Strange eyes were peering from openings in the opposite wall. A chattered gabble was telling what had happened. Amidst the lull, Cleve raised his revolver as a threat, and began to back toward the door where he knew that safety lay.
The effect of his action was startling. It was the spark that kindled the fire of rage among the foeman. One purpose dominated the entire throng of Chinese: that their victim should not depart alive.
If Cleve had supposed that his enemies were armed only with long, wicked knives, he now learned his mistake. As though by given signal, a dozen revolvers flashed into view.
Cleve did not wait for the firing to start. He blazed away with his revolver, straight at the nearest group of opponents. One Chinaman fell. The others dropped behind the shelter of the tables.
Like rats, these Mongols had slipped out of sight, and opened fire from their ambuscades.
As he sought the protection of a table, Cleve fired at spots where his enemies had been. He aimed well, but his plan could never have succeeded.
He was one against many, and the odds were impossible. His one lone revolver might account for a few of the attackers; but doom was inevitable. Cleve could never make that short dash to the door and expect to arrive alive.
Bursts of flame were coming from all quarters now. The room was ablaze with revolver shots. Cleve Branch was the target, and bullets smashed against the table which he had chosen for a buffer. Cleve’s answering shots were pitifully small and few.
But he still had help. The man at the door was fighting with him. There, from an angle, the hidden marksman could see all portions of the room. He had a dozen targets, and he chose them well.
Yellow hands spread and dropped their weapons. Fingers that were pressed to triggers suddenly lost their purpose. The sharp, staccato barks of the automatic were tokens of unerring aim.
A strange silence dominated the room as the echoes of gunfire died away. Cleve, bewildered, gradually realized the explanation.
His revolver was empty and useless in his hand. He had brought no reserve supply of cartridges. He knew that his weapon had done little damage. Those shots from the door had turned the tide!
Prone, helpless Chinese were sprawled about the room. Those who still remained active were too wary. They were crouching, fearfully, in corners; or they were back behind the refuge of the doorways.
They knew too well that their own shots would betray their presence. They had seen the havoc wrought. Not one dared risk encounter with that superman whose aim was everywhere!
TO Cleve, the silence became a sign that all his enemies were fallen or had fled. In that he was wrong. His knowledge of the Chinese nature was at fault.
These men were snipers at heart. They had attacked openly because they were many against one. Now, realizing their error, those who remained uninjured were lying low, awaiting a false move by the man whose life they sought.
The blackened door was refuge, in Cleve’s mind. The bursts of flame that had emerged from it were signs of sure protection. With gunfire ended, he felt that escape was the only course. Escape, before fresh attackers might arrive.
Springing from behind the table, Cleve leaped straight toward the door. His dash carried him no farther than five feet. The shots came from hidden Chinamen. A bullet winged Cleve in the shoulder, and he sprawled headlong on the floor.
The hidden friend was answering. Shots rang from his reloaded automatics. But now the task was superhuman. Cleve’s false move had placed his helpless body where it was a target for the aim of merciless snipers.
These Chinese would not be content to let that body lie. Dead or alive, the form of Cleve Branch was due to receive a full quota of revengeful lead.
Cleve’s eyes, upraised toward the door, were staring with both misery and amazement. For before him appeared a strange, unaccountable form. Sweeping in from the darkened hallway came a living shadow!
It was The Shadow!
No longer a mere fleeting phantom, The Shadow appeared as a man garbed in black — a flowing cloak upon his shoulders, a slouch hat pulled low over his inscrutable visage. Two black-gloved hands were clutching their automatics.
The Shadow was coming to the rescue!
His first move was a swift one. Like a living form of darkness, The Shadow swept forward, and his tall shape blotted out the form of Cleve Branch. Willfully, The Shadow had made himself the target for those hidden enemies.
His challenge was answered.
No longer was Cleve the victim that the murderers sought. Their fire turned toward this new menace — the man who had spoiled their schemes — the hidden marksman who had sent their comrades sprawling with his wondrous aim.
Swaying evasively, The Shadow made a strange target. His tall form, moving with a mystic rhythm, seemed to elude the fire of his foeman. A bullet clipped the top of the slouch hat. Another zimmed through the flowing border of the black cloak.
From hidden lips came a mocking laugh — a merciless mirth that boded no good for the relentless enemy. A living target, The Shadow had played the Chinamen’s own game. He had caused their eagerness to prevail over their caution.
Unscathed by the shots that had greeted his appearance, he had surveyed the scene with piercing eyes. He had marked the spots from which betraying spurts of flame had told the presence of the snipers.
Now his automatics came into sudden action. They burst forth with roars that sounded like cannon in that low-ceilinged room. They formed a swift barrage — a deadly hail of uncanny fire that rained destruction on those who had unwisely found The Shadow’s wrath!
One bullet caught a yellow-visaged sniper as he dodged behind a door. The man toppled sidewise and sprawled into the room, his revolver striking the floor four feet beyond his body. A sneaking form, slipping down behind a corner table, plumped suddenly and did not rise again.
The Shadow’s left hand, with quickly moving forefinger, turned the path of an automatic across a blackened opening at the far side of the room.
Somewhere in that darkness lay a man whose revolver was pointed, ready to deliver a fatal bullet. The shot never came. The Shadow’s remedy had worked. Another Chinaman became motionless.
THOSE deadly automatics brought another silence to the den of death. Down to a single shot that remained in his right-hand gun, The Shadow had dealt destruction to the hidden murderers. Not one Chinaman remained capable of action — either in that room or in the hidden passageways beyond.
A prone man in a corner was trying to rise and deliver a last shot; but his effort failed. He sank back helpless, and his revolver dropped from his grip.
There was an open window across the room. It opened on a narrow crevice between this building and the next. Through it, a yellow face was peering. This single assassin had crawled to his perch from the floor below.
The Shadow did not see that face, for his gaze was turning to the floor. There, a crippled knife-wielder was writhing upward at The Shadow’s side. His blade was poised in his left hand. Seeking to attack at close range, he had approached The Shadow while the automatics were barking.
The Shadow saw his foe. His right hand swung wide with a long, forceful blow. It struck the Chinaman’s raised wrist, and hurled the assassin sidewise. The knife, loosened from the grasp which held it, clicked harmlessly away.
A yellow hand was beside the face at the window. A gleaming revolver shone. Its muzzle was pointed directly at the form in black. The Shadow’s cloak was spreading, and its crimson lining formed a background for the man within that cloak. The revolver moved upward at the window.
The Shadow, turning suddenly, saw the threatening gleam. His lowered automatic swung upward. Its last shot sped on its way, just as the poised enemy prepared to loose his fire.