Title:   DEATH IN SILVER

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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DEATH IN SILVER

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

DEATH IN SILVER...........................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. SILVER DEATH'SHEADS .................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THE ARCHER IN SILVER ...................................................................................................4

Chapter 3. THE ARCHER QUEST .........................................................................................................9

Chapter 4. TWO SILVER MURDERS.................................................................................................17

Chapter 5. RAPID PACE .......................................................................................................................25

Chapter 6. MYSTERIOUS BLUEPRINTS...........................................................................................32

Chapter 7. THE INDIAN'S HEAD ........................................................................................................39

Chapter 8. THE BIG MYSTERY..........................................................................................................47

Chapter 9. THE CAPTURE ...................................................................................................................55

Chapter 10. DEATH BLASTS..............................................................................................................60

Chapter 11. THE RIVER BED MYSTERY ..........................................................................................65

Chapter 12. THE TRICK.......................................................................................................................72

Chapter 13. THE PHANTOMS.............................................................................................................76

Chapter 14. THE GREEN TRAIL .........................................................................................................83

Chapter 15. HELL UNDER WATER ....................................................................................................89

Chapter 16. UNDERWATER DEFEAT ................................................................................................94

Chapter 17. THE SUBSEAS RIDE.....................................................................................................100

Chapter 18. THE BASE .......................................................................................................................104

Chapter 19. DESTRUCTION..............................................................................................................110


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DEATH IN SILVER

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. SILVER DEATH'SHEADS 

Chapter 2. THE ARCHER IN SILVER 

Chapter 3. THE ARCHER QUEST 

Chapter 4. TWO SILVER MURDERS 

Chapter 5. RAPID PACE 

Chapter 6. MYSTERIOUS BLUEPRINTS 

Chapter 7. THE INDIAN'S HEAD 

Chapter 8. THE BIG MYSTERY 

Chapter 9. THE CAPTURE 

Chapter 10. DEATH BLASTS 

Chapter 11. THE RIVER BED MYSTERY 

Chapter 12. THE TRICK 

Chapter 13. THE PHANTOMS 

Chapter 14. THE GREEN TRAIL 

Chapter 15. HELL UNDER WATER 

Chapter 16. UNDERWATER DEFEAT 

Chapter 17. THE SUBSEAS RIDE 

Chapter 18. THE BASE 

Chapter 19. DESTRUCTION  

Chapter 1. SILVER DEATH'SHEADS

THERE was a frozen, stony expression on the tall man's face, and  his dark eyes rolled and jerked with

unease. His hands were drawn pale  and bard at his sides. 

These signs should have told an experienced observer that the man  was worried and scared. But there were no

experienced observers among  the stenographers and clerks in the office of Seven Seas, so the  glances they

gave the tall man were merely the bootlicking smiles of  employees who had about as much spirit as rabbits. 

A person with spunk did not work long with Seven Seas, because  Paine L. Winthrop, the owner, was a

coldblooded driver of the old  school, an industrial emperor who looked upon those under him as  vassals.

Had Paine L. Winthrop lived a hundred years earlier, he would  have kept a retinue of slaves  and beaten

them often. 

Maybe Clarence Sparks had an inkling that something was awry.  Clarence was a billing clerk for Seven Seas,

which operated  transatlantic freight boats and had no connection with Winthrop's  Shipyards, which was also

controlled by Paine L. Winthrop, and which  built freight steamers. Clarence was a rabbit, like the rest of

those  who worked for Seven Seas. But Clarence also had sharp wits. 

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"Good afternoon, Commodore Winthrop," said Clarence. 

Winthrop's only claim to the designation of commodore was that he  held such an office in an exclusive yacht

club, but he liked the title  and the canny Clarence knew it. 

Winthrop seemed not to hear. He walked stiffly, mechanically, from  the corridor door to his private office,

and his face was rigid, his  eyes busy, his hands hard and gray. 

"The old wolf!" grunted Clarence. "Some day somebody is going to  give Winthrop what he has coming to

him." 

Clarence was a prophet, a great deal more of a prophet than he  knew. 

Paine L. Winthrop entered his office, turned the key in the door,  then tried the knob to make sure it was

locked. He stuffed a corner of  a silk handkerchief into the keyhole, using a match for the purpose. He  pulled

off his topcoat and laid it along the bottom of the door. After  these two precautions, he seemed to feel that no

one would eavesdrop. 

Striding stiffly to the window, he looked down at the street, forty  floors below. Pedestrians there resembled

ants. Paine L. Winthrop  ordinarily got a thrill out of the view, because he liked to think of  other people as

ants. But now the view made him shiver. 

One of New York's frequent fogs was mushroomed over the city,  especially thick out over the nearby East

River, but less dense here  in the Wall Street sector. Winthrop shivered again and jerked a cord  which closed

the slats of the Venetian blind. 

Seating himself at his desk, be hugged a telephone close and dialed  with a trembling forefinger. He missed

his number the first time,  through nervousness, but got it on the second attempt. 

Before speaking, he drew out a costly watch and noted that it  lacked only a few minutes of being four in the

afternoon. Evidently he  recognized the voice which answered at the other end of the wire, for  no names were

exchanged. 

"Your ttime is almost up," he said shakily. 

THE other did not respond immediately, and Paine L. Winthrop seemed  on the verge of repeating his

warning. Then a coarse, angry whisper  came over the line. 

"Winthrop, you are passing up a chance of becoming one of the  richest men alive," said the distant speaker. 

"I am passing up a chance of landing in the electric chair,"  Winthrop snapped. 

"Listen, Winthrop," the other said earnestly. "I have explained to  you very  " 

"There is no object in arguing," said the shipping magnate. "I may  be a hard business man, and I may be a

skinflint and a slave driver, as  some people have called me; but I stay within the law. Early in my  youth, I

learned that was the best policy." 

The distant whispering voice took on a menacing quality. 

"You are already too deep in this to back out' Winthrop," it  pointed out. "We have used your shipyard." 


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Winthrop flinched as if he had been seized with an inner chill in  the region of his spine, but his forbidding

face remained set and  determined. 

"I was deceived," he grated. "I thought the thing being built in my  shipyard was for a foreign government. I

think I can convince the  authorities of that." 

"It seems that I made a mistake in taking you into my confidence,"  said the whisper. 

Winthrop snapped, "You certainly did!" 

"I should have turned the matter over to the Silver Death'sHeads,  as the newspapers so dramatically term

them," retorted the other. 

The mention of Silver Death'sHeads had the effect of nearly  causing Winthrop to drop the receiver. The

man peered about as if  fearing some grisly menace might be in the room with him. Then he got a  grip on

himself. 

"There is no more to be said," he stated grimly. "I have given you  a chance to disband the Silver

Death'sHeads and destroy the  the  thing that was built in my shipyard. You refuse. Therefore, I shall now

call the police." 

His voice, charged with desperate excitement, had risen to a yell  that had considerable volume. The sound

penetrated through the door of  the private office, despite the precautions which Winthrop had taken in

stuffing the keyhole and covering the crack at the bottom of the door. 

Clarence Sparks, at his desk outside, heard. He hesitated, eying  the door, longing to listen. Then, summoning

his nerve, he shuffled  over to the water cooler, which was beside the door of the private  office. He could

listen from there. 

Inside the office, Winthrop screamed, "I am going to call the  police and tell them all about the Silver

Death'sHeads! I am going to  tell who is apparently their chief, and I am going to tell whose  devilish brain is

actually behind all of this!" 

The coarse whisper over the telephone said, "I can promise that you  will not live long enough to do that,

Winthrop!" 

Winthrop was squirming, perspiring. He shouted, "Killing me will  not help! I have a blueprint showing some

of your working methods. I  have given it to my secretary. And I have told her the whole story." 

"You are bluffing, Winthrop," snarled the whispering one. 

"I am not!" Winthrop barked. "My secretary will give the whole  story to the police if anything happens to me.

Now, will you give this  all up, or do I call the police?" 

"Call them if you dare," suggested the other. 

"I will!" Winthrop banged the receiver up. 

Shaky and pallid, Clarence Sparks backed from the door. He had  overheard too much for his peace of mind.

He was in the same boat with  the young man who was fishing for minnows and caught a shark. 


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The fact that Clarence Sparks was backing away from the door  undoubtedly saved his life. 

There was a cataclysmic crash. The door of Winthrop's private  office exploded to fragments. The whole

partition wall caved. Part of  the ceiling came thundering down. 

Forty stories below, on the street, an earsplitting crack of sound  caused people to look up. It was like the

lash of a stupendous  thunderbolt. After one glance upward, the pedestrians cried out in  terror and began to

run. 

A cloud of bricks, mortar and twisted steel was falling down the  side of the skyscraper, giving at first the

impression that the whole  great building was coming to pieces. A moment later, to those farther  up the street,

it was evident that a great cavity had been blown in the  side of the fogpiercing edifice. 

Debris fell to the sidewalk with a great uproar. Three parked cars,  fortunately unoccupied, were crushed, and

a prowling taxicab was  partially wrecked. The driver of the hack, slightly cut and bruised,  got out and ran,

squawling that there had been an earthquake. 

Following the fall of the debris, there was a brittle jangling of  dropping glass all over the neighborhood, for

windows had been blown  out by the blast. Numerous people were cut; others had narrow escapes. 

Then came several moments of almost complete silence. The quiet was  so complete that the droning of an

airplane over the nearby river  could be heard; then, as the plane swept away, there was the sound of a  motor

boat, also on the river. 

The presence of the plane and the motor boat on the river at that  particular instant came to the attention of a

number of persons, and  was later to become a fact of significance. 

The tension following the explosion snapped. Women screeched and  had hysterics. More stoic souls peered

up in the fog and observed the  yawning hole in the side of the skyscraper where the private office of  Paine L.

Winthrop had been. Policemen came running, and ambulance  sirens wailed. Bedlam reigned. 

Chapter 2. THE ARCHER IN SILVER

THE building housing Paine L. Winthrop's shipping company, the  Seven Seas, was not the most imposing in

the Wall Street sector, but it  narrowly missed that designation. Penthouses ornamented the tops of  most of the

skyscrapers in the district, and this one was no exception. 

The penthouse on this building was a pretentious affair with  numerous glass walls which afforded the

occupant full sunlight. Most of  the glass had been shattered by the blast below. In fact, it was a  miracle that

the whole structure had not gone down, with a resultant  vast loss of life. 

One of the penthouse rooms contained many work benches, and these  supported racks holding innumerable

test tubes, retorts, microscopes,  mixing trays, pestles and bottled chemicals. That the benches had  supported

this array would be more correct, for most of the stuff was  now on the floor. Several small chemical fires had

started. 

A remarkablelooking man was picking himself up from the mess of  glass and liquids. He jumped up and

down and emitted a roar, for he had  been slightly burned by a vial of acid. 

The roar and the way the fellow bounced about gave the impression  of a great, angry ape. The man's


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appearance did little to detract from  the impression. He had practically no forehead; his thick,

musclegnarled arms were longer than his legs, and his skin was  leathery and covered with bristles which

resembled rusty nails. His  mouth was so unnaturally large that it looked as if there had been an  accident in the

assembling of his pleasantly ugly face. 

"Habeas!" the apish man bellowed. 

A pig came galloping into view, squealing excitedly  an almost  incredibly grotesque specimen of the porker

family, as homely in his  way as was the man who had called him. The shote had long, doglike  legs, a scrawny

body, an inquisitive snout, and ears almost large  enough to serve as wings. 

"Dang it, Habeas," the homely chemist grinned, "I was afraid that  dude lawyer had thrown a grenade at you." 

Some one seemed to be trying to open a nearby door. Loud kicks  sounded, wood crunched, and the door fell

inward. 

The man who came through was slender, waspish, and attired to the  height of sartorial perfection. He had a

high forehead, the mobile  mouth of an orator. In one hand he gripped a thin black cane which was  slightly

separated at a joint near the handle, thus disclosing the  object to be a sword cane with a razorsharp blade. 

The welldressed man glared at the homely chemist, his expression  that of a gentleman who had just found a

toad on his breakfast table. 

"Monk, I always did know you would blow us up with some of your  idiotical chemical experiments," he

snapped. 

This was nothing if not libel. The apish man, "Monk," was Lieut.  Col. Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, and

conceded by those who knew to be one  of the greatest of living chemists. His head, which did not look as if  it

had room for a thimbleful of brains, harbored a fabulous amount of  chemical and electrochemical lore. 

Monk glared at the dapper newcomer. 

"The shyster lawyer heard from," he growled. 

That was another libel. The dressy gentleman was Brig. Gen.  Theodore Marley Brooks, better known as

"Ham," one of the most astute  lawyers ever to get his sheepskin from Harvard. 

A strange pair, these two. They were always together, yet no one  could remember either one having spoken a

civil word to the other.  Those who knew, however, could cite a number of instances when each had  risked his

life to save the other. 

Men farfamed in their professions, both of them. Yet they were  known to the comers of the earth for another

reason  known as two  members of a group of five who were assistants to a man who was  probably the most

famed adventurer of all time. 

Monk and Ham were aides of Doc Savage, the man of bronze, the man  of mystery, the being of fabulous

accomplishments, who was almost a  legend to the general public, but who was the synonym for terror and

justice to those who preyed upon their fellow men. 

HAM flourished his sword cane. "What was that  that quake?" 


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"Search me," said Monk, whose voice, in repose, was remarkably  small and querulously childlike. 

Seizing a fire extinguisher, Monk went to work on the chemical  blazes. He resented this damage to his

laboratory, for it was one of  the most complete in existence, exceeded only by those maintained by  the man

of bronze, Doc Savage, who was himself a greater chemist than  Monk. 

Habeas Corpus, Monk's pet pig, backed away from the flames, saw he  was getting near Ham, and hastily

shied off. Habeas and Ham did not get  along together. Ham had repeatedly threatened to make breakfast

bacon  out of Habeas. 

The fires doused, Monk cast aside the extinguisher. 

"Let's find out what happened," he said. 

"A good idea coming from a strange source," Ham stated unkindly,  and they went out. The pig, Habeas, they

left behind. 

The elevators were not operating, probably due to the damage  wrought by the blast, and they had to walk

down. It did not take them  long to reach the scene of the detonation. 

They were efficient, these two men accustomed to scenes of violence  through their long association with Doc

Savage. Doc seemed to exist  always in the shadow of peril and destruction. 

Without delay, they went to work to ascertain the cause of the  explosion. And there, they ran up against a

profound puzzle, as well as  a gruesome scene. 

Paine L. Winthrop was dead. No doubt of that, as it was necessary  for the ambulance surgeons to assemble

the scattered parts of his body  on a stretcher before it could be carried away. 

Several of the Seven Seas office employees had been injured. A  broken arm, received by a stenographer as

she was knocked over her  desk, was the most serious. Others were only lacerated and bruised. 

Monk and Ham put quick inquiries about the cause of the blast. No  one could give a reply of value except

Paine L. Winthrop's head clerk,  who was quite sure there had been no bomb, since she had left the  private

office only shortly before the arrival of her boss. 

Before Monk and Ham could locate fragments of whatever had caused  the detonation, a swarm of policemen

and newspaper reporters arrived.  The officers herded every one to an office one floor below, it having  been

decided that the skyscraper was in no danger of falling. 

The office in which those who had been on the explosion scene were  concentrated, was the headquarters of a

firm dealing in imported  antiques and art works. Adjoining the office were numerous stock rooms  holding

pictures, armor, pieces of ancient furniture, weapons, costumes  and like articles. These were all antiques. 

The newspaper reporters descended upon Monk and Ham. Both were  highpressure copy, for it was known

that they were members of Doc  Savage's group of aides, and Doc was frontpage news all seven days of  the

week. 

"Is Doc working on this?" a journalist connected with a tabloid  demanded. 


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"No," said Monk, irked because the locust swarm of scribes were  keeping Ham and himself from

investigating. "Keep Doc out of it." 

The tabloid reporter ran to a telephone and informed his city  editor, "Two of the famous Doc Savage's men

are on the spot and working  on the mystery explosion. They deny that Doc himself is interested, but  we don't

need to mention that. Doc's name in this will make it all the  bigger." 

"Our pals," Monk growled. 

Modern newspapers function with breathtaking speed, and while the  reporters were still harassing Monk

and Ham, extra editions of their  sheets arrived. 

Monk snatched one of these and retired with Ham to a stock room,  the walls of which were hung with the

work of old masters, to see how  much Doc had been brought into the affair. 

THEY expected to see the blast story occupying a whole page of the  tabloid, but to their surprise, it divided

honors with another yarn. 

"I say," said Ham, who affected a pronounced Harvard accent  whenever he thought of it. "Those Silver

Death'sHead beggars have been  acting again." 

They read the big black headlines and the news story below them.  The thing was almost childishly dramatic,

as written. 

SILVER DEATH'SHEADS STRIKE;  MYSTERY MEN ROB ARMORED CAR 

Get a Quarter Million In Loot  Vanish As Usual 

The terror in silver is with New York again. At  three o'clock this  afternoon, these frightful men  of mystery

shot down the drivers and  guard of an  armored truck in the streets of Manhattan and took  $250,000.00 in

cash. 

Accounts of the number of robbers vary. Some  spectators say there  were twenty; others claim  only five or

six. The robbers escaped in a  fast car  and evaded police pursuit in the waterfront section  of the  East River. 

The thieves wore silvercolored suits and weird  silver hoods which  made their beads resemble skulls.  This

description tallies with the  gang which has  committed other robberies and murders and which  is  known to the

police as the Silver Death'sHeads. 

The last crime committed by the Silver Death'sHeads  was the  coldblooded sinking of the liner Avallancia,

pride of the  Transatlantic Company, in New York  harbor. 

Bedford Burgess Gardner, president of the  Transatlantic Company,  has not been able to explain  what motive

could have been behind the  sinking  of the Avallancia. 

"Wild stuff," commented Monk. 

"Typical  newspaper  sensationalism."  Ham  clipped, agreeing with  Monk because he still resented being

questioned by the reporters.  "Silver Death'sHeads! Imagine that! What rot!" 


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"Too melodramatic to have much foundation in truth," Monk added. "I  doubt if there are really any men

called the Silver Death'sHeads. This  particular tabloid colors its news to beat the band." 

The two men had been making no effort to pitch their voices low,  and a number of the Seven Seas office

employees huddled in the room of  the antique dealer overheard what was being said. Among those who could

not help but catch the words was Clarence Sparks. 

Mention of the Silver Death'sHeads caused Clarence to stiffen  visibly, then look undecided. He hesitated,

mustering up his nerve. As  yet, he had not told any one of what he had overheard outside the door  of Paine L.

Winthrop's private office, but hearing Monk state his  belief that there were no such individuals as Silver

Death'sHeads  apparently moved Clarence to speak. He sidled over to Monk and Ham. 

"You  you gentlemen are mistaken," he said hesitantly. 

MONK squinted at the receding chin and the nonetoorobust physique  of Sparks. 

"You know something?" he asked. 

Clarence Sparks moistened his lips nervously. "I  I hope this  won't get me into trouble," he muttered. 

Monk and Ham were both intensely interested. 

"Spill it," Monk directed. 

The Seven Seas billing clerk swelled his thin chest with a full  breath of resolution. 

"I was eavesdropping outside Paine L. Winthrop's door," he said in  a voice which excitement made loud. "I

heard him make the telephone  call which was directly responsible for his death." 

"Blazes!" Monk exploded. "Then it was a murder, huh?" 

Clarence Sparks clenched his fists and said, "It certainly was!" 

"Who was Winthrop talkin' to?" Monk demanded. 

"To the secret mastermind of the Silver Death'sHeads," Clarence  gulped. 

"For the love of mud!" said Monk. "What was his name?" 

Clarence Sparks almost yelled, "I heard Winthrop say over the  telephone that it was  " 

That was the last word Clarence Sparks spoke, although not the last  sound he made, for his mouth suddenly

flew open to its widest and let a  terrific scream rip out. It was as if the scream had burst out,  destroying his

vocal cords; the yell rasped and was unnatural. 

Clarence Sparks put his arms stiffly above his head in the manner  of an aboriginal saluting the sun. Then he

turned slowly, trembling and  on tiptoe. When he had his back to Monk and Ham, they could see the  feathered

shaft of the arrow which protruded from his back. 

Because Clarence Sparks was thin and poorly, his body made a  clattering sound as it fell to the floor. After he

fell the stiffness  seemed to go out of his thin frame, his head rolled over slackly until  his cheek pressed the


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floor, and with a bubbling rush, scarlet came  from Iris mouth and nostrils. 

But Monk and Ham were not watching the phenomena incidental to  death. They were staring at the archer

who had discharged the arrow, an  archer in silver, a being so grotesque of appearance that they were  held

stunned. 

Chapter 3. THE ARCHER QUEST

THE archer was not a large man  if he was a man. He was shorter  than Ham, who was not tall, and he was

also scrawny, with thin arms and  gnarled legs. 

His garb was the strange, the gripping thing. It was silver. The  cloth was of the metallic stuff such as is used

to make the stage  costumes of show girls, and it was cut in one garment  a coverall. 

There was a hood over the head, also of silver, elastic and tight  fitting. Because eye and mouth openings were

dark against the shiny  metallic hood, the affair had the aspect of a death'shead, a silver  skull. A costly wrist

watch adorned one of his pipestem arms. 

The silver archer stood in the door of an adjacent office, holding  a heavy medieval bow, evidently one of the

antiques which filled the  rooms. He dropped the how, it thumping loudly as it fell; then he  leaped backward. 

The movement snapped Monk and Ham out of their trance. They dived  headlong in pursuit  But the killer

slammed the door; a key clinked  among the tumblers. Doc Savage's two aides, flinging against the panel,

found it solidly resistant. 

"So there isn't any such thing as the Silver Death'sHeads!" Ham  snapped. 

Monk knotted an enormous, bristlecovered fist and grated, "You  were the first one to get that idea, you

nitwit shyster." 

Then Monk grimaced and hit the door panel with his fist. The wood  splintered, gave a trifle; it splintered

more extensively under a  second blow, then collapsed, making a bole large enough to pass the  apish chemist's

hairy hand. Standing well clear of the door, Monk  groped for the key, found it in place, and unlocked the

panel. He  shoved it open. 

Ham started through, sword cane in hand. 

"Wait, stupid," Monk growled, and shoved the dapper lawyer back. 

From a holster, so cleverly padded under an armpit that it was  unnoticeable, Monk drew a weapon bearing

close resemblance to an  overgrown automatic pistol. But it was no automatic. 

It was a supermachine pistol, product of Doc Savage's mechanical  genius, a weapon which fired at an

incredible speed, discharging,  instead of regulation lead slugs, thinwalled composition bullets which  carried

an anaesthetic compound producing quick, harmless  unconsciousness. 

Machine pistol in hand, Monk jumped through the door. Considering  that a murderer had just entered the

room, his act might have seemed  reckless. But Monk wore a bulletproof vest which protected his entire  body,

and he knew gunmen of the modern type do not often shoot at a  man's head. 


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Ham trailed the homely chemist. He, too, wore one of the  bulletproof vests which were so light and thin as to

be unnoticeable  under their clothing, and was not at all uncomfortable. These vests  were also a product of

Doc Savage's mechanical skill. 

Both men jerked up inside the room. Their jaws sagged; their eyes,  roving, widened in amazement. 

"Well, I'm a camel's uncle!" Monk breathed. "Where'd he go?" 

Ham shook his head slowly and turned his sword cane in his hands,  for their quarry was nowhere in the room.

Both the outer windows were  down, and the lawyer knew that this skyscraper had a wall sheer and  smooth,

impossible for even a socalled "human fly" to scale by  ordinary methods. 

MONK, charging around the room, jerked a rectangle of expensive  tapestry from the wall, scowled when he

saw there was no aperture back  of it, and flipped the carpet up. Nowhere was there a trapdoor. 

"The windows are unlocked," Ham pointed out. 

"But that bird in silver couldn't have  " Monk swallowed the rest,  ran to a window and wrenched it up. He

looked out, seemed stunned, but  said nothing. 

Ham leaped to his side. Together they peered down. 

"We must be getting very dumb," Ham said disgustedly. 

"Speak for yourself," Monk growled, then placed a hand on the  'window sill and vaulted through the opening,

out into space. 

Without hesitating, Ham followed, instinctively using care not to  disrupt the neat hang of his garments. It was

a rare occasion when Ham  forgot his clothing. 

Perhaps six feet below the window was a wide ledge. For the moment,  the two men had forgotten that the

skyscraper was set back, pyramid  fashion, at intervals, and that one of these setbacks was at the level  of the

Seven Seas offices. The killer must have fled by this route,  after closing the window behind him to confuse

his pursuers. 

Monk pointed, "He went this way!" 

City grime was smeared on the roof of the setback, soot and dust  which retained footprints plainly. The two

men followed the tracks  around the skyscraper. They disappeared into a window on the opposite  side. 

Monk and Ham clambered through the window and found themselves  among mops, buckets and

windowwashing paraphernalia; the room was  obviously one used by janitors. There was no trace of the

weirdly  garbed slayer. 

A corridor was beyond the store room, this being deserted for the  moment. Not until Monk emitted an angry

roar did any one appear, then  two policemen popped out of the offices of Seven Seas. 

"What's going on here?" snapped an officer. 

"Where'd that killer go?" Monk demanded. 


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The cop gulped. "Killer! Say, what're you talking about?" 

And that was the first inkling the police had of the slaying of  unfortunate Clarence Sparks, for the

meekspirited billing clerk was  dead, the arrow having punctured his heart. They found that out when  they

examined him. 

Where the killer had gone remained a mystery through the course of  the next fifteen minutes. Then an excited

call came up from the  basement regions. A fireman had been found knocked senseless in the  basement. 

Monk and Ham hurried down. 

The fireman had thick blond hair, and that had possibly preserved  his life, for the blow he had received over

the head, judging by the  bruise, had been terrific. A policeman was waiting for a doctor to  revive the fellow. 

"Let me do it," said Ham. "I have an infallible system." 

Ham unsheathed his sword cane, and the onlookers say that the tip  was coated for a few inches with a

brownish substance which was  slightly sticky. This was a drug mixture which produced senselessness  when a

victim was pricked. 

With a finger tip Ham removed a bit of the drug from the sword and  applied it to the tongue of the

unconscious fireman. The stuff, in  small quantities, was a stimulant, but if administered in quantity,  produced

senselessness. 

The fireman revived almost at once. 

"What happened to you?" Ham demanded. 

"Aye not bane know," mumbled the fireman, feeling his blond head. 

"Who hit you?" Ham persisted. 

"He bane a feller all dressed up in shiny suit," was the reply.  "Aye just see him  then bop! He hit me with

gun." 

The room where they stood was a concrete inferno far below the  street, where the great oilburning boilers

roared, generating steam  for the radiators and hot water for the washrooms. 

Moved by a thought  he was sharp in spite of Monk's habit of  terming him a nitwit shyster  Ham went over

and peered into one of the  fire boxes. He started violently, moved to use his sword to probe in  the heat, then

changed his mind and employed a cleaning bar. 

Out of the fire box Ham brought a crinkled mass that had once been  silver metallic cloth. 

"The suit the murderer was wearing," he declared. 

"Then it is some one in the building," Monk growled. "The fellow  burned his rig because the police have the

doors blocked and are not  letting any one out." 

UNNOTICED, a man was standing in the background near the door. He  was a scrawny fellow, bedecked

with grease stains and dirt, garbed in  the green coveralls which the janitors of the building wore. It was


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because he was one of the janitors that he was receiving no attention. 

He deserved attention. No hint of the fact showed on his features,  but he was catching every word that was

being said, He had a stupid  face, anyway; it was almost without a jaw, being round, with small  features, and

having a sickly gray color. His whole head was very much  like an old, white rubber ball which had been

handled with grimy  fingers. He wore a costly wrist watch. 

The fellow glanced over his shoulder, as if anxious to get out of  the boiler room. Shortly, he did leave, but he

took his time so that no  suspicion was attached to his departure. 

Finding his way to a telephone, he called a number. A voice  a  coarse, whispering voice, obviously

disguised  answered. 

"This ain't goin' so hot," said the man in janitor regalia. 

"What is wrong, Bugs?" asked the whispering voice. 

"Two of Doc Savage's men are snooping around," reported "Bugs," his  round, pale face close to the

transmitter. 

The whispering one swore. "I saw that in an extra edition of a  tabloid newspaper. What on earth got those two

involved in the affair?" 

"One of them, named Monk, has a chemical laboratory on top of the  building," Bugs advised. 

This called forth more sibilant profanity. 

"If I had known one of Doc Savage's men had a place on the  building, we would have used other methods on

old Winthrop," grated the  distant whisper. "Doc Savage is the last man on earth we want on our  necks at this

stage of the game. Savage is almost inhuman. He is a  mechanical wizard, a scientific genius, and a man as

strong as  Hercules; and he applies all of his abilities to helping other people  out of trouble. He goes in for big

stuff. Something like we are pulling  would be his meat." 

"Boss," Bugs muttered, "there's somethin'' else." 

"What?" 

"A clerk must've been listenin' outside old Winthrop's door when   well, you know  and he overheard stuff,

I don't know how much, because  I croaked him before he could tell it all to Doc Savage's two men." 

"You damned fool!" snarled the other. "There was nothing said in  that telephone talk which would give me

away." 

"How was I to know that?" Bugs whined. "I was afraid he had a line  on us. I had my silver outfit on, and I got

hold of an old how and  arrow and let him have it." 

"Oh, you idiot!" the whispering man groaned. "Right in front of two  men who are as brainy as they come.

Doc Savage does not have any mental  blanks working for him  like I seem to have." 

"Aw," Bugs mumbled. "I got away, banged a fireman over the head and  burned my silver outfit, so they

couldn't find any finger prints or  where it was made or maybe trace the cloth." 


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SEVERAL seconds of silence followed this; the distant mastermind  seemed to be giving deep thought to the

affair. Bugs, impatient at the  delay, began speaking. 

"If we just hadn't bumped old Winthrop," he said. "That was  " 

"That was necessary!" the distant voice finished for him. "Winthrop  was a man who would not hesitate to

swindle an orphan, if it could be  done legally. That fooled me. The old nut had his own screwy idea of  honor.

Or maybe he was afraid of the law. Anyway, he was going to tell  the police all about us. And he knew plenty,

especially about the job  we had done in his shipyard." 

"Well, Savage's two men are snooping," Bugs muttered. "What're we  gonna do about that? Let it ride, huh?

They ain't got a line to go on." 

"They'll get a line, don't worry," grated the whisperer. "Doc  Savage's men are wizards, and that fellow Savage

himself is positively  inhuman. We must do something." 

"What?" Bugs wanted to know. 

After a pause, the other said, "Listen to this." 

Following that, there was a chain of rapid commands, Bugs mumbling  frequently that he understood. An

expression of evil pleasure  overspread his unhealthy moon of a face as he heard the plans unfolded.  He

consulted his remarkably highpriced wrist watch. 

"That oughta fix 'em," he grinned finally. 

Hanging up, he made his way back through the corridor labyrinths of  the great building until he located Monk

and Ham. Lurking in the  background, unnoticed, he kept an eye on Doc Savage's two aides. 

Bugs was waiting for something, and he eyed the watch often. 

As for Monk and Ham, they had given up all hope of the blond  fireman furnishing any valuable information.

The fellow had seen only a  grotesque figure in silver. The ashes of the silver garment, a  shapeless sediment of

metal and cinders, furnished no clue. 

"Even Doc couldn't learn anything from this," Monk complained,  indicating the garment. 

Ham started to nod, then refrained, since agreeing with Monk on any  subject was against his policy. 

"We're killing time," snapped the dapper lawyer. "Why don't we go  upstairs and look over the explosion

scene." 

"The police have done that," Monk grunted. 

"They have not found what caused the blast," Ham pointed out. 

That seemed to settle the question, and they started mounting  stairs, the elevators not yet being in working

order. 

The skyscraper had, not one basement, but three, one below the  other, and the boilers were in the lowermost

level, deep in the solid  bed rock of Manhattan Island and probably below the surface of the  nearby East


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River, which at this point was very wide, actually a neck  of New York Harbor. 

The two men reached the second basement and encountered a police  officer. The cop had the rank of

lieutenant, but he was deferential,  for Monk and Ham held honorary police stations far above his own. Doc

Savage and all of his men held these honorary commissions, issued out  of gratitude for past services in aiding

the law enforcement agencies  of the city. 

"We have learned something," reported the lieutenant. "I knew you  gentlemen would want all information as

quickly as we got it." 

"Shoot," Monk invited. 

THE police officer explained rapidly: "We are entirely mystified as  to the cause of the explosion which killed

Winthrop, although a more  intensive search may turn up some clue. We are overlooking no bets. The  blast

might have been a bomb, launched in some manner from a plane. In  checking up, we learned that a plane was

flying over the river, very  near the building, at the time of the explosion. Too, there was a man  on the river in

a motor boat." 

No one paid attention to Bugs, who was loitering within earshot. 

"Any way of identifying the plane?" Monk asked the policeman. 

"You would be surprised how people notice things like that when  something grabs their attention," replied the

officer. "I suppose some  persons wondered if the plane had dropped a bomb. Anyway, we have  several

witnesses who got the number on the lower wing surface of the  plane." 

"Great!" grunted Monk. "You're checking?" 

"You bet. And, moreover, two or three dock workers identified the  motor boat which was on the river. There

was one man in the boat, and  he may have seen the plane drop a bomb." 

"It's pretty foggy," Monk pointed out. 

The officer nodded, fumbled in a uniform pocket and produced a  notebook. He thumbed through the leaves. 

"Gilbert Stiles is the owner of the plane, according to the check  we made on the numbers," he said. "Stiles

keeps the plane for his  personal pleasure. The man in the boat was a fisherman named"  he  stumbled over

the pronunciation"  named Gugillello Bellondi, or  something like that. The flier lives on Eightyfifth Street

in Jackson  Heights, and the fisherman on Sand Street in Brooklyn." 

Bugs, who had overheard all of this, turned surreptitiously,  fumbled out a sheet of paper and a pencil stub and

put down the name of  Gilbert Stiles and Gugillello Bellondi. He added data on their  residences. Bugs did not

put much trust in his memory. 

MONK and Ham, accompanied by the police lieutenant, mounted the  stairs into the topmost basement. 

"We had better ring Doc in on this," Monk suggested, eying Ham. 

Ham said, "I had the same idea before you did." 


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In the skyscraper lobby were a number of telephone booths. Monk  entered one of these, found the outside

connections undisturbed by the  blast, and called the number of Doc Savage's headquarters. 

The headquarters was a strange aerie on the eightysixth floor of  the most impressive skyscraper in uptown

New York, and the bronze man  spent much of his leisure there. Actually, Doc Savage allowed himself  no

leisure in the accepted sense, all of his time being spent in  research, in experiments, in study. There was a

fabulously equipped  library and laboratory in the headquarters. 

"Doc?" asked Monk. 

The question was unnecessary  Doc Savage had a remarkable voice,  one which was powerful, yet

controlled, modulated, giving the  impression of almost eerie strength. Unmistakable, that voice. 

"I just saw an extra edition of the newspaper," said Doc Savage.  "Was your laboratory damaged by the

explosion?" 

"Some," Monk admitted. "But that isn't what I called about, Doc.  There is something underhanded going on

down here." 

"We do not involve ourselves in anything the police can handle,"  Doc reminded. 

"I figured you'd be interested," Monk explained. "You see, it's a  queer business all along. First, there's

nothing to show what caused  the explosion  or if there is, they haven't found it yet. Then a guy  in silver

murdered Clarence Sparks, a Winthrop employee." 

"What is this?" Doc asked sharply. 

"A bird dressed up in a sort of silver coverall suit and a silver  mask, shot Sparks with a bow and arrow just as

we were about to  question the fellow. Sparks seemed to know something." 

"Did the killer resemble the strange silverclothed figures who  have recently committed a series of big

robberies and who also sunk the  Transatlantic Company's liner, Avallancia?" Doc questioned. 

"Sure," said Monk. "I think he was one of the gang." 

Doc Savage was silent a moment, as if engaged in thought, then a  weird, a most unusual sound came from the

telephone receiver. It was a  sound defying description. It was a most unmusical trilling, a whistle  and yet not

a whistle. Possessing a throaty, exotic quality, it ran up  and down the musical scale, but without adhering to a

definite time. 

It might have been a wind whistling with ghostly quality through a  ship's rigging, or it might have been the

song of some strange jungle  bird. 

Monk stiffened as be heard the sound; he had heard the eerie note  many times before. It was the sound of Doc

Savage the small unconscious  thing which the bronze man did in moments of mental excitement. It  usually

came before some startling development; often it marked Doc's  discovery of some obscure fact which was

later to possess great  significance. 

"Monk," Doc said, "have you noticed anything queer about the  robberies these socalled Silver

Death'sHeads have been committing?" 


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Monk began, "Well, their silver disguises  " 

"Not that," Doc told him. "There is one strange point about the  robberies themselves. Have you noticed?" 

"No," said Monk. "What is it?" 

"A number of men have been killed in the course of the thefts," Doc  stated. 

"Sure. But men are often killed during robberies." 

"In each case, these men were prominent," Doc explained patiently.  "And on one or two occasions, the thefts

during which they were shot  down were of a trivial nature. I can give you one very good example." 

"Let's have it," Monk requested. 

"Two weeks ago a gang of the Silver Death'sHeads, seven of them to  be exact, held up a small filling station

on Long Island," Doc  announced. "The filling station was very small and never had more than  a few dollars

on hand. But a limousine had just driven into the station  to fill up with gas. It was occupied by a wealthy man

named Kirkland Le  Page. He was shot and killed. The filling station attendant was lying  on the floor of his

station at the time and did not see what provoked  the shooting. Le Page was driving his car himself." 

"I remember," said Monk. 

"Kirkland Le Page was vice president of Transatlantic Company,  owners of the liner Avallancia, which was

later sunk by the Silver  Death'sHeads," Doc stated. 

"Blazes!" exploded Monk. "There's something big behind this!" 

"Exactly," Doc agreed. 

MONK stood silently in the telephone booth, mentally turning over  what Doc Savage had just revealed. The

homely chemist nodded slowly to  himself. He would have been willing to bet that Doc had been on the  verge

of investigating the weird Silver Death'sHeads, even if this  afternoon's explosion had not occurred. 

Monk opened his mouth to speak further  but things began to  happen. 

There was a stifled yell from the lobby behind Monk, where Ham and  the policeman stood. Feet pounded on

the lobby floor. There was another  yell. A shot banged. 

Monk tried to turn. His shoulder spread was vast, the telephone  booth small. At first he did not make it. He

squirmed to get around. 

The booth had glass windows. With a jangling crash, these  caved  in. Glass showered Monk. The homely

chemist got a  flash of a hand  encased in a silver glove. The hand held a  heavy automatic. 

Silver glove and weighty gun were all that Monk saw. The weapon  lashed for his head. He sought to duck.

The booth was too small, and  the automatic came down full on the top of his nubbin of a head. 

Monk slumped and never felt the gun club down on his head twice  again, the blows murderously vicious. 


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Chapter 4. TWO SILVER MURDERS

DOC Savage heard the ugly sounds of the blows upon Monk's head, for  there had been no time for the

homely chemist to replace the telephone  receiver, and telephones are sensitive. 

Doc listened closely. The noise had been distinct enough to tell  what had happened. Over the wire came

scuffling sounds, grunts, which  meant that Monk's bulk was being hauled from the booth. Then the  telephone

receiver in the booth must have been replaced; there was a  click, with silence afterward. 

Doc Savage had been bending over an expensively inlaid table as he  conversed with Monk. He straightened,

and his tremendous physical build  was apparent to its fullest. The telephone, the massive table, seemed  to

shrink beside him; yet it was only in comparison to these objects  that his full proportions were evident. 

So symmetrically was his giant frame developed that, seen at a  distance and away from objects to which his

size might be compared, he  appeared no larger than other men. 

But he would never be mistaken for another, this Herculean figure.  His bronze motif prevented that  his

skin, remarkably fine of texture,  had been turned a rich bronze hue by countless tropical suns, and his  hair,

straight and fitting like a metallic skull cap, was of a bronze  color only slightly darker. 

His face was regular, the lineaments having an unusual quality of  handsomeness, hut in no sense possessing

the somewhat effeminate  prettiness often found in very handsome men. 

The most striking feature, however, was his eyes. They were  slightly weird, like pools of flakegold stirred

continually by tiny  whirlwinds. They held an almost hypnotic quality, a compelling power. 

The room where this amazing bronze man stood was the outer office  of his headquarters, and held only

comfortable chairs and a massive  safe. Adjacent was the library with its thousands of scientific volumes  and

the laboratory with an array of equipment nearly without equal. 

Doc whipped into the corridor, his movements apparently unhurried,  but his speed great. A special elevator, a

fast lift installed for his  own use, lowered him eightysix floors to the skyscraper basement.  There, he kept

several automobiles, all of special construction, in a  garage the existence of which was unknown to all but a

few. 

The bronze man's skyscraper establishment had cost a small fortune,  yet its expense was scarcely a drop from

his reservoir of wealth. Doc  possessed an almost unlimited source of funds, a treasure trove as  unusual as the

bronze man himself. 

Scarcely three minutes after disaster befell Monk, Doc Savage was  on the street in an expensive but

unostensible roadster. He touched a  dash button. Under the hood a siren began wailing. Traffic police heard

and opened a way for him. 

Doc went down Broadway, and for a long time the speedometer needle  swayed above seventy miles an hour.

He drove with an uncanny skill. 

THE roadster was fitted with shortwave radio  receivingandtransmitting apparatus. Ordinarily, Doc Savage

would have  used this to get in touch with the other three members of his group of  five assistants. 

But three of his aides were not at present in New York. William  Harper  "Johnny"  Littlejohn,  the  expert  on


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archaeology and  geology, was in London, filling a special lecture engagement at a  famous university. 

Major Thomas J. "Long Tom" Roberts, electrical wizard  extraordinary, was in Europe, collaborating in

experiments with another  electrical expert on a device which was Long Tom's pet dream  an  apparatus

which, when perfected, could be used to kill insects with  ultrashort sonic or electric waves. This would be

an inestimable boon  to farmers. 

Colonel John "Renny" Renwick, famous engineer, was in South Africa,  halfway around the world,

overseeing construction of a particularly  difficult hydroelectric plant, a project in which the engineer had a

financial interest. 

For the first time in many months, Doc Savage would have to go into  action without the aid of three of his

remarkable group of five men,  each of whom was a master in some profession. 

Several blocks from the scene of the strange explosion in the  office building, Doc switched off the siren. A

crowd milled in front of  the building itself. There were signs of excitement. 

Doc parked at the end of the block and hurried forward, intent on  learning what had befallen Monk and Ham.

He caught snatches of  conversation from the crowd. 

"They came in an armored truck!" gasped a man. 

A woman was telling a friend, "Did you notice how they were  dressed? Silvercolored suits!" 

"Those silver masks on their faces!" gasped the friend. "Ugh!  Hideous!" 

Doc went on and heard a fat colored fellow in a bus boy's uniform  exclaim, "Dem silver lads done lit out of

heah in the same truck dat  dey came in!" 

"Boy, did yoah see dem two men they was draggin' when they up an'  left?" asked a brother bus boy. 

"Yassuh," agreed the first. "Dem two was daid, if yoah asks me." 

Doc Savage's remarkable bronze features did not change expression.  That did not mean he was unconcerned,

for he schooled himself until he  possessed an uncanny control over his own emotions. 

A lieutenant of police  the same individual to whom Monk and Ham  had been talking  answered the

question. Doc encountered the officer  in front of the building. The cop saluted briskly. 

"It was the Silver Death'sHeads," the policeman explained before  Doc could put a query. "They drove right

through the crowd in an  armored car. Ran down two spectators. They rushed in, clubbed down the  guard at

the door, and seized Monk and Ham. It happened so quickly that  we could do nothing, although I did manage

to fire one shot." 

"Did they harm Monk and Ham?" Doc demanded. 

The lieutenant shivered slightly at the grim sound of the giant  bronze man's voice. 

"Both were clubbed over the head," he said thickly. "Ham was caught  beside me. The silver devils came up

behind us. Monk was in the  telephone booth and did not get out in time." 


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"How badly were they clubbed?" Doc questioned. 

The officer moistened his lips. "Pretty hard. I don't know  if  they are alive. They were dragged away." 

"What about the armored truck?" Doc asked. "Armored trucks are not  extremely common on New York

streets." 

"This one was a steel payroll truck," the policeman replied. "It  was stolen, we learned, from a company

which makes a business of  delivering pay rolls. It was taken only a few minutes before the raid  here." 

"You assemble information very quickly," Doc told the officer.  "Good work. Was the truck followed?" 

The policeman grimaced. "I'm sorry to say that it got away  completely. Of course, every radio patrol car in

the city is now  looking for it. We expect a report at any minute. it cannot escape." 

DOC Savage did not rush off on any wild chase of his own in search  of the armored truck. He knew the

efficiency of the metropolitan  police; he had, in fact, served in a consulting capacity when the  present radio

car system was inaugurated. A vehicle as prominent as the  armored truck would not get far before it was

discovered. 

The bronze man's first move was to examine the semimolten silver  mass which Monk and Ham had found

in the basement fire box. A small bag  was brought from Doc's roadster. With chemicals taken from the bag,

Doc  tested the silver. 

"Coin silver," he announced. 

"Eh?" The police lieutenant was puzzled. 

"The cloth is interwoven with fine wire made from molten silver  dollars," Doc explained. 

"Does that prove anything?" the officer queried. 

"Only that the criminals must be making the garments themselves,  which indicates that some of them are

highly skilled metalsmiths," said  the bronze man. "If the disguises had been purchased, it is almost  certain

that a different grade of silver would have been used." 

The policeman nodded, not greatly surprised, for he knew the  amazing detective ability possessed by Doc

Savage. He was slightly  abashed, however, when Doc went upstairs to the explosion scene and  almost at once

turned up the cause of the blast. 

Doc did not expend much time on the wreckage itself, except to  apply chemical tests to some of the powder

stains. 

"The work of trinitrotoluene," he stated. 

"Huh?" asked the officer. 

"T.N.T.," Doc elaborated. "The famous World War explosive." 

"Oh!" 


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The bronze man dug into the office walls, probing pits made by bits  of wreckage, and brought out, after some

work, several bits of steel.  He assembled these, studied them. 

"We found some of that metal and sent it to a specialist for an  opinion," said the officer. "We hoped it would

tell us what caused the  blast  whether it was a bomb or not." 

"It was a highexplosive threeinch shell," Doc said. 

"Good night!" the lieutenant exploded. "You don't mean a cannon  ball?" 

"You might call it that," Doc assured him. "Except that this was a  very modern demolition shell from a

threeinch artillery piece." 

"But where was it fired from?" yelled the officer. 

THERE was an interruption while a sergeant came in with a report  that the armored truck had been found. A

radio car bad come upon the  truck, abandoned on the water front of the East River. 

No trace of the sinister men in silver garments had been found in  the vicinity of the truck. Nor were there

finger prints. No one could  be found who had seen the truck being abandoned. 

"Finding it doesn't help us a bit," the police lieutenant groaned. 

"I would not say that," Doc told him. 

"Yes?" the other queried. "But how is this going to help?" 

"According to the newspapers, the men in silver robbed another  armored truck earlier in the day and took a

quarter of a million  dollars in cash," Doc pointed out. 

"Of course." 

"Police followed them," Doc reminded. 

"Yes, and lost them  " The officer did not finish, but swore and  snapped his fingers violently. 

"Exactly," Doc said. "The police lost trace of them around the  water front of the East River  in the same

vicinity in which this  armored truck was found, to be exact." 

The lieutenant shouted, "I'll have every square inch of that area  combed!" 

"Do it unobtrusively," Doc requested. 

"Of course," the officer agreed. "We will use plainclothes  officers, and put a flock of stool pigeons to work.

We've got a swell  lot of stool pigeons. They're in nearly every crook hangout in the  city. You'd be surprised

what they can turn up." 

"Do you wager?" Doc asked. 

"Bet? Sure  on sure things." 


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"Want to bet me that your stool pigeons won't turn up a thing?" the  bronze man asked. 

"What makes you think they won't?" the cop demanded. "These are not  ordinary crooks," Doc told him. "And

I doubt very much if robberies,  such as the armored truck holdup this afternoon, are the real motive  behind

the organization of men who use the silver disguises." 

The police lieutenant considered, then said, "I'll bet you fifty  that the stool pigeons turn up something." 

"The winner to contribute the fifty to the police Death Benefit  Fund," Doc said. 

"Sure." 

A police messenger ran into the room. He was animated, breathless. 

"Gugillello Bellondi was just murdered by a guy in silver!" he  yelled. 

DOC Savage demanded, "Who is Gugillello Bellondi?" 

"A fisherman who was in a boat in the river at the time of the  explosion," said the police lieutenant. "We

thought he might have seen  the plane flying overhead drop a bomb, and we sent a man over to talk  to him." 

"And our man found him dead," said the messenger. "A woman saw a  fellow in a silver suit run out of

Guglilello Bellondi's room just  before the cop got there." 

"The killer got away?" the lieutenant wailed. 

"So far, he has," the messenger admitted ruefully. 

Doc Savage put in, "Any line on the plane?" 

"Yes. I forgot to tell you." The lieutenant pulled out his  notebook. "The flier was Gilbert Stiles, who lives on

Eightyfifth  Street in Jackson Heights." 

"What house number?" Doc asked. 

The policeman furnished that information, started to ask a  question, but did not  Doc Savage was already

whipping for the door. 

The bronze man reached his roadster. Once again traffic police  opened a lane, and the trip north to

Queensboro Bridge, thence along  Northern Boulevard to Jackson Heights was made in astounding time. 

Jackson Heights was an apartment residential suburb near the north  shore of Long Island, not far out. There

were grass plots around some  of the apartments, a few trees in the parkways down the center of a  street or

two. 

Doc did not stop directly in front of Gilbert Stiles's home, but  parked in an adjacent side street, under the lazy

droop of a weeping  willow. He swung along the sidewalk, reached the corner, made a move at  turning. but

instead of doing so, continued on with long steps  and  stopped when he was sheltered behind a parked car. 

Doc's move was urged by discovery of a man standing beside a shiny  blue sedan down the street, near where

Gilbert Stiles lived. The man  was scrawny, with traces of grease stain on his bands and face. His  face was a


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sickly gray hue, resembling a white ball which had been  mauled in unclean hands. 

During the past, Doc Savage had visited Monk's skyscraper chemical  laboratory frequently, and in doing so

had occasionally seen members of  the janitorial force. The bronze man never forgot a face. The man down

the street was one of the janitors of Monk's skyscraper. 

Doc bad no way of knowing the individual was Bugs, murderer of  Clarence Sparks. 

After watching Bugs for a moment, unobserved, Doc concluded  something was not resting easily on the

fellow's mind. 

Bugs squirmed. He smoked innumerable cigarettes. He walked about,  and be glanced frequently at a tall brick

apartment building before  which the blue sedan stood. He even got into the sedan, but remained  only a

moment and climbed out again. 

Bugs stood scowling at the apartment house. Then his pasty face  took on an expression of resolve, and he

went inside. 

Doc Savage whipped back to his roadster. The rumble seat jumped  open at his touch upon a button, and he

dipped in a hand, withdrew a  small box to which stout spring clamps were secured; then he ran to the  blue

car. 

Employing the spring clamps on the box, Doc clipped the Container  to the chassis of the car in a spot where it

was not likely to be  noticed. Then be followed Bugs into the apartment house. 

THERE was a Spanishtype lobby, with ornate columns, fake iron  balconies, and a rather threadbare carpet.

Bugs was nowhere in sight.  Nor was there a directory of the tenants to be seen. 

The elevator was automatic. You got in and pushed a button marked  with the floor to which you wished to be

lifted. Doc listened. The lift  was running. 

These apartment buildings were all similar in construction. Doc  leaped around a comer, found stairs which

ran to the basement,  descended them, and located the master electric fuse board. He could  still hear the low

whine of the elevator. The sound stopped. 

Doc took out the fuse in the power circuit. The cage would remain  where it was, now. The bronze man ran up

flight after flight of stairs. 

The elevator car was on the sixth floor, which happened to be the  top story. A long hallway was lined with

numbered doors. Doc stood  perfectly still, listening. 

The bronze man possessed remarkable hearing. He used a special  scientific device giving forth sound waves

above and below the usual  audible ranges, to develop his aural organs. 

This was a part of a daily twohour routine of intensive exercise  which be had not neglected since childhood.

The exercises were  responsible for his physical development, for there reposed in his  great bronze frame a

strength that to many seemed incredible. 

Down the corridor, a doorknob rattled. Doc whipped back. A niche   it probably housed an incinerator door

offered concealment. He  pressed into that. 


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He heard the door open. Feet scuffed. Doc counted at least six  persons, all men. The clicking of women's

high heels are distinctive,  and there were none of those. One man walked far in the lead of the  others. An

instant later, the fellow appeared. 

It was Bugs. He saw Doc Savage. He could not very well help it. His  eyes flew wide; stark horror contorted

his face. 

"Savage!" he bawled. "Watch out!" 

Then Bugs clawed at his clothing for a gun. 

Doc moved with dazzling suddenness. Flashing out of the niche, he  drove a fist. So that there would be no

lasting damage, he struck  lightly. But the blow slammed Bugs back against the wall, knocking him  instantly

unconscious. The gun he had tried to get into action skidded  over the floor tiling. 

Doc now faced down the corridorfaced weird, inhuman figures, forms  garbed in grotesque silver garments.

The footstep count had been good.  There were five of them. 

Bugs's yell had warned them. Three had drawn guns. The weapons  gushed flame and raised earsplitting

thunder in the corridor. 

THERE was a touch of the unearthly in the speed with which Doc  Savage got back into the niche. Only

fabulous muscles, carefully  conditioned, could manage such blinding motion. The bullets, missing  him,

gouged plaster off the walls and knocked glass from a window at  the corridor end. 

"Rush him!" a man in silver squawled. 

"T'hell with that, UII I" another growled. 

Shots almost drowned the words, and it was doubtful if the man in  charge realized his name had been called

UII. But Doc caught it and  filed it mentally for future investigation should he escape. 

He was in a tight spot. It was his policy never to carry a gun, and  he had none now. But he did have some of

the scientific devices which  he used. One of these be employed now. 

A hand dipped into a pocket and came out with what might have been  mistaken for a glass marble. This was

actually a thinwalled glass  globe, and the liquid inside was a chemical concoction which vaporized  instantly

into an anaesthetic gas. 

The gas was unique in that its effects were immediate, and it  became ineffective within less than a minute, so

that Doc, holding his  breath, could escape the potent stuff, while the unwary, breathing it,  were rendered

senseless. 

Doc threw the anaesthetic ball. 

Rarely had these gas balls failed to catch foes by surprise. But  this was an exception. Doc waited, holding his

breath to escape the  Vapor. But his enemies gave no sign of succumbing. They did not,  however, call out

again, and the clatter of their feet retreated. A  door slammed. They had fled ahead of the gas. 

Doc knew from past experience just how quickly a man can shoot at  an unexpected target, and knew he could

get a fleeting glimpse of the  corridor without great danger of being shot. He looked out. 


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The hallway was empty. The silver men had gone back into an  apartment. Doc stepped out into the hall. 

Ah instant later, he flashed backward into the niche, for a door  had opened and a metal object slightly smaller

than a baseball had  sailed through. No doubt the silver man who hurled it intended for it  to stop beside Doc.

But the thing had too much momentum. It clattered  past. Then it exploded. 

The concussion almost disrupted the bronze man's eardrums. Clouds  of plaster gushed. The big apartment

house trembled. The ceiling  lifted, split, and came down with a thundering clamor. The floor  collapsed for

some distance. 

Doc, secure in the niche, unhit, was enveloped in a cloud of smoke,  plaster particles and splinters. The

grenade had been powerful.  Directly in front of him, the floor was gone, fallen down into the hall  below.

Bugs's body had been blown back out of sight. 

Toward the end of the uproar, the door down the hall opened again. 

"Get him?" asked the voice which belonged to Ull  it was a shrill,  querulously whanging tone. UII was not

the one looking into the  corridor. 

"It fixed 'im," said another voice. "The whole damn corridor is  blown to pieces!" 

At that point, a loud, agonized groan sounded. 

"Who's that?" asked Ull. 

"Bugs," said the other. "He's butchered up some." 

"Let me take care of that," UII suggested. 

A moment later there was a single deliberate shot, and after that  the groans no longer ground out. 

"He's taken care of," said Ull. 

"What next?" grunted the other. 

"Down the fire escape  all of you," ordered Ull. "We've got to  beat the cops away from here." 

DOC Savage gave Ull and his sinister silver aides a few minutes to  be on their way. The bronze man did not

want any more of those grenades  thrown. Women were screaming, children crying, in the apartment below,

although it was unlikely that any had been hurt. 

When he considered sufficient time had elapsed, Doc stepped out of  the niche. 

Bugs was a slack figure, torn a little by the blast and with a  bullet hole drilling his head just above the ears.

Ull had made a cold,  accurate shot in ascertaining that his followers did not live to talk.  Evidently UIl had not

wanted a wounded man on his hands during the  getaway. 

Doc shoved open the door through which the grenade had been hurled.  He stood just inside, strange

flakegold eyes resting on the deep  leather chair in the center of the apartment living room. 


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There was a man in the chair, but not a living man, for his body  was stiffly erect, probably held that way by

the blade of the long  knife which had gone through his chest and well into the chair back. 

A book had fallen to the floor beside the dead man and was open at  the fly leaf, so that the name written there

could be deciphered. 

"Gilbert Stiles," the name read. 

Chapter 5. RAPID PACE

DOC Savage rested a hand on the man's wrist where there should have  been a pulse  had he been alive  but

there was no throb. 

This aviator had been flying over the river when the explosion  occurred in Paine L. Winthrop's office. He

must have seen something.  The fisherman in the boat on the river must have seen the same thing.  And both

had been killed before they could talk, or be questioned. 

How had the silver fiends gotten their names? Doc had a suspicion   he had no way of knowing how right it

was  that Bugs was responsible  for this. But Bugs had paid for his part. 

Motor roar came up from the street, throbbed, then receded. Doc  Savage did not look out. They might see

him, and it was just as well if  they thought him dead, for they might become careless. 

The blue car had vanished when the bronze man did glance through  the window. He stepped out on the fire

escape and ran down, lightly,  swiftly, and made for his roadster. He did not waste time, but there  was no wild

haste in his movements. 

The sudden life in the oil gauge and ammeter was almost all that  told when the roadster engine started, so

silently did it operate. The  car moved at a touch on the accelerator; it was equipped with the most  modern of

automatic clutches. 

Doc touched one of innumerable buttons on the dash. Then he turned  a knurled knob. Static noises came from

a radio speaker under the dash,  these became terrific as a street car was passed, and, as Doc continued  to

adjust the knob, snatches of Voice and telegraph were heard. A radio  fan would have realized that the bronze

man was fishing through the  ultrashortwave bands, seeking some particular transmitter. 

After a time, regular buzzes  short dashes repeated at  threesecond intervals  whizzed from the speaker.

They were not unlike  train signals, except more widely spaced, and they kept coming  steadily. 

Doc turned the knob to the right. The signals faded. He turned back  to the left and they faded again. Setting

the knob at the loudest  point, he eyed a dial above, which bore close likeness to a compass  card. A pointer on

this indicated almost due west. 

Doc Savage drove west. The apparatus he had just employed was a  radio compass, the tiny loop of which was

in the roadster rear and  operated from the knob by remote control. 

This compact radio directional device was one which Doc employed  for many uses. For instance, his five

men, when working with him, used  cars which also had transmitters, and these were left on at all times.  By

simply turning the directional compass knob, Doc could locate the  nearest of these cars. 


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The radio compass had another use, as well. Doc Savage had  perfected tiny mechanical shortwave

transmitters which, batteries self  contained, were little larger than a cigar box. These sent out a series  of

buzzing sounds. Attached to the containers were clamps by which they  could be affixed to various convenient

objects. 

Doc had, as a matter of precaution, attached one of the  transmitters to the azure sedan. The bronze man

overlooked few chances.  In the perilous life he led, chances could not be overlooked. 

From time to time, a twist of the directional knob, as the buzzing  signals faded, brought the sounds in loud

again and gave a check on the  direction being taken by the blue machine. 

The chase led to Manhattan Island, downtown to the vehicular tunnel  under the Hudson, thence along the

elevated roadway and, after a few  miles, down into a manufacturing district. It ended close to the water  front

when Doc Savage sighted the sedan, empty now, parked before an  imposing, massive steel gate. 

THE gate was not of steel bars, hut of riveted plates; it looked  forbidding. There was a square aperture in the

gate for a watchman to  peer through. Above the gate, a sign read: 

WINTHROP'S SHIPYARDS  PAINE L. WINTHROP, PRESIDENT 

Doc Savage advanced swiftly and put an eye to the square opening in  the gate. The shipyard was beyond,

grotesque in the fog, with its  cranes, material piles and moving booms. There seemed to he no work  under

way. 

Just inside the gate, a man was sprawled on his back, one arm  angled across his face in an attitude of grisly

slumber. The shoulder  of his rough suit was sodden with crimson leakage from his head. 

Doc gave the door a shove. It was unlocked, swung back quietly, and  let him in. He examined the man. 

The fellow was old, workstooped, grayhaired, and on his breast  was a watchman's badge. Doc felt his

wrist, although he could see that  the man still breathed. Some type of bludgeon, perhaps a revolver  barrel,

had beaten the watchman down. 

He would be unconscious some time, judging from the nature of the  wound, but was in no immediate danger. 

Doc advanced into the shipyard. There was some breeze here; the fog  eddied, swept past in nebulous

streamers like marching ghosts. Moisture  had been deposited on the packed earth, and this slime bore tracks. 

Reasoning that the freshest prints were those of the sinister men  in silver garb, Doc followed them. The tracks

progressed in a direct  manner which indicated a definite objective. They ended at the door of  a massive brick

building, evidently housing the offices. 

Doc waited outside, listening. Gray fog around about made his great  frame seem larger, more formidable.

The gloom of early evening was  pressing down, bringing the clammy murk of a waterlogged catacomb. 

A trial of the door showed it locked, but a moment's work with a  thin steel probe tripped the tumblers. A

professional locksmith would  have been slightly stunned at the swiftness with which the lock was  solved. 

Inside was denser murk; mingled with it, the faint heat from  radiators which bubbled against the fog chill.

There was a desk,  telephone and hard, wooden waiting benches. A flyspecked calendar was  crooked on the

wall. 


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Doc advanced, passed through an open door, found worn wooden steps  which led upward. But he did not

mount immediately. Instead, he dipped  a hand into a pocket and brought out what might have been mistaken

for  a handful of black clover seed. He strewed some of this on the floor of  the outer office. Then he went up

the stairs. 

At the first landing he found a door, open. Beyond was an office,  fitted up more luxuriously. The desk

drawers were open, the papers  within littered up as if they had been gone through hastily. 

A curl of smoke arose from a metal smoking stand which stood beside  the desk. 

Doc went over to it. The smouldering objects were old cigar and  cigarette stubs which had been ignited by

hits of burning paper dropped  into the stand. The bronze man examined the charred paper fragments. 

Blueprints, he decided. The print had been torn into fractional  sections, each burned separately, and the ash

crushed. Even his  consummate skill was unequal to telling what nature of diagram had been  on the blueprints. 

The burning had been done within the last few minutes, however. And  the care with which it had been done

indicated Sinister motives. 

Doc dropped the ashes. He stood very still, listening. 

Prom below came a loud report. It was like a shot. Three more  followed. There was a cry  strangled,

inarticulate. 

Doc Savage did not go back down the stairs, but whipped, instead,  to a window. He managed to get it up

without noise that could be heard  downstairs. From inside his clothing came an object he always carried   a

thin, stout silk cord, affixed to the end of which was a folding  grapple of lightness and strength. 

The grapple, hooked to the inner edge of the window sill, held his  weight as he slid outside and down the silk

line. He went slowly,  supported by the incredible strength in his metallic hands. 

A few feet to the left of the spot where he touched the ground,  there was a window. It allowed a look into the

reception room. 

The glass pane was grimy. That, with the fog and darkness, made  vision difficult, the outlines inside hazy.

But there was one point  cleaner than the other sections of the glass. 

Through the clear section, Doc could distinguish  his flakegold  eyes peered closely  a small, flat

automatic pistol, a Vest pocket .25  caliber gun. A thin hand encased in a suede glove held it. 

Doc brought out a handkerchief, doubled it, spread it over his  knuckles, but did not wrap it around so that it

would interfere with  his fingers. He struck. Glass splintered. The cloth protected his  knuckles, but did not

interfere when his arm went through the window  and his corded fingers gripped the gun hand. 

Coat fabric over the bronze man's arm bulged slightly as great  muscles exerted tension. Inside, a shriek piped

out. The gun fell from  a hand made nerveless by the steel pinch of Doc's fingers. 

Doc knocked more glass out of the window, found the lock, twisted  it, then released his victim long enough

to get the sash up and hound  inside. 

The victim was on all fours, clawing for the dropped automatic. Doc  nudged the weapon away with a toe. 


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The woman on the floor  not until he had seized her gun arm had  Doc been sure it was a woman  looked up

angrily and gritted, "Why  didn't you just shoot me? That's what you tried before!" 

She was a vision in suede. Not only were her gloves suede, but her  pumps and the pert, saucy riding beret, a

wealth of brown hair. Her  frock was almost the gray of the suede, making, with her gray bag, an  ensemble

studied, yet extremely striking. 

The garments set off some intriguing curves, and the picture was  aided by a pair of exquisite eyes, a nose

bordering on the retrousse,  and rosebud lips, which trembled a little with rage and fear. 

Doc gave the beauty an impersonal eye. Then he glanced at the  floor. 

On the boards of the floor lay the numerous particles which  resembled black clover seed, just as Doc had left

them  except in four  spots, where there were scorched spots. It looked as if firecrackers  had gone off on the

floor. 

The entrancing young woman got to her feet. In doing so she stepped  on one of the clover seeds. There was a

loud report as it exploded. She  jumped and glared at Doc. 

"What are those things?" she snapped, and put a hand up to adjust  her luxuriant brown hair. 

"Just a precaution to warn if any one was following me," Doc told  her. 

The girl fingered in her hair, thrusting in her fingers, patting.  Suddenly she took her hand down. She pointed

it at Doc. 

The hand held the twin to the small automatic which Doc had caused  her to drop. 

"Your precaution," she said, "is not going to do you much good." 

THE girl's arm was out rigid, the gun pointed at about the middle  button of Doc's vest, and because her arm

was tense, her gray sleeve  was drawn off a whitegold wrist watch. He could hear the animated  clicking of

the watch, tiny as the sound was. 

"This may be a mistake," Doc told her. 

"It will he a mistake if you make any move that I don't order," she  informed him. 

Doc asked, "There has been a previous attempt to kill you? And you  think I had a part in it?" 

The girl seemed fascinated by the eerie quality of the bronze man's  eyes. 

"I can't prove it was you," she said. 

"Why not?" 

"The man who shot at me had some kind of a silvercolored suit on,"  she answered. "He had a silver mask,

too." 

"When did this happen?" 


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"The attempt to shoot me? Yesterday. Yesterday evening about this  time." She moved her gun meaningly, but

it still pointed at the center  of Doc's vest. "I went right out and bought me two guns. And don't get  the idea I

can't use them. I was born and raised in Montana." 

"Why," Doc asked her, "should a man in silver try to kill you?" 

Her gun remained steady. "That is what I would like to know." 

Doc Savage studied her, as if trying to read her mind. Then,  slowly, but firmly, he walked forward. 

"I'll shoot!" the girl shrilled. 

But Doc came on and she did not fire, but retreated, biting her  lips in vexation, until she was against the wall.

The bronze man  reached out and removed the gun from her hand without difficulty. 

"You fool!" she flared. "You don't know how near I came to killing  you!" 

"Your peashooter," Doc advised her, "would not have dented my  bulletproof vest." 

She had tucked her bag high under an arm, so that it had not fallen  throughout the encounter. She did not

resist when he took the bag.  There was a folder of business cards inside. They read: 

MISS LORNA ZANE  Private Secretary to Paine L. Winthrop 

"Lorna?" Doc asked. 

"Miss Zane to you!" she snapped. 

Silently, Doc extended the bag, after noting there was nothing else  in it other than a metal powder box,

almost full. 

The girl took the bag, absently opened it  then apparently got a  big idea. She flipped the powder case open

and dashed the cosmetic  flakes at Doc's eye. 

But she had not counted on the blinding speed with which the bronze  man could move. He ducked and the

powder, shooting over his shoulder,  spread in a cloud over the room. 

The girl tried to flee. Doc grasped her arm. She screamed from  fright, since he could not have been hurting

her. 

From behind Doc came a loud report as a black pellet on the floor  exploded. There was a second bang, a

third. 

Doc whirled. 

TURNING, the bronze man saw first the chair, big and heavy. It  clubbed in a whining arc for his head. Doc

threw head and shoulders  back through the air, turned sidewise. 

The chair missed him, snapped buttons off his vest, such was its  speed, and broke itself into fragments on the

floor. 


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"Blast me, you're lightning in chains!" rapped the man who had  swung the chair. "Blast me, lightning in

chains!" 

The man gave the impression of something operated by electricity.  His words actually gobbled, such was

their high pressure speed. His  arms moved as if driven by a clockwork which had lost its governor. 

He stabbed a hand at his coat pocket. Weighty hang of his coat on  that side indicated a gun. 

Doc lunged. He was fast. But this other man had speed, too. He  brought his left fist up in a terrific blow. It

landed flush on Doc's  jaw. 

The other waited expectantly. His mouth fell open and his eyes flew  wide when Doc did not drop. He looked

scared, but desperate. 

"Incredible!" he exploded. "Incredible! Yes it is!" 

He started another blow. But he was not as fortunate this time.  Doc's left hand drifted out, pushed, and the

fellow upset. As he went  down, Doc's other hand grasped his coat pocket and wrenched. Half of  the man's

coat was torn off, with it the pocket and the gun which it  held. 

"I'll be damned!" the man exclaimed with staccato rapidity. "I'll  be damned! Yes, I will. Damned!" 

Doc ignored him, for the girl was running to get the automatic  which she had first held. When Doc swept

across the floor and got the  weapon first, she grimaced angrily and backed into a corner. 

The man of staccato speech came up from the floor like a suddenly  awakened cat. He bounced backward

warily, as if apprehensive of  encountering Doc again. His hands and lower lip trembled. 

"Who are you?" he clipped. "Who are you? That's what I want to  know!" 

"Doc Savage," the bronze man said. 

"That explains it," gulped the other. "It sure does!" 

Doc glanced at the girl. "Who is this fellow?" he asked. 

"Harry Pace is the name," answered the man for himself. "Yes, sir,  Pace. People call me 'Rapid.' Rapid Pace.

Get it? Efficiency, that's  Pace. You bet. Efficiency." 

"He," the girl said dryly, "is Paine L. Winthrop's efficiency  expert." 

The young woman had undergone a marked change. She wore a somewhat  sheepish expression. 

"So you are Doc Savage," she added. "I have heard so much about you  that I began to think you were a

legend." 

"Yes, sir, you're almost a legend, Mr. Savage," said "Rapid" Pace.  "Yes, sir, a legend." 

"Why did you try to club me with that chair?" Doc asked him. 


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"A mistake," Pace clattered. "All a mistake. You see, I was  protecting Lorna. Efficiency on all occasions, that

is me." 

Doc's flakegold eyes probed. "Have you seen any Silver  Death'sHeads around the shipyard?" he asked. 

"Good night!" Rapid Pace stuttered. "What arc you talking about?" 

The floor seemed to jump a little under their feet. A loud thump  accompanied this phenomenon. Several

windows in the building evidently  broke; they could hear the glass jangling. 

"BLESS me!" gulped Rapid Pace. "What was that?" 

"Stay here," Doc rapped, and whipped for the stairs. Rapid Pace  started after him, stepped on one of the

explosive particles on the  floor, gave a wild jump, and trembled furiously. 

"Dear me!" he choked. "My nerves aren't going to stand this! No,  sir!" 

"Stay with Miss Zane!" Doc directed. Then the bronze man vanished  up the stairs, his going as silent and

swift as the progress of a  galeswept tendril of fog. 

Rapid Pace eyed Lorna Zane and said hurriedly, "Lorna, I'm worried.  What is this all about?" 

"I do not know," said the girl grimly. 

"If anything would happen to you, I think I  I'd die," Pace said  earnestly. 

The young woman studied him. "I doubt it," she said dryly. 

"Now don't joke, Lorna," Pace pleaded. "You know I'm crazy about  you. Yes, sir, crazy! Why don't you like

me?" 

"You get scared too easy," said Lorna. "You go off half cocked." 

"I can't help it," Pace groaned. 

"And you talk too much," Lorna continued. "You say everything  twice, and you could get along with half as

much conversation." 

"I'm trying to stop that, too," Pace assured her. 

"Well, we'll see how you improve," Lorna told him. 

They strained their ears, but did not hear Doc Savage, for the  bronze man was moving with an uncanny quiet

through the upper floors of  the building. He swung down a corridor, angled right, and found the  building was

much larger than it had seemed: there were numerous  hallways. In fact, the place was a labyrinth. 

Doc came unexpectedly to a room which was very large. 

There were rows of desks, many  judging from the lack of  wastebaskets and absence of other paraphernalia

not at present in  use. Others were seeing service. Evidently the Winthrop Shipyards had  once done more

business than at present. 


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Across the room was a safe, huge and battered, with flakes of the  black paint scaled off by long usage. But

there was more wrong with the  safe than scuffed paint. 

The door of the strong box was off and reposed on the floor.  Papers, the former contents of the safe, were

scattered about. A  biliouslooking cloud of smoke eddied above the wreckage, and there was  the itching tang

of burned nitro in the air. 

The safe being blown open was undoubtedly what they had heard  downstairs. 

Chapter 6. MYSTERIOUS BLUEPRINTS

DOC Savage did not expend time examining the safe, but whipped to  the left, found a door open, and went

through. The hallway beyond led  him several yards and turned, conveying him back the way he had come,

toward the stairs and the front door. 

An excited, staccato yell sounded. Rapid Pace's voice! A gun made  an ugly roar. Lorna Zane shrilled

something unin telligible. 

Doc changed his course, found a window and got it up as silently as  was consistent with slashing speed. More

than a dozen feet, that drop  below. He made it easily, tremendous leg muscles cushioning his  landing. 

An instant later, he was at a corner  it chanced to be the one  nearest the gate. 

Lorna Zane and Rapid Pace were running across the shipyard,  striving to reach the shelter of a pile of steel

ship frames. Neither  looked back, but gave all attention to sprinting. 

A gun whacked. 

"I'm hit!" Pace grabbed his arm. "I'm hit!" 

But he did not glance back, and both he and the girl dived behind  the frames. Another shot slammed; the lead

made a belling noise on the  steel frames. 

"Get that damned girl!" yelled the voice of the Silver Death'sHead  member called UII. 

Feet pounded. Doc stepped from his concealment. The group in the  weird silver garments and masks, which

he had followed here, were  running for the frame pile, guns ready. 

Over the thin cloth of woven alloy metal which protected his body,  Doc Savage wore a most unusual vest, a

garment of many pockets,  compartments rather, padded so that they were unnoticeable. From one of  these, he

extracted a metal vial, the padded interior of which held  metallic objects about the size of cherries. He flung

one of these  ahead of the charging silver killers. 

It struck. There was a blinding flash, a terrific crack of a noise  which left ears ringing. Two silver men were

upset by the blast. 

UII  he was prudently not leading the charge  yelled, "The girl  must have grenades! Get her!" 

In the gloom, it was impossible to tell from where the thrown  object had come. They renewed the charge. 


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There was a second flash, and a rapping crash. This one knocked  fully half of the group down. Even Ull was

upset, and a bundle he was  carrying flipped from his arms. 

The bundle was long, round, azuretinted at the edges, tied with  cord and sealed with wax. A bundle of

blueprints, undoubtedly. 

Ull scrambled after the prints as if they meant his very life.  Their merely getting out of his hands seemed to

change his whole plan. 

"Let the girl go!" he howled. "The big boss said to get these  prints, and that's our job. We do not want to lose

them, after all the  trouble we had getting them out of that safe. Back, men! We'll leave  here before some one

calls the police." 

The silver men retreated, firing freely at the pile of massive  steel frames. Scrambling over the keel of a

partially completed small  vessel, they made for the gate, working around a tractor, a mobile  derrick and other

machinery. One produced a flashlight and employed it  to aid their flight. 

They reached the gate. It was locked. 

"Hell!" snarled UII, and glared at the watchman, who was still  unconscious. "I thought we left this unlocked!" 

The fastening of the solid metal sheet was a bar affair, and this  was jammed very tightly, but they got it back

and shoved out into the  waterfront street. With frantic haste, they piled into their blue  sedan. 

"We'll go to Gardner's home next," barked UlI. 

The car engine backfired, came to life, and the machine wailed its  tires on the fogdamp pavement, then

rocketed away. 

THERE were shadows close to the wall outside the gate, very dark  shadows, and the men in the silver regalia

had neglected to examine  them. Thereby, they had missed an important discovery. 

The layer of damp murk seemed to swell, then condense and  materialize into a bronze figure of giant size.

This occurred at a  point no more than fifteen feet from where the sedan had been parked. 

Doc, taking advantage of the night and the fog, had beaten the  silver men to the gate, gotten through, jammed

the lock by the handle  outside, and concealed himself. 

UII's bark, "We'll go to Gardner's home next," had reached his  ears. 

Doc had taken a good deal of trouble to avoid showing himself, for  it was well that the silver men continue

thinking they had killed him  at the apartment of the unfortunate flier, Gilbert Stiles. 

Finding his two men, Monk and Ham  rescuing them if they were  still alive; punishing their murderers if

they were dead  was Doc's  immediate task. Eventually these silver men probably would lead him to  his

objective. 

Once again, he could follow them by the radio directional device. 

Doc did not take up the chase immediately. He ran back into the  shipyard. 


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Lorna Zane came cautiously from behind the steel pile. Rapid Pace,  once sure the coast was clear, bounded

out like an excited cricket. He  waved his arms and began to talk like a phonograph which had lost its

governor, indicating a mere scratch on his shoulder. 

"An outrage!" he yelled. "Yes, sir, an outrage! A mystery, too! A  very black mystery! A most confounding

affair 

Doc ignored him, and asked the girl, "Do you know what was in that  large safe upstairs?" 

"I should know," she replied. "I am the only one who has the  combination." 

Doc gestured, "Come on!" 

As they ran into the brick office building, Lorna Zane said  angrily, "I do not understand this! Why should

those men try to kill  me?" 

"What position do you hold here?" Doc asked her. 

"I really manage the shipyard," she explained, "although I am only  secretary to Paine L. Winthrop." 

"That might explain it," said Doc. 

The young woman glanced sharply at the bronze man, a strange light  in her entrancing eyes. "What do you

mean?" 

Doc Savage seemed not to have heard the question, and they soon  reached the large room where the safe had

been blown open. 

"Will you see what is missing," the bronze man requested, and  indicated the rifled strong box. 

Lorna Zane went through the strewn contents of the safe, picking up  packages, dropping them, inspecting

letters. The inventory did not take  her long. 

"Only one thing is missing," she decided. 

Doc watched her closely. "What is it?" 

"A sealed roll, a blueprint which Paine L. Winthrop gave me nearly  four months ago to lock in this safe for

him," said the attractive  young woman. 

"Blueprint of what?" 

The girl hesitated. "There was something strange about that. I got  explicit orders not to look at it, and it was

sealed so no snooper  could open it without that fact being apparent. I have no idea what it  was." 

Doc nodded. "The blueprint seems to have a sinister importance." 

Lorna Zane bit her lip uncertainly, then said, "There was another  strange thing. Last spring, Mr. Winthrop

gave all his regular employees  a fivemonths' vacation with pay. That was queer, because he usually  did not

give vacations with pay. I came back four months ago." 


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"When you came back, did you notice anything?" Doc asked. 

"There had been a great deal of work done in the shipyard," the  girl replied. "But when I got back, whatever

bad been built was gone,  and no workmen remained." 

"Come on," Doc directed. "We'll talk as we ride." 

"I wonder if the vacations could have anything to do with this,"  Rapid Pace mumbled. "You know, I got one,

too. Yes, it was swell!" 

THEY retired to the bronze man's roadster; all three occupied the  commodious front seat, and the machine

lunged away. The buzzing radio  directional device gave them a line on the blue sedan. 

Doc drove swiftly, silently for a time, so as to decrease the lead  of the sedan. The radio transmitter under the

car of the silver men  would only carry a few miles. 

"Did Winthrop have the combination of the safe which held the  mysterious blueprint?" Doc asked. 

The girl shook her head. "No." 

"Why is that?" 

"That is what I was wondering," said Rapid Pace. "Yes, I was  wondering." 

In the gloom  it was much darker now  the girl's rather inviting  lips compressed into an angry line. 

"I virtually manage the shipyard," she snapped. "There are many  details to which Paine L. Winthrop does not

give close attention. The  combination of that safe happens to be one of them." 

The tires on the roadster were designed with a tread which  prevented, as much as possible, the usual wail

present at high speed.  The engine was still silent, although turning at high speed. Sway and  pitch of the car,

the blur of lighted buildings on their side, told of  their true momentum. 

Doc Savage said suddenly, "Paine L. Winthrop is dead. Did you know  that?" 

The girl became very quiet in her comer of the seat. She separated  her lips as if to speak, seemed to

reconsider, and closed them. Slender  hands tangled and untangled on her lap. 

Rapid Pace started up in the seat at the words, groped for  expression, and burst out, "The old boy's heart, eh?

His heart. Sure, I  knew it would get him sooner or later." 

"It was not his heart," Doc corrected. "It was a threeinch  highexplosive shell, fired from a spot as yet not

definitely  determined." 

For once Rapid Pace did not repeat himself. "This is very  mystifying," he muttered. 

"Do either of you have any idea of what is behind it all?" Doc  asked. 

"Not I," said Rapid Pace. 

"Nor I," murmured the girl. 


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Doc adjusted the directional apparatus knob. The procession of  buzzing was louder. Doc's metallic features

showed no trace of concern,  but he did not resume the questioning. 

He slowed the roadster, for the increasing loudness of the signals  indicated he was coming up rapidly on the

sender. Then he turned  sharply to the right, the roadster pitching over ruts, muddy water  flying from puddles.

He stopped. 

They were on a side road. Brush walled them in. The headlights  glinted on blue. Doc slackened speed, rolled

up windows, especially  designed in the doors of the roadster, and which were of bulletproof  glass. The car

body, engine hood, radiator, were all protected by armor  plate. 

The machine ahead was the blue sedan, empty. 

Using a flashlight, Doc located tracks. It seemed that the silver  men had gone back along the road afoot.

Following the trail closely,  Doc progressed to the main thoroughfare and down that  footprints were  faint in

the fog damp on the pavement  to a drug store before which  there was a taxi stand. 

As a matter of precaution, the silver men had abandoned their  easily recognized sedan. 

Doc Savage secured, from the drug store clerk, a description of the  taxi driver who frequented that stand. The

driver was an elderly man,  distinctive because of a great drooping white mustache. 

The clerk had not seen the men who had taken the taxi, although he  had heard the hack depart only a few

minutes before. 

Thirty minutes later, Doc Savage pulled the roadster to a stop  before an elaborately modernistic building on

the more elite section of  Park Avenue. Instead of one doorman, there were two, and they were  caparisoned in

uniforms somewhat more distinctive than doormen  elsewhere on this, possibly the most expensive street in

the world. 

"What now," Lorna Zane asked curiously, eying the imposing  structure. 

"I am going to leave you here," Doc told her. 

Lorna nipped her lower lip with white teeth. "Haven't I anything to  say about that?" 

"Your life is in danger," Doc told her. "You will be safe here." 

"What about me?" Rapid Pace clattered. "Yes, what about me?" 

"You stay in the car," Doc directed. 

The bronze man escorted Lorna Zane into the building. They received  much attention, the doormen

collaborating efficiently in ushering them  inside. There was a waiting room, a bewildering resplendence of

chromium, enamel and colored rugs. 

A stately, exquisitely formed young woman ushered them to  comfortable chairs. She was a blonde. A

redhead, equally as shapely,  brought them a tray of iced drinks. A young lady with black tresses  popped up

with the most fashionable magazines. 

"Whew!" said Lorna. "What is this, anyway?" 


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Doc did not answer, but watched another young woman who was  approaching. The attendants who had

waited upon Doc and Lorna were  striking, but they were completely overshadowed by the newcomer. This

entrancing Venus had bronze hair of a hue remarkably like Doc's. 

"Hello, Pat," Doc greeted the bronzehaired beauty. "This is Lorna  Zane. Lorna, this is Pat Savage, my

cousin." 

Pat shook hands with Lorna, then waved an airy hand. 

"This is the first time you have been here, Doc," she said. "I want  to show you the gymnasium upstairs. It's a

knockout. And I have over  thirty beauty operators at work, all highly skilled. I already have all  the fashion

leaders on my list, waiting to have their youthful figures  restored. How I am going to reduce some of those

heavyweights is a  mystery to me, but they pay me in advance." 

"Busy?" Doc asked. 

"Busy?" Pat laughed. "Say, this business of running a combination  beauty salon and gymnasium is no joke.

You bet I'm busy." 

At this point, a customer departed  a fat man whose countenance  was still flushed from a facial, and whose

sparse hair had undoubtedly  been curled. 

"Men on my clientele, too," Pat smiled. "But I do not know whether  they come to have their looks improved,

or to flirt with my snappy  assistants." 

"Want to help me, Pat?" Doc asked. 

"Help you?" Pat said cheerfully. "Do I want to fly the Atlantic? Do  I want to stand up and get shot at? Do I

want to go in for parachute  jumping? Ail of those are safer than helping you." 

"Do you want to help?" Doc repeated. 

"Sure," Pat laughed. "Who is trying to kill you now?" 

"Miss Lorna Zane, here, is the one in danger this time," Doc  explained, and briefly outlined what had

occurred. 

Pat Savage listened with profound interest. Pat liked excitement,  and had aided Doc on other occasions. She

had even tried to join Doc's  group of assistants, had been turned down because Doc considered it no  life for

the socalled gentler sex, and had started this elaborate  beauty establishment to keep herself occupied. 

Rapid Pace was walking rapidly back and forth beside the roadster  when Doc joined him down in the street. 

"I am puzzled," clipped the highpressure efficiency expert. "Yes,  deeply puzzled. What I want to know is

this: How are we going to find  those silver devils?" 

"Through an order their leader, Ull, gave," Doc said. 

"What was the order?" Pace questioned swiftly. 

"Something about going to an individual named Gardner," Doc told  him. 


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"Oh, oh!" gulped Pace. "Gardner? Bedford Burgess Gardner, did you  say?" 

"Who is Bedford Burgess Gardner?" Doc countered. 

"Gardner is owner of Transatlantic Lines, the ocean line which was  Paine L. Winthrop's chief rival until

lately, when there has been talk  of the two companies merging," said Pace, using what for him was an

extraordinarily long sentence. "Gardner is  " 

"We will go to Gardner's home," Doc said briskly. 

"I happen to know where he lives," said Pace. "Yes, I know. He has  a lolapaloosa of a place. A lolapaloosa!" 

THE "lolapaloosa" was a cluster of white buildings which stood like  big dice atop a green hill that shouldered

up impressively from the  Hudson's tranquil blue ribbon some miles north of New York City. 

The mansion itself was palatial, modeled after the lines of Mount  Vernon, with tall white columns. Near by

were smaller buildings in  imitation of old slave huts. The stables were large, and back of them a  private race

track looped around a private flying field on which stood  a hangar, also ingeniously Colonial. 

The river edge at the foot of the hill boasted boat houses and a  seaplane hangar, also Colonial. 

There was no fog this far north  it seemed to be present only  along the sea  and the sky was comparatively

free of clouds, so that  moonlight spilled down, giving Doc Savage and Rapid Pace sufficient  illumination to

look over the ground. 

Pace said, "A lolapaloosa! Didn't I tell you? Yes, sir, a  " 

"Quiet," said Doc, who was getting tired of the efficiency expert's  repetitive manner of speaking. 

They had left the roadster a short distance from the palatial  estate and they were approaching on foot. They

were on a driveway which  was barked on either side by black, ominous brush. 

A small red point of light appeared ahead. They used more caution,  came close and perceived a taxi. The tail

light illuminated the license   a New Jersey plate. 

"Probably the machine the silver men took when they abandoned their  sedan in New Jersey," Doc imparted. 

Doc rounded the cab, saw it was empty, and they advanced through  the shrubbery until they came to a stretch

of lawn which was  closecropped and somewhat glassy with dew. Beyond was the house   ample,

impressive, almost unnaturally white. 

"Makes me think of a bone," Pace shivered. "Yes, sir, a white  bone." 

"What do you know about Bedford Burgess Gardner?" Doc asked. 

"A mysterious person," said Pace. "A very mysterious person." 

"What do you mean?" 

"He rarely gets out," Pace explained. "Offhand, I cannot recall any  one who has seen him. He does not keep

offices downtown, and all his  business is transacted by telephone. They say he is a strange person  who does


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not like any one around him. They even say his servants do not  live here  that he makes them leave every

evening before dark." 

"Wealthy?" Doc queried. 

"Within the last year his company has merged with other shipping  concerns until he is the most powerful

shipping magnate in America,  unless I am mistaken," said Pace. 

"Ever see him?" Doc asked. 

"No, sir," said Pace. "Didn't I just tell you that very few people  have ever seen the old codger?" 

"Old?" 

"An old wreck, from what I hear," said Pace. "They say  " 

What "they said" never did come out, however. From the white house  exploded a shout  hollow because it

was inside; guttural with fright. 

The cry repeated. A door banged open, spilling white light. It had  opened on a small balcony, some fifteen

feet up on the side of the  mansion. 

A figure reeled through the door. It was a man who made a grotesque  form against the glitter from within.

His age must have been near  forty, and his face, even from that distance, radiated terror. He wore  the uniform

of a taxi driver. 

The man was fleeing, obviously. He endeavored to get over the  balcony railing. 

Then a gun banged hollowly inside the house. Bullet impact kicked  the taxi driver around so that he fell

across the balcony rail,  teetered a moment, then was carried over by momentum. There was a  concrete

sidewalk below and the driver struck that squarely on top of  his head  which would have killed him, had the

bullet not done so  already. 

Chapter 7. THE INDIAN'S HEAD

DOC Savage heard a fluttering sound beside him, looked around and  saw that Rapid Pace seemed to be in the

grip of a violent chill. His  shaking was oscillating a bough of the bush against which they stood.  Suddenly,

Pace dived for the nearest cover, disappearing like a  frightened rabbit. 

Doc ran for the house, angling to the right, keeping low so that he  could not be glimpsed by the gunman

inside the balcony door. The house  seemed to grow in proportions as he came near it; the structure was  very

large. 

A side door which he approached was locked, but Doc's thin metal  probe gave him silent, quick admission.

The darkness inside swallowed  him. 

A few feet inside, he turned into a room where the carpet was  thick, soft. He caught breathing sounds,

uneasy, jerking. After a few  seconds, feet shuffled on the carpet. 

Doc moved like a wraith; his tendonwrapped bands lashed out and  closed on arms. The struggle was brief.


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There was a soft thump,  evidently of a gun falling. Doc released his Captive, leaped back, got  the gun, then

found a light switch and clicked it on. 

He studied the individual who was revealed in the brilliant flood. 

It was a man, a weird figure, stooped almost double. The man had a  black beard, slightly larger than a

Vandyke, which made his lower face  a dark bundle of fur. The eyes were squinted to the thinnest of slits;  not

even the color of the orbs were distinguishable. 

The bent, bearded figure scuttled back, stooped over, almost  falling, but managed to pick up a heavy cane

which leaned against a  chair. Then he glared at Doc from his slitted eyes. 

Silence persisted for a few seconds. Then the thick beard bobbed as  the other nodded. 

"Doc Savage," he said in a coarse, quavering voice. "I've seen you  somewhere before. Or maybe it was your

picture." 

Doc ejected cartridges from the gun  it was an automatic. None of  the shells had been fired. He threw the

cartridges cut of an open  window and placed the weapon on a stand near a telephone. Doc never  employed a

gun, although he was a skilled marksman if need arose. 

"What's going on here?" he asked. "Who are you?" 

The bearded man answered the last question first. "I am Gardner." 

"What happened?" Doc repeated. 

The coarse voice quavered, "I shall tell that to the police." 

"I," Doc pointed out, "have a police commission. 

"This is Westchester County," Bedford Burgess Gardner growled. "You  may have a New York commission,

but it will do you no good here." 

"It is a State Trooper commission," Doc advised. Gardner thought  that over, while the cane trembled a little

under his nervous weight. 

"You go to hell!" he suggested finally. "And also clear out of  here! I do not like people around me at night." 

There was noise outside, footsteps, and Rapid Pace's voice called  out nervously. When Doc answered him,

Pace came in. 

Gardner pointed a shaking hand at Pace and grated, "You get out,  too!" 

Pace asked, "Who killed the taxi driver?" 

Doc eyed Gardner. "Who did?" 

"I don't know," Gardner wailed. "I don't know anything about it!" 

"That's going to make it tough for you," said Pace. "Yes, sir!" 


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Gardner lifted his cane and started for Pace. Pace leaped back, and  Doc was forced to move aside to get out

of his way. 

Changing his course suddenly, Gardner moved for the door. 

Nerves overwrought at what he considered an intrusion of his home,  he left the room in haste. 

DOC, disappointed at the results of the inquiry, started for the  hallway, followed by Pace. 

There was no sign of Gardner now  until they heard sounds from  above, scuffing, scraping sounds. 

They ran up a flight of stairs. Doc had his flashlight out. A  moment later they dived through a door into the

room that faced on the  balcony. 

On the floor lay the cane Gardner had carried. Near it were wet  crimson spots. A chair was upset. 

"Been a fight," said Pace. "A fight, sure! But was it the taxi  driver, or was Gardner being seized. Is this

Gardner's blood, or the  taxi driver's? That's the question." 

Doc Savage lunged forward, swooped, and picked up a shiny limp  fragment from the floor. It was a bit of

silver cloth, ragged, as if  torn from one of the weird garments of the mysterious silver men. 

"They got Gardner," Pace muttered. "Or did they?" 

Doc Savage glided to the nearest door, opened it and went through. 

Pace, slow in following, reached the door and seemed frightened by  the darkness beyond. He squirmed

uncertainly, his habitual nervousness  even more pronounced. 

The upshot of his hesitancy was that Pace, instead of following  Doc, went back upstairs and got the gun

which Doc had taken from  Gardner. 

Then Pace eased from the room and through the darkened house, the  automatic ready in his hand, a grim

expression on his features. 

SOME moments later, in the murk beside one of the imitation slave  houses which stood near the white

mansion, a sinister meeting occurred.  There was an elaborate garden about the slave cabins, with tall

flowering plants arrayed in neat rows. These formed an ideal  concealment for furtive comings and goings. 

Two silver men were just being joined by a third. 

"UII?" one of the two whispered suspiciously, drawing a gun. 

"Yes, it's me  UII," hissed the newcomer. 

"Did you see who was breaking them doors down?" asked the other,  replacing his gun in its holster. 

"It's Doc Savage," grated Ull. 

"But I thought  " 


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"I know," UII snarled. "He must have avoided that grenade at the  flier's apartment. He is not dead." 

The first man swore quietly, briefly. "Then what are we going to  do? If we hadn't shot that taxi driver when

he tried to run  " 

UII considered, a harridan figure in his allenveloping disguise of  silver which shimmered slightly in the

moonlight. 

"Everything else has turned out all right," he said finally. "The  safest thing for us to do is leave here. The rest

of our party went on  ahead, did they not?" 

"They did," said the first. 

UlI gave the fellow a shove. "Then get a move on. We will join  them." 

The three furtive figures had taken scarcely a step when they were  brought up by a voice. It came from the

slave hut window. 

"You fools!" said this new speaker. "You are overlooking a chance." 

Two of the silver men started violently and wrenched out weapons.  UII, grabbing at their arms, swore in an

angry whisper. 

"This is the master!" he grated. 

The other two obviously had never heard the voice before, but at  UII's words, they seemed profoundly

impressed. 

"You mean  the big shot who is behind all this?" one stuttered. 

UII ignored him and addressed the window behind which the unseen  speaker lurked. "You say we are

overlooking a chance? What is it? And  what are you doing here?" 

"An opportunity to get rid of Doc Savage," said the Voice from the  window murk. "And never mind what I

am doing here." 

"But it is too risky to rush him," UII protested. "The man is a  walking storehouse of scientific weapons.

Twice as many men as I have  could not overcome him." 

The tone of the concealed mastermind took on an edge. "You do not  underrate an enemy, do you?" 

"Not if I can help it," said UII. "And I have seen this fellow  work. To rush him would be too dangerous." 

"I am going to throw you a package," said the voice inside the  cabin. "Catch it!" 

An instant later, a small packet sailed out into the moonlight and  UlI cupped it successfully in a silvergloved

palm. The parcel seemed  to be a bottle, carefully wrapped, for it gurgled as it hit UII's hand. 

"Come close under the window," the unseen chief directed. "I want  to give you explicit directions." 


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UII crept near, and their voices dropped so that even the two who  waited near by in the garden, the two who

had been with UII, could not  hear what was said. 

These two kept eyes avidly on the window, for they had never seen  this mysterious chief, this sinister one of

great ingenuity, who was  their real leader. Nor did they see him now. The fellow did not show  himself. 

INSIDE the big white house, Doc Savage was pushing his search for  some sign of Gardner or the silver men.

Doc did not use undue haste,  for that, in the perilous career which he led, was synonymous with  risking

sudden death. 

He heard sounds after a time  some one moving. He waited. The  prowler seemed to be coming from

outdoors. The bronze man used his  sensitive ears to their fullest, noting particularly the number of  nervous

moves which the skulker made. This identified the man. 

"Pace," he said quietly. 

Rapid Pace emitted a loud gasp, and struck a match. He seemed  relieved at sight of Doc. 

"I have been looking for you," he gulped. "Yes, sir, looking for  you. I was outside." 

"Where did you get the gun?" Doc questioned. 

Pace glanced down at his weapon. "It is the one Gardner had. I got  it. I had no cartridges, of course, but just

holding the gun kind of  makes me feel more  well, brave." 

"Hear anything of Gardner?" Doc asked. 

Pace denied this, and they continued their hunt in company. The  efficiency expert seemed never to run out of

conversation, and he began  whispering his personal opinion in the darkness until Doc reminded him  that the

noise would make an excellent target. 

"I think Gardner is behind all this," Pace breathed, and fell  silent. 

They moved outdoors, kept to the shadowbanked side of the house  and moved to the right, toward the spot

where the body of the murdered  taxi driver had fallen. Doc peered around a corner. 

For an instant, the bronze man's weird trilling note came into  being. Hardly audible, it trailed up and down

the musical scale,  fantastic in its vague similitude to the cadence of an exotic tropical  bird. It had been

brought forth by surprise. 

Over the prone form of the slain cab driver crouched a second  silver figure. This individual held a glass

bottle; he was sprinkling  the contents on the clothing of the corpse. 

Doc stepped into View. The silver man looked up, bleated and threw  the bottle. Doc whipped back to let it go

past. A few drops of liquid,  showering from the bottle as it gyrated, spilled on the bronze man's  coat. 

Doc promptly wrenched the coat off, lunging for the silver figure  as he did so. 

The silver man ran. But his pace was wild with haste, his metallic  garment slightly clumsy, and he stumbled.

Down on all fours he slapped.  Twisting his head over his shoulder, he saw that Doc was almost upon  him. 


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Beside the silver man was a low basement window. Without thought of  glass cuts, he rolled into the window,

knocked the sash out with head  and shoulders and vanished within. 

Doc Savage flung his coat aside and rapped at Pace, "Keep away from  that coat. Don't touch the body,

either!" 

Pace barked, "But what  " 

"Contact poison!" Doc shouted. "An acid and some sort of toxin in  solution. A trick to kill whoever touched

the corpse!" 

The last words were lost in a crashing noise as Doc kicked the  basement sash out and dived inside. He hit the

concrete floor lightly,  let the rebound carry him to one side. 

Flame plunged through the basement murk, a yardlong tongue; powder  bellow accompanied it. The bullet

made a hammering sound against the  wall. 

Doc, seeing darkness with his hands, found a chair with one leg  missing. He shied it at the gun flame source,

but got only the noise of  the chair striking. The gunman had shifted position. 

Came a dull patpatpat noise and Doc, looking up through the  window, saw Rapid Pace's head and

shoulders recede in the moonlight.  The efficiency expert was living up to his name  he was fleeing across

the lawn. The situation had gotten the best of his nerves. 

Doc advanced under cover of the sound. He passed the spot where the  powder fumes were thickest, and made

for the opposite side of the  basement. The quarry would be over there somewhere. 

Bending low, Doc drifted a hand over the concrete floor. Like most  basements, this one was covered with a

film of gritty dust. The stuff  did not grind audibly under Doc's shoe soles, because they were of  rubber  not

ordinary rubber, but the soft sponge variety. But the grit  would make sound under ordinary shoes, even

rubber heels of the prosaic  type. 

As Doc had hoped, the grit gave the silver man away. Doc heard the  fellow drift slowly nearer through the

gloom. When the man was near,  the bronze giant leaped. 

Doc did not flail blows or try to hold the man. He simply found the  fellow's neck and grasped the back of it

with corded fingers. 

Doc Savage was skilled in many lines, but easily his greatest  knowledge was in the field of surgery, of human

anatomy. He knew the  location of certain nerve centers on which pressure, properly applied,  produced a

temporary paralysis. 

The silver man went limp under Doc's fingers. 

DOC called through the smashed window, "Pace! Everything is all  right!" 

It was not a desire for Pace's company that moved Doc to call. The  efficiency expert, with his aggravating

habit of repeating half of what  he said, was as tiresome a companion as Doc could recall encountering.  Pace

was shy on nerve, as well. 


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But Doc wanted to keep all threads of this weird mystery of the  silver man as closely at hand as possible. And

Pace might be one of the  threads. 

Rapid Pace appeared at the basement window, after giving the  poisoned corpse a wide berth. Another man

might have been sheepish over  the recent show of cowardice, but not Pace. 

"I was looking for another weapon," said Pace. "You know, a club or  something." 

Doc said nothing, but used his flashlight to locate a switch which  filled the basement with light. Then he went

to the man in silver and  stripped off the hooded mask. 

A rather square, stupid face was revealed. The eyes were ugly, the  mouth twisted in a perpetual sneer. 

"A typical crook," said Rapid Pace. "Yes, typical." 

Doc searched the fellow, but found nothing to indicate the man's  name. The fellow, unable to move or speak

because of the weird  paralysis, could only glare. 

Doc turned him over, adjusted the thick neck and exerted pressure  with skilled finger tips. The results were

amazing. The victim began to  squirm in an endeavor to sit up. 

"Lemme go!" he snarled. Fear rasped in his coarse Voice, and he  stared at Doc's hands, at the sinews that

were like bundled cables. 

"There are two things I want to know," Doc told him quietly. 

"T'hell wit' yer!" snarled the thug. 

"What happened to my two aides, Monk and Ham? Where are they now?"  Doc spoke slowly, and the

ominous undertones of his great voice caused  the listener on the floor to cringe involuntarily. "That is the first

thing I want to know. The second is: What is behind all of this  melodramatic business of the silver

disguises?" 

The evilfaced man wet his lip nervously, hesitated, then snarled,  "I dunno a t'ing, s'help me!" 

"Hit him, Mr. Savage," suggested Rapid Pace. "His type cannot stand  physical pain." 

"Yer been takin' in de movies," sneered the other. "1 can take all  yer got." 

"Hold him, Mr. Savage," Pace urged. "I'll try busting him one on  the nose. Hey  what  " 

Doc, lashing out an arm, upset Pace. Simultaneously, the basement  quaked with gun sound. A shot had been

fired from the window  not at  Pace, but at Doc himself. 

The slug smashed against Doc's bulletproof vest. Despite his great  physique, air was driven from his lungs

and he was half turned. 

A long lunge carried him to the shelter of a cellar pillar. Rapid  Pace was safe where he had been propelled by

Doc's shove. 


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There was movement at the window. A pistol came gyratmg through the  air and landed on the lap of the man

Doc had been questioning. No words  were spoken. None were needed. The fellow clutched the gun avidly

and  wheeled in Doc's direction. 

The bronze man seemed, for a moment, caught between two fires. If  he left the shelter of the pillar, he would

be in range from the window   and the marksman would be intelligent enough to shoot at his head  this time. 

The thug on the floor heaved up for a deliberate aim. 

Doc flattened closer to the pillar. His right hand seemed to  vanish, so swiftly did it move. It dipped into his

coat and came out  with the only weapon at hand  the collapsible grappling hook with its  silken cord. The

cord was wound tightly around the hook, adding weight  to it. Doc threw the device, threw it with all the

violence he could  muster from tremendous thews. The gunman's hand was not a difficult  target; any baseball

pitcher of ability should have been able to hit  it. 

The thug howled. His gun, knocked from his band, skittered toward  Rapid Pace. 

THE man on the floor peered abruptly at his hands. It was as if he  were surprised by something he had

discovered on the somewhat grimy  paws. Then he began to scream. His voice held terror. 

Pace reached for the gun which had been tossed to the thug. 

"Don't!" Doc rapped  and Pace jerked his hand back, stared  stupidly at Doc, then at the thug on the floor,

and his eyes flew wide  with horror. 

The thug was becoming mottled of face. He made gagging sounds. A  hideous foam came to his lips, and he

twisted with a convulsive  violence. 

"That gun  stuff off corpse  on handle!" he choked. 

Doc took a chance, leaped and broke the one electric light bulb  with a snap of his hand. Darkness descended.

There was no shooting from  the window, the person outside evidently having departed. 

Doc wheeled back and seized the stricken man, then moved him to the  shelter of the pillar. 

"Your chance to get back at them," Doc said rapidly. "The grip of  the gun that was tossed to you was smeared

with some of the poison you  were putting on the body. It was a trick to kill you, to shut you up,  just on the

chance that you would fail to get me." 

"Damn  damn Ull!" the groveling man choked. "What you  want  know?" 

"Where are my two assistants, Monk and Ham?" Doc rapped. 

"Indian's Head," mumbled the man. 

"Where?" Doc asked. 

The stricken one was having difficulty with his words. The strange  poison seemed to work with uncanny

speed. 

"The Indian's Head  both there," he labored. 


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"What is this Indian's Head?" Doc demanded. 

But the man seemed not to hear. 

"UlI  not brains  back of Silver Death'sHeads," he said, and the  words seemed to come from a bag which

had leaked almost empty. 

"Who is the chief?" Doc snapped. 

There was no answer. 

The bronze man made a brief examination. He was careful not to  touch the hands with which the other had

gripped the gun tossed to him  from the window. 

"Dead," Doc said. 

Chapter 8. THE BIG MYSTERY

HEAVY silence hung in the gloomy basement. Outside, there was no  sound hut the faint shuffle of night

breeze in the shrubbery. In the  distance a dog moonbayed mournfully, then, far up the Hudson, a boat

whistle blew a deep note. 

Doc Savage glided to the window, careful not to disturb the broken  glass on the floor inside. He heard

nothing. A quick glance showed him  no one. 

The bronze man did not go outside through the window, for that  would be inviting a shot. Instead, he

ascended stairs, worked through  hallways and let himself out through a rear door. He began a search. 

He found no one. The gunman who had fired through the window had  disappeared  not a difficult task, since

there had been time for him  to flee. 

Back in the house, Doc addressed Rapid Pace. "Do you want to stay  here and watch things until the police

arrive?" 

Rapid Pace shuddered so violently that he almost fell down. "Stay  with these two dead men?" he gulped.

"Not me! No sir!" 

Doc, however, had decided the efficiency expert was a liability. 

"There will probably be much more violence before I find my two  men, Monk and Ham," be pointed out. 

Pace groaned, "I shall take my chances with you. Yes, with you. You  seemed to bear a charmed life. Just

being around you braces my  " 

"Shhh," admonished Doc. "Listen!" 

The breeze made leaves flutter outside the basement window; the dog  was still baying the moon in the far

distance. Chunk! The sound was  dull, as if soft dough had been dropped on a board. Chunk! It came  again. 

"The Silver Death's  Heads haven't ggone!" Pace stuttered. 


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"Come!" Doc rapped, and swung up the stairs that led to the second  floor. 

They heard the sound again  more of a hollow thumping this time.  It came from the front, from a bedroom.

Doc swung into the chamber,  across it, and opened a closet door. 

A man fell out. He was bound and gagged, and had been making the  noises by thumping the door with his

head. Doc untied him and extracted  the gag. 

The man was a powerful, handsome fellow in his early thirties. His  hair was dark and thick, a bit shiny with a

pleasantly aromatic oil,  and the sideburns in front of his ears were cut, not squarely across,  but slanting. His

complexion was as perfect as a woman's; his eyelashes  were long. But his strapping physique kept him from

seeming unnaturally  pretty. 

Rapid Pace took one look at the stranger and groaned, "Hugh McCoy,  of all people!" 

"You have seen him before?" Doc demanded. 

"I have seen entirely too much of him," Pace said gloomily. "He has  been hanging around the shipyard a lot

lately. Er  Lorna Zane was the  attraction. Yes, she was the attraction." 

Hugh McCoy managed to get up on his feet, although his muscles  apparently were cramped. He rubbed and

kneaded himself briskly. It  became apparent that his suit was of most expensive tailoring. 

"What happened to you?" Doc asked him. 

McCoy studied the bronze man briefly, then said, "Some one leaped  onto me from behind and overpowered

me." 

"Who was it?" Doc asked. 

"It must have been Bedford Burgess Gardner," McCoy snapped. 

DOC indicated the door. "We will talk while moving. Two of my men  have been seized by Silver

Death'sHeads, and everything but their  rescue is secondary." 

"But you haven't got a clue to where your two men may be," Rapid  Pace protested. "That man in the

basement did gasp something about an  Indian's head, but I do not see how that is going to help you." 

Doc ignored that, said, "Hurry!" and they clattered down the stairs  and out into the night, swung boldly across

the lawn and reached Doc's  roadster without anything happening. 

The machine chased the white funnels of its own headlights through  the night, like a quiet black ghost

hurtling after some lustrous siren. 

"You saw Gardner attack you?" Doc queried of Hugh McCoy. 

McCoy shook his head. "It was dark. I saw no one. But it must have  been Gardner, because there was no one

else in the house. The  blackwhiskered old devil!" 

"Any idea why you were attacked?" 


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"To get me out of the way," McCoy said, and shrugged. "I know of no  other reason." 

"I wonder," Pace put in. 

McCoy stared coldly at the efficiency expert. Pace returned the  frosty look with interest. It was apparent that

no love existed between  these two. 

"Just what are you driving at?" McCoy asked harshly. 

Rapid Pace snapped, "Your story sounds fishy to me! Yes, fishy!" 

McCoy's features darkened in the back glow of the car headlights.  He made one hand into a hard square fist

and drew it back wrathfully. 

"I'll cave your face in!" Then he lowered the fist. "No, I won't  either. You're just a sorehead. Peeved because

Miss Zane has gone out  with me a few times, aren't you?" 

"Let's not bring Miss Zane into it," Pace suggested stiffly. 

Doc nursed the roadster over a bridge, where their speed caused the  machine to travel a score of feet with all

wheels off the ground. 

"Drop the personalities," he suggested. "McCoy, what were you doing  at Gardner's house tonight?" 

"I am a financial relations counsel, by profession," McCoy began.  "I  " 

"A general fourflusher would be more like it," Rapid Pace sneered. 

"Shut up or I'll crown you!" McCoy snapped. "Mr. Savage, I am a  financial relations counsel." 

"Just what does that mean?" Doc interposed. 

"I give corporations and business concerns financial advice,"  explained McCoy. "Sometimes, I take charge of

disputes between  companies, serving as intermediary to get things settled amicably. For  instance, take the

currently discussed merger between Gardner's  shipping company, and the steamship concern and shipyard

owned by Paine  L. Winthrop. Gardner called me in as consultant. I looked over the  situation and advised the

merger. Winthrop, however, opposed it. I was  at Gardner's house tonight discussing the matter." 

"Did you," Doc queried, "know that Paine L. Winthrop was murdered  late this afternoon." 

"Hell, no!" Hugh McCoy said feelingly. "Who killed him?" 

"The Silver Death'sHeads, undoubtedly," Doc answered. 

Mccoy shook his head slowly. "How was it done?" 

"With a shell from a threeinch cannon," Doc replied. 

"Listen," McCoy exploded. "Are you serious?" 

"Do you," Doc asked, "know anything about this mystery?" 


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"Not a thing!" McCoy said vehemently. 

Doc Savage seemed on the point of putting another question, but  instead, he applied the brakes, bringing the

roadster to a sharp stop.  They were approaching one of the bridges which led over the Harlem  River into

Manhattan. 

A squad of policemen with riot guns and teargas bombs was barring  their way. 

A BURLY sergeant advanced, recognized Doc Savage, stepped back  hastily and motioned the car on. But

Doc tarried to ask questions. He  wanted to know what happened. 

"Why the blockading party at the bridge, officer?" he queried. 

"It's them blasted Silver Death'sHeads," said the cop. "We have  all the bridges an' ferries an' the subways

blocked. We'll get 'em." 

"Have the silver men done anything since the murder of Paine L.  Winthrop?" Doc questioned. 

"Done anything!" the policeman exploded. "They've been running  wild. They robbed a string of movie

theaters, blew open a bank vault,  and looted three jewelry stores. They worked like an army. They've got  gas

masks inside them Silver hoods they wear, and they've got  bulletproof vests, machine guns and gas grenades.

They're the worst  thing this town has ever seen. 

"Any trace of where they go to?" Doc asked. 

"No  nor where they come from, either," groaned the officer.  "Except maybe it must be somewhere in the

East River waterfront  district. After their jobs, they seem to flee in that direction." 

Doc Savage drove on. Signs that the law enforcement agencies of the  city were on edge was evident at point

after point. Instead of one  traffic cop on duty at a corner, there were two, or even three, and an  unusual

number of radio cars were prowling. 

"But we have been chasing the silver men all evening," Rapid Pace  remarked. "It does not seem possible that

they could have committed the  robberies the policeman told about. No sir." 

"The organization must be large," Doc told him. "We have been  following only a small portion of the gang." 

"Where are we going?" Hugh McCoy asked abruptly. 

Instead of replying, Doc Savage swung the roadster up before an  allnight drug store which displayed a

telephone sign, entered and  thumbed through the directories. 

Pace and McCoy, following him in, were interested observers. 

In the directory, Doc found numerous concerns which used the name  "Indian Head." He moved a metallic

finger down the list.  "We will try  this one," he said, and stopped his finger at: 

Indian Head Club 

Pace squinted, then asked, "But why this particular one?" 


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"Notice the address," Doc suggested. "It is in the Brooklyn  waterfront district, across from the Manhattan

side of the East River  where the crooks have been disappearing On Wallow Street, to be exact.  After their

crimes, they ferried in some manner across to the Brooklyn  shore." 

"Have you," Hugh McCoy asked abruptly, "any objection to my doing  my bit to aid you? I have a personal

interest in this matter." 

Doc's flakegold eyes were inscrutable. "Personal interest?" he  queried. 

"I am on Gardner's pay roll," McCoy elaborated. "I do not like to  have anything put over on me. Gardner has

been acting uneasily of late,  which leads me to think something is queer. If anything is wrong, I  would be

involved  in the minds of the public at least. If I have been  working for a crook, I want to be known as one

of those who helped put  him behind bars." 

"You think Gardner is a crook?" Doc asked sharply. 

"Gardner might be the leader of the Silver Death'sHeads," MCCoy  reminded. 

WALLOW Street was a narrow, teeming alley full of odors and gloom.  The thoroughfare was less than half a

dozen blocks long, with the first  two blocks, the two up on the hill, lined with tenements of the lowest  type.

The other four blocks housed sail lofts, warerooms, and shops  dealing in ship supplies. 

Wallow Street ended at the water front, where piers bulked gloomily  and the polluted water of the East River

sloshed and eddied. At this  hour, the section down by the water was deserted, while farther up in  the

tenement stretch, wretched inhabitants draped themselves on fire  escapes and rooftops to escape the

fogsoaked warmth. 

Rapid Pace and Hugh McCoy were silent as Doc guided the roadster  into Wallow Street. They were still

showing a coldness toward each  other, neither having addressed a word to the other since entering the  city. 

Doc pulled into a side street, stopped the roadster and motioned  McCoy and Pace back when they moved to

get out. 

"You two stay here," he directed. 

Then the smelly darkness seemed to absorb the bronze giant. There  was no sound to indicate which way he

had gone. Pace and McCoy watched  the corners, where street lights were brilliant, expecting to see the

bronze man. But, to their amazement, he did not appear. 

They should have watched the roof line along the street. They might  have seen Doc Savage poise for an

instant against the foggorged sky,  after he had climbed a heavy metal drain pipe. 

There was no sign of life on the rooftops, but Doc went forward as  warily as if he were stalking an

abnormally alert sentinel. The roofs  were level, except for one stretch a floor lower than the rest, an  obstacle

which Doc bridged by use of his grapple and silk line. 

Advancing to the forward edge of the roof, he employed a thin  periscope device to scrutinize the street. This

apparatus functioned  remarkably well in the darkness. 

INDIAN HEAD CLUB 


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The sign was almost below, the letters arrayed around a gaudy  likeness of a redskin brave's head. The

building was as devoid of  lights as the black, sombre warehouses on either side. 

Doc retreated. Buildings such as this usually had roof hatches. Doc  searched and found one, and pressed an

ear to  it. He listened for a  long time, but heard nothing from within. 

Doc did not enter the hatch, but moved to the rear of the building,  slid down his grapple cord with the hook

affixed behind a chimney, and  reached a window. 

The glass pane in this was large. Doc's flashlight came out,  protruded a beam little thicker than a lead pencil,

and he examined the  edge of the glass where it was puttied in. He dug very carefully with  his penknife. 

What he eventually found was so well concealed that it almost  evaded his intent scrutiny. Affixed in the putty

was a hairfine wire  of copper. Had he carelessly tried to remove the putty, the wire would  have been broken,

setting off an alarm somewhere. 

The discovery was proof that his caution was not wasted. The roof  hatch, of course, would be fitted with

another alarm. 

With a penknife Doc went to work, carefully uncovering the fine  wire, locating its terminals. He twisted them

together, forming a short  circuit that would keep the alarm system electromagnets energized.  Without this

shortcircuiting, he would not have been able to remove  the glass without actuating the ingenious device. 

He now removed the glass. 

Before entering, Doc clambered back up the roof. He ran boldly to  the hatch, gave it a wrench, and it came

open. 

Doc whipped back to his grapple cord, slid down to the window he  bad operated upon, freed the grapple with

a jerk, and rolled it up and  pocketed it as he eased into the Indian Head Club. 

He advanced silently, eased through a door  and found proof that  his precautions were wise. 

Four grim figures in silver crouched at the end of the hallway,  scarcely discernible in the vague light which

came down through the  open hatch. Doc took a chance on the floor squeaking, and crept a bit  closer. 

"Be sure the silencers are on your guns," said a coarse whisper. 

"Why don't the guy who opened that hatch come on down?" grated  another. 

Perhaps a minute of grim waiting ticked by. 

"Two of you go back and watch Savage's two buddies," breathed the  coarser whisper. 

Two silver men detached from the group and eased along the hallway  and down a flight of stairs. They did

not see Doc Savage, for the  bronze man was moving ahead of them. 

Doc was doing a strange thing as he glided along: in one of his  hands was a small can with a perforated top,

not unlike the containers  in which talcum powder is often sold. From time to time he sprinkled  some of the

contents on the floor behind him. The powder was dark, and  did not show up in the darkness. 


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The two silver men reached a door, shoved it open and thumbed on  flashlights. A glance within seemed to

satisfy them. 

"They'll never get away," said one. "Come on. Let's take a look at  the back door. I don't like that business of

the roof hatch opening.  Somebody might've done that to cover up while they got inside some  other way." 

"Nobody could get in without setting off an alarm," the other  snorted skeptically. 

"We'll take a look, anyhow." 

The two men retreated. 

They were hardly around a corner when Doc appeared at the door, got  it open and passed through. His

flashlight traced its white thread. 

Big, apish Monk and slender, dapper Ham were handcuffed, wrist and  ankle. In addition, wrist shackles were

linked to ankle manacles. Both  their lips and eyes were taped, the strips almost concealing their  features. 

The manacle locks were simple. They surrendered quickly to Doc's  metal probe. He got the gags off with

quick jerks  the least painful  method. 

Monk, making a snarling sound, reached up and uncovered his eyes.  He saw Doc, gulped and dropped the fist

with which he was preparing to  drive a blow. 

"Glory be!" he grinned. "I knew it was only a question of time  until you got here!" 

The door snapped open. A silverhooded head thrust in, attracted no  doubt by the noise Monk had made. The

observer let out an earsplitting  yell. 

DOC scooped up a heavy handcuff and snapped it at the door. The  head jerked back. The manacles struck the

wood so hard that splinters  were torn off. With a slam, the door was yanked shut. 

From the hallway came a sound reminiscent of buckshot being poured  on a taut bed sheet  a silenced

machine gun. Its clamor was not as  loud as the uproar made by the slugs tearing through the door. 

Monk was on his feet. Shoving, Doc propelled him to a corner. Ham  was jerking at the tape over his eyes.

Doc pitched him bodily after  Monk, clear of the leaden storm. 

In the hallway, there was shouting and the pound of racing feet.  The silver men were gathering to the attack. 

The room which held Doc and his two men were fitted with easy  chairs, tables and smoking stands. Doc

heaved a chair at a window, and  it went through with a great jangling of glass. 

Three silenced rapidfirers were stuttering in the hall. But the  weapons, firing cartridges of pistol caliber,

could not penetrate the  walls. The door, however, mangled by metal, toppled off its hinges. 

A silvergloved hand thrust a machine gun inside. Monk threw a  smoking stand. It hit the hand; the owner

screamed, and his gun  skittered across the floor. 

Monk started for the weapon, willing to chance being shot in order  to get it. 


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"Wait!" Doc rapped. 

The bronze man stripped off the light alloy metal mail which he  wore to protect his torso from bullets. He

spread this over a cheap,  overstuffed chair, making a mobile shield. Using this, Monk scuttled  across the

floor. 

The mail jumped and whipped under the impact of lead, and flattened  bullets fell from it to the floor. But

Monk got the rapidfirer. He  loosened a brief burst of fire  and outside, a man squawked in agony. 

"They're wearing bulletproof vests," Monk said grimly. "You've got  to shoot at their legs or their heads. I got

that one in the legs." 

Monk's single burst had a remarkable effect, for the shooting  outside suddenly ceased. Footsteps pounded,

grew fainter. Monk promptly  charged outside, holding Doc's bulletproof garment in front of his  chest. 

"Sounds like they're heading for the back!" he roared. 

Doc and Ham followed. They could hear the running feet  until  silence fell unexpectedly. 

On the floor was a spattering of crimson which had come from the  leg of the man Monk had shot. Doc

followed the trail, but not for far.  It ended, indicating the injured one had stemmed the scarlet flow,  perhaps

with a handkerchief. 

"It's a cinch they didn't leave the place," Monk rumbled. "We'll  find 'em." 

"Watch the doors." Doc directed. 

Monk raced to the front entrance, and almost at once there was a  violent scuffle. It subsided quickly. 

"Doc, I've got one!" Monk called. "Caught him just inside!" 

Doc Savage, running to the spot, found the homely chemist holding a  very frightened young man speared on

the muzzle of his gun. 

The frightened individual was Rapid Pace. 

"WE hheard ffighting," Rapid Pace stuttered. "We decided to  hhave a look." 

"Where is McCoy?" Doc demanded. 

"He took the back way," said Pace. "Yyes, the back way." 

"Did you see any one running from the club?" 

"No," said Pace. "No, sir." 

Doc studied Rapid Pace for a moment. It had taken quite a degree of  nerve to enter the Indian Head Club as

Pace had done. The efficiency  expert was a puzzle; at times he exhibited plenty of nerve, at other  times none

at all. 


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Hugh McCoy, appearing from the rear door, put a halt to Doc's  character appraisal. No one, asserted McCoy

emphatically, had fled down  the alley which ran past the back door. 

"But they went somewhere," said Monk. 

Monk had returned to his habitual tinyvoiced manner of speaking,  in marked contrast to his gusty roaring

when he was in action. Monk  liked plenty of noise with his fights. 

"We will," Doc stated, "pull this place apart if necessary, to find  where those four silver men went. Monk,

Ham  did you overhear anything  to indicate who is behind this affair?" 

"There is a mastermind," Ham offered crisply. "He is a fellow who  remains in the background. He does not

even mingle with his gang. Some  of the gang do not even know him by sight. We did not get his name, or

overhear anything to indicate his identity." 

"A bird named Ull is first lieutenant to this chief," Monk put in.  "This Ull is no dunce himself. He is a

scientist, from what I  overheard. He has invented a lot of things these Silver Deaths'sHeads  use  their

disguises for instance, and bulletproof vests which are  almost as efficient as our own. Too, he mixed up a

poison which kills  you when you touch it." 

Doc's gaze, roving, eyed a telephone. 

"Wait," he directed, and went to the instrument. Lifting the  receiver, he found it alive. He dialed a number,

then heard the ringer  operate the distant phone twice before a receiver came up. 

"Park Avenue Beautician," said a cultured feminine voice. 

"Miss Savage," Doc requested. 

A moment later another voice said, "Miss Patricia Savage speaking." 

"Is Lorna Zane safe?" Doc asked. 

"She is unless she succumbs from some of my beauty treatments," Pat  advised. "I told her anything she

wanted was free while she was with  me. And did she take advantage of it! She started with my Special

Egyptian Clay Pack Facial, and is going right down the list. Doc, do  you know what I think?" 

"Better put a guard over her," Doc suggested. 

"Sure," Pat agreed. "Doc, I think she is setting her cap for you.  She keeps wanting to know about you." 

Doc said dryly, "Try to discourage her," and hung up. 

Chapter 9. THE CAPTURE

PATRICIA Savage smiled as she hung up. because she knew that Doc  was as womanproof as any man

could be. Feminine attention only  embarrassed Doc, and Pat, womanlike, enjoyed kidding him. More the

pity, too, because there was no doubt but that Lorna Zane was actually  entranced by the bronze giant, and

Lorna was not only a beauty, but she  had good sense and ability as well. No one without ability could run a

shipyard. 


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"Poor Lorna," sighed Pat aloud. "She's bumping her head against a  stone wall." 

"And you, sister," said a cold voice, "are going to bump into some  lead if you don't behave!" 

Pat started violently and whirled. The windows of her private  office were adorned with drapes which hung to

the floor. From behind  one of these, a man had stepped. At least, Pat decided be was a man,  since the voice

was too coarse to come from a feminine source. The  fellow was garbed in one of the weird silver regalias. 

"What," Pat demanded, "does this mean?" 

"Never mind that," growled the silver man. "Call that Zane dame in  here." 

The speaker moved his right hand, silvergloved, to emphasize the  presence of the pistol which he held. 

Pat studied the gun. She was outwardly calm, and looked very chic  in an evening gown from one of the city's

finest designers. 

"Get a jump on," advised the silver man. 

"All right," Pat said, and picked up an interoffice telephone. 

Leaping swiftly, the silver man wrenched the instrument from Pat's  fingers and clapped it back on the hook. 

"What in blazes are you tryin' to pull?" he grated. 

"That phone connects to the operator who is now dressing Miss  Zane's hair," Pat explained. "I was going to

call her. If you don't  believe me, call her yourself." 

The other hesitated, thinking the matter over. 

"You got some men working in this joint, ain't you?" he grunted. 

"Of course," said Pat. "Very handsome men, too. The older society  matrons like that." 

"Yeah," the silver man leered. "Well, I'll take a chance on 'em  thinking it's one of your men callin'." 

He picked up the instrument, which was one of the cradle type   receiver and mouthpiece on one arm  and

began: "I want to talk to the  operator dressing Miss Zane's hair  " 

That was as far as he got, because a popping noise interrupted him.  He dropped the instrument and staggered

back, gasping and blinking. He  seemed to forget that he held a gun, and pawed at the eyeholes in his  mask. 

Pat lunged, seized his gun with both hands, wrenched and got it.  She sprang back triumphantly. Because she

helped Doc Savage  occasionally, she was sometimes in danger, and she had taken  precautions. This trick

telephone was one of them. 

It was not connected to anything; but the mouthpiece, when spoken  into, ejected a tiny spray of tear gas. She

had borrowed the device  from Doc Savage, who had fashioned countless such trick contrivances. 

"When you get around to it," Pat advised, "you can put up your  hands." 


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The silver man snarled incoherently and kept on pawing at his  masked features. The noises he made in his

agony and rage were bubbling  and babylike. They were loud enough to cover the sound, if any, as a  second

silver man appeared in the open door behind Pat and advanced  swiftly, lifting a gun clubfashion. 

The gun bludgeoned down heavily. Pat moaned and collapsed to her  knees. 

"A wise dame," said the newcomer. "But not wise enough." 

WHILE still stunned, Pat was jerked up and slammed into a chair.  The same gun which had clubbed her was

shoved into her face. 

"Don't think I'm finicky about usin' it on a dame, neither!" the  man advised her. "We got too much at stake to

take chances on the works  bein' gummed." 

Pat sat very still, and said thickly, "The last thing I would think  of doing is gumming anybody's works." 

"You take a lot of killin', don't you," the other jeered, half  admiringly. Then he snapped at his companion:

"Get over in the corner  to that water cooler and wash your eyes." 

The blinded man stumbled to the water cooler, spilled water down  the front of his clothing, but finally

managed to bathe his eyes. By  that time the effects of the tear gas had started subsiding, and he was  soon able

to use his orbs. With gusto, he took over the task of  guarding Pat. 

"Pull a funny one on me, will you," he gritted at the young woman.  "I oughta hand you yours right here!" 

"Nix," said the other. "This hank of hair goes with us. The big  shot's orders." 

"You mean," Pat demanded, "that I am going to be honored with your  companionship?" 

"You get the idea." 

"Why?" Pat wanted to know. 

The silver man squinted at her through the eyeholes in his mask.  "This guy Doc Savage thinks a lot of you,

don't he?" 

"I suspect," said Pat, "that Doc sometimes wishes I had never been  horn. You would he surprised how much

time he has to spend rescuing me  from trouble." 

The silver man laughed harshly. "0. K. Now he's gonna have another  chance." 

Pat snapped, "I fail to follow you." 

"Live bait, sister," the other sneered. "Get it? We use you to pull  the bronze guy into a trap." 

"Is that why you kept Monk and Ham alive?" Pat asked. 

Teeth made a gritting noise behind the silver mask. "So you know  that Savage got 'em away from us, eh?" 

Pat had not known this. Doc, with a reticence characteristic of  himself, had neglected to tell her over the

telephone, Pat smiled  cheerfully into the gun muzzle. 


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"My feminine intuition or something tells me you fellows will be  better off if you drop everything and hunt a

nice hideout in  let us  say  Timbuktu," she advised. 

"Your intuition had better show you when it's wise to pipe down,"  the other grated, and shoved his gun closer

to her face. 

"Can the chatter," said the second silver man, who was carefully  examining the telephones on Pat's desk. He

picked up one, held it  gingerly, got the operator, and seemed satisfied there was no trick. 

"Will you send Miss Zane to Miss Savage's offices," he requested,  then put the instrument down, scowled at

Pat and added, "You had better  hope that scheme works." 

THE scheme worked as perfectly as the two silver men could have  wished. Lorna Zane, unsuspicious,

freshened and more entrancingly  pretty than ever, came swinging in. She was an advertisement for the

effectiveness of Pat's beauticians. 

The two men, stepping to her side as she came through the door, put  guns to her side and chorused, "Do the

wise thing, sister!" 

Lorna Zane looked at the two men, then at Pat. 

"Sorry," said Pat. "I did all I could." 

"I could scream," Lorna stated grimly. "But they would probably  shoot us both." 

"You're damn right we would," she was assured. 

"We're walking you out," advised the second of the two men in the  metallic disguises. "Take the back way." 

Lorna Zane did not move. She stared steadily at the two sinister  figures in silver. 

"What do you want with me?" she demanded. "Why did you try to kill  me at the shipyard?" 

"Don't kid us, sister," sneered the man. "You know why." 

"I do not," Lorna insisted. "And that is the truth." The vehemence  in her tone seemed to penetrate the callous

armor of the two men,  convincing them that she was telling the truth. 

"Let's get this straight," one growled. "Didn't you know what that  blueprint was about?" 

"You mean the print that your gang stole from the safe out at the  shipyard?" Lorna demanded. 

"Sure. You know what it was, didn't you?" 

"No," said Lorna, "I did not." 

The silver man whistled softly, as if amazed. "Didn't old Winthrop  tell you what it was all about?" 

"Emphatically not," Lorna a snapped. 

"Damned if I don't believe you," the man mumbled thoughtfully. 


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The second silver man emitted a gritting laugh. "Say, I see what  happened! Remember when the big boss

threatened Winthrop over the  telephone? Winthrop was scared. He said this dame had the blueprint and  knew

the story, and would go to the cops if anything happened to  Winthrop. We had been keepin' an eye on

Winthrop and knew who had the  blueprint  this dame, here." 

"You think Winthrop stalled to save his neck for a while?" his  companion questioned. 

"It looks like it," the other admitted. 

"Then you'll let me go?" Lorna asked hopefully. 

"Watch us do that!" the man growled. "Get goin', both of you  skirts! Out the back way." 

Pat and Lorna walked meekly ahead of the two gunmen. There was  nothing else for them to do. 

INSTEAD of an alley at the hack of the modernistic skyscraper which  housed Pat's beauty establishment,

there was a large tunnel of an  affair, closed at the street by large steel doors. During the daylight  hours, this

was used by the trucks which had merchandise to deliver to  the building, but at the present late hour, the

tunnel was occupied  only by an innocentappearing truck. 

The truck driver had his collar turned  and his hat was yanked  over his eyes. This, coupled with the

darkness, afforded him a complete  disguise. 

Pat and Lorna did not see his features as they were forced to get  into the hack of the truck, accompanied by

their two captors. The doors  were closed. 

One silver man pressed his metallic mask to a slit in the van and  spoke to the driver. "All set?" 

"Sure," said the driver. 

"And listen  did I get a message that was relayed from the big  boss?" chuckled the other. 

"Savage doesn't know it," the driver advised gleefully. "He's all  set to get his within ten minutes, though.

Everything is fixed. The big  boss himself arranged it." 

"Where is Savage now?" asked the silver man. 

"In the Indian Head Club. He's frisking the joint." 

The silver man swore violently. "Hell, if he ever finds 

"Don't worry," snapped the driver. "He won't find anything but  sudden death. It's all fixed, I tell you. Savage

won't suspect a thing  until  blooje! He'll be done for." 

Pat heard each word. Desperation seized her, and she lunged at the  nearest captor. It was a move doomed to

defeat, because the fellow was  alert. He simply stepped back and sideswiped Pat's head with the barrel  of his

heavy automatic, not hard enough to do violent damage, but  forcibly enough to send her reeling back. 

The van rolled out of the tunnel and into the traffic as the two  men in the rear used tape to gag Pat and Lorna. 

"You'll hear all about the party at the Indian Head Club." 


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Chapter 10. DEATH BLASTS

THE Indian Head Club was outwardly quiet, but there was grim work  underfoot inside. Doc and his party

were searching. 

"This place is more than a hideout," Monk stated firmly. "There's  some secret about it." 

"What makes you think that?" Doc questioned. 

"The way them silver mugs acted," Monk explained. "They were mighty  careful. And I heard one of them

remark that if you or the police found  out what was here, the fat would be in the fire." 

Ham, who was hauling clothing out of a closet, emitted a grunt of  pleasure. He had found his sword cane. 

"Our captors brought this along when they seized us," he said,  flourishing the weapon. "They were curious

about the chemical on the  tip. I heard one of them remark that Ull might make use of it." 

"Yeah," Monk admitted. "This Ull is a brainy cuss, from what they  said." 

Hugh McCoy, flushed and seemingly enjoying the excitement, put in,  "Did either of you gentlemen hear a

mention of Gardner while you were  prisoners?" 

"No," said Monk. "Who's Gardner?" 

"A man who might conceivably be behind the Silver Death'sHeads,"  McCoy replied. 

Rapid Pace snapped, "What makes you suspect Gardner? That is what I  want to know? What makes you

suspect him?" 

"Have you any better suggestion?" McCoy asked coldly. 

Rapid Pace merely glared at McCoy, then wheeled away. 

"We are killing time," he snapped. "The thing to do is find where  those four silver men went to." 

"That will not be difficult," Doc assured him quietly. "Monk, you  watch the rear door. McCoy, you take the

front entrance." 

The bronze man moved out into the street and ran toward the corner  where his roadster stood. The streets

were quiet, except that  lateplaying children made a little noise up in the tenement section.  The fog seemed

to be thicker. 

From the nimble seat of the roadster, Doc got an object which might  have been a press photographer's

camera, but which was actually a  lantern projecting light rays in the ultraviolet range of the  spectrum. 

The device was simple, merely being an electric bulb, battery  operated, which gave off light closely akin to

that of an arc, and a  deep filter which cut out all the light but ultraviolet. 

Doc went back to the house and to the stairway where he had  sprinkled the powder from the shaker during

the time that the silver  men were unwittingly leading him to Monk and Ham. The silver men had  walked


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through the powder without knowing it. 

Doc extinguished all lights, turned on the ultraviolet lantern and  pointed its dark lens at the floor. Scattered

patches of glowing  electric blue appeared wherever Doc bad sprinkled the powder  and  where the silver

men had walked through the powder, their feet had  therefore left prints. 

Doc followed the trail. It grew a bit fainter, for the powder would  soon wear off the shoe soles of the quarry.

The tracks progressed down  into the basement. 

The basement floor was of concrete. A large furnace stood in a  corner, and insulated steam pipes stretched

about like the tentacles of  an octopus. There were barrels, boxes and a bin holding coal. 

The glowing tracks led to a barrel which stood against one wall. 

"Stand back," Doc warned, and moved the barrel. 

At first, it seemed there was solid concrete below, but a closer  scrutiny revealed a circular manhole, its lines

intended to be  concealed by the mark the barrel bottom had made on the floor. 

With a heel, Doc put weight on various parts of the lid. It hinged  up, uncovering a cavity so black that it

resembled a puddle of drawing  ink. 

The thin flashlight beam showed a room below, with a ladder leading  down. Walls and floor of the

subterranean recess were lined with  bricks. There was a table, chairs, a rack holding numerous silver

garments, opened cases of submachine gun ammunition, and other boxes  holding rapidfirers and hand

grenades. 

But there was no sign of the silver men. 

Doc descended the ladder, after searching to make sure there were  no trick triggers or death traps. 

On the rack of silver garments, four metallic regalias lay askew,  as if hastily cast there. Doc lifted them

curiously. 

One was crimson stained, still wet. 

"Discarded by the man Monk shot in the leg," Doc decided. 

He stood hefting the silver cloaks curiously. 

UPSTAIRS, Monk was shifting from one foot to the other as he  watched the rear door. Monk believed there

would be action below, and  he hated to miss it. He peered into the alley, listened, then withdrew  to the

stairway that led down into the basement, and strained his ears. 

He did not hear anything from the basement. Instead, he caught a  faint sound from the direction of the front

door, where Hugh McCoy was  functioning as lookout. Monk hesitated. 

"McCoy," he called softly. 

There was no answer. Gripping his captured submachine gun, Monk  eased toward the front. McCoy should

have been just inside, but he was  not there. Monk peered out into the street. 


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It was some seconds before he caught an indefinite blur moving away  from the Indian Head Club, keeping in

the shadow of the buildings. With  a silence remarkable for a man of such bulk, Monk floated down the  steps,

glided a dozen yards, took a deliberate aim with his weapon and  invited, "Whoever you are, stand still!" 

The figure was silent so long that it seemed there was going to be  no answer. 

"Speak up!" Monk growled. 

"You dope!" said McCoy's voice. "They'll hear you!" 

"Who?" 

"The four silver men," grated McCoy. "1 just saw them sneaking up  the street." 

"Wait here," Monk grated. "Doc will want to know about this!" 

The homely chemist whipped back into the Indian Head Club, went  half way down the basement stairs and

barked, "Doc! McCoy just seen the  four birds pulling a sneak!" 

Monk saw Ham and Pace race for the stairs, saw Doc appear from the  round hole in the basement floor. He

waited for no more, but pitched  back outside to aid McCoy. 

McCoy was not where Monk had left him. Deciding the financial  counselor had gone ahead, so as not to lose

sight of the quarry, Monk  scuttled up the street. He gained the corner and discerned no sign of  McCoy. 

Monk looked around to see if Doc and the others were following him   and saw the most stupendous display

of pyrotechnics he had ever  witnessed. 

The ground seemed to sink several inches under Monk's feet, then  jump straight up. Simultaneously, there

was a sound as if a firecracker  had gone off in each ear. Bloodred light flooded his eyes, blinding  him. 

Against the lurid glow, Monk saw Doc, Ham and Pace outlined. The  trio were not running, but seemed to be

flying through the air, carried  by an invisible force from behind. Then the force of the explosion  reached

Monk, slapped him like an unseen Colossus, and he was knocked  sprawling. 

Dazed, unable to hear because the blast had temporarily deafened  his ears, Monk managed to land on all

fours. Peering upward, he saw  copings toppling off buildings. Window glass was falling like brittle  snow.

Walls began to come down. 

Down by the Indian Head Club  or rather, where it had been  a  mound of flame and debris was climbing

toward the sky. 

Monk began to crawl. Then something happened to the top of his  head; things turned very black in front of

his eyes, and all noise of  the uproar left him. 

MONK'S next connection with the material world was a briskly  calloused voice saying, "No ordinary brick

could do anything to that  head of Monk's. He'll be all right in a minute." 

Monk, unable to think coherently, "Where's Habeas?" 


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"There you are!" said Ham. "Thinking of that pet pig ahead of  everybody else. We left the pig at your

laboratory." 

"Yeah?" Monk got his wits together. "I sure wasn't worrying about  you, shyster. Say, what happened? The

last I remember, Vesuvius seemed  to turn loose." 

"That was no more than a minute ago," Ham snapped. "Take a look at  the Indian Head Club." 

Monk, realizing he was facing away from the club, turned himself  around with his hands, still in a seated

position. A great glare caused  him to close his eyes tightly. 

Where the Indian Head Club had been there was a tower of flame that  moaned and squirmed fully two

hundred feet in the air. Waves of heat  shoved against his face. 

"Say, what could burn like that?" Monk gulped. 

"Chemicals," Doc Savage said quietly. "There must have been a mine  under the place, charged with an

inflammable chemical in addition to  explosive." 

"Them four silver devils must have lit the fuse and were beating it  when McCoy saw them." Monk reared up

shakily. "Say, where did McCoy  go?" 

"No sign of him," Doc advised. 

Rapid Pace, standing in the background dabbing at various minor  cuts, snapped, "I do not trust that McCoy.

No, sir. He is a very smooth  man." 

"If he hadn't discovered those silver lads skipping out, it would  have been just too bad for us," Monk

growled. 

Down the street, a weaving figure appeared. It was a man. He was  staggering, keeping both hands pressed to

his head. His clothing was  torn, and dust fell from him when he stumbled. 

When he was close, they saw that it was Hugh McCoy. 

"Where did the four silver men go?" Doc asked sharply. 

McCoy looked at them painfully, still holding his head. 

"How would I know?" he snapped. "Part of a wall fell on me. I've  been unconscious." 

THE flames from the Indian Head Club ruin seemed to be climbing  higher; gory tongues of fire detached

themselves and shot upward  hundreds of feet. The howling bedlam of the blaze made conversation  difficult. 

To escape the searing heat, Doc and his men retreated. From all  around them came the wall of fire sirens, but

none of the apparatus was  yet in sight. 

Doc Savage, eying the flames, decided. "It will be a good many  hours before we can get into that ruin to do

any investigating. Come  on. We have something to do besides watching the fireworks." 


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Monk peering at Doc, started slightly. He had just discovered that  Doc carried, tucked obscurely under one

arm, one of the strange  metallic garments worn by the Silver Death'sHeads. 

"Where'd you get that thing, Doc?" the homely chemist demanded. 

"From the room under the Indian Head Club basement," Doc replied. 

"Think it's a clue?" Monk questioned eagerly. 

"No," Doc told him. "But there are pockets inside the garment, and  the contents of one of those pockets is, I

think, going to prove very  valuable." 

They were still retreating from the flames. A crowd sprang up  rapidly about them, curious persons drawn by

the terrific blast and the  amazing fire. Howling fire trucks bored through the throng, followed by  hose

wagons, rescue squads and emergency police. 

In the uproar, Doc Savage and his party attracted little attention. 

They reached a drug store, windows of which had been broken by the  detonation. It was unoccupied, the

proprietor evidently having dashed  off excitedly to the fire. Lights were burning inside the first spot  Doc and

his party had encountered where there was illumination. 

"Let's have a look at what was in the pocket of that silver suit,"  Monk requested. 

Doc nodded, and they went in the drug store. Broken glass strewed  the floor, for many bottles had been

shaken off counters. The bronze  man employed the marble top of the soda fountain as a table. 

From the inner recesses of the silver suit, he extracted a long  blue roll sealed with wax. 

Rapid Pace took one look at them and exploded, "The blueprint that  was taken from the shipyard safe!" 

"You've seen it before?" Hugh McCoy asked sharply. 

Pace scowled at his rival for the hand of Lorna Zane. 

"No," he retorted. "But Miss Zane described it." 

Doc unrolled the print  it was, it developed, the only one. 

"Blazes," muttered Monk eying the lines traced whitely on the blue  background. "A sketch of New York

Harbor! Now, that ain't quite what I  expected." 

THE map  it was actually no more than that  of the harbor was not  especially complete, but it showed

certain prominent details,  outstanding landmarks, and the depth of water was carefully gauged at  numerous

points. Compared with a regulation marine harbor chart, it  would have been crude, yet it apparently had been

traced from such a  chart. 

Doc dropped a finger on the blue expanse. "These four small stars  seem to be the only especiallyoutstanding

marks." 


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The stars with Doc indicated were situated in approximately the  center of the East River  the first off the

Wall Street section of  Manhattan, the next possibly a quarter of a mile south, and the others  spaced at like

intervals farther down. 

"Maybe they're buoys," Ham suggested. 

"No buoys at those points," Doc assured him. "And notice the  position of the first, the northermost one." 

Ham looked again, then started. 

"By Jove! It is almost directly opposite that Indian Head Club." 

"Exactly," Doc agreed. 

"You think that is significant?" 

"I do." 

"Will you explain, Doc?" Ham requested. 

"Later," Doc told him. 

The bronze man went to a telephone booth, took the receiver down,  found the circuit intact, and dialed a

number. He spoke quietly for  some moments. 

His metallic features did not alter expression. However, there was  audible for a brief moment that unearthly

trilling sound which was the  bronze man's peculiar characteristic, the sound which he made  unconsciously

when some unusual danger threatened, or which marked some  stark discovery, or which preceded some

unusual course of action.  Finally he replaced the receiver and left the booth. 

"The Silver Death'sHeads," he said slowly, "have seized Pat and  Lorna Zane. I just talked to Pat's

establishment." 

Chapter 11. THE RIVER BED MYSTERY

IT was getting along toward dawn, and Father Knickerbocker, as New  Yorkers like to dub their city as a

whole, was for the most part  asleep. It had been a hectic night. 

No less than twenty major robberies had been committed by the weird  Silver Death'sHeads during the early

part of the night. 

New York bad had her crime waves in the past; there had been nights  which saw more robberies and nights

when more loot bad been annexed by  thieves. But never had a crime wave possessed quite the spectacular

qualities of this one. Never before had the thieves all affected the  same fantastic costumes. That was the

startling thing. 

The tabloid newspapers ate it up; the radio broadcast it, and the  police began to expect gray hairs when they

next looked in mirrors. 

The mayor was up all night walking the floor; the governor called  twice to know whether the militia would


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help, and editorial writers  sharpened their pencils to take digs at the city administration. 

Almost a million dollars in loot had been taken, the largest haul  being the armored truck earlier the previous

afternoon. Robbery reports  piled onto the city desks of newspapers so fast that the editors could  not tell which

was which. 

The murder of Paine L. Winthrop, good for a frontpage streamer on  the first edition, was relegated to the

back pages before the final  edition went to bed. 

Most amazing aspect of the whole thing, however, was the fact that  New York's usually efficient policemen

had not captured a single silver  man. What was more, they had no idea where any one of the silver men  could

be found. 

The sinister fellows in metallic disguises bobbed up, committed a  robbery, shot down any one who resisted,

and fled. Maybe the police  chased them a few blocks. Then, without exception, the silver men  disappeared. 

Usually, they disappeared in the vicinity of the water front  surrounding Manhattan Island. The police had

noted this fact. 

It was still foggy, and although dawn was more than an hour  distant, there was still intense darkness. Ocean

vessels were dropping  anchor outside the Narrows, waiting for the soup to lift; such tugs as  prowled the

harbor nosed along with tooting horns and every spare man  on lookout duty. 

There was one boat on the river which was not making undue noise,  however. It was a thin lance of a speed

craft with motors which did not  make sound proportionate to their great power, for they were  scientifically

muffled. With just a few alterations, that boat could  well be a contender for the Harmsworth trophy. She was

fast. 

Doc Savage and Monk were alone in the speedboat, Monk handling the  controls, Doc in the cockpit, donning

a pair of heavy lead diving  shoes. 

From time to time, Monk lifted a boxlike device to his eyes and  peered at, first, one shore of the river and

then the other. Monk was  getting bearings. 

On the shore, Doc had placed projectors emitting strong infrared  light, rays invisible to the unaided eye, but

which bad the power of  penetrating fog and smoke to a remarkable degree. The boxlike apparatus  rendered

the infrared beacons visible. Merely an adaptation, this  contrivance, of the signaling apparatus well known

to naval  technicians, and of principles with which alert photographers were  familiar. 

"The place is about a hundred feet upstream," Monk decided. 

Doc paused in buckling on the lead shoes, and reached into a  locker. He brought out a flashlight already tied

to a float, and  switched it on. This he tossed overboard, together with a long line to  which was affixed an

anchor weight. 

The light bobbed astern, moored in place by the line and weight. 

Monk took another bearing, then said. "We're right over the place  where the first star was marked on that

blueprint." 


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DOC Savage stood up as the boat slackened speed. He lifted an  apparatus which might have been mistaken

for an oversized fish bowl,  and put it over his head. 

It was a diving hood of a transparent composition infinitely  stronger than glass, and had the advantage of

permitting vision on all  sides. The helmet was a product of Doc's inventive genius, its  composition vaguely

akin to the common cellophane. 

Inside the helmet was a receiver and microphone, these being  connected to a tiny radio transmitter that was

attached   to a stout  tool jacket which Doc now donned. The radio transmitter aerial was in  one sleeve of the

jacket, the receiving aerial in the other. 

The receiving aerial was a loop, and by pointing the arm in various  directions, the position of another diver

using one of the transmitters  could be ascertained. 

Doc switched on the radio, which was waterproof, and twirled the  wavelength knob. He got major

broadcasting stations, amateurs, very  shortwave stuff  then a sudden, earsplitting moan. 

He waited tensely. The moan came again. 

The sound was the radio compass station operated by the Government.  Doc searched on down until he found

a clear band, then gave Monk the  wavelength figure. 

Monk, who had lifted another radio transmitterreceiver combination  from a box, tuned to the same wave. 

Doc stepped overside. The heavy lead shoes pulled him down with a  gurgling rapidity. 

"Cruise above this spot," Doc directed Monk. "Better shut off your  motor, douse all lights and use the oars.

You can hold your position  with the oars alone." 

"Sure," said Monk. "Keep me posted on what you find." 

The twoway radio functioned perfectly, a fact that did not  displease Doc, because this was the first time he

had been able to test  it and the transparent helmet under actual diving conditions. 

Inset in the helmet side, low down where it did not interfere with  vision, was a watchshaped depth gauge

calibrated in feet. It was  marked with radiant paint. Doc watched the hand crawl around. 

The pressure did not greatly hamper his powerful body, the water at  this point being not excessively deep.

Patent "lungs" of conventional  type kept breathable air in the helmet. 

When he was near the bottom, Doc switched on a powerful waterproof  searchlight. 

He hit bottom, and mud clouded up around him. By pointing the arm  containing the receiver loop upward, he

located Monk's transmitter. It  was a bit upstream. Doc walked in that direction, sweeping the river  bottom

with his band searchlight. 

He almost missed it. The thing was drifted over with mud, and only  the clank of the lead diving shoes against

the metal cover disclosed  its presence. Doc picked it up, washed it off and studied it. 

He held in his arms a metal box something over a foot square. It  had thickly soldered seams to render it

waterproof. 


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"Lower a line," Doc directed Monk. 

A moment later, a weighted line came snaking down. Doc grasped the  end and was hauled upward. 

"So you got it," Monk chuckled when they were both in the  speedboat. 

"Yes," Doc told him. "And I believe we have our hands on the whole  secret." 

The bronze man employed a screwdriver to thrust into one of the  soldered seams. Prying, he gradually tore

the metal box open. Inside  was a soft black composition of the type used to fill automobile spark  coils. Doc

carefully dug into this. 

He uncovered scattered wires, then a coil, and finally the rounded  glass top of a vacuum tube. 

Upstream, the light he had left atloat made a pale blur in the  darkness. Doc worked low in the boat cockpit,

his own light  painstakingly sheltered. Down in the bay, two tugboats were hooting at  each other. Their own

boat was drifting. 

"What do you make of it?" Monk asked anxiously. 

"Well," Doc began. "It seems  " 

Monk had stood erect to look over Doc's shoulder. He flopped flat  in the cockpit as a piercing whistle

sounded overhead. 

THERE was a flash; it seemed to come from some distance down the  river. Another, much brighter flash

followed it  that one from up the  river. Then came two earsplitting roars which blended, intermingling

until they became one whooping tumult. 

A great geyser of water lifted where Doc had left the floating  light. Bilious water pushed away from the spot

in a wall that boiled  down upon the speedboat. 

The craft was caught broadside. It lifted, and turned completely  over. 

Doc and Monk, clutching life lines, remained with the boat  and  the craft, because of its design, came

upright again. 

Everything loose, including the mysterious box on which Doc had  been working, was gone from the cockpit.

A full six inches of water  sloshed in the bottom of the boat. 

Doc lunged for the instrument panel, thumbed a button, and the big  motors in their waterproof compartment

moaned into life. A stroke of a  lever set pumps to work emptying the shallow cockpit. No ordinary boat,  this,

but one with such peculiar qualities of efficiency that the naval  experts were considering its design for

creating a fleet of light  coastal defense speedsters. 

"That was a shell!" Monk gulped. "Boy, I've heard too many of them  things whistle to be mis taken." 

Doc said grimly, "Fired from downstream, too. The sound from the  gun reached us just before the shell

detonated. It was aimed at that  decoy light we left floating." 

Doc had the speedboat controls now. The craft lifted its snout out  of the water and knifed downstream. 


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Clambering forward, Monk wrenched at a hatch and a mechanical  tripod lifted a gun into view. The weapon

fired shells no more than an  inch in diameter, hut they were armorpiercing and highexplosive,  slugs which

could sink a destroyer if carefully placed. 

Monk hunkered behind the piece, waiting. 

The homely chemist had no idea what manner of craft they might  encounter, but any antagonist armed with a

cannon was formidable. He  wondered how it happened that they had not heard the motors of the  enemy. 

Monk found cause for fresh wonder when they passed over the spot  from which the gun flash of the foe had

come  and found nothing. 

Doc curved the fast boat in a narrow circle. Still, there was  nothing. He described a wider circuit, with the

same negative  results.  Twice more, be went around. Then be cut the motors and both he and Monk  listened. 

The only sound was the noise of a loud motor upstream, and a hit  later a siren wail from the same source.

This identified an approaching  police boat. 

Monk squinted in Doc's direction, moistened his lips, then growled,  "Well, only one thing can explain it." 

"Yes," Doc agreed. "That shell was fired from a submarine,  fantastic as the idea seems." 

RAPID Pace and Hugh McCoy leaped to their feet when Doc Savage and  Monk entered the reception room

of Doc's skyscraper headquarters. 

"Any word of Lorna  Miss Zane?" McCoy asked anxiously. 

"Yes," Pace echoed. "Any word?" 

"No," Doc said. "Is Ham hack?" 

Pace nodded at the library door. "In there. He told us to stay out.  Said he did not want to be bothered." 

Doc and Monk waved McCoy and Pace back when the pair would have  followed them into the laboratory. 

Ham gave them a wellbred frown when he saw their dripping  garments. 

"I knew I would miss out on some excitement," he said peevishly. 

Doc questioned, "Did you have any luck with your end?" 

"I followed the orders you gave before you and Monk started out in  the speedboat," Ham replied. "A fine job

I had, too, digging up old  sanitation maps of the city at that hour of the night." 

"What did you learn?" Doc demanded. 

Ham picked up a rolled map which reposed on the writing desk. 

"You can see it on here." he said. "But I can tell you just as  well. Up until fifteen years ago, a large drainage

pipe ran under the  waterfront section of Brooklyn and emptied into the Fast River. It was  abandoned fifteen

years ago. Not taken up, mind you, because that was  too expensive. It was merely abandoned." 


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Doc said, "It ran in the neighborhood of the Indian Head Club?" 

"Right under the Indian Head Club, to he exact," Ham stated. 

"Daggone!" Monk gulped. "This is beginning to shape up. The Silver  Death'sHeads had opened a passage

into that old pipe. That's why they  blew up the Indian Head Club  to keep us from finding the pipe and the

secret passage." 

"But what did they use the abandoned drain pipe for?" Ham pondered  aloud. 

"To get to their submarine," Monk grunted. 

Ham had secured a new sword cane from a supply of the unique  weapons which he kept in his apartment at a

fashionable club. He picked  the weapon up, twirled it slowly, eying Monk the while. 

"That brick which cracked you when the Indian Head Club blew up,  must have done some damage, after all,"

he said dryly. "You sound even  crazier than usual. Submarine! Bosh!" 

Monk scowled. "Listen, shyster, there was a submarine in the river  tonight, or at least some craft that went

under the water. What's  more, whoever was running it took a potshot at us with what sounded  like a

threeinch cannon." 

Ham absently unsheathed the blade of his sword cane a few inches,  then clicked it back together. Amazement

sat his features. 

"You are serious about this submarine business?" he asked  earnestly. 

"It may sound wild," said Monk. "But it is the truth." 

Doc Savage put in, "You will recall that it was a threeinch shell  which killed Paine L. Winthrop yesterday

afternoon. Later, two men who  were in a position to see the submarine, were killed. I mean the  fisherman and

the aviator, of course." 

"Murdered to keep the existence of the submarine a secret," Monk  mumbled. 

"I say," Ham queried sharply; "do you mean that these Silver  Death'sHeads came into New York harbor

under water, and reached the  Indian Head Club through that abandoned drainage pipe?" 

"That is not at all impossible," Doc assured him. "And now, Ham,  did you learn anything about a scientist

named UII?" 

HAM, drilling his sword cane with his eyes, said, "This fellow must  he Don UII, alias Ellis Nodham, alias

Professor O'Donald, alias a flock  of other names. He served a term in Sing Sing for manufacturing  pineapples

for gangsters. In the United States Patent Office he has  over a dozen electrical inventions registered, some of

them extremely  clever. 

"He was technician for a concern manufacturing poison gas during  the war, which means he was a skillful

chemist. He once designed a  patent twoman submarine, and he is an expert on diving apparatus,  having

patented one of his creations. I talked to a dozen men who had  known him in the past, and every one said UII

was as crooked a snake as  ever lived." 


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"Whew!" Monk exploded. "The fellow seems to be a  jackofalltrades." 

"Think what a clever rascal the mastermind behind Ull must be," Ham  said. 

Monk looked grim and stated, "That reminds me. How in blazes did  the Silver Death'sHeads know we were

going to be on the river?" 

"Probably had men shadowing us," Ham retorted. "Now, what I want to  know is: What did you find in the

river?" 

"A tin box," Monk told him. "A tin box soldered waterproof, and  filled with black insulating compound,

wires and vacuum tubes." 

Ham demanded, "What was it?" 

Instead of answering, Monk turned around and faced the door of the  reception room. In there, the telephone

buzzer was whining. 

Doc leaped to the door. Rapid Pace was reaching for the phone. 

"I'll take it," Doc said, and scooped up the instrument. A voice  remindful of a squealing rat said, "I wanta talk

to a guy named Doc  Savage." 

"You have him now," Doc replied. "What is it?" 

"A dame throwed a note out of a window," whined the rodent voice.  "The note said some mugs had kidnaped

her, and for me to call you for  help and you'd pay me plenty to show you where she was bein' held." 

"Was there a name signed to the note?" Doc questioned sharply. 

"Yeah. It was 'Pat.'" The squeaking took on a more uneasy quality.  "Listen, mister, step on it. I'm kinda

worried. I dunno but what some  guys are followin' me. I sorta thought they was, a time or two." 

"Where are you?" Doc rapped. 

"In an allnight drug store at the corner of Stein and Decker  Streets. I'll wait here  " The ratty voice broke

off sharply in an  excited gasp. 

There followed a tense dozen seconds of silence. When the squeaking  tone resumed, it was stark with terror. 

"Oh hell, mister, I'm on the spot!" it choked. "Them fellers that  was followin' me just came in. They're them

Silver Death'sHeads!  They're runnin' for this phone booth  " 

The rodent voice began to scream. Glass crashed and wood broke, as  if the phone booth doors had been

smashed in. Ugly thumps, coming over  the wire, sounded like blows. 

A voice that was unmistakably UIl's said, "It is fortunate that we  saw this fellow loitering about the spot

where we were holding the two  women. I believe he was up to something." 

"What's we do wit' 'im?" asked another voice. 


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"Take him to the place where the two women arc," said Ull. 

Then the distant telephone receiver was placed on its hook. 

Chapter 12. THE TRICK

ULL glared at the receiver after he hung it up. In his  allenveloping silver garment, UII made an ominous

figure, and the  heavy submarine gun in his left hand detracted no whit from his fierce  aspect. 

Behind UII, two silvercloaked men were pointing guns at a drug  store clerk who was so frightened that he

was on the point of fainting. 

Two more silver men gripped a scrawny, pinchfaced fellow who was  also badly scared. 

"Lemme loose!" whined the prisoner in a ratsqueal voice. "I ain't  done nothin'!" 

"Lay off the jaw music," he was ordered harshly. 

UIl directed loudly, "Everybody out!" 

One of the pair guarding the clerk held up a hand, said, "Wait a  minute, boss. I got a headache. Let's see if I

can find something  that's good for it." 

"Hurry up, then," Ull snapped. 

The silver man who claimed he had a headache began a rapid scrutiny  of the drug store display shelves. He

showed scant consideration for  the stock, sweeping bottles off the shelves. He seemed to take an  unholy joy

in doing as much damage as he could. 

He came to an array of vaseline in jars and tubes. These he upset.  Then he trampled over the litter, and his

weight forced the pale  petroleum jelly from the tubes and jars and smeared the whole mess over  his shoe

soles. 

The man left greasy tracks as he tore down more chemicals, and  found his aspirin. 

Then all the silver men moved for the door, dragging the fellow who  had been in the telephone booth. 

About to walk onto the street, UIl paused and snarled, "Maybe we  had better shut this clerk up permanently." 

The soda jerker paled, swayed, his lips moved without sound, and he  fainted on his feet. Toppling forward, he

fell on the fountain syrup  pumps, pushing them down and squirting strings of chocolate, pineapple  and

strawberry. 

UII and his silvermasked companions cast alert gazes about them as  they moved down the gloomy street.

There was still fog over the city,  thick stuff which deposited a slimy coat over every exposed object.  This was

a remote street, and at this early hour almost deserted. 

The man who had stepped in the petroleum left greasy tracks for a  time, but they grew fainter and soon were

no longer discernible to the  naked eye. 


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The man looked back at his tracks, scowled, then tried scuffing  along to leave more pronounced prints. 

"No," said Ull. "That might make him suspicious." 

"How d'you mean?" the man growled. 

"He can see from the way you scraped your feet that you  deliberately tried to leave tracks," UII told him. 

"Hell!" said the man. "The guy ain't that sharp." 

"Doc Savage is a mental genius," said UII. "The trouble so far is,  that we have underrated the fellow." 

They turned into an alley where it was almost as dark as night. 

"Do you think Doc Savage will fall into it?" asked one of the  weirdly garbed figures. 

"Yes," said Ull. "It was perfect. The vaseline tracks, especially." 

They now released the man with the ratty voice. One of the silver  garments was produced and the rodent one

donned it hurriedly. The suit  was fitted with zipper fasteners, which facilitated getting into it. 

"How about a bonus for me?" he chuckled. 

"You did excellently," Ull told him with heartiness. 

THE men were moving swiftly, as if aware that each moment upon the  street was dangerous. The city was

inflamed against them, because of  the depredations committed the previous day and night. Mere sight of  them

in this section would be enough to create a turmoil. 

"Hurry," UII snapped. 

"You figure Savage will come?" asked the ratty man. 

"If your acting over that telephone was sufficiently convincing, he  will," said Ull. "Did he sound as if be were

being taken in?" 

"He sure did," declared the rodent one. 

"Then he must he on his way now." UII sounded vastly pleased. "He  wilt search the drug store and, of course,

he will find the vaseline  which was so thoughtfully walked through." 

"What if Savage ain't wise enough to know what we want him  I mean  what we hope he'll do about the

vaseline?" 

"Forget it," snorted UII. "He uses ultra violet light a lot." They  clustered about a grimy doorway and Ull

rapped a peculiar signal with  his finger tips, playing a short, distinctive bit from a song popular  at the

moment. The fingertip aria could be recognized easily as such.  The door opened. 

Two men inside the building sighted grimly over machine guns.  Safeties were off the weapons, and the eyes

back of the mask holes were  coldly grim. Both were garbed in the metallic disguises. 


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UII stared at the gunmen, saying nothing. 

"All right!" snarled one of the men. "You ain't foolin' nobody by  wearin' them silver rigs! Get 'em off!" 

Moving very slowly so as not to invite a bullet, Ull tugged one  sleeve back and looked at an expensive,

heavily protected wrist watch. 

"Seventeen minutes and eleven seconds after," said Ull. 

One of the machine gunners eyed his own watch, laughed and said,  "0. K. How did I do?" 

"Very well," said Ull. "Remember, we all wear watches timed to the  exact second, all set together, but not at

the correct time. At the  present moment we are all two minutes and fifteen seconds fast." 

"Sure," said the other. "It beats a password." 

Ull and his party advanced down a gloomy corridor in complete  darkness, reaching a room where other silver

men waited. One of these  men illuminated a flashlight briefly. 

"What do we do now?" this man asked. 

"We have set the trap for Doc Savage," UlI explained. "This  building has been carefully prepared. There are

many traps to kill him  when he tries to enter." 

"What about us?" 

"We remain here to take a hand if the traps fail," said Ull. "There  must be no slip this time." 

A grotesque silver figure came in hurriedly, excitement in his  walk. 

"The big boss wants to talk to you," he said to UII. "He sounds mad  as hell!" 

Ull emitted a startled ejaculation. "Is the chief here?" 

"No," explained the other. "He is on the telephone. And he wants to  talk to you. 

AS Ull went into another room to the telephone, there was a trace  of nervousness in his manner. He strode

much more hurriedly than was  his wont, and his hands made jerky gestures. Reaching the phone, he  picked

up the dangling receiver, put an ear to the instrument, got his  mouth close to the transmitter and said, "Ull

speaking." 

A coarse, angry whisper said, "Damn you, Ull! You have just about  bungled everything!" 

Ull recognized that harsh sibilance. The rage it carried evidently  impressed him as well, for before he spoke,

his neck stiffened  slightly, as if he were swallowing some trouble. 

"But chief," he murmured, "there has been no major misfortune. I  consider that we have come off very

luckily." 

"Hell!" the other swore expressively. 


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Ull stammered in haste, "Of course, we have had backsets  such as  losing the blueprint, and being forced to

blow up the Indian Head Club,  and a few other minor details. But in fighting a man the caliber of Doc

Savage, we could not expect perfect sailing." 

"Why, you  " The other tried to find a word bad enough. 

But Ul, eager to plead his own case before this whispering  mastermind of whom he stood in such awe,

interrupted. 

"Our situation is still very satisfactory," he pointed out. "Doc  Savage does not suspect your identity. He has

learned who I am, but  that does not matter because I am already wanted by the police. We have  Doc Savage's

cousin and the girl, Lorna Zane. The two women are perfect  bait with which to draw Doc Savage into a trap." 

"Listen  " 

"Doc Savage is now heading straight for a trap from which he cannot  possibly escape," interpolated UII. "We

will get him out of the way.  Then there will be no one to bar our path. We will repeat what we did  last night.

Why, chief, we got nearly a million, all told, from those  robberies." 

"You damned blathering idiot!" grated the distant master. "I did  not order those robberies, except the first one

the armored truck  holdup. You pulled the others on your own Initiative. Ull, you went  crazy. The city is in

an uproar." 

"They can't touch us," U!! said earnestly. "Not with the system  we've got of making a getaway." 

"And I thought you had brains!" the other snarled. "The governor  will throw troops into the city. They will

call on the navy. They will  use naval submarine finders. Then how long do you think we will last?" 

Ull mumbled, "Aw, maybe we can clean up first  " 

"Damn you!" said the coarse whisper. "Why do you think I have been  financing you? For the loot you could

get from a few robberies? Not  much. Why, the stuff you took last night won't repay a fraction of what  I have

invested in this thing! The money was in large bills and the  banks have the numbers. The jewelry can be

identified. Hell! By the  time you dispose of last night's take, you will not have cleared two  hundred

thousand." 

Ull seemed dazed. "Boss, do you mean there is something bigger  behind this?" 

"Yes," snarled the other. 

Ull's confusion began to turn to anger. "You were using my brains  and inventive ability, eh? Using it for your

own benefit! Listen, I do  not like  " 

"Shut up!" gritted the whispering one. "I intended for you to pull  a robbery now and then, like that armored

truck job, to pay expenses.  But the big money was not to come from that trivial stuff." 

Ull snapped, "If you call what we got last night trivial  " 

"Trivial alongside what I plan," interjected the master. "But we'll  go into this later. Your job now is to get

Doc Savage." 


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Ull stood perfectly still for some seconds, glaring at the  telephone. He had thought he was fully in the

confidence of this  mysterious chieftain who kept in the background. He had just discovered  that such was not

the ease. It made him mad. 

"Doc Savage will be taken care of," Ull growled. "Then there's got  to be a new deal on splits. I didn't know

about this socalled big  stuff you planned to pull. What is it?" 

"I'll tell you after you get through with Savage," the other  delayed. 

And the telephone conversation ended with that. 

Chapter 13. THE PHANTOMS

DOC Savage was giving orders as he drove through the early morning  fog that hung like a stuffing of wet

cotton in the New York streets.  The bronze man was alone. The machine which be drove was not his  roadster

but a vehicle with an appearance totally foreign to his  character. 

The car was a slightly shabby laundry truck, with a noisy motor and  a manner of jolting over cobbles in a

manner which seemed most  uncomfortable. The cab windows, being extraordinarily grimy, made it  difficult

for the driver to be observed. 

The vehicle was deceptive. The noise was not actually in the motor,  which was huge and powerful, but was

created by a mechanical device.  The cab and body were of armor steel, the windows thick and proof  against

anything less than a tankrifle slug, and the machine could  travel nearly a hundred miles an hour. 

In giving commands, Doc Savage was utilizing a twoway radio  apparatus. Just now, Monk's voice, small

and disgusted, was coming from  the speaker. 

"Listen, Doc," Monk demanded. "What was the idea of leaving us  behind?" 

"I want you to do some work," Doc told him. "But first, I want you  to ask Hugh McCoy and Rapid Pace if

either of them left headquarters  while you and I were out on the river bringing up that small metal  box." 

There ensued a brief pause while Monk relayed the question. There  was sharp interest in the homely

chemist's childlike voice when he  spoke. 

"Rapid Pace was out for a while right after we left," he declared.  "He says he went to get some cigarettes." 

"Have you seen him smoking?" Doc queried. 

"No," Monk replied. "I asked him about that, and he said he had  been too excited to smoke. Listen, Doc, I'm

wondering." 

"Wondering what?" 

"Somebody must've tipped them damn silver men in their submarine  that we were going to be on the river."

Monk paused for dramatic  effect. "Do you reckon Pace could have slipped out and given them the  tip?" 

Doc said, "From now on, watch Pace very closely." 


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"Will I!" Monk growled. 

"Is Ham there?" Doc asked. 

"Ham speaking," said Ham's voice over the radio. 

Despite the outward noise of the laundry truck  the clattering,  clanking and popping of the motor and the

squeak of the spring  it was  comparatively quiet inside the armored van. The radio operated through  a

loudspeaker, hence conversation could be carried on without great  difficulty. 

"Ham," Doc directed, "you will make a quick check on Bedford  Burgess Gardner. Learn what you can of his

character, his associates,  his business career and that sort of thing." 

"Certainly," said Ham's melodious orator's voice. 

"Check up particularly on how it happens that Gardner's shipping  company has become one of the largest in

the business, Doc said  pointedly. "Concentrate on learning the facts back of the mergers which  made it one of

the biggest companies." 

"So you suspect Gardner," said Ham. 

Doc did not comment on the swordcanecarrying lawyer's words. 

"Get any available details, together with all suspicious  circumstances in connection with the mergers," he

directed. 

"Righto," said Ham. 

Doc clicked off the microphone button. He was driving on Decker  Street, and Stein Street was directly ahead.

The bronze man could see  the drug store from which the rodentvoiced man had called. 

There was a small crowd in front of the store, composed mostly of  policemen. 

DOC Savage received courteous cooperation from the police, being  told without delay that the soda clerk

had, upon regaining  consciousness, telephoned news of the raid of the silver men. 

The clerk, knees still rubbery, stopping to swallow frequently,  said the silver gang had entered, seized the

individual who was  telephoning, then one man had torn up a lot of stock while hunting some  aspirin. By way

of corroborating himself, the clerk indicated the  smashed vaseline on the floor. 

"We followed those greasy tracks," the police officer put in at  this point. "But they played out very shortly." 

Some moments later, Doc Savage departed. When the police would have  accompanied him, he requested

them to refrain from doing so. The cops  looked disappointed. They had hoped to see this remarkable bronze

man  work. 

Doc followed the greasy footprints until they were no longer  visible to the unaided eye. This was a bit farther

than the officers  had been able to trace them. The bronze man was carrying a leather  case, and this he now

opened. 


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The portable ultraviolet light lantern came to view, together with  another device which resembled welder's

goggles, except that they were  more bulky. Doc switched on the lantern and donned the goggles. The  goggles

simply made it easier to observe the fluorescing effect, by  daylight, of substances in which the ultraviolet

light caused the  phenomena. 

Vaseline being a substance which glows when exposed to ultraviolet  light, Doc had little difficulty picking

up the footprints which had  become invisible to the naked eye. Microscopic quantities of vaseline  showed up

vaguely under the socalled "black light." 

The trail led to the gloomy side street. Doc, canny, did not enter.  Instead, he circled to the opposite end of the

block, used his black  light and, finding no tracks, knew that the quarry had entered a  building somewhere in

the block. 

The bronze man considered. A boat was passing on the river, and it  was near enough that the watery wash

from its bows was audible. This  evidence that the river was very near seemed to give Doc an idea. 

He moved down the street, careful to keep clear of the street in  which the vaseline trail ended, and the thick

fog swallowed him. 

Some minutes later, a creature with an appearance both grotesque  and pitiable appeared in the street, and the

grimy thoroughfare was  filled with the whine of a hand organ. 

The organ player was a beggar, a hideous cripple. His legs were  drawn up and apparently useless, for the

fellow dragged himself along  by his hands. Judging from the enormous colored glasses under the brim  of a

shapeless hat, the fellow was also blind. 

The hand organ jangled with a quality as macabre as the personality  of the grisly beggar. From time to time,

the mendicant lifted a face  that was purple, lumpy and utterly repulsive. 

The beggar moved slowly, cranking his organ, carefully feeling his  way along the sidewalk. He stopped

frequently to let the organ wail,  and to clink some pennies in a tin cup. 

Eventually he reached the house into which Ull and his silver men  had gone. A few feet beyond it he stopped,

put his organ down, drew  from his ragged clothing a paperwrapped sandwich and began to eat. 

The slowness with which he ate indicated he would be some time at  his dining. But it was not long before

things began to happen. 

A door opened. 

"Get t'hell outa here, bum!" grated a harsh voice. 

The beggar seized his organ and began to play his loudest. The  street resounded with the discordant notes. 

The man in the door cursed. Then he ran down the steps, across the  walk and gave the beggar a resounding

kick in the side. 

"Beat it, I told yer," he snarled. 

But the results were not as expected. The mendicant gave a  convulsive jerk and fell over. He lay motionless,

apparently in a dead  faint. 


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The man who had done the kicking swore fiercely and seemed baffled  as to what do. He could not let the

beggar lie. That would draw  attention. He picked the fellow up and hauled him inside. 

After he had the limp beggar through the door, the man dropped him,  went back and scrutinized the street.

The miserable avenue was  deserted. 

"Whew!" sighed the man. "I couldn't leave that bum layin' around  for Doc Savage to see. It might make the

big bronze guy suspicious." 

He picked up a silver garment, which had been behind the door, and  drew it on. Then he turned, intending to

inspect the senseless beggar. 

He got barely half around. His eyes flew wide; his jaw fell. For  the erstwhile beggar had undergone a

complete metamorphosis. 

The mendicant had turned into a giant of a figure, legs uncoiling  from their grotesque positions, back

straightening, head lifting. 

The silver man lashed out frantically with a fist. His knuckles  skidded on purplish makeup, and the

theatrical grease, rubbed aside,  disclosed bronze skin beneath. 

"Doc Sav  " The silver man did not get past the first syllable. A  metallic fist under his jaw closed his mouth

clickingly, and he  slumped, knocked out. 

DOC Savage let the fellow sag to the floor, breaking the fall  enough to eliminate undue noise. He had not

struck hard; the victim  would be out only a few minutes. This was so that the man could be  questioned, if

necessary. 

Doc listened. Then he whipped for the nearest shadows. The scuffle  had been heard. The clatter of

approaching footsteps told him that. 

A door down the hallway came open with a smash. Silver figures  appeared. They held flashlights which

sprayed blinding luminance. The  lights picked up Doc's form. 

The bronze giant was a startling figure in the beggar makeup. The  coat he wore  it went with one of several

disguises which he carried  in the delivery truck  was padded to feign deformities, and these  padded portions

protruded strangely, now that he was erect. 

Curiosity gripped the silver men, held them long enough for Doc to  move. He already bad the implement he

intended to use, had it in one  hand. He lobbed it at the floor in front of the nearest silver man. 

There was a roar! The floor splintered! The silver man was knocked  backwards, went end over end, then

managed to gain his feet. 

The other silver men backed away wildly, forgetting their guns in  their baste. Then, as Doc lifted his arm

with another explosive  grenade, they pitched for the nearest door, got through, and hurled  their weight against

the panel in an endeavor to close it. 

Doc tried to prevent the door from closing. The silver men strained  and pushed, squeezing profanity through

clenched teeth. 


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Except the floor, which was inadequate there was no grip for Doc's  feet. He was forced back; the door closed,

and the lock clicked. 

An instant later, machinegun slugs began clouting splinteredged  holes in the panel. 

Doc retreated, swabbing some of the makeup off his face with a  sleeve. The stuff might get in his eyes in a

handtohand fight. He  brought out a tiny, highexplosive grenade and lobbed it at the door. 

Lightning seemed to strike inside the grimy building. Plaster fell  off the walls; floor boards jumped up with a

screeching of pulled  nails. The door turned into a cloud of fragments. 

The machine gun was silenced by the exploding grenade. After debris  had ceased to fall, men began cursing.

Then they ran away. From the  dragging sounds, it seemed they were hauling one of their number, who  was

injured. 

Doc Savage did not advance in pursuit. He held respect for these  foes. They were cunning. Just how cunning

was evident when there came a  second terrific concussion, which caused the old building to rock, sent

window glass sheeting out and loosened more plaster. 

They had left one of their own grenades behind, the time fuse set  for a long interval. Had Doc followed them,

he might very well have  been killed. 

From the entrance to the building there came noise of a movement.  That would be the silver man who had so

unwisely kicked the pseudo  beggar. 

The reviving fellow floundered about a bit, then he ran outside.  His feet made a rapid patter which receded

down the street. 

Doc Savage did not attempt to follow him. 

THE bronze man waited, and it must have been full two minutes later  when he heard several shots which

came from the direction the fleeing  silver man had taken. 

Doc did not try to ascertain what had happened. 

The bronze man used a second highexplosive grenade to open a hole  in the hallway wall, then whipped

through the aperture while debris was  still falling. He was now in a bare, litterstrewn room. Plaster dust

seethed in choking clouds. 

Doc produced a cuplike contrivance which fitted over his nostrils.  A rubber tube ran from this to a compact

arrangement of metal flasks.  It was a gas mask; also a protection  against smoke and dust. There  were airtight

goggles for his eyes. 

The silver men were working toward the rear. Doc could hear their  profanity. Then he saw distinct traces of a

cloud other than plaster  dust, and knew his foes had turned loose some type of gas. 

Hoping they would think the gas had overcome him, Doc did not use  more grenades. He worked toward the

rear. Near the center of the  building, he encountered a room which had windows opening on a  ventilating

shaft. Through these, light came. 


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On the floor, a large rat groveled, its antics madly agonized. As  the bronze man observed, the rodent became

still. The gas was poison. 

Glass had been shattered out of the ventilating shaft windows.  Looking out of one of these, Doc saw a

fireescape ladder leading  upward. He swung out, but before he mounted he pulled another of the  explosive

grenades from a pocket. 

This grenade, like all of its kind, was fitted with a time fuse,  but this differed from the conventional type in

that its explosion was  capable of being delayed, by the turning of a tiny knob, so as to  withhold detonation for

as long as several seconds. Doc adjusted the  turning knob and left it on the floor. 

The fire escape was ancient, and groaned and shed rust under the  bronze man's weight. But it furnished him

the means of reaching the  roof. Crouched on the roof edge in the fog, he could hear the caterwaul  of police

sirens headed for the spot. 

As Doc had expected, there was another fire escape at the rear. He  ran down that lightly and stood in an alley

that was black, filthy.  When he was very near the rear door, he could hear voices. 

The silver men were grouped just inside, arguing. 

"We gotta clear out of here," one was insisting." Listen to the  bull wagons bowl. The place'll be runnin' over

with law in a minute." 

"Quiet!" commanded Ull's voice. "Savage may hear us. 

At that instant, the grenade which Doc had left behind exploded  deep inside the building. 

"He's still blastin' around in there," a man said, voicing what Doc  had hoped they would think. 

Another growled, "Wonder if he's wise that the two women ain't  here?" 

The police sirens were getting very close. 

"We shall have to leave," Ull snapped. 

The rear door opened. 

THE door, being heavy, opened but slowly. Ull's words had given Doc  an instant of warning, too, and he was

already in motion. 

Forty feet away, up the alley, stood an ash can. Doc was behind it  before Ull and his silver men stepped out

into the alley. 

The silver hoods were more bulky, due no doubt to gas masks which  Ull and his fellows had donned. The

group ran in the direction of the  nearby river. After one searching glance around, they did not look  back, but

gave all attention to getting away before the police arrived. 

When they were out of the alley, Doc followed them. He kept under  cover, using his greatest skill, for he

wanted to follow these silver  men to the spot where Pat and Lorna Zane were being held. The quarry  made

noise in their haste, and that simplified Doc's trailing them. 


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Warehouses shoved out of the fog. became dank, towering piles;  there was the odor of polluted bay water, the

sound of waves, and the  noise of a disconsolate gull. 

Doc quickened his pace. He caught sight of the silver men, still in  their weird disguises. They rounded a

warehouse and ran out on a wharf,  where they were lost to view behind a tool house. 

On the pier lay old machinery, piling, timbers. Doc worked through  this, on hands and knees most of the

time. A dozen feet from the tool  house, he lay still and listened. 

There was no sound. 

The bronze man leaped up and lunged for the tool structure, a smoke  bomb in one hand, a grenade in the

other. 

As soon as he was around the structure, all of his grim haste left  him and his great muscles uncoiled from

their tenseness, so that he  seemed suddenly slack and weary. His motions as he pocketed the  grenades were

slow. 

The gull that had been making the noise spun low overhead, then  zoomed away, frightened by a fantastic

note, an eerie, indefinable  sound that might have been a spawn of the fog. The sound was trilling,  melodious,

yet devoid of tune, an eerie cadence which lasted only a  moment, then came to an end as fantastic as its

beginning. 

Doc's lips did not move as he made the sound, such a quality of  ventriloquism did it possess that a close

bystander could not have told  from whence it came, without previous knowledge. 

The tool house was an open shed. There was no one in it, no one on  the wharf, nor on the water which

lunged, greasy and menacing, at the  bronze man's feet. 

Doc looked under the wharf. The silver men were not There. He  listened for a long time. No boat could have

taken them away in the fog  so silently that he could not have heard Their departure. 

The silver men had vanished in a fashion as strange as their  costumes. 

THERE was a crowd of police about the ramshackle, grimy  and now  half destroyed  building where the

trap had been set for Doc. They  asked questions of the giant bronze man who wore the grotesque, padded

garb of a deformed beggar. 

"A trap," Doc said simply, and got the hand organ which he had  carried when playing the part of the

mendicant. 

The hand organ held, carefully concealed in its innards, the  ultraviolet lantern. The big colored glasses Doc

had worn while  playing beggar had been the spectacles which helped in detecting, by  daylight, The

fluorescing of the black light. Thus he had traced the  Vague smears of vaseline to the building. 

Doc started for his truck, but deviated to join a crowd at a  nearby corner. There, police were keeping the

crowd back from a body  sprawled on the sidewalk. 

An officer was removing an allenveloping silver garment from it.  The dead man was burly, evil of face, and

his body had not spilled much  scarlet, because he had been shot perfectly between the eyes. There was  a gun

near the corpse. 


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"I came around a corner and bumped into him, and he ups and ats me  with his iron," explained one of the

cops. "But he was a little slow." 

Doc said nothing and did not change expression, although the death  of the burly man closed a source of

possible information, for the  fellow was the one who bad come out and kicked Doc when he was doing  his

beggar act. 

"I will take the silver suit," Doc said. 

The police passed it over without objection. They knew this bronze  man, with his scientific skill, his daring

which sometimes seemed  madness, could probably accomplish more against the menace of the  Silver

Death'sHeads than The entire metropolitan police. 

There was an expensive wrist watch on the dead man. Doc glanced at  it, then at his own wrist watch. The

other was exactly two minutes and  fifteen seconds fast. 

Doc Savage started away, only to pause and do what for him was a  rare thing. He reconsidered. Then he came

back and took the expensive  wrist watch from the arm of the dead man. 

He donned the watch and wore it in place of his own. 

Chapter 14. THE GREEN TRAIL

DOC Savage had exchanged his armored delivery truck for a dark,  somber sedan which, in its way, was as

impregnable as the truck, and as  deceptive. The change had been made at The skyscraper headquarters. 

Ham and Rapid Pace occupied the commodious front seat with Doc.  Monk and Hugh McCoy were wedged in

the back with a large number of  metal equipment cases. There had been no time out for explanations. 

"Come on," Doc had directed, then rattled out a string of numbers.  The numbers corresponded with the

numerals inscribed on the equipment  boxes, which Doc kept ready packed in the skyscraper aerie. 

But now the bronze man was finishing a brief synopsis of what had  happened at the end of the vaseline trail. 

"It was, of course, a trap," he said. "Now, Ham, what did you learn  about Bedford Burgess Gardner? Or did

you have time to learn anything?" 

Ham rolled his sword cane between manicured fingers. He had changed  his clothing and looked dapper, neat,

not at all as if he had been in a  mad whirl of death, destruction and mystery throughout the night. 

"I learned enough," be said, and grimness crackled in his orator's  voice. 

"What do you mean by that?" 

"One year ago, Bedford Burgess Gardner beaded a secondrate  shipping company," Ham stated. "Exactly

one year ago negotiations were  under way, discussing the merger of Gardner's hack concern with a  larger,

sounder company. One man opposed the union  the president of  the board of The other company. That

night, the president was killed by  a burglar whom he caught ransacking his house. The merger went  through." 

"This sounds bad," Rapid Pace gulped rapidly. "Yes, sir, it does  sound bad!" 


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"Three months later, a second merger was under consideration, This  one between Gardner's company and still

another. Two men in the other  outfit opposed the union. A private yacht blew up and killed Them both.  The

merger went through." 

"For cryin' out loud!" Hugh McCoy exploded, bigvoiced, in the rear  seat. "That was the merger between

Gardner's concern and The Oriental  PassengerFreight Transport." 

"Exactly," said Ham. "There was another merger a few weeks ago, and  that one also had suspicious

circumstances." 

"Somebody else killed?" Monk demanded in his characteristic tiny  Voice. 

"No," said Ham. "It was the sinking of the liner Avallancia. 

"Hey," Monk barked. "We read about that in the paper yesterday. The  newspaper story said the Avallancia

belonged to Bedford Burgess  Gardner's company." 

"It did not at the time it was sunk," Ham corrected. "It belonged  to the other company, a small concern, and

its loss put them in such a  bad financial predicament that they had to merge with Gardner's  corporation.

Gardner gave out that he had already merged. That was so  Wall Street would not think the smaller company

was financially  embarrassed and try to beat down the price of its stock." 

Doc Savage asked sharply, "Did financial manipulations in stock  feature these mergers?" 

"All of them," Ham rapped. "And right here we haul the cat out of  the bag." 

"Listen," said Monk. "Use plain English, will you?" 

"Bedford Burgess Gardner has made over a billion dollars during the  last year," Ham said slowly and

distinctly. "Does that sound like plain  English?" 

"It sounds like a blasted lot of money," Monk muttered. 

THE conversation had not taken long, but the big sedan was  traveling fast. They were now on the water front,

gliding along before  frowning phalanxes of pier warehouses. 

"Stock ballooning?" Doc asked, without turning his head. 

"Exactly," said Ham. "Recapitalization with each merger, and  flotations of immense stock issues which were

disseminated to the  public." 

"Again," said Monk, "will you use plain English." 

"Here is a simple example," Ham snapped. 

"Make it very simple," Monk told him sourly. "And don't make any  cracks about me being ignorant." 

"You own a boat worth a thousand dollars and I own a boat worth a  thousand dollars," Ham explained. "We

both carry passengers and  freight. We are bitter business rivals. We do anything we can to cut  each other's

throat." 


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"I can see how that could be," Monk growled. 

"As a result, neither of us makes much money," Ham continued. "I  offer to merge, you refuse  and I ruin the

engine in your boat, so  you've got to merge, which is another name for selling out to me." 

"Very clear," Monk snorted. 

"Now, I have two companies worth a thousand a piece," said Ham. "I  issue stock  two thousand shares, of

no par value  and offer it to  the public. If the public has any sense, they won't pay over a dollar a  share for

the stock, because that is all my merged companies are  worth." 

"Hurry it up," Monk commanded impatiently. 

"All right," said Ham. "I bid three dollars a share for the stock  on the market, doing the bidding through a

broker, so that no one knows  my name, or even through a dummy purchaser. I jump the price to four  dollars.

The public gets excited, and begins to buy. Demand holds the  price up, or possibly makes it go higher. The

result, when all two  thousand shares of stock are sold, is that I have cleaned up an extra  thousand or two." 

"Hmmm,"  Monk  murmured,  his  homely  features thoughtful. 

"Then I find another company, make it merge with me, recapitalize,  issue new stock to the holders of shares

in the first merger concern,  and do it all over again." Ham leaned back in the seat. "That is what  Gardner did,

fundamentally. Of course, the actual high finance was a  bit more complicated than that. But he has cleaned up

almost a billion  within the last year." 

Rapid Pace whipped around, glared at Hugh McCoy and clipped, "You  work for Gardner. What do you know

about this?" 

McCoy returned the glare, his too perfectly handsome face turning  scarlet. 

"I have only been working for Gardner on the Paine L. Winthrop  concern merger!" he yelled. "I did not know

anything was wrong. And I  dare you to show differently!" 

"You mean you were so dumb you did not know you were working for  the world's biggest crook?" Rapid

Pace snapped. 

"Gardner is a devil, a cunning devil!" McCoy shouted. "And don't  you insinuate  " 

"Pipe down, you birds, or I'll bob you both," Monk advised, his  small voice turning into a rumble. 

Doc pulled to a stop before an enormous building of brick and  steel. 

THE structure in front of which they had halted, for all of its  size, differed little from other warehouses which

stood on piers along  the water front. A sign on the front read: 

HIDALGO TRADING COMPANY 

The building was Doc Savage's waterfront boathouse and seaplane  hangar. Perhaps dock workers wondered

why the place seemed deserted  much of the time, but it was doubtful if any knew its true nature. 


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Doc touched a button on the dash. This operated an ultraviolet  light projector on the front of the sedan, and

the beam in turn  actuated a photoelectric cell which caused the great door in the front  of the warehouse

hangar to slide open. 

Doc drove into the enormous building and the door closed  automatically behind them. 

Rapid Pace and Hugh McCoy stared in gaping astonishment at the  array of fast planes  they ranged from a

tiny gyro to a great  trimotored speed ship which could carry two dozen passengers in excess  of three

hundred miles an hour. 

"Hurry," Doc commanded. 

The bronze man passed the planes, opened a door into another  section of the building and switched on lights.

If Pace and McCoy had  been surprised by the planes, they were figuratively floored by what  they saw now. 

"A submarine!" McCoy gasped, and his manicured band strayed up to  his eyes as if to see if they were

functioning correctly. 

Helldiver was the name on the conning tower of the underseas craft. 

The Helldiver was probably as unique a sub as man had ever  constructed. The conning tower, as such, existed

hardly at all, and  from bow to stern ran great steel, sledlike runners, stoutly braced.  The Helldiver had first

been constructed for a trip under The North  Polar ice. 

Doc and his little group of aides had seen two great adventures  aboard the Heildiver  the first under the

Polar ice, and the second  through an underground river into a fantastic phantom city in the  Arabian desert. 

After the Arabian trip, the submersible had lain idle, but  carefully greased, the fuel tanks full. The craft was

ready for quick  service. 

"Get the stuff aboard," Doc directed. 

McCoy moistened his almost womanish lips. "Are we  are we going  under the water?" 

Doc studied him. "You do not like the idea?" 

McCoy straightened his remarkably square shoulders. "I  I have  never been down. But I shall go. I owe it to

my reputation to help  capture this devil Gardner." 

Doc turned to Rapid Pace. "And you?" 

Pace shuddered. 

"I do not like the idea. I think I shall stay here." He shuddered  again. "Yes, sir, I shall stay behind. No iron

fish for mine." 

Then Pace caught Monk's eye. Monk's eyes were small and normally  pleasant, but now they were small and

not pleasant, for Monk was  thinking that Rapid Pace had gone out for cigarettes about the time he  and Doc

were in the East River diving for the mysterious metal box. 


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Monk was a blunt fellow, not given to suavity, and what he was  thinking showed on his incredibly homely

features. 

Rapid Pace began to tremble. 

"On second thought, I shall be glad to go," he gulped. "Yes, on  second thought." 

THE Helldiver's engines had been reconditioned since her Arabian  jaunt. Diesels had new pistons, the

electric motors new bearings. The  electric motors were running now, and they made little noise. 

Doc Savage and his four companions stood in the control room. The  submarine was equipped so that one man

could operate her if necessary,  all controls centered in one spot. 

The depth indicator read only twenty feet and the periscope was up  above the surface, but Doc now turned a

wheel and the steel cigar with  the strange runners sank slowly. A touch of a button, and the periscope  swished

down into its well. 

Rapid Pace moistened his lips, clenched his fists and cried  uneasily, "But we're in New York harbor! A ship

may run into us!" 

Monk, homely features placid, said, "We've taken the Helldiver  where icebergs were thicker than fleas, and

never did hit anything." 

"What saved you?" Pace demanded. "Yes, sir, what saved you?" 

"The instruments," Monk shrugged. "There are sonic devices all over  the hull. They tell us how deep the

water is, and if anything larger  than a rowboat comes near, we'll know it." 

Monk indicated a bank of dials. These bore hands which were  continually jumping slightly. Four of them

were marked "North,"  "South," "East" and "West;" a fifth dial was labeled "Bottom Distance."  The dial

marked South abruptly began jumping. 

"That means there is a boat to the south," said Monk. Doc swung the  steering controls slightly. After a bit, the

jumping shifted to the  West dial, then the North dial, which meant they had left the surface  vessel astern. 

"Remarkable!" Hugh McCoy murmured. 

"You ain't seen nothing!" Monk snorted. "Doc has used this sub for  testing out ideas. It's got more gadgets

aboard than the average man  sees in a lifetime." 

Rapid Pace, shifting about nervously as was his habit, asked in a  shrill voice, "But what are we out here in a

submarine for?" 

Monk scowled. "We're hunting silver men. of course." 

"Who ever heard of a submarine hunting a submarine?" Pace said  rapidly. "They use sub chasers, surface

vessels for that." 

"Listen, noisy, suppose you pipe down," Monk requested. 

"Yes," McCoy told Pace. "You talk too much." 


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Rapid Pace glared at the handsome, wellknit figure of McCoy. His  lips curled hatefully. 

"You, of course, are large enough to whip me," he gritted.  "Otherwise, I would hand you a poke on the jaw!" 

"I'll tie one hand behind me, if it will encourage you any," McCoy  jeered. 

Monk said, "Cut it out  or I'll bump your heads." 

Without taking his flakegold eyes off the controls, Doc Savage  announced, "Within not longer than two

minutes, we shall know whether  we have the slightest chance of finding the silver men." 

THE electric motors had decreased their slight hum, and gear boxes  made almost no noise, so that they could

hear the bay water curling  past the outer skin of the Helldiver. 

"Where are we?" Monk asked. 

Doc Savage dropped a sinewwrapped bronze finger on the illuminated  chart table, and said, "Here." 

The gorillalike chemist hunched over the map board, blinked his  small eyes and observed that they were

navigating by the crude map  which Doc had secured from the secret room in the Indian Head Club. 

Their position, as indicated by Doc's finger, was near one of the  four small stars, but not the star where the

bronze man had dived and  found the mysterious metal box. 

"So we're gonna try to get another one of them boxes," Monk  grunted. 

"No," Doc corrected. 

Monk squinted his small eyes. "Huh?" 

"I saw enough of the first box, before losing it over the side of  the launch when the submarine fired on us,"

Doc explained. "Those boxes  are very clever radio buoys. They are nothing more than tiny  transmitters." 

"Radio transmitters!" Monk grunted. 

"Very compact," Doc elaborated. "They are fitted with a form of the  socalled aircell battery, which

delivers a small quantity of current  over a long period of time. The transmitters in the boxes are of  extremely

small power, using a negligible amount of current." 

Ham tapped the chart with his sword cane. "You say those stars mark  the location of radio buoys? What do

you mean  radio buoys?" 

"I will illustrate," Doc answered. 

The bronze man clicked switches, then turned a knob which  controlled the Helldiver's radio compass. The

latter did not differ  greatly from the type in use on most naval and commercial vessels,  except that it could

function on extremely short wavelengths. 

Manipulating the wavelength knob, Doc fished through the ether for  the signal from the Silver

Death'sHeads' radio buoy. 


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The others waited impatiently. The bronze man had decreased their  speed even more, until the momentum

was now barely enough to cause the  planing effect of diving rudders to hold them off the bottom. 

A faint popping came from the speaker. It loudened as Doc  maneuvered the loop, a sound closely akin to

static. 

"There," he announced. "They did not use the regular dotanddash  signals, but an arrangement of breaking

contacts which creates a sound  resembling static." 

"Deuced clever," Ham murmured. "Any one picking up that noise on  their radio would think it was static and

give it no more attention." 

Doc moved levers. The Helldiver picked up speed and headed for the  radio buoy; the sound got louder, then

began to weaken as they passed  over it and left it astern. Soon Doc picked up the sound of the next  buoy. 

Rapid Pace said abruptly, "I get it! Yes, I get it! These buoys are  to guide the Silver Death'sHead submarine

into the harbor. They must  have a rendezvous somewhere outside The harbor." 

There were thick glass windows in the submarine conning tower, and  through these the men could see the

vile green water of the bay curling  past. 

"The green trail," Ham said grimly. "I hope it leads us to  something." 

Chapter 15. HELL UNDER WATER

ALTHOUGH the Helldiver could be navigated by one man, it was  considerable of a singlehanded task. It

kept Doc extremely busy moving  levers, nipping switches. The tanks trimmed themselves through the

medium of a robot apparatus  which helped. 

Inset in the front wall of the control room was a large panel of  frosted glass. There were similar panels in the

side and rear walls, as  well. 

Monk, who was familiar with the Helldiver's intricate mechanism,  adjusted dials which resulted in a

remarkable thing happening to the  frosted glass panels. They assumed a greenish hue. The glaucous tint

seemed alive, moving. 

Rapid Pace ogled the panels. But not until a bit of underwater  driftage swirled past one did he realize he was

seeing the watery  depths outside the submarine. 

"Marvelous!" be exploded. "Yes, sir, marvelous!" 

"There are strong infrared searchlights recessed in the hull,"  Monk told him. "Infrared light penetrates

water a little better than  ordinary Visible rays. Photoelectric eyes pick up the images and they  are brought to

these screens through common television apparatus." 

Pace looked a little dizzy. "Why, this underseas boat is  incredible. It must have cost a fortune!" 

"It did," Monk told him calmly. "This iron fish was a whiz when it  was first built, and it has been improved

on ever since. I told you  that when Doc invents something for a submarine, he tries it out on the  Helldiver." 


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Ham, eying his sword cane, put in. "And that reminds me of  something: Where did these Silver

Death'sHeads get their sub?" 

Monk grunted, "I've been wondering about that, too." 

"That may not be so mysterious," Doc offered. 

"Eh?" Monk stared at the bronze giant. 

"Do you recall my telling you that Lorna Zane said Paine L.  Winthrop gave her fivemonths' vacation with

pay last spring?" Doc  queried. 

"Sure," said Monk. 

Rapid Pace exploded. "I was given a vacation at the same time! So  were all of the regular employees of the

Winthrop Shipyards. It was  very mysterious. When we got back to work, we found that the shipyard  had been

in operation during our absence. We never did find out what  had been built." 

"That," said Doc, "explains it." 

"So the submarine was built in Winthrop's yard," Ham clipped  grimly. "Winthrop was in on this. He got cold

feet, or fell out with  his partners or something, and they killed him with a shell fired from  the submarine in

the East River." 

"Fantastic!" Rapid Pace murmured. "Utterly fantastic, yes, sir!" 

The Helldiver had now passed the last of the radio buoys shown on  the map which Doc had gotten from the

Indian Head Club. 

"What now?" Monk wondered aloud. 

"We will keep on and hope the map did not show all of the radio  guides," Doc said. 

Sure enough, the directional apparatus picked up more of the bursts  which bad the sound of static. The buoys,

it seemed, continued out  toward the open sea. 

Following the trail, always beneath the surface, they veered to the  right, out of ship lanes. They were now

heading down the Jersey coast,  but a number of miles offshore. 

"Pretty slick," Monk said. "Having a string of radio buoys to guide  them right into New York harbor. Boy,

oh, boy! What a perfect getaway  idea!" 

"It required the expenditure of a lot of money," Ham pointed out. 

Monk started to say something  and his mouth flew so very wide  open that it seemed he was trying to yawn.

His right arm jutted out  like a bar, pointing. 

"I'll be a whale's brother!" he choked. "Look!" 

IN the sternview screen had appeared an object which resembled a  steel egg viewed from the front. It might

have been a fish coming  headon, for they had seen other fish on the screens, but this was of a  steely color


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and certain rudders and protuberances marked it for what  it was. 

"Submarine!" Ham ejaculated. 

The other subseas craft was traveling more swiftly than the  Helldiver, and therefore was gaining. 

Doc Savage advanced the throttles. The Helldiver picked up speed.  But so did the other ship. It continued to

gain. 

"This bus was not made for racing," Monk grumbled. "The  iceprotector rails cut down the speed." 

Rapid Pace cried anxiously, "How about torpedo tubes?" 

"None aboard," Doc advised. 

"What about depth bombs, then?" 

Doc Savage shook a metallic head. "The Helldiver is not equipped  for fighting. It is primarily a scientific

experimental vessel." 

The bronze man changed their course a trifle. 

Monk was scowling at the screen. "One consolation  that other iron  fish hasn't got torpedo tubes, either." 

The pursuing sub swung slightly sidewise to follow the Helldiver,  and they could observe the length of the

craft. It was considerably  smaller than the Helldiver, more slender, scientifically streamlined. 

"Seems like I've seen that bus somewhere before!" Monk grunted. "Or  maybe it was a picture." 

"It was a picture," Doc told him. 

Monk blinked little eyes. "I can't remember where I saw it. Do  you?" 

"Not long ago, United States newspapers carried a photograph of a  small twoman submarine which the

Japanese were testing," Doc advised.  "It was a craft closely resembling that one. Probably the design of the

Japanese submarine was copied in making this one. 

The smaller underseas boat was now only a few yards behind. They  could see, in the front of the conning

tower, a round glass porthole. 

Rapid Pace barked, "I wonder what they plan to do?" 

Doc, not altering expression, said, "Nothing pleasant, you can rest  assured." 

Pace moistened his lips, then glanced down at his bands. He held  them out in front of him. They were steady.

This seemed to surprise  him. 

"Hurrah!" he shouted. 

Hugh McCoy glared at him and snarled, "I don't see anything to be  happy about!" McCoy's exquisitely

handsome face was greasy with  perspiration. 


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Rapid Pace grinned widely. "Gentlemen, I believe my association  with you has ridded me of something

which has hampered me all my life.  I am speaking of my cowardice. I usually scare, get so frightened that  I

am positively a wreck. But now I feel like a daredevil. Positively,  a daredevil." 

McCoy groaned, "What are we going to do? Why don't we rise to the  surface? We can't outrun them." 

"See that streamlined hatch on the other sub?" Doc queried. 

"Yyes," McCoy stuttered. 

"That undoubtedly covers the threeinch gun," Doc assured him.  "They cannot fire it under water. But wait 

let us see if this helps." 

The bronze man reached over and jerked a brass lever. The rearview  screen suddenly became black. But the

viewing device had not failed.  The blackness was from without  an inky cloud was pouring from  receptacles

in the skin of the submarine. 

"Blazes!" Monk gulped. "This is a new one on me!" 

DOC Savage put the wheel hard over, then cut the motors to  halfthrottle. 

"Remember when we went under the Polar ice in the Helldiver?" he  asked. 

"Do I?" grunted Monk. "I'll never forget!" 

"We put tanks in the submarine skin to hold a chemical mixture you  invented, incidentally  which would

melt ice when released," Doc  recalled. "That was to free us if we got trapped under the ice pack." 

Monk nodded. "Sure." 

"The chemical solution I just released from those tanks is my own  invention," Doc told him. "It turns salt

water black. The secret is now  in the hands of the United States Government. It may come in handy  should

there be another war." 

Doc now manipulated the sonic locators. These showed that the small  submarine of the silver men was astern,

wandering in its course,  baffled by the sepia water. 

Doc cut the motors of the Helldiver entirely. The craft lost  headway, sank, and came to a rest on the bottom

of the Atlantic which,  at this point, was hard sand, according to the charts. 

McCoy mopped perspiration from his toohandsome features and  groaned, "I don't see where this is going to

help us!" 

Pace grinned at him. "We're alive, anyway." 

Glaring, McCoy snapped, "You don't need to be so damned cheerful!" 

Rapid Pace, in his new personality of a man who was not afraid, was  a different individual from the nervous,

rapidtalking efficiency  expert. He even spoke more slowly, firmly, and did not repeat himself  as much. 


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"From now on, you use a civil tongue when you speak to me," he told  Hugh McCoy grimly. "Otherwise I am

going to do my best to knock hell  out of you." 

Monk growled, "For just about the last time, I'm telling you guys  to cut that out!" 

There came a loud, metallic clank. The rubberribbed floor tilted,  throwing all but Doc Savage off balance.

The bronze man's grip on the  controls kept him erect. 

McCoy wailed fearfully, and seemed on the point of bursting into  tears. 

"What was that?" he screamed. 

Rapid Pace picked himself up, sneered at McCoy, then squinted at  the window panels. These were black, due

to the murky solution in the  water without. But the ocean current had swept some of the sepia cloud  away,

and he could make out objects a few feet from the Helldiver hull. 

"Look!" Pace barked. "That other submarine has fastened itself to  our hull in some manner!" 

DOC Savage started the Helldiver motors. The sub began to move, but  it was an erratic motion. The

resistance of the other vessel clinging  to their hull  and the other craft did not dislodge  was sufficient  to

prevent them steering a straight course. 

Manipulating valves, Doc caused the Helldiver's ballast tanks to  blow. They lifted a few feet, then their rise

stopped and they watched  the depth gauge sink back until they jarred on the sandy ocean floor  again. The

Helldiver, an extremely heavy craft, did not have enough  surplus buoyancy to lift the other submarine with its

ballast tanks  fully filled. 

"Hell!" yelled Monk. "This beats anything I ever heard of! What's  holdin' that iron fish to us?" 

"That is the mystery," Doc said grimly. "And what puzzles me even  more. How did it find us in the black

water?" 

There was quiet in the Helldiver now, except for the clicking of a  gyro compass and the microscopic ticking

of chronometers. They strained  their ears. Hugh McCoy had changed color, not getting pale, but blue,  as if he

were being slowly smothered. 

Glub! The sound was wet. Glub, glub! It repeated twice again. 

"Bubbles from an escape hatch on the other sub!" Doc rapped. "They  are sending divers outside!" 

The bronze giant lashed a glance at the depth indicators. They read  slightly below seventy feet. The depth

was not excessive for diving  work. 

Doc ran to a locker which held diving equipment  flexible,  mailarmored suits and some of the transparent

hoods which vaguely  resembled goldfish bowls. The locker held more than hall a dozen  outfits. Doc hauled

them out. 

"Put them on!" he rapped. 

Monk and Ham sprang to obey. They knew how the suits operated,  having used them before. Rapid Pace

joined them. 


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Hugh McCoy stood back, his exquisitely profiled face even more  purple. 

Monk picked up one of the suits and ran toward McCoy, intending to  force the handsome man to put it on. 

McCoy suddenly clawed at a pocket. He bad a gun half out when Monk,  lunging, wrenched the weapon from

his fingers. 

"What in blazes were you gonna do with that?" Monk yelled. 

"I ddon't know," McCoy stuttered. "Ffight those devils, I guess.  I don't want to go outside. I hate the water.

I've never been in a  diving suit. why, we're sseventy feet down!" 

Monk jammed McCoy's gun in his own pocket. "Yes, and we'll be down  here permanently unless we do

something about it." 

McCoy, trembling, allowed himself to be helped into the diving suit  and received instructions on its

operation. 

Rapid Pace, chest puffed with his newfound courage, said, "I'm not  scared. I feel like a daredevil,

positively. Damned if I understand  it!" 

Chapter 16. UNDERWATER DEFEAT

THE Helldiver was not silent now. The men were breathing noisily  from the exertion of getting into the suits;

the suits themselves made  clinkings against the metal parts of the submarine. 

But there was other sound, a hideous sound. It was a series of  resounding blows against the steel hull of the

submarine. These came  from forward, and from immediately overhead. 

"They've found our hatches, and are trying to get them open to let  the water in," Monk growled. 

Then the homely chemist pulled the transparent helmet over his  head, switched on the tiny twoway radio

and added, "Let's get goin'.  We gotta put a stop to that." 

Doc Savage led the way aft. He opened an oval hatch which gave into  a steel cubicle hardly more than six

feet square. In the top of this  was another hatch. 

Doc closed the bulkhead through which they had come. He turned a  lever. Machinery whined. The hatch

overhead lifted and water came in,  by strings at first, then with a smashing rush that jostled them about. 

The bronze man let compressed air from the back tanks into his suit  to compensate his buoyancy to

approximately that of the surrounding  sea. Then he leaped, floated upward, grasped the hatch edge and

clambered out. 

The others followed him  McCoy first, then Pace, then Monk and  Ham. 

Each man drew a sharp, longbladed knife. These were holstered to  the diving suit belts. Under water, knives

were the most effective  weapons. 

It was lighter than they had expected outside. For one thing, the  current had swept away the black cloud. And


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the silver men were  carrying powerful portable torches. 

Doc headed for the group about the main conning tower hatch. They  were vague at first, like figures seen in a

fog. Then they took on  distinctness. There were four of them. 

They wore selfcontained diving suits  paraphernalia which did not  require air hoses, oxygen being supplied

by tanks worn on a back  harness. Their helmets were not transparent, but of metal, with round  grilled

windows. 

The diving equipment was of the sort which could be purchased at  any supply house. 

The silver men  there was not the slightest doubt but that they  were Silver Death'sHeads  were working

with wrenches and bars, and a  cutting torch made a lurid spot of light and spewed bubbles through the  water. 

Doc ran toward them, leaning far forward. Probably the thump of his  lead shoes on the sub hull warned the

group about the conning tower  hatch. They straightened. The one with the torch sidled ahead, waving  the

grisly flame before him. 

It was a hideous weapon, that torch. It burned under water by grace  of pure oxygen supplied from a portable

tank, and it could slice  through hard steel with no more difficulty than a finger is drawn  through mud. 

Monk lunged along at Doc's elbow. The pleasantly ugly chemist  retained some of his apish aspect in a diving

suit. 

"We'll flank the man with the torch," Doc said into the radio. 

The bronze man went to the right. Monk took the left. 

The diver with the torch made a few erratic passes, then began to  retreat. He had respect for the knives Doc

and Monk carried. The body  of his suit was of rubber and canvas composition, by no means proof  against

sharp' steel. 

Suddenly the silver men broke and fled. Resistance of the water  made their movements grotesquely slow as

they took flying leaps off the  hull of the Helldiver, then churned for their own craft, which was  attached

slightly forward. 

Doc and Monk, following, had a chance to observe how the other  submarine managed to cling so tightly to

the Helldiver. 

Attached to the hull of the smaller Uboat was a succession of  circular objects which might have been

washtubs. It was these which  were in contact with Doc's submarine. 

"Electromagnets!" Monk yelled through the intercommunicating radio.  "But what in blazes are

electromagnets doing on their tub?" 

The answer to that did not come until later, after unpleasant  things had happened. 

THE submarine of the silver men, while small in proportion to the  Helldiver, was larger than it had first

seemed when viewed through the  lookout screen from within the Helldiver. 

It was no twoman craft. At least a dozen silver men in diving  suits were outside. 


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They grouped to meet Doc and his party. Some of them held diver's  knives. But others were doing something

else, working at the escape  hatch by which they had left their own submersible. 

They drew out black rods some six feet or more in length, to the  ends of which were attached what resembled

black rubber hose. The men  held these rods like lances, and advanced. The black line trailed out  behind them

and led into their own submarine. 

One of them stumbled. He put the end of his rod down against the  sandy bottom to maintain his balance.

Where the rod touched, there was  abrupt, sizzling blue flame, like an electric arc. 

"The rods carry highvoltage current!" Doc warned his companions.  "Pressure closes a contact. If they touch

us with those things, we're  finished!" 

The silver men came on. Their features were grotesque inside the  helmet windows, for they still wore the

gruesome masks which had caused  the tabloid newspapers to give them their designation of Silver

Death'sHeads. The insulated highvoltage rods probed hungrily. 

Doc halted, wheeled, saw that his four companions were behind him  and waved them back. 

"To fight them would be fatal," he warned. "Stay away from those  rods. Circle around them. Keep them

worried. I am going back into the  Helldiver." 

The bronze man spun and sloped back for the escape hatch. His best  speed was not as fast as a normal man

could walk on land. Injecting  extra buoyancy into his suit, he lifted himself up to the conning  tower,

compensated the buoyancy, then dropped back and let himself down  into the hatch. Compressed air forced

the sea water out. 

A moment later, he was in the Helldiver control room. 

A twist of a lever discharged a fresh quantity of the chemical  which, due to its reaction with the saline content

of the sea water,  created a black smudge. 

Next, the bronze man dug a cutting torch out of a locker. He did  not ignite it. Then he passed through the

escape hatch and emerged  outside again. 

"Every one safe?" he asked. 

Monk and Ham replied almost at once over the intercommunicating  radio. McCoy was a bit slower. 

"How about you, Pace?" Doc asked. 

"I'm not a bit scared," said Rapid Pace. "I cannot understand it." 

"Simply stay clear of them," Doc directed. "Give me a chance to  work on their electromagnets with this

cutting torch." 

The bronze man did not ignite the torch immediately, since its glow  might betray his presence despite the

black smear which now filled the  sea. It was like working through ink as he crept along the hard, sandy

bottom. 


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The silver men, he reasoned, would be worried by the black cloud  and stick close to their own craft. Getting

between the two  tightlyclinging submersibles, Doc fended off with one hand, then  puffed his suit with the

air valve and sailed upward. 

He found one of the electromagnets which were like washtubs. The  cutting torch was fitted with an

underwater igniter. With a mild  explosion, it began to flame. 

Doc Savage promptly clamped his transparent helmet to the steel  side of the submarine. This would cause the

clank of lead shoes, should  any divers approach, to come to his attention before danger was too  close. 

Instead of holding the cutting torch in his hand, the bronze man  placed it on the sub hull in such a position

that the flame was held  against the electromagnet covering without aid from his own hand. This  was a matter

of precaution. The torch might shortcircuit through the  coil and bring a deathdealing jolt of current. 

Shortly, a flash of blue flame showed through the sepia void. That  would be the burnedout coil wires arcing.

Doc jerked the insulated  lanyard attached to the torch and drew it to him. 

He worked down the hull in the intensely dark, gently resisting  void that was the sea, and found the next

electromagnet. He repeated  the process there, even to keeping his helmet pressed to the subhull. 

And it was well that he did not neglect that last. He might have  missed the clanking of rapid footsteps. Lead

shoes were coming along  the subdeck. From the jangling noises, other divers were striving to  clamber up the

hull. 

Doc waited. The torch made a roaring that almost drowned out the  footsteps, but it did not drown them quite

as much as before. The  divers were getting close. 

Doc hauled the torch in, cut the flame and eased away. A few feet  down the hull, he stepped out and let

himself sink to the sand. 

Before he got his balance, the ocean current carried him against  the Helldiver's hull. He crept along it, feeling

his way. 

"Monk! Ham!" Doc called into the microphone. "Get in the Helldiver  with Pace and McCoy." 

Doc reached the escape hatch and a moment later, with a dull  clanking and a bubbling of released air, his four

companions also  reached the hatch. In order not to get lost, they had linked themselves  together with a line 

a hank of stout cord was a part of each diving  suit belt equipment. 

Doc closed the escape chamber hatch, blew the water, then stepped  into the Helldiver. He ran for the control

room without removing the  diving suit. 

Motors wailed out at his touch of the starting switch, wailed and  labored. Suddenly there was a great crashing

of circuit breakers  cutting current off from the motors. The breakers functioned  automatically, to protect the

motors from an overload. 

Doc tried again. Unclutched from the propeller drive shafts, the  motors turned over readily. But the shafts

themselves refused to turn.  The overload caused the breakers to bang open. 

"What is it?" Monk asked anxiously. 


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"They seem to have wrapped chain around our propeller shafts," Doc  told him. 

THE bronze man now blew the Helldiver's ballast tanks to their  fullest, in an endeavor to get the submarine to

pull free from the  electromagnets which still held it to the other underwater craft. Since  some of the magnets

had been rendered useless, Doc hoped the others  would be insufficient to hold. 

He was positive they could have gotten away had the Helldiver's  motors been able to turn over the propellers.

The submarines did not  separate, however, but continued to repose on the sea bottom,  magnetically glued

together. 

And now there was more noise at the hatches, as the silver men  endeavored to force themselves inside the

Helldiver. 

Doc went back to the escape chamber, accompanied by the other four.  They were grim, saying little.

Enclosed in the chamber, they shut the  inner door, then Doc touched the control which started opening the

outer panel. 

The door had opened but a few inches when he lunged for the  controls and reversed them. A black rod had

protruded through the  opening. Its end was armored with the shiny copper of an electrode. 

"One of them blasted electric lances!" Monk growled. 

"Keep away from it!" Doc commanded grimly. 

The lance had been caught in the closing door. The steel panel  pinched shut, and a moment later cut through

the lance insulation with  a resultant explosion of blue flame. 

The Helldiver was equipped with two escape hatches, so that divers  could come and go. They had been

intended for scientific exploration  work under water. The second hatch was located forward and was smaller. 

"We'll try the other hatch," Doc decided. 

They were in water well above their knees. When the inner door was  open, this flooded into the Helldiver

with them. But the automatic  pumps would take care of it. 

But they did not reach the other escape hatch, or pass through it  to engage in combat. 

They were abreast of the conning tower when there was a moaning  roar, and water sheeted out of the control

room. It came from the  control room door, as if that aperture were the mouth of a great faucet  which had been

turned on suddenly. 

Doc Savage, for all of his great strength, was tumbled about and  smashed into bulkheads. The torrent jostled

him down a passage, banged  him into a steel support, and the transparent helmet he was wearing  would have

broken had it not been of very strong construction. 

Monk and the others, lacking Doc's physical hardihood, were handled  with greater roughness. McCoy yelled

in pain as he smashed over a  motor; there was terror in his voice also. Pace swore calmly. 

Monk and Ham resisted the water with grim silence. 


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Had they all not worn diving suits, death would have come within  the ensuing few minutes. As it was, they

were jostled about, helpless  to resist the tremendous force of the water, until the Helldiver's main

compartment had filled. 

Only the central section filled at the moment, however, for there  were safety devices on the bulkhead doors,

mechanical contrivances  which closed and made the bulkheads watertight when water entered. 

There were no air locks between the bulkheads, so that it was  impossible to move from one compartment to

the other, now that the  central one was full. 

Silver men in diving suits began dropping down the conning tower  hatch. 

THE sea water, due to the strong current, had cleared up again, the  black cloud having been swept away. The

first silver man to enter held  one of the long dark lances, and close at his elbow came another man  bearing a

strong underwater searchlight. They advanced. 

More sinister divers entered behind them. They floated down in an  ominous procession, vague forms in the

water, like spectral bodies from  some Stygian domain. There was only the one electric lance. The others  held

diver's knives. 

Doc and his men retreated. There was nothing else to do. The lance  was deadly. It was the thing which had

defeated them, the one weapon  with which they were helpless to cope, having, as they did, no time to  rig an

insulated shield or other defense. 

There was not even an insulated pole in the Helldiver which could  be employed to fend off the electric lance. 

Doc watched the lancer. The bronze man's remarkable features,  plainly distinguishable inside his transparent

helmet, showed no  emotion. 

Doc's attention  all of it  was on the lance. The clanking of  lead shoes made a metallic mumble on the floor

plates. That was why he  did not hear the bulkhead door behind him open. It was a carefully  made,

wellgreased door. 

Doc had no way of knowing that the other compartments had been  opened and flooded. But they had. The

work had been done with wrenches  and cutting torches. And silver men had come from behind to flank Doc's

party. 

A second diver appeared in the bulkhead opening. Then came a third,  a fourth and a fifth. They had no lance,

but they all held knives. They  lunged in to attack. 

Doc was not taken entirely unawares. He heard the flanking divers,  wheeled, noted the absence' of a lance,

and lunged in fiercely to the  attack. 

The silver divers did not retreat. They must have felt they had  safety in numbers. 

It was a weirdly fantastic battle which was fought in the  watergorged entrails of the submarine. The fellow

with the electrified  lance made a few jabs, then the electric cord, leading to the power  plant in his own

underwater craft, became entangled and he had to  abandon the unique weapon. 

Doc Savage and his men, surrounded completely now, formed a tight  ring, a circlet that bristled with the

razorsharp steel thorns of their  knives. But they did not hold it for Iong. 


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Silver divers lunged in on the side defended by Pace and McCoy.  They broke through. One man sagged back,

bubbles pouring from a hole  which Pace had knifed in his suit. 

The fighting ring disintegrated. Four men seized Doc Savage. One  lost interest in the fray and stumbled off

for his own submarine, his  suit streaming bubbles. 

A man leeched upon Doc's arm. Doc endeavored to shake him off. In  the open air it would have been a

simple task, but under water it was a  Herculean job. The bronze man's second arm was trapped. A man

tangled  with his legs. 

Doc was forced over sidewise. There was no purchase for footing,  because his weight above the displaced

water was negligible. The diving  suit hampered him. 

He felt some one at his back. He endeavored to spin, despite the  men trying to hold him. But it was too late.

There was a roar of  escaping air. His oxygen apparatus had been wrenched away! 

AS air pressure left the bronze man's helmet, water began to pour  in. It sloshed cold upon his neck, his

shoulders, spilled down in his  suit, which had been pressed tightly to his great frame when the air  escaped. 

Water came up around his neck, his lips. Had he been erect, air  pressure in the top of his helmet might have

kept the water out for a  few moments. But he was tilted over on the steel floor. The brine  covered his nostrils,

his eyes. 

A few bubbles left his nostrils. Then the mad desperation of  impending death seemed to seize the metallic

giant. His great arms  corded, convulsed, and the two silver (livers who held him were carried  together, head

first. They dropped off his arms, stunned. 

Doc stamped the other man free of his legs. 

The fellow who had torn off the oxygen tank retreated, still  holding the tank in one hand, a knife in the other. 

Doc made a move as if to follow him. But a great weakness seemed to  have seized him. He swayed, was

moved about by the water currents  within the swamped Helldiver. He sagged. 

The current carried him backward and he disappeared into the gloom  of the compartment from which the

silver divers had come to stage the  flank attack. 

Chapter 17. THE SUBSEAS RIDE

ULL himself had wrenched the oxygen apparatus from Doc Savage's  suit. He was elated. He yelled once in

unholy delight, as Doc vanished  into the black tomb of the compartment. Then he lunged toward two men

who held Rapid Pace, and jammed his helmet to one of theirs. 

"Keep them alive!" he yelled. 

Because their diving suits were not equipped with the ingenious  radio intercommunicating sets, it was

necessary to put helmets  together when they wanted to talk. In that manner, vibration through  the metal

carried their voices. 

"Hell's fire!" the man shouted back. "Why?" 


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"We'll pump them!" UlI bellowed. "We must know whether they told  the police what they had learned about

us!" 

UlI moved rapidly to his other men and repeated the order. As a  result, Monk and Ham were hauled to the

conning tower hatch, not  greatly damaged, except in spirit. Monk's diving suit was leaking on  one leg, but

that would not be serious as long as he kept upright. A  knife had made a gash in it. 

Rapid Pace and McCoy were also unharmed. They were dragged along  behind. 

To the homely Monk, the trip back to the submarine of the Silver  Death'sHeads seemed to take an age. He

struggled at first, then  desisted at the very real threat of a knife point against his chest. 

The air lock by which they were taken into the other subseas boat  was of the conventional type, possibly a bit

larger than usual. But  Monk was not interested in structural details. 

Forlorn grief contorted the chemist's pleasantly ugly features. He  had seen what had happened to Doc Savage.

The bronze giant, he was  convinced, was now dead. 

The thought appalled Monk. It weakened him, took his spirit, made  him listless, not caring greatly what

happened henceforward. The fact  that Pat Savage and Lorna Zane were still prisoners of the Silver

Death'sHeads, perhaps alive, was temporarily forgotten. 

Monk's existence was tied up with Doc Savage, and had been for  years; but Doc was dead now. Scientist, a

being of superhuman physical  powers, master of incredible feats, the bronze man had perished in a  tomb of

steel sixty feet beneath the Atlantic. 

Monk thought of that, and it put him in a mood where he could not  see the need for carrying on. 

Monk and Ham, under the guard of alert submachine guns, were placed  together in a tiny compartment in the

silver men's submarine. Their  diving suits were removed. 

They had to sit down, shoulder to shoulder, between two lockers.  There was barely room for them. Nor was

there headroom for even the  shortest of their captors in the submarine. 

The Uboat was incredibly cramped, and she had a big cargo of  humanity aboard, if these men who wore the

silver disguises could be  classed as such. 

Rapid Pace and McCoy were placed somewhere else. Monk and Ham did  not see them after they entered the

underseas craft. 

The homely chemist and the dapper lawyer did see a large metal  canister being passed through the air hatch.

A clockwork device was  attached to this, and they recognized it for what it was  a mine of  the type used by

the Coast Guard to destroy derelicts. 

They could guess to what use the explosive was to be put. 

The Silver Death'sHeads loaded aboard the submarine and took off  their diving paraphernalia. They were a

jubilant lot. Some removed  their silver masks. The faces they revealed had one thing in common   there was

viciousness about the eyes. 


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A switch was thrown, cutting current off from the electromagnets.  The submarine lifted a little, but did not

clear the surface, and  traveled away. 

By the sound of the motors, Monk and Ham knew the craft was making  full speed. They knew why  the

mine. 

The mine went off after a few minutes, and the shock of it rolled  the submarine and made her steel plates

groan. 

Ull came and leered down at Monk and Ham, and said, "That blew your  submarine and the corpse of Doc

Savage to where they belong!" 

ULL removed his mask now, probably because it hampered his  breathing. The fact that he did remove it

promised an unpleasant  future. He would not show his face to men whom he expected to live to  identify him

later in a court of law. 

It was a surprise. this face of Ull's. It mirrored no evil, not  even the eyes. It was a round, cherubic thing, the

countenance of a  matured cupid. The eyes were soft and brown and the fat, round chin had  a cleft that was

almost a dimple. 

UII stared peacefully at Monk and Ham. 

"You see," he said dryly, "we were prepared for trouble under the  water." 

"Whatcha mean?" Monk asked thickly. 

"The electric lances," U!! chuckled. "We have carried them aboard  for a long time. You see, there was always

a chance that we might be  trapped under water, and divers sent down to investigate. The lances  were the most

effective weapons I could devise." 

Monk said nothing but tried not to think of Doc Savage and what had  happened to him. His groping mind hit

on another thing which was  puzzling him, so he asked about it. 

"The electromagnets?" he asked. "How come this  this thing was  equipped with them." 

"We use them," UII chuckled. 

"How?" Monk questioned hoarsely. 

UII chuckled. If there was placidity and innocence on his cherubic  face, it did not extend to his voice, for that

was ugly in its very  quietness. There was satanic evil also in his calm demeanor. 

"The electromagnets enabled us to contact you in that black water,"  UII offered. "We were lucky. We came

close to you, and had sense enough  to have the magnets switched on. Before we knew it, we were fastened to

you. The magnets pulled us close. They are very powerful!" 

"You didn't put them on for that purpose," Monk muttered. "They  wouldn't operate over a distance of more

than a few feet. What are they  intended for?" 

UIl smirked. "Before long, I think that will cease to puzzle you." 


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"Yeah," Monk growled. Then, still trying to keep his thoughts off  Doc Savage's fate, the homely chemist

ejected another question: "Pat   is she all right?" 

"She is alive," UlI told him. "I would not say she is all right. In  fact, her position is very bad. So is that of the

other young lady,  Lorna Zane. To be quite clear, they are to be killed along with you   unless you tell us

whether or not the police know of our method of  getting into New York harbor by the underwater route." 

That last was an afterthought, plainly, and Monk did not honor it  with an answer. They would be tortured, of

course. Whether or not they  talked would not make much difference  to them. They would be killed

anyway. 

Monk tried to clear up another mysterious point. 

"Is Bedford Burgess Gardner behind all this?" he asked. 

Ull hesitated, put the end of a pink tongue between his teeth as he  considered, then burst into an explosion of

hollow laughter. 

"Is Gardner the big brain?" he smiled. "You want to know that?" 

"Yes," Monk grunted. 

"Yes," said UlI. 

The submarine was traveling along at half throttle, and not making  great speed. That was fortunate.

Otherwise, Doc Savage might have been  torn off. 

True, he was lashed to a mooring ring on the deck. He could never  have held on any other way, even with his

fabulous muscles. Maybe he  could have managed for a time, but the chances were against it,  especially

earlier, during the time when the underseas craft had  charged full speed from the vicinity of the Helldiver,

endeavoring to  get clear before the mine exploded. 

Doc's escape from death had been executed without great difficulty  or impossible legerdemain. The water

where the subsea fight had  occurred was not so deep that its mere pressure produced extreme  discomfort. 

The bronze man had managed to get to a locker in the compartment  into which he had disappeared after UIl

had torn off the oxygen  apparatus. This was not hard, for Doc knew the Helldiver's every rivet,  and he could

hold his breath, due to long practice, a time an ordinary  man would consider beyond human ability. 

A pair of diving "lungs" had come out of the locker. These were  merely the tubes and mouthpiece, purifier

and oxygen tanks, minus the  helmet and suit of an ordinary diving rig. Donning the diving lungs had  entailed

no greater problem than the swallowing of a quantity of salt  water. Doc wore them now. 

The bronze man had to keep his head down and his features protected  with enwrapping arms. Otherwise, the

diving lungs would have been torn  out by the rush of the water. That was why it was well that he had  lashed

himself to the mooring ring. 

Getting atop the submarine had not been difficult either, since the  silver men thought him dead. 

Not that the bronze man was having an easy time of it. T he water  tore at him with terrific force. The lashing

line was gradually sawing  into his great ligaments, and eventually he was certain to weaken and  be battered


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into insensibility, or else to lose the diving lungs, which  would be more disastrous. 

He was unable to keep his eyes open against the tearing water,  except for an occasional brief squint. The

lighter hue of the water  about him told him that the sub was not running far beneath the  surface. No doubt it

was following the radio guide buoys. The fact that  they were not as deep indicated, conceivably, that they

might be  nearing shore. 

Soon the shoreward course hypothesis became a certainty, for there  was a grinding sound, and Doc, chancing

a glance, saw the periscope  rising. He could barely make it out through the sunlit waters. 

The fog must have cleared up, judging by the illumination in the  water. 

The submotors became more silent. The water lost some of its  tearing force. After a bit there was a soft jar,

and mud billowed up  around the sub. It had touched bottom. Probably its keel was  reenforced against just

such contacts as this. 

T he sub was built almost as strongly as the practically  indestructible Helldiver. 

The Uboat lifted out of the mud and continued. With bare headway,  it nosed forward. Everything indicated

that the craft was nearing the  secret base of the Silver Death'sHeads. 

Doc could keep his eyes open. He saw the underwater searchlight on  the bow of the submarine spout

brilliance, although it was hardly  necessary with the brightness of the sun. 

A moment later, the bronze man began a mad wrenching at the  lashings which held him to the mooring ring. 

A mass  it resembled a gigantic log with the bark on, due to a  profuse growth of barnacles  was looming

overhead. He was in immediate  danger of being crushed. 

Chapter 18. THE BASE

DOC Savage unlashed himself from the ring, then stroked down and  seized the fin of a diving rudder. A

watery rush from the propellers  nearly tore him loose. 

The sub was jockeying to get under the huge hulk above. The slow,  tedious task the silver men made of it was

nevertheless an expert job. 

Undoubtedly, they were guided by highly scientific soundwave  projectors and receivers, or, possibly, beam

radio apparatus which told  them when they were directly under the mass overhead. 

Ballast was slowly blown and the underseas boat lifted. There was a  jar as it touched the barnaclecovered

hulk. In some spots the  barnacles had been sheared away by past contacts, and steel plates were  disclosed. 

The sub did not move after the contact. It was being held in place  by the electromagnets. 

The thing above was the bottom of a ship. It could be nothing else.  No doubt there were other electromagnets

inside the ship to keep the  Uboat from changing position. 

Machinery ground. A great turmoil of bubbles poured up from the  direction of the air lock by which divers

came and went from the  Uboat. 


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Doc Savage hastily released the diving fin to which he clung, then  stroked down and under the submarine.

From there, he managed to get  under the hull of the ship, where he would be comparatively safe from

discovery. 

The bronze man worked forward, swimming a little, using the more  clustered patches of barnacles for finger

tip purchase. The hull began  to narrow as he approached the bow. It was not a large ship, it seemed. 

He did not follow the bow up out of the water, but shoved himself  free and swam to the right, keeping far

beneath the surface. He prowled  out there for a time, but found nothing. Then he tried the left side.  There, he

located the anchor cable, a procession of thick iron links. 

Doc drew in all the air his lungs would comfortably contain, then  removed the diving lungs and tied them to

the anchor linkage by the  straps which held the purifying mechanism to his back. 

It was a precaution. If he got aboard the ship, was shot at and  went overboard, not to come up, the Silver

Death'sHeads would think  him dead again, perhaps. He could reach the lungs, swimming under water  to don

them. 

The anchor chain ran down on the side opposite the point where the  submarine had fastened itself  which

was fortunate. But Doc broke the  surface very cautiously, keeping under the anchor links, they being  large

enough to partially conceal his head. He stared upward. 

The ship was a tramp, a rusty old hulk of a few thousand tons, one  of the type which helped make up the Rum

Row of prohibition days. 

The Row still existed, for that matter, well outside the  jurisdiction of the Coast Guard, and handled other

things beside rum   perfumes, watch movements and other things on which there was a high  duty. No doubt

a few aliens were smuggled, too. 

The tramp needed paint; her brasswork was almost beyond being  helped by polish, and her one funnel leaned

slightly askew. 

Doc saw the funnel when he reached the anchor hawse hole and lifted  himself by the strength of his great

arms. The vessel had two crow's  nests, that suspicious in itself; and in each, a lookout was on duty. 

Doc watched the lookouts closely. They would sweep the horizon with  binoculars, then give attention to their

comrades, who were coming up  from the submarine through the air lock. 

It was while they were eying the sub that Doc whipped over the  rail, flashed to the nearest open hatch and

dropped down it. 

No one saw him, because there was a commotion aft, along the rail. 

THE commotion was of Monk's making. The homely chemist still  thought Doc Savage dead; he had been

benumbed by the fact, but now he  was shedding the agonizing lethargy. 

Monk topped the rail, dripping and sputtering; he had been forced  to swim up from the air lock without

benefit of a diving suit, and he  was mad. He lashed out at the first convenient jaw. Bone crunched under  his

fist. 

The man who had been hit caved as he went backward. 


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Some one tried to smash Monk over his bulletlike head with a  revolver. Monk grabbed the short arm. He

almost got it, but silver men,  rushing in, clubbed him back. He was seized and handcuffed. 

When Ham appeared, he and Monk were led below. They did not see  Hugh McCoy or Rapid Pace. Nor had

they seen the pair since the  misfortune aboard the Helldiver. 

"I wonder if they're alive?" Monk growled. 

"Get below, gentlemen," suggested cherubfaced UII. 

Monk and Ham were convoyed below decks by a grim ring of gun  snouts. They were halted before a metal

door. Monk's wrists were  decorated with an additional pair of manacles, and Ham was handcuffed.  The door

was opened and they were shoved inside. 

Monk took one look at the two occupants of the rusty steel chamber  and let out a loud grunt of relief. 

"Pat!" he ejaculated. "So you are safe, after all!" 

"Do you call this safe?" Pat demanded caustically. "Where's Doc?" 

Patricia Savage, wrists ornamented with steel linkage, was far from  being the immaculate personality who

headed a successful swanky Park  Avenue beauty establishment. She still wore her evening gown, but it  was

grimy, and she had torn it off above the ankles for greater freedom  of movement. 

Lorna Zane was with her, and she also showed traces of a rough  evening and night. Her brown hair was

disheveled; her ensemble of gray  had lost its effectiveness; the gray beret and gray bag being missing,  and a

heel was gone from one gray pump. 

"Where's Doc?" Pat repeated. 

Monk turned around as if to look at Ham, but actually to hide the  expression on his homely features. 

"I dunno," he mumbled. 

Pat, voice suddenly shrill, demanded, "Monk! Has something happened  to Doc?" 

Ull, laughing loudly from the door, said ,"I will tell the  broadminded world that something happened to him.

He drowned! Then we  blew his body to little pieces." 

Pat became very pale and swiveled so that no one could see her  face. 

Lorna Zane bit her lower lip so furiously that it seemed certain  her small white teeth would go through. 

A silver man appeared behind UII and said, "Listen, the big boy  wants to see you. And he's as mad as hell!" 

ULL scowled, his childishly round face suddenly ugly. He leveled an  arm at the prisoners. 

"I'll be back," he promised. "And you had better make up your minds  to tell whether or not you spilled the

dope on us to the police before  you started out in that submarine." 


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Then Ull stamped out and made his way up a companionway, then along  a filthy passage. The old boat had

once carried passengers, and Ull  turned into what had been the lounge. 

In the center of the lounge stood a large table. It was long and  wide, but it was none too large for the use to

which it was being put. 

The table held the proceeds of the Silver Death'sHeads' robberies  of the night before. There were stacks of

currency, canvas bags of hard  money, piles of necklaces, bracelets, and fully a bushel of rings.  Almost a

million dollars' worth of it, if sold at retail by the  original owners. 

At the head of the table stood an ominous figure. He waved an arm  and snarled, in a coarse whispering voice,

"I suppose you had this  display arranged to impress me?" 

The expression on Ull's cherubic features showed that he had done  just that. 

"There is a great deal of money here," he muttered. The ominous one  at the end of the table wore one of the

silver cloaks. T he whispering  tone he used was obviously assumed to disguise his voice. 

"You still think that the loot taken last night justifies the  turmoil into which the robberies threw the New

York police?" he asked  sarcastically. 

"They won't catch us," said Ull. "I'll order the anchor hoisted,  and we shall cruise out to sea for a few days.

No one will suspect us.  The papers of this ship are in order, and there is a cargo of innocent  wool and hides in

the hold, by way of proving we are enroute from South  America to Canada." 

"You are avoiding!" rapped the whispering one. 

"Avoiding what?" UII asked with pretended innocence. 

"The fact that you ordered those robberies on your own initiative,"  snapped the other. "You were to loot that

first armored truck. You were  to kill Paine L. Winthrop. And that was all, except for the work  incidental to

fighting Doc Savage." 

Ull began, "We took nearly a million dollars  " 

"And you endangered a scheme which has netted me a billion within  the last year!" the silver mastermind

hissed. 

Ull's cleft chin sagged. 

"What?" he choked. "A  how much?" 

"A billion!" snarled the man at the head of the table. 

Ull seemed dazed. "I do not understand this." 

"Do you recall that at various times during the past year I have  ordered certain men killed," queried the other

grimly. "The killings  were well done by yourself and aides, I must admit In no case were they  traceable to an

organized plot." 

Ull wet his lips. "I thought they were just  enemies of yours,  like you said." 


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"Enemies  business enemies," the other said hoarsely. "They were  men who stood in the way of business

mergers which I was engineering.  It was necessary to get them out of the way." 

"But what about the billion?" UlI gulped. 

"That was made by recapitalizing the merged companies and selling  the stock," he was informed. "The

financial details are too complicated  to consider here." 

Ull eyed the loot on the table, and it did not seem to impress him  as much as it had earlier. 

"Was Paine L. Winthrop in the way of one of your mergers?" he  asked. 

"No," rasped the other. "Winthrop was working with me. As you know,  he built our submarine in his

shipyard a few months ago, when all of  his regular employees were laid off, and we used our own men for the

construction work. I was going to merge his company and give Inina a  handsome cut of the profits. But he

got cold feet. He had been told the  submarine was for a foreign government. When he found out its true use,

his nerve failed. I had to put him out of the way to keep him from  going to the police." 

"Oh," Ull said vaguely. 

THE master in silver teetered on his heels. He even wore the silver  gloves, but it was apparent that his hands

were shaking slightly with  rage. 

The sinister one's anger began to get on Ull's nerves, as did the  mask. He was uneasy. Here be realized, was a

schemer of much greater  magnitude than be had thought. 

"You do not have to wear that disguise aboard," Ull mumbled. 

"Most of your men do not know me," the other whispered hoarsely.  "It is as well that they remain in

ignorance. But let us not get away  from the subject. You disobeyed my orders last night" 

"That," UIl told him quietly, "is not entirely my fault." 

"How do you figure that way?" 

"Had I known of this billion business, do you think I would have  been fool enough to endanger it?" Ull

demanded. 

The other seemed to think this over. 

"In the future, my orders must be followed implicitly," he said. 

"They will be," Ull replied earnestly. 

The being in silver waved an arm at the treasureladen table.  "Divide this stuff among the men. I do not want a

share. And you will  get no share yourself. That is by way of punishment for overstepping  your authority last

night." 

Ull looked as if he had been stuck with a pin, but said nothing. 

"What about the prisoners?" he asked. 


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"Question them," commanded the other. "Then execute them." 

Ull departed. 

"Close the door behind you," he was directed. "And do not disturb  me." 

Ull closed the door of the treasure table room and walked away. 

AFTER Ull had gone, the man in silver walked over to the table,  gazed upon the jewels with an experienced

eye and picked out the more  valuable. He selected packets of bills. In less than a minute, he had  annexed

nearly a fourth of the loot. 

The fellow now left the room, chuckling harshly. The passage into  which he went was dark, but he strode

blithely along it  until he  suddenly fell on his face. 

He never heard the blow which had struck him, for it had been  delivered silently, with great force. Nor did he

see the giant man of  bronze who bent over him and searched him. 

A bulky packet  not the loot from the table  was fastened inside  the silver man's garment. Doc Savage took

that. 

Then Doc removed the silver garment. 

It was very dark in the corridor and Doc did not make a light.  Hence it was impossible for him to view the

features of his victim, the  chieftain of the Silver Death'sHeads. Nor did Doc risk striking a  match. 

He drew the silver cloak on over his own head, found that it was  snug, but could be worn, then searched his

victim again and found  matches. He pocketed the matches. 

Back to the treasure room, Doc walked. Under a light he opened the  packet which had been inside the silver

man's garment. 

The package held a large, wellmade black theatrical beard. Doc  replaced the set of dark whiskers in his

pocket. 

The bronze man left the treasure room, stooping, bending his knees  and hanging his head in order to make

himself appear smaller. 

He sighted a guard down the passage and made for the fellow. But  before he reached the watchman, another

silver figure appeared and  attempted to pass. 

The lookout challenged, snarling, "Get that rig off! I wanta see  your face!" 

Instead of complying with the command, the silver man held up an  arm and exposed a wrist watch. The guard

compared its reading with the  expensive timepiece on his own wrist. 

"Sure," he said. "Go ahead." 

Doc paused, and for a brief moment his fantastic trilling sound was  audible, but not loud enough to penetrate

to the guard. Doc had just  discovered the significance of the expensive wrist watches which all of  the gang

wore. They were used in place of passwords. 


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The bronze man still wore the wrist watch which be had taken from  the man who had kicked the beggar in

New York City  the man who had  discovered his mistake and later fled, only to be shot to death by a

policeman. Its underwater bath had evidently not hurt the watch. 

Advancing, Doc was challenged. He showed the watch as the other had  done. It got him past. 

A few yards beyond the guard, he turned and in a voice greatly  different from his own, a harsh, cruel tone,

asked, "Where are the  prisoners being held?" 

"Right ahead of you," he was told. "You can't miss it." Doc went  on. He saw the room in which the prisoners

were being questioned, but  instead of pausing, went on as if he were uninterested. 

He had seen that Monk, Ham and the two girls were safe for the time  being. They would be safe until they

talked, providing they did not  hold out until UII was exasperated. 

Working deep into the old tramp steamer, Doc carefully avoided the  engine rooms. The craft was an oil

burner. He found the fuel tanks, got  a cap unscrewed and learned they were almost full. 

He left the cap off, scooped up oil in his hands and spilled it  along the tanks and down the sides, thence to the

nearest bulkhead  door. He carried the trail beyond that for some distance. 

At the end of the oil trail, he sank to a knee and felt through the  pockets of the silver frock until he found the

matches. With a quick  scrape, he struck one, then dropped it. 

The bronze man was running furiously when the match hit the fuel  oil. There was a sizzling. The stuff did not

burn like gasoline, but it  flamed, nevertheless, and the fire ran along until it reached the  bulkhead, passed

through and went on. 

That was all Doc saw. He was still running. He mounted a  Companionway. 

There was a loud roar and a rush of superheated air as the fuel  tank took fire. There had been enough gas

inside it to explode and  split the container. 

Chapter 19. DESTRUCTION

ULL was yelling threats at Monk and Ham when the explosion came.  The cherubfaced man rocked on his

feet, brought up against a bulkhead  and looked very surprised. 

"What the  " he began, then a mad shout apprised him of what was  wrong. 

"Fire! Fire!" was the yell. 

Ull wheeled and plunged out of the steel cell, rapping over his  shoulder, "Watch these prisoners!" 

He disappeared down the passage. Other men, some in silver frocks  and some in shirt sleeves, followed. They

streamed past the door. 

But one did not pass. He whipped into the cell. The guard stared  wonderingly at him. 

"I'm taking your place!" snapped the newcomer. "Give me your gun  and go help fight that fire." 


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The guard hesitated, then passed over his weapon and plunged  outside. He had little hankering to be left

below on sentry duty where  he might be trapped if the ship sank. 

The replacement wrenched down his hood. 

"Doc!" Monk squawked, and looked as if he were going to faint. 

Doc Savage snapped, "Come on! We've got to get out of here fast!" 

The bronze man replaced his hood, concealing his features, and  waved his gun prominently as he herded

Monk, Ham and the two girls down  the passage. Other silver men, passing him, thought, if they took time  to

think at all, that he was merely one of their number moving the  prisoners. 

Doc stopped one of them. 

"Where is the other captive?" he demanded. 

The silver man pointed. "Third door," he said. 

Doc ran to the designated panel, wrenched at the heavy hasp which  secured it, got it open  and Rapid Pace

came stumbling out. He lunged  fiercely at Doc and tried to strike with his fists. 

"Stop it!" Doc rapped. 

"Bless me!" Pace gulped. "I thought you were dead. Yes, sir, I  thought you were dead." 

Doc herded his party on, still pretending to be escorting them to  another prison cell. 

They came to the room which held the treasure table. Monk stared at  the assembled wealth, then made a

growling sound and plunged to the  left. Sacks lay there, stout rubberized canvas bags in which the loot  had no

doubt been brought aboard. He seized upon some of the bags, and  with sweeps of his great arms began

stuffing the sacks. 

"Gimme a hand!" he snapped at Ham. "I don't want to see these guys  get away with this stuff!" 

Ham leaped to aid. To expedite matters, Doc also lent a hand. 

Rapid Pace dashed forward, opened a door, yelled over his shoulder,  "I'm gonna see if the coast is clear," then

disappeared. He had entered  the passage in which Doc had overpowered the master of the Silver

Death'sHeads. 

A moment later were grunts, blows, painful exclamations. 

Pace yelled, "Ouch! There's somebody on the floor here! Say, he's  tying a handkerchief over his face!" 

"Watch it!" Doc shouted. "He is the man behind all of this!" 

Pace shouted. "Ouch!" again, after which there were more blows.  Heels kicked steel plates. grunts came from

between clenched teeth. The  thumping and tearing of clothing indicated a terrific fight. 

Doc leaped forward and plunged into the passage. It was very dark. 


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The fight had worked farther down the corridor. The master of the  Silver Death'sHeads seemed to be in

flight, with Pace close on his  heels. 

"I licked 'im!" Pace howled. "But he's getting away!" An instant  later, Doc bumped into Pace. The efficiency

expert stood in the  brilliant sunlight outside. An open hatch near by indicated where the  quarry had gone. 

Pace's face was blank. He tried to speak twice before he could  manufacture words. 

"Tthat was the mastermind?" be stuttered. 

"It was," Doc told him. "Did you see his face?" 

"I ssure ddid!" Pace gulped. "And am I ssurprised."' 

DOC gave Rapid Pace a shove. They headed for the nearest lifeboat,  the two girls immediately behind, Monk

and Ham, heavily burdened,  bringing up the rear. 

The lifeboat was an unusual craft for a tramp steamer of this sort   it was more of a fast seagoing launch.

Evidently it was a provision  against the necessity of a getaway some time when the submarine was  not at

hand. 

Doc wrenched the tarpaulin off, then he and Monk threw their weight  against the levers which swung the

davits out. Ham heaved sacks of loot  into the craft. They loaded aboard. 

A silver man in the crow's nest yelled and shot at them. T he  bullet dug splinters out of the boat. The second

lookout had quitted  his post  to assist in fighting the fire, no doubt. 

Doc directed a single shot from his gun at the crow's nest. 

The man there screamed and dropped his weapon, then tried to get  both hands down in the crow's nest bucket

to squeeze the pain out of  the leg which Doc's bullet had drilled. 

It was one of the few times the bronze man had used a gun, but the  shot was accurate; he might have been

practicing with the weapon all of  his life. 

They ran the rope through the falls a bit more swiftly than was  sane, but with alert eyes and husky muscles,

Doc and Monk managed to  keep the craft level. Ham had the engine going as they hit the water.  It was

perfect teamwork. 

The shots on deck had spread an alarm. Men leaped to the rail. 

"Get down!" Doc rapped. 

The boat sides were thick enough to break the force of a revolver  bullet and, flattened below the water level,

it was unlikely that they  would be hit at all. 

The boat heaved its nose up, dug its stern down in a mass of  propellerstirred foam and scudded away from

the tramp. 

Lead smacked the hall, chewed a thwart and clanged off the engine.  One slug opened a pair of holes in the

gas tank, and Monk, crawling  back, calmly planted a hairy finger over each aperture. 


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A few minutes put them out of bullet range. 

Smoke was climbing from hatches and portholes of the tramp. It was  very black oil smoke, and it indicated

the silver men had not been  successful in extinguishing the oil fire. That the flames were  spreading rapidly

was evident when men began diving overside. They  fought each other to get over the rail. 

"Trying to get in their sub," Monk grunted, lifting his bead from  his job of stoppering the gas tank. 

"They'll have a job," Ham said grimly. "The sub won't hold a fifth  of them." 

Some of the silver men undoubtedly reached the submarine. Perhaps  they entered through the air lock. But it

did them no good. 

The tanker suddenly blew up. Possibly it was the fuel tanks. In  later discussion, Doc tended toward the theory

that explosives were  stored aboard, and these had let loose. 

There was a great geyser of debris, smoke and flame. The ship came  apart in the middle, separating, the two

ends turning half around while  men spilled off the decks, their bodies hardly distinguishable amid the  flying

wreckage. 

A boiling inferno of oil poured out of the rent craft and spread,  flaming on the sea, engulfing those men who

were in the water, burning  them to death, or forcing them down until their lungs took in water  convulsively. 

At that, the swimmers were no more unlucky than those in the  submarine. The blast undoubtedly crushed the

submersible, so that those  within perished. 

Doc said slowly, "It is too bad that they tried to fight the fire  so long, and then wasted time in seeking to get

into the submarine.  They could have gotten off in the lifeboats. We did not take them all." 

Ham offered. "Probably afraid they would get picked up in the boats  and turned over to the police." 

"Poor guy," Monk put in. 

"Who?" Ham demanded. 

"Hugh McCoy," said Monk. "We did not rescue him. That's tough." 

Rapid Pace had been sitting as if in a stupor. Now he started and  eyed Monk. 

"It's not tough!" he snapped. "No, sir! It's not!" 

Monk scowled. "Listen, that ain't no way to talk about a dead guy,  even if you were all the time going to lick

him." 

"I did lick him!" Pace exclaimed triumphantly. "I finally did! I  don't understand how I had it in me." 

"When?" Monk grunted. "When did this happen?" 

"Just before we got off the boat," said Pace. 

The significance of the words dawned on Monk. 


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"Listen!" he exploded. "Say that again, will you?" 

"Hugh McCoy was the brains behind all of this," Pace said grimly.  "It was him that I fought in the corridor." 

Monk swiveled on Doc. "Is that right?" 

"McCoy was the chief of the Silver Death'sHeads " Doc said slowly.  "That was finally evident when the

silver men attacked our submarine  when they could have used a depth bomb and destroyed us. Their chief

was aboard. They did not want to kill him." 

Monk waved hairy arms, the gastank leak forgotten. "But what about  GardnerBedford Burgess Gardner?" 

"The same person," Doc said. 

"What?" Monk all but choked on the exclamation. 

"Remember the black beard which Gardner wore?" Doc questioned. "You  did not see him, but Face and

myself did, and I told you about it." 

"Sure," Monk admitted. 

Doc produced the packet which he had taken from the unconscious  chief of the silver men. He tossed it over.

Monk opened it. 

The packet held the black theatrical beard. 

Monk slowly put his thumbs back over the holes in the gas tank. 

THERE was not much more they could do. The sea about the spot where  the tramp had gone down was a

flaming mass of oil; in it, no creature  could live. But they cruised as near as possible, hoping to pick up any

survivors. 

Lorna Zane gave way and sobbed a little, and seemed quite willing  for Pace, the efficiency expert who had

improved his nerve so  remarkably, to comfort her. Pace was radiant. 

Pat looked wan, a little exhausted by the whole grisly episode. 

But Doc and his party were satisfied that the menace of the silver  men was ended, and were unconcerned

over the future. They cruised with  the launch until there was no possible chance of survivors being found. 

Then they turned toward the Jersey coast. There was sufficient fuel  to make it, and the sea was not too rough

for the launch. 

In the stern, Rapid Pace had an arm around Lorna Zane's shoulders. 

"You know, I've stopped getting scared," be told her. "I can't  understand it. No, sir!" 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. DEATH IN SILVER, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. SILVER DEATH'S-HEADS, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THE ARCHER IN SILVER, page = 7

   6. Chapter 3. THE ARCHER QUEST, page = 12

   7. Chapter 4. TWO SILVER MURDERS, page = 20

   8. Chapter 5. RAPID PACE, page = 28

   9. Chapter 6. MYSTERIOUS BLUEPRINTS, page = 35

   10. Chapter 7. THE INDIAN'S HEAD, page = 42

   11. Chapter 8. THE BIG MYSTERY, page = 50

   12. Chapter 9. THE CAPTURE, page = 58

   13. Chapter 10. DEATH BLASTS, page = 63

   14. Chapter 11. THE RIVER BED MYSTERY, page = 68

   15. Chapter 12. THE TRICK, page = 75

   16. Chapter 13. THE PHANTOMS, page = 79

   17. Chapter 14. THE GREEN TRAIL, page = 86

   18. Chapter 15. HELL UNDER WATER, page = 92

   19. Chapter 16. UNDERWATER DEFEAT, page = 97

   20. Chapter 17. THE SUBSEAS RIDE, page = 103

   21. Chapter 18. THE BASE, page = 107

   22. Chapter 19. DESTRUCTION, page = 113