Title:   THE SARGASSO OGRE

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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 SARGASSO OGRE

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE SARGASSO OGRE ...................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter I. THE "SINGAS" SONG..........................................................................................................1

Chapter II. CAVES OF BONES ..............................................................................................................6

Chapter III. THE "CAMERONIC" PERIL ............................................................................................11

Chapter IV. THE WHITEWHISKERED MAN ..................................................................................17

Chapter V. THE SCALP BELT .............................................................................................................24

Chapter VI. SEA TROUBLE .................................................................................................................30

Chapter VII. THE DEVIL'S BREW ......................................................................................................39

Chapter VIII. DERELICT ......................................................................................................................46

Chapter IX. SEA OF THE DEAD.........................................................................................................52

Chapter X. DEATH'S REALM.............................................................................................................57

Chapter XI. SARGASSO PRISONERS................................................................................................62

Chapter XII. THE NIGHT DECOY......................................................................................................69

Chapter XIII. THE HUNT.....................................................................................................................75

Chapter XIV. RED DAWN...................................................................................................................82

Chapter XV. SPECTRAL MOTORS....................................................................................................90

Chapter XVI. THE SARGASSO OGRE PLANS ..................................................................................96

Chapter XVII. THE FLAME TRAP ....................................................................................................102

Chapter XVIII. FATAL FIST ..............................................................................................................107

Chapter XIX. MONK'S LAST SALLY ...............................................................................................112


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THE SARGASSO OGRE

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter I. THE "SINGAS" SONG 

Chapter II. CAVES OF BONES 

Chapter III. THE "CAMERONIC" PERIL 

Chapter IV. THE WHITEWHISKERED MAN 

Chapter V. THE SCALP BELT 

Chapter VI. SEA TROUBLE 

Chapter VII. THE DEVIL'S BREW 

Chapter VIII. DERELICT 

Chapter IX. SEA OF THE DEAD 

Chapter X. DEATH'S REALM 

Chapter XI. SARGASSO PRISONERS 

Chapter XII. THE NIGHT DECOY 

Chapter XIII. THE HUNT 

Chapter XIV. RED DAWN 

Chapter XV. SPECTRAL MOTORS 

Chapter XVI. THE SARGASSO OGRE PLANS 

Chapter XVII. THE FLAME TRAP 

Chapter XVIII. FATAL FIST 

Chapter XIX. MONK'S LAST SALLY  

Chapter I. THE "SINGAS" SONG

AN American man of letters once said that, if a man built a better  mousetrap, the world would beat a path to

his door. 

Pasha Bey was like that. His output was not mousetraps, but it was  the best of its kind. Being modern, Pasha

Bey had become president of a  vast organization which specialized in his product. The fame of Pasha  Bey

was great. From all of Egypt, men beat a path to his door, which  was likely to be anywhere in Alexandria.

They came to buy his product,  of course. 

Pasha Bey's product was murder! 

Just now, Pasha Bey was about to close a deal. He was easing up a  dark street just off the Place Mehemet Ali,

the center of the life of  Alexandria 

Pasha Bey was a large bag of bones. He wore a flowing burnoose. The  burnoose was more flowing than the

usual one, so as to conceal the fact  that two longbladed singas were in sheaths strapped to Pasha Bey's  bony,

naked upper arms. 

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He also carried two modern, silenced American sixshooters, one on  either hip. A silk cord, excellent for

strangling purposes, was  fastened inside the burnoose with a single thread; so it could be  wrenched free

quickly. 

Pasha Bey always went well heeled with tools of his trade. 

He turned, stepping silently, into an entry. This place was like a  dark tunnel. Some thirty feet deep, it

terminated in a heavy wooden  door. A small, barred hole pierced the door. 

"Ya intal," he called softly through the bars. 

"What?" growled a harsh Yankee voice from the other side of the  grille. 

"Holloa there!" said Pasha Bey, putting his call into English. "By  the life of your father, your servant is here.

He awaits your command." 

"Are you ready to pull the croak?" asked the unseen man. 

"Na'am, aywa!" murmured Pasha Bey. 

"Speak English. you bony camel!" 

"Yes. I am ready!" 

The man backed of the door did not waste time. He shoved a hand  through the bars. The hand was gloved. It

held a folded paper. 

"Give this note to the guy. It's a bait to make him go with you  without suspecting anything. I don't care where

you do the job, or how  you do it. But pick a good spot." 

"Trust your servant." 

"0. K. Now, beat it!" 

"Four thousand piastres," Pasha Bey reminded gently. 

"You'll get your pay when the job is done!" growled the hidden man. 

"Half; now," suggested Pasha Bey, who knew it was sometimes  difficult to collect from those who wanted

murder done. 

There was silence while the unseen man thought it over. Then the  gloved hand again appeared. It held a

hundred dollar billthe  approximate equivalent of two thousand piastres. At current exchange, a  piastre was

worth about a nickel. 

Pasha Bey stowed the money in his burnoose. "I will come here for  the other halfand to tell you the man is

dead." 

"Are you sure you've got his name down patMajor Thomas J. Roberts?  Long Tom Roberts." 

"I know." 


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"0. K. You may see a big, bronzelooking guy around. Steer clear of  him." 

"Very well." 

"Vamose!" 

With a meekness that belied his profession, Pasha Bey eased out of  the gloomy tunnel. He was pondering if,

upon his return, he might not  be able to slip his silken strangling cord through those bars and  around the neck

of the man who had hired him. The fellow might have  more of those big bills. It was good, this American

money. 

NOT very many minutes later, Pasha Bey appeared in the lobby of the  Hotel Londoner. This hostelry was one

of the swankiest in Alexandria,  and it catered largely to English speaking foreigners. 

The lobby held the usual quota of guests and loafers. Some of the  latter were Pasha Bey's associates,

members of the particular  murderer's guild of which he was dictator. 

In the United States, Pasha Bey would have been called the big shot  of a mob; in Egypt, he was the head of a

guild. 

He sauntered over and joined one of his men. 

"You have a word for me?" he questioned. 

"The man  Long Tom Roberts  is in his room," advised the other.  "But he has company. From the

hallway, I listened and heard voices." 

"How many voices?" 

"Long Tom Roberts's and one other." 

"A visitor, by Allah!" Pasha Bey folded his arms while he thought.  His bony face was benevolent. He looked

like a harmless old man in need  of a square meal. 

"I will go up and pray that my ears may tell me the visitor has  gone," he said at last, and shuffled for the

stairs. 

At the foot of the staircase, Pasha Bey had a strange experience.  He encountered a bronze giant of an

American. He took a single look at  this herculean figureand shivered. 

That was unusual. Pasha Bey had not, in a goodly number of years,  seen anything fearsome enough to give

him qualms. He was a hardened  rogue, afraid of nothing. That is, he feared nothing until he saw the  bronze

man. One look at the big, metallic American scared Pasha Bey.  There was something terrible about the giant

Yankee. 

Pasha Bey turned to watch the bronze man across the lobby. He was  not alone in his staring; almost every one

else was doing the same  thing. Alexandria was a city of strange men, but never had it seen such  a personage

as this. 

The American was huge, yet so perfectly proportioned that his great  size was apparent only when he was near

other men to whose stature he  might be compared. They seemed to shrink to pygmies alongside him.


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Tendons like big metal bands enwrapped the bronze man's hands and neck,  giving a hint of the tremendous

strength which must be harbored in his  mighty body. 

But it was the eyes that got Pasha Bey. They were weird orbs, like  glittering pools of flake gold. In one casual

glance, they seemed to  turn Pasha Bey's unholy soul inside out, see all its evil, and promise  full punishment.

The effect was most unnerving. 

Pasha Bey had heard of this man of metalhad heard much of him. So  had all of Alexandria, for that matter. 

The man was Doc Savage. He had appeared in Egypt under  circumstances that were cyclonic. Cables had

carried news of the event  across the Atlantic; airplanes. had rushed pictures of his arrival to  newspapers in

London, Paris, Berlin, and elsewhere. 

For Doc Savage had come, with five strange men who were his aids,  flying the Zeppelintype airship,

Aeromunde, which had vanished  mysteriously many years ago. It was all very fantastic, this arrival of  Doc

Savage and his helpers. 

Rumor had it that evil men had stolen the dirigible and used it for  years to carry slaves to a lost oasis in the

trackless deserts, where  there was a great diamond mine, and that Doc Savage had rescued the  slaves and

punished their masters. 

PASHA  BEY had probed into those rumors, especially after be heard  something about several packing cases

filled with diamonds. But he had  learned precious little. No one was telling the location of the  fabulous lost

oasis of the diamonds. The Aeromunde had been restored to  the government which formerly owned the ship. 

Doc Savage  talk in the drinking places said  had given to each  of the rescued slaves a round fortune,

and was keeping the diamonds.  But the gems themselves were only rumors, for all the headway Pasha Bey

had made at locating them. 

The names of Doc Savage's aids had even evaded Pasha Bey's adroit  angling for information. 

He would have been very shocked to learn that "Long Tom" Roberts  was one of those five. Had he known

this, he would have thought long  and soberly before undertaking to murder the man for four thousand

piastres. Doc Savage and his comrades were a bad crowd to monkey with. 

They were reported to be a terror to evildoers. It was said they  made a life work out of helping those who

needed help, and punishing  those who deserved it. Doc Savage and the five aids traveled to the  ends of the

earth to hunt trouble. 

Unluckily for him, Pasha Bey did not know the connection between  Long Tom and Doc Savage. So he

shuffled upstairs in search of Long  Tom's room. 

He found the door in a brightly decorated hall. Composing a look of  bland meekness on his bony features, he

rippled knuckles on the panel,  after making sure he heard no voices inside. 

"Who is it?" 

"A messenger for Major Thomas J. Roberts, the electrical engineer." 

"Be right with you!" 


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The man who soon opened the door was rather undersized, pale of  hair and eyes, and somewhat pale of

complexion. In fact, he did not  look at all robust. He did, however, have a very alert manner. 

This fellow, Pasha Bey reflected, would surely be an easy one to  murder. The thought did not show on his

face, however. He extended the  note his employer had handed through the barred door. 

Long Tom read it. 

MY DEAR ROBERTS: I have heard a great deal about your ability as an  electrical expert, and of your

accomplishments in the field of atomic  research. 

You may not have heard of me, my name not being widely known. But I  believe I have perfected a device for

killing harmful insects with  atomic streams. My understanding is that you have experimented along  the same

lines. 

I certainly wish that you would visit me and inspect my apparatus.  If you would be kind enough to do so, the

bearer of this note will  guide you to my laboratory. 

LELAND SMITH. 

Long Tom showed pronounced interest. It was true that he had never  heard of Leland Smith. But he had

himself perfected a device for  killing insects. The thing would be a boon to farmers, and Long Tom  expected

to make a fortune out of it. If some other inventor was likely  to cut in on the profits, Long Tom wanted to

know about it. 

"I'll go with you," he told Pasha Bey. 

HURRIEDLY, Long Tom turned for his hat. A halfpacked suitcase  stood on a chair. It bore a fresh label,

addressed to a stateroom on  the steamer Cameronic. This was ample evidence that Long Tom expected  to sail

on the Camerionic, which was scheduled to depart shortly after  midnight. 

Long Tom placed the note on the table. At the foot of it, he wrote: 

Doc  I've gone to look into this. 

"So my friends will know what became of me," he told Pasha Bey.  "Let's go." 

Pasha Bey would much rather that the note not be left behind. It  was a clew for the Alexandria police, who

were unpleasantly efficient.  But he dared not object, and arouse suspicion. 

They went down to the lobby. Spying one of his men, Pasha Bey  thought he saw a way of removing the note

from the scene. 

"Ten thousand pardons, master," he apologized profusely to Long  Tom. "I see an old friend. I would like very

much to talk to him for a  moment." 

"Sure! Go ahead." 

Pasha Bey sidled over to his hireling, a man called Homar. 


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"Listen closely, oh stupid one!" he muttered. "This fool of a white  man left a note on the table in his room.

The ways of the police are  beyond understanding, and it might be unfortunate for us if they found  the note.

Go get it." 

"Yes, oh wise one," agreed Homar. 

"When you have the missive, come to the spot in the catacombs where  we are to kill this white man. He is

small and pale, and should be easy  killing. But it is just as well to have plenty of help on hand. He who  said

too many cooks spoil a broth told a lie." 

"Yes, oh great one," replied Homar. 

Pasha Bey now returned to Long Tom and salaamed politely. 

"My friend was very glad to see me," he lied. "And by the life of  your father, I am grateful to you for letting

me talk with him." 

"That's all right," said Long Tom impatiently. "Let's hurry along.  Our gang is sailing on the Camerionic, a

little after midnight." 

They stepped to the street. A neat, moderately expensive closed  automobile stood at the curb. 

"Our conveyance, my master," murmured Pasha Bey, neglecting to add  that the car was stolen, and that the

driver was one of the most  accomplished murderers in Alexandria, probably second only to Pasha Bey

himself. 

They entered. The car rolled along the narrow streets, the booq  hooting loudly to clear the hodgepodge of

humanity out of the way. 

Long Tom settled back luxuriously on the cushions, entirely unaware  that he was riding to a death trap. 

Chapter II. CAVES OF BONES

IN the Hotel Londoner, Homar hurried to get the note from Long  Tom's room. as he had been hidden to do.

In Egyptian, Homar's name  meant "donkey." The fact that he seemed always half asleep had earned  him the

cognomen. He was neither slowmoving nor stupid, however. He  was a sharp fiend, or he would not have

been in Pasha Bey's crew. 

He had very little difficulty picking the lock of Long Tom's room.  Entering, he seized the note. He drew a

kabrit from a pocket, with the  idea of burning the paper. Then, on second thought, he put the match  away and

stuffed the missive inside his burnoose. Pasha Bey might find  use for it, for there was such a thing as

blackmail in Egypt. 

He turned to depart. 

The door had opened and closed while Homar was getting the paper,  but he had not been aware of this. The

thing had happened with great  silence. 

Nor did Homar, upon leaving the room, notice that the window at the  end of the corridor was open. He

scuttled down the stairs, anxious to  join Pasha Bey in the killing. 


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A moment after Homar vanished, the giant bronze form of Doc Savage  appeared in the open window. He had

been outside, hanging to the ledge  by his fingers. Furthermore, it was he who had opened and shut the door  of

Lang Tom's room so silently. Doc had come upstairs in time to  witness the undeniably suspicious act of

Homar in picking the door  lock. 

He followed Homar. Doc knew all the signs. Trouble was once more  seeking out him and his men, as it had a

habit of doing. He was intent  on finding out what it could be this time. 

Homar engaged a ramshackle cab near the hotel. Doc got into  another, commanding his driver to trail the first

machine. 

They progressed to the region of the city where stood Pompey's  Pillar, in the highest part of Alexandria. 

The red granite shaft of Pompey's Pillar, exquisitely polished,  glistened faintly in the moonlight. From there,

the course led  southwest. 

Homar dismissed his hack. 

The pilot of Doc Savage's vehicle drove on at a soft order from the  rear. Several score qasabs he traveled,

then suddenly discovered a gold  fiftypiastres coin on the cushions beside him. He looked around. Much  to

his astonishment, his fare was gone. 

Doc Savage had quitted the cab some distance back, silent as a  phantom for all his great size. He lurked in the

shadow of a heap of  ancient masonry, watching Homar's alert progress. 

Doc had a fair knowledge of this section of Alexandria, just as he  had, stored in his retentive memory, what

amounted to a map of every  large city on the globe. This was part of an amazing course of training  which

Doc had administered to himself  a training to fit himself for  this strange life work of helping those in need

of help, and punishing  those who deserved it. 

This part of Alexandria held the ancient catacombs  vast  underground caverns, possibly dating back to the

day of Cleopatra   which held the bones of Egyptians long dead. Parts of the catacombs had  been seen by

no living man, Doc knew. 

Homar moved to a ramshackle stone hut. Doc haunted him like a  bronze ghost 

A gritty rasp came from within the stone hut. Doc glanced in. Using  a flashlight, Homar was tilting a slab of

rock from the floor. He  dropped into the cavity, closing the stone plate after him. 

A FLASHLIGHT came out of Doc Savage's clothing. It cast a beam like  a glowing whitehot wire, the thin

luminance switching back and forth  over the hut floor. 

A drop or two of wet crimson glistened in the ray. Near the  trapdoor edge was a group of slightly larger

smears. Five! Red finger  prints! 

Bending low, Doc explained them. 

Into the sour murk of the hut there abruptly came a strange, exotic  sound. It was a low, trilling, mellow note,

which might have been the  sound of some weird bird of the jungle, or a wind filtering through the  piled stone

of the ancient ruins around about. Although melodious, it  had no tune. It had an uncanny quality, for it

seemed to come from no  particular spot. 


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It was part of Doc Savage, this sound  a small, unconscious thing  which he did in moments of stress. 

The bloody finger prints were from Long Tom's right hand! Doc had  seen the prints of his five men countless

times, and could recognize  them instantly. 

He grasped the stone lid. It had rasped under Homar's clutch, but  it lifted noiselessly under Doc's hand  so

silently, that it almost  seemed the bronze man had a supernatural power to command quiet. 

Cold, damp steps led down; then came a black, low tunnel. Dust of  ages lay on the floor. The sound of

Homar's footsteps thumped like the  beat of a waterfilled drum. 

Doc whipped forward without noise, showing no light, sensitive  hands feeling out the way. The walls were

rough. In spots, there were  hard, crusted deposits formed by water seepage through the centuries. 

They came to a spot where the ancient corridor branched three ways.  Homar took the one to the right. He

seemed to know where he was going. 

The character of the walls abruptly changed, becoming solid instead  of jointed masonry. The passages were

hewn out of natural rock. 

Doc drew a small case from a pocket. This held a peculiar powder.  At frequent intervals, he dropped a pinch

on the tunnel floor. 

Homar's footbeats led on iinterminably. Shuffle and thud! Shuffle  and thud! The noises had a dull, deathlike

quality. The air was dusty.  It was like breathing within a trunk which had been long closed. 

Again and again, the passages branched. And every few yards, Doc  left a bit of his powder on the floor. His

actions might have seemed a  bit puzzling. The stuff gave off no odor, no phosphorescent glow. 

The tunnel widened, forming a series of long rooms. Doc's hands,  along the walls, encountered what felt

vaguely like rounded stones.  These were arched entirely to the ceiling. He knew what they were. 

Human skulls! The walls were lined with them. 

Farther on, there were many casketshaped niches cut in the rock,  and in these were stacked arm and leg

bones, spinal columns, ribs. It  was a macabre, hideous place. Compared to these catacombs, a walk  through a

graveyard at midnight was no more awesome than a stroll  through a town park. 

Doc Savage went forward without flinching or shivering. If he  experienced any of the feelings which would

have gripped another man,  he did not show it. Doc had remarkable powers of concentration. He  avoided the

ghostly, spinechilling effects of his surroundings simply  by putting his attention on following the man

ahead, and keeping it  there. 

Homar was carrying his flashlight at his side. 

Deeper and deeper into the maze, they penetrated. They descended  steps. The catacombs seemed to be cut

several stories deep. Countless  thousands were the dead who had been buried here, for the city had been

founded in the third century. 

In some passages the stone had caved in, closing them, probably  forever. Three times, Homar opened stone

doors. Doc, a silent specter  at his heels, kept leaving small deposits of his powder. 


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They came finally to their destination. 

SEVERAL brightly glowing flashlights marked the spot. Men were  squatting crosslegged, or standing about

a sprawled form. The latter  was Long Tom. 

The right side of Long Tom's face was a sticky red smear from a cut  on his scalp, evidently the result of a

blow which had knocked him  senseless. His dazed manner showed that he had just revived. 

A large heap of bones shrouded in a white burnoose, Pasha Bey was  hunkered in front of Long Tom. In the

professional murderer's gaunt  claw was a book of ordinary travelers' checks. These comprised Long  Tom's

traveling funds, and they totaled more than a thousand dollars. 

"By the left eye of Allah, himself, I swear it!" Pasha Bey was  murmuring. "If you will sign these travelers'

checks, I will let you go  free and guide you out of this devil's den of bones!" 

It was apparent Long Tom was still alive only because of Pasha  Bey's greed. Long Tom had signed each of

the checks when buying them,  as was customary. They could be cashed only when he signed them a  second

time in the space which was provided. Pasha Bey no doubt had a  way of getting the money for them, once

they were complete with both  signatures. 

Long Tom scowled. "No! You can't kid me!" 

"By both eyes of Allah, I swear that I  " 

"I know a liar when I see one! You can swear by all of Allah, and I  wouldn't believe a word!" 

Pasha Bey slipped one of his razorsharp singes from an arm sheath.  In the fitful glare of the flashlights, he

presented a sinister figure.  He might have been an assembly of hones taken from the surrounding  catacomb

walls, stained brown, animated with life, and covered with a  white burnoose. 

"Wallah!" he snarled. "You will have but one more chance to sign  these paper slips!" 

Long Tom slowly propped himself to a sitting position. His wrists  and ankles were tightly bound. His pale

face was even whiter than  usual, and grimly composed. He was wise enough to know he was very near  death,

whether he signed the travelers' checks or not. 

His roped feet suddenly drove out. He had decided to take a  desperate chance. The awkward kick sent Pasha

Bey spinning head over  heels. The singa flew up, clinked on the ceiling, and all but speared  Long Tom as it

dropped at his back near his bound hands. 

Sliding his bound wrists over the blade, cutting the ropes with one  slice, Long Tom grasped the big knife. He

chopped desperately at the  bonds on his feet. 

Howling, Pasha Bey's men rushed forward. Nearly every brown paw  clutched a foot or more of glinting steel.

They crouched low to the  floor. They were like evil, tobacco colored mice in white sheets. 

The next instant, they were even more like mice. Mice with a  gigantic bronze cat in their midst! 

Two blows popped. Each broke bones, crushed flesh. The two men who  had been hit fell without knowing

what had happenedknocked out. 


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The form of Long Tom was wrenched bodily from under the descending  knives. 

The thing happened with such blinding speed that even Long Tom did  not get a glimpse of his rescuer before

he was out of danger. But he  knew who it was, the moment he felt the clutch which jerked him to  safety.

Only one man possessed such strength and agility  Doc Savage! 

ONE of Pasha Bey's men goggled as Doc appeared before hima mighty  genie of bronze. He yelled, struck

with his singa! His yell became an  agonized squawl as his wrist was trapped in midair. Came a jerk such as

the wouldbe killer had never felt before. He sailed to one side like a  tossed bundle, struck the wall, and

bounced back to lie so dazed he  could not move. 

Knifemen charged the bronze giant, only to have him seemingly  vanish before their eyes, so quickly did he

whip out of the flashlight  luminance. 

Two fellows in the rear dropped, knocked stiff as toppling logs,  before they knew Doc had attacked again

from that point. 

This was too much. It bordered on the supernatural. It was hard to  believe flesh and blood could move so

swiftly. 

"Wallah!" wailed a man. "He is a ruh! A spirit!" 

Maybe the others thought that, too. Or maybe it was that they had  no stomach for a real fight. Tentoone

odds in a dark alley was their  style. 

They fled. plunging headlong through the catacomb passages, their  flash beams darting like terrified things.

One man, less agile,  bringing up the rear, screeched as fingers like steel bands trapped his  neck. A tap on the

temple reduced the fellow to senselessness. 

The rest could not run much faster, but that did not keep them from  trying to do so. 

Far ahead was a bounding flashlight glow. This was Pasha Bey, the  master murderer. And master of

discretion, too! He knew when flight was  wise. He had taken a big head start on the others. 

He knew, now. that Long Tom was one of Doc Savage's group of five  aids. At least, he had guessed it. And

between jumps. he was cursing  the man who had hired him to murder Long Tom. 

That man would pay for not mentioning the fact that Long Tom was  one of Doc Savage's crew. He would pay

dearly! And that, as soon as  Pasha Bey could hurry to the darkened street off the Place Mehemet Ali  for a

meeting. 

The fleeing murder gang passed through one of the stone doors. The  hindermost fellow wrenched the heavy

rock slab shut. It was swung on  great iron hinges, and there was a massive iron bar. He slid the bar. 

"Wallah!" he howled. "By the life of my father, we are safe! The  bronze man and the one we sought to kill

will never escape! There is no  other way out of that place!" 

The whole gang kept on at full speed, however. 


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Chapter III. THE "CAMERONIC" PERIL

DOC SAVAGE reached the huge block of stone that was the door. He  exerted a tentative shove. The rock

only groaned. It was as solid as  the entrance of a bank vault. Turning, he strode back to join his  friend. 

Long Tom had cut himself loose, and was stumbling about, gathering  up knives which had been dropped in

the retreat. He picked up his  travelers' checks, patted them lovingly, and pocketed them. 

"Those things," he said dryly, "are all that kept me alive until  you could get here." 

"Was it robbery?" Doc asked him. 

Long Tom ran fingers through his thin blond hair. "I don't think  so, Doc. Of course, they delayed slipping a

knife into me in hopes I  would sign those travelers' checks. But I don't think robbery was at  the bottom of the

trouble. I had only a few dollars in change. The  checks were worthless unless countersigned." 

"This is rather mystifying." 

"You said it! I can't imagine why they picked on me." 

"Unless they were hired!" 

"Yes. I thought of that. But who would hire them? And why? We have  no enemies in Alexandria. Or I

haven't, at least." 

Speaking rapidly, Doc explained how he had gotten on the trail by  observing the man removing the note from

Long Tom's hotel room. 

"That note was a bait, of course," Long Tom grunted. 

At this point, there sounded a faint scuffle in the nearby  darkness. Doc raced his flashlight beam to the spot

the sound had come  from. 

It was the man who had been stunned by being flung against the  wall. He was seeking to flee. 

With two long leaps, Doc collared him He turned his light on the  fellow's face. 

It was Homar. His brown features were convulsing with terror. 

"This is the lad who got the letter out of your room," Doc told  Long Tom. "We"ll just see if he still has it." 

Homar was so frightened he remained perfectly docile, and,  trembling greatly, let himself be searched. Doc's

mighty bronze form  had been frightsome in the fight; at close range, it was even more  productive of terror. 

Doc found the note. He studied it. 

"The name signed at the bottom  Leland Smith  is false," he  said. "The writing is somewhat stilted,

exactly like the rest of the  message. A man usually scrawls his signature in a more free, practiced  fashion

than the rest of his writing. The author of the missive was a  big man and a strong one, as denoted by his

forceful strokes. He was a  fellow of fair education, as shown by the correct spelling and the fact  that he


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mentioned that atomic business. That seems to be all the note  tells us at present. There are no finger prints." 

Long Tom frowned thoughtfully at the cowering Homar. 

"I wonder what he can tell us?" 

Homar shivered and whined: "Ma atka!limsh el loghah el In ge liz."' 

He had stated in Egyptian that he did not speak English. 

"You are lying!" Doc said ominously. "Otherwise, how did you know  we were wondering what you could tell

us?" 

"Wallah!" Homar gasped, then added in fair English: "I know  nothing! I am an innocent man, who has

always been good to his mother." 

Long Tom snorted loudly. 

DOC SAVAGE now began ominous preparations. He selected from Long  Tom's collection the knife which

had the brightest blade. He polished  this on his sleeve; then advanced. 

Homar screamed, shrank back, and dashed his fists madly at Doc. But  he was swiftly pinned and held

helpless. He found the gleaming knife  blade suspended before his eyes. 

"Keep your light on the blade," Doc directed Long Tom. 

Before Homar's distended orbs, the length of steel became a  glittering sliver. It twirled slowly, monotonously.

Homar's eyes held  it in a sort of fixed terror. He thought, no doubt, that the blade  would at any instant plunge

into his heart. He did not dream what Doc  was actually doing. 

Except for Homar's breathing, silence enwrapped the awesome  catacomb interior. Seconds trickled away and

became minutes. The knife  spun interminably, fluttering whitehot in the flash glare. 

Homar watched it, fascinated. 

So softly that at first it was unnoticed, Doc's weird trilling  sound came into being. It rose and fell, mellow and

unending,  possessing no tune. 

Homar's eyes became more protuberant. He was rapidly being  hypnotized. 

"Talk to the flashing knife," Doc commanded him softly. "Tell it  why you sought to kill my friend!" 

Homar's throat pumped a few times. At last, words came out. 

"We are paid money, oh knife. We were to get four thousand piastres  for the death of Long Tom Roberts." 

"Who hired you? The knife wishes to learn that." 

"I do not know. It was a man who met our chief, Pasha Bey. The man  did not show his face." 

"Tell the knife  were you to meet this man a"gain?" 


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"Yes." 

"Where?" 

Homar had been speaking in Arabic, a tongue which Doc Savage could  handle fluently, just as he could

speak count less other languages. 

"The meeting was to be in a street near the Place Mehemet Ah,"  mumbled Homar. "Pasha Bey was to report

to that spot." 

"Name the street and describe the place. We wish to go there." 

Homar complied. 

Doc Savage now cast the knife aside, and. by slapping Homar sharply  and calling to him, broke the hypnotic

spell. 

"Come on." he told Long Tom. "We'll let this fellow go, little as  he deserves his freedom. We'll have to make

it snappy, or we'll miss  the Cameronic when she sails shortly after midnight." 

LEAVING Homar behind, still too dazed to walk or talk coherently,  they hurried along the catacomb

passage, and came to the door of stone. 

"Good night!" Long Tom groaned. "We're stuck! We have nothing but  knives to attack that thing! It'll take

days to chip a hole through!" 

Then he glanced at Doc, and brightened somewhat. The big bronze man  usually had a way out of jams like

this. 

Doc had thrust two fingers far back in his mouth. They came out,  bearing two molars. These were extras

which Doc always wore. They held  two different chemical mixtures. 

Mingling the chemicals, Doc hastily stuffed them in a crack in the  huge stone door. 

"Get back!" he rapped, and rushed Long Tom away from the Vicinity. 

Whurroom! 

An explosion shuddered the stone floor under their feet. Dust  gushed in choking clouds. The shock cascaded

bones off the catacomb  shelves, and caused skulls to carom across the floor like baseballs. 

Doc's two chemicals, after being mixed together, had become a  powerful explosive, selfdetonating. 

They felt their way forward through the dust, and found the door  little more than a heap of broken rock. 

Long Tom advanced, once more uneasy. He saw that the catacombs were  a trackless labyrinth. Suppose they

should get lost in the grisly  passages? 

But a miracle seemed to have occurred. Ahead of them, marking the  way to the exit, was a procession of

glowing spots. These might have  been redhot coals! As a matter of fact, they were the chemical powder

which Doc had sprinkled along his incoming path. This powder, although  it possessed no glow at first,


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became phosphorescent after a short  exposure to damp air. 

They came out by the route Doc had enteredthrough the stone hut. 

Doc set out at a run, explaining: "We should be able to find a cab  over beyond Pompey's Pillar." 

Long Tom made no replyhe needed all his breath to maintain the  pace Doc was setting. 

They found no cab. But they did locate a conveyancea pudgy tourist  and his driver, who consented to take

them to the Place Mehemet Ali.  The car started out slowly. 

Doc showed the tourist's driver a fat American bank note. 

"Imshi bil 'agal!" he requested. "Go more quickly!" 

The driver needed no more urging. Indeed, they had to remind him  repeatedly that he could not take

rightangle turns at forty miles an  hour. 

IN the darkened street off the Place Mehemet All, three  innocentlooking gentlemen in burnooses shuffled

slowly for ward. They  kept their hands out of sight, and their faces well enveloped. This was  to hide

numerous scrapes and bruises acquired in mad flight through the  catacomb passages. 

Pasha Bey had not come directly to this gloomy thorough fare. He  had stopped en route to take council with

himself. As a result, he had  decided only two of his best murderess should accompany him to the  rendezvous

with the man who had hired them. 

"Wallah!" Pasha Bey muttered. "You understand what we are to do?" 

"We understand, oh great one!" 

"This man who hired us did a very evil thing when he failed to tell  us we were to dispose of one of Doc

Savage's friends. For that, he must  pay." 

"Aye, master!" the other two agreed heartily. "He shall pay!" 

"With his life!" 

"Aye! With his life, he shall pay! And with his money, if he has  any on his person!" 

Pasha Bey kneaded his bony knuckles. "I have been thinking, oh  brethren, of those diamonds which this Doc

Savage is said to possess." 

"The diamonds may be only drinkingplace talk." 

"They might not be, too. Wallah! It would be very nice to dip our  hands in chests of the bright gems." 

"To whence does this talk of yours lead, oh master?" 

"To this: I shall converse with this man who hired us, before I  slip my garrote cord over his evil neck. It may

be that he knows  something of the diamonds." 


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"A thought worthy of Allah, himself! With Doc Savage entombed in  the catacombs, we might easily get the

bright stones." 

The speaker would have been no little shocked to know that, at this  instant, Doc Savage and Long Tom were

watching him from a corner near  the Place Mehemet Ali. 

He would have been more shocked had he seen Doc and Long Tom whip  forward silently the instant Pasha

Bey and his companions entered the  darkened tunnel where the meeting was to take place. Without showing

themselves, Doc and Long Tom were lurking outside the passage in time  to hear all that was said. 

Pasha Bey pressed his skinny face to the barred hole in the door  and called softly. 

"Well?" growled the voice of the man who had hired them. 

"Your humble servant begs to report a failure. We failed to kill  Long Tom!" 

This, as far as Pasha Bey was concerned, was an untruth. He thought  Doc and Long Tom were fast in the

catacombs, where they would  eventually starve to death. 

"What?" roared the man behind the barred door. "You fell down on  the job?" 

"It was not our fault," Pasha Bey murmured meekly. "You, oh master,  should have told us Long Tom Roberts

was a friend of this man of  mystery and power  Doc Savage. Then we could have prepared more

carefully." 

"Savage gummed the works, did he?" 

"Aye. He thwarted our plans." 

The man back of the bars cursed violently for some moments. To the  listening Pasha Bey  and to Doc

Savage and Long Tom, concealed in the  murky street  a notable fact was disclosed by the man's swearing.

The  fellow's coarse voice was disguised in tone. Probably the slangy way of  talking was assumed, also. 

The unseen man had actually a powerful, ringing voice, and was  capable of speaking good English. 

"YOU'VE got to get Doc Savage's friend, Long Tom!" the man snarled,  when his profanity was expended.

"Or you can get one of the other four  who belong to his crew! Any one will do!" 

"It is very difficult  this thing you ask us to do," Pasha Bey  temporized. "Four thousand piastres is not

enough payment." 

"I'll put up more jack for the job." 

Pasha Bey now got around to the thing he was angling for. "It might  be that our ends would best be served if

we were to go into  partnership," he suggested. 

"What d'you mean, you bony camel?" 

"I mean, oh master, that we would be glad to help you get the  diamonds for a very small share of the stones." 

An explosive curse blasted through the bars. 


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"I'm not after any diamonds! I don't know anything about the gems,  except the talk that's been going around

this stinkin' burg. I ain't  after ice!" 

"You do not speak with a forked tongue?" Pasha Bey muttered  suspiciously. He thought he detected a

falsehood. 

"I'm not lying!" 

"Then why, oh master, did you want Long Tom Roberts slain?" 

"Doc Savage and his five pals have booked passage on the Cameronic,  sailing tonight!" the unseen man said,

after hesitating momentarily. "I  don't want them to go on the Cameronic, savvy! I've got reasons of my  own

for not wantin' them on the tub. I thought, if I got Long Tom  Roberts killed, Doc Savage would stay behind to

investigate the murder.  Him and his crowd wouldn't be on the boat." 

To say this filled Pasha Bey with rage was putting it mildly. He  had been used as a tool to draw Doc Savage's

wrath and make the bronze  man miss the Cameronic?! Shades of Allah! 

"Wallah!" he hissed. 

Whipping the silk garrote cord from inside his burnoose, he swung  it through the bars. His hand was

experienced. He snared the neck of  the man inside. By flinging his bony frame backward, he wrenched the

terrible cord tight. 

A single, startled bleat came from the trapped man. It ended sudden  when the cord snugged, as if his head had

been cut off. 

Pasha Bey leered from ear to ear. He had his preythe man would  soon strangle. 

Came the surprise! The door whipped open. Men piled through  men  who had been with the fellow the

garrote cord had trapped. Knives  flashed! Pistols slammed thunder! 

The dark tunnel became a bawling bedlam! Screams, blows, wails, all  came at once! 

It was over as swiftly as it started. Pasha Bey and his two men  were slain with a dispatch as abrupt as any

murder they had ever  committed themselves. 

The barred door slammed behind the retreating killers, while Pasha  Bey and his two helpers still thrashed

about, spouting their life fluid  upon the dank stone floor. 

DOC SAVAGE and Long Tom glided into the gloomfilled tunnel. They  had held back from the fight,

practicing a policy of letting dog eat  dog. But they had not expected the slayers to flee so swiftly. 

The door was big and stanch, and there was no sign of a latch on  the outside. The bars were thick. 

Doc splashed his flash beam on the three bodies. It was a grisly  sight, for scarlet was rapidly spreading a wet

sheet over the floor.  Each of the trio had been stabbed. 

"Whew!" Long Tom breathed. "Pasha Bey was a bad one, but he was a  babe in arms compared to the crowd

he went up against! Those fellows  had killed men before! It takes practice to do a job like this!" 


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Pasha Bey had, it appeared, closed with one of his assailants. His  clutching hand had seized upon a belt. In

falling, he had torn this  from his attacker. His bony claw still held it. 

Doc picked up the belt and inspected it. The thing was perhaps  three inches wide, and made of soft leather.

Upon the leather was  sewed, side by side, more than a score of circular, braided insignia.  Each of these bore

an embroidered name. 

Doc glanced over some of the names. 

Sea Sylph, Henryetta, U. S. S. Voyager, Queen Neptune, Gotham  Beile, Axteila Marie. 

Saying nothing, Doc slipped the strange belt in a pocket. He  grasped the iron bars. These had no doubt been

put there by the  original builder to defy the strength of any man. They were very  substantial. 

The stout iron groaned under the terrific strength of Doc's bronze,  corded hands. It was something fabulous,

this muscular power Doc had  developed in himself. Opening horseshoes and bending halfdollar coins  

feats of professional strong men  he could accomplish easily. 

With a ripping of wood, one bar came out. Then another. With the  two, he struck and pried, tearing off planks

in an effort to reach the  lock. 

Up toward the Place Mehemet Ali, excited yelling denoted the  approach of bulis zabtieh. The shots and

screams had drawn the  policemen. 

Doc got the door open. He whipped through, hands empty except for  his flashlight. Doc Savage never used a

gun in his fighting. 

Long Tom trod his heels. 

They ran down a corridor which smelled of samak and tobacco smoke.  Another door barred their way. It was

locked, but less substantial. 

Doc struck a blow with his unprotected fist, a blow only alloyhard  tendons could withstand. The panel

caved like a banana crate. 

They found only more passages, empty rooms, silence  and open  doors which gave upon another street.

There was no one in sight. 

"They got away!" Long Tom grumbled. 

"They did," Doc agreed, "and we had best follow their example.  Otherwise, the police are liable to hold us for

questioning, and cause  us to miss the Cameronic." 

They ran silently along the handiest street, speedily leaving the  vicinity of the Place Mehemet Ali. 

Chapter IV. THE WHITEWHISKERED MAN

DOC SAVAGE and Long Tom reached the Hotel Londoner without  incident. Consulting his watch, Doc

found it would be two hours until  the Cameronic sailed. 


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In that two hours, several things happened. The incidents were such  that they gave grave hint of trouble

ahead. 

"Confound it!" said Long Tom, grinning widely. "I was in hopes we  would have a nice, restful sea voyage to

New York." 

Long Tom's grin gave the lie to his complaint. There was nothing  Long Tom  or Doc's other four aids, for

that matter  liked better  than the excitement that came out of their association with Doc. They  took to

danger like bees to honey. And there was always danger around  Doc, it seemed. That, together with the

pleasure of associating with  one of the most remarkable of living men, was the attraction which drew  them to

the man of bronze. 

"I wonder, Long Tom, if you have drawn the same conclusions about  this thing that I have?" Doc asked

dryly. 

"You mean about what must be behind it?" 

"Exactly." 

Long Tom popped shirts and socks into his traveling bag. 

"This guy who was trying to get me killed didn't want our gang on  the Cameronic," he grunted. "Maybe I

flatter myself, but I'll bet he  didn't want us aboard because he was afraid we'd be on hand to throw a  monkey

wrench in some plan  some devilish scheme that involves the  Cameronic!" 

Doc nodded. "My own suspicions are along that line." 

Long Tom finished his packing. "What about our four pals, Renny,  Monk, Ham, and Johnny?" 

The four men named were the other members of Doc's group of five  aids. Each, in his way, was an unusual

personage. Just as Long Tom was  an electrical wizard of no mean note, so were these others men of fame  in

the fields of engineering, chemistry, the law, and geology. 

"They are to meet us on the ship," Doc explained. 

Doc now produced the strange belt which the dead Pasha Bey had  clutched. He examined it further. 

Long Tom came over and also bent a scrutiny on the unusual object. 

"Sylph, Henryetta, U. S. S. Voyager, Queen Neptune,"  he read some  of the embroidered names aloud. "Say

those sound like the names of  boats!" 

"Right," Doc agreed. "Moreover, the circular, braided insignia,  which bears each name, is in reality a tab such

as is worn on the peak  of a ship officer's cap." 

"Any of the names familiar?" 

Doc did not reply immediately. But weird little lights seemed to  come and go in his golden eyes. 

"I'll answer that later  after I confirm a suspicion!" he said  slowly. 


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Long Tom did not push for an answer. He knew he would not get it.  But Doc's manner had told him this belt,

with its score or more of  insignia from the uniform caps of ship officers, had an important  meaning. 

For some reason hard to define, the belt dangling from Doc's  muscular hand impressed Long Tom as being a

thing of sinister portent. 

They completed their packing, gathered up their baggage, paid their  bill, and got in a taxi in front of the hotel. 

JUST before the cab departed, Long Tom bought a late copy of one of  the Alexandria newspapers which was

printed in English. One look at the  headlines, and he let cut a surprised squawk. 

"Hey! What d'you make of this newspaper item?" 

Doc took the paper, and as their hack rolled down the narrow  streets, read the item which had startled Long

Tom. 

BANK CLERK FOUND SLAIN 

John Mack O'Minner, clerk in the Alexandria branch of the American  Bank, was found dead on the outskirts

of the city early tonight. His  body bore marks which indicated he had been tortured before being  slain. 

The clerk had apparently been dead at least a day. 

On the face of it, this bit of news was not unusual. Murders were  no more infrequent in Alexandria than in

other large cities. 

But the dead clerk had been employed by the American Bank. And that  bank was handling the transfer of

Doc's hoard of diamonds  gems to a  fabulous value. The bank had put the stones, under heavy guard,

aboard  the Cameronic  for shipment to New York. 

"I see the whole thing!" Long Tom barked excitedly. "That bank  clerk was kidnaped and tortured until he told

where the diamonds were!  Then he was slain! And the gang who killed him set about keeping us off  the

Cameronic, so they would have a free hand to get the stones!" 

Doc, saying nothing, took the strange belt of cap insignias from  his pocket and studied it thoughtfully. 

Down at the water front, they encountered the hubbub which always  accompanies the sailing of a passenger

liner. Hucksters howled  themselves hoarse peddling nut meats, dates, and carved knicknacks for  tourist

souvenirs. Porters dashed about. Policemen yelled. 

Their taxi rooted noisily through the uproar. They alighted near  the pier entrance. Doc gave his bags to a

Cameronic flunky to be taken  immediately to the suite he had engaged. 

Some delay followed while he and Long Tom settled matters about  their passports. They had entered Egypt

without these necessities,  having flown the lost dirigible there at the conclusion of their last  great adventure

in the lost oasis. 

The papers which the American consul had supplied to Doc and his  men were finally passed upon, however.

They went aboard, being  plentifully elbowed en route by excited tourists. The screaming din of  peddlers

trying to make a last sale, was deafening. 


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A neat modernistic elevator lifted them to the top deck, which held  their cabins. The Cameronic  was a new

craft. They turned down the  corridor which led to their quarters. 

They had not taken a dozen steps when a volley of yells crackled  through the passage! Blows whacked! A

man screeched in terrible pain! 

Three thin brown men dived out of a door down the corridor. They  were half naked, their burnooses torn off.

One streamed crimson from a  gash in his arm. 

After the latter man, pursuing him closely, appeared a slender,  dapperly dressed gentleman. This fellow's

clothing was sartorial  perfection. He was in the heat of action, yet his attire was as  unruffled as if he had been

presiding at a banquet. 

He flourished a thinbladed sword cane. It was obviously this which  had opened the gash in the fleeing one's

arm. 

This man was Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks, better known  as "Ham." He was one of the

cleverest lawyers Harvard had ever  matriculated. And he was one of Doc Savage's five aids. 

Close on Ham's heels came probably the homeliest man ever to set  foot on the Cameronic. He weighed close

to two hundred and sixty  pounds, and he had the physique of a gorilla. His arms were inches  longer than his

legs. His hide was furred with a growth of coarse, red  bristles. His rather pleasant, unlovely features, bore

numerous ancient  scars   thin, gray lines, as if a chicken with chalk feet had paraded  on his face. 

"Monk!" 

No other nickname would have fitted him. As Lieutenant Colonel  Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, he was

conceded to be among the greatest of  modern chemists. He, too, was one of Doc Savage's five men. 

Monk and Ham pursued the three fleeing brown villains. 

THE swarthy trio veered into a crossship passage which led out on  deck. They never hesitated, but cleared

the rail with wild leaps. The  splashes, as they hit the water far below, came in such near succession  as to be a

single loud swish of a sound. 

Doc and Long Tom arrived at the rail close behind Ham and Monk. 

"What was the trouble?" Long Tom demanded. 

"Those three rats tried to nab Doc's baggage!" the big, hairy Monk  explained, in a voice surprisingly mild for

one of such bulk. 

Ham snapped his sword cane like a short whip. The blade twanged and  sent a spray of scarlet drops over the

rail. 

"We happened to be in your suite, Doc, looking the place over, when  these fellows came in," he declared.

"The baggage had just arrived." 

"I sent it in only a moment ago," Doc explained. 

He cast his flash beam downward. It disclosed the three marauders  swimming briskly away. 


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Monk grasped the rail. "I've got a notion to go after them sheiks!" 

"Let them go," Doc suggested. "It is my guess that we would find  they were merely hired thieves." 

Monk pulled thoughtfully at a gristle tuft of an ear. "Have you any  idea what is back of it, Doc?" 

Don made no reply, but Long Tom grinned widely. 

"The belt!" Long Tom grunted. "I'll bet they were after it!" 

"What belt?" chorused Ham and Monk. 

Long Tom explained about the adventure in the catacombs, and  described what had happened in the street off

the Place Mehemet Ali,  where they had found, in Pasha Bey's clutch, the strange belt of cap  insignias 

THEY returned to Doc's suite, where Ham secured the sheath portion  of his sword cane. When the blade was

cased, it became an innocent  black walking stick. Ham was never seen without this article. 

There was some speculation ever the significance of the belt, as  well as guesses at the nature of the trouble

which was undoubtedly  brewing. 

Monk blew thoughtfully upon his bristlecovered fists. 

"I think I'll prowl around the decks and see if there's anything  suspicious going on," he said mildly. 

"I wouldn't," Ham suggested with biting dryness. 

"Why not?" 

"There's no need of frightening the passengers off the boat before  we sail!" Ham retorted, and squinted wryly

at Monk's homely features. 

This unkind cut was typical of Ham. He was always riding Monk. He  missed no chances for a crack at

Monk's expense. It had been thus for  years, since an incident in the Great War had given Ham his nickname. 

As a joke, Ham had taught Monk some French words which were highly  insulting, telling him they were

exactly what one should say to flatter  a French general. Monk had used them  and landed in the

guardhouse.  But soon after his release, the dapper Brigadier General Brooks had  been hailed up on a charge

of stealing hams. Somebody had planted the  evidence. Ham had never been able to prove it was Monk's

work, and the  thing still irked him. 

Monk, however, was far from helpless under Ham's sharp tongue. He  had many methods of goading Ham,

from imitating Ham's snappy attire, to  impersonating a pig grunting and squealing. This last always threw

Ham  into a rage. 

Monk now twisted his simian features into a frightsome grimace,  preparatory to emitting a piggy squeal. 

"We'd better lock up our other two friends," Doc suggested, to head  off a verbal battle which might last for

hours. "Where are they?" 


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"Down keeping an eye on the strong room, where our diamonds are  stored," Monk said, with a regretful

scowl at Ham. 

THEY descended to a middle deck. This held the purser's office, a  grilled inclosure not unlike a bank teller's

cage. The back of this  cage was a wall of thick steel, pierced by a heavy metal door fitted  with combination

locks  the ship's safe. 

Passengers milled about in front of the purser's cage, checking  valuables and transacting other business.

Mingling with the crowd were  several uniformed, heavily armed men. These were guards from the

Alexandria branch of the American Bank. They were present to watch  Doc's diamonds. They would remain

until the Cameronic sailed. 

The diamonds reposed in the vault. An even half dozen cases held  the stones. The gem hoard was of fabulous

value. There were so many of  the stones that the diamond market would have declined, had they all  been

offered for sale at Once. Doc intended to dispose of them, a few  at a time. 

The money from the gems was to be expended on hospitals and other  philanthropic projects which Doc

Savage conducted. 

Two men occupied chairs in unobtrusive corners of the room gacing  the purser's cage. At sight of Doc's

group, they arose and came  forward. 

The first man was nearly as tall as Doc, and almost as heavy as  Monk. He was a giant. Yet he had a pair of

hands so huge that they  seemed to dwarf the rest of him. Half a dozen people in the crowd  stared at the size

of those hands, as if doubting their eyes. 

This man was Colonel John Renwick, a personage known in a number of  nations for his accomplishments as

an engineer.  Rennv" was also noted  for a disquieting habit of amusing himself by knocking panels cut of

doors with those big fists. 

The second fellow was tall, gaunt. He looked half starved. His  clothes hung upon his frame as if it were a

structure of hard sticks.  He wore glasses. The left lens of these spectacles was very thick. It  was actually a

powerful magnifying glass. 

William Harper Littlejohn had lost the use of his left eye in the  Great War. 'Johnny" needed a magnifying

glass in his profession of  archaeologist and geologist, so he carried it in his spectacles for  convenience. 

"Seen anything suspicious?" Doc asked the pair. 

"Nope!" Renny had a voice which gave the impression that a lion had  jumped roaring out of its den. "Not

very  that is!" 

"What do you mean  not very?" 

"A man came in and hung around a while ago," Johnny put in, his  extremely clear manner of speaking giving

a clew to the fact that he  had once headed the natural science research department of a famous  American

university. 

"We both saw this chap," he continued. "He was very large  as big  as Renny. He had a flowing white

beard." 


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"He looked like Santa Claus," Renny rumbled a chuckle. 

"But that was not what got us interested in him." Removing his  spectacles with the magnifying left lens,

Johnny polished  them  briskly. "This whitewhiskered gentleman stood and stared at the vault  for some time.

Just why he did that, we could not understand. We did  not see him leave any valuables with the purser to be

put in the  vault." 

Maybe he was just sizing up the safe to see if it was secure enough  to hold his bank roll!" snorted Monk. 

Johnny shrugged his bony shoulders, then adjusted his glasses.  "Maybe. But it struck me that there was

something peculiar in his  manner!" 

DOC SAVAGE and his five friends continued to loiter in the vicinity  of the vault. They were taking no

chances. The sum their diamonds  represented was great enough to purchase outright some smaller European

countries. It was conceivable that thieves might make a bold raid upon  the Cameronic, strong room. 

Nothing of the sort happened. however. The large gentleman with the  white whiskers did not appear. Amid

much shouting and blaring of native  musicians, the gangplank was hauled back. 

Whistles tooted, and the brilliantly lighted pier began slowly to  recede, seeming to draw after it a stretch of

oily, trashspeckled  harbor water. 

Doc Savage, accompanied by Long Tom, repaired to the radio room.  Doc wrote out a message, consulting the

strange belt of cap insignias  as he did so. 

"What's the idea?" Long Tom asked. Doc let him read the radiogram. 

CHIEF INSPECTOR  SCOTLAND YARD LONDON 

CAN YOU FURNISH ME INFORMATION PRESENT WHEREABOUTS FOLLOWING SHIPS  STOP

SEA SYLPH STOP HENRYETTA STOP U S S VOYAGER STOP QUEEN NEPTUNE  STOP GOTHAM

BELLE STOP AXTELLA MARIE STOP RADIO ME CARE OF LINER  CAMERONIC 

DOC SAVAGE 

Long Tom scraped thoughtfully in his thin hair. "You think that  getting in touch with the ships named on the

belt will cast a light on  this mystery?" 

"I believe Scotland Yard's answer to this radiogram will throw  light on something a good deal more horrible

than these present  difficulties of ours," Doc replied quietly. 

"What do you mean?" 

"I have heard of most of those ships  heard something which  suggests a very unpleasant possibility. We

will know more about it when  we get Scotland Yard's reply." 

Long Tom would have liked to probe for more definite information,  but knew it would be futile. Doc was not

in the habit of giving voice  to idle theories. When he had proved his suspicions to be facts, word  would be

forthcoming. 

They went out on deck, after filing the wireless message for  immediate transmission. 


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The lights of Alexandria receded rapidly in the warm night. Monk  and the others joined Doc. Together, they

stood at the rail and  conversed, speculating on whether or not their troubles had been left  behind. 

The Cameronic  rapidly quieted, for the passengers  mostly  tourists  had spent a strenuous day

sightseeing, and were quick to  retire. The liner plowed silently through the night. Somehow, it had  the

aspect of a shiny, new coffin fitted with lights. 

The tomblike atmosphere, enwrapping a ship so new and so elaborate,  lent the impression that they were

starting a voyage of death. 

Not until the light on the Cape of Figs, at Alexandria harbor, was  a winking white eye in the distance, did

Doc and his men retire for the  night. 

Chapter V. THE SCALP BELT

AN hour before dawn. Doc Savage arose and. attired in a bathing  suit, went up to the sun deck for his daily

routine of exercise. The  deck was deserted at this early hour. 

In a remote spot in the forest of elevators and funnels, Doc began  his usual ritual. 

These exercises were the explanation of Doc's amazing physical and  mental powers. They lasted a full two

hours. Every second of that time  he was working out at full speed. He had done this sort of thing daily  from

childhood. 

He made his muscles tug, one against the other, until all of his  mighty bronze body glistened under a film of

perspiration. He juggled a  number of more than a dozen figures in his head, multiplying, dividing,  extracting

square and cube roots. This intricate mental arithmetic  sharpened his ability to concentrate. 

He employed an apparatus which created sound waves of frequencies  above and below those audible to the

normal ear. Thanks to his lifetime  of practice, Doc was able to hear many of these sounds. His hearing was

unbelievably keen. 

He named numerous odors contained in a case of small vials. He read  pages of Braille print  the system of

upraised dots which is the  writing of the blind. This sharpened his sense of touch. 

He had many other parts in his routine exercises calculated to  develop his every faculty. He went through the

whole thing at top  speed, and each portion of the ritual was so strenuous that five  minutes of it would have

prostrated a man unused to that sort of thing. 

Finishing his ritual, Doc moved toward his cabin. Rounding a large  ventilator, he halted abruptly. 

Before him was another man, also taking exercises. The fellow was  unaware of Doc's presence. 

Doc watched, greatly interested. 

The stranger was balancing expertly on his hands and raising and  lowering himself. This was no mean feat,

but he was doing it easily.  And he did it innumerable times. 

He had a regulation exerciser of spring cables. Five such cables  were all an ordinary man could handle. Yet

there were more than fifteen  strands on this apparatus. After working out with that a while, the man  turned a


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score or more of handsprings, flinging himself high into the  air. 

The stranger was big, and undoubtedly strong. 

He had a great, flowing white beard! This was what made his  performance so remarkable. He looked like an

acrobatic Santa Claus. 

Doc Savage's strange golden eyes showed no expression. But he knew  this must be the personage who had

acted suspiciously in the vicinity  of the ship's strong room, the night before. 

"Good morning," he said suddenly. 

Had a cannon exploded, the effect would not have been more  remarkable. The whitewhiskered man whirled

like a startled rabbit. One  look at Doc, and he shot in a flying leap for the rail. He plummeted  over the edge. 

No little taken with surprise, Doc ran to the rail. He expected to  see the gentleman of the Santa Claus beard

sprawled, perhaps with a  broken leg, on the deck below. 

But only the snowy beard lay on the deck! 

The whiskers were false, and had jarred off, the adhesive used to  hold them in place probably having been

softened by perspiration. 

The stranger himself had vanished into the ship. 

DOC SAVAGE dropped down to the deck and got the false beard. It was  no cheap theatrical adornment, but

carefully constructed. The name of  the maker was stamped inside, together with his business address. 

The false beard had been made in Alexandria. 

Doc carried the thing along as he headed for the swimming pool, and  placed it in plain view on the pool edge

while he took a dip. He  remained in the water for some time, practicing various strokes. Once  he sank

beneath the surface and stayed an astounding length of time   several minutes. This was a trick he had

learned from masters of diving   the pearl gatherers of the South Seas. 

He returned at length to his quarters, carrying the beard, Just  inside the door, he stopped, staring at his

quarters. 

For twenty seconds  perhaps thirty  his mellow, weird trilling  sound permeated the

parlorbedroombath suite which he was occupying.  An eerie, exotic song without tune, the melody rose and

fell. And all  the while, his flakegold eyes roved. 

The place had been ransacked. A thorough job. The searcher had made  no effort to conceal his handiwork. 

Doc stepped quickly into each of the rooms. Only one thing was gone   the curious belt of cap insignias. 

Doc showed no fluttering of excitement. But he told his men about  it at breakfast. Told them also of the

strong man who had lost his  false white beard. 

"Well, what d'you know about that!" Renny thumped explosively. "It  looks like we weren't mistaken when

we thought that fellow was acting  suspiciously around the strong room!" 


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Long Tom eyed Doc curiously. 

"How come you didn't take particular pains to hide the belt. Doc?" 

"Why should 1? We examined it to our satisfaction. And I remember  the names of all the ships that were on

it." 

"Maybe the dang thing was proof of something!" 

"It was. It's my guess that we'll find that out when Scotland Yard  answers our radiogram sometime this

morning." 

"Would you recognize  the strong  man without his whiskers?" Johnny  queried. 

"Probably. But he seems to be clever at disguises. He might don  another." 

The rest of the meal was consumed in silence, except for a minor  explosion from Ham, who claimed Monk

purposefully squirted grapefruit  juice on the immaculate suit the lawyer was wearing. 

During this outburst, alarmed waiters hovered about, thinking of a  certainty that there was going to be a fight,

if not a murder. 

"Now we'll do some investigating in connection with that decoy note  sent to Long Tom," Doc declared. 

"Huh!" grunted Renny. "Did the fellow who got the belt miss that?" 

"He missed it by about half the length of the ship," Doc replied,  and showed where he had been carrying the

message, inclosed in a  waterproof, flat box, secured under his bathing suit with a strip of  adhesive tape. 

Renny popped his big fists together, causing a sound not unlike  concrete blocks colliding. 

"Dang a mystery! I'd like to get my hands on that now whiskerless  Santa Claus!" 

Johnny squinted through his peculiar spectacles. "Do you want to  bet that it was not the unwhiskered Santa

Claus who searched Doc's  suite?" 

Renny gave a loud snort. "Some of these days you're gonna offer to  bet on something that ain't a sure thing!" 

It was a habit of Johnny's, this offering to wager  but he never  suggested a bet where there was a chance of

losing. 

THE Cameronic purser had in his possession a register which had  been signed by all the passengers upon

boarding ship. Doc consulted  this while the others peered over his shoulder. 

"What a mess of frog tracks!" grunted Monk, eyeing the scrawled  names. 

"You've got a lot to talk about!" Ham choked mirthfully, indicating  Monk's signature with the tip of his

sword cane. 

Even Johnny, who had learned to read ancient hieroglyphics as a  part of his training in archaeology, could not

have translated the  convulsive splatter of pen marks which Monk had put down for his name. 


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"Here we are!" Doc said abruptly. 

His companions bent close. But not until he pointed out certain  handwriting similarities, could they tell that a

name he was indicating  had been written by the same hand which penned the decoy note that had  so nearly

led Long Tom to his death. 

They read the name: Jacob Black Bruze. 

"Hmmm!" growled Long Tom. "So a bird named Bruze sent me that  note!" 

"Does somebody want to bet Bruze is not the guy who killed Pasha  Bey and his two helpers?" Johnny queried

hopefully. 

Nobody did. 

"Let's pay this gentleman a visit!" Long Tom grunted. "He's got  Cabin 17 on B deck, this record says." 

They lost no time in getting to B deck. 

Doc tapped imperatively on No.17. 

No answer! The door was unlocked, a test showed. They entered. 

The berth was rumpled, indicating it had been occupied during the  night. 

Long Tom glanced under the berth, into the wardrobe, and jerked out  dressingstand drawers. 

"Not a speck of clothing or other stuff here!" he rapped. "The  fellow must have deserted this stateroom!" 

Producing a small cannister of gray powder, Doc sprinkled the  doorknob, the lightswitch. the shiny edge of

the berth. Then be used  the magnifying left lens of Johnny's spectacles to hunt finger prints.  He found none. 

"Wiped off! You're right, Long Tom  the bird has flown the coop!" 

In the corridor. Doc stopped the steward who attended this section  of staterooms. 

"What did the man in No. 17 look like?" 

"A very large fellow, with a long white beard  " 

"That's enough!" 

Long Tom glowered angrily up and down the passage. 

"The guy got the jitters when he saw you looking at him, Doc! He  thought you were getting ready to put the

jinx on him! He's took to  cover!" 

"It's a cinch he hasn't left the boat!" Renny boomed. "We can hunt  for him!" 

"And we're going to do exactly that!" Doc declared. 


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THE cooperation of the Cameronic skipper would be a convenience in  the search. So Doc visited that worthy. 

Captain Ned Stanhope, his name was. He was a little old grandma of  a man. His hands were roped with blue

veins, and shook at intervals  from some nervous affliction. He looked less like a doughty sea captain  than any

of that species Doc had ever seen. 

Captain Stanhope did have the whopping voice of a windjammer  master, however. He was very affable. 

"Sure, an' I've heard of you an' your crew!" he rumbled amiably at  Doc. "Go right ahead with your search. I'll

order my mates to give you  their cooperation." 

"Thank you, captain," said Doc. 

The search got under way. The hunt would, it was certain, take more  than one day. The Cameronic was a

liner of fair size, and the passages  within her hold were innumerable. 

Other than Doc, only Renny and Johnny had glimpsed the  whitebearded man. This restricted the speed of

the search. 

Two hours later, a radio messenger came paging Doc's name. He bore  the answer to the Scotland Yard

radiogram. The men clustered to read  the missive. 

SHIPS YOU NAME ARE ALL VESSELS LOST AT SEA DURING LAST FIFTEEN  YEARS OR SO

STOP IN EACH CASE NOTHING KNOWN OF FATE OF SHIP STOP THEY  SIMPLY VANISHED IN

ATLANTIC OCEAN 

CHIEF INSPECTOR  SCOTLAND YARD 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled. "The insignia on the belt were from the  uniform caps of the officers of lost

ships!" 

Doc nodded slowly. "That's what I was afraid of. My memory  suggested that the names were of lost vessels.

What I wanted to confirm  was the fact that they all disappeared in the same ocean  the  Atlantic." 

"That belt!" Ham made thoughtful stabbing gestures with his sword  cane. "The thing strikes me as being

something like a  scalp belt!" 

"A scalp belt of ships!" Monk grunted, his feud with the dapper  lawyer temporarily forgotten. 

Ham stopped manipulating his sword cane and stared at Doc. 

"Say  it may be that this thing is a lot bigger than simply a  matter of somebody being after our diamonds!" 

"I won't be surprised!" 

Ham blinked. "Does that mean you've got an idea what we're headed  for?" 

"Not at all," Doc assured him honestly 

The scrutiny of passengers and crew on the Cameronic went ahead  with much more vigor. In the back of his

mind, each man harbored the  same thought. That scalp belt of dead ships! Could it mean that some  strange,


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grisly fate had overtaken each of the vanished boats? And  could the Cameronic be destined for a like end? 

As the search progressed through the day, they remarked on one  fact. 

"Have you noticed what a bunch of mugs are booked in the  firstclass cabins?" Monk grunted. 

"I'll say!" agreed Long Tom. "Firstclass passengers are usually  prosperous business men and their families.

But not these eggs! There's  thirty or forty who look like they had been jerked out of some  penitentiary!" 

Although the rough character of these individuals in firstclass  accommodations was noteworthy, there was

nothing about their presence  to arouse suspicion. 

Night came. Doc and his friends had not found the mysterious strong  man who had worn the white beard. 

A surprise awaited them when they visited their cabins to dress for  dinner. 

IT was the scalp belt. The thing lay on the floor of Doc sitting  room, where it had evidently been tossed

through porthole. 

Doc picked it up, and inspected the array of cap insignias. The  other men crowded close. 

"Holy cow!" Renny exploded his pet ejaculation. "Do you see what I  do?" 

The rest showed astonishment in various ways. Long Tom scraped  fingers in his pale hair; Johnny took off

his peculiar glasses; Monk  made a frightful face; Ham absently us sheathed a few inches of his  sword cane. 

It was unpleasant, this thing they had discovered. There was  something horrible about it. Something cold and

chilling as if death  had unexpectedly walked in their midst. 

The Cameronic had been added to the scalp belt! 

Bright and new, sewed in place, a bit more carelessly than the  others, was the cap insigne of a Cameronic

officer. It ha been added  while the belt was in the hands of whoever ha taken it, then returned  it. 

"This beats me!" Long Tom grunted. "Why was it returned to us  as  a hint?" 

"A warning, more likely," Doc decided. "Our enemy  enemies  is  trying to get our goat. Too, the act

smacks bravado. Our opponents want  to show us they're not afraid of us." 

"But why take the belt, then return it?" 

"Probably they learned of the message from Scotland Yard." 

This latter possibility became an evident fact, when consultation  with the radio operator on duty during the

day r revealed that his file  of message carbon copies had been ran sacked. This had happened, he  believed,

when he had stepped( out of his office for a moment to smoke  a cigarette. 

Further inquiry disclosed that Captain Ned Stanhope had lost his  dressuniform cap. 

"Scrub my scuppers, if I can figure what happened to that cap!"  complained the Cameronic skipper in

expressive seafar ing lingo. 


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Doc Savage did not tell him his head gear must have be lifted to  get a decoration for the strange belt. 

Neglecting the evening meal, Doc and his five men continued their  search. To facilitate things for the three

who had not seen the  whitebearded strong man Bruze  if that was real name  Doc made a  pencil sketch

of the fellow, emphasizing predominant features. 

"Bruze is probably his name," Doc explained. "That signature was  written freely upon the purser's record, as

if the man had enscribed it  often." 

The night hunt proved as barren as the one during the day. 

Shortly after ten o'clock, there came a new development. A sailor  shouted an excited alarm. 

"One of the lifeboats is gone!" he yelled. 

The boat. it appeared, had been lowered away silently. Whoever had  done this had greased the ropes

thoroughly beforehand. It was little  short of astounding that the thing could have been accomplished without

discovery. But the boat was gone. 

"This guy Bruze got scared and cleared out!" Monk chortled. 

Doc was not so optimistic. "I hope you're right, Monk. The only way  we can be certain is to wait and see

what happens. It looks like our  search is useless. A man as clever as Bruze could easily evade us on a  ship

this size, especially if he has donned a disguise." 

Chapter VI. SEA TROUBLE

WHEN successive days passed without another suspicious event,  Monk's surmise that Bruze had fled the

Cameronic in a lifeboat seemed  correct. 

The liner passed through the Straits of Gibraltar, with the famous  mountain of rock frowning majestically off

one rail. 

A day out of Gibraltar, the Cameronic ran into soupy weatherfog,  clouds, and sporadic rain. Radio reports

were that such gloomy  conditions were predominant over most of the Atlantic, and would  continue for some

time, possibly as long as a week. 

The night after they ran into the rain and fog, Doc Savage found  out, beyond a shadow of doubt. that Bruze

had not been left behind. The  discovery came about in a fashion that promised violent death. 

Doc and his men were at a late cabaret entertainment held for the  passengers in the main dining room.

Broadway theatrical performers,  paying for Mediterranean cruises by entertaining the steamship  passengers,

furnished the talent. 

There was a young lady dancer, very comely, at whom Monk had been  casting admiring eyes. He had not as

yet spoken to her, however. 

"One look at that thing you call a face will ruin the trip for  her," Ham had assured Monk unkindly, when he

saw how the wind was  blowing. 


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Monk had about decided to take a chance on that. 

Doc and his crowd had a ringside table. Behind them many passengers   tardy arrivals  were standing,

and crowding each other to get a  better view of the young woman dancer, who was nothing if not

accomplished. 

No one noticed a rather hardlooking individual quit the assemblage  and amble out of the dining room,

pretending to be casual about it.  Another, also a vicious character, did the same thing. Then another!  Soon

nearly a dozen had departed. 

These were all men who were occupying the costliest cabins. They  gathered in one of these highpriced

staterooms. Others were also  present. Fully fifty, altogether! 

A grim, hawkfaced giant occupied a chair in the center of the  cabin. The night was warm, made sticky by

the rain, and he wore no  shirt. His torso was enormously muscled. He had a set of biceps which  were only a

little smaller than footballs. 

He sat in a sort of fierce silence until every one was present. 

"Savage and his gang are watching the cabaret!" growled the last  fellow to enter. 'There ain't no danger of 'em

eavesdroppin' on us!" 

The evillooking man in the chair shifted about impatiently. The  big muscles seemed to crawl like slithering

animals under his skin. 

"Tonlght we start workin':" he said abruptly. 'We'll follow our  usual plan  the same scheme we've worked

on the other ships. Only,  we'll add a bit to it. The first thing we'll do is get rid of Doc  Savage and his outfit!" 

The other men  they crowded every available inch of floor space   looked like a cold wind had blown

upon them. 

"That won't be so easy, Bruze!" one muttered. 

The overmuscled man sneered at him. 'Afraid?" 

The one who had muttered did not answer. 

"Don't you guys get worried." Bruze held up his right arm and  flexed the muscles. The limb seemed to

acquire additional ligaments   it became unbelievably huge and hard. 

"This Doc Savage may be a strong man, but he can't handle me!"  Bruze growled, obviously proud of the

display. "I can tear 'em to  pieces with my bare hands!" 

The others shifted uneasily. If they held any doubts, it would not  have been wise to voice them. They

swabbed their tongues over dry lips  and kept silent. 

Bruze tapped his musclebloated arm. "But I won't use this!" He  transferred the tapping to his forehead. "I'll

use this! And I'll lay  you it's as good as anything Doc Savage has got!" 

Again, no one voiced skepticism. Bruze was a supreme egotist To  dispute his word was to invite a taste of his

terrible strength and the  murderous torture his huge hands could inflict. 


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The big man's shirt lay on a table. He picked it up, disclosing a  cluster of six glass bottles which the garment

had covered. These held  a rather colorless liquid. 

He distributed them among six men. 

"You cents know what to do!" he growled. "One bottle for Doc Savage  and each of his five pals!" 

The six nodded nervously. 

"After those bottles'5 do her work. we go ahead with our usual  plan!" Bruze continued. "Do you all savvy

what you're to do?" 

To a man, they bobbed an affirmative. 

"You ought to!" their monster leader leered. "You've done the same  thing on other ships often enough! Now,

get the blazes out of here!  Vamose!" 

The stateroom rapidly emptied its unsavory brood. 

When the last man had departed. Bruze arose, exercised his vast  limbs briefly. then stepped to a large

wardrobe trunk. He ensconced  himself inside and pulled the two halves of the trunk together. 

It was a cramped hiding place. but it had protected him from  stewards who might have reported his presence

to Doc Savage. Bruze had  evaded Doc's actual search by shifting from one end of the liner to the  other while

disguised as a greasesmeared engineer. 

Air entered the trunk through cunningly concealed apertures. Very  faintly, the jangling of an orchestra in the

cabaret reached him. 

DOWN in the cabaret. all the performers had appeared on the floor  for the grand finale. The entertainment

was over a moment later. 

Doc and his men moved to the upper deck in a compact group and  turned toward their staterooms, which

were situated close together. 

Monk stretched a cavernous mouth in a yawn. "It looks like this  voyage is going to be quiet, after all." 

He was soon to find out just how mistaken he was. 

Separating, they entered their respective quarters. 

Moving without haste, Doc slipped out of his dinner coat and  unfastened his black vest. He noted nothing out

of the ordinary about  the room. 

A vacuum jug held ice water. Doc poured out a glassful. sipped it,  and found it a bit too cold. His vast

knowledge of the human physique  had taught him it was unnecessary, if not unwise, to shock the system  by

drinking excessively cold water. 

He flung the glass of Chill liquid into the washbowl. A sizzling  swish! Foul brownish Vapor puffed from the

bowl! It spread with ugly  speed, filling all the room. 


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Long before the hideous cloud reached the spot where he had stood,  Doc was outside. He had recognized the

danger instantly. A plug must  have been shoved down the washbowl drain, and some chemical poured atop  it

a chemical which produced a poisonous vapor when mixed with  water! 

In the corridor, he slammed the door. Scarcely pausing, he flung to  Monk's cabin, which was nearest. The

door was locked. A single blow of  mighty knuckles caved it inward! 

Monk was sprawled, a contorted heap, on the floor. 

Holding his breath, Doc dived inside. His powerful bronze hands  lifted Monk's bulk easily, bore it into the

hall, and out of range of  the deadly vapor. 

Doc grasped Monk's wrist, feeling for a pulse. And as he felt, a  strange, cold fixedness of expression came

upon his face. The metal of  his mighty body seemed to freeze in a wintry blast of horror. 

Monk was dead! 

TRAVELING with a speed that all but defied the eye, Doc whipped to  Ham's cabin. He broke down the door,

entered holding his breath  and  carried out the slack body of the lawyer. 

Ham was also dead! 

Rapidly, Doc tried the other three staterooms. Renny, Long Tom, and  Johnny had escapethe fate of the other

two, not having as yet gotten  around to washing up for the night. 

"Move the bodies out of range of the Vapor!" Doc rapped. The three  survivors complied, their faces set in

slightly inhuman masks. Monk   Ham! They could not quite believe the pair were dead. They looked about

blankly for Doc, only to discover the big bronze man was nowhere about. 

Doc, holding his breath against the diabolic gas, had reentered his  suite. Wrenching open a bag, he secured

what he wanted  tools of the  two trades with which, of all others, he was most skilled. 

He was back at the side of his three companions in an incredibly  short interval. 

Doc's three men stared dully as the bronze giant went to work.  Then, slowly, as they looked on, something

resembling normalcy came  back into their eyes. They leaned forward tensely, hardly breathing.  And a sort of

incredulous hope came upon their faces. 

There on the corridor floor, under the nonetoobright ship lights,  they were witnessing one of the miracles

of modern surgical skill. 

The hearts of both Monk and Ham had stopped. Respiration had  ceased. To all appearances, they were

lifeless. 

The thing Doc Savage was doing had been accomplished before by  other great surgeons. But probably never

under such conditions! To the  three watchers, who knew but little of such things, what happened  smacked of

the touch of a supernatural being. 

For Doc Savage, introducing adrenalin and other stimulants with a  long hypodermic needle, which actually

reached the hearts of the two  men, caused the pulse to start once more. With a respiratory pump he  cleared

the residue of the poisonous vapor out of their lungs, and got  breathing under way. 


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An hour, he worked! Two! three! 

It was a great moment when Monk and Ham, now transplanted to  berths, opened their eyes. Twenty minutes

later, they were able to  exchange faint scowls. 

Their eyes sought Doc's mighty bronze form. They were not yet able  to talk coherently. But their gaze

conveyed their thoughts  their  knowledge that they once more owed their lives to this amazing man of

metal who could accomplish miracles. 

Doc had saved them from peril on other occasions; he had often  snatched them from the brink of death. But

this time he had gone  farther, into the depths of the black beyond itself, to bring them  back. 

DOC remained with the two victims through the remainder of the  night, except for a few minutes spent

getting rid of the deadly  chemical in the staterooms where it had not yet been vaporized. This he

accomplished simply by pouring water on the stuff, while holding his  breath, and letting it dissipate through a

porthole. 

Several times he administered additional restoratives to Monk and  Ham. Their heart action was still weak,

and they were two very ill men.  It was evident, however, that they were going to recover. This  knowledge

moved everybody to cheerfulness. 

"How does it feel to be dead?" Renny boomed at Ham. 

"Yeah!" Long Tom grinned. "What'd you see in the hereafter?" 

Ham smiled faintly. "Were we really dead?" 

"I'll tell a man!" 

At the moment, Monk's homely features bore a film of perspiration. 

"I knew it!" Ham croaked cheerfully. "It was just like I always  thought it would be!" 

"What're you talkin' about?" Long Tom asked, puzzled. "When I was  dead," Ham explained, "I saw a big

green guy with horns, a spike tail,  and a pitchfork. It was the devil, sure enough! He went tearing past  me.

And a minute later, I saw him chasing Monk!" 

"You're a liar!" Monk squawked. 

"Liar  nothing! You're still sweating from the race!" 

Everybody laughed. They were back to normal, these two. The old  feud was on again. 

It was decided that Renny, Long Tom, and Johnny should stand guard  over the two invalids. They armed

themselves with compact little  machine guns which were Doc's own invention. 

These weapons resembled slightly oversize automatics fitted with  curled magazines. They were capable of a

firing speed which exceeded  even modern airplane machine guns. In operation, their roar was like  the note of

a monster bull fiddle. 


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Doc and his men had a fired policy against taking human life, even  in the most heated combat. Their enemies,

however, had a recurrent  habit of coming to an untimely end in traps which they themselves set  for Doc's

group. 

At the moment there was a grim look on the faces of Renny and the  others. It was not unlikely that their rule

against taking life might  go by the boards, should Bruze attack this stateroom. 

Doc quitted the cabin. He vouchsafed no word about where he was  going; his men did not ask. They knew he

was embarking on a lonehanded  killer hunt 

It was the hour of dawn. But there was no sunlight. The sky was  piled full of slate clouds. These hung so low

that they seemed to  scrape the funnels of the Cameronic. And they leaked rain which washed  the decks

steadily. 

THE night had produced other hideous developments. The first hint  of this came to Doc when he heard two

stewards talking excitedly. 

"The operator went nuts!" 

"Yeah! He must have!" 

"Sure, he did! Two of the firstclass passengers saw part of it!  They heard the racket and ran into the radio

room. The crazy operator  was smashing the apparatus!" 

"Had he already killed his partner?" 

"That's what the two passengers said. Then the crazy guy shot  himself through the brain!" 

Doc faded away from the vicinity. A few seconds later, he appeared  in the radio room. 

The place was large. Around the walls were cabinets and panels for  apparatus. Large switchboards bracketed

to the floor bore other  mechanism. The wireless installation on the Cameronic consisted of four  complete

transmitting and receiving sets  two short wave and two long  wave. At least two operators were on duty at

all times. 

The place was now a shambles. Every item of apparatus was smashed  beyond repair A fire ax had apparently

been used in the job. Switch  arms and hacked wire littered the floor. 

Over everything was spread a snow of broken glass fragments from  the numerous vacuum tubes. 

One radio operator reposed in a corner. The fire ax had cleaved his  head. Flaky glass hung to his clothing. 

The second operator lay in the center of the wrecked room. He had  been shot, obviously with a revolver on

the floor near by. 

The Cameronic's physician was present. He pointed to the radio man  who had died by bullet. "This fellow

killed the other, wrecked the  place, then slew himself." 

Doc's flakegold eyes roved around the room. 

"I think not," he said softly. 


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The ship's medico bristled. "Ridiculous! Two firstclass passengers  saw it happen!" 

Doc glanced again at the wireless operator who was supposed to have  destroyed the apparatus and then shot

himself. To the bronze man's  discerning eye, it was plain that nothing of the sort had happened. The  radio

man had not even been in the room while the mechanism was being  wrecked! 

Particles of glass from the vacuum tubes littered everything else,  but there was none on the clothing of the

fellow who had been shot. Had  he broken the apparatus, some pieces of glass would certainly have  clung to

his garments. 

"Where are the two firstclass passengers who saw it happen?" Doc  asked grimly. 

The medico blinked the lids of his eyes owlishly. This bronze man  had irked him at first; now, his presence

was a bit frightening. 

"They're around somewhere." The physician peered about "There they  are. That's them!" 

He pointed at two men. They wore snappy sport clothes, although it  was a rainy day. Their ties and shirts

were a bit loud for good taste.  They had hard eyes, a pugnacious manner. 

"Whatcha wavin' a hand at us for?" one growled. 

Doc went over. His movements were effortless, pantherish. His big  metallic form seemed to glide. 

"You saw this?" 

"What's it to you?" 

"You saw it?" 

The pair made snarly mouths. Their shoulders hunched truculently.  But their eyes roved in an uneasy way. 

"Phooey on you!" one muttered. 

Doc's stare ranged their clothing. 

"How did those fine pieces of glass get on your garments?" Their  eyes popped. They wet their lips,

swallowed, wet their lips again. 

Doc knew the signs. They were thinking up a lie. 

"We rushed in while the radio guy was bustin' up his outfit," one  sneered. "We tried to stop 'im. The glass

must've got on us then." 

DOC SAVAGE moved  moved so swiftly that there was only a blur of  bronze. The two hardlooking men

squawked in surprise. They stumbled  back, bewildered, not understanding. For Doc had done nothing but

touch  each lightly upon the face. 

"Slap us, will yer!" one gritted. 

He spaded a hand under his flashy coat. His companion did the same. 


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Then a bewildering thing happened. Both men seemed to go to sleep  on their feet. They fell heavily. 

Two guns which they had partly drawn went bouncing across the deck. 

The Cameronic  medico howled: "What's the matter? What'd you do?" 

Doc did not clarify the mystery. 

A metallic giant in the rain, he made for the bridge. The water  strung down out of the heavens like oyster

soup. Wind stirred it about  in little whirls. 

Doc wore no hat, and the rain seemed to strike him without wetting.  His bronze hair, smooth and straight as a

carefully sculptured  skullcap, had the aspect of being impervious to moisture. 

Captain Ned Stanhope of the Cameronic occupied quarters directly  below the bridge. His chief officers also

had cabins there. 

The skipper was not on the bridge. Doc tapped knuckles on the door  of his office. 

"Who is it?" The voice was Captain Stanhope's; but it was a voice  weirdly changed. Gone was the whooping

roar of an oldtime seafarer.  The tone was whining, forced. 

"Doc Savage." 

A long minute passed. "What d'you want?" 

For answer, Doc opened the door and went in. 

Captain Stanhope screamed: "Get out! What the blazes d'you mean by  walkin' in uninvited?" 

More than ever like a little old grandma, the skipper hunched in a  swivel chair before his desk. His eyes held

a strange glare. His  nervous trembling was bothering him more than usual. A black revolver  lay on the desk

at his elbow. 

The cabin light  artificial illumination was necessary because of  the besmudged skies  played with eerie

effect in Doc's golden eyes. 

"What is wrong, Captain?" 

"Nothing! Damn you, what does it look like was wrong?" This was a  very different Captain Stanhope from

the affable old man with whom Doc  had previously dealt. "What d'you want? Tell me! Then get out!" 

"It's about the radio operators  " 

"I know all about them! You can't tell me anything! Get out of  here!" 

"You know they were murdered?" 

Captain Stanhope's large eyes rolled. "You're crazy!" 

"Both operators were killed by  " 


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Captain Stanhope interrupted with a shrill whine. He grabbed his  black gun off the desk, pointed it at Doc,

and cocked it. 

"Clear out!" he snarled. "I don't want to hear your talk! You're a  damn trouble maker! You asked to search

my ship, and I let you! I  should've known then you were nuts! Blast my timbers! You ain't gonna  turn my

ship upside down!" 

"Captain Stanhope  " 

"Shut up! Get out!" The revolver darted menacingly. Saying nothing  more, Doc left the skipper's cabin. 

DOC SAVAGE advised his men of the new developments, finishing with  a flat statement. "The two in sport

clothes killed the operators and  ruined the radio apparatus, of course." 

Renny rattled his enormous fists together. "But what's got into the  skipper?" 

"He seems to have decided he doesn't like us." Doc's voice, if it  had changed expression at all, was a bit more

dry. 

"Is he in with this Bruze?" 

Doc's reply was slow. "That  remains to be seen." 

Leaving his men in the cabin, Doc prowled a bit. He made several  discoveries which added to the tenseness

of the situation. 

First, the baggage room had been raided during the night. All  trunks and suitcases had been ripped open, the

contents scattered. 

A portable radio transmitter and receiver carried in Doc's luggage  had been ruined beyond repair. So had two

compasses. 

A visit to the workshop maintained aboard the Cameronic disclosed a  foray had also been made there. All

insulated wire, spare vacuum tubes  for the radio sets  anything which could be used to construct a  wireless

outfit  had been ruined or thrown overboard. 

The Cameronic physician encountered Doc. He had moved the two  unconscious men in sport attire to their

cabins. He wanted Doc to  explain what was wrong with them  what made them sleep so deeply. 

Doc did not enlighten the medico. 

"I'll visit them and bring them out of it," he said instead. "Then  we'll see what they can tell us." 

But the pair were gone from their cabins. Suspecting what had  happened, Doc went out on the rainwashed

decks. There he found the  evidence  marks where bodies had been dragged to the rail and flung  overboard. 

Callous murder! The two had been under the influence of a drug,  administered by a tiny hypodermic needle

held in Doc's hand when he had  slapped them lightly. He had intended to revive them and make them  talk. 

Bruze must have fathomed his intent and disposed of the pair. 


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Doc returned to his friends. 

Hours dragged. Nothing untoward happened. When mealtime came, they  consumed concentrated rations

from their own baggage  stuff they were  sure was not poisoned. 

Life on the Cameronic was apparently going on as usual. Passengers  walked the deck, some laughing and

some complaining about the drizzly  weather. The orchestra played, mechanical horse races were held, and

that night there was a dance. 

The foghorn hooted at monotonous intervals, a hoarse voice in the  abyss of rain and fog and cloud. 

Like a monster lost in the soupy fastness of another sphere, the  Cameronic plowed ahead. 

Chapter VII. THE DEVIL'S BREW

SEVEN days! Seven years, it seemed! Seven ages in a fantastic world  where there was only a dark, sinister

sea and clouds and rain. 

Not once did the clear blue sky appear. Nor did anything happen,  although time and again during the

interminable hours did Doc Savage  prowl the decks and lounges, inviting trouble. 

Monk and Ham were on their feet, somewhat shaky, but otherwise as  good as new. 

"I never saw such weather!" Monk grumbled. 

Ham wiped moisture off the blade of his sword cane. "If you ask me,  it was time we was getting to New

York!" 

"The ship has been traveling at reduced speed," Renny reminded. 

Monk snorted. "We may not have been going toward New York! Seven  days! No telling where we are!" 

Doc entered the discussion quietly. "I think we've waited about  long enough, brothers. I'm going to have

another try at the captain. He  hasn't shown himself on deck for the last week." 

He went forward. At Captain Stanhope's cabin, he was met with  profanity, orders to mind his own business

and a pointed gun. 

Doc did nothing violent. The situation did not call for that just  yet. Captain Stanhope was acting strangely,

but he was within his  rights in refusing to discuss matters with a passenger. Too, since the  slaying of the radio

operators and the destruction of the wireless  apparatus, nothing untoward had occurred. 

But for seven days, the Cameronic had been sailing blind   and no  telling what direction! 

Doc sought for some of Captain Stanhope's officers. He had done  that before, but had been strangely unable

to locate them. 

He consulted a steward and learned the Cameronic mates were keeping  very close to their quarters, just as the

skipper had been doing. 


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"They even have their meals brought forward." 

Going to the cabin of the first mate, Doc tapped on the door. It  was opened enough to let a stubby automatic

snout protrude. 

"Clear out!" snarled the mate. "We've got orders from Captain  Stanhope to plug you if you pull anything

funny! And we're not to talk  to you!" 

Doc temporized, but the door was slammed in his face. 

He went away with an impression that the mate had been a badly  scared man  a man frightened into acting

as he had done. 

"There's something devilish about this," Doc told his five friends.  "The skipper and his officers seem to be

terrorized. I think it's time  we looked into the thing." 

The others agreed. They fell to discussing the best procedure. 

And while they talked, the sun suddenly appeared. Its warm rays  slanted through the porthole like something

brilliant and strange. 

Discussion stopped. Doc rapped orders. Within a few moments, they  were on deck, equipped with hastily

made contraptions which would serve  as sextants. They took celestial sightings; they consulted their  watches;

they performed intricate mathematical calculations. 

The result was startling! 

"Holy cow!" Renny muttered. "We're thousands of miles from where we  should be!" 

"Just where are we?" demanded Ham, who had not secured satisfactory  readings from his makeshift

instrument. 

"I'll have to figure it more closely," Renny replied. "But you can  bet on one thing: we're just about as far from

New York as we could  be!" 

Doc tossed his own instrument aside, announcing: "Brothers, this  ship has been off her course the whole

seven days!" 

MONK emitted an ominous rumble. "I'm in favor of starting  something! Maybe a little action will touch off

the fireworks, so we  can tell what this is all about!" 

Doc nodded. "Discovery that we're off our course thousands of miles  changes things. Captain Stanhope is no

longer entitled to run this  ship." 

Monk grinned. "Meanin' that we're going to take it over?" 

"Exactly that!" 

There was no more argument or discussion. A tight, grim group, Doc  and his men went forward. They

expected trouble, and were prepared for  it. 


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The trouble was not long coming. Weather tarpaulins were up on the  bridge of the Cameronic. A knife blade

furtively opened a rip in one of  these. A rifle barrel appeared. 

Doc's alert eyes discerned the weapon. What followed took only snap  parts of a second. Doc swept the

compact little machine gun from Monk's  furry paw. It stuttered  twelve reports, perhaps! They were so

swift  that no ear could have counted them, or hardly have distinguished them  one from the other. 

Behind the weather cloth, a man jumped up like a toy on a string.  He screamed, whirled around and around,

dervish fashion, and pawed at a  mutilated arm. Then he ran for cover. 

Passengers jumped up from deck chairs, or ran from within the  superstructure, to stare. They had not

recognized the roar of the  superfirer as shots; the sound had been but a deafening moan. 

Doc and his men charged. 

On the bridge, two men ran into view with automatic pistols. But  before they could fire, Doc's compact

weapon racketed again. The pair  seemed to melt down as lead tore at their legs. 

Doc was refraining deliberately from killing; his men would do  likewise. 

Returning Monk's rapidfirer, Doc veered into the superstructure.  He rounded a corner and sped down the

passage which led to Captain  Stanhope's quarters. His bronze hands held no weapon. 

A hardfaced man popped out of a door, two dark, ugly automatics  held at waist level. The guns coughed like

angry steel animals! Bullets  chopped hardwood splinters from the corridor paneling, broke a  steward's

annunciator board, and collapsed the bulbs in a light  fixture. 

The slugs passed over Doc's head, for he had flattened low. Only  inches above the carpet, he hit the gunman's

legs. 

The fellow tilted over. A chopping blow, expertly delivered,  plunged him into oblivion before he slammed to

the floor. 

Doc ran on, reached Captain Stanhope's cabin, and tried the door.  He had the foresight to stand far to one side

while doing so, which was  fortunate. For lead, snapping holes in the hardwood. stormed through a  spot his

body would ordinarily have occupied! 

Pandemonium was spreading on the Cameronic. Men passengers were  yelling; women shrieking! Up on the

bridge, men howled, cursed! Pistols  rattled; rifles spat more violently! And every once in a while, like a

frightsome music over the whole, the amazing little machine guns in the  hands of Doc's friends emitted

earsplitting bullfiddle hoots. 

BULLETS abruptly ceased eating at the door of Captain Stanhope's  cabin. Out of the room came sounds of

scuffling, faint cries, and gasps  that were louder than cries. 

Doc's fist levered like a bronze sledge. The door opened inward  under the blow, leaving the lock behind. 

Two men struggled in the center of the skipper's office. Their  animated figures clarified the mystery of

Captain Stanhope's surly  behavior during the last seven days. 


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The Cameronic's  commander had been acting a part at the point of a  gun! He had turned upon his captor 

was now fighting the man. He was  using a clubbed pistol, evidently an empty weapon which he had been

forced to use to threaten Doc. 

Doc lunged in. He was a bit too late. Captain Stanhope, little old  grandma that he was, had not the strength to

match his opponent. 

The latter twisted his gun into the skipper's chest, and pulled the  trigger. 

The roaring explosion caused the gun to jump backward from the  skipper's chest as if it were a scared thing!

The bullet tunneled  through Captain Stanhope's heart, went on, and parted his spine. He was  instantly dead

dead beyond even Doc Savage's miraculous ability to  restore life. 

The killer sought to turn his gun on Doc, but didn't succeed. It  was doubtful if he even saw the fist which hit

him. But his ugly jaw  suddenly skewered over and under one ear. 

The blow turned him entirely around. His arms jerked foolishly, his  gun hanging by the trigger guard to one

of his fingers. He crashed to  the floor with a jar which upset an inkwell on the desk, and caused a  pencil to

roll to the carpet. 

There was no one else in the commander's quarters. 

Doc spun out into the corridor and up a private companion which  gave to the enclosed portion of the bridge,

more properly the  wheelhouse. 

At the top, two men stabbed at him with knives. But they 

might as well have tried to spear an enraged bumble bee with  toothpicks. 

Doc's tendonwrapped hand darted at one wrist, caught it, and  twisted. Crunching, the arm acquired a

grotesque shape and began to  flop like a string in a wind, as the owner bounded about. screaming. 

The second knifeman slashed desperately, felt a pain in his hand,  stared! His eyes came out like seeds as he

saw the bronze fingers that  had trapped his bladegripping fist. The next instant, he was  screeching and

trying to pull eight inches of steel out of his own leg. 

To his grave, that man carried an insane impression that he had  stabbed himself. The blade had been shoved

into his leg so swiftly that  his sluggish reflexes had failed to tell him how it had happened. 

A stocky fiend with a gun came flying, traveling backward, into the  wheelhouse. He was already senseless.

knocked so by Renny's great  fists. He banged headlong into the upright frame which held the  gyrosteering

apparatus. 

Renny followed him in. Doc's other four aids appeared in quick  succession. 

Monk, grinning fiercely. one hand over a knife slash on his homely  face, said: "We've got the fort!" 

"How many did you account for?" Doc rapped. 

"Five or six!" 


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"And I got four! Any sign of Bruze?" 

"Not a hair!" 

"Then our work is far from done! It stands to reason he's aboard!  We'd better get him while we're warmed

up!" 

The gyro steersman was taking care of the wheel, so no one was  needed on deck for the time being. 

They dived for the companion which led below. 

Bullets streamed up at them to the accompaniment of a clamor that  sounded like many ball bearings shaken

in a box. A submachine gun this  time! Either Bruze, or some of his henchmen! 

The gunman had been nervous. and had fired at mere glimpse of Doc,  giving the big bronze man a chance to

twist out of range. 

Growling angrily, Renny pointed his compact rapidfirer at the  bridge floor. Using the bullet stream like a

saw, clipping in fresh  drums of cartridges as they emptied, he opened a hole in the stout  planking. 

Doc went down it, while his companions spread in a flanking  movement. 

The room into which he dropped was the cabin office of the first  mate. The latter individual sprawled across

his berth, stringing  scarlet from a smashed nose, and with more red fluid soaking a patch of  his scalp. He was

breathing noisily. 

The sight told Doc what he had already guessed  that the chief  officers as well as unfortunate Captain

Stanhope had been terrorized by  gunmen for the past seven days. Obviously, the mate's captor had  knocked

him out before fleeing. 

The door was locked. Doc drove it down with a sharp kick. He  expected to find the machine gunner in the

passage, but was  disappointed. The man had fled, together with such of his comrades as  had been guarding

the other Cameronic  officers. 

A companionway leading deeper into the innards of the liner  a  shortcut route to the engine rooms 

seemed the most likely course  for them to have taken. 

Men were beating at nearby cabin doors, yelling. They were the  other ship officers! 

Doc released them. 

"The devils!" choked the second mate. "They've had guns on us for  the last week! Followed us everywhere

we went, threatening to kill us  if we made a break! There's forty or so of 'em!" 

"It was Captain Stanhope's fault!" snarled another. "The damned old  woman was afraid some of us would get

killed if we made a break! He  advised us to take the safe course, and do as we were told! The old  ninny!" 

"Captain Stanhope is dead," Doc said. 

A startled look came over the man who had berated the unfortunate  skipper. He fumbled absently at his own

throat. 


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"I  didn't  know," he mumbled, suddenly ashamed of his outburst 

Doc's five aids came up, bolting in vain for further fighting. Down  the companion which led, eventually, to

the engine room, Doc started.  The others clattered the steps at his back. 

"Look!" Doc pointed. 

Wet scarlet drops were scattered at intervals on the companion  tread. 

"They went this way! One of them is wounded. Maybe more!" 

Doc and his men followed the red trail. It led along corridors,  down staircases, through more passages 

nearing the stern and the  engine room. 

Unexpectedly, a colossal, unseen fist seemed to strike them. 

It spanked them back. It crowded in their eardrums until they  almost burst. 

An explosion! Thumping and rumbling, it traveled over the Cameronic  from stem to stern! Searing hot air,

scalding steam. The stench of  cordite, gushed past them with hurricane force! 

They reeled upon their feet. then dived forward. Ten feet brought  them to the engine room. That was why the

blast had seemed so  tremendous  the engine compartment was very near. 

They looked in. The instant they did so, they knew the engines were  disabled. 

DOC pushed forward, breasting waves of steam which felt hot enough  to wash the bronze skin off his body. 

All about him men shrieked in agony, or fought each other to get  out of the heatseared hell. Doc ignored

them; they were too many to  carry to safety before that flood of scalding water from the boilers  rose high

enough to melt the flesh from a man's legs. 

He concentrated on finding certain valves and getting them shut. He  soon accomplished the task. Then,

working along the arched cavern of  the boiler room, he closed the oil burners. 

Several engineers, who had retained their presence of mind, gave  assistance. 

A marvelously short time  four or five minutes  saw danger of  fire and bursting boilers eliminated. The

powerful ventilators rapidly  sucked the steam from the chambers of the engine rooms. 

For all the force of the explosion, and all the yelling and  screaming and fighting, it developed that no one had

been killed.  Several engineers, however, were seriously burned. But alert medical  attention should pull them

through. 

Of Bruze and his men there was no sign. The problem of coping with  them was temporarily sidetracked,

anyway. 

Doc and his men examined the engines. Turbines  reduction gears   all were smashed beyond repair. At

least four charges of explosive  had been placed, all timed to detonate at the same instant. 

"What worries me  did the blast open the hull plates?" Renny  muttered. 


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An examination disclosed the hull to be intact, although three or  four bulkheads had been blown out. 

"It's plumb lucky the Cameronic is a new ship!" Renny declared. 

During the next few minutes they gave all attention to attending to  the wounded. Emergency kits were

brought into use. The more seriously  hurt were carried to the upperdeck lounge, which was converted into a

temporary hospital. 

Doc was setting a broken arm for a husky oiler when Monk came  rushing in. 

"Say  we've been too busy to take a look at the sea! C'mon out! I  wanta show you somethin'!" 

Doc completed the setting of the arm; then followed Monk out on the  upper deck. 

"Blast it  look." Monk leveled a furry arm at the sea. 

Or was it a sea! Certainly, the flat waste which stretched to the  horizon had none of the aspects of an ordinary

ocean. It looked more  like a vast, dead prairie of strange, sapphire hue. Here and there  weird, whitish spots

lent a mottled appearance. 

There were no waves. Instead, the expanse seemed to bend with the  swell, not unlike a flexible mirror. 

The Cameronic  still moved, for the engines had not been stopped  long. In her wake was a short lane of

intense indigo. Farther back,  this wake was slowly filling with the jaundiced substance which colored  the sea

in all directions. 

Monk felt vacantly of the cut on his face. "Blazes, Doc! What kind  of a place is this?" 

LEANING over the rail, Doc studied the water below. The yellowish  hue, he saw, was caused by a

remarkable species of weed. Weeds which  floated in countless profusion! 

Long and stringy, the bilious stalks bore berries, not unlike  ordinary gooseberr~es. Air cells which supported

the weed resembled  small bladders. 

The mottled appearance of the fantastic sea came from patches of  the weed which had seemingly died. A

macabre, dying waste it was! And  it stretched interminably into the distance. 

Intent study of the monster weed bed  for it was nothing less  than that  showed the existence of a fair

number of primitive life  forms. 

Little, shorttailed crabs were most plentiful, probably because  they were of a yolky hue, blotched over with

white  a color scheme  which blended nicely with their surroundings. 

There were also species of small fish, mollusks, gastrapods,  shrimp, and pipe fish. Most remarkable of all

were the strangely formed  little sea horses. 

Doc borrowed a pair of powerful binoculars from a passenger, that  he might study the life forms more

closely. 

Renny and the others appeared. They looked around blankly,  uneasily. The blazing heat of the sun, the

lifelessness of the sea,  gave the region a moribund air. 


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"Holy cow!" Renny snorted. "What is this place  the Sargasso  Sea?" 

"It would seem so," Doc told him. 

Renny frowned. "But I've been on ships that sailed through the  Sargasso Sea! Right through the thing! And

we never encountered any  weed beds as thick as this! 

Doc considered for a time, his bronze features inscrutable. 

"Over a period of some two thousand years the Sargasso Sea has been  a mystery and a menace," he said

slowly. "Strange and incredible  stories have been told of it. It is just possible, brothers, that those  wild tales

have a basis in fact!" 

Renny seemed doubtful. "But expeditions have visited the place and  reported that, although the weeds were

there, they were not so  extremely thick." 

"Expeditions could have missed the true Sargasso!" Doc pointed out.  "According to the legends, the place is a

great weed bed to which  derelict ships are carried, to be entrapped and float through the ages.  The actual

location of the Sargasso might vary from time to time, as  the weed bed is moved by the ocean current." 

Monk emitted a humorless chuckle and pointed at the strange  sapphire sea. "Is this the Sargasso Sea, or isn't

it?" 

"Do you want to bet it isn't?" questioned the bony Johnny, who  never wagered unless it was on a sure thing. 

Chapter VIII. DERELICT

A SINGLE shot whacked in the depths of the liner, and its echoes  cascaded through the corridors and lounges

like satanic mirth. 

"That was near the stern!" said Ham. 

They ran for the sound, and met a steward who was reeling about,  digging splinters out of his face. He had, it

developed, thrust his  head down a hatch, only to be shot at. 

Bruze and his gang had barricaded themselves in the rear portion of  the Cameronic. 

"You fellows hang back!" Doc directed his men, and went forward  alone. 

"Bruze!" he hailed, when near the temporary fortress. 

"Well?" a hoarse voice came thumping back. 

"We're going to give you birds a chance to throw down your weapons  and come out!" 

This got a resounding horse laugh. "You are, huh? Well, we was just  figurin' on givin' you the same chance!" 

"You'd better be sure you're not biting off more than you can  chew!" 

"Yeah? We've done a pretty good job of chewing the bites we've  taken so far, haven't we?" 


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"That's one way of looking at it!" Doc was using care not to show  enough of himself to offer a target. 

"We're givin' you two hours to turn the ship over to us!" Bruze  called fiercely. 

"What will you do with the boat after you get it?" 

"Plenty! You'll find that out!" 

Doc did not doubt the truth of the statement."You fellows are after  the diamonds?" he questioned. 

"Sure! And three million in gold bullion in the strong room! You  didn't know the bullion was aboard, did

ya?" 

"I didn't have a captured bank clerk to torture for the  information!" 

Bruze squawled a curse. "So you found out about the clerk, huh?" 

Doc neglected to mention that he had held only suspicions, until  Bruze's words virtually admitted the murder

of the Alexandria employee  of the American Bank branch. 

"Is that the way you always work?" he inquired. "I mean  do you  usually capture a bank clerk and torture

him until you learn what  outgoing liner is carrying the most money?" 

Bruze laughed nastily. "So you've guessed this ain't the first ship  we've bagged?" 

"You as much as told me when you left that scalp belt in my cabin  with the name of the Cameronic added." 

Bruze's ugly laughter turned to profanity. "No more talkin'! Ten  minutes of the two hours you've got to

surrender in are already gone!" 

"You don't think we're saps enough to give up, do you?" 

"Oh, I don't know! We've got about a dozen sailors and passengers  back here! We'll croak 'em if you hold

out!" 

This was the first information Doc had that Bruze was holding  hostages. He retreated and made hasty

inquiries. Confusion and terror  was still rampant among the passengers. Securing any sort of facts in  the

bedlam was difficult. But at length the truth was evident. 

Bruze was holding at least a dozen prisoners! 

DOC went into council with his five aids. 

"We'd better face the truth," he informed them. "Bruze will no  doubt kill his hostages, just as he says he will.

He's entirely  merciless." 

"You're tellin' us!" Monk muttered, thinking of his own visit into  the domain of death. 

"We've got to spring something on him," Doc continued. "Something  which will show him that murdering his

captives will not save him." 


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"Gas would do the trick  only we haven't got any!" Monk grunted.  Then he looked hopefully at Doc.

"Unless you have some?" 

Doc shook his head. "The only thing I have is the stuff we use in  hypodermic needles to produce

unconsciousness. Unfortunately, we had no  chance to stock up on our usual emergency supplies before we

got into  this mess." 

Descending to the engine room, Doc secured a length of straight  brass tubing which was nearly three feet

long, and approximately a  quarter of an inch in diameter. It had been part of a gauge tube. 

He gave this to Renny and Monk, and explained what he wanted done. 

Grinning widely, the pair of giants departed to perform their  assigned tasks. 

The wild confusion among the passengers was increasing instead of  abating. Whitefaced tourists, looking

over the rail at the dead,  hideous expanse of weedfilled sea, became even more pallid. 

Every individual who had the slightest information on the Sargasso  Sea was broadcasting it at the top of his

voice. Every book on the  subject had already been taken from the library. 

Several women had gone into hysterics, and were being treated with  the wounded in the lounge. The

Cameronic  physician had found four  other medicos on the passenger list, and these gentlemen had been

pressed into service. They were probably the coolest of the lot. 

Not all of the passengers had lost their control, however. Many  stood in groups, talking calmly or seeking to

quiet those who had  fears. 

The most troublesome persons were panicky souls, forty or fifty in  number, who had the idea the Cameronic

was going to sink as a result  of the blast which had ruined the engines. They were insisting on  taking to the

lifeboats. 

Lastly, there were a few persons who could not get it through their  heads that the whole thing was not a joke

some fantastic  entertainment put on by the Cameronic personnel. 

"It's a swell show!" insisted one of these gentlemen. "The best I  ever saw! And I've been on plenty of cruises.

Why, it beats the show  they usually put on when a ship crosses the equator! It beats it all  hollow!" 

Some one offered to take the gentleman down and show him the ruined  engines, and see if he thought that

was a joke. And how about the  scalded engineers? 

Since it was evident that the Cameronic  officers, dazed by the  loss of their skipper, were going to have

trouble keeping things under  control, Doc Savage called a meeting on the forward sun deck. Nearly  every

one, except the physicians and the injured, attended. 

Doc told them, in a powerful but unexcited voice, which carried to  every individual, exactly what had

happened. 

"The situation is certainly not a joke!" he informed them. "But  neither is it something to get panicky over.

The ship is not sinking,  nor is it likely to do so." 


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His remarkable voice, his ability to put over facts distinctly and  without exaggeration, had produced a strong

effect upon the crowd.  Those in Lear were calmed to a marked degree. 

"The men barricaded in the stern are heartless killers," Doc  continued. "They are as likely as not to shoot any

one they catch sight  of! For that reason, it is advisable that everybody remain up here for  the next few hours

or until we take care of the gang in the stern." 

"Are we actually in the Sargasso Sea?" demanded a man. 

"You are!" 

MONK and Renny were waiting when Doc left the crowd. They carried a  small tin sirup pail, which was well

wrapped with wire and fitted with  a fuse, which Monk had fashioned out of a string soaked in gasoline and

wrapped with paper. 

This thing resembled a bomb, but the carelessness with which Monk  handled it showed that it held no

explosive. 

Renny carried a large glass bottle containing a colorless liquid.  The fact that he took a drink from the bottle

before they moved aft  demonstrated the liquid was merely water. 

Monk also had the tube of brass. He turned this over to Doc. 

"You understand how we're to work it?" Doc questioned. 

"You bet!" 

They separated, Monk and Renny remaining together, but Doc taking a  devious course of his own. 

Monk and Renny reached a spot near the fortified Bruze and his  crew. 

Monk flung the bottle. It landed near a door in the superstructure  behind which their enemies lurked. Glass

burst and water sprayed the  deck. 

"Hey!" Bruze's coarse voice boomed. "What's goin' on here?" 

A moment later, Renny touched a match to the gasolinesaturated  string which comprised the makeshift fuse

on the fake bomb. He threw  the thing. It skittered along the deck, and stopped directly in front  of the door.

The fuse blazed brightly 

"A bomb!" Bruze squawled. "Throw it overboard, somebody, before it  explodes!" 

A toughlooking man bounded out of the door, grasped the imitation  bomb, and heaved it over the rail. Then

he whirled for the door. 

He never reached it. A great drowsiness seemed to seize him. He  reeled, then slouched down on the deck. He

chanced to land directly in  the water from the broken bottle. 

Bruze raved profanely. He started to jump out of the door to rescue  his man. Machine guns, moaning in the

fists of Monk and Renny, drove  him back. 


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It was three or four minutes before Bruze ceased raving, and his  men stopped a wild barrage of bullets

launched in hopes of reaching  Monk and Renny. 

Then Doc's strong voice pealed: "Bruze!" 

"Yeah?" 

"You saw what happened to your man?" 

"Yeah! You got him with some kind of damn gas from that bottle!" 

"All right! We'll use the same stuff on you birds if you don't come  to terms. We were just testing it out!" 

To this, Bruze returned only an uneasy silence. 

A FEW seconds after this, Doc and his two men were together. Monk  and Renny were grinning. 

"It worked like a charm!" Monk chuckled. 

Doc nodded, hefting the long brass tube. It was not gas which had  overcome Bruze's comrade; Doc had

simply winged him with a dart blown  from the tube  a dart tipped with the drug which produced the

sleeping unconsciousness. 

"Bruze is going to do some tall thinking," Renny declared grimly.  "He thinks we've got a supply of gas,

thanks to that trick." 

That Bruze had engaged in some serious thought was evident before  long. 

"Savage!" he called. 

"Well?" Doc demanded, making his expressive voice coldly arrogant. 

"Maybe we can make terms!" 

"I doubt it! You see, we've got you just where we want you!" 

The coarseness in Bruze's voice did not entirely hide a strain of  stark fear. 

"Listen!" he called; "give us some lifeboats and turn the diamonds  over to us, and we'll leave the ship!" 

Monk took it on himself to answer that suggestion. "Don't make us  laugh!" 

The next three or four minutes were marked by some animated  discussion in the stern. None of the words

were audible, but from the  nature of the voices, it seemed that most of Bruze's men were insisting  they make

the best terms possible. 

"Just give us the lifeboats and plenty of food and water, and we'll  leave!" Bruze shouted finally. 

Monk winked. "We'd better take 'im up!" he whispered. 

"You will leave the prisoners behind!" Doc yelled. "Better still,  you'll turn them loose at once!" 


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This provoked another conflab among Bruze's cutthroats. 

"Lower the boats and load 'em!" yelled Bruze. "We'll have the  captives drag the painters back to where we

can get hold of 'em! Then  we'll let them go, unharmed!" 

This was done. The various manipulations occupied almost an hour. 

The most remarkable occurrence was when the captives were pulling  the lifeboats, lowered from amidships,

along the rail to the stern.  There were an even dozen in the group. Yet it took every ounce of  strength all

twelve could muster to budge the boats through the weed! 

"You can't tell me this stuff wouldn't trap a ship and hold it  forever!" Ham muttered. "A liner with the power

of this one might be  able to go through, but think of what would happen to a slow freighter  or a sailing

vessel!" 

To all appearances, Bruze went through with his part of the bargain  in honest fashion. The captives were

permitted to reach safety, much to  their relief. 

Bruze and his gang boarded the lifeboats  three of them  in the  shelter of the after deck. 

"What I'm wondering is how they're going to get away through the  weeds." Ham pondered. "Fifty men

couldn't row a boat a hundred yards a  day through the stuff!" 

HAM soon got his answer. 

The three lifeboats appeared unexpectedly  so far behind the  stern that they were out of pistol range. 

Bruze's followers were standing erect, poling the craft ahead. They  had lashed crosspieces to the ends of the

long oars. With these they  shoved against the weeds. 

Doc seized a pair of strong binoculars, adjusted them, and stared. 

"They have a sort of mechanical cutter rigged on the bow of each  boat, and others along the rail!" he

declared. 

Ham was bewildered. "But where'd they get the cutters?" 

"They must have brought them aboard in their baggage in  Alexandria." 

Monk grimaced with all his homely face. "Doggone if they didn't  plan this thing mighty thoroughly!" 

There now came a development which showed Bruze had not lived up to  his part of the bargain as honestly as

he had pretended. 

A worm of black smoke wriggled out of the stern of the liner. It  swelled into a snake, then a flaming monster. 

"Fire!" The cry ran from stem to stern of the Cameronic. 

Members of the crew and passengers poured along the decks, carrying  extinguishers, buckets of water, and

blankets with which to beat the  flames. 


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A fire hose was unlimbered. Luckily, the fire pumps were operated  by electricity from a storagebattery

source, which had not been  damaged by the enginedestroying explosion. 

Bruze had soaked much woodwork with fuel oil, and piled furniture  and fixtures in great heaps. But the

flames were finally controlled and  extinguished. 

The volunteer firemen, tired and bedraggled, lined the rails for a  breath of fresh air. 

Renny scowled at the three distant lifeboats, and mopped  perspiration. 

"The doublecrossers!" he gritted. "Lettin' 'em get away was too  good for 'em!" 

An impish expression came into Monk's little eyes. "Oh, I don't  know! They haven't got a monopoly on

doublecrossin'!" 

"What d'you mean, you missin' link?" 

Monk chuckled. "It was me who filled the water kegs in their  boats!" 

"So what?" 

"I filled 'em with nice salty sea water!" 

Chapter IX. SEA OF THE DEAD

THE men fell to watching the distant lifeboats. Use of binoculars  disclosed that Bruze and his followers had

ceased employing their oars  as poles. The small craft were at rest, just out of range of a  highpowered rifle. 

The glasses separated Bruze's distinctive figure from the others.  Standing erect, he was waving his arms,

conveying orders to his gang.  Soon they began raising sailcloth awnings as a protection from the sun. 

"Making themselves comfortable." Ham tapped the rail thoughtfully  with his sword cane. "I can't understand

this. They have no chance of  reaching land! The nearest shore is many hundreds of miles away! They  can't

retake the Cameronic. What are they going to do out there in  those little boats? Why are they settling down to

wait?" 

Ham was summarizing these puzzling questions largely to hear  himself talk; he knew as well as the others

that no answer was at hand. 

There was an unnerving quality in the flat, slothful, dying expanse  of the sea around about  a quality which

made a man want to talk to  himself for company. Too, there was sinister portent in the way the  three lifeboats

had come to rest a little beyond bullet range. 

They were like birds of carrion, hovering within sight of the  helpless hulk of the Cameronic  as if waiting for

it to die. 

This unwholesome atmosphere was dispelled somewhat by a group of  passengers who came striding along

the deck. These individuals were  substantial and quietmannered  just the sort of men who would be


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leaders in their communities. 

They walked with a grimly purposeful air. That they had something  important on their minds was perfectly

evident. 

"Bet they've held a convention, and voted us the cause of all this  trouble!" Ham muttered. 

The delegation arrived in front of Doc. Their manner was formal,  their faces serious. 

"Mr. Savage!" said the spokesman. "The passengers and crew have  held a meeting. We did some voting. The

results were perfectly  satisfactory to the officers of the Cameronic. We wish you to take  charge, to serve as

dictator for the duration of our present  difficulties." 

The grace with which Doc accepted this honor would have done credit  to a President of the United States

making his inauguration speech. He  stated that there seemed to be no immediate danger, and gave other  facts

calculated to allay fear. 

"There is a goodly supply of food aboard," he explained. "And from  the quantity of marine life in the weed

beds, it is likely that edible  fish are to be found. We may be able to put the weeds themselves  through

chemical processes and obtain some form of food. As for water,  we can easily rig a distilling apparatus to

secure the fresh product." 

His statements resulted in a noticeable slackening of tension. 

Well aware of the cheering effects of music, Doc put the Cameronic  orchestra to work. Then he pushed a

search for any of Bruze's men who  might have been left behind. He hoped to find some of the fellows who

had been wounded or knocked unconscious during the fight at the bridge. 

The hunt drew a blank, however. During the excitement following the  engineroom explosion, Bruze had

evidently collected all his followers. 

"That is too bad!" Ham grumbled. "If we had one of the gang, we  could darn well start him talking, and find

out what is in store for  us." 

MONOTONOUS days followed. Such developments as occurred did nothing  to slacken the feeling of dread

which gnawed at every one. 

Sightings at stars during successive nights showed beyond a shadow  of a doubt that the Cameronic was

drifting at a fair rate. The course  seemed to be somewhat in the form of a swiftly narrowing circle. 

"We are being carried toward the center of the Sargasso Sea," was  Doc's conclusion. 

"You mean that the Sargasso itself is nothing more or less than the  vortex of a gigantic ocean whirlpool?"

Renny questioned. 

"That's the idea. It is the center of what is known as the 

Atlantic whirl, an imaginary point to which the ocean currents  carry all floating objects." 

"I wonder where this weed comes from?" muttered Long Tom, examining  a stalk of the stuff which he had

fished aboard with a wire hook on a  line. 


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"That," Doc told him, "is one of the unsolved mysteries. The  sargassum weed, as it is called, is presumably

torn from distant  tropical coasts  South America, or possibly Africa  and brought  here by the ocean

currents. But, so far as I know, this has not been  definitely proved. Certain it is, however, that the weed is

carried  here, supported by the little air cells on its stalks, to float and  die." 

Long Tom flung the weed away, as if it were something hideous.  "Ugh! I'd call this place the floating

cesspool of the Atlantic!" 

"Others have called it that, too!" 

It required unending effort to fight off the depressing effects of  the jaundiced, ghostly surroundings. For it

was as though they were  adrift in the realm of death. The size of the stately Cameronic  seemed  to shrink on

the listless tundra of dappled ochre. 

Doc kept the orchestra going most of the time. At his suggestion,  only the liveliest tunes were rendered. He

himself devised new  arrangements when the old pieces grew stale, showing in the process  that he possessed a

knowledge of music as remarkable as his learning  along other lines. 

There were frequent boxing and wrestling matches. Doc instituted a  regular military drill, from which no one

but the injured engineers  were excluded. In fact, he gave no one time to sit down and think, for  with thought

would come fear that there was never to be escape from  this domain of death. 

The sun beat down remorselessly, except for one occasion, when  there was a rainstorm. 

This shower supplied Bruze and his gang with drinking water, much  to the disgust of Monk, who had hoped

the brine he had put in the  lifeboat water kegs would eventually bring their enemies to terms 

The continued presence of the three small boats, just out of bullet  range, was itself disquieting. They were

like a trio of vultures. 

Doc and Renny, both supremely expert mechanics, contrived cutters  for the weeds. Instead of fitting them to

the regular lifeboats, they  constructed lighter craft, remindful of racing shells. 

To these thin hulls, they rigged manually operated paddlewheel  contraptions, the wheels being equipped

with spokelike poles which  dipped into the weeds for propulsion. The cutters were geared,  sicklewise, to

operate from the paddlewheel device. 

When the job was done, they had several speedy craft, capable of  carrying from one to a dozen persons. 

In order to try these out, they set forth and chased Bruze and his  crew several miles. A number of shots were

exchanged, but no  casualties resulted. 

That night, Bruze retaliated by moving in and taking longdistance  rifle shots, making it dangerous for any

one to be on deck. 

Doc and his friends put a stop to that by casting out of engine  parts a reasonably efficient muzzleloading

cannon. 

The days dragged into weeks. Never, it seemed, was their plight  going to change. But it did. And the change

was not exactly pleasant. 


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THE hysterical screaming of a woman passenger awakened Doc one  sungloried morning. He lost no time

getting out on deck. 

Off the starboard bow was an object so utterly hideous that it was  easy to understand why the lady passenger

had shrieked at sight of it.  The Cameronic had drifted near the thing during the night, which had  been

somewhat hazy. 

The feminine wails drew other passengers. They flocked to the rails  in pajamas and dressing robes. More than

one face paled after a first  look; more than one breakfast was ruined. 

The thing they were viewing resembled a litter of carelessstacked,  gray, odious bones, festooned over with

layers of vilehued creepers.  It lay there like something throttled and half devoured by the foul  green growth

which covered it. 

Once it had been a ship. A stately, fourmasted clipper! The  toppled masts and spars were the gray things

which had the aspect of  cleanpicked bones. 

"The creepers have sprouted from the hold!" a man muttered. "There  must have been a cargo of seeds

aboard." 

Renny appeared at Doc's side. Uneasiness pulled heavily at the  bigfisted fellow's solemn features. 

"Holy cow!" he breathed. "That's a nice thing to look at before  breakfast! I can't help thinking but maybe the

Cameronic  will turn  into something like that!" 

"Want to work up an appetite?" Doc inquired dryly. 

"You mean by rowing over and having a look? Sure!" 

One of the light shells fitted with weed cutters and  paddlepropelling device was lowered. Doc and his men

got aboard. As  they approached the derelict clipper, the hulk became even more like an  opened grave mound,

vinecovered. 

Nor was the sinister air dispelled when they went aboard. The  bulwarks and rails were decaying, coated with

a repulsive gray mold.  The decking planks gave soggily under their feet. The creepers, pale  and unhealthy

things, draped like ravenous, starved fingers, as if  greedy to feed upon the new life which had come aboard. 

"Danged if I care about this kind of exploring!" Monk grumbled,  flattening suddenly on all fours as the deck

threatened to cave in  under his great weight. 

The ship had obviously been disabled in a storm. The cargo had been  grain, seeds, and empty barrels, it

appeared. The vessel was very low  in the water, kept afloat only by her wooden construction and the  buoyant

nature of her load. 

There was nothing to show how many years the derelict had been in  this weird domain of dead ships. Nor

was there anything to hint at the  fate of her crew. Certainly, there seemed to be no human remains  aboard. 

The plates which had borne the name had rotted away until the  lettering was indistinguishable. But, on a

molded card which had been  protected somewhat by glass in the wheelhouse, they found a name. 

SEA SYLPH. 


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"That name was on the scalp belt!" Renny ejaculated. 

In the skipper's cabin, a small, cheap safe gaped open. It was  apparent that some explosive had been used

upon it. 

SOMBER and thoughtful, Doc's outfit returned to the Cameronic.  Discovery that the name of the derelict was

upon the scalp belt  the  same belt which also bore the name of the Cameronic  had given them

distasteful food for thought. They could not help comparing the  possible fate of the liner with the lot of the

derelict. 

Nor did the fact that they had found no signs of human death aboard  the moldering Sea Sylph  add to their

cheer. What had happened to the  crew of the weedtrapped clipper? 

Gaining the deck of the Cameronic, they found much uneasiness. The  cause was not Bruze's three lifeboats,

which still lurked like a  scavenger trio just out of range of Doc's improvised cannon; the  explanation lay in

what could be seen off the port bows. 

A smoky haze had enwrapped the weedmatted sea at dawn, but this  was now lifting. It disclosed an amazing

spectacle. 

The Cameronic  had drifted almost to the center of the Sargasso Sea  during the night! They had reached the

spot told of in story and  legend! 

Ships were before them. An amazing fleet! They seemed to date from  all ages. Some were comparatively spic

and span, craft which had been  here only a matter of weeks or months. Others were older. Centuries  older, if

their strange construction was a guide. 

Many of the craft floated high in the water. More were halfhull  deep. Not a few were waterlogged and

practically submerged  little  more than mounds in the repellent, yellow weed. Some were canted on  their

sides. Here and there, one had capsized completely. 

Monk started counting, but speedily gave it up. The number of the  derelicts was bewildering. Their masts

were like a naked jungle on the  horizon. 

The hulks had been brought together by the push of ocean currents  from all sides. Nor was the strange forest

composed of ships alone.  There was everything that would float  sticks, planks, hatches, logs,  bottles,

metal barrels, and wooden barrels! Every conceivable kind of  trash! 

The stark amazement created by this weird sight did a great deal to  abate the uneasiness of those aboard the

Cameronic. Maneuvering deftly,  Doc managed to induce something of a carnival spirit into the affair. 

Stewards served breakfast on deck; the orchestra made the loudest  possible harmony. 

It was Johnny, on watch far up on a mast, who called news of the  next development. 

"Bruze and his gang have come to life!" 

Every one rushed to points from which Bruze's three lifeboats could  be viewed. The trio of small craft were

being poled directly for the  clustered derelicts. 

They were soon lost to sight, slinking like ghouls into the  graveyard of lost ships. 


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BRUZE did not appear again that day, although binoculars were kept  trained upon the massed derelicts

toward which the Cameronic was slowly  being carried by the ocean current whirl. 

Two or three times, watchers on the liner thought they saw movement  among the clustered wrecks, but at no

time were they certain. 

The rail of the Cameronic  was crowded throughout the afternoon.  Name plates on many of the hulks could be

deciphered. Frequently, the  name of a ship would draw forth excited comment from some one who  recalled

the history of that craft. 

Four vessels were sighted, the names of which were represented on  the strange scalp belt. These discoveries

engendered anything but  jubilation in the minds of Doc's men. It brought home a fact which each  man knew

they must face. The Cameronic was destined never to leave the  Sargasso Sea! 

Whether those aboard her would get away was something else again.  More and more, speculation of Doc and

his men turned to what had  happened to the occupants of the other ships on the scalp belt. 

Shortly after darkness fell like a dank, black blanket, Doc decided  to get his own answer to that mystery. 

He took no one into his confidence, but eased into a oneman,  weedcutting hull, and left the liner. This was

Doc's custom  to  vanish silently when he intended to make some foray of his own which  might involve

danger. 

The shell hissed forward like a knife under the bronze man's  powerful turning of the spokefitted paddle

wheel. The spokes were  equipped with a hinged arrangement which allowed them to flop downward  after

leaving the water, thus throwing off the entangling sargassum. 

The air was oppressive. It had the musty tang of a cellar.  Obnoxious to breathe at first, it was not unpleasant

after a time. 

The moonlight was brilliant, almost unnaturally so. In the lunar  splendor, the massed derelicts presented a

sight even more fantastic  than that afforded by day. 

Doc circled widely. A certain amount of noise, coming from the weed  sickles and the paddles, was

unavoidable. So he progressed cautiously. 

The wrecks were not jammed as closely together as it had seemed  from a distance. A few rubbed rail to rail.

But many floated some yards  from the nearest neighbor. 

Frequently, Doc's craft nudged timbers, boxes, or other flotsam. At  such times, he was forced to back up and

go around. This was no mean  job. The sickles were not equipped to operate in reverse. Nor did the  paddle

spokes, because of the hinged device, turn backward. 

He was wangling a way around a huge hatch when a weird, unearthly  sound thrummed against his ears. 

Bong, bongbong! 

The notes came lunging hollowly across the yellowed, dying sea, and  cascaded back from the hulls of


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derelicts in echoes which swallowed  themselves. Again and again, the noise came, the bongings irregularly

spaced. 

Minute after minute, Doc listened. The metallic quality in the  spectral gonging told him what it was. Signals!

Someone was beating a  message upon a giant Oriental gong. 

The sounds died away after a time. The forest of dead ships seemed  to acquire an eerie, whispering life. An

occasional dull splash  sounded. Once in a while, there came low rattlings, scrapings, and  squeakings. 

It took Doc quite an interval to decide human beings were moving  through the ship graveyard, converging

upon the spot from whence the  gong notes had emanated. 

The bronze man worked forward warily, intent on being an uninvited  visitor at the gathering place. 

THE derelicts grew more crowded in numbers, and the going  consequently more difficult In spots, the

wreckage was clotted in great  drifts. 

Working under the stern of a half sunken, rustcankered old tramp  steamer, Doc stood erect in his light shell.

He balanced expertly, then  leaped. His powerful hands clutched the low rail. 

He ran lightly, the moon furnishing plenty of light. At the bows,  he dropped to a log, sprang from that to an

overturned lifeboat, thence  onward over more jetsam. 

Only his incredible agility made such progress possible. He kept  his footing on logs that bobbed and rolled,

selecting with a precision  which seemed uncanny the driftage which would support him. 

Once, however, he slipped in. The moments which followed were  horrible. The weeds seemed to grasp and

cling like living tendrils;  every movement caused them to bundle him around and around. 

Writhing free, Doc was filled with a new respect for this grisly,  moribund place. Not only would the weeds

trap a ship, but they would  trap a man, so densely were they packed. 

Light abruptly appeared ahead! A reddish glow cast on the forest of  masts and drooping halyards! This

luminance appeared and disappeared at  Irregular intervals. 

Doc quickened his progress, wondering if the glow was some kind of  a signal. He soon came upon a strange

sight. 

Two ancient, stout steel barges had been secured together. Around  the edges of these had been lashed great

timbers, which served both as  added buoyancy for the barges, and as fenders to ward off any other  derelict

which the ocean current might shove against the barges. 

A circular steel inclosure had been erected upon the barges. This  resembled nothing so much as the pillbox

gun turret on an ancient  monitor gunboat. it was, however, larger than any turret 

A conical steel tower projected from the center. This was  perforated with loopholes. Like apertures were also

plentiful in the  turret itself. 

Doc realized the whole thing was an efficient fortress. No doubt it  was erected on the barges for good reason.

Some of these dead ships  must sink from time to time; hence the decision against using one of  them for a

headquarters. 


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And headquarters it must be! Men were arriving. A door, opening to  admit them, flung the red blaze of light

which had attracted Doc. 

Doc eased forward. 

An instant later, he hit bad luck. His foresight and cleverness  usually guarded against incidents such as the

one which now occurred. 

There must have been a sensitive alarm system rigged around the  fortress. Perhaps it worked from wires,

perhaps from sensitive sound  detectors. 

Whatever it was, a full dozen searchlights suddenly blazed from the  turret. 

Doc, in the lee of a log, was plainly revealed. 

Machine guns opened a nasty yammering from the barge fort! 

WITH a move as swift as he could manage, Doc whipped over the log,  gaining shelter. But he could feel the

stout, waterheavy timber  trembling as slugs chugged into it. 

Doc fished a knife out of a sheath in his soaked clothing. He had  stropped it to a razor keenness against such

a contingency as this. 

Wielding the blade, and keeping as low in the water as he could, he  slashed through the weeds in retreat. 

The fortress door opened with a gush of maroon light. Men poured  out. It was as if an ant hill had been

opened. They were bearded,  vilelooking fellows. And each was burdened with weapons. 

Bullets scooped sheets of spray out of the water about Doc. He  sank, striving desperately to reach the stern of

a ramshackle schooner   the handiest vessel. 

He kept his eyes open under the water. Amid the web of yellow  weeds, he saw magical comet streaks of

bubbles appear  rifle lead  driving beneath the surface! 

The entwining weeds impeded him. At times he seemed to stand still.  His lungs, tremendous as they were,

pumped with the effort. This was no  ordinary battle he was fighting; a man of normal powers would have

been  helpless. 

He reached the schooner hulk, and hauled himself behind it, slugs  spanking the hull timbers. 

Over the cackle of firearms, Bruze was bellowing frenzied commands. 

"Here's our chance! That's the guy who's been givin' us so damn  much trouble! Nab 'im!" 

Splashing, cursing, and the chug of feet on flotsam, showed the men  were charging the schooner. 

Doc hauled atop a decaying life raft. That gave him his start. A  flying leap, another, and he was traveling

rapidly. A vault put him  upon a deck house, blown from some sailing vessel in a gale, no doubt. 

"Get a move on!" Bruze shrieked. "Half of you spread out and cut  'im off from gettin' back to the

Cameronic!" 


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Doc dropped off the floating deck house, cut his way twenty feet  through the weeds, and reached more

buoyant timbers, bounding quickly  ahead. 

Close behind him came Bruze's men, the Sargasso killers! Had Doc  been a few degrees less powerful and

agile, they would have caught him  speedily. For they knew this weird nearisland of derelicts, knew how  to

get through them most 

speedily. Doc had to plan his course as he ran, a great handicap. 

As it was, he held his own; but not much more. On occasions, he got  some distance in the lead. Then the

necessity of taking to the  weedcurded water would slow him. 

Doc was seeking a large ship, one aboard which he could play  something in the nature of a frightful game of

hide and seek with his  pursuers. He was a master at that sort of thing. He could seek them  out, one or a few at

a time, and overpower them until they gave up in  terror and fled. 

The desired haven materialized in the shape of a monster of steel  which reared up before him. A warship! It

showed signs of having been  swept by shell fire, but floated quite high in the water. 

There were no dangling hawsers or chains visible in the moonlight.  That did not bother Doc. He worked close

to the hull. A silk line with  a grapple hook attached  an article he always carried  came out of  his

clothing. 

He tossed the hook, and it caught, held. He went up the silk cord,  mighty hands gripping it with ease, and

over the rail! He ducked into  the shadow of an overturned antiaircraft gun mount. 

A surprising thing happened when his enemies came close. They  stopped as if the manofwar was

something poisonous. 

"Damn the luck!" Bruze howled, "Did he go aboard that boat?" 

"Yeah!" 

"That settles it, then!" 

Astounded no little, Doc watched his pursuers fade away in the  night. 

THAT there was something aboard the battleship which Bruze and his  gang feared was evident. 

Doc's golden eyes roved alertly. He saw only upset guns, a fallen  fighting top, and numerous jagged rents in

the thick armor plate, where  shells had exploded. How this monster war vessel happened to be here  was

selfevident. The craft had been in a hot fight, no doubt during  the Great War, and had been abandoned by

her crew. Or perhaps the enemy  had taken the crew off, leaving the huge craft to drift. 

There was no movement, no sign of life. 

It would have been comparatively easy to slide overside and depart;  certainly, it would have called for less

nerve. But Doc decided to  investigate. 

He went forward, a bronze shadow mingling with the rust and  battleship gray of Ills surroundings. The deck

underfootwas  comparatively free of obstruction. Too, there was an air of life about  the giant craft  this


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sensation probably coming from the absence of  the musty odor which had characterized the other wrecks. 

Once he heard a sound which brought him up rigid, and held him that  way for a long time. The noise was not

repeated. It had been hard to  define   low sort of whimpering note. 

Doc entered a forest of deck machinery. Shadow enwrapped him. The  darkness was warm with an

animalwarm quality. 

Came a faint, rasping scrape ahead of him! He halted. And suddenly  a weird, hairy thing was upon him in the

darkness! 

Instinctively, he twisted aside. But furry, sticklike arms clutched  his neck, held it. Tiny claws dug in. 

Doc's hands whipped up, grasping. They inclosed a pulsing form  about twice the thickness of his wrists. It

felt like a gigantic  forearm. 

The thing emitted a piercing screech! The sound was piping,  babylike  and deafening! 

The atmosphere of horror enwrapping the wilderness of lost ships  was responsible for Doc's first impression

that some great, fantastic  monster had seized him. A second later, he knew what it was  nothing  more

unearthly than a fairsized monkey! 

THE little animal was only scared. Doc disentangled it gently from  his neck. His fingers, brushing through

the fur of the animal,  encountered a collar. He explored this with interest. Then he brought  out Ills flashlight,

which was, fortunately, waterproof, and spiked the  thin beam upon the collar. 

It was a ribbon, gaudy and rather new! 

Sswish! 

Doc forgot both monkey and ribbon collar, and ducked. Whatever had  made the swishing sound passed over

his head. 

Sswish! That one came from the opposite direction. 

Sswish! From every side! 

It was impossible to dodge them all. One caught him! A second! They  were loops of wire, thin and flexible.

They trapped his head  an arm   the other arm. They inclosed him in a tough web. 

Doc spun on his heels, wrenching at the wires. They had been  expertly cast. Enwrapping Ills muscular hand

in one line, he gave it a  hard jerk. 

A sharp cry pealed out! 

An avalanche of forms struck Doc. Clutching hands gripped at his  arms, his neck. They were puny, these

hands, compared to the bronze  man's vast strength. By striking about, he could no doubt have escaped. 

But he made no effort to do so. These were women! The sharp cry had  told him that. 


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DOC was bundled in wire until he resembled a metallic mummy. While  that was going on, he kept his great

muscles tense  relaxing them  would give him play in which to wriggle free. This was just in case the

women might have violent designs. 

The tying proceeded in darkness. Several times low words were  spoken, always in feminine tones. A rather

pleasant voice was giving  most of the orders. 

The remarkable part of this was that the commands were issued in a  half dozen languages. Doc, who was an

unexcelled linguist himself, had  to admire the fluency with which the pleasantvoiced woman handled the

tongues. Her followers seemed to be made up of many nationalities. 

Not once was the bass tone of a man heard. 

The little monkey scampered about, squeaking, in the murk. 

"Come Nero!" the leader of the women called gently to the animal on  one occasion. 

'Bueno!" said a feminine voice in Spanish  the speaker seemingly  satisfied Doc was secure. "He is tied

tightly!" 

"Very well," replied her chief in the same tongue. "Were you  watching closely enough to be sure this was the

only one who came  aboard?" 

"Si, si! He was alone. The others were pursuing him, it seemed." 

"That might have been a trick, senorita. We will redouble the guard  for the rest of the night." 

Doc unbunched his mighty muscles. Testing the wire bonds, he  learned there was slack enough to escape. He

had often practiced  liberating himself after being tied. It was an accomplishment of  convenience. 

Several pairs of soft feminine hands laid hold of him. 

"Pesado!" gasped out the Spanish woman. "Heavy! He is very heavy!" 

They hauled Doc, his feet dragging, into the battleship. The air  here was vastly different than outdoors. A

faint perfume dispelled the  musty tang. Too, there was thick carpet underfoot. 

Some one lighted a gasoline lantern. It shed a brilliant glare. 

Doc glanced about. To all appearance, he had been captured by a  crew of Amazons. There was not a man in

sight. 

The women were of all ages, races, and varying degrees of beauty.  Several of them were pretty enough to be

considered entirely  entrancing. All were strangely clad, with no two ensembles alike. 

The most striking of the lot was their leader  she who spoke so  many languages. 

She was a redhead. In height, she would have topped Doc's shoulder  a bit. Her eyes were a dreamy South


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Seas blue; her nose was small, with  a suspicion of snubness; her lips were an inviting bow. Altogether, her

features could hardly have been improved upon. 

She wore an amazing costume  a loose, brocaded, Russian style  blouse, drawn at the waist with a belt

fashioned of parallel lines of  gold coins. From this dangled a slender, jeweled sword which Doc was  certain

dated back at least four centuries. There was also an  efficient, spikenosed, very modern automatic pistol. 

Her small feet were shod in strange boots of soft leather, which  extended several inches above her ankles.

She wore trousers of some  silken fabric, which terminated shortly above her knees. 

The monkey  Nero  which had jumped Doc, perched on her  shoulder. The animal was alert, intelligent

looking. 

She was an exotic  and attractive  figure, this queen of the  Amazons. 

DOC was not doing all the staring. He was being subjected to a  thorough inspection. 

The women showed some astonishment at the nature of their captive.  From their expressions, it would seem

they had expected an individual  of much different appearance. 

Doc's powerful form, the regularity of his features, made a strong  impression. Anger had been on more than

one feminine face when the  lights came on. This emotion rapidly vanished. This was not hard to  understand.

It was not the first time members of the supposedly gentler  sex had experienced a marked attraction to Doc. 

"American?" asked the redhaired leader. 

"Check," Doc agreed. 

She seemed puzzled. "What nationality is that?" 

Evidently she did not have a supply of American slang. "I'm  American," Doc agreed. 

She favored him with what she tried to make a grim look. "I would  advise you not to try joking with me!" 

"I wasn't," Doc explained politely. 

The flameheaded young lady seemed undecided. 

"I am Kina la Forge!" she said at length. 

"And I am Clark Savage, Jr." 

She shrugged. "I have never heard of you." 

"Nor I of you." 

This was apparently quite a surprise. She fingered the jeweled hilt  of her sword absently. 

"You are either lying, or you have not been in the Sargasso for  long." 

"The latter explanation is correct." 


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"Why was the Sargasso Ogre and his men pursuing you?" 

"You mean Bruze?" 

"That is one of his names  the right one. I believe." 

Doc saw no reason for holding back the information. These young  women were patently no friends of Bruze.

At mention of his name, more  than one expression of loathing had crossed a feminine countenance. 

"It started in Alexandria, Egypt," he began, and told the whole  story. 

They heard him through without interruption. They did not express  particular surprise. It seemed to be what

they were expecting. 

"You of the Cameronic have been lucky!" said Kina la Forge, and  shuddered until her red hair tousled itself.

"The Sargasso Ogre and his  men usually have the ships captured and looted before they get this  far!" 

"How long has Bruze been working this thing?" Doc asked curiously. 

"About six years." 

DOC decided to try an experiment. He nodded at the wires securing  him, and suggested: "Why not turn me

loose." 

The mass of red hair shook. "No!" 

Doc assumed a pained expression  he was an excellent actor when  he chose to be."Why not?" 

"Your story may be the truth," Kina la Forge told him firmly "It  sounds truthful. But we can take no chances.

The Sargasso Ogre has  tried on other occasions to get his men aboard by having them pretend  to be fugitives.

Once, he succeeded." 

She took hold of her lower lip with even white teeth; a slight  tremor entered her remarkably fine voice. 

"The fact that the Sargasso Ogre got a man aboard  once   explains why you see no men here!" 

Doc made his malleable voice express gentleness. "He led them into  a trap?" 

She nodded. 

Somewhere in the room an elderly woman began to sob. and to moan  hysterically: "Oh, my poor husband!

They killed him that time! I wish I  could die! We'll never get out of this ghastly place!" 

Three other women moved to her side, seeking to comfort her. 

Doc Savage glanced about the room. The place was fitted with all  the splendor of an Oriental palace, rich

rugs upon the floor,  tapestries upon the steel walls. 

But Doc felt a growing sorrow and sympathy for these women, for all  the richness of their surroundings.

They were. be knew suddenly,  passengers from ships which had drifted here in the years past. 


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"Have all of you been carried here on derelicts?" he asked. The  auburnhaired girl shock her head and

stroked the fine fur on her pet  monkey. 

"I was born in this place, and have lived all my life here." She  indicated several of the young women, some of

them mere girls. "They,  also, were born here. There is no way of escape." 

"But you seem to have a fine education. You speak a number of  languages." 

"There are books from the libraries of boats which drift here. And  my father was a professor of philosophy in

a London university, before  his ship was disabled in a storm." Her small hand burrowed deeper into  the rich

fur of her pet. "My father  was killed at the same time as  that woman's husband. My mother died many

years ago." 

Doc was silent. It was almost inconceivable that beings could live  in this ghostly place for a lifetime, or for

generations. 

"Suppose you tell me all about the Sargasso  and the Sargasso  Ogre," he urged. 

The titianhaired young woman spoke readily, swayed, no doubt, by  Doc's remarkable charm of manner. 

"Men  women, too  have been here for generations," she said.  "No one knows for just how long. Some

of the Sargasso Ogre's gang are  descendants of people who have been here a century or more. They are  the

worst. Long existence in this place seems to drain every human  quality." 

The monkey, jumping off her shoulder, came and pawed curiously at  the wires holding Doc. 

"THERE have always been bad men in the Sargasso," Kina la Forge  went on. "But they have been controlled.

We had a government, a tiny  republic, such as the books say you have in the United States. My  father was

president." 

She paused, and, to hide the feeling in her voice, called softly to  the monkey. The little animal did not desert

Doc. 

"About eight years ago, Bruze drifted to this place," she went on.  "He had been a rumrunner off the coast of

the United States, and got in  a fight with a coastguard boat. That made it necessary for him to  flee. He sailed

for the coast of Africa, and encountered a storm there.  Machinegun bullets from the coastguard cutter had

damaged his masts,  and they collapsed, rendering Ills schooner useless." 

Her voice turned cold. "Bruze is a devil'. He organized the  criminal element of the Sargasso. Then he seized

power. Those who would  not join him, he sought to kill. 

"It was terrible! For more than a year, there was fighting, with  each group fortified upon a boat. Bruze had

this warship at that time.  Then, through a clever coup of my father's, we captured the warship. 

"We have been holding out here since. From time to time, the men  made forays to ships which drifted into the

Sargasso, to get food. We  have waterdistilling apparatus aboard." 

She called the monkey again. 

Reluctantly, the little creature abandoned its examination of Doc. 


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"Then came the trap which resulted in the death of all our men!"  Kina la Forge continued. "That was five

months ago. Since then, we  women have not been off this warship. We can defend it easily, but we  dare not

leave for food. Our supplies are low. In fact, we have little  but such fish as we can catch." 

After she finished, Doc was slow in speaking. It was a fantastic,  terrible story. The suffering these people

must have undergone! The  mere atmosphere of this zone of dead ships was one of horror. 

"We have been trying to bargain with the Sargasso Ogre  Bruze,"  the girl said unexpectedly. "We have

much of his treasure aboard. It  was here when we captured the warship, years ago. We have promised to  turn

it over to him, if he will send us out of the Sargasso." 

"What method does he use for getting out?" 

Kina la Forge shook her head. "I do not know. That has always been  a mystery. Only he and his followers

know the secret." 

"Do they have a submarine?" 

"I have not the slightest idea. Their departure is always made at  night. And on each occasion, they post men

around this battleship, and  keep up a steady rifle fire." 

"They might use airplanes! Do you ever hear the roar of motors?" 

"No. We never hear any kind of an engine. They always set up a loud  shouting, and a beating of that gong,

when the Sargasso Ogre is  preparing to depart. l know only that he does not use a surface craft.  No boat of

any size can be forced through the weeds, even when fitted  with cutters." 

"How great is this treasure you have aboard  the one Bruze  wants?" 

"Six or seven millions, I suppose." She said it as calmly as she  would say fifteen cents. 

DOC kept his own counsel for a time, reflecting on what a  remarkable young lady Kina la Forge was. With

six or seven million  dollars in treasure under their feet, most individuals would walk about  as if they were

treading on eggs. 

This redheaded girl showed a genuine unconcern over the hoard.  This, it was true, might be because she had

never been in the outer  world, where money meant so much. 

"Hadn't you better turn me loose," Doc suggested, after waiting in  vain for the young woman to broach the

same idea. 

"No!" 

"Why not?" 

"You have talked very convincingly and I believe you. But I cannot  take chances. There is too much at stake.

We will not force you to  leave, for that would certainly mean the Sargasso Ogre would capture  you. But

neither shall we free you. We will keep you prisoner for a few  days or a few weeks, until there is not the

slightest doubt of your  being some new recruit of Bruze's gang sent to trick us." 


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Doc was no little disgusted at this. On few occasions had his art  of persuasion failed him. But it was getting

him nowhere with this  queen of Amazons. 

Kina la Forge turned away, the monkey perched upon her shoulder,  and gave the same order in four

languages, speaking each language as if  it were her native tongue. 

Several women started for Doc, with the intention of dragging him  off to some prison cell. 

The bronze man had no desire to spend time locked up. Furthermore,  these warship brigs were usually strong.

The cell might defy even his  strength. 

So, with a quick twist, he freed his legs. The wire all but dropped  off, so much slack had his tensed muscles

provided. His arms still  secured at his sides, he bounded for the door. 

These women were no different from their sisters in civilization. A  chorus of scared shrieks went up. But

Kina la Forge and some others  plunged in pursuit. 

Doc twisted outside, at the same time working the wires off his  arms. The women had not done a very

workmanlike job of tying him in the  first place. 

Leaping, he caught the steel eave of a roof overhead. A single  powerful swing put him atop it. He crouched

there, waiting. 

"Do not shoot him!" Kina la Forge was calling in three or four  lingoes. 

Doc flattened atop the steel armor plate, waiting for the women to  run past underneath. They were unlikely to

guess that he had leaped the  considerable height to the superstructure roof. 

His eyes roved instinctively. It was possible Bruze or some of his  killers might be posted in the surrounding

jungle of wrecked ships. 

Perhaps a hundred yards distant, he discerned a slight movement.  His eyes focused intently on the spot. 

A man emerged from shadows and stood, washed by moonlight, upon the  castled stern structure of an ancient

galleon. The craft under his feet  had probably been used in the Spanish Main treasure trade, centuries  ago.

The man, the details of his clothing indistinguishable in the  moonlight, might have been a romantic figure

from the pages of ancient  history. 

The jarring note about him was the modern submachine gun which he  held to his shoulder. 

Doc crouched a little lower. The gunner, it was apparent, had  caught a flash of the bronze man, but did not

know where he had gone. 

Kina la Forge appeared, running along the deck. 

She did not see the distant gunner in the moonlight. 

The fellow ducked his head close to the sights of Ills weapon,  aiming at the young woman. 

WITHIN ten seconds, the redheaded girl would undoubtedly have been  the target for a storm of lead. But in

that time, several things  happened. 


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Doc launched himself from the superstructure. Tawny and huge, he  landed like a cat on the deck. 

Kina squealed  but she was already being carried backward. Great  bronze arms defeated her struggles, yet

were not painfully tight. 

The distant submachine gun gobbled. It was drummed with tracer  bullets. The slugs sprayed against the

warship armor plate, glancing  like sparks from a grinding wheel. Their rattle was that of drumstick  upon tin. 

But the fiery torrent was yards behind the bronze man. He veered  into the superstructure and released the

young woman. Her pretty  features were faintly visible in the moonbeams that reflected through  the door. 

Her expression showed that she knew very well Doc had saved her  life. But before she could speak, he was

gone  literally swallowed by  the darkness within the derelict battleship. 

Gliding down various intricate passages, Doc came out again upon  the deck, avoiding the women. 

Rifles rapped angrily from the warship. The wouldbe killer with  the submachine gun took a wild leap and

vanished behind the high, thick  bulwarks of the galleon. 

Doc chose that instant to hook his grapple over the rail and slide  downward. He landed upon a jam of sticks

and timbers which supported  him. A flip freed the grapple. He stowed it within his clothing as he  leaped

across the weed laden sea. 

Bullets began snapping about him, fired by other followers of  Bruze, posted to watch the warship. But Doc

had chosen a route where  footing was plentiful. His low, flying figure was a difficult,  unexpected target in the

moonlight. 

He reached cover safely. He did not linger in the vicinity, but  hurtled onward, circling so as to reach the spot

where he had left his  weedcutting boat. 

Fortunately, his enemies had not found the little shell. He seated  himself on the fragile seat, grasped the

cranks which operated the  paddle wheels, and turned. The hull sped forward. Steering was  accomplished by

turning one crank faster than the other, in the fashion  wheel chairs are manipulated. 

It was necessary to keep a close watch to avoid collision with  floatsam. At one point, he maneuvered around

a large life raft. 

There were at least half a dozen skeletons upon the raft, lying in  the lashings of rotting ropes. They were

victims of some sea tragedy,  no doubt, individuals who had perished of thirst or hunger long before  their raft

had been carried into the Sargasso. 

Doc cranked his strange craft onward. He came within sight of the  Cameronic. Majestic, gleaming in the

moonlight, the vessel was a  welcome sight. She seemed the only thing alive in this moribund place. 

Alive and aloft from the rest of the derelictsfor the Cameronic  lay a goodly distance from the thicker cluster

of wrecks. 

Doc was still some distance from the Cameronic when a bedlam of  shouting and yelling came from the liner. 


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Chapter XII. THE NIGHT DECOY

THE Sargasso Ogre  Bruze  and his followers had attacked the  Cameronic. The attack had come from

the bows, judging by the flash of  firearms. 

Doc put on every ounce of effort the paddle wheels would stand. The  light shell nearly flew over the

weedcrammed sea. The madly vibrating  sickles made a shrill moan. 

In the gloom cast by the flaming Cameronic bows, the bronze man  distinguished four or five small craft.

Bruze's boats! 

Men, evidently left below to guard the boats, discovered Doc.  Reddish lances of powder flame jumped out of

the murk! 

Doc cranked the left paddle more briskly. His shell veered for the  liner's stern. Twice slugs tore rents in the

thin hull of his craft. 

He gained the liner. It was a long throw to lift his grapple to the  rail. On the first attempt, the hook failed to

hold, and came snaking  back. The silken line was enameled, giving it a wire stiffness. It did  not entangle

easily. 

Doc tried again, successfully. He mounted upward like a spider on a  web, and topped the rail. Then he ran

forward. 

A watchman saw him, lifted a rifle, but lowered it when he  recognized Doc. 

"Keep your post!" Doc warned him. "They may try a flank attack from  the stern!" 

Fighting seemed to be confined to the deck in the front of the  ship. It was a good two hundred yards to the

spot. Doc covered it in  remarkably fast time, and was breathing but little faster when he  finished. He had

trained a lifetime for emergencies such as this. 

The Cameronic defenders, taken completely by surprise, it seemed,  were in a bad way. A metallic specter of

violence, Doc appeared among  them. 

Upon his finger tips were the tiny hypodermic needles which  administered the sleep drug. These needles were

in cased in cleverly  made thimbles of bronze. Their presence upon his fingers could hardly  be detected. 

The fact that the thimbles were not noticeable, immediately gave  Bruze's men the idea that Doc possessed

supernatural powers. For, at  his mere touch, whiskered. toughmuscled villains were stopped in their  tracks.

In each instance, they seemed to sleep a few seconds on their  feet, then slump heavily to the deck, where their

slumbers were  continued. 

Bullets sought wildly for the bronze man. Knives slashed. Some of  the attackers carried halberds  long

weapons which were half spear  and half battleax. These pieces dated to the fifteenth and sixteenth  century,

and must have come to the Sargasso on derelicts of that era.  There were also rapiers, cutlasses, and assorted

daggers. 

The tide of the scrap began to turn. Doc's amazing fighting skill  had never showed to better advantage. He

was everywhere, and as hard to  lay a hand upon as a puff of smoke. At the same time, he was as  destructive


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as a monster of steel. 

Wherever he appeared, men went into the strange sleep. This was  probably responsible for the final defeat of

Bruze's boarders. They  began to retreat 

Through the whole fight, Doc had been aware of a disquieting fact.  His five friends would never miss an

affair such as this. Yet they were  not to be seen! 

"STAND up to 'em!" Bruze was squealing from the bows. "Go get 'em!  Tear 'em to pieces!" 

His men continued to recoil. It was very well for Bruze to stand  back there and yell. He was not in the fight. 

Doc Savage skirted the embattled crowd and whipped toward Bruze. 

The Sargasso Ogre saw him. 

Instead of retreating, Bruze rushed forward. This was remarkable in  itself. Few in number were the men who,

after obtaining a hint of Doc's  enormous strength, had ever sought to close with him. But Bruze was  probably

the strongest man Doc had ever pitted himself against. 

Bruze had a pleased leer on his hawklike features. He was supremely  confident in his muscles. They were

huge. Already, tensing knots of  them had torn out his shirt sleeves and ripped his shirt across the  shoulders. It

looked as if the man were bloated. 

The two men met thuddingly! Two leviathans of bone and flesh. Blows  smackedblows which sank like

fingers jabbed into putty, although the  sinews upon which they landed were tough as bundled wire. 

The pleasure suddenly went out of Bruze's leer. A shocked look came  on his predatory features. His

expression was that of a man who had met  up with an unpleasant miracle. He had never dreamed there was a

foe  such as this bronze man. 

Doc, too, was somewhat startled. This man Bruze had a strength  little, if any, short of his own. 

Both men knew most of the fighting tricks in the book. Bruze tried  battering with his fists, only to miss two

thirds of his swings. He  resorted to biting, gouging, kicking, and even clutched at his knife. 

A bronze fist drove him backward before he could get the blade! 

They smashed together again! They toppled to the deck! They grasped  each other, and so terrific was their

clutch that when their fingers  slipped, skin came away as if scalded. 

As a fight, it was virtually even. But Bruze was not satisfied with  that. 

"Help me!" he bellowed at his men. "Scrag this guy! Shoot him! Use  a knife!" 

His men had other things to do. They were taking a sound lambasting  from the Cameronic defenders. One did

try to point a revolver at Doc.  But he was knocked along the deck by a bullet which struck his bony  shoulder. 

Bruze began to squeal and hiss as he fought. This did him no good.  It merely wasted his breath. And it

showed he was getting scared about  the outcome of this handtohand battle he had entered so confidently. 


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He was accustomed to opponents who were like rabbits in his grasp,  not a tawny tiger who was his own

equal. 

Bruze got a grip on Doc's throat. 

Doc whirled. 

Bruze tried to hang on, but was flung off. He spun down the deck  like a vaudeville tumbler, his great strength

warding off injury. 

He came to his feet. It was then that he realized his gang  I was  whipped. Instead of returning to the attack, he

vaulted over the rail  and vanished toward the weedy water. 

His followers now broke wildly. Some of them followed Bruze in  leaping over the rail. Others slid down the

ropes by which they had  boarded the ship. A few seconds saw them all overboard. 

Doc ran to one of the Cameronic's officers. "Where are my men?" 

"Didn't they get to you after you sent for them?" 

Doc's golden eyes shot hard lights. "I did not send for them!" 

THE man to whom Doc was talking registered bewilderment. 'But the  lookout in the bow said you had called

to him from out of the darkness  to send your live friends to that boat!" 

"To what boat?" 

The fellow pointed over the rail. 

"To that funnylooking boat, the caravel," he stated. 

In the moonlight it was impossible to distinguish the vessel be  meant. But Doc recalled ita weird, ancient

craft with all the grace of  a half of a barrel. This craft had called forth some comment during the  day because

of its antiquity. 

"What excuse did the man impersonating me give for calling my  friends?" 

"He said there was a chest of treasure. Your men were to go and get  it." 

"Let's talk to the watchman." 

They found the poor fellow dead in the bow. A long, steelfanged  arrow had impaled his heart. 

The man's death explained how Bruze's gang had pulled their  surprise. They had silently murdered the fellow

with the arrow, then  fired other arrows over the Cameronic's bow, with strings attached.  Pulling on the

strings, they had dragged up ropes, which they had then  climbed while men held the ends on the other side. 

The shooting had all stopped. Bruze's outfit had pulled away and  were lost in the forest of derelicts. 

Deck lights on the Cameronic, which had been on full force, were  switched off, so those aboard would not

present targets. Too, Doc  Savage wanted to leave the liner without being observed. 


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SOME three hundred yards distant, Bruze himself saw the  illumination vanish, and guessed the reason. 

"The bronze guy has found out we decoyed his gang away. He'll be  sure to come huntin' 'em." 

Grimacing frightfully, Bruze felt of his monster muscles. Each was  now a big package of pain. He had sorely

strained himself. He did not  mind that so much. The fact that he had managed to get nothing but a  doubtful

draw against Doc Savage was what irked. 

He could see that his followers were not as much in awe of him as  they had been. This was bad. They were

human wolves, and the only way  wolves can be ruled is by force. Let 

their leader slip, and they would be the first to tear him to  pieces. 

Bruze's right fist was oozing crimson from a spot where he had  bruised it on a stanchion after missing a

swing at Dec. He pressed this  fist to his shirt, with the result that it left a large crimson  splotch. This looked

like the leakage of a wound. 

"The Savage guy is tough!" he growled. "But I could've handled 'im  if I hadn't been shot before the scrap with

'im started!" 

After these lying words, he gripped the bloody spot on his shirt  and grunted as if in pain. He cursed a man

who wanted to dress the  wound. 

This had the effect of redeeming Bruze's overrated reputation. 

"Row to that caravel!" he growled. 

They abandoned one small boat. They had lost so many men that there  was no need of the extra craft. 

SOON the caravel materialized in the moon glow. This craft was a  large one of its kind. In comparison to

modern boats, however, it was  just a toy. The thing looked unbelievably clumsy. It floated fairly low  in the

water, supported by the wood in its hull. Had it been fully  buoyant, it would have been more clumsy in

appearance. 

The masts were broken off close to the decks. Pieces of the  bulwarks had fallen out. But it was a miracle that

the craft was afloat  at all. It must have been here for centuries. Columbus had used two  similar craft in his

little fleet which discovered America. 

As they neared the caravel, Bruze voiced a grumbling complaint. 

"I wonder," he snarled, "how Savage's five men come to miss fallin'  into our trap?" 

None of his men knew. 

Bruze boarded the caravel alone. He went directly to the high poop.  This structure still bore traces of paint in

spots where the sun rays  did not touch. Probably an excellent paint job on the ancient craft at  the time of its

loss, helped to explain how it had lasted this long. 

A narrow, low door admitted to the poop. Before this stood a chest,  with the lid closed. It was a big,

metalbound chest. A look at it  could not help but arouse a feeling of anticipation. It was exactly  such a chest

as artists always draw when they want to depict a pirate  treasure. 


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Bruze did not go near the chest lid. It was a death trap.  Opening  it would close a circuit which would instantly

discharge two full cases  of dynamite, stored in the hold directly below the chest. 

Moving gingerly, Bruze inspected the electrical contacts, making  certain they were still in working order.

Then he rejoined his  henchmen. 

"There ain't nothin' wrong with the bomb," he explained. "I guess  them five pals of Savage's just didn't come

around here. Wonder where  in blazes they went to? And why didn't they come aboard?" 

One man tossed away a halfconsumed cigarette. Nobody answered. 

"Well, maybe we'll get Savage!" Bruze grumbled. "He's sure to come  huntin' his friends. 1 hope he walks up

an' opens the lid of that  treasure chest. He'll find the damnedest treasure he ever saw!" 

The men poled their boats away, the weed cutters sawing briskly.  These contrivances, although they served

the purpose, were not as  efficient as the ones Doc had perfected. They were, however, as silent  as Doc's

sickles. 

Shadow, piled like black sand in the lee of a capsized freighter,  concealed Bruze's crew. 

Possibly five minutes later, there was a soft breath of a movement  near the caravel rail. A great, silent bronze

bat seemed to float up  and perch on the rail. Doc had lost no time in coming here. He was  arduous about his

five pals. 

He listened, but heard nothing. His sensitive nostrils dilated. A  tang of tobacco smoke mingled with the

unwholesome aroma of the  Sargasso. 

Doc's flashlight raced its thin white beam about. The radiance  ferreted out a cigarette stub which lay in the

water beside the hull. 

Of Doc's men, only one smoked. Monk indulged in an occasional  cigarette. But Monk always rolled his own.

This stub was a tailormade. 

It had not been there long, as evidenced by the fact that the  wrapper had not decomposed in the water. 

Doc soon spied the alluring ironbound chest. He went to it and  moved around it slowly. What he saw

seemed entirely satisfactory. 

Leaning forward, he grasped the chest lid. 

ALTHOUGH Bruze was highly puzzled as to why Doc's five aids had not  fallen into the caravel trap, or even

as much as visited the ageold  derelict, the explanation was simple. 

Monk and the rest had heard the machinegun shots which 

would have resulted fatally for pretty Kina la Forge, had not Doc  been on hand. 

"To blazes with the treasure chest!" Renny had rumbled the instant  he heard the firing. "It'll keep! Let's see

what the excitement is!" 


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So they went to investigate. They did not fare as well as Doc in  getting through the forest of derelicts. They

lacked his agility.  Reaching the vicinity of the battleship took half an hour. 

Eventually, they chanced to sight a match flame ahead. This was one  of the watchmen posted about the

warship. He flipped away the match  with which he had fired his cigarette, and drew in luxuriously of  smoke. 

Smack! The lookout toppled, instantly senseless from a blow upon  the temple. He fell, and the impact shot

streams of smoke from his  mouth and nostrils. 

The dapper Ham  dapper in spite of the laborious progress of the  last hour  flexed his sword cane in his

hands. It was he who had  crept up and kayoed the sentry. 

"The guy was watchin' that battleship," Monk whispered. 

The men had showed no astonishment at sight of the warship. They  were past being astonished. Had New

York City suddenly turned up in the  Sargasso, they would have been glad to see it  but not unduly

surprised. The weed crowded waste seemed to hold just about everything. 

"The fact that they were watching that war wagon shows there's  somebody they don't care for aboard it,"

Renny muttered. 

"I'm goin' aboard!" Monk grunted. 

"Wait! We'll all go  " 

"Naw! There may be more lookouts around here! You guys stay an'  fight 'em off." 

Before there could be more argument, Monk bounded forward. His  simian physique was just right for this

sort of thing. He simply  doubled over, using his hands to help maintain a balance, and hopped  from one piece

of floating wreckage to another. 

He reached the warship  and was temporarily baffled. There was no  climbing those sheer steel plates.

Monk carried no silken line and  grapple, such as Doc had employed. 

He wandered along the hull, hoping to find a dangling line. He made  a complete circuit of the vessel without

locating one. 

Then, in a spot where he thought certainly that he had looked on  the first trip, he saw an inviting Manila

hawser. 

Reluctantly, he decided he had overlooked it on the first search.  He had no way of knowing it had been

lowered deliberately from above  since his initial passage, to invite him aboard. 

Monk tested, found the line solid, and climbed. 

There was a reception committee at the top. 

A wire loop snared Monk's furry neck. He let out a roar. Another  wire got his left hand. One trapped the

ankle which he had flung over  the rail. He roared again. 


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A young woman scrambled out of a nearby hatchway, carrying a  gasoline lantern. She held this high, to

illuminate the scene of the  capture. 

Monk saw that his attackers were women. He could only sit on the  rail like a big gorilla, a ludicrous

expression on his homely features.  Two more wire loops snared him. 

Monk, seeming oblivious of the wires, gaped at the girls.  Especially at the redheaded queen of the lot! She

was little less than  a vision. She would have been a knockout in any company. But finding  her here  it

took Monk's breath away. 

Another wire circlet fastened to his hairy person. 

Monk came to life. He had no idea whether these ladies were friends  or enemies. He preferred them friends.

But they were not acting as  such. 

Flinging himself backward, Monk toppled over the rail. His great  weight was too much for the women. They

lost their grips on the wires. 

Monk hit the water with a resounding smack. Between the wires and  the sargassum weed, and a snakelike

pipe fish which became entangled in  the mess, Monk all but drowned. 

He finally extricated himself. 

Chapter XIII. THE HUNT

THE sartorially perfect Ham was propped against the hull of a  halfdismantled sloop when Monk returned.

Ham' face was red, and he  shook from head to foot with laughter. 

"What a figure you cut," he howled mirthfully. "I'll never forget  it! You sat there like a frog on a log, and let

the women lasso you!" 

"Phooey on you!" Monk grumbled. 

"It was the funniest thing  " 

Monk interrupted this with the hairlifting squeal of a pig in  mortal agony. 

Ham shut up, looking very indignant. Monk had but to make the  slightest reference to anything that smacked

of hams, and the dapper  lawyer was silenced. 

A bullet now hissed past them. followed by the clapping echoes of a  shot. One of the other guards posted

around the warship had run to a  position where he could get a bead on them. 

Renny leveled one of Doc's compact machine guns. It moaned  deafeningly. 

The gunman who had fired upon them beat a hurried retreat. 

During the next several minutes. a sniping campaign was waged among  the derelicts. Bruze's sentries

eventually withdrew, doing it so  furtively that Monk and his friends were unable to follow them. 


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"We'd better get back to the Cameronic!" Renny suggested. 

"Oh, there ain't no big hurry about that," Monk offered. "How about  us having a try at getting aboard that old

battleship?" 

Monk was thinking of the redheaded peach. 

The others were not deceived. They exchanged knowing glances. 

"We were too far away to see what the women looked like," Long Tom  grinned. "But from the way Monk is

acting, they must have been swell  numbers." 

"The redhead was a beauty," Monk agreed fervently. 

They studied the warship. At this point. a bullet came singing from  the vessel. It did not strike anywhere near.

but it had the effect of  persuading them to defer their visit. They left the spot. 

Kina la Forge was taking no chances. Uncertain whether the men were  hostile or not, she had fired the bullet

wide by way of warning. 

The breeze was now blowing against their backs. They did not know  it. but this had served to prevent them

hearing sounds of the fight on  the Cameronic. The wind, although not strong enough to move the  derelicts in

the thick weed beds, nevertheless caused numerous  rattling, whistling, and moaning noises, which had also

contributed to  the failure to hear the fight. 

But there soon came a sound which they had no difficulty hearing. A  terrific, thumping roar! A great Hash

lighted the sky some moments  before they heard the blast. The Hash was like lightning. 

The thunderous explosion was tossed back and forth by derelict  hulls. until it became a laughing, mumbling

medley of noises. 

Monk and the rest increased their pace. 

Johnny, who had chanced to be looking up at the moment of the  flash, had secured a fair idea of where it had

come from. 

They neared the spot. 

"Hey!" Monk breathed. "That explosion was in the caravel where we  were supposed to go for the treasure

chest! Look! The thin" has been  blown clean off the map!" 

THE destruction of the caravel was virtually entire. A considerable  space had been blown free of flotsam. A

deck timber had been cast upon  a nearby metal hull, where it lay smoldering. 

Monk and the others swapped grim looks. 

"There must have been a bomb aboard," Renny muttered. 

"But what made it go off?" 

"How do I know? Maybe it went off by accident!" 


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They were on the point of going forward for a closer investigation,  when they heard voices and a movement

near by. 

"Wait!" Monk whispered. "Somebody is comin'!" 

He pressed his fellows back into the shadows. 

A moment later, a little cavalcade of men filed out from between  two floating wrecks, leaping precariously

from one piece of jetsam to  another. They were like ants doing some grotesque dance under the  frowning

hulks of the derelicts. 

Bruze and a party of his henchmen! They were headed for the  explosion scene. Their route was going to

bring them very close to the  spot where Monk and his friends waited. 

Monk slid a fresh clip into his pistollike rapidfirer. The others  followed his example. 

Bruze caught sight of the spot where the caravel had floated. He  emitted a loud roar of pleasure. 

"Look! The trap worked!" 

The words reached Monk distinctly. 

Bruze was all but jumping up and down in his delight. 

"It worked! The bronze guy came an' opened the chest lid! He got  blowed to pieces!" 

The last shocking statement no more than left his lips before a  torrent of bullets blew cold on his face. 

Only Monk's mad rage at hearing the statement that the blast had  killed Doc saved Bruze's life. Monk fired

before he had taken an  accurate aim. 

As it was, Bruze managed to twist aside and spring to cover. 

His henchmen unlimbered guns. The weapons lipped flame. The gang  also retreated hurriedly. They did not

know how many men opposed them.  And there was terror in the bull fiddle roaring of the tiny machine  guns

held by their opponents. 

Ignoring Bruze for the moment, Monk and the others raced wildly for  the explosion scene. Their faces were

distorted; their eyes fixed in a  sort of glaze. It was ghastly news, this which had just come to them. 

Their bronze leader had perished! The thought numbed their brains. 

In their mad haste to reach the spot where the caravel had lain,  they stumbled headlong into the sea. They

fought off the entangling  weeds blindly, as if they were of no consequence. 

With a pathetic eagerness, they searched the wreckage around the  explosion spot. They turned over timbers.

They even plunged into the  weeds, and with waterproof flashlights, sought for Doc's mighty bronze  form, or

his fragments. 

They found nothing. Many timbers of the caravel had been pulled  beneath the surface by old cannons and

other attached metalware. And  the blast had been of such force as to virtually annihilate everything  near it. 


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Renny's great voice boomed out, rasping, threatful: "Come on! We'll  pay them for this!" 

A SILENT, setfaced group, the five raced in pursuit of Bruze. They  were like grim jumping jacks, leaping

over the wreckage. 

They were not long overcoming their quarry. Bruze had halted his  crew, and was considering returning to

learn who had launched that  sudden, fierce assault. 

Renny and the others went into action the instant they Sighted  Bruze. Flame poured out of their fists

repeatedly. The bullets scooped  planks off derelicts, or streaked the yellowed sea. 

Only their knowledge of the Sargasso saved Bruze and his crew.  Knowing the best routes for flight, they

managed to keep ahead of the  five grim men who pursued them. 

The retreat led toward the circular fortress erected on the two  barges. 

Bruze reached the place, got his fellows inside, and banged the  steel door shut. 

Renny and the other four came up. They squinted thoughtfully at the  stronghold. 

Their first recklessness had evaporated. They were using caution  now. But their fierce determination burned

even stronger. Bruze would  pay dearly for the trap aboard the caravel! 

As they stared, searchlights squirted glaring rods of white from  the turret. 

Sighting expertly, Long Tom squeezed the firing latch of his  pistolsized machine gun. The weapon hooted. 

Long Tom was the runt of Doc's crowd in size, yet he had no trouble  targeting the noisy rapidfirer. Certain

radically new features which  Doc had incorporated in the recoil mechanism were responsible for this. 

The searchlights went out like candles in a gale before Long Tom's  bullets. For several seconds after the last

one was extinguished, lens  fragments jangled down the steel sides of the turret. 

Renny took charge. Their fighting campaign, to be effective,  required some one in command. 

Although Doc's five aids held an equal ranking, it was the  bigfisted engineer who was most fitted for the

present emergency.  Renny was a master of tactics. Had the job ahead involved chemistry,  Monk would have

assumed control; had it been an electrical task, Long  Tom would have led. 

"We'll post ourselves in a circle around the place," Renny  muttered. "Latch the guns into single fire, and

shoot only at flashes  from their weapons. We've got to conserve ammunition." 

The five deployed. Each twisted a small lever on his weapon. This  set the machine guns to discharge one shot

at a time. 

They selected pieces of wreckage which offered shelter. Their shots  became scattering, purposeful. Hardly a

slug left their guns which did  not enter some loophole in the turret. 

Time after time, men screamed in agony within the fortress! Bruze's  gang sought to use machine guns of their

own, only to have sniping  bullets tear their hands and arms, or dismantle their weapons. 


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Considering the moonlight, the shooting was little short of  uncanny. After the lapse of a quarter of an hour, it

had come to a  point where not a man dared shoot from a loophole. To do so meant an  instant slug in return,

placed with awful sureness. 

"Whew!" mumbled a man within the turret. "A guy might as well step  up to one of them portholes an' take a

crack at 'imself!" 

"We'll fix 'em!" Bruze snarled. 

A few moments later, the weird signal gong boomed from within the  turret. Bongbong, bong! The gong

sounded with such volume that  eardrums quivered. Bong, bong! The noise roiled for miles across the

fantastic graveyard of lost ships. Bongbongbong! The sound echoed and  reechoed until it became a

continuous mumbling. 

Renny and the other four realized the significance of the gonging. 

"Signals!" Renny called to his friends. "There's only one thing  they could be doing  summoning aid!" 

IN view of the new development, Renny altered his strategy  somewhat. He grouped his men. 

"We'll wait!" he whispered. "If they're too many for us, we'll have  to retreat. We've got to use our heads to

clean out this nest of  vipers!" 

They ceased firing and tuned their ears to the wind made creakings  and wheezings of the Sargasso. Time

dragged. 

Monk glanced uneasily at his wrist watch. This was of the  jumpminute variety, with luminous figures, and a

tiny lid which  obscured the radiolite when a betraying glow would have been dangerous.  Only five minutes

had gone by. 

New noises became audible. Men coming! More of Bruze's followers!  The men, of course, did not live within

the turret. 

No doubt they were widely scattered, occupying the most luxurious  ('.quarters to be found in the great island

of derelicts. The gong had  summoned them to the attack. 

Renny listened alertly. 

"Holy cow!" he breathed. "There seems to be scores of 'em! Too many  for us! We'd better get out of here!" 

Cautiously, they withdrew. 

Bruze's underlings had encircled the spot, however. They must have  been ordered to do so by the gong code. 

A revolver smacked six rapid shots! The bullets made shrill  whistles past the men, and dug up small geysers

in the jaundiced water!  The slugs had been fired from a high point the crow's nest of a  neighboring

eighteenthcentury frigate 

Growling wrathfully, the five ducked for cover. Those shots had  been accurate. Renny sought to lead the way

from the spot. 


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Wheeechug! Lead dug into the weeds and water almost under him. 

"We gotta pick that guy off!" Monk growled. 

This proved a difficult task. The crow's nest was actually a tub of  steel, fitted with loopholes. No doubt, in

another age, snipers had  lurked there to pick off the helmsmen on enemy vessels. 

Their rapidfirers rapped out single shots. 

Ham latched his weapon into continuous fire, steadied it against  his sword cane, and let it moan. That did the

trick. 

Screams of pain began coming from the crow's nest. 

"My arm  my arm! It's torn off! My arm  " 

"Let's ramble!" Renny grunted. "Bet he's barely nicked!" 

The temporary delay had let their enemies surround them, they  discovered. Metal stormed frequently. Powder

sound whooped back and  forth. 

Bruze's gang did not charge. They held a hearty respect for the  terrible little machine guns. Instead, they

skulked through the forest  of wrecks, shooting from all sides. 

Their position getting worse each minute, Renny's crowd worked  slowly toward the distant Cameronic. 

Johnny was wounded, not seriously, in an arm. Renny himself had  received a painful bullet burn across the

shoulders. 

"Far be it from me to be a pessimist!" Monk grumbled. But I don't  think we're going to make it!" 

Monk was merely facing facts. They had covered almost a mile, but  they were practically at a standstill. To

continue onward meant almost  certain death. 

"Hey! hissed Ham. "Listen!" 

The gong had started booming again. 

THE weird sound kept coming for several minutes. It was not unlike  a strumming on the bass string of a

gigantic, distant guitar. 

Bongbong, Bong! Bong! Bongbong! 

The erratic boomings were undoubtedly spelling out words. Renny  tried to get some idea of the code. The

others did likewise. But, grope  as they would, they could make nothing out of the uncanny  orchestration. 

With a final bong! came silence. 

Renny and the other four waited for their enemies to resume  shooting. Nothing happened! He even raised his

head from behind a log,  inviting a slug. The truth dawned. 


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"The gong called 'em off our necks!" he roared. "C'mon, you mugs!  Here's our chance!" 

They quitted the vicinity at top speed, bounding from one piece of  wreckage to the next. They said nothing,

all their breath being needed  for the terrible going. 

Eventually, they neared the spot where they had left their boat.  Once there, they would be comparatively safe,

and certain of getting to  the Cameronic, which floated impressively some distance from the edge  of the vast

field of derelicts. 

They came within sight of the little craft. 

"Hey!" squawled Monk. "D'you see what I do!" 

The others did. Relief hit them, a relief so great that it weakened  them like an illness. They could only sink,

trembling, upon the nearest  wreckage, and stare as if unable to believe their vision. 

Doc Savage, a mighty bronze statue in the moonlight, was waiting at  the boat! As he came toward them, a

faint film of perspiration was  noticeable, glistening upon his finetextured skin. This was proof that  Doc had

just put forth tremendous exertion. 

"We thought  that caravel  " Renny was unable to form a  coherent sentence. "The explosion  holy

cow!" 

"They had a bomb trap on it," Doc said quietly. "I found the wires  by grasping the lid and running my hands

around it. Then it was a  simple matter to locate the explosive, and arrange for it to let loose  after I was safely

off the caravel." 

"But why  " 

"I wanted to draw Bruze Into the vicinity. In other words  locate  him so that I could get on his trail. It was

reasonable to believe he  would come to the scene of the blast to see if I was killed." 

"But the gong signals that called 'em off our trail 

"Imagine they're a bit sore about that," Doc replied dryly. "You  see, I was lurking near by during your entire

fight. You were doing all  right, so I didn't show myself. 

"But they finally got you in a bad way. So I went back to their  fortress on the barges and sounded the gong.

By hinting that there was  a flank attack by a party from the Cameronic, I decoyed them away from  you

fellows!" 

THE five men, tired and perspiring, sat there enjoying this  information. They could imagine Bruze's chagrin.

That Doc had fathomed  the gong code did not surprise them. Their bronze leader was a wizard  at such things.

In fact, as they had long ago come to realize, he was a  wizard at all things. 

Renny rattled his huge, hard fists together. He was thoughtful.  Knowing the uncanny silence with which Doc

could move, Renny believed  there must have been an instance or two when Bruze might have been  captured.

He voiced this suspicion, along with a question. 

"Why aren't you trying to grab Bruze?" 


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A hint of mirth flickered in Doc's golden eyes. 

"I had hold of him once. And if you care to take my word for it,  Bruze is very much a handful! He is the

strongest man I ever  encountered." 

Doc now described the fight on the Cameronic. This was the first  his friends had known of the affair. Doc

played down his part; his  words even gave the impression that Bruze had more than held his own in  the

combat. 

Renny and the other four were not deceived; however. The fact that  Bruze had jumped off the liner showed

how Doc had fared. 

"You can't tell us you couldn't get hold of Bru.ze if you tried!"  Renny grinned. "Since the explosion, I mean!" 

Doc passed the compliment. "For the moment, it is best that Bruze  remain at liberty." 

"Why?" 

"He has some method of leaving the Sargasso. Just how he does it is  a mystery. And we've got to crack that

mystery, brothers, or we may  never get out of here ourselves." 

"I see. You plan to trail him in hopes that he will lead you to the  device he uses." 

"Right." 

"What about us?" 

"You go back to the Cameronic." 

The five did not object. Long experience had taught them that  whatever plan Doc had, it was the best.

Anyway, they 

were tired. The comfortable chairs in the Cameronic lounge would be  welcome. 

Doc saw his friends safely in their boat. They sped away, four of  them at the paddlewheel cranks, Long

Tom in the bows keeping an eye on  the weed sickles. 

A smoky haze was appearing on the surface of the Sargasso, such a  haze as had been present that morning. It

swallowed the little shell as  it neared the gleaming hulk which was the distant liner. 

Chapter XIV. RED DAWN

AN hour later, Doc appeared in the vicinity of the turret of a  fortress on the two barges. He had taken his

time. This was not to  conserve his strength, the enormous reservoirs of which had hardly been  tapped. He had

done a little searching en route. 

He had hoped to find some hint of the means Bruze used to enter and  leave the Sargasso. It was possible, of

course, that he only entered  aboard derelict ships  craft which he had disabled that they might  drift here

and be looted at leisure. 


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But he surely had an efficient method of getting out. Moreover, it  was a system by which a considerable

number of men could be  transported. The force he had put aboard the Cameronic in Alexandria   at least

forty men  showed that. 

Doc's hunt had drawn a blank, though. 

He scouted the turret stronghold. It was quiet, but a spot of light  showed here and there from a porthole. 

Doc did not go too close. He had found the alarm system which  protected the place. It was very complex and

efficient and modern,  employing photoelectric cells and ultraviolet light, in addition to  the usual contact

traps. Doc had put this partially out of commission,  but it might have been repaired. 

The absence of noise showed that not many men were within the  turret. A large crowd could hardly have kept

so quiet. Certain it was  that they would not have done so, for there was no reason for silence. 

Finally, there came a procession of growled oaths from the  stronghold. 

"No, damn you! I don't want my wound dressed!" 

Bruze's voice. Some one must have volunteered a second time to  dress the injury which he claimed was

responsible for his bad showing  against Doc. 

Some time later, the turret door opened. A man came out. He was a  small, wiry villain. 

Bruze appeared behind him. 

"I don't hear anything!" said the wiry man. 

"That's all right," Bruze growled. "I hope we don't hear anything.  Noise, especially shooting, would mean

something had gone wrong." 

The pair stood there a while, hands cupped back of their ears. 

"Ain't nothin' to do but wait!" Bruze growled. "Dammit! If it  hadn't been for this wound of mine, I'd have

gone along!" 

This made it plain that Bruze was using the imaginary injury to  keep out of any engagement in which he

might encounter Doc. 

To Doc, the words disclosed something else. Bruze. working with  fiendish speed, had launched some other

infernal scheme! 

Doc pondered briefly. This meant danger to somebody. To the women  aboard the warship? To the

Cameronic? The women were accustomed to  taking care of themselves. It must be against the liner! 

A noiseless bronze apparition, Doc faded from the vicinity. He set  a direct course for the Cameronic, and he

traveled faster than at any  time before. 

He reached the spot where he had left his little shell of a boat.  It was still there  but quite thoroughly

smashed to bits! 


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Bruze's henchmen had found the craft. 

Doc whipped from the vicinity, then prowled warily. There was no  ambush, however  which might mean

that Bruze's gang were afraid, or  that they had some more efficient scheme for getting their hands on  Doc. 

The ruined boat meant a terrible swim through the weedfilled sea  to the Cameronic.  Drawing his knife, Doc

honed it briefly on his shoe  heel. Then he partially disrobed for the swim. This disclosed that a  vestlike

garment, fitted with many waterproof pockets, held the  manifold items which composed his bottomless bag

of tricks. 

The haze had thickened, until the liner was completely lost from  view. No sound came from that direction. 

The swim to the ship was a nightmare, even to Doc. It consumed  hours of terrifying, straining effort. The

weeds clutched at him  always. His knife dulled repeatedly, and had to be whetted on the  leather parts of his

vest, which he still wore. It was like being  entangled in a vast fish net. 

Dawn came before he reached the Cameronic. The sun was a red, gory  eye in the east. He found ropes

dangling over the liner rails, and  climbed them. The truth confronted him instantly. 

Bruze's followers had taken the liner! 

DOC moved from spot to spot, inspecting the scene. Huge and  expressionless, he might have been a robot

man of tempered metal.  Tendrils of seaweed dangled like strings from his form. At intervals,  he popped,

between thumb and forefinger, one of the tiny bulbs which,  airfilled, gave the sargassum buoyancy. 

He entered the 'lounge. There, a weird thing happened. The giant  bronze man seemed to grow suddenly

weary. He turned around and around,  sluggishly, as if hunting a comfortable spot in which to repose. Then  he

fell heavily to the floor. 

He did not sleep, however. With efforts strangely forced, he  dragged himself for the door. His progress was

by inches. His eyes were  closed; his metallic features were a mask. 

It was ages before he reached the deck. He lay there breathing  heavily, but otherwise unmoving. He seemed

to slowly awaken. 

Doc had learned how Bruze's men had  taken the Cameronic. Getting  the information had nearly proved

disastrous. 

They had employed gas! An odorless vapor! Some of it still remained  in the liner interior, and Doc had

walked into the stuff. 

He arose at last, and continued his search. This time, he held his  breath whenever he was inside. 

He found no bodies, except those who had perished in the fight when  Bruze made his first attack. This fact

indicated the gas was not  necessarily fatal. 

The strong room back of the purser's office gaped open. The heavy  steel door had been stripped of its lock by

use of a cutting torch. 

Doc's hoard of diamonds and the gold bullion were both gone.  Jewelry and money deposited by the

passengers had also been taken. 


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More thought had entirely convinced Doc that those who had been  aboard the liner were still alive. Why had

they been carried off? That  was simple. Their lives would be forfeited if he himself did not  surrender. Then

they would probably be forfeited anyway, if Bruze got  his way. 

In fierce silence, Doc set about his preparations. He found that  his weedcutter equipped boats had been

chopped to bits. 

But one of the craft, apart from the others, had not been  discovered. Doc carried this out on deck. 

He stocked it with food. He intended to no longer use the Cameronic  as a base. He carried a load of

equipment, mostly ammunition for his  one machine gun, from his suite. 

He went back for a second load. 

Hardly had he vanished inside, when a furtive form glided out of a  recess in the superstructure. A man! He

scuttled forward, soundless in  bare feet. 

IT was Bruze. He had surmised Doc was headed back to the Cameronic,  and has passed him under cover of

the night, as Doc was making his  terrific swim. His unlovely hawk features were plastered with both fear  and

elation. 

His actions were those of a man with a plan. He floated straight to  Doc's boat. A pair of powerful bolt cutters

came out of a pocket. He  grasped a link of the chain which turned the paddles. He cut half  through the link.

Then he smeared the grease on the chain into the cut,  so it would not be noticed. 

Next, he seized Doc's pistolsized machine gun. Jacking it open, he  inserted the bolt cutters and pried. A

piece of mechanism broke. He  replaced the gun. The damage he had done was not evident. 

He crept to the superstructure, and vanished inside. A gas mask lay  there. He picked it up and donned it. Then

he went forward, stepping  sil!entlv. 

From a stateroom, he removed a large mirror. He took this to the  bows. Sheltered from Doc's view, he caught

beams of sunlight upon the  mirror, and reflected them toward the island of derelicts. 

The Cameronic had been carried slightly nearer this isle during the  night. And the haze had largely dissipated. 

An answering heliograph flash came. The signaler was hidden on a  wrecked sailing vessel. 

Bruze spelled out words, using the same code employed with the  gong. 

"I have not been able to get a shot at Savage," he transmitted. 

A lie, that! The plain truth was that Bruze had a mortal terror of  Doc Savage. He had not dared shoot at the

bronze man, on the chance  that a first bullet might not kill. 

"You want us to spring the trap at our end?" flashed the distant  man. 

'Yes," was Bruze's answering signal. "Savage will come in a boat. I  fixed it so it'll break down if he tries to

speed. His gun is out of  whack, too." 

"That oughta make things easy," the signals flashed back. 


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The sun signaling now ceased. 

Bruze crept to the corner of the deck house and peered around. He  drew a silent breath of relief. Doc Savage

had not yet reappeared. The  bronze man could not have seen the heliographics. 

Doc appeared shortly. Bruze did not take the chance of watching. He  knew something of Doc's uncanny

keenness of vision. 

Employing a regular lifeboat davit, Doc lowered his shell to the  surface. Munching chocolate he had taken

from the Cameronic candy shop,  he slid down the ropes and planted himself carefully in the light hull. 

The sickles clicking, the boat moved away from the liner. Doc made  no effort to travel at more than normal

speed. 

The sun was already hot, although as vet not far above the horizon.  The warmth seemed to increase the musty

tang of the Sargasso. It made  breathing harder. 

Tiny sea horses, shrimps, and crabs scuttled about madly to get out  of the boat's path. Writhing here and there

were long pipe fish. The  weeds fairly teemed with life. 

Doc passed a smaller derelict or two. These craft floated like  sentries on the outskirts of the thicker forest of

wrecks. His golden  eyes ranged over the fast drift of dead ships. The strangeness of the  place, the wonder of

its being here, had not ceased to affect him. 

He neared the floating isle. 

Four lifeboats suddenly appeared. They were fitted with crude weed  cutters. Bruze's villains poled them

along. 

Doc spun the righthand crank of his paddle drive. Then he bent  effort to both cranks. One drive broke. Doc

grasped the shattered  portion. A split instant, he studied it. Cut! 

He reached for his gun, jacked it open. He saw the damage. 

From the lifeboats, a gun whacked. But long before either sound or  bullet reached Doc, he was out of his

boat. 

HE sank beneath the surface like a dropped knife. For that matter,  his knife was held out in front, cutting a

passage. Down and down, he  slashed his way. He had taken an enormous supply of air into his huge  lungs. 

The weeds extended far deeper than he had expected. The reason for  this seemed to be that, when tendrils of

the stuff died and sank, they  were held by tentacles of weed which still floated. 

His blade mowed briskly. His ears registered the chug! chug! of  bullets into the water. He was no longer

going down, but to the right.  He covered some yards. 

Slowly, he arose toward the surface. Out of his manypocketed,  vestlike undergarment he took a small tube.

This telescoped to a length  of nearly four feet. 

When he was near the top, as denoted by the jeweled glitter of  sunlight, he shoved the tube up, seized it

between his lips, and drank  the salty brine out of it. Then he began to breathe. 


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It was not necessary to paddle to keep down. The weeds held him. He  lay, relaxed, entirely motionless. He

could hear the gurgling of the  boats near by. 

Doc was not optimistic enough to believe his enemies would not  suspect a trick as common as this one. So,

when he had breathed until  his lungs felt normal, he sank and continued on. 

It was laborious business. Each inch was like a foot. He came  nearly to the top once more, protruded his pipe,

and lay immobile. 

He waited longer, this time. A tiny, fragile sea horse came and  lurked about, finally resting upon his nose.

The thing looked like a  monster dragon, that close to his eyes. It was covered with small,  rough, bony plates,

and had a tapering tail, which it switched. Its  head and neck were indeed remindful of a horse. Altogether, it

was not  much more than three inches long. 

The sea horse swam away when Doc moved. The big bronze man swam on. 

He was a long time reaching the shelter of a derelict. 

When he came to the surface, a fat man with a submachine gun was  standing on a timber not a foot from his

head. 

The gunner saw Doc. His eyes bulged. His mouth dropped open and his  tongue hung out. It was the first time

Doc had ever seen a surprised  man's tongue hang out. 

The man began shooting. The first dozen or so of his bullets went  screaming into the air. He swung his

weapon down like a leadspouting  hose. 

Doc grasped the timber and gave it a tug. The huge piece of wood  was waterlogged, unwieldy. But Doc

moved it enough to unbalance his  enemy. The fellow toppled into the soupy weeds. 

Doc's fist levered, popped. 

The gunner gave one spasmodic kick, then began to sink. 

Gripping the man, Doc hauled him up and placed him atop the timber.  The unconscious fellow would not

drown there. Never, if it could be  helped, did Doc deliberately take human life. 

He bounded away from the spot. A derelict was sheltering him from  the gang in the four lifeboats. 

KINA LA FORGE stood at the rail of her warship stronghold. Her  position was just aft of the bow gun turret.

Her wealth of red hair was  stirring in the faint breeze. In her brocaded blouse, her belt of gold  coins with

suspended pistol and rapier, she presented an exotic figure.  Her small pet monkey danced on the rail. 

The unusual costume set off her entrancing beauty to advantage.  Altogether, she was an exquisite creature. 

"You come one step nearer, and I'll break your leg with a bullet!"  she was saying. 

Doc, still wet from his recent swim, argued: "Now, listen  " 

"You heard me!" 


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Doc studied the charming picture she presented. Along with his  other training for his perilous career of

hunting trouble, he had taken  a course in feminine psychology. Sometimes he wondered if he had  learned

anything, after all. The intricacies of the feminine mind were  beyond any psychologist. 

He had saved this young woman's life. And here she was promising to  shoot him. 

"Well, can I talk?" Doc asked in a pained tone. 

"If you don't come any closer!" 

Doc kept his distance. He told of the capture of every one aboard  the Cameronic. The information was bad in

itself, but he purposely made  it sound much worse. This was to influence the redheaded beauty who  had her

gun pointed at him. He told of his narrow escape, and squeezed  water out of his garments to prove it. 

"Now you see why I came here," he finished. 

"I'm still none too sure about you!" Kina la Forge temporized.  "Bruze  the Sargasso Ogre  has some

very clever men. Besides,  another man came aboard our ship last night. He was a great, big, hairy  fellow. We

thought at first he was a gorilla. I have never seen a  gorilla, but he looked almost like the pictures of them in

the books." 

"That was Monk  one of my five friends," Doc explained. "He is a  great guy. You shouldn't have pushed

him overboard." 

"I didn't! He fell!" 

Doc turned his head slowly. He cupped his ears. The Sargasso was  creaking and whimpering in the breeze.

But there were other sounds. Men  approaching! 

"I'M coming aboard!" Doc snapped. 

"You do, and I'll shoot!" she shrilled. 

Doc tossed his grapple, snared the rail, and climbed. He expected  her to try to cut the silk cord. Nothing of

the sort happened. 

She was waiting for him at the top. She did not even aim her gun at  him. The pet monkey danced about,

chattering. 

Her objections, it dawned on him, had been feminine contrariness  only. Probably she was piqued at the ease

with which he had escaped  during the night, and wanted to make him sweat for it. 

"Men are on their way, probably some of Bruze's outfit!" he told  her. "You talk to them. I don't want them to

know I am aboard!" 

He stepped through a steel door. Waiting just inside, he could hear  what was said without being seen. 

"Ahoy, you women!" Bruze's voice roared from the distance. 

Four women shot in Bruze's direction almost simultaneously. 


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Bruze yelled maledictions. 

"We didn't try to hit him!" the redheaded girl said for Doc's  benefit. "But we gave him a scare. I'll bet he

jumped twenty feet  flatfooted!" 

Doc smiled faintly. Here was a remarkable young woman. 

"Listen, you!" Bruze howled. "I got somethin' to say!" 

"We don't want to hear it!" 

"You gotta! I've just brought a liner named the Cameronic to our  little playground, and  " 

"I know all about it!" 

"There was more'n three hundred passengers! We got 'em all!" 

"Alive?" 

"Sure they are! But they won't be for long! You dames have gotta  turn over that gold you're holdin' on that

warship, or we'll kill  everybody from the Cameronic! You can stay on the warship, if you  wanta. But you

gotta give up the treasure!" 

"Tell him to chase himself!" Doc suggested, lowvoiced. 

"No!" Kina la Forge relayed to Bruze. 

"You'll wish you had!" 

"You can't scare us!" 

Bruze made a few sulphurous remarks concerning womankind in  general. 

"We'll bring our prisoners from the liner here one at a time, an'  kill 'em right under your eyes!" he threatened. 

"I expect you will! We'll watch!" 

It took nerve to greet Bruze's hideous promise with hardboiled  flippancy, as the auburnhaired girl had

done. But it was the best way  of handling him. 

"All right, all right!" Bruze screamed. "But if you see that bronze  guy, Doc Savage, you can tell 'im we're

gonna croak 'is five friends if  he don't surrender to us!" 

"And in just five seconds we're going to start shooting at you if  you're still in sight!" the redhead shrieked,

driven to near breaking  point. "And we don't miss!" 

Bruze and his gang evidently departed in haste, because the young  woman came to the door inside which Doc

stood. She leaned against it,  pale and trembling a little. 

"They mean it!" she choked. 


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"I know that!" Doc assured her grimlv. 

She shuddered. "I'm going to be a nervous wreck the rest of the  day. Seeing Bruze always affects me like

that. I  I think he killed  my father with his own hand. I wish you had talked to them." 

"I couldn't!" Doc replied gently. "They will keep their prisoners  unarmed until they get hold of me. But the

instant they talk to me,  things will be at a crisis. I'll either have to give up or see my  friends slain." 

DOC remained aboard the derelict warship the rest of the day. He  kept inside, where Bruze's watchmen, if

any were about, could not  glimpse him. 

He had hoped to sleep a little, but that proved to be out of the  question. 

The women bombarded him with questions. They had had no news of the  outside world for a long time.

Some of them, of course. had never seen  anything but this great raft of derelicts which was the moldering

heart  of the Sargasso Sea. 

Doc told them all the latest news, including the newest in feminine  styles. When he saw how pathetically

eager they were, he used crayons,  which some one produced, and sketched the summer dress models from

Paris and New York. 

Another man would have been astounded at Doc's knowledge of these  things. To the ladies, it was scarcely

less remarkable. 

It was not long before the inevitable began to happen. Comely young  things began to regard Doc with more

interest than due a wayfarer with  news. His unusual physique, his undeniably good looks, were having  their

effect. 

Young ladies cast appraising glances at their sisters, as if  comparing the charm of the others with their own,

with the ultimate  idea of making a conquest of this big bronze fellow. 

Nor was their ravishing redheaded leader unsusceptible. Indeed.  she was the first one to show the

symptoms. Before the afternoon was  well along, she contrived to get all her subjects at work upon the."'

various housekeeping tasks aboard the warship. In this manner, she  discouraged competition. 

She did not know it yet, but she would have done well to save her  gentle wiles. Doc was womanproof. In his

life, with its constant peril  and violence, there was no place for the fair sex. 

Consequently, he disregarded them. He simply exercised his  remarkable will power and carefully avoided

any entanglements. 

This was not difficult for Doc. But it was occasionally tough on  the young women who came in contact with

the bronze man's amazing  personality. They could not help but be attracted. 

Doc was not unaware of the effect he had upon the fair sex. So he  took care not to be snared, even by so

gorgeous a young lady as this  titianhaired queen. 

Chapter XV. SPECTRAL MOTORS

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move the derelicts in the weed. To  her memory, Kina la Forge had informed Doc, there had never been a gale

strong enough to scatter the wrecks. 

Doc rested the hook of his grapple snugly against the rail, grasped  the enameledsilk cord and prepared to

descend. 

The redheaded ruler of the warship femininity stood near by. Her  pretty features bore a pensive expression.

She was discovering that her  charm was having no perceptible effect on Doc. Privately, she  considered this

situation not to her liking, but there was nothing she  could do about it. 

Rather sooner than it came to most young ladies, it had dawned on  Kina la Forge that this bronze giant was a

man for no woman. 

"Good luck!" 

"Thank you," Doc told her. "And you be sure and keep a close guard  posted. Those fellows are liable to try

their gasmask trick." 

Kina la Forge called to the pet monkey. It came and skipped up to  her shoulder. She scratched his ear. 

"That's where Nero is very useful," she said, indicating the  monkey. "He can detect the gas before it is strong

enough to harm us.  He always raises a fuss. That is our cue to put on masks. We have  plenty of gas masks." 

"Bruze has tried to take this battleship with gas?" 

"Often." 

"Well," said Doc, "let's hope he doesn't try it tonight, and catch  Nero asleep." 

"Don't you want to take one of our masks?" 

Doc tapped his pocketed undergarment. "I have one of them already" 

He slid swiftly down the silken thread. The nearest piece of  flotsam was out ten feet from the hull. He shoved

himself out and  landed lightly upon it. 

The inevitable gray, smokelike mists which characterized the  Sargasso nights enveloped him. If anything, the

vapor, a sort of  unhealthy fog, was thicker than on the previous night. 

Doc did not mind. it could not get too dark for his purpose. The  more gloom there was, the less likely his

enemies were to see him. 

He was, however, able to distinguish objects with fair distinctness  for a score of yards in any direction. 

He set his course straight for the barges whereon stood Bruze's  little fort. He progressed with greater ease

than at any time  previously. 

During the afternoon. Kina la Forge had shown him a chart of the  position of derelicts in the Sargasso. It

seemed that the wrecks  altered their location very little during the months  so little, in  fact, that the chart

was a year old and still fairly accurate. 


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The Cameronic, for instance, would take years to work into the  center of the nearcontinent of lost ships. The

liner, having a deeper  draft, and thus receiving a stronger shove from the ocean currents,  would drift more

swiftly than the smaller craft, even forcing her way  among them. 

There were, the titian beauty had told Doc, several welldefined  paths through the wilderness of wrecks. 

One part of the great mass of derelicts was not shown. This was the  far western portion  a part which Doc

had not yet visited. This was  not on the map, the girl had explained, because Bruze always kept that  end

heavily guarded. 

This had given Doc an idea that Bruze's device for leaving the  Sargasso, whatever it was, could be found in

that region. He intended  to investigate. 

First, however, Doc wanted to locate the prisoners Bruze was  holding. And he had a ruse to try. A ruse he

hoped would bring vital  results. 

FIERY slits marked portholes in Bruze's turret of a fort. The  interior was more brilliantly lighted than Doc

had yet seen it. 

He took up a position near by and waited. 

Voices muttered inside the stronghold. They might have been the  growling of animals. Not a word could be

understood. 

For perhaps an hour, Doc crouched in patience. 

Then the turret door opened. Four men came out. They carried a  lantern. All four held submachine guns

carelessly under their arms. 

"You mugs get some rest!" Bruze's voice called out from inside.  "Tomorrow we'll cook up somethin' for that

Savage!" 

Doc kept his position, since the words had told him the four were  merely going to whatever derelict they

called home. 

The men, holding their lantern high, stepped along a sort of  makeshift path which had been formed by

shoving chunks of flotsam close  together. 

Doc now advanced on the turret. The four departing men, he  believed, would cause a ringing of the alarm.

Right! The jangle of the  hell reached his ears. Such alarms as Doc now set off would be  attributed to the

departing quartet. 

A bronze smear close to the water, he gained the turret side. While  the alarm bell still jangled, he tossed his

grapple up and hooked the  roof. This was flat as a tank, except for the center where the conical  observation

tower arose. 

The grapple held. Doc did not climb immediately. He waited. He  believed the alarms were all wired in one

system, since he had found  but one bell while on his gongbeating visit. But he wanted to be sure. 

Swearing at the noise of the bell, Bruze or some one switched it  off. 


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Silence! It was like the quiet in a graveyard. Since there was no  breeze tonight, the usual creakings and

whinings of the Sargasso were  absent. 

Soon a faint noise reached Doc's ears. It seemed to be the slam of  a door. Other sounds told him somebody

was moving about on the other  side of the steel wall, very near him. 

A series of rattlings reached him. The noises had the quality of  pebbles poured from hand to hand. 

Doc climbed his silk cord. He made no more racket than a feather  pulled up by a string. Reaching a point

level with a porthole, he found  it necessary to bend far over to peer through. 

Just before he looked, he heard a hideous, guinealike cackle of a  laugh. Then he stared. 

Scrooge and his miser hoard! Only Scrooge, in his greediest dreams,  never imagined a trove such as this. 

Bruze sat crosslegged on rich cushions. Before him was a case, the  lid pried off. Into this, the hawkfaced,

overmuscled man dipped his  hands. His little eyes were sticking out of his head like glass  marbles, and he

was so gripped by hysterical delight that he was  sweating. 

For he was handling Doc's uncut diamonds. A wealth untold! 

About the room was stacked other treasuregold bullion, gold coin  in sacks, trays of jewelry, and cheaper

trinkets in mounds on the  floor. Loot from the ships named on the scalp belt! Ransom of a score  of kings! 

And in the midst of it sat Bruze a gloating fiend, with thews and  sinews draping his great body like coiled

snakes. 

The Sargasso Ogre! At the moment, no other name could have fitted  him more aptly. 

DOC SAVAGE now did a surprising thing. He threw back his head. His  pliant throat muscles fluttered a bit,

then set themselves in position. 

From Doc's lips came a low, whizzing moan. He interspersed sharp  popping noises made with his tongue. 

It was probably one of the most perfect and difficult imitations  ever given by the bronze man. 

An engine in the distance, being warmed up! The popping  interruptions were to represent backfiring. 

Doc was working on the theory that Bruze's means of leaving the  Sargasso, whatever it was, certainly had a

motor in it. If he could  make Bruze think he was hearing a motor, the man might rush to the  place where he

had his device hidden, just to make sure nobody was  stealing it. 

The ruse worked! Bruze  involved with his greed  failed to hear  the sound at first. When he did hear it,

he leaped erect with a  suddenness which sent a round half million dollars' worth of diamonds  skittering

across the steel floor like gravel. 

Bruze listened. He came close to the porthole. Compared to the  bright light within the turret, the smoky moon

glow was like darkness. 

Doc remained unseen. 


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Bruze ripped a profane exclamation. He grabbed up a submachine gun  and dived out of the room. 

Doc slid down to a floating hatch. It gurgled faintly when he  landed on it, but Bruze was making so much

racket no one heard. A quick  flip dislodged Doc's grapple. 

The turret door banged open, and Bruze popped out, shaking his  head, roaring. The alarm bell promptly

began to jangle as he operated  some of the trips. 

Doc quitted the vicinity. Apparently there was no lookout in the  tower, or if there was one, he put all his

dependence in the efficient  alarm system. 

Reaching the shelter of a hulk, Doc circled. He was soon on Bruze's  trail. The man was traveling alone, and

very fast. It taxed even Doc's  fabulous agility to keep up. 

Bruze seemed to be following a path constructed through the  derelict wilderness. Getting upon this, Doc had

easier going. 

Their course was west  toward the region that Bruze's followers  guarded so carefully! 

For almost an hour, they traveled. Then Doc received his  disappointment. 

NEAR the outskirts of the clot of lifeless ships, Bruze approached  a monster hulk of a freighter. It was one of

the largest  freightcarrying ships Doc had ever seen. It had nearly the proportions  of a liner. 

Rust scales as large as books clung to the ancient hull, as Doc  discovered upon creeping close. The deck was

a tangled mess of rigging,  shattered superstructure, and twisted rails. The craft seemed even more  decrepit

than other derelicts of like age. 

Doc was disgusted. He had expected to find a ship with the upper  works cut away, and a runway for plane

takeoffs built upon it; or  perhaps a moored submarine. There was nothing of that sort here. 

"What d'you guys think you're doin', startin' them motors!" Bruze  screamed. "Dontcha know they're liable to

be heard? You dumb cluck!  Supposin' them women or that Savage should find this place?" 

A door in the rusty old hull, close to the water, opened. Two men  stepped out. Others were behind them.

They were heavily armed and very  alert. 

"We didn't start no motors!" one growled. 

"Don't lie to me! I heard 'em! You had the mufflers off, too! Ain't  I told you never to run 'em without

mufflers when there ain't no wind  to cover the sound?" 

"I tell you we haven't touched the engines!" 

Bruze shook his fists. "Call me a liar, huh?" 

"You're crazy if you think  " 

The man got no further than that. 


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Whop! Bruze's fist took the fellow alongside the head. The victim  turned entirely over in the air and splashed

in the weedy sea beside a  log. 

Leaping to him, Bruze grasped with his ropy hands. He must have  squeezed terribly, for the other man

screamed like a rabbit caught by a  dog. 

"I didn't mean no harm!" he shrieked. "Honest, we ain't touched the  motors! And we ain't heard nothin'

either!" 

More men stepped out of the rusty hulk. They added their 

assertions to those of their brother who had been so unwise as to  make a crack about Bruze's sanity. 

"I'll wring yer necks if this is a lie!" Bruze gritted. "I'm gonna  look! I'll lay a hand on every motor! And if one

is warm, you'd better  start runnin'!" 

He stamped through the door. 

The other men remained on guard. Some one brought a carbide lamp. 

This shed a great glare, and forced Doc to retreat to avoid  discovery. 

Using his silken cord and the grapple, Doc gained the deck of the  derelict. Rust scales hung everywhere. The

deck planks, laid over steel  plates, were curled and warped until they resembled elongated breakfast  food

flakes. The smoky fog gave the place a spooky aspect. 

Doc went to the handiest companionway. He found it closed with a  panel of heavy steel riveted in place. No

ingress by that route. 

He sought another way into the hold. Again, rivets and rusty metal  barred his way. 

Searching diligently, he worked entirely to the stern. Every  companion was plated securely. 

The old freighter must have been a clumsy craft in her day. She had  a tremendously wide beam  fully a

hundred feet from one side to the  other. A tub! No wonder she had broken down in some storm, to drift to

this cemetery of the Atlantic. That a storm had disabled her was  evident from the condition of the rigging, the

funnels, and the  superstructure. 

Bruze's growling voice attracted Doc from his search. Further  hunting was useless, anyway. The interior of

the hulk was steelplated  everywhere, as if she were a treasure vault. 

"I can't savvy it!" Bruze was snorting. "I tell you, I heard a  motor!" 

suddenly he stopped and scratched his head. "Come inside! All of  you! Never mind watchin' the door! There

likely ain't nobody around!" 

THE entire party now passed inside the mystery ship. 

Doc promptly hooked his grapple to a rusty length of pipe which had  once been a davit. Unreeling his line as

he went, he descended   straight down upon the door. 


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He knew very well what chances he was taking. That sudden decision  of Bruze's to call his men inside had

smacked of a foxy trick. 

Had Johnny, the surething geologist, been around, he would have  offered to bet that armed men lurked

inside that invitingly open door,  waiting for Doc to put in an appearance. 

Unless Doc was mightily mistaken, Bruze had fathomed the imitation  motorsound ruse. But getting a look

at the interior of the puzzle  vessel was worth a chance. 

What Doc had hoped would not occur, however, now happened. 

A hatch in the side of the hull a hundred feet sternward grated  noisily, then opened. simultaneously, another

one near the bows also  flung back. 

A man leaned from each, gripping submachine guns. 

Doc let the silk cord hiss through his fingers. He literally  hurtled down. He was not more than a dozen feet

above the door, anyway. 

He thumped, light as a big cat, on a platform of driftwood which  stood before the door. 

Inside the door, at least a dozen men crouched. Those who did not  have machine guns held pistols. 

Doc leaped to the left. He did it so quickly that guns roared  anyway, although he was no longer a target. 

His hand raced to his clothing and back again. It made a gesture of  tossing something through the door. Then

he flattened against the rusty  plates. 

Close to his right ear hung a rust scale as large as a spelling  book. There were many others like it. Too, the

hull flared in such a  fashion as to make it difficult for the men to lean out of the side  hatches at bow and stern

they could not sight him. In the murk, his  bronze skin blended with the rust somewhat. 

One of the men started to shoot, regardless. The other, thus  encouraged, did likewise. 

Rust scales fell like big snowflakes. Timbers in the raft  splintered, split, and jarred as if invisible horses were

galloping  upon them. None of the lead reached Doc. 

Perhaps a minute passed. Nothing happened inside the door. There  might have been sounds, but the terrific

babble of the rapidfirers  blanketed them. 

Doc slipped through the door. His sinewy hands held no weapon. He  did not falter, however, or seem to

expect danger. His manner was that  of a hunter who had made his shot and was going after his game, sure he

had bagged it. 

Chapter XVI. THE SARGASSO OGRE PLANS

THE compartment into which Doc sprang was a steel box.  A door on  the opposite side was tightly closed.

Numerous loopholes perforated the  walls. The place was simply a second line of defense guarding the

entrance. 


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Further proof, this  that the mysterious freighter held something  of great importance to the Sargasso

looters! 

Men sprawled on the steel floor. Some were piled atop each other  like kindling. They breathed noisily, and to

all appearances slept  soundly. 

Fragments of thin glass lay in one spot. Doc stepped on these,  grinding heavily. When he took his foot away,

the glass had become a  powder so fine as to be unnoticeable. 

His golden eyes ranged the sleepers. 

There was no Bruze! 

The master villain had been clever enough, or perhaps lucky enough,  to be out of the tiny steel room. 

Doc whipped to one of the loopholes and sought to peer deeper into  the puzzling derelict. The darkness

defeated him. He used his  flashlight, but that disclosed only a long steel corridor. 

Doc tried the inner door. This was of thick metal plates, and  fastened securely on the other side. Time and

tools would be needed to  open it. Doc had neither. 

He could hear men rushing for the little room. II there were men on  the other side of the loopholes, they were

undoubtedly unconscious from  the anaesthetic vapor. But the places of the unlucky ones would soon be  taken

by those now en route. 

Doc spiked his flash through another loophole. The light planted a  white bar down the middle of a crossship

corridor, and revealed five  or six charging men. They wore gas masks. 

"Nail 'em!" Bruze was screaming from somewhere. "Get the guy! Don't  let 'im out of that room!" 

Doc spun over, picked up a submachine gun and turned it on the  ceiling. An ordinary electric bulb furnished

illumination. Lead tapped  the bulb; it went out in a hissing of electric flame. 

Leaning from the door, Doc mowed rust scales off the steel hull of  the freighter. The submachine gun,

heating, threw off waves of warmth.  Bullets, fired by the men at the side hatches, came screaming back. 

"We got 'im cornered!" Bruze screamed. "We got 'im in a hole!" 

Doc threw down the empty rapidfirer. An instant later, a metal  blob of an object flipped from his hand to the

platform outside. It  opened with a metallic click. 

The thing had landed almost under the gently swinging invisible  silk cord. 

It gave birth to a curl of black smoke. More smoke came  a vast  cloud of it. This spread in all directions. It

crawled up the  rustcankered hull of the wreck. Like a gigantic black serpent lifting  its somber head to have a

look over the Sargasso, it reared above the  derelict. 

Men in the hull hatches brought searchlights into play. These cast  fat funnels of brilliance. Soon the yellowed

sea and the packed  driftwood were all aglow. The smoke monster looked oily and solid. 

"That's the stuff!" Bruze squalled. "He can't get away now without  us seein' him!" 


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Inside the little steel room, a submachine gun began to moan. The  sound was hollow. The clatter of bullets on

steel mingled with the dull  laugh of cartridges. 

"He can't hit nobody with that gun!" yelled Bruze. "Keep under  cover! But turn lights through the loopholes!" 

The submachine gun howled on and on. Finally, it stopped. 

About that time, Bruze's henchmen got up nerve enough to squirt  flashlight luminance into the metal

chamber. 

They saw a rapidfirer  drum empty, the trigger tied back with a  bit of silk cord. 

There was no bronze man. The cloud of black smoke floated  heavenward. Still no bronze man! 

Bruze wailed and tore his hair. 

Doc Savage had vanished as completely and as mysteriously as if  carried away by that plume of sepia smoke. 

BRUZE scattered his followers in a determined search. Some of them  climbed to the ramshackle deck and

used electric lanterns.  Others  prowled the neighboring derelicts and floating trash. 

There were, incidentally, not many large hulks near the mystery  freighter. The craft itself was on the outskirts

of the small continent  of dead ships. Standing in the bows and looking west, it was possible  to view a stretch

of yolky water and weeds virtually bare of flotsam. 

Near the door which gave into the hull, Bruze held a powwow. 

"How'd he do it?" he yelled. "Savage didn't wear a mask, so it  couldn't have been gas he got my men with!

How about the birds in the  room? Are they waking up?" 

"No," said a man, "they're still sleepin'." 

"I oughta shoot the lot of 'em!" Bruze snarled unkindly. "I can't  understand how Savage could overcome a

dozen of 'em like he did. They  just wasn't up on their toes! That's all! 

"What burns me up is his gettin' clean away! How'd he do it?" Then  a man who had been in one of the hull

hatches spoke up: "I think I've  got that figured out. He got here by slidin' down a rope or somethin'  from

above! He must've went back the same way. We couldn't see 'im on  account of the smoke." 

Bruze knotted his fists. "And you didn't shoot into the smoke where  the rope was hangin'?" 

"We did, too!" 

This was not a fact. The man had expended all his bullets in the  direction of the float before the door. Not

more than a minute before  had the climbing explanation of the bronze man's disappearance occurred  to him. 

"I shot up an' down where the rope was danglin'!" he repeated  wildly. He did not want to feel Bruze's angry

fists. 

Bruze was a slightly insanelooking figure. His hair was down in  his eyes. He had fallen into the weedy sea

during the hunt, and was  stringing water. Weeds draped him like a coarse veil. 


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He tore wrathfully at the weeds. "I'm gonna change our plans! C'mon  up close, you mugs! I don't want that

Savage to overhear this. He ain't  human, if you ask me. He may be hangin' around close!" 

The others clustered about their Gargantuan chief. One fellow  carried an electric lantern. 

Bruze knocked the lantern out of the man's fist. 

"No light!" he gritted. "Savage may be a lip reader!" 

AFTER several seconds of silence, in which Bruze reviewed the plans  he had in mind, whispered orders

began flowing. 

"We're going to wind this thing up tonight. I did think we'd hold  off, in hopes of nailing Savage within the

next day or two. But the guy  is pretty slick. He might fool around and mess up our play. So we ain't  gonna

lose no time!" 

"I don't get you, Bruze!" grunted a man. 

"Shut up, and you soon will! Go wake up a gang of the boys! Better  wake 'em all up! This is gonna be a big

night!" 

"Why not call 'em with the gong?" 

"Because Savage knows the gong code. Didn't he sneak in and send a  fake message that saved his five pals?" 

"Sure, sure! I forgot that." The man prepared to depart. 

"Have 'em collect at the fort!" Bruze commanded; then designated  three more men. "You birds go help wake

'em up!" 

The four departed. They traveled together for a short distance;  then separated. One climbed on a luxurious

private yacht to awaken some  of his associates who were quartered there. Another man entered the  most

luxurious cabin of a small schooner, also to awaken friends. The  other pair attended to like missions. 

Bruze's followers had combed the Sargasso to secure fittings for  their respective dens. The decorations were

of the richest; the  furniture was luxurious. Each man lived like a king. 

For food, they had tasty preserved viands from the liners they had  brought here and looted. Edible fish were

to be found in the weeds. The  ships had also yielded up fine clothing. 

Not the least point about their existence here was that each man  was in a fair way of becoming a millionaire

even if Bruze did hog a  good share of their loot. 

There was no grumbling when they were awakened. They yanked on  their clothing, oiled their guns, and

burdened themselves with  cartridges. 

They were of all nations, these devils, but brothers at heart. 

Doc Savage was a menace. The Sargasso looters were getting their  hands on more wealth than they had ever

imagined possible. The bronze  man, if they did not stop him, might put a halt to their good living.  So they did

not complain about being awakened  they were every bit as  anxious as Bruze to polish Doc off. 


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They gathered at the steel turret on the barges, a few at a time. 

Bruze at once dispatched a squad to reinforce the guard at the  mysterious freighter. He did this as soon as

enough men were on hand. 

"Don't take no chances!" he warned. "Turn the lights on and keep a  close lookout! Wear your gas masks! We

don't want Savage gettin' in  that boat!" 

When the group had departed. Bruze glanced about, lips moving under  his beak of a nose as he counted. 

'About a dozen yet to come," he grunted. "Wish they'd hurry up!" 

"What's your plan, boss?" 

"I'll spill it when everybody is here!" 

Seven evillooking men now appeared in a group. They were chuckling  at the expense of one of their

number. This fellow was very fat,  judging from the flabby bulges which stuffed his garments. If his

appearance was any criterion, he would weigh at least three hundred  pounds. 

His skin was a brownish color. He wore a flowing burnoose of fine  silk, and had curly black hair. He was a

halfcaste white. 

His face was swathed partially in bandages. He carried one arm in a  sling. 

"Wallah!" he gritted with a strong Arabic accent. "By the beard of  my father, I will stick a knife in the next

man who makes what he calls  the wisecrack!" 

"What's the fuss?" Bruze snapped. 

One of the new arrivals laughed. "Big Sheik fell off the boat where  he's stayin', he says! He skinned himself

up some and sprained his arm!  We was just kiddin' 'im a little!" 

"Wallah!" snarled "Big Sheik." "I do not like this thing you call  the kid!" 

"Stop it!" Bruze snarled angrily. "You guys lay off Big Sheik!" 

Bruze reigned his tribe of fiends with an iron hand. He allowed no  horseplay, knowing that such goingson

often led to fights and ill  feeling. 

THE other men soon arrived. They bunched about their master. Big  Sheik sulked on the outskirts, as if

wishing to hide the fruit of his  clumsiness. 

Big Sheik's exotic garb attracted no undue attention. Indeed, some  of the others were attired more

flamboyantly. A few wore resplendent  military uniforms, which they had plundered from derelicts. One wag

even wore formal evening dress, including a silk topper. 

All were heavily armed, however. Gas masks were in bags slung over  their shoulders. 

Bruze got down to business. 


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"I've come to the conclusion that Doc Savage is makin' his  headquarters on the warship with them women!"

he declared. "It's the  safest hangout he could find!" 

"That's good reasonin', boss!" agreed a man who knew it was always  ideal policy to flatter his chief. 

"Kwayis khahs!" mumbled Big Sheik, in the rear. "Very nice! No  doubt the bronze man fled to the warship

after you so nearly took his  life a few minutes ago!" 

Bruze scowled, not certain whether this was flattery or a dirty  dig. 

"I'm doin' the thinkin' around here!" he growled. "Dry up, you  brown tub of lard! But I think you're right, at

that. Savage must be  aboard that warship right now! We'll make sure before we act, though!" 

"How?" 

"By talkin' to that redheaded fire eater!" 

"She won't tell us. She'll just start shootin'!" 

"We'll try it, anyway! And if that don't work, we'll bring one of  Savage's five friends to the warship. We'll

hold 'im in plain sight,  and slice his ears off. If we promise to stop the knife work if the  redhead will talk 

she'll tell us what we wanta know!" 

"EL baqq bi eydak!" Big Sheik murmured reverently. 

Bruze glowered. "What does that mean in English?" 

"The truth is in your hands, oh master!" translated the fat man. 

"You bet it is!" Bruze grinned nastily. "We'll find out if Savage  is aboard the warship. If he ain't, we'll wait

until he is! Then we'll  get rid of 'im  and that redhead's fightin' gang, too!" 

His men registered astonishment. Their faces  some brown, some  yellow, some black, many white  all

showed the same surprise. 

"Dang!" one grunted. "We've been tryin' to do that for a long time!  It'll be some job!" 

"I've got a scheme," Bruze declared. "It's somethin' I've been  holdin' for the last. It can't fail; but it's got one

drawback. When  them women see they're doomed to death, they'll probably blow the  bottom out of that

warship to get it over with  and to keep us from  gettin' the treasure they have aboard! They're just that

spiteful!" 

"The treasure!" wailed one villain. "You ain't gonna let that go to  Davy Jones's locker?" 

"We gotta!" Bruze snapped. "We've got plenty without it! And with  them and this Savage outa the way, and

with our prisoners polished off,  we'll be plumb free to keep on gettin' more booty." 

"What is your p!an?" 

"C'mon! I'll show you!" 


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Chapter XVII. THE FLAME TRAP

THE pillagers moved out of the turret fort and headed toward the  distant warship. It was characteristic of

Bruze that he walked in the  center of the crowd. He was taking no chances of being picked off. 

Closest to Bruze were the white men of his crew  the fellows who  had been on the Cameronic, and a few

others. Bruze put more trust in  these men. Some were members of his old crew of rum runners,  hardboiled

gentlemen who had drifted here with Bruze. 

The men of other races moved on the outskirts or strung back in the  rear. The huge, fat halfcaste, Big Sheik,

was the hindermost 

Having his arm in a sling hampered Big Sheik. Every few feet, it  was necessary to leap from one piece of

wreckage to another. This  required both hands and no little agility.. 

It was not long before Big Sheik tried to spring to the floating  mast of some longwrecked ship, missed it,

and slammed into the water. 

Every one laughed at the misfortune. 

"Wallah!" gritted Big Sheik, exasperated. 

"What's the matter back there?" Bruze called angrily. 

"Alas! My arm  " 

"We can't have you floppin' around makin' a noise!" Bruze  interrupted Big Sheik's explanation. "Turn around

an' go back! We can  get along without you!" 

"Aye! I wrn do that, master!" 

Bruze and the others went on, leaving their big compatriot behind.  They were not making very fast time,

since they were sacrificing speed  for silence. They were successful in causing very little noise. 

"That's the idea  plenty of quiet," Bruze muttered. "Ifs a good  thing we left Big Sheik behind!" 

Bruze would have entertained a different opinion had he been  watching Big Sheik at the moment. 

The huge man in the burnoose had thrown away the arm sling. Holding  up his flowing silk garment as if it

were a skirt, he was flying across  the wreckage with a series of prodigious leaps. 

Veering a bit to the right, he came to a prostrate form. This  figure was that of a very fat man, brown of skin.

He wore only his  undergarments. He was unconscious. A knot over one ear hinted at the  reason for the

slumber. 

The giant who had attended Bruze's conference now yanked off the  burnoose and the rest of the bandages.

This disclosed various garments  and bundles of seaweed tied to his person to give it a fatty bulk. 

A few rubs with the burnoose removed brown makeup. The bronze  lineaments of Doc Savage appeared. He

also scrubbed briefly at the oily  black stuff on his hair, removing most of it. A quick brush with his  fingers


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caused his hair to straighten and lay close to his head, like a  bronze skullcap. 

Doc left the burnoose and other stuff with Big Sheik. He knew the  bulbous fellow would remain senseless for

some time. In overpowering  him, Doc had struck a rather heavy blow. 

It had not been difficult to vanquish Big Sheik. Doc had trailed  one of the fellows who had made the rounds

to summon Bruze's henchmen.  Big Sheik had been quartered by himself, and the messenger had awakened

him simply by rapping noisily on the hull of Big Sheik's derelict until  he got an answer. 

Big Sheik, with his flowing burnoose, was ideal for Doc's purpose.  The fat fellow actually had not injured

himself. Doc had added the  imaginary hurts to make the disguise more effective. 

Doc now made for the warship. He bent every effort to speed. Many  of his leaps covered an almost

unbelievable space. He seemed to no more  than touch a piece of wreckage before he was gone again. He

swung  slightly to one side, so as to pass Bruze's crowd without being  observed. 

BRUZE, striving for silence, was not maintaining a pace as fast as  Doc's. It would undoubtedly take him

more than an hour to reach the  derelict battleship. 

Long before that time had passed, Doc was in the neighborhood of  the dreadnaught. 

He ranged in a circle, alert golden eyes probing the smoky mist. He  soon located one of the lookouts. 

The watchman was seated on the bowsprit of a small sloop, which had  apparently been a fishing craft before

it became food for the Sargasso.  The bowsprit was a pole about six inches thick. He dangled his legs  over the

edge, and kept his eyes fixed on the manofwar. All his  attention was riveted upon that ship. 

Suddenly he started as if a mosquito had bitten his ankle. He  reached down to slap at the insect. 

He seemed to go to sleep. Head foremost, he fell off the bowsprit. 

A pair of great bronze arms caught him, and lowered his slumbering  form to a drift of wreckage. 

A close observer might have noted that thimblelike caps, each  containing a tiny hypodermic needle, were

fitted to Doc's fingers. 

The metallic giant continued his explorations. There was nothing  leisurely about his movements. He did not

have any too much time for  the work ahead. 

Soon he found another lookout. This one was overcome in much the  manner of the first, except that he was

seated in a comfortable deck  chair on a cluster of flotsam when disaster befell him. 

The minutes dragged. Once ju a while, a faint scuffle in the smoky  night gave a hint of what was going on.

None of these sounds were loud. 

At length, even these noises ceased. 

On the warship, several lighted portholes denoted that the  occupants were awake. 

Outwardly, the scene was entirely peaceful. At one time, however,  Kina la Forge appeared on deck with a

gasoline lantern. Her red hair  was a gorgeous aurora in the light. 


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She called softly. 

Four young women, posted as lookout about the derelict war vessel,  hastily quitted their posts. They followed

Kina la Forge inside. 

After this, there was fluttering movement for many minutes. The  lighted portholes still glowed at various

points. Then silence fell. 

Bruze's men now put in their appearance. They came in what they  considered a very furtive quiet. It was

impossible, though, to keep an  occasional piece of wreckage from gurgling under the sudden weight of a

man. And there were many small sticks which broke when stepped upon. 

The sly approach had cost time. It had taken nearer two hours than  one to arrive. 

"If there was just some wind tonight," Bruze had muttered  vehemently, "it'd make our job a lot easier!

Shhh! Can't you mugs be  quiet!" 

As if to mock his efforts to maintain a hush, a machine gun  abruptly vomited a thunderous tumult! The

muzzle lipped flame no more  than fifty yards ahead! 

The bullets screamed a frightening song above Bruze's head. He and  his men flattened, or pitched headlong

for the nearest cover. Two had  the nerve to turn powerful flashlights toward the firemouthing machine  gun. 

The glare disclosed Doc Savage. 

DOC promptly flung down his rapidfirer  it had come from one of  the lookouts he had overpowered 

and sprang for shelter. 

At erratic intervals, his hurtling bronze form could be glimpsed  through the ashcolored fog. His actions

were those of a man stricken  with terror and in full flight. 

"After 'im!" Bruze bellowed, suddenly recovering from the fright  the unexpected volley had given him. 

Spattering bullets from its fringes, Bruze's mob charged in  pursuit. They yelped excitedly, like a pack of

dogs. 

Their bronze quarry had fled with great speed, yet they nearly  overhauled him. They came so close that their

lights, spiking through  the night fog, showed Doc going up the sheer steel hull of the  dreadnaught. 

Doc was climbing his silk cord. The cord was not visible to his  pursuers. To them, it looked as if Doc was

gifted with some magical  ability to scramble upward through thin air. 

The pursuers loosened a flurry of lead. Their effort was a fraction  too late. Doc had gotten safely over the rail. 

Crrack! a rifle spat flame from the warship. The spot was a few  yards forward from where Doc had

boarded. 

Crrack! Another shot! It came from a point many feet sternward. 

"Wait!" Bruze barked at his aids. No use of us tryin' to get  aboard! Them women will plug us!" 


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Bruze was unaware that Doc had fired both those shots from the  manofwar. Doc had tied two rifles to the

rail in preparation for this  event, and secured long strings to the triggers. A yank on the string  had done the

trick, giving the impression of two widely separated  marksmen  markswomen, in this case  when in

reality only Doc was on  deck. 

"Surround the boat!" Bruze howled. 

This order was speedily executed. Rather, the men themselves  thought they were moving fast. But before

they had rounded the bows of  the great rusting steel war dog of the seas, Doc had descended on the  opposite

side, using his silken cord. 

The fogfilled night gobbled up the bronze man. 

Bruze and his crew, thinking Doc was still aboard the derelict  battleship, posted a heavy guard. They turned

their flashlights on and  propped them so that the beams illuminated the surroundings. Then, lest  the light

draw bullets, they concealed themselves. 

Bruze himself happened upon one of the unconscious watchmen.  Cursing, he delivered a terrific kick. This

did not awaken the  stupefied one. It merely rolled him off the spar on which he lay. He  would have drowned,

had Bruze not hauled him back. 

Swearing a steady stream, Bruze sought in vain to awaken the  fellow. 

The other unlucky sentinels were soon discovered. 

"A FINE kettle of fish!" Bruze wailed irately. "A swell gang of men  I've got! You'd think this Savage was

your pal, the way you let him  waltz you around!" 

"But we got 'im penned up aboard the warship!" a man muttered  mistakenly. 

"Yeah, an' lucky for you we have!" 

"Aw, blazes, boss! It wasn't us> that he put to sleep! It was these  mugs on guard!" 

"Shut up! If you had been here, I'm bettin' it would have been the  same thing. Half a dozen of you come with

me. The rest stay here." 

"Aye, aye, chief!" 

"And watch that warship!"  Bruze thrust his hawklike face forward  in the fogsmoked moonlight. His eyes

glared venomously. "If Savage  leaves that boat, I'm gonna have a lead party with the guys responsible  for his

gettin' away!" 

Uneasy glances were plentiful. The hearers did not doubt in the  least that Bruze meant what he said. 

"Honest, boss, we're doin' our best!" one muttered. 

"Oui!" echoed another, a native of France. "Zat ees all we can do   our ver' bes'!" 

Bruze hurried away, his satellites in his wake. They looked like a  line of big crickets hopping from one

waterlogged piece of wreckage to  another. 


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"What's your plan, chief?" 

"You'll see in a minute!" 

Very soon they came to a large, rustcoated derelict which floated  low in the water. This craft had the lines

of a long pipe, flatted on  top, and a battered superstructure fore aft. At one time these two fore  and aft

protuberances had been connected by a spidery steel catwalk,  now torn away. 

"Here we are!" Bruze declared. 

"What's this tanker got to do with your scheme?" 

"It's loaded with gasoline, ain't it?" 

"Sure! We been gettin' gas for our lanterns and motors from it for  a long time, and we ain't hardly tapped the

supply. But what of it?" 

"Remember the fire hose offn the derelicts that I've been havin'  you birds bring and store here durin' the past

few months?" 

"Sure. You didn't explain why you wanted it here!" 

"I'm explainin' now! We're gonna couple the hoses on the hull  outlets of this gasoline tanker. The gas will

flow by gravity, because  we can draw from valves close to the water. We'll simply run the stuff  onto the sea

around that warship and set it on fire." 

"The warship is steel. No gasoline fire is gonna melt it!" 

"Who said anything about melting? The fire around the tub will make  it so hot those aboard can't stand it." 

"Yeah. I guess it will at that, boss!" 

"Sure it will!" 

"Won't gasoline evaporate offen the water, chief?" 

"Some will, naturally. But not enough to put the fritz on our  scheme. We've got enough fire hose to run seven

or eight lines. Get  busy!" 

The men fell to with a will. They soon discovered that hauling  heavy fire hose across the wreckagepacked

Sargasso was a task, though.  Bruze withdrew some of his watchers from the manofwar, and put them  to

work with the hose. 

An hour passed, and still another. The men took no pains to  maintain silence. 

Aboard the rusty battleship, things were very quiet. Lights still  burned in the portholes. 

But three lights had gone out. 

Once a machine gun roared angrily from aboard the vessel. 


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"We got 'em guessin'!" Bruze leered. "I'll bet every one of 'em is  watchin' in the fog!" 

THE truth about the extinguishing lights and the machinegun blast  would have been a sickening shock to

Bruze. The lights had gone out  simply because fuel was exhausted. They were gasoline lanterns, and Doc  had

carefully emptied most of the liquid from them. 

An alarm clock  a string winding around the ringer key and  tightening on a trigger  had launched the

machine gun volley. Doc had  also prepared this. 

It was important that Bruze and his followers should think the huge  war dog of the seas was still occupied;

and Doc had planned to that  end. 

Actually, there was not a soul aboard. Under Doc's directions, all  the women defenders had departed before

Bruze's arrival. 

Bruze, unaware of all this, skipped from place to place,  superintending operations. He was in high spirits. He

thought he could  see the end of all his troubles. 

Gasoline began to flow through two hoses. Threeinch streams of the  highly volatile liquid swished upon the

weedfilled sea. Floating, the  stuff spread. It crawled like transparent worms. 

The other hoses went into operation. The gasoline spread more  rapidly. The fumes overpowered the musty

reek of the Sargasso.  Evaporation, however, great, could not compete with the hissing outpour  of seven hose

lines. 

The dawn hour approached. Gasoline now covered all the sea about  the old derelict battleship. 

"We'll tell 'em what we're gonna do," Bruze announced. "We'll give  'em a chance to surrender. That way, we

can get the treasure aboard  that tub." 

He advanced, keeping well under cover. He felt a little queer  inside, and a strange sort of reluctance

possessed him. Bruze was a  calloused thug. He did not recognize these subconscious urgings for  what they

were. 

Somewhere inside Bruze there was a speck of humanity. A tiny trace  of a decent man! Bruze had had nothing

to do with this inner fellow for  so long that he had forgotten his presence. 

The simple fact was that Bruze felt reluctant to perform the  horrible deed he was contemplating. In spite of

himself, he hoped those  aboard the battleship would surrender. 

Chapter XVIII. FATAL FIST

AT the moment Bruze was experiencing his strangely humanitarian  urges, the former defenders of the

derelict dreadnaught were doing  exactly what he hoped they would do  surrendering. 

The capitulation, however, was taking place at the mysterious  freighter. 

Beautiful, redheaded Kina la Forge had appeared out of the pale  fog. She was trailed by a column of her

followers. 


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The freighter guards let out a squawk of surprise at the sight  Suspicious, they leveled their guns. 

"Don't shoot!" the auburnhaired girl called anxiously. 

"What're you pullin' now?" a sentry demanded suspiciously. 

"We're surrendering!" 

"What?" The man could not believe his ears. 

Kina la Forge repeated her information. At the same time, she  continued her advance. 

Startled, incredulous men poured out of the freighter. Some wore  their gas masks. All had their weapons

ready. 

But the women seemed to be without arms. The rapier sheath and  pistol holster dangling at the redhead's

goldcoin belt were both  empty. 

A man appropriated the belt of gold coins and stuffed it greedily  in a pocket. 

"What a break for us!" he cackled. 

"Why're you doin' this?" another man asked Kina la Forge. 

"We are simply tired of fighting. We give up! The treasure is on  the warship. You can have it" 

More than one avaricious sigh went up at this information. The  leader of the freighter guards designated one

of his men. 

"You go tell Bruze this!" he commanded. "You'll probably find 'im  at the warship. Tell 'im he can go aboard

and get the gold and stuff." 

"Sure! And won't he be mad to hear it!" The messenger bounded away,  his elation lending wings to his feet.

Even a plunge into the weedy  sea, which he soon took upon missing a leap, did not drown his  jubilation. 

"Get inside!" the women were ordered, with a gesture at the  freighter. 

The redhead hesitated. "What are you going to do with us?" 

"We'll decide that later. Bruze will wanta have the say." 

Meekly the women entered. They looked cowed, completely defeated. 

A door was opened in the small steel room inside the entrance. This  gave to a long passage. The prisoners

were all herded into this cavern  of a place. 

The guards, now that things were coining so nicely, had all removed  their gas masks. 

Kina la Forge glanced about, apparently in fear. 

"Perhaps we had better put up our hands," she told her sisters. 


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"No need of that!" said a man expansively. 

But the ladies lifted their hands anyway. They pressed them against  their luxurious masses of hair. 

A close observer could have told that every woman was holding her  breath. 

The next instant, the guards began going to sleep on their feet.  They toppled to the floor. 

Thump, thump, thump! Within twenty seconds every man was asleep. 

The women continued holding their breath. One, unable to do so any  longer, exhaled wildly and drew fresh

air into her lungs. She went to  sleep. This happened to several others. 

When nearly a minute was up, the redheaded leader gave a signal,  and her followers began breathing. 

EACH woman now shook out her hair. Thin particles of glass fell to  the floor, tinkling. These were broken

bits of glass globes which had  been concealed in their tresses. Inside the globes had been an  anaesthetic gas

which spread quickly to all the passage and produced  instant unconsciousness. 

Yet it was a peculiarity of this gas that, within less than a  minute after mixing with the air, it became

ineffective. 

Doc had supplied the stuff, together with the plan for its use. He  had used the same material once before at

the door of this boat. 

The bronze man himself now appeared, coming in through the hull  door, which had been left open. 

"Good work!" he told the titianhaired girl fervently. The young  lady stared after him as he sped on down the

passage. Her attractive  features held disappointment. She had hoped there would be a more  substantial

reward. A kiss, for instance. Doc seemed to be very shy on  ideas along these lines. 

Doc reached a steel door secured by a big bar. He flung the bar  back and shoved the door open. 

A tremendous roar of joy greeted him! 

Here were his five friends, together with every one from the  illfated Cameronic. They occupied a large

room, jamming every foot of  floor space. Air was foul in the great cell. 

Monk and Renny ran forward, howling their pleasure. The other three  were close on their heels. 

They spouted questions. 

"Explain later!" Doc rapped. "We've got to get Bruze!" 

They ran back down the passage. 

Kina la Forge was bending anxiously over one of the sleeping women  who had inhaled the anaesthetic. 

Doc wheeled and stopped Monk. "You stay here!" Monk, wild at the  idea of missing out on a possible fight,

howled: "Now listen 


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"You're a chemist!" Doc interrupted. He drew various phials from  his clothing, and passed them to the furry

fellow. "Your chemistry  experience will enable you to concoct a mixture to revive these women  quickly." 

"Aw, they'll only sleep a few hours anyway!" Monk complained.  "Can't I go along  " 

"Nix!" We've got to have some one here to take charge of the  defense of this freighter in case something goes

wrong. You're  elected." 

Before Monk could frame more objections, Doc and the others were  gone. Grumbling, Monk prepared to

revive the women who had been unable  to hold their breath nearly a minute. 

The redhead came over to offer her assistance. She gave Monk a  ravishing smile. 

"I'm sorry you got such a rough reception when we met the first  time," she said. 

Monk grinned from ear to ear. She was about the most entrancing  creature he had ever seen. 

He could see he was not going to mind staying behind so much. 

DOC SAVAGE led his four companions at full speed. They were fresh  from their enforced rest within the

mystery freighter, and did a good  job of keeping up. 

"That boat you just got out of holds the secret of Bruze's being  able to enter and leave the Sargasso," Doc

explained. "What is the  method?" 

"Holy cow!" Renny ejaculated. "This is the first we knew of it!" 

"Have you seen the rest of the freighter?" 

"No. We haven't seen anything but that one room and the passage to  the door." 

"Confound it, I wish I had my sword cane!" Ham snapped. "Say, Doc,  we heard hammering in the stern part

of the ship  as if they were  working on machinery." 

"That's right!" echoed Johnny, who still wore his glasses with the  magnifying left lens. 

"Whatever the contraption is, ifs probably in the stern," declared  Long Tom. The pale electrical expert was

bounding along in the rear,  hard put to it to keep up. 

The sun was lifting. The fog had turned a vile red color, and was  beginning to thin out. Instead of the limited

vision of a few yards  which the hazy moonlight had offered, they could now see a number of  rods. 

"Slow up!" Doc warned. "We're getting close!" 

The hulk of the dreadnaught came into their range of vision. 

Bruze stood upon the deck. From time to time he bent over to  inspect objects which his men were carrying up

from below and  depositing at his feet 

The treasure! The fruit of Bruze's first looting, which he had  stored here when the warship was his

headquarters. The hoard which he  had lost when Kina la Forge's father had engineered the capture of the


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vessel. 

All about the rusty derelict the sea was glassy and greasy under a  film of gasoline. The stuff still flowed from

the seven hose lines  which led to the nearby tanker. In their excitement, the men had not  closed the valves. 

Doc halted his four companions well distant from the dreadnaught 

"Stay here!" he warned. 

Going forward alone, Doc came within hailing range of the rusty  manofwar. He halted just beyond the

film of gasoline. The fumes of  the stuff were so strong as to make breathing difficult. 

"Bruze!" he thundered. 

A bomb might have exploded on the battleship deck. Men sprang to  the rail. 

"You're trapped!" Doc called, his powerful voice carrying with the  volume of a loudspeaker of a public

address system. 

Bruze cursed violently. 

"You might as well give up!" Doc informed him. "All we 

have to do is toss a match in this gasoline and you're done for!" 

At the rail, a man lifted a submachine gun. His idea was to try to  nail Doc. 

Bruze struck the man a cruel blow. Bruze no doubt realized a powder  blaze might touch off the reeking

gasoline fumes. The blow was hardly  necessary, though; a quick clutch would have stopped the shots. But

Bruze used his brute strength, as was his custom. And to that cruel  act, he owed his end. 

The stricken man toppled sidewise. His nerveless fingers tightened  on the firing latch. A stream of bullets

poured from his gun. 

The powder blaze itself might not have detonated the vapor, but the  weapon discharged some of its slugs into

the sea/ The lead pellets  rapped at wreckage. Some of them were tracers. 

The tracers touched off the gasoline! 

THE world seemed to turn to flame! With a whooping roar, the  conflagration spread! The blaze did not

confine itself to the surface.  The congested fumes ignited with a great, mushy explosion. 

The air for many yards overhead seemed to burn like invisible  powder. The gigantic flash rouged all the

morning sky. 

Doc spun and ran, traversing the wreckage with prodigious leaps. He  was out of danger. What he sought was

to turn off the flowing gasoline  at the tanker before that, too, caught on fire. 

It was a grim race. Gasoline had soaked through the fire hoses,  making them virtual fuses. But in many spots

they were lying slightly  below the surface, supported by the wreckage over which they draped.  This checked

the rush of flames. 


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Doc got the valves closed. Then he turned back. Flames were still  flashing above the level of the warship

deck, making it impossible to  discern the situation there. 

By the time Doc had rejoined his four friends, the scarlet sheets  of flame had ceased to jump so high. A

monster pall of gloomy smoke was  lifting as wreckage burned. 

Upon the warship deck lay twisted, blackened figures. Not one  showed movement 

"It was the explosion of the fumes which got them," Long Tom  declared. "Probably killed 'em instantly, or

nearly so. Burned their  lungs out" 

Renny knocked his big fists together, looked somber, and said  nothing. Ham and Johnny were also quiet 

It was no more than Bruze deserved  this sudden, fiery death  which had overtaken him and those with him.

But that did not keep it  from being appalling. 

Nor did the fact that Bruze had brought it upon himself, becoming a  victim of his own grisly trap, make the

thing less horrible. 

Doc Savage and his men had seen death in countless forms, but never  had they witnessed a Villain meeting a

more bloodcurdling end than  this. 

During the next few hours, they prowled the vicinity. It was  desirable that the fire should not spread. When

the flames threatened  to crawl along drifts of wreckage, they used great swabs of wet seaweed  to whip them

out 

"It will not spread now," Doc concluded at length. 

They studied the rusty warship, now blackened from the heat Blazing  hulks near by made it inadvisable to

seek to reach the craft just yet  But it was not going to sink. The treasure was safe. 

"We'll be able to go aboard by nightfall," Ham concluded. "Let's go  back to that freighter. I want to hunt my

sword cane." 

"You'd better think of something more important than that!" Johnny  snorted, wiping his glasses. "The thing

that Bruze uses to get out of  this place, for instance!" 

"Yeah!" agreed Renny. "Unless we get hold of that, we'll be stuck  in this place! And that would be tough! I've

never seen a spot on this  old ball of mud that I liked less!" 

Chapter XIX. MONK'S LAST SALLY

MONK and Kina la Forge met them upon their return to the mystery  freighter. Monk, if appearances were

any indication, had become rather  well acquainted with the entrancing redhead. 

A big grin was fixed so tightly to his homely face that it 

could not have been taken off with a cold chisel. 

At these signs Ham scowled darkly. Nothing irked him more than to  see Monk happy. And the idea of Monk


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enjoying the company of a young  lady as charming as the redhead was almost more than Ham could stand. 

Doc now introduced his four men  it was the first chance that had  been presented for these formalities. 

Kina la Forge smiled and curtsied to each. 

To Ham she said pleasantly: "I am indeed glad to meet the father of  so large a family." 

"What?" Ham gulped. 

"Monk has told me about your wife and thirteen children," said the  redheaded queen. 

"Why, the liar!" Ham growled. "I haven't even got a wife, much less  a family!" 

The two perpetual enemies, one big and furry and homely, the other  dapper and sharply handsome, stood and

glared at each other until Doc  interrupted. 

"Have you explored the freighter?" he questioned. 

"Sure," said Monk, still leering at Ham. 

"What did you find?" 

"C'mon and I'll demonstrate." 

Monk ambled into the freighter, then forward. 

En route many Cameronic passengers hailed Doc, making almost  pathetic efforts to express their gratitude for

his services. 

Coming to a companionway, Monk mounted. He entered a steel room. A  battery of levers protruded from the

floor. Monk shoved one of these 

In the innards of the derelict, there sounded a great whining of  motors and growling gears. 

Monk pushed to a door on the opposite side of the cubicle. 

"Look!" he cried. 

Doc stared. The others peered over his shoulder. 

"Holy cow!" exploded Renny. 

The stern of the ancient, widebeamed freighter was virtually an  enormous trapdoor. The noisy machinery

had opened this. 

From where they stood to the open stern stretched a great metal  track of an affair. On this stood a large flying

boat. The wingtips  just cleared the sides of the hull. 

Other seaplanes were stalled near at hand. Four of them! "A  launching catapult!" Long Tom declared

breathlessly. "Sure. A good one,  too. I looked it over." Monk was taking care to keep out of Ham's  reach. "It's


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my idea that the planes were launched here. They're not  fast crates, but they're built to carry heavy loads and

fly long  distances. Bruze simply used them to ferry his gang ashore whenever  they went after a new victim." 

"But the landings!" Johnny interjected. "How did they manage to get  down on this island of weeds and

wreckage?" 

"There is a comparatively clear space near the stern," Doc told  him. "By doing it carefully, a landing could be

made on the weedfilled  sea. You'll notice, too, that the hulls of these planes are fitted with  razorsharp

knives." 

They fell to examining the craft. 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE SARGASSO OGRE, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter I. THE "SINGAS" SONG, page = 4

   5. Chapter II. CAVES OF BONES, page = 9

   6. Chapter III. THE "CAMERONIC" PERIL, page = 14

   7. Chapter IV. THE WHITE-WHISKERED MAN, page = 20

   8. Chapter V. THE SCALP BELT, page = 27

   9. Chapter VI. SEA TROUBLE, page = 33

   10. Chapter VII. THE DEVIL'S BREW, page = 42

   11. Chapter VIII. DERELICT, page = 49

   12. Chapter IX. SEA OF THE DEAD, page = 55

   13. Chapter X. DEATH'S REALM, page = 60

   14. Chapter XI. SARGASSO PRISONERS, page = 65

   15. Chapter XII. THE NIGHT DECOY, page = 72

   16. Chapter XIII. THE HUNT, page = 78

   17. Chapter XIV. RED DAWN, page = 85

   18. Chapter XV. SPECTRAL MOTORS, page = 93

   19. Chapter XVI. THE SARGASSO OGRE PLANS, page = 99

   20. Chapter XVII. THE FLAME TRAP, page = 105

   21. Chapter XVIII. FATAL FIST, page = 110

   22. Chapter XIX. MONK'S LAST SALLY, page = 115