Title:   DEATH'S PREMIUM

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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DEATH'S PREMIUM

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

DEATH'S PREMIUM........................................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. KEYS TO CRIME............................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. MEN OF MURDER........................................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. THE LAW'S TURN ........................................................................................................9

CHAPTER IV. TEN O'CLOCK............................................................................................................12

CHAPTER V. CLUES TO CRIME .......................................................................................................15

CHAPTER VI. THE MAN FROM THE DARK ...................................................................................19

CHAPTER VII. WITHIN THE CORDON...........................................................................................23

CHAPTER VIII. THE FINGER POINTS.............................................................................................27

CHAPTER IX. DEATH FINDS A WAY ..............................................................................................31

CHAPTER X. CRIME'S MOTIVE.......................................................................................................34

CHAPTER XI. CROOKS OBLIGE......................................................................................................39

CHAPTER XII. CRIME'S NEW CLIENT ............................................................................................41

CHAPTER XIII. THE HUNTED MAN ................................................................................................46

CHAPTER XIV. CRIME OVERPLAYED ...........................................................................................51

CHAPTER XV. CRIME TRIES AGAIN ..............................................................................................55

CHAPTER XVI. THE SIXTH DAY .....................................................................................................59

CHAPTER XVII. DEATH REVERSED ...............................................................................................63

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S DOUBLE TRAIL ...................................................................................66

CHAPTER XIX. CRIME FROM WITHIN ...........................................................................................70

CHAPTER XX. THE MASTER HAND ...............................................................................................75

CHAPTER XXI. CRIME'S FULL PROOF ...........................................................................................78


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DEATH'S PREMIUM

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. KEYS TO CRIME 

CHAPTER II. MEN OF MURDER 

CHAPTER III. THE LAW'S TURN 

CHAPTER IV. TEN O'CLOCK 

CHAPTER V. CLUES TO CRIME 

CHAPTER VI. THE MAN FROM THE DARK 

CHAPTER VII. WITHIN THE CORDON 

CHAPTER VIII. THE FINGER POINTS 

CHAPTER IX. DEATH FINDS A WAY 

CHAPTER X. CRIME'S MOTIVE 

CHAPTER XI. CROOKS OBLIGE 

CHAPTER XII. CRIME'S NEW CLIENT 

CHAPTER XIII. THE HUNTED MAN 

CHAPTER XIV. CRIME OVERPLAYED 

CHAPTER XV. CRIME TRIES AGAIN 

CHAPTER XVI. THE SIXTH DAY 

CHAPTER XVII. DEATH REVERSED 

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S DOUBLE TRAIL 

CHAPTER XIX. CRIME FROM WITHIN 

CHAPTER XX. THE MASTER HAND 

CHAPTER XXI. CRIME'S FULL PROOF  

CHAPTER I. KEYS TO CRIME

EARLY dusk was deepening the grimy front of the old Hotel Thurmont  when Ronald Parron sidled in from

the front street. With quick, nervous  eyes he darted a look about the lobby, then approached the desk and

asked for the key to Room 312. 

Parron was still glancing about after he received the key. The  clerk took another look into the box, then told

him: 

"No messages, Mr. Hotchkiss." 

At the mention of the name, Parron gave a jumpy start. He forced a  smile to his twitchy lips, managed to

mutter a thanks. Parron had just  remembered that he was registered at this hotel under the name of  Hotchkiss. 

Entering the elevator, Parron gave the operator a suspicious stare.  Turned half about, Parron had his hand

thrust to a hip pocket, where a  revolver bulged. He regarded the elevator operator as a possible enemy,  who

might make trouble during the short ride. 

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The trip proved a safe one. On the third floor, Parron nervously  unlocked the door of 312 and sprang into the

room, his revolver drawn.  He pawed for the light switch; failing to find it, he darted across the  room. 

Stumbling against a chair, he blundered into a bureau, where he  halted, panting, at sight of a face that rose

from the gloom. 

It was a haggard face, pale in the dusk; a wellformed face that  showed a trim mustache and sleek black hair.

The face was Parron's own. 

Sight of himself in the bureau mirror brought a laugh from Parron's  lips. He fumbled for a lamp. His face

looked less hunted when the lamp  glow filled the room. 

Drawing the window shades, the darkhaired man looked about him.  Deciding that no intruders had been in

the place, Parron tiptoed to a  closet door and yanked it open. 

With the same move, he covered the closet with his .32 revolver.  Another laugh drifted from his lips when he

saw that the closet was  empty. Stretching, Parron reached eagerly to the shelf, brought down an  oblong

dispatch box of thin tinny metal. 

The box was locked. Parron made no attempt to open it. He simply  laid it on the bureau, then looked toward

the telephone. He hesitated  at making a call from the hotel room, but finally decided to do so. The  number

that he called had a Long Island exchange. 

Parron recognized the voice that answered; but, in his turn, he  used a tone that was different from his own. He

spoke in quick, clipped  fashion, and to complete the vocal disguise, he asked: 

"Am I speaking to Mr. Renstrom? To Mr. Albert Renstrom?" 

Receiving the affirmative reply that he actually expected, Parron  pretended to doubt the other speaker's

identity. Finally ending the  bluff, he came down to business. 

"All right, Mr. Renstrom," announced Parron rapidly. "I'm the man  who sent you the letter that contained the

key. I'm willing to send the  box, too, if you're interested." 

A low, earnest voice reached Parron's ear. Renstrom was interested;  deeply so. He was ready to cooperate in

any way possible. He had read  the letter thoroughly, and would abide by its terms. 

"It's a deal, Mr. Renstrom," decided Parron. "You'll have the box  inside an hour. But remember  you're to

hold it until ten o'clock, as  I specified in my letter " 

RENSTROM was interrupting with assurances. Smiling as he listened,  Parron ended the phone call, tucked

the dispatch box under his arm and  stole from the hotel room. 

He used the stairway instead of the elevator, and took a rear exit  from the lobby. Spying a cab on the rear

street, Parron hailed it and  gave the driver Renstrom's address. 

As the cab swung along, Parron studied an airplane schedule,  choosing a plane that left Newark Airport at

half past eight. If he  missed that one, he could take another at nine fifteen. Where they went  didn't matter to

Parron. He was tapping a wellfilled wallet in his  inside pocket. His trip was going to be a long one. 


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It took the cab about half an hour to reach the Renstrom residence  on Long Island. Telling the driver to wait,

Parron alighted and went  through a gate between high hedges. The porch light was on; as he  neared its glow,

Parron suddenly remembered a needed precaution. He  paused, pulled the collar of his overcoat about his chin. 

Peering upward, Parron squinted suspiciously at a window on the  second floor. He thought he saw a face

there; then, fancying that his  imagination had tricked him, he hastened to the front door and rang the  bell. 

The door was opened by a whitehaired servant who blinked at sight  of the muffled visitor. 

"For Mr. Renstrom," gruffed Parron, thrusting the metal box into  the servant's hands. "Take it to him, right

away." 

With that, Parron was heading back along the walk. He took a quick  glance over his shoulder as he reached

the gate. The servant was  staring stupidly at the box; there was no one at the upstairs window.  Jumping into

the cab, Parron told the driver to take him back to town. 

During the ride the taxi driver became talkative. His head inclined  toward the connecting window, he

remarked: 

"Tough about that polo player getting killed this afternoon. Read  about it, did you?" 

Parron winced; stared nervously. 

"What polo player?" 

"Young Reggie Chitterton," replied the driver. "Here's his picture"   the driver was thrusting a newspaper

through the window  "but you  won't be able to read it until we reach the bridge lights. Throwed off  his

horse, Chitterton was, and they found his skull fractured after  they lugged him to the clubhouse. Dangerous

game, that polo." 

Stifling a groan, Parron managed to grasp the newspaper. He knew  what had happened to Chitterton, though

the cab driver didn't. Parron  could picture the whole case, and sum it up in one word: 

Murder! 

ELSEWHERE, keen eyes were studying the item that Parron did not  have to read. Cut from the latest

newspaper, the clipping lay beneath  the glow of a bluish lamp. From darkness above the glare came a grim,

whispered laugh, uttered by hidden lips. 

The Shadow, master crime tracker, was in his sanctum, a  blackwalled room sequestered somewhere in

Manhattan. To the clipping  that told of recent death, he was adding others, of a similar variety. 

All pertained to socalled accidents  the sort that would be  checked by the law and classed as unavoidable.

But behind such cases  could lie the insidious hand of crime. 

The Shadow knew! 

He was visualizing what might have happened at the polo field,  where Chitterton had suffered a fall during

the second chukker. A  felled player, carried to the clubhouse, would be in the hands of  various attendants

before a physician could arrive. 


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During that interval, much could happen, particularly if ghoulish  killers were in wait, hoping for any break.

Chitterton's death could  have been murder  for a very definite reason. There had been too many  others like

it. 

A hand moved from the light. There was a sparkle of a flamecolored  gem: The Shadow's girasol. That rare

stone, a magnificent fire opal,  was The Shadow's only jewel. Returning to the light, the hand brought a  square

sheet of glossy paper. 

The sheet bore a chart, with double lines. Graphically, those lines  told their story. One traced the course of

murder during the past year;  it showed a slight decline when compared to previous periods of twelve  months. 

Crisscrossing murder's graph, the second line indicated cases of  technical manslaughter. They had shown a

surprising jump. From that,  The Shadow had formed a definite conclusion; one which, so far, had not  been

noticed by the law. 

Grouped together, the two styles of death did more than indicate a  serious total. These statistics applied to

New York City alone, and  they were worse than any other, though the death wave was noticeable  elsewhere.

It was time that this particular chart reached the right  man. 

Forming his hands into an interlocking pattern, The Shadow held  them between the light and the paper on the

table. Supple fingers cast  a silhouette upon the sheet. It was a hawkish profile, topped by a  slouch hat, in

miniature. 

When The Shadow withdrew his hands the silhouette remained, shaded  upon sensitized paper. Approaching

the paper from the sides, The Shadow  folded it and placed it into an envelope, which was already addressed

to Ralph Weston, New York's police commissioner. 

Sealing the envelope, the mysterious master reached for earphones  that hung from the sanctum wall. Before

his hand had touched the  instruments, a tiny light gleamed from the darkness. A call was coming  through,

from the man with whom The Shadow intended to communicate. 

Raising the earphones, The Shadow heard a steady, mechanical voice: 

"Burbank speaking." 

"Report!" 

WITH that whisper, The Shadow pronounced his identity to Burbank,  the contact man who kept in touch

with active agents. For the past  week, ever since The Shadow had learned of crime's increase, ardent  workers

had been aiding their chief in searching for men who might be  murderers by trade. 

Results had come at last. Burbank was relaying a report from Clyde  Burke, one of the active agents. Clyde

was on the staff of a tabloid  newspaper, the New York Classic. It had been Clyde's job to visit night  clubs,

gambling houses, and other places of a sporting reputation. 

Other agents had prowled the underworld, without results. The fact  that Clyde was coming through with

information fitted with The Shadow's  own conclusions; namely, that murder was being conducted on a deluxe

basis, rather than through the hiring of ordinary mobsmen. 

Killing meant thugs. Of that, The Shadow was certain; but he  doubted that the lesser hands engaged in this

game of supercrime would  be found in the usual underworld dives. Through Burbank, he had  instructed


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Clyde to be on the lookout for any man of better connections  who held any converse with hoodlums. 

Clyde had found such a man  one who did not visit thugs, but who  had them come to him. At present, the

man in question was at the  Moonlight Club. He had just talked to a pair of toughlooking customers  who had

drifted to the bar. Apparently, the suspected man was awaiting  the arrival of more followers. 

The bluish light clicked off. Somber walls were stirred by a  whispered laugh. Echoes faded, bringing silence

to pitch blackness. The  Shadow had departed by the sanctum's hidden exit. Real echoes, those,  but they stood

for imaginary ones. 

Echoes like the clank of keys! 

Ronald Parron held one key  to his hotel room. Albert Renstrom had  another key  to a mysterious metal

box. The Shadow owned a third key,  more potent than the other two. 

It was the name of a man bent upon evil design. 

A key to coming murder! 

CHAPTER II. MEN OF MURDER

ARRIVING again at the Hotel Thurmont, Ronald Parron entered by the  front door. Riding up in the elevator,

he did not bother to keep a hand  on his revolver. 

If crooks had learned his moves, so Parron reasoned, they would  have attempted to block him long before

this. As matters now stood, his  work was accomplished. He was entering Room 312 for the last time,  which

was something that pleased him immensely. 

Parron's enthusiasm waned when he pressed the light switch.  Stiffening, he stared across the room toward a

man who had been waiting  in the darkness beside the bureau. Of their own accord, Parron's lips  phrased the

intruder's name: 

"Rudy Waygart!" 

The waiting man chuckled. His tone wasn't pleasant. It was an ugly  tone, the sort that fitted Rudy Waygart.

Sallow, leanfaced, with small  gimlet eyes and sharp, bulging teeth, Rudy habitually wore a nasty  expression

that suited his disposition. 

"Hello, Parron!" Rudy's voice was raspy. "I've been wondering where  you've been keeping yourself. Up with

those dukes of yours"  with a  quick gesture, Rudy produced a revolver  "while I take care of that  rod that's

poking from your hip!" 

Disarmed, Parron let Rudy shove him to a corner. Nervously, he was  thinking how he could square himself

with this unwanted visitor. His  hands half raised, Parron nudged a thumb toward his inside pocket. 

"I've got the cash right here, Rudy," he argued. "I was going to  look you up, to pay off that poker debt. I was

carrying a gun because I  had so much money with me." 

Rudy gave a satisfied grin, then glanced casually across the room,  toward a suitcase. His tone became

friendly as be asked: 


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"Going on a trip?" 

Parron started to nod, then halted, horrified. Gimlet eyes, fangish  teeth were combining in a leer. Chilled by a

horrifying thought, Parron  could find no words. It was Rudy who spoke. 

"Thought that gambling was my racket, didn't you?" sneered Rudy.  "Never figured I was in the same game

you were. While you've been  handling one end of it, I've been taking care of the other. You know  what that

means, don't you?" 

Parron's lips moved as though trying to hold back the single word  that summed the answer. 

Murder! 

It flashed through Parron's brain, an electrifying thought, and  Rudy understood it. Pocketing Parron's gun,

Rudy jammed his own  revolver against the trembling man's ribs and rasped the prophecy: 

"You're going on a trip, all right. A oneway ride, without a  return ticket! You're the first doublecrosser I've

had to handle, but  it's going to be a quick job!" 

Prodded by Rudy's gun, Parron turned numbly toward the door. With a  mock bow, Rudy reached lefthanded

for the knob, keeping Parron covered  with his right, which held the revolver. 

The door was ajar, something that Rudy didn't realize until he  grasped the knob. Before he had time to guess

the significance behind  the fact, the door smashed inward. 

Struck by the barrier, Rudy was lifted from his feet, hurled half  across the room. His gun went off in the air. 

As he finished his backward sprawl, Rudy saw Parron tossed aside by  an insurging shape of black moving

with the speed and power of an  avalanche. 

The Shadow! 

CRIME'S superfoe had trailed Rudy from the Moonlight Club. Outside  the door he had overheard the killer's

chat with Parron. Picking the  timeliest moment, The Shadow had performed a move of twofold  consequence:

He had rescued Parron from doom's threat and had flattened  Rudy, rendering the killer helpless. 

The taunt of a shivery laugh came from lips that were concealed by  the upturned collar of a black cloak.

Below eyes that blazed from  beneath a slouch hat brim was The Shadow's counterthreat, the muzzle of  a .45

automatic swinging toward Rudy Waygart. 

At that instant came a clatter that sounded like an echo of The  Shadow's incoming crash. Two window shades

went whipping upward; as The  Shadow wheeled, he saw forms lunging in from a fire escape. Coarse  faces

came into the light; tough fists were brandishing glittering  revolvers. 

Rudy's mobbies! 

They hadn't been with the sallow killer when he left the Moonlight  Club. 

Rudy had sent the crew ahead, had posted them at the least expected  spot. Rudy's plan, apparently, was to cut

off any mad dash that Parron  might make toward the windows. His cute idea had turned out bigger than  he

thought. 


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Murderous mobbies had the opportunity of a lifetime  a chance to  bag The Shadow! 

They overlooked one point. 

Just as The Shadow's smashing entry and mocking laugh had revealed  his presence, so did the crooks betray

themselves by the noisy way in  which they had disposed of the window shades. As they thrust gun  muzzles

into the room, The Shadow was wheeling toward the door. By the  time they aimed, he was fading sideward,

staying in the room instead of  making toward the hall. 

Tricked crooks changed aim. By then Rudy was coming to his feet,  trying to block The Shadow's spinning

course. Almost from the floor The  Shadow bobbed upward under Rudy's outthrust arm. He chucked the killer

over his shoulders; flung forward in a sudden somersault, Rudy hit the  floor again, half dazed. 

Thugs held their trigger fingers, rather than riddle their leader.  The brief delay was too long for their own

benefit. 

Two guns blasted. The first was the automatic that The Shadow had  ready when he entered. The second shot

came from the fringe of his  cloak, where he had produced another gun. One clipped thug sprawled  inward

from the window; the other sank back to the fire escape. 

The Shadow had aimed while on the move. He didn't need to pick out  his thuggish foemen; he simply fired at

the window centers, and his  method brought results. 

Launching across the room, The Shadow reached the window that had  disgorged a writhing crook. The

Shadow suspected that there would be  more than two and he was right. 

Gun to gun, he met another thug who was coming through the emptied  window, and beat the fellow to the

shot. Thrusting head and arm out  through the window, The Shadow saw a fourth crook swinging from the far

end of the platform. 

The last mobbie was quick with his trigger; too quick. His revolver  spurted a leaden slug that whined past

The Shadow's slouch hat. The  crook wasn't equal to the task of clipping a target three inches in  width. 

Gun muzzle close to the wall, one eye peering above it, The Shadow  answered that blast. The impact of a .45

bullet jolted the last thug  back across the rail. 

Arms clawed, feet kicked high. The next token of that final fighter  was the dull sound of a cracking skull that

struck the cement alleyway,  three floors below. 

THE SHADOW heard the sound from midway in the room. He had spun  about to look for Rudy Waygart. He

saw the sallow murderer diving out  into the hallway; from farther along came the fading clatter of running

feet that belonged to Ronald Parron. 

Fleeing, the rescued victim was showing maddened haste, thinking  that Rudy was after him; but Rudy had

forgotten Parron. The crook's  sole reason for taking the same route was to escape The Shadow. 

The chase led to the stairway, then down into the lobby. Rudy was  twisting toward the rear route. The

Shadow let the killer go, for a  very important reason. Two loungers at the front of the lobby were  springing

up from chairs, to close in on Parron. 


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One glimpse of their faces told The Shadow what they were: trigger  men that Rudy had ordered here as

reserves. They didn't know that Rudy  was dodging The Shadow; they thought that he was leaving the final

work  to them. Their guns were out, they were aiming, when The Shadow  delivered withering shots. 

The pair sprawled toward the front doorway. They were shooting as  they fell; their shots were wide. Parron

heard their shrieks. In  response to some mental quirk, the hunted man paused at the sidewalk to  look back. 

A slumped thug fired, almost blindly, from the lobby floor. There  was an echoing howl from the sidewalk as

Parron staggered. 

Speeding across the lobby, where all noncombatants had dived from  sight, The Shadow reached the street,

gathered Parron up and thrust him  into the open door of a taxicab that had wheeled into sight as if  summoned. 

The cab was away with its wounded burden. Turned about, The Shadow  looked back into the lobby. There

was no more fight in the pair who had  made that final thrust; both thugs were lying still. But Waygart was

gone, to the rear street, and he had closed the trail behind him. 

Two police officers were coming through from the back. Evidently  Rudy had reached the street before they

arrived. Seeing a cloaked  figure on the lighted sidewalk of the front street, the two patrolmen  raised a shout.

It was answered from two directions along the front  street. 

The police were on the job. Too late to corner Rudy Waygart, they  were in time to find The Shadow. They

didn't stop to reason whether he  was friend or foe. The cops had heard shots; they saw a fighter who  held two

guns. They opened fire. 

Springing from the curb, The Shadow sought darkness across the  street. Noting his course, the officers

followed. 

When they converged, they found themselves staring at a blank wall.  Above was the sliding ladder of a fire

escape against a dilapidated  building; but it was beyond their reach. They decided that the man with  the guns

couldn't have gone by that route. 

They were wrong. The Shadow had gauged the distance better than  they had. He had reached the bottom rung

with a high leap, and hauled  himself to the floor above. The reason that flashlights didn't show him  was

because he was no longer there. 

The Shadow had swung past the corner of the building. Away from  sight of the police, he was crossing the

low roof of a onestory  garage, to reach the next street. 

Two blocks from where Rudy Waygart had gotten in the clear, The  Shadow knew that further pursuit of the

crafty murderer would be  useless, since a squad of police had come between. However, The Shadow  had

marked Rudy as a killer; and he had also started Ronald Parron on a  route to safety. 

Parron would talk, unless too seriously wounded. The fellow was  anxious to get out of the murder racket

represented by Rudy Waygart.  What Parron knew might be sufficient to forestall all future crime. 

There was a whispered laugh as The Shadow merged with darkness.  Unfortunately, that mirth was premature.

Crime's finish was not to be  an early matter. 

A long and arduous campaign lay ahead. More death was due before  The Shadow could possibly trap Rudy

Waygart and other men of murder! 


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CHAPTER III. THE LAW'S TURN

COMMISSIONER RALPH WESTON was at the Cobalt Club, his favorite  place during evening hours.

Swankiest of exclusive Manhattan clubs, the  Cobalt boasted many wealthy members, who liked the special

privacy it  offered. 

In fact, Weston had experienced some difficulty in joining the  Cobalt Club. He had been accepted only

through the efforts of Lamont  Cranston, one of the most influential members. Behind that fact lay an

important secret. 

The man who posed as Lamont Cranston was actually The Shadow. 

Knowing that constant contact with the police commissioner would  prove valuable, The Shadow had pressed

the point of Weston's  membership. As Cranston, he had naturally gained Weston's full  friendship and

confidence. Whenever Weston was at the club, which was  often, he welcomed Cranston's arrival. 

Tonight was a case in point. 

Commissioner Weston was busy in a telephone booth making a series  of calls. He had received news of a

gang raid at the Hotel Thurmont,  and was alternately receiving reports and giving orders. When he  emerged

from the booth, Weston spied Cranston strolling in from the  street. 

Tall, easymannered, with a calm expression on his masklike face,  Cranston approached Weston with

outstretched hand. 

"Good evening, commissioner," he said in even tones. "You appear to  be quite busy." 

"I was busy," returned Weston briskly, "but my work is finished for  a while. Suppose we go to the grillroom,

Cranston." 

"I shall meet you there, commissioner. It happens"  Cranston's  lips showed the faintest of smiles  "that I

have a phone call to make,  myself." 

From the phone booth, Cranston watched the commissioner turn toward  the stairs that led down to the

grillroom. An attendant overtook the  commissioner and handed him an envelope, which Weston pocketed

somewhat  mechanically. 

By that time The Shadow was listening to a report from Burbank. The  news was disappointing. Parron was

dead. 

Moe Shrevnitz, one of The Shadow's secret agents, was the driver of  the cab that had carried Parron away

from the Hotel Thurmont. Moe had  headed directly to the office of Dr. Rupert Sayre  a friend of The

Shadow. By then Parron was unconscious from loss of blood. Sayre had  attempted an immediate transfusion,

but the victim was beyond hope. 

No papers had been found on Parron, other than the bank notes that  filled his bulging wallet. Crime's victim

had failed to utter a single  word before he died. 

The Shadow told Burbank to arrange the further details. Sayre, of  course, would report the case to the law.

Moe's story would be that he  had picked up Parron as a chance passenger; that upon noting the man's


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condition, he had stopped at the first physician's office he saw. 

WITH the Parron angle temporarily closed, The Shadow went down to  the grillroom. He found Weston alone

there, for the place was being  redecorated and there was only one table, in a corner. 

"It looked like we'd run into a murder case," began Weston. "There  was some shooting over at the Hotel

Thurmont. But Inspector Cardona  just phoned that it was merely a mob fight. We've cut down murder" 

Weston was chuckling  "to the point where crooks are so badly off,  they're killing one another " 

Interrupting himself, the commissioner stared at a sheet of paper  that he had unfolded from an envelope.

Clutching Cranston's arm, he  found words: 

"Look at this paper, Cranston!" 

The Shadow leaned forward, gazed at the charted lines on the sheet.  He remarked that they looked quite

interesting, but not enough so to  cause excitement or consternation. The commissioner stared at the paper

again. 

"It's gone!" he exclaimed. "But I saw it, Cranston! The outline of  a hawkish silhouette, with a slouch hat

above it!" 

Cranston's eyes sparkled with interest. He took the paper, studied  it in the light, then handed it back to

Weston with a smile. 

"It wasn't my imagination," argued Weston. "This is a message from  The Shadow!" 

Still smiling, Cranston lighted a thin cigar. His profile  intervened between the match flare and the wall.

Against the wall  appeared the same silhouette that had faded when light struck the  sensitized paper. It lasted

for flickery moments, but Weston did not  see the fullsized outline that marked Cranston's actual identity.

The  commissioner was studying the paper again. 

For a two full minutes, Weston frowned, twitched at the tips of his  pointed mustache. Then, flinging the

paper to the table, the  commissioner clenched his fists. 

"Gad, Cranston!" he exclaimed. "The Shadow may be right. He usually  is, you know." 

Cranston shrugged. He was gazing idly at the sheet of paper, but  did not seem to infer anything from it. 

"Look how that secondary line has risen!" insisted Weston. "Like  fools, we've been congratulating ourselves

on the decline of the murder  rate without checking the increase in cases that could come under the  general

head of homicide. 

"If a tenth of those are actually murder, we're up against a huge  problem. It would mean that the murder rate

has almost doubled without  our knowledge!" 

Weston experienced a sudden change. He realized that The Shadow was  doing more than merely helping the

law. He was giving Weston a chance  to actually carve the murder rate before the public realized that the

police had been deceived. 

Always impetuous, Commissioner Weston was seized with sudden desire  for action, even though it might

prove of a blind sort. Rising from the  table, he strode out of the grillroom. Returning a few minutes later,  he


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sat down with a triumphant smile. 

"I just called headquarters," declared Weston. "Inspector Cardona  isn't back there yet; but when he arrives

he's to call me right away.  Do you know what's coming next, Cranston? 

"I'll tell you. I'm going to have Cardona bring full reports on  every case of chance manslaughter or accidental

death that might, by  the least shade of suspicion, be considered murder. We'll spend the  rest of the night

sifting those cases to the bottom. 

"You're welcome to remain, Cranston, as long as you want, to see  how the law operates. Too bad we can't

have The Shadow here. He might  enjoy it, also." 

CASUALLY, The Shadow remarked that he would stay awhile, but that  he was expecting a call from a friend

that might take him elsewhere.  Cranston frequently expected such calls. The commissioner had come to

regard them as a common matter. 

Actually, they were calls from Burbank, relaying reports of agents.  Always, on a night when crime had

struck, The Shadow had to be ready  for quick countermoves. In this instance the chance seemed unlikely. 

Tonight, Rudy Waygart and a band of henchmen had set out to finish  a doublecrosser. With Ronald Parron

dead, it appeared that their full  mission was accomplished. With Rudy's trail obliterated, The Shadow's  best

policy was to stay with Weston and note the commissioner delve  into other murder cases that had been

marked as closed. 

Actually, that plan should have brought results. Instead, a freak  occurrence was to thwart The Shadow's

method. 

At headquarters, a detective sergeant had left a note on Cardona's  desk telling the ace inspector to call the

commissioner at once.  Entering the office, Cardona would have seen that message, had not the  telephone

been ringing when he arrived. 

Answering the call, Joe Cardona lost the pokerfaced expression  that usually adorned his swarthy features.

He knew the man who was on  the telephone, recognized that whatever he said must be important. 

Cardona's replies were a series of affirmatives; finishing with  another "yes," the inspector planked the

telephone on the desk,  squarely over the note that lay there. 

Looking for messages, Joe didn't notice the corner of the memo slip  that poked from beneath the telephone.

He strode from the office and  out through the corridor, bound on a new mission. 

At the door he ran into a wiry young man who was hastening in from  the street. 

"Hello, Burke!" snapped Joe. "Got your car outside? If you have,  you're in luck." 

Clyde Burke showed interest  the sort that befitted a reporter. He  nodded that his car was outside. 

"Drive me where I want to go," continued Cardona, "and I'll promise  you a scoop, Burke." 

They were riding in Clyde's coupe when Cardona explained why he  hadn't used a police car. They were on

the way to visit a man who  didn't want Cardona's arrival to be conspicuous. 


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"His name is Albert Renstrom," explained Joe. "He lives out on Long  Island. He's an actuary. You know 

one of those fellows who does the  figuring for big insurance companies." 

Vaguely, Clyde remembered hearing of Renstrom. The man was the head  of a national group of actuaries,

which meant that Renstrom probably  compiled statistics for many companies, rather than merely for one. But

the next name that Cardona mentioned was more potent than Renstrom's. 

"Thomas Merwood is out there, too," confided Cardona. "He got on  the wire and said it was important that I

come at once. When a big  financier like Merwood says that anything is important, it must be." 

Clyde agreed. Meanwhile, he was linking facts. He knew that Merwood  handled giltedged investments, the

sort that large insurance companies  would buy. Naturally, in looking into the assets of such companies,

Merwood would consult with someone like Renstrom. 

As a result of such a conference, they had apparently uncovered  something of consequence to the law.

Something, perhaps, that pertained  to the increased death rate that The Shadow previously had noticed.

Knowing that The Shadow was seeking inside facts, Clyde was elated. 

Clyde felt that luck was with him. Along with Cardona, he had  stumbled upon a trail that he thought could

lead to something highly  important, even though it seemed remote from Rudy Waygart and the  murderer's

victim, Ronald Parron. 

It never occurred to Clyde that he was crossing Parron's earlier  trail; that at Renstrom's house it might be

possible to obtain the very  facts that a dying man had failed to tell! 

CHAPTER IV. TEN O'CLOCK

ALBERT RENSTROM received the visitors in the downstairs living room  of his spacious home. He made no

comment when Cardona introduced Clyde.  Evidently, Renstrom decided that Mr. Burke was another man

from  headquarters. 

In fact, Renstrom seemed too concerned with matters of his own to  worry about anyone else. 

The actuary was a tall, stoopshouldered man who looked quite frail  and very nervous. His face was lean; his

eyes had a fixed expression as  they stared through large goldrimmed glasses. While shaking hands he

studied both visitors in an owlish fashion; then he licked his lips to  speak. 

Suddenly remembering that he was not alone, Renstrom turned and  introduced Thomas Merwood, who was

standing patiently by. The financier  stepped forward, smiled as he spoke a deepvoiced greeting. 

As tall as Renstrom, Merwood was much heavier of build. His broad  face was squarejawed; his gray hair

added dignity to his appearance.  Merwood was calm, and his collected manner did much to soothe Renstrom.

Nervousness ending, the actuary began his story. 

"For some time," Renstrom told Cardona, "I have been observing a  curious trend in the mortality rate among

the policy holders of large  lifeinsurance companies. The trend, I regret to say, has been upward. 

"That fact is nothing to cause alarm, considering that the  percentage is very slight. But the curious point is

this: The increase  in death has been restricted entirely to men in the higherincome  brackets." 


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The final statement impressed Cardona. Promptly, Joe asked: 

"Were all of them heavily insured?" 

Renstrom shook his head. 

"No," he replied. "None of them was overloaded. In fact, the  opposite was the case. The payment of death

claims was by no means in  proportion to the increased mortality rate. On that account I did not  give the

situation the attention that it deserved." 

Cardona was beginning to think that the matter deserved no  attention at all when Renstrom produced a key

from his vest pocket. 

"This came yesterday," stated the actuary. "It was with a letter  sent by an anonymous writer. The letter

intimated facts that I would  have regarded as preposterous, except that they tallied with figures at  my

disposal. 

"The writer attributed many recent deaths to murder, craftily  disguised. He said that if I would guarantee to

press the issue, he  would deliver a box containing documents that would prove the existence  of an actual

murder ring working throughout the country. 

"I was to keep the letter secret until I heard further from him. He  telephoned me this evening; I promised to

abide by his terms. Half an  hour later the box was delivered." 

Cardona looked about the room as if he expected to see the box pop  up from under a chair. It was Merwood

who smilingly explained why the  box was not on exhibit. 

"Renstrom has it in the safe in his study," said Merwood. "The  letter contained some provision about not

opening the box until a  certain time. What hour did it say, Renstrom? Eleven, wasn't it?" 

"Ten o'clock," corrected Renstrom. "Until then I am honorbound to  keep the box in my safe, as the letter

specified. At that time I shall  produce the letter and my own figures, along with the box." 

"He won't listen to reason, inspector," inserted Merwood. "I argued  that he should place everything in your

hands as soon as you arrived,  but I haven't managed to change his decision." 

The clock on the mantel showed twenty minutes past nine. Shrugging  his shoulders, Cardona decided to wait

until ten o'clock. But Clyde  Burke was gripped by a sudden inspiration. Pulling out pad and pencil,  he swung

to Renstrom and Merwood with the question: 

"How about it, gentlemen? Any statement for the press, while we  wait? I represent the New York Classic " 

BURSTS of indignation came from Renstrom and Merwood. Answering  them with impudent arguments,

Clyde soon found himself unpopular with  Cardona as well as the others. The upshot was an exertion of

authority  by Cardona. 

Aided by an old servant, who came at Renstrom's summons, Joe  marched Clyde to the front door and told

him to be on his way. 

Driving from the house, Clyde gave a rueful laugh. He had put  himself in wrong with Cardona, and would

have to square it later. But  it had been the only way out. 


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Clyde wanted to find a telephone and get word to The Shadow. It was  important that his chief be here by ten

o'clock to learn facts first  hand. 

Back in Renstrom's living room, Cardona was making profuse  apologies. Renstrom was still indignant, angry

because Cardona had  brought a reporter here at all; but Merwood took the situation more  calmly. 

"No harm has been done," insisted the financier. "The few facts  that Burke heard were not enough to make a

newspaper story. The Classic  will have to wait, like the other journals, until we issue a complete  statement to

the press." 

As he finished speaking, Merwood turned toward the doorway to the  hall. A girl was standing there; her face

showed alarm. Noting that  Cardona was a stranger, she gazed at him instead of the others. 

Returning the stare, Joe was impressed by the depth and beauty of  the brown eyes that met his, and the beauty

of the girl herself. She  was a brunette. 

"Good evening, Miss Renstrom," said Merwood with a bow. "I am sorry  if we alarmed you. This is Inspector

Cardona. He was merely ejecting an  unwelcome reporter." 

"My niece," undertoned Renstrom to Cardona. Then, turning to the  girl: "You may remain here, Janet. I am

going to the study to gather  some papers. I am not to be disturbed until ten o'clock." 

Renstrom went upstairs. Janet chatted with the visitors, and her  talk proved quite vivacious. Time went

rapidly, and with it, Cardona  began to have a hunch. 

He remembered how nervous the girl had been until she learned  exactly what had caused the commotion

downstairs. At present, so Joe  decided, Janet Renstrom was hiding something that she did not want her  uncle

or anyone else to know. 

It was nearly ten o'clock when the brunette left the living room  and went upstairs again. Strolling toward the

hallway, Cardona glanced  at his watch. Turning to Merwood, he grunted: 

"About four minutes more. I guess we'd better wait the full time  before we call Mr. Renstrom." 

Actually, Cardona wanted those four minutes to listen for sounds  from upstairs. He could hear Janet's voice

in the upper hallway, and he  caught enough snatches of her conversation to know that she was making  a

telephone call. 

After the call was finished, Cardona thought that he heard another  sound: the throb of a motor, outdoors. He

decided that it must have  been a car passing the house, for the noise faded. 

Joe's guess was a bad one. There was a car outside, but it hadn't  passed the house. It was stopped on the side

street; a lowbuilt sedan,  its top no higher than the hedge that intervened between the sidewalk  and

Renstrom's premises. 

Crouched in the parked car, four men were talking in low mutters.  From behind the wheel came another tone,

a smooth one. It was the voice  of Rudy Waygart. 

"SIT tight," Rudy was telling his new crew of thugs. "It isn't ten  o'clock yet. You'll know when the time

comes. I've given you the dope.  Spread out, start shooting, then get back here. When we lam, we'll go  in a

hurry." 


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As he finished, Rudy gave a whisper for silence. He thought that he  had heard a stir from the other side of the

hedge. Staring out at pitch  blackness, Rudy soon decided that no one was about. Nevertheless, he  kept his

gaze fixed toward the dim window of an upstairs room:  Renstrom's study. 

Below that window a blackened shape was moving upward. Gray stone  walls were inky in the night. No eye

could have discerned the ascent of  the cloaked figure that was nearing the very window that Rudy watched. 

A gloved hand clutched the window sill. A slouch hat came up beside  it. The Shadow was outside of

Renstrom's window, still Rudy did not  observe the blackclad arrival. The Shadow had chosen the side away

from the light in Renstrom's study. The glow produced an optical  illusion that Rudy could not observe from

the car. 

Thanks to the depth of the inner window sill, there was a vertical  streak of blackness along the opening. That

narrow, shaded space looked  like part of the wall. The Shadow was taking advantage of the  projecting

darkness to keep out of sight while he looked into the  study. 

He saw Renstrom at a desk stacked high with papers. The actuary had  written something on a small pad and

was staring at the penciled line.  Then, with a nervous gesture, he crumpled the paper and looked for a

wastebasket. None being at hand, Renstrom swung about in his swivel  chair and began to turn the dial of a

safe. 

From somewhere in the house a clock began to chime the hour of ten.  During the strokes Renstrom drew the

safe door open, thrust one hand  inward. 

It was as if he had touched a hidden spring to produce a cataclysm.  The whole room shuddered with a burst

of tremendous light. The strokes  of the clock were drowned by a deafening burst of sound that rose to a

gigantic roar. 

With that blast Renstrom was flung across the room like a discarded  scarecrow. The door of the safe mouthed

flame like the muzzle of a  howitzer. Furniture was scattered into bits by the explosion. 

The door of the room was shattered by the concussion. So were the  window sashes above The Shadow's head.

They were actually ripped to  slivers by the blast. 

The Shadow wasn't present to receive the spray of glass. Hurled  outward by the explosion, he was a

somersaulting figure in midair, his  long arms sweeping wide as his gloved hands clutched uselessly to  regain

a vanished hold. 

Shouts rose as the explosion's echoes faded. Crooks had seen the  cloaked shape, revealed by the vivid glare.

Returning darkness  swallowed The Shadow below the gray stone walls; but watchers had  marked the

direction of his plunge. 

Planned death, delivered to Albert Renstrom, had produced a greater  prize. Tossed into the very midst of

surrounding crooks, The Shadow had  become crime's prey! 

CHAPTER V. CLUES TO CRIME

FLASHLIGHTS glimmered as thugs thrust themselves through the hedge,  seeking to close in upon The

Shadow. Rudy Waygart, standing on the step  of the sedan, was peering across the top of the hedge to direct

the  search. 


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With a triumphant snarl, Rudy pointed to something black that  showed on the ground beyond the hedge. A

crook scooped it up; the  object was The Shadow's slouch hat. Eagerly, flashlights circled in an  effort to find

the hat's vanished owner. 

One torch steadied. The man who held it saw something stir. He  aimed his revolver; the others heard a gun

bark. The shot wasn't from  the crook's revolver. He was on the receiving end of that prompt blast.  There was

a cry, a staggery sound in the darkness. The flashlight  struck the ground along with its owner. 

Rudy saw the spot where the gun had spurted. He located the weird,  challenging laugh that followed the

report. Both came from the middle  of the hedge, a dozen paces from the place where Rudy's car was parked.

In a flash the murderer understood. 

The Shadow's long hurtle hadn't ended in a disastrous crash. The  cloaked fighter wasn't out of combat as

crooks supposed. Instead of  striking unyielding ground, to lie there senseless, The Shadow had  landed in the

high hedge. Wedged in the midst of springy branches, he  had escaped with no injuries worse than scratches. 

Diving away from the car, Rudy fired, hoping that his gun stabs  would point out the direction to the others.

He preferred to chance  wild shots rather than run the risk of becoming The Shadow's target. It  was lucky for

Rudy that he dodged, for The Shadow promptly returned the  fire. 

Where Rudy's slugs merely clipped leaves from the hedge, The  Shadow's whizzed close to the ducking

murderer. Flattening beyond the  car, Rudy decided to let his gunners handle the fray. 

The Shadow chose that interval to wriggle from the hedge. Creeping  along the ground, he was seeking the

shelter of the house; from there  he intended to bait his foemen. On the way he found the slouch hat that  a

crook had dropped. Clamping the hat on his head, The Shadow continued  his crawl. 

Things were changed suddenly when a flashlight bored from the  window of Renstrom's study. Crooks were

ducking when the roving glare  reached them; floundering through the hedge, they rolled to safety  below a

low bank beyond. 

Joe Cardona had reached the blasted room. Hearing gunfire outdoors,  he had hurried to the window. Cardona

was firing at the crooks as fast  as his flashlight picked them out; but the range was long and Joe's aim  too

hasty. 

The Shadow could have settled the fleeing tribe had he been in  Cardona's position; but the ground level put

him at a disadvantage. By  the time The Shadow reached the hedge, Rudy was at the wheel of the  car, driving

away, while thugs clambered to the running board, dragging  a wounded pal with them. 

Only one man remained on the ground: the gunner that The Shadow had  dropped early in the fray. 

Reversing his course, The Shadow rounded the house to reach a lane  at the rear. There was another car

available: the one that had brought  The Shadow here. He still had a chance of intercepting Rudy's crew

somewhere in this neighborhood. 

A big official car came along the front street, pausing as it  neared Renstrom's driveway. It was bringing

Commissioner Weston, for  Cardona had remembered to call the Cobalt Club along about twenty  minutes of

ten. 

As Weston's chauffeur veered toward the driveway, a sedan rocketed  from the opposite direction. Foreseeing

a crash, the chauffeur shoved  the big car into reverse. Skidding, the sedan swerved alongside and  stopped.


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Uglyfaced men poked gun muzzles from the windows, intending  to avenge their recent defeat by murdering

the police commissioner. 

Rudy's crew never had a chance to fire. A limousine swung from the  corner; a passenger in the back seat

recognized the sedan and opened  with a fire that sounded like a cannonade. Rudy knew who was bringing

rescue, even though Weston didn't. 

The Shadow! 

WITH gunners slumping at the windows, Rudy yanked the sedan up into  Renstrom's driveway. With the car

speeding forward, he saw a garage  looming ahead. Jerking the wheel, Rudy swerved across the lawn in back

of the house, tore a path through a hedge and bounced across the bank  beyond. 

Shoving the car into high gear, he took to speedy flight, carrying  three sagging passengers with him. 

On the front street, Commissioner Weston was shaking hands with his  rescuer, who had alighted from the

limousine. As they stepped into the  glare of headlights, Weston was amazed to recognize Cranston, who had

left the Cobalt Club some time before him. 

It turned out that Cranston had come to visit a friend in this  vicinity and was quite as surprised as Weston at

this unexpected  meeting. He had heard a distant explosion, followed by gunfire, and had  ordered his

chauffeur to turn in that direction. 

As for the rescue, Cranston calmly belittled it to a point where  Weston decided that it had actually been

anything but spectacular.  Remarking that he had one of the commissioner's permits to carry a gun  in the

limousine, Cranston declared that the other car had fled the  moment he opened fire. 

Crooks had weakened; that was all. Weston agreed that such must  have been the case. Had the commissioner

been able to glimpse Rudy's  passengers he would have realized that they had weakened to the point  of

complete collapse; that bullets, not lack of nerve, had accounted  for their sudden disinterest in continuing the

battle. 

Together, Weston and The Shadow entered the Renstrom house. They  found Cardona at the top of the stairs;

the ace inspector wasn't  surprised to see Cranston with the commissioner, for the two were often  together. 

Briefly, Joe explained what had happened; then led the way to the  ruined study. A lamp was aglow on a

halfshattered table that stood in  the corner. Its light showed Renstrom lying close to the threshold. 

The actuary's glasses were gone; his dead eyes had a bulgy stare.  His fists were clenched, as though he had

made a last mad effort to  battle invisible enemies. 

"The mob must have chucked a pineapple through the window," stated  Cardona. "That's the only way they

could have wrecked the place. I  don't know why they started shooting afterward. They may have seen us

through the downstairs windows and tried to clip us." 

Merwood inclined to Cardona's theory of a bomb from outdoors. He  had been with Cardona, in the living

room, when the explosion occurred.  Dashing up, they had met Janet on the stairway, in time to save her  from

a spill to the bottom. 

The girl claimed that the whole house had been shaken by the blast.  She kept repeating it and seemed too

dazed to remember anything except  that her uncle was dead. Merwood's sympathy seemed to soothe her, so


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the others left Janet with him while they entered the study. 

None of Renstrom's papers remained. They had caught fire after the  explosion; Cardona and Daniel, the old

servant, had managed to  extinguish the blaze, but had failed to salvage the documents that the  law wanted. 

The door of the safe was wide; its contents had been transformed to  junk. Cardona suggested that the crooks

had thrown the bomb in at an  angle, knowing that Renstrom would be near the safe. 

"They couldn't have souped the thing," argued Cardona. "Only  Renstrom had the combination. Still they

wanted the dispatch box that  was in there and they must have gotten it. The box is gone." Joe  realized

suddenly that he was disputing his own theory. He looked  anxiously at Weston, fearing that the commissioner

would call him for  it. 

Before Weston could speak, The Shadow offered Cardona a chance to  display new headwork. Picking up a

chunk of metal that lay on the  floor, he handed it to the inspector. The thing was the lock of a cheap  dispatch

box. 

Casually, The Shadow remarked: "You said that Renstrom had a key to  " 

Cardona interrupted by hurrying to Renstrom's body; he brought back  the key that he found in the dead man's

vest pocket. It fitted the  lock, which brought Cardona to the conclusion that the key was the  right one. 

By that time The Shadow was producing more fragments of the box. 

"Odd, how the box seems to have blown outward," was Cranston's next  remark. "Curious, too, the way the

pieces scattered to all corners of  the room." 

"I've got it!" exclaimed Cardona. "The bomb was in the box! It was  delivered here to get rid of Renstrom!" 

JOE didn't notice the slight smile that appeared upon Cranston's  lips. The Shadow had put across the point he

wanted, giving Cardona  credit for it. The box that Renstrom had received was a death device  containing a

time bomb set for ten o'clock. 

Already The Shadow had linked this death with the affray at the  Hotel Thurmont. Though he hadn't seen

Rudy Waygart in the darkness, he  had heard the murderer's voice. 

Somehow, though, facts didn't quite fit. While Cardona was poking  about for more clues, The Shadow picked

up the lock and key to study  them more closely. 

In the hallway, Cardona found a knob from the shattered door.  Bringing it into the room, he produced a small

brush and a tiny bottle  of powdered graphite. He was examining the knob for fingerprints, while  Weston and

Cranston were viewing Renstrom's body. 

"Too bad," remarked the commissioner with a headshake, "that  Renstrom was unable to leave us a single

clue. He didn't even show that  letter to Merwood  and now it's gone, along with all the papers that  were on

Renstrom's desk!" 

"Not quite all, commissioner." 

With that comment, The Shadow stooped forward and gripped the  fingers of Renstrom's clenched left hand. It

took an effort to pry open  the dead fist, but when it came, a crumpled paper fell to the floor. 


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Picking up the little wad, The Shadow handed it to Weston. The  commissioner supposed that Cranston had

noted a corner of the paper  poking between Renstrom's fingers. 

Weston unfolded the slip. It bore what appeared to be a word, and  an odd one, penciled in capital letters: 

ADICO 

Deciding that the word was a name, Weston stepped out to the  hallway to question Merwood and Janet. He

asked if either had ever  heard of a person known as Adico. 

Both shook their heads. Daniel was there, also, but he was positive  that Renstrom had never mentioned the

name to him. 

Cardona came from the wrecked study to look at the sheet of paper.  Joe's fingers were covered with graphite

that smeared the edges of the  slip when he handled it. Passing the paper to the others, Cardona  insisted that

they study the name and try to jog their memories. 

Merwood, Daniel, finally Janet, all insisted in turn that the name  "Adico" still mystified them. 

Cardona took the paper to a bright lamp on the hallway table,  studied it, along with the knob from the study

door. Laying both  objects aside, he swung about, triumph registered on his face. 

"There's one person who can tell us who Adico is," insisted  Cardona. "We won't have to look far for the

person in question. I mean  someone who can tell us plenty besides; a person who had a lot to do  with

murder." 

Shoving a hand forward, Cardona clamped his fingers on Janet's  wrist and smothered the girl's startled outcry

with the firm  announcement: 

"I mean you, Miss Renstrom!" 

CHAPTER VI. THE MAN FROM THE DARK

AFTER a few frantic protests, Janet Renstrom became very earnest in  declaring her innocence of crime.

Taken at face value, Cardona's theory  seemed wild. Of all persons, Janet seemed least likely to have played a

part in her uncle's death. 

Commissioner Weston evidently thought so. He insisted that Cardona  produce proof before pressing the

charge further. Obligingly, Joe  showed the doorknob and the slip of paper, pointing out identical  fingerprints

on both. 

"I found those prints on the knob," explained Cardona. "They looked  like a woman's; that's why I smudged

the note with graphite and let  other people handle it. I was watching this girl very closely; those  fingerprints

are hers." 

"Of course they are," agreed Janet. She paused to brush away tears  that streaked her cheeks. "I stopped at the

study door and was about to  open it, just before I started downstairs. Then I thought I'd better  make sure that

it was ten o'clock before I disturbed my uncle. The  clock began to strike when I reached the stairs." 

The statement had the ring of truth; but Cardona did not accept it.  He acted as though he expected Janet to


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produce an alibi. 

"You made a phone call," Joe told the girl, "just after you came  upstairs. Would you mind telling us where

you called, and why?" 

The color faded from Janet's face. Then, rallying, the girl  replied: 

"There was a message for me to call that number. Who it came from,  I don't know." 

"Do you remember what the number was?" 

Janet pondered; at last she shook her head. She declared that the  explosion and the shock of her uncle's death

had driven such  recollections from her head. Her nerve restored, she spoke in  convincing style, but Cardona

considered her statement to be an alibi. 

So did The Shadow. He had learned what Cardona had noted earlier:  that Janet was trying to cover up

something. 

Cardona decided to call the girl's bluff. Picking up the telephone,  he gave a Manhattan number. The Shadow's

keen eyes watched Janet's  face, detected a tightening of the girl's lips, which neither Weston  nor Merwood

observed. Getting the number, Cardona asked for Room 312,  and talked to someone there. 

After a brief conversation, Joe thrust the telephone into Janet's  hands and told the girl to speak. He added that

she was to talk the way  she had awhile ago, quietly, but in her normal voice. 

With the slightest of winces, Janet complied. Cardona took the  telephone from her and completed the

conversation himself. Hanging up,  he announced: 

"That settles it. Do you know where this girl phoned, commissioner?  To the room at the Hotel Thurmont,

where the shooting took place  tonight. I left Markham there; he says she called just before ten and  hung up on

him. He recognized her voice again." 

Swinging to Janet, Cardona demanded that she admit the truth. He  expected defiance; instead, he encountered

cool determination. Janet  was quite prepared to tie Joe into many knots. 

"Of course I called there," said the girl as though she at last  remembered the number. "I was to ask for Room

312. The message said  so." 

Turning to Daniel, Cardona asked if the servant had given Janet any  such message. Daniel shook his head.

Promptly, Cardona snapped: 

"Answer that one, Miss Renstrom." 

"My uncle gave me the message," said the girl, her voice choking.  "He had received the call and thought it

was from one of my college  chums. They often come to New York." 

This time Janet was lying, and The Shadow knew it. Cardona  suspected the same thing but couldn't prove it.

However, he had made a  good start. He asked if he could grill Janet further, and Weston  finally agreed. 

THEY went down to the living room, where Cardona began his quiz. He  repeated previous questions, and

Janet gave the same answers. Weston  was standing at the doorway with Cranston. The commissioner heard


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his  friend undertone: 

"Sorry I can't stay until Cardona finishes. I wouldn't like to  arrive home late for breakfast." 

Commissioner Weston watched Cranston stroll out to the limousine.  The big car drove away. Turning to

Merwood, Weston saw that the  financier was still smiling at Cranston's parting quip. By mutual  agreement

the two retired to the library, which was across the hall. 

"I can't imagine what Janet could be hiding," declared Merwood  seriously. "She cared a great deal for her

uncle. I can't believe that  she would have helped plot his death. Who was the occupant of that  hotel room,

commissioner?" 

"A man named Hotchkiss," replied Weston. "He disappeared, and we  think that he may have been registered

under an assumed name." 

Merwood couldn't remember any friend of Renstrom's named Hotchkiss.  He was saying so when Daniel

appeared, admitting a pair of headquarters  detectives. They had nothing new to report; Daniel had brought

them to  the library to avoid interrupting Cardona's questioning. 

Grilling the girl was a tougher matter than Cardona had expected.  Pacing the living room, Joe stopped at

intervals to demand if Janet  knew a man named Hotchkiss. 

The girl shook her head each time; when Cardona suddenly shifted to  the mysterious Adico, Janet wrinkled

her forehead in perplexed fashion. 

"Really, inspector," she said earnestly, "if I could help you find  my uncle's murderer, I would. I assure you " 

"I don't want assurances," interjected Joe angrily. "I want  answers, and the right ones! I've wasted half an

hour, getting nowhere.  But I'm going to keep at it until I get results!" 

A telephone bell was ringing. Daniel answered the downstairs  extension, then came to the living room. 

"For you, inspector." 

Cardona went to the telephone. From the hallway he could still see  Janet, seated in a chair near a heavily

curtained doorway. Despite the  distance, Cardona observed a horrified expression come over the girl's  face.

He decided that she had thought of something that disturbed her  conscience. Joe intended to make the most of

it when he resumed the  grilling. 

What Cardona did not see was the gun muzzle that poked through the  curtains within sight of Janet's eyes.

Nor did he catch the raspy voice  that reached the girl's ears: 

"Stay as you are! Give me the nod when that cluck gets busy on the  telephone." 

Janet sat tight. She could hear Cardona shouting at the telephone,  telling the caller to talk louder. The girl

gave a nod; a folded paper  skimmed through the curtains and landed in her lap. 

"Open it," came the order. "Read it; then put it away. Remember  what it says." 

Trembling, Janet began to unfold the note. A sudden clatter stopped  her. Cardona had flung down the

telephone, was lunging into the room.  He had spied the note and regarded it as new evidence. 


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With a shriek, Janet flung herself forward. The gun blasted from  between the curtains; but the shot was late.

Away from immediate harm,  Janet forgot her own plight, fearing for Cardona. Desperately, she  threw herself

upon the inspector, hoping to hurry him out into the  hall. 

Cardona was already plucking the note from Janet's hand. With a  quick clutch he grasped the girl's arm,

swung her about and propelled  her into the hall. Thrusting his hand into his pocket, he dropped the  note and

whipped out a gun. 

All in the same move, Cardona was ducking for a table on the other  side of the room, while the hidden gunner

was spurting another shot  from the curtains. 

Men were coming from the library: Merwood, Weston, and the two  detectives. Janet shrieked the words: 

"It must be Adico  he's here!" 

THEY saw Cardona lunging for the curtains. Like Janet, he had  escaped the gunfire. Joe was ripping the

curtain with bullets from a  Police Positive, trying to down the man on the other side. But the  invader was no

longer there. He had cut through a rear room, seeking an  outlet. 

Detectives dashed along the hallway. Daniel was pointing to the  pantry door. Yanking it open, the two

detectives met the fugitive in  darkness. They were slugging it out with him when Cardona arrived from

another door. 

Flashing a light, Joe hoped to find the mysterious Adico and settle  scores with the killer. Again, the ace

inspector missed his chance. The  detectives were reeling back; Cardona's flashlight showed a swinging  door.

The foe was fleeing through the kitchen. 

Daniel pressed switches that illuminated outside lights. Reaching  the back door, Cardona could see for twenty

yards, but he saw no sign  of Adico, nor anyone else. The detectives appeared, coming from a side  route,

where Daniel had headed them, but they had seen no one on the  way. 

Rounding to the front of the house, Cardona and his reinforcements  met Weston and Merwood, who had gone

out through the front door. Joined  by the puzzled Daniel, all wondered what had become of the enemy they

sought. 

The man from the dark had made good his escape. Remembering how  Rudy had bashed through hedges,

Weston decided that Adico had done the  same. He set the detectives to work probing the sides of the lawn;

then, with a rueful headshake, the commissioner decided that he had set  that task too late. 

Janet was seated limply in the living room when Weston and Cardona  returned. Merwood came with them

and gave the girl an approving nod.  Janet smiled, realizing that her heroic effort in Cardona's behalf had

squared her with the law. 

Questioned, Janet told exactly what had happened, and gave a good  description of Adico's raspy voice. When

she mentioned the note,  Cardona produced it and handed it to Weston, who read its contents  carefully. 

"This clears you, Miss Renstrom," decided the commissioner briskly.  "You read it, didn't you?" 

"I was starting to " 


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"Read all of it," suggested Weston, handing her the paper. "But  don't let it worry you. We shall guarantee you

full protection against  Adico, whoever he may be." 

An hour before, the note might have given Janet a feeling of dread.  Under present circumstances it did not

trouble her. The explosion, her  uncle's death, Cardona's questioning, had stiffened her courage. In  fact, Janet

smiled somewhat grimly as she read the note. 

It seemed that men of crime had struck a snag at last. Janet  Renstrom had escaped a murderous thrust; and

with it  as Commissioner  Weston testified  crooks themselves had cleared her of any complicity  in their

evil schemes! 

CHAPTER VII. WITHIN THE CORDON

THE note was scrawled in red ink, as though the writer had  disguised his hand. The bloodred color made

Janet shudder, despite her  restored confidence. 

Somehow the vivid hue made the threat seem real, as Janet read: 

Do not inform the police that your uncle gave you the message 

to call the Hotel Thurmont. Failure to keep silence will bring  death. 

ADICO. 

The message brought home two points: first, that Janet's previous  testimony had been correct; second, that

Adico was her enemy. Coming  from a foe, the note helped the girl more than if a friend had sent it,  for she

had been under suspicion at the time when it arrived. 

There was a puzzling factor in the message; one that caused Janet  to feel somewhat stupefied. She kept

staring at the crimson ink until  Commissioner Weston approached and laid a reassuring hand upon her

shoulder. 

"You shall be amply protected," he assured. "I have instructed  Inspector Cardona to place a police cordon

here about the house. If  Adico returns we shall give him a warm reception." 

It wasn't long before a squad of police arrived. Cardona posted  them, then left in the official car with Weston,

Merwood, and the two  detectives. 

Renstrom's body had gone out awhile before; as Janet stood on the  front steps, saying good night to

Merwood, she shuddered at the  recollection of her uncle's last journey. 

"You have all my sympathy, Janet," said Merwood in parting.  "Remember that I counted your uncle among

my best friends. Do not worry  about danger." 

"I'm worrying about you, Mr. Merwood." 

"Because your uncle told me about the letter?" queried Merwood.  "That is a minor matter, Janet. Evidently

Adico has guessed that I did  not actually see it, and that I have no idea who sent it. After all,  the threat from

Adico was delivered to you, not to me." 


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Commissioner Weston didn't quite agree that Merwood was entirely  safe. He declared that the two detectives

would accompany the financier  to his apartment in Manhattan; that they would be detailed there,  guarding

Merwood until further notice. 

With that they were off, and Janet walked back into the house.  Daniel was serving coffee to two detectives in

the living room. They  were extras who would later relieve the men posted outside. 

Going up to her own room, Janet undressed. Then, in nightie and  kimono, she wrapped herself in a quilt and

sat down in a chair beside  the window. 

A chill kept sweeping her in waves, and at last she realized its  cause. 

Fear of Adico! 

Why? 

As she labored with the mental question, Janet began to visualize  the scene downstairs, at the time when the

man had fled from behind the  livingroom curtains. She could picture the route that he had followed,  through

the dining room, then the pantry, finally the kitchen. 

But how had Adico managed to disappear from the back porch? 

Janet gained a sudden answer that explained her instinctive fears.  The invader had disappeared because he

had not gone to the back porch  at all! 

Janet remembered a door in the kitchen  one that led down into the  cellar. She realized that Adico must have

entered by the back door;  that on the way through to the front he could have seen the route to  the cellar and

left it open for emergency. 

Adico might still be in the house! 

MADLY, Janet flung the quilt aside. She stumbled to a bureau,  opened the drawer and drew out a tiny

automatic that her uncle had once  given her. Fumblingly, she loaded the gun. 

What use was an outside cordon and police downstairs when Adico  could easily come up by the back way

from the kitchen and find Janet  alone? 

The note had promised death if Janet gave certain testimony,  whether it was right or wrong. She had made the

forbidden statement;  namely, that her uncle had told her to call Room 312 at the Hotel  Thurmont. At any

moment, Adico's stroke might come! 

Janet was tempted to shriek from the window; then realized that it  would be folly. Better to talk to the

detectives downstairs, tell them  her suspicions and let them trap Adico. 

Opening the door of the room, Janet turned toward the front stairs.  Sensing something in the hallway behind

her, she darted a look over her  shoulder. 

A figure from darkness made a sudden, amazing lunge. Two powerful  hands gripped Janet. Whirled about,

she actually felt that she was  flying through the air. 

Her rapid trip ended when she found herself half sprawled in the  quiltdraped chair beside the window. 


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Janet's captor was a huge creature of blackness, ghostly rather  than human. 

A whispered laugh drifted through the room. Though weird in tone,  it carried no menace. On the contrary it

gave Janet a sudden lift of  confidence; particularly as the gun in the visitor's hand was  immediately

withdrawn. 

Janet made out the cloaked shape and hatted head of the singular  visitor as he seated himself upon the

window sill. 

Against the faint moonlight, the being in black was slightly  visible from Janet's angle; but it would be

impossible for patrolling  detectives to observe his form against the darkness of the room. 

Whoever he was, the stranger could not be Adico, the one enemy that  Janet feared. The girl understood the

reason for the swift action in  the hall. Confronted by a gun, knowing that Janet would shriek for aid,  the

mysterious invader had but one choice: to overpower the girl. 

At present his attitude was one of protection. At the window the  cloaked personage was able to keep track of

events outside and also  watch the door of the room. Anxious to know his identity, Janet began: 

"You... you are " 

"The Shadow!" 

By his own pronouncement of the name, The Shadow seemed to speak of  things mysterious. Thoughts

flashed to Janet's mind; she remembered the  talk of defeated crooks at the Hotel Thurmont; of battle outside

this  very house. She felt, somehow, that The Shadow must have remained in  this vicinity after that. The

thought caused her to blurt a question: 

"Did you find Adico?" 

The Shadow laughed. His lowtoned mirth promised a remarkable  answer, which promptly came. 

"Not exactly," returned The Shadow. "I was Adico." 

"You... you were " 

"I was acting in your behalf, to free you from the burden of unfair  suspicion. You told an unwise falsehood

when you said that your uncle  had given you the message to call the Hotel Thurmont." 

Amazed, Janet tried to figure how The Shadow knew. She realized  that Adico was probably an imaginary

person; that The Shadow had made  the most of that supposed personality, merely to relieve her from the

ordeal that Cardona had begun. 

Further, Janet saw The Shadow's purpose. Knowing the truth,  probably possessed of facts that the law had not

learned, The Shadow  had wanted to question her himself. 

Janet didn't connect The Shadow with Cranston. Because of The  Shadow's mysterious ways, she supposed

that he had been listening in on  Cardona's quiz, and thereby discovered the situation. 

IT wasn't necessary for The Shadow to use Cardona's grilling  tactics. He had already broken Janet's story; the

girl was ready to  talk. But before she could speak a word, The Shadow made a statement  that amazed her. 


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"You knew that a man named Parron was at the Hotel Thurmont, in  Room 312. That is why you phoned

there." 

Janet nodded. 

"Ronald told me where he was," she admitted. "He asked me to keep  it secret, saying that I would understand

later. Tonight I saw him come  to the house and deliver a box for my uncle. Daniel didn't know who it  was,

but I saw Ronald before he muffled his face." 

"Parron delivered the box that caused your uncle's death. Yet you  shielded him " 

"Because I knew that Ronald couldn't be responsible for what  happened later. He never would have told me

where he was if he had  plotted my uncle's death." 

There was logic in what Janet said. Moreover, it fitted with what  The Shadow had himself discovered. Not

only did he know that Parron had  tried to shake loose from the murder ring that operated under the title  of

Adico; but The Shadow had evidence to substantiate the fact. 

He produced the evidence: the little key and the lock of the  shattered dispatch box. Janet had last seen those

objects in Cardona's  possession; she supposed that Joe had laid them somewhere and that The  Shadow had

picked them up. 

Handing the articles to Janet, The Shadow remarked in quiet  whisper: 

"The key fits. Try to turn it." 

The key fitted; rather loosely, it seemed. But it wouldn't turn the  lock when Janet tried it. She couldn't quite

grasp the answer, though  she knew there must be one. The Shadow supplied it. 

"Parron mailed the key," he stated, "and intended to deliver the  box that it would open. Someone entered

Parron's room and substituted a  different box, loaded with a bomb, instead of documents pertaining to  the

murder ring. 

"The fact that a killer named Rudy Waygart was waiting for Parron  when he returned makes it obvious that

crooks could have entered the  hotel room while Parron was absent earlier." 

Janet's expression tightened. Solemnly, she questioned: 

"What happened to Ronald?" 

"He is dead," replied The Shadow. "Our mission, therefore, becomes  one of double vengeance. We must

settle scores for the deaths of Ronald  Parron and Albert Renstrom." 

Bravely accepting the news of Parron's death, Janet gave prompt  agreement to The Shadow's plan. His use of

the term "we" inspired her  with the hope that she could play a part in the coming campaign. The  Shadow

emphasized that very point. 

"Parron was linked with a crooked gang," affirmed The Shadow. "When  he learned that they dealt in murder,

he tried to reveal it to your  uncle, who was the proper man to explain the situation to the law. 


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"To protect himself, Parron did not reveal who he was. He probably  had your interests in mind when he did

so. Crooks managed to destroy  the information that Parron sent your uncle. We must replace that

information." 

An excellent idea, thought Janet; but she wondered where they would  begin. She was puzzled, too, about how

she could help. When she put  such questions, The Shadow answered them. 

"Having known Parron well," The Shadow told her, "you can learn the  names of persons who were friends of

his. It is likely that some of his  friends have died recently. I should like to know who they were, along  with

Parron's living acquaintances." 

Rising from the window sill, The Shadow drew a white envelope from  his cloak and gave it to Janet. He said

that it contained a simple code  that she could easily memorize. She was to study it the moment that she

opened the envelope. 

"The writing will fade soon after you read it," cautioned The  Shadow, "hence it will be unnecessary to

destroy the paper. In giving  me any names by telephone, spell them with the code letters. Always  remember

that someone may be watching you; therefore, trust no one." 

Trust no one! 

That thought dominated after Janet had watched The Shadow glide  from the room to merge with the

hallway's darkness. By no one, The  Shadow had not included himself. That went without saying, and the fact

was significant in itself. 

Janet felt chilled no longer. She burned with eagerness to begin  the task that The Shadow had assigned her.

Nor had she forgotten the  final words of caution. 

She would trust no one but The Shadow! 

CHAPTER VIII. THE FINGER POINTS

THREE days had passed; with them the excitement over the Renstrom  murder had simmered down

considerably. The police had obtained Parron's  body from Dr. Sayre, and the clerk at the Hotel Thurmont had

identified  the dead man as the missing Hotchkiss. 

Afterward, Parron's actual identity had been discovered, and it was  generally conceded that he must have

been a victim of crime. For there  was no link between Parron and any known crooks. 

In talking to reporters, Commissioner Weston declared that any  rumor of a murder ring must be sheer

exaggeration. It was probable, of  course, that Parron had discovered the workings of some criminal racket

that had death connected with it. However, assuming that Parron had  informed Renstrom, it was probable that

the latter had overestimated  the matter. 

Renstrom was an actuary; his mind had been trained in terms of life  and death, from the standpoint of

statistics. 

Along with that assertion the commissioner furnished an explanation  for the murders. Having learned too

much about things that did not  concern them, Parron and Renstrom had been slain. But the manner of  their

death was, in itself, proof that a murder ring was not behind it. 


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The killers were bunglers. They had left dead mobsmen on the field.  In short, when it came to murder, they

lacked finesse. Claiming that  the law had taken toll of almost all the mobbies involved, Weston  declared that

the case had resolved itself into a simple search for the  leader who had headed the criminal band. 

Privately, of course, Weston was troubled. In his office he  frequently mulled over the chart that The Shadow

had sent. Its  conflicting lines bothered him, and he hadn't forgotten the fading  silhouette that had been

impressed upon the graphic message. 

He believed, however, that by refraining from any mention of The  Shadow, he would aid the cloaked

investigator in the search for an  actual master of murder. 

Weston was still thinking in terms of Adico. As yet, neither the  commissioner nor Inspector Cardona had

gotten a lead to Rudy Waygart. 

Meanwhile, The Shadow was considering a problem of his own. Janet  had furnished him with the names he

wanted. At first the list had been  a disappointment. None of Parron's friends had died recently, nor did  any of

them appear to be important enough to be in danger. 

Nevertheless, The Shadow had not discarded the list. Instead he had  put certain of his secret agents to work

upon it  such men as Harry  Vincent, who had access to privileged social groups; and Rutledge Mann,  an

investment broker, whose clients were wealthy persons. 

Likewise, in his guise of Lamont Cranston, The Shadow was actively  checking on various deaths that looked

suspicious, particularly among  the select class covered by Renstrom's mortality figures. From such  extended

research, The Shadow had gained a very important fact. 

Parron's friends were still alive; but some of their friends had  met with sudden death! 

FOR example, Reggie Chitterton. The polo player had a cousin, Alan  Grake, who was due to claim Reggie's

inheritance from their mutual  grandfather. At present, Grake was abroad, had been for nearly a year.

Attorneys were handling the inheritance for him. 

There were other cases: a business rival of one of Parron's friends  had died quite suddenly. A second

instance: one of Parron's pals had  owed money to a wealthy chum, presumably quite a large sum. But it had

turned out to be very small after the chum in question was killed in an  automobile crash. 

Again both of Parron's friends were away. This proved a valuable  link as The Shadow considered Janet's list.

In his sanctum, The Shadow  checked further facts and came to one that intrigued him. 

From the list he chose a name, wrote it separately in ink of vivid  blue: 

CLAUDE JUBLE 

The writing faded, while The Shadow gave a mirthless, whispered  laugh. Then, on the same sheet of paper,

The Shadow's hand inscribed  the name of a man wellknown to Juble, but not to Parron: 

TYRUS VAYNE 

Facts were definite. Claude Juble was the junior partner in an  importing firm; his senior, Tyrus Vayne, was

the real head of the  business. Vayne Co., it was called; but there was talk that it might,  some day, be Vayne

Juble. 


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Then Vayne would retire and Juble would take over. Meanwhile, Vayne  Co. was gradually slipping. The

business was moderate, but profitable.  It might not be so in a few years if Vayne continued at the helm, for

the senior partner was oldfashioned in his methods and persisted in  continuing them. 

For nearly a year, The Shadow learned, Juble had made no effort to  push his own position, though he had

done so before. Juble was simply  keeping in the background, apparently quite content with Vayne's  methods. 

In fact, Juble was going on a vacation. He had intended to leave  last week on a cruise, but reports of storms at

sea had caused him to  postpone the trip. 

As Vayne's name faded from the sheet, The Shadow extinguished the  sanctum light. Again a laugh sounded

in the darkness. Though the  curtained room was pitch black, it was still daylight outdoors. There  was time for

The Shadow to complete an important plan. 

SOON afterward, a visitor was ushered into the private office of  Tyrus Vayne. He introduced himself as

Lamont Cranston, which produced a  beaming smile and a warm handshake from the elderly importer. Vayne

knew that Cranston was a millionaire globe trotter. The interview might  mean business. 

It did. 

The business was much bigger than Vayne supposed. Idly smoking one  of Vayne's best cigars, Cranston

placidly proposed a deal that held  Vayne breathless. 

"On my coming trip to India," stated The Shadow, "I intend to buy a  rajah's treasure house. It will cost me a

considerable sum; perhaps"   he flicked the ash from the cigar  "it will run to half a million  dollars. But that

amount can be tripled inside two years, with your  cooperation." 

Vayne let his lips move silently before he managed to ask: 

"Just how?" 

"Your concern can import the gems," explained The Shadow, "and sell  them at a tremendous profit, although

the prices will be bargains here  in America. The first purchase will lead to others, therefore it is  advisable that

we should organize as a new corporation." 

Eagerly, Vayne agreed to the proposal. It was then that The Shadow  brought up another angle. His tone was

sympathetic as he declared: 

"I intend to bring in other investors, Mr. Vayne. I am afraid that  they will insist that a more active man head

the new corporation. We  shall need you in an advisory capacity, and you will share the profits,  but young

blood will be needed." 

Vayne swallowed the bait in a single gulp. A generous man at heart,  the old importer suggested the very thing

that The Shadow expected. 

"Wouldn't Juble do?" queried Vayne. "He's practically my full  partner. He is young, capable, and knows the

importing business. Ask  anyone who knows; they will tell you that Claude Juble has a future in  our trade." 

"I agree with you," returned The Shadow. "Juble will be acceptable  as president of the corporation. Provided,

of course, that he will be  satisfied with the salary that we are able to offer him." 


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"How much would that be?" 

"Fifty thousand dollars." Naming the figure, The Shadow added,  rather hastily: "Of course, we could

guarantee an increase after the  first year " 

No more was necessary. Vayne had almost collapsed behind his desk.  Finally managing to grasp his

telephone, he called Juble's apartment  and poured forth the news. Finishing the call, he sat back and mopped

his forehead. 

"Juble intended to leave tonight on a cruise," said Vayne. "I told  him to unpack instead. He wanted to come

down here to the office right  away when he heard your offer, but I suggested that he meet me at my

penthouse. 

"This is a wonderful chance for Juble, Mr. Cranston! You may think  that your offer is an ordinary one, but I

can assure you that it is far  beyond what either Juble or I would have expected. Your associates must  be very

wealthy, like yourself." 

The Shadow assured Vayne that they were. He named a few of the men  that he thought would be interested,

and decided to telephone them at  once, to line them up as a board of directors. He purposely picked  names

that would impress Vayne. 

Among them, The Shadow chose Thomas Merwood. The financier had  lately been in the news, because of

events at Renstrom's. Vayne  promptly recognized Merwood's name, as The Shadow expected. There was

another reason, however, why The Shadow called Merwood. 

Weston and Merwood had discussed the possible existence of a murder  ring. Like the police commissioner,

the financier had expressed some  doubt as to the extent of its activity. Both had agreed, however, that  there

might be something deep behind the mysterious Adico, whomever or  whatever it represented. 

According to The Shadow's calculations, Adico would be heard from  again in connection with Tyrus Vayne.

By bringing Merwood into the  coming situation, The Shadow might make more progress toward his final

goal. 

CRANSTON'S limousine was outside. Vayne willingly accepted an  invitation to ride home in the car, since it

was on the way to the  Cobalt Club. Dusk was deepening while they rode along, and all the  while Vayne kept

repeating his gratitude to Cranston. 

The car paused in front of a secluded apartment house. Leaving it,  Vayne entered the building. Before

ordering the chauffeur to drive on,  The Shadow looked upward to Vayne's penthouse, a dozen stories above

the street. 

In the penthouse, a lurking visitor was lying in wait for Vayne,  this tragic evening. That visitor was death! 

Only one person could prevent it. From beneath the rear seat of the  limousine, Lamont Cranston was drawing

garments of black that reposed  in a hidden sliding drawer. 

The Shadow was planning a daring course  one that meant risk for  Vayne as well as for himself. A

necessary course, however, for its  purpose was to make crime show its hand. 

If all went well, Tyrus Vayne would soon be expressing newer,  greater gratitude to someone other than

Lamont Cranston; at least, so  Vayne would believe. 


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Vayne's thanks would be given to The Shadow! 

CHAPTER IX. DEATH FINDS A WAY

DEEP in a comfortable chair, Tyrus Vayne smiled contentedly as he  looked around the living room of his

tiny penthouse. He was getting  old, Vayne was, and he had realized lately that he looked it. 

He felt, though, that today's conference with Cranston had relieved  him of many years. Business worries were

the thing that had aged Vayne.  They were over and he was actually sprightly. 

A polite voice spoke. It was Harkin, Vayne's new servant. Rising  from his chair, Vayne inquired: 

"Dinner already, Harkin?" 

"Not yet, sir," replied the servant. "It's Mr. Juble. He just  phoned from downstairs. He's coming up." 

Vayne met Juble at the elevator. Clapping his junior partner on the  shoulder, he started him into the living

room, talking all the way. 

"It's the chance of a lifetime, Claude! The very sort of  opportunity that I've dreamed about for years. I'm not

too old to have  a share of it, but you are the person who will really profit. You'd  better forget about going on

a cruise in order to be here when we form  the corporation " 

Vayne stopped. To his amazement, Vayne saw a different Juble than  he had expected. The young man did not

show a single trace of  enthusiasm. 

Usually, Juble showed poise; tonight he was worried. Steady eyes  had become restless; lips that customarily

smiled were twitchy. Juble's  whole expression was haggard. 

"Why, tell me, what's the matter, Claude?" 

Juble didn't immediately reply to Vayne's question. Half choking,  he asked for a drink; Vayne had Harkin

bring one. Gulping it in a  single swallow, Juble clanked his glass on a table, then faltered the  warning: 

"You're in danger, Tyrus! Great danger... more than I can describe!  You've got to go away... right off... in a

hurry! Here"  he thrust an  envelope into Vayne's hand  "take these tickets. Go on that cruise in  my place." 

"Nonsense!" returned Vayne. "Why, we're both needed here, to  organize the new company. Cranston said so.

They'll only offer you the  presidency on my recommendation." 

Juble's clutch tightened on Vayne's arm. 

"That's just it!" said the young man hoarsely. "If anything  happened to you, I'd " 

Vayne's eyes sharpened as Juble faltered. His own calm maintained,  Vayne completed the sentence. 

"You would lose out," he stated. "Am I right in inferring that your  sudden concern for my safety is inspired

wholly by your hope of  personal profit?" 

The words struck home. For the first time in their long  association, Vayne was recognizing Juble's actual


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character. The fellow  was a grasper; perhaps a plotter. In the past he had managed to hide  such traits under a

suave, agreeable manner. 

Juble tried to offset his own betrayal. 

"No, no!" he insisted. "Your welfare comes first, Tyrus. I'm  nervous; but if you'll only give me time to

explain " 

Vayne waited. He watched Juble's lips twitch, saw the young man's  fists clench. At last Juble regained some

of his suavity; he spoke  steadily, though glibly. 

"I made a serious mistake," he said. "I let someone sell me a  proposition which seemed quite legitimate at the

time. It wasn't until  later that I realized what I had done. If I could only explain " 

JUBLE halted, interrupted by a dry comment which came from the  doorway. The speaker was Harkin, the

new servant. The man was pointing  a gun at Juble and Vayne. 

"No explanations will be necessary, Juble," inserted Harkin.  "Instead, we would prefer cooperation. Tonight

happens to be the  deadline!" 

Groaning, Juble sank to a chair. Harkin concentrated upon Vayne,  who went slowly backward, hands partly

raised as he stared, horrified,  at the gun. 

"It will be very quick, Mr. Vayne," announced Harkin with a leer.  "Just a tap on the back of the head; after

that you won't know that you  are going over the rail on the outside roof. 

"You are an old man. No one will be surprised to hear that you had  an attack of vertigo and fell from the

penthouse terrace. You have said  yourself that the rail was too low, that it worried you. 

"Two witnesses will support the accident story. One will be your  friend and partner, Juble. The other will he

an honest, trusted servant   myself." 

Juble was on his feet. 

"Don't go through with it!" he gasped. "I'll buy you off! I'll pay  Adico more than is coming to me! Let Vayne

live; by the end of a few  years he'll be worth far more to me than if he dies!" 

"More to you, perhaps," sneered Harkin, "but not to Adico. It's too  late, Juble. You've told too much to

Vayne." 

Harkin had backed slowly toward the double door that led out to a  little roof terrace. Alongside the servant

were two other men, who had  just come from the elevator. They were a murderouslooking pair, who  were to

serve as Vayne's executioners. 

One had drawn a blackjack, preparatory to the "tap" that Vayne was  to receive when he reached the rail. The

other held a revolver; he  covered Vayne, while Harkin stepped forward to open the doors. At that  moment

Vayne looked very pitiful, almost shrunken, as he stood hemmed  in by the crew of killers. 

Harkin extended his hand to open the double door. At that instant  both sections of the double portal ripped

wide. In from the darkness  came the weird challenge of a shivering laugh that brought crooks full  about. 


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Out of the blackness that formed the outdoor background they saw  thrusting gun muzzles; above them, eyes

that burned with righteous  fury. Flatfooted, their guns unaimed, they stood petrified by that  terror from the

night as they voiced, in awe, his name: 

"The Shadow!" 

Scaling to the penthouse terrace, The Shadow had lain in wait to  spring a perfect trap. This time he was

outside; crooks were inside.  Behind The Shadow was ample darkness into which he could fade if  necessary. 

As crooks let their guns hit the floor, The Shadow motioned Vayne  aside. Nodding toward a telephone, he

commanded in sibilant tone: 

"Summon the police!" 

Vayne obeyed. His words were terse across the wire. All the while,  Juble was twitchy as he watched. He

didn't belong to the crooked tribe  who operated under the title of Adico, but his present rating was  nearly as

bad. 

Conflicting thoughts were stirring Juble. At moments he was  calculating upon flight, wondering if The

Shadow would let him get away  with it. At other intervals his expression tightened as he had flashes  of hope

that he might redeem himself. 

At least he had tried to warn Vayne; even though his motives had  been selfish, Juble had actually pleaded for

the old man's life. Half  risen from his chair, Juble glared at the helpless crooks as though he  would like to

slaughter them. 

It was an act calculated to impress Vayne. Recognizing Juble's  pose, The Shadow concentrated upon the

crooks. They were the men who  had to be watched; Juble could be disregarded as a factor. Such was The

Shadow's verdict, until a freak of circumstances changed it. 

One crook shifted. He was the fellow who had the blackjack; he  hadn't dropped it like the others had their

guns. At present the  blackjack was as harmless as a baby's rattle, and The Shadow had let  the thug keep his

toy. 

Gradually, the hand with the blackjack had slid behind Harkin. With  the weapon out of sight, its owner was

making his shift to start a bold  leap toward The Shadow, who, in his turn, was awaiting the attack. 

It would simply mean a bullet for the thug; and with the fellow  sprawled upon the floor, Harkin and the

remaining thug would be more  cowed than ever. But Juble didn't see it that way. All that he  recognized was a

chance for actual heroics. 

Springing from his chair, Juble struck the thug full force and  reeled him forward. The crook tried to grapple

with one hand while he  swung the blackjack with the other. The Shadow let them tangle; in his  turn he made

a side step to keep Harkin and the other thug covered. 

Just then the grapplers stumbled. Headlong, they pitched against  The Shadow, almost pinning him beside the

door. Bowling into them, The  Shadow sent them sprawling; but, again, there was a freakish twist of  direction.

The staggering men formed a shield for Harkin and his pal. 

Servant and thug grabbed for their guns. Wheeling, The Shadow flung  Vayne behind a huge chair in the

corner, then pivoted to open battle. 


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Guns blasted loudly, their echoes magnified by the confines of the  room. Harkin's pal slumped; but the

servant reached the door and turned  to fire again at The Shadow. 

Juble had settled the fellow with the blackjack. Seeing Harkin, he  made a spring for the murderous servant.

The Shadow was twisting to a  new vantage point, from which he could drop Harkin after the crook  delivered

another futile shot. Harkin was changing aim too slowly.  Frantically he fired. 

That shot should have missed The Shadow by three feet. Instead, it  missed him by a dozen. It never reached

the wall from which The Shadow  whirled. An intervening target stopped it. 

The target was Juble, finishing his lunge. He had come directly  into Harkin's path of fire. Staggering

momentarily, Juble pitched  forward. The bullet had reached his heart. 

Harkin was stabbing his gun forward for another shot. In finishing  Juble he hadn't suffered the slightest delay

in getting a new chance at  The Shadow. But the blackcloaked fighter was working split seconds  ahead of

Harkin. The big muzzle of a .45 smoked a shot straight for the  servant. 

Sprawling, his gun unfired, Harkin rolled over dead. A weird laugh  of triumph pealed through the room, to

the accompaniment of snarls from  two wounded thugs. With the echoes of that mirth came a metallic clang.  It

was the door of the elevator. 

FROM his corner, The Shadow saw men in blue uniform dashing toward  him. With a quick turn he swung

through the open doorway to the  terrace, and became part of the blackness beyond it. Only Tyrus Vayne  was

left to greet the police and tell them of crime's defeat. 

For The Shadow had another mission; one that the death of Juble had  produced. Like Parron, Juble was a man

who could have told much about  the murder racket if only he had lived. Chances were that Juble  possessed

evidence, in documentary form, relating to the mysterious  Adico. 

Mobsters hadn't intended to slay Claude Juble. Others in the ring   Rudy Waygart, for instance  would be

late in learning that Juble had  died. Even though the Adico organization was geared for speed, this  time The

Shadow held the edge. 

Off into the night, The Shadow was traveling ahead of crime, hoping  to get evidence that would mark an end

to murder! 

CHAPTER X. CRIME'S MOTIVE

A TINY flashlight twinkled in deep darkness. Its ray, a shining  disk the size of a small gold piece, was

moving low along the floor,  roving from one object to another. Dwindling almost to a point, it  settled on the

lock of a steamer trunk  Juble's trunk, which he hadn't  sent to the cruise ship. 

The ray enlarged; into its area came a gloved hand holding a steel  lock pick. The Shadow set to work upon

the trunk lock. 

A clicking sound  the trunk lid went upward. Within was a tray  holding some scattered objects of apparel.

Lifting the tray, The Shadow  found the bottom of the trunk still packed. He probed among the  articles that

Juble had stowed there. 

Time was short. That was why The Shadow had chosen the trunk as the  first place to search. If Juble had any


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papers pertaining to crime's  game, he would not have planned to go away without them. 

Nothing was in the bottom of the trunk. The fact did not deter The  Shadow's search. He knew that Juble

might have foreseen a routine  custom's inspection upon returning from the cruise. If so, the trunk  would have

some hiding place that would not ordinarily be suspected. 

The trunk lacked trickery. The Shadow replaced the tray, began to  examine it in minute fashion. The

flashlight licked along a folded edge  of cloth, the tray's lining, turned over one end and glued in place.  Only

The Shadow's eyes could have noted the frayed edge at one portion  of the cloth. 

Instantly, deft fingers were at work loosening the cloth. The edge  came up to reveal a slit in the woodwork.

The Shadow saw the folded  edge of a white paper. Drawing it from the hiding place, he laid the  paper in the

tray, aimed the light full upon it. 

It was the most remarkable document that The Shadow had ever  viewed. It looked like an insurance policy; in

fact it was one, except  that its border was printed in black, instead of the customary green. 

At the top was the amazing title: 

AMERICAN DEATH INSURANCE COMPANY 

The word "Adico" was explained. It was formed from the initials of  the outlandish corporation, with the letter

"C" of "Company" followed  by the next letter, "O." 

Below the title was the company's symbol, a skull and crossbones.  At the bottom was the amount of the

policy: one hundred thousand  dollars. Spreading the folded sheet, The Shadow read its terms  in  engraved

printing, interspersed with engrossed hand lettering: 

AMERICAN 

DEATH INSURANCE COMPANY 

herewith insures the death of 

Tyrus Vayne 

and agrees to pay the sum of 

$100,000 

upon due proof that the insured is alive after 

ONE YEAR 

following the issue of this policy. 

This insurance is granted in consideration of a premium of 

$8,786.28, 

paid by 


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CLAUDE JUBLE, who will become the beneficiary in the event that the  insured should survive the stated

term. 

At the bottom, in smaller type, The Shadow read the statement:  "Form SP2. Single premium, payable in

advance." On a line in a lower  corner appeared the date of the policy. It proved a highly significant  find. The

policy was just one year old. Its term would be up tomorrow. 

DEATH insurance! 

Outlandish that such a thing should exist, yet here was actual  proof of it. Yet, as The Shadow analyzed the

matter, he saw how logical  the scheme could be. 

Death insurance was simply the opposite of life insurance. Instead  of a man insuring his own life, someone

else insured his death. The  case of Claude Juble and Richard Vayne was typical. 

Juble wanted to take over the importing business before it dwindled  and became valueless. Since Vayne was

reluctant to retire, Juble had  looked forward to his death. Juble had paid the sum of nearly nine  thousand

dollars to make sure that Vayne died within a year. 

If Vayne didn't die, Adico would owe Juble one hundred thousand  dollars. Therefore, Juble would be the

winner in either case. In one  instance he would acquire control of a profitable business; in the  other, he would

gross a hundred thousand dollars. 

Naturally, the Adico outfit was out to make a profit of its own.  Instead of running a legitimate insurance

business, the sponsors had  gone in for murder, craftily disguised. Premiums paid by men like Juble  were

accumulated by the strange insurance organization, while claims  were seldom paid  if ever  simply because

insured men, like Vayne,  were always slated for death! 

It was easy, now, to understand Parron's relation to the racket.  Like any insurance business, Adico required

selling agents, and Parron  had been one. He had probably believed for a while that death insurance  was as

legitimate as any other form, though it appeared somewhat  irregular. 

The reign of murder; repeated deaths of men that Parron had insured   those tragedies had convinced Parron

otherwise. That was why he  wanted to get out of the game and expose it through Renstrom. 

Reading the policy once again, The Shadow saw how cunningly it  operated. The policy was Juble's receipt

for a payment. If Vayne lived,  Juble could present it and collect his hundred thousand. Adico would  have to

pay, otherwise Juble could make the policy public and expose  the game. 

Had Vayne died, Juble would have immediately destroyed the policy,  since its existence would incriminate

him in connection with the  insured man's death. Thus Adico was amply protected in all the policies  it issued. 

The Shadow had expected evidence of the sort he found, but the  death insurance policy was far more

remarkable than his actual  anticipations. In fact, it improved The Shadow's own plans. He knew  that he had

put a decided crimp into the racket, confronting Adico with  a most pressing problem. 

Tyrus Vayne was still alive. Protected by the law, Vayne was beyond  another murder thrust within the time

allowed. But Claude Juble was  dead, therefore unable to produce the policy or destroy it. As The  Shadow had

foreseen, crooks would certainly have to visit his apartment  to reclaim the policy before police came here to

have a look around. 


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The Shadow listened. From the street he could hear the throbs of  traffic. Occasionally a car stopped near the

apartment house. Anyone of  those cars might be bringing a squad of professional killers, headed,  probably,

by Rudy Waygart. 

Tonight, mobsters would expect to find The Shadow. He had crossed  their paths quite often lately. They

would know that he had settled  matters with Harkin and the others, up at Vayne's. They would probably

suppose that The Shadow had also slain Juble, bringing about the  present situation. 

CALMLY, The Shadow turned the flashlight toward the edge of the  trunk tray, to find if other papers were

concealed in the niche. He  found some; they were bills for various debts, made out to different  persons. 

Evidently, Juble had been running in the hole financially, another  reason why he had been interested in the

deathinsurance proposition  when Parron proposed it. 

On a sheet of paper The Shadow listed the names and totaled the  amounts owed. They came to several

thousand dollars; probably all  honest debts. Fingering the slips, The Shadow was struck with a new

inspiration  one that brought a soft laugh from his hidden lips. 

Among loose papers in a desk drawer he found some printed  billheads. He tore one away, then placed the pad

beneath his cloak.  Resting the flashlight so its glow showed the billhead, The Shadow  filled it out as follows: 

To Mr. Claude Juble 

Owed to Henry Arnaud, 

for services rendered 

$3,250.00 

Folding the faked bill, The Shadow tucked it in the niche with the  rest. He replaced the death insurance policy

where it belonged, then  began a mending job of the frayed cloth that hid the secret hollow in  the trunk tray. 

Creaky footsteps were sounding in the hallway. Low voices mumbled;  there was a click from the door lock.

The Shadow recognized that  arriving crooks were using a lock pick, not a key. It would take them a  few

minutes to get the door open. Carefully, The Shadow continued his  job of mending the trunk lining. 

He wasn't making it look perfect. On the contrary, he took pains to  make the frayed edge just obvious enough

to attract attention, yet not  too crude. 

The Shadow wanted crooks to find the death insurance policy and the  papers that were with it! 

Such a find would convince them that The Shadow had not arrived  ahead of them; that their game was not

discovered. Even The Shadow  so  crooks would reason  would not be able to resist the temptation of

acquiring evidence that was so damaging to Adico. 

But The Shadow reasoned otherwise. 

He was sure that he had learned enough to advance far with his  hidden campaign. He had paved the way to

further things, that might  enable him to beat murderers at their own game, provided they did not  guess that he

had penetrated so deeply into their schemes. 


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The Shadow left the halfpacked trunk unlocked. He wanted to help  the mobsters accomplish what they had

come to do. An unlocked trunk  wouldn't rouse their suspicions. They would simply suppose that Juble  had

been in too much of a hurry to bother about locking it. 

For Juble, hearing of Vayne's proposition to Cranston, had wanted  his partner to live. The existing business

had become unimportant  compared to the new corporation that promised an initial salary of  fifty thousand

dollars. Vayne's death would have ended the deal, so  Juble had done his utmost to prevent it. 

All of which proved that The Shadow had sensed the secret behind  the Adico racket, even before he had

found the actual death insurance  policy. The Shadow had suspected, at least, that men like Juble had  paid

cash for the murder of others, like Vayne. But, for the moment, he  was dropping all such thoughts from mind. 

The Shadow was confronted with a rather unique problem. Perfectly  situated to battle incoming crooks, he

was anxious, for once, to avoid  them! 

NEWLY formed plans required that The Shadow be gone before killers  entered. He couldn't use the

windows; they were latched, and they  opened into a tiny courtyard that might prove an absolute trap. There

was only one route: a circuit through the apartment itself. 

Light suddenly streaked the room. The crooks had opened the door  from the hallway. Against the glow, The

Shadow saw the sallow, ugly  face of their leader, Rudy Waygart. But Rudy didn't see The Shadow. All  that

the ace killer spied was fading blackness that seemed to retire  reluctantly from the dim, incoming light. 

Gun in one hand, flashlight in the other, Rudy sprang forward.  Pressure of the flash switch threw a glare past

Juble's trunk. Again  blackness vanished. 

Swinging the beam, Rudy spotted a closed door. He hurried across  the room and tried it. The door was tightly

shut. Deciding that all was  well, Rudy began to inspect the room. 

Noticing the trunk, Rudy examined it, gave a harsh chuckle as he  ran his fingers along the turneddown cloth

that edged the tray. He was  congratulating himself upon a discovery that he thought was his alone. 

Out in the hallway, a blackcloaked shape was moving away from a  service entrance at the rear of Juble's

apartment. A wraithlike form,  it reached a stairway, unnoticed by a thuggish watcher that Rudy had  posted as

a lookout. Descending to a small lobby, The Shadow paused,  listened for sounds from the rear of the hallway. 

He heard them  shuffling noises that betrayed thugs spotted there.  Rudy had brought his crew in through the

back. It wouldn't do to try  that exit. 

Through the front entry, The Shadow reached the sidewalk; there, he  came to a sudden halt as he sidestepped

to a narrow stretch of outside  brick. 

The Shadow had flattened against the only portion of the wall that  afforded complete darkness. Elsewhere,

street lights made the path too  plain. Across the way The Shadow saw a parked car, much like the rakish

sedan that Rudy had used in flight from Renstrom's. Such a car meant  watching crooks. 

Trapped between the outside watchers and the inside mob, The Shadow  was faced by a new dilemma that

threatened more than danger. His  present position promised to ruin all the plans that he had formed  against

the murder ring! 


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CHAPTER XI. CROOKS OBLIGE

THIS was a time for clever strategy; a ruse of a sort that The  Shadow had seldom tried. It meant slowmotion

tactics, more difficult  than rapid action, perhaps with risk of a most hazardous sort.  Nevertheless, The

Shadow resolved to try it. 

Gunmen expected him. Still, they thought that they had reached the  goal first. It was necessary to balance

those facts; to preserve the  illusion among with the real. Eyes toward the car across the way, The  Shadow

watched for any motion within it. Seeing none, he began to edge  out into the light. 

He was watching across his shoulder, for he was moving backward.  Inching away from the darkened

doorway, The Shadow kept his cloaked  form stooped forward. He had worked himself several feet rearward

and  was midway to another patch of darkness when he saw a motion in the  car. 

Instantly, The Shadow pressed forward a bit faster than he had  retreated. He kept a free hand moving ahead,

probing along the wall;  but his other fist was under his cloak, gripping a gun. Seeing a gun  muzzle glimmer,

The Shadow made a quick dive forward. 

Shots roared from the car. Those bullets peppered close to The  Shadow. Chunks of brick bounded from his

hat brim. He had beaten the  opening barrage by inches only. Rounding the corner of the entry, he  was

momentarily safe as he heard the leatherlunged yell of someone in  the car: 

"The Shadow!" 

Flattening on the entry steps, The Shadow caught the pounding of  feet from the rear hallway. Knees doubled,

he gave an upward spring,  came into sight like a figure actuated by pistons. Guns blasting, he  went back with

the recoil, dropping away as revolvers spurted toward  him. 

A gunman plunged to the steps, clipped by one of The Shadow's  shots. Others hurdled their sprawling pal,

thinking that they had  dropped The Shadow. They learned their mistake when they reached close  range.

Aiming up from a crouch, The Shadow gave the thugs both barrels. 

There was a melee in the entry. Struggling crooks were grabbing for  The Shadow's guns as he slashed them

down with hardslugged blows. He  had crippled them to begin with; their fight was frantic, but useless.  In

fact, The Shadow was actually holding up two men who would otherwise  have slumped. 

He was making them keep up the semblance of a struggle; partly to  mislead arriving reserves, also to keep

human shields against any shots  that might come. 

Rudy Waygart was on the stairway. Glimpsing The Shadow, Rudy paused  to pocket papers that he had taken

from Juble's trunk, while he urged  his followers to help the others get The Shadow. Two hoodlums had left

the car across the street and were nearing the outer doorway to attack  from that side. 

With a twist, The Shadow actually flung crippled foemen into the  path of Rudy's squad. With a fierce,

challenging laugh, he swung for  the pair from the street, sideswiping them with his gunweighted fists.  The

two astonished crooks spilled in opposite directions. 

The Shadow had gone easy with that pair. He wanted them to talk to  Rudy later; to tell their leader that they

had seen The Shadow coming  into the apartment house, not out of it. His path cleared, The Shadow  sprang

across the sidewalk, out into the street. 


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Behind him came a piling group of wouldbe killers, who had  disentangled themselves from the floundering

men in the entry. At the  rear was Rudy, again too wise to take undue chances with The Shadow. 

Sure advantage lay across the street. There, The Shadow could find  darkness; from it, employ sniping tactics,

to thin out another of  Rudy's ruthless but overzealous crews. Only a few yards to go  but the  distance proved

too long. 

OTHER cars were swinging into the street from each end. One  contained a reserve squad of crooks who

began to shoot the moment that  they saw The Shadow. The other, more distant, was a police car that

promptly answered the fire. 

Friend or foe, it didn't matter. The Shadow was caught between two  fires. Still in the light, the smoking guns

that projected from his  fists were enough to mark him as the likely target for police as well  as crooks. This

wasn't the time to stop and offer explanations. 

The opposite sidewalk could have been miles away, considering the  chance that The Shadow had to reach it.

Though he sped with longer  strides, he came far short of his intended goal. In the midst of that  first barrage,

The Shadow made a twisting spring in air, landed on the  paving shoulder first and rolled beneath the step of

the empty sedan  across the street. 

Crooks passed him in their car, shooting as they went. Then they  were tangled with the patrol car. Officers,

recognizing crooks at last,  began to shoot it out with them. Thugs who had come downstairs with  Rudy saw

their chance to reach The Shadow. Two of them took long bounds  across the street. 

They saw The Shadow rise, grip the door of the sedan and yank it  open. Then, with a pitiful stumble, he

rolled inside. A gloved hand  gripped the door handle, gave a contorted twist that pulled it shut.  But The

Shadow didn't reappear at the window. Rudy saw his plight and  yelled quick orders: 

"Get him away! Make it quick! Finish him after you're clear!" 

The two men sprang into the front seat, started the sedan and raced  it around the corner. The patrol car had

ditched the reserve crew and  was after the sedan. Other police cars were whining into the street  from the

direction that the first had come. 

Rudy and a few men with him supplied a barrage that made the first  police car stop to return the favor. With

others coming up, Rudy knew  that continued fight was useless. He and his companions fled through  the

apartment house and made their escape by the rear door. 

Of two things Rudy was certain as he made his way to safety. He had  obtained Juble's papers without the

knowledge of The Shadow. Rudy could  testify to that fact, personally. The other certainty was The Shadow's

finish. Wounded, the cloaked fighter would have no chance against the  two uninjured killers who had carried

him away. 

Rudy guessed wrong twice. 

BLOCKS from the scene where strife had started, the man at the  wheel of the sedan slackened speed and took

a look from the window. The  car was on a quiet street with a convenient alleyway nearby. A good  place to

dump a body and make a getaway. 

Nudging a thumb over his shoulder, the driver grunted to his pal: 


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"All right. Give it!" 

Eagerly, the man on the right leaned over the seat and probed with  his gun in back. Finding an inert, huddled

form, he poked it with his  gun muzzle. Somehow, the muzzle caught; the gunman thought it had  hooked in

the folds of The Shadow's cloak. 

Then the revolver began to twist about. With a snarl the thug  fired; the blaze from the gun muzzle merely

singed the cushions of the  rear seat. A hand was gripping the crook's revolver; another fist came  upward, took

the hoodlum by the neck and yanked him into the rear. 

Jamming the brakes, the driver swung from the wheel, shoving his  own gun for a mass of rising blackness.

Above came a swinging arm, its  hand carrying a heavy .45, an empty gun that The Shadow was using as a

cudgel. 

Pressing his revolver trigger, the crook put in a shot that beat  the gun's descent, but the gloved hand didn't

falter. The last that the  crooked driver heard was the sound of a hissed laugh in his very ear.  Then came a

skullcracking jolt that produced light more vivid than a  gun burst. 

The Shadow opened the door of the halted sedan. He lifted his cloak  from slumped shoulders on the rear

floor. He had wrapped the first  attacker in that garment when he hauled him over the seat. The man in  front

had blazed the death shot into the body of his halfgagged pal. 

Garbing himself in the cloak, The Shadow pressed the slouch hat  tighter on his head. Gliding away into

darkness, he gave a parting  laugh  a tone of sardonic mirth, that trailed from the enveloping  gloom. Crooks

failed to hear that mockery. One of the pair was dead,  the other unconscious. 

Like Rudy, they had fallen for The Shadow's final ruse, the  beststaged of all. His spill, his crawl into the

sedan, were  calculated as a means of leaving a scene where odds were heavy against  him, and chance of stray

bullets too likely. 

The Shadow had needed a car and someone to drive it while he kept  low in back. Crooks had obligingly

supplied him with both. He had let  Rudy's pair of handpicked mobbies carry him from the battle scene to a

spot where he could settle them conveniently. 

Perhaps, if Rudy Waygart had witnessed that later scene and heard  the laugh that followed it, he would have

felt less sure about the  future. Crime would have trouble with The Shadow, skilled fighter who  could turn

defeat into triumph! 

CHAPTER XII. CRIME'S NEW CLIENT

"CALL for Mr. Henry Arnaud " 

A man arose from a chair in the corner of the hotel lobby and  stopped the bellboy who was passing him.

Identifying himself as Mr.  Arnaud, he let the bellhop conduct him to a phone booth, where a call  awaited. 

There, Arnaud spoke a dry: "Hello." 

"Mr. Arnaud?" The voice was quick. "My name is Regar. Clarence  Regar. I'd like to see you. My office is in

the Ferwin Building. Could  you come over, right away?" 


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"An urgent matter?" 

"Yes." Regar's tone was emphatic. "It means money to you, Mr.  Arnaud." 

Agreeing to come at once, Arnaud stepped from the phone booth. As  he walked from the lobby into daylight,

Arnaud's full, shrewdlooking  features underwent a momentary change. Strong sunlight gave his face a

masklike appearance, seemed to mark full places that had once been  hollows. 

The effect was ended as soon as Arnaud stepped into a cab. Milder  light, less revealing than the sun's full

glare, made the face resume  its fuller mold. 

There was a secret to the face of Henry Arnaud. 

It was a face built upon another, a disguise that no eye could  discern except under conditions highly

unfavorable to Mr. Arnaud. It  bore but the slightest traces of a hawkish profile that ordinarily  identified

Lamont Cranston. 

After the battle at Juble's two nights ago, The Shadow had  registered at the pretentious hotel under the name

of Henry Arnaud. He  had foreseen a call like the one that came from Clarence Regar for very  good reasons. 

An organization named the American Death Insurance Co. was selling  policies through agents. One of those

agents, Ronald Parron, had died  very suddenly. Like any insurance company, legal or otherwise, Adico

would naturally turn Parron's business over to some other agent. 

Parron had sold a policy to Claude Juble, covering the death of  Tyrus Vayne. But Vayne was still alive,

though Juble was dead. The term  of the policy was over, and Adico owed money to the dead man, Juble.  The

death insurance company had to keep up its prestige. Therefore, one  thing was certain. 

The agent who was handling Parron's business would have to find  some way to disburse the sum of one

hundred thousand dollars among the  heirs and creditors of the deceased Claude Juble. 

Obviously, Clarence Regar was the man in charge of Parron's  business. He had traced Henry Arnaud and

called him, because among  Juble's bills was one that bore Arnaud's name. 

The Shadow found Regar in his office. The fellow appeared to be  Parron's type, something of a society man.

There the similarity ended. 

Where Parron had been nervous, uncertain in manner and a trifle  weakfaced, Regar was quite the opposite.

He was cool and competent.  His eyes were sharp, his lips suavely smiling, while his blocky chin  gave him the

challenging air of a fighter. 

Regar eyed Arnaud steadily, yet failed to penetrate the  facefilling disguise that the visitor wore. The

Shadow had picked a  chair near the window where the light struck him at an excellent angle.  Regar was able

to see changes that might flicker over Arnaud's  countenance, without seeing through the face itself. 

Producing the falsified bill that The Shadow had left in Juble's  trunk, Regar passed it over with the question: 

"Do you recognize this, Mr. Arnaud?" 

"Of course!" The Shadow's tone was harsher, more brisk than the one  he used as Cranston. "I made out this

bill myself." 


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"May I ask what were the services that you rendered to Claude  Juble?" 

A hard smile registered itself on the faked lips of Arnaud. Regar  saw shrewdness in the glitter of the eyes that

peered through  halfclosed lids. The Shadow's tone was cold. 

"In my own behalf," he said, "I should like to ask just why you are  interested in any of Juble's transactions." 

THE retort pleased Regar. In Arnaud he was recognizing a man of his  own sort. He could foresee a

hearttoheart talk, crook to crook, which  would make everything much easier. 

"I happen to have a considerable sum of money," declared Regar,  "which Juble intrusted to my care. It is my

duty"  he shook his head  sadly  "to pay off my dead friend's debts and turn over the remaining  cash to

members of his family." 

Without a word The Shadow took a pen from Regar's desk, wrote  something on the bill and extended it

toward Regar. The sharpeyed man  stared at the writing; it was a receipt for payment. 

With a bland smile, Regar reached into a desk drawer, brought out a  stack of money and counted out

thirtytwo hundred and fifty dollars. 

Pocketing the cash, The Shadow arose. He let his lips turn downward  in an expression of disdain. Evidently,

Henry Arnaud regarded the cash  as a very trivial sum. Regar was quick to take advantage of the

disappointment that Arnaud registered. 

"You expected more, Mr. Arnaud?" 

Turning toward the door, The Shadow paused. Meeting Regar eye to  eye, he said in Arnaud's cold, harsh

tone: 

"This was chicken feed! If Juble had lived, I could have made this  amount a hundred times over!" 

Leaning back in his chair, Regar clasped his hands in front of him.  Suavely, he suggested: 

"Tell me more, Mr. Arnaud." 

"Why not?" Arnaud's tone was a sneer. "Who can prove anything, now  that Juble is dead? There's a lot of

money in imports, Mr. Regar,  provided that they come in duty free." 

Regar gave a wise nod. He inferred that Arnaud was the big shot of  a smuggling racket, with Juble the fence

who disposed of the tainted  goods. It fitted well with Juble's character, such crooked business,  conducted

under the protective name of Vayne Co. 

"Why do you suppose Juble wanted old Vayne to quit?" demanded  Arnaud. "Not just because the business

wasn't big enough for both.  Juble wanted full control so he could work with me without anyone  getting wise." 

Regar was nodding sympathetically. 

"Losing Juble was a setback," growled The Shadow. "He was a sap, to  fail a legitimate proposition like he

did. But I could still go places"   though halfclosed, Arnaud's eyes flashed a glare  "if it wasn't for  one

man!" 


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Regar leaned forward. 

"Sit down, Mr. Arnaud," he purred. "I have a proposition that I am  sure will interest you. We call it death

insurance." 

FOR the next five minutes The Shadow was treated to a remarkable  sales talk, explaining the Adico plan. It

was very simple, and quite  legitimate, as Regar put it, though the sales agent was constantly  sneaking

sidelong glances toward the muchinterested Mr. Arnaud. 

"One man troubles you?" purred Regar. "Very well, Mr. Arnaud, why  not insure his death? By paying a

premium of ten percent, with a  percentage off for cash, you will collect the full amount, provided " 

"Provided that the man lives?" 

"Exactly!" Regar smiled smugly. "If he lives beyond a period of one  year, you collect. If he dies"  Regar

spread his hands  "you lose the  premium, but you get what you really want." 

Flickering changes came over Arnaud's scheming face as he  considered the merits of the proposition. Eyeing

Regar shrewdly, he  remarked: 

"It seems that your premium rates are very low." 

"They suit us," returned Regar. "Once in a while we pay off, as we  are doing in Juble's case." 

"You mean he insured his partner, Vayne?" 

"Precisely! Usually our adjusters take care of such cases. In this  instance they failed." 

By "adjusters" Regar meant murderers. He was sure that the  reference would please Arnaud, and apparently it

did. Thickish lips  formed a coarse smile as Arnaud's eyes glinted. 

"I still think that I could buy out Vayne Co.," remarked The  Shadow, "and use it as a front for my own racket,

with some stooge as a  coverup. But there's one man who could queer the deal, and I don't  want to wait a

year to get rid of him." 

"Sometimes," returned Regar, "we issue special policies for shorter  periods. Of course the premium is

higher." 

"What would it be for a policy covering one week?" 

Regar squatted back in his chair. The request rather stumped him.  The oneyear period was a thin veil that

made the death insurance  business plausible, since there was always a chance that insured men,  particularly

elderly ones, would die within that time. 

Arnaud was brazenly treating death insurance as what it was: a  murder racket. He wanted to buy murder

outright, without bothering with  sham. He wanted prompt service and was willing to pay for it. To Regar  it

looked like the biggest sale that had ever come his way. 

For the next few minutes Regar pondered over the risk. He was  weighing everything that Arnaud had said.

He knew that his prospective  client had openly vowed himself to be a crook, but Regar was looking  for a

catch in the tale. 


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It struck Regar finally that Arnaud could not have known, could not  even have guessed, that such a thing as

death insurance existed, until  Regar, himself, had mentioned it. Leaning forward again, Regar  announced: 

"We have a maximum rate of twentyfive percent that would apply to  a policy on a oneweek term. It would

require a cash payment, with no  discount. Of course, the man whose death you insure would have to be

available, so that our adjusters " 

Regar paused. He saw Arnaud nod full understanding. Reaching for  the pen, The Shadow wrote a name on a

pad of paper, tore off the slip  and gave it to Regar. 

"This is the man." 

"Very well," said Regar glibly. "You shall hear from me this  evening, Mr. Arnaud. If the case is approved,

the policy will be  delivered. Of course, there is the matter of the amount." 

Taking back the slip of paper The Shadow wrote a figure that  actually startled Regar. Losing his suavity, the

fellow gulped: 

"You... you can pay the premium on this? All at once... when the  policy is delivered?" 

"That much and more," returned The Shadow, rising beside the desk.  "I'm making it big, Regar, because I

want results. I know how I'll  stand"  he tapped the paper  "if that man dies. If he doesn't  well,  your outfit

can pay me off instead." 

LEAVING Regar's office, The Shadow took a devious route, the sort  that would shake any followers off his

trail. He entered his sanctum at  dusk, still wearing the guise of Arnaud under the cloak and hat that he  had

picked up on the way. 

A while later, he left the sanctum. Riding in a limousine, The  Shadow put his cloak and hat beneath the rear

seat. When he alighted at  the Cobalt Club he was wearing the calm, immobile features of the  hawkfaced Mr.

Cranston. 

As Cranston, The Shadow dined with Commissioner Weston and two  others  Vayne and Merwood  in the

privacy of the halfdecorated  grillroom, where Weston had his special table. The commissioner was  trying to

get new angles on the murder attempt at Vayne's penthouse. 

Vayne was sketchy on the details. The Shadow knew why. The old  importer was trying to protect his dead

junior partner, Juble, because  of the heroic fight that the latter had put up. According to Vayne,  Harkin and a

pair of thugs had tried to kill him; that was all. Juble  and a blackcloaked stranger had prevented it. 

When questioned, Vayne remembered that crooks had called their foe  "The Shadow," which Weston

regarded as a very important point. But  neither Cranston nor Merwood could supply any help in tracing

further  details. 

Cranston stated quietly that he had intended to build up a large  importing corporation, with Vayne Co. as the

nucleus. The proposition  was still open, provided that Tyrus Vayne could find another man, as  capable as the

unfortunate Claude Juble, to become the president of the  new concern. 

Merwood stated that Cranston had called him, asking him to become a  director. The financier was quite

willing to serve in such capacity; in  fact, if the corporation developed as well as Cranston expected,  Merwood

would be willing to buy stock in it. 


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As yet, however, Merwood wasn't sure that the market for imported  gems could stand up under too great an

influx. 

Leaving the Cobalt Club after dinner, The Shadow entered his  limousine and started home. But Lamont

Cranston was no longer in the  car when it arrived at the millionaire's New Jersey estate. Again  cloaked in

black, Cranston had become The Shadow; he had dropped off  before the limousine reached the Holland

Tunnel. 

In his sanctum, The Shadow worked with makeup kit and mirror,  adding the touches of a putty substance

that filled his features and  changed them from the thin visage of Cranston into that of Arnaud. 

Later, he picked up Moe Shrevnitz's cab and timed his trip to  arrive at Arnaud's hotel just before midnight.

Wearing tuxedo, Arnaud  looked like a theatergoer returning from a show. 

Regar was waiting in the lobby. The Shadow shook hands with the  deathinsurance agent; then obtained a

package that he had deposited in  the hotel safe under the name of Arnaud. 

With Regar, he went upstairs to a spacious suite. The appearance of  the rooms indicated plainly that Arnaud

was a man who could regard a  few thousand dollars as the "chicken feed" that he had termed it. 

About to open the package, The Shadow paused. He looked at Regar  and inquired sharply: 

"The policy?" 

"Approved." 

Opening the package, The Shadow displayed a bundle of currency. The  notes were all of

onethousanddollar denomination; he counted out a  hundred and twentyfive of them. 

Regar extended an envelope; while The Shadow was opening it, the  crook wrapped the package of cash and

bundled it under his arm.  He  left by the door, saying nothing further. 

With Regar gone The Shadow stood alone, studying the document for  which he had paid the sum of one

hundred and twentyfive thousand  dollars. It was a death insurance policy, promising payment of half a

million dollars if the insured man lived beyond a week. 

The sum, of course, would be payable to Henry Arnaud. The  interesting thing was the name of the insured

man, otherwise the  victim, upon whose death Adico was staking a half million. 

It glared from the whiteness of the policy, in black ink that  symbolized doom, the name of the man who was

to become the immediate  target of killers like Rudy Waygart. 

A whispered tone of mockery came from The Shadow's disguised lips,  as he read the name: Lamont

Cranston. 

The Shadow had taken out death insurance upon himself! 

CHAPTER XIII. THE HUNTED MAN

TWO days. No move from Adico. 


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Seated in the lounge of the Cobalt Club, Lamont Cranston was  reading an evening newspaper. Outwardly, he

was placid, but behind the  outspread pages of the newspaper, keen eyes showed a sparkle as deep as  the

glowing girasol that adorned The Shadow's finger. 

Deliberately, The Shadow was inviting murder. In tantalizing  fashion, the killers who worked for Adico were

ignoring the marked Mr.  Cranston, although they certainly knew where they could find him. 

Did they suspect that Cranston was The Shadow? 

It did not matter. There was a better reason why the death  organization was biding its time. Rudy Waygart,

the ace killer, wasn't  available for this important murder. 

Shadow or not, Cranston was a man who might know a lot. A close  friend of the police commissioner, he

would probably recognize Rudy as  a crook if the fellow walked into the Cobalt Club. It wouldn't do for  Adico

to start with a false move. 

Things fitted with The Shadow's theory that the deathinsurance  ring was nationwide. Other victims had been

murdered in various cities,  probably by killers who had learned fine points from Rudy. If Adico  played its

cards right, Cranston would probably meet with one of those  specialists very soon. 

Viewing the club foyer, noting that it was empty, The Shadow  returned to his reading of the newspaper.

Commissioner Weston had  issued a statement claiming that the law had put the lid on murder and  intended to

keep it tightly clamped. 

Superficially, Weston's statement sounded well. The commissioner  argued that recent murders were the work

of desperate mobsmen, who had  been either killed off, or dispersed. Parron had been slain by massed

invaders. A mob was on hand when Renstrom died from a planted  explosion. Juble's death had come during a

thwarted mob attack directed  against Vayne. 

The Shadow smiled. He knew the facts behind those cases, saw how  they differed. 

Rudy Waygart had used mob methods in finishing Parron and Renstrom,  to hide the fact that many other

victims  of a far different sort   were being handled much more neatly. No one had taken out death

insurance on either Parron or Renstrom. They were simply persons who  had learned too much about the

murder ring. 

Vayne was different. He had been insured. Murderers had tried to  dispose of him in subtle fashion. It was The

Shadow's own forcing of  the issue that had made the case look like a mob attempt. Weston simply  hadn't

caught on to the situation. 

In his statement, Weston bragged that the law had managed to  successfully protect three threatened persons:

Janet Renstrom, Thomas  Merwood, and Tyrus Vayne, though all of them had definitely been marked  for

death. 

Again, the commissioner was deluded. 

Weston didn't know that The Shadow had faked the Adico threat  against Janet. Nor did he realize that

Merwood had never been in danger  at all, since no one had insured the financier's death. As for Vayne,

crooks no longer had a reason to kill him. His term had passed; his  claim was paid off and scratched from the

books. 


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Adico wasn't an organization geared for revenge. Its business was  to make crime pay. It cost money to keep

Rudy and such killers on the  payroll. Their services were too valuable to be wasted. 

There was no mention of Adico in Weston's statement to the  newspapers. In fact, the commissioner had laid a

definite taboo upon  the name and did not like to hear it mentioned, even by Cardona. 

Weston still thought that Adico was a person; until he gained some  trace to the man in question he preferred

that the name should not be  publicly disclosed. 

EYES turned again to the foyer. The Shadow saw an approaching  attendant. Meeting Cranston's gaze, the

man nodded. 

"A call for you, sir." 

Impassive though his training had made him, The Shadow felt an  actual thrill as he strolled to the telephone.

He recognized that this  call might be the forerunner of Adico's first thrust. From the moment  that he heard the

plaintive voice across the wire he knew that his hope  was realized. 

"Cranston!" The tone was excited, though spoken in a guarded  fashion. "It's Ladwin! I've got to see you!" 

Despite its distress, the voice certainly belonged to Peter Ladwin.  The man was an explorer, who had met

Cranston in various foreign  countries. Odd that Ladwin should be calling; he wasn't supposed to be  in

America at present. 

"Ladwin?" The Shadow spoke in Cranston's tone. "I thought you had  gone to Australia." 

"I canceled my passage from Frisco," informed Ladwin, "and came  here instead. I'm hunted, Cranston! My

life is in danger! I can't risk  coming to the club " 

"Give me your address." 

Ladwin gave it. The Shadow left the club. By the time his limousine  neared Times Square he was no longer

Cranston. As the car crept through  the traffic of a gloomy side street its passenger issued silently from  the

rear door, thoroughly cloaked in black. 

A tiny flashlight twinkled from between two parked cars. An odd  color, that gleamed. It was green. A cab

wheeled from its stand,  slackened as the twinkle turned red. Sliding into the cab, The Shadow  gave Moe

Shrevnitz an address a few blocks from the one that Ladwin had  mentioned. 

Reaching the proper neighborhood, The Shadow continued his journey  on foot. The district fitted Ladwin's

story of danger. Usually, Ladwin  stayed at an expensive hotel when he visited New York. On this trip the

explorer had chosen dilapidated surroundings. 

A safe setting in a way. Hunting for Ladwin in the forgotten  sectors of Manhattan would be like looking for a

dullpointed needle in  an oversized haystack. 

But there was another side to that situation. Assuming that crooks  had found a thread to their needle, Ladwin,

they would have him boxed  in a very unlovely position. 

Alleyways, courtyards, empty doorways, untenanted houses, all made  excellent lurking spots. In fact, this

section had the look of a trap,  which made The Shadow surmise that the hunted man, Ladwin, was actually


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bait, and Cranston the real prey. 

Whatever the benefit that crooks might derive from the darkness of  this neighborhood, The Shadow likewise

shared it. The darker it came,  the better he liked it. 

Gliding unseen through narrow passages between brickwalled  buildings, he hoped for an encounter with

lurking thugs. If he found  them he intended to strew silently his path with them. 

But there were no thugs. Entering the cellar of the old house where  Ladwin was staying, The Shadow made

his way to the second floor by a  very gloomy back stairs. Stopping outside a room, he drew a glove half  from

his hand and knuckled a rap that seemed muffled in the hallway but  which was sure to be heard inside. 

A key turned. The door swung inward. A haggard, middleaged man  stepped backward with a gasp as living

blackness entered. Gray eyes,  frantic and fearful, met The Shadow's gaze. Then, rallying, Ladwin  gasped: 

"You... you're from Cranston?" 

The Shadow's whispered laugh was an affirmative. Then, to inspire  Ladwin's complete confidence, he tilted

back his slouch hat and let the  folds of his cloak collar drop downward. 

SEEING Cranston's face, Ladwin gave a happy gasp. He reached to the  door, turned the key and removed it,

and dropped it into his pocket.  Licking his lips, Ladwin smiled. 

"Stout fellow, Cranston!" he approved. "I hadn't dreamed that you  could rig yourself up this way. Did you

ever try the trick in the  jungle? I'll wager that even a tiger would mistake you for a shadow!" 

With Cranston's slight smile, The Shadow showed his approval of the  banter. It was putting Ladwin at ease.

His worriment lessened, the  haggard explorer came to his story. 

"I've received warnings, Cranston," he declared. "Someone kept  calling my apartment in Frisco, saying

'Beware of death.' My mail  brought clippings telling of accidents. One day I received a letter  with big words

scrawled in red pencil. 

"It said: 'Look out for Adico'  and the voice mentioned the same  name when it called again. I didn't tell the

police because I was  intending to sail for Australia. Then came a crudely typed letter, in  red, telling me that

death lurked aboard the liner. That's why I didn't  sail." 

Calmly, The Shadow inquired why Ladwin had come to New York. The  hunted man explained very simply

that he had received a final call,  stating that a friend in New York could aid him. 

"I have few friends in New York," asserted Ladwin. "In fact, you  were the only one I was sure of, Cranston.

That's why I came East by  plane, hid myself here, and called you at the club." 

Added up, Ladwin's story produced an obvious face value. Ladwin  could be classed as a deathinsurance

victim, scheduled to die soon.  Someone  perhaps a person like Parron  could have tried to warn him

against an Adico murder. 

Meanwhile, the Adico crowd itself might have seen a special value  in Ladwin. Placing him as a friend of

Cranston, he would be the right  man to use as unwitting bait. Even if Ladwin outlived his term, it  would be

worth while to pay off on his claim, in order to dispose of a  halfmilliondollar victim like Cranston. 


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There was another angle. By bringing Cranston and Ladwin together,  the Adico workers could murder both at

once. 

Looking about the place, The Shadow saw it was a little apartment.  There were two doors, beside the one that

he had entered. Opening one,  The Shadow found an empty closet. Ladwin opened the other to display a  small

lighted bedroom. 

As with the living room, windows were bolted shut, and Ladwin had  drawn the shades. 

"If you can get me out of here, Cranston," Ladwin pleaded, "I'll be  safe. I've hired a plane; it's waiting at

Newark Airport. But I'm  worried for fear that enemies may be on watch. Did you see anyone  outside?" 

"No one." 

Ladwin sighed relief. He opened a small suitcase, took out an  envelope and carried it to the living room. 

"This contains the papers I mentioned." Ladwin crossed the room,  laid the envelope on a table, and turned on

a lamp. "You can look them  over, Cranston, while I'm getting packed." 

He pushed a chair to the table. The Shadow sat down and opened the  envelope. Ladwin hurried back into the

bedroom, closing the door behind  him. Spreading the papers, The Shadow paused. His keen ears had caught

the faintest of clicks. 

Listening for any repetition of the sound, The Shadow heard  something else. Again, it was a noise that

ordinary hearing would not  have caught. In fact, The Shadow might not have noted it, except for  the fact that

he had strained to a listening attitude. 

Tilting his head in different directions, The Shadow gained a  position wherein the sound became more

audible. It was a low, steady  hiss, and The Shadow located its source. The sound came from the table  lamp.

Leaning forward, he drew a brief breath. 

No odor was perceptible; but the hiss was certainly caused by an  escaping gas. The Shadow felt the effects of

the vapor; it gave him a  temporary dizziness. Steadying, he tilted back his head, drew in a  relieving breath of

fresher air. 

The first sound was explained. The click had come when Ladwin  locked the bedroom door, from the other

side, just as he had previously  locked the door to the hall. Reaching to a window shade, The Shadow  pressed

its edge aside, noted the greenish tinge of the pane beyond. 

Unbreakable glass, in metal frames, painted to look like wood.  Arranged for Ladwin's own protection? Not

quite! It was Ladwin who had  pointed The Shadow to the corner table and had then turned on the  special

lamp, so that the flow of gas had begun. 

Peter Ladwin wasn't a hunted man at all. He was a murderer deluxe,  in the employ of the Adico ring.

Chancing to be one of Cranston's  friends, he had been summoned to New York to engineer the most

important murder that Adico had undertaken! 

A whispered laugh came from The Shadow's lips. Though low, subdued,  its sibilance drowned the faint hiss

of the death gas. The Shadow's  mirth was a veto against doom! 


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CHAPTER XIV. CRIME OVERPLAYED

WITH the end of ten silent minutes, a key turned sharply in its  lock. Confident that caution was no longer

needed, Peter Ladwin opened  the door from the bedroom and peered through. His face was worried no

longer, it was gleeful. 

The smile on Ladwin's puckered lips told that he had taken a deep  breath of the clear air in the bedroom.

Suitcase in one hand, he was  holding a key in the other, ready to move to the outer door and make  his own

safe departure. 

First, however, Ladwin had time to look at the victim who lay  slumped upon the corner table. There was

something else that Ladwin  wanted, too: the batch of papers that contained clippings and other  evidence. 

Approaching, Ladwin reached across a slumped cloaked shoulder and  clutched the envelope. It was empty.

The smile left his compressed  lips. He put the envelope in his pocket, along with the key that his  hand already

carried. 

Setting down the suitcase, he dived his hands toward The Shadow's  cloak, to make a rapid search for the

missing clippings. 

The slouched form shifted as Ladwin jogged it. The slouch hat fell  to the floor. Two stacks of magazines

tumbled from a sofa pillow on  which they rested; the black cloak slipped floorward with them. 

A dummy figure! 

Using articles at hand, The Shadow had improvised a sham for  Ladwin's benefit. It hadn't required much

imagination on Ladwin's part  for him to be deceived. 

But with his discovery, Ladwin's imagination was highly stirred.  Clutching up the cloak and hat, the startled

crook turned toward the  outer door, ready for a mad escape. 

A laugh greeted him from another direction. Wheeling, he saw the  closet door swing wide. He was facing

Cranston, who held a leveled  automatic. But the mockery that Cranston's lips exhaled was the  whispered

mirth of The Shadow! 

Burning eyes told their story. By using the closet as a waiting  place, Cranston had made himself immune

from the gas. 

Listening, he had waited until Ladwin came from the bedroom.  Drawing his own breath later, The Shadow

was in condition to outlast  the foiled murderer as they faced each other in the gasladen room! 

Quivering, Ladwin extended the hat and cloak. It was the only way  that he could make a plea for mercy. Any

attempt to speak would have  meant inhaling the death gas. Plucking the garments from Ladwin's hand,  The

Shadow gestured his gun toward the outer door. 

Eagerly, Ladwin produced the key. He sprang to the door, managed to  steady his fumbling hand long enough

to unlock it. Almost out of  breath, he clutched the knob feebly, pulled the door halfway inward and  pitched

headlong across the threshold. 

The gas hadn't gotten Ladwin. He was simply out of breath. One deep  swallow of the free air revived him


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instantly. Rolled to an elbow, he  looked back, saw The Shadow stepping around the door. 

With snakelike speed, Ladwin displayed a return of his murderous  skill. Driving one foot through the

doorway, he kicked the door fully  inward. 

The flinging barrier sideswiped The Shadow, sent him sprawling half  across the room. Coming to his feet,

Ladwin lunged inward, drawing a  gun. He intended to use the weapon as a cudgel, before The Shadow could

grab up the automatic that had clattered from his grasp. 

One stunning blow would be enough; the gas would do the rest.  Finding Cranston, the police would suppose

that a fall had caused the  blow that Ladwin intended to strike. 

WHAT Ladwin didn't notice was The Shadow's free hand. It happened  to be beneath the cloak and hat. 

Swinging, bringing the garments with it, the hand caught Ladwin's  descending wrist, gave a twist that carried

the murderer off balance,  thanks to the force that Ladwin was putting behind the slugging blow. 

Then The Shadow was on his feet heading through the doorway, while  Ladwin, rolling toward the table, was

fumbling for the gun that his  hand had failed to hold. As he came to hands and knees, he saw the door

swinging shut. 

It was The Shadow's turn to need air. He had to have it before he  could settle Ladwin. 

Seeing his own gun handy, Ladwin grabbed it up and aimed for the  slammed door. He intended to riddle the

thick wood with every bullet  that his revolver contained, spraying the shots so that one, at least,  would be

sure to clip The Shadow. 

Ladwin fired his first shot. 

The roar that came was louder than a cannon's. Its result would  have done credit to a sixinch shell. The tiny

apartment exploded in  one titanic blast. 

Ladwin had forgotten that the odorless death gas was inflammable.  Either that or he hadn't realized how fully

it had charged the  atmosphere. 

Like a mammoth bomb the whole room ripped outward. Steel window  frames were twisted like weak wire;

their unbreakable glass was flung  to the next roof. The door to the hallway, splintered from its hinges,  was

broken into chunks that scaled along the hall. 

Interior walls were shattered; the whole house quivered and sagged  on its foundations. Great tongues of flame

licked from the windows to  the roof and roared along the inner hall. As the licking fire vanished,  bricks began

to rattle down upon the front sidewalk, while the rear  courtyard received a veritable hail of masonry. 

Flattened by the explosion, The Shadow felt the scorching flame  ride over him like a mass of billowy surf. He

had escaped Ladwin's  bullet; the passage of the fiery gas was too brief to do him harm.  Nevertheless, he was

staggering as he went down the tilted front  stairway. The force of the concussion had jarred The Shadow

badly. 

People were shrieking from other windows in the wrecked house. They  were safe, though they didn't know it,

for the flames had dissipated  too rapidly to start a serious conflagration. No one in the house saw  the

staggering figure that went out through the front door carrying a  cloak, a hat, and a gun. 


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That sight was reserved for two men in a roadster, who had swung  their car in from the corner. Turning on

their headlights, they saw  someone falter into the glare, then make a stumbling retreat toward the  house. 

"It's Ladwin!" voiced one. "He oughta have lammed sooner. Let's get  him away quick, and flash the word to

the crew." 

"Yeah," agreed the other as they were clambering from the car.  "We'll be dodging smokeeaters, along with

coppers, if we don't make it  swift." 

They reached the man on the sidewalk, steered him toward the  roadster. Headlights showed his face

imperfectly; it was grimy.  Accepting him as Ladwin, the thugs were more interested in the articles  he carried.

They paused, plucking at the cloak and hat. 

"Cripes!" ejaculated one. "That guy Cranston musta been The  Shadow!" 

"Looks like it," rejoined his pal. "We'd better make sure he's  croaked. Hey, Ladwin  what about it?" 

The thug shook the groggy man who had come from the house. A face  turned squarely toward the headlights.

The crooks saw the countenance  more plainly. 

"This ain't Ladwin " 

"It's Cranston!" 

"The Shadow!" 

MENTION of the dread name stirred its owner to action. The Shadow  voiced a laugh that carried challenge,

though its mockery was off key.  Swinging blindly into battle, he slashed one crook aside with a hard

gunhand swing, met the other in a grapple. 

They rolled in front of the roadster's headlights. The Shadow could  hear the approaching clatter of the thug

that he had swept aside. Gun  poked past the shoulder of the man who grappled him, The Shadow fired

repeated shots. A yell told that one of his stabs had reached the  incoming crook. 

A revolver was swinging toward The Shadow's head. Too late to ward  off its stroke, he made a quick

sideward move. The descending revolver  clanged a metal bar  the car's front bumper. Losing the gun, the

crook  made a backward grab to regain it; then swung in again. 

Knees doubled, The Shadow drove both feet upward. They met their  human target, hurled the thug into a

backward somersault. Grabbing the  roadster's bumper, The Shadow hauled himself to his feet, scooped up  his

hat and cloak, then stumbled into the car. 

Putting the throbbing motor into reverse, he zigzagged it backward  toward the corner. The two gunmen were

shooting, but their aim was bad.  One was wounded, the other winded; they couldn't follow the car's  erratic

course. Then they were meeting troubles of their own. 

A patrol car was roaring down the street from the opposite  direction. The thugs turned to greet it. As they

opened fire they were  met by shots. One succumbed from bullets; the other, the thug that The  Shadow had

wounded, lost his balance as he twisted toward the curb, and  went shrieking beneath the front wheels of the

patrol car. 


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Undisturbed by the jounce that their car took, the officers went  after the roadster, not knowing who its

occupant was. They were  overtaking it when a sedan slashed across their path. Brakes shrieked  as guns

talked. The police sprang from their car to take shelter  against overheavy odds. 

The thing that saved them was the steady shooting that came from  the corner where the roadster had turned.

His daze ended, The Shadow  had come from the captured car to snipe the gunners who were trapping  the

police. The sedan took suddenly to flight, carrying away its  crippled crew. 

Covering more blocks in the roadster, The Shadow abandoned the car  in a side street and started for his

sanctum. Arriving there, he  brought papers into the bluish light. They were the clippings and other  items that

Ladwin had asked him to examine. 

This was The Shadow's first opportunity to get a good look at them.  Among them he found an interesting

link. One showed a picture of a  California convict named Lucky Engriff, who had escaped from San  Quentin

Prison. 

In two group photographs  one showing a street riot in San  Francisco; the other a crowd at Coney Island 

The Shadow picked out  the same face. He noted that the New York clipping was of later date  than the one

from Frisco. 

BY a process of deduction, The Shadow came to a remarkable  conclusion. These clippings, presumably sent

to Ladwin by a mysterious  person who wanted to help him, indicated that Lucky Engriff was  connected with

the murder ring; that the escaped convict had gone to  San Francisco and later to New York. 

That part was simple. The remarkable point was that the evidence  was bona fide. The Shadow was sure that

Engriff was in New York; that  he was actually employed as a killer in the deathinsurance racket. 

The reason was this: 

Ladwin, playing a false part, needed genuine evidence to support  his singular story. Evidence so strong that

The Shadow would recognize  it as real. It had been necessary to keep The Shadow fully occupied  with the

papers during the ten minutes that it took the gas to fill the  death room. 

Anything flimsy would have been too risky for Ladwin. As for  Engriff, he would willingly have allowed such

damaging evidence to  reach The Shadow's hands, because Ladwin expected to get those papers  back. The

Shadow remembered that Ladwin had made a grab for the  envelope as soon as he approached the table where

the death lamp stood. 

All members of the Adico ring would soon know that Ladwin had died  instead of Cranston. They would

wonder whether or not The Shadow had  kept the evidence incriminating Engriff. The man who would

wonder most  would be Lucky Engriff himself; moreover, the escaped convict would be  particularly eager to

do something about it. 

By all calculations, Engriff would be the next man to seek  Cranston's life. He would demand the

appointment, and the Adico  organization would have to approve it, in return for Engriff's  cooperation with

Ladwin. 

Leaving the sanctum, The Shadow went into a laboratory that  adjoined it. When he returned he placed a sheet

of glossy paper beneath  the bluish light. On the paper were imprinted photostatic copies of the  three

newspaper clippings that pertained to Engriff. 


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Twisting his hands into the right position, The Shadow interposed  them between the light and the paper. As

on a previous occasion, a  hawkish silhouette impressed itself upon the sensitized sheet. 

Folding the paper, The Shadow sealed it in an envelope. He turned  off the blue light. 

A laugh trailed out in the solid darkness  

CHAPTER XV. CRIME TRIES AGAIN

THEY were dining at the Cobalt Club, Commissioner Weston and his  friend Lamont Cranston, in the

otherwise deserted grillroom. Despite  new worries that perplexed him, Weston gave a satisfied smile as he

leaned back in his chair. 

"I hope that the house committee keeps on haggling," he declared.  "The more time they waste choosing new

decorations, the longer we can  have the grillroom to ourselves. If they want my opinion, I would say  to leave

the place as it is. 

"Ladders, paint buckets, paper all over the floor  it suits me,  Cranston. It gives me privacy when there are no

other diners about;  and, candidly, Cranston, all this mess is no worse than the old  decorations. Remember

when the place looked like a tropical garden,  with palm trees and parrots? Bah!" 

The Shadow remembered. The parrots had particularly annoyed Weston  because every time the

commissioner raised his voice he had been  imitated by croaks from a dozen cages. Weston's tone was the

exact  pitch that parrots liked to mimic. 

"Yes, I like it as it is," repeated Weston. "After the waiter is  gone, I can hold conferences here. Tonight, for

instance, I am  expecting Inspector Cardona " 

There were footsteps from the stairway that led down into the  grillroom. Cardona's stocky figure came into

sight. Approaching the  table, Joe handed the commissioner an envelope. 

"It was at your office, commissioner," said Cardona. "It came after  you had left." 

Unfolding the contents of the envelope, Weston gave a rapid  exclamation: 

"Look quickly! Both of you!" 

Rising from his chair, Cranston unfortunately jostled Cardona. They  were too late. 

"It's gone again," Weston told them. "The profile of The Shadow! It  was there on the paper, plainly visible!" 

Cardona was looking at the glossy sheet. What he saw was  interesting enough. 

"This looks like The Shadow's work, all right," asserted Joe.  "Those photographs aren't fading out. I wonder

how he got this dope,  commissioner." 

There were arrows with the photographs, pointing out Engriff's  picture in the groups. Weston saw the

combination, and asked: 

"What do you know about this fellow Engriff?" 


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"He's dangerous," replied Cardona. "I had a full report on him from  San Q. They don't know he's headed East,

though. Engriff used to be one  of those daredevil guys that jump off cliffs and take rides on  skyrockets. 

"Working as a stunt artist, he was, until that got too tame for  him. He went in for gang stuff  just for the

excitement, he said. They  got him on a seconddegree charge, and he went up for twenty years.  Only, he got

out." 

"The time of the big break, wasn't it?" 

"Yeah. Somebody smuggled in some dynamite, and the cons blew a hole  in the wall. I always figured that

Lucky was the bird who planted the  charge." 

WESTON was showing renewed interest in the photostats. Suddenly he  slapped his broad hand on the table.

Jarred dishes added echoes to the  thump. 

"This fits with last night's mystery!" exclaimed the commissioner.  "Ever since we identified Peter Ladwin by

scattered articles from his  suitcase, we have been wondering why a man of his repute was in hiding. 

"Ladwin came from San Francisco. So did Engriff. Perhaps Ladwin  feared the fellow and was living in a

squalid neighborhood to avoid  him. We must work on that theory, inspector. Engriff may be responsible  for

other deaths." 

Turning to Cranston for approval, Weston received a nod. Quietly,  The Shadow stated:. 

"Perhaps Engriff murdered Parron " 

"And Renstrom!" exclaimed Weston. "The explosion at Renstrom's is a  case in point. Perhaps Engriff was

behind Juble's death. Maybe Vayne  could give us some clue " 

Mulling over matters, Weston became more and more convinced that he  was right. The law had not yet

linked Rudy Waygart with the mobbies who  had shown up  some of them to stay  on the scene of every

crime. 

Dying crooks had refused to talk when questioned. They claimed they  didn't know who they worked for, or

what the racket was. They had lied  to protect Rudy, but on the second count they told the truth. None of

Rudy's gorillas had ever heard of Adico. 

The Shadow voiced no objection to Weston's theory regarding Lucky  Engriff. He preferred to have the law

go after Lucky, rather than Rudy.  By The Shadow's calculations, Lucky was to be heard from very soon. 

"Yes," repeated Weston, "we must talk to Vayne." 

"We can do that quite easily," declared The Shadow. "Merwood and I  are calling on Vayne tonight to talk

over the importing office. I don't  suppose that Merwood would object if you came along, commissioner. Why

not ask him?" 

"I shall do so." 

Weston shook a bell that brought a waiter, who went to get a  special telephone that plugged into a floor

socket recently installed  in the grillroom. Calling Merwood, Weston told the financier about the  new

evidence that the law had received. 


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"Merwood is willing to postpone all other business," declared  Weston as he laid the telephone aside, "and he

is anxious to be present  when we talk to Vayne. He hopes that we are on the trail of the man who  murdered

Renstrom. We shall start at once and stop for Merwood on the  way to Vayne's." 

OUTSIDE the Cobalt Club, they chose Weston's official car instead  of Cranston's limousine. When they

stepped into the big car, Cardona  did not come along. He explained that Sergeant Markham was parked

around the corner in a headquarters car. 

"We'll follow you, commissioner," said Cardona. "I may need Markham  later." 

Most persons would have felt secure while riding in the police  commissioner's official car. Not so The

Shadow. He knew that he was  marked for death so long as he persisted in appearing publicly as  Cranston. 

The Shadow would have preferred his own limousine, or Moe's taxi,  even though the trip was short.

Nevertheless, he made no objection to  Weston's insistence that they ride in the official car. 

After all, The Shadow was quite prepared for any trouble. In  special pockets under his tuxedo jacket, he

carried a brace of  automatics. His coat had been fitted for them. 

Weston was commenting on the Engriff theory. He did not notice that  Cranston was observing every corner

that they passed; even scanning  each darkened doorway as they rode along the avenue. Folded arms gave

Cranston the semblance of calmness, but his hands, tucked beneath  opposite elbows, were gripping the

handles of the automatics. 

The official car swung into a narrow oneway street that led toward  the apartment house where Merwood

lived. With a side glance through the  window, The Shadow saw Markham's car follow. There would be no

trouble  from the rear; but up ahead  

It came. A terrific shriek of fire apparatus, accompanied by the  clang of bells. A hookandladder truck,

loaded with a dozen firemen,  had swung into the block. It was bucking traffic, as it had a right to  do, shrilling

its warning for other vehicles to clear the path. 

People were scurrying along the sidewalks. Among them The Shadow  saw a stoopish man who had been

close to the curb in a position to note  the commissioner's car when it passed. 

There was ample room to avoid the fire truck, and plenty of time to  be out of its way. Weston's chauffeur

swung the big car toward the curb  where he could park it. The rapid swerve, the application of the brakes

produced a jolt. 

Oddly, Cranston was flung forward. Weston didn't realize that his  friend had made a deliberate lunge. The

commissioner couldn't see what  happened next, for Cranston's body blocked the sight. One hand speeding

forward, The Shadow grabbed the wheel, yanked it from the chauffeur's  grasp. 

Veered to the right, the car climbed the curb, shot across the  sidewalk and made an angled plunge into the

hollowed entrance to a  basement that was protected by a flight of stone steps. 

Both Weston and the chauffeur were hurled to the lower side of the  car as it crashed, but Cranston did not

share their experience.  Swinging about, he caught the handle of the high door on the left,  yanked it

downward. 


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Throwing his weight against the reluctant barrier, he went headlong  as the door swung outward, to land in the

trough of the uptilted step. 

Strange though the course of the car had been, the fire truck  matched it. As the car veered to the right, the

truck lurched to the  left. Its wheels grazing the curb, it was bound for the very spot that  Weston's car had left! 

The Shadow had averted a terrific wreck by supplying a minor mishap  instead. He had placed the official car

where the roaring, cumbersome  truck could not reach it, saving Weston's life, the chauffeur's, and  his own. 

THAT was not all The Shadow did. 

He had one gun drawn as he flattened on the step. Looming almost  upon him, The Shadow saw the fire truck

and the driver at its wheel. He  stabbed a shot straight for the driver. The man flipped backward from  the

wheel, losing his helmet as his hands flung wide. 

Still The Shadow's gun was stabbing shots, aimed for the truck  crew, as the vehicle careened past, completely

out of control. They  were firing in return, those firemen, but their shots were high, wide,  and scattered. 

No marksman, however capable, could have found any target while the  truck was riding wild. Front wheels

climbed one curb, jolted away and  headed across the street. 

Yelling men were forgetting their guns to hang on. Others, a few  who had intercepted The Shadow's bullets,

were losing their hold and  falling to the street. 

Markham's car dodged the massive hookandladder truck by taking to  one curb as the uncontrolled

juggernaut climbed the other. The truck  struck the front of an empty store, bashed in the show window and

half  a ton of bricks surrounding it. Ladders were ripped to splinters as the  truck crashed through. 

With the shattered equipment went falling figures. A few of them  came to their feet, still clutching guns.

They heard a sound that  followed the echoes of the crash. 

It came from near the commissioner's car: 

The laugh of The Shadow! 

Strange, taunting, it branded enemies for what they were: not  firemen, but thugs. Crooks engaged in one of

the most daring murder  attempts ever made in Manhattan. 

Who would have suspected that a hookandladder truck, bound  apparently toward a fire, was a fake vehicle

that had come from a  deserted garage on a murder trip? 

Only The Shadow! 

The truck had passed a dozen traffic cops, but none had challenged  it. The Shadow had personally put a finish

to its mad career, by  settling the thug who drove it. He had thinned its crooked crew with  bullets; the crash

had settled several more. At present, The Shadow was  dealing with the stragglers, who were still enough to

make trouble. 

Tuned to The Shadow's shots came those from another gun. Cardona  was out of Markham's car; he had heard

The Shadow's laugh. Pelting  mobsters from the rear, Cardona gave The Shadow satisfactory aid.  Wildly

shooting mobbies sprawled under the double fire. No more shots  came from the vicinity of the shattered


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truck. 

When Commissioner Weston climbed from his canted limousine, he  found his friend Cranston seated, dazed,

upon the higher step. Cranston  didn't remember just what had happened. He had heard shots, a crash, a

strange, weird laugh. 

Cardona was beckoning from along the street. Together, Weston and  Cranston joined him, Stepping over the

stilled forms of recent foemen,  Cardona shouldered through the smashed wall, toward the front of the

hookandladder truck. 

Beside the fake truck lay the battered driver. Cardona turned a  flashlight on the dead man's face, which was

still in recognizable  condition. 

Though it wasn't necessary, Joe pronounced the name: 

"Lucky Engriff." 

CHAPTER XVI. THE SIXTH DAY

COMMISSIONER WESTON was considerably worried and he wondered why.  Dining at his table in the

grillroom, he began to count the names of  persons under his special protection. 

The list included Janet Renstrom, Thomas Merwood, Tyrus Vayne; all  were amply safe. Detectives were still

on duty at the Renstrom home.  Merwood had servants who were capable and loyal. In his turn, Vayne had

hired a reputable private detective to help investigate Juble's death,  and the man was serving as Vayne's

bodyguard. 

Finally analyzing his worriment, Weston decided that it was  Cranston's safety that disturbed him. 

Cranston had admitted an acquaintance with Ladwin, the explorer who  had died a few nights ago. Classing

Ladwin's death as murder, with  Lucky Engriff the killer, Weston concluded that the crookmanned fire  truck

had been directed at Cranston. 

Through such erroneous reasoning, Weston had actually struck the  truth; but he was far from guessing

crime's motive. Cranston was  wealthy, but there seemed no logical way whereby crooks could profit  through

his death. 

Had true facts been told to Weston, he would have considered them  too fanciful to believe. 

An organization called Adico, flinging murderers at Cranston, to  save itself the payment of half a million

dollars to a man named  Arnaud! 

Murder for profit, yes; for Adico, if it succeeded, would retain  the one hundred and twentyfive thousand

dollars that Arnaud had paid  as premium. Still, the case was amazing. 

Quite as amazing as something that the Adico group did not know;  namely, that Cranston and Arnaud were

the same man, and that both were  The Shadow! 

Tonight was the sixth night. Adico had played two aces  Ladwin and  Engriff  only to lose both. Despite

Weston's qualms, Cranston had  shown skill at taking care of himself. But Weston, in his ignorance,  was quite


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relieved when he saw his friend enter from the grillroom  stairway. 

Cranston was seated at the table when Merwood arrived, accompanied  by a chauffeur who politely left after

having safely conducted his  employer to the police commissioner's presence. Soon afterward,  Inspector Joe

Cardona appeared. 

"I am sorry, gentlemen," said Weston with a smile, "that I must ask  you to conduct a business conference

under police supervision. But  murder is in the air; it might strike anywhere, even here, if we did  not take

proper precautions." 

Merwood gave a worried nod, turned his broad face toward Cranston  and queried anxiously: "Where is

Vayne?" 

"We expect him shortly," interposed Weston. "Ah! I believe this is  Vayne now." 

ENTERING from the stairway, Vayne was followed by a private  detective who answered to the name of

Hapthorpe. Advancing eagerly to  the table, Vayne turned first to Cranston, then to Merwood, and  exclaimed: 

"Excellent news! I have just heard from a man who can give our  importing corporation the international

status that it requires. You  have heard of Mailleaux Freres, the jewelry wholesalers in Paris?" 

There were nods from Cranston and Merwood. 

"This man represents them," continued Vayne, rubbing his hands.  "His name is Georges Daux, and he is

staying at the Hotel Marleigh. He  says that Mailleaux Freres have read reports of our prospective  enterprise

and would like to buy a share in it." 

"Why didn't you invite him here?" inquired Merwood. 

"I felt that he should talk to Cranston first," replied Vayne.  "Daux wants to know about the jewel purchases.

He spoke as though he  would like to ask some confidential questions that only Cranston could  answer." 

The Shadow arose, turned in leisurely fashion toward the stairway.  He spoke in Cranston's style. 

"I shall go over to see Daux," he said. "Meanwhile, Vayne, you can  talk with Merwood regarding the details

of our company's  incorporation." 

Weston came to his feet in alarm. 

"I can't let you go alone, Cranston!" Weston's tone showed horror.  "Anything might happen! I tell you,

murder is everywhere!" 

"Cranston can take Hapthorpe," suggested Vayne. "I have found him  to be a very good bodyguard." 

Weston studied Hapthorpe. The private dick looked brawny, but  sluggish. Weston shook his head. 

"Hapthorpe can stay here," he decided. "Inspector Cardona can go  with Cranston. By the way, Cranston,

where is that gun you had the  other night, at Renstrom's?" 

"Out in the car, I suppose," was Cranston's smiling reply, "unless  somebody stole it while my chauffeur was

asleep." 


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"Better stop and look for it. Take it along. You may need it." 

SMALL, but exclusive, the Hotel Marleigh was more of an apartment  house than a hotel. It had an ample

lobby, which Cardona eyed  thoroughly when he and Cranston entered from the limousine, and the  place

looked quite innocent. 

There was a dapper clerk behind the desk. He phoned up to the suite  where Daux was staying, then

announced to Cranston that the guest was  ready to receive him. 

The Shadow and Cardona entered an automatic elevator which had a  modern type of hinged door. The metal

door was swinging shut when  Cardona pressed the button for the fourth floor. Smoothly, the elevator  began

its upward journey as soon as the door had closed. 

Reaching the fourth floor, they were greeted by Georges Daux, a  middleaged man with thin, dark hair,

sparkling eyes, and a polished  French manner. 

"Ah, Monsieur Cranston!" exclaimed Daux. "This is indeed one great  pleasure! Monsieur Vayne had told me

that I should expect you. Votre  ami  that is, your friend"  he looked questioningly at Cardona  "he  is one

who is also interested in jewels, oui?" 

"In a way, yes," replied The Shadow. "Show Monsieur Daux your  bracelets, inspector." 

Cardona produced a pair of handcuffs, flashed them along with his  badge. Daux tilted back his head and

laughed. 

"Ah, bracelets! You have a sense of humor, Monsieur Cranston. But  why"  he shrugged, spread his hands 

"why should you need a police  inspector with you when you visit me?" 

The Shadow blamed it on Weston, explaining matters as he and Daux  strolled into the suite, with Cardona

close behind them. Daux's rooms  were quite pretentious, befitting the foreign representative of so  important a

firm as Mailleaux Freres. 

Two stocky servants were in the living room. Indicating them, Daux  remarked: 

"I, too, require protection, messieurs. That is why I always have  these men with me. Look!" 

From a table drawer he brought a fistful of jewels, strewing them  on the table. Rings, pendants, gemstudded

brooches, made a valuable  array that The Shadow estimated as upward of fifty thousand dollars.  Yet Daux

treated brilliant diamonds and richly colored emeralds as if  they were mere samples of his wares. 

"One thing is wrong," he said gloomily. "The price. It is too high.  We must give more for less, to satisfy the

American trade. If you can  buy jewels cheaply in India, Monsieur Cranston, we could do very much." 

The Shadow nodded. He glanced toward Cardona, who had taken a  corner chair and was buried in a

magazine that he had picked up from  the table. 

"I believe that I can talk freely," The Shadow told Daux. "Let me  tell you something about the gems that I

intend to buy." 

Daux listened, fascinated by the tale that followed. It began with  a boar hunt, wherein Cranston had saved the

life of a rajah. Next came  the details of political intrigue which Cranston had spiked, thus  keeping the rajah


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on his throne. 

In return the rajah had conducted his benefactor to a secret  underground chamber where a jewelstudded

Buddha squatted mid heaps of  fabulous gems. 

"Ancestors of the rajah placed that wealth in the Buddha's care,"  declared The Shadow, "that it might some

day be awarded to a man who,  according to a yogi's prophecy, would come from a far land to save the

throne." 

"Ah!" Daux nodded, wisely. "You were the man of the prophecy, n'est  pas?" 

"I was. But having no armored truck available, I left the jewels in  the rajah's care. On my next trip to India, I

intend to claim them." 

"And they will cost you nothing?" 

"Only transportation and custom duty. Beyond that, all will be  profit. Does it interest you, Monsieur Daux?" 

It interested Daux exceedingly. He chattered about the jewel market  in Europe as well as America. He

assured Cranston that Mailleaux Freres  would pay a large sum in advance for the privilege of selling the

gems  in France and other portions of the continent. 

THE interview ended, Cardona came promptly to life, indicating that  he had been alert while reading the

magazine. 

Taking the magazine from Cardona, The Shadow studied the  illustration on the opened page, then scanned

half a dozen paragraphs  printed in French. 

"Very, very funny!" The Shadow chuckled in Cranston's style. "Don't  you think so, inspector?" 

Cardona shook his head; remarking that he didn't read French. The  Shadow handed the magazine to Daux,

suggesting: 

"Translate the anecdote for Inspector Cardona." 

Glancing at the page, Daux opened his lips in a gleaming smile,  that turned to an almost convulsive laugh. 

"Ah, it is rare, this story!" he exclaimed, amid his laughter. "You  must take the magazine, with my

compliments. Inspector Cardona can hear  it when you translate it for your friend the commissioner." 

Daux was conducting his visitors out to the elevator, thrusting the  magazine in Cranston's hands as they went.

Still chortling, he shook  hands, then opened the elevator door. Bowed into the car, The Shadow  and Cardona

could see Daux's laughwrinkled face through a little glass  window as the door was closing. 

Cardona was thinking that the magazine anecdote must have been a  very funny one. The Shadow wasn't

thinking of the magazine at all, even  though he had it tucked beneath his arm. 

The Shadow knew that Daux's mirth was a sham; but behind it lay  cause for future jest, of a Satanic sort.

Daux's farewell to his  visitors was a prelude to death. Mere moments would prove it  moments  dependent

upon mere inches that the elevator door would have to travel  before it was fully shut. 


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Death to The Shadow unless, by display of rapid skill, he could  halt the closing trap and turn doom back upon

another of the Adico  murder makers, Georges Daux! 

CHAPTER XVII. DEATH REVERSED

CARDONA was pressing a button as he heard the door bump to a close.  On the opposite side of the little

window, Daux was doing the same. His  fingers were at the wall button which ordinarily brought the elevator

to the fourth floor. 

The button stayed in when Daux pushed it. Eyes toward the little  window, Daux expected to witness a sudden

disappearance of the faces on  the other side. His laugh was changing to a leer that revealed his evil  design.

Then the leer had wiped itself away, to be replaced by a  frantic scowl. 

Daux was springing back from the elevator door as if it had  scorched him. He was yanking a revolver as he

went; his eyes, beady,  glary, saw the reason for his mistake. The door hadn't fully shut. It  had stopped with

less than an inch to go. 

A rounded chunk of metal blocked it  the muzzle of a gun that The  Shadow had thrust into the crack at the

final instant. 

Daux aimed for that muzzle, pressed the trigger of his own gun.  Finding a halfinch opening between a metal

door and a cement wall was  too much for a marksman on the move, as was Daux. 

The wedging gun answered before Daux could fire again. Flames from  the .45 automatic bored a bullet

straight through the killer's forearm,  into the ribs beyond it. Daux's twisty dive became a tumble. He hit the

floor with a yell. 

Servants were bounding from the apartment. They saw The Shadow  shouldering from the elevator, carrying

his smoking gun. Their own  hands whipped into sight with weapons, but The Shadow's moves were  quicker.

His .45 was mouthing staccato bursts as he sprang forward.  Wellaimed shots floored Daux's servants. 

Amazed by Cranston's unusually swift action, Cardona wondered where  he came into it. Joe was out of the

elevator, too, but there weren't  any targets left. However, Cardona's disappointment wasn't to be  longlasting. 

Doors ripped open along the hall. Men with guns took aim at  Cranston as he hurtled past. Hearing the clatter,

he came full about,  dropping to his knees and one extended hand. With his other fist he  jabbed quick shots up

into the very mouths of blazing revolvers. 

Cardona didn't have to duck. Not only was he far behind, but Daux  had shoved out a foot to trip him. Flat on

the floor, Cardona witnessed  the display of bursting guns. He could hear the smack of ricocheting  bullets as

they jolted from the walls. 

Gunners were sagging back into their doorways, but Cranston was  still delivering shots. That whirl, that drop

of his, had carried him  below the level of the hasty fire. Nevertheless, he hadn't clinched the  victory. His gun

was empty. 

Surviving thugs sprang from their doorways. Cardona saw Cranston  lunge up to meet them, heard the clash of

metal as the attackers  reached their prey. 

Joe couldn't shoot because of Cranston, but he saw his chance to  enter the slugging conflict with these killers


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who had bolstered Daux's  murderous servants. Heaving himself into the melee, Cardona clouted  hard at every

head he saw. 

ODD, how Joe missed those swings. He didn't realize that other  blows were landing ahead of his. The

Shadow was already hammering away  when Joe arrived. 

Bowled back by a rush of halfstaggered crooks, Cardona suddenly  found himself beside Cranston. Together,

they drove their stubborn  foemen along the hall. 

Shots were roaring, almost in Cardona's ear. Joe could feel the  whiz of bullets that skimmed past his face. He

saw Cranston give a  momentary jolt, knew that his companion had been hit. It couldn't be  serious, though, for

Cranston was keeping on, as they slashed at rising  men who came into their path. 

Fortunately, the mobsmen were shooting wildly, from complete  desperation. Cranston had softened them

considerably, first with  bullets, then with hardslashed blows. Fighters were dropped all along  the hallway.

Only three remained, and they were trying to escape. 

An intercepting figure came up to aid them. It was Daux, clutching  his gun in his left fist. He was mouthing

oaths and they weren't in  French, as he tottered toward Cranston. Shoving the revolver ahead of  him, Daux

pulled the trigger just as a long arm finished a hooked  swing. 

The Shadow's gun hit Daux's as it blasted. The shot found the  hallway wall. So did the revolver, carried from

Daux's fist by the  weight of the empty gun that thwacked it. Spun half about, Daux came  squarely into the

path of another spurting gun: Cardona's. 

Without waiting for Daux to fall, Cardona pivoted toward the  elevator. Joe didn't see what happened behind

him. He thought that  Cranston only had one gun; instead, the commissioner's friend was  carrying two. 

The Shadow was finding his opportunity to draw that second  automatic; and crooks, fearing the

straightaiming Cranston, didn't  wait for more battle. 

One had yanked the elevator door wide open. He dived into the car  with the others. The door was closing

when bullets smashed against it.  Through the window, with its wired, shatterproof glass, crooks were  giving

a farewell leer. Then, with the thump of the door, faces were  wiped from sight. 

The wall button was still pressed. The mere action of starting the  car had produced what Daux had intended

earlier. The elevator, with its  groggy crew of criminals, had taken a plunge to the bottom of the  shaft! 

Stopped by the door, Cardona was gripped by a longheld suspense.  His head was pounding from the action

of the fray; perhaps that was why  he fancied that he heard a vague sound, much like a whispered laugh. A

tone that meant The Shadow  for Cardona had heard such mirth in the  past. 

Then the whispery taunt was drowned by a muffled clangor far below.  The elevator had struck cement deep

in the basement; with the rising  reverberations of the crash came trailing, dying shrieks. Like Daux and  his

crooked servants, the last of crime's reserve crew had gone to  doom. 

It was death, in reverse, thrown back upon those who served the  brain who planned it. 

LOOKING about, Cardona saw Cranston leaning against the wall, one  hand clamped just above his knee.

Waving Joe away, The Shadow gave a  slight smile and pointed toward the floor. 


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"Pick up the magazine, inspector," he said dryly. "I want the  commissioner to see it. Don't worry about this

leg of mine. It's not  more than a flesh wound. Find a stairway and I'll manage to hobble  down." 

Joe found the stairs, kept close to Cranston so that his companion  wouldn't stumble. On the way, Cardona

remarked: 

"Say! That story must be a mighty funny one." 

"It's not humorous at all," returned The Shadow. "It happens to be  a serious description of the bookshops

along the River Seine, in  Paris." 

"But you laughed at it " 

"And so did Monsieur Daux." 

They were at the bottom of the stairs before Cardona suddenly  caught the inference. 

"Then Daux wasn't a Frenchman! You guessed it, and tested him out!  But what about those trick words he

was using?" 

"They were the sort that a fake Frenchman would use," returned The  Shadow. "Daux probably culled them

from a dictionary that I saw in the  corner. He should have improved his pronunciation before he tried them.

When I found that he couldn't read French " 

Cardona's nod told that he knew the rest. Joe understood, at last,  why Cranston had been so prompt with the

gun that Weston had advised  him to carry along. 

They were half across the lobby, The Shadow leaning heavily on  Cardona, when suddenly a jerk sent Joe

stumbling to the right. Cranston  had made a sudden shift; with all his weight he was lunging his  companion

toward a cluster of chairs beside a pillar. 

They were rolling when a revolver barked from twenty feet away. Its  bullet flattened against the pillar just

above their heads. 

Not bothering to draw his automatic, The Shadow pulled its trigger.  The gun was beneath his coat, but it was

pointed at a backward angle,  its muzzle underneath his arm. The shot scorched through the cloth, met  a

marksman who was bounding forward from a chair to take new aim. 

The killer had been stationed in the lobby, ready in case Daux  failed. Clipped by The Shadow's bullet, the

man staggered about and  started for an exit at the back of the lobby, where a pair of thuggish  companions

leaped out to aid him. 

Shooting together, The Shadow and Cardona met the incoming thrust.  As they fired, more guns opened up

from the front door of the lobby.  Patrolmen had heard the earlier gunfire from the fourth floor and had

reached the scene. Dropping their wounded burden, the thugs fled out  through the back. 

The man who had tried to kill The Shadow was riddled with police  bullets when Cardona reached him. He

wasn't an ordinary crook, this  fellow. His features were shrewd, intelligent; they marked him as a man  of

craft, like Daux. 


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Hobbling up, The Shadow viewed the dead face on the floor. Although  he recognized it, he couldn't say so.

Not while he was Cranston,  though, as Arnaud, The Shadow might have spoken the dead man's name:

Clarence Regar. 

Seated alone in the hotel office, while waiting for a physician to  arrive and attend his wound, The Shadow

gave a low, meditative laugh  that no one else could hear. Ladwin, Engriff, Daux  they were the  types that

The Shadow had expected as messengers of death. 

Regar was different. He belonged to the selling end, not to the  murder corps. The fact that Regar had been

pressed into such service  could mean one thing only: that Adico had run out of expert killers,  with the

exception of the missing ace, Rudy Waygart. 

One night more. It would be murder's last chance. Adico would bank  everything on that final thrust, and

Rudy would necessarily be in it.  He had to be, since there were no more of his caliber left. 

The Shadow knew! 

CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S DOUBLE TRAIL

THERE was much news the next day. Headlines shrieked of murder,  twice foiled. The law had victory to

show for itself, so Commissioner  Weston was releasing facts galore. He openly admitted that a murder  ring

had been at work, but claimed that it was entirely suppressed. 

The statement carried logic. Weston had withheld it, the night when  Lucky Engriff had met with grief; for

Lucky, an escaped convict, was  not important enough to rate as the head of a craftily managed murder  ring.

But Georges Daux and Clarence Regar were of sufficient caliber to  hold such status. 

Daux, it turned out, was a clever confidence man, who had operated  under several aliases; while Regar, well

known socially, actually had a  mysterious office in Manhattan which he had probably used for illicit

transactions. 

Classed as a team, they formed a competent pair; but why they dealt  in murder was a puzzle. Weston

sidetracked questions on that score,  declaring that the law was investigating and that he would issue a

statement later. 

The commissioner refrained from mentioning Adico. Privately, he  told Cardona that it was probably a name

that applied to Daux and Regar  combined. No papers of any consequence were found, either in Daux's  hotel

suite or Regar's office. 

In the morning newspapers, Joe Cardona was the hero. It was noon  when Clyde Burke slouched into Joe's

office, parked himself on a corner  of the desk and queried: 

"Anything for me, inspector?" 

"Outside, newshound," gruffed Cardona. "You gummed one scoop I  tried to shove your way!" 

"The Renstrom story? I was trying to help you, Joe. I figured I was  postponing the conference by sticking

around. That's why I had myself  kicked out." 

Clyde spoke earnestly, and Cardona actually believed him.  Apologetically, the inspector muttered: 


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"I guess I was too dumb to see it, Burke. If there's anything I can  do for you " 

"Now, we're getting somewhere! Give me the lowdown on last night,  Joe. Didn't Cranston do just about as

much as you did?" 

Cardona hesitated, then nodded. 

"He did more," admitted the inspector, generously. "I wanted to  give the story out, but the commissioner said

to lay off. Listen; why  don't you follow your own hunch and keep after Cranston until he gives  you the whole

thing?" 

"You'll corroborate it?" 

"I'll have to," returned Cardona with a grin, "if Cranston starts  the ball rolling." 

By midafternoon the Classic was on the street with its scoop.  Cranston's picture dominated the front page;

he was rated equally with  Cardona in the smashing of the murder ring. Immediately, Cranston's New  Jersey

home became the goal of dozens of reporters, all anxious to go  Burke's story one better. 

Cranston's physician, Dr. Sayre, dispersed the mob of newshawks,  telling them that his patient would have no

more to say until after he  had conferred with the police commissioner, at ten o'clock that  evening. 

LATER that afternoon, Janet Renstrom was sitting in the living room  of her home, staring moodily at the

darkening sky. She felt that she  should be happy, but, somehow, she wasn't. 

Murderers had met deserved death, but Janet wasn't convinced that  either Daux or Regar had planted the

bomb that killed her uncle. Maybe  Lucky Engriff had done the deed; but if so, there was certainly someone

else who had given the order. 

Evening was approaching, and in this house all evenings were  gloomy. Janet had stayed at home constantly,

because The Shadow had  ordered it. He knew that her life would be in jeopardy, if the Adico  group guessed

how much she knew. Since The Shadow had not informed her  otherwise, Janet decided that the head of the

murder ring must still be  at large. 

A ring from the telephone bell brought Janet to her feet. Hurrying  out into the hallway, she scrawled letters

quickly on a pad. It was a  simple rearrangement of the alphabet, based upon a few key words, with  the rest of

the letters in rotation: the code that she had memorized  before it faded, that night when she talked with The

Shadow. 

But it wasn't The Shadow, or the methodicaltoned speaker, Burbank,  who sometimes called in his stead.

Someone had simply gotten the wrong  number. Janet was hanging up when she heard the doorbell ring. 

Daniel came from the pantry. Crumpling the code slip in her hand,  Janet let the servant pass and watched him

open the front door. 

The visitor was Thomas Merwood; Janet tossed the slip into a  wastebasket beneath the telephone table and

hurried forward with a glad  greeting. 

Merwood's visits were about the only relief in the monotony of  Janet's existence. 


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They went into the living room: after a short chat, Merwood brought  up the matter of the murder ring. He was

enthused at first; then he  shook his head. 

"We still haven't found out who Adico is," he said. "Maybe the name  is a mere myth, but it should certainly

have some bearing on the case." 

"Aren't the police investigating further?" 

"I don't know, Janet," replied Merwood. "Commissioner Weston talks  as though the case were closed. Of

course, there's Vayne; he has hired  a private detective named Hapthorpe, who is supposedly looking into

Juble's death, but they don't seem to be getting very far." 

There was silence; then a voice came from the radio, which Janet  had turned on earlier. A news commentator

was on the air. 

"Flash!" came the voice. "Lamont Cranston, new hero in the smashing  of the mysterious murder ring, has just

staged another exploit. Leaving  his home as darkness settled, he successfully dodged a cordon of  reporters

who have been camping on the grounds of his New Jersey  estate. 

"Cranston's physician announced that his patient has gone for an  excursion to be free from all annoyance. He

says that Cranston will  call on Commissioner Weston at ten o'clock this evening, and will issue  no statements

until after the conference." 

Merwood gave a broad smile. 

"A clever fellow, Cranston," he said approvingly. "He was the real  factor that settled those murderers, last

night. Cardona admits it, but  Weston won't." 

"Tell me, how badly was Cranston wounded?" Janet asked. 

"Not seriously," replied Merwood. "He must certainly be in good  shape to dodge those reporters. Wait " 

He paused, his hand lifted. It was the radio again, the commentator  was reading a very testy statement from

Commissioner Weston. 

It referred to the coming conference with Cranston, which would be  held at the Cobalt Club. All reporters

were to stay away, the  commissioner warned. After the conference, Weston would issue a general  statement

to the press. 

"He wants to muffle Cranston," decided Merwood as he rose. "I hope  he doesn't succeed. I think I'll call

Weston and give him my opinion on  the subject." 

Janet was listening to the radio when Merwood returned to the  living room, shaking his head. 

"To put it candidly," said the financier, "Weston is a conceited  lout. He says that he cannot allow his personal

regard for Cranston to  interfere with facts that concern the law." 

"You mean he won't believe what Cranston really did?" 

"Weston shapes truth to suit his own designs," returned Merwood.  "However, he can't prevent me from

dropping in on that conference. Both  Vayne and I have the privilege of calling at the Cobalt Club whenever


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we choose, because it is the only place where we can talk business with  Cranston." 

HALF an hour after Merwood had gone, Janet received the call that  she expected. It wasn't The Shadow's

whisper; the voice was slow,  calmtoned, very much like Cranston's. 

It gave her the coded message, letter by letter, with pauses  between the words. Remembering the paper that

she had tossed into the  wastebasket, Janet used it to decode the message. It read: 

SWIM TO BOAT OFF DOCK AT NINE 

Such instructions promised real adventure. Janet could understand  why The Shadow ordered it. Obviously,

The Shadow knew of Weston's  present mood; how the commissioner was ready to challenge anyone, even  his

friend Cranston. 

It wouldn't do for her to leave the house openly, for detectives  who patrolled the ground would insist that she

wait until they called  Weston. He would probably taboo any trip. 

Shortly before nine, Janet went up to her room. Disrobing, she clad  herself in a modern bathing suit that

consisted of trunks and halter.  Wearing bathing slippers, she stole down the back stairs, out the  kitchen door

and across the lawn, to the opening in the rear hedge,  where the path began. 

Something stirred amid the brush. Crouching beneath the hedge,  Janet felt very helpless; her costume was so

scanty that she feared her  figure would be revealed by its whiteness. Fortunately, one of the  detectives came

past the slice in the hedge. The noise from the brush  faded away. 

Taking the path, Janet hurried toward the dock that extended into  the Sound, positive that she had escaped

some lurking enemy. 

The Shadow must have known that crooks would be about tonight. The  boat would be her one refuge, for

Janet knew that The Shadow had agents  in his service, and such men would certainly be on board the craft. 

In the dim phosphorescence of the water, Janet saw the outline of  an anchored cabin cruiser. Kicking off her

slippers, she took a prompt  dive from the end of the short pier, made swift strokes for the waiting  craft. Her

approach was heard on board. 

Friendly hands came over the side, helped Janet to the deck. The  motor was thrumming; as Janet looked back

she thought she saw a figure  stooping near the end of the pier. She had evidently outraced some  follower

along the path. 

She couldn't see the faces about her, but she heard the courteous  voices which directed her to the cruiser's tiny

cabin. It was lighted;  closing the door, she stood alone and looked about. Everything was  prepared for her,

from towels to a complete supply of apparel. 

Dressing, Janet found that the clothes were all her proper size.  The dark dress with its long sleeves was

excellent for this secret  excursion, yet attractive in itself. So were the black kid shoes that  went with it. 

Stepping to the deck, Janet saw the glow of Manhattan lights  looming up ahead. The cruiser sped beneath big

bridges and swung in  toward a deserted pier, where Janet observed the lights of a waiting  taxicab. 

She smiled at the clever way in which The Shadow was transporting  her to Manhattan for a special meeting,

leaving detectives guarding an  empty house. 


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ELSEWHERE, The Shadow was receiving his own report of Janet's trip.  It came across the wire to the

sanctum. Burbank gave the details in his  methodical tone: 

"Report from Vincent. Janet Renstrom left house at three minutes of  nine. Swam to cabin cruiser moored

offshore." 

There was a pause; then: 

"Report from Hawkeye," announced Burbank. "He has located hideout  occupied by Rudy Waygart.

Hideout empty." 

"Reports received." 

With that statement, The Shadow studied a curious clock upon his  table. It was formed of moving dials,

registering hours, minutes, and  seconds. Gauged to exactitude, that clock was The Shadow's guide on all

expeditions wherein the time element might prove a vital factor. 

The clock was registering very close to ten. Whatever the  significance of Burbank's reports, there was very

little time to deal  with them, considering the appointment where as Cranston, The Shadow  was to meet

Commissioner Weston. 

Instructions, though, could go to agents. The Shadow voiced brief  orders for Burbank to relay. Knowing that

Janet was inbound to  Manhattan, having learned that Rudy was at large, The Shadow was making  certain

changes in his plans. He was allowing for a double trail,  knowing that both would have a bearing on coming

events. 

This was the night for crime's last thrust. Until ten, all servers  of Adico would have to bide their time, so far

as Cranston was  concerned. They had their victim tagged for doom; but his whereabouts  were unknown. In

slipping the reporters at dusk, The Shadow had also  dodged any watchful crooks. 

In so doing, The Shadow had postponed all combat until a scheduled  hour. He had given crooks time to

weave their strategy, introducing  whatever cunning factors they could design. It did not matter who  became

concerned in it, or why. All trails, whether of Adico's making,  or The Shadow's, would meet at one

destination. 

There, all would depend upon The Shadow's prowess. Should other  lives be threatened, The Shadow could

protect them by saving his own.  He knew that his battle of last night had told crooks the true identity  of

Lamont Cranston, even though the law had not found out. 

Crooks, bonded in a common cause of evil, would be operating with  one slogan: "Death to The Shadow!" 

The Shadow had his own slogan: 

"Death to Adico!" 

CHAPTER XIX. CRIME FROM WITHIN

COMMISSIONER WESTON was dining later than usual. Many things had  detained him at the office  freak

phone calls, crank interviewers,  bothersome reporters. There had been trouble, too, when he reached the  club.

Some argument among the waiters. 


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The usual man who served meals in the grillroom was absent tonight.  A stupid substitute admitted being new

to the club's ways when Weston  questioned him. 

Later, the waiter proved his inefficiency by serving Weston's steak  without the mushrooms. 

"They were delivered late, sir," the waiter tried to explain. "The  chef hasn't finished cooking them. But I'll

have them very shortly." 

The mushrooms arrived. Weston stared, as if to push them aside,  then observed their appetizing look. He

spread them on the remainder of  his steak, tasted them and liked them. The chef had certainly made  amends

for his delay. 

While Weston ate, the new waiter watched with a pleased smile.  Stepping through a doorway, he stopped

near a stairway that led up to  the kitchen. There, he whisked off his apron, coat, and false shirt  front, handed

them to a sallow man who stepped in from a basement  entrance. 

"All right, Koko," whispered the arrival. "Get going and fix your  alibi. I'll do the rest." 

Weston stared when the sallow man entered the grillroom wearing the  waiter's outfit. The fellow was

carrying a halffilled brandy bottle  and a glass. He poured a drink, the commissioner began to swallow it.

Then, muttering thickly, Weston objected: 

"I didn't order brandy!" 

"You said brandy, sir," returned the waiter, in a smooth tone. "But  there may have been a mistake." 

"A mistake?" Weston made a wide clutch at the waiter's arm;  gripping it, he pulled himself to his feet and

stared at the fellow's  face. "You're the mistake! You aren't the waiter"  the commissioner  was swaying as he

spoke  "who was here before." 

Steadying, Weston grabbed the fake waiter by both shoulders, glared  at a pair of tiny, gimlet eyes. With a

bigtoothed smile the sallow man  shoved his hand hard against Weston's chest, sent him reeling back into  his

chair. 

Weston reached for the brandy bottle, as if to swing it like a  club. He couldn't find it with his hand. Rolling

his head sideward to  the table, the commissioner gave a halfcrazed laugh that gave out  while his lips were

still in motion. 

Just then the service door swung open. A girl stepped into the  grillroom, stared in surprise as she saw Weston

rise, reel about in his  chair, and flop with another maddened laugh. She looked toward the  waiter in alarm. 

The girl was Janet Renstrom. She was taken aback by the false  waiter's ugliness. He wasn't just homely; he

looked vicious. Weston  must have thought the same, for he came up in his chair, staring with  eyes that

showed dilated pupils. 

"What... what are you?" shrilled Weston. "A man or a monster? Get  out of here, you devil"  making a mad

grab, he knocked over the brandy  bottle  "before I... before I " 

"Before what, commissioner?" 


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The ugly man snarled the question as he leaned toward the table,  where Weston's coat sleeve was soaking up

brandy that had poured from  the bottle. Shakily, the commissioner managed to uptilt his head, as it  wobbled

from side to side. 

"Before I " The commissioner paused, managed momentarily to  control his curious spell as he demanded:

"Who are you?" 

"Rudy Waygart." 

WESTON squinted as he tried to study Rudy. He muttered that he  didn't know him. 

Janet began to shrink toward the door; she had thought first that  Rudy might be a detective, but now she was

sure he wasn't. Spying her  retreat, Rudy whipped out a revolver. 

"Stay where you are, Miss Renstrom." 

"Why'm I drunk?" moaned Weston. "Brandy? Bah! Don't want it. Didn't  drink it." He knocked the bottle to

the floor, pawed at the table cloth  and pulled it toward him. There was a clatter as his face flattened  amid the

dishes. 

Janet was staring at Rudy's gimlet eyes beyond the gun muzzle.  Something in their ugliness told her a

horrible truth. 

"You're the man " 

"Who planted the pineapple in the box that Parron took to your  uncle?" Rudy's tone was sneering. "You

guessed it. Neat job, wasn't  it?" 

Janet gave no answer. Rudy's snake eyes held her helpless. Their  glitter was more terrible than the glint of the

gun. 

"A neat job," repeated Rudy. Then, with a gesture toward the table:  "So was this. The commish looks like

he's drunk, don't he? Only he  isn't. 

"You look like a doll with education. Ever hear of a mushroom  called the Panaeolus? No? Well, I've got the

name straight, anyway.  It's one of the poison kind, only it isn't deadly. That's what the  commish had for

dinner." 

Weston heard the mention of the mushrooms. Slapping at the dish, he  knocked it from the table. The dish

crashed the floor; Weston began to  mouth a cackly, hysterical laugh, as horrible as any that Janet had  ever

heard. 

"It makes a guy act drunk," informed Rudy. "That's the best thing  about the Panaeolus. It's why we fed it to

his nibs. His friend  Cranston is due here soon. He's going to get croaked"  his free hand  sweeping sideward,

Rudy whisked a revolver from beneath Weston's coat   "with this gun!" 

Janet understood as she saw Rudy pocket his own revolver, that Rudy  intended to murder Cranston, then pin

it on the commissioner. Talk of a  disagreement between the two friends would make it bad for Weston.

Found in an intoxicated condition, gun in hand, the commissioner would  have no alibi. 


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"It's getting him good," jeered Rudy as Weston gave a hysterical  gargle. "He's due for a crying jag pretty

soon. He won't even remember  what happened. Nobody, not even that wise guy Cardona, will figure that

Weston was anything but drunk, the way this joint stinks of brandy!" 

Something that Rudy said made Janet forget Weston's plight. Being  framed for murder was one thing; to

become a victim could be worse.  Cranston was slated for that fate; so was Janet! 

The Shadow's agents hadn't brought her here. Those men on the cabin  cruiser were crooks. They had

managed to trick her with a faked  message; their courtesy had been a sham, to dupe her into coming here. 

Remembering the man that she had dodged along the path, Janet  realized that he must have been a watcher

posted by The Shadow. 

"Guessing things, aren't you?" jeered Rudy, poking the gun closer.  "Yeah, we're going to croak you, too, with

the commissioner's gun. You  know too much, cutey. You've talked to The Shadow!" 

The Shadow! 

He, too, must be slated for death; therefore, he could only be  Cranston. The thought struck home to Janet; she

wondered if it had  occurred to Rudy. Her nerve suddenly steeled, the girl decided to test  him. 

"One death should be enough," she said bravely. "Let Cranston live.  It will be easier. If you kill me, the

commissioner will be blamed.  That seems to be your main motive." 

Rudy pursed his lips in solemn manner, gave a very approving nod. 

"A game kid, aren't you?" 

Encouraged, Janet returned the nod. She was moving forward boldly  to the very muzzle of the gun, almost

daring Rudy to fire. Through her  brain was running the thought that if Rudy used that gun he would have  to

leave in a hurry, before the club attendants arrived. 

That would mean life  for The Shadow! 

SUDDENLY, Rudy's impressed look vanished. With the ugliest of  snarly laughs, he sped his loose hand

forward, slapped it upon Janet's  arm. With a vicious wrench that made Janet gasp in pain, he swung her

around between himself and the stairway that led up to the foyer. 

The finish of Rudy's twist dropped Janet to her knees. She didn't  try to rise as he stepped back beside

Weston's table. Instead, she  looked up, pleading, hoping that further entreaty might still have  avail. 

"Go ahead  beg," sneered Rudy. "You won't be the first dame that  made me try to change my mind. Maybe

it works out in the sticks, but  not in this town, where a new crop of dolls comes in every week.  Anyway, you

look too educated to make a hit with me. I like dames  dumb." 

Stepping forward with two long strides, Rudy planted the gun muzzle  squarely against Janet's temple. 

"Try to get smart," he told her. "If you do I'll tap you so hard  you'll need a new permanent wave! I can knock

you cold, you know, and  give you a couple of bullets later, so you won't be helping Cranston  any if you start

anything before he gets here." 


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Motionless, Janet waited. The gun muzzle seemed to freeze her  entire forehead, numbing her brain by its

penetrating coldness. 

"That's it," gibed Rudy. "Sit tight. Maybe you figure Cranston can  fake a sneak in here; but I'm telling you he

can't. He's got a game  leg, for one thing, and " 

As Rudy reached that point, a puff of light flashed from the bottom  of the stairway to the foyer. It didn't

alarm the murderer. Keeping the  gun point squarely against Janet's head, Rudy turned toward the

disappearing glow and grated a welcoming laugh. 

Against the new white plaster of the grillroom wall, Rudy saw The  Shadow. Sight of the cloaked figure

merely provoked the killer to  further mirth. 

"Hello, Cranston!" Rudy greeted. "Trying to kid me with that  getup? We figured you'd pull the Shadow

stuff tonight. That's why I  had a guy named Koko plant a flash bulb, with a thread to set it off,  right there at

the bottom of the steps." 

The Shadow's figure was clearer. Rudy could see the burn of steady  eyes. There was a gun beneath them, its

muzzle pointed straight for  Rudy; but the killer's former fear of The Shadow was gone. Watching  Janet as he

spoke, Rudy gave new invitation. 

"Keep coming, Shadow," said the crook. "The closer you get, the  better you'll see. Only, don't get too close,

because when you do, I'm  liable to touch this hair trigger. You wouldn't want to see this doll  get croaked,

would you, Shadow?" 

The Shadow was approaching with a slow, impressive glide. A  whispered taunt issued from his hidden lips;

the mockery filled the  room, bringing echoes from every wall. 

Its shudder seemed to grip Rudy and bring a tremble to the bold  crook's shoulders. But Rudy's gun hand

stayed right where it was, its  weapon still clamped to Janet's head. 

Summoning his full bravado, Rudy repeated his snarl in all its  ugliness. He spoke as though he held full

command, totally disdainful  of the gun that covered him. 

"Close enough, Shadow!" reminded Rudy. "I mean it when I say I'll  shoot!" 

The Shadow halted. Rudy's lips widened their grin of triumph. He  had accomplished something that no crook

had ever hoped to do, Rudy  had, in making The Shadow obey him. Crime's master foe was baffled.  Rudy had

The Shadow wondering. 

Yes, The Shadow was wondering. 

He was wondering why Rudy, formerly quick to dodge from danger, was  so confident on this occasion. But

that problem didn't keep The Shadow  wondering long. Quickly he grasped the answer. 

For once The Shadow's silence was more to be dreaded than his  laugh, though Rudy did not guess it. Through

silence The Shadow was  building to the stroke that might produce crime's doom. 

Silent strategy could bring a later laugh. 

The Shadow's laugh of triumph! 


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CHAPTER XX. THE MASTER HAND

IT was a strange, unprecedented scene. 

Commissioner Weston, slumped drunkenly across the table, a dupe  prepared to receive murder's blame. Janet

Renstrom, kneeling on the  floor, awaiting death from a gun muzzle pressed against her forehead.  The

Shadow, standing rigid, silent, unwilling to press the trigger of  his gun. 

The center of that scene was Rudy Waygart, the missing murderer who  had so suddenly reappeared, to take

control over both The Shadow and  the law. 

It was too much glory for any lone crook; particularly one like  Rudy Waygart. 

Plainly, Rudy was counting upon more than his own prowess to put up  such a front. Rudy stood for Adico

and all the strength of the  insidious murder ring. Rudy was the last of the aces; The Shadow had  disposed of

the other three: Ladwin, Engriff, Daux, with Regar as an  ace in the hole, to boot. 

There would have to be a trump card in Adico's pack, all ready to  be played; otherwise, Rudy wouldn't be

going through with his present  action. The Shadow knew of such a trump, had hoped that it would be  used

tonight. This was his chance to find the brain of Adico! 

Calmly waiting, The Shadow concentrated upon Rudy. There was a flaw  in the killer's situation. Suppose

Rudy should fire the gun that he  held pressed to Janet's head. The shot would be the last he ever gave.  The

Shadow would drop him before the gun could end its recoil. 

Rudy was counting upon important aid. 

It couldn't come from the service door beyond where the killer  stood. Mobbies might be lurking there; in fact,

they probably were, for  Rudy always carried a gun crew along. 

But they would not help  The Shadow could riddle them the moment  they appeared. And Rudy not only

knew it; he had seen such things done  in the past. 

Aid could arrive from one spot alone  from the stairway behind The  Shadow, the steps that led down from

the foyer to the grillroom! 

The Shadow had strolled through the foyer as Cranston, carrying  cloak and hat across his arm, like ordinary

garments. He hadn't put on  the black garb until he reached the darkened stairs, for the simple  reason that there

were too many persons in the foyer. People like club  members and attendants. 

The Shadow had recognized them when he passed. They weren't crooks;  they couldn't be. Still, someone was

coming to those same stairs, to  cut off The Shadow's retreat; otherwise, Rudy wouldn't have a chance. 

Another murderer, appointed to kill The Shadow? 

No! 

It couldn't be. The Shadow saw the entire setup. If Commissioner  Weston was to be framed for the double

murder of Janet and Cranston,  both shots would have to come from the same gun  the revolver that  Rudy

had borrowed from the commissioner's pocket! 


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Two shots from that gun. 

The first would be fired at The Shadow, not Janet. Rudy couldn't  risk it otherwise. The ruse was clear, though

only The Shadow could  have so quickly divined its cunning phases. 

Rudy still was the actual menace. 

Whoever else came into the picture would do it only to distract The  Shadow, so that Rudy would be clear for

action. By shooting The Shadow  first, Rudy could easily settle Janet afterward. Provided that Rudy's  bullet

found The Shadow! 

A LAUGH almost escaped The Shadow's lips. He had the links he  wanted. Rudy wouldn't move until the aid

arrived. Crafty aid, geared to  trick even The Shadow; for it would be through pretended stealth, which  he

would actually be supposed to detect. 

Such was crime's setup. Did it have a loophole? 

Yes. One that crooks had overlooked: Janet's temporary safety! The  girl wasn't scheduled for instant death, as

Rudy was trying to make it  appear. Janet was The Shadow's trump card; a small one, but strong  enough to

take an ace! 

The Shadow's eyes steadied on the girl's, for Janet's gaze was  turned in his direction. The girl caught

understanding from those  glowing orbs. She saw The Shadow's free hand move toward his other  wrist, clamp

tightly there. 

Despite the pressure of Rudy's revolver, the girl managed to give a  perceptible nod. By clutching his own gun

hand, The Shadow signified  that she was to grab at Rudy's, the moment that action began. Rudy  didn't catch

the signal. His eyes no longer met The Shadow's. 

The flash to Janet was timely. Already, The Shadow could hear the  token he expected: a creeping sound from

the stairway; cautious,  guarded at first, then with a slight stumble  the planned giveaway  that The Shadow

could not ignore. 

With a fierce laugh The Shadow wheeled in a wide, eccentric circle.  There was an instant scramble as the

man on the stairs sprang upward,  away from the path of aim. He had been sneaking down the steps  sidewise,

ready for that quick bound toward the top. 

As The Shadow spun about, Rudy whipped his gun from Janet's  forehead and aimed for the blackcloaked

fighter. With the crook's  shift, another hand was on its way: Janet's. 

Grabbing Rudy's wrist, Janet yanked it just as the murderer tugged  the trigger. Rudy's misdirected shot went

two feet wide of its cloaked  target. 

One bullet wasted. Rudy's harsh snarl meant that it didn't matter.  Cuffing Janet's chin with his free hand,

Rudy flattened the girl on the  floor. The thwack that Janet's head took made her see a flash of light  as vivid as

Rudy's gun burst. 

There was such a blast; but it didn't come from Rudy's revolver,  though the crook was jabbing the weapon

toward The Shadow. With all his  confidence, the murderer had lost his chance. 


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The Shadow hadn't halted his whirl to go after the marauder on the  stairway. Completing his rapid spin, the

cloaked avenger was aiming at  Rudy again, firing as he came! The whirl had taken less than a full  second;

and The Shadow, concentrating solely upon Rudy, had picked his  target with precision. 

Tongued flame was like a vivid arrow pointed close to Rudy's heart.  The slug from a .45 jarred the ace

murderer, sent him reeling against  the table where Weston had lifted a distorted face to stare with  grotesquely

livid eyes. 

As Rudy bounced from table to floor, The Shadow's laugh pealed  anew. That laugh, telling that The Shadow

had succeeded, meant that  Rudy had failed. 

MASS attack was due. Driving for the service door at the rear of  the grillroom, The Shadow thrust Janet

toward a safe corner, then  shifted in the other direction to shove Weston from his chair. 

As the commissioner flattened beneath the table, the rear door  lashed open. Thugs jammed through, headed

by Koko, the crook who had  served the mushrooms. 

The Shadow served them bullets hot from a pair of gun muzzles. The  charging tribe disintegrated into wild,

excited grapplers who grabbed  at The Shadow's guns, tried to sledge him with their own. 

From her corner, Janet saw The Shadow reel backward. Frantically,  the girl made a scramble for Rudy's lost

revolver, hoping to aid her  rescuer. 

She didn't guess The Shadow's latest ruse. 

He was letting disorganized thugs carry him to the front of the  grillroom; in fact, he was dragging some of the

wounded along to make a  show. He wanted to bait the man who had acted as decoy on the stairway. 

Near the steps, The Shadow shook thugs aside, purposely stumbling  over one falling figure, he staggered to

the steps, acting as though he  couldn't quite point his gun upward. 

The Shadow's limp helped. He had strained his injured leg during  the rapid fray; he had merely to put his

weight on it to make his  stumble real. He was on one knee, but still dangerous, there at the  bottom of the

gloomy steps, when a figure came lunging down upon him. 

Stiffening, The Shadow met a bulky, desperate antagonist who came  with a powerful surge. A slashing gun

skimmed the brim of the slouch  hat; failing in the stroke, the final killer went berserk and tried to  plant the

muzzle against The Shadow's head. 

Warding off that move, The Shadow jabbed his own gun toward the  other man's heart; a flinging hand dashed

it aside. 

Then they were locked, circling about the grillroom until they came  up against Weston's table. The Shadow's

hat was tilted back, the face  of Cranston showed beneath the lifted brim. His opponent recognized it  and

throated a savage challenge. 

The Shadow recognized the broad face that was eye to eye with his.  He answered the challenge with a

mocking laugh, an invitation to  battle, wherein death to one would mark the victory of the other. 

This was the meeting that The Shadow had long sought, an open  encounter with the master hand who

managed the affairs of Adico. He  wasn't surprised at the face he saw, for The Shadow had long ago  guessed


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who the real brain was. 

It was Janet who voiced an amazed outcry as she recognized that  glaring face so close to Cranston's. 

The master hand of Adico was Thomas Merwood! 

CHAPTER XXI. CRIME'S FULL PROOF

LIMPING, wearied from his furious fray, The Shadow was at a  physical disadvantage against a burly

opponent like Merwood. The head  of Adico had strength, along with a superhuman fury, inspired by his  last

chance to save the deathinsurance racket. 

He was fighting for half a million dollars, Merwood was, the sum  represented by Cranston's scalp. Proof that

The Shadow was not only  human, but the very man that Adico wanted to kill, was all Merwood  needed to

show himself a fighter far more extraordinary than any of the  dead murderers who had served him. 

Always a cool calculator, Merwood was keeping his wits as he tried  to wear The Shadow down. Like

Cranston, Merwood had come into the  Cobalt Club openly, as was his right. 

He had intended to be a chance witness to a double murder, which he  could blame on Commissioner Weston.

Even now, Merwood might turn the  outcome to his own design. 

If he could kill The Shadow, then Janet, it would be easy to plant  the death gun on Rudy and claim that all

killing had been the result of  a mob fight. 

Making Weston the goat had been a good idea, but it wasn't  essential. As long as the commissioner wasn't in

condition to give  accurate testimony of what had happened, Merwood's story would stand. 

He had to work swiftly, did Merwood, for people would soon be  pouring into the grillroom. Sounds of battle

had carried up to the  foyer, and would certainly bring police. Probably The Shadow was  banking on it. With

that thought, Merwood doubled his already forceful  strength. 

Head tilted backward, The Shadow could feel the steady pressure of  Merwood's gun hand. The Shadow, too,

was getting his gun muzzle slowly  into position toward Merwood's body; but the slowmotion duel was

uncertain. Either hand might win, if this kept on, and The Shadow  didn't intend it to be Merwood's. 

Craftily, the Adico master was keeping The Shadow turned toward  Janet, so the girl couldn't put in a shot

from Rudy's revolver. But the  girl still had a value in this fray; one that The Shadow had understood  from the

start. It was the thing upon which the cloaked fighter banked  in this moment of emergency. 

Janet heard the words that hissed from Cranston's lips: 

"To the foyer! Up the stairs! Quick  get started! Get clear!" 

The girl hesitated. She didn't want to abandon her rescuer. Then  she caught the commanding glint of the eyes

that peered from Cranston's  strained face as he actually wrenched his head so he could see her  across a

cloaked shoulder. 

Though she didn't guess the purpose, Janet followed orders.  Turning, she dashed full speed for the stairs. She

heard Merwood raise  a bellow, realized its meaning as she ran. 


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Merwood couldn't let Janet get away! 

Slated for sure death, the girl had been introduced to the entire  situation. Even if Merwood triumphed against

The Shadow, Janet's  testimony would mark the financier as the real head of the murder ring. 

She knew about the Panaeolus mushrooms; a chemical analysis of the  innocentlooking dish would prove

Janet's story and discredit  Merwood's. 

As Janet neared the stairs, Merwood did what The Shadow had been  working for all along. The master crook

let fury overplay his wisdom.  Twisting his gun away from The Shadow, Merwood aimed for Janet and  fired. 

Merwood was reeling as he pulled the trigger, for The Shadow, too,  had reserve strength and was using it.

The bullet pinged the wall, a  yard wide of Janet; the girl reached the stairs. 

Savagely, Merwood tried to get his gun back at The Shadow. Another  muzzle was already pressing home.

The Shadow's .45 spoke; it drove a  bullet into Merwood's side, just as the big man's gun spouted a futile  blast

across a cloaked shoulder. 

This time, Merwood reeled alone. 

Gun fist lowered, his other hand clamped to the wound above his  hip, Merwood was trying to find The

Shadow. He heard a mirthless laugh,  but couldn't see its author. The tone might have come from anywhere,

the way it reverberated from the grillroom's inclosing walls. 

BY the time that Merwood turned toward the rear of the room, The  Shadow was through the service door. His

gun muzzle, poked through a  crack, was covering Merwood's staggery course. 

The crook didn't see the gun's mouth. But he heard the clatter of  footsteps from the stairs. They were too loud

to mark Janet's return;  besides, the girl would not be coming back. 

Nevertheless, Merwood turned. Into the scene of carnage came  Inspector Joe Cardona, a pair of bluecoats

close behind him. 

Merwood saw only Joe, greeted him with a spasmodic snarl. Sight of  Merwood, one hand gripping a gun, the

other clutching a bloodgushing  wound, had made Cardona pause. 

Too late did Cardona recognize that Merwood was a killer, not a  victim of crime. Too late, that was, for

Cardona to beat the coming  shot. It was another gun, already trained, that came to Cardona's aid.  Flame spat

from the crack of the service door as The Shadow fired. 

Merwood jolted forward, upward, clipped in the spine. Convulsively,  his fingers tightened on his gun; the

trigger snapped. A bullet carved  the plaster above Cardona's head, sent a shower of debris downward. 

From that splatter of plaster came a threegun volley as Cardona  and the officers fairly riddled the killer

whose stagger had all the  semblance of a murderous lunge. 

A laugh whispered through the grillroom, as Joe and his companions  stooped above the dead form of Thomas

Merwood. 

Solemn, mirthless, that departing knell marked more than the death  of a master murderer. It told the end of

Adico. 


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Leaving by the basement exit, The Shadow blinked his flashlight.  Signals answered his varicolored flashes;

he was met by agents who had  arrived to cut off the flight of Adico's reserves, a sortie that had  never come. 

But Harry, Hawkeye and the others had met Janet as she scurried  dazedly along the street. They had put her

in Moe's cab; it was waiting  nearby. 

Soon, The Shadow was riding to a new destination, with Janet as his  companion. The girl said that she had

simply kept going after she  dashed out from the Cobalt Club. She had remembered The Shadow's  instructions

to get clear. 

Calm again, Janet heard The Shadow's whispered account of Merwood's  death, spoke her willingness to aid

in the followup that was required.  They reached a big apartment house; there, The Shadow left the taxi. 

Soon, signal flashes gleamed from high above. Red, then green;  finally, there was a yellow glimmer as the

light disappeared. Janet  entered the apartment house, went up in the elevator and rang boldly at  a door. 

It opened. On the threshold was a dapper servant whose face  switched to a sudden scowl when he recognized

Janet. His sharp cry  carried a tone that the girl in her turn recognized. This man, like the  rest of Merwood's

servants, had been one of the smug crew on the cabin  cruiser! 

Janet realized now that Merwood was able to send her the fake  message in The Shadow's code, telling her to

board the cabin cruiser,  because he had probably found the code symbols in the wastebasket when  he had

gone to make a phone call. Janet had dropped the code there when  Merwood had last come to her home. 

BEFORE the dapper servant could yank a gun, men sprang into the  corridor from doorways where they had

waited. They were The Shadow's  agents; they had come here, too. 

Sight of drawn guns sent Merwood's servant scurrying into the  apartment shouting the alarm. Crooked

flunkies rallied, only to be  greeted from a weird laugh that came from an opened window. 

They turned to see the silhouetted form of The Shadow. Guns opened  on them as they frantically tried to aim.

As they fled, The Shadow  followed them, drove them into a reception committee of his agents, who

gunslugged them senseless. 

Merwood's chauffeur was among the slumped group; from the hallway,  Janet recognized him as the taxi

driver who had brought her from the  dock to the Cobalt Club, where he had guided her in through the

basement entrance. 

The Shadow's agents whisked Janet out to Moe's cab. They were away  before police arrived. But up in

Merwood's apartment, where groans of  groggy crooks alone disturbed the silence, The Shadow remained

busy  making a search. 

He found the evidence he wanted: papers gathered by Parron, among  them deathinsurance policies marked

paid. Merwood's own records were  there in full, and when The Shadow blasted open a strong box with a

gunshot, he discovered a huge stack of cash funds. 

The Shadow did not count the cash in full. Thumbing a stack of  bills of thousanddollar denomination, he

took five hundred of them and  left the rest. It was Adico's final payment, the half million owed to  Henry

Arnaud; a collection on the expired death insurance placed on  Lamont Cranston. 


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Tearing the last page from a big ledger, The Shadow wrapped the  money in it. The page carried the only

records of the transaction which  The Shadow had conducted under two names. 

Moving to the window, The Shadow swung across the sill. He was  gone, into outer darkness, when the police

entered Merwood's apartment. 

At the hospital where Commissioner Weston had undergone a session  with a stomach pump, physicians

decided that the patient could receive  visitors. 

Propped in bed, Weston smiled a weak greeting to Lamont Cranston,  who was accompanied by Tyrus Vayne.

He asked them to listen while  Inspector Cardona read a full report on the Adico racket. 

It developed that Merwood's books were complete except for a single  page, which probably accounted for a

shortage in the recorded funds. In  all, however, the police had gathered more than two million dollars;  some

in cash, the rest in giltedged bonds. 

"Fancy it, Cranston!" exclaimed Weston. "The books show more than  two hundred and fifty names, all

insured for at least a hundred  thousand dollars each. At premiums averaging ten percent and more,

Merwood's racket had brought in more than three million dollars. 

"Only one name was written off as a loss." Turning to Vayne, the  commissioner added: "That was yours. Of

course, there were heavy  expenses. Killers like Waygart, Engriff, and Daux received sizable  salaries, and

were authorized to hire thugs. 

"Ladwin was a murderer, too; something we hadn't guessed. It cost  them money to rig up his hideout as some

sort of trap, and they spent a  lot on the fake fire truck that Engriff drove. Daux's jewels were a  loss, too, for

we appropriated them. 

"Agents like Parron and Regar operated on commissions, and  surprisingly small ones. Once in the racket,

they couldn't object. When  Parron tried to get out, Merwood made an example of him." 

The books showed that the vast majority of the death insurance  policies were unexpired, which amounted to

the saving of nearly two  hundred lives throughout the nation. With murderers obliterated, the  law could

concentrate upon a roundup of hiding salesmen and scared  clients who had insured friends for death. 

"We owe a lot to The Shadow," conceded Weston. "He cracked the  racket wide open and ruined it. We have

cause to be elated." 

CRANSTON didn't look elated. The commissioner asked him why. 

"I'm thinking about Merwood," said The Shadow in Cranston's  customary tone. "We should have seen

through him almost from the start.  You took his word for it, that he hadn't seen the letter that came to

Renstrom. 

"He must have seen it and it probably told a lot. Because only  Merwood could have guessed that Parron sent

that letter. Learning about  the box, Merwood had Rudy substitute the one that contained the bomb." 

Nodding, Weston suggested that Merwood might have sent the Adico  note to Janet. He saw Cranston smile,

but didn't guess that the note  had been important in another way. 


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"You called Merwood," reminded The Shadow, "the night we learned  about Engriff. Only Merwood could

have sent Lucky after us with the  fire truck. It was Merwood, too, who told Daux to call Vayne " 

"To lay another trap!" exclaimed Weston. "Hoping to get me,  Cranston, along with you and Cardona!" 

Again The Shadow smiled. He preferred that the commissioner should  keep his theory that Merwood liked

revenge as well as profit. It fitted  with recent events at the Cobalt Club, where Merwood had again shown

such traits. 

The fact that Cranston had been the only target, with Janet as bait  to trap him, did not occur to Weston. He

didn't know that Cranston had  been to the club at all, during the evening. The commissioner did not  guess,

nor did Cardona, that the missing page of Merwood's ledger  listed Cranston's name, insured for death. 

At the doorway, Cranston shook hands with Vayne. 

"Sorry, Vayne," he said, "but I can't go through with that  importing proposition. I have a friend, though"  his

tone made Vayne  brighten  "who might supply cash to help your present company. You'll  hear from him;

his name is Henry Arnaud, and he tells me that he has a  few hundred thousand to invest." 

All visitors had left when Commissioner Weston found a folded sheet  of paper on the table beside his bed.

Chafingly, he thought that  Cardona had mislaid some of the Adico records; but Weston learned  otherwise

when he unfolded the sheet. 

Its sensitized surface was blank, except for a darkshaded  silhouette that showed a hawkish silhouette.

Vaguely, from blurred  recollections of his hazy evening at the club, Weston recalled that  same profile in life. 

The Shadow! 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. DEATH'S PREMIUM, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. KEYS TO CRIME, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. MEN OF MURDER, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. THE LAW'S TURN, page = 12

   7. CHAPTER IV. TEN O'CLOCK, page = 15

   8. CHAPTER V. CLUES TO CRIME, page = 18

   9. CHAPTER VI. THE MAN FROM THE DARK, page = 22

   10. CHAPTER VII. WITHIN THE CORDON, page = 26

   11. CHAPTER VIII. THE FINGER POINTS, page = 30

   12. CHAPTER IX. DEATH FINDS A WAY, page = 34

   13. CHAPTER X. CRIME'S MOTIVE, page = 37

   14. CHAPTER XI. CROOKS OBLIGE, page = 42

   15. CHAPTER XII. CRIME'S NEW CLIENT, page = 44

   16. CHAPTER XIII. THE HUNTED MAN, page = 49

   17. CHAPTER XIV. CRIME OVERPLAYED, page = 54

   18. CHAPTER XV. CRIME TRIES AGAIN, page = 58

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE SIXTH DAY, page = 62

   20. CHAPTER XVII. DEATH REVERSED, page = 66

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. CRIME'S DOUBLE TRAIL, page = 69

   22. CHAPTER XIX. CRIME FROM WITHIN, page = 73

   23. CHAPTER XX. THE MASTER HAND, page = 78

   24. CHAPTER XXI. CRIME'S FULL PROOF, page = 81