Title:   THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

Subject:  

Author:   Maxwell Grant

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



Contents:

Page No 1

Page No 2

Page No 3

Page No 4

Page No 5

Page No 6

Page No 7

Page No 8

Page No 9

Page No 10

Page No 11

Page No 12

Page No 13

Page No 14

Page No 15

Page No 16

Page No 17

Page No 18

Page No 19

Page No 20

Page No 21

Page No 22

Page No 23

Page No 24

Page No 25

Page No 26

Page No 27

Page No 28

Page No 29

Page No 30

Page No 31

Page No 32

Page No 33

Page No 34

Page No 35

Page No 36

Page No 37

Page No 38

Page No 39

Page No 40

Page No 41

Page No 42

Page No 43

Page No 44

Page No 45

Page No 46

Page No 47

Page No 48

Page No 49

Page No 50

Page No 51

Page No 52

Page No 53

Page No 54

Page No 55

Page No 56

Page No 57

Page No 58

Page No 59

Page No 60

Page No 61

Page No 62

Page No 63

Page No 64

Page No 65

Page No 66

Page No 67

Page No 68

Page No 69

Page No 70

Page No 71

Page No 72

Page No 73

Page No 74

Page No 75

Page No 76

Page No 77

Page No 78

Page No 79

Page No 80

Page No 81

Page No 82

Page No 83

Page No 84

Page No 85

Page No 86

Page No 87

Page No 88

Page No 89

Page No 90

Page No 91

Bookmarks





Page No 1


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

Maxwell Grant



Top




Page No 2


Table of Contents

THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED .....................................................................................................................1

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

CHAPTER I. HOUSE OF DOOM..........................................................................................................1

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD......................................................................................................5

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES ..........................................................................................10

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE ...........................................................................................14

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN .........................................................................................18

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS........................................................................................22

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK ..........................................................................................27

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES .............................................................................................31

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING.......................................................................................36

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES .....................................................................................................40

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES ...................................................................................................44

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT...................................................................................................48

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE ....................................................................................53

CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST................................................................................................58

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY........................................................................................................61

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR ....................................................................................................65

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT......................................................................................70

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE ...................................................................................73

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT .................................................................................................77

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT ...................................................................................................80

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS ......................................................................................83

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS .....................................................................................86


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

i



Top




Page No 3


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. HOUSE OF DOOM 

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES 

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE 

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN 

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK 

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING 

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES 

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES 

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 

CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST 

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY 

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT 

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE 

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT 

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT 

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS 

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS  

CHAPTER I. HOUSE OF DOOM

SHEETS of rain were sweeping with blinding downpour as the small  coupe sloshed through the midnight

blackness. The glare of headlights  was drowned amid the deluge. Two men, the driver and the passenger

beside him, were straining as they watched the road ahead. 

"Ten yards is as far as I can see," remarked the driver, in a tense  tone. "But I'm keeping up to twenty miles an

hour. The sooner we're  through with this, the better. How about it, Fred?" 

"You're the driver, Jay," replied the passenger. "You pick the  speed you want. You're lucky that you can see

ten yards. I can't even  spot the road through this side of the windshield." 

"The wiper's a big help," stated Jay. "I'm watching the macadam of  the road. That's what counts when " 

"Hold it!" broke in Fred. "Look out ahead!" 

THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED 1



Top




Page No 4


Staring into further blackness, the passenger had seen what the  driver had not. A read lantern was waving in

the darkness, its holder  completely lost amid the storm. Jay looked up as he heard Fred's  warning. He jammed

on the brakes. The car skidded halfway across the  road before it came to a stop. 

Fred lowered the window as the red lantern came swinging forward.  He turned on the dome light. As rain

drizzled into the coupe, a man  thrust his head and shoulders through the window. A rough but friendly  face

showed below the dripping brim of an oilskin hat. 

"Didn't want to jolt you off the road, friend," announced the man  with the lantern, "but I had to flag you

before you got past. The  bridge is out down the road." 

"Have you reported it?" queried Jay, from the driver's wheel. 

"That's what I'm doing now," laughed the informant, gruffly. "We  were coming over from Westbury in a

truck when we saw that the bridge  was gone. Pete, he started back; but I waded through the creek to get  over

on this side. I'm heading into Sheffield, I am." 

"You should have telephoned word," declared Jay. 

"Ain't no houses along this stretch of road," retorted the man in  oilskins. "Say  who do you reckon you are

to be telling me what I  ought to have been doing?" 

"My name is Goodling," replied the man at the wheel of the coupe.  "Jay Goodling. I " 

"That's different," growled the man in oilskins, his rough tone  apologetic. "I hadn't no idea who you were. Jay

Goodling, eh? The new  county prosecutor. I kind of reckoned Jay Goodling was an older man  than you. My

name's Turner, Mr. Goodling." 

TURNER thrust a beefy, rainsoaked paw through the window. Goodling  smiled as he received the fellow's

shake. The dome light showed  Goodling's features as those of a man in his early thirties; but his  face, though

youthful, bore the firmness that befitted his legal  position. 

"This is Fred Lanford," introduced Goodling, indicating the  passenger. Lanford was younger and less

challenging than the  prosecutor. "We're on our way to Westbury. Our best plan is to leave  you here to stop

other cars while we go ahead and find some house from  which we can telephone." 

"Suits me, Mr. Goodling," acknowledged Turner. "Being a night like  this and after midnight, I don't reckon

there'll be any more cars  along. But I'll watch for them. Only thing is, where are you going to  find the house

to call from?" 

"What about that old dirt road that cuts off to the right?"  questioned Goodling. "The one that was the old

route into Westbury?" 

"Nobody uses it any longer," informed Turner. "Leastwise, nobody  except those folks that live on it. It's like

all those other dirt  roads leading off. There's a raft of them that don't go anywhere." 

"But there are houses on the old Westbury road. Some of them ought  to have telephones." 

"Like as not, Mr. Goodling. Well, I'm staying here, like you said  to." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED 2



Top




Page No 5


Turner drew away with his lantern. Goodling straightened the car  and started off through the storm while

Lanford raised the window and  turned out the dome light. 

"The old Westbury road," mused Goodling, as he drove along. "Well,  Fred, we won't have very much trouble

finding it. That old sign will  tell us when we get there. It still has its pointer marked Westbury." 

"Maybe we'll see the sign," returned Lanford, peering at the  sweeping downpour, "but it's a cinch we won't

see the road. Look over  there on the right, Fred. You can't even see the edge. We're liable to  be passing a road

right now, without knowing it." 

"Look for the sign," ordered Goodling. "It's painted white and it's  right at the turn. You'll see it." 

Lanford lowered the window while the car rolled along. Despite the  insweep of the rain, he kept peering at an

angle ahead, watching the  extreme right corner of the restricted glare that the headlights  offered. 

MINUTES passed, Goodling watched the road while Lanford kept a  lookout. Suddenly the passenger uttered.

an exclamation. Goodling  applied the brakes. Lanford pointed. 

"There's the sign, Jay," he indicated. "You can even read it.  Westbury. But you'll have to fish for the road. I

can't make it out,  even though I know it's here." 

Goodling backed the car a dozen feet; then turned the wheel to the  right. As he started forward, the

headlights, swinging to the right,  revealed the beginning of a curved dirt road. As the coupe rolled from  the

macadam, the winding course of the old highway showed its rocks and  ruts. 

In second gear, traveling at fifteen miles an hour, Goodling fumed  as he tried to control the coupe. The road

was upgrade; down it poured  a sweeping torrent. At every dozen yards, the car went into a temporary  skid. 

"Like driving through a creek," asserted Goodling, grimly. "Keep  that window open, Fred. Look for a house

the first one you see." 

"That's a tough assignment, Jay," returned Lanford. "These farmers  turn in early. If their lights are out, how

are we going to see their  houses?" 

"Watch for entrances. Maybe you'll see a driveway." 

"Not much chance. I couldn't even see this road when we came to  it." 

"Well, there's always a possibility. If you keep watching, you'll  " 

Goodling ended abruptly. The coupe had gone into a skid. This was a  bad one; water sloshed high as the car

jabbed toward the left of the  road. Front wheels hit an embankment; the car careened. Goodling held  tight to

the wheel, releasing the brakes momentarily while Lanford  gripped the door. 

Instead of toppling, the coupe slipped sidewise. The right side  jounced; then the wheels struck a level space.

Goodling applied the  brakes as the car rolled from the road, headed directly to the left of  the highway. The

coupe came to a slithering stop. 

THE two men blinked as they stared straight ahead. They had gained  the luckiest of breaks. Directly in front

of the headlights was the  surface of a muddy driveway. Beyond it, at the edge of glow, the  outline of porch

steps. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED 3



Top




Page No 6


"How was that for hitting it?" chuckled Goodling. "Right into the  front yard. We wanted a house and we

found one. Say  that was a lucky  skid." 

"Turn out the lights," suggested Lanford. "Maybe we'll be able to  see if anyone is home." 

Goodling complied. His pressure of the light switch brought thick  blackness up ahead. But as the men stared

through the rainswished  windshield, they saw the sign that they wanted. 

A tiny crack of light gave dim indication of a window. It came from  the side of a lowered blind. It was further

than the distance to the  steps. This glimmer was from a front window that opened on the porch.  It was proof

that the house was occupied. 

"Come on," suggested Goodling. "I'll leave the lights off. We won't  need them. Get out on your side, Fred,

and I'll meet you at the front  of the car." 

The two men disembarked. Splashing through mud, they groped their  way to the front of the coupe. From

there they stumbled forward until  they struck the house steps. The sweeping beat of the rain ended as  they

gained the shelter beneath a porch roof. 

Goodling struck a match. The flame showed a front door. The  youthful prosecutor approached and hammered

against the barrier. While  he waited for an answer, he spoke to his companion. 

"Do you know, Fred," remarked Goodling, "I would wager that neither  of us would recognize this place if we

saw it in daylight. Steps  a  porch  a window  that's all. We don't know if the house is a big one  or a small

one." 

"Or whether it's stone or wood," laughed Lanford. "We do know that  it's somewhere on the old road to

Westbury. We saw the sign. But  outside of that " 

He broke off. A sound was coming from beyond the door. Listening,  the young men heard the grate of rusty

bolts. Above the sweep and beat  of the rain the sound was strangely ominous. 

Then the door swung inward. A burst of light glared from the hall  within. It showed the strained faces of the

two arrivals. It also  revealed the figure of the person who had answered their knock. 

A HUGE, stoopshouldered fellow was standing just within the  doorway, his big fists clenched. Glowering

eyes peered from a scarred  face. Bloated lips showed a fierce scowl of challenge. The man spoke  harshly: 

"Come in." 

Almost mechanically, the two obeyed. Hardly were they across the  threshold before the huge man thrust the

door shut and pressed the  bolts. Swinging about, he faced the two who were watching them. He  uttered a

gruff laugh. 

"Go in there"  the man pointed to the door of a dimly lighted room   "while I go and tell that you are here.

Stay in that room." 

The eyes retained their glower. The big fists tightened. Fred  Lanford turned about instinctively and entered

the door that the huge  fellow had indicated. Jay Goodling, almost ready to meet the man's  challenge, decided

better. He turned about and followed Lanford. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED 4



Top




Page No 7


The room was a parlor, sparse of furnishing; but its few chairs  were expensive ones. Goodling sat down;

Lanford followed suit. Both  watched the door through which they had come. The big man was still  standing

there; his attitude that of a huge hound ready to make an  attack. 

Neither Goodling nor Lanford made a move. Satisfied at last, the  big man stepped away. His figure passed

from view, while the visitors  still stared, like statues in their chairs. 

The big man's heavy footsteps faded in the uncarpeted hall. The  listeners heard a sound that resembled the

creaking of a stairway. Then  came silence, tempered only by the unceasing patter of the heavy rain  upon the

outside porch. 

The glimmer of two floor lamps showed the room in somber outline. A  deep depression had fallen upon those

two men who had stepped into this  outlandish setting. 

The parlor seemed unreal, like a fanciful room plucked from a  terrifying dream. The hush that filled it was a

portion of the silence  that seemed to pervade the whole building. 

Neither Goodling nor Lanford spoke during those first minutes of  ghastly silence. Yet the thoughts that they

held were identical, forced  by the pall of these strange surroundings. 

Stupefied by the atmosphere that gripped them, these chance  arrivals felt themselves within a house of doom. 

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD

"WHAT do you make of it, Jay?" 

Fred Lanford whispered the question huskily. Tense and nervous, he  had managed to find his voice. He was

looking at Jay Goodling as he  spoke. 

Goodling held up his hand for silence. The youthful prosecutor had  become stolid. He was listening for

sounds that might indicate the  return of the huge servant who had introduced them to this room. 

Hearing nothing, Goodling arose from his chair. He stared toward  the open door that led to the hallway. Then

he looked about the room  and spied two heavy curtains that indicated a wide doorway at the rear. 

Directly opposite the front window, these draperies showed that  there was another apartment adjoining the

parlor. Softly, Goodling trod  in that direction. He drew back the curtains to disclose a pair of  sliding doors.

These barriers were shut. 

"I wonder what's in back of these," he remarked quietly. "Suppose I  take a look, Fred, while we're waiting." 

"It might mean trouble, Jay," rejoined Lanford. "We've barged into  something by accident. The best thing we

can do is to sit tight." 

"And wait for trouble? I don't see it that way, Fred. We did not  come here as intruders. We made one mistake

by not asserting ourselves  before we entered." 

"If you start prying, Jay, you'll be making a new mistake." 

"You forget my status, Fred. This house is certainly within the  limits of Sheffield County. My position as


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 5



Top




Page No 8


prosecutor entitles me to " 

He broke off, swinging from the sliding doors. The curtains dropped  as Goodling released them. The

prosecutor had heard a sound from the  hallway. Lanford joined him in staring toward the door through which

they had entered this parlor. 

STANDING in the doorway was a darkhaired girl of twenty. The  beauty of her face was apparent despite

her paleness. She was attired  in a black traveling dress; like her hair, the darkness of this costume  accentuated

her pallor. 

Goodling bowed and smiled. Lanford came to his feet. He was smiling  also; but the girl's face remained

troubled. The girl darted a quick  look back into the hall; then stepped into the parlor. 

"You must go!" she said, tensely. "It is not safe here. Go. At  once. Before Croy returns." 

"Croy?" quizzed Goodling. "You mean the big fellow who opened the  door for us?" 

The brunette nodded. 

"I think that we'll stay," decided Goodling. "We came here as  strangers; but we were told that our arrival

would be announced. I  think that we are entitled to something of an explanation." 

The girl shook her head. 

"You don't agree with me?" questioned Goodling. "Well, perhaps if I  explain who we are and how we

happened to come here, you will  understand the circumstances. May I do so, Miss " 

Goodling paused quizzically, hoping that the girl would announce  her name, just as she had stated the name

of the servant. Instead, the  brunette continued to shake her head. 

"I can not tell you who I am," she declared emphatically. "I can  only say that you would be wise to leave. If

you go, I can explain your  departure. You must leave at once." 

This time it was Goodling who shook his head. The girl sighed,  hopelessly, and looked appealingly toward

Lanford. For a moment, Fred  was on the point of arguing with Goodling; but he saw the determined  look on

the prosecutor's face and knew that persuasion would be  useless. 

"Very well," said the girl, wearily. "I have advised you to go.  Your own stubbornness will be to blame if your

stay here becomes  unpleasant." 

She turned about and started toward the door. Goodling moved  forward, about to speak. He saw the girl stop

short; he did the same. A  man had stepped into view from the hallway. 

THIS chap was the antithesis of Croy. He was of no more than medium  height; he was light in build, almost

frail. His face was a sensitive  one, but exceedingly pale. His left arm was in a sling. Freshly wrapped

bandages ran from his wrist to his elbow. 

Yet there was sternness in the pale man's gaze as he looked to the  girl. His eyes, brilliant in their pallid

setting, were half accusing,  half inquiring. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 6



Top




Page No 9


"Why did you come in here?" the man asked calmly. "You knew that  these visitors were to be announced.

You should not have talked to  them." 

"I saw Croy admit them," returned the girl. "I came to warn them,  Daggart. I told them it would be best for

them to leave." 

The pale man winced at mention of his name. Then his stern  expression returned. 

"I shall talk with them," he announced. "It would be best for you  to return upstairs." 

"Very well," challenged the girl. "I shall talk with Mr. Kermal,  since you have come from him, Daggart." 

Croy  Daggart  Kermal  the three names were buzzing through the  minds of both Goodling and Lanford

as the girl departed into the hall.  Goodling no longer felt tense. He drew a cigarette from his pocket and

lighted it as he faced Daggart. 

The pale man shifted his arm in his sling; then spoke quietly to  Goodling and Lanford. Daggart's tone was

reserved, yet friendly. 

"You are strangers here," he told the two men. "Your unexpected  arrival, at so late an hour, was a bit

disconcerting to our servant.  That is why he ushered you in here so abruptly. 

"I am the secretary of the gentleman who is the master of this  house. I have come to inform you that he will

be here shortly. Kindly  be seated and forget the odd incidents which followed your arrival. The  master of the

house will interview you presently." 

Goodling nodded as he sat down. Lanford took a chair; Daggart bowed  and walked out into the hallway.

They heard the secretary's footsteps  fade toward the distant stairway. 

"Fred!" Goodling's whisper was tense. "That fellow didn't intend to  come in here. He was sent down to look

us over." 

"Why did he enter then?" queried Lanford, in a low tone. 

"Because the girl was talking to us," explained Goodling. "Daggart  has gone up to report. That big fellow,

Croy, is still upstairs. We'll  hear this man Kermal when he comes down. We've a few minutes yet." 

"For what?" 

"To take a look around. Come." 

RISING, Goodling made for the curtains at the rear of the room.  Spreading them, he tried the sliding doors.

There was a catch on the  other side of the barriers; but the doors were old and shaky. Goodling  juggled them;

the curtains muffled the sound. 

"Go easy, Jay," warned Lanford. "Somebody's liable to hear you " 

A click ended Lanford's statement. The catch had juggled loose.  Goodling slid one door open, slowly and

carefully. The two men peered  into a dimly lighted living room. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 7



Top




Page No 10


The new apartment afforded a beautiful setting. Contrasted with the  stuffy front parlor, it was luxurious.

Tapestries adorned the walls.  Antique Oriental rugs were spread about the floor. The furniture,  though of

light construction, was exquisite in its workmanship. 

Goodling noted chairs and a large couch, the back of which was  toward the parlor. He saw a writing desk in

the corner. By the farther  wall, near a door beyond, was a Russian wolfhound, reposing on a large  mat. 

The dog, apparently, had been trained to accept strangers, for it  merely raised its head to survey the intruders;

then placed its nose  between its paws. Goodling shrugged his shoulders as he stepped a few  paces into the

room. He was about to turn and go back into the parlor  when Lanford uttered a hoarse whisper: 

"Look!" 

Goodling stared as Lanford pointed. From their new angle, they  could see just past the end of the couch.

There, on the floor, they  spied a man's feet. The tips of the shoes were pointed upward. 

Goodling sprang forward, Lanford close behind him. Reaching the end  of the couch, they stared in horror.

The feet were those of a dead  body. A man almost as huge as the servant, Croy, was lying on his back,  his

unseeing eyes staring upward. 

"Who  who is he?" gasped Lanford. "Another  another servant? Or   or someone who came here  like

ourselves " 

Goodling held up a hand, warning for silence. He approached and  kneeled beside the dead body. Lanford

joined him. They surveyed a face  that had once been handsome, despite the overlargeness of its  features.

Death, however, had given a ghastly ugliness to the  countenance. 

The man had black hair, tanned skin, large nose and square jaw. He  had eyes that seemed dark, despite the

conspicuous whiteness that their  bulge produced, and heavy black eyebrows. These were points that

Goodling checked mentally. 

The prosecutor raised the dead man's right arm. It swung stiffly;  then thumped as if on a spring, when

Goodling released it. Goodling  noticed that the blueserge coat was buttoned. He opened it; then  grunted as

he saw the man's vest. A gaping, ugly wound showed upon the  dead man's breast. 

"Shot through the heart," whispered Goodling. "Look at those  singes, Fred. Close range  probably a revolver

of large caliber " 

"Shh!" gasped Lanford, faintly. "Someone is coming  down the  staircase " 

Goodling threw the coat front over the wound. He popped up from  beside the corpse. Lanford was pale,

shaking, unable to respond.  Goodling caught his arm and dragged him toward the parlor. 

Footsteps were already in the hall as the two reached the front  room. There was no time to close the sliding

doors. Goodling thrust  Lanford into a chair; then pulled a curtain over the adjoining door. He  was lighting a

cigarette when the footsteps reached the hallway door. 

THE man who entered was a newcomer. Though almost six feet tall, he  looked shorter because of his

thickset build. He was well dressed, but  his hair was shaggy and unkempt. His face was sallow; his tousled

hair  an irongray. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 8



Top




Page No 11


"Mr. Kermal?" inquired Goodling, casually. 

"Yes." The bulky man's voice was a harsh rasp. His features, though  well formed, looked ugly as he scowled.

"So you know my name, eh? The  girl told you?" 

"She did," replied Goodling, with a nod. He was stalling, so that  Kermal would not notice Lanford, who was

staring, pale faced, from his  chair. "Allow me, sir, to introduce myself. Also to tell you why I came  here." 

"That is not necessary!" Kermal's tone was fierce. "I do not care  why you came! Your actions here are what

concerns me!" 

"Our actions?" queried Goodling, feigning surprise. 

"Yes," sneered Kermal. "My servant heard you from the stairs. He  realized that you had managed to pry into

the next room. He has entered  there already." 

Kermal looked toward the curtains. Goodling wheeled about. He saw  Croy, coming through. The servant's

face looked even uglier than  before. Croy nodded to Kermal. 

"You are sure they saw?" quizzed Kermal. 

"Coat unbuttoned," responded Croy, gruffly. 

Kermal smiled. He was looking at Lanford. Fred's paleness was a  giveaway that he had seen the corpse in the

next room. 

"Well, gentlemen," decided Kermal, "who you are and why you came  here does not matter, now.

Circumstances compel me to keep you in  temporary custody until " 

He did not finish the sentence. Goodling was bounding forward  uttering a sharp cry to Lanford to aid him.

From his pocket, the  prosecutor was whipping a stubnosed revolver, a weapon that he always  carried. 

CROY hurtled in from the curtains. Before Lanford could intervene,  the servant was upon Goodling. Seizing

the prosecutor as one would  pounce upon a troublemaking child, Croy twisted Goodling's gun away.  Then,

as the prosecutor still struggled, Croy hurled him across the  room. Goodling's head thumped the wall. He

rolled half stunned, upon  the floor. 

Goodling's gun had struck thin carpeting. Lanford bounced from his  chair and seized it. He came up, aiming

at Croy. Again, the big servant  was quick in action. 

Lunging furiously, he hoisted Lanford upward and backward. Fred hit  the chair back and sprawled to the

floor, the chair rolling upon him.  Like Goodling, Lanford lost hold of the revolver and lay half senseless  from

the force of the blow. 

"Turn out the lights," ordered Kermal. Arms folded, the  shaggyhaired man was standing at the door. "Watch

these fellows, Croy,  until I return." 

Croy extinguished the lamps. Standing by the door, he blocked most  of the dim hallway light. Jay Goodling,

slowly recovering, heard  footsteps as they returned. Trying to rise, Goodling saw Croy enter.  Then he felt

himself in the big servant's clutch. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD 9



Top




Page No 12


Something was happening to Lanford. Figures had entered; Goodling  saw the flicker of a flashlight and

caught the tones of whispered  voices. He struggled against Croy; the big man's grasp tightened. 

His head thrust back, Goodling could see nothing but the ceiling.  He felt hands tugging at his coat sleeve;

then came the rip of the  shirt sleeve beneath it. Again, he fought with Croy. It was useless. 

The flashlight blinked on Jay Goodling's bare arm. Croy's grip  tightened. A hand appeared in the light,

bearing a hypodermic syringe.  The needle jabbed deep into Goodling's flesh. 

Croy still gripped the victim as others stole from the darkened  room. Then the servant's hold relaxed. Jay

Goodling had subsided. Croy  arose and went to the hall. He nodded to Kermal, who was standing there  alone.

Kermal pointed to the front door. 

The servant returned to the parlor and reappeared with Lanford's  limp form over his shoulder. Kermal

unbolted the front door. Croy  carried Lanford out into the driving rain. A few minutes later, he  returned,

entered the parlor and picked up Goodling. 

Croy carried the prosecutor out into the darkness. Kermal chuckled  as he bolted the front door. Listening, the

shaggyhaired man heard the  roar of a motor. Croy had started Goodling's coupe. The car was backing  out

into the din road. 

However Kermal had hoped to deal with these intruders, the fight  had definitely forced him to one plan.

Goodling and Lanford had been  overpowered in the fray. Both were doped. Croy had removed them at his

master's order. 

Whatever Kermal's plans might be, the bulky man seemed satisfied  with his procedure. His chuckle sounded

in the gloomy hall as he  crossed the uncarpeted floor toward the stairway beyond that living  room in which a

man lay dead. 

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES

IT was morning in Manhattan. A quiet, roundfaced man was seated at  an office desk. From beyond his

window loomed the sky line of the city;  but the view did not concern this worker. The roundfaced man was

studying a map which showed the terrain about the town of Sheffield. 

A rap sounded at the door. The man at the desk folded the map then  gave an order to enter. A stenographer

appeared. 

"Mr. Vincent is calling," said the girl. "Shall I tell him to come  in, Mr. Mann?" 

"Certainly," responded Mann. "At once." 

A few minutes later, a cleancut young man was facing Mann in the  inner office. Vincent's appearance was

one that denoted an active  temperament quite a contrast to the lethargic expression of Mann's  chubby visage. 

Yet both were workers in the same service. Rutledge Mann and Harry  Vincent were agents of The Shadow.

Mann, an investment broker, was a  contact who relayed orders to the active aids such as Harry. 

"You have seen this clipping?" inquired Mann. "It appeared in this  morning's newspaper." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES 10



Top




Page No 13


"I saw it," smiled Harry, as he viewed the item that Mann passed  him, "but I passed it up as something of a

hoax. Two men reporting a  murder in an isolated house, only to find that the building had  vanished." 

"Read more closely," suggested Mann. "You will note that one of the  two men was the county prosecutor." 

"That's right," acknowledged Harry, studying the clipping. "Say   that puts a new light on the case, doesn't it?

This ought to have been  front page stuff, Mann." 

"It will be soon," stated the broker. "The New York newspapers are  sending men to Sheffield. Clyde Burke is

going for the Classic." 

"Burke has already supplied further details," stated Mann,  unfolding the map on his desk. "So I suggest,

Vincent, that you listen  to my full account. I can amplify facts that the newspapers merely  skimmed over in

the first story. Like yourself, they took it as a hoax  at the start. 

"Here"  Mann pointed to the map  "is the town of Sheffield. A  paved road runs southward from Sheffield,

then curves west and reaches  Westbury, some dozen miles distant. You will notice that there are dirt  roads

going to the right from the main highway. One of them  this one   is important. It is the old road to

Westbury." 

Harry nodded. 

"Saturday night, after midnight," resumed Mann, "Jay Goodling,  county prosecutor and his friend, Fred

Lanford, were riding along the  paved road. They were going southward, from Sheffield to Westbury, when  a

man named Turner flagged them with a lantern. Somewhere in this  neighborhood." 

Mann tapped the map with his pencil. Harry watched while the  investment broker made a mark, then moved

the pencil to a point about  three miles south. 

"This is Roaring Creek," he explained. "The bridge had gone out  during the heavy storm. Turner had hiked

up to the road to stop other  cars. He was heading into Sheffield. Goodling and Lanford decided to  take the old

Westbury road, which turns off before the bridge." 

HARRY noted four roads going to the right between Mann's pencil  mark and the creek. Only one, the third,

was a through dirt highway. It  was the old road to Westbury. 

"Goodling and Lanford found the old Westbury road," explained Mann.  "They identified it by the

conspicuous sign that marks it. Driving up  the road, they discovered a house. They entered, in the hope of

finding  a telephone. 

"The servant who admitted them was named Croy. They also  encountered a man named Daggart, ostensibly a

secretary, whose arm was  in a sling, indicating a recent wound. The supposed owner of the house,  whom they

likewise met, was named Kermal." 

"What about the girl?" questioned Harry, holding up the clipping.  "This story deals chiefly with the

mysterious brunette, who vanished  along with the house. Talks about the whole affair as if it had been a  pipe

dream." 

"The girl," replied Mann, "was the person who mentioned the names  of the others. Her name, however, was

not learned. She advised Goodling  and Lanford to leave." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES 11



Top




Page No 14


"But instead, they snooped around and found the body?" 

"Yes. The report is correct. They found a dead man, who had been  shot through the heart. Goodling and

Lanford started a fight. They were  overpowered. Goodling recalls that he was jabbed with a hypodermic

needle. Lanford was too groggy to remember. 

"That happened after midnight, Saturday. Shortly before noon,  Sunday, Goodling and Lanford were found,

half asleep, in the coupe. The  car was about fifty yards from the washedout bridge. 

"As county prosecutor, Goodling has extraordinary powers. As soon  as he was sufficiently roused to

remember his story coherently, he  ordered a search for the house. A dozen men scoured the old Westbury

road. They failed to find the building at all." 

"There are no houses along that road?" 

"There are a dozen. But all are occupied by persons who are well  known in the vicinity. Goodling and

Lanford spoke of an extravagantly  furnished living room. None of the houses can match that description.  The

report, Vincent, is not exaggerated. The mystery house vanished  over night." 

"But suppose that " 

Mann smiled as he held up his hand. He drew a watch from his pocket  and nodded as he consulted the time. 

"You can catch the one o'clock train for Sheffield," he stated.  "You will find Burke there, representing the

Classic. He will introduce  you as a representative of the National Press Association. He will  supply you with

credentials." 

WHILE Harry Vincent was on his way from Rutledge Mann's office, a  singular event was taking place in

another portion of Manhattan. A  bluish light was gleaming in the corner of a blackwalled room. Long  white

hands were unfolding a map that resembled Mann's. 

The Shadow was in his sanctum. He, too, was marking points in the  neighborhood of Sheffield and

Westbury. The Shadow, like Harry Vincent,  had questions that needed answering. His whispered laugh

betokened that  fact. 

A pointing finger touched the town marked Westbury. It traced a  northeast course toward Sheffield,

following the line of the old road.  The Shadow's finger stopped. 

Although Goodling and Lanford had started their journey from  Sheffield. the spot of their strange adventure

had been nearer the town  of Westbury. Furthermore, Westbury was larger than Sheffield, despite  the fact that

the latter town was the county seat. 

Long hands folded the map. The bluish light clicked off. The  Shadow's laugh sounded in the darkness.

Shivering tones betokened his  urge for new adventure. When silence reigned within the blackwalled  room,

The Shadow had departed. 

Like his agents, he was faring forth to the mysterious terrain from  which a house had vanished. But he had

chosen to make his starting  point the town of Westbury, in preference to Sheffield. Burke and  Vincent could

cover that town for the present. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES 12



Top




Page No 15


IT was late in the afternoon when Harry Vincent strolled into the  lobby of the Weatherby Hotel, the

oldfashioned inn that constituted  Sheffield's sole hotel. He learned that Clyde Burke was in a room on  the

third floor. Harry went up and rapped on the door. Hearing a call  to enter, he stepped in to find Clyde seated

at a typewriter. 

"Stuff for the Classic," chuckled Clyde. "Close the door, Harry.  I've got your credentials. I thought you'd be

in on the train I just  heard chugging in." 

"Anything new on the house?" questioned Harry. 

"Not a thing," replied Clyde, seriously. "I've talked with  Goodling. He won't go into further details until this

evening. He's  holding a conference in his office." 

"Do you think he has learned something?" 

"Yes. But not about the house. He's still mystified on that point.  The place has vanished." 

"Have you talked with Lanford?" 

"I'm going to. Before he comes into the conference. He lives out in  the country and he's still sleeping off his

dopey jag. They must have  given him a bigger dose than they did Goodling." 

"Have they searched for the house today?" 

"Sure. They started at Sunday noon. Here it is, Monday afternoon,  and they've just finished." 

Harry considered. Clyde watched him rub his chin. The reporter  laughed. 

"I know what you're thinking," declared Clyde. "They ought to have  looked along the other roads. Well, they

did; but they had no luck." 

"No houses?" 

"A few. But occupied by persons whom they knew, except for some  empties. They knew who the owners of

the empty houses were, and they've  checked on them. All pass muster." 

Clyde produced a road map. He had dotted it at various points. The  marks indicated houses. 

"Here's the old Gallivan house," he stated. "Been empty for two  years; but it's three miles up the Westbury

road. Goodling is sure that  he and Lanford couldn't have traveled that far. One mile was about the  limit. 

"This house is empty. An artist named Brooks left it a month ago,  to make a trip to California. But it's not on

the old Westbury road.  It's on one of those other roads. See? The first one past the Westbury  road. 

"Same thing with this house. It was owned by a farmer named  Buckley. It's on the first road before you reach

the old Westbury road;  and it was burned out last fall. The big point, Harry, is that Goodling  and Lanford

both saw the old sign that points to Westbury. It's there,  big as life. I went down to look at it this afternoon." 

"But what about tire marks?" questioned Harry. "Those ought to tell  something. Those dirt roads must have

been mighty muddy." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES 13



Top




Page No 16


"Too muddy," replied Clyde. "They all led down into the paved road.  They were raging torrents on Saturday

night. Completely washed out by  morning. Nothing left to go by. 

"You can take it or leave it, Harry. The cold truth is that a house  is missing. It's a bigger problem than a

stolen bass drum. It has me  guessing, just like everyone else." 

HARRY was about to speak when the telephone bell rang. Clyde picked  up the telephone from beside his

typewriter. As he answered, Harry saw  a steady expression appear upon the reporter's face. 

Briefly, in short sentences, Clyde reported the same facts that he  had given Harry. His words were prompted

by questions that he heard  across the wire. When the call was ended, Clyde hung up and nodded as  he looked

toward Harry 

"It will pass as a longdistance call from the Classic," explained  Clyde. "I talked like I was giving dope for a

story. But that call was  from a place nearer than New York." 

"Westbury?" guessed Harry 

Again Clyde nodded. Those quiet tones that he had heard could have  come from only one person: The

Shadow. 

"I'm to see Lanford," stated Clyde. "I'll introduce you to Goodling  after dinner; then I'll cut out and meet

Lanford before he comes in to  the conference. You can stick with Goodling." 

Clyde dug into a suitcase to obtain Harry's credentials. Harry  stood looking from the window, studying the

town of Sheffield, beneath  the darkening, clouded afternoon sky. A smile showed upon Harry's lips. 

For Harry could guess what The Shadow's work would be while his  agents were engaged in checking on

developments here. Harry's hunch was  that The Shadow was planning a prompt search for the vanished house

wherein Jay Goodling and Fred Lanford had encountered strange  adventure. 

Would The Shadow succeed in that strange quest that had baffled  scores of searchers? Harry Vincent

believed it probable; yet he could  not fathom what The Shadow's course could be. For in all his service as  an

agent of The Shadow, Harry Vincent had never encountered a case with  so strange a beginning as this. 

Men who knew the ground could offer no answer to the disappearance  of a house with all its furnishings. The

Shadow, here for the first  time, following only the reports of others, was apparently faced by an  impossible

task. 

So Harry Vincent reasoned; but his own arguments failed. Greater  even than reason was Harry's confidence

in The Shadow's amazing power  of deduction. 

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE

ALL lay quiet along the old Westbury road. Sultry afternoon had  brought a pall to the countryside where

searchers had given up their  vain hunt for a vanished house. Though an hour still remained until  sunset, the

features of the landscape appeared hazy and obscure. 

There was motion at the side of the dirt road. Steadily, yet almost  unnoticeably, a figure was moving along

the highway. It was that of a  tall individual who wore a dark suit. His chiseled features were  scarcely


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE 14



Top




Page No 17


discernible in that modulated light. 

The stroller was hatless. He was carrying a flexible briefcase. He  might have been some chance wayfarer

taking this route between Westbury  and Sheffield. Actually, he was here with a more definite purpose. The

Shadow was going over the vainly searched terrain. 

Walking along the old road from Westbury, The Shadow had spied  various houses. All were ones which had

already been investigated by  the local authorities. Casual surveys had satisfied The Shadow that  none were of

interest. 

The Shadow's goal was the spot where the old road met the paved  one. He wanted to see the point at which

Jay Goodling and Fred Lanford  had turned into the path of weird adventure. The Shadow's pace had

quickened; it slowed as he passed a slight bend. Directly ahead was the  main highway. 

Conspicuous at the junction point was the sign that pointed to  Westbury. The white post and largelettered

placard stood straight  upward. As The Shadow surveyed the sign he was impressed by its total  absence of tilt. 

Odd, for a sign like this one. The old Westbury road had gone into  disuse; yet its sign had acquired none of

the leaning so common with  the oldfashioned markers seen on country highways. 

Though the sign was obviously topheavy; though the heavy rain had  softened the ground, the post still

maintained its vertical position.  The Shadow stepped forward to examine it more closely 

HE made a prompt discovery. The post hole was enlarged at the  surface of the ground. This indicated that the

sign must once have  tilted slightly. Placing his briefcase aside, The Shadow gripped the  post and tugged it

upward. 

At first the wooden upright refused to yield. Then it came loose.  The Shadow hoisted the post up into the

light. Again his eyes noted  something; slowly he let the post slide down into the hole. 

The pointed lower portion of the post was stained with dirt; that  was natural, since it had been imbedded in

the ground for some years.  But the margin of the dirt stain was not at the ground level. When the  post

dropped back into place, a full five inches of white paint sank  with the dirtstained portion. 

Thumping the post, The Shadow forced it farther down. It stuck and  remained upright. The Shadow stepped

back; his straight lips delivered  a soft, whispered laugh. He had made the discovery that was to serve  him as a

vital clue. 

Someone had recently removed that post. Afterward, the sign had  been replaced. Before its removal, the sign

had been slightly tilted.  The man who had replaced it had not taken any chances on trying to  duplicate the

lean. 

Instead, he had driven the post further into the rainsoftened  ground. He had left it upright, hard in place, so

that no one would  suspect that the post had been loose. That person had lowered the  height of the signboard

by his action. Yet none of the searchers,  viewing the marker, had realized its new condition. 

A good job. One that had been a perfect deception. Only The Shadow,  delving into the possibilities of this

strange case, had given thought  to the signpost as a likely element in the mystery. 

The Shadow had concluded that it would have been easier to move a  signpost than a house. Since both had

figured in the episode of  Saturday, midnight, he had started with the post as his first  objective. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE 15



Top




Page No 18


The sign, at present, was standing at the beginning of the old  Westbury road, exactly where it belonged. Yet

chances were that  Goodling and Lanford had seen it elsewhere. The Shadow drew a map from  his pocket and

studied it in the fading light. 

Following south from the old Westbury road, there were two more  dirt roads that led off to the right before

the paved highway crossed  the creek. Those were logically the ones to be investigated. Picking up  his

briefcase, The Shadow started southward at a brisk pace. 

The paved highway was deserted. The bridge had not yet been  repaired. Travelers were using an entirely

different route between  Sheffield and Westbury. There had been searchers hereabouts, but The  Shadow had

learned from Clyde Burke that the hunt was ended. Hence he  ran no risk of encountering searchers. 

HALF a mile down the paved highway, The Shadow found the next dirt  road. It looked very much like the

old Westbury road; but the map  showed that it merely ran into an old abandoned farm, a few miles from  the

main highway. It was called Dobson's Road on the map. 

The Shadow stopped at the edge of Dobson's Road. He picked the spot  where a sign would naturally stand, if

this road were marked like the  old highway to Westbury. Stooping beside the underbrush, The Shadow

pressed back a matted mass of soggy turf. Again his soft laugh sounded. 

The Shadow had found a large posthole. This second clue told him  where the Westbury sign had been during

its absence from the road where  it belonged. The Shadow pushed the turf back into place. He started  along

Dobson's Road. 

The weekend rain had completely obliterated any tire traces along  this road. But The Shadow needed no

such indications. He was watching  to the left. Three quarters of a mile brought him to his objective. 

Just past a slight embankment, The Shadow discovered an old  driveway. Following it, he made a slight turn;

then, swinging to the  opposite angle, he faced a large house that loomed among trees. 

At one corner was a porch, which had a roof but no steps.  Approaching closely, The Shadow noticed a dry

fringe of grass along the  porch edge. This was a token that steps had been here until recently. 

This was one of the empty houses that Clyde Burke had spoken about  to Harry Vincent. It was the house that

had been occupied by Brooks,  the artist. The Shadow knew that it must be the house that Goodling and

Lanford had visited. 

The prosecutor and his friend had skidded through the driveway.  They thought they had stopped facing the

front of the building.  Instead, they had been headed directly toward the side. 

Realizing that, the occupants of the house had removed the steps  after they had disposed of Goodling and

Lanford. Small wonder that  searchers had passed up this house entirely. It was not on the Westbury  road. It

was empty. It did not answer the vague description that  Goodling and Lanford had given. 

STEPPING UP to the porch, The Shadow tried the door. He found it  locked. He opened it easily with a

skeleton key. The inside of the door  showed no bolts whatever. But as The Shadow used a flashlight for close

examination, he discovered spots that had been dabbed with paint. 

Another touch. The removal of the bolts aided the deception. As The  Shadow looked through the gloomy

hall, he understood fully how  difficult it would be for anyone to recognize the place after one  visit. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE 16



Top




Page No 19


The main portion of the house was to The Shadow's left. This was  nothing more than a long rear hall. People

coming in from the actual  front would reach this hall from other passages. It would not answer  the description

given by Goodling and Lanford. 

There was a doorway to The Shadow's right. Having the proper  perspective, The Shadow decided that this

must lead to the room which  Goodling and Lanford had mistaken for a front parlor. The Shadow  entered and

found the room empty. He saw a wide opening into another  room. He went through. 

Clyde Burke had given The Shadow full details of the house as  Goodling and Lanford had remembered it.

Their description had been  received at the Classic office before Clyde had started to Sheffield. 

The Shadow knew, therefore, that he was in the living room where  the two men had seen the dead body. But

nothing remained to indicate  that this had once been an apartment of luxury. 

Old books, newspapers and magazines were scattered upon the bare  floor. Cracked walls showed where

tapestries had been. Empty boxes  occupied the corners. Everything had been done to make this look like a

rear storeroom in an empty house. 

Half shrouded in dusk, The Shadow reviewed his discoveries. He saw  the game, even though he could not

supply the full details. A man had  been killed in this house. The occupants had decided to make a  getaway. 

This house was on Dobson's Road, the first dirt road past the old  route to Westbury. Someone in the house

had gone out in the storm to  remove the Westbury sign and place it on Dobson's Road. After they had

departed with all their luggage, the sign had been put back in its  original place. 

Had this been to deceive such chance wayfarers as Goodling and  Lanford? Perhaps. It had certainly

succeeded in their case. But The  Shadow could see chances for a deeper purpose. He decided, however,  that

such considerations could wait until later. 

Opening a window in the big room, he dropped out to the rear of the  house. Striding across sodden ground, he

stopped to examine traces that  interested him. Here, off at the rear, was an old abandoned path that  was wide

enough to accommodate an automobile. It wound off through the  trees toward the next dirt road. 

THE SHADOW followed the path. Flattened turf showed that a car  might have traveled here; but the rain had

obliterated tire marks. A  quarter of a mile brought The Shadow to the last of the parallel dirt  roads. Here, in a

deep rut, he found another clue. 

It was the broad mark of a tire with an oldfashioned, dotted  tread. Large enough to have been made by a

light truck. Using a bit of  string, The Shadow measured this mark. He made an estimate of the  tire's width. 

Stepping up to an embankment, The Shadow looked forward and saw the  hazy course of Roaring Creek. He

gained a distant view of the broken  bridge on the main highway. 

Even at such long range, he could discern the muddy turbulence of  the torrent that still raged through the gap.

Near that spot where  disaster threatened was the place where Goodling and Lanford had been  found on

Sunday morning. 

Something in the view must have impressed The Shadow, for his laugh  came as a spontaneous utterance.

Turning, he made his way back to the  abandoned house. Climbing through the window, he began an

inspection of  the ground floor. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE 17



Top




Page No 20


In the front of the building, The Shadow discovered a stairway.  There was an obscure closet beneath it. The

Shadow blinked his  flashlight and tugged at the closed door. It opened. The rays of the  light revealed an

object in the closet's depths. 

It was a small steamer trunk. Locked, but easily opened. Entering  the closet, The Shadow blinked his

flashlight on the trunk. There he  discerned the remnants of steamship labels and stickers that bore the  names

of European hotels. 

Another turn of the flashlight showed the end of the trunk. The  Shadow saw the initials M. L. D. Using a

pick, he unlocked the trunk  and opened it. The trunk had a tray which contained various odd papers. 

Steamship menus, theater programs in various languages, clippings  from foreign newspapers. The Shadow

raised the tray to find the main  portion of the trunk empty. Replacing the tray, he rummaged among the

papers and discovered a small stack of hotel bills. 

There were all made out to Miss Myra Dolthan, of New York. With  them, The Shadow found an envelope

which had once contained a letter.  It bore an American postage stamp. It was addressed to Miss Myra

Dolthan, Hotel de Ville, Paris. It was postmarked Boston, but bore no  return address. 

THE SHADOW closed the trunk and locked it. He stepped from the  closet. He picked up his briefcase and

brought out a blackened fold of  cloth. A cloak slipped over his shoulders. A slouch hat settled on his  head. 

Automatics went beneath the cloak; The Shadow's hands encased  themselves in gloves. Beside the dusty

stairs, The Shadow had become a  living shroud. This spot was to be his headquarters until after dark. 

For The Shadow had learned the one name that others had not gained:  that of the mystery girl whom

Goodling and Lanford had seen in this  very house. The occupants, in leaving, had forgotten the single trunk. 

Searchers had been about until this afternoon. The scouring of the  district had ended. It would be possible for

someone to return to this  house. The odds were that the vanished occupants had learned that they  had

forgotten the steamer trunk. 

The Shadow was waiting in the hope that he would later meet some  member of the band that had departed so

suddenly from this house of  doom. That forgotten trunk was the factor that would bring a secret  emissary

hither. 

To The Shadow, certain possibilities could rise to a point where  they were sureties. He had discovered such

an instance at present. He  needed no further trail until this development had completed itself.  His process of

logic had brought him to a definite conclusion regarding  the ways and means of the persons who had left this

house. 

Only the unforeseen could balk The Shadow for the present. Only  developments that offered no clue could

hold The Shadow to one duty  while another pressing task was close at hand. 

Oddly, both such obstacles were already in the making. The fortune  which had resulted in the finding of the

trunk was keeping The Shadow  from other spots where strange events were due. 

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN

WHILE The Shadow was lingering in the empty, almost forgotten house  on Dobson's Road, one of his agents


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN 18



Top




Page No 21


was approaching a farm building on  the other side of Sheffield. This was Clyde Burke, riding in a coupe  that

he had hired. The reporter was on his way to pick up Fred Lanford. 

Clyde applied the brakes as he saw a man step into the road. The  fellow had come from a house gate. Clyde

knew that this must be  Lanford's farm. He turned on the dome light as the man stepped forward. 

"You're Fred Lanford?" queried Clyde, surveying the pale,  seriouslooking man who peered through the

coupe window. 

A nod was the response. 

"I'm Burke," explained Clyde. "Hop in; we'll ride downtown." 

Lanford complied. He shook hands with Clyde, then turned out the  dome light at the reporter's suggestion.

Clyde headed back toward  Sheffield. 

"Nice of you to come out here and get me," said Lanford, as they  rode along. "There's only one thing about it,

Burke. I don't think I  ought to talk much until after I've seen Goodling." 

"I understand," acknowledged Clyde. "I'm not trying to work you for  an interview. I told you that over the

telephone. All I want to do is  check up on the story as it already stands. This business about the  house seems

too fantastic to be real." 

"I don't blame you for thinking that, Burke," chuckled Lanford.  "Actually, I thought I'd had a pipe dream

when I woke up. But when I  told my story, it fitted Jay Goodling's account right to every detail.  We couldn't

both have had the same delusion." 

"That's logical," agreed Clyde. 

"Jay and I have always been pals," went on Lanford. "We went to  college together; then I came back to help

dad run the farm while he  took up law. I can vouch for Jay's word and he can vouch for mine. 

"We went through a real experience Saturday night. We both  remembered names that we heard mentioned.

The names of people whom we  saw. Kermal  Daggart  Croy. Say  that fellow Croy was a tough  fighter. 

"He caught Jay unawares; but I had a chance to nab him. I would  have made good on it, too; but I was woozy

after looking at that corpse  in the other room. Say"  Clyde could see Lanford's fists clench  "I'd  like a crack

at that big bird once again. I'd show him this time." 

"About the girl," remarked Clyde, as Lanford paused. "Her name was  not mentioned?" 

"No. She was the one who told us the names of the others. That pale  fellow, Daggart, seemed upset about it. I

wonder what had happened to  him. His left arm was bandaged and in a sling." 

"Do you think that his wound was recent?" 

"Yes. The bandages were fresh. Of course they could have been new  ones; but he was so pale, it looked as

though he'd gone through  something not long before we arrived." 

LANFORD paused and sat silent, staring through the windshield.  Clyde had turned into a road that led

directly into Sheffield. Far  ahead, a traffic light showed a crossing on the outskirts of the town.  An arc light


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN 19



Top




Page No 22


also illuminated the corner. 

"I was rather groggy when I came to my senses," resumed Lanford.  "First thing I heard on Sunday morning

was the roar of the creek.  They'd parked Jay and myself mighty close to the broken bridge. 

"It's a deep chasm there; and it was filled to the brim. Sure death  for anybody who might have coasted into

that mess. But I stopped  worrying about the creek when I began to think about the night before.  My arm's still

a bit stiff from that jab they gave me with the hypo." 

A sedan had cut in from a side street. It was rolling ahead of  Clyde's coupe. Both cars were approaching the

traffic light. The gleam  turned red. The sedan stopped and Clyde swung up beside it. 

Clyde went to the left of the sedan, which was apparently waiting  to make a right turn into the secluded cross

street. 

Clyde muttered jokingly about the uselessness of a light at this  point. He stopped suddenly as he heard a

sound beside him. Lanford was  opening the door. 

"What's up?" queried Clyde. 

Lanford was halfway out of the car. He caught Clyde's forearm in a  warning grip. He whispered as he pointed

to the sedan; the driver of  the other car was looking up at the traffic light. 

"See him?" queried Lanford, hoarsely. "Do you know who he is?  That's Croy! I'm going to get him!" 

Clyde shot a look as Lanford scrambled to the street. The reporter  saw the scarred face of the man in the

sedan. He noted puffy lips; he  realized that the driver of the other car must be a huge hulk of a  fellow. 

It was too late to stop Lanford. Clyde would have recommended a  chase, not an attack against so powerful a

fighter. But Lanford,  angered by his previous defeat, had already grabbed the opportunity  that he wanted. He

was pouncing straight toward the sedan. 

Croy heard him coming. As Lanford reached the front door of the  sedan, the big man shot a wild, hurried

look at his unexpected  antagonist. He recognized Lanford as the young man from the previous  night. Lanford

sprang upon the running board and thrust his hands  through the opened window, aiming for Croy's throat. 

Clyde saw a big fist flash. Lanford thumped back, staggering  halfway to the coupe. Croy hurled the front

door open and leaped from  the sedan. Lanford piled forward to meet him. 

CRYING encouragement to Lanford, Clyde leaped to the street and  surged forward to aid. Had Lanford put

up a real struggle, the reporter  could have aided him. But Croy was too much for Lanford. 

The huge man had delivered a second punch. Lanford was crumpling.  He dropped away as Clyde arrived.

Croy swung another powerful blow  against Clyde's chest. The reporter catapulted back against the coupe. 

With a fierce snarl, Croy yanked open the rear door of the sedan.  He scooped up Lanford's form and hurled

the groggy man within. 

Slamming the rear door, he leaped to the wheel and pulled his own  door shut. He swung the car about, to

drive back along the street down  which he had come. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN 20



Top




Page No 23


Clyde Burke had regained his wind. Croy's move gave the reporter  opportunity. Running to the rear of the

coupe, Clyde cut across in back  and reached the sedan as it passed. He leaped to the running board  beside the

driver's seat. He shot a quick fist to Croy's jaw. 

The scarred face took the punch unflinching. Croy's left arm swung  out and encased Clyde. Driving with his

right, the big man gripped and  battled with his left while he sped the sedan along the silent street,  heading out

of town. 

Clyde was wiry; that fact made up for the lack of weight behind his  punches. He proved tougher than Croy

had expected. Though he needed his  left hand to hold on to the door of the sedan, Clyde found opportunity  to

use his right. He pummeled Croy as thoroughly as he could. 

Yet Clyde's punches only glanced from the scarred face. Croy's head  was bobbing back and forth; his left arm

warded off most of the  reporter's blows. Whirling along a serpentine course, the sedan was  leaving the town

behind. 

Anything to stop the car. That was Clyde's frenzied thought. He was  willing to risk a wreck to end this mad

course. At intervals he almost  succeeded. 

They were roaring along an outlying road. At one point, Croy jammed  the brakes as the sedan swung to the

right. The big car skidded; then  found its course along a dirt road. 

Clyde lost his grip as the sedan swung. Croy's hamlike hand caught  the back of the reporter's neck. The big

man guffawed; his puffy lips  showed a grin as he swung his opponent back and forth. 

Clyde's light body wavered like a dummy figure; his feet clicked  the running board while his hands made

wild, unsuccessful grasps for  the door. 

The car slowed at another turn. Croy swung right. As he did, he  flung his huge left arm outward. The heave

precipitated Clyde a full  dozen feet. The Shadow's agent landed at the edge of the road and  hurtled

headforemost upon a grassy bank. 

CLYDE rolled over and came up gasping. He rose unsteadily and  looked around for the car. It was gone, past

the turn in the road. To  follow by foot would be useless. 

Clyde thought of his coupe, three miles away, on the outskirts of  Sheffield. He realized now that he should

have followed in his car. He  had made the same mistake as Lanford. 

As on a previous night, Croy had conquered two combatants. He had  overpowered Lanford and carried the

man away as prisoner. He had  pitched Clyde Burke from the side of his speeding car. Evidently he had

considered the reporter unimportant. 

Croy, despite his great strength, must be stupid. So Clyde decided  as he started back along the road. For

although the big man had carried  off Lanford, he had left Clyde free to bear witness of the affray that  had

ended in the abduction of Fred Lanford. 

Under the circumstances, Clyde had but one choice. He knew that he  must go into Sheffield and report to Jay

Goodling. The conference in  the prosecutor's office was already under way; for Clyde and Lanford  would

have arrived just at the time that Goodling had set. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN 21



Top




Page No 24


Clyde Burke grunted huskily as he limped townward, still shaky from  his battle with Croy. He was on his

way to drop a bombshell into the  conference at Goodling's, so he thought. 

But Clyde's conjecture was wrong on that point. Already  developments were taking place in Sheffield.

Occurrences were due there  that would prove more startling than Clyde's experience with Croy. 

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS

THE county prosecutor's office was situated at the rear of the old  Sheffield courthouse, a gloomy building

that stood across the street  from the Weatherby Hotel. It was there that Jay Goodling had arranged  to hold an

early evening discussion regarding the case in which he had  figured so prominently. 

Harry Vincent had met the prosecutor shortly after dinner. Clyde  Burke had made the introduction.

Immediately afterward, Goodling had  headed for his office. The prosecutor's actions had indicated that

something was in the air. 

Harry sensed new tension when he entered the courthouse to await  Clyde's arrival. There were three reporters

present; with them, two men  who looked like deputy sheriffs. In addition, Harry noted a lanky,  whitehaired

man who wore a friendly smile as he chatted with the  deputies. Harry heard one man address this worthy as

Doctor Claig. 

A closed door indicated the prosecutor's office. The transom above  it was tightly shut. Harry fancied that he

could hear the buzz of  voices from within. Evidently, Goodling was holding preliminary  conferences with

someone. 

At last there came the click of a key. The door swung open.  Goodling, his face inscrutable, waved for those

waiting to enter. Harry  walked in with the others. Goodling motioned them to chairs. 

Harry, like the others, was quick to observe another man within the  room. The stranger was a squareset

individual, with dark hair and a  wise face. He was seated beside Goodling's desk. 

"GENTLEMEN," began Goodling as he took his chair at the desk, "this  is Roy Parrell, a private detective

from New York. He has come up from  New York to present a theory regarding the mysterious house wherein

Lanford and I had our strange adventure. 

"Mr. Parrell arrived this afternoon. He has finally agreed to make  his theory public, now that the search for

the house has failed. He  feels that such a statement would be to the interest of the client who  sent him here." 

Goodling looked toward Parrell, who nodded; then glanced about the  group. 

"Which man," he asked, "is your friend Fred Lanford? I think that  he should be present to hear my statement,

prosecutor." 

"That's right," rejoined Goodling. "Lanford should be here. Didn't  I hear that reporter, Burke, say that he was

going out to get him?" 

Goodling looked toward Harry, who nodded. 

"Well, Fred should be in any minute," declared Goodling. "Suppose  you start, Parrell. Lanford will probably

arrive by the time you have  finished with the preliminaries." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 22



Top




Page No 25


"Just one other question," insisted Parrell. "Is this gentleman  Doctor Leo Claig?" 

The detective was looking toward the whitehaired man. It was Claig  himself who nodded. Harry noticed a

sharp gleam of the physician's  eyes. 

"Doctor Claig," continued Parrell, "you were the physician who  examined Mr. Goodling and Mr. Lanford,

were you not?" 

"I was," replied the physician. 

"And you stated," said Parrell, "that they had been under the  influence of a powerful opiate, administered by a

hypodermic syringe?" 

"Precisely," agreed Claig. "Both showed influence of the drug. Both  bore marks of the needle." 

"Would that experience," questioned Parrell, "have caused them to  hold a delusion regarding the things they

saw and heard during their  stay at the unknown house?" 

"Not at all," interjected Claig. "Their impressions were gained  prior to the injection of the narcotics.

Moreover, their stories were  identical." 

"Doctor Claig is experienced in such matters," explained Goodling.  "Prior to his retirement from active

practice, he used his home for a  private sanitarium." 

"Here in Sheffield?" questioned Parrell. 

"Outside of town," replied Claig. "Three miles north of here. I  still live in the old place; but I have closed off

the upper stories,  since I no longer have patients there. 

"You see, Mr. Parrell, opiates and narcotics are frequently  required in mental cases. I am thoroughly

acquainted with the actions  of drugs. When I state, with full conviction, that Goodling and Lanford  were not

the victims of drugged impressions, my opinion is one that  should carry weight. 

"They, apparently, acquired a condition of complete catalepsy.  Awakening, their minds reverted to the point

where their recollections  had left off. All their original impressions were clarified. Fully  acceptable as

testimony." 

DOCTOR CLAIG nodded wisely as he completed his statement. The  physician's opinion brought a gleaming

smile from Parrell. It roused  the detective into prompt activity. 

"Good!" exclaimed Parrell. "Then we know that we are dealing with a  man named Kermal; that he has a

secretary named Daggart and a servant  named Croy. That there was a girl there with them." 

Again Claig nodded. Goodling looked pleased. 

"Daggart and Croy," stated Parrell, "are names with which I am  unfamiliar. But obviously, those men were

merely servants of Kermal. I  know who Kermal is. His full name is Taussig Kermal; he is a lawyer who  once

practiced in Boston." 

Reporters began to make notes. Harry Vincent followed suit. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 23



Top




Page No 26


"I can also name the young lady who was present," resumed Parrell.  "She is Myra Dolthan, of Boston. She is

the niece of my client, Rufus  Dolthan, who lives in New York." 

Parrell waited for the pencils to pause. He leaned on the side of  the desk and resumed his statement. 

"Rufus Dolthan is wealthy," he explained. "So was his brother, Wade  Dolthan, Myra's father. A few months

ago, Wade Dolthan died. He left  his entire estate to his daughter, Myra, who was then in Europe. 

"There was a second beneficiary. I refer to George Garling, stepson  of Wade Dolthan. George Garling is

somewhere in the West. He received a  small inheritance; he would have come into the whole estate only if

Myra had not been living." 

Parrell made another pause. Then, emphatically, he came to the next  point of his account. 

"Myra Dolthan is not yet twentyone," stated the detective. "Hence  the estate is not yet hers. It still lies in the

control of the  executor. That man, gentlemen, is none other than Taussig Kermal, the  Boston lawyer. 

"Rufus Dolthan tried to communicate with his niece after her father  died. He failed to reach her in Europe. He

sought Kermal; the lawyer  had left Boston. It was then that the truth dawned upon Rufus Dolthan. 

"Taussig Kermal has decided to keep the girl away from everyone  until her twentyfirst birthday, which will

be this very week. Upon  that date, Myra Dolthan becomes sole heir to ten million dollars. Once  she is

twentyone, any papers that she may sign will be legal  documents. 

"Kermal's game is to hold her, away from all contact, until after  her birthday. Then he can have her sign away

the bulk of her estate  into his hands. Once that is done, Myra Dolthan will be free; and also  penniless. She

will have a chance to see her Uncle Rufus, after it is  too late for him to aid her." 

PARRELL was leaning forward as he spoke. The detective was in front  of an open window, where trees and

ground behind the courthouse formed  pitch blackness. But Parrell was not concerned with matters outside. He

was intent as he addressed his audience. He wagged an emphatic finger  as he completed his statement. 

"Most remarkable," commented Doctor Claig, nodding his whitelocked  head. "I presume, Mr. Parrell, that

you read the brief accounts of the  mysterious girl in the vanished house?" 

"Rufus Dolthan did," returned Parrell. "That is why he sent me  here. I run an investigating agency of my

own"  he thrust a card  across the desk to the physician  "and Rufus Dolthan told me to look  into the case. 

"After I talked with Mr. Goodling this afternoon, I wired Mr.  Dolthan to come up on the evening train. He

should be here within a few  hours. All I needed to know"  again Parrell wagged his finger  "was  that one

name. Kermal. Taussig Kermal. That put us on the right track." 

"What about these others?" questioned Claig. The physician was  taking a sudden interest in the case.

"Daggart and Croy? You say they  are unimportant?" 

"Probably," returned Roy Parrell. "Merely servants. Tools of  Kermal's. He has probably duped the girl into

believing that her  enforced hiding is in keeping with some term in her father's will." 

"But the dead man at the house?" quizzed Claig. "Have you any idea  who he might be? Has Rufus Dolthan

any theory?" 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 24



Top




Page No 27


"None at all." Parrell shook his head. "Taussig Kermal is the only  one we know about. The lawyer has proven

himself to be a scoundrel. He  is capable of any crime; the fact that murder was committed in his  house

testifies to that point." 

"We shall learn the name of the dead man," assured Goodling,  quietly. "Do not worry upon that score. Our

chief problem is to find  that house. We must pick up some trail; gain some proof of crime " 

The prosecutor paused. Someone was rapping at the door. Goodling  gave the command to enter. The door

opened. A gawky, redfaced yokel  stepped into the room. The newcomer was attired in khaki trousers, a

grayflannel shirt and heavy hunting boots. He was unshaven and his  face showed an ugly grin. 

"Hello, prosecutor," greeted the arrival, stepping up to the desk  and dropping a battered felt hat into a chair.

"Guess maybe you've  heard of me. My name's Yager"  he rumbled a laugh as he spoke   "Hector Yager. I

live up Dobson's Road, in by the old farm." 

"A squatter, aren't you?" queried Goodling, sternly. 

"Well," grumbled Yager, "I ain't got no deed for that property  where I built that log cabin of mine. But I ain't

exactly no squatter,  neither." 

"Certain people seem to think so. They've put in a protest to have  you evicted." 

"Yeah? What've they got against me?" 

"Chicken stealing. You've been seen a few places where you  shouldn't have been, Yager." 

THE squatter's ugly grin faded. His eyes glowered angrily as he  faced the youthful prosecutor. Then Yager's

lips formed a sneer. 

"Bringing that up, eh?" he snorted. "If I was as big a swellhead  as them folks, I'd walk out of here right

now." 

"You're welcome to it, Yager. Your confession to thefts of hen  roosts can wait until later. We have more

important business here  tonight." 

"Smart guy, eh? Well, that comes of 'em, putting in a kid for  county prosecutor. I ought to be leaving; but just

because you think  you know so much, I'm going to stay. And talk." 

"There's the door, Yager," snapped Goodling, coming to his feet.  "Use it in a hurry before I have you pitched

out of here. Do you  understand?" 

"Sure," chuckled Yager, holding his ground. "You want me to clear  out  without telling you what I know.

About that house you're looking  for  and the people who were living in it." 

Goodling stood staring, rigid. Yager snorted a laugh. He pulled a  wad of bank notes from his pocket and

flung them on the desk beside his  hat. 

"See that there money?" demanded the squatter. "Well, that was  given to me to keep my trap shut. It was

given to me by a fellow named  Blissop. He was living there in that house." 

"Blissop?" queried Goodling. "You mean " 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 25



Top




Page No 28


"I mean the guy they did away with," broke in Yager. "You're  looking for a dead man, ain't you? Well, I'm

telling you who he was.  Blissop  that was his name." 

"And the others?" 

"I don't know them. But they got rid of Blissop because he was  pulling a doublecross." 

Doctor Claig had drawn close to the desk. Harry Vincent could see  the sharp gleam of the physician's eyes.

He fancied that he could hear  Claig's breath coming in short, tense wheezes. 

It was Parrell, however, who spoke to Yager. The detective had come  to his feet. His expression was eager.

He wanted to know more. He  pointed as Yager turned toward him. 

"You saw the murder of this man Blissop?" questioned Parrell. "You  were a witness to the crime?" 

"Me?" snorted Yager. "Say  I wouldn't have gone near that place.  Not after Blissop talked to me. He spilled

everything, he did, to keep  me quiet. He thought I'd stay quiet because he gave me the dough. 

"Say  I'm going to tell you folks who's who and what's what. I'm  going to give away a mighty slick game so

you'll all be straight. You  won't have much trouble finding the man you want after I'm through." 

YAGER paused. His grin returned. Claig was at his side, hands half  raised. Parrell, still beside the desk, was

wagging his finger; the  detective was seeking to attract Yager's attention. But the squatter  was facing

Goodling, gloating in his triumph over the new prosecutor  who had accused him of chicken stealing. 

"Blissop come to me," began Yager, "and he says to listen. He gives  me money. He says there's going to be

more. He says to me on Saturday  night that when " 

A staccato gun bark ended Yager's sentence. The burst came from  outside the window. Harry Vincent leaped

to his feet as he saw the  flash in the darkness. A gulp came from Hector Yager as the big  squatter

straightened in front of the desk. 

Then, like the echoes of that first bark, came two new bursts from  beyond the window. With those flashes,

Yager crumpled; he sprawled  headforemost across the desk. Assassins from the trees behind the  courthouse

had drilled the squatter with their bullets. 

As Goodling stood rigid, Claig stepped forward and bent above the  body. The physician seemed fearless of

new shots. He was acting to aid  the stricken man. Roy Parrell, however, was quick to see new danger. 

Leaping away from the desk, the private detective dived for the  wall beside the door. He blinked out the light.

The darkened room  afforded no new targets for hidden killers in the night. 

Goodling sprang to the window as he heard the roar of a motor. A  car was shooting away from the curb of an

isolated street beyond the  trees that formed a cluster in the grounds behind the courthouse. 

"Get them!" barked the prosecutor. "Through the window! Through the  door! Outside, you fools!" 

Goodling was yanking open a desk drawer. He grabbed a revolver in  the darkness and sprang through the

window to the ground a few feet  below. Parrell scrambled after him; the detective had a gun of his own. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS 26



Top




Page No 29


The deputies yanked open the door and dashed through the corridor  to spread the alarm, then circled the

courthouse. The reporters  followed. Harry Vincent was about to leave when he heard someone by the  light

switch. The light clicked on. It revealed Doctor Leo Claig. 

The physician gazed sharply at Harry; then turned on his heel and  went to the desk to examine Yager's body.

Harry watched Claig. He saw a  slow solemn nod of the physician's head; an indication that the  squatter was

dead. 

Claig was still beside the body when Goodling and the others  returned. The prosecutor's face was grim. The

brief chase had proven  futile. Killers had made a quick getaway in a waiting car. Half a  dozen new deputies

had arrived; they were men who had searched for the  missing house that very afternoon. 

JAY GOODLING studied the squad before him. He looked at Yager's  body; then gave a prompt decision. His

words brought comment of  approval from the crowd. 

"We're going out to Yager's cabin," declared the prosecutor. "We'll  see what we can find there. Come along;

we're starting for Dobson's  Road." 

Men tramped from the office. This time, Harry Vincent followed.  Hector Yager's body remained, watched

only by Doctor Leo Claig. 

Death had claimed a witness about to testify regarding the location  of the vanished house. The law was

moving to follow the one lead that  it had gained. Such a course was likely to prove barren; but it was the  only

one to take. 

Harry Vincent realized that the trip to Yager's would probably  prove futile. He would have preferred to stay

at the courthouse until  Clyde Burke arrived, for he was already puzzled by his fellow agent's  absence. 

But Harry had a part to play. He and Clyde were supposed to be mere  acquaintances, both newspapermen, but

not companions in a hidden  surface. It was up to Harry to continue the bluff that The Shadow had  ordered.

He must not jeopardize his usefulness by failing to join the  other reporters who were anxious to see the

squatter's cabin. 

With these thoughts in mind, Harry Vincent entered a waiting  automobile that was about to start for the shack

where Hector Yager  would no longer dwell. 

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK

ONLY a few hours had elapsed since The Shadow's return to the  lonely house on Dobson's Road. Those

hours had brought no change to  this silent terrain. This evening's episodes had so far been confined  to the

town of Sheffield. 

All was still within the house on Dobson's Road. Complete blackness  had enveloped the building. The

Shadow lay hidden within that thickened  gloom. He was listening as he had been since dusk; waiting for

some  betraying sound of a prowler's approach. 

Click! The Shadow heard the noise from the darkness of the stairs.  A key, scraping in a lock. The sound

ended; then it repeated. Someone  was trying to open the front door. The Shadow waited while the sound

continued at brief intervals. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK 27



Top




Page No 30


Squeaking hinges told that the door had yielded. A faint puff of  air breezed through the darkened hall beside

the stairs. Then came  footsteps, cautious, creaking tokens of advance. Dull reflections told  of blinking

flashlights. 

Prowlers had entered. Two men; not one. They were sneaking through  the rooms on the ground floor, making

a close inspection of the  secluded house. The blinks appeared from the rear. The men had cut  through to the

long hall. 

Parlor  living room  hall again. The blinks were by the side door  that The Shadow had entered. Light

gleamed toward the stairs, then ran  along the wall. Someone grunted; a hand clicked a light switch. 

A single bulb gleamed from a high ceiling. That lamp was one that  had not been removed from its

unreachable socket. The light showed a  telephone on the floor, near the closet to the stairs 

PEERING from the steps, The Shadow saw two roughly dressed men.  They were whispering, apparently

discussing the next step in their  snatch. One pointed to the closet door. The other nodded. The first man

tugged the door open; he grunted to his pal. Both entered the long  sloping closet. 

The Shadow glided from the stairway. 

In that dim light, he seemed a ghostly shape, some creature  harbored by a house of gloom, a living shade that

had remained from  banished darkness. 

Swiftly, silently, he gained the turn on the closet door. He  stooped; his gloved hands appeared bearing

automatics. His burning eyes  stared toward the closet. The two men were sliding the trunk from its  hiding

place. 

"Better open it, Jake," growled one. "Let's see what's inside. No  use in lugging it out if its empty!" 

"Yeah?" Jake's question was a snort. "Take a look at them labels,  Dink. "An' the initials on the end. Ain't they

reason enough?" 

"Guess you're right, Jake; But you'd better " 

"Dink" broke off. Jake had stepped out into the light to fumble for  keys somewhere in his pocket. He had

chanced to look up. He found  himself staring into the eyes of The Shadow. 

Dink, looking up at Jake, had seen a sudden change in his pal's  expression. Ugly lips had spread; but the snarl

which they tried to  give had faded in Jack's throat. Dink followed the direction of his  companion's gaze. Like

Jake, Dink saw The Shadow. 

Two rigid men. Revolvers bulging from their pockets; yet they dared  not reach for those ready weapons. The

fiery gaze of The Shadow held  them motionless. 

They knew the identity of this weird being. That, in itself, told  facts to The Shadow. He knew that these men,

despite their rural garb,  were ruffians from the city. They were crooks who feared The Shadow's  might 

Those who had occupied this house had gone to stay. These men were  members of some crew that had come

here in their stead. But their  object was the same: to pick up anything that had been left behind,  such as that

telltale trunk beneath the stairs. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK 28



Top




Page No 31


THE SHADOW spoke. His tone was cold; his words a throbbing whisper,  backed by the weapons that he

wielded. He had no quarrel with these  men, despite their uncouth appearance. He was ready to let them talk. 

"Speak" hissed The Shadow. "State why you are here. Give the name  of the person who sent you." 

It was Jake who found words. His answer came in a husky gasp that  followed the sibilant echoes of The

Shadow's eerie tones. 

"We was just lookin' around," explained the ruffian. "But here   wonderin' if there was anythin'  anythin' we

could use. We're just a  couple of bums. Nothin' else " 

The Shadow's whispered laugh interrupted. It was a sneering,  mirthless tone that stopped Jake in his lie. That

fierce taunt called  for the truth. Dink quivered as he heard The Shadow's gibe. 

"We'll talk," whined Dink. "On the level. Jake didn't mean no harm.  We picked this house because we was

told to come here. We ain't hicks;  that's all a fake story. We've been looking for " 

The Shadow whirled suddenly. His move was timely. He was standing  at the very corner of the long rear

passage, his figure revealed by the  light. 

Dink's words had drowned a sound that The Shadow would ordinarily  have heard. Some new prowler had

been unlocking the door through which  Goodling and Lanford had made their entry two nights before. 

It was a puff of air that had warned The Shadow. His whirl came  just as the door was fully opened. Crimson

flashed from the lining of  his blacksurfaced cloak. Barely discernible in the doorway were the  figures of two

men. 

"It's Slasher!" cried Jake to Dink. "Slasher, with Louie. They seen  the glimmer. Get The Shadow!" 

REVOLVERS barked from the doorway. "Slasher" and Louie had spotted  The Shadow's twisting figure.

Crooks, like Jake and Dink, they had  blazed quick shots at their archfoe. As flames stabbed in from the

night, bullets sizzled past The Shadow's shoulder. 

The cloaked fighter had made himself a moving target. The long  range, the full length of the hall, was also to

his advantage.  Moreover, he had dived in the direction opposite that which the new  arrivals had expected. He

was heading for the living room; not to the  stairs. 

In his swift sweep, The Shadow swung straight toward those stabbing  flares of guns. His fingers clicked

triggers. Automatics answered with  their booms. The Shadow's thrusts were gauged, despite their speed. 

A figure thudded in the hall; another staggered back with a cry.  One invader had dropped; the other was

diving for the porch. The Shadow  wheeled again; this time toward Jake and Dink. Once again, his move was

his salvation. 

Cornered rats were whimpering no longer. With venomous snarls, this  pair had snatched their guns from their

pockets. The Shadow had given  them a chance to live. It was not in their evil hearts to return the  favor. 

Dink aimed too swiftly. He fired as The Shadow suddenly wheeled  clear of the living room door. Dink's shot

went wide. Jake, however,  was more deliberate than his excited pal. He pressed his trigger  finger, holding his

shot half a second longer than Dink. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK 29



Top




Page No 32


One half second! Such an interval was a long space to The Shadow.  His actions came in tenths of seconds.

Between Dink's futile shot and  Jake's coming attempt, The Shadow's automatics spat their jabs of  flame. 

Dink sprawled before he could fire a new bullet. Jake slumped, his  first shot undischarged. The Shadow had

dealt rightly with these  skulkers who had shown no thanks for his mercy. 

A gleam of headlights shot through the opened door. A cry from  outside; it came from the man who had

staggered into the clear. An  automobile had arrived, bearing new thugs. Shouts told that they were  piling

toward the house. 

THE SHADOW swept toward the wall near the stairway closet. Guns  barked from the porch; exultant cries

told that new crooks thought  their enemy was on the run. The Shadow snapped the wall switch,  plunging the

hallway into darkness. 

Crooks came on; they believed that The Shadow had fled into the  interior of the house. They were wrong.

Automatics burst anew. The  Shadow had held his ground; he was meeting these invaders with a leaden  hail. 

Men went diving back to the porch, scrambling for safety, anxious  to regain their car. The Shadow followed.

His guns still barked as he  kept up the pursuit. Crooks were in flight, firing wild shots from the  sides of a

rakish touring car. 

One man had remained at the wheel; that accounted for the rapid  escape. But as the touring car swung into

the dirt road at the front,  it came squarely into the glare of other headlights. Crooks fired  wildly at

approaching cars. 

Guns barked in answer. The touring car veered wide and shot by an  arriving caravan. Skidding from an

embankment, it roared toward the  lower road, jouncing its way to the clear before the other cars could  stop

and turn about. 

The three cars swung into the driveway. The Shadow moved swiftly  from the porch. He faded into the shelter

of enshrouding trees. He saw  the three cars draw up beside the house. Men alighted; Harry Vincent  was

among them. 

Jay Goodling's procession, on its way to Yager's cabin, had been  attracted by the finish of The Shadow's fray.

Flashlights glimmered;  one showed the open side door. A call for Goodling; then came the  prosecutor's

startled exclamation. 

Entering by the side, Goodling had recognized the same hall that he  and Lanford had seen two nights before.

As men of the law poured into  the house, The Shadow faded toward the dirt road. He saw no need to  linger. 

As aftermath to this strange chain of episodes, the law had  discovered the spot that The Shadow had found

hours before  the house  that searchers thought had vanished. Within that house lay evidence. 

Men of crime had failed to remove the steamer trunk that bore the  initials of Myra Dolthan and which

contained an envelope addressed to  the girl herself. 

The search for the missing heiress would gain new impetus, thanks  to the consequences that had followed

The Shadow's fight. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK 30



Top




Page No 33


CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES

THE big clock in the Sheffield courthouse was striking ten when  three cars rolled up in front of the gloomy,

oldfashioned building.  Jay Goodling was returning with his squad from the house on Dobson's  Road. 

A lone deputy came forward from the courthouse steps. He started to  speak to the prosecutor. Goodling

waved him aside in order to  superintend the unloading of the steamer trunk from one of the cars.  The deputy

managed, however, to get a statement off his chest. 

"It's important, prosecutor," he insisted. "It's about your friend  Lanford " 

"Where is Lanford?" questioned Goodling, suddenly turning about. "I  want to see him. Is he here yet?" 

"No," returned the deputy. "He's missing. Don't know where he is.  This reporter fellow is in your office." 

"Burke?" 

"Yeah. Waiting to see you, prosecutor." 

Goodling bounded up the steps. Roy Parrell followed, and Harry  Vincent did the same. Two deputies were

hoisting the trunk; they  decided to carry it to the prosecutor's office. 

When Harry and Parrell reached the rear office, they found Goodling  already there. The prosecutor was

staring at Clyde Burke, who was  resting wearily in a chair beside the desk. Doctor Claig was standing  beside

the reporter. 

"Where's Lanford?" Goodling was demanding. "What's happened to him,  Burke? What's happened to you?" 

Clyde's clothes showed that he had been in a scuffle. The  reporter's sleeves were ripped; his suit was

mudstained. His face  showed bruises. 

"Lanford has been abducted," interposed Claig, quietly, before  Clyde could explain. "He and Burke had a

battle with some fellow whom  they met outside of town. Lanford was carried off." 

"By whom?" questioned Goodling, savagely. 

"By Croy," replied Clyde. "The big fellow that you and Lanford saw  at the missing house." 

"Let me have the details, Burke." 

CLYDE gave them. He told of the fight; his subsequent fall from  Croy's sedan. He stated that he had walked

into town; that he had  arrived at half past nine to find the prosecutor absent. 

"Half past nine?" questioned Goodling. "That was half an hour ago.  Why wasn't I informed sooner?" 

"You were up at Yager's," said Claig. "There was no way to reach  you, prosecutor. I advised Burke to rest

here until you returned." 

"And you started no search for Lanford?" 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 31



Top




Page No 34


"There was no use. You had taken all your men except one; and I  supposed that you wanted him to stay

here." 

"You seem to have an exaggerated idea of your authority, doctor." 

Claig smiled at Goodling's outburst. With eyes gleaming shrewdly,  the physician replied to the prosecutor's

harsh statement. 

"On the contrary, Goodling," declared Claig, "I did not usurp any  privileges. I am merely a physician; not an

officer of the law. The  only advice that I could give was for Burke to rest until you returned.  It was beyond

my province to order a hunt for Lanford." 

Goodling could think of no retort. He was angry; but realized that  Claig's mild reproval allowed no criticism.

Turning about, Goodling  addressed the two deputies who had brought in the trunk. 

"Everyone out to hunt for Lanford," snapped the prosecutor. "Start  from the traffic light on Elm Street.

Follow out to the old Northwest  Road. Look for a suspicious sedan; hunt a big man with a scarred face.  By

the way, where are the reporters?" 

"Coming in," replied a deputy. "They're in the last car. Take 'em  along, shall we?" 

"Yes," decided Goodling. "Burke and Vincent both represent the  press. They're enough to be here." 

Momentary silence followed the departure of the deputies. A train  was chugging from somewhere beyond the

courthouse; its clanging bell  told that it was pulling out of town. Goodling spied the trunk. He  opened it and

began to examine the papers in the tray. 

"Look at this," he said suddenly. He had found the envelope.  "Addressed to Myra Dolthan, in Paris. This is

her trunk, all right." 

"I knew that from the initials," returned Parrell, indicating the  end of the trunk. "The L stands for Lucille 

the girl's middle name." 

There were footsteps in the hall. Goodling looked up to see a tall,  dignified man, whose thin gray hair topped

a straight forehead. The  arrival's face was a kindly one; yet trouble showed upon its drooping  lips. 

Behind the newcomer were two others. One was a solemn, longfaced  individual of slight build; the other

was a cabby from the station. The  cabby was burdened with two heavy suitcases. 

"Rufus Dolthan!" exclaimed Parrell, springing forward to greet the  grayhaired man. "I am sorry, sir. I

should have met you at the  station. But there has been trouble here." 

DOLTHAN'S kindly eyes had narrowed as they spied the trunk. The  grayhaired man noticed the foreign

papers in the opened tray. 

"Myra's?" he questioned, in a worried tone. "You have traced her,  Parrell?" 

"Yes," nodded the private detective. "This is Mr. Goodling, sir. He  can explain better than I." 

Rufus Dolthan bowed. He turned to the longfaced man behind him and  gave an order. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 32



Top




Page No 35


"Pay the cabby, Souder," said Dolthan. "Have him take our luggage  to the hotel. After that, you may join me

here." 

Souder nodded and went out with the cabby. Dolthan sat down in a  chair. Goodling took his seat behind the

desk; then introduced Claig,  Harry and Clyde. 

"Matters are still unsettled," explained Goodling, to Dolthan.  "Nevertheless, I was about to summarize what

we have learned.  Therefore, Mr. Dolthan, your arrival enables you to hear of certain  unfortunate

developments." 

"Concerning my niece?" questioned Dolthan, anxiously. 

"Only indirectly," replied Goodling. "First of all, Mr. Dolthan, we  had evidence of strangers in this vicinity.

Two nights ago, a man named  Lanford and myself entered an unknown house and there met a man named

Kermal." 

"Taussig Kermal?" 

"Yes. He could hardly have been any other person. We also met a  young woman who answers the description

of your niece, Myra. She warned  us to leave." 

"She seemed well?" 

"Yes. Her concern was for us; not for herself." 

"Of course. Of course. Kermal would be according her the best  possible treatment. The scoundrel will have to

maintain her confidence  until after she is of age." 

"SO I understand from Parrell. But to resume, Mr. Dolthan, we had  not, until tonight, gained any trace of the

house or its occupants.  Then events commenced. 

"First, regarding Lanford. He was driving into town with Burke"   Goodling indicated the reporter  "and

they encountered a man in a  sedan. Lanford recognized the fellow as Croy, a servant of Taussig  Kermal. 

"Croy was a powerful fighter, as I can testify. He carried Lanford  away; he dropped Burke on a road outside

of town. Hence we were not  immediately acquainted with what had happened. 

"I was holding conference here. A squatter named Hector Yager  entered and told of dealing with a man called

Blissop, a servant of  Kermal's who was murdered. Before Yager could complete his testimony,  shots were

fired through this window. Yager was slain under our very  eyes." 

"Incredible!" exclaimed Dolthan. He shifted, his chair away from  the window. "A murder  here in your own

office! Did the assassins  escape?" 

"They did," returned Goodling. "We started out to Yager's. We heard  gunfire; we encountered a fleeing car.

That led us to investigate a  house that had not been properly searched before, since it was not on  the old

Westbury road. 

"We discovered it to be the mystery house. We found dead men there;  and we located this trunk that belonged

to your niece. But the house  was deserted; its lavish furnishings removed. Kermal, Daggart, Croy   all were

gone; and Myra also." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 33



Top




Page No 36


Goodling arose and paced the office. He stared through the  blackened window. He shrugged his shoulders; he

was sure that no  lurkers had returned. They had dealt with Yager; another visit here  would have been folly on

the part of the assassins. 

"I have come to certain conclusions," stated Goodling, "despite the  fact that some details are vague. It is

obvious that Kermal and his  underlings fled that house after they had dealt with Lanford and  myself. 

"Apparently Blissop, knowing Kermal's game, had planned to  blackmail his master. He must have arranged

for pals of his to come to  the house tonight. Probably he chose Yager's shack for the rendezvous.  That is why

he gave Yager money." 

Goodling paused to look toward Parrell. The private detective  nodded his accordance. Goodling resumed. 

"Kermal ordered Blissop's murder. He removed everything to some new  hideout. The trunk was forgotten.

He sent men of his own to get it. On  the way, they stopped here. Croy, scouting about, must have reported

that a conference was due. 

"Kermal's ruffians saw Yager through the window. They fired three  shots, killing Yager; then they dashed

away for a quick trip to the old  house. Blissop's pals, meanwhile, had arrived at Yager's. Finding the  squatter

gone, they went to the old house. 

"The two groups met. They battled; we arrived at the finish. We  gained the trunk as evidence. But dead men

cannot speak; and living  rascals have escaped." 

JAY GOODLING stopped, dejectedly. Rufus Dolthan, however, was quick  to interject a hopeful comment. 

"Perhaps," he exclaimed, "those fugitives have gone to join Kermal.  Their trail would lead you to his new

hiding place." 

"No." It was Parrell who spoke. "Those fellows were covering up.  They wouldn't hop back to Kermal's. They

weren't hicks; they came from  New York. Kermal must have called them in on the deal." 

"We have one lead," decided Goodling, thoughtfully. "I refer to  Croy. He must have gone to join Kermal.

What is more, I believe that  the new headquarters is close by." 

"What makes you think that?" questioned Dolthan. 

"Croy being close at hand," replied Goodling. "That is one point.  Another fact: they moved a whole lot of

furnishings. They would not  have wanted to travel after daybreak; hence they could not have gone a  great

distance. 

"Moreover, the move was an emergency one. They were taking chances  being in that empty house and they

probably were wise enough to have  another hideout picked for a pinch. What is more, Daggart was

wounded.  Kermal would have to think about him. 

"Our search will continue. I intend to scour the entirely county  for traces of Kermal and his subordinates. No

time will be lost." 

"No time can be lost!" exclaimed Dolthan, rising. "Myra must be  found within the next few days. As soon as

she becomes of age, Kermal's  plot will be completed. Myra is his dupe, just as her father was. The  grasping

scoundrel will trick her into signing away her wealth." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 34



Top




Page No 37


"Do you think that the girl's life is in jeopardy?" queried  Goodling. 

"Yes and no," replied Dolthan, his tone troubled. "So long as  Kermal thinks he's within the law, he will prefer

to have her live. But  if he is trapped; if crime is pinned upon him, he is rogue enough to  resort to murder. As

he had done already." 

"Then our search may bring trouble," declared Goodling, seriously.  "Yet it is our only course." 

"It must be carefully conducted," warned Dolthan. "Search  thoroughly for Kermal; but when he is found,

make no immediate attack  against him." 

"A good plan," agreed Goodling. "Naturally, Kermal would not murder  Myra unless he knew his game was

finished. Only an open attack would  drive him to such a deed. I believe, Mr. Dolthan, that it would be best  for

you to stay in town, so that we can discuss matters when the  emergency arrives." 

"I shall do so." Dolthan turned to Souder, who had quietly returned  during the discussion. "Souder, call my

home in New York. Have Wurling  drive here at once with the limousine. Tell him to bring Hazzler,  also." 

"ONE moment, Mr. Dolthan," asserted Parrell. "Maybe you need your  chauffeur and your valet since you

intend to stay a while; but I need  helpers, too; and they are more important. If I'm to work on this case  with

Mr. Goodling, I ought to have a few of my investigators on the  job." 

"Perhaps, Parrell," reproved Dolthan, "Mr. Goodling does not want  your assistance. My intentions were to

send you back to New York. The  search for Myra is now in the hands of the law." 

"But I was trailing Kermal," insisted Parrell, in an indignant  tone. "I came here to look for him. It's rather

tough to be let down  just when the game begins to open." 

"Your search was for Myra," declared Dolthan. "We suspected that  she was being influenced by Kermal. But

Kermal, then, was known to us  only as a rogue. At present, we know him for a criminal. A murderer. It  is a

matter for the authorities." 

"I should welcome cooperation," put in Goodling, as he saw  Parrell's dejection. "Parrell is a good man, Mr.

Dolthan. If you care  to retain him, I can certainly use him and his experienced  investigators. They can be

sworn in as deputies." 

"Very well," agreed Dolthan. "Give Souder the names of the men whom  you want, Parrell. When you call

New York, Souder, arrange for Wurling  to bring Parrell's operatives with him." 

Comment ended. Goodling arose. He decided that there was no need of  further conference. He stated that he

would push the search that had  already begun. 

Rufus Dolthan left for the hotel, accompanied by Souder and  Parrell. Doctor Claig suavely decided that he

was going home. Harry and  Clyde went from the office while the physician was still holding a  brief chat with

the prosecutor. 

Both agents were anxious to hear from The Shadow; to make their  reports regarding the evening's episodes.

For they knew that in the  search for Myra Dolthan, The Shadow, alone, could accomplish more than  a host of

others. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES 35



Top




Page No 38


CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING

"THAT'S finished." 

Clyde Burke made the remark as he sealed a wellpacked envelope. He  placed it on the writing desk, where

Harry Vincent was still engaged  with fountain pen. A few minutes later, Harry ceased writing and folded  his

final paper. He tucked this sheet into a partly filled envelope.  Like Clyde, Harry sealed the wrapper. 

Harry had decided to room with Clyde. Uninstructed by The Shadow,  the two agents had gone immediately

to the hotel. There they had  compiled individual reports. 

"Of all places," mused Clyde Burke, staring from the window, "this  town of Sheffield is the last where I'd

expect excitement. The only  place that's lighted is the courthouse; and that's simply because of  all this crime." 

"Quite a few street lamps," observed Harry, strolling to the  window. "That's one help, Clyde." 

"Yes," returned the reporter, "but what use are they? Ordinarily,  nobody would be up after nine o'clock in this

burg." 

"There's someone now, coming from the courthouse." 

"Sure. From the courthouse. Probably some deputy. No  it's Doctor  Claig." 

"I thought he had started home." 

"Probably he got talking with Goodling. Claig likes to talk. He  chatted with me for half an hour while we

were waiting for you to come  back." 

"What was his topic?" 

"A lot of bunk about the swell sanitarium he used to run. It's off  on a hillside, about three miles north of town.

I mentioned the place  in my report." 

"He's retired now, isn't he?" 

"Yes. Living alone amid the ruins of his former glory. Wants to  sell the old place. But he can't find a buyer." 

Claig had come across the street while the two men were talking.  The physician had entered a coupe that was

parked in a space beneath  the side of the hotel. Clyde and Harry heard the starter; they saw the  gleam of

lights. The coupe pulled out and started northward. 

Clyde had regained his hired coupe on the way into town. He had  found it undisturbed in front of the traffic

light. At present, it was  parked at the rear of the hotel. 

Claig's car was the last that had been at the side of the hotel. To  Harry and Clyde, the space seemed empty as

they stared downward into  the darkness. 

THEY were wrong. There was a figure in that blackened space beside  the old hotel. A shrouded form had

arrived shortly before Doctor Claig.  Silently, unseen, the shape was entering a side door of the hotel 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING 36



Top




Page No 39


Looking up from below, The Shadow had seen his agents at the  window. He was coming to gain their reports.

Yet neither Clyde nor  Harry suspected the proximity of their invisible master. 

"I hope we receive a call from Westbury," remarked Clyde, in an  undertone. "Of course, there's a lot of dope

we can't give over the  wire, even though we're supposed to be working for the press." 

"That's true," agreed Harry, "but I've a hunch that we'll gain  different contact, Clyde. A closer interview. I've

been thinking about  it ever since I was out at the house on Dobson's Road." 

"You mean you saw someone there?" 

"No. But I'm sure Goodling was wrong on one point of his theory.  His idea was sound about Kermal's men

being there to cover up; but " 

"That was Parrell's idea." 

"One and the same. Goodling agreed with it. The fellows went from  here after they shot down Yager. But it

wasn't Blissop's pals who gave  them trouble." 

"Then who were the men there?" 

"Some more of the same bunch. Some came to cover the courthouse.  Others went to search the old house.

And then " 

Clyde nodded as Harry paused. The reporter understood. Harry had  viewed the scene of the fray and had

recognized that The Shadow must  have battled alone against two groups of crooks. Those who had slain

Yager had come to warn their fellows. 

Both agents were thinking, picturing the lone fighter and his odds.  Clyde's face was serious. He was

wondering if The Shadow had come  unscathed from the fray. Harry's face was troubled also. Both agents

stared musingly from the window. 

The door behind them opened. Without noise, almost imperceptibly at  first. Then, into the dull light of the

room came the living figure of  their chief. Beneath the table lamp lay the sealed envelopes; near by  were the

keys of Clyde's coupe 

The Shadow approached. He picked up the envelopes and thrust them  beneath his cloak. He detached one of

the keys from the ring. His eyes  viewed his agents by the window. Stealthily, The Shadow withdrew. 

Unseen, unheard, the master sleuth had come and gone. But as token  of his departure, he did not close the

door as silently as he had  opened it. From the hallway, The Shadow drew the door shut with a  slight thump. 

Harry and Clyde swung about, electrified by the sound. They saw the  closed door. They stared at the table.

They observed that the envelopes  were gone. For a moment, Clyde showed alarm; then Harry's chuckle made

the reporter smile. 

Someone had entered unnoticed to gain those envelopes. That same  person could have departed just as

silently. The click of the door had  been a deliberate signal on the part of The Shadow. An act that told  his

agents that it was he who had removed their messages. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING 37



Top




Page No 40


SHORTLY afterward, a light gleamed in a room on the same floor of  the hotel. The Shadow had chosen an

unoccupied room as a temporary  sanctum. Blinds were drawn over windows. The glare came from a shaded

table lamps, its rays centered downward upon the woodwork. 

The Shadow was reading the reports of his agents. They were inked  in code. Writing faded as The Shadow

perused separately folded pages.  But with pencil in an ungloved hand, The Shadow made notations as he

continued his perusal. The reports finished, his hands brought a large  sheet of paper into the light. 

The Shadow compiled a column of notations, that read as follows: 

Empty house as hideout. 

Death of Blissop. 

Disposal of Goodling and Lanford. 

Removal to new hideout. 

Encounter with Croy. 

Capture of Lanford. 

The Shadow paused. Instead of continuing the column, he started a  new sequence at the other side of the

paper. This second column stated: 

Arrival of Yager. 

Murder of Yager. 

Prowlers at house. 

Arrival of murderers. 

What Harry Vincent had guessed, The Shadow knew. The band that had  come to the abandoned house were

on their way to contact those already  there. Both groups had joined in battle with The Shadow. 

But Harry had not even guessed at one fact which The Shadow had  definitely noted. That was the sudden

break which had come in the  sequence of events. That break explained the reason why The Shadow had

formed two columns instead of only one. 

Events that concerned Taussig Kermal had begun with craft and  strategy. Blissop had been slain; but the

death of that servant had not  been an open one. Only the chance arrival of Goodling and Lanford had  made

Blissop's death a fact known to the law. 

Goodling and Lanford could easily have been murdered in the old  house. Instead, they had been doped and

removed. That showed that  Kermal still preferred craft; that he was confident that his trail  would not be

followed. 

Upon that point, The Shadow made side notations; this time in ink,  that dried, then faded. Thoughts that The

Shadow gave in brief  consideration; then dropped in order to return to his main theme. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING 38



Top




Page No 41


Murder not needed. 

Accidental death. 

The creek. 

His references were to Goodling and Lanford. Kermal could not have  known that the pair had met Turner on

the road from Sheffield. Goodling  and Lanford had been found in the prosecutor's coupe, on the very edge  of

Roaring Creek. 

Had Kermal seen necessity for their death, he could have seen to it  that the coupe was rolled into the creek,

with the motor running. The  doped men would have perished. Their deaths would have been classed as

accidental  without Turner's testimony, which Kermal could not have  anticipated. 

Kermal had been confident that his new hideout would not be  discovered. He had deliberately allowed

Goodling and Lanford to live,  despite the testimony that they would later give concerning the body of

Blissop. 

Moreover, Kermal had allowed Croy to travel from the hideout on  this very night. Encountering Lanford

and Clyde Burke, Croy had  captured the former and shaken off the latter. Up to that point, Kermal  and his

aids had persisted in their policy of avoiding unnecessary  killings. 

Then came the break. Yager, murdered under the very nose of half a  dozen witnesses. Why had the policy

been changed? Yager could have been  seized as readily as Lanford. Unless Yager's contact with Blissop had

been unknown to Kermal. In that case, there would have been no use in  watching the courthouse at all. 

The prowlers at the house showed the next step in this new and  perplexing policy. Since Croy had ventured

from the new hideout, why  had Kermal not sent him alone to the old house? 

Last of all, the arrival of the murderers there. Since the mystery  of the house stood as Kermal's strongest

protection; since its supposed  evanishment left no beginning from which to pick up the lawyer's trail,  why

had he not warned Yager's murderers to stay clear of it after  delivering death? 

Obviously, they had gone to warn the men who were already there.  Why, again, had that been a necessary

move? Yager had not named the  location of the house. 

Goodling and the others were heading for Yager's cabin, two miles  beyond the house. The prowlers who had

come in place of Croy could  easily have finished their search and departed with the trunk. 

Confusion on the part of Yager's murderers was no explanation. Men  who fired pointblank through the

window of a prosecutor's office were  too hardened to become stampeded after a simple getaway. 

THE SHADOW'S finding was definite. The capture of Lanford, by Croy,  constituted the final step in a policy

of craft and strategy. The  murder of Yager, very shortly after Lanford's capture, began a policy  of open

defiance; a series of bold moves that nullified all the cunning  measures that had preceded it. 

Taussig Kermal had become a hunted man. The murder of Yager had  aroused the law to a high pitch of

action. The trail to the house that  he had left had cleared all mystery. The law had not even stopped to  analyze

the sudden change of action. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING 39



Top




Page No 42


Only The Shadow was making such analysis. He could see the reason  behind the bold murder of Yager and

the flight of killers to the  mystery house. His answer was a whispered laugh that spoke of hidden  knowledge.

His long fist crumpled the paper that bore the written  columns. 

A NEW matter concerned The Shadow. That of Kermal's present  hideout. Quick comments appeared upon

new paper; these were inscribed  in vivid blue ink. 

Croy close by... Daggart wounded... Bandages... Hypodermic... 

Informant needed... Security in new hideout... Quick seizure of 

Lanford. 

A pause. The last word faded. Then, in vivid letters, The Shadow  wrote a name upon the paper: 

Doctor Leo Claig. 

A whispered laugh sounded as the name faded, letter by letter.  Again, The Shadow had pieced important

points. Daggart had been  wounded. Clyde's report stated that Lanford had spoken of his paleness;  the

freshness of the bandages. 

All pointed to skilled medical attention. Someone at the mystery  house had tended the wounded secretary in

capable fashion. Goodling and  Lanford had been treated with a hypodermic needle. A likely item in the  kit of

a medical practitioner, on hand because of a wounded patient. 

Claig had thrust himself straight into the investigation. It was he  who had examined Goodling and Lanford

after their experience. As an  informant for Kermal, none could be better than Claig. 

The doctor's old sanitarium could fill the bill as the new hideout  in this emergency. Croy's quick seizure of

Fred Lanford at the traffic  light proved that the servant did not have far to go. 

Searchers were already on the job. They would scour the countryside  for abandoned houses. They would pass

up Claig's house as a matter of  course. The physician had worked himself into the affairs of the law. 

The Shadow, however, remained undeceived. The light clicked out; a  cloak swished in darkness. A few

minutes later, Clyde Burke's coupe  rolled from its parking space behind the Weatherby Hotel. 

The Shadow was on his way to pay an unseen visit to the country  residence of Doctor Leo Claig. 

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES

"WELL, doctor, we'll probably be seeing you tomorrow." 

"Good. I'm glad you stopped off to say hello." 

"We saw you pulling into your garage. Though we'd better find out  if you'd spotted anybody suspicious." 

"I wish I had, Carter. But I didn't pass a single car coming up  from town." 

"Well, I guess we've been chinning long enough. Good night,  doctor." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES 40



Top




Page No 43


Three men stamped down the steps of Doctor Claig's front porch.  They were deputies, headed by a man

named Carter. Claig had encountered  them just outside his drive. They had strolled up to the porch for a  chat. 

Doctor Leo Claig was both well known and well liked in Sheffield.  In the days when his big house had served

as a private sanitarium, his  wealthy patients had spent large sums of money in the town. 

Always ready to chat with those whom he met, Claig had given  greeting to the deputies. They were returning

from the search that  Goodling had ordered; they were wearied with their tramp about the  hills and were glad

to rest a while at the physician's invitation. 

Claig had gone into reminiscences. He had recalled many places in  the neighborhood of Sheffield that he

thought would be worthwhile  investigating. Carter had thanked him for the tips. 

Claig chuckled as he unlocked his front door. He planned to stay at  home tomorrow. There would be more

deputies prowling about. He would  greet them as he had greeted Carter. 

Closing the front door, Claig turned on the light. He walked from  the hall into a comfortable, oldfashioned

sitting room. He turned on a  light there; then went back through the hall and into a parlor that  served as

waiting room for the few patients whom he occasionally  received. 

Claig went through and turned on the light in his office. Beyond  was a door that opened into his bedroom.

But instead of going in that  direction, Claig used another door to enter a long passage that ran to  the dining

room and kitchen. 

The physician turned on a light in a small alcove. Directly in  front of him was a heavy door, with a large lock.

The bottom of the  barrier was above the level of the floor. This was the entrance to the  stairway that led to the

second and third floors. 

Presumably, these upper stories were no longer in use. Claig had  abandoned them when he had given up his

sanitarium. They had formerly  been the quarters occupied by the doctor's patients. 

Tonight, however, Claig had reason to go upstairs. He unlocked the  big door, stepped through to the darkened

stairway and closed the door  behind him. The lock clicked automatically. 

Viewed from outside, Claig's house was a somber structure. The  lights which the doctor had turned on

modified the gloominess of the  ground floor; but the upper stories looked barren and forbidding. 

Faint moonlight showed blackened windows, most of them fronted by  steel bars. One large window at the

side of the house was unbarred; but  its darkness made it as forbidding as the others. This window was on  the

second floor, just above the roof of a small side porch. 

Off to the rear of the large house was a darkened garage. It was a  large structure also, of sufficient size to

accommodate four or five  automobiles. The garage had a low second story, which possessed half a  dozen

windows. It had once been used as quarters for servants. 

Off beyond the garage was a line of thick trees that marked the  path of an old dirt road. It was from that

streak of blackness that a  vague figure appeared in the moonlight, only to fade in ghostlike  fashion as it

neared the garage. 

THE SHADOW had come by a back route to Claig's. He had studied maps  of the district. He had read Clyde

Burke's details of the reporter's  chat with the physician. Clyde had gained a good idea of where Claig's  house


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES 41



Top




Page No 44


was located. 

From the garage, The Shadow studied the dimly lighted windows of  the lower door. In their appearance, he

detected the physician's bluff. 

Claig had definitely made an effort to indicate that he was at  home, yet might be anywhere on the ground

floor. To the average late  visitor, those scattered lights would serve as explanation if Claig  should prove slow

in answering a ring at the doorbell. 

To The Shadow, the lights meant that the first floor needed no  investigation. He looked upward and spied the

unbarred window that was  conspicuous above the roof of the little side porch. The Shadow moved  toward the

house. 

That objective gained, his course was upward. Gripping fingers  pressed roughened stone. The Shadow's

figure reached the porch roof.  His hands arrived upon a glass pane. A wedge of thin steel slid between  the

portions of the sash. A clamp yielded, noiselessly. 

Stretching a hand into darkness, The Shadow felt a broad window  ledge. Beyond were thick curtains; this

accounted for the deep gloom  within the window. The Shadow edged in until he reached the curtains.

Silently, he closed the widow. 

The Shadow could hear voices; yet the thickness of the draperies  muffled them almost to a point of obscurity.

It was not until The  Shadow carefully divided the curtains to a scant half inch that he  could make out the

words that were being spoken. 

The separation of the curtains enabled him to see as well as hear.  The view of the room beyond the curtains

was immediate proof that The  Shadow had reached his objective. 

Chairs, couch, rugs and tapestries; even the wolfhound in the  corner  all matched the description of the

living room in the house on  Dobson's Road. 

The furnishings had been carried here to Claig's and put in place  about this room. Apparently, this had once

been the physician's  upstairs office; that was why it had no bars upon the window. For the  present, it was the

new headquarters of Taussig Kermal. The man,  himself, was seated in the center of the room. 

A SOUR glower showed on Kermal's thick features. As The Shadow  watched, the heavy man gave a growl

and shook his shaggy head. Opposite  Kermal sat Claig. It was apparent that the physician had completed a

report. The details had not been to Kermal's liking. 

"That's about all," declared Claig, suavely, as Kermal began to  chew at the end of a cigar. "I was later than I

expected; and I ran  into some deputies outside the house. I stopped to chat with them a  while. It seemed good

policy." 

"It was," snorted Kermal, "and it won't be all the talking you'll  have to do, Claig. Well, let's hope we can hold

out for the next few  days." 

"There should be no trouble, Kermal," assured Claig. "Leave that  part of it to me." 

"We may be able to fool Goodling," stated Kermal, "but Rufus  Dolthan is a different. matter. He and this

smart detective, Parrell,  are liable to make a lot of trouble for us." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES 42



Top




Page No 45


"No more than Goodling," objected Claig. "He's hot because of  Yager's death. He's found the missing house

besides." 

"He blundered into it," sneered Kermal. "Something odd must have  happened down there tonight. He never

should have found the place. I'd  have sent after that trunk sooner, if I'd known all that was coming." 

"Lay it on Yager," suggested Claig. "How were we to know that  Blissop talked to the fellow. I didn't know it

until he blew into the  courthouse tonight. I was expecting some trouble from Goodling or  Lanford  not from

a person like Yager." 

"Croy took care of Lanford?" 

"Yes. But there, again, I can see trouble. Goodling will be as  anxious to rescue Lanford as Dolthan is to find

Myra." 

"Not quite. But we've a chance to spike the Lanford business." 

Kermal settled back into his chair and puffed at his cigar. After a  few moments of meditation, he spoke in a

slow growl. 

"Lanford recognized Croy," he explained. "The only thing Croy could  do was grab him. Croy didn't think

Burke knew who he was. That's why he  chucked Burke from the car, instead of bringing him along, too." 

"But Burke knew it was Croy," put in Claig, in a sarcastic tone,  "and right after that, Yager was murdered.

That made a perfect tieup  between the abduction and the killing." 

"Forget Yager," growled Kermal. 

"They'll never find the fellow who shot him; and if they can't  trace it that far, how are they ever going to

bring us into it?" 

"Through Blissop's death," returned Claig. "When they find his  body, they'll accuse us of his murder. They

won't need any more than  circumstantial evidence to pin Yager's death on us." 

"We can explain matters about Blissop," insisted Kermal. "We  decided that the other night, Claig. Our story

will sound straight  enough." 

"It would have sounded straight," agreed Claig, "but it won't pass  muster after what's happened to Yager. The

two men were linked. Anybody  who had cause to kill one would apparently have cause to kill the  other. 

"We'll have to sit tight; and all the while, we're in a worse mess  because of Lanford. I'll tell you, Kermal,

you've gone too strong. Of  course, it was Croy's fault. He had good reason to be on his way  through town; but

he made a mistake in grabbing Lanford." 

"DID he?" Kermal bounded to his feet. "Did he? Listen, Claig   we're lucky to have Lanford here. They're

looking for us anyway. We  couldn't use Lanford while he was loose." 

"Can we use him now?" 

"Certainly. There's going to be a showdown some day. The more  friends we have in court, the better. I'm

going to talk to Lanford and  see how he reacts." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES 43



Top




Page No 46


"You're going to tell him about Yager?" 

"Of course not. We'll give him the facts as they stood at the time  Croy grabbed him. We'll see if he is

impressed. If it goes over, we'll  know that we can take a chance with the others later." 

"Not now. Not since Yager's death. That complicates everything." 

"Perhaps. Nevertheless, if Lanford listens, we'll have gained  something." 

Kermal strode to the door and called for Daggart. The Shadow caught  a glimpse of the palefaced secretary

in a hallway beyond the door.  Daggart nodded and departed when Kermal ordered him to bring Lanford. 

Doctor Leo Claig was smiling wisely as Kermal returned. Watching  the physician's face, The Shadow could

see that Claig possessed craft  as keen as Kermal's. 

Fred Lanford was due for an interview with two shrewd men. However  they might choose to bluff their

prisoner, the chances were that they  would be successful. 

But in the coming game, these two planners were dealing with one  whose presence they did not suspect.

Unwittingly, they were about to  reveal themselves and their schemes to the hidden watcher who had come  to

learn their ways. 

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES

"COME in, Daggart." 

Kermal rasped the command in response to taps at the doorway from  the hall. The door opened; Daggart

appeared, with Fred Lanford. The  Shadow, peering from the slitted curtain, observed another figure also. 

Croy was standing out in the hallway. The big servant had backed up  Daggart. The Shadow knew that

Lanford, until now, must have been kept  prisoner in one of the barred rooms. 

In fact, Lanford's face showed defiance as the prisoner met  Kermal's gaze. Then, as Daggart closed the door,

Lanford began to look  about in bewildered fashion. The room had turned his recollection back  to that old

house that he had visited with Goodling. 

Lanford stared toward the curtains at the window, thinking that  they led into an adjoining room. Seeing that

they were raised to the  level of a window sill, he realized that this could not be the  apartment wherein he had

viewed a dead form by the couch. 

A chuckle ended Lanford's musing. The prisoner turned as he heard  the sound. He recognized Doctor Claig.

An expression of complete  mystification showed upon Lanford's features; then the young man smiled  in

relief. 

Like others who lived in Sheffield, Lanford knew Claig by sight and  reputation. The doctor's presence gave

assurance that danger was  absent. But as he viewed Claig's steady eyes, Lanford appeared to  wonder. 

"Good evening," greeted Kermal, his harsh voice toned. "Have a  seat, Mr. Lanford. Help yourself to a cigar.

You are with friends." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES 44



Top




Page No 47


LANFORD considered Kermal with doubt; then he caught a nod from  Claig. He started to sit down on the

couch; then shied away and took a  chair instead. He managed a weak smile as he accepted a cigar from a  box

that Kermal passed him. 

"Mr. Lanford," stated Kermal, "I greatly regret the circumstances  that surrounded our first meeting. I must

also apologize for the  emergency which caused my servant to bring you here tonight. 

"Therefore, I am ready to make explanation. Not only that: I am  willing to answer any questions that may

trouble you. Suppose, however,  that I begin by giving an account of myself. That will automatically  answer

most of the questions that you have in mind." 

"Very well," agreed Lanford, huskily. "Go ahead, Mr. Kermal." 

"You remember my name." Kermal smiled. "Good. In full form, it is  Taussig Kermal. I am a Boston attorney.

I represent a man named Wade  Dolthan, who died a few months ago. Before his death, he appointed me  as

executor of his estate. 

"Wade Dolthan had a daughter named Myra. She is the young lady whom  you met at our former

headquarters. Myra was abroad at the time of her  father's death. Since she would not inherit the estate until

she became  of age, I feared for her safety during the short time that remained  before she would be

twentyone." 

Kermal paused. He was seated back in his chair, looking steadily at  Lanford. The Shadow could detect the

closeness with which the lawyer  was watching his listener. 

"Let me be specific," resumed Kermal. "Should Myra Dolthan die  before the age of twentyone, the full

estate would go to her  stepbrother, George Garling. He is older than Myra, and he is a man of  doubtful

character. 

"Do not misunderstand my statement"  Kermal raised his hand as  Lanford was about to ask a question  "I

would not accuse Garling of  plotting his stepsister's death. Far from it. Garling is a weakling.  But therein lies

the possibility that he might listen to the threats of  others. 

"Wade Dolthan warned me that his stepson was a man with a bad past.  He refused to give me details; but he

intimated that there might be  people who held information sufficient to send Garling to prison. 

"Such persons would naturally like to see Wade Dolthan's estate go  into the hands of George Garling. They

could blackmail that young man  for several millions. There is one way in which they could assure  themselves

that Garling would receive the money. That would be by  murdering Myra Dolthan prior to her twentyfirst

birthday." 

Kermal paused to survey his listener, Lanford was staring in  amazement. He looked toward Doctor Claig,

who nodded shrewdly. 

"Am I clear?" questioned Kermal. "Do you see, Lanford, what great  opportunity exists for those of criminal

tendency? Realize one point"   he wagged an impressive finger  "namely that murderers could strike  before

they revealed themselves. They would not have to start pressure  on Garling until after he actually held the

millions. 

"They could approach him by proxy, if necessary. He would not dare  accuse anyone of murder; for on the

face of it, he would appear to be  the one who had most to gain. Had I realized those complications prior  to


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES 45



Top




Page No 48


Wade Dolthan's death, I would have insisted that he change his will.  But I did not see the danger until after he

had died." 

KERMAL arose impressively. Chewing at a fresh cigar, he paced back  and forth. He finally seated himself

on the couch, nearer to Lanford  than he had been before. 

"There are remedies for most ills," stated Kermal, steadily. "I saw  the cure in this case. To keep Myra

Dolthan hidden until she is of age.  Then to have her make out a will herself, cutting George Garling off

entirely. When that has been accomplished, plotters will be checkmated. 

"I happened to be a friend of Doctor Leo Claig. He came to Boston  while Myra was on her way from Europe.

I wanted to use his house as our  hiding place. He suggested that it would be better to occupy a house on

Dobson's Road, a building recently vacated by an artist named Brooks. 

"We moved in there one night. Myra, myself, Daggart and two  servants: Croy and Blissop. Brooks had failed

to order the telephone  disconnected. That suited us, because it enabled us to communicate with  Doctor Claig. 

"However, the telephone caused trouble. Last Saturday night,  Daggart heard someone making a call by the

door of the hall closet.  Daggart listened; he heard Blissop giving someone instructions how to  reach our

house. 

"Blissop, like Croy, was in my confidence. The man had turned  traitor. He was selling out to those who

wished to murder Myra. Daggart  rushed upon Blissop as soon as the fellow had completed the call. 

"Blissop drew a gun. He fired two shots; one clipped Daggart's arm.  When Daggart fell, Blissop was aiming

deliberately to kill him when  Croy arrived. He had a gun; he had heard the shots. He fired and his  bullet

lodged in Blissop's heart." 

Lanford saw Daggart standing palefaced near the couch. The  secretary nodded as he caught Kermal's gaze.

Daggart's face looked  troubled; Lanford decided that the man was recalling that experience in  which he had

been wounded. 

"I called Doctor Claig," declared Kermal. "He attended Daggart's  wound. We placed Blissop's body in the

living room. Then we discussed  our next step. Less than one week remained before Myra would be

twentyone. It seemed best to avoid complications until that date. 

"To inform the authorities would have caused an inquiry. Our  whereabouts would be known. Myra would be

held as a witness. We knew  that we were dealing with hidden foes who would go to any measure to  slay the

girl whom we were protecting 

"Blissop had told them where we were. Fortunately, his telephone  conversation had been finished. They did

not know what had happened.  Yet there was a chance that they might come that very night. Blissop  had

directed them to take the first road after they passed the one  marked Westbury. 

"We sent Croy out into the storm. He removed the sign. He brought  it to our road and planted it there. We

knew that we would have time to  move. We were packing upstairs when you and Goodling arrived.

Naturally, Croy suspected that you might be enemies." 

LANFORD smiled. The story sounded logical. Kermal smiled also; he  saw that Lanford was beginning to

believe. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES 46



Top




Page No 49


"Croy's description of you and Goodling impressed Doctor Claig and  myself," said Kermal, to Lanford. "We

sent Daggart downstairs, however,  to make sure. Unfortunately, Myra, who was upset by Blissop's death,  saw

you before Daggart arrived. 

"She took it upon herself to give you a vague warning. You became  suspicious and discovered Blissop's

body. Even then we would not have  dealt roughly with you if Goodling had not started the attack. 

"After we had overpowered the pair of you, I felt that there was no  time to be lost. Doctor Claig agreed. He

realized who you were. That  was why we turned out the lights before he came in to administer the

hypodermic. 

"Croy took you both to the edge of the creek. He left you in the  coupe. He came back and helped us complete

packing. After that, he  replaced the sign where it belonged. We came here and brought Blissop's  body with

us. Our intention was to make everything known the day that  Myra becomes of age." 

Kermal stopped. It was Doctor Claig who added the finishing touch  to the story. 

"There was a trunk at the old house," explained the physician,  dryly. "Blissop had put it away somewhere.

We overlooked it when we  packed. When we checked up on everything here, we remembered the trunk. 

"Myra thought it must be under the stairs. We decided to send Croy  to find it, since I had learned, downtown,

that the location of the  house was still a mystery. But Croy could not go until after the search  was ended." 

"I sent him out this evening," added Kermal. "He met you while he  was driving through the outskirts of the

town. You recognized him; and  Croy saw nothing else to do but bring you here." 

"And now," put in Claig, "the house has been located. The trunk is  in Goodling's office. The hunt is

beginning for Myra Dolthan as well as  for you, Lanford. But"  the physician chuckled  "they will never

suspect this house as the new hiding place." 

"Not until we reveal it," declared Kermal, seriously. "We intend to  do that, Lanford, within the next few days.

As soon as Myra is  twentyone and has made her new will. That is why we have decided to be  frank with

you." 

KERMAL arose, stepped forward and clamped his hand on Lanford's  shoulder. His entire action was

friendly. 

"You can help us, Lanford," declared the lawyer, in an emphatic  tone. "You can help us by staying here, as a

guest, rather than as a  prisoner. You can act as witness to documents. You can aid us in  protecting Myra." 

"How?" questioned Lanford. 

"By writing a letter," replied Kermal. "A letter to Goodling. I  shall mail it to New York and have a friend

there send it, in your  envelope, to Goodling. 

"You can explain that everything is all right. That you have met  Myra Dolthan. That will carry the search

away from here. We shall be  unmolested until the allimportant day when we can make our complete  story

public." 

Lanford nodded momentarily. Then his fists clenched in challenge.  Rising, the young man faced Kermal. He

blurted out his doubt. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES 47



Top




Page No 50


"Why should I accept your story?" he demanded. "Why should I even  believe in Doctor Claig? You have

tried to explain a murder. Perhaps  your story is true. But how do I know that the girl is here? How do I  know

that she is still alive? She warned me once  where is she to warn  me now?" 

"She is here," smiled Kermal, "to advise you. Not to warn you.  Daggart"  he beckoned to the secretary  "go

and request Miss Dolthan  to join our company." 

The secretary bowed and went toward a door opposite the one by  which Lanford had entered. Kermal's smile

had become triumphant.  Claig's face showed a gleam. 

The Shadow, watching Fred Lanford, saw the young man stare fixedly  toward the door by which Daggart had

departed. The Shadow knew that if  Myra Dolthan appeared in answer to the secretary's summons, Kermal's

argument with Lanford would be won. 

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT

BEYOND the door that Daggart had left open was a further hall. It  was the twin of the corridor by which

Lanford had come to this meeting  room. Daggart's footsteps had died; now, after a brieflapse,  footfalls

were returning. 

All eyes were toward that door as Myra Dolthan appeared. Standing  on the threshold, the girl gazed

inquiringly toward Taussig Kermal.  Then she spied Fred Lanford. 

Her eyes showed involuntary surprise as she recognized him as one  of the men to whom she had given a

warning. 

"Come in, Myra," requested Kermal, in a kindly tone. "I want you to  meet Mr. Lanford. He was one of the

strangers who came to the other  house. Do you remember him?" 

"I do," replied Myra, nodding slowly. The girl's face had paled;  but its color was returning as she advanced

into the room. "I  I am  pleased to meet you, Mr. Lanford." 

"I am pleased to meet you, Miss Dolthan," returned Lanford. He had  risen and was bowing. "Very pleased." 

"Your friend?" inquired Myra. "Where is he?" 

"Jay Goodling?" laughed Lanford. "Back in town, where he belongs.  Wondering where I am, I suppose." 

"You see, Myra"  Kermal caught the girl's attention  "I told you  the exact truth when I said that no harm

had befallen those two  strangers. We did not hold them as prisoners. They were released by  Croy. Both of

them returned to Sheffield. 

"Mr. Lanford came here tonight, after a chance meeting with Croy. I  must admit that there was a

misunderstanding; but after Croy brought  Lanford here, I explained matters. Lanford is our guest; not our

prisoner." 

Myra Dolthan appeared relieved. Fred Lanford smiled. This was  certainly the girl whom he had met on

Saturday night. He had remembered  Myra's countenance from the vague light of the old house. Here, where

he could see her face more plainly, he was absolutely sure of her  identity. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 48



Top




Page No 51


Myra Dolthan was attired in the same dark traveling costume that  she had been wearing that other night. Her

voice was the same; the  darkness of her hair produced the same contrast against the whiteness  of her face. 

"I was worried about you, Mr. Lanford," explained Myra, as she  seated herself in a chair. "Mr. Kermal and

Doctor Claig assured me that  you and your friend were uninjured. But I knew that there had been a  scuffle

after you had failed to heed my warning." 

"Mr. Lanford was concerned about your safety, Myra," put in Claig,  with his dry tone. "So Mr. Kermal

decided that it would be best for you  to meet." 

"You see, Myra," stated Kermal, "I have made certain statements to  Mr. Lanford. I feel convinced that he

believes what I have told him;  but your corroboration would be most welcome." 

"May I ask Miss Dolthan some questions?" queried Lanford, facing  Kermal boldly. 

"Certainly," replied the lawyer. "Myra"  he stared toward the girl   "you may answer any questions that Mr.

Lanford asks." 

THE girl nodded. Her eyes were looking straight toward Kermal. The  Shadow, watching from the curtains,

could see the fixed, almost  hypnotic stare that had come over Myra's expression. Not once did  Kermal relax

his gaze. 

"Miss Dolthan," stated Lanford, "I have been told that you are here  of your own free choice. Is that correct?" 

"Certainly." The girl spoke in a low tone; then turned toward  Lanford as Kermal's gaze relaxed. "Yes. I lived

in the old house at Mr.  Kermal's advice. I came here also because he advised it." 

"Yet you warned Goodling and myself," insisted Lanford. "You told  us to leave that house on Dobson's Road.

Why?" 

Myra did not look toward Kermal; yet it was plain, to The Shadow,  that the girl knew the lawyer was

watching her. Myra spoke; her voice  trembled slightly. 

"I was afraid," she said to Lanford. "Not for myself; but for you  and your friend. I was afraid that you would

be mistaken for enemies.  We expected such persons to arrive." 

"But you thought Goodling and I were all right?" 

"Yes. That is why I warned you." 

"You knew that a man was dead in the house?" 

"Yes. I knew that Blissop had been killed." 

"And you believe that his death was either accidental or justified  by circumstances?" 

"Yes. Croy told me that he shot Blissop in order to save Daggart. I  believed Croy." 

Lanford nodded. Despite the fact that Myra spoke as if under  pressure, her statements were clear. Kermal

smiled; then made a  suggestion to Lanford. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 49



Top




Page No 52


"Ask Miss Dolthan if she thinks you should cooperate with us," said  the lawyer. Then, to Myra: "Remember,

Myra, you may answer as you think  best." 

Again the girl's eyes met Kermal's. Myra nodded instinctively. The  Shadow could see that Kermal was

forcing her to a choice. Lanford,  however, did not discern the subtle fact. 

"Mr. Kermal wants me to write a letter," stated the young man. "One  that can be posted from New York. A

letter saying that everything is  all right; that you are safe. That I am satisfied that all can be  explained. Do you

feel that I should comply with that request?" 

"I do," responded Myra. "I advise you to do as Mr. Kermal  suggests." 

"And shall I remain here, and aid in keeping searchers from  learning where you are?" 

"Yes. If Mr. Kermal wishes you to do so." 

Lanford paused. Again he was impressed by the girl's definite  opinions. Kermal spoke. 

"Are there any other questions, Mr. Lanford?" he inquired. 

Fred started to shake his head; then stopped. One question had  occurred to him. He turned to Myra. 

"Who are these enemies of yours," he asked. "Is there anyone in  particular whom you fear? Anyone whom

you think " 

LANFORD stopped short. Myra was gripping the arms of her chair. Her  face had turned pale; she was biting

her lips. The girl glanced  nervously toward Kermal. 

The lawyer came to his feet. For a moment he glared at Lanford;  then his wrath subsided before Fred noticed

the suppressed outburst. 

"Miss Dolthan is highly nervous," spoke Kermal. "Your question has  disturbed her. We must not trouble her

with a subject that arouses her  fears. Am I right, Doctor Claig?" 

"Quite right," responded the physician. "As you know, Lanford, I am  a specialist on nerve conditions. I

believe that it would be best for  Miss Dolthan to rest." 

Kermal nodded. The girl arose. She steadied and managed to say good  night. Fred watched her walk from the

room. Daggart closed the door  immediately after the girl's departure. 

"About the letter," declared Kermal, brusquely. "If you write it at  once, Doctor Claig can drive downtown and

post it so it will go out in  the early morning mall." 

"What shall I state in it?" asked Lanford. 

"I shall leave that to you," replied Kermal. "Goodling is a friend  of yours. Tell him that you are in New York;

that you have met Myra  Dolthan. State that you have promised her that you will not explain  matters until

later. Choose your own wording, so the letter will be  natural." 

Lanford nodded and turned about toward the door by which he had  entered. Kermal nodded to Daggart. The

secretary followed Goodling. The  Shadow saw Croy in the hall when the door was opened by Lanford. Then


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 50



Top




Page No 53


Fred and Daggart went out; the door closed. "Not bad, Claig," chuckled  Kermal. "Not bad at all. We sold

Lanford on our story. Others will  believe us also." 

"It was Myra who convinced him," corrected Claig. "Don't forget  that, Kermal." 

"Myra will convince others later." 

"Not if they question her while you are absent." 

"Ridiculous, Claig. She knows what to say." 

"Up to a certain point, yes. But after that  well, you saw how she  acted when Lanford questioned her about

who the enemies were." 

Kermal grunted angrily; but he had no reply. He paced back and  forth across the room. Claig looked dour. 

"I guess you're right," admitted Kermal, stopping his pacing to  face the physician. "Everything is explainable

up to a certain point.  After that, we need proofs." 

"Which you do not have," reminded Claig, "and which you can never  obtain. Remember, Kermal, how you

first told the story to Myra. I was  there. I saw her reaction." 

"She listened just as Lanford did tonight. She believed me  completely." 

"At first, yes. You told her about threatening danger. That you  were performing a duty for her dead father.

She welcomed your  protection; and then she asked whom it was you feared." 

"And I told her Rufus Dolthan. Her uncle." 

"Yes. You told her that. Like the fool you can sometimes be." 

"I made her believe that her uncle wants to murder her." 

"You made her make believe she believed it." 

"She certainly mistrusts her uncle." 

"And she mistrusts you as well. That girl is in a state of  confusion, Kermal. As a witness, she would probably

turn against you." 

KERMAL paced again. At last he stopped and pounded his fist upon  the table. 

"There are millions of dollars hinged on this game of ours, Claig,"  declared the lawyer. "You and I are in it

deep. You know as well as I  do that we have to hold off everyone until after Myra Dolthan becomes  of age. 

"The girl believes sufficiently in me. As long as she encounters no  other influence, she will sign anything that

I ask. No one  not even  Rufus Dolthan  can question the legality of a paper that bears her  signature after

she is twentyone. 

"Provided, of course, that it is witnessed. That part of it is  easily handled. Croy and Daggart can sign; better

still, you and  Lanford. Four of you."


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 51



Top




Page No 54


"And suppose," suggested Claig, "that the lot of us are jailed on  account of Blissop and Yager " 

"That does not matter," broke in Kermal. "There's only one document  that Myra needs to sign. That is her

will. In the absence of a later  will, such an instrument would remain valid." 

"You are forgetting Rufus Dolthan," reminded Claig. "Suppose all of  us  Lanford, of course, excepted 

should become fugitives from  justice. Myra would be restored to her uncle. She would know us as  thieves

and murderers; she would see some game in everything that we  have done. No matter how cleverly you word

that will, Kermal, its  purpose will appear suspicious." 

"We can discuss that point later," decided Kermal. "I disagree with  you on it, Claig. Myra may have doubted

some of my statements; but she  believes enough of them to make matters safe. As you yourself say, she  is in

a state of confusion. That is good. 

"I made her trust me at the start. Then to clinch matters, I tried  to shatter her belief in her uncle. My plan did

not work as I expected  it. But it did have a negative effect; it made the girl mistrust both  her uncle and

myself. 

"Let her remain confused. Let her distrust everyone concerned. She  will seek new friends; and because of her

mistrust, she will find safe  ones. She will go by the advice of some reputable lawyer; and I will  defy any

attorney to uncover a joker in the will that I intend to have  Myra sign. 

"She will be advised to let it stand. We will still hold the upper  hand. But all this, Claig"  Kermal shook his

shaggy head  "is useless  speculation. We are smart enough to come into the clear." 

CLAIG looked unconvinced. Kermal became savage in his argument. 

"I've told you," he asserted, "that we can explain Blissop's death.  They can never prove Yager's murder

against us. The birds who finished  him have flown." 

"A bad combination," reminded Claig. "I was afraid that matters  would get beyond us. But you were

stubborn, Kermal. You insisted on  acting as you have." 

"We have Lanford as an ally," mused Kermal. "He will testify in our  behalf." 

"Not when he learns what happened at the courthouse tonight." 

"But Croy and Daggart will stand by." 

"Croy, yes. But not Daggart. He will stick to his story regarding  Blissop's death, because he might be

implicated. But when you are  accused of Yager's murder, Daggart will have qualms." 

"How can he bring any charges against me?" 

"He can't. But he will doubt you. He will no longer be  wholeheartedly for you. Whatever you do, Kermal,

say nothing to  Daggart about that crime downtown tonight." 

"You mean that even if I assured him that I did not order Yager's  death he would not believe me?" 

"Daggart would not believe you. He knows your stubborn traits,  Kermal. If he grasps the idea that crooks are

teamed up with us, he  will desert us." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT 52



Top




Page No 55


"And report Blissop's death in order to save his own hide?" 

"Exactly. He would consider himself justified." 

Claig paused. Kermal was about to speak when a light tap sounded at  the door. Kermal growled; Daggart

entered. The secretary was bringing  Lanford's letter. 

KERMAL read the epistle. He nodded in satisfaction, put the letter  in its envelope and thrust the latter into a

larger wrapper, upon which  he wrote an address. 

"The letter is all right, Claig," assured the lawyer. "Get it  downtown right away. I have addressed it to a

friend in New York. He  will mail Lanford's letter back. Lanford addressed its envelope to  Goodling." 

Claig took the letter and departed. The Shadow saw Daggart watch  the physician's departure. Daggart's face

looked pale and troubled.  Kermal noted the fact also. 

"Good night, Daggart," said the lawyer. "It's time for sleep. If  anything worries you, we can talk about it in

the morning." 

The secretary nodded and went out by the door which he had entered.  Kermal glanced about the room; then

went to the same door and turned  out the lights. The Shadow saw the hallway light as the lawyer opened  the

door; then the glow was obscured as the barrier closed behind  Kermal. 

Curtains parted in darkness. Softly, The Shadow entered the living  room. From outside, he could hear the

buzz of a motor. Doctor Claig was  driving his coupe from the garage. 

Reaching the portal, The Shadow opened the door to find a darkened  hall. One glimmer of light was present;

it came from beneath a door at  the end of the corridor. Softly, The Shadow stole in that direction. 

He stopped when he reached the door itself. Shrouded amid darkness,  The Shadow paused to listen. The

sound outside had faded. Claig had  departed townward. An absolute hush held sway throughout this entire

house. 

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE

Taptap  Taptap  

Myra Dolthan looked up, startled. The girl was seated in the corner  of a plainly furnished room, the apartment

to which she had been  assigned since the arrival at Doctor Claig's. 

Taptap  Taptap  

Myra smiled at her own fright. She laid aside the diary in which  she was writing and arose from beside a little

table. She had  recognized Daggart's knock. This was probably another summons from  Kermal. Myra

supposed that the lawyer wanted her to hold a new  interview with Lanford. 

"All right, Daggart," said Myra. "I am ready. Does Mr. Kermal want  to see me again?" 

She was unlocking the door as she spoke. She thought she heard a  response in the secretary's voice. Myra

opened the door. Eyes wide with  amazement, she stared across the threshold. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 53



Top




Page No 56


Before her, Myra saw an incredible figure. The darkness of the hall  enshrouded cloaked shoulders. That same

gloom obscured the features of  a face beneath a slouch hat. Yet the girl could discern eyes  orbs of  fire that

shone from beneath the hat brim. 

A warning whisper stopped the startled exclamation that sprang to  Myra's lips. Silent, the girl stared into

those burning eyes. Yet fear  passed instantly as Myra studied the glowing optics. Some mysterious  flash of

The Shadow's eyes told her that this visitant was a friend. 

The Shadow's gaze brought further understanding. Like speaking  lips, those eyes pronounced that their owner

had come here secretly,  that his presence in this house was unknown to other occupants.  Stepping back from

the door, Myra motioned for The Shadow to enter. 

Blackness moved inward from the hall. The Shadow's outline formed a  clearcut figure in the light. Silently,

The Shadow closed the door. He  turned and spoke to Myra. The steadiness of his whisper gave the girl  new

confidence. 

"I have seen," pronounced The Shadow. "I have heard. I am a friend.  You may speak. Tell me your real

thoughts concerning Taussig Kermal." 

The girl walked to the table. She picked up her diary, closed the  book and extended it to The Shadow. A

gloved hand received the volume. 

"I have kept this record," declared Myra. "You may have it. You  must truly be a friend; otherwise you could

not be here. Of if you were  an enemy"  the girl managed a smile as she paused  "your purpose  would be to

kill me; not to talk of the dangers which surround me." 

MYRA had seated herself at the table. Her confidence in The Shadow  was amazing. Instinctively, the girl had

recognized The Shadow as a  protector. She was anxious to unburden her troubled mind to this weird  visitant

who had conquered obstacles to meet her. 

"The book tells everything," declared Myra, her quiet eyes meeting  The Shadow's gaze, "and yet  and yet I

do not fully understand. About  Taussig Kermal  about my uncle. I would have believed Mr. Kermal fully  if

he had not spoken as he did of Uncle Rufus." 

"State what Kermal said," ordained The Shadow. 

"He told me that father had died suddenly." The girl's tone was  sober. "He said that the will placed my life in

jeopardy. Should I die  before I became twentyone, father's money would go to my stepbrother,  George. I

have always liked George; but it is true that he is a  weakling, as Mr. Kermal said. 

"I do not doubt that George could be sent to prison by people who  knew too much about him. I believed it

best to do as Mr. Kermal said.  The old house where we were seemed safe. I could see easily how my life

would be sought by criminals if they intended to blackmail George  Garling, should he gain my father's

wealth. 

"But I could not understand why Mr. Kermal would not let me write  to my uncle. I asked him; he said, at

first, that my uncle would  disapprove of the plan to keep me hidden. I insisted that I could  persuade Uncle

Rufus to make no objection. Mr. Kermal said then that  maybe our enemies were watching Uncle Rufus. I

became more persistent  and finally Mr. Kermal said that my uncle was the one enemy whom we  must guard

against." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 54



Top




Page No 57


THE girl paused. Her face was pale and troubled; her eyes had a  faraway stare as she recalled those

discussions that she had held in  the past. 

"I told Mr. Kermal that I did not believe him," declared Myra,  firmly. "He broke into a tirade against my

uncle. He  he said that he  believed my father feared my uncle. That  that my father's death  looked like

murder. 

"He claimed that!" The girl's tone, though low, was indignant. "Mr.  Kermal declared that Uncle Rufus first

managed to poison my father. So  cleverly was it done that no trace could be discovered; and that his  next

move would be to kill me. 

"In my case, Mr. Kermal said, there would be no attempt at  strategy. Any form of death would do, so long as

I died before I came  of age. Each day seemed more desperate; and yet I felt forced to trust  in Mr. Kermal." 

"Your reason," ordered The Shadow. "State why you still trusted  Kermal." 

"I knew that I was safe with him," explained Myra. "Events had  proven that. Doctor Claig, too, seemed very

kind. But when Blissop was  killed, I  I began to wonder. That is why I warned the two men who  came to the

house." 

"Give your recollection of Blissop's death," commanded The Shadow. 

"It happened while I was upstairs," declared Myra. "At the other  house. I heard the shots. I came down and

saw Daggart wounded. Blissop  was dead; Croy had killed him. Croy said that he had slain Blissop to  save

Daggart. 

"Croy seemed honest. But Blissop had seemed honest, too. I think  Croy did act to save Daggart. But Croy is

stupid at times; Blissop was  a much more intelligent man. I wondered if Blissop really was a  traitor. 

"Suppose that Mr. Kermal was the one who really plotted against my  life; not Uncle Rufus, as he suggests.

Croy would not have seen that  Mr. Kermal was evil; but Blissop could have. He might have been acting  to

help me when Croy killed him." 

Again the girl paused. The Shadow spoke: 

"Tonight," he whispered, "you spoke as though you partly trusted  Kermal. You managed well with it. You

covered most of the doubts that  you must feel." 

Myra nodded her understanding. She realized that somehow The Shadow  had been present at that interview.

She gave her explanation. 

"I have realized that I must cover my mistrust," she declared. "I  am safe here for the present. But I fear Mr.

Kermal. I know that the  crisis may come soon. When he told me those lies about Uncle Rufus, I  realized what

his own game could be. 

"Whether or not I do have enemies at present, I could certainly  have one after I become of age. The one I

mean is Mr. Kermal himself.  He may be planning crime of his own, telling me these stories in order  to cover

his own plot. 

"When I am twentyone, my father's wealth will be mine. I am  actually in the power of Mr. Kermal and

Doctor Claig. If they should  threaten me, I should be forced to sign away my wealth to them. Mr.  Kermal


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 55



Top




Page No 58


says he merely wants me to sign a will, leaving my money to some  charitable organization, instead of to

George Garling. 

"And yet  yet I can no longer believe him. His statements about  Uncle Rufus; his policy of hiding; the fact

that he has covered  Blissop's death  all these things frighten me. Today is the fifteenth.  My birthday is the

eighteenth. Once midnight of the seventeenth has  passed " 

THE girl stopped speaking. She shuddered; her lips trembled with  suppressed fear. The Shadow spoke; his

voice held a calmness that  quieted Myra's alarm. 

The Shadow raised his left hand and drew back the glove that  covered it. Myra observed a glowing gem. It

was a magnificent opal, its  depths as mysterious as The Shadow's eyes. 

"This girasol," affirmed The Shadow, "is my token. You will  recognize me by it, no matter what my guise.

Have no fear; you are safe  for the present. Before danger strikes, I shall be here." 

The Shadow stepped to the window. He unlatched folding shutters and  drew one inward. Bars gleamed

beyond. The girasol glittered as The  Shadow pointed to the rods of steel. 

"They have told you," he stated, "that those bars are to protect  you. But to you  not fully trusting  those

bars make this room a  prison." 

The girl nodded. She was amazed at The Shadow's statement. Kermal  and Claig had spoken of the bars the

night that Myra had occupied this  room. The Shadow closed the shutter. 

"Keep these shutters closed," he warned, "as you have been  instructed. As for the bars, I shall deal with them

tonight. Beyond  this window you can see the upper story of the garage. My station will  be there. You can

signal me, should fear compel you. 

"I shall know when danger threatens. I shall return at that hour.  You will answer when you hear my

summons"  slowly, The Shadow  delivered four slow taps upon the table, with his gloved hand  "and  you

will know me by my token." 

The Shadow raised his left hand. Myra stared once more at the  girasol, fascinated by its changing hues. Then

the glove moved over the  gem, blotting out its hypnotic radiance. 

Myra saw a flash of crimson as The Shadow moved toward the door.  The weird visitor opened the barrier; his

form merged with the  blackness of the hall. The door closed, leaving Myra stilled with  wonderment. 

To the girl, the episode was like a dream. Yet her diary was gone;  sure proof that this being from the night

had been a reality. Moreover,  The Shadow's presence had brought a calmness that remained. Myra  Dolthan's

fears were allayed. 

OUTSIDE the house, The Shadow was descending by the window through  which he had entered. He reached

the ground; he faded toward the garage  as he saw lights coming up the road. Doctor Claig's coupe rolled into

the drive. A stooped figure appeared from the direction of the house.  It was Croy. 

The Shadow watched the big servant enter the garage. Peering  through a window, he saw Croy and Claig

jacking up an old sedan in the  corner. This was the car that Croy had used earlier; they were fixing  it so that it

would appear to have been long since out of commission. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 56



Top




Page No 59


The coupe's lights went out; Claig and Croy stumbled through  darkness to the house. The Shadow let them

pass, then entered the  garage. He waited there a few minutes; then blinked his light along the  floor. He found

a third vehicle parked in the garage. It was an old  station wagon that Claig had used in the past. 

The Shadow's light showed the right rear tire. The Shadow  recognized the tread that he had seen on the road

from the rear of the  old house. The station wagon was the vehicle in which the furnishings  had been brought

here. 

The flashlight blackened. The Shadow stole from the garage, glided  to the back road and coasted away in

Clyde's coupe. Reaching Sheffield,  he parked the car and entered the hotel. 

He arrived at the room which his agents occupied. There he unlocked  the door. Clyde and Harry were asleep

in their beds. 

From a large suitcase belonging to Harry Vincent, The Shadow  brought out boxlike objects: items of special

radio equipment. He  produced wires and earphones; in their place he left a sealed envelope.  Carrying his new

burdens, he glided from the room and locked the door  behind him. 

LATER, he arrived on foot at Doctor Claig's. Entering the garage,  The Shadow found the door to the

unoccupied upper floor. He went up the  stairs, left the articles that he was carrying and descended. His  figure

glided to the house, directly beneath Myra's room. 

Scaling the wall in darkness, The Shadow gripped the outside bars.  They were built into the masonry; The

Shadow attacked them in the  darkness with a sharp, glistening saw that cut its way steadily through  the steel.

He seemed untiring as he proceeded with this task, gripping  the solid bars as he worked to weaken others. 

At last, the central bars, though apparently untampered, were cut  to a point where a single twist would break

them. Loosening his hold,  The Shadow dropped easily to the ground. The moonlight gave only a  passing

glimpse of his gliding figure as he returned to the garage. 

Only Myra Dolthan had heard the sound of The Shadow's sawing. Half  asleep, the girl had scarcely noticed

the sound until just before The  Shadow's task was completed. Rising, Myra went to the window and

cautiously unlatched a shutter. She peered out into the moonlight. 

A blink came from an upstairs window of the garage. It was  repeated. Myra understood. The Shadow had

discerned her face behind the  barred window of her room. His glimmers were a signal that all was  well. The

Shadow had kept his promise. Myra knew that the bars of her  window were formidable no longer. 

She knew also that her mysterious protector had taken his new post.  Day and night, The Shadow would be

ready to aid her should danger  strike. Myra smiled as she looked out into the moonlight. With a happy  heart

she closed the shutters and dropped the latch in place. 

Whatever the answer to the complex problems that, confronted her,  the girl felt confident that her security

was assured. Somehow, she  held the belief that The Shadow had delved deeply into the plots that  up to now

had threatened her. 

The Shadow knew. Withholding action for the present, he was baiting  men of crime. When the stage would

be set for an exposure of evil  schemes, The Shadow would be prepared. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE 57



Top




Page No 60


CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST

IT was the next afternoon. A sultry haze clung to the slopes of the  horizon about Sheffield. An ominous touch

seemed present on the  countryside. This was apparent to Doctor Leo Claig as he sat in an old  rocker on the

front porch of his prisonlike house. 

The physician was puffing mildly at a briar pipe. A casual observer  would have considered him complacent.

But all the while, Claig's  watchful eyes were shrewdly gazing toward roads and hillsides. He was  studying

the toylike figures of searching men. Jay Goodling had ordered  a search throughout the county. 

Deputies had passed during the day. Some had seen Doctor Claig  standing in his doorway; others had noted

him rocking in his porch  chair. All had waved friendly greetings, which Claig had returned.  None, however,

had heard the mild chuckles that the physician uttered  after they had passed. 

Sunset was approaching. Claig's gaze turned westward. The watchful  man saw wearied figures against the

sky. Searchers were inward bound.  Cutting across fields, they would pass by the house. They had evidently

chosen Claig's as a landmark on which to take bearings. 

A motor throbbed from the road. Claig looked in that direction to  see a sedan roll in the driveway. An arm

waved from the driver's seat.  Jay Goodling alighted; then Clyde Burke. Following them came Roy  Parrell and

a stocky man who was evidently one of Parrell's  investigators. 

The group approached the porch. Doctor Claig arose, knocked the  ashes from his pipe and leaned against a

thin pillar. He waited until  Goodling was almost to the porch; then drawled: 

"Any luck, prosecutor?" 

"No, doctor," returned Goodling. "We're ending the hunt for today.  Driving around to bring in the searchers.

There come some of them now." 

He waved toward the stragglers who were coming across the field.  The leader of the searchers waved in

return. Claig recognized him as  Carter. 

"I'm posting men on all the roads," stated Goodling. "Even though  that fellow Kermal is hiding out

somewhere about, he won't be able to  leave the county. Tomorrow, we'll have another big hunt." 

"No clues?" queried Claig. "Nothing on the car that Croy was  driving?" 

"Not a thing. Burke says it was a sedan; but he's not sure of the  make. It was an old bus, a dark color  that's

all he knows." 

"Too bad," mused Claig, studying Clyde. "It would have helped you,  Goodling, had he noted it more

closely." 

PARRELL had strolled out from the porch. The private detective was  studying Claig's house curiously,

looking up toward barred and  shuttered windows. The physician noted this from the corner of his eye.

Methodically, Claig pulled a tobacco pouch from his pocket and began to  stuff his pipe. 

"Lucky I'm still living here," he chuckled. "Otherwise those rogues  might have chosen this house instead of

the one on Dobson's Road.  That's the trouble with a place in the country. You can't leave it  empty." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST 58



Top




Page No 61


The remarks, although addressed to Goodling, had been for Parrell's  benefit. The detective ended his

inspection and strolled up to the  porch. 

"This was your sanitarium?" questioned Parrell. 

Claig nodded. 

"You must have had a lot of customers once," added Parrell. 

"I did," chuckled Claig. "Always at least a dozen patients. Do you  know, yesterday, I was thinking I might go

into business again. With  everybody looking for a house that had vanished from the old Westbury  road, I

thought I would find a lot of nervous cases right in  Sheffield." 

"It had me guessing," put in Goodling. "It did seem like a pipe  dream, Claig. But matters are serious right

now. I'm mighty worried  about Fred Lanford. He may be in greater danger than Myra Dolthan." 

"He won't be after tomorrow night," stated Parrell. "Don't forget  that, prosecutor. The girl's birthday comes

on the eighteenth. We've  got to find her before tomorrow at midnight." 

Carter and his men arrived. The deputy clambered upon the porch and  mopped his brow. He looked tired; his

gaze wandered toward Goodling's  sedan. 

"Say, prosecutor," suggested Carter, "if you could send some cars  up from Sheffield, we'd appreciate it

plenty. The boys are pretty worn  out, ploughing through some of that soggy ground. I can keep them here

until the cars come, instead of tramping into town." 

"Don't know that I can help you, Carter," returned Goodling. "Most  of the available cars are off in other parts

of the county." 

"I have just what you want, Carter," announced Claig. He removed  his pipe from his lips and used it to point

toward the rear of the  house. "My old station wagon's out there and I've no present use for  it. If you can

manage to start it, you can take the whole bunch along  to town." 

"That's great, doctor," returned Carter. "Who knows enough about  cars to give me a hand?" 

Clyde Burke volunteered. He went along with Carter to the garage.  They opened the sliding door and found

the station wagon. Clyde noted  the old sedan jacked up in the corner, beyond Claig's coupe. He made no

comment. Carter was testing the starter; he discovered that the battery  in the station wagon was low. He

decided to use the crank. 

Another man entered while Carter was cranking. It was Roy Parrell.  The detective noted the sedan; observing

that it was jacked up, he  decided that it had long been out of use. He climbed into the station  wagon when

Carter called for cooperation with the accelerator. 

After a few crankings, the station wagon started. Parrell shifted  over from the driver's seat, pulling the hand

throttle to make the  motor roar. 

Carter took the wheel and backed the vehicle from the garage. He  swung about in the drive and headed

toward the house. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST 59



Top




Page No 62


CLYDE BURKE was closing the sliding, door. Gloom had pervaded the  old garage. The door almost closed.

Clyde stopped as he heard a warning  whisper. Turning about, the reporter saw a door that stood a trifle  ajar. 

"Report." 

Clyde heard The Shadow's quiet order. He approached and spoke brief  details regarding the fruitless search.

The Shadow's whisper delivered  brief instructions. A gloved hand emerged from the blackness beyond the

stairway door. 

Clyde received a small book: Myra Dolthan's diary. The reporter  placed the volume in his inside pocket,

nodded his understanding and  stepped from the garage. He slid the big door tightly shut; then walked  across

the drive, past the house until he reached the porch in front. 

The motor of the station wagon was still roaring. The deputies were  aboard; Carter at the wheel. Doctor

Claig, pipe in hand, was shouting  above the tumult. 

"Put a service battery in it, Carter," the physician was ordering.  "Have mine recharged. Keep the old wagon

as long as you want. If you  pay for the recharging of the battery, we'll call it square." 

Carter nodded; then drove away. The sun had set; long streaks of  gloom presaged the coming darkness. Jay

Goodling motioned to his  companions. They walked to the prosecutor's car, Claig accompanying  them. 

"Well, Parrell," said Goodling, "I'm mighty sorry that you've  gained no good news for Rufus Dolthan. My

only hope is that some of the  other searchers may have had some luck. Your other two men are out with

them, aren't they?" 

"Over toward Westbury," replied Parrell. "That's where they went;  probably they're back by now, though. By

the way, Doctor Claig, do you  have a telephone here?" 

The physician nodded. 

"Rufus Dolthan is staying at the Weatherby Hotel," explained  Parrell. "He has Souder with him; and, of

course, Wurling and Hazzler  came in this morning, bringing my three operatives. But they're not  much help." 

"You mean that Mr. Dolthan is subject to illness?" questioned  Claig. 

"Yes," replied the detective. "He is extremely nervous; and failure  to find his niece may be too much of a

strain for him. I wanted to be  sure that you were available." 

"Absolutely," assured Claig. "Call me at any time, Parrell. Or stop  by, if you wish. I'm a regular owl  always

awake half the night." 

GOODLING'S car pulled away, carrying the last of the visitors.  Doctor Claig stood alone, puffing at his pipe.

As he smoked, the  physician delivered a contemptuous snort that ended in a chuckle. 

He had disposed of these unwanted guests in giltedged fashion.  Claig's lips showed a hard smile as he

walked back to the house. 

The physician thought that eyes were no longer observing him. He  was wrong in that supposition. From a

darkened window upstairs in the  garage, glittering optics were viewing Claig, noting his gestures and

expressions from a distance of thirty feet. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST 60



Top




Page No 63


A whispered laugh crept through a duskfilled room as Claig passed  from view. Well did The Shadow know

the game that lay at stake. He  could end Claig's bluff the moment that he chose to do so. 

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY

TWENTYFOUR hours had elapsed. Again, darkness had settled over the  town of Sheffield. Searchers had

scoured the terrain in vain. This  by  Roy Parrell's statement  marked the end of the law's last chance. 

Clyde Burke was standing at the window of his hotel room. By the  inner wall, Harry Vincent was tuning in

with a small radio, the  duplicate of the device that The Shadow had removed from his suitcase,  two nights

before. 

"Here comes the station wagon," informed Clyde. "Carter and half a  dozen deputies are in it. They're parking

alongside of the hotel, in  that empty space. They look mighty tired." 

"Are they all going off duty?" questioned Harry. 

"Not a chance," replied Clyde. "Goodling is not through by a long  shot. He's posting all those fellows along

the roads. He'll start  another hunt tomorrow." 

"Hoping that the girl will still be alive?" 

"Yes. He says it's the only bet. He's sure that Kermal is still  somewhere in the county. He doesn't think the

lawyer will take a chance  on murdering Myra Dolthan until he has a chance to get the girl away  from here." 

"What's Parrell's opinion?" 

"He's doubtful. Says it might work either way. Blissop was murdered  in this county; so was Yager. Why

should Kermal worry about the law?" 

"What does he recommend?" 

"To keep on with the search tonight. But Goodling won't agree. He  says that it's best to watch the roads. They

might try a getaway from  their new hideout." 

There was a pause. Clyde strolled in from the window. Harry had set  the radio dial as he wanted it. Clyde

opened the door, peered into the  hall; then closed the door and locked it. 

"Craig was too smart for Parrell," he stated in a low tone. "I  watched Parrell when we were up there

yesterday. He looked at the old  sedan; but never guessed that it could have been the one Croy had  used." 

"It's good he didn't," said Harry. "He'd probably have asked you  about it." 

"Yes. That would have put me in the bluffer class, with Claig. Of  course, I could have gotten away with it;

but it was better I didn't  have to. It had me shaky, for a minute." 

"What about that letter Goodling received today?" 

"The one from Lanford? Both Goodling and Parrell figured it for a  bluff. Lanford could have written it under

orders." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY 61



Top




Page No 64


"Didn't sound as though Lanford meant it?" 

"Yes; but it was too vague. Goodling and Parrell agreed that  Lanford might have listened to some hokum

from Kermal. The lawyer is a  smart bird, you know." 

"Undoubtedly." 

HARRY became thoughtful. Clyde watched him. The reporter knew what  was passing in his friend's mind.

Harry was thinking of The Shadow,  speculating on what the chief intended. 

It was seldom that the agents discussed their superior's methods;  but on this occasion, Harry seemed inclined

to forgo the usual custom. 

"Our job is coming," said Harry, slowly. "It's for tonight, Clyde;  we know that much. We'll do what we're

told when we receive final  orders. At the same time " 

"I know," interposed Clyde. "You're wondering just how the parties  are going to react. It has me guessing,

too." 

"Kermal is powerless until after midnight," declared Harry. "Of  course, its possible that he might murder

Myra before then. He could  make her sign documents at any time; then have them witnessed  afterward. But

that would be a dangerous procedure." 

"Absolutely," agreed Clyde. "Particularly if he had Lanford  buffaloed. He can use Lanford as a witness, you

know, and if Lanford  swears later that he saw Myra alive after she became of age, it would  be an important

point." 

"Myra is safe enough for the present," affirmed Harry. "We know  that The"  he paused, catching himself

before he mentioned The  Shadow's name aloud  "well, we know she's under protection. There's  only one

answer to it, Clyde." 

"What's that?" 

"A showdown. At midnight. That's the time when Kermal will have  reached his goal." 

"That's right, Harry." 

"And it's also the finish line for Rufus Dolthan's hopes. Rufus  Dolthan will be desperate; Taussig Kermal will

be triumphant." 

"Kermal's wariness will be ended." 

"Absolutely. And yet, when the break comes, Clyde " 

"Well?" 

"It can't strike right at midnight. The time element would be too  close." 

Another pause. This time it was Clyde's quick brain that found an  answer. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY 62



Top




Page No 65


"I've got it, Harry!" exclaimed the reporter. Then, lowering his  voice: "Look here: Kermal must have some

details to make ready.  Preparing documents, smoothing Lanford, getting everything ready. Am I  right?" 

"Yes." 

"When will he do all that? I'll tell you. Before midnight. He'll  have everything set; he'll be waiting for the

stroke of the gong." 

"That's logical, Clyde." 

"Allow him an hour  between eleven and twelve. That's the crucial  time. That's when Kermal will be all set

for triumph, but Dolthan and  Parrell will still have a chance to stop him. If " 

Clyde cut it short. A faint buzz was coming from the radio. Harry  was listening to the call. Quickly, he began

to manipulate his own set.  Like The Shadow, Harry could send. He and his chief were in shortwave

communication. 

Faint, barely audible, those coded sentences. Toned low so that  chance listeners might not even hear them,

Harry caught a question that  The Shadow was sending from Claig's garage. He spoke to Clyde. 

"What about Goodling's men?" he queried. "Are they using the  station wagon tonight?" 

"No," replied Clyde. "They didn't use it last night. The  roadwatching groups are too small. They need

something faster than the  wagon, anyway. It's only used for bringing in a big crowd during the  day." 

HARRY was already sending a reply. Clyde heard instructions follow  from The Shadow; but he was not

close enough to catch the code. Harry  nodded; but did not speak. He sent his acknowledgment. Then came

another query. Harry questioned Clyde this time. 

"Goodling will be at the courthouse?" 

"Either there or over here with Rufus Dolthan." 

"Parrell and his men?" 

"Here, with Dolthan." 

"Deputies?" 

"Maybe a few will be available. Not many." 

Harry sent this information. He received another query and answered  it. Then came a signal that Clyde

recognized. The Shadow was signing  off. Harry acknowledged. 

He turned the dial, made some adjustments and strolled away from  the radio. The soft melody of music came

over the air. Harry had tuned  in on a New York station. The set was giving normal reception. 

"We're right," Harry told Clyde. "Eleven is the zero hour. That's  when the move must start up to Claig's.

You're to be in on it, while  I'm up here; that is, you'll be with Rufus Dolthan, Roy Parrell and Jay  Goodling

when they plan their action." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY 63



Top




Page No 66


"And after that?" 

"You're to hop up here. I'm supposed to be in bed. That is, I will  be at eleven o'clock. I'm no nighthawk, like

the Classic bunch. I  represent the National Press Association." 

Clyde chuckled. 

"I'm glad the rest of the reporters went back to town," he  remarked. "They're going to miss a story. Go ahead,

Harry  after I get  up here " 

"You'll know the plans. I'll send the details by the shortwave  set. But we'll probably be heading out on our

own. In your car. Unless,  of course, there's some hitch that forces a change." 

"But suppose I'm wanted by Goodling and the others?" 

"Then I can go out alone, using your car. You won't need it if  you're with them." 

Clyde nodded his understanding. The Shadow always provided for  emergencies. Whatever tonight's mission

might be, one agent would be  available for it if both were not. 

"Get that diary of Myra Dolthan's," said Harry. "It's in the secret  pocket of my suitcase. Here's one point,

Clyde; you've got to start the  fireworks. The question is, can you ring Parrell in on it? Can you get  him out of

the hotel? Just for a stroll  any pretext  just so you'll  have a chance to steer him on a job of sleuthing that

he'll think is  his own?" 

Clyde pondered. 

"If you can't," said Harry, "you can do the job alone. But if you  can bring in Parrell " 

"I've got it!" interrupted Clyde. "Yesterday, Parrell whiffed some  smoke from Claig's pipe. The doctor was

smoking when we were up there.  The aroma suited Parrell and he dug out a swell briar of his own. He  was

smoking it today." 

"Well?" 

"He left it in Goodling's office. Parrell will be wondering where  he dropped it. Let's go and see if it's still

there." 

"Fine. Bring the diary." 

FIVE minutes later, The Shadow's agents strolled into Goodling's  office. The prosecutor was out to dinner;

but he never locked his door.  The lights were on; and Clyde spied a pipe on the desk. The reporter  recognized

it as Parrell's. 

"Pocket it," whispered Harry. Then, as they strolled out through  the vacated corridor, he questioned: "Didn't I

see Parrell in the  station wagon about the middle of the afternoon?" 

"Yes," replied Clyde. "He was in the front seat, talking with  Carter. That was just after Carter came in to

report no luck to  Goodling." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY 64



Top




Page No 67


"That's great!" Harry chuckled as they reached the street. He  looked across to the spot where the station

wagon was parked near a big  limousine that belonged to Rufus Dolthan. "We'll have some planting to  do,

Clyde. We'll have dinner first; then take in a movie. It will be  after ten by then. I'll do the planting; you'll

handle the rest." 

"What's the stunt, Harry?" 

They had reached the little restaurant where they usually ate.  Harry motioned for silence. He whispered last

words as they entered. 

"I'll tell you after dinner, Clyde," said Harry. "When we're in the  movie, you can slip me the pipe and the

diary." 

They sat down at a table. Clyde was still half mystified. But Harry  wore a smile. He knew that The Shadow's

orders could be carried through  with ease. Clyde Burke would understand as well, as soon as Harry could

give him three minutes of explanation. 

The Shadow had planned a simple process which would bring confusion  to those who schemed in crime. Yet

Clyde Burke had not guessed what was  due, even though Clyde was a keen thinker. That, to Harry, was

merely  new proof that facts, though simple, were not necessarily obvious. 

Harry felt secret elation as he noticed Clyde's thoughtful  perplexity. He felt, for the moment, that he had

gained the edge in a  bit of friendly rivalry. Soon, however, Clyde would know all that Harry  knew. 

That, oddly, would prove to be less than Harry Vincent supposed.  For while his agents were studying the

surfaces of crime development,  The Shadow had delved into the depths. Where others guessed, The Shadow

knew. 

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR

IT was a quarter of eleven when Clyde Burke stopped in front of a  door on the second floor of the Weatherby

Hotel. The reporter rapped  for admittance. A voice called for him to enter. Clyde stepped into the  living room

of the only suite that the hotel boasted. 

Rufus Dolthan was seated in an easychair. His kindly face seemed  haggard; yet his restlessness was a sign

that he still possessed  stamina. Clyde noticed that the grayhaired man was clutching the arms  of his chair, as

though to suppress a maddened desire for hopeless  action. 

Roy Parrell looked chunky as he stood beside Dolthan's chair. The  detective's wise face possessed a

glumness. There was a third man in  the room: Jay Goodling. The prosecutor's youthful countenance seemed

aged with worry. 

"We are talking matters over, Mr. Burke," informed Dolthan, in a  wearied tone. "It is terrible, this suspense.

As you know, Myra's fate  may be decided within a few hours. My word!" He turned appealingly to  Parrell

and Goodling. "Is there nothing we can do?" 

"We can only wait, Mr. Dolthan," returned Goodling. "I'm positive  that this county still harbors those

criminals  Kermal and his fellows   and I believe that in spite of Lanford's letter. Remember, sir: Fred

Lanford is my closest friend. This situation grieves me deeply." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 65



Top




Page No 68


"But Kermal may murder Myra " 

"And Lanford also, if it suits him. They are both in grave danger,  wherever they are." 

"And you, Parrell"  Dolthan spoke sharply to the detective  "you  have failed me in this crisis. I have paid

you well, because millions  are at stake. Have you no suggestions whatever?" 

Parrell shook his head. He, too, was becoming restless. Clyde could  see desperation in the detective's air.

Idly, the reporter drew a new  pipe and a package of fine smoking mixture from his pocket. He extended  the

package to Parrell. 

"Fill up, old man," suggested Clyde. "A good pipe smoke clears the  cobwebs. That briar of yours is a sweet

one." 

Parrell nodded and began to fumble in his pocket. His pipe was  missing. Goodling made a remark. 

"Your pipe is over in my office, Parrell," he said. "I believe that  you left it on my desk." 

"I'll walk over with you while you get it," put in Clyde. "How  about it, Parrell?" 

Clyde had filled his own pipe and was lighting it. The aroma of the  tobacco brought a nod from Parrell. Clyde

had chosen a mixture well  filled with perique. The odor was effective. 

TOGETHER, reporter and detective left the hotel and reached  Goodling's office. Parrell was silent during the

walk; he stared glumly  after turning on the lights and noting no pipe on the prosecutor's  desk. 

"Goodling must have been seeing things," he grumbled. "I wonder  where I could have dropped that briar.

Let's see " 

"Didn't you have it this afternoon?" queried Clyde. "When you were  in the station wagon with Carter?" 

"That's right, Burke," recalled Parrell. "The old bus is parked  alongside of Mr. Dolthan's limousine, isn't it?

Let's take a look over  there." 

They left the courthouse and approached the station wagon. Parrell  produced a flashlight and looked about

the front seat. He saw no sign  of the pipe; but he noticed a space between the seat and the side of  the car. He

drew the seat forward. 

"Here's the pipe, all right," exclaimed the detective. "But say   what's this?" 

The diary was lying below the pipe. Harry Vincent had planted them  effectively. Parrell opened the book

with his left hand while he held  the flashlight with his right. A sudden cry came from his lips. 

"This book is Myra Dolthan's!" blurted the detective. "In the  girl's handwriting. Here, in Claig's station

wagon. She must have  dropped it. Say, Burke didn't Claig tell Carter he might have a tough  time starting this

old bus?" 

"That's what he said," nodded Clyde. "I heard him." 

"But Carter had no trouble," added Parrell. "Say, Burke  do you  remember an old sedan up in Claig's

garage?" 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 66



Top




Page No 69


"The one that was jacked up?" 

"Yes. Did it look anything like the boat that Croy was in the night  he snatched Lanford?" 

"A whole lot, Parrell. But I didn't think anything about it at the  time. Claig's sedan looked out of use. It could

have been the car Croy  was in though. Maybe it was the car." 

"Come on." Parrell grabbed Clyde's arm. "We're hopping up to see  Dolthan and the prosecutor! Pronto." 

They hurried into the hotel and took the stairs on the run. Parrell  barged into Dolthan's living room and thrust

the diary into the hands  of Myra's uncle. 

Excitedly, the detective told how they had made the find. He added  the comments that Clyde had given

concerning the old sedan in Claig's  garage. 

"This is incredible!" exclaimed Goodling. "A man of Doctor Claig's  reputation would not assist criminals. I

cannot believe that he aided  them in their departure from the old house on Dobson's Road." 

"He has done more than aid them," retorted Parrell. "He is  harboring them. Why do you think we haven't

been able to locate Kermal?  I'll tell you why  it's because he's hiding out in the one place we've  never

looked. In the upstairs part of Claig's house!" 

"But  but " 

GOODLING stopped short as he spluttered. This suggestion of  Parrell's was a powerful one. The prosecutor

realized suddenly that  those upper stories of Claig's old sanitarium afforded every advantage  as a refuge for

Kermal and his band. Nevertheless, the prosecutor  finally shook his head. 

"I have too much faith in Claig," he asserted. "He has lived  hereabouts for years. Even supposing that he has

listened to crooks,  why should he commit the folly of using his own property as their  lair?" 

"He didn't," returned Parrell. "Not at first. Who do you suppose  wised Kermal to that old house where you

and Lanford first went? How  did Kermal learn of it?" 

"Someone hereabouts could have told him." 

"That's just it. And who would be most likely? Doctor Claig. You're  right, prosecutor; he didn't want to

jeopardize himself by letting  Kermal use his own place. He didn't at first. He steered Kermal to the  house on

Dobson's Road. But when the emergency landed, he brought the  works to his own hangout. It was the only

way out in the pinch." 

"Parrell is correct," declared Dolthan, with a dignified nod. "Men  of repute will do much, prosecutor, when

they see an opportunity for  huge wealth. We can consider Doctor Claig more charitably than we can  Taussig

Kermal. Claig was tempted by a fiend's offer. He allowed  himself to become a party to crime." 

Dolthan's heatless words were convincing. The grayhaired man  showed sorrow rather than anger. A thought

came to Goodling; he himself  expressed the next statement in the argument against Claig's integrity. 

"Fred Lanford's letter," mused the prosecutor. "It seemed genuine;  yet it indicated that he was trying to lead

the trail away from here.  Fred would not have allowed Kermal to influence him. Fred was  encouraged by

someone in whom he had confidence. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 67



Top




Page No 70


"Doctor Claig could have influenced Fred Lanford. What is more,  Claig could have sent that letter to New

York, so someone would return  it here. As I review this case, I realize that Claig has shown unusual  interest

in it. Too much interest for one who is merely a retired  physician." 

"He bluffed us yesterday," asserted Parrell. "Up there on his  porch. Acting as a blind. Offering Carter his

station wagon." 

"And Myra a prisoner in his house," groaned Dolthan. "Her day of  doom approaching." 

"Craig is as crooked as Kermal," barked Parrell. "Why try to be  easy with him? He's the fellow, right enough,

who jabbed you and  Lanford with the hypodermic, prosecutor. Being a doctor, he'd have had  a needle with

him. He's a crook " 

"Calm yourself, Parrell." It was Dolthan who interrupted. He had  risen from his chair and was surveying the

others with dignity. "Doctor  Claig may not know the depths of Kermal's schemes. We can learn the

physician's story later. Our present duty is to rescue my niece and  this poor chap, Lanford." 

"Right!" agreed Goodling. "We'll get to the bottom of this  business. I'll gather thirty men; we'll smash into

Claig's if  necessary." 

"ONE moment." Dolthan's raised hand stopped Goodling as the latter  was about to pick up the telephone.

"Tell me, prosecutor, where are  these men whom you intend to summon?" 

"Out guarding the roads," returned Goodling. "I'll have them all in  here and on their way to Claig's within two

hours." 

"That will be too late." Dolthan's tone was solemn. "It is already  eleven. At midnight, Myra becomes of age.

Kermal will force her to sign  away her wealth the moment that she is legally twentyone. Her life  will then

be at stake." 

"That's true," added Parrell. "What's more, prosecutor, Kermal will  have to kill her in a pinch. He'll bump

Lanford, too, if he knows his  game is up. He'll know it, right enough, when a whole squadron comes  banging

in on him." 

"We must use strategy," announced Dolthan. "Moreover, we cannot  spare another precious minute. Tell me,

prosecutor, have you no men  available here?" 

"There's a deputy named Derry downstairs," replied Parrell. "But  I'll need him to round up the men on the

roads. We certainly should  arrange to cut off any flight by Kermal." 

"Positively," nodded Dolthan. "That move will be essential,  prosecutor. But in the meantime, we must

arrange some immediate action.  Come, come, Parrell"  Dolthan turned to the detective  "show your  ability,

man. How can we surmount this emergency?" 

"We'll have to consider Doctor Claig first," responded Parrell  promptly. "He's the blind. If we can get past

him easily, we'll be  where we want. Listen, prosecutor"  he swung to Goodling  "do you  remember how

Claig invited us to stop in any time?" 

Goodling nodded. 

"I told him, too," continued Parrell, "that we might need him as  physician for Mr. Dolthan?" 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 68



Top




Page No 71


Again Goodling nodded. 

"That's our bet then," decided Parrell. "You and I can drive up to  Claig's. He'll let us in, all right. We'll tell

him Mr. Dolthan is very  ill." 

"Won't Claig wonder?" queried Goodling. "He will want to know why  we did not call him by telephone." 

"We'll explain that, prosecutor. Tell him that Mr. Dolthan claims  he doesn't want to see a doctor. Worriment

over Myra. Claig will fall  for it." 

"And accompany us down here? That would give Kermal an opportunity  to suspect a ruse on our part." 

"We won't leave the place. We'll corner Claig and cover him. Then  our way will be clear. We'll go upstairs

and pounce on Kermal. He'll  think it's Claig." 

"But there are only two of us, Parrell. I cannot get deputies on  such short order." 

"I have three operatives here. Trained detectives. We'll take them  along in your car. They can follow us in." 

GOODLING'S expression showed prompt enthusiasm. He urged Parrell to  the telephone. The detective

began to call the rooms in which his men  were staying. Goodling turned to Dolthan, who offered a further

suggestion. 

"Use strategy, prosecutor," urged Dolthan. "Lives are at stake.  Would that I could accompany you. Indeed, I

shall follow you and  Parrell; but of course, I shall remain far enough away not to excite  suspicion. 

"Parrell has never seen either Kermal or Myra. Of course, you have   that night you were at the old house 

so that will satisfy for  immediate identification. But when I see them also, there can be no  doubt." 

"It's best to have you close by, Mr. Dolthan," assured Goodling.  "After all, once we are actually upstairs in

the house, there is no  reason why you should not approach." 

"Souder!" called Dolthan. The longfaced man appeared from the  other room. "Summon Wurling and

Hazzler at once. We are going out in  the limousine." 

Souder nodded and went to the telephone, which Parrell had  relinquished. Clyde Burke, silent until now,

found chance to speak to  Jay Goodling. 

"How about myself, prosecutor," asked the reporter. "All right if I  tag along in my coupe. I'll keep far enough

away from the house." 

"All right," agreed Goodling. "What about this friend of yours,  Vincent? Are you taking him with you?" 

"I can. He's asleep in his room right now." 

"Better wake him. Then he'll be accounted for. I don't want anyone  coming up there unexpectedly to bungle

our work." 

Souder had finished his call for Wurling and Hazzler. Goodling took  the telephone to speak with Derry, the

deputy who he had left in the  lobby. Clyde hurried from the room; in the hallway he ran into two of  Parrell's

husky subordinates, coming in response to the detective's  call. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR 69



Top




Page No 72


Passing the fellows, Clyde dashed up the steps to the third floor.  The way was clear; but time was short. The

Shadow's plan had worked;  unexpected visitors would soon be at the home of Doctor Leo Claig. In  the brief

interval that remained, there would be important work for The  Shadow's agents to perform. 

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT

HARRY VINCENT was already at the radio when Clyde Burke arrived in  their thirdfloor room. Harry had

watched from the window after  planting Parrell's pipe and Myra's diary in the station wagon. He had  seen

Clyde and the detective make their find. Harry had allowed a short  interval; then had begun to signal The

Shadow. 

An acknowledgment was sounding. As Clyde whispered details to  Harry, the latter sent through a coded

message. The Shadow's reply was  brief. Events had shaped as he had anticipated them. Harry nodded as

former instructions were corroborated. The Shadow's signal came to sign  off. Harry responded; he twisted the

dial and disconnected wiring. He  nodded to Clyde. 

Together, the agents headed downstairs. They had made the most of  brief minutes. The clock in the lobby

showed twelve minutes after  eleven. Goodling, Parrell and the latter's three men were still  upstairs. Clyde and

Harry heard their tramp in the hallway above. 

Derry was in a telephone booth, sending out calls to the various  posts where deputies were watching roads.

Clyde and Harry hurried out  through the side door, dashed past the station wagon and reached the  reporter's

coupe. 

Clyde started the motor; they rolled away just as Goodling and  Parrell were coming out of the hotel with their

party. The Shadow's  agents took a rear street; between buildings they saw the five men  heading for the

courthouse, where Goodling's car was parked. 

Clyde was taking the route that The Shadow had used when he had  gone to Claig's. A circling course that

would bring them to that  obscure road fringed by trees, where not even the lights of the car  could be seen

from Claig's house. 

The trip required less than one dozen minutes. As they curved into  the old road, at a point above Claig's,

Clyde shut off the motor and  switched off the lights. Feeling his way by the ruts, the reporter  coasted the car

along the road. He finally applied the brakes. 

Both agents alighted. They crept up the bank of the road and passed  a cluster of bushes. The night was

clouded; but they could discern the  outline of Claig's garage; they could also see the house beyond it. 

As they waited, they saw a momentary glimmer from the near side of  the garage. It was The Shadow's signal;

and meant that he would join  them. 

Watching tensely, Clyde saw a car approaching Claig's. Its lights  were coming up the regular road. The

machine was Goodling's; the  prosecutor was using the strategy that he had planned with Parrell and  Dolthan. 

Then, as Goodling's car drew closer to the house, Harry pointed out  other lights. These were down the road;

they slowed, stopped and  finally blinked off. 

"Dolthan's limousine," whispered Harry. "The chauffeur must have  followed pretty close after Goodling." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT 70



Top




Page No 73


"They'll wait there," added Clyde. "Then they'll come closer after  they know that Goodling and Parrell are

inside the house." 

The comments ended. Both agents were silent, knowing that soon The  Shadow would arrive where they were

stationed. Harry held a flashlight  close against the ground, ready to deliver a cautious answering glimmer  the

moment that The Shadow gave an arriving blink from close at hand. 

MEANWHILE, Goodling's car was slowly climbing the up grade to  Claig's. The prosecutor was making a

cautious approach, despite the  fact that there was reason for the visit. He was not anxious that the  physician

should know of their arrival until they rang the doorbell. 

While he drove, Goodling exchanged comments with Parrell. In  response to a suggestion from the detective,

the prosecutor swung wide  as they entered the drive and brought the car to a standstill at the  very edge of the

gravel. 

This made the path easy for Parrell's three followers. The trio  would be able to avoid crunching gravel when

they approached the house. 

Goodling and Parrell alighted. Apparently their arrival had not  been heard. The lower floor of the house

showed dim lights from various  rooms. Doctor Claig had applied his usual method of deceiving visitors.  The

county prosecutor strolled slowly to the porch; the private  detective followed at his heels. Reaching their

goal, they stopped at  the door. Goodling rang the bell. 

An interval followed. Goodling rang again. Two minutes of waiting;  then a light appeared suddenly upon the

porch. The door opened; Doctor  Claig appeared. The physician smiled as he recognized his visitors. 

"Well, well, Goodling," he ejaculated. "This is a surprise. I did  not hear your car arrive. You appear troubled.

Have you come to report  an illness in town?" 

Goodling nodded; it was Parrell, however, who spoke. 

"We've come on account of Rufus Dolthan," he explained. "He is just  about beside himself, doctor. Pacing

like a caged lion. Won't go to  bed. 

"We've got to get something to put him to sleep. Can't you fix up  some opiate for him? Something that will

look like ordinary medicine?  So he'll take it?" 

"I believe so," responded Claig. "Come in, gentlemen. We can go  right into my office." 

The door closed as the three men entered. Darkness stirred in the  blackness beside the house. A cloak

swished softly. 

The Shadow had returned from his trip to the rear road. His  business with his agents was ended; his return

journey had been  accomplished with swiftness. In fact, The Shadow had arrived just in  time to catch the last

of the conversation between Doctor Claig and the  physician's two visitors. 

Listening, The Shadow heard sounds from Goodling's car. A door was  opening cautiously. Men were easing

out into the darkness. The Shadow  sensed that Parrell's three aids were creeping toward the porch. He  waited

no longer. Turning in the darkness, The Shadow skirted toward  the rear of the building. His course was

untraceable. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT 71



Top




Page No 74


INSIDE the house, Doctor Claig was holding consultation with  Goodling and Parrell. Head cocked, the

whitehaired physician was  listening to the detective's description of Rufus Dolthan's nervous  symptoms. A

ticking clock showed the time as twentyfive minutes before  twelve. 

"I see," declared Claig, wisely. "Mr. Dolthan has reached a high  pitch of nervousness. Unquestionably, the

strain has been too great for  him. He must be soothed. Quieted. Suppose I write you a prescription,  Goodling?

You can wake Billings, the druggist, and he will prepare it  for you. Let me see  where did I place those

prescription blanks?" 

Claig opened a drawer with his left hand. He reached in with his  right; then stopped short as he heard a sharp

remark from Parrell. 

Looking over his shoulder, the doctor stared into the muzzle of a  stubnosed revolver that the detective had

brought from his pocket.  Even Goodling was momentarily surprised until he heard Parrell explain. 

"You'll find a gun in that drawer," stated Parrell. "Take a look  for it, prosecutor. I know when a man's

reaching for a gat. Claig was  going to cover us." 

Goodling dived for the drawer. He uncovered an oldfashioned  revolver. Removing the weapon, the

prosecutor cracked it open and found  bullets in the gun's five chambers. Pocketing the revolver, Goodling

eyed Claig severely. 

"I've had that gun for years," declared the physician, calmly.  "Naturally, I have it in an available place. It is

dangerous to live  out in the country, Goodling. Everyone around here owns a gun." 

"Hurry up, prosecutor," urged Parrell. "Don't let him pull a stall.  He's holding out for twelve o'clock. Trying

to help Kermal's game." 

For the first time, Claig lost his selfcontrol The physician's  face darkened; an instinctive gasp came from his

lips. It was enough  for Goodling. The prosecutor drew a .38 and covered the physician. He  motioned Parrell

to the door; the detective grinned and nodded. 

Sneaking out through the front hall, Parrell opened the big door  and let his three men enter. They followed

him softly into the  physician's office. 

Goodling was questioning Claig; the doctor was preserving firm  silence. As the others appeared, Goodling

stepped forward, gripped  Claig's wrist and pulled the physician to his feet. Searching Claig's  pockets,

Goodling found a large key. He thrust it into Claig's hand. 

"Move ahead of us, doctor," growled Goodling. "Unlock that door and  lead the way upstairs. I warn you 

despite the fact that you were once  my friend  I shall riddle you with bullets if you display a sign of

treachery." 

With that cold statement, Goodling rammed the muzzle of his .38  between Claig's shoulders. Parrell nodded

to his men; they drew  revolvers of their own. Goodling forced Claig through the doorway to  the hall. Key in

hand, the physician moved to the alcove and unlocked  the door. 

Covered by five men, Claig had no chance to resist. His role of  blind had ended; no longer could he cover

Taussig Kermal's hideout.  With twenty minutes still remaining before midnight, invaders were on  the

threshold of the crafty lawyer's lair. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT 72



Top




Page No 75


CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE

UPSTAIRS in the luxurious room, Taussig Kermal was seated at his  desk, totally unaware of the coup that

had been made downstairs. The  lawyer had faith in Doctor Claig's ability. The arrival of late callers  had not

perturbed him. 

Moreover, Kermal had a reason for covering the slight concern that  he did feel. Fred Lanford was present in

the room, watching him from a  chair. Croy was present also; the big servant had brought Lanford here  only a

few minutes before. 

"Miss Dolthan will soon be with us, Lanford," declared Kermal. He  looked up from the desk, where his hand

was resting upon a written  document. "I just sent Daggart to summon her. There are matters which I  should

like you to hear when they are discussed." 

"Concerning her estate?" inquired Fred. 

"Yes," replied Kermal. "This document on my desk is a will. It  stipulates that her entire wealth is to go to

certain charities. I want  her to read it before twelve o'clock; you will have opportunity to do  the same. Then

you can sign as a witness when she affixes her  signature." 

Kermal looked toward the door to the hallway on the left. Daggart  had not reappeared; Kermal seemed

perplexed. He turned his shaggy head  and delivered a command to Croy. 

"Possibly Daggart misunderstood my order," said the lawyer. "Go and  summon Miss Dolthan, Croy. Then

hunt up Daggart. He should be here  also." 

The uglyfaced servant nodded and made his departure. This time  Kermal showed anger as he glared toward

the door on the right. 

"What is keeping Claig?" he questioned. "He should certainly not be  dawdling at this late hour. If he has

patients, why does he not hurry  them from his office?" 

"They might become suspicious," replied Lanford. 

"What does it matter?" demanded Kermal. "In twenty minutes we shall  be ready to call your friend Goodling

and invite him here in person.  Claig knows that as well as I." 

"Maybe he has an emergency case to hold him up." 

"Never mind, Lanford. Here is Claig now." 

The door was opening as Kermal spoke. Claig's figure came into  view; the doctor stared, pale faced, then

stumbled into the room,  impelled by a thrust. As Kermal came to his feet, Goodling bounded  through the

doorway. With leveled gun, the prosecutor covered the  lawyer. 

FOR a moment, Kermal appeared ready to spring forward in  resistance; then Parrell and the detectives

bobbed into view. Revolvers  glimmered; Kermal sank back in his chair, glowering. Fred Lanford  sprang to

his feet, to give greeting to his friend. 

"Fred!" cried Goodling, with enthusiasm. "You're safe. Tell me   what about the girl  is she all right?" 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE 73



Top




Page No 76


"Myra Dolthan?" returned Lanford. "Certainly, Jay. How did you  happen to get up here? Mr. Kermal wasn't

going to call you until after  midnight." 

Goodling eyed Lanford in perplexity. Fred grinned as he thumped the  prosecutor on the shoulder. 

"It's all jake, Jay," assured Lanford. "You got my letter, didn't  you?" 

"Certainly," retorted Goodling. "It said you were in New York.  Instead, you're here. That sounds bad for a

start." 

"Not when you know the facts," laughed Lanford. "Miss Dolthan is  not a prisoner. She is staying here of her

own volition. I have talked  with her. That dead man, Blissop, was not murdered. He tried to kill  Daggart.

Croy had to shoot him." 

"What about Yager?" 

"Yager? Who is he?" 

"A squatter living out on Dobson's Road. Shot dead in my office,  the same night that you were abducted." 

LANFORD stared. Parrell pressed forward and delivered a  contemptuous laugh. He stared at Kermal; then at

Claig, who was backed  in a corner near the desk. 

"Bluffed Lanford did you?" quizzed the detective. "I thought maybe  that would be your game. But you didn't

have nerve enough to let him  know you'd rubbed out Yager." 

"I had nothing to do with Yager's death," retorted Kermal, in a  harsh tone. "It was unnecessary to mention it

to Lanford. It would have  confused him." 

"Have your men cover these doors," said Goodling, to Parrell. "I'm  going to have this out with Kermal. Those

two rogues, Daggart and Croy,  are somewhere about. We must be ready for them." 

With that, the prosecutor swung toward the desk. In challenging  tones he delivered an ultimatum to the

shaggyheaded man who stood  beyond. 

"Your assassins slew Yager," accused Goodling. "You and your  accomplices are guilty of two murders,

Kermal. We have come to remove  Myra Dolthan from your custody. Also to arrest your confederates. Tell

me where they are." 

"Speak up, Claig," rasped Kermal, turning to the lawyer. "This is  your house. These persons have entered

without warrant. Order them to  leave. Prosecutor or no prosecutor, Goodling has no right here." 

"I am investigating the deaths of Blissop and Yager," stormed  Goodling. "I am here also to find Myra

Dolthan. Unless " 

He paused as he saw the paper on the desk. Snatching it up,  Goodling began to read the lines that Kermal had

written. The lawyer  chuckled. 

"That," he explained, "is the will that Myra Dolthan will sign at  midnight. As you see, Goodling, it leaves all

of her property to  recognized charities. It stands as proof of my sincerity. I am the  girl's legal guardian and

will be"  he chuckled as he glanced at a  clock on the desk  "for fifteen minutes more. I refuse to have you


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE 74



Top




Page No 77


interview her until after midnight. She will be here at any moment"   Kermal paused to glance toward the

door  "and I shall advise her both  as guardian and counsel." 

GOODLING looked a trifle puzzled as he dropped the will back on the  desk. He stared at Kermal; then

swung to Lanford. That young man  nodded. 

"It's on the level, Jay," Lanford told Goodling. "Give Kermal a  chance to explain. Doctor Claig will back up

his statements. Kermal is  working to protect Myra Dolthan. Her real enemy is her uncle, Rufus  Dolthan " 

Roy Parrell leaped forward in angry interruption. In maddened  loyalty to his employer, the private dick thrust

his stubby revolver  toward Lanford. 

The gesture brought a sharp bark of challenge from Goodling.  Apologetically, Parrell stepped back and

lowered his revolver. Taussig  Kermal was prompt to make the most of the detective's action. 

"See that?" demanded the lawyer. "Parrell knows the truth. That's  why he made his slip. Use your brains,

Goodling. Tell those fellows to  put up their guns; then I'll tell you something." 

The lawyer was leaning with both palms on the table; his position  rendered him helpless. Goodling glared at

Parrell and motioned for the  dicks to put away their guns. The detective, anxious to hold the  prosecutor's

favor, nodded to his men. Revolvers went into pockets. 

"You have asked me about Yager's death, Goodling," announced  Kermal, in his deep tone. "I swear that I had

nothing to do with it. I  ask you to hear my defense; I can promise you it will be brief. I admit  that Blissop was

slain by Croy, in the house on Dobson's Road. Blissop,  however, tried to kill Daggart; the latter's wound is

proof of that  fact." 

"To which I can testify," put in Doctor Claig. "Kermal is right,  Goodling." 

"I consider you a murderer." Goodling spoke steadily as he faced  Kermal. The prosecutor was holding his .38

in readiness. "Nevertheless,  I shall accept the supposition that Blissop's death was justifiable.  But Yager's

death was murder " 

"One moment," interposed Kermal. "Follow the story from the time of  Blissop's death. Shortly after that,

Goodling, you and Lanford came to  my house. The two of you put up a fight. We overpowered you. Had I

been  a murderer, I would have slain you then." 

"You feared to kill us," retorted Goodling. "We were well known in  Sheffield." 

"So was Yager," reminded Kermal, with a nod of his shaggy head.  "Your logic does not hold. But here is the

main point, Goodling. You  and Lanford had seen Blissop's body; there was every reason why you  could

make trouble for us. We had a chance to dispose of both of you by  the simple expedient of coasting your

coupe into the swollen creek  beside the broken bridge. Yet we spared your lives." 

KERMAL had delivered a strong argument; it was one that coincided  with the facts that The Shadow alone

had considered, of all those who  had investigated this case. An exclamation of agreement came from  Lanford. 

"That's straight, Jay," argued the prosecutor's friend. "Kermal's  no murderer. If he was, he'd have gotten rid of

us." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE 75



Top




Page No 78


"Your own friend understands, Goodling," asserted Kermal.  "Moreover, when he encountered my servant

Croy, a few nights ago, Croy  made no effort to injure him. Croy brought Lanford here a prisoner;  that is true.

After that, however, I offered Lanford freedom. He  preferred to stay here." 

"Is that right, Fred?" questioned Goodling. 

"Absolutely," returned Lanford. 

"But Yager was murdered," asserted the prosecutor, swinging back to  Kermal. "And if you ordered his death,

you " 

"I would have been a fool," interposed Kermal, with a convincing  nod. "I had an explanation for Blissop's

death. I had proof that I  meant you and Lanford no ill. Lanford himself was here with us, ready  to favor our

cause. My hands were clean." 

"Then who " 

"Who murdered Yager? The facts should be obvious to anyone who has  heard me speak. Thugs murdered

Yager; they fled afterward. But they  acted at the order of those who were seeking to defeat me in my

protection of Myra Dolthan. They were ordered to kill Yager because he  had talked with Blissop." 

"Talked with Blissop?" 

"Yes. Because Blissop had turned traitor against me. He knew whom I  feared. He must have told Yager the

facts. Had Yager talked, the real  crooks would have been exposed. One name would have been revealed in  its

true light  the name of the man who seeks the life of Myra Dolthan   the name of the girl's own uncle,

Rufus Dolthan!" 

GOODLING stood transfixed. Roy Parrell was staring straight at the  prosecutor, too tense to make a move

while Goodling held that ready  gun. Taussig Kermal clenched a massive fist and drove it fiercely  against the

surface of the desk. 

"Rufus Dolthan!" he denounced. "But his crooked game is at its end.  He came here hoping that the law would

find his niece, so he could see  that she was slain before she came of age. A dozen minutes more; his

opportunity will be ended. 

"Fool that he is! Instead of coming here himself, he sent an  underling, Roy Parrell." Kermal turned and

pointed squarely at the  detective. "Roy Parrell, head of a fake investigation agency, a poor  tool in the hands

of a supercrook. Keep him covered, Goodling; he put  his gun away too soon. 

"Parrell is yellow. He won't call for help from those fake dicks of  his. He's afraid that you will shoot him if he

does. Hold them where  they stand, Goodling. Call Croy and Daggart, Lanford. Bring Myra  Dolthan here. It is

almost midnight." 

Lanford started toward the door at the left. Croy had left it ajar.  But before he had taken four steps, Lanford

halted. Like the others,  Goodling included, he whirled about to face the door at the right of  the room. 

A fiendish chuckle had issued from that halfopened barrier. Into  the room was stepping a grayhaired man,

his face no longer one of  dignity. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE 76



Top




Page No 79


Rufus Dolthan, revolver in hand, was covering Jay Goodling. Behind  the leering fiend were others: Souder,

Wurling and Hazzler; three  servants as venomous as their master, all with guns. 

As counsel in his own defense, Taussig Kermal had won his argument  with the county prosecutor. But Jay

Goodling could no longer act in  Kermal's behalf. Rufus Dolthan and his servants had stepped in to gain  the

control that Roy Parrell and his aids had lost. 

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT

"TWELVE minutes more." 

Rufus Dolthan delivered the words with an insidious sneer. His  faked nervousness was gone. Revealed as a

man of crime, he was taking  pride in his role of supercrook. At his nod, Roy Parrell grinned. He  and his

pretended dicks were ready to double the strength of Dolthan's  forces. 

"Twelve minutes," repeated Dolthan, "ample time in which to  accomplish my purpose here. In fact"  an evil

chuckle escaped his  curling lips  "there is no need for haste. As matters now stand, we  can wait until after

midnight. 

"You have paved your own destruction, Kermal. You were crafty in  your moves. You suspected that I

murdered my brother Wade. You were  right. I had him poisoned; Souder aided me and Parrell removed the

evidence. 

"It was Parrell, too, who gathered facts concerning George Garling.  When Myra's stepbrother inherits her

father's estate, he will not enjoy  it long. When Parrell, as my agent, interviews him, Garling will be  glad to rid

himself of wealth. Some of his past indiscretions can be  classed as crimes. Enough, if known, to send him to

prison for twenty  years. He will pay for silence." 

Dolthan paused to survey Kermal in contemptuous fashion. The little  clock was ticking on toward midnight;

the fact did not seem to trouble  the supercrook. Dolthan had already said that he had no need for haste. 

"You moved ahead of us, Kermal," sneered the grayhaired murderer.  "Your mistake, however, was in

trusting those about you. Particularly  Blissop. He knew that you feared me. He saw an opportunity for wealth.

He called me by long distance, Saturday night. You uncovered his  treachery; you traveled here. But your own

softness was your undoing. 

"Had you finished Goodling and Lanford  as I would have done  you  would have been better off. I am

forgetting though"  Dolthan's chuckle  was filled with cackled malice  "that you are honest, not a plotter

like myself. You see, Kermal, I did not intend to hurry to that house  on Dobson's Road. I planned to wait; to

let you spend a few more days  of false security. 

"But when I read of the strange adventures of Jay Goodling and Fred  Lanford, I knew that Blissop had failed

to keep his spying secret. I  knew my informant to be the dead man mentioned in their story. I knew  then that

you must have sought some new hideout; I knew also that  technically you were a fugitive from justice. 

"I sent Parrell here to Sheffield. His purpose: to discover Myra's  whereabouts, to dispatch hidden killers to

the spot where she might be.  Their task was to slay my niece; but prior to that, they had other  duties. They

came in secretly on Monday evening. Some to be near the  courthouse in case of an emergency; others to visit

the old house of  which Blissop had told us, there to find clues before the law could  gain them." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT 77



Top




Page No 80


TAUSSIG KERMAL, leaning heavily on the desk, was nodding as Rufus  Dolthan paused. These words were

the lawyer's vindication. Jay Goodling  realized it; the prosecutor stared helplessly. He still held his gun;  but

he had been forced to point the weapon to the floor when covered by  Dolthan's revolver. 

Roy Parrell was swaggering up beside Dolthan. The phony dick was  trying to cover his display of

yellowness. His face was hard; his lips  wore a leer as he took credit for the next phase of Dolthan's criminal

activity. 

"When Yager blew in," jeered Parrell, "I heard him start to blab  about Blissop. I guessed that he knew too

much. Blissop had posted him  that we'd be sending some killers out that way. He'd told us over the  telephone

that he had things fixed. 

"So I marked Yager for the spot. Pointed him out, right in front of  your eyes. I gave the finger wag like I'd

been doing all along"   Parrell paused to indicate the gesture that he had used in the  prosecutor's office 

"and when I steadied it on Yager, there were  fellows outside who knew what it meant. 

"They finished Yager. Then they headed for Dobson's Road, to tip  off the boys who were going through the

house. Who started the trouble  there is something that I don't know. It was a bad break for us,  though." 

"Hardly so, Parrell," croaked Dolthan, as his lieutenant paused.  "The murder of Yager was easily blamed on

Kermal. It placed him  definitely outside the law. The discovery of the trunk merely enabled  us to spur the

authorities to their search for Myra. 

"Moreover, the elimination of those hirelings was no handicap. Your  phony detectives and my servants have

proven themselves more capable  than those cheap skulkers. What we needed, Parrell, was a break.  Finding

Myra's diary in the station wagon was a most timely clue.  Particularly because it occurred when Goodling's

deputies were not  available." 

The reference to the diary brought a puzzled look to Kermal's face.  Doctor Claig also registered perplexity.

Rufus Dolthan seemed to have  gained a new chain of thought now that he had mentioned his niece's  name.

He looked across the room toward the door that stood ajar. 

"It is time we thought of Myra," he remarked. "One fact is certain:  she has no way of leaving here. Your

barred windows, Claig, are  excellently suited to our purpose. The girl is trapped; for that  matter, Kermal, so

are your two servants. 

"I said that haste was not imperative. I meant it. So long as no  one except myself and those with me see Myra

alive after midnight, it  will be deemed that she died before she came of age. Her father's will  is due to stand.

The wealth will come into the possession of George  Garling. Only for a temporary period." 

Stepping to the desk, Dolthan snatched up the will that Kermal had  prepared. He crumpled it with his left

hand and thrust the paper into  his pocket. All the while he kept Goodling covered. 

Stepping toward the door that led to Myra's hallway, Dolthan  paused; then laughed as he eyed the revolver

that Goodling was still  holding. 

"Keep your revolver, Goodling," ordered the master crook. "You will  have use for it. Parrell, take a look in

Kermal's desk. See what  weapons he has available." 

PARRELL stepped forward and opened the drawer, pushing Kermal away  from the desk. He found two guns.

One was a .32 automatic; another was  a revolver of the same caliber, with inlaid handle bearing the letter  K.


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT 78



Top




Page No 81


Parrell exhibited them. 

"Excellent," decided Dolthan. "Replace the automatic, Parrell, and  bring me the revolver. Leave the drawer

half open." 

The phony detective complied. Dolthan juggled the initialed gun in  his left hand. 

"Quite considerate of you, Kermal," he chortled, "to have a  revolver that will certainly be identified as your

own. I shall keep  this weapon and use it to slay Myra. Her death will be attributed to  you, Kermal. 

"It will do for Lanford also; but he will come afterward. By the  way, Parrell, did Doctor Claig have a gun

when you and Goodling  captured him?" 

The detective nodded and nudged his thumb toward Goodling's pocket. 

"Produce the weapon," ordered Dolthan. "Return it to Claig." 

Parrell complied. Dolthan motioned his men to new positions. He  arranged them so that Souder and the three

false detectives were with  Parrell, all covering Kermal, Goodling and Claig. 

The lawyer's hand was just above the desk drawer wherein Parrell  had replaced his automatic. The prosecutor

was still holding his .38  downward. The physician had his fivechambered revolver limp in his  hand, where

Parrell had placed it. 

"Wurling," said Dolthan to his chauffeur, "you and Hazzler keep  Lanford covered. Simply hold him until I

return. If he tries to make  trouble, overpower him. Do not shoot him unless you are forced to do  so. 

"The stage is now set. We shall have the semblance of a battle.  Start to shoot down the victims, Parrell, when

I give the word. Let  them try to fight; they have guns handy. I shall go find Myra and  arrange her death. After

that, I shall attend to Lanford." 

Dolthan chuckled gloatingly as he brandished the gun that he had  taken from Kermal. The inlaid handle

glittered in the light. Dolthan  exhibited his own revolver. 

"This will do for others," he remarked. "Croy and Daggart, if I  encounter them. You follow me, Parrell, after

your first shots. The  rest also; we will scour the place and corner our missing enemies." 

THE depth of Dolthan's scheme was apparent. Deputies would soon  arrive from town. They would hasten at

the sound of distant gunfire.  They would find Kermal, Claig and Goodling dead, with guns in hand.  They

would meet Dolthan, his servants and detectives triumphant. 

The scene would show that a supposed crook  Kermal  had been  slain, along with his accomplice, Doctor

Claig. For it would be obvious  that the physician had let Kermal use this house as hideout. 

Myra and Lanford also would be found slain by bullets from Kermal's  gun. Belief would have it that Kermal

had murdered them prior to the  arrival of rescuers. Goodling would be found dead also. Witnesses would

testify that the prosecutor had fallen fighting against Kermal and  Claig. 

As for Croy and Daggart, they would be trapped and slain afterward.  Chances were that they would head for

this room once the gunfire began.  Dolthan and his underlings would have no trouble with the missing pair. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT 79



Top




Page No 82


The only flaw was Goodling. It must look as though he had fallen in  fray with the occupants of the house; not

from shots delivered by the  pretended rescuers. Dolthan had not forgotten that point. He settled it  as he

surveyed the scene. 

"You take out Goodling," he said to Souder. "Don't give him a  chance; we don't want many of his bullets

around here. After we finish  that big fellow Croy, we'll plant your gun on him, Souder. It will look  like he

settled Goodling." 

Souder's long face showed a grin, as the fellow nodded. Dolthan  surveyed the intended victims. He saw

determined looks upon their  faces. He shook his head. 

"You won't stand idle with those guns," jeered Dolthan. "When you  hear me give the word to fire, you'll

make a fight for your lives. At  least you'll try to; but you won't get far." 

THE crook's words bore significance. Kermal, Claig, Goodling  all  had the same thought: to drop their guns

to the floor, so the evidence  would show that they had not fought. Yet it was impossible for them to  do so.

Human desire to live would force them to a fight for their  lives, even though the odds were against them. 

Already guns were trained upon the victims. Glowering fiends would  let the doomed men start upward with

their weapons; then those covering  crooks would shoot down the victims, letting them do no more than fire

scattered bullets while they sank dying to the floor. 

As Dolthan said, time was not essential to his scheme. He had  forgotten the little clock upon the desk. But

from the floor below came  the booming tones of an old grandfather's clock, an heirloom that  Doctor Claig

had always prized. It was intoning the hour of midnight. 

Twelve strokes of doom; the change to a new day. The fateful hour  that had meant so much to Myra Dolthan.

It marked the day that Taussig  Kermal had hoped would come with haste; that Rufus Dolthan had wished

would wait until his evil schemes were fully fashioned. 

Kermal's cause was lost; Dolthan's crimes were ready for their  culmination. The fiend chuckled as he heard

the clock's strokes. While  the tones still boomed, he raised his hand, waiting only until the  final echo to give

the signal for slaughter. The time was suited to  Rufus Dolthan's need for massacre. 

Then came a sudden pause. Dolthan's lips, about to speak, froze  with their twisted smile. From that door that

stood ajar behind him  came a sound that stopped the crook's command. Into the room of doom  crept the

ghoulish quiver of a mocking laugh, a sound that brought  chilled rigidity to all who heard its eerie tones. 

Another had waited for this crucial moment, hard on the stroke of  twelve. An unseen visitant had listened to

Rufus Dolthan's plans and  was here to prevent their delivery. 

That creepy taunt from the blackness of the hallway was the laugh  of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT

RUFUS DOLTHAN wheeled. With their leader's turn, henchmen of crime  swung also toward the doorway.

Already the partly opened barrier was  swinging inward. The Shadow's laugh rang loud. 

Burning eyes from darkness. They were the only visible tokens of  the master avenger. His cloaked form

shrouded in the gloom, The Shadow  was a creature of invisibility. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT 80



Top




Page No 83


Then, with amazing suddenness, a sweeping form moved inward.  Automatics blazed an opening message into

the ranks of crooks. The  Shadow could afford no quarter to murderers who held helpless men at  bay. 

Wildly, crooks scattered, firing quick shots toward the shape that  whirled inward from the door. As always,

The Shadow had sprung the  unexpected. He had deserted his post of safety. Forgetful of his own  safety, he

wanted to draw all shots in his direction. 

The automatics blasted thunderously. That withering fire gave no  choice. The Shadow was the only target to

every wouldbe murderer who  saw him. Dropping, crouching, diving, crooks stabbed wild shots toward  the

figure that was wheeling half across the room. 

There were others who joined in the fray. Men to whom The Shadow  had given opportunity; those upon

whose aid he had counted to cover his  bold stroke. Rufus Dolthan had good cause to regret the plans he had

made to camouflage this scene of crime. Men whom he had branded  helpless were far from being so. 

Backed against the desk, Jay Goodling was jabbing shots at close  range. Making every bullet tell, he was

crippling Dolthan's henchmen as  those rogues aimed for The Shadow. 

Taussig Kermal had snatched his automatic from the desk drawer.  With two quick shots, the lawyer dropped

one of Dolthan's aces, the  longfaced Souder. 

Fred Lanford had sprung to fight with Wurling and Hazzler. That was  the only reason why The Shadow had

left Souder to someone else. 

Wurling, desperate, had aimed to finish Lanford. The Shadow had  fired two consecutive bullets to drop

Dolthan's murderous chauffeur. 

It was Hazzler, now, who threatened. He had left Lanford to Wurling  and was aiming for The Shadow as the

chauffeur fell. Fred Lanford,  furious, made a dive for Hazzler and drove the fellow's gun arm upward.  Then

the pair grappled. Hazzler's wellaimed shot had been sent wide. 

All the while, one man had devoted himself to a single task. Doctor  Claig, dropping back into a corner, had

fired diagonally across the  room, hoping to drop one foeman, Rufus Dolthan. 

The supercrook had dived for cover as Claig's first bullets whined  past his ears. Dolthan had chosen the

refuge that The Shadow had  scorned: that blackened hallway that led to Myra's room. 

Frantically, Claig had emptied his gun. His shots were too hasty;  all five of the bullets from his oldfashioned

revolver had gone wide  of their mark. 

Claig was clicking his trigger before he realized that his  opportunity was gone. He looked about; he saw

Kermal and Goodling  standing with smoking guns. All about were sprawled crooks. 

Claig tried to shout; his voice failed him. Kermal and Goodling  were transfixed as they watched the finish of

a desperate fray. Lanford  and Hazzler were locked like wrestlers. Hazzler was striving to twist  his revolver

muzzle toward Lanford's head. 

ACROSS the room, The Shadow stood like a blackened statue. He saw  Hazzler's hand come clear. Goodling

sprang forward frantically, too  late to be of aid to his threatened friend. But before Hazzler could  press the

trigger of his gun, The Shadow acted. One of his automatics  boomed a timely shot. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT 81



Top




Page No 84


The Shadow was swinging as he fired; spinning to an angle that  offered opportunity. His gun roared as he

neared the door through which  Dolthan had sped. 

A swift shot clipped Hazzler's forearm. With a wild cry the man  clawed the air, his revolver dropping from

his grasp. Then Goodling was  upon him; the prosecutor hurled the fellow hard against the wall, while

Lanford staggered free. 

It was then that Claig found his voice. Wildly, the physician  appealed to Kermal. Frantically, he pointed

toward the door on the  left, gesturing with his emptied gun. 

"Get Dolthan!" gasped Claig. "Stop him! He's gone to murder Myra!" 

Before Kermal could turn about, a last antagonist came upward from  the floor. It was Roy Parrell. The yellow

lieutenant had dropped at the  first shots from The Shadow's automatics. 

Covered by a fallen body, Parrell had escaped injury. Lying there,  he had believed that his pals had

triumphed. Then, when he started to  arise, he saw Kermal squarely in front of him. 

Thinking he had but one man to finish, Parrell had sprung upon the  lawyer. With vicious snarl, the coward

was aiming to kill; his finger  on revolver trigger. Doctor Claig, his own gun emptied, had no chance  to save

Kermal. He thought that the lawyer was doomed. 

The Shadow fired a final shot. One automatic emptied, this was the  last that the other gun contained. Straight

from the front of the  opened door, his cloaked form black against the background of the  hallway, The

Shadow dealt this stroke with absolute precision. As his  automatic gave its message, Parrell's murderous

drive was ended. 

Kermal, staring into the detective's gun muzzle, saw Parrell spin  about in air. The revolver clattered to the

floor; mechanically, Kermal  reached for it as Parrell sprawled, rolled over writhing and lay still. 

The Shadow had spun about, out into the hall. Instead of following  it, he drew back into a short alcove at the

nearer end. He had given up  pursuit of Rufus Dolthan. The master murderer had already reached the  doorway

of Myra's room. 

There, dangling in the lock, Dolthan had found a key. He had turned  it; gun in hand, he was opening the door

at the moment of The Shadow's  return to the hall. 

Dull light revealed Dolthan's figure. The Shadow saw the crook  bound inward. He listened. An instant later,

his ears caught a hoarse  cry of surprise; a sound that turned to the snarled tone of a cornered  beast. 

SURE that his henchmen would win their fray, Dolthan had headed  through the hall with murderous intent.

Within the lighted room, he had  expected to find the niece whose life he sought. Instead, he had come  upon

two foemen whom he had forgotten. 

At one side of the room was Daggart, palefaced but determined as  he held a leveled gun; at the other side,

Croy, his huge face  stonelike. Like Daggart, Croy was ready with a revolver. Rufus Dolthan  was between

them. 

The archcrook's face showed ratlike in the light. Slowly, Dolthan  moved back a pace; then, taking

advantage of the fact that his enemies  were ready to give quarter, the crook sprang forward, choosing Croy as

his first foe. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT 82



Top




Page No 85


With wild fury, Dolthan ducked past the big man's aiming arm to  thrust his gun straight for Croy's heart. 

Daggart fired. Teeth gritting, the palefaced secretary showed  determination as well as good aim. Croy had

saved his life when Blissop  had sought it. Daggart's chance for repayment had arrived. His grit  served him in

the pinch. 

As Croy's revolver covered Dolthan, the grayhaired crook  collapsed. He sank to the floor; he lost his hold

on his gun. Mortally  wounded, he began to cough out his evil life. 

Footsteps pounded through the hallway. Taussig Kermal dashed into  the room, carrying Parrell's revolver.

Behind the lawyer followed  Goodling and Lanford; after them, Doctor Claig. All stopped short as  they joined

Kermal. 

Straight across the room yawned blackness. Shutters were opened;  window was unbarred. Myra Dolthan had

gone. Croy and Daggart had  remained here in her stead. 

A gleam of triumph showed on Croy's rugged features. Daggart was  nodding as he viewed the dying form of

Rufus Dolthan. Daggart's left  arm was still in its sling; his right hand held the revolver with which  he had

delivered his timely shot. 

Taussig Kermal spoke his commendation as Dolthan's last cough  ended. The others crowded about Daggart.

The babble of their praising  tones could be heard in the long hall. The Shadow stepped from his  alcove. 

Again, his weird laugh sounded. Quivering echoes returned their  mockery from the walls. Turning, The

Shadow swept into the room where  crooks lay sprawled. 

Hazzler, crippled by the wall, looked up and tried to snarl as his  bleary eyes saw the shape that moved swiftly

toward the window. 

Then, as the wounded minion's snarl failed him, The Shadow was  gone. Blackness only where he had merged

with those heavy draperies  beyond Kermal's desk. Only the ticking of the desk clock sounded amid  the hush

that followed, until, from beyond the house, came the weird  tones of a fading laugh. 

The Shadow, triumphant, had departed. He had dealt with men of  crime. He had made allowance for Rufus

Dolthan's eagerness to kill, by  preparing a trap wherein two determined men had been ready for the

supercrook. 

Croy's strength or Daggart's courage; The Shadow had known that he  could rely on one or the other. To

Daggart had come the opportunity to  fire the shot that spelled the end of Rufus Dolthan. To The Shadow had

come the real triumph. 

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS

"BUT Myra? What has become of her?" 

Taussig Kermal put the question as he stood beside his desk. Doctor  Claig was tending Hazzler; the wounded

man's testimony would be a  record against Rufus Dolthan's past. But Kermal knew that Hazzler could  tell

nothing. It was to Croy and Daggart that he spoke. 

"I don't know, sir," stated the secretary. "The mystery began when  I went to summon Miss Dolthan. I rapped


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS 83



Top




Page No 86


at her door, sir. I heard her  unlock it; the door opened slowly." 

"And then?" 

"Something black enveloped me. I was powerless. I had no chance to  cry out. Someone switched out the

light; I found myself upon the floor.  Yet there was no struggle; no sudden jolt. Just a momentary smothering

that stifled me for the time." 

"What next?" 

"I heard a voice  a whispered voice  warning me to be quiet and  to make no move. Metal pressed my neck.

It was a gun muzzle. I had my  own revolver, sir; but I dared not reach for it. Then, after a long  time  at least

so it seemed  I heard another rap upon the door." 

"Was that when Croy arrived?" 

"Yes. The gun was pressing me no longer; but the voice repeated a  warning. It was uncanny, that voice. I

could not bring myself to  disobey it. Perhaps I was somewhat of a coward, Mr. Kermal " 

"You have proven your bravery, Daggart. Proceed." 

"The door opened suddenly. There was a struggle in the darkness. A  figure sprawled beside me, so suddenly

that it seemed incredible. The  door must have closed; for I heard the voice speaking a new warning as  it had

to me. I knew that Croy must be the man beside me." 

"Enough for the moment, Daggart," said Kermal. "What happened to  you, Croy?" 

"Just what Daggart said," grumbled the big man. "It was the same  with me, Mr. Kermal. I was smothered, I

made a grab and found myself  plopped on the floor. There was the voice, too. That gun muzzle Daggart

talked about. 

"Like a ghost, Mr. Kermal. It wasn't human, anyway. Look"  Croy  stretched out his huge arms and doubled

his big fists  "who's going to  roll me over like I was nothing. Anybody human? No, sir." 

Kermal paused, speculating. He was inclined to agree. He remembered  The Shadow's laugh. He had a

fleeting recollection of a sweeping figure  in black. It was all uncanny; bullets had been real, yet even they had

come in a deluge that seemed incredible. 

"The whisper came again, Mr. Kermal," explained Daggart. "It was  friendly  yet fearful. It told us to wait;

that we must be ready to  fight for you." 

"The voice said that?" queried Kermal. "When?" 

"Shortly after Croy arrived. There was something weirdly persuasive  in the tone. There, in pitch darkness, it

was ghostly. There was  nothing to do but obey." 

"What was your impression, Croy?" questioned Kermal. 

"What Daggart has said, Mr. Kermal," nodded the big man. "I can't  tell it the way he does; but it wasn't

human, that voice wasn't. You  had to do what it said." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS 84



Top




Page No 87


KERMAL looked toward Goodling and Lanford who were listening with  interest. The lawyer shook his head,

wondering. 

"Do you realize what this means?" questioned Kermal. "This weird  creature  whoever, whatever he was 

had divined my purposes. He knew  that I was right; that Rufus Dolthan was wrong." 

"We waited in the room, sir," resumed Daggart. "The voice told us  to remain where we were; to put on the

light when we heard four raps  against the door. Then to wait until someone came; to be ready." 

"But to stay there," added Croy, "no matter what happened. Remember  that, Daggart?" 

The secretary nodded. 

"A while went by," said Croy to Kermal. "Then came the four raps.  They were like the voice. You'd have

thought a ghost had tapped the  door. We turned on the light. The room was empty." 

"You had heard no one go out?" demanded Kermal. 

"Absolutely not, sir," responded Daggart. "Croy tried the door. It  must have been locked on the other side." 

"The key was out of the inside," put in Croy. 

"I opened the shutters," resumed Daggart. "The bars were no longer  there. Before I could investigate further,

we heard the shooting begin.  Croy wanted to start out. I stopped him." 

"Why?" asked Kermal. 

"Because of what the voice had said," replied Daggart. "I reminded  Croy; he agreed when I mentioned the

voice. We waited there in the  room, with our guns ready." 

"There was some sort of sound we heard," completed Croy. "Like a  laugh  before the shots. The same laugh

that we heard when you and the  others had come to join us." 

"Did it remind you of the voice?" demanded Kermal. 

Croy nodded. 

"That tells the story, sir," completed Daggart. "We heard nothing  more until someone unlocked the door. The

voice had said some enemy was  coming. We were ready; we knew Rufus Dolthan from your description of

him." 

"You finished him, Daggart," commended Kermal. "You deserve great  credit." 

"Frankly, sir," declared Daggart, "it  it was that voice that gave  me the nerve I needed. Somehow, I  well,

if I hadn't dropped Rufus  Dolthan, I'd have had the voice to settle with. That was what was in my  mind, sir,

from the moment that I saw the villain." 

Kermal's face was sober as he clapped his secretary on the right  shoulder. The lawyer realized that some

strange influence had  predominated this house tonight. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS 85



Top




Page No 88


He was recalling facts that he could not explain; other facts than  these that Daggart and Croy had related.

Kermal began to speak again  concerning Myra, when Goodling held up his hand for silence. 

From outside came the throb of motors. Goodling sprang to the  window and drew aside the heavy curtains.

Half a dozen cars were  rolling into the driveway. Goodling saw figures alighting; men dashing  toward the

porch. The summoned deputies had arrived. 

GOODLING hurried out into the hallway on the right. He descended  the stairs as he heard pounding on the

door. He opened the barrier to  admit a surge of deputies, Carter in the lead. 

Goodling detailed briefly what had happened as he led the way  upstairs. Carter and the others stared at sight

of the crooks who lay  in the living room. 

Then the deputy remembered a message. He drew Goodling aside and  spoke in confidential tone. The

prosecutor's eyes opened. 

"Those reporter fellows," informed Carter. "Burke and Vincent.  They're in the lobby down at the hotel. Spoke

to me when we pulled into  town. Said to get down there as soon as possible, with everybody  concerned." 

Goodling nodded. Leaving Carter in charge, he ordered the others to  join him in a quick trip to town.

Lanford, Kermal and Croy accompanied  the prosecutor in his car, while Daggart came along with Doctor

Claig,  in the physician's coupe. The two cars made the trip to Sheffield in a  dozen minutes. Goodling was the

first to reach the hotel lobby. There  he found Clyde and Harry waiting. 

"Carter says you have news for us," stated Goodling, anxiously.  "What is it? Something important?" 

"I'll say it is," replied Clyde. "Hurry up to Rufus Dolthan's  living room. There's someone up there." 

"Myra Dolthan?" 

Clyde nodded. 

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS

THEY found Myra Dolthan in the big room of her dead uncle's suite.  Garbed in her traveling attire, the girl

was reading a book when the  arrivals entered. Myra had heard nothing about the fray at Doctor  Claig's. She

looked up in surprise when she saw the anxious faces. 

Spying Taussig Kermal, Myra arose with a smile. She extended her  hand to the lawyer. Kermal received the

girl's clasp. Relief showed on  his heavy features. He wondered for a moment at the enthusiasm of the  girl's

greeting; then Myra explained. 

"I did not fully trust you, Mr. Kermal," said the girl. "I am  sorry. I was wrong. You are my truest friend. That

is, unless " 

She paused soberly; then added: 

"Unless I place one friend before you. One whose face I have never  seen; one whose voice is weird and

mysterious, whose words carry  absolute conviction. One who must be believed and cannot be disobeyed." 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS 86



Top




Page No 89


"The voice!" exclaimed Daggart, looking toward Croy. "The voice we  heard tonight!" 

"Tell us everything, Myra," urged Kermal. "We must learn all that  we can about this amazing being who

rescued us." 

"Who rescued you as well as me?" queried Myra, in surprise. 

"Yes," replied Kermal. "I shall explain that later. Go on, Myra." 

"Two nights ago," stated the girl, "after you had let Mr. Lanford  question me, I felt grave concern. I

wondered about everything, Mr.  Kermal. Particularly about your accusations of my uncle." 

Doctor Claig nodded wisely. 

"Later," continued Myra, "there was a knock at my door. I thought  it was Daggart. Instead, it was a tall

stranger in black. His eyes were  like living fire; his voice an uncanny whisper." 

Daggart and Croy looked at each other and nodded their  corroboration of the voice. 

"This visitor," resumed Myra, "seemed more than human. He was a  most amazing being; his cloak, his hat,

made him seem a solid shadow  come to life. Yet his tones were calming. He was as gentle as he was  fearful. 

"He promised me protection. I gave him the diary that I had kept.  When he left, he vanished so amazingly

that I thought almost that he  had been unreal. But later, he cut the bars outside of my window. After  that, I

saw a glimmering light from the second floor of the garage. His  promised signal. From then on, I had no

fear." 

THERE was a calmness to the girl's story. Every word had the ring  of fact. None who listened doubted. Clyde

Burke and Harry Vincent were  agents of The Shadow; the others had heard his laugh upon this very  night. 

"At about eleven o'clock tonight," declared Myra, "or a little  later, perhaps, I heard four taps upon the shutters

of my window. That  was his signal. Strange taps  almost as though they were in the room." 

Again Daggart and Croy were impressed with recollections. They,  like Myra, recalled The Shadow's signal. 

"I opened the shutters," declared the girl. "I saw those glowing,  living eyes in blackness. That whispered

voice spoke again. The figure  moved downward; I followed, by a ladder that was resting against the  wall. 

"It was black about the house. The ladder was white. It seemed to  move beside me as the voice gave

instructions. Stretched level with the  ground, that ladder; carried by a figure that I could not see beside  me. 

"We passed the garage; there my conductor placed the ladder against  the wall. The voice still spoke, moving

onward, commanding me to  follow. It was like a dream, my eyes unseeing. A gloved hand held my  arm,

guiding me; the whispered tones gave truthful utterance. 

"My invisible friend was telling me of danger. My uncle was coming  to Doctor Claig's. Mr. Kermal had been

right when he had told me of my  uncle's plotting. I was to meet others who would take me to safety when  I

told them who I was. Then suddenly, I realized that I was walking  alone. 

"For the moment, I was terrified; I stumbled as I continued along  the slope. A flashlight appeared in front of

me; I was at the edge of a  road. Two men were there; they questioned me. They were Mr. Burke and  Mr.


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS 87



Top




Page No 90


Vincent. They introduced themselves when I told them who I was.  They brought me here in their car." 

"Where did you find Miss Dolthan?" questioned Goodling, turning to  Clyde and Harry. 

"On the back road," replied Clyde. "We drove up there to watch the  house while you went in with Parrell.

While we were waiting around, we  heard someone coming our way. It turned out to be Miss Dolthan. We

knew  town was the safest place for her." 

"You were right," agreed Goodling, grimly. "We've a lot to thank  you for, Burke. You too, Vincent." 

"Rufus Dolthan turned phony?" questioned Clyde. "These chaps"  he  indicated Kermal, Croy and Daggart 

"look a lot like the ones you were  looking for." 

"They're the ones," stated Goodling. "Lanford told us they were all  right; but we didn't believe him until

Parrell started to act up and  Dolthan broke in on the meeting." 

CLYDE was looking at Lanford, who pointed toward Croy. Clyde stared  at the big man; he saw Croy grin.

Then Clyde smiled as he nodded. He  was indicating that he had at last recognized the man with whom he had

battled while on the running board of the old sedan. 

"Rufus Dolthan is dead," declared Goodling, solemnly. "Roy Parrell  also. They admitted their crimes,

believing that we were helpless. Then  a rescuer arrived; as nearly as I can judge, he must have been the same

one who aided Miss Dolthan to safety." 

"He came in by the window," put in Croy, with a nod. "That is it.  By the window." 

"After you were gone, Miss Dolthan," added Daggart, to Myra, "he  held Croy and myself there, so that we

would be ready when your uncle  came to kill you." 

The girl uttered a startled cry. Then, realizing that all danger  was past, she reached to the table beside her and

picked up a little  book that lay there. 

"My diary," she stated. "I cannot imagine how it came here." 

"Parrell found it in the station wagon," explained Clyde, to Kermal  and Claig. "While he was looking for his

pipe. I was with him. That's  how he guessed where you were." 

Bit by bit, the story was being pieced. More comments followed;  yet, as the talk continued, the part by The

Shadow increased in its  mysterious proportions. One suggestion followed another; it was Jay  Goodling,

finally, who summed the case. 

"Whoever he was," declared the prosecutor, solemnly, as he referred  to The Shadow, "he must have learned

everything through sheer  deduction. Not only a superfighter, he is a supermind. A superbeing. 

"It was he who scattered those crooks at the house on Dobson's Road  and brought us to the first goal in our

hunt. He learned that Kermal  was at your house, Claig. He went there and prepared to save Myra from  danger

that he foresaw. 

"He must have analyzed the case to perfection; known that you were  on the level, Kermal; that Dolthan was

crooked. He must have analyzed  it from Yager's murder, the way you outlined it tonight. 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS 88



Top




Page No 91


"He was for you, Kermal. He wanted a showdown. He wanted to make  Dolthan reveal himself as the villain.

No one but this mysterious  stranger could have placed that diary in the station wagon. But how he  knew so

many other things is what amazes me. 

"Parrell's pipe in my office. Parrell found it in the station wagon  instead. Burke and Vincent on that rear road;

with their lights out.  Yet this superbeing found that out while he was rescuing Myra Dolthan  and sent the

girl to safety. 

"He handled Daggart and Croy; then pitched in to start the fight  against them. He had Rufus Dolthan figured

to the dot. He knew that  Dolthan would set out to kill Myra; and then he had Daggart and Croy  waiting. The

very men with whom he had battled less than a quarter of  an hour before." 

OTHERS nodded their heads in understanding. Each terse detail was  new proof of The Shadow's might. Men

who had fought for right felt like  mere pygmies as they considered the craft, the strategy, the prowess of  The

Shadow. 

"Well, Myra," announced Kermal, after Goodling had concluded.  "Congratulations are in order. You are

twentyone; your father's estate  is yours. Here is the will that I made out"  he produced the crumpled  paper;

he had taken it from Rufus Dolthan's pocket  "and I still  advise you to sign it. 

"There's no one now to influence your stepbrother should he be  named as your heir; but I've seen enough of

crooks to know we shouldn't  trust one just because he hasn't gone to prison. As for witnesses"   Kermal

chuckled as he looked about the group  "we have plenty of them  now." 

Kermal spread the crumpled will upon the table. Myra Dolthan took a  pen that Fred Lanford brought from a

desk. She dipped the pen in ink,  wrote her signature below the will and passed the document to Taussig

Kermal. 

It was then that all were stilled by a weird sound that reached  them. Though the timing of that distant call

might have been mere  coincidence, it impressed every listener with the startling thought  that an unseen being

had known all that passed within this room. 

From somewhere outside the hotel, floating through silent night  that blanketed the town of Sheffield came the

burst of eerie mirth,  that faded into shivering echoes, wafted by a dying breeze. As if he  claimed the privilege

of being the first witness to the will, The  Shadow's tones had come from the invisible spaces that formed his

habitat. 

Justice had triumphed. Men of right had conquered insidious crime.  All through the strength of The Shadow,

that master being whose token  of departure remained, unforgotten, in the minds of those who had  heard. 

THE END 


THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED

CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS 89



Top





Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE HOUSE THAT VANISHED, page = 4

   3. Maxwell Grant, page = 4

   4. CHAPTER I. HOUSE OF DOOM, page = 4

   5. CHAPTER II. LIVING AND DEAD, page = 8

   6. CHAPTER III. THE SHADOW ARRIVES, page = 13

   7. CHAPTER IV. THE VANISHED HOUSE, page = 17

   8. CHAPTER V. THE MAN IN THE SEDAN, page = 21

   9. CHAPTER VI. DEATH BEARS WITNESS, page = 25

   10. CHAPTER VII. KILLERS IN THE DARK, page = 30

   11. CHAPTER VIII. THE LAW PREPARES, page = 34

   12. CHAPTER IX. THE SHADOW'S FINDING, page = 39

   13. CHAPTER X. KERMAL DECIDES, page = 43

   14. CHAPTER XI. LANFORD AGREES, page = 47

   15. CHAPTER XII. FROM THE NIGHT, page = 51

   16. CHAPTER XIII. THE SHADOW'S PROMISE, page = 56

   17. CHAPTER XIV. THE LAW'S QUEST, page = 61

   18. CHAPTER XV. THE LAST DAY, page = 64

   19. CHAPTER XVI. THE ZERO HOUR, page = 68

   20. CHAPTER XVII. MEN FROM THE NIGHT, page = 73

   21. CHAPTER XVIII. COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE, page = 76

   22. CHAPTER XIX. FACTS COME OUT, page = 80

   23. CHAPTER XX. AFTER MIDNIGHT, page = 83

   24. CHAPTER XXI. WORD TO THE VICTORS, page = 86

   25. CHAPTER XXII. THE SHADOW DEPARTS, page = 89