Title:   BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Keywords:  

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PDF Version:   1.2



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BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF .......................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE STRANGE MESSAGE .................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THE TRAIN WEREWOLF...................................................................................................6

Chapter 3. WARNING OF THE WEREWOLF ....................................................................................12

Chapter 4. DEAD MAN........................................................................................................................17

Chapter 5. THE WEREWOLF CRIES..................................................................................................23

Chapter 6. SQUARE WHITE DEATH.................................................................................................27

Chapter 7. STRANGE ATTACKERS ...................................................................................................34

Chapter 8. THE MAN IN THE WHITE HAT .......................................................................................40

Chapter 9. THE IVORYCUBE TRAIL ...............................................................................................47

Chapter 10. CABIN OF MURDER.......................................................................................................53

Chapter 11. THE VANISHED BOX.....................................................................................................62

Chapter 12. THE HAND THAT BECKONED.....................................................................................70

Chapter 13. AN OFFER .........................................................................................................................79

Chapter 14. THE TRAP IN A TRAP .....................................................................................................88

Chapter 15. WHEN TROUBLE DOUBLES .........................................................................................95

Chapter 16. INSIDE THE IVORY BLOCK ........................................................................................102

Chapter 17. INTO THE EARTH.........................................................................................................108

Chapter 18. THE SKELETON CREW ................................................................................................115

Chapter 19. THE KILLING DEAD .....................................................................................................119


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BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE STRANGE MESSAGE 

Chapter 2. THE TRAIN WEREWOLF 

Chapter 3. WARNING OF THE WEREWOLF 

Chapter 4. DEAD MAN 

Chapter 5. THE WEREWOLF CRIES 

Chapter 6. SQUARE WHITE DEATH 

Chapter 7. STRANGE ATTACKERS 

Chapter 8. THE MAN IN THE WHITE HAT 

Chapter 9. THE IVORYCUBE TRAIL 

Chapter 10. CABIN OF MURDER 

Chapter 11. THE VANISHED BOX 

Chapter 12. THE HAND THAT BECKONED 

Chapter 13. AN OFFER 

Chapter 14. THE TRAP IN A TRAP 

Chapter 15. WHEN TROUBLE DOUBLES 

Chapter 16. INSIDE THE IVORY BLOCK 

Chapter 17. INTO THE EARTH 

Chapter 18. THE SKELETON CREW 

Chapter 19. THE KILLING DEAD  

Chapter 1. THE STRANGE MESSAGE

IT was a little way station on the transcontinental railroad in  western Canada. Only one man worked there.

He had what railroaders call  an "OS" job. About all he had to do was "OS" trains  telegraph the  dispatcher

that they were passing his point. 

Usually, nothing much ever happened around there. 

Just now, however, the telegrapher looked as if things were  happening  big things. His manner was as

excited as that of a small  boy about to see the circus. 

The thing which had flustered him was a telegram that he had just  copied. It was addressed to a passenger on

the fast express train which  was due to arrive soon. 

The operator interrupted his routine work frequently to stare at  the name of the individual to whom the

message was going. He scratched  his head. 

"If that man is the fellow I think he is  " He finished his remark  with a low whistle of amazement. 

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Some minutes later, the brass pounder gave a start as if he had  just thought of something. He got up hastily

and went to a row of  shelves in the rear of the room. These held magazines. Due to the  loneliness of his post,

the operator was a heavy reader. 

He picked out and thumbed through several magazines which made a  practice of publishing stories of famous

men. The cover design of one  of these consisted of a large bronzecolored question mark. Printed  across this

were the words: 

THE MAN OF MYSTERY  (Story on page 9) 

The telegrapher opened the magazine to page nine. The Story was  what writers call a "fact article." Every

word was Supposed to be the  truth. More large black type asked: 

WHO IS PROBABLY THE MOST  AMAZING OF LIVING MEN? 

The telegraph operator had read this story before. But now he  started to peruse it again. He was interrupted. 

A train whistled in the distance, and soon its approaching roar was  soon audible. 

It was the fast passenger. Smoke and steam rolling, air brakes  shrieking, the engine and string of coaches

came to a halt. A regular  stop for water was made here. 

Wilkie came in. Wilkie was the conductor. He had a large head, and  an extraordinarily prominent stomach.

He looked like a pleasant little  goblin in a uniform. 

"Hyah, brass mauler!" he greeted cheerfully. 

With a dramatic gesture, the operator passed over the telegram. 

"Message for one of the passengers, eh?" said Wilkie, and started  to stuff the missive in a pocket 

"Wait a minute!" ejaculated the telegrapher. "Look who that's for!" 

Wilkie eyed the name on the telegram. 

"For the love of Mike!" he exclaimed. 

"I KNEW you'd heard of him," the operator said triumphantly. 

Wilkie absently removed the uniform cap from his enormous head. "Do  you reckon this is the same man?" 

"I'm betting it is," said the telegrapher. "He's taking a vacation   him and the five men who help him. He has

a relative up in the woods  along the coast. He's paying a visit there." 

"How do you know that?" Wilkie demanded. 

The operator grinned. "It's kinda lonesome here, and I km time by  listening to the messages that go back and

forth over the wires. I  heard the message he sent, saying he was coming with his five friends." 

Wilkie hesitated, then read the message. As an employee of the  company, he probably had a right to do this. 


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"Whew!" he exclaimed. "If that chap was a relative of mine, I  wouldn't send him a telegram like this!" 

"Me either!" the operator replied. He secured the magazine which he  had started to read. "Say, did you see

the article in here about that  fellow?" 

Wilkie glanced at the magazine. "Nope. I'd like to read it, too." 

"Take it." The operator passed the magazine over. "It's sure worth  reading. It tells some of the things he and

his five men have done. I  tell you, Wilkie, a lot of the things are hard to believe. This fellow  must be a

superman!" 

"Them writers sometimes exaggerate," Wilkie said. "Not in this  magazine," the telegrapher assured him. "It's

got a reputation of  sticking close to the truth." 

The engine whistle moaned out. Echoes came slamming back from the  timbered hills. 

"That's the ol' highballl" Wilkie wheeled. "Thanks for the  magazine. Be seeing you, brass pounder." 

The train was moving. With a smoothness that came of long practice,  Wilkie swung aboard. He headed for

the cars which held drawingrooms.  He walked the swaying aisles with the proficiency of a sailor on a

rolling deck of a stormtossed ship. 

Opening the magazine at page nine, he stared at the article. The  first paragraph gripped him. Absorbed in his

reading, he nearly fell  over a suitcase which some traveler had left protruding into the aisle. 

"What a man!" Wilkie ejaculated. 

The traveler who owned the suitcase, mistakenly thinking the remark  was directed at himself, looked

indignant. 

Wilkie reached the drawingroom; and found the porter. "I'm hunting  for this man," he said, and showed the

name on the telegram. 

"Yassah!" gulped the porter. "Golly me! Dat's de stranges' lookin'  man Ah evah saw!" 

"What's strange about him?" 

"Man, he am de bigges' fella yo' evah laid yo' eyes on!" The porter  gazed ecstatically ceilingward. "When he

looks at yo', yo' jus' kinda  turns inside out. Ah seed him with his shirt off, takin' some kinda  exercises. Ah

nevah seed such muscles befo'. Dey was like big ropes  tied around him." 

Wilkie nodded. He had come on duty at the last division point, and  had not seen all the passengers. "In the

observation car, eh? And I'll  know him when I see him?" 

"Yo' cain't miss him! He's a great big bronze man!" 

Wilkie headed for the observation car. 

BACK in the tiny way station, the telegraph sounder was clicking  noisily. The operator sat down at his

typewriter to receive. 


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He copied the incoming message number, the office of origin, and  the address. The missive was destined for

a passenger on another train. 

The telegrapher reached over to his key and "broke." 

"Wrong number," he transmitted. 

Telegrams were numbered in consecutive order. This was to prevent a  telegrapher sending one "into the air"

trans mitting a message which  was not received at the other end. 

"It's the right number," the man at the distant key tapped. 

"You're shy a number," explained the station wireman. "You sent me  a message half an hour ago." 

"The last message we sent you was four hours ago," rattled the  sounder. 

The telegrapher shook his head in bewilderment. Getting out his  carbon copy of the message which he had

given to Wilkie, he "traced" it  to the distant man  outlining its contents. 

"We sent no such message," he was informed. 

"I received it," the station operator clicked back. "There's  something strange about this. Do you think the

wires were tapped?" 

"Search me." 

The telegrapher sat and pondered. He reached a decision. Grasping  the key, he transmitted: "I'm going to wire

ahead to the next station,  and let Wilkie know what happened." 

"Why go to all that trouble?" the distant operator demanded. 

"Because both Wilkie and I thought the contents of that message  were strange. We both remarked that it was

an unusual communication for  this man to receive." 

"What do you know about the business of the man the message was  going to?" 

"I've read of the fellow," tapped the station operator. "I'll tell  you about him later. He's worth hearing about.

But I'm going to wire  Wilkie now." 

He began to maul out the call letters of a station at which  Wilkie's train would soon arrive. 

The station door opened furtively behind him. It made no noise. Two  men crept in. They were clad in

greasespattered coveralls. Both had  handkerchiefs tied over their faces, and both carried revolvers. 

The telegrapher, absorbed in calling, did not hear them. It was  doubtful if he ever knew of their presence. 

One of the marauders jammed his revolver to the operator's temple,  and pulled the trigger. The report of the

shot was deafening. 

The operator tumbled from his chair. He had died instantly. 


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Reaching over, the murderer grasped the telegraph key. "Never mind  that stuff about another message," he

transmitted. "I was mistaken." 

"That lonesome place must be driving you nuts," chided the distant  telegrapher, thinking he was still talking

to the station man. 

The killer gave an ugly laugh. He grabbed the key again. "Nuts,  nuts! Ha, ha, ha!" he transmitted erratically.

"King George couldn't be  crazy. Ha, ha! I'm King George  " 

For several minutes he sent crazily, in the manner of a demented  man. Then he carefully wiped the finger

prints off the murder revolver  and placed it in the fingers of the lifeless station telegrapher. 

"That fixes it up," he told his companion. "They'll think he went  mad and committed suicide. Nobody can

trace my gun. The numbers are  filed off." 

"I don't like this!" gulped the fellow's companion. "We hadda keep  'em from findin' out we tapped the wire

and sent that message, didn't  we? C'mon! Let's blowl" 

The pair departed. Some time later, a somber black monoplane lifted  them from a level bit of grassland which

lay about three miles from the  tiny station. 

The plane moaned off in the eye of the evening sun. It was  following the railroad westward, as if in pursuit of

the passenger  train. 

WILKIE, the conductor, stood stockstill in the observation car and  stared. The colored porter's words, and

what he had read of the article  in the magazine, had prepared him to a degree for what he was seeing.  Yet the

personage before him was even more remarkable than he had  expected. 

Had Wilkie not known better, he would have sworn the individual was  a statue sculptured from solid bronze.

The effect of the metallic  figure was amazing. 

The man's unusually high forehead, the muscular and strong mouth,  the lean and corded cheeks, denoted a

rare power of character. The  bronze hair was a shade darker than the bronze skin. It lay straight  and smooth. 

Only by comparing the bronze man's size to that of the observation  car chair in which he sat, were his

gigantic proportions evident. The  bulk of his great frame was lost in its perfect symmetry. No part of  the man

seemed overdeveloped. 

Wilkie snapped himself out of his trance and advanced, "Doc  Savage?" he asked. 

The bronze man glanced up. 

Wilkie suddenly realized the most striking thing about the fellow  was his eyes. They were like pools of flake

gold glistening in the  afternoon sunlight that reflected through the train windows. Their gaze  possessed an

almost hypnotic quality, a strange ability to literally  convey the owner's desires with their glance. 

Undeniably, here was an amazing man. 

"Doc Savage," he said. "That is right." 


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The man's voice impressed Wilkie as being very much in keeping with  his appearance. It was vibrant with

controlled power. 

"A wire came for you at the last station," said Wilkie, and handed  over the message. It was the first time in

years that Wilkie had been  awed in the presence of anybody. 

"Thank you," said Doc Savage. 

Wilkie found himself retreating, although he had intended to hang  around and strike up a conversation with

this remarkable man. The tone  of those two words had impelled him to depart. At the same time, he  found

himself feeling very friendly toward the metallic giant. 

It was eerie, the things the bronze man's voice could do. 

Wilkie was almost out of the observation car when another weird  thing happened. An uncanny sound reached

his ears. 

He came to an abrupt stop. His face was blank. Absently, he felt of  his ears. The sound was so curious that he

half suspected it might be a  product of his imagination. The note seemed to be coming from no  particular

spot, but from every where. 

It was low, mellow, and trilling, that soundlike the song of some  strange feathered denizen of the jungle, or

the sound of a wind  crawling through a leafless wilderness. It ran up and down the musical  scale, having no

tune, yet melodious. Then it ended. 

Wilkie did not feel awed by the sound. Rather, there was something  inspiring about it. 

As he went on, Wilkie felt as if he had just taken a drink of fine  old liquor. The trilling sound had that kind of

an effect. 

Chapter 2. THE TRAIN WEREWOLF

THE sound Wilkie had heard was part of Doc Savage. It was a small,  unconscious thing which he did in

moments of intense concentration, or  when he was surprised. Often when Doc made the sound, he was

unaware of  doing so. 

Reading the text of the telegram had caused the tiny, weird note to  come into being. 

Leaving his chair, Doc strode for the observation platform on the  rear of the coach. 

There were other passengers. These were amazed by the bronze man's  appearance  so much so that they

forgot their manners and frankly  stared. 

A stout, elderly man with a slightly swarthy face gazed at the  bronze giant's hands. Enormous, supple tendons

showed those hands  contained incredible strength. The hands seemed to mesmerize the  swarthy man. 

A ravishingly pretty darkhaired girl sat beside the elderly man.  Her eyes were large and limpid, and her lips

a most inviting rosebud.  She looked very fresh and crisp, so impeccable, in fact, that it was  obvious she had

not been on the train long. Even the neatest of  individuals soon show the effects of traveling. 


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These two were clearly father and daughter. 

The attractive young woman seemed intrigued, not by the bronze  man's undeniable physical strength, but by

the fact that he was one of  the handsomest fellows she had ever seen. 

Doc Savage went on, seeming not to notice the pair. 

Frowning, the elderly man dropped a hand on his daughter's arm. 

"Quila aIM!" he ejaculated severely in Spanish. "For shame! You  were smiling at that man, Cere." 

The enchanting Cere colored in confusion. She had smiled, although  she had not meant to. 

"Eso es espantoso!" she laughed. "It is dreadful! Thank goodness,  he did not see me. He would have thought

me very forward." 

"Si, Si," her parent agreed disapprovingly. 

Father and daughter were staring after the receding bronze man when  a low voice sounded at their side. 

A man had joined them silently. This individual was tall and  slenderly athletic. His face was more than

handsome. It was pretty. It  was almost a girl's face. His age was somewhere around thirtyfive. He  had hard

eyes. 

"I trust you are retaining your courage, senorita," he said  fawningly. He bowed to her father. "You also, Senor

Corto Oveja." 

"You need have no fear of our nerve, El Rabanos," said Cere in  excellent English. "Instead of discussing our

troubles, we were  remarking on the striking qualities of the bronze man who just passed.  Do you happen to

know his name?" 

The girlfaced El Rabanos leaned close to breathe: "Not so loud,  senorita!" 

A close observer could have noted that the pretty senorita had  suddenly begun turning pale. "You mean  " 

"The bronze man is Doc Savage," said El Rabanos. 

Senor Corto Oveja came up rigid in his chair. "So that is the man   the fiend who is to kill us! Dios mio!" 

"Si, si!" muttered El Rabanos. "We must watch this Doc Savage. From  him, our very lives are in danger." 

"And his appearance made such a good impression," Cere murmured  forlornly. 

DOC SAVAGE, unaware of the bombshell his passage had exploded,  stepped out on the observation

platform. 

One man rode there. The outstanding thing about this fellow was his  gigantic hands. Each of these was

composed of more than a quart of bone  and gristle, sheathed in hide that resembled rusted sheet iron. The

man  was very big  over six feet, and weighing fully two hundred and fifty  pounds  but the size of his hands

made the rest of him seem dwarfed. 


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He had a long, Puritanical face, which bore an expression of great  gloom. He looked like a man on his way to

a funeral. 

"Have a look, Renny," said Doc Savage, and extended the telegram. 

The bigfisted man was Colonel John Renwick, known in many parts of  the globe for his accomplishments

as an engineer. Also, he was noted  for a playful habit of knocking panels out of doors with his incredible

fists. With either fist, he boasted, he could vanquish the stoutest  wooden door. 

Renny's funeralgoing expression was the one he habitually wore  when at peace with the world. 

Renny was one of a group of five singular men who were Doc Savage's  helpers. 

The telegram was addressed to Doc Savage, care of the train, and  read: 

JUST RECEIVED YOUR WIRE ADVISING YOU  ARE PAYING ME A VISIT STOP  WISH TO IN

FORM YOU I HAVE NO USE FOR REST OF SAVAGE  FAMILY STOP DO  NOT WISH YOUR

COMPANY  STOP WOULD BE DELIGHTED TO HAVE  YOU STAY AWAY 

ALEX SAVAGE 

Renny had a pet expression which be used on all occasions calling  for vehemence. He employed it now. 

"Holy cow!" he exploded. 

"Those are something near my own sentiments," Doc Savage agreed. 

"Dang it!" Renny's voice was something like the roaring of an angry  animal in a cave. "What if he don't want

our company? The crowd of us  weren't going to drop in and sponge off him! We were going to do some

fishing and hunting, and merely pay him a visit as a courtesy. If he  don't want us, we won't bother him. But

I'll be blasted if that will  keep us from our vacation!" 

"Alex Savage owns a large stretch of land along the coast," Doc  pointed out. "It has the reputation of being

the best spot in Canada  for hunting and fishing." 

Renny groaned thunderously. "A fine gesture of welcome! Say, Doc,  don't this Alex Savage know you?" 

"Not personally," Doc replied. "He is an uncle. I have never met  either him or his daughter." 

"Daughter?" 

"An only child, I understand. Her name is Patricia. Age about  eighteen." 

Renny tapped his huge fists together. This made a sound remindful  of two flint boulders colliding with each

other. 

"If your uncle and cousin don't want us, Doc, I reckon we'll go  somewhere else," he said gloomily. "Where's

the map? I'll try to find  another place where there's good fishing." 

"Better postpone that, Renny," Doc said dryly. 


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"Huh? 

'There's something very suspicious about this message," Doc Savage  informed him. 

PUZZLED and wondering, bigfisted Renny followed his giant bronze  chief back through the observation

car. Renny's relation to Doc Savage  was unusual. He willingly carried out Doc's smallest order. Yet Renny

received not one penny of salary 

Renny, in fact, was considerably more than a millionaire in his own  right. His skill as an engineer had made

into a fortune. He had, in a  sense, retired  retired to follow the trail of what he liked above all  else,

adventure. Peril and excitement were the spice of his life. 

Peril, excitement, and adventure were the bonds which cemented him  to Doc Savage. Doc seemed always to

walk amid these things. Each minute  of his life was one of danger. 

For Doc Savage had a strange purpose in life, a creed to which his  existence was dedicated. That creed was to

go here and there, to the  far corners of the earth, helping those in need of help, punishing  those who needed

punishment. 

Doc had been trained for this purpose from the cradle. 

The other four aides of the bronze man, like Renny, were bound to  him by a love of adventure. And, like

Renny, they were masters of some  profession. 

One was an electrical wizard, one a worldrenowned chemist, another  a great geologist and archaeologist,

and the fourth, one of the most  astute lawyers Harvard had ever turned out. 

Troublebusting was the life purpose of Doc and his five aides.  Their exploits had pushed their fame to the

ends of the earth. Doc,  mighty man of bronze, was by way of becoming a legend  a specter of  terror where

evildoers were concerned. 

Doc Savage entered his drawingroom, Renny at his heels. The room  was stacked with bags and many metal

boxes equipped with carrying  straps. 

Doc opened one of the boxes. A compact radio transmitter and  receiver came to light. Corded fingers moving

with deftness, Doc  manipulated the controls. The set was fitted with a "bug"  a  mechanical key for rapid

transmission. 

"What station are you callin', Doc?" Renny queried. 

"There is a Royal Canadian Mounted Police stttion in the railroad  town nearest Alex Savage's home," Doc ex

plalned. "I'm trying to raise  them." 

Renny heard this without batting an eye. That Doc should know there  was a Mounted station at the town, and

have the call letters at his  finger tips, did not impress Renny as anything out of the ordinary. Doc  Savage had

a fabulous fund of information of all kinds. 

Doc contacted the Mounted station, and made known his identity. 

"At your service, Mr. Savage," was the reply to this. 


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Renny heard this come from the ear phones. He was not surprised.  This was not the only great police system

which cooperated fully with  Doc Savage. 

"I received a telegram which pretends to have been sent from your  town by Alex Savage," Doc transmitted.

"Will you check up and see if it  was sent' please?" 

There followed fully five minutes of silence, while the distant  Mounted operator made inquiries. 

"No such message was sent from here," came back the report. 

Doc wirelessed his thanks, then replaced the radio set in its case. 

"You've got one guess about that telegram," he told Renny. 

"It was a fake!" Renny thumped. "But, Doc, what in blazes made you  suspicious?" 

"The message was addressed care of this train," Doc explained. "Our  earlier message to Alex Savage said

nothing about what train we would  be on." 

DOC Savage, Renny lumbering at his side, now sought out Wilkie, the  conductor. 

Wilkie was absorbed in the magazine which held the feature story  about Doc Savage. 

"How soon will we reach a point from which I can send a telegram?"  Doc inquired. 

Wilkie swallowed twice before he could answer. What he had been  reading had tended to increase his awe of

this bronze man. 

"We pass a little station in a few minutes," he replied.  "We don't  stop, but I can clip it to an order hoop, and

get it to the telegrapher  as we go past." 

"Good!"  Doc proceeded to write out a message. It was addressed to  Alex Savage: 

SOMETHING STRANGE GOING ON STOP DID  YOU GET MY TELEGRAM ADVISING  THAT MY

SELF AND FIVE FRIENDS PLANNING SPEND  FISHING AND HUNTING  VACATION YOUR VIC

NITY STOP DID YOU WIRE US NOT TO COME  STOP PLEASE  ADVISE IMMEDIATELY  DOC

SAVAGE 

Folding this, Doc gave it to the conductor. 

"I don't know what it will cost," Wilkie said. 

"This should more than cover it." Doc passed over a large Canadian  five dollar bill. "Keep the change for

your trouble." 

"I couldn't do that," Wilkie said hastily. "I'll deadhead the  message for you, Mr. Savage. It won't cost a

thing." 

Wilkie was outdoing himself to please the bronze man. Doc seemed  faintly puzzled for a moment. Then he

caught sight of the magazine  article which Wilkie had been reading. His inscrutable, metallic  features did not

change. but after a moment he indicated the  periodical. 


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"The chap who wrote that had a lot of imagination," he said dryly. 

Doc and Renny turned away from the admiring conductor. They almost  bumped into two swarthy men and a

beautiful, darkhaired girl. These  were Senor Corto Oveja, his daughter Cere, and the girlfaced El  Rabanos. 

The three looked steadily away from Doc and Renny. They had been  standing there eavesdropping as Doc

gave Wilkie his message. But they  did not want the bronze giant to know that. 

Doc and Renny went on up the car. 

"A peach!" Renny breathed when they were in the next car. 

"What?" said Doc 

"The girl with those two swarthy men," Renny murmured. "Holy cow!  Was she a looker!" 

"You mean the three who were spying on us as we gave the conductor  that message?" Doc queried softly. 

Renny gulped: "They were spying on us?' 

"They were." 

Senor Corto Oveja, Cere, and El Rabanos would have been surprised,  had they overheard this statement.

They had not imagined they had been  discovered. They did not know that few things happening around Doc

escaped his attention. 

RENNY scowled and banged his knuckles together. "What do you make  of this, Doc?.' 

"Somebody wants to keep us away from Alex Savage's place, and the  beautiful senorita and her two dark com

plexioned companions are very  interested in us," Doc summarized. 

"But what's at the bottom of it?" 

"Trouble!" 

"You're tellin' me?' Renny grimaced. "But what's at the bottom of  it?" 

"I neglected to bring my crystal ball," Doc said dryly. Renny  grinned. Somebody, incredulous at the eerie

precision with which Doc  could read the meaning of mysterious events, and deduct what was to  come, had

once declared the bronze man was a mystic, able to see the  future in a crystal ball. The truth was that Doc's

foresight came from  a brain that operated with crystal clarity. 

"The rest of the gang will want to know about this," Renny  suggested. 

Renny was referring to the other four members of Doc's little  group. These gentlemen were playing a game of

chess in another  drawingroom. 

"A good idea," Doc agreed. "We'll tell them." Doc and Renny went to  a drawingroom door. Doc's hand,

drifting toward the knob, came to a  rigid stop. 

"Look!" He pointed at the door. 


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The panel bore a weirdly shaped smudge. Faintly imprinted,  discernible only after a close glance, the thing

was more than a foot  high, and about half as wide. 

Renny stepped around so that he got a better view with the light on  it 

"Holy cowl" he gasped. "The thing is shaped like a wolf head, Doc   a wolf with hideous, humanlike

features!" 

Doc nodded slowly. His bronze lineaments, his strange golden eyes,  had not changed expression. 

"Werewolf," he said. 

"What?" Renny was puzzled. "There ain't no such critter. It's just  a legend of these Canadian trappers and

natives." 

"A legend of human beings who, thirsting for the blood of their  fellow men, turn into wolves that they may

satisfy their vampire lust,"  .Doc said quietly. "Most unsavory creatures, even for ghost stories." 

Renny hesitated, then stroked a finger through the design on the  door. His enormous digit left a clean path in

its wake. 

"Just dust!" he muttered. "But it's strange it'd settle there in  that kind of a shape." 

Doc tried the door. It resisted, He showed no surprise. "Locked,"  he said. 

"Blazes! Something's wrong!" Without hesitating, Renny blocked one  huge hand into a fist. He swung it. 

The door panel was of metal, but it gave as if it were a kicked tin  can. With a loud crack' the lock broke. The

panel jumped open. 

Doc and Renny shouldered in. 

Four men lay sprawled about a table. Their positions were  grotesque; they lay exactly as they had fallen from

their chairs. 

The men were Doc Savage's four aides. 

"They're dead!" Renny walled. 

At that instant, a small depot flashed by the speeding train. It  was the station at which Wilkie planned to drop

Doc Savage's telegram. 

Wilkie got rid of the message successfully, and before the train  was out of sight, he saw the station

telegrapher, carrying the missive,  enter his office. 

Chapter 3. WARNING OF THE WEREWOLF

THE window of the drawingroom in which the four rigid forms lay,  was closed tightly. Lunging to it, Doc

wrenched Up' the sliding sash.  The noise of the train wheels came in through the window like the  moaning of

a mechanical monster. 


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Bigfisted Renny, after his one wailing cry that the four men were  dead, went into action. He sank beside one

of the prone forms. 

The individual over whom Renny stooped was a startling figure. He  hardly exceeded five feet in height, yet

outweighed Renny's own  tremendous bulk fully ten pounds. Nearly as wide as he was tall, he had  arms inches

longer than his legs. His face was incredibly homely. The  fellow who would pass as first cousin to a gorilla. 

This was "Monk." As Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, his  accomplishments in the field of

experimental chemistry were known to  both hemispheres. 

"Holy cow!" Renny yelled. "They're not dead!" 

Doc Savage replied nothing. He made a round of the drawingroom,  sensitive nostrils testing the air. His

weird, flakepool golden eyes  roved about. 

He examined the doorlock, the key. The latter was in place from the  inside. Obviously, the drawingroom

had been locked from the interior. 

Doc picked up the nearest of his four inert friends. This man was  extremely tall, and as thin as a skeleton. His

coat draped on his  shoulders as on a coat hanger. Spectacles were still in place on his  nose. These were

peculiar, in that the left lens was extraordinarily  thick. 

This man was "Johnny"  William Harper Littlejohn. The proudest  possession of a famous Eastern museum

was an archaeological exhibit of  the ancient Mayan civilization which Johnny had contributed. Mining

engineers consulted textbooks which he had written on geology. 

Johnny had lost use of his left eye in the War. Needing a  magnifying glass in his business, he carried one in

the left side of  his spectacles for convenience. 

Doc Savage hurried into the corridor. Within a few minutes he was  back, carrying a medical case. 

He began administering restoratives. 

"Pulse very slow in all four of them," he announced to Renny.  "Respiration only perceptible when you hold a

mirror in front of their  lips. They're about all in." 

"Ain't a mark on 'em!" Renny rumbled. 

"So I notice," Doc agreed. 

"But what happened to them?" 

"Something very mysterious," Doc said grimly. "Let's snap them out  of it and see if they can shed light on

what has occurred." 

STRANGELY enough, it was the most unhealthylooklng fellow in the  group who was first to revive. To all

appearances, this man was easily  the weakling of the crowd. He was undersized, slender, only fairly set  up,

with a none too healthy complexion. He had pale hair and pale eyes.  He looked as if he might have lived most

of his life in a dark and  mouldy cellar. 


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This was "Long Tom" Roberts. Long Tom  he was occasionally known  as Major Thomas J. Roberts  was

an electrical expert. "A wizard of the  juice!"  men of his own profession declared. 

Long Tom frowned blankly at the table, on which a chessboard stood.  Then be peered at his three motionless

fellows. 

"What kind of a game are those guys playing?" he demanded weakly. 

"Game, bell!" Renny boomed. "Listen, Long Tom, we busted in here  and found you four birds all spread out.

What happened?" 

Long Tom considered. "I don't know." 

"You don't  " Renny waved his huge hand. "Come on! Snap out of  it!" 

"We went to sleep," Long Tom groaned. "We just felt drowsy all of a  sudden, then went to sleep." 

"You have no idea what caused it?" Doc questioned. 

"Nope." 

Doc continued his resuscitation efforts on the other men. "Ham" was  the second individual to awaken. Ham

was famed for two things: he was  one of the cleverest lawyers Harvard had ever turned out, and he was a

snappy dresser. Tailors often followed Brigadier General Theodore  Marley Brooks down the street, to see

clothes being worn as they should  be worn. He was a slender man, quick moving, and a fast thinker. 

It chanced that, as Ham's eyes opened, the first figure he saw was  homely, gorillalike Monk. 

"I can't be in heaven!" he grinned feebly. 

Renny snorted. Ham was always making some wisecrack at Monk's  expense. To listen to the sharptongued

lawyer, one would think nothing  would have given him more delight than to see Monk burned at the stake. 

This peeve of Ham's dated back to the Great War  to an event which  had earned him his nickname. Thinking

to have fun, Ham had taught Monk  some French words which were highly insulting, telling him they were

the proper expressions with which to flatter a Frenchman. Monk had  addressed the words to a French general,

and landed in the guardhouse. 

But very shortly after Monk's release, Ham was hailed up on a  charge of stealing hams. He was convicted;

somebody had planted the  evidence. Ham was mortally certain Monk had framed him. But to this  day, be had

not been able to prove it. 

"What happened to you guys?" Renny asked. 

Ham acquired a bewildered expression. He moved about weakly until  his hands found a black cane. This cane

appeared innocentlooking.  Actually, housed in its slender length, was a razorsharp sword. The  tip of this

blade was daubed with a chemical, a touch of which, in a  wound, would produce instant unconsciousness.

Ham was rarely seen  without his sword cane. 

"He don't know what happened to him!" Renny boomed, interpreting  Ham's befuddled expression. 


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Johnny, the archaeologist and geologist, and the homely Monk now  opened their eyes. Johnny promptly felt

for his glasses which had the  magnifying lens, just as Ham had groped for his sword cane. 

Both men admitted they had not the slightest idea of what had  happened While playing chess, they had

simply gone to sleep. 

Monk had a small, childlike voice that was surprisingly mild for  one of his apish build. 

"Well, what about the head of the werewolf on the door outside?"  Doc asked them. 

FUZZLED wonderment stamped the faces of the four men. Doc knew they  had no knowledge of the weird

design on the door. 

"A werewolf!" Monk muttered. 

"I just called it that," Doc told him. "It is the head of a wolf,  with a grotesquely human face." 

Bracing himself on his sword cane, Ham sought to sit erect. He gave  it up and fell back dizzily. 

"Golly, I feel washed up!" he groaned. 

"Ain't that too bad!" Monk jeered faintly. 

Ham ignored the insult. "I can't imagine what is behind it, Doc. We  were just sitting here  " 

His eyes protruded. His hands grasped his sword cane wrathfully. 

Under the bed, an unearthly squealing and grunting suddenly arose. 

"Habeas Corpus!" Monk yelled weakly, but joyfully. 

A pig staggered from under the bed. The porker family probably  never produced a more grotesque specimen

than this one. The pig had  legs as long as those of a dog, and ears that rivaled airplane wings. 

"Owww!" Ham groaned. 

Habeas Corpus was the present great misery of Ham's existence. Monk  had bought the pig on a recent

expedition to Arabia, paying the  equivalent of four cents in American money as purchase price for him. 

Monk's story was that Habeas Corpus's former owner, an Arab, had  sold the pig because he had been making

a nuisance of himself by  catching hyenas and dragging their carcasses up to the house. It was  possible that

either Monk or the Arab had exaggerated. 

The homely Monk was greatly attached to Habeas Corpus, probably  because the presence of the pig enraged

Ham. 

"The door was locked on the inside, and you had the windows  closed?" Doc inquired. 

"That's right," Ham replied. 


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"The pig seemed to have been laid out, the same as you fellows,"  Doc said dryly. "It's all very mystifying.

This isn't the first queer  thing that's happened, either." 

Ham blinked. "What do you mean?" 

Doc told them about the telegram incident 

"Do you think the fake telegram and what happened to us has a  connection?" Ham demanded. 

"Can't say," Doc replied. 

Doc went to a hand bag and opened it. The piece of baggage held  several weapons which resembled

overgrown automatic pistols. They were  fitted with curled magazines. 

These were machine guns of Doc's own invention. The weapons were  tiny, compared to the destruction they

could wreak. They fired so  rapidly that their roar was like the note of a gigantic bullfiddle.  Magazines were

charged with what biggame hunters call "mercy bullets"   slugs which produce unconsciousness instead of

death. 

Doc distributed the rapidfirers to the four weakened victims of  the mystery attack. 

"Keep a sharp lookout!" be warned. 

Renny demanded: "What are you gonna do, Doc?" 

"You and I are going 'to talk to the three persons who were  eavesdropping when I gave the conductor the

telegram," Doc told him. 

Trailed by Renny, Doc glided out into the corridor. 

THE two men had not progressed far when they encountered Wilkie. 

"I'd like to get some information about two darkcomplexioned men  on the train," Doc told the conductor. 

Wilkie scratched his large head. "There are a number of dark men  aboard, I notice." 

At this, Renny shot a sharp glance at Doc. The bronze man's  features told nothing. 

"The two I am interested in were in the company of a very pretty  girl," Doc explained. 

"Oh, them!" grinned Wilkie. "They got on at the division point  where I went on duty. That was two stops

back." 

"Know their names?" 

"No. Passengers don't usually give a conductor their names." 

"Have you noticed anything queer about their actions?" Doc  persisted. 

Wilkie scratched his large head again. "Nothing, except that they  seem to be moving around a lot." 


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"These swarthy men  did they get on at the same time?" 

Wilkie nodded. "Yes. At the division point." 

Doc and Renny left the goblinlike little conductor. "This thing is  beginning to shape up like a mess of

firstclass trouble," Renny said  thoughtfully. 

Doc said nothing. He sought and found a porter. The porter directed  him to a drawingroom which had been

reserved by the three individuals  whom Doc wished to see. 

Doc found the door and knocked. Silence answered. He rippled his  knuckles on the panel again. Then he tried

the knob. The door was  locked. 

Doc called the porter. "You're sure they're in here?" 

"Yas, suh," said the porter. "Dey went in about five minutes ago.  Two of 'em did, anyhow  at pretty gal and

her pap! Don't know if dat  man with de gal face is in dere or not." 

Renny held up a huge fist and gave Doc an inquiring look. 

"I guess we'll go in," Doc told him. 

Renny drew back to slam his fist against the panel. Then he  lurched. The train had slackened speed abruptly.

Renny had to grasp the  doorknob to maintain his balance. 

"Guess we're pulling into a station," he rumbled. Bang! went his  big fist against the door. The sheet metal

bulged, but held. Renny  swung again terrifically. It seemed a miracle that his fist was not  smashed to a pulp. 

The train had slowed rapidly; it was now crawling. Renny's next  punch exploded the door open. He plunged

across the threshold, then  brought up quickly, his jaw asag. 

"Holy cow!" he gulped. 

Senor Corto Oveja and his attractive daughter were draped across  the drawingroom bed. They lay perfectly

still. Black leather straps  were drawn so tightly around their necks as to be almost buried in the  flesh! 

Chapter 4. DEAD MAN

"THE window!" ejaculated rockfisted Renny. "It's open!" 

"Take a look!" Doc rapped. "Whoever did this may have jumped out as  the train slowed down." 

Doc was already bending over the two forms on the bed. The  garroting straps were strong, yet they broke

under Doc's sinewy fingers  like cardboard strips. 

The girl's wrist in one hand, the man's in the other, Doc explored  for pulse. 

Both were still alive; pulse was strong, respiration firm. 

"This didn't happen more than a few moments ago," Doc told Renny.  "The wouldbe killers must have


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escaped through the window." 

Renny, his head thrust outside, boomed: "I don't see anybody!" 

"They had time to duck." 

"Yeah," Renny agreed. He lifted his gaze skyward. "Holy cow! That  thing is almost an omen!" 

"What is?" 

"An airplane flying overhead!" Renny rumbled. "The thing is black   looks kinda like a buzzard." 

Doc stepped to the window and studied the plane. His sharp eye  noted something Renny had missed. 

"That plane has no identification numeral!" he said sharply. Renny  made a silent whistle. "In view of what's

happening on this train,  that's more than passing strange, eh? P!olice on lawful business  usually have

identification numbers." 

Like a somber vulture, the black monoplane dipped off to the  westward, and was soon lost to sight. 

Doc twisted a faucet at the washbowl, caught cold water in a palm,  carried it over and dashed it on the faces

of Senor Corto Oveja and his  daughter. He waited expectantly, but they did not stir. 

"They should be coming out of it!" Doc said in a vaguely puzzled  tone. 

He tested pulse and respiration. Then, for the briefest moment, the  bronze man's weird trilling note was

audible. It trailed softly up and  down the musical scale, and abruptly was gone. 

Turning to Renny, Doc said: "It looks as if, in addition to being  choked, they got a dose of the same thing our

four friends got  that  weird unconsciousness." 

Renny was staring fixedly at the door. There was an expression of  bewilderment on his long, puritanical face. 

"Yeah," he mumbled. "Look, Doc!" 

His huge hand indicated the inner side of the door panel which he  had damaged. 

The sheet metal bore an eerie smudge. It had the likeness of a wolf  head  a wolf with horribly human

features. 

"I saw it earlier," Doc explained. 

"You did!" Renny gulped. He had not seen Doc show any surprise,  whenever it was that he had made the

discovery. 

"That same mark was on the other door," Doc Savage said. He stepped  close to the hideous smear. His eyes

measured it "It's exactly the same  size' too." 

Renny nodded. He could not tell, himself, that this mark was the  same size as the other. He knew Doc Savage

could judge the relative  sizes within fractions of an inch. 


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"Two men have been accompanying this girl about," Renny rumbled. "I  wonder where the other one is." 

With a rather unpleasant jerk, the train got into motion. 

"We'll revive this man and the girl," Doc declared. "Then we'll  hunt the other one." 

"Yeah!" Renny boomed. "We'll get that gink!" 

Outside in the passage, a man yelled shrilly. "Help! Help! They're  going to kill me!" 

RENNY and Doc bounded to the door. They expected to see a murder  scene  or at least a fight. They got a

shock. 

The swarthy, girlfaced man stood in the corridor. He leveled an  arm at Doc and Renny. 

"You heard them!" he bellowed. "They said they would gel me. Sabe!  That means they plan to kill me!" 

Wilkie, the conductor, stood just behind the girlfaced man. Wilkie  looked flabbergasted. 

"Now, now, mister," Wilkie said soothingly. "There's some mistake  here." 

"It is no mistake!" wailed the dark man. "Look quickly! They must  have killed my friends, Senor and

Senorita Oveja!" 

Wilkie advanced. He mumbled apologetically to Doc: "1 sure don't  know what this is all about." 

The swarthy man yelled: "I know what it's all about, senor! This  bronze man is trying to kill my friends and

myself." 

He came to the door and looked in. "Eo es terrible! It is terrible!  What did I tell you? They are murderers!" 

Renny made big square blocks of his fists. "You'd better dry up,  girlface!" 

At this point, Senor Corto Oveja and his daughter showed signs of  reviving. Doc splashed more water on

them. They stirred about, and  finally opened their eyes. 

Senor Oveja pointed weakly at Doc. 

"Seize that caballero!" he cried feebly. "It was he who attacked  us." 

Renny was perfectly familiar with Doc's ability to control his  emotions. Yet, watching the bronze man now,

he had to marvel; Doc  showed by not the remotest sign that anything out of the ordinary had  occurred. 

"You," Doc said, "are mistaken!" 

"It is true!" Senor Oveja shrieked weakly. 

"Si, si!" echoed his pretty daughter. "This man Savage is the one  who assaulted us. We became strangely

drowsy as we sat here in our  room. Before complete unconsciousness overcame us, men entered and  began

tying straps around our necks. One of them addressed the other as  Senor Savage." 


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"Did he say Senor Savage?" Doc asked pointedly. 

The girl shut her eyes. Apparently she was thinking. "Yes. He used  the word 'senor."' 

Doc glanced at Renny. 

The bigfisted engineer was staring at the leather straps which had  been around the necks of Senor Oveja and

the girl, choking them to  death. From the expression on his somber face, he might have been  looking at a pair

of poisonous serpents. 

"I thought you'd notice those straps," Doc told him quietly.  "They're carryingstraps from a piece of my

luggage." 

The man with the womanish face bellowed triumphantly. "Bueno! This  proves it beyond a shadow of a doubt

Savage tried to do murder!  Conductor, arrest him!" 

Wilkie shifted from one foot to the other. Little bubbles of  perspiration stood on his large forehead. He made

a bewildered gesture. 

"What is your name?" he asked the girlfaced man. 

"El Rabanos," the fellow replied. 

"What is the motive?" Wilkie demanded. "Why should Doc Savage try  to kill you?" 

El Rabanos hesitated. A strange expression flickered about his  eyes. 

"I don't know," he said finally. 

Wilkie scowled. "Did you think previously that you were in danger  from Doc Savage?" 

"Yes," El Rabanos admitted reluctantly. 

"For what reason?" Wilkie cracked back. 

El Rabanos said angrily: "You arrest this man! Turn him over to the  Mounted Police. I'll give them my full

story." 

Wilkie eyed Doc. "I don't want to arrest you, Mr. Savage, but I may  have to. Something strange and horrible

is going on around here. I  wouldn't be surprised if the death of that poor telegraph operator  hasn't got

something to do with it." 

"What telegraph operator?" Doc queried sharply. 

"The fellow who copied the message that I gave you," Wilkie  explained. 

ONCE more Doc Savage received surprising information without an  appreciable show of emotion. Doc was

not callous. He simply had his  nerves under such control that they behaved as he wished. 

"Was the telegrapher murdered?" he queried. 


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"Not according to a report I got at our last stop," Wilkie replied.  "A section worker found the body. He

claimed it looked like suicide.  But I knew that operator. He wasn't the kind to take his own life." 

Doc's hand described a gesture which took in Senor Oveja, his  daughter, and El Rabanos. 

"I should like very much to hear these three explain why they fear  me," he said. 

All Doc received was a hateful stare from each of the trio. The  girl's look was the least malicious. In fact, her

expression portrayed  rather plainly that she regretted that this handsome bronze man was an  enemy. 

"It don't seem like they're gonna talk," Wilkie muttered. Doc  Savage swung over to the door. He closed it so

that the rear of the  panel was visible, and indicated the smear which resembled a grisly,  humanfaced wolf. 

"Maybe you can explain this!" His powerful voice crashed. The  girl's eyes flew wide as she saw the smudge.

she screamed with a sort  of exhausted horror. Then she clamped palms over her eyes. 

Senor Oveja and El Rabanos reacted almost as sharply. Their eyes  protruded; their jaws fell. 

"The werewolf!" choked Senor Oveja. 

"What does it mean?" Doc questioned. 

Pretty Senorita Oveja laughed hysterically. "Why should you be  asking w? You know very well what it

means!" 

"You three are under some misapprehension," Doc told them. "This is  all a mystery to me." 

"Que!" El Rabanos ejaculated sarcastically. "What! Did not your  uncle Alex Savage take you into his

confidence?" 

"So Alex Savage is mixed up in this," Doc said dryly. "Mixed is a  very mild word for it, Senor Savage," El

Rabanos sneered. 

Ignoring the girlfaced man, Doc Savage turned to Wilkie. 

"One of the gang who assaulted Senor Oveja and his  daughter called  the other by the name of Senor Savage.

Obviously they were trying to  frame me. But use of the Spanish word 'senor' was a slip. I believe you  said

there were other swarthyskinned men on this train." 

"Right!" exclaimed Wilkie. "I'm going to check up on them right  now." 

The goblinlike little conductor hurried off. 

DOC paid a visit to his four friends who had been victims of the  weird sleep. There was no danger of any one

escaping from the speeding  train. 

When he entered the drawingroom, Monk and Ham were scowling  blackly at each other. This was a good

sign. It indicated Monk and Ham  were back to their normal quarreling state. 

Johnny and Long Tom also seemed fairly chipper. "The effects of the  stuff wear off quickly," said gaunt

Johnny, polishing his spectacles  which had the magnifying left lens. "What's new, Doc?" 


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"We're in the thick of a mess," Doc announced. Instead of looking  gloomy or apprehensive at this, all four

men grinned. They were a  strange bunch. Peril and excitement were the things for which they  lived. 

Speaking rapidly, Doc told them what had happened when he went to  investigate Senor Oveja, the daughter,

and El Rabanos. 

"They seem to think I'm some kind of a bogy man, he finished. 

"Do they really think that, or are they pretending?" questioned  apish Monk, scratching the airplanewing ears

of his pig, Habeas  Corpus. 

"I'm not sure yet," Doc replied. 

The train whistle moaned. Its sound was a banshee wail over the  noisy progress of the coaches. 

Doc glanced through the window. It was only a road crossing for  which the train had whistled. 

A porter ran past the drawingroom door, crying in a  horrorstricken voice: "Lawsy mel Lawsy mel" 

Doc collared him. "What is it?" he demanded of the porter. 

"It am de conductor, Mistah Wilkie," the colored man moaned. 

"What about him?" 

"He done been stuck!" 

"Show me where he is!" Doc commanded. 

Wilkie lay in the washroom of a Pullman car  lay in a wet lake of  crimson which had leaked from his own

body. He had been knifed numerous  times in the chest. 

Doc Savage was skilled in many things  but in surgery and medicine  above all others. A glance convinced

him that Wilkie was dead. 

"Anybody see anything?" Doc asked the porter. 

"No sah!" said the porter. "Not that Ah knows of." 

Doc Savage stood like an image graven in the metal he resembled. 

On the washroom door, he had discovered another of the hideous  smears  a humanfaced wolf. The mark of

death! 

Standing there, the bronze man was so quiet as to seem without  life. An unseen monster of horror and death

was slowly wreathing its  tentacles about him. Why, he did not know. But it must be something  that

concerned his uncle, Alex Savage, or his uncle's daughter,  Patricia. 

Absently, Doc's golden eyes roved to the north and west. In that  direction lay the estate of Alex Savage. And

there, it was possible,  lay also the explanation of the mystery. 


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Chapter 5. THE WEREWOLF CRIES

DOC Savage was a man of profound accomplishments. But he was no  clairvoyant with a gift of transporting

his vision. So he was unaware  that mystery and horror also stalked the domain of Alex Savage. 

There, too, the werewolf was spreading its uncanny violence. 

The estate of Alex Savage was no mere backwoods homestead. It was  true that forty years ago Alex Savage

had homesteaded it. But now it  had grown, until the estate spanned up and down the coast for miles,  and

reached no little distance inland. 

Scattered over other parts of Canada, Alex Savage had wheat  ranches, mines, and an industrial plant or two.

He was considered a  business success. 

The estate at the edge of the sea was in the nature of a hunting  preserve. Within its bounds was some of the

roughest land in Canada.  The shore was a ragged stone wall which shot up out of the water. The  coast was

fanged with reefs and tiny islands. 

The estate itself was a collection of pinnacle and canyons,  boulders and brush. Alex Savage boasted freely

that there were parts of  his estate upon which he had never set eyes. Moreover, he claimed there  were spots

which no one had ever explored. This was possible, since  there were places to which none could climb. 

In this labyrinth of stone and brush, Alex Savage had erected a log  cabin. In it, he spent part of each summer,

and all of the hunting  seasons. The cabin had several rooms. It was filled with electric  lights, electric

refrigeration, radio, and even airconditioning  apparatus, although there was seldom need for the latter. The

rugs were  rich. Any one who sat in one of the luxurious chairs was in danger of  sinking from sight. The place

was no backwoodsman's hut. 

From the wide veranda of the cabin, an excellent view could be had  of the sea. Monster boulders and tall

trees towered around the place;  thick underbrush made these surroundings almost a jungle. Twilight came  to

the brush almost an hour before the sun actually set 

The birds usually made a good deal of noise settling for the night. 

It was twilight now, but the birds were making no noise. The  feathered songsters had been chilled into silence

by an eerie sound. 

This noise pealed out erratically. At times, there was five minutes  of dead silence. Then weird, unearthly cries

would shiver out, a  babbling volley of them. They had a human quality, those cries. They  were tremulous

with an incoherent horror. 

The bird life could not have been more silent had death been  astalk. 

The latest outburst of the banshee cries was somewhat more human  than before. They sounded very like

some one in frightful agony. 

Inside the Alex Savage cabin, a feminine voice called sharply:  "Boat Face! Haven't you got that rifle fixed

yet?" 

There was no answer. 


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"Boat Face!" the girl called again angrily. 

There was a moment of silence. Then a squaw shuffled out of the  kitchen region. She was very fat, very

brown, and wore enough clothes  to garb several of her whiteskinned sisters. She looked as competent as  the

Rock of Gibraltar. 

"Boat Face, him in kitchen, Miss Patricia," she said calmly. "Him  scared out of skin." 

"Boat Face won't go out and investigate those cries?" the girl  asked. 

"Him heap big coward," said the squaw. 

The girl stepped back from a window. She had a wealth of bronze  hair  hair very closely akin in hue to that

of Doc Savage. She had  been watching the brush that circled like a wall. 

She was tall; her form was molded along lines that left nothing to  be desired. Her. features were as perfect as

though a magazinecover  artist had designed them. 

She wore highlaced boots, breeches, and a serviceable gray shirt. 

A cartridge belt was draped about her waist. From it dangled a  heavy Frontier Single Action sixshooter 

freely admitted by those who  know to be one of the most reliable guns ever made. In the crook of her  right

arm lay a very modern automatic biggame rifle. 

"I'll talk to him, Tiny," said the girl. 

"0. K., Miss Patricia," said Tiny. "It do no good. That damn  halfbreed husband of mine plenty afraid." 

Tiny was the cook. Boat Face was manofallwork around the place.  These two were the only servants. 

Patricia's heels tapped angrily into the kitchen. 

Boat Face was a squarish, coppercolored man, who sat in a corner,  holding a rifle. His squaw, Tiny, had

called him a breed, but he looked  pure Indian. Just what had given him the name of Boat Face was a  mystery

only an Indian could fathom. His beady black eyes refused  sullenly to meet Patricia's gaze. 

Patricia started to speak  then held back her words. 

The eerie, banshee cries once more babbled from the gloomy brush  outside the cabin. They were

unmistakably human now, appealing for  succor. 

Boat Face's inkblack eyes wavered. He took a. firmer grasp on a  rifle which lay across his knees. 

"I no go out," he muttered. "Rifle broke." 

Patricia Savage suddenly seized Boat Face's rifle. She examined the  mechanism, threw it to her shoulder, and

snapped  it. 

"You're lying!" she cried. "There's nothing wrong with this gun!" 

"He heap big piker," grunted Tiny. 


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Boat Face's eyes rolled nervously. 

"That noise  him werewolf," he mumbled. 

"Nonsense!" Patricia said sharply. "There is no such animal!" 

Boat Face did not seem convinced. "Your pa  if him alive, him no  ask me go and see what make that noise." 

The words seemed to wash Patricia's rage away. She paled visibly.  Even the fingers which held the rifle

tensed to whiteness. 

"These sounds have something to do with the murder of my father!"  she said shrilly 

"Me no go outdoors," Boat Face mumbled. "You tie can on me, if you  like. Me no go, anyway." 

"I won't discharge you," Patricia told him in a weary voice. "after  all, I won't ask you to do anything I

wouldn't do myself. You can stay  here. I'll go out and investigate." 

Tiny waddled over to a corner. She came back with a doublebarrel  shotgun and said stoically: "Me go, too!" 

"Thanks, Tiny," Patricia said gratefully. "But you and Boat Face  stay here on guard." 

Tiny nodded reluctantly. Boat Face looked much relieved. 

PATRICIA moved into the cabin's large living room, and drew the  shades carefully. Then she indicated one

of the uprights which formed a  rustic support for the ceiling. This was a log over a foot thick, still  covered

with natural bark, 

"Guard that, especially," she said meaningly. 

Tiny and Boat Face showed no surprise  they seemed to comprehend  fully what she meant. 

Patricia pocketed several extra ammunition clips for her automatic  rifle. Then she opened the door and

stepped swiftly outside. 

Tiny watched her go with evident concern. Boat Face's aboriginal  features were inscrutable. 

Sunlight still penetrated to the clearing Immediately adjacent to  the cabin. Gloom lurked in the tangle of

rocks and brush beyond.  Walking away from the cabin was like leaving a lantern and going into  the night. 

Patricia walked warily, rifle alert. She kept fingers on safety and  trigger. Her ears strained to catch the next

outburst of the unearthly  cries. 

Off to her right, the noise arose. It was low, sinister; a horrible  bleating. It persisted only a moment, then

whimpered itself into  nothingness. 

Patricia shivered. She tripped the rifle safety. This time the cry  had not sounded so human. Indeed, it seemed

to have taken on a  repulsive, animallike quality. 

The sound had come from inland. From, perhaps, a hundred yards away   maybe more! The girl could not

tell. 


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She went toward the noise, her pretty face so set it was almost a  mask. When she was near the spot from

which the sound had seemed to  come, she searched for tracks. The terrain was not the sort to show a  trail; it

was too rocky. 

Patricia heard the cries again. They now wailed from a little  farther on. She advanced  again she found

nothing. 

A bit later, the sounds came once more. They had moved on ahead.  Patricia shuddered. It seemed the eerie

crying thing was trying to  decoy her away. 

Patricia suddenly gave it up as a bad job. She went back toward the  cabin, steps hurried, eyes roving uneasily. 

She was baffled, and more than a little terrified, and drew a sigh  of relief when the cabin came in sight. 

"Tiny! Boat Face!" she called. "It's me!" 

She did not want the sullen Boat Face or the competent Tiny taking  a shot at her by mistake. 

Patricia reached the cabin and shoved the door open. She went in   and jerked to a stop. Her pretty features

became blankly startled. 

The cabin interior looked as if the proverbial cyclone had hit it. 

Patricia's eyes wandered. Then she saw something which caused her  to cry out shrilly in horror. 

Tiny and Boat Face were brown, unmoving forms on the floor! 

STUFFING was ripped from rich chairs. Rugs had been plucked up and  flung aside. Drawers had been

emptied on the floor. Everywhere signs  showed the cabin had been searched wildly. 

Patricia ran to the voluminous, copperhued Tiny, and felt  anxiously for pulse. 

"They're dead!" she wailed miserably. 

Within a moment, however, she realized this was a mistake. There  was a heartbeat  very faint. 

Getting ice cubes from the electric refrigerator, Patricia Savage  rubbed them over the faces of Boat Face and

Tiny. 

Pulse strengthened slowly under the copper skins. Confident both  servants would recover, Patricia ran

through the cabin. Everywhere,  there was wild upheaval and destruction. From attic down, the search  had

missed little. The covered motor of the electric refrigerator was  even torn open. 

There was no trace of the men  certainly it seemed the work of  more than one  who had ransacked the

place. They must have come in  through the rear door, or an unlocked window. 

Something like twenty minutes elapsed before Tiny and Boat Face  were revived enough to speak coherently. 

"What on earth occurred?" Patricia demanded. 

The two servants exchanged blank looks. 


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"Dunno," Boat Face mumbled. "Me and squaw just go to sleep." 

Patricia snapped: "That's ridiculous!" 

"Boat Face tell truth," said the ample Tiny, with a roll of jet  eyes. "We get heap much sleepy and fall over." 

Patricia stared fixedly at the floor near where the two servants  had been lying. She had discovered something

she had not observed  before. The sight of the thing had a striking effect. She stood erect,  tense, gripping her

rifle. 

It was a weird, blackish smudge  more than a foot high and half as  wide. The thing had the contour of a

wolf's head. The features were  grotesquely human. 

"It's the werewolf's head again!" Patricia said shrilly. "It's the  same mark which we began seeing shortly

before my father's death  and  which we have seen since!" 

Boat Face mumbled. "Werewolf! Indian know them. They devilman with  body of wolf. They prowl in

woods and eat plenty hunter and trapper." 

"Campfire ghost tales!" Patricia snapped. "There are no such  creatures! This particular werewolf is very

human, Boat Face. You and  Tiny both know what he is after." 

Patricia went to the large barkcovered timber which supported the  livingroom ceiling. It was this timber

which she had asked Tiny and  Boat Face to guard. 

It had not been disturbed, although the search had missed little  else. 

Patricia pressed certain projections on the bark. A concealed door  flew open. She withdrew from within what

looked like a solid block of  ivory. The white cube was perhaps two inches square. 

"They're after this," Patricia said grimly. 

Chapter 6. SQUARE WHITE DEATH

FOR once, Tiny's aboriginal face lost its stoic indifference. She  stared at the ivory cube as if it were a charm

which guaranteed the  coming of evil events. 

"Him bad medicine," she muttered, indicating the snowwhite block. 

"I cannot understand what significance it has." Patricia turned the  cube slowly in her slender fingers. "It

seems solid  there is no  hollow sound when it is tapped." 

'You know where your dad get him?" Tiny asked. 

"Father found it under a ledge about two miles from here, years  ago," Patricia replied. "It lay amid a cluster of

human skeletons. The  skeletons looked as if they had been there for centuries. No one knew  anything about

them." 

"Sure!" said Tiny. "That how he find it. That alone enough make it  bring bad luck." 


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Patricia eyed the white cube thoughtfully. 

"Dad never dreamed the thing was of any value," she said. "Three  weeks ago, he found a prowler searching

this cabin. The fellow escaped.  A little later, dad received a mysterious demand for the cube. He  refused to

turn it over." 

"Better if him give it up," muttered Boat Face. 

Patricia nodded miserably. "Maybe. We began finding those  mysterious werewolf marks around the place.

We got other demands for  the cube. Then we found dad dead. The doctors called it heart failure." 

"They make blood bubble," said Tiny. She nodded elaborately. 'Your  pa' him murdered." 

"I think so, too, Tiny," Patricia said jerkily. 

"You bet!" The squaw nodded again. "Him die from same thing that  almost get me and Boat Face a minute

ago." 

'You mean the thing that made you unconscious?" 

Again Tiny nodded. "You bet." 

"But what was it?" Patricia pondered. 

"We go to sleep," said Tiny, as if that explained everything. Nor  did Patricia come any nearer a solution of

the mystery, although she  asked many questions, and finally went outside and searched the  immediate

neighborhood. 

The rocky earth bore no footprints. That meant nothing, however.  The marauders could easily have avoided

leaving tracks. 

The weird banshee crying had not come from the gloomy brush since  Patricia had returned to the cabin. The

blush of dusk still spread over  the sea. 

Unexpectedly, a long, doleful sound moaned out, causing echoes to  bang against the cliffs. The noise was

greatly different from the  earliest banshee cries, yet Patricia started violently. 

The sound repeated itself a moment later. She knew, then, what it  was. 

"The trader's launch!" she exclaimed. "They're letting us know that  they have some mail." 

SO rugged was this region in which the Savage cabin lay, that no  automobile could penetrate. A stout wagon

could get through, but only  with difficulty. To come and go, either a speed boat or a seaplane was  the most

feasible conveyance. A rustic boathouse on the beach held a  fast launch. 

Mail was delivered to the Savage hunting lodge in an ingenious  fashion. A trader who lived up the coast

made regular daily trips to  the settlement. His route was past the Savage place. 

A few hundred feet from shore, there was a floating buoy box. In  this' the trader was accustomed to leave the

Savage mail. 


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The estate had no other communication with the outside world.  During his sojourns there, Alex Savage had

always made it a point not  to be disturbed. The place was his refuge from business worries. 

Patricia secured binoculars, and focused them on the trader's boat.  There was light enough for her to make it

out distinctly. 

She saw the trader place at least one piece of mail in the box.  Then his boat went on. 

"Get the launch!" Patricia commanded Boat Face. "1'm going to keep  my eyes on the mail box until we get

out to  it. That's another  mysterious thing that has happened. Our mail has been disappearing!" 

Boat Face was slow about complying with the order; he seemed  reluctant to leave the cabin. Only when Tiny

shouted angrily, "You big  bum! You do what Miss Pat say!" did he shuffle off toward the boat. 

It was fully five minutes before the breed got the launch out of  the boathouse and alongside the little wharf in

front of the cabin. 

During this time, Patricia had not removed her binoculars from the  inspection of the buoy . 

"I'm betting nobody got that mail this time!" she declared. She  kept her glasses fixed on the box as Boat Face

guided the launch out.  At no time had she seen anything suspicious. 

The floating mail box was an ordinary buoy with a container  countersunk in the top. It turned and bobbed

with the waves, being  anchored by a light chain to a heavy concrete weight. 

Capturing the box with the aid of a boat hook, Patricia opened it. 

The container was empty! 

"But this is impossible!" Patricia exclaimed incredulously. "I saw  mail put in it. I've watched it since. Every

instant!" 

"Werewolf!" mumbled Boat Face, and shrugged beefy shoulders. 

Patricia examined the buoy box. The mail container had no lock,  since thieves were scarce in this region.

However, a wave could not  possibly have tossed the mail out 

Patricia had Boat Face run the launch in a big circle. She could  not find a thing to shed light on the mystery. 

Her face was somewhat white as the launch swerved shoreward. 

"I CAN'T understand it," Patricia said grimly. 

"Werewolf!" muttered Boat Face. "Him heap bad customer." The girl  ignored the redskin's prognostications.

She leveled her binoculars  inquiringly at the shore line. The cliffs were cracked here and there  by canyons,

scratched by watercourses. Huge boulders were piled at the  foot of the cliffs. Some of these were fully as

large as city apartment  houses. 

"I don't see a thing," she said. 

"Werewolf, him can disappear," said Boat Face. 


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"You say 'werewolf' to me again, and I'm going to have Tiny work  out on you!" snapped Patricia. 

Boat Face subsided uneasily. Boat Face was something rare in the  brotherhood of red men  a henpecked

husband.  Most bucks make their  squaws walk a chalk line, but not Boat Face. On occasion, the lethargic  Tiny

would shed her stoical air long enough to give Boat Face what  metropolitan cops call a "good shellacking."

The implement which Tiny  used was the same as that employed by her paleface sisters, a rolling  pin. 

"Did you ever hear of Doc Savage?" Patricia asked suddenly. 

"Me no hear of him," said Boat Face, flinching as if he had felt  his squaw's rolling pin. 

"He's a cousin of mine," said Patricia. "He lives in the United  States. I understand he does remarkable

things." 

"What kind of things?" asked Boat Face. 

"He gets people out of trouble." 

"Unh!" Boat Face grunted expressively. "How him make money out of  business like that?" 

"He doesn't do it for money, if what I've heard is true," Patricia  announced. "He goes all over the world and

helps others, and doesn't  charge them anything. He just does it for the excitement" 

"Sound like him crazy,', Boat Face offered. 

Patricia frowned at the servant 

"You're getting a bit insolent lately, Boat Face!" she said  pointedly. 

"You t'ink so, eh?" Boat Face asked indifferently. 

"I don't think  I know!" the girl snapped. 

"Me not care what damn gal t'inks!" said Boat Face, plainly  sneering. 

Bronzehaired Patricia sprang suddenly to her feet. She shot  forward like a metallic tigress. Her small right

fist swung with the  timing and precision of a trained boxer's. 

Boat Face saw it coming. He tried to dodge, was a fraction too  late. Pop! Patricia's knuckles caught him in the

right eye. 

The blow had snap and power. Boat Face's arm flailed, he wavered  off balance, then toppled overboard. 

Patricia ran to the rudder as the launch left the floundering brave  behind. She turned the craft back, came

alongside, and, with her boat  hook, hauled Boat Face over the gunwale. 

"You apologize for swearing at me," she gritted, "or I'll knock you  overboard again!" 

Boat Face squirmed. He was a greatly embarrassed redskin. If this  ever got out, the other Indians would laugh

him out of Canada. He had  not dreamed Miss Patricia was such a hellcat. 


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"Me sorry!" he muttered. 

"Starting right now, you are going to jump quick when I give you an  order!" Patricia informed him. 

'Yes'm," said Boat Face meekly. 

'The first thing you are going to do in the morning is to take the  launch down the coast to the nearest

telegraph office, and send a  telegram," Patricia advised. 

"Who telegram go to?" 

"To Doc Savage," Patricia said grimly. "I need his help!" 

IN preparing for the night, the cabin windows and doors were  locked. This done, it seemed impossible that

any one could enter  without creating an alarm. Patricia did not think it necessary for the  two servants and

herself to stand guard. 

Night came, a tidal wave of gloom that poured in from the eastward.  Darkness crawled down the canyons like

predatory black monsters  stalking the sun. 

Boat Face had quarters in a small room at the rear of the cabin.  His ample mate occupied the same cubicle. 

Tiny was a substantial squaw. k was doubtful if anything would ever  excite her enough to spoil her sleep. She

began to snore with  astonishing promptness soon after she had retired. 

Boat Face had been careful to remain awake. He knew how soundly his  squaw slept. after Tiny had snored a

half dozen times, Boat Face eased  silently out of his small room and crept to the door of the chamber

occupied by Patricia Savage. He listened intently, an ear mashed to the  wooden panel. 

Regular breathing assured him Patricia was asleep. 

Careful to make no noise, Boat Face sidled to the barkcovered  pillar in the living room. Fumbling until he

located the secret catch,  he pressed it. The concealed door in the timber flew soundlessly open. 

"Heap good!" Boat Face breathed. "Still here. Me use him for bait  to croak urn damn werewolf! Yah  Boat

Face not as dumb as ever'body  seem t'ink around here." 

Patricia had replaced the ivory cube. 

Boat Face withdrew the white block. He fingered it, hefted it. An  evil grin warped his swarthy face. He

swiped a greedy tongue over his  lips. 

He seemed to indulge in deep thought for a time. Then he returned  the cube to its hiding place, and closed the

cleverly constructed door.  after this, he let himself out into the night. 

His first stop was at the boathouse. There, he carefully unscrewed  the plug in the gasoline storage barrel, and

let the fluid gurgle out.  Then he emptied the launch tank. 

"Nobody go from here to send telegram for Doc Savage," he chuckled.  "Not right away soon, anyhow. Now,

me go fix trap!" 


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Quitting the boathouse, he faded into the brush. The night  swallowed him. 

Boat Face was gone nearly an hour. When he appeared again in the  vicinity of the cabin, his manner was

equally furtive as before. He  felt of his clothing, and made a disgusted face. He was soaked with  water to the

armpits. 

"Trap, him all 0. K.," he chuckled. Then he stood in the murk near  the cabin, pondering. 

"Damn squaw will want to know how me get wet," he muttered once.  "Me no tell  she use rolling pin." 

As if to banish that possibility, Boat Face started to remove his  wet clothing. The process was hardly under

way, however, when a low  hissing came out of the gloom. It was faint, and had apparently  originated some

distance away. 

Boat Face's manner showed that he had heard this hiss before, and  that it had a definite meaning. He fastened

the buttons he had  loosened, then crept off in the gloom, toward the source of the hiss. 

His objective proved to be a clump of spruce two hundred yards  distant. These trees narrowly missed

growing as thick as hair. Boat  Face came to a stop near the dense covert. 

"Cough up, then. I've got the five hundred you were to get for  delivering it." 

"Five hundred not enough," pronounced Boat Face. 

The man in the thicket cursed softly. "So you're a welsher, eh?" 

"Welsher  what him?" asked Boat Face. 

"It's a guy who makes an agreement and don't go through with it,"  the other gritted. 

"Me want ten thousand dollars," Boat Face announced. 

A choking sound came out of the spruce. "So Jesse James has put on  feathers!" 

"Me no like funny guys," Boat Face said sullenly. "Ten thousand  dollars! Put up or shut up!" 

"Now listen, Indian!" the other argued angrily. "We played square  with you. We even took you into our

confidence and told you what the  ivory block is, and why we wanted it. And now you're welshing!" 

"Put up or shut up!" Boat Face insisted. 

The unseen man was briefly silent. 

"Shut up it is!" he said abruptly. 

There was a sharp swishing sound  a note that was half a whistle.  It was followed by a dull thud which

resembled a rock falling into mud. 

Boat Face pitched soundlessly backward. The hilt of a knife  protruded from his chest over the heart, and he

gave only a few weak  squirmings while he died. 


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The killer crawled from the spruce thicket at once. He kept on  hands and knees, making him seem sinister,

more spiderlike than human.  He had a handkerchief bound over his face, mask fashion. 

"Shut up, it was!" he snarled at the lifeless Boat Face. "A shutup  for you!" 

With eager fingers he searched for the ivory cube. Searched again!  He fell to cursing in a low, guttural voice

which had suddenly betrayed  a trace of foreign accent. 

Then he cursed aloud. 

The ivory cube was not in Boat Face's clothing. 

SOME minutes later, a curious conclave took place in a deep canyon  far up on the mountain side. The

meeting was held on the waterworn  stone bottom of the canyon. Stygian realms never produced a more

intense darkness than that which gorged the scene of the conference. 

Several men were present. Not one of them could see his fellows in  the ebony void. 

"I made a hell of a bad move!" announced the man who had thrown the  knife that brought death to Boat Face.

"I should have searched him  before I croaked him." 

"You are telling us!" snarled another voice. 

"How was I to know he didn't have the ivory cube?" the killer  defended. 

"The milk is spilled, hombre! Why cry?" said a man with a marked  Spanish accent. 

"That's an idea!" agreed the slayer. "The redskin probably didn't  have the cube at all. My guess is that the girl

still has it. We'll  soon get it from her!" 

"Si, Si! But what if the Senorita Savage does not know where it  is?" 

"She knows. Her old man would tell her." 

"Possibly. And it is possible, too, that we made a mistake in  disposing of the Senor Alex Savage in such

haste." 

"He caught me talkin' to that redskin, didn't he?" snarled Boat  Face's slayer. "It looked like my best move to

put him out of the way  and let the redskin get the cube." 

"Si, si!" agreed the other amiably. "You are not being criticized,  my friend. Our chief may not like this,

however. But we will consider  other matters. You got the letter from the buoy box?" 

The query was addressed to another member of the sinister  gathering. 

"Sure," replied the man who had been spoken to. "It wasn't a  letter, though. It was a telegram." 

The man now thumbed on a flashlight. The brilliant beam,  splattering at his feet, disclosed a contrivance

which vaguely  resembled a gas mask, This was a selfcontained diving lung. 


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The diving lung held the explanation of how the man had gotten the  letter from the buoy box without being

seen by Patricia Savage. He had  merely weighted himself, marched to the float underwater, climbed the

mooring line, and reached into the box. In the poor light of dusk,  Patricia had not seen his hand enter the

container. 

The man extracted a telegram from a pocket. "This is it." A gnarled  brown hand whipped out and snatched

both the telegram and the man's  flashlight. The telegram was exposed under the beam. 

"Que icistima!" exploded the man who had seized the message. "What  a pity! This is from Doc Savage to his

uncle, whom he evidently does  not know is dead. But it asks if the esteemed uncle got the telegram in  which

the Senor Doc Savage said he was coming for a visit." 

"They did not!" chuckled a man. "We secured that message as we did  this one." 

"It is evident that Senor Doc Savage suspects something is wrong,"  said the one who had read the telegram.

"That is bad." 

Someone laughed fiercely. 

"The boss will take care of that!" 

"Si, si!' agreed the man with the telegram. "He is very ingenious,  that maestro of ours. He will thoroughly

dispose of this Doc Savage." 

A few minutes later, the sinister gathering dispersed. 

Chapter 7. STRANGE ATTACKERS

THE train was still driving its way westward, excitement and  tragedy hovering over it. 

Girlfaced El Rabanos waved his arms and screamed: "This man Savage  is the murderer!" 

Renny shook fists that were larger than brickbats, rumbling:  "Say  that again, sissyfaced squirt, and I'll hit

you so hard you'll turn  into a grease spot!" 

Monk's pig, Habeas Corpus, squealed violently. 

Senor Corto Oveja glared and shrilled: "I, too, think Senor Savage  is the murderer." 

Pretty Senorita Oveja put hands over her mouth to crowd back sobs.  She made no accusations either way. 

The train was in a general uproar  it had been thus for more than  two hours. 

The dead form of Wilkie, the conductor, was still sprawled in its  crimson puddle on the Pullman washroom

floor. His murderer was as yet  uncaught. 

With the noisy violence of Latin temperaments, Senor Oveja and El  Rabanos had shouted the length of the

train that Doc Savage was the  killer. They were still shouting insistently. The very noisiness of  their assertion

was producing an effect. 


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"This man Savage suggested the mission on which the conductor was  killed!" El Rabanos repeated for

probably the dozenth time. 

"That mission was ridiculous in the first place!" snapped Senor  Oveja. "It was to summon and question all

Spanish people on this  train." 

"I notice there's a lot of them," Renny said pointedly. 

"You have heard their story!" El Rabanos snapped. "They are going  to a convention of a Spanish society

being held on the Pacific coast." 

This was true. On the train were about a dozen individuals of  Spanish ancestry. Without exception, they

declared they were going to  the meeting of the society. The news butcher on the train had found a  story in

one of his papers which proved there actually was such a  meeting scheduled. 

Doc was not under arrest. But that was simply because there  happened to be no officers on the train. 

The most unpleasant of recent developments, from Doc's standpoint,  was the work of Senor Oveja. The senor

had dispatched a telegram to the  Mounted Police at the train's next stop, asking that officers be on  hand to

arrest Doc. This was a through train. It had not paused since  the discovery of Wilkie's body. Senor Oveja had

dropped his message at  a small depot as the train had flashed past it. 

Renny sidled close to Doc. 

"It is is beginning to look bad!" he said in a low voice. 'There is  not the slightest clue to show who murdered

Wilkie." 

Girlfaced El Rabanos sprang forward, shouting. "These men should  not be allowed to talk together! They

may plot an escape!" 

Doc Savage shrugged wearily and sat down. 

"Would you mind bringing a glass of water, Renny?" he asked. 

"Glad to!" said Renny. 

There was a long glass cylinder mounted in a corner of the coach.  This held paper cups which dropped out

when one inserted a penny. Renny  ignored these. He wandered off to the regions of the diner. 

after a bit, Renny was back, carrying a plain glass beaker, brimful  of cold water. 

Doc drank the water. Holding the empty glass in both hands, he  toyed with it as he addressed entrancingly

pretty Senorita Oveja. 

"I wonder if you would do me a favor?" he asked. 

"What?" the young woman inquired shortly. 

"Tell me why you think I am your enemy." 

El Rabanos put in wrathfully: "That is information which we shall  give to the Mounted Police!" 


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"Would I like to smear that face of yours!" Renny thundered at El  Rabanos. 

"Here," Doc said, and handed Renny the glass. 

Renny took the beaker. There was a strange expression on his long,  puritanical face. 

Renny departed as if he were returning the water glass to where he  had gotten it. 

Seemingly with no particular purpose in mind, gaunt Johnny and pale  Long Tom sauntered off together. 

Twirling his sword cane, Ham was next to leave the group. The pig  Habeas Corpus under an arm, Monk

trailed after the dapper lawyer. Ham  was inviting Monk to quit following him as they passed out of hearing. 

"We should keep an eye on those men!" El Rabanos declared. 

"Fat chance they've got of getting off the train!" somebody told  him. "We're hitting all of sixty miles an

hour." 

Doc Savage went to a writing desk and selected a book of telegram  blanks. He addressed a message to the

Mounted Police at the metropolis  where the train next stopped. 

ADVISE YOU HAVE STATION AND VICINITY  BRILLIANTLY LIGHTED WHEN OUR  TRAIN

ARRIVES  STOP ALSO HAVE ENOUGH TROOPERS ON HAND  TO SEE THAT NO  ONE ESCAPES

STOP CONFIDENT  SOMETHING CRIMINAL UNDERFOOT.  DOC SAVAGE 

Doc tied the telegram in his handkerchief, first weighting it with  two silver dollars. Then he opened the

window. He did this in plain  view, not wishing to have somebody get excited and take a shot at him.  He

consulted his watch, then waited. He had studied the timetable  earlier, and knew they were due to pass

through a small town in a few  moments. 

The train whistle moaned. A pinpoint eye of light opened in the  distance. This approached with a rush. It was

the illuminated window of  a railway station. The little depot looked like a match box in the  headlight glare. 

Standing in front of the station was a man who wore a green  eyeshade, and had black dust protectors over his

shirt sleeves. The  accouterments stamped him as the telegraph operator. 

Doc threw his message as the train hooted past. Considering the  terrific speed, his aim was uncanny. The

handkerchief, the telegram  inside, all but bounced into the operator's hands. 

In the act of closing the window, Doc noted something from the  corner of an eye. 

Senor Oveja was bending over the desk where the telegram had been  written. He hastily sauntered away from

the desk when he saw Doc  observing him. 

Doc gave no sign of having noticed. He knew what Senor Oveja was  doing at the desk. There had been a

sheet of carbon paper in the pad  upon which Doc had written his message. Senor Oveja had read this  carbon

copy of Doc's wire. 

It was possible the senor imagined he had done a neat bit of  detecting. As a matter of fact, Doc had left the

carbon copy  deliberately uncovered, and had been careful that the senor saw it. Doc  wanted to see what Senor

Oveja's reaction would be. He learned little.  The senor kept his thoughts well concealed. 


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THROUGH the next half hour, Doc Savage remained within sight of the  writing desk. He wanted to observe

any others who might seek to get a  look at the carbon copy. 

No one else went near the desk. 

The train charged recklessly through the night, swooping across  bridges with a thunderous moan, and panting

noisily over grades. 

Some sage once wrote that the presence of death makes people  silent. He should have been on that train. He

would have heard more  conversation than at a chamberofcommerce luncheon. In smokers,  diners,

Pullmans, day coaches, discussion waged. A number of uninformed  persons had never heard of Doc Savage.

These were speedily enlightened  by their neighbors. 

One man spoke steadily for five minutes, reciting the remarkable  ability of Doc Savage, and the things he had

accomplished. He finished  with: "This man Savage is a person of mystery. Not much is known about  him." 

"Oh, yeah!" snorted his listener. "A mystery, eh? And you just told  me more about him than you can tell me

about the Prince of Wales." 

"What I mean is Savage don't parade his feats around in public,"  the other explained. "He don't brag. For

instance, take his five  helpers. There's an engineer, a chemist, a lawyer, a geologist, and an  electrical expert.

What do you know about them?" 

"I have heard this: in their respective lines, they are among the  most learned men in the world," was the reply. 

"That's right," declared the first man. "Yet Doc Savage is a  greater expert in these lines  engineering,

chemistry, law.  archaeology, and electricity  than his aides, and he's just as  proficient in many other lines.

They say be is, beyond a doubt in the  least, the greatest living surgeon." 

"Sounds like a fairy tale." 

"Sure it does!" agreed the other. "Just the same, I don't think  this bronze man murdered the conductor, and I'd

hate to be the fellow  who did.  Savage will get him, sure." 

Heedless of this discussion, and many others along similar lines,  Doc Savage returned to his drawingroom.

Hardly had he entered when his  sharp eyes noted something amis. A folded newspaper reposed in the

wastebasket. He had not placed it there. 

His movements unhurried, the bronze man locked the drawingroom  door. Then he went to the basket and

investigated. 

The newspaper was one published in the large town they had passed  through some hours before  the

division point where unfortunate Wilkie  had gone on duty. It was at this town that Senor and Senorita Oveja

and  El Rabanos had boarded the train. 

The newspaper was folded so as to enwrap a knife. The long blade of  this was still smeared with gore. 

Doc's practiced eye measured the width of the blade. He decided it  would exactly fit the wound which had

caused Wilkie's death. 


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Opening one of his many hand bags stacked in the compartment, Doc  drew out a powerful magnifying glass.

He used it on the knife hilt.  Finger prints had been wiped off. 

Doc opened the window and threw the knife out into the night, far  from the plunging train. 

GLANCING at his watch, Doc saw they would soon reach the next stop   within thirteen minutes, to be

exact. 

Precisely nine minutes later, the holocaust broke. 

From beneath the train came a sudden scream of steel on steel! It  was like the wail of a demented monster.

The cars rocked in sickening  fashion? 

Doc Savage plunged the length of the drawingroom, but brought up  lightly against the bulkhead. 

In the coaches, passengers were hurled against seats. Parcels and  suitcases fell off the overhead racks. In the

diners, dishes hit the  floors as if tossed by invisible scoop shovels. In the mail cars,  clerks brought up in

tangles with their sacks. 

Doc Savage unlocked the drawingroom door, wrenched it open, and  whipped out The steely screeching

underfoot died slowly; the train was  coming to an unbelievably quick stop. 

Doc leaned from a window. With a final squeal of brakes, the train  became entirely stationary. 

It was no mean feat of agility which Doc performed now. He managed  to stand erect outside on the narrow

ledge of the train window. One of  his hands stretched up, groped, and found a projection on the roof. The

practiced swing of a gymnast put him atop the coach. 

From this vantage point he could see, as far as darkness permitted,  what was occurring. Somewhat more than

a quarter of a mile ahead of the  rest of the train, the locomotive was just coming to a standstill. In  some

manner the engine had become detached. No doubt the air brakes  were adjusted to stop the coaches instantly

in such an emergency. 

Doc Savage ran forward along coach tops. It was his guess that some  one, possibly traveling over the tops of

the coaches as he was doing,  had severed the connection between the engine and cars. Doc hoped to  glimpse

the malefactor. 

At the forward end of the train, Doc dropped to the side of the  tracks and conducted a brief examination.

There was a film of grease  and dust on the connecting mechanism. This was smudged where a hand had

grasped it. 

From his pocket, Doc produced a small flashlight. It gave an  intense white beam, no thicker than a pencil.

Whoever had caused the  locomotive to separate from the train, had worn gloves. There were no  finger prints. 

The engine was backing slowly to rejoin its lost string of coaches. 

With an ease that would have amazed an onlooker, Doc regained the  top of the train. He ran rearward. He

was taking no chances. It seemed  he had violent enemies on the train. They might chance a shot at him. 

Swinging down, he reentered his drawingroom. No one was there.  Plucking a hand bag out of his luggage

heap, Doc opened it. 


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He lifted out a metal contraption which resembled a pocketsize  magic lantern. The lens of this was almost

black. Doc turned a switch  on the side of the contraption. Apparently, nothing happened. 

Then Doc went to a shelf over the washbowl and picked up a large  water glass. The glass had not been on the

shelf when he departed. It  was the same beaker in which Renny had brought Doc the drink of water. 

Doc held the glass in front of the lens of the thing that looked  like a magic lantern. What happened was

startling. 

To the naked eye there was nothing unusual about the glass.  Certainly no writing was visible. But the instant

Doc held the beaker  before the magic lantern, written letters sprang out in a dazzling,  electric blue. The

writing at the top was in a script so perfect that  it might have been done by an engraver. It was Doc's own

handwriting.  It read: 

All five of you shadow Senor Oveja, his daughter and El Rabanos. 

Below this was another communication, done in a more scrawling  hand. This one read: 

The three of them prepared to leave the train just before it  stopped, Doc. It looks suspicious, although they

might have intended to  get off at the next station. Senor Oveja is wearing a big white panama  hat that you

can't mistake. We're trailing them. 

There was no more. Doc dropped the glass and crushed it to  fragments under a heel. Then he switched off the

lantern contrivance,  pocketed it, and stepped out in the corridor. 

Moving swiftly, he began a search of the train. 

DOC Savage did many things which to the layman were puzzling and  sometimes inexplicable. Always he had

a reason for what he did. His  method of communicating with his friends by leaving writing on glass   writing

quite invisible to the naked eye  was something to amaze one  unfamiliar with the bronze giant. 

When Doc had asked for water, the bigfisted Renny had understood  that what his bronze chief wanted was a

tablet on which to write some  orders. 

The writing was done with a bit of strange chalk. Its markings were  almost undetectable  until exposed to

ultraviolet light. Then it would  fluoresce, showing in blue. The lantern contrivance Doc had used was an

ultraviolet projector. 

Passengers stood in aisles in the coaches, feeling tenderly of  spots which had been bruised when the train

stopped so suddenly. A few  had clambered out and stood beside the track. Not many had done this.  There is

something which makes the average man reluctant to leave his  train when it stops, a subtle fear that he will

get left behind when  the train starts again. 

Doc Savage walked all the way to the baggage cars, and back again  to the observation coach. His giant

stature, the remarkable bronze hue  of his skin, drew much attention. Passengers stared. Without exception,

they had heard the gossip concerning this giant man with the golden  eyes. 

Everyone knew the bronze man had been accused of stabbing Wilkie to  death. But no one showed an

inclination to stop Doc. The metallic giant  did not look like a safe fellow to meddle with. 


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Doc reflected that events must have occurred swiftly while be was  forward making his unsuccessful hunt for

whoever had separated the  engine from the train. 

Nowhere on the train could be seen Senor Corto Oveja, his  attractive daughter, or the girlfaced El Rabanos.

They had vanished. 

From the group of swarthy passengers who claimed they were en route  to the meeting of a Spanish society,

four were missing. 

Doc's five men were also not to be found. Even the pig, Habeas  Corpus, was gone. 

Doc came out on the observation platform at the conclusion of his  search. He noted a man with a red lantern

standing some distance down  the track. That would be a flagman sent hack to guard against a  rearend

collision. 

From forward came a low crash. This traveled the length of the  train, like a rock bouncing downstairs. The

locomotive had hooked on.  The whistle blared. The man with the lantern came running back. The  train was

preparing to go on. 

Doc Savage vaulted over the observation platform rail, landing  lightly on cinders and gravel. The brakeman,

running with his head  down, did not see Doc Savage. The passengers who had stepped off the  train were too

busy climbing back on to notice the departure of the  bronze man. 

The locomotive whistled again, then began to chug mightily and spew  steam. The train moved, slowly at

first, but gathering speed. The tail  lights went past. They looked like little eyes on a monster snake which  was

crawling backwards. The serpent monster lost itself and its roaring  in the distance. 

The blacker gloom in the lee of a large rock seemed to detach  itself and scud along the track. Doc Savage had

become a soundless  phantom. From a coat pocket, he drew the rather bulky black metal box  which was his

ultraviolet lantern. He switched this on and played its  invisible beam before him. 

Shortly a tiny, arrowshaped mark sprang out in dazzling, electric  blue. It was drawn on top of a rock with

the chalk which Doc and his  men employed to exchange secret communications. 

Doc glided in the direction which the arrow indicated. Two rods,  and he found a second pointer. 

From a pocket, Doc extracted his small flashlight. His men   trailing their enemies, no doubt  had left these

arrows to indicate  the direction they had taken. Doc intended to inspect the track, and  find just how many

individuals his friends were following. He thumbed  the flash on. 

To his left, a machine gun opened up!  It's deadly cackle was like  thesound of a gigantic cricket! 

Doc Savage seemed to melt down before the hideous gabble of noise  and the moaning stream of jacketed

lead. 

Chapter 8. THE MAN IN THE WHITE HAT

THE stuttering of the rapidfirer ended as abruptly as it had  started. The last few empty cartridges to jump

from the ejector  mechanism tinkled brassily on the rocks. There was no sound after that,  but the mad flight of

a rabbit which had been frightened out of its  wits by the sudden uproar. Eventually, that noise also died away. 


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"Bueno!" hissed a voice. "That, amigos, settles our troubles!" 

"Si,   !" a low whisper agreed. 

Men advanced. From the sound of their movements, there were four of  them. They strode warily. 

"Un fosforo!" commanded one. "A match!" 

There was a tiny clatter of safety matches in a box. The box  scraped open. But no match was lighted. 

One of the marauders screeched! The sound was awful  as if  invisible hands had seized his heart and were

tearing it out. The  ghastly peal trailed off in a sob  a sob like water pouring through a  pipe. 

The other three skulkers were brave enough. They leaped to assist  their companion. 

"Que hay?" yelled one. "What is the matter?" 

He found out soon enough. Something seized his left arm  something  which crushed flesh against bone with

an awful pressure, The arm went  numb with pain. It had no more feeling than a thick cord attached to  his

body. And by that cord the man was abruptly lifted and flung far to  one side. 

As he slammed down in brush and rocks, the man was quite sure that  it could not have been a human hand

which had seized him. It must have  been some hulking colossus of the night. 

He was wrong. 

The other two men became aware of the truth, for their groping  hands and striking fists encountered a form

unmistakably human. 

"En verdad!" choked one. "Indeed! It is the bronze hombre! Our lead  missed him!" 

The four men, seeing Doc sink as their shots roared, naturally  supposed he was done for. Not knowing the

blinding speed with which the  bronze giant moved, they had been too optimistic. 

Doc had been warned in advance by a faint click as a machinegun  safety was released, and had dropped in

time to get clear. But some  rapidfirer slugs had come so close that his ears still rang with their  whine. 

One of the wouldbe killers tried to use his machine gun. The  weapon muttered deafeningly! The bullets dug

up a cloud of dust. 

Doc seized the gun, pulled, and got its hideous gobbling stilled  before it could do any damage. 

Then came a new development. Somewhere near by, running feet  sounded. Reinforcements arriving! 

Doc listened, wondering if they were his own men. They were not. A  guttural ejaculation in Spanish told him

that. 

Flashlight beams  blinding funnels of white  jumped from the  hands of the newcomers. The glare

illuminated Doc. 


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One of the new arrivals fired a revolver. Had Doc not pitched  violently to one side, that bullet would have

ended his career. It was  well aimed. 

DOC Savage had, for much of his life, walked in the shadow of peril  and sudden death. Many men had

sought to end his existence by violent  means. To kill in defense of his own life, frequently seemed

imperative. Yet Doc never did that. 

The bronze man's enemies by no means went unscathed. They  frequently perished  but always in traps of

their own setting. Doc did  not take life with his own hands. 

Doc still held the machine gun which he had seized. He could have  fired upon the approaching gunmen. His

chances of downing them were  excellent, for there seemed to be only two. But because of the  darkness, he

knew he would have to kill rather than merely wound. 

Flinging aside in a leap that was of almost incredible length, Doc  temporarily evaded the white funnels of the

flashlights. Doubling low,  he raced from the vicinity. 

The surrounding terrain was level. Boulders and brush were both  small, and would conceal a man only if he

lay prone and perfectly  still. Doc was forced to race fifty yards before he found adequate  cover. 

Twice, in that distance, flashlights found him and guns cackled  noisily. One bullet cut his coat across the

shoulders, but did not open  his bronze skin. This was excellent shooting, since Doc was traveling  at great

speed. 

He ducked into the shelter of a boulder, and waited. 

The newcomers smashed out more random bullets. They made no effort  at pursuit; instead, they helped the

four they had rescued to stand  erect. 

The whole party retreated at a wild run. 

Doc promptly set out after them. He deemed it wise to go slowly,  for they blasted frequent bullets in his

direction. At first, because  it would be very dangerous, he made no effort to overhaul the group.  Once they

reached rough going, he intended to whip close to them. 

He suddenly quickened his pace. The rusty squeak of barbed wire  against staples had told him the men were

mounting a fence. 

An automobile engine burst into noisy life! Headlights came on. The  car rocketed away. 

There was a road beyond the fence, very dusty, but wide and well  graded. Doc stood in it and watched the

receding car. The taillight  bulb had been extinguished, so he could not read the license number. 

A flight of bullets came up the road from the receding auto, and  Doc hastily quitted the thoroughfare. 

Going back to the scene of the fight, he dabbed his flashlight beam  about. Tracks were numerous. Doc's

practiced eye measured these for  possible future reference. He gathered up several empty machinegun and

revolver cartridges. 

Beside a studded bush, he found his chief clew. This was an  extremely white Panama hat, wide of brim and

high of crown. Inside the  sweatband of the hat, printed in gold lettering, was a name: 


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OVEJA 

Thanks to the darkness, Doc had not glimpsed the features of any of  his attackers. The first four had been

sprawled on the ground when the  two rescuers appeared with their flashlights. Had they been on their  feet,

Doc might have glimpsed their faces. 

Doc recalled the message in invisible chalk which one of his five  men had left on the water glass. It had

stated that Senor Oveja had  donned a large white Panama. And who had read Doc's wire asking the  Mounted

Police to surround the train on arrival? Oveja, of course. 

Switching on his ultraviolet lantern, Doc resumed what he had been  doing when the attack came 

following the arrow markers left by his  men. The indicators jumped out in unearthly blue flame at frequent

intervals. The route angled away from the railroad tracks and mounted a  hill. 

Beyond the hill, lights were arrayed like whitehot beads strung on  taut wires. 

THE spots of iridescence were street lamps of the town which the  train had been nearing when it had stopped

so suddenly. It was not a  large metropolis, only a few thousand in population. 

Doc Savage followed the luminous arrows down the slope. They  turned, paralleling the railroad. When the

trail dropped into a small  gulley, he used his flashlight, which gave a light as bright as burning  magnesium. 

The sandy gulch floor was pocked with tracks. To an individual of  average perception, they would have

looked pretty much alike. An  experienced tracker might have known, from the depth of the prints,  that two of

the men making the tracks were very heavy, and that one was  a woman. 

Doc Savage, however, read the prints like a chart. He picked out  the tracks of his five men  he knew their

every peculiarity, from the  fact that Monk and Renny, the giants, made deep, big prints, to the  straight,

military preciseness of Ham's walk, with the little  irregularity when the lawyer twiddled his sword cane. 

When he had the five segregated, three sets remained. These had  been walked over by Doc's aides, so he

knew his friends were trailing  the three persons. Two of the quarry were men, the other a woman. Her  prints

were highheeled and very feminine. 

Near the edge of town, the trail turned abruptly and began to  circle the settlement. 

Doc studied the town, judging its size from the street lights. In  small villages, telegrams were usually handled

from the railway  station. This borough looked large enough to have an office uptown. 

Deserting the trail, Doc entered a street and ran along it. His  pace would have taxed a proficient sprinter, but,

even after he had  traversed several blocks, the bronze man's breathing had not quickened  appreciably. His

mighty muscles were conditioned by regular exercise  until they seemed to show no more fatigue than the

metal of a machine. 

The telegraph office was nested in the front of a brick hotel. It  was brilliantly lighted, and relays were

cheeping on the instrument  table. 

On duty was an exceedingly tall and freckled young man, whose hair  stood up like the coiffure of a Fiji

Islander. 

"I want information about certain telegrams which may have come  here tonight," Doc told him. 


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"That is against the rules!" the young man replied promptly. 

Doc brought a wallet out. This held numerous cards. He selected one  particular pasteboard from the

collection in that wallet. 

"Does this make it any different?" he asked, and exhibited the  card. 

The young man looked, then whistled softly. "I'll say it does!" 

The card was signed by the highest official of the company, and  informed all employees that Doc Savage was

to receive every assistance  possible, no matter of what nature, or what the possible consequences. 

Going behind the counter, Doc sorted through carbon copies of  messages received that evening. He found his

own communication,  addressed to the local Mounted Police. There was also a wire signed by  Senor Corto

Oveja, asking the Mounties to arrest Doc as soon as the  train arrived. 

The prize, however, was one signed simply, "John Smith." It was  addressed to "Sam Smith." Doc eyed the

body of the message. At first  glance the thing seemed unintelligible. The stuff sounded like bad  poetry. 

THE HORSE OF IRON HE SAW THE CITY FLEAS AWAY DID RUN AND THAT VERY  SWIFTLY

STOP MAN OH MAN WAS THE GAS BUGGY HANDY 

Doc read the doggerel again. Its meaning became clear. It was  simply a message from John Smith to Sam

Smith, advising that the train  would be deserted at the edge of town, and that an automobile should be  on

hand. The Smith names were probably fakes. 

"Remember the fellow who received this?" Doc asked. 

"Yep!" said the operator eagerly. "There was two of them. They came  in and asked if there was a message for

Sam Smith. I remembered them  because of the funny way that message sounded." 

"Describe them," Doc requested. 

"Both were short and darkskinned. They wore greasy Coveralls. I  saw an aviator's helmet sticking from the

hip pocket of each man." 

"Fliers! And strangers in town, eh?" 

"Yes, sir!" The telegrapher was beginning to look awed. "Gee whiz!  Say, I just happened to think that I've

heard of you. Aren't you the  Doc Savage the newspapers carry stories about  the fellow they call  the 'Man of

Mystery?' Aren't you the man who just got back from Arabia,  where you took a submarine and followed an

underground river under the  desert? And at the end of the river you found  " 

"I'll use your wires," Doc told the frizzlehaired operator. He had  not changed expression, but he was a bit

embarrassed. Hero worship got  Doc's goat  when he was the subject of admiration. 

He examined the "John Smith" telegram. It had been sent from a  small! way station on the railroad some fifty

miles back. 

Doc opened the telegraph key. A moment later, he was in  communication with the station from which the

message had been sent. He  described the missive in which he was interested. 


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"It was thrown off the fast train," reported the distant  telegrapher. "But I didn't get a look at the party who

threw it." 

"Was it handwritten?" Doc queried over the wire. 

"It was printed," the other replied. 

Doc closed the key and stood up. Since the message was printed,  there was no chance of tracing the author by

his handwriting. 

The freckled, frizzlehaired young man stared at Doc in  openmouthed amazement. He had been listening to

the wire talk. He had  just heard some of the fastest and most perfect handsent Morse to  which he had ever

listened. It had been as rapid as if sent with a fast  automatic key, a "bug." The freckled young man had not

believed such a  thing possible. 

LEAVING the telegraph office and its stunned manager, Doc resumed  the luminousarrow trail left by his

friends. He had sprinted the  entire distance from the telegraph office. He continued running as he  followed

the trail. 

Around the fringe of the settlement, his course led. 

A prowling dog, sighting the bronze man, began to growl fiercely. 

"Cut it out, old fellow," Doc called. 

The calm friendliness of the mighty man's tone had a marked effect  upon the dog. It exchanged tailwagging

for growling. Doc was forced to  toss a rock near the dog to keep the suddenly friendly animal from  following

him. This was another example of the remarkable things his  great voice could do. 

Unexpectedly, Doc came upon Monk. The homely chemist was sprawled  flat on the ground. The pig, Habeas

Corpus, lay comfortably beside him. 

"Hands up!" Monk growled. "Grab a cloud!" He had failed to  recognize Doc. 

"Bite him, pig!" Doc ordered dryly. 

Habeas Corpus promptly stood up and bit furiously at Monk. Monk  dodged. Much to the homely chemist's

disgust, somebody had recently  taught his pet pig the trick of biting the nearest human when told to  do so.

Monk was usually the victim of these nips. He suspected the  dapper Ham had taught the pig the trick. 

"Where is the rest of the gang?" asked Doc. 

Monk waved a furry arm in the gloom. "They're watching that joint  over there." 

Doc peered into the night. He made out a building which resembled a  gigantic, square hatbox. "An airplane

hangar!" 

"Sure," said Monk. "There's a little flying field over there. Senor  Oveja, the girl, and El Rabanos are in the

hangar." 

"You're sure Senor Oveja is there?" Doc asked quickly. 


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"You bet! We've been right on their heels since they left the  train. He couldn't have slipped away" 

"Senor Oveja has been wearing his white Panama hat?" Doc queried. 

Monk's voice was very small in the murk. "He tossed that aside  before he left the train." 

"What made him do it?" 

"Don't know for sure," Monk said. "It looked like El Rabanos  pointed out that the white hat would show up

plain in the dark." 

Doc informed Monk of the attack which had come as he followed the  trail. 

"The first four men to jump me might have been off the train," he  declared. "From what I learned at the

telegraph office, the other two  were obviously fliers, waiting near by in a car." 

Monk grunted softly. "Renny said he saw a black monoplane that  seemed to be following our train. That was

just before dark." 

"It might have been carrying the two who got the telegram at this  town," Doc admitted. 

"This thing is sure a mess," Monk muttered. "It shapes up like  this: Senor Oveja, his daughter, and El

Rabanos are after you. Another  gang is after them, and also you." 

"And the motivation behind the whole thing is a deep, black  mystery," Doc agreed. "Let's collar the three in

the hangar, here, and  see what we can dig out of them." 

AS if touched off by the decision, a hollow roaring burst from the  airplane hangar. 

"Blazes!" Monk barked. "They've started up a plane!" He raced for  the hangar. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, bounced after him, squealing and grunting  with each jump. 

Doc joined Monk in the race. Both heard metal doors on the hangar  rasp open. A plane jumped out of the

structure. Its exhaust stack was a  fiery mouth that slavered sparks! Its roar was like cannonading! 

Except for one thing, Doc and his men might have seized the plane's  occupants. It was doubtful if those in the

craft knew of the presence  of their pursuers. Had the wind been coming from straight ahead, they  would

undoubtedly have stopped in front of the hangar to warm the  engine, before taking off. But the wind was in

the opposite direction;  it was necessary to taxi across the field before taking the air. The  pilot decided to

warm his engine while doing that. 

Away the ship went. It rolled too swiftly even for Doc's fleet  running. Landing lights jutted fans of

incandescence from the wing tips  of the airplane. 

Reaching the far edge of the tarmac, the plane taxied around and  took off. It was a large yellow biplane, with

a cabin for six. 


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Chapter 9. THE IVORYCUBE TRAIL

DOC Savage's other men came pounding through the night. Bigfisted  Renny was leading. 

"Five of us!" Renny boomed disgustedly. "And we let 'em get away!" 

"Six of us!" Doc corrected. 

"We could have shot 'em down, of course," rumbled Renny. "But the  girl was aboard the plane." 

The sky was like an overturned bowl of black cotton. Into it, the  moaning yellow biplane crawled. 

"Let's see if there's another plane in the hangar," Doc rapped. 

They raced back for the black box of a hangar. Reaching it, Doc  cast his flash beam into the structure. 

"There's a crate!" Renny thundered. "No! Two of 'em!" 

The planes were small. One was a monoplane, the other an open  cockpit. Neither accommodated more than

two passengers. 

Renny ran to the biplane. It looked the speedier. He latched out  the choke, then bounded around in front to

spin the prop. But his huge  hands only dropped listlessly from the metal blade. He glared at the  engine itself. 

"Holy cow!" he muttered. "They've got us stumped!" 

Doc came around and inspected the plane engine. 

"They did it very simply, too," he said dryly. "They just smashed  all the spark plugs. There's no need of

replacing them. The other plane  will be gone before we can get in the air." 

Doc had been moving as he spoke. His last word came from near the  door. 

The other five hastily followed. The bronze man's rapid movements  showed he had a plan. 

"What's up?" Monk demanded. 

"Let's see how fast you are on those bow legs of yours!" Doc  suggested. 

Heading for town, Doc set a pace which he judged was about the  fastest speed the others could travel. It was

not slow; they were all  adept at running. 

Monk, short gorilla legs going like pistons, brought up the rear.  At his heels trailed Habeas Corpus. The pig

could run like a dog. But,  as before, the porker was squealing with every jump. 

"Cut that out, or I'll kick you loose from your appetite!" Monk  advised the homely shoat. 

Habeas Corpus at once stopped squealing. 

"That pig has brains, I'm telling you!" Monk shouted. 


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"That's more than can be said for the guy who owns him!" Ham  replied nastily. 

The purpose of their pellmell progress was still a mystery to  Doc's five men. They exchanged puzzled looks

when Doc entered town and  went straight to the telegraph office. 

"Do you know the surrounding country?" Doc asked the frizzlehaired  operator. 

The young man replied: "I've hunted over most of it." 

"Mountainous and timbered, isn't it?" 

"You bet!" 

"I want you to point out all fields which are level enough to land  an airplane on," Doc told him. "Don't count

the local airport, unless  there's more than one." 

The young man seized a pencil which dangled from the counter by a  chain, planked a telegraph blank on the

counter, and drew a map. His  movements were rapid. 

"There's only three level places near town," he explained. "One is  about a mile north. The other two are at

least five miles out. There's  only one local airport. You said not to count it, so I'm not." 

Doc Savage nodded at Monk and Ham. "You two pals go to the field  farthest out. The other three of you take

the next one. I'll go to the  nearest." 

"We're after that black monoplane!" Renny rumbled, suddenly  enlightened. 

"Right!" Doc agreed. "Grab taxicabs for the trips!" 

DOC and his men separated in front of the telegraph office. All but  Doc went hunting taxicabs. 

Deciding not to bother himself with a cab, Doc headed northward  through town. The distance to the field was

only a mile. Chances were  that he would lose time hunting a hack. 

The little metropolis was quiet. Every other street light had been  extinguished to conserve electricity. Very

few houses were illuminated. 

Overhead, the clouds abruptly parted and let moonlight spill down.  After the earlier darkness, the moon rays

seemed as brilliant as  sunlight. Trees along the thoroughfare were scrawny, probably because  of the cold

winters here in Canada. The shrubs and the houses cast moon  shadows. 

Dwellings became scattered, then abruptly ceased. Doc crossed a  washboard of small black hills. Gullies

gaped here and there, as if the  skin of the earth had cracked. The road was narrow, graded only in  spots.

Bridges were crude spans of logs, earthcovered. Apparently the  road saw little travel. 

Indeed, according to the telegrapher's map, the road terminated  shortly beyond the field which was Doc's

destination. It was a lane  leading to a ranch home. 

Doc kept on it, his long strides eating up distance. Soon the road  dipped. Two hundred yards ahead in the

moonlight, Doc distinguished a  gate; beyond that was a patch of level meadow. 


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A black raven of a monoplane stood at the meadow's edge, some  distance from the gate. 

Without slackening his pace, Doc came up on his toes, making less  noise, thus. He could see no one in or

near the black plane, but he was  taking no chances. 

Small hills reared beyond the meadows. Suddenly the tops of these  became weirdly white. It was as if an

invisible hand had spilled thin  snow upon them. 

Then Doc discarded all caution, put on more speed. For he knew what  the whiteness meant. A car was

coming up the road behind him, and its  headlights had bleached the hill. 

He heard the engine mumble. The machine was coming fast. Doc had  hoped to reach the ebony monoplane;

but that, he saw now, was  impossible. 

The neighborhood was unpleasantly hare of vegetation which might  furnish shelter. A mowing machine stood

near the gate. Its moon shadow  made a spidery hump of gloom. 

Doc took shelter behind the. mowing machine. 

The automobile clattered up. Tire treads squealing and throwing  dust, it stopped at the gate. The car was a

sedan, very shiny with good  care, but a model some three years old. It had all the marks of a car  hired from a

rental agency. 

The sedan was jammed with men. In the glare of the moonlight Doc  could count six men. All were swarthy

complexioned. 

Four of them had been on the passenger train. The other two,  attired in greasy coveralls, were obviously the

aviators who had called  at the telegraph office. 

A man clambered from the rear of the car and walked ahead to open  the gate. 

DOC Savage usually wore a vest of pliable leather under his outer  clothing. This vest had numerous pockets,

and these held ingenious  devices  apparatus with which Doc Savage could cope with almost any  emergency.

The vest now reposed in his baggage, wherever that might now  be. Doc was beaded for a vacation, and had

not been wearing the vest.  He was emptyhanded. 

There was no doubt but that these six men were armed. Under such  conditions, the course of safety was to

remain under cover. 

Doc quitted the shelter of the mowing machine, and glided up to the  car. He had little expectation of reaching

the sedan unobserved. Nor  did he. 

"Ver!" cried one of the gang. "See! The bronze devil!" 

The men in the machine seemed to go through a convulsion as they  grabbed for weapons. The driver let the

clutch out; the car went  forward like a thing kicked. 

Doc had anticipated that the sedan would spring into motion. He had  reasoned that by the time it reached the

gate, it would be going too  swiftly for the man there to spring aboard. 


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His logic was right  and wrong. The man at the gate was caught off  guard. Moreover, he must have been a

nervous individual. As the uproar  burst forth, he gave one long leap  in the wrong direction! He was  directly

in the path of the car! 

The sedan hit him, and bore him down as if he were a weed. For a  moment after he disappeared, ugly

crunchings and crackings came from  under the machine. The sounds were those of monster jaws munching.

When  the unlucky man appeared again  behind the rear bumper  he was  shapeless. 

Inside the car, guns began a hollow coughing. The windows were up;  holes appeared in them. The car pushed

its radiator snout through the  gate with a roar of splintering wood! 

Ducking and weaving, Doc Savage ran after the machine until he  reached the gate. The post on which the

gate was swung was large, and  offered more adequate shelter against bullets than the mowing machine.  Doc

ducked behind it and made himself as thin as possible. 

The car was headed for the plane. It traveled too swiftly for those  in it to do accurate shooting. Probably

twenty shots were fired. Only  two of them hit Doc's post. The rest made short, sharp sounds which  were

strangely remindful of shrilly barking prairie dogs. 

In the road, the man who had been run over was moaning and groaning  feebly. 

The sedan careened to a stop near the black plane. Using revolvers,  four of the men fired steadily in Doc's

direction. The other two worked  at getting the plane motor started. 

Taking a chance, Doc dashed to the man who had been run over. The  fellow had carried a revolver  he must

have had it in his hand when  the car hit him, for the weapon was buried in the dust near by. One of  the tires

had passed squarely over it. 

Doc sought to pick the gun up. But the cylinder fell out. It was a  cheap firearm, and the metal pin on which

the cylinder turned had been  snapped by the weight of the car. 

Dropping the useless weapon, Doc whipped back to the post. The  dangerous foray had been executed with his

best speed, so swiftly that  his foes had hardly perceived his move. 

The plane engine caught with a bang! bang! and a moan. The four  swarthy gunmen ceased shooting and piled

into the craft. The ship began  to scud, its tail lifting. 

Without time for his engine to warm up, the pilot pulled off. It  was his lucky day. The engine kept turning,

and the black bat of a  craft clubbed its way up into the moonlight. 

LEVELING off in the air, the black plane headed westward. 

Doc Savage watched it only long enough to make certain of the  direction it was taking. Then he swung over

and knelt beside the man  who had gone under the sedan. 

Life remained in the fellow; he was still moaning. 

Doc grasped the man. To a bystander, the bronze man's manner might  have seemed rough. But Doc knew

what he was doing; he possessed a fund  of surgical lore which was probably unequaled. 


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He straightened the victim out until he was more the shape of a  human being. Then, using his flashlight, Doc

examined him. An X ray  would have helped; but he learned the important thing without it. 

This man could not live long. 

"Not a chance, fellow!" Doc told him. There was no use keeping it  from him. 

"Como dice?" The man's query was a wispy, tortured whisper. "What  did you say?" 

His hearing must have been damaged. 

Instead of repeating the statement, Doc Savage put a question:  "What's behind all this, hombre?" 

The man's eyes only stared glassily. It was as if he had not heard. 

"What are you fellows after?" Doc asked, his voice even louder. 

The man's eyes seemed as crystal balls fixed in his bead. Nothing  came past his lips but labored, painful

breathing. 

"Who is your boss?" Doc persisted. 

"Voy a casa!" said the man. "I am going home." 

He was delirious. Strands were breaking in the already thin life  thread which suspended him over the Infinite

Abyss. 

Doc Savage, seeking to draw something of value from the delirium,  leaned close and shouted loudly: "Senor

Corto Oveja!" 

"Oveja!" gurgled the dying man. "Oveja  fool  easily tricked." 

"Tricked by whom?" Doc shouted. 

This query brought no response. 

With the tips of sinewy, practiced fingers, Doc touched the various  nerve centers in the broken body. His vast

knowledge enabled him to  alleviate pain in this fashion. Although even his surgical skill could  not save this

man's life, be might prolong the flow of information,  such as it was. 

"Ivory cube!" gulped the dying man. 

"What?" Doc yelled. 

"All square, and of ivory!" the fellow moaned in Spanish. "Must get  it  worth many million pesos!" 

Doc continued his dulling pressure on the nerve centers. It was  probable that the man did not even know be

was being spoken to.  Whatever information that came would be incoherent and by chance. 

"Rico hombres!" came the agonized whisper. "Rich men? Rich men it  will make us! Skeletons under a rock 

the ivory cube was gone! The  galleon with the crew of skeletons, we cannot find it!" 


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Doc's bronze features remained composed, but he was about as near  bursting with impatience as he ever got.

The mutterings of this man  only deepened the mystery. 

The dying man said loudly and clearly: "Senor Oveja and his  daughter are fools, and easily deceived. Alex

Savage  " 

And then the man died. 

"BUT what did he mean?" Monk demanded. "An ivory cube  a galleon  with a skeleton crew  skeletons

under a ledge  and a lot of pesos!  What a hash of information to try to make something out of!" 

Doc Savage had assembled his five men, and they stood together in  the darkness at the edge of town. It was

well past midnight. 

"Figuring it out is a swell job for Monk!" dapper Ham said in a  jeering voice. 

"What do you mean?" Monk asked innocently. "Trying to dope it out  would drive an ordinary man

halfwitted," Ham assured him politely.  "You're safe." 

"Meanin' I'm half simple, huh?" Monk growled pleasantly. He  addressed his pig. "Habeas, this shyster don't

like you and me. Whatcha  say to that?" 

"T' hell with 'im!" said the pig  at least it sounded as if the  pig had replied. 

Ham dropped his sword cane and jumped a foot in the air. "For  crying out loud!" 

"Don't he look funny!" questioned the voice which seemed to come  from the pig. 

Ham caught on, then. He grabbed his sword cane, straightened, and  made a pass at Monk. 

Only by a frenzied leap did Monk escape. He retreated to safety,  carrying his pet shoat. 

"I didn't know Monk was a ventriloquist!" chuckled Long Tom, the  electrical wizard. "He must have just

picked it up!" 

A pitiful groan escaped Ham. 

Doc Savage had delayed his recital while the horseplay progressed.  Their escapades rarely got so perilous but

that Monk and Ham could have  no spats. This was only Monk's latest scheme to insult the sartorially  perfect

Ham. 

"Much of what the dying man said was incoherent," Doc resumed. "But  two fragments of the information

were fairly significant." 

Johnny, the skinny archaeologist, took off his spectacles which had  the magnifying left lens. 

"Which were they?" 

"The reference to money," Doc explained. "Once he mentioned a  hundred million pesos! That must be the

motivation  the loot the gang  is after." 


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"A hundred million pesos!" Monk gasped from the adjacent darkness. 

"It may not be that much," Doc pointed out. "The fellow was  delirious. He may have spoken the first large

figure that came to his  wandering mind." 

"The dying man tipped us to one thing we had already guessed,"  mumbled the bigfisted Renny. "Senor

Oveja, the guy with the peach of a  daughter, is being tricked." 

"We're making headway!" said the sharptongued Ham. "Now, will some  one kindly explain what was meant

by an ivory cube, and skeletons under  ledges and in boats?" 

No one had an answer to that. 

"We may see some action before we get it cleared up," Doc said  dryly. "Let's set sail, brothers!" 

"Where to?" Ham questioned. 

"To see about our baggage," Doc told him. 

Their luggage, they discovered, after a bit of reconnoitering, was  locked in the freight room at the local depot.

The night station agent  not only refused to turn it over, but when he learned Doc's identity,  ran for a Mounted

Policeman. It seemed the agent had been advised that  Doc was wanted for questioning in connection with the

death of the  conductor, Wilkie. 

Doc glided to the locked freight room the instant the agent was out  of sight. He had no implement other than

the thin blade of a pocket  knife, which Monk produced. But he got the lock on the freightroom  door open in

a bit less than B minute. 

By the time the station agent returned with a Mounted Policeman,  Doc and his men had lost themselves in the

night, carrying their  various pieces of luggage with them. 

Ordinarily, Doc cooperated freely with the police, but just now he  did not care to he delayed. These Mounted

Police were thoroughgoing;  they might jail him, despite his influence. 

"Where are we going?" asked Ham, trying to balance both his sword  cane and his luggage in his arms. 

"To the place where this trouble seems to be coming from," Doc told  him. "Alex Savage's estate!" 

Chapter 10. CABIN OF MURDER

"ALL I can say is that we picked some spot for a vacation!" Ham  wailed loudly and mournfully. 

The time was somewhat past noon, the following day. The spot was in  the neighborhood of Alex Savage's

cabin. 

"I've been in a lot of tropical jungles!" Ham continued dolefully.  "But they were boulevards compared to

this!" 

Ham was a man who entertained little liking for getting close to  nature. He heartily disapproved of all rough

going. This was not  because he could not stand hardship  Ham could take it. What Ham did  dislike, though,


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was seeing his costly, welltailored clothes torn off  his back. Clothes were Ham's passion. He would forego

anything  except  possibly a fight  to remain sartorially perfect 

His present garments were rapidly beckoning rags. His spirits were  sinking accordingly. Ham had donned a

nifty woodsman's outfit before  starting on this hike. His Park Avenue tailor had told him it was the  proper

thing when he purchased it. Ham had known better at the time,  but had failed to resist the welltailored lines

of the outfit. 

"Doc, where's a camera?" Monk demanded loudly. "I want Ham's  picture as he looks now! The newspapers

would go for it!" 

Ham glared indignantly. 

The business of reaching Alex Savage's woodland retreat they had  found to be no small task. Doc had

searched for an airplane, but the  only craft available had been an old twoseater biplane. Locating the  owner

shortly after dawn, Doc bought the decrepit ship outright. 

By dint of howling and groaning like a dying thing, the old crate  had proved it could take three of them off

the ground at once. 

Lack of landing fields near Alex Savage's cabin had been another  obstacle. To complicate things, a thick fog

had been sweeping in from  the sea. It had taken three hours of flying to even locate Alex  Savage's cabin.

Once he had found it, Doc could discern no sign of life  about the place. 

Doc had been forced to land something like ten miles from the  cabin, directly inland. Four trips had been

necessary to carry his  friends and their load of baggage. 

Now, they had been fighting their way through the wilderness for  some hours. 

"Holy cow!" Renny boomed. "Do you reckon they ever got your  telegrams into this country, Doc?" 

"I understand the mail is brought up the coast by boat," Doc told  him. "Telegrams would probably come in

the same way." 

"If we only had Doc's big plane!" Ham groaned. 

The ship to which Ham referred was Doc's enormous speed plane, a  bus capable of descending on land or

water. This craft now reposed in  Doc's hidden hangar on the Hudson River in New York City. With it, a

landing on the little bay in front of Alex Savage's cabin would have  been a simple matter. 

Doc had not used the plane to fly to Canada simply because he  wished to get away from speed and bustle

during his vacation. 

For some time they had been following a small river. This stream  flowed at a terrific pace, a great fiat,

moaning green serpent which  shook white spray off its back at frequent intervals. 

The river, Doc had determined from the air, emptied into the tiny  bay on the shores of which Alex Savage's

large cabin stood. 

"Look!" Doc said abruptly. He leveled an arm. 


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Fog was crawling through the brush like lazy smoke; the vapor lay  like a gray mold on the sky, stifling

sunbeams and making the day  almost twilight. In the creamy illumination, the object which Doc  indicated

was barely discernible. 

It was a fresh grave, marked by a cross. 

AS they drew nearer, it became apparent that the cross was  ponderous, reaching above Doc's shoulders. It

was of wood, roughly  hewn. 

"The grave is only a few days old," Long Tom offered. They all  walked around to get a look at the inscription

on the cross, burned  into it on a place where the wood had been chiseled flat. 

ALEX SAVAGE 

"My uncle!" Doc said sharply. 

Silence wrapped the little group for some minutes. Their faces were  grim. Discovery of the grave had been a

shower of cold water on their  spirits. 

That Alex Savage was blood kin to their bronze chief, accounted for  part of the gloom settling on the group.

Ordinarily, they were inclined  to sail grandly through all sorts of perils, taking the occurrence of a  death as an

unpleasant thing which was part of the game. 

But this was different. For a little while, as they stood there,  adventure seemed somewhat to lose its tang. 

"Do you suppose  " Homely Monk made a vague gesture. "I wonder if  the death was natural?" 

No one replied. 

"He had a daughter, Patricia Savage," Doc said at last 

The sartorially inclined Ham seemed to have forgotten both his  ragged garments and his goodnatured

enemy, Monk. 

"Let's move!" he muttered. "Graves always get my goat!" They left  their depressing find. The grave was on a

level shelf of ground. The  gray fog hung all around like waterlogged curtains. Doc surmised that  the spot

overlooked the sea, for the way soon dipped sharply downward,  and they could hear the mushy splashing of

waves. 

They scrambled over rocks, shouldered through brush. Behind them,  the river moaned, but they eventually

left that sound behind. 

The fog, growing more dense, swirled about the men like the clammy  tentacles of some fabulous colossus.

No birds sounded in the trees.  There was no perceptible wind, but waves continued to make low  splashings in

the distance. The splashes came at regular intervals, and  no doubt were the result of a ground swell. In the

thick fog, these  sounds might have been the shuffling steps of some spectral wanderer. 

"I don't care a lot for this place!" Monk announced. 

"We're getting near the cabin," Doc said. 


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Monk glanced up sharply. He wondered how Doc had learned that. He  decided the bronze man had

recognized landmarks. 

The truth was that Doc's sensitive nostrils had caught certain  faint odors  scents which the others had

missed. Doc's olfactory  organs were of almost animal keenness, for training them was a part of  the daily

exercise routine which he took unfailingly. 

The vague odor which he had detected was mainly that of gasoline.  Also, there were certain flower scents

alien to the region, which  probably came from a woman's dressing room. Too, there was the faint  odor of

wood smoke. The smoke tang was old  not such as would come  from a blazing fire. 

Within the next hundred yards, the cabin came in sight The  sumptuous nature of the rustic establishment

created a sensation. 

"Holy cow!" Renny ejaculated. "This is quite a place!" 

Doc said sharply: "There's nobody here!" 

Again the bronze man was voicing what his amazing senses had told  him. His ears, sharp beyond those of an

ordinary human, had detected no  stirrings of life. 

The front door of the cabin gaping open, they went in. 

A man lay face up on the floor. A length of staghorn stuck upright  from his chest  the hilt of a knife! 

GLIDING across the floor, Doc Savage studied the dead man. 

"An Indian!" he said. 

Then he made a brief examination. "A halfbreed, I should have  said. He died, as near as can be told, about

the time we were having  all our troubles on the train." 

Doc indicated the wrinkled condition of the dead man's lower  garments. "The fellow got soaked to the

armpits just before his death.  His clothes show plainly that they dried on his motionless body. That  means

they were wet when he was killed, and dried later." 

Doc removed the beaded moccasins from the corpse. There was more  than a spoonful of bright, clean sand in

each slipper. 

To the trousers on the corpse was sticking smears of an  ambercolored, sticky gum. There was more gum on

the lifeless fingers. 

To the gum on the trousers clung bits of bark; and to the gum on  the hands stuck, not only bark, but tiny

feathers and lint. 

If the gum and the stuff clinging to it informed him of anything,  Doc Savage did not remark on the fact at the

moment. 

Long Tom, the electrical wizard, looking slightly more unhealthy  and pale than usual, asked: "Who is he?" 


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Doc shook his head in a slow negative. He walked through the other  rooms. Everywhere there was evidence

of a thorough search  furniture  ripped apart, bedding torn and scattered, rugs jerked up. The stuffed,  snarling

head of a bearskin rug had been chopped open. 

"The cabin was searched twice," Doc announced after his scrutiny. 

"Twice!" exclaimed skeletonthin Johnny, puzzled. "How do you  figure that?" 

Moving into the kitchen, Doc indicated a smear on the floor. It  resembled molasses which had been spilled,

and had become as hard as  glass. An overturned can near by showed where the stuff had come from.  This can

bore a varnish label. 

"Look at the label," Doc advised. "Notice how long it requires for  that varnish to dry." 

After he had looked, the dapper Ham said: "Twelve hours." 

"Exactly. It is now perfectly dry, but it was spilled during the  search. That means the hunt occurred at least

twelve hours ago." 

Doc went into a bedroom. A gasoline lantern lay on the floor. Its  fuelreservoir base had been split open. The

floor about the wreck of  the lamp was wet with gasoline. 

"You fellows know how fast gasoline evaporates," Doc said. "That  gas was spilled less than an hour ago. The

second search was more  thorough. They even split open the lantern base." 

Johnny adjusted his spectacles which had the magnifier lens. 

"I've been noticing things, too," he announced. "The breed lying  dead in the front room is a servant. I noticed

clothes which would fit  him. These were in a small room in the rear   obviously a servant's  room. There were

woman's garments in the room, too. That means he had a  wife." 

"She's a very large woman, too," Doc agreed. "Her clothes were big.  She's an Indian, judging by the bright

colors she affects. Apparently  she and her husband were the only servants on the place." 

"What about the daughter, Patricia?" Renny rumbled. 

DOC did not reply immediately. He roved into a bedroom where  feminine garments littered the floor. He

ended his wandering at a  wastebasket which had been overturned, and which had held  among other  trash 

rumpled cleaning tissues. These were the paper napkins young  women use to remove facial creams. 

Picking up one of these tissues, Doc crushed it between his  sensitive, metalbard fingers. 

"It was used this morning," he said. "That means the young woman  was present that recently." 

"But where is she now?" Renny boomed. "And where is the fat  servant?" 

Renny was asking questions as if he thought his bronze chief had  been present at whatever had happened here

in the cabin. Renny knew  from past experiences that Doc could come upon a scene such as this,  and, because

of his weird ability to read vague dews, get a story which  came uncannily near being the truth. 

"I'll show you," Doc said, thereby proving Renny had not been too  optimistic. 


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Doc beckoned the group outdoors. He pointed to tracks in the soft  earth. It had evidently rained at dawn, or

shortly afterward. And  distinguishable in the dirt were footprints of three men and two women.  One of the

women had worn moccasins, the other lowheeled, hobnailed  boots. 

"The two women have been kidnaped," Doc said bluntly. The five  aides swapped blank glances. How Doc

could look at a set of footprints  and tell there had been a kidnaping was beyond their deepest  understanding. 

Pointing, Doc said: "Notice the tracks show where one of the men  shoved the girl  shoved her hard. It was

no playful push. He would  hardly have done that if the girl was going with them willingly." 

Renny waved acknowledgment with his big hands. "You win, Doc." 

"The kidnapers were our friends who escaped in the black  monoplane," Doc continued. 

The five men were fairly accustomed to this sort of thing  Doc's  habit of plucking gems of information out

of thin air. They had seen  him do miracles on more than one occasion. But they could not help  looking a bit

stunned. 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled. "I don't see how you can tell that,  Doc." 

"These tracks were made by the same men who attacked me when I  started to follow the trail of luminous

arrows from the train," Doc  replied. "Those men were members of the gang who escaped in the plane." 

He dropped to a knee and inspected the footprints more thoroughly.  Then he reiterated: "I am sure of it! Not

only the size, but certain  worn patches on the soles exactly coincide." 

"0. K., 0. K.," Renny muttered. "All we need to know now is where  the two women prisoners are being held." 

"That will take some trailing," Doc replied. 

The trail following was an easy matter for a few yards. Then, in  the center of a great litter of rocks, the prints

vanished. Nowhere  could they be seen. 

"They began leaping from rock to rock," Doc decided. "They can't do  that forever. We'll circle  " 

SCATTERING, Doc and his men ranged the vicinity. They did not  spread so widely but that they could hear

each other call, however. 

Shortly, Long Tom cried loudly: "Come over here, you guys! I ain't  got the trail, but I've got something else!" 

The unhealthylooking electrical wizard was standing near a dense  thicket of spruce. At his feet, brownish

stains colored the rank woods  grass. 

"Blood!" he exclaimed dramatically. 

"Thoroughly dried," Doc agreed after a close scrutiny. "Part of it  was washed away by the rain last night." 

The bronze man swung slowly around the spot, eyes on the ground.  Several times, he stopped and parted the

grass. The rain had washed  away signs, leaving few that could be read. To eyes less than superbly  trained, the

stretch of forest presented absolutely no clew.  Penetrating the spruce thicket, Doc spent some time in it. 


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He came out of the spruce and said: "In there was where the breed  was murdered." 

"Yeah?" Monk grunted. 

"Maybe I should have said, from in there was where he was murdered.  The knife must have been thrown.

Signs show the breed came out here to  meet some one. Evidently, whoever he was meeting got him with a

knife  thrown from the thicket." 

"Any chance of trailin' the killer?" Renny demanded. 

"No. The fellow was careful to follow rocky ground coming and  going. The rain last night wiped out what

few tracks he did make." 

Monk had been inspecting the rainfaded prints around the  bloodstain. Laboriously, he was finding the tracks

which Doc had  discovered almost at a glance. 

"The two women evidently found the slain Indian," the homely  chemist declared. "They carried him to the

cabin. Here're the tracks.  One set was made by boots, the other by moccasins. 

Monk glanced over his shoulder. He wanted to see if Doc would  verify the deduction. Monk started. His eyes

flew wide. 

Doc Savage was nowhere about! 

Doc's five friends showed no excitement over the bronze man's  disappearance. Doc had a disconcerting habit

of vanishing on certain  occasions. Doc had merely glided into the brush, of course, but his  going had been so

silent as to seem spectral. 

By the time his absence was noticed, Doc had covered scores of  yards. He traveled swiftly until he was a full

quarter of a mile from  the cabin. Then he swung in a Wide circle. 

The bronze man seemed to undergo a strange change. He became  animallike in his searching for the trail.

He utilized not only his  eyes, but his sense of smell as well. Much of the time, he traveled on  all fours.

Occasionally, when desiring to move swiftly, or to clear a  tangle of brush which no man could have

penetrated without infinite  labor, he sprang upward and swung along, with the prodigious agility of  a

monkey, from one tree limb to another. 

IT was a tangle of spider webs which finally showed Doc the trail. 

The webs had been torn from their anchorage by some passing body,  and hung dangling. A few yards from

that point, Doc found a footprint.  It was small; unmistakably feminine. He did not touch it, did not span  its

proportions with his fingers. But he knew it was the footprint of  the girl who had been seized from the cabin. 

It was somewhat uncanny, the ability, which Doc had acquired by  long practice, to judge size by eye alone.

Like Doc's other unusual  accomplishments, there was nothing supernatural about this. It was an

accomplishment perfected by his remarkable routine of exercises. 

This routine occupied two hours daily, and in it was a process  where he cast small white balls on the ground

repeatedly, calculating  just how far apart they had fallen. Careful measurements Verified his  judgment. 


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Doc followed the trail. It was not easy. The kidnapers had taken  pains to conceal their path. They trod rocky

ground wherever possible.  They entered a small stream, followed it fully two hundred yards; here,  water had

washed away the tracks. 

At one point  an eddy where the water was stagnant  Doc found a  faint haze of mud still suspended. It had

been stirred up by the  passing of his quarry. This proved they were not far ahead. 

Going became more difficult. The trail mounted sheer slopes, dived  into rocky gulches. Stony boulders and

ledges were steadily underfoot.  The stuff would not retain footprints. 

The wild western country produces certain individuals who are known  as "sign readers." These are expert

trackers, and are employed to trail  thieves, find lost live stock, and kindred other jobs. So expert do  these men

become that they can look at a stretch of ground and see a  clear trail where another man can distinguish

nothing. 

Had a sign reader been watching Doc Savage now, he would have been  driven to conclude himself a veritable

amateur. For it was in actuality  no trail at all which Doc followed. The stony earth retained no prints. 

Doc ranged back and forth, his strange golden eyes photographing  everything in his mind's eye. He discerned

certain bugs and small  lizards loitering about the rocks. In other places, these were not in  evidence. It was

plain they had been frightened to cover. 

They were such vague dews as this which guided the bronze giant. 

The noise of the river became audible. The kidnapers seemed to be  heading straight for the rushing torrent.

The noise of the river was  like that made by a large tree being shaken by some gigantic hand. 

Wadded masses of fog crawled through the rocks like enormous, gray  phantom cats. In spots underfoot, little

puddles of water stood, the  result of the rain of the night before. 

Doc found where one of the party he was following had stepped into  a pool, and left a plain trail for some

distance, The boot tracks were  small  those of the girl. A bit farther on, Doc began finding small  colored

glass beads, of the sort used in decorating Indian moccasins. 

Both women seemed to be doing their bit to advertise the trail. 

THE roaring of the river became louder. It might have been a noisy  beast drawing near. The sound had lost

its likeness to a tree being  shaken. It was ugly and throbbing, and full of sobs and gurgles. It had  a quality of

ugly savagery. It caused the very eardrums, against which  it battered, to ache. 

Then Doc came to a canyon. It was perhaps a hundred feet deep. He  could not see the opposite walls, nor the

bottom. He had to climb down  to see how deep it was. 

Upstream a few rods, there was a high waterfall. This was making  the roaring that hurt the ears. 

The trail which Doc was following ended at the water's edge. The  waterfall made a vast thunder in the

canyon, and it was shattered into  spray by its plunge over the precipice. From the noisy inferno, mist  arose

like smoke from a burning house. It mingled with the fog; it  darkened the sun. Its wetness drooled on the

surrounding rocks until  they ran rills of water, as if it were raining. 

Doc lifted his gaze. Overhead, the mist clouds collided and merged  and tumbled like fighting things. 


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For perhaps a minute he stared upward. Then he lowered his eyes.  The river was all foam. Waves snapped

twice the height of his head.  Their tops spat foam like ravenous jaws. 

Here and there a rock jutted from the stream bed. So swift was the  flood that air spaces were left behind these

rocks, which reached far  down toward the stream bed. 

By peering closely, Doc could discern the tracks of those he was  following. The party had waded directly out

into the boiling waters. 

This was puzzling. No human being could wade the current; no boat  could exist in it. 

Doc glanced upward again. The mist that lathered the air overhead  seemed to fascinate him. He watched it go

through convulsions for a  bit. Then he clambered up the canyon side. 

The walls were not exactly sheer, but they were steep enough that  no loose rocks clung in midair. Fifty feet,

Doc climbed   seventyfive. He was still in the clouds of spray. The stuff dashed  against his face. 

Pausing, he aligned himself with the tracks which had disappeared  into the stream. He was a little to the right.

He corrected his  position. Then he looked upward. 

Very low, yet penetrating the cataclysmic roar of the waterfall  with seeming ease, came a tiny triiling note 

the sound that was  characteristic of Doc Savage. The fantastic note seemed hardly to come  into being, then it

was gone again. Doc himself showed no sign of being  aware that he had made it. 

The bronze man was studying what he had found. It was simply a rope  tied securely to a tree. The rope

stretched across the canyon. 

DOC had expected something like this. It was the only thing that  explained the tracks which had entered the

stream. Some kind of a sling  was pulled back and forth on this aerial cableway, he believed. The  sling must

hang low enough to enable those in the water to grasp it.  The ingenious thing about this crossing device was

that the cable  stretched where it was completely hidden by clouds of mist and spray  from the waterfall. 

Doc grasped the cable and tested it. Then he leaped high in the air  and landed, perfectly balanced on his feet,

on the cable. He did not go  hand over hand across the ropes, as another man might have done. He ran  atop it,

in the fashion of a tightrope walker. 

Spray had made the rope very slippery. More treacherous footing  would have been difficult to imagine. Doc

seemed to give it no more  consideration than he would have given a sidewalk. He carried no  balancing rod 

without which few tightrope walkers venture to perform   yet his balance was perfectly maintained. 

The rope sagged in the middle, making the crossing more dangerous.  Below, waves darted up like

greensnouted, repellent lizards of titanic  size. A fail meant certain death. 

The rope curved sharply upward. Doc tilted far forward to maintain  his balance, and his feet slipped

repeatedly on the spraywet fiber.  These slippings, which would have raised the hair of a spectator,  seemed

to affect Doc's nerve not at all. He appeared to be as immune  from fear as the metal he resembled. 

A tree appeared in the misty void. To it was secured the rope end.  Doc discerned a rude basket of sticks,

pulleys, and ropes lying near  by. It was a makeshift car for the cableway over the canyon. 


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Doc was almost on the point of leaping from the rope to solid  ground when a man appeared beside the tree.

He was squat, swarthy, and  wore greasy coveralls. He had a rifle stock jammed against his  shoulder. 

The rifle coughed a tongue of flame which actually blackened the  coat fabric over Doc's heart. The bullet

made a tiny, ragged hole in  the patch of powderburned cloth. 

Chapter 11. THE VANISHED BOX

DOC Savage's shoe soles seemed to acquire roller hearings. His  giant form skittered back down the sloping

wire. 

He was bent nearly double now  he had folded into that position an  instant after the rifleman fired. His

movements were strangely  grotesque. He slouched forward and seized the rope, his arms and legs  whipping

wildly Doc seemed to be trying to retain his grip on the rope. 

The swarthy rifleman leaned far out to peer through the mist. 

"Bueno!" be hissed. "My bullets hit his heart!" 

The man jacked a fresh cartridge into his rifle, planted the weapon  against his shoulder, and aimed

deliberately. 

He could barely make out Doc's figure. It was a feverishly  contorting, bronzehued smear in the dripping

gray abyss. The bronze  man's movements reminded the rifleman of a squirrel that had been shot,  and was

attempting frantically to cling to its limb. Even as the man  peered over his rifle sights, the metallic figure fell

away from the  overhanging cable. 

Spray which boiled up from the water swallowed Doc's falling body. 

"Bueno!" hissed the swarthy man again. He lowered his rifle. "He  did not need a second shot." 

The rifleman did not take the death of the bronze man for granted,  however. He scrambled down the steep

wall of the canyon to the water.  There, washed by spray which the mad waters flung up, he explored. 

He was positive Doc Savage had fallen into the river where it was  roughest and running most violently, and

equally sure Doc could not  have escaped, even had he not been shot through the heart. 

THE man climbed back up the canyon wall and left the vicinity. He  seemed none too familiar with the region.

His progress was a series of  careful sallies from one landmark to another. He stood near a tree,  which had an

extra large trunk, until he located a pair of large  boulders which looked familiar. His next lap was to a brier

thicket. 

The fellow was plainly no woodsman, and he was taking no chances on  getting lost. 

He did not have far to go, soon entering a large grove of trees.  There was a clearing in the center of the grove. 

Four tents were pegged out in the clearing. The canvas was painted  a green hue which camouflaged perfectly

with the leaves overhead. 

At the edge of the clearing stood an enormous, brushylooking mound  of green. This had a somewhat


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artificial look. However, only close  examination would have revealed that the mound was made of freshly cut

green boughs. 

The boughs were stacked over a black monoplane, concealing it  thoroughly. It would be almost impossible

for an aviator flying over it  to detect presence of the black ship. 

Several men sprang to meet the bridge guard. They had rifles in  their hands; revolvers were belted about their

midriffs. 

"Mulo cabeza!" gritted a man. "Mule head! You were left to guard  the rope over the river!" 

"Keep your shirts on, caballeros!" chuckled the rifleman. "What do  you think I have just done?" 

"Deserted your post!" somebody growled. 

"No, amigo! I was standing at the rope end with my rifle ready,  when the bronze man tried to cross. I shot

him in the heart! He fell  into the river!" 

"Bueno!" chortled the other, suddenly delighted. "Good! Did he fall  where the water ran swiftest?" 

"He fell where no man could swim, amigo." 

MORE men stumbled out of the green tents. They crowded around the  man who was the selfadmitted killer

of Doc Savage. They were prepared  to make a hero of the fellow. 

"You are quite a caballero!" declared a man. "Many others have  tried to kill this bronze wizard and failed. I

once heard a rumor that  he was gifted with everlasting life  that he could not be killed." 

"Where did you hear that rumor, senor?" demanded a listener. 

"In our native Spain, amigos." 

"Que?" ejaculated the other. "What? Has the fame of Doc Savage  penetrated to our native land?" 

"Si, si! That bronze man was known to many lands." 

"Wag is correct, senors," chuckled another fellow. 

The late bridge guard swelled with pride. He flashed white teeth in  an expansive grin, and stuck out his chest

like a pouter pigeon. 

"It is possible I shall draw a bonus when our boss hears of this,  eh senors?" he queried. 

"We must find the ivory cube before anybody draws a bonus!" one of  the others reminded. 

"Have you not yet learned where the white block is?" snapped the  guard. 

"What do you think we are  magicians?" snarled one of the group.  "We have not had time to question the

senorita  fittingly." 


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"The fat one  the squaw  she is what the Yankees call a bat from  hell!" a man offered. He felt tenderly of

an ear. From the upper end of  the ear, a semicircular segment had been bitten. "Like a dog, the squaw

snapped at me! Before I could dodge, she was spitting out a piece of my  ear!" 

Somebody unkindly laughed. 

Five of these men were the fellows who had escaped in the black  monoplane. The others there were seven

more  were somewhat incrusted  with grease and dirt, an indication they had been encamped here in the

wilderness for some time. The only clean, wellkept thing about them  was their guns. These were spotless,

freshly oiled, and carried in open  holsters. 

"What do we do next?" questioned a man. 

"We will let our chief know that I have killed Doc Savage," said  the rifleman who had guarded the rope

bridge. 

"Have you forgotten, my friend?" somebody chided him, "that we have  strict orders never to go to our chief.

He always comes to us." 

"The chief, senors, should know what I have done," insisted the  man. "It was no small feat! Here is how I did

it!" 

The man now proceeded to describe a terrific fight at one end of  the rope bridge. Many blows had been

exchanged; bullets had flown, and  knives had flashed  to hear him tell it. 

The fellow was an accomplished liar. Out of his imagination, he  conjured an amazing battle; before he had

finished talking, he had not  only slain Doc Savage, but had first bested the bronze giant in a  physical contest. 

"And that is how it happened, hombres!" The tale spinner wiped  perspiration from his forehead. The sweat

had been brought out by the  very fierceness of the combat which he had just described. "Truly, it  was the

great fight of my life." 

"You are mucho hombre!" a listener agreed, tongue in his cheek. "If  you could now lead us to the galleon

with the crew of skeletons, you  would indeed be a hero." 

"Si, Si," agreed the world's champion liar. "The galleon of  skeletons! We will find it' amigo! But the ivory

cube comes first 1" 

THE words caused the men to exchange glances. An ugly determination  rode each face. Here was a question

on which they all seemed to be of  the same mind. 

"A man should go and guard the river crossing," some one suggested. 

"Not me, senor!" snapped the man who had lately been at the post.  "I have done my guardings for this day." 

This struck the others as being a reasonable statement. So another  man was dispatched to take a position at

the rope over the river. 

"Now to question the Senorita Savage," the leader announced. 

They moved in a body to one of the green tents. 


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"Come out, Senorita Savage!" commanded the leader. 

There was no response from the tent. 

"Come, senorita" the man directed, more sharply. 

Once more, nothing happened. 

The man stooped and looked in. He emitted a surprised yell. He  dived into the tent like a terrier after a rat.

There was noise as he  jumped about, and two blankets flew outdoors. 

"Es no posible!" the man screeched. "It is not possible! Senorita  Savage is gone!" 

Had the men suddenly discovered that they were standing over a  lighted charge of dynamite, they could not

have scattered more quickly.  In a wild wave, they spread around the tent. At the rear wall, one  fellow found a

stake loose. 

"Here is where she escaped!" he cried. 

"En verda!" sneered the former bridge guard. "Indeed! So this is  the way you hombres keep track of your

prisoners!" 

"Your own big mouth is to blame, caballero!" some one advised him  angrily. "While you were talking so

loud and fast, telling us what you  did to this man Savage, she escaped I" 

"Scatter, hombres!" shouted the man who seemed to possess some  semblance of authority. "Look everywhere

for her! She cannot have gone  far." 

Like a pack of hounds which had lost a trail, the men dispersed.  Some dashed madly into the woods; others

peered in brush clumps. There  was plenty of shrubbery, for the gang had not troubled to clear the  camp site. 

Some of the men probed about the camp. One of these went to the  green tent which held the squaw, Tiny. A

single glance inside sufficed  to show that the squaw's legs were still bound securely. The man  started to back

out. 

"Wait!" grunted Tiny. "You want know what way white gal go?" 

"Si, Si, Senorita!" said the man. "Yes, yes!" "Cut um loose," said  Tiny. "Me tell um." "Si!" exclaimed the

man delightedly. He sprang  inside. He was hardly in the tent when a slender, sinewy brown arm  enwrapped

his throat from behind. This caused his mouth to fly wide  open. Another brown hand promptly stuffed a

wadded handkerchief between  the gaping jaws. 

PATRICIA Savage had been crouching to one side of the tent door  while Tiny enticed their victim inside. 

During the excitement which had attended the arrival of the killer,  Patricia had managed to free herself and

crawl into the tent which  sheltered the squaw. 

Her escape had been discovered at an inopportune moment. Given a  few seconds more, and Patricia would

have been gone, along with Tiny. 


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Tiny reared up to help subdue the man. She gave a wrench, and the  rope fell off her wrists. A kick, and her

ankles were free. The ropes  had merely been arranged to look like they were tied. That was  Patricia's idea. 

The man was probably not more than twentyfive, and quite husky. He  had a neck like a young bull. He was

more than a match for nine out of  ten runofthestreet men. 

Patricia, however, had taken him by surprise. Moreover, she was a  young lady who combined good looks

with a welldeveloped muscle. She  not only kept the man from yelling an alarm, but she had his wind

completely shut off. 

The man kicked, struck backward. Not for nothing had Patricia taken  fencing lessons in a finishing school.

She evaded his blows easily. The  man grabbed her attractive bronze hair and gave it a tremendous yank. 

Tiny went into action. Stooping, she seemed to pick something off  the floor and plant it forcibly on the man's

chin. It was a beautiful  haymaker. 

The man stopped struggling as suddenly as if he had been shot  through the brain. 

"Me learn that practicing on Boat Face," Tiny muttered. A moment  after she had spoken, Tiny seemed to

remember that Boat Face was dead.  Her lower lip quivered, and tremendous sobs shook her enormous bosom. 

Patricia eyed their unconscious victim, then appraised the squaw's  size. 

"I'll have to put on his clothes and walk out of camp," she said.  "If they would fit you, I'd let you go, Tiny.

But you're too darn big.  When I get out of camp, I'll make a fuss. I'll yell or something. When  they rush to

investigate, you beat it." 

"0. K.," said Tiny. 

The man had a gun. Patricia took that; then she yanked off the  man's shirt. After this, she turned her back. 

When she wheeled around again, Tiny had the fellow's pants and  shoes, and had spread a blanket over his

sleeping form. 

Patricia now donned the garments. She picked up the man's hat,  looked at the greasy interior, grimaced,

scrubbed it vigorously with  her elbow, and put it on. She stuffed her bronze hair under it. 

"How do I look?" she asked Tiny. 

Tiny leaned over and popped their prisoner on the jaw with a fist.  He had shown signs of reviving. "You look

all right, Miss Pat." 

Patricia calmly walked out of the tent and strolled for  the woods.  If any of her enemies discovered her, there

was  a good chance that  they would start shooting. They were of  a race notoriously quick on  the trigger. 

No one, fortunately, saw through her disguise. When she reached the  first trees, Patricia resisted an impulse

to run. The woods were full  of maddened searchers. 

PATRICIA had not covered two rods when she saw a human hunter. He  was prowling around, peering this

way and that. It chanced that he was  the same individual who had been guarding the bridge. 


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Patricia, peering out of her tent while making her escape, had seen  this man. She had heard him bragging of

the murder he had committed.  The name of the murder victim had been a shock. 

It was Patricia's first knowledge that her famous cousin, Doc  Savage, was in the vicinity. 

The young woman was at a loss to explain why Doc was in this part  of Canada. She did not know it, but she

had not received the bronze  man's messages advising her of his northern vacation. 

Patricia had intended to send to Doc for help. But that morning,  she had found both the storage barrel and the

launch tanks empty of  gasoline. This had prevented her from going to send a telegram. She was  relieved that

no gesture of hers had drawn Doc to his death. 

However, Patricia was horrified to think that Doc had perished. She  was also filled with a consuming rage

against his killer. 

Patricia was no butterfly who blossomed forth only at social  functions. That did not mean she was a

wallflower when confronted with  the glittering pomp of society. But at the same time, she was a  twofisted

young woman who could go out and do things. 

Glaring at the seffadmitted murderer of Doc Savage, she made a  decision. She concluded to seize the fellow

and turn him over to the  nearest Mounted Policeman. 

Stepping behind a tree, Patricia drew her gun  the weapon she had  taken from the man she had

overpowered. She examined it; the thing was  loaded. She waited purposefully. 

Patricia could hear her victim approaching. He had been headed in  this direction when she first saw him. She

believed his course would  take him within arm's length of the tree behind which she stood. In  this, she was

not wrong. 

The man rounded the tree. He was looking in another direction, so  his back was half turned. He did not see

Patricia. 

Reaching out, Patricia jammed the barrel of her gun against the  nape of the man's neck. 

The man gave one horrorstricken scream and fell over in a dead  faint. 

Patricia was thunderstruck. She would have maintained that it was  beyond the most nervous of women to

faint at the mere touch of cold  metal on the back of a neck.  But what Patricia had no means of knowing  was

that this man was highly wrought up. 

For the last half hour, the fellow had been seeing Doc Savage in  his mind's eye. Especially did he remember

the metallic quality which  was Doc's chief characteristic. 

When cold metal touched his neck, his reaction was that Doc's  frosty ghost had seized him. So he fainted. 

"Darn it!" snapped Patricia, and began running deeper into the  woods. 

By yelling before he had keeled over, the man had upset her plans.  The howl had spread the alarm. 

"Que hay!" shouted a man from somewhere. "What is the matter?" 


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Patricia hoped he would be a long time finding out,. She put on  more speed, and began to have a faint hope'

that she would make it. If  she did, her plan would have worked out to a nicety. The alarm would be  exactly

what was needed to give Tiny her chance to escape. 

Patricia was too optimistic, however. A man hurled himself from  behind a tree into her path. His gun was in

its holster. With bare  hands, he sought to seize the fleeing girl. The fact that the man was  not using his gun

saved his life. 

Instead of shooting him, as he no doubt deserved, Patricia made a  pass at his head with her revolver barrel. 

Clank! went the gun on the fellow's skull. He fell at her feet. 

Thinking he was unconscious, Patricia started to step over him. But  the man grasped her by the ankles and

tripped her. 

Too late, Patricia sought to shoot him  through a leg. They  scuffled for a moment. Then Patricia lost her

revolver. 

That marked the finish. In a moment, more swarthy men came rushing  through the timber to the aid of their

comrade. Seizing Patricia, they  bound her hand and foot. Then they carried her back to camp. 

THE first thing Patricia saw in camp was the voluminous Tiny. The  squaw lay on the ground in an attitude of

slumber. 

"What have you done to her?" Patricia shrieked. 

A man tapped his rifle barrel expressively and said: "I kees her  weeth thees, senorita." 

Patricia gripped her upper lip between firm white teeth, and said  nothing. She was worried and angry enough

to burst into tears. She felt  certain she would not get another such opportunity to escape. 

"What do you want with me?" she demanded of the men. 

"We have told you that, senorita!" ()ne said. 

"The ivory cube?" Patricia asked bitterly. 

"Si, senorita. The ivory cube is right. We want it." 

"It'll be a long old day before you get it!" Patricia retorted  angrily. 

The man shrugged his shoulders and made expressive handspreading  gestures. 

"Quien sabe?" he smiled coldly. "But why are you so determined not  to give it to us?" 

"I'll never turn the cube over to my father's murderers!" Patricia  rapped. 

The young woman's captor looked hurt at this. His face assumed an  injured expression. He shrugged several

times. 

"But, senorita," he said mournfully, "you do us mucho wrong to  think that." 


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Patricia sniffed indignantly. 

"Of course, I have no proof," she said. "You could claim the  werewolf did it." 

The man gave a pronounced shiver. He rolled his eyes skyward. He  crossed himself. 

"Heaven forbid!" he muttered. "The werewolf, senorita  has he  bothered you also?" 

Patricia eyed the man narrowly. She could not for the life of her  tell whether he was putting on an act for her

benefit, or telling the  truth. 

"Oh, don't try to kid me!" she said finally. 

"We are not kidding anybody, senorita. We know nothing of this  murder. But we do know you have a certain

ivory cube. It is imperative  that we have it. We are going to get it."  "Why do you want it?"  Patricia countered,

"That, senorita, is our own affair!" 

"I examined the block," Patricia said wonderingly. "There is no  inscription of any kind on it. It seems

perfectly solid  it does not  ring hollow when you tap it. Of what possible value can a plain ivory  block be to

you?" 

"So you do have the block!" her captor exclaimed triumphantly. 

Patricia bit her lips. The cat had been in the bag without her  knowing it, and she had let it out. 

Her captor waved his arms in excitement. He shouted loudly to his  fellows: "You hear, amigos? She has the

block! We have but to make her  tell where it is!" 

THE swarthy men gathered about. Eying them, Patricia decided they  were about as evillooking a collection

as she had ever seen. Any one  of them would have drawn a second look from a policeman. She did not  like

the fierce greed on their ugly faces. 

The men began to make cruel suggestions. 

"A knife on her pretty face!" proposed one. "That will make her  talk!" 

"Si, Si,", agreed another. "But a redhot iron is better." 

"Why not work on the squaw?" asked one man. "I think the Senorita  Savage is a young woman who will talk

to save her servant." 

At this point, the man who had fainted when he felt Patricia's cold  gun against the back of his neck, regained

consciousness. He glanced  about in a dazed fashion, keeping silent until he found out what was  going on. 

"What happened to you?" somebody asked him. 

"She struck me over the head!" replied the wily liar. "But, at  great risk to my life, I managed to yell the

alarm!" 

A man ran up. He carried a small portable gasoline stove of the  type woodsmen sometimes use  usually

tenderfoot woodsmen who have  trouble building fires. 


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He pumped up the pressure tank on the stove, and applied a lighted  match. The stove began to roar softly, and

give out an intensely hot  blue flame. 

The man placed the stove near Tiny. Then he prepared to grasp the  squaw's feet and hold them over the blue

flame. He had almost forced  the feet into the flame when there was a loud crash. The gasoline stove  lost

much of its shape, and jumped end over end. It had been hit by a  large rock, flung with terrific force. 

The swarthy men whirled. 

They saw a sight which, to a man, they carried in their memories to  their day of death. 

Chapter 12. THE HAND THAT BECKONED

HAD an elephant walked out in that clearing in the Canadian woods,  consternation could hardly have been

greater. Certainly, the shock  would have been less. 

The late bridge guard shrieked loudly, spun around, and fled! His  wild terror would have been comical, had it

not been so harshly real.  The man was stricken with horror. 

He had seen a ghost coming across the clearing. A ghost of the  bronze giant he had sent into the torrent below

the waterfall! More  appalling, this ghost was not moving with the stately walk usually  attributed to its kind.

The thing was coming with a speed which in  itself seemed beyond human ability. 

A towering bronze Nemesis, Doc Savage bore down on the swarthy man. 

Doc's escape had been managed quite simply. He now wore the  remarkable vest of many pockets which held

his assortment of apparatus.  This was lined with a metallic mail which would stop even a biggame  rifle slug. 

In one of the vest pockets was a long, slender, very strong silk  cord. To the end of this was fixed a grappling

hook. 

Doc had simply hooked the grapple over the rope spanning the river,  then lowered himself until he hung

concealed in the clouds of spray  boiling above the water. It chanced that the wait was almost his  undoing,

however. In the terrific roar of the falls, he had not heard  his enemy descending the canyon side. Luckily,

Doc had seen the other  first. 

Doc had climbed back up his silk cord to the cable, and swung  handoverhand to terra firma. 

The bronze man had followed his assailant to camp, and had been  lurking near by ever since. Unfortunately,

he had not been in a  position to help Patricia with her escape. Her flight had been opposite  Doc's place of

concealment. 

Doc had demolished the gasoline stove with the thrown rock. 

What now transpired happened with the violence of exploding  dynamite and the rapidity of an electrical

phenomena. 

Patricia Savage had often wondered what her famous cousin looked  like. She had read of some of his feats.

She had heard tales of him.  But she had never met Doc, and she had doubted his being the man he was  said to

be. 


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Watching Doc in action, Patricia concluded he was all he was  rumored to be, and then some. Discounting the

fellow who had fled,  there were eleven men in the clearing. All were fair physical  specimens. Moreover, they

were armed. 

One man sprang forward, leveled his revolver at Doc's chest, and  pulled the trigger repeatedly. The range was

short. He could hardly  miss. It was possible to count the ragged holes which his bullets  caused to appear

magically in the bronze man's coat front. 

Doc did not waver. The slugs 'night have been beans pelted at a  rhino. He came on like a juggernaut of metal. 

The gunman finished shooting, and threw his revolver wildly at Doc. 

The bronze man dodged. The way he did this was in itself reason for  popeyed surprise. The gun seemed to

pass through flesh and bone, so  swiftly did he weave his head aside and back. 

"I shoot him six times!" shrieked the one who had thrown the gun.  "He should be dead!" 

The seeming impossibility of what they had just witnessed held the  others spellbound. The fractional moment

during which they stood and  stared proved disastrous. 

The mighty bronze man drove a hand inside his clothing, brought out  a small metal egg of an object. He flung

it. 

The metal lump dropped among the swarthy men with a loud report! 

Without exception, the men clapped hands over their eyes. They  began to yell in terror. They could see

nothing  the world had  suddenly gone jet black! 

They were either too stupid or too surprised to realize they were  now standing in a smoke cloud  a great wad

of inky blackness which had  spread with lightning suddenness from the metal egg. 

PATRICIA Savage was only slightly less surprised than her captors.  She was lifted and borne rapidly through

the black cloud. With such  uncanny ease was she carried that Patricia was slow to realize human  hands were

bearing her. 

She could not see a thing in the almost blueblack void, but she  knew it must be the gigantic bronze man who

was bearing her. 

Patricia was carried out of the smoke. The day, dim and vaporous as  it was, seemed almost brilliant after the

sooty pall out of which they  had come. 

The young woman discovered her eyes had not been affected by the  dense smoke. They did not smart. 

She was lying across the bronze man's mighty shoulders, she  discovered. 

Patricia looked down and gave a violent start. Under one arm, as  easily as another man would carry a sack of

groceries, Doc had tucked  Tiny. The squaw weighed well over two hundred pounds. 

Doc Savage whipped across the clearing, his great speed seemingly  impeded not at all by his burdens.

Patricia found it hard to believe.  This metallic giant had the strength of a dozen men! 


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Reaching the edge of the clearing, Doc planted the two women on  their feet. 

"Run!" he said, and pointed in the direction of the rope spanning  the river gorge. 

Patricia began: "If you need any help  " 

"Do what I say!" Doc said sharply. 

Patricia looked slightly indignant, but began running. 

Turning to the right, Doc veered around the clearing edge. His  progress was swift, but he also zigzagged from

side to side, keeping  behind brush and trees as much as possible. 

None of the swarthy men had come from the black cloud as yet. This  was probably because the somber pall

had spread until it was more than  a hundred feet across. The smoke boiled like a dark foam. 

One of the men finally staggered into view. He stood staring  stupidly at the fogpacked sky, as if it were

something he had never  expected to see again. 

Suddenly, he understood the nature of what he had thought to be a  weird blindness. Drawing his revolver, he

fired it rapidly into the  air. 

"This way, hombres!" he screeched. "We have been tricked I" 

IN his excitement, the man failed to observe a bronze apparition  which streaked under the pile of green

boughs that covered the black  monoplane. 

The instant he was concealed under the brush, Doc glanced back to  see if he had been observed. Apparently

he was unseen. 

He was under the right wing of the plane. Doc crawled to the big  radial motor, and his deft fingers explored

its innards. 

Doc's familiarity with airplane motors was as profound as his other  lines of knowledge. He had, in fact,

designed a motor which was in use  on a large air line in the United States. This was not public  knowledge, it

being popularly supposed that the motor was the work of  an elderly and kindly inventor whom Doc had

befriended. Nor did any one  but the inventor, who was also the manufacturer, know that the design  for the

motor had saved the old gentleman's business. 

The motor of this black plane was fitted with two carburetors. Doc  removed both, his corded fingers

loosening the fastener nuts after a  little straining. Fortunately, they were not tight. 

Doc buried both carburetors under the plane, carefully replacing  the dirt so that the hiding place would not be

noticed. 

Peering through the fur of brush which camouflaged the ship, Doc  saw the swarthy men. They were in a

group, and heading for the opposite  side of the clearing. A moment later, veering behind the immense wad of

inky smoke, they were lost to view. 

Doc Savage promptly deserted the plane. Entering the timber, he  circled widely. 


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Patricia and Tiny had been running with all the speed they could  muster. Patricia gave a start of surprise

when Doc Savage materialized  like a phantom beside her. 

"One of those men shot right at you!" she gasped wonderingly. "I  saw the bullets hit! Why didn't they harm

you?" 

"Bulletproof vest!" Doc explained cryptically. 

Many things were puzzling Patricia. Speaking as she ran, she sought  to get them straightened out. 

"You are Doc Savage, aren't you?" she asked. 

"Right," Doc admitted. 

"How does it happen you are here?" 

"Better save the breath for running," Doc told her. 

Patricia gasped with faint indignation. The fact that her father  was a fairly wealthy man had not exactly

spoiled her, but she was not  accustomed to being told what to do in such short fashion. 

"But," she snapped, "I want to know what 

"There're lots of things we both want to know!" Doc told her. "We  can save them until we get clear." 

Patricia seemed about to express an opinion contrary to this. But a  loud, fierce shout from behind caused her

to change her mind. 

"Buenos!" was the cry. "Here is the trail!" 

"Darn it!" cried Patricia, and saved her breath for running. 

THEY reached the rope which spanned the gorge below the falls. The  canyon was like a great cauldron in

which water boiled thunderously and  poured up frostcold steam. 

Patricia glanced over the brink and shuddered. 

"1 was never so scared in my life as I was when they hauled me over  in this thing," she declared, indicating

the rickety cage which could  be pulled across the rope. 

Doc was somewhat at a loss to know why the swarthy men had spanned  the river in this fashion. He put a

question to clear that up. 

"I presume there is no other point near by where the river can be  crossed?" he asked. 

"Not for miles in either direction," Patricia replied. 

She peered over the brink once more, and watched bucketfills of  spray being flung higher than the canyon

walls by the force of the  torrent. 


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Patricia had been under a great strain for the last few hours. The  thought of crossing this ominous chasm was

the last straw. Her grip on  her nerves slipped. 

She clapped her hands tightly to her eyes and shrieked: "I won't go  over! I can't!" 

Doc reached for her. There was no time to be lost. 

Patricia struck at him hysterically, shrieked again. 

The young woman realized what she was doing, and was not at all  proud of her performance. Nevertheless,

she could not help it. She had  a bad case of what is generally called the jitters. 

She felt herself seized. One of the bronze man's hands glided past  her cheek and pressed a certain spot near

the cranial nerve center.  There was a slight tingling sensation, and Patricia suddenly found  herself powerless

to move a muscle. It was weird. 

She was tossed lightly across Doc's shoulders. Then the mighty  bronze man seemed to leap outward, straight

into the cauldron below the  falls. However, his feet landed on the rope, and he came to a perfect  balance. He

glided along the hemp strands. 

During any one of the dozen seconds which followed, Patricia would  have died cheerfully. It was the most

ghastly interval of her  existence. She had admired the work of circus performers in the big top   trapeze and

tightwire artists who did amazing things. But she had  never seen a feat which equaled this bronze man's

seemingly unconcerned  defiance of death. 

Patricia was placed safely on her feet on the opposite side. Doc's  bronze fingers found nerve centers again.

The young woman recovered use  of her limbs magically. 

Patricia knew enough of human anatomy to comprehend some of the  enormous skill which lay in Doc

Savage's fingers. She crouched on the  edge of the cliff, dazed. She was frankly ashamed of herself. 

Doc Savage crossed back over the chasm, running lightly on the  rope. 

Tiny was waiting there. She gazed into the chasm and shuddered. 

"Wait!" she grunted uneasily. "Me take um chance  stay on this  side." 

The voluminous Tiny never was exactly sure what happened after  that. The bronze hands pressed her head.

She became helpless. Then she,  also, was borne out over the thundering abyss. 

Doc seemed to handle the squaw's weight as easily as he had managed  Patricia's. 

Safely across, he loosened the pulley from the anchor tree, and let  the rope fall back into the torrent. This

blocked pursuit. 

Patricia had said that, for several miles, there was no other way  of crossing the violent little river. 

DOC Savage's five men greeted their chief noisily when he appeared.  They were no little impressed by the

exquisite beauty of Patricia  Savage. 

"look at that bronze hair!" Monk breathed ecstatically in an aside.  "Say, she might almost be Doc's sister!" 


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"She's a knockout for looks!" agreed the debonair Ham, forgetting  himself so much as to agree with Monk. 

"Back to the cabin," Doc directed. "We've got some talking to do." 

Doc had encountered his aides some distance from the cabin. They  retraced their steps to the structure. 

Out of courtesy to the young woman, Doc unfolded his part of the  story first. He began with the fake

telegram on the train, and omitted  few details. 

"To sum up," he finished, "the whole thing is pretty baffling. The  gang who just kidnaped you seem to be

after an ivory block. And in some  fashion, they must have learned we were coming here on a visit." 

"They probably learned that by robbing the mail box," Patricia  Savage suggested. 

"That would explain it," Doc agreed. "They attacked me on the train  in an effort to prevent me coming here.

The  there's Senor Corto  Oveja, his daughter, and El Rabanos They headed in this direction,  although we

have seen no signs of them being around here." 

"What part do they play?" Patricia asked. 

"That's more mystery," Doc told her. "They were attacked on the  train. They laid it onto me. And their

assailants left one of those  werewolf marks." 

Patricia shuddered violently. "The werewolf marks! I have found  several of them around this cabin." 

"We saw one on the cabin floor," Doc admitted. 

"Yes. That one appeared when I found Boat Face and Tiny afflicted  with that weird sleep." 

Doc and his men exchanged glances. They had by no means forgotten  their own experience with the weird

slumher. But what the fantastic  affliction was, they had not yet learned. 

"When did this all start?" Doc asked Patricia. 

"Some weeks ago. My father found a prowler in our cabin. The fellow  fled. A little later, a mysterious voice

called from the woods and  demanded that dad hand over the ivory cube. Dad refused 

"What ivory cube?" Doc interjected. 

"One father found on a rock ledge near here," Patricia replied.  "Several human skeletons lay around the little

block. It was years ago  when he found it." 

Speaking rapidly, the young woman told of the repeated demands for  the ivory trinket. 

"Then my father was found  dead!" she finished jerkily. "Doctors  said his heart had gone back on him. I

think he was murdered  a victim  of that fantastic sleep." 

Doc Savage indicated the lifeless figure of Boat Face. "When did  that happen?" 

"Last night, sometime," Patricia said slowly. "Tiny and I found his  body this morning, just before the rain.

We carried it to the cabin. A  few minutes later, those swarthy men came and seized us. They took us  by


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surprise." 

"You haven't the slightest idea why the ivory cube is in demand?"  Doc questioned pointedly, 

"No." 

"Let's have a look at it." 

"Of course!" Patricia went to the barksheathed pillar which  supported the livingroom ceiling. She pressed

a concealed catch, and  the door flew open. 

She shoved a hand confidently inside, and groped around. Then she  bent over and stared into the recess. 

"It's gone!" she gasped. 

"DID Boat Face know where the cube was hidden?" Doc asked. His  remarkable voice was smoothly

unexcited, and told nothing. 

"Yes," Patricia admitted. 

"And he could have removed it without your knowing it?" Patricia  hesitated. As yet, she had no knowledge of

the halfbreed's duplicity. 

"He could have," she admitted. "But I would rather think he did not  take it. No doubt he heard a prowler,

went to investigate, and was  knifed." 

"Boat Face  him no good!" said Tiny, with scant consideration for  her dead husband. "Him no mean. Him

just weak. And him foxy." 

"Boat Face was killed at a secret meeting," Doc declared. 

"How do you know?" Patricia asked. 

"There were tracks." 

"I didn't see any tracks!" 

"They were there," Doc assured her. "I'm sorry, Pat, but Boat Face  seems to have been a crook." 

Patricia nodded slowly. She felt an agreeable tingling. Doc Savage  had called her "Pat." This seemed to

indicate that he had accepted her  as one of the gang. Patricia was pleased. 

"I don't know who took the ivory block,n she said. "This thing is  getting more involved all the time." 

Doc Savage now made a second survey of the cabin and its vicinity.  This search was so intense that it made

his earlier hunt seem but a  careless glance in comparison. 

From a pack, which he had carried to this wilderness retreat, he  removed what looked like a pair of tiny

binoculars mounted in spectacle  frames. The lenses of these were extremely powerful, and adjusted for a

short distance. 


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Doc's unaided eyes were keen. But, wearing these eyeglasses, he  could cover the ground with microscopic

thoroughness. 

It was around the boathouse that his scrutiny became most  intensive. In addition to the launch, the boathouse

contained several  canoes. There was also a rack of holding spades, saws, axes, and other  tools. 

Doc studied one of the spades closely. 

"Has this been used recently, Pat?" he asked. 

Patricia thought it over before she answered. 

"No," she said, "I'm quite sure it hasn't." 

Lifting down the canoes one at a time, Doc examined them.  Especially did he concentrate on the floor boards.

On one of these be  found a semicircular scar. When he tried the tip of the spade, it  exactly fitted the mark. 

Doc laid the spade aside. 

Patricia picked it up, examined it. To her astonishment, she found  nothing. 

"I don't understand I" she said, puzzled. 

Johnny came forward hastily, removing his glasses which had the  magnifying lens. He let the young lady

inspect the spade under  magnification. 

"Oh!" Patricia ejaculated. "This spade has been used recently to  dig in sand! There are tiny scratches which

are not a bit rusted." 

Inspecting further, Doc found where a canoe had been carried to the  water. The canoe had been floated to an

outoftheway spot under some  overhanging brush. There was no reason why it should be used for a

regular point of launching. Yet marks in the sand showed that the canoe  had arrived and departed numerous

times. All of the tracks had been  made by Boat Face's moccasins. 

Doc noticed that bushes prevented the landing place from being seen  from the cabin. 

"Boat Face seems to have made numerous excursions!" he announced. 

Patricia stared at Tiny. "Did you know about his trips?" The squaw  shrugged stoically. "Me sleep sound! Me

not hear!" 

Doc collected his men before the door of the cabin. 

"Let's get organized," he said. 

DOC'S five aides brightened visibly at the words. So far, they  considered themselves as having been rather

useless. At least once in  each adventure, Doc usually had occasion to make use of the particular  talent which

each of his men claimed. 

Monk, the chemist, was first to receive orders. 


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"Got your portable laboratory?" Doc asked him. 

The question was hardly necessary. Monk was rarely to be found far  from his remarkable outfit of chemicals.

This piece of equipment was  wonderfully compact, yet Monk could do work with it which called  ordinarily

for a great outlay of equipment. Monk was something of a  Houdini with the test tubes. 

"I've got it," he said. 

"I want you to go to work on the inside of the cabin," Doc told  him. "Analyze and test everything." 

Monk did not comprehend fully. 

"But what will I look for?" he demanded. 

"ANYTHING that might give a clew as to what caused the weird  sleep," Doc explained. 

"I get you, Doc." 

"Renny," Doc said; "think you can find our plane?" 

Renny flicked an enormous hand inland. "Sure! I remember the way we  came." 

"You have a small mapping camera in your luggage, haven't you?" 

"A special mapping lens which fits our regular camera," Renny said.  "It amounts to the same thing." 

"0. K.," Doc told him. "I want aerial photos of the vicinity of  this cabin. Cover the region for several miles up

and down the coast.  Take one set of photos at a height of about five hundred feet. Take the  others from a

much higher altitude, at least a mile." 

"Got you!" boomed Renny. 

Patricia's pretty face was frank!y incredulous. 

She exclaimed, "You can't get pictures in this fog!" 

"We use cameras equipped to utilize infra4ight," Doc told her.  "Haze and fog don't faze these infrarays." 

Renny gathered his equipment together and moved off, a giant of a  man who was made to look smaller than

he was by the incredible hugeness  of his hands. 

Doc Savage now addressed Long Tom and Johnny. 

"You two fellows will work at the same job, but using different  methods," he advised. "long Tom, I want you

to take electricwave tests  that will help to determine the possible presence of oil or deposits of  mineral

underground. Johnny will prospect outcroppings in search of  anything that might be valuable. We, of course,

are hunting for  whatever this gang is after." 

The two men lost no time getting busy. Few living men knew more of  the earth's structure than did Johnny; if

there were mineral  outcroppings, the gaunt geologist with his manifyinglens spectacles  could find them. 


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The electrical device which Long Tom would use, employed several  principles known to scientific oil

prospectors and others. Wave  impulses, both sonic and electric, were sent into the earth. Their  subsequent

reaction betrayed any unusual subterranean formation. 

"What about me?" Ham demanded. 

"You will guard Miss Patricia," Doc said. 

The rather handsome Ham grinned widely at this. 

Homely Monk, who had overheard, emitted a loud groan. If there was  anything Monk hated, it was seeing

Ham enjoying himself in the company  of an attractive girl. 

Disgusted with the latest developments, Monk turned away to conduct  his chemical experiments. 

Chapter 13. AN OFFER

IT was midafternoon of the following day. Things were pretty much  at a status quo. Nothing had happened;

nothing had been discovered that  was of value. And it was still foggy. 

Renny was off continuing his mapping, using the old plane. Johnny  and Long Tom were still prospecting.

They had found nothing the day  before. 

Monk was dividing his time between scowling at Ham, who was  enjoying himself entertaining Patricia, and

dabbling with his chemical  equipment. 

Doc Savage was just completing his exercise routine. He had been at  it without pause for two hours. From the

cradle, he had never missed a  day of this ritual. 

They were unlike anything else in the world, those exercises. Doc's  father, a great surgeon and adventurer,

had started him taking them.  They were solely responsible for Doc's amazing physical and mental  powers. 

He made his muscles pull one against the other, straining until a  fine film of perspiration covered his mighty

bronze body. He juggled a  number of a dozen figures mentally, extracting roots, multiplying,  dividing. 

In a small case, Doc carried an apparatus which made sound waves of  frequencies so high and low that an

ordinary ear could not detect them.  Through a lifetime of practice, Doc had perfected his hearing to a  point

where the sounds were audible. He named several score of  different odors after a quick olfactory test of small

vials racked in  the case which held his exercising equipment. 

He read pages of Braille printing  the writing for the blind,  which consists of tiny upraised dots. He did this

as rapidly as another  would peruse ordinary type. This attuned his sense of touch. 

The whole exercise routine was pushed with an unbounded vigor. Five  minutes at the clip would have

prostrated an ordinary man  and an  ordinary man would have found it impossible to do most of the work. 

Monk came outdoors to get a breath of air. The chemical analysis he  was conducting at the moment was

giving off a most unpleasant odor. 

The sight of Ham and Patricia together seemed painful to Monk. He  turned his gaze away, letting it rove the


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brush surrounding the cabin.  Suddenly, his little eyes almost popped from their sockets. 

Monk emitted a yell! The howl had tremendous volume. It scared  birds off their limbs almost a mile away. 

"A hand!" Monk bawled. 

Ordinarily, Monk's voice was small, weak as a baby's. But it  underwent a startling change when he was

excited. It became tremendous,  bawling, and made even Renny's thunder seem puny by comparison. 

As he shouted, Monk pointed with both hands. 

The others followed his gesture. They saw  nothing! 

"WHAT is it?" Patricia gasped, racing to Monk's side. "You'll have  to get used to him," Ham said, jerking his

thumb at Monk. "He's part  ape. You can never tell how he'll act." 

Ignoring this pleasantly, Monk charged for the clearing edge. He  hit the brush like a bull moose. He had, he

was mortally certain, seen  a hand projecting from the brush. A slender, white hand, it was. It  looked like a

woman's. 

The hand had been visible for only a fractional moment, but Monk  was certain it had been there. As he

searched through the brush,  however, he became less positive. There was no sign of any young woman. 

Monk studied the ground. As a woodsman, he was no amateur. But in  this tangle of rocks and shrubs, not a

track could he discover. 

Disgusted, he returned to the cabin. 

"Don't get excited at what the missing link does," Ham told the  attractive Patricia. "Just look at his monkey

face, and you'll  understand. There couldn't possibly be good sense behind a mug like  that." 

"Oh, yeah?" Monk grinned. "Listen, you shyster, where has Doc gone  to?" 

The men glanced about hastily. Monk's words had prepared them for  what they found. Doc Savage was not

around. 

"He's gone!" Patricia gasped. "What on earth can that mean?" 

A grin on his homely face, Monk began: "Well, you see, Doc has a  habit of  " 

"Shut up!" Ham snapped. "I'm doing guard duty here. Go play with  your test tubes!" 

Monk rambled off, Habeas Corpus at his heels. 

THERE was hardly a mystery about Doc's disappearance. He had simply  glided away while the others were

watching Monk's wild charge. Once in  the brush, he quickened his pace and swung in a wide circle. 

Doc had seen the hand which had excited Monk. In fact, the hand had  been gesturing at Doc when Monk

chanced to glimpse it. 

The hand had been feminine, and its owner unquestionably wanted to  talk with Doc. 


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Doc had not gone far when he found a leaf crushed on a rock. A bit  farther on, a creeper dangled, torn from

its anchorage. There was no  breeze here in the undergrowth, yet the creeper swung slowly from side  to side.

Below it were feminine footprints. 

"Senorita Oveja!" Doc called softly. 

There was no answer. The swayings of the creeper, however,  gradually became shorter and shorter. 

"There's no one with me, Miss Oveja," Doc called. 

This secured results. Attractive, darkhaired Senorita Oveja  appeared in the shrubbery some distance ahead. 

"Buenos dias," she greeted. "Good morning. I wanted to talk with  you, Senor Savage." 

"I recognized your hand," Doc told her. 

"Your man  the big, hairy one  frightened me away," Senorita  Oveja smiled. 

"Monk makes a lot of noise," Doc agreed. "But he wouldn't hurt a  fly  unless the fly bit him." 

"We have been thinking things over  my father, El Rabanos, and  myself," said the girl. 

She came closer. Doc noted her olive cheeks were flushed from  running. 

"You haven't decided you and I may have the same enemies?" Doc  asked dryly. 

"Then it is that way?" the girl gasped. 

"It looks very much like it," Doc admitted. "Our common enemy is a  fellow who uses a likeness of a

werewolf for his mark." 

The beautiful Spanish woman shivered from head to foot. "That is  what my father and El Rabanos decided

after we talked it over." 

"This enemy seems to be after an ivory cube," Doc offered. 

Cere started. "You know that, too?" 

"Yes," Doc replied. "My cousin, Patricia Savage, has the cube  or  did have it." 

At this, the Castilian girl showed every evidence of unbounded  surprise. 

Doc was an expert at reading human character. He was watching her  closely. As far as he could tell, her

astonishment was genuine. Doc had  a suspicion, however, that the man did not live who could read a young

woman's mind unfailingly by looking at her pretty face. 

"Patricia Savage has it?" gasped Cere. 

"Had it," Doc corrected. "The cube seems to have complicated things  by disappearing." 

"Suppose you tell me  " 


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"Suppose you tell me," Doc interposed. "We'll start off with: What  gave you the idea that I was your enemy?" 

The girl said promptly: "More than a week ago, your uncle, Alex  Savage, shot at us from the woods, saying

he would kill us unless we  left the vicinity." 

"Did you see Alex Savage at that time?" 

"No. Nor did we see him two days ago when he came again and said  that he had sent for you, and that you

would come and kill us for not  leaving the vicinity." 

"Alex Savage warned you again two days ago?" 

"Yes." 

"It was not Alex Savage!" Doc said flatly. 

"But he said his name was Alex Savage!" 

"Alex Savage has been dead more than a week." 

Cere placed a hand over her heart. "In that case we have been  terribly mistaken. This other man was a fake!" 

"Any one can be misled," Doc assured her. "Now, suppose you tell me  exactly what is behind all this." 

The girl nodded. "You have heard of Sir Henry Morgan?" 

"The pirate?" 

"That is the one," Cere replied. "In the year 1670 he started  across the Isthmus of Panama with twelve

hundred men. The Spaniards  received warning of his coming. Treasure from the Panama City  cathedral, and

wealth belonging to merchants, was loaded onto a  galleon. This craft fled out to sea, carrying some of the

owners of the  treasure besides the crew." 

"That incident is a matter of history," Doc told her. "The pirate  Esquemeling, who was with Morgan at the

sacking of Panama, wrote of the  galleon in his book. Shortly after he had captured Panama, Morgan heard  of

this treasure craft. He knew the treasure to be of more value than  all else the expedition had secured put

together. He seized several  Spanish boats, and sent them out in pursuit of the galleon. But they  did not find

the craft." 

"And for a very good reason, Senor Savage," Cere resumed. "Part of  the galleon crew had mutinied,

murdered the merchants and the others  aboard, and seized the treasure." 

"There is no historical record of such an occurrence!" Doc told  her. 

"In a moment I'll explain how I know it is true," Cere retorted.  "These men who mutinied and seized the

galleon loaded with treasure,  were not very intelligent. One of them had heard that there was a water  passage

around North America. He converted his companions to his  belief. They sailed north. 

"The journey was long and full of hardship. The coast became bleak,  and the climate cold. Finally, it was

necessary to anchor in a small  bay, careen their boat, and make repairs to the hull. They pulled the  galleon up

on the sandy floor of a small, canyonlike inlet. Bad luck  plagued them. An earthquake caused the gulley side


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to topple over,  burying the boat in a sort of cavern." 

The Castilian beauty paused to stare steadily at Doc. "The spot  where the boat met disaster was only a few

miles from here!" 

"How do you know that?" Doc demanded. 

Senorita Oveja shrugged. "My story will bring that out, Senor  Savage. To get back to what happened

hundreds of years ago: not all the  crew were on the galleon when it was entombed. About a dozen had

camped  near by. They dug a tunnel to the tomb where their fellows lay. That  took many days. Their comrades

were dead when reached. No doubt, by  now, only their skeletons remain. 

"The survivors thought to remove the treasure from the boat, but  hostile Indians made that impossible. They

determined to leave it and  travel southward until they found men of their own race. Later, they  would come

back by sea. 

"One of the men was an expert carver of ivory. He took six small  flat pieces of ivory and made a relief

carving of the vicinity where  the boat lay. He fitted these ivory pieces together, carved portions  inward, and

made a box. This he packed with clay. Due to the cleverness  of his construction, and the clay packing, the

box seemed solid." 

"The ivory cube!" Doc said understandingly. 

"Si, si!" Cere assured him. "Even when opened and spread flat, the  relief map inside the box would be

apparent only to a close observer." 

"Go ahead with your story," Doc directed. 

"The men closed up the hole which led to the buried ship," Cere  resumed. "They started south. Almost at

once, they were attacked.  Several were slain, including the one who carried the box. The massacre  took place

under a rock ledge In this vicinity. Those who escaped had  to leave the box behind." 

The girl made a somewhat shamefaced gesture. "One of those men who  escaped was an ancestor of mine. He

left a written account of the  incident. It was handed down in our family for centuries." 

"This clears the situation a lot," Doc told her. "you and your  father came for the treasure, eh?" 

"Myself, my father, and El Rabanos," Cere corrected. "El Rabanos is  financing us." 

"You hoped the ivory block would still be under the ledge where the  men were massacred?" Doc questioned. 

Cere bobbed her attractive head. "Yes. But we were disappointed,  senor. It was gone." 

"Then you began searching for the galleon itself?" 

"Si, si! But on this rugged coast, that is a hopeless task." 

"And then this fake Alex Savage appeared with his lies, eh?"  "Si,  si!" 

"One thing puzzles me," Doc said. 


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"Quien sabe?" said the girl. "What is that?" 

"How did you happen to be on the train?" 

The young woman smiled archly at Doc. Obviously she was captivated  by the bronze man's manners and

unmistakable character. For the last  few minutes she had hardly taken her eyes off him. 

Doc realized this, but carefully kept his bronze face  expressionless. To Doc, young women were something

of a problem. There  was no provision in his perilous existence for feminine company. It was  necessary for

Doc to ignore all eligible girls  for the personal  safety of the young things, it for no other reason. 

Doc's enemies were legion. They would not hesitate to strike at him  through a girl whom they thought he

liked. 

The prettier the young women were, the harder Doc found it to  gently repulse them. The more beautiful the

girl, the more stunned she  was when the bronze man failed to bow before her charms; and the more  vigorous

her renewed efforts to ensnare him. 

"You have not answered my question," Doc reminded her. Senorita  Cere Oveja colored prettily. "We were on

the train to get rid of you,  so that you would not give us trouble." 

"I trust you didn't contemplate a murder, senorita?" Doc said  dryly. 

"Gracias, no!" the Castilian beauty ejaculated. 

Doc Savage nodded slowly. "I can see now why you suspected me," he  said. "It was the work of the prowler

the fellow who said he was Alex  Savage." 

Darkeyed Cere said eagerly: "He told us he had sent for you to  come and take our lives. Naturally, when we

got upon the train, we  looked upon you as a sort of ogre. We had heard that you were famous  for deeds of

violence." 

"Violence against those who have it coming to them," Doc corrected  the pretty senorita. 

"My first sight of you brought doubts, Senor Savage," said Cere. 

Doc hastily headed her off. 

"On the train, some one tried to choke you to death with a leather  strap," he said. "Naturally, you thought that

was my work." 

"Si, Si," said Cere. "That is, father and El Rabanos did." She  paused expectantly, as if inviting Doc to ask

what her own opinion had  been. Doc passed up the opportunity. 

"It looked suspicious when you fled the train," he reminded. 

"Father and El Rabanos were in terror of you," said the girl. "When  the train stopped we decided to flee." 

"That brings us down to the present moment, I believe," Doc told  her. "Now, what is the purpose of this

conversation?" 


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Cere's entrancing dark eyes dropped. 

"Father and El Rabanos are still a little doubtful of you, I regret  to say. But they have agreed to talk with you.

I wish you would do  that." 

"You came to persuade me to meet them?" 

Senorita Oveja nodded. "Si! Si! Please do." 

"I shall be delighted to accommodate you." 

"Buenos, senor!" Cere exclaimed. "You make me so happy!" 

Doc looked like a fellow who had taken a big swallow of toohot  coffee. He asked: "Shall I go with you now

and meet them?" 

"Oh, no!" the young woman said hastily. "We are away from our camp  now, searching the coast for the

buried galleon. You must meet them  tonight. Let us say  shortly after sundown. Come alone." 

"Alone?" Doc asked sharply. 

"Please! If you bring your men, father and El Rabanos will be  suspicious of you." 

Lifting on tiptoe, Cere pointed through the trees. There was a line  of cliffs perhaps a quarter of a mile distant.

She seemed to be  indicating a gap in these. The opening was like a knife slash. 

"Our camp is just beyond that," she smiled. "You can come there?" 

"Just through the gap in those cliffs," Doc said. "I'll come  and  alone, too." 

Usually Doc was an extraordinarily quick mover. There were men who  claimed the bronze giant could dodge

a bullet This was a rank  exaggeration, of course, but it gave an idea of the speed with which  Doc could

maneuver himself. 

Nevertheless, he now got kissed full on the lips  before he could  avoid it. The kiss was clinging, and quite

ardent. The Senorita Oveja's  lips were entirely delicious, Doc decided. 

As if appalled by her act, pretty Cere turned and fled. However,  she paused before she was out of sight, and

looked back. 

Doc Savage had vanished. 

Cere turned hastily and went on. She did not head for the gap in  the cliff beyond which, according to what

she had told Doc, her camp  lay. Instead, she angled off to the right. 

Unexpectedly, her father and El Rabanos appeared before her. 

"We were watching, hila mio!" Senor Oveja chuckled. "It was  excellently done!" 

"As the Americans would say," Cere smiled proudly, "he fell for it   hook, line, and sinker." 


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"THAT bronze caballero is no fool," El Rabanos reminded seriously.  "Are you sure that he did not suspect he

was being tricked?" 

"He was like a lamb in my hands," Cere said loftily. El Rabanos  shrugged. "He will be a lion on our hands, if

he suspects, senorita." 

"What did you tell him?" Senor Oveja demanded. 

"As you say, he is clever," the pretty Castilian girl replied. "I  did not trust myself to lie to him, so I told the

truth. I told him all  about our ancestor, and the galleon of treasure from Panama. He claimed  to know none of

the story." 

"He has a tongue tied in the middle  loose at both ends to tell  lies!" Senor Oveja snarled. "It was he who

made the attempt on the  train to kill us." 

Cere looked doubtful. "I am not so sure about that, padre." 

The father eyed his daughter severely. He made a tongueclicking  sound of disapproval. 

"This bronze caballero is very handsome," he said. "A young woman's  opinion of such a man is not to be

trusted." Senorita Oveja stamped her  foot. "I knew you would say that! But Senor Savage is not to be

harmed!" 

"Of course he will not be harmed," El Rabanos put in sharply. "We  will merely seize him and hold him as a

hostage to insure our securing  the ivory cube. We will trade the bronze man for the cube." 

"I could slit the big hombre's throat!" Senor Oveja growled. 

"There must be no violence!" El Rabanos rapped. "I insist on that." 

"Si, si!" the older man mumbled. "As you wish." 

They walked off in the direction of their camp. 

The camp was nowhere near the cliff, but nearly a mile to the  northward. It nestled in a forest of large

boulders near a rather rocky  stretch of level ground. 

At one end of the comparatively level field stood a plane. It was  canted over on one wing. A landing wheel

was smashed, and the rocks had  damaged the wing tip. 

El Rabanos stared at the plane and growled in Spanish: 

"It is unfortunate that the ship had to hit a rock while I was  landing it. We are virtually marooned here in this

wilderness." 

For shelter, the party had tents. These were small, and of a  leafgreen in color. 

Cere entered a tent and busied herself improving her appearance.  The woods country, she had discovered,

was hard on complexions.  Moreover, it was difficult for a young woman to be captivating in  hobnailed boots,

corduroy trousers, and a flannel shirt. This was the  garb Cere was wearing, because it was the only raiment

which would  withstand the rigors of her surroundings. 


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Senor Oveja and El Rabanos retired to their tents. They were city  men, not used to hardship, and each period

of exertion called for a  corresponding rest. 

The woods were quiet. The fog rolled like smoke. It was an  altogether dreary day. Faintly, from the distance,

came the mushy noise  of the waves on the rocky shore line. 

POSSIBLY an hour later, in a gloomy stretch of timber something  over a mile from the Oveja's camp, a

sinister meeting occurred. It was  a convention of evil conducted with a furtive caution. It began with  the

appearance of eleven men. They were swarthy fellows, and they  skulked along as if afraid of being seen.

Their visages were anything  but pleasant to look on. 

These were the men who had kidnaped pretty Patricia Savage. 

The ominous little caravan of men progressed to a spot where the  timber was particularly dense. They

clustered together and waited,  making no disturbing sound. 

"Cere led Doc Savage into the trap for us," a hollow voice said  suddenly. 

The portentous words were spoken slowly. This, and the fact that  the voice was dull and resonant, gave the

impression of an exotic drum  beating. 

Obviously, it was a disguised voice. The speaker was fifty feet or  so to the left. He was thoroughly hidden

from the group of men by the  trees. 

The men showed no surprise at the voice. They had been expecting  it. Several peered furtively in the

direction from which it had come.  It was as if they were trying to get a glimpse of the speaker. 

"There is no chance of a mistake?" asked one of the men nervously.  "This man Savage has an uncanny way

of avoiding traps." 

The drumlike voice boomed a hollow laugh. "It was a woman who  tricked Savage this time. He was too dizzy

to suspect anything. You  should have seen how still he stood after she kissed him." 

"It was clever  using the woman," a man muttered. "The beauty of  it is that she does not know she is being

wed," said the concealed  voice. 

A man began sharply: "But I thought that 

"Oh, the senorita knows she is drawing him into a trap," said the  concealed man. "But she does not know that

he is to be killed." 

"How will we manage it?" questioned one of the group. "look off to  your right. Do you see that gap in the

line of cliffs?" 

There was no need of an answer. The rent in the cliffs was plainly  distinguishable through an opening in the

trees. 

"You will post yourselves just inside that opening," said the  unseen voice. "You have your machine guns?" 

"Si," one fellow muttered, "we have them." 


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"Set them up just inside the opening in the cliff," their hidden  chief ordered. "When Savage appears, you will

turn them on him  instantly." 

"Si, Si. It will work." 

"That is all. Go! Vamos!" 

Chapter 14. THE TRAP IN A TRAP

THE time was approximately one hour before sundown. Doc Savage had  not yet informed his men of his

meeting with Senorita Oveja. Anyway, of  the five, only Monk and Ham were around the cabin. 

Monk was absorbed in the kitchen. Test tubes, retorts, mixing  howls, and glass containers of chemicals stood

about. Once unpacked,  Monk's chemical laboratory seemed of considerable size. Monk was making

numberless analysis tests. 

So far, he had not announced whether he had drawn any conclusions  regarding the weird sleep. 

The debonair Ham was having a very enjoyable time entertaining  Patricia Savage. The young lady had

altogether captivated Ham. Not only  was she one of the most beautiful specimens of femininity Ham had ever

seen, but she was also one of the most intelligent. 

Ham and Patricia were occupying a rustic bench in front of the  cabin. 

"You wouldn't think it," Ham was saying, "but that homely missing  link, Monk, has a wife and thirteen

children." 

"You don't say!" exclaimed Patricia. 

Ham nodded solemnly. "Not only that, but the thirteen children are  just like their father. You know  they

swing from chandeliers and  things." 

Patricia looked curiously at Ham. The dapper lawyer's expression  was sober as a judge's. 

Patricia knew something was amiss. With a face just as straight,  homely Monk had told her the same story

about Ham. Monk's yarn had  differed only in that Ham's thirteen children were halfwitted. 

"You and Mr. Mayfair are very good friends, aren't you?" Patricia  asked. 

Ham blinked. He so seldom heard Monk called Mr. Mayfair that he had  failed to recognize the name. 

"Friends!" Ham exclaimed indignantly. He flourished his sword cane.  "Nothing would give me more pleasure

than to chop the ears off that  missing link!" 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, wandered into the vicinity. The shoat sat  down and eyed Ham. The pig's actions

were strangely human. It raised on  its rear legs. 

"Who is your trampylooking pal, Miss Pat?" Monk's ventriloquial  voice asked through the medium of the

pig's jaws. 


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Ham launched an indignant kick at the shoat. He might as well have  tried to kick a mosquito. The pig evaded

him easily. Ham glared about  in search of the homely chemist. Monk, however, was not in sight. He  must

have thrown his voice from concealment. 

Patricia was laughing heartily. There was something about the easy  fearlessness of these men, and the

frequent touches of comedy which  relieved their doings that was highly satisfying. 

Fifteen minutes later, Monk appeared in the cabin door. His homely  face was innocent. 

"Doc!" he called. 

The bronze man appeared from the direction of the boathouse. 

"I can't find a thing to indicate what causes the weird sleep,"  Monk reported. 

NUMEROUS times during the afternoon, a plane had prowled overhead.  This ship was traveling back and

forth systematically. It seemed to be  searching for something. It covered the ground twice. 

One hunt was made at a very low altitude  less than five hundred  feet. The second search was conducted at a

greater height  so high  that the roar of the motor was barely audible. 

Renny was flying the ship, making an aerial photographic map. An  uninitiated person would have sworn that

no one could take pictures in  the fog. But Renny, utilizing infrarays, was no doubt securing  pictures equal to

those which could be obtained by sunlight.. 

For an interval now, however, the plane had not been in evidence. 

Not unexpectedly, Renny came out of the brush and strode toward the  cabin. The disappearance of the plane

from the skies indicated that he  had landed some time ago. Under an arm, he carried a bulky package  which

held camera and photographs. 

Entering the cabin, Renny spread his prints on the table. It was  not necessary to lose time developing them.

The camera was an ingenious  type which printed its pictures as they were taken. 

"I got a fair layout of the district," Renny reported. 

Patricia Savage came in to inspect the work. She was still a bit  skeptical about securing pictures in the fog. 

"Why!" she ejaculated. "I never saw clearer photographs!" 

"Taking pictures with fits and lenses sensitive to infrarays isn't  a new idea," Renny told her. "It was a

military secret years ago. And  for some time it has been utilized on a commercial scale." 

"The pictures are in harsh shades," Ham took up the explanation for  Patricia's benefit. "Because of that,

photography with infralight is  unsuitable for portrait work. A picture taken with infralight makes  you look

ugly as sin  like Monk, for instance." 

Monk only grinned at the insult. 

With a powerful magnifying glass, Doc went to work on the prints.  He arranged them in the order in which

they had been taken. This gave  him an aerial map of the region. 


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Johnny and Long Tom were still missing. But the bronze man had  hardly begun his examination when they

appeared. 

Johnny removed his spectacles and polished the magnifier on the  left side. 

"I have little to report," he said. "Of course, I could make only a  sketchy inspection of the vicinity. But there

was no sign of a valuable  ore outcropping. Nor are the rock formations favorable for it" 

Doc Savage eyed Long Tom. 

"What did you find?" he asked the electrical wizard. 

"Nothing particularly unusual about the underlying rock strata,"  Long Tom said wryly. 

"So you guys both drew a blank!" Ham put in. 

"Wait a minute!" Long Tom said. "Let me finish! I found something,  all right!" 

"What?" Doc demanded. 

"A rock ledge," Long Tom replied. "With a bunch of skeletons on  it." 

"That must be where my father found the ivory cube," Patricia  offered. 

Doc said: "Let's take a look." 

Gathering Renny's aerial photographs together, he stuffed them in a  pocket 

THE ledge was well up on the stony face of a mountain. Too, it was  more of an elongated pit dug in a wall of

stone, than a ledge. A  beetling overhang above made the spot almost a cave. To reach the  recess, it was

necessary to make a laborious and sometimes dangerous  climb. 

"Until today, my father was probably the only visitor to this  spot," Patricia declared. 

"I don't wonder," Ham puffed. The climb was wreaking more damage on  Ham's clothing. 

"This is a swell spot for a goat!" he growled. 

The skeletons met their gaze. The bone heaps were white as snow.  Cavernouseyed skulls bore marks hacked

by a knife ages ago. These  marks explained themselves  the victims had been scalped. 

"These are the skeletons of white men," said Johnny, whose  knowledge of archaeology made his opinion

practically indisputable.  "They are well preserved, due to the fact that the overhang of the  cliffs kept off the

weather. This is really a pocket in the side of the  mountain." 

Doc Savage glanced at Long Tom. "Did you dig up the sand around  these bones, then smooth it out again?" 

"No," said Long Tom in a startled voice. He peered at the ground. 

The sand had been disturbed. All over the ledge it had been dug up  and sifted. Then it had been carefully

replaced to give the appearance  of having been unmolested. 


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"You were mistaken," Doc told Patricia. "Your father was not the  only visitor to this ledge before today.

From the condition of the  sand, it seems a search was made about a week ago." 

"They were bunting for the ivory cube!" Patricia gasped. Doc  nodded. "Yes  the cube which remained

behind with the massacred  galleon crew." 

Doc became a magnet for astounded looks. 

"Huh!" Monk ejaculated. "You must know something that we don't!" 

Doc nodded. Then he told them of his meeting with attractive  Senorita Oveja. He repeated, exactly as the girl

had told it to him,  the story of the treasure galleon from Panama, and the crew who had  mutinied. He failed to

mention the kiss. 

"According to the girl's story," he finished, "the galleon is  entombed near here. The relief map inside the

ivory cube is the clew to  its location." 

"But where in blazes is the ivory block?" Monk demanded. 

TO Monk's query, no answer was forthcoming. Doc Savage, if he had  any knowledge on the subject, did not

put it into words. The others  frankly had not the slightest idea what had become of the troublesome  white

cube. 

Monk peered at the red blur in the fog which marked the position of  the sun. It looked like a bonfire on the

horizon. 

"You say you are to meet the Oveja girl and the two men right after  sundown, Doc?" 

"Right." 

"Then you had better be on your way," Monk said. "It's almost that  time." 

"Ham, you take Patricia back to the cabin," Doc suggested. "The  rest of us had better be, as Monk says, on

our way." 

For once, Ham looked as if he were not wholly in accord with his  job of guarding Patricia. He sensed that he

was going to miss some  action. Nevertheless, he offered the young lady his arm and guided her  away. 

"Wait!" Monk called after them. "Miss Pat, would you mind taking  Habeas Corpus back with you. The going

with us may get kinda tough for  the pig." 

"Yes, she would!" Ham said indignantly. "She don't want to do it!" 

"Why, I'll be glad to," Patricia said contrarily. "I think the pig  is very intelligent!" 

"Sure he is!" Monk laughed. "Habeas, follow the prettiest girl in  the world!" 

Habeas Corpus instantly trailed after Patricia and the disgusted  Ham. 

"The rest of us are going with you, eh?" Monk asked Doc. 


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"It looks like it." 

"But didn't you say you told the girl you would go alone to the  meeting place beyond the opening in the

cliffs?" Renny put in. 

"We're not going to that meeting place," Doc replied. 

"Huh?" Monk exclaimed. 

To explain his change of mind, Doc drew Renny's aerial photographs  from his pocket. He spread them on the

smooth sand beside the  skeletons, then borrowed gaunt Johnny', spectacles. He used the  magnifier which was

the left lens. 

Beckoning his men close, Doc indicated an irregular whitish line on  the map. 

"There is the line of cliffs," he said. "And there is the opening  which the girl told me to walk through. Look

close. Notice anything  peculiar?" 

"Blazes!" Monk exploded. "That opening is the mouth of a blind  canyon. There's no sign of a camp in it." 

"Look still closer," Doc suggested. 

Monk did so, squinting and making grotesque faces. He let out a  surprised gasp. 

"Look at this!" he told bigfisted Renny, mild voice suddenly  fierce. 

"Holy cow!" ejaculated Renny after a glance. 

"Well, is it a secret?" snapped Long Tom, who had not yet secured a  look. 

"There's a gob of machine guns planted around that opening in the  cliffs," Monk explained. "Men are

crouched beside them. The guys didn't  bother to get out of sight when they heard Renny's plane. They didn't

dream we could take pictures through this fog." 

"It's an ambush!" Long Tom snapped. 

"Take the head of the class, son," Monk said dryly. 

Ignoring him, Long Tom turned to Doc. "Say, did you suspect this  before you saw the aerial photographs?" 

Doc was slow to answer. "The young woman's insistence that I come  alone was slightly suspicious. I'll

confess, though, that my doubts  were not strong." 

"What do we do now?" queried bigfisted Renny. "Go after the guys  with the machine guns?" 

"We'll call on Senor and Senorita Oveja and El Rabanos, first," Doc  decided. 

"But where is their camp?" 

Doc indicated the aerial photograph. "It shows on here, and is not  very far away. You'll notice the plane they

flew here is lying in the  clearing beside their camp, apparently wrecked." 


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A grimly silent, purposeful file, Doc and his men clambered down  from the ledge which held the macabre

collection of skeletons. 

THE night had descended with an unexpected abruptness.  Surprisingly, with the coming of darkness, the fog

had disappeared.  Bright stars speckled the sky. A fat, milky bag of a moon leaked its  beams. 

The night was offering better visibility than the fogfilled day. 

An air of expectancy gripped the Senor and Senorita Oveja and El  Rabanos, in their camp. They had

consumed an evening meal cooked over a  gasoline stove which gave forth no smoke. 

Pretty Senorita Oveja had cleaned the dishes outdoor fashion, by  scouring them with sand, and rinsing them.

From the grimaces she made,  she apparently did not think much of dishwashing. 

"Is it not about time we were going?" she demanded in Spanish. 

"You are staying here!" her father said calmly. 

"But I wish to go!" the young woman retorted. 

"No!" the elder Oveja refused firmly. 

That settled it as far as Cere was concerned. In her country, young  people did not argue with their parents. 

"You will not harm the bronze man?" she asked anxiously. "What  happens to Doc Savage is not your affair!"

her father snapped. He  turned to El Rabanos. "Come, senor, let w be on our way. The meeting  time is near.', 

Senor Oveja went over to get his rifle. It was leaning against a  large rock, a rock the size of an automobile. 

He reached out for the weapon. Moon shadows darkened the base of  the rock like thickly roosting crows. 

Senor Oveja suddenly emitted a sound between a whimper and a sob,  and fell backward. His body remained

perfectly stiff as it tumbled; it  retained its rigidity when it hit the sand. 

It was as if the senor had turned to stone. The momentum of his  fall caused him to rock, like a frame of

sticks, from side to side. His  arms and legs stuck up with weird stiffness. 

"Padre!" Cere cried shrilly. "Father!" 

Darting forward, the young woman sank beside her parent. She  grasped his strangely stiffened arm. The

muscles were rigid under her  touch. By wrenching, she tried to change the position of one of the  arms. 

The arm remained at the angle to which she moved it, like the cold  limb of a dead man. 

"Oh, oh!" wailed Cere. She turned wildly in El Rabanos's direction.  She intended to demand his help. But her

lips parted and her dark eyes  became staring. 

El Rabanos had also fallen a victim of the fantastic paralysis. The  swarthy, girlfaced man was

spreadeagled, as if staked out. His face  was turned sidewise, so that moonbeams spilled on it. The features

showed no agony  only an unbounded wonder. 


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"El Rabanos!" Cere cried. 

She was close enough to see the man's eyes roll in her direction.  It was plain that El Rabanos knew what was

going on, but was powerless  to move or speak. 

WHAT had just happened was the most uncanny occurrence the pretty  senorita had ever encountered. She

gazed about in terrified  bewilderment. 

There was not a mark on her father or El Rabanos. There was not a  sound from the surrounding shadows to

show what had happened. 

Suddenly, Cere sought to spring wildly to one side. She moved a  trifle too slowly, however. 

Bronze hands, floating out of the shadows beside her, trapped her  arms. The fingers inclosed like steel bands.

The grip, for all of its  strength, however, was not tight enough to inflict pain. It was just  snug enough to hold

the girl tightly. 

Cere gave one violent wrench, then realized the futility of that.  She relaxed. She knew that Doc Savage must

be responsible for the  uncanny happening to her father and El Rabanos. 

"What have you done to them?" she demanded. 

Doc did not answer. Renny and Monk, two mountainous figures, came  up in the murk. Johnny and Long Tom

approached from the opposite  direction. 

Doc released Cere. The young woman instantly started to run. She  had taken only her second stride when

Doc Savage overhauled her, picked  her up, and carried her back. His touch was still impersonally gentle,  but

the Castillan beauty found herself absolutely helpless against his  strength. 

Cere did not learn what had happened to her father and El Rabanos.  The huge forms of Monk and Renny

blocked her view as Doc went to the  two strangely paralyzed men. 

With an experienced sureness, Doc stroked certain nerve centers.  Previous pressure on these had induced a

sort of paralysis. Doc's  practiced touch relieved this condition. 

Use of their limbs did not return instantly to the two men; full  recovery required perhaps a minute. During

that interval, Doc searched  Senor Oveja and El Rabanos. Each had a pair of revolvers belted about  his

middle. Doc removed those. He also took a knife, which he found in  a sheath inside Senor Oveja's shirt. 

"What does this mean?" Senor Oveja demanded indignantly. 

"It means that you weren't as slick as you thought!" rum bled  bigfisted Renny. 

Oveja glared. "What do you  " 

"We have no time for an argument!" Doc interrupted. "Long Tom,  Johnny  you guard the prisoners. Monk,

you and Renny come with me." 

As he spoke, Doc was already gliding away through the moonlight.  Renny and Monk pounded after him. 

"Where are we headed for?" Monk demanded. 


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"For that machinegun ambush at the cliff," Doc told him.' 

Chapter 15. WHEN TROUBLE DOUBLES

"THEY'RE gone!" Monk exclaimed in his small voice. 

"Yeah," Renny rumbled. "You can see that they were around recently,  too. Here's a match one of them was

chewing on. The end is still wet." 

Doc and the two men stood on the edge of the blind canyon which  penetrated the line of cliffs. They had

approached with the greatest of  caution. They were sure the ambushers had not seen or heard them. Yet  the

gang was gone. 

Doc Savage listened intently; training had given his ears a  keenness which rivaled that of a jungle creature.

But they picked up no  sound. 

"The gang isn't in the vicinity," he decided aloud. 

"But how'd they get tipped off?" Renny growled. "How did  " 

He shut his thin lips tightly on the rest. 

Two loud reports came snapping through the night! They were sharp.  Their echoes bounced back and forth

with an uproar that sounded like a  fantastic dragon coughing! 

Monk, confused by the multitude of echoes, demanded:  "Where did  the shots come from?" 

"From the Oveja camp!" Doc decided. 

They listened. But a dead stillness had fallen. There were no more  shots. 

"We'd better go back!" Doc declared. 

The bronze man whipped over the brink of the cliff. Below, the drop  was almost sheer. Footholds were few

and unpleasantly precarious. Yet,  Doc seemed to take no particular pains with his going. His speed seemed

unaffected by the peril of a fall. 

Monk and Renny, tackling the dangerous descent, found it necessary  to lower themselves a few inches at a

time. Doc was far ahead of them  by the time they reached the bottom. 

Coming in view of the camp some time later, Monk and Renny received  a surprise. They had expected to find

violence. However, there was  nothing about the scene to indicate anything desperate had occurred. 

Senor and Senorita Oveja and El Rabanos stood in the moonlight.  Long Tom and Johnny were near. Doc

Savage was to one side. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, was galloping slow circles in the  moonlight. The shoat's running gait was more than

ever like that of a  dog. 

Monk stared at his pet. "Where did Habeas come from?" 


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"It came tearing through the brush," Doc explained. "Thinking it  was a prowler, Johnny fired a couple of

shots in the air. Those were  the shots we heard." 

"I'm sure Patricia took him back with her," Monk declated. "Ham  must have turned him loose. That's the kind

of a trick the shyster  would pull. He don't think a whole lot of Habeas Corpus." 

"I imagine his opinion of the pig is improving a little," Doc  declared. 

Monk's jaw fell. "What do you mean, Doc?" 

By way of answer, Doc Savage produced his tiny lantern, which threw  ultraviolet rays. He switched it on,

and played the beam on Habeas  Corpus. 

Letters in an electric blue flame sprang out on the pig's back. Due  to the uncertainty of the bristled surface on

which they had been  drawn, the letters were large and irregular. Each time the pig moved,  they seemed to

convulse. The letters spelled two words. 

SLEEP  GETTING  

"Holy cow!" Renny muttered. "What's that mean?" 

"Ham's idea of a joke!" Monk growled. 

Doc Savage set out swiftly in the direction of the cabin. 

"I hardly think it's a joke," he called grimly. "Long Tom, you stay  here and guard these three prisoners." 

The electrical wizard nodded, and turned back to watch Senor and  Senorita Oveja and El Rabanos. 

The other three men ran in Doc's wake toward the cabin. 

THE cabin was silent as a house of death. It might have been a tomb  of logs, erected on the shore of the little

inlet. There was no night  breeze to flutter leaves in the surrounding brush. Small waves were  piling sloppily

against the shore. Out on the sea, moonbeams glanced in  long silver shafts. 

Doc Savage was first to approach the cabin. Renny, Monk, and Johnny  brought up the rear. They did not

want to spoil any sign with their  clumsy tramping. 

Using his flashlight, which gave a powerful beam, Doc Savage made a  quick inspection of the house. If he

had expected signs of violence, he  was disappointed. The place was in a no more topsyturvy condition than

it had been when he left. 

But there was no sign of Patricia, Ham, or the fat Indian servant. 

"It's all right for you fellows to come in!" Doc called, after his  first cursory inspection. 

Monk lumbered in and looked around. "That's funny! I don't see any  signs of a fight. And Ham ain't the kind

to give up without a scrap." 

Instead of answering this directly, Doc Savage indicated a black  smear on the wall of a bedroom. This had the

shape of a wolf, with an  unpleasantly human face. 


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"The werewolf!" Monk ejaculated. 

"Placed there recently  no doubt by the gang who captured our  friends," Doc replied. "The presence of the

werewolf mark indicates why  there was no struggle." 

"How do you figure that?" Monk questioned. 

"The strange sleep we have not been able to explain," Doc reminded  him. "It seems to strike coincident with

the appearance of these  werewolf marks." 

Doc led the way to the kitchen. Fresh food stood on the table. A  sandwich lay on a plate. One bite was

missing. 

"They must've been having a snack to eat when the thing happened,"  Renny said. 

A saucer, holding a large lump of butter, stood on the table. Doc  handed this to Monk. 

"Analyze it," he said. 

"For crying out loud!" Monk grunted. "What for?" 

"Search for the presence of the following chemicals," Doc said, and  rattled off a half dozen highly technical

laboratory terms. 

The chemical terminology was unintelligible to Renny and Johnny.  Both were welleducated men, but it was

doubtful if either could have  picked two comprehensible words out of the list. 

Monk nodded with perfect understanding, however. Behind Monk's low  forehead, there did not seem room

for a teaspoonful of brains. But his  looks were deceiving. A roster of the three greatest living chemists  would

certainly have included Monk. 

Taking the platter of butter, Monk went into the room where he kept  his portable laboratory. He set to work. 

Doc Savage peered closely at the kitchen floor, then took his  portable ultraviolet lantern out of his pocket,

switched it on, and  played the invisible beams on the floor. 

A puddle of blue fire seemed to spring into being. 

Renny dropped to a knee and rubbed an enormous hand through the  glowing spot. 

"It's the chalk we use to do invisible writing," he said. "Ham must  have dropped his piece. It's been stepped

on." 

"I think we stepped on it while wandering around in here," Doc  said. "My opinion is that Ham, Patricia, and

the squaw were in here  eating when they felt the weird sleep begin to creep over them. Ham  managed to

scrawl those words on the pig, Habeas Corpus. He dropped the  chalk as he passed out." 

Outdoors, a voice hailed loudly. 

"Ahoy, the cabin!" it cried. "Don't shoot me!" 


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RENNY and Johnny sprang to a window and looked out. They could see  nothing. 

Doc's flashlight went out. It made no sound doing so, for the  switch was noiseless. The darkness which

clamped down was black enough  to be solid. Silence lay over the cabin and the surrounding timber. The  man

who had hailed did not do so again. 

"That was Long Tom!" Doc said unexpectedly. 

"If it was, his voice was changed!" rumbled bigfisted Renny. 

"Something has happened to him, all right," Doc agreed. "But it was  his voice. 

The bronze man's tone, without seeming to become any louder,  suddenly acquired a remarkable carrying

quality. It rolled out of the  cabin and far away into the brush. 

"Come on in, Long Tom!" he said. "What's happened to you?" 

There was the sound of shuffling footsteps. Long Tom appeared. The  paleskinned electrical wizard was

something of a wreck. He was skinned  and bruised, and carried the beginnings of two black eyes. 

Long Tom's front teeth were of a large protruding variety. Two of  these were missing. The missing teeth had

the effect of giving his  voice a rather comical, lisping quality. He sounded very much like an  irate turkey

gobbler. 

Monk thrust his head in a door, looked at Long Tom, said:  "For  cryin' in my sleep! Don't he look funny

without them buck teeth!" 

"What happened to Senor and Senorita Oveja and El Rabanos," Doc  asked Long Tom. 

"They took a powder!" gritted the electrical wizard. 

"I thought you were guarding them," Renny snorted. A wide grin sat  on the bigfisted engineer's usually

solemn face. He seemed tickled by  the ludicrous appearance which the missing teeth gave the electrical

wizard. 

"Senor Oveja picked up a rock and whangoed me," Long Tom growled  through his missing teeth. 

"How'd he catch you off guard?" 

The truth, even if it hurt, was the custom of Doc's aides. Long Tom  squirmed, felt of the gap where his teeth

were missing. 

"The darn girl was making eyes at me," he admitted. 

Everybody laughed. 

"They hit you, then fled?" Doc asked. There was no criticism in his  tone. 

"Yep," Long Tom admitted. "Senor Oveja followed the rock up with  his fists. He walloped me plenty, what I

mean! The rock had knocked me  too dizzy to dodge." 


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"Didn't you try to trail 'em?" 

"Sure! Kind of a strange thing happened then, Doc. They had not  gone far before they managed to get guns.

They cut down on me with  several shots. I couldn't see 'em. Monkeying around after 'em was  useless, with

me disarmed." 

"Guns!" Renny ejaculated. "But we took their guns when we seized  them in their camp." 

"Yeah. They must have had other weapons hidden in the brush." 

Doc said: "Monk, how about analyzing that butter?" 

Monk nodded and returned to his work over the portable chemical  laboratory. He had spread his

paraphernalia over a large table. Several  of the mixing trays were giving off strongsmelling odors. 

Going outdoors, Doc searched for tracks. Finding them was a simple  matter for his trained eye. In addition to

the tracks of Patricia, Ham,  and the squaw, there were prints of at least half a dozen other men.  The trail did

not wander, but headed for the shore. 

The procession of footprints crossed a spot where the ground was  soft. Doc got down on all fours to make an

examination; then he stood  up. 

"The same gang that we rescued Pat from has seized her again," he  said. "I've seen some of those footprints

so often they're beginning to  look like the tracks of old friends." 

The trail terminated near the boathouse. Certain marks in the soft  sand might have been made by canoe keels.

Doc looked into the  boathouse. The canoes which had been stored there were missing. 

"They came by land," he said. "But they left by water. That was a  wise trick on their part. We haven't a

chance of trailing them over  water." 

At this point, Monk came running from the direction of the cabin.  He was excited. He had never looked more

like a gorilla than now. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, bounded at his heels, making frantic  efforts to keep up. 

"I've got it!" Monk shouted. "I've got it!" 

"Got what?" Doc demanded. 

"The stuff in the butter!" Monk bawled. "You know how butter  absorbs the odor of any smelly food you put

in the refrigerator with  it? Well, when the house was saturated with this stuff, the butter  absorbed enough of it

for me to find it by making an analysis." 

"Listen, you homely missing link!" Renny rumbled. "What have you  found?" 

"The stuff which caused the mysterious sleep," Monk grinned. "It's  an odorless and colorless gas which is

poisonous if inhaled long  enough." 

Renny, Long Tom, and Johnny were plenty surprised at this  development. Doc Savage, however, had

expected it. He had already  surmised the probable cause of the weird slumber. So closely had he  guessed that


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he had told Monk what chemical components to look for. 

"No doubt the stuff was used to kill Alex Savage," Monk said. "To a  physician who did not have much

experience, and who did not suspect  foul play, the effects of the stuff might look like heart failure." 

Long Tom grimaced, felt of the gap in his teeth. "I didn't think  the stuff was poisonous. You know it didn't

kill us on the train." 

"That was because you didn't get. enough of it," Doc replied. "I  thought at first that the attack on the train was

made merely to  frighten us. Since then, I've learned more of the nature of these  fellows. They would as soon

kill us as try to scare us. 

"Just why such a small quantity of gas was injected into our train  compartment is hard to explain. Perhaps the

fellow administering the  gas was frightened away. The stuff must have been sent into the  compartment

through the crack at the bottom of the door." 

Doc ended his long speech abruptly, and cupped a palm back of an  ear. He stood thus for several seconds,

perfectly rigid. 

"There's a boat coming!" he said. "It sounds like an outboard  engine." 

A minute passed  two, three. The others began to wonder if Doc  could have been mistaken. Then they heard

the sound of the boat. 

"Probably the kidnapers coming back to make a deal!" Renny boomed. 

"The boat is coming straight in from the open sea," Doc decided. 

The boat nosed in past the floating mail box. It became  distinguishable in the moonlight. It was simply a

squaresterned canoe,  fitted with an outboard motor. 

"Ahoy, Senors!" called a hoarse voice. 

"I've got a notion to take a shot at him!" Renny rumbled. "Bet I  can hit him!" 

"And then they'd bump Ham, Patricia, and the squaw!" Monk grunted.  "Don't be a dope!" 

Monk was very earnest. Although Monk and Ham seemed continually on  the point of flying at each other's

throats, and insulted each other  with vigor and delight, either would have risked his life for the  other. On

occasion, each had done so. 

"What do you want?" Doc called to the distant men. 

"The ivory block, Senor Savage!" the fellow shouted back. 

"We haven't got the block!" Doc told him. 

"You cannot deceive us, hombre!" the reply came volleying back.  "The Senorita Savage had it. She admitted

that fact when she was our  prisoner earlier." 

"She thought she had it," Doc corrected him. "When she looked in  the hiding place, the block was gone." 


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"We are not interested in hearing a smooth story, Senor Savage,"  said the distant man. "I came to inform you

of a fact." 

"What fact?" 

"Simply, senor, that we now have your six friends in a very safe  place." 

Several seconds of surprised silence followed these words. 

"Six!" Renny's big voice rumbled. 

"Ham, Patricia, and the squaw  that's only three!" muttered  Johnny. He took off his glasses with the

magnifying lens, lingered them  thoughtfully. 

"Did you say six?" Doc called to the boatman. 

"Si, si," the fellow shouted back. 

"He can only mean one thing," Long Tom said slowly. "1 told you  that the Ovejas and El Rabanos started

shooting at me right after they  escaped." 

"You were evidently mistaken," Doc told him. 

"Sure I was!" Long Tom agreed. "It was this other gang shooting at  me. They must have grabbed Senor and

Senorita Oveja and El Rabanos." 

Renny banged his big fists together. "It beats me!" 

"Me, too," Monk agreed. Bewilderment was on his homely face. "I  figured Senor Oveja, his daughter, and El

Rabanos were in with the  other gang. The ambush they fixed for Doc made me think that." 

"I figured the same way," said Johnny. "There must have been a  contact between the two parties. Otherwise,

how did they know of the  meeting with Doc?" 

"The girl and the two men might have set a snare to capture me,"  Doc pointed out. "The other gang, hearing

of it' could have tried to  turn it into a death trap." 

"That might be, too," Johnny admitted. 

The man in the distant boat had been waiting. His boat had drifted  near a large rock which thrust out of the

bay; he had wedged the end of  a boat hook into a crack in this rock, and was holding his little craft  stationary.

The rock was a bulletproof shelter. 

"Do you understand me, Senor?" the man yelled. "I have your six  friends! They are all safe  so far!" 

"Ham, Patricia, and the squaw!" Doc called. "Who are the other  three?" 

"El Rabanos, Senor Oveja, and his daughter!" came the reply. 

"I told you so!" said Long Tom. "When the three got away from me,  they jumped from the fryin' pan to the

fire. That explains why the  machine gunners weren't at the cliff when you arrived. They were  watching the


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Ovejas' camp, and saw us show up there. Then they  skipped." 

"This seems to indicate the senorita is straight, after all," Monk  grunted. 

"When she said they were camped behind the cliff, she lied," Johnny  reminded him. 

"You want to make a swap?" Doc shouted. 

"Si, Si, Senor!" the man in the canoe called hastily, "We will  trade our prisoners for the ivory cube." 

"I told you we haven't got the ivory cube!" Doc called back. 

"You are lying, senor," called the canoeman. "I will return in two  hours. If you do not give me the ivory cube,

one of the prisoners will  be shot, and the body tossed out where it will drift ashore!" 

With that, he started the outboard motor, and the squarestern  canoe skipped out to sea. Apparently, he had

laid down an ultimatum  about which there could be no argument. 

Chapter 16. INSIDE THE IVORY BLOCK

THE boat had hardly started its seaward retreat when Doc Savage  whirled on Long Tom. 

"Your electrical ear!" he said. "Get it!" 

Long Tom dashed for the cabin. 

Just as Monk always carried chemical equipment, so did Long Tom  carry a variety of electrical devices.

Among these was an apparatus  which had been useful on many occasions. This consisted of a compact,

highly sensitive parabolic microphone pickup, together with an  amplifier of great power. The thing was no

radical departure from the  listening devices military men use to spot enemy airplanes. However, it  was

infinitely more compact. 

Long Tom hurriedly assembled the mechanism. The microphone was  directional. He pointed it at the

receding motor canoe. The outboard  engine was no longer audible to the unaided ear. 

Long Tom twisted the dial on his amplifier. There was a  loudspeaker device. The sound of the retreating

canoe poured out with  loud volume. 

They listened to the noise which the sensitive device picked up.  After a while the outboard died suddenly. 

Long Tom turned the amplifier on full force. A mosquito flew across  the front of the microphone, and

sounded like a trimotored airplane.  Then the listener picked up several faint shouts, but they were not

understandable. 

"Holy cow!" Renny thumped. "They must be holding the prisoners in a  boat out at sea!" 

"Take flashlights," Doc directed suddenly. "And hunt for birds'  nests in pine trees." 

"Huh?" Monk grunted, and looked as if he had not understood. 


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"Birds' nests in pine trees," Doc repeated. "We're not interested  in birds' nests in any other kind of trees,

though." 

"What do we do when we find them?" Monk wanted to know. He was  still puzzled. 

"Climb up and look in them," Doc said. 

"Then what?" 

"When you find the right bird's nest, you won't need to be told. 

The four men went looking for birds' nests. Each had a dubious and  puzzled look on his face. Just why Doc

was abruptly interested in nests  in pine trees, they had no idea. 

Monk cast his light up a tree and spied a telltale knot of twigs,  stringy bark, and feathers. He prepared to shin

up to the nest. 

"Huntin' birds' nests!" he snorted. "I'm glad Ham ain't here to  see! Would he hand out razzberries!" 

"I wouldn't blame him!" Renny boomed. "Especially since you're  looking for nests in pine trees." 

"Pine trees  sure!" 

"That's a spruce you're starting to climb!" Renny chuckled 

"Yeah, it is at that," Monk admitted sheepishly, after taking a  second look. 

Doc Savage returned to the cabin. He switched on his flashlight,  which gave the brilliant beam. From a

pocket he drew the aerial  photographs which Renny had made. As yet, Doc had not had time to make  a

complete examination of these photographic prints. He did so now. 

On a picture which had been taken something like seven miles up the  coast, he found a tiny grayish spot. This

might have been a faded,  elongated flyspeck. But under a magnifying glass, it became a small  schooner. 

A tender dangled on a painter behind the schooner  a canoe, fitted  with an outboard. 

The discovery convinced Doc that it was upon this boat that the  prisoners were being held. 

The craft was now standing out to sea, of course. 

Monk came plunging in from the night. 

"I found it, Doc!" he howled. 

THE gorillalike giant of a chemist held his prize in both hands. It  was a bird's nest  the nest of a very large

bird, judging from its  size. 

"How did you know what to look for, Doc?" Monk questioned. 

"Remember the ambercolored, sticky stuff we found on the trousers  and on the hands of the murdered

Indian?" Doc asked. 


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"Sure!" 

"It was gum off a pine tree." 

Monk whistled softly, comprehending. "There was some bark stuck to  his trousers, and tiny feathers stuck to

his hands." 

"Bark off a pine tree and feathers from a bird's nest," Doc agreed. 

Monk dived a furry hand into the bird's nest. 

"Hocus pocus presto!" he grinned. 

He brought out a block of ivory more than two inches square. 

Renny and Johnny and Long Tom came up. They stared at the block. 

"Boat Face stole it!" Renny thundered. "That's where it went! He  hid it in a bird's nest!" 

Doc took the block and turned it in his hand. The workmanship was  wonderful. The thing looked perfectly

solid. 

Crooking a finger at Monk, Doc said: "I've got a job for you"' 

The bronze giant and the homely chemist retired to the room which  held Monk's portable laboratory. Two or

three minutes elapsed. When Doc  reappeared, he was alone. He carried the block in one hand. 

On a foundation of books, Doc arranged two flashlights 80 that they  splashed a brilliant glare on the table. He

placed the ivory cube in  the illumination. 

Johnny promptly handed over his glasses with the magnifying left  lens. The magnifier disclosed narrow,

straight cracks along all four  corners of the ivory block. They were too small for the eyes to see  unaided. 

With his powerful hands, Doc tested the construction of the cube.  He was uncertain just how it opened. He

tried gentle pressure, without  result. He shook it violently, much as one would shake the mercury down  in a

thermometer. This caused the block to separate into six sections.  It had been held together by tiny, ingenious

dowel pins. 

The core of the cube was a hard, square block of dried mud. Doc  inspected this curiously. He turned the mud

slowly in his palm. Then,  wheeling abruptly, he went into another room. 

Boat Face had been buried. His squaw, however, had kept the  clothing he had been wearing at the time of his

death. Doc selected the  trousers and turned the pockets inside out. He had done this on a  previous search, but

he wanted to make sure. 

Several flat leaves, fragments of chewing tobacco, came to light.  The tobacco was very black in color. 

Doc turned his attention to the mud cube which he had crushed in  his palm. There was a leaf of the black

tobacco in the mud. Boat Face's  chewing tobacco inside the cube! 

From Monk's room came brisk tinkling of test tubes and mixing  beakers. 


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Doc's other three aides had been watching the bronze man. Their  expressions showed plainly that they were

going to ask questions. 

But before they could interrogate him, they all heard the mutter of  an approaching outboard motor. 

DOC Savage whipped outdoors. Three of his men followed him. Monk,  however, stayed with the job he was

doing. 

The sputter of the outboard loudened. A blurred spot appeared out  to sea. It soon resolved into the

squaresterned canoe. The speedy  little craft was crowded with men. 

In the gloom, little could be seen of the canoe passengers. Their  forms were dark humps. From each hump a

slender, black thorn seemed to  project. This proved they were not the prisoners  the thorns were  rifle barrels. 

The outboard stopped, and the canoe coasted behind a rock. The  armed passengers used boat hooks to keep

themselves sheltered behind  the stony hump. One or two could be seen using binoculars. They  discerned Doc

Savage and his aides.  "Your decision, Senor Savage!" one  shouted. "We have found the block," Doc told him

"You had it all the  time!" the man jeered. 

Doc did not argue. "Where are the prisoners?" he called. "They will  be produced when you are ready to make

the trade." 

"I'm ready now." 

The men in the motor canoe held a brief consultation. One of the  gun barrels was pointed upward. There was

a loud report. Evidently the  weapon was a shotgun. 

Nothing happened for three or four seconds. Then, high overhead,  there was another report and a blinding

flash. 

"Regular Fourth of July!" said Renny. 

"It was a flash rocket, fired as a signal," announced Johnny. 

"The prisoners will soon be here," called the man from the outboard  canoe. 

Nothing more happened for possibly fifteen minutes. Then, far out  to sea, the slow throb of a marine engine

came into hearing. 

Doc listened intently to the engine noise. 

"It's a gasoline motor," he decided. "That means there is probably  an auxiliary power plant in the schooner." 

SHORTLY afterward, using glasses, Doc was able to discern the  craft. It was not more than fifty feet long,

but had a wide beam and  stout lines. The boat was built for service. 

Outside the inlet, it swung into the teeth of a light breeze. The  auxiliary motor, turning slowly, held it

stationary. 

"The prisoners are aboard the schooner, senor!" called the man in  the motor canoe. 


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"How do you know that?" Doc countered. 

Shouts passed between the canoe and the schooner. Following this,  Ham's voice rang strongly from the

schooner. Ham had a powerful  orators' voice, developed by much courtroom work. 

"We're all 0. K.!" he shouted. "H they're trying to bargain for our  release, Doc, tell 'em to go take a jump at

the moon!" 

"Are there six of you?" Doc demanded. 

"Sure! Senor and Senorita Oveja, and El Rabanos, are prisoners,  tool" 

Then the spokesman in the canoe interrupted the conversation. 

"Will you turn over the ivory cube for their release?" he called to  Doc. 

Doc lowered his voice so that it could by no chance reach any of  the swarthy men. 

"Monk!" 

"Coming up!" said Monk, also lowvoiced. 

The homely chemist ambled out of the cabin. His hairy hands swung  well below his knees. One paw gripped

an object wrapped in a  handkerchief. 

"All set?" Doc asked. 

"Yep. But I was sure pushed for time." 

Doc and Monk strode together down to the water's edge. For a  moment, they were lost to view in the

moonlight as they worked through  the brush. They waded out until the lapping waves came somewhat above

their knees. 

"Come and get it!" Doc called. "But you must release the  prisoners!" 

"Si, si!" called the man in the canoe. "The captives will be turned  loose the instant we have the ivory block." 

The outboard motor bawled; its propeller threw up a fan of spray.  The canoe darted inshore with the speed of

a frightened duck. 

At a low word from Doc, Monk retreated hastily and got under cover. 

The canoe swerved inshore and slackened speed. The boat passed Doc  slowly at a distance of thirty feet. 

"Throw the cube!" commanded a man. "It had better fall in the  canoe, too! We dare not come too close to

you. We will free the  prisoners when we have it!" 

Doc's arm drew back, shot forward. Square and white, the little  block sailed through the moonlight. The man

in the canoe caught it. 

"Bueno!" he barked. "Good! Now  this is how we intend to return  the prisoners." 


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As if the exclamation were a signal, every man in the canoe lifted  his rifle. The muzzles lipped flame. Gun

sounds blended in a ragged  roar! 

AT the moment when he tossed the white cube, Doc Savage was  standing in water above his knees. He was

not taken unawares. The first  rifle barrel was hardly swaying toward him when be doubled, flopping  forward

violently into the water. He was completely submerged before  the shots crashed. 

The perfect physical condition in which Doc kept himself had given  him an ability which had saved his life

on other occasions. This was  the capacity to hold his breath for a seemingly impossible interval! 

Actually, the breathholding did not depend entirely on physical  condition. There was a trick to it. Instead of

taking as deep a breath  as he could, several rapid inhalations were made to charge the lungs  with oxygen, and

the dive was then made with a normal amount of air in  the lungs. Doc had learned this trick from the men

who could do it best   South Sea pearl divers. 

Keeping close to the sandy bottom, Doc swam under water. He did not  go toward the canoe. Nor did he swim

fast enough to raise a betraying  ripple. 

The water was vibrant with hollow chunging noises  rifle shots.  The men were driving lead at random, in

hopes of making a hit. 

As he swam, Doc's hands encountered a rock. He eased around it,  still submerged. When the rock was

between himself and the canoe, he  floated to the surface. 

He was in time to hear the first of a series of remarkable sounds. 

These noises resembled the moan of a gigantic bull fiddle. They  were so loud they hurt the ears. The moans

were very short, none  lasting more than two seconds. The cove throbbed with their volume. 

These sounds were strings of shots, although a human ear could not  distinguish between the reports. They

came so swiftly as to seem a  single shot. The shots were fired by the remarkably compact little  machine guns

which were Doc's invention. 

Doc chanced to look. Being in shadow, he was fairly safe from  discovery. The little machine guns were

charged with bullets which  carried unconsciousness rather than death  mercy bullets. 

Three men were down in the canoe. This was not such good shooting,  considering that all of Doc's men were

good marksmen. Rather, it was  evident, they were not trying to capture the gang. 

The canoe turned wildly and skittered out toward the bay mouth. A  few bullets followed it, fighting wave

crests like angry bees. It was  noticeable that none of the slugs came close to the canoe, which was  now in

wild flight. 

"It is bad shooting, and this is lucky for us!" squawked a man. 

"Those guns!" shivered another. "Never before have I heard anything  like them, senors!" 

The terrific rate at which the little machine guns fired had  produced a near terror. They all showed the effects

of it. 


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The three men who had been hit lay motionless in the bottom of the  canoe. As soon as the ugly moans of the

machine guns ceased, the three  victims were examined. 

"Bueno!" ejaculated one of the gang. "They are not dead!"  Continuing his inspection, the man gave a grunt of

surprise. 

"What is this? The bullets seem to have penetrated only skin deep,  and then burst!" 

Evidently the man had never seen a mercy bullet. He and his fellows  were puzzling over the slugs when the

canoe reached the schooner. They  clambered aboard, after lifting their three motionless companions over  the

rail. 

"Did you get the ivory block?" asked a fellow who seemed to be in  charge of the boat. 

"We did!" declared one of the group. He pulled the white cube from  a pocket, and passed it over. 

The other examined it. 

FROM the shore, a strange sound drifted. It was a series of  guttural, booming words  words which were

intelligible to no one on  the schooner deck. 

It was Doc Savage, shouting in a strange dialect. 

The man holding the white block looked at his fellows. "Do any of  you understand that language, amigos?"

he asked. 

There was a general shaking of heads. The tongue in which the shout  had been couched was wholly foreign

to anything they had ever heard. 

Dismissing the shout as unimportant, the men examined the white  cube closely. They sought to get it open.

Finally, they shook the cube  violently. It separated into six sections. 

What happened then was strange. The holder of the cube stared  stupidly at the segments. Then he leaned over

and gazed foolishly down  at the deck. And, as if he had found a place to lie down, he toppled  forward. 

His fall upon the deck produced a loud thump. He lay quite  motionless afterward. 

Chapter 17. INTO THE EARTH

THE apparent magic which had felled the opener of the box reached  swiftly to the other members of the

crew. One went down. Another! There  was no outcry, no attempt to flee. They simply keeled over. 

Each man began snoring softly a few seconds after he had sprawled  out. 

After perhaps twenty seconds, not a man on the schooner's deck  remained upright. 

Ham and the other prisoners were below. They had been locked in a  small, not too clean cabin. The wrists of

each were bound tightly. A  long rope had been knotted to the lashings of Ham's wrist, carried to  those of

pretty Senorita Oveja, and tied, thence to the senorita's  father, and the rest of the prisoners. 


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While men were dropping so mysteriously on deck, the prisoners were  doing something that seemed

inexplicable. 

They were holding their breaths. Senor Oveja's cheeks were puffed  with the effort. He seemed about to

explode. 

With one hand, Ham made slow counting gestures, as if he were  measuring the passage of a certain length of

time. 

Finally, Ham let his breath out in a rush and said: "0. K.! You can  start breathing again." 

"What was the idea of telling us to hold our breaths, Ham?"  Patricia Savage questioned curiously. 

"Did you hear Doc shout in that strange language?" Ham asked. 

"Yes. I couldn't understand a word of it." 

"Probably not a dozen people in the socalled civilized world could  understand it," Ham told her. "The

language was ancient Mayan. Doc and  the rest of us speak it and understand it." 

"What did Doc say when he shouted?" 

"He said he had some of his anaesthetic gas in the ivory cube," Ham  replied. "He said for us to hold our

breaths, because the stuff would  be released when the cube was opened." 

"But why hold our breath?" Patricia queried, puzzled. 

"The anaesthetic gas spreads with lightning swiftness," Ham  explained. "In less than a minute it dissolves and

becomes ineffective.  We simply held our breaths until it was dissipated." 

Ham now got to his feet. His ankles were not bound, so this was  comparatively simple. The others followed

his example. Ham headed for  the deck. The others had no choice but to follow him. They were tied in  a chain

by the rope. 

Patricia gasped in surprise when she saw the sleeping forms of her  late captors. 

"The gas got them!" Ham chuckled. "Now, if we can just get this  boat headed for shore, we'll be all right." 

"Did it work?" Doc called loudly from the beach. "You tell 'em!"  Ham bellowed back. "Like a charm!" "The

engine of the launch won't  run," Doc called. "There's no gasoline in the tank. But we'll paddle  out and help

you get to shore." 

"You want to be careful!" Ham called. "The whole gang wasn't on the  boat. We've only got about half of

them." 

"Any idea where the others are?" Doc shouted. 

"No!" Ham said. "They're liable to be around somewhere." 

Doc made no answer. 


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Ham, unable to distinguish the bronze man in the moonlight, decided  Doc had gone to get the launch. 

Patricia glanced uneasily at the swarthy men lying senseless on  deck. 

"Aren't you afraid they'll revive?" she asked Ham. 

"It will take them nearly two hours to wake up," Ham told her. "Doc  has been using this anaesthetic gas for a

long time. I know exactly how  it functions." 

Patricia heaved a relieved sigh. "Then we're safe!" 

She was too optimistic. 

Unexpectedly, from either side of the schooner, rifles banged! The  shots echoed back noisily from the cliffs.

Bullets chopped savagely at  bull and deck house. A slug tore a ragged hole in the furled sail. 

THE men doing the shooting were as yet some distance away. Ham,  peering hard, could locate them only

from the flash of their rifles.  They were coming from two directions. Evidently they were shooting at  the

schooner as a whole; at that distance they could not pick out  individual targets. 

"It's the rest of the gang!" Ham gritted. 

El Rabanos wailed: "Diablos! The devils! They will kill us!" 

"Get in the canoe," Ham commanded. "let me in the stern, where I  can start the motor." 

Patricia cried: "But the schooner was  " 

"No time to get it under way," explained Ham. "Come on, those birds  must've been listening. They heard us

talking to Doc, and knew  something had happened to their pals." 

Privately, Ham had no use for canoes. Years ago, one had ducked him  when he was togged out in his

immaculate clothes. They were tricky  things, even when there was plenty of time to get into them. 

Getting six excited individuals, all linked together by a rope,  into the canoe, proved to be an agonizing job.

Twice the canoe rocked  sickeningly. Ham groaned and yelled by turns. 

The instant be could reach the outboard motor at the stern, be went  to work on it. The motor was still hot That

was lucky, for, with his  hands bound, he would never have got it started otherwise. 

Rifle bullets were still hitting the schooner with loud chugs. Some  bit at the water and ricocheted with

piercing wails! Others traveled on  without touching water or schooner, and spanged noisily among the rocks

on the inlet shores. 

The outboard motor popped a blue flame through its exhaust ports.  It fired again, then began to moan

regularly. Patricia, in the bow, had  already thrown off the painter. 

Ham gave the outboard all the gas it would take. The canoe swerved  away from the schooner. 

A spatter of lead followed them as they raced for shore. The  riflemen, approaching from two directions, were

not yet close enough to  shoot accurately, however. 


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A bullet spanged through the thin canvas side of the canoe, just at  the water line. The hole, near the bow,

began to let water in. 

"I hope lightning doesn't strike twice in the same place," Patricia  said, and put a hand over the bullet hole to

shut out the water. 

It was the little supermachine guns in the hands of Doc and the  others which insured their reaching shore. The

small guns began to emit  the amazing bullfiddle moans. 

The bullets, charged with tracer chemical in addition to the  sleepproducing potion, raced like redhot wires

through the moonlight.  It was probably the sight of the red cords of tracer snapping past  their faces that

moved the riflemen to stop shooting. Whatever the  cause, they fell silent. 

Ham ran the canoe against the beach so hard that it skidded up half  its length on the sand. He piled out,

dragging the others. 

The giant form of Doc Savage materialized silently beside them. Doc  produced a knife and cut through their

bonds. 

"Your scheme was swell!" Patricia told Doc. 

"Give Monk the credit," Doc replied. "He is the one who made up  that fake ivory block. He's a wizard as a

chemist, or he couldn't have  done it so quickly." 

Ham overheard this, and he grimaced. Praise for the homely Monk was  a pain to his ears. 

The tall, girlfaced El Rabanos came up. 

"I wish to apologize for any trouble I may have caused you, Mr.  Savage," he said earnestly. "I know now that

you are not our enemy." 

Senor Oveja approached in time to listen. He emitted a surly growl. 

"En verdad!" he snapped. "Indeed! I am by no means convinced that  Savage is our friend." 

BIG, bronze Doc Savage did not seem particularly interested in what  Senor Oveja thought. He turned away. 

Girlfaced El Rabanos said in a low voice: 

"I am terribly sorry for my friend's actions, Senor Savage." 

"Don't worry about it," Doc said wryly. 

"But, Senor Savage, it is ungrateful of him, I am sorry to say," El  Rabanos insisted. "Those hombres on the

schooner were going to kill us!  Unquestionably you saved our lives." 

Doc said nothing. He kept on walking; he was headed for the cabin. 

"We owe you an explanation also," El Rabanos continued in an  ingratiating voice. "In case you do not know

it, we prevailed upon the  Senorita Oveja to deceive you this afternoon." 


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"I knew it." 

"We did not intend to harm you with the trick," El Rabanos said  desperately. "We were merely going to seize

you. We had the silly idea  that we could trade you to your friends for the ivory cube. We had  finally decided

you must have the cube, but did not know its  significance." 

Pretty Senorita Oveja overhauled them and joined in the  conversation. 

"That is the truth, Senor Savage," she added her insistence. "Harm  to you was the last thing in our minds." 

Doc bowed politely, but said nothing. 

A few minutes later, however, when Doc and Monk were together, the  homely chemist expressed a private

idea. 

"Doc," said Monk, "I may be wrong, but I believe there's a  connection between our three visitors and that

gang out there." 

"What makes you think so?" 

"The fact that the trap set for you was a death trap." 

Doc's strange flakegold eyes rested intently on the homely  chemist. "Who do you suspect, Monk?" 

Monk tugged slowly at an ear which resembled a gristle tuft. 

"Senor Oveja," he said. 

Doc Savage did not change expression. Neither did he speak further  on the subject. Instead, he spread a piece

of paper on the table, then  he drew an envelope from a pocket, and tore off the corner. From  envelope to

paper, he poured a tiny heap of clean white sand. 

"Where'd that sand come from?" Monk queried curiously. 

"From the moccasins of the dead Boat Face," Doc told him' "Guess  you were not around when I took it out." 

Going to the door, Doc called: "Pat!" 

Patricia, alert, and prettier than ever, entered. She gave Monk a  gorgeous smile, apparently by way of

thanking him for his work in  constructing the trick ivory block which had been responsible for their  escape. 

Monk reacted with the look of a homely cat which had just dined on  the canary. 

Patricia was by far the prettiest girl Monk had ever seen. He would  have liked to stay and talk with her. A

glance at Doc, however, showed  that the bronze man wanted to be left alone with Patricia. 

Monk ambled out, leaving the two together. Hardly more than a  minute later, Patricia reappeared. She looked

neither to right nor  left, but walked away, along the shore of the inlet. 

She was swallowed by the black shadows which gorged the wilderness  of brush. 


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DOC Savage came out of the cabin and moved about in the darkness  until he found Long Tom. 

"Take your listening device and climb up on top of the cabin," Doc  directed the electrical wizard. "Swing the

thing in slow circles.  Report whatever you hear." 

Long Tom hastily complied. The microphone of his contrivance was so  sensitive, and the amplifier so

powerful, that it would be almost  impossible for any one to approach the cabin without being heard. Long

Tom hooked wires together, clicked switches, and thumbed dials. Instead  of a loudspeaker for listening, he

used a head set. This was more  sensitive. 

"Hey, Doc!" he called almost at once. "I hear somebody already. It  sounds like one person walking." 

"Is the person making three sharp rapping sounds at frequent  intervals?" Doc asked. "Sounds such as would

be made by sticks beaten  together?" 

Long Tom strained his ears. "Yes." 

"Then it's Patricia," Doc told him. "I gave her two pieces of wood,  and told her to beat them together three

times every few steps.  Whenever you hear that, you'll know it's her. If you hear anybody else,  though, fire

two shots in the air. That's to warn Patricia to hide  herself, or to hurry back." 

"What's Patricia doing?" Long Tom asked. 

There was no answer from the bronze man. Long Tom looked over the  cabin roof. He could see no sign of

Doc in the moonlight. He returned  to his listening, deciding Patricia s mission would have to be a  mystery for

the present. 

Doc had entered the cabin. On a table, he spread the six sections  which had been fitted together to form the

ivory block. At first  glance, the inner surfaces of these seemed merely carelessly carved.  They were a bit

rough. However, when a magnifying glass was put on  them, the roughness assumed a definite form. It was

possible to tell  that the block held a cleverly carved relief map of the region around  the cabin. 

It was necessary to rearrange the parts several times before Doc  had them in their proper positions. 

'That's it!" Renny said at last. Renny was looking over Doc's  shoulder. The bigfisted fellow probably knew

as much about maps as any  man. It was part of his engineering training. 

Doc ran the magnifying glass along the irregular line which  indicated the shore on the carving. It was not

hard to find the  location of the entombed galleon. 

The spot was marked by a tiny, exquisitely carved skull. There was  no other peculiar mark on the map, which

made it almost certain the  skull identified the location of the galleon. 

"The darn thing isn't over a mile from here!" Renny boomed. 

Senor Oveja, his daughter, and El Rabanos had not been parties to  the inspection of the insides of the ivory

block. Chancing to come into  the room now, they observed what had been going on. 

"I demand that block!" Senor Oveja said angrily. "It is mine!" 

"By what right?" Doc queried. 


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Senor Oveja sputtered indignantly. "My ancestor  " 

"Your ancestor was a thief," Doc said shortly. "The ivory block was  admittedly not his property. Nor was the

galleon or its contents." 

Senor Oveja seemed about to explode. Before he could do that, Doc  walked away. The bronze man had the

sections of the ivory block in a  pocket. 

"You fellows drift out in the brush," Doc told Monk in a low voice.  "I'll join you a bit later. It'll save trouble

with Senor and Senorita  Oveja and El Rabanos, if they do not know we are going. We'll leave  Long Tom here

to watch them. Long Tom has to stay anyway, to protect  Patricia with his listening device. He has to give Pat

warning if any  of our enemies come close, so she can duck." 

"We're going to have a look at that galleon?" Monk guessed in a  hushed whisper. 

"You have guessed it," Doc told him. 

TWENTY minutes later, Ham was hissing peevishly at Monk, "Can't you  be quiet, you missing link! You

make more fuss than all the rest of us  together!" 

This was hardly true. Ham had just fallen down, making a  considerable racket. 

Monk only sniffed. "Why don't you throw that sword cane away,  shyster? That's what you're stumbling over." 

The dapper Ham had retained his sword cane through the excitement.  He had lost it in the cabin when the

gang seized him. Upon escaping,  his first act had been to find it. 

"You tripped me!" Ham growled. "You big accident of nature!" 

"Gilt out the funnyboning, you culls!" Renny's big voice boomed  softly. "The doggone galleon should be

around here some place!" 

The sloppy smack of waves began to reach their ears. Each smack was  followed by a long flutter of falling

spray. This indicated the shore  was a rock wall climbing sheer from the water. 

Like mountaineers, the men were carrying a long rope. This was  vitally necessary. The way they were

traversing was incredibly rough.  Deep gashes appeared underfoot with the unexpectedness of crevasses in  a

glacier. 

More than once, they had to lower a man over a lip of stone until  he touched bottom. Just as often, they had

to remain at the foot of a  wall of stone while Doc Savage climbed with the end of the rope, later  to haul them

up. To Doc's enormous strength, agility, and sense of  balance, the canyon wails presented no great obstacles. 

Eventually, Doc's men sank on the crest of a small ridge, panting.  They rested there. Doc had gone on ahead

while they climbed. They  presumed he was searching for the spot marked on the map within the  ivory cube. 

"Here it is, men!" Doc called suddenly. 

The men came to life as if lightning had struck near by. They  scrambled down the steep slope toward the spot

Doc's voice had come  from. 


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The bronze man stood beside a waisthigh pile of evergreen brush.  The spot was in a cuplike depression. On

all sides, stone wails sloped  up steeply. 

The gaunt Johnny looked around vacantly. He took off his glasses,  put them back on again. 

"I don't see anything," he said. 

Doc Savage grasped a limb which projected near the bottom of the  brush pile. He lifted it, and upset the

entire pile. 

The brush had covered a hole in the steep slope of the hill  the  mouth of a tunnel. It was perhaps three feet

wide, four high. 

For a few feet, the tunnel penetrated soft earth. For that  distance, it was timbered. The timbers were bright

and new. In some  spots, twigs still clung to them. Leaves on these were still green. 

Beyond the timbering, the tunnel dived into solid rock and sloped  sharply downward. Its floor became a

series of crude steps. 

"This work was done a long, long time ago," said Johnny. If any one  was qualified to judge the age of

mankind's handiwork, the gaunt  archaeologist was. He could look at a goblet from an Egyptian tomb, and  tell

what Pharaoh drank out of it. 

"But the work at the entrance was very recent," Monk muttered. "It  hasn't been done over a week or two, I'll

bet." 

The steps ended. The tunnel traveled straight ahead for a few feet.  It emptied then into what appeared to be a

subterranean room. 

Doc snapped a long, glaring white beam from his flashlight, and  roved it slowly about. 

"Holy cow!" breathed Renny in awestricken tones. 

Chapter 18. THE SKELETON CREW

THE underground recess was not as large as it had seemed at first.  It was, in fact, hardly more than enough to

contain the thing it held. 

The walls to the right were solid and smooth, once a canyon side.  To the left was rock  cracked, distorted

slidein rock, but solid for  all of that 

A small rill of water crawled across the sandy floor. It looked  like a flow of molten silver. 

The galleon had bulked big in front of their eyes. It bad been  blocked up on rocks for a bullscraping when

disaster had overtaken it.  The fact that it had been blocked up had preserved it from dampness to  a certain

extent. But it was not exactly seaworthy. 

Once the galleon might have been a gilded pride of the Spanish  Main. No telling what colors had bedecked it.

But it was gray now   gray because of a repulsive mold which covered it like a carpet. 


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To the left of where Doc and his men stood, a skeleton lay on a  rock. It lay in a curled position, like a

slumbering dog. One of the  hands, from which part of the finger bones had dropped, was over a  gaping eye

socket, as if to keep out the light. 

"One of the galleon crew I guess," said Renny. The big engineer's  enormous voice was a booming roar which

assumed earsplitting  proportions in the cavern confines. 

"Use your muffler!" Monk whispered. "You'll shake this place down  on us." 

Doc Savage turned. His flash beam, like a rod of white flame,  impaled each of his men in turn. In their

eagerness, all four had  followed him into the tunnel. 

The flash beam went to the sandy floor. Tracks were there. Fresh  tracks! The imprints were those of

moccasins! 

Doc moved along the side of the galleon, his men trailing him. They  passed three more skeletons. Rusty

streaks beside the bone assemblies  might once have been blunderbusses or swords. 

Several piles of rust along the cavern wall hinted at cannons which  must have been removed to lighten the

galleon for careening. 

Reaching out, Doc placed a finger against the hull. With a little  pressure, the finger sank for half its length

into the moldcovered  wood. The galleon was a pile of rot. 

Doc came to a halt. Before him in the hull of the galleon, a hole  gaped. It was a fresh bole, and at least four

feet square. It looked  like it had been dug open with a spade. 

Doc popped his light into the bole. There were more skeletons   five, six, seven of them, this time. They

were gray things, made  utterly hideous by the mold which covered them. 

It was indeed a macabre argosy, this ship from another age, with  its crew of skeletons. 

Doc entered. He sank ankledeep in the spongy timbers. It seemed  inevitable that the whole ship would come

down about his ears. 

Going on, his light picked up objects which bore a marked  resemblance to the brassbound chests which

historians write of. He  dropped the glittering thread of light into one of these. 

"Empty!" Renny thundered. "The treasure is gone!" 

DOC Savage stepped swiftly to each of the chests in turn. He worked  his way aft through a bulkhead. More

of the chests were there. He  picked up a small circular piece of metal and a green, glittering  object which

might have been colored glass  but wasn't. 

He carried the articles back and showed them to his men. 

"A pieceofeight, and a small emerald!" Monk muttered. "That  indicates there was really a treasure here." 

Ham punched angrily at a bulkhead with his sword cane. The cane  sank part of its length in the soggy wood. 

"It's gone!" he snapped. "Who got it?" 


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"You noticed those tracks," Doc said. "They were made by feet shod  in moccasins." 

Ham frowned. "You mean  Boat Face?" 

"Boat Face made the tracks," Doc said. "Not only did the Indian  have the ivory cube, but he knew its

significance. The gang who was  after it must have told him what it was. Probably they hired him to get  it for

them. Then, when he doublecrossed them, they killed him." 

"It looks like our job now is to find out where Boat Face put the  treasure," Renny grumbled. 

"Maybe he didn't take it out of here," Monk offered. "After all,  this is as good a hiding place as any. Let's

look around." 

Monk started for the stern. Doc was at his side. They passed  through an aperture which had been spaded in a

molded bulkhead. 

Doc suddenly dropped a hand on Monk's shoulder. Monk's gristled,  apish frame weighed in the neighborhood

of two hundred and fifty  pounds, but Doc's hand brought him up as sharply as if he had been a  child. 

"Back!" Doc rapped. 

"Blazes! What's wrong?" Monk had wheeled, was diving back the way  he had come as he asked the question. 

Doc Savage made no answer. He was close behind Monk. Just before  leaving the compartment, he halted,

half turned, and popped his  flashlight ahead. 

The light disclosed a thin thread as gray as the mold which covered  every inch of the ancient galleon. The

thread was about six inches  above the floor. 

Wheeling, Doc followed Monk back to the others. They all stared at  him, expecting an explanation. They

were all a bit on edge. This place  they were in  a grave which covered a hideous ship and its macabre  crew

of skeletons  had got under their skin somewhat. 

Doc did not explain. 

"Outside!" he said. 

They scrambled into the rock tunnel, mounted the steps, and  stumbled out into the night. 

The cupshaped depression into which the tunnel mouth opened was  fairly deep. The moon was low in the

sky. Its beams did not penetrate  to the depression bottom. 

"Wheeew!" said Monk. "I'm glad to get out of that place! What  went wrong, Doc?" 

"Plenty has gone wrong  for you, amigos!" announced a guttural  voice. 

With that, several flashlights poked white funnels down over the  depression rim. Doc and his men were

wrapped in a white glare of light. 

Squinting against glare, they could see men with guns on all sides  of them. 


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ONE of the encircling gang hastily left his fellows and darted down  the side of the depression. His gait down

the steep slope was a series  of grotesque hops. He came to a stop about halfway down. 

"We know all about the gas!'t said the guttural voice which had  spoken previously. "I mean, Senor Savage,

the gas which does its work  while you hold your breath. Do not try to use it. If the man who just  came near

you drops, we will begin shooting. Sabe?" 

Monk and Ham exchanged uneasy looks. They had forgotten their  animosity. Johnny and Renny stood

perfectly still. 

Each of Doc's men carried one of the little supermachine guns under  his coat. They debated their chances of

seizing the guns and making a  fight of it. The chances seemed slim. 

"Easy does it," Doc said in an expressionless voice. "If we start  fireworks, we haven't a chance." 

"That is very sensible, hombres," said the voice above. "Each of  you will remove his upper garments. Strip to

the skin. Roll up your  trousers legs to show no weapons are concealed beneath them. Turn your  trousers

pockets inside out." 

The speaker was not one of the ring of gunmen. He stood behind  them, hidden from view. 

Doc and his four men stripped off coats, shirts, and undershirts.  Doc shed his remarkable vest. They rolled up

trousers legs, then turned  pockets out. 

"Bueno!" said the masked man. "We can now be sure that they have no  weapons left. Go, amigos, and seize

them!" 

Men came sliding down the side of the depression. 

Doc Savage had seen ail of the gang on other occasions. They were  the kidnapers of Patricia Savage. Doc

counted eleven of them. That was  the entire gang, except the leader. 

Their chief did not appear. He remained above, unseen. 

The men carried ropes. They began tying the prisoners. One fellow's  rope was of extraordinary length, and it

was he who bound Doc Savage. 

The ropes were not of hemp, but of braided Cotton. They were very  strong. The men doing the knotting knew

how it should he done. 

Apparently, Doc submitted meekly to the binding. But a close  observer might have noticed that the cables of

muscles on his wrists  were even larger than usual. Doc was holding the tendons tense. If he  were tied while

they were thus, he had merely to relax to get  sufficient slack to shake off the binding ropes. 

One of the swarthy gang had a canvas bag slung over a shoulder.  From this, he drew a bottleshaped object

of shiny metal. The neck was  fitted with a valve. 

"Now, I will give the hombres the same thing I gave Alex Savage!"  growled the man. 

From the same sack, which had held the metal flask, the fellow  withdrew two fragments of rather floppy

rubber. These were carved,  rubberstamp fashion. The carving was that of a wolf with strangely  human


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features. These were obviously the stamps used to leave the weird  werewolf marks. 

The gold flakes in Doc's eyes seemed to have turned to a tawny  frost.  Here was the murderer of Alex Savage! 

"No!" called the unseen leader from above. "Not the gas!" 

"We can leave them somewhere," muttered the man with the gas flask.  "No one can tell but what they died of

heart failure." 

"No! Not yet!" 

Reluctantly, the swarthy man replaced the metal gas bottle in the  canvas bag container. 

Another dark man drew a knife. He juggled the blade in a way which  showed remarkable dexterity. His

manner indicated he was the  knifethrowing expert of the group, and that he was proud of it. 

"Then I will dispose of them as I did Boat Face, amigos," he  smirked. 

Doc Savage said nothing, made no move. It was a bad sign, the frank  way these fellows were speaking of past

crimes. It meant that they had  little intention of Doc and his men living to bear witness  to tell a  jury what

they had heard. 

"No!" said the concealed chief. "No knife  yet!" 

The hidden leader now showed himself. He came skidding down the  slope. He was a tall man; little more

than that could be seen of him.  He wore a mask  a great bandanna handkerchief which covered his head  as

well as his features. 

Doc Savage glanced at Monk. 

"Do you know this fellow, Monk?" he asked dryly. 

Monk squinted at the masked man. "Nope. Can't recognize 'em. 

"Isn't his walk familiar?" 

Monk considered, acting as if the individual they were discussing  were not present. 

"Ain't able to tell, Doc," he said. "You'll have to spill it." 

"0. K.," said Doc. "The bird is  " 

The masked man snarled. He doubled and scooped up one of the tiny  supermachine guns which Doc had been

forced to drop. Leveling it, he  shot Doc in his unprotected chest. 

Chapter 19. THE KILLING DEAD

DOC dropped. The tiny machine gun happened to be latched into  singleshot position. That was fortunate.

Even though the gun was  charged with mercy bullets, at that short range a flood of the slugs  would have

wrought fatal injury. 


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As it was, Doc took only one mercy bullet in the chest. The  stupefying chemical worked swiftly. Doc was

probably asleep before he  hit the ground. 

Monk and the others stared at their bronze chief. They were dazed.  Now that they thought back, this was the

first time they could remember  having seen Doc entirely helpless. 

They themselves, being bound with rope which was beyond their  strength to break, were powerless to aid

their bronze chief. 

"Bueno!" said the swarthy man who wielded knives. "Let us give him  another bullet  a real bullet!" 

The masked man shook his head slowly. "No, amigos! We will delay  that. These men may have removed the

treasure. If so, we will have to  make them lead us to it." 

The fellow stepped into the tunnel, his followers crowding eagerly  after him. They were hungry for sight of

this loot which they had gone  to such pains to get. 

None troubled to watch the prisoners. They were bound too tightly  to escape, it seemed. 

The last man vanished into the tunnel. 

Monk and the others wrenched at the ropes. They tried to untie each  other's bonds with their teeth. The task

was not hopeless, but it would  take many minutes. 

"We'll never make it!" Johnny groaned. Repeatedly, the men glanced  at Doc. They knew the bronze giant was

a wizard as an escape artist.  These ropes, as vigorously as they had been tied, would hardly hold  Doc. But the

metallic giant was a victim of the mercy bullet. 

Or was he? 

The swarthy men had left a flashlight stuck in the side of the  depression. The beam of this played directly on

Doc. The bronze man's  lids seemed to flutter  they did flutter! 

"Doc!" Renny rumbled softly. 

Renny was incredulous. He knew the stupefying power of the mercy  bullets; he had not believed a man could

recover from their effects in  less than thirty minutes. 

Hardly ten minutes had elapsed since Doc collapsed. His recovery so  soon was a tribute to his fine physical

condition. 

Doc lay perfectly motionless for a time. When finally he spoke, his  voice was unexcited. 

"Where did they go?" 

"You mean the gang that grabbed us  and the masked big shot?" Monk  asked. 

"Yes." 

"They went into the tunnel." 


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With a tremendous, convulsive effort, Doc gained his feet. The  wound on his chest was small, merely a

puncture which hardly oozed  crimson. 

"They'll be killed  at the galleon!" he rapped. "We may have time  to get 'em out before  " 

DOC'S words were still banging through the surrounding night, when  the earth seemed to heave several

inches underfoot. 

There was a tremendous, bellowing roar! It seemed to start deep in  the earth, and gain and gain in volume.

The ground vibrated as if it  were about to fall to pieces! Boulders and gravel showered down the  depression

sides! 

Out of the tunnel maw came a dragonbreath spout of crimson fire. A  gush of yellow smoke followed it.

Then the tunnel seemed to shut itself  like a big mouth closing. 

The quaking of the earth stopped; the rumbling died. A few rocks  galloped the last of the distance down the

slope. Then there was  silence. 

Renny used the exclamation he employed on such occasions. 

"Holy cowl" he exploded. "What happened?" Doc Savage did not answer  immediately. Instead, he twisted his

arms into various positions. The  great muscles that had been tense when he was hound had relaxed now.  The

rope which had secured him fell away. 

He started untying his friends, making explanations as he worked. 

"There was a thread stretched across one of the galleon cabins," he  said. "It ran to a contact that was barely

visible at one side. The  contact could have only one purpose  it was connected to an electric  detonator for

dynamite or gunpowder." 

"So that's why you rushed us out of the galleon!" Monk exclaimed. 

Doc nodded. "There was a chance of other contacts, better  concealed, in other parts of the craft." 

"Boat Face's work, huh?" Monk guessed. "But why'd he do it?" 

"Boat Face evidently did it," Doc agreed. "He was the only visitor  to the place before ourselves; his tracks

prove that. He must have  known he was mixed up with bad actors. Possibly he set the trap to get  rid of them.

He might have intended to give them the ivory block so  that they would visit the galleon." 

Monk stared at the tunnel which had closed like a mouth. 

"Boat Face did a great job  for a dead man," he said' "They're all  finished down below." 

Doc nodded. "No doubt of it." 

Monk swung his gaze back to Doc. "Who was the masked guy, Doc?" 

Doc started to answer, but held the words back when he heard a  distant cry. The sound was shrilly feminine,

cutting through the night.  Patricia Savage's voice! She was anxious as to the fate of the men. 


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"They heard the explosion, and are worrying about us!" Doc decided  aloud, instead of answering Monk's

question. "We'd better let them know  we're safe." 

Doc went to meet Patricia. He encountered her within two hundred  yards. With the girl were Long Tom,

ample Tiny, Senorita Oveja, and  Senor Oveja. 

Girlfaced El Rabanos was not with them. 

Long Tom was excited. 

"What happened?" he gulped. 

"Where's El Rabanos?" Monk countered. 

"Blasted if I know!" Long Tom retorted. "He disappeared, somehow,  without me hearing him with the

listening device. The only way he could  have done it was to creep off at the same time you birds left 

following you. Your noise covered his footsteps." 

"That explains how the gang found us," Doc told Monk. 

Monk emitted a long whistle. "So the guy in the mask was El  Rabanos!" 

"THE master mind behind all this violence was El Rabanos," Doc  agreed. 

"Eso hace temblar!" Senor Oveja moaned.  "It is shocking!  El  Rabanos  my best friend!  A doublecrosser!" 

"The same gentleman who ordered his men to throttle you on the  train  using my baggage straps," Doc

agreed.  "Give him credit for a  devilish mind! He covered himself by making you think I was an enemy." 

"But the treasure!"  exclaimed Monk.  "Where is it?" 

Doc Savage turned to Patricia.  "I showed you the sand from Boat  Face's moccasins," he said.  "You said you

knew of a pool in a creek  which had that kind of sand in its bottom.  You said you remembered  wading there.

You went to examine it.  What did you find?" 

"The treasure," Patricia said.  "Boat face had carried it  out and  sunk it.  The stuff was in fairly deep water.  It

was in carrying it  out to deep water that Boat Face got the sand in his moccasins." 

From a pocket, she produced a thin string of scintillating color.  It was a bangle of emeralds strung on gold. 

"Here's a sample of the stuff." 

Senor Oveja stared at the bauble.  He suddenly forgot his grief  over his friend's treachery. 

"I demand a share, amigos!" he said aggressively.  "At least three  fourths of the treasure!" 

Doc Savage ignored him. 

"What disposition will be made of the treasure," Patricia asked.  Then, lest motives be misunderstood, she

added:  "I don't want any." 


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"Nobody will get any," Doc said dryly.  "Some of it came from the  churches of old Panama City.  That portion

should be easily identified.  It will be turned over to the church, its rightful owner." 

He considered.  "The rest will be used to build public hospitals  here in Canada, and to establish a trust fund to

keep them operating  without charge to patients.  That is what we usually do with any money  that comes our

way." 

"Wonder how much the stuff is worth?" Monk pondered. 

"Several millions at least," Patricia said.  "I know a little of  jewels  enough to guess at the value." 

Senor Oveja waved his arms excitedly and shrieked: "But what do I  get out of it?" 

"You," Doc told him, "get the air." 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE STRANGE MESSAGE, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THE TRAIN WEREWOLF, page = 9

   6. Chapter 3. WARNING OF THE WEREWOLF, page = 15

   7. Chapter 4. DEAD MAN, page = 20

   8. Chapter 5. THE WEREWOLF CRIES, page = 26

   9. Chapter 6. SQUARE WHITE DEATH, page = 30

   10. Chapter 7. STRANGE ATTACKERS, page = 37

   11. Chapter 8. THE MAN IN THE WHITE HAT, page = 43

   12. Chapter 9. THE IVORY-CUBE TRAIL, page = 50

   13. Chapter 10. CABIN OF MURDER, page = 56

   14. Chapter 11. THE VANISHED BOX, page = 65

   15. Chapter 12. THE HAND THAT BECKONED, page = 73

   16. Chapter 13. AN OFFER, page = 82

   17. Chapter 14. THE TRAP IN A TRAP, page = 91

   18. Chapter 15. WHEN TROUBLE DOUBLES, page = 98

   19. Chapter 16. INSIDE THE IVORY BLOCK, page = 105

   20. Chapter 17. INTO THE EARTH, page = 111

   21. Chapter 18. THE SKELETON CREW, page = 118

   22. Chapter 19. THE KILLING DEAD, page = 122