Title:   Ten Ton Snakes

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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Ten Ton Snakes

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

Ten Ton Snakes...................................................................................................................................................1

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

I...............................................................................................................................................................1

II ..............................................................................................................................................................5

III ...........................................................................................................................................................11

IV..........................................................................................................................................................15

V ............................................................................................................................................................21

VI..........................................................................................................................................................27

VII .........................................................................................................................................................32

VIII ........................................................................................................................................................38

IX..........................................................................................................................................................45

X ............................................................................................................................................................52

XI..........................................................................................................................................................58

XII .........................................................................................................................................................64

XIII ........................................................................................................................................................70

XIV.......................................................................................................................................................77


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Ten Ton Snakes

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

I 

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III 

IV 

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VIII 

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XI 

XII 

XIII 

XIV  

I

YOU ought to know about ribbons. The yellow one with the two red  stripes is for China Service. The red

ribbon with the pair of triple  white stripe, good conduct. Purple with white ends, Purple Heart. Blue,  red and

white stripes, Distinguished Service Cross. Blue, yellow and  red bands, the Yangtze Medal. 

The years and the terrors of a man's life worn over his heart. This  boy had all of these ribbons. Except the

goodconduct one. He didn't  have that one. 

He was wearing them, too. They looked like a flag on his chest.  Normally he didn't wear them; he carried

them in his pocket, in a  little teakwood velvetlined case wonderfully made for him by a Karen  in Burma.

The boy felt very deeply about them, but he wouldn't have  admitted it for anything. However, he wasn't

exactly a boy. 

He was over twentyeight. Not old enough for that gray to belong in  his hair. He was leathery and rangy and

longnosed and blueeyed and he  looked at you as if he owned you. That is a thing American soldiers are

beginning to do, look at you as if they own you. And they do, in a way. 

He had a callous like a corn on a finger of his left hand, his  5Ocalibre trigger finger. 

And now they were trying to kill him. 

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He was walking down Fifth Avenue. Looking. Looking at everything  gladly and hungrily, as if he wanted to

eat it. Looking at the legs of  the girls walking on Fifth Avenue. Ogling the plasterofparis legs of  the

mannikins in the store windows. Going "woowoo" at the girls  walking by him on the street. He wanted to

jump over the buildings, you  could tell. He would get up on his toes and dance a step or two, and  whirl

completely around. Like a ballet dancer. As if God had given him  wings. 

MURDER. 

It was a very carefully planned thing, this project of sudden  death. It was getting the care that a murder

deserves. The boy with the  ribbons, the boy who was so glad that he was almost sick at his  stomach, was

going to be slain in cold blood. Cold blood  if anyone  knows why they call it that. 

It was hard to be sure how many men were going to help do it to  him. Thousands of people were on Fifth

Avenue, probably no more nor  less than are there any days. The murderers were of the crowd, and like  the

crowd. Pointing them out would have been as difficult as picking  four maggots who had had catfish for

dinner from a basketful of other  maggots who had had sunfish for dinner. Very difficult. They weren't  doing

anything to get fingers pointed at them. 

Keeping track of the boy, was all. Waiting. But waiting has its  end. Suspense can draw out just about so far,

and then something must  happen. 

So one of the men walked up behind the boy with a long knife and  started to put the blade in between the

boy's third and fourth ribs  where it would reach the boy's happy heart. 

IT was a walkupandstab murder, but the sun was shining gaily,  making shadows. The sun made the

shadow of the man with the knife on  the sidewalk, and it looked like exactly what it was, a man with a  knife.

This the soldier saw. 

The soldier did more than dodge. The army had spent a lot in time  and patience teaching him what to do

when someone tried to shoot, club  or stab him. He did it. He did it so fast you could hardly see it. 

Slam, slam. Too fast to follow, but the knife was spinning in the  air and he who'd held it was on his back with

teeth loose in his mouth  and an awful feeling where he'd been kicked in the belly. It was an  army bellykick,

Commando stuff, intended to gut a man if possible. It  was no fooling. 

The man fell on the sidewalk. He might as well have been dead. He  was noisy and he was hurting, but

otherwise he might as well have been  dead. 

The boy looked at the man. 

"You blank blank," he said. "I think I know you." 

He circled, looking at the man on the sidewalk. 

"Why God bless you, I do know you," the soldier said. "What do you  know about that. Doggone!" 

And he began being unnice to the man on the sidewalk. What the  soldier proceeded to do was sickening, but

it didn't sicken. He had  been dealing with Japs, and the only safe Jap was one who couldn't be  anything else. 

He kicked in some of the man's ribs. The man was long and skinny,  like a wolf with the sickness wolves get

from eating too much carrion,  so his ribs were close to the hide and broke easily. The soldier jumped  on to


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the man's belly with both feet. This was guaranteed to rupture,  to burst the bladder, etc. 

The soldier got off the man's belly and leaned over the man's face  and said, "Listen, bub, to what I'm asking

you. Is Tucker French, my  brother, all right? Is he going to be all right? What do you  suchandsuch plan to

do to Tucker?" 

The man on the sidewalk gargled his blood and teeth and pain. "Come  on, boy," the soldier said. "Let's have

an answer. Don't be bashful." 

No answer. 

"Come, come, boy," the soldier said. "What about Tucker? You're not  going to hurt Tucker, are you?" 

No answer. 

"Oh yes, I nearly forgot," the soldier said. "What about the heavy  stuff? You boys fixing to do something bad

with the heavy stuff?" 

The man on the sidewalk finally got his throat sufficiently clear  of blood and teeth to form some

semicoherent words. When he spoke, he  was down to greatest fundamental of all, the thing than which there

is  nothing much more important. He said, "Please don't kill me." 

He said not to kill him in Spanish, because Spanish and not English  was his mother tongue. 

As if answering his prayer, his friends came to his aid. 

THE soldier was fooled this time. There were no shadows to warn  him. There was only a mild looking man

in a blue serge suit who sidled  up to the scene with one hand over his mouth as if he was showing  horror the

way a woman shows it. When he was close enough to the  soldier, he slugged the soldier on the side of the

face. 

The soldier wasn't greatly damaged. He began to fight. He wanted to  fight anyway. 

Two other men drifted out of the crowd and took a hand, beginning  beating the soldier. 

"Hey, this guy tried to knife me," the soldier cried. "Cut it out!  Call a cop, if you want to help." 

This was what he said before he understood that they were part of  an organized attempt on his life. When he

did realize what they were,  he stopped talking. He did everything with his fists and feet that he  could. 

The men, finding the soldier was extremely tough, began producing  knives. These knives did not resemble

the knife the first man had tried  to use, except in one particular. They were individualized knives. That  is,

each one was a knife which its owner liked. Which meant that they  were men who carried their knives as a

habit. 

Such men would know how to use knives, so the soldier got away from  them as fast as he could. 

He escaped by running. He didn't make the mistake of going in  either direction along the sidewalk. Instead,

he popped into the  nearest doorway. 


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They shot at him. The bullet went past his head and buried itself  somewhere in the upper pant of the luggage

shop in which he found  himself. 

The soldier was afraid the place wouldn't have a back door. He was  right. But it had a basement and a second

floor. He took the stairs to  the second floor. 

There was a bank of elevators and he got in one of them and rode  down to the basement, which was also a

part of the leathergoods store.  He waited around there for a while, looking at suitcases. He had the  clerk show

him a tan leather case, and faced the stairs and the  elevators while he examined it. He saw nor heard nothing

alarming. He  asked the clerk if there was a back door, and the clerk got such a  funny look that the soldier

walked off and left him. 

The soldier walked out of the front door. 

The man who had tried to knife him was no longer on the sidewalk.  The man was nowhere in sight. None of

the other knifewielders were to  be seen. Nobody recognized the soldier as a participant in the action  of a

few minutes before. The soldier didn't stick around long enough to  give them much chance. 

He went to a bar. He had three snorts of rye. He burst out in a  sweat and he became sick with the feeling that

nerves give to a man's  stomach. He was plain scared. 

After he felt that he was able to walk down the street without  falling on his face (and it took him some time to

get back that much  control) he got moving. 

He went to a phone booth and looked in the phone book for a name:  Renwick, John, civil engr. 

JOHN Renwick, civil engineer, had an office in a ponderous building  two blocks from Grand Central station

on Fortieth Street. The office  was not quite seedy, but it had no floss. The furniture was old, of  walnut, and

the middleaged office girl also looked as if she were made  of walnut. She listened to the soldier state that he

wanted to see  Renwick if Renwick was in town. 

"He's in town," the office girl said. "Wait a minute." 

She went into the inner office, closed the door and put her back  against the door. 

"A soldier to see you," she said. "Gives his name as Bob French.  Says he met you at Yungshun, wherever

that is." 

"Yungshun," Renny Renwick said, "is in China." 

You first noticed Renny Renwick's fists. They were too big. He was  a big man, more than six feet, more than

two hundred pounds, but the  fists were still too big. 

The fists, as a matter of fact, were the index to the man. They  were capable hands, almost ridiculously strong,

hands that were not  made for soft work or for softness of any kind. Gentleness, yes. But  not softness. There

were scars on the fists where they had hit things,  and the hide was leathery where the sun had beat them, and

the palms  calloused from handling heavy things. 

"Hunan province in China," he said. "That's where we built that  intermediate field for the B29's. Holy cow,

was that a place for you!  Shoot this soldier in here." 


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The middleaged office girl opened the door and told the soldier,  "Shoot you in, he says." 

The soldier came in holding out his hand and saying, "You remember  me?" 

Renwick jumped to his feet and roared. 

"Hell, yes! Holy cow!" he roared. "What are you doing here? Did  they run out of rice whiskey in China?

You're the last man I expected  to see." 

"My time was up and they shipped me home," the soldier said. 

"When was that?" 

"A week ago." 

"Only a week? What are you doing sober? Sit down. What became of  Sleepy Wilson? And what about

what'shisname, the flopeared guy we  stole the jeep from that night?" 

The soldier didn't answer the questions. He started to, but his  words stubbed their toes on his fears and fell

flat on their faces. 

What he did say was, "Look, I'm in trouble." 

Renwick grinned and roared, "Borrowing money from me is getting  blood from a turnip. But not for a man

from Yungshun. How much do you  need?" 

"I don't need money." 

"No? You've come to the wrong man, then. I don't know anything  about women." 

"This isn't a girl." 

Renwick examined the soldier intently. 

"What's your name?" he asked. "I never did know it, I don't think." 

"Bob French." 

"All right, Bob French, sit down and see if you can't talk that  scared look off your face." 

Bob French sat down. "It's a story that has its goofy aspects." 

"Shoot." 

II

RENNY Renwick's voice was a great tumbling thing developed by  bawling at steeljacks on towering

skyscraper frameworks and bawling  above the clatter of riveting guns. The voice had been rattling the

windows, almost. Now that he was silent, listening for the soldier's  story, there seemed almost too much

stillness in the office. 


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"It's a shame to drag this in on you," Bob French said. "But you're  the only man I could think of that I knew

in New York. And I'm scared." 

"What are you scared of?" 

"Here's the story. I got a brother, see. His name is Tucker. He is  younger than me, and he's in South America.

Colombia, back in the  jungles. He's in the mining business in a small way." 

"American citizen?" 

Bob French took his eyes off Renwick and put them on the floor and  didn't say anything for a moment. "Yes.

I don't know why the draft  missed him." 

"Okay." 

Bob French shoved his jaw out and said, "Okay or not, I don't give  a damn. I've done enough fighting for all

of our family, and I'm glad  Tucker kept out of it and I hope to God he continues keeping out of  it." 

He sounded violent, as if he were taking something out of his  heart. 

Renny laughed. "Was I picking a fight with you?" 

The soldier licked his lips. He looked at the floor some more. 

"I got a cable from my brother. That was two days ago. I had cabled  Tucker I was back in the States and had

a twentyoneday furlough that  was just starting, so that's how he knew I was back and where to find  me. 

"This cable was funny. It said for me to go see a man named Sir  Roger Powell, who would be at the

Westland. It said for me to ask  Powell about the heavy stuff. I was to ask Powell what the situation  was on

the heavy stuff. It said,  the cable said  to try to form a  judgment about Powell. Well, I did an  " 

"What," Renny interrupted, "did the cable mean by asking you to  form a judgment?" 

"Decide about Powell." 

"Decide what?" 

"Whether he was a crook or not, I guess." 

"What is the heavy stuff?" 

"That's all the cable said  heavy stuff." 

"You mean it just said to ask about the heavy stuff, and that was  all the description it gave?" 

"Yes." 

"And from that, what did you gather the heavy stuff was?" 

"I couldn't figure it out." 


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"What's your guess?" 

"I haven't got any guess." 

"Then you have no idea what the heavy stuff could be?" 

"None," the soldier said. "I told you this thing had goofy aspects.  That's one of them." 

"Mind letting me see this cablegram?" 

"I'd be glad to show it to you, only I haven't got it." 

"What became of it?" 

"I destroyed it." 

"Why?" 

"Habit. I have the habit of destroying all the letters and  telegrams I receive when they're not something I have

to keep. I've  done that for years, I guess." 

"What did you do after you got the cablegram from your brother?"  Renny asked, settling back to listen again. 

Bob French seemed to require a moment to get his mind back on the  telling of his story. Then he said, "I went

to see Sir Roger Powell. I  found him at the hotel, as Tucker's cablegram had said I would. I sent  my name up

to his room, and he returned word for me to come right up. 

"Well, that name of Sir Roger Powell had sure fooled me," the  soldier continued. "I expected an old geezer

with a monocle and a white  goatee. Sir Roger Powell wasn't anything like that. He could have been  an

insurance agent in Kansas City, for all you could tell." 

"Is he a genuine title?" Renny asked. 

"Search me. If you're a genuine Sir, don't you have to sit in the  House of Lords or in Parliament or

something?" 

"Search me," Renny said. "I wouldn't know." 

"Anyway, Powell didn't admit knowing anything about any heavy  stuff. He knew my brother. That was all he

would admit." 

"You think, then, that he lied to you?" Renny asked. 

"Everything he said might not be lies. But he sure lied about the  heavy stuff, whatever it is." 

"How do you know?" 

"I can tell when a man lies to me." 

"Always?" 


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"I could tell this time," Bob French said. "He was lying, all  right. There was another guy in the room with

him. I didn't like the  fellow's looks either. Well, I talked to this Powell fellow, asking him  about the heavy

stuff, and I didn't get a thing out of him. He just  said he knew nothing about any such thing, and that he was

very sorry.  But I got the feeling he wasn't sorry, and that he knew plenty about  the heavy stuff, whatever it is,

and that the only thing he was sorry  about was seeing me. My showing up that way worried him, all right.

Well, I left." 

The soldier scowled at the floor for a moment. 

"I cabled my brother the results of the interview," he said. "I  asked him what he wanted me to do." 

"Have you had an answer?" 

"Not yet." 

Renny said, "You said you were scared. I don't see any reason for  your being scared." 

"Wait a minute, I haven't told you what happened just before I came  up here." 

Renny waited patiently. He was interested in the story. He was  excited about it, too, and his eyes were bright

and intent. 

"They tried to kill me on the street," the soldier said. "First, a  man tried to knife me. I knocked him down. I

was pretty rough. Some  other men piled in to help. Too many for me, I figured. So I cut and  ran, and here I

am." 

"How," Renny asked, "did you connect this attack with Sir Roger  Powell, the man your brother cabled you to

interview about the heavy  stuff?" 

"This guy with the knife was with Powell when we had our talk." 

Renny raised his eyebrows over this piece of information. "That  would be a connection, all right. But I don't

exactly see what you want  me to do." 

"Look, you're the only man in New York I know," Bob French said.  "I've got some funny trouble on my

hands, as you can see. I'm scared.  I've had practice in being scared, because I've killed Japs and had  Japs

trying to kill me, and I've been scared for a week at a time. And  I can still get scared, like when those guys

tried to kill me. Right on  the street like that, they tried to kill me. I tell you, I never heard  of such a damned

thing." 

"So that's why you came to me?" Renny said. 

"That's right," the soldier said. "I got to know you in China, and  I figured you would be the man to help me or

advise me." The soldier  hesitated, then added sheepishly, "Don't get me wrong. I don't expect  you to drop

your business and grab a gun and rush out to fight my  battles for me. Just kick in with some advice, that's

what I want. When  a man is scared, it helps to have someone around who understands." 

"You didn't," Renny said, "come to me because you knew I was  associated with Doc Savage?" 

"Eh? You're what with who?" 


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"Associated with Doc Savage." 

"Who's he?" Bob French asked. 

Renny thought over the answer for a moment, then he laughed.  "That's fresh," he said. "That's wonderful." 

"WHAT are you laughing at?" Bob French demanded. 

Renny chuckled over it for a while. "The idea of you not having  heard of Doc Savage, coupled with the

coincidence of your popping up  with a piece of mysterious trouble like this, strikes me as funny," he

explained. 

"Who's this Savage?" 

"A friend with whom I frequently work," Renny said. Then he  frowned, and shook his head quickly. "No,

that isn't the way to put it.  Let's change that, and say that several years ago I met the most  remarkable man I

have ever seen. A man with so much ability that it  sounds silly when you start telling the truth about him. I'll

explain  what I mean by silly by saying that his profession is other people's  troubles, righting wrongs and

punishing evildoers in the far corners of  the earth. See how wild that sounds? Like something out of a book

about  knighthood. It gives you an idea." 

"You work for this fellow, that it?" Bob French demanded. 

"I work with him, not for him," Renny corrected. "There are five of  us who do that. I'm an engineer. I'm the

engineering specialist. The  others are also specialists. One is an electrician, one a chemist, one  a geologist

and archaeologist, and the other a lawyer." Renny was  silent a moment, grinning. "Here's something else

unusual about it.  None of us get paid for it." 

Bob French stared fixedly at Renny. "When I knew you in China, I  figured you were a pretty levelheaded

guy." 

"And now you don't think so?" 

"I don't know what to think. This sure sounds pixyish." 

Renny chuckled. "You'll understand it when you meet Doc Savage, the  'man of bronze,' as they call him

sometimes." 

Bob French gave a visible jump, and said, "The ' 

man of  '" and didn't finish. 

"The newspapers call Doc the 'man of bronze' now and then," Renny  said. "Have you heard of him under that

description?" 

"I guess I have," the soldier said. 

Renny watched the soldier curiously. Bob French wasn't a fellow who  hid his feelings very well. Renny could

tell what was going through  French's mind. First, French mentally reviewed what he had heard about  Doc

Savage. This review, for some reason or other, made French  apprehensive. French suddenly decided that he

didn't want Doc Savage  involved in the affair. 


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"If you don't mind," French said, "let's you and I work out this  thing ourselves." 

"You mean you don't want Doc to know about this?" 

"I'd rather not." 

"Why?" 

Bob French didn't reply immediately. He was becoming cautious,  stopping to plan his words. "This isn't a

very important affair, and  Savage is a man who is accustomed to large matters, if what I recall  about him is

right. I don't think we should bother him with this." 

"Didn't someone try to murder you?" Renny demanded. 

"Yes, but  " 

"Isn't that important?" 

"Well  " 

"A murder is always important," Renny said. "We'll go to Doc with  this thing. Wait'll I get my hat and coat." 

RENNY went into an adjoining room which, Bob French decided, must  serve the bigfisted engineer as

living quarters. At least French got a  glimpse of a cot and a dresser through the open door. 

Now that Renny was out of sight, some of the emotion inside French  suddenly appeared on his face. The

emotion, a sick apprehension, got  the best of him for a moment. 

He went to the door leading into the reception room and opened it,  not as a man who was in flight, but as a

man who was so worried that he  felt the need of moving about. 

It was when he made the unexpected discovery that the middleaged  office girl was not in the outer office

that French's frightened brain  hatched a quick plan. 

The key in the partition door was on the inside. He had already  noticed that. He seized the key and changed it

to the other side of the  door, stepped through, closed the door quietly, and locked it. 

He lifted his voice, yelled, "Renny! Watch out! For God's sake!" He  screamed the last part. 

He snatched up the office girl's chair and broke it over her desk.  He hurled the fragments against the

connecting door. He emitted a  series of loud grunts and gasps, and shoved the office girl's desk  around. 

Renny hit the other side of the partition door, rattling the locked  doorknob. 

"French, what's happening?" Renny yelled. 

"They've jumped me!" the soldier howled. 

He stamped and slapped the desk. He seized his blouse, deliberately  tore it half in two up the back, wrenched

off the blousehalf including  the sleeve, and threw it on the floor. 


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Then he ran out into the corridor. He had been afraid someone would  have heard the uproar and come into the

corridor to investigate. But no  one had. 

Bob French ran to the door at the end of the corridor which was  marked EXIT. This led to the stairs. He went

down the stairs in  clattering haste. 

III

HALF an hour later, Renny Renwick was saying to Doc Savage, "He got  a cable from his brother to ask a

man named Powell about something  called the heavy stuff." 

Renny went on with the story, and Doc listened. 

Doc Savage was a taller man than Renny Renwick, and probably as  heavy, but it was only when he was near

Renwick that this was apparent.  Standing apart, Doc seemed of slighter stature. Most muscular men and  most

big men look muscular or big. Doc didn't. 

There were two or three startling things about his appearance. His  hair was bronzecolored, and only slightly

darker than the sun had made  his skin. He had golden eyes that were unusual, almost weird. Otherwise  he

was not particularly handsome. He dressed with an obvious effort to  make himself inconspicuous, but with

little success. He was a man who  would be conspicuous anywhere. 

He had received an excited telephone call from Renny. He had  hurried to Renwick's office, and now he

listened to the story of Bob  French's visit. 

"They grabbed him," Renny concluded, "when I was in the other room  getting my hat and coat. They must

have jerked him into the reception  room and locked the door between the two offices before he began to

fight. The fight must have been a beaut. It only lasted a couple of  seconds, because it was over, and

everybody was gone, by the time I  could find something heavy enough to break down the door." 

"You searched for French?" Doc asked. He had a voice which was  somewhat startling because of the

impression it gave of controlled  volume and power. It had a quality which highly trained voices have. 

"Sure I looked. I ran into the corridor, yelling for French. I  didn't get an answer. I dashed back and

telephoned the elevator starter  downstairs to keep his eyes open for a man of French's description. But  I must

have been too late, because French hasn't left since. He might  still be in the building, of course." 

"Where did this fight take place?" 

"The reception room." 

Doc said, "Let's have a look." 

In the reception room, he picked up the broken pieces of the office  girl's chair and examined them. 

"Where was your office girl?" he asked. 

"Mrs. Carter goes home at four," Renny explained. "It was about  fourfifteen when this happened. She had

already gone." 


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The office girl's desk was overturned on the floor. 

"Where was the desk placed before?" Doc asked. "Let's put it back  where it was." 

Renny returned the desk to its original position. "About here, I  think," he said. 

Doc Savage examined the desk, and thoughtfully compared the parts  of the chair to the marks on the top of

the desk. He gave more  attention to scratches on the side of the desk. 

Renny said, "They tore half of his blouse off him. Here it is." 

Doc looked at the blouse. 

"Would you like to hear some Sherlock Holmes work on this?" he  asked. 

"What do you mean?" Renny inquired. 

"Nobody attacked your man," Doc said. "He staged the thing  himself." 

RENNY scratched his head doubtfully. "I don't see how you figure  that." 

There was only a narrow space between the desk and the wall, where  the office girl's chair would normally

have been. Doc stood there. 

"From the marks on the desk, the chair was swung by someone  standing about here," he said. "You'll notice

there is hardly room for  anyone to have been in front of the chair when it was swung, indicating  French

picked up the chair and smashed it down on the desk. 

"The marks on the side of the desk indicate it was kicked several  times in the same place. That could happen

in a fight, but it is hardly  likely. 

"None of the chair fragments show traces of having hit a man.  A  chair, or even a chair leg, is a heavy

weapon, and if you struck  a man  with one, some blood or hair or hide should adhere to the  weapon." 

Renny nodded thoughtfully. 

"Of course any one of those freak things could happen in a fight,"  Doc added. "But it isn't likely that all of

them would happen in the  same fight." 

"Holy cow!" Renny said. "Now that you bring this up, I remember  that French didn't seem so happy about

bringing you into the case." 

"Oh, he showed some reluctance?" 

"Yes, he did. At first, he didn't seem to know who you were. Then  it dawned on him that he had heard of you,

and right away he suggested  that we shouldn't bother you with his trouble." 

"Did he give any reason?" 

"No. He only said that he didn't think we should bother an  important man like you with the matter," Renny

said. "Doggone it, I  should have attached more importance to his reluctance." 


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"It looks as if he staged a fake attack, then escaped down the  stairs." 

"That's the way it seems, all right." 

Doc asked, "When French first began asking you for help, did he  seem sincere?" 

"As sincere as anything." 

"When did he change?" 

"When he realized who you were." 

"As I understand it, you first told him that you would bring me  into the thing, calling me by name," Doc said.

"Was that when French  got excited?" 

"No. He got excited when it dawned on him who you were. He'd heard  of you as the man of bronze. I

mentioned that was who you were, and  that was when he changed his mind about wanting you in it." 

Doc looked thoughtfully at the half portion of Bob French's coat. 

"He wanted us to investigate the thing," Doc said. "But he didn't  want to appear in it himself any more." 

Renny was startled. "How you figure that?" 

"He must have staged the fake attack to get us excited," Doc  pointed out. "Otherwise he would have merely

slipped away from you." 

Renny clapped a hand to his forehead. "By God, that's right. What's  the matter with my brains, anyway!" 

DOC went through the half of Bob French's blouse. In the pockets he  found cigarettes, book matches, two

Chinese cash coins with square  holes in their middles, an English shilling coin, a cigar. 

Renny scrutinized the book matches. "None of this stuff means  anything. I thought the matches might, but

they're from a chain outfit  that has branches all over the city." 

Doc indicated a small white cloth tab clipped to the blouse collar.  It had inked markings. 

"Laundry tag," Doc said. 

Renny brightened. "By golly, that's as good as an address. Doesn't  the New York police have a directory of

these laundry marks?" 

"I think so," Doc said. "But tracing it down is going to take time.  We want to talk to this Sir Roger Powell

fellow without delay. So we  had better turn the job of tracing down the laundry mark over to Monk." 

"Good idea," Renny agreed. 

Monk Mayfair was the only other one of their group who was in New  York, or in the United States for that

matter. Monk was Lieutenant  Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, the chemist of their outfit. 

Doc got Monk on the telephone. 


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"The blouse with the laundry mark will be in Renny's desk in his  office," Doc said, after he had told Monk

what had happened. "Your job  is to get it, check back the laundry mark with the police, and find Bob  French

if you can. Better not waste any time." 

Monk had a small squeaky voice. He wasn't too happy about the  assignment. 

"You guys wouldn't be shoving off some routine on me, so you can go  after the exciting part?" he demanded. 

"What makes you think that?" 

Monk snorted. "I've had some previous experience." 

"If you're not interes  " 

"Oh, I'll go after the laundry angle," Monk said hastily. "But it's  funny I always get this leg work." 

Doc mentioned Monk's reluctance to Renny Renwick while they were  riding an elevator down to the street.

Renny said, "Monk always finds  something to squawk about. But he's worse lately. I think he misses  fussing

with Ham Brooks since Ham went to Europe to work on that legal  tangle the Nazis left." 

Doc agreed that Monk certainly missed Ham. He added that it was a  relief, though, not to have to listen to the

quarrel the two had  carried on for years, and not to have to put up with the practical  jokes the two liked to

pull on each other. 

They got a cab. 

"The Westland," Renny said. 

"That's on Madison, ain't it?" the driver asked. 

"Right." 

During the ride, Renny told Doc Savage what he knew about Bob  French. On the Yurigshun job, on which

Renny had been supervising  engineer, French had been with the army engineer group assigned to the  project.

Renny had been assigned the same living quarters as French, a  Chinese farmer's house, and they had become

friends in the same fashion  as any two men would become friends under the same circumstances.  French's

twofisted ability had impressed Renny. 

It was Renny's opinion that French would have been a Major or a  Colonel  French was a buck sergeant  if

the man had been more  amenable to discipline. French was one of those fellows who didn't  regard the war as

a career, hadn't the slightest intention of staying  in the army a minute longer than was necessary, and got

away with  anything and everything he could. Some of it he didn't get away with.  He had been busted back to

private grade several times for just helling  around. But there was nothing wrong with Bob French's

warmaking. He  was a guy who was in it to lick the Japs and Nazis, and the hell with  the rest of it. Renny

had liked him. 

None of which shed much light on the matter at hand, Renny  admitted. 

"Here's the Westland," Doc said, looking out at a radio prowl car,  a detective squad car and a police

ambulance. 


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IV

"HOLY cow!" Renny said. "Things don't look too peaceful around  here!" 

Doc paid off their cab, and entered the Westland. It was a luxury  hotel. Modernistic, chrome and black, with

surrealist murals on the  walls. Not garish, though. And not cheap. 

In the cavernous, indirectly lighted lobby, business was proceeding  as usual. However, the doorman and

another man, evidently the assistant  manager, were standing with two detectives. They were okaying people

who entered, it was apparent, when one of the plainclothes sleuths  came over and stopped Doc and Renny. 

"You are not guests here, I believe," the officer said. 

Doc produced a billfold, and leafed through the assortment of  permits, licenses, memberships cards and

identification cards. He found  what he wanted. The detective looked at the document and said, "Huh!"

explosively. 

Doc said, "If whatever has happened here concerns a man named  Powell, we'll want the lowdown on it." 

The detective glanced from Doc to Renny dubiously, then said,  "You'd better wait here a minute." He went to

a telephone and spoke  over it, reading from the card Doc had given him during part of his  conversation. 

Coming back, the officer said, "Okay. Sorry to keep you waiting.  This is the first time I have had one of these

things sprung on me. The  card Doc had given him was an honorary commission in the New York City  police

force. 

"What's going on?" Doc asked. 

"Fellow named Powell got shot at," the officer explained. "He  doesn't know who did it, he says. We're

checking people in and out of  the hotel in hopes of getting a line on something. No luck yet. Can you  help

us?" 

"I haven't met Powell," Doc said. 

"What do you want to see him about?" the detective asked. 

"On a private matter," Doc said. 

The police detective didn't like the answer. He still held Doc's  card of identification. He glanced at it as if

wondering how much  weight it carried. 

"People are generally better off if they give us information when  we ask for it," the officer said finally, thinly

veiling a threat. 

"I'm sure they are," Doc told him. "Where will we find Powell?" 

"He's in his suite, eighteeneleven," the officer said reluctantly.  Riding up in the elevator, Renny said, "The

cop was disappointed." 

Doc nodded. "Normally I would not advise anyone to withhold  information from the police. But,


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unfortunately, the newspapers have an  uncanny facility at finding out what the police are doing, and we can

do without any front page splurges." 

SIR Roger Powell was a lithe, neat youngacting middleaged man in  a blue pinstripe suit and white shirt.

His black hair stood up like a  fresh brush and his moustache was a work of art. 

He opened a door which had two holes, bullet holes, in the panel,  after they knocked on it. 

"Ah, some more police," he said not unpleasantly. 

"Not exactly," Doc told him. "You are Powell?" 

Powell hesitated, smiled, said, "Well, you must be newspapermen,  then. Won't you come in? Yes, I'm

Powell." 

They entered, and there was a uniformed police patrolman sitting in  a chair watching the door intently. He

had a revolver on his lap. 

Doc went to the policeman and showed him the same identification he  had shown the police detective

downstairs. 

"Mind if we talk to Powell privately?" Doc asked. 

The cop knew what the identification meant. He had a better idea  than the detective. He said, "Be okay if I

wait out in the hall?" 

"Sure." 

The cop went out. 

Powell stared at Doc and Renny. "I say, have a bit of influence,  haven't you?" 

Renny said, "My name is Renwick. This is Doc Savage, Mr. Powell." 

Powell was startled into being very English. 

"I'll be damned, really I will," he said. "You know I thought there  was something familiar about you." 

"We've met before?" Doc asked. 

"I've met your reputation a number of times," Powell said amiably.  "I never saw you personally before, that I

know about. I think I'd have  remembered, old boy." 

The suite was large, airy and expensive looking. Through a door  there was a bedroom, and on the floor and

on a rack were two pieces of  handsome, monogrammed luggage. 

From the looks of the walls, at least five bullets had clouted into  the plaster. The floors had not been swept,

and some of the plaster had  been tracked on the carpet. 

"Any idea why we're here?" Doc asked. 


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Powell gave them his smile again. "Considering that I have lately  had a gun emptied at me, that would be a

logical guess as to the  reason." 

"I believe you know a man named Bob French," Doc said. All  amiability, almost all emotion, left Powell's

face while he looked at  them. 

"Oh, that," he said. 

"Know him?" 

"I met," Powell said, "a man who claimed to be Bob French." 

Doc said, "He came to see Renwick here. Renwick knew him in China.  He wanted Renny's help. When he

found out that I was associated with  Renny, he changed his mind about the help. He ducked out." 

Powell frowned. He got out a cloth bag of tobacco and a book of  papers and went to work on a cigarette. He

didn't look like a man who  would be rolling his own. It didn't fit him. He took plenty of time to  think while he

was rolling the cigarette. 

He said, "Ordinarily I wouldn't call that a sound reason for your  being here." 

"That was no reason; it was something to start us talking," Doc  explained. 

"I could," Powell said, "tell you to go to hell." 

"Are you?" 

Powell laughed There was utterly no humor in the laugh. "Tell Doc  Savage that? Naturally not," he said.

"Because I have heard of Savage.  I have heard that you make a business of helping people out of trouble,

provided the trouble is unusual enough to interest you. However, I'm  going to ask you one question: Just

whom do you think you are helping  out of trouble?" 

"Bob French," Renny said. 

Powell turned to Renny. "Pardon me, but I don't get it. Bob French  ran away." 

"He's a pal of mine and he was scared," Renny said. "He came to me  for help. He's going to get help." 

"Perhaps he doesn't want it now." 

"He hasn't said so." 

"And you're going to help him?" 

"If we can." 

Powell's laugh came, still without heartiness. "In anyone else,  that would be unreasonable, you must admit.

You have no actual interest  in the matter. The man who asked you for aid apparently doesn't want it  now." He

examined them and suddenly smiled as if he understood them  thoroughly. "But of course I don't consider

your interest as  unreasonable. I've heard of you, and I know that the things you do  which are seemingly

without motive really have a very strong motive,  which is your love of excitement." 


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Doc asked patiently, "Do we talk about Bob French or not?" 

"Of course we talk," Powell said. 

POWELL snuffed out his cigarette, then took a stand facing them,  his back to the window so that,

intentionally or not, the light was in  their eyes and they couldn't see his face too well. 

"There's much I don't understand. I want to say that first," he  told them. 

Renny said, "Begin with Bob French's brother. You're supposed to  know him." 

"With Tucker French? That was where I was going to begin anyway. I  got acquainted with Tucker in

Colombia, South America. Tucker French is  one of those somewhat strange and mysterious white men who

take their  living, in one way or another, out of the jungle." 

Powell wheeled abruptly and went into the bedroom. He came back  with one of the neat, monogrammed

traveling bags, opened it and showed  them the contents. 

The bag held twoway airplane radios of the smaller sort, and a  salesman's prospectus of larger outfits. 

"I sell this stuff," Powell said. "I sell it in South America, and  that's how I met Tucker French. He wanted a

portable radio for use in  the jungle, and I sold him one, and we became acquaintances. I suppose  you would

call us friends, except for one thing: I never got to know  too much about Tucker." 

He closed the suitcase. Then he resumed his stance with the light  at his back. 

"Three weeks ago, I happened to mention to Tucker French that I was  coming to New York to brush up on

my contacts with manufacturers and  new postwar types of radio equipment. He asked me to bring a

shipment  of snake skins to New York for him. I agreed. 

"So I was given a very heavy box of snake skins. Or rather, the box  was put aboard the ship which was to

bring me to New York, after having  been passed by the Colombian officials who, in times like these,  examine

the things which are exported. 

"I came to New York, and the customs officials here passed the box  of snake skins, and I had them

transferred to the warehouse where I  usually store my radios. The case of snake skins was very heavy. 

"I was to contact a firm named Blassett and Morris about the snake  skins. I did so. Blassett and Morris said

they didn't deal in snake  skins. They didn't know Tucker French, either, and said they'd never  had any

dealings with him." 

Powell paused and puffed his cigarette. 

"You see the thing was beginning to get strange," he said. 

Doc Savage asked, "What did you do next?" 

"I cabled Tucker French the facts. I have not received an answer.  The same day, this man saying he was Bob

French called on me and made  some mysterious remarks about something he called the heavy stuff. I  told

him I knew nothing about it.', 


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Powell paused again, this time to get their attention. "Remember,  I'm not sure Tucker French has a brother,"

he said. "Tucker never  mentioned having one." 

"What happened after Bob French's visit?" Doc asked. 

"Nothing, until today," Powell said. "A little over half an hour  ago, there was a knock on the door of this

hotel room suite. I opened  the door. A man fired a revolver at me. He missed. He fired, in fact,  three shots

while I was holding the door open. I slammed the door. He  fired two more shots, emptying his gun, the

bullets going through the  door." 

Doc Savage said, "The bullets all missed?" 

"That's right. The man was very excited. And of course, I did some  dodging." 

"Did you know the man?" 

"No." 

"Ever seen him before?" 

"Not that I recall." 

Doc Savage had been sitting on a straightbacked chair. Now he came  to his feet, took a few strides toward

the window as if to look out.  This brought him in a better position to study Powell's face. The man's

countenance was as pale as ivory and coated with nervous perspiration. 

"Powell," Doc said, "what do you think is behind the trouble?" 

Powell threw out his hands. "I don't know. I told you I didn't know  when I began talking." 

"You're sweating," Doc said. 

Powell blew up. 

"By God, of course I'm sweating!" he yelled. "Why wouldn't I be?  I've never been shot at before. It was a

miracle that fellow didn't  kill me when he emptied his gun at me." 

"You are sure, Doc asked dryly, "that he really tried?" 

Powell threw up both clenched hands preparatory to a tirade. But  before the words got away from him, he

took control of himself. He  lowered his hands and straightened his coat by jerking at the sleeves. 

"If he didn't," he said, "he gave an imitation that utterly  convinced me." 

Doc changed to a manner that was friendly and said, "We are not  trying to accuse or irritate you. If my

questions seem pointless, or  too pointed, it's because the affair seems confusing. 

"It's confusing enough," Powell agreed. 

"Would you," Doc asked, "like to plunge into it and see if we can  find out what it's about?" 


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"You're damned right," Powell said vehemently. 

"Then why don't we take a look at the box of snake skins?" Doc  suggested. 

Powell hesitated barely long enough for it to be evident that he  had hesitated. "All right," he agreed. "But I

don't see what good that  will do." 

THEY went out into the hall, and Doc told the policeman, "Mr.  Powell is going with us. Will that be all

right?" 

The officer nodded, then said, "I think I ought to check on that,  to keep myself clear." 

"Go ahead." 

The cop was back shortly. "It's okay." 

They found a cab downstairs. Powell gave the driver an address,  then leaned back. Powell looked controlled,

smug, righteous. 

Doc said, "By the way, I overlooked something." 

"Yes?" Powell smiled slightly. 

"When Bob French came to see you, were you alone?" 

"Yes, I  " Powell hesitated, puckering his forehead thoughtfully.  "No, I wasn't, either. Mr. Jessup was there." 

"Jessup?" 

"D. B. Jessup. He happened to be there when Bob French called, and  I think he was present during the

interview." 

"Who is he? Friend of yours?" 

"Not exactly a friend," Powell said. "D. B. Jessup had written me a  letter to my Colombian headquarters,

saying he had some army surplus  radio equipment in which I might be interested. He asked to call on me

when I came to New York. So I got in touch with him, and he called." 

"Buy any radios from him?" Doc asked. 

"No, as a matter of fact I didn't." 

"Why not?" 

"His prices were too high. I didn't even bother to go look at his  stuff. His prices were clear out of reason." 

Renny leaned forward. "This D. B. Jessup  was he a long, lean man.  Dark hair. Sallow skin. Very skinny,

with kind of a wolf face and an  unhealthy look?" 

"Why, yes  "  Powell bolted upright in the seat. He held himself  there with arms rigid, fists clenched. He

showed utter alarm. "You know  him?" 


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"Is that Jessup?" 

"It answers his description." 

"That's the man," Renny said, "who tried to stick a knife into Bob  French." 

The tip of Powell's tongue showed between his teeth for a moment.  Then he leaned back, very carefully, as if

he was afraid he would fall,  and said, "God love us!" in a horrified voice. 

"You know where we can find Jessup?" Doc Savage asked. 

Powell shook his head slowly. "The man told me he was leaving town,  checking out of his hotel. He said he

was going to the Coast to see  what luck he would have selling his radios." 

"Was it after Bob French visited you that Jessup said he was  leaving town?" 

"Yes, it was." Powell shuddered. 

V

THE warehouse was far downtown on the East River, not far from  where the South American shipping lines

had their docks. It was not a  beautiful neighborhood. The wind brought some of the smell from Fulton  Fish

Market. There was a name, Powell Export, over the entrance. 

"I use this place for storage," Powell explained. "There are  occasions when I have a chance to buy up a good

deal of radio equipment  at bargain prices, and I need a place to store it. This is a  particularly opportune time

for that, with the war near its end and the  army and navy contracts being canceled." 

He unlocked the door and went inside. 

There was some outofdate radio equipment standing around. Old  battery sets. Some newer stuff, but none

of recent manufacture. 

"Some of my bad investments," Powell said wryly. "The French case  is back here." 

The case was about three by four by four feet. 

Renny was surprised by the heaviness of its construction. 

"Looks like a machinery case," he said. "Look at that iron  reenforcing." 

"There's nothing but snake hides inside," Powell said. "The customs  men opened it in my presence. 

"Suppose we open it," Doc suggested. 

Powell was agreeable. "There is a pinch bar and a wrench somewhere  around." He went hunting the items,

found them, and they started on the  case lid fastenings. 

"What kinda snake hides are these supposed to be?" Renny asked.  "Something for a museum?" 


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"Oh, no. They're commercial," Powell explained. "There are several  varieties, but most of them are

anacondas. You know what anacondas are   anyone who has been to South America does. Sometimes they're

called  boa constrictors, but they're not true boas. You hear wild native  stories down there about anacondas

fifty feet long that can swallow a  fullgrown bull. However, I think they only get to be about thirty feet  long,

and not very often that." 

"What're the hides used for?" 

"Women's shoes, purses, or whatever is made out of skin. I think  they're sold by the pound, much as any

other hides, although I'm not  sure." 

Renny asked, "Is that part of Tucker French's business, marketing  snake hides?" 

"So I understood." 

They got the lid off finally. It was bolted, not nailed, and as  Renny had remarked, it was heavy. 

The hides were heavy also, most of them salted. It was a messy job  as they unrolled each skin, and inspected

it. 

They finished the job, then looked at each other foolishly.  "Blank," Renny said. "They're just snake hides, as

far as I can tell.  What do you say, Doc?" 

Doc eyed the hides with no approval. "They seem to be snake hides,"  he said, with no attempt to be funny.

"We'll look at the box itself,  then put them back." 

Renny climbed onto the edge of the box. He gave it several whacks  with the pinch bar, said, "It sounds solid

enough. I'll take a look at  the bottom." 

He jumped to the floor, grasped the box and heaved. Nothing  happened. 

"Holy cow!" he said. 

DOC Savage frowned suddenly. "What's wrong?" 

"The dang box weighs a ton," Renny said. "How about you helping me  turn it over." 

"You should be able to handle a box that size." 

"I must be getting weak in the push. Give me a hand," Renny said. 

Doc joined him. Together, they heaved at the box. With no result. 

Renny, exasperated, said, "The danged thing must be nailed to the  floor." 

Doc turned to Powell. "You notice this thing being particularly  heavy before?" 

Powell hesitated. "Well, not  yes, I did. You understand, I  haven't handled the thing myself. But it broke the

sling when they were  loading it off the lighter on to the steamer at Cartagena. But I just  supposed that green

hides were very heavy." 


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"No box," Doc said, "should be this heavy." 

Powell showed sudden emotion. "You mean the box has a double bottom  or something?" 

Doc scooped up the pinch bar. "We'll soon find out." He went to  work overturning the case. 

It became ridiculous. The pinch bar split the flooring, but finally  he did get the case pried up about two

inches. Renny had found an iron  pipe, which he rammed under the case. They pried and grunted and heaved

and finally got the box up on its side. 

"I'll be danged!" Renny said sheepishly. "Did you ever see the  equal of that?" 

"How do you account for the empty box being so heavy?" Powell  asked. 

"The thing's got to have a false bottom," Renny told him. "I'll see  in a minute." 

The bigfisted engineer, with the end of his gas pipe, gave the box  bottom a wallop. The solid sound he got

obviously astonished him. He  scowled, growled, "Gimme that pinch bar," and went to work. 

By the time he had pried a board off the bottom of the case, his  long face had a foolish expression. 

The case bottom was obviously solid. 

"God bless us, what kinda wood is that?" he blurted. He produced a  pocket knife and took shavings off

different parts of the case. 

"Well?" Doc asked. 

"Oak," Renny said. "Plain oak." 

"An oak box should not be that heavy." 

"You're telling me!" Renny picked up the pinch bar again. 

"What are you going to do?" Powell demanded. 

"I'm going to take this thing to pieces a board at a time," Renny  said. 

"That seems foolish to me," Powell said. "You can see it's an oak  box." 

Renny's voice was becoming a rumble, the way it did when he was  excited. "Brother, this box weighs three

tons if it weighs an ounce.  I'm an engineer and I know it's an impossibility for it to weigh that.  I want to know

why." 

Renny began beating at the stout oak planks. 

Powell looked contemptuous of the whole thing. He said, "This is  getting childish. Here, I'll find you an axe

and you can split the  boards." 

He went away and came back with a fire axe that was sharp. Renny  took the axe. It was large, heavy, made

for the sort of thing he wanted  it for. He came down on the oaken planks, one after another, splitting  them. He


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split the right side, first, then the left side, then the  bottom, which was uppermost. The planks split readily

enough. They  were, after all, just wood. 

Disgusted, puzzled, Renny lowered the fire axe, and rested. The  back of the box was unhandy to get at, and

after he swung at it a  couple of times, he gave the box an angry shove. 

The box skidded across the floor. 

Renny's eyes popped. 

He seized the case and turned it over without much trouble. 

"Holy cow!" he blurted. 

DOC Savage himself grasped the box. He found that now he could lift  it entirely without difficulty, whereas a

few moments ago he couldn't  have gotten it a quarter of an inch off the floor without leverage. It  had taken

the utmost strength of Renny and himself combined, exerted on  levers and the pinch bar, to lift the case at all.

Renny might have  exaggerated slightly when he said it weighed three tons, but he could  not have been far off. 

Three tons was about what thirty heavy men would weigh. At least  three tons was thirty times two hundred

pounds. Now the box didn't  weigh as much as one twohundredpound man. 

"It's impossible!" Renny rumbled. 

Doc turned the box over two or three times more. He made, for a  moment, a small trilling noise. It meant the

same thing as a whistle of  astonishment. 

There was some salt on the floor, salt from the snake skins which  had stuck to the inside of the box and been

dislodged by Renny's  pounding. Mixed with the dirty salt were snake skin scales, dirt and  small litter. 

Doc raked the fire axe through the salt and litter, but it was  immediately evident there was nothing of any size

in it. 

Powell suddenly giggled. It sounded hysterical. "What do you expect  a couple of handfuls of salt to weigh,

three tons?" 

Doc straightened. He felt foolish, and he was angry with himself  for being so completely baffled. 

He said, "A moment ago, that box weighed as much as a heavy truck.  Now it weighs less than I do. How do

you account for that?" 

Powell tittered wildly. "Maybe there was a threeton mouse in it." 

Doc said violently, "Don't be a fool!" 

The silly merriment slid off Powell's face, which became strained.  "Will you name one reason why I should

stand around and tolerate being  called a fool?" he demanded. 

Doc got hold of himself. He had lost his temper because he was  baffled and confused. He became ashamed of

having done so. 


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"Calling you a fool was uncalled for, and I apologize," he said. 

Powell was mollified. "It was my fault. What just happened to that  box is so unbelievable that my first

impulse was to laugh at it. What  do you think made it suddenly lose its weight?" 

"I have no idea," Doc told him. "But we are going to find out." 

"Well, if I can do anything to help, tell me," Powell said. 

A new voice said to them, "Help is what you're going to need  if  you make one jittery move!" 

THE voice was in the warehouse. But where? Doc turned slowly,  searching. 

"Stand still, damn you!" the voice warned. 

Doc froze. 

The voice said, "Now turn your head to the right. See it?" 

It was a rifle muzzle projecting from a large packing case that  looked fragile. The rifle snout waggled to get

their attention. 

The voice added, "You've probably got guns. All right, don't use  them. I've got brick stacked up inside here,

and unless you hit this  crack first shot, I'll kill you all!" 

No one said anything. 

There was a stir inside the box. A brick sailed out over the top  and hit the floor. 

"See, bricks,". the voice said. "Now, turn your backs to me." 

They turned their backs. 

"Okay," the voice said. "Now drop your guns on the floor and kick  them off to one side." 

Renny carefully produced a pistol from an underarm holster. It was  a spikenosed weapon which would take

either a clip or a ramhorn  magazine and would fire either single shot or fully automatic. 

"All right, Savage!" the voice said. 

"I do not carry a gun," Doc said. 

"Powell!" 

"I am unarmed," Powell said shakily. 

There was a silence. The hidden man appeared to be debating the  truth of their statements. He cleared his

throat noisily. 

"Buck, I guess it's safe to come out and frisk them," he said. Buck  proved to be a heavy man with a large

cornplaster strip across his  nose. The adhesive, about an inch and a half wide, placed diagonally,  had been put


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on so that it pulled the upper part of his face out of  shape on one side and the lower part out of shape on the

other. It was  probably as effective a disguise as a mask, and certainly more  efficient. 

Buck searched them. He did it as if they were red hot, and he  seemed to grit his teeth each time he touched

them. He was scared. 

Renny asked him sourly, "What would you do if I jumped and said  boo!" 

Without a word, Buck whipped out a blackjack and laid it against  the side of Renny's head, hard. Renny fell,

going down in sections,  making a heavy noise on the floor. He landed with his face in the salt  that had been

knocked from the packing case when they were working on  it, and hardly moved afterward. 

Doc, the violence in his voice poorly controlled, said, "That  wasn't necessary." 

"Guys who get funny make me nervous," Buck said. "They ain't  scared, and when they ain't scared they're

liable to do anything." 

"I can assure you that I'm scared," Doc said. 

"Then get your hands behind you. Both you birds." 

They were working to a plan, because Buck had lengths of rope in  his pockets, already cut to the length for

tying wrists and ankles. 

Buck tied them. He knew his knots. He used a highwayman's hitch on  their wrists, then made them lie down,

carried the rope up around their  necks, gave it a twist, carried it down and doubled their legs back and  did

another highwayman's hitch around their ankles. 

It was a vicious tie. If they struggled, they would strangle  themselves. 

Buck tied Renny. 

Then he gagged them all. He had the materials for that, too.  Adhesive tape and three large sponges, for

stuffing in their mouths. 

The man in the box  he was still in the box  said, "If I was you,  Buck, I'd scatter them out around the place.

Otherwise they might get  together and untie each other in a hurry." 

Buck said, "Yeah, that's a good idea." 

He hauled Renny off to the back of the building, dragged Doc around  to the side, and hauled Powell forward

and dumped him behind a pile of  boxes. 

Of the three, Doc was the only one left where he could watch what  went on. 

The man in the box came out. He was stocky and darkskinned, as if  recently from a climate of heavy

sunshine. He had a thin wire of a scar  on his chin and a thick cluster of pocks on the left side of the neck. 

"Get the jug," he said. 


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The jug was a glass one, gallon size. It was full of yellowish  liquid. The skullandcrossbones label said

sulphuric acid. 

The other man dug out a package, and from a spot in the corner of  the wareroom took a large pottery crock.

He dumped the contents of his  package into the crock. Doc knew immediately what it must be  some  form

of yellow prussiate of potash. 

"Dump in the stuff in the jug," the heavy man said. 

THERE was quite a chemical commotion in the crock, which was  understandable. The fumes which arose

had no great amount of color. 

The two men got out in a hurry. There were no words of parting. 

They slammed the door and locked it. 

Doc stared at the crock. He tried the binding on his wrists. Tight.  Very tight. And the sponge in his mouth,

taped there, was an effective  gag. The chances of making enough noise to bring help from the street  were not

worth mentioning. 

Shots, of course, would have been heard on the street. That was why  there hadn't been any shooting. That was

why they were being killed  this way. 

Doc Savage closed his eyes tightly, trying to shut out the vision  of poisoning by vapor of hydrocyanic. It

would be quick. One breath  usually brought oppression and suffering at the temples and the nape of  the neck.

The eyes grew cloudy, and it would be almost impossible to  keep from throwing the head back. In a moment

would come vertigo, then  prostration, that awful hypertension in the head, the ghastly  stiffening of the body,

the legs stretched and flexed and the arms  flexed and the fingers splayed. Then respiration would cease. 

First there would be the odor, of course. The odor of bitter  almonds, the scent a peach seed has. 

Quick. He remembered, drymouthed, the medical aspects of the stuff  which he had studied. It acted directly

on the nerves, the only  objective lesion being a spasm of the respiratory system, the lungs  contracting in the

lower thoracic cavity would become bloodtinged and   on  autopsy  the veins would stand out as clearly as

if filled with  the brightest red ink. 

The bronchial tubes would be affected, too; an autopsy would show  them constricted and almost entirely

closed. 

All of this in a minute or so. Unconsciousness first, and then a  stiffness, and then one gigantic awful

wrenching inspiration of breath,  and then death. 

But first the odor of almonds. And he thought he could catch it  now. 

VI

THE old cop who had charge of laundry marks didn't like being  called back to the office after hours. 

"You might at least get around here during the day," he said. 


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Monk laughed at him. "Don't tell me the police never have a laundry  mark looked up except between eight

and four." 

The old man snorted. He took the half of Bob French's blouse from  Monk, but before he would do anything

about it, he insisted on filling  out a lengthy form. "Name?" he growled. 

"Monk Mayfair," Monk said. 

"That's not your full name." 

"Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair," Monk said wearily.  "Height five foot four, weight two

hundred, occupation chemist,  avocation chasing excitement with Doc Savage, favorite bobby blondes

preferably over twentyone  " 

"You're as funny as a crutch," the old man said. 

He finished filling in the blanks, had Monk sign, then went away  with the blouse half. 

He was hardly out of sight, it seemed to Monk, before he was back  again. 

"Blouse was last cleaned or washed by the Univex Laundry, in  Jackson Heights," he said. 

"Great grief, did you have the information in your hat?" Monk  gasped. 

The ancient sneered at him. "It's done by television." 

Properly impressed and amused, Monk left the police station and got  in his car. The car was eyefilling. It

was a secondhand job which had  belonged to a Balkan dictator who had been chased out of his country by

another dictator. The car, a special job from end to end, was but  slightly less a spectacle than a Grand Canyon

sunset. 

In many ways, the car was Monk. It was loud, spectacular, in not  too good taste, and unless one liked

ultramodernism, it was as ugly as  a sore thumb on an angel. Monk was like that. And he was homely. His

looks were something to scare the socks off babies, except that there  was a certain gleeful pleasantness about

him. The car was efficient;  the very best metals and the very finest workmanship were in it. The  same with

Monk. He was one of the world's best industrial chemists,  when he worked at it. His difficulty was not

working at it often  enough. He liked excitement, and preferred chasing it as a member of  Doc Savage's group

of five aids to working at his profession. As a  result, his habitual financial condition was one to interest the

sheriff and the wolf. It certainly wasn't something to interest the  incendiary blondes Monk spent his spare

time pursuing. 

He crossed Queensborough bridge to Roosevelt Boulevard and Jackson  Heights. The Univex Laundry was

closed. He spent an hour finding the  office manager of the laundry and dragging him away from a dinner

party. 

The laundry was efficient enough to keep a record of their work. 

"The blouse was done for a soldier named Robert French," the  laundry man said. "Here's the address." He

wrote the address out. It  was a little farther out in Jackson Heights. 


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IT was a cottage, a private home. There weren't many of those in  Jackson Heights which was an apartment

house and duplex home  development. But this was out toward flushing, a part of a block where  there were

small houses. This was a frame house. Frame houses were  scarcer than just plain houses. 

Monk drove past and looked over the place. The lawn was cut, but he  could tell from other signs that the

house hadn't been lived in for a  long time. The shrubs, for instance, had grown wild and untrimmed. And  the

place needed painting. It had that look that houses get when they  aren't lived in. 

Monk wondered if he'd drawn a blank. Wondered if Bob French had  given a phony address. 

At the corner was a neighborhood drugstore. It was the kind of a  drugstore that had pinball machines and a

soda fountain and tables on  the sidewalk for the customers. A neighborhood loafing place. He parked  in front. 

Monk went in and asked a middleaged man with an apron, "Know  anybody around here by the name of Bob

French? I've got the wrong  address, or something." 

"Fifth house from the corner, this side of the street," the man  said, naming the address Monk had. 

"Swell," Monk said enthusiastically. "Now, if he's just home." 

"Bob's living there, anyway, the man said. "Just got back from the  war. Been in China, where it's tough. Got

his hat full of medals. I was  talking to him the other day." 

"You sound like an old family friend," Monk said. 

"I  " 

"Where's the brother, Tucker, now?" Monk asked. 

The man frowned, hesitated, then said, "I didn't ask." 

Monk thought: Why didn't you ask? You're an old family friend.  There was something here. 

"Tucker been gone quite a while, hasn't he?" Monk said, fishing for  more information. 

The man said, "I don't know anything about Tucker. If you're from  the draft board, I still don't know anything

about him." 

Monk got it then. 

"Draft evader, eh?" he said. 

The man tightened up. "I wouldn't know." 

Monk laughed and said, "That Bob is a great guy. He's done enough  fighting for the whole family. Buddy of

mine was with him in China,  place called Yungshun. They built an air field there, and I guess they  had

themselves a time on the side. I hope Bob is at home. Don't want to  miss him." 

"Saw Bob around this morning," the man said. 

"Any of the rest of the family at home with Bob?" Monk asked. 


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"Mother and father are dead, didn't you know that?" 

"Never heard it," Monk said. 

"Car accident two years ago. Tucker was the kid of the family. Just  the two boys, Tucker and Bob. House has

been closed while they were  away. Don't know of any other relatives, so I guess nobody is there  with Bob." 

"Thanks," Monk said. 

He intended to leave then, but didn't. He changed his mind when he  saw how the man was looking at him,

weighing him. 

The man seemed to decide he liked Monk. He leaned over the counter  and lowered his voice. "This friend of

yours who was with Bob in China.  What was his name?" 

"Renwick," Monk said. "Renny Renwick." 

The man nodded. "Why, sure, Bob was talking about him. Laughing  about the time they'd had in China." 

"They had the time, I guess," Monk said. 

The man dropped his voice even lower. "What I wanted to ask you  about  there was a girl in here a little

while ago. Asked where Bob  French lived. She was a damned goodlooking girl, and so I told her  where Bob

lived, then I wished I hadn't." 

"What made you wish you hadn't?" 

The man pointed. "You see the black coupe parked yonder?" 

Monk said he saw the car. 

"She didn't go to Bob's house. She's sitting in that car, watching  the house. Kind of a funny way to do." 

Monk chuckled and said, "Maybe a disappointed girl friend. I better  warn old Bob." 

"She ain't no disappointed girlfriend," the man said. "Not her." 

"What makes you think so?" 

"Nobody would disappoint her," the man said. "You walk past and  take a look and you'll see." 

MONK had a way with women. Sometimes it got him a poke in the eye,  but frequently it didn't. His method

included everything but tact. 

Monk opened the door of the black coupe and got in. 

"Has he come out of the house yet?" he asked. 

The girl didn't quite tear the other door of the car off getting  out, but it was only because the door flew open

instantly. 


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She looked back into the car at Monk, much as one would look  through the zoo bars at a jackal. She didn't

say anything. 

It was Monk's theory that all women liked to hear you say that they  were beautiful. He said, "You're the

loveliest thing I've seen, as  lovely as the flowers in the valley of Kashmir, which are supposed to  be the most

glorious sight that man's eyes  oh, brother!" 

What ended his speech was the fact that she was more beautiful than  he was saying she was. 

"Time out while I learn to breathe again," he said weakly. 

"Must you?" she asked coldly. 

"Now, now, let's keep the conversation in a warm climate," Monk  said. "I chill easily. Anyway, you should

only look like that at Hitler  and Hirohito. Also at all other guys." 

She examined him. Apparently she found nothing of which she  approved. 

"Just who do you think you are?" she demanded. 

"Not the same man I was a moment ago," Monk said, grinning. "Rest  assured of that, and I doubt if I'll ever

be the same." 

She continued to scrutinize him distastefully. 

"What was it you said when you got in the car?" she asked. 

"I asked you if Bob French had come out of his house yet," Monk  said. "But already I can think of much

better subjects to talk about.  Your eyes, for instance. And our plans for the next few years. Oh, boy!  Some of

the things I've got to talk about may have been talked about  before, but I'll bet you I can give them a new   " 

She astonished him by getting back in the car. "First things  first," she said. "What about Bob French?" 

"Really, must we  " 

"Is he a friend of yours?" 

"I don't know yet, and anyway  " 

"Why not?" 

"Why not what?" 

"This isn't getting us anywhere," the girl said. She took an object  out of her purse. "Maybe this will." 

The object from her purse was black, made of steel and had a  remarkably large hole where the bullets could

come out. 

"Bless us! Do be careful with that!" Monk gasped. 

"Can you drive a car?" 


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"No." 

"You can learn on this one then," she said. "And don't be coy. I  saw you drive past a while ago in that

combination of a sunset and an  earthquake on wheels." 

"But I don't want to drive anywhere," Monk protested. 

"You're not being asked for an opinion." 

"I can't drive. Meeting a vision like you has been too much for me:  Look, I'm shaking all over," Monk

protested. 

"You had better shake." She poked him in the ribs with the gun,  rather emphatically. "There is nothing

whatever wrong with this gun." 

"You wouldn't shoot me!" 

"Right in the edge of Jackson Heights, I would," she assured him.  "Get going. Go around the block, and we'll

pick up Bill." 

VII

WHO the hell is Bill? Monk did fast thinking while he drove. 

Bob French got into his thoughts, which he shouldn't have. Bob  French, according to the version Monk had

received from Doc Savage over  the telephone, had come to Renny Renwick for aid. Bob French had told

Renny that he, Renny, was the only one in New York whom he knew, which  was why he'd come to Renny.

This seemed to be shaping up as a darned  lie. 

Who was Bill? 

"Your brother?" Monk asked hopefully. 

"Who?" 

"Bill." 

"Watch where you're driving," the girl said. "You run into the curb  and blow out one of my tires and I'll

probably shoot you anyway." 

Monk gave more attention to piloting her car. "This suspense is  murdering me," he muttered. 

They rounded the block and traveled a short distance and she said,  "Pull over and stop." 

Monk obeyed. A tall woman leaning against a light pole stepped on  the cigarette she had been smoking and

came toward them. The lamp post  which had been propping her up, it occurred to Monk, commanded a view

of the alley behind Bob French's house, and all rear exits to the  French house. This could be a good reason for

the woman being there. 

Monk examined the woman from the lamp pest. It was his candid  opinion that there must be a carnival


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around and she was the lady  performer who straightened horseshoes with her bare hands. 

This female peered into the car at Monk. In a voice reminiscent of  a bullfiddle, she said, "My goodness, I

thought it was a bearskin rug  you had picked up somewhere." 

Her own wit apparently struck her as hilarious. Because she upset  the whole neighborhood with laughter.

Frightened sparrows flew out of  trees. 

Monk was somewhat hairy, but he didn't feel it called for that much  noise. 

"Go away, before you lose a friend," he told the thundering female. 

"My, my, you've got a nice voice," the big girl said. "Like a frog  after something had swallowed him." 

Another laugh, and more sparrows flew out of the trees. 

"Why didn't I say my prayers," Monk muttered. 

The female turned to the beautiful vision and asked, "Who is he,  Grace? What tree did you get him out of?" 

"He got in the car with me, Bill," Grace said. 

"'What do you know! They never get in the car with me," Bill said. 

Monk pointed at the roaring woman and asked, "Is this Bill?" 

"Yes," Grace said. 

"I'm not as relieved as I thought I'd be," Monk said dubiously.  "Does she bite, too?" 

The two girls held a conversation about Monk, but omitted him from  participation. 

Grace, the gorgeous one, said, "He got in the car and asked if Bob  French had come out yet." 

"He must be a friend of Bob French's," Bill said. 

"I don't know," Grace said. "But at any rate, he's not a friend of  ours." 

"Who is he?" 

Both girls now looked at Monk, and Bill thundered, "Who are you,  handsome?" 

Monk maintained a peeved silence. 

Grace said, "He's a wolf. You should have heard the awful, corny  line he pulled on me." 

"That was before I got a good look at you and lost my voice," Monk  said. 

Bill whistled admiringly. "Say now, that wasn't bad. That wasn't  bad at all. Maybe he's a higher grade of wolf

than you thought he was." 


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Monk said nothing. 

Bill told him, "I do hope you're a medium grade of wolf or better.  Because I do some wolfing myself, if

offered medium grade or better  material," 

"God save little Andrew Blodgett Mayfair," Monk mumbled. 

"His name is Andy," Bill said. "Little Andypandy. Isn't that  sweet?" 

Why the hell did I ever get in this car, Monk wondered. 

Grace was frowning at Monk. She hadn't at any time shifted the  muzzle of her gun away from the most

vulnerable part of Monk's anatomy. 

"Bob French hasn't come back and I don't think he is going to," she  told Bill. 

"What makes you think he won't be back?" Bill asked. 

"Because, I searched the house, and it looked as if he had closed  up the place for quite a while, His army

clothes were all gone, and the  water was shut off. It looked as if he didn't plan to be back. 

"What did the man in the drugstore know? You were going to talk to  him." 

"Nothing, Grace said. "He knew French, but he didn't know anything  else that would help me. I think he

became suspicious when I was  questioning him, too. I think he told Andypandy that I was watching the

house, too." 

"Stop calling me that!" Monk pleaded. "My name's Monk Mayfair." 

They ignored him. 

"I think Bob French has gotten away from us," Grace said. 

"Could be," said Bill. 

Monk said, "Well, I wish I could say it has been pleasant meeting  you." He opened the car door and prepared

to get out. 

"Where you going?" Grace demanded. 

"Away," Monk said. "Away to reflect on the adversities of life. I  may become a hermit." 

"No, you don't," Bill said. 

He swung out of the car. 

Then he was back in the car. His midriff felt as if a blockbuster  had landed there. He couldn't believe it was

only Bill's right jab. 

Bill got in the car beside him. The three of them made a tight fit.  Bill held Monk's head tenderly. "He hurt his

little tummy," she said. 


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Grace said, "If he tries to get out, swat him again." 

She put the coupe in motion. 

THE lovely girl and the strongarmed character were going to take  Monk to their office and have a talk with

him. They discussed their  plans quite freely. If Monk didn't wish to talk, they were going to get  the words out

of him anyway. Bill said she knew how. Monk didn't doubt  it. 

The two girls talked about someone called Benjy. Benjy was an old  dear, they agreed, and he was supposed

to be doing something for them  and they hoped he had been successful. Monk gathered that Benjy was

employed by them. He had been employed by them a long time. In fact,  Monk rather gathered that old Benjy

had been employed by the fathers of  the two girls before their time. 

The office proved to be on upper Lexington Avenue. It was located  in an impressive office building. 

It was now getting dark, after hours for office building traffic,  and Monk wondered how they were going to

get him inside. He couldn't  see how they would do it, if he chose to try to prevent them. 

It was simple. 

Bill said, "Oh look, isn't that a beautiful girl going yonder." 

The next thing Monk heard was Grace telling somebody, who proved to  be the elevator operator on night

duty in the office building, that,  "It was something called slivowitz that did it. He got along fine as  long as he

stayed with gin, rum and bourbon, then he had to try  slivowitz." 

The elevator operator said he would help them get Monk into the  office. 

"You hit me again," Monk accused Bill, and Bill patted his shoulder  comfortingly. 

The elevator operator finished helping with Monk and went back to  his work. 

There was another man in the office. Benjy. He was a little taller  than Monk and between forty and eighty

years old, the doubt about his  exact age being the result of innumerable wrinkles. He looked like a  pleasant

old geezer. The faithful old bookkeeper type. 

Benjy was worried, 

"I'm afraid I've done something awful," he said. 

BILL was pleased. She said, "My God, Benjy, don't tell me you  finally have a misdeed to your credit." 

Benjy squirmed. It was not a light matter to him. He gave both  girls a rebuking look. "I'm not at all sure we're

doing the right  thing, not at all sure." 

"Skip the sermon, will you Benjy," the girl said. Benjy became  indignant. 

"Listen to me, both of you!" he said seriously. "Your fathers,  neither one of them, would approve of what you

are doing, and you know  it. I promised your father"  he pointed at Grace  "and I promised  your father"  he

pointed at the herculean Bill  "that I would look  after you. That's exactly what I promised them." 


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The girls had a system on the old boy. They put their arms around  him and patted his back and chucked him

under the chin and told him he  was fine, he was doing a wonderful job, they couldn't get along without  him,

and they loved him like everything. Old Benjy ate it up. If he'd  had a tail, he would have wagged it so hard he

would have fallen down. 

"Now tell us what happened Benjy," Grace said. 

"I followed that fellow, and he didn't see me," Benjy said. 

"You mean the one who hung around trying to watch us?" Grace  demanded. 

"That's him, the short one with the scar on his chin and them  pockmarks on his face," Benjy agreed. "Well,

here's what happened. This  fellow met another one. That one was heavier and meaner looking. The  two of

them went downtown to a warehouse marked Powell Export." 

Bill puckered her lips and whistled. "Then they were working for  Powell!" 

"That's what I thought, but I think I was wrong," Benjy said.  "Because they went in the warehouse and they

hid. The back windows of  the warehouse were boarded over, but there was a crack in the boards  where I

could see what went on. There was a shed over the crack, or  rather a shed built on the back of the warehouse,

and the window that  had the crack between the boards was in that so I could  " 

"You could watch," Bill said. "What did you see?" 

"Well, these two fellows hid themselves in packing boxes in the  shed. They waited. They waited three or four

hours." 

Monk was keeping very still. He was afraid, if he said anything  that would draw attention to himself, that

they would lock him up  somewhere to get him away from the conversation. 

Benjy continued, "Three men came. One was Sir Roger Powell. The  other two I didn't know at the time, but I

thought there was something  familiar about one of them. Later, when I found out who they were, I  could

understand why that one looked familiar. Well, these three men  had come to look  " 

"What were their names?" Grace interrupted. Old Benjy grinned at  them coyly. 

"You'll be surprised," he said. "These three men had come down to  look at a box. It was a big, heavy box. It

was a box which Sir Roger  Powell had brought from South America for Tucker French." 

This had an effect on the girls. 

"Wow!" Bill said. "Wow! Oh, boy!" 

Grace just gasped, but she could gasp very prettily. 

Benjy was as proud of himself as Hitler was in 1940. "As soon as  they began taking the snake hides out of

this box, I knew what it was,"  he said. 

"Snake hides!" Grace said, with another gasp. 

"Sure. Them big boa constrictors they grow down in South America." 


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Bill frowned and demanded, "'Where were these other two fellows all  this time." 

"They were hid, I told you that." 

"Oh." 

"They got the snake hides out, and then they tried to move the  box," Benjy said. "They couldn't." 

Both girls said, "Oh!" together. They said it as if they couldn't  be more excited. 

Monk didn't get it at all. 

Benjy hooked his thumbs in the armholes of his vest, like a  politician who had just been reelected. "Wait

until you hear the  rest," he said. "It gets more exciting as it goes along. After the  three men took out the snake

hides, they couldn't lift the box. So they  got suspicious. They got a fire ax and  " 

"You mean," Grace demanded, "that they didn't know what was in the  box?" 

"Didn't seem to." 

"Didn't Powell?" 

"Acted as if he didn't." 

"Oh, oh," Grace said. 

Benjy said, "Well, they cut loose on the packing case with the ax,  and chopped and chopped. They found out

the case was ordinary wood.  Then, all of a sudden, they found they could lift the case. That  surprised 'em

some." 

Benjy paused, grinning. 

Grace asked, "Was there loose salt? Were the snake hides packed in  salt or something? And did it get

scattered over the floor?" 

"Sure." 

"Then I know what happened," Grace said. "I know what happened to  make the box lighter." 

Monk wished he knew. The whole story sounded farfetched to him. He  suspected they might be telling a

pack of lies in order to confuse him.  Grace asked, "Didn't they find out what made the case lighter?" 

"No." 

"They must have been pretty dumb." 

"Oh, I wouldn't say that Doc Savage is so dumb," Benjy said. 

Monk jumped straight up and yelled, "Doc Savage! Was Doc with  Powell?" 


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Bill and Grace were dumfounded as well. For the next few seconds,  everyone stared at everyone else, and

Benjy teetered with his thumbs in  his vest armholes. 

Then Grace said, "Doc Savage  you mean that big bronze fellow who  is such a mysterious figure when he is

mentioned in the newspapers? The  one who is so handsome?" 

"That's him," Benjy said. 

"And he's not so handsome," Monk said. 

"What do you know about him?" Grace demanded. 

"I've never been able to understand this effect Doe has on the  wenches," Monk said gloomily. "He doesn't run

after them, and in fact  he's what you would call inaccessible goods. On the other hand, take  me. I'm

accessible, and I chase 'em. I don't savvy it." 

Bill examined Monk and said, "Oh, I don't know. You sort of  interest me, handsome." 

Monk shivered. 

Grace demanded of Benjy, "Is Doc Savage involved in this affair?" 

"Yep." Benjy nodded vehemently. "Don't you want to hear the rest of  the story  how they almost killed Doc

Savage, his friend Renny  Renwick, and Powell?" 

VIII

THE remainder of Benjy's story got their close attention. It was  worth it. 

"Those two fellows hidden in the wareroom came out," Benjy related.  "They had guns. They surprised Doc

Savage, Renwick and Powell and fled  them up. They gagged them, too. And then they did a bad thing." 

Old Benjy faltered. He lost his thumbsinvestarmholes pride. He  became an old man, a timid old man,

who had been close to death, to  murder. 

He mumbled, "They had some kind of chemicals, something in a jug  and something else. They put the stuff

in the jug in a crock and put  the other stuff in it, then they ran out and shut the door." 

The old man shuddered. 

"I could look at Doc Savage's face and I could see the stuff in the  crock was going to kill him," he said. 

"What did you do?" Grace asked. 

Benjy shuddered. "I ran out of the shed. I ran around to the front  of the warehouse. The two killers were

there, waiting for the men  inside to die, I guess. I yelled, 'Help! Police! Murder!' And the two  men ran away. I

scared 'em away." 

Monk began breathing again. He believed old Benjy's story now. The  old man wasn't that good an actor. 


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Benjy said, "I held my breath and ran into the warehouse. I figured  the stuff in the crock was making gas. I

got out my pocket knife. I  keep it sharp. I cut Doc Savage and Renwick and Powell loose. Maybe I  didn't

save their lives, because Powell had his hands almost loose.  Anyway, Doc Savage and Renwick and Powell

ran out of the warehouse,  chasing the other two fellows who had tried to kill them. They told me  to run out of

the warehouse, too, and I did." 

Old Benjy winked foxily. 

"After they were out of sight, I ran back in the place, though. I  picked up the crock and carried it out and

dumped it down a storm sewer  grating in the street. I held my breath." 

Benjy began to look pleased with himself again. 

"I left the warehouse door open for the wind to blow in, and I went  and got a hand truck and a crowbar. I

borrowed the hand truck and  crowbar from a place down the street that moves heavy machinery. 

"I got what had fallen out of the packing case and was lying in the  loose salt, kind of embedded in the floor

where they hadn't seen it. I  was lucky. I wheeled it down the street. It was almost more than I  could manage

to move. I sure got tired. 

"Finally I hired a truck. I didn't know where to take it. Finally I  took it to your apartment, put it on the freight

elevator, and wheeled  it into your front room. The building super at the place knew me, and  let me in. I left it

there, and came here." 

Benjy let out a long breath. 

"That's all there is to it," he finished. 

The girls screamed, "Our apartment! Maybe it isn't safe there!"  They started for the door. 

"Wait for me!" Monk yelled. 

They looked at Monk as if they'd forgotten him. Bill said, "Let's  take him along. On the way, we may be able

to find out who he is." 

They didn't take the coupe this time: There were four of them   Benjy was going along  and there wasn't

room in the small car: Benjy's  car was parked near, so they took that. It was a sedan, one that had  been built

back during Hoover's administration. 

"My feelings are hurt," Monk confided to them. "Or anyway my ego  is." 

"That's too bad," Grace said with almost no interest. 

"My name is Monk Mayfair." 

"So you mentioned." 

"But haven't you heard of me?" 

"Of course not," Grace said. 


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"Such is fame," Monk complained bitterly. "Anyway, I'll let you in  on something. I'm a spearcarrier for Doc

Savage." 

Grace showed a disgusting amount of interest in this. "You work for  Mr. Savage?" 

"Uhhuh." 

"Is he as handsome as his pictures?" Grace asked. 

"Oh, hell!" Monk said, and he wouldn't answer another question. 

The girls had an apartment in one of the fashionable buildings  close to Radio City. To live there cost plenty.

Monk knew, because he  had been thrown out of one of the place  not this one, but one much  like it  for

being unable to pay his rent. 

There was nowhere to park directly in front of the building, and  they finally had to use the Radio City garage. 

The girls hurried on ahead, and Monk and Benjy fell behind.  "They're so excited, aren't they?" Benjy said to

Monk. 

"Everybody is excited, including me," Monk told him. "What's the  matter with that Grace, anyway. I don't get

any office there at all. It  was my idea that the prettiest girls fall for the homeliest guys." 

"They're lovely girls, both of them," Benjy said. "I've known them  since they were babies. Both their fathers

joined the army, but they  didn't do it until I promised them that I would look after the girls.  I'm like a second

father to them." 

"That Bill," said Monk, "scares the socks off me." 

"She likes you." 

"That's what scares me." Monk frowned at the old fellow. "What's  this all about, anyway?" 

"It's a little secret the girls have," Benjy said firmly. "If they  want you to know, they'll tell you." 

THE man they thought was dead was lying as if he had tried to crawl  under the modernistic lambcolored

couch in the bright livingroom. He  had one arm and part of his face under the couch. There was

considerable blood about. 

It was a very gory mess and Bill further dramatized the scene by  making a sound like a large mouse and

fainting. 

Monk looked around for a place to put her, complaining, "She weighs  a ton." 

Old Benjy levelled both arms at the man on the floor and cried, "A  dead man! A dead man!" 

Grace, much more practical, pointed at the floor two or three  times, at different places each time, then turned

to Benjy and  demanded, "Benjy, is it gone? It's gone, isn't it?" 

Benjy stopped ogling the man on the floor long enough to bleat,  "Yes, it's gone." 


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Monk deposited the cumbersome Bill on the floor. 

He didn't like the job, but he picked up the wrist of the man  partly under the couch. He found pulse. It was

evident that a firmly  harmless bump on the head had made the man unconscious, and that the  impressive gore

was the result of a fist having hit the fellow's nose.  Monk hauled him out from under the couch and turned

him over. 

"Bob French!" Grace cried, pointing at the man. 

Monk agreed that it was Bob French, recalling the secondhand  description of the soldiering French brother

which he had received from  Doc Savage. 

Monk asked, "Is this your apartment?" 

"Yes," Bill admitted. 

"What," Monk demanded, "do you mean by having dead men around the  place?" 

This alarmed Bill sufficiently to give Monk some satisfaction. But  Bill fooled him. She went to the door,

examined the edge near the lock,  and pointed. "See here," she said. "They drove something in between the

door and the jamb, forcing the lock. You can see the marks." 

"Who did it?" Monk asked. 

"I have no idea." 

Monk turned to Benjy. "Do you?" 

Benjy was calm. He wasn't completely calm, but he was calm enough  to surprise Monk. The old man was

evidently at his best when the going  got tight. It was a rare fine trait, and Monk's opinion of the old man

climbed considerably. 

"It might," Benjy said, "have been those two bad men who tried to  kill Doc Savage, Renwick and Powell.

They might have managed to trail  me here." 

"Thought you said they didn't." 

"I didn't think they did. They might have. I don't know for sure." 

Monk shook Bob French. "Maybe this guy will tell us if we can wake  him up. Can you bring me a pan of ice

cubes from your refrigerator?" 

MONK'S methods were direct. He unbuttoned Bob French's shirt and  pushed the ice cubes inside, pan and

all. French made some tittering  noises, like a silly girl, and came out of it. Monk, in withdrawing the  pan of

ice cubes, had a slight accident and spilled the contents inside  French's shirt, causing some excitement. 

"Take it easy," Monk told French. 

Bob French got himself organized. Apparently he didn't know who  Monk was Monk was fairly sure French

knew the girls, Grace and Bill.  But the acquaintance didn't include old Benjy. 


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Monk said, "My name's Mayfair. Monk Mayfair." 

This didn't click with French. 

"Renny is a pal of mine," Monk said. "I'm one of Doc Savage's group  of assistants." 

Bob French moistened his lips. He was doubtful. "Are you kidding?" 

Monk shrugged. "Suit yourself." 

Bob French looked around the livingroom of the apartment. He  became visibly alarmed. "Did they get it?" 

"Get what?" Monk asked. 

French blinked owlishly. He decided not to confide in Monk. At  least, he did not answer. 

Old Benjy leaned over Bob French. 

"Somebody got it," Benjy said. "Can you tell us who it was?" 

"Renny?" French was looking at Monk. "You mean Renny Renwick, the  engineer? You're a friend of his?" 

"That's right," Monk assured him. 

French grasped his shirt front and flapped it vaguely, fanning the  wet cloth. He fished around inside and

brought out an ice cube which he  had missed. "What time is it?" he asked finally. 

Monk pointed at the electric clock. It said a quarter until  midnight. 

Bob French became alarmed. 

He said, "Three of them did it. They were watching this place." 

Grace demanded, "What did they look like?" And then she described  the two Benjy had followed, the pair

who had tried to kill Doc Savage,  Renny and Powell. 

"No," French said. "No, that sounds like the two who were watching  this place first." 

"My God, who's watching who!" Monk complained. "This is getting  confused." 

French looked pained. 

"All five of them work together. It's simple," he said. "When I  first got her  " He hesitated, glancing at

Monk. "You apparently know  I went to ask Renny Renwick for help?" 

"Yeah, I got a telephone call to that effect," Monk told him. 

"Well, I was seized at Renny's office, but I escaped from  " 

Monk's laugh was loud, bitter, skeptical. "French, are you going to  tell us any truth at all?" 


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French looked uncomfortable. 

"Doc figured out that nobody jumped you at Renny's office. You  faked it," Monk added. 

French's deeply tanned neck got darker. He shook his wet shirt some  more. He got out a handkerchief and

dabbed at the bloodstains on his  chin. 

Suddenly he said, "Okay, that was a phony. I was so scared I didn't  know what to do, so I scrammed out." 

Monk opened his mouth, then closed it. He'd been about to ask Bob  French why he'd been terrified when he

learned Doc Savage was going to  be involved. That was what had happened. 

But French was tough guy, he had just barely decided to talk to  them at all, and calling him a liar would

probably shut him up. Better  let him go, Monk decided, and try to pick the truth out of whatever he  had to

say. 

"Go ahead," Monk muttered. 

BOB French scowled and spoke emphatically. He had some truth to  tell now, Monk decided, and he wanted

them to know that it was the  truth. 

"I didn't know what to do, but I knew where the girls lived, so I  came here to see them," French said. "I was

going to walk right in and  talk to them. That was what I planned. But outside, down the street a  ways, I

happened to see a mug who looked familiar. He hadn't seen me,  so I kept out of his sight. I looked him over,

and pretty soon I  realized I had seen him three or four times the last couple of days.  You know what that

meant?" 

"He'd been following you?" Monk suggested. 

"That's right. Part of the push that was following me around before  they tried to put that knife into me." 

"Then what'd you do?" 

"I camped around. This guy had some pals. Four of them. They were  hanging around with their eyes big.

Watching the apartment." 

French indicated Benjy. "Pretty soon this old gaffer slipped out  and followed two of them off. He did a pretty

slick job. I almost  didn't catch him doing it, I stayed here and watched the other three. I  was here about four

hours. Then this old fellow came back, wheeling  something on one of those heavy hand trucks. He took it in

the  apartment house. The three guys watched him. Pretty soon the old fellow  came out and left." 

Benjy looked sick. "The three men saw me?" 

"Yep." 

Benjy's shame was pitiful. He had been stupid, and he was bitterly  discouraged with himself. 

"Well, I could tell the three guys who had been lousing around were  excited about what they'd seen the old

fellow wheel in on the truck,"  Bob French said. "They were gonna come up to investigate, I guessed. So  I

decided to beat 'em to it." 


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French got up and essayed a step or two, then reached out quickly  and grabbed a table for support. "Wow!

My head sure whirls! Two of them  were sapping me at once, the last I remember." 

Frowning, Monk asked, "Didn't you leave out a little in between?" 

"Oh, you mean how did I get in? Back way. I didn't lose any time.  But, damn the luck, when I got up here,

those guys were already here.  They had one posted around a corner in the hall. While I had my ear to  the

keyhole, he came up behind, cut loose on me, and knocked me through  the door into the apartment. Well,

they swarmed over me with saps, and  that's where I took a blackout." 

He indicated the floor. 

"The freight handtruck was sitting right there, I remember." 

Bill planted her hands on her hips angrily. "We're sunk! We don't  know what to do next!" 

Bob French grinned without much pleasure. 

"I got a little climax," he said. 

"What do you mean?" 

"I woke up before the three guys left," French said. "I heard them  talking. They're going to scram out for

South America. They're going  after my brother." 

MONK asked suspiciously, "If you regained consciousness and  overheard that, how come  " 

"How come I was asleep again when you got here?" French grimaced.  "They popped me one for the money

before they left. It's a wonder they  didn't mash my skull." 

"You know where they're going in South America?" 

"Better than that," French said, "I know where we may be able to  head 'em off before they go." 

Monk yelled, "Why wait until now to tell  " 

"If you had my head, you'd know why!" French snarled dizzily. "But  let's go." 

He named an airport in New Jersey. 

"Let's head for there," he said. 

They decided riding down in the elevator that they would use  Benjy's old sedan for the New Jersey trip.

Benjy seemed confident it  would hold together for the journey. Everyone else was dubious. They  were

arguing about it, striding down the sidewalk, when Bob French let  out his yell. 

His squawl was hairlifting. It was about the most arresting sound  Monk had ever heard. It was formed of

words, not noise, and it was a  practiced thing. It was a warning, one he'd used before. 

While he was still making the sound, French had scooped up both  Grace and Bill, one in the crook of either

arm, and yanked them across  the sidewalk and behind a parked car. 


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Monk realized by now what had alarmed French. 

A black object, small and round, that had skipped across the  sidewalk and under one of the cars. 

A grenade? Bob French seemed to think it was. Monk reasoned that  soldier Bob French had seen enough

grenades to know what one was. So he  grabbed for Benjy  Benjy wasn't there, though  and got going. Old

Benjy didn't need urging. He was ahead of Monk. 

They joined French and the two girls. 

French yelled, "Grenade! Get going! Run!" 

Monk had a second thought. He said, "I don't think that was a  grenade." 

French and the two girls were running. Old Benjy told Monk, "It was  a hand grenade, brother." 

Benjy joined the flight. If it was a grenade, there was no point in  getting blown up to prove it, so Monk

legged it after the others. 

"It wasn't," Monk puffed. 

"I know one when I see it," Benjy said. "I was in the other war." 

They reached Benjy's car, which was fortunately pointed the way  they were going. Benjy landed behind the

wheel. The two girls, Bob  French and Monk piled in the back. Monk, scrambling to get inside,  yelled, "It

hasn't gone off, so it wasn't any grenade." 

"Sometimes they miss fire," French said. 

Benjy was twisting and stamping on gadgets. The old car began  moving. 

French, on his knees on the rear seat, looked back through the  window. He yelled, "Watch out! The guy's out

on the sidewalk, ready to  throw another!" 

Monk raised up to look. He got a glimpse of a man standing on the  sidewalk, whirling one arm above his

head in what looked like a  pitcher's windup. "Godamighty!" Monk croaked, and hauled the girls down  on the

floorboards. 

The car took the first corner with a noise like canvas tearing.  There was no grenade explosion. 

"Decided he couldn't throw it that far," Bob French said. He looked  at Monk. He was sweating. He said, "I

vote for that airport. I don't  want any part of guys with grenades. Not when I'm emptyhanded." 

"That's two of us," Monk agreed shakily. 

"Three," old Benjy said. He settled down to his driving. 

IX

RENNY Renwick was not normally a man of many cusswords. But after  the car carrying Monk, Grace, Bill


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and old Benjy vanished, Renny spoke  for approximately two minutes  without using a word that could be

found  in a dictionary. 

Sir Roger Powell took it, but his face got gray with rage. "No man  has talked to me like that!" he said finally. 

"I should do more than talk to you!" Renny yelled. "What the  blueblazecoated edge of hell were you trying

to do?" 

"Get their attention after they came out of the apartment house!"  Powell snapped. 

"Why not just call to Monk?" 

"I wanted to get their eye furtively. I thought someone might be  watching. I didn't want to create a

disturbance." 

"No disturbance! Holy cow!" 

"It didn't turn out like I expected," Powell muttered. "That Bob  French is warsimple. He thought I had

tossed a hand grenade and he  went crazy." 

"What did you toss?" 

Powell went to the curbing, got down on hands and knees and fished  something out from under an

automobile parked there. He brought it  back. "This," he said. 

It was a wad of paper. Dark brown paper. Renny unrolled it. The  wrappers off a couple of candy bars, loosely

wadded. 

Powell explained, "We haven't had a chance to eat dinner, as you  well know. So I bought a couple of large

candy bars to fill in. These  are the wrappers." 

Doc Savage arrived. He had been farther up the block, parking their  car. 

"What caused the uproar?" Doc asked. 

Renny explained the mishap, omitting the cussing. "I wasn't close  enough to get Monk's attention," he said.

"That ball of paper looked  like a grenade to Bob French, I suppose, and he started a stampede." 

Powell said, "What kind of a fool would think a grenade would be  thrown at him on a New York street!" 

"Look, Bob French is a soldier and he's been where it's hot. Where  he's been, any unexpected thing the size

and color of that wad of  candywrapper could be a grenade," Renny said. "I know. I was in China  with him

for a while." 

"I didn't intend to frighten him." 

Renny complained, "Did you have to wave your arm like you were  getting ready to throw another one?" 

"I was trying to get their attention." Powell pushed his jaw out  wrathfully. "What's the matter? Can't anyone

but you make mistakes?" 


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"Where have I made a mistake?" Renny rumbled. "Listen, brother, if  you want  " 

Doc Savage said, "Oh, stop it! A mistake is a mistake." 

Powell said, "Yes, and a loudmouthed fool is a loudmouthed fool." 

"Meaning me?" Renny asked ominously. 

Powell examined Renny deliberately. He examined Renny's fists with  the most care. He moistened his lips. "I

don't think I could lick you,"  he said. "Anyway it would be foolish to try, wouldn't it? I mean, what  would be

the purpose?" 

"You figure I'm a fool?" 

Powell grinned slightly. "I figure we all probably feel like fools  right now," he said. "You want an apology?" 

Renny finally grinned himself. "Ah, not right now," he said. Doc  Savage said, "We might as well take up

where we left off, now that  you've stopped acting like kids." 

THEY walked to the apartment house from which Monk and the others  had come. 

This, Doc reflected, is like getting all set for the ball game, and  the other team not showing up. He was

suddenly tired, hungry, baffled 

The most baffling thing was that box in the warehouse which had  been so unbelievably heavy  and as

unbelievably become light again. He  wished that he had examined the thing more closely. 

For the last three hours, they had been running their heads off.  The progress they had made hadn't been easy.

Luck had been with them,  or they wouldn't have gotten as far as they had. 

Luck had been with them when they discovered the trucking  establishment where old Benjy had rented the

hand truck. They'd been  looking for the hand truck. Doc had found marks in the spilled salt,  elsewhere on the

warehouse floormarks obviously made by a hand truck. 

A hand truck had suggested something heavy to be moved, and that  had started them hunting for a trucking

concern that might have done  the job. They had found it eventually. Old Benjy and his hand truck   and

something remarkably heavy on the hand truck, in a small box  had  been brought to this apartment house.

One of the men with the truck  knew the apartment number to which the box had been taken. He'd been

impressed with the building, and remembered the apartment number  because he supposed it was the

livingplace of some big shot. 

When one looked back, their finding the apartment seemed simple and  direct. But it had been hard work. 

They got the apartment house superintendent because they wished to  enter the apartment at least halfway

legally. They noted the evidences  of violence  the traces of the door being forced, and the bloodstains  on the

livingroom rug. 

Doc's quick search of the place' turned up nothing of value. It was  just a rather fine apartment occupied by

two girls. 


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The apartment superintendent answered questions. Grace Blassett and  Willa Morris were the occupants. Two

fine girls. Very fine. Paid their  rent on time. No wild parties. 

The two girls operated the firm of Blassett and Morris. Their  fathers had gone to war, enlisting in the army

about a year previously,  and the two girls had taken over the firm. Yes, the super had some idea  of what sort

of a firm Blassett and Morris was. They were purchasing  specialists, industrial supply. If you had a factory,

for instance, and  needed a special machine, a supply of steel, or any hardtoget raw  material, you employed

Blassett and Morris. They went out and bought it  for you at the lowest possible price. 

Sir Roger Powell listened to this. He smiled thinly, and got out  his cloth sack of tobacco and papers and made

a limp cigarette. 

Doc said, "We might as well go back to headquarters. Monk will  contact us as soon as he can, and he will call

us there." 

They rode back in Doc's car. 

"All right," Doc said to Powell. "What about Blassett and Morris?" 

"Eh?" 

"You mentioned them before," Doc said. 

Powell contemplated Doc and Renny. Powell still looked  welltailored, neat, although his pinstripe suit and

white shirt were a  mess. It was the man's manner which gave him that prim quality. He had  combed his black

hair and given his moustache a twisting with his  fingers, getting it back in shape. The handmade cigarettes

still  seemed incongruous for him. 

"Oh, yes," Powell said finally. "When Tucker French in South  America gave me the mysteriously heavy box

of snake skins to bring to  New York, I was to get in touch with the firm of Blassett and Morris.  That's what I

told you." 

"Was it the truth?" 

Powell flushed. "Certainly." 

"You said you contacted Blassett and Morris, didn't you?" 

"I did. They didn't deal in snake skins. They didn't know Tucker  French." 

"How did you contact the firm?" 

"Telephone. I talked to a woman. I presume one of the young ladies  whose apartment we just left." 

"Know anything more about them?" 

Powell said violently, "Dammit, I wish I did." 

They reached headquarters. There was no message from Monk. There  was a gadget which would have

recorded one, had Monk telephoned in. Doc  liked gadgets, and he had developed this recorder affair, an

automatic  gimmick which told a caller, with a recorded voice, that no one was in  the office, but that if the


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caller would speak his or her message, it  would be put on record. The recording was done magnetically, on a

wire. 

They ordered up food from an allnight restaurant. While he was  eating, Powell told them more about

himself. He got to talking about  his birthplace, which he said was Epping Forest, near London. The  pleasant

memories of his youth and early manhood there, he said, were  good to have with him. He talked about the

deer in the forest, the  herons and the kingfishers and the many small songbirds. He understood,  he said, that

the Germans had bombed nearby High Beech, where Tennyson  was living when he wrote "The Talking Oak"

and "Locksley Hall." 

Doc said, "High Beech is five miles south of Epping Forest, isn't  it?" 

Powell drew slowly on another handmade cigarette. "That's about  right." 

Doc looked at Powell intently. "It wasn't when I was there." 

Powell froze. He picked up his fork, then put it down again slowly.  He muttered, "You've been there." 

Doc nodded. "And you haven't." 

Powell grimaced sheepishly. "Believe it or not, this is the first  time I've been caught. Dammit, I should have

remembered High Beech is  part of Epping Forest. I've read enough about the place that I should  have

remembered that." 

"Are you an Englishman at all?" Doc asked. 

"No," Powell confessed. 

RENNY put down his own knife and fork. He stared at Powell, then at  Doc. "Is this important?" 

"I don't see why it should be important!" Powell said instantly.  "I've been telling that lie for years. If you

want to know the truth, I  was born on the wrong side of the tracks in Kirksville, Missouri. My  name is Roger

Powell, all right. I put the Sir on to it back in the  days after the other war, when titles were all the rage. It

helped me,  so I kept on doing it." 

No one said anything. Powell sat there looking sulkily at his  plate. He didn't seem ashamed particularly. Just

disgusted that they  had found him out. 

The telephone rang. The outside wire. 

Monk. 

"Santa Isabel," Monk said. "It's on the Rio Negro River, Brazil.  Back in the godforsaken jungle. You can find

it on the map. 

"All right," Doc said. "What about it?" 

"Get down there," Monk said. "That's where I'm going." 

"Why?" 


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"That's where everybody we're chasing seems to be headed. Listen, I  can't give details. Just get down there.

I'll leave a message at the  biggest store in town, if I get there first. Okay?" 

"If you know what you're doing," Doc agreed. 

"I hope I do." 

"All right." 

"And, Doc, will you talk to a guy here. I'm renting a sixplace  plane from him. You know me, always broke.

I want you to tell him  you'll pay for it. And hold your hat. He wants plenty for rental." 

"We have planes of our own," Doc said. 

"No time to get one." 

"Put the man on," Doc said. 

The man wasn't particularly suspicious. He just wanted to be sure  he got his money. He was trying to

overcharge, and they had an argument  about that, but came to terms. By this time it developed that Monk had

gone. He had taken off in the rented plane. 

"Just what happened out there?" Doc demanded. 

The man  he was the operator at an airport about forty miles out  in New Jersey  talked freely. He was

somewhat alarmed, and wondering  if he shouldn't make a report to the CAA or the Army. 

Four days ago, a twomotored plane had arrived at his field and  been hangared there, which was not unusual.

About half an hour ago,  several men, he didn't know exactly how many, had arrived in a hurry  and piled into

the plane and taken off. They had signed out for Miami. 

"Did they load anything heavy into the plane?" Doc asked. 

No, they hadn't, the man said. He added, "But during the four days  the ship was hangared here, one of the

men brought out stuff in boxes  or suitcases at various times and put it in the plane." 

"Are they gone?" 

"They're taking off. So is the ship your friend rented from me.  What shall I do about this? Is there something

wrong?" 

"Give me the NC numbers of both planes," Doc said. "And their  types, cruising range, and radio equipment,

if you have it." 

"Sure, I've got that. Wait'll I get the register." The man soon  supplied the information. He asked again,

"What'll I do?" 

"Let us handle it," Doc said. 

He hung up. 


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Renny had cut in an amplifierspeaker gadget on the telephone, so  that he and Powell had heard both ends of

the conversation. 

"South America!" Powell blurted. "This is fantastic!" 

"Know anything about Santa Isabel, in Brazil, where they're going?"  Doc asked. 

Powell nodded. "I've been there. It's not too bad. But the country  around there is really something. It's

probably the leastknown stretch  of country left on the face of the earth." 

Doc nodded, watching Powell. Whatever the trail Monk was following,  it must be hot and important. Monk

was no fool. So Doc intended to go  to South America. He intended also to take Powell, because Powell was

part of the queer affair. It would be simpler if Powell agreed to go  willingly. 

"Going along?" Doc asked. 

"You're damned right!" Powell said instantly. "And if you wonder  why, I'll tell you. It's because two attempts

have been made to murder  me, and I'm mad." 

"That's reason enough," Doc said, glad there was not going to be an  argument over Powell's going. He added,

"Say, I made a dumb mistake. I  didn't ask who went with Monk in the rented plane." 

He called the New Jersey airport operator again. Five people had  left in the plane, including Monk. The

operator described the other  four. The descriptions fitted Grace Blasset, Willa Morris, old Benjy  and Bob

French. 

Doc told Renny, "Let's get some equipment ready in a hurry. Jungle  stuff. Quinine, insect repellent,

machetes, weapons, some trade stuff  for natives. We'd better work fast." 

Powell was getting doubtful. "My God, that's thousands of miles  down there. How do we know we'll find

anything when we get there?" 

"We'll keep track of those two planes," Doc said. 

"How on earth can you do that?" 

"The Army and Navy interceptor network," Doc said dryly, "has a  setup which they think can track a mallard

duck from Cuba to Canada." 

"Will they cooperate?" 

"We'll see. I'll do some telephoning while you and Renny get  equipment together." 

The Army and Navy would cooperate. It took some telephoning to  Washington to get it done. 

Powell was impressed. He told Renny. "You fellows get things done." 

Renny said sourly, "It sure looks it, don't it? Here we are busting  our necks to get to South America, and we

haven't the least idea why." 

"How," Powell asked, "do you suppose Monk Mayfair found out that we  should go to Santa Isabel?" 


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"I wish I knew," Renny said. 

X

THEY began the southward flight. Renny flew. Doc began fishing with  the radio, prowling the wavelengths

which Monk might use to call him. 

Finally he got Monk. Monk spoke Mayan, an almost unknown dialect,  as far as the civilized world was

concerned, which Doc and the others  had learned in Central America a long time ago. 

Monk said his plane had a standardized wavelength radio  transmitter. He didn't dare use it much. But he

could receive on any of  the aeronautical frequencies. Would Doc use two hundred eightyfive, a  little above

the standard control tower frequency, and keep him posted  about the whereabouts of the plane they were

trailing? He said he  presumed that Doc had the Army and Navy interceptor service at work  tracing the ship. 

Doc said he would. 

After that, they got halfhour reports from the Army in code. Renny  had brought one of the little portable

decoders used by the military.  He made the settings, and keyed off the translations. 

Powell was skeptical. 

"They won't be able to keep track of the plane," he said. 

"Watch them," Renny told him. 

"What makes you so damned sure?" 

With some indignation and pride, Renny said, "I helped the Army and  Navy set up their interceptor alarm

system. It was primarily an  engineering job in communications." 

Powell raised his eyebrows. "Didn't mean to hurt your feelings." 

"You didn't," Renny rumbled. "Ignorance never does." 

As the pair sat scowling at each other, Doc wondered if they were  going to have a fight after all. But they

took it out in unpleasant  looks for the time being. 

Doc relayed the army reports to Monk from time to time, speaking  Mayan on the twoeightfive waveband.

Monk's ship immediately dropped  back about forty miles in order not to be sighted by the other ship. So

Monk was receiving the information, although he wasn't acknowledging it  for fear that the ship they were

following would pick up his signal and  recognize his voice. 

"How long," Powell asked, "is this easy stuff going to last?" 

"Until we get well across the northern coast of South America,"  Renny told him. 

Powell whistled. Later he asked, "Where do you suppose they'll  refuel?" 

That had been bothering him, Monk said. 


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But the refueling turned out to be a simple matter. The ship simply  doubled right a hundred miles, set down at

a designated civilian field  in Florida, took on a load of gasoline, signed out for Atlanta, Georgia   which was

a lie  and took off. Ten minutes later Doc knew exactly  how many gallons of gas and oil they had taken

aboard. 

Spotter reports showed the ship was heading out across the gulf  stream. 

Doc Savage refueled in Miami. His plane was an amphibian,  twomotored, not particularly large, and not the

fastest thing in the  air. But it was stable, capable of long range, and with the flaps  cracked, could set down in

any field capable of handling a lightplane. 

Powell expressed an interest in learning to fly. Renny killed time  by letting him play with the duals, first

switching on the auto pilot  and not telling Powell about it, so that Powell thought he was handling  the ship.

Renny thought it was very funny. But Powell eventually became  suspicious, and they came near having

another fight. 

It was monotonous. 

DOC Savage finally talked a little about himself. It was the first  time Renny had heard him do that. 

Doc talked about the strangeness of his early life, the different  outlook it had given him. He said that he had

never known just what had  happened to his father to cause him to put his small son, Doc, in the  hands of

scientists for training. It was a weird upbringing, aimed  entirely at making Doc into a combination of mental

marvel and physical  giant  if science could do it. The elder Savage had not lived to see  the final outcome of

his plans for the boy. 

"It was effective, but probably not as effective as he hoped," Doc  said slowly. "Looking back on the fantastic

business, I feel lucky as  anything, because it seems to me that what I got was a psychological  course

guaranteed to make a freak." The bronze man grinned slightly. "I  find myself doing, or on the verge of doing,

many queer things as a  result of the training." 

He fell silent, then started again and explained that what he had  missed most was a normal youth, the thrills

and the heartbreaks and the  excitement of devilment, which boys have. He had not missed these at  the time he

was not getting them, because he hadn't known about them,  but he missed them now. 

He frequently suspected that being a juvenile was something a man  had to work out of his system, like

getting rid of his baby teeth, he  said. He still had the kid stuff in him. He'd never had a chance to  work it off.

As a result, he spent his time chasing excitement now,  whereas if his youth had been a normal one, his adult

life would have  been normal. In other words, he would now be a young settled family man  with a wife who

dragged him out to bridge parties. 

Renny laughed at that. The idea of Doc being dragged out to bridge  by a henpecking wife struck him as

funny. 

Doc shut up, made somewhat uncomfortable by the levity. 

"We all look back," Powell said, "and wish that our lives had been  different. I don't think there breathes a

man who doesn't do that." 

For four hours they flew above an overcast that ended at twelve  thousand. Renny got busy with an astral

sextant, the Maggie, and stuck  his head up in the astro dome. He tinkered with the computer and chart. 


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"South American coast should be below," he said. 

Doc nodded, pointed. Far ahead were snowcapped coastal Andean  peaks, like muddy froth on the vast

whiteness of the cloud floor. 

"From here on, there'll be no spotter network to keep track of Monk  and the plane we're following," Doc said.

"The thing for us to do is  refuel somewhere and head straight for the Rio Negros country." 

Renny dug around in his navigation stuff. 

"There's open weather at Fernando, on the Orinoeo," he said.  "According to my dope, we can get ninety

octane gas there. That should  do us for a round trip, in case we can't get gas in the Amazon  headwater

country." 

"Give me a course and ETA for Fernando," Doc said. 

FLYING down out of the rather open mountain country into the Amazon  basin was an experience that

somehow discouraged talk. They were going  into one of the most untouched places in the world. 

Doc flew fairly low; there was no sense in flying high. There were  no places to land, because now they were

traversing the immense  expanses of jungle where there were many small streams, but no rivers  large enough

to show through the overcoating of green growth. 

The world was a green carpet, not smooth, but knobby and limitless.  Certainly a drab thing to the eye. But

when the plane flew low, the  hobgoblin nature of the jungle was evident. Occasionally through the  umbrella

of foliage, they could see the undermass of the jungle, the  fallen and decayed trunks everywhere, over and

about them the thickets,  the vines that draped from trees a hundred and fifty feet high, the  incredible tangle of

lianas everywhere, and the gaudy sickbright  colors of the flowers. 

Renny knew something of this jungle country. He had been into it  before. But for the sake of devilment, he

pretended complete ignorance  and got Powell talking. 

Powell took the bait. He knew the jungle, and wanted to tell about  it. 

"The small blue birds you see occasionally in flocks are uirapuru,  or charmer bird," Powell said. "They're

called charmer birds because of  their beautiful singing, and the weird effect it has on other birds.  You'll see

flocks of different kinds of birds being led through the  forest, and the leader will be a charmer bird." 

"No kidding!" Renny said. 

Powell nodded. "Some of the natives make nodevil charms out of the  charmer bird skins. Other natives buy

them for very high prices, the  price varying according to whether the charm is a woman charm or made  for a

man. It's very fascinating. But of course the funny thing is the  way the charmer bird can lead all the other

birds through the jungle." 

"I'll be darned." Renny tried to keep a straight face. 

Renny caught Doc's eye, and his glee cooled. Doc knew, of course,  that Renny was almost as familiar with

charmer birds as he was with  blackbirds or sparrows. 


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"How about doing some navigating?" Doc asked Renny dryly. Renny  went back and prepared to get another

astral fix. There was a foxing of  cirrus clouds in front of the sun, and he decided to wait until they  were out of

the way. 

He cut in the radio directional loop, intending to get a fix on one  of the broadcasting stations at Caracas,

Venezuela, and perhaps at  Bogota, Colombia. As a matter of course, he had the receiver tuned to  the

frequency which Monk had last used to communicate with them. He  changed to broadcast wavelength, and

fished for the Bogota station,  getting mostly static. 

That Powell, Renny thought sourly, talks too much. Probably that's  because be's a salesman. And he's got that

damned superior way which  high pressure salesmen get. 

A shout from Doc Savage blew Renny out of his reverie. "The loop!"  Doc yelled. "Cut the loop in on Monk's

frequency!" 

Renny grew cold. He'd left Monk's wavelength unguarded, the first  moment they'd done that since leaving

New York. But Doc, with the other  receiver tuned from the cockpit, had covered the wavelength when he'd

noticed Renny fiddling with the loop. 

"Hurry up!" Doc shouted. 

Renny got the loop set tuned to Monk's frequency. Monk's voice,  weak, gorged with horror, was saying, "  I

wasn't expecting the right  one to turn out to be a crook." There was considerable garbled by  static. Then

Monk's voice saying, "  righthand gear up through the  wing, so we groundlooped. One motor is out of the

mounts and the  gasoline tank in that wing split over everything." More garbled, then,  "  I'm pretending to be

unconscious so I can talk. Hope you get a  radio fix. The men are coming into the plane now. This was all

rigged,  I can see that. For God's sake, be careful. I think  " What he thought  they didn't learn. That was the

last of Monk's voice. 

RENNY sat there with both hands on the loop knob, afraid to take  them off lest he disturb the pointer setting.

Seventythree degrees, he  thought, ogling the pointer. Holy cow, I hope I really had the null  before Monk got

shut down. 

He took his hands away from the pointer. He stumbled forward to the  cockpit. 

"What happened to Monk?" he gasped. 

"Did you get a null?" Doc shouted. 

"Seventythree," Renny said "What went wrong?" 

"Static," Doc said. "So much static we missed just what did go  wrong. Monk's plane was forced down.

Evidently one of the group in the  plane caused it." 

"Which one?" 

If Monk said, it was garbled by the static. "Seventythree," Renny  said hoarsely. "The pointer was on

seventythree. The bearing has got  to be that, or twofiftythree degrees, which would be the opposite." 

Doc considered for a moment. "We will try the twofiftythree  bearing." 


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He brought the plane around to correct for the mile or two they  had covered since getting the bearing. He

leaned back to look at  Renny's loop, on the chance Renny had misread the dial. It said  seventythree degrees,

after correction for deviation and variation. 

"Break out equipment," Doc said. "It may not be long." 

"Doc, you heard Monk's signal," Renny said. "Did it sound close?" 

"Fairly close. Not over fifty miles," Doc said. 

They could discern streams below, most of them black, as black as  the Rio Negro into which they fed. Doc

climbed the ship. He cut in the  engine mufflers and reduced speed somewhat to decrease the prop roar. 

"Use binoculars," Doc said. "If we can spot them from high enough  that they don't see or hear us, we might

come down in the sun and  accomplish more." 

Renny rumbled, "Who the devil do you suppose doublecrossed Monk?" 

Powell scowled. "That Bob French fellow, probably. He struck me as  a shifty sort." 

"Nuts!" Renny said. 

Renny was angered. He had been through a good deal of rough stuff  with young Bob French in China, and he

was inclined to trust French.  Bob wasn't shifty, not in Renny's opinion. 

Then suddenly his wrath froze. For an instant he thought: No man  should ever get mad! Because his rage had

almost caused him to miss  Monk's plane. 

"There!" he yelled at Doc. "About two hundred degrees, five miles  away! Monk's plane!" 

DOC put the big plane in a glide. He cut the switches. He didn't  quite close the throttles. Powell's hair seemed

to visibly stand on  end. 

"My God, you'll need motors to land!" he screamed. 

Renny said, "They've got starters." 

The sun was low. Not quite on the horizon. But there wasn't more  than an hour of daylight left. 

They came down to three thousand before they could tell much about  Monk's plane. 

It was Monk's plane, all right. They could distinguish the NC  number on the upper wing panel. 

"That's a landing field, isn't it?" Doc demanded suddenly. The same  idea had hit Renny. A landing field. Not

a paved runway, but a fairly  clear landing strip. 

Monk's plane was piled up at the midway point of the runway. 

A ground loop had obviously taken it to the left, and it was jammed  among the small trees at the edge of the

runway. 


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A figure appeared in the open, waving both arms. 

"Who's that?" Powell demanded. 

Doc said he couldn't tell. "We've been seen; so we might as well  start the motors," he added. 

Shutting plane motors off in the air, then getting them going again  with the electric starters was always

ticklish business. The starters  wailed, and the props went over jerkily. Then the stacks coughed blue  smoke,

the engines got going and Doc resumed breathing. 

Doc said, "Keep your eyes open for funny stuff." 

He sent the ship down in a spiral, watching the ground. 

Powell muttered, "A runway! The way this jungle grows, it would  take a young army to keep a runway like

that cleared." 

"It's not such a mystery," Renny told him. "I think it's an old  lake bed, a dried mud flat that is so impregnated

with minerals,  possibly salt  that the vegetation won't grow on it." 

"Watch for trouble!" Doc warned. 

They were getting down low enough now to make a stab at identifying  the figure which was gesturing at

them. It was broad, not tall. 

"Monk!" Renny yelled. "That's Monk! That's the suit Monk was  wearing in New York. He always wears the

same suit a week at a time."  He scowled. "Wait a minute. His face doesn't look right." 

They were around six hundred feet, so identifying a face, even  Monk's face, was mostly guessing. Doc sent

the ship lower. 

"Seems to be blood on his face," Doc said. 

"Uhhuh," Renny muttered. "Could be red berry juice, if it wasn't  Monk, too." 

The figure below solved their doubts by suddenly dashing into the  jungle, and reappearing dragging a limp

man. He waved his arms  triumphantly, jumped around, went back and came out dragging another  figure. 

Renny roared, "Holy cow! It's Monk! He cleaned up on them after he  radioed us! That explains the blood on

his face. They had a fight, and  Monk licked the pack of them." 

This struck Doc as a natural conclusion. Monk was phenomenal in a  hand to hand fight. 

Doc put the plane across the field at a hundred and fifty feet,  then banked back explaining, "We will drag the

field at about ten feet  altitude to be sure it's all right." 

He arched back, adjusting flaps and props and getting down the  gear. He could see the landing strip clear

ahead. It seemed okay. The  only moving figure in sight was the one they had identified as Monk. 

He was thinking how fine everything was when the triprope of vines  flew up in front of the plane. He hardly

saw the thing before he hit  it. 


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Things began coming off the plane, the first thing being the  rightside motor. 

XI

THERE were probably no tougher vines in the world than those which  grew in the Amazon basin jungle.

They were the greatest obstruction to  movement. Some were three or four inches thick, and from that they

shaded down to fine threads that were as tough as buckskin. The  triprope was made of vines. 

It was no fiveminute job. The main rope was a braided cable  effect, with stringers hanging down. There

must be, over at the side in  the jungle, a devil of an efficient weight and pulley gadget to yank it  up so

quickly. 

The starboard motor went out of its mount because the bent prop  blades threw it off balance. It just tore itself

loose. 

The shock was not too terrific. The plane was heavy, and it snapped  the vine cable. 

The vines were tangled in the left motor, which was still running.  The vines beat and flailed and knocked the

glass out of the cabin  windows on that side, tore the wing covering. The noise was of many  bullwhips. 

Doc cut the motorswitches. He whirled the control wheel and did a  fandango on the rudder bars. He didn't

get the ship quite level. But he  did get it mushed out in landing attitude. The only trouble was that  they

weren't going straight down the runway any longer. The jungle was  puffing up in front of them. 

The plane fuselage dived into the jungle, leaving both wings  behind. It shed wheels, fuselageskin and other

things including  anything resembling its former streamlined shape. The uproar was as if  several sacks of very

big cans were being dragged over rocky ground.  Early in the uproar, Doc hit the safety catches and the cabin

doors and  escape hatches flew off the plane, propelled by the jettisoning  devices. 

The first thing to do after any plane crackup was get out. Get  free. Because nothing burns quite as vigorously

as an airplane. Doc  twisted about, said, "Renny, are you  " 

"Hell, yes," Renny said. 

Powell was fighting with his safety belt. He couldn't get the  fastener unhooked. He seemed all right

otherwise. Doc reached up  the  plane was on its nose  and twisted Powell's belt fastener open. Powell  was

merely confused. 

They piled out of the ship. 

"Get away from here!" Doc said. "Move fast!" 

Powell lost his confusion. He bored into the jungle with the  practice of an expert and the vigor of a mail with

death blowing on his  heels. 

Renny said, "Holy cow!" and charged after Powell. Renny would keep  track of Powell, Doc knew. 

Doc himself moved rapidly for a few yards, or as rapidly as the  tangle of the jungle would permit, then gave

all his attention to being  silent. He went back to a spot where he could see the landing strip. 


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The man they had thought was Monk was gone. He hadn't been Monk, of  course. 

The "unconscious men," who the pretended Monk had hauled out into  the clearing, were gone. Doc surmised

they had arisen and fled under  their own power. 

You mutt, he thought. What did you use for brains a minute ago? 

HE went back to his wrecked plane. It had not burned. He scouted  the vicinity carefully, decided it was safe

to enter the ship, and did  so swiftly. The stuff he wanted was the medical kit and portable radio.  He got them.

He left the plane quickly. 

His plain white shirt was nothing to be wearing in the jungle if  one wanted to escape discovery. He stripped it

off. To help against the  heat, he used his pocket knife to make his trousers into shorts. All  the time, he was

listening. 

Nothing seemed to be stirring in the jungle. That puzzled him. As  protection against insects, he rubbed some

chemical repeller into his  skin. The jungle mosquitoes could be a fright, so bad you carried a  sack and sat

with your legs in that whenever you rested. There were  puim, the little lice with wings and the maqiuim,

which had the habits  of chiggers, but considerably more voracity, and others as bad. 

After a while, he caught a sound. He heard it again. He began  moving, stalking the noise. 

It was a native. An unlovely, insectwelted little jungle man. He  had a pot belly and muscles like wires and a

geestring and a blowgun  as long as he was. He had the tiny arrows for the blowgun tucked in his  frizzled

hair. 

He was stalking the plane. 

Shortly he put an arrow into the blowgun, raised the long tube to  his lips, and blew out his cheeks, held them

a moment, let the air go.  Actually, the little arrow's tink! on the metal flank of the plane was  louder than the

blowgun sound. 

The small native waited a while, warily. Then he took another shot  at the plane, as if he thought it was some

great wounded bird that he  was going to dispatch with his arrows. 

Doc waited, watching. He kept his ears open, lest other natives  approach and surround him before he knew it.

They could move silently  in the jungle. Their stealth could surprise you. But they weren't  superghosts. He

was not afraid of being taken unawares. 

Now the one native was advancing. 

The little jungle ruffian held both hands up, palms out, an  accepted gesture of peace, and walked to the plane. 

He stood beside the plane, listening. 

"Anybody home?" he asked. 

Doc came near starting violently enough to betray his hiding place.  The native's English wasn't good. But it

was plainly understandable,  with a slightly slangy swing. And it was so utterly the last thing Doc  expected

the little imp to say that he was dumfounded.


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The petbellied little man looked into the plane. He stepped up on  the wing stub, opened the cabin door,

which had swung shut, and looked  inside. He scratched his head, puzzled. 

He knew what planes were, Doc decided. When he'd fired those  arrows, he hadn't thought he was attacking a

big bird. 

Doc watched the fellow prowl around the ship. The man found the  tracks made by Doc, Renny and Powell.

As soon as he found the tracks,  he whirled and dashed for the landing strip. 

Out on to the landing strip, head back, stomach out, he sped toward  the southern end of the strip. 

He vanished into the jungle. 

There was time to secondcount to about twenty. 

Then shots. First one rifle bang. Then three more, scattered. A  shotgun crashed, evidently a doublebarreled

gun because it went off  twice. 

Someone swore in good New York English and said, "The little  sonofagun got away!" 

Another voice called, "You see the plane?" 

Monk's voice! 

The first speaker said, "I can see where it crashed into the jungle  down yonder." 

NOW men came out on the landing strip. The first was a very tall  young man with stooped shoulders. Then,

in a group, there were Monk  Mayfair, Bob French, old Benjy, and the two girls, Grace Blassett and  Willa

Moms. 

There were about a dozen natives with them. These natives looked  better fed and were wearing different

articles of European clothing in  the individualistic fashion which natives like. One man had two  neckties tied

around each forearm. 

The tall, stooped young man was the leader. He shouted, "There's  their plane!" 

The group raced down the landing strip. 

Doc remained where he was. Not far from the plane. But hidden among  the vines. 

Monk, he saw, seemed to be in fair shape. Monk looked somewhat  confused, however, as if things had been

moving too fast for him. 

Bob French and old Benjy he identified without trouble. He had  their description  Renny had described

French, and they'd learned  about old Benjy at the New York apartment house of the two girls. 

He found it interesting to identify Grace Blassett. Monk had been  acting somewhat queerly in the course of

recent events. Doc began to  see what was probably causing Monk's deviations. 

The racing group reached the plane. They searched it. Monk  scrambled inside the fuselage. 


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"They're not here!" Monk yelled angrily. "Dammit, those natives  must have packed them off!" 

The tall, stooped young man turned to one of the natives, happening  to choose the unorthodox wearer of the

neckties. He grunted and gurgled  at the native. The native looked at the ground for a while, then did  some

grunting himself. 

"He says," the tall, hunched young man translated, "that there are  not enough native tracks for the natives to

have carried them off." 

Monk scratched his head. He examined the ground himself, and  evidently decided it was logical. 

Monk lifted his voice. 

"Doc!" he bellowed. "Oh, Doc! Are you all right?" 

Doc kept silent. He wasn't sure what was going on. It struck him  there was something queer. 

"Doc!" Monk was howling. "Renny! Hey, this is Monk. Come here,  before the gooks find you!" 

His roar shook the jungle. Obviously Renny and Powell heard it. 

SHORTLY Renny called, "What gives, Monk?" 

"Come on outa there," Monk shouted at the jungle. 

Renny appeared then. Powell was with him. 

Doc Savage watched Monk and Renny pound each other on the back. The  situation seemed to be all right.

And yet in the back of Doc's mind  there was a specter of doubt, a black threatening uncertainty. It sat  there

like a dangerous beast. 

Monk was yelling, "Where's Doc? Good God, do you suppose they got  Doc?" 

His concern got the best of Doc's better judgment, of his vague  conviction that he shouldn't be doing this. 

He walked out of the jungle, joining them. 

THE tall, stooped young man was Tucker French. Bob French  who was  still in his army uniform   made

the introduction. 

"This is Tucker, my kid brother," Bob said. 

There were family resemblances. Both had long noses and blue eyes  and a gangling length that was almost

awkwardness. 

Tucker French put out his hand. 

"Savage? Doc Savage?" he said, as if puzzled. "Well, I've never  heard of you, but apparently my brother has.

And he seems impressed." 

Monk had a story to tell. 


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"Doc," he said excitedly, "Doc, when we came down to land in that  clearing, a vine rope tripped us." 

"Just how," Doc asked, "did you know about the landing strip?" 

Monk indicated Bob French. "He knew." 

"Naturally I knew the location of the strip," Bob French said. 

Tucker French, his brother, put in  too quickly, it could have  been  saying, "Bob should know. I've written

him about it often  enough, and it's easy to find, in the fork of two rivers the way it  is." 

"That's right," Bob said. 

Their glibness gave Doc Savage a queer feeling, and the reason for  the queerness he didn't exactly

understand. He said, "Let's go back  farther than that. Monk, how did your parry happen to head for here in

the first place?" 

"For South America, you mean?" 

Monk scratched his head. "Well, back in New York after Bob French  called on Renny asking for help, then

skipped out so mysteriously, you  assigned me the job of tracing Bob French through the laundry mark on  his

blouse. Well, I traced it to his address in Long Island City, where  I met these two girls who were also hunting

French. We joined up with  Benjy, here, who works for the girls, and then we found Bob French in  the girls'

apartment." 

Monk deviated to explain about the mysterious, very heavy something  which old Benjy had moved from the

downtown warehouse to the girls'  apartment  the stuff having been stolen by the men who had knocked out

Bob French. 

"Bob French had regained consciousness after they kayoed him and  heard them say they were headed for

South America, and what airport  they were leaving from," Monk continued. "We figured we could tear out

there and head them off. Well, we tried, but they were already taking  off. So I rented a plane in a hell of a

hurry, telephoned you, and we  followed them. 

"You didn't exactly follow them," Doc reminded him. "You had Santa  Isabel on your mind. You said you

thought that was where they were  heading." 

"Sure." 

"What put Santa Isabel in your head?" 

Monk pointed at Bob French. "Him." 

Bob nodded. "That's right. I remembered hearing them say they would  fly a straight course from Caracas to

Santa Isabel on the Negros river  in Brazil." 

Doc said patiently, "Now, what put this particular landing field in  your head." 

"Him again." Monk indicated Bob French. 


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Bob French scowled slightly. "I got that idea no more than an hour  ago, when it suddenly dawned on me that

this flight course would put us  over brother's landing strip." 

"So," Monk said, "we thought we'd sit down and ask brother Tucker  what it was all about." 

"You made a queer landing," Doc reminded him. 

NOW Tucker French entered the conversation. "If you don't mind," he  said, "I think we had better get the

more important material you wish  to salvage out of the plane, and head for the safety of my trading  post." 

One of the natives had been grunting uneasily, and now he burst out  in a series of vocal sounds, interspersed

with grunting and snorting,  to express himself. Tucker French evidently understood the primitive  language,

because he showed some concern. 

"There are hostile natives nearby in the jungle," Tucker French  told Doc. 

Doc made no comment. Could be, he thought. But if there were, the  grunting and snorting native hadn't heard

them. Doc had been listening  himself. He was willing to bet that there hadn't been any sounds in the  jungle

which were manmade. 

Monk said, "The natives wrecked my plane. They seized us as soon as  we crashed. They were carrying us

off." 

Tucker French said, "Fortunately, I heard the plane come down, and  so I rushed to the spot, surmising what

might have happened. With my  men, I was fortunate enough to overhaul the war party which had your

friends, and rescue them." 

Monk grinned. "That was nice timing, too." 

"Much of a fight?" Doc asked. 

"Not much. There was some dart blowing, then the little devils who  had us just faded away into the jungle." 

Tucker French said, "They're not anxious for a pitched fight with  me. They're marauders, more cunning than

violent." He grimaced.  "However, they did surprise me, when they wrecked your plane." 

"My plane, you mean?" Doc said. "They wrecked it?" 

"Of course. 

"They're persistent." 

Tucker French laughed grimly. "That's right. They're after me, of  course. But they've been after me for a year

or so." 

"They've tried this planewrecking gag with a vine rope before?"  Doc asked curiously. 

"Oh, yes. Matter of fact, that's why I no longer use the strip.  They nearly got me." 

"What," Doc asked, "is the trouble between you and these natives?" 


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Tucker French shrugged. "Why did my grandfather have to fight  Indians in Dakota? Much the same sort of

thing." 

He glanced about uneasily at the jungle. And one of the natives  grunted excitedly, pointing. 

Tucker French walked over to the object which was exciting the  grunter, and plucked it from a thick leaf in

which it was embedded. It  was one of the tiny blowgun darts. 

"I don't believe we should stand around here any longer," he said.  He opened his shirt and showed them that

he wore a metallic mesh  undershirt of the type often worn by explorers in the poisonarrow  country. "Even

with one of these, I don't feel safe." 

They got going. 

XII

THE walk was not long. About half an hour. Powell dropped back with  Doc Savage, and talked glibly about

the jungle. It sounded to Doc as if  Powell was talking from nervousness. Some of what he told them was  trite

stuff. 

The piranha, for instance. The piranha were the small flat fish  with the ferocious expressions and teeth that

could cut like razors,  the fish which suddenly appeared in a stream by the thousands at the  trace of blood, and

in a moment or two would leave nothing but the  skeleton of a man. 

Doc listened patiently. Everybody, he supposed, had heard of  piranha. 

Another thing Powell talked about was the difference between the  black jacare and the brown one. The black

one frequently reached a  length of twentyfive feet, and was the most dangerous of the caiman  family. You

could guess the mind of a lightcolored jacare, he warned,  but for God's sake be careful about the black ones. 

Powell was scared, Doc finally decided. Whether Powell was  frightened of the natives or not, Doc couldn't

tell. 

The going was not hard. They were on a path, a welltrimmed one,  and they went fast. 

Tucker French dropped back and told Doc Savage, "The path we're on  now is my main road to the river. We

use it frequently. My place isn't  far." 

Doc said nothing. He was wondering why nobody had said a word about  the pink elephant in the affair  he

cause of all the scuffling; the  "heavy stuff," whatever it was. 

It seemed that everyone was avoiding it. 

They reached Tucker French's place. 

Anywhere but in the jungle, it wouldn't have been impressive. In  the jungle, it was. It was in a stretch of

country which an explorer  would have called palmy. Which meant simply that it was higher ground,

welldrained, that there were tall babassu palms, the fronds of which  met overhead to form a cathedrallike

effect with the last of the  evening sunlight streaming down. 


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There was an outer cultivated fence of thorn trees, something like  the "hedge" fences found in Iowa and

Missouri. But thicker, more rank.  Nothing larger than a mouse could pass through the fence readily. 

The trading post was in the center of the fenced circle, the fence  being far enough away that no blowgun

arrow could reach it. 

There were four buildings, none of them large, connected with a low  wall so that the effect was somewhat

that of a fort, but not too much  so. Stone was the building material used. The stone had been dug up on  the

site, and laid with a mortar of local siliceous sand and lime made  by burning limestone on the spot. 

There was nothing extraordinary about the spot, except that Tucker  French's personal quarters were

airconditioned. The airconditioning  was not too good, but it was better than the jungle heat. Tucker French

was obviously proud of it. 

"I have some good mate'," he said. "How about a highball?" 

Doc said grimly, "You might also serve up a little more  information." 

This sounded, he realized, more angry and suspicious than he  intended. 

Tucker French's innocence was almost babylike. "I don't  understand." 

"The box of snakeskins," Doc said. "What about it?" 

Tucker French looked vaguely dumfounded, as if he didn't in the  least know what a box of snakeskins was. 

Sir Roger Powell said, "He means the box of snake hides you gave me  to take to New York." 

"Oh, those," said Tucker French vaguely. "Why, I ship a few snake  hides now and then. What about them?" 

"The box seems to be behind this trouble," Doc told him. 

Tucker French smiled. "Oh, you must be mistaken. They were just  snake skins." 

Doc said, "You gave them to Powell to give to Blassett and Morris." 

"Yes, that's right." 

"Blassett and Morris had never heard of you and they don't deal in  snake hides," Doc countered sharply. 

"We discussed that before your plane landed," Tucker French said  easily. "I'm afraid I made an error." 

"Error?" 

"I understood Blassett and Morris were snakeskin dealers. I was  wrong." Tucker French smiled again, but it

wasn't very genuine. 

Doc could feel tension growing in the room. There wasn't anything  visible. It was just a feeling. 

"The box was pretty heavy," he said. 


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No one said anything. Grace Blassett wasn't looking at anyone. Her  face, Doc thought, was getting a little

gray with fright. 

"It was a pretty heavy box," Doc said. "Three of us could barely  lift it with levers. Then it suddenly became

as light as a normal box  should be." 

Tucker French smiled. "Is this a ghost story?" 

Doc was silent. It was a difficult silence, because he was trying  to hold down a growing impulse to smash

things. He was, he saw, being  roundly lied to. 

He turned slowly to old Benjy. "What was it that you took from that  downtown warehouse in New York to

the girls' apartment?" he asked the  old man. 

Benjy looked him in the eye. 

"Nothing," Benjy said. "I didn't take anything. You can't prove I  did." 

Doc looked intently at the ceiling. 

"Does anyone have the least idea why we're down here?" he asked  wearily. 

"To have a drink with me, I hope," Tucker French said, laughing  again. It was a queer laugh. 

Suddenly Doc was sure that Tucker French was a very dangerous  fellow. 

"I don't drink," Doc said shortly. 

THE night came on slowly. Now and then a native would come to  consult with Tucker French to the effect

that there was no sign of the  other natives, the bad ones, the marauders. 

Doc gave no inkling that he could understand the grunts and snorts  and cackling that was the native language.

He understood it fairly  well. Well enough to know that the natives were saying what Tucker  French said they

were saying. 

Also he understood the lingo well enough to know that the natives  were mouthing exactly what they had been

told to say. The natives were  poor actors. They had poker faces, but they didn't get the necessary  conviction

into their grunts and other sounds. 

Doc began to find cold sweat on the backs of his hands. He knew it  was along his backbone, too. He was

frightened. 

The outward appearance of things was as social as any cocktail hour  would have been in the jungle. It

shouldn't have been. It was  unnatural. 

Monk and Renny felt the same way. He could tell. Monk was  fascinated by pretty Grace Blassett, but fear

was beginning to get the  better of Monk's prowling instincts. Renny's long face was more  composed, but his

big hands were gripping various things, the arms of  his chair for instance, very tightly. 

A native announced dinner. 


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"Perhaps you would like to clean up," Tucker French said easily. 

Doc managed to get Monk and Renny alone in the modern bathroom. 

"How do you feel about this?" Doc asked them. 

Monk said, "I'm beginning to sweat icicles." 

"We're being ganged up on," Doc said. 

Renny nodded. He thought so, too. 

Doc said, "Back there in the jungle, during this capture and rescue  thing you fellows went through  did

Tucker French have a chance to  talk to Benjy, the two girls and Bob French without you hearing?" 

Renny scowled. "Yes, he did." 

"Notice any change after that?" 

"Come to think of it, yes." 

"All right," Doc said. "It's the three of us against the rest of  them." 

Monk asked, "What do you think they're planning to do with us?" 

"I don't want to scare myself by wondering," Doc told him. "Keep  your eyes open. 

He went back to the living room. He found Powell and Tucker French  holding a lipstoear conversation.

They didn't quite spring apart  guiltily. At least, Powell was the only one who sprang. 

"Powell was just telling me the latest war news," Tucker French  said. "I'm a few months behind on it." 

They hadn't been discussing any war news, Doc knew. Powell looked  too relieved. He looked like a man who

wanted to giggle, like a man who  had just won the sweepstakes. 

"Don't you have a radio?" Doc asked idly. 

"It's out of order," Tucker French said. "One of the fool natives  broke the tubes." 

Doc said, "Your brother Bob says he received a cablegram from you." 

Tucker French smiled his worst smile. 

"That's quite a mystery, isn't it?" he said. "I wonder who could  have sent it?" 

"Quite a mystery," Doc agreed, trying to use the same maneating  cheerful tone Tucker French was using. 

DINNER was uneventful, but it was also as false as the gaiety of  medical school students eating dinner on a

dissecting table as a gag.  Doc himself ate nothing which Tucker French did not sample first. He  noticed that

Monk and Renny didn't either. 


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Throughout the meal, Tucker French kept up a running fire of  questions at his brother. Bob, what kind of

action did you see in the  army? Was China very interesting? How many times were you shot at? 

They weren't the questions, somehow, that a brother would ask  another brother. And the answers weren't

right, either. They were  forced. 

Doc formed a fairly certain conviction that Bob French didn't like  what was going on, but for some reason or

other felt that he couldn't  do anything about it. 

After dinner, Doc said, "I have a portable radio. We might tune in  some news." 

He went to get the little portable outfit  a transmitterreceiver  combination affair which under favorable

conditions could reach some  other station, probably one at Manaos or Bogota. 

He found the radio smashed. 

"These damned dumb natives!" Tucker French said with anger which  must be feigned. "One of them smashed

it, I'm afraid." 

Doc nodded. 

"And the radio transmitters in both planes were doubtless ruined in  the crash," he said. 

"I'm afraid so," Tucker French said. 

"That's too bad." 

"Indeed it is," Tucker French agreed. "Do you and your two friends  mind sharing the same bedroom?" 

"Not at all." 

"I'll show you where it is." 

The bedroom was large and had several very small windows which Doc  was particular to note were not large

enough to permit a man to escape  by crawling through them. 

Tucker French, in the course of looking over the room, emitted a  startled cry and sprang forward. He bent

over a small object on the  floor. 

"For God's sake, keep away from this!" he cried. The insect on the  floor was an ant. 

It was a peculiar ant, however. It was about an inch and a quarter  long, with a velvety appearance and an

enormous head. 

Doc had a near malaria chill for a moment. An isle ant. The bites  of the things were deadly poison. 

Tucker French told them what it was. He dressed it up a little,  making it sound as if the isle bite was worse

than that of a cobra. 

"It's the work of those infernal natives who were shooting poisoned  arrows at us," Tucker French told them

emphatically. "Now and then they  catch some isle ants and let them loose near my stockade fence. This  one


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must have worked its way into the house. I'll help you search your  bedclothing for more of them." 

They didn't find any more isle. 

"I don't believe it is safe for you to walk around the place during  the night," Tucker French told them. 

"Yes, that seems to be fairly obvious," Doc agreed, using the  maneating cheerful tone. 

WHEN they were alone in the bedroom, Monk whispered, "Say, are we  gonna stay in here tonight?" 

"We are not!" Doc said vehemently. 

"Then what  " 

"We are going to the bathroom together again," Doc said. 

They strolled to the bathroom. They met Tucker French en route, and  told him they were going to the

bathroom. 

The bathroom had a window a man could crawl through. 

"Crawl out," Doc said. "Hide. Don't move around and get yourselves  seen. In an hour or so, or when

everyone is asleep, come and get me out  of that bedroom, because I have a hunch the door will be locked by

then." 

Renny, having difficulty keeping his whisper from being a roar like  his voice, whispered, "And I've got a

hunch nobody plans to sleep in  this house tonight." 

"Out of the window," Doc said. 

"How you going to cover when they check up to make sure we're all  in our little beds?" 

"I'll try to sound like all three of us," Doc said. "Get going."  Renny went out of the window. Monk followed.

Monk whispered, "If those  jungle natives hanging around  " 

"You can forget the jungle natives hanging around," Doc said. 

"Yes, but will they forget me?" 

"They aren't." 

"Eh?" 

"Those jungle natives," Doc said, "are the figments of Tucker  Powell's imagination, I hope." 

Monk shivered before he disappeared and said, "I hope so, too." 

Doc went back to the bedroom. He didn't meet anyone. He closed the  door and locked it on the inside, after

noting that there was a padlock  hasp on the outside. It was a very strong door. 

He took off his shoes and lay down on one bed and turned out the  light, then waited for the checkup. 


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A knock on the door. 

"Yes?" 

"Thought you might like some cold beer as a nightcap," Tucker  French's voice said. 

Doc said, "Monk. Do you want some cold beer?" 

Imitating Monk's voice as closely as he could, Doc said, "No, my  feet are cold enough as it is." 

"Renny?" 

"No, thanks." Using Renny's voice. 

"I guess not," Doc said using his own voice again. 

"Well, sleep tight," Tucker French said. He sounded as if he had  been fooled. 

Surmising that the fellow might listen outside the door. Doc  proceeded to carry on a threesided conversation

using the voices of  Renny, Monk and Himself. He did that for a while. Then he had his  voices agree that they

might as well get some sleep. 

Lying there after he had finished, he felt silly. He was pretty  good at voice mimicry. He had practiced it a lot,

and he had used it  before. But he felt silly anyway. 

He was somewhat pleased, too. It was a crazy sort of a thing to do.  He liked such things. 

He thought back, lying there in the darkness, of the monologue he  had given, while flying south in the plane

with Renny and Powell, about  his strange youth. About the lack of a normal boy's devilment and small

adventures which had featured his youth. Of how he was convinced that  having missed such things as a kid

accounted for his present interest  in the fantastic and the adventurous and the quixotic. 

The selfanalysis was accurate, he hoped. It was a sensible  explanation of the elation with which he seized

upon a goofy way of  accomplishing something instead of using a more normal, probably more  sensible

method. Like the trick he was trying to pull now. 

Such methods probably meant he needed psychoanalysis, he reflected. 

XIII

A COUPLE of hours later, Monk Mayfair clubbed someone over the head  outside the door. It didn't make

much noise. 

Doc whispered, "Watch the door, it squeaks." They eased the panel  open carefully. 

"Lucky they didn't have it padlocked," Monk breathed. "Just stuck a  bolt in the staple." 

"Who did you hit?" 

"One of the local boys," Monk explained. "He was standing here with  a rifle, but he turned his back." 


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They carried the native into the bedroom. Monk had used his fist on  the fellow, so he would probably revive

in time. 

"Tie him and gag him," Doc said. 

They ran into difficulty. The native had some kind of adenoidal  difficulty which rendered him unable to

breathe through his nose. If  they gagged him, he would suffocate. 

Renny said, "I've got an idea." He went away and came back with the  carafe of mate' which had been served

earlier in the night. He began  pouring it down the native. 

Monk started to giggle. He finally had to collapse on the edge of  the bed and hold his mouth. 

"What the hell's the matter with you?" Renny demanded. 

"'What you trying to do to that native?" 

"Make him drunk so he can't talk for a while." 

"With mate'?" 

''Sure." 

"Mate' is a form of tea. It has no alcoholic content, and contains  less caffeine than ordinary tea or coffee." 

Renny stared at the carafe intently. Without a word, he put it down  on the floor and walked out. Doc kept a

straight face with some  difficulty. 

Renny came back with a squaresided bottle. He said, "At least I  know what gin is." He began pouring gin

down the native who had been on  guard. 

Doc shook a little with silent laughter, entertained by Renny's  sheepish disgust. It was good, he suddenly

realized, to be able to  laugh. The mirth, like a clean shower, washed away some of the slime  that continual

fear was beginning to deposit on his nerves. While Renny  was funneling gin down the native, Doc asked

Monk, "Anything been going  on?" 

"Plenty big powwow in the main storeroom," Monk said. "What  about?" 

"No idea. Renny and I couldn't get near enough to overhear." 

"Who attended?" 

"Everyone." 

"The two girls?" 

"Uhhuh," Monk said sourly. "I can't feature Grace Blansett being  mixed in something shady, but I guess she

is." 

Renny straightened. 


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"Let's go see what the powwow has developed into," the bigfisted  engineer suggested. 

They moved warily through the house, stepping cautiously, stopping  to listen. Doc found an outer door,

moved it carefully and got it open  without enough sound to worry them. They stepped out into the night. 

Something seemed to be going on around at the front of the place. 

"Careful," Doc breathed. 

A moment later, they could see what was happening. Renny's, "Holy  cow! They're all going into the jungle!"

wasn't necessary. 

IT was a grimfaced group in front of the trading post. They were  all there, except Tucker French. And he

appeared shortly, with an  electric lantern, dragging a twowheeled iron cart. The cart was small,  with

widetread wheels. It was something like a wheelbarrow, except  that it was twowheeled. 

Tucker French told Benjy, "You bring this." Benjy took the cart. 

They walked toward the gate in the hedge. Tucker French unfastened  the gate. He did not close it. The gate

was unguarded. 

Monk growled, "Say, they're not much scared of the boys with the  blowguns!" 

"There aren't any boys with blowguns besieging the place," Doc  said. 

"But that arrow Tucker French found sticking in a leaf  " 

"He probably stuck it there himself," Doc said. "Then found it  later for our benefit. Come on." 

The jungle darkness was thick because of the canopy of palms  overhead. Nothing happened when they passed

through the gate. 

Doc went ahead, feeling the way. There was a path, not hard to  follow. The iron cart Benjy was dragging had

taken to squeaking. The  sound was a help. 

The way led sharply upward. There was a hill which they had not  noticed particularly from the air. Hills in

the jungle were difficult  to locate, because frequently the trees in the damper jungle grew a  hundred feet taller

than those on drier high ground. 

This hill was rocky, too. The trees on it became not much more than  rank bushes. The path was not wide, but

it was solid, easily followed.  The canopy of foliage above shut off less light now, so they could see  where

they were going, discern the path easily. 

The cluster of lights ahead came to a stop. 

"Take your time getting up on them," Doc warned. "And separate.  When we meet, it will be on the west side,

toward the moon." 

He parted from Monk and Renny, silently. 


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Because it was obvious the group ahead did not expect to be  followed, he went ahead boldly, only using care

not to make any noise. 

Powell, Tucker French, Bob French and all the others were gathered  together. Benjy was leaning on the iron

cart, mopping perspiration. 

Doc frowned. Evidently they were where they were going. But the  spot did not look interesting. There was

just rock. Hard stone, which  could be some sort of quartz. 

Tucker French made a speech. 

HE said, "Like every explorer, I was always taking rock samples  when I traveled. This rock here is quartz,

and you find minerals in  quartz veins frequently. So I prospected the place as a matter of  course. 

Powell said, "Your finding it was an accident, then?" 

"Not entirely," Tucker French told him. "My compass was acting  funny as anything, and that aroused my

curiosity. It led me to the  exact spot." 

"Right here?" 

"Yes." 

"I don't see anything." 

Tucker French laughed. "I hope not, all the trouble I took to hide  it." 

He began kicking brush aside, exposing an expanse of loose stone. 

"Help me toss the loose rock aside," he said. 

"How far down is it?" Powell demanded eagerly. 

"Right on top, almost." 

Doc watched them remove the loose stone from a small pit. All of  them worked but the two girls and Bob

French. These three stood back,  whitefaced, and watched. 

Once Tucker French said to his brother, "Get in here and help,  Bob." 

Bob French said nothing, did not help. 

They cleared the hole and climbed out. 

Tucker French said, "Let's get our breath." He mopped his face,  then continued, "Maybe it hit in the form of a

meteor centuries ago. I  don't know." 

"What makes you think a meteor?" Powell asked. 

"Well, the only thing that science has ever heard of that is  anything like it is the substance of which one of the

stars is  composed. Astronomers found a star made of something like it." 


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Old Benjy snorted. "How the hell can they tell what a star is made  of?" 

"They can, don't kid yourself," Tucker French told him. "They  analyze the light from the star, somehow. I

can't give you the exact  procedure. But they get what they call a spectra by breaking up the  light. If the body

is hot they get what they call an emission spectra,  and it's fairly easy to make a spectrum analysis with a

gadget made of  flint and crown glass prisms, I think." 

"That's enough to confuse me," Benjy said. "I'll take your word." 

Tucker French said, "All right. Let's get a chunk out. We'll have  to use crowbars and tongs." 

He got down in the pit with Powell. For the next ten minutes the  men alternately struggled, cursed, and

perspired. 

It took four of them to lift out what they were after. 

The object they had, as nearly as Doc could make out, was not much  larger than a marble. 

"Hell, this is a light piece," Tucker French said. 

"You kidding?" Benjy said. 

TUCKER French said they had better rest a while before trying to  put it into the cart. 

"This is lighter than the one I sent to New York embedded in the  bottom of the box which held the snake

skins," Tucker French said.  "That one was not much larger than the eraser off a pencil." 

Bob French frowned at his brother. "How'd you get the other piece  out?" 

"By stripping the inside of my cargo plane," Tucker told him. "Then  I reinforced the ship so that it would

carry it. I flew it as far as  Cartagena, made up the special box, got enough snake hides locally to  fill it, and

turned it over to Powell to take north." 

Bob French wheeled to Powell. "So you knew what it was all along   " 

Powell hesitated. "Yes." 

"And you were going to steal the sample?" 

Tucker French laughed unpleasantly. "He was going to steal not only  the sample, but the whole deposit. He

got in touch with Blassett and  Morris, told them what he had, and found out it was valuable. So he got  a gang

together intending to come back down here and do me in." 

Powell said coldly, "I wasn't going to kill anybody." 

"I can imagine," Tucker said bitterly. 

Bob French growled, "Now wait a minute! Don't start a fight. Let me  get this straight. Powell, I can see why

you lied to me and said you  didn't know anything about any heavy stuff. You didn't want to give  away the

secret. But what about that attack on you in the New York  hotel?" 


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"Fake. Arranged it myself." Powell sounded pleased with himself.  "That was to fool Doc Savage, make him

think I didn't know anything  about anything  to make him think I was in danger and needed his  protection.

As long as he was protecting me, I would know what he was  doing." 

"At the warehouse, it was your men who tried to kill him?" 

"Yes." 

"You were with them. Why wouldn't the gas have killed you?" 

"Because I would have got the hell out of there before it did. I  wasn't tied like the others. My men just

pretended to tie me. But old  Benjy came busting in and ruined the plan." 

Bob French shook his head strangely. He turned to the two girls,  said, "And you were in on it too, murder and

all?" 

Grace gasped, shook her head mutely. Her companion, Bill, said,  "No, no, we didn't have any part in that!" 

"It looks to me as if you did." 

Bill looked ill. She said, "Powell came to us and told us about the  heavy stuff, and we knew it was valuable.

But we didn't trust Powell,  and began watching him. We saw he was up to something crooked. So we  began

trying to get the heavy stuff ourselves." 

"Oh, you were going to steal it yourself." 

Bill shook her head. "We were protecting your brother's interests.  We wanted to handle the heavy stuff, but

not if there was crooked work  connected with it." 

Bob French spat violently. "Just sheep in the wolf den!" he said. 

His brother said, "Cut it out, Bob." 

Bob French stared at his brother. He did not say anything more. 

OLD Benjy, leaning on the cart again, said, "To put it all in a  nutshell: Tucker French found this stuff. Tucker

French couldn't go to  New York to sell it himself on account of he is a draftdodger. So  Tucker gave a

sample to Powell to take to New York and arrange a sale.  Powell tried to steal the whole thing. Blassett and

Morris tried to  prevent it. Bob French tried to prevent it. Doc Savage tried to prevent  it. We all wound up

here." 

"One big happy family!" said Bob French bitterly. 

"Why not?" his brother shouted at him. "We decided there was no  need for violence, that there was enough

money in it for all of us. So  we would all drop our schemes and work together. Isn't that sensible?" 

"Doc Savage," Bob French said. 

"WHAT do you plan to do with Savage and his two friends?" 


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"Let him cool off," Tucker French said. "Then tell him the truth.  If he wants to be contrary, there is nothing

he can do. At the worst,  we may have to make him walk to civilization, which will take him a  couple of

months." 

Grace Blassett said anxiously, "You mean that? You're not going to  kill him?" 

"Good God, no!" Tucker French exclaimed. "Let's get this piece  loaded and get back to the post." 

They heaved and grunted some more, and finally got the small  fragment of whatever it was loaded into the

cart. 

Tucker French flopped down on the ground, puffing. 

"I'm exhausted!" he gasped. "Bob, you and Benjy and the girls go  ahead with the cart. Powell and I will be

along as soon as we catch our  breath." 

Powell puffed, "Golly, that's an idea." He flopped down beside  Tucker French. 

Old Benjy began wrestling with the cart. He and Bob French pulled.  The two girls pushed. 

They struggled down the trail with the unwieldy load. 

Doc remained where he was. Tucker French and Powell, he was sure,  had remained behind for some good

reason. 

Tucker French did nothing but breathe heavily for a while. Then he  growled, "Well, you know where it is

now." 

"How much is in there?" Powell asked. 

"Piece the size of a small house, nearly as I can tell." 

Powell whistled softly. "That's plenty." 

Tucker French asked anxiously, "You're sure it's worth a lot of  money?" 

"Hell, yes!" Powell exclaimed instantly. "I think the best market  is to sell it in tiny bits to scientists and

scientific institutions  and museums. Divided up like that, it'll be worth as much as gold.  More. There's

nothing else like it on earth. Every scientific research  laboratory will want a piece." 

Tucker French nodded. "I hoped it would have some specific value  immediately. It's a new element." 

"You don't seem to realize the curiosity value of the stuff alone,"  Powell told him. "We would divide it up in

pieces the size of a pea and  get a million bucks peddling it to people who just wanted a chunk for a  curiosity." 

"You reckon that's the only value it's got?" 

"I don't know. Probably not. We'll have to find out." 

The two were silent for a while. The iron cart was squeaking in the  distance. 


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Powell laughed suddenly. It wasn't pleasant. 

"What's the matter with you?" Tucker French demanded nervously.  "What are you laughing at?" 

"At Doc Savage," Powell said. 

"What do you mean?" 

"You know what we've got to do with Savage, don't you?" 

"Eh?" 

"Kill him. Kill Monk Mayfair and Renny Renwick, too." 

XIV

THE two men sat there. Tucker French stared sickly at the ground.  He didn't say anything. 

"The two girls and that Benjy had better be gotten out of the way,  too," Powell said. 

Tucker French shuddered. "I  I can't stand for that." 

"You won't have to." 

French stared at him. "What do you mean?" 

Powell said, "You know my boys in the first airplane? The ones in  the plane which Savage's plane, and the

other ship with Monk and Benjy  and the girls and your brother, followed down here?" 

Tucker French shook his head. "What have they got to do with it." 

"Plenty." 

"But Doc Savage doesn't know they're here. He doesn't know that the  plane bringing them landed ahead of

everyone else, let them out, and  then the pilot took the plane on to Santa Isabel to make a false trail  if one was

necessary." 

"No, he doesn't know that." 

Tucker French said uneasily, "I don't like your tone. What the hell  are you driving at?" 

"My boys are hiding out in the jungle near here." 

"All right, let them stay out of sight! Pay them whatever you  agreed to pay them, and don't tell them anything

and  " 

"You don't get the idea," Powell said coldly. "You're slow,  brother." 

Tucker French started to get to his feet. He acted like a man  halffrozen. 


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Powell took a gun out of his clothing, said, "Sit down, sucker." 

Tucker French sat down slowly. 

"You get it now, don't you?" Powell said. 

"Yo  you're not" 

"Uhhuh. You bet I am." Powell cocked his gun. It was a revolver.  "I'm going to take over. Savage and his

two friends have to go. Why not  you? Your brother, old Benjy, the two girls, too?" 

"My God, you're insane!" Tucker French's voice was hoarse. 

"Don't move," Powell said. 

Powell put two fingers between his lips and whistled shrilly. Three  times. 

"That's the signal to bring my men," he said. "I told them to stick  around and follow us when we left the

stockade. Follow our lights, I  told them." 

Doc Savage came to his feet. He had, for the few brief seconds that  he was given to have it, the ghastly

certainty that he and Monk and  Renny had walked into a devilish predicament. He was right. 

From nearby, a voice, one of Powell's men, yelled, "Watch out,  boss! Savage and two of his men are around

here!" 

Tucker French jumped at Powell then. And Powell shot French twice,  putting both bullets in Tucker French's

face. 

The weird part of what followed was the part played by the  flashlight which Tucker French was holding

when he died. The convulsion  which came when the bullets hit him caused him to throw the flashlight.  It

spun in the air for a moment, splattering light over the jungle as  if there was a series of lightning flashes. And

when it landed, it did  not go out, but rested in a bush with the beam planted on Tucker  French's body. It

remained there, blazing light on the body. 

Powell backed into the jungle after he shot Tucker French, backed  slowly, holding his gun ready. 

Doc moved silently, stalking him. 

Powell called, "You say Savage and his men are here?" 

"Yeah." 

"How do you know?" 

"They followed you up here. Ahead of us. We've been hoping to find   " 

A fight broke out in the nearby jungle. Two blows, a shot,  scuffling, brush snapping. 

Monk. Doc knew. It had to be Monk. Anyone else would have had  better sense than start a fight against odds

in the jungle night. 


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Doc lunged for Powell. It was too far, and moreover he tripped. The  best he could do was slam his shoulder

against Powell violently. Powell  didn't fall. He just received a hard push, and kept going. Doc went  down,

tangled in vines. 

Powell whirled. His gun made thunder and winking red glare. Doc  rolled, got behind a tree trunk. 

Powell screamed, "Get together! Don't try to fight them here! Get  together! We'll go to the trading post  " 

Where Monk was fighting, sudden silence came. 

Then Monk's voice said, "I got two." 

Gunsound crashed in the jungle again. A revolver made five  splitting roars, emptying itself. 

Then silence. Suddenly footsteps were pounding madly from the  direction of the post. Up the trail. 

It was Bob French. He stopped when he saw his brother. Doc couldn't  distinguish him in the darkness, but he

heard Bob French's breathing  stop. 

"Who did that to Tuck?" Bob French asked hollowly. 

"Powell," Doc said. "This is Savage. Monk and Renny are around. So  are Powell's men and Powell. Be

careful." 

"How many?" 

"Shut up," Doc said. 

"How many?" 

A gun cracked as someone fired at Bob French's voice. Bob French  shot back instantly. He killed a man. The

man he killed didn't scream,  but began breathing his life away with awful, labored sounds that were

somewhat like snoring. 

"I was hoping they'd shoot at my voice," Bob French said. "That's  one." 

Then they heard from Renny. He rumbled, "Here they are! The rest of  them!" And his roar merged with the

frantic splatter of gunfire. 

Doc charged the sound. He heard Monk going for it, too. But Bob  French was ahead of them both. Bob

French, with fury, violence,  junglefighting experience, and a gun. 

For the next few seconds, it was one of those things you don't  exactly remember afterward. Not that things

moved too fast to remember.  It was more the fear, the frenzy of trying not to be killed, and to  kill, maim,

mangle, do anything to save your life. 

Doc himself had a throat when silence fell. He had to force  himself, making quite an effort, to relinquish his

grip before the man  he was holding should die. 

"How many?" Bob French's voice asked. 


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Monk said, "Six. Seven including Powell." 

Bob French said, "Renny?" 

"I'm okay," Renny's voice said. 

"A little like the Burma jungles, wasn't it?" 

"Uhhuh. Is this all?" Renny asked. 

"That's all," Bob French said. 

"Providing," Doc Savage corrected, "the natives don't give us  trouble." 

THE natives didn't give them trouble. It made no difference to  them, their spokesman explained to Doc, what

the white men did to each  other. They hadn't been enthusiastic about what was going on, anyway. 

The natives would dig graves for those who had been killed, though. 

Bob French insisted that his brother not be buried with Powell. Bob  said he had no particular regret at having

killed Powell. 

"I blame Powell more than my brother," Bob explained grimly.  "Tucker was a coward at heart, and I knew it

and I never blamed him.  Something like that, a man has or he hasn't." 

Doc said, "Tucker did not start out trying to be crooked." 

"I don't think so," Bob agreed. "Tucker was a draft dodger, though.  I knew that. That's why, back in New

York, when I went to Renwick for  help, I acted so queer when I found out you would get into the affair.  I

knew you wouldn't have much sympathy for a draft dodger. So I tried  to back out. I didn't want to see Tucker

in the penitentiary. He was my  brother. And I've fought enough of this war for our whole damned  family." 

"I'll tell the natives about the graves." 

"Thanks," Bob French said quietly. His eyes were wet when he turned  away. 

The next two days were uneventful. Doc Savage was trying to get  enough radio parts together to make a

transmitter. He did not have much  luck. 

Renny spent most of his time fooling with the heavy stuff. It was a  new element of some sort. New as far as

anyone having actually gotten  hands on any, although astronomers had discovered the stuff on a star.  * 

The stuff intrigued Renny. He began coming up with all kinds of  ideas about how they would dispose of it. 

Monk was also having ideas, some of them fairly desperate. 

His prize idea was that Doc, Renny and Bob French take the  twofisted girl, Bill, along with them on the

jungle trek to  civilization. He, Monk, would stay behind with Grace and old Benjy.  Benjy could be

chaperone. 

"Benjy is getting down with malaria, so he'd be an ideal  chaperone," Monk said hopefully. 


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"What's the matter with you and Bill?" Doc asked. 

Monk shivered. "She scares me." 

"You don't scare her, I've noticed," Doc told him. "She gives you  quite a bit of her time." 

"Yeah, so damned much of it that I haven't been able to make any  hay with Grace," Monk complained. "You

know what that Bill reminds me  of?" 

"What?" 

"You know that big gangling bug around here they call a praying  mantis? The female mantis marries the

male, then eats him for her  wedding breakfast. That's the way Bill affects me." 

Doc kept his face straight and said, "Renny and Bob French and I  were talking, and we thought we might

leave you and Bill here with  Benjy while the rest of us made the trip out." 

"God help me!" Monk said. 

In the end, none of them had to walk out. The man who had gone on  to Santa Isabel with the plane came

back. Evidently the arrangement had  been for him to return with the plane in three days. He made a nice

landing, and they did an equally nice job of taking him and the plane  back intact.

  *The existence of this  extremely heavy matter is not imagination.

Scientists have discovered a  star in the sky composed of extremely heavy matter. As a writer on  scientific

oddities recently put it, a piece of it the size of a golf  ball would weigh one thousand four hundred and sixty

tons. Not pounds.  Tons.  The Author   

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Ten Ton Snakes, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4.  I, page = 4

   5.  II, page = 8

   6.  III, page = 14

   7.  IV, page = 18

   8.  V, page = 24

   9.  VI, page = 30

   10.  VII, page = 35

   11.  VIII, page = 41

   12.  IX, page = 48

   13.  X, page = 55

   14.  XI, page = 61

   15.  XII, page = 67

   16.  XIII, page = 73

   17.  XIV, page = 80