Title:   REALM OF DOOM

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Author:   Maxwell Grant

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REALM OF DOOM

Maxwell Grant



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Table of Contents

REALM OF DOOM..........................................................................................................................................1

Table of Contents................................................................................................................................................2

REALM OF DOOM...........................................................................................................................................3

Maxwell Grant.........................................................................................................................................3

CHAPTER I. CRIME'S APPOINTMENT..............................................................................................3

CHAPTER II. THE SECOND MEETING ..............................................................................................6

CHAPTER III. HIGH IN THE HILLS ....................................................................................................9

CHAPTER IV. THE NEEDED LINK ...................................................................................................12

CHAPTER V. THE SHADOW EXPLAINS .........................................................................................15

CHAPTER VI. CROOKS REPORT.....................................................................................................19

CHAPTER VII. THE MAN BELOW...................................................................................................21

CHAPTER VIII. THE THIRD NIGHT .................................................................................................25

CHAPTER IX. DATED CRIME ...........................................................................................................28

CHAPTER X. MEN OF MILLIONS....................................................................................................32

CHAPTER XI. THE DANGER ZONE .................................................................................................35

CHAPTER XII. THE SHADOW AWAKES........................................................................................39

CHAPTER XIII. THE NEW ALLIANCE .............................................................................................43

CHAPTER XIV. WORD FROM THE SHADOW...............................................................................47

CHAPTER XV. THE COVERED TRAIL............................................................................................51

CHAPTER XVI. CROSSED PLANS...................................................................................................54

CHAPTER XVII. THE CIRCLED TRAIL...........................................................................................58

CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIPLE ORDEAL .........................................................................................62

CHAPTER XIX. STRIFE UNDERGROUND ......................................................................................66

CHAPTER XX. CRIME'S FINISH.......................................................................................................70


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REALM OF DOOM

Maxwell Grant

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Table of Contents

REALM OF DOOM

Maxwell Grant 

CHAPTER I. CRIME'S APPOINTMENT 

CHAPTER II. THE SECOND MEETING 

CHAPTER III. HIGH IN THE HILLS 

CHAPTER IV. THE NEEDED LINK 

CHAPTER V. THE SHADOW EXPLAINS 

CHAPTER VI. CROOKS REPORT 

CHAPTER VII. THE MAN BELOW 

CHAPTER VIII. THE THIRD NIGHT 

CHAPTER IX. DATED CRIME 

CHAPTER X. MEN OF MILLIONS 

CHAPTER XI. THE DANGER ZONE 

CHAPTER XII. THE SHADOW AWAKES 

CHAPTER XIII. THE NEW ALLIANCE 

CHAPTER XIV. WORD FROM THE SHADOW 

CHAPTER XV. THE COVERED TRAIL 

CHAPTER XVI. CROSSED PLANS 

CHAPTER XVII. THE CIRCLED TRAIL 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIPLE ORDEAL 

CHAPTER XIX. STRIFE UNDERGROUND 

CHAPTER XX. CRIME'S FINISH  

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REALM OF DOOM

Maxwell Grant

CHAPTER I. CRIME'S APPOINTMENT

Two men were standing near the center of the hotel lobby, watching  the bellboy bring their suitcases from the

elevator. To all  appearances, they were a pair of motorists ending their stay in  Charleston, West Virginia. 

The fact that they were checking out at six in the afternoon was  not unusual. Many persons preferred to drive

at night, and six o'clock  was the time when guests had to leave or pay for another night's  lodging. 

One man was tall, with light hair and eyes. His face was a friendly  one, except for a disdainful smile that

occasionally flexed his lips.  The other, of average height, had dark hair and sallow complexion, plus  an

expression that showed shrewdness, even when he glanced at a road  map. 

It was the taller man who spoke, before the bellboy arrived. His  words were undertoned. 

"Have the bellhop stick the bags in the car," he told his  companion. "We'll have chow before we scram. I'll

take care of the  bill, Clip." 

The man called Clip was turning away, when he remembered something.  There was still time to ask about it,

for the bellboy was having  trouble with the bags. 

"What about that phone call, Rigger?" whispered Clip. "You're  taking care of it, too?" 

A nod from Rigger settled that question. Soon, Rigger was standing  by the cashier's window, while Clip was

strolling out through the  lobby, preceded by the bagburdened bellboy. 

The bill came to eight dollars and sixty cents. With one of his  curiously curved smiles, Rigger brought a fat

wallet from his pocket,  peeled off a twentydollar bank note and shoved it through the window.  When he had

received his change, he glanced about the lobby, then moved  toward a large rack that held road maps and

other circulars. 

He had decided to stall around for a few minutes, before making the  telephone call that Clip had mentioned.

Haste didn't go along with  Rigger's plan of action, when he was posing as a gentleman. 

In that policy, Rigger evidently had the right idea; for the next  man who approached the cashier's window

was definitely a gentleman, and  he possessed a most leisurely manner. He was attired in evening clothes  that

fitted him to perfection, and his arrival at the window brought a  respectful bow from the cashier. 

This gentleman was Lamont Cranston, a wealthy New Yorker who  traveled much and hunted big game, who

had been in Charleston for  several days. His evening attire indicated that he was to be a guest at  the

governor's reception, scheduled for this evening. 

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THERE was something in Cranston's mere approach that compelled the  cashier's attention. The man behind

the window stopped as he stood, not  even moving his hand to place Rigger's twentydollar bill in the till.

Looking through the wicket, he met Cranston's eyes. 

Calm eyes, those, as immobile as Cranston's face, with its hawkish  profile and masklike look. When

Cranston's lips moved, they retained  their straightness; and his voice came with an even tone. 

"Some change for this, please"  Cranston's fingers tendered a  onehundreddollar bill  "in any

denominations that are convenient." 

The cashier acknowledged by placing Rigger's twenty on the counter,  adding two more twenties, then three

tens and two fives. 

Holding the wad of bills in his left hand, Cranston reached his  right to his vest pocket. Bringing out a

monocle attached to a ribbon,  he affixed the glass to his right eye. 

Slowly, he counted off the bills, until he came to the  twentydollar note at the bottom of the stack. He was

turning away as  he finished, and he stood for a half minute as though glancing across  the lobby, before he

placed the money in his pocket. 

But in reality, he was intently studying the twentydollar bill  that had come from Rigger. Seen through the

monocle, the tiniest  details of the bill were enlarged to immense proportions. 

The monocle was a powerful magnifying lens. 

What Cranston saw on the twentydollar bill must have pleased him,  for a soft laugh, scarcely audible, came

from his fixed lips. He folded  the money into a wallet; let the monocle drop from his eye. Then, with  another

slight turn, Cranston was faced toward the direction of the  rack that held the road maps. 

Rigger had left that spot. Just beyond was a telephone booth, its  door a trifle ajar. Glancing toward the exit of

the lobby, Cranston saw  that Clip and the bellboy had not yet returned. With that, Cranston  took an

immediate interest in the big map rack. 

Strolling there, he was close enough to catch the final words of  Rigger's phone conversation. 

"So the dame's fallen for the hokum, huh?" Rigger's tone, though  guarded, showed that he was greatly

pleased. "Good enough... Yeah. Keep  her kidded until I show up... Don't worry. I'll be Mr. Fixit... Yeah,  I'll

be there in plenty of time for you to get her to the ninethirty  bus." 

Despite his ease of motion, Cranston was at the news stand by the  time Rigger had come from the telephone

booth. Clip appeared at the  lobby door, and the two went into the dining room. 

FOR several minutes, Cranston scanned the columns of an evening  newspaper. Big type told of frenzied

efforts to locate the abductors of  recent kidnap victims. The search, so the newspapers said, was  nationwide. 

Five victims, in all, were missing; and when last seen, they had  been in places very far apart  such as

Chicago, New York and Miami.  True, most of them had been starting on journeys, but their  destinations had

been quite as varied as their starting points. 

In two cases, ransom money had been paid; but the victims had not  been returned. That seemed to be a

wellsettled policy on the part of  kidnapers, although it made their racket tougher, even for themselves.  It had


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also produced the conclusion that the snatches were the work of  different parties. Kidnapping, it seemed,

came in waves  like other  types of crime. 

Whether or not Lamont Cranston agreed with those theories was  something difficult to tell; for he tucked the

paper under his arm,  inserted the monocle, and strolled into the dining room. 

Rigger and Clip, at a table only a few feet away, had finished  their soup when Cranston sat down. 

With a nudge of Rigger's arm, Clip said, "Pipe the monocle the  guy's using. The guy must be a duke or

something!" 

They watched Cranston in amusement, until he had finished with the  bill of fare. Then their grins increased,

as the fastidious diner  adjusted his monocle more carefully and began to study a card that he  took from his

inside pocket. 

It was about the size of a postcard and was printed with tiny dots,  arranged in rows. Those black dots, smaller

than the head of a pencil,  formed a design that looked like a honeycomb. Engrossed in his study of  the card,

Cranston was tapping a finger from one dot to another. 

"What is it?" Clip asked Rigger, with a grin. "Some game the guy is  playing?" 

"Looks like it," returned Rigger. "Say," he chuckled, "maybe it's a  punch board. He'll be pushing those dots

with a match stick, if we  watch him long enough!" 

Clip added a louder chuckle, and Cranston heard it. He looked  about, removed his monocle and stared

haughtily at the two. Suppressing  their laughter, they resumed their meal. 

The two men finished dinner and went from the dining room. With  sidelong gaze, Cranston saw them go out

through the lobby. A faint  smile appeared upon his thin lips. Pushing aside his coffee cup, he  again drew the

card from his pocket and adjusted the monocle to his  right eye. 

Under the powerful microscope, that card underwent a remarkable  transformation. Those dots, tiny blobs of

black print to the naked eye,  became the size of silver dollars. Thus enlarged, they were dots no  longer. 

They were photographs! 

Upon that single card were more than one hundred and fifty  portraits, depicting human faces in clear detail.

Faces that were of  many types, but all with a sordid touch that marked them as the  countenances of crooks,

despite the smooth expressions that many  possessed. 

Beneath each portrait, but inscribed within the printed circle, was  a name identifying the owner of the face.

The card that Cranston  carried was a rogues' gallery in miniature! 

UPON that card, Cranston found one face he wanted. It showed a man  of light complexion, whose eyes were

almost colorless and whose lips  wore a twisty smile, caught to perfection by a timely click of the  camera. 

Beneath that portrait was the name: Rigger Bayne. 

A few circles away, another photograph portrayed a sallowfaced  subject whose eyes and hair were dark. It

bore the name of Clip Rallin. 


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Those two members of Cranston's pocket rogues' gallery were the men  who had watched him in the dining

room. Crooks they were, as Cranston  alone had suspected. 

The lobby clock showed half past seven, as Cranston strolled past.  Ascending to his fifthfloor room,

Cranston stared out across the  lighted streets of Charleston, toward the flowing blackness of the  Kanawha

River. That moving darkness, that seemed a portion of night  itself, reminded him of a part that he himself

could play. 

Removing his coat and vest, Cranston pulled away the collar of his  stiff shirt and seated himself before a

mirror. With deft fingers, he  began to change his face. He molded it into a new shape, building its  contours

with dabs of a puttylike substance, until only a semblance of  its hawkish look remained. 

From changed lips came a whispered laugh that brought eerie echoes  from surrounding walls. Neither Rigger

Bayne nor Clip Rallin would have  enjoyed that mirth. They would have identified it with a being cloaked  in

black, whose ways brought doom to persons of their ilk. 

That tone was the laugh of The Shadow, master fighter who conquered  men of crime! 

CHAPTER II. THE SECOND MEETING

IN the dusk that The Shadow viewed from his hotel window, Rigger  Bayne was driving through the side

streets of Charleston, taking a  circuitous course to a highway that led from the city. Rigger was  riding alone;

his pal, Clip Rallin, had dropped off soon after they  left the hotel. 

Rigger's car was an old one that thumped heavily when he crossed  the tracks of a littleused railway line. The

jolts made Rigger grin.  He was thinking of another car, one that hadn't stood bumps so well; a  car that he

expected soon to view. 

A few miles from the city limits, Rigger reached a rough stretch of  road marked as being a detour. Another

mile, his headlights glinted  upon the gasoline standards of a small service station. There, a coupe  was

standing in front of a tiny shack close to the pumps. 

Beside the coupe, a man in overalls was stooping to peer beneath  the car, while a girl's face was visible at the

window of the driver's  seat. Rigger pulled up beside the coupe; the man in overalls turned a  flashlight in his

direction. 

Rigger saw a blunt face above wide shoulders. He also caught the  grin that was meant for him. But it was

gone when the man turned to the  girl. 

"This is my partner," said the bluntfaced man. "The fellow who  called up a while ago. I gotta talk to him.

We'll be right out." 

Had The Shadow been present, he could have identified the  bluntfaced man by another consultation of the

microscopic rogues'  gallery. The fellow's name was Uke Flenn, and he teamed excellently  with Rigger and

Clip. All three were specialists in crime who had  managed to keep well clear of the law. 

Like the others, Uke had no idea that he had ever been "mugged" for  future reference. It happened that The

Shadow's records listed many  crooks not included in police archives. 

In the shack, Uke and Rigger held a brisk. but pointed, conference. 


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"That feed line broke," gruffed Uke, "just like we figured it would  when she hit this detour. I loosened it

before I left Richmond, last  night." 

"Got it fixed how?" questioned Rigger. 

"Yeah. Only, the dame don't know it. She don't know either that I  lifted the dough she had in her handbag. I

snagged it onehanded"  Uke  made a deft motion with thumb and fingers  "when I picked it off the  floor

of the car. She dropped the bag getting out here. Now, she thinks  she lost it." 

Rigger gave his leery grin. His colorless eyes stared reflectively  from the grimy window of the shack. 

"She's the dame we're after," he mused. "Loretta Wyndon, whose old  man owns about half the copper in the

State of Utah. Last seen in  Richmond, Virginia " 

"Driving to the South," added Uke. "Because nobody knows that she  got that phony telegram asking her to

visit friends in Knoxville,  Tennessee. A trip out of the way of her regular route South, and one  that took her

over this detour." 

Rigger seemed satisfied on that point; but he had another important  question. 

"How about this joint?" he asked. "Did anybody look it over close,  or stop for gas?" 

"Nobody," returned Uke. "There's been cars along, but the detour  worried 'em too much to stop. The most

anybody could figure is that I  was one of the guys that used to run the dump, come back to see how  business

looked." 

FROM the conversation, the two crooks revealed the clever measures  by which they were covering the trail

of Loretta Wyndon, next candidate  in the growing list of kidnap victims. Once the girl disappeared, the  hunt

would go astray somewhere in Virginia. 

Even, by chance, if searchers did come to the neighborhood of  Charleston, they would again meet with a

broken trail; for Uke and  Rigger were adding another tricky move. 

Together, they stepped from the shack and approached the car where  the anxious girl awaited. By the glow of

the dome light, Rigger gained  his first close look at Loretta Wyndon. He recognized her from  photographs

that he had seen. 

Those pictures, though excellent, had not done the girl justice. No  camera could have caught the trusting gaze

of those lovely hazel eyes.  No posed photo could have shown the stray wisps of lightbrown hair  that peeked

cutely from beneath her tan beret. Even the tilt of that  headgear had an angle that added to Loretta's charm. 

Anxiety seemed to make the girl more lovely. When she looked at  Uke, she smiled; and he responded in a

tone no longer gruff, but  pleasant. 

"Looks like we can help you out, lady." Uke was slowing his voice  to a drawl such as he had heard in West

Virginia. "This here is my  podner"  he gestured toward Rigger  "and he's scared up some money  while he

was in town." 

"Enough for bus fare, lady," added Rigger, stepping forward, hat in  hand. "We reckon it will see you clear to

Knoxville, where you're  going." Then shyly: "I'm sorry you lost your handbag." 


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Loretta's smile became a troubled one. 

"I've never traveled by bus," she admitted. "Isn't there a train  that I could take from Charleston?" 

There were headshakes from Uke and Rigger. Railroads ran from  Charleston, but not direct to Knoxville. Just

when the trains left, the  pretended natives didn't know. People around these parts didn't travel  by train any

more. 

Trains cost too much to ride. That was particularly applicable in  Loretta's case, Uke and Rigger argued.

They'd scraped up just enough  for her to make the bus trip; and to go by train, even if it could be  arranged,

would require more cash than they had. 

Both men were so apologetic that Loretta capitulated and hastened  to express her thanks, with a sincerity that

would have softened almost  anyone except such criminals as Uke Flenn and Rigger Bayne. They merely

counted out the money, in onedollar bills and change. They gave the  cash to Loretta, telling her that she

could repay them when they  delivered her car to her in Knoxville, after they repaired it. 

Uke invited Loretta into the car that Rigger had come in. They were  scarcely out of sight before Rigger drove

the girl's coupe in the  opposite direction. Totally unconscious of that fraud, Loretta chatted  lightly with Uke,

until they reached the Charleston bus depot. 

"I can't imagine where I lost my money," said Loretta, in parting.  "But I'll keep tight hold of this"  she

gripped the cash that the  crooks had given her  "until I get my bus ticket." 

"And hold onto the ticket," chuckled Uke. "Don't forget that,  lady." 

AS soon as Loretta had entered the bus depot, Uke drove the car to  a parking space. Strolling back along the

street, he saw Loretta in the  waiting room; then he looked into the window of a modernistic  lunchroom.

There, past the chromiumplated tables, Uke saw the man he  wanted, seated at the lunch counter. The fellow

was the swaggery bus  driver who drove the ninethirty trip. 

Uke entered the lunchroom and sat beside the uniformed driver, who  gave him a somewhat friendly nod. The

two had become acquainted within  the past week. Folding his elbows on the counter, Uke called for a cup  of

coffee. The fingers of his right hand, sneaking from beneath his  left elbow, meanwhile performed a crawl. 

Deftly, they reached the cup of coffee that the bus driver had half  finished. Raising, Uke's first two fingers let

a grayish pill drop into  the cup. The bus driver didn't notice that occurrence. He was taking  another gulp of

coffee when Uke's order arrived. 

Uke began a conversation that kept the bus driver interested. All  the while, he sidled glances toward the

fellow's face. That knockout  drop wouldn't be long in accomplishing its work. 

Gradually, the victim's face took on a grayish tinge that resembled  the color of the dissolved pills. His head

was nodding slowly; he was  scarcely hearing what Uke said, until the crook drew him from his stool  and

started him toward the rear door that led to the space where the  busses were parked. 

"You're looking kind of sick," undertoned Uke. "Maybe some air  would do you good." 

The bus driver managed a nod. 

"Uhhuh," he grunted. "I'm feeling sort of " 


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His voice ended with a gulp as Uke guided him behind an empty bus.  The fellow stumbled in the darkness;

the shove that Uke added was  almost useless. Within five seconds another man was beside Uke;  together,

they were lifting the stupefied victim into the empty bus. 

Back in the terminal a loudspeaker was bawling the destinations of  the ninethirty bus. Loretta caught a

mention of the name "Knoxville."  Picking up a small bag that she had brought with her, she followed a  small

group of travelers who were starting out to the bus. 

Loretta didn't notice a stranger who was seated in the waiting  room, his calm eyes fixed upon her. His face

was as immobile as his  gaze, and it carried a very slight trace of the hawkish features that  characterized

Lamont Cranston. 

Steady lips, fuller than those of Cranston, formed the slightest of  smiles as Loretta passed. The steady eyes

showed a momentary gleam. Of  all the passengers going on the ninethirty bus, The Shadow had found  the

proper one to watch. 

Rising he followed Loretta out to the platform. There, both were  delayed before they could board the bus.

Two men, one roughclad, the  other in a bus driver's uniform, were piloting a passenger between  them,

urging him in through the bus door. 

Whether drunk or half asleep, the man was almost helpless. Once he  was in his seat, the two who had aided

him came out together. The  roughclad man was wiping his forehead with a big handkerchief, half  obscuring

his face. That was why Loretta Wyndon failed to recognize the  blunt features of Uke Flenn. 

Politely, the bus driver helped the girl aboard then turned about  as The Shadow came up the step. Eyes met in

a second meeting, but the  man in driver's uniform did not recognize the face of this final  passenger. He had

no idea that he had seen him before in the dining  room of a Charleston hotel. 

Small wonder. The Shadow's attire, like his face, was totally  changed. No longer did he wear evening clothes

nor sport a monocle. But  he recognized the face of the man who wore a busdriver's outfit;  recognized those

sallow features topped by dark hair. 

Whatever the man's ability, he didn't belong at the wheel of this  bus. He was an impostor who had acquired

his uniform from the back of a  helpless man who had been thrust into a bus seat as a groggy passenger. 

The Shadow's lips formed a smile as he took a seat halfway along  the aisle and watched the fake bus driver

close the door and take the  wheel. 

The Shadow was bound on an adventure that offered a firsthand  study of the methods used by crooks whose

further trail he sought. 

The driver of this overmountain bus was Clip Rallin! 

CHAPTER III. HIGH IN THE HILLS

How long the bus had traveled, Loretta couldn't guess. She had  forgotten to wind her wrist watch and the bus

driver seemed too busy  for her to even ask the time. It was certainly past midnight, and  during the passing

hours of the trip, the man at the big wheel had been  piloting the bus over roads that Loretta would not have

liked to travel  even in daylight. 


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Sometimes there were stretches of paved road that the bus seemed to  swallow as it rumbled ahead. Again

there would be chunks of rocky  cliffs that loomed like threatening icebergs, until this "ship of the  road"

swung past them. 

Then the lights would blaze off into nowhere, over the depths of  great ravines where the bus seemed destined

to finish its precarious  trip. Each time, however, the huddled driver turned the big wheel, to  curve the bus

along a roadway that the girl could not see. 

Traffic, fortunately, was light among these West Virginia  mountains. At moments, pygmy headlights of

automobiles met the glare  from the bus. Each time, the great vehicle threatened to crush the  midgets that so

annoyed it, but, somehow, they managed to scurry from  its path and get by. 

The other passengers  about a dozen of them  had gone to sleep.  They looked like veteran bus riders who

were accustomed to leaving  their worries to the driver, along with their fate. 

Across the aisle, a few seats behind the bus driver, was a man who  had solved the riddle of traveling

comfortably by bus. He was slanted  across the double seat, his head tucked out of sight of everyone except

Loretta. With one hand tilted up behind his shoulder, his arm formed a  buffer between his head and the

curtained window. 

He looked to be asleep, yet his face was alert. In the dimmed  lights, his features had a hawkish aspect that

would not have shown in  a sharper glow. Indeed, Loretta might not have noticed that  characteristic, except

for the silhouette that the man's profile cast  against the pillowy whiteness that backed the reclining seat. 

The silhouette, more than the face itself, produced the hawklike  effect. Interested in that passenger, Loretta

looked toward his right  hand, that lay beside his knee. She saw long, tapered fingers that  rested loosely about

the handle of a black briefcase. That added to the  impression that the man was vigilant even in sleep. 

Five hours from Charleston to Bluefield, a matter of some hundred  and thirty miles. That didn't seem so very

slow, however, when Loretta  considered the road that the bus was traveling. 

Somewhere past Bluefield was a town that served as a junction  point. There, at a time when people ought to

be asleep, Loretta would  leave this bus and wait for another that would carry her to Knoxville. 

She had spent all her dollar bills on the bus ticket, but her  handbag contained a collection of quarters and

dimes that the kindly  men who ran the detour service station had given her. Loretta decided  that she could

afford to buy a breakfast when they reached the junction  point. 

SINCE no one else was awake, Loretta glanced at the bus driver. For  the first time, she noticed that his face

wore traces of worry that,  she wondered why, he had not previously shown during this overmountain

journey. 

Clip Rallin had caught the girl's glance in the mirror. In his role  of bus driver, he had placed Loretta where he

could watch her whenever  he chose. Had Loretta gone to sleep, Clip would somehow have managed to

awaken her; for that was part of his game. Loretta had obligingly  remained awake for the climax that was

almost due. 

Clip began to apply the brakes. The bus swung past a jagged cliff  edge, which Clip identified by the

whitepainted remnants of an  advertisement plastered against a smooth surface of rock. Swinging the  curve,

Clip coasted the bus to a stop on a downward slope. 


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Turning about, he looked at Loretta and grinned as though pleased  to find someone else awake. He leaned

over and confided the trouble in  a low, purry tone that didn't rouse the other passengers. 

"Pulling too hard to the right," he told Loretta. "Maybe a tire is  going flat. I hate to trouble you, miss, but if

you'd hold this  flashlight while I take a look " 

Clip didn't have to finish. Loretta obliged by taking the  flashlight. The fake bus driver opened the door,

helped the girl to the  ground. It was foggy here, not drizzly, as it had been a while back. To  the right was a

high embankment; from the left, across the road,  Loretta could hear the faint roar of a stream deep in a

mountain gorge. 

Loretta picked her way beside the bus, following Clip toward the  front wheel. She found she couldn't make

the flashlight work. Clip took  it, pressed the button. 

"The bulb's burned out," he grunted. "Lucky I got a spare one in  the bus. If you want to get it for me " 

Turning, for a moment the girl couldn't make out the lighted door  of the bus, for it seemed blurred by a

blackness that faded outward.  She blinked; the door was clear again. That was when Clip plucked her  sleeve. 

"I'd better get the bulb," he decided, smoothly. "It won't take me  long to find it." 

He moved toward the step; Loretta followed slowly, not liking the  darkness around her. Clip stepped briskly

through the door, took a  quick shrewd glance along the aisle. He counted heads that he had noted  before; the

ones that stuck above the seat tops. 

Those passengers were still asleep. With a twist, Clip dropped  behind the wheel, yanking the lever that

controlled the door. The motor  was still throbbing; a yank of the gear shift, a foot on the throttle,  the bus was

away down the slope. 

TO Loretta, the whole thing happened before she could even gasp.  The bus whipped clear almost with the

closing of the door, and she  found herself staring at an array of taillights below the dim rear  windows, as the

big vehicle took the next bend. 

She was in utter darkness, thicker than any that she had ever  realized could exist, so black that even the white

wraiths of drifting  fog were lost. It was fearful here, alone on a forgotten mountainside,  with nothing but that

steady roar of the creek that pounded through the  deep gorge below. 

Despite the nerve that she possessed, Loretta was gripped with real  horror at her plight. The action of the

treacherous bus driver stirred  her with vague fears of something more to come. Then, for a moment, her  terror

was forgotten, as a light swept from the upper bend. Another car  was coming down the lonely highway,

feeling its way past the curve. 

With a glad cry, Loretta sprang out to the middle of the road and  waved her arms, just as the automobile

rounded the bend. 

The car came to a sudden stop. Even that didn't surprise Loretta;  she simply thought that the driver had

caught her signal. What did  puzzle her, was the clatter of three doors opening at once. The noise  was

explained when a trio of men sprang suddenly into the path of the  headlights, bound in Loretta's direction. 

With a gasp, the girl understood. This car hadn't arrived by  chance. It had been lurking somewhere, waiting

for the bus to pass.  These men had known that the bus driver was going to strand her; it was  their job to grab


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her before she recovered from her bewilderment. 

Loretta gave a frantic look in one direction, then the other. She  saw the guard rail of the ravine, with

uncertain depths beyond it; then  the embankment. studded with scraggly bushes and trees that offered

opportunity for a frenzied climb. She ran for the steeppitched slope. 

On the way, she stumbled, rolling into a tiny gully that she hadn't  noticed. The black ditch seemed to enfold

her as she fell. Her head  glanced a mossy stone; with the daze that gripped her, Loretta heard  the murmur of

the mountain creek fade. 

Prone in the gully, the helpless girl could not hear the clatter of  footsteps upon the highway. Her wouldbe

captors were almost at the  spot where Loretta had fallen. A few seconds more, they would have had  her in

their clutch. It seemed that only the impossible could  intervene. 

The impossible came  a note of fierce challenge that rose strident  above the roar from the ravine. A peal of

fierce laugher that reached  Loretta in her stupor; mirth so weird that it seemed the culmination of  all her

fears. But that sardonic mirth foretold no ill to Loretta  Wyndon. 

The challenge was meant for the girl's persecutors; and with it,  hardened men of crime stopped short, trying

blankly to locate the  source of that mighty mockery. 

It was their turn to meet the unexpected in the midst of these  forsaken hills. They screamed out their

challenger's name. They had  heard the laugh of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER IV. THE NEEDED LINK

LIKE moving pistons, grimy hands sped to hip pockets as three  gunmen reached for their revolvers. Where

The Shadow was, how he had  arrived here, these thugs couldn't guess; but they knew they were in  for battle.

Given a break, they'd get The Shadow. So, at least, they  thought. 

One of the three was leader of the mob. He shouted a raucous  command to two others, who had remained in

the halted car. Immediately,  a spotlight burned; it began a long sweep back and forth across the  road, to finish

at a spot near the embankment. 

Shots came from the crooks, as they aimed their ready guns. There,  caught like a mammoth moth in the lights

of a brilliant flame, was the  figure that they wanted. It was The Shadow, cloaked in black garb that  he had

brought from his briefcase. 

Crooks saw the outline of a slouch hat above the cloaked shoulders.  They didn't sight the guns that were, in

The Shadow's fists. Those  automatics, like the thin gloves that he wore, were black. But the guns  made

themselves evident an instant later. 

Timed to the spurts from thuggish revolvers came answering tongues  of flame. But The Shadow's gun stabs

had a feature that the other  lacked. The Shadow's shots were accurate. He had aimed before the  spotlight

revealed him. He was shooting straight, while crooks were  opening a hasty, illaimed fire. 

One mobster hit the highway. Another took a stagger; made a  frenzied dive back toward the halted car. Only

the leader stood intact,  for he had been behind the others. His gun had swung straight for the  cloaked fighter

ahead. He intended to do more than shoot it out with  The Shadow; he expected to drop that being in black. 


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Guns spoke together. Singularly, both shots were wide. The  mobleader's bullet pinged through space, for The

Shadow had faded a  split second before the fellow fired. The Shadow's shot happened to be  wide because he

was starting a rapid move. 

The fade that he made was more than a mere drop. It turned to a  long leap across the little ditch; transformed

from that into a whirl  that carried him to the other side of the road. During that speedy  spin, guns gave

staccato barks. The men in the car were firing along  with their leader, who stood in the road; but all their

shots were  belated. 

The Shadow ended his swift whirl by a stop against the guard rail.  With it, he came squarely into position.

His left hand jabbed a shot  straight for the aiming mobleader. The slug from the .45 jolted the  crook like a

blow of a sledge hammer. 

The men in the car were shooting beyond their mark, for they hadn't  expected The Shadow's sudden halt.

Before they could aim again, he was  coming their direction, seeking the shelter of the car front below the

level of their guns. 

There were three men in that car: the driver, a marksman beside  him, and the crippled thug who had crawled

in from the road. It was the  last named who screamed a warning to the other two: 

"Get him! Get The Shadow before he climbs over the front and gets  you!" 

THE words brought an instant response, though the two men in front  chose different measures. The driver

lurched the car forward, starting  it down the slope in second gear, hoping to crush The Shadow in its  path.

The marksman stretched from the window on his side of the sedan,  hoping for a shot at the blackclad foe. 

As the car took its leap, something whirled from in front of it.  That something was The Shadow, launched in

a reverse spin. He was out  of danger, with several feet to spare, and he took the path that  offered the most

space; the area in the direction of the guard rail. 

Madly, the crooks tried to get him before he could aim. The  persistent driver yanked the wheel to the left,

again heading the car  straight for The Shadow. The marksman shoved his gun across in front of  the driver,

poking the muzzle from the window on the left. 

From the sedan the gun was barking its rapid fire, when The Shadow  spliced a shot of his own from the guard

rail. 

His target was the stabbing gun itself. The bullet skimmed the  marksman's knuckles, took him in the chest.

His last shots were  spasmodic, as he slumped into the driver's arms. 

Then came tragedy that The Shadow had not intended; for on this  occasion, he would have preferred to take

at least one foemen alive.  The result of The Shadow's shot prevented that outcome. Tangled with  the withered

marksman, the driver lost his grip on the wheel at the  moment when he needed it most. 

Before he could slew the car around to the right, it clipped the  guard rail. Under the powerful drive of the

accelerated second gear,  traveling downhill, the car supplied a battering force beyond any for  which the rail

was intended. 

Posts ripped from their moorings. There was a splintering of wood,  punctuated by the frantic cries of the

driver and the thug in the back  seat. Then, in a flash, the car was gone, its lights with it. Trailing  shrieks were

lost in a clatter far below. A final crash woke echoes  from the ravine; echoes that soon subsided, to blend


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with the dull roar  of the creek below. 

That crookmanned car had taken a hundredfoot plunge, wiping out  the last members of the defeated mob. 

A tiny flashlight blinked across the highway. It centered upon one  dead crook, then the other. It was the

second man, the leader of the  mob, whose face came under The Shadow's closest scrutiny. 

That face was one that The Shadow recalled. It was choppy,  biglipped, with a scar that ran from one glassy

eye to the hatchetjaw  below. A face that could be remembered in death, as well as life. 

A search of pockets brought nothing of importance. Finished with  the fallen mobsters, The Shadow beamed

his light along the ditch on the  upper side of the road. Among the slanted rocks, he found Loretta  Wyndon. 

The girl gave a low moan as The Shadow reached her. The Shadow saw  the lump where her head had struck

the stones. 

Loretta wasn't badly hurt, but the blow had given her a slight  brain concussion, accounting for her bewildered

state. Lifting the girl  across his shoulders, The Shadow began an upward trek along the road.  He seemed

confident of finding something important, once he was past  the bend. 

Two hundred yards brought him to a bridge across the ravine. The  roar of the creek loudened as he crossed.

Thirty paces onward, The  Shadow came to an old dirt road. It was the route of an old mountain  highway that

stayed on the left side of the ravine and paralleled both  the new highway and the descending creek. 

Blinking his flashlight upward, The Shadow discovered an old road  sign, pointing down the valley, with the

faded legend: ROCK HILL, ONE  HALF MILE. 

The Shadow followed the dirt road. With Loretta as a burden, the  plod was tedious. At last, his flashlight

showed a building. Resting  Loretta on the ground, The Shadow made a further survey. 

ROCK HILL was a hamlet of not more than half a dozen houses, all  recently abandoned. Its inhabitants, like

those of other tiny hill  settlements, had deserted their decayed homes to move into new houses  provided

through a Federal building project. 

After a short investigation, The Shadow returned and carried  Loretta up the rickety steps of the largest

structure, placed her upon  an old cot in the corner of a room. Finding a broken chair, The Shadow  set it in

front of an ancient table. 

Probing another corner, he found an old kerosene lamp and lighted  it. Once set on the table, the lamp

revealed The Shadow's next action.  From beneath his cloak, he brought an object that girded him like a  sheet

of armor. It was the flexible briefcase that he had carried on  the bus. 

From the briefcase came a thin folder that bore a printed symbol of  a hand. Across the front, The Shadow

wrote a single name: "Thumb  Gaudrey." 

Once there had been five members of the crooked band that called  itself The Hand. Five "fingers"  who had

worked together, then had  turned to lonewolf methods. One by one, The Shadow had chopped off  those

"fingers." (Note: See "The Hand," Vol. XXV., No. 6, "Murder for  Sale," Vol. XXVI., No. 3, "Chicago

Crime," Vol. XXVII., No. 6, "Crime  Rides the Sea," Vol. XXVIII., No. 4.) He had finished blackmail,

murder, insurance rackets, theft  


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Now, kidnapping was the issue. 

For tonight, The Shadow had gained conclusive evidence that Thumb  Gaudrey, last member of The Hand,

was the mastermind behind the snatch  racket that had listed Loretta Wyndon as the next victim. 

The proof lay in the dead face that The Shadow had seen beside the  highway. 

Out came the card of many dots; also the monocle that magnified  those tiny circles into faces. Beneath the

lamplight, The Shadow  studied a picture that portrayed a man with choppy, biglipped  features, marred by a

scar from eye to chin. The name beneath the  portrait completed the identification. It identified him as Curley

Schaffel. 

There was no doubt almost it, Curley Schaffel was the leader of the  snatch crew that had waited until the bus

went past; probably on the  dirt road across the bridge. Curley had followed, knowing that Clip  Rallin

controlled the bus. 

But Clip Rallin provided no link to the head of the kidnap racket,  whereas Curley Schaffel did. 

Opening the folder that bore the symbol of The Hand, The Shadow  studied facts that concerned Thumb

Gaudrey, missing mastermind of  crime. There, he found data that fitted with his recollections. Among a  small

list of lesser crooks, all missing, who served Thumb Gaudrey and  Thumb alone, was the name of Curley

Schaffel. 

Though long tasks lay ahead, The Shadow's ultimate search was no  longer a blind one. He knew the man that

he would find at the end of  the kidnapping trail: Thumb Gaudrey. 

Folding the file sheets, The Shadow replaced them in the briefcase.  He puffed out the lamp flame. Instant

darkness made the room a solid  mass of black. 

Through that room passed the whisper of a lowtone laugh; a  chilling tone that mingled weirdly with Loretta

Wyndon's dreams. 

CHAPTER V. THE SHADOW EXPLAINS

IT was morning, and Loretta Wyndon was propped up on her cot  staring wonderingly at the scene about her.

She was in an old storeroom  furnished with junky chairs and tables, plus a multitude of empty  boxes. 

Her mental haze had ended, but when Loretta tried to review past  events, she ran into a blank. She could

remember nothing of the night  before, from the time she had fallen into the ditch. 

Something had happened on that road; she had met with danger that  should have placed her in a hopeless

plight. Yet here she seemed safe;  free to leave whenever she chose. 

By the light that streamed through little windows, Loretta saw a  stairway that led to liberty. Rising from the

cot, she rubbed her  forehead, then started for the stairs. Hearing footsteps, she shrank  back cautiously. 

A man appeared from the stairway. Loretta seemed to recognize him.  In the slight light near the stairs, his

face had a hawkish look. She  placed him suddenly: the man on the bus! 

Other faces flashed to recollection  those of vicious foemen who  had driven toward her in the glare of a


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sedan's headlights. The man  from the bus hadn't been one of those; therefore, the truth hit Loretta  suddenly.

He was the rescuer who must have stopped that mob! 

Calmly, the hawkfaced man invited Loretta to the table by the  window. There, he placed an opened can of

fruit juice, a box of cereal,  evaporated milk and sugar. He went down the stairs; when he returned  again, he

brought dishes, cups and silverware, with a pot of steaming  coffee. 

"Allow me to introduce myself, Miss Wyndon," he said, in an  eventoned voice. "My name is Henry Arnaud.

We are in an old store in  the deserted village of Rock Hill. Fortunately"  Arnaud's lips showed  the slightest

touch of a smile  "some of the supplies were left here.  That accounts for this breakfast." 

Loretta began to eat. She was on her second cup of coffee, when she  decided to question her new friend

regarding last night's adventure. 

Quietly, The Shadow told her what had happened; but his version of  the battle seemed anything but

spectacular. He had been awake, he said,  when Loretta and the driver had stepped from the bus. He had done

the  same, and had remained with Loretta. 

The girl nodded. She remembered that streak of blackness that had  faded when she looked at the bus door.

She was connecting it with later  recollections; dreams, perhaps, that involved a formidable fighter  cloaked in

black. She decided suddenly that Henry Arnaud was a man of  greater prowess than he cared to claim. 

"Thugs arrived," stated The Shadow, calmly. "They tried to kidnap  you. I was fighting them off, when they

made the fortunate mistake of  ditching their car in the ravine." 

He stepped to the window and pointed. The daylight gave Loretta a  long view up the gorge. It was deeper

than she had supposed. High above  its depths was the brink of the main highway. 

There, men were at work beside a broken guard rail. They were using  cables and derricks; Loretta could see

the toylike object that they  were drawing up from the gorge. It was the twisted wreckage of an  automobile. 

"From all the circumstances," came Arnaud's steady tone, "the  police will class that tragedy as a clash

between the mobsters who  manned the car. Such battles sometimes happen, in remote spots like  this." 

Loretta nodded agreement. The words of Henry Arnaud had all the  tone of a prediction. Then his voice

reached her ears again, asking  quiet questions. The Shadow wanted an account of Loretta's adventures  before

she reached Charleston. The girl gave her detailed story. 

A FEW minutes later, Loretta was looking through the monocle that  served as microscope, gasping as she

saw the enlarged faces beneath the  lens. 

"This man  Clip Rallin!" she exclaimed. "He was the driver of the  bus! And this one  Rigger Bayne 

pretended that he was the  servicestation man's partner!" 

"See if you can find the third man," suggested The Shadow, in  Arnaud's tone. "The one that you first met at

the service station." 

Loretta ran the microscope from face to face, then placed her  finger on a dot. She handed the monocle to The

Shadow. Looking through  the glass, he saw the picture of Uke Flenn. 


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"It was all prearranged!" gasped Loretta, "Why, no one in the world  would ever guess what had become of

me! Unless the telegram would  tell." 

"Are you sure," questioned The Shadow, "that the telegram was  genuine?" 

Loretta reflected; then shook her head. She had found the telegram  thrust under the door of her Richmond

hotel room. Anyone could have  placed it there. 

"A fake telegram!" she exclaimed. "But how"  she looked at her  rescuer  "how did you know that I was

coming to Charleston?" 

For answer, The Shadow spread a large map on the table. He pointed  out various cities, all wide apart; then

drew a large circle in among  them. Loretta noted that New York, Chicago, Miami, even Richmond, lay

outside the circle. 

"In investigating these kidnap cases"  from The Shadow's easy  tone, Loretta decided that Henry Arnaud

must be a government agent  "I  preferred the littleaccepted theory that one man was responsible. From

that, it appeared logical that there could be a danger zone, or circle,  into which the victims were either drawn

or carried. 

"All were traveling somewhere, when they disappeared. Their  destinations, like yours, were not positively

known. That fitted with  my theory. I could picture those victims converging toward the zone." 

The Shadow's finger traced southeastward from Chicago;  southwestward from New York; northward from

Miami. 

"That zone," he continued, "became my base of operations. In  searching for clues, I found  these!" 

From his pocket, The Shadow produced a small batch of twentydollar  bills. He spread them on the table,

watched Loretta eye them. A  question popped suddenly to the girl's mind. 

"They're counterfeits?" 

"Yes," replied The Shadow. "But so finely executed that their  faults are visible only under the powerful lens,

which I had with me  for another purpose. That is why it is not yet generally known that  fraudulent bills of

this type are in circulation. However, that is not  the most important feature. I discovered something else." 

He gave the lens to Loretta, along with a twentydollar bill. The  girl looked through the monocle, then

exclaimed: 

"Why, there is a message on this bill! Printed in tiny letters " 

"Printed by hand," interposed The Shadow. "Done under a microscope,  in green ink. Read the message." 

Loretta made out the words; they were very small, even through the  glass. 

"It's about me!" she ejaculated. "Why, it says that I'll be leaving  Richmond for Charleston  that I'm to be the

next person abducted! It  gives the date  yesterday!" 

That was all that the girl could gasp. The Shadow gathered the  twentydollar bill along with the others. 


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"The rest," he said, "bear messages concerning previous victims.  Unfortunately, I found them too late. In your

case, I came across  several bills in advance. That was why I happened to be in Charleston. 

"Those previous messages, however, were not entirely useless. From  them, I learned of cities where other

persons had gone before they  vanished. Places like Portsmouth, Ohio; Roanoke, Virginia;  WinstonSalem,

North Carolina. 

"As a result, I have reduced the danger zone"  The Shadow was  drawing a smaller circle on his map  "until

it covers a comparatively  small area, although it crosses the borders of several States.  Somewhere within that

circle " 

THE SHADOW said no more. Loretta understood the rest. She knew that  this friend who chose to call

himself Henry Arnaud was seeking a newer  and greater duel with a master criminal who ruled many mobs

like the  one that had failed last night. 

Somehow, before Loretta's eyes the map took on the semblance of a  web fashioned by some human spider. In

that mesh lay the creature's  lair but his threads stretched everywhere throughout the terrain. 

Could her rescuer reach that lair and bring aid to victims already  held there? Perhaps  if he could lessen the

load and gain new leads by  checking on the crooks that he traced or battled. In her eagerness to  aid The

Shadow Loretta blurted: 

"I'll tell my story! I'll do anything " 

"Anything except tell your story," interposed The Shadow. "You are  anxious to aid; but that would be the

worst way." 

Loretta didn't understand until The Shadow provided the simple  explanation. 

"You can help best," he explained, "by remaining vanished. The head  of these crimes  a man whose name I

know  will be highly anxious to  find you. If you returned among your friends he would spare no effort  to

seize you." 

"I'll take the chance," began Loretta. "If I can make him betray  himself " 

"You can," inserted The Shadow, "but you can do it more safely, and  more effectively by remaining in this

territory. It is better that he  should show his hand on his home grounds." 

Loretta saw the logic. It meant her own security, as well as  trouble for the master crook. Best of all  as she

explained to The  Shadow  her disappearance would not be known to the public for a long  while to come.

Her parents were in Europe and would not return for  another month. 

The news pleased Loretta's rescuer. Looking from the window, The  Shadow saw that the derrick crew had

finished their work of raising the  smashed sedan. A discussion was under way over there on the paved road

and The Shadow could see the uniforms of State police. 

"Very soon," he predicted to Loretta, "they will be searching  around here to find out if crooks used these

houses for a hideaway. By  that time, we shall be gone." 

"Where?" asked Loretta, eagerly. 


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"Southward," replied The Shadow. "Over the hills to a town on  another road. It's a good day for a hike; we

can carry provisions with  us and arrive by dusk." 

State police who visited Rock Hill a half hour later found nothing  that denoted recent human occupancy.

Canned goods, borrowed from odd  shelves, were the only clues that could have helped them. 

Such clues however were no longer visible. They had vanished with  Loretta Wyndon and The Shadow. 

CHAPTER VI. CROOKS REPORT

LATE that same night a car with dimmed lights pulled up in front of  a barrier that loomed up like the large

doors of a garage. The car was  a rattletrap that bore a West Virginia license, but its three occupants  hailed

from other States. 

The men in that car were the assembled lieutenants who served Thumb  Gaudrey. Each having played a part in

crime, Uke Flenn, Rigger Bayne  and Clip Rallin had come to report to their chief. 

The dim lamps flicked a signal. Big doors slid apart. The car  coasted into a short, widebuilt tunnel to stop at

another door, a  barrier of steel. When that portal had opened, the car rolled into an  underground garage. 

The place was a great vault with sloping ceiling that dwindled into  shortened walls. There was space,

however, for at least two dozen cars,  and nearly half that number of automobiles were quartered there. 

Hardlooking thugs, attendants in this improvised garage, gave  grinned greeting to the three who had arrived.

Leaving their car, Uke,  Rigger and Clip entered a maze of narrow passages that eventually  brought them to a

higher level. They were met there by a burly  toughfaced guard who stood outside an ironsheeted door. 

It was Clip Rallin, acting as spokesman for the trio, who announced  that they had come to see the chief.

Evidently the guard had orders to  admit them, for he rapped a signal at the door, and it opened promptly. 

The three stepped into a room that looked like an office. It  differed from the underground passages, in that its

walls were  carefully hewn. Moreover, they were draped with deepred curtains which  bulged at spots, as

though a jagged wall lay behind them. On the rough  floor were garish rugs that overlapped in such

extravagant fashion that  no more than half of any rug was visible. 

This room, like the garage and the connecting passages, was  illuminated by electric lights that hung from

wires running along the  ceiling. But the lights of this office were supplied with shades, and  the big desk in the

corner had a standing lamp that connected with an  overhead wire. 

Behind the desk was a man who did not have to proclaim his  identity. Every man in crookdom knew Thumb

Gaudrey, once the leader of  the group called The Hand. 

Driven from Manhattan's underworld, Thumb Gaudrey had gone the law  one better. He had created an

underworld of his own  a literal one,  wherein daylight never shone. In this secluded office, that served him

as a veritable throne room, Thumb Gaudrey ruled supreme. 

Against the lamplight, Thumb's face formed a saturnine countenance.  It was large, pudgy, yet a mass of

muscle that could contort into many  ugly shapes. Below Thumb's graystreaked hair was a bulgy forehead;

beneath it, heavy brows. 


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His heavylidded eyes had a penetrating effect upon all who met  them. 

Thumb's nose was bulbous. So was his chin, which looked overlarge,  despite the thickness of his lips.

Through whitish teeth boomed a bass  voice. 

One other feature added to Thumb's supreme ugliness. His hands, as  they rested on the desk top, looked

massive, even when compared to his  considerable bulk. They were proportioned to his body like a lobster's

claws; great bulgy fists half the size of hams, and of the same smoky  color. There was terrible strength in

them. 

Visiting crooks agreed that Thumb kept bodyguards merely for a  show. No wonder those husky hoodlums

obeyed the bigshot's slightest  whim. Singlehanded, Thumb could have chucked the lot of them from his

presence, guns and all. 

But with his prowess, Thumb boasted craft. He wouldn't thrust  himself into a noose, not even to meet The

Shadow. He preferred to let  The Shadow come to him, as others had been unwise enough to do. So far,  The

Shadow had not arrived. He couldn't seem to find Thumb Gaudrey. 

And that, as Thumb was wont to brag, was very lucky  for The  Shadow! 

FACING his three lieutenants, Thumb Gaudrey saw that they were  worried. 

They watched Thumb pick up a fat cigar, bite off the end of it with  a single champ of his sharp teeth. Then: 

"Let's hear it," growled Thumb. "If you guys bungled, you'd better  admit it. You couldn't have done worse

than Curley Schaffel did." 

Relieved expressions showed on three faces. The lieutenants  hastened to declare that they hadn't bungled.

Uke had handled the  servicestation stunt to perfection, and had taken care of the bus  driver at the depot. 

As for Rigger Bayne, he had disposed of Loretta Wyndon's coupe,  leaving no trace of the girl's trip to

Charleston. His job, he  declared, had been onehundred percent perfect. 

Clip Rallin heard those reports; then licked his dried lips and  recovered his usual suavity. 

"I dumped the dame, like I was told to," he asserted. "When I  finished the bus run, I got the bus driver off to a

hotel. He thinks a  pal covered for him on the trip. The coppers think the trouble happened  on the road a long

while after the bus had passed. 

"So they haven't questioned him. What's more, he's being  transferred North. There's not a chance that the guy

will blab that he  went to sleep in Charleston. Why should he? When he woke up, he was  back in uniform." 

Thumb Gaudrey grunted. His thickish lips were pumping furiously at  the cigar between them. At last, he

brought a big fist downward with a  thwack that quivered the desk beneath it. 

"The Shadow's in it!" boomed Thumb. "Nobody else could have mopped  up Curley and that mob. He let the

girl make her getaway; and he'll be  watching for the next snatch we try to spring. 

"The question is  how did The Shadow get into it? Did any of you  fellows see him, or anybody that looked

like him? Out with it, if you  did!" 


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Uke Flenn, thinking in terms of the service station near the  Charleston detour, supplied a negative headshake.

In a few moments,  both Rigger Bayne and Clip Rallin had joined in an expression of the  same ignorance. 

Neither linked the man at the Charleston hotel with The Shadow.  Rigger couldn't remember anything that had

happened afterward in which  The Shadow might have been concerned. 

As for Clip, he had not noticed one less passenger on the bus, when  it had reached its destination. He had

checked on the passengers simply  by counting them, while at the driver's seat. The Shadow, slumped low  in

the cushions. had been out of sight when Clip made his checkup  before and after leaving Loretta on the

mountain road. 

"All right," decided Thumb. "You birds are safe enough. The Shadow  must have picked up Curley's trail

somewhere along the road. Let's  forget The Shadow for a while. We'll talk about the Wyndon girl. If she  " 

Thumb interrupted himself, another thought in mind. With a fangish  grin, he pulled open a desk drawer,

brought out a clipping and laid it  in front of him. 

"We'll get back to the girl later," decided Thumb. "She can make  more trouble than The Shadow, if we give

her time. But we won't let  that happen. We're going to stage something big! 

"This snatch racket means dough; big dough. But it isn't fast  enough to suit me. Each guy we grab is like

plugging a stone into  another hornet's nest. Why waste our shots?" 

There were nods from the listeners, although they didn't fully  understand what Thumb meant. The bigshot

grated an ugly laugh. 

"We're going into this racket wholesale," he announced. "We're  going to stage it on a scale that nobody ever

dreamed about! I've got  the setup"  Thumb was wagging the clipping, as he spoke  "made right  to our

order! 

"We'll spring it before The Shadow can get wise. Before anybody  finds that dame, who's probably wandering

somewhere in the hills. When  we've pulled this one job, we won't have to worry about any more  snatches.

After that, we'll specialize in collecting ransoms. 

"We'll sit tight right here, while the dough rolls in. The Feds  will be as helpless as a bunch of boy scouts,

when it comes tracing us.  If you don't believe me"  Thumb was glowering at the wondering faces   "take a

look at this!" 

He passed the clipping to Clip Rallin, whose sallow face became  suddenly shrewd again as his eyes scanned

the printed lines. Clip  handed the slip to Rigger Bayne, who read a few lines then showed his  peculiar smile.

Uke Flenn took the clipping, read it, and began to  gloat. 

Three of a kind, those crooks understood the stroke that the  mastermind had planned. 

The greatest snatch in history! 

CHAPTER VII. THE MAN BELOW

"THE kidnap business," observed Thumb Gaudrey, leaning back in his  chair until it creaked, "has given us a

lot of grief. It's not only  moved too slow; we haven't been able to demand bigenough ransoms, for  fear we'd


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give away the size of our outfit. 

"Besides, we haven't sent home the guys whose ransoms were paid.  Fifty grand apiece we got for them, but

no delivery, because it was  safer for us to keep them here. That hasn't created public confidence"   Thumb's

fat lips spread in a grin  "so I figure to eliminate that  system." 

There were nods from the others. 

They understood the measures that Thumb proposed: wholesale  kidnapping, with the payment of a huge

blanket ransom. They liked that  idea. 

Clip Rallin had a query: "How much do you think this big job will  clear?" 

"A couple of million," replied Thumb, coolly. "Of course, we'll  collect a few hundred grand besides on the

guys we haven't asked a  price for yet. We can spring them along with the new customers." 

"Why not croak the lot of them," suggested Uke Flenn, "after you  get the mazuma?" 

"We might," returned Thumb. Then, with a glower: "One thing sure,  I'll rub out any stuffed bozo whose looks

I don't like! I always have." 

More nods of acknowledgment. Then Rigger Bayne spread his twisty  smile a trifle, and asked: 

"What about old Felix Dort? Is he paying any real dividends yet?" 

Thumb Gaudrey laid back in his chair and laughed. His mirth quaked  his entire bulk, bringing spasmodic raps

on the desk from his huge  hands. Clip and Rigger appreciated the joke, but Uke didn't understand.  He'd never

heard of Felix Dort. 

"The guy's an inventor," explained Rigger. "We snatched him early  in the game; then we found out that he

didn't have any dough." 

"Except what comes from his royalties," corrected Clip. "Close to a  grand a month, and Thumb fixed it so the

cash comes here." 

"And Thumb pays it over to Dort," chuckled Rigger, "just to keep  the boob happy. After that, Dort hands it

back again. He's paying off  his own ransom, in installments." 

"In the meantime," added Clip, "Dort is working on what he calls an  efficiency motor. We brought in his

laboratory equipment, and Thumb had  it set up for him"  Clip pointed toward the floor  "down below." 

Thumb Gaudrey had finished his huge laugh. He was leaning forward  on the desk, nodding as he propped his

big chin in his hands. 

"Dort has got something," assured Thumb, seriously. "When he gets  it perfected, I'm going to take it over.

That motor of his is going to  be my alibi for all the dough that I'll flash afterward. Only, Dort  will be croaked

by that time." 

There was a rap at the metalsheeted door. Thumb motioned for  silence; gave a rumbly call. An outer guard

opened the door, and upon  the threshold appeared the very man that the crooks had mentioned. 


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FELIX DORT was a scrawny specimen of humanity. Old and withery, he  had a thin face topped by

eyeglasses and a shock of white hair. His  eyes were birdlike, tiny little beads that glanced quickly from face

to face. His lips, however, wore a simple, trustful smile. 

"Come in, professor," spoke Thumb, in a soothing tone. "Tell me   how is the motor coming along?" 

"Very well indeed," replied Dort, in a crackly tone. Then, in  plaintive voice: "But I must remind you. Mr.

Gaudrey, that my royalty  money is due." 

"That's right," agreed Thumb. He reached into the desk drawer,  brought out a stack of currency and papers

that were circled by a  rubber band. "I had forgotten that we were working on a weekly payment  system." 

He gave the money to Dort, who hobbled to a table in the corner.  Counting the cash with shaky hands, the

inventor kept looking at the  royalty statements. Thumb gave a gesture, to indicate that Dort's  presence didn't

matter. 

"Let's get back to the girl," suggested the bigshot. "While we're  waiting to stage this big snatch, we might as

well be finding her.  She's worth dough, just like the rest." 

"It's going to be tough," remarked Clip. "Looking for her in those  hills. We'd need a big crew, chief." 

Thumb considered that awhile, then supplied a wellchosen  suggestion. 

"Talk to some of the guys that live there," he said. "The  hillbillies. Tell them you're private dicks looking for

a dame that was  mixed in some New York murder. They'll fall for that gag and do your  hunting for you." 

Clip pondered over the possible response of the hill dwellers.  Finally, he gave sound advice. 

"They're lazy," he declared. "They'll lay down on the job unless we  grease them with some dough." 

"Go to it," ordered Thumb. "Pass out some of those twenties that  you carry." Then, swinging toward Dort. he

added: "By the way,  professor, you owe some more money on your ransom installments." 

Dort gave a nod to indicate that he had not forgotten the fact.  Then, half turning his head, he cackled: 

"I'll settle that later, Mr. Gaudrey." 

By that time, Thumb was listening to objections from Clip.  Twentydollar bills would not do, Clip said. They

were too uncommon  among the hillbillies. 

"A twenty is big dough up there," declared Clip. "We'd better hand  out onespots to those fellows. A couple

of hundred dollars ought to be  enough; but make it all in ones, chief." 

Thumb pulled open a drawer that contained bundles of cash. Looking  through the money, he grimaced when

he noted a shortage of onedollar  bills. He was shaking his head, when Dort came over from the table. 

"The royalties are correct, Mr. Gaudrey," declared the wizened  inventor. "When I have gone over my own

records. I shall return and pay  the ransom installment. How do you wish the money  in twentydollar  bills,

as usual?" 

Thumb tilted his big head. 


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"How about onedollar bills?" he inquired. "Have you any of those,  professor?" 

"I believe so." Dort rubbed his dryish chin. "Yes, I believe so." 

His lips were moving, as though be were trying to make sure about  the matter. His head was lowered; but all

the while that he mumbled,  Dort's tiny eyes were squinting toward Thumb's desk. There lay the  clipping that

Thumb had shown to his lieutenants. Unnoticed by the  crooks, Dort was taking in its import. 

"Look and see," suggested Thumb. "If you've got any onedollar  bills, I'd prefer them. I tell you what,

professor: Bring me a hundred  dollars in ones and I'll give you a twopercent discount. That goes  for every

hundred bucks you bring me." 

DORT'S eyes lifted. They showed eagerness. Mumbling his thanks, the  inventor hobbled hurriedly from the

room. 

Outside Thumb's underground office, he moved hastily along  corridors, muttering as he went. His

absentminded manner brought  chuckly snorts from guards who saw him pass. They were used to Dort; he  had

the run of the premises, to a certain limit. 

Reaching a side passage, Dort took a downward slope that brought  him to a lower corridor. Tracing his way

through a miniature labyrinth,  he came to a wooden door and opened it. He stepped at once into a  circular,

domeroofed cavern that served him as a laboratory. 

Only the center of the cave was lighted. Beyond that, the walls  tapered into blackness. Standing near the

center was a large motor with  many pipes and oddshaped gadgets. It was Dort's unfinished invention. 

There were other mechanical contrivances in the room. One was a  smaller motor, that looked like a model for

a larger device. It was  buzzing rhythmically, fed from an electric current, Dort chuckled to  himself as he

stared at the small machine. After that, he stumbled  toward the blackness near a slanting wall. 

Into a tin box set between two stones, Dort placed the money and  the papers that he had brought from

Thumb's office. Then, after a  shrewd glance toward the door of the laboratory, he began to dig among  loose

stones. One came free; Dort uncovered a sheet of tin that served  as a slab for a large crevice. 

From that hole, Dort brought flat heavy packages wrapped in  newspaper. When he opened them, the parcels

revealed an interesting  sight. 

Each packet contained engraved plates suited for the printing of  counterfeit money. There were plates for

bills of four denominations:  twenties, tens, fives and ones. With each plate were batches of crisp  bills that

looked quite genuine. 

The stack of twenties was depleted. With a pleased chuckle, Dort  placed it back in the cache. Next, he hid the

tens and fives; finally  the ones, but not until he had helped himself to two wads of the crisp  notes. 

Covering the hiding place, Dort went to a bulky machine in another  outer edge of the room. It looked like

nothing more than a metal lathe,  but when Dort lifted it, he disclosed a large space beneath. In that  cavity

were the compact parts of a small crude printing press. 

DORT found a microscope, a pen, a bottle of green ink. Taking them  to a square box that stood beneath the

light, the inventor crouched on  hands and knees. Feverishly, he began to work beneath the microscope. 


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On each of the dollar bills he printed tiny words, so minute that  their letters looked like mere dots whenever

he lifted the microscope  away. 

With many bills to mark, Dort made his messages brief, allowing no  more than ten seconds for each

inscription. He had finished more than a  hundred and fifty of the bills, when he heard footsteps stumbling

along  the rocky passage outside his door. 

Dort whipped the microscope into his pocket. He corked the bottle  of green ink and shoved it from sight,

along with the pen. 

With trembling hands, the inventor was counting his cash in miserly  fashion, when a guard thrust his head

through the doorway and growled: 

"Say, stupid! The chief wants to know what's keeping you. He says  he's waiting for you in the office, and

you'd better make it swift!" 

When Dort reached the office, he heard Thumb Gaudrey growling a new  complaint. The bigshot was telling

his lieutenants that this  underground hideaway had one flaw: No radio set would give proper  reception in

these depths. Thumb dropped that discussion, to rumble a  question at Dort: 

"Well? What about those onebuck bills?" 

"Here they are, Mr. Gaudrey," replied Dort. "Two hundred dollars,  all in ones. I found that I had quite a

number of them, for there's  been no way that I could spend them." 

Thumb Gaudrey took the money. Solemnly, he handed four dollars back  to Dort; then he divided the rest

among Clip, Rigger, and Uke. While  doing that, Thumb told Dort that he could leave. 

Outside the office, Dort could hear the guffaws of Thumb Gaudrey  and his lieutenants while the big door was

swinging shut. Farther along  the corridor, Dort muttered a chuckle of his own. 

Felix Dort, the mouselike prisoner who lived in the labyrinth  below, had again done his bit to provide future

trouble for Thumb  Gaudrey, the master of this hidden realm! 

Nor did Dort lack reason for his chuckle. Tonight, he had learned  news that gave him confidence. Thumb

Gaudrey had failed in a recent  kidnap attempt  the capture of Loretta Wyndon; and Felix Dort took  credit

for producing that failure. 

If Dort's measure worked again, they would provide an obstacle for  Thumb's new scheme, the most gigantic

kidnap attempt that crooks had  ever planned. 

Yet Dort's endeavor, clever though it was, provided nothing more  than a preliminary step. 

Much more would depend upon the power of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER VIII. THE THIRD NIGHT

LORETTA WYNDON stared at the West Virginia hills and hated the  sight of them. She had been looking at

those same slopes for three  days, and they were all alike; identical with the other hills that she  had climbed

during her long tramp with The Shadow. 


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The girl was in an upstairs room of a little farmhouse on the  outskirts of a village. Since she had been here,

her sole entertainment  had been short walks among those wooded slopes. 

Now, settling dusk ended the tedious view. Loretta lighted a lamp  and tried to read a book. But her mind

wandered from the pages. She  began to think of The Shadow. 

For three days, she had not seen that mysterious personage who  called himself Henry Arnaud. That fact, in its

turn, indicated that The  Shadow was having difficulties of his own. 

His chief clues to the activities of the kidnap ring had been the  discovery of counterfeit twentydollar bills

circulated in cities like  Charleston. For some reason, those bills carried microscopic messages  that gave

information of coming crime. 

Obviously, the bigshot of the kidnap racket would not stop his  efforts merely because his crew had failed to

capture Loretta.  Contrarily, his policy would probably be to step up his campaign of  crime. Coincident with

that might come new messages: more clues for The  Shadow. 

That was why The Shadow, otherwise Henry Arnaud, had left the  little village where Loretta was at present.

He was going the rounds of  cities like Charleston and Bluefield, making a new collection of  twentydollar

bills in hopes of finding telltale counterfeits among  them. 

From her window, Loretta saw a sudden glow of lights. They came  from a big barn that stood down the road;

and as Loretta watched, she  saw signs of activity there. 

This was the night of the village barn dance, a weekly event that  drew folk from everywhere along the

countryside. 

Her elbows propped on the window sill, Loretta watched with  interest. People were coming to town in plenty

some on foot, a few  with horses and buggies, others in ancientlooking automobiles. 

There were musicians among them, carrying violins, banjos, and  other instruments, that Loretta could not

identify. The rest of the  throng looked gay, some wearing informal attire such as flannel shirts;  others dressed

in clothes that had long been in storage, as Loretta  could tell from high stiff collars, fancy bow ties, and

antiquated  straw hats. 

The women's clothes were likewise wellassorted, but many of their  frocks had a more modern touch. In

these days of automobiles, women of  the hill region could often visit towns and pick up bargains in  exchange

for longsaved pennies. 

That crowd around the old barn interested Loretta. They had come  here for a gala night, and Loretta caught

the spirit of it. She wanted  to be with the crowd. 

Why not? 

No one but natives were in the throng; of that, Loretta was sure.  Men like Uke, Rigger, and Clip would not be

wasting their time at a  barn dance in the hills. Loretta was sure that she would be as safe  over there as in this

room. 

SOON, Loretta was mingling with the throng that was entering the  barn. A good many strangers came to

town on nights like this, so  Loretta's arrival did not attract much undue attention. Those persons  who

recognized that she wasn't from the hill region apparently made no  comment over the fact. 


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The dance had been in progress for half an hour when a coupe swung  along the road. It was an old car, but in

better shape than most of  those parked around the barn. It pulled up in the drive in front of the  farmhouse and

a tall driver alighted. When he knocked at the farmhouse  door, Loretta's landlady answered. 

She recognized Henry Arnaud, the man that she supposed was  Loretta's physician; for Loretta's story to the

landlady had been that  she was staying in the mountains for her health's sake. 

"Good evening, doctor," said the woman. "The young lady is over at  the dance. This country air has made her

chipper, I reckon, and the  music done the rest." 

The Shadow strolled in the direction of the barn. Through the big  wide door, he saw the merrymakers in the

midst of a square dance. He  was looking for Loretta, when a woman seated at a table just inside the  door,

asked: 

"Want a ticket, mister?" 

The Shadow nodded. He saw an admission card that stated  "Twentyfive Cents," and laid a quarter on the

table. The woman looked  pleased. 

"Kinda short on change tonight," she said. "Folks here usually  bring in dimes and nickels, sometimes pennies.

But tonight"  she  pointed to a green pile beside her and shook her head in wonder  "it's  been mostly dollar

bills!" 

"Who brought them?" queried The Shadow, in the casual tone of  Arnaud. "Strangers?" 

"No, the reg'lar folks." The woman shook her head. "I can't reckon;  though, where they all got them." 

A new expression flickered on The Shadow's maskish features.  Methodically, he tendered a twentydollar

bill across the table. It was  a genuine bank note; the only kind that he had encountered during the  past few

days. 

"I could use some onedollar bills," he remarked. "How about  letting me have twenty for this?" 

The ticket seller was agreeable. Taking the note, she began to  count. 

As the last bill was counted out, The Shadow suddenly whisked the  batch away and shoved the cash into his

coat pocket. Turning, he dived  between a group of dancers just inside the barn door. 

He had witnessed a brisk commotion clear across the dance floor,  near a small door in the most distant

corner. That door had been yanked  open, showing a patch of moonlight; a cluster of men were trying to  shove

someone out into the night. 

In one momentary flash. The Shadow had seen the face of a young  woman: Loretta Wyndon. 

As The Shadow sped across the dance floor, he heard a woman's  shriek above the tumult and the music.

Despite its call for aid, there  was bravery in that cry. It came from Loretta, as she struggled with a  new crew

of wouldbe abductors. 

SIGHT of a welldressed stranger driving full speed across the barn  was sufficient to halt the dance. Who

The Shadow was, local huskies  didn't care. He was here to make some trouble, so it seemed. Dropping  their

partners, a flock of brawny hill men tried to block The Shadow's  drive. 


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As Henry Arnaud, The Shadow inspired none of the awe that he  created when cloaked in black. His present

attire marked him as  anything from a revenue officer to a city slicker visiting the hills.  These strongarmed

chaps from the mountain slopes thought they would  have an easy time stifling such a troublemaker. They

were wrong. 

The Shadow met the oncomers with fists driving like pistons. He  cleared a path ahead, then changed direction

to save a few moments of  time. Twisting from another surge of adversaries, The Shadow sprang  upon the

orchestra platform. 

Squeaks of violins ended; so did the twanging of banjos. The  players gripped those instruments by the neck,

wielded them like  cudgels, at arm's length. 

Warding off those slashes, The Shadow grabbed up a chair and  whirled it in a mighty circle that sent the

orchestra members diving to  the dance floor. He flung the chair into the faces of others who were  jumping for

the platform; then twisted, took long, rapid strides toward  the door where Loretta had been struggling. 

Save for the moonlight, the portal was blank. Loretta's captors had  managed to drag her outside. A muffled

cry, however, told The Shadow  that they hadn't gotten her to a car. He leaped through the door. 

There, by the moonlight that reflected from the hills, he saw five  men beside a parked touring car that had its

motor running. Three were  trying to shove Loretta into the automobile, stifling her while they  did. 

The other two were ready with doublebarreled shotguns, which they  aimed at him the moment The Shadow

appeared. Their harsh voices warned  the stranger to stop where he stood or take a load of lead. They meant  it,

that pair, with their itchy fingers on the gun triggers; but in  another instant, they stood riveted, jaws gaping. 

From the lips of Henry Arnaud bad pealed an amazing burst of  mockery; a tone so chilling that the listeners

could not believe it  came from a human throat. It was a fearful challenge which, in that  spectral moonlight,

filled them with a superstitious awe. 

Strident, sinister, that sardonic taunt brought echoes from the  hillsides, as though a horde of ghouls had risen

from woodland nooks to  join in the challenge. It carried a menace that impressed those rustic  marksmen. 

They feared neither man nor beast, but they couldn't face a being  whose mockery roused thoughts of

supernatural creatures  ghosts and  hobgoblins  that were the legendary relics of these hills. 

Shotguns slipped from arms. Hands that gripped Loretta lost their  hold. In the moments that followed, even

the passage of time seemed  halted  stayed by the laugh of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER IX. DATED CRIME

To The Shadow, those lapsing moments offered the slimmest of  opportunity; but opportunity it was. He had

startled the hillbillies  who faced him, thereby lessening their vigilance. But it wouldn't be  long before the

spell was broken. 

Tightening every muscle, The Shadow suddenly hurtled forward in the  moonlight, straight for the men who

held the shotguns. They wheeled  apart, swinging their guns with alacrity, ready to down an opponent who

they at last realized must be human. They were not quick enough,  however, to bag The Shadow before he

reached them. 


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With a twisty dive beneath the barrels of the nearer gun, The  Shadow grabbed for the farther weapon and

shoved its muzzle upward. One  shotgun belched a blast above his head; the other roared its charge  past his

shoulder. Swinging one man full about, The Shadow flung him  against the other before either could discharge

a second barrel. 

Completing a swift whirl, he was among the men beside the touring  car, wrestling with them for the

possession of Loretta. In that  closegripped fray, The Shadow was no longer a target for the men with  the

shotguns. They didn't want to risk shooting their pals. 

That forced him to continue the grapple. During it, the hillbillies  were trying to shove Loretta into the car.

The girl resisted, until The  Shadow suddenly joined sides with his foemen  so far as handling  Loretta was

concerned. Headlong, the girl was pitched through the open  door into the dilapidated back seat. 

An instant later, The Shadow was squirming into the car himself.  Flat on the floor, he doubled his knees and

drove his feet for the  nearest hillbilly, sending the fellow outward from the step. Thrusting  a hand above his

head, The Shadow yanked open the door on the other  side. 

Twisting up to the seat, he grabbed Loretta with one arm and took a  long, flinging dive through the other side

of the car. They hit the  turf together, but Loretta's fall was broken by The Shadow's warding  arm. 

It was amazing, the speed with which the strange fighter came to  his feet. In the same move, he yanked an

automatic from beneath his  coat and jabbed shots through the space between the car doors. Those  shots were

aimed high; The Shadow had no wish to cripple any of the  misguided hillbillies. His purpose was to rout

them. 

Those shots from The Shadow's .45 had stirred a hornets' nest. What  the quarrel, nobody cared much, except

that a stranger was involved in  it. Everyone at the barn dance was siding with the five who had grabbed

Loretta. Men were dashing to their cars, shouting for others to bring  their shooting irons. 

Had The Shadow and Loretta taken to the woods, they would have been  tracked down in rapid fashion.

Instead, they skirted bushes that  fringed the barnyard and reached the car that The Shadow had parked in

front of Loretta's farmhouse residence. 

Instead of following the driveway from the farmhouse, he took a  short, sudden detour across rough ground

through a clump of trees. 

That move was wise, for a blast of shotguns sounded as the car cut  through the tiny grove. Tree trunks took

that hail, except for one slug  that struck the back of the coupe; but it did no other damage. 

Loretta took a bold look back, saw men at the open door of the  farmhouse. One was at the hallway telephone.

Then, Loretta was looking  straight ahead, watching the road spring up in front of the headlights.  She heard a

whispered tone beside her: the grim laugh of The Shadow. 

TWO old cars had started down the road. Both drivers had the same  idea: to block the path of the fleeing

coupe before it left the farm  property. They were trying to converge, to form the point of a V  directly in The

Shadow's course. 

Loretta expected The Shadow to apply the brakes; to seek some other  route of escape. She didn't realize at

that moment that such a move  would have meant disaster, for there was no other way except the road. 

The Shadow didn't touch the brake pedal. 


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Instead, he gave the car the gas. It sprang into the road like a  startled whippet, boring squarely between the

converging cars. It  reached them before they could close the gap, although their fenders  were less than a car's

width apart. 

There was a triple crash, wherein The Shadow literally sliced his  car between the other two. The coupe's

momentum carried it through like  an avalanche of steel. It ripped fenders from the rattletraps, as it  flung them

to either side. The smashing sound still echoed in Loretta's  ears as she looked back again, this time to see two

battered cars  wabbling crazily on the sides of the road. 

Shotguns throated their farewell as The Shadow piloted the coupe  around a bend. Then Loretta could hear the

chugs of other motors, that  became fainter as the coupe kept up its rapid pace. She settled back in  the seat

with a grateful sigh, tried to fasten her torn frock together.  From this point onward, Loretta was sure, The

Shadow could outdistance  all pursuers. 

They had gone fully two miles before Loretta was seized with new  alarm. She remembered that she had seen

a man at the telephone in the  farmhouse. Perhaps he had been calling someone at the crossroads a half  mile

ahead. 

Gripping The Shadow's arm, Loretta blurted the news. She saw him  reach beneath his coat and produce

another loaded automatic. A few  seconds later, the lights of the crossroads were ahead. 

How The Shadow picked out the car that lurked in the darkness  beside an old store, Loretta never guessed.

But he found it, and  proclaimed the fact with bullets. From his sweeping gun came bullets  that brought frantic

shouts from the darkness. The Shadow was probing  the ambush, as he approached it at fifty miles an hour. 

The coupe took a swerve  an intended one, as Loretta realized  afterward. By that swing, The Shadow sent

his headlights pouring into  the space beside the building. Loretta saw men dive frantically for  shelter. 

From the cut of their clothes, the revolvers in their fists, she  knew that they weren't hillbillies. They were

thugs who had happened to  be at this crossroad. 

FROM then on, Loretta watched the speedometer needle waver around  the eighty mark, until they had left

any pursuers miles behind. After  that, The Shadow slackened speed, as he took a new route to a  fairsized

city that was near the border of West Virginia and Kentucky. 

When they stopped in front of a small hotel, The Shadow furnished  Loretta with a light overcoat to cover her

torn frock. When Loretta  registered there, she carried The Shadow's briefcase, instead of a  valise. He had

given her money also. Coming from the hotel, she found  Henry Arnaud seated quietly in a little cafe a few

doors down the  street. 

Loretta couldn't say that Arnaud had become himself again, because  she had come to the definite conclusion

that there was no actual Henry  Arnaud. Through her mind ran recollections of hoarse, excited voices  shouting

a name that night on the mountain highway. She could remember  the cry: 

"The Shadow!" 

The title suited the amazing fighter who had twice rescued Loretta.  He was not Henry Arnaud; he was The

Shadow! 

Nevertheless, in his role of Arnaud, The Shadow was a most genial  personality; a man with whom Loretta

felt exceedingly at ease. They  were alone in their corner of the restaurant, so Loretta asked: 


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"What about the counterfeit twentydollar bills? Did you find any  more with messages for the crooks?" 

The Shadow shook his head. 

"Those messages did not come from the head criminal," he told  Loretta. "They were prepared by someone

who is anxious to defeat the  crooked game. Someone at crime's headquarters, who has managed to learn  each

new move in advance. 

"That theory has impressed me all along. Tonight, I proved it to my  satisfaction. Our unknown informant

found no chance to put twenties  into circulation, so he switched to ones. He marked the cash that was  paid to

natives in the hill region to search for you." 

Loretta began to understand. During the ride, The Shadow had  asserted that the hillbillies must be dupes; that

was why he had dealt  so lightly with them. Right now, he was bringing out a stack of  onedollar bills that

Loretta realized he must have acquired at the  barn dance. 

"Our unknown friend," declared The Shadow, "hoped that these would  circulate far enough to reach the right

hands  my own. His hope was  realized." From the bills, The Shadow picked a few, passed them to  Loretta

with the monocle microscope, and added: "Look at these." 

Again Loretta was examining currency that looked good enough to be  genuine. She was chiefly interested,

though, in the greeninked  inscriptions that appeared in the thin border beneath the words "One  Dollar" on

the reverse of the bills. All were the same: 

N. Y. C.  Th. p 3  c 5. 

After short perplexity, Loretta decided that "N. Y." meant New  York; but the letter "C" seemed superfluous

The Shadow, however, did  not regard it so. 

"The reference is to a newspaper," he declared. "The letter 'C'  must mean the Classic, which has a very wide

circulation throughout the  country. I took the rest of the abbreviation to mean 'Thursday, page  three, column

five;' and my supposition was correct." 

From the chair beside him, The Shadow brought a copy of the Classic  for the previous Thursday. He had

been fortunate enough to pick up the  newspaper at a local magazine stand, while waiting for Loretta to come

from the hotel. 

When he opened the sheet to the third page, and pointed out the  fifth column, Loretta scanned it with

eagerness. A small headline  struck her eye; she hadn't read a single paragraph before her  expression became

one of horror. 

"It couldn't be!" she exclaimed. "Why, all the people mentioned  here " 

"Are the very sort," interposed The Shadow, "who could be held for  a huge ransom." 

"But there are so many of them " 

"All will be traveling together. Their number will give them a  false impression of security." 

"But how " 


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"How will the job be managed?" The Shadow smiled. "That is  something I intend to learn, after I have joined

them tomorrow morning.  That is when they will start into the danger zone." 

LORETTA nodded, solemnly. She remembered the map that The Shadow  had shown her. Then she began to

listen to instructions that The Shadow  undertoned. 

He was leaving this town, for a destination where he would arrive  at dawn. His briefcase, with its contents,

would remain in Loretta's  custody until another man arrived here  a man who was a trusted agent  of The

Shadow. She was to deliver the briefcase to that agent. 

By that time  The Shadow expressed the hope in Arnaud's steady  tone  crime might be broken. That

accomplished, Loretta would hear  from him again. 

His promise given, The Shadow arose, smiled a friendly good night,  and departed. 

The Shadow, it seemed, had overlooked nothing. Yet, with his  departure, Loretta could not repress a qualm

that gripped her to the  heart. Somehow, the new adventure that he was undertaking struck her as  a duty

surrounded by great and unknown hazards. 

For the first time, Loretta Wyndon felt real, harrowing fear; not  for herself, but for The Shadow! 

CHAPTER X. MEN OF MILLIONS

DAWN glinted from the silver wings of a monoplane that was  traveling southward. Below, rugged mountain

tops lay like the frozen  waves of a mighty sea. Those peaks were surrounded by a vast wilderness  of trees that

gave the greentinged likeness to the billows of an  ocean. 

Though the plane's altimeter showed seven thousand feet, one great  peak jutted almost to a level with the

wings, as though challenging the  plane's ownership of the higher air. That peak was Mount Mitchell,  highest

summit in the East, the towering giant that dominated the  region known as the "Land of the Sky." 

Veering as it passed Mount Mitchell, the plane zoomed above another  line of crests. Then, as if produced by

magic, came a complete change  of the scene below. A valley opened among widespread mountains, and the

vista was a wilderness no longer. 

A city spread amid that valley, which could also have been termed a  rolling plateau, since its altitude was two

thousand feet above the  sea. It was a modern city, with the tone of a metropolis, for its  buildings were large

and new. 

The city was Asheville, North Carolina, metropolis of a resort  region that claimed visitors throughout all

seasons of the year. Its  hotels and residential districts were not the only signs of the city's  wealth. From spots

near the banks of rivers, the chimneys of sprawling  factories poured columns of smoke into the thin mountain

air. 

The plane banked as it sought the airport; then came to a perfect  landing upon the field. 

From the plane came a passenger  a tall, distinguished individual  with a hawklike countenance. The Shadow

had again resumed the  personality of Lamont Cranston for this visit to Asheville, playground  of millionaires. 

Hiring a car at the airport, The Shadow rode along one of the roads  that wound up toward a mountainside.


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His destination was the exclusive  Skyland Club, where the membership fee cost a small fortune. It  happened

that Lamont Cranston was not a member of that club; but he had  several friends who were. 

AN hour later, The Shadow, playing his part of Cranston, was having  breakfast with a group of men who had

accorded him an enthusiastic  reception at the Skyland Club. The spokesman of the group was a  middleaged

man named Richard Baybrock, whose chief interest in life  was collecting profits from the rayon industry, and

having a good time  with the money thus obtained. 

"It's good to see you, Lamont!" enthused Baybrock. "Here we are,  two dozen of us, getting pretty tired of

each other's company, when who  pops up but you! We'll count on you to be the life of the party,  provided

that you can get any fun by joining in our childish sports. I  imagine playing golf here in Asheville would be

rather tame sport to a  biggame hunter and traveler, such as you." 

The Shadow made a deprecatory gesture, said, "But tell me, Dick   why all this talk about Asheville? I

thought you were leaving here  today." 

"So we are," declared Baybrock. "You must have read about it in  last Thursday's Classic. If you did, you've

heard about the big bus,  haven't you?" 

The Shadow nodded. 

"It's the swellest bus ever built!" assured Baybrock. "A deluxe  cruiser that rides as smooth as a yacht in a

calm sea! We're taking a  trip up to White Sulphur Springs, in West Virginia. But after we've  been there a few

days, we'll come back here." 

"How did you happen to decide on the bus?" asked The Shadow. "I  thought that you always traveled by rail,

in a private car, when you  went with a crowd of friends." 

Baybrock gave a snort. 

"Do you know how the railways want to haul us?" he asked. "All over  the map! Down one valley, around by

another, from one line to another,  with waits and layovers for the right connections. They've abandoned a  lot

of branch lines that would help out; and, worst of all, they want  to charge us according to their own mileage! 

"It's less than three hundred miles from here to White Sulphur  Springs, but it would be double if we went by

rail. And we'd pay for  the inconvenience. Bah! I've got money to spend, but not to throw away!  Here  look

at this map." 

Baybrock spread the map upon the breakfast table and traced the  route that the deluxe bus was to follow. The

Shadow observed that it  was not the main route from Asheville to White Sulphur Springs. The  regular road

went through such cities as Bristol and Bluefield, and  Baybrock had decided to avoid them. 

He preferred roads where traffic was lighter and the scenery  better. Moreover, there were detours on the main

road; bad ones.  Baybrock's route required a few detours, but they would not prove  annoying. 

From the way he spoke, he had evidently chosen the route long in  advance, which made The Shadow silently

decide that by this time, Thumb  Gaudrey could know all about it. While Baybrock was marking the roads

with a blue pencil, another important angle struck The Shadow. 

The route that the bus was to follow cut deep into the smaller  circle that The Shadow knew to be a danger

zone. The message that The  Shadow had shown Loretta on a counterfeit dollar bill was more than  accurate; it


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was ominous. 

IN this party of Baybrock's were men of many millions. The  wealthiest included Carter Sanders, owner of a

merchant fleet; Titus  Jenney, whose oil wells included some of the biggest gushers in  Oklahoma; George

Demble, whose annual output of chewing gum, if laid  stick to stick, would probably gird the globe. 

Besides, there was Hastings Bleer. 

The Shadow saw him strolling past the spacious breakfast room   Hastings Bleer, a crabfaced man of

seventyfive, who seemed to have  solved the secret of perpetual youth, despite his dyspeptic look.  Bleer, so

far as energy was concerned, was a walking example of the  product from which he had made millions:

Oxotone, the famous nerve  tonic advertised everywhere. 

Hastings Bleer, the maker of Oxotone, who claimed that he intended  to begin life at eighty! Along with

Baybrock, Sanders, Jenney and  Demble, Bleer would be a fine plum for the kidnap pudding that Thumb

Gaudrey intended to cook. 

There couldn't be a tinge of doubt regarding what Thumb intended.  That tycoon of the snatch racket, past

master and sole survivor from  the band of crooks who had formed The Hand, was conniving to abduct  this

entire group of millionaires before they reached their destination  in West Virginia! 

At The Shadow's request, put in the calm tone of Cranston, Baybrock  took the new member of the party out

to see the bus. It was a splendid  vehicle, quite worthy of Baybrock's boasts. The bus was painted a  strong

maroon, with tasteful decorations that followed its streamlined  contours. 

The windows alongside the commodious seats were spacious. The top  was divided into sections that slid into

one another, allowing full  vision from below. That feature, Baybrock explained, would allow the  passengers

to view the scenery from every angle. 

Moreover, the bus was equipped with every safety device. It was to  be piloted by Baybrock's own chauffeur,

a man of absolute trust and  experience. Another chauffeur, who worked for old Bleer, was to act as  relief

driver. 

"We'll give them both a dose of Oxotone," jested Baybrock. "Then  watch this old buggy roll! This trip will

make history, Lamont! Only,  we won't get to White Sulphur before dark, as a lot of the crowd hope." 

The Shadow asked why they preferred an early arrival. Baybrock  explained that members of the party hoped

to do some gunning in West  Virginia. They were bringing along their shotguns and rifles. 

"They must think they'll have a chance to wing something on the  road," laughed Baybrock. "This bunch of

sportsmen carry their guns  loaded, even when they're on my private car. It's a good thing guns are  made with

safety catches nowadays." 

Baybrock, though he did not realize it, had solved a problem for  The Shadow. Until he heard that statement,

The Shadow had been vexed by  the need of acquiring guns himself, to replace the brace of automatics  that he

had left in his briefcase, with his cloak. 

He had also considered the necessity of having other armed men on  the bus, to meet a mass attack if Thumb

Gaudrey sprang one. Such  worries were ended. This crowd, with Cranston as their leader, would be  able to

beat off an attacking band. 


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Yes, there would be shooting on this expedition, The Shadow  decided, with bigger game than squirrels to

intrigue the gentlemen  sports. 

One question alone remained; The Shadow asked it so casually, that  Baybrock caught no clue to its

importance. 

"What about the roads, Dick? Are they safe for this heavy bus?" 

"Absolutely!" assured Baybrock. "We've checked on everything   bridges, detours, all that sort of stuff. But

I'm taking no chances.  I'm sending servants ahead in cars. 

"If they see anything that looks like a washout or a shaky bridge,  they'll stop and wait for us. Yes, sir! When

this journey is over, bus  travel will have such a swell reputation that we'd better all buy  stocks in bus

companies, before they hit a new high!" 

This opportunity  the bus trip  The Shadow believed, was the best  for which he could have hoped.

Whatever stroke Thumb Gaudrey made  should prove a boomerang to the master crook. Of that, The Shadow

was  confident. 

Sometimes confidence could become overconfidence  even with The  Shadow! 

CHAPTER XI. THE DANGER ZONE

LATE afternoon found the big bus purring smoothly through the West  Virginia hills, over terrain resembling

that which Loretta Wyndon had  traveled on her trip south from Charleston, West Virginia. 

Civilization was absent, though, except for traces of coal mines,  many of them abandoned, that studded some

of the rounded hills. The  cleared spaces on the slopes showed squares of black: places where  shafts drove

down into the hill. 

Sometimes the bus followed the valley of a creek, where ancient  suspension bridges hung above roaring

streams. Some of those crude  affairs were no more than footbridges; others looked strong enough to  bear the

weight of a light car. 

Those bridges, however, merely led to abandoned shacks across the  streams, some of them close to the

mouths of larger coal shafts. None  of the paved roads crossed such bridges  as Dick Baybrock carefully

explained, when questioned by members of the party. 

Having disposed of such occasional inquiries, Baybrock seated near  the front of the bus. was talking to his

friend Cranston, who was  across the aisle. Baybrock was full of enthusiasm regarding one of his  rifles. 

"A sweet gun, Lamont!" he told The Shadow. "You could wing a  mosquito at a hundred yards, with that

telescopic sight. Take her; try  her out when we do some longrange shooting tomorrow." 

The Shadow accepted the rifle, and the cartridges that came with  it. He opened the breech, slid in the clip of

cartridges. then fixed  the safety catch. 

"Might as well load it," agreed Baybrock. "All this crazy gang  carry their guns that way." 

The bus had swung a long curve rising toward a hilltop. Upon a  farther slope stood a rickety sign advertising


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a shoe store in a West  Virginia town. A chorus came from the cluster of merry millionaires who  saw the sign. 

"What!" They chimed. "No Oxotone?" 

Old Hastings Bleer swung around in his seat. His look was testy. 

"Why should I advertise my product in this region?" he snapped.  "People down here get healthy from the

mountain air!" 

"We saw one of your signs about fifty miles back," reminded one of  Bleer's tormentors. "How do you explain

that?" 

"Near a city, probably," muttered Bleer, "or near a main road. You  always see my signs advertised on main

roads." 

"Good old Oxotone," gibed another millionaire. "It saves its  punches for those who need it  and have the

cash to buy it!" 

Bleer tried to get into the spirit of the fun. 

"Maybe the folks around here can't read," he suggested. "If they  can't, why waste signs? My advertising is

smart." 

"So are the hillbillies," someone answered. "Smart enough not to  believe your advertisements." 

Old Bleer looked angry. He turned away, faced the front of the bus.  He clenched his fist around a

doublebarreled shotgun that stood  between his knee and the window. 

The group at the back of the bus must have recognized that they had  ribbed Bleer too much, for they dropped

further comments concerning  Oxotone. Nevertheless, Bleer himself kept a close watch for any signs  that

advertised his product, and grumbled when he saw none. 

"We've got them here," he muttered, including the advertising  department along with himself. "We've got

them, all right. We cover  every State. Yes, sir, Oxotone is advertised throughout the entire  country; and that

includes West Virginia!" 

At the summit of a hill, the bus riders could see their road  curving below. Along it, tiny in the distance, were

the cars that  carried the servants. The midget procession bore left at a fork, and  Baybrock gave an approving

nod. 

"That begins the last detour," he told The Shadow. "Only a dozen  miles and a good road, but slow because of

curves. Then we come into a  wide highway." 

THE hillsides had darkened by the time the bus reached the fork.  Curving toward a valley, the bus had

dropped below the level of the  setting sun. Its headlights blinked on, as the big machine rolled into  deeper

gloom. 

This portion of the journey was definitely in the danger zone,  which was why The Shadow became more alert

than ever. Added to the fact  that they were off the through highway, he sensed a menace in the  premature

twilight that enshrouded the bus. 


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Hands tightened on the rifle, The Shadow saw a curve ahead. The bus  took it at less than twentyfive miles

an hour. Through a slight gap in  the hills peeked the sun, to give a sharp view of a bridge, a quarter  mile

ahead. 

It was an unusual bridge for West Virginia, for it was one of the  covered type, more common in New

England States than in regions farther  south. Those bridges were meant to shed snow in the winter. 

What The Shadow wanted to determine was the strength of the bridge  that the bus had to cross. He noticed

that the two chauffeurs were both  looking closely as the bus approached the bridge. 

At last, they exchanged nods  with which The Shadow agreed. The  bridge was certainly safe. Its timbers

were mounted on heavy stone  foundations; the beams showed signs of recent reinforcement. 

Other cars had gone over that bridge, only a short while ago, and  had kept on their way. The only problem

that remained was the width of  the bridge; and that was solved the moment that the bus swung the final  bend. 

Gleaming headlights showed that the bridge was ample both in width  and height. 

During those last few twists, the hovering sun had about  disappeared again. Only a few rays could be seen

through the opened  slats in the top of the bus. The bus came almost to a stop, then poked  its long nose into

the tunnel of the covered bridge. 

The front wheels jarred a loose board, made it rattle heavily. The  two men who piloted the bus heard that

clatter, but though it  unimportant. Only The Shadow noticed the click that responded, like an  echo, not from

the floor of the bridge but from the roof above. 

Quickly, The Shadow sped a quick look to the rafters, just as a  roundish object came tumbling from the

beams. Snatching up the rifle,  he made a swing to strike the thing aside before it came through the  open top.

A slight forward lurch of the bus prevented The Shadow's  effort to stay disaster. 

The big ball struck five feet behind The Shadow, hitting the edge  of a closed section of the roof. It took a

crazy bounce into the mist  of the jolly group toward the back of the bus; there, it broke with a  fierce puff. 

Hearing the sound, the driver of the bus applied the brakes and  halted in the very center of the bridge. He

stared about, to gape in  horror at a sight that The Shadow had already seen. A yellowish smoke  was spreading

through the bus, with a sizzle that drowned the wild  shouts of the men it had enveloped. 

Actuated by a wire from the loose board in the bridge, a big gas  bomb had dropped among the millionaires.

The lever beneath the board  had been tightened so that the weight of an ordinary car would not  spring it; but

the bus, far heavier, had set off the device. 

GRABBING the men beside him, The Shadow started toward the front  door, motioning for the two drivers to

jump. Behind the chauffeurs came  The Shadow, dragging Baybrock and Bleer along with him. 

All were choking from the gas that overtook them. Its odor wasn't  deadly; it had an effect more like tear gas. 

The pursuing fumes curled out through the bus windows, to cling  within the walls of the bridge. Escape from

the first snare had merely  brought The Shadow and his companions into another almost as bad. There  was

still a chance, however, that they could scramble across the bridge  before they were overpowered. 


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Then into the headlights, which seemed filmed by a yellowish haze,  appeared foemen with threatening

revolvers. Men who wore gas masks;  fighters, hidden beneath the heavily buttressed bridge, who had risen  to

complete the work that the gas had begun. 

Hastings Bleer saw them first, for The Shadow had started him  ahead. The Oxotone magnate had his precious

shotgun, and wasted no time  using it. But in valuing time, he simply wasted shots. The gasmasked  men

ducked at sight of Bleer's weapon. He blasted both barrels into the  space ahead, then stumbled in front of the

headlights, choking from the  gas. 

The Shadow was driving forward, his left sleeve across his  nostrils, his right arm raising the rifle to his

shoulder. He didn't  notice that Baybrock and the men who had piloted the bus were sagging  as they tried to

follow. 

Swinging the rifle back and forth, The Shadow delivered onehanded  shots that ripped the old boards in the

bridge wall. Men were banging  back at him with their revolvers, but his flaying fire had them on the  dodge,

which marred the accuracy of their aim. Despite the recoil of  the rifle, The Shadow clipped two of the men

who harried him. Five  strides more, he would have been beyond the bridge. 

One attacker prevented that by chucking a smaller gas bomb, the  size of a hand grenade. The object hit at The

Shadow's feet, puffed its  deadly contents up beneath his arm. Stifling, he staggered; then  gripping the rifle

barrel with both hands, he swung the heavy butt  toward heads that clustered about him. 

Mechanically, The Shadow felt the jar that one thump brought. He  had flattened one crook; he tried blindly to

fell others, despite the  choking effect of the gas. His swinging arm, seemingly, melted in air.  He was floating

into space; the bridge had vanished, along with the  roar of the water beneath it. 

The Shadow had flattened, although he did not know it. The floating  effect came from the hands that dragged

him back into the bus, along  with Baybrock, Bleer and the senseless drivers. 

Vaguely, a roar came to The Shadow's ears during one of those  moments that he fought valiantly for

consciousness. It was the sound of  the starting bus motor. Crooks had taken the wheel. 

Then a voice  a growl that seemed oddly muffled, though the tone  was uttered not far from The Shadow's

ears. Only a snatched portion of  a statement, but one that dented sharply on The Shadow's muddled mind: 

"We're driving for old Oxotone " 

A mobster had uttered those words. They had some curious reference,  perhaps to Hastings Bleer. The words

thrummed through The Shadow's  fading thoughts: Old Oxotone 

Life returned to The Shadow's numbed hands. His eyes tightly shut  from the effects of the tormenting gas, he

shoved his fists up from the  bus floor where he lay, seeking the throat of the crook who had spoken  those

growled words. 

As the bus heaved forward, The Shadow found that throat and  gripped. There was a gurgle from the confines

of a gas mask, which the  crook had half lifted when he spoke. Then came another foemen that The  Shadow

could not see. A gun butt thumped The Shadow's head behind the  ear. 

The blow brought blackness. No longer did The Shadow try to solve  the riddle of the words that he had so

vaguely caught. The Shadow had  become another senseless victim among those who lined the floor of the

luxurious bus. 


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Thumb Gaudrey, master of the kidnap ring, was to acquire one more  millionaire than he expected  in the

person of Lamont Cranston,  otherwise The Shadow! 

CHAPTER XII. THE SHADOW AWAKES

WHEN The Shadow awoke, he heard the buzz of voices. They seemed a  continuation of the last that he had

heard, but he could not make out  the words they uttered. From the blur, however, he remembered the last

clear statement that had reached his ears. 

He recalled the final moments of the fight beneath the roof of the  covered bridge; how he had been dragged

into the bus. Then the talk of  "driving for old Oxotone"  something that made as little sense as when  he had

heard it. 

The Shadow opened his eyes. 

About him, he saw a garish scene. He was in a square room, where  overlapping rugs covered the rough floor.

Deeper draperies hung from  the walls; but otherwise, the place looked like an office. 

No longer tortured by the gas, The Shadow's eyes discerned the man  who sat behind a large desk. That man

had a bloated face. His eyes  glared uglily from beneath brows graystreaked like his hair. His  hands, resting

on the desktop, were mammoth illshaped talons. 

The Shadow recognized Thumb Gaudrey. 

There were others in the room; vaguely, The Shadow knew their  voices. He looked about wearily, saw their

faces. Out of the blur, they  became plain. 

Two of the men were Clip Rallin and Rigger Bayne. The Shadow  gradually identified a third as Uke Flenn,

from his memory of the  fellow's photograph. 

Slumped in a chair, The Shadow was the object of the conversation  between Clip and Rigger. 

"He's the same guy, I tell you!" insisted Clip. "The dude we saw in  the hotel at Charleston." 

"Yeah," agreed Rigger, his smile hard. "The bozo who was squinting  through the molecule." 

"Monocle!" corrected Clip. "And this"  he laid something in front  of Thumb  "is the card he was looking

at!" 

Rigger reached to The Shadow's vest, grabbed a cord that hung  there. He gave a tug, bringing the monocle

from the prisoner's pocket. 

"Here's the eye dingus," declared Rigger. Fragments of glass were  falling as he spoke. "Only, it's broke. The

guy must have busted it  when he put up that fight." 

The Shadow withheld a sigh of relief. The monocle was broken; that  was a help. With the glass gone, there

was no way for the crooks to  learn of its magnifying properties. Nevertheless, he knew that he would  be in

for a sharp crossexamination from Thumb Gaudrey. 

The bigshot had already noted the opening flicker of The Shadow's  eyelids. Leaning across the desk, Thumb


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boomed a question: 

"Your name is Lamont Cranston?" 

Slowly, The Shadow nodded. Thumb added: 

"What were you doing in Charleston?" 

"Charleston?" The Shadow spoke coolly, in Cranston's tone. Then, as  if he didn't understand: "Do you mean

Charleston, South Carolina?" 

"I mean Charleston, West Virginia," boomed Thumb. "You were seen  there, a few nights ago." 

The Shadow stroked the bruise on the back of his head. His attitude  indicated an honest attempt to remember

where he had been a few nights  ago. At last, his manner brightened. 

"Of course!" he exclaimed. "I was in Charleston the night of the  governor's reception. An interesting place! I

liked it so well that I  stayed awhile, before I went on to Asheville. 

"But where"  he looked about blankly  "just where am I at  present? The last I remember was the bus  the

covered bridge " 

Thumb Gaudrey was out from behind the desk, his big fists  threatening to punch Cranston into submission. 

"You know where you are, all right!" challenged Thumb. "What's  more, you know who I am! Because" 

Thumb added the accusation with a  venomous snarl  "you are The Shadow!" 

THE eyes that met Thumb's were calm, almost puzzled. If ever The  Shadow had played the part of Cranston

to absolute perfection, it was  at that critical instant. He didn't seem to recognize that Thumb was  speaking of

a person. Even the name of The Shadow was a novelty to  Lamont Cranston. 

Thumb Gaudrey finished his glare. Again, The Shadow felt an  unexpressed triumph. He had bluffed the

master crook; left him  guessing. Thumb went back to the desk; he picked up the card that lay  there. 

"This belongs to you"  Thumb shoved the card in front of The  Shadow's eyes  "so maybe you can tell us

something about it. Let's  hear you talk  and talk fast!" 

Those final words were crafty. Thumb figured that if Cranston  happened to be The Shadow, he would

recognize the parlance of the  underworld and swing into a smooth, glib speech. Instead, The Shadow  clung to

his part of a half bewildered millionaire. When he saw the  card, he actually laughed. 

"Hold it farther from you," he told Thumb. "That's right  in the  light. Look at those dots. Notice how they

change into hexagons?" 

Thumb looked at the card, raising his heavy eyebrows. He heard  Rigger ask: 

"What's a hexagon?" 

"A thing with six sides," growled Thumb. Then to Clip and Rigger,  who were peering over his big shoulders:

"The guy's right! Those dots  look like they were sixsided when you hold the card a little off." 


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Thumb went back to the desk. He held the card edgewise, snapped at  it, to see if it had double thickness.

While he flipped the edge of the  card, he spoke to Uke Flenn: 

"Send for the professor." 

There was an interval, while Thumb played with the card. At last,  he set his heavy chin in one big hand and

looked directly at The  Shadow. 

"Maybe you're right," declared Thumb. "You millionaires have a hard  time amusing yourselves. Maybe you

would carry a screwy thing like this  card around with you, just to show it to a lot of boobs like yourself. 

"Again, maybe you wouldn't. Maybe this card means something." Thumb  was reaching into a desk drawer; he

brought a large magnifying glass  into sight. "And if it does, I'm going to find out! The closer I look,  maybe

the more I'll see." 

BEFORE Thumb could sight the card through the magnifying glass,  there was a rap at the door. He laid the

glass aside, bawled a command  to enter. 

Felix Dort stepped into the room. 

"Hello, professor!" greeted Thumb, in a cordial tone. "Meet another  of our guests  Mr. Cranston. Treat him

nice, because he's got a wad of  dough  if he's the guy he claims to be. He might lend you some cash  toward

your ransom." 

Dort shook hands with The Shadow, then turned toward the desk where  Thumb was beckoning him. 

"Look at this card," said Thumb. "What do you make out of it?" 

Dort studied the honeycomb of circles, held the card at different  angles, until he noted the sixsided

appearance of the dots. 

"It's a novelty," decided Dort. "Those circles form an optical  illusion. They look like hexagons." 

Thumb nodded. 

"Maybe that's just a blind," he said. "Listen, professor, I want  you to take this card down to your laboratory.

Give it the works. Put  the X ray on it. Heat it. Test it every way you can think of, to find  out if it's phony." 

Dort smiled, as though pleased by the assignment. 

"Then bring it back," added Thumb, "and tell us what you've found  out. Maybe by the time you show up,

we'll have found out something for  ourselves. We're going to give this guy the heat!" 

They "gave the heat" while Dort was gone. Between them, Thumb  Gaudrey and his lieutenants made a police

third degree seem  kindergarten play, when they worked on The Shadow. They told him that  he wasn't

Lamont Cranston, and they backed that argument with wallops  from a rubber hose. 

They cited names and places involving that same Shadow, in hope  that their captive would betray some

recognition. When they had  finished with the beating, The Shadow fell to the floor as limp as a  figure stuffed

with sawdust. 


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But he was still Lamont Cranston. Gaudrey had learned nothing. 

"He's passed out," grumbled Thumb. "No use bothering him any  longer. Send a guy down to tell the professor

to get a move on." 

It wasn't long before Felix Dort arrived carrying a muchcrumpled  card with many dots. Wearily, the

investor laid the card on Thumb's big  desk. Immediately, Dort became the center of attention. 

"I've done everything," declared the inventor. "I used the X ray. I  heated the card looking for secret ink. I

tried an ultraviolet ray. I  gave the card an acid bath." 

"It looks it," returned Thumb. "But what did you find out?" 

"Nothing!" replied Dort. "The card means absolutely nothing unless  " 

His eyes showed a glitter as they fixed upon the magnifying glass  that lay on Thumb's desk. 

"There!" exclaimed Dort eagerly. "That's all I lacked! A magnifying  glass! It may show something." 

DORT reached for the glass. Thumb shoved him aside. The bigshot  took the glass himself and held it over

the card. He wasn't thinking of  the groggy prisoner who claimed to be Lamont Cranston nor were his

lieutenants. 

On the floor The Shadow had stiffened. He was on one elbow ready to  begin an upward spring. Groggy

though he was, his eyes almost closed,  his arms numbed by twists that thugs had given them, he preferred

battle as a last resort. It would be forced, The Shadow thought, the  moment that Thumb Gaudrey saw those

circles enlarged beneath the  magnifying glass. 

Then came momentary amazement. 

Thumb clanked the glass on the desk tore the card to fragments and  scattered the shreds angrily. 

"Nothing!" he bellowed. "Nothing but a lot of black dots that look  ten times bigger when you see them

through a microscope! That guy"  as  Thumb pointed, The Shadow was relaxing on the floor  "isn't The

Shadow! He's just another one of those screwy millionaires! 

"Haul him away; shove him in a cell, like the rest of them. Stick  him in the end cell  the one we kept empty.

If he wakes up, tell him  he's at the governor's reception!" 

Clip and Rigger hauled The Shadow to his feet. From his limpness  they thought that he was unconscious for

he started a forward sprawl in  their arms. They didn't notice the moment when The Shadow's eyes  opened;

when his lips took on a smile. 

That was when The Shadow took a final look at the scrawny frame of  Felix Dort as the old inventor shuffled

out through the door. The smile  was one that even The Shadow could not repress. 

Here in the realm that Thumb Gaudrey ruled, The Shadow knew he had  found a friend who could answer

many questions; a man upon whom he  could depend for future assistance. 

That muchneeded person was Felix Dort. 


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CHAPTER XIII. THE NEW ALLIANCE

HOURS passed before The Shadow moved stiffly upon the cell floor  where his captors had thrown him.

Recuperated from the rough treatment  given by Thumb Gaudrey and his lieutenants, he was ready to begin a

countermove. 

At first consideration, such seemed impossible. 

His cell was small, blocklike; barred by a solid steel door through  which faint light trickled from slits high up

on the barrier. Outside  that door was a corridor leading past many cells as stout as this one.  A guard was

posted at the farther end of the passage. 

The door was mechanically controlled; made to slide into the wall.  Breaking through it, if that could be

accomplished, would bring The  Shadow into nothing but a more serious snare. 

These cells, on a level slightly below that of Thumb's personal  headquarters, were deep within the

mastercrook's hidden domain. If  trouble started hereabouts, even if The Shadow freed other prisoners to  help

him, the makers of that commotion would be boxed. 

A few of Thumb's gas bombs, chucked by his ugly henchmen, would put  any jailbreakers back where they

started. 

Reasoning thus, The Shadow began a study of the cell's interior. He  noted that the walls were rough, but

plainly discernible in the light  that trickled through the door, for they were thickly whitewashed. The  only rift

was a small opening deep in the cell: a crevice that looked  like a jagged window. 

That gap was large enough for a person to squeeze through, but such  a process was doubly blocked. First, by

short bars across the opening   bars that rattled when The Shadow tested them. Those bars didn't amount  to

much; that was why Thumb Gaudrey had replaced them by a stronger  barrier, in the shape of a steel grating

set beyond the bars. 

The grating could not be attacked, for it had been put in place  from the other side and was driven deep into

the rock. Beyond the  grating was blackness; and from the absence of any breeze, The Shadow  decided that

the space outside was nothing more than a crevice that  followed the line of cells, much like the corridor that

ran in front of  the doors. 

From his knowledge of this hill country, The Shadow had a hunch.  Working at the window, he wrenched

away one of the old bars. It became  a valuable tool. 

Then The Shadow soon was hacking, scraping at the lower portion of  the side wall that marked the final

buttress in the long line of cells. 

Whiteness disappeared, leaving a blackness that smudged The  Shadow's fingers when he contacted it. His

laugh whispered softly  between smiling lips. The wall was what he had expected it to be:  honeycombed rock,

veined with coal. 

This hidden domain, with its many passages and deephewn cells, was  located in an abandoned coal mine;

one of the many forgotten shafts  that form subterranean caverns in the hills of West Virginia! 

Thumb Gaudrey had enlarged the mine's corridors and rooms into an  underground citadel, where he and his


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chosen followers could live like  gnomes. 

WORKING with his improvised pick, The Shadow was trying to chisel a  passage through the deepest cell

wall. The vein of coal led downward.  That didn't promise much, but it was the only route to follow, for the

coal yielded steadily and became a mound upon the floor of The Shadow's  cell. At moments, the grim worker

halted; not through weariness, but to  listen for any sounds from the corridor. The greatest risk that The

Shadow faced was the chance that some guard might overhear his hacking  at the cell wall. 

The Shadow had started another gouge, when he caught an echoed  sound that seemed to quiver from the rock

below the hole that he had  chiseled. He waited; listening, he heard the tap repeated. Thumping the  rock with

the metal bar, he was rewarded by a prompt response. 

Soon, messages were tapping back and forth through the  soundconducting rock. The man below understood

Morse, and  communication in dots and dashes became rapid. When The Shadow and the  other man took turns

at work, the idle one listened, then tapped his  findings. 

Eventually, they were hewing along the same slanted vein  The  Shadow from above, his friend from below.

From the blows that he heard,  The Shadow recognized that his helper must have a real pick that he was  using

lustily. 

Shoulder deep in the hole that he had carved, The Shadow felt coal  crumble at his feet. He tapped on the rock

beside him; gnawing efforts  ceased below. Punching with the steel bar, The Shadow opened a final  crevice;

squeezed through into a passage that received him like a  chute. Thumping his way to the bottom, he found a

man waiting with a  flashlight. 

The man was Felix Dort. 

Beckoning, the inventor led The Shadow through a maze of passages,  until they reached the laboratory.

There, he pointed his visitor to a  chair. From a hiding place beneath the efficiency motor, Dort brought  out a

dotstudded card. 

"I kept it!" he chuckled triumphantly. "I saw what it was, when I  used my microscope. A rogues' gallery, so I

kept it. But I had to  prepare another card"  his voice became apologetic  "with pen and  black ink. It took

me a long while; otherwise, I would have relieved  you sooner." 

The Shadow nodded his understanding. 

"You spoke of a microscope," he said. "Let me see it, along with  the counterfeit bills on which you write your

messages." 

Dort grinned. He opened the cache and brought out the bills and the  plates that went with them. He showed

The Shadow his printing press  concealed in the lathe; then began an explanation. 

"I'm not a counterfeiter," he declared, "but I must admit that such  work always lured me. Not the desire for

profit. you understand; but  the joy of doing work to such perfection that it would stand the acid  test of close

inspection. 

"Engraving was my hobby, but I limited it to honest work  stock  certificates and such, for which I had a

salable market. Then came the  time when I was abducted, brought here  as the first of many persons  to be

held for ransom. I had no money, other than my royalties. Thumb  Gaudrey sent me back, under guard, to

pack up my laboratory and bring  it here. I managed to secrete the printing press in the lathe. The  counterfeit


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plates I engraved here." 

Pointing with a scrawny finger, Dort indicated the big contrivance  that he termed the efficiency motor. 

"I told Thumb that this motor will bring a fortune, when  perfected," the old man continued. "That is why he

wants it. I know his  game: once the motor has proven itself, he will kill me and appropriate  it. But I foresaw

that and brought my engraving tools with me. 

"Thumb Gaudrey knows's nothing of the counterfeit bills that I  produced, as the only way by which I could

get word to the outside  world. I gave him twenties, when I paid my ransom installments, and he  passed them

along to his lieutenants. When he wanted onedollar bills  instead"  Dort licked his lips in pleasure  "I had

them for him!" 

THE SHADOW kept short silence, then: "Have you any idea where this  mine is located?" 

Dort shook his head. He brought a map from a table drawer, spread  it on a chair. A sweep of his thin hand

indicated half of West  Virginia. 

"Somewhere in this area," he declared. "That is all that I know." 

The Shadow's eyes became reflective. 

"The bus was captured at six fifteen," he recalled. "Have you any  idea at what time it arrived here?" 

Dort's face showed eagerness. 

"Yes!" he exclaimed. "It came in at half past seven! It was just  after I had adjusted the disturber." 

"Disturber?" 

"Yes. This instrument with the revolving blades. Hear it hum? I  designed it to create interference with radio

reception. That is why  Thumb Gaudrey has never found a radio set that will give him  satisfactory reception." 

The Shadow smiled at this new evidence of Dort's efforts to  secretly harass the kidnapking. Then,

consulting Dort's map, The  Shadow marked the spot where the covered bridge was located. 

From that center point, he drew a circle with a radius of  approximately thirty miles. Several roads went

through the rim of that  circle. The Shadow pointed them out to Dort. 

"We are near one of these spots," he assured. "The mobsters would  have brought the bus here without delay.

Thirty miles, however, is the  best that they could have done in an hour and a quarter." 

Dort nodded agreement; then he asked: "But which road is the right  one?" 

"That will have to be determined later," replied The Shadow. "For  the present. we must revert to your

procedure of sending messages on  counterfeit bills." 

Dort looked pleased. He brought the microscope, the pen and the  green ink. He pointed to the stacks of false

money, inviting The Shadow  to choose the denominations that he wanted. 


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Instead, The Shadow held the microscope above one of the engraved  plates. Before Dort could stop him, he

had picked up an engraving tool  and was deliberately routing out some of the finer bits of workmanship. 

"Don't ruin them!" wailed Dort. "Those plates required weeks to  make!" 

"And you made them too good." Coolly, The Shadow pressed Dort  aside. "This portrait, for instance, will

look better when the eyes are  slanted. This border requires a few flaws. Let's help this figure, by  breaking it." 

Dort gulped. 

"You mean"  his eyes showed amazement  "that my work was too  good?" 

"I do," replied The Shadow. "It was almost sheer luck, my detection  of these counterfeits. If we want our

messages to reach the proper  authorities, we must first print new bills that bank tellers will  recognize as

counterfeits and send in to Washington." 

"But if the crooks suspect them " 

"They won't be poor enough for that." Dort, listening, saw that The  Shadow was making alterations very

neatly. "Your new bills will pass  with Thumb Gaudrey, just like the others did." 

FINISHED with one plate, The Shadow started on another. He paused a  few moments, to study Dort's

efficiency motor, and a large packing case  which stood in the corner. 

"Pay Gaudrey all the money you have," said The Shadow. "That is,  after we have prepared the new bills." He

bent above the plate, worked  carefully as he peered through the microscope. "I am engraving the  message on

the plates, so it will be printed with the bills." 

"But I need some excuse," injected Dort, "when I give Thumb all my  money." 

"Of course. You will tell him that you are eager to complete the  ransom payments." 

"Why should I have that sudden urge?" 

"Because"  The Shadow leaned back, smiling  "you will also tell  Thumb that you have perfected your

efficiency motor; that you are ready  to have it tested by the right experts." 

Anxiety flickered in Dort's eyes. The delay on the efficiency motor  had long been the thread that kept him

alive. He foresaw a huge risk,  if he followed The Shadow's instructions. Nevertheless, Dort was game.  He

simply asked: 

"And after that?" 

"You can tell me what Thumb has to say," replied The Shadow, "and  we can plan accordingly. For the

present"  he was rising, as he spoke   "I must leave you. We must remember that you have work to do, and

that I have a cell to occupy." 

Getting back to that cell was not the only problem. The place would  have to be fixed well enough to stand

inspection when guards peered  through the slits of The Shadow's door. Fortunately, the needed  properties

were in Dort's laboratory. 


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Slabs of veneer were stacked in a corner of the laboratory, and The  Shadow also saw a can of white paint. He

told Dort to paint one sheet  of wood; meanwhile, The Shadow took a tape measure and went up through  the

hole that led to his cell. 

Returning, he marked the whitened veneer to the proper size and cut  it to fit the hole. Taking a broom, The

Shadow again went out to the  passage, while Dort followed with the slab. 

Back in his cell, The Shadow swept the powdery mound of coal down  into the chute that he and Dort had

dug. He sent the broom bouncing  down through the cavity, as a signal to Dort that the sweeping had been

finished. 

Crawling up through the narrow, twisty hole, Dort managed to push  the thinply veneer into the cell. Thanks

to its irregular dimensions,  there was a way to squeeze it past. While Dort was descending, The  Shadow fitted

the slab exactly to the hole. 

With white paint that he had brought in an empty glue bottle, The  Shadow touched up the edges where the

slab met the wall, using a small  brush that Dort had given him. When the job was done, the crack was  gone

from sight; it would remain invisible, even should captors open  the cell door to admit more of the corridor's

dull light. 

The Shadow's cell was a prison no longer; but he preferred to bide  his time, rather than attempt a mad escape.

His life was not the only  one at stake. By biding his time, depending upon the cooperation of  Felix Dort, The

Shadow could set the stage for rescue of his fellow  prisoners. 

In preparing for a duel with Thumb Gaudrey, The Shadow had not  forgotten that the master criminal was

backed by a mobster horde. His  plan was to snare that band along with Thumb Gaudrey, commander of the

crooked crew. 

CHAPTER XIV. WORD FROM THE SHADOW

WHEN Thumb Gaudrey's gigantic stroke of snatchery dawned on the  outer world, it produced the greatest

news sensation in a dozen years;  a frontpage story that built up day by day. 

First, the deluxe bus with its cargo of millionaires had not  arrived at White Sulphur Springs. 

That was enough to start the wires ticking, feeding news to the big  newspapers in New York. It was supposed

that the bus had met with an  accident somewhere along the route. As a result, the police of  different States

began a search. 

They found no traces of the bus. They couldn't even learn where it  had vanished. Natives reported having

seen it in North Carolina, close  to the borders of both Virginia and Tennessee. Had it continued on its  course,

it would have reached West Virginia; but there was a chance  that it could have veered westward and reached

Kentucky. 

From all that anyone knew, that bus and its precious passengers  might be in any one of five different States! 

All those border districts, it happened, were within the circle  that The Shadow had long ago formed; but the

law knew nothing of The  Shadow's earlier investigations of Thumb Gaudrey and the kidnap racket. 

ON the fourth day of the search, a dazed man wandered along the  roadway that led from Asheville, stumbling


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toward the Skyland Club,  that residence of millionaires. Mistaken for a hitchhiker off the  beaten path, he was

warned to go elsewhere, until someone realized that  he was in need of medical attention. 

Carried into the Skyland Club, he was recognized as Carter Sanders,  one of the missing millionaires! 

It was another day before Sanders could talk. He awoke from a doped  condition; encouraged, he told what

little he knew. Where the bus had  been captured, Sanders couldn't say; but he was pretty sure that they  were

out of North Carolina when it had happened. 

He remembered being quizzed by a man with an ugly bloated face,  whose hands looked big enough to choke

an ox. He told how he had been  blindfolded, led to a cell; finally, how he had been doped. He muttered

something about a letter somewhere on his person. 

The letter was found in the lining of the coat that Sanders wore.  It was from Thumb Gaudrey, although the

kidnapper had signed no name.  The message stated that the lot of millionaires would be released upon

payment of two million dollars in ransom. 

Carter Sanders, it appeared, had been put back in circulation as  proof that the others would be freed, once the

money was paid over. The  bigshot, who had a score of millionaires as prisoners, could easily  afford to let

one go as a demonstration of his "good faith," as he  termed it. 

The reason why Thumb had released Sanders was because Thumb's quiz  had produced a most important fact.

Carter Sanders had gone to sleep in  the bus while it was still in North Carolina. Therefore, he was the one

man who could not give any worthwhile testimony as to where, how, and  at what time the snatch had been

staged. 

Sanders had been gassed. So had the others. He knew that much. 

Later, he had been doped, although the others probably hadn't.  Since he had been dead to the world, agents of

the head kidnaper had  easily brought him back to Asheville and dumped him on the road to the  Skyland Club. 

Within a few hours, government men were listening to the  millionaire's story. Since he had reappeared in

Asheville, and crooks  had brought him there, that city was the best starting point for an  investigation. During

the next few days, however, not another clue was  uncovered. 

AMONG the F.B.I. men who came to the Asheville base was Vic  Marquette, long experienced in government

service. Though technically  in charge of operations, Vic chafed at what he considered to be  inactivity. He

would have liked to be among the more active searchers,  who were scouring the mountains of five States for

clues. But his job,  for the present, was to stay in Asheville. 

Six days had gone, and on this seventh day, Marquette was pacing  the office that he and his men had taken

temporarily, opposite a lofty  hotel. Vic's swarthy face was glum; his heavy mustache had a droop that  came

only when he had reached an absolute wall. 

Another day half gone and nothing to show for it, until Marquette  was suddenly surprised by the entrance of a

man whom he hadn't seen for  several years: Ted Revell, of the Secret Service. 

Marquette had scarcely greeted his old friend, before Revell was  spreading a batch of tendollar bills on the

desk, asking Vic to look  them over. Marquette did so with an expert eye. 


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"Hamilton looks sour," he declared, pointing to the portrait on the  bill. "His lips aren't right. Neither are his

eyes. Not enough shading  over the left one." 

Revell turned the bill over. Marquette found objections to the  appearance of the treasury building depicted on

the back. He also  pointed out smudges in the border beneath the words "Ten Dollars." 

He laughed when Revell handed him a microscope. 

"You think I've gone blind?" demanded Marquette. "Say  I could  spot that note for queer money if I looked

through the wrong end of a  telescope!" Then, angrily, he added: "Say, Revell, if you've got  business here in

Asheville, you'd better attend to it! I'm busy working  on a kidnap case." 

"I know it," returned Revell. "That's why I want you to use the  microscope." 

A few seconds later, Vic Marquette's peering eye was goggly as it  looked through the glass. Those marks on

the lower border of the  counterfeit tenspot were not smudges. They were finely printed  letters, which, when

enlarged, bore a brief message. 

That message was to Vic Marquette! 

It read: 

Marquette. See V. Put men in circle. 

More later.  S. 

"What do you make out of it?" inquired Revell. "who's 'V' and 'S'?" 

"'V' is a chap named Vincent," declared Marquette, his thoughts  stirred by a chain of recollections. "And 'S'

stands for The Shadow.  This means that when I find Vincent  his full name is Harry Vincent   I'll find out

what the circle is." 

Marquette put in a longdistance call to New York. While he awaited  its completion, he told Revell a few

brief facts about The Shadow. It  seemed that on several occasions, Vic Marquette had cracked some tough

cases through The Shadow's aid; that in addition to such favors, The  Shadow had stepped in to save Vic's life

during emergencies that had  arisen. 

In the course of those events, Marquette had formed a friendship  with a young man named Harry Vincent.

Although Harry had never claimed  to be an agent of The Shadow, Vic was sure that he served in that

capacity. However, Vic Marquette was quite as convinced that Harry  Vincent did not know the actual identity

of the mysterious personage  whom he served. 

The message on the counterfeit bill, combining the letters "V" and  "S," was a sufficient link for Marquette to

connect the persons  concerned. He was convinced that any message from The Shadow could only  relate to

the wholesale kidnapping plot. 

When The Shadow battled crime, he invariably took on the most  difficult cases available. It was no surprise 

at least not to Vic  Marquette  to find The Shadow again leading the nationwide drive  against some hidden

supercrook. 


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THE call came through from New York. Vic Marquette learned that  Harry Vincent was not at the Hotel

Metrolite, where he usually stayed.  He had left there a few days ago; and recent word from him stated that  he

had arrived  of all places  in Asheville, North Carolina! 

In fact, Harry was reported to be stopping in the very hotel that  Vic Marquette could see from his office

window! 

It took the Fed just two and one half minutes to contact the hotel  and learn that Harry was actually registered

there. Unfortunately, he  had gone out a few hours before, and had said that he would not return  until late in

the day 

Vic Marquette fingered the counterfeit tenspot that lay on the  desk. He heard Revell remark that several

such bills had been picked  up; that he had found one at a bank in Asheville that very morning. 

"That gives us a lead!" exclaimed Marquette. "Some of the kidnap  mob were here! They must have been,

because they dumped Sanders in  Asheville! They're the bunch that are shoving this queer, without  knowing

it!" 

He held the bill closer to the light, intrigued with the new  theory. 

"There's to be more word later," mused Marquette. "Maybe it's  already on the way." He snapped his fingers.

"Make the rounds of the  banks, Ted! Right here in town. Look over currency of other  denominations. Maybe

you'll find some other brands of queer dough." 

One hour later, Marquette received an excited call from Revell.  Over the phone, he learned that the Secret

Service man had uncovered a  few fives and one twenty  all bills that showed the flaws of  counterfeits. 

They bore other messages to Vic Marquette. Word for him to post men  secretly in certain cities near the

borders of West Virginia; to await  a call from the mysterious "S," who represented none other than The

Shadow. 

Vic Marquette decided to follow those instructions to the letter;  to be ready, at The Shadow's bidding, when

the crucial period came.  Spreading a map on his desk, Marquette stuck pins into the towns named  in The

Shadow's messages. He noted that they were in a circular  arrangement. 

"There's our circle," announced Marquette, when Revell arrived.  "Not as perfect as it ought to be, but it will

do until we hear from  Vincent. Somewhere in that circle"  Vic was confident in tone  "is  the kidnapper

we're after. But we can't afford to let him know we want  him." 

Revell eyed the circle. It looked good, but it covered a large  area. He saw Marquette writing orders for F.B.I.

operatives to station  themselves at places indicated by the pins. Revell gave a doubtful  headshake, as he

asked: 

"What next?" 

Vic Marquette returned a grim stare. 

"What next?" he echoed. Then, in a tone that put an end to doubt:  "The Shadow knows!" 


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CHAPTER XV. THE COVERED TRAIL

WHILE Vic Marquette was making plans in Asheville, a speedy coupe  was racing northward from that city,

carrying two persons who were very  much alert. 

One, the driver of the car, was a young man of cleancut  appearance, whose eyes were intent upon every

scene along the highway.  He was Harry Vincent, the man that Marquette had tried to reach too  late. 

Harry's companion was a girl, who ordinarily would have interested  him much more than the passing

scenery; for she was a very lovely and  agreeable person. She was not disappointed, however, by Harry's lack

of  attention toward her. Loretta Wyndon was herself quite as interested in  this quest. 

A fork in the road caused Harry to pull over to the side and  consult a road map, which Loretta, too, studied

from across Harry's  shoulder. 

"I'd say the bus took the left fork," decided Harry. "A swing that  way would have taken it well up toward

White Sulphur Springs." 

Loretta voiced her agreement. 

They took the road to the left, each watching from a different side  of the car. They were in West Virginia and

the roads here were winding,  rolling, yet monotonous with hills all studded with the tiny shafts of  coal mines,

far up the slopes. 

Through both their thoughts kept running the circumstances that had  brought about this quest. 

Harry Vincent had joined Loretta Wyndon in the small city where The  Shadow had left her. Loretta had given

Harry the briefcase containing  all The Shadow's papers  the folder stamped with the symbol of The  Hand;

the map marked with the circle, as The Shadow had finally  narrowed it; written papers giving the facts that

linked Thumb Gaudrey,  sole survivor of The Hand, with that very circle. 

The briefcase also contained The Shadow's cloak, gloves and hat. It  had held a brace of automatics; but only

one of those guns was at  present in the briefcase, which was now behind the seat of the coupe.  The other .45

was fully loaded, resting in Harry's pocket. 

There was good reason why Harry had the gun so close to hand. 

He and Loretta had gone to Asheville, after hearing that one of the  millionaires had returned there. Today,

Harry had decided upon a new  field of investigation: the circle marked on The Shadow's map. From all  that

had passed within that circle, entering it would be an unwise  venture for any unarmed person. 

Particularly persons so closely associated with The Shadow as were  Harry Vincent and Loretta Wyndon. For

both had been overwhelmed by the  fact  true, though it seemed incredible  that The Shadow must have

fallen prey to the vulturous band of criminals who served Thumb  Gaudrey! 

They could only hope that The Shadow had remained alive by  continuing to pose as one of the captured

millionaires, those  unfortunates held by Thumb Gaudrey in some invisible stronghold that  both Harry and

Loretta would have given worlds to find. 

Perhaps they could find it somewhere in this danger zone! 


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That was their hope. It might have been a complete conviction, had  they known of the clues that had reached

Vic Marquette. But Harry  Vincent had avoided the F.B.I. man while in Asheville. It would be  better, he

thought, to make this trip, and contact Marquette later. 

Thus, The Shadow's first message had failed to score a bull'seye.  Fortunately, he had sent out later details

that had also reached  Marquette. Somehow, The Shadow had foreseen that chance might prevent a  meeting

between Vic Marquette and Harry Vincent. 

Chance was moving in to play an immediate part, while Harry's car  rolled through those lonely hills. 

SWINGING a bend, Harry heard Loretta give a slight exclamation. The  girl was pointing toward a creek that

rolled through the valley; she  had seen a covered bridge that crossed it. The unusual sight intrigued  her. 

It intrigued Harry, too. The afternoon was late; from their angle,  the bridge blended with the scenery, then

caught the sun's glow as they  approached. Nearing the bridge, Harry halted the car just in front of  it; he

looked at Loretta. 

The girl smiled. There was something romantic about a covered  bridge. She thought, for the moment, that

Harry's interest had at last  drifted from his quest. Then she saw that his expression was very  serious. 

"That Sanders chap," remarked Harry. "Remember what the papers had  to say about him? His description of

what happened to the crowd?" 

"He said he was gassed," recalled Loretta, "and that he thought the  others were, too. The Feds believe that a

gas bomb was set off in the  bus." 

Harry nodded. 

"That bus had an open top," he said. "We saw the pictures of it.  The theory is that the gas worked so rapidly

that its escape didn't  matter. But that bothered me, until " 

He drew a pipe from between his lips, pointed the stem toward the  covered bridge. Loretta gasped a sudden

understanding: 

"If the bus had been going through the bridge. the gas couldn't  have escaped so quickly!" 

"Exactly!" said Harry. "What's more"  he pointed the pipestem  upward  "the bomb could have dropped

from those rafters. I'm going to  take a look at that bridge." 

Take a look he did, and came back with the news that the boards at  the side of the bridge were splintered as if

by gunshots. There were  stains, too, he said, that might have come from settling gas. 

Harry drove slowly through the bridge. The road on the other side  followed the creek, keeping well along the

brink. At one spot where the  grass thinned, Harry saw a pile of old boards. He was to remember them  a short

while later after the highway had revealed no other clues. 

Turning at a dirt road, Harry drove back to the bridge, on the  hunch that he had missed something there.

Coming up the creek, he and  Loretta caught a straight view of a small dam that they had not  previously

noticed. 

"Look how the water is coming through!" exclaimed Harry. "That dam  has broken recently." 


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"It's very old," declared Loretta, "and weak. Perhaps a heavy rain  " 

"There haven't been any heavy rains. My hunch is that the dam was  pulled just after the bus vanished. Let's

go back down the creek." 

THIS time, Harry got out and looked at the board pile. On the bank  just beyond the pile, he noticed marks

against the creek's edge, as if  boards had been placed there and pressed into the soil. 

Loretta, looking from the coupe, was puzzled when Harry took off  his shoes and socks, then rolled up his

trousers and began to wade in  the creek. 

The water was shallow, although if Harry had waded farther out, he  would have found it hip deep. Shallow

enough, however, in most spots,  to serve his next purpose. 

Stepping back into the car, Harry swung it over the brink and down  into the creek. Before Loretta could catch

her breath, they were  plowing through water that would have stopped the motor, except for  Harry's careful

management. 

Keeping at low speed, he continued that course for a full mile,  until Loretta was used to the sensation of

navigating a stream an  automobile. Then, as the sunlight glinted on the water ahead, Harry  swung into

shallows on the left. 

A stony road opened up beneath the wheels; the coupe jerked up the  bank. 

Harry was out again, pointing enthusiastically to muddy marks along  the abandoned road. 

"That creek was almost dry below the dam," he explained. "It gave  them the idea to bring the bus along the

creek bed. They made tracks,  but they destroyed them by having men pull the dam afterward. 

"This road doesn't show on the map. It's forgotten; covered over  with weeds and trees. But we can travel it,

like the bus did. Do you  know where it's going to take us?" 

Loretta shook her head. Harry showed her the road map. He didn't  have to word an explanation. It showed

itself on the map. 

A dozen miles away from the road where the bus had vanished was  another paved highway, that kept a

parallel course among the hills,  then took a long swerve. The map showed no connection between those two

roads. 

To reach one from the other would have meant a roundabout course of  more than fifty miles, by highway. But

there was a shorter link between  the two; one that only Harry had managed to detect. That link was  formed by

the creek and the stretch of old roadway that faded away in  the woods. 

It was difficult, in the gloom of the trees, to pick the course  that Harry wanted. But he managed it, and all

along were occasional  indications that the bus had traveled this direction. At last, the  remnants of the road

were gone; but a swing back to the creek made up  for it. 

Harry forded the coupe through the stream, found a dirt road on the  other side. It led to the highway. 

It was then a question of going left or right, for the ground had  been smoothed to cover any tracks of the bus.

The left was Harry's  first choice; he drove along at twenty miles an hour, straining his  eyes for any other clue. 


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He hadn't turned the lights on, for there was still some daylight  among the bare slopes where the present route

curved. 

NEARING a side road, Harry saw another car swing in ahead of him.  From the reckless sweep it made; he

was sure that its driver hadn't  noticed the coupe. 

Although the car ahead lacked lights, Harry kept track of it for  several miles. He saw it gain; then take a bend

in the road, a full  mile ahead. When he reached that bend, Harry had another distant view,  helped by a break

in the hills, where the yellow of the sunset  glimmered. 

There was a long stretch of road ahead; a stream to the left, with  a rickety suspension bridge that led across to

a spot where a house had  been, but stood no longer. Nothing else, except some sparsely placed  advertising

signs, could be seen among these lonely hillsides. 

A scene that was amazingly lonely. For somewhere along the road  ahead should have been a car  the one

that had swung in from the  byways. But the car wasn't in sight. It had vanished! 

Gone  like the bus that had disappeared a week or so ago! That  thought pounded Harry's brain; and Loretta,

also looking for the  missing car, grasped the same idea. Even their trail had vanished,  which meant that they

had reached the end of it: the very goal they  wanted. 

Grimly, Harry eased the coupe toward the hanging bridge. The sun  seemed to set as they neared it, for the

bridge was at a lower level.  Then gloom was all about them, for the sun had obligingly disappeared  as Harry

pointed the coupe along beside the creek. 

He was away from the bridge, parked in a spot that seemed safe,  with increasing dusk an ever greater help. In

a silence that seemed  great despite the murmur of the stream, Harry told Loretta to remain in  the car. 

On foot, The Shadow's agent intended to follow the last short  stretch of the amazing trail. 

CHAPTER XVI. CROSSED PLANS

OUTDOOR twilight brought no change to the atmosphere of Thumb  Gaudrey's invisible domain. There, it

was always darkness, except where  hanging incandescents glimmered from the roofs of narrow roughhewn

corridors. 

Along one of those passages a scrawny man was moving eagerly,  unmindful of the irregular floor that often

made him stumble. Thuggish  guards chuckled as he passed. They always had a laugh when Felix Dort  went

by in a hurry. 

The old professor was making one of his frequent visits to the  bigshot. Funny, the way Thumb humored the

goofy old inventor. But  Thumb was smart; therefore, he must have a reason. Such were the  opinions of the

crooks who were on vigil; and it applied to the huge  hoodlum who stood outside Thumb's office. He let Dort

enter without  announcement. 

From behind his desk, Thumb raised his heavy brows and noted Dort's  enthusiasm. The bigshot laid his

huge hands on the desk, pushed back  to hear what the inventor had to say. 

"It's finished!" cackled Dort. "Working to perfection, as I  promised it would be! It will stand any test, and

prove itself! My  efficiency motor is perfected!" 


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For once, Thumb let his own enthusiasm show. He came up from behind  the desk and strode for the door,

beckoning for Dort to follow.  Panting, the old man stood there clinging to the desk that Thumb had  left. In

his eagerness, Thumb did not notice that Dort looked  exhausted. 

He was outside the door, giving orders to the guard, before be  realized that Dort had not come with him.

Angrily, Thumb turned about  to go back into the office. 

At that moment, Thumb was several feet along the passage. He could  not see into the office; therefore, he

failed to catch the move that  Dort had made. With a new show of eagerness. the inventor had whipped  his

hand to the curtained wall in back of the kidnaper's desk. 

Lifting that drape at a spot where it was smooth, Dort gained the  glimpse that he expected. There was an

opening in the jagged wall that  the curtains masked  the entrance to a long, dark corridor that formed  a

slight incline. 

Dort's left hand let the curtain fall. His right, still clamped to  the desk, gave a jerk that pulled him back to

standing position. He  sagged, breathing hard again; his eyes were half closed, as Thumb  stepped into sight. 

A halfphrased oath stifled itself on Thumb's big lips. He smoothed  his voice to a humoring tone. 

"Come on, professor," he suggested. "We'll go slow. You've been  wearing yourself out; you've got to take it

easier." 

Dort nodded feebly. He let Thumb help him along the corridor. Their  slow progress accounted for the

interruption that came when two men  shouldered in from another passage. The arrivals were Uke Flenn and

Rigger Bayne. 

"EVERYTHING'S riding jake, chief," informed Uke. "The Feds aren't  getting nowhere. Of course, we

haven't dropped in to say hello to them;  but we've been listening a lot of places. They're still hanging around

Asheville, wondering what to do next." 

Rigger added a corroborating nod, along with the half smile that  certified his agreement. 

There was coldness in the way Thumb Gaudrey took the news. The  bigshot pulled a heavy watch from his

vest pocket, studied it sourly. 

"You got back too early," he told his lieutenants. "Unless it's  cloudy outside." 

"It isn't cloudy," admitted Uke. "The sun has set, though." 

"But there still was some daylight, wasn't there? Listen, both of  you, that order of mine is more important

than ever! No pulling in here  before dark. When it's dark, you can spot the glims of other cars and  douse your

own. Remember it!" 

Felix Dort was reaching up to tap Thumb's big shoulder. Reference  to the sunset hour had aroused his

interest. 

"If it's dark outside," remarked Dort, "you can ship my motor, Mr.  Gaudrey. With a whole night ahead, you

can get it to New York by  morning." 

Thumb looked interested. 


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"Get hold of Clip," he told Uke and Rigger. "Tell him to have the  truck crew ready. Clip will drive; you two

cover." 

When Thumb and Dort reached the laboratory, they were greeted by  the sound of a purring motor. It was

Dort's efficiency motor, standing  on its table, which, in turn, was deep in a large crate. 

"I started to pack it," explained Dort. "Then I realized that you  would want to see it in operation. Watch!" 

He worked at levers; the motor speed increased, as indicated by a  dial. There was another indicator that

registered the fuel consumption,  and Thumb was pleased to see how slowly it advanced. 

Dort was talking in terms of kilowatts, ratios, friction  elimination, and what not; but Thumb was more

interested in the dials  alone. They couldn't lie, and the story they told was a pleasant one. 

This motor would supplant many other types, rendering them  obsolete. It showed economy at higher speeds,

with less wear on the  parts. Once on the market, it would have a steady sale through its own  merits. 

There were "millions in it," according to Dort, and while Thumb  doubted that claim, he was convinced that

profits from the motor's  manufacture would be the blind that he needed, to account for the  wealth that he soon

would spend. 

While Dort bent above the motor, working at the levers, Thumb eyed  him with a contemptuous glare. One

clamp of Thumb's big hands around  the inventor's scrawny neck would mean the end of Felix Dort. In

perfecting his motor the inventor had arranged his own doom. 

However Thumb would need Dort for a while. If the motor failed to  meet full specifications, it would require

improvement. Thumb was  anxious to get that over with; therefore, he fell in with Dort's next  suggestion. 

"You must ship it at once!" pleaded Dort. "I have rushed the work  so that the motor could reach New York in

time for demonstration at the  convention of mechanical engineers. There are only a few days left." 

He paused; his eyes took on an eager gleam, as he added  plaintively: 

"If I could only go " 

"Not a chance, professor!" interposed Thumb gruffly. "We're keeping  you here. But I'll see that the motor

gets its test. Where's the  instruction sheets?" 

Dort produced them. Thumb glanced over them, a smile on his big  lips. This would be soft for Clip Rallin to

handle. Clip had a rep as a  promoter. He'd sold gold bricks, fake oil wells, and "green goods" in  his time.

Given something legitimate, Clip would go places. This motor  was just the ticket. 

Thumb could picture Clip demonstrating it to the engineers with no  other object than to gain their opinions

and testimonials. No stock to  sell; no buildup. Nothing, except to learn if the machine had the  goods. 

If it had, one man would own that motor outright and he would be  Thumb Gaudrey. The name of Felix Dort

would never be connected with the  Gaudrey Efficiency Motor, as it would be called. 

THUMB noted Dort stooped above the motor, crooning to his  brainchild. He couldn't hear the old man's

mutterings but he decided  they must be some foolish babble. Thumb was wrong. 


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"There's another way out," Dort was telling the motor. "Through the  curtain behind the desk. A long shaft

that goes up into the hill " 

As Thumb approached, Dort sped the motor, drowning his words with  its hum. Then with lips moving

wordlessly, Dort pulled the switch that  cut off the motor. 

Thumb called men in from an outer passage. They helped Dort finish  the crating of the motor in its solid

padded box. Dort told them the  motor could be carried on its side without injury So they tilted the  box. It

made a burden five feet long and four feet square. 

They lugged it to the underground garage where Dort, blinking from  a doorway where he stood with Thumb,

got his first view of a big bus  that occupied the center of the vaulted chamber, its nose pointed  outward. 

The box carriers passed the bus and put their burden in a light  truck. Clip Rallin was at the wheel; two other

men joined him in the  front seat. Rigger Bayne and Uke Flenn showed up to hop aboard with the  crate. 

Big doors slid open, closing after the truck passed. Outside, the  truck felt its way through thick darkness. At

last, its dim lights  blinked into being. 

Uke and Rigger dropped off; they watched the truck cross a level  space, then take a short climb to a road. As

it wheeled from sight  around a bend, Uke said: 

"O.K.  let's go back." 

Rigger's hand clamped Uke's arm. 

"Listen!" 

Both heard it: the clatter of a small stone rolling against a rock.  The sound was repeated farther away in the

darkness. A flashlight  gleamed cautiously. 

Someone had been out here watching the truck's departure. Not  knowing that two men had dropped off to

cover that same departure, the  unknown man had lessened his caution. He was moving back to some base. 

Following, stealthily in their tread along the ground that they  knew so well, the two crooks were guided by

the flashlight's blinks.  They caught a glimpse of a car that the man was about to enter. As the  car door swung

open, the thugs made a spring. 

THE attack was swift. They bowled their unsuspecting adversary to  the ground. As he flattened there,

helpless, they heard a girl's  stifled scream from the car. Rigger dived through the open door, gained  a grip

upon the second victim. 

The girl made a valiant fight, even after Uke added his weight to  the struggle. Breaking away, she was

momentarily lost from view; for  her dress was dark. It was Uke who made a grab for her, to catch the  back of

her dress. 

She tore away, letting the dress rip as she went. Uke was left with  the discarded garment as his only trophy;

but the girl's chance for  escape was ended. Her slip was white; its silkiness showed wraithlike  in the darkness

as she stumbled away across the stony ground. 


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Rigger traced her; overtook her. Diving for her ankle, he tripped  her upon ground which fortunately was

softer than the stony soil, for  it was the turf along a creek bank. Nevertheless, the girl was jarred;  too helpless

to put up further battle. 

Rigger dragged her into the light that Uke supplied. It was Uke who  first recognized her. 

"Look!" he exclaimed. "It's the Wyndon dame!" 

Rigger leaned around to stare at Loretta's face. With a chuckle, he  shoved her into Uke's grasp. 

"You drag her in," said Rigger. "I'll haul the guy that's beside  the car." 

Rigger's flashlight shone on the face of Harry Vincent, showing the  victim pale, half senseless from a blow he

had received on the side of  his head. Harry mumbled thickly, as Rigger pulled him to his feet. 

Then he was staggering, slumping in Rigger's grasp, when they  reached the entrance to the underground

garage where Uke's stubby  fingers had a throttle hold on Loretta's smooth neck, ready to supply a  choking

grip if the girl attempted to escape. 

Big doors slid back. Loretta felt a chill from the cavernous vault  of the garage. Where she was going, she

could not guess, except that  she would ultimately meet Thumb Gaudrey, the bigshot who ruled the  crooks

who had captured her. 

The same Thumb Gaudrey who had managed to overpower The Shadow! 

That thought awoke horror in Loretta's mind, coupled with a dread  of everything to come. Her fears were not

for herself, but for Harry  Vincent. An agent of The Shadow, Harry could expect no mercy from the  kidnaper

king. 

Valiantly, Loretta tried to whisper encouragement to her fellow  prisoner. With the grasp that Uke held against

her throat, words  couldn't leave her lips. But words, perhaps, would have been useless. 

Harry's own mumbles told that he was in no condition for coherent  conversation. Out of his mutters, Loretta

could distinguish only a  single word, that Harry repeated as though his fate depended on it. 

"Oxotone," he muttered. "Oxotone " 

Crossed plans had brought disaster. In his eagerness to have his  motor shipped to the outside world, Felix

Dort had unwittingly caused  the capture of Harry Vincent and Loretta Wyndon. 

All had done their best to serve The Shadow. In their turn, they  would need The Shadow's aid to remedy the

new misfortunes! 

CHAPTER XVII. THE CIRCLED TRAIL

THE truck that Clip Rallin was driving had covered just thirty  miles in slightly less than one hour. That was

good time, considering  the winding roads and heavy slopes up which the truck was forced to  labor. 

A few more hours, they would be on a better highway, a through  route where the light truck could average

close to fifty. They would  then reach more congested areas, away from all suspicion. 


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But Clip wasn't worrying for the present. The search for the  vanished bus had become very feeble. He wasn't

apt to be stopped along  these back roads. Besides, what connection could anyone find between  Dort's crated

motor and the kidnap racket run by Thumb Gaudrey? 

All that concerned Clip was how well the big crate was riding. At  intervals, he had ordered his companions to

look into the rear of the  truck and make sure that the box hadn't shifted. Their reports were  always the same:

the crate was riding well. 

At times, there were slight creaks from the rear of the truck; the  sort to be expected when traveling over an

irregular road. One of those  creaks differed from the others, although none of the men in the wide  front seat

noticed it. 

The creak came from the crate. It moved backward a few inches.  Three minutes; then another creak,

accompanied by a slight scrape.  Again the crate had performed a peculiar backward shift, too short to  draw

attention. 

The reason became visible. The end of the crate had opened. That  end, pointed forward in the truck, was

actually the bottom, when the  big box stood upright. It was the portion that held the table to which  the motor

was clamped. 

Someone was in that crate bottom  a person who had been packed  there when Dort had started the crating

operation alone! 

Hands had opened the box end; they had worked the crate back, far  enough for a body to squeeze out and

come up behind the seat where Clip  and the crooks were riding. The face that showed dimly was one that

Clip Rallin would have recognized, had his gaze been backward, instead  of along the road. 

It was the hawkish face of Lamont Cranston  the prisoner that  Thumb Gaudrey had once suspected was The

Shadow. Instead of occupying a  cell, as did the other millionaires, Cranston was a secret passenger  traveling

his way to freedom. 

AS he squeezed higher from the narrow space, Cranston became The  Shadow, by deed though not in

appearance. His longfingered hands slid  over the top of the truck seat, inched toward the neck of the crook

who  rode in the middle. 

An instant later, those fingers clamped the neck in question. The  Shadow's thumbs pressed hard against the

fellow's arteries. The crook  didn't give a gasp; he tightened, then slipped slowly downward. The  Shadow had

supplied a method of socalled jujitsu that he had learned  in Java; actually, a system of paralyzing a victim

by cutting off the  blood stream to his brain. 

Clip elbowed the slumped man beside him, then spoke to the crook on  the far side of the seat. 

"He's gone to sleep," gruffed Clip. "Wake him up. After a while,  we'll stop for coffee. A dose of Java will

make him stay awake." 

The thug didn't waken when prodded. He had already had a dose of  something that came from Java, quite

different from the coffee to which  Clip referred. 

"What's wrong with him?" demanded Clip, turning from the wheel. "He  looks like he's passed out! Say " 


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Clip's words ended with a snarl, as hands sped above the slumped  crook's back. They were aimed for Clip's

throat, and to avoid them,  Clip tried to perform two operations at once. With his left hand, he  was yanking the

steering wheel; while his right tried to pull a gun. 

The hands took Clip's neck, shoved him downward, to force his feet  against the brake pedal. The truck was

jouncing to a stop, as Clip lost  his hold on the wheel and let the halfdrawn gun slip from his fingers. 

By that time, The Shadow had swung to fight off a last adversary:  the fellow from the right. They were

locked in a hard struggle, during  which the crook tried to slug with a revolver that he had drawn but had

found no time to shoot. 

The Shadow twisted the thug's gun wrist just as the man's finger  found the trigger. The revolver roared, but

its muzzle wasn't toward  The Shadow. It was pointed at the sidewardtilted head of Clip Rallin. 

Half groggy, Clip was lying across the wheel, his foot tight on the  brake pedal. He took that bullet through

the brain; his body twisted  toward the window. Immediately, the pressure left the brake, for Clip's  inert foot

slipped from the pedal. 

The stalled truck began a slide down a slope; it canted toward a  steep bank. 

Jerking his last opponent clear across the seat, The Shadow grabbed  the handle of the emergency brake.

Ratchets clicked, but that was all.  The hand brake hadn't been inspected for six months; it was so worn  that it

was worthless. The truck took a dive through a clump of bushes  and began a series of long bounces down into

a valley. 

Fortunately, the slope was not a ravine. Finding a double grip, The  Shadow held tight, one hand on the

steering wheel, the other on the  window ledge at the right. His body was flinging, twisting like an  acrobat's,

but he retained his hold. 

When the truck finally crashed upon a pile of stones, bashing its  left side as it struck, The Shadow managed

to crawl out from the  debris. Looking down through the window on the upper side, he flicked a  flashlight on

the other occupants. 

All three were dead: Clip from the bullet, the others from the  wrecking of the truck. The man The Shadow

had paralyzed had been  rattled about like a withered peanut in its shell. The last crook had  clung to the

window by the driver's seat; his head had gone through  that window, for the truck to crush it. 

GATHERING the guns that the mobsters had carried, The Shadow made  his way up to the road. He followed

it a half mile, came to a dirt  byway that had a road sign, which he read by flashlight. Seating  himself on a

large stone, The Shadow spread a map and located the spot  where he was. 

On that map was a circle, its center the bridge where the bus had  been captured. 

Taking this spot where he was now as another center, The Shadow  traced a circle of the same size. 

Each of those circles had a radius of approximately thirty miles,  according to The Shadow's calculations. It

was obvious, therefore, that  where the circles crossed, would be a spot very close to the hidden  realm where

Thumb Gaudrey ruled. 

The circles showed two crossings. Either might be the one The  Shadow wanted. After a careful study, he

picked the wrong one. 


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Poor judgment was not the cause of The Shadow's mistake. On the  contrary, his choice seemed logical. The

spot that he picked was near a  town where several roads converged. It could be reached fairly  directly, from

the bridge where the bus had been attacked; also from  the valley where the truck had come to grief. 

The other choice  the right one  was at least sixty miles from  the bridge, by road, which did not fit The

Shadow's estimate of thirty.  The Shadow, of course, had no clue to the route that Harry Vincent had

discovered  where the creek bed, serving as a road, had cut the  distance from bridge to hideout down to

thirty miles. 

Beneath the light of a rising moon, The Shadow hiked five miles  into a town, where he found an old garage.

His presentable appearance,  his pose of Cranston, backed his argument that he was a person who had  been

expecting the arrival of friends, who had not appeared. 

He wanted to buy a car, and he had a pocketful of genuine cash with  which to buy it, supplied from the real

funds that Felix Dort had  accumulated while passing counterfeit currency through Thumb Gaudrey.  For one

hundred and fifty dollars, The Shadow purchased an old car that  belonged to the garage owner. A car, the

man said, that was serviceable  and equipped with good rubber. 

Driving his new property, The Shadow reached the vicinity that  seemed the likely area for Thumb's

headquarters. The drive took the  better part of an hour, and The Shadow spent two more hours searching  that

terrain. 

The moonlight did not show a single location that could house  Thumb's headquarters. The hills were too

gentle, and they were mostly  farmland, away from the coalmining area. Furthermore, a town  encroached

upon the few slopes that might have been suitable. 

Either The Shadow's calculations were entirely wrong, or Thumb's  underground domain lay near the other

meeting spot of the circles.  Seated in his car, The Shadow studied the map for clues that fitted the  new

circumstances. His lips phrased a laugh of grim understanding, as  his forefinger traced along the creek. 

Though valuable hours had been lost, The Shadow had at last  reasoned out an answer to the riddle. 

Again traveling the highway, The Shadow started the long trip that  would take him to the new searching

ground. He didn't press the old car  to its limit, for the night was only half gone. There seemed no need  for

hurry in this careful quest. 

Once more, The Shadow was mistaken; but not at fault. There was no  evidence whatever by which he could

have learned of the plight that had  overtaken Harry Vincent and Loretta Wyndon. 

COMING to a fork, The Shadow took a dirt road to the right, for he  remembered that the truck had ridden

roughly at first. The road swung  him past a hill, where the moonlight gleamed to perfection. Much like  the

other steep hills that The Shadow had passed, this one showed an  important difference. 

Every other hill had displayed an old mine shaft somewhere up its  slope. This hill lacked such a patch of

blackness. It had bushes,  however, and rocks. Those, perhaps, could mask a tiny opening. Not  large enough

for a bus or a truck, but suitable for the mouth of the  secret exit that Dort had discovered when Thumb

Gaudrey had left him in  the office. 

The Shadow hadn't forgotten the crooned information that Dort had  given him while testing the motor. This

bushstudded hillside struck  The Shadow as important; but before investigating it on foot, he  decided to see

the other side of the hill. 


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Driving back to the fork, The Shadow took the paved road. It  followed the course of a creek, with many

turns. Passing one curve, The  Shadow saw a hanging bridge that crossed the creek to rocky soil, where  there

was no house. 

There was something else, however, just past the bridge: an object  that looked innocent. It might even have

passed The Shadow's scrutiny,  if he had not remembered a certain word, that he now whispered in a  soft tone

of recollection. 

The Shadow didn't stop. Instead, he kept the car along its course,  anxious to clear this place where hidden

watchers might be on guard. As  he rode, he surveyed a hillside opposite the one that was reached by  the

bridge. Sight of trees and rocks against the moonlight were  pleasing to The Shadow. 

This time, his laugh had a tone of finality that betokened the  plans of a master who dealt with strategy. The

Shadow had found the  main entrance to Thumb's headquarters, and he had mapped a campaign  concerning it. 

A few miles beyond the hill, The Shadow reached a cluster of  houses, one a little store that handled gasoline.

Soon, he was pounding  at the door. A man came out, ruffled because a motorist was demanding  gas two

hours before dawn. 

Humored by the friendly tone of Cranston, the storekeeper finally  agreed to let the stranger use the telephone.

Outside, filling the gas  tank, the man didn't hear the words that Cranston uttered after his  longdistance call

was established. 

Weird words, those; not in the quiet voice of Cranston, but in the  whisper of The Shadow. Words that

electrified the listener at the other  end. The Shadow was talking to Vic Marquette, giving specific orders  that

the Fed repeated in a tone that was no longer sleepy. 

Five minutes later, The Shadow was away, driving for the dirt road  that skirted the back hill. Two hours more

of moonlight; then dawn. 

Others would see that dawn; but not The Shadow. His work lay where  dawn had never come! 

CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIPLE ORDEAL

HARRY VINCENT'S brain was pounding under the beating of invisible  hammers; his nerves seemed to

crack with every imaginary stroke.  Through that torture came the harshness of a rasping voice that  sometimes

rose to a thundering boom. 

"You're The Shadow. The Shadow " 

Eyes closed, Harry shook his head. He'd heard that impeachment a  hundred times, and had constantly denied

it. In the moments when the  torture lapsed, Harry wished he was The Shadow. 

His chief, perhaps, could find a way to meet this ordeal that to  Harry had become a maddening misery. 

Massive hands clutched Harry's neck. It was lucky that they didn't  tighten, for their grip was the sort that

could bring rapid death.  Harry heard a gasp, its tone pleading, and knew that it came from  Loretta Wyndon. 

Then the big hands hoisted Harry from his chair, jarred him back  again with such force that he let his eyes

come open. 


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Harry saw a face in front of him  a bloated face, with eyes as red  as the draperies that covered the wall of

this garish room. He clutched  the arms of his chair, dug his feet into the overlapped rugs and tilted  his head

back away from the mammoth fist that Thumb Gaudrey shook in  front of it. 

During the past few hours  ever since he had regained something of  his consciousness  Harry had been

seeing more than enough of Thumb  Gaudrey. Enough, too, of the bigshot's lieutenants Rigger Bayne and

Uke Flenn, who flanked Thumb like a pair of lesser demons aiding a  satanic majesty. 

All that those fellows needed were pitchforks and a blazing fire,  to make this room a scene from the infernal

regions. 

Stepping back to the desk. Thumb looked at the men beside him then  motioned toward Harry. 

"I've talked enough," boomed Thumb. "You tell him!" 

They "told" him, Rigger and Uke did, with evidence to back their  argument. Rigger brought The Shadow's

cloak and hat; Uke produced other  objects from the briefcase  the file that bore the symbol of The Hand  and

the papers that went with it. 

Clanking big automatics on the desk they announced that those were  weapons that The Shadow used. One

had been found on Harry's person; the  other in his briefcase. That proved their story. 

Each approached with a loaded .45 and they pressed the muzzles  against the sides of Harry's head. They were

going to blow out his  brains, they told him. That would be a great finish for The Shadow:  death from his own

weapons. 

The threat didn't break Harry's story. He wasn't The Shadow; and he  said so. 

There was a pause after that, while Harry met the sympathetic gaze  of Loretta who was bound to a chair in

the corner of the room. She  looked sorry and bedraggled in her mudstained white slip; but all the  while,

Loretta had been bravely pleading Harry's cause. She, too,  declared that he was not The Shadow; but Thumb

had finally roared for  her to keep silent. 

"So you say you aren't The Shadow," declared Thumb, finally. "And  you've got the moll backing you. Smart

stuff  but it don't get by! The  trouble is you know what would be coming to you if you admitted you  were

The Shadow. 

"We'll fix that. You'll get what's coming to you anyway! Clamp him  to the iron chair"  Thumb had turned to

Rigger and Uke  "and we'll  make him squeal even if he is The Shadow!" 

RIGGER pulled a cord in a corner of the room. A side curtain lifted  to show a wide hollow in the blackish

rock. Instead of one chair coming  into sight there were four all alike. They were made of iron and each  had a

high skeleton frame above it. 

Rigger and Uke grabbed Harry. As he struggled they tore his shirt  from his back. They handled him roughly,

as they forced him to the  nearest chair. They weren't taking chances with anyone who might be The  Shadow. 

Planking Harry in the chair, they clamped a large metal band around  his waist, another about his neck. His

back against the cold metal,  Harry could feel a sharp chill that ran the length of his spine. 


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His wrists were next. They were fixed in metal rings attached to  the uprights of the skeleton frame. Pinioned

loosely, Harry felt  nothing more than discomfort, until Rigger began to work a winch beside  the chair. 

Then the metal rings moved upward, until Harry's arms were  spreadeagled above his head. His shoulder

muscles humped beneath his  flesh; the strain showed a corresponding stretch below his chest. Those

tightening cables, it seemed, were meant to pull his arms from his  sockets  until Rigger stopped, and undid

the neck clamp. 

Loretta gave a horrified gasp. Like Harry, she realized that if his  shoulders stood the strain, his body would

be racked. The cables that  pulled above would lift him; the metal belt would restrain him. There  wouldn't be

much left of Harry Vincent, if the crooks continued with  that ordeal. 

By this time, there was another spectator. The office door had  opened, to admit Felix Dort. The old inventor

had been paddling back  and forth during the past few hours, as if interested in how matters  were progressing,

yet also anxious to finish work in his laboratory. 

To Loretta, Dort had seemed nothing more than another of Thumb's  tools; and she found that impression

strengthened upon Dort's present  visit. 

There was no touch of mercy in the old man's eyes. He acted quite  delighted at the sight of Harry's body,

strained and stretched from  waist to neck, with arms that were about to be elongated. Loretta heard  Dort

chuckle. 

So did Thumb Gaudrey. 

"You like it, professor?" queried the bigshot. "Stick around and  see the rest. The show's just starting!" 

Dort shook his head. He glanced in the direction of his laboratory.  Turning about, he started through the door;

once outside, he must have  paused, for, of a sudden, his cackly laugh returned. It was no longer a  chuckle, but

an unrepressed burst of insane mirth. 

"Listen to him!" began Thumb. Then, with a tilt of his overbalanced  head: "Wait a minute!" 

He was listening to another of Dort's mad laughs. Thumb looked at  Rigger and Uke. 

"Do you think what I'm thinking?" he asked. "I've got a hunch that  the old geezer has something different in

his bean." 

The others nodded. They had caught a curious irony in Dort's laugh.  It couldn't be meant for Harry Vincent,

even if the prisoner happened  to be The Shadow. Dort, though he might like the idea of torture given  to

anyone, had no grudge against The Shadow. 

It was more like a laugh that was meant for persons whom Dort knew.  It seemed to proclaim that someone

was a fool and that Dort could  explain why. 

"Leave Vincent as he is" ordered Thumb. "You two trail the  professor. See what he's up to." 

THE next ten minutes were tedious for Harry Vincent, but he did not  find them painful for his body was

merely taut, not stretched. To  Loretta, there were minutes of terrible anxiety, for she was convinced  that the

delay would merely postpone Harry's ordeal, not end it. 


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Then they heard a scuffle from the passage. Thumb Gaudrey arose  behind his desk, as Rigger and Uke came

dragging Dort between them. The  crooks were trying to shout something, but Dort's mad cackle drowned

them. 

"Fools!" he chuckled. "That's not The Shadow! You had The Shadow,  and he's left you! Left you " 

Hands clamped over Dort's mouth. Rigger and Uke explained. They had  found the professor snooping in a

passage near the laboratory.  Surprising him, they had discovered a hole leading up through the rock. 

"Into the cell corridor," explained Rigger. "So we stopped by  there, when we came up." 

"Yeah," added Uke. "The hole goes to Cranston's cell. Only,  Cranston ain't in there any longer." 

Dort relished that announcement as a joke. His cackle brought him  prompt attention from Thumb Gaudrey. 

"So Cranston was The Shadow?" quizzed Thumb. "All right, professor.  You've wised us to that much. Spill

the rest. Where'd he go after you  helped him out?" 

Dort didn't answer. His merriment increased. Thumb's fingers gave a  snap like the clicking of a lobster's

claws 

"He went out in that box!" decided Thumb. "Well, it's up to Clip to  handle him. Maybe Clip will, maybe he

won't; but we're wise to the game  and we're going to find out the rest of it  from this laughing hyena!" 

The "laughing hyena" was Dort. Thumb ordered the lieutenants to  shove him into an iron chair. They grabbed

the inventor, ripped his  shirt from him, as they had done with Harry. But Dort, despite his  scrawniness, put up

a neat tussle. He was slippery when they tried to  hold him. It was several minutes before they had him in a

torture  chair. 

"Stretch him along with Vincent," ordered Thumb. Then, noting  Dort's thinness, "Take it slower, though,

because those ribs of his  will crack easy. We want to hear him talk before he snaps." 

Dort canted his head against one of his upstretched arms. His eye  was on a clock that adorned Thumb's desk.

He gave a defiant chuckle. 

The scene was too much for Loretta. Trying to twist from the ropes  that held her, she pleaded with Thumb

Gaudrey. 

"I'll tell you everything!" she promised. "I know all about The  Shadow  where he's gone, what he intends to

do " 

Harry croaked for Loretta to keep silence. Before he could repeat  the admonition, he heard a husky whisper

from Dort. Harry tightened his  lips. 

There was nothing that Loretta could tell; therefore, it had seemed  folly to let the girl try to bluff the crooks.

She could supply only a  few minutes' delay at most. Then, stirred by Dort's whisper, Harry  realized that the

old professor had himself produced what seemed a  useless delay. Perhaps Dort wasn't as crazy as he acted. If

such were  the case, Loretta's move would help. 

THE ropes were off the girl. She looked slim and frail, a helpless  thing in white, as Rigger and Uke dragged

her to Thumb's desk for the  bigshot to begin his quiz. But the questions that Thumb drove were  sharp ones.


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Loretta, it proved, did not know as much about The Shadow  as she claimed. 

Either that, or she was holding out. The latter possibility gave  Thumb his next idea. His big lips showed a

grin of anticipation. Thumb  pointed to the third of the torture chairs. 

"Put her there," he told Uke and Rigger. "Just like the others.  When they see what she gets, they'll talk  even

if she can't." 

They dragged Loretta toward the chair, beating down her slender  fighting hands. Standing beside his desk,

leaning on one big hand,  Thumb watched that scene. His eyes were interested only in Loretta,  until Dort

suddenly shrilled another of his wild laughs. 

"Too late!" he screeched gleefully. "Too late! You waited too long,  Gaudrey!" 

Before Thumb could digest the meaning of those words, another laugh  swept through that drapewalled

room; a tone that made Dort's crazed  mirth dwindle. It was a laugh that brought Thumb Gaudrey full about,

facing toward his desk, from which the tone had seemingly come. 

Rigger and Uke turned from the torture chair, their hands loosening  from Loretta's bare shoulders. Like their

chief, they had heard that  weird taunt that left no doubt as to The Shadow's intended moves. 

For that laugh was The Shadow's own! 

Behind Thumb's desk, in front of the halflifted curtain, stood  Lamont Cranston, his eyes blazing from his

masklike face. The burn of  those eyes were a symbol of identity: the eyes of The Shadow! 

The intrepid fighter had found the secret exit from Thumb's lair.  Through the shaft that pierced the hill, he

had come to meet the  bigshot in his throne room. He was one against three; yet The Shadow  held the odds. 

From his fists pointed two of the revolvers that he had brought  from the truck in which Clip Rallin had

perished. Those guns were ready  to deliver doom to other crooks. 

Foremost of those who faced The Shadow's wrath was Thumb Gaudrey,  the last member of The Hand! 

CHAPTER XIX. STRIFE UNDERGROUND

IT took a bold crook to combat The Shadow, when the latter had the  edge. A bold crook, and a tough one.

Thumb Gaudrey had those  qualifications. His effort toward combat looked suicidal, as he began  it; but there

was method in his boldness. 

Faced toward The Shadow, Thumb started a charge that a bull  elephant could have envied. He hoped by that

mastodonic lunge to reach  his cool opponent before The Shadow had a chance to use his guns. The  desk lay

in between; Thumb had to clear it to get at The Shadow. That  element seemed highly in The Shadow's favor. 

It proved otherwise; and therewith proved also that Thumb Gaudrey  possessed craft along with brawn. 

As he lunged, Thumb clamped his huge hands on the front edge of the  desk. as if to vault it. Instead, he threw

his shoulders into a  terrific heave. hoisting the desk three feet in the air, straight  toward The Shadow. 

The flat top of the desk was flipping over like a door swung on a  horizontal lunge; with the bulk of the desk


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coming with it. The thing  formed a revolving barrier that blocked The Shadow's aim; and likewise,  it was an

approaching missile that threatened to bowl over the fighter  in its path. 

The Shadow had no chance to sidestep. He managed instead, to wheel  back against the curtained wall,

reaching there just as the desk hit  the spot where he had been. The desk took a revolving bounce; its final

thump came against The Shadow's knees. Catching his balance, he  couldn't aim within the next half second. 

That interval brought Thumb Gaudrey. Carrying his lunge across the  overturned desk, the kidnaper pounced

upon The Shadow in elephantine  style. Scooping a gun wrist with each of his hamsized hands, Thumb  kept

his big fists driving for The Shadow's throat. 

There was The Shadow, pressed down toward the wall, in the clutch  of fleshy pincers that bound his wrists

and neck together, almost  encircling them. From his clenched fists poked the barrels of his guns,  sprouting up

from behind his ears, where he couldn't use them against  Thumb Gaudrey. 

All that The Shadow could perform was a body lash that carried him  away from the wall. He flattened, face

upward, beneath Thumb's bulk,  his head pointed toward the torture chairs. 

The head was tilted back upon a rug. Its eyes showed anguish. His  fingers seemed to be making a vain grasp

to hold the guns that were  leveled along the floor. Fingers that had a motion, as if strumming  piano keys in

search of a forgotten melody. 

From their torture chairs, Harry and Dort stared helplessly. So did  Loretta, although she was not yet bound.

Rigger and Uke had dropped her  when they heard The Shadow's laugh; she had shrunk to the floor in  front of

the empty iron chair, her hands huddled crosswise to her  shoulders. 

DURING moments that had been all too rapid, Loretta had felt the  thrill of rescue. A rescue that was timely,

too, for it had come at the  very instant when she could fight no longer. 

Given their way, Rigger and Uke would have had her pinioned in the  third chair, in the same state as Harry

and Dort. They hadn't managed  to begin that operation; but their chance would come again, if Thumb

Gaudrey conquered The Shadow. 

Then, before Loretta realized their intent, Rigger and Uke were on  their way to aid in the conquest. They

were diving for those guns upon  which The Shadow had almost lost his hold, to snatch them before his  feeble

forefingers could find their triggers. 

Loretta gave a hopeless cry. 

If she had only struggled with those crooks again, instead of  cringing away! She could at least have given

The Shadow an opportunity  to fight Thumb Gaudrey alone. But that opportunity was ended, and so  was The

Shadow  at least, such was the flash that came to Loretta's  brain. 

Then, with kaleidoscopic suddenness, the odds had turned again. The  Shadow's laugh taunted from his

upturned lips, at the moment when  Rigger and Uke were half upon him. 

Like creatures detached, performing a volition of their own, his  hands ended their pretended plucking at the

guns. Instead, they  tightened instantaneously, fingers clamped to triggers. Those guns  behind The Shadow's

ears coughed. 


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Two attackers howled as their lunges turned to sprawls. Rigger  Bayne and Uke Flenn were rolling on the

tufted rugs, each clipped by a  bullet. 

The Shadow, all but helpless in Thumb's clutch, had not been able  to attempt a distant aim at the lieutenants.

But he had duped them into  becoming human targets, by that trickery with his revolvers. Almost  above the

gun muzzles, they were where they couldn't be missed, when  The Shadow had fired. 

That wasn't all. The roar of these guns, the spurts of flame before  his eyes, made Thumb Gaudrey stare in the

direction of the shots. He  saw the writhing figures of his lieutenants and bellowed a startled  oath. Savagely,

he threw more weight upon The Shadow's throat. 

His wrists a buffer, The Shadow didn't choke. Instead, he welcomed  Thumb's forward shift. It gave The

Shadow's knees a chance to work.  Heels digging hard into the rug beneath them, he brought those knees

straight upward with the force of pistons. 

Even Thumb's bulk couldn't outweigh that thrust. The bigshot took  a somersaulting dive across The

Shadow, losing his grip as he went.  Hitting the floor, Thumb bounced around with the speed of a landing  cat,

to go after another grab. He was quick enough to scoop The  Shadow's wrists again; but this time, he couldn't

carry the clutch to  his foeman's throat. 

The fighters came to their feet, reeled across the forms of Rigger  and Uke. Stumbling against the desk, they

hit the floor. As they lashed  there, The Shadow lost one gun and Thumb grabbed it; but The Shadow  slashed

his other weapon against the lost revolver so forcefully that  he knocked it to the floor. 

Loretta saw The Shadow's shoulders and head rise above the  overturned desk. She saw Uke Flenn, lying very

still upon a lighthued  rug that was absorbing a crimson stain from the crook's heart blood.  She saw Rigger

Bayne; but he was still alive. Propped upon one elbow,  he was painfully bringing a revolver upward, hoping

for a dying aim at  The Shadow. 

This time, Loretta's frantic thoughts brought action. On the floor,  away from the iron chair, lay her white slip,

lost in the struggle just  before The Shadow's arrival. Seizing the silken garment, Loretta sprang  forward and

flung it across Rigger's head. 

Blinded, the mobster tried to snatch away the thin cloth that  blanketed his vision. He used his free hand for

the task, and thereby  lost the benefit of his propping elbow. Slipping to the floor, he fired  wildly; his tilted

gun spent its bullets against the ceiling. 

The effort was too much. Tangled in the mass of white, Rigger Bayne  succumbed. His revolver dropped from

his useless fingers. Loretta  grabbed it, looked for Thumb Gaudrey. 

TWO fighters had rolled apart. The Shadow was coming up beside the  wall. His face  the features of

Cranston  showed strain despite their  maskish look. They were streaked with blood from a forehead gash 

blood that his quick hand wiped from his eyes. 

Thumb Gaudrey, too, came up, displaying titanic strength. He was  lifting himself with hands that clamped the

overturned desk. On his  feet, he heaved his yardwide shoulders and hauled the desk to one  knee. Rolling the

desk higher, he balanced it upon a shoulder, ready to  hurl it in the manner a man of ordinary strength would

fling a small  log. 

A strange laugh, weird despite its weariness, made Thumb hasten. He  saw the figure of Cranston propped

against the wall, bringing a gun to  bear. Thumb threw the desk; quick spurts from the gun blasted bullets  that


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splintered the woodwork. 

The flying shield saved Thumb. But the missile did not harm The  Shadow. This time, he had space to

sidestep as he fired. The desk  crashed the base of the wall beside him. 

Thumb Gaudrey hadn't stopped. He was at the door, yanking it open.  Again The Shadow fired; the door,

flung in his direction, was another  shield for Thumb. Loretta found her wits again and began to shoot from

her angle; but the kick of the revolver surprised her. Her shots were  wide. 

She ran to the door, hoping to overtake the fleeing bigshot. On  the threshold, she dived back again. Thumb

was bellowing to the outside  guards, pointing them into the office. They saw Loretta just before she  sprang

away. 

Then the guards arrived. They expected to find a flimsily attired  girl, hopelessly attempting to defend a pair

of pinioned prisoners.  Instead, they were greeted by a shivering laugh, that seemed a product  of the

squarewalled room itself. Against the crimson drape, they saw a  shape in black. 

The Shadow! 

From the floor beside the overturned desk, the master fighter had  plucked his cloak and hat. He had donned

those garments and had armed  himself with his own automatics, those fully loaded weapons that Rigger  and

Uke had so carelessly handled a while ago, and then replaced on  Thumb's desk. 

The big guns spoke. The guards, too startled to beat that fire,  went reeling out through the door, hoping to

flee by the route that  Thumb Gaudrey had taken. 

The Shadow pointed to the prisoners, ordered Loretta to release  them. He took up the chase, and Loretta

could hear his automatics  booming from the outer passage, while she loosed the clamps that held  Harry

Vincent and Felix Dort. 

Freed, the prisoners snatched up guns. Holding the revolver that  she had obtained, Loretta dashed out into the

passage with them.  Following the twisted corridors, they found The Shadow by the sounds of  his guns. 

THOUGH he had failed in his plan to take over silently the office  that formed the heart of Thumb's domain,

The Shadow had rectified that  matter. The spot where he stood was a connecting passage that divided  the

maze of mine shafts. 

He had driven Thumb Gaudrey outward, along with a flock of the  bigshot's followers. Within, protected by

The Shadow, lay the deep  corridor that ran along the row of cells. Telling his aids to go there  and release the

prisoners, The Shadow added another instruction,  addressed to Felix Dort 

The inventor knew all about these underground corridors. He was to  break into the room near the cell corridor

where the luggage of the  kidnapped millionaires had been stored. It would form the assembly hall  for the

captives, when they were released. 

Alone, The Shadow took an outward path. All along, he was greeted  by the hasty fire of retreating mobsters.

His answering shots were  rapid, and effective. As marksmen sprawled, the others ran to reach the  domed

garage that formed the outer chamber of this hidden realm. 

As the last of them staggered into the garage, Thumb Gaudrey  pointed them into the big bus that had brought

the millionaires.  Stooping low, Thumb hurled a gas bomb back into the passage. Through  the vapor from the


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breaking bomb, he saw a blackcloaked figure shift  from sight, an arm lifted across its face. 

"The pineapple didn't get him," growled Thumb, "but it will hold  him as long as we need. With those spark

plugs gone from the other  cars"  he gestured toward the side walls of the garage  "The Shadow  won't be

able to follow when he gets here. Let's go!" 

A dozen crooks heard Thumb's order with satisfaction, and relief.  Cut off from the underground depths, they

wanted this hideout no  longer. They were ready for flight, along with their leader. 

Out of disaster, Thumb Gaudrey had gained what he was willing to  consider victory. He, the last member of

The Hand, was escaping the  wrath of The Shadow! 

CHAPTER XX. CRIME'S FINISH

DAWN had arrived amid those fierce scenes in the depths of Thumb  Gaudrey's lair. It was the dawn that

Felix Dort had played for  not by  sight, but by the time registered by Thumb's desk clock. The hour of  dawn

had been the zero hour promised by The Shadow. 

Spreading across the West Virginia hillside, that dawn had revealed  a barren sight to men who had stolen into

cover under the blanket of  night. Fading moonlight hadn't shown them, when they had taken  positions on a

hillside just above a winding road. 

With dawn, those men were peppering their leader with questions, as  they huddled alongside him. The

answers that he gave were whispered  along the line. 

This was the right spot. Of that, Vic Marquette was certain. He had  been told to come here by The Shadow.

No one else could have spoken in  such a weird and sinister tone. 

Yet Marquette, himself, had doubts that he did not express. 

The scene below was too placid to suggest crime. It began with the  road, not many rods away. Beyond that

was a peaceful creek, crossed by  a hanging bridge. Though wider than most of such bridges, which often

were mere footpaths, this one looked very dilapidated. 

Stout ropes held it in place; but those ropes had a frayed  appearance  and no wonder. If there had been a

house on the other side  of the creek, it had certainly been gone for years; hence the bridge  could be no more

than a relic of the past. 

The only other object visible beyond the creek, was a large  advertising sign that stood some forty feet or so

up the slope,  buttressed by a shelf of rock that peered through the soil. It was an  ideal place for such a sign,

for it could be seen from either direction  on the road. But Vic Marquette was tired of looking at that sign. 

"Oxotone," he grumbled. "The stuff that gives you vigor! Makes you  young when you're old! If that's so, why

don't you take it when you're  young, and never got old? Oxotone! You fellows can drink it. I prefer  baloney

when it's sliced!" 

There were chuckles from the crouching Feds. They liked Vic's jest,  and were passing it along. Vic decided

to spring another; he began to  figure what else he knew about Oxotone. 

"Say!" Vic's whisper was sudden. "Oxotone  that's the stuff old  Hastings Bleer peddles! He's one of the


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bunch that they snatched!" 

The situation was a coincidence, but enough to make Marquette take  a new interest in the sign. He reached

for a pair of field glasses,  used them to look at the sign. He noted a thin streak that looked like  a line dividing

the sign into two sections. 

Marquette laid down the glasses. 

"That sign's split!" he said to the men beside him. "Just as if it  were " 

Vic said no more. The Oxotone sign had begun to move. Vic was  right; it was divided, and each section

formed a door. The portions  slid apart, smoothly, silently, on welloiled rollers, showing a huge  black hole in

the hill. 

The amazement that gripped the Feds might have been less, had they  known certain facts. Days ago, The

Shadow had heard a crook's cryptic  remark: "We're driving for old Oxotone " and later Harry Vincent,

outside those very doors had muttered the word "Oxotone" for Loretta's  benefit. 

By moonlight, The Shadow had seen that sign, one of very few in  West Virginia. He had known then what

the crook had meant. "Old  Oxotone" in the parlance of the crooks, was the nickname for the sign  that

camouflaged the entrance to their underground garage; not a  sobriquet that they applied to Hastings Bleer. 

WITHIN half a minute, Vic Marquette and his men learned much that  The Shadow knew. Something nosed

out through the arched blackness in  the rocks, to become a mass of red in the sunlight. The thing  materialized

into a vehicle that the Feds recognized from its  description: 

The bus that had carried the kidnapped millionaires! 

Timidly, the bus seemed to choose a path. Men inside were making  sure that they were not observed. They

couldn't see the Feds hiding  behind the rocks and bushes opposite. The bus eased down the slope,  took a wide

angle along level ground to reach the bridge. 

Watchers saw the bridge sway as the heavy vehicle crossed it; but  the structure did not collapse. They

realized that the frayed  supporting ropes were camouflage. Inside those ropes were steel cables  that gave the

suspension bridge great strength. 

Feds were awaiting orders from Marquette. They saw his lips go  tight. His thought seemed to pass from man

to man. 

To all appearances that bus was being used to transport prisoners  to a new hideout. If so, an attack would

jeopardize the lives of the  helpless millionaire captives of Thumb Gaudrey. 

Vic Marquette had learned the identity of the bigshot from The  Shadow. He knew the ways of Thumb

Gaudrey. If Thumb had chosen to  change his headquarters, he was the sort who would send a load of

hostages ahead of him to bear the brunt of any battle. 

It was a sound that made Marquette raise the eyes that he had fixed  upon the bus; a tone that roused

recollections of a voice across the  wire though this token was no whisper. 

The sound was a strident laugh  a fierce peal of mockery that  seemed to come from nowhere. Vic's gaze

went instantly toward the gap  upon the hill, for he associated its blackness with The Shadow. 


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There he saw The Shadow. 

Out from the forgotten entrance came the cloaked figure, tiny  against the rocks. Lowering one arm from his

face, The Shadow  brandished an automatic in his other fist. Pointing it at the bus, he  fired rapid shots. 

Pygmy spurts from a midget gun. The bus was across the bridge,  heading up to the road and at that distance

The Shadow's shots were  useless. 

The reason for the firing hit Vic Marquette as suddenly as if one  of those lost bullets had stung him. 

The Shadow would not have begun that fire, futile though it was, if  prisoners were in the bus. His shots were

not for the crooks; they were  a signal to the Feds, a tipoff to the fact that the bus could be  attacked. 

Vic Marquette turned his head from left to right and shouted: 

"Take it!" 

OUT from cover poured the Feds, aiming their Tommy guns for the bus  as it swung into the road, less than

fifty yards below them. A wide  line, they outflanked the crookmanned vehicle; and the drilling fire  that they

gave made the barks of answering revolvers sound like dud  firecrackers. 

When the Feds reached the bus they found a dead man in the driver's  seat; others lying all along the floor.

The few who remained alive were  too badly wounded to offer any resistance. 

On the far side of the bus, near the back, was an opened emergency  door. Looking through it Marquette saw

three men running across the  suspension bridge. One was blocky and ungainly, but he outstripped the  others

despite his crablike gait. 

Thumb Gaudrey was heading back for the mine, where The Shadow had  vanished into the blackness. The

bigshot had the desperate hope that  he could bury himself some place where pursuers couldn't find him. 

Cool fire flattened the two crooks who ran with Thumb, but the past  master of The Hand was lucky. He

staggered once or twice; but whether  he had tripped on the rough ground, or been nicked by bullets,

Marquette couldn't tell. 

Vic led the squad that pursued across the bridge. They saw Thumb  disappear through the outlet on the hill.

They reached the hidden  garage, found the passage that led inward from it. A tinge of gas  reached their

nostrils, but it wasn't strong enough to bother them. The  gas had been settling when The Shadow came

through. 

There were shots from below; Vic and his men supplied a fire of  their own. Reaching a turn in a passage they

heard a welcoming shout.  Out from behind a pillar of blackveined rock stepped a shirtless man  who held a

smoking revolver. Vic Marquette recognized Harry Vincent. 

With The Shadow's agent was a scantilyclad girl who also held a  gun. Harry introduced her as Loretta

Wyndon, and Marquette's eyes went  wide when he learned the identity of the cute brunette. Loretta's

disappearance had been reported only the night before, by relatives who  had returned from Europe. 

Then, remembering the chase, Vic queried: "Which way did Gaudrey  go?" 

Harry pointed along a passage. 


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"We ambushed him," he said. "Drove him through to the room he calls  his office." 

Marquette turned, gestured to the men who followed him. Before they  had gone three paces, Vic stopped

short. He heard the reports of guns  from another direction. From the heaviness of their fire, he took them  for

rifles. 

"It's the prisoners," explained Harry. "They're loose, and they've  reclaimed their hunting rifles. They're

hunting down the rats that  Thumb Gaudrey left here." 

Marquette decided that the millionaires deserved their fun. He and  his squad headed along the passage to the

office. They reached the door  and flung it open, in time to see the broad back of Thumb Gaudrey as he  leaned

across the battered desk. 

There was someone beyond that desk  a person hidden by Thumb's  bulk. That person had replaced the desk

where it belonged, and had been  waiting here, in case the kidnap king returned. Thumb was aiming a  revolver

as he leaned, threatening the being opposite. 

Together, Marquette and his men stabbed shots into the bigshot's  back. Their fire formed a rousing echo to a

gun that spoke ahead of  theirs: a .45 that drove a bullet into the heart of Thumb Gaudrey. That  was certain,

from the way that Thumb jolted back just as he received  the fire of the Feds. 

Striking the desk, as bullets plunged him forward, Thumb rolled to  the floor, his unfired revolver hitting the

thick rug beside him.  Marquette, foremost of the Feds, sighted the black shape that stood  beyond; met the

burn of eyes from the being who had finished Thumb  Gaudrey. 

Then a chilling laugh swept through that room  a tone that might  have been a knell; perhaps a claim of

triumph. It seemed to blend with  the walls; their echoes became a repetition of the shuddery mirth. 

Except for the laugh, the room was empty. The downward whisk of a  crimson drapery had marked the

departure of The Shadow through the long  tunnel that led to the other side of the hill. 

SEATED behind the desk, Vic Marquette received a visitor brought by  Harry Vincent and Loretta Wyndon.

The arrival first stared gleefully at  the body of Thumb Gaudrey, then turned a plaintive gaze toward Vic

Marquette. Harry introduced the man as Felix Dort. 

The inventor was explaining the matter of the counterfeit notes.  How he had made them here and put

messages on them, hoping that when  the counterfeits were discovered, the message might help in rescuing

him. Marquette heard his story and assured Dort that the government  would understand. Instead of arrest as a

counterfeiter, Dort could  expect full credit for his aid in cracking the kidnap racket. 

Millionaires were reporting, giving their names as they came in  carrying rifles and shotguns. With them were

other missing men, earlier  victims of Thumb Gaudrey's racket. The list was complete; politely, Vic  Marquette

showed the visitors out through the door. 

Then Vic turned to open a folder that lay upon the table. It bore  the printed symbol of a hand. Opening the

file that The Shadow had  recovered, Marquette found all the documents that pertained to the  kidnap ring. 

That case was closed; but what interested Marquette even more, was  the list that lay inside the folder. It told a

silent story of past  achievements  by The Shadow. Blackmail, murder, rackets, theft, now  kidnapping  The

Shadow had outlawed all, and delivered doom to the  instigators of those crimes. 


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Five names formed that list: 

Thumb Gaudrey 

Pointer Trame 

Long Steve Bydle 

Ring Brescott 

Pinkey Findlen 

Starting with the bottom, Marquette saw that each name was crossed  with an inked line. The lowermost was a

darkblue, the next three of  varying lighter shades, as if to indicate the order in which those  "fingers" had

been eliminated. 

The top name was stroked with an ink of different hue; the marking  line was red. The Shadow had crossed it

with a pen from Thumb's own  desk, using ink that he had also found there. Ink so red that it might  have been

the bigshot's own blood. 

For when Vic Marquette looked at the bulky body on the floor beyond  the desk, he saw a redblotched shirt

front beneath the chin of a  heavy, bloated face. The lights of the room showed a ruddiness in those  glassy

eyes  another touch of red, like the blotch, the drapes, and  the ink stroke that scored the name of Thumb

Gaudrey. 

One by one, The Shadow had found and banished the evil members of  The Hand. Banished them, not to

foreign parts, but to doom that they  deserved. 

The law, in the person of Vic Marquette, was master in this  rockwalled lair where The Shadow had

climaxed his fivefold campaign! 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2.  REALM OF DOOM, page = 4

3. Table of Contents, page = 5

4. REALM OF DOOM, page = 6

   5. Maxwell Grant, page = 6

   6. CHAPTER I. CRIME'S APPOINTMENT, page = 6

   7. CHAPTER II. THE SECOND MEETING, page = 9

   8. CHAPTER III. HIGH IN THE HILLS, page = 12

   9. CHAPTER IV. THE NEEDED LINK, page = 15

   10. CHAPTER V. THE SHADOW EXPLAINS, page = 18

   11. CHAPTER VI. CROOKS REPORT, page = 22

   12. CHAPTER VII. THE MAN BELOW, page = 24

   13. CHAPTER VIII. THE THIRD NIGHT, page = 28

   14. CHAPTER IX. DATED CRIME, page = 31

   15. CHAPTER X. MEN OF MILLIONS, page = 35

   16. CHAPTER XI. THE DANGER ZONE, page = 38

   17. CHAPTER XII. THE SHADOW AWAKES, page = 42

   18. CHAPTER XIII. THE NEW ALLIANCE, page = 46

   19. CHAPTER XIV. WORD FROM THE SHADOW, page = 50

   20. CHAPTER XV. THE COVERED TRAIL, page = 54

   21. CHAPTER XVI. CROSSED PLANS, page = 57

   22. CHAPTER XVII. THE CIRCLED TRAIL, page = 61

   23. CHAPTER XVIII. THE TRIPLE ORDEAL, page = 65

   24. CHAPTER XIX. STRIFE UNDERGROUND, page = 69

   25. CHAPTER XX. CRIME'S FINISH, page = 73