Title:   THE MYSTIC MULLAH

Subject:  

Author:   by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE MYSTIC MULLAH

by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE MYSTIC MULLAH..................................................................................................................................1

by Kenneth Robeson ................................................................................................................................1

Chapter 1. THE BROKEN NECK ...........................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THE FIREFACED MAN .....................................................................................................5

Chapter 3. THE MYSTIC MULLAH TALKS ......................................................................................12

Chapter 4. THE BRONZE SHADOW ...................................................................................................16

Chapter 5. AFTER MONK YELLED...................................................................................................23

Chapter 6. THE RESCUED MAN .........................................................................................................28

Chapter 7. THE WHITEBROWN MEN.............................................................................................36

Chapter 8. THE WISE GUY ..................................................................................................................41

Chapter 9. TROUBLE CLUB ................................................................................................................48

Chapter 10. TWO MEN IN CANVAS..................................................................................................54

Chapter 11. HORROR IN GREEN ........................................................................................................58

Chapter 12. ASIATIC EXODUS ...........................................................................................................67

Chapter 13. THE SECRET SERVICE MAN........................................................................................70

Chapter 14. THE HUMAN SPIDER.....................................................................................................79

Chapter 15. SINISTER CONFERENCE...............................................................................................85

Chapter 16. SURPRISES .......................................................................................................................89

Chapter 17. CLUE OF THUNDER AND SANDALWOOD ................................................................96

Chapter 18. THE GREEN FACE .........................................................................................................102


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THE MYSTIC MULLAH

by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE BROKEN NECK 

Chapter 2. THE FIREFACED MAN 

Chapter 3. THE MYSTIC MULLAH TALKS 

Chapter 4. THE BRONZE SHADOW 

Chapter 5. AFTER MONK YELLED 

Chapter 6. THE RESCUED MAN 

Chapter 7. THE WHITEBROWN MEN 

Chapter 8. THE WISE GUY 

Chapter 9. TROUBLE CLUB 

Chapter 10. TWO MEN IN CANVAS 

Chapter 11. HORROR IN GREEN 

Chapter 12. ASIATIC EXODUS 

Chapter 13. THE SECRET SERVICE MAN 

Chapter 14. THE HUMAN SPIDER 

Chapter 15. SINISTER CONFERENCE 

Chapter 16. SURPRISES 

Chapter 17. CLUE OF THUNDER AND SANDALWOOD 

Chapter 18. THE GREEN FACE  

Chapter 1. THE BROKEN NECK

IT was a drizzling gray evening full of moaning ghosts. The rain  came down in occasional flurries, but most

of the time it remained  suspended in the air as mist that the newspapers next day were to call  "the thickest fog

within memory." Harbor traffic was almost at a  standstill, and only those boat captains who were foolhardy,

or those  pressed by absolute necessity, were abroad. The foghorns of the boats  were the moaning ghosts. 

One ghost was especially persistent. It had the particular strident  voice peculiar to tugboat whistles, and it

came up through the Narrows  from the open sea at a clip that put cold chills on the spines of  boatmen who

knew how thick that fog was. 

There was something scared, something imperative, and maybe  something a bit mad about the tooting of that

tugboat. A coast guard  cutter became interested and nosed over to investigate. Coast guardsmen  will go out in

anything. 

The cutter skipper nosed in close, saw that the tug was the Whale  of Gotham, and that there was a picture of a

spouting whale painted on  the bows. Then, after the manner of coast guard skippers with tugboat  captains, the

cutter commandant swore a blue streak. 

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"What's the idea of tearing in here like an express train?" he  finished. 

The tugboat master swore back. He would have been very polite to  another tugboat captain, but a coast guard

skipper was fair game. 

"Sheer off!" be yelled. "I've got a man aboard, who's been hurt!  We're rushing him to a hospital. He's dying!" 

It was a story that satisfied even the coast guardsman, so he  sheered off and betook himself away in the fog.

And that set the  tugboat captain to chuckling. 

A voice at the tugboat captain's elbow spoke an English that was  entirely too perfect. 

"Why did you tell him that?" it asked. "We have no dying man  aboard." 

The tug master jumped as if a transatlantic liner had shoved out of  the fog at full speed. He turned, an angry

exclamation on his tongue,  for he did not like to be startled, especially in this fog, with his  nerves already on

edge. But he held his counsel, for the man at his  elbow did not look like one who would take a tonguelashing;

and  furthermore, it would be bad policy to insult a man who is paying a  tremendous sum for the services of

your tugboat. 

The man had a big hooked nose and a beard that was small and  pointed. His skin was a yellowbrown, dry

and wrinkled, and did not  appeal to the eye. He wore strange garments. 

The tugboat skipper had done his life's traveling in New York  harbor, so he did not know that the long,

flowing white mantle which  reached down from the hooknosed man's head was an abah, or that his

embroidered cloak was a jubbah, or that the queerlooking trousers were  shirwals. Only one who had

traveled in Central Asia would know what the  garments were called. 

On the hooknosed man's forehead was a strange design, an affair of  fines which might have been construed

as a likeness of a serpent coiled  a jewel, as if protecting it. The lines looked as if they were put on  with ink,

but actually they were tattooed into the skin with a fluid  that one of the master sorcerers of Asia had insisted

was composed  partially of the dried blood of Genghis Khan, the original. 

To the tugboat captain, the mark looked like a dirty smear; and had  he known its true significance, he might

have fallen off the bridge of  his grimy craft. For it was the Sacred Seal of the Khan Nadir Shar, Son  of

Divinity, Destined Master of Ten Thousand Lances, Khan of Tanan,  Ruler of Outer Mongolia. Maybe the tug

skipper would not have known  what all of that meant. Probably not. 

It meant that the hooknosed man, Khan Shar, was a king, absolute  ruler of the city of Tanan, beyond Outer

Mongolia, and monarch over the  surrounding provinces. 

"Advise me when we tie up at the dock," requested Khan Shar in his  tooperfect English. 

"Sure," said the skipper. 

"This dock you have selected  it is secluded?" asked the Khan. 

The skipper rolled his tobacco quid in his jaws. The man made him  nervous. 

"It's an outoftheway dock," he said. 


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"Excellent!" said the Khan, and left the tugboat bridge, or more  properly, the pilot house. 

The tugboat captain rolled his eyes and directed tobacco juice at  the feet of One of Ills two deckhands, who

had come in out of the foggy  night. "Damned if I like this," he said in a tone which showed he  wanted to talk

to relieve his mind. 

The deckhand, who knew that tone, let his boss talk without  interruption. 

"Damned if I like it,"' repeated the skipper. "I get a radio to go  out to the Atlantic Queen, that new liner that's

fog bound, and take  off a passenger. I get out there, and, by golly, if it ain't three  passengers, and two of 'em

the queerest lookin' ducks you ever saw!  Take that one who was just in here." 

"I'd rather take him than the other man," said the deckhand in a  queer tone. 

The skipper scowled. "Whatcha mean?" 

"I mean that the other duck has a knife as long as your arm up his  sleeve," said the deckhand. "I just saw it 

he's standin' outside the  door of your cabin. Looks like he's guardin' the girl." 

"The girl!" The skipper sighed.  "Now she's what I call a nifty  number. She's white, too. Wonder what she's

doin' with these two funny  lookin' buzzards?" 

The skipper was not a had judge of femininity. The girl was a  "nifty number." In fact, she would have put a

movie casting director up  on his toes. 

She was tall, with dark hair and lashes that were altogether  delectable. But there was something else about

her. She was  businesslike, capable. Her person radiated efficiency. 

Her clothing was thoroughly modern, and so was the blue automatic  which she held in her hand as the door

opened. 

The hooknosed Khan Shar looked at the gun and smiled as if it  might have been a cocktail the young

woman intended offering him. 

"I do not feel there is danger," he said. "We have not heard of the  Mystic Mullah since our caravan left the

Gobi." 

The girl kept the gun in her hands. "A thousand lives depend on  what we are doing," she said dryly. "If you

want to be dramatic, you  can put the figure higher." 

The Khan's dark face drained of its color, giving him a stark,  agonized look. 

"You could put the figure higher and not be dramatic," he said  thickly. 

Neither spoke again, for the tugboat engine had changed its regular  pulse and was running slowly; it

accelerated, then pounded, as if the  craft were backing. Shouts rang out, and scraping sounds on deck

indicated ropes dragging. There was a bump, rather violent, then lesser  bumps and the tug heeled so that the

Khan put out a hand to steady  himself. There were four large rings, each with a big jewel, on his  fingers. 

"I trust we have tied to a secluded dock," said the Khan~ 


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"Hadim!" called the girl. 

The door opened and a lean man with a long, brown face came in. He  was dressed in a flowing jubbah and

shirwals that fitted his legs  tightly, and he carried his left arm stiffly, as if not wishing to  disturb the long

knife which the deckhand had seen up that sleeve. 

This Hadim did not present an appealing picture, for someone had  made a pass at him with a sword or a knife

in the past, and had come  just close enough to groove his face with a permanent scar from  forehead to chin.

He bowed deeply to the girl. 

"Yes, Miss Joan," he said. 

"You will leave at once, Hadim," said the girl "You know what you  are to do, the message you are to deliver.

And you know how much  depends upon our finding this man." 

"Yes, Miss Joan," said Hadim. "My four brothers, my father and  mother and my sisters have died when

touched by the green soul of the  Mystic Mullah, Need I more to remind me?" 

"You will die if you make a mistake," said the girl. "And if we do  not reach this man we have come to see,

many more may follow you. Just  how many, there is no telling." she extended her automatic. "Better  take

this." 

Hadim tapped his sleeve. "I know better how to use this." 

Joan directed, "Have the man get in touch with us." 

Hadim murmured, "Aye, and this man's name  " 

"Doc Savage," said Joan. "Hurry. We must find him, or learn where  he is." 

THERE was rawness in the fog, a damp chill, and the vapor had long  since washed the moon and stars out of

the sky and had put the dank  waterfront streets in the grip of the clammy mist from the sea. 

Hadim embraced the soupy fog as one at home in his element, and he  took to the shabby, narrow waterfront

thoroughfares without  hesitation. He did, however, walk in the middle of the street until  almost run down by

a prowling taxicab. Hadim looked the hack over  carefully, after the driver stopped to see if he had done any

damage.  The driver had an honest face, so Hadim used his cab to go uptown. 

Hadim, let out at his destination, stared up at the building which  he was to enter, and stark amazement sat

upon his scarred, brown face.  This building was the pride of native New Yorkers. To Hadim, it was an

architectural wonder such as he had not dreamed existed. It was a  modernistic structure, somewhere near a

hundred stories in height, and  was a blinding exhibition of white stone and shining metal. 

"What a lot of camels would be needed to haul the stones for this  house," Hadim murmured. 

Then he went inside, asked questions, made a few mistakes, but  eventually got in an elevator which let him

out, after a frightsome  ride upward, on the eightysixth floor. The corridor was as impressive  as the building

exterior. 

"Even the palace of the Khan does not excel this," Hadim told  himself. 


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Then he jerked to a stop. He could feel a slight breeze through the  corridor. And he had heard a hissing

sound. This last was very faint. 

Hadim turned slowly  and his voice went out in a sudden, wild  shriek of terror. It was earsplitting, that

shriek. In it was all of  the agony of a man who knows he has met death. 

Down the corridor, floating in the air, strange, fantastic things  were approaching. They were like fat snakes,

their color an unholy  green, their diameter perhaps that of a human wrist, their length the  span of an arm from

hand to elbow. They whirled, contorted with a sort  of dervish dance. They seemed to grow fatter, then

thinner. 

Most hideous of all was the fact that these flying serpentine  things seemed unreal. They were ghostly,

nebulous, without any real  body or shape. 

Hadim, screaming again, had his long knife out of his left sleeve.  He retreated. The green things overhauled

him. He began to run  backward. They still gained. 

Hadim came to the end of the corridor, to a window. He beat it,  knocking the glass out, but the metal

crosspieces defied him, thwarting  him in his mad desire to jump through. 

The green horrors reached him and Hadim struck with his knife, only  to shriek out in fresh horror as the blade

passed completely through  the green atrocity and nothing happened. He struck again; then the  serpentine

things were upon him. 

They brushed against his arms, his chest. One rolled like a hideous  green tongue, caressing his face, lingering

about his mouth, his  nostrils, then rolling up over his eyes. Hadim fought them with his  hands, shrieking

again and again; he writhed down to get away from  them, and squirmed on the floor. 

Then the green things arose and drifted out through the holes which  Hadim had beaten in the skyscraper

window with his fists. They went  slowly, as if satisfied with the work they had done. They had changed

shape materially by now; one had been knocked to pieces and had  resolved itself into half a dozen thin, green

strings, so pale that the  eye could easily see through them, distinguishing the frames of the  window behind

them. 

Chapter 2. THE FIREFACED MAN

DOWN the corridor a way, and around a corner, there was a plain  metal door, the panel of which bore a name

in small letters of a  peculiar bronze color: 

CLARK SAVAGE, JR. 

This door whipped back and a tall, incredibly bony man popped out.  The man was thinner than it seemed any

human being could be and still  exist. He wore no coat, and a rubber apron was tied about his  midsection.

Rubber gloves were on his hands, and one hand held a  magnifying glass made in the shape of a monocle. 

He peered about, blinking, searching for the source of the shrieks  which had drawn his attention. But there

was a crook in the corridor  and he did not see the form of Hadim immediately. 

The bony man absently stowed the monocle magnifier in a vest pocket  under his rubber laboratory apron, and

advanced. He rounded the corner,  jerked up and stared. 


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Hadim was now motionless on the floor, and his head was angled back  in a grotesque posture which no man

could attain normally. 

The bony man in the rubber apron suddenly snapped a hand to an  armpit and brought it away gripping a

weapon which somewhat resembled  an oversize automatic pistol. He flipped this up and tightened on the

trigger; the weapon shuttled, smoked and made a noise like a gigantic  bullfiddle. It was a machine pistol with

a tremendous firing speed. 

One of the sinister green wraiths was still inside the corridor,  rolling against the window as if seeking blindly

to escape. The stream  of bullets from the machine pistol passed through it, disturbing it,  fattening it a little,

but not destroying it or seeming in any way to  affect its unholy life. 

The stream of lead broke glass out of the window. The green harpy  squirmed through the opening and floated

away into the gloom, losing  itself over the nest of skyscraper spires. 

The skeleton of a man stood very still for a long minute. 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" he muttered finally. 

Stooping, he examined the body of Hadim, for Hadim was dead. When  Hadim's head was moved, there was a

grisly looseness about its  attachment to the body, as if it were only connected by a cord no  stiffer than a

wrapping twine. 

The bony man eyed Hadim's extraordinarily long knife. 

"Sixteenth century Tananese," he decided aloud. Then he employed  the monocle magnifier briefly. "Wrong.

Tananese, all right, but of  modern construction, using sixteenth century methods of tempering and  moulding.

Most peculiar." 

The wall beside Hadim's body was of plaster, painted over, and it  was scarred with numerous rather odd

looking marks. These came to the  thin man's attention. 

"I'll be superamalgamated!" he gulped again, using what was  evidently, for him, a pet ejaculation. He stared

harder at the marks.  Down the corridor, an elevator door clanked to a stop. Before the door  opened, voices

could be heard.  They were very loud voices, angry. It  sounded as if a fight was about to occur in the elevator.

The cage door  opened and a man came skidding out. 

This man was slender, waspish, with a high forehead and a large  orator's mouth. His attire was sartorial

perfection from silken topper  to the exact hang of his tail coat. He carried a thin, black cane. 

He yelled at the open elevator door, "You hairy accident! You awful  mistake of nature! You insult to the

human race!" 

A most striking looking individual now came out of the elevator.  His height was no greater than that of a

young boy; his width was  almost equal to his height. His face was mostly mouth, with a broken  nubbin of a

nose, small eyes set in pits of gristle, and scarcely a  noticeable quantity of forehead. His long arms dangled

well below his  knees and the wrists were matted with hair that looked like rusted  steel wool. 

Had the corridor been a little less brilliantly lighted the hairy  gentleman might have been mistaken for an

amiable gorilla. 


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The hairy man squinted little eyes at the dapper one and said,  "Pipe down, you shyster, or I'll tie a knot in

your neck! 

Then they both saw the tall skeleton of a man down the Corridor.  They could not help but note his

excitement. 

"What's happened, Johnny?" demanded the apish fellow. They could  not see the body of Hadim, which lay

around the bend in the corridor. 

"Johnny," the bony man  he was actually William Harper Littlejohn,  worldrenowned expert on

archaeology and geology  gestured over his  shoulder with the monocle magnifier. 

"Come here, Monk," he said, then included the dapper man. "You too,  Ham." 

"Monk," the homely gorilla of a man, and "Ham," the immaculate  fashion plate, advanced hurriedly. A

moment before, they had seemed on  the point of blows; now their quarrel was suddenly suspended. It was

always thus. No one who knew these two could recall one having  addressed a civil word to the other. 

Monk, whose low forehead did not look as if it afforded room for  more than a spoonful of brains, was

Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett  Mayfair, generally conceded to be one of the most accomplished of

industrial chemists; while Ham, the fashion plate, was Major General  Theodore Marley Brooks, a lawyer who

possessed probably the sharpest  legal mind ever trained by Harvard. 

Monk and Ham, rounding the hallway angle and sighting Hadim's body  with its grotesquely twisted head,

jerked to a stop and became  slackjawed. 

"Blazes!" Monk sniffed, sampling the air like an animal. "I smell  burned gunpowder. Who shot the guy?" 

"No one," said Johnny. "I fired a few shots subsequently." 

Monk ambled over to the body, hands swinging below his knees, and  stared intently. 

"What's wrong with his neck?" he asked. 

"Broken," Johnny replied. 

Monk asked, "Who broke it?" 

"No one," answered the gaunt geologist "As far as I can  " 

"Yeah," Monk growled. "Then who'd you shoot at?" 

"A peculiar, nebulous green corporeity with the optical aspects of  a serpentine specimen suspended

atmospherically," said Johnny, his  expression not changing. "It bore similarity to a phantasmagoria." 

Monk lifted one hand and snapped thumb and forefinger. 

"Now do it again with little words," he requested. Johnny had once  held the chair of natural science research

in a famous university where  he had been known as a professor who stunned most of his students with  his big

words, and he still had the habit. He never used a small word  when he could think of a large one. 


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"A green thing was floating in the air above the body," said  Johnny. "I shot. The bullet went through it,

breaking the window. Then  the thing floated out through the window and away." 

Monk said unsmilingly, "I always did think those big words would  drive you crazy. 

Johnny pointed at the odd looking marks scratched on the wall  beside Hadim's body. 

"The man obviously inscribed these when he felt demise imminent,"  he said. "He used the tip of his knife." 

Monk bent over, looked and said, "They don't mean anything. He just  dug the wall with his knife as he was

flopping around." 

"Those marks," said Johnny, "are words, or word signs, rather, of  Tananese, an obscure language with an

Arabic derivative, spoken in  certain parts of outer Mongolia." 

"What do they say?" asked Monk. 

And Johnny, who probably knew as many ancient languages, written  and spoken, as any half dozen of the

ordinary socalled experts on the  subject, drew a paper and pencil from his pocket and reproduced thereon

the characters which the wall bore, here and there correcting a stroke  which Hadim, in his dying agony, had

made with slight error. Then  Johnny wrote the English translation under the word signs. He passed it  to Monk

and Ham. They read: 

MANY LIVES WILL BE SPARED IF HE OF MOUNTAINS  WHO CHARMS EVIL  SPIRITS WILL GO

TO FISH THAT  SMOKES ON WATER WHERE THE KRAN SHAR AND  JOAN 

"It ends there," said Johnny. "You can see the name 'Joan' is  scratched out in the nearest thing an Asiatic

could come to English  letters." 

Ham, the dapper lawyer, fumbled absently with his slim black cane,  and in doing so, separated the handle

slightly from the rest of the  cane, revealing that there was a long, slender blade of razorsharp  steel housed in

the cane body. 

"That sounds silly," he said. "What does it mean?" 

Monk suddenly banged a fist on a knee, something he could do  without stooping. 

"Remember that radio we got a few days ago?" he demanded. "The  message was signed, 'Joan Lyndell.'" 

The gaunt Johnny said sharply, "I have been carrying it around with  me," and withdrawing a radiogram blank

from a pocket, he passed it to  the others, open for perusal. They had all seen it before, but they  went over it

again: 

DOC SAVAGE, NEW YORK. YOUR ASSISTANCE IMPERATIVE  ON MATTER  INVOLVING

THOUSANDS OF LIVES AND  POSSIBLY STABILITY OF WESTERN  CIVILIZATION.  PLEASE

RADIO ME APPOINTMENT TIME AND PLACE. MY  LINER  WILL REACH NEW YORK THREE

DAYS. JOAN  LYNDELL, ABOARD 5.5. ATLANTIC  QUEEN. 

Below the message, written in pencil, was another missive, one  evidently penned as an answer to the

radiogram. It read: 


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JOAN LYNDELL, CARE TRANSATLANTIC LINER ATLANTIC  QUEEN. SORRY BUT  DOC SAVAGE

NOT IN CITY AND NOT  AVAILABLE TO COMMUNICATION. CANNOT SAY  WHEN HE WILL

RETURN. WILLIAM HARPER LITTLEJOHN. 

Monk rubbed his jaw and asked, "Connection?" 

"Between this message and the dead man?" Johnny shrugged. "He  inscribed the name 'Joan' on the wall." 

Ham pointed at the wall markings with his sword cane. 

"But what does the rest of that mean?" 

In the manner of a scholar giving a lecture, Johnny said, 

"The man could not write Doc Savage's name, so he came as near to  describing it as he could. The mountain

men in the Tananese region are  savages, so 'He of Mountains' probably is meant for Savage. And a  Tananese

doctor is called one who chases evil spirits." 

Monk squinted admiringly. "Maybe there is something besides big  words in that head. What about the 'fish

that smokes on water'?" 

"A boat," said Johnny. "A boat in some manner connected with a  fish, and probably an oil or a coal burner." 

Ham said briskly, "I'll see about this." 

He strode down the corridor, opened the door on which was the name  "Clark Savage, Jr.," in small bronze

letters, and entered a reception  room which held an enormous safe, a costly inlaid table, and various  other

items of quiet but expensive furniture. Ham picked up a  telephone. 

With the casual ease of a man who had done the thing before, Ham  got a landline radio connection to the

liner Atlantic Queen. He spoke  for some minutes, then hung up. 

He did not leave the telephone immediately, but consulted the  directory, then made a second call. Then he

went out and joined the  others. 

"His Majesty, Khan Nadir Shar of Tanan, and a young woman named  Joan Lyndell were taken off the

Atlantic Queen by the tug Whale of  Gotham about three hours ago," he repeated. "I called the owners of the

Whale of Gotham. The tug is tied up at a wharf in the Hudson, off  Twentysixth Street" 

"Whale of Gotham," Monk grunted. "That would be the 'fish that  smokes on the water.'" 

Ham eyed Johnny, then indicated the body of Hadim. "Just what did  kill this fellow?" 

The thin geologist shook his head slowly. "That is a profound  mystery, as great a mystery as the nature of the

green body I saw." 

Monk frowned at Johnny, at the rubber apron the tall geologist  wore. "Busy, aren't you?" 

"Yes," Johnny admitted. "I am trying to assemble the vertebrae of a  small dinosaur of the early Mesozoic." 

"Stick here," Monk advised. "Me and the tailor's dream here will go  down to this tugboat." 


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"Very well," Johnny agreed, after hesitating. 

"If Doc Savage shows up, tip him off," Monk finished. 

MONK and Ham, departing, rode down to the basement in a private  highspeed elevator which had

undoubtedly cost a young fortune to  install, and came out in a subterranean garage which held several motor

vehicles, ranging from an open roadster of expensive manufacture and  quiet color scheme to a large delivery

van which, although it did not  look the part, was literally an armored tank. The elevator, the garage,  the

assortment of cars, as well the establishment on the eightysixth  floor  there was an enormous scientific

laboratory and a highly  complete scientific library up there in addition to the reception room   were all a part

of the New York headquarters maintained by Doc  Savage. 

A strange individual, this Doc Savage. Probably one of the most  remarkable of living men. A genius, a

mental marvel and a giant of  fabulous physical strength. 

He was literally a product of science himself, was this Savage, for  he had been trained from birth for one

single purpose In life the  fantastic career which he now followed. Every trick of science had been  utilized in

his training. In no sense had he led a life that might be  regarded as normal 

Two hours of each day since childhood had been devoted to a routine  of intense exercises calculated to

develop not only muscles, but  physical senses and mental sharpness. All of his early life had been  devoted to

study under masters of trades, sciences, professions, until  he possessed a knowledge that was, to the ordinary

man, uncanny. 

The result of this studied upbringing was an individual who was a  remarkable combination of scientific

genius and physical capacity. 

Stranger even than the man himself was the career to which his life  was dedicated  the business of helping

others out of trouble, of  aiding the oppressed, of dealing with those evildoers who seemed beyond  the touch

of the law. For all of which Doc Savage made it an unbending  rule to accept no payment in money, under any

circumstances. 

Long ago, Doc Savage had assembled five men as his assistants, five  men who were worldfamed specialists

in their respective lines, five  men who associated themselves with him because they loved adventure,

excitement, and because they were drawn by admiration for the giant of  bronze who was Doc Savage. 

Monk, the chemist, and Ham, the lawyer, were two of the five aides.  Johnny, the archaeologist, was another.

Two others  Colonel John  "Renny" Renwick, engineer, and Major Thomas J. "long Tom" Roberts,  electrical

wizard  were, at the moment, elsewhere in the city, engaged  in the private business which they carried on

when not actively  assisting Doc Savage. 

The present whereabouts of Doc Savage himself was something that no  one knew. The bronze man had

vanished. He had told no one where he was  going. No one, not even his five aides, knew how to reach him.

But they  were not worried, these five, for they were confident that the bronze  man had gone away to some

mysterious rendezvous, where he could he  alone for intensive study. 

And, although Doc's five aides were not sure, they believed this  place to which the bronze man retired, this

remote trysting place with  reflection which he called his Fortress of Solitude, was located on an  Island in the

remote Arctic It was certain, though, that no one would  hear of Doc Savage until he should return,

mysteriously as he had gone. 


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MONK and Ham, nearing the Hudson River waterfront in a coupe which  presented no outward hint that it

was a rolling fortress with  bulletproof glass and armored body, exchanged comments punctuated with

insults. 

"We should've asked that walkin' encyclopedia, Johnny, more  questions," Monk grumbled. "Where's Tanan,

the place where this Khan  Shar is supposed to be a king?" 

"Didn't you study geography?" Ham asked sarcastically. 

"Well, where is it?" 

"In Asia." 

Monk scowled. "Do you, or do you not, know where it is?" 

"I know as much about it as you do," Ham snapped. 

"Which is not a dang thing." Monk used a spotlight to ascertain a  street number. "What's this king over here

for? And what's he want with  Doc?" 

"Nothing was said about the king wanting Doc," Ham pointed out. "It  was this Joan Lyndeil who sent that

radiogram." 

Monk said, "Wonder who she is?" 

"How would I know?" Ham said sourly. 

They parked the car and got out. Monk rummaged for a flashlight,  but was unable to find one, then they

moved away from the machine. 

Monk mused aloud, "Wonder what broke that brownskinned guy's neck.  Wish we'd figured that out." 

Ham began, "Say, you hairy baboonwwuh!" He ended the statement  with a sort of choked explosion. 

Monk's jaw sagged, pulling his big mouth open cavernously; his  fingers made absent straying movements.

His little eyes seemed on the  point of jumping from their pits of gristle. 

They had been moving along a warehouse side, a wall of brick,  unbroken by windows or other apertures. The

darkness was intense. 

Ahead of them, a face had appeared, materializing with an eerie  unexpectedness. This was all the more

startling, because the darkness  was so thick that neither Monk nor Ham could see the other. Yet they  saw the

face clearly. 

It was a fantastic thing, that face. Its color was not human, but a  greenish hue, the tint that comes to meat in

the first stages of decay.  The green countenance shone with a fantastic luminosity; it was not  exactly

fluorescent, nor did it seem to have a light playing upon it,  yet it was plainly visible. 

The face had slant eyes, the contour of the Orient, and when it  roiled lips back in a grin, the effect was

anything but pleasant, for  the tongue in the mouth, which should have been in shadow, was as  plainly

discernible as the other features. It was the same unholy  green. Monk said, "What the devil?" thickly. 


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Chapter 3. THE MYSTIC MULLAH TALKS

IT was very silent beside the warehouse, for Monk and Ham were too  surprised for further speech.

Somewhere near, waves lapped with sounds  like women sobbing, and farther away, there was a hissing, as of

steam  escaping from the boilers of a tugboat. Out in the harbor, whistles and  foghorns still made occasional

clamor in the thick fog. 

The face hung suspended, like something disembodied, for the  darkness was too thick to permit Monk and

Ham to see the nature of the  body to which it was attached. The effect was ghostly. 

When the unearthly green lips writhed and words came from the  verdant face, both Monk and Ham jumped.

They could not help it. 

"Try to control your surprise," the voice said. 

Monk growled, "What the heck kind of hocus pocus is this anyhow?" 

"Do not jump at conclusions, my friends," said the voice. "You of  the Western civilization are too prone to

try to make science explain  all that you see. You like to call all exhibitions of the occult by the  plain terms of

magic, meaning mechanical fakery. You make the mistake  of not believing in the occult, the supernatural.

Your minds are too  practical." 

"Jove!" Ham said vaguely. "I do not get this." 

Monk grunted, "Why the lecture?" 

The voice  it was hollow and unreal  went on. 

"You are looking at something now that you do not understand," it  said. "You think you see a face. Perhaps

you think you see my body. You  are wrong. You see neither face nor body." 

"Nuts!" Monk felt under an arm where nestled a padded holster  holding a machine pistol scarcely larger than

an ordinary automatic. 

"In a material sense," said the fantastic voice, "you are looking  at a nonentity, at nothing. You think you see a

face; but actually,  there is nothing." 

Monk got his machine pistol out, and directed sourly, "All right, I  guess half a pound or so of lead won't hurt

you, Mr. Nonentity." 

"Listen to me," said the voice. "I am the green soul of the Mystic  Mullah. I am the master of all souls, the

power infinite. I have  touched many men, so that they have died and their souls come to me." 

Ham unsheathed his sword cane. He preferred the weapon because the  tip was coated with a drug concoction

which produced a quick, temporary  unconsciousness. 

The voice of the Mystic Mullah droned on, and there was no  perceptible lip motion on the uncanny green

face. 

"Go back," it said. "Forget what has happened tonight. Forget it  so thoroughly that you will not remember to


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tell this bronze man, Doc  Savage." 

Monk laughed; he laughed loudly, for somehow it made him feel  better to hear the crash of his own false

mirth. 

Ham said dryly, "Very dramatic, Mr. Green Soul. Our lives are in  danger, too, I suppose?" 

"Only your physical bodies," said the voice. "Your souls will live  on, green, serpentine, ghostly worms that

travel in the night and do my  bidding." 

Monk thought of the green things which Johnny had seen  He began to  perspire. 

"I died a million years ago, before time began," said the Mystic  Mullah. "I do not live, even now. I tell you to

forget. It would be  well for you to heed." 

"And if we don't?" Monk asked curiously. 

"My slaves, the green souls that are like flying serpents, will  come to you," said the Mystic Mullah. "Then

you will join me." 

Out of the side of his mouth, Monk breathed, "Let's take this nut,  whoever he is!" 

"Righto!" Ham breathed back. 

A string of powder blazes came from Monk's machine pistol. They  came so swiftly that they resembled a

short, solid red rod, and the  noise of the remarkable gun was a tremendous bawl of sound. 

The greenish lips writhed and the voice said casually, "I am not a  being who can be killed." 

MONK snorted and waited. He was surprised, but still hopeful. His  machine pistol fired mercy bullets,

hollow shells filled with a drug  which caused unconsciousness without doing permanent damage. That was

why he had shot. The slugs would not harm the greenfaced one to any  extent, and they would teach the

fellow a lesson. 

But nothing happened.  The green face remained suspended where it  was. 

"Dang it!" Monk ripped, and lunged forward. 

The green countenance vanished  simply vanished. It turned  slightly as it disappeared, and afterward there

was no trace. 

Monk fired again. The red blare from the machine pistol muzzle  furnished some light, by which Monk fully

expected to see his foe. 

His mouth fell open and astonishment came out of his throat in a  hacking grunt. There was no one, nothing

visible but the brick wall  against which the greenish face had been stationed, and on the wall  little splashes,

wetly glistening, where the mercy bullets had burst. 

Ham, lunging in a circle, switched his sword cane. He waved the  weapon lightly, so that, if it struck a body, it

could cut in only far  enough to introduce the stupefying drug. But the blade encountered only  the chilly fog

and the night. 


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"Strike a match!" Monk rapped. 

Ham did not carry matches, but he produced a jeweled lighter and  rasped its tiny flame into being. He cupped

it in a palm and turned  slowly, throwing the luminance it made. 

Fog streamers, crawling past, lent a spookish aspect to the place,  but there was no wraith solid enough to be a

human body. Out of the  harbor, the foghorns still moaned, but the hissing of steam escaping  from the

nearby tugboat had stopped. 

Ham turned his light upward. The warehouse wall reared sheer,  unbroken by windows or other openings, for

fully thirty feet above  them. It was smooth, too smooth for any man to climb. 

"He ducked out," Ham said. 

Monk started forward, stopped, stared, and made a gesture at his  eyes, as if doubting them. He turned, and

Ham, who knew the homely  chemist as well as any living man, could not remember when he had seen  Monk

look so awestricken. 

"Look!" Monk pointed at the ground. 

There was pavement underfoot and along the warehouse wall, but  winds, strong down here by the river, had

swept dust in and banked it  shallowly over the bricks, The fog, the occasional drizzles of rain,  had wet this

dust, turning it into mud which bore their own footprints  distinctly. 

But below, where the green face had been, there were no footprints;  indeed, there was no mark other than the

tiny indentations made by  fragments of brick which the mercy bullets had chipped off the  warehouse wall. 

"Blast it!" Monk said. "Nobody was standing here!" 

Monk's voice was hollow. 

THEY stood there, two very startled men, and the chill wind blew  out Ham's lighter and he ignited it again,

as if not liking the sudden  rush of darkness 

Monk wet his lips repeatedly. Their enmity was forgotten; this  showed how deeply they were moved, for

these two had been known to  carry on their perpetual quarrel in the thick of a fight for their  lives. 

"Blazes!" Monk muttered. "Blazes!" 

Ham cleared his throat as if wanting to say something, then did not  speak, but raised his lighter again and

illuminated their surroundings. 

"It was preposterous!" he said. 

"Sure," Monk told him slowly. "But explain it. Do that." 

"Well," Ham began, but got no further, hesitated, and finished:  "Jove! A confounded mystery if there ever

was one!" 

"The Mystic Mullah," Monk murmured. "The man who is not a man and  who lived a thousand thousand

years ago. What a goofy yarn that was." 


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"The face!" Ham shuddered, dropped his sword cane, then retrieved  it. "What an unearthly thing it was." 

Monk grasped his arm deliberately and pinched it. "Snap out of it!"  he snorted. "Such things don't happen

There was a trick to it. Let's go  on and have a look at that tug, the Whale of Gotham." 

Ham asked, "What about the warning?" 

"Don't make me laugh," Monk growled. 

"I suspect it would take quite a bit to make you laugh right now,"  Ham said grimly. 

Monk scowled. "Listen, shyster, you look as if you had just come  from a spook interview yourself." 

"You hairy ape," Ham said cordially. "How'd you like for me to  leave you here but in assorted pieces?" 

And thus, with their quarrel faintly resumed, and feeling a bit  more normal, they moved along the blank side

of the warehouse toward  the littleused wharf where the tug, Whale of Gotham, was moored. 

Near by, the waves sobbed, and a flurry of rain arrived with a wet  shotting noise, splattering clammily on

their hands, their faces. 

"Come on!" Monk snapped.  "We'll get wet!" 

They began to run, but not swiftly, for it was intensely dark and  they were without light. 

HAM, the more agile on his feet, was in the lead, his hands out  before him, seining the darkness.

Unexpectedly, he felt a pain across  his knuckles. It was a burning sensation as if a redhot iron had been  laid

there. The agony stabbed. He exploded in a grunt and recoiled. 

"What's wrong?" Monk demanded. 

Ham started to answer  but instead, thumbed on his lighter,  holding it high. What he saw caused him to

howl at the top of his  voice. 

"Run!" he bellowed. 

Monk stood rooted in gapejawed surprise. He had seen the same  thing as Ham  vague, nebulous green

things floating in the night. They  seemed alive, squirming through the murk like winged serpents. One of  the

fantastic bodies was afloat near Ham's knuckles. 

Monk felt sudden pain, yelled, and knew he had touched one of the  green mysteries. He launched a blow, hit

nothing, then felt horrible  agony scorch his neck. 

There was nothing visible, no sound. Monk made snarlings and tried  to get his machine pistol out. Again,

agony scorched him. It was like  an iron at red heat. 

Ham was fighting near by. All of his blows fanned air, but often  his fists were burned. He lashed with his

sword cane. That did no good.  He went down. He felt ill, nauseated. 

Ham could feel the streaks of agony elsewhere on his lithe body  now. There were stabs at his ankles, across

his back where his shirt  was wet from the rain and from his own perspiration. They were  horrible. They


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brought mad screeches to his lips. Red curtains of agony  fluttered before his eyes. It was as if he were being

beaten. 

Monk tried to get up. He could still hear Ham's mouthings, but they  were weaker. It came to the chemist that

his own voice was fading. It  seemed to go away, to become a thing in the infinite distance. 

His last sensation was that his own voice had gone entirely away,  leaving him in a silence that was profound,

a darkness that was  complete. 

Chapter 4. THE BRONZE SHADOW

ON the tug Whale of Gotham, there was tense suspense. The skipper  stood with both hands cupped behind

his ears, listening. He had heard  the cries of Monk and Ham. 

The deckhand who had seen Hadim's knife stood near by, also  listening. 

"Something's up," he said. 

"You bet there is!" agreed the skipper. "Where's a lantern? And  hand me that signal pistol. I'm gonna

investigate." 

"That signal pistol won't help much," muttered the deckhand. 

"Hell it won't!" The skipper scowled. "Ever see how one of them  rocket balls will burn a man?" 

He got his lantern and his signal pistol and clambered down out of  the pilot house. He was a hard, bold man,

this tug captain, and there  was no cowardice in his makeup, and not much caution. He approached a  spot

from which he could leap to the dock. 

A tall figure reared up in the lantern light and stood with folded  arms. The hooknosed face was inscrutable;

the flowing abah, the  embroidered jubbah, and the queerlooking shirwals lent the figure an  exotic

appearance. 

The tug skipper, recognizing his passenger, the Khan Nadir Shar,  stopped. 

"I would not," said the Khan, "go ashore." 

"You wouldn't?" growled the captain. Why not"' 

"it would not be advisable," said the Khan, speaking his English  that was so perfect it was almost unpleasant. 

The skipper put out his jaw and swung his rocket pistol where it  showed distinctly in the lantern light. The

rocket pistol resembled a  sin~gle.barreled shotgun sawed off and fitted with a revolver grip. 

"Why not?" he repeated. 

"I hoped it would not be necessary to tell you this," said the Khan  Nadir Shar. "But my life is in danger. So is

the life of Joan Lyndell,  the American woman who accompanies me. I believe that noise night have  been

made to decoy you ashore, that you might be put out of the way,  leaving us alone and defenseless." 


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The skipper expanded a little under that. So these people depended  on him? That appealed to his fighting

instincts. 

The Khan Nadir Shar dipped a hand inside his jubbah and brought out  a big automatic. The tug captain took

it. It was an American army gun. 

"An extra hundred dollars," promised the Khan, "if you will stand  guard, letting no one aboard without first

calling me. 

The skipper did not consider long. A hundred was a hundred. 

"Sure," he said. 

The Khan Nadir Shar now went below, walking slowly, as if he had no  concern in the world. He did not walk

to Joan Lyndell's stateroom this  time, but knocked first and spoke softly. 

Joan Lyndell was sitting in the same chair, as if she had not  moved, and she held her blue automatic precisely

as she had before. 

"What was it?" she asked. 

"The Mystic Mullah, I fear," the Khan said precisely. "I have heard  his victims die before. They have a

peculiar way of crying out as they  feel the touch of the Mystic Mullah's green soul slaves, and their  shrieks

gradually die away, taking about the same time before  " 

"Stop it!" the girl rapped. 

The Khan bowed. "Sorry." 

Knuckles banged the door. 

"Guy out here that says he wants to see you," said the tug  skipper's voice. "He looks like a walking skeleton

and he just got  here." 

"What is his name?" the Khan asked precisely. 

"Says it's William Harper Littlejohn," said the tug captain 

THE Khan Nadir Shar absently traced a hand along the embroidery of  his jubbah. On his forehead, the

serpent design coiled about the jewel  seemed to stand out more distinctly than before. 

"A William Harper Littlejohn signed the radiogram which came to us  at sea," he said. "The message which

informed us that Doc Savage was  not available for the time being." 

Joan Lyndell stood up. She was very tall and there was a regal  quality about her. 

"Hadim must have delivered his message," she said. "Let this  Littlejohn in. He is one of Doc Savage's aides." 

The door was opened. The man who came in was very tall, very thin,  and had a prominent forehead. His

clothes hung upon him as on the lath  frame of a scarecrow. In one hand, he juggled a monocle which had a

thick lens that was obviously a strong magnifier. 


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He looked at the Khan Nadir Shar, at the design tattooed on the  man's forehead, and he plainly recognized it

for what it signified, for  he bowed slightly. Then he eyed the girl, and bowed again. 

"Where are my associates, Monk and Ham?" he asked. 

The Khan said nothing. 

Joan Lyndell looked puzzled. 

"What do you mean?" she asked. 

"Doc Savage was not in town," said the bony man. "I am Johnny, one  of his five assistants. Monk and Ham

are two more of Doc's men. They  came down to see you." 

Joan Lyndell held her gun tightly and said, "The noises we heard!  The screams!" 

The skeleton of a man frowned. "Elucidate, please?" he said. 

"Strange noises which might have been shrieks some minutes ago,"  said the Khan. 

Joan Lyndell asked, "Then Hadim got to you?" 

"Hadim?" The tall man stopped juggling the monocle magnifier.  "Was  he the brown gentleman with the large

knife up his sleeve?" 

"Was?" The girl lowered her gun. "What do you mean?" 

"We found him dead in the corridor, with his neck broken," said the  bony man. 

A SHORT, sharp whistle came from the Khan. He had jerked breath in  through his teeth. Joan Lyndell held

her gun tightly at her side and  her breathing was audible. 

"The Mystic Mullah!" she said hoarsely. 

The unnaturally thin man said sharply, "What are you talking  about?" 

"The Mystic Mullah's victims die from broken necks," the Khan Nadir  Shar said precisely. 

The bony man waved an arm. 

"Wait a minute!" he said. "We'll get all of this straightened out  later. Doc Savage came back after Monk and

Ham had left. I told him  what had happened. He sent me down here to get you all and bring you to  him." 

"He will help us?" the girl asked eagerly. 

"How can he tell?" asked the gaunt man.  "He does not know what it  is all about." 

"But I thought Hadim  " 

"Hadim died before he could do more than scratch a clue on the wall  which led us down here," replied the

bony man. "Will You go with me,  please, I will take you to Doc Savage." 


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The Khan asked, "But what about the other two  Monk and Ham?" 

The tall man shrugged. "Doc Savage will know what to do about  that." 

"We have no luggage," said Joan Lyndell. "Let's go." 

THE tugboat captain watched them disappear into the night, then  looked at the hundreddollar hill which the

Khan had given him. He  snapped it in his hands, held it close to the lantern, then looked  doubtful, for he had

not seen enough hundreddollar bills to know what  they resembled. After that, he made a washing gesture

with his hands,  as if cleaning them of the whole affair.  The deckhand loomed out of  the wet murk. "Hey,

cap," he said. "I think we ought to call the cops  and spill this whole thing." 

The skipper hastily stowed the greenback. 

"Why?" he demanded. 

The deckhand came close and spoke in a low voice. 

"Just before that long bony guy got here, I thought I'd look  around, so I crawled up on the dock," he said, "I

eased up alongside a  pile of boxes. And boy, did I get an earful! After I listened a minute,  I thought I was

nuts!" 

"What did you hear?" asked the skipper. 

Instead of answering, the deckhand said, "Oh!" rather loudly, then  another "Oh!" that was even louder. The

second "Oh!" was choked up with  something. 

The skipper lifted his lantern, his eyes protruded and he Jumped  madly backward. He opened his mouth to

bark something having to do with  astonishment, but he was so shocked that no sound came forth. 

The deckhand was flailing his arms and crying "Oh!" again and  again, each time in a more horrible tone. The

breath puff of each "Oh!"  seemed to distort the hideous green worm of a thing that was rolling  against his

face, coiling around it, as if caressing it. 

The deckhand struck at his own features and his hands, it was quite  plain, passed completely through the

nebulous green horror, with the  result that the verdant thing was separated into two sections, each of  which

seemed to take on added life and slide over the man's nose. 

The deckhand sucked in breath, and one of the green snakelike  things crawled partially inside his mouth, then

hastily out again. The  deckhand shrieked more hoarsely and fell flat on his face, where his  squirmings

became rapidly less, and his head began to bend backward  strangely, as if something invisible, some unseen

master of strength,  had gripped his neck. 

The skipper was yelling now, striking with his lantern at one of  the green bodies in the air in front of him.  He

succeeded in fanning  it away with his lantern, but stepped backward directly into another of  the citrine

horrors. He shrieked; and jumping away, slipped and banged  his lantern down, batting its flame out and

extinguishing it. 

After that, there was intense darkness, out of which came unearthly  and sickening sounds of a man making a

rendezvous with death. 


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IN the midst of the other sounds there was a hollow crack, as if  some one had broken a stick of candy while it

was still wrapped in its  paper covering. A bit later, there was another crack, almost identical:  and after that,

there was silence except for the bubbling suck of waves  and the faraway fog horns. 

For perhaps the span of a minute, the quiet held. 

A light appeared. It was a weird beam, thin as a white string, and  it laced about with eerie speed until it found

the two forms on the tug  deck. 

Both skipper and deckhand lay with postures grotesquely distorted,  their heads bent back in a manner which

indicated with certainty that  their necks were broken. There was no sign of the nebulous green  monstrosities. 

The thin, white beam of light collapsed suddenly. Quiet again  gripped the vicinity, except for the small

sounds of the water, which  were sufficient to cover other, minor noises. A wave nudged the tug  into the dock,

and the fenders screamed out like condemned souls, as  they ground between hull planking and dock piles. 

There was no sound of anything living, no trace that the wielder of  the thinbeamed flashlight had moved;

yet inshore, toward the end of  the dock, where there was a little glow reflected from a distant street  light, a

shadow moved unexpectedly. It was a very large shadow and  quite shapeless, with nothing definite enough

about it to identify it. 

A bit later, the shadowy figure materialized again, some distance  down the street, near where three other

figures stood.(L 

The other three figures were Joan Lyndell, the Khan Nadir Shar, and  the skeletonthin man with the

magnifying monocle. They were close  under a street lamp, hugging it as if its brilliance were an actual

protection. 

Joan Lyndell was saying, "I think we had better go back." 

The Khan shivered. He looked scared. 

"I do not know what we should do," he said. 

The bony man exhaled noisily as if trying to relax from an  unpleasant tension. He jerked his head. 

"The thing to do is get you two to Doc Savage," he said sharply.  "Let Doc get hold of this thing." 

"We have come half around the world to do that very thing,"  murmured the girl. "But something happened

back at the tug. I could  hear it." 

And the bony man snapped, "We're not going back. Come on." 

They advanced, the skeleton of a man now using a flashlight. The  beam soon picked up a car, a large sedan.

The thin man got behind the  wheel and put the machine into motion. 

It was raining again, cold, bitter drops which ran over the car top  with sounds like smallfooted unseen

things. The windshield wiper began  to swickswuck monotonously. They passed through streets that were

like  the avenues of the dead, for none were abroad in the rain. 


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The sedan covered many blocks, but did not get over in the  theatrical district with its tinsel blaze. When the

machine stopped  finally, it was before a gloomy structure that resembled a shabby  factory building. The

headlight glow, splashing sidewise, revealed a  "To Rent" sign which looked old. 

The bony man got from behind the wheel, came around and opened the  rear door adjacent to the curb. He

leaned far inside and switched on  the dome light. 

A blue revolver was disclosed in his hand. It shifted its menace  from the Khan to the girl. 

"Think it over," the skeleton man advised. "The boss said to kill  you if you got funny." 

The Khan choked, "Then Doc Savage  " 

"Doc Savage, hell!" the other said h"I've never even seen Doc  Savage!" 

The girl said in a small dry voice, "Then you  " 

"I'm doing this job for the Mystic Mullah," the skeleton man told  her. "Get out! Go inside! And no  " 

The bony man fell silent. 

HE was silent because of a sound. A sound that had come into  existence so gradually that it had at first not

been noticed. The sound  was still vague, but it was real, so real that it possessed a quality  of menace, of

promised events. 

It was a trilling. It traced a fantastic musical scale, rising and  failing, but not repeating its notes or indicating

in any way that it  adhered to a definite tune. It was low, nearly impossible of  description. It might have been

the product of a chill wind through the  fog, or the song of some exotic tropical bird. And it was entirely

unnatural, aweinspiring. 

The skeletonthin man glared at the Khan and the girl. There was  nothing to show from whence the weird

sound came, but he thought one of  them was making it. 

"Cut it out!" he snarled. "Get out of there and pile into this old  factory!" 

He stepped back. Then he convulsed violently. His gun dropped from  his hand. He tried to cry out, but his

mouth, open at its widest,  emitted no sound. He twisted around, staring, seeming not to understand  what had

happened to him. 

Only when he got his head around was he aware of the giant form  which had floated soundlessly out of the

fog and fastened upon him. The  giant was a man, but he seemed huge beyond all human proportions. Maybe

the fog helped that impression, the fog and the incredible strength of  the mighty hand which held his neck in

a paralyzing clutch, and the  other hand which, gripping his arm, had twisted and caused the gun to  fall. 

The giant dropped the gun in a coat pocket. He seemed unhurried.  His free hand went to the thin man's neck

and did something to nerve  centers. The man became tense, as if seized with a spell that he could  not break,

and when he was released, he fell to the slimy sidewalk and  did not move, except to roll his eyes in horror. 

The giant stepped close to the car and the dome light showed his  features. They were features of an amazing

regularity. But the  handsomeness of the big man's face did not make it distinctive. It was  his bronze hue; his

countenance might have been moulded from metal.  Too, it was his eyes, like pools of flakegold stirred by


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tiny winds.  Weird eyes, they seemed possessed of a compelling power, an ability to  literally convey orders

with their glance. 

The bronze man wore no head covering, and his hair, of a bronze hue  only slightly darker than his skin, lay

smooth and unruffled as a  metallic skullcap. His neck was bundled with fantastic sinews, and the  tendons on

the backs of his bronze hands were of unnatural size. 

The girl, Joan Lyndell, had her blue automatic out, but she did not  lift it. Instead, she spoke throatily. 

"You are Doc Savage," she told the bronze man. 

THE remarkable bronze man did not reply. He studied the pair in the  sedan. Then he made a small gesture at

the skeleton man so weirdly  paralyzed on the sidewalk. 

When he spoke, his voice was in keeping with his striking  appearance, a voice that was deep and cultivated,

conveying the  impression that it was capable of great flexibility. 

"This man told you he was Johnny  William Harper Littlejohn?" he  asked. 

"Isn't he?" the girl countered. 

"No," said the bronze man. "He has made himself up to look  something like Johnny." 

The Khan Nadir Shar seemed to have been beyond speech. Now he  reached up and absently touched the

design tattooed on his forehead;  that seemed to awaken him. 

"You are Doc Savage," he said precisely. "How did you get here?" 

"I have been away," the bronze man said simply. "A short while ago,  I returned to my headquarters and

learned that Monk and Ham, two of my  aides, had gone to the tug. My arrival there was simultaneous with

your  own departure. I followed you." 

The girl said rapidly, "Something happened back at the tug shortly  after we left. Do you have any idea what it

was?" 

"I heard the sounds," admitted the bronze man. "I went back and  used a flashlight. Two men, apparently the

skipper of the tug and one  of his deckhands, were dead. Their necks seemed to be broken. There was  not time

to investigate thoroughly, because it was necessary to follow  you. 

"The Mystic Mullah!" the girl said hoarsely. "His green soul  slaves!" 

Doc Savage studied her, his metallic features inscrutable. 

"What makes you say that?" he asked. 

"The Mystic Mullah's victims always die with their necks broken,"  replied the girl. "The green soul slaves do

that." 

The Khan Nadir Shar knotted and unknotted his hands and his jeweled  finger rings ground together softly. 


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"The Mystic Mullah is here!" he moaned. "His green soul slaves will  find us! They go everywhere!" He fell

silent. 

Doc Savage continued to study them. His flakegold eyes, catching  the glow from the dome light, gave the

impression of being strangely  luminous. 

"This will all have to be explained," he said. "But first, our  friend here will talk." 

The bronze man stepped hack and picked up the skeletonthin man. He  did something to the nerve centers

near the fellow's neck, and the man  regained the use of his limbs as if by magic. He tried to fight, but he  was

battered against the car with a fierce roughness and held so  helpless that he began to~whimper. 

"Where is the Mystic Mullah?" Doc Savage asked. 

The victim stared, moaned as the bronze hands hurt him more, then  seemed to reach a sudden conclusion that

it would be wise to tell what  he knew. 

"I don't know," he groaned. "Listen, I wouldn't have gone into this  if I had known I would have to buck you,

Savage. I've heard of you,  see. I'm an actor. A ham. I've been having it tough. 

"A guy telephones me and asks me will I go to the tug and get these  two people, tell them my story, and bring

them here. I get two hundred  for the job. I never seen the guy who hired me, see. He left a picture  at my hotel

and telephoned me to make up like the picture. The  picture's in my pocket." 

Doc Savage dipped a hand inside the man's coat and brought Out a  piece of cardboard to which was pasted a

newspaper cutout of William  Harper Littlejohn, the eminent archaeologist and geologist. 

"The guy on the telephone said you were out of town and would never  know," moaned the bony man. "What

a sucker I was!" 

Doc Savage watched the man steadily, making the other return his  stare, turning the other's face when he

sought to avoid the menace of  the fantastic flakegold eyes. 

The thin man squirmed and more and more horror came upon his  cadaverous face; his tongue swabbed over

his lips, but it was dry and  left no wetness, and his eyelids rolled back until most of the eyeballs  showed. 

"I told you the truth!" he shrieked suddenly. "What are you going  to do with me?" 

The nature of the answer, if there was an answer intended, was  never known, for a voice shrilled out suddenly

from the depths of the  grimy old factory building. 

"Don't!" it screamed. "Get those things off me!" 

It was Monk's voice. 

Chapter 5. AFTER MONK YELLED

THE skeletonthin man barked out in agony as Doc Savage slammed him  into the sedan. He floundered

down on the floorboards at the feet of  the girl and the Khan Nadir Shar, and lay there stunned. 


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"Two blocks north, one west," Doc rapped. "Drive there and wait for  me!" 

The girl, comprehending instantly, scrambled out of the rear door  and into the front one, inserting her slender

form behind the wheel 

The Khan began, "But whowhat the  " 

"That was Monk, one of my men," said the bronze man. "Watch this  ham actor here. He knows more than he

has told us, if his manner is any  indication." 

The Khan removed an automatic from under his jubbah. It was a  thinsnouted foreign weapon which fired a

bullet with the penetration  force of some rifles. He put the snout against the temple of the bony  prisoner. 

"Be careful," Doc warned. 

"Your warning is not necessary," the Kban said, his English still  unnaturally perfect. "We well know the

hideous power of this Mystic  Mullah." 

It was doubtful if the bronze man heard the last of that, for he  had faded into the fog and wet darkness. He

went directly to the  entrance of the warehouse, but did not touch the door, which was  closed. He paused

there, entirely immobile. 

He was using his ears, organs which had been developed by years of  scientific treatment and exercise until

they had a sensitivity that was  far beyond the normal. There were sounds inside, low and uneven, as if

something were rubbing against something else with short strokes. 

The bronze man did not touch the door, or go closer. He moved away.  Those sounds were made by men

waiting on the other side of the panel,  men who were trying not to breathe loudly, and as a result, made

occasional strained gasps. 

The bronze man searched in the darkness, found a ledge on the face  of the building where mortar had

weathered out, and lifted himself up.  A projecting window ledge furnished his next grip. He used a

handkerchief to wipe off the damp stone. The city grime, soaked with  the fog and rain, made a paste only

slightly less slick than grease. 

He tried the window. Glass was gone from it. Inside, there were  hoards planked over. 

Down in the street, the sedan departed, making very little noise. 

The bronze giant set himself on the window ledge and struck a  sudden, violent blow. The impact seemed

more than human knuckles could  withstand. He struck again in, stantly. The plank split, caved, and he

grasped the edges and wrenched it out; then, although the adjacent  hoards were nearly three quarters of an

inch thick, he tore them aside  as if they had been shingles, 

The crash of wood, the scream of nails drawing, echoed through the  old structure. There were other sounds,

too. Men were running on the  stairs. Voices were shouting. 

The language they spoke was the gobbling, clucking dialect  weird  to the unaccustomed ear, common to

certain remote areas of central  Asia. 


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Then lights burst into the room, whitehot, stinging rods of  brilliance from powerful flashlights. A man

babbled out in the strange  language. Then powder roar slammed and plaster, loosened by a bullet,  ran off the

wall in a gray stream. 

THE bullet missed Doc Savage. He was far to the left when it  struck. 

The room was enormous. Humped here and there over the floor were  foundations for heavy machinery. A

few still supported bulky machines.  They were like a forest, and excellent shelter. 

The bronze man got down behind the machine foundation:. Instead of  continuing to the left, he went straight

ahead. The attackers were  cackling profanely in their dialect. A moment later, Doc Savage saw one  of them.

A switching flash beam outlined him distinctly. 

The man was wolfishly lean, with very black hair and eyes, the  latter with the merest of slants, and his skin

was the color of a  gunnysack. He was clad immaculately in clothing which would not draw a  second glance

on New York streets. 

He carried a thinnosed automatic, similar to the one produced by  the Khan Nadir Shar. The weapon could

drive a slug through half a dozen  human bodies. 

Doc saw others of the attacking party a moment later; and they were  similar in appearance to the first. Central

Asiatics, all of them, men  from a land where life was cheap. 

Alert, deadly, they prowled the big room, spreading out, twisting  the heads of their flashlights to cause them

to throw wider beams. Some  fell back to watch the stairway and the door. 

It was toward these latter that Doc Savage directed his attention.  Monk and Ham were here somewhere.

Finding them was the bronze man's  goal. And it would have to be accomplished by some means other than

brute force, or an open gun fight, for Doc carried no firearms. 

He never carried a gun. He had a special reason for this,  maintaining that a man who carried a firearm came

to depend upon it;  and once it was taken from him, that man would tend to feel completely  helpless. 

The bronze man touched rusty lengths of iron. They were bolts,  heavy things, piled together. He raised up

with one of them and threw  it. His target was not one of the men at the door, but one On the far  side of the

large room. He did not want them to think he was near the  door. The bolt struck the victim between thigh and

knee and he screamed  and fell down. 

Instantly, there was a rush for the spot. They thought the man must  have been struck at close range, not

realizing the ability of the  bronze man's great muscles to throw far and accurately. 

From below, downstairs and to the rear, a voice bellowed out. It  was Monk again. 

"Watch out, Doc!" he howled. "They made me yell that first time to  draw you inside! I didn't know that!" 

The bronze man knew it now. His discovery of the waiting men behind  the door downstairs, had told him it

was a trap. He scuttled swiftly,  taking advantage of the uproar at the other end of the room. 

A darkskinned man sighted him, let out a yell. The cry choked off  suddenly as a heavy bolt glanced from

the man's head to the wall. Man  and belt hit the floor together. 


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Gunshots whoomwhoomed! in the cavernous room. Lead clanged on  machinery or slapped the walls

fiercely. But Doc Savage was already at  the stairs. He went down swiftly, reached the bottom, took a step

forwardand stopped. 

A light gushed. It was not a bright, blinding light, but a mellow  one, designed not to blind. It came from the

head of a flashlight which  someone had wrapped in a single thickness of handkerchief. 

The light was brilliant enough to reveal four slanteyed brown  faces, their very inscrutability something

terrible. Each of the men  held one of the spikenosed guns. But to these had been fitted ramhorn  magazines,

and the gears in the mechanism were no doubt filed so that  the guns were continuously automatic in

operation, capable of emptying  thirty or so shots in a single blast. 

"Wallah!?!" one rasped in his native tongue. "It would be good to  take this bronze devil alive, that we might

show the Mystic Mullah we  are sons of the mountain fox." 

Doc Savage stood very still. The next word would decide his fate. 

"It is a good thought," agreed another of the four. 

THE FOUR MEN came close. They held their doctored automatics at  waist level, gripping them with both

hands. This showed they knew what  they were doing. Only an inexperienced man will try to fire an  automatic

altered so that it discharges as long as the trigger is held  back, for the recoil will kick such a weapon up,

possibly blowing out  the brains of an unwary individual. 

The gun snouts pressed bard against the bronze man. Hands reached  out, ripped his pockets open, spilling the

contents, and slapped places  where weapons might be concealed. 

"His muscles are as hard as the rock walls of Tanan," murmured one  of the party in his strange language.

"Watch him closely. He must have  terrible strength." 

Doc Savage asked, "Why do you seek my life?" 

The gun muzzles jiggled against his side as the men started. They  were surprised, for the bronze giant had

spoken their mother language  as perfectly as they themselves. 

"It was not an idly wagging tongue that said this man knows all  things," one of the four muttered. "Even in

Asia, few men speak our  tongue as well as he does." 

"It is said that the man who faces danger quietly lives to face it  again," said another. "He is too calm. Watch

him closely." 

Men began coming down the stairs. They cackled in their excitement.  Those who had been hurt were helped

by others. 

The man who had given orders upstairs faced Doc Savage and showed  black teeth. He did not speak at once,

but slowly prepared a chew of  betel nut, the ingredients for which he drew from a pocket of his neat  business

suit. The chewing of betel had made his teeth black. He  watched closely; and discovering no trace of fear on

the bronze giant's  features, seemed disgusted. 

"A wise man knows when to be frightened," he said. 


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"There can he fear without shaking and wailing," Doc Savage said in  the tongue of Tanan. 

"You are a strange one," said the man in English. "I can understand  why the Mystic Mullah should come

from the other side of the world to  dispose of you before you heard the story of the Khan Shar and the  white

woman, Joan Lyndell." 

"I am curious about this Mystic Mullah," the bronze man stated  quietly. "Who is he?" 

"He was dead and sat for a thousand years in one spot, thinking,"  the other said matter of factly. "He knows

all things and can do all  things. After he had meditated, he detached his spirit from himself and  sent it to

earth, to Tanan, to enlighten men and lead them to their  proper destiny." 

"You," Doc Savage told him, "sound like a coolie who has partaken  too freely of the product of the poppy." 

The other smiled fiercely. "The Mystic Mullah is greater than the  Genghis Khan, greater even than Allah, or

Buddha. Beside him, Confucius  was as the child scholar who puzzles over his first books. These  things, you

will learn." 

"Here in America, they have a word for such talk," said the bronze  man. 

"What is it?" 

"Hokum!" answered the bronze man. 

All of the men were down from upstairs now. They had gathered in a  close ring. None of them had faces of

morons. Rather, their features  were those of intelligent men. But they were also the faces of killers,  men who

took life for a purpose they considered right and just. 

"Watch!" rapped the bronze man. 

He lifted both hands above his head, began to knot and unknot the  fingers in a slow, fantastic fashion. 

"Damn it!" grated the chief of the brownskinned men. His eyes were  on Doc's hands. So were the eyes of

his companions. They could not  understand it. 

Nor did Doc expect them to understand. The strange movements of his  hands were simply to draw their

attention from his feet as he stepped  on one heel with the toe of the other foot and strained. The heel of  his

shoe was dislodged so easily that it was evident it was equipped  with some type of hinge. A yellowish

powder spilled out, making a small  mound on the floor. 

Doc stepped back, turned half around, put his hands over his face  and bent double. 

There was a terrific, eyehurting white light. A plop of sound  accompanied it, not unlike the setting off of a

photographer's flash  light gun. The light burned for perhaps a full two seconds, dense white  smoke pouring

from the mound of powder. The light went out. 

Only then did guns begin going off. 

IT was too late. Doc Savage had lunged with the first burst of  light. He knew what would happen. The

chemical mixture was infinitely  stronger than magnesium; it made a light so strong that it produced  almost

complete blindness for a few moments. The stuff was ignited by a  small pellet of another chemical compound


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which burst into flame  shortly after it was exposed to the air. 

The brown men milled about, cursing in their dialect. Fully twenty  shots were fired wildly. Two men fell,

knocked down by the bullets of  their fellows. 

Doc Savage did not linger, or try to make any capture. The  blindness would not last long enough for that. It

was momentary, as if  a flashlight had been splashed into eyes accustomed to intense  darkness. 

The bronze man moved toward the rear. It was from there that Monk's  yell had come. He found an open door.

It gave into an alley. 

On the alley pavement were tracks, faintly discernible in the fog  slime. Doc followed them, and came out on

a street. The tracks crossed  a sidewalk. Recently, there had been work done on the street pavement,

necessitating the use of sand, and a film of the stuff still remained. 

Doc Savage knew the footprint sizes of Monk and Ham. He found them  both. Monk bad a peculiar shambling

gait and large feet. Ham's shoes  were small, almost feminine, and he put his feet down straight, without

toeing in or out. The tracks ended on the sidewalk. Across the curb  there were other marks, made by

automobile tires. These were still  practically dry, the moisture having been forced aside by the weight of  the

car. The machine had left only a moment ago. It must have had a  quiet engine not to be heard inside the

abandoned factory, 

The brown men of Tanan were yelling; some dashed out and splattered  their flashlights in the alley, then

came running toward where Doc  stood. 

The bronze man faded away into the damp night. He reached the main  thoroughfare, turned north two blocks,

then went one west. It was there  that the Khan Nadir Shar and the girl should have waited in the sedan. 

Doc found the sedan. It was dark, with the headlights and the dome  light extinguished. He stopped a few

yards away, listened, then went  on. He did not call out. He splashed his own flash beam into the  machine. 

There was only a body inside, a body 'with a twisted, grotesquely  broken neck. It was the skeletonthin man

who had claimed he was a ham  actor hired to play the part of William Harper Littlejohn. 

Of the Khan Nadir Shar and Joan Lyndell there was no trace. 

Chapter 6. THE RESCUED MAN

DOC Savage looked the sedan over closely, noting engine and license  numbers, the make of the tires, the

location of the inevitable dents in  the fenders. Probably it was a stolen machine. 

Down the street, the brownskinned Tananese were pushing a speedy  search. In the distance, a police siren

was making uproar; it seemed to  come closer, an indication that the shooting inside the abandoned  factory

had attracted attention. 

The Tananese apparently heard the siren, but were so unfamiliar  with American life that they failed to realize

what it was until the  very closeness of the eerie whine told them it was bound for this spot.  Then they

scattered, scuttling away like frightened rats. 

Doc Savage himself eased away. He wished to learn more about the  Mystic Mullah before giving any


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information to the police. A moment  later, the bronze man reached his roadster. 

It was a long car, manufactured by a concern noted for the long  life of its machines. It would take an

experienced observer to tell  that the machine was armorplated. 

Seating himself behind the wheel, Doc Savage drew on a peculiar  looking pair of overgrown goggles. The

lenses of these were  considerably larger but of the same shape as condensed milk cans. He  shifted tiny

switches on the goggle affair and they began to make a  faint whizzing. This was barely audible. 

Doc next flicked a switch on the dash. To one standing near by, it  would have seemed that nothing happened.

Certainly no visible lights  came on. 

But to Doc Savage, wearing the strange goggles, a stretch ahead of  the car had become illuminated with an

unearthly distinctness. It was  not like ordinary light, this luminance. Objects stood out in stark  high lights and

shadows and there was no sense of color. It was as if  everything had taken on varied shades of black and

white. The effect  was produced by an infraray projector mounted forward of the hood. The  infralight was

ordinarily invisible to the unaided eye, and its use in  headlights was made possible only by the intricate

goggles which the  bronze man wore. 

It was by use of this invisible light that the bronze man had been  able to follow the girl and the Khan Nadir

Shar. 

The roadster ran with the silence of a ghost through the darkened  streets, wheeled to the left and sought an

even more secluded district. 

It was raining again, another of the brief flurries which had been  prevalent all evening. The wet drops,

striking the bronze man's  uncovered head, ran off with the peculiar effect of water shedding from  the back of

a waterfowl. The rain seemed to bother him not at all. 

He clicked switches concealed under the dash, and a radio  loudspeaker began to spew metallic static. From

a concealed hook, the  bronze man lifted a microphone, a sensitive instrument with an  enclosing mouthpiece

so constructed that, by holding it close to the  lips, one could speak without bystanders hearing. 

"Any luck?" he asked, then listened to the radio speaker. 

"Plenty," said a rather nasal voice. "Drive across Queensborough  Bridge and turn north through Astoria." 

Doc Savage swung the roadster about, complying with the directions.  He kept to secluded streets and broke

the speed limit steadily, except  on the upper level across the bridge, when he was limited by the speed  of the

other cars in the double traffic lane, there being no room for  passing. 

He was nearly across the bridge when the nasal voice came out of  the radio speaker again. 

"An old refinery on the river," it said. "We're waiting for you at  the beginning of the lane that leads to the

refinery." 

THE lane was narrow, rutted deeply by trucks, but it did not look  as if it had been used much recently. There

was high brush alongside  it, brush from which the leaves had fallen, for the season was well in  the Fall.

Although it was comparatively warm now, snow had fallen  briefly weeks before. 


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The man who stepped out in front of the roadster was thin, somewhat  scrawny, and he had a complexion

which was, as far as appearances went,  strikingly unhealthy. He looked as if he had grown up in a cellar with

mushrooms. He had the color of a mushroom. 

The unhealthy looking man came close to the roadster and said,  "They turned into that old refinery, Doc. I

don't think it, being used.  They must have bought off the watchman." 

Doc Savage said, "Good work, Long Tom." 

The pallid man was Major Thomas J. Roberts. He looked vaguely like  a corpse, but he could whip three times

his weight in ordinary men.  Furthermore, he was a wizard in the field of electricity, a genius of  the "juice." 

Another man lumbered out of the night, a tower of gristle and bone  almost as large as Doc Savage. He had a

long face which wore an  expression of utter gloom. He looked as if he had just lost a very dear  friend. But the

striking thing about the newcomer was his fists. They  were incredibly huge, each composed of somewhat

more than a quart of  hone and sinew. 

"Johnny went on ahead to scout around," he said, and his voice,  although he tried to keep it down, was like

the roar of an angry lion. 

The bigfisted man was Colonel John Renwick, and his name was one  known widely in the engineering

profession, a trade at which he had  made several fortunes. Renny, as he was ordinarily called, was, along  with

the pallid Long Tom, a member of Doc Savage's group of five  unusual aides. 

Doc Savage guided the roadster off the lane, parking it in a spot  where it was not likely to be seen. Then they

all went on ahead. 

Johnny met them shortly, a thin lath of darker shadow in the damp  fog and darkness. When he spoke, he used

his big words. 

"Conceivably, could these Orientals conjecture the hypothesis of  our pervasion of this circumambiency?" 

Renny looked more gloomy. 

"Holy cow!" he grumbled, "Don't you ever speak English? Somebody  translate that." 

Long Tom said sourly, "He means that he wonders if them brown guys  could be wise that Doc Savage had us

posted in the background at that  old factory, so that we could trail them." 

"Rats!" said Renny. "Why didn't he say so? I don't think they are  wise." 

"Did you see what happened to the girl and the king after they  drove off in the sedan?" Doc asked. 

"King!" Renny exploded. 

"The man wears, tattooed on his forehead, the Sacred Seal of Tanan,  the mark of the Son of Divinity,

Destined Master of Ten Thousand  Lances, Ruler of Outer Mongolia," Doc told them. 

"Sounds big," said Renny, nodding. 


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"It means he is absolute ruler of Tanan, possibly the strangest and  most medieval city of Asia," Dee replied.

"What happened to him and to  the girl?" 

"They were seized by the brown fellows while waiting in the sedan,"  Re nny replied. "We did not get there in

time to prevent it. We heard  squawling and pitching around, and got there to find that bony fellow  lying dead

with what looked like a broken neck. Say, just what happened  to him, anyway?" 

"The hand of the Mystic Mullah," Doc said. 

"Huh?" Renny blinked. "I don't get this." 

Doc Savage told them what he had seen and heard, and what had  happened. He missed few details, yet his

recital was not wordy. 

"Holy cow!" Renny mumbled when he finished. "I still don't get it." 

"As things happened," Doc replied, "there was no time to hear the  story of the Khan and the girl." 

The men continued forward and soon could smell the crude tang of  the refinery. The odor was not a fresh,

gaseous one of oil distilling,  but an older, stale one that wafted from greasesoaked earth and  disused stills.

They came to a high fence, constructed of wire so  coarse that it was like iron bars. 

They stood listening; and there was no sound, except those that  came distantly from the bay. Then an

elevated train moaned in the  distance. 

"Wait here," Doc said. 

Surmounting the fence did not present the bronze man with much  difficulty. Renny and the others heard the

wire groan a little, as he  descended the other side of the fence, but after that there was no  trace of his

progress. It seemed darker than before, and he was almost  instantly lost in the moist void. 

Doc Savage traveled swiftly, but not so rapidly as to invite  mishap. Only the fact that he was feeling out the

ground in front of  him prevented Doc from falling into an abandoned water cooling. pit. 

Shortly after that he saw lights. They were furtive and bobbing,  the splash of flashlights used in a cautious

manner. He made for them,  and soon could see the source of the luminous dabs. 

Men were working with large wrenches alongside a bank of pressure  stills. They were removing one of the

manhole covers, held in place  with powerful bolts. 

One brown fellow, directing the work, seemed more worldlywise than  the others. 

"It is a good prison," he said in the Tananese dialect. "The steel  is thick, and their loudest shouts will not be

heard." 

The last bolt came free, after which they pried off the oval slab  of steel which closed the tall metal cylinder.

The spokesman thrust his  head and a flashlight inside and looked it over. 

"It is well," he said. "Go bring the prisoners." 


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A brown man of Tanan darted away, using his flashlight to avoid the  stanchions of aerial pipelines, gate

houses and the other rusted  appurtenances of the refinery. He lifted the beam eventually and  splashed it upon

a large brick building. He made directly for the door. 

Then a giant of bronze descended upon him, a longfingered hand of  fantastic strength cupping over his

mouth and closing in all sound. A  single, short blow chopped down, and the messenger became unconscious. 

After he had struck down the man, Doc Savage moved to the door of  the brick building. The lock, he

discovered by the sense of touch, had  been torn off. A certain slight sharpness about the ruptured wood  fibers

indicated that the tearing had been done recently. 

The bronze man did not try to enter by the door, but moved to the  left, where a window had unexpectedly

whitened from a light within. He  peered through the window. 

The room inside was shabby, with dust and paper on the floor. It  did not look as if it had been used for

months, bearing out the general  impression that the refinery had been closed down for some time. 

Several brown Tananese were present. All, after the manner of  Orientals in the clothing of Occidentals,

looked very neat, rather  unnaturally prim. 

A stoop shouldered white man in greasy overalls stood in the center  of the room. A metal plate affixed to his

greasy cap read, "Night  Watchman." He was nervous. 

"I'm taking a big chance," he grumbled, and his words carried  faintly to Doc Savage. 

"You are well paid for letting us use this spot for hiding our  prisoners," one of the Tananese told him, 

More brown men now appeared, coming from another room. They dragged  the apish Monk and the slender,

dapperly clad Ham. The two prisoners  were bound tightly at the wrists. Ham had managed to retain his attire

in a remarkably unruffled condition. The crease in his trousers had a  knifelike sharpness. 

One of the brown men brought ordinary burlap bags. Monk kicked and  struggled, but was unable to prevent

one of the bags being drawn over  his head and tied at the bottom. Then Ham received the same treatment. 

Monk squawled, "You blasted heathen, what're you gonna do with us?" 

"Shut up, you furry mistake!" Ham directed at Monk. "The  fact that  they don't want us to see where we are,

shows they're not planning to  kill us at once." 

Doc Savage ducked suddenly, with all the speed of which he was  capable. 

The window glass broke, jangling. Flashing steel traveled on  through the pane, passed under one of the

brown men who jumped into the  air with remarkable alacrity, and stuck, quivering, in the baseboard.  It was a

knife, very heavy of blade. 

THE sound which had warned Doc Savage was faint; the rasp of cloth  as the knife arm was drawn back for

the throw. The assailant was  undoubtedly a guard who had stood there in the night. The bronze man's

sensitive ears would have caught the approach of any one. The fellow  must have thrown at the outline of

Doc's head against the window. 


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Once down on all fours, Doc whipped along the building wall. A  flashlight popped a white disk on the bricks.

This skidded about,  located Doc. 

"Ya!" the knife thrower bawled. "It is the bronze one!" 

Doc spotted half a brick in the flash glow, seized it and shied it  at the light. The beam vanished in blackness. 

"Ya!" snarled the brown man. He had not been hit. 

Inside the brick building, undoubtedly the refinery office, there  was a hollow squabble of shouting. Over

toward the pressure still more  voices howled. Lights were popping out everywhere, scudding their beams  like

frightened ghosts. 

The night watchman, who had certainly taken a bribe to allow the  brown men to hide their prisoners at the

refinery, dashed out into the  moist night. 

"Be quiet!" he squawled. "Somebody'll hear this racket!" From the  direction of the main gate, shot sound

came slamming. Hysterical yells  followed it. A voice roared like an angry lion in a cave. Renny's  voice!

Aided by Long Tom and Johnny, he was trying to get into the  refinery grounds. 

Doc Savage haunted the shadows, skirting the office building in an  endeavor to get to Monk and Ham. The

Khan Nadir Shar and the girl, Joan  Lyndell, if they were alive, might possibly have been brought here  also. 

Inside the office building, orders cracked in guttural Tananese.  After that, the brown men began to move in

an orderly manner. They had  been searching; now they gave up the hunt and assembled in a compact  group

about the door. 

One of the Orientals dragged a large bag into view, opened it, and  started passing out extremely modern and

compact gas masks. It was  apparent that only two or three of the Tananese had the least idea of  how to don

these. But amid much profane exchange of directions, they  managed to get them on. 

Doc Savage had worked close and had drawn from his clothing a  number of small glass bulbs filled with a

colorless liquid. These were  gas bombs capable of producing quick unconsciousness. He returned them  to the

padded metal case from which they had been removed. Their  anesthetic vapor content was effective only

when inhaled; the gas masks  had made them useless. 

Instead of the gas bombs Doc produced two small cans, each fitted  with a screw valve. He opened these

valves. The small canisters began  making faint hissing sounds. 

The bronze man tossed one of the cans toward the brown men, but was  careful that it did not roll close

enough to come to their attention.  The second can he threw very hard, so that it passed entirely over them  and

landed beyond. 

Judging accurately the time it would hit, he yelled loudly to cover  the sound of its landing. 

The yell brought bullets which snapped like vicious, unseen teeth  and climbed away into the night with

piercing squeals. Doc lunged over  and got behind a nest of pipe gates. A lead slug, hitting the gates,  splashed

like a harddriven raindrop. 

"Somebody'll hear the noise!" screamed the watchman. "Stop it!" 


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Two of the brown men consulted in low voices. Then one ran over,  stood close in front of the watchman and

said something that Doc Savage  did not hear. The other brown man came up, unnoticed, behind the

watchman. 

Doc Savage called loudly, "Watchman  look out!" 

He was too late, because the slanteyed brown man behind the  watchman leaned forward suddenly with all of

his weight, holding both  hands clasped in front of his chest. From the knob of his hands  protruded the steel

thorn of a knife blade, and this disappeared its  full length in the watchman's back. 

The watchman's scream blew scarlet through his teeth; he fell down  heavily, jerked convulsively, then lay on

his face while a fountain of  red jumped above his back a few time. This stopped as his heart became  quiet. 

"We can no longer use this place," said one of the Tananese. "And  this white devil ghost,"  pointing to the

dead watchman  "might have  told that which would give us trouble." 

Men came running from the direction of the gate. Brown fellows,  they sprinted with frenzied speed,

squawking that a white devil ghost  who was all hands was pursuing them, along with a skeleton that lived

and fought terribly, and another man who looked as if he were dead.  That would be Renny, Johnny and Long

Tom. 

Things happened swiftly. A supermachine pistol hooted in the hands  of one of Doc's men. That caused the

flashlights to go out. Tananese  shouts indicated the prisoners were being hauled out of the building. 

The brown men came directly toward Doc Savage, and the bronze  giant, instead of retreating, found the

stanchion which supported an  overhead pipeline and climbed. Rust ground under his palms. He balanced  atop

the pipe. 

The brown men began to pass under him. Their breathing was heavy.  One felt down; others swore at him.

Then they splattered a flashlight  beam to see their way. 

By the backglow from the light Doc Savage made out the vague forms  of prisoners, their heads hooded in

gunnysacks so as to prevent them  sighting their surroundings. He counted three of the captives, but not  all of

the party was illuminated. The flash went out. 

Doc Savage launched himself headlong into the cluster of Tananese. 

THE SLANTEYED men were naturally expectant of an attack. But they  were not ready for it from above.

One man, on whose shoulders Doc  managed to land, went down; there was a muffled crunch, as a bone broke

in some part of him. 

Doc kept down, striking upward, wrenching at legs. Men fell  heavily. They shrieked; and one not knowing

Orientals would have  thought they were thinking only of escape. On the contrary, they  unsheathed knives and

stabbed about with no great consideration for  their companions. 

Feet pounded as Renny, Long Tom and Johnny came up. They were  cautious enough, however, not to display

flashlights. 

Doc Savage swept a figure from his feet. It was intensely dark. Doc  reached for his victim's face. His fingers

encountered coarse cloth  a  burlap bag. It was one of the prisoners. 


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The bronze man was near the fringe of the fighting brown men now.  He lunged, holding the prisoner, and got

clear, then gave the hooded  captive a hard shove, propelling him away in the murk. Whirling, Doc  plunged

into the fight. 

But the brown men had recovered from their surprise, had grouped  themselves, and were retreating. They

brought flashlights into play,  along with guns. 

Doc, finding himself lodged in a glaring flash beam, whipped for  shelter. The only haven in sight was an

upright of concrete which  supported an overhead pipeline. He got behind it. Fragments began to  fall off as

bullets smashed. 

Renny and the others were also forced back. They used their  supermachine pistols, but the brown men got

behind a still house, ran  from there to abandoned benzine tanks and, in full flight, plunged on  past a row of

crude tanks. 

Renny had a flashlight, and hearing the prisoner whom Doc had  rescued emit a groan, switched the beam in

that direction. The spike of  white picked up a pair of immaculately trousered legs. The rest of the  rescued one

lay behind a gate box. 

"It's Ham!" Renny thundered. "I'd know his clothes anywhere." 

They did not wait, but lunged in pursuit of the Tananese. The  latter greatly outnumbered them. Doc and his

men, in order not to show  their position, refrained from using their flashlights. This slowed  them up. 

They could hear clanking of metal. The men of Tanan must be  breaking open a side gate. A moment later,

automobile engines whooped  into life; headlights jumped out in long funnels and began to move. 

"Had cars waiting there for a getaway!" Renny boomed. Doc and his  men reached the gate. They launched a

few mercy bullets from the  machine pistols, but as far as they could see, got no results. 

Long Tom snapped, "I'll get our car and try to follow them!" and  started away. 

"No use!" Doc cried after him. "You could not pick up their trail!" 

Long Tom came back reluctantly, and they reentered the grounds of  the closed refinery. Going back over the

back trail of the brown men,  they hoped to find some who had been overcome by the mercy bullets.  There

was no trace of victims. 

"Those babies kept their heads," Renny grumbled reluctantly. "They  carried off those who got laid out." 

"Let us hold interlocution with Ham," suggested big worded Johnny. 

They came soon to the prisoner whom Doc had rescued.  The fellow  was tumbling about, endeavoring to free

his hands. He had not yet been  able to remove the gunnysack hood which was over his head. 

"It's Ham, all right," Long Tom declared. "Hey, Ham, what'd you  learn about them brown eggs? What's

behind all of this?" 

The hooded man made hacking sounds' 

"Gagged," Renny thumped. 


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The bigfisted engineer bent down, tried to untie the knots in the  string which held the gunnysack, had

trouble, then calmly gripped the  sack with his two huge fists and tore it wide open.  He laid the two  halves

back from the rescued one's face. 

Renny was hunkered down.  His jaw fell, and he slouched over  backward so that he seated himself heavily. 

"Holy cow!" he gulped. 

The rescued man was not Ham. 

Long Tom stared at the man. "Who the devil are you?" 

The man was lean, rather thin about the waist, but muscled  sufficiently. His clothing was expensive, perfectly

tailored, and still  remarkably neat, considering what he had been through. In these two  respects, he resembled

Ham, the dapper lawyer who was one of Doc  Savage's five associates. 

The man tried to answer  for he was not gagged. But the sounds he  made were unintelligible. He seemed to

be far gone. 

"Get that string off his throat," Renny mutter.  "Maybe he's  choking." 

They loosened the string. Then the man fell over and his face  buried itself in a pool of rainwater. Breath came

out of his lungs and  made a loud bubbling. 

"Fainted," Doc said, and lifted the man. 

In the far distance, three reports smacked out rapidly. They  sounded very much like shots. 

Chapter 7. THE WHITEBROWN MEN

THE reports were shots discharged from one of the lean barreled  foreign automatics, and were directed at the

front tire of a police  motorcycle. The cars had been driving fast enough to interest the  motorcycle cop. 

The front tire of the motorcycle let go with a loud hissing. The  cop fought the handlebars, but his machine

wobbled into a ditch and  bucked him off. He wallowed for a time in the water that filled the  ditch, then got

out and tried to use his revolver. But the cars bearing  the brown men were too far distant. 

The machines  there were two of them  speeded on for a short  distance, then turned to the right and slowed

down. 

"He is a fool who only drops thorns in the path of the tiger," one  brown man told the man who had fired at the

motorcycle cop. "The tiger  will come again by another route." 

"He is a greater fool who kills the cub of the tiger," retorted the  other. "The police of these white devil ghosts

are a bad tiger." 

Monk, who rode in the same car, his head encased in a gunnysack,  growled, "If I ever get loose, I'm gonna

make somebody think tiger!" 

A man leaned forward, selected the spot in the sack where Monk's  nose should be, and tapped with a hard


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brown fist. The homely chemist  bawled out and tried to kick, using both of his feet, which were now  bound

together. There was some excitement while he was beaten to the  point where he concluded it was the better

course to submit to his  captors. 

By that time, the cars had stopped. 

"It is a wise leopard who changes his spots," stated one of the  captors. 

They unloaded from the two machines. Men went carefully over the  cars with handkerchiefs, rubbing

vigorously to remove finger prints.  Then they advanced on foot. 

Ahead, there was a traffic light which still functioned, although  the traffic was very light. The Orientals

scattered themselves and  became lost in the darkness, dragging their prisoners along with them. 

A moment later a motorist, stopping for the red light, got quite a  shock when brown men suddenly descended

upon him from either side,  menacing with their thinbarreled guns. The motorist, not being devoid  of sense,

put up his hands. He was hauled out, struck over the head  repeatedly until he was thoroughly senseless, then

tossed behind a  nearby wooden fence. 

Within the next ten minutes, a second motorist met an identical  fate. 

The brown men loaded into the cars thus obtained and drove off.  Their pace was now decorous, so as not to

cause a repetition of the  motorcycle cop incident. 

It rained again, more violently this time, so that water stood in a  sheet over the streets and ran mad torrents in

the gutters. Traffic  policemen were grotesque black figures in their raincoats and cap  shields. 

Monk and Ham were kept out of sight, and by now were gagged so  effectively that they could make no noise

audible outside the cars. The  brown Tananese were unusually silent. 

They drove down, finally, on a steep road that led to the bank of  the Hudson, below Riverside Drive. Monk

and Ham were hauled out, their  ankles untied; gun muzzles forced them to walk ahead. They came to a  large,

shadowy building, on which a man played a flashlight, disclosing  a sign that read: 

CLOSED BY ORDER OF PARK COMMISSION 

The building behind the sign was soundless, and the flash beam,  roving, picked up a name painted over the

door: 

COASTAL YACHT CLUB 

A brown Tananese called out softly; a voice answered from the door,  and they all filed inside. Monk and

Ham were now unhooded and ungagged. 

Great red welts were to be seen across the hands and faces of the  two prisoners. These stood out like streaks

of scarlet grease paint,  when bathed by the occasional dabbing touch of a roving flashlight  beam. 

The brown men arrayed themselves along one wall, opposite a blank  wall, and turned out their lights. The

darkness became like a black  solid. They waited for a moment in silence. Then one spoke hollowly,

dramatically, after the manner of one expecting something momentous. 


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"We wait your presence, 0 One Who Died Before Time Began," he said. 

And the strange voice which Monk and Ham had heard earlier in the  night near the water front, said, "My

green soul is with you. It will  take the visible form of a face." 

MONK, hear that, gave a violent start and rolled his eyes toward  the source of the voice. Locating it, he

started again and blinked  incredulously. 

Across the room, fully twenty feet distant, was a face, a grisly,  luminous visage, its hue a bilious green. The

liniments were, weirdly  enough, now scarcely suggestive of an Oriental countenance. The mouth  opened and

the tongue was like a pale, vague tendril of flame behind  the uncannily glowing teeth. The whole effect was

that of a luminous  ghost. 

The spokesman of the brown men got down on his knees and touched  his forehead to the floor. 

"The soul of this one is a worm which has been stepped upon," he  said uneasily. "My words are vehicles

which convey naught but bad news.  For that, sorrow fills me." 

Monk watched the fantastic green face. He strained his eyes until  they hurt. Yet he could discern no form

below the verdant countenance.  It was as if the face were a thing disembodied, something unreal. 

A spell had gripped the brown men of Tanan. They seemed hardly to  breathe. And each had clasped both his

fists and pressed them tightly  to his forehead, holding them there. No doubt this latter was some  gesture of

submission peculiar to Tananese. 

"My soul is a worm, my body quivers like the flank of the trapped  mountain deer and my ancestors all hide

their faces in shame, for I  have failed to carry out the wishes of He Who Has Been Dead A Thousand

Thousand Years, the Mystic Mullah," said the brown spokesman. "Here are  the events that brought me shame

as they happened  " 

The recital was longwinded, but when it ended, the speaker had  conveyed the story of what had happened at

the abandoned refinery. 

"We were dogs and fled," he finished. "And this bronze man, this  white devil ghost who is not white, took

from us our third prisoner.  Truly, we are alley curs that we permitted this." 

"You are dogs," the macabre voice of the Mystic Mullah agreed. "But  you are wise dogs, like those that grow

to a ripe old age in the alleys  of Tanan, because they know when to run and when to fight." 

"Such praise from you is beautiful," murmured the other. "It is  like perfume in our nostrils, nectar in our

mouths and wine in our  bellies. What is your next wish?" 

"The death of the bronze man," advised the Mystic Mullah. 

NO one appeared to have a ready answer to that. Several men  breathed noisily. A knife fell out of one man's

sleeve, making a  ringing noise, and he snatched it up with the guilty expression of a  small boy caught

bringing candy into a school room. 

Monk sat down on the floor, doing so slowly, as if he were tired.  He ignored a harsh hiss from his captor

commanding him to stand erect;  and the captor, seemingly loath to create a stir in the presence of the  hideous

green countenance that was suspended apparently in thin air,  crouched down beside Monk and thrust the


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point of a knife a quarter of  an inch into Monk's back and held it there, an agonizing threat. 

The Mystic MulIah continued speaking. 

"This white devil ghost who is not white, this Doc Savage, must not  have his ears filled with the tale borne by

the woman, Joan Lyndell,  and the milkhearted camel who is the Khan Nadir Shar of Tanan," the  hollow

voice said. "So far, we have done well. The messenger, Hadim,  died in trying to reach the bronze man. Then,

making use of the actor  fool who sold himself for a few dollars, we got Joan Lyndell and the  Khan into our

trap, which we sprung after some difficulty." 

The spokesman of the brown men asked, "But what of the third  prisoner, the one who was taken from us?" 

"He is but a moth drawn to the flame," said the Mystic Mullah. 

The mouthpiece of the group of brown men was puzzled. "Your wisdom  is too profound," he mumbled. "Will

you speak in small words that your  children may comprehend?" 

"You may forget the third prisoner," advised the Mystic Mullah.  "Worry not about him, and harm him not,

for he has a use to us." 

The other chuckled suddenly. "Your small words carry the light.  This third prisoner, he is one of your

servants." 

"Seek not to comprehend that which is known only to the One Who Has  Been Dead A Thousand Thousand

Years," the Mystic Mullah suggested. 

Monk squirmed to get away from the knife pricking his back. He  could feel scarlet trickling down inside his

undershirt. It felt like a  string of flies crawling on his bare skin. 

Monk growled unintelligibly, so it sounded to his captors. The  sounds Monk made were guttural, little more

than audible. They might  have been the mutterings of a man afraid to speak. 

Actually, Monk's growled sounds were quite intelligible to half a  dozen men in the civilized world. The

words were Mayan, tongue of the  lost race which once populated Central America; and the language which

Doc Savage and his five aides had learned, that they might communicate  with each other without being

understood by those about them. 

Ham heard the words, and began shifting his position in an endeavor  to get close to Monk. His legs were not

bound; neither were those of  the homely chemist 

"We know much of this bronze man," said the Mystic Mullah. "Through  the eyes of you, my servants, we

have studied his institution in this  great city of the white devil ghosts. We know that he values the lives  of the

five men who aid him above all else. Of that knowledge, we shall  make use for we have two of his assistants

with us." 

Monk sighed loudly. 

Ham promptly kicked the temple of the brown man who held the knife  against Monk's back. 

HAM wore shoes with narrow toes, and his kick was terrific. The  knifeman upset, dragging his blade across

Monk's back, slitting his  clothing and raking across his bare flesh. 


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Monk squawled, "You could've done a better kicking job than that,  you danged shyster!" and shot to his feet

like a toy spring snake  coming out of a box. He continued straight for the fantastic face which  was suspended

in midair. Reaching it, he launched a terrific kick at  where the body should be. 

His foot whistled through empty space. Momentum spun him around.  Off balance, he slammed down. In

falling, though, he did not take his  startled eyes from the unholy visage. Thus it was that he saw an

impossible phenomenon. 

The unearthly green glow that was the face seemed to fade, becoming  paler and paler until its outlines were

lost to the eyes and only a  vague luminance remained. That, too, went away, leaving only the  blackness of the

room. 

"Lights!" bawled a voice in Tananese. 

Another man wailed, "He who shows a light in the presence of the  Mystic Mullah is the same as a dying man. 

"Lights!" screamed the other. "Fool! The Mystic Mullah has become  as the air we breath. Can you not see

that? Lights!" 

Some one knocked the lens out of a flashlight, so that it whitened  the whole room palely when it was

thumbed on. 

Monk, peering about, was struck with a species of surprise  paralysis, for the doors of the room were closed

tightly, the windows  boarded over from the outside so that there was hardly a crack. And  nowhere was there a

trace of the sinister presence, the Mystic Mullah.  Nor was there anything to explain that nature of the eerie

green visage  which had been suspended in the darkness. 

Brown men pitched upon Monk, and the homely chemist backed away.  One man came close, holding a knife

with both hands. Monk kicked. The  knife wielder flopped away with most of his lower face out of shape.

Across the room, Ham was also fighting, using only his feet. 

"It is intended that their lives be tools of the Mystic Mullah!"  rapped the spokesman. "Do not kill. He Who

Has Been Dead A Thousand  Thousand Years would not want his tools destroyed." 

Ham promptly stopped struggling and barked at Monk, "Don't be a  dope, you ape! They're not going to kill

us!" 

Monk snarled, "Swell!" and lumped up amazingly and kicked a wiry  brown chest with both feet. Ribs broke

in the chest with a sound  distinctly audible. Then a Tananese ran around behind the gorilla of a  chemist and

banged him twice over the head with a longbarreled  automatic. Monk sat down with a cloud in his eyes. 

Both Monk and Ham were now bound more securely. The gags were  replaced. Then one of the brown men

went outside, to return with the  word that all was quiet. 

"This is a remote spot," he reported. "We are as alone as the wolf  which howls in the desert." 

Then he started violently and looked at his own hands. From them,  he shifted his stare to his fellow. 

"Look!" he gulped. 


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They all looked. Strange expressions came upon their faces,  expressions of bewilderment admixed with fear.

Again and again, they  examined their hands or peered at each other's faces. They rubbed their  hands together

violently, as if washing them. They produced  handkerchiefs and scrubbed; then shook heads slowly. 

Their bands, their faces, were slowly turning white. Or perhaps the  color was more of a gray, the tint that

comes over a corpse after  death. The effect upon the brown skins was hideous. 

"We are dying, and yet we live!" a man groaned. 

Several planted clasped fists against their foreheads and began to  call loudly upon their ancestors. Their

voices trembled with the fright  that the onrush of gray color was bringing. It was the spokesman,  obviously

the most alertmindeded of the lot, who spoke up loudly. 

"Offspring of donkeys!" he growled. "This is the hand of the Mystic  Mullah, whose powers no man can

comprehend. He has seen fit to give us  the skins of the white devil ghosts, that we may better serve him

without attracting attention." 

"Truly the ways of Him Who Has Existed A Thousand Thousand Years  are marvelous," mumured another,

relieved. 

Monk stared at them. His little eyes were bright in their pits of  gristle. He looked at his own hands. They, too,

were assuming an unholy  gray tint. 

Monk made a noisy laughing sound through his nose. 

Chapter 8. THE WISE GUY

WILLIAM Harper Littlejohn spun his monocle so that its black ribbon  wrapped around his finger, bandage

fashion, then unwound it with a  backward movement. His finger seemed but a linkage of bone with a thin

skin painted on. 

"Indicative omens point to the reanimation of the individual  shortly," he said. 

"Hurrah!" Renny said gloomily "Those are the smallest words you  have used in the last half hour." 

Long Tom, who was guiding their car through the fog and the rain,  only frowned and rubbed a faint fog off

the inside of the windshield  with a palm. 

Doc Savage was working over the lean, thinwaisted man whom they  had rescued from the brownskinned

fiends of Tanan. His exploring  fingers had located numerous head bruises which might have come from

clubbing guns. It must have been the compounded effect of these,  coupled with the excitement of the rescue,

which had caused the man to  pass out. 

Doc had been administering restoratives for some time, but the man  was only now showing signs of returning

consciousness. He stirred, a  little animation came into his fingers and his mouth fell open. Then  his eyelids

came apart. 

"He is not human," he said. 

His words were distinct. He had a nice voice. 


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"Not human," he mumbled again. 

Johnny, Renny and Long Tom exchanged glances. Doc's features  remained inscrutable. 

"Who you talkin' about?" Renny rumbled. 

The thinwaisted man squirmed about and finally managed to prop  himself erect by using his arms as rigid

stilts. He shut his eyes with  great force several times, opening them wide after each pinching  effort. 

"Whew!" he muttered. "My head!" 

Renny got down in front of him, his long face violent above an  outthrust jaw, and growled, "Who were you

mumblin' about when you woke  up?" 

"The Mystic Mullah," said the other distinctly. "Who the deuce are  you?" 

Then he rolled his eyes again, swiped his lips with his tongue and,  quite suddenly, lay back in the car seat. 

"Hallelujah!" he said dryly. "We are saved!" 

Long Tom took his eyes off the road long enough to say, "Sounds  like he's nuts." 

Doc Savage watched the thinwaisted man closely and asked, "What  day of the week is this?" 

"Wednesday," said the other man. "Granting of course that it is now  past midnight. Haven't you more sensible

questions?" 

"His head is clear enough," Doc said. "What is your name?" 

"It might be Mohammed, or Little Boy Blue, or Columbus," said the  stranger. "But, of course, it's not." 

Renny blocked out a big fist, held it close to the man's head, and  head and fist did not differ greatly in size. 

The stranger looked at the knuckles almost against his nose, let  his jaw down in mock wonder, and asked,

"What on earth is that?" 

"That's what cracks wisecrackers," Renny told him. "Now are you  gonna talk sense or do I have to start the

bells ringing in your head?" 

"Push the button," said the other. "Or go straight to the devil.  Take your choice." 

Long Torn turned his head to ask, "What's eating him? Is he really  gaga?" 

Doc Savage said, "It seems that the gentleman does not want to  talk." 

THEY drove on rapidly, down in the business section now, but well  out of the theatrical district where cars

were few and only an  occasional trolley banged along, or an elevated train made greater  uproar. The fog was

a grayblack packing in the street, and everything  was shiny and wet, with water running in the gutters or

streaming off  eaves. It seemed as if the entire world were turning to wetness. 

The thinwaisted man looked out of the moving car and said, "Noah  must have had a night like this." 


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Renny roared, "Guy, are you gonna talk?" 

The stranger laughed shrilly, then shut his eyes as if it had hurt  him. 

"Gentlemen, are you obtuse?" he asked. "No, I am not talking. I  thought I had made that clear." 

Johnny carefully wrapped his magnifying monocle in a handkerchief  and tucked it in his upper coat pocket, a

precaution he habitually took  when there was danger of it getting broken. Then he began searching the

stranger, obviously prepared for resistance. But the welldressed man  did not show fight. 

"As the Mystic Mullah's faithful say: 'He is a wise man who knows  when to do nothing'," he murmured. 

Johnny turned the fellow's pockets inside out. He looked in his  clothing for labels. The total result was a

blank. 

"I was gone over thoroughly earlier in the night and relieved of  all my possessions," said the man. 

"This individual is the personification of ambiguity," Johnny  stated. 

"Does a dictionary go with that?" asked the man. 

Long Tom wheeled the sedan up by the side of the towering  skyscraper which housed Doc's headquarters. He

touched a button under  the dash; this actuated the searchlight projecting infrared light with  which all of his

cars were fitted, and the invisible beam in turn  reacted upon a photoelectric cell connected to an

electromagnet that  released the lock of the garage door. 

Long Tom drove in and down the ramp, the door closing automatically  behind him. The opening mechanism

was convenient, because the sedan was  bulletproofed, and no one need leave its shelter to open the doors 

"What about your roadster?" Renny asked the bronze man. 

Doc had left the roadster back on the lane near the abandoned  refinery. He had rode into town with the others

in order that he might  question the stranger they had rescued. 

"It will be all right where it is until we have time to go after  it," Doc said. 

The stranger was looking about curiously, but he said nothing. They  entered an elevator at the end of a

passage. The cage was of unusually  stout construction. 

Doc threw the control and the cage accelerated at tremendous speed.  The stranger, taken by surprise, was

snapped down flat on the floor;  but the others, knowing the pace of the elevator, kept their feet. 

The stranger got up, looking sheepish, then instinctively grabbed a  hand rail as the cage stopped so swiftly

that it seemed they were  suspended in midair. 

"This is better than an amusement park ride," he said shakily. 

"Pipe down," Renny advised him. "You're getting in my hair!" 

"Wait!" Doc Savage advised, as Long Tom was about to open the  elevator door. 


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The bronze man pointed at a small perforation in the sliding doors.  Through this, it was possible to view a

stationary mirror fixed to the  door frame. This gave a view of the corridor. 

"Holy cow!" Renny thumped. 

There was a policeman lounging in front of Doc Savage's office. 

With no further hesitation, Doc opened the elevator doors and  stepped into the corridor, the rest of the party

behind him. 

The policeman, recognizing Doc, stepped up to him and said, "Mr.  Savage, the commissioner sent me up here

to see what you know about the  Oriental found dead with a broken neck in this corridor." The copper  was a

bit overawed in Doc's presence, for he shifted nervously on his  feet. 

"Tell the commissioner," Doc said, "that, as yet, the entire case  is a mystery to me; but that as soon as I get to

the heart of the plot,  I will notify him. 

"0. K., Mr. Savage." The policeman saluted snappily and made for  the elevator. 

Doc entered his office. 

Then they all stepped into the great laboratory with its fabulous  array of scientific apparatus, its thousands of

bottles of chemicals,  its maze of electrical wiring. 

The thinwaisted stranger glanced about with manifest interest. 

"Quite effective," he drawled. 

Renny ran huge fingers through his hair. 

"We've got to find Monk and Ham, somehow," he rumbled. "And if we  don't get going pretty soon, it'll make

things harder." 

"We've got to find Joan Lyndell and the Khan Nadir Shar," added  Long Torn. 

"I thought so," said the stranger. 

Renny scowled at him. "You thought what?" 

"What a sad face you have, grandma," murmured the stranger. 

"You are a hegemonic enigma," the gaunt Johnny told him. 

"You," said the stranger, "stun me with those words." 

Long Tom, the electrical wizard, snapped, "We're killing time,  blast it! How are we going to get a line on

Monk and Ham?" 

As if to explain that, Doc Savage went to the telephone, took down  the receiver and began to speak. The

mouthpiece was fitted with a  boxlike attachment which partially enclosed the face and made his words

inaudible to those in the room. He spoke for some time. Then he hung  up. 


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Long Tom was staring at the bronze man's hands. 

"Doc!" he exploded. "Look at your hands! Your face! The skin is  turning white!" 

IT was dawn. The fog had gone away, pushed by a cold wind from the  north, and the morning sun was

incredibly bright. Only the uncommon  cleanness of the streets showed how wet the night had been. 

Long Tom had gone downstairs to get the morning newspapers. He  returned now. Ordinarily, he looked

unhealthy, but now he was starkly  white of skin, as bleached as if his hide had turned to typewriter  paper. 

Doc Savage, Renny, Johnny, even the stranger  who had still not  talked  were also weirdly white. There

had been discussion during the  final hours of the night concerning this strange pallor. 

But Doc Savage had taken no part in the talk, had seemed  unconcerned, and the others, noting this, had not

worried excessively.  If the whiteness had been dangerous, Doc would have taken action upon  it, they

reasoned. 

Long Tom deposited his bundle of papers. 

"Nothing new in them," he advised. 

"Did you look at the advertisements?" Doc asked. 

"Why should I?" the electrical wizard countered. 

Doc Savage riffled through the papers. One after the other, he  spread them open on a table displaying in each

instance a fullpage  advertisement. 

"The results of my telephone call," he said. 

"Holy cow!" Renny boomed when he saw the displays. 

THE ADVERTISEMENTS WERE in bold black type. Each was worded the  same, reading: 

$1,000 REWARD FOR GHOST MAN 

The sum of one thousand dollars will be  paid for information  leading to the  whereabouts of a man whose skin

is  unnaturally white.  This man will have  the face of an Oriental. His skin will  be almost  as white as ordinary

writing paper. 

Call this newspaper when you see such a man. 

"Holy cow!" Renny repeated wonderingly. Then he eyed Doc Savage.  "So this white skin is your doing!

How'd you work it?" 

"A chemical vapor," Doc explained. "It is odorless and colorless at  first, but upon long exposure to the

oxygen in the air, it turns white.  It is harmless." 

"But where did you use it?" Renny persisted. 


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"At the refinery," Doc told him. "The stuff was in two cans thrown  in such a position that the Mystic Mullah's

men had to walk through  them." 

Long Tom said grimly, "But they'll get wise! All they have to do is  dye their skins, or cover them with grease

paint." 

"It will not be effective," Doc told him. "This chemical stains  material with which it comes in contact. For

instance, examine your  clothing." 

Long Tom scrutinized his coat sleeve closely, and it dawned on him  that the cloth was several shades lighter

than it had been originally. 

"So all we have to do is wait for some one to sight one of these  whiteskinned brown men," he grinned. 

"The newspapers have orders to relay any reports to us," Doc said. 

The stranger had taken it all in. 

"Have you any more hats with rabbits in them?" he queried dryly. 

Renny scowled. "How about me bumping this guy around a little,  Doc?" 

The telephone rang. It was one of the newspaper offices. 

"A man with a white skin was sighted a few minutes ago," said the  informant at the news plant. 

"The address, please," Doc requested. The other rattled off an  address. 

"Sorry," Doc told him. "That man was not an Oriental." 

He hung up. 

"Who did they see?" Long Tom demanded. 

"You," Doc told him. "Some one must have seen you when you were  down buying the newspapers." 

The phone rang again. The bronze man  he was not bronze now, due  to the whitening effect of the chemical

answered and listened. He  hung up. 

"Man out for a morning walk along the Hudson River saw an Oriental  with a white skin enter one of the

yacht clubs which the city park  commissioner ordered abandoned some weeks ago," Doc said. 

Renny said grimly, "Let's go!" 

HALF an hour later, Doc Savage was saying, "Johnny, you and Long  Tom cover the river. These fellows are

smart enough to overlook no  bets. They may have a getaway by water arranged." 

"Supermalagorgeous!" Johnny agreed. 

"Does the man know any small words?" queried the thinwaisted  stranger sarcastically. 


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Renny said, "Shut up, pal, or I'll bust your face in!" 

Johnny and Long Tom shoved off. They were in a speedboat, a lean,  heavy craft which carried so much

engine that it seemed on the point of  sinking whenever it was not in motion. The propellers threw a great

geyser of spray, but there was little noise except for their churn, the  engines being excellently muffled.

Within a hundred yards, the craft  was doing forty knots. 

Johnny and Long Tom had gotten the speedboat from a seaplane hangar  and boathouse owned by Doc

Savage, which masqueraded as a disused  warehouse on the Hudson River water front 

Doc Savage now led the way to his car, Renny following with the  stranger. This was a different machine, but

armorplated like the  others. It, however, bore a license which had been issued to Doc under  an assumed

name. The machine got into motion quietly. 

Renny jabbed the waspish stranger with a thumb and asked, "What  about Wise Snappers, here?" 

Doc studied the man. "By not talking, you are making things  difficult," he said. 

"What a beautiful speech," smirked the other. 

"That's the last straw," rumbled Renny, and swung a fist. The huge  maul of bone and gristle seemed certain to

hit the mysterious man, to  batter him into insensibility. But it did not. 

The slender man rolled his head, boxer fashion. The blow went  harmlessly past. Then he hit Renny a terrific,

blinding blow on the  jaw. 

They both looked surprised; Renny because he had been hit so  unexpectedly, the stranger because he

expected Renny to go down and  nothing of the sort had happened. The next instant, there was violent  turmoil

in the rear of the sedan. Terrific blows smacked. The two men  grunted. Both, it was plain, were skilled

boxers, but there was little  room for that in the car. 

Renny, by the simple process of using his superior weight to force  the other down on the floorboards, got him

helpless, then clipped him  into senselessness with a big fist. 

"That guy can fight," Renny said grimly. "But what gets me is the  way he's acting. Notice he hasn't made any

effort to get away from us.  He never even asked what we intended to do to him." 

"Strange," Doc agreed. 

"What are we gonna do with him?" Renny wanted to know. 

For answer, Doc Savage produced a small hypodermic from a pocket of  the car. 

"I brought this for his benefit," he said. "It will keep him  unconscious until a stimulant and counteractive are

administered." 

Renny took the hypodermic needle, leaned over and used it on the  unconscious stranger. The man  he was

stirring a little with returning  consciousness  relaxed and began to breathe more easily and noisily. 

"Now, how are we gonna get into that yacht club?" Renny asked. "We  can't just barge in." 


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Doc told him, "is exactly what we are going to  barge up." 

Chapter 9. TROUBLE CLUB

THE Coastal Yacht Club was one of the oldest and most distinguished  in the United States, and it had

occupied its site on the banks of the  Hudson River since Colonial days. But the last city administration had

taken over the shore line along the stretch by the club with the  intention of establishing a park. There had

been a squabble in the  courts, after which the yacht club abandoned its large but ancient  building and betook

its membership further uptown. 

The old club lay now, awaiting the wreckers, a forlorn, rambling  white structure of wood extending partially

over the river, and with a  flagpole which was a little off plumb. 

It was shortly after eight o'clock when a puffing tug escorted a  large empty barge to the ramshackle yacht

club dock. At the dock,  moored stem and stern so that its paintwork would not be chafed, lay a  small cabin

cruiser. There was no one aboard. 

The barge was nursed up to the dock and lines made fast, then the  tug skipper cast off and chugged away

down the river. The two bargemen  scrambled ashore. 

They were very grimy specimens, these two, wearing old clothing too  voluminous even for the chilly

morning, and oilskin southwesters which  made it seem as if they had been out all night in the fog and rain. 

Heads down, they shuffled to the club, seeming in no hurry as they  reached the porch and seated themselves.

One kept his hands out of  sight a great deal. 

"Thought that wreckin' crew was supposed to be here by this time,"  he said loudly at last. 

"Let's get our tools ashore," growled the other. 

They left the porch, went to the barge and returned bearing large,  grimy canvas sacks. They deposited one of

these on the wharf, another  on the rear porch of the yacht club, and went around to the front and  placed

another on the porch there. Then they seated themselves and  resumed talking. 

"Strange the wreckers ain't showed up," said the one who kept his  hands out of sight. 

"Yeah," agreed the other. "let's look inside and see how much of a  job this is gonna be." 

They both got up and ambled to the door. They tried to peer inside,  but dust had settled on the glass panel,

shutting out vision. They  tried to open the door, but it resisted their efforts. One of them  pulled out a key and

started to insert it in the lock. 

The door opened suddenly. With great speed, the two shabby wreckers  sprang forward. They might have

been expecting this. 

Inside the yacht club, a man squawked in surprise. He was an  Oriental who had once been brown of skin, but

who was now a weirdly  bleached fellow. The man had held a knife; but the door, slamming into  him, had

taken the knife point and he was wrenching to get it free. 

A fist banged the man's head and he fell down heavily, leaving the  knife sticking in the door. The fist was a


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tremendous thing, and it  belonged to the wrecker who had been keeping his hands out of sight. 

There were two more knife wielders inside the door. The two  wreckers had changed character remarkably.

No one could mistake their  identity now. They were Doc Savage and Renny. 

THE two knifemen  whitebrown men  saw they had caught Tartars;  but they had nerve and did not try to

retreat, endeavoring to get in  with ripping knife strokes. Their skill was evident as they lunged. 

Both saw their knife strokes were going home to the chests of their  foes. Doc and Renny seemed strangely

clumsy, defenseless. Knife point  traveling at blinding speed, one of the knives hit Doc almost in the  pit of the

stomach. But instead of penetrating, there was a rasp of a  noise and the blade broke off short. 

A blow clanked on the knife wielder's head and he fell. Probably he  had not even had time to realize Doc was

wearing a bulletproof vest 

The other knifeman made an industrious effort to sink his blade  into Renny, discovered the bulletproof vest

too late, and was slammed  down. 

Still Tananese squawls were piping through the ancient building.  They conveyed wild alarm. 

Doc and Renny charged forward. Their procedure might have seemed  reckless, but not only did they wear the

armor vests which protected  their bodies, legs, and even a portion of their necks, but the oilskin  hats which

they wore were not conventional seamen's hats at all, but  thin steel helmets as efficient as regulation army

equipment. 

A labyrinth of passages and stairs opened ahead of them. Boardedup  windows made the interior murky,

almost dark, in spite of the morning  brilliance outside. In the gloom, whitebrown men flitted like ghosts.

Occasional shots whooped. 

"Monk!" Renny boomed. "Ham! You in here?" 

In answer to that, a scuffle started somewhere in the rear. 

"That'll be them!" Renny growled. 

The bigfisted engineer and the bronze man dived in that direction.  They made ghostly figures with their

unnaturally white skins, their  grim expressions. 

A cluster of animated men appeared ahead, vague figures in the  gloom. Monk and Ham were putting up a

fight, hoping to prevent  themselves being carried away. Able to use only their bound legs and  arms, they

were not doing badly. 

Gun flame lashed out, and the room filled with earsplitting  concussion as guns were discharged. The

spikesnouted automatics had a  particularly vicious crack, and the bullets, driven with force enough  to

penetrate anything less than extraordinarily efficient bulletproof  vests, delivered tremendous blows. 

Doc and Renny separated, getting down behind large steel cabinets.  This had evidently been the club locker

room, and the lockers had not  yet been removed. The Tananese, disgusted and excited, drove a few  bullets

through metal cabinets. They cackled orders among themselves. 

Renny had expected them to charge, He was surprised when they did  not. 


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"What're they up to?" he demanded loudly. 

"They're trying to take the prisoners away," Doc called. 

A door banged in the extreme rear; then the room became quiet. Doc  and Renny reared up simultaneously,

charged the panel and found it  barred on the inside. Renny put his huge fists to use, smashing with a  violence

that seemed incredible. He pulled splinteredged slabs out of  the door, got the panel open, and he and Doc

whipped through. 

Steps slanted downward. 

"Back stairs!" Renny roared. 

"Wait!" Doc rapped. "Listen!" 

They listened, and they could hear running feet in the halls below,  heard doors bang open, and caught the

weaker pipe of Oriental voices  outside. 

"They're out!" Renny growled. 

Doc Savage jerked his coat back, wrenched and got the skirt of his  bulletproof tunic up. This disclosed a

small case which had been well  protected. Projecting from the case was a knob resembling those on  radio

sets, and a pointer was affixed to this. In a circle around the  pointer, four numerals were stamped. Where the

pointer now rested, the  panel was marked "Off." 

Doc turned the pointer to the first number. 

Outside, there was a loud, mushy explosion, as if some one had  dropped a rotten egg several feet in diameter. 

The bleached brown men began to scream and cackle like guineas. 

"HAH!" roared Renny.  "I guess they didn't expect that!" Doc Savage  said nothing, but turned the knob to the

next number. This resulted in  another explosion. The first had been at the rear, but the second  occurred

around in front. A fresh caterwauling of sound arose from the  Orientals. 

"Now's our chance," said Renny, needlessly, for Doc Savage was  already racing downstairs. 

They plunged out of the yacht club building, and were suddenly  among a forest of squirming, yelling men.

The bleached brown  fellowsthose immediately at the door were not showing flight.  They  were interested

solely in their own difficulties, in the thing which  had happened to them. 

They looked as if they had been pierced by thousands of needles, or  perhaps caught in a storm of fine, flying

shot. Drops of scarlet, very  tiny, were oozing from their skins in such profusion that the result  was a freckled

appearance. 

Odor of burned powder hung in the air. A small cloud of powder  smoke made a haze over the melee.

Scattered about were the fragments of  the tool bag which Doc Savage had placed on the yacht club porch. 

The Tananese began toppling over, contorted, mouths gaping. 


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Renny snorted gleefully and waded through them. Doc's tool bags had  been bombs, exploded by remote radio

control. They had been filled, not  with deadly shrapnel, but with solidified particles of the same  chemical

which the dapper Ham employed to coat the tip of his sword  cane. The stuff looked like a yellowish rock salt. 

"Holy cow!" Renny boomed. "Monk and Ham are not here!" 

That was true. Neither the homely chemist nor the lawyer was in  sight. 

Foot clatter came from the direction of the dock. View of the  structure was impeded by a boat shed. Doc

whipped around thatand  almost fell over two prone figures, both of which were bound and  gagged. 

They were the girl, Joan Lyndell, and the hawknosed Khan Nadir  Shar. The pair roiled their eyes

imploringly at the bronze man. 

On ahead, out toward the dock end, fully a dozen of the Tananese  were racing for the moored cabin cruiser.

Among them, they carried two  limp figures which were bundled in old canvas, probably abandoned sails

which they had picked up around the yacht club. Little about the  shrouded forms could be distinguished. 

Among the Tananese was one who kept his head covered. He was a  towering, gaunt figure, stooped in an

effort to hide some of his  height. And he had pulled his coat up over his head so that it was  covered. He ran in

the lead, as if more anxious than the others to  escape. 

On the ground in front of Doc, the Khan Nadir Shar wrenched about.  He got his hands up. His fingers had

been stripped of jewels, but  grooves where the rings had rested were distinguishable. He managed to  get the

gag out. 

"Your men, Monk and Ham, they carry them away!" he rapped in  English which was still unnaturally perfect

in spite of its staccato  speed. "And seize the one who has his head hidden with a coat!" 

Doc ran toward the wharf end. 

THE TANANESE PITCHED the two shrouded forms which they carried, and  the figures landed on the trunk

of the cabin cruiser. Brown men leaped  down and whisked them inside. One seized the controls. A starter

gnashed at a flywheel with iron teeth. The motor banged into life. 

All but two Tananese were now aboard. These two took a great leap  to the top of the cockpit cover. This

broke, letting them through on  the man who still had his coat over his head. He fell down, but did not  uncover

his head, then got up and kicked soundly in the ribs the two  who had broken through. 

The cabin cruiser was moving now. Its propeller threw a plume of  water. The pilot put the wheel hard over. 

"Damn!" Renny roared, and looked as if he were going to plunge in  after the craft. 

Doc Savage hauled him back  then gave him a violent shove. Renny  flailed his arms, turned over once and

made a great splash. Doc hit the  water almost simultaneously. 

Renny came up, spouted and started to yell. 

"DOWN!" Doc rapped.  "Stay under!" 


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There was a loud chung! as a bullet hit water. Others followed.  Leadknocked spray stung Renny's eyes. The

Tananese were leaning over  the cabin cruiser cockpit, shooting with the wildness characteristic of  excited

Orientals. 

Renny bloated his lungs with air and sank. He knew now why Doc had  shoved him overboard, then dived in

himself. On the flimsy dock they  would have stood no chance. Finding a dock pile, Renny hugged it and

remained down until his lungs took fire and his ears began to bang in  sympathy with his heartbeat. 

He came up half expecting to find the cabin cruiser had come back.  But it was not there. Far down the river, it

scudded like a fat white  duck. 

The explanation of its continued flight was moaning out on the  river: the speedboat occupied by Johnny and

Long Tom. The speedboat had  been loitering slowly, its stern sunk far down. But now it was up on  the

surface so high that it seemed only propellers and rudder were  buried in water. 

In toward the dock boiled the speedboat. It cut its speed, settled,  then seemed to stand on its stern as Johnny

slammed the reverse lever. 

Doc Savage stroked to the craft and whipped over the gunwale. Renny  splashed up. Long Tom seized both of

his big wrists. The two of them  were nearly yanked overboard. as Johnny snapped the throttle around on  the

quadrant. Renny finally landed on the floorboards, sputtering,  clothes leaking water. When he got up again,

the speed of the boat was  such that the rush of air almost knocked him over. 

Johnny cut the exhaust streams from the mufflers. Quiet was no  longer necessary; and the cutting out of the

silencers added a little  to the boat's power. The water was rough; the hull smacked down on the  waves with a

series of loud reports. 

Other clapping sounds began to be heard. The nonshatter windshield  acquired round perforations; streaks of

splinters arose on the mahogany  coaming. 

"They sure do like us," Long Tom said grimly. " I hope they haven't  anything stronger than those foreign

pistols." 

"A propensity conducive to salubriousness," agreed Johnny. He had  jacked a periscope up and was using it to

steer by. 

Bullets fired from the cabin cruiser continued to nick the  speedboat hull, but did no harm, because the craft

had been conceived  and designed for a violent existence. It was armored as heavily as  circumstances

permitted; under the innocent  looking mahogany sheeting  was a layer of nickelchrome alloy, carbonized

and tempered like the  plate on battleships. 

Doc opened a locker, got out another periscope and employed it to  watch the cabin cruiser. The craft was

swinging out across the river,  bound north. 

"Heading for the Jersey shore," he advised. 

Renny, who was never too cautious, popped up his head for a brief  look 

"They'll make it, too," he rumbled. "Got a head start on us when  Johnny swung in to pick us up." 

For a moment there was only the terrific bawl of the motors and the  loud reports of waves smacking past. 


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"They've got Monk and Ham wrapped in sailcloth!" Renny boomed.  "Blast it! I hope they're still alive!" 

Doc said nothing. He was watching the cabin cruiser. It was headed  for a stretch of beach, one of the few

along the river. 

Beyond the beach, clinging to the steep slope of the bank, was an  amusement park. This was closed for the

winter. It had a dreary,  deserted aspect 

The cabin cruiser scarcely slackened speed when it came to the  beach.  Propellers and rudder were torn off.

The craft slid twice its  own length out of water. 

The Tananese picked themselves up and began to spill out. First to  hit the ground was the tall man who kept

his coat over his head. 

The next men to spring out carried the two forms wrapped in  sailcloth. 

JOHNNY held the speedboat directly for the beach. Doc reached his  side, said a word and Johnny

surrendered the controls. Then Johnny,  Long Tom and Renny draped themselves forward over the

bulletripped  coaming. They gripped cleats and wrenched them up, thus lifting special  steel shields already

fitted with slit loopholes. They leveled their  mercy bullet charged supermachine pistols through these. The

guns began  to racket, and spew smoking empties. 

The Tananese stood for a moment, trying to make a fight of it. Two  went down. The tall man who kept his

head covered, waved an arm and  probably shouted orders which did not reach the speedboat. His party  raced

in wild retreat. 

Doc jacked the speedboat engines into reverse. Some thousands of  horsepower whooped and moaned.

Mechanisms strained. The braking shock  sent all three men skidding off the coaming. Then the boat

grounded  lightly. 

Doc took a running leap along the deck and reached dry land. His  three men splashed out behind him. They

ran furiously, using the  machine pistols. 

They shot freely, taking few pains to avoid hitting the two canvas  swathed forms. The mercy bullets would

not harm Ham and Monk seriously,  except on the rare chance of contact with an eye. 

The Tananese reached a row of concession booths, all deserted and  boarded up. Scrap trash and paper were

scattered about. Gaudy paint had  already started peeling from the booths and the amusement houses. The

great framework of a rollercoaster had the aspect of a manyboned  skeleton. 

Dodging among the booths, the Tananese paused to shoot  occasionally. They were fighting a difficult battle,

and knew it by  now. Doc and his men, with their effective body armor, were  invulnerable to everything but a

carefully placed shot. 

Flight was not going to be easy, either, and the bleached brown men  began to realize that, too. They took

shelter among the buildings,  found rests for their gun arms and started shooting with a great deal  more

accuracy. 

Renny barked a pained surprise as a bullet made a rather gory mess  of his left ear. 

"Get down!" Doc directed. "Stay here!" 


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Renny boomed, "But Doc, if we circle around and cut 'em off, we'll  be able  " 

"Stay here!" the bronze man directed. 

He crawled away, keeping below an ornamental sidewalk, and vanished  behind a building which had a

paintscabby sign reading, "House of  Mirrors." Renny, Long Tom and Johnny did not catch sight of him

again. 

Chapter 10. TWO MEN IN CANVAS

RENNY clipped a fresh drum of mercy bullets into his machine  pistol. The cartridges, waterproofed, had not

suffered from the  immersion. 

The men lay behind a raised section of earth enclosed in a concrete  retaining wall. This was less than a foot

high, and had evidently  supported one of the strengthtesting devices in which a weight flies  up a pole when

a lever is struck with a mallet. 

Several bullets sizzled overhead. Dirt, moist from the rain of the  night before, showered them. It was chilly

enough that their breath  made faint steam. These spurts of steam came with surprising regularity  considering

the tenseness of the situation. 

Renny looked repeatedly for Doc, but saw no sign of the bronze man. 

"Doc must be gonna circle around behind," he decided. "More likely  he'll try to free Monk and Ham so those

birds won't kill 'em," advised  Long Tom. 

"I hope Doc can grab the fellow who keeps his head covered," said  Johnny. "It is my guess that that

gentleman is the Mystic Mullah." 

Both Renny and Long Tom glanced at the gaunt geologist. Johnny had  not used words as small as those for

some time. But Johnny had a habit  of stepping out of the dictionary when the going got exceptionally  rough. 

"Look!" Renny exploded suddenly. He slanted a beam of an arm. 

Several of the Tananese were scuttling across an open space. They  dragged the two canvas wrapped forms

with them. They employed frenzied  haste and kept low; then all dived into a huge circular building. 

"What're we gonna do about this?" Renny growled. "Doc went around  the other way." 

"We were to stay here," Long Tom said grimly. "But that's Monk and  Ham." He hurriedly snapped fresh

ammo into his gun. 

Johnny said, "Let's go!" and reared up. 

They dashed to the left. A swarthy Tananese  he was one who had  not been caught in the bleaching gas at

the refinery, for his skin was  still dark  fired at them. A blast from Long Tom's machine pistol  drove him to

cover. 

Renny reached the side of the circular building. Johnny and Long  Tom trod his heels. They could see the sign

on the structure now. It  read: 


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THE PREHISTORIC WORLD 

Running swiftly, Renny reached a side door. It was fastened with  hasp and padlock, both rather flimsy. The

bigfisted engineer holstered  his machine pistol, grasped the padlock with both hands and wrenched  and

twisted. His great hands were corded blocks, his arms beams on  which tendons stood out like rifle barrels.

With a grinding and rasping  of splinters, the staple came out. 

They shoved through the door. There was a metal shield inside, no  doubt intended to prevent nonpaying

customers seeing beyond the door.  They rounded that. 

"Holy cow!" Renny gulped, and dodged wildly. 

It was very dark inside the great building, but a little light  reflected through the door they had opened. This

showed, close at hand,  an astounding sight. 

A fantastic monster was reared up on its hind legs. The thing was  all of twenty feet high. It had giant rear

legs, a hideous body covered  with scales the size of pie plates, a head with predominantly gaping  jaws and

enormous fangs, to which clung drops of blood imitated  realistically in red wax. The short front arms of the

monster were out  in front of the fangs, gripping what at first appeared to be the  mutilated body of a hairy,

apelike man. 

"Whew!" Renny shuddered. "I thought at first that the body was  Monk!" 

THE MONSTER WAS one of the exhibits of the show, and the manfigure  in its claws, a thing of

papiermache and wax, was no doubt intended to  represent a prehistoric man. There were other of the

prehistoric Titans  about. There was a longnecked brontosaurus, an amazing leer on its  serpent face; there

was another tyrannosaurus, such as held the  likeness of the prehistoric man; there were various other

dinosaurs;  and suspended from the ceiling in lifelike immobility were various  flying pterodactyls. 

These latter, great hairless bats of things, were attached to wires  and aerial tracks; when the exhibit was in

operation. they probably  swooped about in a fashion calculated to make the hair of onlookers  stand on end. 

Near the front of the building, men could be heard moving about.  There was a loud rustling. That meant some

one had disturbed the  artificial foliage which was a part of the display. 

"Come on," Renny breathed, getting his great voice down to a  whisper with some difficulty. 

They advanced. It was difficult to keep from making noise in the  artificial jungle. Not that the brown men

were unaware that they were  inside; the ripping off of the padlock had told them that. But it was  just as well

that they did not know from which direction the attack  would come. 

The jungle was surprisingly natural, and utterly fantastic, being  composed of ferns the sine of trees, and

grasses which had blades fully  fifteen feet high. All of this had been manufactured at some expense,  and

painted a natural green. 

"Some joint!" Long Tom whispered. 

"Pssst,"' Johnny admonished. 

They listened until their ears hurt. 


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"What was it?" Long Tom breathed to Johnny. 

Johnny replied, "I thought I heard something behind  " 

Renny shrieked. They knew it was Renny, for there was no other  voice quite like the roaring tones of the

bigfisted engineer. The howl  held on infinite agony. 

Then Johnny felt a searing pain against one check. It was such a  pain as he had never felt before. Reflex

muscular action, instinctive  movement, caused him to pitch sidewise. He crashed into a clump of  prehistoric,

reedlike grass. With a great crashing, he went down. 

He felt the burning agony again. It was around one of his ankles  this time. It crawled up his leg as far as his

knee and grew and grew  until the agony was almost insufferable. He bent over and struck  furiously. His

fingers began to burn. It was as if something terribly  hot had taken hold of him. 

Twisting about, Johnny managed to claw out matches. He could hear  both Long Tom and Renny groaning

and threshing about. He got his match  aflame. His eyes popped. 

There was a hideous green snakelike thing coiled over his ankles.  Another floated in the air close to his

hands. Even as he stared, it  came toward his hands, seemed to wrap around them, and again he felt  the

frightful pain. 

Johnny struck madly. The nebulous green thing was knocked away. But  it came drifting back. He smashed at

it once more and missed. The green  horror came on, touched his face, his nostrils. 

The awful agony of it made Johnny yell until all of the air was  gone out of his lungs; and then, when he

sucked in breath again, the  fearsome thing of green seemed to seize its chance and pounce into his  mouth.

Johnny coughed and gagged, fell back beating the air with his  fists, writhing and twisting, and his heels beat

at the floor with a  mad frenzy. 

After a while, he was still. 

Long Tom and Renny also became quiet. 

DOC Savage was some distance away when he heard the cries of his  three men. The sounds were muffled,

and because a street car was  slamming past somewhere outside the park, he all but missed hearing the  yells. 

A weird phantom, the metallic giant whipped across the amusement  park. His skin, thanks to the chemical

bleaching fog, looked more like  aluminum than bronze. 

Tananese fired at him with pistols. There were two of them, and  they shot madly, so that the hall of vicious

lead drove Doc to the  side, behind a boarded up merrygoround. He was delayed there some  minutes until

the two firing natives unaccountably deserted their posts  and ran away across the amusement park grounds. 

Doc went forward. He had some difficulty locating the source of the  cries he had heard, There was only

silence In the park now. 

Not until he glimpsed the lock torn off the door of the circular  building did he conclude the cries might have

emanated from inside. He  went to the door, listened. There was only silence. 


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He backed a pace, continued to listen. An utter calm had settled  everywhere. Then, up the hill toward the

gate, there was a stifled cry,  an outburst of cackling Tananese. 

Doc ran for the spot. His speed was tremendous. But long before he  reached the gate he heard other cries,

awful screams of one or two men  in agony. 

After that, an automobile motor roared, then receded; the violence  of its noise indicating high speed. 

Doc reached the gate. 

Three men lay there. One wore shabby civilian garb, and on the  front of his denim jumper clung a badge

which said, "Watchman." 

The other two were Jersey policemen in full unifom. 

Two of them patently were dead, their heads twisted back in a  grotesque manner which indicated broken

necks. The third man still  groveled about on the muddy ground, flailing and striking with both  hands about

his head, as if fighting something invisible. His neck bent  by jerks, then straightened, only to bend again, as if

something were  trying to break it. His eyes were wide and glassy, but as he saw Doc  Savage he tried to

speak. 

"Watchman heard shooting and called us," he gasped jerkily. "We  came  green snakes in the air  men all

got away In our car." 

Cluck! His head flew back, then forward, and hung like a ball on a  string. An awful trembling went through

his body and ran out to the  ends of his arms, his legs, and he fell down heavily. 

Doc Savage reached his side, making a furious endeavor to aid the  man. But it was no use. The fellow's neck

was broken. 

ONLY for a few moments did Doc Savage stand studying the three dead  men. The cluck he had heard had

been the last victim's neck breaking.  They all had broken necks. And there was no mark on their bodies,

nothing that showed outwardly what had caused the grisly demise. 

There were houses some distance down the road. Doc Savage ran to  one of these, barged in on a frightened

housewife and employed the  telephone. He called the local police station, gave the shield numbers  of the two

dead officers  and explained that they had been murdered,  their car taken by the kidnappers. Doc did not give

his name, not  wishing to be hampered by questions and by future police  investigations. After the call, he went

back to the amusement park. 

Past the three dead men, he strode, only to turn back and conduct a  thorough examination of the bodies. His

scrutiny was professional;  among all this remarkable man's accomplishments, he excelled in the  field of

surgery and medicine, for this had been his first training,  his most Intensive. 

The examination completed, Doc entered the amusement park and went  to the round building which housed

the exhibition of prehistoric  monsters. He did not go in boldly, but looked around and made sure none  of the

Tananese remained In the park. Those who had been disabled by  the mercy bullets had been carried away by

their fellows in their  furtive exodus, for none of them were to be found, 

Just inside the door of the circular structure, Doc plucked some of  the artificial grasses, bundling the tips

together tightly; then he  scraped some dry, green cotton which had been glued to the boles of the  great ferns


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to simulate moss, and shoved it into his improvised torch,  after which he applied a match. 

It was an unearthly scene which this torch lighted up, for in the  fitful red flicker, the unearthly surroundings

took on an unnatural  reality, and the jumping luminance made the monsters seem alive,  hideous. Their

toothsnaggled heads had the appearance of bobbing  hungrily, jaws agape, as if in search of prey, while the

green,  unhealthy artificial jungle acquired an air of latent menace. 

Smoke crawled upward from the firebrand, curling into eerie  designs, twining and untwining, and the reeds

popped and cackled as  they were consumed. The moss fell away as it burned, making it  necessary for Doc to

turn back often and stamp out the redhot threads,  lest they fire the place. 

Doc came suddenly upon two forms, enwrapped in canvas. They lay  just inside the front door. One was large,

bulky, as if it enclosed the  frame of the apish chemist, Monk; and the other was thinner, a bit  longer, as

though Ham were inside. 

Doc Savage looked at them for some moments, and there came into  existence the small, fantastic trilling note

which was the  characteristic thing of the man of bronze in moments of stress or  surprise. 

The trilling note, tiny and unnatural, was oddly in keeping with  his grotesque surroundings. And its

undulating tune might have been the  song of some prehistoric creature housed here in this fabulous spot.  The

trilling died finally, and Doc, stooping swiftly, stripped the  canvas back from the objects they covered. 

Inside were only two dummies, made up rather carefully of sticks  and rolls of old sailcloth. 

Chapter 11. HORROR IN GREEN

POLICE sirens were screaming on the hilltop above the amusement  park, and Doc Savage left hastily, gliding

down to the water and using  his fabulous strength to launch the speedboat. He was so far out on the  river

before the first officer entered the park that the presence of  the speedboat was not connected with the three

dead men by the gate. 

The Hudson was wide at that point, and Doc used binoculars, a pair  of which were pocketed in the unusual

speedboat to study the wharf  before the Coastal Yacht Club. He saw standing upon the wharf the Khan  Nadir

Shar, tail and exotic in appearance, even from that distance; and  behind the Khan, the sprawled forms that

were the girl, Joan Lyndell,  and bleached, brown Tananese. The latter were still unconscious from  the effects

of the chemicalsalt shrapnel, but the Khan must have  escaped the stuff. 

Doc Savage did not send the speedboat across to the wharf, but only  studied the scene through the binoculars

long enough to become certain  that no police had come upon the abandoned yacht club, a fact that was  not

remarkable considering that the club was on a section of the river  front little frequented at this season of the

year. 

Doc went downstream, crossed to the Mahhattan shore and tied up at  the point at which he had left his car. 

The mysterious thin man who had been rescued from the Tananese at  the refinery was still in the car,

unconscious from the drug which Doc  had administered, his attitude surprisingly like that of a sleeping  man,

and Doc went over his clothing, something he had done before. He  did it more thoroughly now. 

The garments were costly, and had been fashioned by a tailor in  Shanghai, China. There was nothing in the

man's pockets, nor concealed  in seams or lining of his clothing. 


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Doc got a case out of the cardoor pocket, filled a hypo needle  with a dark fluid and emptied it into the

sleeping man's arm. The  fellow then stirred and began to show life, sitting up finally. He did  not speak for a

long time; when he did, his words were clear, his  sentence structure coherent "What quaint methods you use,"

he said  dryly. 

"Want to talk?" Doc asked. 

"Loquacity was always a failing of mine," the stranger smiled.  "What shall we discuss? The weather? Rather

chilly, what?" 

Doc's weird flakegold eyes rested unmoving upon the man's face,  and the fellow, for the first time, showed a

trace of uneasiness. 

"I can administer drugs which will cause you to talk," Doc told  him. "That may he necessary." 

The man bowed slightly. "I believe I remarked that your methods are  quaint." 

"It is possible you are keeping quiet because you misunderstand the  situation," Doc told him. 

The stranger studied Doc's bleached features intently. 

"You are aiding Joan Lyndell?" he asked. "Is that right?". Doc  watched the man's face. It was as devoid of

expression as any he had  ever seen, and Doc had made an intensive study of the tricks emotions  play on

faces. 

"So far," Doc said, "I have only been endeavoring to aid my men. I  was thrust into this. There has been no

explanation of what it is all  about." 

"Are you going to help Joan Lyndell?" asked the man. 

"I help only those who deserve it," Doc countered. 

The man said jerkily, "Then you will not help her." 

"Why not?" 

"She is the Mystic Mullah," said the stranger bluntly. 

DOC put questions, but the stranger closed up and fell back upon  his facetious manner of answering

questions. He remarked that the air  was bracing; that he was hungry; that the river was beautiful with the

morning sun upon it  and he would not commit himself beyond that. 

He did not try to get out of the car as Doc drove north toward the  abandoned yacht club. He refused twice to

give his name. But that  information was forthcoming when they reached the yacht club. 

The Khan Nadir Shar came striding to meet Doc. The tattooed serpent  design was brazen upon the Oriental

potentate's forehead, and he looked  very healthy, very powerful. 

The Khan did not see the thin man in Doc's car until he was close.  Sight of the fellow caused him to wrench

up abruptly. His hand drifted  to a pocket, flicked in, and came out with a gun which he must have  taken from

one of the unconscious Tananese. 


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"So you succeeded," he said distinctly, carefully. 

"What do you mean?" Doc asked. 

The Khan bobbed his hooknosed head at the stranger. 

"Oscar Gibson," he said. "Is that his name?" Doc queried. 

"It is," the Khan nodded. 

"You know his business?" Doc demanded. 

"Many men know that  to their sorrow," said the Khan. "This man   " 

"It's a damned lie!" Oscar Gibson rapped suddenly. 

"This man is an agent of the Mystic Mullah!" continued the Kilan. 

"A lie!" exploded Gibson. "It cannot be proved!" 

The Khan's forehead grew red and angry around the tattoo mark which  marked him as the divinely ordained

ruler of Tanan, a monarch who  possessed absolute power over his subjects, as had his royal ancestors  for

many generations before him. 

"This man knows who the Mystic Mullah is  if the creature is  actually a living being, or perhaps I should

say, living beast," the  Khan said crisply. "it was in my capital city of Tanan that suspicion  first shadowed his

path, and my soldiers seized him. He told them he  was an agent of the Mystic Mullah. Then he  escaped." 

Oscar Gibson made a snarling sound. His hands whipped to his breast  and tore at his shirt and undershirt.

Opening them, his chest was  revealed. His torso was hideous. Instead of skin, there was a nodular  expanse of

scar tissue. 

"Coals from camp fires," gritted Gibson. "They dropped them on me,  glowing redhot, one at a time! I told

them what they wanted to hear,  not the truth." 

"My chief, Mihafi, was in charge of the soldiers who seized you,"  the Khan told Gibson precisely. "Mihafi

said there was no torture." 

"A lie!" Gibson snapped. "Mihafi lied!" 

Doc Savage looked at Gibson intently. 

"A few minutes ago, you gave me the name of the person who is the  Mystic Mullah," he said. "Have you any

proof of that?" 

"Only conviction," said Gibson; "nothing else." 

The Khan's voice became suddenly shrill. 

"Who did he name?" he demanded. 


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Doc Savage seemed not to hear, but walked toward the yacht club and  around it until he saw the girl, Joan

Lyndell. 

They worked together, the three men, transferring Joan Lyndell and  the Tananese into the yacht club, for it

was possible that some curious  person might sight the prone, motionless forms, if they were left  outside, and

call the police. 

Doc Savage administered restoratives to the bleached, brown men in  quick succession, first tying them

securely, so that they could not  move about. After all of the Tananese were conscious and fastened, Doc

revived the girl. 

There was something admirable in the way the young woman recovered  from her period of senselessness, for

she was not at all hysterical,  and did not speak until she had full command of her faculties. 

Oscar Gibson looked closely at Doc Savage, then away in such a  manner that his glance conveyed meaning. 

"A remarkable young woman,' he said pointedly. 

Doc Savage began speaking. His voice was quiet. He showed by no  mannerism that he was perturbed, or that

he was concerned over the fact  that all five of his aides were in the hands of the Mystic Mullah's  followed. He

told of what had happened in the amusement park across the  river. 

"Now," he finished, "who is the Mystic Mullah?" 

The Khan Nadir Shar bowed his head slightly. "A devil, a fiend such  as your white man's hell, or the mol gha

of my people, never produced!  The Mystic Mullah is a menace to my subjects, to myself, to all of the  world!" 

"Be specific," Doc requested. 

The girl took up the explanation. 

"Years ago, my father went to Tanan," she said. "He was the first  white man to come there, and the only

white man ever permitted to live  there. He was a trader, and he established a trading organization,  building it

until it spread over Tanan and the surrounding desert and  mountains. Four years ago he died, and  " 

"Made you probably the richest woman in the world," Oscar Gibson  interjected bluntly. He wheeled upon

Doc Savage. "She has more money  than any two of your rich men put together. She may be the wealthiest

person alive." 

Joan Lyndell eyed the young man coldly. 

"You have insufferable manners," she told him.  "I wish I knew who  you are." 

"He is an agent of the Mystic Mullah," snapped the Khan. 

"A lie!" yelled Gibson. 

"We were talklng about the Mystic Mullah," Doc suggested. Joan  Lyndell turned her back on Gibson. There

was a composure about her  manner, an easy sureness. 


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"More than a year ago, we first heard of the Mystic Mullah," she  said. "A man was found dead in the street, a

wealthy man, one holding a  high position in my trading company. Not until weeks later did we learn  that this

man had been driven distraught by the apparition of a hideous  green face which would appear at night,

demanding money of him and  threatening death unless he complied. 

"The sums demanded were tremendous! The man was a millionaire,  compared with American money, but

complying with the demands would have  left him a pauper. Obviously, he was killed because he refused." 

The Khan Nadir Shar said abruptly, in a voice in which emotion was  thick: "We speak only of the rich. It is

not for them I worry. Let us  speak of the poor, my subjects who have died since that day, a year  past, when

the Mystic Mulish first struck." 

Joan Lyndell nodded. 

"We began to hear of the Mystic MulIah," she said. "The stories  were horrible, of men who died with

fantastic green serpents, the green  soul slaves of the Mystic Mullah, crawling over them And the souls of

these men became slaves of the Mystic Mulish. We do not know how many  have died. Perhaps a thousand;

perhaps more. But there has been enough  that all of Tanan is terrified, and none dare mention the Mystic

Mullah  in public." 

"Aimless killing?" Doc asked. 

Joan Lyndell shook her head. "On the contrary, it has a very  definite purpose. Only those who do not believe

the Mystic Mullah is a  supernatural power, not human at all, are the victims. In other words,  the Mystic

Mullah is building himself up an invisible empire founded on  terror. 

"Countless thousands of Tananese do his slightest bidding, or the  bidding of those who are his subjects,

because they fear not to do so.  There are deaths every day. Always, they are the same. They are  stricken in

the night, or the darkness. They are heard screaming.  Sometimes those who rush to them see hideous green

things about them,  but these vanish, and the victims are left with broken necks, always." 

The young woman was speaking slightly bookish English, an  indication that she had conversed in a foreign

language so much that  the found her mother tongue a bit awkward. 

"There is talk that I am to be overthrown," the Khan Nadir Shar put  in grimly. "There is to come a day when

the Mystic Mullah will take my  life with these things he calls his green soul slaves. And, later, he  will spread

his domain over all of Asia, and perhaps beyond." 

Oscar Gibson, looking steadily at Doc Savage, asked, "How much of  it do you believe?" 

John Lyndell glared at him. "You are calling me a liar!" 

Gibson scowled at her. 

"I'll call you anything I please, my dear young lady," he advised.  "The billion or so dollars that you are worth

does not overawe me." 

"You will keep quiet until you are called on," Doc told 'him. 

Gibson smiled thinly, fiercely. "Do not let yourself be taken in,"  he said. 


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THE Khan, as if to end the bickering, resumed: "Terror has seized  all of Tanan. You cannot realize what

horror has come over my people.  They are distraught. This monster, this Mystic Mullah, is like an  invisible

demon, striking down all who oppose him, demanding gifts of  money, of arms, and slaying through the

medium of his green soul slaves  those who refuse." 

"Unless you know the Orient, it is difficult to understand how such  a thing could happen," said Joan Lyndell.

"In Tannan, the people are  superstitious. For centuries, they have kept white men out, which was  all the more

difficult because Tanan is one of the richest countries in  the world. It is a strange land, where firearms are

still almost  unknown, and where the sword and the lance are the standard fighting  weapon." 

She paused and studied Doc Savage, as if wondering how much belief  he attached to the somewhat fantastic

story she was telling. 

"My own holdings in Tanan are endangered by the Mystic MuIlah," she  said. "Many of my most faithful men

have perished. I know, to an  absolute certainty, that I myself shall die unless the monster is  stopped." 

She began speaking more rapidly. 

"We discussed many methods of fighting the Mystic Mullah," she  said. "I am wealthy. The Khan is rich 

according to American  standards. We could have imported an army, but we were afraid it would  not work.

The Mystic Mullah can amass thousands of men, and the  mountain passes into Tanan would withstand the

most modern army. We  could have used airplanes, except that there are few suitable fields. 

"But, too"  she spread her hands  "the Mystic Mullah is only a  name, a hideous green face in the night, a

face no one has been able to  touch, nor to harm, although I personally have emptied a revolver into  it. How

could an army fight something like that? So we came for you." 

"I had heard of you," said the Khan. "Your fame is such, Doc  Savage, that it has reached even remote Tanan." 

He said this bombastically, in a manner that under circumstances  less grim would have been faintly

reminiscent of a politician passing  out flattery. 

"We took every precaution to keep our destination a secret," added  the girl. "But it doesn't seem to have done

any good." 

Oscar Gibson squinted at her. His expression was skeptical; his  whole manner one of disbelief, not of the

story being told, but of the  sincerity of the young woman herself. 

"You are very concerned over the fate of your wealth," he said  dryly. 

The girl eyed him with utter coldness, "I am interested in the  capture of the Mystic Mullah for another

reason," she said. 

Gibson lifted his brows. "Yes?" 

"Yes," Joan Lyndell said steadily. "When my father died, his neck  was found broken; and there was no mark

upon his body, nor was there  any conceivable explanation of how his neck had snapped." 

Oscar Gibson started slightly, opened his mouth, shut it, then  slowly moistened his lips. He began looking

Intently at the floor. 


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DOC Savage Gibson, as if on the point of questioning him; but  something about the man's expression caused

the bronze man to turn away  and bend above one of the bound Tananese. 

It was gloomy In the room, due partially to the boarded windows,  but due also to the fact that the morning,

which had started out so  clear and cool, was changing, after the manner of New York weather,  clouds

springing up magically out of nowhere and settling over the  bright sun and sinking like a fog into the deep cut

through which the  Hudson ran. 

The Tananese only glared at the bronze man. Doc addressed him in  the dialect of Tanan, speaking it so

perfectly that the Khan showed  surprise and the young woman gave him a sharp glance. 

"Who is the one who calls himself the Mystic MulIah?" Doc asked. 

The Tananese answered promptly, Insultingly. 

"A faithful dog knows his master," he said. 

"And it is a wise dog which finds a new master when the old one can  no longer care for him," Doc replied.

The Tananese shrugged, clipped  his lips together and shut his eyes. He lay perfectly still, his whole  attitude

that of one absolutely determined not to speak and resigned to  whatever fate befell him as a consequence 

Doc turned to another prisoner, but did not address him  immediately. Instead, be sank beside the man and

remained there,  motionless. After a bit, he drew from a pocket a small flat case and  held it where the

Tananese could see it. 

The case held only a lockpicking device and other small  implements, none of them dangerous, but the

prisoner did not know that  and, judging from his expression, used his imagination to picture some  lethal

horror inside the case. 

The Khan Nadir Shar came over and said solemnly, "You cannot  persuade these men to talk. They are from a

mountain tribe of Tanan, a  fierce, utterly cruel clan which has been a source of terror for  centuries." 

"Human nature is very much the same the world over," Doc told the  Khan. "Watch him break down." 

The bronze man held the shiny case closer to the eyes of the  Tananese captive, forcing the man to look at it

with an unwinking  intentness. So softly that its presence was at first scarcely  noticeable, the bronze man's

fantastic trilling note pealed out of  nothingness and began to trace its exotic note. It was a plan of utter

unreality, and it had a marked effect upon the Tananese. The fellow  stared. He breathed loudly. 

What Doc Savage was doing smacked of black magic, but the  explanation was simple; he was slowly

building up a hypnotic spell.  Once hypnotized, the Tananese might be Induced to talk. 

But his plan was never completed. 

Oscar Gibson shrilled suddenly, "Watch out! Across the room!" 

Doc Savage looked lip. Hideous green things were coming toward him.  They were almost transparent; he

could see completely through some of  the thinner ones. They averaged as long as his arm, but some were thin

as ropes, others almost as thick as Doc's vast chest. 

"The green souls!" gasped the girl, Joan Lyndell. 


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SPRINGING TO THE side and backward, the young woman swooped and  picked up an automatic from the

pile of weapons which had been taken  from the captured Tananese. Oscar Gibson saw her move, lunged as if

to  seize her. The young woman began shooting at the green horrors, Gibson  veered away from her, got one of

the guns and himself began firing. The  smashing of the guns was earsplitting. 

The emerald things were not visibly affected by the ballets. They  came along the floor, some seeming to

crawl on the dusty planks, others  a few Inches in the air. Their color blended surprisingly with the  darkness;

at times they were almost Invisible. 

They reached the first bound captive and he emitted an awful shriek  and threshed about. The olivaceous,

serpentine bodies squirmed on. They  did not travel smoothly. At times they jerked about. Again, they almost

stopped. They piled together and seemed to merge into larger  corporeities. 

There were more of them now. Hundreds! They danced across the floor  like fantastic dervishes, like evil

harpies creeping out of some  cavernous lair on the other side of the vast room, where it was too  dark to

distinguish details. 

Joan Lyndell and Oscar Gibson had emptied their guns by now. And  they had done no good. 

"Get out of here!" the girl cried loudly. "They cannot be harmed!" 

She began to retreat. The Khan followed her, hands out before him  as if to ward off the Incredible green

bodies. 

Doc Savage, instead of going back toward the door and the outside,  advanced. He bent forward a little. His

flake gold eyes strained to  view the green things more closely. 

Oscar Gibson yelled, "Careful! If you touch them, they'll kill  you!" 

Doc Savage did not answer, He picked up a fragment of trash from  the floor, threw it, The missile went

entirely through the largest of  the absinthe tinted things, causing a minor disturbance in its body. 

Doc got a second piece of trash, a lump of plaster. He stepped  close, threw again. He was trying to fathom the

mystery of the things.  But the light was insufficient. He raced fingers through his pockets,  searching for

matches. 

So intent was Doc Savage upon the green horror he was investigating  that he did not note that other

olivehued things were bouncing close  on either side, threatening to cut off his retreat to the door. 

The prisoners were screaming now, shrieking as if their very souls  were coming out. And as they were

touched by the serpentine marauders,  they began to writhe about in the throes of death agony. The necks of

the first to be affected were already beginning to jerk, to snap about  as if in the grip of invisible giants. 

Doc Savage abandoned his investigation of the fat green body and  swung to the nearest prisoner. He scooped

the fellow up got him across  a shoulder; then got two more of the captives one under either arm. 

He took two paces toward the door, stopped. The green things had  moved to the wall, shutting off retreat. He

was trapped. 

THE horrors were closing in. There were more hundreds of them. The  whole room seemed to have turned

green. 


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One drifted toward Doc Savage. He whipped down, to the side. One of  the Tananese he was carrying

contorted and managed to get his bound  legs underfoot. Tripped, Doc sank to a knee. The other two Tananese

began to kick and flail about. It was obvious that they did not want to  be rescued. 

Doc dropped them. There was nothing else to do. He needed all his  agility to escape the green things. He

worked backward. One of the  serpentine objects came close; Doc ducked, and it all but touched him.  Sliding

backward, he was almost against another. They were on all  sides. 

One of the Tananese was yelling, "Watch the green soul slaves of  our master overcome this white devil

ghost!" 

Again and again, Doc tried to reach the door. Each time, he was cut  off. He sprang high into the air. He got

down and crawled. He tried  battering holes in the plaster with his fists, hoping to break through  the wall. But

he encountered a wall of thick planks. Evidently the  yacht club building had been enlarged long ago. 

The bronze man was breathing noisily now. It was one of the few  times in his life that he had been trapped

with no avenue of escape at  hand. His present position seemed hopeless. He began to wrench off his  coat, to

rip off the sleeves, to cover his hands, his face. 

Then there was a shout from the door. Oscar Gibson came leaping  inside. He carried an old sail, a fragment

of twelve ounce duck fully a  dozen feet square. 

"Watch it!" he shouted, and flung the sail out before him. The  effect was surprising. The green things were

caught by the Sail, borne  down, whipped aside. Gibson skidded the sail forward, whipped it up  again and

literally fanned the green things aside. 

"Now!" he barked. 

There was no need for the suggestion. Doc savage was leaping  through the space the fanning sail had cleared.

Together, he and Gibson  reached the door and gained the outside. 

"Thanks," Doc Savage said quietly. 

Gibson grinned, said nothing. 

"Let's try the other side of the club," Doc rapped. "Those things  came from somewhere!" 

They ran through the soft mud, splashing and slipping, reached the  end of the old yacht club and sloped

around. They skidded to a stop and  stared. 

A giant of a man stood before them, a fellow with a vast frame and  tremendous hones and little flesh to spare,

a man who had a pair of  fists so huge that they seemed out of proportion, even when compared to  his huge

form. He was busy tearing a gag out of his mouth with hands  that bore ugly red welts, as if they had been

seared with hot irons.  There were more of the welts across his face. 

"Holy cow!" he boomed when he had the gag out. 

It was Renny, Doc's bigfisted engineer aide. 


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Chapter 12. ASIATIC EXODUS

DOC Savage ran on past Renny without speaking, rounded another  corner and studied the rear of the yacht

club. The ground seemed, if  anything, more muddy than it had before. The soft muck bore tracks,  some made

earlier in the morning, but some also that had undoubtedly  been imprinted within the last few moments.

These led to a side door;  the same tracks led away. 

Doc whirled. His eyes ranged the terrain surrounding the yacht club  There was bare ground  not mud  for

some distance, but beyond that  there was grass, then foliage of the park which flanked the Hudson at  this

point. Most of the landscaped vegetation was bare of leafage; but  here and there stood an evergreen, and

these were profuse enough to  furnish cover. 

Inside the yacht club, the shrieks were dying away in frightful  fashion. 

Doc ran back to where Renny stood. 

"How many brought you here from the amusement park?" he demanded. 

"Three or four," Renny boomed. 

"The Mystic Mullah with them?" 

"Darned if I know," said Renny. "They got into the yacht club  through a back door. Then they came out, ran

off and left me. I was  tied up and it took me a little time to get loose." 

He indicated a spot In the mud where lay lengths of ordinary cotton  clothes line, and added, "I was tied with

that stuff." 

Doc Savage whipped away, found the trail made by the departing  party which had brought Renny, and

followed it. The tracks were  distinct through the mud, even more distinct beyond, for mud had  scraped off

shoes onto grass. 

The prints processioned up a hill, took shelter behind evergreens,  went on, and eventually reached a path.

There they were lost to  anything but an extraordinary eye. Doc Savage managed to follow them up  to the wall

that topped the cliff, edging Riverside Drive. 

Cars whizzed steadily on the drive. Taxicabs cruised. There was no  hope of trailing the Tananese further.

They could have taken a cab;  they might have had their own car waiting. Doc went back and joined  Renny.

He found the bigfisted engineer and Oscar Gibson glaring at  each other. 

"One more squawk out of you and I'll pound you down into the ground  to your hips!" Renny was telling

Gibson fiercely. 

Gibson sneered. "I still say it is suspicious." 

Doc asked, "What is wrong now?" 

"This snipe," Renny jabbed a fist at Gibson. "This snipe thinks it  was funny because them brown geezers

turned me loose. He up and said  so." 


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"The Mystic Mullah's assistants are not in the habit of freeing  their prisoners," Gibson said nastily. 

Renny boomed, "They turned me loose for a danged good reason." 

"What was it?" Doc asked. 

"They've got Long Tom and Johnny," Renny said grimly. "They're  taking both of them to Tanan. They've

already chartered planes, and  they're going to take off immediately, carrying Long Tom and Johnny  along." 

"How do you know this?" Gibson interjected. 

"They told me," Renny rumbled. "They also told me to tell Doc." 

Gibson snapped, "I do not understand why they should do that." 

"They were baldfaced enough about it," Renny told him. "The Mystic  Mullah has got enough of Doc. He

don't care about fighting him any more  here in New York. He's simply grabbed two of Doc's men and carried

them  off to decoy Doc into Tanan, where the Mullah can fight on his own  ground. It's not a new gag." 

Joan Lyndell and the Khan Nadir Shar came around the yacht club,  and their faces were horrified and they

walked as if in trances. 

"The prisoners in the club," the girl said hoarsely, "are all  dead!" 

DOC Savage said; he might have been expecting the news. Nor did  Oscar Gibson show that it was other than

he expected. 

Doc asked Renny, "How did they get you in that amusement park?" 

"We barged into that prehistoric world exhibit, thinking we were  going to rescue Monk and Ham," the

engineer rambled, and swung his big  fists angrily. "The green snakes got us." 

He pointed at the ugly red welts across his hands and face. 

"Whenever the things touched us, it was as if they were redhot  irons," he continued. "They burned like fire.

We couldn't fight them  off. And after while, we all passed out." 

Oscar Gibson said incredulously, "But the green soul slaves usually  kill their victims." 

"They didn't kill us," Renny pointed out. "They just burned us, and  we passed out. Then we woke up with

headaches and feeling kinda weak.  We were bound and gagged. The guys who held us told me what to tell

Doc, then brought me here. That's all I know." 

"Any sign of Monk and Ham?" Doc asked. 

"No," Renny said slowly. "And that was bad. Those fellows did not  say a word about them. They talked like

they were going to take only  Johnny and Long Tom with them." 

"You asked them about Monk and Ham?" Doc queried. 

Renny nodded. "And they just gave me the ugly eye." 


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After that, silence fell, for Doc Savage seemed to have nothing  more to say, and Renny did not speak further.

Side by side, they swung  slowly toward the door of the yacht club. Their steps were slow, and  one knowing

them would have realized that they were enwrapped in a  shroud of gloom, of grief, believing as they did that

the actions of  the brown men of Tanan had indicated that both Monk and Ham were dead. 

It was hideous news, and the consideration of it steeped them in  sorrow. Monk and Ham had been associated

with them for years. They had  gone through incredible perils together, had saved each other's lives  on

occasion, and had been amused always by the friendly bickering  between Monk and Ham, the quarrel that

never died. 

Doc reached the door. Inside, bodies sprawled in the gloom. They  were contorted in grisly fashion, and their

heads hung as if their  necks had been emptied of bones. 

"Necks broken," Renny said thickly. "It's incredible! What infernal  thing does it, Doc?" 

The bronze man did not reply. He entered the room, stepping  cautiously, eyes alert for some sign of the green

horrors that were  like ghostly snakes. But none of the things were to be seen. They had  vanished as

inexplicably as they had come. 

Renny spoke again, hoarsely: "There's no need of hanging around  here, Doc. Let's get on the trail of Johnny

and Long Tom. Those fellows  may have taken off in their planes by now." 

Doc nodded. "We will follow them. That is what they wanted; but it  is the only thing we can do." 

The bronze man moved toward one of the doors that led deeper into  the old yacht club structure. 

"What are you going to do?" Renny demanded. 

"Search the place," Doc said. "We have had no time to do that. We  might find something." 

Renny started to object, then silenced himself, realizing what Doc  meant by "something"  the bodies of

Monk and Ham, perhaps. They began  to go through rooms that were littered with rubble, to pry into closets

which held old yachting caps, discarded white ducks, broken oars, old  sails and even a rusted, worthless

outboard motor. 

They came to a closet which was very dark, and Doc stepped inside,  scraping a match alight. Renny waited

outside. Suddenly, he stiffened. 

Doc's trilling had piped out, short, surprised, more violent than  was its usual note. It lasted only a brief

moment. Renny lunged  forward. 

Two forms were sprawled in the closet. Doc was untying them, and  they were kicking about, very much

alive. 

"Monk!" Renny exploded. "Ham!" 

The homely Monk, his mouth ridded of the gag, grinned, "Them brown  guys were chased off before they had

time to move us. Boy, I began to  think you'd never find us!" 

His hands and face were covered with the same type of red welts  which decorated Renny's fists and features.

Ham bore the same markings. 


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Ham, with the gag out of his mouth, spat violently and demanded,  "Where's my sword cane?" 

Chapter 13. THE SECRET SERVICE MAN

THE time was two days later. 

The plane had three motors, each of them supercharged with nearly a  thousand horse power and all labored in

unison, hurling the big ship  ahead at a speed which very seldom fell below two hundred miles an  hour. A

time or two, when the ship was very high, seeking out  stratospheric air currents that were favorable, the speed

had been far  above three hundred an hour. 

The wings of the ship were streamlined into the fuselage; the  landing wheels drew up in the hull, also shaped

so as to serve as a big  pontoon for landing on water; and nowhere did a strut or a brace wire  show outside the

streamlining. 

It was quiet in the cabin, almost unnaturally so. The brawl of the  big engines was but a peaceful murmur. The

silencing job on that cabin  was remarkable. Aeronautical engineers had come from some of the  world's most

advanced plants to inspect it. 

It was warm in the cabin, too; warm, although there was snow below,  vast whitenesses of it. It seemed as if

the plane had shifted to  another world, for there were no rivers visible on this terrain below,  no mountains.

There was only smooth whiteness. 

Had the ship dropped to a lower altitude, however, the ground would  have taken on some resemblance to an

earthy domain, for this was tundra  below, the amazing expanse of nearswamp which covers parts of Siberia. 

Renny was at the plane controls, nursing the airspeed meter,  endeavoring to get it up a bit higher without

racing the motors  unnecessarily. 

Monk and Ham, as usual, were quarreling. 

"You missing link!" Ham snarled. "I'll cut you open and see if you  look any more like a human inside than

you do on the outside!" 

The slender, waspish lawyer carried a sword cane, not the one with  which he had started out to investigate the

tug Whale of Gotham in New  York, for that one had been lost. 

This weapon was one from a stock of spares which Ham kept in his  club apartment. 

Monk, the homely chemist, scowled fiercely at Ham. 

"Just a big mouth and a lot of noise," he sneered. "You keep your  hands off that hog, or I'll give you a good

wringing and hang you up to  dry." 

Between the two belligerents, an interested observer to the  argument, was Monk's pet pig, Habeas Corpus.

Habeas had been named in a  manner calculated to aggravate Ham. He was a remarkable specimen of the

porker race, this Habeas Corpus. He was predominately ears, with a  generous proportioning of snout and

legs, the rest of him being thin  and scrawny. 

Habeas Corpus and Monk had joined company in Arabia so many months  ago that it was by now evident that


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the shote would never grow much  larger. He ate prodigiously without gaining an ounce. But Habeas had  also

demonstrated that, as a mental specimen, he was no ordinary  porker. He learned tricks with the ease of a

show dog, and Monk spent  most of his spare time training the shote. 

The immediate cause of Monk and Ham's quarrel was certain damage  Habeas Corpus had done to Ham's

immaculate traveling bag. Habeas had  gnawed practically the entire end out of the cowskin bag. 

"Habeas don't like cows," Monk explained. "When you pick your next  bag, don't have it made of cowskin." 

"It'll probably be pigskin," Ham gritted, and eyed Habeas  meaningly. 

The plane hit a down current and pitched sickeningly, so that they  all were forced to grasp the arm rests of the

seats to retain their  positions. 

"Such flying," Ham said. 

Renny called, "You start razzing me and I'll pick your arms and  legs off." 

The Khan Nadir Shar looked on with drowsy interest. He had been a  long time without sleep and he seemed

on the point of dropping off. 

Joan Lyndell sat across from Oscar Gibson, and they both looked  straight ahead, neither giving attention to

the other or even acting as  if the other existed. 

Renny made some calculations, put figures and words on a paper and  passed it back. 

"There's our position," he advised. '"We'll have to land In Novo  Sibirsk for refueling." 

DOC Savage, secluded in the rear of the plane, received the message  without comment, read it, then advised,

"Better radio ahead so that  gasoline will be ready." 

"You think the Mystic Mullah's men are still ahead of us?" Renny  called. 

"That is difficult to say," Doc replied. "They had fast planes." 

Doc and his men had made inquiries before taking off from New York  and had learned that two planes laden

with the brown men of Tanan had  actually taken off from a Gotham airport. The ships had been heard from  in

Nova Scotia; they had landed in Iceland, and had refueled at the  point of guns. Next word of them had come

from Finland, where they had  again refueled by force. It was that phantom trail which Doc Savage was

following. 

That the Tananese were still ahead, Doc had reason to believe, for  his own ship, delayed in starting some

hours, had hit bad weather which  the other craft must have missed. The North Atlantic had been  disturbed,

and there had been head winds, even up into the lower  stratosphere as far as the big speed plane could

penetrate. 

The bronze man closed the door of the compartment in the rear of  the plane and continued what he had been

doing  taking his exercises.  These exercises, over a period of years, were entirely responsible for  his

amazing physical development. He had been taking them now for  almost two hours, and not yet was he done.

He had gone through the same  intensive routine each day since childhood. Not only did Doc develop  his

muscles, but his five senses as well, using complicated apparatus  for that purpose. 


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The aluminum hue lent by the chemical bleaching agent had faded,  allowing Doc's bronze color to return. 

Doc was completing his exercises when the plane tilted sharply and  the changed note of the motors Indicated

a descent. He left the  compartment and went forward.. 

"Novo Sibirsk," Renny said. 

NOVO Sibirsk, situated, on the navigable Ob River, was a typical  metropolis of southern Siberia. The river

was off to the left now, with  its nine spans plainly distinguishable, and the thin thread of the  TransSiberian

railway stretching away Into the infinite distance.  There were large buildings below, grain elevators and flour

mills,  probably, and everywhere was a bright newness. Columns of smoke curled  up from the iron smelting

plants. 

Renny cut the motors and opened the cabin windows in order to see  better. At a very low altitude, they

scudded over the fringe of the  town. They were so low that the odor of a tannery was plainly  distinguishable

as they glided above it. 

The airport appeared, its modernity a mark of the industrial  efforts of the Soviets. The hangars were

substantial, and snowplows had  boosted the field clear of deeper drifts. The air lashing in through  the plane

windows was bitterly cold. 

Renny cranked the landing wheels out of their streamlined recesses  and planted the ship with a skilled ease

on the field. Whooping gusts  from the propellers pulled the plane toward the hangars and the little  flags on

flexible staffs which marked the location of the gas tanks. 

Renny cut the motors when close to the hangars. In the silence, the  snow squealed under the wheels; it wailed

louder when he applied the  brakes, and the craft came to a stop. 

Monk arose, stretched his furry arms and announced, "I'm gonna  stoke the human machine with some food." 

He opened the cabin door. 

Out of the nearby hangar popped a squad of men. They held rifles.  Obviously they had been concealed,

awaiting the moment the plane would  stop. 

"Something wrong!" Renny rapped. 

He snapped on the ignition switches, made passes at the starter  buttons. The hot motors crashed into life. The

plane veered around,  began moving. 

To the right, the left, on the front and rear, men sprang out of  the huge piles of snow which tractors had

pushed aside from the airport  runways. They gripped the ends of thin wire cables. They yanked these,

disclosing the fact the cables were buried in the snow. The men,  tugging on them, got them waisthigh and in

the plane's path. 

One cable snagged across the landing wheels, high enough that it  was above the streamlined pants, where it

would not slip off. 

"They can't hold us!" Renny boomed. 


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He was wrong. The men did not depend on physical strength alone to  hold the plane; for they tied the ends of

the wire cables around steel  rods which had been previously driven into the frozen earth. 

There was a jar as the plane snubbed against the lines. The cable  gave a little, the spring effect cushioning the

shock of the stoppage.  Then the big ship lay helpless. 

THE uniformed men dashed forward, rifles slanted across their  chests. There was military precision In their

movements. 

They wore the metal helmets of the Soviet military, with knitted  winter covers over the helmets and

protecting their ears from the  bitter cold. Their overcoats were very long, their boots huge. There  was not an

unshaven face among them. 

The leader trotted up alongside the plane door and lifted his  voice. 

"You will come out," he said in excellent English. "You are under  arrest!" 

Monk angrily hauled down a window and demanded, "Just what the  hades is the meaning of this?" 

"We have orders to search your plane," imparted the Soviet officer.  "It has been reported that you have been

taking pictures of Soviet  fortified areas." 

"Is that all you intend to do  search the plane?" Doc Savage put  in. 

"Yes," said the officer. 

"Go ahead," Doc told him. "But what I should like to know is what  instigated this. Who reported we had been

taking pictures?" 

"A cablegram came from Omsk." advised the Soviet commandant. "It  was signed merely by one who called

himself a 'Friend of the Soviet'." 

Monk breathed, so only Don could hear the words, "The Mystic  Mullah!" 

The Soviet soldiers entered the plane and directed all of the  occupants outside. Their manner was firm

without being roughshod; they  kept their rifles ready, but did not aim them. 

The commanding officer and two assistants did the searching. They  went through each item of baggage, not

scattering the contents, but  carefully repacking after examination. They came to the last of the  items of

baggage without finding anything. After that, they began going  over the plane itself, carefully prying at wall

paneling to see if it  had been loosened recently. They found nothing. 

Two men clambered out on the wings and opened the large caps of the  gas tanks. Flashlights were brought

and thrust down into the apertures. 

"Sh'o'!" exploded one in his native tongue. "E'ta iako'ye? What is  that?" 

They tried to fish in the tank, hut the opening was too small.  Finally, they summoned a small boy, and the

urchin, peeling his  sheepskin koortka, inserted a thin arm into the tank and brought it out  dripping gasoline

and triumphantly clutching a long glass bottle in  which was a curl of photographic prints. 


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The officer examined these. 

"Be samneneeyer," he said grimly. "Without a doubt! These are  photographic prints of some of our fortified

areas." 

Monk yelled, "Say, guy, there's something screwy" 

"You will have a chance to tell it at the trial," the Soviet  officer said grimly. 

THE jail was very modern, except for the heating arrangement. It  was bitterly cold in the large, white cell.

The naked walls echoed back  the steady tramping of a sentry somewhere down the corridor. 

Monk, a gloomy expression on his homely features, sat on a low  bench and scratched the ears of Habeas

Corpus, his pet pig. 

"There ain't no doubt of it," he said, disgust in his small voice.  "Back there at one of them places we got

gasoline, somebody put that  glass jar of pictures into the gas tank. Some airport attendant was  bribed to do

the job. If this ain't a swell note!" 

Ham requested unkindly, "Will you shut up! We can all guess what  happened. But the important thing

iswhat to do about it?" 

Monk went on as if he had not heard. "That picture business is the  fine hand of this Mystic Mullah. There

ain't no doubt about that,  either. Say, what do these Soviets do with spies? Do they shoot 'em?" 

"Shooting is employed only in time of war," Doc told him dryly.  "They usually send them to Siberian prison

camps for thirty or forty  years." 

"Pleasant thought," Monk muttered. 

Oscar Gibson stood to one side, against the barred door of the  cell, and watched the pacing sentry. Gibson

had said little. As a  matter of fact, he had spoken only when necessary since they had left  New York. Not that

he had been left alone, for Monk, Ham and Renny, as  well as Doc Savage, had had tries at questioning him.

But Oscar Gibson,  where information about himself was concerned, had the characteristics  of a clam. 

Just who Oscar Gibson was, what connection he had with the affair  of the Mystic Mullah' was a complete

mystery. 

Monk lifted the pig, Habeas Corpus, by both ears and swung him back  and forth, a procedure that Habeas

seemed to enjoy immensely. 

"What do you say, Doc  shall we try a break?" he demanded. 

Doc Savage shook his head slowly. He was watching Oscar Gibson, who  still leaned against the barred door.

The pacing sentry had stopped  outside. He leaned close to the bars. Oscar Gibson said something. His  voice

was so low that it did not reach Don Savage. 

Then Gibson reached into his mouth and withdrew a bridge of false  teeth, the first indication any of them had

that some of his molars  were artificial. He held the bridgework so that only the guard could  see it. 


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The guard's start was plainly distinguishable. Gibson said  something further, and they could tell only that he

was speaking  Russian fluently. 

The guard whipped out a key and unlocked the barred door. 

Monk came to life suddenly, dropped Habeas and lunged headlong for  the door, hoping to bowl Gibson

against the guard and thus open the way  for an escape. But Gibson was too fast for him. He got through the

door, slammed it, and the automatic lock clicked securely. 

Monk took the force of his charge with a shoulder, bounced back,  and glared at Gibson. "What's the idea,

guy?" he growled. 

"I believe the proper Yankee terminology is 'Nuts to you'," Gibson  said airily. 

GIBSON MARCHED AWAY marched away in company with the guard, and  Monk stood for some

moments by the door, grumbling to himself. 

"Danged if I can make that guy Gibson out," Monk finally announced,  disgustedly. 

"He is a mysterious person," Joan Lyndell agreed. 

"He is one of the Mystic Mullah's agents, I am convinced," rumbled  the Khan Nadir Shar, and the tattooed

serpent coiled around the jewel  on his forehead, glowed redly with anger. 

Doc Savage seemed to be listening. 

"The guard went outside with Gibson!" he rapped. "Now is our  chance!"  The bronze man flung to the

window. This was a tunnellike  opening through which very little light came, for the wall was fully  five feet

thick. The glass panes closing the window were at the outer  extremity, so that prisoners could not reach them

and use the glass for  stabbing purposes. 

The inner bars were almost an inch thick and bedded deeply in  stone. Removing them was beyond the ability

of naked hands, as Doc  found out when he grasped them and wrenched; they barely groaned in  their sockets. 

The prisoners had been searched most thoroughly, the men being  forced to remove their clothing in the

process. But they had been given  back their own garments. 

Doc still wore his necktie. It was loose about his neck. He  stripped it off, inserted a thumb in the large end

and ripped it open.  The lining was a yellowish, stiff cloth which looked like the usual  lining put in neckties.

Doc pulled the lining out. 

He picked several buttons off his coat, including the ornamental  ones on the sleeves. These crushed with

surprising ease, became a  brownish powder as he ground them between his corded fingers. He placed  the

powder along the necktie lining, as if he were making a cigarette  of strange nature, then rolled the lining,

enclosing the powder. 

His movements became swifter. He tore the long cylinder he had made  into four pieces. He bound these

around the lower and upper ends of two  bars. 

"What on earth are you doing?" Joan Lyndell breathed wonderingiy. 


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Monk grinned and cackled, "I get it! I get it!" He ran forward,  fishing in a pocket. 

"They left me one match," he chuckled. "That'll speed it up." 

"It will," Doc agreed. 

The bronze man struck Monk's match carefully, applied it to the  yellow rolls of necktie lining, and the results

were surprising. Came a  loud hiss. The cell became blindingly white from the light of the  burning substance.

They all felt the tremendous heat. 

Doc backed away and waited. The substance he had secured to the  bars continued to hiss. It was burning with

a violence that rivaled the  heat of an electric torch. There was the same flickering. The light  became too

brilliant for their eyes and they squinted, covered their  faces. 

"What is it?" Joan Lyndell gasped. 

"Ever hear of thermite?" Monk asked her. 

"No." 

"A MIXTURE of aluminum powder and iron oxide," Monk told her. "It  is used in welding, principally. That

necktie lining was impregnated  with the aluminum powder, and the buttons were the oxide. There were  some

other chemicals mixed in with it to make it more efficient than  ordinary thermite. It generates a terrific heat

when it burns." 

Doc Savage was balling his coat about his hands, forming a pad.  Using this as a protection, he lunged at the

bars. 

These were white hot at the ends, red in the middle, and were  bending slightly of their own weight. 

His impact against the first bar caused it to break. He knocked the  second one out. Using the coat, he brushed

the thermite and molten  steel away, as much of it as he could. Then he threw the coat over the  glowing bar

ends, and before it burned through or burst into flame,  scrambled over and got into the tunnellike aperture of

the window. 

He knocked the glass from the outer end. There was snow heaped on  the sill. He scooped that up In his hands

and used it to cool the bar  ends so that the others could clamber up. 

THE prison, although its interior was modern, had been built  centuries ago, possibly having once served as a

fortress, for there was  a moat surrounding the wall. This was now banked full of snow, and Doc  Savage,

dropping down, sank considerably over his head. Lying in the  pit he had made, he looked upward and made

sure there were no guards on  the high walls. 

The others followed him down. There was harder snow under the  fluffy upper layer, and they managed to

work across the moat and  scramble out on the other side. They ran across a stretch of park where  naked trees

reared up around them, their hurried feet kicking up clouds  of snow. 

Some one yelled in Russian: "Stoi! Stoi!" 

"This way!" Doc rapped. "They're yelling for us to halt." The  fugitives dived into a small creek which wound

through the park and  descended a hill toward the river Ob. This sheltered them. A few  bullets searched them


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out with vicious squeals. 

The Soviet prison guards yelled a few more "Stois!" and then began  ringing a bell. The bell must have been

tremendous. Its reverberations  shuddered out and undoubtedly carried for miles. 

The creek was frozen over, packed with snow; but here and there ice  was uncovered. Monk, hitting one of

these slick stretches with too much  speed, slipped and fell, much to the discomfort of Habeas Corpus, whom

he had thrust inside his coat for easier carrying. The pig began  squealing. 

"Knock him in the head," Ham suggested. 

Monk only snorted. 

They passed under a bridge, and the driver of a kareta crossing  over the stone structure saw them, reined up

and began to yell at the  top of his voice. This frightened his wild Siberian ponies, and they  promptly ran off,

so that the driver's yells, if they were heard, would  probably be construed as directed at his steeds. 

"That was a lucky break!" Renny boomed. 

They reached another bridge, climbed up beside it, and trotted down  a road. A few moments later they saw

the airport ahead, the hangars  looking larger than they were because of the expanse of snow. 

"Lookit!" Monk exploded. "I'll say we're getting the breaks.  There's our plane, with the motors turning over!" 

The big plane stood on the field, slightly away from the nearest  hangar, in a position as convenient for their

purpose as could have  been wished for. The three propellers were spinning disks of alloy, and  the exhaust

stacks spilled occasional gusts of oil smoke. 

"This can't be real!" Renny thumped. 

They raced toward the plane. Eyes were alert. But no one appeared  to head them off. No alarm was shouted. 

Doc bounded into the plane, plunged forward to take the control  bucket. The others piled into the cabin. Ham

barked something  unintelligible but glad when he discovered his sword cane reposing on  the plane floor

where he had left it. He pounced upon it. Monk  clambered into the ship, carrying Habeas by one oversize ear,

then  banged the door. 

Doc sawed the throttles open; the ship lifted its tail and nearly  three thousand thundering horsepower sucked

it across the field and up  into the cold sunlight. 

THE WINDOWS WERE open, and Doc closed them. They were  doublepaneled, equipped to thwart frost

formation and to keep out  sound. The cabin became quiet as the interior of a hearse. 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled gloomily. "We were nearly out of gas when  we landed. What're we gonna do for

fuel? We're still a good thousand  miles from Tanan." 

Doc said, "Have a look at this instrument panel, Renny." The  bigfisted engineer ambled forward, his long

face wearing an expression  slightly more sorrowful than usual  if that were possible  and eyed  the board.

At first, he caught nothing of significance. And then he  saw. 

"Fuel gauge!" he barked. "Our tanks are full!" 


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Joan Lyndell came up behind him and said, "That is strange! And  isn't it unusual that we should find the

plane at the airport with the  engines running. It was as if it had been made ready for us." 

"It was," said a new voice. 

They whirled. The tone was distinct in the soundproofed cabin. They  all recognized it. 

Oscar Gibson, thinwaisted and narrowlipped, stood in the rear of  the cabin. His lips had a faint upward

warp at the corners, and there  was a small sparkle to his eyes. He had been stowed away in the rear

compartment. 

"I must say that I barely reached the airport in time to have them  prepare the plane for you," he said dryly. "I

felt sure, once word  spread that you had escaped, that you would head for the airport. But  how did you get

out of that prison cell? It is supposed to be one of  the strongest in Russia? 

Nobody answered him. 

"You had this plane arranged for us?" Renny boomed unbelievingly. 

Gibson bowed slightly. "I would have arranged your release, as  well, if you had allowed me a little time." 

"I don't believe you would've!" Monk snorted. "Just who are you,  anyhow?" 

Gibson inserted a little finger between his lips and worked out the  bridge of false teeth. He turned this over,

presenting the rather  unusually wide gold bar for their inspection. 

Engraved on the bar was a peculiar design. It incorporated the  hammer and sickle of the Soviet. There were a

few engraved words of  Russian. Doc read them and studied the design. 

"Secret Police," he said. 

"Exactly," said Oscar Gibson. "I am a member. More correctly I am  one of the four highest ranking officers." 

"But you're English!" Monk exploded. 

"I was born in Texas," Gibson said gravely. "Some day, when I get  tired of adventuring, I shall go back there.

In the meantime, I shall  make every effort to stamp out one of the greatest curses ever  afflicted upon the

human race, the Mystic Mullah." 

"You are working for the Soviet on this?" Doc asked. 

Gibson nodded. "Secretly and without official public  acknowledgment, of course. The Soviet wants peace in

the Orient. This  devil, the Mystic Mullah, is hungry for power. He is slowly taking over  Tanan. He practically

has it in the palm of his hand now. After Tanan  will come Tibet, Afghanistan, Mongolia, China and,

eventually, Russia." 

"This thing must be big," Monk said slowly. 

"It is," Gibson agreed. "Big  and horrible!" 


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Doc Savage turned back to the control wheel and the big plane  pointed its baying snout at the sun and

climbed toward the lower zone  of stratosphere. 

Chapter 14. THE HUMAN SPIDER

IT is written that the Genghis Khan, mighty Mongol of the twelfth  century, whose ferocious soldiers probably

set the alltime record for  slaughtering prisoners of war when they took a million and a half lives  in a

captured city, once pushed a campaign against Tanan, and failing  to take it, beheaded those of his war chiefs

who had been in charge of  the campaign and had their graves marked with the legend: 

        These are fools, for they have

        butted a stone wall with their heads,

        yet they recognized the stone wall not

        until they had cast away a hundred

        thousand fighting men and more.

Had the violent Genghis returned from whatever afterlife his deeds  warranted him, and visited Tanan, he

would probably have been more at  home than any other spot on the globe, for Tanan was much as it had  been

in Genghis Khan's day. The soldiers still carried their short,  fearful swords, wore quilted armor; and such

guns as they had  and  they had a few, for the Orient sired the invention of gun powder  were  unique relics,

more cannon than rifle, requiring two men to carry them.  They fired anything from a ball of copper pounded

from the rich natural  deposits in Tanan, to a fistful of pebbles, or, if a man were  desperate, various oddly

shaped Tananese coins. 

Yet the arrival of Doc Savage's plane did not create the awe that  might be expected, for it developed that Joan

Lyndell kept two planes  of her own, both speedy, marvelously appointed craft piloted by  exarmy fliers

from the Chinese Nationalist air force. 

Doc Savage and his men were not in Tanan long before they began to  realize that Joan Lyndell was a

remarkable young woman indeed. In New  York, and in the wild chase across the north Atlantic and over

Russia,  she had been but an extremely pretty bit of femininity who was rumored  to have inherited a fortune

from a wealthy trader father. 

In Tanan, it developed, she was a power. Indeed, Doc Savage began  to understand before long that she was

actually more of an influence  than the Khan Nadir Shar himself. Oscar Gibson, the remarkable young

American who was a high Soviet secret service official, verified this. 

"The girl dictates the Khan's policies of government," he advised.  "The Khan is a nice enough old war horse,

but he is no statesman. The  girl could buy and sell him a dozen times. Her private force of company  guards,

organized to protect the caravans which she sends into the wild  mountain regions to trade with the savage

tribesmen, is a larger force  than the Khan's own army, and better equipped." 

"Yet you said she was the Mystic Mullah," Doc reminded him. "What  made you say that?" 

"I might have been mistaken. I will know when I find out if her  father really died of a broken neck, like the

Mystic Mullah's victims."  After that, Gibson clipped his lips together tightly. 


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A band of Joan Lyndell's company guards met them at the young  woman's private flying field. There were

nearly four hundred of them,  and they marched with a precision that aroused the appreciation of  Renny, who

had an eye for military things. 

Joan Lyndell herself retired to the compartment at the rear of the  plane, and when she reappeared, she wore

the garb of a Tananese woman  of royal descent. The attire was exotic, consisting of an embroidered  satin

jacket embellished with silver and gold, and a rather voluminous  skirt, with a sash of incredibly brilliant

green There was a headdress  equally as elaborate, a resplendent affair with jewels and entwIning  gold wire.

And she had affixed rather enormous earrings to her ear  lobes. 

"You are a knockout!" Monk told her. 

"When in Tanan, it is better to dress as the Tananese do," she  said. "You would be well to take that advice

yourselves." 

TWO hours later, Monk was holding his sides, laughing. His mirth  was hysterical, and finally he sat down

weakly. 

"What the welldressed lawyer will wear!" he choked, "What a  picture you are!" 

Ham scowled blackly. He had just donned the clothing of a Tananese  gentleman, which consisted principally

of more than a dozen square  yards of coarse cloth draped about his person in folds. He had tried  various

methods of folding. Now he glared at Monk and demanded, "How do  they keep these things on?" 

"Darned if I know," Monk told him. "I used safety pins." 

A part of their equipment, they discovered, was a short sword, and  they had noted that the Tananese wore

these not in the conventional  fashion dangling at the side, but strapped directly across the stomach,  where it

interfered with the operation of both arms. 

The door opened unexpectedly. Both Monk and Ham whirled. The pig,  Habeas Corpus, squealed and scooted

under a low bench. 

The individual who had entered the room was both huge and  unprepossessing of feature. His skin was brown,

scarred, his lips  thick, and he walked with a pronounced limp. He carried two swords  across his middle

instead of one, the hilts projecting on either side  where they could be grasped conveniently. 

"Sabah elkheyr!" he roared. 

"No savvy," Monk growled. "And who the heck are you to come busting  in here? How'd you like to have a

taste of your own ears?" 

"That is no way to speak to a Tananese who merely greeted you with  the top of the morning," the newcomer

said dryly. 

Monk swallowed twice, then exploded, "Doc!" 

"Think the disguise will do?" Doc asked. 

Monk grinned. "What's first on the program?" 


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"I am going out and roam through the streets," Doc advised. "Renny  is going to serve as personal bodyguard

to the Khan Nadir Shar for the  time being. You two will go everywhere with Joan Lyndell, when she is  not in

her private quarters." 

Monk snorted, "Am I going to find that job hard to take!" 

Ham suggested hopefully, "Maybe Monk had better guard Oscar  Gibson." 

"My pal," Monk growled. "I oughta shake you out of the bundle of  cloth you're wearing for a suit." 

Doc Savage, his personality completely submerged in the Tananese  disguise which he had donned, passed out

through the door. His stride  even matched the shuffling gait of the lower class of Tananese, a gait  which had

come of years of climbing mountains and of following  slowmoving yaks. 

Monk and Ham, their unusual garments  garment, rather  adjusted  to the demands of propriety, if not to

their own satisfaction, shuffled  off and found Joan Lyndell. They were, at present, in her home. 

The young woman occupied an exquisitely carved, thronelike chair on  a raised dais which stood In the center

of an enormous room, the walls  of which were hung with tapestries. 

She was holding a sort of court, a steady stream of Tananese  passing before her, each sinking to his knees and

touching his head to  the floor, then speaking rapidly, or answering questions which the  young woman put to

them In the native tongue of Tanan. 

Not all of the men spoke Tananese, however. Two or three  individuals, instead of touching their heads to the

floor, merely stuck  out their tongues as far as they  could. This, Monk and Ham knew, was a  form of Tibetan

greeting, and they recognized that these men spoke  Tibetan. 

Joan Lyndell answered them smoothly in their own language, and Monk  and Ham, who comprehended that

language, realized that these were  representatives of the girl's trading company, reporting conditions to  their

chief. 

Behind Joan Lyndell sat two stenographers, taking down the  important details of what was said. 

There finally came a man who made a report that, from the girl's  expression, was very disturbing. 

SHE turned to Monk and Ham. 

"One of my trusted officers, a man occupying a position to  correspond with that of a vice president in an

American company, has  been absent from Tanan during the time I myself was gone," she advised  meaningly.

"He returned only today." 

Ham had scorned the blunt Tananese sword which had been furnished  with his native garb. He wore his own

sword cane belted across the  front of his stomach, instead of the other weapon. 

"You think he might be one of the Mystic Mullah's men who was in  New York?" he asked. 

"Those men were killers," said the girl. "This man is not that  type. He is Shallalah El Auwal, a man whose

ancestors have been  chieftains as far back as Tanan history goes. If he went to New York,  it is reasonably

certain that he is the Mystic Mullah." 


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"What are we going to do about it?" Monk asked grimly. 

"We will go and speak with this Shallalah El Auwal," Joan Lyndell  said grimly. "Where is Doc Savage?" 

"Out looking around," Monk advised. 

"Then we will go alone," said the young woman. 

The "alone" proved to be somewhat exaggerated. Fully two hundred  heavily armed guards accompanied

them, surrounding them, and a party  went on ahead, heating drums, shouting and jostling the ordinary

citizenry into side streets. 

But through the pomp and noise, Monk and Ham could  see things.  Tanan was a city of terror. Children are

usually present in the streets  of Oriental cities, hordes of ragged urchins being the rule. There were  none

abroad here. Nor were there any women out. All of the men to be  seen were heavily armed, and more than

one slunk away in a manner which  showed a guilty conscience. 

There was something else which smashed home the grisly nature of  the situation. At frequent intervals along

the streets there were piles  of stones, these being surrounded with prayer  wheels which spun  noisily with

every vagrant breeze. 

Atop each mound lay a body, and in each case, the dead man had a  broken neck. Some of the corpses had

been on their strange biers a  number of days, judging from their bloated aspect. 

"They started putting the bodies in the streets while the Khan  Nadir Shar was gone," Joan Lyndell said

hoarsely. "They say that the  Mystic Mullah decreed that this was to be done, on pain that the  relatives of the

dead man would also die. The true motive, of course,  was to add to the spell of horror which the Mystic

Mullah has been  building up." 

"The Khan has ordered it stopped, and the bodies removed. They do  not seem to be removing them, however.

And that makes me afraid that an  uprising is close at hand, when the Mystic Mullah will try to seize the

government." 

"People in Tanan continued to die while the Mystic Mullah was in  New York?" Monk asked wonderingiy. 

"Yes." The girl nodded. "And they say the Mullah also appeared here  each day, before different persons." 

"But he couldn't if he was in  " Monk shook his head, let that  sentence go unfinished, and said, "It beats

me!" 

THAT Shallalab El Auwal was a personage of importance was evident  from the magnificence of his dwelling

and the number of his retainers.  The palatial residence covered some acres, being situated inside a  courtyard

which was circled by numerous small houses. 

"It is the custom in Tanan, as in many Oriental countries, for all  the poor relatives of a rich man to come and

live with him," Joan  Lyndell explained. "The poor relations occupy the small dwellings." 

Shallalah El Auwal himself, it developed, lived in the glittering  edifice set in the central portion of the court.

Joan Lyndell directed  her cavalcade toward this. 

"If the guy is the Mystic Mullah, we'd better be careful," Ham  suggested. 


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"We will be careful," the girl agreed. 

She gave orders, and her men spread out, encircling the central  dwelling. Monk and Ham eyed the girl's

personal guards distrustfully,  however, for they could detect a certain slouchiness in their manner, a  surly

undercurrent which indicated that they were not to be depended  upon too greatly. 

"Bet about half of them mugs have gone over to the Mystic Mullah,"  Monk breathed. 

"It looks like this whole thing is a powder keg," Ham said,  forgetting himself so much as to agree with Monk. 

Unexpectedly, from within the house of Shallalah El Auwal a great  babble of yelling arose. There were

screams, wails. Gongs clanged. 

"I figured there'd be trouble," Monk announced grimly. "They're  gettin' ready to put up a scrap." 

"Wait!" Joan Lyndell said sharply. "Something has happened!" 

She ran forward, stopped just before the door of the house, and  called out sharply and repeatedly until she got

an answer. Then she  came back to Monk and Ham. 

"We misjudged the Shallalah El Auwal," she said slowly. 

"Whatcha mean?" Monk demanded. 

"He is dead," said Joan Lyndell. 

THE uproar in the house of unfortunate Shallalah El Auwal was  getting louder, coming nearer the door. Soon

a procession appeared,  several men coming first, carrying a ponderous platform affair upon  which rested the

body of a man. 

"It is Shallalah El Auwal," Joan Lyndell affirmed, then turned so  as to look away from the corpse,. 

A man came up to the young woman and spoke rapidly. Joan heard him  through, then translated for the

benefit of Monk and Ham. 

"Shallalah El Auwal was threatened by the Mystic Mullah, who  demanded all of his wealth," she explained.

"Shallalah El Auwal hid  himself away, letting it be said that he was absent from Tanan. Today,  one of the

mountain chiefs sent him a present of a pretty dancing girl,  and her charms caused him to show himself. That

was his death." 

"His neck is not broken," Monk decided after eying the dead man  again. "What killed him?" 

"A human spider," Joan Lyndell replied. 

"Huh?" Monk was puzzled. 

"Listen," said the girl. "They are bringing the spider now." A  group of screaming women appeared at the

door, and after some  struggling about, got themselves outside. They numbered nearly a dozen. 

"The wives and dancing girls of Shallalah El Auwal," Joan Lyndell  offered. 


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The excited women were doing a strange thing. Each held the end of  a long rope. These radiated from a

common center like spokes from a  wheel. At the central focus point of the ropes, an extremely pretty  young

Tananese girl was tied. Her clothing was torn, and she was  bruised; cuts in her smooth brown skin dripped

scarlet. 

One of the wives holding the ropes dug a cobble out of the  courtyard and hurled it at the girl prisoner. It

struck and bounced off  with a sickening thud. Another of the wives drew a knife, screamed  madly and dashed

forward. 

"Blazes!" Monk gulped. "That ain't no way to act!" He started  forward, roaring, and brushed through the

fringe of wives until he  reached the woman with the knife. There was a brief flurry, during  which Monk,

trying to be gentle, all but got stabbed; but the homely  chemist secured the knife. Then he sprang toward the

girl to whom the  ropes were tied, evidently with the idea of freeing her. 

Joan Lyndell, racing to Monk's side, yanked him to a stop. 

"Don't be a fool!" she snapped. 

Monk scowled at her. "Listen, lady, this may be an old Tananese  custom, but it gets under my skin. I'm going

to turn this girl loose!" 

"Don't you realize what she is?" Joan Lyndell demanded. 

Monk snapped, "I know she's a danged pretty little kid who  " 

"Is a human spider," finished Joan Lyndell. 

MONK blinked, wet his lips, opened and shut his huge hands, then  looked from the Tananese girl to the

remarkably beautiful young  American girl before him. 

"Human spider," he mumbled. 

"Look at her finger nails," Joan advised. 

Monk did so. 

"They could stand manicuring," he admitted. "But I don't see  nothing else wrong." 

"See the yellowish deposit under the nails?" 

Monk looked again. "Sure." 

"That is a poison which is almost instantly fatal," said Joan  Lyndell. "That girl has but to scratch you, and

you will die. That is  what killed Shallalah El Auwal. She is the dancing girl who was sent to  him as a

present." 

Monk studied the pretty Tananese. "Darned if I believe it." Joan  Lyndell spoke to the wives, and got a

conglomeration of excited  replies. 

"The girl has confessed," Joan translated. "She was sent by a chief  in the mountains, at the order of the

Mystic Mullah. It seems that the  green soul slaves of the Mystic Mullah were unable to kill Shallalah El


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Auwal, and the more prosaic method of the human spider had to be used." 

"Prosaic!" Monk exploded. "You mean this sort of thing is common in  Tanan?" 

"Not common, exactly," the young woman replied. "But it has  happened before. In Afghanistan, it is even

more often practiced." 

"Whew!" Monk gulped. "What will happen to this girl  this human  spider?" 

"She will stand trial," said Joan Lyndell. 

Monk sighed jerkily. 

Ham shook an admonishing finger at the apish chemist and said, "Let  this be a lesson to you." 

"Whatcha mean, shyster?" Monk growled. 

"Before you start shining up to one of these Tananese girls, give  her a close manicure," Ham told him. 

Chapter 15. SINISTER CONFERENCE

THE enormous bodyguard which Joan Lyndell had brought with her on  the visit to the house of unfortunate

Shallalah El Auwal, had seemed  unnecessarily large at first; but now, as the return trip was started,  it began

to look as if the force was not overly adequate. They had  scarcely left the walled compound which enclosed

the house they had  visited when it became apparent that word of their presence there had  spread, and with

ominous results. 

There was a throng outside, an ominous multitude which gorged the  streets. There were only men in the

crowd. These stared sullenly at the  array of guards. Some muttered under their breath; others yelled out

maledictions. 

"They say that the Mystic Mullah has spread the word that the  mother of every man in Tanan will have her

life taken by the green soul  slaves unless I am slain, the Khan Nadir Shar deposed from power, and  Doc

Savage and his men slain," advised Joan Lyndell. 

Ham fingered his sword cane uneasily, eying the ominous street  crowds. He fished under his voluminous

garment and made sure that no  folds of cloth were in the way, should he want to draw his machine  pistol

suddenly. 

Joan Lyndell ordered their guard forward. The latter formed  themselves in to a thin spearhead and forced a

way through the streets.  The throng gave way, but many yells jarred out, and occasionally a  stone or a short

spear came through the air. 

"I can see why the Mystic Mullah wanted to do his fightin' here  instead of in New York," Monk said grimly. 

Monk's pet pig, Habeas, emitted a series of uneasy grunts, as if  his porcine mind comprehended their danger. 

"You'd better throw that hog away and get ready to run," Ham  advised. "Our escort seems to be getting cold

feet." 


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This was true. The spearhead of soldiers was shrinking, literally  wearing itself away against the crowd.

Watching, Monk and Ham saw one  guard after another seize his chance and duck away into the throng. 

Joan Lyndell called out angrily, but it had no effect. The guards  continued to desert. There was a worried

expression on the young  woman's face now, and she carried her automatic pistol in plain view. 

"These guards were trained by my father," she said grimly. "I had  hoped they would be faithful." 

Monk put Habeas Corpus down so as to have both hands clear. 

"They don't intend for us to get back to your house," he told the  young woman." 

She nodded. "We will head for the castle of the Khan Nadir Shar." 

She rapped a sharp order. The guards who remained hesitated, then  swung sharply to the left and dived into a

narrow street. The throng of  Tananese had not expected this, and angry shouts went up. 

"Bet they had an ambush arranged ahead," Monk offered. 

"Linshi bil 'agall" Joan Lyndell called sharply to their escort.  "Go more swiftly!" 

THE escort swing into a trot. This side street was narrow, not  pleasing to eye or nostril, and was populated

largely by yaks, donkeys  and dogs. There was a chill wind blowing down from the mountains which  enwalled

Tanan, and steely clouds in the distance suggested snow. 

Along the street, prayer strips fluttered in the wind and prayer  wheels spun like toy windmills. Underfoot,

grimy snow was packed bard  by the pad of innumerable yaks, the shaggy Himalayan ponies known as  tats,

and human feet shod in clumsy felt boots. 

The way began to lift, surmounting a hill. This prominence was  surmounted by an extremely large building,

portions of which they began  to glimpse through the spaces between houses. This had been pointed out

earlier to Doc and his men as the official yamen or palace of the Khan. 

"Look!" Monk grunted suddenly, and pointed out a certain figure  mingling with the populace who were

slowly closing in on them again.  The figure was that of a giant brown man of unprepossessing features. 

"Doc!" Monk breathed. "He's keeping an eye on things." They lost  sight of Doc Savage shortly, and did not

again sight him before they  came out in a wide open space which surrounded the walls of the yamen.  They

raced madly across this area. 

A few arrows discharged from short, stout bows hissed about them,  or struck in the quilted armor of the

guards without doing harm. Ham  dodged wildly and let a spear go past. Then they were crowding over an

ancient drawbridge and through an embrasured wall. 

The Khan Nadir Shar himself met them, and when they were over the  draw, he sprang out and, his

hooknosed face livid with rage, bellowed  at the throng. Some of these yelled back. Then they slunk away. 

"Six months ago, no man in Tanan would have dared raise his voice  against me," the Khan said grimly. "It is

very bad. I fear for our  safety." 


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Lifting his voice, the Khan called out loudly, and a moment later a  stocky, utterly ferociouslooking man

came striding up. He wore,  instead of the conventional robes of the Tananese, a long pushlin, a  fleecelined

leather coat of the type popular with the Russians. 

His head was entirely bald and exposed to the rigors of the chill  air. Strapped to his middle were two

revolvers; a pair of cartridge  bandoleers crisscrossed his chest, and a very modern automatic rifle  was slung

over one shoulder. Two short daggers and a stubby sword  completed the picture of a walking arsenal. 

"This is Mihafi, commander in chief of my army," said the Khan. "Of  his loyalty, I am certain." 

MONK AND HAM studied Mihall, and were not greatly impressed. This,  they recalled, was the individual

whom Oscar Gibson claimed had  tortured him into admitting falsely that he was one of the Mystic  Mullah's

agents. 

Mihafi, for his part, gave Monk and Ham a somewhat too elaborate  bow and an oily greeting in Tananese,

which they could not understand. 

"He affects me like carbolic acid," Monk told Ham when they were  alone. 

Mihafi went about the business of posting the castle guard with  hardboiled efficiency. Whenever he detected

a sign of sullenness among  the guards, he immediately detached the guilty individual and ordered  him booted

through an embrasure into the moat, from which the unlucky  one might climb if too many of his bones were

not broken. The moat was  frozen solid. 

Projecting from the walls of the castle were rows of steel spikes.  These sloped downward, and were intended

to prevent any one scaling the  walls. Men were put to touching up the needle points of these spikes  and

greasing them with yak tallow, so that they could not be used as  hand holds. 

Fires were lighted in the court, under huge kettles which were  filled with lead to be melted, that it might be

poured down on the  heads of any so reckless as to try to scale the walls. Too, ancient  flamethrowers of the

Chinese type were prepared hollow tubes filled  with a concoction of sulphur and other substances which

would spew  flame and molten liquid upon the attackers. 

"Looks like a party," Monk offered dryly. 

Mihafi, having overseen these preparations, confronted Monk and  Ham, bowed with what he thought was

military snap, and spoke in several  different dialects and languages. When he tried bodkad, the language of

Tibet, he made himself understood. 

"It is a wise turtle which grows a thick shell, and a smart tiger  which sharpens its claws," he imparted. "We

are now ready for these  dogs who have given their souls to the Mystic Mullah." 

"You are doing well, 0 Man Without Hair On His Head," Monk  admitted. 

Mihafi looked as if he did not care for the form of address. 

'"This mighty bronze man who came with you  where is he now?" he  asked. 

"Search me," said Monk, then did his best to translate that into  bodskad. 

Mihafi looked disappointed. "The fox that is wise retires to his  den when the dogs begin barking," he said. 


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"Doc can take care of himself," Monk grunted.[ 

Mihafi's ugly features took on a more ferocious aspect. 

"This one who is named Oscar Gibson, where can he be found?" he  questioned. 

Monk tried his hand at the Oriental method of making replies. 

"He who tries to know all things only makes himself dizzy," he  stated. 

Mihafi walked off looking puzzled, as if not sure whether he had  been given a hint to stop his questioning. 

MIHAFI entered the palace of the Khan, and his evil face took on an  expression of cupidity as he surveyed

the richness of the furnishings.  He paused to finger a rug which had come from Turkestan, and over which  an

entire family of sied rug makers had probably labored for years. He  lifted a small gold image, judged its

weight, and held it to the light  that he might examine the jewels which encrusted it. 

He went on past the little cubicles which housed the slaves of the  Khan's household. Slavery still existed in

Tanan, open bartering being  carried on with human beings as the merchandise. Raiding the ferocious  hill

tribes for young captives who would bring a good price on the  market, was a popular source of income to the

violent young warriors of  Tanan who could devise no other means of getting money. Such forays had  laid the

foundation for many a Tananese fortune. 

Deeper into the castle, Mihall penetrated. The passages were dark,  and he produced a candle of yak tallow

and lighted it by the ancient  method of flint and steel. Going on, he came to a massive door crossed  by heavy

iron bars. He blew out the candle. 

The door rasped faintly in the intense darkness as Mihafi opened it  and passed through. After that, an intense

silence and an infinite  blackness swallowed him. 

The quiet persisted for perhaps five minutes. Then the door gritted  open again and some one came in. Shortly

afterward, there was another  arrival, and another, until fully a dozen persons had let themselves  into the

shadowy chamber. 

The silence was not interrupted for a time. Then a volley of sharp  gasps sounded. 

Hanging in the air, apparently in the center of the gloomy  subterranean room, the hideous green face of the

Mystic Mullah had  appeared. It revolved slowly, as if it could penetrate the darkness  with its lurid eyes and

view those who were present. The first words  added to that impression. 

"You are all here, my faithful," the macabre voice of the Mystic  Mullah intoned. "That is well, for we must

lay plans." 

"The people of Tanan have been aroused as you directed," said one  of those present. "They are as a flock of

sheep who hear the howling of  the wolves. At a word, they will fall upon those that rule and tear  them to

pieces." 

"It is well," murmured the Mystic Mullah. "But it is also an unwise  farmer who destroys his entire crop

because there are a few weeds. He  would better pull the weeds." 

"Truly, your wisdom is great," said the other. "But what do you  mean?" 


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"This bronze man, Doc Savage, must be slain," said the Mystic  Mullah. "He is a devil with the strength of a

tiger and the cunning of  one who has lived long in perilous ways." 

"We are here to be told how to kill this bronze man?" the other  questioned. 

"No," the Mystic Mullah stated monotonously. "That has been  arranged. You have been brought here to be

told that the white woman,  Joan Lyndell, is not to be harmed or molested." 

Utter silence indicated that this proclamation was totally  unexpected. 

"This lowly one craves the light of knowledge," muttered a Voice.  "Why is she not to be touched?" 

'"Because it is she who will slay the bronze man," announced the  Mystic Mullah. "Go, you who are faithful,

and see that you harm the  white woman not." 

There was stirring in the darkness, and those who had gathered  there began filing away. They did not strike

lights, and none saw the  face of any of his fellows. 

Chapter 16. SURPRISES

MONK, pulling off his enormous felt boots, complained, "What dog  cases! What dog cases!" 

"Don't you ever get tired of grousing?" Ham demanded sourly. 

Monk glared at the lawyer and advised, "Your pants are coming off,  or maybe it's your shirt." 

Ham scowled, and hastily adjusted the single enveloping cloth which  was serving him as coat, shirt and

trousers. Usually, he wore his  clothing with debonair stylishness but he had failed to master the  technique of

making the national garment of Tanan serve its purpose. 

Renny came in, a giant form in coarse, dark cloth, with the glint  of a short sword across his middle, and a

bandage around his head. 

"Doc hasn't turned up yet," he rumbled. "I'm kinda worried." 

"He's hunting Johnny and Long Tom," Ham said. 

Renny nodded. "If we had the slightest idea of where to look for  them, I'd say that we do the same thing. But,

holy cow! There's no clue  worth following." 

Monk looked up sharply. "Then there has been some trace of Johnny  and Long Tom?" 

"Only rumors," Renny advised. "The Khan Nadir Shar sent out some of  his soldiers, and they found the

planes which the Mystic Mullah used in  the flight from New York. They found no one, naturally. But they

did  locate a peasant who had seen the ships land, and that fellow said  there were two prisoners, both white

men, who were carried away,  blindfolded." 

"Wasn't there the slightest trace of where they went? Monk asked  plaintively. 

Renny shook his head. "None." 


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Monk began pulling his felt boots back on. "Danged if I feel like  sleeping," he muttered. "Let's prowl around

the yamen until Doc comes  back, or something turns up." He stood up. "Or until Oscar Gibson puts  in an

appearance." He added as an afterthought. "I wonder what became  of that lad?" 

They went out on a balcony, a sort of outthrust of masonry  surrounded by a parapet which was perforated

with loop holes. It was  night. The view was impressive, and not pleasantly so. 

Fires had been lighted around the yamen at some distance, and  Tananese stood in the warmth of these,

mumbling among themselves, or  staring at the high walls of the castle. More than one was openly  sharpening

a knife or a sword, and at intervals, an arrow would be  discharged at the walls. 

Over to the right, a group was rigging up a crude catapult,  employing the springy trunk of a tree. They loaded

this with a rock the  size of a small keg; then fully fifty men seized a rope and sprung the  tree back. One of

them cut the rope with a slash of a short sword, and  the stone was launched and sailed over the yamen walls,

to crash  through the roof and set guards to cursing. 

"If a few knights were around in armor, the picture would he  complete," Ham said dryly. 

Overhead, the sky was a cold blue, with the steely snow clouds now  black humps over the distant mountains

and the stars marvelously white  flecks, like luminous snow suspended close above. 

The view lost interest for Monk and the other two after a while.  Anyway, it was cold outside, and the chill

wind had an unpleasant way  of whistling up inside their blanketlike garments. They went inside. 

The felt boots made little noise on the stone floors, and this  probably accounted for what happened next. 

"Pssi!" warned Ham. "Look!" 

Ahead of them, barely distinguishable in the pale light, a figure  crept. There was such stealth in the

marauder's movements that  suspicion was instantly aroused. 

"Whoever it is is making for the part of the yamen where Joan  Lyndell is staying," Ham breathed. 

Then he glided forward. Monk and Renny followed, using care not to  drag the felt boot soles, keeping their

hands over hilt and tip of  their swords in order that the steel might not rasp against the stone  walls. 

The figure ahead passed close to a brazier in which burned a blue  fire of teyzak, and the uncanny glow

illuminated his features. 

"It's Mihafi."' Monk muttered. 

MIHAFI, patently unaware that he was being shadowed, crept on and  reached a narrow door. This he opened,

but he did not pass through.  Instead, a file of men came out, half a dozen swarthy fellows whose  deportment

was as sneaky as Mihafi's. They whispered together, then  moved on. 

"Making for Joan's room," Renny growled faintly. 

Mihafi reached the door of the chambers occupied by Joan Lyndell.  Then he and his men shed all caution.

That took Doc's three aides by  surprise. They had expected Mihafi to continue his stealth. 


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Mihafi dashed a key into the door lock, turned it and boosted the  panel open. Inside the room, Joan Lyndell

shrieked. 

Monk emitted an angry howl and charged. Monk liked to yell when he  was fighting. Renny and Ham flanked

him grimly silent, Ham with his  sword cane out. 

Mihafi's brown men whirled, clawing at their short swords. An  instant later, the corridor was filled with

lunging men and the rasp  and clank of colliding swords. 

Felt covered feet slapped in the passage behind Doc's men. They  threw glances backward. What they saw

was far from pleasurable. Mihafi  had evidently not taken all of his men with him, but had left some  behind,

and these were staging a flank attack. 

Enclosed on both sides, the three men backed against a wall. Monk  threw his short sword, and it spiked into a

brown shoulder. Then the  homely chemist hauled out a machine pistol and it moaned. 

The brown men wavered. Some began to weaken as the mercy bullets  took effect. Then these victims were

seized by their fellows and used  as living shields behind which a re newed charge was staged. 

Joan Lyndell was still shrieking. There was more of anger than fear  in her voice. She appeared, being dragged

by Mihafi and three other  men. 

Monk leaped up in an effort to get a shot at Mihafi, but the fellow  was canny and ducked down, whisking the

prisoner around an angle in the  gloomy stone corridor. 

The brown men lunged in furiously upon Monk and the other two. They  were concentrating on preventing

Mihafi from being followed. Some one  threw a knife, and the blade opened Ham's hip slightly. Renny lost the

bandage which he was wearing over the ear that a Tananese bullet had  damaged in New York. 

All three had their machine pistols out now. They used them  carefully, keeping them in their left hands,

warding off an occasional  violent rush with the short swords in their right. 

Eventually, they broke through the fringe of assailants and raced  in the direction Mihafi had, taken with his

captive. Around the first  corner they plunged. Their quarry was nowhere in sight. 

Nor did they find Joan Lyndell. 

IT was fully fifteen minutes later, and they were still searching,  when the Khan Nadir Shar joined them. He

looked worried and he was  heavily armed, attended by a group of personal guards, huge fellows.  Some one

had told him of the uproar, he declared, adding that his own  quarters on the other side of yamen were

virtually soundproof and he  had not heard the tumult, 

Doc's men recited rapidly what had happened, and the Khan heard  them through with an expression of

growing horror on his hawklike face. 

"This is very bad," he groaned. "The white woman, Joan Lyndell, was  one of my staunchest supporters and

most trusted advisors. She had an  influence in Tanan equal, if not exceeding, my own." 

They searched further, but finding no trace of Joan Lyndell or her  captors, returned in the direction of the

young woman's quarters. 


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"Holy cow!" Renny exploded when they came within sight of the door  and that portion of the corridor in

which the fight had taken place. 

The corridor was empty of Mihafi's followers who had dropped in the  fray. There had been bloodstains on the

corridor floor. These were now  gone. 

"But, blast it, them guys couldn't have walked off!" Monk growled.  "And some of 'em got cut up pretty bad.

What's become of the blood?" 

The door of Joan Lyndell's chambers opened, and to their utter  astonishment, the young woman herself

appeared. She was entrancing in a  robe of silk. 

"What has happened?" she asked. 

Monk let his jaw down on his chest as he stared at her. 

"How'd you get loose?" he demanded. 

"Get loose?" Joan Lyndell shook her head slowly. "I don't  understand." 

"Huh!" Monk strode swiftly to her, shoved past and looked over the  room beyond, lifting tapestries, peering

into recesses, until he was  sure no one was there forcing the girl to speak in the manner she did. 

"What is the meaning of this?" the young woman demanded sharply. 

"After Mihafi carried you off, how'd you get loose?" Monk  questioned. 

"Mihafi?" Joan Lyndell shook her head. "I never saw him. He  certainly did not carry me anywhere. I have

been asleep. Your noise  here in the corridor awakened me. 

Doc's three men exchanged bewildered looks, then shifted glances to  the corridor itself, which was so

mysteriously empty of bodies and  bloodstains. There was nothing to show that the fight and the kidnaping  of

the girl was anything more than an evil trick of their imaginations. 

Joan Lyndel stood perfectly still, relaxed, and there was certainly  no fear upon her face. In fact, she was

smiling slightly, as if she  believed the whole affair were some kind of a joke. 

"Are you sure you are not suffering from hallucinations?" she  asked. 

Monk absently felt of his machine pistol, then drew it out and,  examining it, saw that the ammo drum was

well over half empty. It had  been full at nightfall. 

"I dunno," he muttered. "It depends on what it takes to make a  hallucination." 

AFTER the girl had returned to her chambers, Monk, Ham and Renny  stood for a time and conversed with

the Khan Nadir Shar. 

"It is very mysterious," said the Khan. 

"Mysterious, hell!" Renny thumped. "It's downright impossible! It  couldn't have happened!" 


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"Many fantastic things are caused to happen by this Mystic Mullah,"  advised the Khan. "Perhaps there was

no fight and no capture of Joan  Lyndell." 

Ham touched his hip where the knife blade had slit the cloth. "If  it was a dream, it was entirely too lifelike,"

he said, grimly. 

The Khan shook his head slowly and muttered, "Sometimes I wonder if  this monster, the Mystic Mullah, is

really not what he claims to be   one who lived and died before time began, and whose soul has existed

through the ages, absorbing the knowledge of all infinity." 

"Nuts!" Monk said. "That whole idea is cuckoo. It couldn't happen." 

"Nor does it seem that you could indulge in a fight when there was  seemingly no fight," murmured the Khan. 

Shortly afterward, the Khan retired in the direction of his rooms,  accompanied by his guard of huge dark

men, and Monk, Ham and Renny  moved in the direction of their own quarters. They wanted to discuss  the

affair privately. 

Doc Savage was there, much to their pleased surprise. The bronze  man was somewhat disheveled, as if he

had moved about a great deal. 

"Find Long Tom and Johnny?" Monk asked eagerly. 

Doc shook a slow negative. "The best I could do was to pick up  rumors of two white devil ghosts who are

being held by the faithful of  the Mystic Mullah," he said. "That will be Long Tom and Johnny. But I  could

get no definite line on them." 

"Tough!" Monk muttered. 

Doc said, "You fellows look a little strange! What is wrong?" 

So they told him what had happened, dwelling particularly on  details of the fight outside the girl's room, as if

they wanted to  impress upon the bronze man that the fray could not have been a dream. 

"How do you explain it, Doc?" Monk finished. 

"Go to sleep," the bronze man suggested. "Forget about it. Get some  rest, and we'll tackle this thing in the

morning." 

Renny boomed, "But Long Tom and Johnny  " 

"The Mystic Mullah will[ have to make some move before we can get a  line on them," Doc said. "Turn in,

you fellows." 

They turned in. 

HAM, who was somewhat of a nervous man, was a light sleeper. It  must have been well past midnight when

he awakened, for the air had  turned bitterly cold, and the noise of the Tananese gathered around the  yamen

had died away. 


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Knowing something must have awakened him, Ham gripped his sword  cane, with which he habitually slept

when in danger, and lifted quietly  on an elbow. He suspected that the noise had been made by Habeas

Corpus. The pig had an aggravating habit of dragging Ham's shoes away,  to chew on during the night. 

But Habeas had not made the noise. There was a stirring in the  darkness across the room. A vague shape took

form before Ham's staring  eyes. It changed position, moving out into a ray of moonlight. 

Ham all hut shouted aloud, so great was his shock. He stared more  intently, wondering if he could be

mistaken. But the features of the  marauder were outlined with perfect distinctness. 

It was Joan Lyndell. 

THE young woman walked slowly, making little noise. She was headed  directly across the roomand Ham,

shifting his stare, saw Doc Savage  seated on a pile of rags, his back to the wall. The bronze man's head  was

tilted forward and he appeared to be asleep. The girl was making  furtively toward him. 

Amazement held Ham motionless and silent for the moment. Then he  shifted cautiously, moving back the felt

coverings of his couch. For  greater warmth, he had gone to bed fully attired. But his feet were  bare and the

utter coldness of the floor caused him to shiver. Or  perhaps it was the attitude of the girl. 

She was half crouching now, and her hands were out before her,  fingers distended in resemblance of claws.

She was staring at Doc  steadily. 

She came into another shaft of moonlight, and her shapely form  stood out in brilliant silver. She leaned

forward and seemed to set  herself. 

"Doc!" Ham screeched. "Look out!" 

Had the bronze man been asleep, it was doubtful if he would have  escaped. But Ham knew, even as he yelled,

that Doc was only feigning  slumber, for the bronze man moved with incredible speed, not changing  the

position of his body, but shooting up his hands and grasping the  wrists of the girl. 

The next instant, Ham had reached them and was helping hold Joan  Lyndell. The girl struggled violently for a

moment, then became  quiescent in their grip. She did not cry out. Her exquisite face showed  no emotion

whatever. 

Ham shuddered violently and choked out, "Look at her finger nails!  That dark yellow stuff under them!" 

Monk and Renny came stumbling in, weapons in hand, blinking sleep  away. 

"What's goin' on here?" Monk barked. 

"Joan Lyndell," Ham said thickly, "is a human spider!" 

THE shock of the announcement held Monk and Renny speechless for a  time. Indeed, they did not show full

belief until they came over and  inspected the young woman's finger nails and saw the deposit of poison. 

"This explains what happened this afternoon," Monk mumbled. "The  girl lied about the fight and about

Mihafi seizing her." 

"But why did Mihafi grab her?" Renny thumped. 


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Instead of answering, Doc Savage went to their baggage and got out  a nail file, small orange sticks and a

swab of cotton. He brought these  to the place where Ham held the girl. 

Hold her hands open," he directed. "Don't let her move. If some of  that poison gets into her bloodstream, it

will probably kill her." 

Joan Lyndell had been quieter when the bronze man was not before  her; but now, as he grasped her wrist, she

struggled wildly, as if in  the grip of an insane frenzy, and it took much of the bronze man's  strength to hold

her. 

He went to work on her finger nails, carefully cleaning them of the  poison deposit, afterward swabbing under

each nail with cotton. 

The poison he placed in a glass phial, perhaps for later analyzing  and study, should he ever return to his New

York laboratory. 

The girl had not spoken a single word. 

"What are we going to do with her?" Monk growled. 

Doc glanced sharply at the homely chemist. 

"Don't you see what has happened to her?" he asked. 

Monk frowned. "She's acting queer. She don't say anything. But  maybe she  " 

"She is hypnotized," Doc told him. 

"Huh?" Monk made a round hole with his mouth. 

"You know something of hypnosis," Doc told them. "A person once put  under a spell can be made to forget

all events which they are told to  forget. In addition, they may be told to do a certain thing at a later  time, and

when the designated time comes, they automatically go into  another hypnotic spell and perform the suggested

act." 

"Holy cow!" Renny breathed. "Mihall got the girl and somebody  hypnotized her and made her forget what

had happened. Then she was told  to put poison under her finger nails and try to kill you. She did it.  She

doesn't know what is happening." 

Monk snapped his fingers violently. 

"Listen!" he rapped, "can she be made to tell who hypnotized her?" 

Doc told him, "I was going to see about that." 

The bronze man then went to work while the others watched. That Doc  was an expert on the vagaries of the

human mind, that he had studied  hypnotic suggestion from the masters, the holy men of India, they knew.

They had seen him work his power before. 

DOC worked for a long time, talking gently, making movements with  his hands, and the girl finally began to

talk. Her voice was far away  and strange, as if she were not speaking, but her vocal cords were  being actuated


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by remote control. 

"Where did Mihafi take you?" Doc asked her. 

She spoke, but the words were unintelligible, and the bronze man  repeated his question. 

"I was blindfolded," the girl said thinly. "When they uncovered my  eyes, we were in a dark room. Then the

Mystic Mullah came." 

"Who was he?" Doc asked. 

"He was a face, a green face that hung in the darkness without  body," was the reply. 

"That don't help us much," Monk grunted. 

"Quiet," Doc told him. Then to Joan Lyndell: "Do you remember  anything about the room?" 

"There was a sound of thunder that did not cease, nor grow louder  or weaker," the girl stated in her strange

voice. "And when doors  opened somewhere in the darkness and men came down steps, they brought  with

them the odor of sandalwood." 

"Anything else?" Doc asked. "You are sure you do not know who the  Mystic Mullah is?" 

"Nothing else," said the girl. "And I do not know the identity of  the Mystic Mullah." 

"Blast it!" Monk grumbled. "That ain't gonna do much good." 

Doc Savage now escorted Joan Lyndell out into the corridor, and  there, holding her attention with a sword

blade dangled in front of her  eyes, brought her out of the hypnotic trance with sharp commands. 

The young woman, awakening, stared about in amazement, not  understanding what had happened, not

remembering anything. 

"Whywhy!" she stuttered, and swallowed. "What am I doing here?" 

"You must have been sleep walking," Doc told her. "We heard you." 

"Goodness!" she gasped. "I never did that before!" 

Then she fled, coloring prettily. 

Chapter 17. CLUE OF THUNDER AND SANDALWOOD

IT was possibly fifteen minutes later that Oscar Gibson appeared.  He looked rather neat in the coarse cloak

which was the common Tananese  garment. 

"Where you been?" Monk growled. 

"Out picking daisies," said Gibson. 


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Monk glared and rasped, "Listen, you little snort, I still don't go  in for your idea of being funny, and one of

these days I'm going to  give myself the satisfaction of rolling you out flat!" 

Gibson smiled, "My, what a temper!" and ambled off. 

Monk stood up, yawned and said, "I think I'll take another look  around before I try to get some sleep." 

"You'll need some one to watch you, you ape," Ham advised, and  followed Monk out into the corridor. 

"Let's follow this guy Gibson," Monk whispered. "I don't like the  cut of his jib or the way his lip flaps. I don't

trust him, even though  Doc seems to." 

"He saved Doc's life back in New York when the green things  appeared in the yacht club," Ham reminded. 

"Sure," Monk said. "And I'll remember that when his time comes. But  I'm still in favor of trailing him." 

"You and me, too," said Ham. "But if we get in a jam, remember  it  was your fool idea. I'm just going along

to keep you from gumming up  things." 

"I'd take it as a favor if you'd go off and die," Monk grumbled. 

Trailing Oscar Gibson proved to be comparatively easy, for the  thinwaisted man merely roamed along in the

direction of his private  quarters. He entered and closed the door loudly. 

"If I recall rightly, there's a balcony outside his window that he  can leave by," Monk whispered. "Let's check

on that." 

They eased around, found that the door into the adjacent chamber  was open, and crept through the arched

opening. It was intensely dark.  They were scarcely halfway across the room when both men stopped. They

could hear some one working at the window, some one who was on the  balcony. Monk and Ham both

retreated hastily and took up a position  where they could watch the room without being seen. They saw now

why  Gibson was leaving his chamber by the balcony. The region about the  door of his own room was lighted

by a flickering wick blazing in a can  of yak tallow. As it was, Gibson was very hard to see as he left the

room, and he was almost upon Monk and Ham before they saw him. They  backtracked hastily. 

Gibson was more difficult to trail now. He worked over toward the  central part of the enormous castle and

eventually entered a chamber in  which the odor of sandalwood was almost overpoweringly strong. In the

center of the room stood a raised platform of richly matched stone, and  on this stood an elaborate throne,

from which led a strip of costly  carpet. 

"The royal throne room," Ham breathed. 

"Shut up!" Monk whispered back. "Do you want that guy to hear us?" 

Oscar Gibson crossed the throne room and passed through a door and  down another short passage. 

This part of the castle seemed to have been equipped in more modern  fashion. For one thing, the rooms were

warm, whereas the far side of  the yamen had been bitterly cold. Monk, looking about for the source of  heat,

got a surprise. 


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"Lookit!" he whispered. "An electric heater! Blast it, I didn't  know the place was fixed up with electricity.

Wonder why we didn't get  quarters in the modern part of the castle?" 

Ham said, "Look at Gibson! Meeting some one!" 

OSCAR Gibson had not exactly met some one as yet, but he had halted  and was knocking on a door. It

opened. There was a short scuffle in  which Gibson thrust a foot into the crack of the door, then spoke in a  low

voice. Toward the end, he used English; and Monk and Ham heard him  distinctly. 

"You fool!" Gibson said to whoever was inside. "The Mystic Mullah  sent me over here.  Doc Savage is not as

dumb as we figured. He's  suspicious. You are to hide me out." 

The man inside said something that was inaudible. 

"Well, wait until you get word from the Mystic Mullah if you don't  believe it!" Gibson snapped. 

After that, the man to whom Gibson was talking stepped out where he  could be seen plainly. He was a broad

figure in a leather pushtin, with  numerous bandoleers of cartridges slung about his chest. He had an  utterly

ferocious face. 

"Mihafi!" Monk grunted. "What do you know about that? The lug is  still in the castle!" 

GIBSON and Mihafi strode along the corridor. There was now nothing  particularly furtive about their

manner, and this caused Ham to surmise  grimly, "I'll bet half the castle guard are in with the Mystic Mullah." 

Mihafi opened a door, stood aside to let Gibson through, then  followed himself. He left the door open. 

Monk and Ham put on a little speed, considering themselves hot on  the trail that would lead to the Mystic

Mullah. Their enthusiasm  possibly made them somewhat careless. They listened at the door, heard  distant

footsteps of two men, then stepped boldly through. 

It is almost impossible for a fully clothed man to move in the  darkness without making some slight sounds.

Folds of clothing are  almost sure to rub together. So when men leaped upon Monk and Ham, they  had a

splitsecond warning. 

Monk howled at the top of his voice. He always howled when he  fought. Simultaneous with the howl, he

ducked and lunged forward. His  arching fist hit hard bones thinly padded with flesh. 

Ham was cautious enough to have his sword cane already unsheathed.  He lashed it out like a whip. A man

screamed terribly and the blade  bedded itself deeply enough that it had to be yanked free. 

A terrific blow smashed Monk's back. It was caused by a man,  jumping feetfirst. The homely chemist went

down. Men piled upon him,  jumping, stomping. 

Monk's methods in a freeforall were remarkable. He grabbed a leg,  and taking a lesson from the alligator,

spun around and around. He held  the leg tightly. The victim tried to turn. He failed, screeched; his  leg bones

gave with a distinct snap. 

A gun went off, its flame a red spurt. Masonry, lead loosened,  clicked on the floor. Some one fell on Monk's

face, stifling his yells.  Two more men got his feet. 


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About the same time, a flying wedge hit Ham. He slashed one down  with his sword cane. Weight of numbers

bore him back. He tripped over a  fallen form. The floor was very hard when he hit it. 

Furious blows rapped. Men grunted. Monk moaned under the chest that  was mashed against his face. After

that, there was only the breathing  of men who had worked violently. 

"Excellent work!" said Oscar Gibson's voice. "But it was a bit  noisy." 

THE shot had carried through the yamen, and excited cries were now  heard. Feet pounded as a man came

running. Evidently he was not one of  the Mystic Mullah's henchmen, because he stopped the instant a tallow

candle was lighted and the glow fell upon the scene. 

"Wallah!' he bawled, then whirled and fled. 

The Mystic Mullah's men cursed, and four shots were fired by the  one who had the gun. All four missed. The

gun man swore and ran into  the light of the candle, reloading 

The gunman was Oscar Gibson. 

The yamen guard, who had happened upon the scene, got away, thanks  to the running ability of a jack rabbit.

He must have learned his  lesson, because he did not cry out an alarm He reached the old, cold  part of the

castle, still traveling at headlong speed, and there he  crashed into Doc Savage. 

"What is it?" the bronze man demanded in Tananese. 

The frightened guard told his story by gasps. 

Renny galloped up in time to get a gesture from Doc. They left the  scared guard and raced for the scene of the

combat. There was a good  deal of shouting now, and men ran about, gripping their short swords,  carrying

candles or small copper pans of tallow in which a twist of  felt burned. 

Doc Savage reached the spot where Monk and Ham had fallen. He found  the rock fragments which the bullet

had chipped from the wall. That  alone told him he was on the spot  that, and when he turned a  flashlight on

the floor, traces of wet crimson which had been wiped up  too hastily. 

Of the victims and their captors, there was no sign. Doc moved  about, questioning guards, but could find no

one who knew anything and  would admit it. 

Renny rumbled angrily. They were completely checkmated. He  continued to rumble as they made their way

back through the big throne  room where the air was full of sandalwood. 

Electric lights were burning now. They had been switched on by the  guards. Doc Savage halted suddenly and

collared one of the yamen  sentries. 

"Where does the power for these lights come from?" he asked,  speaking Tananese. 

"From a round, fat, black monster who rumbles and whose veins pump  an invisible fire that burns the

unwary," explained the guard. 

"It comes from a generator," Doc translated for Renny's benefit 


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The bigfisted engineer was not interested in the electric plant. 

"Wonder if Joan Lyndell is safe?" he rumbled. "Maybe we'd better  check up on her." 

Doc nodded, and they sought out the young woman's quarters in the  frigid portion of the yamen. There was

no answer to their knock on her  door, and the panel, which should have been locked, gave under their  shove. 

Probably she's out seeing what the shooting was about," Renny said. 

Then his long, gloomy face slackened, his huge hands strayed in  small aimless gestures, and he tried to make

words that seemed to  refuse to form. 

Joan Lyndell's automatic pistol lay on the floor. Near it was a  torn half of blanket, and close to that a blanket

strip which had been  rent from the other portion. It was such a strip as might have been  left over when several

were torn to bind the young woman. 

"The Khan!" Renny roared. 

Doc Savage was already racing in the direction of Khan Nadir Shar's  apartments. Long before they reached

the door, they saw a guard  sprawled in the hall, his head split open. 

Inside the Khan's chambers there was some confusion, enough to show  there had been a fight, and a little

blood was red and wet on the  floor. The Khan was not there. 

"Doc!" Renny growled. "There's just you and me now!" 

THEY were still standing there when some of the yamen guards  arrived and discovered that the Khan was

missing. Instead of wailing  out the Asiatic method of expressing sorrow, they seemed happy over the  event.

Several showed white teeth in wide grins. 

They did not grin so widely when Renny showed them the business end  of a machine pistol. They knew what

the weapon was, and permitted  themselves to be herded into the Khan's apartments, where Doc used a

hypodermic needle on each; they all went to sleep shortly. Doc hauled  the body of the murdered guard inside,

then closed the door of the  Khan's quarters and made it tight. 

"This whole thing will blow wide open the minute it is learned the  Khan has disappeared," he surmised. 

"Yeah," Renny agreed. "He and the girl were all that kept the  Mystic Mullah from taking over things. I think

it was the girl more  than the Khan." 

"Listen," Doc suggested. 

A window was undoubtedly open somewhere near, and they could hear  an ugly babble of sound  shouts,

cries, the hammering of drums. They  sought a balcony which projected above the frozen moat far below, and

looked out into the brilliant moonlight of the late night. 

The multitude about the yamen had aroused itself, had picked up its  arms and was preparing to do something.

The crowd was closer to the  walls than earlier in the night. Occasionally a gun went off, or an  arrow,

launched hard, slithered along the stone walls or split its  shaft. 


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The cries of the throng were for the most part unintelligible  because of their intermingling, but now and then

one yell did stand  out. 

"The Khan is dead, his soul now one of the green slaves of the  Mystic Mullah!" was one of the cries. 

"The female white devil ghost, Joan Lyndell, is no more!" was  another yell. 

The throng milled about, and big twoman muzzleloaders went off,  vomiting volumes of smoke; archers

sent more arrows. 

Watching closely, Doc and Monk discerned men going through the  crowd, howling and screaming and

shoving persons about, and by their  very vehemence, getting the mob into some resemblance of a fighting

array. These organizers  agitators, too, judging from their howling   were undoubtedly chosen of the Mystic

Mullah. 

From the peak turret of the yamen, a powerful electric searchlight  came on, a startling and modern thing in

this mad scene of almost  medieval confusion. Its beam stirred about like a rigid white finger,  and

superstitious Tananese fled from it wildly at first, as if fearing  its white magic; then, finding themselves

caught in it and unharmed,  they jumped up and down, beating their chests and squawling, grown both  brave

and angry. 

But the searchlight beam seemed to turn a light on Doc Savage's  agile mind. 

"Come on!" he rapped. 

THE bronze man ran back into the endless stone passages of the vast  yamen, descended steps that were

centuries old, and sought about until  he found a fat castle servitor. 

"Electric generator!" Doc rapped. "Where is it?" 

The flunky batted scared eyes and shook his head. 

"The fat iron monster who roars and pumps invisible fire through  his veins," Doc said. "Where does he lurk,

this monster?" 

The lackey got that, waved his arms and erupted a gibberish volley. 

"Show me!" Doc clipped. 

The plump vassal was none too willing, but a look at the giant  bronze man showed him what course was

wise, and he led the way at a  waddling gallop. 

They went through the throne room where sandalwood was cloying in  their nostrils, and shortly beyond, were

guided into a steep stairs  which led down. They could hear, once heavy wooden doors were opened,  the

rumble of a steam turbine and electric generator, both of which  seemed to need new bearings. 

"Good!" Doc said, and dismissed the domestic, much to the fellow's  relief. 

The bronze man went back to the throne room. He made a circle of  the place, eyes busy. Renny watched him,

coughing a little because the  smell of sandalwood was so stifling. The stuff came from a brass affair  near the

throne and Renny finally moved over and dropped a rug upon the  source of the perfume. 


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The odor was even stronger near the throne, and Renny, looking up,  saw that the stuff escaped through a

round ventilating aperture above.  This was open and he could see coldlooking stars through it. 

Doc came to his side. 

"So you've got the idea," he said. 

"Huh?" Renny was bewildered. "What idea?" 

"Remember what Joan Lyndell said about the place where she was  hypnotized?" Doc asked. 

Renny scratched his head. 

"You mean about the steady thunder and the odor of  Holy Cow!"  Renny's mouth fell open, snapped shut.

"Whenever the door of the place  opened, she could smell sandalwood! She must have been right in here!" 

"No," Doc said. "The sound of the generators cannot be heard here.  That must have been the steady thunder

which she heard." 

"Sure!" Renny roared. "Sure! Why didn't I think of that?" 

Doc waved an arm. "Get back." 

Wonderingly, Renny retreated from the vicinity of the great throne. 

"The odor of sandalwood is strongest around the throne," Doc said.  "There must be a secret door leading into

an underground room such as  the one which holds the generator. And it is probably close to that  perfume box

you just covered up. 

Doc dipped into a pocket and brought out two grenades not greatly  larger than pigeon eggs. Renny saw them,

and promptly whirled and ran  to get farther away. He knew what those grenades would do. 

DOC hurled the first one. The flash hurt their eyes; the roar hurt  their ears even more. The elaborate floor

split. The rich rags gathered  up in the great wind of the blast and piled against the walls; one  sailed up as if

attached to invisible strings and skittered about in  the air. 

Running forward, Doc saw that the grenade had opened no secret  entrance. He retreated and threw another.

Huge blocks of the roof came  down. The floor split wider, and Doc, racing ahead again, looked down  into

one of the cracks and saw that it had opened in the roof of a  passage. 

He dropped down into the black maw. Renny followed him. Behind  them, parts of the throne room ceiling

were still falling down, making  tremendous noises. 

Chapter 18. THE GREEN FACE

DOC Savage raced his flashlight beam down the passage. Clouds of  dust boiled in the air. In that fog, a jewel

seemed to flash, traveling  with eye defying speed. Renny felt himself seized and jerked aside by  Doc Savage

even before he could realize the glinting thing was a thrown  knife. It clanged on the stone behind them. 

Renny yelled and ran forward, pushing his own flashlight beam out  before him. He saw brown men, two of


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them. One had a knife. He threw  it, and the blade was easily evaded. The pair appeared to have no other

weapons, for they spun and raced away. 

"Them's two of the guys who helped grab the girl before she was  hypnotized!" Renny roared. 

They charged down the narrow tunnel, pursuing the, brown men. A  murmur, faint at first, became louder, and

since they already knew what  it was, it was easily identified as the rumble of the motor generator  set. 

The brown men were screeching for help. They dived into a chamber  which was very dark, the floor slimy

with earth moisture. 

Doc and Renny, overhauling them, were well over a third across the  cavernous place when a hollow voice

caused them to wrench to a stop.  They swung in the direction of the eerie tones. 

A face had appeared, the hideous green visage of the Mystic Mullah,  swinging in midair as it always did.

The lips writhed, seemed to  snarl. 

"It was convenient of you to come here," the voice advised. Renny  jerked his flashlight around, intending to

turn it upon the satanic,  ghostly visage, but something the light disclosed caused him to stop  the beam. 

Grisly green serpentine things were crawling through the air toward  them. Hideous and fantastic, the horrors

seemed alive, yet unreal. The  flash beam, passing through them, hit the wall, and there were only  vague

shadows to show that the green objects were real. 

Then there came a cataclysmic roar and a flash that seemed to turn  Renny's brain to fire. He knew instantly,

as he was tumbled backward as  by a giant hand, that Doc Savage had thrown another of the grenades,  and

before he recovered himself the big bronze man had a hand upon his  shoulder, urging, "Run!" 

They ran for the door, but Doc Savage pawed and switched his flash  back. The wall where the green face of

the Mullah had appeared was  considerably torn up, and a slab of stone had fallen in, uncovering an  opening

of some size. 

The Mystic Mullah himself was not in sight. 

But out of the hole in the wall, like monsters from a cave, came  the green monstrosities. They were true

monsters, now, for some were a  yard thick, great, squirming nebulous dragons, without shape or method  of

movement. 

Renny, halting and glaring at the green things, bellowed, "Why,  dang it! I see what them things are now!" 

He started forward. 

"Stay back!" Doc Savage's voice had a smashing power that wrenched  Renny to a stop. 

"I'll take a chance!" Renny howled. "That Mystic Mullah is in there  somewhere!" 

"If that green stuff touches you, it'll kill you!" Doc said grimy.  "He was using two kinds. One only burned the

skin and produced  senselessness. The other was mixed with the venom of the neotropical  rattlesnake." 

"Neotropical  " 


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"Something like that," Doc rapped. "Venom of the neotropical  rattler centralizes its effects in the nervous

system around the nape  of the neck and causes a form of nerve destruction which makes it  appear that the

victim has a broken neck. This poison probably had  additional ingredients which heightened its effects,

causing a muscular  constriction which actually snapped the vertebrae in most cases." 

Renny shifted in an endeavor to peer into the hole in the wall, at  the same time avoiding the green horrors. 

"But, holy cow, the way these things move!" he growled. "Always  launched so that a current of air will carry

the green mist toward the  victims," Doc said, and himself moved to glance into the wall opening.  "Probably

the stuff is squirted from some kind of a pump gun. That  would give the snakelike effect." 

Renny roared, "But they're bigger now!" 

"Which means the pump was ruptured by the grenade, possibly," Doc  said. 

They drove their lights into the aperture. The green, smokelike  cloud of poison vapor filled all of the

passage beyond the hole, but  through its transparent body they could see a sprawled form, a figure  enfolded

in rich clothing. 

It was impossible, however, to make out the features. But Renny  boomed a guess. 

"The Mystic Mullah!" he thumped. "The guy got his own medicine!" 

THE streamers of green poison were fanning out into the room.  Moreover, yells indicated an approaching

attack. So Doc and Renny spun  and raced on in pursuit of the two brown men who had fled. 

Near the door, Renny tangled in an affair of wires, and fell back.  He got up, growling, and turned his light on

the contrivance. 

"Blazes!" he gulped. "Here's how he stuck that green face around  and made it disappear!" 

The thing Renny had fallen over must have been blown across the  room by the grenade blast. It was such a

device as fake spiritualists  and magicians sometimes use to make luminous heads appear in thin air   a

telescoping tube of some length, to the end of which was fixed a  thinwalled rubber balloon face which could

be inflated by blowing  through the tube; then, by suction, drawn back into the tube, and the  telescoping affair

collapsed. Manipulation of thin threads caused the  appearance of lip motion. 

Renny threw it aside, scowling as he recalled his own horror when  he had first seen the thing in action. 

They went on. Some one shot at them with one of the Tananesemade  guns, but did not hit them, and Renny

poured a deafening volley from  his machine pistol. An instant later, they were in hand to hand  conflict with

four or five Tananese. 

The latter were under an enormous handicap, in that they possessed,  for light, only pans of tallow in which

felt wicks burned. The  flashlights in the hands of Doc and Renny blinded the others, and they  did not last

long. 

Renny pumped mercy bullets into the fourth man, and Doc sank the  fifth senseless with a tremendous fist

smash. 

They ran ahead, came unexpectedly into a chamber which was  illuminated a pale pink by a heating brazier. 


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On the floor reposed tightly bound figures, mouths stuffed with  wads of cloth. The apish Monk was nearest,

and Ham was behind him,  trying to free the homely chemist; beyond them were Joan Lyndell,  Johnny, long

Tom and Oscar Gibson. 

There were none of the Mystic Mullah's men left in the room. 

Doc and Renny went to work untying the prisoners, and there was  much pointless shouting, largely to let off

steam. 

Monk, rearing up on his feet, glared at Oscar Gibson and howled,  "You got us into this, you smartcracker!" 

Gibson said wearily, "I was desperate. I tried to trick Mihafi into  taking me to the Mystic Mullah. How was I

to know you were following  me?" 

"That reminds me!" Ham snapped. "Where's Mihafi?" 

They did not learn the answer to that until some five minutes  later, when Renny ventured back to the room

where the green poison  vapor had appeared, and finding the vapor had strained out through  ventilating

apertures, stepped in and looked closely and long at the  face of the Mystic Mullah. 

He came back looking stunned. 

"Mihafi is in there with him, down the passage a bit," Renny  mumbled. "Say, did you know that the Mystic

Mullah was  " 

"He showed himself to us," Joan Lyndell put in jerkily. "And he  made it clear why he had become the Mystic

Mullah. He felt his power  slipping. He was afraid I would eventually become the real power in  Tanan. So he

began operating as the Mystic Mullah to fight me and to  satisfy his desire for a great empire." 

"Holy cow!" Renny muttered, "I didn't dream the Mystic Mullah was  the Khan Nadir Shar." 

THEY did not think they were remotely near a complete escape from  their difficulties, for the populace of

Tanan was laying siege to the  yamen; but, as it developed, the situation was not serious. 

Joan Lyndell, appearing on the yamen walls, managed to muster the  loyal portion of her own guards. These,

with the castle force who had  remained faithful, fell upon the throng and there was violent fighting.  The

guiding genius of the Mystic Mullah, the Khan Nadir Shar, was  sorely missed, and after a few hours, and

somewhat before the noon  hour, the thing was over. 

Once it became bruited about that the Mystic Mullah had been the  Khan, rage seized the Tananese, and they

turned upon the Mullah's  faithful. Those who had lost relatives to the socalled green soul  slaves of the

Mullah, were especially bitter, and lives were taken all  through that day, the ensuing night, and, for that

matter, throughout  the months that followed. 

Doc Savage and Joan Lyndell managed to take a certain amount of  control during the confusion, and

established a representative  government of leading Tananese. This body strengthened itself, soon  becoming

stable, so that peace returned, menaced only by grudge  killings as some wronged Tananese evened scores

with one who had gone  over to the Mystic Mullah. But Tanan was a savage, medieval land, and  there had

always been such feuds. 


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Doc Savage and his five aides left Tanan as soon as they perceived  conditions had attained moderate stability.

They traveled east, flying  across the Gobi, and as Tanan was lost in its mountain cup, Monk  declared himself. 

"If I ever seen a stranger country than that, I'll let Ham make  that traveling bag of Habeas Corpus's hide," he

declared. 

And Monk, little dreaming, recklessly offered to contribute  Habeas's hide to the cause of good luggage, as

their plane volleyed  over the caravan trail eastward across the Gobi. 

THE END 


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2. THE MYSTIC MULLAH, page = 4

   3. by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE BROKEN NECK, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THE FIRE-FACED MAN, page = 8

   6. Chapter 3. THE MYSTIC MULLAH TALKS, page = 15

   7. Chapter 4. THE BRONZE SHADOW, page = 19

   8. Chapter 5. AFTER MONK YELLED, page = 26

   9. Chapter 6. THE RESCUED MAN, page = 31

   10. Chapter 7. THE WHITE-BROWN MEN, page = 39

   11. Chapter 8. THE WISE GUY, page = 44

   12. Chapter 9. TROUBLE CLUB, page = 51

   13. Chapter 10. TWO MEN IN CANVAS, page = 57

   14. Chapter 11. HORROR IN GREEN, page = 61

   15. Chapter 12. ASIATIC EXODUS, page = 70

   16. Chapter 13. THE SECRET SERVICE MAN, page = 73

   17. Chapter 14. THE HUMAN SPIDER, page = 82

   18. Chapter 15. SINISTER CONFERENCE, page = 88

   19. Chapter 16. SURPRISES, page = 92

   20. Chapter 17. CLUE OF THUNDER AND SANDALWOOD, page = 99

   21. Chapter 18. THE GREEN FACE, page = 105