Chapter I — The Shadow Acts

The glittering lights of Paris were a glorious sight from the window of Suite 15 in the Hotel Barzonne. But the man who sat beside the window had no interest in the spectacle. He was an American of dignified appearance — a man perhaps forty years of age.

Resting on the table at which the man sat were small piles of newspaper clippings, and neatly tabulated typewritten sheets. The man assembled them deftly.

As he worked, a strange, mysterious gem gleamed upon the third finger of the left hand, its light producing weird, changing colors.

The gem was a girasol — a fire opal of rare value. There was no other like it in the world.

The stone was a clue to the identity of the man who owned it; but no one had ever learned that clue. The gleaming girasol was the property of the mysterious man called "The Shadow!"

Comparing one stack of clippings with a corresponding sheaf of typed papers, the man at the table laughed softly.

The clippings and the data referred to an amazing murder case in Germany. They told of an unsolved mystery. With them was a small item that mentioned the finding of a body in the Seine. It had not been identified.

Neither newspapers nor police had connected that body with the murder in Germany.

They did not know that the drowned man and the German murderer were one and the same. Nor did they know that the drowning had not been accidental; that a fiend of crime had encountered just retribution. These were facts that only The Shadow knew!

The man at the table tore the sheets and the clippings. That case was ended. He referred to another. This was the account of a bank robbery in London — a mystery that had baffled the best sleuths in Scotland Yard.

The stolen money — sixty thousand pounds — had been recovered following a tip from an unknown source. The same night, two men had been discovered dead in a London rooming house; the victims of a gun fray.

There was no apparent connection between these persons — reputed to be criminals — and the restored bank funds. How they had met their end was a mystery.

The Shadow tore these clippings, and with them the typed sheets. That case was closed.

Those dead men were the robbers.

How they had stolen and lost the bank notes — how they had died, and why — these, again, were facts that only The Shadow knew!

There was a third pile of clippings. These related to a Parisian affair, the death of Herbert Brockley; the subsequent killing of Parisian criminals who had been responsible for it; and the flight and disappearance of one of the gang.

The American referred closely to this subject. He folded up the papers and inserted them in a secret drawer of a small steamer trunk that was standing in the corner. From another compartment of the trunk, the man produced a package.

Tucking the bundle under his arm, he left the suite, and descended to the lobby of the hotel. He walked along the street for several blocks; then stopped a taxicab, and spoke to the driver in perfect French. He ordered the man to take him to a certain cafe — the Poisson d'Or. The driver looked astonished. He could not believe the instructions. The Poisson d'Or was one of the worst dives in all Paris. It was patronized only by criminals of the most notorious type.

Unwelcome strangers usually met death there.

He doubted the sanity of this well-dressed American.

The instructions were repeated. They came in a firm, determined voice. The taxi driver shrugged his shoulders

He would take this fellow to the Poisson d'Or, since he was determined to go; but he resolved that he would notify the nearest gendarme as soon as he had left his passenger.

The taxi reached a squalid, unlighted street. One could not have picked out a more undesirable district than this. No tourists came here. It was the most dangerous portion of the underworld of Paris. The passenger had alighted from the cab. He was standing close by, and the driver could see only his hand as it extended the fare. The taximan noted that the hand wore a black glove. He looked around the moment that he had received the money. No one was in sight!

Had the American become faint-hearted? Had he stepped back into the cab?

The driver looked into the back seat. All that he saw was the wrapping of a package — a crumpled sheet of heavy paper that his fare had left.

The man had undoubtedly gone into the Poisson d'Or. The driver drove away to find a gendarme. The interior of the Poisson d'Or contained a series of small rooms, separated by rough partitions. In one of these, two roughly clad men were conversing in the dialect of Parisian ruffians. Their uncouth words, intermingled with oaths, related to the payment of blood money, which one of the men had received.

"Hubert is dead," said one. "I have his share. They will never find me. Bah! I would kill a dozen Americans for ten thousand francs. Now I have twenty thousand for killing one!" He drew a wad of bills from his pocket and divided the money into two portions.

"Here is half for you, Andre," he said. "I am going where these cursed police can never find me. I cannot understand how they caught Hubert. There is someone who knows more than the police." Andre grinned as he took the ten thousand francs. It was a payment in advance, for work that he was to perform while his crony was absent.

"Bah!" he exclaimed. "You can count on me, Louis. You stay away until this affair of the dead American has blown over. Then — "

He raised a glass of cognac, and his companion did the same. They were drinking to their future exploits, these Apache killers. But the glasses stopped before they had reached the lips for which they were intended.

The door of the small room had opened. There, framed in the narrow doorway, stood a man clad in black. His appearance was amazing — even to these men of crime.

A black cloak hung from his shoulders, and his hands were hidden in its folds. A large slouch hat was turned down to cover his features. All that was visible were two glowing eyes!

Those eyes were focused upon the money on the table. That represented a payment for the killing of Herbert Brockley, the American. Andre saw the direction in which the eyes were staring. He reached to grasp the money.

Quick as a flash, the man in black stepped forward. His left hand extended and fell upon the twenty thousand francs. An oath came from Louis, who sat at the left. Rising, he whisked a revolver from his pocket.

The weapon was never used. As Louis sought to level it and press the trigger, a shot came from the folds of the black cloak. The hidden hand had been covering the Apache. Louis toppled from his chair. Andre leaped forward to seize that hidden hand. He grappled with the stranger, and pressed him back against the wall. There was another muffled shot, and the second Apache fell to the floor. A soft, weird laugh came from the man in black, as he gathered up the twenty thousand francs and swept through the door, with the money beneath his cloak.

The Shadow — terror to the denizens of New York's underworld — had conquered two of the most murderous men in Paris. In the midst of their strong-hold, he had deprived them of the blood money that had been paid for the death of Herbert Brockley!

Those two were not the only Apaches in the Poisson d'Or. Gunshots were a signal to the bloodthirsty crew that frequented the Parisian dive.

As The Shadow stepped into the corridor outside the partition room, half a dozen men appeared from the other end of the passage.

There were two entrances to the corridor — one from the front room, whence these murderers were coming; the other toward an obscure door of the Poisson d'Or — the way by which The Shadow had entered, unseen.

The Apaches were flinging themselves into the attack in an effort to capture the intruder before he could flee to safety. There had been shootings in this dive before; and always the participants had tried to escape by the obscure door.

Two husky cutthroats were leaping forward with flashing knives; behind them were others armed with revolvers. Against such odds, only flight seemed feasible; but had The Shadow turned his back to flee, he would have become a target for six deadly weapons.

Instead, he did the unexpected. Barely a dozen feet lay between him and the surging crew. Two automatics were in The Shadow's hands. The pistols roared into the teeth of the attackers!

A knife slashed the side of the black cloak; the man who held the blade pitched headlong.

A revolver shot clipped the slouch hat; the man who fired fell before he could deliver another shot. The Shadow was among the Apaches now. All but one were sprawled along the corridor.

The one fellow had flattened himself against the wall. He had escaped the raking fire, and now his hand swung upward with its automatic.

The Shadow's aim was quicker. His final bullet struck the Apache's wrist. As the arm fell, The Shadow, with a burst of derisive mirth, reached out and plucked the gun away from its owner. The Shadow's empty automatic dropped at the man's feet.

Sweeping along the corridor, The Shadow reached the front room of the Poisson d'Or.

There, a crowd of grinning Apaches were awaiting the return of the killing squad. They were used to these affairs. Always, a gang of cut-throats would rush away and come back with a victim's bullet-riddled body as their trophy.

Into this scene came The Shadow! Before the Apaches realized that the impossible had happened, the cloaked man's automatic was again at work.

As one rising Apache fell wounded, the other mobsters dived for cover. With sweeping strides, The Shadow gained the door, and his sardonic laugh was loud with mockery and menace.

As The Shadow's hand pressed the knob, the door crashed inward, and a squad of gendarmes burst into the place. Coming to rescue a helpless American, they had heard the gunfire. The Shadow stepped back as the door burst. The gendarmes were hurtling upon him. His right arm swung with terrific force as The Shadow leaped among the officers.

Two gendarmes staggered. Their hands slipped from the black cloak. Diving forward, The Shadow broke loose and sprang to the street.

The Apaches had been quick to meet the double emergency. Their guns were barking as The Shadow swung his way through the gendarmes. They sought to slay the man in black, and to withstand the attack of the law.

Their first purpose failed. The hail of bullets was too late to thwart The Shadow's escape.

Gendarmes were falling; but others, dropping to the floor, blazed away at the mobsters. The Apaches were outnumbered. Those who were able, scurried to the corridor and fled.

With the mob subdued, gendarmes rushed to the street and scattered everywhere in search of the man who had baffled them. But in the darkness that reigned over that quarter of Paris, a man in black could make himself invisible.

Darkness shrouded the form of The Shadow. He was nowhere to be found.

While the gendarmes still persisted in their search, the dignified American reappeared in Suite 15 of the Hotel Barzonne.

His face retained its calmness; there was no hurry in his action as he opened the drawer of the steamer trunk and removed the clippings and the typed sheets that referred to Herbert Brockley. In a blank space, the quiet man wrote the name of Louis Bargelle. The last of Brockley's slayers was gone. Methodically, the American tore the sheets and clippings. He laughed — and his laugh was an echo of those taunting jibes that had sounded within the walls of the Poisson d'Or. The next morning, two Parisian detectives were going over a report of the battle at the Apache dive. They were discussing the deaths of certain criminals — among them Louis Bargelle — when an attendant entered. He was carrying a tightly wrapped paper.

A detective opened it and gasped in surprise as he saw the contents — a mass of paper money. He counted it. Twenty thousand francs!

The only clue to the sender was an oddly shaped card among the bills; but the card was blank. The detective held the card to the light. It showed no markings whatever.

But upon the wall — unnoticed by the detective — the card cast a strange shadow that bore a grotesque resemblance to the profile of a human being!

Chapter II — The Storm of Death

Stuart Bruxton brought his automobile to a sudden stop in front of a dilapidated building beside the road. The place had been a filling station once — the rusted gasoline standard told that.

Now, the house was nothing but a deserted shack — yet it was the only human habitation that Stuart had seen for the past few miles.

Peering through the gloom of the gathering dusk, Stuart Bruxton tried to distinguish objects on the small porch of the battered building. He fancied that he had seen the figure of a man standing beneath that small and rickety roof.

It was impossible to observe anything now; but as Stuart stared toward the house, the whole building was suddenly revealed, in the temporary glare of a distant lightning flash. During that short, photographic scene, Stuart's first impression was justified. There actually was a man on the porch. He seemed to be hiding behind a battered pillar.

Stuart lowered the window of the coupe. He called out, but his voice was drowned by the long rumble of the thunder. When silence came, he called again; then waited while big drops of rain spattered through the window.

Stuart watched to see if the man would respond, waiting patiently for another flash of lightning. Before it came, someone spoke in reply.

The man had come from the porch through the darkness. He was standing beside the car.

Stuart could distinguish his face through the gloom.

"I'm heading for a town called Herkimer," explained Stuart. "How do I get there?"

"I'm going that way," came the reply. "Want to give me a lift? Guess I can show you the road."

"Sure thing," responded Stuart.

The man clambered into the car. Now, at close range, Stuart saw that he was evidently a man from the city. He was well dressed, even though his overcoat bore signs of long wear. He was about thirty-five years of age, and his face, while pale and drooping, indicated intelligence.

"Herkimer's straight ahead — for a while," the man remarked. "Glad you came along. I was kinda stranded there, on that porch. Waiting for the storm to pass over."

They were entering the storm zone as the man spoke. Stuart could feel the effects of the driving wind as he managed the powerful coupe. Rain was battering against the windshield, and the glare of the bright lights shone into an oncoming torrent.

Stuart pictured the porch where the man had been. It was hardly an enviable spot during a deluge, but it was better than the open.

"Hiking my way," explained the man. "Cut across this road because it was shorter, and figured I could pick up a hitch. But the people seem to be kinda leery of hikers. That's why I was watching, when you came along."

"You know this road?" questioned Stuart.

"Yeah," the man answered. "It's a good road, but it isn't on the map. Lot of them like that, down here in Maryland. They told me all about it, back in the last town. When we get a few miles farther on, I'll show you a short cut."

They drove along in silence for a few minutes; then the man at Stuart's side began a brief and disjointed explanation of his circumstances.

His name, it appeared, was Jefferson — he did not mention his surname. He had gone broke in a town outside of Baltimore and had decided to foot it for New York.

The man said nothing of his business; merely mentioned that he had friends in Manhattan, and was anxious to get there. Stuart asked no questions, so the man's talk ended. The fury of the storm had increased. The road, although narrow, was well paved, and Stuart handled the car in expert fashion. They were traveling nearly forty miles an hour — a high speed under the conditions. Stuart's eyes were glued to the road. He wanted to make Herkimer, where he could cut over to a main road, and reach Philadelphia within a few hours. The companionship of the hitch-hiker was not disagreeable, so he intended to take the man all the way.

"Must be pretty near there, now," the stranger remarked. "The road splits, and you can save five miles if you stick to the right. We'll see a detour sign, but it won't mean anything."

"How's that?" questioned Stuart.

"They're starting some repair work," explained Jefferson, "so they've closed the road.

Going to take down two bridges and put up new ones. But they aren't beginning until next Monday — even though they've had the signs up for a couple of days."

"You're positive about that?" Stuart parried.

"Sure thing," Jefferson continued. "Some of the road gang were talking about it, back in a lunch wagon where I stopped. Stick to the right fork, and you'll cut off five miles to Herkimer.

That's the way I was going to hoof it. Figured it would be a shorter walk, even though there wouldn't be a chance for a lift."

"All right," said Stuart.

The road was winding now, and Stuart reduced speed slightly. The lightning flashes were blinding; the roar of the thunder was continuous. They were in the thick of the storm. A dazzling glare revealed the road ahead, and Stuart saw the spreading of the fork. Jefferson observed it, too.

"The right," he said.

Both roads looked good. Stuart swerved the big car to the right. Whirling through the storm, they began to descend a constant decline.

"Getting down to a river," observed Jefferson. "That's where the bridges are. Two of them. One on each side of an island. I heard the gang telling about them.

"They haven't even been down there, yet. Just stuck up barriers at each end. Waiting to get the order to go. That's the way they work. Better watch out, because we may hit a block across the road." The man's suggestion was a timely one. They were passing a dirt road that led off to the right. The headlights shone upon something white. A flash of lightning came, an instant later, and Stuart applied the brakes to keep from running into a broad, whitewashed board that blocked his path. The car began to skid, but responded to the driver's touch, and came to a jolting, sidewise stop, only a few feet from the barricade.

"No light," muttered Stuart.

"Wouldn't do much good," said Jefferson. "That white board shows about as well as a red light. Wait. I'll lift it so you can go through."

The man clambered from the car and walked in front of the headlights. He swung the board to one side, and Stuart guided the car through. A few moments later, his companion rejoined him. The man's coat and hat were dripping.

"What a storm!" he exclaimed. "Wouldn't like to be out in it long." THE road lay straight ahead, past the barrier. Stuart speeded up. He remembered what Jefferson had said about the two bridges. There would be no other obstacle until they passed the second bridge. Stuart was in a hurry, not only because he wanted to reach his destination, but also because he wanted to be off this road, and clear of the storm.

There was a twist; then came a straight downward hill, and at the end of it, the first bridge. Jefferson saw it as soon as the driver, and added another bit of information.

"The bridges are O.K.," he said. "They're taking them down because they're only wide enough for one car."

The headlights were revealing the fact that the bridge was narrow. A flash of lightning showed the complete structure, and the straight road on the island beyond.

Thus assured, Stuart pressed the accelerator, and the roar of the motor vied with the surging sound of the swollen stream that swept beneath the bridge.

The big car reached the bridge, traveling forty miles an hour. Hardly had the crossing begun before a strange vibration seemed to seize the bridge. The firm, level roadway was swaying!

For a brief second, Stuart felt that he was at the helm of a ship at sea. The automobile was in the midst of a skidding course. The bridge was giving way beneath its weight!

Instinctively, Stuart pressed the accelerator to the floor, knowing that his only salvation was to get clear of the collapsing bridge. The response of the car was instantaneous. It shot forward as Stuart passed the center of the bridge. The front wheels struck some obstacle, but kept on. As the rear wheels hit the same spot, there was a terrific crash.

The front of the car was almost to the end of the bridge, as a mighty sound — louder than a thunder roll told that the bridge had gone down beneath the rear of the car!

Only the momentum of the automobile prevented the car from falling into the engulfing stream. The bridge, collapsing at an angle, threw the rear of the coupe to one side. The hurtling machine shot on to the solid ground ahead. No longer under control, it swerved to the left of the road. The right side of the car rose like a mountain as Stuart applied the brakes. They were headed for a clump of saplings, and they crashed through the obstacle like an avenging Juggernaut. All was wild confusion before Stuart's eyes as he felt the car lunge forward and downward. It seemed to spin spirally to the left; then came a crash as the car smashed into a tree.

The motion ceased. Stuart recovered from a momentary daze to realize that the car was lying at a precipitous angle to the left. The whole front of the car was a mass of wreckage.

Something weighed heavily upon Stuart's body. He discovered that it was the form of Jefferson. His companion was lying almost over the steering wheel.

"Are you all right?" questioned Stuart.

A groan was the response, but it was satisfying. The man was hurt, but still alive. A flash of lightning showed his face, the right side gashed and bruised.

Amidst the rumble of thunder and the roaring of the stream beside the car, Stuart realized that he must extricate himself; then look to the other's welfare. Cautiously, he opened the door of the car and started to slide free.

There was a depression in the ground below; but the car could not topple farther, for it was wedged against a good-sized tree.

As Stuart slipped downward, he realized that Jefferson's inert form was following him.

He managed to stop the helpless man's progress by pushing him forward so that he rested against the steering wheel. Once out and looking up into the car above, Stuart saw that Jefferson's body was slowly gliding downward. The car would be a better place than the ground, Stuart decided, pushing the door shut. Jefferson's sagging form stopped as it settled into the driver's seat.

Stuart had lost all sense of direction. The winding course of the stream confused him. He stumbled through dampened underbrush and drew himself upward out of boggy ground. Then, as his senses straightened, he began to take his bearings.

The very elements which had contrived against him now worked in his behalf. The chilling rain aroused his benumbed faculties. The roaring stream told him that the road must be in the opposite direction. The lightning glare revealed the scene and showed the edge of the road, upward and ahead. Climbing an embankment, Stuart clung to a tree and rested, conscious of a sudden weakness in his left leg.

Before he went farther, it would be wise to note the situation about him. He looked back toward the car. It was invisible. Stuart had turned off the lights after the smash.

Then came a lightning flash — distant, now, for the center of the storm had passed. In the midst of that prolonged glare, Stuart saw a sight that froze his heart with terror.

The car was some sixty feet away, its right side looming upward. The door was opened, and Stuart saw why.

Poised over the opening was the stocky form of a man clad in cap and sweater. The face of this man was turned upward, and it wore an expression of evil exultation. In a huge, thick fist, this creature of the storm held a thick rod.

One sight of the poised figure told Stuart that whatever the man's errand might be, it would not be one of mercy. Who was this ghoulish being who had so quickly arrived at the scene of the disaster?

Stuart's startled cry was unheard in the roar of the thunder that followed the revealing flash. Helpless, Stuart stood there and waited; then another flash came, and he saw that the door of the car was closed. The evil-visaged man was gone!

Forgetting his injured leg, Stuart fought his way to the car, pushing through underbrush and saplings. He clambered upon the running board and opened the door.

He waited there, tense, his eyes staring downward, unable to view the form of the injured man whom he had left there.

Then came a broad sheet of lightning. Instantly Stuart saw the face of Jefferson, no longer turned downward, as it had been when Stuart left, but staring straight upward with ghastly, unseeing eyes. The gashes and bruises suffered in the crash still adorned the side of the man's face. But above them was a horrible wound. Jefferson's head had been crushed by a blow from some heavy object!

Helpless and alone, there in the car, Stuart's companion had been slain by the hideous man who had come from the storm!

Chapter III — The House on the Island

A sense of overpowering danger gripped Stuart Bruxton as he rested on the running board of the tipped coupe. He had closed the door upon the hideous sight within.

He was groping for an explanation. A helpless man had been done to death while he looked on. What was the meaning of the crime?

It was fear for his own safety that made Stuart act. The monster, lurking in the abating fury of the storm, might return at any moment. The storm itself would be a safer place than this.

Responding to the mental suggestion, Stuart arose and moved wearily toward the road. He kept to the side of the thoroughfare and began a plodding course across the island. Beyond was another bridge. He could cross it and get away from this locality. Then he might find help -

somewhere and come back to investigate. What puzzled Stuart was the motive that might lay behind the appearance of the murderer. Perhaps the man was a maniac. No other explanation seemed likely.

Stuart's leg was troubling him again. He stumbled against a stone, and nearly fell; so he stopped and sat upon the stone.

It was then that he remembered something. When he had slid from the car, Jefferson's body had slipped into the driver's seat. His own escape could not have been witnessed, Stuart reasoned. The murderer, arriving after the accident, had mistaken Jefferson for the driver of the wrecked car. Unless the murderer had stayed in the immediate vicinity, he could not possibly know of Stuart's presence here.

Stuart realized that if he had been alone in that car, he, instead of the hitchhiker, would have been the victim. The thought was amazing!

Half an hour ago, Stuart had been driving for Massachusetts, intending to stop in Philadelphia for the night. He had no enemies; he anticipated no danger.

Now, his car wrecked beyond repair, he was wandering, alone and unarmed, upon a lonely island in a Maryland river, alive only because a chance stranger whom he had picked up had been mistaken for himself!

In the midst of vague theorizing, Stuart remembered what Jefferson had said about the bridges — that they were not unsafe. The peculiar circumstances of the accident impressed him.

Had that bridge been deliberately weakened? It seemed likely. Ordinarily, a car would have crossed it slowly. Only the speed of the coupe had saved it.

A definite thought now ruled Stuart's mind. The murderer had simply completed work which had been intended, but which had failed.

It must be — it could only be — that some other car had been expected to cross that bridge.

Purely through an oddity of circumstances had Stuart been thrust here. Jefferson's advice to follow the short road had led to the disaster, but the hitch-hiker had been the one to suffer.

Still, the thought that the slayer was crazed persisted in Stuart Bruxton's brain as he began his labored limping once more. The inhumanness of the deed made it seem incredible that anything else was possible.

Stuart felt sure that he would obtain immediate aid from the first place he encountered -

but that might be far away.

His left leg could scarcely support him now, and Stuart felt a greater weariness than before. The ground at the side of the road changed suddenly to soft dirt.

This must be a byroad, leading to some spot on the island. If someone lived near here, this would be the place to call for assistance. Peering in the direction from which the road seemed to come, Stuart fancied that he saw a light through the trees.

The storm was over — only a drizzle now remained — and there were no lightning flashes to indicate the way. But as Stuart moved his head back and forth, he occasionally caught sight of a distant sparkle. There must be a house somewhere amid the trees!

Stuart started along the side road. The twinkle of the light became more evident. After a while, Stuart reached a clearing and stood before the looming bulk of an old country house, some mansion of a forgotten period.

A single light showed through a glass panel in the heavy front door. Stuart approached it and peered within.

The room inside the door was a sparsely furnished hallway, lighted by a bright oil lamp.

An elderly man was seated beside the table which bore the lamp. The man was quietly reading, and his white hair and benign appearance were reassuring.

Stuart knocked at the door. He saw the old man look up; then rise to answer the knock.

The door opened. Stuart limped into the light. He was looking at the old man, and he saw a puzzled appearance flit over the quiet face. Then the old man smiled and extended a hand in greeting.

"Ah!" he said. "You are here. I have been waiting for you. Where is your car? I did not hear you drive up."

Stuart realized that the old man had mistaken him for someone else. But there was no time to waste in giving his identity.

"I have had an accident," he said quickly. "My car was wrecked, coming over the bridge.

The whole bridge collapsed."

"You should have been careful," responded the old man, shaking his head in a solemn manner. "I told you to come over that bridge very slowly. You said you would remember. Very slowly." The old man's words brought a sudden understanding. Stuart's belief that the bridge had been weakened came back, now, with startling force. With it came the thought that someone else had been expected to cross it.

The old man had been expecting someone. He had warned that person to cross the bridge slowly. Suppose that advice had been followed! The person heeding it would be in the river, now, buried in a submerged automobile!

There was only one answer. The old man was a party to the crime!

Stuart was in a quandary. The old man must suppose him to he intended victim — one who had an appointment at this place.

Stuart was on the point of blurting out that a mistake was evident; then he checked himself. He could reveal his right name at any time. It might be better wait. He sat down wearily upon an old chair. Then he realized another danger. Jefferson had been murdered, perhaps by the old man's design. Stuart knew that he must feign ignorance of the hitchhiker's death. The old man gave him the opportunity unwittingly.

"You have been hurt," he said, in a kindly tone. "You must rest. My man will be here shortly" — Stuart shuddered at these words, as he thought of the monster in the storm — "and he can look to your car. You have the papers?"

"There's another man in the car," responded Stuart, anxious to avoid answering the question. "I think he is hurt, badly. I am worrying about him. We ought to help him."

"You had someone with you?" The old man's voice was incredulous

"Only a hitch-hiker," replied Stuart quickly. "I picked him up out of the storm."

"Yes — but to bring him here?" The man's alarm was evident.

"I–I figured I was a bit early," said Stuart. Groping for an excuse. "I planned to go into Herkimer and return. He was going there, so I took him along. I couldn't leave him out in such a storm."

"I see," acquiesced the old man. "It was not wise, however. Well, we can do nothing until my man appears, which should be any moment now."

AS if in fulfillment of the old man's prediction, the door opened, and Stuart Bruxton looked up to see the monster whom he had observed beside the wrecked car.

The man was a powerful brute, with tremendous shoulders for one of middle stature. His face, although ugly, did not wear that fiendish expression that Stuart had seen by the lightning flash. Instead, it wore a look of puzzlement as its owner viewed the newcomer.

"Grady," said the old man. "this is the man we have been expecting — Mr. Powell. He tells me that he has had an accident.

"He also had a man riding with him — a hitch-hiker — who was hurt and is still in the car.

Will you go down to the bridge and see what you can do?"

"Yes, sir," growled Grady.

Stuart, watching closely, fancied that he saw a sign pass from the brute to the old man.

Stuart gave no sign that he had noticed it. Instead, he adopted new tactics the moment that Grady had gone. In order to avoid further questioning and to sustain temporarily his identity as that of the unknown Powell, he let his head fall upon his hand and feigned a sudden stupor.

"You must be hurt," said the old man, in an apprehensive voice. "Let me see what I can do for you while we are waiting for Grady to return."

He disappeared, and came back with a bottle, from which he poured a small glass of liquid. He tendered it to Stuart, who pretended great effort in drinking it. It tasted like a brandy.

Stuart showed a slight revival; then sank back into his faked weariness. The old man watched him for a time; then went out of the room into darkness beyond.

To Stuart, only one course seemed logical, even though it might mean increasing danger.

Although his mind was working clearly, he was handicapped physically, not only because of his injured leg, but because of other pains that were now racking him.

He might be able to cope with the old man and overpower him, but it would be virtually impossible to escape, for Grady would surely follow him.

Far better, Stuart thought, to rely on ingenuity. The old man had certainly designed death for Powell, whose part Stuart was playing. But now that Stuart was safely in the house, the old man seemed a bit dumfounded, and was evidently figuring a new plan.

Stuart felt sure that Grady's attack on Jefferson had been made without the old man's knowledge. The servant, seeing that the automobile had not fallen into the river, had taken it upon himself to supply the required death.

Whatever the old man's plan might be, it would not culminate until Grady's return.

Perhaps some break might come in Stuart's favor.

The old man was back, now, and his insistent voice was returning to his previous questioning.

"You have the papers with you?"

The words gave Stuart an inspiration. There was something that the old man wanted as well as Powell's life — namely, papers that Powell was bringing here!

How the old man had intended to get them with Powell's car in the river was beyond Stuart's knowledge. But he did realize, most emphatically, that Powell without the papers would be in a better situation than Powell with them.

The question came again; and Stuart replied, groggily, but truthfully:

"I didn't bring — any papers!"

"You don't have the papers?" The question showed the old man's consternation. "What good is the visit without them? How do you expect me to believe what you may have to say?"

"I thought — thought we could get them — later," was Stuart's evasive answer. "After we had talked together."

Stuart nodded.

"Where are they, then?" questioned the old man.

Stuart pretended a recurrence of his stupor.

"Did you leave them in Baltimore?" came the question. "At the Burnham House?" Again Stuart nodded.

"You still have your room there — going back tonight. Is that the idea?"

"Yes," answered Stuart.

"Very well," said the old man quietly. "We can get them tomorrow, after we have discussed this matter. You must stay here tonight. You are in no condition to leave."

That ended the conversation for the time, and Stuart, nodding drowsily in his chair, congratulated himself upon the way in which he had turned the conversation.

He felt that he was better off as Powell, under the present circumstances. As Stuart Bruxton, he would be an intruder here; and he had a strong suspicion that intruders as well as expected visitors could find sudden death upon this sinister isle.

The door opened to admit Grady. The man spoke to his master, but loud enough for Stuart to hear.

"I found the car," he said. "It's a bad wreck. But there's nobody in it. I guess that hitch-hiker of yours climbed out and started on to Herkimer. It isn't raining anymore, so he'll be all right."

"We can forget about him, then," declared the old man. "Of course, you looked around, didn't you, Grady?"

"All along the road, declared the man. "I saw some footprints going on past our driveway, here, so I reckoned they were his."

"Very well," said the old man

"Mr. Powell is staying here tonight, Grady. He is badly jarred from the accident. He will probably feel better in the morning. Come, we must help him to his room."

Stuart repressed a shudder as Grady lifted him upward. Supported by the murderous menial and the old man, Stuart was conducted up pitch-black stairs. He let his body sag limp, but he was ready to spring at any instant.

There proved to be no occasion for alarm, however. Grady turned on his flashlight to blaze the path, and the three entered a room furnished with two old chairs and a small bed. Here, Grady left, and the old man spoke from the darkness.

"You are tired," he said soothingly, "and I advise you to rest. Sleep well, and we can talk together in the morning."

With these words, the host departed, and Stuart, lying as though oblivious, heard the door close behind him.

Instantly, the young man was alert. He rose from the bed and moved stealthily toward the window. He raised the sash and thrust his hand out toward what appeared to be black night.

Instead of space, his fist encountered a solid barrier.

The window was barricaded with an iron shutter!

Stuart waited. At last, sure that no one could be listening in the hall, he went to the door and tried it, There was no yielding. The door had been solidly locked from the outside. Stuart sat upon the bed and thought, amidst impenetrable darkness. He was a prisoner, here in this strange house. The two men who watched him were murderers. Their next crime might be his death, tomorrow!

Tomorrow?

Stuart wondered if he would ever see the dawn of another morning. His life was hanging in the balance. He was alone and helpless, without friends. There was nothing to do but wait.

Would his pretense of false identity prove his salvation? Perhaps, for the time. But the respite could be no more than temporary.

The one vital thought that governed Stuart Bruxton's mind was the recollection of that upturned face — the face of the murdered man in the car.

Stuart was to have been the victim of that crime! His life had been spared, but only for the moment. Death was the lot intended for him now.

With hope struggling against these fearful thoughts, the prisoner stretched himself on the bed and fell into a restless slumber.

Chapter IV — At the Burnham House

The Burnham House was one of Baltimore's older hostelries. It still preserved the atmosphere of earlier times when it had reigned among the elite.

Now, although its clientele was largely commercial, it continued to be the Baltimore home of travelers who remembered times of yore.

The famous old decorations still adorned the walls. The commodious lounging rooms were quiet spots frequented by guests who enjoyed the hospitality of the time-honored hotel.

Most of the persons in the gilded lobby were commercial travelers. In fact, they so predominated, that it was not difficult for a shrewd observer to pick out all who did not belong to that class.

Such an observer was watching now, from the vantage point of a tall-backed chair that rested against a marble-faced pillar. He was a young man of clean-cut appearance, who expressed a very general interest in what was going on before him.

A tall, stoop-shouldered individual weaved his way up to the lobby and spoke to the clerk. After a short conversation, this man strolled to a corner and stood in speculation.

The tall man was directly under the observation of the watcher by the pillar, who, glancing from the corners of his eyes, had an excellent opportunity to study the lanky person. It was evident that the stoop-shouldered one was worrying about something. He seemed impatient and ill at ease.

His long, prying nose showed him to be a talkative type, and one who had a penchant for mingling in the business of others. His furtive eyes gave him a suspicious appearance.

He made a good subject for a character analyst.

Too much concerned with matters pertaining to himself to notice that he was under observation, this man suddenly strode across the lobby to the cigar counter. He purchased a handful of perfectos, and made off in the direction of the smoking room.

There, ensconced in a corner, he lighted a cigar and stared steadily at the mural decorations. So preoccupied was he that he did not notice the arrival of another person — the man who had been watching him in the lobby.

"Have you a match?"

The simple question made the gawkish man start. He fumbled in his pocket and produced a pack of paper matches. He gave them to the one who had asked for them.

"Thank you, Mr. Powell."

The man raised his stooped shoulders. A hunted expression came over his face. His eyes gleamed with suspicion. He stared at the speaker, who returned his gaze with a frank and friendly air.

"My name isn't Powell," the man declared in a low, tense voice.

"Not on the hotel register," was the young man's reply. "There you have written your name as Wallace Weldon. The first name is correct; the last is not. You should have listed yourself as Wallace Powell, unless — "

"Unless what?" the tall man interrupted.

"— unless you prefer not to be known in Baltimore," the other finished. Powell sank back in his chair and stared toward the ceiling; but his mind was still on what the stranger had said.

"Suppose," said Powell, "that I do not care to be known in Baltimore. How does it concern you?"

"It does not concern me at all."

"Then why mention it?" Powell persisted.

"Because it concerns you — and your immediate welfare. More so, perhaps, than you suppose." The young man's voice was firm.

Again the hunted eyes flashed. Powell looked about to see if they were alone. Then he spoke in a low, but demanding, tone.

"Why are you watching me?"

"I told you why," came the answer. "For your own good!"

"What are you? A detective?"

"No. I have no concern whatever with the law."

Powell saw that the man's eyes were frank. He believed him. Then he laughed, in a disgruntled manner.

"It wouldn't matter if you were a detective," he said. "I've done nothing wrong. Whatever I do is always legitimate. I've got nothing to worry about."

"No?"

The peculiar accent of the question puzzled Powell. It increased his nervousness. He wanted to know who this man was.

"What is your name?" he demanded bluntly.

"Harry Vincent," was the reply. "The same name in Baltimore as in New York."

"I never heard of you," Powell countered.

"You might have — if I had been in Paris a few weeks ago!"

Powell did not reply. He became restless, and chewed his lips. He wanted to question the stranger further, but seemed unwilling to begin. Harry Vincent saved him the trouble.

"When you were in Paris," said Harry quietly, "you met an old friend — a man much older than yourself, and one who was much wealthier. I refer to Herbert Brockley."

Powell did not reply.

"Brockley died while he was there," continued Harry, in a reminiscent tone. "His death was a sudden one. He was murdered. It was a shock to you."

"It was a shock," admitted Powell.

"Before he died, Brockley gave you something. What, I do not know. I presume, however, that it involved information of a certain sort. It may have explained, to some degree, why Brockley died.

"Of course, the cause of his death has been traced to Parisian criminals — Apaches. But you know something which underlies it all."

"Where did you get that idea?" asked Powell, with a hollow laugh.

"My source of information is my secret," replied Harry, "just as your fund of information is your secret. Perhaps a fair exchange would be to our mutual liking."

"Not to mine," declared Powell. "What I know, I keep to myself. What I have learned" -

he caught himself — "what I may have learned was given to me in confidence. That's enough, isn't it?"

"Yes," said Harry calmly. "But sometimes, people learn too much. Herbert Brockley did.

He passed the information on to you."

The amazement that swept over Wallace Powell showed that the remark had struck home.

The man began to clench his fists nervously. He started to rise; then sat down.

He looked at Harry Vincent; but his eyes were more than hunted. They were beseeching.

Harry detected their expression. He followed it to advantage.

"Powell," he said, "I never met you before. But you may consider me a friend. You can also assume me to be a friend of Herbert Brockley's.

"There are reasons why I wish to learn who caused his death. I believe that you can tell me. You owe that to Brockley, don't you?"

"Perhaps," said Powell slowly. "But that makes you a detective, doesn't it?"

"Not a bit of it," declared Harry emphatically. "Look here, Powell. I know what you're after. Money!

You can't be blamed for that.

"I don't happen to need cash" — he pulled a massive roll of bills from his pocket, and Powell stared goggle-eyed at the yellow-backed currency — "and, furthermore, I'm willing to spend some. How does that sound?"

"How much do you want to pay for what I know?" demanded Powell, completely off his guard because of the money.

"How much are you getting for it?" quizzed Harry, thrusting the roll of bills back into his pocket. The cash out of view, Powell's attitude changed. He became close-mouthed, giving way to a short laugh.

"Think this over, Powell," declared Harry. "I am out to obtain certain information — which I think you have. I intend to get it — although it may take a long while, and cause serious consequences in the meantime. To save myself that trouble, I am willing to pay you a substantial sum.

"I take it that you have already made plans to sell your knowledge. That does not concern me. You are quite welcome to go through with your deal. Whatever I pay you, will be extra." A sudden light came into Powell's glance. Harry's words had struck a responsive chord. Avaricious, Powell immediately began to figure excess profits. He was a man who lived by his wits, and this was too good an opportunity to miss.

"Furthermore," continued Harry, "our transaction can take place in the security of this hotel, which is a great advantage to you. I doubt that your other — client, shall I call him? — is offering you that consideration."

"Let me think this over," said Powell. "I'm too much worried about — well, just worried — "

"About the other deal," interposed Harry quietly. "I'll tell you something, Powell. If a man came to you and offered to work this with you, you'd be willing to split fifty-fifty with him.

Just because you are worried.

"Well, suppose I make that offer. Only, instead of collecting fifty per cent, I'll pay you that amount! How does that sound?"

Powell's eyes gleamed, but he still hesitated. Harry quickly continued with his offer.

"The reason I know so much," Harry was saying, "is because I've been well posted regarding you and your methods. You're not a crook, but you have been in some shady deals.

Your specialty is gaining information and supplying it to certain interested parties.

"You reason that if a man knows facts and wants to tell them, he can do so and collect money for it. Particularly, when the crime of blackmail does not begin until after his own transaction has ended.

"That sizes you up, doesn't it?"

Powell smiled and shrugged his shoulders.

"In the case of Brockley," continued Harry, "you fell into certain information. You have said that you consider it to be yours. It involves a crime committed in France — where you were not molested by the police.

"You came to America, and you reason that you can do what you see fit with what you know. I was waiting for you in New York. I watched you there.

"You held one mysterious phone conversation from a pay station. Because of it, you came to Baltimore. I came also."

"Why didn't you talk to me in New York?" asked Powell.

"Because I wanted to make sure you were going through with the deal," responded Harry.

"You came here yesterday. Knowing what I do of you, I realized by your actions that you are springing the deal tonight. Those road maps that you were consulting — "

Harry's voice drifted away. Powell turned to look at the speaker. He saw that Harry Vincent was smiling. Wallace Powell realized that this man had the goods.

"Just one point more," said Harry. "Whatever you are doing must necessarily depend upon what you received from Herbert Brockley.

"If I were a detective, I could arrest you now, and find out all you know. I could have obtained the articles by theft. But I preferred to deal with you direct."

"Why?"

"Because I am anxious to know all about the persons with whom you are dealing!"

"All right," declared Powell suddenly. "I'll think this over. Let's say you're right." He grinned as he spoke.

"There's no witnesses here, and I can deny anything later.

"I'm out for dough. Your offer sounds good. I'm going somewhere. I'd like to have a pal.

If you'll put up fifty per cent of what I'm getting, I'll consider it."

"How much money?" questioned Harry.

"I'm shooting for ten grand," said Powell. "That means, five thousand simoleons is what you've got to pay."

"That's agreeable to me."

"I'm going up to think it over," declared Powell. "There's two reasons besides cash why I'm willing to work with you. You're wise enough to know what they are, so I'll spill them.

"One is because you've got me more worried than I was. I'm going out on this deal, but I've been hesitating. I can't wait much longer.

"And that gives the second reason. You're wise to me, and if I want to dodge you completely, I'll have to welsh on the other proposition. But I want to be sure that I'll get my five grand from you."

"You'll be as sure of it as you are of the ten thousand you're after." Powell nodded without thinking. It was evident that Harry Vincent had cleverly contrived to arouse the man's suspicious nature.

"It's ten o'clock now," said Powell thoughtfully. "I'm going to wait another hour. I'll think things over — up in my room. I want to be alone a while."

"Wait a moment," said Harry. "I'll make terms with you first. How about letting me in on everything right now. Taking your five thousand — "

"Nix!" exclaimed Powell. "Spill you the ten-grand lay? That don't work. I'm taking you in with me as partners. You've got work to do — you'll have to earn the dough you're spending."

"You want me to go with you?" Harry asked.

"You bet I do," Powell replied. "That gives you the dope you want firsthand."

"And," added Harry, "also protects you a bit."

"That's just it. When we get to the place, you slip me the cash. Then I'll go in and get the ten grand, leaving what I've got!"

"That works the other way," smiled Harry. "I want to know exactly what you're going to leave. You show me what you're taking in, so I can check up on your story.

"You can take the five thousand dollars with you. I'll be waiting for you. I won't blow."

"You might — "

"Not a bit of it. Because I want to know who you're dickering with, and get some other facts from you. I'll let those wait until you join me."

"All right," agreed Powell.

"Get this straight, Powell!" Harry's voice was emphatic. "We're both taking chances tonight. I'm shooting fair, and I expect you to do the same. It's to your advantage.

"Remember this. You're taking no more chances with me than you are where you're going. I'm sticking with you. Understand?"

"Right," answered Powell, "but I won't be ready for a while. I want to mull this over, and I've got to go up to my room. Where will you be?"

"Here in the lobby."

Wallace Powell arose and extended his hand. Harry Vincent accepted it. The gawky man moved forward, and Harry stood aside to let him pass.

They were finishing their handclasp, and Harry was at Powell's side. A number of road maps were extending from Powell's right coat pocket. One of them was on the point of falling.

Instinctively, Harry plucked it with his left hand, and it came free of the pocket. Harry's left hand dropped behind his back as Powell walked away. The man, fortunately, did not turn to look back.

"Perhaps I made a mistake," thought Harry, as he stood alone. "If he finds this missing, he may suspect, and call off the deal. But then" — his chain of thought changed — "if this means anything and Powell knows it's gone, he'll be anxious to work with me quick — because he'll be afraid I'll get there ahead of him!" Sitting at a smoking table, Harry Vincent unfolded the road map, and a smile came to his lips. The map was marked. Off from a main road extended a thin, penciled line, leading toward the town of Herkimer. Harry noted at one spot, the beginning of a fork, the line continued to the right. Then, at a spot marked with a cross line, was a tiny road leading off, and the letter "X" at the end of it. What was the cross line? A bridge? The letter must surely indicate a house. Harry Vincent had obtained the advance information that he wanted. He was still willing to spend the five thousand dollars to learn all that Wallace Powell knew!

Chapter V — A Guest Checks Out

When Harry Vincent returned to the lobby of the hotel, he resumed his placid waiting in the chair by the pillar. The clock above the desk showed quarter past ten. From Harry's estimate on the road map, the spot near Herkimer could not be more than an hour's ride from Baltimore.

Harry knew that Wallace Powell had an automobile available, though Powell did not refer to it in talking; neither did Harry mention his own car, ready for use.

Indeed, there were various facts which Harry had not found it necessary to reveal. The most important concerned Harry's presence here tonight.

Powell had assumed that Harry was working for his own interests. Had the stoop-shouldered man known Harry Vincent's real employer, he would have been utterly dumfounded and — in all probability terrified. Harry Vincent was an agent of The Shadow. That fact told a tremendous story, for The Shadow was such a mysterious figure that even his agents seemed cloaked in the veil of darkness which surrounded him.

To the world at large, The Shadow was an enigma. To the police of New York, he was an unknown genius who battled crime more effectually than did the law. To the underworld — in its crime centers in every city — The Shadow was a scourge.

The Shadow's exploits in New York and Chicago had sent hundreds of gangsters scurrying to other cities. Even in their new haunts, the hand of The Shadow did not hesitate to stretch out and pluck those who had incurred his wrath.

Despite the fact that The Shadow was untraceable, the man himself was as audible to the public ear as he was invisible to searching eyes.

Once a week The Shadow's voice could be heard over the radio on a national hook-up.

His weird, uncanny laugh thrilled millions of listeners with a tremulous shudder.

The world knew the laugh of The Shadow — and gangdom understood its meaning, for every fiend of the underworld knew that sometime that laugh might ring in his own ears — and that with its sinister merriment would come his doom!

The Shadow seemed everywhere when crime was being done. Through his agents and investigators none of whom had ever met him face-to-face — he learned of gangdom's doings, and launched his organized force of co-workers, to crush the evil foe.

So constant were The Shadow's efforts in this battle against crime, that in his massive archives appeared only records of his most important conflicts. The skirmishes with minor figures of the underworld passed unnoticed.

It was impossible for anyone to determine the full scope of The Shadow's work; for seldom did his activity enter into the final reckoning. But it was said by a prominent criminologist — whose name cannot be quoted — that The Shadow was the one controlling factor who had prevented the empires of the underworld from gaining overwhelming domination over the forces of the law!

Harry Vincent had served The Shadow often and loyally. He had proved to be one of the most useful men of all the master's agents. Still, he had no idea who The Shadow might be. One night — long ago — Harry had contemplated suicide. A hand from the darkness had drawn him back from the parapet of a bridge. Instead of plunging to suicide, Harry had obeyed the weird voice of a man clad in black — had become his henchman.

Harry knew well that The Shadow was a master of disguise; that he might meet The Shadow anytime, and not know who he was. On some occasions, the man in black had appeared to aid Harry in his work. But The Shadow had always vanished like a puff of smoke, fading into the nothingness from which he had emerged.

But now, strange events were brewing. Clyde Burke, a newspaper reporter, who was also one of The Shadow's men, had gone to Paris as a correspondent for a New York newspaper.

There, Clyde had uncovered a vital fact in the killing of Herbert Brockley.

Burke had reported that Wallace Powell, an American confidence man, had held negotiations with Brockley.

Burke was the only man in Paris who had learned of Powell's departure for America.

Whether Burke had discovered it alone — or whether The Shadow had been in Paris at the time -

Harry did not know. Harry had been deputized to watch Wallace Powell, on the latter's arrival in this country, and he had done the job well.

The singular fact that impressed Harry Vincent was the matter of money. While awaiting Powell's arrival in New York, Harry had conferred with Rutledge Mann, an investment broker who also served The Shadow. Harry had been supplied with cash, and Mann had told him to buy Powell's information if necessary.

From this, Harry deduced that The Shadow was abroad, probably now returning home, and desirous of having as much as possible accomplished before his arrival. For The Shadow, had he been in New York, could easily have contrived to learn all facts from Powell without the man knowing it. Powell, cunning and wily, was supplying important information to someone who would buy it, instead of giving it to the authorities. That was Powell's type of game. He had been successful in it. Tonight, Harry was elated because he had succeeded in gaining Powell's confidence. At the same time, Harry felt a feeling of insecurity. He was alone in Baltimore, coping with this problem single-handed. Should danger threaten, this would be one time that Harry could not depend upon The Shadow's aid! It was evident that Powell had a wide acquaintance with supercrooks — blackmailers. His one telephone call in New York had been to arrange a meeting with some member of the clique. For that purpose, Powell had come to Baltimore.

Harry felt positive that whatever Brockley had given Powell — documents, probably — told certain facts pertaining to some man who could be blackmailed. A knowledge of that material would enable The Shadow to strike at the blackmail ring, particularly if the recipient of Powell's information could be traced.

Harry was eager for the adventure. Sitting in the lobby, he restrained himself from starting ahead to Powell's destination. That would be folly. He also put down the impulse to dash madly up to Powell's room and demand the man's possessions at the point of a gun. Another ridiculous idea!

No. Harry's game was to work with Powell; to go with him and observe all that could be seen; to pay the man, and have him on tap as a useful informant later on.

Powell was disturbed through mistrust of the men with whom he was dealing. Harry wondered how much cause Powell had to worry.

The large hand of the clock pointed downward. Half past ten. No sign yet of Powell.

Harry was not surprised. The man was pondering over an important decision. Acceptance of Harry's offer meant that he must double-cross those with whom he had negotiated. Still, Harry remembered the eagerness with which Powell had eyed that roll of bills. That temptation must prevail. Powell wanted money.

It was nearing quarter of eleven. Men were coming in and out of the lobby. Harry, although watching the elevators constantly, was able to notice few newcomers. There seemed to be less traveling men than usual.

Most of the chairs in the lobby were filled now, but many heads were turned so that Harry could not view the faces.

Finally, Harry saw Powell come from the elevators and approach the desk. HARRY

promptly arose and stepped close beside the man. Powell seemed more nervous than before. He spoke to the clerk as Harry stood looking in another direction.

"I'm staying another night," said Powell, "but I'm taking my bag out with me now.

Suppose I pay you in advance — "

The clerk nodded and indicated the cashier's window. As Powell passed Harry, he spoke in a low voice:

"Back in five minutes."

No one overheard the statement. It was all that Harry wanted to know. He already knew the room number.

Harry strolled back to his chair and watched Powell return to the elevator to get the bag from his room. That bag, Harry thought, must contain the required data. Several men went up on the elevator with Powell.

Powell's room was on the fifth floor — Room 516. In five minutes, he would just have time to get his belongings and return. Evidently he had decided to accept Harry's terms. The five minutes proved painfully slow. Before the end of the time lapse, Harry had left his chair and was anxiously standing near the desk, from where he could watch both elevator and stairway. He was determined to lose no time from now on; for Powell's manner had plainly told that all was set.

Five minutes were past. The clock showed that six minutes had transpired. What was keeping Powell?

Another minute. Had the man deliberately misled Harry?

At the end of eight minutes, Harry decided to wait no longer. He saw an elevator ready for its upward trip. Harry felt sure that Powell would linger a few minutes if he came into the lobby. So he entered the elevator and rode to the fifth floor. He hurried down the corridor toward 516. If Powell were gone, it would mean a quick trip back to the lobby. Failing to find the man there, Harry could assume that he had slipped away. Then it would be a race toward Herkimer, with a head start for Powell.

The door of 516 was closed. Harry tapped lightly. No response. Harry spoke softly, leaning close to the door. Still, no reply.

Harry sensed a trap, and his hand tightened on the handle of the automatic which he carried in his pocket. He tried the door. It was unlocked. Harry entered.

The room was dark. Harry turned on the light; the room was empty. He noticed the key lying on the bureau. Strange that Powell had not taken it with him. Harry looked for baggage, but saw none. Then he spied what appeared to be a shoe, protruding from the foot of the bed. He moved forward to investigate.

There, in the space between the front of the bed and the window, Harry saw the body of Wallace Powell. The man was dead!

He had been barbarously murdered. The collar had been pulled from his throat as strong hands had choked him. His head had been driven forcibly against the radiator in the corner.

Powell's features were a ghastly sight.

Harry had seen death often — but seldom death so frightful as this.

The sight dazed Harry. It was the last thing he had anticipated. He had felt sure that Powell would be safe here, in the hotel. But the man was dead, and his precious bag was missing.

Stooping forward, mind clearing, Harry searched the dead man's pockets. Not an article remained in them. The murderer had rifled them. All that Harry had gained was the precious map. WHO

had done this murder? Harry remembered that Powell had feared someone might rob him of his secret and try to sell it in his stead. Had some unknown party entered and accomplished such a deed?

Harry instinctively thought of how Powell must have felt during the brief death struggle.

Perhaps he had believed that his antagonist was a hireling of Harry's.

There was not a moment to lose. Harry knew that he must leave the place immediately.

Fortunately, no one had seen him talking with Powell. Harry's own room was, luckily, located on the same floor.

Tense with excitement, Harry stole to the door and extinguished the light. Then he stepped into the empty corridor and closed the door behind him, wiping the knob quickly with his handkerchief to eliminate any telltale marks that might have indicated his entrance.

Wallace Powell was dead. His secret was gone. Harry Vincent's plans had been foiled by an unknown murderer!

With all the cards in his hand, Harry had lost — and the only clue to all this mystery was a road map upon which the dead man had traced a few penciled lines!

A problem, Harry felt, that would have astounded anyone — except The Shadow. But The Shadow was not here!

Wallace Powell had checked out of the Burnham House; checked out, expecting to return. But he had checked out permanently, now.

Chapter VI — A Fiendish Crime

The room was pitch-black when Stuart Bruxton awoke. He recalled that he had been sleeping fitfully. Two or three times he had half awakened, fancying that he heard sounds near his door. The sounds had ceased on each occasion, when Stuart had uttered drowsy growls. Now, for the first time, he began to realize where he was.

A peculiar sensation gripped the back of his head. In the midst of chaotic recollections, Stuart remembered the drink that the old man had given him.

It must have been doped — probably a powder in the glass. The old man had turned his back when he had poured the drink.

The direct cause of Stuart's awakening had been his injured leg. It was twisted beneath him in a painful manner. He tried to stand up, and found that he was barely capable of the effort, due to stiffness. He felt for his coat, which he had thrown over a chair. He found his watch and a box of matches. He lighted a match and saw that the time was midnight.

The throbbing in his head continued, but Stuart, despite his weakness, felt the need of action. He looked about the room, lighting a few matches, and managed to make a careful inspection of the iron shutter. No escape from the window he decided. The shutter was barred from the outside. The door offered no encouragement. It was a huge barrier, that might have belonged in a medieval castle. Stuart found one of the chairs, and realized that its frailness rendered it useless as a battering ram against that door.

He listened, hoping to hear some sound. Even the faint whispers of the storm would have been gladdening, but the storm was evidently ended long ago.

Stuart wondered why his life had been spared until this hour. He remembered those noises outside the door. Perhaps they had been afraid to attack.

The only answer that seemed logical was that the old man might be alone in the house.

Perhaps Grady had gone on some errand.

Stuart realized, upon thought, that probably the pair thought he was armed, and were waiting to try some strategy. Whatever their plan might be, he felt that now he would be safe until morning. But there was no surety.

Back on the bed, Stuart continued to listen. He heard an occasional noise, seemingly at some distance from the room. It sounded like a creaking somewhere in the house, but it was repeated too often to be such an ordinary sound.

Stuart rubbed his forehead. It was growing very stuffy in this unventilated room. The house had seemed musty and chilly when he entered; now it was stuffy and warm. Breathing was a difficult task. Stuart seemed to have caught a cold during the eventful evening. But now his nostrils scented something. Smoke!

He listened in alarm. Now he knew what the noise was — the crackling of fire! A terrible thought swept over Stuart.

The old man had set the house on fire — and he was here to be burned alive!

There was no time for lingering, now. Furiously, Stuart battered at the iron shutter, but to no avail. He seized a chair and beat against the door.

He demolished the chair with a few strokes, and he seized the other one. The result was the same. Then Stuart smashed away with the broken pieces, until they were splintered to bits.

The barrier still remained unopened.

Wearied, Stuart rested on the side of the bed. It would take a miracle to save him now.

The old man's scheme was dastardly.

Stuart knew that the fire must have been kindled directly beneath this room. The old house was a stone-walled structure, but the interior was a mass of wood. Within a few minutes, the place would be a holocaust, and he would be the victim.

The building was in an isolated spot. The flames would only be visible on the side of the hill which Stuart had descended in his car. There, the bridge was down over the river.

Help would be delayed — and the worst thought was that if help did come, it would not start on its way until the flames were first seen. By that time the old building would be a mighty torch, flaming skyward. Stuart felt the heat greatly now. The crackling had become a furious noise. A lighted match showed him that a mass of smoke was coming in through the slender crack beneath the door. He could smell nothing but the smoke now; still, he was astonished at its volume.

Sounds broke loose in the walls. Timbers were giving way. Once the flames came through the floor, there would be an open way — but the route would be through a roaring furnace! He was trapped, with fire beneath, eating its way up the sides. A hopeless position, to be followed by a terrible death. The doomed man leaped savagely upon the bed, breaking it apart, seeking to use the pieces in another futile storming of the door.

Nevertheless, it was the only task that could keep Stuart's mind from the death that lay so close. He not only beat upon the door, he shouted at the top of his lungs, seeking to outdo the roaring crackle of the flames.

At last, as he broke a final bed slat upon the door, Stuart sank exhausted, incapable of effort or outcry. It was then that his fevered mind heard what seemed to be an echo to his pounding. The door reverberated with heavy strokes from the other side. Stuart shouted again and heard an answering word.

"Steady!" came a voice, that seemed choked with smoke. "Back from the door! I've broken the bolts. Here goes the lock."

Stuart heard a muffled revolver shot. Then another report. A third seemed to roar in his ears. It was fired through an opening in the door. The lock was broken. The door swung inward, Stuart crawling away to avoid its path.

The open doorway revealed an amazing scene.

A man was standing in the center of a surging swirl of smoke. All about him was a ruddy glow — the reflection of flames that were consuming the old house. The man was stooped forward, his head muffled by a coat, wringing wet.

As Stuart started to rise, he fell back, choked by the incoming smoke. The man stooped quickly and placed his own coat over Stuart's head.

Crawling, the rescuer spied Stuart's coat on the floor and picked it up. He threw this, likewise, over Stuart. Choking, he pressed the two coats together.

Stuart's coat was still somewhat damp from the rain. The added moistness sufficed to make it a good protection against the smoke. The stranger slipped the coat over his own head and tried to help Stuart to his feet.

Progress was slow at first. But Stuart, responding to his rescuer's heroic efforts, used all his strength. The man had dropped a revolver in his work; he picked it up. Together, Stuart and his companion made the stairs. There they began a terrible descent.

It was like a trip into an active volcano. The smoke came upward with blinding thickness.

Only by holding their coats tightly over their heads could the men make their way. Flames were licking up the side of the stairs. Some of the steps were charred. But ahead lay safety. The roaring furnace was directly beneath the room where Stuart had been, and the stairs led in the opposite direction.

Stuart was on the inside. The other man took the dangerous outer portion of the stairs.

Once his foot went through a burning step; he caught himself and continued.

The front door was straight ahead. It was partly opened. Before it seethed a ring of hot-tongued flame. Stuart staggered before they reached the bottom step. With a mighty effort, his companion seized him and dragged him roughshod through the fast-increasing blaze.

The rescuer used every ounce of strength to make the passage a rapid one. He virtually flung his helpless burden through the door and came staggering afterward. Then both men lay face downward on the rain-soaked drive, panting and choking.

Stuart felt his breath coming back; but he seemed incapable of motion. Behind him was the surging roar of the fire. A falling piece of wood landed blazing beside him.

But, again, the other man was equal to the task. Recovered from his furious fight through the smoke-filled house, he rose to his feet and lifted Stuart with him.

He lifted off the wet coats. Stuart saw the other man's face for the first time. Harry Vincent was the rescuer: but Stuart had never met him. He only knew that this brave chap had come in the nick of time. A few more minutes would have meant the doom of Stuart Bruxton.

"Come along," said Harry, "we've got to move!"

The warning was a timely one. The house, with flames sweeping from all corners, had become a menace at this close range. Burning beams were shooting outward and landing about it. Stuart limped along the driveway, by Harry's side. His companion noticed his difficulty, and gave him support on the left. They reached the road and turned toward the bridge. Stuart, trudging mechanically, never looked for the wreck of his car.

Harry was carrying the coats. He felt in the pocket of his own and produced a flashlight.

It was necessary, here along the ground, although the cloudy sky above was lighted with the glare of the burning house.

The light pointed out the fallen portion of the bridge — a section which extended downward from the nearest pier.

"Somebody got over by a rope, I think," said Harry. "I saw the end of it tied to the bridge.

We'll have to scramble for it — the way I came over. It's about twenty-five feet, but the water's hardly over your head here."

With that, he led Stuart to the edge of the swiftly moving stream, and the two plunged into the current above the fallen end of the bridge. Stuart was a good swimmer, but effort was difficult for him now. Harry helped him as they floundered through.

The current carried them downward, but before they were swept too far, they had covered the distance, and their feet were slipping on the fallen roadway of the broken portion of the bridge. Harry jammed Stuart against the rail and followed him. They made their way upward to the solid pier. From then on, the bridge was shaky, but safe. Weakened though it was, the center of the structure had not yet succumbed to the swollen branch of the shallow river.

To Stuart, this last stretch was more nerve-racking than all that had gone before. Each step seemed a tremendous ordeal.

They reached the road, and Harry urged his tired companion to a coupe that was parked sidewise off the edge of the road. Stuart entered and sank exhausted beside the driver's seat. The car spun madly up the hill as Harry shot it into second gear. They were driving away, posthaste, from the scene of the misfortunes that had almost overwhelmed Stuart Bruxton. They passed the barrier across the road. Here, Harry stopped long enough to replace it.

They continued upward, and at one spot Stuart looked to see great flames surging up above the treetops on the island, far below.

The coupe shot onward until it passed the fork that came in from the right. Then Harry, with a sigh of relief, slackened speed.

His mad pace had been a wise one, for they had traveled less than half a mile before they met a rural fire truck. After it followed half a dozen automobiles, at intervals.

Harry glanced over his shoulder. Through the rear window, he could see the dull glare of the horizon.

"They'll think we've come over the open road," was his only comment. This proved to be correct, for a man hailed them from beside the road. He was standing by a car that had developed motor trouble. The vehicle was loaded with natives. Harry slowed down and looked through the window.

"Where's the fire?" came the question. "Down on the lower road?"

"Guess so," said Harry.

"Could you see it from the upper road, coming from Herkimer?"

"Was just looking at it," answered Harry, stopping the car.

"Must be the old house on the island," said the man.

"Anybody live there?" asked Harry.

"No," was the reply. "The owner died a year ago, and the place has been closed up since.

Some old beds in there. Maybe some tramps were living in the place. Those bums often start fires, drat 'em!" Harry drove on, and as they rode, he spoke to the man beside him.

"My names Harry Vincent," he said. "Yours?"

"Stuart Bruxton. Thanks for pulling me out of that mess."

"Forget that part of it," Harry interposed. "What I want to know is how you got into it."

Leaning his head back against the corner of the coupe, Stuart recited his story. Harry listened intently, while his eyes watched the road.

The fact that Stuart had been mistaken for Powell interested Harry greatly. So did the description of the old man, and the naming of Grady, the murderer.

The whole situation began to clear in Harry's mind. Stuart's bluff that he had left the papers in the hotel was the key.

Unquestionably, the old man had begun to doubt that Stuart was Powell. He had sent Grady to investigate. If Stuart had been Powell, Grady would have tried to get the papers.

Meanwhile, chancing it that Powell had not come, the old man was on watch for him, while Grady was searching at the hotel. Grady must have come in while Harry was waiting. There had been some queer ducks entering the hotel at that time. Harry recalled that Powell's manner was a give-away, when he had come down to the desk. Harry noted that Stuart Bruxton was tall and somewhat like Powell in appearance, except that he lacked Powell's rather gawkish manner.

Assuming that neither the old man nor Grady had ever seen Powell, Stuart would have answered the general description. But in the lobby, Grady must have recognized the man they were really after.

Piece by piece, Harry figured that Grady had dashed back after the murder, carrying the papers. The old man had been waiting at the bridge. He had gone back and set the house on fire.

Then Grady had helped him across the breach.

Now, Harry recalled that he had met a single car, a mile before the fork in the road. That might have been the two men of whom Stuart spoke.

Harry had left the Burnham House after he had viewed Wallace Powell's body. But he had felt shaky and uncertain. He had never dreamed that the trail of the murderer would lead directly to that spot where Powell was awaited. Grady, speeding ahead, had increased his lead.

"My car!" said Stuart suddenly. "It's back there on the island — wrecked — "

"And rifled, probably," remarked Harry, thinking of the old man during Grady's absence.

"What did you have in it?"

"A suitcase — in back. That lock would be easy to break. I guess they took it and the license plates, too. If they got the bag, they know who I am."

"Where were you bound?" questioned Harry.

"Up to Massachusetts, to see some friends."

"Your family?" Vincent questioned.

"Not many in it. They're all abroad."

"Then if no one knew what became of you — "

"If no one knew!" interrupted Stuart indignantly. "Say, I want everybody to know! I'm going to get those murderers — "

"That's just it," interposed Harry. "I'm out to get them, too. Remember, murderers is what they are. You're the only man who can identify them. You're safe if they think you're dead.

"When we've talked this over, I think you'll agree that you're safer working with me, and that you'll have a better chance of seeing them landed, than if you go to the police."

"You're the boss," replied Stuart quietly. "You hauled me out. I'd be a bum sport if I didn't play the game the way you want it."

Harry Vincent grinned in the dark. He liked this chap. He believed that he would be a good man working for The Shadow. That could be settled after they reached Baltimore.

The night had started well — then had come failure. But that one incident — the purloining of Wallace Powell's road map — had turned disaster into gain. There were two men to be traced.

Harry had descriptions of both, and knew the name of one.

More than that, Harry had rescued a man who would prove useful in this campaign.

Tonight, a full report would go to Rutledge Mann — a record of events that would reach The Shadow. That report would state the simple fact that Harry Vincent had foiled one fiendish crime that the enemy had planned. And then, Harry knew, The Shadow would act!

Chapter VII — Death after Dark

An old man sat alone in the somber dining room of an ancient house. He was at a table, munching his food methodically. At times, he chuckled to himself. Something evidently amused him. The old man's expression was deceiving. The changing moods which passed over his features were mingled with signs of doddering senility and traces of uncanny shrewdness. His mutterings were coherent only to himself. They ceased suddenly as a middle-aged woman entered through a swinging door.

"Is there anything else, Mr. Chadwick?" she asked.

"No, Martha," said the old man, in a harsh voice. "I shall be finished with my meal, directly. Then you can go."

"I'll wash the dishes," said the woman. "That will only take me a few minutes. There'll be plenty of time for me to get home and cook dinner for the folks."

"You're a busy lady, Martha," chuckled the old man. "You're a good cook, too. The best I ever had!"

"Thank you, Mr. Chadwick. I'm glad to work for you. It's very convenient, sir, that you always take dinner at five o'clock in the afternoon. It's an early hour, sir, and if it wasn't for that -

well, I guess I couldn't get here. My own family has to eat, you know."

"One should dine a few hours before retiring," declared the old man. "It is an excellent habit. There are good habits as well as bad ones. I always retire early. Therefore, I dine early."

"Well, sir," said Martha, "you may be right. But when one has men folks coming home from work, that's when dinner has to be gotten ready. Half past six is our time. That goes on Saturdays, too. Let the others grumble if they want to; my husband works until half after five every weekday. He's the boss."

"He's a hard worker," commented the old man. "Henry Birch was always a hard-working man."

"Yes," replied the woman proudly, "but he likes good times, too. He's taking me to see a picture show, tonight. We're going in to Philadelphia."

"Why to Philadelphia?" queried Chadwick. "Chester is much closer by."

"Yes, but the pictures are much better in Philadelphia. We always go there on a Saturday night, Henry and I. We're always in time for the nine o'clock show."

The old man laughed as he arose from the table and walked slowly from the room. The woman, clearing the dishes from the table, shook her head as she heard him chortling from the stairway.

"A funny sort, Grant Chadwick is," she commented, half aloud. "Fussy, too — but it's not hard to work for him. Clean up house in the morning; cook a meal in the afternoon. Outside of that, he takes care of himself.

"Gets his own breakfast. Then I cook his dinner. He always makes out alone on Sundays, and I'm glad of it. Gives me one day away from this place. Spooky old house, too."

The woman resumed her soliloquy after she had carried the dishes to the pantry. There, engaged in washing the tableware, she added a few remarks to her former ones.

"It wasn't so bad around here when young Mr. Denby used to live in the place. A good sort, young Denby Chadwick. Put up with a lot of nonsense from the old man. Small wonder he moved out.

"He likes his old uncle, though — leastwise I reckon he does. Comes to see him once in a while. I wish he was here more often. He seems to liven the place."

The woman finished her work in a few minutes. She went into the front hall and called a good night up the stairs. There was no response, but she seemed to accept that as a matter of course. She went from the house, closing the front door behind her.

Upstairs, Grant Chadwick was dozing in an armchair. He always took a short nap after his frugal dinner.

Although he was a man of considerable wealth, neither his habitation nor its furnishings betrayed the fact. His house was a decadent building on the outskirts of the city of Chester, in a place called Eddystone, ten miles from Philadelphia. The house was isolated, the nearest buildings being some deserted shacks near the railroad.

Grant Chadwick liked solitude. He had retired from business years ago, and now derived an excellent income from certain holdings which he possessed. Yet he was miserly to the extreme, unwilling to part with anything he owned.

The furnishings of his home were not only cheap, they were inadequate. Only a few of the rooms were fit for occupancy. All of old Chadwick's wealth rested in safe-deposit vaults; and the great percentage of his income was hoarded away with his investments.

The old man awoke from his doze and nodded mechanically. He looked about the room in a solemn manner.

He did not know how long he had been asleep. He did not seem to care. There was no clock in the room. Grant Chadwick paid little attention to the passage of time.

Besides the bed and a few chairs, the room contained a battered desk, of the antiquated roll-top variety. Grant Chadwick, no longer sleepy, went to the desk and opened it. He began a slow and methodical inspection of the drawers.

Most of them were empty. Others contained an odd assortment of useless articles. But in one drawer, the old man discovered two objects for which he was searching. Both were sheets of paper — one small, the other large.

The old man laid the papers on the desk. Then, with a grunt of satisfaction, he prepared to retire. Soon he was garbed in nightgown and nightcap.

He walked back to the desk, took the papers, and carried them to the bed. There, he lighted an oil lamp that rested upon a crumbling dictionary placed upon a chair. He extinguished the other lights and climbed into the bed.

He slipped his hand beneath the pillow and drew forth an old-fashioned revolver. This weapon was the old man's safeguard against burglars. He had owned the gun for many years, but he had never had occasion to use it. Grant Chadwick's reputation for meagerness was the best protection that he could have asked. A sane robber would have tackled a dog kennel in preference to the decaying home of Grant Chadwick.

The old man began to examine the smaller of the two papers. As he leaned forward to bring it within the range of the low light, his lips began to mutter disdainfully.

Grant Chadwick preferred his own company to that of any other person; hence it was not strange that he should speak aloud when alone, for the only one with whom he conferred was himself.

"Two thousand dollars," he said. "Bah! An old fool — that is what I am. Interest on it, yes"

— his eyes gleamed at the thought — "but no security. The principal is as good as lost. Waiting -

that's what he's doing. Waiting. I know his game. I'll fix it — "

The old man's lips were moving, but he was not talking now. He laid the small slip of paper upon the dictionary and fumbled along the seat of the chair until he found a lead pencil.

Taking the large sheet of paper, he began to check off words which appeared upon it, in scrawly writing:

I, Ulysses Grant Chadwick, considering the uncertainty of this mortal life and being of sound mind and memory, do make and publish this my last will and testament, in manner and form following, that is to say -

There the old man stopped. He leaned back against the propped pillow, holding the paper in his scrawny hands.

"What will Cromwell say when he reads this!" he laughed. "What will he say! He used to tell me that I was the wisest man who ever came into his law office. Wise, because I have had the same will laying there for these twenty years. Now, what will he say!"

The old man looked at the paper. He could not read the written lines that he had inscribed beneath the opening paragraph, for his hands were in darkness.

Grant Chadwick's penchant for economy had restrained him from the extravagance of a reading table beside his bed. The lamp on the antiquated dictionary served the purpose of a reading light, but it stood too low for convenience. The ring of illumination about the chair was scarcely on a level with the bed. The old man began to stoop forward to hold the paper in the light; then he leaned back on the pillow and chuckled once more. Evidently, he knew the contents of the document. An actual perusal was unnecessary.

"It's his own doing," he said, aloud. "He's to blame. He's waiting, and he can continue to wait — after this. I, Ulysses Grant Chadwick" — he was repeating the opening paragraph of the will

— "I, Ulysses Grant Chadwick, considering the uncertainty of this mortal life — "

He paused and leered vacantly. He seemed to enjoy those words, for after a moment, the old man repeated them as though reciting to an imaginary audience.

"Considering the uncertainty of this mortal life. Ha — ha — ha — ha" — the laugh was convulsive — "the uncertainty of this mortal life! He'll consider it! More than I. Yes, more than — "

The old man stopped, a guttural sound emerging from his lips. Something had attracted his attention. He turned suddenly toward the lamp on the chair beside him. His gaze was turned downward. There, in the brightness, was a hand, its outstretched fingers reaching for the old revolver!

With a snarl, Grant Chadwick clutched for the weapon. His clawing action was too late.

The hand was ahead of him. The revolver was drawn in the other direction. The old man was weaponless. Fuming, he raised himself in the bed and stared into the gloom beyond the light. His shrewd eyes flashed with recognition of the pallid face he saw there.

A scream of rage came from the parched lips of Grant Chadwick. He leaned forward in a frenzy, babbling incoherently. He did not glance toward the metallic flash of the revolver as it gleamed in the light.

His eyes were staring at the face that had aroused his fury. His voice was rising to a cracked scream.

"You — you — " His exclamation was broken and incoherent. "You dare to come here!

You'll pay for this you'll — " A flash shot from the revolver. The old man, poised forward, toppled headlong. His head struck the edge of the chair. His body seemed drawn after it.

The long, skinny arms were spread, one along the floor, the other reaching up to the chair. The tassel of the nightcap lay in a straight line, away from the bed. A pool of blood was forming on the floor. Silence dominated as a man stooped over the inert form of Grant Chadwick. Satisfied that the old man was dead, the murderer laid the revolver on the floor beside the outstretched hand. The motionless fingers seemed clutching for the weapon — just as they had done in life. Soft footsteps shuffled toward the door. The murderer left as silently as he had come. Once more, Grant Chadwick was alone in his solitary room. But the two papers were gone. One had disappeared from the chair; the other from the bed.

The hand that had slain Grant Chadwick had plucked away the old man's documents!

Chapter VIII — The Death Unsolved

"Thank you, Mr. Chadwick. We appreciate the cooperation that you have given us." The speaker was a tall, gaunt man, whose face showed marks of weariness. He formed the central figure of a group assembled in the office of a county courthouse. The corner of a silver badge peered from beneath his coat, proclaiming him a detective.

"I'm glad to help you in any way, Mr. Davidson," replied the young man who had been addressed as Chadwick. "It — it was rather a surprise to have you quiz me the way you did — so soon after the shock of my uncle's death. It was — "

"It was necessary," interrupted Davidson. "It should at least assure you that we intend to use every effort in solving this murder case. I am sorry to have inconvenienced you and these other persons, but it was my duty."

"There's some reporters outside, chief," said a man from the door. "Shall I tell them you'll see them later on?"

"Perhaps you would like to hear me talk to them now," suggested Davidson, turning to Chadwick.

"Well" — the young man spoke uncertainly, then began to nod — "I guess it would be best.

Yes, it would be best." The reporters tramped into the room and looked at the group of men and women assembled there. They turned to Davidson for an explanation.

It was forthcoming. The detective spoke in a methodical tone, indicating individuals as he discussed them.

"This is Denby Chadwick," he explained, pointing out the young man. Chadwick, solemn-faced, nodded in corroboration. The reporters noted his neat attire and his weary look.

"Chadwick," said Davidson, "is the only relative of the murdered man. Grant Chadwick was his uncle. Denby Chadwick is the branch manager of the Mayo Safe Lock Co. He has charge of the Philadelphia office.

"After Mrs. Martha Birch discovered the body of Grant Chadwick, at eight o'clock this morning, we questioned her and learned that she was presumably the last person who had seen Grant Chadwick alive.

"The old man was murdered sometime between five-thirty Saturday night and eight o'clock this morning — Monday morning. The physician's report states that Grant Chadwick was probably dead for twenty-four hours before his body was found.

"Mrs. Birch reports latching the door on her departure Saturday, and unlocking it upon her arrival this morning. We have found no traces of forcible entry.

"Eliminating the slim possibility of suicide, we quizzed Mrs. Birch, and found her to be a most useful informant. The only person who ever visited Grant Chadwick was his nephew — this gentleman here.

"A month ago, Denby Chadwick was living with his uncle. According to Mrs. Birch, a disagreement ended that arrangement. Denby Chadwick has been back only occasionally since then. He has a pass key to the house. Here it is."

Davidson displayed the key, which had evidently been given to him by Denby Chadwick.

"I located Denby Chadwick in his Philadelphia office," continued Davidson, in his methodical manner. "That was at half past ten. He came here with me.

"Due to the fact that he had access to the house; that he had quarreled with his uncle; that he admitted ownership to a pair of gloves which were found on a downstairs table, I was naturally anxious to learn of all his activities between Saturday afternoon and this morning.

"That fact seems to have made an impression upon you newspapermen. While Denby Chadwick and I have been conferring here, you have been busy."

Davidson picked up a newspaper from the desk. It was an edition of a Philadelphia journal which bore the screaming headline:

Denby Chadwick Grilled In Uncle's Murder

"This has just arrived here," declared the detective. "In the meantime, Denby Chadwick has been phoning many sources. Half an hour ago, the last of his witnesses arrived. These people have testified in his behalf.

"I can now state, positively, that Denby Chadwick knew nothing of his uncle's death. I have the sworn affidavits of the testifiers. You may interview these people in turn; afterward, you may read their statements.

"Now that we have learned the facts, I feel that everything possible should be done to clear young Chadwick of any implied suspicion that may rest upon him."

The detective pointed to a middle-aged man who stood at the side of the room. The individual cleared his throat and spoke to the reporters.

"My name is Charles Washburn," he said. "Office in the Elite Building, Philadelphia.

Washburn Finance Co. Denby Chadwick was in my office until five o'clock Saturday afternoon.

My stenographer, Miss Daisy Whitman, was present."

"That is correct," acknowledged a young woman who was seated in a chair by the desk.

"We left the office," resumed Washburn, "and were joined by James Newmann, whose office is also in the Elite Building. We rode in my car and took Denby Chadwick to the station.

"We were both with him while he purchased a ticket for Havre de Grace, Maryland. We were with him when he boarded the five-thirty local."

"That is correct," came another statement. This speaker was a man who stood beside Washburn evidently James Newmann.

"Next," declared Davidson.

A stoop-shouldered, gray-haired man followed.

"Harold Clinch," he said. "Conductor on Train 37 — local leaving Philadelphia at five-thirty p.m. for Havre de Grace. Denby Chadwick rides my train every Saturday afternoon.

"I collected his ticket last Saturday, going out of Philadelphia station. I saw him playing cards in the smoker, afterward. Helped him off with his bag, and said good night when we reached Havre de Grace at seven-fifty."

Davidson nodded to another man, a young fellow attired in a sheepskin coat.

"Stephen Biggs is my name," said the young man. "I'm a lineman with the telephone company. Got on the train at Wilmington, last Saturday. Was playing cards with a couple of fellows, and this man joined us."

"He was with us when we got to Havre de Grace. We were talking, you know, and I happened to mention where I lived. That's how they got me up here today — "

"All right," interrupted the detective briskly. "That's enough, Biggs. We also have a statement from Elbert Brown" — he indicated a bespectacled man — "who is a regular rider on that train. He knows Denby Chadwick by sight, and got off the train with him, Saturday evening.

Now, Mr. Turner." THE final testifier was a lanky man, who spoke with a slight Southern drawl.

He was standing with hat in one hand as he addressed the reporters.

"All I've had to say," he stated, "is that Denby Chadwick is a fine young fellow, and that I'm glad I've been able to settle this matter.

"Ezra Turner is my name — I run a farm down near Havre de Grace, over across the Susquehanna, and Denby here has been coming down to my place regular every week-end. I come over to the station in my car to meet him. That's what I did last Saturday night.

"We was sitting up all night playing poker — him and me and these two fellows here, Jim Blotz and Greg Stephens, who comes down from Carlisle. The whole lot of us was sleeping most of Sunday, except at dinner time, when the women folks woke us up.

"We had another poker session last night — we take the game kind of serious down Maryland way. We didn't quit until five o'clock this morning, and I had to rouse Denby up at eight, so as to drive up to Philadelphia. All of us were coming up this way — except the women folks.

"When Denby got a hold of me, I called them by long-distance and told them to jump up here in a hurry. They've all vouched for it that Denby Chadwick didn't step out of that old farmhouse of mine between the time he got there and eight o'clock this morning.

"He was sitting up most of the time — that's why he looks tired out, with all this grief about his poor uncle coming on top of it — "

Two women were nodding their agreement with the speaker. The reporters were looking at the affidavits. Davidson began to dismiss the gathering, hesitating just long enough to answer a reporter's query about young Chadwick.

"Yes, I suspected Denby Chadwick, until I got the facts," Davidson said. "I'm suspecting anybody that comes along in this case. But these testimonies give this young man a perfect alibi, and that's putting him with us in the work we're doing in this case.

"He's just as anxious as I am to find out who murdered his uncle. We are working on a process of elimination, and we aren't passing up a single clue!"

The visitors filed out of the detective's room, and the reporters made hurried notes in order to catch the late editions of the evening newspapers.

The statements of the persons who had testified were sent in full detail. The fact that Denby Chadwick was entirely cleared of all suspicion in his uncle's death was food for screaming headlines. THE next morning, Harry Vincent opened a letter in his room at the Burnham House in Baltimore. He was seated at the writing table, where a copy of a Baltimore newspaper was lying. Harry had been reading of the Chadwick murder. His eyes opened in surprise when he noted that the letter referred to the same matter.

The written letter was in code, inscribed in bright blue ink. The jumbled characters were no puzzle to Harry Vincent. He knew that code by heart. Translated, the letter read: Go to Philadelphia. Take Bruxton with you. Have work for him.

Check all details in the murder of Grant Chadwick. Observe all actions of his nephew, Denby Chadwick. Report regularly, in detail.

The written characters began to fade while Harry still held the letter in his hand. That was a peculiarity of all The Shadow's orders. They were written with a secret ink, which disappeared shortly after it had come in open contact with the air.

Harry tore the blank paper in half; then in quarters. He threw the pieces in the wastebasket. Taking the telephone, he called up another hotel. He was connected with Stuart Bruxton's room.

"We're taking a trip, today," said Harry. "Let's get started as soon as possible. It may mean some interesting business. Are you ready?" There was an affirmative answer. One hour later, a coupe was speeding along the road from Baltimore to Philadelphia. Harry Vincent was the driver. Beside him, Stuart Bruxton was listening intently to what his companion had to say.

The murder of Grant Chadwick was the subject of discussion.

Did this crime have a bearing on the adventures which Stuart had encountered? Was it connected with the murder of Wallace Powell? Could the unsolved death of Grant Chadwick be solved?

Only The Shadow knew!

Chapter IX — The Shadow at Work

Rutledge Mann was busy in his finely furnished investment office. His mind was not on stocks and bonds. Instead, he was studying a mass of newspaper clippings and typewritten reports. It was after dusk, and the skyline of busy Manhattan formed a glowing spectacle from Mann's window. But the quiet, deliberate investment broker had no time for enjoying such a view. He was centered entirely upon the work before him.

His friends knew Rutledge Mann as a person whose business was securities. Actually, Mann was a most important and dependable agent of the mystery man called The Shadow.

Here, in this comfortable office, he assembled data and compiled reports in a methodical and efficient manner. The material upon which he was now engaged formed a most interesting problem. It had been gained from numerous sources, and important portions of it had been supplied by agents of The Shadow.

Upon one sheet, Mann had compiled notations in reference to Herbert Brockley. To the police, the death of the wealthy American had become a closed issue. Three Apaches had been implicated in Brockley's murder. Two had been killed while resisting capture. They had died at the hands of Parisian gendarmes. The third was a fugitive in France. But to Rutledge Mann, the matter of Brockley's death was not ended.

The investment broker was marking down facts in reference to Herbert Brockley's history. Briefly, Brockley had been successful in business in New York, and it had not been difficult to trace his contacts. A list of a dozen names comprised the persons with whom he had, at one time or another, had definite dealings.

Outstanding in that list was the name of Sherwood Mayo, the multimillionaire. Brockley and Mayo had been associates in certain mining enterprises, some years before. Details were meager, but they showed a definite connection between the two men. Rutledge Mann drew a line under Mayo's name.

There was apparently no reason why he should choose that one particular name from the list, unless he might have been impressed by Mayo's wealth.

The reason became evident, however, when Mann picked up another sheet that was headed with the name of U. Grant Chadwick.

There were only a few names here; and one of them was that of Sherwood Mayo. Mann had made notations. These stated that Grant Chadwick and the multimillionaire had at one time been partners in the manufacture of safes; but that Mayo had branched out on his own.

The company which Mayo now controlled — the Mayo Safe Lock Co. - was a dominating concern in the industry. The original company — the Holyoke Safe Manufactory — was still in business, and it was assumed that Grant Chadwick had retained a large share of the original stock. Mann took pains to mention that shares of Holyoke stock were not available, although they had been sought by purchasers. The concern, although small, held rights to important patents, some of recent issue, and did a profitable business on that account.

The coincidence of Sherwood Mayo's name on both lists made that name conspicuous.

The importance of the matter became still more noticeable when Rutledge Mann referred to the data that concerned Denby Chadwick.

Here, the investment broker had a mass of facts, for newspaper clippings were in abundance, and there were also records that had come in that day from Harry Vincent.

From these records, Mann wrote his report.

Denby Chadwick's position with the Mayo Safe Lock Co. was gained through his connection with Sherwood Mayo. Denby Chadwick has had varied sales experience. He obtained the job as manager of the Philadelphia office of Mayo's company less than a year ago.

He probably used his uncle's name to secure the position. The fact that Grant Chadwick and Sherwood Mayo were once associated in business is significant. Inquiry has shown that the

Mayo Safe Lock Co. pays large royalties annually to the Holyoke Safe Manufactory for use of patented appliances. This shows an indirect business relationship still existing between Grant Chadwick and Sherwood Mayo.

Investigation by Harry Vincent (data inclosed) states that Denby Chadwick showed incompetence on previous jobs and that his present position was a great jump over anything he did before. It is assumed that influence had everything to do with his appointment in his present capacity.

As if in corroboration, Mann referred to a report marked by Harry Vincent. He nodded as he read a paragraph:

Denby Chadwick spends very little time in the office. Stuart Bruxton has been in three times, trying to make a business appointment with him. He has been unsuccessful.

Charles Brady, the assistant manager, handles practically all of the business.

The excuse is given that Chadwick is busy settling the affairs of his uncle's estate, and that the old man's death has been so great a strain upon him that he has been unable to come to the office.

But this is only a pretext, as the stenographer stated twice that Chadwick never came into the office before noon, and that sometimes he did not come in at all.

The one point that filled Rutledge Mann with perplexity was the situation that existed between Denby Chadwick and his uncle at the time of the old man's death. It was obvious that the two had disagreed about something, although it could not have been extremely serious.

Denby Chadwick had lived at the old house for several years. Grant Chadwick was his only relation. The old man was eccentric, and his frugality must have been annoying to Denby.

The uncle, in turn, had evidently regarded Denby as a ne'er-do-well up until the time when the young man had obtained his position with the Mayo Safe Lock Co.

It was after that time that Denby Chadwick had abandoned his uncle's home. Perhaps the young man had felt an independence in his new position, and had taken advantage of his new circumstances to depart from an environment that had always been distasteful to him.

Whatever the situation, it could not have been serious, for Denby Chadwick was sole legatee to his uncle's estate. This announcement had been made by Egbert Cromwell, the Philadelphia attorney who managed the affairs of Grant Chadwick.

The estate was now in the course of settlement, and Denby Chadwick had come into considerable wealth — the exact amount unknown.

Rutledge Mann sat back in his swivel chair and smiled languidly as he looked toward the ceiling. It was not his business to deal in theory. His duty was to assemble facts.

At the same time, The Shadow placed no restrictions on his agent's reports. They were allowed to express themselves in any way they chose. Hence, Mann, as a matter of custom, was indulging in speculation on these strange connections.

He was convinced that blackmail was at the bottom of the whole matter. Herbert Brockley had gone abroad to escape some threat or menace.

In Paris, Brockley had been befriended by Wallace Powell. He had given some information — in the form of documents — to Powell. That information may have concerned himself; it probably concerned others also.

Powell had sought to sell the information. He had dealt with a blackmailer in New York, and had made the arrangements for a meeting near Baltimore. There, Powell had been killed — and the slayers had obtained the information without the necessity of paying him ten thousand dollars. Harry Vincent's rescue of Stuart Bruxton had not only been an excellent deed; it had also gained a new secondary agent for The Shadow — a man who could identify Grady, the killer, and the old man whom Grady served. These persons were active workers for a mythical blackmail ring. But who were they? Harry Vincent had visited the burned house the day after he had rescued Stuart Bruxton. On that visit, Harry had drawn a complete blank. The house was a stone-walled ruin; its cellar was a mass of debris. Harry presumed, in his report, that the body of Jefferson, the hitch-hiker, had been placed on the ground floor, to be destroyed amidst the flames; but there was no direct evidence of this. Traces of the murderous pair — Grady and his chief — were totally lacking. The finding of Stuart Bruxton's car had perplexed the local police.

The automobile had been stripped of license plates and luggage; other identifying marks had been obliterated. The theory was that the car had been stolen; that it had crashed through the bridge; and that the men in it had taken refuge in the old house. There, they had started a fire which had gotten beyond control; then they had fled from the flames.

The police were confident that they had solved the case in its entirety. They saw only accidental incendiarism — not murder — and Harry had made no effort to enlighten them. The murder of Grant Chadwick, following so closely upon the killing of Wallace Powell, was highly significant to Rutledge Mann.

With Denby Chadwick completely cleared of suspicion, it seemed quite plausible that Grady was the man who had visited the old house near Chester, where Grant Chadwick lived alone. The connection between Herbert Brockley and Sherwood Mayo was similar to the one between Mayo and Grant Chadwick.

Had Grady come to threaten old Chadwick, putting forward a proposition of blackmail on the strength of what had been learned from Powell's documents?

That was Mann's theory, and he considered it a good one. But even more important was the possibility that the future might hold.

Two evil men, agents of some unknown leader, were embarked upon a career of crime. It was logical to suppose that other lives were threatened. Who would be next?

Mann's eyes rested upon the notes before him. One name, alone, seemed to stare at him.

That was the name of Sherwood Mayo.

That was where the trail led — to Mayo! Four victims had already fallen prey to monsters of crime; Brockley, Jefferson, Powell, and Grant Chadwick. Rutledge Mann foresaw protective measures. Whatever scheme had caused the death of Grant Chadwick, it was reasonable to suppose that the killers had not obtained full measure.

If the old man had refused to meet their demands, it might be that he had passed on a heritage of danger to his nephew. Denby Chadwick had already been suspected of murdering his uncle. Would his life be safe now?

The Shadow's purpose was clear to Rutledge Mann. With Harry Vincent and Stuart Bruxton on the watch, Denby Chadwick would be assured of some security. But there was another man who must be protected — Sherwood Mayo, the multimillionaire.

Foreseeing this, Mann turned to another report. He referred to a list which he had prepared beneath the name of Sherwood Mayo. This list was entirely of Mann's compilation. It had not been difficult for him, with many influential friends, to obtain reliable data concerning such an important person as Sherwood Mayo.

The investment broker realized that this list might prove entirely useless; but he had prepared it with the view of picking out certain individuals who were inimical to Sherwood Mayo. Somewhere in this list, Mann felt sure, would be found the name of a man who might seek to injure Sherwood Mayo. Such a man might bear watching — as one who might possess information which could be used by blackmailers.

Finishing this last list, Mann gathered up all the material intended for The Shadow and folded the papers into a long, official-looking envelope. He tucked the envelope in his pocket and left the office, carefully locking the door behind him.

Broadway was aglow as Rutledge Mann rode down the busy thoroughfare. He discharged the cab at Twenty-Third Street, and sauntered along until he came to a dilapidated building. Even at night, this time-worn structure looked miserable and untidy. The rattly door was unlocked.

Mann entered and ascended a rickety stairs. He was in one of New York's most antiquated office buildings. In a gloomy, ill-lighted hallway, Rutledge Mann stopped before a door. The name on the glass pane was barely distinguishable. It simply read:

B. Jonas

Mann's envelope went through a slit in the door. The investment broker shrugged his shoulders and hurried from the gloomy building.

These visits were distasteful to the fastidious businessman, even in the daytime. At night, they were even more repugnant. The dreary atmosphere of the place was miserable.

Yet the visits were necessary, for that mysterious door with the cobwebbed window was a barrier chosen by The Shadow. Letters thrust into its mail chute invariably reached the mysterious man of the dark.

Rutledge Mann was thinking of The Shadow as he rode in a cab along Twenty-Third Street. But now, with his work done, and his mind relieved from perplexing matters, the investment broker noticed the things about him.

He heard the deep-throated whistle of an ocean liner as his cab sped westward. Some ship was coming into dock.

Then, the taxi turned up an avenue, and Mann, slightly weary, leaned back to rest during the remainder of his ride to the Cobalt Club, his favorite spot during leisure evening hours. The whistle which Rutledge Mann had heard carried a significance which the investment broker did not appreciate. It was like a heralding note, announcing the arrival of someone of importance.

Various celebrities were landing from the S. S. Gallitania. Reporters were busy seeking interviews. The newspapermen, however, paid no attention to a tall man who wore a dark coat and hat. This individual strode solemnly down the gangplank, looking neither to right nor left.

Small news, this, a silent, cold-faced man leaving an ocean liner without companions.

This arrival brushed against a reporter as he stepped from the gangplank. The news gatherer turned to see a hawk-like countenance and a pair of sharp, gleaming eyes.

He was startled for an instant; then turned back to await the arrival of an expected celebrity. What a story that reporter missed! He had seen The Shadow, landing from the Gallitania!

A light clicked in a dark, silent room. Then two white hands appeared beneath it — long, slender hands that seemed like detached creatures of life. Upon the third finger of the left hand gleamed a fire opal, the symbolic jewel of The Shadow!

The hands produced an envelope. They tore open the end. From the packet came the papers which Rutledge Mann had placed in the mail chute of the office marked "B. Jonas." In a twinkling, the papers were spread. Eyes from the dark were examining the data which The Shadow had received from his trusted agent.

Silence reigned while The Shadow, hidden in darkness, perused the compilations. At last, only two papers remained. One was Mann's own statement; the other was the list that accompanied it. A long white forefinger rested upon a paragraph in Mann's statement. The words to which it pointed read as follows:

I feel that in all this accumulated data must be the key to the mysterious deaths which have occurred. More than that, I feel sure that other crimes are planned, and clues to them are here. Because of this, I have paid particular attention to the name of Sherwood Mayo, and have prepared a list of men who might be classed as his enemies. Two of Mayo's friends have been killed. Like Denby Chadwick, he, too, should he watched.

A pencil appeared, and across this single paragraph the white hand wrote the word "Correct." Then the paper was laid aside. The moving finger considered each name in the list of Mayo's antagonists. Each name bore a brief account beneath it.

The pencil was busy. It crossed out name by name until only two remained. The finger checked the first:

Sidney Delmuth. Advertising man and promoter. Has been connected with various businesses competitive with enterprises backed by Sherwood Mayo. Once brought suit against Mayo, but matter was settled out of court. Mayo has threatened lawsuits against Delmuth on several occasions, but has never gone through with them. Delmuth has reputation for shrewd dealings.

The hand moved to the next name:

Paul Hawthorne. Real-estate man of doubtful wealth. Reputed to be on the verge of bankruptcy; also to have a considerable amount of money. Most of his enterprises have failed. Rumor that he makes his money and lets others lose. Has been sued by many individuals. Only opposition to Mayo is matter of summer resort in Massachusetts, which Hawthorne promoted in opposition to Mayo. Hawthorne not only located resort near Mayo's Massachusetts estate, but managed to buy acres which Mayo had intended to purchase. Hawthorne managed this through Mayo's neglect to exercise option on ground. In compiling his list, Mann had marked Delmuth as being one of the most likely persons to be opposed to Sherwood Mayo. He had mentioned Hawthorne as mere possibility.

The Shadow, in taking advantage of Mann's suggestion, had apparently agreed with the opinion on Delmuth, but not with the one given on Hawthorne. For these two names had been selected; all others ignored.

Now, as though inspired by an afterthought of the master brain, the hands drew forth another paper. This was a report sent by Harry Vincent, which Rutledge Mann had seen fit to forward. The report was detailed to the extreme. It described the house in which Grant Chadwick had been murdered. It gave the exact location of the building, and a diagram marked the position of the deserted shacks near the railroad. These old houses were only a few hundred yards from Grant Chadwick's home.

It also told of Harry's visit to Havre de Grace, Maryland. He had gone there on the train that Denby Chadwick had taken a few nights before. He had visited the farmhouse where Chadwick had stayed. Attached to the report was a copy of the railway time-table.

The Shadow's hands held these two papers momentarily; then laid them aside, beyond the range of the luminous circle that was cast by the shaded lamp. The hands busied themselves with a sheet of paper and a fountain pen.

In neatly formed letters, a code message was inscribed. It was folded and tucked in an envelope. Using another pen, the hand wrote:

Instructions to be given Stuart Bruxton.

This was inclosed in a larger envelope, that already bore the typewritten name and address of Harry Vincent.

A click sounded. The room was plunged in darkness.

The Shadow's work was ended. In a short time, this mysterious man had gone over all of his agent's material. Nothing he had done indicated either a definite solution or an involved campaign. The notation of certain facts — an order concerning Stuart Bruxton — that was all.

But from the midst of the darkness of that little room came a soft, creepy laugh. It was mirthless and foreboding. Echoing weirdly from the walls, the laugh was more expressive than words. The sinister understanding of that echoed sound indicated a knowledge of unknown matters. It presaged defeat and destruction for those who thrived in crime. Had The Shadow, from his brief perusal of his agent's statements, gained the key to mysterious deaths and looming dangers?

Only The Shadow knew!

Chapter X — Stuart Goes On Duty

Stuart Bruxton was seated in the smoking car of a two-coach train that was wending its curving way through the hills of northern Massachusetts. He was traveling on a branch line, and was alone in the car.

To Stuart, the purpose of this quiet journey was puzzling. He was acting upon instructions given him by Harry Vincent. He was going to a place called Greenhurst.

This hamlet, Stuart had learned, was a budding summer resort that had failed to bloom. In Greenhurst, he was to keep a watchful eye on the affairs of two men; Paul Hawthorne, a real-estate promoter who had not yet managed to put Greenhurst on the map of Massachusetts; and Sherwood Mayo, a multimillionaire of many enterprises.

What had these two to do with strange events that had occurred in Maryland? Could there be any connection between them and the sinister old man who had sought Stuart's life?

Hawthorne was managing the affairs of a summer colony. Mayo dwelt on an estate, resisting the invasion of what he considered to be feudal rights.

From Harry, Stuart had learned that some hostility was supposed to exist between the two men. For some reason, both should be observed, although Harry had been very meager in his information. Ever since Stuart, anxious to aid in the cause of justice, had agreed to work with Harry, he had felt a positive conviction that some directing hand was in back of his rescuer's activities. Harry had told Stuart that further instructions would reach him at Greenhurst. He had also indicated the manner in which those instructions would be received. It had made Stuart wonder. As the train pulled into the little station of Greenhurst, Stuart felt a sudden interest. This was a campaign that called for diplomacy. He must meet two men and win their confidence. That would be easy with Hawthorne. Mayo might be a different matter. Stuart decided that Paul Hawthorne would be his best approach.

There were no houses near the station. The summer colony was a mile away. Stuart entered a touring car that bore a sign "Taxi." He started for the village. On the way he questioned the driver about Paul Hawthorne.

"You're going to the Inn?" queried the driver. "Well, it's only a little spell up the road to Mr. Hawthorne's.

'Bout a fifteen-minute walk, I should say. The house sets back from the road apiece.

"I reckon he's out running round the township, marking out places for new cottages.

There ain't many folks buying them, though. He's always home in the evenings. You can telephone him from the hotel." Stuart registered at the Inn. It was a building left over from a previous attempt to colonize Greenhurst. Stuart was given a room at the end of a wing, on the third floor. The hotel was somewhat modernized, so Stuart was not dissatisfied with the surroundings.

The other guests were typical residents of an obscure resort. Stuart went in the dining room when the bell rang for dinner. After that, he lounged a while in the lobby. Finally, he called Paul Hawthorne's cottage. A brisk voice answered him. Stuart gave his name and explained that he had come to Greenhurst from New York. He mentioned that he would like to know about real-estate opportunities. Hawthorne eagerly agreed to meet him. He said he would come to the Inn in his car. In ten minutes, Hawthorne arrived. He proved to be a pleasant-faced man, some forty-odd years of age. He shook hands warmly and invited Stuart to come up to the cottage.

They left the hotel, and were soon in the living room of Hawthorne's home, chatting as though they were old friends. Hawthorne was interesting to Stuart. The man possessed a lulling glibness; but Stuart felt that his cordiality was something that he adopted with all prospects.

"By the way," said Hawthorne, "you don't happen to know Sherwood Mayo, who lives near here?"

"Mayo, the millionaire?"

"Yes," Hawthorne assented.

"I've heard of him," declared Stuart. "I'd like to meet him sometime."

"I can arrange that," said Hawthorne promptly. "Tonight, if you wish." The statement surprised Stuart. He had not expected to find Hawthorne and Mayo on good terms. This was a good hit, already, Stuart thought.

"Mayo is a friend of mine," explained Hawthorne. "We had a little unpleasantness, when I first came here. Mayo has a hunting lodge, and he thought that he was lord of all lands that he could view from his watch tower. Since he found he wasn't, he's been more pleasant.

"He's begun to find out that the people who are buying here in Greenhurst are of a selective class. Wait, I'll phone him and see if we can run up there."

Stuart smiled when Hawthorne had gone from the room. He saw the promoter's game.

Currying favor with Mayo, Hawthorne probably made it a point to introduce all desirable persons to the millionaire. It was a system that worked both ways. It enabled Hawthorne to impress his prospects, and also to better his position with Mayo. Stuart wondered if the millionaire was wise to the game. Hawthorne was smiling when he returned.

"Let's go," he said. "Mayo says he will be glad to see us." They left the cottage and stepped out into blackness. The night was cloudy, and it was impossible to see a step ahead. As they were feeling their way toward the car, Hawthorne suddenly pressed Stuart's arm. They stood silent for a moment; then continued their way. When they reached the car, and Hawthorne had turned the lights on, the promoter explained his action.

"It's rather lonely out here," he said. "All right when the family is here, and friends are around. But it's early in the season, and I'm up here alone.

"I've got a man here on the place — a young fellow who helps me in the real-estate business; but he goes home on certain nights, once or twice a week. It gives me the creeps once in a while; just then I thought I heard someone prowling around."

Stuart felt no qualms as they were driving through the woods; but Hawthorne's remarks interested him. Stuart decided to take advantage of the turn in conversation.

"I shouldn't think you'd be worried up here," he said. "I guess most of the people are honest farmers — "

"It's not the people up here," interrupted Hawthorne quickly. "They're the best in the world. It's strangers — outsiders, you know.

"Well" — he laughed, a trifle nervously — "I've been around so much in this promotion work, I guess I'm apt to worry foolishly. But you bump into so many cranks. People who have imaginary grievances — " He went no further, but Stuart began to understand. He recalled that Harry had said Hawthorne had been engaged in various enterprises which had ended unfortunately. Perhaps the man had reason to fear some menace.

Stuart looked toward his companion and saw the outline of Hawthorne's pale face. He realized that the man had been actually frightened.

They swung up a road and passed between two stone pillars, upon which were mounted electric lights. These were brightly illuminated, and they showed walls running in both directions. The pillars constituted a gateway. The gates were open.

"Mayo is expecting us," declared Hawthorne. "That's why the lights are on. There's the lodge, straight ahead."

The house was set in a level clearing. It was of old English style, and very elaborate for a hunting lodge. They pulled up in front. The door opened, and a tall, genial baldheaded man stood awaiting them. They went in the house, Hawthorne introducing Stuart to Mayo as they entered.

Stuart looked around the living room in admiration. It was sumptuously furnished for a hunting lodge. An excellent rug lay on the floor. A bright fire crackled in the fireplace. A glass-eyed deer head looked down from above the mantelpiece.

Stuart noted the bookcase, with its array of neatly placed volumes. Each article of furniture was distinctive. All of the chairs were elaborate, and no two were exactly alike. While Stuart was wondering who kept the place so tidy, the explanation came in the form of a Filipino valet, who entered with a tray of glasses.

The servant was neatly attired in a white coat, and he moved with catlike stealth. Stuart took a sudden dislike to the man. Why, he did not know.

Conversation began. Mayo and Hawthorne became involved in a friendly discussion of affairs at Greenhurst. Stuart was an interested listener. He noted that Mayo was rather indulgent.

"So you're going on with the developing, eh?" asked Mayo. "What if it goes flat?"

Hawthorne shrugged his shoulders.

"Remember the price I offered you?" quizzed Mayo. "It's a lot more than you paid for that acreage!"

"It's not enough," responded Hawthorne.

"Suppose I raised the bid?" Mayo suggested.

"Not for sale. I'm going to make millions out of this deal."

"Maybe you're fooling yourself, Hawthorne."

"Not a bit of it, Mayo!" was Hawthorne's definite answer.

The millionaire laughed.

"Say, Hawthorne," he said, "I'll bet you've cleaned up on some of these propositions of yours."

"I have," returned Hawthorne quietly; "Why shouldn't I?"

"No reason why you shouldn't. More power to you. Of course, clean-ups sometimes bring comebacks unpleasant ones, from disappointed customers." Hawthorne shifted the subject immediately.

Stuart made a mental note of the conversation. He sized the men as opposites.

Hawthorne, a speculator who was afraid to declare the wealth that he had made through doubtful dealings; Mayo, a magnate who was proud of his possessions.

"Swell," said Mayo pleasantly. "You're a cagey chap, Hawthorne, and I like you in spite of it. Maybe it pays you to be mysterious. Say — by the way — you might like to see this. It ought to fit in your line. A packet of letters that I've been receiving. They're rather mysterious, too." He went across the room and fished in a pigeonhole of a writing desk. He brought our a key and unlocked a drawer. He started to lift a small white parcel that was girded with a rubber band.

Stuart saw him hesitate; then make a hasty examination of the package.

"This isn't it," declared Mayo. "I guess I left the letters back in New York." MAYO

replaced the packet and put the key in the pigeonhole. Stuart threw a sidelong glance toward Hawthorne. He saw a keen look upon the man's face.

Stuart knew what the promoter was thinking. For some reason, Mayo had decided not to show the letters of which he had spoken. His excuse that he had picked the wrong package was a lame one.

"I'll bring them up when I come from New York," declared Mayo pleasantly. "I'm going down to town tomorrow afternoon. Then back the next day."

"Quick work," observed Stuart. "I thought it was a sleeper jump from here to New York."

"No, just a plane hop for Mayo," laughed Hawthorne.

"Yes," said Mayo, "I use my private plane. Landing field right out in back of the house.

The pilot's on my pay roll. He drives my car while I'm here.

"Louie looks after the place when I'm gone. I go back and forth a lot, Bruxton. Anytime you want to travel that way, say the word."

"Thanks," said Stuart. "I'll be here for a while, but I might want to run down to New York, since it's so simple a matter."

"Why don't you come up here to the lodge?" asked Mayo. "After I get back, you know.

It's better than that terrible Inn."

Stuart again expressed thanks for the invitation. This was excellent. It would be easy to watch Mayo here, and Hawthorne's cottage was nearer to Mayo's lodge than to the Inn. The clock on the mantel struck twelve with an odd, chiming note. Hawthorne suggested a departure.

Louie, the Filipino, arrived with hats and coats. The guests said good night to Sherwood Mayo.

As they drove slowly between the stone gates, Stuart glanced through the rear window, wondering if the lights of the house would be visible. He noted that they were hidden over a slight rise of ground. Stuart's interest in that fact quickly faded. For he saw something else that impressed him as much more important.

Beside the wall, a few feet from one post, stood a tall, silent figure. It looked like the form of a man; but Stuart could not be sure that it was other than a creation of his imagination. It was a mammoth shadow, that bore the semblance of a human being.

Before Stuart could speak to Hawthorne, the car had reached a bend in the road. In his last glimpse, Stuart could scarcely see the fantastic form that he had noticed. It had blended with the darkness of the wall. It had vanished, like a specter of the night!

Chapter XI — Delmuth Pays A Visit

At eight o'clock the next evening, a man entered the lobby of the Dradno Building, one of Manhattan's newest skyscrapers. This individual was perfectly attired in a tuxedo, and over his arm he carried a dark-gray coat. He stepped into the waiting elevator.

"Good evening, Mr. Delmuth," said the operator.

The man uttered a slight response. He was not the type of person one would find talking with elevator operators. He possessed a blunt manner and carried himself in military fashion.

Sidney Delmuth impressed all observers as an egotist, not only in attire, but in expression. His face was round and challenging. His eyes were shrewd and cunning. His pointed black mustache bristled above thin, straight-set lips.

The elevator stopped at the thirtieth floor. The man in the tuxedo walked directly to a lighted door which bore the ornate sign:

Delmuth Advertising Agency

A man was sitting at a desk when Delmuth entered. He arose as his employer arrived.

"Waiting for you, Mr. Delmuth," he said.

"All right, Matthews," was the reply.

"Thought you came in a while ago," said Matthews. "I was sitting here, half-asleep, and I could have sworn I heard the door open. Guess I was dreaming."

Delmuth looked up sharply. He looked around the office as though expecting to see someone there. He walked into a small private office, and turned on the light.

After a brief inspection he visited a similar room. Then he came back into the outer office and went to a large safe in the corner.

He appeared satisfied that no one was in the place besides himself and his employee.

Delmuth indulged in a harsh laugh as he opened the safe. He was still laughing as he brought out a heavy manila envelope and thrust it in his inside pocket.

"I have to laugh when I look at this safe," he declared.

"Why?" questioned Matthews.

Delmuth shut the safe and turned the knob. Then he pointed to the name on the safe.

"One of old Mayo's safes," he said, "To think that we've got one of them in here! He'd give plenty to have that safe — with its contents.

"Every time we put one over on him, we keep all the data in a Mayo safe. Funny, isn't it?"

Matthews grinned. "Well," he said, "we've never done any work for his competitors in the safe line."

"Not in that, no," agreed Delmuth. "But that's only one iron in his smoldering fires. What about Sokleene Soap? He had a half a million tied up in that. It's making out all right — just about.

But that advertising campaign we put out on Washine just about wiped Sokleene off the map.

"Remember when he was promoting the Princess Products, and we pushed Duchess Beauty Sets? The same thing happened again.

"It's getting so every time the old boy starts something, it comes right down our alley, and we beat him with a competitive idea."

"No question about that," Matthews concurred.

"Well," declared Delmuth, "this time he's wise enough to come to terms before he begins!

He has a big interest in Purple Blossom Lotions, and he figures that we are planning something to meet it. He knows we have contacts with other concerns in that line."

"What's he going to do about it?" asked Matthews.

"I'm finding out tonight," Delmuth went on. "He's invited me up to a conference he's having at his apartment. Some of the Purple Blossom men are there.

"They won't offer me the account, I'm sure. Maybe they want to threaten me. Lawyers there, perhaps. Well, I'll soon find out!"

Delmuth had his hand on the doorknob. While he was talking, he was looking toward Matthews. With his last words, the advertising manager walked out into the hall.

There he stopped, and his lips tightened. He frowned as he glanced back toward the office. For Sidney Delmuth had a sudden recollection of something he had noticed just as he stepped through the door. Acting impulsively, Delmuth went back into the office. Matthews looked up in surprise at his return. He could not understand the puzzled look on Delmuth's face.

The advertising man was looking straight toward the far wall.

"What's the matter, sir?" asked Matthews.

"I've forgotten something," replied Delmuth. "I can't remember what it is." Actually, Sidney Delmuth was looking for a shadow. He was astonished because he did not see it. While he had been talking to Matthews, he had observed, in an offhand manner, a tall patch of darkness in the dim far corner. He had come back to look at it again. It was no longer there.

"The Shadow," murmured Delmuth. "The Shadow. I wonder if — " He strode across the room to that corner. There was nothing there. Unconscious of Matthews' surprised gaze, Delmuth walked about the room; then made an inspection of both inner offices. He finally stopped at a door that led into a side corridor. He tried the door; it was locked.

"That door is always locked, sir," said Matthews.

"I know it," answered Delmuth. "But where is the key? It's usually in the lock."

"That's so," said Matthews, in surprise. "I guess someone must have taken it out."

"See about it tomorrow," said Delmuth brusquely. "I'm a trifle nervous, Matthews. This unusual appointment is annoying me. Ah! Now I remember what I have forgotten." With no further words, Delmuth went into the inner office that bore his name on the door. There, he quietly unlocked a desk drawer and brought out a revolver. He examined the weapon to see that it was fully loaded. He placed it in his pocket and went out through the main office. Riding uptown in a cab, Sidney Delmuth was restless. He kept feeling for the envelope in his pocket. He was wearing his overcoat now, and he transferred the envelope to it. He looked out of the windows of the cab, and occasionally glanced through the rear window in a suspicious manner.

He was still anxious when he left the cab in front of Mayo's apartment house. There, he rested his hand against the inside pocket of his overcoat as he walked into the building. Sidney Delmuth was still looking for shadows. There were many of them here, and the fact annoyed him. In Mayo's apartment, an attendant took the visitor's overcoat. Delmuth saw the garment go into a closet; then he stepped there as soon as the servant had gone down the hall to announce his presence. For a moment, Delmuth fingered the envelope. Then he left it where it was. He also put his revolver in the pocket of the coat.

Sherwood Mayo was not present in the room which Sidney Delmuth entered. The advertising man saw two persons whom he knew, and was introduced all around.

He observed the coldness in the attitude of those who were meeting him, even though they pretended cordiality. This was even more evident when Sherwood Mayo entered.

The millionaire, usually genial, had a frown upon his face. He nodded curtly to Delmuth, who returned the greeting with a slight smile. The men sat down, and Mayo came quickly to the point.

"You know why we've asked you here tonight, Delmuth," he said. "We're starting a big campaign with Purple Blossom Lotions, and we don't want it copied by a competitor. Do you understand?"

"What have I to do with that?" asked Delmuth.

"You know well enough!" retorted Mayo. "You've spoiled business for me in other ways.

There's been too much of it!"

"I don't understand you," said Delmuth coldly.

Sherwood Mayo sat back and folded his arms. He looked about the group, as though expecting some other person to take up the cudgels. One of the other men spoke.

"We can't give you this account, Delmuth," said a sharp-faced individual. "There's two reasons why. One is, Mayo won't let us. The other is, the account's already placed.

"But I have a proposition to make. I have interests in the Grandoso Cigar Co. I'll swing you that account if you will keep away from concerns who are in the lotion business."

"When do I get the Grandoso account?" asked Delmuth.

"This week," was the reply.

"Fair enough," said Delmuth, rising and staring from one person to another. "I'll wait to the end of the week!"

"All right," said the man who had spoken before. "That settles it. You get the Grandoso account. I'll see you in your office, and we can go over the details. We'll line it up so that if you sign with any lotion concern, that will be the end of the Grandoso job."

Delmuth bowed and left the room.

"Now," said Mayo ironically, "we have finished with bribery. We can attend to business."

"I think he'll play fair on that basis," said the sharp-faced man.

"Delmuth is not likely to play fair on any basis," declared Mayo quietly. "You don't know him, Rawlings. If you did, you would not negotiate with him. However, I warned you.

"We can do with this makeshift arrangement. He will want to hold the Grandoso account, and that will give us a head start. But if he gets a good offer from a rival lotion concern, I warn you, he will drop the cigar advertising in a moment!"

The door was closed during this discussion. Delmuth, in the hallway, was putting on his overcoat while the servant held it.

Going down in the elevator, the advertising man felt in both inside and outside pockets.

He smiled as he felt the envelope and the revolver.

In the taxicab, Delmuth drew the envelope front his pocket. He held it between his hands as he smiled, and speculated on what had transpired.

"The fools!" he exclaimed in a low voice. "Handing me that soft proposition. They're stalling for time, and they don't think I know it — none except Mayo.

"They can have six months start for all I care — the way Mayo keeps bidding back on all his propositions. Then I can break out with another lotion, and it will be the same story over again.

"As for that Grandoso account, they'll find out that their contract will be a hard one to break, without paying plenty. Fools!" He laughed softly. "If they only knew what was in this envelope!

"Well, that's over, and I didn't have to say more than a few words. Easy money and no work!" Delmuth opened the envelope as he spoke. He removed a paper which it contained, and unfolded the document.

The cab was stopped near a traffic light. Leaning forward. Sidney Delmuth quickly scanned the written lines that appeared on the paper, checking all with care. Looking from the windows, he made sure that no one was observing him from a near-by vehicle.

Then, leaning back in his seat, Delmuth tore the paper to pieces. The tiny fragments fluttered from the window as the cab rolled along.

Sidney Delmuth was bound for the Cobalt Club. He had given that address to the driver when he had entered the cab. The vehicle stopped at its destination and Delmuth alighted. He entered the club and gave his hat and overcoat to an attendant. In the smoking room, Sidney Delmuth sat in a corner chair and noted the various members who were there. Among them was Rutledge Mann.

Meanwhile, Delmuth's overcoat was hanging in the check room, near the counter. The attendant was reading a newspaper. Had he glanced up, he would have witnessed a startling sight. A hand, apparently coming from nowhere, was approaching the pocket of a dark-gray overcoat. The hand paused and went away, carrying a manila envelope. Half a minute passed.

The hand returned and replaced the envelope as it had found it.

The attendant, had he witnessed the event, would have been astonished. Sidney Delmuth, had he been present to see, would have been pleased. For he had anticipated the occurrence, and had prepared for it.

The hand of The Shadow had stretched forth to grasp a prize. It had gained only an empty envelope!

Chapter XII — Stuart Encounters Trouble

It was the second night of Stuart Bruxton's sojourn in Greenhurst. So far, nothing had occurred to disturb the tranquillity.

Of all places, this peaceful summer resort seemed a most unlikely one for strife. It was for that very reason that Stuart was now alone in his room at the hotel, making his plans for this night. Stuart had been sent here to Massachusetts to conduct an investigation. He had been advised not to act decisively without first reporting to Harry Vincent.

His duty was one of observation. But Stuart felt that observation and action would go very well together; and on this occasion, he intended to try it out.

He had come here to watch two men, without interfering in their normal plans. Luck had broken his way. Paul Hawthorne and Sherwood Mayo had proved to be on friendly terms.

Sizing the two up, Stuart was well convinced that Hawthorne held a very minor position in the mind of Mayo. On the contrary, the multimillionaire loomed as a large factor in Hawthorne's limited world. Sherwood Mayo was a man of large affairs. Paul Hawthorne was a speculator, and something of an adventurer. Mayo appeared care free. Hawthorne seemed to dread some danger. These facts were significant. If a menace really existed for Hawthorne -

outside of the man's own imagination — it must come from an outside source. The promoter gave indications of fearing secret enemies.

On the other hand, Mayo's position, which seemed so secure, might be threatened without the millionaire realizing it. Mayo did not impress Stuart as a type of man who would bother with trivialities. Some scheme might be on foot without the millionaire suspecting the existence of a plot. Mayo was out of the picture tonight. That morning, his speedy monoplane had zoomed over the hotel, headed south for New York. That lightened Stuart's appointed task by half. He had only Hawthorne to consider at present.

But Stuart had a feeling that there might be a third man in this drama. He could not forget that tall, shadowy figure that he had seen outside the gate of Mayo's estate!

Tonight, Stuart intended to play the part of an active observer. From a package on his bed, he removed a suit of dark clothing — rough, ill-fitting garments that he had purchased in the village. Attired in these, he would not be recognized. There was a side door to the hotel, and it was no task to slip in and out without being observed.

Dressed, Stuart grinned as he viewed himself in the mirror. He looked like a farmhand ready for a night out. The dark, long-visored cap came over his eyes. That would do for the present. He could hide his features more effectively, later on.

Stuart slipped a businesslike revolver into his coat pocket. It was a short, snub-nosed.32

that made no bulge. He stole downstairs and left by the side door.

Once again the night was pitch black. Hovering clouds obscured the starlight. It was an ideal time for a secret prowl.

Striding up the road to Hawthorne's, Stuart found his thoughts reverting to the mysterious person whom he had seen beside the pillar of Mayo's wall.

Was that being at large tonight? The thought caused Stuart's hand to creep to his coat pocket. Perhaps the man had some connection with those fiends in Maryland! If so, an encounter here would be enjoyable. Stuart felt that he would like to meet both the old man with the smiling face and the monster, Grady.

Cautiously nearing Hawthorne's, Stuart saw a light in the window. He made a sweeping circuit through the woods, and crawled toward the house.

Beneath the window, Stuart crouched as he looked about him. Positive that no one was near, Stuart rose and peered through the window.

Hawthorne, at his table, was going over accounts. In a corner was a dull-faced young man

— probably the promoter's assistant. Hawthorne had mentioned that such a man lived here. Stuart dropped away from the window and prowled about the house. Satisfied that there was no one in the vicinity, he turned toward Mayo's. Stuart knew that there was no one but the Filipino servant at the millionaire's lodge. With Mayo away, what were the chances of the strange, shadowy person being present? None, Stuart decided.

He felt sure that the man — if it were actually a living being and not an imaginary figure that Stuart had seen — would be more concerned with Mayo than with his home. With Mayo away, Stuart decided that the premises about the lodge would be deserted. It was an ideal time to investigate that neighborhood. Stuart reached the approach to the house, and noted that the lamps on top of the pillars were not lighted. So he went directly through the gateway, and soon saw a light in the low-lying second floor of Mayo's lodge. That, Stuart decided, must be Louie's room.

There was also a light downstairs — a single lamp in Mayo's living room. Stuart again adopted his circuitous tactics and peered into the downstairs room. No one there.

He went in back of the house, and reached a large level area — Mayo's landing field. From here he could see the Filipino's quarters.

Stuart watched the man's window a short while, and just about the time he had again decided to approach the house, he saw the light go out. Then came the noise of a window being raised. Evidently Louie had retired.

To make sure, Stuart moved silently back to the house, and again looked in the living-room window. The place was still deserted.

Stuart felt sure that the light had either been forgotten or that it was customary to leave it on all night. With that decision, Stuart Bruxton smiled quietly to himself.

Now, he could go back to Hawthorne's house, make another inspection, and return to his room at the Inn. But that was not Stuart's intention. He was going to introduce the element of action into this prowl. In that room was a desk. In a pigeonhole of the desk was a key. The key unlocked a drawer. Within the drawer was a package of envelopes that Sherwood Mayo had started to unbind — and then had changed his mind.

It was Stuart's plan to take advantage of the millionaire's absence and inspect that package. He wanted to know whether or not Sherwood Mayo had been bluffing when he had said that he had forgotten to bring the proper package from New York.

Softly, Stuart tried the living-room window, it was looser than he had anticipated. It had evidently been locked, but the fastening was not a firm one.

Stuart pushed the sash inward; then upward. It gave under pressure. With only a slight rattle, the window opened.

Stuart waited a full minute; then drew his body through the opening and into Mayo's living room. He stole to the doorway, crouching low as he moved. He listened.

Satisfied that Louie could not have heard his entry, Stuart went back to the desk and fished in the pigeonhole. He found the key. Then, with a slight smile on his lips, Stuart bethought himself of two precautions.

He removed the revolver from his right coat pocket and set it softly on the table. From his left coat pocket, he produced a blue bandanna handkerchief, and tied it about his face. Two eyeholes which Stuart had cut that afternoon served to transform the bandanna into a perfect mask. There was a remote chance that he might encounter someone here — either Louie or some unknown person. In either case, Stuart intended that his identity should remain wholly unknown.

With revolver close at hand, Stuart unlocked the desk drawer. He opened it and found a cardboard box. This, he believed, was the object that contained the package of envelopes.

Opening the box, Stuart discovered a packet that looked very much like the one which Mayo had exhibited. He raised the loose flap of the first envelope and drew out a sheet of paper. It was entirely blank.

Replacing the paper, Cliff tried the second envelope with the same result. Each succeeding envelope had similar contents. All blank!

Was this the packet that Sherwood Mayo had shown? If so, the millionaire's statement had been correct. It must be the wrong packet.

It was also possible that the original packet had been taken away, and this one left instead. Why?

The envelopes were in Stuart's left hand. His right hand, resting on the desk, touched the handle of the revolver. Stuart's eyes were staring at the green blotter on the desk, his mind completely centered on the puzzling problem that confronted him.

It was instinct that told Stuart someone was approaching. In a flash, his hand seized the gun, and he whirled to ward off approaching disaster.

Even before his masked eyes could observe the menace — before he could level his gun, Stuart received the full attack of an antagonist.

A white-clad form sprang from a few feet away. An arm twisted itself about Stuart's neck. A quick, sweeping hand clutched the revolver and flung it across the room.

Grimly, Stuart locked himself in the struggle. He knew almost immediately that he had to contend with Louie, the Filipino. The servant must have heard him downstairs, and made a stealthy approach. This fight at close quarters was to Stuart's liking. He gripped the man's body with his strong hands, and sought to obtain a dominating hold.

But, to Stuart's astonishment, his foe was too formidable to conquer. Louie had gained the advantage by his surprise attack. Stuart, with his superior physique, should have offset that advantage. But he could not.

Stuart was a capable wrestler, but the Filipino was a master of jujutsu. They struggled back and forth, Stuart's teeth grating and his breath coming fiercely. Louie's wiry arms were controlling him, twisting him sidewise, despite Stuart's most strenuous efforts.

Stuart realized that he was being drawn into some hold that would give the Filipino the advantage. To prevent this, he wrestled one arm free, and tried to swing his opponent to the floor. That proved to be the very thing that Louie had desired. Twisting suddenly, the Filipino raised Stuart's body upward, and flung him headlong.

Stuart lost his hold as he somersaulted through the air. He felt a terrific impact against the back of his neck. For a moment he lay prone, his arms sprawled helplessly. Then he shot his hands upward and seized Louie's body.

The lithe Filipino countered the attack. He was twisting again, and under his expert efforts, Stuart's arms were pinioned beneath his own back. Staring straight upward through the eyeholes of his tight bandanna mask, Stuart saw the gleam of a knife blade in the Filipino's hand.

The blow which Stuart had received had weakened him for the instant; now, with death close at hand, he broke loose with his right hand, and clutched at the descending wrist. The action stopped the downward stroke.

Then Louie's left hand struck Stuart's arm, and the Filipino's left knee settled the defense.

Stuart was pinioned again, helpless, despite his writhing.

The Filipino's left hand was planted firmly against Stuart's mask. The fingers dug through the eyeholes. Stuart could see nothing now — but he knew that the murderous blade was aiming for his throat. No action of his own could have saved Stuart at that instant. He was utterly at Louie's mercy. A second was all that the Filipino needed to drive the knife blade home and end the life of this intrepid man. Stuart was closer to death than he had ever been — even when he had been trapped in the fiery house in Maryland!

It was the unexpected that brought the rescue. The knife stroke never fell. The brutal, boring fingers were suddenly withdrawn from Stuart's eyes.

Before the helpless man's blurred vision, the gleaming blade flashed sidewise and downward. A black-gloved fist had materialized from nowhere. It had landed against the face of the Filipino!

As Louie toppled sidewise, Stuart was freed. He rolled over in an effort to regain his feet.

As he turned, Stuart saw the white-coated Filipino rising before him. The murderous man was dodging the new antagonist. Once more, the gleaming knife flashed; then a mass of blackness blotted out the form of the Filipino.

The mask obscured Stuart's vision. As he pulled the handkerchief down to his neck, he saw Louie's form rise upward toward the ceiling, as though elevated by an invisible force! It was an amazing blur to Stuart's blinking eyes.

Then the Filipino hurtled headlong. The gleaming knife clattered to the floor.

Bewildered, Stuart saw Louie lying stunned. Looking back at the spot where the Filipino had been, he saw the answer.

In the center of the room stood a man in black — a tall figure clad in a flowing cloak. His face was obscured by the brim of a hat. From beneath, glowed keen eyes that viewed Stuart. The folds of the man's black cloak were swaying; and Stuart caught a glimpse of a bright, crimson lining. It was the mysterious man whom he had seen the night before! Here, in this mellow-lighted room, the tall figure seemed more mysterious than before. It was a shadow that had come to life — a solid being materialized from nothingness. Stuart's eyes were staring; his ears received the next weird impression. From that tall, sinister form came a mocking laugh. It was a cry of victory — the sardonic mirth of an avenger! Those burning eyes were staring toward the unconscious form of the murderous Filipino. The hidden lips were voicing the swift triumph!

This man had rescued Stuart; but was he friend or foe? Had he stopped the death thrust of the knife to deliver death of his own choosing?

Seized by a sudden fear, Stuart could think of but one course; to protect himself in case this being of the night should prove to be an enemy!

Across the room, he saw his revolver, lying beneath a chair. Stuart acted on impulse. He leaped for the spot where his gun lay, intending to gain the weapon as a protection.

He stumbled as he reached his objective. On his knees, Stuart clutched the.32 and threw himself around to cover the stranger. Then came amazement.

The man in black was gone! Stuart was alone, with the sprawled form of the helpless Filipino!

Was it all a dream? Could the rescue have been a thing of fancy? Even as Stuart wondered, his ears caught a sound that seemed to echo from outside the house. It was a long, eerie laugh — that same triumphant laugh of the man in black!

Stuart pocketed his revolver and dashed from the house. He stood in the thick darkness.

He could see nothing he could hear nothing. The weird rescuer was swallowed by the night.

Retracing his steps toward the road, Stuart wondered. He had found the front door unlocked when he had rushed from the lodge. It was through that door the stranger had entered. The man must have unlocked it — for it seemed likely that Louie would have barred the door at night. On a chance, Stuart wended his way to Hawthorne's. He crept to the house and peered into the window. Both men were at their places. It was obvious that neither had been out of the cottage.

Slowly, Stuart went back toward the Inn. His body was bruised and lame. He took his time; and stopped frequently to listen.

As he neared the hotel, he heard a distant sound. It was the faint humming of an airplane motor. Was Mayo returning? Stuart waited. The black sky gave no sign of the plane. The purring sound faded. Stuart recalled that there was a landing field a few miles from Greenhurst. Had the plane taken off from there? The plane was departing, not arriving; so it could not be Mayo's ship.

Stuart was wondering as he went into the hotel; wondering about the man; wondering about the plane. Somehow, there seemed to be a connection.

In this, Stuart was correct. Heading southward, The Shadow was flying to New York!

Chapter XIII — The Midnight Meeting

One night after Stuart Bruxton's experience in Greenhurst, Harry Vincent encountered developments in Philadelphia.

From the darkened window of a small apartment, he was peering across a narrow courtyard to a lighted room in a wing of the same building. The window of that room was open.

Harry was watching Denby Chadwick.

A sound came across the court. It was the ringing of a telephone. Harry was awaiting it as eagerly as Chadwick. He looked at the luminous dial of his wrist watch. It registered twenty minutes of eleven. Chadwick was answering the telephone.

"Yes — yes" — were his words — "I understand. I've been waiting to hear from you. I don't like it, though… I'm afraid I'll lose everything… You're demanding too much… No — no" — the voice had a pathetic note "don't say that… Wait… Wait a moment." Chadwick left the phone and came to the window. He stared out into the court with haggard eyes. His hands moved restlessly, clasping and unclasping. He drew down the sash.

Unable to hear more, Harry left his apartment and hastened through the hall. It was a considerable distance to the door of Chadwick's apartment.

Arriving there, Harry found himself in luck. The transom of Chadwick's door was slightly open. Harry could hear the voice within, although the words were not so plain as they had been in the room across the court.

Harry realized that he had missed an important part of Chadwick's conversation, and he chided himself for not having come here the moment that the phone call had commenced. It was too late for such regrets, however.

"I understand," Harry heard Chadwick say. "I've got to come through" — the voice was glum — "and you're letting me off easy, after all. I want to be sure that this is all of it, though." A pause followed, indicating that Chadwick was listening from the other end. Then came these words:

"I'll be there, then. But I want to be sure that I'll be safe. You know I'm taking a chance, going alone. I can't do anything else, but — " The voice stopped, as though the speaker might be listening to an interruption from the other end.

When Chadwick spoke again, it was with the tone of a man who has been somewhat reassured.

"You're protecting me positively, then. Well, I'll be there. I know the way. Midnight."

The conversation ended. Harry Vincent hurried back toward his own apartment. He waited behind a corner until he saw young Chadwick appear and start for the elevator. Then Harry descended by the stairway.

Chadwick was leaving the lobby when Harry reached the ground floor. Harry knew his immediate destination. Chadwick's car was outside the apartment.

The man was driving away when Harry reached the street and clambered into his own coupe. He saw the taillight of Chadwick's car as it turned a corner. Harry followed in pursuit.

Chadwick's car reached a trafficked street. It was not difficult to trail it.

Harry was thinking deeply as he kept pace behind the car in front. He knew something of Chadwick's troubles, but not enough.

So far as his uncle's death was concerned, Chadwick had a perfect alibi. But the fact that he had been quizzed so closely by the county detective made it appear as though there might be a plot against him. Blackmail was afoot, Harry decided. Perhaps old Grant Chadwick had been killed because he would not meet demands. Perhaps the heritage which Denby Chadwick had received was putting him in hot water also.

Harry remembered the fiendish plan that had operated against Stuart Bruxton. If the same men were after Denby Chadwick, there would certainly be danger.

Chadwick was going to a meeting. Harry, armed, was following him. The meeting was to be at midnight. It must be some distance away.

Harry's surmise was justified when Chadwick headed along the boulevard toward New York; then turned off to the right.

This gave his plan away. Chadwick was evidently aiming for the Palmyra bridge, a long span that connected Pennsylvania with New Jersey.

They reached the bridge, and after following Chadwick to the other side, Harry allowed the man to increase the space that separated the two cars. There was a straight road ahead; it would not do to be too close.

Far out in the country, Chadwick speeded his machine and drew out of sight around a long bend. When Harry reached the straight stretch that followed the curve, he could see no sign of his quarry. But his headlights showed a crossroads. There had been a heavy rain, and a smeared tire track indicated that a car had turned to the left.

Harry swung in that direction. He was piqued at his failure to follow effectively; but now he had a hunch that he believed must be correct.

They had been traveling for nearly an hour. Chadwick had shown only a few bursts of speed. The destination must be close, otherwise the man would have traveled more rapidly.

Harry knew this road, now that he was upon it. Three miles ahead was located a roadhouse called the Green Mill — a spot where beer runners sometimes gathered. Harry was convinced that the lonely roadhouse was Denby Chadwick's destination.

At ten minutes of twelve, Harry neared the Green Mill. He piloted his coupe up a side road; then ran it into an unfenced field beneath a clump of trees. The tires wallowed in mud, but the car slid through to a dry spot.

There was no time to waste. Harry could see the lights of the roadhouse. He opened the back of his coupe. He lifted an inner lid to disclose a complete and compact wireless sending set.

Harry strung an aerial between two trees. He worked with speed and precision.

The sending key clicked when he had completed operations. Harry's fingers were at work. With the special equipment provided him by The Shadow, Harry was reporting.

Somewhere, not far from New York, The Shadow had a sending station which enabled him to keep in direct touch by wireless. Harry had used this method of communication in the past. So far as he knew, the man at the other end was Burbank, The Shadow's most trusted agent.

Harry had often communicated with him.

Harry did not wait for a response. Satisfied that the set was working, he hurried toward the roadhouse, and did not slacken his pace until he was close by the building. There, he crouched in darkness and wormed his way toward a lighted window.

The shade was drawn, but there was a slight space at the bottom. Peering through, Harry saw Denby Chadwick, seated at a table.

Chadwick was waiting for someone who had not yet arrived. While Harry watched and waited, he heard a car pull in from the pike, bound toward a parking space at the side of the roadhouse. A few minutes later, a door opened within the room. A man entered. Harry stared.

The man was heavy and powerfully built. His face was an ugly one.

Stuart Bruxton's description of Grady flashed through Harry's mind. He felt positive this man was the killer who had slain both Jefferson and Powell!

Harry's hand tightened on his automatic. If Grady attempted murder here, he would fail.

Harry was ready to send a bullet through the man's brain if he attacked Denby Chadwick.

But it became evident that Grady was here for no such purpose. His face was ugly and leering; but it carried no fiendish look.

The men were conversing, but Harry could not catch their words. Chadwick drew forth a small portfolio, and gave it to Grady. The evil-faced man opened it and peered in at the contents.

He spoke a few words to Chadwick; then arose and went to the door.

For a moment Harry thought he was leaving; instead, he reappeared with a waiter. The man had bottles and glasses. Drinks were poured.

Grady, grinning, imbibed deeply. Chadwick, morose, did not touch his glass. This was an opportunity. Harry felt that nothing would occur for several minutes at least. He hurried back to the spot where he had rigged his aerial.

He had removed the sending apparatus about thirty feet from the car. Opening communication, he tapped a code message, telling all that he had observed, and giving his exact location. He received a prompt response. He was to watch what happened, and to wait until the men left; then to follow Grady in preference to Chadwick.

Most important, Harry was to send a quick signal by wireless before he left, leaving the equipment set up, if necessary, to make a hasty departure.

Gauging the distance from the spot to the roadhouse, Harry figured he could make a quick trip back and forth. He tapped word to stand by; that he would signal again within five minutes. Leaving the key, he went back to the Green Mill.

Chadwick and Grady were still at their table. Harry watched them a few minutes.

Chadwick swallowed his drink and rose to leave. Harry slid away from the window, and headed toward the coupe. He knew that if Chadwick should be going home, he would pass by the little road that led in from the Pike. At his car, Harry stood listening. Hearing no sound of an automobile, he decided to send word to Burbank. He turned to go to the sending set.

As he stepped away from the coupe, a man leaped upon him!

Harry had no opportunity to seize his automatic. The gun was in his pocket, for he had expected no trouble back here at the car.

He realized, now, that he had been followed from the roadhouse on this last trip. He was resolved to defeat this enemy.

Fighting furiously, Harry broke free and dealt the man a powerful punch on the jaw. The fellow staggered, and Harry leaned forward to deliver another telling blow.

At that instant, another figure rose from beside him. Harry saw a descending arm. He turned quickly to ward off the falling blow.

A solid object struck the side of Harry's head. The Shadow's operative sank with a groan.

Half stunned, he was incapable of motion as he felt himself gripped by both antagonists. Expert hands bound him. A handkerchief was thrust in his mouth and its ends tied behind his head.

Harry was lifted bodily and thrust in the front seat of his own car.

In a daze, he heard an automobile starting from the roadhouse. A few minutes later, the sound was repeated. Harry's mind barely managed to grasp the fact that both Chadwick and Grady were now gone from the Green Mill.

Who, then, were these men who had captured him?

More minutes dragged by. The door on the other side of the car opened. One of the captors entered the coupe and took the wheel. The starter buzzed and the car moved slowly backward, sloughing; through the mud toward the side road.

Harry Vincent, a helpless victim, was being taken to an unknown destination — and the only clue to his capture was the silent key upon the sending apparatus that he had left amid the trees!

Unseen danger had come to Harry — before he had been able to signal that he expected trouble!

Chapter XIV — Delmuth Sees A Shadow

An elderly man was seated in the living room of an apartment. His armchair was drawn back from the open window. Below sparkled the lights of Riverside Drive; beyond them, the blackness of the Hudson River.

The gray-haired titan gazed thoughtfully into the night and smiled benignly. A deceiving smile! For this was the same man whom Stuart Bruxton had met in Maryland!

The door opened and another man entered quickly, closing the door behind him. The newcomer turned to face the old man. The person was Sidney Delmuth.

The old man seemed keenly interested in Delmuth's arrival. His eyes lit up with a weird gleam as he detected a tense look upon the face of the advertising man.

The old man was looking for an explanation. It was forthcoming. Delmuth sat down in a chair opposite the old man and began to speak in a low, guarded voice.