Title:   FEAR CAY

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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FEAR CAY

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

FEAR CAY..........................................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE POCKETBOOK GAG ...................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THIRTYSTORY DEATH...................................................................................................6

Chapter 3. MISTER SANTINI..............................................................................................................11

Chapter 4. THE UNSEEN MESSAGE ..................................................................................................18

Chapter 5. THE HANGING MAN........................................................................................................25

Chapter 6. DAN THUNDEN .................................................................................................................27

Chapter 7. MURDER .............................................................................................................................32

Chapter 8. FAST STUFF.......................................................................................................................36

Chapter 9. KEL AVERY'S STORY......................................................................................................41

Chapter 10. THE PACKAGE TRICK...................................................................................................46

Chapter 11. THE SEIZURE ...................................................................................................................51

Chapter 12. THE DISAPPOINTING PARCEL....................................................................................55

Chapter 13. FEAR CAY TRAIL...........................................................................................................62

Chapter 14. THE ISLAND OF DEATH ................................................................................................69

Chapter 15. THE NET TRAP................................................................................................................76

Chapter 10. THE TRAIL SINISTER .....................................................................................................80

Chapter 17. TROUBLE UNDERGROUND ..........................................................................................86

Chapter 18. LOTS OF LUCK  ALL BAD........................................................................................94

Chapter 19. THE WEEDS...................................................................................................................101

Chapter 20. THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH ........................................................................................108

Chapter 21. THE CRAWLING TERROR ...........................................................................................113


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FEAR CAY

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE POCKETBOOK GAG 

Chapter 2. THIRTYSTORY DEATH 

Chapter 3. MISTER SANTINI 

Chapter 4. THE UNSEEN MESSAGE 

Chapter 5. THE HANGING MAN 

Chapter 6. DAN THUNDEN 

Chapter 7. MURDER 

Chapter 8. FAST STUFF 

Chapter 9. KEL AVERY'S STORY 

Chapter 10. THE PACKAGE TRICK 

Chapter 11. THE SEIZURE 

Chapter 12. THE DISAPPOINTING PARCEL 

Chapter 13. FEAR CAY TRAIL 

Chapter 14. THE ISLAND OF DEATH 

Chapter 15. THE NET TRAP 

Chapter 10. THE TRAIL SINISTER 

Chapter 17. TROUBLE UNDERGROUND 

Chapter 18. LOTS OF LUCK  ALL BAD 

Chapter 19. THE WEEDS 

Chapter 20. THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH 

Chapter 21. THE CRAWLING TERROR  

Chapter 1. THE POCKETBOOK GAG

ONE OF two pedestrians walking on a New York street turned, pointed  at the big bronze man they had just

passed, and said earnestly, "I  wouldn't trade places with that bird for a million bucks!" 

The pedestrian's companion also looked at the bronze man. 

"You said it," he agreed. "I wouldn't last a day in his shoes, if  half of what I've heard is true." 

If the bronze man was aware of their attention, he gave no sign.  Many persons turned to stare at him;

newsboys stopped shouting abruptly  when they saw him; but the bronze man merely went on with long,

elastic  strides. 

"He's not often seen in public," some one breathed. 

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"And no wonder!" another exclaimed. "The newspapers say his enemies  have made countless attempts to kill

him." 

The heads of the tallest individuals on the New York street did not  top the bronze man's shoulders. He was a

giant. Yet it was only the  manner in which he towered above the throng that made him seem as huge  as he

really was, so symmetrically perfect was his great frame  developed. 

"They say he can take a piece of building brick in one hand and  squeeze it to dust," offered a man. 

Huge cables of sinew enwrapped the bronze man's neck, and enormous  thews stood up as hard as bone on the

backs of his hands. There was a  liquid smoothness about the way they flowed. 

Persons who saw the metallic man's eyes made haste in getting out  of his path. Not that the eyes were

threatening, but there was  something about them that compelled. They were like pools of  flakegold, those

eyes, and the gold flakes were very fine and always  in movement, as if stirred by diminutive, invisible

whirlwinds. 

Strange eyes! They held power, and the promise of an ability to do  weird things. 

Two policemen on a corner saluted the bronze giant  enthusiastically. 

"Hello, Doc Savage," they chorused. 

Tile mighty man who looked as if be were made of metal acknowledged  the greeting with a nod and went on.

His features were strikingly  regular, unusually handsome in an emphatic, muscular way. 

More than one attractive young stenographer or clerk felt herself  inexplicably moved to attempt a mild

flirtation the instant she saw the  big bronze fellow. But the amazing giant had a manner of not seeming to  see

such incidents. 

The bronze man came to a section where the sidewalk was almost  deserted. He stopped. 

On the walk before him lay a small object of leather. Stooping, be  picked it up. 

The article was a pocketbook of good quality, and its plumpness  hinted at a plentiful content. The sinewy

cables on the bronze man's  hands flowed easily as he opened the purse. 

There was a popping sound, such a noise as might have been made by  a stubborn cork being pulled from a

bottle. Instantly after that, the  bronze man dropped the wallet, and it slithered along the sidewalk for  a few

feet before coining to a rest. 

The man's arms became slack, his strikingly handsome head slumped  forward, and he began to weave slightly

from side to side. Suddenly, as  If a master nerve controlling all of the muscles in his mighty frame  had been

severed, he collapsed upon the street. 

NUMEROUS INDIVIDUALS saw the bronze giant drop, but one was nearer  than the others. This man was a

bulky fellow with an extremely long  nose, a round puncture of a mouth, and a skin which was flushed redly,

as if the fellow were very warm. One thing particularly outstanding  about the man's appearance was the

manner in which he always seemed to  be perspiring a little. 

The man carried a small, plain black leather case. 


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He ran toward the prone form of Doc Savage, swooping enroute to  pick up the pocketbook which the bronze

man had been examining an  instant before he collapsed. This went into a pocket. 

Reaching Doc Savage, the perspiring man sank to a knee. As he  placed his black leather case on the sidewalk,

it came open  and  those curious persons who ran up, saw that it held a doctor's  equipment. 

"This man has been stricken by heart failure!" the man said loudly,  after a brief examination. 

A taxicab swerved to the curb and the driver craned his neck. The  perspiring man stood erect and beckoned

sharply at the hackman. 

"Give me a hand!" he shouted. "We've got to rush this big fellow to  an emergency hospital to save his life!" 

The taxi driver tumbled from his machine, ran over and lent his aid  to moving the recumbent Doc Savage.

The hackman was burly, but the two  of them grunted and strained, so heavy was the giant bronze form they

were carrying to the cab. 

A cop pounded up, puffing, "Begorra, what's goin' on here?" 

"Heart trouble," he was told. "The big bronze fellow had an  overworked heart, and it caved on him." 

They managed to haul Doc Savage into the cab. The longnosed man,  perspiring somewhat more freely,

dashed back, got his bag of  instruments, and piled into the taxi. 

"Begorra, I'm goin' along," said the cop. 

"Is that necessary?" snapped the sweating man. 

"This bronze lad be Doc Savage, no less," declared the officer.  "The finest ain't half good enough for him,

and I'm gonna see that he  gets it!" 

The cop leaped into the machine. 

Behind the wheel, the driver made a pass at the shift lever and the  cab lunged forward. The horn blared,

pedestrians dived aside, and the  cab volleyed down the street. 

"Ride your horn and tromp on it!" called the cop. 

Tires howled as they took a corner; skyscrapers shoved up close  walls that shut out the sunlight, so that the

cab pitched through  gloom. On the sidewalks not many people could be seen. 

The perspiring man dipped a hand into a coat pocket, brought out a  heavy blue automatic pistol and lifted it.

The policeman was occupied  in examining Doc Savage and never saw the gun whip toward his own head. 

There was the sound as of a football being kicked hard. The officer  let air out of his lungs and slumped, head

lolling. 

The rear door of the cab opened and the cop toppled out, driven by  a lusty shove. Momentum of the car

caused him to roll end over end and  slam into a parked machine, where he lay, not seriously damaged. 

THE HACK driver looked around. He had freckles, a loose lower lip  and cigarettestained fingers. 


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"When that cop piled in I figured we was sunk, Leaking," be  chuckled. 

"Watch your driving!" growled "Leaking," and dabbed at the  perspiration on his forehead. 

Leaking now produced the billfold which had lain on the sidewalk.  Once he had opened it, there was

disc]losed a small flat metal phial,  the cork of which was yanked when the folding halves of the purse were

separated. 

"Neat!" the sinister, longnosed man chuckled. "He never smelled a  ratand when he opened it, the gas in the

metal phial got him before he  knew what it was all about." 

He passed the ingenious wallet forward to the freckled,  slacklipped driver. "Stick this away somewhere." 

"Sure." The hacknian had been watching his rearview mirror to make  sure there was no pursuit. 

The cab swung west and streets became shabby. 

A robe hung on the rack in the rear, and Leaking drew this over the  slack form of Doc Savage to prevent

casual observers from sighting the  giant bronze man. 

"Sure his nibs is alive?" asked the driver. 

"I don't care a hell of a lot," said Leaking. "But he's still  breathing." 

"Hallet wanted him alive, didn't he?" 

"Sure." 

"Any idea what that shyster has up his sleeve?" 

"No," said Leaking. "Shut Lip and drive." 

"Whose idea was that pocketbook trick?" 

"Mine," Leaking snapped. "And will you shut up and drive!" 

The cab passed a play street where grimy kids howled, skirted tall  gas tanks and a solid vast cube of bricks

wherein generators wailed  like banshees, and from which hightension wires stretched in  profusion. 

Streets became even more decrepit, and the hack ran more swiftly, a  carbon knock tinkling under the hood.

They were going downtown toward  the financial section now, using streets which were almost deserted.  The

machine slackened speed and turned into more populous streets after  a time. 

"This is the joint," said Leaking. 

The "joint" was a towering skyscraper of white brick, modernistic,  impressive, one of scores, all resembling

each other closely, which  shot up like cold thorns around Wall Street. 

Between the structure and the one adjacent was a narrow alleyway  intended as a freight entrance. 

The cab popped into this and dragged its tires to a halt. 


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The driver alighted and entered the skyscraper. Probably he engaged  the attendant on the freight elevator in

conversation, for that worthy  did riot appear to interfere with Leaking as he unloaded Doc Savage's  great

frame from the hack and, not without some laboring, conveyed the  bronze man into the lift. 

At the twentieth floor, Leaking unloaded his cargo and employed a  large janitors' closet for temporary storage

while he returned the  freight elevator to the ground level without any one being aware that  he had taken it. 

Then the man rode up on a passenger lift to the twentieth floor,  swabbing at perspiration, waited in the

corridor until no one was in  sight, then picked Doc Savage up and staggered out of the janitors'  closet with

him. 

Goldlettered on a frosted glass door was: 

N. BECKELL HALLET  ATTORNEYATLAW 

Leaking shoved this door open and walked in with his burden. He  dumped Doc's great frame in a swivel

chair, and the chair squeaked  loudly. 

Across the office, the sid wooden door of an inner sanctum flew  open. 

"I knew it!" wailed the man who looked out. "I knew it!" 

LEAKING SCOWLED and snapped, "You knew what, Hallet'?" 

"Knew what Doc Savage would damage you or one of your men  seriously," groaned the other. 

Leaking's scowl turned into a laugh as he realized that Hallet was  not standing where he could see Doc's

features and had mistaken the  identity of the bronze man. 

"Hell!" chuckled Leaking. "This is Doc Savage." 

"What?"  Hallet gulped  incredulously, then advanced gingerly to  eye the bronze giant. 

Hallet was a fat man with the manners of a bird. He was round and  sleek and plump, but there was a mincing

daintiness to his movements.  His Suit was sparrowcolored and added to his birdlike aspect, as did  his sharp

beak of a nose. 

"It is Doc Savage!" Hallet wrung his plump hands. 

"Well, you wanted him, didn't you?" Leaking growled. 

"Yes, but  " Hallet slumped into a chair, pulled a foaming square  of silk handkerchief from his breast

pocket and dabbed it at his neck.  "How did you do it?" 

"Fake pocketbook with a doodad in it that threw gas into his face  when he opened it," grinned Leaking. 

"I never thought you would secure him that easily," Hallet  murmured, restoring the handkerchief. "They say

this bronze man is  incredibly clever. Wrongdoers all over the world fear him." 

"Does he look like something to be scared of now?" Leaking jeered. 


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"His name is synonymous for fear in the far corners of the earth,"  Hallet went on earnestly. "His life career is

helping others out of  trouble. They say he has accomplished fabulous things, feats that range  from stopping a

revolution in an European country to 

"In your hat!" laughed Leaking. "He's overrated. Here he is. What  do we do now?" 

"Tie him up," Hallet said hastily. He minced into the other office  and came back with thin, stout, braided

cotton rope. 

The two men grasped Doc Savage, apparently with the idea of moving  him from the chair to the floor, where

he could be bound with more  facility. But what happened was hardly the thing they anticipated. 

There was blinding motion, two slapping sounds. Leaking and Hallet  tried to cry out. They made no sound,

for a great corded bronze hand  had grasped each of them by the throat. 

Chapter 2. THIRTYSTORY DEATH

THE NEXT few seconds offered a study in abject helplessness and an  exhibition of incalculable strength. The

two seized men at first  windmilled their arms, but the awful agony of the grip on their necks  seemed to surge

like deadening poison through their bodies, and they  became limp. 

Around Doc Savage's metallic fingers,  and between them, the flesh  of his victims all but oozed, so terrific

was the pressure. The faces  of the pair turned purple, eyes ogled and tongue stuck out stiffly. 

Doc arose, and the two were limp as rags hanging from his great  hands. They quivered a little and that was

all. 

The bronze man released them, and although neither was fully  unconscious, they were too weak to do more

than make croaking noises. 

A search of their clothing brought the light small sums of money  and billfolds containing cards. Leaking's full

name seemed to be Manuel  Caesar Dicer. Hallet carried a blue army automatic and Leaking the  slightly

smaller gun with which he had clubbed the cop in the taxicab. 

The outer office was fitted with a leather divan. Doc popped the  two captives down on this, bound their wrists

and ankles securely with  the same cord they had intended to use upon him, and fell to eying them  steadily. 

"I want to know what is behind this," he said. "It is going to be  very, very unfortunate unless you start

talking." 

The captives glared, exchanged glances and said nothing. The  globules of moisture on Leaking's forehead

fattened, broke from their  moorings and chased each other downward, forming little rivulets. 

"Talk up!" Doc said sharply. 

The pair registered discomfort, but held silence. This was  something of a feat in itself, for there was a

fierceness in the giant  bronze man's weird flakegold eyes. 

Doc straightened suddenly, swung around the office once, then went  into the inside room. This was fitted

with desk, chairs, ice water  stand, a large sheet metal clothes locker the color of grass, and  shelves holding


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innumerable law books. Atop a fat legal volume on torts  perched a telephone. 

Scooping up the instrument, Doc unpronged the receiver and asked  for a number. His voice was low, and

traffic sounds from the street  below the open window kept his words completely from the two in the  other

chamber. 

"Monk?" Doc asked when he got an answer. 

"Sure," said a mouselike voice. 

Doc Savage now spoke rapidly, but not in English. The tongue he  used was not unmusical, composed of

liquid gutturals and sharp  clackings, but it was doubtful if more than half a dozen people in the  socalled

civilized  world would have understood it. Yet the language  was the mother tongue of a race once among the

most powerful and  cultured  the ancient Mayans of Central America. 

His conversation completed, Doc hung up and went back to the  prisoners. They had been trying ineffectually

to escape, but desisted  when they saw him. 

"I never saw either of you gentlemen before this afternoon," he  said in an ominously calm tone. "Yet you go

to great trouble to seize  me off the street." 

Birdlike Hallet trembled; Leaking perspired; and neither let a word  escape. 

"Why did you seize me?" Doc asked, his voice vibrating a grim  power. "What (lid you intend to do with me?" 

This time, Leaking spoke. "Hhow did you get rid of the effects of  that gas so quick?" 

"The gas never had any effect on me in the first place," Doc said. 

"Wwhat?" Leaking stuttered. 

"You underestimate the human powers of observation," Doc assured  him dryly. "When you dropped that trick

purse, I saw you." 

"You picked it up, knowing it was a trick?" 

"The picking was done most carefully, if you had noticed," Doc told  him. "There were two logical things to

suspect  a poisoned needle and  gas. To avoid a needle, I did not open the purse in the usual manner of  a

man who has found one. And to checkmate the gas, I merely held my  breath until the breeze blew the vapor

away." 

"But why?" 

"Why pretend to be overcome? Merely to find out what your game was.  And now, any more questions?" 

Leaking only glared. 

"Then perhaps you will relieve my curiosity," Doc suggested. "Why  did you seize me?" 

Leaking blew sweat off his upper lip and said, "You go to hell I" 


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VIOLENT ACTION followed Leaking's profane suggestion. Doc Savage  lunged, closed metallic hands upon

the fellow and lifted him. 

Leaking grimaced in agony and opened his mouth wide to cry out. Doc  corked a wadded handkerchief into

the gaping maw, and Leaking could  only squeal through his nose. 

Next, Doc gagged plump Hal]et. 

Leaking was carried helplessly through the door into the inner  office. The door was slammed shut. 

Hallet, the sparrowlike lawyer, sprawled helpless on the divan and  ogled the closed door. He tried to move.

His ropes were drawn  excruciatingly tight, many of the strands almost buried in the fellow's  soft flesh, and

the gag distended his mouth to its greatest capacity. 

Suddenly his eyes flew wider and his jaw sagged in horror. Out of  the inner office were coming awful thuds,

smackings and grunts. It was  as if a man were being horribly beaten. 

"You won't talk. eh?" Doc Savage's grim, powerful voice came  through the door. 

The sound of more blows followed, together with buzzing sounds that  might have been a gagged man crying

out in terrible pain. 

Hallet tried to scream, hut his own gag made his best effort a  whining, and he desisted to lay panting through

his nostrils, round  face draining of color until it had a clay hue. He was the picture of a  man scared out of his

wits. 

Certainly the sounds emanating from the adjacent office were such  as to strike horror. Again and again Doc

Savage's unusual voice put  questions, to which Leaking only whizzed or whined through his  nostrils, or, the

gag removed, cursed smashingly. The blow thuddings  always resumed, more violent than before. And finally

there came the  climax. 

"Well, if you won't talk, out of the window you go!" Doc boomed. 

The window rattled up. 

Hallet's face was white enough to he written upon with a pencil,  for he was visualizing that twentystory

drop to the street, and the  hard sidewalk below. Many times he had looked down and visualized what  would

be the lot of one who fell. 

Hallet abruptly tried to scream through his gag. He had heard a  scuffling sound, as of a living body pushed

over the window sill. A  gruesome cry, faintly receding, followed that. 

The connecting door leaped open. Doc Savage came through, his weird  eyes hot aureate pools, the tendons on

his neck standing out like rifle  barrels. 

Hallet sought to scream again. He had never glimpsed anything which  looked quite as terrible as did the

bronze giant. 

Doc swept Hallet up easily and carried him to the inner office. The  window was open, and Doc shoved Hallet

half outside. 


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"Look down!" he directed. 

Hallet looked, and shook as if be had taken bold of a charged  electric wire. 

The crowd  on the sidewalk below resembled flies around some dark  speck of succulence, while other flies

came scudding across the street  or climbed out of cars which were stopping. A fly in blue ran for the  spot,

tweetling a police whistle. 

Doc wrenched Hallet back. His great voice was a grim crashing. 

"They'll be up here to investigate in about two minutes," he said.  "You have that long to tell your story'." 

"I ddon't know anything!" Hallet stuttered when his gag was out. 

Doc picked him up helplessly and ran him toward the open window,  and the man screeched out in chilling

fright, confident the bony hand  of death was cupped to receive him down there in the street. 

"I'll tell you everything!" he shrilled. 

Doc calmly carried him back into the outer office and tossed him on  the leather divan. 

"Why did you and our  er  unlucky friend, Leaking, attempt to  seize me?" the bronze man demanded. 

Hallet wet his lips. "We were hired. We were to get ten thousand  dollars for grabbing you and holding you

where no one could find you  for two weeks." 

"So some one wants me out of circulation for two weeks, eh?" Doc  showed no great surprise at the news;

indeed, now that Hallet was  talking, the bronze features had settled into a metallic repose. "Who  hired you?"

he continued. 

"I don't know," Hallet muttered. 

Doc grasped the man, rumbling, "The window is still open!" 

"Fountain of Youth, Inc., hired me!" Hallet shrieked fearfully. 

"Who?" 

"It was handled in a roundabout way," Hallet mumbled rapidly. "I  was approached over the telephone with

this proposition to seize you  and hold you. The party who called me said there was no need of us ever  seeing

each other, and it would be better, in fact, if we didn't. The  only name I got was Fountain of Youth, Inc." 

"Man or woman?" 

Hallet squirmed. "I am not positive." 

"Don't forget that window!" Doc said meaningly. "You should know  whether you talked to a man or a

woman over the telephone." 

"It was a shrill, unnatural voice," Hallet gulped. "I couldn't  tell. Honestly, I couldn't." 


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"Why did this Fountain of Youth, Inc., want me held?" 

"I haven't the slightest idea. I asked that question, of course,  but was told that there was no necessity for me

knowing." 

Doc's strange eyes dwelled upon the frightened lawyer for a moment.  "Since you have no information of

importance, I shall have to consign  you to that window, it seems. Has Fountain of Youth, Inc., got an  office?" 

"Yes. It is Room 1402, the Queen Tower building." 

"What about a telephone?" 

"Yes. It is in the Queen Tower office. I had it traced." 

"So you tried on your own hook to learn something of this  mysterious Fountain of Youth, Inc.?" 

Hallet had gotten some of his nerve back and was almost chirping,  birdlike, when he spoke. "Do you blame

me for trying to get a line on  them?" 

Doc did not answer, but considered. Although his features showed no  expression, there was a certain finality

about his manner which  indicated that he was sure Hallet had no more information to reveal. 

Doc swung into the next office. Hallet could see the bronze man  through the open door. Doc went to the big

grassgreen clothes locker  and opened it. 

Sight of the object which rolled out caused Hallet to turn very'  purple in the face. 

LEAKING HAD been in the locker, bound and gagged. He fell out when  Doc pulled the door ajar, and his

garments made moist squishings, so  profusely had he perspired. Leaking was uninjured. 

"I thought  I thought  " The words choked Hallet up and he  could not finish. 

"The power of suggestion," Doc assured him dryly. "A few noises,  some words, and you got the idea he had

gone out of the window." 

"But the body on the street  " 

"Ever hear of my five assistants?" Doc asked. 

"Yyes," Hallet mumbled. "But wwhat  " 

"One of them, Monk by name, played the part of the body in the  street," Doc explained shortly. "New

Yorkers are curious souls, and  they all ran to see what a man could be lying on the sidewalk for. That

naturally made Monk's trick very lifelike. You see, Monk was summoned  by telephone." 

"Oh!" Hallet swallowed. "I remember I did think I heard you  phoning." 

Leaking, when the gag was removed from his jaws, swore choice  profanity in a low voice that dripped rage.

When it was suggested that  he tell what he knew, he only snarled. 


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Of a different caliber was this Leaking. A block of a jaw and ugly  eyes showed determination, offering a hint

that to get information from  him would take application of a more moving thirddegree method than  had

urged Hallet to talk. 

"My assistant, Monk, who played the dead man in the street, will be  up here shortly," Doc stated. "With him

will be another of my group of  five aides, Ham. By the way, Ham is a lawyer of no little reputation  and may

want to take measures to have you, Hallet, barred from  practice." 

Hallet scowled; Leaking went on profaning in a guttural, hoarse  monotone. 

The afternoon sun sloped through the both offices, throwing shadows  into the fear lines on Hallet's face, and

glistening on the wetness  that filmed Leaking's features. 

An elevator doer clanked in the corridor outside, then feet tramped  the hallway. They approached the office

door. 

"That will be my two men," Doc said. He walked over and yanked the  door ajar. 

A man came in, holding a revolver straight out in front of his  chest. 

"Ain't I the lucky one, Savage!" he gritted. "Get them hands high!" 

Chapter 3. MISTER SANTINI

THE MAN with the gun was the freckled, looselipped taxi driver who  had helped Leaking kidnap Doc

Savage. The automatic in his  cigarettebrowned fingers was a large one. 

Behind the driver strolled half a dozen other men. They were tough  looking after the modern style, too fancy

of dress, with a sleek,  unnatural manner about them, the manner of men long accustomed to  acting either very

bad or very innocent. All held weapons. 

"Got rid of the hack and was comin' back here with the boys,"  growled the driver. "We saw some funny stuff

downstairs  a guy layin'  on the sidewalk. That tipped us off to come up here with our rods  ready." 

"Watch that Savage!" snarled Hallet from the floor. 

"He's covered!" the driver snorted; then, much louder:  "Get back!  Get back!" 

Doc Savage was advancing, apparently heedless of the leveled  pistol. The taxi driver jabbed the gun

threateningly. It was pointed at  Doc's chest. 

"I'll plug you," the man blustered. 

Sprawled on the divan, Leaking comprehended Doc's Intention and  tried to yell a warning. 

"The guy's probably got a bulletproof vest!" he howled. "Point your  rod at his head!" 

Too late! Doc leaped. His arms were up clear of the line of fire,  and he twisted as he came in. 

The gun smacked thunder and the bullet opened a long rip in the  bronze man's coat, below the left armpit,


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then gouged stuffing out of  the divan on which Leaking and Hallet sprawled. Doc, by twisting, had  caused

the slug merely to scrape across his bulletproof vest. 

The driver swore, tried to fire again. There was a dull impact.  None present were quite sure they saw Doc

strike the blow. But the  hackman's nose was suddenly a flat, scarlet stringing pulp and he was  gagging to

keep from swallowing dislodged teeth. He fell down on all  fours, concerned exclusively with his own pain. 

The other men were not yet inside. Doc banged the door. It had a  spring lock and would hold for a time.

Swinging into the inner office,  he closed and locked that door behind him. 

A pistol whooped in the corridor. The bullet, puncturing the door,  made a round daisy of splinters, then

scooped leaves out of a law book  which lay on the reception desk. 

"You dopes!" Leaking shrilled. "You'll hit us. Bust the door down!" 

Somebody kicked the frosted glass out of the outer door, reached in  and turned the spring lock, which was

better than breaking the panel  down. The six men came inside gingerly, guns darting here and there so  that

they rather ridiculously resembled movie bad men, except for the  killer expressions on their faces. 

"The inner office," Hallet grated. "Get him! And tie us loose  I  mean, turn us loose!" The excitement

twisted his tongue. 

Hallet and Leaking were freed by the use of sharp knives. They had  to be helped to their feet, so taut had

been their bindings. 

The inner door resisted kicking. They shouted angrily for Doc to  open up, got no response, then lighted on

the great idea of picking up  the reception desk and hurling it at the door. This knocked the door  off its hinges. 

The catwalking across the threshold, guns ready, was repeated.  They peered about, bewildered. 

"Gone!" Hallet gulped. 

LEAKING, MINDFUL of his own incarceration, sidled over and yanked  open the grasscolored locker; but

it was empty, and he stood cursing,  swiping at his moist forehead with first one coat sleeve then the  other. 

"Was there a rope or somethin' in here that he could've used to  slide down to the ground?" he demanded. 

"The only rope was the one he used to tie us," Hallet disclaimed. 

A man ran over to the window and looked out and down, then drew  back, growling, "No sign of 'im!" 

Leaking whipped to the window and gave close attention to the  nature of the brick walls. They were very

smooth, the bricks being set  with a minimum of mortar and the mortar not grooved, but smooth and  flush

with the masonry. 

"It'd take a good fly to stick on that wall," Leaking growled. 

"I always did hear this Doc Savage wasn't quite human," a man  mumbled. 

"Shut up!" Leaking told him. "Let's look around. That bronze guy  went somewhere." 


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The telephone rang loudly. 

The men started as if something totally unexpected had happened,  then looked sheepish, and Hallet went

over, his gait more birdlike than  usual, to answer the instrument. 

The conversation lasted for a long minute, with Hallet saying  nothing except "Yes." at intervals. But finally

he put in a complete  sentence. 

"We got Doc Savage, but be escaped," he said. 

Explosives came from the receiver, after which Hallet hurriedly  explained exactly what had occurred and,

judging from the way his neck  turned red, took a cursing. 

He hung up and stood adjusting a sleeve of his sparrowcolored coat,  eying his companions the meanwhile. 

"That was Fountain of Youth, Inc.," he said. "But it wasn't the  same voice that usually calls me. I could tell

this one was a man." 

"Did this bird give his name?" Leaking demanded. 

"He did. Said to call him Santini." 

"Santini, eh? Any first handle?" 

"None. Just Santini. He said to come to the office of Fountain of  Youth, Inc., at once, and if he wasn't there to

give us orders, there  would be an envelope under the blotter on his desk, with our directions  inside." 

"Why didn't you tell him to go to hell?" Leaking snarled, and  mopped sweat. "This is worth more than we're

getting." 

"Santini said there would be seven onethousanddollar bills in the  envelope," Hallet smirked. "I forgot to

tell you gentlemen that. The  money is by way of a bonus." 

Leaking stopped mopping and laughed. "That makes it different.  Let's set sail, bozos." 

They swung around, apparently having decided to dismiss the problem  of Doc Savage's disappearance for the

time being, and made for the  outer door. But before they reached the aperture, the wrecked panel  swung ajar

so forcibly that portions of the shattered glass fell out. 

A man looked inside the office and said in a tiny, mild voice, "I'm  looking for a man named Doc Savage." 

The newcomer was a study in evolution. His height barely topped  five feet, but he would trip the scales at

better than two hundred and  sixty pounds. His face was incredibly home, only in a pleasant way, and  great

beams of arms dangled well below his knees. 

His eyes were small and bright; big mouth was so large that it  looked as if there had been an accident in its

making. Exposed portions  of his skin were stuck full of hairs which resembled lengths of rusty  barbed wire. 

Hallet gulped, flopped his arms like wings, swallowed and got words  out. 


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"Monk!" he squawled. "This is Monk, one of Doc Savage's five men!  I've seen his picture in the

newspapers!" 

Pistol snouts leaped in "Monk's" direction. Like an ungainly ape,  the hairy fellow bounced back out of sight. 

BEHIND MONK in the corridor crouched a slender wasp of a man whose  clothing was sartorial perfection,

and who carried a black,  expensivelooking cane. In leaping back, Monk bounced into this  dandified

gentleman and almost upset him. 

"Drat you!" rapped the nattily clad man. "Watch where you're  going!" 

"Get outa the way, Ham!" Monk grunted. "There's eight guys in  there, most of 'em with guns!" 

The two backed hastily down the corridor. Hands dipped into their  coats, and from carefully contrived armpit

holsters drew  strangelooking weapons which perhaps bore more of a resemblance to  oversized automatics

than anything else. To the firing mechanisms of  these were attached curled magazines. 

"Any sign of Doc?" "Ham" demanded. 

"Nope." 

Monk suddenly tightened on the trigger of his strange gun. From the  ejector, empty brass cartridges climbed

so rapidly that they looked  like a brass wire; simultaneously, the weapon emitted an earsplitting  roar. 

A man had looked out of Hallet's law office, and the fellow  suddenly went limp and fell out into the hallway.

His companions  grabbed his heels, which were still in the office, and hauled him out  of sight. Voices came

out of the office. 

"He ain't dead," barked the taxi driver's coarse tone. He evidently  referred to Monk's victim. "Looks like the

slugs flattened and burst  when they got under his skin." 

"Mercy bullets!" said Hallet's voice. "They're hulls filled with a  chemical which produces unconsciousness.

I've read about 'em in the  papers."  "Them two guys must be usin' the supermachine pistols  that  Doc Savage is

supposed to have invented," growled Leaking. 

After that there was more conversation, but it was pitched so low  that the words failed to reach Monk and

Ham. The latter two had stopped  down the corridor and were exchanging compliments. 

"You dumb missing link!" the dapper Ham advised. "You hairy' freak!  You certainly stirred up something

when you walked up and shoved your  ugly face through that door." 

"I wanted to see if Doc was in there," said the smallvoiced Monk.  "And if you keep on callin' me names, I'm

gonna shove you out where  them redhots can get a shot at you." 

The two glared at each other, then, as if each had been nauseated  by sight of the other, both spat on the floor. 

"Where could Doc have gone?" Ham pondered. 

"Suppose you dope it out with that great legal brain of yours,"  Monk invited. 


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Out of Hallet's office sailed a metal canister. This  clankclankclanked down the corridor, suddenly went

plop, and vanished  in a wad of vile fumes of its own spewing. 

"Tear gas!" Monk howled, his small voice abruptly vast, roaring. 

He and Ham dived for the nearest stairway. 

THEY STOPPED one flight down and exchanged black, hateful looks. 

"If you had kept that noisy trap shut, we could have heard 'em  gettin' ready to throw that crybaby," gritted

Monk. 

Ham  sneered  expressively,  and  his  slenderfingered hands  tugged at his black cane and it telescoped from a

point near the  handle, thus disclosing that it was in reality a sword cane with a  blade which looked

razorsharp. 

"One of these days I'm gonna see if there's a man under that hairy'  hide," he promised. 

"Listen," advised Monk. "There's something going on upstairs." 

They strained their ears, catching numerous small sounds that  probably were foot scufflings, together with

certain grunts and low  words. The meaning of these dawned sharply. 

"They're takin' the freight elevator down!" Monk howled. He  sprinted down the hallway and sloped around a

corner, Ham at his heels. 

The fact that these two seemed continually on the point of coming  to blows appeared to have little effect on

their teamwork. They reached  the sliding freight elevator door. This naturally could only be opened  from

inside the shaft. 

Ham tapped it with his sword cane. The panel was of steel and  sounded solid. 

Monk drew back and gave the panel a resounding kick, but with no  results. 

He reached for Ham's sword cane. "Gimme that tin toothpick." 

"No," said Ham. "What do you want to do? I'll do it." 

"See if you can loosen the locking device while I shove on the  door," Monk directed. 

At that point, the cage passed downward with a noisy sigh. This  caused the two to redouble their efforts, Ham

fishing through the crack  between the halves of the door with his sword cane and Monk shoving  heavily. 

The door came open. Far below, the cage promptly stopped, due to  the safety device which cut off the current

the instant the door was  open. 

Monk shoved his nubbin of a head inside, peered down, and snapped  back as a bullet climbed squealing in

the shaft. 

"We got 'em!" he grinned. "They're between floors, and can't do a  thing but shoot up through the grilled roof

of the cage." 


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"Look down again and make sure," Ham suggested. 

"Yeah  and get shot." Monk hauled out his superfirer pistol,  examined the magazine indicator, then leered

at Ham. "I'm a great big  black cloud and I'm gonna rain on them guys." 

"You don't talk like you had good sense," Ham assured him. "But go  ahead. It's not a bad idea." 

Monk prepared to fire, but instead of doing so, looked over his  shoulder and started violently. 

Doc Savage stood far enough down the corridor that distance made  him seem less of the metallic giant than

he was  until his stature  chanced to be compared with the nearby office doors. 

"Let them go," said the giant bronze man. 

Ham and Monk promptly let the sliding doors of the freight  elevators swish shut. Then they joined Doc. 

DOC SAVAGE had a passenger elevator waiting, and they entered this  without delay at the bronze man's

gesture. The lift sank, whistling a  little. 

"Where'd you go, Doc?" Monk demanded. 

For answer, the bronze man said no word but simply drew from a  pocket a collapsible metal grappling hook,

to the shank of which was  affixed a slender and very stout silken cord. 

"Huh!" Monk grunted. 

"Slid from the office window down to the window below, then  loosened the grapple by flipping the cord,"

Doc explained. "Were they  puzzled?" 

"Plumb stunned, from the sound of it," Monk grinned. 

The passenger cage let them out in the lobby. They ran around to  the alleylike freight entrance, but a swiftly

receding taxi was all  that they saw of their quarry'. 

That the cab carried Hallet and the others, they were sure, due to  the heavy way in which the machine was

laden and because they saw  Hallet's face against the rear window. 

Less than a minute later, Doc Savage had secured another hack. 

"The Queen Tower building," he directed. 

Monk began, "But, Doc  " 

"No chance of trailing that gang," Doc explained. "Anyway, I think  they will head for the Queen Tower

building. The office of Fountain of  Youth, Inc., is there." 

"What's Fountain of Youth, Inc.?" Monk demanded. 

"That is one thing I want to find out," Doc told the homely gorilla  of a fellow. "The other puzzle is: Why did

that gang seize me? Fountain  of Youth, Inc., whatever that is, seems to have hired them. But why?" 


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They mulled over the enigma in silence as their cab jerked and  honked its way through downtown New York

traffic, but after a few  moments, Monk and Ham gave up the problem and fell to glowering at each  other. 

An onlooker would have sworn they were about to fly at each other's  throats. The manner they bore toward

each other was deceptive, however,  for each would risk his life to preserve the other, and both had done  so on

occasion. 

Their cab finally groaned to a stop. 

"Queen Tower building, gents," said the driver. 

THE QUEEN Tower was one of the newer structures in lower Manhattan,  which meant its front was a

symphony in black and white and shiny  metals. Its lobby was spouting humanity, for the quitting hour of

office workers was at hand. 

Doc slid out of the cab. Then he seemed to explode, so suddenly was  he back in the machine. 

A man had stepped from the throng. He presented a startling  appearance, due largely to his amazing

mustache. This was extremely  black, no thicker than a pencil at the base, and each wing was fully  three

inches long. It resembled a pair of oversize cat whiskers. 

The man wore a brilliant red ribbon slantwise across his shirt  front, and his afternoon garb was faultless. A

pearlgray derby topped  off the ensemble. Even in New York, his appearance commanded attention. 

But what interested Doc Savage and his two aides was the flat  automatic the stranger was plucking from

under the tails of his  afternoon coat. The weapon glinted pearl and gold inlay as it came up 

The gun whacked. Two windows fell out of the cab as the bullet  passed through. 

"Oh, damn me!" shrieked the driver. He spilled out of the front  seat and ran down the middle of the street, not

looking back. 

Doc and his two men got out almost as quickly, hitting the sidewalk  on the side opposite the gunman. Monk

and Ham had their superfirer  pistols out. Doc's hands were empty, for he never carried a firearm,  depending

rather upon his wits and his scientific devices. 

Monk tried to shoot under the cab at the man with the unique  mustache. But the fellow was running, jumping

high, a poor target. The  next instant he popped into the Queen Tower. 

"Dang jackrabbit!" Monk grunted. 

Doc Savage and his two men reached the Queen Tower entrance  together and surged inside. 

A wake of howling, excited office workers showed the route their  quarry had taken toward the rear. The

chase led past the elevators,  through a small door, down unfinished stairs and out a rear door, which  gave

upon an odorous side street. 

A heavy, fast coupe was swerving away from the curb. The mustached  gunman was at the wheel. 

Monk lifted his machine pistol and it moaned. The bullets only  flattened against the coupe glass. The homely

chemist tried for the  tires. He knocked off bits of rubber, but the tires did not go down. 


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The coupe roiled on, reeled around a distant corner and vanished. 

They sought to find a taxi in which to push a pursuit, but the  quarry was hopelessly gone before they got a

hack lined out on the  trail. 

"That mug had the coupe waitin' for a getaway," Monk grumbled. "It  was some boat. Had bulletproof glass

and solid rubber tires." 

"Wonder who be was?" Ham pondered. 

That question was answered in the lobby of the Queen Tower, for it  developed that the proprietor of the lobby

cigar stand had not only  seen the running gunman, but knew his identity. 

"That was Mr. Santini," the proprietor explained. 

"And who is Mr. Santini?" Doc queried. 

"The president of Fountain of Youth, Inc." 

Chapter 4. THE UNSEEN MESSAGE

AN ELEVATOR let them out on the fourteenth floor of the Queen Tower  building and they walked toward a

door which bore the legend they were  seeking. 

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH, INC. 

"Mr. Santini seemed to know us by sight," Monk said grimly, his  homely face solemn. 

"That doesn't mean anything, you accident of nature," Ham pointed  out sharply. "Doc's picture appears often

in newspapers and magazines. 

"Sure, shyster," Monk sneered. "Nobody but you would think of  that." 

Doc Savage, studying the door of the office, put in, "The thing  which puzzles me most is why these men

should be so anxious to get us  out of the way." 

Doc was listening. His sense of hearing was fabulously keen, due to  a scientific device, an apparatus emitting

sound waves of a frequency  above and below the audible range, with which he attuned his ears for a  certain

period each day, as a part of a twohour exercise routine that  he had not missed taking each twentyfour

hours for many years. 

"Seems to be no one inside," he said. 

He tried the knob, found the door locked, and employed a small  curved metal device which he removed from

a pocket. This was an  especially designed lock picker and opened the door within a few  moments. 

The offices beyond  outer reception chamber and two inner rooms  were sumptuous to an extreme, the

furniture being of genuine  mahogany. the upholstery leather soft and rich, and the carpeting deep  and silky.

The latest in automatic typewriters, dictaphones, and  announcing devices were installed. 


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Doc Savage made one rapid circuit and ascertained that Do one was  present, then began a slower and more

intensive scrutiny. His strange  golden eyes missed little. There were words emblazoned on the door of  one of

the inner offices. 

Q. SANTINI, PRESIDENT. 

In that room, alongside a rich desk, Doc picked up a crumpled  envelope to which he gave particular attention,

although outwardly it  seemed little different from much other wadded paper. 

"What's so interesting about that?" Monk wanted to know. 

Doc produced a magnifying glass that the homely chemist might  discern what the bronze man's highly

developed eyes had noticed  the  paper was moist, as if crumpled in a perspiring palm. 

"One of the fellows who grabbed me was called Leaking, probably  because of some strange affliction which

makes him perspire a great  deal," he explained. "Only a man who sweats freely would have damp  palms on a

day like this." 

The bronze man now gave attention to the desk. In a drawer was a  pad of plain white paper, together with a

package of envelopes which  matched the one he had found on the floor. If there had been a message  in the

envelope, it was logical to suspect that it might have been  written on the pad. 

Out of Doc's clothing came a tiny metal device, the principal  gadget on which was a small reservoir filled

with a liquid the color of  coagulated blood. Doc held the paper pad over this and flicked a lever,  causing the

apparatus to give off a vapor. 

After a moment, Doc examined the pad. The vapor had caused it to  change color slightly. Vague, but clearly

readable, writing had  appeared. 

"This is the message which was written on the top leaf of the pad,"  he explained. 

Ham fumbled his sword cane and looked bewildered. "But how did you  bring it out?" 

Doc returned his apparatus to a pocket in a special toolcarrying  vest which he wore, a vest cleverly enough

padded that its presence was  not noticeable to the chance observer. 

"The application of iodine vapor to bring out impressions left by a  pencil point is not exactly new," he said.

"Let's read this." 

MONK AND Ham came close to read what the paper held. The penmanship  was firm, rounded, very

readable. 

"HALLET: 

Kel Avery in on eight o'clock plane from Florida and must be  prevented from communicating with Doc

Savage. Better grab and hold for  me. 

SANTINI." 

"Oh, oh," Monk grinned. "Now we're getting places." 


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"Leaking and Hallet and their gang beat us here and got the  message," Doc decided. 

Then the bronze man continued his search of the office suite of  Fountain of Youth, Inc. 

"Ain't we gonna do nothin' about this message?" Monk questioned,  using a type of grammar that gave little

hint that he was one of the  most highly educated industrial chemists living. 

"It's twenty minutes after five," Doc replied. "That gives us two  hours and forty minutes before this Florida

plane bearing Kel Avery  arrives." 

At Doc's words, Ham surreptitiously eyed an expensive wrist watch  which he wore. The time was exactly

twenty after five, a fact which  caused Ham to sheath and unsheath his sword cane thoughtfully, for he  knew

Doc carried no watch, and there was no clock in sight in the  office. To Ham's recollection, they had not

passed a clock within half  an hour. 

Doc's uncanny ability to judge the passage of time was something at  which the dapper lawyer had never

ceased to marvel. 

Doc came to a filing cabinet of metal painted to resemble mahogany,  and unearthed cards which held his

attention. The cards were large,  indexed alphabetically, and each bore a name. 

"Look here," the big man of metal suggested. 

Monk came over and riffled through the index. 

"For the love of mud!" he said, smallvoiced. "This looks like a  who's who of the town's moneybags." 

"An index of the richest men in New York City," Doc agreed, and  drew out a second drawer. "And here are

other files of wealthy  individuals, their names listed by states." 

Ham joined them, tucked his sword cane under an arm and inspected  the files. 

"Every rich man in America," he murmured. Then he pointed at a  small silver star which had been pasted on

a card. "Wonder what this  means?" 

Doc's supple fingers traveled back and forth through the cards a  few times. He found more silver stars, and

gold one as well. 

"You'll notice the cards give not only the man's name and the  probable size of his fortune, but also his age

and the state of his  health. The old and feeble men rate gold stars, while those around  fifty are marked with

silver stars.  The younger  and more healthy  men  are  not marked." 

Ham twirled his innocentlooking black stick. "Get it, Doc?" 

Doc nodded. "I'm afraid I do get it." 

"Get what?" Monk demanded. 

"I'll explain, hairy stupid," Ham began. "The men marked with gold  stars are  " 

The phone rang. 


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DOC SAVAGE swung to the instrument, scooped it up, seemed to  hesitate and consider for the briefest of

intervals, then spoke. From  his lips came an astoundingly exact reproduction of the brisk, birdlike  voice of

Attorney Hallet. Monk and Ham grinned in appreciation,  although they had heard the bronze man's unusual

command of voice  mimicry exercised on other occasions. 

"The office of Fountain of Youth, Inc.," Doc said quietly. 

"Kel Avery can be found at 1120 Fish Lane," said a man's Voice over  the wire. 

The voice was surprising. It sounded youthful and as full of  bubbling life as a mountain brook, a voice which

suggested a rather  ridiculous vision of a boy joyfully turning handsprings as he spoke. 

Doc Savage began, in Hallet's tones, "But I thought Kel Avery  " 

"Was on a plane bound foah New Yawk," said the spontaneous voice.  "You are mistaken. Kel Avery is at

1120 Fish Lane." 

So exuberant was the voice that the pronounced accent of the South  had not been noticeable at first, but as the

informant spoke this  second time, the twist of speech was more apparent on certain words. 

"Who is this?" Doc demanded, impersonating Hallet. "The receiver  does not seem to bring your voice clearly

enough for me to recognize  it." 

"You nevah heard mah voice before, Mistah Hallet," said the tone of  youth. 

"Then who are you? You know my voice." 

"You take care of Kel Avery," advised the other. "I'll explain who  Ah am later." 

The distant receiver went clank on its hook. Doc Savage put his own  instrument down slowly, eyes on his

two men. 

"That was the strangest voice," he said. "It sounded indescribably  young and joyful; as if it belonged to an

irresponsible lad." 

"What'd he say?" Monk queried. 

"That Kel Avery was at 1120 Fish Lane." 

"Fish Lane is out in them Flushing marshes," Monk said slowly. "The  district is not so hot." 

Ham brandished his sword cane and put in, "But I thought this  mysterious Kel Avery was on a plane to arrive

from Florida at eight  o'clock!" 

Instead of commenting, Doc Savage lifted the phone again and  requested a number to be found only in

private lists which never went  beyond the walls of the telephone company offices. 

It was the number of Doc's officelaboratoryIibrary on the  eightysixth floor of the city's most impressive

skyscraper. 


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A gentleman with a scholastic voice and a remarkable command of big  words answered. Doc gave him a

brief synopsis of what had occurred. 

"Lookit  Habeas!" Monk exploded. "How'd that hog get down here?" 

HABEAS CORPUS was galloping toward them, great ears flopping like  wings. The shoat, no larger than a

small dog, presented such a  grotesque picture that pedestrians halted and rubbered. 

Ham leveled his sword cane. "What do you know about that!" 

He was indicating a long, somberlooking sedan parked at the curb.  This machine he had recognized as

belonging to Doc Savage; there could  be no mistake, for he had ridden in it numerous times and, moreover, it

bore the distinctive license plates which the bronze man was permitted  to use. 

A young woman got out of the sedan. 

Habeas Corpus, squealing delightedly, pawed at Monk like a dog. 

"Cut that out or I'll kick you out from between your ears!" grunted  Monk, who was interested in the girl.

Pretty girls always intrigued  Monk greatly, and this one was a knockout. 

Doc Savage ordinarily did not let his features register much  expression, but now he was looking a little

astounded. 

Doc had a fixed policy which he had adhered to for a long time, and  that was to steer clear of feminine

entanglements. The life he led was  too perilous to permit such, for enemies would not hesitate to strike  at him

through any young woman upon whom he might permit his affections  to dwell. That a young woman should

be alighting from his car was  entirely surprising. 

Then she turned and they saw her face.  "Pat Savage!" Monk howled. 

Patricia Savage, tall, exquisitely moulded, had the same remarkable  bronze hair as Doc Savage himself. They

were cousins, and Doc had last  seen her in western Canada, months before, when he and his five aides  had

gone through some perilous adventures in tracking down a gang who  had slain Patricia's father. 

Doc went forward eagerly which was something unusual for the bronze  man. Ordinarily, he felt

uncomfortable in the presence of young women,  especially girls as entrancing as Patricia. 

But Pat was an exception. Pat was something of a twofisted  scrapper herself, and almost as unique in her

way as the big Doc was in  his. 

"Tell Renny and Long Tom the yarn, Johnny," the bronze 

man directed. "Then the three of you head for 1120 Fish Lane.  Investigate this Kel Avery report. Monk and

Ham and myself will be here  for ten or fifteen minutes longer." 

"Will you join us later at this piscatorial thoroughfare of Fish  Lane?" asked the bigworded "Johnny." 

"Right." 

"Exactly what is your present whereabouts?" 


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Doc gave him the address of Fountain of Youth, Inc., then asked  "Why?" 

It was a rare thing when Johnny laughed, but he laughed now. 

"You are going to get a surprise, Doc," he chuckled. 

And with that, he hung up. 

DOC SAVAGE was thoughtful as be replaced the receiver. 

"Johnny does not go in for playful mysteries as a usual thing," be  pondered aloud. "I wonder what is on his

mind?" 

"Maybe his big words finally made him dizzy," Monk grinned. 

"More likely his association with you has gotten him down, you  hairy mistake," Ham said unkindly. 

The pleasantly ugly Monk scowled and registered injury. 

"I'm gonna tell Habeas on you," he muttered seriously. 

Ham's grip on his sword cane tightened. Habeas Corpus was Monk's  pet pig, a bigeared, longlegged shoat

which was fully as ridiculous a  looking member of the pork family as Monk was of the human race. 

Doc went through the file containing the data on America's most  wealthy men. One card was dogeared with

thumb marks, as if it had been  handled more than the others. 

The card bore the name of Thackeray Hutchinson, a banker who was  among the wealthiest and whom the

United States government had once  tried to convict of illegal practices in connection with the failure of  a

public utilities project. The charge had been defeated by clever  lawyers. 

Doc got Thackeray Hutchinson on the telephone, then stated that he  wished information on Fountain of

Youth, Inc. 

"Never heard of it!" snapped the pompous banker, and hung up. 

"He was lying," said Doc, who was a judge of voice expression.  "We'll investigate him more thoroughly a bit

later." 

They rode an elevator down to the street. On the sidewalk, they  halted and stared. 

"I got tired of the woods," Pat smiled. "Johnny and the others told  me I could catch you here if I hurried." 

There was no gushing display of affection. She and Doc merely shook  hands warmly. 

"I brought Habeas along," Pat told Monk laughingly. 

Monk took in her smart frock, her chic hat and the slender silk of  her ankles. 

"Golly, Pat," he said, grinning from one ear to the other, "you  sure make these city gals look rusty. Thanks

for bringing Habeas. Ham,  here, will appreciate that." 


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Ham scowled at Monk, bowed graciously to Pat. 

"Haven't you two settled your quarrel yet?" Pat laughed. 

"One of these days I'll lose my temper," Ham said grimly. "Then  they'll be hunting for a coffin wide enough

to hold that ape." 

Doc Savage indicated the car. "We'll talk on the way uptown, Pat,  but I'm afraid we'll have to drop you at the

office until we get a  matter settled." 

"A matter?" Pat asked curiously. "Sounds interesting." 

"There's a plot afoot;" Monk imparted. "Or rather, some other  cookies are plotting something." 

"I'm going along!" Pat declared firmly. "I've missed all the  excitement we had while you fellows were up in

my country. To tell the  truth, it was in hopes of seeing some action that I came down to visit  you." 

Doc shook his head. "It's dangerous, or may be." 

"Aw, Doc," Monk grumbled. "Pat's regular. What we went through in  Canada proves that." 

Doc surrendered. "All right." 

They entered the sedan, Doc taking the wheel. The machine did not  look new or particularly efficient, but the

motor came to life under  the hood with scarcely a sound, and the quiet power of their departure  from the curb

indicated costly gears and great power. 

"The yearning to hunt trouble must run in the Savage blood," said  Pat. "Gentlemen, I yearn for some action." 

"Here it is!" Doc rapped abruptly, and stepped heavily on the power  brakes. 

A taxi had sloughed crosswise of the narrow street. It was the same  cab which had been used a bit earlier by

Leaking to kidnap Doc. 

MEN MATERIALIZED with sinister abruptness out of the crowds on the  sidewalk. Some carried trombone

cases, and others long hand bags. They  snapped them open. Out came sawedoff rifles, shotguns, a machine

gun  or two. 

Patricia Savage slid off the seat onto the floorboards, opening her  chic hand bag as she did so. Out of the bag

came an enormous, muchworn  singleaction sixshooter. The gun had neither trigger nor sights, and  a

fanning spur had been welded onto the hammer. 

Monk and Ham wrenched out superfirer pistols. 

"There's that Santini bird!" Monk rapped. 

Ham, squinting at the gunmen rushing toward the car, added, "And  there's Hallet and Leaking!" 

Santini, resplendent in red chest ribbon and catwhisker mustache,  was one of the attackers who depended

only on a hand weapon. He held  his pearlandgold inlaid automatic. 


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"Tutto ad un tratto!" he howled. "All at once! Let them have it!" 

The close confines of the street quaked, thundered and echoed with  the crash of guns. Fully a dozen men had

surrounded the sedan, and all  fired simultaneously. Machine gun and automatic pistol ejectors sprayed  empty

cartridges on the pavement. 

It seemed impossible that those in the sedan could live under that  storm of powderdriven metal. 

Chapter 5. THE HANGING MAN

FISH LANE was an unpaved rut which ran out into the bog that was  the upper end of Flushing Bay. This bog

was furred with tall, coarse  salt water grass, and along the Lane stood a few shacks of wood, tar  paper and tin,

most of these structural materials apparently having  come from neighboring junk heaps. 

A car crawled quietly into Fish Lane, a long, streamlined machine  with a fishtail back and pants over the

wheels. It stopped. 

The man who first alighted from the machine had hands of startling  size. Huge and knobby, they eclipsed the

other proportions of their  owner, who would weight in excess of two hundred and fifty pounds, and  who was

gaunt and bony. 

Wearing a long, solemn, funerealgoing expression, he asked of some  one still in the car, "Fish Lane is where

Doc said to come, wasn't it,  Johnny?" 

"Eminently correct, Renny," said Johnny's scholastic voice. Johnny  was a scarecrow of bones, except that the

garments were hung on his  frame were of excellent quality. Nowhere on his skeleton did there seem  to be

even a normal muscle, far less any surplus flesh. Dangling from  his shirt lapel was a monocle on a ribbon. 

They were a strange pair, these two. "Renny" was known all over the  world for his ability and

accomplishments as an engineer, having  constructed bridges, dams, power plants, railroads, in many

countries. 

The bony Johnny was equally famous in his field of archaeology and  geology, and he had formerly been the

head of the natural science  research department of a famous university, an environment which  perhaps had

given him his love of big words. 

Bigfisted Renny's engineer associates knew him as Colonel John  Renwick, while scholastic gentlemen knew

Johnny as William Harper  Littlejohn. 

Gaunt Johnny peered into the car and advised, "Alight,  Electrophobia." 

The man who now got out of the car, stuffing a tangle of wires and  delicate electrical apparatus into a door

pocket as he did so, looked  pale and almost feeble. Alongside the great, bigfisted Renny, he  seemed almost

an invalid, a fact that was deceptive, however, for the  giant Renny would have hesitated about mixing in a

fight with the puny  looking one, knowing him as he did. 

The apparent invalid was Major Thomas J. Roberts, "Long Tom" to his  intimates, an electrical wizard

extraordinary. 

These three were the other members of Doc Savage's group of five  remarkable assistants, and each was an


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expert, a socalled genius, in  his line, although in their case as in most others, genius and hard  work and

protracted study. 

Renny pointed with his huge fist. "There's the place where this Kel  Avery is supposed to be  1120 Fish

Lane." 

THE BUILDING at 1120 Fish Lane was grayishly shabby and  resembled  a barred rock hen nested in a tangle

of brush. Shingles were scabbing  off the roof, tin cans had been split and nailed over knotholes in the

upanddown plank walls, and sacks and old clothing were wadded in  place of missing windowpanes. 

The Flushing elevated tracks were not far away and a train passed  on it, making much clank and rumble. 

"That joint isn't much," Renny rumbled. "We won't need to wait for  Doc. Let's take it." 

They were all agreed on the idea, and they went forward. Doc's word  had been to await his arrival, but they

knew the bronze man had made  that statement in a general fashion rather than a literal one. 

If there had been any apparent need for needing Doc's consummate  skill in the present instance, the three

would have waited. But to  learn whether Kel Avery was in the shack or not seemed but a simple  matter. 

Doc Savage's five men were not puppets who did the bronze man's  bidding. They were men of training, of

sharp mentality, and had a habit  of going ahead on their own initiative. Sometimes they made mistakes.  More

often, they did not. 

Turning into the ramshackle building, they stepped over a fallen  fence and trod a furrow through the brush

and weeds where feet had  trampled. In one spot they noticed tracks  the prints of long, narrow  shoes 

embedded in the moist loam. 

"Seems to have been only the one guy walking in and out here,"  rumbled bigfisted Renny. 

Another train passed noisily on the nearby elevated. 

Gaining the door, the three men knocked; but there was no answer.  Gaunt Johnny shifted to a knothole

uncovered by tin and pasted his  right eye to the aperture. His violent start was plainly visible to  both Renny

and Long Tom, and he used a pet ejaculation which he saved  for occasions of supreme shock. 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" he exploded. 

Renny and Long Tom reached his side in concerted leaps. They  clapped eyes in turn to the knothole, and each

tensed. Then Renny  bounded back to the door. 

There was blurred motion, a crash, and splinters climbed in a cloud  around Renny. With one blow, he had

sent an enormous fist through the  door. 

It was a remarkable exhibition of iron ruggedness, but Johnny and  Long Tom showed no surprise, for they

had seen its equal and had heard  Renny's frequent boast that no wooden door was made with a panel so  stout

that he could not smash through with one swing of the  monstrosities which he called fists. 

Weakened, the door collapsed. The three men dived inside. They  gazed upward the instant they were across

the threshold. 


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"Horrible!" Johnny breathed. "Revolting!" 

"Damn bad!" agreed pale Long Tom. 

THE TRASH of years of abandonment lay about the room, and from the  rotting floor in one corner had

sprouted a few toadstools. Paper had  peeled from the walls long ago, while marauding boys had belted glass

out of the windows with stones and the glass reposed in shattered  fragments over the floor. 

The door of a closet hung askew, half closed; from the partition  between the shack's two rooms, the door was

missing  entirely, only  hinges that clung like rusty scabs showing that there had been one. 

Eyes of the three men remained fixed overhead, where the ceiling  lath had long since been torn away to leave

the attic naked and exposed  to its highest recess, except for the twobyfour timbers to which the  laths had

been nailed. 

They were not calloused men, these five aides of Doc's, although  they had walked long in the shadow of

violence and peril. They were not  beyond being gripped by a scene of horror. They were gripped now. 

From the roof peak stretched  a rope which was a yard in length and  terminated around the neck of a man. The

man's feet dangled off one of  the twobyfours a distance of a foot or so. 

The hanging man had a white beard which came nearly to his belt,  and it covered the front of his chest like

the stiff front of a dress  shirt. His hair was white and very long, snowy beard and hair lending  him a most

striking appearance. His face was darkly purple from the  throttling effect of the rope. 

"Quick!" boomed Renny. "He may be alive!" 

Renny and Johnny prepared to lift Long Tom, the lighter of the  three, up to loosen the hanging one. Then

their hair all but stood on  end. 

The hands of the man on the rope were crossed. They moved with  flashing speed, darting inside his coat.

Reappearing, each hand held a  blue revolver. 

The bearded one squirmed and his feet found a twobyfour  crosspiece. He shook his head violently and

loosened the rope from his  neck. 

It all happened in the space of a finger snap, before the three men  below could do a thing. 

"Bettah keep yoah hands in sight," the stranger advised. 

Chapter 6. DAN THUNDEN

VERY SLOWLY, so that the whitebearded man with the two blue guns  could see each move, Renny and

Johnny lowered Long Tom back to the  floor. Then Renny's huge fists knotted and unknotted angrily. 

"Take it easy," Long Tom warned. "This guy took us in, what I  mean." 

The whiskered one dropped down to the floor, white hair' flying.  There was a weird lightness and agility

about his movements. His  features were unusual, also. They had the lines of a man of fifty, yet  the skin was

clear and the eyes had a youthful sparkle. 


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"Stand still," advised the gunman in a youthful, drawling voice.  "I'm going to search yoah pockets." 

His bony but agile fingers brought to view, from armpit holsters  worn by Doc's three men, a trio of the unique

supermachine pistols  which were the bronze man's invention. He fumbled these, obviously  curious about

their mechanism. 

Renny thought he saw his chance. He lashed a big hand at the  whitebearded one. 

The results were choking to Renny. There was a whistling sound, a  bonki noise. Renny sat down heavily,

eyelids fluttering. 

He had been hit between the eyes with one of the blue revolvers and  the blow had come so swiftly that be had

not even seen it. 

Long Tom and Johnny stared. They had just witnessed speed such as  they had imagined only one man could

possess  Doc Savage. 

"Why didn't Santini, Hallet and Leaking come, instead of sendin'  you gentlemen?" asked the remarkable

whitehaired man dryly. 

"Are you Kel Avery?" Long Tom demanded. 

The other juggled the two blue guns slowly. "Are you tryin' to kid  me?" 

"Are you Kel Avery?" repeated Long Tom. 

The thatch of white hair shook. "No, suh, and you should know that,  hem' in Santini's gang." 

The electrical wizard frowned, "Wrong, whiskers. We're not working  for Santini 

"Save that guff, suh," snapped the other. "Ah don't believe you can  talk fast enough to fool old Dan

Thunden." 

"Dan Thunden," Long Tom grunted. "That your name?" Dan Thunden  laughed loudly, boyishly. "Just as if

Santini hadn't told you." 

"I tell you we're not 

"Shut up!" The blue guns jutted angrily. 

Gaunt Johnny put in, calmvoiced, "Would you condescend to answer a  single interrogation?" 

Dan Thunden threw his white hair back with a headsnapping gesture.  "What is yoah question?" 

"How old are you?" Johnny asked, using small words for once. 

"One hundred and thirtyone yeahs old," Dan Thunden said promptly. 

Renny's jaw sagged. Long Tom and Johnny looked little less shocked. 

"A dang lie!" Long Tom snapped. "Nobody could be as spry as you are  at that age!" 


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Dan Thunden's white whiskers bristled indignantly and he seemed on  the point of putting up a vociferous

argument. Instead, he spun toward  the door. 

Doc Savage stood there, his great bronze frame almost filling the  opening. Behind him were the homely

Monk and swordcanecarrying Ham.  The three of them had approached with great silence. 

Thunden leveled a gun at the door, roared, "Yoah hands up, suh!" 

But Doc was already hurtling forward. 

THUNDEN'S GUN convulsed. The shack quaked with powder roar! 

Doc was moving with the full coordination of his tremendous  muscles, and the bullet missed. A wall board

split as the lead clouted  it. 

There was no time for a second shot. Thunden ducked wildly as Doc's  great hands grasped for him. He got

clear, dancing aside. 

Johnny jumped for the whitehaired man who said his his age was a  hundred and thirtyone. 

Thunden threw a blue gun. It took Johnny in the middle. The bony  geologist folded, face distorted, tongue

protruding. 

Monk came in from the rear with the speed of a great cat. Thunden  hurled his second gun. Monk wailed and

wrapped both hands over the top  of his bullet of a head, where the weapon struck. He sank to the floor,  his

wail turning into a howl of rage and pain. All of him but his vocal  apparatus seemed paralyzed. 

The next few seconds held action as Doc's five men had never before  witnessed. They had seen many fights,

but never one in which their  bronze chief had been pitted against a man anywhere near his own equal  in

agility. 

Dan Thunden could not possibly possess the Herculean strength of  the bronze giant, but the whitehaired old

fellow did move with an  unearthly speed. Time after time, Doc seemed oh the point of grasping  Thunden,

only to have the strange fellow get clear. They flashed to the  ends of the room, two men of superhuman

abilities. 

Dan Thunden did not have an easy time of it, however. At first,  when he had carelessly used his guns to lay

out Monk and Johnny, he had  seemed supremely confident of his own ability. A grin had been on his  aged,

but remarkably healthy looking face. But the grin faded. He began  to look worried. 

"You sho' are no ordinary man!" he gulped, and his expression was  that of a man who had met something he

did not believe existed. 

Leaping desperately, he reached a window. Glass and aged wood  exploded as he went through it headfirst.

Surprisingly enough, he  managed to land on his feet outside and started running. 

The window was too small to pass Doc's big frame in a hurry, and he  had to swing around and out through

the door. That lost him time.  Thunden had gained yards. 

Renny and Doc's other men piled into the chase. Johnny, bringing up  the rear, still had his arms across his

middle and groaned with each  jump. 


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It became evident that Dan Thunden was no match for Doc in a  straight race. The bronze man overhauled the

bearded fellow. 

Thunden stopped, whirled. A gun  a tiny flat hideaway automatic   came from inside the waistband of

his trousers. 

"Down!" Doc rapped, and flattened with his men. 

Thunden's bullet made an ugly hissing as it cut through the brush  and salt water grass. Shot echoes slammed,

then came jarring back in  fainter echoes from the distant walls of Flushing warehouses. 

"White whiskers seems to be a walkin' armory," Monk growled, and  snapped the safety off on his machine

pistol. 

The superfirer hooted. Bru]sh and grass toppled as if mowed. The  homely chemist emptied an entire drum,

then reared up to observe  effects, He slapped down again in wild haste. 

Dan Thunden had crawled through the salt grass and now fired from a  spot fifty yards from where he had last

been seen. Despite Monk's mad  speed in flattening, he might well have been shot had it not been for

bronzehaired Patricia Savage, who sent a bullet snapping near Thunden,  startling the white haired one into

aiming badly. 

Pat was in the sedan, parked a short distance up Fish Lane. She had  remained in the car as a lookout. 

Dan Thunden got away, reaching a paved street which abutted on the  marsh ground and running up that until

he had the good fortune to  encounter a prowling taxi. He paused an instant before leaping into the  cab to yell

at his pursuers. 

"If you don't believe I'm a hundred and thirtyone yeahs old, look  up the records on the skippah of the Sea

Nymph, a schoonah that sailed  from New York in 1843!" he shouted. 

Then, menacing the driver of the taxi with his gun, Thunden forced  the cab to carry him away in great haste. 

Farther up the street children were playing, and that prevented Doc  and the others from using their

superfirers, or Pat her singleaction  sixgun. 

PAT, PLUGGING fresh shells into her big revolver as Doc came up,  grinned widely. 

"Two fights and I've only been with you half an hour!" she laughed.  "Talk about leading violent lives!" 

Bigfisted Renny overheard that and was puzzled. 

"Two fights?" he demanded. 

Pat indicated the sedan with a slender, capable hand. The car  windows had a frosty appearance and were

pocked. Paint was knocked off  the body. 

Renny nodded soberly, comprehending. Windows and car body were of  bulletproof construction. Indications

were that the machine had  recently been in the path of a barrage. 


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"Santini, Hallet and Leaking and their gang jumped us,"  Pat  explained for the benefit of Renny, Long Tom

and Johnny. "Stopped our  car by blocking the street with a taxi. Then they ran out with guns and  cut loose." 

"What happened?" Renny boomed. 

"I aged ten years wondering if the sedan was really bulletproof,"  Pat smiled. "And was it a good feeling when

those bullets bounced off!" 

"What about Santini's gang?" 

"They ran," Pat advised. "They had things all set for a fast  getaway. They were gone before we could get

straightened out and  follow them." 

Renny's puritanical face grew long and gloomy, which meant,  contrary enough, that he was delighted. 

"You're in awful bad company, Pat," he said seriously. 

"I love this company," Pat assured him. 

An hour later, Doc Savage and his five men were going through  ancient shipping records by way of

complying with strange, whitehaired  Dan Thunden's suggestion that they check up on his age. 

"Here it is," Doc advised, indicating yellowed papers. The others  gathered about and read. The schooner Sea

Nymph had sailed from New  York in 1843, according to the aged documents, and her skipper was a

gentleman bearing the name of Dan Thunden, whose age at that time was  exactly forty. 

Gaunt Johnny fingered his monocle and did some mental arithmetic. 

"Computation indicates Captain Dan Thunden of the Sea Nymph would  be a hundred and thirtyone years of

age if he had lived to this day,"  advised. 

"Nuts," snorted the homely Monk. 

"To whom are you attributing the qualities of a hardshelled fruit?"  Johnny asked in an injured tone. 

"Not to you," Monk grunted. "But it's silly to think any guy a  hundred and thirtyone years old could be as

spry as that old  whitewhiskered gent." 

Doc riffled through more of the ancient papers. He pointed. 

"Look," he advised. 

Again, the other read. 

"Holy cow!" gulped Renny. "That voyage in 1843 was the Sea Nymph's  last. She was lost at sea and never

heard from again." 

SHORTLY AFTER the discovery that the Sea Nymph was listed as one of  the mysteriously lost ships of the

sea, Doc Savage spoke without  consulting a timepiece. 


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"We have about thirty minutes to spare before heading for the  airport to meet this Kel Avery who was

ordered seized by Santini." 

"Do you think they will go through with the attempted capture?" Pat  asked curiously. 

"Why not? They do not know we intercepted Santini's orders to  Hallet and Leaking." 

"Right," Pat admitted. "What about the half hour we have to spare?" 

"We'll make a stab at learning what is behind this," Doc told her. 

"How?" 

"Recall the file of wealthy men in the offices of Fountain of  Youth, Inc.?" 

"You told me about it." 

"I phoned one of the names in the file  a banker by the name of  Thackeray Hutchinson," Doc explained.

"He acted very secretive and hung  up on me." 

"Which means he knows something," Pat said promptly. 

"Right." 

"And we're going to ask him questions?" 

"We are." 

Chapter 7. MURDER

BANKER Thackeray Hutchinson's domicile was one befitting a man who  was by way of being one of the

nation's wealthiest and most  unscrupulously greedy moneybags. It was a penthouse covering the entire  roof

of a costly building which Thackeray Hutchinson owned in the Wall  Street sector. 

"I never did like this Hutchinson octopus," Monk muttered as they  unloaded before the building which

supported the penthouse. "He should  have been shot when he was born." 

"He's an orphan robber," agreed pale Long Tom. 

A private elevator gave admittance to the penthouse, and this was  operated by a rather toughlooking fellow

in a gaudy uniform. 

"Mr.  Hutchinson,  is not  in,"  the  operator  advised harshly. 

"We'll go up anyway," Monk growled. 

The attendant started to object, but eyed the chemist's gorilla  hulk and changed his mind. He ran them up in

sour silence. 

A butler put his nose in the air and also imparted that Hutchinson  was not in.  "Don't lie to us!" Doc Savage


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said shortly. The flunky  stared coldly at the bronze man. Then his haughty aplomb collapsed.  There was

something about Doc's flakegold eyes and the quiet power of  his voice that did not promise easy going to

those who tried to resist  his will. 

"In the library," the butler mumbled. 

Banker Thackeray Hutchinson sprang wildly from his easy chair as  they walked unceremoniously into his

presence. He stared at Doc Savage  and his expression was that of a rabbit hunter who has just met a bear. 

The moneybags had the jowls of a bulldog, the eyes of a lizard and  the body of a pelican, along with the

pelican's neck. His head was  utterly bald and an unpleasant white, as if the top of his skull were  showing. 

"Damn you, get out of here!" he yelled. He wore a checkered suit  with a ridiculously youthful cut, a suit such

as a college freshman  might wear until his classmates laughed him into leaving it at home.  The effect was

such that Ham, whose hobby was clothing, made a face as  he glimpsed the loud suit. 

"My name is Savage, Mr. Hutchinson," Doc began. "We have called  upon you to  " 

"I know you're Doc Savage, and a big shot with some fools!" the  banker roared. "You may buffalo some

people, but you won't get to first  base with me! Get out!" 

"We have called to learn what you know of Fountain of Youth, Inc.,"  Doc finished. 

"Never heard of it!" the pelican man snarled. 

"That is not true," Doc charged. "Your denial doesn't ring sound." 

Hutchinson ground his teeth and leaped for a telephone. Monk moved  with a lazy speed and got there first.

The banker shrank away from the  apish chemist. 

"Help, police!" he screamed. "Help! Murder!" 

"The police are here," Doc advised. 

Hutchinson snarled, "Where?" 

"We are the police. Myself and each of my men hold commissions on  the New York police force." 

The man whose manner of getting wealth had interested the Federal  government retreated, scowling

trembling a little. He was the picture  of a man in a panic. 

Doc Savage studied the fellow. During Thackeray Hutchinson' 5 trial  in connection with the public utilities

fiasco, there had been much in  the newspapers and little of it complimentary. There was one angle  worth

remembering  this man had an awful fear of going to jail. It  was rumored that he had spent over a million

dollars in defeating the  government charge. 

"You are under arrest," Doc said abruptly. 

Hutchinson blanched. "Wwwhat?" 


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"Fountain of Youth, Inc., has made repeated attempts to kill me  within the last two hours," Doc told him

quietly. "You have been  connected with the concern, and that means a trip to jail." 

"Yyou're crazy!" the banker snarled. 

"Accessory to murder, or attempted murder, is a criminal charge,"  Doc pointed out quietly. "Your money

won't keep you out of prison." 

Doc was bluffing, but the utter calmness of his voice gave  Thackeray Hutchinson no hint of that. The threat

of jail did what  perhaps nothing else could have done. The pelican man collapsed in a  chair. 

"Wwhat do yyou want to kknow?" he mumbled. "I'll tell you." 

AT ONE side of the room, dapper Ham twirled his sword cane and  masked a smile. His law career had made

Ham a master of scaring  unwilling witnesses into divulging the truth, but even he could not  have bested the

job Doc had just done. The bronze man had hit on their  victim's one fear that of going to prison. 

"I'm only a ccustomer of Fountain of Youth, Inc.," Hutchinson  stuttered in his haste to get the information

out. 

"A customer?" Doc prompted. 

The banker wrung his hands. "This is horrible! If only Fountain of  Youth had not gotten into trouble! They

had the secret! The secret man  has hunted for since he was able to think for himself! And now they've  got in

trouble and it'll be lost." 

The hand wringing became more violent. 

"I was to pay them a million dollars for the secret," the moneybags  went on. "It was cheap at the price. A

select list of other rich men  was to receive the secret, too. We had been selected carefully because  of our

wealth anderer other qualifications by Fountain of Youth. A  million apiece, we were all to pay." 

"Wait!" Doc put in. "This isn't making sense. What is this secret  for which you and other wealthy men of

your type were to pay a million  each?" 

Thackeray Hutchinson twisted his bald head to peer about uneasily. 

"They've got a man here." he mumbled. "They said they had to be  sure we did not tell the secret or plot

against them to get the weeds." 

"Fountain of Youth has a man here? One of Santini's gang?" 

The bulldogjowled capitalist shuddered. "Yes. One of Santini's  men." 

"Who is he?" Doc rapped. 

Thackeray Hutchinson opened his mouth to reply. He shut it before  words came out. He lifted half out of his

chair. Gagging sounds escaped  him as he tried to point at a door on the opposite side of the study. 

The hardlooking elevator operator stood there, lifting a revolver. 


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"Spill your insides, will you?" he snarled. 

His gun lipped flame; the recoil kicked his arm up. The room seemed  to fly apart and come together again, so

earsplitting was the report. 

Thackeray Hutchinson sat down loosely in his easy chair. His eyes  were closed tightly. There was a round

blue hole in the middle of his  forehead. Then his mouth fell open and let a scarlet flood spill down  the vest of

his loud suit. 

Doc Savage scooped an ornamental vase off an end table. It was not  an effective weapon, but the handiest

one. He threw it. 

The gunman tried to step aside. He was far too slow. The vase hit  his gun arm. Enameled particles geysered.

The man dropped his revolver,  stooped to recover it, saw there was no time for that and leaped  backward. He

slammed the door. 

"The elevator!" Doc rapped. "Watch it!" 

Bigfisted Renny and homely Monk dived to obey. 

The gunman got the key turned in the lock  they could hear it  click. 

Doc hit the panel. It was stout. The bronze man blocked out one  metallic hand and struck. His knuckles drove

completely through the  wood, a feat that seemed more than bone and tendons could stand, yet,  when he

withdrew his fist after turning the key, there was no apparent  damage. 

Doc plunged down a passage. Yells and curses indicated the killer  had been cut off from the elevators. 

"He's makin' for the terrace!" came Renny's great rumble. 

Doc crashed through double glass doors. The slayer was on the  opposite side of the terrace, peering over the

parapet. He looked  around, grimaced, swore hoarsely, then swung over the edge and  vanished. 

Two long leaps took Doc to the edge. An ornamental fresco ran  downward, the carvings of this forming fairly

substantial handholds.  The gunman was perhaps ten feet down. 

Doc swung over and started after him. His movements were swift,  making those of the man below seem slow

by comparison. 

The killer glanced up. Discovering Doc almost upon him, he yelled a  meaningless threat. Then he tried to

increase his own pace. 

It was no spot for a race. The slayer missed his grip in his mad  haste. He clawed the air furiously, but failed

to recover, and his body  tilted outward, arms windmilling. 

At the beginning of his fall, he turned over so that he faced the  street some forty floors below. The sight

caused him to shriek long and  horribly, and the sound grew rapidly fainter as his fall carried him  away from

Doc and the others. 

On the street, pedestrians looked up, they ran away and made a  place for the body to hit the sidewalk. The

concrete cracked a little  from the impact. 


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Doc climbed slowly back to the terrace. 

Ham came out of the penthouse and said grimly, "Thackeray  Hutchinson died like that!" and snapped his

fingers to illustrate. 

Chapter 8. FAST STUFF

THE CLOCK on the front of the main hangar was big enough that it  could be seen from all parts of the flying

field, but it was dusk now,  and one had to be quite close to make out that the clock hands stood at  eight. 

Monk got out of Doc's streamlined car, saying in his small voice,  "One thing is sure, and that is we haven't

seen all the guys in this  Fountain of Youth gang. So we gotta be careful." He jerked a thumb to  take in the

airport in general. "Some of them mugs might be around here  anywhere, waitin' for Kel Avery's plane." 

Somewhat of a crowd was about the airport waiting room with its  long telescoping canopy that could be

hauled out to planes on little  wheels. The throng had a heterogeneous appearance. Some persons carried  small

books and others had cameras. 

"Autograph hounds and photographers," rumbled bigfisted Renny. 

"Which means a celebrity is arriving, doesn't it?" Patricia put in. 

Doc said, "Pat!" 

"Yes?" 

"Can you change your appearance in a hurry?" 

"If I had some dark glasses, I could. You can't imagine what a  difference dark glasses make in a girl's looks." 

Doc Savage dropped a hand into a door pocket and brought out a  small leather case. 

"Here they are. I do not think that Fountain of Youth crew got a  good look at you this afternoon, and if you

alter your appearance  slightly, they might not recognize you." 

"The idea is that nobody is to think I'm with you?" Pat queried. 

"Exactly." 

"All right." Pat tapped Ham on the arm. "Lend me that snappy  topcoat you're wearing." 

"Hula?" Ham was startled. 

"It's cut like a ladies' garment. Come on, shed it!" 

The homely Monk exploded stifled laughter and Ham, ears getting  red, slid out of his snappily tailored

topcoat and passed it to the  bronzehaired young woman. 

"Keep your eyes open and be ready to grab any loose ends that we  let slip, Pat," Doc directed. 


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"I will." Pat faded into the gloom among the other parked cars. 

A few moments later, when they saw her again, she had donned the  smoked spectacles, changed her hair, and

had draped the topcoat over  her shoulders. 

"Smart kid!" Renny rumbled softly. "I'd hardly know her myself." 

Monk, gurgling mirth, moaned ecstatically, "I always did know  something was wrong with that topcoat, and

now I see what it is. The  thing was made for a woman." 

Ham glared in the murk, fumbled his sword cane and snarled, "For  two cents I'd make hash out of you!" 

Doc put in, "Listen!" 

Out of the southern twilight was coming the multiple drone of  airplane engines. 

"That'll be the ship carrying Kel Avery," decided the bronze man.  "Let's go." 

They got out of the streamlined car, six men so unusual as to  attract more than one curious stare. 

Doc kept in the background; he seldom wore a hat, but he wore one  now, yanked low to help the murk hide

his features. He did not want to  attract the cameras or the autograph hunters. 

Long Tom, so pale as to seem an ill man, stopped an airport  attendant, asking, "Why the excitement?" 

"Maureen Darleen, the movie actress, is coming in on this plane  from Florida," the attendant replied. 

WHILE THE big passenger plane moaned closer, Long Tom sauntered  over to Doc and spoke in a low voice. 

"The photographers and autograph grabbers are here to meet Maureen  Darleen, the picture queen," he

imparted.  "But if I remember my  movies, this Darleen is not such a big shot. The best she's done is  play

opposite a well known actor or two. And that makes me wonder why  all the fuss?" 

"Haven't you read your papers lately?" Doc asked. 

"Naw," Long Tom shrugged. "I been busy working on my electrical  invention to utilize sonic waves to kill

insects and crop pests." 

"The papers yesterday and this morning were full of Maureen  Darleen," Doc explained. "She was kidnaped in

Florida yesterday, but  escaped. Some of the newspapers hinted unkindly that it was a publicity  stunt." 

"Probably was," Long Tom grunted skeptically. "These movie people  will do anything for publicity." 

"They have to. If the public does not know their names; they have  no box office pull, and big box office pull

means big salary." 

"You seem to be sticking up for this Maureen Darleen." 

"I do not know her personally," Doc replied. "But I do know that  she spends most of her salary to support a

home for orphans in her home  town down in Georgia." 


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"That may be a publicity stunt, too." 

"She does not advertise her connection with the home. Anyway, there  are less expensive methods of grabbing

publicity." 

Long Tom patted his armpit where reposed a supermachine pistol. 

"Some of these cameramen and autograph hunters may belong to the  Fountain of Youth gang," he grunted. 

Doc nodded. "I was thinking of that." 

The big plane circled the field once, the motors decreased their  clamor and the ship swung in, sinking. The

pilot was good and touched  his ponderous charge to the tarmac without a bounce; then, with  whooping gusts

from the propellers, drove the craft toward the canopy. 

Field attendants yelled and grunted and shoved to keep the crowd  out of range of the propellers, and other

flunkies ran the telescoping  awning out. 

The plane engines stopped and the cabin door opened. The throng  burst bounds and rushed for the door,

cameramen yelling and jumping up  in an endeavor to get pictures, the autograph fans shouting for Maureen

Darleen's signature. 

Doc Savage and his five men kept in a group, although they were  jostled about. They lost sight of Patricia in

her disguise of dark  glasses and borrowed topcoat, as she was submerged in the excited movie  fans. 

Suddenly a voice yelled from the edge of the melee. It was a shrill  voice, very loud, and the words were

plainly distinguishable as they  knifed through the bedlam. 

"Here is Kel Avery!" it cried. 

Instantly after that, a man shrieked. Blows smacked. Men cursed. 

"Help! Help!" bawled a voice. 

Doc Savage pitched in the direction of the cries. His great frame  went through the crowd like a torpedo

through water. At his beck, his  five men were a flying wedge. 

"Help!" bawled the voice. "Leggo me!" 

Doc sighted the fight. Several hardfaced, roughly clad men had  seized a fat, stocky fellow and were hauling

at him, beating and  kicking. 

"Stop that!" Doc rapped. 

"Who the hell are you?" snarled a man, and swung with a clubbed  revolver. 

Doc was not where he had been when the blow descended, but a yard  to one side. His fist lathed out; there

was a wet smack. The man with  the revolver threw lip his arms and floundered hack, his lips a pulp  and his

teeth showing through splits where Doc's metallic knuckles had  landed. 


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The others ran with the fat man. They did not get far. Doc was upon  them, his five men close behind. They

struck, grabbed, twisted. 

Johnny, who looked so incredibly gaunt, grabbed a thug twice his  own weight, enwrapping the fellow spider

fashion. The victim shrieked  terribly, proving that Johnny had a fighting ability that belied his  professional

appearance. 

The brawl attracted a crowd. A newspaper photographer began to jump  about in his excitement and fumble

his flashlight apparatus. 

"It's Doc Savage in action!" he howled. "T'hell with the movie  dame! Get this!" 

His flashlight gun made a whoosh!" and an eyehurting splash of  white light. Other cameramen joined the

outskirts of the fray and their  flashes winked blindingly. 

A man wearing an aviator's helmet ran into the scrap, fists  swinging, and was promptly knocked senseless,

falling at the feet of a  woman who began screaming hysterically. 

Long Tom bored into the middle of a large man with a gun; his fists  made a rapid drum roll, and the man

collapsed, gurgling. Running for  another foe, the electrical wizard went out of his way to bump a camera

from a photographer's hands and step on it, ruining the exposed plates.  Long Tom knew Doc's dislike for

newspaper publicity, and the camera  belonged to the newspaper which the photographer worked for, anyway. 

Quite suddenly, the fight was over. Of the gang who had tried to  seize the fat man, all were helpless,

sprawled on the ground. There  were exactly seven of them, and all had the earmarks of smalltime  criminals. 

Doc helped the fat victim to his feet. "You're not hurt, Avery?" 

"My name is not Avery!" shrieked the fat man. "I'm Joe Smith and  I'm a reporter on the Morning Comet!" 

Doc beckoned other newspaper men to come close. "This man says he's  Joe Smith 

"Sure, he's Joe Smith of the Morning Comet," said a journalist. "We  all know him!" 

Doc Savage's strange flakegold eyes roved from Joe Smith to the  overpowered assailants, and the bronze

man's features were strangely  fixed, more metallic than ever. 

There sounded unexpectedly a weird, low, mellow trilling note, a  fantastic sound which seemed to come from

everywhere and yet from no  definite source, and which ran up and down the musical scale,  definitely

rhythmatic, yet adhering to no specific tune. Even those  bystanders who heard the exotic trilling and looked

at the bronze man's  lips, could not tell from whence it came. Yet Doc Savage authored the  sound. 

The trilling was a small, unconscious thing which Doc Savage did  when under sudden stress, or when greatly

surprised. Even he could not  tell exactly how he made it, but the sound always had great  significance. Just

now it meant that he was shocked and utterly  disgusted with himself. 

At Doc's signal, the men who had attacked the reporter were hauled  into the nearest hangar and the doors

closed. The thugs were scared and  bewildered and entirely willing to talk, hoping it would prevent them

being charged with a worse crime than assault. 


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"A guy named Santini hired us to jump this bird Kel Avery when the  plane came in, and beat him up," one of

the men moaned. "Santini  pointed out Kel Avery to us. We got fifty bucks apiece." 

"It was Joe Smith, a reporter, you attacked and not Kel Avery," Doc  said grimly. 

"Santini said that guy was named Kel Avery, and for us to yell out  his name," insisted the frightened yegg. 

DOC SAVAGE turned the gang over to the airport officials and went  outside to join his aides. 

"We fell for a trick," he said grimly. "Santini hired these cheap  crooks to attack a man in the crowd and get

our attention." 

"But why get our attention?" Ham demanded, puzzled. 

Bigfisted Renny came up with the answer to that. The engineer was  excited. 

"Doc! Doc!" he ejaculated. "During the fight, another gang grabbed  this Maureen Darleen and another

woman and carried them off in a car,  according to people I've talked to in the crowd. They slugged a

bodyguard this Maureen Darleen had along." 

A moment of silence followed the news and Doc Savage's strange  trilling sound seemed to echo, but it was

very low and hardly  perceptible to the ear. 

"What beautiful dopes we turned out to be," Ham muttered. "That  other fight was to get our attention while

this gang grabbed Maureen  Darleen." 

"But I thought it was somebody named Kel Avery that they were  after!" Renny rumbled. 

"Where is this bodyguard of Maureen Darleen's?" Doc demanded. 

"Over here." Renny led the way. 

The bodyguard looked the part. He was an athletic giant almost as  impressive in physique as Doc Savage.

The fellow's great muscles were  more bulging even than Doc's, which meant he was a trifle musclebound.

He had a square head, a corded neck and square, powerful fingers. Slung  across his chest, in plain sight, was

a harness for carrying two  pistols in underarm holsters. 

The man was sitting up, shaking his head slowly, when Doc  approached him. He peered at the bronze man a

bit vacantly, then felt  of the holsters attached to his harness. They were empty. 

Doc knelt, grasped the fellow's shoulders and shook him. "Are you  Kel Avery?" 

The overmuscled one shook his head from side to side. "Meester, my  name, she is no Kel Avery. My name is

Da Clima, yes." 

His English was understandable enough, but the words were put  together in the manner of one who had

learned the tongue in later life.  Such accent as he had was that of southern Europe. 

"You are Maureen Darleen's bodyguard?" Doc questioned. 


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"Her guard, yes. Maybe was her guard." Da Clima sighed. "She, maybe  it is, won't want a guard who as a

guard is not so hot, no?" 

"Do you know a Kel Avery?" Doc asked. 

Da Clima squinted. Muscles as large as muskmelons bulged up under  his coat as he lifted himself. 

"Kel Avery is Maureen Darleen," he said. "You not know that, no?" 

"Maureen Darleen and Kel Avery the same person?" Doc repeated, as  if to make sure. 

Da Clima nodded. "Kel Avery, or Kelmina Avery, she don't use that  name, not so much. The name Avery,

she not so good on the movie  picture, no. Maureen Darleen much better, so the girl she use the name  of

Avery not so,, much." 

"A lot of these movie actresses have stage names, Renny rumbled. 

Monk came up, short legs taking great leaps. 

"Pat ain't around here anywhere!" he snapped. 

Doc gripped Renny's thick arm. "You said that gang made off with  two women, didn't you?" 

"Yes." 

"Let's go!" 

Chapter 9. KEL AVERY'S STORY

THE CAR bearing the kidnapers and their two women prisoners was a  long blue phaeton. It had gone toward

New York. These two bits of  information were forthcoming from members of the crowd who had seen the

snatching. 

Da Clima piled into Doc's streamlined car with the rest. 

"Da Clima, he go along," he growled. "We catch them and Da Clima,  he do them like this!" His muscular

hands made pantomime of breaking  things. 

"How about that, Doc?" Monk questioned. 

"Let him come, of course. We want to ask him questions." The big  engine came to life under the tapered

hood, but only sudden animation  of ammeter and oil gauge showed that. The machine was fitted with an

automatic shifting device, and Doc thrust the lever which meshed the  gears, after which the shifting required

no further attention. 

Tires threw gravel all the way out of the flying field, shrieked on  concrete as they swerved to the pavement,

and then there was only the  hiss of exhausts and the wail of air past the streamlined curves. 

The speedometer arm jumped around to seventy. Doc touched a switch,  and a siren started a banshee wail. 


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Doc spoke to Da Clima without taking his eyes off the scudding  concrete. 

"What do you know about this?" he demanded. 

"Me, I not know the much," Da Clima disclaimed. 

"Tell us what you do know." 

"Yesterday, I read about it in the papers, the kidnap what is tried  on Maureen Darleen," said Da Clima. "I am

in this Florida then. Maybe  you read about that, no? The kidnap what is try on Maureen Darleen 

"Call her Miss Avery so there will be no confusion," Doc suggested.  "Yes. We read about the attempted

kidnaping." 

"I go to her, to Mees Avery," Da Clima continued. "I am once the  fighter, not so hot. Now, the nickel I pick

up where I can. I fight. I  shoot. I'm plenty the tough guy, me." 

"Don't brag," Monk growled. "You're with guys who are tough, now." 

"But you not so good in the head, no?" Da Clima queried. "You run  to the wrong fight while them fellows,

they get Maureen  Mees Avery.  They make of you the sap, no?" 

Monk scowled. "Say, you funnytalkin' bundle of beef, are you  huntin' a scrap?" 

"Stop it," Doc put in quietly. "Da Clima, you went to Miss Avery  after you heard of the attempt to kidnap her

and offered your services  as a bodyguard  is that it?" 

"That's her, the idea," Da Clima nodded. "I put up the talk and  tell her that me, I am the one she need. So she

hire me to watch out  for her." 

"A swell job you done," Monk snorted. 

Da Clima started to answer, but caught sight of the speedometer and  his eyes opened wide and black. He wet

his lips uneasily and muttered,  "Boy, we travel  no?" 

The speedometer read eightyfive. Buildings went by like pickets  and cars, frightened to the curb by the

siren, were blurred. 

"What else do you know?" Doc asked. 

"Me, nothing," said Da Clima. 

"Don't you know anything about Santini, Hallet, Leaking, or a  whitebearded man named Dan Thunden, who

claims he is a hundred and  thirtyone years old, or a company which calls itself Fountain of  Youth, Inc.?" 

"Nope," said Da Clima. "Never heard of any of them, no.,, 

"What an information mine he turned out to be!" Monk growled. 

Da Clima scowled at the homely chemist and said, "Da Clima, he not  like you, not much." 


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"Brother, the affection is returned," Monk rapped. 

"Look!" pale Long Tom shrieked. 

DOC SAVAGE had already applied the power brakes. The heavy  streamlined car squatted a little, slithered,

straightened, slithered  again, then, as the bronze man alternately stamped and released the  brake pedal, the

machine spun with tires screaming and stopped with its  radiator pointing hack the way it had come. 

Da Clima was pale, frightened by the wildness of their stop, and  his hands were clenched, his breath coming

and going rapidly. 

Under the tread of the accelerator the big car lunged back upon  their course, then slackened speed and

swerved off the pavement,  bounding over the packed shoulder, and stopped. 

A woman was standing in the ditch beside the road, in water to her  knees. She was disheveled, mud spattered,

her frock was torn at the  shoulder, as if she had pitched into the ditch from a rapidlymoving  car. She came

toward them, wiping mud off her face. 

"Maureen  Mees Avery!" Da Clima cried in astonishment. Kel Avery  was a tall young woman, blonde,

blueeyed, and even though she was  swathed in mud and roadside grime, it was not hard to see why, as

Maureen Darleen, she was considered one of the upandcoming young  movie actresses. 

She got in the car and said, "Back the way you were going,  gentlemen! And step on it!" 

Monk grinned as if he liked that and made room for her, while Doc  jockeyed the car around skillfully. They

resumed their cometlike  progress, siren ahowl. 

"Which one of you is Doc Savage?" Kel Avery asked. 

Monk pointed at the front seat, but said nothing. 

Kel Avery took in the bronze man's remarkable head, his expanse of  shoulders, the metallic texture of his

skin. 

"Oh," she said. "I didn't get a look at him, or I would have  known." 

"Ask her questions, Monk," Doc directed. "This driving takes a lot  of attention. We're getting into the city

limits." 

On the floorboards, where he had been throughout, the pig Habeas  Corpus sniffed of the movie actress's

drenched, shapely ankles until  Monk kicked him lightly in the ribs. 

"They threw me out," said Kel Avery. 

"After they went to all that trouble to seize you?" Monk asked  incredulously. 

"Oh, they thought I was my maid," explained the blonde actress.  "The other girl made them think she was Kel

Avery." 

"What other girl?" 


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"The one who rushed to my side and acted as if she was one of my  party, when the trouble started hack at the

airport. Say, that young  lady would go great in the movies. She's got looks, and how she can  act! She made

them think she was Kel Avery, and when she got her  chance, whispered to me to begin to scream and they

might throw me out,  and if they did, I should find Doc Savage and tell him my story. So I  screamed and they

did throw me out." 

Doc tooled the plunging car past an intersection, then threw a  question over his shoulder. 

"What did this other girl look like?" 

"She was beautiful, as I said," advised Kel Avery. "And she had  bronzecolored hairhair like your own, Mr.

Savage." 

"It was Pat!" Monk groaned. 

THERE WAS unpleasant silence for a whilesilence, if the whooping  noise of the big car's progress could be

excepted. 

Doc Savage himself showed little expression, for his command of his  facial muscles was complete, but his

five men showed that the thought  of Patricia Savage being in the hands of Santini's crew was anything  but

pleasant. 

Da Clima held on, face white, and seemed to shrink each time the  speeding car careened. 

"I was coming to New York by plane to get your help, Mr. Savage,"  volunteered blonde Kel Avery. 

"Did you tell that to any one?" Doc questioned. 

"Nobody. Why?" 

"Because Santini and his outfit learned you were coming to me and  tried to grab me and put me where you

could not find me," Doc told her.  "Or that's how it seems." 

"Santini?" Kel Avery sounded puzzled. 

"Ever hear of him?" 

"Or of Fountain of Youth, Inc.?" 

"What about Hallet or Leaking?" 

"Never heard the names that I recall." The blonde's voice had a  ring of genuineness. 

"What about a whitehaired man named Dan Thunden who says he is a  hundred and thirtyone years old?" 

"Oh!" 

Doc lifted his eyes from the road and turned his head for a quick  glance. The girl looked startled. "You have

heard of Dan Thunden?" Doc  asked. 


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"Yes," said Kel Avery. "He is my greatgrandfather, according to the  letter I got from him. My

greatgrandfather on my mother's side, his  letter said." 

"What else did his letter say?" Doc asked grimly. 

"It said for me to take the package that was with the letter and  guard it with my life, to be sure not to open it,

and to come to  Florida and I would be worth fifty million dollars within thirty days,"  the blonde said all in

one breath. 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled.  Doc inquired. "You obeyed  instructions?" 

"Oh, it sounds silly, but I did," Kel Avery sighed. "You see, the  press agent of the movie company I work for

thought it would be a great  idea to get some newspaper space. The company even paid me a salary to  go to

Florida as instructed, and the press agent was going to meet me  there. But before he came, I was kidnaped.

That scared me. I came  North." 

"Why come North?"  The actress smiled. "To put the thing into your  hands."  "Was that the press agent's

idea?" Doc asked. 

Kel Avery looked blank, then color crept up in her cheeks under the  mud and she glared indignantly at the

back of Doc's head. 

"Those men threatened to kill me and I was scared!" she snapped.  "They told me they would kill me unless I

got the package. As a matter  of fact, I didn't escape. They turned me loose to get the parcel. And  the press

agent does not know where I am. The press agent hadn't even  gotten to Florida." 

Doc was silent after the sharp answer, his metallic features  expressionless. He made no movements, except

suck as were necessary in  controlling the car. 

A corner loomed ahead. Kel Avery screamed softly; Da Clima groaned  and put big hands over his face; the

car reeled, rubber shrieked, then  they were around the corner, straightened out and going on safely. 

"Where is the parcel now?" Doc asked, his great voice calm. 

"In the plane on which I arrived, back at the airport," said Kel  Avery. "You see, I sent it by air mail, knowing

it would come on the  same plane." 

"Why that precaution?" 

"I was afraid to carry it. Maybe I'm not very brave." 

"You're brave enough," Doc assured her. 

"This is what I call a deep, black mystery," Monk muttered. 

Doc slowed the streamlined car abruptly, much to the relief of Da  Clima, who swelled proportionately as the

machine slackened speed, so  that, when they were traveling forty, his chest was out, his chin up,  his eyes

bright and brave. 

"It's no use," Doc said. "The car carrying Pat has given us the  slip." 


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Bony Johnny absently fitted his monocle into his left eye, where it  gave his optic a grotesque appearance, for

the monocle was in reality a  powerful magnifying glass which the gaunt geologist and archaeologist  found

occasion to use in the course of his work. 

"This thing about Pat is appalling," he said. "Appalling!" 

Chapter 10. THE PACKAGE TRICK

MANY CITIZENZ of New York City knew of the headquarters which Doc  Savage maintained on the

eightysixth floor of Manhattan's most  impressive skyscraper, for the newspapers had published that fact

innumerable times. But not many citizens had seen the establishment.  Had they done so, they would have

been astounded. 

The establishment consisted of an outer reception room and office  which was sumptuously, but not gaudily

furnished. Beyond this was a  library which for completeness in its assortment of scientific books  could be

equaled perhaps by but one other library, its location unknown  except to Doc Savage himself, being in a

mysterious and remote spot  which the bronze man termed his "Fortress of Solitude," and to which he  retired

at intervals to study, none knowing his whereabouts, not even  his five trusted aides. 

Connecting with the library was an experimental laboratory, this  also having an equal only in the second

laboratory which the bronze man  maintained at his "Fortress of Solitude." The city laboratory held  apparatus

for almost every conceivable scientific experiment, as well  as tools for the construction of the numerous

devices for which Doc  Savage found need. 

Monk stood in the outer office, nudging Habeas Corpus gently in the  ribs with a toe, and spoke his mind. 

"That old yahoo, Dan Thunden, is sure a licksplitting freak," the  homely chemist declared. "Imagine a gink

a hundred and thirtyone years  old being able to hop around like he can." 

Only beautiful blonde Kel Avery was listening, but she was audience  enough, since Monk would talk all day

if it would keep him in the  company of a girl as attractive as this one. 

Doc was issuing commands, having just finished writing a number of  names and addresses on slips of paper. 

"Here are some of the wealthy men whose names were in that file  which we found in the offices of Fountain

of Youth, Inc.," the bronze  man explained. 

He distributed the slips to Long Tom, Renny, Ham and Johnny. 

"Investigate," he directed. "Those names were in the file for some  reason, just as was that banker, Thackeray

Hutchinson." 

Renny folded his paper slip with huge fingers. "Some of these birds  should give us information," he said. 

"Be careful," Doc admonished. "We do not want a repetition of what  happened to Thackeray Hutchinson." 

"That guy got what was coming to him," put in Monk, who had paused  to overhear. 

"What happened to him?" blonde Kel Avery asked curiously. 


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"He got shot between the eyes," Ham told her. 

"Oh!" The young woman gasped and sank into a chair. 

"This hairy ape"  Ham indicated Monk with his sword cane   "thinks it was all right for a man to get

killed." 

"Aw, he was an orphan robber," Monk said uncomfortably, knowing  very well Ham had deliberately put him

before the movie actress in a  calloused light. 

"What about Pat?" Renny rumbled anxiously. 

"We haven't a lead to go on," Doc pointed out. "We'll have to see  what turns up." 

The four men departed with their paper slips, intent on running  down some information about Fountain of

Youth, Inc. 

Big Da Clima went to the water cooler, drank deeply from the  gurgling fountain, then came back and stood in

front of Doc. 

"Me, I think I go out, not for long," he said. 

"Why?" Doc asked. 

Da Clima shrugged musclebound shoulders, and said, "Business." 

"Very well," Doc agreed. 

Da Clima lumbered out toward the elevators. 

Doc nodded at Monk. "Follow him." 

Monk grinned and waved Habeas Corpus back. 

"Boy, do I hope this Da Clima gives me some excuse to tie into  him," leered the homely chemist. "I don't like

him." 

Monk went out. 

KEL AVERY tried to wring muddy water out of her drying frock and  asked, "You do not trust Da Clima?" 

"Just a precaution," Doc told her quietly. "And it gives Monk  something to do. He would feel neglected if he

wasn't doing something." 

"You have a remarkable group of men," said the young woman. 

Doc bowed politely, suggested, "It is not advisable for you to  leave here, since Santini and his crew must

know about this  headquarters. You can use the telephone and have fresh clothing sent up  from a shop. There

is an excellent one in the building." 

"Thank you." 


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Doc Savage retired to the library where there was a second  telephone  and while Kel Avery called the

shop, the bronze man put in  a call of his own to the post office officials. Much talk ensued, and  he was

transferred to several officials before he got full  satisfaction. 

He had to explain twice what he wanted, and he found it necessary  to give the mail officials the number on a

small card which he drew  from a pocket. 

The card which Doc used held the information that he was a fully  commissioned postal investigator, and bore

the postmaster general's  signature. This was one of many honorary commissions which Doc held. 

Doc went next to the laboratory, where he switched on a shortwave  radio telephone

transmitterandreceiver. This communicated to other  shortwave sets in the automobiles used by his aides

in their work. 

Doc called Johnny, Long Tom, Ham and Renny in rapid succession   but only Johnny answered. The others

were evidently interviewing their  rich men. 

"You have my unadulterated attention, Doc," said bigworded Johnny. 

"Listen," said Doc. 

Then he spoke rapidly in the Mayan dialect which he used to  communicate with his men when conveying

secret and important orders. 

"Supermalagorgeous," said Johnny when the conversation ended. 

Doc went in and joined Kel Avery in the outer room. "You have  arranged for my air mail package to come

here?" asked the movie  actress. 

"It will be here in not more than twenty minutes," Doc replied. 

"You took quite a bit of time," the young woman pointed out. "Did  you experience any trouble?" 

The bronze man seemed on the point of informing her of something  unusual about the call he had made to the

mail officials, but before  the words formed, the outer door opened and Da Clima came stamping in. 

"Me, I get two new ones," said Da Clima, and threw back his coat,  revealing in his shoulder harness a pair of

heavy blue revolvers. "My  other two ones, them feller at the airport they get," he added. 

"Bought two new revolvers, eh?" Doc said slowly. "They are not easy  to purchase here in New York." 

"For the feller with the money, anything she easy," grinned Da Cli  ma. "At a hock shop. I get them, and I no

need the license for to  carry, either." 

Monk ambled in shortly, tossed a bundle of newspapers on the inlaid  office table, said, "There they are, Doc,"

as if he had been sent out  to get the papers instead of to follow Da Clima. Then he ambled into  the laboratory. 

Doc joined Monk as soon as he could do so without attracting Da  Clima's suspicions. 

"The mug went into a hock shop, stayed a while, then came back  here," Monk grumbled. "He didn't do

nothing else." 


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"Call the police and tell them to have that pawnbroker's license to  do business taken away from him, for

selling firearms to unlicensed  persons," Doc directed. 

Monk nodded. "Any word from Pat?" 

"None." 

DOC WENT back into the outer office while Monk used the inside  phone to make his call about the

pawnbroker who sold guns to unlicensed  persons, and who was therefore undoubtedly a source of firearms to

the  underworld. 

The clothing which Kel Avery had ordered came up, and a dressmaker  accompanied the garments, ready to

make any alterations which might be  necessary. 

Bedraggled and mudcaked, the lighthaired young actress retired to  the library, and was out again shortly, the

frock having fitted her  without changes. 

"Now you look again like Maureen Darleen, the movie queen," Monk  grinned. "Not that you looked bad

before, though." 

"Thank you," the young woman smiled, then studied Habeas Corpus. "A  remarkablelooking pet pig you

have." 

"Habeas is quite a guy," Monk admitted. "Speak to the Hollywood  heartthrob, Habeas." 

"Monk, I think she's a queen," said Habeas. Entrancing Kel Avery  looked somewhat stunned, then realized

Monk had used ventriloquism to  make the homely pig apparently speak, and burst out laughing. But she

sobered very suddenly. 

"I'm worried about that other girl  Pat," she said uneasily.  "What do you  think  they're doing to her?" 

"Probably trying to buffalo her into telling them where the box  your greatgranddaddy Dan Thunden sent

you can be found," Monk guessed. 

"I'll give up that mysterious box in an instant if it will get her  freedom," Kel Avery said grimly. 

"The mailmen with the box should be here shortly," Doc put in. 

Kel Avery eyed the bronze man curiously, then said, "Just as Da  Clima came in, you started to tell me

something about the call which  you made to the air mail officials about their sending my package here.  What

was it? Or have you changed your mind?" 

Doc Savage smiled. "I haven't changed my mind," he said. Then,  before continuing, went to the window and

looked down from its  tremendous height into the street. He was silent a moment as if in  thought, then began,

"What I was going to tell you 

He fell silent, then pointed down through the window. 

"An armored mail truck is pulling up in front," he said. "It must  be bringing your package." 

Kel Avery ran over to the window. "You told them to use an armored  truck?" she asked. 


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"Of course." 

Then Doc stiffened. The young woman glanced down and also became  rigid, while Monk and Da Clima

came over quickly, stared, then grew  slackjawed and attentive. The street below was brightly lighted. 

"Oh, oh," breathed Kel Avery in a small, horrified voice. 

AN UNIFORMED postal carrier carrying a package, had gotten out of  the truck and had started for the

skyscraper entrance. But at the same  time three men had stood erect m an open touring car which was parked

near by. 

The men lifted their arms and threw what resembled glass bottles.  The containers struck the sidewalk at the

feet of the postal men and  burst, making wet smears on the concrete. These wet splashes seemed to  evaporate

with startling suddenness. Bright street lights made this  visible. 

"Gas!" breathed Monk, the chemist. 

The vapor, whatever its nature, was potent, for both postal men  collapsed within a few moments. Another

carrier, springing out of the  truck with a revolver, apparently came under the spell of the gas, for  he also went

down. 

One of the men sprang out of the touring car and ran forward. 

"Santini's gang!" Monk groaned. "He's holding his breath. Doc,  can't we do something?" 

"Quiet!" Doc rapped. 

The man far below reached the recumbent postal carriers, stooped  and seized the package which one had

been carrying. Then he galloped  back to the touring car and dived inside. The machine was moving almost  as

he hit the cushions. 

"There goes the package!" gritted Monk. 

"Them damn feller, they sure the smart guys!" Da Clima growled, and  swung for the door. 

"Wait!" Doc barked. 

There was a ring of authority to the bronze man's voice that  brought the excited Da Clima up and caused him

to return, his  expression puzzled, to the window, where he peered downward again. 

The touring car was rolling more swiftly down the street. Monk  wrenched up the window, roaring, "I can hit

'em with my superfirer  pistol!" 

"No," Doc told him. 

Monk spun around. "Doc, have you gone nuts?" But before the bronze  man could possibly make answer, the

homely chemist looked sheepish,  then began to grin. 

"Doc, you pulled a fast one," he accused. "What was it?" 

"Have a look." Doc pointed. 


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Down in the street, a small undistinguished coupe was darting in  and out through traffic in a manner that

made it plain to the watchers  above that it was following the touring car. 

Those in the open car could hardly tell they were trailed, due to  the intervening taxicabs and pleasure cars. 

"Johnny's coupe!" Monk barked. 

"Exactly." 

"But how did he 

"I got him on the shortwave radio at the time I called the postal  officials," Doc explained. "Johnny was to

follow the mail truck, and if  anything came up, he was to use his own judgment." 

"This may lead us to Pat," Monk grinned. 

"Let us hope." 

Chapter 11. THE SEIZURE

BUILT INTO the skyscraper which housed Doc Savage's headquarters,  was a special highspeed elevator

which gave access, not only to the  ornate lobby downstairs, but to a basement garage where the bronze man

kept his assortment of cars. 

The presence of this garage was known but to few persons outside  Doc's immediate circle of five aides. 

Kel Avery was made a bit breathless by the terrific speed with  which the elevator lowered them to the

basement, while Da Clima, who  seemed brave enough in the face of everything but speed, paled a  little. 

"The fast moving, you sure do a lot of heem, no?" he mumbled as  they got out in the passage that led to the

garage. 

"There ain't no crook ever moved fast enough to keep ahead of Doc  in the long run," Monk said. "They may

outguess him once in a while,  but the first thing you know  " Monk finished by making a gesture of

catching something imaginary in the air. 

Kel Avery put a hand on Doc's arm and asked, "It was about having  Johnny trail the truck that you were

going to tell me?" 

Doc nodded. 

She smiled. "I am glad of that, because if you had not told me, it  would have shown you did not trust me." 

Doc Savage selected a car which Santini or his followers would not  be likely to recognize as they would if

Doc used the streamlined  machine. The machine he entered was a vehicle which resembled an  ordinary

delivery truck such as is used by small laundries or  groceries. 

Bulletproof glass and armor plate construction made this virtually  a fast tank. The tires were filled with

sponge rubber instead of air.  The cab portion was fitted with comfortable seats which swiveled before

concealed portholes, and there were racks holding supefiirer pistols,  body armor, gas masks, grenades,


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canisters of gas and even a small  field gun that could be carried by two strong men and which fired a two

inch shell. 

"This, she some bus," Da Clima said admiringly. 

A sloping ramp let them through the street door, which opened  automatically at their approach and closed

behind them, actuated by a  hidden mechanism. 

Doc switched on the shortwave radio telephone and spoke into the  mouthpiece. 

"Johnny? Johnny?" 

"Going north on Broadway," came Johnny's precise voice from the  loudspeaker. "So far, there has been no

difficulty." 

"Have they seen you?" Doc asked. 

"Emphatically a negative answere to that," said Johnny, who hated  to use a little word where a big one would

do. 

"He means no," Monk advised Kel Avery. 

The young woman was staring at Doc Savage as if fascinated, for  sight of the bronze man's remarkable

skyscraper establishment had  brought home to her the fact that he was no ordinary individual. 

"I begin to understand how you get the results which have made you  famous," she murmured. "You do not

depend alone on your own personal  skill and that of your men. You use every scientific device possible in

your work." 

Doc said nothing, but gave his attention instead to the traffic. He  disliked talking about himself. 

"Deviating eastward over the bridge to Long Island," came Johnny's  scholastic voice from radio. 

Long Tom's tones came in over the air waves, following the  professorial Johnny's information. 

"What's goin' on here?" the electrical wizard demanded. 

THE DIFFERENT radio sets used by Doc Savage and his men were all  fixed on the same wave length with

crystal devices which prevented  changes in frequency. Accordingly, conversation could be carried on  much

as if they were all hooked to a party telephone line. 

Evidently Long Tom had just turned his set on and was puzzled at  what he was hearing. 

Doc told the electrical expert about the theft of the air mall  parcel. 

"Head for Long Island," the bronze man directed. "And tell me what  information you received when you

interviewed your rich man." 

There was a pause while the distant Long Tom turned his ear in the  direction of Long Island, then he began

speaking. 


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"My rich man had flown the coop," he advised. 

"Unfortunate," Doc said. "What are the particulars?" 

"He got a telephone call a little while before I arrived, according  to a maid," Long Tom explained. "He acted

excited, grabbed some money  out of his private safe, snatched a few clothes and jammed them in a  suitcase.

He ran out of the door and that's the last they saw of him." 

"Sounds as if he were tipped off that you were coming," Doc  hazarded. 

"You said it." 

Shortly afterward, Renny and Ham both reported experiences similar  to that of Long Tom. They had not

found their men at home, and in both  cases, the fellows had fledhurriedly only a few moments before their

arrival. 

Johnny interrupted to advise. "The men who appropriated that  package are now traversing an unpopulated

section of beach road." 

"Careful," Doc warned him. 

"You are cautioning me!" Johnny snorted. 

There was silence, except for the noise of traffic and the muffled  sounds made by the cars. Johnny reported

his position more exactly, and  Doc marked his whereabouts on a map of Long Island. The region into  which

Johnny was following his quarry was one of the most thinly  inhabited sections of the Island. 

Renny rumbled over the radio, "Doc, it's obvious Santini's gang  warned the rich men to skip out, and they did

it." 

"What puzzles me is what persuaded them to skip so promptly," Ham  interjected. 

"They probably knew what happened to Thackeray Hutchinson," Doc  stated. "The newspapers are on the

street with news of his death by  now. Fear of a like fate is enough to urge those wealthy men to do what  they

were told." 

"Santini is sure taking plenty of trouble to keep us from learning  what this is all about," Renny boomed.

"Brothers, it must be big,  whatever is back of this." 

A few minutes later, Johnny spoke. He forgot his big words. His  voice was a rattle of haste. 

"They've stopped their car and are getting out!" he exclaimed. Then  he clipped off his exact location. "It's on

an old road near the  beach." 

"It will take us fifteen or twenty minutes to get there," Doc  advised. "You've been traveling faster than it

seemed." 

"I'm going to trail them," Johnny said. 

"Do that. And watch your step." 


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JOHNNY SWITCHED off the radio transmitter with a bony forefinger.  He had stopped the car after pulling

into tall brush where the machine  was fairly well hidden, and he did not want the radio speaker to  attract

attention. 

Drawing his handkerchief from a pocket, the gaunt geologist wrapped  it carefully around his monocle, then

pocketed the padded glass where  it was not likely to get broken. This was a habitual precaution with  Johnny

when he contemplated going into action. 

The sand was so soft that it seemed alive under Johnny's feet as he  moved forward. There was a brilliant

moon which caused the scrawny  beach shrubs to cast grotesque shadows. Somewhere a night bird piped,  and

waves on the beach sounded as if some unseen person was pouring  buckets of water upon the sand. 

Light from flashlights splattered ahead. Voices muttered; laughter  cackled. That would be the quarry. 

"The way them mail carriers caved!" a man laughed. "Sweet, I call  it!" 

"It won't be so sweet if they croak," growled another. "Uncle Sam  is a tough monkey to have on your neck." 

"Forget it!" he was told. "That gas just made 'em senseless for a  while." 

They went on and Johnny, hurrying, got close enough that he could  hear the mushmush of their feet in the

soft sand. If they posted a  lookout, he wanted to be close enough to hear the command. 

Johnny was puzzled about their destination. This section of beach,  low and unhealthy, was not even

populated by summer cabins. Taken  altogether, it was as remote a spot as could be found in the immediate

vicinity of New York City. 

"Who the hell's that?" challenged a harsh voice. 

"Santa Claus," growled one of the trio who had robbed the mail  carriers. "Who's you think? Is his nibs here?" 

"Santini is," said the one who bad challenge, apparently a sentry. 

"He'll do." 

Johnny, mentally thanking his lucky star that he had been close  enough to catch the challenge, circled and

evaded the watchman, then  continued after the trio. They did not go much farther. 

A haze of flickering red appeared, resolved into a camp fire which  burned before a tumbledown shed that was

open on one side. 

Santini appeared in the fire glow, then Hallet and Leaking, the  latter still perspiring despite the coolness of

the night. 

Johnny stared steadily at something in the murk beyond the fire. It  stood in the edge of the water, a few yards

offshore. Some one threw  wood on the fire, and he made out the lines of the thing. 

A plane! It was a big ship, massive of hull, with great wing spread  and two canvasswathed radial motors.

An amphibianfor the thin  geologist could make out the streamlined humps which harbored the  landing

wheels, flow cranked up out of the water. 


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Santini mopped at a small cut on his chin and growled, "That damn  Pat Savage is a cat. She kicked me in the

face and almost got away!" 

That snapped Johnny's attention off the giant seaplane. So they  knew Pat was not Kel Avery! How had they

learned that? But most  important of all, Pat was here! 

"We got it," vouchsafed one of the three newcomers. "Bueno!"  Santini pocketed the handkerchief with which

he had been dabbing at his  cut chin, adjusted his sharp mustache points, then extended a hand.  "Give me!" 

He was handed the parcel which had been taken from the mail men. 

The breeze from the sea whipped in briskly, causing the moored  seaplane to bob and fine sand to whisper

against beach grass and  shrubs. 

"We will go inside where it is not windy," Santini decided. 

The instant they were inside, Johnny started to advance. He wanted  to observe the contents of that parcel. 

But the bony geologist stopped as if his spine had frozen. And it  did feel cold, too, from the chill metal object

which had jabbed  against the back of his neck. 

"Unless you be proof against bullets, you'd bettah stand still," a  remarkably youthful voice breathed in

Johnny's ear. 

Chapter 12. THE DISAPPOINTING PARCEL

JOHNNY STOOD as immobile as he could, for he had recognized the  juvenile tone as belonging to

whitebearded Dan Thunden, and common  sense told him the cold thing against his neck was a gun snout.

Hands  slapped against his person and the superfirer pistol, his only weapon,  was removed. 

Johnny wore a bulletproof vest, a fact that Dan Thunden's search  disclosed. 

"I'll shoot you in the head," advised the boyishvoiced old man. 

"So you're still working with them!" Johnny whispered back. 

Dan Thunden cursed round, seafaring oaths under his breath. 

"I'm wukkin' on them, not foah them," he gritted. "I laid aboard  the lookout back yondah, and he won't set his

sail foah some time to  come." 

"Then you and I had better work together," Johnny said hopefully,  his large words forgotten in the urgency of

the situation. 

"Old Dan Thunden is wukkin' foaH himself," Thunden whispered  vehemently. "I didn't know who you was

when I met you befoah, but now I  know you are one of Doc Savage's outfit. Well, I don't want any paht of

you." 

"Listen," Johnny began. "What  " 


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"Belay yoah jaw an' walk up to that shanty," Dan Thunden grated.  "We are gonna do some listenin'." 

Johnny, feeling discretion the better part of foolhardiness, since  the gun snout was a determined pressure

against his neck, ambled  forward and stopped against the shack wall. There were wide cracks  between the

boards which offered orifices for both eye and ear. Burning  brightly on the open side of the ramshackle

structure, the fire spilled  light over the interior, and they could see plainly what went on  within. 

Johnny's first look gave him a shock. Patricia Savage was not in  sight. 

Several men besides Santini, Hallet and Leaking were in the shack,  among them the killer of the banker,

Thackeray Hutchinson, who had  masqueraded as an elevator operator. 

Santini kicked litter aside on the floor and made a clean place on  which he placed the mail parcel. 

"We've had fits over this," he said. 

Fishing in a watch pocket beside the ribbon that crossed his chest  so gaudily, he brought out a penknife with

which to cut the tyings on  the bundle. 

After the string and outer wrapper of paper was removed, Santini  lifted a folded square of heavy paper. He

opened this. It crackled and  fluttered in the breeze that eddied inside the shanty. 

"Verameilte!" Santini exploded. "Indeed! Dan Thunden, the old goat,  even sent his greatgranddaughter a

map showing the island's  whereabouts!" 

"You are sure it is the island?" asked the man who had killed  Thackeray Hutchinson. 

"Yes. Here is the island," said Santini, and placed a finger on the  map. 

Johnny strained his eyes and made out the general location of the  island  it was in the Caribbean, some

considerable distance from  Florida  then Dan Thunden gave his head a push to prevent him from  seeing

more. But Johnny had fixed in his memory the approximate  location of the isle. 

Inside the hut there was scuffling sound, a low, stifled cry. "The  damn girl!" snarled Leaking. 

"We no longer need her," Santini said callously. "Shoot her!" 

The man who had killed Thackeray Hutchinson leered, drew a  revolver, spun the cylinder, then growled, "A

knife won't make as much  noise," and drew a long hunting knife from a sheath sewed to the inside  of his vest. 

Dan Thunden's gun nudged Johnny's neck. 

"Walk," breathed the youngvoiced old man. "Quick! Befoah they ha'm  mah granddaughtah." 

Johnny found himself urged around to the open front of the  structure. Dan Thunden was going to use him as a

shield  and the fact  that he wore a bulletproof vest failed to ease Johnny's mind a great  deal. 

"I couldn't miss yoahall from heah," Dan Thunden called from the  open end of the hut. 

NOT A man inside the ancient building stood still at the  'unexpected words, for it is human nature to start

violently when  surprised, an inheritance probably from treedwelling ancestors who  found it necessary to


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leap for their lives at sounds of danger. 

But only one man was foolish enough to try resistance. The killer  of Thackeray Hutchinson held his knife in

hand. He whipped back his arm  to throw the blade. 

Dan Thunden's gun roared splittingly in Johnny's ear, and its  muzzle flame seared his neck. 

The knifeman let fall his blade, took two or three bobblekneed  steps, then put both hands over the spot where

the top of his skull  seemed to be torn off, and dived headfirst to the sandy floor. He lay  there, a red flood

spilling out of the top of his head. 

"He's dead," Dan Thunden advised the others meaningly. 

Santini jutted his hands up and the others followed his example. 

Then Johnny saw Pat Savage. She had been lying against the wall  through the cracks of which they had

peered, this accounting for the  failure to discover her earlier. Ropes bound her arms and ankles and a  strip

torn from Ham's natty topcoat had been used to gag her. 

Dan Thunden gave Johnny a shove. "Get ovah with them, wheah I can  watch you!" 

Picking up the map which Santini had dropped, the whitehaired man  hurled it out into the fire. Flames

bundled it hungrily and it turned  into a black crisp and a curl of yellow smoke. 

"I should nevah have sent that to mah greatgranddaughtah," Thunden  growled. "But I didn't know but that

we might find use foaH it. I guess  all concerned can find the island if need be." He paused to scowl at

Johnny. "Except Doc Savage and his scuts, and we don't want them in on  it." 

With that, he continued unwrapping the package. A box of thin,  light wood came into view. It resembled a

large cigar box, except that  there were no printing or labels on it. 

Expression expectant, the youngold man flipped the lid back. He  tensed, gulped something unintelligible

under his breath. His  longfingered hand dipped into the contents turning up flakes of  greenishgray leaves. 

"This heah ain't it!" he howled suddenly. "This heah stuff is just  plain sage!" 

So shocked was whitehaired Dan Thunden at the discovery that the  box contained something other than he

had expected, that his attention  left his prisoners. 

"Look out!" Johnny rapped. 

He was too late. Santini leaped. His foot collided with Dan  Thunden's gun arm. The weapon spun away. 

"Presto!" Santini yelled. "Haste! Grab him!" 

Men piled on Dan Thunden. They were met with a whirlwind of blows,  a dazzling display of fighting skill.

The old man was an amazing  acrobat and a fighting cyclone. 

Johnny joined the fray by clouting a jaw with a bony fist. He  failed to drop his quarry, due to his own haste,

and was clouted back  for his pains. 


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A man jumped astride Johnny's bony back, locked legs around his  middle and drubbed the back of Johnny's

head and neck with hard fists.  Johnny fell backward on the fellow. The man who had been hit on the jaw

jumped on Johnny's stomach with both feet. 

Pat Savage began to flip about, endeavoring to get rid of her  bindings. Failing in that, she managed to trip a

man who was running at  Dan Thunden. 

Thunden had felled three assailants with his bare fists. Then  Santini danced around behind the old fellow and

struck him a terrific  blow alongside the ear. Thunden's knees hinged; his eyelids fluttered. 

Santini's men took advantage of this weakness. They rushed,  swarming over the whitehaired man and

bearing him down. In a moment he  was beaten fiat, gripped and held helpless. 

Grinning, Santini got up, ran over and kicked Johnny twice in the  head, after which the bony geologist was

easily subdued. Santini  stepped back and adjusted his ornate mustache. The ribbon across his  chest was loose

and he carefully fitted it back in place. 

"Bueno!" he exclaimed. Then his pleasure faded as his eye lighted  on the box. He went over and scooped up

some of the greenish contents,  let the flakes sift through his fingers, then straightened. 

"This is not the stuff!" he snarled. 

Dan Thunden, straining at the men who held lima' growled, "This  heah gal must have made a change.', 

Santini swore. 

Pat made unintelligible noises through her gag. 

Dan Thunden glared at Pat. "What did you do with the package that I  sent you?" 

Santini started at that. Dan Thunden had addressed Pat as if she  were his greatgranddaughter, and this was a

surprise to Santini, who  had learned in some fashion that Pat was not Kel Avery. 

Dan Thunden's mistake was no surprise to Johnny. Had blonde Kel  Avery not said that she had never seen

her greatgrandfather? Old Dan  Thunden did. not know Kel Avery by sight, and naturally had mistaken  Pat for

Kel. 

Santini took a full breath. It was plain that he was going to  advise Dan Thunden of his mistake. 

Johnny said loudly, "Miss Avery, don't tell them a thing! Whatever  you do, don't tell them a thing!" 

Instead of speaking, Santini blinked. His expression showed that he  bore half a conviction that Pat was Kel

Avery. 

"Mummburrr," said Pat through her gag. 

"Untie her and see what she says!" ordered Santini. 

A man started toward Pat, but stopped very suddenly, for Pat had  whipped up a gun in her bound hands. It

was the weapon which had been  kicked from Dan Thunden's handat the start of the fight, and which Pat  had

managed to reach without being noticed. 


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"Mummmmwurrrah," said Pat. 

It was not hard to understand what she meant, and hands went up. 

"EXQUISITE!" BREATHED Johnny, and sprang to undo the gag and free  her wrists. 

Pat made hacking noises when the gag was out. 

"I came to New York for excitement," she said. "Man, oh man, am I  getting it!" 

She stood erect, stamping her feet to restore cramped circulation,  but keeping the gun level and determined. 

"Why did you mail that package?" she asked Dan Thunden sharply. 

The whitehaired man shrugged. "I was hopin' you would see fit to  become mah pahtnah." 

"What?" Pat demanded incredulously. 

"You see, I needed money," said Dan Thunden. "I was goin' to meet  you in Florida and tell you the whole

story." He paused to glare at  Santini and the others. "But these gentlemen must have got the telegram  you

sent me tellin' me you would go to Florida. Or did you send such a  message?" 

"The message was sent," said Pat, evidently deciding she could get  more out of him by pretending she was

his greatgranddaughter. 

"I nevah got it," said Dan Thunden. "And that explains why I did  not meet you in Florida. Did Santini send a

man down theah to 

Santini suddenly took a long chance. He stood near Dan Thunden at  the moment. Leaping, he got behind the

whitehaired man and shoved with  all of his strength. 

Dan Thunden was hurled toward Pat. Taken by surprise, and not  wishing to shoot the old man, Pat jumped

aside. That gave Hallet and  Leaking their chance, working with wits almost as deft as Santini's.  They sprang

quickly forward. 

Pat shrilled angrily and fired, but her arm was knocked up and the  bullet merely clouted rotten wood out of

the ceiling. Santini ran in  and got her gun. 

Johnny struck Santini in the face. Whirling, Santini put the muzzle  of the gun against Johnny's chest and

pulled the trigger until the gun  was empty. 

The reports were deafening in the shack. Johnny was knocked back,  spinning, by the force of the slugs. Coat

fabric over his chest smoked  and dripped sparks. He fell flat on his  back and lay there, eyes  widely open, all

of his gaunt length immobile. 

Dan Thunden, still stumbling from the shove which had propelled him  at Pat, got his balance and whirled, but

saw the odds were against him,  for Santini's thugs already had their guns out. 

Head down, Dan Thunden plunged outside. A Santini gunman shot at  the whitewhiskered form flying

through the firelight, but Thunden only  leaped higher into the air and went the faster, until he was lost in  the

darkness and the stunted brush of the beach. 


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Four men, struggling together, held Pat. 

"What a life!" Santini gasped. 

A MAN ran over to examine Johnny. 

"Let him go," snapped Santini. "I shot him many times in the  heart." 

Leaking swabbed at perspiration running off his face in fast drops. 

"Boss, I move we shake the dust of this place," he puffed. "Things  are getting too tough. This skinny guy you

shot is one of Doc Savage's  outfit, and that means hell. This Doc Savage will move the earth to get  the guys

who rubbed out his pal." 

"Only too true," put in Hallet nervously. "Kidnaping that bronze  man was one thing. Killing one of his men is

another. Savage is a  wizard, and the United States is going to be too warm for us." 

Pat said, "You birds are just getting wise to yourselves!" 

A man slapped her over the mouth. She bit him. The man cursed,  lifted a gun. 

"No!" yelled Santini. "She is the one who knows where the other box  is!" 

"But she ain't old Thunden's greatgranddaughter!" objected  Leaking. 

"Maybe we make the mistake and she is Kel Avery," said Santini.  "Did you not see the old goat accuse her of

making away with the  parcel?" 

"Maybe," Leaking admitted. "But we got word  " 

"Never mind the 'buts,' " Santini rapped. 

After that, there was a brief pause during which no one seemed to  know what to do next, and it was obvious

every one was thinking  desperately. 

Santini's swarthy face lighted. His sharp mustache ends shot up in  the air as he grinned. He swung a hand

around his head and brought it  down on a thigh with a great smack. 

"Bueno!" he yelled. "Good! Excellent! Wonderful!" 

"I hope it is," Leaking said pessimistically. 

"It is," Santini laughed. "The one great idea, I have. We will take  the plane and go to the island. Doing that,

we will be away from this  Doc Savage. We will get a supply of  " He stopped and eyed the  surrounding

night, and did not finish. 

"What about the girl?" Leaking questioned. 

"We take her along," Santini grinned. "We make her tell where that  parcel go to. It may be we do not find the

" He paused again and  scowled at the night. "  we do not find what we want on the island,  then this box

be very valuable indeed." 


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"Not a bad idea," Leaking admitted. 

With that, Pat was hauled, kicking and striking, out to the beach  and thrust into the giant seaplane. 

"Boss," a man addressed Santini. 

"Si," snapped the chief. "What eating you?" 

"When we reach this island and find the storeroom, do we get to use  the stuff ourselves?" the man asked. 

Santini hesitated, shrugged. "Of course. Si, Si." 

The man who had asked the question expanded Visibly and slapped his  chest solidly, delightedly. 

"I feel like a guy who had just been promised a million," he  smirked. 

The canvas jackets were wrenched off the motors; selfstarters  whirred, clanked, and the exhaust stacks spilled

sparks, smoke and  noise. 

With every one aboard, the plane wallowed away from the beach.  Hammering motors put the big craft on

step, and it took the air. 

INSIDE THE tumbledown beach shack, Johnny stirred slightly. He shut  his eyes and moaned; several times

he sought to arise, and at last  succeeded. Propped up shakily, he tore open his coat, vest and shirt. 

The bulletproof vest which he wore was of mail, not rigid armor  plate. It was a vest designed by Doc Savage

for himself and his men to  wear continually, and therefore it was light, intended to save them  only from an

occasional bullet. 

Impact of the revolver slugs at close range had stunned Johnny,  rendering him helpless, and he had lain there,

at no time unconscious,  but unable to fight effectively and knowing it. 

He had heard all that was said. 

Getting up on his £feet, he wavered outside, fell down, then got up  and propped himself against the shack.

There was a roaring in his ears  and he coughed a crimson spray, but it was not until the roaring went  away

slowly that he realized it was motors of Santini's enormous plane  which he had been hearing, and that the

craft had seemed to recede to  the southward over the Atlantic Ocean. 

Johnny peered around, unsteady on his feet, trying to find some  trace of Dan Thunden. But there was none,

and he was still peering  fruitlessly when a fast car made noise on the beach road and headlights  waved a

white glare. 

It was Doc Savage's armored delivery truck, and it stopped near by.  Doc and the others unloaded. 

Monk ran up and stared curiously at Johnny. 

"Do you know any cuss words?" Johnny asked thickly. 

"Hell, yes," Monk said. 


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"Then cuss some for me," Johnny mumbled, and fell forward on his  face. 

Chapter 13. FEAR CAY TRAIL

A THOUSAND big, noisy thunderbolts seemed to be making music for  Johnny while he sat on a cloud in

sepia blackness. The thunder music  was steady, and not nice to listen to, nor to feel, either, because one  of the

cannonading thunderbolts occasionally flew off at a tangent and  struck Johnny heavily in the chest, making

him feel as if he wanted to  open his eyes and jump, except that the cloud which held him up was so  soft and

comfortable. 

Somebody said, "Close the windows. I think Johnny is coming out of  it." 

Johnny opened his eye and what he saw showed him that he was not on  a cloud, but on a comfortable berth in

Doc Savage's largest speedplane. 

Monk was closing the windows to shut out the motor noise, which was  terrific, the silencers being cut off

from the exhausts for greater  power efficiency. 

Around about were Kel Avery, burly Da Clima, Doc's five men and Doc  himself. The plane hit an air bump,

jumped a little, then settled level  again. Cloud scud scraped past the windows. 

"Where are we?" asked Johnny, and was surprised at the strength of  his own voice. 

"Over the Caribbean," Monk advised. 

"What?" 

"A good many miles off the southern tip of Florida," Monk  elaborated. 

"But the last I remember is folding up on that Long Island beach!"  Johnny gulped. "How did you find out

where Santini went?" 

"You talked," Monk assured him. "Maybe you don't remember it. Doc  shot some stuff into you to make you

rest. You told us a complete  story." 

Johnny shut his eyes; opened them. "I recall now. It was like a  dream. How badly am I hurt?" 

"A few cracked ribs," said Monk. "You can navigate all right now,  Doc says, unless you jump around too

brisk." 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" said Johnny. 

"Which means he's all right," snorted Ham, who was on a berth  opposite, sword cane across his knees. "A

sick man couldn't think of  such words." 

Johnny sat up, found himself fairly steady, then asked, "How long  have I been out of the picture?" 

"You got slammed night before last," Monk explained. 

The bony geologist asked hastily, "Have I missed anything?" 


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"Not a thing." 

"What about the patriarch with the alabaster locks?" 

"Dan Thunden?" Monk grunted. "Believe it or not, he hired one of  the fastest planes in New York and lit out

for this part of the world.  A bird named Windy Allen owned the plane and flew it." 

"How did you acquire that knowledge?" 

"The pilot he hired, Windy Allen, was talkative and told around  what a swell wad of coin he was to get for

flying the old goat down to  the Caribbean. Doc checked up the airports as a matter of routine, and  got the

dope there. That Windy Allen sure lived up to his name." 

Johnny raised higher, leaned over and peered down through gossamer  puddles of cloud which were almost

blindingly white because of the sun  shining upon them. Perhaps a mile below was a finely riffled expanse of

ultramarine, a limitless vista of blue that slid away to the horizons  in a panorama so vast that it was a bit

breathtaking. 

"The Caribbean," Johnny said. "Right." 

"Bring me a chart and I'll point out the exact spot that Santini  indicated." 

Long Tom had retired to the tiny, soundproofed cubicle which held  the radio apparatus. He popped into view

like a pale jackinabox. 

"I just got an S.O.S.!" he barked. 

DOC SAVAGE swung back to his side. "Where is it coming from, Long  Tom?" 

"The bird isn't giving his position," advised the electrical  expert. "From the sound of his fist, he's sending the

letters as he  picks them off a code chart." 

The bronze man bent over the instruments and adjusted the dials.  The signals from the loudspeaker were

very weak, and he turned on more  volume. Irregular, hesitant, the dots and dashes whined out of the  ether. 

"Whoever is sending does not know the code," Doc agreed. "We'll try  the directional antenna." 

Doc turned a larger knob, and this swung a directional loop aerial  mounted in the plane fuselage to the rear of

the cabin. Possibly thirty  seconds were required to pick the point at which the erratic signals  were the loudest. 

"Either northwest or southeast of us," he decided. 

Kel Avery wrinkled her brow, "But can't you tell nearer 

"The directional loop only shows the plane of greatest intensity of  radio signals," Doc explained. "The

sending station is on a line drawn  through our present position from the northwest to the southeast, but  the

only way we can tell the exact direction is to take another bearing  when we have gone on a few miles." 

Johnny came hobbling back, favoring his injured chest, holding a  chart in both bony hands. He pointed. 

"The place Santini indicated is southeast of here," he said. 


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"The radio S. 0. S.!" Long Tom barked. "I wonder  " He did not  finish. 

The radio speaker continued to buzz three dots, three dashes, three  dots in monotonous succession. The

signals seemed to grow weaker as the  minutes passed. 

Doc worked with dividers, rule and pencil on the chart, and some  five minutes later, when the great plane had

hurtled through almost  twentyfive miles of sunscorched sky, he took a second radiocompass  bearing and

drew a line. Where this intersected the first bearing, was  the location of the wireless appeal for aid. 

"Southeast," he announced, and promptly went forward to change the  course of the plane. 

Johnny had fallen to studying the chart. A puzzled expression  overspread his long, studious face. 

"I'll be supermalgamated!" he muttered. 

"What's eating you?" Renny wanted to know. 

"There is no island shown where Santini had his finger on the map,"  Johnny muttered. 

Doc came back from the cockpit, having turned the flying over to  the ingenius mechanical robot. Johnny met

the bronze man with a look of  bewilderment. 

"The chart does not show an island, Doc," he advised. 

The bronze man considered for a moment, then went on back. to the  radio cubicle. He switched on the

transmitter and alternately sent and  received for some time. 

"There may be an island, after all," he said at last. 

"Huh?" Renny grunted. "But the map  " 

"I got in touch by radio with the hydrographic office of the Navy  Department," Doc explained. "They looked

over old charts of this region  for us, and it seems some ancient maps did show the presence of an  island." 

"Did the island have a name?" Renny asked. 

"Fear Cay," Doc said. "It was named that on the old maps." 

RETURNED to the wave length on which the S. 0. S. call was being  sent, the radio speaker continued to buzz

dots and dashes. At no time,  however, was anything received other than three dots, three dashes,  three dots. 

"Queer the guy don't give his position," Monk muttered. "Anybody  with gumption would know enough to do

that." 

Long Tom, after listening intently, glanced around. "That sender  cannot be far away," he said. 

"How can you tell!" Kel Avery asked curiously. 

Long Tom shrugged. "Oh, when you're close to a station, very close  that is, there's a noticeable difference.

You can almost hear the key  close." 


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Ham laid his sword cane aside, got a pair of binoculars and began  to use them through the scattered patches

of cloud. A slight quantity  of oil from the engines had smeared the windows and he slid one of the  panes back

in order that he might see better. The motor moan came in  with whooping volume. 

"Fear Cay!" Ham bawled suddenly. 

Every one in the plane crowded to cabin windows. 

Pretty Kel Avery was breathless. She looked even more the cinema  star now, for she wore about what a

movie director would request his  star to affect when making an adventure picture. Her boots, laced  breeches

and leather blouse were new, but serviceable. 

Big, overmuscled Da Clima hulked in the background, his square face  slightly purple, as if he were straining

mentally, possibly trying to  envision what not even Ham's powerful glasses could as yet reveal. 

Fear Cay was still miles away. But it seemed to rush toward them,  so terrific was the speed of the plane. 

Doc went to the pilot's cockpit and tilted the plane downward. 

The sea heaved up at them likea bloating green paunch and the cay,  climbing out of the haze, took on definite

contour. 

"I say," Ham pointed out excitedly. "It doesn't look like a place  where a boat could land!" 

The lawyer was drawing attention to the coral reef around Fear Cay.  Such reefs encircling islands of coral

formation were a rule rather  than an exception, but usually 'they had one or more openings which  gave access

to the lagoon within. But there were no apertures in the  jagged band around this cay. 

Looking down from the height of the plane, the reef resembled a  necklace of ugly gray foam, for the waves

broke over the coral fangs  with smashing violence. 

The island itself was low, a bog of mangrove swamp and jungle.  Nowhere did it project more than a few

yards above the sea. 

"Couldn't be seen from a great distance," Renny boomed. "That helps  explain why it isn't on the modern

charts." 

Long Tom jammed his head into the radio box, then hauled it out  again. 

"That S 0.5. is being sent from Fear Cay!" he barked. 

Ham dropped the binoculars and scooped up his sword cane to point. 

"Yes, and I think I see where it's being sent from," he shouted.  "Look! That wrecked plane!" 

THE REEF around Fear Cay was a foaming ring of stone, but the isle  itself had at most points a wide beach

of silvercolored sand, lined  with tall royal and cocoanut palms. The trees bobbed, their bundled  fronds

contorting, for there seemed to be considerable of a breeze. 

The plane lay at the beach edge, half buried in a tangle of  mangroves. Both slender wings were wiped off.

The wind fluttered fabric  around the edge of a great hole which gaped in the fuselage, and the  single engine


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was detached and lay deeper in the mangroves, barely  distinguishable. 

Ham called, "Doc! See any one?" 

"No," said the bronze man. 

"Are we going to land?" 

"We are." 

Doc banked the plane out over the reef where jade and emerald surf  sloshed itself into an ivory suds, then

swooped over the lagoon with  its kaleidoscopic coloring. The hull touched so lightly that only the  braking

effect and the appearance of a long foam tail showed them they  were down. Whooping motor gusts kicked

them inshore. 

The royal palms seemingly grew larger, standing up like pillars of  silver from the gaudiness of oleanders,

jessamine, poinsettia. Gulls  and a forktailed frigate bird sailed inquiringly about the plane. 

The breeze was blowing inshore, and the air above the beach was  gray with fine driven coral sand. The palm

fronds convulsed steadily,  and palmetto leaves trembled to the wind. 

Doc cut the motors. The plane was kicked around with its nose into  the wind, then sailed backward until the

reinforced hull grounded on  the beach. 

The men unloaded. 

"Eyes open!" Doc warned. 

They all ran toward the wrecked plane. The windblown coral grains  gnawed at their naked skin like sleet,

and the sun was brazen,  merciless with its heat. They waded into palmettos, sank ankledeep in  soft ground,

then worked through mangroves. 

Doc stopped abruptly and pointed, saying nothing. 

"Holy cow!" Renny gulped. 

A long, grisly object lay under a bush. He was clad in khaki  trousers, boots, a leather blouse, an aviator's

helmet. It bore the  shape of a man, vaguely, but where face and hands should have been  there was only grisly,

bare bone. 

"A skeleton!" Renny rumbled. "But Doc, it takes years to turn a  body into a skeleton! And those clothes are

not even weatherbeaten!" 

Doc Savage advanced, while Monk caught Kel Avery's arm and guided  her back so that she would not be

unnecessarily upset. 

The leather blouse of the thing on the ground was unbuttoned. Only  rib bones were beneath. They were bare

and white; almost polished. 

"A freshly made skeleton," Long Tom decided aloud. "Now, I ask you,  brothers, what do you make of that?" 


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A brittle silence was his only answer. Doc picked up one of the  boots, shook it  and bare white tibia, fibula

and metatarsal bones  rattled out. 

"Whew!" Ham gulped, and his knuckles whitened on his sword cane. 

"What d'you make of this?" Long Tom asked. 

Doc Savage indicated the skull, after removing the helmet. "The top  of the head is caved in, as if it might

have been fractured when the  plane crashed." 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" Johnny murmured. "You maintain this is  the pilot of the demolished aircraft?" 

Doc did not answer, but arose and studied the tracks around the  plane and the marks it had made when

wrecked. 

"The ship was trying to take off, probably just got into the air,  and a number of bullets put the motor out of

commission," he said. "The  ship is full of bullet holes. Possibly it crashed trying to land!" 

Doc came back and searched the leather jacket which had enclosed  the bones. He found papers and letters

which bore a name. 

"This is Windy Allen, old Dan Thunden's flier," he announced. 

THE BRONZE man gave attention to the wrecked plane. Inside, there  was a radio transmitter and receiver.

Doc removed the metal shields and  held a palm on the vacuum tubes on the transmitter side. 

"Hot," he said. "That means some one used them for sending,  probably up until the time our plane was

sighted." 

"Who?" asked Renny. 

The bigfisted engineer did not put the query with the manner of a  man asking a question to which he does

not expect an answer. Renny knew  Doc's ability as a sign reader. 

Doc circled slowly, the flakegold pools of his eyes seeming a bit  more agitated, more refulgent. There were

tracks in the soft earth,  prints which told the bronze man what had occurred. 

He had seen the footprints of Santini, Leaking, Hallet, old Dan  Thunden and the others on the south beach of

Long Island. All of those  prints were here about the wrecked plane. 

"The ship seems to have been shot down by Santini and his crowd,"  Doc announced. "Thunden and his pilot

were aboard. Dan Thunden escaped  into the jungle, but the pilot got a fractured skull in the crash." 

Renny indicated the skeleton. "But what made the pilot like   this? They couldn't have been here more than

a few hours? What made him  a skeleton so quickly?" 

Doc Savage did not reply, and there was a somewhat breathless  silence while the others waited hopefully.

Then Renny shivered, knowing  Doc was not going to commit himself. 

"Who used the radio?" the bigfisted engineer persisted. 


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"Thunden," Doc said. 

Renny boomed, "Then the whole crooked crew  Santini, Thunden and  everybody  is on this island!" 

"Exactly!" Doc said. "And that means it would not be a bad idea to  locate Santini's plane." 

"How?" 

"From the air." 

Renny nodded and looked about. Monk and Kel Avery were somewhere  back toward the beach. Ham,

Johnny, Long Tom and Da Clima had  separated, evidently to look over the vicinity. 

"We'd better call our gang together and get in the air," Renny  decided. 

They moved toward the beach, the whisper of windblown coral  particles increasing, palm fronds arattle

above, the small gale  wailing faintly in the mangroves. 

"I wonder if Pat is all right." Renny rumbled, and made flinty  blocks out of his massive fists. "Say, if they've

done anything to her   " His teeth ground audibly. 

They gathered about the plane, prepared to wade out and clamber  aboard. 

"Look!" Doc said sharply, and pointed. 

Down the beach some two hundred yards, a man had popped out of the  mangroves. He was a wiry man with

white beard that covered his chest  like the front of a dress shirt, and a great mane of snowy hair. 

"Dan Thunden!" Monk breathed. 

Dan Thunden threw out his chest, fashioned a cup around his mouth  with his hands and howled into the wind. 

"Bomb in your plane!" he yelled. 

HAD THE bomb gone off at that point, astonishment could not have  been more complete. Kel Avery and

Doc's five men, all of whom had come  running at the call, stood rigidly and stared at Dan Thunden. 

Da Clima for once showed a nimble wit. He leaped toward the plane,  big feet churning up water and sand. He

dived through the cabin door.  Doc Savage was on his heels. They raked the plane interior with anxious

glances. 

Doc worked aft, for there was the most likely hiding place. Da  Clima went forward, musclebound shoulders

hunched, eyes roving. 

"The bomb, how she get in the plane?" he mumbled anxiously. "Every  damn minute some of us feller, he

watch the plane. Yes." 

Doc pounced abruptly. He had discovered a cabin pocket which looked  more plump than it had before. His

hand delved in gingerly and brought  out a bundle of six or eight sticks of dynamite to which was attached a

trio of flashlight batteries wired together, a detonating coil, and an  alarm clock with a crude set of contacts

rigged on the minute hand and  the clock face. 


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Da Clima lumbered up and looked. 

"That, meester, she no so funny!" he gulped. "To go off in five  minutes, the clock she is fixed, no?" 

Doc clambered out of the plane with his explosive prize, carefully  adjusted the clock hands to close the

contact earlier, then flung the  bomb far down the beach. It bounced, rolled close to a royal palm, lay  there an

instant, then detonated. 

Coral sand climbed in a great mushroom. Tiny seashells were mixed  with the sand and whistled about like

buckshot. The silver bole of the  royal palm split, fronds fell out of the top, then the palm upset  slowly and

majestically. Echoes coughed hollowly then subsided. 

Even the whine of the breeze, the hissing of coral sand, seemed to  subside. Dan Thunden still stood on the

beach two hundred yards away. 

Abruptly, down the beach in the opposite direction from there Dan  Thunden stood, there was a commotion

behind a gum bush. A man stepped  out, stood staring at the plane, seeming surprised that it had not been

blown into fragments. 

The newcomer was Santini, and he was so far away that the red  ribbon across his chest seemed small as a

scarlet thread. 

Doc Savage spoke rapidly in a low voice. 

"Monk, Ham, Da Clima and Miss Avery  stay with the plane," he  directed. "Johnny, you and Long Tom

and Renny get hold of Dan Thunden  if you can. He and Santini are fighting each 'other, and I'd like to  know

why Thunden won't throw in with us. He warned us and probably  saved our plane from that bomb." 

Renny rumbled, "What about you, Doc?" 

"I'll try to do business with Santini," Doc said grimly. 

Chapter 14. THE ISLAND OF DEATH

SANTINI SHOWED scant interest in doing business with the bronze  man's party, however. The instant Doc

started toward him, the mustached  man dived a hand for the coat lapel under which his chest ribbon

disappeared, and brought out his ornate automatic. Evidently he no  longer carried it under the tails of his coat. 

The gun whacked. Powder noise and its echoes cackled among the tall  palms. The slug kicked up sand, went

on a hundred yards and kicked sand  again. 

Monk unlimbered a superfirer pistol and blasted away at Santini.  But Santini had dived to cover. 

In the opposite direction, Dan Thunden scampered to shelter, white  beard flying. 

Doc ran in pursuit of Santini. The three men he had designated to  chase Thunder  Johnny, Long Tom and

Renny  set out. 

"Dang it, Doc, don't you want some help?" Monk yelled. 


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"If anything happens to that plane, we might spend the rest of our  lives here!" Doc called, not turning. "You

stick there!" 

Santini did not shoot again. Tracks showed that he had set out  directly across the island. The terrain was

higher  here, with a growth  of crotons, calabash trees, custard apples and even guavas cactus.  There was sand

and enough grass that Doc could follow Santini's trail  without great difficulty. 

They crossed a low stretch where mangroves were a tangle, a  festering morass populated by humpbacked

spiders and land leeches.  Then came high ground again and large gnarled silk cotton trees, and  farther on,

jungle with lianas and grotesque ae"riai roots entwining. 

Santini was following a definite trail, one cleared through the  jungle some months ago, judging by the shrubs

which had grown up in the  path. The swarthy man with the remarkable mustache was evidently  running at a

headlong pace, for Doc himself was going fast and had not  yet sighted Santini. 

From the air the island had seemed entirely of coral formation, but  it now became apparent, as the terrain

lifted sharply, that the central  area was of more substantial construction. 

The bronze man's casual glances discerned clayslates, micaceous  and talcose schists as well as crystalline

and compact limestones, a  formation which his knowledge of geology told him constituted what  geologists

call the Caribbean series. 

Doc paused frequently and listened. He could judge Santini's  progress now by the occasional outcries of

tropical birds. These  noises, raucous at best, might have sounded no different to an  inexperienced ear, but the

bronze man could detect those that were  alarmed. 

Abruptly, Doc turned aside. Santini had stopped. 

A metallic phantom, making no appreciable stir in the jungle, Doc  circled until he caught sight of Santini.

The man had halted to use his  eyes and ears. Santini seemed satisfied that he was not followed. The  swell and

collapse of his chest, as he sighed his relief, was visible. 

Santini went on more slowly, breathing deeply to regain his wind,  mopping perspiration. 

The breeze made soft noise in the foliage. Gulls going past  overhead sailed sidewise in the small gale.

Thrushes and banana birds  flew through the trees when disturbed, rather than above the foliage  where the

breeze was stronger. 

Voices came from ahead. Doc quickened his pace, then halted to peer  through a screen of vines. 

Santini had met the lawyer, Hallet. The fat barrister seemed to be  nervous, his birdlike mannerisms more

pronounced. He had stripped to  his undershirt and was fanning himself with a dry palm frond. Two heavy

blue revolvers were belted about his middle, cowboy style, the belt  loops stuffed with cartridges. 

The pair consulted in voices so low that the words did not reach  Doc. Then they went on, and the bronze man

lost sight of them. He  followed their trail. 

It was not more than four or five minutes later when weird things  began to happen. 

A loud cry rasped out, guttural with an awful terror. It was  Hallet's Voice. And it ended in uncanny fashion,

ended suddenly, as if  the man who shrieked had been enveloped completely by the horror which  had come


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upon him. 

Macabre silence followed. Then birds flew up, calling harshly from  all over the jungle, making a frightened

bedlam. 

DOC SAVAGE glided forward and soon caught sight of Santini. 

The swarthy man with the waxed mustaches was backing across an  expanse of rock, eyes fixed with hypnotic

steadiness upon the stone a  few yards distant. 

The rock was smooth except for the undulations and tiny cracks made  by the weather. There was nothing to

show what fascinated Santini. 

Doc Savage remained where he was, ears straining, and abruptly he  caught a horrible moaning cry, muffled

until he could not tell from  where it came. 

The cry affected Santini in grisly fashion, for he sprang backward  as if the sound was that of some voracious

beast, invisible in the  scalding sunlight, but which was menacing  him. 

Santini veered to the left abruptly and ran across the expanse of  weathercracked stone. He vanished over a

small ridge of rock. 

Doc ran forward, swinging so as to pass near where Santini had been  when he evidenced such terror. Nothing

out of the ordinary came to the  attention of the bronze man's eyes. 

What had happened to Hallet was a profound mystery. Doc topped the  rocky ridge. He halted so suddenly

that his feet skidded a little. 

Santini had vanished! 

Doc went forward a few yards, flakegold eyes probing and alert.  Then he circled, warily, lest there be a trap.

It was too much to  believe that Santini had sprinted far enough to get into the jungle  beyond the rocky space. 

Doc went completely around the rocky area, and nowhere did be find  tracks left by the swarthy man who

affected the waxed mustache and the  scarlet chest ribbon. 

Going back to the starting point, the bronze man began a  painstaking process of following Santini's trail over

the smooth, hard  stone. To do this, he employed a small, powerful magnifying glass. 

Santini had plunged through a small water puddle at one point,  deposited by a recent rain. For the next few

yards the trail was clear,  wetly defined. 

Doc ran ahead, following it. Suddenly, there was a low, dull  clanking noise. Down went the slab of rock on

which Doc stood! 

There was no time to pitch clear. Doc plummeted downward. Eight or  ten feet he judged his fall to be. Great

muscles enabled him to land  lightly on hard rock. 

Scufflings and scratchings came from one side. A terrific blow  smashed down on his head. He sank as if

struck by a gigantic hammer. 


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DOC SAVAGE was twisting aside instinctively as the blow landed, and  the movement absorbed much of the

violence. His head remained clear. On  all fours he scuttled to the left, encountered a rough stone wall and

stood erect. 

Silence fell. Stone grated softly above, probably the stone  trapdoor closing more tightly. It must have been

made with diabolic  exactness, for Doc's sharp gaze had failed to detect it. True, part of  his failure to notice

the trap could be blamed on Santini's wet tracks,  for they had progressed boldly across the slab which had

tilted. 

The blackness was almost eyehurting. Doc felt in a pocket, found a  coin and tossed it. His opponent failed

to fall for the trick. The  metallic tinkle echoed and reechoed, indicating a large cavern with  many passages. 

Doc wore his vest of many padded pockets containing the mechanical  devices which he used frequently.

They were gems of scientific skill,  these gadgets. They had saved his life on many occasions. 

A tiny tubular container, hardly as large as a talcum can, came out  of the vest. Doc opened it noiselessly, then

made several passes  through the air. A cloud of fine powder, quite invisible in the intense  murk, was wafted

in the direction in which he knew his foe to be. 

Doc replaced the container, and more slowly, deliberately waiting  for the powder to settle, he produced what

an observer, had there been  one who could see in the dark, would have mistaken for a flashlight.  But this had

a lens that was so purple as to be almost black. 

Doc thumbed the button. The flashlight device was a tiny, powerful  projector of ultraviolet rays, the light

which is commonly called  "black" because the retina of the human eye is not sensitive to them,  the beams

which cause certain substances, such as ordinary vaseline, to  glow with weird colors. 

A startling thing happened. The figure of Doc's foe stood out in  the darkness, an eerie blue apparition. The

floor on which he stood and  the contour of a stone wall behind him, was also Visible. This was due  to the fact

that the powder which the bronze man had thrown was one  which glowed when exposed to the ultraviolet

beams. 

The enemy could not see his bronze quarry. He never knew Doc was  close to him until metallic fingers

closed about his throat, stifling  an outcry. 

Clutching, Doc got hold of a short rifle with which the man had  clubbed that first blow. He wrenched and got

the weapon. Then he  crushed the fellow down to the floor. 

The man struggled and kicked, tried to cry out, but his muscles  might have been denuded of life for all the

good it did him. Against  the bronze giant who held him, the attacker was helpless. 

Doc sought and found a certain spot on the back of the fellow's  head, low down near its juncture with the top

cervical, the chain of  small bones which comprised the neck. He exerted pressure in a fashion  taught him by

his fabulous knowledge of surgery. 

The Victim promptly became rigid, paralyzed. He would remain  helpless and speechless until Doc, or some

one with equal skill and  knowledge, worked on his neck again, after which he would have nothing  more than

a bad headache and a stiff neck to show for his experience. 

Doc used a conventional flashlight. 


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The man was one of Santini's thugs. The fellow had been a member of  the party which had endeavored to kill

Doc and his companions in the  car outside the office of Fountain of Youth, Inc., in New York City. 

Roving his flash beam, Doc discerned a passage which led to the  left and downward. The floor was sandy and

showed numerous tracks. The  bronze man advanced, following the tracks. 

A TWIST at the head of the flashlight caused the beam to narrow  until it was no larger than a cigarette, a long

white string which  roved ceaselessly. The flash was one which operated from a spring  generator rather than a

battery which might exhaust itself. The  generator ran soundlessly. 

Details of the cavern became apparent. The underground labyrinth  was not the work of human hands, but of

the elements. Softer stratas of  stone had been worn or dissolved by subterranean waters. At spots there  were

chambers of considerable size. Again, it was necessary to stoop  and even crawl. 

But nature had received assistance at some points. On three  different occasions Doc's light picked up spots

where the passages had  been widened by human hands to permit comfortable passage. 

A strange odor, not exactly pleasant, soaked the stale air. Doc  sampled the tang several times, once stopping

for several moments to  give his nostrils a chance. The smell was not animal, nor was it of  putrefaction. It was

vague, baffling. 

Discovery of a light ahead caused Doc to forget the aroma for the  time being. He doused his own

illumination, then glided forward. 

The other lights came from electric lanterns  several of them.  Doc heard the thump of hammers on stone,

and the scraping of shovels. 

Santini and a number of his men were gathered in a long, low  chamber. Evidently they had not heard Doc's

encounter with their fellow  at the entrance. 

"Stop making noise!" Santini snarled. "Fermate! Stop!" 

Men who had been tapping the stone walls and shoveling in the sand  floor, ceased their efforts. 

Santini took a long breath, shuddered and wiped his forehead with a  silk handkerchief. 

"Che vergogna!" he muttered. "What a shame! Our good friend Hallet  has met with misfortune." 

"Hell!" said a thicknecked fellow, and dropped his shovel. "You  mean that Doc Savage got 'im?" 

"Worse than that," replied Santini. 

"Whatcha mean, worse?" 

"There was a trapdoor in the rock of which we knew nothing,"  explained Santini. "Hallet walked in advance

and fell through. He  screamed, and I saw what happened to him before the trapdoor closed  again." Santini

paused to shudder. "Si signors, I saw. It was ghastly!  And after the trap closed, I could bear him moan!" 

The man with the shovel cursed, then asked, "It was  " 

"He is a skeleton by now," affirmed Santini. 


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DOC SAVAGE advanced a few paces more and stood well within the  chamber, but to one side in another

passage which led off to the north,  or so it felt from the current of air against his neck. The air was  strong

with the unexplained odor. 

The men with the lights and the tools were silent for a time.  Evidently they all understood what had happened

to Hallet, and were  thinking it over. Several looked uneasy. 

"It's that damned old Dan Thunden's work!" grated a man. 

"Yeah," another agreed. "The old rip! He's sure caused us hell. It  mighta been better if we hadn't tried to

doublecross 'im in the first  place. Givin' him his half split in the racket would've been better  than goin'

through what we're goin' through." 

Santini sighed. "It is spilled milk. How were we to know that old  Thunden would steal that package,

containing all of the product that we  had, and mail it to this relative of his, Kel Avery." 

"Kel Avery," a third man grunted. "Damn it! I'm still wonderin' if  the girl we've got is really Kel Avery, or

that Doc Savage's cousin." 

"We shall know the answer to that before long, I promise you,"  Santini declared. 

The men stood in silence, as if not knowing what to do. Doc  occupied the interval with thinking over what he

had heard. Dan Thunden  had once been a partner of Santini's, it seemed, and they had split  after a quarrel

over Thunden's receiving half the proceeds of whatever  nefarious scheme they had underfoot. 

"Why did old Thunden send the girl the package in the first place?"  a man pondered aloud. 

"It was undoubtedly his first step in an effort to persuade her to  furnish financial backing for his project," said

Santini. 

"You mean that old whitewhiskers intended marketing the stuff  himself?" 

"Si," Santini nodded. "That is my guess." 

"Did you destroy Savage's plane?" 

Santini swore round oaths of south Europe. "Non! The bomb was in  the plane  but Dan Thunden was

watching, unknown to me. He jumped out  and yelled a warning, and they got the bomb out in time." 

The man with the shovel dug savagely into the sand. "But why'd  Thunden do that? Is he workin' with Savage

now?" 

"Non." Santini shook his head. "His is the game of a mastermind. He  hopes for Savage and his men to

vanquish us. Then he will step in and  eliminate Savage." 

"Give old Thunden credit," some one muttered. "He's got a brain." 

"He oughta have," said another. "He's been around a hundred and  thirtyone years. A guy that old oughta

have some gray matter." 


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Again the conversation gave signs of getting nowhere, and Doc  Savage decided to try an expedient which he

had used on other  occasions. The bronze man was a master of mimicry, of voice imitation. 

The last man to speak had been on the outskirts of the group, in  comparative darkness. Doc set himself to

attempt a difficult feat, that  of using his skill as a mimic and as a ventriloquist to make it seem  that the man

had asked a question. Doc wanted to find out just what had  happened  to Hallet. 

Santini interrupted at the wrong instant, saying, "You had best  resume the search. We must find Dan

Thunden's supply of the material.  The old devil has hidden it well." 

"You think it's in this mess of caves?" asked some one. "I'm not  certain, but it is likely," Santini replied. "It

was in these caves  that Dan Thunden dwelled for the ninetyone years since his ship was  wrecked here in

1843, and only he alone of the crew reached shore. It  is reasonable to think that he would store it here." 

"Right at that," somebody agreed. 

Doc decided to try his ventriloquism trick. 

"What gets me is just how those bodies are turned into skeletons so  quickly," he said, assuming the voice of

the man on the outskirts of  the crowd. "Just how is it done?" 

The bronze man got a bad break. From the direction of the entrance,  feet pounded. Leaking appeared, adrip

with perspiration, excited. 

"Doc Savage is in here!" he howled. 

THE INSTANT he heard that, Doc Savage moved silently along the  wall, intending to get past Leaking

unobserved, if he could. 

"How do you know Savage is in here?" Santini roared. 

"The guard at the door was laid out!" Leaking barked. "He's  paralyzed, or somethin'. Only that bronze guy

could've done it!" 

Flashlights and electric lanterns which had not been in use by  Santini's party, were now turned on. Their glow

flooded the confines of  the cavern and outlined Doc's great bronze frame. 

Leaking saw Doc. The fellow's pores seemed literally to squirt  water as terror struck him. 

"There he is!" he squawled. 

Guns roared. Lead spaded at the hard stone, knocking off fragments,  leaving metallic smears. 

Only one avenue of flight was open. Doc took it. Back into the side  passage he whipped. 

Behind him weapons continued to thunder, the rap of pistols  intermingling with the whoop of repeating

shotguns. A machine gun let  loose a staccato bedlam. Bullets squawled and ricocheted and seemed to  pursue

Doc like invisible bees. 

Doc used his flashlight, for haste was more desirable than  concealment. He rounded an angle in the

underground channel, vaulted  over a slab of stone which had fallen from the roof and slid down a  steep slope. 


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Next came a large room, and beyond that a narrow passage again. Doc  scuttled along this for a hundred feet.

Then a door barred his way. 

The door was of timbers, very solid, and nowhere could be discerned  a fastener. Doc threw a shoulder against

it. The panel held like  Gibraltar, did not as much as squeak under his hammering bulk. He stood  still, his

flashlight roving the timbers. 

A shouting, shooting tumult, the pursuit came closer. It looked  very much as if Doc were trapped. 

Chapter 15. THE NET TRAP

Doc SAVAGE kept his flashlight beam on the door. He had twisted the  lens assembly again, making the

beam wide and brilliant, and as he  stared, he gave the spring wind of the generator another twist, an act  which

might possibly have been attributed to nervousness. But in no  other way did he show that he was in peril of

imminent death. His  bronze features were composed, inscrutable. 

He reached up abruptly and inserted his fingers in a narrow crack  at the top of the door. Beyond, barely in

reach of his finger tips, he  found a small lever. He threw this, and the door came open. 

Doc's eyes, sharp beyond the average under ordinary circumstances,  had missed nothing in this moment of

stress, for he had discerned faint  smudges at the top of the door, a sufficient clue. 

He pitched through the door and slammed it at his back. 

Santini and his men reached the panel, cursing, firing their guns.  The lead slugs dug dully at the hardwood,

but did not come through. 

Doc ran his flashlight beam about in search of fasteners, but they  were concealed in the stone wall in such a

fashion that he could not  get to them without a lengthy search. 

Fingers came through in search of the secret catch. Santini and his  men obviously knew of it. Doc struck the

fingers with a hardened,  metallike fist. A man screamed and the fingers were withdrawn, dripping  crimson. 

Somebody thrust a machine gun snout through the hole and began to  spray bullets methodically. Doc grasped

the gun muzzle, pulled, but the  weapon was too large to come through. It continued firing, and the  barrel soon

became too hot to hold. Doc released it. 

A second rapidfirer joined the first. Then some one began to fish  for the catch with a bent ramrod. Doc

clutched the ramrod and jerked it  through, getting a scream from the fellow who had his finger hooked in  the

loop at the rod end. "Badate!" yelled Santini. "Take care, Signor!  We are getting nowhere this way!" 

"I've got a grenade!" a man barked. 

"Come bello!" Santini squawled, relapsing into his native tongue in  his excitement. "How beautiful! Datemi!

Give me!" 

Doc retreated hastily from the door. The grenade would blow down  the panel, and it was safer for him to

attempt to find an exit. 

He was a score of yards down the passage and rounding an angle when  he heard the door grate open. They


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had discovered they could reach the  catch, hence had not used the grenade. 

Preceded by a storm of angry bullets, Santini and his gang charged  in pursuit. 

"We've got 'im now!" a man bawled. 

"Fool!" grated Santini. "We do not know, but that there may be  another exit from this passage." 

"Haven't you explored all of this place?" some one demanded. 

"Non," said Santini. "On my first visit here, when we found the old  man, Dan Thunden, living here, we did

not pry into this place. It was  not healthy." 

Doc crossed a chamber, dived into another underground channel, and  a moment later the voices of his

pursuers were echoing behind him. 

"Didn't old Dan Thunden trust you when you was here the first  time?" a man grunted. "Looks like he'd have

been so glad to see his  first white man in over ninety years that he'd have fallen over himself  to show you

around!" 

Santini said nothing to that except to snarl, "Presto! Make haste!" 

And Doc Savage, with his pursuers close behind him, came to a  sudden stop. His flakegold eyes, aghast and

faintly unbelieving,  rested upon the macabre thing before him. 

He had come upon a vision to impel horror in the most strongwilled  of men. 

COMPLETELY forgotten for the moment were the words which the bronze  giant had overheard  words

which had told him that Dan Thunden had  been a castaway upon this island since the wrecking of the

schooner of  which the man was captain  in 1843; and that the first visitors to the  island had been Santini's

party. 

How Santini had arrived at the island, remained to be seen, but it  was probably by air, for the ugly reef

completely around the island was  an impassable barrier to any surface vessel. 

Wrinkled trousers, a shirt open at the throat, costly shoes now  mudstained, lay on the floor before Doc's

eyes. The garments were  wrinkled  wrinkled, but not entirely collapsed, for there were bones  inside. 'The

skeleton of Hallet, the birdlike lawyer! 

That the skeleton had belonged to Hallet was not to be doubted, for  Doc had seen the garments on the living

man. The jungle muck on the  shoes was still damp, and overhead was the mechanism of the trapdoor  which

had precipitated the shyster lawyer to his death. 

Doc's eyes roved over the floor; his flash beam probed. But there  was nothing to indicate the nature of the

fantastic fate which had  overtaken the birdmannered barrister. The floor bore no stains, no  prints. 

There was a minor fracture on Hallet's skull, as if he might have  fallen upon his head and been knocked

unconscious, or perhaps mortally  hurt. But what had turned him into a skeleton remained an unearthly

mystery. 


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A yell pealed behind Doc. Flashlights splattered their beams upon  him. Santini and his gang had arrived. A

gun bellowed in the cavern,  all but rupturing eardrums, and Doc felt the cold snap of the slug past  his head. 

The bronze man aimed his flashlight beam at the men and it raced an  incandescent rod against their eyes.

They cursed, blinded. 

"Fate presto!" Santini yelled. "Make haste! Seize him!" 

But Santini did not take the lead and his men showed no desire for  a fight at close quarters. There was

nothing to prevent them shooting,  however. Their guns sounded as loud as cannons in the underground

labyrinth. 

One man was canny enough to throw up a hand and drag his black hair  down over his eyes, serving to shut

off some of the glare so that he  could tell about where Doc's flashlight lens was. He emptied an  automatic.

Luck was with him. 

A bullet collided with Doc's flash; glass geysered, and the white  funnel of the beam collapsed magically. 

"Bueno!" howled Santini. "Good!" 

Doc whirled and glided down the passage. He was handicapped. He had  no other light, except the one which

utilized ultraviolet rays and the  powder which glowed, and that was of no use just now. 

Running was difficult, moreover, and slow, since each yard of  progress had to be felt out, the subterranean

way being full of stony  outthrusts which snagged face and limbs at the most unexpected moments. 

With his best speed and a reckless disregard of physical pain in  smashing into jutting rocks, Doc barely

managed to keep ahead of the  baying pack at his rear. He covered what seemed to be at least a  hundred yards.

Side passages were everywhere. This portion of Fear Cay  was virtually an underground honeycomb. 

The bronze man halted suddenly, his ears alert. Ahead, there was  sound. 

He listened, and the skin at his nape felt an absurd tendency to  crawl in spite of his power of control, for the

sound from in front of  him was weird, a noise which resembled nothing so much as a great pan  of frying fat.

It was louder at moments, a crackling and popping such  as is heard when an egg is broken into a skillet of hot

grease. 

Santini and the others heard it, too. They stopped hastily.  Strained silence held them for an instant. 

"Hell's bells!" a man mumbled. 

"A scoltate!" breathed Santini . "Listen!" 

"I'm draggin' it outa here!" another wailed in terror. 

They fled in abject fear. 

DOC SAVAGE stood and listened to the flight of the men who had been  stricken with stark terror by the

sound that was like grease in a pan  on a hot stove. The strange noise came closer as the bronze man  delayed,

and he could tell that it was close to the cavern floor, as if  it might be flowing in the fashion of liquid. 


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Out of his pocketed vest Doc brought the canister holding the  powder. He flung some of the stuff in the

direction of the sound. Then  he used the ultraviolet projector. 

What he saw made him feel as if cold fingers had grabbed at his  nape and rimed up through his hair, standing

it on end. There was no  beast, no monster, nothing of physical size coming toward him. 

The cave floor, however, seemed to be alive and undulating as if it  were a river. Indeed, some fantastic fluid

might have been flowing  toward him. The powder, landing on top of such a sinister stream and  floating there

until it was made phosphorescent by the ultraviolet  beams, would have caused such a phenomenon as he

saw now. But it was  very dark and the eerie sheen of the powder did not reveal details. 

Doc backed away. The frying sound seemed to grow louder and the  animation on the cavern floor more

boisterous. It was as if the  incredible menace was angered by his retreat. 

The bronze man put on speed in his retreat. Santini and his gang  had fled and were not menacing him, so

there was no sense in risking  his life just to learn the nature of the mystery on the cavern floor. 

The crackling and popping was left behind. Whatever made it did not  seem capable of traveling swiftly. 

Doc found himself wandering through the tangle of underground  tunnels. He still retained his sense of

direction, but the course over  which he had come was blocked by the mysterious horror which flowed on  the

cavern floor, so there was nothing to do but prowl cautiously in an  effort to locate another exit. 

Santini and his men were still in the subterranean passage. From  time to time Doc heard echoing shouts, the

words unintelligible. The  sounds were ghostly in the inky darkness. 

The bronze man searched through his pockets. And that was a sign  that he was worried, for he knew very

well that the pockets held no  matches. True, there was a pair of tiny bottles holding chemicals  which, when

exposed to the air and mixed, would burn brilliantly and  with great heat, but their light would last for only a

moment. It would  not be wise to waste them. 

Unexpectedly, he saw light ahead, It was the unmistakable glow of  the hot tropical sun. Doc ran forward. 

There was a rectangular aperture overhead. Perfectly square, it had  been evidently hewn out by human hands.

A ladder led up to it, a stout  ladder that was almost a staircase. 

The bronze man was examining the ladder when an excited shout  bawled out behind him. 

"Here's the bronze guy!" the voice howled. 

IT WAS one of Santini's men. His Voice echoes bounced hollowly.  Then Santini himself shouted from near

by. 

"Buena!" Santini barked. "Do not let him escape!" 

Feet scuffled as men ran forward. A gun roared. The bullet chopped  at the stone. 

Doc leaped for the ladder. Three steps he mounted with dazzling  speed, then four. But something happened.

There was a grinding. The  ladder dropped downward, carrying the bronze man with it. 


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Too late, Doc realized this was another of the traps which the  fantastic underground realm held. There was no

time to leap clear. 

He fell fifteen or twenty feet, was torn off the ladder by the  shock of landing, and slammed down on hard

stone. Leaping up, not  greatly damaged, he felt around him. 

There was only smooth stone, circular, some eight feet in diameter,  with no opening as far up as he could

reach. 

A man threw a flashlight beam into the rock pit from above, and Doc  saw that his prison was a welllike

cavity capped by a trap on which  the ladder had rested. The man with the flash was Leaking. 

Leaking mopped at his face, shifted his flashlight to his left hand  and used the right to draw a revolver. 

"Here's where I fix everything," he snarled, and leveled his  weapon. 

Santini lunged, knocking at the gun. It roared  and the bullet,  deflected, flattened near Doc's feet. 

"Wait, Signor," Santini said grimly. "I have the big idea." 

"Huh?" growled Leaking. 

"We will make this bronze man do a job for us," chuckled Santini.  "Ah  great, wonderful, majestic, superb!

This idea of mine, she is  the swell one." 

"It'd better be good," Leaking muttered doubtfully. 

Chapter 10. THE TRAIL SINISTER

LEAKING's gun, in firing the shot which Santini had knocked aside,  had made a good deal of noise, and the

sound had volleyed through the  hole toward which Doc Savage had been climbing when the trick ladder

collapsed. The report had carried some distance through the tropical  sunlight. 

The bigfisted engineer, Renny, heard it. He promptly halted.  cupped big hands behind his ears and listened. 

"Hey, gang, did you get that?" he rumbled. 

"A percussion with the characteristics of a firearm," admitted the  gaunt Johnny. 

"Let's look into that," snapped Long Tom. 

Renny dropped his oversized paws from his ears, started forward,  then hesitated. 

"Doc set us to hunting old Dan Thunden," he pointed out. 

Long Tom shrugged his weaklooking shoulders and said sourly, "A  fine lot of luck we've had! The old

geezer gave us the slip like a  ghost. We're wasting time prowling around here. Let's see what that  shot was." 

"A recommendation of acumen," said Johnny, and promptly threw his  bony frame at the tangled jungle. 


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Johnny was the freshest of the three, for they had put forth no  small effort in endeavoring to overhaul

whitebearded Dan Thunden. The  heat and the density of the vegetation was a combination to sap  vitality.

The huge Renny was perspiring and bedraggled, while Long Tom,  although far from exhausted, seemed a bit

paler than usual. 

Johnny's fortitude was remarkable, considering the fact that  another man would have been in a hospital from

those cracked ribs. 

In Johnny's incredibly thin frame there seemed to repose an  unlimited resistance to fatigue. Johnny's

outstanding physical quality,  in fact, was his endurance. He seemed never to get tired. 

They came out upon a comparatively level expanse of weathered  stone. 

"The shot came from about here," said Long Tom. 

"I think it was farther on," Renny rumbled. 

The electrical wizard shook his head in a violent negative. 

"It was muffled, as if fired in a hole or something. Let's look  around and see if there's a pit or a cave in these

rocks." 

'They advanced, eyes busy. Johnny, lifting his tower of bones on  tiptoe, peered around and got himself

located. 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" he said quietly. 

"Eh?" Long Tom queried. 

"It was right around here that we last saw Dan Thunden," said  Johnny. "The fellow traversed a

convolutionary course prior to his  evanescence." 

"Eh?" said Long Tom. "I didn't get that last." 

"He means that Thunden prowled around a lot before he vanished,"  explained Renny. 

"You're going to choke on those words some day," Long Tom warned  the bony Johnny. 

They continued their search for the source of the shot. 

As a measure of safety, they carried their small supermachine  pistols in their hands and made sure that spare

magazine drums, fully  loaded with the mercy bullets which produced quick unconsciousness,  were handy in

coat pockets. 

Renny thumped something unintelligible, lifted his machine pistol  and sent an earsplitting bawl of sound

over the cay. 

Long Tom gulped, "What the  " 

"Dan Thunden!" Renny rumbled. "Over there!" 


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He pointed  and his two companions, looking, saw a thatch of  white hair, a snowy beard, an oldyoung

face, vanish behind the thick  bole of a cocoanut palm. 

"He flattened before I could line up that first burst of bullets,"  Renny growled. 

The bigfisted engineer fired again. The machine pistol was charged  every third cartridge with a tracer bullet,

and a grayish thread seemed  to stretch from the muzzle to the distant palm, where a shower of  cocoanuts

were kicked down. 

Renny corrected his aim, but Dan Thunden had reached more  substantial cover. 

Forgotten was the investigation of the shot they had heard. The  three men raced in pursuit of Dan Thunden. 

They crashed headlong into brush, tore at lianas and entwining  plants. Knee deep in slime where the ground

was low, they kicked and  wallowed, knocking off the big land leeches, avoiding the hideous  looking spiders. 

A cayman, an alligator not much longer than one of Johnny's bony  arms, fled madly at the uproar. 

For a time, they lost their quarry. Then they saw him peering at  them from a tangle of mangroves, and they

set out again. 

But once more, Dan Thunden distanced them with an ease that was  disgusting. 

"He must know every inch of this island to get around like that,"  Renny grumbled. 

"The fellow has the agility of an acrobat," complained Johnny. 

Then they saw Thunden again. He was leaning from behind an upthrust  of coral this time. He ran before they

could fire. 

Renny and his two companions, following, came near enough to the  beach that they could hear the surf

grumbling in sea coves of coral out  on the reef. 

Thunden had vanished once more, but only for a few moments for they  saw him a third time, far down the

beach, running easily. 

"For a lad a hundred and thirtyone years old, he takes the cake,"  Long Tom snapped, and increased his

speed. 

Renny stopped, booming, "Wait!" 

"What's the idea?" Long Tom pulled up. 

"Yes, elucidate," Johnny invited. 

"I just got wise to something," Renny rumbled. "Old snowy whiskers  is pulling a fast one on us. He is

showing himself deliberately, to  lead us where he wants us to go." 

Johnny absently drew his monocle out, unwrapped it from the  protecting handkerchief, saw it was unbroken,

then replaced it, seeming  at no time to be aware of what he was doing. 


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"Eminently correct," he admitted. "We are being decoyed." 

Long Tom plunged on, calling over his shoulder, "0. K.! Now that we  know what he's doing, we'll keep our

eyes open. But I'm in favor of  giving him a chase." 

The other two reached the same decision and ran after the  electrical wizard. But they were more cautious

now, at times barely  trotting. That Dan Thunden was leading them to some spot which he  wished them to

visit was evident, for he was careful not to let them  lose his trail. 

"Strange way for him to act," grumbled Renny. 

"No stranger than his warning us of that bomb in our plane," Long  Tom countered. 

Renny nodded. "I'd like to get my hands on him. He'd tell things." 

"You said it," Long Tom agreed. "And the first thing he would  explain would be just what turned that aviator

into a skeleton." 

'The conversation ended sharply, for Dan Thunden had halted and was  making strange gestures with his

hands  one finger was to his lips;  he patted the air with the other hand. 

"Seems to be asking us to be careful," Renny decided aloud. 

Dan Thunden now stepped off the beach into the jungle, and did not  reappear. 

Renny and the other two went forward cautiously, nearing a headland  where the mangrove swamp jutted out.

Beyond was a junglewalled cove,  with a beach of black manganese instead of white coral sand. 

But they did not progress far. From the jungle a revolver bawled.  The bullet squawked over their heads and

chopped up water out near the  reef. 

The shot had come from the jungle. 

THE THREE men pitched for the undergrowth, Johnny grimacing a  little. The racing about, heedless of his

fractured ribs, was beginning  to have its effect. 

They opened up with their superfirer pistols. The slugs mowed down  leaves, splattered against hard palm

boles and cut away vines. 

A man howled in fright, and they could bear him running away  through the tropical labyrinth. 

"I recognize that voice," Johnny groaned. "It's one of Santini's  gang!" 

The agony in the gaunt geologist's voice caused Long Tom to eye him  anxiously. 

"The ribs?" he queried. 

"No," said Johnny. 

"That's a dang lie," Long Tom snapped. "You're about played out.  Blast it, you oughta be in a hospital yet.

Stay behind!" 


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Johnny obeyed that command as they rushed forward; but not from  choice. He was simply too weak to hold

up his end of the charge. 

They sighted a man fleeing through the growth. He was making for  the cove. Renny sighted deliberately. His

superfirer moaned. 

The runner threw up his arms, tossing a revolver high into the air.  Then his head went down and he stumbled,

turned a perfect somersault,  after which he lay and squirmed with decreasing vigor until, by the  time Doc

Savage's three aides had reached him, the man was limp and  unconscious from the effects of the mercy

bullets. 

The flesh was torn slightly across his shoulders, but he was not  greatly damaged  unless infection set in

from the wounds, which was  unlikely, since the mercy bullets carried their own antiseptic agent,  and even the

tracer chemicals were of a type which did not produce  infection. 

"Let's see where he was goin'!" Renny boomed. 

They plunged on, caught the blue wink of sun from water ahead, and  came out on the cove beach. Gasoline

smell met their nostrils. 

"Holy cow!" Renny exploded. 

The three of them pitched backward for the shelter of the jungle. 

THE COVE was a narrow, shallow indentation, and at one end the  mangroves grew out into the water. 

A plane  Santini's great seaplane  was beached near this point.  Green boughs had been cut and spread

over the cabin and wings of the  plane; others, longer, cut and thrust into the soft black manganese  sand

around the ship. The result was a perfect job of camouflaging,  which explained why they had not sighted the

plane from the air. 

Under the concealment of wideflung palm fronds near the plane there  was a hut, also of green fronds,

thatched so that its presence had  escaped notice from above. 

Three men stood near the hut. Each held a submachine gun. At sight  of Doc's men, they began firing. 

Renny's superfirer, bawling, sent back a hail of lead. One of the  enemy trio went down. The other pair dived

behind palm trunks. 

The fight which followed was short. Santini's men were at a  disadvantage, being outnumbered now, three to

two. Nor were they as  good marksmen as their foes. They had to plant bullets in vulnerable  spots, and that

was difficult because of the bulletproof vests which  Doc's men wore. 

The decisive factor in the fray, however, was the fact that the  slightest wound from one of the mercy bullets

would put the man who  received it out of commission. 

As the last of the pair fell from behind his palm tree, squirming  with the delirium that preceded the quick

stupor of the mercy chemical,  Renny darted forward. 

Johnny tried to follow, stumbled and went to his knees, grimacing.  He tried to get up, but failed. 


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"I'll be superamalgamated," he gritted. "I seem to have  folded  up!" 

Bigfisted Renny went back, scooped the bony geologist up easily,  and bore him along. They reached the

plane under his covering of green  limbs and Long Tom, tearing the boughs aside, burst in to inspect the  ship. 

His feet sloshed through the water; metallic thumps indicated he  had stepped upon the floats; a clatter showed

he was in the cabin. Then  his voice came out hollowly. 

"I'm a son of a gun!" he ejaculated. 

"What is it?" Renny demanded. 

"Come in here and look," the electrical wizard invited. 

Renny, carrying the vociferously objecting Johnny, worked to the  plane and found Long Tom pointing at the

wings, more particularly at  elongated punctures which gaped in the thin metal skin of the wings. 

"I first noticed the fuel tanks showed empty on the gauges, then  looked around for the reason," said Long

Tom. "There's the reason." 

Renny nodded soberly. The cuts in the wings must have been made by  a small ax, or a knife wielded by a

strong arm; and they had penetrated  the fuel tanks. 

The strength of the gasoline odor moved Renny to glance down, and  he saw in the black manganese sand the

tiny pocks made by the dribbling  fuel. 

They stared at the evidence of vandalism in silence. 

A jubilantly youthful voice said, "You gentlemen did a good job  theah. But youah work is not done." 

The three men knocked down a length of camouflage wall in getting  outside. They stared in astonishment. 

Dan Thunden stood some fifty yards distant, beside a ridge of  ragged gray coral. 

Renny snarled, lifted his superfirer. 

"Wait!" howled Dan Thunden. "Youah boss, Doc Savage  Santini has  gotten hold of him!" 

Renny lowered his gun. "What?" 

"You had bettah help Savage," called Thunden. "Just tag along  behind me and I'll show you what to do." 

Renny yelled, "Wait!" but Thunden bobbed behind the coral ridge and  vanished. 

The three men started in pursuit, but wrenched up as they heard a  stirring in the hut near by. A feminine voice

came out of the shack of  green boughs. 

"Do I get any attention around here, or not?" it asked. 


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Chapter 17. TROUBLE UNDERGROUND

"PAT!" RENNY howled  and all three men whirled back and dived  into the crudely constructed hut. 

Patricia Savage sat on the black sand inside, her face  flushed and  angry. A length of stout piano wire,

evidently a spare piece from the  plane repair kit, had been fastened securely around her slender waist  and the

other end spiked to a palm which formed the rear brace of the  hut. 

Renny lowered Johnny and pounced upon the piano wire. He wrenched  at it, but it held. He began twisting it,

kinking and unkinking in an  endeavor to break it. 

"You won't get anywhere that way," Pat advised. "I did that for  hours." 

Renny nodded and put his huge hands to work on the knots. They were  tight, and had evidently been fled

with pincers. 

"You all right," Long Tom asked Pat. 

They could see that she was. 

"I'm madder than a tomcat caught in a rat trap," Pat imparted  violently. "What was that I heard the old

whiskered goat yelling about  Doc?" 

"Something about Santini having gotten Doc," Renny said grimly. 

"Oh!" said Pat, and shuddered. 

"I don't believe it," Renny informed her, after freeing one strand  of the piano wire. "Doc has never yet been in

a jam where he didn't  have an ace up his sleeve." 

"This Santini is the devil with a red ribbon across his chest," Pat  murmured. 

"Did they ever find out that you weren't Kel Avery?" Long Tom asked  her. 

Pat shook a negative with her bronze head. "I wouldn't be here if  they had. Man, those fellows are bad!

They'd have thrown me out of the  plane if they had known who I was. They very near did it anyway." 

"They kept you alive in hopes of making you tell them where the  contents of that air mail parcel went to?"

Long Tom questioned. 

"That's why." 

"Where did it go to?" 

"Do you think I know?" Pat asked sarcastically. "Ask that other  girl  Kel Avery, or Maureen Darleen, or

whatever she calls herself." 

"You don't seem to like her." 

"I don't like anybody who got me into what I've just gone through,"  said Pat. 


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Long Tom grinned. "I thought you wanted to be amused by a little  excitement." 

"This has gone past the amusement stage," Pat said, then grinned  back at the electrical wizard. "But I don't

mind, much." 

Renny gave the piano wire a wrench. It came free and he  straightened, advising, "There you are." 

Pat jumped up and ran out of the hut. "Come on! Let's see if  anything has really happened to Doc!" 

Outside, they looked around hopefully. It was Johnny, his eye  unaffected by the weakness that came from his

shattered ribs, who  leveled a pointing arm and declared, "There he is!" 

Whitehaired Dan Thunden had waited. They could see him through the  jungle, poised near a convenient

palm bole that was bulletproof. 

"Hey, you!  c'mere and tell us what this is all about!" Renny  roared. 

Dan Thunden's answer was a quick disappearance behind the palm. 

"For two cents, I'd shoot him full of good hard lead bullets the  next time he shows his nose," Long Tom

snarled. 

"I wouldn't," Pat advised. 

"Why not?" 

"He's on our side  until we clean up on Santini's outfit." 

"Where'd you learn that?" 

"From Santini's talk." 

THEY SET out after the elusive Dan Thunden, holding their anger in  check, but vowing vengeance. It was

humiliating to be pawns maneuvered  about by the old fellow, but they were not so unwise as to fail to  realize

it was best that they follow him. 

At such times as they lost the trail, Dan Thunden showed his white  head and made a noise to put them right. 

Toward the expanse of rock near the center of the cay, their course  led  the same stony area where they had

heard the shot which they had  as yet no way of knowing had signaled Doc Savage's capture by Santini's  crew. 

"Did Santini's talk tell you anything else?" Renny asked Pat as  they worked through the tangled undergrowth. 

"Plenty!" Pat advised.  "What?" 

"The most fantastic story you ever heard," Pat explained. "This Dan  Thunden was shipwrecked here in 1843,

more than ninety years ago, and  was the only one from his ship to reach shore. He has lived here  since." 

"I've still got my doubts about that guy being a hundred and  thirtyone years old," Long Tom put in. 

"Santini does not seem to doubt it," Pat retorted. "And Santini is  nobody's sucker." 


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"We'll let that ride, then," Renny grunted. "What else did you  learn?" 

"That Santini found this island by accident," said Pat. "He was  flying from South American in a stolen plane.

He had gotten into some  trouble down there over killing a government official in Venezuela, and  he was

making for the United States, after leading every one to believe  he was flying south. 

"He could not take the usual air routes, or fly over islands where  there were settlements and radio, or where

he was likely to sight  ships. That explains why he happened to come over this outoftheway  corner. He

was having motor trouble and landed." 

"Then what?" 

"'Then the mystery darkens," Pat replied. "They found Dan Thunden   and something else, something worth

a great deal of money." 

"What?" 

"Search me." 

Renny came to a full stop in order to eye Pat curiously. 

"Do you mean to say you don't know yet what all this fighting is  over?" he rumbled. 

Pat wrinkled a nose at the bigfisted engineer. "Are you  criticizing me?" 

"No," said Renny. "But I had high hopes." 

"So did I," Pat told him. "I tried to pump Santini, but got  precisely nowhere. 'They were very glad to learn I

did not know what  was behind the trouble. And I had to be careful not to get them to  believing I was not Kel

Avery." 

Johnny put in, rather weakvoiced: "Santini and his gang came to  Fear Gay to get more of the stuff which

was supposed to be in that air  mail package, but wasn't, didn't they?" 

"Right," Pat said, then looked anxiously at the bony geologist. 

Johnny had neglected his pet luxury, his big words, and that showed  he was suffering. Johnny managed a

twisted grin of reassurance. 

Pat continued: "Santini's crowd shot down Dan Thunden's plane when  it arrived, and killed the pilot. Since

then, they've been trying to  catch Thunden to make him show them where the thing they're after is  hidden." 

"Santini  killed  the pilot?" Long Tom asked slowly. 

Pat caught the strangeness in the electrical expert's tone said  curiously, "Yes. Why?" 

"The pilot was a  skeleton  when we found him," said Long Tom. 

Pat shuddered. "And that reminds me of another thing. There's some  horror on the island of which Santini

and his men are in deadly terror.  They would not tell me what it is." 


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RENNY TOSSED tip a beam of an arm and advised, "There's that  stretch of bare rock ahead where we heard

the shot." 

Dan Thunden vanished from sight of them a moment later, and they  drew their superfirers and haunted the

jungle shrubs as they crept  ahead, aware that the strange oldyoung man's previous disappearance  had

marked the nearness of danger. 

Pat studied the expanse of naked stone, then gasped, "Oh!" softly. 

"Eh?" Long Tom eyed her. 

"I heard Santini and his men talk about this place," said Pat. "It  is honeycombed underground with caves. It

was here that old Dan Thunden  lived for more than ninety years. Santini and his gang thought the  stuff 

whatever it is that they are searching for  was hidden  here." 

There was silence while they peered through a bank of oleander and  poinsettia in an effort to locate an

opening. But there was no sign of  an aperture. They advanced, Renny in the lead. 

"Careful," Pat warned. "From Santini's talk, I think this place is  a net of traps. Dan Thunden rigged them up

as a diversion while he  lived here." 

"Some idea of a pastime!" Renny snorted. 

They continued to go forward, eyes busy on the rocky surface  underfoot. There were many cracks, numerous

tiny pits, but none of them  seemed to be a secret door. 

Unexpectedly, Dan Thunden called to them from the jungle. 

"Stamp on that square of reddish rock to youah right," he advised.  "That'll open the trapdoah!" 

Renny hesitated, then swung to the right. A few moments later he  was inspecting the panel of faintly

rosecolored stone. Then he put his  hands in his pockets and teetered thoughtfully on his heels. 

Removing the big hands from his pockets, he dropped to his knees  and began to feel over the dull vermilion

stone. 

"The old goat said to stamp on it!" Long Tom snapped. 

"Dry up," Renny said, trying to keep his rumbling voice down to a  whisper. "I'm going to get even with white

whiskers for his little  tricks!" 

Renny fumbled with the cracks around the stone for a time, then  stood up. He stamped. 

To Dan Thunden it undoubtedly appeared that Renny was slamming his  heel down on the square of red stone,

but he was actually kicking a few  inches to one side. Renny turned. 

"It don't work," he called. 

"Try it again, suh!" yelled Dan Thunden. 

Renny stamped  again missing the square panel. 


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"Something has gone wrong!" he shouted. "We'll get over to the  other side of the place while you come and

open it." 

With that, he guided Johnny, Long Tom and Pat away. They stopped  some hundred and fifty yards from the

stone, turned and saw Dan Thunden  scuttling for the rock. 

The old man reached the panel and delivered a resounding blow with  a heel. 'The panel promptly flew open,

lid fashion. 

Dan Thunden howled, "I told you to stamp  " 

Then he sank down prone on the stone and seemed to go to sleep. 

RENNY AND his three companions, reaching the whitehaired man, found  him snoring loudly, unmoving.

'The square of red stone was still open.  A black cavity was below. 

Pat looked puzzled for a moment, then smiled understanding. 

"Doc's anesthetic bulbs!" she exclaimed. 

"Good guess," Renny grinned. He indicated the edges of the secret  door, where tiny particles of thin glass

could be distinguished. "I put  some of the bulbs around the slab, and they broke when the lid opened.  The gas

inside of them produces quick unconsciousness." 

Pat drew back instinctively. 

"The gas loses its strength in less than a minute," Renny advised  her. "It won't overcome us now." 

Long Tom, who looked like a physical weakling, stooped and picked  up Dan Thunden's frame with manifest

ease. 

"The old goat wasn't so wise after all," he grinned. "Boy, when he  wakes up will his face be red!" 

There was a stir in the black void below the secret door. A man  cursed, then queried, "What's goin' on out

there?" 

It was one of Santini's men; he must have heard the noise as the  hidden panel opened, and come to

investigate. He was canny; they could  tell by his voice that he was well back in the subterranean depths,

protected from a bullet. 

Renny tried a trick, knowing that his voice would sound unnatural  to the man below and hoping the fellow

would fail to identify it. 

"We've got old Dan Thunden," Renny said. "Come up and have a look." 

"Yeah," growled the man beneath. "Who're you?" 

That stumped Renny; but Pat came to the rescue. 

"Tell him Snicker," she breathed. "That's the name of one of the  three who were watching me." 


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"Snicker!" Renny called. 

The man in the cavern was silent, still suspicious, and finally  said, "C'mon down here where I can get a look

at you. I gotta be sure  it's you, Snicker." 

Renny's long, puritanical face was very sober for an instant,  because he knew the Santini gangster would

become alarmed before long.  'Then the gloomylooking engineer dipped a huge hand into his coat and

brought out some of the tiny glass globes which held more of the  anaesthetic gas that had vanquished Dan

Thunden. 

Taking careful aim, Renny lobbed three of the bulbs in quick  succession. Hitting and breaking, they made

squishing sounds. The gas  was colorless, odorless, and victims were always unaware of the effects  until it

was too late to do anything. 

There was a sound as of a bundle of old clothes being dropped, and  they knew the man below had collapsed. 

AFTER DESCENDING a series of steps cut in the native stone, they  found their victim  a broad and squat

man with a crooked nose and a  pitted facesnoring lazily behind an outthrust in the cave wall. They  relieved

the fellow of a submachine gun and a canvas knapsack  containing extra ammunition drums. 

Johnny, who had been receiving Renny's assistance in traveling,  asked, "What impends now?" 

Long Tom, who did not smoke, but who carried a cigarette lighter in  lieu of matches, thumbed the tiny flame

alight and squinted in the  fitful glow which was cast over their surroundings. He noted  particularly the rugged

nature of the cavern floor. 

"This is no place for you, Johnny," he breathed. "The going will be  too rough for those ribs of yours." 

The thin geologist sighed. "That is regrettably true." 

"So you better stick here on guard. You can watch Dan Thunden and  this other guy." 

"They will be unconscious for at least an hour," Johnny pointed  out. Then he groaned slightly and sat down.

"But I'll stay here. 

"Sure you won't pass out?" Renny asked. 

"Positive," Johnny insisted. 

'They left him there, a form as thin as death itself, crouched  above the two men who slept so weirdly. His

bony fingers held a  superfirer pistol, and handy it' his right coat pocket were several of  the anaesthetic bulbs. 

A man who knew how, could use those bulbs without a mask, simply by  holding his breath for the space of

almost a minute, during which time  the vapor would have its effect on an enemy who breathed it, then

dissipate itself. The stuff worked only when taken into the lungs. 

Pat whispered, "Careful! Remember, there's something on this cay  that can turn a man into a skeleton.

Whatever the thing is, Santini and  his men are in deadly fear of it." 

"We've seen a sample of its work," Long Tom replied quietly,  thinking of the skeleton of the aviator which

they had found on the  beach. 


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They endeavored to make as little noise as possible. Between the  three of them only Renny had a flashlight,

one of the instruments which  got its current from a selfcontained spring generator. The beam of  this was

played about cautiously. 

Once they heard a faint, strange noise from some side avenue of  nocturnal murk. Listening, they were

puzzled. 

"Sounded like fat frying," Long Tom mumbled. 

When the sound did not come closer, but continued low and barely  audible, as if coming from behind a

closed door, they went on. 

To avoid becoming lost, they daubed spots of a chemical mixture at  intervals. This stuff would glow when

exposed to ultraviolet light,  and Long Tom, the electrical genius, carried a projector of the "black  light"

similar to the one which Doc kept on his person. 'Thus their  back trail would be marked plainly if needful. 

They were crawling along a sandfloored tunnel, when Renny's huge  hand stopped them. 

"Get that!" breathed the engineer. 

THERE WERE voices ahead, hollow, the words not understandable. They  advanced  and a glow of light

appeared. Men stood in a circle around  a great metallic figure which lay on the sandy floor of a chamber. 

"Doc!" Renny gulped. "They did get him after all!" 

Doc Savage was bound with a stout rope woven from plant fibre.  Literally hundreds of turns encircled his

mighty frame. He resembled a  mummy. 

Santini and a part of his gang made up the circle of men. They  seemed still to fear the bronze giant, securely

though he was bound,  for they did not venture close. And they were careful to keep their  flashlight beams off

the bronze man's eyes. There was something about  those flakegold  orbs, a hypnotic quality that chilled.

Santini said,  "You're probably wondering why we did not shoot you when we had the  chance, Signor

Savage." Doc said nothing. 

Santini scowled. "You were kept alive to do a bit of work for us.  511 And if you do it well, we will permit

you to live." 

Long Tom's machine pistol clicked softly as he threw the safety. 

Renny, gripping the electrical expert's arm, breathed, "Let's  listen to this first." 

They could hear Santini perfectly. 

"There is something on this island which is worth many millions of  dollars, Signor Savage," Santini

continued. "It grows here. But we do  not know what it looks like when it grows. We only know what it

resembles after it is dried and treated. This material is hidden  somewhere, and only old Dan Thunden knows

of the hiding place. 

"When we visited this island the first time, we learned of this  thing and arranged with Dan Thunden to sell it

to wealthy men who could  afford to pay us millions for it. We went to New York and made contact  with a

number of wealthy men." 


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"The names in the file at the office of Fountain of Youth, Inc.,"  Doc suggested, and his powerful voice

showed no strain. 

"Exactly, Signor Savage," Santini agreed. "They were very anxious  to buy what we had to sell, and pay a

handsome price. It was then that  we decided to get rid of Dan Thunden. That might have been a mistake.  He

found out our intentions and seized a box containing our entire  supply of this fabulously valuable substance. 

"The old man had very little money, and he hit upon the idea of  persuading a relative who had much money

Kel Avery  to finance him  in selling the stuff. He sent the box to Kel Avery and arranged a  rendezvous

in Florida, which we were fortunate enough to apprehend his  mail and prevent him keeping. 

"We tried to kidnap the girl and get the box, but failed, and she  became alarmed and decided to call on you

for aid. We tried to seize  you before she got to you, and there our troubles really started." 

"Why the review?" Doc demanded sharply. 

Santini smirked. "Merely a foundation for telling you that we want  your aid. We will trade the safety of

yourself and your party for your  help." 

"How can I help you?" Doc asked. 

"I know something of your ability," Santini said. "You will notice  that we keep our flashlights off your eyes.

That is because we happen  to know you are a skilled hypnotist. You can hypnotize Dan Thunden and  make

him tell where this  shall we call it a treasure  is hidden." 

"You haven't got Dan Thunden," Doc said dryly. 

"We will get him," Santini snapped. "Now!" 

'The man whirled with his flashlight and started for the exit. 

So unexpected was the move that Renny, Long Tom and Pat were caught  unprepared. Santini's flashlight

illuminated them. 

"HOLY COW!" Renny boomed. "We've gotta make a fight of it!" 

His superfirer blared. Simultaneously, he pitched into the cavern.  Long Tom trod his heels. 

Santini's gang, taken by surprise, reacted variously. One cried out  in fright. Mother dropped his flashlight.

Others drew guns. One fell  from Renny's blast of mercy bullets. 

It was Santini himself who showed the most presence of mind. He  sprang backward and vanished into the

gloomy rear of the underground  room. It seemed that he had a definite destination. 

Long Tom and Renny were both shooting now. They concentrated Oil  the flashlights, the blinding beams of

which were a menace. With  explosions of glass, bowls from the men who held them, the flashes went  out.

More men dropped. Confusion grew. 

"We've got 'em goin'!" Renny roared, and charged. Long Tom and Pat  followed. Pat carried the submachine

gun which they had taken from the  man at the entrance, but she did not use it, knowing that it was the  way of

Doc and his men never to take human life. 


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Then something happened. There was a rattling at the sides of the  room. The sand seemed to come alive,

exploding upward. 

A net appeared, a mesh woven of stout fibre. It had been buried  under the sand, and was being pulled by

ropes attached to the sides and  hidden in recesses in the walls. The motive force was evidently a great  weight

sliding in a pit, for they could hear the rumble and jar of its  descent. 

Renny and the other two were jerked from their feet. The net mesh  was large enough to pass their feet and

their arms through, and they  hung there like fish caught by the gills. 

The net trap was cleverly constructed. It hauled them over and  slammed them against one wall, holding them

there with an inexorable  strength. 

Renny snarled, and tore at the net. His huge hands did manage to  snap two of the strands. He shot down a

man who ran toward him. 

Then Santini's gang was upon them. Santini appeared from where he  had retreated to actuate the trap,

howling, "Non! Non! There is no need  to kill them now!" 

Clubbing guns reduced the prisoners to senselessness. "Go see if  they left a watcher at the entrance!" Santini

gritted. 

Chapter 18. LOTS OF LUCK  ALL BAD

WILLIAM HARPER LITTLEJOHN was sitting on the top step of the secret  entrance when he heard men

running through the caverns beneath him,  coming closer. Johnny was perspiring and pale, absently fingering

his  monocle magnifier. He was suffering from his injured chest. 

He stood erect hastily. An instant later, he knew it was Santini's  men who approached. He grasped some of

the anesthetic bulbs, took his  time, then threw them into the blackness below. 

Startled curses indicated he had downed at least one man. There was  a confab. He could not catch the words.

Some one tried to shoot him,  but had no luck. Johnny returned a blast from his superfirer for  effect. 

Had there been only the one exit, Johnny might have held Santini  and his men prisoners below for an

indefinite period  but there were  other openings. 

A hundred yards distant, a section of stone flew up. Two men popped  out with sawedoff shotguns. 

Johnny did the only thing possible  he got up and ran. Grasping  Dan Thunden's inert frame, he attempted

to carry the whitehaired  oldyoung man along. 

In Dan Thunden reposed the secret of Fear Cay, and Johnny wanted  mightily to get at the bottom of that

mystery. 

Santini himself put in an appearance and yelled, "Non! Non! Do not  shoot Thunden!" 

Johnny tightened his grip on Thunden, realizing that the presence  of the whiteheaded man meant safety. But

the burden slowed his pace  amazingly. He staggered. Twice he went entirely down. 


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It dawned on Johnny that he was never going to escape with his  prisoner. So, reluctantly, he dropped the form

of Thunden, then  sprinted into the jungle. He reached the dense growth, plams and gum  trees sheltering him

from a storm of lead. 

Head down, Johnny ran with a longlegged stride. He was headed for  the spot where Doc's plane had landed,

and he kept going in that  direction. At his back, pursuit was steady, but the enemy did not gain. 

Johnny was reeling and nearly out when he came upon Monk and Ham. 

The apish Monk was bristling, eager for a fight, his pet pig,  Habeas, trailing him. Ham had his sword cane in

one hand, his  superfirer in the other. 

"We heard the shootin'!" Monk grunted. "What's goin' on?" 

Johnny waved a bony hand to indicate pursuit, then sank down weakly  on the most comfortablelooking

spot, an expanse of rank green plants.  He sat there while Monk and Ham dashed forward. 

"Where's Kel Avery and Da Clima?" he called in a feeble Voice. 

"Back at the plane," Ham called without stopping. 

An instant later there was a bawling of machine pistols, the  slamming reports of repeating shotguns and the

cackle of automatics.  Lead made eerie noises in the jungle. Leaves were cut free and drifted  with the breeze.

Occasional cocoanuts dropped noisily. Frightened birds  made a great uproar until they had all fled the scene

of hostilities. 

For perhaps five minutes, the guerrilla warfare continued  intermittently. Then Ham and Monk came creeping

back through the  jungle. They had resumed their perpetual quarrel. 

"If you'd throw that sticker away and learn to shoot, we'd have  better luck," Monk growled, eying Ham's

sword cane. 

"How could I find anybody to shoot at when you charged around like  an elephant and showed them where we

were?" Ham snapped. "Nature had  sure run out of brains when she got around to equipping you!" 

This was a slight exaggeration, considering Monk's reputation as  one of the greatest of living chemists. 

They reached Johnny, and Monk advised, "There was just a lot of  leadthrowing and noise. I don't think

anybody was hit. And they beat  it. Now, tell us what's happened." 

Johnny did not reply. He was on all fours, eyes close to the  ground, and he did not look up. He seemed in the

grip of some spell. 

"What's been going on?" Monk asked Johnny again. 

The bony archaeologist and geologist did not lift his eyes. He  seemed frozen in his crouching position. 

"Hey!" Monk barked anxiously. "What ails you?" 

Johnny lifted an arm, beckoned. 


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"Look at this," he requested, and indicated one of the plants in  the bed of which he had been seated. 

Monk came over and stared. 

"Just a funnylookin' weed," he snorted. 

JOHNNY LOOKED pained, and pointed at the growth of plants. 

"Weed!" he sniffed. "Neither of you ever saw flora of that type  before." 

"So what?" Monk queried. 

"Examine the confines of this area of vegetation," Johnny invited. 

Monk and Ham complied with that request, and the result was a  surprising discovery. The plants which had

intrigued Johnny grew in  even rows, as if cultivated. 

"Somebody's garden patch," Monk grunted. 

"This is very strange," Johnny murmured. 

"Not half as strange as some other things," Monk said. "For  instance, what is it that is making people into

skeletons around here?  And what is Santini after? C'mon. Let's go back to the plane." 

Before leaving the spot where he was seated, Johnny carefully  plucked a few shoots of the plants which had

so intrigued him and  tucked the sprigs inside his hat band where they would not be crumpled. 

By the time the men had reached the plane, Johnny had completed a  rapid outline of what had occurred.

Monk and Ham grinned widely over  the news that Dan Thunden had been seized, but scowled darkly at word

of the final outcome. 

They stood on the white coral beach where the sand stung their  faces, and looked about. There was no one in

sight. 

"Thought you said Da Clima and Kel Avery were here," Johnny  suggested. 

Monk, his expression suddenly anxious, lifted his voice, '"Miss  Avery!" 

Silence followed. 

"Blazes!" Ham muttered, and nervously sheathed and unsheathed his  sword cane. 

Monk called again. Once more there was no answer. 

"Something's happened!" he rapped. "Da Clima and Kel Avery had  orders to stick right here!" 

A moment later, Habeas Corpus began squealing and grunting off to  one side. The three men dived for the

spot, Ham using his sword cane to  knock aside the jungle vegetation, Monk and Johnny with their machine

pistols ready. 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" Johnny mumbled, and all three stared at  what Habeas had found. 


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BIG DA CLIMA was piled slackly on his stomach in the leafage, his  legs crossed in a grotesque fashion, one

arm twisted under his chest,  the other flung up and over his head as if to protect it. 

His head was askew, the face up, and a crimson rivulet had crawled  down out of his hair, trickled on down

his face and over neck, to  redden his shirt collar. 

"Look for Kel!" Ham barked, and sank down to see how badly Da Clima  was hurt. 

Monk dashed about; Johnny tottered. Both waved their rapidfirer  pistols, anxious to find a target, and both

had ragetensed faces. But  neither found a sign of the enemy. 

When they went back, Ham looked up from his task of kneading Da  Clima's wrists, got their disgusted head

shakes, then said, "He's  coming out of it. There's hardly any bump at all on his head." 

Da Clima sat up at last. His manner was remindful of the first time  they had seen him. back at the New York

airport. He blinked, swayed his  read from side to side and looked stupid. 

"Where's Kel Avery?" Ham snapped. 

"Da Clima, how he know?" the overmuscled man mumbled. 

"What happened to you?" 

Da Clima (lid not seem quite positive on the subject. 

"For you feller, I stand around and listen, yes," he said 'vaguely.  "Then all of a sudden the top of my head,

she go bane! like the  firecracker on the Fourth of July." 

"Then what?" 

"How do I know?" Da Clima scowled. "'The world, she kind of stop  for to go around, then." 

"Somebody sneaked up behind and kissed your bean with a gun barrel  or something, eh?" Monk growled. 

"Maybe," Da Clima admitted. "I no see the soul, not a soul." 

The big man stood up, glared at his knees which seemed inclined to  buckle, then hammered himself upon the

chest  weakly at first and  erratically, almost missing with his own fist, then more accurately and  soundly,

so that his great torso gave off hollow boomings. 

"Show me the damn feller who is do this to Da Clima!" he roared. "I  tear from him the arm and leg, yes!" 

"You sure do talk, big boy," Monk growled. "But in action you ain't  been so hot." 

Da Clima glowered. "What you mean by that? The insult, no?" 

Ham put in placatingly, "Don't mind the missing link, Da Clima. He  fell out of the nest when he was little." 

Da Clima laughed harshly and frowned at Monk. "I might have known  this feller he born in a nest in the tree,

like the monkey." 


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Johnny snapped, "Stop it! This is no time for personalities! What  are we going to do?" 

"Take the plane and try to spot Santini's men," Ham suggested.  "Maybe we can locate them before they get

Kel Avery to their  headquarters." 

They ran for the plane, clambered into the cabin, and Monk took the  control bucket. He threw starter

switches. Nothing happened. They  clambered out and investigated. 

"Santini's men took the carburetors off the motors!" Ham groaned. 

THEY UNLOADED, held a brief conference, and it was decided to head  for the rocky area afoot. Just what

they would do when they reached the  scene of the underground caverns they were not sure, but each man

made  a pack of equipment which he thought might be necessary. 

Johnny described the location of the expanse of stone, and they  concluded the place could be reached more

quickly by taking the  slightly circuitous route around the beach. They could travel more  swiftly, especially

Johnny, who was not equal to much more jungle. 

"Boy, you're gonna suffer for that crack about me fallin' out of  the nest," Monk promised Ham in an

undertone as they trotted along the  white coral sand. 

Ham started some caustic retort, held it back and pointed. "What is  that?" 

All four men followed his indicating arm. Bits of timber, aged and  weatherbeaten, projected above the sand

close to the jungle. 

"An old wreck," Monk snorted, and would have gone on. 

"Wait!" Johnny said sharply. 

The skeletonthin geologist and archaeologist went forward, eyed  such of the timbers as were above the

sand, then kicked about,  uncovering others. 

It was the frame of a ship  not a large Vessel. The wood had once  been carved in elaborate fashion. 

"What're we killin' time here for?" Monk demanded impatiently. 

Johnny eyed him. "Did you ever see a Roman galley?" 

"Blazes, no!" Monk growled. "I'm not two thousand years old." 

"This," Johnny indicated the wreckage dramatically, "was once a  Roman galley. I am sure of it." 

The emphasis which the gaunt scientist put on the declaration was  enough  to impress the others. They knew

from past experience that  Johnny was not addicted to excitement without just cause. 

"A Roman galley," Monk said slowly. "But how did it get here on  this side of the Atlantic?" 

"Drifted, perhaps." 

"Nix. Ocean currents are wrong for that." 


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"Then possibly it had sails which were set, and the wind blew it  across,"said Johnny. "The thing is not

impossible. It could have  happened. This island is on the outskirts of the Caribbean, and a craft  blown across

the Atlantic might conceivably have landed here, or been  wrecked, as this one was undoubtedly." 

Monk nodded. "I still don't see why all the excitement?" 

Johnny touched his hat band where the sprigs of weed reposed. 

"I have an astounding theory," he said. "But we will go into it  later." 

"Yes," said Ham. "We've got Kel Avery and the rest to worry about  now." 

Soon they turned into the jungle. They went as quietly as possible,  but banana birds and noisy parakeets were

stirred up, while gulls and  frigate birds sailed inquiringly overhead. 

"Gonna be hard to get close without bein' heard," Monk opined. 

The expanse of smooth stone opened before their eyes. The sun was  nearing the horizon, but still hot, and the

rock was like so much  molten substance poured out, still white with its own heat. 

Crouched behind a gnarled silkcotton tree at the edge of the stony  area, they used their eyes and small

pocket telescopes, but discerned  no sign of life. More important, there was no trace of the secret  entrances.

'The flinty surface looked one solid mass. 

"Can you find any of the trapdoors?" Ham asked Johnny. 

Johnny grimaced doubtfully. "I don't know. I shall try." 

They advanced, weapons ready, pausing frequently to sink down and  jam ears to the hot stone to listen for

sounds from below. The heat  waves danced and all but scorched their skins. They were already red  with

sunburn, their northern tan being little protection against this  tropical inferno. But they heard nothing. 

Suddenly Da Clima, off to one side, dropped to all fours and pawed  at a crack. 

"Me, I find the hole!" he gulped. 

DA CLIMA wrenched, pounded with the heel of a hand and so suddenly  that they all sprang backward, a lid

of stone flew up, exposing a dark  gullet that led downward. 

Monk extended a hand. "Shake," he smiled. 

Da Clima glared at the hairy paw. "What for?" 

"I'll take it all back," Monk informed him. "You have finally  performed a useful service." 

"Ahrrr," growled Da Clima, and scrambled down into the black  cavity which he had uncovered. 

The others unlimbered flashlights which they had brought from the  plane, and followed the overmuscled Da

Clima. Roughly hewn rock  enclosed them so closely that Monk's massive shoulders rubbed and at  times he

had difficulty in passing. Da Clima's bulk was only slightly  less. 


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The way widened for a time, then narrowed again. They passed a side  tunnel. A stout hardwood log, which

they tested carefully, bridged a  crack that cleft beneath them. 

Monk dropped a tiny pebble, counted almost to twenty before it hit  water. 

"Nice place, this," Monk whispered. 

"Pipe down," Ham suggested. 

Monk picked up Habeas, who was following them, and carried the  bigeared pig tucked under an arm.

Habeas was making no sound now. Not  for nothing had Monk spent innumerable hours in training the shoat. 

Da Clima, first into the depths, was still in the lead, and as they  came to a point where it was necessary to get

down on all fours and  crawl, he went ahead. 

"Ugh!" Da Clima exploded unexpectedly. 

The next instant, his gun emitted a blast that all but ruptured  their eardrums. Then the muscular giant scuttled

forward, reached a  sizable chamber, and reared erect. He plunged on. 

"A man, he see me!" he howled. "That guy Santini, I think it was I   " 

Men shouted ahead. They caught Santini's foreign accent. A gun  lashed red flame. They fired back. Their

shots were not answered. 

"Gonna be tough from now on," Monk growled. 

They stood there in darkness, their flashlights extinguished. 

"I," said Ham, "have an idea." 

THE DAPPER lawyer could be heard fumbling at the pack which held  the stuff they had brought from the

plane. 

"What is this idea?" Monk whispered. 

"We'll use the lightspot cartridges on those birds," Ham said  grimly. "That should give them something to

think about." 

"Boy, you are bright," Monk admitted, and dug into his own pack. 

Lightspot cartridges was the designation given by Doc Savage's men  to a special shell which the bronze

man had designed for the  superfirer. Doc had created many unusual bullet types for the  remarkable guns,

from tracers and mercy slugs to explosives of such  power that a single one could knock down a small house. 

The lightspot pellets were among the most unique. They were  charged with a mixture of thermite and

magnesium, the exact ingredients  known only to the bronze man, and burned with a brilliant white light

wherever they struck. 

Certain of the amino drums were charged alternately with five  lightspot slugs and five mercy bullets, an

effective combination. The  new drums were fitted and the guns latched into singlefire position. 


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"Let's go!" Monk growled. 

They charged forward. One of Santini's men fired at them. 

"Let 'em have the spots!" Monk rapped. 

A volley of metallic clicks followed. Utter silence ensued. 

"Blazes!" groaned Monk. 

"Something's wrong!" Ham grated. "These ammo drums are duds!" 

Monk snarled unintelligibly. "I know! When those birds got to the  plane, they doctored the bullets!" 

He got no further. Santini must have heard their Voices. 

"Rush them!" he howled. 

Feet slammed. A gun glared red lightning. Monk thumbed on his  flashlight, then tossed it to the floor where it

would furnish  illumination for the fight. 

The next instant, Santini's men were upon them. There was no  shooting now. The Santini gang seemed

confident. They swung clubbed  guns, fists, kicked and clawed. 

A dozen seconds of desperate conflict told Monk and the others that  they were outnumbered. They tried to

retreat. 

Da Clima got the retreat idea first. He popped into the cramped  tunnel through which they had just crawled.

In some fashion, he seemed  to stick there. He began to bawl in terror. 

Monk pinched Da Clima, shoved him, but the big fellow did not  budge, although Monk's pinches must have

been very painful. 

"Danged if this mess of meat ain't a jinx!" Monk roared, and gave  Da Clima another terrific pinch. 

Three Santini followers sprang upon Monk, and three guns bludgeoned  together for his head. For Monk, it

seemed as if all of the lights went  out suddenly and his surroundings became very still. 

Chapter 19. THE WEEDS

MONK'S eyes opened a little, rolled until they were all whites,  then slowly assumed normalcy, and he looked

at Doc Savage. 

The bronze man was some ten feet distant, tied around and around,  mummy fashion, with turns of fibre rope.

His head and his hands alone  projected from his tyings, and cloth had been lashed over his hands so  that he

could not use his fingers. 

Monk tried to move, groaned, "Blast it, I'm paralyzed!" then  realized he was tied in much the same fashion as

Doc. 


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"They don't take many chances, do they?" he mumbled. 

"Are you all right?" Doc asked. 

"His skull is thick," Ham's voice said from somewhere. 

Squinting about, Monk saw that Ham lay near by, bound like himself.  Johnny, Long Tom and Renny, formed

a row along the sandy floor. 

Da Clima scowled at Monk and strained against his ropes. He lay  just at the edge of the area lighted by an

electric lantern. 

Pat Savage and Kel Avery were opposite, both tied, and  whitebearded Dan Thunden was between them.

Thunden seemed to be  slumbering yet from the effects of the anesthetic gas. 

They were in a ragged stone chamber. Santini and his men stood  about, looking elated. 

"It is the big reunion, eh, signors?" Santini inquired. 

"In your hat," Monk grunted. 

Santini laughed jubilantly, came over and stood playfully on Monk's  chest, bouncing up and down a little. 

Monk rolled abruptly, throwing Santini, and Santini, regaining his  feet, kicked Monk in the side with great

violence, swearing the while  in his native tongue. 

Monk showed his teeth and grunted loudly at each impact. like an  animal in distress. 

"This is the joyful occasion for me," said Santini. 

Then he went to Renny and began to kick and abuse him as he had  Monk. He treated Long Tom in like

fashion, and was standing on Da  Clima's massive torso when Dan Thunden rolled over and groaned. 

Dropping his diversion, Santini sprang forward and pointed at the  whitebearded oldyoung man. 

"This is what I wait for!" he snapped. "Take him somewhere and make  him answer our questions!" 

Two men picked up Dan Thunden, head and heels. 

"Do not go near that door with the secret lock," Santini warned.  apparently as an afterthought. "We do not

want our friends here to turn  into skeletons. Not yet, signors." 

The two who carried Dan Thunden started out with their burden, but  before they had gone far, Doc Savage

spoke. His words were in the  guttural, not unmusical tongue of ancient Maya, the language which only  the

bronze man and his five aides spoke and understood, excepting those  in the lost Central American valley to

whom the language was native. 

"Talk to me in this language," Doc directed in Mayan. "Make them  think we're cooking up something." 

Santini glared as he heard the unintelligible words, then snarled,  "Non! No,i! Speak so that I understand!" 


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"Go chase yourself," Monk advised him in Mayan. "Say, Doc, what's  the idea of this jabbering? It'll only start

him kicking our ribs  again. 

"I want them to separate us," Doc said in Mayan. "if I can get by  myself, I have a scheme to try." 

Monk asked in Mayan, "What is it?" 

He never got his answer. Santini, sputtering his rage, took the  bait. 

"Take this bronze man to another room," he ordered. "Two of you  watch him! Shoot him at the least

suspicion!" 

Doc was promptly hauled out. 

Monk muttered in Mayan, "I don't see what Doc can do. They've  searched him, and he's tied up like nobody's

business." 

"Losing faith in Doc?" Ham  asked sourly. 

Monk sighed and lay back. "Brother, he's the only hope we've got." 

DOC SAVAGE was carried into a circular recess in the stone, a place  from which there was only one egress,

and deposited on the sandy floor.  The two who had carried him straightened up, puffing, perspiration like  a

shiny grease on their foreheads. 

"The guy weighs a ton," one captor grunted. 

"Pipe down!" the other muttered, and planted an electric hand  lantern so that its beam bore upon the bronze

man. 

"That's the idea," said the first. "We've gotta watch 'im." 

But Doc Savage did not want them scrutinizing him too closely, and  he discouraged their attention by the

simple expedient of staring at  them intently, lids widened so that the full power of his flakegold  eyes had

effect. 

"Cut it out!" snarled one of the two captors. 

Doc seemed not to hear, and a moment later, the hand lanterns were  shifted so that the bronze man did not lie

in direct brilliance, nor  yet in complete gloom, but in a half light where he could not move  appreciably

without being observed. 

"The guy can hypnotize a feller with them eyes," the more burly of  the pair mumbled. "That's what Santini

said, anyhow. I ain't takin' no  chances myself." 

There was no apparent possibility of Doc Savage gaining his  freedom, so securely was he bound. The bronze

man's five aides knew  something of his remarkable ability, had seen him accomplish the  seeming impossible

in the past, and even they had been skeptical about  his chances. Mixed with the skepticism had been hope,

though, for Doc  had a way of making the incredible seem simple. 


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Santini's men had wrenched the heels off Doc's shoes to make sure  no gadget was hidden there. 'The nails

which had held the heels  projected. The shoes were fitted with modern zipper fasteners instead  of

timehonored laces. 

Moving an imperceptible bit at a time, Doc hooked a heel nail in  one zipper ring and stripped it down. He did

the same with the other  shoe. 

From somewhere down the passage that led from the room, Santini's  voice ordered, "Come here, you two!" 

"You mean us?" called a guard. 

"Si, si, you!" snapped Santini's voice. 

"But we're watching  " 

"Canes!" snarled the voice. "Dogs! He will not escape in the minute  I need you!" 

The two watchmen walked out of the stone cubicle. 

Doc Savage kicked off his shoes. His great frame seemed to turn to  rubber, for be doubled backward in the

fashion of a skilled  contortionist, and his toes found the knots that secured his rope  bindings. There were no

feet in his socks, merely spatlike straps under  the instep, leaving his toes uncovered. 

The bronze man's toes took on the prehensile deftness of fingers.  In fractional seconds, the knots were untied.

He twisted about, working  with fabulous speed, but making little noise. He came to his feet. 

Down the stone passage, the two guards were peering about in  puzzled fashion, for they had not found

Santini at the point from which  the man's voice had apparently come. 

"Boss!" one growled. "Where the deuce did you go?" 

There sounded two dull thumps. Both men dropped senseless. Neither  was ever exactly sure what had

happened, for they did not see or hear  the metallic nemesis who loomed abruptly behind them and struck with

both fists simultaneously. 

Nor did either guard realize at the moment that they were the  victims of a skill at voice mimicry and

ventriloquism. 

Santini had not called. Doc had done that. 

DOC WENT forward and looked into the room which held his five  aides, along with Pat, Kel Avery and Da

Clima. A number of Santini's  men were there, alert and watchful. An attempt to free the captives was  sure to

mean a fight, noise, an alarm. 

From a nearby cavern emanated gruff words, interspersed with angry  explosives. That would be Santini

questioning old Dan Thunden. Doc made  for the sounds. 

In addition to Santini, four men were with Thunden. Four ropes had  been tied to the whitehaired man's

wrists and ankles and a man held  the end of each rope, pulling backward with all of his strength. 


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Thunden's finger tips were gory horrors. Santini held a pair of  small pliers. Even as Doc sighted the group,

the pincers were employed  to yank another nail off one of Thunden's fingers. 

Thunden moaned, writhed. Crimson crawled from lips into which he  sank his own teeth. 

"That is all of the finger nails, Signor Thunden," Santini said  callously. "It seems that we will have to pull out

an eye next. I will  do it slowly, so that you can see with the other eye the knife as it  cuts the muscles to free

the orb from your head." 

The recitation of grim details seemed to accomplish what the  previous torture had not done. 

"What do you want to know?" he groaned. 

"I suppose you have no idea?" Santini sneered. 

Doc advanced a little to be in a position to better catch the  words. His feet, still bare, contacted something. He

stooped and felt  with sensitive fingers. 

It was the packs which his aides, Monk, Ham, Johnny and Da Clima,  had brought from the plane. The

knapsacks made a little mound. Doc  stepped around them and went on a few feet, then stopped. 

Dan Thunden said, "The stoahroom, suh, is just inside the wooden  doah." 

Santini swore. "You mean that we have to take a chance with those   with those  " 

"With my little friends, yes," Dan Thunden growled. "And I do hope  you have an accident." 

"How do we get in there?" Santini demanded. 

"Can you walk on stilts?" 

"Non!" 

"I don't give a hoot how you get in!" Dan Thunden snapped. "I have  told you wheah the stoahroom is." 

"Just how is it opened?" Santini asked. 

"Theah is a black ledge in the rock," said the whitehaired man.  "You jam youah weight against that." 

Doc Savage waited to hear no more, but glided backward. He paused  to run deft fingers over the packs lying

on the floor, and thus managed  to locate the one which Monk had found. 

Monk's pack was distinctive because it held a thing without which  Monk seldom ventured into action  the

apish chemist's amazing  portable laboratory which contained chemicals and apparatus for almost  every

purpose, all nested in a marvelously compact space. 

With Monk's pack, Doc raced along the passages. 

THE BRONZE man reached the massive wooden door with out incident.  He listened, an ear against it. There

was no trace of the sound that  was like fat frying. His fingers found the secret catch and the  timbered panel

swung back, grating softly. 


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Doc's movements in the passage beyond were silent. Monk's pack held  a spare flashlight, and he used this.

The black ledge which Dan Thunden  had mentioned was easily distingu ished. 

Doc started to plant weight against the dark stone, then hesitated.  He drew back and searched for something

with which to exert force  without getting too near. He was thinking of those many traps which old  Dan

Thunden had rigged in this strange subterranean place. 

Footsteps sounded beyond the door. They were rapid, running. Doc  drifted silently into a patch of gloom. A

flashlight swayed close. 

Leaking appeared, dripping perspiration, his upper lip held between  his teeth. There was a desperate

expression on his unlovely face, a  quivering eagerness in his plump hulk. 

Leaking's look showed Doc exactly what was up. Leaking had heard  Dan Thunden's words and was bound to

inspect the storeroom ahead of  Santini. Such action could only mean treachery. 

Leaking must intend to doublecross his boss. 

'The flashlight which the perspiring man carried picked up the  black Tedge. Leaking's time was evidently

short, for he threw his  weight against the black ledge. Nothing happened. 

The man stood back. In his excitement, he had failed to attach  significance to finding the heavy wooden door

open. Once more, he  plunged against the strip of dark stone. 

Mechanism grated. Steel flashed. There was a hollow glug. 

Leaking reeled, swayed. He seemed to come apart in the middle and  fall in a flood of scarlet. 

The upper part of his torso fell forward and blocked the slender  panel of stone which had opened. 

Doc advanced swiftly, not looking at Leaking's body, and examined  the unholy mechanism inside the door. It

was of hardwood, cleverly  made, actuated by a lever on which a heavy weight bore. 

Attached to the device was a great, razorsharp cleaver, roughly  fashioned from some iron part of a sailing

ship. This was rigged so as  to slash outward when pressure was placed upon the black stone. 

It was this cleaver which had chopped Leaking in two halves. 

Doc Savage still carried Monk's pack. He opened it, using his  flashlight. The bronze man knew where every

phial of chemical reposed.  He drew out bottles, then walked into the storeroom, eyes alert for  other grisly

traps. 

THE STOREROOM was not large, and the walls were inset with crude  shelves. On these reposed jars of

baked earthenware. 

Doc opened the handiest, dipped in fingers and brought up some of  the contents. 

The bronze man did not seem surprised at what he saw  leaves, a  bilious green in color, dried and carefully

packed. The sprigs did not  have the color and shape of tea, nor yet of sage. 


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A botanist would have been intrigued by the leaves, for they were  of a type difficult to catalogue. But Doc

Savage, who was ordinarily  interested by anything new and strange, gave them little attention. He  let them

fall back, and opened several more of the most convenient  containers. 

Over the leaves in each jar, he sprinkled a bit of the chemical  which he had taken from Monk's portable

laboratory. 

His departure was as ghostly as his coming, and executed none too  soon, for steps could be heard as a number

of men came near. They  appeared, Santini and some of his followers. 

They did not glimpse Doc, for he had concealed himself where they  would walk past, leaving him behind

them. At sight of the open door,  Santini snarled profanely and sprang forward. He discovered Leaking's

decapitated form. 

"Che!" he gulped. "What  what is this  " 

Then he burst into a roar of ugly mirth which bent him over and  caused him to slap his beribboned chest to

regain his breath. 

"Leaking is try to pull the crooked deal on us, si," he chortled.  "And old Dan Thunden is try the same thing.

Leaking is fall into  Thunden's trap. Come hello! How beautiful!" 

They advanced into the storeroom and clutched up the handiest jars,  which were those that Doc Savage had

opened and sprinkled with  chemical. 

"At last we have the material," Santini murmured, and waved an arm  to take in the other jars. "There is

enough of it here to make us all  rich men." 

A man eyed Santini eagerly. "Boss?" 

"Si." 

"You're going to keep your promise, ain't you?" asked the man. "You  said, back on Long Island that night,

that we would all be given the  weed when we found the storeroom. 

Santini hesitated, then nodded. "It is true. Later, you can all 

The men were brighteyed with eagerness. There was a near madness  in their manner. a strange spell woven

by sight of the unusual weed in  the jars. 

"Now," muttered the spokesman. "Let's sample the stuff. It's  supposed to make a guy feel better right off, ain't

it?" 

Santini nodded. "It is.'' 

"What's the word? Do we sample it now, or not?" 

"It must be mixed with water," said Santini. "We will try it at  once. All of us." 

"That's the idea!" The speaker was almost blubbering his joy, and  the others were like him, excited to the

point of incoherence. 


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"The real Fountain of Youth," one gulped. 

"You said it," agreed another. "The stuff that makes you live  forever!" 

Chapter 20. THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

SANTINI AND his men appeared shortly afterward at the long cavern  which held the prisoners, carrying the

jars of the weed. 

The captives stared at them and seemed puzzled  with one  exception. 

Johnny, the bony geologist and archaeologist, who also knew a great  deal about botany, was the only one of

the prisoners who looked as if  he had an inkling of what it was all about. But he said nothing for the  moment. 

"We have found it!" Santini shouted. "Bi'enc! We shall all live  forever, my men, and we will sell enough of

the stuff to make us all  millionaires!" 

Santini retired to a nearby room which had, it seemed, been Dan  Thunden's living quarters in the past, and

where could be found  utensils for mixing the strange leaves, as well as a spring of fresh  water. 

In the excitement of the moment, the guards forgot their charges.  There was little chance of the captives

escaping unaided, however. 

Laughing, excited, the men crowded to the point where the mixing  was in progress, and the room where

Renny and the others lay was left  unwatched. 

"I don't get this atall," Monk muttered. "Did you hear what they  said? The crazy dopes seem to think they've

found something that will  give them everlasting life." 

Ham made a sudden tongue click of surprise. "I get it now! Fountain  of Youth, Inc.! Remember the Fountain

of Youth that history says Ponce  De Leon hunted for? It was supposed to be somewhere in Florida." 

"You've gone as crazy as they have!" Monk snapped. "The Fountain of  Youth could be on this cay," Ham

insisted. "Maybe, long ago, the reef  was passable and canoes came here. The Fountain of Youth might not be

a  fountain at all, but that funnylooking weed Santini had. Maybe that  plant does bring everlasting life." 

"Nuts!" said Monk. "I won't swallow 110 such scatterbrained ideas.  Not much!" 

"Stay stupid, then," Ham retorted. "Or have you a better  explanation?" 

Johnny had been holding his tongue with an apparent effort, and now  he spoke. 

"Ham is eminently correct," he said. 

Monk managed to roll over where he could eye Johnny. "Yeah?" 

"Remember the wreckage which we found that bore a pronounced  resemblance to structural segments from

an ancient Roman galley?"  Johnny queried. 

"Has that got something to do with this?" Monk asked. 


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"It has, emphatically," said the bigworded geologist. "That  wrecked galley was the clue that made me think

of a legend from history  which explains the presence of this weed that brings everlasting life   supposedly." 

Monk sniffed, "I still maintain that's hooey! There isn't no  " 

"Ever hear of Cirene?" Johnny interrupted. 

"Cirene?" 

"Cirene." Johnny spelled it out. 

Monk assumed a pained expression, his habitual look when thinking.  "Was that a city that grew up about the

time of old Egypt and  Carthage?" 

"Right," Johnny nodded vehemently. "Cirene stood on a plateau, and  its source of wealth was a fabulous

medicinal herb known as silphium.  Even the coins of Cirene bore a design of the ruler watching his  subjects

weigh this remarkable plant. 

"Legend gives this herb great powers, claiming it cured every  ailment; wounds  even disease. From all

over the ancient world ships  came for this herb, and it became extremely highpriced. 

"The Romans came and put a tax on silphium, an enormous tax. The  people of Cirene were enraged and,

hating the Romans tremendously, they  set about destroying the herb to rib themselves of the high taxes. In

time, silphium became extinct. 

"Men have searched for some sprigs of it, even a single plant,  since that age. Only a year or two ago, there

was a newspaper story  about an Italian doctor who thought he had discovered silphium again in  Cirenaica." 

"I don't believe it," Monk grunted. 

"It's in the history books, dammit!" rapped Johnny. "Now, it is  foolish to think the people of ancient Cirene

would destroy a plant so  valuable. Perhaps they loaded some on a galley and sent it out for an  island or

another part of the coast, and the galley got lost and  eventually wound up here on Fear Cay." 

In his vehemence, Johnny had departed from his big words, and his  recitation was the more emphatic. 

The others were silent after he finished. 

Two of Santini' 5 men came in. Without a word, they picked up big  Da Clima and carried him out. 

Renny shuddered, rumbled, "They've started their killing!" 

"Poor Da Clima," Pat said sorrowfully. 

A voice of quiet power came from the murk near by. "Do not worry  too much about Da Clima," it said. 

"Doc!" Renny breathed. 

The bronze man appeared, admonishing silence, and began untying  them. 

"I was waiting for them to take Da Clima away," he advised. 


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Monk grunted, "You figured they'd take him! Why?" 

"He is one of them." 

Monk's jaw fell down on his barrel of a chest. "Da Clima is working  with Santini?" 

"He is." 

"How long have you known that, Doc?" the homely chemist breathed  wonderingly. 

"Since Santini was tipped so mysteriously that the air mail package  was coming to my office in New York,"

Doc said. "Only Da Clima had an  opportunity to pass that information along." 

KEL AVERY, still looking very much the motion picture actress in  spite of all that she had been through,

overheard Doc's information and  seemed deeply shocked. 

"When Da Clima came to me in Florida and offered his services as a  bodyguard, Santini had sent him!" she

gasped. 

Doc nodded. He had Renny, Johnny and Monk free of their bonds. He  went to work on Pat's ropes. Their

situation was dangerous. At any  instant, some of Santini's men might return. 

"Doc, was I right about that silphium from Cirene theory?" Johnny  questioned. 

"You were," Doc replied. "I saw the weed, and it is unquestionably  the highly medicinal species of silphium." 

Johnny glanced triumphantly at the doubter, Monk. But Monk appeared  not to have heard, being engaged in

making fierce faces and rubbing his  huge arms to unlimber muscles. 

"Wait'll I get that egg Da Clima!" he gritted. "I knew he was a  phony all along. He was responsible for us

bein' caught. Pretended to  get himself wedged in a hole and blocked our retreat." 

All were on their feet now. Doc opened a knapsack and passed out  the superfirers which had been taken from

his men, and which he had  found in the course of his prowling through the stone labyrinth.  Receiving the

guns reminded Monk of something else. 

"Some of our ammo drums were duds," he growled. "I'll bet Da Clima  was responsible for that." 

They grouped closely and started an advance. They were, they knew  from words they had previously

overheard their captors drop, in a dead  end of the caverns. To escape, it would be necessary to pass Santini

and his men, either by violence, or by stealth. 

"There's just one thing that ain't cleared up," Monk said softly.  "What's turnin' men into skeletons on this

island?" 

"Quiet," Doc breathed. "That will have to wait." 

"So you know what it  is?" 

"I saw the things  after a fashion," Doc replied, and did not  elaborate that his glimpse had been by use of

the powder which glowed  under ultraviolet light. 


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Misfortune walked with them, it developed, for Santini and three of  his men appeared, laughing, swabbing at

their lips, evidence that they  had quaffed of the silphium brew. 

Santini emitted a startled bawl. His hands, clawing for his inlaid  gun. tore the bright ribbon loose from his

chest. He shot as he leaped  backward. His bullet, fired hastily, hit no one. Those with him sought  cover, one

lifting a submachine gun. 

Storming lead from the rapidlirer drove Doc and the others to  cover. They crouched behind stone bulwarks,

and it could not but dawn  on them that their position was as dangerous as at any time hitherto. 

"Blazes!" Monk mumbled. "Got any of those anaesthetic bulbs, Doc?" 

"I could not find them." the bronze man advised. "Santini did not  put them with the rest of our weapons. 

Santini began yelling again. "Fate presto! Make haste! Bring me the  bundle containing those glass balls

which we took from these porcos!" 

"Hey, boss, you can hold your breath until the gas loses its  punch," said a member of the gang. "Da Clima,

here, says to do so." 

"We will throw them one at the time," snapped Santini. "Thus we  will keep the cloud of gas fresh. They

cannot bold their breath  forever." 

"That, she is the big idea of mine, yes," Da Clima's big 'voice  chimed in. "Da Clima got the good head, no?" 

Tense uneasiness gripped Doc's party as they heard the words, for  they knew that their enemies had hit on a

most effective way of  capturing them. 

"That damn Da Clima hatched that one," Monk grated. "If I could  have one wish before I kick off, it'd be to

get that bird in my hands." 

"For once, I can agree with you," Ham growled. Renny boomed, "Doc,  I'm in favor of rushing 'em. Let's go

out with fireworks!" 

"Wait," Doc advised. 

"Blazes! Do you think there's another way out?" 

"No. We won't even waste time hunting for one." 

"Then  " 

"Just wait," Doc advised. "Let's see what happens." 

DURING THE next few moments it seemed that the future held nothing  but trouble. Santini and his men

fired occasionally to prevent a  charge. They were only waiting for the thinwalled glass balls which

contained Doc's unusual anesthetic gas. 

Then Santini, in a strained, uneasy voice, said, "Do you feel   queer  signors?" 

A man cursed. Another groaned. 


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"That damned weed  " some one began, and did not finish, but fell  to coughing and gagging. These sounds

of agony decreased in strength,  terminating in a thump which might have been a man falling. 

Doc and his party waited. Pat stood near enough to Doc that the  bronze man could hear her even breathing.

Somewhere in the distant  reaches of the cavern there was a piping, forlorn squeal. 

"Habeas," said Monk. "I'm glad he's all right." 

"Come," said Doc, and stepped out boldly. 

Monk clutched anxiously for the bronze giant, thinking he was  taking unnecessary chances in thrusting

himself into the zone of fire.  But nothing happened. Gingerly, half expectant of a bullet, Monk  followed

Doc's example. They were not fired upon, although they stood  boldly outlined in the glare from the

flashlights of Santini's gang. 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled, and leaped forward. 

They found Santini sprawled upon the stone floor, limp, but still  breathing, and the other members of the

gang were near by, all immobile  on the sandy floor. Not one of the crew was conscious. 

"I've seen lots of unexpected things happen," Monk muttered  wonderingly, "but this one comes nearer to

magic than the rest. How do  you explain it?" 

"The silphium tea that they drank," Doc told him. 

"Huh? Is the stuff poison?" 

"Not that I know of," Doc elaborated. "You see, Monk, I put some  powerful narcotic from your chemical

laboratory into the handiest  containers of the siphium." 

"You drugged 'em!" Monk exploded. 

"Indirectly," Doc agreed. "Yes." 

Kel Avery emitted a sudden piercing shriek. They whirled upon her,  startled. She threw back her head and

began to laugh, wildly, madly,  while tears ran from her eyes. She trembled and beat her hands  together. 

"She's hysterical, now that it's all over," Monk mumbled, and went  over to quiet the young actress as best he

could. 

"Let's get out of here," suggested Ham. 

In single file, the most convenient way of traversing the tortuous  passages of the underground network, they

worked forward. 

"We've still got to find the parts they took off our plane," Long  Tom reminded. 

"Sure," Renny agreed. "But even if we don't find them, we can  repair the fuel tanks in Santini's plane and

shift the gas from our  ship. Reckon old Dan Thunden punctured Santini's tanks." 

Monk stopped suddenly. "Dan Thunden! What became of him? I forgot  all about the old goat." 


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The answer to Monk's query came from no member of the party, but  from the stone of Fear Cay itself. The

entire cay seemed to jump  violently. There was a roar that left their heads aching. A torrent of  air, sand and

small stone gushed upon them, bowling Long Toni and  Johnny off their feet. 

"That came from one of the entrances!" Doc rapped. 

They ran forward, but did not go far before a whoop of hateful  laughter yanked them up. The sound came

from a passage to the left, and  it was Dan Thunden's oldyoung voice. 

"I've got Santini's grenades," the strange character shrilled. "You  just heard me close one entrance, and I'll get

the othahs When I open  the place up again, theah won't be nothin' of you but bones!" 

Chapter 21. THE CRAWLING TERROR

IT WAS difficult to locate the enraged voice in the  hollowlyresounding passages. Doc led the rush for the

spot from which  it seemed to emanate. 

"He was tied up the last I saw of him," the bronze man offered  quietly. "He must have gotten loose. He is

tremendously strong." 

"A living example of how effective this Fountain of Youth is," Ham  agreed. 

Dan Thunden evidently had a gun  for it roared in the cavern. 

Monk grunted loudly and fell down, but heaved up again, grimly  silent. 

"Are you hurt badly?" Doc demanded. 

"My leg," said Monk. "I can still navigate." 

Dan Thunden became terrified at their advance and fled. Knowing  every cranny of the caverns as he did, he

traveled so swiftly that they  barely managed to keep within earshot of his footsteps. 

"Where's he headin' for?" Renny pondered aloud. 

"There's a heavy wooden door which shuts off a part of the cavern,"  Doc explained. "He seems to be making

for that." 

"What's behind the door?" 

"The things which made that skeleton we found on the beach, and  turned Hallet into one like it," Doc replied. 

They found the bones of unfortunate Hallet shortly afterward. They  were scattered, for some of Santini's gang

had evidently given them a  kick in passing. 

Johnny was weak, and being helped along by Renny. Pat kept close to  Doc's side, along with Kel Avery,

whose hysteria had subsided magically  at the return of danger. 

"That old man is dangerous," Pat warned. "If we don't head him off,  he'll entomb us in here and turn his pets,

or whatever is behind that  door, loose on us. 


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They soon caught sight of Dan Thunden. He had opened the massive  door with the secret fastener, and was

just passing through. His form  towered fully eight feet off the floor. 

"He's on stilts!" Long Tom barked. "What d'you think of that!" 

"I think he's thinking fast," Doc said grimly. "And we haven't much  time. Get that door shut. Let him go, if

necessary." 

But Thunden had other plans for the door. He spun, facing the glare  of their flashlights, and thrust a hand into

a coat pocket. Bringing  out a small object of metal, he threw it' 

A hand grenade! The thing arched toward them. But not far! Doc's  hands, as usual, were empty of guns. The

only thing he held was a  flashlight. He threw that. 

Flashlight and grenade met in the air, a little nearer them than  Dan Thunden, and almost in the big door.

There was a white flash, a  roar, and the inevitable rush of air. 

Johnny and Renny both upset, as did Pat and Kel Avery. Doc himself  was staggered. The door split and the

massive timbers made a great  noise falling to the floor. 

Dan Thunden on his tall stilts was overbalanced. He toppled, tried  to balance himself against one stone wall,

and in doing so, bore his  entire weight on one stilt. The stilt snapped off. 

The old man fell squarely on his whitethatched head. 

A weird thing happened to the floor about him. Seemingly, it came  to life and began to undulate and crowd

toward where Thunden lay. In  fractional seconds, the rustylooking floor spread over the prone form,

covering it, until Thunden's body resembled only a rugged hump of  reddishblack sand. There was a great

frying noise. 

"Too late to help him!" Doc rapped. "Let's get out of here." They  ran back the way they had been coming,

fleeing from the horror on the  cavern floor. Not until they had gone scores of yards did they discover  that the

concussion of the exploding grenades had in spots jarred great  rock fragments from the ceiling. 

Farther on, the way was entirely blocked. 

"Blazes!" Monk muttered, resting his injured leg. "How are we gonna  get to Santini's outfit?" 

They were not to get to Santini, it developed, for they could not  find an opening large enough to crawl

through  and behind them grew  the sound that was like the gentle popping of hot grease into which an  egg

had been broken. 

They gave up the effort to reach Santini, found an exit, and  climbed out into the sunlight. 

JOHNNY WAS the last to leave the cavern. He sat on the lip of the  hole through which the others had

scrambled, squinting his eyes in the  hot evening sunlight, listening to the frying sound below. 

"What was that thing we saw?" Kel Avery asked thickly. 

"You mean the things that got your great  " 


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"Yes, the things that covered my greatgrandfather, Dali Thunden,"  said the actress. 

"Carnivorous jormicoidea," Johnny told her. 

Monk glared at him and snapped, "I ain't in a good humor! Use  little words for once, will you!" 

"Ants," said Johnny. "Flesheating ants. Isn't that right Doc?" 

The bronze man nodded. "They used one part of the cavern for their  colony. That is undoubtedly why Dan

Thunden shut it off with that  door." 

Monk leaned back and sighed, "So it was that simple! And I had  visioned a new menace that was threatening

mankind." 

The voracious ants, literally millions of them, were not a menace  to be taken lightly, they discovered in the

days following. it was  necessary to be always on guard against the carnivorous insects, for  they traveled in

armies and their bites induced a poison, if suffered  in sufficient number, that would render a victim helpless.

Woe to the  man whom the insects came upon when asleep. 

The ants were not, Doc explained repeatedly, of a species new to  science. 

Their stay at the island was to dig out the entombed Santini and  his men. But they found only bones. There

had been cracks large enough  to admit the voracious ants. 

The store of siphium was intact, and Doc, searching, located  growing plants on the cay. These were carefully

dug up, packed, and  made ready for transportation to the United States. 

Monk tried out some of the silphium tea on his wounded leg, and the  results were remarkable. The puncture

began to heal almost at once. 

"Boy, we've got something," Monk insisted. "We've cornered the  Fountain of Youth!" 

Doc did not disillusion him at that moment. The bronze man  suspected that old Dan Thunden's longevity was

due to perfect health   that, of course, the result of drinking silphium tea  and the fact  that Thunden, an

exile on the is!and, had been kept away from the  distractions and dissipations of civilization which might

undermine  health. 

That the silphium was only a valuable medicinal herb proved  correct, for it was an amazingly efficient

antiseptic and tonic, a  disease preventative. But they did not learn that until months later,  after a number of

scientists and doctors had made careful experiments. 

Doc and his party got their plane ready to leave Fear Cay. They had  found the missing motor parts. 

"I just thought of one thing that ain't been cleared up yet," Monk  said in sudden excitement as they were

loading Up. 

"What?" Doc questioned. 

"The package of silphium that Kel Avery sent by air mail from  Florida," explained Monk. 

"That is in New York," Doc told him. 


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"Huh?" 

"Remember when I talked to the air mail officials?" Doc countered. 

"Sure. But nobody heard you, except the mail people." 

"I told them to open the package, take out the real contents, and  substitute something which looked similar,"

Doc said. "They did." 

Pat looked at the bronze man and asked, "Do you ever overlook  anything?" 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. FEAR CAY, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE POCKETBOOK GAG, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THIRTY-STORY DEATH, page = 9

   6. Chapter 3. MISTER SANTINI, page = 14

   7. Chapter 4. THE UNSEEN MESSAGE, page = 21

   8. Chapter 5. THE HANGING MAN, page = 28

   9. Chapter 6. DAN THUNDEN, page = 30

   10. Chapter 7. MURDER, page = 35

   11. Chapter 8. FAST STUFF, page = 39

   12. Chapter 9. KEL AVERY'S STORY, page = 44

   13. Chapter 10. THE PACKAGE TRICK, page = 49

   14. Chapter 11. THE SEIZURE, page = 54

   15. Chapter 12. THE DISAPPOINTING PARCEL, page = 58

   16. Chapter 13. FEAR CAY TRAIL, page = 65

   17. Chapter 14. THE ISLAND OF DEATH, page = 72

   18. Chapter 15. THE NET TRAP, page = 79

   19. Chapter 10. THE TRAIL SINISTER, page = 83

   20. Chapter 17. TROUBLE UNDERGROUND, page = 89

   21. Chapter 18. LOTS OF LUCK -- ALL BAD, page = 97

   22. Chapter 19. THE WEEDS, page = 104

   23. Chapter 20. THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH, page = 111

   24. Chapter 21. THE CRAWLING TERROR, page = 116