Wizard Of Crime.txt

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by Wizard of Crime (lit)


  by the police before any were allowed to serve at this important dinner.

  Unless some crooks had been detailed to fix the master switch in the

  cellar of the restaurant, it would be a difficult job to extinguish those

  lights. The thing had been done at Weylan's, but it was an easy matter there.

  Unquestionably, Ralph was in a desperate mood. The Shadow could tell that

  from the restless twitches of Ralph's face. But that did not apply to the

  master crook who had somehow induced Ralph to play a murderer's role.

  What if the lights did go out, giving Ralph a chance to try some gunplay?

  He would be overwhelmed by Cranston's friends - Fitzcroft, Caulden and the

  other society men. They wouldn't kill him; they would take him alive. A man who

  knew much about the Dean business would be a prisoner, who might be forced to

  talk.

  The Shadow's train of thought came to an distant halt. He was on the wrong

  track. The master behind this game of murder could not afford to let Ralph live

  after attempting a kill. Gruble hadn't been given a chance to live after he had

  rendered his required services at Weylan's.

  Tracing back to the battle on Weylan's lawn, The Shadow considered the

  mystery of the vanished mob. An amazing solution threaded itself through his

  mind.

  Letting his eyes close, The Shadow projected himself back further to the

  ride that he had taken with a squad of killers after his crawl from the remains

  of Parringer's blasted laboratory.

  Voices came to mind. Voices that The Shadow had been unable to recall but

  which came plainly to him at this moment, not as echoes from the past but as

  actual sounds about this very table. Opening his eyes, The Shadow gave a

  typical Cranston smile and began to chat with the other diners.

  Not one of the jolly throng realized that their guest of honor had solved

  crime's subtle secret.

  There was no vanished mob!

  The wizard who manipulated crime had been too crafty to hire a horde from

  the underworld. He had chosen his followers, not from the rogues' gallery but

  from the social register. Fitzcroft, Caulden, a dozen more who belonged to

  their exclusive set were the high-priced thugs who worked for R. G. Dean!

  Four of them had grabbed The Shadow outside Parringer's. They had acted

  like mobbies, but they had talked like gentlemen. They had served again as

  decoys and bomb-setters, the night that The Shadow had dodged a succession of

  traps outside the Harmon Building. Their neatest trick however, was the one

  that they had staged at Weylan's house.

  One man had slipped down to the cellar to put out the lights. A few others

  had sneaked outside, to put on masks and start the mob attack. The rest had

  posed as what they were supposed to be: society men attending a fashionable

  party.

  They had carried that faked fray across the lawn, each man playing

  whichever part he chose. Some had remembered to give raucous battle shouts, the

  sort that went with the part of mobsmen. No wonder they had come back bringing

  captured guns and masks. Those articles had belonged to them from the start!

  Tonight, they were going to let Ralph Atgood do the dirty work. But they

  wouldn't merely suppress him afterward. They would kill him and testify, one

  and all, that he had gone berserk. They would claim that Ralph had jumped up

  and turned off the lights, though The Shadow knew exactly who was to perform

  that duty; Percy Caulden was seated closest to the light switch.

  If Ralph failed to make the kill, these chaps would do it on their own.

  They could still put the blame on Ralph. The only way to clear with these

  well-groomed rats who had sold their birthright, was to make them show their

  hand too soon.

  SIGHTING a waiter, The Shadow called for champagne, which brought plaudits

  from his pretended friends. When the waiter suggested two bottles they heard

  Cranston order a magnum, which produced more acclaim.

  In the midst of the hilarity that followed, The Shadow flashed quick looks

  to Harry Vincent, giving him the news in brief.

  The magnum arrived. It was a huge two-quart bottle that stood as high as

  The Shadow's shoulder when the waiter rested it on the table.

  When The Shadow nodded, the waiter poured the champagne finishing with

  Cranston's glass. Rising, The Shadow raised his glass with his right hand, his

  left elbow grazing the now emptied magnum.

  All others rose with the guest of honor. Ralph Atgood was holding his

  glass in his left hand. He let his right hand go to the coat-tail pocket where

  he had the gun. Harry Vincent shifted in from Ralph's right, ready for a

  sideward, left-handed grab.

  This was the logical time for the stroke to come. In the act of sipping

  champagne while standing, Lamont Cranston would be a perfect target, even when

  the lights were gone. Ralph sensed that the lights would blacken the moment

  that the glass reached Cranston's lips. But The Shadow planned to force that

  action earlier.

  Smiling as he looked toward the faces all about him The Shadow spoke in

  Cranston's even fashion.

  "I propose a toast" - there was a trace of mockery in that level tone -

  "to a man who is not with us. One whose cleverness is great but not great

  enough to prevent us from knowing one another as we really are."

  Strained expressions showed on the faces of the listeners. The Shadow

  broke the tension, as he uttered:

  "To your friend and my enemy - R. G. Dean!"

  THERE was a fierce shout from Fitzcroft, the leader of the gilt-edged mob.

  Caulden yanked the light switch; before Ralph could get his revolver from his

  pocket, Harry Vincent floored him with a punch and wrested the gun away from

  him.

  Men were springing for The Shadow, thinking that they could reach him

  before he had a chance to ward them off. They thought that he was unarmed and

  defenseless at the moment the lights went out. They had forgotten the empty

  champagne magnum.

  The Shadow caught the massive two-quart bottle by the neck and swung it

  like an Indian club. It battered past the hands that grabbed for him, found

  jaws and skulls beyond. Clearing a wide circle, he voiced a sinister,

  challenging laugh that seemed a part of the very darkness that filled the room.

  He was fading backward as he delivered that mockery. Guns blasted for the

  spot where he had been. The Shadow answered with shots from an automatic that

  he whipped from beneath his tail coat. He was picking out foemen by the spurts

  of their guns, and Harry was doing the same with Ralph's revolver.

  The terrific tumult brought smashes from the door. Under the glare of

  police flashlights, de luxe crooks went mad, knowing that their game was up.

  Some were sprawled, others were staggery, but the rest made a drive for the

  doorway, preferring to rush a headquarters squad rather than risk further

  chances with The Shadow.

  As he wheeled to a small doorway, The Shadow flayed those crooks with

  bullets. They were flattening beneath an avalanche of police, when the little

  door broke inward.

  Sidestepping, The Shadow flashed a red gleam with his tiny flashlight; it
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  changed to green as a pair of detectives charged in from the door to join the

  fray, leaving the way open.

  Catching the signal, Harry dragged Ralph from underneath the banquet

  table. Groggily, Ralph stumbled ahead, for he was anxious to get away. The

  Shadow caught him from the other side, helped Harry hustle the prisoner through

  the little doorway.

  A detective found the light switch, pulled it. In the glare that filled

  the room, a dozen police found themselves winners over a crew of the same size.

  No fight was left in the bedraggled, wounded men whose uniforms were evening

  clothes.

  The Shadow had found the vanished mob, conquered its members, and left the

  roundup to the law. From a stairway beyond the little doorway, headquarters men

  heard the weird, trailing tone of a parting laugh.

  The victory dinner had ended with an actual triumph, instead of the murder

  that society mobsters had planned as part of a fake celebration.

  Victory belonged with The Shadow!

  CHAPTER XIX

  THE NEEDED LINK

  RALPH ATGOOD found himself riding in a taxicab, staring into glowing eyes

  that seemed to burn him with their intensity. He was listening to a whispered

  voice - one that put questions in the tone of commands.

  He wondered what had happened to Lamont Cranston. This being wasn't

  Cranston. He was some superhuman sort of creature, who wore a black cloak and a

  slouch hat that obscured his face, except for those amazing eyes.

  Ralph was feeling the forceful power that only The Shadow could apply. The

  whispered voice was telling him to talk, and Ralph responded. He felt as though

  he had come into the province of an impartial judge, who would know the truth

  of his story.

  Coming rapidly to the events at Weylan's, Ralph told how he had found the

  money in his own possession after the robbery. He heard The Shadow's

  understanding laugh, and it seemed to clear up the mystery.

  Fitzcroft and his stuffed-shirt crew were the ones who had taken the swag.

  They had hidden it, by the simple expedient of dividing it into a dozen thin

  bundles, each man carrying a quota.

  Those small packets hadn't shown under their evening clothes. Strolling

  outside so they could bid Alicia good-by, they had stuffed Ralph's topcoat with

  the stolen goods after the police had searched the car.

  Eagerly continuing with his story, Ralph told of his visit to crime's

  headquarters, how he had met the wizard of crime in person, under the glare of

  the bewildering green light that filled the low-ceilinged laboratory. He

  described Alicia's plight; how he had agreed to murder Cranston, in order to

  save her life.

  The Shadow spoke. His words were an acceptance of Ralph's story. From that

  tone, Ralph understood that he had been released from blame for his misguided

  actions. In return, The Shadow stipulated that Ralph was to aid in an immediate

  search for the master criminal to which Ralph willingly agreed.

  He described the man, as much as he could. Oddly, the only important point

  - the enormous size of the crime wizard's oval head - was the very clue that The

  Shadow wanted. Ralph heard the whisper of a laugh, then the words:

  "You spoke of the route you followed, blindfolded; how you remembered the

  number of turns."

  Ralph fumbled in his vest pocket, brought out a slip of paper upon which

  he had dejectedly jotted that data, after returning to his apartment. The

  Shadow's gloved hand passed the list to Harry Vincent, who sat on the other

  side of Ralph. For the first time, Ralph realized that there was another

  passenger in the car.

  Giving the driver the address of Ralph's apartment, The Shadow spread a

  map of Manhattan and studied it beneath a flashlight, while Harry read off the

  lefts and rights.

  Tracing a course, The Shadow checked it. His laugh was sibilant. Fitting

  Ralph's clues to a trail he had in mind, The Shadow found that it finished at

  the very place he expected.

  BEGINNING the route from Ralph's apartment, the cab eventually pulled up

  into an alleyway that Moe Shrevnitz found by cruising along the street. The

  Shadow alighted, Harry and Ralph with him; he sent Moe back for other agents.

  Finding the doorway that Ralph remembered, The Shadow used his flashlight

  on the steep stone stairs, then through the long underground passage. They came

  at last to the elevator.

  Probing a loose board, The Shadow slid it aside and found a button that

  controlled the lift. He brought the elevator down to the subbasement level and

  left the button uncovered, so that others would notice it when they arrived.

  Tonight, Ralph judged from the slow motion of the elevator that the trip

  to the top of the shaft was not more than four or five stories. When the

  elevator stopped, The Shadow began to slide the door open, very slowly.

  A greenish glow reached it from the laboratory, then was blocked by The

  Shadow's form.

  Ralph heard The Shadow whisper something to Harry Vincent. The door, never

  more than a quarter open, began to close again. Harry had his finger on the

  control, ready to start the car down to the basement. Disquieted, Ralph asked

  the reason.

  In the darkness, Harry told him that The Shadow believed their arrival was

  suspected; that it would be better to withdraw.

  Before Ralph could offer a protest, Harry pressed the button. The elevator

  gave a slight jolt, then stopped. Before Harry could find a way to make it move

  again, the door slid wide, operated from the other side. This time, its slide

  was swift.

  The elevator was bathed in greenish light; the visitors found themselves

  covered by a pair of guns, held by the two chunky men who served as the

  chemical wizard's assistants.

  Harry's hands lifted; so did Ralph's. As they stepped forward, Ralph

  looked for The Shadow, wondering what the black-cloaked fighter was doing in

  this emergency. To his surprise, he saw no sign of the black-clad leader who

  had brought them to this lair!

  Marched toward the front of the laboratory, the prisoners were greeted by

  two men that Ralph could recognize by their voices. One was the master crook,

  who used his chortling tone; the other, Glenny, who spoke in his purred style.

  "So you have returned," chuckled the chief of crime, "and brought a

  witness with you to testify, I suppose, that you disposed of our enemy

  Cranston."

  "Clever stuff, Atgood," added Glenny, in his smoothest manner, "finding

  your way here. Who is this chap you brought along?"

  Ralph introduced Harry, stammering as he did. He realized that the pair

  were ridiculing them. By this time, the pretended Mr. Dean had probably learned

  that matters had not worked out well at the Red Ribbon Cafe. Probably his

  informant was Glenny, who could easily have been in the vicinity of the cafe.

  Then came snarled words from the man with the enormous head. The master

  crook had discarded his chortle. He was ready, apparently, to reveal his true

  identity to these helpless prisoners.

  Ralph and Harry saw a scrawny, green-dyed hand reach out and press a

  switch. The gre
enish glow dwindled, white light gradually replacing it.

  Under the changing illumination, the man with the great head seemed to

  undergo a magical transformation. The size of his head was dwindling, although

  another outline curved beneath it. Two ovals, a smaller and a larger, gradually

  took on the complete form of a face.

  The prisoners saw a gray-haired man, whose grizzled heard formed a large

  curve beneath his chin. It was Harry who recognized that face, from a

  description that he had previously been given. Harry exclaimed the name:

  "Cyrus Shawnwood!"

  BOWING, Shawnwood acknowledged his own name. Then, in a wheezy tone that

  carried an ugly note of malice, he declared:

  "You were fools, to let The Shadow send you here to test my trap! But I

  could hardly expect fools to serve any one other than a fool! At last, The

  Shadow's wandering brain has grasped the facts that he should have known long

  ago!"

  Tilting his head back, Shawnwood indulged in a reminiscent laugh.

  "There never was an Isaac Loman," he announced. "I sent that death machine

  to myself, through you, Atgood, and I arranged the Loman correspondence myself.

  For weeks, the police have been looking for a man who does not exist.

  "By passing myself as one of my own victims. I was able to meet the police

  commissioner, at the Cobalt Club. I halted the action of the death machine, when

  it showed the word 'danger,' until Cranston arrived. Then I let Cardona push the

  buttons."

  The cleverness of that scheme made Shawnwood laugh again, until he

  remembered that the flying bomb had not killed The Shadow. From that, he

  recalled that all his other methods of assassination had likewise failed.

  Shawnwood's next snarl was venomous.

  "Tonight," he spat, "The Shadow learned one fact that enabled him to guess

  another. He found out that my mob was imaginary. That made him think about

  Loman. He probably decided that Loman was a myth, also."

  There was more to it than Shawnwood realized. On top of the possibility

  regarding Loman's nonexistence, The Shadow had listened to Ralph's description

  of a supercrook with a giant head. Ralph's details had been clouded because of

  the laboratory's greenish glow. Discounting that, The Shadow had found a simple

  answer.

 

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