Title:   THE ANNIHILIST

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE ANNIHILIST

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE ANNIHILIST.............................................................................................................................................1

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson ......................................................................................1

Chapter I. THE POPEYED DEAD.......................................................................................................1

Chapter II. THE MYSTERY QUEST...................................................................................................10

Chapter III. THE BOKE MEETING.....................................................................................................17

Chapter IV. MORE POPEYED ...........................................................................................................24

Chapter V. THE HAND OF SULTMAN..............................................................................................31

Chapter VI. PAT HITS A SNAG..........................................................................................................38

Chapter VII. SURPRISE SHADOW.....................................................................................................44

Chapter VIII. THE CRIME GLAND .....................................................................................................49

Chapter IX. BOKE'S TOUCH ...............................................................................................................54

Chapter X. TORTURE ...........................................................................................................................59

Chapter XI. TERROR OVER THE CITY .............................................................................................66

Chapter XII. DEATH ON THE RIVER................................................................................................71

Chapter XIII. ULTIMATUM .................................................................................................................79

Chapter XIV. BOKE DECIDES ............................................................................................................87

Chapter XV. UPSTATE .........................................................................................................................94

Chapter XVI. DOUBLE TRAP...........................................................................................................101

Chapter XVII. HARDBOILED'S MISTAKE ......................................................................................106

Chapter XVIII. MONK TAKES HIS DAY .........................................................................................115


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THE ANNIHILIST

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter I. THE POPEYED DEAD 

Chapter II. THE MYSTERY QUEST 

Chapter III. THE BOKE MEETING 

Chapter IV. MORE POPEYED 

Chapter V. THE HAND OF SULTMAN 

Chapter VI. PAT HITS A SNAG 

Chapter VII. SURPRISE SHADOW 

Chapter VIII. THE CRIME GLAND 

Chapter IX. BOKE'S TOUCH 

Chapter X. TORTURE 

Chapter XI. TERROR OVER THE CITY 

Chapter XII. DEATH ON THE RIVER 

Chapter XIII. ULTIMATUM 

Chapter XIV. BOKE DECIDES 

Chapter XV. UPSTATE 

Chapter XVI. DOUBLE TRAP 

Chapter XVII. HARDBOILED'S MISTAKE 

Chapter XVIII. MONK TAKES HIS DAY  

Chapter I. THE POPEYED DEAD

JOHN Henry Cowlton was the first popeyed dead one. Cowlton was a  young man who had inherited

money, and the newspaper reporters, writing  his obituary the next morning, called him a Park Avenue

playboy.  Cowlton was found in his penthouse gymnasium, and because the gym  windows were open and it

had been a cold night, his body was frozen  only slightly less hard than a rock. There was no mark on John

Henry  Cowlton's athletic body. But there was a very peculiar thing wrong with  his eyes. 

John Henry Cowlton's eyes were protruding completely from their  sockets, and for no good reason that the

coroner could find. They were  quite horrible, those eyes. 

Everett Buckett was the second popeyed dead one. They found him in  his limousine, which he drove

himself. Buckett was a Wall Street  operator whose machinations had sometimes moved others to call him

"Old  Bucket of Blood." He was worth upward of forty millions of dollars. 

There was no mark on his body, but every one who saw his corpse  noted the way the eyes stuck out. Not only

was this horrible to look  at, but it gave the undertaker considerable trouble. 

Of course Everett Buckett's death was connected with that of John  Henry Cowlton, on account of the eyes.

But the catch was that there was  no other connection between the two men, as far as any one knew. They  had

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not even been acquaintances. 

And certainly no one could connect "Nutty" Olsen with Everett  Buckett, Wall Street wolf, and John Henry

Cowlton, Park Avenue  socialite. 

Nutty Olsen was the next victim, and they found him in his cheap,  filthy room with his eyes all apop. Nutty

had been in numerous jails  and he had a long police record; he was known as an utterly bad  character. It was

even suspected that he had murdered his mother  because the old lady had once turned him over to the police.

This had  never been proved. 

All of these deaths were in Manhattan. 

The next one was in the Bronx. By this time, newspapers had started  putting the popeyed deaths on the front

page, and people who had  nothing else to do were wondering if some new and mysterious disease  might not

have sprung up. 

The Bronx victim was a lawyer, noted as a very honest man. He had a  large family. They heard him

screaming in his room. When they reached  him, he was spread out on the floor with his eyes sticking out. 

The tabloid newspapers began to turn handsprings. They ran big  headlines; and the more timid citizens of

New York began to look into  mirrors frequently to see if anything was wrong with their eyes. 

The thing was not a joke. A fifth and sixth man were found dead   one a comfortably fixed insurance man,

the other a downandout  hangeron in a pool hall  and their eyes were not pleasant things to  look at The

seventh was a professor in the city's largest university. 

There was no conceivable connection between any of these men. But  they all died with their eyes sticking

out. 

The police department, urged by the mayor, sent to Chicago for a  specialist in strange diseases, for none of

the victims showed the  slightest mark on their bodies. The conservative New York papers became  as wild as

the tabloids. They did their best to worry every one. 

Certain unnaturally timid persons began to go south to Florida  earlier than they had intended. Others went to

Europe. Those who had  country homes paid them a visit. So far, it was only the timid who were  worried. But

before long, every one was to feel the terror of it. 

They thought it was some new disease. They were wrong. Just how  hideously wrong, no one had yet realized.

The secret of the whole thing  started coming out after what happened at the Association of Physical  Health. 

In the Association of Physical Health, there was a frosted glass  inneroffice door which bore the legend: 

Dr. J. Sultman, President 

Behind the door, a man yelled hoarsely, "I won't do it! No!" 

There were scuffling sounds and a thump as if a chair had been  upset. Rattling of the doorknob indicated

some one was trying to get  out. 

In the big outer office, stenographers stopped typing. The flashy  blonde on the phone switchboard ceased

chewing gum and opened her lips. 


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The small man sitting in one of the leather chairs reserved for  customers lowered his newspaper against his

chest and looked over it,  then shifted the paper so that his hands were concealed between it and  his chest. The

small man had long, oily hair and bleak blue eyes. His  clothing was extremely conservative. 

"let me out of here, you damned fiend!" roared the voice back of  the door. 

Then the frosted glass panel broke with a jangling explosion. The  man on the other side was beating it out

with his fists, and when he  had a large opening, he threw a lightbrown topcoat over the jagged  edges and

vaulted through. He did not bother to recover his coat, but  plunged toward the elevators, breathing heavily)

horror on his face. 

The man did not look like one accustomed to violent physical  action. He was portly, with ruddy cheeks, and

his head was almost bald.  He had longfingered, capable hands, which were also unusually  smoothskinned. 

The small man with the newspaper stood erect hastily, let the paper  fall, and showed an automatic pistol

which it had hidden. 

"Wait, brother!" he said. 

The portly man looked at the gun, veered sharply to the left and  slammed himself down in the shelter of a

long leather divan. 

"Help!" he roared at the top of his voice. "Police! Help!" 

The small man's mouth twisted, giving his face a cast of extreme  evil. He aimed at the divan and began

shooting, the gun convulsing and  jumping with each earshattering report. 

Stenographers screamed; nurses began running; and the blonde  telephone girl swallowed her gum and tried to

crawl under her  switchboard. 

When the small man's automatic was empty, he snapped a fresh  cartridge clip into the magazine with the skill

of an expert gunman.  Then he ran around behind the divan. 

The portly man was a limp heap, leaking crimson in several places,  for the bullets had driven through the

leather and upholstery of the  divan. 

The small man shot once more, deliberately, and his victim's head  jarred as a small blue hole appeared a little

above the eyes. Then the  killer ran for the stairway beside the elevators. 

He reached the first stair landing. There he stopped, began to  writhe about and shriek. 

BETWEEN yells, the killer guashed his own lips so that scarlet ran  down over his chin and stained his

necktie and shirt front. He doubled  over as best he could, stamping his feet, slowly, then threw back his  head. 

When his head was back, the strange thing happening to his eyes  first became apparent. It looked as if

something behind the orbs was  slowly forcing them out of their sockets. 

The small man fell down on the landing and his gargling noises  weakened until, before many seconds had

passed, he was silent. He  ceased to breathe, but his body still retained its grotesquely stiff  posture. 

His eyes were all but hanging out of their sockets. 


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There was only one flight of stairs to the street, and heavy feet  pounded these, mounting. Two policemen

appeared, hands on hip holsters,  and saw the body of the man on the landing. 

"I'll be damned!" gasped one officer, impressed by the dead man's  popping eyes. "Whatcha know about that?

The eighth one!" 

They went on up the stairs and entered the big reception room of  the Association of Physical Health. There

was much excitement, one of  the stenographers having fainted. 

The two policemen shouted down every one, gave orders that nobody  was to leave, and one took up a

position at the elevators after  ascertaining there was no back door. The other cop made a brief  inspection of

the portly man who had been shot to death behind the  divan. 

One of the dead man's arms was outfiung, and the wrist was  encircled by a shiny metal band which the

policeman at first mistook  for a wrist watch, only to learn, on closer inspection, that it held in  place a round

metal disk which bore an inscription that read: 

Should anything happen to this man, notify Doc Savage. 

"Hell's bells!" gulped the officer, and ran for a telephone. 

The blonde operator was too nervous to put up a connection, so the  policeman did it himself, fumbling

clumsily with the board. 

"Doc Savage speaking," came over the wire. 

The voice which had answered was one so unusual that the officer  was startled into momentary silence. There

was a remarkable depth and  power to the voice, a quality of capability which even the shortcomings  of

telephonic reproduction did not mask. 

"There's a man dead here," said the policeman. "On his wrist is an  identification tag asking that you be called

if anything should happen  to him." 

"What is the number on the back of the tag?" Doc Savage asked. 

The officer went over and examined the tag, finding a number he had  overlooked the first time. Then he came

back. 

"Twentythree," he said. 

The policeman waited for some comment  then a bewildered  expression overspread his flushed features. He

absently put a finger up  and rubbed an ear, as if that organ were playing him tricks. 

He was hearing one of the strangest sounds ever to come to his  attention. It was a weird trilling, this note,

having a fantastic  rising and falling cadence, yet adhering to no definite tune. It might  have been the product

of a faint wind through the cold spiles of an ice  field, or it might have been the sound of an exotic tropical

bird. The  note ebbed away as mysteriously as it had arisen. 

"I shall be there shortly," Doc Savage said, and there was no trace  of emotion in his unusual voice. 

The policeman hung up and breathed, "Whew! Something about that guy  gets you, even over the telephone!" 


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THE other cop, who had come over and heard the last of the  conversation, demanded, "Who is this guy Doc

Savage?" 

The first officer looked dumfounded. "You ain't kiddin' me?" 

"Oh, I've heard gossip about him," said the other. "But nothing  first hand. What's the dope on him?" 

"He's probably the most unusual bird alive," said the first  officer. "He's the biggest and strongest man you

ever saw. And he's a  whiz! He can do anything. Electricity, chemistry, engineering, he knows  all about 'em

all." 

"What's his business?" demanded the other. 

The first policeman shrugged. "High adventure, I guess. He likes  excitement. And he goes around getting

people out of trouble. But what  I mean, he tackles things on a big scale. He saves thrones for kings  and stops

wars. That's his calibre."  The cop who was asking questions  said, "He has five birds who help him, hasn't

he?" 

"Yeah. Scientists, electricians and so on. Each one of the five is  a topnotch specialist in some line." 

The other policeman nodded at the body, then at the telephone. "How  come you called him?" 

"That identification disk 

"I know. But that's business for Inspector Hardboiled Humbolt. He  won't like it, your calling this Doc

Savage." 

"I don't give a damn," said the other officer. "This Doc Savage has  done more good for the world than any

other ten living men you can  name. Yeah  any fifty you can name." 

"Hardboiled Humbolt is gonna lay an egg because you called Savage,"  grunted the first cop. "You could call

the president and the governor  and the marines, and Hardboiled would still kick. He likes to run  things." 

"Let him lay the egg," snorted the other policeman. 

They went out to stand guard. Down in the street, the caterwauling  of a police siren was becoming louder. 

THE roadster had a long wheelbase, but it was not flashy and there  was nothing particularly outstanding

about its appearance. Only close  inspection would have shown that the body was moulded of armor plate  and

the tires were filled with sponge rubber which would not be  affected greatly by bullets. The glasswork was

also of bulletproof  construction, and the machine was fitted with apparatus for laying  either smoke or gas

screens. 

Under the hood, a siren whined softly. 

It was hard to say whether it was the whining of the siren or the  appearance of the remarkable bronze man at

the wheel which caused  traffic to be parted with alacrity. The siren was the type reserved for  police squad

cars. Furthermore, the license plate consisted simply of  three letters and a number  DOC 1. 

More than a few persons on the streets recognized the bronze man.  His picture was often in the newspapers;

his name was mentioned even  more frequently in the prints. 


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"Doc Savage," some one said, and there was a small stampede for the  curb to get a glimpse of the bronze

man. 

The roadster was a large one, a car in which an ordinary large man  would have seemed small. But the bronze

man had the build of a giant,  even in the open machine. Tremendous muscular strength was apparent in  his

cabled hands and in the vertical muscles in his neck, which were  like hawsers coated with a veneer of bronze. 

This bronze hue was the giant's motif throughout, his unusually  finetextured skin having a metallic hue

imparted by long exposure to  intense sunlight; his hair, straight and fitting like a metal skullcap,  was of a

bronze only slightly darker; the quiet brown of his business  suit added to the symphony in metal. 

Perhaps the eyes of the bronze man were the most impressive thing  about him. They were weird, almost

fantastic eyes, like nothing so much  as pools of fine golden flakes continuously stirred by tiny winds. In  them

was a hypnotic, compelling quality. 

THE bronze man wore no head covering, and his eyes roved  ceaselessly, seeming never to devote attention to

the driving but  rather to the streets through which the roadster passed. In spite of  the seeming inattention,

there was an expert ease about the way he  drove. 

He reached the building which housed the Association of Physical  Health, drew to the curb and switched off

the engine. Little more than  the sudden death of the ammeter needle indicated the motor had stopped,  so

silently had it operated. 

The bronze man drifted a metallic, musclecabled hand under the  dash and touched a switch. Soft static

crackle began coming from a  radio loudspeaker. He brought a hand microphone to view. 

"Monk  Ham," he said into the mike. 

A voice that might have belonged to a small child came from the  radio speaker. 

"We're only a few blocks away, Doc," said this small tone. 

"Ham with you?" Doc questioned. 

"The shyster? Sure. He's along." 

"Watch the outside of the building." Doc Savage directed quietly. 

"Sure," said the childvoiced "Monk." "What do you know about this  Association of Physical Health?" 

"It is a concern which makes a business of giving physical  examinations," the bronze man replied. "A

physician named Janko Sultman  is the president and principal owner." 

Monk asked, "Any idea what this means, Doc?" 

"None whatever," said the bronze giant, and switched off the radio  transmitterreceiver equipment. 

He could hear the murmur of puzzled voices as soon as he entered  the building. A police medical examiner

was inspecting the body of the  man who had died, popeyed, on the stair landing. He bowed with marked

deference when he saw Doc Savage. 


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"What killed him?" Doc Savage queried. 

"I haven't the slightest idea," the medical examiner said promptly.  "It has me stumped. But he's like the other

seven." 

The bronze man said nothing, but knelt beside the dead man, his  intention obviously being to make an

examination. 

There was a pounding of feet on the stairs, coming down from the  second floor above. Doc Savage did not

look around. 

The newcomer was a burly man almost as large as Doc Savage. He had  very large feet which were encased in

canvas sneakers, and he walked as  if his feet hurt him. His face gave the impression of being composed

mostly of jaw. 

He slammed a hand down on Doc Savage's shoulder. The hand was red  and bony with a skin that looked as

tough as rhinoceros hide. 

"What the hell you doing?" he growled. "Get away from that body!" 

The beefy man kept his hand on Doc Savage's shoulder as the bronze  man stood erect. Then he shifted his

grip to Doc Savage's arm. A  slightly blank look overspread his bulldog face as he felt the hardness  of the arm

beneath. The next instant blankness became amazement as the  bronze man plucked the hand off his arm,

accomplishing the feat with  apparent ease. 

The burly man peered foolishly at his wrist' which bore pale  grooves where the bronze man's fingers had

reposed momentarily. He  wriggled the fingers and seemed surprised that they functioned. Then he  rumbled

angrily, shook his arm up and down, and a shotfilled leather  blackjack dropped into his hand. Evidently it

had hung on a hook or  rested in a shallow pocket in his sleeve. 

"Tough guy, huh?" he growled. 

"Don't be a fool, Hardboiled!" the medical examiner gulped. "This  is Doc Savage." 

"I know who he is," "Hardboiled" rumbled. "He's the guy who goes  around mixing in other people's business,

and guys who try to buck him  have a funny way of disappearin'." 

The medical examiner said, "Doc Savage has an honorary commission  as inspector on the police. 

"Yeah, I know," Hardboiled growled. Then he leaned forward and  tapped Doc's chest lightly with the end of

his blackjack. 

"Listen," he said. "I been intending to get around to you, only  I've been too busy. I've beard a lot about you,

and we know each other  by sight. You may know I'm a tough cop. That's what the papers call me,  damn 'em!

I know you're the Man of Mystery, and I know people try to  kill you and you do things to 'em and the law

never hears about it I  don't like it. From now on, when anybody takes a shot at you, you call  a cop and he'll

handle it. Do it like anybody else does." 

"In other words, have the police fight my battles?" Doc asked. 


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"Call it what you want," Hardboiled scowled. "There'. laws to take  care of crooks. And another thing: behave

yourself and you won't have  any battles to fight." 

Doc asked dryly, "You have a faint suspicion I am a crook? Is that  it?" 

Hardboiled glared. "'When I have suspicions, they're not faint!" he  yelled. "I come out with 'em." 

Doc said, "Suppose you come out with them now." 

The beefy inspector's leather sap swung for emphasis. 

"I think you do things outside the law!" Hardboiled roared. "That  makes you subject to arrest. There are laws

to punish criminals. And  don't feed me that hokum about them not being punished in this day,  because they

are. Let the law take its course." 

Doc said, "No one is disputing that" 

Hardboiled put out his jaw. "I've heard that you set yourself up as  judge, jury and penitentiary, all in one," he

rapped. "Now that stuff  don't go. You make one slip, and I'll clap your pants in the holdover  so quick your

head'll swim! If there's any one needs arresting in this  town, that's my job. I do it. And I don't stand for

anyhody meddling  with my job." 

Doc murmured without expression, "Very clear." 

Hardboiled got his jaw out farther. "Now I want civil answers to  plain questions out of you. There has been

two murders here, one of  them the eighth in a damned mysterious chain of deaths that's beginning  to get

everybody all bothered." 

"I see," Doc said. 

"Go upstairs and take a look at that other body," Hardboiled  directed. "Maybe you can identify it." 

The medical examiner managed to work close to Doc Savage's side as  the bronze man mounted the stairs. 

"This Hardboiled is a character," he said. "He would insult the  president. He's a leatherskinned cop of the

old school, and he's been  doing wonders at cleaning up Manhattan since they put him in charge.  He's got a

phobia for sticking to the letter of the law where police  duties are concerned." 

"I have been following Hardboiled's record," Doc Savage said  quietly. "The man is just what Manhattan

needed." 

The examiner chuckled. "Hardboiled was canned by a previous  administration for knocking the mayor down

when they got in a quarrel  over one of the mayor's friends breaking the speed limit. He's some  character. His

feet always hurt him. Maybe that's what makes him so  grouchy." 

Hardboiled Humbolt strode over to the body of the portly, bald man  who had been shot to death and

demanded of Doc Savage, "Who is he?" 

"}His name," the bronze man said, "was Leander Court." 

"What was his business?" Hardboiled asked.


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"He was a scientist and surgeon." 

"How'd he hook up with you?" 

The bronze man's flakegold eyes seemed to acquire strange lights.  "What do you mean?" 

"How come he was wearing an identification tag asking that you be  called if anything happened to him?"

boomed Hardboiled. 

"That, I shall not answer," Doc Savage said. 

Hardboiled glared. "Say, didn't that lecture I just gave you take  effect? You cooperate with me, or else you

get in some trouble!" 

He shook his sap down out of his sleeve. 

THE medical examiner yelled, "You're making an unmitigated fool out  of yourself, Hardboiled!" 

Hardboiled scowled and growled, "I don't like the methods of Doc  Savage and I don't give a damn who

knows it, and he's gonna answer my  questions. There's some motive behind this killing, and I want to know

what it is. I want to know why the other seven were killed." 

"I can assure you," Doc Savage told him, "that I have not the  slightest idea why Leander Court was killed, or

the other seven,  either." 

"All right," snapped Hardboiled. "Now, why was he wearing that  identification disk?" 

Doc Savage ignored the question. "Just exactly what happened here?" 

The medical examiner, who was embarrassed by the attitude which  Hardboiled Humbolt had taken, said,

"The dead man, Leander Court,  arrived about an hour ago, according to the reception girl. He said he  had an

appointment with Janko Sultman, the president of the Association  of Physical Health, and she directed him to

Sultman's office. 

"He was in there some time. Then he began yelling stuff about not  doing something, and demanding to be let

out. He broke the glass out of  the door and climbed through.  Then the man dead on the staircase  downstairs

shot him." 

"When did the man downstairs appear?" Doc Savage interjected. 

"Shortly after Leander Court arrived," said the examiner. "It looks  as if the man followed Court here." 

The bronze man nodded. "Then what?" 

"After he shot Court, the man fled," explained the examiner. "He  ran down the stairs, got to the first landing

and had some kind of a  fit, and died. That's as near as we can reconstruct it." 

Doc Savage waved at the office. "Who was Leander Court yelling at  before he broke out of the office?" 

"That," said the medical examiner, "is a mystery." 


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"What do you mean?" 

"There was nobody in the office." 

Doc Savage swung over to the door and glanced through the jagged  aperture where the frosted glass panel

had been broken out. The office  beyond was plainly furnished, the Opposite wall being perforated with  one

window, and there was certainly no one inside. He tried the door.  It resisted his efforts. 

"The lock is peculiar," said the examiner. "It is a spring affair  that has to be unlocked from either side with a

key." 

Doc Savage questioned, "You are sure no one left the office during  the excitement?" 

"They would have had to climb out," said the examiner. "Some one  would certainly have noticed." 

The bronze man glanced through the door again. The window was  fitted with a substantial lock, and this was

fastened. No one could  have left by that route. 

"Very mysterious," Doc Savage said. 

"Not any more mysterious than your not wantin' to tell us why  Leander Court wore that identification tag,"

Hardboiled Humbolt  interjected sourly. 

"Vot t'ings is happen here?" a strange voice demanded loudly. 

Chapter II. THE MYSTERY QUEST

THE man who had spoken was a bulky fellow, with upstanding,  frizzled hair and a ludicrously small

mustache.  He wore  an  exceptionally loud checked suit which, however, seemed entirely in  keeping with his

unruly hair. 

"You poleezmans, vot you do here?" he demanded. Then he glimpsed  the body of Leander Court and

gulped, "Dot man, who shot him?" 

Hardboiled Humbolt shouldered forward and demanded, "Who the heck  are you?" 

The officer at the elevator called, "He said he was Janko Sultman,  the president of the Association of Physical

Health.  I thought I'd  better let him in." 

Doc Savage asked abruptly, "Sultman, why did Leander Court come to  see you?" 

Janko Sultman looked puzzled. He made a tripod of the thumb and two  forefingers of one hand, then reached

up and absently massaged the top  of his head. 

"Leander Court," he murmured. "I am ,,sorry, genteelmans, but dod  name I not hear before. Never. 

"Ever see him before?" the bronze man asked, and indicated dead  Leander Court. 

Sultman shook an emphatic, "Never!" Hardboiled Humbolt, scowling at  Doc Savage, monopolizing the

questioning, strode forward so that he was  between the bronze man and Janko Sultman. 


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"The telephone girl says Leander Court came in and said he had an  appointment with you and was to wait in

your private office,"  Hardboiled rumbled. 

"Dot mystifies me," said Sultman. "Der man I have never seen  before, believe you me." 

Hardboiled shifted his sneakerclad feet as if they hurt him, and  said loudly, "Nobody seems to know a thing

around here  except you."  He glared at Doc Savage. 

The bronze man nodded at the door from which the frosted glass was  broken. "Mind if I try something?" 

"Some of this snappy scientific detective stuff I hear you're so  good at?" Hardboiled growled. 

"Something like that," Doc admitted. 

"All right," Hardboiled told him. "But before you start, let's get  one thing straight." 

"What?" 

"You're under technical arrest on a charge of concealing evidence,"  said Hardboiled. 

Every one except Doc Savage looked extremely surprised, and the  bronze man asked quietly, "Just what sort

of evidence am I hiding?" 

Hardboiled jabbed a hand at plump Leander Court's bulletriddled  body. "Why is this guy wearing that

identification disk?" 

Doc Savage, seeming not to hear the question, said, "Let's look  over the office where Leander Court waited." 

Hardboiled swore, growled, "You're gonna find I'm not a healthy guy  to kid along, big fellow," and led the

way into the office from which  Leander Court had smashed his way. 

FROM a pocket, Doc Savage drew a small metal canister which had a  perforated top. He twisted the lid so

that the perforations were open,  pepperbox fashion. Next, he pulled the shades over the locked window,

causing gloom to descend upon the room. Outside, it was late afternoon  of the first chilly day of fall. 

Tilting the container, Doc Savage shook it. Liquid flame seemed to  pour out and settle to the floor. 'rile stuff

was a powder which glowed  like phosphorus. 

Settling upon the floor, the stuff ceased to glow, except for  certain spots which bore the shape of footprints. 

The tracks showed where a man  they were unmistakably a man's  footprints  had come into the office and

occupied a chair. From the  chair they led to a stand which held a telephone, and from the  telephone back to

the door. From telephone stand to door they were  farther apart, as if the man who made them had been

running wildly. 

Doc Savage lifted the telephone receiver, listened a moment and  replaced it on the hook. 

"An outside line which does not go through the switchboard," he  said. "That explains it. Leander Court was

waiting here when he got a  call. He became excited, cried out, and burst open the door in order to  get out of

the office." 


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"Nuts!" said Hardboiled Humbolt. "No man could be started off  yelling by a telephone call." 

Doc Savage replaced the metal canister in a pocket. 

Hardboiled pointed and demanded, "What is that stuff, anyhow?" 

"A powder which fluoresces, or glows, when exposed to the air," Doc  Savage explained. "'rile slightest

disturbance, by shifting the  particles which compose the powder, causes them to expose new surfaces  to the

air, which in turn glow." 

"But what made the tracks appear?" persisted the tough sleuth. 

"The weight of Leander Court as he walked over the rug compressed  the fibres," Doc elaborated. "Those

fibres are still straightening,  although by only microscopic degrees. But the movement is enough to  disturb

the powder, causing it to glow and mark the footprints." 

"Well damn me!" Hardboiled growled. "I thought they had you  overrated." 

There was a spanking sound from the window. Glass particles  geysered like tiny jewels. 

Janko Sultman, president of the Association of Physical Health,  bawled out loudly and hideously and fell to

the floor. A wriggling red  stream came out of his frizzled hair, puddling on the carpet. 

HARDBOILED Humbolt jumped fully a foot in the air, roared "Somebody  shot 'im!" and ran for the window.

He banged the panel up, leaned out,  a hand fishing under his coat. 

The gun he brought out was not the regulation service revolver, but  a leansnouted .22calibre target pistol.

He balanced this in a hand as  his eyes roved the street. 

"Car going down the street," he growled. "But the shot wasn't fired  from the street, and the gunman hasn't had

time to get to a car." 

"What kind of a car is it?" Doc Savage questioned. 

"Gray coupe," snapped Hardboiled. He hauled back out of the window,  bolstering his unusual weapon and

bounded for the door. "You stay here,  Savage!" he yelled. "You're still under arrest!" 

Hardboiled plunged out through the door, taking ungainly leaps as  if he were traveling on a hot surface. His

gait and the canvas sneakers  which he wore indicated he must have a bad case of corns. 

Doc Savage was at the window, and he watched steadily for some  moments. Then he backed away, stood

over Janko Sultman and looked at  the small round hole which the bullet had made in the window. It was on  a

line with the top of the building across the street. 

"Strange there was no sound of a shot," said the medical examiner. 

The bronze giant did not reply, but bent over and parted Janko  Sultman's frizzled hair. Then he slapped

Sultman's face with sharp,  stinging force. 

Sultman groaned, stirred, and shortly afterward was sitting up, his  hands malting aimless gestures. His eyes

were cloudy. 


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"Boke," he mumbled thickly. 

"Who is Boke?" Doc Savage asked. 

The cloud went out of Janko Sultman's eyes and he held his head  with both hands. 

"Joke," he groaned. "I say dot bullet no joke. I guess you not  understand right." 

"Why should anybody try to shoot you?" Doc Savage asked sharply. 

Sultman held his head and wailed, "I do not know, and dot is the  truth, sure enough!" 

Doc Savage went out into the reception room without saying  anything, and found fresh excitement had

arisen, with two of the  stenographers screaming hysterically and the blonde telephone girl  telling every one

loudly that she was through. 

"No telling who will get shot next," she wailed. "I'm through with  this place! I'm quitting!" 

Doc Savage went to the elevator and a policeman stopped him saying,  "I'm sorry. Hardboiled ordered you

kept here." 

The bronze man nodded, and roamed with apparent aimlessness over  the offices. He peered into numerous

small rooms where patients were  examined, passed nurses and physicians without a word. 

Down in the street, police sirens were wailing. 

Doc Savage entered a washroom, closed the door and opened the tiny  window. It gave into an air shaft. There

was no door at the bottom of  this, and no fire escape. The bronze man slid outside, negotiating the  small

aperture with a startling ease. 

Had there been a hundred observers, fully ninetynine of them would  have sworn that not even a cat could

climb the sheer wall. But the  metallic giant went up in uncanny fashion, supported by the corded  strength of

his fingers and the shallow grooves between the bricks. 

Reaching the top, he traveled over rooftops until he found a  skylight, below which an artist painted. The

artist, surprised, made a  long smear on his painting as a giant man of metal smashed the skylight  and dropped

lightly at his side. While the artist stared, openmouthed,  the bronze man walked out. 

Coming to life, the artist yelled, "Hey, I'll give you a hundred  dollars to pose for me!" 

There was no answer, and the artist, racing out, found no one. He  returned, grumbling disgustedly, to stare at

his picture, which was a  partially completed study of a Herculean male figure supporting a  certain

wellknown automobile. It was an advertising poster. 

"What a model that fellow would have made," the painter groaned. 

A uniformed patrolman loitered beside Doc Savage's roadster where  it was parked in the street. His manner

showed plainly that he had been  posted there to watch the car. He twirled his club and walked around  and

around the machine, scrutinizing it closely. It had dawned on him  that the car was no ordinary stock vehicle. 


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From behind him  from a door somewhere, it seemed  a harsh voice  called, "Never mind the car! Go down

and help the boys look for that  gunman!" 

The officer saluted briskly and departed. He thought he had  recognized the tone as belonging to Hardboiled

Humbolt. He rounded a  corner, took a few paces  and came face to face with Hardboiled  Humbolt in person. 

"Dang it!" exploded the patrolman. "How'd you get here?" 

"Whatcha mean?" growled Hardboiled. 

The patrolman waved his club. "You just told me to leave the  roadster. You were back there somewhere

when you called." 

"The hell I was!" Hardboiled yelled, and ran for the corner.  Sloping around it, he drew up and began to

swear. 

The roadster was gone. 

"You lunk!" Hardboiled accused the policeman. "I told you to watch  that machine." 

"But you told me to leave it, too," declared the cop. 

"I did not!" Hardboiled growled. "Are you calling me a liar?" 

"No," said the patrolman prudently. "I must be crazy." 

A few blocks distant, Doc Savage tooled the roadster through the  late afternoon traffic. He was a man of a

myriad accomplishments, this  bronze giant. Among other things, he was a skilled voice mimic and

ventriloquist. It had been a simple matter to imitate Hardboiled's  gruff tone and get the patrolman away from

the roadster. 

From time to time, the bronze man leaned over and spoke into the  radio microphone, calling, "Monk, Ham,"

but getting no answer. 

The apparatus operated on a short wavelength, and, compact though  it was, it had power enough to

communicate over a number of miles, even  through the highly unfavorable conditions set up by the towering

buildings of the city. 

Doc called again, "Monk, Ham." 

The childlike voice of Monk said, "On deck, Doc," from the  loudspeaker. 

"Did you manage to trail the sniper?" Doc Savage asked. 

"Sure," Monk answered. "We've got him spotted. He's in a taxicab  going down Broadway." 

"Don't lose him," Doc Savage requested. 

THE bronze man now wheeled the roadster to the right, and shortly  afterward was traversing the rich canyon

of Park Avenue, passing  towering apartment houses which housed more wealthy persons per block  than

perhaps any other thoroughfare in the world.


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Shortly afterward, the roadster pulled up before an elaborately  modernistic structure situated in the most

exclusive section of the  avenue. Two doormen in resplendent uniforms bowed Doc Savage inside and  the

bronze man entered a reception room where he was met by an  exquisitely gowned redheaded young woman

who politely inquired his  business. 

"I want to speak to Pat," Doc said. 

The titian receptionist was a beauty, but she was completely  overshadowed by the young woman who soon

put in an appearance. 

This young woman was tall, had an exquisite form, and wore a  stunning gown. The striking point about her

appearance was her wealth  of bronze hair  it was almost the same hue as Doc Savage's hair. She  looked very

regal in the long, trailing gown. 

Several males of varying ages waiting in the large, sumptuously  furnished reception room sighed as they saw

the bronzehaired vision. 

"Hello, Pat," Doc Savage said. 

Pat asked, "Well, who's trying to kill you now?" 

Pat was Patricia Savage, cousin to the man of bronze, Doc Savage.  Pat liked excitement, and had long ago

sought to join the unusual group  of five assistants with which Doc Savage had surrounded himself. 

Doc, considering association with himself too dangerous, had  refused to consider it. But the bronze man

frequently employed Pat's  aid. Between adventures, Pat devoted herself to running this  combination beauty

parlor and gymnasium which catered to the very rich.  Financially, she was very successful. 

"Want to help me?" Doc asked her. 

"That," laughed Pat, "is equivalent to an invitation to be shot at,  stabbed, drowned, beaten up and no telling

what else. Sure, I'll help  you. Who are we fighting?" 

"So far, the whole affair is strange," Doc told her. "A gunman  killed Leander Court, then the gunman had a fit

and fell over dead with  his eyes protruding. The way he died was very mysterious." 

"Do you know what caused the popeyed death?" Pat asked. 

"No," Doc told her promptly. 

"Then it must be mysterious," Pat murmured. "What am I to do?" 

Doc Savage gave a brief synopsis of all that had occurred. 

"Janko Sultman's business is running the Association of Physical  Health," he finished. "I want you to scout

around there and see what  you can turn up." 

"Any suggestion about how I am to do it?" Pat asked. 

"Use your own excellent judgment," Doc told her. "But watch out for  a tough cop called Hardboiled

Humbolt." 


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"I've been reading about him in the newspapers," Pat smiled. "The  new mayor put him in charge of

Manhattan to clean up. They say that  this alone was enough to scare half the crooks out of town. He must be

a ripsnorter." 

"He is all of that," Doc agreed. "He has already placed me under  arrest." 

"Goodness!" exploded Pat. "What for?" 

"He endeavored to bulldoze information out of me," Doc said dryly.  "Unluckily, he wanted to know

something that could not be divulged." 

"What?" 

"He tried to learn what connection Leander Court had with myself,"  Doc Savage said. 

Pat's features suddenly became grim. "Listen, Doc, do you think  some one could be trying  " 

"It's too early to tell," the bronze man said. "And I've got to be  moving." 

THE armored roadster carried the bronze man south quietly and  swiftly. He switched on the twoway radio

apparatus and Monk's small  voice began coming from the speaker, making explanations. 

"Me and Ham were in the street when we heard the noise of a  silenced rifle and heard the bullet hit the

window," Monk stated. "We  decided the shot must have come from the roof and we reasoned the  gunman

would come out in the next block, so we barged around there and  sure enough, a lad pops out. He's a

thinlooking egg with a face like  one of them old Salem witches. He dived into a cab. It's him all right.  He's

got his guns in the trombone case." 

"Where are you now?" the bronze man inquired. 

Monk replied with an address far downtown. 

Doc Savage angled over to the west side of Manhattan Island, took  the elevated express highway which led

southward, and eventually came  out on Canal Street, where there were numberless trucks, taxicabs and a  few

horsedrawn drays. 

An excited squeak, Monk's small voice jumped out of the radio. "The  sniper is gettin' out of his hack!" 

"Keep a line on him," Doc requested. 

"O.K.," said Monk. "The bird has gone into a department store  across the street." 

"Sure you can watch all entrances to the store?" Doc asked. 

"You bet!" Monk's small voice was confident. "We've got our heap  parked close to the corner. The guy must

have gone into the store to  buy something." 

The next few seconds produced no more direct communication,  although Doc Savage caught a number of

sarcastic exchanges between the  smallvoiced Monk and his companion, "Ham," who had a welldeveloped

orator's voice. The two seemed to be on the verge of a fight. 


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Doc Savage ignored the verbal hostilities. Monk and Ham always  seemed on the verge of a fight; no one

acquainted with the pair could  recall one of them having addressed a civil word to the other. They  squabbled

continuously about anything and everything, and they were  actually friends who would sacrifice everything

for each other. 

The bronze man devoted his attention to working through a fleet of  drygoods trucks which were evidently

bound for retail centers adjacent  to New York City. 

Unexpected, explosive, Monk's small voice croaked out of the radio  speaker. "Here, you, what's the idea  " 

A very brittle and totally strange voice said, "You two mugs have  been shaggin' the wrong guy!" 

Doc Savage listened intently to the radio speaker, but almost at  once, a loud snap of a sound came from it,

and after that a shrill  oscillating whine, a mournful, hairraising wall which indicated  something had

happened to the transmitter in the car occupied by Monk  and Ham. 

Chapter III. THE BOKE MEETING

THE gunman was very lean, with dreamy blue eyes and an  extraordinarily long chin which swung down and

out to attain the  contour which artists like to give to the features of witch drawings.  He had used his trombone

case to smash in the front of the box which  held the transmittingandreceiving apparatus. His other hand,

the  left, juggled an automatic pistol which seemed composed mostly of  barrel. 

Monk tolled one eye at the department store across the street and  growled, "How'd you get out of there and

come up behind us?" 

The witchfaced man held his weapon below the level of the door,  where it was out of sight, which was

fortunate, because many of the  pedestrians who passed turned to stare at the coupe and its occupants.  Monk

was undoubtedly the magnet which drew their attention. 

Monk's physical appearance was startling. Perhaps three out of four  citizens who passed were taller than

Monk, but Monk weighed in excess  of two hundred and fifty pounds, was nearly as tall as he was broad,  and

had arms some inches longer than his legs. He had a leathery skin,  furred with hair that looked like coarse,

rusted steel wool. His face  was almost incredibly homely, the mouth being far too large. 

"Sap!" said the gunman. "That department store has a branch on this  side of the street A tunnel under the

street connects the two  buildings." 

Monk, blinking his small eyes, looked unutterably stupid  which  showed how deceptive appearances can be,

for Monk, under his full name  of Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, was known as an  industrial

chemist whose ability was that of a wizard. 

The man with the automatic looked at the other occupant of the car   Ham. Major General Theodore Marley

Brooks  it was with this name  that Ham was formally designated  looked like a gentleman who might

qualify as a perfume salesman or a male clerk in an exclusive feminine  shop. 

He was a waspwaisted man with the large mobile mouth of an orator  and a pair of brightly intent eyes. His

garments were sartorial  perfection  from creased afternoon trousers to gray derby. He held a  thin, plain

black cane across his knees. 


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Ham was also a gentleman who belied his appearance, being one of  the most astute lawyers ever to acquire

an accent and a degree from  Harvard. 

The witchfaced gunman, looking puzzled, shook his head slowly but  did not divert the menace of his

automatic. 

"I don't get this," he growled. "Are you two guys laws?" 

Ham said in an aggravating, drawling accent, "Really, old fellow,  you do misuse the English language

dreadfully." 

"Horse collar!" said the man with the gun. "Why'd you two tail me." 

Ham began, "My dear chap  " Then he stopped and watched the other. 

The gunman was wearing a topcoat of some furry gray material, and  he stepped back, burying his gun in a

pocket of the coat. It was chilly  on the street and perfectly natural that a man should keep a hand in a  pocket. 

"I'll let Boke talk to you," he said. "Let's stagger along." 

"Huh?" The homely Monk blinked small eyes. 

"Get a move on," advised the other. "Who's Boke?" Monk demanded. 

"We're going for a walk," the man said. 

THE witchfaced fellow now opened the car door, stepping back with  it as if performing a polite service, but

he kept his eyes high,  watching the faces of Monk and Ham, and their hands. When they got out  of the coupe,

he fell in behind them and murmured, "Up the street.  Boke's joint is close." 

They walked several paces, the chill Fail air pulling breath steam  out of their nostrils; a few chill particles of

snow, more like hail  than flakes, crunched out whitely on the sidewalk. 

Monk, chin down in his collar as if cold, said three loud words in  an absolutely unintelligible dialect. 

The gun wielder growled, "Cut it out, whatever you're tryin' to  do." 

Then the man gave a mad leap and squawled out in agony, and Monk  moved with a speed which indicated he

had expected the happening and  had set himself. He lunged, both big, hairy hands cupping down on the

pocket which held the witchfaced man's hand and gun. 

Reaching their objective, Monk's paws closed, wrenched. The whole  side came out of the man's gray coat.

They began to fight over the wad  of cloth, hand and gun. The trombone case dropped. 

Ham had tucked his black cane under an arm. He snatched at it now,  gave the handle a twist and it pulled

apart, disclosed that it was a  sword cane. At the tip, and for a few inches back, it was coated with a  substance

which seemed to have a mucilaginous quality. 

Ham, manipulating the sword cane with an expert ease, inserted the  daubed tip perhaps a hall inch under the

shoulder skin of their foe.  The results were remarkable. 


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The witchfaced man stared, turned to see what had pricked him,  then began to look dazed. His endeavors to

use the gun in spite of  Monk's restraining clutch, became feeble. Eventually, he seemed to go  completely

asleep and it was only the support of Monk and Ham which  kept him erect. 

At that point, there was a series of satisfied grunting sounds at  their feet, and for the first time, the two men

looked at the animal  which had made the conquest possible. This was a pig. 

"Not bad, Habeas," the pleasantly ugly Monk grinned. 

Habeas Corpus, the pig, was Monk's pet. Habeas was as freakish an  example of the porker species as Monk

was of the human race. Habeas had  the legs of a dog, a thin, gaunt body and a pair of ears which might  have

doubled for wings. 

Monk expended most of his spare time in training Habeas, with the  result that the pig had some unique

capabilities. Doc Savage and his  five men, when wishing to consult each other in a tongue which

eavesdroppers could not understand, used the speech of the ancient  Mayans, the civilization which once

flourished in Central America.  Probably not half a dozen men in the civilized world, outside of  themselves,

could speak and understand the language. Monk had taught  Habeas to obey commands given in Mayan. 

The shoat, on the floorboards of the coupe, had escaped the  witchfaced man's notice, and his attack, directed

by Monk in Mayan,  had been a surprise. 

"We can't stay here," Ham said briskly, and glared at Habeas. Ham  treated the pig with no more civility than

he did Monk. 

The scuffle, brief as it had been, had attracted notice, causing  pedestrians to stop and stare, undecided as to

what they should do. 

"Move on!" Ham commanded sharply. 

Tills did not secure very pronounced results. No policemen were in  sight as yet 

"Let's get this guy to the coupe," Monk grunted. "Doc will want to  know about this, and he'll want to look up

Boke, whoever he is, when he  gets here." 

The two men started for the coupe, still supporting their  unconscious captive. They did not go far. 

There was a flurry on the outskirts of the crowd and a man came  plunging through, wielding his elbows. He

was a scrawny man, unshaven,  somewhat shabbily garbed, and he peered at Monk and Ham as if he were

very delighted indeed to see them. 

"You're cops!" he gulped excitedly. "I know you're cops. Sure! You  made a swell pinch when you got this

guy." 

Monk squinted small eyes at him. Ham opened his orator's mouth to  say something, but the newcomer

spouted on without pause. 

"Come on," he snapped. 'This mug has been up to some funny  business. I want to show you what I

accidentally saw in his room." 


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He wheeled off and Monk and Ham, vastly surprised, tramped along  after him, the cold snow making gritting

noises underfoot and the heels  of their unconscious captive dragging along with a series of raspings.  The

stranger had picked up the trombone case. 

They came to a doorway and the guide muttered, "It's in here. I was  waitin' for 'im to come back when I saw

you put the hand on 

Monk stopped suddenly. "You were waiting here?" He pointed at the  door. 

"Yes," said the unkempt man. 

Monk pointed at the snow particles which did not lie on the  sidewalk in sufficient depth to hold footsteps but

which had drifted  into the doorway in a shallow, cold bank that was unbroken by tracks or  other marks which

certainly would have been made by the door opening. 

"You're a liar!" Monk said. "A poor one, too." 

The shabby stranger coughed as if he were cold, and under cover of  the convulsion, his hands made a

bewilderingly swift gesture and were  suddenly holding a pistol. 

"I'm good enough to get by," he said. 

THE crowd, as curious persons will, had followed the little  cavalcade, wondering what it was all about and

possessed of a morbid  desire to see what would happen. They had not followed quite fast  enough, however,

for any one to be near enough to catch exactly what  passed between Monk, Ham and the stranger. 

Three men, burly fellows swathed in mufflers, now detached  themselves from the crowd and turned upon it,

hardfaced and belligerent  of manner. 

"Here, beat it!" one of them said, and his words threw small puffs  of steam into the frosty air. "G'wan! You

don't live here. We're cops." 

The crowd melted, sheeplike, as city crowds will do in the face of  authority. 

Monk said something in the strange, not unmusical Mayan dialect,  and the pig, Habeas Corpus, spun and

raced down the street, feet making  clickings and scratchings. 

The man with the gun growled, "You say another word I can't  understand and it'll be just too damn bad!" 

The men who had turned the crowd back now joined the fellow with  the gun and they themselves produced

weapons. 

"Inside," one said. "You know by now that we saw you playing games  with our pal here and come down to

invite you in where it's warm." He  picked up the trombone case. 

Some one laughed, and snow rasped as Monk and Ham mounted, still  carrying the man who had been made

unconscious by Ham's sword cane. In  the door, they looked at each other, then let their burden fall  heavily. 

"Pick 'im up," they were ordered. 


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They complied with the command and marched into a passage which  seemed colder than the street outside.

While guns menaced them, hands  searched them. The casual thoroughness of the search showed that these

men knew the spots where weapons were carried. 

Monk and Ham each wore in an expertly padded holster a firearm  which resembled an oversized automatic

pistol. These had curled  magazines, intricate mechanisms, fine workmanship. 

"Damn me," one man said softly. "First rods I ever saw like these." 

Another man looked at the guns. 

"Hell's bells!" His face blanched; his hands shook a little. 

The others eyed him, and one demanded, "Why the chalk and shiver?" 

The excited man tapped one weapon. "Doc Savage," he said. 

"Listen," some one rapped. "What's this?" 

"I've read about these. Only Doc Savage's men carry them. They're  supermachine pistols. The bronze guy

himself invented them." 

There was nothing more said for some seconds. One man took out a  cigarette, put it between his lips, then

took it away from his mouth  and mashed it up between slowmoving fingers. Another man, breathing

heavily, went back to the door, and looked out. 

"Let's go talk to Boke," some one rapped. "I don't like the way  this damned thing is shaping up." 

THE witchfaced man, reviving from the stupefying effects of the  chemical on the end of Ham's sword cane,

began to squirm and moan. Ham  and Monk stood him on his feet, but his legs refused to support him and

bowed, letting him down facefirst to the floor. Saliva came from his  mouth and puddled on the grimy, cold

carpet. 

Monk kicked him; the impact rolled the man half over. 

"Cut it!" snarled one of the others. 

The witchfaced man reached back and rubbed the spot where he had  been kicked, then rolled over and

jacked himself up by the strength of  his arms. Slowly he raised himself erect. 

"The kick was what be needed," Monk said gloomily. 

One of the men scowled at Monk, then at Ham, and said, "Walk ahead  of us  and be sure you got a will all

made out before you squawk or  make a jump." 

The man with the face of a harridan weaved toward the back door,  saying, "I've got plenty to tell Boke." 

The hallway gave into a cementfloored courtyard which smelled of  cold garbage. A cat, the sole living thing

in sight, hackled its back  and slunk among garbage cans. 


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Crossing the court, the cavalcade entered a hallway where the air  was too hot and mounted stairs, and opened

a door. Warm, tobaccoladen  air gushed out. A fireplace made fitful red light in the room beyond.  The place

was windowless. It whitened up blindingly when some one  thumbed an electric switch. 

Monk and Ham were forced to stand with their faces jammed in  comers, not unlike schoolboys receiving

punishment. They were warned  not to turn around; and Monk, disobeying, was knocked rubberkneed with  a

slender stick of stovewood from the fuel rack beside the fireplace. 

Some one said, "I wonder what happened to that hog?" 

"Hell with the hog!" another snorted. "Hey, Boke, things have been  happening!" 

One of the most pleasant voices Monk and Ham had ever heard said,  "That is to be regretted." 

Monk and Ham both turned their heads. The speaker was not in the  room. Just where the voice was coming

from, they could not tell, for  the menace of a clubbing forced them to face into the corners again. 

The spokesman began, "We were all watching the back way just in  case something might turn up, and we

saw  " 

"Let Frightful tell it," directed the mysterious, amiable voice. 

Monk snorted loudly, suddenly realizing that "Frightful" was the  nickname of the witchfaced man. 

Frightful, listlessness in his voice showing the effects of the  drug on the sword cane, said, "I followed your

orders, Boke." 

Boke's voice asked pleasantly, "What do you mean?" 

"I plugged Janko Sultman in the head," said Frightful. 

"You coldblooded devil!" exploded the pleasantvoiced Boke. "Don't  be so definite about such a hideous

thing. It gets on my nerves." 

The witchfaced Frightful seemed accustomed to this squeamishness  on the part of his chief, for he went on

rapidly: 

"I wanta tell you about a strange thing I saw when I posted myself  on the roof," he said. "I could see into

Janko Sultman's office, but  Sultman wasn't there. The office was empty. But after while a guy come  in. Who

d'you think it was?" 

Instead of answering as expected, Boke's remarkably suave voice  said hollowly, "I would give my right arm

if it had not been necessary  to eliminate Sultman. A murder! Horrible!" 

Frightful said, "Leander Coust came into SuItman's office while I  was watching." 

Boke's voice, yelling suddenly, demanded, "Who?" 

"Leander Court," Frightful repeated patiently. "He sat around in  the office by himself until the telephone

rang, and he answered it.  What he heard must have made him excited. He threw the phone down and  broke

the glass out of the office door and crawled through. The door  must have had a trick lock." 


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"It has," said pleasantvoiced Boke. "Then what happened?" 

"Some guy in the reception room up and fills Leander Court full of  bullets. I could see that. Then the guy ran

for the stairs. After that,  something must've happened to the guy, because I heard some bellowing  and a lot of

cops came, and I heard one of 'em say something about the  guy being dead with his eyes sticking out" 

"With what?" demanded Boke. 

"His eyes sticking out. Like you've been reading about in the  papers." 

"It is all very clear to me except that last," said Boke,  puzzlement in his amiable tone. "Janko Sultman had

doublecrossed us, as  we already knew, and had an appointment with Leander Court. He must  have put his

proposition up to Court over the telephone, or perhaps he  had already advanced his proposal and Court had

come to give his  answer. 

"Court refused and tried to flee, and the gunman was one who had  been posted by Janko Sultman to kill

Court in case the latter was  stubborn or threatened to go to Doc Savage. Yes. All is very clear. But  what

happened to the gunman? Are you sure that his eyes popped out?" 

"I'm only tellin' you what I overheard," Frightful grumbled. 

"Baffling," said Boke. "I cannot understand it." 

Monk turned his head in another effort to learn where the voice of  Boke was coming from, and one of the

guards slugged the homely chemist,  knocking him against the wall. Monk lashed back with an astounding

speed and the assailant staggered away, his jaw possessed of a slightly  different shape than it had had a

moment before. Pistol muzzles forced  Monk back into his corner and made him face the wall. 

"Where did these two men come from?" asked Boke's mysterious voice. 

"They got on my trail somehow," snarled Frightful. "They're two of  Doc Savage's men." 

"They're who?" Boke sounded as if he had swallowed something  painful. 

"Doc Savage's men," Frightful repeated, then looked very uneasy,  and the others registered concern also. 

When Boke's unique tone sounded again, worry had gone from it, and  he laughed. 

"It was only a matter of days, anyway," he said. "Or perhaps of  hours. We would have had to fight Doc

Savage eventually over this  affair. You all know that." 

Frightful made a wry face. "I haven't been looking forward to it." 

"Hold these two prisoners," Boke ordered. "Then get hold of Leander  Court's partner. You know who I

mean?" 

"Yeah." Frightful nodded. "Robert Lerrey." 

"Exactly," said Boke. "Arrange an appointment for me with Robert  Lorrey. We must whip things up before

Doc Savage gets a line on what it  is all about. And do not make the mistake of underrating this man  Savage.

He is assuredly clever." 


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A man began, "Don't worry, chief, I don't think any of this crowd  underrates that bronze  " 

He did not finish and his eyes flew roundly open and his jaw sagged  enough to pull his lips apart so that his

teeth showed. They were not  nice teeth, being veined up and down and stained so that they resembled  chips

from an old bone which had lain a long time in the weather. 

The man reached up and felt of his ears as if he suspected them of  tricks. 

For there was a strange trilling loose in the room. 

Chapter IV. MORE POPEYED

THE trilling sound, low and fantastic, was quite musical, yet it  was so without adhering to any definite tune.

Nor could the exact  nature of the sound, the sonic embodiment of the thing itself, be  described. It was

something that defied nomenclature, something  infinitely etheric, yet also very real, for it was at times quite

loud,  and again it sank into virtual inaudibility. 

Monk and Ham turned slowly in the corners, eyes alert, muscles  tensing. They knew this weird trilling. It was

the sound of Doc Savage,  a small and unconscious thing which the giant of bronze did in moments  of stress. 

"Hey!" Monk howled suddenly and pointed at the ceiling. "Look! For  cryin' out loud!" 

Almost all eyes went to the ceiling. Monk was an actor when he  wanted to be. But two or three were not

misled by the ruse, and it was  they who saw the door snap open to let in a Herculean metal figure who,  in

passing through, all but filled the aperture. 

"Talk about the devil  " a man roared, and raced a hand for his  gun pocket 

Doc Savage came toward him with the speed of light spurted from a  bronzetinted lens  and stopped. He

stood frozen. Then he began to  back away. 

Monk and Ham stared, puzzled, not comprehending why the bronze man  had hesitated, nor able to remember

a time when he had done so in the  past. 

The man got his gun out, weaved a bit on his feet as if his leg  muscles were unsteady, and took aim. 

Only then did Doc Savage flash in. But it seemed too late. The gun  was a revolver, and the trigger finger was

already tightening. 

The way Doc Savage, giant of metal, reached the gunman and seized  the weapon was something Monk and

Ham always remembered. They had seen  the bronze giant move swiftly before, but never with quite this

unearthly speed. And when the man of bronze stepped back, they saw why  he had at first hesitated to attack

the wouldbe killer. 

The man's eyes were popping. When he had lost his gun, the man  staggered a pace after Doc Savage, then

brought up and swung a hand  foolishly against his own face. He felt of his own eyes, almost out of  their

sockets, in a manner that was hideous to watch, for it was  apparent that the fellow could no longer see. 

Then he began to shriek and bend and unbend himself in convulsions  of frightful agony; he fell upon the

floor, spread himself out and his  clenched fists beat the rough carpet until the skin was barked off. 


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Then another man began to shriek, to paw at his face, to flail his  arms as if fighting an unseen, hideous harpy. 

A third joined the unearthly chorus, and a fourth, then others,  until the room was a bedlam with bodies

threshing about and shrieks  that split the ears. 

A man fell headlong into the fireplace, and the flames consumed his  hair with a malodorous swoosh! and his

flesh began to sizzle while he  screeched as if trying to empty himself of all that nature had put  within him. 

Monk ran over, seized upon the man's heels and dragged him out,  still howling. The only cooling agent at

hand seemed to be a bottle of  pale amber wine, and Monk poured that upon the victim; but the fellow

continued to thresh, dying within a few moments. 

Monk backed away, horror on his homely face. Monk was hard; men had  tried to kill him, and he had seen

hideous things happen to human  bodies. But now his nerves became as old strings; cold water seemed to

wash through his veins and his big mouth felt tongueless. 

He realized, almost suddenly, that it was quiet in the room of  fantastic death, with bodies twisted horrors on

the floor and with only  Doc Savage, Ham and himself erect. 

Monk tried three times before he could speak. 

"What in blazes happened?" he mumbled. 

WHEN Monk got no answer, he looked at Doc Savage, after which his  own feeling of amazement increased a

bit, if such were possible, for  there was stark bewilderment on Doc Savage's regular, metallic  features. And

Doc Savage rarely showed emotion. 

"You  don't know  what it was?" Monk asked haltingly. 

The bronze man shook a slow negative. "I only know that it was one  of the most hideous, mysterious things I

have ever seen happen." 

"Every one of them died but us  every one in the room but us," Ham  said, and looked steadily at the ceiling

as if to avoid the bodies on  the floor. "How do you explain that?" 

Monk, stepping high over corpses, announced, "I'm gettin' out of  here. The damn thing that killed 'em may

have another try  at us." 

Doc Savage shook his head again, half in negations, half in  puzzlement. 

"If it had been gas, it would have killed us," he said. "There was  no sound, no firing of hidden darts, and if

they had been poisoned  Impossible! No poison would have affected them all at once." 

"A death ray of some kind, maybe," Ham muttered. 

"You dope," Monk told him unkindly. "A death ray would have gotten  us, too." 

Doc Savage rapped, "Just before I came, another man was talking, a  man they addressed as Boke. Where was

he?" 

Monk waved his arms. "Danged if I know. That was queer, too. His  voice was plain, but he wasn't in here." 


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"This Boke, he was their chief?" Doc asked. 

Ham answered that. "Righto. And the beggar seemed to think he had  been doublecrossed by Janko Sultman.

He ordered Sultman shot." Ham  eyed the contorted body of Frightful, the witchfaced one, who reposed  at

his feet, quite dead. 

"I heard most of it," Doc Savage said. "The pig, Habeas Corpus, was  down in the street when I got there, and

it was easy to tell from the  tracks what had happened. I came in right behind you, it would seem." 

"Where's Habeas now?" Monk demanded. 

"Downstairs," Doc advised. 

Ham waved his sword cane, which he had retrieved from where one of  their late unfortunate captors had

placed it. 

"But what killed these men?" he demanded. 

Doc Savage hazarded slowly, "The same thing which killed the  murderer of Leander Court; I think we can be

assured of that." 

"But what was it?" Ham persisted. 

"Believe me, I was never before so much at a loss for an  explanation of a happening," Doc Savage said

quietly. 

"Which makes it a real mystery," Monk grumbled. 

"We will look around," Doc Savage said. "We may find something that  will help." 

They began to search. 

Ham, as if he had thought of something, interjected, "You beard  this mysterious Boke say he was going to

talk to Robert Lorrey?" 

"Yes," Doc agreed. "We will look into that, also." 

Monk growled, "Do you reckon this has got something to do with our  upstate  " 

"Some one might be listening," Doc said sharply. 

Monk fell silent, for there was one subject which Doc Savage and  his men did not discuss publicly. That was

the matter of their unique  "college" in the remote wooded mountains of upstate New York. 

As far as they knew, none beyond those immediately concerned knew  of that "college," those concerned

being Doc Savage, his five aides,  Pat Savage, and the attendants in the institution itself. The students  who

enrolled in that college and, later, were graduated, did not even  know its whereabouts. 

For the students entered unwillingly, usually under the affects of  a stuporinducing drug. When they left after

graduation, they were also  drugged. 


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The students were criminals, and the "college" was a fantastic  place which turned them into honest men

whether they wished it or not.  The world did not know about the place. The world would probably have  been

shocked. 

In charge of the criminalcuring institution was a man named Robert  Lorrey, a scientific surgeon of fabulous

skill whom Doc Savage himself  had trained. 

What Robert Lorrey did to the criminals that made them honest men  was known only to himself and to his

chief assistant at the institution   or rather, the man who had been his chief assistant  Leander Court,  the

man shot down in cold blood in the reception room of the  Association of Physical Health. What he did had to

do with intricate  surgery, chemical rehabilitation, and there was also a long course of  training. Doc Savage, of

course, knew. 

When criminals emerged from Doc Savage's unique university, they  did not remember their pasts; for some

strange reason they hated crime  in any form, and they had been taught a trade wherewith to make an  honest

living. 

Had the existence of this place become known, it would have been a  newspaper story unparalleled. Doc

Savage also knew it would excite many  misguided reformers who would stir up government investigations,

for  the criminals had no choice about taking the treatment. 

Doc Savage, in the final analysis, was a private individual, and  such are not supposed to mete out their own

brand of justice. The  courts are for that. And Doc Savage had never sent a crook before an  American court. 

If news of his "college" got out, there would be all kinds of  trouble, he well knew, and for that reason he had

refused to tell the  twofisted tough guy cop, Hardboiled Humbolt, of murdered Leander  Court's connection

with himself. 

And it was to keep news of the institution from leaking out that  the bronze man now requested Monk not to

speak of it. What Monk was  wondering was perfectly plain anyway. Was the "college" in some way

connected with this fantastic affair? 

Monk growled, "What I want to know is where that guy Boke was. He  wasn't in this room. I'll swear to that. I

dang near got my head caved  in lookin' for 'im." 

Ham said unkindly, "No such luck," and added, "What do you say we  try some of the other rooms?" 

THEY tried some of the other rooms  all of them in fact, and found  them an unsavory collection of

dungeons, unfurnished for the most part,  with those that were equipped fitted up with shoddy stuff. 

"Looks kinda like a temporary hangout," Monk decided. 

They had found no one, no sign of the nebulous Boke, the man with  the voice that was so utterly pleasant. 

The rendezvous had, they discovered, a galaxy of entrances. Several  buildings on both sides of the cheap

block had been rented, it seemed,  and connecting doors cut through them. 

They went through the whole maze, the process requiring the better  part of an hour, but found no sign of

Boke. Doc Savage himself searched  the roof, which was cold and bare, being without a coping so that the

chill wind whooped across it without interruption. 


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Doc Savage stood for a time on the roof, apparently unaffected by  the cold, close to where the smoke poured

from a chimney that led to  the fireplace in the death room below. Then he went down to the macabre  chamber

itself. 

The bronze man began sounding the walls. The room, it was plain,  had once been much longer, but had been

shut off by two partitions.  These were thin, and constructed of a wallboard with a paper exterior. 

A moment later his fist, in pumping against the panels, went  through. 

"Blazes!" Monk snorted. "There is where the guy was speaking from!  He was in the next room, and that

paper was what made his voice sound a  little queer." 

"I did notice that his voice was muffled," Ham admitted. "But it  was such a pleasant voice that the muffled

quality almost escaped my  attention." 

"That," Monk said, "explains part of the mystery." 

Doc Savage moved toward the door. 

"'We had better go talk to Robert Lorrey," he declared. "He is at  the  where he works  and we can get him

by shortwave radio  telephone. As for Boke, he must have been unaffected by whatever killed  those men. He

made his getaway during the excitement." 

"Have you any idea what caused the deaths?" Monk asked bluntly. 

Doc Savage seemed to become inexplicably deaf and not to hear, a  fact which caused Monk to grin widely,

because he knew from past events  that it was a good sign when Doc began keeping his own counsel. 

Doc rarely expressed a theory which he could not prove absolutely,  but if he had no theory and was

completely mystified, he would say so.  Hence Doc's assumed deafness conveyed to Monk that the bronze

man did  have an idea about the strange Boke. 

Going downstairs, they found Habeas Corpus there, shivering. It was  near dusk, with the streets almost

deserted. 

The uproar in the house as the men died so weirdly and so awfully,  apparently had not carried to the street,

thanks in part to the first  gale of Fall, which had whipped itself up to quite a frenzy, driving  the hard snow

with the force of cold bullets. 

THE bronze man drove his open roadster, seeming not to feel the  cold. Monk and Ham followed in their

coupe, the windows up, the heater  on to its fullest. They had resumed their interminable quarrel, the  present

point of dissent being Monk's driving. 

They headed directly for the middle of Central Park, the most open  space that the metropolis offered, where

conditions were best for radio  transmission and reception. Doc Savage tuned in and called over the

shortwave set, and Monk and Ham tuned in on their apparatus,  listening. 

Eventually, Doc got the upstate "college." 

"Robert Lorrey," he requested. 


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"Who!" The distant voice, that of an attendant at the institution,  seemed surprised. "Two days ago, you

telegraphed Robert Lorrey to take  his vacation." 

"I telegraphed him?" Doc Savage asked slowly. 

"Why, yes  at least the message had your name signed to it," said  the distant voice. "Robert Lorrey left this

morning." 

"Did he say where he was going to spend his vacation?" the bronze  man demanded. 

"No," said the attendant. "Your message told him not to communicate  with you, so that he would have a

completely uninterrupted rest." 

Doc Savage's lips did not move, but there was not silence in the  roadster, for the bronze man's fantastic

trilling sound came into  being, persisted a moment, then ebbed away. 

"And what about Leander Court?" Doc asked. 

"Why, a telegram from you gave him his vacation four days earlier,"  advised the attendant. "I trust there is

nothing wrong." 

Doc Savage countered with another question. "Is everything all  right around there?" 

"Yes, of course." 

"Double the guards," the bronze man directed. "Go over the  electrical alarm system and the sonic amplifier

listening posts to see  that they have not been tampered with." 

"Yes, sir," agreed the attendant. "Then something is wrong?" 

"I am afraid so," Doc told him. 

"What is it?" 

"That is impossible to say, as yet." 

This terminated the radiotelephonic hookup. 

Monk and Ham got out of their coupe', shivered in the chill air and  came over. 

"You beard it?" Doc asked them. 

Ham nodded soberly and ran his sword cane through gloved fingers. 

"Did you telegraph a vacation to either Leander Court or Robert  Lorrey?" he asked. 

"No," Doc Savage said. 

AS Doc Savage drove out of the park and downtown, he and his  companions could not help but note the

attitude with which the stories  of the popeyed deaths were being received by the public. 


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Newsboys ran along the streets, screaming headlines concerning the  passing of Leander Court, and they did a

surprising business.  Housewives ran out to purchase papers. Groups of persons stood in front  of cigar stores

and under street lamps, in spite of the cold. 

In pausing for a traffic light, they could hear a man speaking in a  nearby car. 

"It's something like the influenza epidemic, only worse," he was  saying. "I tell you, I'm right! Mark my

words. In a few days, there'll  be thousands dying! Women, kids and men  they'll all die. I know what  I'm

talking about." 

"I've already sent my family out of town," said another man in the  car. 

"I'm taking a train tonight," said the other. "It's the only thing  to do. I know what I'm talking about, I tell you.

These poor devils who  stay behind may catch that damned disease that kills you with your eyes  sticking out.

It's a risk, too much of a risk for me  I can see what's  coming." 

Driving onward, Doc Savage stopped at his headquarters on the  eightysixth floor of a skyscraper which was

one of the most impressive  in the city. 

The bronze man's establishment there consisted of an outer office,  plainly and expensively furnished, a

library containing one of the most  complete assortments of scientific volumes in existence, and a  laboratory

fitted with every modern device, as well as a great amount  of apparatus which was the bronze man's own

invention. 

"What next?" Monk wanted to know, he and Ham having followed Doc. 

"Renny," Doc replied. "He is in town and will want in on this. He  was consulting on an engineering job this

afternoon, and I failed to  locate him when the call came about Leander Court." 

Monk nodded, comprehending. 

"Renny"  Colonel John Renwick  was another member of Doc Savage's  group of five unusual aides. Renny

was noted for two things: his  tremendous fists, and his ability as an engineer. 

He had a face peculiar for the expression it wore. Renny always  looked as if he were going to the funeral of a

very close friend. Renny  also had two loves: he liked excitement, and it was his boast that he  could smash the

panel out of the strongest wooden door built with a  single blow of his incredible fists. 

Doc Savage made several telephone calls, but was unable to locate  the bigfisted Renny. 

The bronze man then went to the large office window and with a bit  of peculiar looking substance, wrote

rapidly on the glass. Nothing  appeared after he had written. The unusual chalk he had employed left a  mark

which could not be seen except with the aid of an ultraviolet  lantern. Under these invisible rays the stuff

would fluoresce, or glow,  appearing in an eerie electric blue. 

Renny, when he reached the headquarters, would use an ultraviolet  projector, a small one which reposed in

the desk, to examine the  window. It was Doc's custom to leave messages thus. 

Two other members of Doc Savage's group of five were not at present  in New York. "Long Tom" Roberts,

the electrical wizard, was in Chicago,  attending an exposition of electrical inventions in which he had

exhibits. "Johnny"  William Harper Littlejohn  archaeologist and  geologist, was filling the chair of natural


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science research at a  famous university during the illness of a professor who regularly  occupied that position. 

"Now what?" persisted Monk. Then he suddenly slapped a hand on his  knee, a feat which he could

accomplish without bending in the  slightest. "Say, I just thought of a way that we can maybe locate  Robert

Lorrey!" 

"Through his brother, Sidney?" Doc queried. 

Monk looked crestfallen. "So you thought of that." 

"Yes," said Doc. "We'll try Sidney Lorrey now." 

Chapter V. THE HAND OF SULTMAN

ROBERT and Sidney Lorrey were twin brothers, and, twinlike, had the  same interests and dislikes, and it was

not strange that they should  both have become scientists. 

Robert had long ago associated himself with Doc Savage in a  position which paid him more money, perhaps,

than he could have made at  any other profession. The other twin, Sidney, had a laboratory in New  York City

and spent his time there experimenting and inventing. 

Both brothers were graduate surgeons and doctors. Robert practiced  what he knew. Sidney, on the other hand,

was the creative member of the  pair. His prize invention was an apparatus which produced the same

emanations as radium, without radium's terrific expense, aithough he  did not yet have this device refined

where it could be used as a  commercial proposition. He believed his device would be an inestimable  boon in

treating cancer and other diseases. 

Sidney Lorrey's laboratory was on a barge which was moored to a  longdisused pier in the East River. 

Doc Savage's party, approaching the barge, inspected it closely for  lights. The craft was long,

shabbylooking, blunt at the ends; and in  the middle, where the cargo pit would ordinarily have been, there

was a  long, neat, white deck house. Nowhere did a light show. They could hear  the low whine of electrical

apparatus. 

The three men paused to study the craft, and because it was cold,  Habeas Corpus, the pig, planted himself

against Ham's neatly pressed  trousers to get the benefit of whatever warmth there was in the dapper  lawyer's

ankles. 

Ham struck fiercely at the shoat with his sword cane. The pig,  accustomed to such moves, got clear. 

"One of these days I shall make breakfast bacon out of that hog!"  Ham promised grimly. 

"You try it and there'll just be a grease spot where you stood!"  Monk told him with equal grimness. 

They advanced and observed that the tide was going out noisily,  causing a grinding of fenders and a creaking

of hawsers. Upstream, as  the tide ran now, a low log of a boat was anchored, the smell coming  from it

indicating it to be a gasoline barge. 

Doc Savage led the way aboard Sidney Lorrey's barge, glanced about  and rapped on the door. The panel was

of steel and his knuckles drummed  hollowly against it 


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There was no answer. They went to the windows, found them barred  heavily, and threw flashlights inside.

The whine was louder. 

"Probably has to keep things fastened up on account of sneak  thieves," Monk hazarded. "That whine must be

one of his devices." 

The probing flashlight beams picked up chemical paraphernalia  inside the barge laboratory, together with the

coils and tubes of  electrical devices, as well as tools and workbenches. 

"Bally lot of equipment he has," Ham remarked. 

"No one home, obviously," Doc Savage said. "We will leave a note on  the door, and try to telephone him

later." 

The bronze man wrote briefly on a bit of paper and was wedging it  in a crack of the barge door with a match

stick when Monk barked, "Hey!  Lookit!" 

Upstream, a man had appeared. He seemed to be in an intoxicated  condition, for he weaved along the

bulkhead, stumbling and staggering.  Reaching the edge, he leaned over groggily and peered at the water

below. 

"Get back, you numbskull!" Monk bellowed, small voice suddenly  tremendous. "You'll fall in!" 

The man looked up at the sound of Monk's voice. The effort seemed  to overbalance him. His arms

cartwheeled and he toppled into the cold,  black race below. 

"Blast it!" Monk gritted. "Of all nights to have to jump into the  river after some lug!" 

He started for the water, wrenching long arms out of his coat. Then  Doc Savage's flashlight beam dived past

him, roved the water briefly,  and the bronze man's forceful clutch fell on his shoulder. 

"Don't dive in," Doc warned. 

Monk gulped, "But that fool will drown!" 

"Take a look at the water," Doc advised. Monk peered down. 

"For the love of mud!" he muttered. 

THE water, where the flashlight beam fell upon, gave back all the  colors of the rainbow in a convulsing, eerie

fashion. It was as if  pigment of many colors had been spread on the boiling surface of the  tide rip. 

"Gasoline," Doc Savage said shortly. "That fellow must have opened  a dump valve in the gas boat over

there." 

Monk yelled, "A trap!" 

And Ham echoed, "He thought some of us would jump in and swim  toward him, then somebody would set

fire to the gasoline on top of the  water." 

Doc Savage whipped for the heavy gangplank that led from the barge  to the shore. 


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Down in the water, the splashing man suddenly shed his clumsiness.  He stroked furiously, reached the

bulkhead and grabbed a rope which was  almost indistinguishable in the darkness but which he must have

lowered  previously. He climbed with frenzied haste. 

Nearing the top, the fellow snaked a hand into his coat for a gun,  then kept one finger hooked through the

trigger guard as he continued  to climb. He kept his face upturned. 

A head, its bronze color discernible even in the gloom, appeared  above. The man on the rope reversed his gun

swiftly and fired. He saw  the bronze head plainly the instant before the lash of flame from the  gun muzzle

blotted it out. Afterward, the head was gone. 

Confident he had killed the bronze man, the fellow on the rope  jerked himself up to the bulkhead edge,

elbowed over, and looked for  his victim. He swore. There was no one distinguishable. 

Amazement held the wouldbe killer for a moment. He was positive  his bullet had not missed; he did not

believe any one could have gotten  out of the path of the slug so swiftly. 

Grunting with the effort, he hauled himself up on the bulkhead,  took a tentative pace away from the river, his

gun ready. 

Off to the left, there was a single firecracker pop of a noise. The  man with the gun cursed, bopped on one leg,

then tried to run, but  negotiated only a few paces before he floundered down. His legs still  beat the ground

after he lay prone, as if he were trying to continue  running. 

Monk got up from behind an old timber, waving his supermachine  pistol which he had taken from his former

captives in the strange room  of death downtown. 

"You got an antidote for the chemical in the mercy bullets these  guns shoot?" he demanded of Doc Savage. 

"In the car," the bronze man said, and glided for his roadster. 

DOC Savage came back shortly with a hypodermic needle, the contents  of which he administered to the

victim. 

Monk stood expectantly in the background. The supermachine pistols  were charged, not with regulation

bullets, but with shells which bore a  chemical that produced a harmless unconsciousness, and the stuff Doc

was giving the victim was a stimulant which would revive him quickly. 

The manner of the wouldbe killer's reviving was a bit queer. His  legs had gradually ceased to make their

running movements, but now they  resumed, and the churning became more violent, until the fellow grunted

loudly, opened his eyes and tried to get up. 

Monk turned him over and sat on the pit of his stomach. 

"You're in a spot, sonny," Monk advised him. 

The "sonny" was sarcasm, for the man was past middle age. He had,  however, a face of consummate evil. His

mouth was warped from a  perpetual snarl and his eyes were narrow, furtive. 

The man growled thickly, "Aw, I just fell in  " 


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"You cannot lie out of it," Doc Savage told him. "But you can help  your own position by talking." 

The evilfaced man scowled at the bronze giant, then looked away  and his face convulsed as he wet his lips. 

"I dunno nothin'," he disclaimed. 

Monk, saying nothing, reached out a hairy arm to a pile of rusted  scrap iron which lay on the bulkhead. He

selected a heavy gear wheel,  pulled it to hurt, wrenched off the victim's belt and began strapping  the weight

to the fellow's ankle. 

"Cut it out," gritted the other. "You can't do that." 

"You know who we are?" Monk asked him. 

The other wet his lips once more. "Sure. Doc Savage and two of his  gang." 

"Ever hear what happens to crooks who get in our way?" Monk  demanded fiercely. 

The old man snarled, "You ain't runnin' no shandy on me!" 

"Listen," Monk said patiently. "I asked you if you ever heard what  happens to crooks who tangle up with us." 

"No." The captive tried to kick the heavy gear off his ankle. 

"They disappear," Monk leered. "They ain't never heard from again.  That's what happens to guys who mix

with us. You've heard that story,  ain't you?" 

The terrified roll of the prisoner's eyes showed that he had heard  of the legend that those who opposed Doc

Savage met some fantastic  fate, and were never seen again by their former associates. This was  the story the

underworld bandied, for none knew of Doc Savage's strange  "college" for curing criminals. 

"You're another one that's not gonna be heard from," said Monk. 

The homely chemist was bluffing, but nothing on his simian features  revealed that. 

The captive broke suddenly. 

"Listen!" he exploded. "I hadda do it. I needed the money. I'm an  old man and things are tough for me. I got a

bad record and nobody'll  give me work." 

"Who hired you?" Doc Savage asked sharply. 

Monk began untying the heavy flywheel to encourage their source of  information. 

"A guy named Sultman  Janko Sultman," gulped the elderly thug. 

"Blazes!" said Monk. "Are you sure it wasn't a bird with a nice  voice named Boke?" 

"Sultman was his name," the other insisted. "He told me to watch  this barge here and if you birds showed up,

to pull that  fallingintotheriver gag. I was gonna  " He hesitated, and then  stopped speaking. 


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"I know," Monk told him sourly. "You was gonna set the gasoline  afire after one of us jumped in. What is

Sultman's game?" 

"I don't know," insisted the old man. "He didn't spill that part.  He come here lookin' for Robert Lorrey, but

there wasn't nobody on the  barge and he left me here to tell 'im if Robert Lorrey came back, an'  to  well  if

you guys showed up." 

"You know no more than that?" Doc Savage asked. 

"That's all." 

Monk said fiercely, "Cough up the truth, mug, or I'll bust you wide  open!" 

The old crook began cursing. 

A harsh voice said, "All right, you clever boys will all put your  hands up!" 

HAM drifted a hand for the armpit where reposed his supermachine  pistol laden with mercy bullets. 

"Careful," Doc warned. "It's our friend Hardboiled Humbolt." 

Hardboiled came out of the shadows, a belligerent tower of gristle  who walked gingerly, favoring his sore

feet. His hands were empty. 

Behind him strode uniformed policemen who carried submachine guns,  riot shotguns and tear gas

paraphernalia. 

Hardboiled leveled an arm at Doc Savage. "I put you under arrest  once today. What's the idea? Think I was

kidding you?" 

Monk said mildly, "Tough guys are my meat!" and got off the aged  criminal. He went toward Hardboiled

Humbolt, and when he was very close  to the giant officer, things happened. Monk lashed out a fist that

landed with a sound akin to a woodsman's axe sinking into a tree. 

Monk looked confident that Hardboiled would go down. But nothing of  the sort happened. Hardboiled did

tremble and weave on his feet, then  his arm shook and the blackjack came down out of his sleeve. There was

a swishing sound; Monk ducked, but not in time. 

The homely chemist sat down heavily, wearing a dazed expression and  feeling of the top of his head where

the sap had landed. 

Ham laughed unkindly. 

Habeas Corpus made a staccato grunting outburst and ran at  Hardboiled Humbolt. The policeman kicked at

the shoat, but he must have  been halfunconscious from the effects of Monk's blow, because he lost  his

balance and fell heavily. The pig rushed him again, showing long  yellow tusks. 

Monk said hoarsely, "Cut it out, Habeas. That guy is really hard,"  and the pig backed away again. 

The elderly crook got up and tried to run. A policeman tripped him  and put a foot on the back of his neck, not

at all gently. 


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"I know this old punk," said the cop. "He's a rat from way back." 

Hardboiled Humbolt, still sitting on the cold ground, waved his  blackjack at Doc Savage, at Monk, at Ham. 

"Run 'em in!" he directed. "I warned this bronze guy!" Ham, the  lawyer, drew himself up and snapped, "My

roughmannered friend, men are  not arrested in these good United States unless 

"There is a charge against 'em!" Hardboiled finished for him. "And  you can bet your pretty striped pants that

there is a charge against  all three of you. It is suspicion of murder." 

Ham said, "Ridiculous!" as if it were a swear word. 

Hardboiled Humbolt, reciting as if he were in school, said, "Over  half a dozen men were found a short time

ago, dead in a downtown house.  Their eyes were all protruding. Witnesses were found who saw you three

men leave the house." 

A scowl wrinkled high on Ham's forehead. "Better not start anything  you can't finish, Mister Tough

Policeman." 

"We got a call," Hardboiled elaborated. "It said to go to this  house and we would find a crowd of men you

had murdered." 

Doc Savage put into the conversation for the first time with the  demand, "Who was the informant?" 

"Didn't give his name," said Hardboiled. "But it was a damned  pleasant voice to listen to." 

"Boke," Monk growled. 

"What?" demanded Hardboiled. 

"Fooey on you," Monk told him. 

The elderly thug on the ground, with the cop's foot on his neck,  abruptly seized the policeman's other foot

with his hands and yanked,  spilling the officer. 

The lawman swore and the submachine gun he was carrying bounced out  of his hands. The aged criminal

seized it. 

Startled policemen tried to get their weapons into action, but they  were too late and they stared, aghast, as the

machine gun fanned them  menacingly. 

The ancient crook started to back away, escape his main thought.  Then another idea seemed to seize him and

he paused, stepped sidewise  and was sheltered behind a rusting lump of abandoned machinery. 

"Damn you all!" he gritted. "I've always wanted to slough me a  bunch of cops!" He braced the submachine

gun more firmly. 

"I told you he was a rat," choked one of the policemen. "He's a  crazy killer!" 

They all expected the rapidfirer to blare out; but instead, it was  the old man's voice which tore a guttural

shriek, and he came  staggering and moaning from the shelter. He had dropped his gun. 


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His eyes were popping in a fashion ghastly to observe. 

TO Doc Savage, Monk and Ham, who had seen what happened in the  death room downtown, what occurred

now was not new. But to the  policeman, it was a sight they were to carry always. 

The old criminal was a victim of the popeyed death, and he  shrieked and bit his lips until they ran scarlet;

then he fell down  with convulsions and finally kicked his life away. 

Hardboiled Humbolt squirmed his feet in his oversize sneakers and  wet his lips; his hands made the small

aimless gestures of a man who  does not know what to do, and he breathed heavily. He was the picture  of a

phlegmatic soul startled out of his wits. 

The homely Monk, getting slowly to his feet, a hand still up where  Hardboiled's blackjack had landed, moved

close to Doc. 

"We gonna let this cop throw us into the can?" he demanded in a  whisper. 

Hardboiled Humbolt snapped off his lethargy, came over and clipped,  "No talking between you three!" 

Monk glared at him and demanded, "You mean we're really pinched?" 

"And how!" the burly officer said with gusto. "For once, some of  you privileged boys in this town are going

to take what's coming to  you." 

Ham asked, "Did you stop to think?" 

"Think what?" Hardboiled looked puzzled. 

"That Doc Savage, here, may not be in the same class with the rest  of these people you call 'privileged'," Ham

elaborated. "The persons  you are down on are those with socalled 'pull,' politicians and  playboys and so on.

Now Doc, here  " 

"Is going to jail," Hardboiled finished. "I don't give a damn if  he's the governor of the state in disguise. And

you, you fashionplate  lawyer, are going along." 

"It's an outrage," said Ham. 

"It's murder!" Hardboiled waved at the dead man. "Damned mysterious  murder! And I think you birds know

more than you're telling." 

Doc Savage said half a dozen words in the guttural Mayan language. 

"Here!" ripped Hardboiled. "Speak English!" 

Monk and Ham drew air into their lungs, then ceased to breathe. Doc  Savage did likewise. Then the bronze

man, without the gesture seeming  to mean anything, pressed an elbow tightly to his side. 

Hardboiled frowned, his suspicions half aroused, and the frown was  still on his leathery forehead, when he

drew in a great sobbing breath  of air, bent over and peered at the ground as if searching for a  suitable resting

spot, then laid himself down heavily. He began to  snore. 


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A cop exploded, "Say, what the  " then he, too, dropped. Other  policemen around him toppled over. None of

them moved after they fell,  and all breathed noisily, regularly, in the mysterious stupor which had  seized

upon them. Only a few snored. 

Monk asked, "Any danger of 'em freezing?" 

Doc Savage said, "No. They'll wake up in half an hour." 

Doc Savage, Monk and Ham departed the spot. Monk and Ham made no  comment about what had happened.

It was old stuff to them. 

Long ago Doc Savage had perfected a gas, odorless and colorless,  which produced a quick, temporary

unconsciousness and left no harmful  aftereffects. The unique thing about this gas was that it became

ineffective after somewhat less than a minute. Given a warning, one  could evade the gas by holding his

breath. The substance, extremely  powerful, was carried in small glass bulbs, and the bronze man had  broken

one of these with elbow pressure. 

The three men approached their cars. The pig, Habeas Corpus, had  not been close enough to be affected by

the anaesthetic, and he now  galloped up. 

Monk muttered, "I can't stop thinkin' how those men died  with  their eyes popping." 

Ham, who still clung to his sword cane, said, "What about that  Janko Sultman? We know he is mixed up in it.

Why don't we get on his  neck and make him talk?" 

"Pat is working on that," Doc told him. "Something may turn up at  the Association of Physical Health." 

Chapter VI. PAT HITS A SNAG

SOMETHING had turned up at the Association of Physical Health.  At  least the elevator boy, after his

passenger had alighted, twisted his  lip distastefully and said over his shoulder, "Now ain't that  something!" 

The "something" was a lissome young man in evening clothes. He had  remarkably fragile features and a rose

petal skin. There was a gardenia  in his lapel, the aroma of mimosa about him. 

The newcomer went directly to the receptionisttelephone girl's  desk. The blonde was no longer there. A

rather dowdy looking girl who  wore glasses had taken her place. 

"I wish to see Seco Nandez," he advised. 

"Who is calling?" asked the standardized receptionist 

"Tell Nandez it is a gentleman sent by J. S.," he directed. 

The information was apparently effective, because the young man was  directed toward a door which bore the

legend: 

SENOR SECO NANDEZ, M.D.  Chief Of Medical Staff 

Entering, the effeminate young man shut the door carefully at his  back, took out a handkerchief and wiped his


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finger prints off the knob  as if it were a habit  he had opened the door by a shove, without  touching the knob

on the other side. 

"Hyah, Nannie," he smiled. 

Seco Nandez scowled at the flippancy. He was a tall, reedy dark man  who wore a rather light suit for so late

in the Fall. The pallor of the  suit emphasized the darkness of Seco Nandez, and his large eyes and  thick lips

lent a suspicion that some of his ancestors had come from  Africa. 

"Why do you come here, LIzzie?" he demanded. "Eso es muy mall" 

"What's that last?" demanded the young man addressed as "Lizzie." 

"It is dangerous," snapped Seco Nandez, putting his Spanish into  English. 

"Sultman sent me," said Lizzie. 

Nandez spread his hands. "But why he not come himself, senor?" 

"Trouble with his feet," said Lizzie. 

Nandez scowled his puzzlement. "You mean the fallen arches like  that so very tough cop, Hardboiled

Humbolt? I did not know Sultman had  such trouble." 

"It's the cold," grinned Lizzie. "Not his arches." 

"A hot bath is good for that," Nandez said seriously. 

Lizzie laughed sarcastically. "It's right over your head, isn't it,  Nannie? You no savvy. Well, a hot bath won't

help this kid of cold  feet." 

"What do you mean, senor?" Nandez questioned sharply. 

"Sultman's feet began to cool off when Doc Savage barged in here  this afternoon," Lizzie explained. "The

temperature took another big  drop when that bullet bounced off Sultman's fuzzy head. Boke was  responsible

for that shooting and Sultman knows it." 

Nandez nodded slowly. "Si, si, this thing, she is getting very  dangerous." 

"You knew it would get dangerous when you started it," Lizzie  snorted. 

Nandez groaned, "It would not, had we but done what Boke hired us  to do, and let it go at that. But no, when

Sultman learned what Boke  planned, he decided to get in ahead of Boke and put the plan through  himself." 

Lizzie laughed again. His face, his body, were both fragile  looking, but there was a hard recklessness in his

manner. 

"Don't let it get to your feet," he advised. "Hell! There's more  money than any of us ever saw in this thing.

Boke expected to clean up  a billion. I think he was a piker." 

Nandez frowned at his manicured, dark fingers. "Do not worry about  what you call  my feet." 


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"Swell!" said Lizzie. "Now, I came to tell you to meet Sultman.  We're taking cover from now on, see." 

Nandez waved an arm. "Hut what about the Association of Physical  Health?" 

"Sultman is just walking off and leaving it," Lizzie grinned. "The  damned place ain't making money,

anyhow." 

"Where is Sultman?" asked Nandez. 

'The usual place," advised the other. 

Lizzie went to the door, took out his handkerchief and dropped it  over the doorknob before he turned it. He

waved his free hand airily.  "Keep your chin up, Nannie." 

Nandez snapped, "Stop calling me that name! I do not like it!" 

"There's a lot of things you'd like less," Lizzie grinned, and went  out. 

LIZZIE smiled widely and winked at the little receptionist as he  went out. He swung girlishly into the

elevator and the cage sank. 

The receptionist at the telephone switchboard came to life. Open  before her lay a stenographic notebook, its

pages covered with expert  shorthand pen strokes. 

Translated, these shorthand notes would give an exact record of  what had been said between Lizzie and

Nandez. 

The unimpressive young woman removed the telephone headset. Instead  of having a single receiver, as was

customary, this headset was double  and the extra receiver was connected to a circuit of concealed

microphones which had been planted in the offices early in the evening  during the time the others were

dining. 

The Association of Physical Health, which gained its revenue from  the mere giving of physical examinations,

remained open regularly in  the evenings to accommodate office workers and those who could not come

during daylight hours. 

The plainlooking receptionist smiled widely and put the notebook  in a hand bag which also held a weapon

which resembled an oversized  automatic, two extra curled magazines for the gun, a fountain pen  teargas

gun, and a compact. Then the young woman busied herself at the  switchboard. 

At that point, Seco Nandez came out of his office. He had donned  his hat and overcoat and seemed bound on

a definite errand as he took  the elevator. 

The receptionist motioned to a nurse, said, "Take my place,  please," and hurried away before the nurse could

open her mouth. The  young woman ran down the stairs, past where the gunman had been seized  with the

weird popeyed death earlier in the day, and into the lobby. 

She ran behind the cigar counter and exchanged her colorless and  rather threadbare coat for an exquisite

affair of fur. She kicked off  her fiatheeled, conservative shoes and donned a pair with high heels,  then added

a small metallic hat to the outfit. 


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She used lipstick and rouge expertly. She peeled off a wig of  duncolored hair which she was wearing and

replaced it with one of  metallic blondness. 

The young woman's own hair, it could be observed,was a remarkable  bronze hue. 

The result of her changes was something of a miracle. The young  woman who walked out of the building on

the trail of Seco Nandez was a  ravishing beauty. Even her carriage was different, the high heels  making her

look inches taller. If Seco Nandez or Lizzie had met her  face to face, it was doubtful if they would have

recognized her. 

A close acquaintance, however, might have recognized the young  woman as Patricia Savage. 

Seco Nandez, moving along the gloomy streets, bending over against  the pluck of the cold Fall wind, looked

back numerous times, but thanks  to Pat's skill, noticed nothing unusual, or if he did observe anything,  he gave

no sign. 

His route took him to the east, where the streets became narrow and  dark and full of smells and the small

drifts of hard white snow,  snuggled in bunches behind obstructions, seemed strangely out of place  amid the

grime and squalor. 

There were few persons abroad, which made Pat's job of trailing  much simpler; she did not follow abreast of

Nandez, but paralleled his  course on the next street, watching for him at intersections. There  finally came a

time when he did not appear at a corner. 

Pat hurried down the side street Her coat collar was upturned, her  head down, apparently in defense against

the chill wind, but actually  to watch the sidewalk. The hard snow, almost like ice pellets, had not  covered the

walk, but it had eddied into doorways and stoops. 

Seco Nandez had turned into a shabby building which was reached by  half a dozen stone steps, deeply pitted. 

PAT went up the steps boldly, found the door unlocked, and eased  inside. Listening, she detected voices

muttering from above. One of the  speakers was Seco Nandez. 

"Listen, chief," Nandez was saying, "you've got to give me time.  This fellow Sultman is too slice. We can't

hang the goods on him all at  once." 

Pat heard the words distinctly, but the reply was a monotonous  mutter which she could neither understand nor

identify. 

"The first thing we've got to do," Seco Nandez continued, "is to  find where Sultman is hiding. I think I know.

I'll go there, then make  a report." 

This information gave Pat Savage a surprise. Was it possible that  she had uncovered a minor doublecross

among the ranks of the schemers?  Was Nandez on the side of Sultman, or aiding the mysterious Boke? 

The unintelligible mutter was replying to Nandez. 

"Let's not talk so loud, senor," said Nandez. 

After that the voice dropped to complete inaudibility, and Pat,  disgusted, mounted the stairs cautiously in

order to get nearer and  hear better. At the top she found a long corridor which ended, it  seemed, in another


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stairway leading downward to a back door. It was  very dark, the passage being unlighted, and Pat felt along

with her  hands. She located a door. 

She could hear no speaking beyond the door. She leaned an ear  against the ancient planks. As if that were a

signal, motion exploded  in the darkness beside her. 

Hands seized her throat and her hair, yanked forcibly and  unbalanced her. Before she could do a thing about

it, she was slammed  heavily on the floor. 

Seco Nandez, gripping her fiercely, said, "You fall for the trick  like the ton of bricks, senorita." 

PAT knew the man with whom she fought was her master in physical  strength, so instead of wrestling with

him, she kicked his shins with  the sharp toes of her slippers, hit him on the windpipe, which happens  to be a

particularly vulnerable pant of the human anatomy, and gave one  of his ears a terrific twist. 

Finally, she managed to execute an ancient and effective bit of  roughandtumble strategy  she inserted her

little finger in Seco  Nandez's left nostril and lifted. 

Nandez moaned, his moan became a howl, and he floundered in his  haste to get erect and away from the

torturing finger. He jumped back,  slapping his aching proboscis, hissing expletives in Spanish. 

Pat did not try to get erect, but rolled over, grabbed her purse  and tore it open. The supermachine pistol fell

out. 

Nandez leaped forward and kicked at the gun. He missed. Pat tried  to thumb the safety off. Nandez kicked

again, and missed a second time.  Then Pat did get the safety off and the gun began to moan like a big

buiffiddle and spew empties, but the slugs, going past Nandez, tore  plaster off the walls. 

Pat corrected her aim; once more Nandez kicked. He was in time. The  heavy weapon caromed from wall to

floor and Pat groaned and snapped her  bruised fingers. 

As Nandez fell upon her, she dived her left hand into the purse and  got the teargas gun. Nandez must have

made the mistake of thinking  there would be no other weapon in the bag. 

Pat jammed the gun into his face, shut her eyes, held her breath  and pulled the trigger. The fountainpenlike

barrel made considerable  noise and kicked heavily, for the muzzle was against Nandez's skin. 

Nandez began to cry out and roll on the floor, and Pat gaining her  feet with her eyes still closed, ran for the

door. She missed the  aperture, smacked a wall, fell over a chair, keeping her eyes shut all  of the time, and not

breathing, then found the door and went through. 

She narrowly missed falling head over heels down the stairs, and  not until she was near the bottom did she

open her eyes. She popped  outside, only to have a hand clamp her arm. 

"Not so fast, sister," said the voice of the feminine mannered  Lizzie. 

PAT stood perfectly still, for there was a flat automatic in  Lizzie's other hand and the hard bravado of a killer

in his strange,  limpid eyes. 

"Good thing I shagged along behind Nannie," Lizzie said dryly.  "What'd you do to him?" 


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"Let me go!" Pat snapped. 

"Sure," said Lizzie, and released her arm. 

Then, so suddenly that Pat had no time to dodge, Lizzie struck her  with the automatic. He hit with blinding

speed, and accurately, with  the manner of a man who had done the thing before. 

Pat's head filled with a roaring; scarlet curtains fell and rolled  before her eyes and black masses came up and

danced on the curtains.  After that there was a singing sound as of millions of grasshoppers  traveling, which

resolved into pulsations that in turn became the  banging of her pulse. 

Ml the time she was conscious of being handled, and when she opened  her eyes, she was upstairs and on the

floor, bound and gagged. 

Seco Nandez was erect before her, speaking his feelings slowly and  painfully, not using particularly vile

Spanish words, but putting a  great deal of emphasis upon them. The left side of his face was not  pleasant to

look at, for the teargas gun had blown a rather nasty pit.  It was still running a little red, and his eyes were

streaming tears  that mixed and thinned the scarlet fluid. 

It was obvious that Nandez could not yet see. 

Perhaps ten minutes passed, Lizzie spending the interim in going  over the contents of Pat's hand bag and in

inspecting the supermachine  pistol. Nandez mopped at his face and finally began to see a little. 

He snarled when he saw Pat, and grabbed the supermachine pistol  from Lizzie. 

"Here! Hell!" Lizzie barked; and they struggled over the gun,  Nandez grating, "I shall kill her for what she do

to me, senor!" 

"Use your head," Lizzie snapped. 

Nandez continued struggling, managed to get the gun, tried to shoot  Pat, and the safety baffled him. He

cursed and hurled the weapon with  great violence at her head. His aim was very bad; the gun hit the wall,

bounced and came to rest so close that Pat instantly rolled in a  furious effort to reach it. 

Lizzie ran over, put his foot on her and held her stationary. 

"What a doll!" he grinned at Pat. "Where do you hook into this?" So  that she could answer, he removed the

gag. 

Pat said, "I don't know what this is all about. I came into this  building to see a friend, and as I was walking

down the corridor that  man"  she jerked her head at Nandez  "that man seized me." 

"Beautiful!" said Lizzie. "An excellent lie! A gorgeous lie! You're  Doc Savage's cousin and you bribed that

dizzy blonde at the Association  of Physical Health to let you take her place. I've read of you, sister.  You're

supposed to be good and I guess you really are." 

Nandez had sobered. "This senorita, she is connected with Doc  Savage?" be demanded. 

"She is," said Lizzie. "And that makes it bad.' How'd you come to  pull in here? This isn't Sutlman's hangout." 


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"I saw her trailing me," said Nandez. 

Lizzie put weight on the foot which bore on Pat's back. "How much  have you learned, goodlooking?" 

"Nothing," said Pat. 

"That's probably a lie, but it's swell," Lizzie grinned. He looked  at Nandez. "You want the job, Nannie?" 

"Yes," said Nandez. "And I do not like that nickname, senor." 

Lizzie laughed and went out. 

Pat knew they must have agreed on her fate during the black period  when she had been stunned from the

blow on the head. 

NANDEZ drew out a pocketknife, not a large knife, but one with a  blade which looked razor sharp. 

Lizzie, appearing in the door suddenly, said, "Better wait until  that face stops bleeding. You'd make a hell of

a spectacle on the  street now." 

"Si," growled Nandez. 

Lizzie, turning, said, "Watch the finger prints, Nannie," and  departed once more. 

Nandez scowled at the door for a time; then noting that his  features no longer oozed scarlet, got to his feet,

holding the knife  lightly between his fingers. 

He advanced with the quick purpose of a man who intended to get it  over with. 

Pat, suddenly frozen with horror, tried to scream, but the effort  was pitifully inadequate  a small whining. 

"No one can hear that," said Nandez, and bent down. 

Chapter VII. SURPRISE SHADOW

NANDEZ was wrong in surmising no one would hear the screams. Lizzie  heard them. But Lizzie was across

the street, and he was listening for  them. 

The shrill, piping cries that came from the old building might have  been the product of the icy Fall wind. But

not so the cries which  suddenly followed. 

Screams broke out, awful, penetrating bleats, full of the grisly  quality'of death. 

"The damned girl should have been gagged!" Lizzie gritted. He  started to cross the street. Then he shrank

back. 

A policeman had appeared, a big, burly cop, bundled to his red ears  in his Winter overcoat. He had heard the

shrieks and was running. He  popped into the building. The shrieks had ceased. 

Lizzie swore savagely and dragged out his gun 


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"Damn all cops!" he snarled, and whipped across the street He did  not enter, but paused outside, listening.

There was a chance that  Nandez had fled by the back route. 

Lizzie heard the policeman swear in a loud, startled voice. Then  feet banged on the stairs. Lizzie retreated

hurriedly and was concealed  in a nearby doorway before the officer appeared. 

The cop did not look around, which surprised Lizzie as well as  relieved him no little. The officer ran for a

corner, and Lizzie,  craning his neck, saw the man using a call box frantically. 

"Nandez got away," Lizzie grinned, and used his ears again. 

Once he thought he heard movement from the rear of the building, a  squeaking sound as of rubber pressing

hard against iron or concrete; or  it might have been a foot on a board. 

"Nandez," Lizzie breathed, and himself eased away from the  vicinity. 

Lizzie walked hurriedly eastward until he came to a street where,  despite the cold of the Fall night, a few

persons were abroad, and an  occasional taxi prowled. Even then, he did not take a cab, because  drivers have

memories. He mingled with the crowd and drifted to the  nearest subway. 

As far as he could tell, he was not followed. 

Back in the street, the policeman had deserted his call box. He  strode to the building and went inside, only to

reappear shortly,  mopping his forehead, a strange expression on his features. He waited,  consulting his watch. 

A faint squealing noise arose in the distance, loudened and became  the wail of a siren. The car, a big phaeton,

careened into the street  and screamed its tires on the pavement as it came to a stop. 

In the rear of the phaeton, Hardboiled Humbolt kicked a robe from  around his big stockinged feet, grimaced

as he drew on his canvas  sneakers, and got out, muttering, "It's gettin' damned cold for these  canvas shoes." 

The patrolman ran up. He jerked a thumb over his shoulder, shouted,  "It's in there!" 

Hardboiled put a jaw out against the cold gale. "Dead?" 

"Dead as can be," said the patrolman. "It's awful!" 

"So is about half of this police business," Hardboiled growled, and  went inside and up the creaking stairs: He

said nothing more, but took  a flashlight from his pocket and went into the room. He ranged the  flash beam for

some seconds over the chamber, but giving most of the  time to the corpse on the floor. 

The cadaver was a gruesome sight. 

Stepping back, Hardboiled picked up a hand bag. He looked inside.  There were cards in a pocket; they bore

the name of Patricia Savage,  the name of her beauty parlor and gymnasium on Park Avenue, and the  address. 

"Pat Savage," Hardboiled muttered. "She's Doc Savage's cousin." 

"Helps him out sometimes on his jobs," said the patrolman. "Or so  I've beard." 

"She was a lot of help here," Hardboiled said grimly. 


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THE burly police inspector took another turn of the room, using his  flashlight, then shook his head and

walked out and down the stairs. 

"It gets me," he said slowly. "I can't make heads or tails of this  whole mess. Send for the medical examiner." 

He walked to the phaeton, paused and added, "And spread the net for  Doc Savage. Put every radio car in the

city to looking for him. That  bronze guy knows something he's not telling." 

The patrolman took up a position in the corridor. He had found the  lights, and he turned them on now; the

light seemed to relieve his  mind. 

Once he thought he heard a sound from within the room where the  body lay and he opened the door; but saw

no one. After that, he closed  the door, as if to keep the grisly presence from within out of his  thoughts. 

The door had not been closed for long when the window lifted  slightly. It was the first rise of the window

which had attracted the  officer's attention. 

A great, shadowy figure eased into the room. A flashlight beam no  larger than a pencil came into being and

raced about, resting finally  on the body and roaming over it slowly. 

The body was twisted, as if it had fallen in the throes of awful  agony. The face was pocked deeply on one

side by a bum, and the lips  were bitten and redstained. 

The eyes were barely in their sockets, having squeezed out as if  propelled by some inner force. The muscles

attached to them were gray  and horrible. 

The giant prowler bent over the form and a hand roved, exploring  pockets. Once the hand got in the way of

the thin light beam, and it  could be seen that the skin was an unusual bronze color, and the hands  had

tremendous tendons. Letters yielded Seco Nandez's name. 

Next, the bronze man examined the purse of Patricia Savage, where  it had been replaced on the floor. 

There was no sound audible as the metallic giant went to the  window, eased through and put his weight on

the fire escape outside. He  went down to the landing, grasped a silken cord which was attached to a

collapsible grappling book and slid down into the alley below. A flip  of the cord brought the grapple down,

and the bronze man stowed it  within his clothing. 

He joined two figures waiting silently in the darkness. 

Monk, with the pig, Habeas Corpus, silent under an arm, asked,  "What did you find, Doc?" 

"A popeyed dead man named Seco Nandez," Doc Savage said. "And  Pat's purse was near by." 

"Strange," murmured the dapper Ham. "Something has happened here." 

From the nearby darkness, Pat's voice stated, "You said it!" 

MONK started, all but dropping Habeas, and Ham instinctively  whipped up his sword cane. Doc Savage

showed no perceptible surprise. 

Patricia Savage came from the gloom. 


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"I have been hanging around," she said. "I had an idea you would  show up here." 

"We're in bad with the police," Monk told her. "But we had our  radio tuned on the police radio station and

heard the call which  brought Hardboiled Humbolt here. We dropped in to see what it was all  about." 

Doc Savage asked, "What happened, Pat?" 

Pat was a young woman of crisp explanations. There was no tremble,  no excitement in her voice as she

summarized what had happened from the  time she had overheard the conversation of Seco Nandez and Lizzie

at  the Association of Physical Health. She brought the narrative down to  its gory climax. 

"This Nandez was just leaning over to use his knife," she said. "He  was a killer who enjoyed it. I could see

that in his eyes. He held my  nose to stop what little noise I was able to make, and bent my head  back. Then 

something happened." 

"The popeyed death?" Doc asked. 

"He began to scream," Pat said, her voice suddenly thin. "And his  eyes  they  it was awful!" 

"We seen it happen to a whole roomful of men at once," Monk  muttered. 

Ham clicked his sword cane nervously. 

"Doc, this thing is incredible!" he snapped. "It is as if some  supernatural power were striking down these men

in the act of doing  murder. What do you think the popeyed death is?" 

Monk added, "And what makes it get 'em only when they're about to  kill somebody? Or right after they've

killed?" 

There was a long pause while they waited for Doc Savage to make an  answer, and when he did not, and gave

no sign of intending to do so,  Pat broke the tension. 

"I used Nandez's knife and cut myself loose after he    died" she  said. "I got to the rear stairway and ran down

it, not knowing but that  Nandez's partner, Lizzie, might come back." 

"And you waited here," Ham finished. 

"Hold on," said Pat. "I want to tell you about something queer that  happened down here in the alley." 

"What?" Doc questioned. 

"Some one came out." 

"Maybe it was the policeman looking around?" Doc offered. 

Pat shook a vehement negative. "No. It was a giant figure of a man   a fellow I will swear was almost as

large as you, Doc. And he moved  like a ghost. He came down the fire escape." 

"Down the fire escape?" Monk grunted. 

"Exactly," said Pat. "It looked as if he had been outside of the  window all of the time." 


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"You did not see him clearly?" Doc questioned. 

"Too dark," said Pat. "And be traveled like a black ghost." 

Monk snorted suddenly. "Did you hear his feet on the fire escape? I  mean  did they make squeaking

sounds?" 

"Why, now that you mention it, I think they did," Pat murmured. 

Ham growled, "What are you getting at, you homely monkey?" 

Doc Savage answered that. 

"Monk was thinking of canvassoled rubber shoes," the bronze man  said. "Rubber squeaks sometimes when

it is rubbed over iron." 

Ham began, "But what  ?" then fell silent. He had thought of  Hardboiled Humbolt and his rubbersoled

canvas shoes. 

SOME moments later Doc Savage, Monk, Ham and Pat were in a sedan  traveling a nearby street. 

"We dropped in at headquarters and exchanged the roadster and the  coupe for this bus," Monk explained.

"The cops were looking for the  other two cars." 

"And saw a flock of policemen watching the place for us," Ham  added. 

Pat watched the darkened houses slip by and shivered. 

"The police are against us," she said softly. "One of our men has  been murdered, and we can't find Robert

Lorrey. And some infernal death  is striking. This is more than I bargained for." 

"Want to lay off?" Doc asked. "You'd better." 

"Don't be silly," said Pat. "What do we do next?" 

"Since our headquarters are watched, we will make use of Renny's  apartment," Doc said. 

Colonel John Renwick, the engineer of Doc's group, was a gentleman  who had made some millions in his

profession, prior to his affiliation  with high adventure in the person of the bronze man. He still commanded

staggering fees when he worked. 

Renny occupied a penthouse overlooking Central Park. The building,  one of the most flamboyant in the city,

was one Renny had designed and  the erection of which he had supervised, and his apartment was an

incredible array of modernistic metals and glass. Mechanical gadgets  were everywhere, and the wide,

glasscovered terrace was a greenhouse  of tropical shrubs. 

Renny, they found on arrival, was not present. Doc had a key and  they entered. 

"Wonder what's become of Renny?" Monk pondered. "Reckon the  bigfisted lummox got that message you

left on the office window?" 


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Doc Savage neglected to answer, for he was picking up a telephone.  He got in communication with each of

the city's large broadcasting  stations in succession and spoke rapidly. Hanging up after  communicating with

the first one, he went over and switched on a large  modernistic radio. 

A dance orchestra was playing, and the tone of Renny's radio  speaker was an acoustic engineer's dream come

to life. But almost at  once, the strains were interrupted. 

"An announcement of importance," said the announcer. "Will No. 17  get in touch with his chief. And will

No. 17 guard his own life  carefully and communicate with no one but his chief. For No. 17's  benefit, Leander

Court was murdered today." 

The orchestra strains resumed, and Doc Savage tuned in on another  station and shortly got almost the

identical announcement. 

No. 17 was Robert Lorrey  the number he bore on Doc Savage's pay  roll. 

The fact that the bronze man had been able to prevail upon every  broadcasting station to insert such an

unusual announcement in the  regular evening routine was an indication of his influence. 

"I hope," Monk said, "that Robert Lorrey turns up before long." 

Chapter VIII. THE CRIME GLAND

AT the precise instant, but quite a few blocks distant from Renny's  sumptuous penthouse, the lissome and

femininemannered Lizzie was  listening to a worried voice come from an adjacent room. 

"I hope Robert Lorrey shows up soon," it said. 

Lizzie shrugged. He had changed his evening garb for full dress,  perfect in its every detail, and he had even

less the appearance of a  coldblooded criminal who not long before had left a companion to cut  the throat of

a young woman. 

Janko Sultman was walking circles in the next room. He still wore  his loudchecked suit, and there was a

bandage stuck in the midst of  his upstanding, frizzled hair with adhesive tape. From time to time he  fingered

this bandage. 

"Dot Boke!" he growled. "If der bullet had come another inch lower,  it would have meant finish for me." 

Lizzie carefully adjusted the hang of the bright chain which  spanned the front of his waistcoat. 

"Give me a line on this Boke, and I'll soon stop him," he said  lazily. 

Janko Sultman waved plump hands. "It's a swell idea, only it's no  good." 

"Why not?" 

"I do not know dot Boke by sight, or where to find him." 

"The hell you don't!" Lizzie snorted. "Then how did you contact him  in the first place?" 


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"Through a witchfaced feller dot was called Frightful," explained  Sultman. "They had figured dot because I

was a doctor, I should be able  to get a line on Doc Savage's place where he fixed up der crooks. But  this

Frightful did all der talking. Not once did I see Boke. I hear him  over der telephone, though, and he have the

sweetest voice you ever  listen to." 

"He's got sweet ways, too," grinned Lizzie, casting a glance at  Sultman's bandaged head. "And the gay

Frightful was found dead in that  roomful of men who had their eyes popping. The newspapers are full of  it." 

"Dot's another thing!" Sultman wailed. "The eyepopping business!  What is it? She gets my goat!" 

A man appeared at the door and said, "Robert and Sidney Lorrey  calling." 

Janko Sultman looked very pained and swore. "Dot fool brought his  brother!" 

Lizzie asked, "Well, they've been going around together since you  kindly gave Robert his vacation." Then

Lizzie laughed. "I wonder if Doc  Savage has found out about those faked telegrams yet?" 

Sultman waved his arms. "Damn it, we've got to get rid of Sidney. I  cannot buy them both." 

Lizzie grinned, "Leave it to me," and started for the door. 

Sultman gulped, "Listen, what  " 

"Give me five minutes," Lizzie requested. "I'll fix it." Then he  went out. 

JANKO Sultman hastily summoned three men into the room. They were  smoothlooking gentlemen who

might have been bank clerks reporting for  a day's work, except that each had a submachine gun tucked under

an  arm. 

"Robert Lorrey will be here soon," Janko Sultman said. "He cannot  afford to take any chances." 

One of the smoothlooking men nodded. "You think he may jump you?"  he asked. 

"Not so much dot," said Sultman. "But when he learns why he has  been summoned here, he may fly off der

handle, as did Leander Court,  and threaten to go to Doc Savage. He must be prevented from doing dot." 

"Sure," said one of the men. "Only I hope we don't get the same  dose as the guy you posted to get Leander

Court if he Went up in the  air. That bird died with his eyes sticking out." 

"Don't be silly!" Sultman snapped. "There is no one around here who  can touch you. The gunman dot shot

Court merely had some kind of a  spasm." 

"How about the whole roomful of popeyed dead the papers are  playing up, then?" countered the other. 

"Let it go!" Sultman groaned. "Hurry. I will hide you." The room  was paneled with wood; there were many

pictures, all of excellent  taste. Sultman crossed the deep carpet, a grotesque figure with his  frizzled hair, and

opened a wall panel. There was a recess behind large  enough to hold a man, and a lookout standing within

could peer into the  room through an ingenious colored screen which was a part of a picture  fastened on the

outside. One of the men with machine guns was posted  inside. 

There proved to be two more niches, and additional guards were  posted in these. 


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"Dot is good," Sultman decided. 

The three gunmen, looking through loopholes, had only to' move  their heads to get a full view of the room.

The picture was fairly  distinct, although colors were distorted by the pigment of the screen  through which

they had to peer. 

A FEW seconds later, Janko Sultman was shaking hands with a lean,  stoopshouldered man, and the latter

was admitting, "Yes. I am Robert  Lorrey." 

Robert Lorrey was an extremely plain man as far as outward  appearances went. He had mousecolored hair

and eyes which were pale,  but which were also made slightly grotesque by the powerful lenses of  the

spectacles which he wore. Pressing would have helped his gray suit,  and he was bundled to the ears in a fuzzy

woolen muffler. 

"This is my brother Sidney," said Robert Lorrey. 

"Ah, yes," said Sultman, lying smoothly. "Some one told me you had  a brother. Twins, aren't you?" 

This last was a rank guess on the frizzledhaired man's part, for  Sidney was a smaller carbon copy of his

brother, although he did have  an unnaturally high forehead in addition. It was possible that Sidney  looked a

bit more the idealist, the dreamer. 

"We are twins," Robert agreed. "I hope you do not mind my bringing  Sidney along. We are very fond of each

other, and we frequently  cooperate in conducting experiments." 

"As a matter of fact, my brother has financed most of my  experiments," said Sidney. 

"You are welcome, of course," Janko Sultman lied. 

The telephone rang. 

Sultman looked surprised, went over to the instrument and answered.  He was not a very good actor, for he

failed to keep pleasure off his  features. 

"For Sidney Lorrey," he said. 

Sidney Lorrey spoke for a few minutes over the line, and there was  a puzzled expression on his features as he

put the instrument down. 

"I shall have to go," he said. "Some one wants to speak to me. He  says it is very important." 

Sidney Lorrey took his departure. 

JANKO Sultman now became the perfect host, offering Robert Lorrey  fine cigars and excellent liquor, both

of which the stoopshouldered,  mouselike man turned down, explaining that he did not imbibe. 

"The result of Doc Savage's training, eh?" murmured Sultman dryly.  "The bronze man is quite a puritan, I've

heard." 

Robert Lorrey became very quiet in his chair. He plucked at the  ends of his burry muffler. 


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"You have evidently made a mistake," he said shortly. "I scarcely  know this Doc Savage  if I am to presume

that when you say Doc Savage,  you mean the remarkable bronze man who has become noted as a man who

gets others out of trouble." 

Janko Sultman laughed. "Dere is no use of pretending between  friends." 

"I scarcely know you," Robert Lorrey pointed out. 

Sultman pretended not to hear the last reminder. 

"I know many things," he smiled. "I know, for instance, dot Doc  Savage is a man who does peculiar things.

One of the most peculiar of  these things, perhaps, is his habit of sending criminals whom he  catches to a

weird institution which he maintains in upstate New York." 

Robert Lorrey said sharply, "If you assume I know all of this, you  are wrong." 

"The criminals undergo a treatment which causes them to lose their  memories, and to become honest men,"

continued Sultman. "Strange as it  sounds, dot is what happens." 

"I do not care to bear more about this!" snapped Robert Lorrey.  "The whole thing sounds ridiculous!" 

Janko Sultman carefully adjusted the bandage on top of his head  then lighted himself a cigar, at the same time

never taking his eyes  from his visitor. 

"Doc Savage has seized many criminals during his career," Sultman  went on. "This Savage is a remarkable

individual, more remarkable than  most persons can realize. He is almost a mental freak. His knowledge in  der

fields of electricity, chemistry and engineering and so,, on is  profound. But greatest of all is his skill as a

surgeon. 

Lorrey moistened his lips. "Why are you telling me this?" 

Janko Sultman seemed not to hear. "Doc, Savage has discovered dot  crime is, in a sense, a disease," he went

on. "In other words, we will  take for der purpose of illustration, de effect of ordinary  inflammation on tonsils.

If a man has infected tonsils, a toxic poison  gradually filters from them through his system, and his nerves are

affected, so dot he becomes irritable. He gets der jitters. He is hard  to get along with." 

"You do not need to be so elementary," snapped Robert Lorrey. 

"Sure," Sultman smiled. "There are many glands in the human body.  They secrete everything from

perspiration to digestive juices. Many of  them are in the human brain, and it is these last that are the least

known." 

"What has this to do with crime as a disease?" Lorrey interrupted. 

"There is a small gland which governs operation of a certain  section of der brain which controls a human

being's behavior," said  Sultman. "If dot gland is out of order, der patient loses his sense of  right and wrong. In

other words, he gets so he does not give a damn  what happens or what he does. Doc Savage has discovered

this." 

"I would not call that one of Doc Savage's discoveries," Robert  Lorrey put in. "Many criminologists have

arrived at that conclusion." 


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Sultman shrugged. "Anyway, Doc Savage straightens up dot gland at  his place in upstate New York, and dot

is what makes honest men of the  crooks. Of course, he severs certain nerves in their brains, too, which  makes

them forget their past." 

"This is quite amazing," said Robert Lorrey. 

"No it isn't," grinned Sultman. "You know all about it, because you  are one of der men who do der operating

on crooks." 

THE three gunmen, watching from their concealed niches, saw from  Robert Lorrey's sudden tensing that he

was shocked by the disclosure  that another man knew of his profession. 

They heard Lorrey bark, "How did you learn this? No one is supposed  to know." 

They saw Janko Sultman puff at his cigar, then draw his chair  closer to that of Robert Lorrey, ignoring

Lorrey's tendency to shrink  away from him. There was a smug look on Sultman's face, and one gunman

reflected that he looked like a fuzzyhaired cannibal about to indulge  in a meal. 

Janko Sultman now began speaking rapidly, but his words did not  reach the guards, for they were pitched

low. The watchers could only  observe the play of emotions on the features of Robert Lorrey. 

Lorrey at first registered surprise, then that became a shocked,  blank look, and as Sultman went on speaking,

amazement, wonder and  horror followed each other successively. Then rage blazed in the  meeklooking

scientist's eyes. 

"You go to hell!" he yelled, and sprang to his feet. 

Sultman dropped his cigar and scrambled erect, yelling, "Don't be a  fool! I'll raise the ante! I'll make it a

hundred thousand dollars!" 

"No!" snapped Lorrey. 

"A quarter of a million!" Sultman offered desperately. 

"No!" 

"Fifty per cent of all we can take in!" 

"I told you to go to hell!" Robert Lorrey shouted. Then he backed  toward the door. 

Sultman stepped hastily aside and snapped, "Don't let him out,  men!" 

"He won't leave," Lizzie said unexpectedly from the door. 

Lizzie had come back silently, and it was evident that he did not  know Janko Sultman had posted gunmen

behind the wall panels. 

Robert Lorrey turned around and saw the flat automatic which Lizzie  was holding in one girlishly small hand.

He put his own hands up. 


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Sultman asked Lizzie, "You got rid of Sidney Lorrey?" Lizzie  laughed. "I didn't have to. I just told him over

the telephone when I  called here that I had some important information for him. I made an  appointment in a

drug store far enough away so that he won't get back  in time to bother us." 

Robert Lorrey swallowed rapidly. "What are you going to do with  me?" 

"I was forced to have your superior, Leander Court, killed,"  Sultman smiled. "I will not make that mistake

again. We will use other  means on you." 

"What do you mean?" Lorrey snapped. 

"You are going to be persuaded to do as I wish," advised Sultman.  "I have thought it all out very carefully." 

"Including what Doc Savage will do to you if you harm me?" asked  Lorrey. 

Janko Sultman looked as if some one had jabbed him unexpectedly  with a pin. But the expression was

fleeting. 

"I am not afraid of Doc Savage," he growled. "You might as well  make up your mind that you are going to do

the thing I wish." 

Robert Lorrey's answer was to dive suddenly at Lizzie's gun. The  wielder of the weapon was taken by

surprise and permitted the  stoopshouldered man to get a grip on it. Lorrey kicked Lizzie's shins  from under

him. The man, falling, released his weapon. 

Janko Sultman, forgetting he had the gunmen posted back of the wall  panels, ran and leaped upon Robert

Lorrey. Stunned, Lorrey lost his  weapon. 

Lizzie got up snarling and snatched a long stiletto from inside his  immaculate full dress garb. He started for

Robert Lorrey  and stopped. 

Lizzie put a hand up to his eyes. They were protruding a little. He  dropped his knife. 

"My head!" he wailed horribly. "My eyes! Something is wrong 

Lizzie had shut the door when he came inside, but now there was a  loud crash and an explosion of splinters.

A second crash followed. A  fist  an incredible fist that looked like the business end of a circus  stakedriver's

maul  smashing through the panel.  The door collapsed. 

The man who came through was a tower of bone and gristle. 

Robert Lorrey looked at the newcomer, wideeyed and startled. 

"Renny!" he shouted delightedly. 

Chapter IX. BOKE'S TOUCH

RENNY looked over the room and the expression on his long,  puritanical face was one of absolute gloom 

an indication that he was  enjoying himself, for, adversely, the sadder Renny looked, the more  interest he was

taking in proceedings. 


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He was a giant, this Renny, weighing near two hundred and sixty  pounds, most of it bone, a little gristle, and

not much else. Yet, huge  as he was, the proportions of his fists were such as to make the rest  of him seem

inadequately small. Each was composed of near a half gallon  of bone and tendon. 

Lizzie was still swaying, pawing at his face, his eyes. He had not  fallen, and he seemed to be recovering a

little from the effects of the  strange spell which had seized upon him. 

"The popeyed death," Sultman choked, eying his aide. 

Robert Lorrey also fell to studying Lizzie. There was a  professional curiosity in his scrutiny. 

"Where did you first feel pain?" he asked. "And was there any  sensation prior to the pain?" 

Lizzie was too occupied with his own difficulties to answer. Renny,  moving across the floor with an ease

unusual for so big a man, scooped  up all of the weapons in sight. This caused Sultman to retreat and  furtively

eye the panels behind which his machine gunners were  concealed. 

Catching a moment when Renny and Lorrey were not looking. Sultman  shook his head violently,

admonishing the gunners not to fire. 

Robert Lorrey asked Renny, "How on earth did you get here?" 

The bigfisted engineer looked very gloomy. 

"There was a message at Doc's office," he offered in a whooping,  roaring voice. "It outlined what had

happened. I couldn't locate Doc,  so I thought I'd keep an eye on Pat. The message told where she was." 

Lizzie stopped feeling of his eyes, which were almost normal again,  and glared at Renny. 

The bigfisted engineer jingled the weapons in his enormous digits. 

"Pat didn't know I was looking out for her," he went on. "I kept in  the background, and when she followed

Seco Nandez and the sissy here   " he paused to nod at the effeminate Uzzi  "I trailed along. Well,  they

grabbed Pat, and the pretty boy here left his partner, Nandez, to  cut her throat. I was about to interfere when

Nandez stuck his eyes  out, had a fit and died. I saw Pat was safe, so I left on sissy's  trail. I've been hanging

around since, trying to get an earful." 

Lizzie became slackjawed. Janko Sultman looked slightly ill. It  was the first they had heard of the popeyed

death of their  coconspirator Seco Nandez, and the news was surprising, not at all  pleasant. 

Sultman looked at Lizzie and snarled, "You careless drummer! A hell  of a mess you have got us into!" 

Lizzie said, "Nuts to you!" but he looked worried. He was trying to  think how Renny could have followed

him so expertly and so  unnoticeably, and the upshot of his thinking was that he should have  used a great deal

more caution. 

Renny waved his fistful of weapons and his great voice jumped and  thumped in the room. 

"Get a move on, boys," he directed. "We're all going to have a talk  with Doc Savage." 


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That made Sultman start and think of his machine gunners behind the  wall panels, so he backed slowly to one

side until he stood in the  clear, then stiffened himself and yelled desperately in command. 

"Just the big man!" he howled. "Save Lorrey!" 

RENNY realized then that there must be some one else concealed  around the room. He flopped down to

make himself as small a target as  possible and bulleted toward the door, his idea being to fight back  from the

opening. But his precautions were hardly necessary, as it  developed. 

One of the wall panels snapped open  a necessary move before the  men behind could use their guns, for

when the panels were closed, there  was not room. 

The man who came through did not even hold his submachine gun. The  weapon lay on the floor of the niche.

The man was bent over, and he  bent even more, seeming to contort himself in a titanic effort, his  face

becoming purple with the strain. 

As they watched, his eyes came slowly out, like seeds from a purple  grape, and it seemed certain they would

fall to the floor, but they did  not. Then he began to yell in pain. 

The other two gunners were crying out too, threshing about, and  making awful garglings. One got out of his

niche and died on the floor;  the other only got the door of his concealment  the wall panel  ajar,  and was

unable to get out. He convulsed his mortal existence away while  curled up in the cramped confines. 

Strange things were happening to Lizzie and Janko Sultman, too.  Lizzie was having trouble with his eyes

again, grasping his head and  moaning, and Janko Sultinan, for the first time, was standing slightly  popeyed. 

Suddenly Sultman emitted a wail of terror and stampeded for the  door, but Renny, who was affected not at all

by the popeyed spell,  mysteriously enough, tripped Sultinan and calmly stood on the middle of  the man's

back. 

Renny frowned at the three machine gunners. So amazing was their  affliction, so preposterous was the whole

thing, that Renny plainly  doubted the evidence of his own eyes, or suspected some trick. Finally  it dawned on

him that this was no trick hut death in some grisly,  inexplicable form, and the bigfisted engineer voiced a

pet exclamation  of wonder which he saved for all special occasions. 

"Holy cow!" he boomed hoarsely. 

Robert Lorrey passed a hand over his forehead and blinked vacantly. 

"The most incredible thing I ever saw," he muttered. "What on earth  is it?" 

RENNY did not answer, for there seemed no reply to give. He  swallowed several times, then bethought

himself of the business at hand  and again gathered up guns. He nudged Lizzie and the dazed Sultman,  both of

whom were still mildly affected by the weird trouble. They  stood meekly while he went over their persons,

searching for weapons.  He even relieved them of their penknives. 

"We'll go see Doc Savage now," he advised. 

Lizzie and Sultman obeyed like punished children as the bigfisted  engineer urged them toward the stairway;

they went down slowly, fear  making them very silent. 


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"Their eyes!" Sultman moaned and gave a great shake of a shudder  which all hut threw him down the steps. 

Renny collared the fuzzyhaired man suddenly. "How many more men  have you working for you?" 

Sultman opened his mouth, and it was plain that he was on the point  of giving some number, but he

reconsidered, looked sly and said, "No  more." 

Renny slapped him. The slap was not gentle. It knocked Sultman down  the remaining six stairs of the flight. 

"I'll knock you out from under that frizzled hair if you start  lying to me," the bigfisted engineer promised. 

Sultman, lying on the floor, moaned and did not try to get up. 

Lizzie snarled, "Keep your hands off Sully!" 

Renny turned around and took Lizzie's slim throat in both huge  hands, then lifted Lizzie from the floor

without apparent difficulty  and squeezed a little, tentatively. Lizzie flailed his arms and made  froglike noises. 

"I haven't forgotten that you walked off callously and left your  pal to cut Pat's throat," Renny boomed. 

He squeezed again slowly, not relaxing the pressure even when  Lizzie squirmed his wildest. Lizzie's face

became splotchy, then  purple, and his tongue stuck small and pink and straight through his  teeth. 

Robert Lorrey said nervously, "It is Doc Savage's policy never to  take a human life." 

"Sure," Renny said. "But mistakes will happen." 

Renny looked very sober, with lines about his mouth and a gloomy,  almost tearful droop to his eyes. 

Janko Sultman got up from the floor, as if he wanted to run, but  Renny lashed a foot out and tripped him

down again. 

Sultman was terrified. He looked at the unlucky Lizzie, and had  difficulty getting his breath. 

"You were going to take us to Doc Savage," he wailed. "Sure," Renny  said. "But maybe I changed my mind,

and decided to make you two talk  right here. Who is this Boke, the man with the mysterious voice?" 

"I do not know," Sultman moaned. "Dot is the truth." 

"What proposition did Boke put up to you through this man,  Frightful?" Renny continued. 

Sultman looked away and wailed, "You have got me all wrong and dot  is a fact." 

Robert Lorrey, who had moved toward the door to look out into the  darkened street, gave a sudden start and

yelled. 

RENNY, who had been putting on a tough performance merely in hopes  of impressing Sultman and Lizzie to

the point where they would break  down and unburden their souls of the truth, whirled. He half expected  to

see Robert Lorrey in the grip of the fantastic popeyed death. 


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What he did see was Robert Lorrey in the grip of a burly,  brownskinned man who had sleek black hair and a

remarkably  stupidlooking face. This man had succeeded in grabbing a gun which  Robert Lorrey chanced to

be carrying, and he was endeavoring to drag  his captive outside. 

Renny emitted a whooping roar and slammed for the door. 

Two more men appeared beside the brownskinned fellow, popping in  out of the night. They grabbed Lorrey.

Then other men came in behind  them, these with guns. 

Renny was upon the group now. There was light inside the door, and  those who had come in from the night

were a little blind, so that the  bigfisted engineer's recklessness was justified. He smashed one gunman  in the

face; the fellow flew back, his features flattened as by the  blow of a great maul. 

The other man dodged, and Renny's slugging fist only banged the top  of his head, which to an ordinary fist

would have been more damaging  than to the head. But Renny's was no ordinary set of knuckles, and the

victim fell as if he had been hit with an iron bar. 

The trio seeking to hold Robert Lorrey were brushed aside easily,  and before they could help themselves,

were hurled out into the street. 

In shoving them outside, Renny got a look at the street,  distinguishing other shadowy figures there. 

"Too many outside!" he rapped. "We'll try the back way." 

They ran down the corridor; but long before the rear door was in  sight, they heard feet pounding, men

grunting, and knew enemies had  flanked them, coming in through the rear. 

Renny, busy cuffing Sultman and Lizzie along with him, snapped at  Robert Lorrey, "Get back!" 

"We can get out through a side window," whined Janko Sultman. 

Renny scowled darkly at Sultman, then his scowl turned to brisk  interest. There was a great fear on the

fuzzyhaired man's features. 

"Who are these guys jumping us?" Renny demanded. 

Sultman wrung his hands. 

"Boke's men," he groaned. "They must be!" 

Down the passage, coming from the rear door, a single pencilsized  tongue of red flame pumped in the murk.

Renny got down fast. The flame  spiked again. Gun sound quaked each time. 

Renny had turned his shoulder to see if Robert Lorrey, who had  retreated a little, was safe. It was a little more

luminous where  Robert Lorrey stood, and Renny distinctly saw Lorrey's head kick back  and a small blue spot

appear in the center of his forehead. 

Lorrey's knees caved queerly, so that he turned as he fell, and a  much larger pit was visible in the back of his

cranium where the bullet  had come out. His fall was noisy, and only his fingers moved afterward.  Their

quivering rapidly stilled. 


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MEN with guns now seemed to flow from all sides into the house.  They were tall fellows, short men, thin

men and broad men. There was  some shooting, but that ceased when a low order was passed around. 

Renny carried one of the supermachine pistols, and he got a chance  to use it, blasting two men down with

streams of mercy bullets. 

Then some one threw a chair at him, which he ducked, but the chair  bounced back from the wall and got in

his way as he tried to run across  the room. He fell. Men piled on him in a flood. With guns they clubbed  his

head until it rang. The clubbing made his linger tips tingle and  his arms difficult to move. 

They tied his ankles and his arms with wire torn from floor lamps,  then distended his mouth with the biggest

part of a pillow case. 

Renny lay there on the floor, looking at his captors, and decided  they were a thoroughly hard crew. His

inspection made him conscious of  the cold which had come in with the opened doors, and he shivered a  little. 

The men dragged Sultman and Lizzie into the room. Both these two  had also been bound and gagged, and

they got rough treatment. The  bandage had been torn out of Sultman's frizzled hair and the bullet  wound was

flowing red. A man appropriated Lizzie's watch chain from the  front of his dress waistcoat, then calmly tore

the pockets out of his  garments looking for money. Finding little, he kicked Lizzie in the  sides until the pain

brought tears to Lizzie's eyes. 

Listeners had evidently gone outside, for they now came in to  report that the shooting had not attracted

attention. Renny, hearing  this, was not surprised, for the house was an isolated one and the  night itself was

noisy. 

Robert Lorrey was carried inside, and the men bent over him  anxiously. They cursed when they found the

bullet hole through the  brain. The violence of their profanity showed they had shot Lorrey by  accident. 

"A thorough mess!" said a voice. "Yes, a very thorough mess!" 

Renny was struck and held by that voice, for it was a tone that was  unnaturally pleasant. It had a fascination.

One wanted to hear it  again. He stared about the room, trying to ascertain who had spoken. 

"Things may come out all right after all, however," said the  utterly enthralling voice. 

Renny shuddered; he could not help it. For that amazing voice  seemed to be coming from thin air. It was as if

the speaker were  invisible. 

Chapter X. TORTURE

SIDNEY Lorrey, twin brother of the unfortunate Robert, had a small  habit of tearing matches to pieces with

his fingers when he was not  mentally at ease. The tiled floor about the chair on which he sat was  strewn with

flakes of mutilated matchwood. 

Sidney Lorrey finished dissecting the last match of the book which  had been in the smoking tray on the

drugstore table, then stood slowly  erect. The store was a small one, with two large telephone booths in  the

back. Sidney Lorrey went over to the fountain clerk who was pouring  steaming water into a coffee percolator. 

"A gentleman called me from one of the telephone booths here and  asked me to meet him," Lorrey told the


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clerk. "I don't find any sign of  him. Did he leave any message?" 

The clerk stopped pouring. "When'd he call you?" 

Sidney Lorrey calculated the time since he had left his brother  Robert in the company of Janko SuItman. 

"Half an hour," he said. "Yes,half an hour ago." 

The clerk grinned lopsidedly. "Somebody's been kidding you,  brother." 

Sidney Lorrey, who did not like to be addressed familiarly,  frowned, "What do you mean?" 

"Those booths ain't connected," said the clerk. "They're out of  order, or something. Go back there and you'll

see there's a sign on  them that says they won't work. And nobody has called from here  tonight." 

Sidney Lorrey absently lifted a toothpick off the counter and broke  it to pieces. It had just struck him that

there was something strange  about the call which had come to Janko Sultman's place. He had realized  earlier

that the voice of the man who had telephoned him had belonged  to an entire stranger, and the fact that the

fellow had been secretive,  saying it was vitally important to see Sidney, but neglecting to convey  details, was

queer. 

But the startling fact, which had just dawned on Sidney Lorrey, was  that he had told no one he was going to

accompany his brother Robert to  Sultman's rendezvous. 

Sidney Lorrey and his brother had been eating at a small restaurant  which they favored habitually, when

Janko Sultman had gotten in touch  with Robert and made the appointment. 

Sidney Lorrey swung out of the drug store, baffled wrinkles ridging  his unnaturally high forehead, popped

himself into a taxicab and a few  minutes later was alighting in front of Janko Sultman's place. He  dismissed

the cab, for he presumed his brother was still inside. 

He glanced up at the windows of the house. They were curtained, but  he thought he saw movement. He drew

his coat closer against the chill  of this unnatural Fall evening and stepped toward the doorway, being

swallowed by the shadows. 

In the upstairs room, the man who had looked through the window and  seen Sidney Lorrey wheeled on his

fellows. 

"The brother!" he snapped. 

From the adjacent room came the pleasant voice of the mysterious  Boke. 

"A bit of profound luck, gentlemen," it said. 

The other scowled. "Luck! And with his brother lying dead here?" 

Boke did not appear, but his voice came plainly. 

"Get Sidney," he said. "It may be that he will serve our purpose as  well as his brother." 


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The men in the room moved with swift efficiency. The light was not  on in the hallway, nor did they turn any

on, but positioned themselves,  one on either side of the front door, just inside. They held guns ready  in their

hands. 

A full minute ticked away. The sinister men stirred uneasily,  realizing that Sidney Lorrey should have

reached the door by now. They  allowed more seconds to pass, then pulled the curtain back from the  door and

peered out into the coldswept street. After that, they  wrenched the door wide and craned their necks up and

down the street. 

Sidney Lorrey was nowhere in sight. 

UPSTAIRS, the strangely attractive voice of Boke was giving quiet  orders and men were scampering about

making rapid preparations. In the  main room, there was still no sign of Boke. His voice came from an

adjacent chamber. 

One man seemed to be the lieutenant in charge; he came out of the  room from which Boke had spoken. His

movements were brusque, and an  onlooker might have mistaken him for the mysterious Boke  until he

spoke. He had a coarse, squeaky voice. 

The man's face held satisfaction as they finished their  preparations. He backed away, quietly tamping

aromatic tobacco into a  pipe. 

"What do you think of it, Leo?" Boke's voice asked from the  adjacent room. 

Leo applied tiny flame from a platinum lighter and let the pipe  light itself. He did not draw in. 

"Swell," he said. 

Then Leo's hair all but stood on end. His pipe, lost out of his  teeth, hit the floor and showered sparks like a

small Vesuvius. 

"Do not turn around," advised an utterly cold voice at Leo's back. 

The man called Leo did not turn. The others in the room froze and  became very careful of what gestures they

made with their hands. 

Sidney Lorrey had appeared in the door, and he held in one hand a  small doubleaction revolver from which

the barrel had been sawed. The  calibre of the gun was great  its barrel diameter was such as to  almost admit

a finger. 

"I came in the back way," Sidney Lorrey said dryly. "I do not know  who you gentlemen are, or why you were

acting so mysteriously. I want  my brother." 

Leo bowed slightly. He had long black hair and a lock of it fell  down over his forehead when he bowed. 

"Your brother left here some time ago," he said. 

Sidney Lorrey smiled thinly over his revolver. 

"There is something very queer going on here," he said. "I can see  it in your manner, on your faces." 


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Leo absently replaced the stray lock of black hair. "When a man  walks in on us with a gun, as you have, do

you expect us to look blase  about it?" 

Sidney Lorrey backed toward the door. These men were dangerous, and  there were more of them in the

house. He beckoned at Leo with his  sawedoff gun. 

"I am leaving," be advised. "You will walk downstairs and a short  distance from the house with me. If any

one menaces me in any way, I  shall do my best to blow your spine in two pieces." 

Leo's hair seemed to become blacker, his eyes darker, his brows and  lashes more smoky, all because his face

had turned extremely pale. But  he did not resist or say anything, but stepped out into the hallway. 

Leo stumbled on the stairs, having difficulty with his feet, and  only Sidney Lorrey's hand entangled grimly in

the collar of his coat  kept him from falling. They passed through the door which gave into an  alley full of

cold, hard snow particles and darkness. 

Some one, leaning from a window directly above the alley door, held  a heavy typewriter with both hands.

There was enough light that the  figures below showed as vague blurs against the snow, and the man let  his

typewriter drop carefully. 

The typewriter carriage slid hack with a zizzz of a noise as it  started to fall, and this caused Sidney Lorrey

to look up. He jumped,  but not soon enough; the heavy office appliance struck his head. The  typewriter bell

rang loudly, then rang again as the machine hit the  alley pavement. Sidney Lorrey fell atop the typewriter. 

Blackhaired Leo leaned against the house wall and pounded his  chest slowly, as if his heart had almost

stopped. 

SIDNEY Lorrey was awakened by the raucous sound of some one telling  Leo, "Well, hell, it was all we could

do! We figured he wouldn't plug  you after the typewriter hit him." 

Opening his eyes, Lorrey saw Leo and the other men around him. Leo  had recovered his pipe and was puffing

it, filling the room with  aromatic tobacco fumes. No one seemed to be in a hurry; no one showed  particular

excitement. 

A groan came from a long, boxshaped modernistic divan which stood  on the opposite side of the room.

Sidney tried to sit up, only to  discover he was bound securely, hands and feet held together in one  knot of

stout cords. He managed to lift his head. 

"Bob!" he exploded. 

The form of Robert Lorrey reposed on the divan. There was a bandage  over his head, a gag in his mouth.

Even as Sidney stared, Robert  Lorrey's form stirred slightly to the accompaniment of a second groan. 

"Bob!" Sidney gasped. "Are you hurt badly? Are you conscious?" 

The head of Robert Lorrey rolled so that Sidney could not see the  lips, but he heard a mumble, the words not

quite distinguishable. 

Then Sidney Lorrey started violently, for the utterly pleasant  voice of the fantastic Boke was in the room. 

"Your brother has a chance," said Boke's honeyed tones. 


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Sidney Lorrey, wrenching at the ropes which held him, gritted, "Get  a doctor for him, damn you! Let me treat

him! I'm a doctor!" 

"Medical attention will not save him," Boke stated pleasantly. "But  information will." 

k an effort to see just which one of the men was Boke, Sidney  Lorrey peered about intently. He could detect

no betraying lip  movements. He decided Boke must be in an adjoining room. There was an  unnatural quality

in the voice. 

"Doc Savage has a remarkable institution in upstate New York for  curing criminals," Boke said amiably.

"The bronze man has discovered a  treatment for the particular gland which is responsible for criminal

behavior, Your brother, here, was in charge of the institution." 

"How did you learn all of this?" Sidney Lorrey demanded. "It is  supposed to be known only to Doc Savage

and his five men and to those  immediately connected with the institution." 

"I had heard that criminals who went against this Doc Savage  disappeared mysteriously and were never heard

from again in their  former haunts," said Boke's pleasant voice. "I became curious. This Doc  Savage, it is a

well known fact, does not take human life. What then,  did he do with his prisoners. That was the puzzle. So I

hired many  investigators, and spent much money, and, eventually, I learned." 

"What do you want with me?" Sidney Lorrey asked. 

"One of the investigators whom I hired, a gentleman named Janko  Sultman, doublecrossed me," said Boke,

ignoring the question. "But we  will not go into that Sultman is being taken care of." 

"What do you want with me?" demanded Sidney Lorrey. 

"I want the names of the men at Doc Savage's criminalcuring  'college' in upstate New York," said Boke. "I

mean, the names of the  surgeons who do the work there." 

"I do not have that information," snapped Sidney Lorrey. 

Boke's pleasant voice made bubbling laughter. "A lie, of course.  You have visited the 'college' frequently.

You have even conducted  experiments there, using the facilities of the 'college' laboratory." 

"I will tell you nothing," Sidney Lorrey said grimly. The  blackhaired Leo straightened, sighed, and looked

around as if irked by  the waiting. 

"Go to work on him, Leo," said Boke's voice. 

LEO swung over easily and kicked Sidney Lorrey's face lightly and  rapidly until scarlet began to ooze.

Lorrey moaned, tried to scream,  but they stuffed old cloth into his mouth. 

Boke's voice, now filled with a ring of genuine horror, said, "I  cannot bear violence, gentlemen! You will

excuse me until you have  secured the names of the surgeons in Doc Savage's establishment." 

Sidney Lorrey, his interest in the mysterious Boke greater than his  own agony, listened intently for some

sound of a man leaving the other  room, but there was no such noise. 


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Leo grinned lopsidedly and stroked his black hair back. "Funny guy,  Boke," he said. "He's the biggest crook

in the world, but if be had to  do the dirty work himself, he couldn't pick a pocket." 

"I can't make him out," some one said. "He ain't a coward. He  claims his inner nature rebels at the thought of

actually committing a  crime. What a laugh!" 

"I guess his crime gland ain't just right," Leo chuckled. Leo now  stripped off his coat, his evil face grim. He

gave a low order and some  one went out, evidently to an automobile parked somewhere near, for the  fellow

came back bearing a pair of pliers of the inexpensive type  ordinarily included in tool kits. 

Leo leaned over Sidney Lorrey, but jerked a hand at the divan near  by on which lay the form of Robert

Lorrey. One of the men went over and  nudged the form. The figure shifted slightly and there was a groan. 

"Your brother," Leo reminded Sidney Lorrey. "He will die if you do  not tell us what we want to know." 

"Why do you want the names of these surgeons?" Sidney Lorrey  demanded. 

Leo ignored that. "Are you going to give the Information?" 

Sidney Lorrey gritted, "I am not!" 

Leo began plucking Sidney Lorrey's finger nails off with the  pliers. 

The human mentality is almost an incorporeity; it is a thing  productive of so many contradictions, so many

mysteries, that it is not  even fully understood by the psychologists who make the study of the  mind their

specialty. Students of the mind dispute each other when they  try to explain, for instance, why one small boy

may twist a cat's tail  to hear it squawl while another lad may be horrified by the cruelty of  such an act. 

But the fact remains that some mentalities gloat over torture; and  to some of these, the sight of physical pain,

the joy of inflicting it  themselves, acts as a wine, making them drunk with a sort of Infernal  ecstasy. 

Leo's eyes became brighter, he breathed more rapidly, a grease of  perspiration stood out on his forehead and

he ceased to brush back the  loose lock of black hair. 

At first, he demanded of Sidney Lorrey the name of the physicians  at Doc Savage's "college," putting the

demands after each act of  torture, but before long, he ceased doing that and went ahead in  silence that was

broken only by the awful sounds of the tortured man  and the harsh grating of Leo's own breathing. 

When the floor became slippery with crimson, Leo ordered bed  coverings brought from another room, and

Sidney Lorrey was rolled upon  these. Lorrey was barely conscious now. Frightful things had been done  to

him, things that would mutilate him for life, and the other  onlookers, hardened criminals, were becoming

nauseated and turning  away. 

"He ain't gonna talk," one muttered. "why not put him out of his  misery?" 

Leo, purplefaced, hoteyed and intent, seemed not to hear, for he  was engaged in the process of whittling

Lorrey's fingers down to the  bone, one at a time, and showing Lorrey, with fiendish chuckles, the  naked gray

of the exposed bones. 

It was then that something began to happen to Leo, that his eyes  started protruding. He dropped his knife,

clasped his face and began to  moan, then to shriek. His cries were hideous guttering bleats of pain  and agony;


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his head tilted far back, then came forward and he bent  almost double; he was gnashing his lips to shreds. 

He fell over, convulsing, on the floor beside Sidney Lorrey, his  eyes now all but out of their sockets; and after

one final twitch, he  relaxed completely and stopped breathing. 

SIDNEY Lorrey, it suddenly developed, was far less gone than it had  appeared. He must have been working

slyly with his bonds, for now he  jerked and got one hand free. He dived that hand into the clothing of  the man

who had just fallen a victim to the fantastic popeyed death.  The hand reappeared with Leo's gun. 

Sidney Lorrey held the weapon in the palsied clutch of both hands  and croaked, "Stand still!" 

None of the men moved. They marveled that Lorrey still lived, and  they watched, fascinated at the gruesome

efforts of the man to free  himself of the rest of the cords and get to his feet. He was too weak  to stand erect.

He did not moan or otherwise voice pain as he crawled  toward the divan on which lay the form of his brother. 

The men in the room shivered and turned pale as Sidney Lorrey  neared the divan; their eyes sought the door,

but none dared flee. They  were scared, terrified beyond reason by the fantastic fate which had  overtaken Leo,

and by the grim animation in the broken manthing on the  floor. 

Sidney Lorrey took hold of the form on the divan. He shook it. He  clutched blindly at the bandage on the

forehead, so that it was pulled  aside, showing the bullet hole in dead Robert Lorrey's head. 

Sidney Lorrey screamed once, horribly, then he reared up and looked  behind the divan. There was a man

lying prone back there, too scared to  move. It was he who had moved the body and groaned, so as to make

Sidney Lorrey think his brother still lived, that they might use the  brother's safety as a club to make Sidney

talk. 

HOARSE, uncanny sounds came from Sidney Lorrey's lips as he sagged  back to the floor, and his eyes were

wide and glazed. Red fluid from a  cut on his forehead seeped down and pooled in one eye, but the orb did  not

blink. It glared, horrible and bloody. 

It seemed that he was going to empty the gun which he held. He  crawled toward the men, leaving crimson

smears on the floor. His course  brought him close to Leo's grotesquely sprawled body, and he peered

vacantly at the protruding eyes. 

Suddenly the vacancy went from Sidney Lorrey's stare. The madness  still remained. And with it was a

frenzied triumph, a mad, unreasoning  mirth which caused him to cackle grotesque laughter. 

"Look at him!" he screamed, and pointed at Leo. 

None of the men looked. They had looked too much already, and it  had put ice in their vitals. 

"Look at your friend!" Sidney Lorrey shrieked madly. 

"Look at the eyes I Look, and see how you are all going to die!" 

Somebody croaked, "He's nuts!" 

That was what they all thought, for Sidney Lorrey had been tortured  enough to kill an ordinary man, and the

hideous trick played with the  body of his dead brother was enough to upset a more than ordinarily  stable

mind. 


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Sidney Lorrey was crawling toward the door, covering his retreat  with the menace of his gun. The door he

was making for was the one  which led into the room from which Boke, the mysterious man with the  voice of

joy, had spoken. 

"You want to know what is making their eyes stick out?" he gibbered  hollowly. 

No one answered, but that did not mean they did not want to know. 

"It is the work of the Crime Annihilist!" Lorrey snarled. "Yes,  call it the Crime Annihilist!" 

He paused in the door, said, "You!" and jabbed a hand at the  nearest man. "And you, and you, and you!" He

jabbed at the others, then  covered them all with an inclusive sweep. "All of you are destined to  die! All of the

criminals in the world will die!" 

"He's nuts," muttered one of the listeners. 

"Nuts!" Sidney Lorrey shrilled. "Insanity! Madness! It is a  pleasure compared to what is to befall you." 

Lorrey drew himself up dramatically and pointed at the popeyed  body of Leo, yelling, "Look at him

closely!" 

No one looked. 

"The work of the Crime Annihilist!" Lorrey shrieked. 

Then Sidney Lorrey backed through the door into a room. He looked  around vacantly for the weird Boke, but

saw only three men with  protruding eyes dead on the floor  Janko Sultman's men; but Sidney  Lorrey did not

know that, nor did he seem greatly interested, for he  went down the rear stairway and out of the house. 

He moved with an infinite slowness, leaving splotches of crimson,  and should have been an easy victim; but

the men he left behind did not  follow him, for they were too horrified by what had happened. 

A taxi driver whom Sidney Lorrey hailed thought his passenger was  crazy, possibly with reason, and tried to

take him to Bellevue  Hospital. But Lorrey made threats and finally got out of the machine,  and the hack

driver fled, glad to get away with his life. After that,  the snowstreaked cold of the Fall night swallowed

Sidney Lorrey. 

Chapter XI. TERROR OVER THE CITY

MONK, the homely chemist, beat his chest with hairy fists and  bellowed, "They're the curse of humanity!

They're parasites! They've  caused half the wars of the world and they should all be shot!" 

Pat, very trim and bronzehaired, came in from the outer corridor  with a newspaper under her arm, and

asked, "Who?" 

Ham, the dapper lawyer, was carefully dipping the tip of his sword  cane in a sticky paste which reposed in

the back of his watch, in a  special compartment which he had 'unscrewed. He glanced up. 

"Lawyers in general," he smiled. "Monk is expressing an opinion." 


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"One lawyer in particular," Monk scowled, and glared at the  sartorially perfect Ham. 

"What set this off?" Pat demanded. 

"That shyster," Monk indicated Ham, "done my hog a dirty trick! He  put itching powder on Habeas." 

Ham stood up suddenly and yelled, "I'm getting tired of having that  accident in the pig race pull my topcoat

down on the floor and make a  bed out of it every chance he gets." 

"So you put itching powder on the coat," Monk glared. "And you got  the stuff on you when you tried to find

out what was wrong," Ham  smirked. 

Monk grimaced and scratched his furry wrist. 

"Where is Habeas now?" Pat asked. 

"In Renny's bathtub, soaking the stuff off," Monk admitted. 

Pat snapped open the newspaper which she had brought. 

"The press has gone wild," she said. "Look." 

Black headlines were a foot deep across the front page. The  mysterious popeyed malady was rampant, said

the sheets, with more than  a dozen persons dead during the night. 

Half a dozen men had been found dead in a shabby rooming house, all  of them known criminals, and a

known murderer had dropped dead at the  Association of Physical Health. 

Nor were these all. In other parts of the city, men had been found  dead with their eyes protuberant. 

New York was scared, said the headlines. The trains out of the city  were crowded. Workers were applying for

winter vacations, and two or  three persons, according to information amassed during the night, were  thinking

of closing up shop until the malady was past, or until some  one found out what was causing the deaths. A

tabloid predicted that  this would be general. 

The journalists pointed out again that, while some of the men who  had died during the night undoubtedly

knew each other, and one group  was probably a member of a criminal gang, the majority of the Victims  had

no possible connection with each other. This, the scribes seemed to  think, could mean nothing but the

presence of some fabulous epidemic. 

That the hideous disease might strike anywhere, and in fact, was  doing so, was played up. 

Certain Southern health resorts had taken advantage of the scare to  run advertisements suggesting that a visit

to their establishments  would be an excellent way to avoid the whole thing. 

Monk scowled. "Those papers are making it worse," he said. "They  should play it down. They're getting the

whole town excited. They're  scaring people. If this keeps up, it's liable to shut the whole place  down. And

poor people who can't afford it are going to get worried and  spend their money and lose their jobs leaving

town." 


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"Maybe they had best leave," Ham said grimly. "We don't know but  that every life in the city may be in

danger. It begins to look like  this thing strikes everywhere." 

Pat ran slim fingers through her hair and murmured, "Doc, do you  think all of these popeyed deaths have a

connection with Sultman and  Boke and their schemes, whatever they are?" 

Instead of answering, the bronze man said slowly, "I wonder what  has become of Renny and the two

Lorreys?" 

DOC Savage's question remained unanswered during the next half  hour. They waited in comparative

idleness; the bronze man had put out  every possible line in an effort to get in touch with the Lorreys, so  there

was nothing to do but kill time until something happened. Renny,  too, should he have a chance, would be

certain to call the apartment in  an effort to locate Doc Savage. 

Pat went out again when newsboys were heard yelling on the streets  far below. She came back wildly excited. 

"Look!" she screamed, and flourished a paper. 

The headlines were as big as the page could hold, and the story  which followed was in type which made it

stand out in shrieking  prominence. 

DOC SAVAGE WANTED  POLICE NET OUT FOR  BRONZE MYSTERY MAN 

Police Inspector Clarence "Hardboiled"  Humbolt tonight announced  that he had  twice received tips that

Clark Savage,  Jr., who has  become famous as Doc Savage,  the man of bronze, is responsible for the  fantastic

and horrible popeyed deaths.  Each tip led to the discovery  of a group  of men who had perished from the

mysterious  popeyed  death. Each tip was given by  a pleasant voice over the telephone. 

Doc Savage, Inspector Humbolt stated  to reporters, was at one time  under arrest,  but escaped by employing

one of the  scientific devices  for which he  is famous. A general alarm has been  spread for the  bronze man. 

The second telephone tip led to  a house in upper Manhattan, where  several men were found dead. Among

them was a body identified as that  of Robert Lorrey. He had been shot  through the brain. 

The story continued, giving details of the yarn, as well as the  address of the house where Robert Lorrey and

the other dead had been  discovered. Doc Savage and his party read it through. 

"A pleasant voice over the telephone gave the tips," Ham said  grimly. "That means Boke." 

Monk eyed Doc. "What about this?" 

"We will go up there and look around," Doc said quietly. 

"The police will have an eye open for us," Monk reminded. 

Doc nodded. "For that reason, you three will stay here for the time  being." 

Monk did not look as if he thought much of the idea. 

"What's the use?" he countered. "The cops will learn that Renny  lives here, and they'll come around to

investigate." 


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The bronze man answered that by moving to the bathroom. The tub was  full of steaming water, and in this

stood the pig, Habeas Corpus. Doc  lifted the shoat out of the water, then pulled the plug and let the tub  drain,

after which he reached up and turned the shower head so that it  pointed straight up. 

The tub promptly lifted on some mechanical support and swiveled,  exposing an expanse of masonry which

was perforated with a slit large  enough to permit the passage of a man. Metal ladder rungs led downward. 

"Renny prepared this for a getaway," Doc explained. "It leads to a  secret elevator in what is apparently a solid

column of masonry. No one  else in the building knows of it." 

"Where does it come out?" Monk demanded. 

"Nearly a block distant, in a private garage rented by Renny under  an assumed name," the bronze man

explained. "If the police come, you  simply leave by this route, and they will never know you have been  here." 

"Swell," Monk grinned, and got down on his hands and knees to see  how the mechanism operated. Satisfied,

he straightened, looked around  as if to say something, then blinked his small eyes. 

Doc Savage was gone from the apartment. 

SOME moments later, a taxicab driver, huddled at the wheel of his  machine, got the start of his life when a

voice addressed him from the  supposedly empty rear compartment. 

"Drive north until I tell you to turn," the voice directed. The  hackman screwed his head around, but the light

in the rear of his car  had been turned out and he could make out only a shadowy bulk where his  passenger sat.

The driver rubbed his ears as he let out the clutch,  wondering why he had not heard the door open or close. 

He drove rapidly, slowing only when there was danger of skidding in  the sheets of icy snow particles, and

traversed nearly fifty blocks. 

"Left here," advised the voice in the rear; and after they had gone  two blocks: "Now, north." 

The driver turned again to try to examine his fare, but once more  the darkness thwarted him, and a moment

later, he was too interested in  something happening down the street ahead of him to think about his

passenger. 

The street was a long, gloomy one, lined by only a few houses. At  the next block, a group of policemen stood

in the street, stopping all  cars, opening the doors and peering inside. 

With a prickling sensation along the back of his neck, the driver  of the cab pushed ahead. He halted when one

of the officers flagged him  with a hand. 

"Got a fare?" the policeman demanded. 

"Sure," said the driver. 

An officer opened the cab door, looked inside, then pulled back and  snarled, "What're you tryin' to do, wise

guy? Kid us?" 

The driver wheeled and his eyes flew wide, for the rear seat was  empty. 


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"Uhhuh!" he stuttered. 

"Get the beck outa here!" snapped a cop. "And take a tip and lay  off the funny stuff." 

The hackman went on willingly. Within the next four blocks, he  noted a piece of paper blowing about in the

seat beside him, and he  picked it up. He grinned widely and pocketed the fragment of paper. 

It was a tendollar bill. 

Police Inspector Clarence "Hardboiled" Humbolt was bothered, angry,  and taking no chances. He had made

an examination of the house where  Robert Lorrey had been found shot to death and the other men lay  lifeless

from the strange affliction of the protruding eyes. The  medical examiner had come and gone. Fingerprint

men had done their  work. The police photographers had taken pictures. 

Hardboiled himself was in the lower hallway, talking to newspaper  men. He had taken off his canvas shoes

and was rubbing his feet gently,  grimacing as if the rubbing pained him rather pleasantly. 

The house was flattopped, and flanked on either side by vacant  lots which were surrounded by high board

fences. There was a policeman  in each vacant lot and two in the alley. 

Hardboiled Humbolt held a small metal disk up for the newspaper  reporters to examine. The disk was affixed

to a linkage of small chain. 

"Robert Lorrey wore this around his ankle," Hardboiled growled. "It  is an identification disk with a number

and an inscription requesting  that Doc Savage be called." 

"Did you call Doc Savage?" a reporter asked. 

Hardboiled stopped rubbing his foot and swore. "If I knew where  that bronze guy was, I'd call on him!" 

"What does the disk mean?" asked another journalist. 

"It means that the dead man was connected with Doc Savage," snapped  Hardboiled. "He is the second fellow

wearing one of those to be killed  in the last few hours." 

"Do you accuse Doc Savage of the killings?" questioned a cub. 

"I don't accuse anybody," said Hardboiled, who knew what a clever  lawyer could do with a libel suit. "I have

evidence enough to warrant  the bronze man's arrest." 

Another reporter, the dean of the lot, said, "I do not think my  paper will print any of these innuendoes cast in

the direction of Doc  Savage. For one thing, Savage has the reputation of being straight as a  string and of

fighting criminals and of helping those who are in  trouble. Furthermore, he is a man who has made

incalculable  contributions to surgical knowledge, and I personally know of charities  and hospitals which he

keeps in operation." 

"All of which may be a buildup by Savage to make himself a big  shot, while he's actually a master criminal

of some kind," growled  Hardboiled. 

"Rats!" said the reporter. 


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Hardboiled Humbolt scowled and got up. He mounted the stairs, and  because he did not put his tennis shoes

on, and walked lightly so as to  favor his bunions, he made almost no noise. Reaching one of the  upstairs

rooms, which was dark, he glanced inside. For once, he forgot  his sore feet. 

The chamber was a bedroom, and there was a mirror door on the  closet. On this mirror, words were glowing

in an eerie, electric blue.  The big, wellrounded letters were perfectly decipherable from where  Hardboiled

stood. They read: 

SIDNEY LORREY KNOWS CRIME  ANNIHILIST SECRET 

Hardboiled Humbolt was so shocked that he made several inarticulate  croaking noises. He had gone Over the

room personally a bit earlier and  had found no such writing as this. 

Thinking he caught a slight sound, he cocked an ear. Then he  stepped in the room, wrenching out his gun. 

"Stand still, you!" he grated. 

There was no answer. Cold air brushed his face, and hard snow  tinkled on window glass. Hardboiled felt for

the light switch and got  the bulbs white. 

The room was empty, the one window was wide open and the writing  had vanished. 

HARDBOILED'S angry howl brought policemen and newspaper reporters  slamming up the stairs. They

found the tenderfooted inspector leaning  out of the window. 

"Who left this open?" be roared. 

No one seemed to know. To the reporters, Hardboiled told what had  happened. 

"This writing will come on when I turn the lights off," he said  confidently. "It's phosphorous or something." 

He stepped back and clicked the light bulb black. Then he looked at  the mirror. He swore. 

No writing had appeared. 

Hardboiled tried it twice again without causing writing to appear  on the mirror, then he went over, and with

the lights on, used a pocket  magnifier borrowed from a fingerprint man. He found nothing, much to  his

amazement. They tried fingerprint powder, and that brought out  nothing. 

"I can't understand it," the burly officer rumbled. 

"The real original handwriting on the wall!" snorted a journalist. 

Chapter XII. DEATH ON THE RIVER

IT was well past midnight. The air was colder. The wind had become  stronger. The gale howled around the

cornices outside Renny's apartment  like a lonesome dog. 

Ham, the dapper lawyer, waved his sword cane and shrieked, "You  awful mistake of nature! You missing

link! You furry ape! I'll chop you  down to the shape of a human being!" 


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Monk, homely and simian, sprawled in a chair across the office, his  eyes practically closed, his big mouth

barely open. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, sat in the middle of the room and to all  appearances, said, "The human race is made

up of very funny animals.  Even funnier than some others are certain small, sissifled fellows who  doll

themselves up in flashy clothes and carry canes. Now you take  " 

Ham suddenly seized a book and hurled it at the pig. Habeas dodged  with a skill that had come from much

practice, moved to the other side  of the room and began again. 

"Now you take  " 

Ham roared, "I'm in no mood to listen to one of those funny hog  lectures!" and glared at Monk. 

Monk pretended to be asleep. 

Pat Savage, occupying a chair in the background, tried to keep a  sober expression on her attractive features.

Monk and Ham quarreled  during all their time together, each going to extreme and sometimes  childish

measures to aggravate the other. 

Monk's present performance was one be could depend upon to throw  Ham into a rage. Monk had gone to

great pains to learn ventriloquism  for the specific purpose of throwing his voice to Habeas and having the

shoat express choice opinions of Ham, who was touchy on the subject of  pork in general, anyway. 

Monk, throwing his voice, made Habeas seem to say, "This funny  human race is marked by the presence of

parasites. A parasite is a  fellow everybody else could get along very well without. An example of  a parasite is

a lawyer  " 

Monk stooped and sat up suddenly as Doc Savage came in. 

"Find Renny?" Monk demanded. 

The bronze man said, "I managed to get into the house where Robert  Lorrey was killed. Use of the

ultraviolet lantern showed a message in  Renny's handwriting, on a mirror door." 

'mien Renny had been there!" Ham said grimly. 

"What did the message say?" Pat put in. 

"'Sidney Lorrey knows Crime Annihilist secret,'" Doc Savage stated.  "What was the message." 

Monk scratched in the rusty bristles which stood out straight on  the back of his neck. 

"Crime Annihilist?" he pondered aloud. "Who's he?" 

Ham flourished his sword cane suddenly. "Jove! I believe an  annihilist would be one who destroys. And

hasn't it occurred to you  that the victims of this popeyed death have been criminals?" 

"Not all of them, shyster," Monk reminded. "That last newspaper we  read said two had died who were not

crooks. One was a Park Avenue sport  and the other a banker." 


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Ham frowned, changed the subject completely, and asked, "Doc, did  you see our friend Hardboiled

Humbolt?" 

"The gentleman walked in on me while Renny's message was  fluorescing under the ultraviolet lantern," said

the bronze man dryly.  "A convenient window allowed me to get away before he realized just  what it was all

about." 

Pat put in sharply: "If Sidney Lorrey knows the secret of what is  behind all these hideous killings, suppose we

find him." 

"An excellent idea," Doc agreed. "We will try Sidney Lorrey's  laboratory on the barge." 

BECAUSE the night was unnaturally cold for the season, and the  waters of the East River proportionately

warmer, there was a thick gray  suds of fog over the water. The gale swept this upon the shore, where  it froze

and deposited thick white frost, giving the terrain a ghostly,  Arctic aspect. 

Sidney Lorrey's barge was like a great white box, with another and  smaller white box placed in its middle,

and the whole set in a steaming  cauldron. But because it was very dark, the boxes did not look so  intensely

white. 

There was a great silence, broken only by the gale and the sound of  tug whistles audible at long intervals.

Close to the river, the noise  of the waves could be heard. 

For a long time there bad been no sign of life, but now the macabre  aspect of the cold scene was broken. A

figure moved, shifting from the  shelter of a piling head to the lee of a great, unused timber. There  was great

furtiveness in the marauder's manner. 

The skulker was bundled in a black overcoat, the velvet collar  upturned; there was a muffler of black silk,

thinly marked with white,  wrapped around the lower face. The hat was light gray, blending with  the snow,

and concealing the remainder of the wearer's features. 

This strange individual, who obviously did not wish to be seen,  seemed to be watching Sidney Lorrey's barge.

From time to time, his  head lifted over the timber while eyes examined the barge. 

The steam off the river and the windborne snow, combined to mask  the barge, and from where the mysterious

figure lay, not overly much  could be seen. The skulker evidently concluded to crawl closer. He  wormed along

for a few yards, then shifted over and got behind another  timber and crawled along that. 

But he did not crawl far. A handa great, corded hand of bronze   abruptly drifted over from the opposite

side of the timber and clamped  down on the crawling one's neck. The marauder emitted one stifled bleat  of

surprise and pain. Then he was wrenched bodily over the timber. He  struggled a bit, but could accomplish but

little against the metallic  giant who held him. 

There was a stir in the nearby murk, and Monk, Ham and Pat  scuttled forward. They joined Doc Savage and

his captive. 

"Who is be, Doc?" Monk breathed. "Sidney Lorrey?" 

Ham said softly, "It's lucky you spotted this fellow, Doc.  Otherwise, we'd have walked right onto the barge

without ever knowing  he was around." 


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Doc Savage, saying nothing, pulled the silk muffler down and shoved  the prisoner's hat back, disclosing his

features. 

The man was middleaged. He had fine features, ruddied a bit by the  cold, and a cropped blond mustache,

blue eyes and very even white  teeth. 

Monk leaned close and held a big fist under the man's nose. The man  recoiled nervously. Monk demanded,

"who are you?" 

"Oh, my!" he gasped. "I knew I was making a mistake in acting on my  own initiative." 

His voice was mild, his words rather too prim for the  circumstances. 

"'Who are you?" Monk repeated. 

"Doctor Mortimer Basenstein," the other admitted. 

Monk looked as if he did not believe it. "What are you doing here?" 

The other squirmed, moistened his lips, looked as if be would  rather not answer. 

Monk held his fist up like a bludgeon. "Spill it!" 

"I am a practicing physician," said Doctor Mortimer Basenstein.  "About two hours ago a man came to me for

treatment. He was horribly  beaten, cut and mutilated. I think he was slightly insane. He raved  about being the

Crime Annihilist who was going to kill a million  criminals. He was quite mad. He said the Crime Annihilist

was going to  kill all of the crooks in the world." 

"'What name did this man who said be was the Crime Annihilist give  you?" Doc Savage asked sharply. 

"Sidney Lorrey," muttered Basenstein. 

MONK grunted something explosive, for he had not expected tills  word that Sidney Lorrey was the

mysterious Crime Annihilist who caused  men to drop over with their eyes protruding. 

Ham leaned forward with his sword cane and tapped the point of  their captive's chest. 

"You have not explained just what you are doing here," he pointed  out. 

Basenstein shuddered. "I am a kindhearted man, and I have a  respect for my profession," be said. "This

Sidney Lorrey proved to me  that be himself is a licensed physician." 

"True," said Doc Savage. 

"Then you know him?" Basenstein looked up. 

The bronze man nodded. 

Monk, his manner still hard, said, "'What are you doing here?" 


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"I followed Sidney Lorrey," Basenstein explained. "The man is  temporarily demented, I tell you, and I

wanted to help him. If I turned  him over to the police, no telling what would happen. I tell you, this  Lorrey

claims he has killed scores of criminals already." 

Monk gave a terse opinion of the story. "Pretty thin." 

Basenstein snapped, "I tell you, I am a physician with an office  several blocks from here on Seventieth

Street." 

Doc Savage glanced at Ham and spoke a few words in the ancient  Mayan dialect. Ham nodded and moved

away, the darkness swallowing him. 

It was fully five minutes before Ham came back and stated, "There  is a Doctor Mortimer Basenstein who has

an office on Seventieth." 

"I told you," declared Basenstein. 

Doc Savage asked, "where is Sidney Lorrey now?" 

Basenstein pointed at the barge. "On that." 

"We will find him," the bronze man stated, and moved forward. 

SOME distance away, a man lay prone on a pile of timbers with a  pair of binoculars clamped to his eyes. The

glasses had an  extraordinarily wide field, which made them effective as night glasses.  The man had a

handkerchief tied over his lower face, perhaps to keep  his breath from fogging the glasses, and again, perhaps

to hide his  features. 

He eased backward, using every caution to keep from making a noise  or displaying his person too

prominently. A moment later, he joined  several other men. They, like himself, all wore dark overcoats which

kept them from standing Out too prominently in the murk. They were  careful to keep away from snow

backgrounds. 

"It worked," said the man who had been using the binoculars. 

"He's goin' with Doc Savage?" asked another. 

"Sure!" said the first. 

That seemed to be what they had awaited, for they all crept back  away from the vicinity of the river front, as

if not wanting to take  chances of being discovered. 

DOC Savage, nearing the gangplank which led to the old barge that  Sidney Lorrey had converted into a

laboratory, held up an arm and the  others stopped, permitting him to go on ahead. 

Basenstein asked softly, "'Who is that man?" 

"Doc Savage," Monk advised. 

"Oh!" said Basenstein. "The man of mystery!" 


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Doc Savage advanced toward the gangplank, started across it, halted  suddenly and his strange flakegold

eyes roved. He brought out the  flashlight which operated from a spring generator rather than a battery  and

raced the thin beam back and forth. 

Then he removed his coat, balled it and flung it bard. There was a  mound of snow at the end of the

gangplank, between its end and the side  of the barge deck house. The coat knocked the snow aside a bit,

disclosing the body of a man. 

Doc Savage advanced carefully, spraying the flashlight on the snow  before him. Reaching the body, he turned

it over. 

The dead man was stocky, clad in evening clothes, and his round,  full face was oily even in death. His eyes

were gruesomely protuberant. 

Doc Savage straightened, and the snow, swept along the barge deck  by the terrific force of the wind, covered

the form again almost as if  a sheet were being drawn over it. 

The bronze man went to the deckhouse door, but did not open it. He  listened. There was no sound. He stood

aside as a matter of habitual  precaution, and knocked. 

There was a loud concussion inside the deck house. A tuft of  splinters jumped out of the door. The rifle bullet

which had made the  hole moaned toward Monk and the others, but passed slightly over their  heads. 

Mortimer Basenstein, terrified by the proximity of the bullet,  emitted a screech of terror. Monk snorted

angrily and clapped a hand  over his mouth. They struggled. Basenstein seemed gripped with a mortal  terror. 

A drumming from the shore drew all eyes. Monk released Basenstein  and snatched under his arm for his

supermachine pistol. Figures became  distinguishable in the room. 

"Cops?" Monk growled questioningly. 

"No," said Ham. 

Red sparks jumped from the approaching forms and gun sound slammed  noisily. 

PAT Savage was carrying a larger hand bag, and she wrenched it open  and drew out an enormous

singleaction sixshooter. It had been her  father's gun, and she had practiced with the weapon until she had

the  proficiency of an oldtime Western gun fighter. 

She shot from the hip, not pulling the trigger, for there was no  trigger on the gun, it being stripped down for

fanning. She simply  rocked the hammer back with a thumb and let it fall. The concussion as  the antique went

off was terrific. 

One of the attackers started dancing around crazily, fell down on  the snowcovered ground and threshed and

kicked and finally became  still. 

"Tsk, tsk!" Monk clucked. "Such bloodthirstiness!" He took a  careful aim with his supermachine pistol. 

"Mercy bullet," said Pat. "Doc made some up special for this  cannon." 


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Monk's superfirer emitted its bullfiddle moan. Three of the  approaching men folded down magically.

Startled, the rest flopped flat  and were lost in the nodular masses of timbers, old machinery, piles of  hawser

and other appurtenances common to wharves. 

One of the assailants threw a grenade. No one but Doc saw it  coming, and the bronze man knocked the others

flat so that the grenade,  exploding near by, did nothing but deafen them. 

"Back on the barge," advised the bronze man. 

They retreated, using all the caution possible, keeping down. Monk  fired his supermachine pistol once more.

Ham used his twice. So far as  they could tell they fit no one, but they kept their foes down. 

The high rail around the barge furnished shelter against anything  but a highpowered rifle bullet. 

Monk, turning over to stare at the windows in the barge deck house,  growled, "Didn't somebody shoot at you

from inside, Doc?" 

"A bullet came through the door," the bronze man admitted. 

"Then we'd better get out of sight of those windows," Monk pointed  out. "who d'you reckon fired it?" 

Ham answered that. "Sidney Lorrey, of course!" 

Bullets, striking the barge rail, had the sound of heavy hammer  blows, and where they topped the rail they

dug out splinters and split  the planks of the deck house. 

Basenstein was moaning over and over, "I hate violence! I cannot  stand it! They are trying to kill us!" 

"Shut up!" Monk advised. 

Another grenade made a great uproar and threw pieces of metal from  some rusted machinery alongside which

it exploded. 

"A young war," Monk growled, trying to find a target for his  supermachine pistol. "The cops will hear this

and come running." 

Doc Savage worked back, and the others followed him. They rounded a  corner of the deck house, where they

were more perfectly sheltered. 

Beside a dark window, Ham stood erect, hesitated, then peered  inside. He could make out nothing. He tried

the sashand to his  surprise, it opened. He shoved it up. 

A voice inside the barge said wildly, "Stay out of here! Stay. out  of here!" 

"Sidney Lorrey's voice!" rapped Ham. "I've heard the man speak. He  was visiting his brother at our upstate

place once." 

"Stay out!" shrilled the voice in the barge. 

It was made hollow by the acoustic tricks of the barge interior,  but the words were clearly distinguishable. 


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"Damn you!" shrieked Sidney Lorrey's voice. "I won't let you get  hold of me again!" 

Ham yelled, "Don't be a sap, Lorrey. This is Ham. Doc Savage is  here!" 

His answer was as phenomenal as if a firecracker had exploded in  his face. 

THE roof came off the deck house and rode upward on a sheet of  flame, disintegrating as it arose. Some of

the deck house wall folded  outward; the sides of the barge split; the whole craft heeled, and gory  red flame

jumped from every door, window and crevice. 

Ham, knocked backward by the concussion, would have gone overboard  had it not been for Doc, who seized

his leg and kept him on deck. The  others, lying prone at the moment, were merely bounced about by the

explosion. 

Upstream, as the tide now flowed, there was a flash and a great  blaze of light. There must have been an

explosion, too, but their  eardrums, already punished by the blast on the barge, failed to  register it as more

than a p///41 of a noise. 

The gasoline barge had been split apart and set afire. Gasoline was  spreading over the water, carried down by

the slow ebb tide and moving  toward Sidney Lorrey's barge. 

"We'd better vamoose," Monk gulped. "There's gonna be a real  bonfire here in a minute!" 

The attackers on shore seemed as stunned as any one by the sudden  pyrotechnics. They were on their feet,

some staring, some retreating.  Perhaps the sound of police sirens in the distance had something to do  with

their withdrawal. 

Ham fired his supermachine pistol at the men, but the dapper lawyer  was still dizzy from the shock of

explosion, and he missed. Some one  shot back with an automatic until the gun was empty. Then the attackers

began to flee in a body. 

Monk waved an arm at the burning barge. "what about Sidney Lorrey?"  he asked. 

"Go on," Doc told him. "I'll look around." 

Monk nodded; with Ham and Pat he moved off the barge, then all  stopped and waited for Doc Savage. They

could see the bronze man  working through the wreckage, endeavoring to inspect the barge  interior. 

But the explosion had started a great fire. In addition, the  burning gasoline was piling up around the barge,

the flames mounting,  setting the planking afire. The heat was terrific, already melting snow  a score of yards

back from the river. 

Doc Savage moved swiftly, venturing into what seemed like solid  sheets of flames, and Basenstein moaned,

"He will be burned!" 

There was another, lesser explosion forward in the barge. Fire bad  gotten to a fuel tank, throwing sheets of

flaming petroleum. Smoke  mounting from the pyre was streaked with green and yellow and white,

undoubtedly coming from burning chemicals. 

"These chemical fires are bad!" Monk yelled. "Better get out of  there, Doc!" 


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The bronze man was already moving away from the blaze. A great leap  took him to the shore, and he joined

the others. They ran away from the  spot, using caution, half expecting their late assailants to rush them. 

They were out of sight before police cars whined up, followed by  ambulances, then a hook and ladder, hose

carts, and a general emergency  wagon. 

Doc Savage, watching, noted that the police failed to discover the  gunmen who had driven Doc and his party

aboard the barge. 

"I wonder what outfit them cookies belonged to?" Monk pondered  aloud, referring to the gunmen. "D'you

reckon they drove us onto the  barge, knowing it would blow up?" 

"Unlikely," Doc Savage told him. 

"How d'you figure, Doc?" 

The bronze man did not answer. He seemed not to have heard the  inquiry. 

Basenstein, pale and trembling, asked, "Did you find Sidney  Lorrey?" 

"The fire," Doc told him, "spread too quickly." 

"Then Sidney Lorrey is dead!" Ham said slowly. "And that means the  finish of the Crime Annihilist," Monk

echoed. 

Chapter XIII. ULTIMATUM

MONK was wrong. In spite of what had happened to the unfortunate  Sidney Lorrey, the uncanny menace of

the Crime Annihilist still  existed. They learned that when they reached Renny's apartment. 

Doctor Mortimer Basenstein went to the apartment with them. While  they were still leaving the Vicinity of

the burning barge laboratory,  he had said, "I am sure those gunmen saw my face. I am worried. Suppose  they

should try to take my life?" 

"Why should they?" Ham countered. 

"I shall feel safer with you gentlemen," said the other. 

And Doc Savage agreed to that with a nod, somewhat to the surprise  of Monk, Ham and Pat. 

The telephone was ringing when they entered Renny's apartment,  after crossing the city furtively, so as not to

be sighted by the  police. Doc Savage answered the instrument. Monk crowded to his side,  hoping it was

Renny calling. 

But the voice was one so utterly pleasant to hear that it caused  Monk to clench his fists and show his teeth in

a snarl that would have  done credit to a Congo ape. 

"Boke!" he gritted. 

"This, I trust, is the estimable Doc Savage?" Boke Inquired  pleasantly. 


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"What do you want?" Doc asked emotionlessly. 

"To explain the affair at the barge a few moments ago," Boke  replied over the wire. "In case you may be in

doubt, it was my men who  attacked you. They had made a previous attempt to board the barge, and  one of

them, ah  met a misfortune." 

"I found his body," Doc admitted. 

"No doubt," Boke agreed. "I sent more of my men to get Lorrey, and  they seem to have had the bad luck to

arrive when you and your patty  were there." 

"Why?" Doc questioned. "Did you want Sidney Lorrey?" 

"He is the Crime Annihilist," said Boke. 

Doc asked, "What do you want with me?" 

"We want you to find Sidney Lorrey and commit him to a madhouse  where he belongs," said Boke. 

"Sidney Lorrey's voice spoke to us an instant before the explosion  on the barge," Doc Savage stated quietly.

"After the blast, I attempted  to get his body out, but the fire was too furious to get near the spot  from which

his voice had come." 

Boke screamed, "What?" 

That single wild exclamation of astonishment told Doc Savage and  the others more about the mysterious

Boke than all they had learned  prior to that moment, for the ejaculation was in a dIfferent tone, and  the

alteration showed that Boke had been speaking in a disguised voice.  The deliciously pleasant tone was not his

normal manner of speech. 

"What?" Boke repeated. "You mean that Sidney Lorrey is dead?" 

Doc Savage half turned; Monk was on another telephone, endeavoring  frantically to have the call traced. 

"Is that all you wanted with me?" the bronze man inquired. 

"Wait!" Boke gasped hurriedly. "You have got to find the Crime  Annihilist. He just killed another o/ my

men!" 

"Why?" Doc made his voice disinterested. "In some respects, this  Crime Annihilist is doing a service to

humanity." 

Boke said, "Wait; I wish you to hear some one," and there was a  brief pause, and a scuffle, a thump as if a

chair had been upset, along  with a few labored curses. 

Over the wire came Renny's great, booming tone. 

"Don't do a damn thing these guys want you to, Doc!" Renny rumbled.  "As soon as they get this Crime

Annihilist out of the way, they're  going ahead with their original plan to seize one of the specialists  from your

upstate 


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There were blows, more grunts, a squeal of some one in pain, then  Boke resumed speaking. 

"Your man seems never to get enough fighting," he said dryly. "But  you heard him. You know we have him.

His safety is the price for your  services. Find this Crime Annihilist, get him in an insane asylum or in  a jail,

and we will release this man Renny." 

"On the other hand, the Crime Annihilist, who seems to have  mastered a mysterious method of killing

criminals, will get you if I  leave him alone," Doc said. "Then Renny will be free to walk out." 

"Renny will not walk out from where we are putting him," Boke  promised. "He will die without ever being

found, if anything happens to  us." 

Doc Savage began, "Just what connection does my upstate institution  have with  " 

Boke said, "Think my proposal over," and hung up. 

MONK slammed his own telephone down, waved his long arms and  yelled, "That dumb telephone operator!

She kept Insisting the wire you  were talking on was out of order." 

Doc picked up the telephone over which Boke's call had come,  listened, and got only emptiness. 

"It is out of order," he said briskly. "Sounds as if it had been  cut." 

"Tapped!" Ham yelled. "Somewhere between here and the telephone  exchange." 

"We'll make an examination," Doc rapped, and swung out of the  apartment. At the door, he told Pat, "You

stay here with Basenstein." 

Monk and Ham followed Doc. The telephone circuit, they knew,  entered a master conduit which extended

down through the tall apartment  house to the basement, where it connected with the regular conduits. 

Basenstein seemed nervous after Doc and the other two had gone. He  kneaded his fingers together, picked at

splinters which his clothing  had acquired during the action on the barge. 

"Do you think there is any danger?" he asked Pat. 

"Sure," Pat said unkindly. "We all have an excellent chance of  being killed." 

Basenstein put a wry twist on his lips that was meant for a smile.  "You are quite a remarkable young

woman." 

"Fooey!" said Pat. "I wonder if Renny keeps anything to eat in this  place." 

She wandered off in the direction of the modernistic kitchen, but  it was significant that she kept her enormous

singleaction sixshooter  in hand instead of replacing it in the bag. 

A peculiar change jerked over Basenstein the instant Pat was out of  sight. He whipped a pencil and a

notebook from his pocket and wrote  rapidly. Then he searched for something with which to weight the

missive. A silver half dollar served the purpose, and he snapped a  rubber band around this. 


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As silently as possible, he made his way to the window. Thanks to  the efficiency of modern construction, it

opened with a minimum of  noise. Basenstein leaned out. 

The street was a cold, bleak expanse far below, warmed but little  by street lights and the lenses of parked

taxicabs. 

Basenstein threw his message wrapped in the silver half dollar,  then followed it with his eyes and looked

relieved when he saw it was  going to land near the middle of the street. 

A man detached himself from the shadows of a building across the  street, scuttled hurriedly, and picked up

the message. He faded back  into the murk.  Basenstein put the window down quietly. Behind him, Pat  said,

"You after fresh air or something?" 

BASENSTEIN proved himself a consummate actor. He pretended that he  had just reached the window, and

he raised it high. 

"I am wondering if I can see Doc Savage below," he said, and thrust  his head out, making a show of glancing

about. Then he closed the  window and said, "No sign of him." 

"I put the percolator on," Pat advised. "This thing may go on for  days and days before anybody gets any

sleep. There is stuff for  sandwiches in the kitchen." 

Doc Savage, Monk and Ham came in from the outer corridor, catching  Pat's eye, made an emptyhanded

gesture. 

"Wire was tapped in the basement," he advised. "Bird had flown.  Nobody see, nobody hear. Out of luck." 

Pat eyed Doc. "What are we going to do?" 

The bronze man, addressing them all, advised, "You will stay here  until I return or communicate with you." 

Monk asked pessimistically, "And if we don't hear from you, where  do we start looking for you?" 

"At headquarters," Doc advised. 

Monk exploded. "But the police are watching  " 

Doc Savage said, "It is essential to use the headquarters  laboratory for certain experiments." Then he went

out. 

Down on the street, it was not as dark, but the wind was stronger  and there was more snow in the air. It was

not snow falling from the  thin clouds, but hard flakes scooped up by the gale and whirled about  with great

violence. 

Doc Savage selected a taxicab parked in a dark spot and entered it,  as he had done in another case earlier that

night, before the driver  saw his face. He reached up and switched off the dome light, then  directed the driver

downtown. 

The hackman was too cold to show interest in his fare, but he did  say, "I'd turn on the radio, boss, but the

static is a fright tonight.  Got worse the last couple of hours. Guess it's this blizzard." 


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"Never mind," Doc told him. 

At a street intersection where a traffic light went red, they  pulled up alongside a police car. Doc rolled down

the cab window and  heard the police shortwave set spewing noisy volumes of static. One of  the two officers

in the car was working with the radio dial and  cursing. 

The cop looked up hastily, then scowled at the radio, for he was  bearing a sudden, weird trilling sound of

fantastic, unreal notes. It  was an exotic thing, this trilling, something that might have been a  product of the

cold night gale  or a caprice of the radio. 

The trilling died, and the officer did not associate it with the  presence of the taxicab, which had now gone on. 

THREE uniformed officers were on duty in the lobby of the  skyscraper which housed Doc Savage's

headquarters. The bronze man saw  them as the taxicab drifted past in a whirl of snow. 

He got out of the machine two blocks beyond, walked a block to the  right, then two blocks north and swung

into a side street which ran  along the rear of the skyscraper. 

It was doubtful if the police had learned of the basement garage  which the bronze man maintained in the big

building. Not even the  building employees themselves, for the most part, knew of its  existence. 

Doc Savage let himself into the garage with its array of motor  vehicles, which ranged from a large,

innocentlooking moving van which  was armored like a tank, to a shabby, ramshackle coupe' which might

possibly make a hundred and fifty miles an hour on a straightaway but  which looked like a twentydollar job

off a secondhand lot. A narrow  concrete corridor led the bronze man to a special highspeed elevator  which

in turn let him out on the eightysixth floor. 

The corridor was empty. The door of his headquarters was  unprepossessing, bearing in small bronze letters

the inscription: 

CLARK SAVAGE, Jr. 

Two of the three rooms inside were enormous; with the smaller  reception room and office, they took in the

entire floor of the titanic  structure. Reception room and library, Doc Savage ignored. He entered  the

laboratory. 

The bronze man went to work in the labyrinth of apparatus, setting  up electrical coils, tubes, connecting an

audio amplifier of tremendous  sensitivity and power. Most of the devices with which he tinkered would  have

been understood by an electrical engineer; but there were a few so  complex, so unusual of design, that even

an expert on such things would  have been baffled. 

This laboratory held many things to be found nowhere else, or  perhaps at only one other spot  a strange,

remote retreat to which  this strange bronze man retired periodically to study and experiment,  shut off from

the world so completely that none knew where to find him  or how to get a message to him. 

Only Doc Savage himself knew of this other spot  of its location,  rather. Monk, Ham and the rest of his

aides knew of its existence, knew  he called it his Fortress of Solitude. But that was all they knew. The  bronze

man would simply disappear  for days, weeks, maybe months  and  none would know his whereabouts. 

Then he would come back as mysteriously as he had gone, and usually  with him came some new discovery in

the field of electricity,  chemistry, surgery, or another of the sciences at which he was skilled. 


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One thing Monk and the others did agree upon: These protracted  periods of concentration, away from every

outside influence, were  responsible for the bronze man's fabulous knowledge. 

Outside the skyscraper laboratory, the wind whooped and howled.  Inside, there was frequent noise. Always,

these noises possessed a  sameness, coming from loudspeakers which Doc Savage had hooked to his

apparatus. 

The sounds were akin to the crackle, mutter and crash of ordinary  radio static. 

The minute hand on the chronometer crawled around and around. The  bronze man's wrist watch kept with it

almost to the second, where it  lay after he had removed it and placed it aside to get it out of the  magnetic

fields of the apparatus with which he was working. 

Outside, the wind suddenly stopped dead. Clouds went out of the  sky. The sun came up with what seemed

like suddenness. 

The telephone rang. 

Boke's utterly pleasant voice said, "This, I trust, is the  estimable Doc Savage?" 

The bronze man reached swiftly to a button, pressed it. The bell  which that button rang was an imperative

order to the telephone  operator to trace the call. 

But Boke was canny. He spoke with great speed. "Call Renny's  apartment," he rapped. 

Then he hung up. 

A moment later the operator was reporting, "I am very sorry, but  there was no time to trace that call." 

Doc Savage said nothing, but dialed the number of Renny's  apartment. 

He got no answer. 

THE door of Renny's apartment was closed, but a loud voice  penetrated through it. The speaker was in a

howling rage. 

"Of all the lowdown, infernal tricks!" the voice squawled. "I'll  tear your legs off! I'll feed you that sword

cane." 

"Quit bellowing, you missing link!" snapped Ham's milder voice.  "Try to get loose." 

"I'll haunt you!" Monk bawled. "I'll get in your hair and take it  all out by the roots!" 

Ham yelled, "It's too damn bad they didn't take you instead of the  hog!" 

Basenstein's voice said nervously, "Gentlemen! Gentlemen! Please  stop it!" 

Doc Savage, his appearance showing no signs of the terrific  rapidity with which he had come from his

downtown headquarters to the  apartment, came in from the corridor and stood looking at the tableau  in

Renny's modernistic living room. 


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Monk, Ham and Basenstein were arrayed on the floor, tied with stout  manila rope. Not only were their wrists

and ankles bound securely, but  they were roped together in a chain so that the more they struggled,  the tighter

their bonds became. It was an expert job of tying. 

Doc Savage went to work swiftly, asking no questions. His fingers  showed their incredible strength in the

speed with which the knots  opened. 

Ham, freed ahead of Monk, retreated uneasily from the glaring  chemist. 

"You shyster!" Monk bawled. "You'd better take a running start or  they'll be scraping you off the walls!" 

Ham, for once looking a bit concerned in front of Monk's rage,  began, "Listen, Monk, when I told them how

much you thought of Habeas  Corpus, I didn't think 

Monk's roar drowned him out. 

"What happened?" Doc demanded. 

"That fashion plate!" Monk glared in Ham's direction. "Half a dozen  lugs came charging in. They took us by

surprise. Ham told 'em I thought  more of Habeas than I did of my right eye. So they took the hog." 

The instant Monk's ropes were loosened, he tore them off and heaved  erect. His rusty hair bristled. He

showed all of his teeth. And he  charged Ham purposefully. 

Basenstein moaned and covered his eyes in the manner of a man who  expects to see murder done. 

But Monk never touched Ham. The gorillalike chemist came to a  stop. He rocked back on his heels

foolishly. Then he grabbed at his  head. 

"Ouch!" he squawled. "My head!" 

A hideous thing was happening to Monk's eyes. They were slowly  protruding. He groaned in agony, sank

down on the floor and held his  head with both hands. 

Doc Savage seized Monk, spread him out on the floor. He got  smelling salts from a medicine cabinet and hot

black coffee which  bubbled on the kitchen stove, and administered both to Monk. 

The homely chemist sat up after a time, his eyes normal again. He  looked about foolishly. 

"That popeyed business!" he exploded. "It got hold of me! Hell! I  ain't no crook!" 

Ham suddenly threw back his head and screamed. He sank down on the  floor, rolled over and over, hands

clamped over his chest. After a  moment the others, who had been startled, realized he was gripped with

paroxysms of laughter. 

"I always knew," he gulped, "that the missing link was a crook at  heart." 

Monk got up suddenly, glaring, fists clenched. Then he looked  extremely pained, his eyes seemed about to

pop, and he sat down and  held his head. 


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"Damn the luck!" he groaned. "Whenever I think of giving that  shyster what he's got conning, I get that goofy

feeling." 

Ham went off into fresh mirth. 

"Where's Pat?" Doc Savage asked. 

Ham stopped laughing as if he had been slapped. He seemed to think  deeply, to realize how he had been

laughing, and he looked slightly  sick. 

"They took her," he said, and his voice was hoarse, low. 

"Who did?" Doc demanded. 

"Those men who came in here with guns and tied us up," Ham  elaborated. "They were Boke's men." 

Basenstein pointed at the table and said, "They left a note for  you, Mr. Savage." 

DOC went to the table. The note was not in an envelope. He held it  up  a plain, white typewritten sheet,

folded once. 

"It's Renny's paper and they used Renny's typewriter," Ham said  grimly. "They wrote it out while they were

here, and the typist wore  gloves." 

Doc Savage read his own name, then went on through the body of the  typewritten missive: 

We are entertaining your attractive cousin,  Pat Savage. She will  be kept with your other  friend, Renny. The

two of them will be  released when you have disposed of this  mysterious Crime Annihilist. 

We could, of course, have taken Monk and  Ham. But you will need  assistance in finding  this Crime

Annihilist, so we left them  to help  you. 

P.S. The pig goes in the bargain. 

BOKE (By an agent) 

Basenstein said, "They were quite coldblooded and efficient." 

"On the contrary," Ham said, "they were scared stiff. They were  worried. They fear this Crime Annihilist." 

Basenstein murmured, "I thought that 

"You haven't seen as many crooks as I have," Ham told him. "These  babies were worried." 

Monk tapped his own chest. "I maintain this Crime Annihilist  business is a phony. It affects guys who ain't

crooks." 

Ham snorted unkindly. "If you're trying to prove that by your own  case  the evidence is not convincing." 

Doc Savage said, "We are leaving New York City immediately." 


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Basenstein jumped violently. "But why?" 

The bronze man went over and switched on a radio masked in a  modernistic cabinet. He did not tune in a

station, but set the dials on  an empty frequency. The set began to spew and crackle. 

"Blazes!" muttered Monk. "Such static!" 

"Growing worse by the hour," Doc said quietly. 

Ham, comprehending, nearly dropped his sword cane. "You mean that  this  this static has something to do

with the Crime Annihilist?" 

The bronze man nodded. "Exactly. The experiments in the laboratory  proved it conclusively." 

"You say we are leaving the city," Basenstein murmured. "Where are  we going." 

"That," Doc told him, "will have to remain unknown to you. We will  go by plane, and you will be

blindfolded." 

Basenstein simply spread his hands in baffled agreement. "We will  eat now," Doc said. "It may be some time

before we get another chance." 

Chapter XIV. BOKE DECIDES

DOC Savage, Monk and Ham moved into the kitchenette where Renny,  who was a skilled cook as well as a

great engineer, kept a store of  food which he prepared himself on occasion. 

"I am not hungry," Basenstein said miserably, and sat down in a  chair. 

"You will be when you smell the grub," Monk told him. 

Basenstein remained in the front room, looking very down cast. But  the moment the other three men were out

of sight, he produced his  pencil and paper furtively and began to write. He scribbled briefly and  in great

haste. His efforts to find more silver coins to weight this  missive were futile, so with an animated grimace of

regret, he  contributed his watch to the purpose. 

As before, he got the window up silently, took a careful aim and  hurled his message. Then he carefully shut

the window. 

The wind had died completely; in the chill morning calm, the note  fell with scarcely a flutter, landing in the

street. Basenstein winced  as it hit, for the watch had been an expensive one. 

A man, bundled to the eyes in topcoat and muffler, ran out into the  street, scooped up the note and the wreck

that bad been the watch, and  retreated. He did not glance upward or otherwise behave suspiciously. 

The man had been waiting inside an apartment house doorway, but he  did not return to that spot. Instead, he

walked down the street, not  too rapidly, and turned the first corner. He seemed to be searching for  a taxicab.

There was only one machine parked near by, and he entered  it. 

"Drive north," he directed. 


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The hackman put his vehicle into motion, and as he did so, he  reached down to a secluded spot under the seat

and grasped a small wire  which had a ring in the end. He pulled this out and held it several  moments. 

In the rear of the hack, the passenger was reading the message  which Basenstein had thrown from the

window of Renny's apartment. He  made a clucking sound of Surprise as he noted the contents: 

Savage has Crime Annihilist secret  and is leaving the city for  mysterious  purpose 

The reader absently put a hand over his mouth and coughed. He  coughed again, more violently, then seemed

to strangle slightly.  Suddenly his eyes flew wide and he wrenched at the door handle. 

¡'Lemme out of this damned thing!" he yelled. 

The driver grinned wolfishly, but the faintness of the passenger 5  words showed that the cab body was as

nearly. soundproof as it could be  made. The fare was still wrenching at the door handle, but the door,

mysteriously locked, would not open. The passenger's struggles became  weaker. He still gagged and coughed

and beat his chest. 

In a few moments, he sagged down on the floorboards and his  spasmodic kicking subsided. 

The cab driver turned into a side street, reached around and opened  the cab door easily from the outside. He

drove for a few moments to let  the gas, which had overcome the fare, be swept out by the inrush of  fresh air.

Then the chauffeur felt under the seat to make certain the  gas container trip valve, operated by pulling the

concealed wire, was  closed. 

Stopping the machine, the driver got out. He felt the wrist of the  man in the rear. There was a strong pulse. 

The driver appropriated the message. Then he hauled the unconscious  passenger out, dumped him on the

sidewalk, got back behind the wheel  and drove off rapidly. 

THE taxi driver turned west, ignored two shivering citizens who  tried to flag him down, and crossed Central

Park on one of the express  lanes which were sunken below the sidewalks, bridle paths and  boulevards. He

pulled to the curb before a brownstone house in the  Fifties, got out and entered a door which was dropped

three steps below  the sidewalk level. The door was barred heavily on the inside, and a  thickshouldered man

stood behind it. 

"Something for the boss," said the driver. 

The man at the door lifted one thick shoulder toward the upper  regions, but said nothing. The driver mounted

a narrow stairway. It was  dark in the house, the air was warm and smelled of mimosa. 

The message carrier came to a door, shoved through, and grinned  sourly at the muzzles of several pistols

which were trained in his  direction. 

"What's the idea of not knockin'?" somebody snarled. 

"Nuts to you!" said the driver, and went to a door, opened it and  admitted himself into the kitchen. There was

a dumbwaiter shaft, and he  opened the door of this. 

"Boke!" he called into the shaft. 


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It was a brief moment before the utterly pleasant voice of Boke  demanded, "Well, what is it?" 

"This phony Basenstein threw a note out of Doc Savage's window,"  said the driver. "I glommed onto it." 

"Send it up," Boke requested. 

Complying with the order, the driver reached into the shaft,  grasped the ropes and ran the dumbwaiter down.

He weighted the note in  place, using a heavy pistol cartridge for the purpose, and ran the  platform back up.

Then he listened. A moment later, he grinned. 

Up above, wherever he lurked, the mysterious Boke was cursing  heartily, and there was little laughter in his

voice. 

"What fools we are!" Boke swore expressively. "The whole thing is  perfectly clear!" 

"You mean you know who the Crime Annihilist is?" the driver  demanded. 

"Of course!" said Boke. 

"'Who is he?" 

"This note you just delivered gave it away," said Boke. "See if you  cannot figure it out. In the meantime, wait

down there. Tell the  doorman that we shall have callers shortly. He is to admit them when  they give the

password, 'Desperate Measures.' 

"What are these guys gonna be?" 

"Do not worry about that," said Boke. "You will be able to  recognize most of them." 

That terminated the conversation, and the driver left the  dumbwaiter shaft. 

AT the top of the shaft, the room from which Boke had spoken was  dark, the curtains being drawn tightly,

and additional heavy draperies  spread out to shut off every vestige of outside light. The figure of  Boke

himself was completely lost in the black void. 

The door of the room was opened and Boke stepped out. He crossed a  hallway and entered a room in which

Patricia Savage, Renny and Janko  Sultman were bound and gagged. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, was tethered in a corner by a chain. Renny  eyed Boke intently. The bigfisted

engineer was seeking to pick out  details about the man's appearance which would later serve to identify  him.

He was seeing as much of Boke as he had ever seen. 

For Boke wore a long topcoat  a grotesquely long topcoat which was  like a robe and covered even his shoes.

Above that, a muffler was tied.  Colored glasses and a hat so huge that it sat down over Boke's cars  topped off

the disguise. 

Boke presented a ridiculous figure. He was a laughable apparition.  But the disguise was effective. 

He stood over Janko Sultman and looked at the latter's upstanding,  frizzled hair. Sultman's small mustache

was pulled out of shape by the  gag which distended his jaws. 


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"You are a clever rascal," Boke stated reluctantly, and laughter  and pleasantness was once more in his voice.

"Even if you did try to  doublecross me." 

Janko Sultman made inarticulate sounds around his gag. 

"I hired you to investigate this 'college' which Doc Savage  maintains in upstate New York," Boke continued.

"The way you did it  shows you are clever. I need clever men now. Therefore, I think I shall  give you another

chance." 

Sultman croaked more vehemently at this. 

Boke bent down, untied Sultman and removed the gag, then  straightened swiftly and stepped back, hands

buried in the topcoat  pockets, where bulges indicated the presence of guns. 

"Come," Boke directed. "We will have a conference downstairs." 

Pat and Renny glared as Boke and Sultman left the room. 

Sultman stumbled as he moved, for he was stiff from being tied. It  was some moments before he spoke. 

"What about Lizzie?" he demanded. 

"Lizzie?" Boke laughed dryly, hollowly. "During the night, Lizzie  passed away with his eyes protruding." 

"You mean he's dead?" Sultman gulped. 

"Exactly!" Boke agreed. "He was a victim of the Crime Annihilist." 

Sultman was introduced into the presence of the men in the room  downstairs. These looked him over so

viciously that Sultman,  frightened, slunk into a corner, seated himself and said absolutely  nothing. 

Boke now retired to another room. Taking up a telephone, he  proceeded to make numerous calls. At all times

he used a disguised  voice. The name of Boke did not seem unknown to the individuals he  called, and when

the pleasant Voice requested their presence, at a  conference aimed at their own good, most of them agreed. A

few, though,  did refuse suspiciously. But Boke seemed to think his average was very  good. 

OUTSIDE, the city streets were beginning to fill, although the hour  was unnaturally early. It was especially

notable that many of the  pedestrians carried traveling bags, and were headed in the direction of  railway

stations. 

Fear was on almost every face. Women were nervous, and here and  there, one was hysterical. The people

bought newspapers, read them and  became grim and pale. More than one individual started for his office,  got

as far as the nearest newsstand, bought a paper, then read it and  went back and packed his baggage. 

The headlines were unbelievable. The story was the most fantastic  within the memory of many. 

Almost fifty persons had died in New York City during the previous  night. The eyes of all had protruded. 

Baffled physicians were now advocating that the city be evacuated,  for nowhere else in America was any one

dying with his eyes popping. 


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Boards of health in nearby cities, it was reported, were holding  hasty sessions to decide if it would not be

best to quarantine New  Yorkers, in order that the popeyed malady might not spread. 

A specialist had arrived from Chicago, and was as mystified as  anybody as to the cause of the deaths. 

An astronomer who was something of a publicity hound had declared  he believed mysterious atomic streams

were being shot to the earth from  outer space, and were causing the strange deaths. His statements were  given

quite a play and his picture was prominent. He based his  declaration on the unusual amount of static every

one was hearing on  their radios. 

Indeed, the static was now so bad that the police radio cars were  helpless to receive calls. Radio engineers

were investigating the  phenomenon, and most of them attributed it to the storm and to spots on  the sun. The

only fault with this theory was that the astronomical  observers insisted there had been no unusual number of

sun spots. 

At midmorning came the supreme surprise. 

Extra editions brought the report. 

All of the popeyed death victims were criminals! 

John Henry Cowlton, the Park Avenue playboy who had been the first  victim, had been discovered to be a

clever society jewel thief with  many robberies and at least one murder on his record. 

Everett Buckett, the Wall Street wolf who was the second victim,  was a leader in an enormous

stockswindling gang, and at least two  persons they bad swindled had been murdered to shut their mouths. 

And so it went down the list. The police were now madly at work  investigating records of the dead, and in

most cases they were finding  plenty to show that the corpse, in life, had been far from honest.  Individuals

who had been supposedly possessors of lilywhite characters  were being found to have been crooks. There

were exceptions, but the  police freely intimated they expected to find these were crooks, too. 

Strangely enough, this did not quiet the citizens of New York. If  anything, the horror increased. Not all of the

dead crooks were persons  who had committed heinous crimes. One man had been beating his wife  when he

fell dead with his eyes sticking out. 

The newspapers became wilder, if possible. They freely predicted  that something had happened to the world,

starting in New York City,  and that every dishonest man was going to die, no matter how small his  offense

against society. 

It was surprising how many people began to remember little slips.  It was surprising the frantic efforts they

took to remedy them, too.  The mission down on the Bowery reported an increase in converts.  Unusual

numbers of persons were observed entering churches. 

Police stations began to receive nervous visitors who wished to  confess crimes, thinking that might help.

These first comers were  usually petty offenders. 

Then some great brain down at police headquarters got an idea. He  promptly gave out an interview saying he

was sure that these crooks who  confessed their crimes were safe from the popeyed death. 

The newspapers printed that, and the cops sat back to reap a heavy  harvest of scared crooks. 


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LONG before noon, however, the first of a series of sinister  visitors arrived at the house now occupied by the

mysterious Boke and  his gang. This individual arrived in a large car, driven by a  chauffeur, and his machine

was preceded and followed by two other cars,  in each of which rode four grimlooking bodyguards. 

The escort cars parked up the street while the man in the limousine  alighted and entered the house. 

The doorman goggled at the visitor, recognizing him as one of the  most famous barons of the "alky" racket

during Prohibition days. The  big shot was now the king of the policy racket and considered to be  many times

a millionaire. 

The czar of crime looked scared. 

Shortly afterward, more visitors arrived. Without exception, they  were gang leaders. They were not only

crooks and killers, these men,  they were gentry who had attained a point where they hired lesser thugs  to do

their dirty work. They were the overlords of crime. 

It was a choice collection which finally gathered in the upstairs  room. Fully threefourths of the organized

crime in New York City and  environs was represented. 

Boke appeared. He still wore his comedy character disguise of long  overcoat and muffler and colored

spectacles. 

Some one growled at Boke that he was among friends and he'd better  get out of his disguise if he knew what

was good for him, but Boke told  the speaker to go to hell, then began making a speech. So pleasant was

Boke's voice that every one was held spellbound. 

Boke recited the names of some of the victims of the past night's  holocaust, names which were very well

known to most of those present.  Mention of the bankers, however, brought forth scowls, for these

professional crooks considered their operations amateur competition. 

"You will notice, gentlemen, that all of the unfortunate victims  are men outside the law," said Boke. 

"Nix!" said a fat crook. "The law ain't got a thing on me, but I  had one of them spells anyhow. I damn near

croaked." 

Boke said patiently, "'What I meant was that every one who has died  was, to put it bluntly, a criminal. If you

want to use nicer words,  call them unsocial individuals." 

"Something's poppin' off the damn crooks," said one fellow bluntly.  "So what?" 

"I think it is time we did something about it," Boke announced.  "Otherwise we are all likely to die. Just how

many of you men have had  queer feelings in your heads during the night." 

Considering that some of the crooks, out of pride, and maybe from  force of habit, lied about it, it was evident

that a large number of  them had experienced seizures, or had men in their gangs who had had  the spells. 

Boke stated, "I want you to work with me and take my orders. An  individual known as the Crime Annihilist

is causing these deaths. He is  out to rid the world of criminals. I am probably the only living man  who knows

who the Crime Annihilist is." 


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Boke said all of that very rapidly, so no one could get in an  objection before it was all out. Then he gave them

time to think it  over. Some of these big shots had gained their positions by shooting  all competitors, and had

brains which worked very slowly. So Boke gave  them plenty of time. 

Then Boke passed the note around: 

Savage has Crime Annihilist  secret and is leaving the city  for  mysterious purpose. 

"That came from a very reliable source," said Boke. 

THE filched message came back to Boke; he then read it aloud,  slowly and distinctly. Every one present had

pretended to read the  missive, but Boke knew that some of the big shots could not read a  word, and he did not

want to embarrass anybody. 

"Doc Savage!" a poultry racketeer chief snarled. "I've been afraid  of that guy for years, thinkin' he might get

on my trail. But I never  thought he'd pull anything like this!" 

"It's Savage," another snapped emphatically. "The bronze guy is a  mental wizard. He can do anything. He's

thought up some way of wipin'  out criminals wholesale." 

Another man groaned, "Boys, let's all catch a steamer for Europe  until this blows over." 

"And give up my sweet pickin's!" jeered the man beside him. "Not  much!" 

"But supposing the Crime Annihilist is not Doc Savage?" said  another man. 

"Everything points to Savage as the Crime Annihilist," Boke told  them. "At first, I suspected a man named

Sidney Lorrey, but he  ah,  went insane and killed himself by blowing up his laboratory on a  barge." 

"I read about that fire in the paper," said a voice. 

"I have captured two of Doc Savage's very close friends," Boke said  pleasantly. "One is his cousin, Patricia

Savage. The other is the  engineer, Renny. I have told Doc Savage to produce the Crime  Annihilist, or the two

prisoners will be killed." 

The assembled masterminds of crime looked at Boke with a new  interest. 

"For the love of little dogs," one muttered. "You went up against  that bronze guy and got away with it?" 

"I did," Boke stated with some pride. "Furthermore, I have kept  several jumps ahead of him." 

"What do you advise doing?" a voice queried. 

"Keep close track of Doc Savage," Boke announced. "Then lead the  bronze man into a trap, using my two

prisoners as bait." 

An evilfaced man in the back of the room yelled, "And then let me  have 'im! I'll take care of 'im!" He drew a

big automatic, waved it  dramatically. 

The gun arm gesticulated more and more violently, then the  bloodthirsty man's other arm joined in waving,

and he began to stagger  around and make gargling noises. This persisted for some moments, while  the others


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stared in horror. The victim fell down on the floor, kicked  violently, rolled over on his back and became

quiet. 

His eyes were almost out of their sockets. 

Chapter XV. UPSTATE

DOCTOR Mortimer Basenstein at the precise instant that the gang  leader died in Boke's presence, was

feeling desperately in his coat  pocket for the book of blank papers on which he had been writing his  notes.

Basenstein was worried. He had laid his coat aside for a moment  while he shaved, and the book of blanks had

disappeared. 

Basenstein walked nervously around the living room, looking behind  modernistic divans and under chairs,

but without locating his vanished  property. 

He went to a door and peered through, then stood there for a  moment, fascinated. 

Doc Savage was taking his exercises. Rather, he was just completing  them. 

Monk sat on a bed, and after a casual glance at Basenstein when he  first appeared, continued to watch Doc

and perspire. Monk always  perspired when he watched Doc work out. Such was the power of  suggestion

provoked by the bronze man's strenuous routine. 

For nearly two hours the bronze man had been working Out, going  through a ritual to which he had adhered

with daily regularity since  childhood. He had already finished the musclebuilding part of the  exercises,

which were similar to the ordinary physical culture  movements, although more strenuous. 

A portable case contained other and more unusual appurtenances to  the exercise routine. These consisted of a

device which emitted sound  waves above and below the audible range, careful use of which had, in  the

course of years, given the bronze man an almost supersensitive  hearing. 

There was a collection of phials holding various Odors, and the  bronze man identified these repeatedly to

make more delicate his sense  of smell. He read pages of Braille printing, the system of upraised  dots designed

for the blind, to sharpen his sense of touch. And there  were other devices, more complex, which he had

designed himself. 

The bronze man's giant frame showed little evidence of fatigue,  although he had not slept during the night. 

Basenstein went back and continued his hunt for his note book, but  with no greater luck than before. A few

moments later, Doc Savage  entered the room and strolled casually toward the window. 

He bent suddenly, moved a corner of a small rug, then straightened.  He held the missing book of blank

sheets. 

"This yours?" he asked Basenstein. 

Basenstein made a pretense of feeling of his pocket, then smiled.  "Why, yes, I believe it is. It must have

dropped out of my pocket." 

Basenstein took the pad of blanks and masked a relieved sigh as he  pocketed them. There had been nothing


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written on them, so no harm was  done. But he needed those blanks for future secret messages. 

A bit later, Doc Savage joined Monk in the bedroom. Ham was not  present in the apartment. 

"He smell a rat?" Monk asked softly. 

"No," Doc replied. "I believe he thought he actually had dropped  the book of blanks." 

Monk now slipped from a pocket the uppermost sheet which had lately  adhered to Basenstein's pad of blank

paper. 

The sheet had been treated in a manner familiar to police experts   by the use of chemicals. As a result, the

tracings of messages which  had been written atop it were discernible as faint lines. Fortunately,  they had not

been written one exactly atop the other, so it was not  difficult to read them. 

The first stated: 

Doc Savage got orders to find Crime  Annihilist on pain of having  Renny killed. 

The second was the missive which had eventually found its way under  the eyes of the mysterious Boke. 

"This Basenstein is a phony," Monk growled. "He's a spy." 

"Obviously," Doc agreed. 

Monk got up. "I'm gonna bump 'im around a little and start him  talking." 

"Wait," Doc said. "We will let him play along with us." 

The homely Monk squinted at the bronze man. "You don't very often  have an idea that sounds as nutty as

that." 

Unperturbed, Doc said, "We may find use for this Basenstein."  The  telephone rang. It was Ham. "All set," he

advised. 

TWO hours later, Doc Savage was maneuvering a trimotored speed  plane through the bumpy air over the

mountainous upstate section of New  York. The clouds were low and thick, and the air surprisingly warm, for

a sudden thaw  warm winds out of the south  had followed the storm. 

Snow still remained on the hilltops, but it was melting rapidly and  sheets of water covered the bottoms of

draws, the small meadows;  streams were writhing torrents of muddy water. 

Ham occupied the cockpit with the bronze man. Ham looked very  unlike his usual self, his face being darker

and his hair possessing a  reddish color. This was part of the disguise Ham had donned in order to  assemble

equipment without being molested by the police. The job had  fallen on Ham because he possessed a physical

appearance less striking  than that of Doc Savage or the gorillalike Monk. 

Monk came forward, leaned close and growled, "That mug Basenstein  is at it again." 

"What now?" Doc asked. 


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"He's writing notes," Monk advised. "Whenever we pass over a town,  he drops one out." 

"I had noticed that," Doc admitted. 

Monk blinked his small eyes. "Well, ain't we gonna do anything  about it? This guy will get to thinking he's

good after while." 

"Let him alone," Doc said. "He may prove very useful." 

Grumbling under his breath, Monk retreated to the rear of the  cabin. 

Ham asked curiously, "When did you first get wise to this  Basenstein?" 

"When he joined us at Sidney Lorrey's barge laboratory," Doc  replied. 

"Good night!" Ham exploded. "How?" 

"Remember that I looked around the vicinity of the barge when we  came near it?" Doc asked. 

"Yes." Ham nodded. "And you found Basenstein skulking." 

"I also found several men waiting in the background," Doc said.  "They were wondering if Basenstein would

succeed in deceiving us." 

Ham exploded. "And you let Boke think his agent, this Basenstein,  had taken us in from the first! What was

th  " 

Monk yelled, "Thar she blows!" 

THE terrain below had become wilder, more rugged. A single road, a  trail, barely discernible in the murky

afternoon light, progressed  through the timber, following creeks and tiny valleys for the most  part. The road

ended at a massive metal gate. 

From the gate, a high, stout wire fence ran in a circle which  enclosed many acres. This fence, woven,

surmounted with barbed strands,  was fully fifteen feet high. 

From the air, it looked as if the fence enclosed only a small lake  and a log building which might have been a

hunting lodge. On one side  of the lake, shoving its bald mass up to a considerable prominence, was  a hill

which seemed to be of solid, gray stone. 

There was nothing else inside the fence  just the lodge, the lake  and the bleak stone hill. 

But back from the gate, perhaps a mile, surmounting a hill of its  own, was a small, unpretentious cabin. 

Doc Savage studied that cabin at great length through the  binoculars. 

Then he sent the plane down over the fenced enclosure and circled  the lodge near the gate. 

A man came out of the lodge, which was situated near the gate. He  wore rough woods garments and might

have been a caretaker. He looked up  at the plane. 


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Doc Savage turned the controls over to Monk, leaned from the cabin  window and made semaphore signals

with his arms. 

Below, the man on the ground laid himself fiat on his back so that  his own semaphored reply might be more

distinguishable. His arms jerked  to various angles. 

Ham, going back in the plane cabin, chose the moment of the  signaling to stumble and fall headlong onto

Basenstein, with the result  that their passenger, if he could read the semaphore signals, missed  out on them. 

Doc Savage drew back and said, "Everything is quiet." 

Then he resumed the controls and sent the plane away from the  strange enclosure, strange because there was

no good reason why any one  should want to fence off so thoroughly a piece of ground in this  wilderness. 

The plane was an amphibian, and the bronze man cracked the landing  wheels up so that the floats were clear

for a descent on water. 

"Blazes!" Monk whispered. "Aren't we gonna land at the 'college'?" 

"And give the secret away to Basenstein?" Doc countered. 

"We could pitch him overboard," Monk suggested hopefully. 

"No," Doc replied. "Basenstein is serving a very useful purpose. He  may save us a great deal of trouble." 

Monk sighed. "Blasted if I get this." 

The plane swept over another small lake. Doc tilted the craft down,  pinched the throttles and changed the

propeller pitch. Wing flaps made  automatic adjustment for their decreased speed. They settled on the  lake

surface without undue commotion or shock. 

The water was murky with mud, and when Doc cut the three motors,  they could hear the gurgle and roar of

freshets emptying into the lake.  There was still snow under the larger' trees, but it was fast melting.  The

ground was all but covered with a film of water. Even the air  seemed saturated. 

"A swell time for camping out," Monk complained. 

"Stay in the plane," Doc advised. "It will be more comfortable." 

But Monk and Ham both spilled Out in the shallow water and waded  ashore with the bronze man, leaving

Basenstein behind in the plane. 

"Listen, Doc," Monk said hopefully. "How about giving us the  lowdown?" 

"Yes," Ham put in. "Just what is behind this seemingly pointless  trip up here?" 

"The Crime Annihilist and his work," the bronze man said slowly.  "Unless my guess is wrong, we will find

the whole solution near here." 

Then the bronze man moved away, seemingly without baste, and  stepped behind a clump of small evergreens.

Monk and Ham waited for him  to reappear, became suddenly suspicious, and ran to the thicket 


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The bronze man was gone. 

"DANG it!" Monk complained, and endeavored to follow Doc's trail.  He lost it within a few yards. 

"You might as well give it up, you hairy mistake," Ham advised.  "Doc suspects some one, but has no proof;

so he will not express an  opinion." 

They stood there, snapping at each other quarrelsomely. It occurred  to neither to glance back toward the

plane, which was at the moment  shut off from their view by brush. 

In the plane cabin, Basenstein was furtively busy. The big aircraft  was fitted with radio

transmittingandreceiving apparatus, and  Basenstein was crouched before the instrument panel. The set was

a  strange one, and he showed by the facility with which he got it in  operation that he was not unfamiliar with

radio apparatus. 

He raised the wavelength adjustment slightly, then cut the  microphone into circuit and spoke rapidly. 

"Basenstein reporting," he repeated over and over. "Basenstein  reporting." 

"Report," directed a voice over the receiver. 

"Doc Savage landed plane on lake," Basenstein stated into the  transmitter, then gave a surprisingly accurate

description of the  lake's whereabouts. 

"Excellent!" said the operator of the other radio. "Any further  information on who the Crime Annihilist is?" 

Basenstein hesitated. "I have been thinking," he said at last. "Doc  Savage is acting very strangely about this

affair. I think his own men  are puzzled. It may be that Doc Savage is actually the Crime  Annihilist." 

"I think that myself," said the distant one. 

Basenstein declared, "It is dangerous for me to talk;" then he  severed the radio connection. 

He carefully returned the dials to the setting at which he had  found them, and lifted his head to see if he had

been observed. He  could see no one. He thrust his head out of the cabin, and could hear  Ham and Monk

squabbling. 

MONK and Ham, as they inevitably did when together for long, had  gotten around to personalities and the

matter of Habeas Corpus. 

"You hairy freak!" Ham snapped. "That hog has been a pain to me  from the beginning, and I hereby state that

what has happened to him  does not worry me at all." 

Monk glared. He opened and shut his hairy hands. 

"Maybe it doesn't now," he growled. "But it's going to later.  Because if anything has happened to that hog,

I'm gonna work out on  that neck of yours!" 

"Any time you're ready!" Ham invited, and flourished his sword cane  meaningly. 


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Monk scowled and picked up a convenient limb. The bough was as  thick as his arm, but the homely chemist

handled it as a schoolmaster  would a switch. He started for Ham purposefully. 

Then he pulled up, dropped the limb, looked dazed, and grasped his  head. His eyes popped the merest trifle. 

"Blazes!" he gulped and sat down heavily. "Owww! My head!" 

Ham said, "I should cut your throat and put you out of your  misery," and smiled widely. 

Monk glowered, tried to get up, then relaxed, grimacing as a fresh  burst of pain seized him. 

"What ails you?" Ham asked cheerfully. 

"That Crime Annihilist funny feeling in my head, damn you!" Monk  grated. 

"You get it every time you try to jump me, don't you?" Ham asked  hopefully. 

"Yes, blast you," Monk admitted. 

Ham's large orator's mouth stretched in a smile that threatened his  ears. He leaned on his sword cane and

began to speak in a gentle,  unhurried tone. 

There were many things which Ham had long wanted to tell Monk, but  had not dared. Monk, with his apish

strength, could whip half a dozen  like Ham, and the dapper lawyer knew it. The knowledge had tied his

tongue. 

But now he unburdened himself. He went far back in the niches of  his memory and dug up choice expletives,

goading personalities and  plain insults. He heaped them on Monk with an unholy joy. He became  flushed and

started perspiring, and his eyes turned bright and he  stopped frequently for a good laugh. 

Monk sat and took it. Several times, he got to his feet as if  intent on slaughtering Ham, regardless of the

consequences. But the  terror of the mysterious Crime Ann ihilist's spell overtook him and  forced him back.

He finally stuffed a little finger in each ear. 

Ham waxed more and more eloquent. The memory of all the past  insults Monk had ladled out, all of the

Irritations Monk had wrought  with the aid of his pet pig, his ventriloquism, came back to Ham's  thoughts.

They were legion. And Ham got verbal revenge for all of them. 

The moment was to stick in Ham's memory as the biggest of his  lifetime. He had long wanted to goad Monk

to the limit when the hirsute  chemist was in a position where he could not talk back. 

But Ham's enjoyment came to a rough ending. 

A plane, dropping down out of the sky with motors shut off, so that  it made little noise, was almost overhead

before it was noticed. Even  then, Monk and Ham did not discover it. 

A wild yell from Basenstein drew their attention to the yellow  amphibian. 

Men leaned out of the plane overhead. They held black, lumpish  objects in their hands. While their craft was

still some distance away,  they began hurling the objects overboard. The things burst in the brush  with

plopping violence. 


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Ham, who had been addressing Monk as if the homely chemist were his  bitterest living enemy, suddenly shed

his animosity. 

"I got a lot more to tell you!" he snapped. "I want you alive to  hear it!" 

Then he seized Monk, helped him erect, and tried to aid him in  reaching cover. But the plane was too fast for

them. Passing overhead,  it left a rain of the black metal things which burst dully, and Monk  and Ham

suddenly felt the painful bite of tear gas in their eyes. They  were almost instantly helpless. 

MONK, hanging trees and brush in an effort to flee the vicinity,  yelled, "Dang you, Ham, if you hadn't been

making so much noise, we  would have heard that sky wagon!" 

Ham said, "Shut up and run, you hairy accident!" 

Over toward the lake, they could hear more of the big teargas  bombs bursting. Basenstein was yelling

something that they could not  understand. Then the noise of the plane motor above decreased sharply;  they

caught the whine of air in flying wires, then the noisy rush of  water as it landed on the little lake. Staccato

bursts of the motor  brought it closer. 

Monk and Ham, knowing fully just how helpless they were, bent every  effort to leaving the vicinity. But they

heard men running behind them,  men who came closer with a speed which proved that they were wearing

protective masks. 

Some one struck Monk heavily from behind. Then, strangely enough,  the one who had struck the blow began

to cry out in pain. 

"You fools!" said the utterly pleasant voice of Boke. "Keep calm!  Don't get excited. This Crime Annihilist

thing only hits you when  you're excited." 

"Dot is true," called Janko Sultman's slightly foreign accent. 

Hard things which could only be gun muzzles menaced Monk and Ham.  They were roughed about, and being

helpless, blinded as they were, had  of necessity to surrender. 

A triumphant gang of captors herded them back toward the planes,  after handcuffs were linked on their

wrists. 

Monk, reaching the lake and being ordered to wade out to the  planes, fell down purposefully, so that the tear

gas was washed from  his eyes. This, and the fact that its effects were already wearing off,  enabled him to see

a little. 

Staring at his captors, he identified Janko Sultman at once.  Several other faces, familiar to him, puzzled him

briefly, then he  realized he had seen them in the newspapers. They were the faces of  bigshot criminals. 

Monk searched for Boke  and was disgusted when he discovered that  the individual who must be Boke was

effectively disguised by a flying  suit and a muffler tied across his features. 

"Where is Doc Savage?" Boke demanded. 

Monk ignored that, and roved his eyes until he located Basenstein.  The plump physician was standing to one

side, but two of the plane  arrivals were positioned close to him. 


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"You called this gang!" Monk yelled angrily. 

"I did not!" Basenstein snapped. 

One of the men beside Basenstein demanded of the physician, "Where  is Doc Savage?" 

"I don't know, you damned rascal," said Basenstein. 

The questioner instantly launched a terrific blow with his fist.  Basenstein staggered backward, splashed flat in

the water, and his  split lips, oozing crimson, reddened the cold lake about his face. 

"You'll damned well talk!" yelled the man who had struck the blow.  He seemed about to say more, but

instead, seized his own head with both  hands and moaned, "The Crime Annihilist!" 

His eyes were protruding a little. 

"Take the two planes," Boke directed calmly. "Everybody aboard." 

Monk, eyes still streaming, peered wonderingly at Basenstein as he  was lifted and flung into one of the

planes. Monk was very puzzled.  Basenstein did not seem to be a member of Boke's crew. 

Almost together, the two planes took the air. 

Chapter XVI. DOUBLE TRAP

DOC Savage was almost two miles away and traveling back toward the  small lake with all the speed of which

his trained sinews were capable  when he heard the two planes take off. He had heard the strange  aircraft

approach the lake and had turned back. 

The bronze man halted, stood listening long enough to realize that  the two planes were headed in such a

direction as to fly near where he  stood, then he moved swiftly to one side, entering a clearing where he  could

signal the planes with some chance of being seen. 

The trimotored ship which Doc, Monk, Ham and Basenstein had flown  into the woods country appeared

almost at once. Doc gestured. The pilot  apparently saw him immediately, for the big ship heeled around in the

sky and came sliding toward him. 

The bronze man watched the quality of the flying intently. It was a  sloppy job; either Monk or Ham would

handle the controls far more  expertly. Warned that something was wrong, the bronze man retreated  hastily. 

Instantly, men popped heads and shoulders Out of the plane cabin.  They pointed rifles, revolvers, submachine

guns and sawedoff shotguns.  Tufts of woodland loam began to jump up around Doc. Then came the  reports

of the weapons, distinguishable over the sound of the planes. 

The second plane heeled in. This pilot was more expert. He kept his  craft near the stalling point, air speed at a

minimum. And some one in  the ship had a regulation aircraft machine gun, its ammo cans charged  with

tracers. Slugs ran down in a weaving gray string, chattered in the  mud, splashed pools of melted snow,

snipped twigs off the trees. 

Doc Savage whipped from one scanty shelter to another. The trees  here were not evergreens. Moreover, the


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surroundings had been burned  off a few years ago, so that the trees which now grew were young, thin  things

offering almost no safety. 

Below the clearing was a creek, a roaring torrent almost full from  bank to bank with snow water, and Doc

headed for that. There were  overhangs which might furnish shelter visible along the rim of the  stream. 

Again and again the planes dived, raining lead. The bronze man  dipped a hand inside his clothing, brought

out a tiny chemical smoke  bomb of his own concoction, and tossed it down beside him so that the  blooming

cloud of black smoke enveloped and hid him. He had used these  smoke bombs to escape on other occasions. 

But it did not work this time. Boke's men in the planes simply  swooped low and emptied out nearly half a

bushel of teargas bombs. Doc  was driven on toward the creek. 

Boke's plane dived again, every cabin window crowded with gunners.  They were experts with weapons, these

men; they had lived by them for  years. 

A delighted yell went up as Doc Savage caved down suddenly. The  pilot banked hastily. They could see the

bronze giant squirming on the  ground, could make out a flood of crimson spreading over his shirt  front. 

"He's hit bad!" Boke shrilled. 

Then they saw Doc drag out smoke bombs  one, two, three of them.  He flung them to the right, left and

ahead, so that a great cloud of  black spread over where he lay. 

The planes continued to dive and pour lead into the smoke, the roar  of motors and the stutter and bang of

guns mingling in a holocaust of  sound. 

A slight breeze, stirring through the soaked woods, pummeled the  smoke, shoved it aside, pushed it out over

the stream. 

Boke cursed shrilly through the muffler that he wore over his face,  for he had sighted a twisted form below,

reposing under the scanty  shelter of a tree. 

"He crawled away in the smoke," Boke yelled. "There he is! Get  him!" 

The plane moaned down, jerked its nose up and screwed a tight bank.  Guns clamored. Branches fell off the

tree under which the form lay.  Bark showered. Mud splashed. Water geysered. 

The form itself jerked about as bullets pummeled it. Flying mud  covered it until it was hardly distinguishable.

Again and again, the  planes dived and the attackers emptied gun magazines. 

Then, triumphant as chicken hawks which had made a kill, the two  craft spiraled in search of a landing place.

The clearing where they  had first sighted Doc Savage was too small to permit either ship to be  set down. And

there was no other opening of consequence near. 

"No need of landing, anyway," Boke shouted pleasantly. "He's dead!" 

JANKO Sultman, plump and excited, scrambled to Boke's side and  gripped the mastermind's arm. 

"Der Crime Annihilist!" he bellowed. "It is not harm us! It is no  more!" 


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Boke settled back in his seat. There was wild relief in his laugh. 

"Right!" be yelled amiably over the motor roar. "Every time we  became excited, or tried to kill, that infernal

spell of the Crime  Annihilist would strike. But this time it did not." 

"How you explain dot?" Sultman pondered in a shout. 

Boke waved an arm back at the creek bank where a bullettorn,  mudsplattered form lay under a ripped tree. 

"The Crime Annihilist is dead," he said. "It may be that we will  never know how he did it." 

Sultman shook his head slowly. "Dot was a strange thing, dot Crime  Annihilist thing." 

Boke now went forward, spoke to his pilot, and the aviator began  looking around for a clearing in the woods.

Finding one, he set his  plane down expertly enough, cut the motor, then turned in his seat to  watch the other

ship alight and taxi up alongside. 

Every one got out, excepting an armed guard watching over Monk, Ham  and Basenstein. 

The big shots disported themselves like small boys at the dismissal  hour on the last day of school. Their evil

minds had been relieved of a  burden and they showed it. The future looked rosy. They gathered around  Boke. 

"Let's get back to the big burg," one grinned. 

"I'll throw a party to celebrate," said another. "It'll be a party  to end all parties: Boy, I'll spend ten grand on

it!" 

"Where's' the guy who wanted to go to Europe?" shouted a third  delightedly. "Let's ride 'im on a rail." 

"I move we make up a kitty for Boke!" yelled some one. "I'll put in  ten grand to start the ball." 

"And I move this guy Boke peel that muffler off his face so we can  see who he is," bawled a voice. 

Boke held up an arm, motioning for silence. 

"Keep your money," he said. "You owe me plenty for showing you how  to get rid of this Crime Annihilist. I

want you to pay off by doing me  a favor." 

"Now what the hell?" somebody growled. 

"Unmask him," suggested a tough voice. "I've heard of this baby  Boke, and that's why I strung along with

him. But now I want to see his  map." 

Boke took a small automatic from his clothing. "I have a very good  reason for keeping my face hidden," he

said. "If you could see my face,  you would understand why." 

They looked at the automatic, not knowing just how to take its  threat. Some one asked, "Just what do you

want us to do?" 

"1 want you to raid Doc Savage's criminal curing 'college' and  force some of the surgeons there to divulge

certain information," said  Boke. 


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"College?" a beefy racketeer muttered. "What're you talkin' about,  buddy?" 

Boke began speaking. He told of the fact that criminals who became  entangled with Doc Savage had, in the

past, disappeared, and now this  had made him suspicious. He had hired Janko Sultman, he explained, to

investigate, and Sultman had, by months of painstaking investigation,  learned that Doc Savage maintained a

strange institution in upstate New  York, where he made honest men of these crooks. 

"We got hold of a minor attendant about the place and bribed him,"  Boke explained. "From him we learned

that Doc Savage had discovered  that crime is in a sense, a disease. In other words, there is a small  gland in

the human body the secretions of which have a great deal to do  with whether a man is a satisfied citizen or a

coldblooded criminal  with no sense of right and wrong." 

"What's this all leadin' up to?" someone interrupted. 

"Doc Savage treats this gland, making it function normally," said  Boke. "Or rather, his surgeons at the

institution do the treating." 

Boke paused, in order that suspense might rivet the attention of  his listeners upon his next words. 

"These surgeons know how to treat this 'crime' gland so as to make  a criminal, as well as cure him," he stated.

"It is that secret I want   the knowledge of how to make criminals." 

"Nuts!" growled a voice. "What's the idea? Where'll that put  anything in your pocket?" 

"You lack imagination," Boke chuckled. "It is my plan to seize  bankers, industrial magnates, politicians, and

administer them the drug  which will make them criminals. They will not know what is being done.  Later,

myself or my agents will approach these men and enlist them in  my unlawful enterprises. They will accept.

Having access to thousands,  even millions of dollars, they will, as criminals, appropriate those  funds. I will

make it my business to see that a share of the money gets  into my hands." 

"This," commented one of the big shots, "is the goofiest thing I  ever heard of." 

Boke said patiently, "I have thought it all out with great care. It  will work. The men I make into criminals will

not know exactly how  crimes are committed, and they will be highly susceptible to the clever  schemes which

I put under their noses." 

"Do I get this right?" asked a man who seemed more intelligent than  the rest. "You want to raid this 'college'

to get hold of a drug which  will destroy a man's sense of right and wrong?" 

"Exactly!" said Boke. 

"I'm with you," said the other. 

Arguments and discussions followed, with some of the masterminds of  crime holding out. But their

reluctance was not too strong, and it was  evident in a subtle way that Boke would win their aid. 

Half an hour later, they entered the planes and took to the air' 

WHEN Doc Savage, Monk, Ham and Basenstein had flown over the area  so strangely fenced off in the

wilderness, there had been no sign of  human life excepting the one man who had appeared at the log lodge

near  the gate. 


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There were fully two hundred men in sight now. They were all  attired exactly alike in neat white uniforms,

except for an individual  here and there who was dressed in blue. 

The men in white were arrayed in neat squads and were going through  marches and physicalculture

exercises, commanded by the men in blue. A  few of the white garbed figures strolled about, obviously

relaxing. 

These men in white were former criminals, although their present  appearance gave no indication of that fact.

They were healthy,  cleareyed, and each was developing an excellent set of muscles. Not  one of these men

could remember any of his past life. Each could recall  opening his eyes in a white room in this strange

enclosure in the  wilderness  that was all. 

Over 'by the log lodge, which was not large enough to shelter a  fraction of the men visible within the

enclosure, a man was seated  before a switchboard and an array of amplifiers: He wore an ordinary  telephone

headset, and was reading a late magazine. 

Suddenly, he straightened, gave the amplifier knobs judicious  turns, and an intent expression came over his

face. He turned to  another man, who was clad in the blue regalia. 

"Listening device has picked up the sound of plane motors," he  stated. "Sounds like two ships." 

The other man went to a button, pressed it three times, and three  great donging noises came from a gong

concealed somewhere. 

The results were miraculous. The men in white formed lines in  doublequick time and marched for the hill of

grayish rock. Doors opened  in the apparently solid stone and the files of men streamed through and  were lost

to sight. 

Within a very few minutes no one was left in sight in the whole  fencedin area. 

The man at the listening post continued to wait. It was not often  that airplanes passed over this remote region,

but when they did, the  patients at the strange "college" were whisked from view. Due to the  contour of the

surrounding country, it was only from an airplane that  the whiteclad patients could be seen. 

The planes appeared  two of them. The man at the listening post  recognized Doc's big trimotored craft, but

the other ship was a  stranger. The man went outside and semaphored a question with his arms. 

His answer was a stream of machinegun bullets which sent him  racing wildly for shelter. 

POSSIBLY Boke considered the strange institution below one  conceived only as a retreat where men's souls

were remade and their  lives altered, and, as such, a place without armament. He must not have  known that

Doc Savage, in planning the place, had foreseen the possible  contingency of a gang of criminals trying to

rescue one of their number  from an unwelcome life of honesty. 

There were many reasons why gangsters would want members of their  tribe out of the place. So, as Boke

suddenly discovered, thorough  defense mechanism had been installed. This was the first time it had  ever been

used. 

At numerous points, what looked like ordinary stretches of damp  woodland loam slid back, uncovering neatly

whitewashed concrete gun  pits. The weapons these housed were not large, nor were they toys,  either. The gun

muzzles lifted and began to follow the planes. This was  uncanny, because there was no hand guiding the


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weapons in the pits. 

Aiming was done by a blueclad man at a concealed station. He  simply sighted at one of the planes through a

telescope which was  attached to slides and cogs, and when he had crossed hairs on the  craft, he pressed a

lever. 

The guns began firing. The man in the remote firecontrol station  turned a lever and the white puffs of

bursting shells  they opened too  high at first  crawled down toward the plane, not aiming at it, but  ahead. 

The aircraft, pummeled and rent by the metallic storm, banked away,  but something had gone wrong with its

power plant, and it labored  along. 

The pilot tried to climb, and discovered his control wires were  damaged. He barely made it over the hill and

into a feathery clump of  evergreens, where he stalled away what speed he had and consigned  himself to

whatever goddess of luck that looks out for airmen, good or  bad. And the goddess came through. 

The plane lost its wings, undercarriage part of the empennage. The  cabin went flat; small boughs pierced it.

The noise was heard for two  miles. 

The pilot crawled out, picking glass parts of the instrument panel  from his features, looked around and

heaved a great sigh. Men were  getting out of the wreckage, some more banged up than others, but it  was

evident they were all going to be able to walk away from it. 

Overhead, the other plane circled. Boke was riding in that one, and  it was evident that unexpected discovery

that the "college" was a  hornet's nest had temporarily discouraged him. 

Chapter XVII. HARDBOILED'S MISTAKE

DOC Savage did not hear the roar as the plane crashed. But be did  see the white fruit of bursting antiaircraft

shells which preceded the  crackup. And be caught the distant pungs as the shells exploded,  although it was

very faint. 

The bronze man lay on the banks of the roaring stream, but not at  the point where bullets had been rained

from the planes. He was  downstream. 

There was a bullet hole through his Herculean torso. The slug,  fortunately, had come from a rifle, and it had

left a clean trail,  entering his back at one side of the neck and angling down, doing  something agonizing to a

few bones, and coming out in the thick,  magnificently developed pectoralis major muscle on the right side. 

The bronze man carefully thrust his right hand inside his shirt,  then got erect. He was clad only in shirt and

underclothing. 

He went up the stream and came to the spot where the planes had  fired upon him. He examined the thing they

had fired upon, thinking it  was his body  a bundle composed of twigs and leaves and a few sticks,  for

stiffening purposes, thrust into his clothing. He had left it there  under cover of the smoke, and as the wind

swept the smoke toward the  stream, had moved along with it and entered the cold water. The swim  which

followed was something he wished to forget. 

Looking over the clothing, he found the coat so ripped as to he  useless: the shoes, as well, had been torn

badly by the bullets; but  the trousers, under the coating of mud, were at least wearable. He  donned them. 


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Then he headed for the "college." 

The bronze man did not go as the crow flies, for only a crow or  other aerial traveler could go that way; this

country was not  wilderness for no reason at all. It was because it was almost  impenetrable. The hills were

sharp, multitudinous, and briars, thorny  bushes and low brush made a mat which would vie with a tropical

jungle. 

The most simple route was to head south to the road, then follow  that westward to the institution.

Accordingly, Doc Savage turned south. 

He reached the road. It was not graded, except where it of  necessity had to be leveled off a bit; the bridges

were of logs, and  the whole affair smacked of the pioneer days. But it was passable by  truck its whole length,

and served to bring in heavy supplies which  could not be carried handily by plane. 

The woods still dripped; the breeze was making some noise, and the  running streams kept up a wet

orchestration. That possibly accounted  for what happened next. Ordinarily, the bronze man was not taken

unawares. 

Ahead of him, a man stepped into the road. The fellow wore the  uniform of a New York City policeman. He

held a riot gun. 

"We want to talk to you," he advised loudly. 

Doc had stopped, and now he swung around slowly. More uniformed men  had appeared on either side and at

the rear. They numbered six  and a  leader. 

The leader was Inspector Clarence "Hardboiled" Humbolt. He alone  was not in uniform, and he wore

enormous overshoes and sheepskin pacs  instead of his tennis shoes. But he still hobbled along as if his feet

were raw stubs. Despite the feet, he looked as happy as a dog which had  just caught a rabbit. 

"We were afraid there wouldn't be a landing place up here for a  plane," he rumbled. "So we left our ship at

the last town and came on  by car." 

Doc Savage asked without emotion, "Have you any authority in this  part of the State?" 

Hardboiled shook the leather sap down out of his sleeve and swatted  the palm of a corded hand with it. 

"This is authority enough," he advised. "But I had the governor  issue myself and my men special

commissions before we left the big  town." 

Doc Savage shrugged. "Your man Basenstein seems to have balled  things up," he said. 

HARDBOILED jumped as if some one had stepped on his tender feel. He  peered owlishly at the bronze man, 

"What's that?" he growled. 

"Those notes Basenstein wrote you," Doc said. "They must have  resulted in Boke and his gang following us

up here." 

Hardboiled swatted his palm with the sap, scowled, expectorated,  and shifted from one foot to another. His

features became dark with  disgust. 


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"So I didn't fool you with Basenstein," he muttered. 

"No," Doc told him. "But you might have, if I had not overheard you  talking near Sidney Lorrey's barge

laboratory. Basenstein told a good  story. Just how much of it was the truth?" 

"Most of it," Hardboiled grumbled reluctantly. "Sidney Lorrey did  come to him to be treated, and he did talk

a lot of stuff about the  Crime Annihilist. He was either trying to say he was the Crime  Annihilist himself, or,

as I've been thinking later, he might have  known who the Crime Annihilist was. Basenstein used to be a

police  medical examiner. He called me. I decided to put him on your trail." 

"So I thought," Doc said dryly. 

Hardboiled glared. "Why'd you let 'im hang around if you knew who  he was?" 

"He was," Doc said, "an excellent alibi." 

Hardboiled swore. "Where's Basenstein?" 

A policeman, a short distance down the road, yelled, "Hey! Look  out, fellows!" 

There was a shot. Doc and the others whirled. They were just in  time to see the policeman running backward

madly and waving his arms.  The officer's heel hooked a bush and he went down so heavily that his  heels flew

up, then smacked back again; he coughed and a red spray went  into the air. 

From the dark woods a voice called, "Be good, coppers!" 

Then other voices shouted from the sides, and it was evident that  they were surrounded. 

Hardboiled snarled, reached for his hip  and Doc Savage, grasping  his arm, said, "You'll get your men

killed!" 

Two of the policemen dropped flat in the road, and for a moment it  seemed there would be a fight; then the

attackers circled and came out  in the roads, their ready submachine guns discouraging the policemen. 

"I know some of these mugs," Hardboiled gritted. "They're tough  lads!" 

The gunmen advanced, the officers were disarmed, then a slender man  with a seamy face, who appeared to be

in charge, relaxed and said,  "Won't this tickle Boke!" 

Doc Savage asked, "Will you tell me something?" 

"No," said the man. 

"What brought you up here?" Doc asked. 

The man laughed. "Just about every time that Basenstein sent  Hardboiled here a message, we either got it or

got a look at it.  Basenstein used the plane radio to tell Hardboiled where he had landed  with you fellows, and

we picked up the message." 

Hardboiled looked very disgusted and tried to stand so as to ease  his feet. 


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The man with the wizened face yelled. More gangsters came out of  the woods, dragging two prisoners. The

pig, Habeas, was with them. 

Pat Savage was one of the captives; Renny was the other. 

"We thought these might come in handy," smirked the gang  lieutenant. "Come on. We'll go see how Boke is

making out. 

BOKE, it was evident, was not making out in a manner satisfactory  to himself. They could hear him swearing

before they caught sight of  him. 

"Tsk, tsk," Pat said. "That lad is no gentleman." 

Two or three of Boke's men eyed Pat admiringly. They appreciated  her nerve. Hardboiled scowled at her and

demanded. "Don't you realize  they're liable to kill all of us?" 

Pat studied him as if trying to ascertain what made his temper bad,  then decided aloud, "It must be your feet." 

Boke came striding up and yelled, "Shut up! What is going on here?  I thought this bronze man was dead!" 

Some one told him about the capture. 

"Excellent," shouted Boke. "We will take them all, rope them  together and use them as a shield while we rush

that gate." 

Complying with that order, Monk and Ham were marched up and placed  with Pat, Renny, Doc and the

policemen. Shortly afterward, Basenstein  arrived under escort and was confined to the collection. 

"A fine spy you turned out to be," Hardboiled told him  sarcastically. 

"Well, that's gratitude," Basenstein snorted. "I hope you get  bunions on your hands as well as on your feet!" 

Hardboiled grinned in a way that showed he hadn't meant his  criticism. 

Boke confronted Doc Savage and announced, "You can save a lot of  trouble by giving me the ingredients of

the chemical which upsets this  socalled crime gland. That's what I want." 

The bronze man made no answer, Seemed not to hear. 

"Damn it!" Boke yelled. "Answer me!" 

Doc Savage looked straight over Boke's head, saying nothing. From  where he stood, he could see up the hill

on which stood the cabin that  was outside the fenced enclosure of the criminal "college"  perhaps a  mile

from the gate, although only about half a mile from where Doc now  stood. The cabin looked very forlorn and

deserted. 

"Answer me!" Boke screeched. 

Doc Savage said sharply, "You know your answer. What are you going  to do about it?" 

"Plenty!" Boke rapped, and turned away. 


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SOME seventy yards distant, an evergreen shrub stirred slightly. A  bit later, a stick broke. And after that, a

bird flew up noisily from  the side of the hill and sailed off in the direction of the cabin which  stood alone. 

Monk, speaking so that only Doc heard, asked, "Say, ain't there  somebody skulking over there?" 

"Yes," Doc said. 

"Did you see who it was?" Monk demanded. 

The bronze man shook a negative. 

"Must be one of his gang," Monk hazarded. 

"On the contrary," Doc said, "it is probably the Crime Annihilist." 

Monk looked as if he were about to be upset. He scratched his jaw  as best he could with his bound hands. 

"Blazes!" he muttered. "You really think the guy is up here in  person?" 

"There is," Doc said, "not the slightest doubt of it." 

Renny, who had shuffled over to hear the last, peered around  cautiously, then eyed his big fists, which were

purple from the  tightness of the cords which confined them. 

"How do you figure he's here, Doc?" he asked. 

"The Crime Annihilist stopped working shortly after our plane  appeared," said the bronze man. "It is logical

to suppose that he saw  our plane, feared we could trace him down, and shut off his device." 

Monk grunted, "So that's why the thing quit working." 

Up on the hill, another bird flushed up. This one was more distant,  nearer the cabin. 

"Whoever was hangin' around here is makin' for that cabin," Monk  said abruptly. 

Over toward the gate that led into the enclosure which held the  fantastic "college," they could hear Boke

yelling. He did not seem  particularly anxious for a pitched battle, not knowing just what  armament the fenced

area held. He was demanding that the secret of the  criminalmaking drug be given to him, or he would start

killing his  prisoners. 

"Is there such a drug, Doc?" Ham asked. 

The bronze man nodded. "There is. The concoction was discovered in  the course of experiments to learn how

this socalled 'crime' gland  could best be caused to function normally." 

Their captors had tied all of them by now, securing their wrists,  but leaving their ankles free, an ominous

prediction of what was to  come if worst turned to worst. Cotton rope had been used. The strands  were thin

and stout. 

Most of the men departed to a spot from which the gate could be  seen, anxious to learn how Boke's

negotiations would turn out. Only  four remained close to Doc Savage and the other prisoners, but they  held


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submachine guns with the safeties latched off. 

Doc Savage leaned against a tree as if weary, and worked an arm  against the coarse bark. Unnoticed, a button

came off his sleeve and  fell to the ground. A moment later he sat down, as if his strength had  given out. His

fingers picked up the button. 

It was white, as if constructed of ordinary pearl, but close  examination would have shown that it was of metal

and the edge, instead  of being merely rounded, was disked to a razor sharpness. A thin metal  band protected

this edge, and was easily broken off with the finger  nails, leaving the razor edge exposed. 

Two or three judicious slices cut almost through Doc's wrist bonds. 

He caught Monk's eye and flipped the button. Monk picked it up when  the guards were not looking, kept a

sober face as he discovered its  purpose, used it and passed it on to Renny. Renny gave it to Pat, and  Pat

passed it to Ham. 

Down by the gate, those inside the high fence had refused to have  anything to do with Boke's demands. 

Doc, pretending to writhe as though the pain from his shoulder were  unbearable, dug his hands down into the

ground and closed them over a  stone which had been almost hidden in the mud. 

"All right," he said suddenly, and flung the stone. 

Simultaneously, Monk, Ham, Renny and Pat came to their feet. 

THE flung rock, taking a machine gunner by surprise, dropped him  trembling in his tracks. The other three

gunmen, amazed, squawled out  an alarm and tried to get their weapons into play. 

Monk, reaching one, swung a fist as if he were driving a nail, and  the man went down. 

Two of the others got their rapidfirers chattering, but had no time  to aim before Ham and Renny were upon

them. Renny clubbed his man down  with slamming blows. Ham had a little trouble until Pat, running around

behind, rabbitpunched the gangster. Ham finished him off with an  uppercut. The pig, Habeas, began

squealing. 

"Get their guns!" Doc rapped. "And retreat up the hill!" 

Monk yelled, "Listen, there ain't nothing but that cabin at the top  of the hill! No place to hole up! Why not try

to get over the fence?" 

"Up the hill!" Doc repeated, and began untying Hardboiled Humbolt  and the other policemen. 

Hardboiled bellowed, "Ain't you gonna fight them mugs?" 

Doc said; "Get up that hill! Make for the cabin!" 

"Why not fight 'em?" Hardboiled howled. 

"Because some of them might he killed!" Doc rapped. "Get a move  on!" 


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The fugitives were stringing out up the hill, and a few bullets  were snapping through the timber in pursuit.

Due to the thickness of  the woods, the slugs were poorly aimed. 

Hardboiled, hopping along painfully with a disgruntled look, drew  up beside Renny and demanded, "'What's

eatin' that bronze guy? Why  don't he fight them birds? We could knock off about half of 'em with  them

Tommy guns." 

"Matter of principle," Renny rumbled. "Doc never kills anybody." 

"Hell!" said Hardboiled. "Killin' is too good for Boke and that  crowd!" 

"Shut up and run," Renny advised. "I don't know why Doc is makin'  for that cabin, but he has some reason." 

The bronze man was not leading the retreat, but bringing up the  rear. From time to time, he discharged a burst

from one of the captured  submachine guns, but he shot high, merely discouraging the rapidity of  pursuit. 

It became evident that they were going to reach the cabin before  they were overhauled. Monk was carrying

his pet pig. 

Hardboiled, reaching the cabin finally, ran around it and looked  down the slope beyond. 

"Hell's bells!" he roared. "We're stuck!" 

The hill sloped gently; there was little underbrush which would  furnish shelter; and the tree trunks themselves

were thin, none being  greater than six inches in diameter. 

Doc Savage paid no attention. He was studying the wet ground before  the cabin. It bore fresh tracks. Some of

the prints were so recent that  they were still filling with water, and they had been made by the same  pair of

feet, judging from their likeness m sue. 

The bronze man mounted to a creaking porch and shoved Inside. The  room was large, roughly furnished, the

principal fixture being a large  bench strewn with wires, bits of metal and vacuum tubes of diverse  design. 

Across the room was a closed door. A voice came from behind it. 

"Get away from me!" it shrilled. 

MONK, diving into the cabin behind Doc, let his jaw sag down, then  snapped it up to demand wonderingly,

"'Who in blazes is in that room?" 

"The Crime Annihilist, I believe," Doc said. 

"Well, well," Monk grunted, and dived across the room. He hit the  door with his shoulder, and his homely

face showed that he fully  expected it to collapse. But he was too optimistic. The stout wooden  panel held. 

"Get away!" shrieked the voice from the other side of the door. 

Then a roar of gunfire and a snapping and crashing of bullets  drowned out the shrieks. Nearly all of the glass

fell out of the room's  one window. It jingled not unmusically on the floor. 

Ham, Pat, Hardboiled and all the policemen were inside. 


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"Get down," Doc directed. "The logs will turn lead." 

Monk, seeming unaware of the danger outside, jabbed a thumb at the  inner room into which they had not yet

had time to smash their way. 

"How'd you know the Crime Annihilist was here?" he demanded. 

"Direction finding apparatus," Doc said. "I used it from New York  City." 

"You mean  " 

"That this Crime Annihilist's weapon is merely a machine emitting  emanations similar to ultrashort radio

waves," Doc said. "These  emanations have an irritating effect on the socalled 'crime' gland,  causing a sort of

local poisoning which induces mental spasms and a  peculiar muscular reaction which results in the protruding

of the  eyes." 

"You'll have to make it clearer than that for me to get it," Monk  grunted. 

"I used a sensitive directional finder of an ordinary radio type,  in the New York laboratory," Doc went on. "It

pointed to this  vicinity." 

Monk exploded, "Now listen, Doc  that's a bit thick. No  directional device would point to this cabin." 

"It pointed in this direction," Doc corrected. "The rest was  guesswork. This cabin was the logical spot." 

Monk began, "I don't see  " then fell silent. He wet his lips,  flattened a little lower as a bullet ricocheted

down from the ceiling. 

"Blazes!" he exploded. "This cabin was built 

Hardboiled Humbolt interrupted, bawling, "Hey! Lookit! Lookit!" 

And the shooting stopped as if it had only been some recorded sound  effect which had been switched off. 

SILENCE did not fall. Rather, the shooting stopped and a banshee  caterwauling of shouts took its place. The

shouts became screams, and  these turned to awful shrieks. 

They were all conscious of a metallic drone which had started up  and seemed to be coming from the adjacent

room. 

Pat ran to the window, broken glass crunching under her feet. She  looked out only briefly, then withdrew,

hands lifting in a subconscious  gesture of horror. Her face looked drained, drawn. 

"The Crime Annihilist!" she said thickly. "They're dying outside!  The thing seems to be stronger than ever

before." 

Doc Savage got erect and flung himself against the door of the room  from which the drone came. The panel

rebuffed him as it had Monk. He  hit it again, using his unwounded shoulder. He picked up a chair and

battered it, and the sound this produced told him why the door was so  solid. 

"Metal lined," he said. "Probably a storeroom!" 


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The bronze man ran to the workbench, dumped its litter and tore at  one of the great, thick planks which

composed its top. 

"Give us a hand!" he rapped. "We've got to get into this inside  room to save those men out there." 

Monk, who was usually prompt in carrying out the bronze man's  suggestions, for once seemed not to hear.

Monk, at times in the past,  had been suspected of possessing bloodthirsty inclinations. He looked  through the

window, grimaced, but did not turn away. 

The sight was not a pleasant one to watch. Boke's men had worked  quite close to the cabin when the

affliction seized them; from the  window, Monk had a box seat for the pageant of fantastic death. 

The homely chemist located Janko Sultman. He had already succumbed,  and was a contorted shape beneath a

tree. A strange thing had happened  to his frizzled hair as death overtook him. The hair was no longer

upstanding, but lay down as if it, too, had been devoid of life. 

Monk discovered Boke. The mastermind had been well behind, out of  danger of bullets, a position

masterminds not infrequently occupy. But  it had not preserved him from the vengeance of the Crime

Annihilist. 

Boke was stumbling about, shrieking, beating at his own face. He  tore off the muffler which had masked his

features, then felt to the  ground, stretched himself out and did not move again. 

Monk craned his neck to get a closer look at Boke's face. Monk  snorted. It was not a face of a leader. It had

fragile features and a  rose petal skin. No hardboiled crook would look upon such a face and  feel like calling

its owner his master. It was no mystery why Boke had  kept his face covered. 

For Boke was the femininemannered Lizzie. Probably Janko Sultman  had never known that, and it

explained how Sultman had been discovered  in his doublecrossing. For Lizzie had ostensibly been one of

Sultman's  gang. 

SEVERAL men clutched the long plank which Doc had ripped from the  workbench. They drew back, leveled

it and ran for the door in a living  ram. The panel gave, groaned. A second smash caused it to give slightly

more. With a roar it went in on the third try. 

Doc Savage pitched across the threshold. The room beyond was dark,  for there were no windows. But there

was a furtive movement in a  corner. The bronze man squinted through the murk. 

"Get back!" he rapped suddenly. Then he lunged forward. 

In a remote corner, a figure was huddled over a mound of objects on  the floor. The figure straightened,

gibbering shrilly, as the bronze  man approached. 

Doc swooped upon the objects over which the figure had been  crouched. There was dynamite, nearly a cage

of it, with a battery and  wires attached; there was also a small phonograph, one of the type  newly placed on

the market which can be plugged into a light circuit  and, by using a microphone attachment, employed to

make records, which  can then be played back numerous times. 

Doc hastily disconnected the wires from the explosive, while the  occupant of the room squeaked

meaninglessly at him from across the  chamber. 


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Monk came lumbering in, Renny on big heels. They looked at the  pitiful figure which was the Crime

Annihilist. 

"Holy cow!" Renny boomed. 

And Monk, pointing at the explosive, the phonograph, said, "That's  how he faked his death on the barge. Got

away before we ever came, and  left a rifle attached to the door so that it would go off when the door  was

jarred. Then he had the phonograph yell out in his voice, and then  the explosion. He was fixing to do the

same thing here." 

Monk shook his head slowly, then resumed: "But why?" 

Ham, who had come in, said caustically, "You ape, if you had been  through what he has, you would do queer

things too." 

Then they looked at the Crime Annihilist, at his racked body, a  frame mutilated by torture, swathed in

bandages, and it was not  difficult to understand why he had set out to rid the world of  criminals. 

"They killed my brother!" mumbled the Crime Annihilist. "Damn them   they  they  I'll get them all!" 

The Crime Annihilist was Sidney Lorrey. 

Chapter XVIII. MONK TAKES HIS DAY

THE opposite wall of the room was spanned its full length by a  table, and on this was arrayed a tremendous

quantity of electrical  apparatus. Under the table, a motorgenerator set made a metallic  drone. 

"The thing that produced the popeyed death," Ham murmured, and  eyed the array. 

Doc Savage nodded. 

"Sidney Lorrey was  is  a scientist and surgeon interested in  mental therapy as influenced by various

infrarays and light beams,"  the bronze man said. "I recall Robert Lorrey saying that Sidney was  trying to

perfect a treatment for the socalled 'crime' gland which  would not require the use of drugs." 

The bronze man indicated the intricate array of electrical  apparatus. "Possibly Sidney Lorrey did not realize

at first that his  apparatus was killing criminals. It must have been set up in his barge  laboratory and operating

continuously on some piece of experimental  tissue. Then, when Sidney saw the men die from its effects, he

realized  what it was." 

"And realized what a weapon against crime he had," Ham added. 

Monk pointed at Sidney Lorrey. "'What about him?" 

Doc Savage went over to Sidney Lorrey. The latter recoiled at  first, but under the bronze man's soothing

words, submitted to an  examination. 

"Temporarily disarranged mentally by pain," Doc said. "He will be  entirely normal after a short period of

treatment and a rest." 


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Monk muttered slowly, "I'm glad of that." 

Hardboiled Humbolt was moving about as if he had something on his  mind, but was uncertain what to do

about it. He caught Doc Savage's eye  and beckoned. They went out on the porch. 

Hardboiled waved an arm in the direction of the area of woodland  enclosed by the high fence. 

"'What's over there?" he demanded. "You've got somethin' up here,  somethin' big. I ain't quite been able to

figure out what it is." 

Doc Savage studied the big, roughmannered cop for some moments. 

"That, to put it plainly, was a lie," he said dryly. "From Boke's  talk, you secured a very good idea of what is

inside that fence." 

Hardboiled shook his head. "I didn't hear a thing." 

Doc Savage extended a hand. "Thanks. If news of that place got out,  it would mean all kinds of trouble." 

"I got a few special friends." Hardboiled jerked his hand at the  criminalcuring institution again. "Would you

put 'em in there  when I  catch 'em? Just as a favor?" 

The bronze man rarely smiled, but he did so now. "With pleasure,"  he agreed. 

Hardboiled asked, "What are you gonna do about that thing inside   that mess of electrical business?" 

"Destroy it," Doc said. 

"Why?" Hardboiled looked pained. "Think of what it'd do to the  crooks!" 

Doc Savage asked, "'When a man has the smallpox, do you kill him?" 

"Hell, no!" Hardboiled snorted. "You doctor him up." 

"Exactly!" Doc Savage said. "And that explains why I am going to  destroy the device inside." 

THE bronze man picked up a fragment of the chair with which he had  first tried to batter down the door, and

entered the inner room. He ran  his eyes over the assembled apparatus of the Crime Annihilist until he  had the

circuit fixed in his memory. 

It might become useful sometime in the future. 

He shut off the motorgenerator, then went to work with the piece  of chair, smashing tubes, tearing apart

intricate bundles of wires. The  vacuum tubes broke with loud explosions, showering glass about.  Delicate

insulating sheets crunched, and condensers, torn apart,  spilled layers of foil and waxed paper. 

Doc did the job of destruction carefully, expending fully five  minutes in the task, and when he was done and

had stepped back, Monk  thrust his homely features into the room. He pointed at the apparatus,  or what was

left of it. 

"Is that jigger out of whack?" he demanded. 


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"It is," Doc told him. 

Monk licked his lips. A look of unholy anticipation came over his  features, and he retreated from the door. 

It could not have been more than thirty seconds later when a  terrific scream ripped out. It was followed by

growls, minor howls, and  the thump and bang of a terrific fight. 

Ham, his coat and most of his shirt missing, the rest of his person  looking as if it had been through a tornado,

dashed madly around a  cabin corner. 

Monk popped out in pursuit, still gripping parts of Ham's missing  clothing. 

"Help!" Ham yelled. "Turn that blasted machine on!" 

"What they're gonna have to turn on for you," Monk puffed grimly,  "is slow music!" 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE ANNIHILIST, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter I. THE POP-EYED DEAD, page = 4

   5. Chapter II. THE MYSTERY QUEST, page = 13

   6. Chapter III. THE BOKE MEETING, page = 20

   7. Chapter IV. MORE POP-EYED, page = 27

   8. Chapter V. THE HAND OF SULTMAN, page = 34

   9. Chapter VI. PAT HITS A SNAG, page = 41

   10. Chapter VII. SURPRISE SHADOW, page = 47

   11. Chapter VIII. THE CRIME GLAND, page = 52

   12. Chapter IX. BOKE'S TOUCH, page = 57

   13. Chapter X. TORTURE, page = 62

   14. Chapter XI. TERROR OVER THE CITY, page = 69

   15. Chapter XII. DEATH ON THE RIVER, page = 74

   16. Chapter XIII. ULTIMATUM, page = 82

   17. Chapter XIV. BOKE DECIDES, page = 90

   18. Chapter XV. UPSTATE, page = 97

   19. Chapter XVI. DOUBLE TRAP, page = 104

   20. Chapter XVII. HARDBOILED'S MISTAKE, page = 109

   21. Chapter XVIII. MONK TAKES HIS DAY, page = 118