Title:   THE POLAR TREASURE

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE POLAR TREASURE

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE POLAR TREASURE................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE BRONZE NEMESIS .....................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THE CLICKING DANGER..................................................................................................7

Chapter 3. FIGHTING MEN.................................................................................................................14

Chapter 4. THE BLINDMAN HUNT.................................................................................................19

Chapter 5. GONE AGAIN .....................................................................................................................26

Chapter 6. HANGING MEN.................................................................................................................31

Chapter 7. THE MAP............................................................................................................................37

Chapter 8. STEEL WALLS OF DEATH..............................................................................................42

Chapter 9. TOUGH CARGO .................................................................................................................47

Chapter 10. MAROONED .....................................................................................................................55

Chapter 11. POLAR PERIL ...................................................................................................................64

Chapter 12. ICE TRAP..........................................................................................................................69

Chapter 13. ICE GHOSTS .....................................................................................................................76

Chapter 14. CORPSE BOAT .................................................................................................................81

Chapter 15. THE ARCTIC GODDESS .................................................................................................88

Chapter 16. THE REALM OF COLD...................................................................................................92

Chapter 17. THE CAPTIVES ................................................................................................................99

Chapter 18. THE THAWING DEATH...............................................................................................105


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THE POLAR TREASURE

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE BRONZE NEMESIS 

Chapter 2. THE CLICKING DANGER 

Chapter 3. FIGHTING MEN 

Chapter 4. THE BLINDMAN HUNT 

Chapter 5. GONE AGAIN 

Chapter 6. HANGING MEN 

Chapter 7. THE MAP 

Chapter 8. STEEL WALLS OF DEATH 

Chapter 9. TOUGH CARGO 

Chapter 10. MAROONED 

Chapter 11. POLAR PERIL 

Chapter 12. ICE TRAP 

Chapter 13. ICE GHOSTS 

Chapter 14. CORPSE BOAT 

Chapter 15. THE ARCTIC GODDESS 

Chapter 16. THE REALM OF COLD 

Chapter 17. THE CAPTIVES 

Chapter 18. THE THAWING DEATH  

Chapter 1. THE BRONZE NEMESIS

SOMETHING TERRIBLE impended. 

This was evident from the furtive manner of the small, flatchested  man who cowered in the shadows. He

quaked like a terrified rabbit at  each strange sound. 

Once a cop came along the alleylike side street, slapping big feet  heartily on the walk, twiddling his

nightstick, and whistling "Yankee  Doodle." The prowler crawled under a parked car, and lay there until  the

happy cop passed. 

Near by loomed the enormous bulk of the New York Concert Hall. From  the stage door on the side street

crept strains of a music so beautiful  that each note seemed to grasp the heart with exquisite fingers. 

A violin! 

It was a Stradivarius violin, one of the most perfect in the world,  and had cost the player sixty thousand

dollars. 

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The player was a blind man! 

He was Victor Vail. Many music lovers maintained him to be the  greatest living master of the violin. He

ordinarily got hundreds of  dollars for rendering an hour of violin music before an audience.  Tonight he

played for charity, and got nothing. 

The flatchested man, cowering and fearful, knew little of Victor  Vail. He only knew the music affected him

strangely. Once it made him  think of how his poor mother had sobbed that first time he went to  jail, long

years ago. He nearly burst into tears. 

Then he got hold of his emotions. 

"Yer gettin' goofy!" he sneered at himself. "Snap out of it! Ya got  a job to do!" 

SOON AFTERWARD, a taxi wheeled into the side street. It looked like  any other New York taxi. But the

driver had his coat collar turned up,  and his cap yanked low. Little of his face could be seen. 

The cab halted. The small man scuttled out to it. 

"Ya ready for de job?" he whined. 

"All set," replied the cab driver. He had a very coarse voice. It  was as though a hoarse bullfrog sat in the taxi.

"Go ahead with your  part, matey." 

The flatchested man squirmed uneasily. "Is dis guy gonna be  croaked?" he muttered anxiously. 

"Don't worry about that end of it!" snarled the driver. "We're  handlin' that. Keelhaul me, if we ain't!" 

"I know  but I ain't so hot about gettin' mixed up in a croakin' 

A thumping growl came out of the cab. 

"Pipe down! You've already shipped with this crew, matey! Lay to  an' do your bit of the dirty work!" 

Now that the man in the taxi spoke excitedly, one thing about his  speech was even more noticeable. He had

been a seafaring man in the  past! His speech was sprinkled with sailor lingo. 

The small man shuffled away from the cab. He entered the stage door  of the concert auditorium. 

Victor Vail had finished his violin playing. The audience was  applauding. The handclapping was

tremendous. It sounded like the roar  of Niagara, transferred to the vast hall. 

The flatchested man loitered backstage. Applause from the  delighted audience continued many minutes. It

irked the man. 

"De saps!" he sneered. "You'd t'ink Sharkey had just kayoed  Schmeling, or somethin'!" 

After a time, Victor Vail came to his dressing room. The blind  maestro was surrounded by a worshipful

group of great singers and  musicians. 


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But the loitering man shouldered through them. His shoving hands,  none too clean, soiled the costly gowns of

operatic prima donnas, but  he didn't care. 

"Victor Vail!" he called loudly. "I got a message for yer from Ben  O'Gard!" 

The name of Ben O'Gard had a marked effect on Victor Vail. He  brought up sharply. A smile lighted his

artistic features. 

Victor Vail was tall, distinguished. He had hair as white as  cotton, and almost as fine. His formal dress was

immaculate. 

His eyes did not seem like a blind man's  until an observer  noticed it made no difference to Victor Vail

whether they were open or  shut. 

"Yes!" he cried delightedly. "What is the message from Ben O'Gard?" 

The intruder eyed the persons near by. 

"It's kinda private," he suggested. 

"Then you shall speak to me alone." Victor Vail waved his admirers  back. He led the way to his dressing

room, only a hand thrust out  before him showing he was blind. 

THE FLATCHESTED man entered first. Victor Vail followed, closing  the door. He stood with his back to

the panel a moment. His thoughts  seemed delving into his past. 

"Ben O'Gard!" he murmured reverently. "I have not heard that name  for fifteen years! I have often sought to

find him. I owe my life to  Ben O'Gard. And now that worldly success has come to me, I should like  to show

my gratitude to my benefactor. Tell me, where is Ben O'Gard?" 

"In de street outside." said the flatchested man, trembling a  little. "He wants ter chin with yer." 

"Ben O'Gard is outside! And he wishes to talk to me!" Victor Vail  whipped the dressingroom door open.

"Take me to my friend! Quickly!" 

The dirty man guided the blind master of the violin to the stage  door. 

Just before he reached the door, something happened which made the  guide feel as if a bucket of ice water

had been poured on him. 

He saw the bronze man! 

The bronze man presented a startling figure. He did not look like a  giant  until it was noticed that some

fairly husky men near him seemed  puny, pale specimens in comparison. The big bronze man was so well put

together that the impression was not of size, but of power. The bulk of  his mighty form was forgotten in the

smooth symmetry of a build  incredibly powerful. His dress was quiet, immaculate, but expensive. 

The bronze of this remarkable man's hair was a little darker than  the bronze of his features. The hair was

straight, and lay down  smoothly now. 


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Most striking of all were the eyes. They glittered like pools of  flake gold as backstage lights played on them.

They seemed to exert a  hypnotic influence, a quality that would make the most rash individual  hesitate. 

So pronounced was the strange power of those golden eyes that the  flatchested man shivered and looked

away. Chill perspiration oozed out  of his sallow skin. He glanced back uneasily, saw the weird golden eyes

still upon him, and felt an overpowering impulse to run and hide in the  darkest dive of the vast city. 

He was very glad to get into the outer darkness. 

"WHERE IS Ben O'Gard?" Victor Vail asked eagerly. 

"Aw, hold yer ponies!" snarled the flatchested fellow. "I'm  leadin' yer to 'im, ain't I?" 

He was suddenly very worried  about the bronze man. The strange  golden eyes seemed still boring into his

back. He turned his head to  make sure this wasn't so. 

He wondered who the bronze giant was. He couldn't be a detective   no dick could ever wear dress clothes as

immaculately as this  astounding man had worn them. 

"Gosh!" whimpered the rat. "Just lookin' at dem gold glims made me  feel like I'd been kicked in de belt.

What's de matter wit' me,  anyhow?" 

He didn't know it, but he wasn't the first man who had quailed  before those weird golden eyes. 

"Is it far to where Ben O'Gard waits?" Victor Vail inquired  anxiously. 

"Yer about dere." 

They came abreast of a darkened doorway. Out in the street, a  taxicab had been keeping even with them. This

cab held the sinister  seafaring man who had sent the small man into the concert hall after  Victor Vail. 

The musician's guide looked into the murky door. He made sure  several men lurked there. He grasped Victor

Vail's arm. 

"Yer dere now!" he snarled. 

Then he smashed a fist against Victor Vail's jaw. 

Simultaneously, the gloomy doorway spouted the men it concealed.  They pounced upon the famed blind

violinist. 

Victor Vail fell heavily from the traitorous guide's fist blow. But  the sightless musician was more of a man

than his assailants had  expected. Though he could not get to his feet, he fought from his  clumsy position on

the sidewalk. 

He broke the nose of one attacker with a lucky kick. His hands  found the wrist of another. They were artistic

hands, graceful and long  and very powerful. He twisted the wrist in his grasp. 

The man whose arm he held let out a shriek. It blared like a siren  over the rumble of New York night traffic.

The fellow spun madly to  keep his arm from breaking. 


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The murk of the street aided the blind man, just as it hampered his  assailants. The world he lived in was

always black. 

Blows whistled, thudded. Men hissed, cursed, yelped, groaned.  Bodies fell noisily. Laboring feet scuffed the

walk. 

"Lay aboard 'im, mateys!" howled the seafaring man from his cab.  "Make 'im fast with a line! And load 'im

aboard this landgoin' scow!  Sink 'im with a bullet if you gotta! Keelhaul 'im!" 

A bullet wasn't necessary, though. A clubbed pistol reduced the  fighting Victor Vail to quivering

helplessness. A thin rope looped  clumsily about his wrists and ankles. After the fashion of city  dwellers, the

men were slow with the knots. 

"Throw 'im aboard!" shouted the seafarer in the cab. "Let a swab  who knows knots make 'im shipshape!" 

The gang lifted Victor Vail, bore him toward the taxi. 

And then the lightning struck them! 

THE LIGHTENING was the mighty bronze man! His coming was so swift  and soundless that it seemed

magic. Not one of blind Victor Vail's  attackers saw the giant metallic figure arrive. They knew nothing of  its

presence until they felt its terrible strength. 

Then it was as though a tornado of hard steel had struck them.  Chins collapsed like eggshells. Arms were

plucked from sockets and left  dangling like strings. 

The men screamed and cursed. Two flew out of the melee,  unconscious, not knowing what had vanquished

them. A third dropped with  his whole lower face awfully out of shape, and he, too, didn't know  what had hit

him. 

Others struck feverishly at the Herculean bronze form, only to have  their fists chop empty air. One man found

his ankles trapped as in a  monster vise of metal. He was lifted. His body swung in a terrific  circle, mowing

down his fellows like a scythe. 

"Sink 'im, mateys!" shrilled the seafaring man in the cab. "Scuttle  'im! Use your guns  " 

A piercing shriek from one of his hirelings drowned out the  sailor's urgings. The unfortunate one had been

inclosed in banding  bronze arms. The fearsome arms tightened. The man's ribs breaking made  a sound as of

an apple crate run over by a truck. The fellow fell to  the walk as though dead when released. 

Incredible as it seemed, but two of Victor Vail's assailants  remained in anything but incapacitated conditions.

The sailorman in the  taxi was unhurt, and one villain was upright on the walk. Even an  onlooker who had

seen that flashing battle with his own eyes would have  doubted his senses, such superhuman strength and

agility had the bronze  giant displayed. 

THE MAN upright on the walk abruptly spun end over end for the  taxi. He had been propelled by what for

the bronze man was apparently  but a gentle shove. Yet he caved in the rear door of the cab like a  projectile

would. 

The seafaring hack driver got scared. 


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"Well, keelhaul me!" he choked. 

He slammed the car in gear. He let out the clutch. The cab wrenched  into motion. 

The sailor saw the bronze man flash toward him. The metallic  Nemesis of a figure suddenly looked as big as

a battleship to the  seafaring man. And twice as dangerous! He clawed out a spikesnouted  pistol of foreign

make. He fired. 

The bullet did nothing but break the plateglass window in a shoe  shop. But the bronze giant was forced to

whip into the shelter of a  parked car. 

The seafaring man kept on shooting, largely to prevent his vehicle  being boarded. His lead gouged lone rips

in the car behind which the  bronze man had taken shelter, broke windows in a book store and a  seafood

restaurant. and scared a fat man far up the street so badly  that he fainted. 

The taxi skidded around a corner and was gone. 

BLIND VICTOR Vail abruptly found himself being lifted to his feet  by hands which were unbelievably

powerful, yet which possessed a touch  gentle as that of a mother fondling her babe. He felt a tug at his  wrists. 

Something was happening which he would not have thought possible.  Bronze fingers were snapping the

ropes off Victor Vail's wrists as  effortlessly as though they were frail threads! 

The sightless man had been dazed during the furious fight. But his  ears, keener than an ordinary man's

because of his affliction, had  given him an idea of the momentous thing which had happened. Some  manner

of mighty fighter had come to his rescue. A fighter whose  physical strength was almost beyond

understanding! 

"Thank you, sir," Victor Vail murmured simply. 

"I hope you were not damaged seriously," said the bronze man. 

It struck Victor Vail, as he heard his benefactor speak for the  first time, that he was listening to the voice of a

great singer. It  had a volume of power and tone quality rarely attained by even the  great operatic stars. A

voice such as this should be known throughout  the music world. Yet Victor Vail had never heard it before. 

"I am only bruised a little," said the musician. "But who  " 

The loud clatter of running feet interrupted him. Police were  coming, drawn by the shots. A burly sergeant

pounded from one  direction. Two patrolmen galloped from the other. 

A radio squad car careened into the street with siren moaning in a  way that stood one's hair on end. 

Cops raced for the giant bronze man. Their guns were drawn. They  couldn't see him any too well in the murk. 

"Stick 'em up!" boomed the sergeant. Then a surprising thing  happened. 

The policeman lowered his gun so hastily he nearly dropped it. His  face became actually pale. He couldn't

have looked more mortified had  he accosted the mayor of the city by mistake. 


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"Begorra, I couldn't see it was you, sor," he apologized. The  bronze giant's strong lips quirked the faintest of

smiles. But the  sergeant saw the smile  and beamed as if he had just been promoted to  a captaincy. 

A roadster was parked near by. It was a very powerful and efficient  machine. The top was down. The color

was a reserved gray. 

Not another word was spoken. The bronze man escorted Victor Vail to  the machine. The roadster pulled

away from the curb. The police stood  back respectfully. They watched the car out of sight. 

"T'row these rats in a cell on a charge av disturbin' the peace,"  directed the sergeant. Then he looked more

closely at the prisoners and  grinned widely. "Begorra, 'tis in the hospital yez'd better t'row 'em.  Sure, an'

never in me born days did I see a bunch av lads so busted  up!" 

"But won't they be charged with somethin' besides disturbin' the  peace?" questioned a rooky who had but

lately joined the force. 

The sergeant frowned severely. "Glory be, an' didn't yez see that  big bronze feller?" 

"Sure." 

"Then button the lip av yez. If the bronze man had wanted these  scuts charged wit' anyt'ing, he would av said

so." 

The rooky's eyes popped. "Gosh! Who was that guy?" 

The sergeant chuckled mysteriously. "Me lad, yez know what they say  about our new mayor  that nobody

has any pull wit' him?" 

"Sure," agreed the rooky. "Every one knows our new mayor is the  finest New York has ever had, and that he

can't be influenced. But  what's that got to do with the big bronze fellow?" 

"Nothin'," grinned the sergeant. "Except that, begorra, our new  mayor would gladly turn a handspring at a

word from that bronze man!" 

Chapter 2. THE CLICKING DANGER

AS HE was whipped along New York streets in the speedy gray  roadster, it suddenly dawned on Victor Vail

that he knew nothing about  his rescuer. He didn't even understand why he had accompanied the  strange man

so readily. 

The blind violinist was not in the habit of meekly permitting  unknowns to lead him about. Yet he had gone

with this mighty stranger  as docilely as a lamb. 

"Are you a messenger sent to take me to Ben O'Gard?" he asked. 

"No," came the bronze giant's amazing voice. "I do not even know  any one by that name." 

Victor Vail was so intrigued by the beauty of his unusual  companion's vocal tones that he could not speak for

a moment. 


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"May I ask who you are?" he inquired. 

"Doc Savage," said the bronze man. 

"Doc Savage," Victor Vail murmured. He seemed disappointed. "I am  sorry, but I do not believe I have heard

the name before." 

The bronze giant's lips made a faint smile. 

"That is possible," he said. "Perhaps I should have been more  formal in giving you my name. It is Clark

Savage, Jr." 

At this, Victor Vail gave a marked start. 

"Clark Savage, Jr!" he gasped in a tone of awe. "Why, among the  violin selections I rendered in my concert

tonight was a composition by  Clark Savage, Jr. In my humble opinion, and to the notion of other  artists, that

composition is one of the most masterly of all time.  Surely, you are not the composer?" 

"Guilty!" Doc admitted "And it is not flattery when I say the  selection was never rendered more beautifully

than by your hand  tonight. Indeed, your marvelous playing was one of two things which  led me backstage. I

wished to compliment you. I noted the furtive  manner of the man leading you outside, and followed. That is

how I  happened to be on hand." 

"What was the second thing which led you to seek me out?" Victor  Vail asked curiously. 

"That is something I shall explain later," Doc replied. "I hope you  do not mind accompanying me." 

"Mind!" Blind Victor Vail laughed. "It is a privilege!" 

The sightless master of the violin,indeed, considered it such. He  had many times wondered about the

mysterious Clark Savage, Jr., who had  composed that great violin selection. Strangely enough, the composer

was listed as an unknown. He had claimed no credit for the marvelous  piece of work. 

This was astounding in itself, considering what moneymad beings the  human race had become. The composer

could have ridden to a fortune on  the strength of that one selection. 

Victor Vail could not help but wonder and marvel at the powers of  this strange man who had rescued him. 

AS THE roadster wended its way through the heavy traffic of the  theatrical district, no one noticed one

particular cab which followed  Doc Savage and the blind violinist; not even Doc. 

The seafaring man who had directed the illfated attempt to capture  Victor Vail occupied the machine.

However, he had stuffed his cheeks  with gum, donned dark glasses, stuck a false mustache to his lip,  thrust a

cigar in his teeth, and changed his cap. He looked like a  different man. 

"Keelhaul me!" he snarled repeatedly to himself. "I gotta get that  Victor Vail! I gotta!" 

Doc's roadster halted finally before one of the largest buildings  in New York. This was a gigantic white thorn

of brick and steel which  speared upward nearly a hundred stories. 


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Doc Savage led the blind violinist inside. They entered an  elevator. The cage climbed with a low moan to the

eightysixth floor.  Noiselessly, the doors slid back. 

They now entered a sumptuously furnished office. This held an  inlaid table of great value, a steel safe so

large it reached to the  bronze giant's shoulder, and many comfortable chairs. A vast window  gave an

impressive view of a forest of other skyscrapers. 

Doc ensconced Victor Vail in a luxurious chair. He gave the  musician a cigar of such price and quality that it

came in an  individual vacuum container. Doc did not smoke, himself. 

"If you do not mind telling, I should like to know what was behind  that attack upon you tonight," Doc said. 

The unusual voice of the bronze man held a strangely compelling  quality. Victor Vail found himself

answering without the slightest  hesitancy. 

"I am completely in the dark as to the reason," he said "I have no  enemies. I do not know why they tried to

seize me." 

"Those who seized you had the earmarks of hired thugs. But there  was a man in the cab, a sailor. He shouted

at the others several times.  Did you recognize his voice?" 

Victor Vail shook his head slowly. "I did not hear it. I was too  dazed." 

Silence fell for a moment. 

Then the office abruptly rang with the coarse tones of the  seafaring man! 

"Sink 'im, mateys!" it shrilled. "Scuttle 'im! Use your guns!" 

Victor Vail sprang up with a startled cry. 

"It's Keelhaul de Rosa!" he shouted. "Watch him closely, Mr.  Savage! The devil once tried to kill me!" 

"Keelhaul de Rosa is not here," Doc said gently. 

"But his voice spoke just then!" 

"What you heard was my imitation of the voice of the sailor in the  taxi," Doc explained. "I repeated his

words. Obviously, that man was  Keelhaul de Rosa, as you call him." 

Victor Vail sank back in his chair. He fumbled with the fine cigar.  He mopped his forehead. 

"I would have sworn it was Keelhaul de Rosa speaking," he muttered.  "Why  why  holy smoke! What

manner of man are you, anyhow?" 

Doc passed the question up as though he hadn't heard it. He  disliked to speak of his accomplishments, even

though it might be but a  few words that were well deserved. 

A truly remarkable man, this goldeneyed giant of bronze! 

"Suppose you tell me what you know of Keelhaul de Rosa," Doc said. 


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The blind man ran long fingers through his white hair. It was  apparent he was becoming excited. 

"Why, bless me!" he muttered. "Could this mystery go back to the  destruction of the Oceanic? It must!" 

WITH A pronounced effort, Victor Vail composed himself. He began  speaking rapidly. 

"The story goes back more than fifteen years," he said. "It was  during the World War.  My wife, my infant

daughter, and myself sailed  from Africa on the liner Oceanic.  We were bound for England. 

"But an enemy sea raider chased the liner northward. The enemy boat  could not overhaul us, but it pursued

our craft for days. Indeed, the  Oceanic sailed far within the arctic ice pack before escaping.  " 

"The liner was trapped in the ice. It drifted for months, and was  carried by the ice far within the polar

regions." 

Victor Vail paused to puff his cigar. 

"Trouble with the crew arose as food ran short," he continued. "A  shell from the enemy raider had destroyed

our wireless. We could not  advise the outside world of our difficulty. The crew wanted to desert  the liner.

although the master of the vessel assured them the ice pack  was impassable." 

Victor Vail touched his eyes. "You understand. I am telling this  only as I heard it. I, of course, saw nothing. I

only heard. 

"The leaders of the crew were two men Ben O'Gard was one. Keelhaul  de Rosa was the other. They were

persuaded not to desert the liner." 

Victor Vail suddenly covered his face with his hands. 

"Then came the disaster. The liner was crushed in the ice. Only Ben  O'Gard. Keelhaul de Rosa, and about

thirty of the Oceanic's crew  escaped. I was also among the survivors, although that is a mystery I  do not yet

understand." 

"What do you mean?" 

"I was seized by members of the crew two days before the disaster,  and made unconscious with an

anaesthetic. I did not revive until the  day following the destruction of the Oceanic. Then I awakened with a

strange pain in my back." 

"Describe the pain,  suggested Doc. 

"It was a sort of smarting, as though I had been burned." 

"Any scars on your back now?" 

"None. That is the mysterious part." 

"Who saved you when the liner was lost?" 

"Ben O'Gard," said the blind violinist. "He was hauling me across  the ice on a crude sledge when I revived. I

owe Ben O'Gard my life. Not  only for that, but, some days later, Keelhaul de Rosa seized me and  tried to


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carry me off by force. He and Ben O'Gard had a terrific fight,  O'Gard rescuing me. After that, Keelhaul de

Rosa fled with several of  his followers. We never got trace of them again." 

"Until tonight," Doc put in mildly. 

"That is right  until tonight," Victor Vail agreed. "It was  Keelhaul de Rosa who tried to seize me!" 

The sightless musician now put his face in his hands again. His  shoulders convulsed a little. He was sobbing! 

"My poor wife," he choked. "And my darling little daughter, Roxey!  Ben O'Gard told me he tried to save

them, but they perished." 

Doc Savage was silent. He knew Victor Vail's story must have  brought back memories of his wife and infant

daughter. 

"Little Roxey, that was my daughter's name," murmured the musician. 

DOC SAVAGE finally spoke. 

"It strikes me as rather strange that the story about the fate of  the liner Oceanic did not appear in the

newspapers. Such a yarn would  have made all the front pages." 

Victor Vail gave a start of surprise. "But  didn't it?" 

"That is strange! Ben O'Gard told me it had. Personally, I never  mentioned the incident. The memory is too

painful." The sightless  violinist paused. He made a fingersnapping gesture of surprise. 

"That is another mystery! Why should Ben O'Gard tell me falsely  that every one knew the story of the awful

fate of the Oceanic?" 

"Perhaps he desired to keep the fate of the liner a secret," Doc  offered. "Did he suggest that you keep quiet?" 

"Why  why  I recall that he did bring up the subject! And I told  him I never wanted to hear of the ghastly

affair again!" 

Doc's great voice suddenly acquired a purr of interest. 

"I should like very much to know what actually happened during that  period you were unconscious!" he said. 

Victor Vail stiffened slightly. 

"I refuse to listen to anything against Ben O'Gard!" he snapped.  "The man saved my life! He tried to save my

wife and baby daughter!" 

"You will hear nothing against him," Doc smiled. "I judge no one  without proof." 

Doc did not point out that Victor Vail only had Ben O'Gard's word  about that lifesaving business. 

The blind man rubbed his jaw in a puzzled way. 


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"Perhaps I should mention another strange thing which may be  connected with this," he said. "The mystery

which I call the 'Clicking  Danger'!" 

"By all means! Leave out nothing." 

"It has been nearly fifteen years since I last met Ben O'Gard,"  muttered Victor Vail. "With Ben O'Gard's

faction of the survivors was a  sailor with a nervous ailment of his jaws. This malady caused his teeth  to

chatter together at intervals, making a weird clicking noise. The  sound used to get on my nerves. 

"Here is the mystery: At frequent intervals during the  last  fifteen years, I have heard, or thought I heard, that

clicking noise. I  have gotten into the habit of playfully calling it the 'Clicking  Danger.' 

"Actually, nothing has ever come of it. In fact, I rather thought  it was my imagination entirely, instead of the

sailor. Why should the  fellow follow me all over the world for fifteen years." 

"It is possible Ben O'Gard has been keeping track of you," Doc  replied. 

The sightless master of the violin considered this in a somewhat  offended silence. 

Doc Savage studied Victor Vail's eyes intently. After a bit, he  came over to the musician. He led the man

across an adjacent room. This  was a vast library. It held hundreds of thousands of ponderous volumes

concerning every conceivable branch of science. This was probably the  second most complete scientific

library in existence. 

The one collection of such tomes greater than this was unknown to  the world. No one but Doc Savage was

aware of its existence. For that  superb library was at the spot he called his Fortress of Solitude. a  retreat in a

corner of the globe so remote and inaccessible that only  Doc knew its whereabouts. 

To this Fortress of Solitude the giant man of bronze retired  periodically. On such occasions, he seemed to

vanish completely from  the earth, for no living soul could find him. He worked and studied  absolutely alone. 

It was in these periods of terrific concentration and study that  Doc Savage accomplished many of the

marvelous things for which he was  noted. 

BEYOND skyscraper library lay another room  a vast scientific  laboratory. This, too, was of a completeness

equaled by but one other   the laboratory at Doc's Fortress of Solitude. 

"What are you going to do?" asked Victor Vail curiously. 

"I came backstage tonight to see you for two reasons," Doc  replied. "The first was to tell you how I enjoyed

your rendition of my  violin composition. The second was to examine your eyes." 

"You mean  " 

"I mean an artist as great as you, Victor Vail, should have the use  of his eyes. I wish to examine them to see if

vision cannot be  returned." 

Victor Vail choked. His sightless orbs filled with tears. For an  instant, he seemed about to break down. 

"It is impossible!" he gulped. "I have been to the greatest eye  specialists in the world. They say nothing less

than a magician can  help me." 


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"Then we'll try some magic," Doc smiled. 

"Please  don't joke about it!" moaned the blind man. 

"I'm not joking," Doc said steadily. "I positively can give you  sight of sorts. If conditions are as I think, I can

give you perfect  vision. That is why I wish to examine." 

Victor Vail could only gulp and sag into a chair. It did not occur  to him to doubt the ability of this mighty

being beside him. There was  something in the bronze man's voice which compelled belief. 

An overpowering wonder seized Victor Vail. What, oh, what manner of  person was this bronze master? 

A lot of folks had wondered that. 

Rapidly, Doc took numerous Xray pictures of Victor Vail. He also  got exposures using rays less familiar to

the surgical profession. He  continued his examination with ordinary instruments, as well as some  the like of

which could have been found nowhere else. They were of  Doc's own invention. 

"Now wait in the outer office while I consider what the examination  shows," Doc directed. 

Victor Vail went into the outside office. He did not comprehend  why, but he had such confidence in the

bronze giant's ability that he  already felt as though he could see the wonders of a world he had never

glimpsed. 

For Victor Vail had been born blind. 

The sightless violinist would have been even more happy had be  known the true extent of Doc Savage's

ability. For Doc was a greater  master of the field of surgery than of any other. 

Doc's composition of the violin selection marked him as one of the  greatest in that field. He had done things

equally marvelous in  electricity, chemistry, botany, psychology, and other lines. 

Yet these things were child's play to what he had done with  medicine and surgery. For it was in medicine and

surgery that Doc had  specialized. His first training, and his hardest, had been in these. 

Few persons understood the real scope of Doc's incredible  knowledge. Even fewer knew how he had gained

this knowledge. 

Doc had undergone intensive training from the cradle. Never for a  day during his lifetime had that training

slackened. 

There was really no magic about Doc's uncanny abilities.  He had  simply worked and studied harder than ever

had a man before him. 

Doc was developing the ray photos he had taken. The task quickly  neared completion. 

Suddenly Victor Vail, in the outer office, emitted a piercing howl. 

A shot exploded deafeningly. Men cursed. Blows smashed. 

Doc's bronze form flashed through the laboratory door. Across the  library, he sped. 


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From the library door, a Tommy gun spewed lead almost into his  face. 

Chapter 3. FIGHTING MEN

DOC HAD charged forward. expecting to meet danger. So he was alert.  Twisting aside, he evaded the first

torrent of bullets. 

But nothing in the library offered shelter. He doubled back. His  speed was blinding. His bronze figure

snapped into the laboratory  before the wielder of the machine gun could correct his aim. 

The gunman swore loudly. He dashed across the bookfilled room.  Deadly weapon ready, he sprang into the

laboratory. Murderous purpose  was on his pinched face. 

His eyes roved the lab. His jaw sagged. 

There was no bronze man in the lab! 

To a window, the gunner leaped. He flung it up, looked out. 

No one was in sight. The white wall of the skyscraper lacked very  little of being smooth as glass. Nobody

could pull a humanfly stunt on  that expanse. No rope was visible, above or below. 

The gunman drew back. He panted. His pinched face threatened to  rival in color the white shirt he wore. 

The bronze giant had vanished! 

Fearfully, the gunman sidled about on the polished bricks of the  laboratory floor. 

Two half circles of these bricks suddenly whipped upward. They were  not unlike a monster bear trap. The

gunman was caught. 

His rapidfirer cackled a brief instant. Then pain made him drop  the weapon. Madly, he tore at the awful

thing which held him. It defied  him. The bricks which had arisen were actually of hard steel, merely  painted

to resemble masonry. 

Before the wouldbe killer's painblurred eyes, a section of the  laboratory wall opened soundlessly. The

mighty bronze man stepped out  of the recess it had concealed. 

The giant, metallic form approached, taking up a position before  the captive. 

"Lemme out of dis t'ing!" whined the gunman. "It's bustin' me  ribs!" 

THE BRONZE man might not have heard, for all the sign he gave. One  of his hands lifted. The hand was

slender, perfectly shaped. It seemed  made entirely of piano wires and steel rods. 

The hand touched lightly to the gunman's face. 

The gunman instantly slumped over. 

He was unconscious! 


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He fell to the floor as the bronze giant released the mechanical  trap which held him. The trap settled back into

the floor  become a  part of the other bricks. 

Like an arrow off a bow, the bronze man whipped into the library,  then to the outer office. 

The gunman had never moved after striking the floor. Yet he  breathed noisily, as though asleep. 

In the outer office, the bronze man saw Victor Vail was gone! 

A DRIBBLE of moist crimson across the floor showed the single shot  which had sounded had damaged some

one. The red leakage led to an  elevator door. The panel was closed. The cage was gone. 

Doc Savage glided down the battery of elevator doors. The last  panel was shut. His finger found a secret

button, and pressed it. The  doors slid open. A ready cage was revealed. 

This car always awaited Doc's needs at the eightysixth floor. Its  hoisting mechanism was of a special nature.

The cage went up and down  at a speed far surpassing the other elevators. 

Doc sent it dropping downward. For a moment or two he actually  floated in the air some inches above the

floor, so swift was the  descent 

The cage seemed hardly to get going before it slowed. And with such  an abruptness did it halt that only great

leg muscles kept Doc from  being flattened to the floor. 

The doors opened automatically. Doc popped out into the firstfloor  lobby of the skyscraper. 

An astounding sight met his gaze. 

Directly before the elevator door stood an individual who could  easily be mistaken for a giant gorilla. He

weighed in excess of two  hundred and sixty pounds. His arms were some inches longer than his  legs and

actually as thick as his legs! He was literally furred with  curly, rusthued hair. 

A more homely face than that possessed by this anthropoid fellow  would be hard to find. His eyes were like

little stars twinkling in  their pits of gristle. His ears were cauliflowered; something had  chewed the tip of one,

and the other was perforated as though for an  earring except that the puncture was about the size of a rifle

bullet.  His mouth was very big. 

This gigantic individual held three meaneyed men in the hooplike  clasp of his huge arms. The trio were

helpless. Three guns, which they  had no doubt held recently, lay on the floor. 

The gorilla of a man saw Doc. His knot of a head seemed to open in  halves as he laughed. 

"Listen, Doc!" he said in a voice surprisingly mild for such a  monster. "Listen to this!" 

His enormous arms tightened on his three prisoners. As one man the  three howled in agony. 

"Don't they sing pretty  huh?" the anthropoid man chuckled. He  squeezed the trio again, and listened to their

pained howls like a  singing teacher. 

Across the lobby, two more meaneyed men cowered in a corner. They  had their arms wrapped tightly about

their faces. Each was trying to  crawl into the corner behind the other. 


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The cause of their terror was a slender, waspish man who danced  lightly before them. This man was probably

as immaculately clad a  gentleman as ever twirled a cane on a New York street. 

Indeed, it was with a sword cane that he now menaced the pair in  the corner. A sword cane which ordinarily

looked like an innocent black  walking stick! 

This man was "Ham." On the military records, he was Brigadier  General Theodore Marley Brooks. He was

one of the leading civil lawyers  of the country. He had never been known to lose a case. But there was  no

sign of poor blind Victor Vail. 

DOC SAVAGE addressed the grinning gorilla of a man. 

"What happened, Monk?" 

"Monk!" 

No other nickname would have quite fit the homely, longarmed, and  furry fellow. The highly technical

articles he occasionally wrote on  chemistry were signed by the full name of Lieutenant Colonel Andrew

Blodgett Mayfair. 

There apparently wasn't room back of his low brow for more brains  than could be crammed into a cigarette.

Actually, he was such a great  chemist that other famous chemists often came from foreign countries to

consult with him. 

"We were coming in the door when we met our friends." Monk gave his  three captives a squeeze to hear them

howl. "They had guns. We didn't  like their looks. So we glommed onto 'em." 

Reaching forward, Doc Savage placed his bronze right hand lightly  against the faces of each of Monk's three

prisoners. Only Doc's finger  tips touched the skin of the men. 

Yet all three instantly became unconscious! 

Hurrying over, Doc also touched lightly the pair Ham menaced with  his sword cane. 

Both fell senseless! 

Ham sheathed his sword cane. He twirled the innocent black stick  which resulted. He was quite a striking

figure, sartorially. 

Indeed, tailors often followed Ham down the street, just to watch  clothes being worn as they should be worn! 

"You didn't see more of these rats dragging a whitehaired, blind  man, did you?" Doc asked. 

"We saw only these five." Ham had the penetrant voice of an orator. 

Neither Ham nor Monk seemed the least surprised by the way in which  their prisoners dropped unconscious

at Doc's touch. 

Ham and Monk were accustomed to the remarkable feats of this mighty  bronze man, for they were two of a

group of five men who worked with  Doc Savage. Each of the other three was a master of some profession,

just as Monk was a fine chemist and Ham a great lawyer. 


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The five men and Doc Savage formed an adventuresome group with a  definite, although somewhat strange,

purpose in life. This purpose was  to go here and there, from one end of the world to the other, looking  for

excitement and adventure, striving to help those in need of help,  and punishing those who deserved it. 

Doc suddenly went outside. He moved so effortlessly he seemed to  glide. He had been seized by a suspicion.

Either Victor Vail was still  in the skyscraper, or he had been removed by way of the freight  elevators. 

Hardly was Doc on the walk when a bullet splashed chill air on his  bronze face. 

Two sedans were parked down the street, near the freight entrance  of the giant building. 

One machine lurched into motion. It ran rapidly away. Doc did not  get a chance to see whether Victor Vail

was in it! 

Doc flashed over into the shelter of a manyspouted fire hydrant.  The hydrant had couplings for several hose

lines. It was nearly as  large as a barrel. 

Down the street, the driver hopped out of the sedan which remained.  He was a big man, very fat. He wore a

white handkerchief mask. 

"Git a hump on yer!" he howled. 

The cry was obviously directed at some of his fellows who were  still in the skyscraper. 

Monk and Ham popped out on the walk. The shot had attracted them.  Monk held a pistol which, in his hairy

paw, looked small as a watch  chain ornament. 

The sedan driver leveled a revolver to fire again. Monk's fist spat  flame. 

The driver jumped about wildly. like a beheaded chicken. His  spasmodic actions carried him into the street.

He caved down finally  and rolled under the sedan. 

Three or four evil heads poked out of the freight entrance. Another  red spark jumped out of Monk's paw. The

heads jerked back. 

Suddenly, Doc's low voice reached Monk's ears. Doc spoke half a  dozen staccato sentences. Silence

followed. 

When Monk glanced at the fire hydrant a moment later, Doc Savage  was gone! 

Several times in the next minute guns roared in the gloomy street.  The reports echoed from the manmade

walls on either side like satanic  laughter. 

The driver of the sedan abruptly appeared! The fellow still wore  his mask. He hauled himself laboriously to

the sedan door. Getting it  open, he fell limply into the machine. 

This seemed to embolden the fellows in the freight entrance. They  launched a volley of bullets at Monk and

Ham. The pair were driven out  of sight. 

A tight group, the gunmen sprinted from the freight entrance to  their sedan. They made it safely. They piled

in, trampling the prone,  whitemasked form of the driver. 


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"T'row de stiff out!" snarled one man, seizing the driver. The  driver kicked the man who had grasped him. 

"I ain't no stiff, damn yer!" he cursed. "Dey jest winged me!" 

"It's a lousy deal, us goin' off an' leavin' our pals in dat  buildin'!" growled a gunster. 

"What else could we do?" retorted another. "Dey was saps to go  bargin' out wavin' our rods. If we hadn't

heard 'em squawk, we'd have  been caught, too." 

"Dry up, you mugs!" snapped the man who had taken the wheel. 

The sedan rolled down Broadway. It veered into a side street many  blocks downtown. 

The street became shabby. Smell of fish permeated the air. Ragged  derelicts of men tottered along the

thoroughfare. Men in seamen's  clothing were plentiful. Raucous music blared out of cheap honkatonks. 

It was the water front district  a region of sailor lodging  houses, needled beer, and frequent fights. 

"De others got here first!" growled a gunman. "Dere's de car dey  was drivin'." 

The machine the man indicated was the first sedan to pull away from  the uptown skyscraper. 

THE EVIL fellows left the two sedans parked close together.  "Honkey," the former driver, staggered out, but

nearly fell. 

"Help 'im, you guys!" directed the man who seemed to be the straw  boss. 

Honkey was half carried across the walk. This side street was very  dark. They did not bother to remove the

white mask Honkey still wore. 

"Gosh, but he's heavy!" complained a man helping the driver. 

They mounted a stairway. The rickety steps whined like dogs when  they were stepped on. There was no light,

except that from a match a  man going ahead had struck. 

Into a lighted room, the group went. Several other men waited here. 

Still there was no sign of Victor Vail. 

"Put Honkey on de bed in de nex' room!" commanded the straw boss. 

The two thugs hauled Honkey into an adjacent chamber. It was a  slatternly looking place. Wall paper draped

from the walls in great  scabs. The one bed was filthy. 

The pair prepared to lower Honkey. 

At this point, Honkey's hands came up with apparent aimlessness.  The finger tips touched each man's face. 

Instead of Honkey dropping upon the bed, both thugs collapsed upon  it! They made no sound. 

Honkey now stumbled back into the other room. The gang assembled  there eyed him in surprise. 


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"Yer'd better go ter bed, Honkey!" snarled the one who had been  giving orders. 

"Aw  I ain't feelin' so tough." Honkey muttered. 

"Well, take dat crazy mask off, anyway!" 

"In a minute," mumbled Honkey. "Soon's I find me a chair." 

He weaved among the gangsters. He seemed very unsteady on his feet.  To remain erect, he clutched the

persons of such men as he passed.  Always, his finger tips touched some portion of bare skin. 

He came in contact with six men on his way across the room. The six  sat in their chairs with a strange rigidity

after he had passed. 

The gangster who served as straw boss watched. Curiosity rippled  over his face. Then came ugly suspicion. 

He shucked two big automatics out of his clothing. He covered the  reeling driver. 

"Stick 'em up!" he snarled. 

There was nothing the driver could do but obey. Up went his arms. 

At this point, the six gangsters he had touched fell out of their  chairs. They made a succession of thumps on

the floor. They were  unconscious. 

"Whew!" gritted the gunman. "Keep dem hands up!" 

He advanced gingerly. With a quick move, he plucked the mask off  the driver. 

"I t'ought so!" he hissed. 

The features revealed were not those of Honkey, the driver. 

They were the bronze lineaments of Doc Savage! 

Chapter 4. THE BLINDMAN HUNT

BEWILDERMENT GRIPPED the assembled thugs. They could not comprehend  that the bronze man had

taken the place of Honkey, back at the uptown  skyscraper. It was too much for them to believe that any one

could be  such a master of voice imitation as to fool them by emulating Honkey's  hoarse growl. 

They looked at the six of their comrades huddled senseless on the  floor. A nearterror distorted their ugly

faces.  The bronze man slowly  pushed Honkey's cap off his head. The cap was none too clean. It was as

though he didn't wish to wear it longer than was necessary. 

For a brief instant. his finger tips probed in the bronze hair that  lay down like a metal skullcap. 

"Keep clawin' fer the ceilin'!" snarled the gang chief. 

Doc's arms lifted obediently. His hands nearly touched the ceiling,  indicating what a really large man he was. 


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"Search 'im!" ordered the leader. 

Gingerly, four of the thugs advanced. They frisked Doc with  practiced fingers. They found some silver coins

and a few bills which  had belonged to Honkey. These they appropriated. But they unearthed no  weapon. 

"De umpcha ain't got a rod!" they muttered. The fact that Doc  wasn't armed seemed to stun them. 

Their leader eyed the six limp hulks on the floor. He moved to the  bedroom door. He whitened perceptibly

when he saw the two sprawled on  the bed. 

"I don't savvy dis!" he shivered. "What messed dem guys up like  dat?" 

Suddenly his mean eyes narrowed. 

"Hunt in his sleeves!" he commanded his men. 

They did so  and brought to light a small hypodermic needle. 

The leader grasped the needle fearfully between thumb and  forefinger. He inspected it. 

"So dis is what laid 'em out!" he leered. 

The other villains stirred uneasily. They didn't fancy weapons such  as this. A gun was more their style. 

"Croak 'im!" they suggested. 

But their boss shook his head violently. 

"Ixnay!" he snapped. "Dis guy is just de umpcha we need. We're  gonna make 'im tell us where old Victor

Vail is!" 

A marked interest now registered on Doc Savage's bronze features.  He was obviously surprised. 

"You mean to say you haven't got Victor Vail?" he asked. 

The remarkable power of his great voice held the gangsters  speechless for a moment. Then their leader spoke

sneeringly. 

"D'you t'ink we'd be askin' where de guy is if we had 'im?" he  demanded. He scowled blackly. "Say, whatcha

drivin at  askin' us if we  got 'im?" 

"Victor Vail was seized," Doc replied. "I naturally supposed you  fellows had him. That is why I am here." 

The thugs exchanged angry glares. 

"Dat damn Keelhaul de Rosa crowd got 'im first, after all!" one  grated. 

This morsel was very interesting to Doc Savage. "You mean to say  your outfit and Keelhaul de Rosa's outfit

were both after Victor Vail?"  he asked. 

"Button de lip!" rasped the leader of the thugs. "I t'ink yer lyin'  ter me about anybody gettin' Victor Vail!" 


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"Den why would he come here?" put in another fellow. "Don't be a  nut! Dat's what the shootin' upstairs was.

Yer remember we heard a  typewriter turn loose. Dat's what scared us off." 

Doc Savage gave the tiniest of nods. He understood now why the five  captured by Monk and Ham had come

dashing out of the elevators with  their guns in hand. They had heard the machinegun fire upstairs, and  had

become terrified. 

"I wonder how Keelhaul de Rosa got ahead of us at de skyscraper?"  mumbled the leader. 

"He tried to grab de blind guy from under our snozzles at de  concert hall, didn't he?" asked the other thug.

"He drove off mighty  fast in dat taxi, but he could've circled back an' followed de blind  guy to dat skyscraper

just de same as we did, couldn't he?" 

Doc listened with interest to all this. These fellows must have  arrived at the concert hall in time to witness the

street fight. And  they had been cunning enough to keep out of sight. 

The leader swore loudly. "Cripes! Yer remember dat guy in a cab who  had a trick mustache? De one dat was

puffin' a cigar? He followed de  roadster to de skyscraper, den went in right after dis bronze guy an'  old Victor

Vail. I'll bet dat was Keelhaul de Rosa!" 

"What we gonna do?" growled a man. The leader shrugged. "Ben O'Gard  will wanta know about dis. I'll go

an' have a talk wit' 'im!" 

This apprised Doc of another fact. These men were hirelings of Ben  O'Gard! 

Victor Vail had mentioned a strange feud between Ben O'Gard and  "Keelhaul" de Rosa on the arctic ice pack.

It was evident that this old  feud still continued. 

But what was back of it? Did Victor Vail's unconsciousness at the  time of the disaster to the liner Oceanic,

and his awakening with a  queer smarting in his back, have anything to do with this mystery? 

The leader of the thugs came over and confronted Doc. He looked  small and unhealthy before the mighty

bronze man. He held up the  hypodermic needle. 

"What's in dis?" he questioned. 

"Water," Doc said dryly. 

"Yeah?" sneered the man. He eyed the unmoving forms of his fellows  on the floor, shuddered violently, then

got hold of himself. "Yer a  liar!" 

"There's really nothing but water in it," Doc persisted. 

The thug leered. His hand darted like a striking serpent. The hypo  needle was embedded in Doc's corded

neck. The implement discharged its  contents into his veins. 

Without a sound, the giant bronze man caved down to the floor. 

"So it was only water in dat t'ing!" snorted the gangster straw  boss. "Dat needle is what got our pals!" 


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He gave orders. The big bronze man was turned over, kicked a few  times, and soundly belabored. He showed

no signs of consciousness. 

"Dat guy is harder'n brass!" muttered a thug, blowing feverishly on  a fist with which he had taken an overly

hard swing at the limp,  metallic form. 

"Watch 'im close!" commanded the leader. Then he pointed at a  telephone on a stand against one wall. "I'm

goin' to talk wit' Ben  O'Gard in person. I'll either give you mugs a ring about what to do  wit' the bronze guy,

or come back myself an' tell yer." 

The man now departed. 

The other gangsters expended some minutes in seeking to revive  their unconscious fellows. However, they

had no luck. 

They smoked. They muttered to each other, and one of their number  took a post outside in the hallway as

lookout. 

Suddenly a shrill voice came from the room where the two thugs lay  senseless on the bed. 

"C'mere, quick!" it piped. "I got somethin' important!" 

A number of gangsters rushed into the room. Others crowded about  the door. 

For a moment, not an eye watched the bronze figure of Doc Savage! 

"Dat's funny!" declared a man, examining the pair on the bed. "He  must've gone back to sleep! They're both

out like a light now!" 

"I never heard either one of dem guys talk in a shrill voice like  dat," another fellow said wonderingly. 

They came out of the bedroom, a puzzled group of villains. 

Not one of them glanced at the telephone. So none noticed that a  match had been jammed under the receiver

hook, holding it in a lifted  position! 

The strong lips of Doc Savage began to writhe. Sounds came from  them. Clucking, gobbling sounds, they

were absolutely meaningless to  the listening thugs. The sounds were very loud. 

"What kinda language is dat?" growled a man. 

"Dat ain't no language!" snorted another. "De guy is jest delirious  an' ravin'!" 

The gangster was wrong. For Doc Savage was speaking one of the  leastknown languages in existence. The

tongue of the ancient Mayan  civilization which centuries ago flourished in Central America! And his  words

were going into the telephone! 

When all the gangsters looked in the bedroom, they had given Doc  sufficient time to call Monk at his

skyscraper office. The thugs had  been too excited to hear him whisper the phone number. 


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Doc was a ventriloquist of ability. He had thrown his voice into  the bedroom to get the attention of his

captors. 

It would have surprised the absent leader of the thugs to know the  hypodermic needle he had used on Doc

had actually contained nothing  more harmful than water! Doc had chanced to have the needle on his  person.

And he had slipped it up his sleeve for the purpose of  deceiving the villains. 

It was not the needle with which Doc made his enemies unconscious  so mysteriously. 

DOC SAVAGE continued to speak Mayan. The lingo sounded like  gibberish to the listeners in the shabby

room. 

To homely Monk in the uptown skyscraper, however, it carried a lot  of meaning. All of Doc's men could

speak Mayan. They used it when they  wanted to converse without being understood by bystanders. 

"Renny, Long Tom, and Johnny should be there by now," Doc told Monk  in the strange language. 

The three men he had named were the remaining members of his group  of five adventuresome aids! 

"Tell Johnny to get the contents of Drawer No. 13 in the  laboratory," Doc continued. "The contents will be a

bottle of  biliouslooking paint, a brush, arid a mechanism like an overgrown  field glass. Tell Johnny to bring

the paint and brush here." 

Doc gave the address of the dive where he was being held. 

"There are two sedans parked outside," the bronze man went on in  the gobbling dialect. 'Tell Johnny to paint

a cross on the top of each  one. He is to bring his car which is equipped with radio. He is to wait  in a street

near by when he has finished the painting. 

"Long Tom and Renny are to take the overgrown field glasses and  race to the airport. They're to circle over

the city in my plane, Renny  doing the flying, while Long Tom watches with the overgrown glasses.  The

glasses will make the paint Johnny will put on the sedan tops show  up a distinctive luminous color. Long

Tom is to radio the course of the  sedans to Johnny, who will follow them. 

The gangsters were listening to the clucking words. Evil grins  wreathed their pinched faces. They didn't

dream the gobble could have a  meaning! 

"You, Monk, will visit the police station where the thugs who  attacked Victor Vail and myself outside the

concert hall were taken."  Doc said. "Question them and seek to learn where a sailor called  Keelhaul de Rosa

would be likely to take Victor Vail. 

"Ham is to remain in the office and question the rat you found  unconscious in the laboratory, also seeking to

find Keelhaul de Rosa  and Victor Vail. 

"If you understand these instructions, snap your fingers twice in  the telephone transmitter." 

Two low snaps promptly came from the wedgedup telephone receiver.  They were not loud. Not a thug in

the room noticed them. 

DOC SAVAGE now became silent. He lay as though life had departed  from his giant form. 


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"Reckon he's kicked the pail?" a crook muttered. 

Another man made a brief examination. 

"Naw. His pump is still goin'." 

After this, time dragged. The guard outside the door could be  heard. Once he struck a match. Twice he

coughed hackingly. 

A gangster produced two red dice. The men made a pretense at a crap  game, but they were too nervous to

make a success of it. Seating  themselves in the scant supply of chairs, or hunkering down on the  filthy floor,

they waited. 

Doc Savage Was giving his men time to get on the job. Johnny would  have to daub the luminous paint on the

sedans. Renny and Long Tom would  have to arrive over the city in the plane. Twenty minutes should be

sufficient time. 

He gave them half an hour, to be sure. Indeed, his keen ears  finally detected a series of low drones which

meant the plane was  above. Doc's plane had mufflers on the exhaust pipes. Renny was  evidently cutting the

mufflers off at short intervals to signal his  presence to his pals. 

Doc rolled over. He did it slowly, like a sleepy man. He now faced  the hallway door. 

The thugs tensed. They drew their pistols. They were as jittery as  a flock of wild rabbits. 

Doc imitated the raucous voice of the guard. He threw it against  the hall door. 

"Help!" the voice yelled. "Cripes! Help!" 

The guard outside heard. He might have recognized his own tone.  Maybe he didn't. He wrenched the door

open, at any rate. 

The instant his ugly face shoved inside, Doc threw words into his  mouth. The guard was too astonished to say

a word of his own. 

"De cops!" were the words. "Dey're on de stairs! Lam, youse guys!" 

Pandemonium fell upon the gangsters. They rasped excited orders.  They actually squealed as though they

were already caught. 

One man saw the giant bronze figure of Doc Savage heave up from the  floor. He fired his pistol. But he was a

little slow. Doc evaded the  bullets. He reached the light switch, punched it. 

Darkness clapped down upon the room. 

"De cops are inside!" Doc yelled in the guard's voice. "We gotta  lam, quick!" 

To make sure they fled in the right direction, Doc glided over and  kicked the glass out of the window. 

"Dis way out!" he barked. 


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A thug sprang through the window. Another followed. Then a  succession of them. 

Standing near by, Doc darted his hands against such faces as he  could find in the black void. Three men he

touched in this manner. Each  of the three instantly dropped unconscious. 

The others escaped from the room in a surprisingly short space of  time. 

Doc listened. He heard both sedan engines roar into life. The cars  streaked away like noisy comets. 

INTO THE room where Doc Savage stood there now penetrated a weird  sound. It was low, mellow, trilling.

It was exotic enough to be the  song of some strange bird of the jungle, or the eerie note of wind  filtering

through a jungled forest. It was melodious, though it had no  tune; it was inspiring, without being awesome. 

This sound had the peculiar quality of seeming to arise from  everywhere within the shabby room, rather than

from a definite spot. 

This trilling note was part of Doc  a small, unconscious thing  which he did in moments of emotion. It would

come from his lips as some  plan of action was being arranged. Sometimes it precoursed a master  stroke

which made all things certain. Or it might sound to bring hope  to some beleaguered member of Doc's

adventuresome group. 

Once in a while it came when Doc was a bit pleased with himself.  That was the reason for it sounding now. 

Doc turned on the lights. He lined up the thugs he had made  unconscious. 

Eleven of them! It was not a bad haul. 

Doc used the phone to call Ham at the scraper aerie uptown. 

"You might bring your sedan down here," Doc requested. Ten minutes  later, Ham came up the rickety stairs,

twiddling his sword cane. Ham's  perfection of attire was made more pronounced by the blowsy  surroundings.

He saw the pile of sleeping prisoners. 

"I see you've been collecting!" he chuckled. 

"Did you get anything out of Keelhaul de Rosa's man?" Doc asked. 

"I scared him into talking," Ham said grimly, "but the fellow was  just a hired gunman, Doc. He and his gang

were hired to get Victor  Vail. They were to deliver the blind violinist to Keelhaul de Rosa,  right enough. But

the delivery was to be made on the street. The man  had no idea where Keelhaul de Rosa hangs out." 

"That's too bad," Doc replied. "There's a chance one of the crew  who attacked Victor Vail outside the concert

hall will know where the  sailorman hangs out. If they do, Monk'll make them cough up." 

The unconscious thugs were now loaded into Ham's limousine. This  car of Ham's was one of the most

elaborate and costly in the city. Ham  went in for the finest in automobiles, just as he did in clothes. 

Ham did not ask Doc what they were going to do with the prisoners.  He already knew. The senseless

criminals would be taken to Doc's  skyscraper office. In a day or so, men would call for them, and take  them

to a mysterious institution hidden away in the mountains of  upstate New York. There they would undergo a

treatment which would turn  them into honest, upright citizens. 


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This treatment consisted of a delicate brain operation which wiped  out all knowledge of their past. Then the

men would be taught like  children, with an emphasis on honesty and good citizenship. They would  learn a

trade. Turned out into the world again, they were highly  desirable citizens  for they knew of their own past,

and had been  taught to hate criminality. 

The mysterious institution where this good, if somewhat  unconventional, work went forward, was supported

by Doc Savage. The  great surgeons and psychologists who ran it had been trained by Doc. 

Ham drove his limousine to the skyscraper which held Doc's  headquarters. The unconscious thugs were

loaded in Doc's special  elevator. The cage raced them up at terrific speed to the eightysixth  floor. 

Dragging along several of his unconscious prisoners, Ham behind  him, Doc entered his office. 

Surprise brought him up short. 

Blind Victor Vail sat in the office! 

Chapter 5. GONE AGAIN

DOC SAVAGE instantly noted a slight reek of chloroform about the  sightless musician. 

Otherwise, Victor Vail seemed undamaged. 

"I am glad you are here, Mr. Savage," he said eagerly. 

Like many blind men, it was obvious Victor Vail could identify  individuals by their footsteps. Doc's firm

tread was quite distinctive. 

"What on earth happened to you?" Doc demanded. 

"I was seized by thugs in the employ of Keelhaul de Rosa." 

"I knew that," Doc explained. "What I mean is  how do you happen  to be back here, alive and unharmed?" 

Victor Vail touched his white hair with long, sensitive hands. His  intelligent face registered great

bewilderment. 

"That is a mystery I do not understand myself," he murmured. "I was  chloroformed. I must have been

unconscious a considerable time. When I  awakened, I was lying upon the sidewalk far uptown. I had a

passerby  hail a taxi, and came here." 

"You don't know what happened to you beyond that?" 

"No. Except that my undershirt was missing." 

"What?" 

"My undershirt was gone. Why any one should want to steal it, I  cannot imagine." 

Doc considered. 


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"Possibly your captors removed your clothing to get a look at your  back, and forgot the undershirt when they

dressed you again." 

"But why would they look at my back?" 

"I was thinking of the incident you mentioned as occurring more  than fifteen years ago," Doc replied. '"When

you awakened after the  alleged destruction of the liner Oceanic in the arctic regions, you  said there was a

strange smarting in your back." 

Victor Vail stirred his white hair with big fingers. "I must say I  am baffled. But why do you say alleged

destruction of the Oceanic?" 

"Because there is no proof it was destroyed, beyond Ben O'Gard's  unsupported word." 

The blind violinist bristled slightly. "I trust Ben O'Gard! He  saved my life!" 

"I have nothing but admiration for your faith in O'Gard," Doc  replied sincerely. "We will say no more about

that angle. But I want to  inspect your back." 

Obediently, Victor Vail peeled off his upper garments. 

Doc examined the blind man's wellmuscled back intently. He even  used a powerful magnifying glass. But

he found nothing suspicious. 

"This is very puzzling," he conceded, turning to Ham. 

"You don't think, Doc, that Keelhaul de Rosa seized Mr. Vail just  to get a look at his back?" Ham questioned. 

"I think just that," Doc replied. "And another thing that puzzles  me is why Keelhaul de Rosa turned Mr. Vail

loose, once he had him." 

"That mystifies me, also," Victor Vail put in. "The man is a  murdering devil. I felt sure he would slay me." 

SWINGING OVER to the window, Doc Savage stood looking out. The  street was so far below that

automobiles on it looked like chubby bugs.  Street lamps were pin points of light. 

There came soft sound of elevator doors opening out in the  corridor. 

Monk waddled in. He was smoking a cigarette he had rolled himself.  The stub was no more than an inch

long, and stuck to the end of his  tongue. 

Monk drew in his tongue, and the cigarette went with it,  disappearing completely in his cavernous mouth. His

mouth closed. Smoke  dribbled out of his nostrils. 

Throughout the performance, Monk's little eyes had remained fixed  on the sartorially perfect Ham. This bit of

foolishness was just Monk's  latest method of annoying Ham. 

For Monk was the one person alive who could get Ham's goat  thoroughly. It had all started back in the War,

when Ham was known only  as Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks. He had been the moving  spirit in

a little scheme to teach Monk certain French words which had  a meaning entirely different than Monk

thought. As a result, Monk had  spent a session in the guardhouse for some things he had innocently  called a


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French general. 

A few days after that, though, Brigadier General Theodore Marley  Brooks was suddenly hauled up before a

courtmartial, accused of  stealing hams. And convicted! Somebody had expertly planted plenty of  evidence. 

Ham got his nickname right there. And to this day he had not been  able to prove it was the homely Monk

who had framed him. This rankled  Ham's lawyer soul. 

"They're gonna clap you in the zoo one of these days!" Ham sneered  at his tormentor. 

The cigarette came out of monk's mouth, together with a cloud of  smoke. From his lips burst a hoinckhoinck

sound  a perfect imitation  of a pig grunting. 

The next instant he dodged with a speed astounding for one of his  great bulk. Ham's whistling sword cane

just missed delivering a  resounding whack on his bullet head. Ham was touchy about any reference  to pigs,

especially when made by Monk. 

Monk would probably have continued his goading of Ham for an hour,  but Doc interrupted his fun. 

"What did you learn from Keelhaul de Rosa's men being held at the  police station?" Doc inquired. 

"Nothin'." grinned Monk. "They was just a bunch of hired lice. They  don't even know where Keelhaul de

Rosa hangs out." 

Doc nodded. He had half expected that. 

"Ham," he said, "your legal work has given you connections with  prominent government men in America and

England. I want you to go at  once and find out what you can about the liner Oceanic. Learn all  possible of the

crew, the cargo, and anything else of interest." 

Ham nodded, sneered elaborately at Monk, and went out. 

HE HAD hardly gone when the phone rang. It was "Johnny." 

Johnny's voice was that of a lecturer. He chose his words  precisely, after the fashion of a college professor.

As a matter of  fact, Johnny had been both in his time. William Harper Littlejohn  for  that was what his

mother had named him  stood high on the roster of an  international society of archaeologists. Few men

knew more about the  world and its inhabitants, past and present, than Johnny. 

"I have your men located, Doc," said Johnny. "They halted their  sedans before a lowclass rooming house.

Renny and Long Tom radioed me  the location from the plane, where they were watching, and I arrived in

time to see the men enter." 

Johnny added an address on New York's lower east side. It was not  far from Chinatown. 

"Be right with you!" Doc replied, and hung up. 

Monk was already half through the door. 

"'Hey!" Doc called. "You're staying here." 


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"Aw!" Monk looked like a big, amiable pup who had been booted in  the ribs. He was disappointed. He did

love action! 

"Some one has to guard Victor Vail," Doc pointed out. 

Monk nodded meekly, pulled out his makings, and started a cigarette  as Doc went out. 

DOC SAVAGE'S gray roadster was equipped with a regulation police  siren. He had authority to use it. His

careening car touched eighty  several times. 

A dozen blocks from his destination, he slowed. The wailing siren  died. Like a gray ghost, Doc's car slipped

through the tenement  district. 

He pulled up around the corner from the address Johnny had given. 

A tall man was selling newspapers on the corner. The fellow was  very thin. His shoulders looked like a

coathanger under his plain blue  suit. The rest of him was in proportion, incredibly skinny. 

He wore glasses. The right lens of these spectacles was much  thicker than the left. A close observer might

have noted that this left  lens was in reality a powerful magnifying glass. For the wearer of the  unusual

spectacles had virtually lost the use of his left eye in the  World War. He needed a powerful magnifier in his

business, so he  carried it in his glasses for handiness. 

The newspaper vender saw Doc. He came over. As bony as he was, it  was a wonder he didn't rattle when he

walked. 

"They're still in the room," he said. "Third floor, first door to  your right." 

"Good work, Johnny," Doc replied. "You armed?" 

Johnny opened his bundle of papers like a book. This disclosed a  small, pistollike weapon which had a large

cartridge magazine affixed  to the grip. A more compact and deadly killing machine than this  instrument

would be difficult to find. It was a special machine gun of  Doc Savage's own invention. 

"Fine," Doc breathed. "Wait on the street. I'm going up to that  room." 

THE STEPS whined under the giant bronze man's considerable weight.  To avoid the noise, he leaped lightly

to the banister. Like a  tightrope walker, he ran up the slanted railing. 

He took the second flight in the same manner, not troubling to see  if those steps squeaked also. By using the

banister, he avoided any  electrical alarms which might have been under the steps. 

A white rod of light lying close to the floor marked the bottom of  the door he was interested in. He listened.

His keen ears detected men  breathing. One grunted a demand for a cigarette. 

Doc Savage lurked outside the door perhaps two minutes. His mighty  bronze hands were busy. They dipped

into his pockets often. Then he  turned and started up another flight of steps in the fashion of the  first two. 

The structure had five floors. A creaking hatch let Doc out on a  tarred roof. He moved over to a spot directly

above the window of the  room in which his quarry waited. 


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A silken line came out of his clothing. It was thin, strong. One  end he looped securely about a chimney. 

Like a spider on a string, Doc went down the cord. His sinewy hands  gripped the line securely. He reached

the window. 

Hanging by one thewed fist, he dropped the other hand into a coat  pocket. He boldly kicked the window

inward. Through the aperture his  foot made, he threw the objects he had taken from the pocket. A roar of

excitement seized the room interior. 

Back up the silken cord, Doc climbed. He 'had no more trouble with  the small line than he would have with a

set of stairs. At the top, he  replaced it inside his clothing. He seemed in no hurry. 

Below him in the room, the excitement had died a mysterious death. 

Doc ambled to the front of the building and seated himself on the  parapet. Below, he could see the gaunt

Johnny with his papers. 

"Poipers!" Johnny was bawling lustily. "Wuxtra! Latest  poipers!" 

No one would have dreamed Johnny was actually doing all the  bellowing to cover any sounds from within

the building. 

Nearly ten minutes elapsed before Doc Savage went down to the  thirdfloor room. 

On the hallway carpet lay many colorless glass bulbs about the size  of grapes. Doc had spread these there.

Men charging out of the room had  trampled many of them, crushing them. This had released the powerful

anaesthetic they held. Any one near, and not equipped with a gas mask,  was certain to become unconscious. 

The hallway floor, and the room itself, were littered with  senseless men. 

Doc stepped in, avoiding the unbroken bulbs of thin glass. 

His bronze hand made a disgusted gesture. 

Ben O'Gard was not among the vanquished! 

DOC SAVAGE let his eyes range the room again, making sure. He noted  that all the glass balls of anaesthetic

which he had tossed through the  broken window had been shattered. None of the gaslike stuff remained in  the

room or corridor  Doc had waited on the roof long enough for it to  be dispelled. 

Ben O'Gard was certainly not present. These were merely the gang  Doc's men had trailed here. 

"Bag anybody of any importance?" Johnny asked from the doorway. He  had thrown his bundle of papers

away. 

"Not to us," Doc admitted. "We'll send these gentlemen upstate for  our usual treatment, though. I imagine

every one of them has a police  record." 

Johnny inspected the unconscious villains judiciously. "I'll at  least bet our treatment can't hurt them any. But

what about the chief  devil, Ben 0'Gard?" 


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"He simply wasn't among those present." 

Doc and Johnny now loaded the prisoners aboard their cars. Doc's  roadster held several. 

Johnny's machine was a large touring car of a model at least ten  years old. The thing looked like a wreck. A

usedcar dealer, if asked  what he would give for it, would probably have taken one glance and  said: "Twenty

dollars! And I'm robbing myself at that!" Yet within less  than a year, Johnny had paid three thousand dollars

for the special  engine in it. On a straightaway, the old wreck might do a hundred and  fifty an hour without

unduly straining itself. 

They got their prizes in both cars and drove uptown. They parked  before the white spike of a skyscraper

housing Doc's office. Loading  the captives into the elevators, they took them up to Doc's  headquarters. 

Gales of derisive laughter met them as they unloaded in the  corridor. It was Ham laughing. 

Doc stepped into the office. 

Homely, hairy, gorillalilte Monk sprawled in a chair. He held his  bullet of a head in both furry hands. He

rocked from side to side. His  doleful groans made a somber orchestration for Ham's uproarious mirth. 

A trickle of crimson wriggled through Monk's fingers. 

Doc thought for an instant that Monk had been goading Ham again,  and for once had been too slow in

dodging the whack with the sword cane  which Ham inevitably aimed at him. 

Then Doc saw the implement which had struck Monk. This was a heavy  metal paper weight. It lay on the rug.

A twist or two of Monk's coarse,  rustcolored hair still stuck to it. 

Doc noted something else. 

Victor Vail was gone! 

Chapter 6. HANGING MEN

"WHAT HAPPENED?" Doc Savage demanded. 

Ham tried twice before he choked down his mirth. 

"I thought for a minute I'd die laughing!" he gulped hilariously.  "The blind man said he wanted to feel the

bumps on that wart Monk calls  a head. Our fuzzy missing link of a pal let him. 

"He got a telephone call first," Monk put in sourly. 

"Who did?" Doc inquired. 

"Victor Vail," Monk grumbled. "The phone rang. Some guy asked to  talk to Victor Vail. I put the blind man

on the wire. He didn't say  much to the guy who had called. But he listened a lot. Then he hung up.  After a bit,

we got to arguin' about tellin' fortunes by the knots on  people's heads. He claimed there was somethin' to it,

an' offered to  feel my conk an' tell me plenty about myself." 


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"And you fell for it!" Ham screamed mirthfully. "And he kissed the  top of your noggin with that paper

weight! Then he beat it!" 

"You weren't here?" Doc asked Ham. 

"No," Ham laughed. "I came in just as Monk woke up talking to  himself." 

"Aw  how was I to know the blind guy was gonna hang one on my  nob?" Monk demanded. 

"You have no idea why he did it?" Doc questioned seriously. 

"None atall," declared Monk. "Unless he got the notion from that  telephone talk." 

"You don't know who called?" 

"He said his name was Smath. But it might've been a fake name that  he gimmy." 

Monk took his hands away from his head. A nesting goose would have  been proud of such an egg as now

decorated the top of his cranium. 

"That's one bump it'd be easy to tell your fortune from!" Ham  jeered, his hilarity unabated. "It shows you are

an easy mark for blind  guys with paper weights!" 

Doc Savage swung into the laboratory. The prisoners were lined up  there. Each man snored slightly. They

would sleep thus until the  administration of a chemical which was capable of reviving them from  the thing

which had made them unconscious. 

Doc ignored them. He lifted from the heavily laden shelves of  equipment an apparatus which resembled

nothing so much as the portable  sprayers used to treat apple trees. 

He carried this into the outer office. 

Monk and Ham eyed the contrivance with surprise. The thing was a  new one on them. 

Monk asked: "What is  " 

He never finished the query. Sounds of distant shots came to their  ears. 

The noise was coming from the street below. Doc whipped to the  window. He looked out and down. 

An extremely flashy car, streamlined almost as beautifully as the  world's recordholding racer, was canted up

askew of the curb. Two  machine guns stabbed red flame from the racer  flame that looked like  licking snake

tongues. 

Across the street, other guns spat fire back at them. 

"It's Long Tom and Renny!" Doc rapped. 

THE GIANT bronze man was whipping into the corridor with the last  word. Johnny, Monk, and Ham

followed. Monk had forgotten his cracked  head with surprising suddenness. 


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The superspeed elevator sank them. Both Johnny and Ham, unable to  withstand the force of the car halting,

landed on the floor on their  stomachs. 

"Whee!" grinned Monk. "I always get a wallop out of ridin' this  thing!" 

Indeed, Monk had almost worn out the superspeed elevator the first  week after Doc had it installed, riding it

up and down for the kick it  gave him. 

Doc and his men surged for the street. A stream of lead clouted  glass out of the doors. 

Monk, Johnny, and Ham drew the compact little machine guns which  were Doc's own invention. The

weapons released streams of reports so  closely spaced they sounded like tough cloth ripping. 

Doc himself doubled back through the skyscraper. He left by the  freight entrance, furtively, almost before his

friends realized he was  not with them. He glided down the side street, haunting the deepest  shadows. 

Reaching the main thoroughfare, he saw the fight still waged about  as he had seen it from above. A lot of lead

was flying. But nobody had  been hurt. Renny and Long Tom were sheltered by the flashy racer  it  was Long

Tom's car. Their opponents were barricaded behind the corner  of a building across the street. 

Somebody had shot out the street lights at either end of  the  block. The resulting gloom probably explained

the lack of casualties. 

Doc's bronze form flashed across the street. A bullet whizzed past,  missing by ten feet. He was a nearly

impossible target in the murk. 

"It's de bronze swab!" howled one of the enemy. "Keelhaul me!" 

The words were all that was needed to break up the fight. The  gunmen fled. The had a car parked around the

corner, engine running.  Into this they leaped. It whisked them away. 

A diminutive figure popped out from behind the racer. The small man  sprinted wrathfully after the fleeing

gunmen. His pistollike machine  gun released spiteful gobbles of sound. 

"Hey!" Doc called. "You're wasting your time, Long Tom!" 

The small man came stamping back. Besides being short, he was  slender. He had pale hair and pale eyes, and

a complexion that looked  none too healthy. 

Only his extremely large head hinted that he was no ordinary man.  "Long Tom," formally known as Major

Thomas J. Roberts, was an  electrical wizard who had worked with foremost men in the electrical  world. Nor

was he the physical weakling he appeared. 

"The rats shot my car full of holes!" he howled irately. 

The flashy racing car was the pride of Long Tom's heart. He had  equipped it with about every conceivable

electrical contrivance, from a  television set to a newly perfected gadget projecting rays of an  extremely short

wave length which were capable of killing mosquitoes  and other insects that might annoy the driver. 

This latter device, worked out with some aid from Doc Savage, was  probably destined to bring Long Tom

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alone! 

As they approached Long Tom's racer, a mountain heaved up from  behind it. 

THE MOUNTAIN was Renny. 

Six feet four would have been a close guess at his height. The fact  that he looked nearly as wide was partially

an optical illusion. He  weighed only about two hundred and fifty pounds. On the ends of arms  thick as

telegraph poles, he carried a couple of kegs of bone and  gristle which he called hands. 

Renny was noted for two things. First, many countries knew him as  an engineer little short of a genius.

Second, there was no wooden door  built with a panel so stout, Renny could not knock it out with one of  his

huge fists. 

"How'd you birds start that fight?" Doc demanded. 

Renny and Long Tom exchanged guilty looks. 

"We drove up here as innocent as could be," Renny protested in a  voice which resembled a very big bullfrog

in a barrel. "Them guys ran  out in the street and pointed a machine gun at us. Evidently we weren'  t the birds

they were expecting, because they lowered their guns and  turned back. But we figured if they was huntin'

trouble, we'd  accommodate 'em. So we started a little goodnatured lead slingin'!" 

Doc smiled slightly. 

"If the fight did nothing else, it cleared up something that has  been puzzling me." he said. 

"Huh?" Renny and Long Tom chorused, while Doc's other pals came up  to listen. No one of the group had

been injured. 

"Until a moment ago, it was a puzzle to me why Keelhaul de Rosa  turned Victor Vail loose," Doc explained.

"But now I see the reason.  Keelhaul de Rosa and Ben O'Gard are fighting each other. Just why, is  still a

mystery. Both were after Victor Vail. 

"The reason for that is another mystery. But Keelhaul de Rosa got  Victor Vail, and I be!ieve he got whatever

he wanted from the blind man   something which required removal of the clothes from Vail's upper  body.

Then the violinist was turned loose as a bait to draw Ben O'Gard  into the hands of Keelhaul de Rosa's

gunmen. It was that crowd we just  mixed with, because Keelhaul was along. They thought you birds were

Ben  O'Gard's men." 

The moment he finished speaking, Doc beckoned Renny. The two of  them entered the skyscraper. 

The others, Monk, Ham, Long Tom, and Johnny, remained outside. They  would have to explain the shooting

to the police. Radiosquad cars  laden with officers were booting up from all directions. 

There would be no trouble explaining. Each of Doc's five men bore  the honorary rank of captain on the New

York police force. 

ENTERING HIS eightysixthfloor office, Doc secured the sprayerlike  contraption which he had abandoned

at the start of the fight down in  the street. 


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'What's that doofunny?" Renny inquired. He, too, had never seen the  sprayer of a contrivance before. 

"I'll show you." Doc indicated a sticky material on the corridor  floor outside his office door. This resembled

extremely pale molasses.  The color blended with the floor tiles so as to be hardly noticeable.  "See that?" 

"Sure," Renny replied. "But I wouldn't have, if you hadn't pointed  it out." 

"I chanced to have the foresight to spread that stuff outside the  door when I left Monk here with Victor Vail,"

Doc explained. 

"What is it?" 

"I'm showing you. Take off your shoes." 

Bewildered, Renny kicked off his footgear. Doc did likewise. 

Doc now pointed the nozzle of his sprayer down the corridor  away  from the pale molasses material. A shrill

fizzing sounded. A cloud of  pale vapor came out of the nozzle. 

"Smell anything?" 

"Not a thing," Renny declared. 

Doc aimed a puff of the strange vapor at the molasses stuff. 

"Smell anything now?" 

"Phew!" choked Renny. "Holy cow! A whole regiment of skunks  couldn't make a worse 

Doc hauled Renny into the elevator. 

"The stuff in this sprayer and the sticky material on the floor  form a terrible odor when they come together,

even in the tiniest  quantities," Doc explained as the cage raced them down. "So powerful  are these chemicals

that any one walking through the stuff in front of  the door will leave a trail which can be detected for some

hours.  That's why we took off our shoes. We had walked through it." 

"But I don't see  " 

"We're going to trail Victor Vail," Doc explained. "But cross your  fingers and hope he didn't take a taxi,

Renny. If he did, we've got to  think up another bright way of finding him." 

But Victor Vail hadn't taken a taxi. He had walked to the nearest  subway, and entered the side which

admitted passengers to uptown  trains, feeling his way along the building.walls. 

"We're sunk!" Renny muttered. 

"Far from it," Doc retorted. "We merely drive uptown and throw our  vapor in each subway exit until we find

the odor which will result from  its contact with Victor Vail's tracks." 

Renny laughed noisily. "Ain't we the original bloodhounds. though!" 


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They tried the exits of seven stations. At the eighth, Doc's  remarkable vapor, a chemical compound of his

own making, combined with  the other chemical left by Victor Vail's shoe soles, and gave them the  nauseating

odor. 

"It goes down this side street!" declared Renny. 

There were few pedestrians on the street at this late hour. Even  these, however, promptly stopped to gawk at

Doc and Renny. It might  have been the fact that Doc and Renny were without shoes, and going  through the

apparently idiotic process of spraying an awful perfume on  the sidewalk. 

More likely, it was Doc's mighty bronze form which caught their  eye. Doc was a sensation whenever he

appeared in public. 

"What puzzles me is how the blind guy got around like this," Renny  offered. 

"Simply by asking help of those near him," Doc retorted. "Every one  is glad to aid a blind man." 

Renny got tired of the crowd of curious persons trailing them. 

"Scat!" he told the rubberneckers violently. "Ain't you folks got a  home you can go to?" 

Renny had a most forbidding face. It was long. thinlipped, serious,  and grim. Meekly, awed by that

puritanical countenance, the crowd  melted away. 

Five minutes later, Doc and Renny halted before a door on which a  plain gilt sign said: 

DENTIST. 

"He went in there, Doc," said Renny. 

LIKE TWO dark cotton balls before a breeze, Doc and Renny drifted  into the shadows. This district was a

moderate residential section. The  buildings were neat, but rather old, and not showy. 

"Wait here," Doc directed. Doc was always leaving his men behind  while he went alone into danger. Long

ago, they had become resigned to  this, much as it irked them to stand back when excitement offered. They

literally lived for adventure. 

But no one could cope with danger quite as Doc could. He had an  uncanny way of avoiding, or escaping

from, what for another man would  be a death trap. 

Around to the rear of the brick building, Doc glided. He found the  back door. It was not locked inside  it

was bolted. Heavy iron bars  crisscrossed it. 

Doc leaped upward. The height of that tremendous spring would have  astounded an onlooker. He clutched an

extended ledge and worked his way  to a window on a secondfloor hallway, with hardly more sound than the

noise of a prowling cat. 

The hall was dark. Doc drew things from his pockets. Some sticky  gum, he affixed to the windowpane. Then

a faint, gritty hiss sounded. 


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Doc had cut the glass cut of the window! He kept it from falling  inward by the gum he had stuck to it. He

eased inside. 

Silence gripped the interior of the house. Doc prowled noiselessly.  Only one room held a light. It was

downstairs. The door was locked. 

Doc let Renny in. They went to the fastened door. 

"We might as well go in there all of a sudden!" Doc breathed. 

"0. K., Doc," murmured Renny. 

He lifted his gallon of ironhard knuckles. He struck. With a  rending crash, the door panel was driven inward

by Renny's great fist. 

They sprang into the room. Renny held a gun. Doc's powerful bronze  hands were empty. 

Horrified surprise halted them. 

Only two men were in the room. One was Victor Vail. The other, as  denoted by the sanitary smock he wore,

was obviously the dentist who  had his place of business here. 

Both men hung suspended by ropes around their necks from a stout  ceiling chandelier. 

Chapter 7. THE MAP

THE SUN was up. Doc's remarkable companions lounged in the  skyscraper office. They had lost a night's

sleep, but showed no effects  of it. 

Ham was honing the blade of his sword cane to a razor edge, looking  ominously at Monk each time he tested

its sharpness. Monk sat in an  easy chair, reading a pocket manual of how to raise hogs. He took pains  to hold

the book so Ham could see the title. Monk often maintained   always within earshot of Ham  that some day

he was going to retire and  raise pork for a certain finely dressed lawyer he knew. Johnny, the  archaeologist,

was penning a chapter in the book he was writing on the  ancient Mayan civilization. 

Long Tom, looking pale as an invalid, was in the laboratory, humped  over an apparatus which for intricacy

would have given Steinmetz a  headache. 

Truly an amazing crew, these men. 

Doc Savage entered. With him was Victor Vail. Renny walked in after  them. 

The blind man's neck was swollen somewhat where the rope had nearly  strangled him to death  Doc had

arrived just in time to save him. 

The explanation of Vail's situation was quickly made. 

"The dentist don't know a thing about the gang that seized him,"  Doc concluded. "They called him to the door

and cracked him over the  head." 


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"It was Ben O'Gard!" Victor Vail put in, his voice thick with  emotion. "Oh, Mr. Savage, I was so mistaken

about that man! I thought  he was my friend. I had every confidence in the world in him. When he  called me

here 

"So it was Ben O'Gard who telephoned you!" Monk interposed. 

At the sound of Monk's mild voice, Victor Vail registered great  remorse. Obviously, he was terribly sorry for

that crack he had taken  at Monk's head with the paper weight. 

"I do not know how I shall ever redeem myself for my horrible  mistake," choked the blind man. "Ben O'Gard

told me an awful story of  how you men were holding me here to keep me from seeing him. I believed

O'Gard. I know I was a fool to do that now, but at the time, I regarded  O'Gard as a friend who had twice

saved my life. He told me to escape  and come to him. That is why I struck you." 

"Forget it!" chuckled Monk. 

Renny spoke up.  "What baffles me is why Ben O'Gard took over the  dentist's office." 

Doc's strong lips warped their faint smile. 

"Simple," he said. "Ben O'Gard wanted to use the dentist's X ray!" 

THIS STATMENT elicited surprised looks from every one present. 

"X ray!" Renny grunted. "Why'd they want the X ray?" 

"I'll show you the reason in a minute," Doc replied. "First,  though, I want to find out what Ham learned about

the liner Oceanic." 

Ham now divulged the information which several transatlantic  telephone calls to England had gathered. 

"On the English records, the liner Oceanic is down as lost at  seasunken without trace," Ham said. "There's

no hint of this stuff  about it being trapped in the polar ice pack." 

"I'm not surprised," Doc Savage said dryly. 

"I've got something that will surprise you," Ham smiled. "There was  fifty million dollars in gold bullion and

diamonds on the Oceanic!" 

An electric shock seemed to sweep the room. 

"Fifty million! Will you say that again!" Monk said mildly. 

"Fifty million in gold and sparklers," repeated Ham impressively. 

"That explains it!" Doc declared. 

"Explains what?" Renny wanted to know. 

"What's behind this whole mess," retorted Doc. "Come into the  laboratory. I want to show you something,

brothers." 


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It was an excited crowd of adventurers which surged into the vast  laboratory room. 

From a tray. Doc lifted several large photographic prints. These  were X ray pictures which he had taken of

Victor Vail in his course of  examining the violinist to determine his eve affliction. Until now, Doc  had not

had time to as much as examine the prints. 

He held one up. 

"Holy cow!" barked Renny. 

"Exactly," Doc agreed. "More than fifteen years ago, while Victor  Vail was under the influence of an

anaesthetic, some one tattooed a map  on his back with a chemical, the presence of which could only be

detected by use of a certain tensity of X ray." 

"You mean I have carried the map on my back these many years  without knowing it?" Victor Vail questioned

wonderingly. 

"You certainly have. You recall the man with the clicking teeth who  seemed to haunt your trail through the

years? Well, he was simply  keeping track of you and the map." 

"But what is the map?" 

"It shows where the liner Oceanic is aground on a land far within  the arctic regions," Doc announced. 

SOME MINUTES were expended examining the chart. 

"But I cannot understand why I carried the map around unmolested  for so many years!" Victor Vail

murmured. 

"Possibly I can reconstruct a story which explains that," Doc told  him. "The fifty millions in treasure aboard

the Oceanic led Ben O'Gard,  Keelhaul de Rosa, and the other members of the crew to mutiny. They  probably

disposed of all who did not join them!" 

"The beasts!" Victor Vail covered his face with his hands. "My poor  wife. My poor little daughter, Roxey!

That devil, Ben O'Gard, murdered  them! And I thought he was my friend!" 

"It's merely guesswork about the murder part!" Doc put in hastily.  "I said that simply because the eagerness

of Ben O'Gard and Keelhaul de  Rosa to get this map shows they think the Oceanic is where they left  it, even

now. This indicates there were no survivors but themselves." 

Victor Vail recovered his control. '"When Keelhaul de Rosa tried to  kidnap me from Ben O'Gard, he was

really trying to steal the treasure  map!" 

"Of course," Doc agreed. "That explains why the two factions split.  No doubt they have been waging

unremitting war with each other since  that day, each faction trying to slay the other so they would be free  to

secure the chart off your back, and go get the fifty millions." 

"I'm surprised they left it behind in the first place!" Monk put  in. 

"We barely escaped with our lives as it was," Victor Vail assured  him. "To carry more than food over the ice

pack was impossible." 


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Ham made a quick gesture with his sword cane  and Monk ducked  involuntarily. 

"Both Ben O'Gard and Keelhaul de Rosa now have copies of this map,"  Ham said thoughtfully. 

Doc Savage let his strange golden eyes rest on each of his friends  in turn. The gilded orbs seemed to be

asking a question  and receiving  a highly satisfying answer. 

"Brothers," Doc said softly, "these birds who are after that  treasure are fellows who have no right to any

man's gold. What say we  get it ahead of them? We can use the money to enlarge our secret  institution in

upstate New York to which we send criminals to be made  into useful citizens. The place is becoming a little

crowded." 

Pandemonium seized Doc's headquarters. 

Renny swung over to the door. His enormous fist struck. The panel  flew out of the door as though hit by a

cannonball. No door was safe  around Renny when he was happy. 

Monk fled wildly about the place, each apelike leap barely taking  him out of reach of the lusty whacks

delivered by the pursuing Ham's  sword cane. 

Long Tom and Johnny got into a mock fight and promptly upset a  stand of apparatus. In the ensuing crash,

several hundred dollars'  worth of equipment was ruined. 

The horseplay was their way of saying they thought Doc's  treasurehunt scheme was the best idea they'd

heard recently. 

BEFORE THAT day was done, Doc Savage had operated on Victor Vail's  eyes. 

He performed the delicate bit of surgery in New York's finest  hospital. Those who surrounded him as he

worked were not ordinary  nurses. They were some of the leading American eye specialists. One had  flown

from Boston to see the operation, another from Detroit, and two  from Baltimore. 

They wanted to see this epochal piece of work, for Doc Savage was  seeking to do something which every

expert present had until this very  day maintained was impossible. 

And what the assembled specialists saw the mighty bronze man do  that day in the New York hospital

operating room was something they  would talk about for a long time to come. The mastery of it held them

breathless long after big Doc Savage had taken his departure. 

Victor Vail would have his sight back! 

THE NEXT morning, as Ham entered Doc's office, Doc was taking his  exercises. 

Ham sat down to wait. Doc took his exercises  a terrific twohour  routine each day of his life, and nothing

interfered. 

Doc's ritual was similar to ordinary settingup movements, but  infinitely harder, more violent. He took them

without the usual  exercising apparatus. For instance, he would make certain muscles  attempt to lift his arm,

while other muscles strove to hold it down.  That way he furthered not only muscular tissue, but control over

individual muscles as well. Every ligament in his great, bronzed body  he exercised in this fashion. 


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From a case which held his special equipment, Doc took a pad and  pencil. He wrote a number of several

figures. Eyes shut, he extracted  the square and cube root in his head, carrying the figures to many  decimal

places. 

Out of the case came a device which made sound waves of all tones,  some of a wave length so short or so

long as to be inaudible to the  normal ear. Years of straining to detect these waves had enabled Doc to  make

his ears sensitive enough to hear many sounds inaudible to  ordinary people. 

With his eyes closed, Doc rapidly catalogued by the sense of smell  several score of different odors, all very

vague, each contained in a  small vial racked in the case. 

There were other exercises, far more intricate. Ham shook his head  wonderingly. He knew that five minutes

at the clip Doc was doing the  routine would be more than he, himself, could stand. And Ham was husky

enough to give most professional boxers a drubbing. 

From the cradle, Doc had done these exercises each day. They  accounted for his astounding physique, his

ability to concentrate, and  his superkeen senses. 

"What's on your mind?" Doc asked suddenly. His routine was over! 

Ham plucked a newspaper out of a pocket. 

"What do you think of this?" He handed Doc the paper, indicating an  item, It read: 

WANT TO BUY A POLAR  SUBMARINE EXPEDITION? 

There is one for sale. Captain Chauncey McCluskey  announced this  morning that he is hunting a purchaser

for a  share of the projected  trip of the submarine Helldiver under  the polar ice. 

Captain McCluskey has the submarine, fully equipped and  ready to  go. But it seems he has run out of money. 

There was more of it, written up in typical tabloid style. But it  told nothing more of importance  except that

the submarine Helldiver  was tied up at a local pier, and Captain Chauncey McCluskey could be  found aboard. 

"Who is Captain McCluskey?" Ham inquired. 

Doc shook his head slowly. "Search me! I never heard of the man  before. Nor have I heard of any other

projected submarine trip under  the pole." 

"This sub may be just what we need," Ham declared. "But there's one  point which has me guessing. It's darn

queer the thing should pop up at  just the time we're interested." 

Doc smiled slightly. "It won't hurt to look into it, anyway." 

The regular elevator  not the superspeed one  lowered them to  the street level. 

They took the first taxi which rolled up. 

Doc gave their driver the address of the pier to which was moored  the polar submarine, Helldiver. 


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Office workers were going to their daily tasks. The walks were  crowded. Each subway kiosk vomited

humanity like an opened anthill. The  cab rolled down into a cheaper district, where merchants were setting a

part of their wares out on the walks. 

Ham toyed with his sword cane, and wondered what kind of a tub the  Helldiver would be. 

Suddenly he snapped rigid as an icicle. 

In to the cab had permeated the low, mellow sound which was part of  Doc.  Weird, exotic, the note trilled up

and down the musical scale.  Looking directly at Doc's strong lips, Ham could not tell the sound  was coming

from them, such a quality of ventriloquism did the trilling  note have.  Indeed, Doc himself probably did not

quite realize he was  making it.. 

The sound could have but one meaning now. 

Danger! 

"What is it?" Ham demanded. 

"Listen!" Doc told him abruptly. 

Silence lasted about a minute. Then Ham's high, intelligent  forehead acquired a dubious pucker. 

"I hear a clicking noise at intervals, I think," he said. "Sounds  like somebody shaking a couple of dice!" 

"Remember the clicking noise Victor Vail mentioned having heard  often during the past years?" 

Ham never got to say whether he recollected or not. 

Their driver suddenly flicked several small objects back into the  tonneau. He was careful to keep his face

from being seen. 

The objects he flung were the grapelike balls of anesthetic Doc  had used to overpower Ben O'Gard's hired

gangsters. No doubt these had  come from the scene of that affair, since Doc had neglected to retrieve  such of

them as had not been broken. 

The globules shattered. 

Doc and Ham were caught. With hardly a quiver, they tumbled over  unconscious on the cushions. 

They had not glimpsed the countenance of their driver. 

Chapter 8. STEEL WALLS OF DEATH

HAM sat up. He groaned loudly. 

"If you're complaining about the darkness," came Doc's steady,  capable voice, "that's why you can't see

anything. And as for where we  are  we seem to be inside a steel vault." 

"What a dream I had waking up!" Ham muttered. 


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"The anesthetic sometimes has that effect. I judge we've been  unconscious nearly two hours. One shot of the

anesthetic lays a man out  for about that long." 

Ham suddenly clutched at various parts of his person. His hands  made loud slaps on his bare hide. 

"Hey!" he yelled. "I've only my underclothes!" 

"So have I," Doc told him. "They took our clothing. They even  combed our hair, from the way mine feels.

And they swept the interior  of the vault clean. There are no shelves, or anything else  except a  candle and

three matches which they kindly left us." 

"Light the candle," Ham suggested. "This place is blacker than the  inside of an African savage!" 

"No, Ham," Doc replied. "They left the candle, hoping we'd light  it." 

"Huh?" Ham was puzzled. 

"A flame will exhaust the oxygen in this place very quickly, and  hasten our death by suffocation." 

''You mean the vault is airtight? " 

"Yes. And soundproof, too." 

Ham now listened. He realized he could not hear a sound but the  booming of his own heart. It was so quiet he

could almost hear the  blood gurgle through his arteries. He shivered. A heavy lead weight  seemed to climb on

his chest. 

"The air in here must be pretty foul already," be muttered. 

"Very," Doc agreed. "I have been thinking, Ham. You recall that  some months ago a large chain of New York

banks went out of business.  Probably we are in the vault of one of those banks." 

"Ugh!" Ham shuddered. "Can't you think of something cheerful?" 

Doc Savage's low laugh vibrated through the awful steel cubicle. He  rarely laughed. 

"How's this for something cheerful?" he inquired. "As a matter of  fact, I've only been waiting for you to

regain consciousness before  walking out of this place." 

HAM EMITTED a howl of delight that was almost a sob. He sprang  erect. They were two seminaked men

inclosed in thick walls of hard  steel. Their voices could not penetrate outside, just as no sounds  could get in.

The situation seemed hopeless. 

But Doc Savage had a way! He never joked about matters as serious  as this. 

"How do we do it?" Ham demanded. 

"Our captors probably looked in our mouths," Doc explained. "But  they forgot to count my teeth. They didn't

notice that in my upper jaw  there is an extra wisdom tooth on each side. They're false, and they  hold two

chemical compounds of my own concoction. When combined, these  form one of the most powerful

explosives." 


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Doc now went to work on the vault door. He operated in darkness,  guided only by his sensitive finger tips. 

"Kind of them to leave us the candle," Doc said. 

He used the candle wax to chink his explosive in the joint of the  vault door, near the lock. 

"Get in a corner!" he directed Ham. 

"How you gonna explode it'?" Ham questioned. 

"It explodes itself, due to chemical reactions, about four minutes  after the two compounds are mingled." 

They huddled in the corner farthest from the vault door. Doc  employed his mighty bronze form to shield Ham

although Ham did not  realize it at the time, so great was his nervous tension. 

"It's about time for the blast!" Doc breathed swiftly. "Open your  mouth wide to equalize the pressure on

either side of your eardrums, so  there'll be less likelihood of them being ruptured." 

Ham barely had time to comply. 

Whaam! Compressing air smashed them against the solid steel with  stunning force. It crowded their

eyeballs inward. It seemed to tear the  flesh from their bones. 

So terrific was the explosion that Ham was reduced to  senselessness. 

Doc Savage, huge and bronze and apparently affected not at all by  the concussion, flashed to the heavy steel

door. It was still shut. But  the hard metal was ruptured about the lock. He shoved. 

The door opened about a foot and stuck. But that was enough. Doc  carried the unconscious Ham outside,

thence through two vacant  chambers. 

Ham revived after several minutes in a large, bare room  the lobby  of a former bank. 

Pedestrians moved on the street outside the unwashed plateglass  windows. One of these chanced to look in.

He was a portly man with  spats and a cane, smoking a cigar. No doubt he had heard the blast. 

Doc Savage rushed Ham to a side door. It was locked. The lock came  out of the hard wood like an ear of corn

out of its shuck, when Doc  exerted a little of his tremendous strength. 

A taxi driver at a stand in the street heard the lock tear out. He  glanced around. He was just in time to see the

two men climbing into  his hack. 

The driver bellowed for a cop. 

The cop came. He did not know Doc Savage by sight. He pinched both  Doc and Ham. Doc did not put up an

argument. This was the quickest way  of getting clothes. The cop was tough, and swore a lot. 

At the police station, the captain in charge insisted on stripping  to his underwear so that Doc would be

properly clad. 


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And the cursing cop got a lecture from his superior that would make  him remember the giant bronze man the

rest of his life. He would also  have gotten suspended a month without pay if Doc hadn't interceded. 

"Anyway, begorra, yez had better learn to know some of the big men  in this town by sight!" the captain

warned his cop. 

TWENTY MINUTES later, Doc Savage stood on the wharf, appraising  Captain Chauncey McClusky's

underthepolarice submarine. 

The thing looked like a razorbacked cigar of steel. The hull was  fitted with lengthwise runners resembling

railway rails. As a matter of  fact, these actually were such rails, converted to the purpose of ice  runners. They

were supposed to enable the underseas craft to slide  along beneath the arctic ice pack. 

A wireless aerial, collapsible, was set up for action. There was a  steel rod of a bowsprit ramming out in front,

the size of a telegraph  pole. The rudder and propellers were protected by a steel cage intended  to keep out ice

cakes. 

Doc liked the looks of this latest of polarexploring vehicles. He  stepped aboard. 

A man shoved his head out of the main hatch amidships. All this man  needed to make him a walrus was a

pair of twofoot tusks. Doc had  always believed Monk the homeliest human creation. It was a tossup

between Monk and this man. 

The man squeezed out of the hatch. He would tip a pair of scales at  three hundred pounds, if he'd budge them

at an ounce. 

"What the blazes do you want aboard here, matey?" the man demanded. 

His voice was a roar that frightened roosting gulls off floatsam in  the middle of the bay. 

"I'm hunting Captain Chauncey McCluskey," Doc announced. 

"You've found him!" roared the walrus. "An' if yer a dinged  landlubber just wantin' a look at this bloody

hooker, you can take  shore leave right now! I been pestered to death by cranks since that  piece come out in

the papers this mornin'!" 

Doc didn't bat an eye. He rather liked to deal with a man who got  down to business and said what he thought. 

"Let's look your vessel over," he suggested. 

The walrus blew noisily through his mustache. "Mean to say you're  interested in buyin' a share in this

expedition?" 

"Exactly  if your craft meets my needs." 

"Come below, matey," rumbled Captain McCluskey. "I'll show ye her  innards." 

They looked at her innards for an hour and a half. They came back  on deck. 

Doc was satisfied. 


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"It will take approximately two hundred and fifty thousand dollars  to see you through," he said. "I will put up

the sum  on one  condition." 

Captain McCluskey blew through his walrus mustache and eyed Doc as  if wondering whether the bronze man

had that much money. 

The walrus would have been surprised if he had known the true  extent of Doc's wealth. For Doc had at his

command one of the most  fabulous treasure troves in existence  a vast cavern stored with the  wealth of the

ancient Mayan nation. This was located in a lost canyon,  the Valley of the Vanished, in the remote recesses

of Central America.  Survivors of the ancient Mayan civilization, living isolated from the  rest of the world,

kept Doc supplied with mule trains of gold whenever  he needed it. 

"What's the one condition?" McCluskey rumbled. 

"The expedition must be entirely in my hands the first two months,"  Doc explained. "Within that length of

time, I shall visit a certain  remote spot in the arctic regions, and secure the thing I am going  after." 

CAPTAIN MCCLUSKEY was surprised. "The thing you're goin' after   what d'you mean, matey?" 

"I'm afraid you'll have to swallow your curiosity on that point,  captain. The object of our quest will be

disclosed when we arrive, and  not before. I can assure you, though, that it does not involve breaking  the law

in any way." 

The walrus considered deeply. "All right, matey. I'll sail two  months under your sealed orders. But, strike me

pink, if yer breakin'  the law, I'll throw ye into the brig the minute I finds ye out." 

"Fair enough." 

"Cap'n McCluskey is as honest a swab as ever sailed the ocean," the  walrus continued his roaring. "I've saved

me money many a long year to  bank enough to build the Helldiver. The good lads in me crew have done  the

same. We want to do somethin' to leave our mark in the world, so  we'll be remembered after we're in Davy

Jones's locker. 

"This explorin' v'yage under the pole is our bid for fame, matey.  It means a lot to us. We ain't gonna be

throwed off our course this  late in the game. Maybe ye don't understand our feelin's, but that's  the way it is." 

"Naturally, my project will not interfere with your goal of sailing  under the north pole," Doc replied. "And

you may rest assured we shall  make no effort to share in the glory of your accomplishment. I shall  not permit

my name to be mentioned, either as partial backer, or as  having accompanied you." 

The walrus man seemed deeply moved. 

"Yer a generous man, matey," he mumbled. "But one other point, we'd  better clar up." 

"What's that?" 

"The hearty lads in me crew," chuckled Captain McCluskey. "Them  swabs ain't sissies, matey. They're good

men. They've sailed in naval  submarines aplenty in their time. But they're hard as iron an' a little  rough in

their ways. You said you'd bring five of your own mates along.  That's all right. But if they ain't got hair on

their chests, my crew  is liable to haze 'em around some." 


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Doc smiled faintly. "I don't know about the hair, but I think my  lads can hold their own." 

"Blow me down!" grinned the walrus. "Then we'll get along like  frogs on a log!" 

"I wish to make a number of changes in this craft," Doc declared.  "I shall pay for them. naturally." 

The walrus frowned. "What kinda changes?" 

"A special radio. Electrical apparatus for sounding and locating  icebergs. A collapsible seaplane. Better

diving suits than you have.  And other things of that nature." 

"Strike me pink." chuckled McCluskey. "Yer a swab that knows his  his business, I can see that. How long'lI it

take?" 

"Two weeks." 

Chapter 9. TOUGH CARGO

THE TWO weeks had passed. 

"Helldiver is right!" Monk grumbled. "The name sure fits!" The  underthepolarice submarine was off the

Maine coast, sailing  northward. The craft had run into a stiff blow. And nothing is quite as  disturbing as the

movement of a Uboat in heavy going. 

As each gigantic sea approached the sharp bows of the sub, the  steel cigar of a craft did a sort of devil dance

of anticipation. It  shimmied from side to side. It squirmed. It groaned like a thing in  agony. Then it would

sink in the wave as though going to its death. 

They had to keep the hatches closed. To breathe the air inside was  something like being shut up in a can of

axle grease. 

"It's an oldfashioned hell ship, if you ask me," Long Tom  muttered. 

Doc Savage glanced sharply at the frail, unhealthylooking  electrical wizard. This was Long Tom's way of

telling important news. 

"What do you mean by that, Long Tom?" Doc asked. 

"Last night, I had a dream," Long Tom began. 

"So did I," groaned Monk, who was slightly seasick. "I dreamed I  was Jonah, and the whale had swallowed

me." 

"Shut up!" snapped Long Tom. "In my dream, I saw somebody bending  over me as I slept. I heard a clicking

noise, as though a pair of dice  were being rattled in somebody's hand." 

Strange lights flickered in Doc's golden eyes. "You're not trying  to be funny, are you, Long Tom?" 

"I never felt less funny. 1 grabbed at the man bending over me in  the dream. I got this." Long Tom drew an

object from his pocket. It was  a blackhaired wig. 


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"Did you get a look at his face?" Doc rapped. 

"It was too dark. And he was gone before I could follow." 

Doc considered in silence for perhaps a minute. 

"This is serious, brothers," he said at length. "That killer of Ben  O'Gard's is aboard this sub. And we don't

know him by sight." 

"It oughta be easy to find him now," snorted Monk, eying the black  wig. "Just find the guy whose hair

changed color during the night." 

It was astounding, the way Monk's seasickness had vanished, now  that danger threatened. 

'"No good," said Long Tom. "I looked everybody over this morning.  And no hair had changed color. That

means the man was wearing the wig  as a disguise while he did his dirty work." 

"What dirty work?" Doc inquired. 

"I forgot to mention the fellow had a knife," Long Tom said dryly. 

THE UNHEALTHYLOOKING electrical wizard went below. Long Tom's  looks were deceptive. Although

the weakling of Doc's crowd, he was man  enough to thrash a good nine out of ten of the men you pass on the

street. 

Long Tom was serving as radio operator. He had installed a radio  set so powerful he could keep in touch with

the remotest corners of the  earth, even while resting on the bottom of the sea. 

He had also equipped the Helldiver with the most sensitive devices  for measuring underwater distances with

sound waves. Simply by watching  dials, Long Tom could tell how far below the sea bottom was, how far

they were from the nearest iceberg, and how big the berg was. An alarm  bell would even ring the instant they

came within dangerous distance of  any floating object big enough to harm the sub. 

Monk left Doc considering the new danger which threatened them.  Monk had confidence Doc would find a

way to trap their enemy with the  clicking teeth. 

Monk retired to the cubicle where he kept his chemicals. Monk's  contributions to the expedition were

numerous. The most remarkable of  these was a chemical concoction which, when released in quantities from

the sub, would dissolve any ice which happened to be above it. 

This removed any danger of the Helldiver being trapped under the  ice! 

Special apparatus for supplying oxygen within the sub, concentrated  foods which were composed simply of

the necessary chemical elements for  nourishment in a form easily assimilated  these and other things were

products of Monk's genius. 

Renny was doing work which his experience as an engineer eminently  fitted him. He was the navigator. At

this, Renny had few equals.  Moreover, he was making maps. The voyage of the Helldiver would lead  through

unexplored arctic regions, and Renny's maps would be of great  value to future generations. 


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The archaeologist and geologist, Johnny, possessed a fund of  knowledge about the polar ice cap and ocean

currents which would be  invaluable. There were very few things about this old ball of mud we  call the earth

which Johnny did not know. 

As for Ham, he had taken care of the legal angles, such as securing  the necessary permission to put in at

Greenland seaports. The Danes run  Greenland as a monopoly, and a hatful of permits are necessary before a

foreign vessel can touch there. 

Ham also furnished everybody aboard the Helldiver an example of  what the welldressed voyager under the

polar ice should wear. His  oilskins were impeccable. The fact that he always carried an  innocentlooking

black cane afforded Captain McCluskey's crew some  chuckles. They didn't know this was a sword cane. If

Ham ever drowned,  he would still have that sword cane in one hand. 

About noon, Ham searched Doc Savage out. Doc was on deck. It seemed  a miracle that each terrific wave did

not sweep him overboard. But the  seas had no more effect upon Doc than upon a statue of tough bronze

metal. There was a strange quality about Doc's bronze skin  it seemed  to shed water like the proverbial

duck's back, without becoming wet. 

Ham was excited. 

"Good news!" he yelled. "Radio message from New York, Long Tom just  copied it!" 

"What is it?" Doc asked. 

"Victor Vail left the hospital this morning," Ham replied. "He is  no longer blind. He can see as well as

anybody!" 

THE SMASHING waves soon drove the immaculate Ham into the greasy  vitals of the submarine. 

"I've inhaled so much oil already, it's oozing out of my hide," he  told Monk. 

But Monk was making a chemical concoction capable of giving off  warmth for several hours at a stretch 

something that would be very  handy to tuck in a man's shoes and gloves when he took a. stroll on the  ice in

the vicinity of the north pole. He didn't want to be bothered. 

"G'wan off an' chew a bacon rind!" he sneered. 

Ham bloated indignantly. Monk had been goading him for several days  about pigs and pork, and Ham hadn't

been able to devise a single way to  get back at Monk. Ham wished mightily he dared take a swing at Monk,

but he knew better. A grizzly bear with any sense would think twice  before tackling Monk. 

Muttering to himself, Ham ambled forward. He heard a sound which  might have been an angry bull in a china

shop. Ham quickened his pace.  It sounded like a fight. He ducked gingerly through a slit of a door in  a steel

bulkhead. 

One of the Helldiver's crew sprawled on the grilled floor of the  engine room. The man was an oiler. He was

big  fully as big as Monk.  He looked tough. Privately, Ham had considered getting this oiler and  Monk

embroiled in a fight, just for his own amusement. 

But the fighting oiler now sprawled on his back. He whimpered. His  lips had been smashed into a crimson

pulp. One of his eyes was closed. 


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Over him towered walruslike Captain McCluskey. 

"I kin lick any swab aboard this iron fish!" the captain bellowed.  "Rust my anchor, but I'll wring the neck of

the next scut I find  shirkin' his work. Get up on yer feet, you! An' see that them engines  is kept better oiled!" 

Captain McCluskey evidently ran his craft like an oldtime clipper  master. 

Ham mentally kissed the oiler goodby as a prospective opponent for  Monk. He addressed Captain

McCluskey. 

"I like your discipline methods," he said flatteringly. 

"They'll do, pretty boy." bellowed the walrus. 

Ham writhed under the appellation of pretty boy. But he kept the  oily smile of admiration on his face. 

"I'm afraid you're going to have trouble with one man aboard this  vessel," he said in the air of imparting a

warning to his hero. 

"Who?" roared the giant captain. 

"The hairy baboon they call Monk," said Ham blandly. 

"I'll watch 'im!" boomed the walrus ominously. "If he bats an eye  at me, I'll hit the swab so hard his fur will

fall off!" 

Ham had a foxy look in his eye as he ambled back to Monk's steel  cubicle. He looked in at Monk. 

Monk gave him an elaborate, piglike grunt. 

Ham ignored the insult. 

"The captain says the next time you bat an eye at him, he's gonna  hit you so hard you'll shed all that red

fuzz," Ham advised. 

"Yeah?" Monk heaved to his feet. "Yeah? Well, I'll just go tell 'im  I don't like guys talkin' behind my back

like that." 

He waddled out. He was so big he barely got through the door of his  cubicle. 

Ham trailed along. He wouldn't have missed what was going to happen  for a thousand dollars. 

MONK FOUND walruslike Captain McCluskey in the officers' quarters.  The two giants promptly glowered

at each other. Monk's little eyes  sparkled with the prospect of a fight. The walrus blew noisily through  his

mustache, each hair of which was like a crooked black peg. 

"Listen, guy!" Monk began in a sugary voice.  I don't like  " 

The walrus hit Monk. It sounded like a gun going off. 


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Monk hadn't expected it so soon. He was caught off guard. The blow  drove him backward as though he had

accidentally stood in front of a  twelveinch coastdefense gun. 

His bulk collided with Ham, who was standing behind him. That kept  Monk from falling. 

But Ham was tumbled end over end. His head cracked a valve wheel.  He was promptly knocked senseless. 

From Ham's point of view, nothing worse could have happened. He  slept through the whole fight. He was

cheated of enjoying the fruit of  his devilment. it was the biggest disappointment Ham had suffered in  years.

For days afterward, he was wont to get off in a corner and swear  to himself about it. 

Monk emitted a series of deep bawling noises. He jumped up and down  like an ape. This cleared his head. He

rushed the walrus. 

The walrus kicked him in the stomach. 

Monk folded down to the floor. The walrus leaped high into the air,  and came down  and his face collided

forcibly with Monk's driving  feet. 

Captain McCluskey turned over completely in the air. He spat out  three teeth. He got up, roaring. Monk

knocked him down, loosening two  more teeth in the process. 

The walrus tried to bite off Monk's left ear with what teeth he had  left. 

Monk stopped this by grasping great folds of his opponent's ample  stomach in monster fists and striving to

tear the man open. 

They stood toe to toe and traded haymakers. They swapped  indiscriminate kicks. 

It was a battle of the giants. A fray primeval! A thing of pristine  savagery! It would have drawn a

milliondollar gate in the prize ring   except that the women's clubs would have stopped it. 

And poor Ham, sleeping through it all, would have cut off an arm  rather than miss it. 

Captain McCluskey lunged unexpectedly. Monk was carried backward.  His bullet of a head crashed against a

hard steel bulkhead. 

Monk fell senseless. 

The walrus drew back a foot to kick him. 

At this point, Renny dashed forward. He grasped McCluskey's huge  arm. 

"You whipped him!" Renny rumbled. "No need of crippling him!" 

Renny only wanted to keep Monk from serious damage. He was a  peacemaker. He got what peacemakers

usually get. 

The walrus knocked Renny flat on his back. 


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THE FIGHT now started all over. Renny was nearly as heavy as Monk.  He was also a fine boxer. And for

years he had been smacking panels out  of doors with his fists. 

Renny got up from the floor and hung a left jab on McCluskey's  nose. 

The walrus emitted a sound that was a combination of Vesuvius and  Niagara. By a marvelous feat of

acrobatics, he managed to jump on  Renny's midriff with both feet. 

Air came from Renny's mouth so fast it almost blew out his teeth.  He collapsed  largely to keep his middle

from being jumped on again. 

Captain McCluskey rushed in to the kill. 

Renny hooked a fist. It hit McCluskey's ear. It smashed the ear  fiat as a wellironed handkerchief. 

A strange thing now happened. 

McCluskey got to his feet as calmly as though he were arising from  the mess table. He ambled toward the slit

of a door. He was unsteady on  his feet, it was true, and nearly walked a circle. But he seemed to  have

forgotten there was such a thing as a fight. 

McCluskey was extremely punch drunk. 

He sobered before he got out of the room, though. Whirling, he  emitted a bellow and sprang upon Renny. 

Renny roundhoused two good swings. The first folded McCluskey like  a barlow knife. The second ruined the

walrus's other ear and spun him  like a top. 

McCluskey staggered backward and fell into a bunk. An instant  later, however, he came out of it. 

He was a lot of man, that walrus. 

The two bartered punches. Renny blocked one with his jaw. For an  instant, he was dazed. That instant was his

undoing. Another swing  landed on top of the first. 

Renny dropped, kayoed for one of the few times in his career. 

Mountainous Captain McCluskey took two weaving steps for the narrow  bulkhead door. Then he sighed

loudly, and, turning around twice like a  dog finding a place to lay down, slumped prone on the floor. 

Afterward, Ham awakened. The combatants had been attended to, and  Ham was so disappointed that he

crawled out on deck and actually  mingled salty tears with the sea. 

DOC SAVAGE now inaugurated a campaign of his own. He began to  fraternize with the crew in a most

diligent manner. It was only another  evidence of his immense knowledge that he found something of interest

to discuss with each man. 

Doc was hunting for the fellow whose teeth clicked. 

A strange thing became evident. None of the crew was willing to  open up and talk frankly with him. Instead,

half a dozen of them  sought, none too adroitly, to worm from Doc his reasons for coming  along on the


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underthepolarice expedition. 

The big oiler whom Captain McCluskey had chastised for neglecting  the engines was most outspoken. His

name was, not without reason,  "Dynamite" Smith. 

"Just where is this boodle yer goin' after, sir?" asked Dynamite  Smith. 

"What boodle?" queried Doc innocently. 

Dynamite Smith shifted uneasily. 

"Well, me an' my mates kinda got the idea yer was goin' after  somethin' up in the bloody arctic," he said.

"Have yer got a map that  shows where it is?" 

"What put all this into your head?" 

"Nothin'," muttered Dynamite Smith. Then, unable to stand the  searching gaze of Doc's strangely potent

golden eyes, the big oiler  turned away. 

It was obvious the man knew more than he had divulged. It was also  evident that some sinister devilment was

breeding among the crew. 

Doc didn't like it. 

"I'll bet that bird with the clicking teeth is stirring up the  crew," Doc decided. 

An idea hit him. He went to make sure he still had the treasure map  he had taken off the back of blind Victor

Vail by X ray. 

The map was gone! Somebody had stolen it! 

SEVERAL DAYS passed. Nothing happened. The Helldiver now sailed off  a barren section of northern

Greenland. Great blue icebergs cocked  nasty snouts out of the sea all about them. The sub sloughed through

mile after mile of thin pan ice. 

Occasionally, where the pan ice had joined with fields of growlers,  or small bergs, to make a solid barrier,

they submerged and passed  under. 

The submarine was behaving beautifully. Long Tom's wonderful  apparatus kept them out of danger, with the

double safeguard of Monk's  special chemicals, should something go amiss. 

Monk, Renny, and the walruslike Captain McCluskey had resumed  relations. Indeed, they got along

handsomely. They had a hearty respect  for each other's fighting qualities. 

Doc hadn't found the man with the clicking teeth. He was mystified  He couldn't imagine who had his treasure

map, but he did not worry  greatly about it His retentive brain held all details of the chart. He  could sit down

and reproduce it perfectly from memory. 

The only discovery of note he had made was that Dynamite Smith, the  big oiler, used narcotics almost

steadily. Doc consulted Captain  McCluskey about this. 


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"Sure, I knowed the swab was a dope head," the walrus assured him.  "Rust my anchor, but it don't seem to

hurt him. He's been usin' the  stuff for years. Let'm alone, matey. The stuff just keeps 'im  harmless." 

Doc was not so sure about that. But there was nothing to be gained  by starting trouble. 

Long Tom radioed their position daily to Victor Vail. The violinist  showed a great interest in their progress,

as well as the exact course  they intended to follow. 

Sometimes Doc wondered about Victor Vail's avid desire to know  their whereabouts to the fraction of a mile. 

They were in a zone of continuous daylight now. The sun shone the  full clock around. It was never night. 

"Confound such a region!" Ham complained. He had just found out  that for the last three days, Monk had

awakened him at midnight, and  made him believe it was noon the next day. Consequently, Ham had been

losing a lot of sleep, and couldn't understand what was making him feel  so groggy. 

A strange, sinister tension was growing aboard the Helldiver. 

The crew congregated in groups, whispering. They dispersed, or fell  to speaking loudly of commonplaces

when Captain McCluskey, Doc, or any  of his five men came near. 

"Rust my anchor, but I smells trouble!" Captain McCluskey confided  to Doc. 

Day after day, the submarine bored into the polar regions. Twice it  traveled under the ice more than a score of

hours. It made many shorter  jaunts under the pack. 

On one occasion, they would surely have been trapped under a vast  field of ice more than thirty feet deep,

had it not been for Monk's  chemicals. Released from compartments in the skin of the underseas  boat, the stuff

let the craft reach the surface through a great  selfmade blow hole. 

It was now but a matter of dozens of miles to the spot where the  treasure map indicated the longlost liner

Oceanic lay. 

Doc noted a perceptible increase in the sinister tension. 

"We're in for a jam," he told his five men seriously. "The crew of  this sub, part of them at least, know what

we're after. And one of  these surely must have my map." 

Monk grinned with all his homely face, and popped his knuckles. 

"Well, we ain't seen no signs of Keelhaul de Rosa or Ben O'Gard,"  he chuckled.  'That's one consolation." 

"It's my opinion that Ben O'Gard's man with the clicking teeth is  behind this trouble brewing with the crew,"

Doc replied. 

"Confound it." declared Ham. "The clicking of the teeth should make  the man easy to find!" 

"That's what 1 thought," Doc said wryly. "But, bless me, brothers,  I do believe that fellow's teeth have

stopped clicking. I've gone  around, straining my ears day after day, and not a click have I heard." 


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"Maybe it was really a dream Long Tom had about the man with the  noisy teeth bending over him that

night?" Johnny suggested. 

"I didn't dream the black wig!" Long Tom retorted. 

There was nothing to be said to that. The conclave broke up. At a  scant five miles an hour, the Helldiver

nosed for the dab of unmapped  land where the liner Oceanic supposedly lay. 

This was virtually an unexplored region where they now cruised.  Possibly a polar aviator had flown over it,

but even that was highly  unlikely. 

Doc retired, confident another twentyfour hours would bring action  of some sort. 

It did. 

Johnny's frantic plunge into Doc's quarters awakened the big bronze  man. Johnny's breath was a procession

of gulps. His spectacles with the  magnifying lens on the left side, were askew his nose. 

"Renny! Monk!" he shouted. "They are both gone! They vanished  during their watch on deck!" 

Chapter 10. MAROONED

IN flash parts of seconds, Doc was in the control room. 

"Put about!" His powerful voice volleyed through the monotonous  complaint of the Diesel engines. It

penetrated to every cranny of the  submarine, from the "hardnose" bow up front  loaded with steel and

concrete in case of collision with the ice  to the little tunnel  through the after trim tanks, which gave access

to the rudder  mechanism. 

The helmsman spun his wheel. 

"Full speed ahead!" Doc boomed into the engineroom speaking tube. 

Captain McCluskey lurched in from the officers' quarters. He was  stickyeyed from sleep. 

"What's goin' on here?" he roared. "Rust my anchor, what we puttin'  about for?" 

"My two men, Monk and Renny, have disappeared!" Doc told him.  "We're going back to hunt them!" 

Captain McCluskey clambered up on deck. But he came down almost at  once, his hairy shanks blue from the

cold. 

"No use!" he rumbled. "Stormin' up there! If them two swabs ain't  aboard, they're in Davy Jones's locker." 

McCluskey seized the speaking tube to the engine room, shouted into  it: "Slow your engines to normal

speed." Then, to the helmsman: "Hard  over, me hearty. We're resumin' our course." 

Cold and hard as a statue of bronze, Doc Savage was suddenly in  front of McCluskey. Doc was big. The

walrus was bigger. He outweighed  Doc by nearly a hundred pounds. 


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"Countermand that order!" Doc directed. 

Such a quality of compelling obedience did his remarkable voice  have, that McCluskey made an involuntary

gesture at compliance. Then he  bristled. 

"I'm skipper of this tin fish!" he bellowed. "We ain't wastin no  time goin' back to look for them two swabs.

Davy Jones has got 'em, I  tell you!" 

"Countermand that order!" Doc repeated. "We'll find Monk and Ham,  or their bodies, if we have to winter in

this ice pack!" 

Captain McCluskey glowered. He had a lot of confidence in himself.  He had whipped Monk and Renny in

succession, and either one of them  looked more dangerous than this strange bronze man. 

"I'll show yer who's master of this hooker!" he snarled. 

He reached for Doc's throat. 

The walrus was now treated to the big surprise of his life. 

His hand was trapped in midair by casehardened bronze fingers.  For an instant, McCluskey thought the

hand had been cut off, so much  did that grip hurt, and so numb did it make his arm. 

He started a blow with his free fist. 

It traveled hardly more than an inch. Then that hand was closed in  a fearful clasp. The hard paw crushed like

so much dough. Big blisters  of blood popped out on the finger tips, and burst with fine sprays of  crimson. 

The walrus screamed like a hurt child. 

He stared at his hands. His eyes nearly fell out. Both his monster  claws were now being held easily by one

hard hand of bronze. Strain as  he would, he could not budge them. The largest vise could not have held  them

tighter  or more painfully. 

The walrus screamed again. He had thought himself a mighty fighter.  Not in the scope of his memory had he

met a scrapper who could stand  before him. 

But in the hands of this strange bronze man, he was like a fat  sheep in the jaws of a hungry tiger, Then a Big

Bertha shell seemed to  go off in the captain's head. He slumped senseless. 

Doc had kayoed him with one punch! 

THE SUBMARINE rooted through growlers and pan ice. Back and forth,  right and left, lunged and

wallowed. Sometimes sheets of pan ice  crowded up on the deck until Doc, Long Tom, Ham, and Johnny had

to dive  hastily down the hatch to avoid being crushed or swept overboard. 

They had been searching for five hours. 

No sign of Monk or Renny had they found. 


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A bitter wind was swooping off the distant wastes of icecapped  Greenland. It froze spray on the steel

runners affixed to the hull of  the undertheice sub. But the chemicals on the sides of the ship  flushed the

frigid coating away at intervals. 

"The gale was worse during the night," Johnny muttered. "Poor Monk!  Poor Renny!" He blinked his eyes

back of his spectacle lenses. 

Although Monk and Renny had indeed vanished during the night, it  was night only by their watches. The sun

hung well above the horizon   where it had lingered for some days. It was wan, almost lost in a pale,  nasty

haze. 

Ice which had piled up on deck abruptly slid off with a grinding  roar. 

Doc went outside. He carried powerful binoculars. But once more, a  search through them disclosed nothing. 

However, the sub now surged across a comparatively open lead in the  ice pack. This was what Doc had been

hoping for. 

"Stand by to put out the seaplane!" he ordered. The crew crowded  the deck. They were surly. The air of

sinister trouble still hung about  them. But they obeyed Doc's orders with alacrity. Some of them had seen

what had happened to Captain McCluskey. They had told the others. 

A deck plate was lifted. A folding boom was jacked into position. 

Out came an allmetal, collapsible seaplane. Doc himself got the  tiny hornet of a craft ready for the air. 

Captain McCluskey came on deck while the work was under way. Doc  Savage rested his golden eyes intently

upon the walrus of a man. 

McCluskey scowled for a second or two. Then he grinned sheepishly. 

"Ye won't have any more trouble from me, matey," he mumbled. Then  he winced and moved his hands. 

Each paw was bundled in bandages until it resembled the foot of a  man with the gout. 

Doc drew his three remaining companions aside. 

"Keep your hands on your guns," he warned them. "I don't think  McCluskey will make more trouble

immediately. But watch his crew!" 

It seemed a miracle when the cockpit of the diminutive seaplane  held Doc's mighty bronze form. The little

radial engine was fitted with  a starter. Doc turned it over. The cold made it stubborn. It fired at  last. 

The exhaust stacks smoked for a while. Then they lipped blue flame.  The engine was warm. 

The plane floats left a ribbon of foam as they scudded across the  open lead in the ice pack. Doc backed the

control stick. The ship  vaulted off the water. 

He banked in circle after circle, each one wider than the last. 


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The pale haze hadn't looked so thick from the surface. But it  hampered vision amazingly from the air. The

gloom was increasing, too. 

No sign of Monk or Renny could he discern. 

He flew back at last and alighted beside the submarine. The frozen  rigidity of his bronze face told Long Tom,

Ham, and Johnny the worst. 

"Monk and Renny are  finished," Long Tom said thickly. 

"Monk  how I'm gonna miss that guy!" Ham mumbled. He was near  tears. 

The crew hoisted the seaplane aboard, collapsed it, and stowed it  under the deck plates. 

TWO HOURS later, walruslike Captain McCluskey was pointing with a  thick arm. 

"Rust my anchor  look!" he boomed. "Two points off the starboard  bow!" 

Doc Savage, coming up from below, was a bronze flash. He thought  Monk and Renny might have been

sighted. There was always the  possibility they had been washed overboard, and had reached one of the  many

icebergs. 

This, however, was only a herd of walrus asleep on an enormous pan  of ice. 

"We need fresh meat," explained Captain McCluskey. "It's unusual to  sight 'em this far north. I'm goin' after

some of the critters. Want to  go along, matey?" 

Doc nodded. He advised Ham, Johnny, and Long Tom to go also. It  would get their minds off the loss of

Monk and Renny. 

Several of the crew were also going, big Dynamite Smith included in  them. Doc made sure a number of the

surly faction amid the crew, the  suspected plotters, were among the hunters. There seemed nothing to be  lost

in deserting the sub for a time. 

Two folding kayaks  long and narrow boats with a covering of  sealskin  were set up. They also assembled

a umiak, overgrown brother  of the kayak. 

Doc went below. He was gone about ten minutes. During that time, he  was alone below decks, every one

being outside to witness the departure  of the hunters. 

Doc came up, bearing a sizable bundle. This was done in waterproof  silk. 

"What's that, matey?" Captain McCluskey wanted to know. 

Big bronze Doc Savage seemed not to hear the query. 

They put off. 

The edge of the iceberg, near where the walrus herd slept, arose  almost vertically. It was too sheer for a

landing. The hunters decided  to stalk the animals from the berg. They paddled directly to the floe,  alighted,

and drew the folding boats well out of the cold water. 


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Captain McCluskey and the rest of the Helldiver crew led the stalk.  Doc, with his strange bundle, kept warily

in the rear. Ham, Long Tom,  and Johnny trod his heels. 

The bitter cold bothered them at first, but became less noticeable  in a few minutes. They wore regulation

Eskimo garb  moccasins reaching  to their knees, and lined with reindeer skin, bearskin trousers, shirts  of

auk skins with the feathers inside, and shirts of sealskin, with a  hood which covered their heads. 

The surface of the ice pack was rough. Progress became laborious.  The need for silence made it harder. Their

speed was hardly half a mile  an hour. 

Captain McCluskey and his men drew a little ahead. 

Suddenly they whirled. They aimed rifles at Doc and his friends. 

"Kill the swabs!" shrieked Captain McCluskey. 

DOC HAD been alert. He was not taken off guard. Hardly had the  Helldiver men started their show of

hostilities when a mighty bronze  arm rushed Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham to cover behind an ice hummock. 

The move was executed so quickly they were sheltered before the  first rifle volley spattered out noisily. 

Bullets dug into the ice hummock, showering Doc and his friends  with fragments of ice. The pieces tinkled

down the hard flanks of the  ice mound with a sound like tiny bells. 

"Retreat!" Doc commanded his friends. "We're between the gang and  their boats. We'll try to keep them from

reaching the craft." 

They were extremely thankful for the rugged surface of the iceberg,  now that the situation had changed. 

Doc found a small crevice in the ice. Into this he lowered his  bundle. With a single rap of his tempered fist,

he shattered enough  brittle ice to conceal the bundle. 

Captain McCluskey's booming voice reached them. 

"The deck swipes!" thundered the walrus. "Put the lot of 'em in  Davy Jones's locker!" 

"They don't seem to be trying to beat us back to the boats!" Doc  said in a tight voice of wonder. 

A storm of lead scored the ice all about. The Helldiver gang had  caught sight of them. 

Ham whirled. He secured a glimpse of a furswathed head.  His rifle  jarred. A man slouched out from behind

an ice spike and lay down as  though tired. Steam curled up from the scarlet pool that gathered  around his

feebly squirming body. 

"I haven't lost my shooting eye!" Ham said with grim mirth. "Did  you see who I winged?" 

"Dynamite Smith, the oiler," Doc retorted. "Let's veer over to the  right here. It looks like better footing." 

There ensued a frightful couple of minutes before they reached the  spot Doc had indicated. The more frantic

the effort they put forth, the  more they slithered around on the terrifically rough and slippery ice. 


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"Seas have been breaking over this berg recently," Doc explained.  "That's why it's so infernally slick." 

Bullets gouged ice around them like harddriven, invisible picks.  Ricocheting, the lead squalled like unseen

wild cats. 

Doc, Long Tom, Ham, and Johnny finally reached the smooth footing  which Doc had indicated. This was a

great crack which had opened in the  berg, filled with water, then frozen. They glided down it. 

"We're gonna beat 'em to the boats, anyhow!" said the bony Johnny.  He had taken off his glasses with the

magnifying lens on the left side.  His breath steam had been fogging the spectacles. Johnny really did not  have

much need of glasses on his good right eye, anyway. 

"It's funny they're not putting up more of a race to keep us from  reaching the boats!" Long Tom snapped. "I

don't understand it!" 

But they did understand it a moment later. 

They came in sight of the boats  more properly, the spot where the  boats should have been, for the craft

were gone. 

And the submarine was not where they had left it! 

"THEY'RE CLEVER rats!" Doc Savage said grimly. "The men who  remained aboard the Helldiver put

another folding boat in the water the  instant we were out of sight. They secured the craft we left on the  ice.

And look  there's why McCluskey's gang were not so ambitious in  pursuing us." A bronze arm pointed. 

The three stared. Their hearts sank. 

The Helldiver had cruised down the edge of the iceberg. Standing  by, the submarine was picking up members

of the villainous crew as they  slid off the sheer edge of the vast pan of ice. 

Doc's pals opened fire with their rifles. The range was  considerable. A high tribute to their shooting was the

fact that they  put two of the Helldiver crew out of commission. 

The rest of the sailors reached the submarine safely. The craft  sped down an open lead in the pack ice, headed

northward. It was making  for the spot where, according to the map, the liner Oceanic lay. The  dense mist

swallowed the sub completely. 

The last thing they saw was the gigantic figure of Captain  McCluskey standing on deck, shaking both his fists

in their direction. 

"Brothers!" Doc said mildly, "we have been guilty of an  unforgivable mistake." 

"What's that," Ham wanted to know. 

"We underestimated the intelligence of friend McCluskey," Doc  replied. "Some days ago, McCluskey

commented on the furtive actions of  his own crew, giving the impression, he, himself, feared trouble from

them. The clever fellow must have been aware I had noticed the attitude  of the crew, and he expressed

himself thus to allay my suspicions of  him." 

"They've got the treasure map, of course," Ham clipped. "They've  set out to grab the treasure." 


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"And they've left us in a pretty serious position," Johnny  muttered. "Marooned on this arctic ice pack is

tantamount to a sentence  of death." 

Johnny's words carried awful portent Johnny knew the polar regions.  It was a part of his profession. And if he

said their situation was bad   it was really bad! 

"We might as well realize we're up against it," Doc told them, "and  stop talking about it." 

"The racket scared the walrus off the floe," Long Tom grumbled, his  unhealthylooking features drawing

deeper into the hood of his fur  parka, like the head of a turtle into its shell. "We're without grub!" 

Ham whipped his bearskin trousers vigorously with his sword cane.  "I've heard of Eskimos living quite a

while by eating their clothes,"  he said. 

"We won't need to start on our wardrobe for a while:' Doc smiled.  "We have concentrated rations for about a

month." 

"Where?" the others yelled in chorus. 

"In the bundle I brought along," Doc replied. 

THE PARTY retraced their steps to secure the allimportant bundle  Doc had cached in the ice crevice. 

There was no excitement now. They had leisure to realize the full  peril of their predicament. 

The deathlike quiet of the polar wastes had enveloped them. The  stillness was as of a tomb. 

From time to time, the awful silence was shattered by a crashing  roll of sound like thunder. These noises

would start with a report  sharp and loud as a cannon crack, and there would follow an increasing  volley until

the very ice under their feet seemed to quake. 

This was the awesome voice of the ice waste  it was simply cracks  opening in the floes. 

"Nice music!" Ham shuddered. 

Thoughts came to them of Renny and Monk, of the death both giants  seemed certain to have suffered. This

depressed them. 

There was a quality of horror in the grisly spells of silence. It  was as though they existed in some weird,

frozen habitat of lost souls.  They found themselves listening with an eagerness near pathetic for the  sporadic

cannonade of the ice  then shivering when the sound did come. 

Only big bronze Doc Savage showed no emotion. He swung along  easily, keeping his feet on the slick

iceberg under foot as surely as  though his mukluks were arms with steel spikes. Often, he waited for  his three

friends to overhaul him. 

The mighty bronze man seemed to sense that his very presence  offered a bolster to the courage of Long Tom,

Ham, and Johnny. So he  remained near them, although the best pace they could manage was but  the speed of

a snail compared to the swiftness with which Doc could  have reached the cache. 

They secured the bundle from the crevice in the ice. 


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Doc let his men squat around it. They went to work on the wrappings  with coldstiffened fingers. The more

they kept busy, the less they  would brood over their fearsome predicament. 

Suddenly, Ham gave a start  stopped fiddling with the knots. 

To his ears had come the low, exotic trilling sound which was part  of Doc. So low, so nearly unreal was the

mellow note that it was almost  lost in the fearful silences about them. It might have been the voice  of some

fantastic sprite of this domain of cold. 

Ham grasped his sword cane. Johnny and Long Tom became rigid as the  ice hummocks about them. 

Doc's trilling slipped away into nothingness in a manner as  intangible as its coming. 

For a long minute, silence fairly reeked. It was the kind of quiet,  this dead apathy of the arctic, which you

momentarily expected to  explode. 

Came a new sound! Doc had heard it before. That was what had  surprised him into setting up his trilling note.

Now Johnny, Long Tom,  and Ham also heard it distinctly. 

A clicking! A clicking as of dice rattled together in a palm! 

The noise which had haunted Victor Vail down through the years! The  noise which marked the presence of

Ben O'Gard's man! 

"That, brothers," Doc Savage said softly, "is one of the last  things I expected to hear at this spot!" 

WITH THE final word, Doc glided forward. The others raced after  him. But they were left behind as though

their feet were frozen in the  ice pack. 

Doc Savage was lost to their sight. 

When they overhauled him, Doc was standing over a human figure that  sprawled in a steaming lake of

scarlet. 

"Dynamite Smith!" Ham clipped. "The bird I shot." Doc and his three  friends now exchanged understanding

glances. 

An uncontrollable palsy had seized Dynamite Smith's jaws. They  rattled together  made the distinctive

clicking. 

Dynamite Smith was the one of Ben O'Gard's villains who had kept  track of Victor Vail down through the

years. 

"I don't understand it!" Long Tom muttered. "When he bent over me  that night in my bunk, his teeth clicked.

But we have talked with him  many times since then, aboard the submarine, and his teeth made no  sound." 

"I see the explanation of that  now," Doc replied. "Dynamite Smith  has been using narcotics almost steadily

throughout the submarine  voyage." 

"You mean  " 


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"That the dope quiets his jaws." Doc explained. "In other words,  every addict gets the heebiejeebies when

deprived of his narcotic.  When Dynamite Smith is without it, his jaws shake. When he has it, they  don't." 

The wounded man was conscious. He rolled his eyes. 

Doc Savage now examined the man's wound. But Ham had made an  accurate shot. 

"You're doomed," Doc told Dynamite Smith without emotion. 

The dying man's lips moved. Doc was forced to bend close before  even his keen ears could decipher the

fellow's gaspings. 

"Ben O'Gard an' my mateys went off an' left me here, huh?" Dynamite  Smith said. 

Emotion rarely showed on Doc Savage's handsome bronze face. But it  was in evidence now. 

"Was Ben O'Gard on the Helldiver?" he demanded. Dynamite Smith did  not answer the question. His glazing

eyes rolled slowly until they  focused upon Long Tom. 

"I was huntin' the map when yer grabbed the black wig offn my head  that night," he whispered feebly, "After

I come near gettin' caught,  Ben O'Gard hisself done the huntin'. It was him found the map an'  swiped it from

yer." 

"Which one of the Helldiver crew is Ben O'Gard?" Doc demanded. 

An evil, vicious sneer distorted the blue lips of the dying man.  His whisper gurgled in his throat. 

"We fooled the crew of ye plenty neat," he labored. 

It seemed he would never get the next words past his stiffening  throat muscles. The villainous sneer spread

upon his lips. 

"Ben O'Gard is Cap'n McCluskey!" he coughed. 

ONE STARTLED glance Doc and his three friends exchanged. When they  looked back at Dynamite Smith,

the man was dead. 

"Ben O'Gard and Captain McCluskey  the same person!" Ham muttered.  "For cryin' out loud!" 

Doc Savage's strong lips warped slightly. 

"It seems, brothers, that we kindly financed the expedition of our  enemies to get the treasure," he said dryly.

"No doubt Ben O'Gard   we'll call him that from now on, instead of Captain McCluskey  no  doubt Ben

O'Gard did take some of the treasure from the Oceanic when he  left the liner more than fifteen years ago. He

used that money to fit  up the Helldiver. But his funds were not sufficient. He advertised for  a sucker to back

him. Imagine his pleasure when we presented  ourselves!" 

Ham groaned loudly. 

"It was me called your attention to that newspaper story about the  undertheice submarine," he berated

himself. "What a mess I got us  into!" 


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Doc's low laughter danced merrily among the ice hummocks. 

"Forget it, Ham. If the fault belongs anywhere, it's on my  shoulders. Let us go back and open that bundle of

mine." 

They retraced their steps to the bundle. The sealskin thong was  untied. The waterproof covering was

removed. 

"Hey!" barked Johnny in surprise. "This wrapper is a small silk  tent!" 

"It's more than a tent, also," Doc informed him. "With it in the  package is a collapsible frame of alloy metal.

Expanded, and with that  silk tent stretched over it, the frame becomes a boat. There are web  paddles which

can be attached to our rifle barrels for propulsion." 

They all now dived into the rest of the bundle. They were anxious  to see what fresh wonders it held. 

Long Tom released a howl of delight. 

"A radio set!" he squawled. "Transmitter and receiver, complete!" 

Swiftly, Long Tom drew aside with the wireless equipment. He  proceeded to put it in operation. The

apparatus was of Doc's own  devising, marvelously compact. It had no bulky batteries which might be

rendered useless by moisture or cold, or exhausted by use. Current was  supplied by a generator operated by a

powerful spring and clockwork.  The set operated on very short wave lengths. 

In fifteen minutes, Long Tom had it ready for a test. Eagerly, the  electrical wizard cocked an ear at the tiny

builtin loud speaker, and  twirled the tuning dials. 

Suddenly a voice purred out of the speaker. 

The astonishment of Doc and his friends at hearing that voice was  unbounded. It was as though they had

tuned in on the other world. 

They jumped up and down. They bellowed at each other in a near  hysteria of delight They danced circles on

the iceberg. 

"I tell you' we're tuned in on hell!" Ham howled. 

Ham was back in his old form. 

For it was Monk's voice coming out of the loudspeaker! 

Chapter 11. POLAR PERIL

ONE HOUR had passed. In the hazesoaked sky hung a dark spot. This  spot emitted a loud droning. The

droning increased in volume. 

The spot became a seaplane. 


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It was a twomotored job, not the latest and speediest type of  plane, and somewhat shabby. But an angel

would not have looked better  to the four men watching it from the iceberg. 

The ship sloped down in the fog. It circled. It lowered. The floats  scraped a long white chalk mark of foam on

the open lead in the ice  pack. Then they settled. The plane taxied in to the rim of the berg. 

Monk and Renny stood on the floats. With acrobatic leaps, they  bounded to the ice. 

Probably no more hearty reunion ever occurred than took place there  in the cold shadow of the north pole. 

Unnoticed at first, a man clambered out and sat on the cabin of the  plane. 

Doc Savage was the first to glimpse him. 

"Victor Vail!" he called in surprise. 

The famous violinist smiled at Doc. He tried to speak, but could  find no words to express the depth of his

feeling. 

Finally, Victor Vail pointed at his own eyes. It was a simple  gesture. But its meaning was unbounded. 

Victor Vail now had eyes which were entirely normal. So deep was  his gratitude to this giant bronze man that

he could not put his  emotion into coherent sentences. 

"I sure thought I was rid of the sight of your ugly mug," Ham told  Monk happily. "What happened?" 

"The dang submarine submerged while we were keeping watch on deck,"  Monk explained in his mild way.

"We were washed off. We swam like polar  bears. I'll bet we swam ten miles. Talk about cold We happened to

have  some of that chemical concoction I fixed up to keep a man warm, or we'd  have frozen stiff. Anyway, we

finally found an iceberg big enough to  roost on." 

"And we roosted on it until Victor Vail came along and took us  off," Renny put in, his vast voice rumbling

over the ice pack like  thunder. 

Doc Savage eyed Victor Vail. The violinist was alone in the plane.  Surely, he had not flown into the arctic

wastes alone? 

Victor Vail sensed his puzzlement. 

"I hired this plane and a pilot to overhaul you," he ex plained.  "You may have wondered why I have been so

interested in your exact  position, and the course you intended to follow. The reason was because  I intended to

join you." 

"But why?" Doc questioned. 

"My wife and my infant daughter, Roxey," Victor Vail said quietly.  "I wanted to satisfy myself as to their 

fate." 

LONG TOM now busied himself taking down the portable radio outfit,  It had served its purpose well, for it

had guided the plane to this  iceberg. 


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"Where is the pilot Victor Vail hired to fly him?" Doc asked. 

"The monkey got cold feet!" Renny grinned. "Looking at all these  icebergs got his goat. He refused to go on.

So we took him back south  to a little settlement on the coast of Greenland, bought his plane for  twice what it

is worth, and left him." 

"That accounts for our not finding you," Doc decided. 

Long Tom stored the last of the radio equipment into its container. 

"You haven't told us how you happened to be marooned here," Monk  grunted. 

So Doc explained. "Captain McCluskey is Ben O'Gard," he concluded. 

Victor Vail made a gesture of regret. 

"I could not describe Ben O'Gard to you," he murmured. "I had no  eyes to see him at the time I was in contact

with him." 

The famous violinist was now seized again with emotion. In halting  words, he sought to express his gratitude

to big bronze Doc Savage for  the return of his vision. 

"Any debt of gratitude you owed me is already paid in full!" Doc  assured him. "You have saved me and my

friends from almost certain  death. In the winter, when the ice pack is frozen solid, we might have  reached

civilization. But as it was, we were in a death trap." 

"McCluskey and Ben O'Gard are the same guy!" Renny ruminated. He  popped his enormous fists together

They were so hard it was a wonder  sparks did not fly. "I'd like to have another chance at that walrus!  I'll bet

the chump wouldn't lick me the second time!" 

"You an' me both, pal!" Monk said with deceptive gentleness. "Dibs  on first whack at 'im when we meet

again!" 

Long Tom had been delving in Doc's bundle. Now he gave a bark of  surprise. 

"Hey, what's this jigger?" he demanded. 

He held up an oddly shaped blob of metal. It weighed quite a number  of pounds. 

"That," Doc explained softly, "is something I took off the  submarine before we came away on our walrus

hunt. It's a valve from one  of the submerging tanks." 

Long Tom grinned widely. He sensed that Doc had pulled a fast one. 

"Furthermore," Doc continued, "Monk's chemical which melts the ice  is all exhausted from the containers in

the hull of the sub. There's  material for more of the stuff aboard, but the Helldiver crew don't  know how to

mix it." 

"You mean the gang can't take the submarine beneath the surface  without this valve?" Long Tom demanded. 


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"Exactly," Doc replied. "They will realize they'd never come up if  they did. The craft would be flooded. Too,

they haven't the chemical to  melt themselves out of a jam. The Helldiver cannot escape from this  arctic ice

pack without submerging to pass under solidly frozen floes." 

"Then we've still got the upper hand on the gang!" Monk chortled. 

THE SPIRITS of the adventurous group now soared. They boarded the  seaplane. Old though the craft might

be, it was amply large to  accommodate all of them. Doc himself handled the controls. 

The shabby buzzard of a plane seemed to take a drink out of the  Fountain of Youth, or whatever rejuvenates

decrepit seaplanes. It  wiggled its tail like a fledgling. With a skipping lunge, it took the  air. 

"The Helldiver cannot have sailed far," Doc remarked. 

Long Tom, Ham, and Johnny were taking stock of the plane fittings.  There was an emergency outfit for arctic

travel, including pemmican and  concentrated fruit juices intended to combat scurvy. 

There were also parachutes. 

"They may come in handy," Long Tom grinned. "From what I've seen of  this ice pack, a man sometimes can

go many a mile without finding  enough open water to land a plane." 

"Suppose you birds use binoculars on what's below us," Doc  suggested mildly. "Finding the submarine in this

fog is going to be a  job." 

"You said it," agreed Renny. "We'd never have found you on that  iceberg if it hadn't been for the radio

compass with which this plane  is equipped." 

Long Tom hastily seated himself before the radio compass. He  twirled the dials, and cranked the gear which

turned the loop ae"rial  of the compass. Then he growled disgustedly. 

"They're not operating the radio on the submarine," he declared.  "Finding them would be a pipe if they were." 

It was much colder in the air. They shivered in spite of their fur  garments. Such warmth as there was in this

frigid waste seemed to come  from the water. 

Doc's great voice suddenly reached every ear in the plane. He spoke  but one word. 

"Land!" 

Several intent looks were required before the others saw what Doc's  sharp gaze had discerned. 

Land it was, right enough. But it looked more like a vast iceberg.  Only occasional rocky peaks projecting

from the glacial mass identified  it as land. 

"No map shows this land!" declared Johnny. "It can't be very great  in area." 

"What we're interested in is the fact that the liner Oceanic is  aground on it somewhere," Doc informed him. 

Victor Vail peered eagerly through the cabin windows. He had spent  terrible weeks somewhere on that bleak

terrain below. It held the  secret of the fate of his wife and daughter, Roxey. Yet this was the  first time he had


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ever actually seen it. The sight seemed to depress  him. He shuddered. 

"No one could live down there  more than fifteen years," he  choked. 

In Victor Vail's heart had reposed a desperate hope that he might  find his loved ones alive. This now faded. 

"There's the Helldiver!" Doc said abruptly. 

The others discovered it a moment later. 

"Holy cow!" exploded Renny. "The ice is about to crush the  submarine!" 

BEN O'GARD and his villains were trapped! They had nosed the  Helldiver into an open lead in the ice pack,

close inshore. Excitement  over the nearness of their objective must have made them reckless. 

The ice floe had closed behind them. Slowly, inexorably, it now  squeezed toward the sub. The bergs, a pale

and revolting blue in the  haze, crept in like the frozen fangs of a vast monster. No more than a  score of feet of

water lay open on either side of the sharpbacked  steel cigar of an underseas boat. 

Ben O'Gard and his thugs crowded the deck. They saw the seaplane.  They waved frantically. 

"I do believe they're glad to see us!" Monk snorted grimly. "We  oughta sail around up here and watch 'em get

squashed." 

"There might be some pleasure in that," Doc admitted. "But we need  that submarine to take the treasure

home. There's too much of it to fly  back by plane." 

Monk shrugged. "How can we help 'em? There's not enough open water  to land the plane." 

"Take the controls," Doc Savage told Renny. 

Renny remonstrated: "Hey  what on  " 

Then he made a leap for the controls. Doc had deserted them. Renny  banked the plane in a circle. Like all of

Doc's five friends, he was an  excellent pilot. Doc's teaching had made accomplished airmen out of  them. Doc

seemed able to impact a share of his own genius to those whom  he taught. 

Doc now snugged a parachute harness about his powerful frame. He  grasped the valve which was

allimportant to the safety of the  submarine. 

Before the others could voice an objection, Doc shoved open the  cabin door. He dived through. 

The white silk of the parachute came out of the back pack like a  puff of pale smoke. Doc was lowered to the

ice near the distressed  Helldiver. 

Ben O'Gard and his crew held guns. They made threatening gestures.  Doc displayed the valve. This was the

magic wand that quieted the  villains. 

"Throw your weapons overboard!" Doc commanded. 


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For this order, he was roundly cursed. Ben O'Gard waxed especially  eloquent. He must have gathered swear

words from most of the dives of  the world. He swore in six distinct languages, not counting pidgin  English. 

But the guns went overboard. 

DOC SAVAGE now sprinted forward. The ice had closed in perceptibly.  But more than a score of feet still

separated the Helldiver from the  remorseless blue jaws. 

The surface of the floe was slippery. The leap to the submarine was  prodigious. But from the ease with which

Doc made it, he might have  been gifted with invisible wings. 

More than one gasp of awe escaped from the gullets of the Helldiver  villains as they witnessed the great leap.

They recoiled from the  mighty bronze man. They still remembered what a child their huge walrus  of a leader

had been in those bronze hands. 

One thug even backed away so hastily he fell overboard. He squealed  like a rat in the icy water until he was

hauled back on deck. 

Not a minute could be wasted. Doc hardly touched the steel deck  before he was gliding through the intricate

insides of the submarine. 

Doc worked swiftly at replacing the valve. 

Ben O'Gard's men flocked around him like children. They already had  the deck hatches closed in readiness. 

Even Ben O'Gard himself came fawning up with a wrench to assist in  the work. But Doc waved him aside.

His bronze fingers were more speedy  than any wrench  and they could tighten a tap just about as snugly. 

"All clear!" Doc called at last. "Fill the main tanks!" 

The crew flocked to station. The electric motors started. With a  windy gurgle that was nothing if not joyful,

the Helldiver eased down  out of the fearsome blue jaws of ice. 

Doc watched the valve for a moment. Satisfied it was not going to  leak, he turned away. 

At that instant, the steel door of the compartment in which he  crouched clanged shut. The dogs which secured

it rattled fast. 

He was imprisoned! 

Chapter 12. ICE TRAP

DOC SHRUGGED. He sat down on a convenient pipe. He was not worried.  He was armed. 

True, Ben O'Gard and his crew probably had guns themselves, by now.  The weapons they had thrown

overboard so profanely at Doc's request had  hardly comprised their entire armament. They were too wily for

that. 

But Doc had the explosive he always carried in his pair of extra  molars. With it, he could speedily blast open

the bulkhead. 


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And once the sub came to the surface, he had simply to unscrew the  valve  and he would have the gang at

his mercy again. 

The electric motors set up a musical vibration. The Helldiver had  slanted down steeply in its hurried dive.

Now it trimmed level. After a  time, it sloped upward perceptibly. There came a jar as it touched the  underside

of the ice pack. 

Other crunching shocks ensued. They were of lesser violence. The  submarine was feeling blindly for another

spot free of ice. This  continued interminably. Open leads seemed to be very scarce. 

Doc got up and rapped tentatively on the thick steel bulkhead. 

He was cursed. He was told he would be killed if he didn't behave.  He was promised all kinds of dire fates. 

This didn't worry him much. Danger seldom worried Doc. A telegraph  operator in a great relay office

becomes accustomed to the uproar of  instruments about him. A structural steel worker comes to think nothing

of the fact that a single misstep means sudden death. 

By the same token, Doc Savage had haunted the trails of those who  sought his violent end for so long that he

took danger as a matter of  course. 

More than an hour passed. Doc became impatient. 

Finally, the submarine arose to the surface. The stopping of the  electric motors and the starting of the

oilburning Diesel engines  showed that. 

Doc promptly removed the allimportant valve. 

Through the steel bulkhead, he informed Ben O'Gard what he had  done. 

He got a surprise. Ben O'Gard gave him the horse laugh. 

Doc was puzzled. He had thought he held an ace. But the missing  valve seemed to worry his enemies not at

all. There was but one  explanation. 

They had found a snug harbor on the uncharted coast! Doc settled  down to await developments. They came

twenty minutes later. 

There reached his ears a sound like six or seven hard hailstones  tapping the submarine hull. 

Doc knew what it was. 

Machinegun bullets. 

Were his friends starting hostilities? He hoped not. They'd fool  around and get themselves shot out of the air.

The old seaplane was no  battle wagon. 

With a jarring bedlam, the Diesel engine sped up. The mad race of  the verticaltrunk pistons vibrated the

whole submarine. The Helldiver  lunged away soggily. 

Next instant came a shock which, catching Doc by surprise, piled  him against a bulkhead. 


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The Helldiver had gone aground. 

Men yelled. They sounded like chicks cheeping in an incubator. A  machine gun cut loose on deck. Another

joined it. Their clamor was  hollow, like crickets shut up in a can. 

This continued for the space of time it would take a man to count  to several hundred. 

Wham! The sub all but rolled completely over. The plates shrieked.  Loose tools jumped about as beans in a

shaken box. 

Doc picked himself up. 

"I'd better hold onto something," he remarked to no one in  particular. 

A bomb had just exploded in the water near the submarine. Doc shook  his head slowly. His friends had no

bombs! Ben O'Gard's bellow  penetrated the bulkhead. "Come out!" he boomed. "You gotta help us!" 

"Go take an ice bath!" Doc suggested. 

Ben O'Gard spewed profanity hot enough to melt the steel bulkhead. 

"Rust my anchor, matey!" he yelled at last. "You've got the upper  hand on us again. We'll do anything you

say, only you gotta help us." 

"It sounds like you're aground," Doc told him. "My replacing the  valve won't help any now." 

"T' hell wit' the valve!" roared Ben O'Gard. "Ain't none of us  swabs can fly the foldin' seaplane. You gotta

take the sky hooker up  an' fight off them buzzards that's bombin' us!" 

"Who's bombing you?" Doc questioned. 

"Keelhaul de Rosa's gang  the dirty deck lice." 

DOC DIGESTED this. It was an entirely new development. Since the  Helldiver had left New York, there had

been nothing to show Keelhaul de  Rosa still existed upon the earth. Now the explanation for that was  plain. 

Keelhaul de Rosa had one of the treasure maps. He had secured a  plane and flown to the wreck of the liner

Oceanic. And now he was  seeking to wipe out his rivals. 

"Stand away from the door," Doc ordered. "I'll come out." The dogs  securing the steel panel clanked free.

Doc swung the panel open.  Several of Ben O'Gard's villains faced him. But not a gun was turned in  his

direction. They were a scared lot. 

"Four of me hearties was swept overboard an' drowned by that bomb."  Ben O'Gard roared. "The swabs are in

Davy Jones's locker." 

The thugs split like butter before a hot knife as Doc went through  them. A vault, and he was out on deck. He

had his valve along. 

Ben O'Gard's men were frantically assembling the folding seaplane. 


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Doc scanned the skies. 

"Where's the plane?" he demanded. 

"Figure it went back after another load of bombs," boomed Ben  O'Gard. "Rust my anchor, matey. We gotta

shake a mean leg, or it'll be  back 'fore you set sail in the air." 

The Helldiver was indeed aground. The bow canted half out of the  water. The stern portion of the deck

slanted down beneath the surface. 

Around about was a glacierwalled cove. Ordinarily, it would have  been a snugenough harbor. But the

attack from the air had turned it  into a trap. 

Doc scrutinized the heavens once more. His strange golden eyes  sought everywhere for the shabby plane

flown by his friends. There was  no sign of it. 

Doc juggled the allimportant valve. Some of Ben O'Gard's men eyed  it enviously. Doc had no idea of

surrendering it, though. 

"What became of my friends?" he questioned. 

Ben O'Gard shrugged his walrus shoulders. 

"The last of 'em I saw, they was fightin' Keelhaul de Rosa's sky  tub." He leveled an arm which was a cone of

beef. "The fracas wandered  off down that way." 

He was pointing down the glacial coast of the uncharted land. 

No line changed on Doc Savage's firm bronze features. But inside,  his feelings were far from pleasant. The

shabby old seaplane flown by  his friends was no fighting craft. An Immelman or a tight loop would  pull her

wings off. 

The tiny folding seaplane was now ready for the air. 

"Take 'er off, matey," howled Ben O'Gard. "Rust my  " He fell  silent. The drone of a plane had come to their

ears. "That's Keelhaul  de Rosa comin' back," bawled the walrus.  "Hurry, matey. Our lives is  in your hands." 

"I wish they were," Doc said under his breath. Then, aloud: 

"Give me the best machine gun. And throw every other weapon  overboard." 

"Aw, don't worry about us keepin' our hands offn you from now on,'  fawned the walrus. "Why, we'll cut you

in on a share of the boodle  " 

"Over with the guns," Doc rapped. 

There was more squawking. But the motor sound of the approaching  plane was like the howl of doom. No

argument could have been more  persuasive. Falling pistols, rifles, knives, and machine guns whipped  the

surrounding water into a foam. 

Doc waited until the last arm vanished. 


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Then his mighty bronze form plugged into the tiny seaplane cockpit.  The motor purred like a big cat. 

He took the air. The allimportant valve went with him. 

HE WAS none too soon. With a bawl like a banshee spawned by the  foul gray haze overhead, Keelhaul de

Rosa's plane dived. It opened with  a machine gun. The craft had come into the arctic spurred for war. It  had a

pair of cowl guns, synchronized through the prop. 

Every fourth or fifth slug it fired was a phosphorusburning  tracer. The bullets scuffed the water below Doc's

fleet little flivver  craft. In the green sea, before they were extinguished, the tracers  glowed like a streak of

scattered sparks. 

Cobwebby, gruesome, tracer strings waved before Doc's golden eyes.  Phosphorus fumes reeked in his

nostrils. Lead gashed a hole in the  rightwing bank. The flivver wouldn't stand much of that. 

Doc banked quickly. The tiny seaplane was agile as a fly in his  master hand. 

Twice more, Keelhaul de Rosa's killer craft dived angrily. Its lead  missed both times. 

Ben O'Gard and his gang now gathered the fruit of all that  squawking about giving up their guns, They had

delayed Doc almost too  long. 

Keelhaul de Rosa's plane swooped upon the Helldiver. It released an  elongated metal egg. This hatched a

choice lump of hell alongside the  submarine. Water geysered two hundred feet in the air. A huge wave  sprang

outward in a circle. 

Over heeled the sub, over  over. It writhed. It skewered like a  tadpole out of water. 

Then it slipped free of the ledge upon which it had been hung. 

For a long minute, the Helldiver was lost under the water. Then it  came up  and floated. 

Doc flung his flivver for the other plane. If size of the craft had  been important, the scrap would have been

ridiculous. Doc's steed was  to the other like a sparrow to a hawk. But size counts little in an air  battle. 

Doc, however, was handicapped by having to fly his plane and shoot  his submachine gun by hand at the

same time. 

He jockeyed in above the enemy. His rapidfirer burred noisily, the  breech mechanism spewing a string of

smoking empty cartridges. 

The other plane jumped in the sky like a thing bitten, 

NO SERIOUS damage had been inflicted, however. The two craft  sparred wanly. At this, they were about

evenly matched. 

Keelhaul de Rosa's seaplane was a lowwing, allmetal job of late  production. Its two motors were huge and

speedcowled for efficiency.  Even the pontoon floats were streamlined in a fashion which made them

virtually another pair of small wings. 

Only two men occupied the craft. 


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Neither of these was Keelhaul de Rosa. They had, rather, the  windburned look of professional airmen of the

northland. Probably  Keelhaul de Rosa had picked them up to do his flying. 

The jockeying for position ended suddenly. A quick flip of Doc's  bronze wrist, a gentle pressure from one

foot, and the tiny seaplane  pounced like a bull pup. It was doubtful if the pair in the big plane  understood

quite how the maneuver had been managed. But Doc was upon  them while the pilot still goggled through the

empty sight rings of his  cowl rapidfirers. 

Doc's small machine gun shimmied and lipped flame. His bullets  pushed cabin windows out of the other ship.

They tore the goggles off  the other pilot. 

The big plane did half a wingover, eased into a dizzy slip, and  would have collided with Doc's little bus. He

evaded it by zooming  sharply. 

The second man in Keelhaul de Rosa's craft took over the controls. 

Once again, the manmade birds skulked each other's sky trails  warily. The motors panted and steamed. The

evil gray mist squirmed and  boiled in the prop wakes. 

Doc got in a burst. His lead started colorless streams of liquid  stringing from the wings of the other plane. He

had opened the fuel  tanks in the wings. 

In return, he took a leadwhipping that gnawed a ragged area in the  fuselage of his little fiivver. After that,

the craft flew with a  strangely brokenbacked feel. 

Then fresh trouble loomed. Doc's fuel gauge needle had retreated a  lot. It already covered the first two letters

of the word "empty."  There had been no time to charge the fuel tanks before he took off. 

Doc calculated. Fifteen minutes more, and he would have to come  down. He'd better finish this sky brawl

quickly. 

For the second time. Doc's small craft pulled its bewildering  pounce of a maneuver. His gun hammered. Lead

went home to vital points  of the opposing plane. The plane climbed up on its tail and hung  hooting at the

borealis. It slipped off on a wing tip. It rocked into a  tailspin. 

It hit a floe hard enough to knock a hole through four feet of pan  ice. After that, nothing was left but a wad of

tin and wire sticking  out of the ice. 

Doc slammed his bus back for the cove. He found it in the gray  haze. 

A disquieting sight met his gaze. 

The Helldiver was stealing straight for the open sea  or, rather,  the icecovered sea. All hatches were

battened. 

Doc's powerful bronze hand closed over the tank valve. He had it in  the plane cockpit. If the submarine dived

with the tank open, it would  never come up. 

The sub dived! 


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TWO MINUTES  three  Doc circled the spot where the Helldiver had  gone under the ice pack. Green

water boiled. A lot of bubbles came up.  Small growlers of ice cavorted like filthy blue animals. And that was

all. 

Doc's bronze features, remarkably handsome in their rugged  masculine way, did not alter expression. He

banked away. The tiny  folding seaplane climbed. It boomed along at the speed most economical  on the fuel. 

Doc was hunting his friends. 

The outlook was not pleasant. The plane his friends had flown was  no match for Keelhaul de Rosa's killer

ship. This tiny collapsible  crate of Doc's was far more efficient, and Keelhaul de Rosa's bus would  have

skyscalped it easily except for Doc's master hand at the  controls. 

The fog wrapped him around like an odious, ashcolored death  shroud. The small engine moaned defiantly.

But its life blood, the  hightest gas in the tank, ran lower and lower. 

Suddenly Doc sighted a human figure below. It was a tiny form. It  crawled on all fours, like a white ant in its

lighthued fur garments. 

Doc dropped his plane to within a score of feet of the ice. The  jagged hummocks fanged hungrily at the

floats. They seemed to miss them  by scant inches. 

The crawling human being flashed beneath 

It was Victor Vail. He carried a bundle of white silk. 

Doc's bronze head gave the barest of nods. He could guess why  Victor Vail was down there, carrying the

folds of a parachute. 

Monk, Renny, Long Tom, Ham. and Johnny  Doc's five ironnerved,  capable friends  had given battle to

the sky killer of Keelhaul de  Rosa. They had dumped Victor Vail overboard by chute. They had wanted  him

clear of danger. That meant they knew they were fighting hopeless  odds. 

It boded ill for Doc's five pals, did that crawling figure of  Victor Vail. It meant the five had felt they were

going to their death. 

Doc flew on. He aimed the noisy snout of his little plane in the  direction Victor Vail was crawling.  For the

violinist had been headed,  not for land, but out into the grisly waste of the polar ice pack. 

This indicated he had some goal out there. 

Doc found that goal in slightly more than a minuteabout two miles  from where Victor Vail crept. 

It was a horrible sight. The mighty bronze man had seen few more  ghastly. None that tore at the insides of

him like this one did! 

A ruptured seaplane float lay on the ice. It was a mass of  splinters. Forty yards farther on was the second.

Then the ice bore a  sprinkling of airplane fragments. 

A section of a wing still poured off gruesome yellow smoke. 


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Gaping, sinister, an open lead in the ice yawned just beyond. Into  this had plainly gone engine, fuselage, and

the heavier parts of the  plane. 

To Doc's golden eyes, the whole sickening story was clearly  'written. Tracer bullets had fired the fuel tanks of

the shabby  seaplane. It had crashed in flames. 

The odious green depths of the polar sea was the grave of whatever  and whoever had been in the fuselage

when the old crate cracked up. 

Doc circled slowly. 

The engine of his plane gurgled loudly. It coughed. 

Then it stopped dead. 

Chapter 13. ICE GHOSTS

THE FUEL had run out. Doc realized this  and slammed the nose  down. 

Practically no height for maneuvering lay below. The little  flivver, due to small wingspread and not

inconsiderable weight, would  glide about as well as a brickbat. 

The only landing place was the lead which had swallowed the remains  of the shabby seaplane flown by Doc's

friends. And that had hardly the  width of a city street. It was about half a block long. 

Had Doc Savage's hand on the controls been a whit less masterful  than it was, the rent in the arctic ice would

have claimed his life.  Nothing short of a miracle was the landing Doc made in the cramped  space. 

Above one end of the lead  smaller than many a private swimming  pool  the plane abruptly turned

broadside in the air. As swiftly, it  turned to the other side. This fishtail maneuver lowered air speed to  near

the stalling point. With a sizable splash, the floats dug in the  icy water. They plunged so deep the plane

wetted its bottom. 

Doc had known from the first he was due for a crackup. He was not  wrong. The plane sloughed for the wall

of ice. Doc vaulted out of the  cockpit 

Only fractional seconds elapsed between the time the plane plumped  into the water and the instant it smashed

into the icy bank of the  lead. It taxed even Doc's blinding speed to get out of the control  bucket in time. He

leaped. His feet landed on the ice. He slid a dozen  yards as though on skates. 

The plane hit. There was a jangling crash remindful of an armload  of tin cans dumped on a concrete walk.

Metal rent, crumpled. The plane  sank like a monkey wrench. 

By the time Doc had ceased sliding and wheeled back, the craft was  gone. The repellent water boiled as in a

hideous cauldron. Big bubbles  climbed to the surface with ghastly glubglubs. It was as though a  living thing

was drowning in the depths. 

Doc Savage turned away. The valve from the submarine had gone down  with the plane. So had the machine

gun. 


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Doc stood on the menacing arctic ice pack armed only with his  tremendous muscles and his keen brain. He

had no food. He had no tent,  no bedding, no boat to cross leads in the ice. 

Probably no one could have understood more fully than Doc the  meaning of this. He was in a region so

rugged, so bleak, that out of  countless expeditions traveling on the ice and equipped with the finest  of dog

teams and food, few escaped a dire fate. 

Yet one beholding the quiet composure of the bronze man's features  would have thought he didn't realize

what he was up against. Doc's  giant figure was striking, even swathed as it was in fur garments. 

He roamed the vicinity of the wrecked planes for an hour. Nothing  did he find to indicate his five friends still

lived. So Doc went to  meet Victor Vail. 

VICTOR VAIL was above the average physically. In an ordinary group  of men, he would have stood out as

being rather athletic. 

He had progressed a scant half mile from where Doc had sighted him  from the plane. His breath sobbed

through his teeth. He tottered, near  exhaustion. He was indeed glad to see the bronze man. 

Doc Savage had covered thrice the distance negotiated by Victor  Vail. Yet Doc's bronze sinews were

unstrained. He breathed normally. He  might have been taking a stroll down Park Avenue. 

"Your friends!" gasped Victor Vail. "Did you find them safe?" 

Doc Savage shook a slow negative. "I found where their plane sank  through a hole in the ice. That was all." 

Victor Vail sagged down wearily, disconsolately. 

"I heard the plane crash," he murmured. "I was making for the spot.  I could not see the crash, because of the

haze. But Keelhaul de Rosa's  hired killers shot them down." 

Doc made no sound. Victor Vail nipped his lips, then continued. 

"Your five friends forced me to leave the plane by parachute  to  save my life," he murmured. "Others of the

five could have escaped. Yet  they chose to fight together, to the end. They were brave men." 

Doc still made no sound. The moment was too pregnant with sorrow to  be shattered by cold words. 

"What do we do now?" Victor Vail queried at length. 

"We'll find the lost liner Oceanic," Doc replied. "And we will find  Keelhaul de Rosa." 

The chill ferocity in the bronze giant's expressive voice made  Victor Vail shiver. At that instant, he wouldn't

have traded places  with Keelhaul de Rosa for all the wealth in the world, with a safe  return to New York City

thrown in. Keelhaul de Rosa was going to feel  the kind of justice this mighty bronze man dealt. 

THEY SET a course for the uncharted land. 

"What about Ben O'Gard?" questioned Victor Vail. "Do we still have  him and his crew of devils to fight?" 

"The Helldiver submerged with all aboard," Doc replied. "I had that  valve off the tanks with me." 


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Victor Vail gestured as if tossing something away. "We're rid of  them, then. Water will flood the submarine

through the hole left by the  missing valve." 

A vast quaking and rumbling seized the ice pack. They became aware  that a wind had sprung up. This gave

signs of increasing to a gale. The  ice was beginning to shift. It was as though they strode the white,  heaving,

crusted paunch of a great monster of cold. 

A crevice opened unexpectedly. Victor Vail toppled on the brink. He  slipped into space. But strong bronze

fingers snatched him back. 

The crevice closed as swiftly as it had opened. It made a ghastly  crunching. Chunks of ice flew high in the

air. The frozen monster might  have been angry at being cheated of a victim, and was spitting its  teeth out in a

rage. 

It was several minutes before Victor Vail could still the trembling  of his knees. 

"What a ghastly region!" he muttered. 

"There must be a hard storm to the southward," Doc explained. "It  is causing a movement of the ice field." 

The going was incredibly rough. Sheer blocks of bergs jutted up  everywhere. Many were as large as houses.

Occasionally these toppled  over. Sometimes they piled one atop the other after the fashion of  cards shuffled

together. These occurrences were without warning. 

Twice more, Victor Vail was saved by his giant bronze companion. 

"I shall never be able to pay my debt of gratitude to you," the  violinist said feelingly. 

Doc had a twoword reply to all such protestations. 

"Forget it," he said. 

As they neared land, the seemingly impossible happened  the going  became harder. The arctic ice pack was

at its worst. Summer, such as it  was, was in full swing. The sun had been shining steadily for two  months.

This had rotted the ice enough that it broke up under a brisk  blow. 

Doc now virtually carried Victor Vail. Time after time, ice  pinnacles crashed upon the very spot where they

stood. But in some  magic manner, the mighty bronze man always managed to get himself and  the violinist in

the clear. 

The air was filled with a cracking and rumbling so loud as to  almost produce deafness. They might have been

in the midst of a raging  battle. 

"You can tell your grandchildren you went through about the worst  danger nature can offer," Doc said

grimly. "For sheer, terrifying  menace, nothing quite equals a storm with the arctic ice pack breaking  up under

foot." 

Victor Vail made no reply. Doc glanced at him sharply. 

Tears stood in Victor Vail's eyes. 


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Doc's chance remark about grandchildren had made Victor Vail think  of his longlost daughter, Roxey. 

THEY BRAVED an inferno for the next few minutes; an inferno of ice  and wind. Pressure was forcing the

pack ice high on the shore of the  uncharted land. Frozen death crashed and lurched everywhere. 

Doc Savage made it through in safety. He carried Victor Vail under  one thewed arm, seeming not to feel the

burden at all. 

"We licked it," Doc said dryly. "The storm accounts for the thick  haze we've had the last few days." 

They hurried inland. Their mukluks stilt trod ice. It lay below to  a depth of many feet. Occasional ridges of

dark, impermeable stone  rammed unlovely fangs out of the white waste. 

The wind hooted and shrieked. Sometimes it whirled the two men  along like crumpled balls of paper. 

They mounted higher. The glacier thinned. The dark stone reared in  greater profusion. 

Doc Savage halted suddenly. He poised, motionless, metallic. No  breath steam came from his strong lips. 

"What is it?" breathed Victor Vail. 

Doc released breath from his mighty lungs. It made a spurting plume  that frosted on the fur of his parka. The

air was turning colder. 

"Something is stalking us!" Doc said dryly. 

Victor Vail was astounded. His own senses were very keen  made so  by the years when he had been blind,

and depended upon them. But he had  heard nothing. 

"I caught the odor of it," Doc explained. 

Amazement gripped Victor Vail. He had not known this strange bronze  man, through unremitting exercise,

had developed the olfactory keenness  of a wild thing. 

Doc Savage pressed Victor Vail into a convenient crevasse. "Stay  here!" Doc commanded. "Don't leave the

spot. You might become lost!" 

The void of shrieking wind swallowed Doc's bronze form. He glided  to the right. His speed was amazing. 

A few flakes of snow came sizzling through the gale. More followed.  They were hard as fine hailstones.

When Doc flattened close to a rock  spine to listen, the snow sounded like sand on the stone. He heard

nothing. 

He crept on. The snow shut Out visions beyond a few yards. It stuck  to his bearskin trousers. It rattled off his

metallic face like shot; 

Suddenly he caught blurred movement in the whistling abyss. He  flashed for it. His hands  hands in which

steel bars became plastic as  tin strips  were open and ready. His charge was that of a mighty  hunter of the

wild. 

The next instant, Doc became quarry instead of hunter. 


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It was a polar bear he had rushed! 

The animal bounded to meet Doc. It seemed clumsy. The awkwardness  was only in its looks, however. Its

speed was as tremendous as its  size. It was the most terrible killer of the arctic! 

Doc sought to veer aside. The footing was too slippery. Straight  into the embrace of the polar monster, he

skidded! 

SOME MEN acquainted with the arctic regions maintain the polar bear  will flee from a human being, rather

than attack. Others cite instances  when the bruins were known to have taken the aggressive. 

The truth of the matter is probably covered by the words of a  certain famous arctic explorer. 

"It depends on the bear," he said. 

The bear Doc had met was the attacking type. 

It erected on its rear legs. It was far taller than Doc. It flung  monster forepaws out to inclose Doc's bronze

form. A blow from one of  those paws would have crushed down a bull buffalo. 

Twisting, half ducking, Doc evaded the paws. His sinewy fingers  buried in the fur of the polar monster. A

jerk, a lightening flip, put  him behind the bear. 

Doc's fist swung with explosive force. It seemed to sink inches in  the fat flesh of the animal. Doc had struck

at a nerve center where his  vast knowledge told him there was a chance of stunning the monster. 

Bruin was not accustomed to this style of fighting. This small  manthing had looked like an easy quarry. The

bear snarled, showing  hideous fangs. With a speed that was astounding, considering the size  and weight of

the beast, it whirled. 

Doc had fastened himself to the back of the animal. He clung there  solely by the pinching power of his great

leg muscles. Both his arms  were free. 

He struck the polar bear just back of the small head. He slugged  again, hitting a more vulnerable spot. 

Snarling horribly, the  terror of the northern wastes sank to the  glacier. The animal had met more than its

match. 

Doc could have escaped easily. But he did not. They needed food and  a sleeping robe. Here were both. Doc's

metallic fists pistoned a half  dozen more stunning blows. Slavering and snarling, the bear stretched  out. 

Doc's mighty right arm slipped over the bear's head, just back of  the ears. It jerked. A dull pop sounded. A

great trembling seized all  the great, white monster. The fight was over. 

Silence fell, except for the moan of the blizzard. 

Was it a low, mellow, trilling sound, remindful of the song of some  exotic bird, which mingled with the

whine of the wind? Or was it but  the melodious note of the gale rushing through the neighboring  pinnacles of

rock and ice? 

A listener could not have told. 


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Doc's strange sound sometimes came when he had accomplished some  tremendous feat. Certainly, there was

ample cause for it now. 

No man, bare handed,  had ever vanquished a more frightful foe. 

Doc skidded the huge, hairy animal to a nearby pock in the bleak  stone. He searched until he had found

boulders enough to cover the  cache of potential food and bedding. He did not want other bears to rob  him. 

He now hurried to get Victor Vail. 

He reached the crevasse where he had left the violinist. 

Ten feet from it, a gruesome red sprinkling rouged the ice. Blood!  It no longer steamed. It was frozen solid,

crusted with flakes of snow. 

Scoring in the ice, already inlaid with snow, denoted a furious  fight. 

No sign was to be seen of Victor Vail! 

Chapter 14. CORPSE BOAT

LIKE A hound in search of a scent, Doc set off. He ran in widening  circles. He found faint marks that might

have been a trail. They led  inland. They were lost beyond the following within two rods. 

Doc positioned himself in the lee of a boulder the size of a box  car. Standing there, sheltered a little from the

blizzard, he  considered. 

An animal would have devoured Victor Vail on the spot! There had  been no bits of cloth scattered about, no

gory patches on the ice, such  as certainly would have accompanied such a cannibalistic feast. 

Something else loomed large in Doc's mind, too. The odor his  supersensitive nostrils had detected at first! 

Doc's mighty bronze form came as near a shiver as it ever came. 

There had been a bestial quality about that scent. Yet it had  hardly been that of an animal! Nor was it human,

either. It had been a  revolting tang, reminiscent of carrion. 

One thing he began to realize with certainty. It had not been the  polar bear! 

Doc shrugged. He stepped out into the squealing blizzard. Inland,  he journeyed. 

The terrain sloped upward. The glacier became but scattered smears  of ice. Even the snow did not linger, so

great was the wind velocity. 

Doc crossed a ridge. 

From now on, the way led down. Progress was largely a matter of  defying the propulsion of the gale. 

Snow was drifting here. This was a menace, for it covered  crevasses, a fall into which meant death. Doc trod

cautiously. 


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In a day or two, perhaps in a week, when the blizzard had blown  itself out, the haze above would disperse,

and let the everlasting sun  of the arctic summer beat down upon the snow. This would become slush.  Cold

would freeze it. A little more would be added to the thickness of  the glacier. For thus are glaciers made. 

Warily, Doc sidled along. He let the wind skid him ahead when he  dared. Had he been a man addicted to

profanity, he would have been  consigning all glaciers to a place where their coolness probably would  be a

welcome change. 

A hideous cracking and rumbling began to reach his ears. He could  hear it plainly when he laid his head to

the ice under foot. 

It was the noise of the icepack piling on the shore. This uncharted  land must be but a narrow ridge projecting

from the polar seas. 

Doc neared the shore. 

An awesome sound brought him up sharp. It split through the banshee  howl of the blizzard. It put the hairs

On Doc's nape on edge. 

A woman's shrieking! 

DOC SPED for the sound. The snow collapsed under him unexpectedly.  Only a flip of his Herculean body

kept him from dropping to death on  the snaggled icy bottom of the wide crevasse far below. 

He ran on as though he had not just shaken the clammy claw of the  Reaper. 

A white mass hulked up before his searching golden eyes. It looked  like a gigantic iceberg cast upon the

shore. But it had a strangely  manmade look. 

A ship! 

The icecrusted hulk of the lost liner Oceanic! 

Doc raced along the hull. It canted over his head, for the liner  was obviously heeled slightly. A hundred feet,

he ran. Another! 

He came to an object which might have been a long icicle hanging  down from the rail of the liner. But he

knew it was an icecoated  chain. The links were a procession of knobs. 

These knobs enabled Doc to climb. But the mounting was not easy. A  greased pole would have been a

stairway in comparison. The blizzard  moaned and hooted and sought to pick him bodily from his handhold. 

The woman was no longer shrieking. 

Doc topped the rail. A scene of indescribable confusion met his  eyes. Capstans, hatches, bitts, all were knots

of ice. The rigging had  long ago been torn down by the polar elements. Masts and wirerope  stays and cargo

booms made a tangle on the deck. Ice had formed on  these. 

The forward deck, it was. A frozen, hideous wilderness! The gale  whined in it like a host of ravenous beasts. 

Doc reached a hatch. It defied even his terrific strength. The  years had cemented it solidly. 


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The deck did not slope as much as he had thought. It was not quite  level, though. He glided for the stern. 

An open companion lured him. Snow was pouring in. Half inside, he  saw the floor was seven feet deep in ice

snow which had formed a  glacial mass through the years. 

Doc tried another companion. The door was closed. It resisted his  shove. His fist whipped a blow which

traveled a scant foot. The door  caved as though dynamite had let loose against it. 

Doc pitched inside. 

A wave of pungent aroma met his nostrils. 

It was the smell of the thing which had stalked them on the  glacier! It was horrible  yet there was a

flowerlike quality to it. 

Gloom lurked in the recesses of the cabin where he stood. Formerly,  it had been a lounge. But the once

luxuriant furniture was now but a  rubble on the floor. Some fantastic monster might have torn it to bits,  as

though to line a nest. 

Bones lay in the litter. Bones of polar bear, of seal. Flesh still  clung to some. Others were halfeaten

carcasses. 

Doc sped ahead. He shoved through a door. 

A SHUFFLING movement came from across the room. Doc charged the  sound. 

There was a squealing noise, ratlike, eerie. A door slammed. Doc  hit the panel. It was metal. It smashed him

back. His fists could not  knock down an inch of steel. He wrenched at the lock. That defied him,  too. 

Doc sought another route for pursuit A companionway deposited him  on a lower deck. He went forward. 

It was more gloomy here. Doc's capable bronze fingers searched  inside his parka. They brought out a

flashlight of a type Doc himself  had perfected. 

This flash had no battery. A tiny, powerful generator, built into  the handle and driven by a stout spring,

supplied the current. One  twist of the flash handle would wind the spring and furnish light  current for some

minutes. A special receptacle held spare bulbs in felt  beds. There was not much chance of this light going out

of commission. 

The flash sprayed a slender, whitehot rod. Doc twisted the lens  adjustment to widen the beam. 

Doc went on. His flashlight cast a funnel of white. He stopped  often to listen. 

The derelict liner seemed alive with sinister shufflings and  draggings. Once a bulkhead door banged. Again,

there came another of  the ratlike squeals. 

Even Doc's sensitive ears could not tell whether that squeal was  human! The flowerlike odor was stronger. 

He came to a long passage. It was painted white. It might have been  used but yesterday. For wood does not

decay in the bitter cold of the  arctic. 


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He reached the thirdclass dining room. 

Here his eyes met a sight that would make any man cringe. It was  the explanation of the loss of the Oceanic. 

The room was filled with bodies  bodies of the passengers and crew  of the illfated ship. Bullets had done

their work, and the northern  cold had kept this tableau of carnage inviolate! 

Doc thought of Victor Vail. 

So this was what had happened during the time the blind man was  unconscious! 

Pirates, human fiends, had taken over the Oceanic. They were as  bloodthirsty a gang as ever swung a cutlass

or dangled a victim from a  yardarm on the Spanish Main. Wholesale murder, they had committed. 

Keelhaul de Rosa, Ben O'Gard, Dynamite Smith  greater villains  never trod a deck. And, like the corsairs

they were, they had fallen  out over the loot. 

The whole thing might have been lifted from the parchment  chronicles of another century and transplanted to

our time. 

Doc quitted the hall of murder. 

Uncanny whisperings and shufflings still crept through the lost  liner. Yet Doc saw nothing. it was as though

the tormented souls of  those butchered here were holding spectral conclave. 

Like that except for the flowery odor of living things. It was  present everywhere. 

Doc stepped out into another lounge. 

His light picked up movement! 

What it was, his sharp eyes failed to detect. The thing dropped  behind the massive furniture before more than

the backglow of Doc's  light found it. 

Warily, Doc sidled along the lounge wall. This was no animal  confronting him. 

What happened next came without the slightest sound. 

Something touched Doc's bronze neck. It was warm. It was soft, yet  it possessed a corded strength. 

It encircled Doc's throat! 

DOC MADE one of the quickest moves of his career. He ducked and  whirled. But he did not get the beam of

his flashlight lifted in time.  All he saw was the blank panel of a tightly shut door. 

He wrenched at it. 

Chug! A hard object hit him in the back with terrific force. 

Only the sprung steel of cushioning muscles kept his spine from  being snapped. He was knocked to all fours.

But he did not drop his  flashlight. 


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He sprayed the beam on the lounge. A dozen frothing, hideous  figures were leaping toward him. 

It was seldom that Doc felt an impulse to hug an enemy. But he  could have hugged these. 

For their appearance dispelled the sinister air of supernatural  foes which hung over the lost liner. 

These were but Eskimos! 

Doc doused his light. This was something he could cope with. He  glided sidewise. 

An avalanche of bodies piled onto the spot he had vacated. Clubs   it was a thrown club which had hit Doc's

backbeat vigorously. An Innuit  or two squealed painfully as he was belabored by a fellow. They seemed  to

use the squeals to express both excitement and pain. 

Silence fell. 

The Eskimos were puzzled. Their breathing was gusty, wheezing. 

"Tarnuk!" whined one of the cowering Innuits. 

This gave Doc a clew to the dialect they spoke. Roughly translated,  the word meant "the soul of a man." So

swiftly had Doc evaded their  charge that one of the Eskimos had remarked he must be but a ghost! 

"Chinzo!" Doc told them in their own lingo. "Welcome! You are my  friends! But you have a strange way of

greeting me." 

This friendship business was undoubtedly news to everybody  concerned. But Doc figured it wouldn't hurt to

try that angle on them. 

He spoke several variations of Eskimo dialect, among scores of  other lingos he had mastered in his years of

intensive study. 

He might as well have saved his breath. 

In a squealing knot, the Innuits bore down upon him. Again, they  found themselves beating empty space, or

whacking each other by  accident. 

From a position thirty feet away, Doc planted his flash beam on  them. They were in a nice, tight bunch. A

great chair stood at Doc's  elbow. No doubt it would have been a load for any single steward who  had long

ago sailed on the illfated Oceanic. 

It lifted in Doc's mighty hand as lightly as though it were a  folding camp stool. It slammed into the midst of

the Eskimos. They were  bowled over, practically to a man. 

Those able to, raised a terrific squawling. 

They were calling upon more of their fellows outside for help. 

Doc saw no object in standing up and fighting an army. If there had  been some reason for it, that would be

different. 


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He made swiftly for the forward staircase out of the lounge. 

His thoughts flickered for an instant to the strange thing which  had touched his neck. It had been none of

these queersmelling Innuits. 

He forgot that puzzle speedily. 

The staircase he was making for erupted warlike, greasy Eskimos.  His retreat was cut off! 

There was nothing to do now but make a fight of it. 

FOUR OF the five Innuits carried lighted blubber lamps. Doc  wondered where they had conjured them from.

They Illuminated the  lounge. 

"You are making a mistake, my children," Doc told them in their  lingo. "I come in peace!" 

"You are a tongak, an evil spirit sent to harm us by the chief of  all evil spirits!" an oily fellow clucked at him. 

Doc sneezed. He had never smelled an Eskimo as aromatic as these  fellows  and Eskimos are notoriously

malodorous. 

"You are wrong!" he argued with them. "I come only to do you good." 

They threw gutturals back and forth at each other. All the while,  they kept closing in on the giant bronze man. 

"Where you come from?" demanded one. 

"From a land to the south, where it is always warm." 

Doc could see they didn't believe this. 

One waved an arm expressively. 

'"There is no such land," he said with all the certainty of a very  ignorant man. "The only land besides this is

nakroom, the great space  beyond the sky." 

They had never heard of Greenland, or any country to the south, Doc  gathered. 

"Very well, I come from nakroom," Doc persisted. "And I come to do  good." 

"You speak with a split tongue," he was informed. "Only tongaks,  evil spirits, come from nakroom." 

Doc decided to drop the subject. He didn't have time to convert  their religious beliefs. 

Doc took stock of their weapons. They carried harpoons with lines  of hair seal thong bent in the detachable

tips. Some held oonapiks,  short hunting spears. Quite a few bayonets were in evidence. These had  evidently

been garnered from the Oceanic. No firearms were to be seen. 

Not the least dangerous were ordinary dog whips. These had lashes  fully eighteen feet long. From his vast

knowledge, Doc knew an Eskimo  could take one of these whips and cut a man's throat at five paces.  Flicking

at distant objects with the dog whips bordered on being the  Eskimo national pastime. 


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"Kill him!" clucked the Eskimo leader. "He is only one man! It will  be easy!" 

The Innuit was underestimating, a mistake Doc's enemies quite often  made. 

DOC PICKED up a roundtopped table. This would serve as a shield  against any weapon his foes had. 

He seized a chair, flung it as though it were a chip. Three Innuits  were bowled over. They hadn't had time to

dodge. 

A flight of harpoons and short hunting spears chugged into the  table. Doc threw two more chairs. He

retreated to a spot far from the  nearest flickering blubber lamp. He lowered the table, making sure they  all

saw he was behind it. Then he flattened to the lounge floor and  glided away, unnoticed. 

The Eskimos rushed the table, bent on murder. They howled in dismay  when they found no one there. The

howls turned to pain as hunters in  the rear began dropping from bronze fists that exploded like nitro on  their

jaws. 

An Innuit lunged at Doc with a harpoon. Doc picked the harpoon out  of the fellow's hands and broke it over

his head. A tough walrus lash  on a dog whip slit the hood of Doc's parka like a knife stroke. 

The bronze giant retreated. Thrown spears and bayonets seemed to  whizz through his very body, so quickly

did he dodge. 

His uncanny skill began to have its effect. The greasy fellows  rolled their little eyes at each other. Fear

distorted their pudgy  faces. 

"Truly, he is a tongak, an evil one!" they muttered. "None other  could be so hard to kill." 

"All gather together!" commanded their leader. "We will rush him in  a group!" 

The words were hardly off the leader's lips when he dropped, his  blank and senseless face looking foolishly

through the rungs of the  chair which had hit him. 

The harm had been done. The Innuits grouped. They took fresh holds  on their weapons. 

They charged. 

They had hit upon the only chance they had of coping with Doc.  There were nearly fifty of them. Despite

their short stature and fat,  they were stout, fierce fighters. 

With mad, bloodthirsty squeals, they closed upon the mighty bronze  man. For a moment, they covered him

completely. A tidal wave of  killers! 

Then a bronze arrow of a figure shot upward from the squirming  pile. 

The ceiling of the lounge was crisscrossed with elaborately  decorated beams. Doc's sinewy hands grasped

these, clinging to a  precarious handhold as he moved away. 

He dropped to the floor, clear of the fight, before he was hardly  missed. 


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But the Eskimos still had him cut off from the exits. They closed  in again. They threw spears and knives and

an occasional club, all of  which Doc dodged. They shrieked maledictions, largely to renew their  own faltering

nerve. 

The situation was getting desperate. Doc put his back to a  bulkhead. 

He did not pay particular attention to the fact that he was near  the spot where the strange, warm, soft object

had touched his neck. 

With hideous yells, the killing horde of Innuits charged. 

A door opened beside Doc. A soft, strong hand came out. It clutched  Doc's arm. 

It was a woman's hand. 

Chapter 15. THE ARCTIC GODDESS

DOC SAVAGE whipped through the door. He caught a brief glimpse of  the girl. 

She was tall. Nothing more than that could be told about her form,  since she was muffled in the garb of the

arctic  moccasins reaching  above her knees, and with the tops decorated with the long hair of the  polar bear,

trousers of the skin of the arctic hare, a shirtlike  garment of auk skins, and an outer parka of a coat fitted

with a hood. 

But her face! That was different. He could see enough of that to  tell she was a creature of gorgeous beauty.

Enthralling eyes, an  exquisite little upturned nose, lips as inviting as the petals of a red  rose  they would

have made most men forget all about the fight. 

Had there been light to disclose Doc's features, however, an  onlooker would have been surprised to note how

little the giant bronze  man was affected by this entrancing beauty. 

Doc worked at the prosaic, but by no means unimportant, task of  securing the door. He got it fast. 

He turned his flashlight on the girl. He had noted something he  wanted to verify. The gaze he bent upon her

was the same sort he would  give any stranger he might be curious about. 

Her hair was white; it was a strange, warm sort of white, like old  ivory. The girl was a perfect blonde. 

Doc thought of Victor Vail. The violinist had this same sort of  hair  a little more white, perhaps. 

"You did me a great favor, Miss Vail," Doc told the girl. 

She started. She put her hands over her lips. She wore no mittens.  Her hands were long, shapely, velvet of

skin. 

"How did  ?" 

"Did I know you were Roxey Vail?" Doc picked up her question. "You  could be no one else. You are the

image of your father." 


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"My father!" She said the word softly, as if it were something  sacred. "Did you know him?" 

Doc thought of that smear of scarlet on the ice near the spot where  Victor Vail had disappeared. He changed

the subject. 

"Did any one besides you escape the massacre aboard this liner?" 

The girl hesitated. 

Doc turned his flash on his own face. He knew she was uncertain  whether to trust him. Doc was not flattering

himself when he felt that  a look at his strong features would reassure her. He had seen it work  before. 

"My mother survived," said the girl. 

"Is she alive?" 

"She is." 

Enraged Eskimos beat on the bulkhead door. They hacked at the stout  panel with bayonets. They yelled like

Indians. 

BEAUTIFUL ROXEY Vail suddenly pressed close to Doc Savage. He could  feel the trembling in her

rounded, firm body. 

"You won't let them  kill me?" she choked. 

Doc slipped a corded bronze arm around her  and he didn't often  put his arm around young women. 

"What a question!" he chided her. "Haven't you any faith in men?" 

She shivered. "Not the ones I've seen  lately." 

"What do you mean?" 

"Do you know why those Eskimos attacked you?" she countered. 

"No," Doc admitted. "It surprised me. Eskimos are noted as an  unwarlike people. When they get through

fighting the north for a  living, they've had enough scrapping." 

"They attacked you because of  " 

A slab breaking out of the door stopped her. The Innuits were  smashing the panel! 

"We'd better move!" Doc murmured. 

He swept the girl up in one arm. She struck at him, thinking he  meant her harm. Then, realizing he was only

carrying her because he  could make more speed in that fashion, she desisted. 

Doc glided sternward. 

"You haven't visited this death ship often in the passing years,  have you?" he hazarded. 


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She shook her head. "No. You could count the number of times on the  fingers of one hand." 

They reached a large, rather barren room amidships. Doc knew much  of the construction of ships. He veered

abruptly to the left, descended  a companion, wheeled down a passage. 

He was now face to face with the liner's strong room. 

He took one look at the great vault. He dropped the girl. 

The treasure trove was empty! 

THE YOUNG woman picked herself up from the floor. 

"I'm sorry," Doc apologized. He pointed at the strong room. "Has  that been empty long?" 

"Ever since I can remember." 

"Who got the gold, and the diamonds?" 

She was plainly surprised. "What gold and diamonds?" 

Doc smiled dryly. "You've got me! But fifty millions dollars' worth  of gold and diamonds is at the bottom of

this mess. If it was carried  aboard this liner, it would have been stored in the strong room. It's  not there. So

that means  Hmmm!" He shifted his great shoulders.  "I'm not sure what it means. 

He glanced about. Here seemed to be as good a spot as any to  linger. It would take the Eskimos some minutes

to find them. 

"You started to tell me why the Innuits attacked me," he prompted  the girl. "What was the reason?" 

"I'll tell you my story from the first  I think there's time," she  said swiftly. Her voice was pleasant to listen

to. "My mother and  myself escaped the wholesale slaughter of the others aboard the  Oceanic, because we slid

overboard by a rope. We were apart from the  other passengers, hunting father  he had disappeared

mysteriously the  day before. 

"We hid on land. We saw the mutineers depart over the ice, hauling  the furwrapped figure of a man on a

sledge. We did not realize until  it was too late that the man they hauled was my father." 

She stopped. She bit her lips. Her eyes swam in moisture. They were  very big, enthralling blue eyes. 

Doc made an impatient gesture for her to go on. "Oh  I'm  neglecting to tell you it was the crew who

murdered those aboard the  liner. Men named Ben O'Gard, Dynamite Smith, and Keelhaul de Rosa, were  ring

leaders  " 

"I know all that," Doc interposed. "Tell your side of it." 

"My mother and I got food from the liner after the mutineers had  gone," she continued. "We built a crude hut

inland. We didn't  we  couldn't stay on the liner, although it was solidly aground. The  mutineers might

return. And all those murdered bodies  it was too  horrible. We couldn't have borne the sight  " 

"When did the Eskimos come?" Doc urged her along. 


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"Within a month after the mutineers had departed. This spit of land  was their home. They had been away on a

hunting trip." 

She managed a faint, trembling smile. "The Eskimos treated us  wonderfully. They thought we were good

white spirits who had brought  them a great supply of wood and iron, in the shape of the liner. They  looked

upon myself and my mother as white goddesses, and treated us as  such  but refused to let us leave. In a way,

we were prisoners. Then,  a few days ago  the white men came!" 

"Oh, oh!" Doc interjected. "I begin to see the light." 

"These men were part of the mutineer crew," Roxey Vail said.  "Keelhaul de Rosa was in command. They

came in a plane. They visited  this wrecked liner. After that, they seemed very angry." 

"Imagine their mortification"  Doc chuckled  "when they found the  treasure gone!" 

"They gave the Eskimos liquor," Roxey Vail went on. "And they gave  them worse stuff, something that made

them madmen  a white powder!" 

"Dope  the rats!" Doc growled. 

"My mother and I became frightened," said the girl. "We retreated  to a tiny hideaway we had prepared

against just such an emergency. None  of the Eskimos know where it is. 

"An hour or so ago, I came to the liner. We needed food. There are  supplies still aboard, stuff preserved by

the intense cold. 

"I heard the Eskimos come aboard. I spied on them. They had a white  man prisoner. A white man with hair

like cotton. There was something  strange about this man. It was as though I had seen him before." 

"You were very small when you were marooned here, Weren't you?" Doc  inquired softly. 

"Yes. Only a few years old. Anyway, the Eskimos talked of killing  this whitehaired man. I do not quite

understand why, but it filled me  with such horror I went completely mad. I screamed. Then you  you  came." 

"I heard your scream." Doc eyed her steadily. Then he spoke again. 

"The whitehaired man was your father," he said. 

Without a sound, Roxey Vail passed out. Doc caught her. 

AS HE stood there, with the soft, limp form of the exquisitely  beautiful girl in his arm, Doc wondered if it

could have been the fact  that whitehaired Victor Vail had been murdered which had caused her  swoon. She

was not the type of young woman, from what he had seen of  her, who fainted easily. 

He heard the search of the Eskimos drawing near. They did not have  sense enough to hunt quietly. Or perhaps

they wanted to flush him out  like a wild animal, so he wouldn't be in their midst before they knew  it. 

Doc quitted the strong room. He sped down a passage, bearing the  unconscious girl in his arms. He was

soundless as a wraith. He came to  a large clothes hamper. It was in perfect shape. It still held some  crumpled

garments. 


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Doc dumped the clothes out. The hamper held Roxey Vail nicely as  the big bronze man lowered her into it.

He closed the lid. The hamper  was of open wickerwood. It would conceal her, yet she could breathe  through

it. 

Directly toward the oncoming Innuits, Doc strode. 

His hand drew a small case from inside his parka. With the contents  of this, he made his preparations. 

He stepped into a cabin and waited. 

The first Eskimo passed. Like a striking serpent, Doc's bronze hand  darted from the cabin door. His finger

tips barely stroked the greasy  cheek of the Innuit. Yet the man instantly fell on his face! 

Doc flashed out of the cabin. His fingers touched the bare skin of  a second Eskimo, another  another. He got

five of them before the fat  fellows could show anything like action. 

All five men who felt Doc's eerie touch seemed to go suddenly to  sleep on their feet. 

It was the same brand of magic Doc had used on the gangsters in New  York City. 

Murderous Eskimo with his harpoon, or pastycheeked New York rat,  with his fists full of highpower

automatics  both are the same breed.  Doc's magic worked in the same fashion. 

The Innuits saw their fellows toppling mysteriously.  They realized  the very touch of this mighty bronze man

was disastrous.  They forgot  all about fighting. They fled. 

Ignominiously, they piled out on deck. Rigging tripped them.  After  the fashion of superstitious souls, the

instant they turned their back  on danger, their peril seemed to grow indescribably greater. They were  like

scared boys running from a graveyard at night  each jump made  them want to go faster. 

Two even committed unwilling suicide by leaping over the rail of  the lost liner to the hard glacier far below. 

In a matter of minutes, the last Innuit was sucked away into the  screaming blizzard. 

Chapter 16. THE REALM OF COLD

The lost liner Oceanic lay like something that had died. 

Wind still boomed and squealed in the forest of icecoated,  collapsed rigging, it was true. The sandhard

snow still made a billion  tiny tinklings as the gale shotted it against the derelict hulk. But  gone were the

uncanny whisperings and shufflings which had been so  unnerving. 

Doc Savage went below, moving silently, as had become his habit  when he trod the trails of danger. His

flashlight beam dabbed  everywhere. Sharp, missing nothing, his golden eye took stock of his  surroundings.

He was seeing everything, yet speeding along at a pace  that for another man would have been a lungtearing

sprint. 

A squarish, thickwalled little bottle chanced to meet his gaze. He  did not pick it up. Yet the printing on the

label yielded to his  neartelescopic scrutiny. 


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It was a perfume bottle. Two more like it reposed a bit farther  down the passage. 

Here was the explanation of the flowery odor of the Eskimos which  had so baffled description. To the

characteristic stench of blubber,  perspiration and plain filth which accompanied them, they had added

perfume. The whole had been an effluvium which was unique. 

Doc opened the clothes hamper where he had left unconscious Roxey  Vail. 

Emptiness stared at him. 

Doc dropped to a knee. His flashlight beam narrowed, becoming  intensely brilliant. The luminance spurted

across the carpet on the  passage floor. This looked as though it had been laid down yesterday.  But the years

had taken the springiness out of the nap, so that it  would retain footprints. 

The girl had gone forwardalone. This told Doc some of the Eskimos  had not remained behind and seized

her. 

"Roxey!" he called. 

Doc's shout penetrated the caterwauling of the blizzard in  surprising fashion. A sound expert could have

explained why. It is well  known that certain horn tones, not especially loud, will carry through  the noise of a

factory better than any others. Doc, because of the  perfect control he exercised over his vocal cords, could

pitch his  voice so as to waft through the blizzard in a manner nearly uncanny. 

"Here!" came the girl's faint voice. "I'm hunting my father!" 

Doc hurried to her. She was pale. Terror lay like a garish mask on  her exquisite features. 

"My father  they took him with them!" she said in a small, tight  voice. 

"They didn't have him when they fled a moment ago," Doc assured  her. "I watched closely." 

Her terror gave way to amazement. 

"They fled?" she murmured wonderingly. "Why?" 

Doc neglected to answer. How he produced that mysterious  unconsciousness with his mere touch was a secret

known only to himself  and his five friends. 

But no. Doc shivered. His five friends had met their end in the  burning plane. So the secret was now known

to but one living man  Doc  Savage himself. 

"The Eskimos must have removed your father before they attacked  me," Doc told Roxey Vail. 

He wheeled quickly away. The glow of his flashlight reflected off  the paneling of the lost liner, and made his

bronze form seem even more  gigantic than it was. Fierce little lights played in his golden eyes. 

"Where are you going?" questioned his entrancing companion. 

"To get Victor Vail," Doc replied grimly. "They took him away, and  that shows he was alive. No doubt they

took him to Keelhaul de Rosa." 


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ROXEY VAIL hurried at his side. She was forced to run to keep  abreast. 

"You haven't told me how you happen to be here," she reminded. 

In a few sentences, as they climbed upward to the icebasted deck  of the lost liner, Doc told her of the map

on her father's hack which  could only be brought out with X rays, of the efforts of Keelhaul de  Rosa and Ben

O'Gard to kill each other off so one could hog the  fiftymilliondollar treasure, and the rest. 

'But where is the treasure?" asked the girl. 

"I have no idea what became of it," Doc replied. "Keelhaul de Rosa  expected to find it in the strong room,

judging from his actions as you  described them to me. Too, it looks like he suspects the Eskimos of  moving

it. That's why he gave them liquor. He wanted to get them  pieeyed enough to tell him where they hid it." 

"They didn't get it." Roxey Vail said with certainty. "It was  removed before the mutineers ever left the liner,

more than fifteen  years ago." 

They were on deck now. Doc moved along the rail, hunting a  dangling, iceclad cable. He could drop the

many feet to the glacial  ice without damage, but such a drop would bring serious injury or death  to the girl. 

Roxey Vail was studying Doc curiously. A faint blush suffused her  superb features. To some one who had

been with Doc a lot, and watched  the effect his presence had on the fair sex, this blush would have been  an

infallible sign. 

The blond young goddess of the arctic was going to fail hard for  big, handsome Doc. 

"Why are you here?" Roxey Vail asked abruptly. "You do not seem to  be stricken with the gold madness

which has gripped every one else." 

Doc let a shrug suffice for an answer. 

Probably it was a brand of natural modesty, but Doc did not feel  like explaining he was a sort of supreme

avenger for the wrongs of the  world  the great Nemesis of evildoers in the far corners of the globe. 

They found a hanging cable. It terminated about ten feet from the  ice. With Roxey Vail clinging to his back

like a papoose, Doc carefully  went down the cable. 

Into the teeth of the moaning blizzard, they strode. 

An instant later, Doc's alertness of eye undoubtedly saved their  lives. He whipped to one side  carrying

Roxey Vail with him. 

A volley of rifle bullets spiked through the space they vacated. 

The Eskimos had returned, accompanied by Keelhaul de Rosa and four  or five riflemen and machine gunners. 

AFTER THE flashing movement which had saved their lives, Doc kept  going. He jerked the white hood of

the girl's parka over her face to  camouflage the warm color of her cheeks. He shrugged deep in his own  parka

for the same reason. 


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He wanted to get the girl to safety. Then he was going to hold grim  carnival on the glacier with Keelhaul de

Rosa and his killer group. 

For his share in those hideous murders aboard the Oceanic, Keelhaul  de Rosa would pay, as certainly as a

breath of life remained in Doc  Savage's mighty bronze body. 

Another fusillade of shots clattered. The reports were almost puny  in the clamor of the blizzard. Lead hissed

entirely too close to Doc  and his companion. 

Doc's fingers slipped inside his capacious parka, came out with an  object hardly larger than a highpower

rifle cartridge  and shaped  somewhat similarly. He flipped a tiny lever on this article, then  hurled it at the

attackers. The object was heavy enough to be thrown  some distance. 

Came a blinding flash! The glacier seemed to jump six feet straight  up. A terrific, slamming roar blasted

against eardrums. Then a rush of  air slapped them skidding across the ice like an unseen fist. 

There had been a powerful explosive in the little cylinder Doc  hurled at his enemies. 

Awful quiet followed the blast. The very blizzard seemed to recoil  like a beaten beast. 

A chorus of agonized squealings and bleatings erupted. Some of the  enemy had been incapacitated. They

were all shocked. The Eskimos felt a  vague, unaccountable terror. 

"Up an' at 'em, mateys!" shrilled a coarse tone. "Keelhaul me, but  we ain't gonna let 'em get away from us

now!" 

It was Keelhaul de Rosa's voice. He, at least, had not been  damaged. 

More lead searched the knobby glacier surface. None of it came  dangerously near Doc and his fair

companion. They had gotten far away  in the confusion. 

Doc suddenly jammed the young lady in a handy snowdrift. He wasn't  exactly rough about it, but he certainly

didn't try to fondle her, as a  man of more ordinary caliber might have been tempted to do. And it  wasn't

because the ravishing young woman would have objected to the  caresses. All signs pointed to the contrary. 

The big bronze man had long ago decided a life of domestication was  not for him. It would not go with the

perils and terrors which haunted  his every step. It would mean the surrendering of his goal in life   the

shunning of adventure, the abandoning of his righting of wrongs,  and punishing of evildoers wherever he

found them. 

So Doc had schooled himself never to sway the least bit to the  seductions of the fairest of the fair sex. 

"Stay here," he directed the entrancing young lady impassionately.  "And what I mean  stay here! You can

breathe under the snow. You won't  be discovered." 

"Whatever you say," she said in a voice in which adoration was but  thinly veiled. 

She was certainly losing no time in falling for Doc. 

The giant bronze man smiled faintly. Then the storm swallowed him. 


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KEELHAUL DE ROSA was in a rage. He was burning up. He filled the  blizzard around about with salty

expletives. 

"Ye blasted swabs!" he railed at the Eskimos, forgetting they did  not understand English. "Keelhaul me. The

bronze scut was right in yer  hands, an' ye didn't wreck 'im!" 

"I tell ya dat guy is poison!" muttered a white gunman. "He ain't  human! From de night he tied into us outside

de concert hall in de big  burg, we ain't been able ter lay a hand on 'im!" 

Another white man shivered. He was fatter than Keelhaul de Rosa or  the other gunmen. It was to be

suspected he had some Eskimo b!lood in  his veins. 

As a matter of fact, this fellow was a crook recruited in  Greenland. He knew the arctic. It was he who served

interpreter in all  discussions with the Eskimos. 

"Dat bane awful explosion a minute ago." this man whined. "Aye sure  hope we bane get dat feller damn

quick." 

"Scatter!" rasped Keelhaul de Rosa. "We'll get the swab!" The  Eskimos spread out widely. The white men

kept in a group for mutual  protection. 

One Eskimo in particular rambled a short distance from the others.  He floundered through a snowdrift. 

He did not see a portion of the drift seemingly rise behind him. No  suspicion of danger assailed him until

hard, chill bronze fingers  stroked his greasy cheek with a caress like the fingers of a ghost.  Then it was too

late. 

The Innuit collapsed without a sound. 

Doc pounced upon the inert Eskimo. From his lips came a loud  shoutwords couched in the tongue of the

native. 

Excitement seized the white man who understood the Eskimo lingo,  and he listened intently to the distant

voice. 

"Dat Eskimo bane kill the bronze feller!" he shrieked. "He bane say  come an' look!" 

Three men sprinted for the voice they had heard. 

The interpreter glimpsed two figures. One was prone, motionless.  The second crouched on the first. That was

about all Doc Savage could  see in the flying gale. 

"There they bane!" he howled. 

They charged up. Two of them prepared to empty their guns into the  prone form. just to make sure. 

The crouching man heaved up. Strikingly enough, he seemed to grow  to the proportions of a mountain. Two

Herculean bronze fists drove  accurate blows. Both gunmen described perfect flipflops in midair 

unconscious before their feet left the glacier. 

The interpreter whirled and ran. He knew death when he saw it. And  big Doc Savage was nothing less. 


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Doc did not follow him. For to the bronze man's sensitive ears came  a stifled cry. 

Roxey Vail was being seized! 

EVEN AS he raced toward where he had left her, Doc fathomed what  had occurred. She had disobeyed his

injunction to stay hidden. The  reason  she had heard the shouted information that Doc was dead. She  had

started out with some desperate idea of avenging him. 

Doc appreciated her good intentions. But at the moment, he could  have gotten a lot of satisfaction out of

turning her over his knee and  paddling her. 

A bullet squeaked in Doc's ear. He folded aside and down. A machine  gun picked savagely at the ice near

him. He traveled twenty feet on his  stomach, with a speed that would have shamed a desert lizard. 

"Take the hussy to the boat!" Keelhaul de Rosa's coarse voice rang.  "Step lively, me lads!" 

Doc tried to get to the hideous voice. Murderous lead drove him  back. 

He was forced to skulk, dodging bullets while Roxey Vail was taken  aboard the icecoated hulk of the lost

liner. 

More Eskimos soon arrived. Keelhaul de Rosa was arming some of them  with guns. The interpreter

instructed the Innuits on how to operate the  unfamiliar firearms. 

The natives were far from effective marksmen. More than one greasy  eater of blubber dropped a big pistol

after it exploded in his hand and  ran as though the worst tongak, or evil spirit, were hot on his trail.  But the

guns made them more dangerous, for wild shots were almost as  liable to hit the elusive figure of Doc Savage

as wellaimed ones. In  fact, they were worse. Doc couldn't tell which way to dodge. 

The heat of the hunt finally drove Doc to the remote reaches of the  glacier and rock crest of the land. 

There he replenished his vast reservoir of strength by dining on  frozen, raw steaks he wrenched with his bare,

steelthewed fingers,  from the polar bear he had slain. 

The mighty bronze man might have been a terrible hunter of the wild  as he crouched there at his primeval

repast. But no such hunter ever  possessed cunning and knowledge such as Doc Savage was bringing to bear

upon the problem confronting him. 

But caution remained uppermost in his mind. He had been crouching  with an ear pressed to a pinnacle of

rock. The stone acted as a  sounding board for any footsteps on the surrounding glacier. 

Noise of men passing in the blizzard reached Doc. There seemed to  be four or five in the group. 

Doc fell in behind them. He followed as close as was possible  without discovery. Growled words told him

they were white men. 

"De skipper says for us to take de stern of de liner, mateys," one  said. "Our pals will join us dere.

Everybody's helpin' in dis party,  even de cook." 

"We'd better throw out an anchor," another grunted. "Keelhaul an'  his whole bloody crew, together wit' de

Eskimos, is movin' bag an'  baggage onto de liner. We wanta give 'em time to get settled." 


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Doc Savage sought to get even closer. He was not three yards away  as the group of men came to a stop in the

shelter of a rock spire.  There were five of them. 

What he was hearing was most interesting! 

ONE OF the five men laughed nastily. 

"De bronze guy has just about got Keelhaul de Rosa's goat!" he  chuckled. "To say nothin' of de panic de

Eskimos are in. Dat's why  they're all movin' onto de liner. Dey figure dey can fight 'im off  better." 

Another man swore. 

"Don't forget, pal, dat we gotta smear de bronze guy ourselves  before we leave here!" he growled. 

"Time to begin worryin' about dat after we got Keelhaul an' all de  others croaked!" another informed him. 

"Yer sure Keelhaul an' his gang don't suspect we're around?" 

"Dey sure don't. I crawled up close an' listened to 'em gabbin'.  Here's what happened, pal  de bronze guy got

de idea we had croaked.  He tol' de skoit dat. De broad, she up an' told it to Keelhaul when  they caught her.

An' he believes her." 

Once more, an evil laugh gurgled in the blizzard. 

"Well, Keelhaul is sure due to change his mind!" sneered the one  who had laughed. 

"Yeah  only he won't have the time to change 'is mind before we  boin 'is insides out wit' Tommy lead." 

"How long yer figure we'd better wait here?" 

"About an hour." 

A brief silence ensued. 

"I don't like dis ting much," muttered one of the five uneasily.  "We could light out wit'out all dis killin'." 

"Yah  an' have somebody from dis place show up in a few years an'  spill de woiks to de law," was the

snarled reply. "We gotta clean up de  loose ends, pal. We ain't leavin' nothin' behind but stiffs. We're  playin'

safe." 

Once more there was quiet. One of the evil gang broke it with a  startled ejaculation. 

"What was dat?" 

They peered at each other, turtling their vicious faces forward to  see in the blizzard. 

"I didn't hear nothin'!" muttered one. 

"Sounded like de wind," suggested another. 


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They got up and circled their shelter. They saw nothing. They heard  only the hoot of the gale. They gathered

behind the outthrust of stone  once more, huddling close for warmth. 

They had dismissed what they heard as a child of the storm. 

Indeed, it almost could have been some vagrant creation of the wind   that strange, low, trilling note which

had come into being for a  moment, then trailed away into nothingness. However, it was Doc's sound  which

they had heard. 

Doc was now scores of yards away. He had much to do for he had  learned a great deal. 

The five were Ben O'Gard's thugs. And Doc's listening ears had  detected enough to tell him the submarine

had not met disaster, as he  had thought. Yet he had carried the allimportant valve with him in the  folding

seaplane! 

The survival of the Helldiver without the valve could be explained,  though. Ben O'Gard's crew had simply

fashioned a substitute valve.  There was a small machine shop aboard the underseas craft which they  could

use for this purpose. 

No doubt they had started work on the substitute shortly after they  marooned Doc on the iceberg during the

walrus hunt. It had not been  finished in time to use when they were so nearly trapped in the ice.  But they had

completed it while Doc was locked in the compartment  aboard the Helldiver. 

This, Doc believed, was the true explanation of their presence on  land. 

Ben O'Gard was preparing to slay every one on this forlorn spot! 

No bloodbathed Jolly Roger ever held more frightful ambitions. 

Doc's great bronze form traveled like the wind. He had much to do   not much time in which to accomplish

it. 

Doc had formulated a plan of action which boded ill for his  enemies. 

Chapter 17. THE CAPTIVES

IT WAS midnight, but the sun shone brightly. The storm had abated  as swiftly as it had arisen. Snow no

longer swirled. Such drifts as had  gathered glittered like tiny, ridged diamonds in the solar rays. 

Around the uncharted arctic land, the short, terrific gale had made  a startling change. It had pushed the ice

pack away. For miles in every  direction, comparatively open water could be seen. This was spotted  with a

few viciouslooking blue growlers, but no ice floes of any size. 

In the main lounge of the lost liner Oceanic. Keelhaul de Rosa  walked angry circles, kicking chairs out of his

path. 

"Keelhaul me!" he bellowed. "The bloody treasure has gotta be  somewhere!" 

He came over and planted himself in front of pretty Roxey Vail. He  glowered at the young woman. He had a

face that mirrored indescribable  evil. 


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Two ratfaced thugs held Roxey Vail. Their bony claws dug painfully  into her shapely arms. 

"Where's the swag?" Keelhaul de Rosa roared at her. 

"I don't know anything about any treasure!" the girl replied  scornfully. 

It was perhaps the fiftieth time she had told her captors that. 

"You an' your maw swiped the gold an' diamonds!" snarled Keelhaul  de Rosa. 

Roxey Vail made no answer. 

"The Eskimos told me all about you an' your maw," the hulking  pirate chief informed her. "Where's she

hidin'?" 

The young woman gave him a look of scorn. If she had practiced all  her life squashing mashers on New York

streets, she couldn't have done  it better. 

"C'mon  cough up!" the man hissed in her face. "Where's your old  lady hangin' out? I'll bet she's sittin' right

slapdab on the bloomin'  treasure! Keelhaul me if I don't think that!" 

"You're wrong!" the girl snapped 

"Then where is she?" 

Roxey Vail tightened her lips. That was something she would never  tell. No horror they could inflict upon her

would bring the information  from her lips. 

"You'll spill the dope, sister, or I'll cut that swab of an ol' man  of yorn to pieces right here in front of you!"

gritted Keelhaul de  Rosa. "I'll start by puttin' out the ol' geezer's bloody eyes again!" 

Roxey Vail said nothing to this. What could she say? Her cheeks  became pale as damask, though. 

Keelhaul de Rosa kicked over a couple of additional chairs. He  picked up a book that had lain on a table for

more than fifteen years,  and threw it at a greasy Eskimo. 

Coming back the pirate chief tried softer arguments. 

"Listen, sister," he purred, "gimme the swag an' I'll see that you  an' yer ol' man gets safe passage back with

me an' my crew." 

"How can you escape?" Roxey Vail questioned curiously. "Your plane  is destroyed. You have no submarine." 

"I'm makin' the Eskimos haul the swag to Greenland for me." 

"Then you'll kill them, I suppose," the young woman said coldly. 

The way Keelhaul de Rosa gave a guilty start showed the young  woman's guess had been close to the truth. 

"Will you spare the life of the bronze man, also?" Roxey Vail asked  tentatively. 


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Keelhaul de Rosa scowled. 

"That swab is already dead," he lied, hoping it would help break  the nerve of the beautiful girl. 

THE STATEMENT had an effect exactly opposite. Roxey Vail sprang  forward so suddenly that she eluded

the pair holding her. She clawed  Keelhaul de Rosa's villainous face. She handed him a haymaker that

completely closed his left eye. 

"Lay aboard her!" he howled in agony. "Pull her off, you swabs!  Keelhaul me, but she's a bloody wild cat!" 

His two men secured fresh hold on Roxey Vail, but not before one of  them collected a flattened nose. Her

arctic life had made a very hard  young woman out of Roxey Vail. 

The pretty girl now broke into sobs. The reason for her grief was  easily understood  she believed Doc

Savage was dead. It was incredible  that the bronze man, mighty as he was, could cope with such odds as

confronted him now. 

Suddenly a bellowing voice filled the lounge. 

"Boarders!" it roared. "Ben O'Gard and his swabs! They're comin'.  aboard by the stern!" 

Every eye in the lounge went toward the source of that roaring  voice. It seemed to come from a small

companionway which led off in the  direction of the purser's office. 

"It's Ben O'Gard, I tell yer!" crashed the voice. "They're crawlin'  up some lines danglin' near the stern!" 

Any doubt which might have been arising was dispelled by the loud  clatter of a machine gun on deck. The

sound came from the stern! 

Another rapidfirer joined it. A white man  one of Keelhaul de  Rosa's small gang  shrieked a warning. 

"Ben O'Gard  " The howling of Eskimos drowned out the rest. 

Ben O'Gard was indeed making his attack. "One of you hold her!"  rasped Keelhaul de Rosa. "Keelhaul me 

I gotta look into this!" 

He sprinted out of the room. One of the pair who had been holding  the young woman followed him. 

Roxey Vail promptly engaged in combat with the single rat who now  pinioned her arms. She stamped his

toes through his soft mukluks. She  did her best to bite him. 

Although strong and agile for a woman, Roxey Vail would have been  overpowered by the man. 

But from the spot where that great voice had first roared a  warning, there glided a form that might have been

liquid bronze.  Nearing the struggling man and girl, this became a giant, Herculean man  of hard metal. Hands

floated out. 

They were hands which could have plucked the very head from the rat  now belaboring the poor girl with his

fists. Yet those hands barely  stroked the man's face. 

The thug fell senseless. 


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ROXEY VAIL stared at her rescuer. It was apparent she could hardly  believe her eyes. 

"You  oh, thank  " 

"Listen  here's what you're to do!" Doc interrupted. He didn't  like the tearful business of receiving thanks

from young women whether  they were pretty or not. 

"You are to go and get your mother!" Doc told her. "You know where  the finger of land juts into the sea half

a mile to the north of this  spot?" 

"Yes." 

"Take your mother there. The storm left a floe of ice attached to  the point. It is long and narrow. It protrudes

out into the sea fully  half a mile. The tip is rather rough where ice cakes were piled upon it  by the force of the

gale. You are to hide, with your mother, among  those ice cakes." 

Roxey Vail nodded. But she wanted to know more. 

"What  " 

"No time to explain!" Doc waved an arm in the general direction of  the stern. A bloody fight was going on

back there, judging from the  bedlam. 

Doc now grasped the girl. He shook her like a child but not very  hard. 

"Now get this!" he said sharply. "I don't want any more disobeying  my orders just because you think

something has happened to me!" 

She sniffed at him. Tears were in her eyes. 

"I won't," she said. "But my father is  " 

"I'll attend to him." Doc gave her a shove. "Scoot, Roxey. And be  on the end of that ice neck with your

mother as soon as possible.  Things are going to happen fast around here." 

Obediently, the young woman raced for the bows. These were  deserted, due to the fight at the stern. She

should have no trouble  escaping. 

Doc disappeared down a companionway as though in the grip of a  great suction. He knew where he was

going. He had overheard a chance  remark, while skulking aboard the lost liner a few minutes ago, which  told

him where to look. 

He shoved a stateroom door inward. A long leap and he was working  over tough walrushide thongs which

bound Victor Vail. 

"They told me you were dead!" Victor Vail choked. 

"Have you seen your daughter yet?" Doc grinned. 

Victor Vail's long, handsome face now became a study in emotions.  His lips trembled. Big tears skidded

down his cheeks. His throat worked  convulsively. 


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"Isn't she  a wonderful girl" he gulped proudly. 

He had seen her, all right. 

"She's swell," Doc chuckled. "She's gone to get her mother. They'll  meet us." 

At this, Victor Vail could not restrain himself. He broke into open  sobs of delight and gratitude and

eagerness. 

It would be a strange reunion, this of father and mother and  daughter, after more than fifteen years. It would

be something, in  itself alone, worth all the perils and hardships Doc Savage had  undergone. 

The fight astern was coming closer. Automatics hammered fiercely.  Machine guns tore off long strings of

reports. Men shrieked in the  frenzy of combat. Not a few of them were screaming from their hurts,  too. 

"We'd better drift away from here!" Doc declared. 

They ran down a passage. 

An amazing thing happened to a stateroom door ahead of them. 

The panel jumped out of the door, literally exploding into  splinters. An object came through which resembled

a rusty keg affixed  crosswise to the end of a telephone pole. 

Such a hand and fist could belong to only one man on earth. 

"Renny!" Doc yelled. 

Big Renny leaped out, somber face alight. 

A GREASY Eskimo now popped through the shattered door. His eyes  were wells of terror, and his mouth

was a frightened hole. He headed  down the passage. He made two jumps. 

Through the door after him came two hundred and sixty pounds of  redfuzzed mangorilla. 

Monk! He overhauled the Innuit as though the greasy bag of fright  were standing still. Both his hands grasped

the Eskimo and yanked  backward. Simultaneously, his knee came up. The Innuit landed on his  back across

that knee. He all but broke in halves. 

Doc looked into the stateroom. 

Ham, not quite the fashion plate he usually presented, was there.  Long Tom was astride another Eskimo. The

oily native was twice the size  of the pale electrical wizard. But he was getting the beating of his  life. 

Johnny, the gaunt archaeologist, was dancing around with his  glasses, which had the magnifying lens on the

left side, askew on his  bony face. 

Doc groped for something that would express his happiness, for he  had given these five friends of his up as

dead men. The proper words  refused to come. His throat was cramped with emotion. 

"What a bunch of bums!" he managed to chuckle at last. 


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"We've been praying for the sun to come out," said Ham. He pointed  at a porthole. A strong beam of sunlight

slanted through it. "Johnny  used that magnifying lens to burn his bonds apart. It's lucky for us  our captors

stink like they do  they can't smell anything but  themselves. They couldn't smell the smoke from the thongs

as Johnny  burned them through." 

The group ran for the stern. Renny secured an automatic pistol from  the Eskimo whom Ham had skewered

with his sword cane. Long Tom carried  another he had seized from his opponent. Monk had obtained a third

from  his own victim. 

"I had written you guys off my books," Doc's expressive voice  rumbled pleasantly. "How'd you escape from

that burning plane?" 

"What d'you think we had parachutes for?" Monk inquired in his tiny  murmur. 

"But I flew over the ice, and saw no sign of you," Doc pointed out. 

Monk grinned widely. "I'm tellin' you, Doc, we didn't linger after  we landed. We come down in the middle of

a gang of wild and woolly  Eskimos. They started throwin' things at us  harpoons mostly. Our  ammunition

was gone. We'd wasted it all on the plane that shot us down.  So we made tracks. We thought the Eskimos was

cannibals, or somethin'." 

Ham scowled blackly at Monk. 

"And you, you missing link, suggested leaving me behind as a sort  of pot offering!" he said angrily. 

Ham wasn't mad, though. It was just the old feud starting again.  Things were back to normal. 

"Listen, you overdressed little shyster!" Monk rumbled. "You were  knocked cold when your parachute

popped you against an iceberg, and I  had to carry you. Next time, I'll sureenough leave you!" 

"The Eskimos set a trap for us," Renny finished the story for Doc.  "They were too many for us. They finally

got us." 

THE BOW of the lost liner Oceanic was deserted. The fight at the  stern had drawn everybody. And a bloody

fray that was, for the noise of  it had become more violent. 

Doc halted near an icecrusted, dangling cable which offered safe,  if somewhat slippery, transit to the ice

below. 

"Half a mile north of here, an ice finger juts out into the sea,"  Doc said rapidly. "Go there, all of you! Roxey

Vail and her mother  should be there already. Wait for me." 

"What are you going to do?" Ham questioned. 

"I'm staying behind for a short time," Doc replied. "Over the side  with you, brothers!" 

Rapidly, they slid over the rail. 

Monk was last. His homely face showed concern over Doc's safety. He  tried to put up an argument. 

"Now listen, Doc," he began. "You better  " 


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Doc smiled faintly. He picked up the argumentative two hundred and  sixty pounds of mangorilla by the

slack of the pants and the coat  collar, and sent him whizzing down the icy cable. 

"Beat it!" he called down at them, then sank behind a capstan. 

They ran away across the ice. 

One of the battlers on the derelict liner saw the group. He threw  up a rifle and fired. He missed. He ran

forward to get a better aim. 

The man was one of Ben O'Gard's thugs. He crouched in the shelter  of a bitt and aimed deliberately. He could

hardly have missed.  Squinting, he prepared to squeeze the trigger. 

Then, instinctively, he brushed at something which had touched his  cheek. It felt like a fly. It was no fly 

although the rifleman  toppled over senseless before he realized it. 

Doc retreated as soundlessly as he had reached the man's side. 

Rapidly, Doc removed metal caps from the ends of his fingers. These  were of bronze. They exactly matched

the hue of Doc's skin, and they  were so cleverly constructed as to escape detection with the naked eye.

However, one might have noticed Doc's fingers were a trifle longer when  the caps were in place. 

These caps each held a tiny, very sharp needle. A potent chemical  of Doc's own concoction fed through

glands in those needles. One prick  from them meant instant unconsciousness. 

This was the secret of Doc's magic touch. 

Doc now saw men gathering astern. They were Ben O'Gard's thugs.  Victory had evidently fallen to them. 

A captive was hauled up from below. He squealed and whimpered and  blubbered for mercy. 

Two pirates held him. An automatic in Ben O'Gard's hand cracked  thunder. The prisoner fell dead. 

The man they had murdered was Keelhaul de Rosa. His proper deserts  had at last reached the fellow. As an

unmitigated villain, he had been  equaled only by the devil who now slew him so coldbloodedly  Ben

O'Gard. 

Doc Savage suddenly yelled loudly. His great voice tumbled along  the icecoated deck. 

Ben O'Gard saw him, shrieked: "Get the bronze guy, mateys!" 

Doc whipped over the rail. 

This was what he had remained behind for. He wanted Ben O'Gard and  the rest to follow him! 

Chapter 18. THE THAWING DEATH

Doc Savage sped away from the lost liner Oceanic. Bullets jarred  showers of ice flakes from hummocks

behind which he dodged. Other slugs  ran about in the snow like little moles that traveled too fast for the  eye. 


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Doc was careful not to offer too good a target. But he showed  himself often enough to lure his pursuers on. 

Yelling excitedly, huge Ben O'Gard led the pack. The walrus of a  pirate was careful not to get too far ahead

of his men, though. Once,  Doc saw him stumble deliberately so as to permit the others to catch up  with him. 

The man was cautious. He had felt the frightful strength of Doc  Savage once. In fact, he still wore bandages

on his hands from that  occasion. 

Doc's golden eyes ranged ahead. They held anxiety. Had his friends  reached the neck of ice? 

They had. Doc could see Monk jumping up and down like the gorilla  he resembled as he watched the exciting

chase. Monk's yells even  reached Doc's ears. They sounded like the noise two fighting bulls  would make. For

a man with such a mild voice, Monk could emit the most  bloodcurdling howls. 

Doc quickened his pace. No doubt the pirates thought he had been  going at full speed  for a chorus of

surprised shouts arose as they  saw the bronze man was leaving them as though they stood still. 

"Shake out your sails, mateys!" Ben O'Gard bellowed. He waddled out  ahead of his killer gang like an

elephant. Then, seized with caution,  he was careful to let them catch up. 

Doc reached the headland. The ice pack had piled up here. Passing  through it was laborious business. It was

as though the houses of a  great white city had been shoved into one huge pile. 

Rifle and submachinegun bullets swarmed like unseen hornets  through the ice hummocks. 

Doc finally gained the finger of ice. He sprinted. The footing was  only moderately rough here, offering

correspondingly less shelter. 

There was one point where the ice neck narrowed. Thirty or so steps  would have spanned it from one side to

the other. 

In the middle of this narrow place stood a slightly  unnaturallooking drift of snow. 

Doc sped past this snow pile without giving it a glance. A rifle  slug made such a noise in his ear that he

thought he was hit. But the  hood of his parka had only been torn. 

He doubled low, zigzagged a little  and reached cover. 

Here, the ice finger widened again. Doc joined his friends. 

Victor Vail stood to one side. He was doing his best to hug both  his wife and pretty daughter simultaneously. 

"1 hope you got a deck of aces up your sleeve, Doc," Monk said, his  voice again mild. "If you ain't, we're in a

pretty pickle." 

AS MONK hinted, they were indeed trapped. For it seemed Doc had led  them to a spot from which there was

no escape. Ben O'Gard and his  bloodthirsty pirates had already passed the narrow part of the ice  finger.

Regaining the shore was now impossible. 

To continue their flight in boats, even should Doc have a craft  concealed in the rugged ice near by, was also

unfeasible. The pirates  would have a perfect chance to riddle them with their machine guns. 


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Doc Savage showed no concern. 

"Keep your shirt on, Monk," he suggested. Then, as a burst of  rapidfirer slugs all but parted Monk's bristling

red hair, he added:  "And your head down!" 

"Let the missing link get a lead haircut!" Ham clipped. "He needs  barbering." 

Monk leered at Ham as if he was trying to think of something  got  it, and made his inevitable "Hoinck!

Hoinck!" of a porker grunting. 

Ham subsided. 

Doc was now introduced to Victor Vail's longlost wife. The  introduction lacked something in courtliness,

considering that it was  made with all of them lying as flat as they could, with flocks of  bullets passing but a

few inches over their backs. 

Mrs. Vail was a tall woman, fully as beautiful as her entrancing  blond daughter, although in a more mature

way. She showed little  effects of her long years of isolation on this barren arctic spot. 

Doc turned hastily to his men to avoid the heartfelt gratitude  Victor Vail's wife sought to express, as well as

the adoring look in  pretty Roxey's eyes. 

"Let me have a pistol!" Doc requested. 

His friends were surprised. It was rarely that Doc used firearms on  his human foes. 

Renny handed over an automatic he had taken from one of his Eskimo  guards. 

Doc left them. In an instant. he was lost completely to their  sight, so expertly did he conceal himself. 

They heard his automatic crack once  then four times more. 

They stared at the oncoming pirates. Not a man dropped. This was  little short of astounding to the five who

knew Doc well. Doc was one  of the finest marksmen they had ever seen, even if it was seldom that  he fired a

shot. They had seen him toss up twelve pennies in a single  handful, and using two pistols, touch every one

with lead before it  fell to earth. 

Yet he seemed to have missed the easy targets the pirates offered. 

"Hey  look!" Monk howled suddenly. 

Behind the pirates, where the finger of ice narrowed, a surprising  phenomena was in progress. 

The ice was melting at great speed! 

MONK WAS first to comprehend. "My chemical mixture for dissolving  ice!" he chuckled. "Doc put a supply

of it under that snow drift. He  simply punctured the containers!" 

Ben O'Gard and his pirates came to a stop. They had discovered the  melting ice. That worried them. But their

thirst for blood got the  better of them. They resumed their charge. 


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"Come!" Doc called. "And keep down low!" 

He led them for the end of the ice finger. 

It became noticeable that the whole formation of ice was now in  motion. Enough of the narrow neck had

dissolved to permit the rest to  break free. The whole thing was now an ordinary floe, plaything of the  currents

of the polar sea. 

Doc reached his objective. He pointed. 

"How does that look?" he questioned. 

Monk grinned from ear to ear. "Heaven will never look any better to  this sinful soul!" 

The undertheice submarine, Helldiver, lay before them. It was  moored to deadman anchors which had

obviously been sunken in the ice by  depositing a bit of Monk's remarkable chemical concoction. 

They threw off the moorings, then dived down the main hatch. 

Doc started the electric motors  there was no time to get the  Diesels going. The Helldiver surged away from

the floe. 

"How'd it happen to be here?" Monk questioned. 

Doc smiled faintly. 

"I'm afraid I stole it," he explained. "Ben O'Gard kindly helped me  out by leaving no one aboard. But I must

say I never put in a busier  twenty minutes than I did running the tin whale here single handed." 

A sporadic burst or two of bullets rattled on the submarine hull.  They did not have sufficient power to

penetrate the steel plates,  however. 

The shooting stopped abruptly. 

Renny took a chance and thrust his head out. He was not shot at. 

"If any of you guys are interested in stark drama, come here and  watch," he suggested. 

Doc, Long Tom, Monk, Ham, and Johnny crowded up beside him, along  with Victor Vail. 

Roxey Vail and her mother, after one glance, could not bear the  horror of the sight. 

GRIM FATE had at last grasped Ben O'Gard and his pirates. 

They knew that to drift on the floe did of a certainty mean slow  starvation. So they were making desperate

tries to reach shore. Some  had already plunged into the frigid water, and were battling the strong  current 

Others, who could not swim, were fighting those who could, trying  to make them serve as unwilling pack

horses. A few faint shots rang  out. 


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Those swimming began to go down, overcome by the deadly chill of  the water, for some distance now

separated the floe from land. Their  fur garments handicapped them, yet to remove them was to freeze. 

After a while, the last man sprang wildly, hopelessly, into the  numbingly cold sea. 

Two actually reached the icerimmed shore. One of these was the  walruslike Ben O'Gard. But they could

not climb upon the ice, so  depleted was their strength. 

Ben O'Gard was last to slip back to his death. 

Monk let a long breath swish from his cavernous lungs. 

"He'd better get plenty chilled, because it's mighty hot where he's  goin'!" muttered the gorilla of a chemist.

"He paid a mighty high price  tryin' to get the  " 

Monk swallowed twice. His eyes stuck out. He whirled on Doc. 

"Hey  what about the treasure?" he howled. "Now we're in a nice  fix! Everybody's dead who knows

anything about it!" 

Doc Savage was forced to postpone his answer for a time. Handling  the undertheice submarine occupied

his attention. The tanks had to be  trimmed, the Diesels had to be started. He and his five men would have

only moderate difficulty piloting the Helldiver southward, although  they would be very shorthanded. 

Monk got his mind back on fifty millions in gold and diamonds. 

"Say, Doc, we ain't goin' off an' leave all that money layin'  around on that bleak land somewhere, are we?" he

asked plaintively. 

"Ben O'Gard and his gang moved the treasure from the strong room of  the Oceanic when they mutinied more

than fifteen years ago," Doc said  dryly. "In other words, they filched it from their pals, headed by  Keelhaul de

Rosa, and cached it in a hiding place of their own." 

"Holy cow!" groaned Renny. "Then we have no way of finding that  hiding place! Ben O'Gard and his men

are all dead." 

"We don't care about the hiding pace," Doc assured him. "Ben O'Gard  and his gang had recovered the loot

before they set out a few hours ago  to commit wholesale slaughter on the lost liner." 

Monk emitted one of his best howls. "You mean it's  " 

"The whole business is aboard this submarine," Doc told him. "To be  exact, it's piled some feet deep on the

floor of your cabin, Monk!" 

It was startling information to Monk. at the end of a most  startling adventure. Out of the frozen grip of the

North came a fortune  in gold and diamonds, saved from the lost liner. But more than that   out of this

thrilling adventure came the rescue of two precious lives,  and the reunion of a family lost for many years. 

To the blind violinist and his reunited family, this was the  greatest thing that could have happened, and the

battles of Doc and his  companions were most marvelous. 


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But they did not know of the past of Doc and his friends; of the  many narrow escapes, the thrilling exploits

that were part of their  lives. 

Neither did they know of the future  the immediate future which  held forth adventure and thrills some way

connected with the Orient. 

Doc himself did not know, and did not care. Somewhere some one else  was in danger, some other person

needed help. Whatever it was, wherever  Doc was needed, there he would go, heedless of danger, conquering

all  obstacles. And his five companions, adventurersinarms, would follow  their leader to still greater

exploits. 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE POLAR TREASURE, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE BRONZE NEMESIS, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THE CLICKING DANGER, page = 10

   6. Chapter 3. FIGHTING MEN, page = 17

   7. Chapter 4. THE BLIND-MAN HUNT, page = 22

   8. Chapter 5. GONE AGAIN, page = 29

   9. Chapter 6. HANGING MEN, page = 34

   10. Chapter 7. THE MAP, page = 40

   11. Chapter 8. STEEL WALLS OF DEATH, page = 45

   12. Chapter 9. TOUGH CARGO, page = 50

   13. Chapter 10. MAROONED, page = 58

   14. Chapter 11. POLAR PERIL, page = 67

   15. Chapter 12. ICE TRAP, page = 72

   16. Chapter 13. ICE GHOSTS, page = 79

   17. Chapter 14. CORPSE BOAT, page = 84

   18. Chapter 15. THE ARCTIC GODDESS, page = 91

   19. Chapter 16. THE REALM OF COLD, page = 95

   20. Chapter 17. THE CAPTIVES, page = 102

   21. Chapter 18. THE THAWING DEATH, page = 108