrast to the

insane cackle that he no  longer needed to practice. 

"Who would think of counterfeiting mere pennies?" chortled Gault.  "I did  and I thought of more. Take

some of these pennies, Dane. Feel  their weight!" 

Gault poured coins into his partner's hands. Letting them trickle,  Dane suddenly exclaimed: 

"Gold pennies, all of them!" 

"Of course," nodded Gault. "Counterfeit pennies worth better than  five dollars each. One hundred thousand is

in my penny coffer, Dane.  And who would think of stealing pennies from a crazy old man? Twenty  thousand

pennies, a mere two hundred dollars' worth?" 

"But you asked for pennies, and you gave away some." 

"All for effect, Dane. There are some copper pennies mixed in with  the gold. Whenever I gave any away, I

always picked them out by  weight." Gault gave a cluck of disapproval. "It wouldn't have been  right for me to

pass counterfeit money, you know." 

Gault's attempt at jest was feeble, compared to the sinister laugh  that toned from the elevator door. There

stood The Shadow, both  automatics drawn, one trained on Gault, the other covering Dane. 

Servants wheeled with revolvers, only to pause at Gault's quick  cry. The best thing was to hold The Shadow

on even terms. If guns  barked his direction, his return fire would take out Gault and Dane, to  start. 

The Shadow seemed to relish the situation. In sinister tone, he put  the query: 

"How many pennies did you pay Creep Hubin, Gault?" 

Turning to Dane, Gault explained that Creep was the man hired for  the foundry job. 


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"I wanted to kill you then," declared Gault. "The moment the  servants told me the directors had phoned, I

knew you were elected,  because otherwise I would have heard from Helm or Woburn. So I called  Creep and

told him to start. That's why this line was busy actually  before Rexford phoned Diana. I had to dispose of

you, as I had the  three other vice presidents before you  make it look like a jinx  murder  until the directors

elected someone who would play ball with  me." 

Dane took it quite for granted that Gault should once have sought  his life. The Shadow's attempt to split the

partners had failed. 

"It was up to Helm and Woburn then," continued Gault. "Each ordered  a Prince Poverty costume from Amon.

You were to be King Progress, Dane,  so Helm was to give you poisoned wine. Should it fail, Woburn's job

was  to stab you." 

"But Traymer became the victim," chuckled Dane harshly, "because I  saw what was coming and talked him

into taking my place. Amon made a  bad slip when he almost mentioned those extra costumes." 

It was The Shadow's turn to insert a statement. 

"A very bad slip," he commented. "When you returned to get his  ledger page as evidence and found it gone,

you murdered Amon as a  consequence." 

Dane's glare proved that The Shadow was right. But Dane, a master  of the coverup, decided to dispute the

point. 

"How could I have killed Amon?" he demanded. "I'd crippled my ankle  going out the door." 

"You faked that fall," declared The Shadow, stating a fact he  hadn't known at the time. "But after you killed

Amon, you jumped from  his loft door, knowing your weak ankle would take the brunt. You  hobbled to your

office and were there when the doctors arrived." 

Diana saw Roy's fists tighten. 

"Dane must have worn my costume when he killed Amon," gritted  Rexford. "I found it on the table in the

loft. It should have been down  on the counter. Since Helm and Woburn were out to frame me, Dane  decided

to clinch it!" 

It was obvious that Helm and Woburn had set the mob on Rexford so  he couldn't disclaim Traymer's murder.

Conversely, Dane had acted in  Rexford's behalf because, though anxious to frame him, he wanted to  keep

Helm and Woburn worried, which they would be, as long as Rexford  remained alive. 

Having thus handicapped his real enemies and bluffed them into  supposing that he hadn't guessed their game,

Dane was ready to deal  murder on his own against the very men in question! 

STRIDING toward a corner of the room, The Shadow reached the stage  set that Dane had shipped here. The

Marguerite statue was standing at  an angle in front of the open arch. With a gun, The Shadow pried a  wooden

flap that fronted one of the flat, painted pillars. 

Swinging like a door, the flap filled the arch, revealing itself as  a mirror. Reflecting the back of the

Marguerite statue, the image  portrayed a perfect replica of Mephistopheles that was carved on the  back of the

statue! 


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Dane hadn't been standing in the archway during the second scene of  the pantomime. This reflection had been

doing service for him while he  stalked at large in the backstage darkness. It was Dane who had told  Barlow to

summon Woburn. 

Unwatched, Dane had been free to murder Woburn and follow that by  killing Helm. Rexford had grappled

with him, only to be handed the  death gun while Dane had sped backstage to clear the arch by folding in  the

mirror the moment the blackout came! 

Starting first to aid Rexford, then preventing Roy from mistakingly  shooting Clyde, The Shadow had seen the

extra figure in the gloom  backstage and had known the man could only be Dane. The quick removal  of the

scenery and statue was proof sufficient that Dane must have  discovered one of Amon's stage secrets in the set

and adapted it to his  own use. 

With a laugh that left Dane glowering, The Shadow stepped back  toward the elevator. There, he concentrated

his gaze on Gault, though  he still kept Dane covered with the other gun. 

"You overdid your penny act," The Shadow told Gault. "I didn't have  to see your counterfeiting machine to

know you had one. If you had  really wanted pennies, Gault, you could have owned millions instead of

thousands. But twenty thousand coins of penny size, all made of gold,  would just about represent your illegal

profits. Inasmuch as they were  counterfeits, I confiscated them." 

With a sweep of his foot, The Shadow sent Gault's coffer from the  elevator. As it struck, the lid flung open,

showing the coffer empty  except for a few hundred pennies, real ones, that The Shadow had left  as contrast to

the huge supply that was no longer there. 

With a wild scream, Gault sprang forward  too far. The Shadow  swooped to meet him as he pawed the coins

to see if any gold ones were  among them. Whirling Gault toward the servants, The Shadow held their  master

as a human shield. 

As the servants dodged to gain an angle of fire, The Shadow heard a  shriek from Diana. Knowing what it

meant, The Shadow hurled Gault  blindly in Dane's direction. 

It was Gault who took the ripping shots from a gun that Dane had  drawn. Meant for The Shadow, that fire

found Dane's partner instead.  Then The Shadow was among the servants, slugging them left and right  while

their guns popped like blanks. 

Before Dane could take new aim at The Shadow, Rexford was upon him.  Dane turned, bringing his gun

about. This time, he wasn't trying to  frame Rexford; he was out to kill him. 

Clutching Dane's gun hand, Rexford could feel it bending closer,  closer, almost to his chest. The muzzle was

only an inch short of  Rexford's body when a big automatic roared. 

Reeling from Rexford's clutch, Dane sprawled to the floor, a bullet  through his heart. The murderer who had

slain many victims pointblank  and betrayed a friend to doom, was taking payment of the sort he  deserved.

The Shadow's lead, not Gault's gold, was the reward that  Ferris Dane received for his deeds of crime. 

Released by Diana, Clyde Burke was helping Roy round up the four  servants who had received The Shadow's

gun swings. While Diana was  getting Margo loose, they heard the elevator go up. When they pressed  the

button, it came down again, empty. 


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Clyde sent the girls ahead, saying that he and Roy would bring the  prisoners on the next trip. Thus Diana and

Margo reached the counting  room alone, to find a brilliant glitter awaiting them. On the table lay  Gault's

gold, awaiting Diana's disposal. 

How much of that wealth might rightfully be hers, Diana neither  knew nor cared. 

"It will go back where it came from," Diana told Margo. "All of it,  every " 

Diana halted. She had just been about to add the word "penny." The  word no longer applied, so Diana

omitted it. After all, she'd stated  her intention plainly. Very plainly. 

From the room with the purple curtains came a final token of  approval, the strange laugh of The Shadow. Its

tone was mirthless, this  departing note that marked The Shadow's conquest over crime. The  departure in the

laugh was evidenced by trailing echoes that drifted  back from the stairway, to be blotted by the final curtain

down below. 

A final curtain that marked the end of a drama wherein crime had  met its master. 

The Shadow had gone, but his justice remained! 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. DEATH'S MASQUERADE, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. DEATH TO COME, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. MOLTEN DOOM, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. GHOST OF THE FUTURE, page = 12

   7. CHAPTER IV. THREE MEN OF REASON, page = 16

   8. CHAPTER V. GUESTS AT THE MANSION, page = 21

   9. CHAPTER VI. BRIGHT PENNIES, page = 24

   10. CHAPTER VII. DEATH'S HOLIDAY, page = 29

   11. CHAPTER VIII. THE COSTUME SHOP, page = 32

   12. CHAPTER IX. VANISHED VICTIMS, page = 36

   13. CHAPTER X. PROGRESS AND POVERTY, page = 41

   14. CHAPTER XI. MURDER UNMASKED, page = 45

   15. CHAPTER XII. MISGUIDED VENGEANCE, page = 49

   16. CHAPTER XIII. MURDERER'S PROOF, page = 53

   17. CHAPTER XIV. CRIME'S HOLOCAUST, page = 57

   18. CHAPTER XV. CRIME RETRACED, page = 61

   19. CHAPTER XVI. SETTING FOR MURDER, page = 64

   20. CHAPTER XVII. DRAMA OF DEATH, page = 68

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. DEATH DEALS DOUBLE, page = 72

   22. CHAPTER XIX. TRAIL FINDS TRAIL, page = 75

   23. CHAPTER XX. PARTNERS IN PROFIT, page = 78