Title:   THE MAN WHO FELL UP

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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THE MAN WHO FELL UP

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE MAN WHO FELL UP ...............................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1 . THE ONE WHO FELL  ........................................................................................................1

Chapter II. IN A GREEN FOG  ...............................................................................................................3

Chapter III. ANOTHER WHO FELL UP  .............................................................................................12

Chapter IV. FAINTING SPELL ............................................................................................................16

Chapter V. HAM'S NECK  ....................................................................................................................21

Chapter VI. MONK VS. MONK ..........................................................................................................26

Chapter VII. PLOT LABYRINTH .......................................................................................................34

Chapter VIII. FEAR IS A GOATHERD ..............................................................................................41

Chapter IX. SYZYGY WAS NO GOOD .............................................................................................46

Chapter X. THE MONK COMPOUND ...............................................................................................57

Chapter XI. THE UNDERCOVER AGENT  ........................................................................................63

Chapter XII. THE FLYING MAN  ........................................................................................................67

Chapter XIII. DECEIT  ..........................................................................................................................73

Chapter XIV. BATTLE STATIONS SUBMERGED ..........................................................................77

Chapter XV. THE WARSHIP ..............................................................................................................83

Chapter XVI. THE FRIEND  .................................................................................................................87


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THE MAN WHO FELL UP

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1 . THE ONE WHO FELL  

Chapter II. IN A GREEN FOG  

Chapter III. ANOTHER WHO FELL UP  

Chapter IV. FAINTING SPELL 

Chapter V. HAM'S NECK  

Chapter VI. MONK VS. MONK  

Chapter VII. PLOT LABYRINTH  

Chapter VIII. FEAR IS A GOATHERD  

Chapter IX. SYZYGY WAS NO GOOD  

Chapter X. THE MONK COMPOUND  

Chapter XI. THE UNDERCOVER AGENT  

Chapter XII. THE FLYING MAN  

Chapter XIII. DECEIT  

Chapter XIV. BATTLE STATIONS SUBMERGED  

Chapter XV. THE WARSHIP  

Chapter XVI. THE FRIEND   

Chapter 1 . THE ONE WHO FELL 

THE word "concerned," says the dictionary, means to be affected,  disturbed, troubled or anxious. 

One of the men was concerned. 

The other man was just grim. So grim that his cheek muscles stood  out in  hard knots in front of his ears,

making him look like a large  gopher  with two walnuts in its mouth. 

They stood on a street corner. The city was New York. There was  nothing  distinguished about the street,

except that George Washington  had once  stayed in a house in the next block. The street looked as if  nothing

in  the way of upkeep had been done to it since. 

The green building had been built since the days of George  Washington,  of course, because it was a

skyscraper of sorts. Sixteen  stories and a  watertank high. It still had most of its windows,  except for the first

three floors above the ground. Three stories was  about as high as the  brats in the neighborhood could pitch a

stone.  They were not very strong  brats in this neighborhood. A surprising  percentage of them ended up in

tuberculosis sanitariums, and some of  the survivors graduated to the  stone walls at Dannemora or Sing Sing.

One had even gotten as far as the  little island in San Francisco Bay.  It was neither a healthy nor a  wealthy

neighborhood. 

The concerned man and the grim man were gazing at the tall green  building. 

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"You will go to your death!" said the concerned man. 

The concerned man had lean strength and power and range. Timbre in  his  voice. Character in his face.

Muscles on the backs of his hands  and in  his neck. His suit was blue and good, and his face was shaved,  his

hair  cut. 

There was, however, something hard and sharp about him. Not a  criminal  look. Just hard and sharp. Like a

gleaming knife that had  cut, and could  cut again, and still be polished. 

"I cannot help it, Strand," said the grim man. "There is nothing  else to  do. Nothing." 

The grim man was small and compact with the look of a bull pup. And  his  attitude toward the other was

somehow that of a welltrained bull  pup  toward its master. Master and servant, perhaps. Certainly, at  least,

employer and servant. 

"There may be some other way, Rod," said Strand. 

"Name it." 

Strand could not name it. He was silent, baffled, uncomfortable and  worried. 

"I'm going in there," Rod said. 

Strand pulled a deep breath. "I order you not to," he said. Rod  looked  at him strangely. Rod was thinking of

something to say and  wondering  whether he should say it. Finally he did say it. 

"You are not in the army now, Strand," he said. 

Strand got very white, like a man who had taken a needle through  his  stomach in a way that would make a

man very sick. He did not say  anything. 

"You will be going to your death," Strand repeated. 

Rod swallowed. The trouble he had with his swallow showed he was  scared  as well as grim. 

"It's the only thing left to do," he said. "Shake hands, Strand."  He  took Strand's hand and shook it gravely.

"I'm going in. If it is to  death, that is the way it will have to be." 

And with that, Rod walked into the green skyscraper, walked in to  his  death as he had been warned! 

DEATH, however, came to Rod Bentley in a fashion which was not  immediate  but which was startling. 

Several things happened first, but one of these things was more  important than the others, as is often the case

with incidents. 

The important thing was Tottingham Strand's inability to get into  the  green building. He tried. He stood there

for a few seconds,  fighting his  impulse to save his friend or at least share his friend's  danger, until  he lost the

battle. Then he rushed forward to the door  through which Rod  had gone. The door was locked. 

Strand wrenched savagely at the knob. He was incredulous; he  stepped  back, scowled. He leaped forward and

kicked the door. 


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"Open up!" he bellowed. 

Echoes of his kick on the door and his shout came back from inside  the  building with about the sound a

pebble makes when dropped in a  large  cavern. He tried it again. 

Strand's anxiety became a kind of frenzy. Sweat stood like hot  grease on  his forehead. He ran back from the

door. He stood and stared  up at the  building, and the building was like an old green skeleton.  Nothing  moved.

There was no life anywhere. 

The sweat kept coming out on his forehead. He started trembling,  the  calves of his legs first, then his knees.

And finally, when he  tried to  wipe the perspiration off his face, it was as if his hand  were patting  against the

skin. 

He stood there for minutes. Then he began running along the side of  the  building, leaping to get at the

windows. There were boards nailed  inside  the windows. The glass was broken out almost everywhere. But

the boards  were too solid for him to burst inside. 

He ran back in desperation to look again at the building, and it  was  then that he saw the man on the ledge. 

The ledge was high up, one floor down from the roof. It was not  wide,  probably two or three feet. 

The man there was Rod Bentley. There was no doubt of that. He was  backing away along the ledge. He had

gone out on the ledge, fleeing  from  something. 

There were shots, then! Two rapping reports. Then three more. Rod  Bentley slumped down as if hit! 

In order to see better, Strand wheeled, raced back to the opposite  side  of the street, then stopped and stared

upward. 

Down the street, a couple had stepped out of a doorway to stare. A  man  and a wife, probably. They had heard

the shots. The woman leveled  an arm  at the high ledge and began screaming. She screamed twice, with  a

quick  intake of breath between. Then she stopped shrieking with her  mouth  roundly open, a cavity of

surprise. 

Strand became rigid, as if all his muscles were tight strings. The  figure above had fallen off the ledge.

Possibly, the term "fallen" was  not applicable, because the figure, although coming off the ledge, was  going

upward! It fell up! It fell up and up until it was small in the  sky, finally a dot, eventually nothing that was

visible. The form that  had been on the window ledge became, in plain, unvarnished fact, if  evidence of the

eyes was to be believedand there was no reason to  disbelieve them  an upwardfalling object that fell out

into space. 

This, of course, was not easy to believe, even if seeing is  believing.  The two people, the man and wife who

had come out on their  doorstep to  see what the shooting was about, stood there gapjawed for  something  like

five minutes before they thought of anything to say to  each other. 

Strand had started running and had run out of sight by that time. 

Chapter II. IN A GREEN FOG 

TOTTINGHAM Strand did a hard job of thinking. He walked streets. He  got  in a subway and rode to the end


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of the line and back again. He  stood at  the stone wall near the Soldiers and Sailors Monument on  Riverside

Drive  and looked at the placid Hudson. He stood there for a  long time. 

While he stood there, Strand saw a man snatch a woman's purse.  Actually,  the man eased the purse off the

bench where the woman had  placed it at  her side. The fellow zipped open the purse, made a scoop  at the

contents  and put them in his pocket, then returned the purse to  the bench. The  man arose idly and strolled

away from the bench, then  stopped abruptly  near Strand and stood looking out over the river. 

The reason for the man halting, Strand saw, was the approach of a  bluecoated policeman. 

An impulse hit Strand. He thought it was a rather silly idea. But  something impelled him to go through with

it. 

Strand arose, approached the man, spoke out of the corner of his  mouth.  "Savage is after you," Strand said. 

"Huh?" 

"Doc Savage," said Strand, wondering why he was doing a silly thing  like  this, "is on your trail." 

The sneak thief turned completely white except for shades, of green  around his mouth. For a stark minute, he

said nothing. Then he vaulted  the stone wall, dropped a wild fifteen feet or so down the slope on  the  other

side and lit running. 

Strand watched him disappear. Then Strand climbed on a downtown  bus,  rode it to the midtown district, got

off and entered the tallest  building. He was calling on Doc Savage. The thing he had done on  impulse  to the

sneak thief had decided him. He could not have  explained exactly  why, unless it was because there was

suddenly no  doubt in his mind but  that Doc Savage was a nemesis of evil. 

He did not meet Doc Savage, however. 

He met two other fellows, and they were in a fight when he found  them.  Or practically. One of them was a

dapper man with splendid  shoulders,  was smartly dressed, and was holding an innocentlooking  black cane.

The  other was a wide, short man with a coating of hair  that resembled rusty  shingle nails and a face that was

something to  stop clocks. 

Tottingham Strand stepped forward. He cleared his throat to get  attention. 

"I beg your pardon," he said. "Could you tell me where I can find  Doc  Savage?" 

Neither Monk nor Ham paid him any attention. The two had been  having an  argument. Monk stood glaring at

Ham. 

"Ham, where do the flies go in the winter?" 

"Search me!" Ham snapped. 

"Oh, I won't bother," Monk said smugly. "I was just wondering." 

Ham glowered and lifted the black cane. 

"Gentlemen!" Strand said sharply. "Please, may I have a minute?" 


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Monk turned his head. He saw the tight glacial expression on  Strand's  face, and forgot their quarrel. 

"You can't see Doc," Monk said. "It is impossible!" 

Strand wet his lips. "It is important. Very important." 

Monk shrugged. "I can't help that," he said. "You can talk to us." 

"Who are you?" Strand inquired. 

"We help Doc," Monk explained. "I'm Monk Mayfair. This guy with the  fancy clothes here is Ham Brooks." 

Strand thought for a while. The desperation in his mind moved  across his  face like grim reflections in a

mirror. "I ... I would like  to talk to  you, then," he said. 

Monk and Ham conducted Strand to an elevator. They had met in a  small  office in a lower floor of the

building, an office which the  elevator  starter had informed Strand was used to interview persons who  wished

to  see Doc Savage. They rode to the eightysixth floor. They  crossed a  corridor, opened a plain bronze door

which bore the name  "Clark Savage,  Jr.," in small print. 

Strand found himself in a reception room furnished with a few  comfortable chairs, a safe big enough for a

bank and an inlaid table  that was really an unusual piece. He was shown a seat. 

"What's got you looking like that?" Monk asked. 

"I... looking like what?" asked Strand, surprised. 

"As if the Indians were coming." 

Strand tried to be nonchalant and lighted a cigarette. His first  impression of Monk and Ham had been that

they were a pair who had some  bolts loose. But now he was not so sure. They were as direct, now, as  two

roosters after a worm. 

Ham said, "What is worrying you? What is this trouble you want Doc  Savage to help you out of?" 

Strand, startled, said, "I have not mentioned any trouble." 

"Sure," Ham said. "But you would not be coming in here with that  look on  your face unless that was it." 

"I see," Strand said. "You are accustomed to this sort of thing?" 

"Somewhat." 

"I see." 

Monk, who was no diplomat and had never yearned to be one, said,  "What  you had better see is that we

haven't got all day to sit around  and  listen to you stall. Did you come up here with something to say?" 

Strand frowned. "If you wish me to be blunt, I will be that," he  said.  "I want help. I want you to get

something. It is very valuable." 


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"Does this thing," asked Monk, "belong to you?" 

"It certainly does." 

"Where is it?" 

"Some men have it." 

"Where are they?" 

"I can show you where they are," said Strand. 

"What is this thing?" 

"I'll show you." 

"What shape is it?" 

"We can handle it all right, once we get our hands on it," Strand  said. 

Monk pointed a finger at him. 

"Friend, you'd better be more definite than that," Monk said, "if  you  want us to show much interest." 

Strand began talking then. His voice was deep and smooth, his  delivery  faultless, and his words seemed to

have power and  persuasiveness. Monk  and Ham, who were skeptical fellows, found  themselves listening and

nodding thoughtfully. Monk, in particular,  drank it in, while Ham was a  little more slow on the upbeat. Ham

was a  persuasive orator himself, but  he was up against such a master in the  person of Tottingham Strand that

it did not occur to him that he was  being talked into something. 

Strand told them that he had a friend named Montgomery and that the  friend had left a chest with him. Strand

did not know what the chest  contained, but it must be of valuable content, because Montgomery had  been

very concerned over its safety. Then  as Strand explained it   strange things had started happening: People

watching film, an attempt  to burglarize his house, and, finally, the chest had been stolen. 

"It happened an hour ago," finished Strand, "and I came straight to  you  for help." 

Ham nodded. He was to find out later that he had just listened to  as  smooth a cloth of lies as anyone had ever

woven before his face.  But he  now thought every word that had been told him was the truth. He  had been

taken in! 

Ham said, "Really, the thing to do is call the police. You can tell  them  the story, and they can do more than

we can. Monk, telephone the  police." 

In alarm, Strand held up a hand. 

"No," he said. "Unfortunately, my friend Montgomery said I must  not,  under any circumstances, involve the

police with the box." 

Ham frowned. "We want nothing to do with anything crooked," he said  sharply. 


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Strand smiled grimly. 

"Neither do I," he said. "Suppose we do it this way: You help me. I  let  you look at the contents of the chest,

whatever they may be. If  you  think the police should be informed, we will do so, and they can  arrest

Montgomery." 

"You would doublecross your friend?" Monk asked. 

"That," said Strand, "would not be doublecrossing. If the man  involved  me in something criminal in giving

me the chest, he is no  friend, and  deserves none of the treatment of one." 

That appealed to Ham. 

"We'll help you," he declared. "Just a minute, until we get our  equipment together." 

By equipment, Ham meant some of the gadgets which Doc Savage had  developed. The bronze man's

inventive genius had turned out numerous  unusual  "unusual" was a mild word for some of them  devices

for use  in their profession. The gadgets were unorthodox. The bulletproof  undergarments, made of a

chainmesh alloy that was not much heavier  than  a suit of long, winter red flannels, was an example, and

probably  the  most commonplace of the devices they were in the habit of using. 

Monk said, "You know something?" 

"Where flies go in the wintertime?" Ham sneered. 

"No. No, I'm not kidding," Monk insisted. "You know what? I think  that  guy talked us into something." 

"He told a very convincing story." 

"He sure did," Monk said strangely. 

Ham scowled. "You mean he sucked me in? Ridiculous. Listen, I have  heard  experts put out a line of talk,

and I've done it myself more  than once." 

"All right, smart boy," Monk said. "I bet you we find out, and  don't say  I didn't tell you so." 

Strand looked at them anxiously when they came back out of the  laboratory with their equipment. He asked,

"Are you sure you can  handle  this? It is dangerous." 

"We're as sure we can handle it as we can be," said Monk, "without  knowing what it is." 

"Couldn't you get more help?" 

"Not right away," Monk said. 

"Why can't we get hold of Doc Savage?" Strand asked. "You have not  explained that." 

Monk and Ham saw no reason why they should not tell him the reason. 

"Doc," Monk said, "is at an uptown hospital, performing an  operation." 


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"We can stop for him," Strand suggested. "We will telephone ahead,  and  they can get someone else to

perform the operation. I'll pay  whatever  fee Savage was to get for the operation, so he won't lose  anything." 

"They can't get anybody else for this operation," Monk told him  bluntly,  "because nobody else is able to do it.

And you want some  advice?" 

"Advice?" said Strand, puzzled. 

"Don't mention money around Doc," Monk advised. "I mean, don't give  him  the idea you think money can

buy any of Doc's services." 

"That seems rather strange advice." 

"Doc doesn't work for money." 

"I don't believe I understand," Strand said. 

Monk said nothing, but he wished he hadn't brought up the subject.  Doc  Savage had as good an idea of the

value of money as the next man.  But  Doc was fortunate in having a source of wealth which he could tap  at

will, a secret hoard in a lost Central American jungle valley, a  place  presided over by descendants of an

ancient Mayan civilization.  The  source of wealth was a result of one of their earlier adventures.  It was  also a

secret. 

"Doc doesn't do anything in which he is not interested," Monk said,  and  let it go at that. 

Which was not exactly true. What Monk meant was that Doc could not  be  hired. That the bronze man was

sole judge of what needed doing, and  that  his payment for the job was that same knowledge that it needed

doing.  Monk had heard Johnny Littlejohn explain it that way once, and  the  explanation had confused Monk

until he thought about it. Johnny  Littlejohn had a habit of expressing his statements in abstruse  phrases,  or of

using words so big that no one could understand them. 

Thinking of Johnny Littlejohn led Monk to mention a fact. 

"There are three more members of Doc's group," he said. "There is  Renny  Renwick, the engineer; Long Tom

Roberts, the electrical expert,  and  Johnny Littlejohn, the archaeologist and geologist. All three of  them  are

down in Washington at a defenseboard meeting, so they are  not  available to help us." 

Tottingham Strand nodded. "I wish we had more help," he said. 

Monk's feeling that Strand was shystering them grew stronger and  stronger. 

Their distrust of Strand was actually responsible for what happened  to  them, which was embarrassing.

Usually, distrust kept them out of  trouble. This time, it got them into it. 

It happened in an involved way. 

First, Strand took them into an old building on a side street in a  squalid part of town. He climbed stairs. They

followed, full of  caution.  They clambered out on the roof. 

"Keep down," urged Strand in a tense voice. 


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He meant keep down behind the brick walls around the roof. They did  so.  They got roof tar on their knees,

got skinned with gravel and  collected  dust. 

Eventually, Strand indicated an old dilapidated hulk of an office  building which was colored green. 

"In there," he said. 

"That green building?" asked Monk, surprised. 

Strand nodded. "In there, somewhere. That is where the thieves took  it." 

"It's a big place," Monk pointed out suspiciously, 

"It seems to be abandoned," Strand explained. "I think they may  have  rented it, or maybe they moved in

without any authority to do so.  Anyway, that is where they went." 

"You sure they're there, now?" 

"That," said Strand grimly, "I wouldn't swear to. They were there  three  hours ago. They may have left. We

can move across this roof and  get into  one of the windows of the green building." 

Three hours ago? This guy had said his chest had been stolen only  an  hour ago. Now, he said three hours.

Monk glanced at Ham to see if  the  dapper lawyer had noticed the slip, and Ham had. They exchanged

meaning  looks. 

"Strand," Monk said. "By the way, you said your name was Strand,  didn't  you?" 

"Yes. Tottingham Strand." 

"All right, Strand  what does this mysterious chest look like?" 

"It is green," Strand said. "You'll know it when you see it. Green,  and  longer than a man, but not as wide.

Thicker, though." He indicated  the  building. "Tell you what: I will crawl inside and make an  investigation.  If

the coast is clear, I will come back and tip you  fellows. If it isn't  clear, use your own judgment." 

He crawled away. 

Monk and Ham proceeded to make their mistake. They did not have to  hold  a conference over it. They just

looked at each other, and Ham  said, "It  smells to me as if he was going in there to tip his friends  to be ready

for us, then plans to come back and get us." 

Monk was silent, 

They crawled forward after Tottingham Strand. They climbed in the  same  window through which Strand had

eased himself. Then people began  shooting at them! 

THERE was not much shooting. Two bullets. Both were purposefully  aimed  to one side. 

A voice, evidently belonging to the one who had caused the bullets,  said, "Stand still, you two." 

Monk and Ham stood still. 


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The voice said, "That's fine. Now, listen. We haven't any great  wish to  drum up business for the undertakers.

Suppose you two  wandering Willies  go away from here and have a forgetting spell." 

Monk said, "Ham, I never heard that voice before." 

"I, either," Ham said, precisely. When Ham became precise in  speech, it  meant he was very angry. 

The voice said, "Did you come with Strand?" 

Monk and Ham looked at each other. 

"Who's Strand?" Monk asked. 

The voice laughed grimly. "Humorists, eh? We saw you with him.  Incidentally, we have him with us now." 

Monk lifted his arms slowly to the level of his shoulders. Then he  flexed them at the elbows and clasped his

hands over his head. 

"You don't need to put your hands up," the voice said. "We could  shoot  you dead before you could do

anything." 

Monk said nothing. He flexed his biceps. He made the muscle get  very  big, so that it pressed against a brittle

container in his sleeve  and  broke it. When he felt it break, he winked at Ham, and began  holding his  breath,

Ham also held his breath. 

Monk lowered his arms slowly so that the gas he had released could  get  out of his sleeve and spread through

the room. 

The voice said, "Maybe you would feel better if Strand told you to  go  away. Boys, get Strand. Tell him to

advise his two pups to go away.  We  don't want any more trouble than" 

The man stopped. 

There was a sound like a sack, loosely filled with potatoes, being  dumped on the floor. 

"What the hell!" said the voice. 

The voice was speaking to them through a crack in the door on the  other  side of the room. 

"Gas!" a voice screamed. It was a new voice. "They let loose some  kinda  gas!" 

"SOME kinda gas" might have been one description for it.  Explicitly, the  stuff was an odorless and colorless

anaesthetic of  great power and quick  effect, one which became quite worthless,  however, after it had mingled

with atmosphere for from a minute to a  minute and a half. Doc Savage and  his associates used it as a regular

weapon. 

"Gas, gas!" the man kept bellowing. 

Monk moved fast, got down, went to the right, out of range of the  door.  Ham also moved, dipped a hand into

a pocket, brought out a small  grenade, and put it hard against the door. It was the type that would  explode on

contact when the pin was out. It made splinters and flame  out  of the door. 


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Monk roared. He liked to roar when he was fighting. He plunged into  the  debris that the door had become. 

He saw a man picking himself off the floor twenty feet down a  corridor.  The man had been tumbled that

distance by the blast, but not  stunned.  The fellow ran. Monk got another grenade, heaved it. It did  not

explode.  Either the grenade was defective, or Monk had not  released the firing  pin properly. At least, the

quarry got away up a  stairs. 

There were two men spread out on the floor, and neither of them was  Tottingham Strand. There was only the

runner, the one who had escaped  up  the stairs. Monk chased him. 

"Be careful!" Ham yelled warningly. 

Care was something Monk never knew in a fight. He hit the door.  Someone  was trying to hold it on the other

side long enough for  someone else to  fasten a lock. Monk yanked. There was a short struggle  of muscles.

Monk  could straighten horseshoes with his unaided hands.  He got the door  open, got a man by the neck and

another man by the  arm. 

The stairway was narrow enough to make it a little complicated as  they  went around and around and over and

over in a cloud of dust and  profanity. Monk was entirely happy for twenty or thirty seconds, which  was as

long as the two foes lasted. During the fracas, Ham tried to  join  in, and Monk managed to put an accidental

foot in Ham's face and  shove.  The latter incident made the brief fray a luscious success. 

Monk got up and knocked dust off his hands. 

"Where's some more?" he asked. 

Ham held his aching nose and demanded, "Was that an accident?" He  added  a threat, "If I thought you kicked

me on purpose" 

Tottingham Strand called to them from above. 

"Get help!" he shouted. "There are too many of them! And they've  got  that green fog coming  " 

Judging from the sounds, Strand was either kicked in the throat or  slugged with a blackjack. 

Monk and Ham went up to see. They expected to be shot at, and to  discourage that they tossed up a smoke

grenade and two thinwalled  containers holding the powerful anaesthetic gas. 

They got their lungs full of good air, held their breaths, and  climbed  the stairs silently. They could hear

footsteps running away,  climbing  higher into the green building. They came out on a floor and  found  another

stairway and went up that into a hall like the other  two, where  they paused to consult each other concerning a

rather  strange phenomena  which had come to their attention. 

"Ham," Monk said. 

"Yes?" 

"Do things look kind of green to you?" Monk asked. 

"They do," Ham admitted. 


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"Kind of as if there was a green fog in the air?" 

"Kind of," Ham said. 

Chapter III. ANOTHER WHO FELL UP 

THE remarkable aspects of encountering a green fog held them there  for a  short time. They did not say

anything immediately, but they gave  the  thing considerable thought. 

"Gas," Monk suggested. 

"I don't think so," Ham said. "I don't feel anything." 

Nevertheless, both hastily dug out their gas protection, which  consisted  of a hood apiece, made of a material

resembling cellophane  in its  transparency. Elastic held the hoods snugly around their necks.  The  things had

no oxygen attachments, but they would be effective for  a  short time. 

They went up more stairs. There was no one, nothing but the fog,  and  that was more green. It reminded Monk

of the color of a pond  frog's  back. 

They came to a metal door. It was locked. Ham touched Monk's arm  and  made signs with his fingers. This

was next to the top floor, Ham  signaled. He had kept track. Monk was nodding agreement when they  heard

Strand scream. 

Strand's yelling came from above, but from outside. They ran to the  windows, threw them up. Monk, always

reckless, took a chance and  thrust  his head out and looked up. 

Strand was lying across the ledge. His head, his arms, were  visible.  Judging from his actions, someone was

holding his legs. He  yelled  something. 

Monk wrenched off his gas hood to listen. He was badly in need of  air,  anyway. 

Strand shouted, "Get out of the place! Get help! It's hopeless!" 

Hands grasped Strand's head. They struck him. One of the hands had  a  gun. Strand was hauled back. A

moment later the gun exploded! 

The gun report had a dull, mushy quality, as if the muzzle was  against  the man's body when the blast came. A

thin stream of red  appeared, began  to trickle off the ledge. The greenish fog was so  thick that Monk did  not

see the red string until it began to spatter,  blown by the breeze,  over the sill of the window from which he

leaned. 

"They shot him!" Monk said. 

Ham said, "Here, let me there. I'll fix them." 

Ham had a machine pistol in his hand. The little weapon, no larger  than  a heavy army automatic, could

discharge an enormous number of  bullets  per second. The bullets were very small in caliber, and of  infinite

variety  either "mercy" slugs which would produce  unconsciousness, or  explosive, or smoke pellets. 


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He leaned out of the window, but he did not shoot. "Monk!" he  squalled  suddenly. "Look!" 

Monk thrust his head out of the window. "Blazes!" 

"He just fell off the ledge," Ham said. 

Monk gaped unbelievingly. "But  he's falling up!" The figure, hard  to  distinguish in the green fog, but

nevertheless a figure with  Strand's  clothing and with the shape of a man, was falling upward and  upward  until

it was becoming lost in the olive haze. 

Monk said, "You sure that's him?" 

Ham had to clear his throat before he could speak. "Positive!" 

They stood there in iced astonishment until the figure was no  longer  visible in the sky. 

The iron door blocking the stairs that led on up to the higher  floor was  strong. But it came to pieces under one

of the small  explosive grenades.  They went up cautiously and found nothing. 

"Blast this peasoup fog!" Monk complained while they were looking  cautiously around. "I couldn't see a

rabbit twenty feet away." 

"Ten feet away would be more like it," Ham said. Their earnest and  wary  search disclosed no one, which was

no end baffling. 

"Wonder where they went," Monk muttered. "Think they could all have  floated off into the sky? We didn't

watch." 

Ham said something violent and skeptical. "You really think we saw  a man  float up into the sky?" 

"All I know is what I saw," Monk said. "What would you say?" 

"It couldn't happen, regardless of what we saw." 

"All right," Monk told him. "But you called my attention to it  yourself." 

Monk went to the window. There was wet redness in which he put his  finger. "See?" he said. "Blood! This is

where they shot Strand." 

Ham pointed at the sky. "And there's where he went," he said.  "Don't  tell me we aren't crazy." 

Monk grimaced. "I hope nothing unexpected or violent happens, like  a  mouse squeaking, or something. I'm in

the frame of mind to jump  fifty  feet straight up." 

They prowled around in the green fog. Monk discovered he had  several  small cuts on his legs. Ham found his

own legs bore similar  wounds. They  concluded one of the men they had fought downstairs had  been using a

small penknife that they hadn't noticed. 

Suddenly their minds were relieved. 

They found a fire escape. 


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"That's the way the others got out of here!" Monk exploded in  relief.  "While we were busting down the door,

they just went down the  fire  escape." 

Ham nodded soberly. 

"Fine," he said. "Now you just find the invisible strings that  pulled  that man up in the sky and we can go

home and say we know  everything." 

"How about the green chest?" 

"You mean the one Strand had stolen from  " Ham went silent.  "Green,"  he muttered after a moment.

"Green! This fog is green." 

"Kind of significant, huh?" Monk suggested. 

"I don't know what it is," Ham snapped. "Let's go downstairs and  collect  our prisoners." 

They made the descent of stairways without relaxing caution and  found  that there were no prisoners. They

had left at least four  unconscious  men behind them, and now there were none. 

"Collected," Ham said. 

"Yeah, the guys went down the fire escape, picked them up, then  took to  their heels," Monk agreed. 

"You think there's any use of hunting for the green chest?" 

"If there was a green chest," Monk said, "we might as well look for  it." 

They looked and did not find it. Later they stood on the street,  disgusted. 

"The fog is down here, too," Monk pointed out. 

"Thicker," Ham agreed. "It seems to have covered the whole city. It  is  almost as green as grass." 

The little man with the big hat met them on the corner. He was  standing  there wringing his hands. 

"Gentlemen, please," he said. He put a hand on Ham's arm. "Excuse  me,  but have you noticed anything

strange for the last halfhour?" 

"Strange?" Ham prompted. 

"Ier  green," said the little man. 

Ham snorted. "Strange is the word for it. You mean this fog, don't  you?" 

"Yes, yes," said the little man eagerly. "Yes, indeed. I'm so glad  you  see it, too. I thought I was going slightly

off." 

Ham looked up at the sky. "We can understand your feelings," he  said. 

"I'm so glad," said the little man. "I'll run and tell my wife that  we're all right after all." 


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Ham said, "By the way, you haven't noticed things going up, have  you?" 

"Up?" said the little man vacantly. 

"Never mind," Ham said. 

PAT Savage met them at headquarters. Pat was sitting in the  reception  room applying adhesive tape to an

extremely wellmolded  ankle. 

"I'm sure glad to see you," she said. "What is this stuff? This  green  stuff?" 

"Fog," Monk suggested. 

"Don't be funny. Fog is gray." 

"All right, you can do what I was doing  guess what it is," Monk  told  her. 

Patricia Savage had many of the physical characteristics of her  cousin  Doc. She had his flakegold eyes and

his remarkably bronze  hair, a  little of the tanned bronze of his skin. 

"Doc has been hurt," she said. 

"Hurt?" Ham yelled. "Where? How badly?" 

"Patricia Savage operated an exclusive beauty establishment on Park  Avenue and spent her odd moments

trying to chisel in on the excitement  that usually surrounded Doc and his associates. Pat liked excitement.

The difficulty was that Doc did not appreciate the presence of Pat in  his organization; it was his belief that the

work was too dangerous.  He  had never been able to convince Pat on the point. 

"Pull your eyes back in," Pat suggested. "He isn't hurt badly. Two  fellows got in a street fight, and one of

them had a knife. One man  knocked the knife out of the other's hand and it hit Doc. Cut him a  little, that's

all." 

"Where is he?" Monk demanded anxiously. 

"He will be here before long." 

Monk relaxed and eyed Pat's ankle approvingly. "What happened to  your  running gear?" 

Pat finished applying the adhesive tape. "You know as much about it  as I  do. Something skinned my shin. A

man on the street  clumsy oaf" 

Ham went out and threw up a window, looked out. "I can't tell about  this  fog," he said. "It may be thicker in

other parts of the city, but  I  can't be sure." 

Pat asked, "What time did you first notice it?" 

"About an hour ago, I imagine it was," Ham said. 

Pat said, "I only noticed it about half an hour ago." 


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"Probably it took some time to spread to your part of town." 

Pat stared at him. "You mean you know where it started?" 

"No, I don't!" Ham snapped. "I don't know anything about it, except  that  it is the color of grass and danged

mysterious." 

"What is wrong with Ham?" Pat stared at Ham. "He doesn't look right  to  me." 

Monk chuckled a trifle horribly. "Ham is on edge. He saw a man fall  up,  and it upset him." 

"Up?" Pat frowned. "You mean up?" 

Ham whirled on Monk and yelled, "You shouldn't have told that, you  silly  goon! Nobody will believe us!" 

Pat became completely blank. "You mean to stand there in your skin  and  bones and tell me you saw a man

fall up?" 

"'S a fact," Monk said gloomily. 

"How far up did he fall?" 

"Out of sight, and no telling how much farther." 

Pat contemplated them for a while in silence. "Somebody," she said,  "has  been dropped on his head." 

Chapter IV. FAINTING SPELL

DOC Savage said, "Pat, when did you first notice this greenfog  effect?" 

"Fortyfive minutes ago," Pat said. 

"And you, Monk?" 

"An hour and fifteen minutes ago, about." 

Ham said, "Doc, that isn't all, either." He rubbed his jaw sourly.  "A  guy came in here with a story about a

green chest that had been  stolen  from him. His name was Tottingham Strand, he said. You want to  hear that

story now? It ended when he fell up into the sky." 

Doc Savage studied Ham thoughtfully. "Go ahead with the story," he  said. 

Ham went ahead. 

Doc Savage was as big a man physically as his reputation. This was  not  apparent until one stood close to him,

so well proportioned was  his big  body. There was nothing, in fact, about him that looked  ordinary. His  eyes

were like pools of flake gold, always stirred with  tiny winds, full  of magnetic power. A single glance at him

did not  leave the slightest  doubt about his muscular strength and vitality. 

He looked what he was  a scientific product. Literally a product  of  science. Because he had been placed in


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the hands of physical  culturists,  psychologists, educators, chemists, and a raft of other  scientists at  childhood.

He never had a normal youth. The scientists  might have  considered they were making it as normal as they

could  under the  circumstances, but they were wrong most of the time. 

The strange upbringing of Doc Savage had been the idea of his  father,  who had had a fixation of bringing up

a son who would be a  kind of  modern knight and Sir Galahad, with test tubes and scientific  gadgets  for his

sword and horse. The fixation of the elder Savage,  long since  gone beyond, was the result of some terrible

thing that had  happened to  him; but the son had never learned exactly what it was. 

Ham finished his recital. 

"He fell up, as sure as I'm sitting here," he said. "I know how it  sounds, and Monk knows how it sounds. But

we saw what we saw." 

"The green fog came up on you shortly after you had your first  fight in  the building?" Doc asked. 

Ham nodded. "The building was green," he said. 

"The chest was green," Strand said. "The fog is green." 

Pat said, "There seems to be a green tinge to the thing." Suddenly  Doc  Savage startled the others. The big

bronze man made a small  trilling  sound, an exotic note that seemed to come from everywhere in  the room

rather than from a definite point. It was very low, hardly  audible. Pat  and the others knew it meant that Doc

Savage was  concerned. The sound  was a small unconscious thing he made in moments  of mental stress. 

"Pat," he said, "suppose you get on the telephone and check with  some  friend in another part of the city on

the fog." 

Pat nodded, picked up a telephone and dialed a number. 

"Hello," she said. "Is Susan there?... Oh, she isn't. Who is this,  the  maid?. . . I see. By the way, is it foggy up

there?. . . It is  green,  eh?. . . Thank you. Tell Susan I called, will you? But tell her  it  wasn't important." 

Pat hung up. "The green fog is up in Westchester, where Susan  Glaspell  lives. That was her maid on the

telephone." 

Monk grunted, said, "I know a guy down in Jersey. I think I'll call  and  ask him." 

He got on the telephone but did not succeed in getting his friend.  He  did get a friend of the friend who was at

the friend's office, and  who  said the fog was there in Jersey, as green as peas and as thick as  soup. 

Monk hung up. "More than passing strange," he said. 

Then Doc fainted. 

SIX little devils with hammers walked around on Doc Savage's head  in  dignified circles, testing the ringing

qualities of his skull. When  Doc  finally managed to awaken, he grabbed at the devils with both  hands but  got

fistfuls of his hair. 

"You all right, Doc?" demanded a voice. 


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The face that belonged to the voice seemed to belong to Monk. 

Doc was silent until he had collected enough of himself to sit  erect. He  asked, "Did you fellows see what

made me pass out?" 

"No," said Monk's face and voice. 

"How long have I been out?" 

"Two or three minutes." 

Doc distinguished a dapper figure that should belong to Ham. It was  hard  to see the lawyer's features through

the thick green haze. 

"The fog getting worse?" Doc asked. 

"Much worse." 

"Where is Pat?" 

"She went out," said a voice that seemed to emanate from Ham. "She  went  home." 

"Why?" 

"We persuaded her this thing might be too dangerous for her." 

Doc Savage frowned. His head seemed unusually thick. It was  incredible  that Pat could have been persuaded

anything was too  dangerous for her.  "What was wrong with Pat?" he asked. "Was she ill  or something?" 

"I don't know," Ham said. 

"Do you fellows feel all right?" 

"Our heads seem kind of thick," Ham confessed. "Your voice sounds  different, too, Doc. Kind of thick." 

The bronze man had been about to remark on the difference in the  voices  of Monk and Ham also. He nodded.

 

"Can you fellows find that green office building?" he asked. 

"Sure," Monk said. "But what is the sense of going there?" 

"To get on the trail of this mystery," the bronze man said. "That  seems  to be the only point of attack we

have." 

"All right," Monk said, "if you think that's the thing to do." He  gave  his trousers a hitch. "I'm going to get

some equipment together." 

He walked through a door  into a library equipped with thousands  of  volumes which, as indicated by the

titles, were all of scientific  nature. He closed the door behind him. Crossing the impressive  library,  he entered

a laboratory of vast proportions. He closed that  door, too.  Then he listened to be sure he was not being


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followed. 

Having satisfied himself with these precautions, Monk said, "All  right,  Stinky." 

Stinky was a long blade of a man who was hidden behind some  chemical  cases. He showed himself. 

"The rest of you come out, too," Monk said. 

Four other men appeared. They were not badly dressed, but they did  not  look like gentlemen who would put

things in Christmas stockings. 

Monk said, "Boys, we will have to pull it. He insists on going  hunting  for Strand." 

Stinky grunted. He did not look happy. 

"We go through the motions of a fight with you, then escape?" he  asked. 

"That's right." 

The others looked as unhappy as Stinky. "You sure this will go off  all  right?" one demanded. "If this would

fall through and he caught  us, I  don't like to think of what will happen." 

Monk moved over and indicated a rope ladder hanging out of the  window.  "You go down this. You'll have

plenty of time. What more could  you  want?" 

"All right," the man agreed reluctantly. "Let's start dropping our  eggs." 

Monk then slapped the man, and the man yelled and slapped back.  None of  the blows that followed was hard,

but all the noise was  vigorous. 

DOC Savage wheeled around in the reception room at the first fight  sounds. 

"It's Monk!" Ham yelled. "He's in trouble!" 

Doc hit the library door. It was locked, and it was also of metal  stout  enough that breaking it down

barehanded was out of the question.  He drew  back, produced an explosive grenade. 

"That door cost plenty!" Ham wailed. 

Doc put the grenade against the door. It made flame and noise and  changed the shape of the door. He went

through. The other door, the  one  into the laboratory, was not locked. 

Monk was walking erratic circles in the laboratory and holding his  head. 

"Out of the window!" he croaked. 

"You hurt, Monk?" 

"Not bad. One of them knocked the wits out of me for a minute." 


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Doc Savage went to the window. The greenish fog was an impenetrable  mass  so thick that, a dozen feet from

his face, it was like a solid  thing. He  started to swing out on the rope ladder which he found  there. 

Monk suddenly had hold of his shoulder. "Don't, Doc!" Monk gasped.  "That's just what they're figuring on." 

Doc hesitated. "What do you mean?" 

"I sneaked up on them and heard them talking," Monk explained. "The  idea  of the attack was not to damage

me. It was to create a diversion  to draw  all of us, and you in particular, Doc, out of the building." 

The bronze man was grimly silent for a moment. He made briefly the  strange, low, exotic trilling which was

his unconscious mannerism in  moments of stress. 

"You sure of that?" he asked. 

"Positive!" Monk said. "For some reason they don't want us in the  building." 

Ham said, "That sounds silly, Monk." 

"It's what they said." 

"Seems kind of opposite to me," Ham grumbled. "Lots of times people  have  tried to get us to stay in here and

not stick our noses into  things. But  this time they want us to leave." 

Monk said, "That's why I say stay here." 

Doc Savage had one leg over the window sill. He withdrew it. "That  might  be wise," he said. 

But five minutes later, when they were alone  Doc and Monk  in  the  laboratory, Doc Savage casually took

hold of Monk's necktie and  asked,  "What was the purpose of the attack you had faked on yourself,  Monk?" 

Blank astonishment made creases in Monk's face for a while. "Gosh,  Doc   you didn't get fooled?" 

"Friends of yours, were they not?" Doc inquired quietly. It was one  of  the bronze man's strongest

characteristics that he did not lift his  voice or show excitement even under extraordinary circumstances. 

"Yeah," Monk said. "Or not exactly, that is. Just some guys who  were  willing to make a buck and not  ask

too many questions. Honest  guys, of  course," he added hastily. 

"What were you trying to do?" 

Monk groaned. "Gosh, I hate getting caught like that." 

"What was your idea?" 

Monk gripped the bronze man's arm. "Doc, you know I have been with  you a  long time." 

"Yes?" 

"Well, I thought it entitled me to try to keep you out of danger,"  Monk  said. 


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"And what was the nature of this danger?" 

Monk groaned again, with earnestness. 

"Ham and I saw that man fall up, and we saw the beginning of that  green  fog. This green fog, because it's still

with us," said the  homely man  "We're worried. You know we don't get worried easily, Doc." 

"What makes you think I will be safer here?" 

Monk said evasively, "I knew that if I gave you the idea there was  an  enemy who wanted you to leave here,

the thing you would do would be  to  stay." 

"Why would I be safer here?" 

"Look, Doc. We don't know what this is, do we?" 

"Nor are we likely to find out, sitting here." 

"Yes, but we better know what we're doing before we start barging  around," Monk said. "I tell you, Doc 

this thing is so queer it  scares  me." 

The bronze man made no comment for at least a minute. 

"Is that the way your mind works?" he asked finally. 

"Uhyes." 

Doc said, "Get your equipment." 

"You mean we're going to that green building?" 

"That guess," Doc told him, "is much better than the idea you had." 

The bronze man then closed his eyes, doubled his knees slowly until  he  was down on the floor, and fell

forward on his side! His breathing  was  regular, measured, as if he slept. 

Chapter V. HAM'S NECK 

HAM said, "It has been about ten minutes. You fainted again, Doc." 

"Where are we now?" Doc asked. 

"Down in the street outside headquarters," Ham explained. He  pointed.  "See, there's the street sign. Can you

read it through the  green fog?" 

Doc looked at the sign. It was readable, although barely so. Monk  said,  "We thought there must be something

upstairs that was making you  faint.  Maybe being cooped up in the place. So we came down here for  air." 

Doc said, "Drive to that green building." 


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"But listen!" Monk exploded. "Do you feel able  " 

"Drive to the green building!" 

Monk said nothing more. He put the car in motion and drove slowly,  keeping close to the curb, blatting his

horn warningly. There was not  much traffic, and it moved slowly, the drivers leaning out of windows  and

staring. 

Monk's manner was sullen, and when finally he stopped the car he  said,  "This isn't my idea." He got out of

the machine. "Doc, I'm going  back  and watch headquarters." 

"You think that necessary?" the bronze man inquired. 

"I sure do." 

Monk walked away, was speedily lost in the green void that the  world had  become. 

Ham coughed uncomfortably. "Doc, I think he is scared." The bronze  man  was silent. 

"Something is sure wrong with Monk," Ham insisted. "He acted queer  back  there in headquarters. You know

what? Could that attack on him  have been  fake? I sort of got the idea it was." 

Doc said, "It was a fake." 

Ham slapped his knee. "Then I'll bet he was responsible for you  fainting!" 

"You think so?" 

Ham said meaningly, "You feel fine as soon as you regain  consciousness,  don't you? Doesn't that make you

think of something?" 

"Our anaesthetic gas, you mean?" 

"That's it. The odorless and colorless anaesthetic gas we've been  using  for a long time. I'll bet Monk used

some of that on you on the  sly. All  he would have to do would be to bust a capsule when you  weren't looking,

then pretend you were having some kind of queer  spells. It wouldn't  affect him if he held his breath for a

minute, and  he can do that. I've  seen him hold it a lot longer." 

Doc Savage's metallic features were composed, but his voice showed  interest. "That might be a logical

explanation." 

"I bet it's as logical as cats liking milk." 

"You have a theory about his motives?" 

"He's scared," Ham said. "He's worried about you. He wants to scare  you  into not having anything to do with

this mystery about a man who  came to  see you about a green chest, and who fell up into the sky, and  a green

fog that came. Doc, all Monk is trying to do is protect you. I  believe  his heart is in the right place." 

"And you think Monk just left us because he is scared?" 


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"As much as I'm ashamed to say it  yes." 

THE green building was tall and gaunt and empty, full of nothing  but  stillness and the odors of disuse. There

were the sounds their  feet  made, of course. And there was the green fog and the air mixed  with the  dust their

feet churned up. The temperature was low and the  humidity  heavy enough to be depressing. 

Ham pointed to tracks in the dust, and they climbed stairways  slowly,  stopping often to listen. 

Doc said, "You chased them all the way to the roof?" 

Ham replied, "Right. Topfloor ledge was where Strand took off  from." 

"You searched the place?" 

"After a fashion." 

Doc began to hunt casually. "Where do you think Strand was seized?" 

"Downstairs. First or second floor, probably. We don't know; they  might  have got him right after he entered

the building. But whatever  they did  to him was done on the top floor." 

"What suggests that assumption?" 

"Time," said Ham. "They didn't have time to do anything to him on  the  lower floors. We didn't give them

time. They took him to the top  floor  and did what they did there." 

"We will go to the top floor," Doc said. 

The vest was lying on a roof below. Doc Savage did not find it for  half  an hour, which was long after he had

gone over the top floor  painstakingly, making no comment except to point out that an old gunny  sack had

been mopped over every foot of floor space to spoil all  tracks,  and had been swabbed over the ledge outside. 

The vest came later, after Doc had noted a freshly broken window.  He had  asked Ham if he or Monk had

broken it, receiving the answer  that they  had not. 

It was not a whole vest. It was half, or a little less. Actually,  there  was only the left side of a vest from the

armhole down. Its two  pockets  contained four matches, a fivecent stamp, a broken cigarette,  a receipt  from a

florist, and a cube of sugar of the paperwrapped  type with the  paper wrapper bearing the name "Southern

Susan," but no  address or other  information. 

Ham said, "Southern Susan. I wonder what that is." 

Doc Savage was more interested in the receipt from the florist. 

He went to a telephone and talked to the florist. 

He got an address, also a name. The name was Erica AmblerHotts. 

"I'll drive the car," Ham said. "Damn this uncanny green fog!" 


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He directed the car uptown, then across town in the traffic. There  was  more traffic than there had been, but

very few of the cars were  moving.  Now and then one was traveling slowly. But the others were  standing  still.

Taxicabs, trucks, passenger cars, all motionless. But  the drivers  and passengers were in them, just sitting

there and  staring, so that the  effect was somewhat weird. 

They stopped finally at a building which had a doorman who was  togged up  like a Civil War admiral. 

"Miss Erica AmblerHotts' apartment," Doc Savage said. 

The doorman acted as if he had been hit. Then he made a dash and  came  back with a gentleman who was

wearing an afternoon suit and  perspiration. 

"Who are you?" demanded this gentleman. "I am the manager. I must  insist  that you answer me, or I assure

you that I shall call the  police." 

Doc Savage made his identity known. 

"Oh! Oh!" said the manager. "I have heard of you. What can I do for  you?" 

"Miss AmblerHotts," Doc said. 

The manager turned the palms of his hands up sadly. "We don't know.  The  boy was found dead on her floor.

She is not in her apartment. The  door  was standing open. One of the porters saw her leaving with  several

men,  and the impression was that she was a prisoner." 

"Boy?" Doc Savage said. 

"The elevator operator. He was found dead in the cage on her floor.  A  very hideous thing. An ice pick in the

back of his skull!" 

"She is English?" 

"Miss AmblerHotts? Yes, indeed. Very English. Works for one of  these  societies to save England, I

understand, I cannot tell you the  exact  name of the organization." 

"Did she have a visitor this afternoon?" 

The manager nodded. "Yes, indeed. Gentleman." 

"Description?" 

"A very good one," said the manager. "Our doorman has an excellent  memory, fortunately." 

He described a gentleman who was not unhandsome and who had some  quality  about him that was arresting

in a strange way. " 'He was as  fascinating  as a razor blade,' was the way our doorman put it," the  manager

advised.  "Our doorman is very good at descriptives." 

Ham emitted an exclamation. 

"The visitor," he said, "was Tottingham Strand!" 


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DOC Savage went through the girl's apartment. Miss AmbleHotts was,  as  the manager had said, very

English. Particularly her clothes, her  knottythorn walking stick, the severe pictures of herself. Judging  from

what written stuff they were able to find, she was an energetic,  but not  an important, employee of one of the

British groups now  working in the  United States in behalf of England. A telephone call to  the British  group

verified this. No one at the place could think of  any enemies of  Miss AmblerHotts, or any suspicious acts

committed by  her recently, or  anything else that would lift the lid on the mystery. 

There was a book with a legend in it that said: 

To Erica, in appreciation of a faith as pure as the perfume of  roses and  as sure as gravity. 

Tot Strand 

"Poetic fellow," Ham remarked. 

Doc Savage continued his search. Ham seemed to think the hunt had  been  thorough enough, and that further

effort was a waste of energy.  The  manager of the apartment house seemed to share the conviction,  because  he

excused himself politely and left them alone. 

Ham rubbed his jaw thoughtfully, remarked, "Monk kind of worries  me," he  said. "We've been together a

long time, Doc, haven't we?" 

"A good while," the bronze man admitted. 

"And Monk has worked on a lot of experiments with you," Ham  continued.  "He's a great chemist, Monk is. I

wouldn't admit it to his  face, but he  is good. About the best, next to you, I imagine." 

Doc made no comment. 

Ham seemed lost in thought for a while. "I remember a lot of the  experiments you and Monk worked on. You

remember your work on that  stuff  called 'Compound Monk,' the chemical element combination which  was so

touchy and cranky that it was like Monk?" 

"Monk had very little to do with developing that," Doc said. "In  fact,  as I recall, he took no part in the

experiments." 

"Gosh, I thought he did. What did you ever do about that compound?  I  think I remember the description you

gave of it as being so  sensitive to  motion radiation that the absorption of such radiation by  its atoms  leads to

the ejection of three electrons, or something like  that." 

Doc made no comment. 

"Wasn't that what Compound Monk was?" Ham asked. 

"Generally speaking." 

"What did you ever do with it?" 

Doc Savage seemed not to hear the query. 

"Do you still have the formula for it?" Ham asked. 


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Without making an answer, Doc Savage went downstairs, with Ham  following, and got in his car and drove

four blocks to a deserted  road,  where he pulled to the curb and stopped the machine. He switched  off the

engine. 

He took Ham by the throat with both hands! 

"You are going to be fortunate if I do not kill you!" he told Ham. 

There was something horrible in his voice which showed that he  meant it. 

Chapter VI. MONK VS. MONK 

WHEN Monk Mayfair had left the vicinity of the green building he  had  proceeded to do some telephoning. 

"Stinky," he said into the telephone, "it didn't work. He is  smarter  than we supposed. He got wise." 

In an agitated voice, Stinky said, "I hope not wise enough to know  who  we are. If so, I am going to hurriedly

see about plane  reservations to  South America and points beyond." 

"I got out of it," Monk said. "I told him enough of the truth to  satisfy  him." 

"How much was that?" 

"Oh, that I had hired you to fake an attack on me so that he would  think  somebody wanted him to leave,

which I told him I figured would  make him  stay." 

"Don't sound so skeptical," Monk said. "I've got a job for you." 

"I don't think I'm going to like the job," said Stinky. Monk  explained  the details of the plot with great

explicitness, and the  worst fears of  Stinky seemed fulfilled. 

"Why don't you just ask me to cut off my head and be done with it?"  Stinky demanded. 

"You going to follow orders?" Monk demanded grimly. 

"Sure. What else can I do?" asked Stinky. "But I don't have to like  it." 

Monk hung up violently and carried a scowl out of the telephone  booth.  The scowl lasted until he was out on

the street and in a  taxicab. 

He rode uptown to a hotel room, where a young man in a tweed suit  gave  him a wristpopping salute. 

"Washington waiting with a report, sir," said the young man. 

"Get them." 

Soon a man in Washington was saying, "The series of conferences  ended an  hour and a half ago. Colonel

John Renwick, William Harper  Littlejohn and  Major Thomas J. Roberts went to their hotel, telephoned  the

new airport  for their plane to be refueled, went to their rooms  and began packing." 


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Monk snapped, "Wasn't their plane disabled? You had orders to do  so." 

"Sorry, sir. If you would let me finish," the man said. "They  received a  telephone report that their plane had

been damaged. They  are now on  their way to the airport to investigate." 

"You sure the damage was thorough?" 

"Very thorough." 

"Cancel the three reservations you made on the WashingtontoNew  York  plane. Time it so they will be able

to pick up the three  reservations  when they apply for airline tickets to New York." 

"I have just done so, sir. I think the timing was right, although I  have  not yet had a report." 

"Report at once if they leave on the plane, giving the flight  number of  the ship." 

"Yes, sir." 

Monk hung up with a satisfied expression. 

He lighted a cigar and snapped his fingers and ordered a cold long  drink. He sat at a window with these,

enjoying the cool flow from the  airconditioning vent at his side and smirking out at the city. 

He spoke only once, when he said, "Renny, Johnny and Long Tom will  take  that plane and fall right into my

hands. I will get rid of them  without  a hitch." 

He had spoken boastingly. After that he did nothing but smoke and  rattle  the ice against the sides of the glass. 

Eventually the telephone rang. 

The man in Washington said, "Just leaving. Flight 29." 

"What is the German word for 'good'?" Monk said. 

"Gut," said the man at the other end of the wire. 

"That's what it is," said Monk, "in every sense of the word," 

He put the telephone down and gave orders with violence and haste.  The  orders got him in a car, with five

other men in it, in very short  order.  They drove to the vicinity of LaGuardia Field, but did not  enter the

airport. Instead, they turned off on an overpass and parked  behind a  large moving van. There were four more

men with the van. 

"One of you go to the airport," ordered Monk. "Give us the signal  when  Flight 29 from Washington starts to

land." 

The man saluted and departed. 

Monk climbed into the van and made sure that the interior was lined  with  railroad rails carefully bolted in

place. The steel rails seemed  to  raise some doubt. 


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"You sure these things will turn a .3006 bullet?" 

"They will stop a bullet from a tank gun," a man told him. "There  are  not likely to be any tank guns around

the airport." 

The truck had an additional piece of ingenious mechanism. An extra  control position. Wheel and brakes,

throttle and clutch, and a rod  extending to the gear shift, all mounted back in the steelprotected  body. The

truck could be driven from that point. 

"Got the dummy?" Monk asked. 

A man shoved him a stuffed, manlike figure. "Fits right behind the  wheel in the cab. We fixed clips to hold

it there." 

Monk grinned. "Probably not necessary. But it will keep anyone from  getting excited over an apparently

driverless truck careening through  the streets. And we can't take a chance of a man sitting out front  driving.

He might get shot." 

They settled down to consume cigarettes, look innocent, and wait.  After  a time they drove the truck to the big

airport trucking yard and  waited. 

A BIG passenger plane swung in over Flushing Bay, leveled out,  lowered  its tail and settled on the runway. 

A man stepped out of the big operations office, lighted a  firecracker, a  big one, and tossed it out on the

gravel, where it let  loose with a loud  report. 

"Put her in gear," Monk said. 

The big engine of the armored truck began rumbling. The vehicle  backed  away casually and went toward the

steelwire fence. It was  going rather  fast when it hit the fence, and it went through the fence  with about the

same ease that a fist would go through a cobweb. 

It went on and hit the tail of the plane, caving it in. 

The men who got out of the armored truck had short automatic  rifles,  steel helmets, bulletproof vests, gas

masks and a mad  determination to  do a fantastically bold job in a hurry. 

The plane door was open and people were spilling out. The pilot  leaned  out of the control cabin with a blue

revolver in his hand, and  was  promptly and thoroughly made dead by a bullet above his left eye. 

"Get out, everybody," ordered the man who had shot the pilot.  "Renny  Renwick, Long Tom Roberts and

Johnny Littlejohn  you three  stand to one  side." 

A man with big fists  he was an enormous man, but his fists were  still  greater  came out of the plane

headfirst and rushed forward  until a gun  muzzle practically speared him in the eye. He had a long,

funeralgoing  face. 

"Renny Renwick, I believe," said the man with the gun. "Get in the  truck!" 

"Holy cow!" said the bigfisted Renny. 


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"Get in the truck!" 

He got in the truck. 

Johnny Littlejohn was a man of extreme tallness and startling  thinness.  His clothing fitted him like a sack on

a fishing pole, and a  monocle  dangled from his lapel by a ribbon. 

He had one remark, which was, "I'll be superamalgamated!" Long Tom  Roberts was a man distinguished for

nothing in particular, as far as  appearances went, except his mushroomcellar complexion, a completely

unhealthy aspect. 

He had nothing whatever to say, which was typical of him. 

Not one of the three men really looked what he was. Renny Renwick  was an  engineer, one of the greatest.

Johnny Littlejohn was known to  scientists  all over the world for his work in archaeology and geology.  Long

Tom  Roberts was an electrical expert whose name would be in the  books a  hundred years hence. 

They were not three men who looked, acted, or thought alike. They  had  one strong bond, wherein all three

were associated with Doc  Savage. 

"Load in," said the man who had killed the pilot. "Don't try  anything.  Don't waste our time, either." 

Renny said, "They sure caught us flatfooted." Renny's voice was a  rumbling like something deep in a cave. 

They climbed in the truck. It developed that there were chains and  padlocks with which they were to be

lashed to the truck floor. 

The truck began moving. 

By now there was a little desultory shooting. The dead pilot's head  had  leaked a plume of bright scarlet down

the silver metal side of the  plane, a wet red banner that had spread alarm and conviction that this  was no

theatrical stunt. 

The truck withdrew from the mangled tail parts of the plane,  wheeled  slowly, and left the airport the same

way it had come, by  plunging  headlong through the steel wire fence. Wire strands snapped  like fiddle  strings.

The truck sideswiped a roadster, took the  highway, chipping a  slab off a concrete post and bending a sign

double. 

"You fool!" said the killer. "You aren't driving a tank!" 

"I can't see too good," said the driver. "If I was out on the front  seat  behind the other wheel  " 

"If you were out there, you would be dead," the other assured him. 

Monk took charge again. He had been crouched beside the driver,  watching  the road. He got up and went

back to the prisoners. 

MONK kicked Renny Renwick in the ribs. "For a long time I've wanted  to  do that," Monk said. 

The kick and the remark got a howl of laughter. Pleased, Monk  kicked  Renny again. 


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Renny said through his teeth, "Have you gone crazy, Monk?" That got  another bellow of mirth from the

onlookers. Grinning widely, Monk  proceeded to boot Long Tom in the ribs, then gave Johnny the same

treatment. 

"I'll be superamalgamated," said bigfisted Johnny, distressed. 

"He just knows that one word, eh, Stinky?" said Monk. 

Long Tom said, "Who is your pal Stinky, Monk? What is this,  anyway?" 

Monk assumed an air of imparting a great confidence. 

"Things have come up," he said, "that make it necessary to get rid  of  you three fellows." 

"Where's Doc and Ham?" Long Tom demanded. 

Monk said, "Doc himself would be surprised to know." And that also  got a  burst of glee. 

Long Tom scowled. "What's the matter with you apes? What is so  funny?" 

Stinky shouted suddenly, "Hey, there's a State police car trailing  us." 

They fell suddenly silent, and their faces got white. Two men  crawled  back to the rear with long rifles fitted

with telescopic  sights and  crouched there for a while. One of them cursed his  telescopic sight  loudly. The

other fired. The one who had cursed  released a bullet. Both  of them shot again. 

"They're dropping back," said one of the riflemen. 

Monk said, "Slow up when we hit the first bridge. Dump three or  four  grenades on the bridge." 

They did this, then went on. They drove for half an hour, turning  off  into a road that was almost nothing, and

ending finally on a small  bluff  beside the grayblue corduroy surface of Long Island Sound. 

Monk got out and signaled to a cabin cruiser which lay offshore.  The  boat immediately headed in. 

Renny, Long Tom and Johnny were tossed out of the truck, after  being  unlocked from the chains. 

Renny bellowed, "What're you trying to do? What is this, anyhow?" 

Monk eyed them and said, "You remember some experiments Doc was  working  on some time back  a

compound he called 'the Monk mixture,'  or  something like that?" 

"I don't remember," Renny said. 

Long and bony Johnny said, "Say, I recall something about some such  experiments." 

Monk looked at Johnny as if he were very glad to hear that. "We'll  go  into it later, my friend." His statement

had an ominous tinge, the  same  tone a dentist would use in saying, "My friend, we'll have to  pull all  your

teeth." 


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Stinky said, "Good idea to park your revolvers and pistols in the  truck  and leave them. Also the two rifles you

shot at the State police  with.  Taking chances never pays dividends." 

At this point, only Monk was standing outside the truck, with Long  Tom,  Renny and Johnny. 

The others were inside the truck, getting rid of their weapons. 

This was the situation when a second Monk came around the nearest  clump  of bushes. 

"Holy cow!" gasped Renny. "Two Monks!" 

"Yes," said the second Monk. "And very strange it is, too." 

The second Monk took hold of the first Monk in the way a knife  would  meet butter, the second Monk being

the knife. 

"Start shutting off their water!" he yelled at Renny, Long Tom and  Johnny. 

They began taking hold of the first Monk as if they meant to denude  him  of arms and legs. 

"Get that truck closed!" yelled Renny. 

He sprang to do it himself. He got his big hands on the truck doors  and  forced the ponderous things shut, but

not before two men had  managed to  pile through to the ground. 

One of the two who had gotten out  it was Stinky  had a revolver.  He  scrambled and rolled clear, sat up

and began taking a deliberate  aim at  the newly arrived Monk. 

From the nearby bush came Ham with his sword cane. He held the  blade for  throwing the way a spear is

thrown, let fly, and suddenly  eighteen  inches or so of the blade was protruding from the other side  of Stinky's

arm. 

Stinky made strange noises and finally became still on the ground,  the  tip of Ham's sword cane being coated

with a chemical which  produced  quick unconsciousness. 

Monk said to Ham, "It's about time you got into action, you fashion  plate!" 

The other man had dropped his gun and was trying to get to his feet  and  snatch up the weapon at the same

time. Renny made a rush at the  fellow  and created much the effect of a locomotive hitting a cow. 

Then men began to crawl out of the front of the truck with guns and  plenty of rage. 

Ham said, "Don't you think we'd better run?" 

It was obviously the thing to do. The second Monk  the genuine  one, it  was by now apparent  gave the

first, and fake, Monk one last  punch. It  was terrific! Monk took it off the ground somewhere near his  heels.

He  made it whistle. It gave the fake Monk's jaw the shape of a  wet pretzel  and made teeth fly like gravel. 

The five hit the brush then, traveled a few yards, changed  direction,  and went down the slope. Bullets began

hunting them,  glancing off  branches and riddling foliage. Renny rumbled, "This way!"  They turned  again. 


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Johnny said, "Susurration might be perspicacious." 

They ran for a while. 

"I'm in no mood for those words," Monk said. "What did you say?" 

Ham translated, "He said a little less noise might be wise." Monk's  eyes  came out somewhat as a bullet cut a

limb from in front of his  face.  "He's got something there," he gasped. He got down on all fours,  changed  his

course at right angles, and crawled. The others followed  the same  tactics. 

Back of them was shooting and shouting, running around  but not  too  recklessly  in the undergrowth. From

the beach came angry  inquiring  yells. The men from the boat wanted to know what in the name  of little  fish

was happening, as one of them expressed it in a scream. 

Monk and the others sat down to see what would happen now. 

RENNY punched Monk in the ribs. "How come there's two of you?" 

"Search me," Monk said. 

"Strange, don't you think?" 

"The deeper I get into this thing," Monk said, "the less I get  amazed," 

"You can't explain it?" Renny asked him. 

"I'm not going to try," Monk assured him. 

"How did you happen to rescue us?" 

"Oh, that was as simple as filling off a log," Monk explained. "I  telephoned Washington and found out what

plane you had taken and  " 

"I was the one who telephoned Washington," Ham reminded him. 

"Well, we telephoned and found what plane you were on," Monk  continued,  pretending not to hear the

interruption. "So we came down  to meet you." 

"You saw what happened at the airport?" 

"Yes. And we saw we couldn't stop it singlehandedly." 

"What did you do?" 

"Got around on the other side of the plane during the uproar," Monk  said, "and laid down on the front

bumper. Or Ham laid on the bumper. I  took the running board on the off side from the driver." 

"It's a wonder they didn't see you there!" Renny exclaimed. Long  Tom was  puzzled. "How come you rushed

out to the airport to meet us?" 

"Trouble," Monk said. 


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"What kind?" 

"Green fog, green chests, and men falling up instead of down," Monk  said. "And if that isn't enough to make

you think you're crazy  Doc  has  disappeared." 

Long Tom started to exclaim something shocked about that, but Ham  hissed  and grabbed his arm. Ham

pointed with his sword cane, which he  had  recovered from the man he had speared. He indicated the beach. 

"Those fellows from the boat are confused," he said. "They're  rushing up  the hill to help their friends. Does

that give anybody an  idea?" 

"The boat," Long Tom said. "Let's try to take it. We might collect  a  prisoner, and make him talk later." 

"Supermalagorgeous." Johnny agreed. 

FIVE minutes later Renny clubbed down a man with a big fist, and he  fell  in the mud a few feet from the bow

of the cabin cruiser, which  had been  gently beached. They gathered up the man, threw him on the  deck of the

cruiser, and climbed aboard themselves after shoving the  boat off. Renny  dashed below and started the

engine. 

"That," boomed the bigfisted engineer, "was what you would call  almost  too easy." 

The cruiserit was about fortytwo feet long with a  twohundredhorsepower enginechurned backward in

a quarter circle,  then  dug its stern down and surged forward. It took a bone in its  teeth and  traveled. 

A few bullets began coming from shore and there was a rush to get  below  and behind the engine. The cabin

cruiser was essentially a  lightly  constructed yacht and offered only slightly more obstruction  to a bullet  from

an army rifle than a tomato can. 

Monk and the others hauled the prisoner below with them as if he  were  precious. 

Monk admired the captive. 

"Nice and plump," he remarked. "Looks like he might be a talkative  fellow." 

"I hope so," Ham muttered. 

"So do I," Monk said. "I think I begin to put this mystery  together.  There's a fake Monk and a fake Ham. The

two fakes are part  of a scheme  of some kind. There is a trap, I believe. 

Doc may have fallen into it. I'm even beginning to suspect that  green  fog. 

"What do you suspect about the green fog?" Ham demanded. 

"I don't know for sure," Monk said. "I'm going to make this fellow  tell  about that. 

"Suppose he doesn't know anything." 

"That," said Monk, "isn't likely." 

"What makes you so sure?" 


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"Intelligent face. A guy like that would be sure to know what  everything  was about." 

While Monk was thinking of something that would fit to query the  captive, the bow came off the boat! It was

a case, at last, of  dynamite.  Or a bomb of some kind, or a box of hand grenades. The Doc  Savage aids  never

did decide exactly what. But a rifle bullet from  shore probably  hit something and started the blast. The air

inside the  boat seemed  suddenly to turn to water and smoke. 

Chapter VII. PLOT LABYRINTH 

DOC Savage had given up choking "Ham" and had belted the man  senseless  with his fist. Then Doc had

seized the wheel of the car and  had driven  away rapidly, with the horn blowing a steady moan. He  traveled in

that  fashion until he reached the nearest police precinct  station  two  blocks away  where he crashed the car

over the sidewalk  and against the  precinct steps. He got a sudden flow of cops out of  the place, which was

what he wanted. 

"Grab anyone who looks as if he might be following me," he called  loudly. "Particularly in a car!" 

One of the officers recognized the bronze man and relayed the  order.  There was some running, two shots.

Finally, the police  returned. 

Doc had remained in his car, by now almost blinded by the green  fog. 

"There was someone following me?" he asked. 

"I don't understand this darned thing," one of the officers said. 

"Was there?" 

"Following you!" the policeman exploded. "They were all around  you." 

"In cars?" 

"In big machines marked with red signs," the policeman explained.  "The  signs read: 'Danger!' They also read:

'Beware the car carrying  dangerous  high explosive!'" The officer came closer. "What is this,  anyway?" 

Doc Savage was silent for a moment. 

He asked, "Did the signs on the cars also warn all traffic to stop,  or  go slowly, while the car they were

escorting passed?" 

"Sure," the cop said. "You were supposed to be the car carrying the  explosive. Is there any in there?" 

Doc Savage was silent again. Then he said, "That explains how they  made  the traffic go slowly." 

"It sure went slow," said the cop. "Reports of this cavalcade have  been  coming in as it crossed town. It went

to that old green building  downtown, then went up to the apartmenthouse district. That right?" 

"And traffic stopped all the way?" 

The policeman approached. "That's right." 


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"Why, hello, Lieutenant Evers," Doc said. Evers dropped his jaw:  "Great  grief, did you just recognize me?" 

"You just came close enough for me to see you." Lieutenant Evers  was  concerned. "Something happened to

your eyes?" He looked into the  car.  "What have you got there? That is your aid, Ham Brooks, isn't  it?" 

"An excellent imitation only," the bronze man said. He did not  elaborate  on the remark, although Evers was

puzzled. "Lieutenant, will  you drive  me to my headquarters?" 

"Why, sure," said Lieutenant Evers. He moved in behind the wheel as  Doc  Savage climbed into the back.

"Fast or slow?" he asked. 

"Fast," Doc said grimly. He had not mentioned the green fog. 

"I'll have a squad car pace us," the officer said. The pacing was  somewhat, but not much, under seventy miles

an hour. They took the  long  wide sweep of Eighth Avenue, then turned left and stopped at the  stone

skyscraper which housed the bronze man's establishment. 

Lieutenant Evers pointed at "Ham." "You need any help getting him  upstairs?" 

Doc shook his head slightly. "No, thanks, Evers. But you might tell  me  something." 

"Sure! Anything you want to know." 

"Do you see anything that looks like a green fog?" 

Evers swung slowly, staring everywhere. 

"No. No green fog," he said. "That's a strange question." 

PAT Savage ran across the eightysixthfloor reception room to  greet  Doc. 

"Doc, you're safe!" she gasped. Then she saw the man Doc was  carrying.  "Ham! What has happened to him?" 

Doc carried his burden into the laboratory, placed the man on a  table.  He asked, "You remember that knife

scar on Ham's back?" Pat  nodded. Doc  then stripped open the man's shirt and exhibited an  expanse of

unmarred  skin. There was no scar. 

"It isn't Ham!" Pat exclaimed. 

"No," Doc Savage said grimly. "It is a very good imitation,  though." 

Pat said, "Doc, those fainting spells we had  they did something  to us.  Gas or something." 

Doc nodded. "Something of the kind. They knocked all of us out,  then  took me away." He eyed Pat. "Did

they harm you or Monk or Ham?" 

"No." Pat shook her head. "We just woke up. And you were gone." 

"That was when they sprang the trap," Doc said. 

Puzzled, Pat said, "How do you mean?"


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"Seized me," the bronze man explained, "and took me away. They had  a  fake Monk and Ham all ready for

me, I think. At least, here is the  fake  Ham." The bronze man frowned. "They were unbelievably clever  about

it.  They had an escort of cars, marked with signs that kept  everyone away  from my car. That was so I would

think the green fog was  all over the  city and that no one was out driving. The signs caused  motorists to pull

over to the curb and stop. The signs labeled me as  carrying dangerous  explosives." 

Doc began strapping the false Ham to a table that was narrow enough  for  the purpose. 

"Where are Monk and Ham?" he asked. 

Color went out of Pat's face in a quick rush. "They went to the  airport  to meet Renny, Johnny and Long

Tom," she said. She waited,  and, when Doc  Savage made no comment, she asked, "Haven't you heard  what

happened at  the airport?" 

Doc straightened suddenly. "What?" 

"A big truck and a bunch of heavily armed men smashed into the  plane  carrying Renny, Long Tom and

Johnny," Pat said. "The pilot of  the plane  was shot dead when he resisted. Renny, Long Tom and Johnny

were seized  and carried off in the truck." 

"Monk and Ham?" 

"Not a word from them since," Pat said. 

Doc was silent a moment. "Will you check the telephone," he said. 

Pat reached for the instrument. 

"Outside, I mean," Doc said. "Go to the drugstore in the lobby, or  the  restaurant, and telephone me here." 

Pat nodded and left. 

Several minutes later, she returned with a surprised expression.  "Telephone operator told me the telephone

was out of order," she said. 

"Remember when you called your friend Susan Glaspell, to ask if the  green fog was present in Westchester

County?" he asked. 

"Yes, of course I recall," Pat said. "I got Susan's maid." 

"Notice any resemblance between this telephone operator's voice you  just  heard find that of Susan Glaspell's

maid?" 

Pat nibbled a lower lip, and a frown began crowding her eyebrows  together. "Come to think of it, the voices

were very much alike." 

Suddenly, Pat sprang to the telephone, dialed a number at random,  and  said, "Give me Mr. Jonathan Doe."

She listened to a voice, put the  instrument down, and stamped a foot. "I was assured Mr. Doe was out of  the

building," she said. "That was my own telephone number I dialed,  and  there is certainly no Doe working for

me." 


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Without comment, Doc returned to work on the fake Ham. 

Pat snapped, "I get it! They've got our telephone line tapped, with  a  girl riding it and telling us that the people

we want to talk to  aren't  there. What's the idea of that?" 

"A trick." 

"But why? They're pulling a fast one on us for some reason. But  why?" 

"The green fog." 

"I don't," said Pat, "get it." 

"There is no green fog!" 

Pat jumped. "Wait a minute! They say, seeing is believing. I see a  fog."  When Doc did not answer, she

demanded, "Don't you see one?" 

He nodded slightly. 

"But it does not exist," he said. 

THE man who had masqueraded as Ham was wearing a woman's tight,  oldfashioned corset to give himself

the rather waspish midriff which  was Ham's proud possession. A chemical test showed that his hair was  dyed,

that his skin was shaded, that he wore a metal arrangement  inside  his nostrils to shape them. Doc glanced at

the labels in his  clothes.  The name was the same tailor which Ham patronized. 

Pat had been thinking about the fog. 

"Doesn't exist," she said. "But I see it!" 

Doc said, "Step into the chemical storeroom, will you, and get No.  22800." 

"That's the truth serum, isn't it?" Pat remarked. She went to the  cubicle where they stored the chemicals. The

storeroom was a cubicle  only in relation to the general size of the rest of the laboratory.  Actually, the place

was larger than most living rooms. 

The fake Ham opened his eyes. He had been hit very hard. The man  did not  say anything. 

Doc said, "You did a commendable job of acting." 

The man wet his lips. His first effort to speak was a croaking  noise  which embarrassed him. 

"Thank you," he managed to say. "It should have been good. I have  studied day and night for the part for over

a month." 

"It was very good," Doc agreed. 

The man expanded. "Naturally, as I say, it was not bad. Matter of  fact,  I memorized everything about Ham

Brooks which ten detectives  were able  to unearth. You should hear me spout legal terminology. I  bet I could

pass a bar examination." 


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"No doubt." 

"Kept you fooled, didn't I?" said the man proudly. 

"For about thirty seconds." 

"You mean"  the man's eyes popped  "you got wise to us right  away?" 

"Almost." 

"I don't believe it. Hell, we thought of everything. Every possible  means of making you think we were Monk

and Ham, and that there was a  green fog  we used them all. We didn't overlook anything." 

Doc Savage said, "You recall when you told me Pat was not there  because  she had gone home?" 

"Yes. What was wrong with that?" 

"You said she had gone because you had persuaded her there might be  danger for her." 

"Yes." 

"That," said Doc, "was an impossibility. No one could persuade Pat  anything was too dangerous." 

Pat had come back in time to hear the last. "Thank you kindly," she  said  cheerfully. "You should know, Doc.

You've tried often enough." 

The bronze man slapped the fake Ham on the chest. Not hard, but  with  enough force to remove some air. He

said, "What we want out of  you is  conversation." 

The man's eyes became stony. 

"Hell of a bit you'll get," he said. 

Doc Savage contemplated the man for a while, said abruptly, "We  will not  waste time with you." He picked

up a hypo needle and used it,  and the  man barked once, more in anger than pain. Then Doc stepped  back. 

"Watch him," he sold Pat. "The stuff will take about fifteen  minutes to  work." 

"What's that junk you gimme?" snarled the man. 

Pat said ominously, "You won't care." 

The chemical the bronze man had used was a type of truth serum  which he  had developed after considerable

research. It was violent in  its effect  on the victim, so dangerous that Doc rarely used it except  in extreme

emergencies. 

THE bronze man proceeded to change clothes, apply a light coloring  to  his face, put dark optical caps over

his eyeballs to change the  distinct  coloration of his eyes, and pull on a coat with a builtin  back  deformity.

He whitened his hair and took a cane. 


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He made a tour of the neighborhood, moving casually, stooping to  conceal  his extraordinary height, and

wearing gloves. He did not have  to pretend  to be nearsighted. He was unable to see more than twenty or  thirty

feet  because of the greenish haze in his eyes. The fog. 

He studied the taxicabs at the stand on the corner. Taxicab drivers  in  the city frequent the same stands day

after day. There was only one  strange cab in the line. Doc approached the machine, opened the rear  door. 

"Sorry, mister," the driver said sharply. "This cab is engaged." 

Doc got into the cab. "Never mind that," he said. "When do they  move in  on Savage?" 

The driver jumped, turned his head, stared. "What you talking  about,  brother?" 

Doc said, "Didn't you turn in the word Savage had come back here?" 

The man seemed to consider the point. "Elmer send you?" 

"What makes you think anybody sent me?" 

The man was suspicious. "Brother, you better identify yourself." 

Doc put an angry note in his voice. "You better not waste my time,  fellow. The man who was playing the part

of Ham is in serious trouble.  Not that anybody gives a hoot about him, but Savage may have ways of  making

him talk." 

"Oh!" The driver settled back in his seat. "So it's that way. The  boys  are meeting down the street. That side

street on the left. Didn't  they  tell you?" 

"No. What's the plan?" 

"Straight raid. They will go into Savage's garage in the basement  and  take the private elevator." 

"How will they manage that?" Doc was genuinely surprised. Existence  of  the basement garage was supposed

to be more or less of a secret,  and  certainly no one could gain admission who did not understand the  operation

of a number of secret devices. 

"The mechanic who worked on the place will lead the way," said the  taxicab driver. 

Doc made no immediate comment. A mechanic had made some repairs on  the  private elevator recently. The

fellow had been highly recommended.  But  someone evidently had made a mistake. 

The bronze man got out of the cab. "Keep your eyes open," he said. 

HE took the fast elevator to the eightysixth floor, swung into the  laboratory, picked up a knife and slashed

the lines with which he had  secured the fake Ham to the table. 

"Come on," he told Pat. "They are on the verge of raiding the  place." 

Pat said, "Why can't we stay and fight?"


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The bronze man shook his head slightly. He carried the false Ham to  the  elevator, went down a dozen floors

and stopped at the private  apartment  which he had maintained in the place for some time. 

Pat was surprised. "I didn't know you had this apartment." 

"Keep him here." Doc put the fake Ham on a bed. The man was going  under  the effects of the truth serum,

acting as if he was completely  drunk.  "If he begins to have spasmodic attacks, break some of these  vials

under  his nostrils." He gave Pat several thinwalled,  gauzewrapped vials of  the type sometimes used for

smelling salts. 

"Where you going?" Pat asked, concerned. 

The bronze man seemed not to hear the question. He went to the  door. 

"If I should be delayed," he said, "you proceed with questioning  the  man." 

Pat nodded. "Pry out of him what this green fog is, what is in the  green  chest and what made men fall up.

That the idea?" 

"We want the reason for this mystery." 

"Sure. I'll get it." 

Doc went to the elevator and dropped down to the garage. For  convenience, he kept a store of gadgets in the

garage. He selected a  pair of large hand grenades and took a position near the elevator. 

He watched the relays and motors which controlled the big outer  door.  That the foe might gain admission

through the garage was  surprising.  They would have to operate a radio control, and the device  had a

combination which was changed regularly. It functioned after the  fashion  of relay office calls on telegraph

lines. For instance, this  week only a  combination of dotdotdashdotdashdashspacedotdot  would

make the  device function. Next week, the combination would be  changed. If they  got in, they would be

ingenious. 

They were ingenious enough, for suddenly relays clicked and motors  whined and the big door moved up. 

Men started to come in. A dozen of them at the least. 

Doc tossed the grenade so that it hopped across the floor and blew  up in  their faces. The blast was not close

enough to kill anyone, but  it  brushed them back out of the opening as if a great hand had slapped  them. The

second grenade was a combination of tear gas and smoke, and  he  threw that one directly in their midst. 

They broke and ran. 

Doc wheeled, raced up a stairway, pounded across the lobby floor  and  dived out on the sidewalk. With great

commotion and haste  still  wearing his makeshift disguise  he piled into the taxicab run by the  driver to

whom he had talked. 

"It went wrong," he said excitedly. "Clear out of here. Quick!" 

The driver was not excitable. "They put out orders to get back to  the  meeting place in case this went wrong,"

he said. 


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Doc settled back on the seat. "The meeting place, eh? By all  means." 

Chapter VIII. FEAR IS A GOATHERD 

THE taxi driver took him forty miles out on Long Island and turned  left  on a deserted road and stopped. 

The man pointed. "Up there on the hill." 

Doc Savage surveyed the place in the increasing darkness of early  evening. It was not yet night. Red color

mixed with gold splashed over  the foliage as the sun rode just out of sight below the horizon. A  single spike

of sunlight came through a split cleft in the trees and  made a long thing, like a steel broadsword blade, across

the deepblue  surface of Long Island Sound. 

"Deserted spot," Doc said. 

"What do you want? The middle of a sidewalk?" The driver started  his car  again, pulled over to a wall of

brush, worked his way through  it, and  there was suddenly a ramshackle shed with two other cars and a  truck.

The truck was a huge thing, marked by bullets. 

Since it was undoubtedly the truck which had seized Renny, Long Tom  and  Johnny at the airport, Doc

Savage made his small trilling noise  briefly  and unconsciously. 

"What's that noise?" the driver grunted. 

Doc silenced himself. He never knew that he was making the sound  until  he made it. It was something that,

when the circumstances were  right,  was as natural as breathing. 

"The wind, probably," Doc said. 

"There ain't no wind to speak of." 

A man came out of the shadows with a rifle. "What went wrong?" 

"I guess plenty," said the taxi driver. "The attack on Savage's  place to  rescue that guy who was playing Ham

Brooks blew up like a  skyrocket." 

The man looked into the back seat. "Who's your pal?" 

"One of the boys." 

"Which one?" 

"I dunno." 

The taxi driver turned around. "What's your name?" he asked Doc. 

The other sniffed and said, "Mean to tell me you never even asked  who he  was? Hell, why not just pick up

anybody and bring him out  here?" 

The taxi driver did not like that. He and the man seemed to have  quarreled before. The driver got out. 


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"He knows all the answers," he said, indicating Doc. Then he  reached for  the other's collar. "Pal, I've told you

before about  getting tough with  me. I don't take it, see!" 

Doc Savage alighted from the cab, doing his best to look as if he  was  interested in nothing but the fight that

was about to develop. 

The man with the rifle hastily backed away from the taxi driver.  "Now  wait a minute, Freddy," he said. "This

ain't no time to get each  other  skinned up." 

"It looks like a good time to me," said the taxi driver, Freddy. 

"Nix, nix, you sap! We've got trouble here of our own." 

Freddy scowled. "Whatcha mean?" 

"We got all five of Doc Savage's aids cornered," the man explained.  "And  it's a hell of a job grabbing them." 

Freddy was incredulous. "All five? I thought only three were coming  in  on the plane." 

The man shrugged. "Monk and Ham  the genuine ones  showed up,  took  their three friends away from us,

got on our boat. We had a box  of hand  grenades in the boat. Stinky's brother put a bullet in them  and the boat

sank." 

"What became of Savage's men?" 

"They got on a pile of rocks that is exposed at low tide. There's  cover  for them. They're holding us off." 

"If you can't get them off the rocks," Freddy said, "why not get  the  blazes out of here and leave them?

Suppose a coastguard boat  shows up." 

"We'll get 'em." The man laughed grimly. "The tide is coming in.  And  fast." 

There was automobile noise that approached from the direction of  the  highway. 

Freddy said, "That will be the rest of the men who, were going to  raid  Doc Savage's place." 

The other man scowled at Doc. "Who is this bird? I still want to  know." 

Doc said quietly, "I can prove that." He walked over to the man and  held  out a sheet of paper that was blank 

although this was not  important   and when the man started to look at it, he hit the fellow  neatly on the  jaw. 

Freddy was somewhat more difficult. He was quick. He went back like  a  skater, twisted with serpentine

speed, lifting his hands as if he  was  surrendering, but coming out with a short, blunt black pistol that  had

been under his tightly fitting uniform cap. Doc got his hands on  the  gun, and they went to the ground,

fighting to see whether the  safety of  the automatic would be on or off. Off it was. 

Freddy croaked, "Don't hit me!" just as Doc Savage hit him on the  jaw.  Freddy was evidently thinking of a

set of false teeth, parts of  which  flew out of his mouth. He rolled over on his side, spat out the  rest of  the teeth

and was silent, motionless. 

Doc left the shed. He heard four quick shots from toward the sea.  He  made for the Sound. 


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THE rock pile in the sea seemed to consist of four large boulders  and  enough smaller ones to make a rampart.

The tide had come in until  no  more than two feet of the stone bulwarks projected, and waves were  breaking

over this. 

A long, lean and fastlooking boat cruised slowly across the blade  of  sunlight that was fading from the water.

The craft was painted as a  pleasure vessel, but it was larger and slimmer, seemed charged with  power. Doc

Savage studied the vessel, decided it was no pleasure craft  at all. 

The boat nosed slowly toward the cluster of rocks. There was a  report,  not loud, then an enormously louder

blast and a geyser of  water ahead of  the craft. That would be one of the supermachine  pistols, the compact

little weapons which Monk and Ham no doubt had  brought with them. An  explosive pellet. The boat was

keeping out of  range, for it now sheered  off. 

Doc Savage studied the scene as best he could, handicapped by the  greenish haze in his eyes. The powerful

prisms of the monocular which  he  carried was a help. Even with its strong magnification, he was not  positive

of the situation. 

He moved downward through the brush, attracted by a man who was  standing  in view of the boat, but out of

sight of the rocks. The man  had two  shirts tied to sticks. 

Doc came close to the man with the wigwag equipment. 

"All right, all right!" the man called impatiently to someone. "On  the  boat, they want to know what to do.

What shall I tell them?" 

A voice cursed the gathering night. "Give us an hour, and the tide  will  drown them out." 

"We won't have an hour." 

The other swore again. "Tell them to wait. Hold that torpedo." 

Doc Savage moved away hastily, and used his strong monocular on the  long  slim boat again. He saw now

what had made the craft look queer. A  rather  bulky buildup on the forward deck, giving that part of a boat  a

homemade appearance that did not fit the rest of the craft. 

There was a housing that covered a pair of torpedo tubes, he  suddenly  decided. A socalled "mosquito boat,"

not American either, he  decided. 

He went back to the flagman, cautiously skirted the fellow, and  found  that the man who had been giving the

orders had gone away for  the  moment. 

Doc took a long chance. 

He imitated the voice of the man who had been giving orders to the  flagman, and said, "Tell them to lay a

smoke screen around that rock." 

The flagman jumped. "Are you crazy?" He scowled toward the bush  where  Doc was concealed. "What's the

matter with your voice?" 

Under other conditions Doc would have been embarrassed. He had  studied  voice imitation under a master.

Usually, he was more  successful. 


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He said sharply, "Signal them, you fool! The smoke screen!" The  flagman  jumped at the tone, saluted. He

began an expert waggling with  the sticks  to which the shirts were tied. 

"Tell them," Doc ordered, "to lay the smoke screen, then stand by  on the  other side. They are to capture

anyone they see. But there is  to be no  shooting." 

"Right, sir," said the flagman. 

"Be sure they wait on the other side of the smoke screen." 

"Right, sir!" 

DOC worked down to a point where, close inshore, the water was  deep. He  watched the long torpedo boat lift

its nose and charge around  the rock  at a respectful distance, trailing a great worm of smoke that  flattened. 

The fact that they had smokescreen equipment aboard checked his  conviction that the craft was a naval one. 

The breeze drifted the smoke toward shore. As soon as it reached  the  beach, Doc scrambled down and

entered the water. 

Behind him, there was suddenly profane excitement. The flagman was  assuring someone he had done nothing

but follow orders. 

Doc swam strongly. He would not have much time. As fully equipped  as  they were, they would have radio

apparatus. The boat waiting on the  other side of the smoke could not see the wigwag signals, but a single

radio contact could tip them off that something was wrong. 

Nearing the rocks, Doc called, "Monk!" 

Monk's small voice squawked astonishment, and Renny rumbled, "Holy  cow!" 

Doc reached the stony refuge. Waves were breaking over his men. He  demanded, "All of you safe?" 

"I wouldn't call it safe," Long Tom said dryly. "We're all here,  though." 

Doc said, "Wait five minutes. Then swim out of the smoke." He  pointed.  "Head in that direction." 

"Their boat is out there. We heard the motors." 

"Your job," Doc said, "is to divert their attention while I climb  aboard  by the stern." 

"All right," Long Tom said. "But this won't be easy. Those guys  have a  regular navy here. I never saw such

efficiency." 

Doc asked, "Is there a loose rock around here about the size of a  man's  head?" 

"Plenty of them." 

The bronze man put on one of the transparent hoods of  Cellophanelike  material which, pulled over his head,

was held tightly  about his neck  with elastic. Inside this, clamped between his teeth,  he placed a  compact

breathpurifier of the artificiallung type. It  was not, of  course, as efficient. But it would keep him supplied


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with  oxygen for  possibly ten minutes. He got his bearings, took the rock  and went under. 

LOCATING the boat was more a matter of patience than superhuman  ability.  The water was not deep. He

merely spotted the dark hulk of  the craft  outlined on the water above, let go the stone, and swam up

cautiously to  the stern. The propellers were motionless, two big dark  blades. 

He ran a hand over the hull. Rough with barnacles. The boat had  been in  the water a long time. 

With extreme care, hanging to the rudder, he got his head above the  surface. No one above. He reached

upward. The rail was too far away. 

He unlimbered the collapsible grapple, attached to a silken cord of  great strength. He always carried the

thing. He tossed the grapple,  hooked it over the rail, waited to see that no one had been alarmed.  Then he

went down into the water again and waited. 

There was a shout. Sudden rush from the propellers nearly threw him  out  of the water. He fought the cord,

managed to get hold of the rail. 

They were crowded on the forward deck, except for two men who were  at  the wheel and controls. The last

pair were amidships. 

Forward, a man bellowed, "Get your hands up!" 

Monk's voice answered. "Come and get us. We're surrendering! The  darn  tide covered those rocks." 

The man who had bellowed said, "Careful, men. This smells like a  trick." 

Doc was on deck by that time. He went forward. The boat was  traveling  fast now, making a wide circle

around the swimming figures  of Monk and  the others. 

The bronze man hit the pair at the controls. He struck hard with a  shoulder, sent one man overboard. The

other whirled, gasped, dodged  the  fist Doc sent at him. He stepped backward, got out of reach. 

Doc knocked the engine throttles wide open. He put the port engine  into  reverse, the starboard one full speed

ahead. He put the wheel  hard to  port. The result was a hairpin turn by the boat. 

Narrow beam of the craft had never been designed for such turns. It  went  over, not completely capsizing, but

tipping fully half over, the  starboard rail and half the cabin under. This happened at near forty  miles an hour,

and the result was like an avalanche of stone as water  came over the bows. Everyone on deck was washed

overboard, with the  exception of one man, who got hold of a cleat. Doc picked a cover off  the binnacle and

hurled it at that man, and the fellow slid over the  side. 

It was then no trouble to go back and pick up Monk, Ham, Long Tom,  Renny  and Johnny. The latter

immediately piled below decks to see if  there was  anyone left there. There was a commotion. Excited voices.

Doc listened  to them. 

Longbodied, bigworded Johnny put his head out of a companion and  said,  "A syzygy, emphatically." 

Monk also came up from below. Monk's face was blank with  astonishment. 

"A syzygy," Monk said, "is probably the word for it." 


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Johnny seemed surprised that Monk should know what such a word  meant.  "You know what it means?" he

asked suspiciously. 

"Syzygy," Monk said, "is when one planet meets another, or  something  like that. Isn't that it?" 

Johnny nodded. 

Doc Savage said. "What are you two talking about?" 

"A meeting of planets," Monk explained. "The way that fellow  Tottingham  Strand fell up into the sky, we

supposed he would be  floating around  among the stars, by now. But he's back to earth!" 

"You mean he is on board?" 

"He is tied to a bunk down below," Monk said. 

Chapter IX. SYZYGY WAS NO GOOD 

JOHNNY made another statement. He used small words, so he was very  impressed. 

"There is also a girl," he said. 

"A princess," Monk corrected him. "Such a regal creature as to make  your  heart go flopflop." 

"Her name is Erica, she says," Johnny added. "Erica Ambler Hotts,  she  says." 

Doc Savage changed the subject by pointing upward. "That plane," he  said, "is coming down as if it had a

purpose." 

The plane was a yellow craft with two flat, fishshaped floats and  a  lean shark snout of a watercooled

motor. It came down in a long  falling  dive, not steep enough to strip off the wings. The wing slots  were set,

after the fashion of a dive bomber. 

Monk said, "I don't like the way that thing acts." Doc Savage  he  had  turned the boat back to pick up the

crew members who had been  dumped  overboard  suddenly knocked the throttles wide open again and  spun

the  wheel. He began to make snaky S curves over the surface. 

The plane changed course two or three times, pulled out of its  dive.  There was a whistling, then commotion

and water and smoke  climbing into  the air, and deep underwater noise. 

"A little closer," Monk said, "and there would really have been a  syzygy." 

"Bombs!" Johnny muttered. "I'll be superamalgamated! A regular dive  bomber." 

"Navy type," Doc said. 

"What navy?" 

"That would be hard to tell," the bronze man said. 


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Johnny rubbed his jaw thoughtfully. 

"Nice mixture of events, wouldn't you say?" he remarked. "A man  comes,  Monk tells me, about a green chest

which was stolen from him.  He doesn't  know what is in the chest because it belonged to a friend  named

Montgomery, for whom he was keeping it. Then the man falls up  into the  sky. Then a green fog affects Doc,

Monk, Ham and Pat  " 

"Wait a minute!" Monk yelled. "Aren't you seeing the green fog?" 

"Certainly not!" Johnny replied. "And now, a naval plane is  divebombing  us. It's a little mixed up, if you ask

me. Some  explanations would help  clear part of it." 

Monk collared the gaunt geologist and archaeologist. "Are you  seeing any  fog?" 

"No!" 

Monk looked blank. "That's funny. I see a fog." 

Doc Savage had been watching the plane as it arched up and came  back  again. Machinegun bullets began

boiling the water as guns on its  wings   two on each wing, two through the propeller  hung out red  tongues.

Doc changed the course of the boat rapidly. 

"Get below," he said sharply. "The decks are probably armored." 

Monk and Johnny dived for the hatch. Doc yanked at a projection  which  proved to be what he thought it was

a steel shell which hinged  up over  the steersman's post, and would turn machinegun slugs and  possibly the

lightcannon shells with which modern planes are  equipped. 

Ham shouted, "Doc, you want to put out a smoke screen?" 

"Good idea," the bronze man said. His voice was composed, in  contrast to  the gnashing rip and tear of

machinegun slugs, the  shotgunloud smash  of a cannon shell that suddenly tore away deck  planking and

exposed the  silver shine of armor plate below. 

The boat put out smoke, and they moved around under it. 

After a while, the night was dark enough to escape. The bronze man  noted  that the gas tanks were well filled.

He sent the boat toward the  city. 

MONK watched the lights of the Triborough Bridge move overhead like  a  great monocolored rainbow on

which moved the luminous patches of  automobile headlights. The boat motors were a rumble like a subway

train  underfoot, and two white ram horns of spray stood out from the  bows and,  now and then grew, longer or

shorter. 

Long Tom came on deck. "You want to talk to the State police on the  radio, Doc?" 

The bronze man asked, "Did you give them the story?" 

"All but the silly parts," Long Tom said. "I didn't mention green  chests, men falling up, or green fogs. I told

them there were some  foreign agents or something stirring up a mess." 


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"Were they caught?" 

"Every one of them was gone by the time the police got there." 

"No clues?" 

"Not yet. They are checking on the plane, have the roads blocked,  and  the coast guard is starting to search all

boats. Ham and Monk  furnished  descriptions of all those we had seen." 

Monk came on deck in time to say, "The best description I gave was  of  that fake Monk. That sure gets me.

You wouldn't believe anyone  could  look so much like me." 

"You sure said something there," Ham told him. 

"What you mean?" 

"Looking like you is a feat I didn't think anyone could do." 

"Look," Monk said bitterly, "I'm in no mood for that stuff you call  wit." 

Renny put his head out to look at the breathless spectacle which  was New  York seen at night from the river.

They swung past the Sutton  Place and  Tudor City districts, high apartment houses with many  lighted

windows. 

"They won't talk," Renny reported. 

"Which one?" 

"Both of them," said Renny. "The girl claims she doesn't know  anything.  Tottingham Strand says he can't

imagine what it is all  about." 

Doc Savage inquired quietly, "Is he sticking to the story about a  mysterious green chest which a friend gave

him to keep?" 

"That's his story, and he's stuck with it, if you ask me," Renny  rumbled. "Personally, I don't believe it any

more than I believe  storks  bring little babies." 

Doc turned the boat in to a pier. 

Surprised, Long Tom asked, "Aren't we going around to the  warehouse?" 

The "warehouse" was an innocent lump of a building on the Hudson  side of  Manhattan Island, a structure that

bore the legend "Hidalgo  Trading  Company." The interior had been converted into a seaplane  hangar and

boathouse. A pneumatic mancarrying tube of Doc's design   one gadget  which would never become popular

with the public; a ride in  the tube was  about as soothing as a trip through a forest on a  skyrocket  led  directly

to headquarters. 

"No, we shall stay away from there," Doc said. "It is probably  being  watched." 

"Not many people know about it." 


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Doc was silent a moment. "These men we are fighting, whoever they  are,  know an incredible amount about

us. They knew enough to  substitute two  impostors for Monk and Ham, to gain access to our  headquarters at

will." 

Long Tom's mouth jerked open, then closed. "Doc, isn't Pat at  headquarters with the fake Ham? Doesn't that

mean she may be in  danger?" 

"Pat," the bronze man explained, "is in the same building, but on a  different floor. In my apartment." 

"Apartment?" Long Tom said. "I didn't know you had one there." 

"Nor did anyone else," Doc said. "So Pat probably is safe." 

PAT Savage looked anything but safe when they walked in on her. She  was  ghostpale. "Have you got

smelling salts or something?" she asked. 

The idea of Pat needing smelling salts was startling. 

"What happened?" Monk demanded. "Did the fake Ham fall up, too?" 

Pat shuddered. "He went down, if anything  the part of him that  left." 

"What  " Monk stared blankly. 

"A button off his vest, I think it was," Pat explained. She sank in  a  chair. "It was awful. I thought I was tough.

I was the one who ate  up  excitement. Whew!" 

"Button?" Monk asked. 

Pat said, "He ate it, before the truth serum got him. That is, he  began  to feel the effects of the serum, and he

ate the button. It was  a hollow  shell, and there was some powder  chemical of some kind  in  it. The  man 

the false Ham  bragged about it. He said it would keep  him  unconscious for days, so we could not get

anything out of him. You  know,  like spies do, and like we have done on occasion. It's an old  trick." 

"Poison?" Doc Savage put in. 

Pat nodded. "I don't think  I'm sure he did not know it. That was  horrible, wasn't it? Whoever he was

working for knew he would be in  very  desperate straits before he ever used that chemicalfilled  button. It

was murder!" 

Doc Savage glanced at Erica AmblerHotts. She was as cool as cream  in a  refrigerator. 

"I would like you to look at the body," Doc told her. 

She did not flinch. "I don't mind," she said. 

She went into the other room and glanced at the body on the floor.  The  man had gone through motions in

dying that had clawed up the rug  and  upset things. Erica AmblerHotts was not all cold stone. She lost  color. 

"I never saw him before," she said. She turned quickly and walked  out. 


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Doc brought in Tottingham Strand. The man was composed, but it was  the  composure of a steel spring

tightened to its last turn. More than  ever,  the man was like a tempered blade, a fine cutting instrument,

impersonal, always on his feet, like a cat. He went to the body and  turned the face into different positions. 

"I have seen him." He straightened, looked at his hands  distastefully,  took out a handkerchief and wiped

them. "This man tried  to kill me a few  days ago. He was in a car that sought to run me  down." 

Doc asked, "Did you go to the police about that?" 

Strand shrugged. "I have explained to your associates why I did not  go  to the police with any of this. My

friend Montgomery  he left me  the  green chest  requested me not to go to the police." 

"You must have been willing to do a great deal for your friend  Montgomery." Doc's metallic eyes were

suddenly as still as hardened  gold. 

Strand spread his hands. "I did not know what I was getting into." 

"And what did you get into?" Doc asked. 

"That," said Strand quickly, "is something I wish you would tell  me." 

"What part do you want me to tell you?" 

"Why men fall up," Strand said. 

Doc was silent. 

Strand, after smiling wryly, added, "And why Miss Ambler Hotts was  seized. They were going to kill her.

But first they were going to  torture her to make her tell what she knew about my actions and what I  knew and

what I had done." 

Doc said, "You know, then, why they seized you?" 

"No." 

Doc Savage's face was usually expressionless, but that did not mean  he  could not show emotion. He

displayed feeling now. The feeling was  profound skepticism. It was so plain that Strand could not miss it.

Strand flushed. 

"My friend Montgomery got me into something," Strand said grimly.  "I  wish you would tell me what it is." 

WHILE Doc Savage was answering Strand's last statement with  silence,  Monk and Ham came into the room.

Monk gestured skyward with a  thumb,  said, "Ham and I are going up to headquarters." 

"Be careful," was all Doc Savage had to say. 

It was a rare occasion when Doc gave a warning, so Monk and Ham  were  impressed when they walked out. 

Doc Savage watched Strand for a while. Doc's face was now  expressionless. Then he made the low trilling

which was his  peculiarity.  The sound was almost inaudible. 


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"Strand," he said, "there is a place for everything." 

Strand halfclosed one eye. "So I've heard. " 

"This is the place," Doc said, "for the truth." The Englishman's  face  jerked into a mask, telling nothing except

that he was on guard. 

"Sorry," he said. 

"You have not told the truth." 

Strand wheeled stiffly. "Sorry," he said. He walked out. 

A moment later, there was a rumble from the outer room. 

Doc went to the door. Strand was trying to leave, and Renny had his  way  barred, with big fists cocked. "Holy

cow!" Renny told him. "You're  not  just walking out!" 

"Get out of my way," Strand said coldly. 

Renny looked at the steel expression of the man and said, "You  don't  make me shake in my boots, friend. Go

back and sit down." 

Strand did something that was hard to do. He went back and took a  chair  and made it seem that he had not

been bluffed in the least. 

Later, Renny got Doc aside. "That fellow," Renny muttered, "is not  someone I would want to find in a dark

alley, if he didn't like me." 

Doc Savage made no comment. He went to the telephone and dialed his  headquarters upstairs, using the

unlisted number which would get a  quick  response. 

Monk answered and said, "They have been in here, Doc. But they're  gone.  We've got the photographs from

the concealed camera that takes  pictures  of intruders. You want us to develop the film?" 

"Bring the film and developing chemicals downstairs," Doc directed.  "And  there are some other chemicals

you can also bring. Better get a  paper  and pencil and make a list." 

The list of chemicals which Doc Savage named was long and  complicated.  He added a few pieces of

equipment. 

"It's a good thing you told me to write them down, " Monk said. 

He and Ham soon appeared, heavily burdened. Ham patted his pocket.  "Here're the films. Want us to use the

bathroom or the kitchen?" 

"Bathroom." Doc Savage picked up the chemicals and carried them  into the  kitchen. He worked for some

time, mixing and testing. 

Monk came in with a print which he had made. "This is the best  one," he  said. "Look here; we've seen these

guys. Some of them were in  the gang  that we fought out on Long Island  part of the crew that  cornered us on


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that rock." 

Doc examined the print. 

Then he looked at Monk and asked, "How is the green fog, Monk?" 

"Still see it," Monk said. "Renny and the others say it doesn't  exist.  But Pat and Ham and I sure see it. We see

a fog, and it's  green." 

Ham had come to lean against the door. "Doc, I've noticed a queer  thing  about this fog." 

"You mean that it seems to turn red at times?" Doc asked. 

Ham stared. "How did you know?" 

"Ever hear of santonin?" Doc asked. 

Monk popped his palms together. "Blazes! For the love of little  fishes!" 

"You know what it is?" Ham demanded. 

"Sure!" Monk explained. "Great grief! Doc, how did they administer  it to  us? Santonin. They couldn't have

done that!" 

Doc Savage said, "The fact that we saw only green indicates they  used  either a developed form of santonin,

or a similar compound. It  may have  been a gas. It probably was." 

"I'm going back upstairs to see how they gave it to us!" Monk  yelled. 

The homely chemist burst out of the room. 

Ham shook his head. "I still don't know what this santonin stuff  is." 

"A chemical," Doc Savage explained. "It makes things appear all  green or  all red to its victims for several

days. It is a drug." 

Ham gave that deep thought. "Why," he asked, "did they do that?" 

MONK came bursting back into the apartment with triumph all over  his  clockstopping face. "It was easy

when I knew what to look for." 

"You found how they gave us that chemical?" Ham demanded. 

"Did I!" Monk grinned. "How do you think?" 

"Don't be cute, you lummox," Ham advised. 

"You remember one of the very first things that happened to Doc  when  this thing began?" Monk demanded. 

"The green fog  " 


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"No, no! Before that." 

"Doc was up at a hospital performing an operation nobody else could  perform  " 

"Right after that," Monk said. 

"Why, Doc had an accident. There was a fight. Some stranger with a  knife. The knife was knocked out of the

fellow's hand and struck Doc,  cutting him slightly. But Doc wasn't even involved in that." 

Monk grinned. "Remember what Pat was doing when we found her at  headquarters?" 

"Bandaging her ankle." 

"Why?" 

"Oh, some fellow on the street had kicked her shin or something and  skinned  " Ham went silent. His eyes

narrowed. "Wait a minute! That's  a  kind of a coincidence." 

Monk said, "Remember what you and I did just before we began seeing  the  green fog?" 

"We were in a fight." 

"Exactly," Monk said. "And no doubt that was when we got jabbed  with a  hypodermic needle containing this

advanced form of santonin." 

Ham looked disgruntled. "You mean to tell me the santonin was  administered with the knife that cut Doc,

with a needle in the toe of  somebody's shoe that skinned Pat's ankle, and to us during that  fight?" 

"That," Monk said, "is how we got it." 

"How did you find it out?" 

Monk tapped his forehead. "By using what's in here." 

Ham snorted. "What's in there will never trouble Einstein." Ham sat  down  in a chair, rubbed his jaw and

began to realize just how puzzled  he was.  He scowled at Monk. He did not like to discuss serious matters

with  Monk, because the impulse to insult Monk was overwhelming.  Rather, it  was a necessary act of

selfpreservation, for Monk would do  plenty of  insulting himself if not held at bay in some fashion. Ham

strained his  hair with his fingers. 

"Doc," he said. "Why did they give us that stuff  that santonin?" 

"To make us think there was a green fog." 

"For what purpose?" 

The bronze man's features were inscrutable. "It was part of an  astoundingly clear and elaborate plot." 

Ham's eyes flew wide. When Doc referred to a thing as astounding  and  elaborate, it meant a great deal. One

of the bronze man's habits  were  understatement. Ham had heard him call an earthquake a minor  tremor when

the quake was strong enough to shake the hat off a man's  head. 


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"Plot," Ham said. "Plot, eh?" He was puzzled. "They gave us  santonin.  That made us see a greenish film,

because of what it did to  our eyes.  They made us think it was a fog. I remember when Monk and I  were

around  that building  we met a fellow who asked us if there  wasn't a green  fog. That fellow was one of their

men. He was helping  to make us think  there was a fog." 

"But why?" Monk asked. 

"To make it easier to deceive me," Doc explained, rather loudly. At  least, there was perceptibly greater

volume in his voice, although for  no apparent reason. 

Ham nodded. "I think I get it. They wanted to hamper your vision so  you  wouldn't recognize the fake Ham

and the fake Monk. But they gave  us the  stuff, too, so that, when we were first with you, it would be

common.  You'd think the fog was overall." 

Doc said, "Yes, and they did not want me to realize I was in a fake  headquarters." 

Ham stared. "There was a phony headquarters, then?" 

"An exact duplicate." 

Monk muttered, "That's a hard one to believe. I don't see how they  duplicated it." 

"There have been weeks of patient effort behind this," Doc Savage  advised him. 

THE bronze man's voice was becoming louder by degrees. The gradual  increase in volume had not gone

unnoticed by Monk and Ham, but they  were  more or less excited over the fantastic evidence that someone

had  gone  to the enormous pains of duplicating their headquarters exactly.  They  were now doing as people

will do when another lifts his voice   they  were speaking with more volume, themselves. 

Ham paused to rub his jaw reflectively. 

"What," he asked, "was the idea of the fooling us with the fake  headquarters?" 

"A psychological trick." 

Ham frowned. "I don't see the psychology in it." 

"The idea," Doc explained, "was to make me think I was safe in  headquarters among friends  the fake Monk

and Ham were to be the  friends for that occasion  and get me talking." 

Monk got into the conversation with a grunt. 

"I can see how it might have worked," Monk declared. 

"We always talk freely to each other. If Doc thought he was with  me, or  if I thought I was with Doc, or with

Ham  in other words, if  we thought  we were together and nobody else around, we might let  something slip.

Sure, it'd work." 

Ham put in a skeptical snort. "If," he said, "we knew anything to  let  slip." 

Monk forgot himself and nodded agreement with Ham. 


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"That's right," he said. "We don't have anything they would want." 

Doc Savage said quietly, "But we have." 

They stared at him. "Huh?" Monk said. 

"Compound Monk," Doc said. 

Ham Brooks chuckled heartily. "Monk is a compound, all right," he  said.  He glanced at Monk. "A compound

of a missing link and nobody  could  figure what else." 

Then Ham stopped speaking. His jaw fell. He had remembered  something. 

"Say!" he exploded. "You mean that stuff  that chemical stuff   you  developed a long time ago? I remember

hearing somebody say  something  about some new discovery you had named 'Compound Monk'; but  nothing

more  was ever said about it, and it slipped my mind." 

Monk said, "I remember that stuff. It was very sensitive to motion  radiation. The absorption of such radiation

by its atoms led to the  ejection of three electrons, as against twoelectron ejection by  socalled photoelectric

substances sensitive to light radiation." 

"Greek!" Ham said. 

"It's not Greek, either," Monk snapped. "It's a perfectly simple  thing.  You've seen light meters?

Photographers use them to measure  light." 

"What," asked Ham, "has a light meter got to do with this affair?" 

"Nothing." Monk looked exasperated. "But I can take the perfectly  simple  principle of the light meter and

explain it to you, and use  that to  illustrate Compound Monk  " 

Doc Savage interrupted. There was even more volume in his voice  now. 

"The formula for Compound Monk is in the big safe upstairs," he  said.  "We might get it, look it over, and see

if it would explain what  the  mystery is about." 

A moment later, Tottingham Strand appeared in the door. 

"I can explain what it is all about," he said. 

RENNY, Long Tom, Johnny, Pat and Erica AmblerHotts had evidently  been  listening, because they

appeared behind Strand. Strand stepped  aside,  and they entered. Strand remained in the doorway. Noting that,

and  realizing there was now no one between Strand and the outer door,  Monk  arose and sauntered past the

man, then stood where he could shut  off an  escape attempt. 

"It was because they were fools," Strand said. 

Doc made a slight negative gesture. "On the contrary, they were  clever." 

Strand showed his teeth with no humor. "They were trying to deceive  me   and failed." 


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Doc said, after a moment, "You are not making yourself very clear." 

"They were going to let me escape and go to you for help." Doc  Savage  spoke quietly in Mayan, the tongue

which he and his associates  used for  consultation when they did not wish to be understood by  others. He

spoke  to Monk. He told Monk to come back out of the other  room and leave the  way free for Strand to take

flight. 

"What did you say?" Strand demanded. 

Monk swallowed his surprise, though fast, and said, "All right,  Doc.  I'll go into the kitchen and mix more of

that stuff to clear the  green  fog out of our eyes." 

The homely chemist walked past Strand into the kitchen. 

Strand was relieved. "The explanation of all that elaborate deceit  was  this, Mr. Savage. First, they wanted you

in a fake headquarters,  where  you were virtually a prisoner guarded by two of their men. By  two men

guarding you, I, of course, mean the false Monk and Ham." 

Strand stared at them. 

He said, "I was permitted to escape  or so they planned. I would  go to  you, they knew. And they knew I

would talk to you; tell you  everything.  The fake Monk and Ham would be present and overhear all I  told

you." 

"Then," Doc said, "our guess at the purpose of the green fog and  the  fake headquarters was correct?" 

"Yes. It was to get information out of you and me." 

Doc asked, "They had reason for thinking you would try to reach  me?" 

"Excellent reason." 

"What was it?" 

Strand drew himself up. 

"I came to America from England to see you," he said. "They knew  that." 

Monk's curiosity got so strong that he put his head out of the  kitchen  and demanded, "What did they expect to

learn?" 

"They wished to hear what I would tell you when I came to see you,"  said  Tottingham Strand. "They had the

fake Monk and Ham planted for  that  purpose. But"  his face darkened, and his hands closed  "I was  too

experienced for that gag. I saw through it at once. I told them  so." 

Monk rather derisively, said, "You're clever, huh?" 

Strand smiled again, and it was like a knife blade showing its  steel. 

"I was not fool enough for Savage to deceive me," he said. Monk  looked  as if he had been slapped. "Hey,

what do you mean?" 


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"I mean," snapped Strand, "that I do not think Savage could have  been  deceived by those men even for a

moment. Therefore, he was not  deceived.  Hence, he is working with them." 

"Brother," said Monk coldly, "words like those may lose you your  teeth." 

"Savage has you duped," Strand said coldly. "He did not want you to  know  he had sold out; so he pulled that

elaborate and impossible yarn  about a  fake headquarters to deceive you. He did not want me coming  here. He

wanted me away from you, but he knew I would expect to find  some of his  associates with him. You and

Ham Brooks are the most  prominent.  Therefore, Savage prepared a fake Monk and a fake Ham for  me." 

Monk shook his head slowly. 

"Man, you're as crazy as a box full of loons," he said. 

Strand showed most of his teeth. 

"I'll just leave you with that thought," he said. 

Then Strand leaped back, slammed the door and locked it. Sound of  his  feet went away from the door fast. 

Monk bounced forward, bellowing, "He scrammed! I knew he was fixing  to!" 

Erica AmblerHotts stood with her hands pressed to her cheeks and  made  an extremely coherent statement. 

"Poor Tot Strand is so terrified by the magnitude of this thing,"  she  said, "that he has made a frightful

mistake." 

Chapter X. THE MONK COMPOUND 

THE eightysixth floor of the midtown building had been Doc  Savage's  headquarters since the beginning of

his rather strange career  of  righting wrongs and punishing evildoers. 

From time to time, he had made changes in the place, added gadgets  and  trick devices, until it was a

remarkable labyrinth of the  unexpected. 

There was, for example, the wall passages by which they could move  from  one room to another and watch

through disguised loopholes. It was  possible to move from these to a lower floor, thence out of the  building

by the regular elevator service. 

Doc Savage watched Tot Strand crouch before the big safe in the  reception room and go through the contents.

Doc stood in a narrow  passage and looked on through the glass eye of a large stuffed fish  which hung on the

wall. 

Strand had found the safe open. He had located a file marked:  "Confidential Formulae." There were

envelopes in this file, fat ones,  each of which contained a notebook  a record of the experiments in

developing the formula  and a package which contained samples of the  formula itself, whenever the stuff

was not perishable. 

Strand found a package, grunted loudly.


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He put his find in his pocket and fled the place. He was so nervous  that  he was perspiring. 

Down in the lobby, he took a great deal of care to make sure no one  was  waiting for him. 

This information was relayed to Doc Savage by Renny Renwick, who  said,  "He got off on the mezzanine

floor. He's looking over the  railing,  scouting to see if the coast is clear." 

Renny was sitting in the lobby barber shop, which had huge glass  windows  that offered a full view of the

lobby. Renny had seated  himself in a  chair, lathered his face, and leaned back. The barber,  who knew what

was  expected, had handed Renny a telephone when the  latter gestured. 

Doc said, "Tell me when he leaves and what route he takes." 

"He's doing it, now," Renny said. "The south door. He is going  west." 

Doc directed, "Go back upstairs. Keep an eye on that girl, Erica  AmblerHotts. She knows more about this

than she has told us." 

"That will be a pleasure," Renny said. 

"Is Bob following Strand?" Doc asked. 

"Yes." 

Bob was Bob Gaston. He operated the newsstand in the south lobby of  the  building. Bob Gaston was also a

product of the institution which  Doc  Savage and his associates referred to as the "college." The  "college"  was

located in a remote section of upstate New York, and its  purpose and  even its existence were unknown to the

general public. The  purpose of  the "college" was the renovating of criminals by unusual  methods. When  Doc

caught a chronic crook, he committed the fellow to  the place, where  the patient underwent a delicate brain

operation at  the hands of  specialists trained by Doc himself. As a result of the  operation, all  memory of past

was wiped out. The patient was then  trained to hate crime  and taught a trade, after which he was  "graduated"

as a useful citizen.  Bob Gaston was such a graduate. Once  a criminal, he now bore no traces  of it, no more

trace than he had  recollection. 

BOB watched Tottingham Strand enter a small apartment house in the  Jackson Heights section. He calmly

walked into the lobby, and entered  the elevator with Strand. The place did not have a doorman, and the  front

door was left carefully unlocked during the day. 

Strand got out at the fifth floor. So did Bob. Strand entered  Apartment  5C. 

Bob went back downstairs, hurried to a drugstore, and telephoned  Doc  Savage. He told Doc where Strand

would be found. 

"Watch the place and wait for me," Doc said. 

The bronze man's voice was pleased, and Bob Gaston felt very good  about  the matter as he left the drugstore

and walked back toward the  apartment  house. Bob understood vaguely that, in some way, he owed a  great

debt to  Doc Savage, although he did not know exactly what it  was. Something to  do with his earlier life, he

suspected. His past was  a blank, largely.  It did not bother him, except that, once or twice,  he had met men

who  seemed to know him, but whom he did not recognize.  Such memories as he  had were only very vague

stirrings, nothing  tangible enough to shape  into an actual recollection. 


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Bob was perfectly satisfied. He operated the newsstand and cigar  counter  in the great skyscraper which

contained Doc Savage's  headquarters, and  he made a good living. He knew that he owed his  prosperity to

Doc, so he  was particularly anxious to please. 

He now noticed a taxicab in front of the apartment house. It had  been  there earlier, not exactly in front of the

place, but at a  parking spot  designated as set aside for cabs. 

Hit by an idea, Bob approached the cab. "Care to rent this heap for  a  couple of hours, buddy?" he asked. "Let

me drive it, I mean." 

The taxi driver stared in astonishment. "Huh?" 

"I would like to take over your cab for a while," Bob explained. 

The driver had a round pumpkin of a head and small eyes as gray as  pencil erasers. "G'wan somewhere else,"

he growled. "I got no time for  stews." 

"I am not drunk," Bob explained carefully. "I wish to hire your  cab. I  will pay you for it." 

"You think I'm crazy?" countered the driver. "Hell, I don't know  you. I  own this cab myself. Think I'm going

to turn it over to a  stranger?" 

This was a logical argument. Bob chuckled. "Look," he said, "would  it  make any difference if you knew I

was working for Doc Savage?" 

The taxi driver seemed to jump an inch off his seat. "Savage?" 

"Doc Savage," Bob explained innocently. "I'm on a job for him, so  your  cab will be safe enough." 

The driver had trouble getting his chin up off his chest. 

"You work for Doc Savage?" he asked. 

Bob Gaston nodded. 

"What you doing?" asked the driver. 

"I'm shadowing a man," Bob said. "I want to use your cab to keep  track  of him. So, driver, you can see it is

perfectly all right. Here,  I'll  give you ten dollars for the rental of your cab the next hour." 

"Ten dollars!" The cab driver sounded utterly amazed. "Sure, pal.  Here,  let me get out." He alighted from the

cab. He removed his cap.  "Here,  take my cap." 

Bob reached for the cap and the driver used the blackjack he had  managed  to slip unobserved out of his

pocket; used it so hard that the  leather  split and small shot flew and bounced and scampered over the

sidewalk  long after Bob Gaston was lying motionless on his face. 

With uncanny abruptness, two more men were beside the driver. "What  happened, Joey?" one demanded. 

"This guy followed Strand to the place," said the driver. "He came  up  and tried to hire my cab to trail Strand,

the fool. He even told me  he  was working for Savage." 


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"Hell, if Strand left Savage, that means he's got what he came  after!"  exploded the other. 

"We better see about that," said Joey. 

There were more than the three of them. The others were concealed  in the  adjacent darkness. Joey made a

series of gestures with his arms    semaphore signals  tanding under the light in front of the  apartment  house. 

"I told 'em to stand by for trouble," he said. 

THEY went upstairs, using the stairway instead of the elevator, and  climbed warily. They did not knock on

Strand's door. Two of them  simply  hit it together, and the third stood back with a gun. 

It was not a wellmade apartment house, and the door split, letting  them  inside. The man who had stood back

was instantly inside with his  gun. 

Tottingham Strand dropped a suitcase. Another suitcase stood on a  chair,  partially packed. 

Joey said, "Getting ready to leave us, Tot?" 

Strand stood very stiff with hands splayed against his legs. He  trembled  slightly. When he spoke, it was to

make low, guttural remarks  that went  into great detail about the debased nature of Joey's  ancestry. 

Joey whitened and said, "Shut up!" 

Then Joey went looking around the room. He located on a table a  packet  and noted its markings: 

Compound Monk 

"You got it!" he yelled. He bounced over in front of Strand, so  excited  that he drooled. "You got it! You got

what you came all the  way from  England to get!" 

Strand, who had composed himself coldly, said nothing. 

Joey saw the expression. He chilled. "What you looking so smug  about?" 

Strand indicated the package. "No good." 

"What?" 

"A plant. A fake. Just something Savage put in his safe for me to  find." 

Joey glared. "I don't believe it!" 

Strand shrugged. "Oh, he sucked me in properly. I fell for an old  trick   one of the oldest. He let me escape

and get this, that  package. He  even let a clue drop to where it was." 

Joey, suddenly frenzied, ripped open the package. He examined the  contents, stuff which looked somewhat

like quicksilver in a small  glass  bottle. It was heavy. 

When Joey noticed how heavy the stuff was, he began getting pale.  He dug  a silver coin, a quarter, out of his

pocket, and uncorked the  bottle,  put some of the contents on the coin. He rubbed. The coin got  a wet  silver


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sheen. 

"Mercury!" Joey bellowed. "Ordinary mercury!" 

Strand shrugged. "I told you it was just a bait." 

Joey's eyebrows pulled together. "Yeah, I guess that explains why  Savage's man was following you." He

wheeled. "Get out of here," he  told  his men. 

"What about me?" Strand asked. 

"You go with us," Joey advised him. "And this time, we'll see if we  can't do a better job of holding you." 

THEY got down on the street with scared haste. Joey had rolled  unfortunate Bob Gaston into the cab. He

rolled him out again. Bob was  still unconscious. Joey got behind the wheel. His two men and Strand  climbed

in the rear. Joey made semaphore signals with his arms, and  they  left. 

They drove fast and cautiously, and in silence for a time. Then  Strand  spoke. 

"Got some new helpers, haven't you, Joey?" he asked. 

Joey only grunted. Then he demanded, "What do you mean?" 

"Earlier today. The two boats. The plane. All those men going  around  giving each other snappy salutes." 

"What about 'em?" 

"Rather an augmented organization, I would say," Strand remarked  grimly. 

"They work for me," Joey snapped. "What of it?" 

"You and Stinky and the other two didn't have money enough to hire  such  a collection." 

"You're nuts," Joey said. "I got more money than you think." 

Strand showed his teeth unpleasantly, in the strange knifeblade  way he  could manage. "You have an excess

of brains," he added. "An  impossible  excess." 

JOEY drove into a stretch of deserted road, and watched the  rearview  mirror carefully. Only one car

followed. He blinked his  headlights. The  other car blinked its lights three times quickly, in  response, and Joey

breathed easily again. They were his men following. 

"What's excessive about my brains?" he demanded. 

"You didn't have the sense, Joey, to think up that rather  fantastic, but  shrewd, scheme to get Doc Savage to a

fake headquarters  with a false  Monk and Ham, so that I would escape and go to them and  reveal  you  hoped

to your false Monk and Ham all I knew. And Doc  Savage would, in  turn, reveal all he knew  you hoped." 

Joey grunted disgustedly. 

Strand said, "You did not think that up, Joey." 


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"I don't see why it didn't work," Joey said. 

"You could not put a thing like that over on Doc Savage," Strand  advised  him. 

"Hell, it was fantastic enough to have worked," Joey snapped. "They  told  me Savage wouldn't fall for

anything ordinary, but this would be  so wild  he would  " 

Joey then caught himself and swallowed uncomfortably. 

Strand gave a laugh with an edge. "So you do have a boss, now,  Joey.  Someone with brains." 

Joey said, "You're nuts!" unconvincingly. 

Strand leaned back and sighed. 

"Joey," he said, "you have no imagination. You could have sold this  thing for an empire. And I actually mean

an empire, a kingdom. You  could  have been king of any one of a dozen countries you could have  named."

Strand laughed. "What did you get? A hundred thousand  dollars?" 

"I got half a mil  " Joey began indignantly, then caught himself  again. 

There was genuine mirth of a cold, desperate kind in Strand's  laugh. 

"A kingdom, you could have gotten, Joey," he said. "You could have  been  king of England, perhaps. How

would you like that, you miserable  gutter  rat?" 

Joey did not say anything. He was white. 

Joey went to a deserted woodland section, and got a portable radio  out  of a tree. He also produced a code

book and began rather painfully  a  coded transmission that was supposed to sound like an airplane pilot

attempting to contact a control airport. He got an answer, also  ostensibly from an airport, and worked

frantically with a pencil,  paper  and a flashlight. Finally, he came back to the car. 

He was triumphant. 

"We got a plan to get hold of Savage," he said. "This time, it will  work!" 

"Is Savage supposed to fall for this one because it is so  fantastic?"  Strand asked witheringly. 

Joey snorted. "This one is so simple anybody would be taken in.  We're  gonna work through somebody that

Savage won't suspect in a  million  years." 

Strand said, "You do function well when you connect up with someone  who  has brains, don't you, Joey?" 

Joey snarled, "Pop that guy if he don't close his mouth!" 

One of the men slapped Strand. 

Undisturbed, Strand said, "You sold too cheap, Joey. A kingdom.  Think of  it, you miserable dupe." 

Joey got in the car and drove on, but he had become pale again. 


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Chapter XI. THE UNDERCOVER AGENT 

DOC Savage was quietly undisturbed with Bob Gaston. "It could  happen to  anyone, Bob," he said. 

Bob Gaston was miserable over his failure. "To anyone who has no  sense  whatever," he declared. "Myself,

for example." 

"Forget it." 

"It's nice of you to say that," Bob muttered. "But I made a mistake  in  blabbing too much to that fellow I

thought was a taxi driver. I  guess  being a detective isn't my line of work." 

"How is the newsstand going?" floe inquired. 

"Oh, fine," Bob said. "I owe you so much. That's what makes me feel  particularly bad about lousing up the

job you gave me." 

Doc Savage left Bob Gaston at the newsstand in the lobby of the  building. It was now late night, long past

closing time, and the lobby  was deserted except for scrubwomen and janitors. Doc rode an elevator  up  to his

apartment. 

Monk and Pat and the others, including Erica Ambler Hotts, met him.  The  bronze man explained quietly that

the enemy had knocked Bob Gaston  senseless and had apparently made off with Tottingham Strand. 

"There was nothing in Strand's apartment to shed light on the  mystery,"  he finished, "except that Strand

rented the place only two  weeks ago.  There were stickers on his luggage when he arrived,  indicating he had

come by steamship to South America, thence to New  York by plane. The  stickers had been steamed off his

luggage,  indicating he did not want  anyone to know about his recent arrival.  The information about the

stickers came from the superintendent of the  apartment house, who is a  travel bug." 

Bigfisted Renny spoke in Mayan, saying that he wanted to speak  with Doc  privately. The bronze man

moved into the bedroom. Someone had  covered  the body of the fake Ham with a sheet. 

"Strand showed us one thing," Renny said. "They are after the  Compound  Monk, as we call it." 

"Was that what you wanted to discuss?" 

"No, not exactly." Renny blocked out his big fists thoughtfully.  "It's  this Erica AmblerHotts." 

"What about her?" 

"I don't place her in this," Renny said. "She says she doesn't know  a  thing. But when Strand cleared out, she

said something about his  being  so terrified by the magnitude of the affair that he was making a  terrible

mistake. I ask you this: Doesn't that sound as if she knew  something?" 

Doc Savage nodded slowly. "Did you question her about that?" 

Renny snorted. "Yes," he said. "And you can guess about how much  she  told me. What the little boy shot at.

Nothing." 


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The bronze man said, "We might hear her story again." 

He returned to the outer room. He took his time opening a  conversation  with Erica AmblerHotts, as if he

had no particular  motive. 

"By the way," he said, "how did you become acquainted with Strand?" 

Erica smiled wryly. "With Tot? Oh, I've known the fellow for ages.  His  father was garnetender on my father's

estate when I was so high."  She  indicated something an inch or two long with thumb and forefinger.  "We've

plowed into each other at intervals ever since. Really nothing  close between us. Just a gabbing acquaintance,

you might say  " 

"Can you tell us anything about Strand?" Doc asked idly. 

"Nothing, I'm afraid." 

"Nothing at all?" 

"Nothing." 

Doc Savage picked up the telephone. "I want the transatlantic  operator,"  he said. "I am placing a call to

Scotland Yard, in London." 

Erica AmblerHotts jerked up straight. "Just a minute. You calling  about  Tot?" 

"Yes." 

"In that case," Erica said, "I had better tell you about him  myself.  Rather you get the information from a

sympathetic source." 

Doc told the telephone operator, "Never mind, cancel the call," and  hung  up. 

Erica AmblerHotts took a deep breath. 

"Poor Tot Strand is wanted in England for murder?" she said. 

MONK dropped an apple he was peeling. Habeas Corpus, Monk's runt  hog,  stooped up the apple and scuttled

into the kitchen, pursued by  Ham's pet  chimp, Chemistry. 

Blank astonishment was all over Monk's homely face. He said,  "That's  hard to believe. Strand is a tough guy

I could see that. But  it seemed  to me that it was a clean kind of toughness." 

Erica half nodded. 

"He is also wanted for treason!" she said. 

Monk muttered, "Blazes!" 

"Both of those crimes," Erica announced grimly, "are punishable by  the  death penalty." 

Monk shook his head. "I still can't see him as that kind of a man." 


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"Tot would like to hear you say that," Erica said. 

Monk eyed her thoughtfully. "You seem to believe he is not guilty." 

"That's right." 

"What makes you think he isn't guilty?" 

"I know Tot. That's jolly well enough for me." 

Doc Savage entered the discussion again with a completely  emotionless  request. "Suppose you give us the

details about the murder  and treason  charge against Tottingham Strand," he said. There was  something about

the flat emotionlessness of his voice that compelled  an answer more than  a show of agitated interest would

have. 

"Really, I can't give you the exact details," Erica told him. 

"But the way I understand it, Tot was doing a spot of service for  the  war department. He was working with a

man named Coxwell." 

"What kind of work was Strand doing for the war ministry?" Doc  asked. 

Too quickly, Erica said, "I do not know. Coxwell, the man who was  working with Strand, went to his

superior officers and told them that  he  suspected Strand of selling out the English government. Coxwell had

no  proof. He just suspected. He was a rather sleazy sort, this Coxwell  chap  was, and I fancy the chaps in the

war ministry rather doubted his  word." 

She paused to give dramatic effect to her next statement. "Coxwell  was  found killed in Strand's apartment off

Kensington," she said.  "Strand  disappeared." 

"When was that?" 

"Not quite six months ago." 

Doc Savage said, "Had you been in constant contact with him since?" 

"Oh, certainly not. I had not seen him for months. Not until a few  days  ago, in fact, when he gave me a ring

on the telephone." 

"Any particular reason for his calling you?" 

"Not that I was able to learn." 

"Any reason," Doc asked, "for you to go out with a murderer?" 

She tightened visibly. "Really, I don't believe you think I've told  you  the truth." 

Doc reached for the telephone. 

Into the telephone, the bronze man said, "Transatlantic operator,  please." 


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TO the operator, Doc said, "I want to talk to Carl Morenta, of the  International Game Association, Longacre

Road, London, England." 

He listened for a few moments. 

"That is too bad," he said. "Put the call through immediately after  the  wire is made available." 

He hung up, and explained, "The wire is being used for military  matters.  It will be turned back to civilian use

again in half an hour.  There is  nothing to do but wait." 

Erica AmblerHotts leaned back in her chair. She took out a  cigarette  and lighted it. They had not seen her

smoke before. 

"Cigarette?" she asked Pat, and Pat shook her head. Doc Savage  spoke to  Monk. He used the Mayan tongue,

which only his associates  understood. 

"Give this girl a chance to escape," Doc said. "Answer me in Mayan,  as  if we were holding a conversation." 

"So you think she's been lying to us!" Monk said in an astonished  voice,  using the Mayan lingo. 

"That's good," Doc told him. "Now you will receive orders to leave  and  perform certain duties. Ignore the

orders. Instead, follow this  girl if  she leaves. We do not want any slips. She is our one chance to  get back  in

contact with the mystery." 

Pat Savage was not supposed to understand the Mayan lingo. 

She said in Mayan, "What am I to do, Doc?" 

A flicker of astonishment crossed the bronze man's usually  emotionless  face. "Where did you learn the

language, Pat?" 

"Oh, I talked Monk into teaching it to me," she said. 

Monk looked embarrassed. 

Doc said, "Monk, take Ham and Johnny and visit your laboratory  downtown.  Get together equipment that we

might need. Take it to the  waterfront  hangar. Pat, you and Renny and Long Tom had better get out  and talk

to  the British consular officials. I want to know whether  they have any  inkling about this mystery. Better talk

to them  personally, to get  results." 

Pat nodded. "If we started talking to them over the telephone about  men  falling up," she said, "fat lot of

information we would get." 

They departed, leaving Doc Savage alone with Erica AmblerHotts, 

Doc told Erica, "I am waiting for the telephone call to England to  go  through. The halfhour delay will have

elapsed shortly." 

She nodded. "Can I do anything to help?" 

"You are not scared, are you?" 


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"I imagine so," she said. "I have no impulse to wring my hands and  moan,  however." 

Doc asked, "Would you be afraid to go downstairs and get something  for  my associates to eat when they get

back? There is a delicatessen  in the  next block. You take the south side entrance and turn right." 

The girl was expressionless, as enigmatic as the bronze man. "I  would  like to help," she said. "Of course I

will go." 

"Thank you." 

Erica AmblerHotts arose. "By the way, Mr. Savage, why do you think  Tot  Strand fled the way he did? You

recall he said he had come all the  way  from England to see you, and it sounded as if he was telling the  truth." 

Doc faced the young woman. 

"Tottingham Strand got into our safe and seized a package marked  'Compound Monk,' " the bronze man said. 

Erica was shocked. She lowered her head, did things with her hands  calculated to make it seem she was not

concerned. She moved to the  door. 

"I will get the food," she said. 

She went out. 

Five minutes passed. And ten. An hour finally, and a bit more. Then  the  telephone rang. It was Renny, with

his big bullinabox voice. 

"She's scramming," Renny said. "Holy cow, Doc! She met three very  smoothlooking guys who probably

live on nails and sandpaper, and  they're out at a private airport on Long Island. They're warming up a  plane." 

Doc asked, "Have you a portable radio?" 

"Yes." 

"Keep in touch with me," the bronze man said. "And give me the  location  of the airport." 

The telephone began ringing as soon as the bronze man put it down,  and  the operator said, "This is the

transatlantic operator. I am ready  with  your call to London." 

Chapter XII. THE FLYING MAN 

ANDREW Blodgett Monk Mayfair and Theodore Marley Ham Brooks had  been  goodnatured enemies since

they had known each other. The brand  of good  nature was hard to recognize. Strangers often yelled for the

police upon  hearing them engaging in what was a minor bit of  persiflage,  comparatively speaking. 

An hour before dawn the following morning, they were crawling  through  brush with their two pets, Habeas

Corpus and Chemistry. 

They were discussing a small matter about which Monk was feeling  injured. 


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"This Compound Monk they're talking about," Monk said grimly. "How  come  I didn't know the stuff was

named after me?" 

"I wouldn't know," Ham said. "There are probably two or three  things  since the beginning of creation that you

don't know. Or did  that ever  occur to you?" 

"Don't try to be nasty," Monk advised. "I'm asking you a simple  question." 

"'Simple' describes most of your questions." 

"Why'd they name that stuff Compound Monk?" Ham began grinning, but  the  grin was lost on Monk because

of the darkness. However, when Ham  burst  into smothered laughter, Monk realized the state of the dapper

lawyer's  feelings. 

"You shyster!" Monk sounded bitter. "There's some gag connected to  them  naming that chemical, or

whatever it is, after me!" 

"And how!" Ham chortled. 

Monk thought of several bitter things he wished to say, and said  none of  them, because they were crawling

through the runt bushes which  fringed a  beach. The sand was hard and gritty under their hands. 

"Imitate a loon," Ham said. 

"You do it," Monk snarled. "It should come more natural to you." 

Ham gave a passable imitation of a loon's cry, got an answer, and  they  headed for the sound. Shortly they

came upon the others. 

Bigfisted Renny said, "We began to think you two fellows were  never  going to join us. All the others were

here an hour ago." 

"Aw, Ham had to go past his club and get the proper clothes for the  occasion," Monk growled. 

"Does he figure he knows what the proper occasion will be?" asked  Renny. 

"From the size of his suitcase, I guess he prepared for an  assortment of  occasions," Monk said. 

Doc Savage was soundlessly beside them. He had come from the night  somewhere. 

Doc said, "The plane is preparing to take off. Erica Ambler Hotts  and  her three companions apparently have

been waiting for daylight." 

Renny rumbled, "I'll wake up Pat. She could sleep through the end  of the  world." 

He went over and tickled Pat's nose with a grass blade. She  promptly  slapped him, then tried to go back to

sleep. 

"Wake up," Renny advised. "We're about to start cutting oats around  here." 

"They must be pretty wild," Pat complained, "if you have to sneak  up on  them in the dark this way." 


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DOC Savage's plane was the large experimental job which he had  developed  in transparent plastic. Not that it

was an invisible ship.  Nothing of  the kind. But the skin fabric was almost as transparent as  glass, and  some of

the control cables were made of the same stuff,  which was almost  as tough as duralumin. The motor and the

other solid  parts were painted  a dark color above to blend with the earth, a light  color below to merge  with

the sky. 

Riding along in the experimental craft was somewhat eerie, and did  not  please Monk. He picked his way

through the cabin with a ghastly  expression. 

"If there was a hole in the floor of this thing, you couldn't see  it!"  he complained. 

Pat watched the ground. "At least it makes sightseeing easy." 

That was true. At first, they had felt no need whatever for  windows.  This was one of the great military values

of the transparent  plastic; it  would enable the occupants to watch for attacking planes  from any  direction. But

as the flight had progressed, the inevitable  oil vapor  from the motors had stained the plastic hull, hampering

vision. 

Renny pointed at the ground, rumbled, "Nice country for a giant to  walk  over." 

"He would sure stub his toe," Pat agreed. 

It was the rugged coast above Maine, a snaggletoothed coast line  that  was noted for its high, tides and brittle

weather. The rocks were  like  black teeth, and, back inland, the earth had been clawed by the  weather  into

great ravines that stretched for miles. 

Long Tom Roberts lowered a telescope almost as long as his arm. He  rubbed his eye; "They're about five

thousand feet above us," he said.  "Just went through that rift in the clouds. They seem to know where  they're

going." 

"Ineluctable dialecticism," Johnny remarked. 

"My, my," Pat said. "Two very nice words. What do they mean?" 

"I think he means it's obvious," Long Tom said. 

"What's obvious? Where Erica AmblerHotts and her three friends are  going?" 

"That's the idea," 

"What makes it so obvious, if I may ask?" 

"They've flown a straight line ever since they left Long Island,"  Long  Tom pointed out. "That shows they

know where they're going." 

Monk grabbed a seat, felt of the transparent cushions to make sure  they  were solid, and sank on them. "Doc,"

he said. 

"Yes?" called the bronze man. Doc was at the controls. 

"You ever get that call to London through?" Monk asked. 


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"Yes." 

"That Carl Morenta you asked for  isn't that a name you call to  get  hold of the head office of the British

army intelligence service?"  Monk  inquired. 

"Yes." 

"I was just wondering," Monk continued, "why you went to such pains  to  let Erica AmblerHotts know you

were calling Carl Morenta  " 

Long Tom burst out in a howl of astonishment. "Down there!" he  bellowed.  He jabbed with his telescope.

"Right north of that big  ravine that runs  down into the sea." 

Monk stared. "What the heck is it? You've got the telescope." 

"It's a man," Long Tom shouted. 

Monk snorted. "What's so remarkable about a man?" 

"This one," Long Tom said, "is falling up into the sky! If we keep  going  the way we are, we'll pass right by

him. Or he'll pass by us." 

Doc Savage said, "Get on your parachutes. Quick!" 

There was a rippling grimness in the bronze man's tone that was  like  cold ice against their backs. 

GETTING into a parachute is not something to be done in a hurry.  There  are two straps over the shoulders

that snap together across the  chest,  and two more that snap, one around each leg. But haste makes an

inexplicable snarl out of the webbing straps. Renny started it off  nicely by getting the wrong 'chute. There

was only one on the plane  that  would fit him. "Holy cow!" he rumbled. 

It did not help that they all tried to watch the man falling up. By  now,  they could see the man falling up with

their unaided eyes. 

Also, they could see the plane ahead. The craft had turned  suddenly, it  appeared, and was coming back. It

became more prominent  in the morning  sky. 

Monk said, "Looks as if they've seen the man falling up, and are  coming  back to investigate." 

He was wrong. How wrong, it was suddenly obvious when the other  ship  banked wildly. 

"Gosh, looks as if they saw the man falling up, and are fleeing  from  him," Monk said. 

Long Tom used his telescope. "The man is falling toward them," he  yelled. 

Ham said, "You're crazy. A man falls up. He Doesn't fall toward  airplanes." 

"Don't call me crazy!" Long Tom snapped. "You get in the habit of  that,  talking to Monk. It'll get you new

skin on your nose if you  aren't  careful. And a man does not fall up!" 


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Ham shrugged. "Well, yonder is one falling somewhere." Doc Savage  asked,  "Can you distinguish the

features of the man who is falling  up?" 

Long Tom puckered an eye against the small end of the telescope.  "Too  far away," he said. "He's got his arms

and legs spread out,  stifflike." 

The next development they could all see with naked eyes. "I'll be  superamalgamated!" said bigworded

Johnny. The occupants of the  distant  plane were jumping. Four figures in quick succession. Black  forms that

fell down through the sky. 

"At least, they aren't falling up," Monk said. 

They tumbled for a long way, almost to the earth, before the  parachutes  opened. As a result, they landed close

together, coming  down in a small  clearing, the only one in miles, apparently. 

The plane which they had deserted lifted its nose into a stall,  fell off  in a left spin and went down and down

after them. 

"Blazes!" Renny rumbled. He was popeyed. "The man who was falling  up is  now falling down." 

The figure did not fall downward for long. It seemed to follow the  spinning plane a while. Then it began

dropping behind. It floated  around  idly. It started to fall up again. Then it changed direction. 

"Holy cow!" Renny boomed. "Now, it's after us!" 

Doc Savage spoke again, and there was more crashing concern in his  voice  than had been there when he had

ordered them to put on the  parachutes. 

"Jump!" he said. 

Stupefied, they watched the figure coming toward them. It was  traveling,  they began to realize, with

surprising speed. 

"Jump!" Doc Savage rapped. "Take to the parachutes. Do like the  others  did  fall to within a few hundred

feet of the ground before  you pull  your ripcords." 

DOC boosted open the door, began shoving the others out into space.  Pat  was pale when she went out. She

did not care much for parachute  jumping.  Not that the others were enthusiastic about it, either. Monk  and

Ham  carried their pets. Each animal had a collar, and they had  snapped these  inside the chest rings of their

parachutes. 

They fell for a long distance, closely packed, only a few score of  yards  between them. Then they cracked

open the 'chutes, had a few  moments to  tug at shrouds to stop swaying and to direct their descent  slightly.

Then they were busy getting out of the harness, ready to  free themselves  the moment they hit ground, so that

they would not be  dragged. 

Doc ran in search of the others. He found Monk first. Monk was  sitting  on the ground, as pale as anyone had

ever seen him. 

"What happened?" Doc asked. 


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"I aged fifty years in that jump," Monk said weakly. "My hog got to  kicking around and got a leg through the

ripcord ring so that I  couldn't  grab hold of it. I thought I was never going to crack that  'chute." 

Ham came up in time to hear that and snort. "Your 'chute opened  ahead of  anyone else's." 

Monk was too shaken to answer. 

Doc Savage was watching the sky. 

The others looked upward also. Suddenly, there was an explosion, a  sharp  blast, although not a terrific one.

Distance took away some of  its  force. 

What had happened was plain to the eye, but hard for a brain to  accept.  It was manifestly impossible. A man

falling up was impossible,  to begin  with. And the fact that a man falling up could overtake a  plane, plunge

directly into the plane, and blow it to more or less  small pieces  at  least, into such a condition that it fell

helplessly  toward earth  was  even harder to accept rationally. 

All of them watched, with breath corked tightly in their lungs, for  the  same thing  a glimpse of the man who

had fallen up. 

They did not see him. 

They watched with eyes out and lips getting dry and arms and legs  beginning to ache from being held stiff,

until parts of the plane,  heavier parts such as motor assembly, began striking the ground. 

But no man! 

"It was the man that blew up!" Monk breathed. 

Ham's expression became strange. Suddenly, he emitted a blurt of  laughter. "Blurt" was the word; the

laughter came out of him without  his  consciously authoring it. It had a silly sound, so asinine that he  caught

his lips involuntarily. 

Monk stared and asked, "What's the matter with you?" 

Ham shook his head wordlessly. He was pale. The horrible jackass  laugh  he had made had given him a start.

He was wondering if his mind  had  suddenly snapped, so that he was crazy. 

Pat said, "I know how it feels. I could make a noise like that,  too." 

Bigfisted Renny Renwick nodded soberly. "It was the man blowing  up.  That's what does it for me." 

"Does what?" Long Tom asked him. 

"Makes me sure I'm crazy," Renny said. 

Doc Savage said, "Do not let it worry you. There is a perfectly  logical,  if somewhat unusual, explanation." 

Renny rumbled, "The only thing that would sound logical to me is  that a  man did not fall up." 

A brisk twist of an emotion that probably was humor appeared in the  bronze man's eyes. 


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"You can rest assured," he said, "that a man did not fall up." 

Chapter XIII. DECEIT 

ERICA AmblerHotts called: "Mr. Savage! Please don't answer me.  Don't  let them know where you are!"

She was to the right, some  distance away. 

Her voice had a kind of vibrating terror. 

"Get away if you can!" she added loudly. "Get plenty of help! Call  on  the American government. Telephone

the naval intelligence  department and  tell them Morenta 72 told you to get help. Don't forget  that  Morenta

72." Her tone got louder. "Repeat that name to be sure   No, no, don't!  They might hear your voice and locate

you. Please  go!" 

Monk said, "That girl sure sounds as if somebody was trying to make  her  eat a snake." 

The bronze man made no audible comment. But he gestured  emphatically,  indicating that he and his men

were to take cover and  make no noise. 

They crawled several yards. A wing fragment of their plane, the  last to  fall, hit the rocky ridge to the south. 

Ham caught Doc's eye and used the deafanddumb finger language to  say,  "I'm going to use Chemistry to

spot them," 

Doc nodded. 

Ham collared his pet, and proceeded to give several hand signals.  The  chimp  or runt ape, for there was

some scientific doubt about  Chemistry's ancestry  seemed to understand. 

Monk watched with no pleasure. He prided himself on the  intelligence of  his pet hog, Habeas Corpus. But it

had not occurred to  him to teach  Habeas to understand hand signals which could be given  silently. 

Obeying Ham's gestures, Chemistry took to the trees. 

"Humph!" Monk said. 

They waited. The undergrowth, thick about them, was drawn tight  with a  kind of uneasy stillness. Not

stillness, either. The sea was  close by.  The sound it made was a sobbing one, rising and falling, but  it was

always loud enough to cover small noises around them. 

Finally, Chemistry dropped silently out of a tree near them. The  chimp  went to Ham, danced up and down,

turned and took off the way he  had  come. He looked back with an almost human appeal for them to  follow. 

"Probably found a bird nest," Monk muttered. "He sucks eggs,  Doesn't  her' 

Doc Savage asked, "Ham, will Chemistry guide me alone?" 

"Probably," Ham admitted. "If you want to try it alone. But  wouldn't it  be safer if all of us  " 

"You stay here," Doc said. "Do not move, and do not make any  noise." 


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The bronze man moved after the chimp. He went quietly, so silently  that  it was uncanny. The chief of the

Mok native tribe in the Amazon  jungles  who had taught him woodcraft would have been proud of the way  he

merged  with the undergrowth and shadows. 

Chemistry discovered that Doc alone was following, and showed a  spell of  indecision over the matter that

would have embarrassed Ham.  Doc repeated  the gestures Ham had used. After he did it the second  time,

Chemistry  surrendered and went ahead. 

ERICA AmblerHotts was talking to the man called Stinky and the one  who  had played the part of Monk in

the greenfogandfakeheadquarters  trick.  There were other men. There was Freddy, the taxi driver who had

been  duped by Doc Savage into taking the bronze man from headquarters  to the  spot where Monk and the

others were besieged on Long Island.  Freddy wore  a white bandage around his jaw, evidently part of repairs

made necessary  by the blow Doc Savage had struck 

Erica's three companions were there. Renny Renwick had described  them as  three very smoothlooking

gentlemen who probably lived on  sandpaper and  nails. That was right. They looked exactly like that. 

The three stood there, holding their hands in the air and looking  like  men who knew they were the same as

dead. 

Erica was smiling. She talked animatedly with Stinky and the fake  Monk  and the others. 

It was clear that Erica was engaged in some kind of a double cross. 

Doc Savage got the small telescope out of his clothing and began to  watch the girl's lips. He was an excellent

lipreader. Her English  accent, in so far as it changed her lip movements, bothered him  slightly. But he was

able to make out what she said. 

His face got grim as he listened. One of the three smoothlooking  men  spoke angrily to Erica. She slapped

the man. The fake Monk then  knocked  the fellow down. Erica showed her teeth in a kind of shewolf  smile

that  was utterly convincing  if one wanted to be convinced that  she was a  very capable thing which headed

for a goal about the same as  a bullet  after it leaves an army rifle. 

WHEN Doc Savage rejoined Monk and the others, Ham jumped and  dropped his  sword cane, which he had

managed somehow to retain. The  bronze man's  reappearance was abrupt and silent. Chemistry dropped out  of

a tree  beside the bronze man. 

Ham pointed at Chemistry. "He find them for you?" 

"Very efficiently," Doc replied. "How much equipment have we on  hand?" 

Monk and the others immediately dug into their clothing. They  brought to  life what was, in total, a startling

assortment. It ranged  from grenades   explosive, smoke, gas, flashers for producing  momentary blindness 

to  several drums of cartridges for the  supermachine pistols, gas  equipmentmasks, suits and various other

gadgets. 

Doc selected certain items that surprised the others. Then he went  away,  silently as before. 

IT was almost an hour later when Doc Savage appeared unexpectedly  in  front of Erica AmblerHotts. 

"Oh!" exclaimed the English girl. 


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She was alone. 

Doc asked, "Where are your companions?" 

"They were captured," she said, without hesitating at all. "Why  didn't  you flee after I called to you?" 

The bronze man shrugged. "It seemed senseless to get so close, then  flee." 

"You think you are close?" 

He said, "This is one of the most deserted sections of the country.  A  very good place for a foreign power to

land its agents and for them  to  headquarter." 

She seemed startled. "You seem to know a great deal about this  affair." 

"It is clearing up, bit by bit." He gestured. "Suppose we join my  men  and Pat." 

Erica nodded. Again her response was without hesitation. Doc  indicated  the direction they were to take. They

walked through the  undergrowth,  using care in moving bushes, looking for the quiet places  to put their  feet.

Monk and Renny were suddenly in front of them with  machine  pistols. 

"Holy cow!" Renny said. "You were making so much noise we thought  it  must be someone else." 

Erica showed surprise. "I thought we were being very quiet." She  looked  around. "You are all safe?" 

Renny nodded. 

Pat frowned at Erica. "How are you, Morenta 72?" she asked. 

Erica stared at them. "You already knew I was a British agent,  didn't  you?" 

Pat said, "Doc seemed to know it. He was going to call somebody  named  Morenta in England. What is

Morenta? A password?" 

Erica shook her head. 

"Morenta isn't exactly a password," she said. "It is headquarters  of a  branch of English espionage service.

There are various branches.  The  Morentas are engaged primarily in developing or securing war  inventions.

Each Morenta is a number rather than an individual. I  happen to be  Morenta 72." 

Doc Savage said, "Tottingham Strand was once Morenta 7, was he  not?" 

Erica started. "How did you find that out?" 

"I talked to Morenta 1 on the telephone after you fled," Doc  explained. 

"I fled because I knew you were getting too close to the truth,"  Erica  frankly admitted. "Our orders are not to

allow our identity or  our  missions to become known to outsiders, under any conditions. You  were  beginning

to discover the truth. I had no choice but to clear  out." 

Doc said, "Morenta headquarters made that fairly clear. At least,  they  surmised that must be your motive." 


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Ham put in, "Miss AmblerHotts, you say Tottingham Strand used to  be one  of these Morenta agents?" 

"Yes." 

"I told you what happened," the girl said sharply. "A man named  Coxwell  was found murdered in Strand's

apartment. And Strand  disappeared." 

"Who was Coxwell?" 

"Another Morenta," Erica said. 

Doc Savage put in, "What was behind the murder?" 

"Didn't Morenta 1 tell you?" 

"No." 

"It's a long and bally involved story," Erica said. "We can't stay  here.  They are all through the woods. I think

we can reach the spot  where they  keep their boat. I know where it is. Come on, and we'll  straighten this  out

later." 

Doc Savage said, "Good, We will travel in single file. You and I  and  Long Tom and Monk will lead. The

others will follow." 

The girl seemed dissatisfied. "How will they follow us? By keeping  us in  sight?" 

Doc opened a small case. It contained a chemical and a pair of  rather  bulky goggles. 

"The chemical is not noticeable to the unaided eye," he said. "But  seen  through these glasses, it is a brilliant

yellow. We will blaze  the trail  with the chemical. The others will have the spectacles and  can follow."* 

Erica swallowed. "You fellows have the darnedest gadgets," she  said. 

Doc Savage, Monk, Long Tom and Erica moved forward. The girl led  the  way. From time to time, Doc

Savage made brief marks with the swab  contained in the bottle of chemical. 

Erica was confident, moving straight ahead, as if her destination  was  definitely in mind. And it was. 

The destination was several men with rifles. One of them was the  fake  Monk. The cab driver called Freddy

was another. 

Freddy cocked his rifle, said, "One of you want to make a noise?" 

Erica stamped a foot. "Quiet, you fool! His aids are following us.  Be  still. They will appear in a minute." 

"Good," Freddy said. 

They waited. Waited a long time. And no one came. Ham, Pat, Renny  and  Johnny did not put in their

appearance. 

Freddy growled, "He must have got wise." 


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Erica snapped. "He couldn't have. He did not speak a word to the  others,  except to tell them to follow. He did

not even use that  strange language  in which they occasionally converse." 

"Nevertheless," said Freddy, "something just must have come  uncorked." 

Doc Savage, Monk and Tom were led forward. There was no path,  exactly.  But men had gone that way

before, frequently, always taking a  slightly  different route so that there would not be a trail. 

*The gadgets and chemical mixtures which Doc  Savage  employs may seem unusual to

the point of being fantastic, but  scientific  investigation will show any reader that the bronze man is  ahead of

other  scientists only in degree of development. Rarely does  the bronze man use  anything which has not

already had laboratory  treatment. Because  unscrupulous individuals have been known to make  criminal use

of such  information, specific details and chemical  formulae are purposely  omitted.  

Chapter XIV. BATTLE STATIONS SUBMERGED 

THE trail led down to the sea, to a cove that was a cup in which  green  water churned and made sobbing

noises among the rocks. 

The boat in the cove was a sailing yacht, schooner rigged, not more  than  forty feet over all, slightly less at the

waterline. A fat old  woman of  a hull, patched sails. 

SEAGRID, NEW YORK 

That was what lettering on the stern of the old boat said. But it  was  tied out there in the cove with lines that

were too heavy. 

They got into an old twelvefoot dinghy. The dinghy ferried them  out to  the schooner. 

Freddy ordered: "Take them below," 

A man shoved Monk. The homely chemist took a couple of steps,  stopped,  started to swing on the man who

had pushed him. Then Monk  became more  interested in the construction of the boat. He stamped a  foot. 

"Doc, there's something phony about this hooker," he said. "It's  made of  steel." 

He leaned forward suddenly to ogle the sails. 

"Heck, these aren't sails!" he exploded. "They are made of steel  and  painted. Imitations. That's what they

are!" 

He got shoved again and was menaced with a rifle muzzle. They were  pushed to a hatchway and started down

a ladder. The ladder had wooden  rungs for six feet, where there was an opening in the floor, then the  rungs

turned to steel, carrying them on down into the interior of the  submarine. 

DOC, Monk and Long Tom were locked in a steel compartment that was  evidently the skipper's cabin. 

Monk expressed his feelings by kicking the door. 

"It looks like we're mixed up in an international incident," he  complained. 


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"If you ask me," Long Tom said, "we fell for a woman's story." 

Doc said, "Do not be too concerned about it." 

They gaped at him. "Doc, you don't mean you expected this to  happen?" 

"Something like it," the bronze man said. He was without  expression. 

That was all they got out of Doc Savage, because he began to  comment on  the cleverness of the submarine

disguise. The imitation  boat which had  been constructed around the conning tower. The bronze  man seemed

to have  an extensive knowledge of the craft, because he  mentioned the way it was  jointed, how it was

fastened to the  conningtower structure so that, in  an emergency, it could be  jettisoned by mechanical means.

The entire  craft was of steel, so  cleverly fashioned that they had not realized it  was not a genuine  yacht until

after they were aboard it. 

"The periscope," Doc explained, "is actually inside the mast.  Presumably, it is an accessory periscope and can

be cast off when the  false structure is released. 

"The disguise is particularly effective," he added, "because it  gives  the submarine a means of working along

the coast and enabling it  to  enter almost any harbor which it would care to enter. The  underwater  surface of

the submarine is painted so that only a close  observer from  an airplane would notice anything peculiar. Then,

from  an airplane, it  would only appear that the schooner was under way,  leaving a wake. The  boat structure is

on the forward portion of the  submarine, and the after  portion is painted white, mottled so that  from a height

it would look  like a wake being trailed by the  schooner." 

Monk was suspicious by now. 

"Doc, you seem to know a lot about this sub," he said. 

Doc Savage dropped the subject of the submarine without making an  answer. He selected a chair, looked over

the reading matter the cabin  offered, and selected a copy of the "Atlantic Pilot," the government  volume of

information for masters of small coastwise vessels. 

When Pat, Ham and Long Tom were brought aboard, not more than half  an  hour had gone by. The three

prisoners were marched past and crowded  into  a steel niche that passed for a cabin across the corridor. 

"How did you get caught?" Monk asked. 

"Your blasted hog," Ham said. "They trailed him to us." Then, after  Monk  had felt the shock, Ham corrected:

"They just had a piece of luck  and  caught us." 

"Where is Johnny?" 

"They're hunting him," Ham explained. 

"This gets no better fast," Monk muttered. 

Another fortyfive minutes brought Erica AmblerHotts to the small  steel  network which ventilated the steel

door. She was sobbing. 

"They will not let him go," she said. 


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Doc asked, "Let who go?" 

"Poor Tot," she said stiffly. "Tot Strand. They promised to free  him if  I would trick you into a trap." 

From across the steel hall, Pat said, "I like that bargain, sister.  I  hope I get my hands on you." 

Erica tightened. "Oh, it was dirty! But I thought you could take  care of  yourselves. And I wanted poor Tot out

of it." 

Pat snapped, "Why should you think they would keep their word?" 

"Why not?" Erica sounded baffled. "They have all of Tot's notes,  his  apparatus, his working models. They

even have the Compound Monk  that Tot  came to America to get." 

Doc Savage put in, "They do not have the Compound Monk. We misled  Strand  into thinking he had taken it." 

"Then they lied to me," Erica said miserably. "They told me they  wanted  merely to seize you and hold you

prisoner so that you would not  molest  them until they got back to Europe. But that wasn't it; they  wanted to

force you to give up the Compound Monk." 

A man came down the corridor hurriedly, a sailor in the uniform of  one  of the warring nations. 

"Ruhig!" he yelled. "Quiet! What is this?" 

Erica AmblerHotts whirled, said, "Get away from me, you lying  pig!" She  had a wrench under her arm, and

she suddenly tried to lay it  against the  sailor's head. He dodged, clutched the girl. She crowded  the sailor

against the door of Doc's cell. Doc managed to get two  fingers through  the steel grille, and clamped them on

the sailor's  arm. It was not much  of a grip. The sailor began to scream. More  sailors came, struggled and  got

the sailor loose. 

"Meine mutter!" he croaked. "He tore the flesh out of my arm!" 

A sailor shoved a pistol through the grille and fired five times.  It was  for effect. The effect was impressive.

The bullets moved around  like  hornets, splashing lead that was like driving redhot needles. 

The group spent the next fifteen minutes hunting in their hides for  particles of lead. 

"That looked impressive," Monk said. "What kind of an act do you  suppose  it was?" 

"No trick," Doc said. 

"Huh?" 

"She told too much of the truth that time," Doc said. 

Long Tom complained, "I like this less and less. These cookies are  naileaters from way back. When they go

to work on us for information,  it will not be any taffy pull." 

THE door of their cubicle had no inner lock, so that when sailors  came  for them, there was not much they

could do about it. They were  led to  the control room below the conning tower. Another group arrived  shortly

with Pat, Ham and Long Tom. 


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The hatch was open above their heads. They could look straight up  through it and see two or three stars,

motionless in an inky night.  The  night wind was like a perfume after the oil stench. 

A tall, dark, handsome man faced them. He said, "I want  information,  bitte," with a heavy accent. "You will

tell me where is  the other member  of your party. The one called Johnny." 

Monk said, "You want in on a little secret, brother?" 

The man bowed politely. "Yes, of course." 

"We will tell you nothing," Monk said. "Not even the time of day." 

A half inch of red appeared above the handsome man's collar. "You  misunderstood us," he said. "We wish no

trouble with you." His face  was  wooden. "Where is Johnny?" 

"Mister, trouble is what I'd like to have with you," Monk told him. 

The half inch of red became an inch, and the man suddenly popped  his  palms together, as if he was

summoning a waiter. 

"Bring Strand," he ordered. 

He did not look irritated, but he must have been in a bad humor,  from  the way the sailors jumped. Four of

them doublequicked out, While  they  were gone, no one said anything. They came back with Strand. 

Tottingham Strand had not been improved by handling. One eye  resembled  an apple that had been in the hot

sun too long. Skin was  missing from  his knuckles. Among other missing thing was a smile, more  skin, a shirt

sleeve, and possibly a handful of hair, although it was  hard to be  positive about the latter. 

Monk told him, "You look as if you and our friends here have had a  conference." 

Strand said five words which expressed fully his opinion of his  captors.  Some of the captors got red necks.

Pat smiled. 

"Beg pardon," Strand told Pat. 

"It's all right," Pat told him. "I was trying to think of something  like  that to say." 

Strand bowed slightly. "Thank you." 

He was calm enough. His surface was ice. His eyes and his muscles  were  like edged steel. 

Doc Savage asked in a conversational tone, "They have everything  but the  Compound Monk, have they not?" 

Strand returned the bronze man's look with no visible emotion.  "Yes," he  said. "They have. But then, they

have had it for weeks. I  was not aware  of it until two days ago." 

"How did you make the discovery?" Doc asked. 

The man called Freddy put in, "Shut up, you two  " 


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"Let them talk, please!" snapped the handsome man. His tone left no  doubt about who was boss here. 

"My friend Rod Bentleythe only real friend I had in the  worldfound it  out for me," Strand told Doc Savage.

"He discovered  they were conducting  experiments in that green building in New York  City. We went there to

investigate. I was cautious, and Rod was  reckless. I would not go into  the building. He went in instead. They

caught and killed him. And when  they killed him, they demonstrated  that they had my invention." 

Doc asked, "There was no green chest?" 

Strand shook his head. "There was never one." 

"You told us a man named Montgomery gave you a green chest to  keep," Doc  reminded. 

"I told you several things that were not quite true," Strand said. 

MONK put in disgustedly, "No green chest, no green fog, no sense to  anything. What is this, anyway? Did a

man fall up or didn't he?" 

Strand showed his teeth briefly. "A man did not fall up. Not at any  time." 

Monk started to say something else, but caught Doc's eye. Monk went  silent. 

Doc asked, "Strand, you came to America to get the formula for  Compound  Monk?" 

"Correct." 

"It is essential for the operation of your device?" 

"Correct again." 

"How did you expect to get the Compound Monk?" 

Strand's smile was steel. "By stealth or by force. Any way I  could." 

Doc said, "You did not think of trying a frank approach on the  subject?" 

Strand shrugged. "I thought that out. It was no good. To get the  formula, I would have to explain things. You

are too smooth to be  fooled. I tried to concoct some jimcrack invention that I could use  to  make you think I

needed the formula for some innocent purpose. It  was  what you Americans call 'no dice.' I knew I couldn't

deceive you.  So I  wasn't trying." 

Doc said, "But others  these fellows we are mixed up with  went  ahead  and tried a trick." 

Strand nodded. "I guess you know what they did. They used that  fakeheadquarters gag, and the phony Monk

and Ham. They thought you  could be taken in, particularly after they used the stuff that made  the  green fog

effect in your eyes. They were after the formula, which  they  didn't have. They were in the same position as I

myself; they had  my  invention, but it was useless without the key secret, which you had  developed, and

which no one but yourself knew. Of course, I didn't  know  at first that they had my invention." 

"You first found out your device was in their hands when?" Doc  inquired. 


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"Two days ago," Strand said. 

"How?" 

"My friend Rod Bentley told me." 

"That was the first time you realized?" 

"Yes." 

Doc Savage was silent a moment. During the interval, he made the  small  trilling which was his peculiarity

when disturbed. Monk and the  others  stared at him, puzzled. 

Doc inquired, "What were you going to do with the device in the  end,  Strand?" 

Strand became strangely white. "What do you think?" 

"I do not believe," Doc told him, "that you were going to sell it." 

The whiteness went slowly out of Strand's face. He smiled, and it  was  the first genuine smile any of them had

seen on his face. 

"Thank you," he said. "But you are wrong, in a way. I wanted the  device  to make a trade." 

"Trade?" 

Strand asked stiffly, "You know my record in England?" 

"You mean the murder and treason charges?" 

Strand displayed his eyeteeth. "I see you do know. Yes, that is it.  I  was going to try to trade this gadget for

freedom from the charge." 

"Trade it to the English government?" 

Strand drew himself erect. "Exactly." 

Quick and warm lights of approval appeared briefly in the bronze  man's  strangely flakegold eyes. 

"Did you receive offers from others?" Doc indicated their captors.  "From  these gentlemen, for instance?" 

Strand stared at the dark handsome man, at Freddy, with contempt.  "You  would not believe how much they

offered me," he said. 

Doc Savage said nothing. 

After a while, Strand lowered his eyes. "This may not matter," he  said.  "But if get out of this, there will be no

trade. I will give the  thing  to America and England jointly." 

Doc said, "You mean that?" 


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Something in the bronze man's voice startled the darkly handsome  man.  The fellow's hand made a flashing

gesture, and held a gun. He  held the  weapon with muzzle on the floor, said, "You had better lift  your hands,

Mr. Savage." 

Doc did not move. 

"Schnell!" the man snapped. "Quickly! Your hands!" 

Doc put up his arms, and his hands touched an Ibeam which  surprised one  of the submarine ribs. Only Ham

was watching the bronze  man closely, and  he saw that none of the others had noticed a small  globule, not

larger  than a pigeon egg, fastened to the side of the  beam with a strip of  adhesive tape. Ham saw Doc pluck

the object  loose. 

Observing the bronze man get hold of the gadget in such a fashion,  Ham  understood something. 

He became positive that Doc had been aboard the submarine earlier  in the  day. 

Ham shut his eyes tightly. He knew what was coming, was prepared  for it.  Even then, with his eyes shut and

his nerves steeled, he got a  shock. 

The object was a flash grenade. Tiny as the thing was, it gave off  a  completely blinding light. Actually, what

it emanated was more than  light. The chemical contents burned in such a fashion that they  emitted  rays of a

wave length extremely shocking to the optic nerves.  The effect  was something like looking at an arcwelding

flame for a  period of time,  except that it was created in a fraction of a minute. 

Following the flash, a man screamed and a pistol exploded. Feet  pounded  up the steel companionway. They

got the hatch closed. 

"Crash dive!" shouted the dark, goodlooking man. He repeated the  order  in his native tongue. 

There was fighting. Monk was one of the battlers. Monk's warfare  was  always noisy. A pair of fists were

making big noises, which was  probably  Renny. The place began to fill with sailors who were not  blinded. 

The submarine began sinking under their feet, rumbling a little,  water  displacing air in the tanks. 

Doc said loudly, "Monk, Renny  stop fighting! We have no chance of  breaking out of here!" 

"Holy cow!" Renny complained. 

But they stopped. 

Chapter XV. THE WARSHIP 

THE bronze man's next statement made Renny feel better, Doc said,  "Commander, you will surrender to us

immediately." 

The dark man jumped. He said several things which were not  complimentary  and which expressed his

personal feelings thoroughly. 

Doc said, "Very well." 


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"Was nun?" the man snapped. "What do you mean  very well?" 

"You might," Doc said, "put a man on your underwater sonic  apparatus." 

The dark man swore and yelled at a sailor. The underwater sonic  equipment was part of all warship

equipment. In the present modern  form,  it was a most efficient device for locating a ship by sound of  its

engines and propellers. 

The sailor made an excited report. "A vessel," he said. "Very near,  sir." 

"What type?" 

The listeneroperator seemed puzzled. 

An expert trained for the job could identify crafttell destroyer  from  cruiser, freighter from battleship  by

the difference in sound. 

"Rather difficult to identify, sir," he reported. 

"What is it?" yelled the commander. 

Suddenly nervous, the listener said, "It is a strange type of  vessel,  sir." 

Doc Savage spoke again. His voice had volume enough to cut through  the  excitement and a calm power that

was convincing. 

"Tune your radio to the navy band," he directed. 

The commander stared, whirled and gave an order to that effect. The  radio room, for convenience, adjoined

the control compartment. The  operator cut in a loudspeaker, from which a brisk voice came, saying,  "Crew

7, how are you coming with those mines across the cove  entrance?" 

The radio clicked off, came on again, and another voice, 

very muffled, said, "We are on the fourth row, lieutenant. A 

fish could hardly get out of that cove now, much less a 

submarine." 

"Good," said the first voice. "Send one of the light boats into the  cove  and put down a small depth charge." 

There was a short wait. Then the listener reported, "A boat seems  to be  coming closer, sir. I do not identify its

motor. It has a  strange  sound." 

He hardly finished when there was a thumping jar. The submarine  rolled  violently, tumbling people off their

feet. Monk took occasion  to land a  hard blow on a sailor's square jaw. Another sailor instantly  menaced the

homely chemist with a pistol. 

Ham, suddenly pale, warned, "They'll shoot you, Monk!" 


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The radio said, "Hello, the submarine. Wie geht es Ihnen? How are  you?" 

There was deathly stillness. Somewhere, a thin stream of water was  snarling through a sprung seam. 

"Hello, the submarine," said the radio voice. "You better answer us  if  you know what is good for you." 

There was another silence, and it was pretty bad. 

Doc Savage said, "I suggest you answer. At this close range, your  radio  will function." 

The commander swore. He sounded as if something had hold of his  throat. 

The radio said, "Light boat, put down another small depth charge." 

They were prepared for the blast that came, but it was bad anyway.  The  submarine rolled, jarred. The

backrush of water into the vacuum  created  by the blast made a suction that lifted the conningtower  hatch,

and a  sheet of spray knifed in and drenched them. It shut off  in an instant,  but everyone dodged wildly. 

The radio said remorselessly, "Hello, submarine!" 

More silence. And a sailor made the sounds of a small duck as he  breathed. 

From the radio: "All right. We won't fool with them any more. Boats  5  and 9. Get in there with heavy depth

charges. Blow all the water out  of  that cove." 

With a face completely drained of everything including expression,  the  submarine commander stepped to the

radioroom door. 

"Tell them we surrender," he said. 

The radio operator relayed the information, having difficulty with  his  English. 

The radio, in great relief, said, "I'll be superamalgamated!" 

DOC Savage hit the control panel as Renny got a sailor by the neck  and  bellowed, "Holy cow! He gave it

away!" Monk, for once was a little  slow  getting into a fight. The homely chemist had known it was Johnny  up

there somewhere, but he had not expected Johnny in his excitement  to use  a big word and give away the

deception. He was caught by  surprise.  Johnny usually did not makes mistakes in a crisis. 

The others  Ham and Long Tom and Pat  joined the fight. Renny  slammed  his victim against a bulkhead.

He went on in a rush for the  engine room.  Distances were short inside the submarine. He got to the  engine

room.  Being an engineer, Renny knew the intricacies of a  submarine. He knew  that, if they could blow the air

supply out of the  tanks, the submarine  would not dare submerge again. Because, without  compressed air, it

could  not expel water from the tanks to rise again.  He worked valves, at the  same time shouting at astonished

engineers  that they were prisoners. 

At the controlroom valves and levers, Doc Savage did the same  thing  Renny was attempting  blew the

banks and brought the submarine  to the  surface like a cork. 

They could hear the rush and roar as the sub broke surface. 


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"It is a trick!" screamed the commander. "Down again! Quickly!" 

But there was no trick about the sudden rending blast from the bow  section. Nothing false about the stream of

water that flooded through  a  gaping aperture. 

Johnny had put a highexplosive grenade against the bow of the  submarine  as soon as it came out of the

water. 

Doc said loudly, "Get overboard. The boat is going to sink." He  repeated  it in the language the sailors spoke,

for effect. 

The fighting broke up in an anxious rush for the conningtower  hatch.  Monk and Doc fought side by side,

with fists. 

"Strand, can you swim?" Doc demanded. 

"Excellently," Strand said. He was cool again. "So can Miss  AmblerHotts." 

"The north shore of the inlet," Doc said. 

"Righto." Strand took Erica's arm, started her up the companion  stairs.  He followed. 

There was no actual fighting now, only struggle to get out. Water  coming  in the rent bow was like roaring

thunder. Doc Savage backed his  men to  the ladder. They climbed, Pat first, then Ham and Renny and  Monk

and  Long Tom. Doc followed them, kicking off clutching hands. 

"The north shore," he said. 

As they swam away they could hear the commander bellowing to his  men to  head for the south shore. 

Johnny was standing in the shallow water, holding a long paddle  affair  and a notched stick with which he had

been imitating the  underwater  sound of a boat. 

Monk scrambled out beside him and said, "Those big words of yours  danged  near upset the cart." 

"Ill be superamalgamated!" Johnny gasped. "What happened? What went  wrong? I imitated boats, used the

radio and threw hand grenades into  the  water near the submarine, just as Doc had planned. What went

wrong?" 

Monk said, "A word." 

"Eh?" 

"That 'superamalgamated.'" 

"I do not," said Johnny, "comprehend." 

"You were imitating a navy in firstclass style," Monk told him.  "In  fact, you were a regular warship all by

yourself. Then you got  excited  and used that word." 

"I  " Johnny groaned. "I did, didn't I? It slipped out. I'll be  superamalgamated!" 


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"The word," Monk assured him, "expresses what danged near happened  to  us." 

Someone took a shot at them with a sidearm. They crawled away.  Rocks  shoved up around them, heavy

cover. They took shelter. 

Doc tasked, "Did you contact the coast guard by radio, Johnny?" 

Johnny was gloomy. "Yes, they will be here shortly." Erica  AmblerHotts  put a hand on Doc's arm. "It looks

as if you pulled a  trick of your  own." 

Ham told her, "Doc saw you getting the ultimatum to turn him in to  save  Strand's life. He can read lips. He

knew you agreed. So he  hatched a  scheme," 

Erica was silent a moment. "The submarine was mentioned in that  conversation. The fact that the supposed

sailing craft in the cove was  really the sub." 

"Right," Monk told her. 

"So Doc went aboard," Erica gasped. "I do not see how he could do  that,"  She turned to Doc. "How did you

manage?" 

Doc said, "It was luck, largely. The guard on the forward deck  mistook  my voice for that of the man they

called Freddy. I went below  and made a  tour of the vessel, managing to plant various gadgets." 

"You put the flash grenade  I guess you call it thaton the  controlroom ceiling, then?" 

"Yes," Doc admitted. "However, there were other gadgets concealed  at  various vantage points. We had the

submarine well prepared for a  fight  when we permitted ourselves to be seized and taken aboard." 

Ham added something else. "The submarine couldn't have left the  cove,  anyway." 

Astonished, Erica demanded, "Why not?" 

"Doc jammed the steering mechanism when he was aboard." The beam of  a  searchlight appeared like a white

needle out of the sea, and Ham  said,  "That must be the coast guard." 

Which was a good guess. 

Chapter XVI. THE FRIEND 

SUNLIGHT slanted against the panes of Doc Savage's skyscraper  laboratory  and was cut into thin bright

sheets by the Venetian blinds.  Rooftops  were a forest below the windows, and out beyond, the vista  was lost

in a  blue haze of incipient fog. 

Doc Savage watched Tottingham Strand without emotion. "You are  sure,  Strand, that you wish to give this

thing to the American and  British  governments jointly." 

"Right," Strand said. Much of the steel was gone from Strand's  manner,  as if something bitter had been taken

out of his existence. 


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"You understand this is no trade. It will not affect the murder and  treason charges which are against you." 

Strand nodded. "I understand that fully." 

Pat came into the room. She was looking pleased with herself and,  in the  frock she was wearing, she was

something to make men walk into  lampposts. 

Pat indicated the roof. "Those generals and other officers are  ready for  the demonstration," she said. 

Doc Savage nodded. 

Erica AmblerHotts jumped to her feet. She took Strand's hand.  "Tot, I'm  glad you did this," she said. 

Strand's eyes fell. "I'm not proud," he muttered. "I should have  done it  in the first place. It makes me no

happier, because I know  exactly why I  didn't. I was looking out for myself. I wanted to trade  the thing for my

freedom." 

Erica said, "You were always an efficient fellow, Tot." 

"Sure," Strand agreed wryly. "And see what it got me?" 

Erica smiled. "It is getting America and England an amazing war  weapon.  You are giving it to them

voluntarily, Tot. Nothing can take  that from  you. You have not only a great inventive mind, Tot. You have  a

heart." 

She kissed Strand then, and nobody was surprised. Her tone had said  that  was exactly what she was going to

do. 

Strand's reaction was a little more surprising. He seemed to  tighten  from head to toes, then give way. His

arms went about Erica,  and he  buried his face against her hair. They saw that there were  tears in his  eyes. 

Ham looked on, utterly disgusted. He knew love when he saw it. What  disgusted him was the fact that he had

been giving Erica some admiring  attention himself. 

Monk shoved open the receptionroom door without knocking, looked  at the  embraced couple, grimaced,

said, "Anybody want to look at what  the coast  guard caught?" 

Strand and Erica came apart, wheeled. 

Monk said, "I only brought one. The coast guard caught most of  them. But  this was the really interesting

specimen." 

Monk shoved a man into the room, a man who somehow resembled a  whipped  bull pup. 

"Rod Bentley!" gasped Strand. 

Rod Bentley said nothing. There seemed to be nothing he could say.  The  handcuffs on his wrists were

explanation enough of his present  status. 

Strand said finally, "I looked on you as the best friend I ever  had." He  laughed. It was not pleasant. "You

made a fool of me in the  greatest  way." 


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Rod Bentley stared at space. 

Strand said, "Rod, you were an enemy agent?" 

Bentley curled his lips slightly. "I am not English. I am proud of  it." 

Monk said, "Bentley was kind enough to explain why he disappeared  so  that you would think he was dead.

He had the idea Miss AmblerHotts  had  gotten wise to the fact that he was not what he seemed." 

"I did suspect," Erica said. "I never told Tot, because no one  could  have made him believe. That, incidentally,

is why I was seized  by the  agents here in the city after Tot called on me. 

Strand seemed beyond words. 

Doc Savage produced a packet of papers bound with a rubber band.  "This  seems to be an appropriate time for

these." He tossed the packet  on the  table. "Your pardon, Strand." 

Strand nodded slowly. "Pardon?" 

Doc nodded at the documents. "The orders Rod Bentley received over  a  period of two years. He kept them.

They were on the submarine. I  found  them when I went over the craft before we faked the capture and  were

brought aboard." 

Strand looked at the papers as if they were gold. "What do you mean  by  the word 'Pardon'?" 

Doc said, "Rod Bentley rigged the murder of which you are accused.  His  orders there will show that. He

planted the suspicion of Coxwell,  the  man you killed. He planted suspicion of you also. Then he told  Coxwell

you were framing him, and egged Coxwell into attacking you. He  warned  you, and you killed Coxwell when

he came." 

Strand shut his eyes tightly. "So that is how it happened." Doc  added,  "They wanted you to be an outlaw. It

would give them a chance  to buy  your contraption." 

Strand's nod was slow. "Yes, I can see, now," 

Pat said, "They're about ready on the roof." 

THE thing was about seven feet high and fatter than a man because  it was  full of gas. It looked somewhat like

a man, too, because there  were four  distended limbs that somewhat resembled arms and legs. On  the ends of

these projections were the devices that made the thing so  uncanny. 

The assembled army officers, United States and British, watched  with  interest. 

Tottingham Strand told them, "The device really has two vital  parts.  First is the gas, which is lighter than air

and highly  explosive. Thus,  I get both lift and explosive violence in one  operation." 

"What," asked an officer, "makes it go fast enough to overtake a  plane?" 

"The rocket principle," Strand said. 


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"A thing as light as that could not carry enough rocket fuel to  push it  around over the sky until it found a

plane," said the officer. 

Strand nodded agreement. "The rocket fuel will drive it only a mile  or  two. As a matter of fact, it cannot

overtake a fast plane. But it  can  meet one." 

He stepped over and slashed a cord which held the unusual manlike  gadget  to the roof. The thing immediately

began rising. 

"A man falling up," Renny rumbled. "Holy cow!" 

Strand said, "Watch, It will rise slowly to five thousand feet,  when the  builtin altimeter will automatically

arm the detonator  device. The  thing thereafter will be explosive upon contact. Somewhat  like an  ordinary

mine." 

The army man said, "It hits a plane and explodes. We understand  that." 

"Righto." Strand smiled. "The altimeter keeps it from being  effective  below five thousand feet. Your own

planes can fly under it  with perfect  safety." 

"Won't it chase them?" 

"No. The pursuit device cuts in at the same time the detonators are  armed." 

"Then this altimeter arrangement will keep it from rushing at  objects on  earth?" 

"Yes," Strand said. 

"But it will chase any moving thing in the sky?" 

"Not any moving thing," Strand corrected. "Only very hot objects,  such  as airplane motors giving off heat and

movement." 

The army man grunted. "Will you explain that fully?" 

Strand hesitated, then turned to Doc Savage. "Mr. Savage, would you  attempt that? I am afraid I can not go

into the details without  becoming  too technical." 

Doc Savage nodded quietly. "You gentlemen," he told the army men,  "are  familiar with the ordinary

photoelectric cell which is in light  meters." 

"I've got one for my camera," admitted an officer. "It registers  light.  That's all I know about it." 

Doc nodded again. "The device in Mr. Strand's apparatus is similar  in  principle," he said. "The photoelectric

cell is composed of a  compound  which, upon the absorption of motion, ejects two electrons.  This  compound

differs in that the absorption of motion and heat by its  atoms  leads to the ejection of three electrons." 

The officer pondered. "I take it that one of the arms which is  nearest a  plane motor picks up this radiation,

and that sets off the  rocket affair  so as to drive the thing in that direction. That it?" 

"That," Doc said, "is exactly it." 


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"What is this compound?" 

"It is called Compound Monk." 

Ham pointed upward. "The thing is after a plane now," he said. 

Strand watched placidly. "There is no need for alarm," he said.  "The  pilot of the plane understands that the

gas will not explode  because the  detonators have been removed." 

They watched the device strike the army plane in the sky. The pilot  shut  off his motors before the collision

occurred, so that no harm was  done.  The plane began to spiral slowly toward Floyd Bennett Airport.  They

saw  the crew reach out with hooks attached to poles and gather  the device  into the ship. 

"Holy cow!" Renny muttered. 

LATER, Monk got Doc aside. Monk was perturbed. 

"Who named that stuff Compound Monk?" he demanded. "How come I  never  knew about this?" 

The bronze man smiled slightly. A display of emotion was rare with  him.  "It seemed a good idea at the time,"

he said. 

"I don't get it," Monk growled. 

Pat overheard and laughed. "I thought it was a perfect name," she  said.  "This compound is very sensitive to

the presence of movement and  warmth.  It chases movement and warmth. Everyone knows that you chase

after any  pretty girl who happens along. Both you and Compound Monk  chase hot  numbers. Get it?" 

Monk didn't like getting it. 

"I can see that was one of Ham's ideas," he growled. "Where is that  shyster? I'll make a compound out of

him." 

DOC Savage sat at a dinner in a restaurant with Monk and a friend. 

The girl appeared and walked directly to their table. She was very  pretty. She was a stranger. She seemed to

know what she was doing. 

She carried a small soft purse and she jammed this against Doc  Savage's  left side below the shoulder blade

and squeezed. 

Then she opened the purse, took out the hypo needle which she had  just  emptied into Doc Savage's back and

placed it on the table in  front of  them. 

"You naturally know what that is," she said. "However, it might be  interesting if you also knew it was  was,

mind you  filled with  germs." 

Doc Savage contemplated the girl. 

"What," he asked, "do I do now?" 


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"You help me," the girl said. "I need your help. I had to have it;  so I  used those germs on you. You've now

got to do something about  those  germs, and you can't do anything about them without helping me.  Get the

idea?" 

"This seems a little strange," Doc said. 

"You haven't seen anything yet," the girl said. "Wait until you  find out  about the three wild men." 

The remainder of this affair of "The Three Wild Men" is related in  the  issue of Doc Savage magazine on sale

next month. 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE MAN WHO FELL UP, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1 . THE ONE WHO FELL , page = 4

   5. Chapter II. IN A GREEN FOG , page = 6

   6. Chapter III. ANOTHER WHO FELL UP , page = 15

   7. Chapter IV. FAINTING SPELL, page = 19

   8. Chapter V. HAM'S NECK , page = 24

   9. Chapter VI. MONK VS. MONK , page = 29

   10. Chapter VII. PLOT LABYRINTH , page = 37

   11. Chapter VIII. FEAR IS A GOATHERD , page = 44

   12. Chapter IX. SYZYGY WAS NO GOOD , page = 49

   13. Chapter X. THE MONK COMPOUND , page = 60

   14. Chapter XI. THE UNDERCOVER AGENT , page = 66

   15. Chapter XII. THE FLYING MAN , page = 70

   16. Chapter XIII. DECEIT , page = 76

   17. Chapter XIV. BATTLE STATIONS SUBMERGED , page = 80

   18. Chapter XV. THE WARSHIP , page = 86

   19. Chapter XVI. THE FRIEND , page = 90