the past; how The Shadow had intervened in the face of tremendous dangers, to effect an amazing rescue of his faithful operative.
But to Rutledge Mann, this was a new experience. His work for The Shadow had been of a passive sort.
He had never believed that he would encounter a situation like this.
Harry Vincent glanced toward his companion. He saw that Mann's face was pale; yet that full countenance possessed a firmness that brought new courage to Harry's heart.
Rutledge Mann was bearing up. Like Harry, he would die before he would tell what he knew about The Shadow!
'So you guys know nothing, eh?' quizzed Gats. 'Well, it's time you did know something! So I'll let you in on it. The Shadow has got his! What do you think of that? Up in your office, Mann—that's where he took it on the chin. I had my gang laying for him, and they bumped him off.'
These words were well calculated. First, they were spoken to give Gats, himself, new courage. Five minutes ago, he had left these close-mouthed prisoners to answer a phone call from Squint Freston.
From that message, he had learned that The Shadow was still at large. That had been discouraging news.
Again, Gats was thinking of his men. He had told them that these prisoners were agents of The Shadow.
The fact had made them worry. To let them believe that The Shadow had been blotted out was, indeed, a wise policy.
The proof of this belief was indicated by grunts of approval from the gangsters who heard Gats Hackett's statement.
Lastly, Gats felt sure that his expression of self-confidence would convince Vincent and Mann that their own lives could be saved by speaking; now that The Shadow was supposedly dead, they would surely talk.
Harry Vincent, however, was not deceived. He threw a warning look toward Rutledge Mann. He realized then that the glance was unnecessary. The investment broker, too, knew that Gats Hackett was lying.
SEEING that his words had failed of their final effect, Gats became sullen. The knowledge that The Shadow was at large was disturbing; still, he was confident that The Shadow could not know where his men were prisoners.
This underground den was located beneath an old garage. It had been an unknown hideout of the notorious mob known as the Hudson Dusters, and Gats had fitted it up for his own purposes.
Nevertheless, he felt that there was no use waiting longer before he came to the climax of his endeavors to make these cold-faced prisoners speak. Gats was an ingenious man for a mobster; and it had long been his desire to test a method of ordeal which would produce remarkable results.
He surveyed Vincent and Mann. His plan required different treatment for each one. He wanted to choose the proper subjects. Gats grinned as he compared the two.
'You, handsome,' he said to Harry, 'you're the guy that knows the most about The Shadow. Well, we'll make you squeal. How do you like that?'
Gats paused; then turned toward Mann. He laughed as he saw the frigid expression of the investment broker's face.
'You, fatty,' he remarked, 'you'll squeal, too—not to me, maybe, but to this pal of yours. I've had enough of foolishness. We'll give you the real works this time!'
Gats spoke to a pair of mobsmen, and the two gangsters became immediately active.
The room in which the ordeal was taking place was lighted by one huge incandescent. The helping henchmen went out into the edges of darkness, and came back, dragging an upright rack that stood some six feet in height.
The purpose of this instrument was obvious. It formed a crude guillotine, with a sharp-edged cleaver suspended above a slotted pillory. Two wooden channels marked the path down which the blade would fall when released.
Gats ordered a demonstration. He pressed a lever, and the blade dropped. It sped through the pillory, and stopped with a heavy thud.
Any object placed within that pillory would have been demolished by the falling cleaver, which was a huge, broad-edged device.
'Put fatty in it,' ordered Gats, with a malicious laugh.
The guillotine was dragged to the center of the stone-walled room. Mobsmen affixed it to clamps that projected from the floor.
They pulled Mann from the wall and stretched him, face upward, with his head through the pillory, the upper part of which was raised momentarily. When the pillory was clamped down, it held a tight grip on the neck of The Shadow's agent.
'That's right,' mocked Gats. 'Keep looking upward. That's the idea. You'll see plenty if you keep watching.'
He made a motion toward Harry Vincent. Mobsmen dragged Harry forward.
Directly opposite the guillotine were rings that protruded from the wall. Harry was placed against these.
The cords that bound him were cut. Harry offered no resistance; that would have been hopeless.
His body and his legs were now bound by straps to the wall. The body strap was slightly looser. A gangster gave Harry a push; he found himself leaning forward, staring down into the face of Rutledge Mann.
The two men gazed at each other with firm, set expressions. They were determined not to yield, no matter what might occur.
The position of Harry's arms made it impossible for him to reach the guillotine; but now Gats placed a chair close by Harry's right hand. Unconsciously, Harry tried to reach it. His fingers just failed. Gats Hackett laughed.
'Right where I want it,' he sneered.
Upon the chair, Gats placed a flat block of wood, upon which was clamped a clock marked in sections.
The block also held a box of small proportions, topped by an electric switch.
'See that?' questioned Gats. 'I'm going to explain it to you.'
The gang leader made an attachment between the box and the lever that controlled the guillotine. Harry shuddered as Gats toyed with the release. A slip would mean the death of Rutledge Mann.
'Here's the way it works,' explained Gats, with an ugly chuckle. 'When I press that switch, she's all set.
Twelve minutes to go; then the big knife plops. Great idea—I got it from a chink, who used it in the tong wars.
'You can't quite reach it, handsome. Try all you want; but you can't. When the twelve minutes are up, down will come the knife, and fatty here will get it in the neck.
'So keep watching fatty, handsome. He'll be squealing like a rat, and you won't be able to help him except by squawking to me. He'll holler to you, and when the going gets too tough, you yell to me that you'll tell all you know about The Shadow. If you don't tell after you squawk—well, fatty will get it in the neck anyway.'
Gats made a motion to the gangsters. They walked away. Harry watched them. They closed a metal grille about fifteen feet from the guillotine. All the gangsters but one stood beyond; that particular mobster remained with Gats.
The leader walked in the other direction, followed by the one remaining henchman. Another grilled door began to close. Gats laughed. He returned and pressed the electric switch from right to left. The clockwork began to operate. Gats walked to the closing grille and joined his one companion.
THE openwork door closed. Harry Vincent and Rutledge Mann were in a cage. Scowling, sordid faces were mocking them like evil demons as they watched this grim scene.
Harry stared down at Rutledge Mann. He saw the look of instinctive dread that clouded his companion's face. Spurred to action, Harry strained at the strap which held his body, in a hopeless effort to reach the electric switch and shove it from left to right. Hard though he tried, he found the task was impossible.
The ordeal was terrific. The hand on the clock dial was moving steadily. One minute had nearly passed.
Harry, with beads of sweat forming on his brow, looked again at Mann.