Title:   THE HATE GENIUS

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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THE HATE GENIUS

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE HATE GENIUS.........................................................................................................................................1

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

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

II ...............................................................................................................................................................6

III ............................................................................................................................................................13

IV...........................................................................................................................................................19

V .............................................................................................................................................................25

VI...........................................................................................................................................................32

VII ..........................................................................................................................................................37

VIII .........................................................................................................................................................43

IX...........................................................................................................................................................48

X .............................................................................................................................................................55

XI...........................................................................................................................................................60

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

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


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THE HATE GENIUS

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

I 

II 

III 

IV 

V 

VI 

VII 

VIII 

IX 

X 

XI 

XII 

XIII  

I

IT came as soon as he saw Lisbon. The feeling of being afraid.  There had been fog, a slatecolored

depressing fog around the Clipper  during the last five hundred miles of flying; and the plane popped out  of it

suddenly into bright sunlight. And there directly below was their  destination, Lisbon, the westernmost of

Europe's capitals. With its  white houses and colored tile roofs and parks and gardens, fronting on  the Rada de

Lisboa. With its elevenbyseven mile lake made by the  widening of the Tagus river. 

He had expected to be afraid as soon as he saw Lisbon, and what he  felt wasn't too bad, so he was relieved.

Not much relieved, though. 

The plane began circling. He suspected something was wrong. 

Looking down, he could see the Castello de San Jorge on its rocky  hill in the Alfama district And suddenly

he realized that he could  recall with an unnatural clarity the exact appearance of the ancient  Castello de San

Jorge. There was no reason for such an abrupt and  striking memory, except nerves. He frowned down at the

old citadel,  which dominated the Alfama section, containing one of the nastiest  slums in Europe. There was

no use kidding himself. Nerves. He was  having the jitters. As badly as he had expected to have them. 

The Clipper continued to circle. Then the control compartment door  finally opened and the Captain  on a

land plane he would have been  called the Pilot  came out with a worried expression. 

"Mr. Savage," the Captain said. "They won't let us land at the  lower end." 

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"What would happen if you went ahead and landed there anyway?" 

"Their antiaircraft batteries would fire on us." 

He held back his irritation with difficulty  he had a biting  impulse to shout his anger. He had directed the

pilot to land on the  remote end of the big, lakelike Rada de Lisboa, because he had hoped  to get ashore

unobserved at that point. He was disappointed because the  Portuguese officials wouldn't let the plane land

there. It was a small  disruption of his plans, but it filled him with hot anger. Another sign  of how much he

was on edge. 

"Go ahead and make a normal landing," he said. 

"Yes, sir," the Captain said. "I'm sorry." 

"Nothing to be sorry about. It's not your fault," he said, and the  words had a harshness he didn't intend them

to have. The Captain looked  worried as he made his way back to the compartment. The Portuguese  officials

were being cranky. They must have had enough tricks pulled on  them in the course of the war to make them

impatient with everyone. 

The Clipper shortly went into its procedure landing approach. 

HIS ill luck continued when he stepped ashore. He turned up his  coat collar and tried to hurry through the

bright modern new American  transAtlantic terminal building. He was recognized, however. 

He could hear the word going around while they examined his  credentials: "Es la Senor Savaget!"  That was

in Spanish, but he heard  it in Portuguese, also. 

More attention, he thought sourly, than the leading bullfighter  used to get before the war. But he was

flattered, and embarrassed, too. 

He soon discovered that they were sending for a welcoming committee  to be composed of persons of local

consequence. He hurried to put a  stop to that. 

He told them he was leaving immediately, that he couldn't linger in  Lisbon to be entertained, that he was

most profoundly sorry, and knew  they probably didn't believe him. But they were polite about it, and he

bowed out of their company, entering the airways terminal manager's  office. He got from the office to the

street via a window. 

He walked rapidly for two blocks, then hailed a taxicab, one of the  type which manufactured its own

propelling gas in a furnace affair  which rode on the rear bumper and which was as likely as not to cough

handfuls of sparks at the passengers. 

"Drive to the Cidac Baixa," he told the driver, then settled back  to watch out for sparks, and to wonder if

there was a redheaded young  man following him. 

There was. 

Not wishing to jump at conclusions  in his state of nerves, he  could be imagining things  he had the

puffing, smelling,  sparkbelching cab take him around several streets in Cidae Baixa, the  lower town. He

became certain the redheaded man was on his trail, and  that the fellow was fairly adept at snooping. 


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He said, in Portuguese, "Driver, do you know the Hotel Giocare?" 

The driver said he did. 

He gave the driver an envelope and said, "I want you to take this  to the Hotel Giocare. Drive with it to the

Hotel Giocare, and wait  outside with it. Do not give it to the hotel clerk. Just wait outside.  Across the street

from the Giocare is the Ciriegia Park, where you can  wait. I will pay you." 

The driver turned the envelope in his hands and frowned at it. The  envelope was sealed. As a matter of fact, it

contained Doc Savage's  driving license, pilot certificate, a few courtesy cards, a commission  in the New York

police department, and some other matter. He had  emptied his billfold of the litter and put it in the envelope

for no  other reason than that the billfold was getting stuffed. He had done  this on the plane, so the envelope

still had been in his pocket. 

"What will you pay me?" the driver asked. 

Doc Savage named an amount equal to the fare. 

"No, it will cost you twice as much," the driver insisted, for  evidently he had decided his passenger was one

of the mysterious  international gentlemen, secretive about their business, who had been  plentiful in neutral

Lisbon for a couple of years. 

"All right," Doc said curtly. To punish the driver for being  greedy, he carefully wrote down the man's name

and identification and  description, letting the fellow see him do it. 

They went on. The streets were narrow, the corners sharp. He picked  a sharp corner, and after they were

around it, stepped hurriedly out of  the car and ducked into the handiest doorway. His cab went on. The  other

machine, the one occupied by the redheaded man, was out of sight  when he quit his own cab, but it popped

into view a moment later,  passing within handreach. 

Doc got a thorough look at the redheaded man. The fellow was  around forty, not large, but with an intense

animal expression. He was  dapperly dressed, with tan gloves and a cane. He was leaning forward,  both

gloved hands resting on the cane, staring at the cab he was  following.  His hair was about the color of a

freshly cut carrot. His  lips had an expression that was not exactly a grin, more of an

Ilikethissortofthing twist. He was a complete stranger. 

Doc Savage began walking toward a hostelry called the Chiaro di  Luna. He wondered about the redheaded

man as he walked, trying to  figure out who the fellow might be, and frightening himself with some  of the

possibilities. 

The redheaded young man had seemed so vital and enthusiastic about  doing his following lob. He was so

damned hearty about it. Whoever and  whatever he was, he liked his job, and a man with enthusiasm for this

kind of work was dangerous. 

The Hotel Chiaro di Luna was a gaudy, noisy hostelry where you  could go without attracting much attention.

The name meant, in Italian,  moonlight, but something relative to a circus or carnival would have  been more

appropriate. 

"Mr. Carlos Napolena calling to see Mr. Scimmia," Doc Savage told  the clerk. 


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His name was not Carlos Napolena, and neither was Monk Mayfair  named Mr. Scimmia. Monk Mayfair was

Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett  Mayfair, a chemist of great ability when he worked at it, which wasn't

very often because he liked excitement. 

"By golly!" Monk said heartily. "By golly, I'm glad you showed up." 

Monk looked and acted as if he were mentally about ten years old,  which was deceptive. It would also have

been entertaining, but he  frequently overdid it He was short, wide, homely, hairy; he had more  than a general

resemblance to an amiable ape, and Doc Savage sometimes  suspected he went out of his way to cultivate the

mannerisms of one. 

Ham Brooks was with Monk. Ham was a lawyer. Calling Ham a lawyer  was somewhat like calling

Buckingham Palace a house. 

Monk Mayfair and Ham Brooks were members of a group of five who had  worked with Doc Savage for a

long time. They were his associates, his  assistants. 

He knew them quite well, and so he was immediately sure that  something was bothering them. They were

hiding something from him, he  decided. 

HE was badly scared. Monk and Ham rarely deceived him, and never  except for good and vital reason. He

tossed his hat on a table, trying  to be casual, and wondered if there was someone hiding in the room with

trained and cocked pistols. A wild idea, of course. But he was sure  something was amiss. 

"You are doing all right by yourselves," he said. 

He meant the room. It was a rich place, although It ran a little  more to red velvet than select taste dictated. 

Ham explained, "The snazzy jernt was Monk's idea. This suite until  recently was occupied, we were told, by

the Sultan of  somethingorother and ten of his favorite wives. The minute Monk heard  that, nothing would

do but that we should put up here." 

Doc asked, "Who is paying for it?" 

"Monk." 

Monk's financial condition was pretty continuously one of being  strapped. At Lisbon prices, the suite was

rich for his purse. 

"Paying with what?" Doc asked idly, still wondering what was wrong  with Monk and Ham, puzzled about

their uneasiness. 

Monk said quickly, "I'm twobit rich for a change. I sold a  chemical formula to a fellow." 

"A formula for making nonrubber baby pants," Ham said. 

Monk winced. "I don't think it so funny. I got paid for it." 

Doc Savage took a deep breath and faced them. 

"All right now," he said. "What is worrying you two fellows?" 


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They looked at him too innocently. 

Watching them, his own uneasiness crawled up like a nest of snakes  and frightened him additionally. He

could not guess what might be  wrong. 

They had not, he was sure, been in Lisbon more than a day. When he  had cabled them, they were in London,

and he was in New York. His cable  had instructed them to go immediately to Lisbon, to the Chiaro di Luna

hotel, and wait for his appearance. That was all he had told them. He  did not dare tell them anything more,

even in code. He couldn't take  chances with this matter. 

He began to get angry. It is always a short step from tight nerves  to rage. He scowled at them. 

"Stop it!" he said. "You're behaving like kids!" 

Monk and Ham looked so uncomfortable that he was ashamed of his  harshness. He watched them, and he

was sure that they were going to  confess whatever was worrying them, but it would take a little time for  them

to get around to it. 

He waited, and he thought again of the redheaded stranger. The  thought of the fellow made him jump up,

and on his feet he realized how  jittery he was becoming. He went to the window and stared out, seeing  the

people in the street, the hucksters, the country folk from Almada  and Sixal, the fishermen from Trafaril. 

Monk finally spoke. 

"Pat is here," Monk said. 

DOC Savage wheeled. The news was so much different from anything he  had expected. He almost laughed,

yet he wasn't pleased. 

"Lord!" he said. "Oh, Lord!" 

Explanations and alibis poured out of Monk and Ham. "She was in  London," Monk said. "She came over on a

war correspondent's clearance  she had wangled out of some magazine. They wouldn't  the military  people

wouldn't  let her go across and see action, so you can guess  what Pat did. She told everybody from

Eisenhower on down what she  thought of them. So they jerked her credentials, except for a oneway  pass

back to New York. Pat refused to return to New York, so she was  stranded in London." 

Ham said, "We hid from her, Doc. Honest we did. But she vamped some  somebody in the Intelligence office

into giving her our address. So she  found us. She found us a few hours before we got your message to come

to Lisbon." 

Monk spread his hands. "You know what happened. She found out you  had assigned us a job  and came

along." 

"Why did you tell her about the cablegram?" Doc demanded. 

"We didn't. She found it out. She's a mindreader." 

Ham said defensively, "She has never seen the cable. We destroyed  it before she got her hands on it." 


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Doc frowned at them. "How on earth did she get from England to  Portugal in times like these when she didn't

have credentials." 

"I don't know, but I think she let them think she was returning to  New York by plane, and got herself routed

through Lisbon." 

"Anyway, she's here?" 

"Yes." 

"Where?" 

"I'll get her," Monk said sheepishly. "She's got a room down the  hall." 

"Wait a minute," Doc said. He went into the bedroom of the suite,  threw up a window he found there, and

examined a convenient fire  escape. "Come on," he said. "We're going to skip without seeing Pat." 

MONK grinned. "I wish I could be around to hear what she has to say  about it." 

"Better get our clothes," Ham said. "Or are we coming back here?" 

"Grab what you'll need," Doc said. 

Ham and Monk did some hasty scooping of garments into a handbag,  and Ham climbed out on the fire

escape. Monk followed him, then Doc. 

They went down two floors and there was a clattering uproar and a  crash as a champagne bottle fell off a

window sill, hit the areaway  below and broke. 

"Blazes!" Monk said. "Somebody had a thread stretched across  " 

Pat Savage put her head out of a window above and said, "That's  right, Monk. A thread. And guess who put it

there." 

II

MOST males would admit that looking at Patricia Savage was an  experience. She was a cousin of Doc

Savage, a distant one, but she had  some of the family characteristics which made Doc a striking figure.  She

had his height, and his remarkable bronze hair, and she had   almost  the strange flakegold eyes which

were Doc's outstanding  peculiarity of appearance. She was something to be shown in kodachrome. 

"I won't laugh at you," she told them. "But it's an effort not to." 

Monk asked sourly, "How'd you know we would sneak out by the fire  escape?" 

"I figured that as soon as you told Doc I was here, he would get  some such impulse," she said. "What's going

on?" 

"Going on?" 


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"Now, now, don't keep me in suspense," Pat told him. "And don't  beat around the bush. Why did you rush to

Lisbon? Why did Doc rush to  Lisbon? What is it this time?" 

"I don't know," Monk said. "And that's the truth. Doc hasn't taken  time to tell us anything." 

"But something is in the pot?" 

"Of course." 

They had returned to the sinfullooking velvet interior of the  suite which Monk and Ham occupied. Monk

and Ham skidded their handbags  into the bedroom, and waited for Doc and Pat to have a row. Doc would

come out loser, they surmised, but it should be interesting to listen  to. 

Doc Savage lodged himself in a chair. He knew Monk and Ham expected  to hear a row, and he knew Pat

expected him to start one, and he  decided to fool them. He wouldn't have an argument with Pat. 

He looked thoughtfully at the floor. And in a moment his fears and  his nervousness wrapped around him like

a clammy blanket. His mood  became like something from a grave. 

Ten thousand curses, he thought gloomily, upon whatever it was that  made Pat like dangerous excitement.

Pat was okay. She was lovely. She  was so beautiful she made men foolish, and she had brains. He wished to

God she would marry some nice guy and mastermind him into becoming  President, or something. 

If only she hadn't come to Lisbon. Her presence here horrified him,  because he knew the extent of the danger. 

He was half tempted to tell her what she was getting into, just for  the satisfaction of scaring the devil out of

her. He smothered the  impulse, because it would do no good. It would scare Pat stiff, but she  would string

along with the thing because of that crazy yen she had for  dangerous excitement 

"I'm going to fool you," he told her. "I'm going to let you in on  our little party without an argument." 

She looked at him suspiciously. "Don't you feel all right?" she  asked. 'I mean, this doesn't sound like you." 

"Would you go back to New York if I asked you to?" he demanded. 

"I would not!" 

"All right, I won't argue," he said. "I just give up. Stay if you  want to." 

She stared at him intently, trying to read him. 

"You're scared," she decided. "Doc, you're scared. This is, I  think, the first time I ever saw you plain out and

out funked. You're  just so plain darn terrified that you don't feel like arguing with me." 

He nodded and said heavily, "That's right." 

He could tell that she was shocked, that she was beginning to get  scared herself. 

"Why are we in Lisbon?" she demanded. "What is this, anyhow?" 


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HE decided not to tell her now. There were several reasons for not  doing so. There might be a microphone in

the room, for one thing. The  main reason was that he had, actually, not the slightest intention of  letting Pat

get involved in the affair. He couldn't think of a way now  of bustling her off to New York, but he hoped to. In

the meantime, he  would keep her from finding out anything. 

He said, "The man is a little less than average size, ruddy  complexion, a few freckles, a grin like a man about

to bite a baby. And  red hair. The reddest hair you ever saw. Know him?" 

"Not in my book," Monk said. 

"I don't recall such a person," Ham said. 

Pat looked interested. "Does he laugh a lot when he talks, and tell  corny gags now and then? Seems to have a

fancy cane and gloves to match  every suit he wears?" 

"About his talk I couldn't say, but he had brown gloves and a  cane," Doc admitted. "He got on my trail as

soon as I stepped off the  plane." 

Pat said, "He must be a fellow who has been popping his eyes at me.  Didn't seem like a bad egg." 

"You met him?" 

"He introduced himself." 

"What seemed to be his business?" 

"Monkey business, the same as most guys who introduce themselves to  me," Pat said. "He didn't strike me as

a bad character, although he  gets you down with his jokes, and you have the feeling that he has more  energy

than he knows what to do with." 

"Know anything definite about him?" 

"No, I don't." 

Doc frowned, and decided that they had better take a look at his  redheaded man to make sure it was the

same one Pat knew. He told Monk,  Ham and Pat how the carrottop had followed him from the Clipper base,

and explained the trick he had used to mislead the fellow. "The theory  of the trick was that he will ask the cab

driver where he left me, and  the cab driver will sell him the information, then also sell him the  fact that he,

the driver, has an envelope which he was to keep and  deliver to me later. The envelope isn't sealed, so they

will  immediately take a look at the contents, and find that the stuff seems  important So the redheaded man,

to get back on my trail, will be  watching the waiting cab driver in front of the Hotel Giocare." He  added

dubiously, "If it all works out right." 

It did. 

"THAT'S my redheaded man," Pat said. "That's FullofJokes." 

The redheaded man was sprawled on the grass in Giriegia Park. He  had spread newspapers out on the grass

and was lying on them, making a  pretense of contemplating a statue of Pedro IV, emperor of Portugal  during

the troublesome Miguelite war period. 


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The cab driver had parked at the curb about forty yards distant and  was sitting on the runningboard of his

vehicle lunching on a bottle of  wine and a long loaf of bread. 

"I'm sure," Pat said. "I'm positive that's the same redheaded  fellow." 

"What would happen if you walked up to him?" Doc asked. 

"How do you mean?" 

"Are you on good terms? Have you slapped him, or anything, the way  you've been known to do?" 

"Not yet," Pat said. "Although I've a hunch he's a fellow who could  stand a little slapping. What have you got

on your mind?" 

Doc explained, "We might as well rake that fellow in now and see  what he can tell us." 

"Grab him, you mean?" 

Doc nodded. "Walk up to him, Pat Stroll him around the corner.  We'll form a reception committee." 

She said, "I'll try it"' and went toward the redheaded man. 

The redheaded man gave up contemplating the statue of Pedro Iv and  grinned at Pat He sprang to his feet

and did a sweeping bow, talked for  a while with Pat, then began shaking his head. 

Pat turned and pointed at the waiting cab. The redheaded man  looked at the cab, and while he was doing

that, Pat hit him over the  head with an object which she took from her purse. The redheaded man  sprawled

down in the grass. 

Monk said, astonished, "She knocked him cold!" 

"That's Pat," Doc agreed. "As subtle as a ton of bricks." 

Monk and Ham hurried to join Pat Doc detoured past the cab to get  his envelope from the driver, and to tell

the driver, "You keep on  doublecrossing people, and it will get you in trouble!" The driver  looked frightened,

and lost no time getting into his machine and  leaving. 

Doc joined Pat. "Why did you hit him like that?" 

"He wouldn't go for a walk," Pat explained. 

"Stretch him out and look concerned about him," Doc said. "If he  starts to wake up, belt him again. I'll go

find a cab." 

He had to walk three blocks before he found a cab. Returning with  the machine, he discovered that a small

crowd of curious had gathered,  including two policemen. "Our friend fainted," Pat was telling the cops

blandly. 

They carried the redheaded man to the cab, loaded him inside, and  got in themselves. The onlookers

followed them, giving advice. 


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Doc was glad when the cab got moving. "what did you hit him with?"  he asked Pat. 

"My sixshooter," she said. 

"It's a wonder you didn't brain him. It was about as subtle as  shooting a sparrow with a cannon." 

Pat wasn't impressed. 

Monk jerked off the redheaded man's brown gloves. The fellow's  hands were lean and strong, but there was

nothing unusual about them.  Monk was disappointed. "Thought he might be wearing gloves to cover up  a

scar or birthmark or something." 

Pat began going through the redheaded man's clothing. She found  quite a lot of moneypaper money and

metal, French, Swiss, Portuguese,  Spanish and Germanand that was all. There was nothing but money in the

man's pockets. 

Pat looked for suit labels and found none. She pointed out that it  was obviously a tailormade suit, and there

should have been labels.  She did not sound discouraged. 

Monk fanned through the man's roll of money admiringly. "He sure  goes wellheeled. Who do you suppose

he is?" 

Pat looked at Doc Savage. "What I'm wondering is why we grabbed  him. Doc, don't you think you'd better

tell us what this is all about?" 

Doc told their driver in Portuguese, "Drive out through the  Alcantara Valley." 

Pat continued to watch him. Finally she said, "Come on, Doc. Let's  have some information." 

He said, "Now isn't the best time for that," and glanced meaningly  at the driver. 

"Oh," Pat said, and subsided. 

Later he asked Pat,"Mind loaning me your gun?" 

"What gun?" 

He told her patiently, "That portable howitzer you carry in your  handbag. I want to borrow it to influence our

friend here." 

Pat got the piece of artillery out of her handbag. '"I can do  without your wise sayings about this gun, this

once," she said. 

Doc said nothing, but Monk and Ham laughed. Pat's gun was an  oldfashioned singleaction sixshooter of

Jesse James and Wild Bill  Hickok vintage. It weighed more than four pounds, which was as much as  some

hunting rifles. The blunderbuss was a family heirloom, and they  had always wondered whether Pat could hit

anything with it 

Their driver got a glimpse of the gun. He became alarmed, judging  from the way his color changed from

mahogany to slate. 


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Doc selected a side road at random, told the driver to take it,  then in a stretch of woods which looked

lonesome, had the cab stop. 

"Ham, you stay with the driver so he won't desert us," Doc  suggested. 

He seized the redheaded man and carried him into the woods. The  fellow was showing no signs of

consciousness. 

"I didn't think I hit him that hard," Pat said uneasily. "His skull  isn't cracked, or anything, is it?" 

"He will wake up eventually," he told her. 

This was not exactly true. The redheaded man was already awake. He  had been conscious for about fifteen

minutes, but doing a good job of  pretending he wasn't. 

DOC lowered the redheaded man beside some bushes, indicated Monk  and Pat should watch the fellow, and

said, "I'll look around to be sure  we won't be bothered here." 

He walked a few yards into the brush, and unloaded Pat's overgrown  gun, putting the shells in his pocket

Then he went back. 

"Coast seems clear." He made a pretense of taking the redheaded  man's pulse. 

"You're sure he's going to be all right?" Pat demanded. 

Doc nodded. 

"I'd better tell you something before we start questioning him," he  said. "Listen to me, because there may not

be time to repeat" 

He hesitated, dangling Pat's sixshooter thoughtfully. He wanted to  tell them some of the truth, enough truth

to serve a purpose. But not  too much. It was difficult to know what to say and what not to say. 

He said, '"This is no time for too many details. But here is the  situation roughly: We have been handed a job,

the job of finding a man.  It would be more correct to say that our job is to catch a man. And  don't get the idea

that the matter isn't important because we have only  one man to catch." 

He paused, considering how best to convince them with word  and  still not give specific facts  that they

were involved in something  extraordinary. It was a little like trying to describe the Grand Canyon  to someone

who had never heard of the place. 

He hesitated to tell them in plain words how big it was, knowing he  would sound overdramatic, so

spectacular that it would be incredible.  It would sound too wild to say that the immediate course of the war,

the lives of innumerable men, the future of European nations, depended  on whether they caught one man.

That was goofy stuff if you put it in  words. But it was not an exaggeration. 

He said quietly, "If I told you how important it is that this. one  man be caught, it wouldn't be quite believable,

I am afraid." 

"Who wants us to catch the guy?" Monk demanded. 


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"The request came directly from the White House, which sounds  rather wild also," he said, uncomfortably. 

He crouched beside the redheaded man still dangling Pat's sixgun  idly in his fingers. 

He added, "Here is what I'm trying to tell you. No one seems to  know the whereabouts of this man we are to

catch. However, I have a  means of locating him which should work  and will work, providing no  one

interferes with us. Everything hinges on that  no one interfering  with us. For that reason, we have to get

tough with this fellow here. I  do not know who he is, or what his game was, but he's out of luck. We  can't

have him interfering now. Because if things work out right, we'll  be able to lay our hands right on this man

we're supposed to catch." 

He closed his eyes and thought: God help me, that is close to  lying. He had never lied to Monk or Pat or

Ham. Not exactly. He had  shaved the truth a few times, and always regretted it. 

While he was repenting, the redheaded man snatched the big  sixshooter out of his hands. 

THE redheaded man was quick and violent. He was coming to his feet  when he said, "Don't move, babies,

or I'll blow you apart!" 

The fellow stood there, as if afraid to make another move. He held  the big gun too tightly, and it shook a

little, enough to worry Monk  and Pat  and it would have worried Doc if he hadn't unloaded it a  while ago. 

Pat stared at the gun. It was large, so much larger when you were  looking at the producing end. Age and use

had made the metal shiny and  smooth, and the large ivory grips were as smooth as pearls from much  use. The

redheaded man's hand looked so strained that it was a little  yellow on the grips, and It was sweating.

Leaving a beautiful set of  finger prints, Pat thought.  She hoped she wouldn't be shot with her  own gun, not

with a weapon that was a cherished heirloom like this one. 

The redheaded man began backing away. 

Doc said, "There are no shells in that gun." 

The man laughed, but not as if it was funny. "You should know," he  said. 

"That's right, I should know," Doc said, and went toward him. 

The redheaded man's face suddenly blanched. He pointed the gun at  the ground. He pulled the trigger.

Nothing happened except the  hammerfall click. 

Monk said, "Damn, It's not loaded," and he made for the man. 

Doc Savage, to stop Monk, pretended to stumble and got under Monk's  feet, bringing Monk down. They tied

up in a pile in the grass. 

The redheaded man threw the sixshooter at Doc. He threw it as  hard as he could, missed Doc with the gun

because Doc dodged, then  whirled and tucked his elbows into his ribs and took out through the  woods like a

deer. 

Pat said something wild and angry and chased the fellow. Pat was  fast on her feet for a girl, but no equal of

the redheaded man. He  outdistanced her.


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Doc told Monk in a low voice, "Don't catch him. Work at it, but  don't catch him!" 

Monk was dumfounded. "I'll be danged! You deliberately let him get  away!" 

Doc said, "Chase him. Make him think it's real" 

They did that. They charged around through the thick woodland,  carefully finding no trace of the redheaded

man. 

Doc said, "I'm going back and get Pat's gun. We've got to keep that  cannon away from her, or she's going to

shoot somebody." 

Monk and Doc both searched for Pat's sixshooter in the brush, and  found it before Pat joined them. Doc put

the big weapon inside his  shirt. 

"We'll just forget to tell Pat we picked this up," he told Monk.  "The way she likes to wave the thing around

makes me nervous. 

"Yeah, she has Buffalo Bill tendencies when she gets excited," Monk  said. 

Pat came back, and began hunting for her heirloom. Doc and Monk  pretended to help for a few minutes. 

Then Doc said, "We'll have to let it go." 

"But that gun was Dad's!" Pat wailed. "I wouldn't take a fortune  for it." 

"We can't kill more time," Doc said. 

Pat got mad. 

"Look, you!" Pat poked Doc's chest angrily with a forefinger. "Next  time you rig a piece of funny business,

don't pass my sixshooter  around so freely. I put a lot of stock in that weapon. He might have  run off with it" 

"What makes you think the business was funny?" 

"Listen, I know a goat when I see one. Why didn't you just say you  wanted to hand that fellow some

information, then turn him loose." 

They went back to the cab, where Ham was waiting. "What happened?"  Ham demanded. 

"A shenanygin," Pat said bitterly. "Our fieryheaded friend was  stuffed with information and turned loose." 

Ham stared at Doc. "What was the idea?" 

Doc Savage glanced at his watch. "I am supposed to have a  conference with a gentleman who handed us this

job. Suppose you sit in  on It. You'll get an idea of what we're up against." 

III

THE building was nice but not spectacular. It was on the Terreiro  do Paco, the spacious square, facing the


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river. The building itself did  not face the river, but was on one of the sides, the side opposite the  post office

and some of the ministries. 

Inside the arcaded entrance there was a wine shop of the better  type. 

"I want a port wine," Doc told one of the two middleaged clerks.  "The brand I prefer is L'Imperatore da

Liberade." 

"A particular vintage?" the clerk asked. 

"Nineteen thirtyeight." 

"Would you care to visit our cellars and make a selection?" 

The thing was done so naturally that Pat wasn't sure that a code  was passing. She nudged Monk and asked

him about it, and Monk said  damned if he could tell. 

They went down a flight of steps into a typical vaulted wine  cellar, cool and spicy. The clerk showed them

some wine bottles, and  the bottles had spots of. differentcolored paint on each. Doc selected  a blue and

yellow combination, said, "I like this one. But I would like  more than you seem to have in stock." 

"Perhaps, you would consult the wholesaler person ally," the clerk  said apologetically. "I am sorry, but we

have had a slight  misunderstanding with the fellow, and he will not supply us more. I  will give you his

address, if you wish." 

"I would appreciate that," Doc assured him. 

The clerk wrote an address. "I would suggest that you not mention  our firm, because it might irritate the

distributor." 

"Thank you. I won't." 

When they were out on the street, Pat said, "Doc, was that a code  deal, or not?" 

"It was," he told her. He consulted the address the clerk had given  him. "The spot seems to be north of Black

Horse Square." 

It wasn't too far, because Black Horse Square was the name the  British used for the Praca do Cornmercio,

which was also the Terreiro  do Paco. They passed the triumphal arch on the north side, moved along  Rua

Augusta, and turned into an office building. 

There they bought some more winebottles paint  marked blue and  yellow  from a slickhaired,

insultmg young man. 

"This is getting monotonous," Pat complained. 

"You will pay upstairs," said the insulting young man. 

The man they went to pay proved to be a red faced, worried looking  man who seized Doc Savage's hand,

pumped it, and said, "1 say, we're  glad to see you, Savage. We've been in a hit of a wind lest you not  make it" 


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Pat nudged Ham, said, "Hey, I've seen redface before somewhere." 

Ham said, "Good God!" in a low, impressed voice. Pat stared at him  in surprise, because Ham was not easily

impressed. She wondered who the  dickens the redfaced man could be, but they were introduced before she

could ask Ham. The redfaced man was presented as Mr. Dilling, but Pat  didn't feel that his name was Mr.

Dilling. 

"Who is he?" Pat whispered, nudging Ham, after the introductions. 

Ham told her. He told her as if he wasn't quite ready to believe a  man so important would be out of England,

or at least in Portugal,  which was a neutral country and infested with foreign agents, hence  somewhat

dangerous. 

"Hold your hat!" Ham whispered. "I don't think Doc was fooling when  he said this thing was out of the

ordinary." 

Pat was plagued by a feeling of unreality. The redfaced man was no  less an individual than the head of

combined Allied intelligence. 

They were taken into a comfortable room where there were some other  men waiting. There was some

handshaking, but it was without much  feeling, as if no one was in a mood to waste time being social, or

polite. 

MR. DILLING  which wasn't his name  got down to business by  saying, "As I understand it, Mr.

Savage, you prefer to work alone in  this matter?" 

"Not alone," Doc corrected him. "With my associates, here." He  nodded at Monk, Ham and Pat. 

"Are you planning for us to suspend efforts while you tackle the  matter?" 

"Not at all. That is just what I don't want I put out no claim of  being infallible. Suppose you fellows laid off,

and we flopped?" 

Mr. Dilling looked relieved' "That's sensible." 

"1 hope you can give me some information,,' Doc told him. "All I  know about the situation is what you

cabled me, and that was pretty  general stuff." 

Mr. Dilling nodded. He indicated one of the other men and said,  "This is Festus, of Munich, and this is

Melless, our Paris man." 

Doc Savage listened to Mr. Dilling name the men who were present,  and all of their names were familiar, and

of some of them he had heard  a great deal. It gave him a feeling of smallness, of inadequacy, to be  in a room

with so many men who were so capable along a special line. 

He watched them, particularly those of whom he had heard special  things. There was Oland Von Zett, for

instance, who had assassinated  the German Generalinchief, Neufsedt, early in the war. Assassination  was

not the word the English and American general staff had used, but  Zett with enormous cunning and patience

had put six bullets through  General Neufsedt and gotten away with it. General Neufsedt had started  ordering

the execution of American prisoners of war, and his  assassination had put a stop to that. 


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There was also Francis Gonnerman, who had maneuvered the Italian  coup, which had resulted in the

surrender of the Italian government,  the Italian fleet, and the fight of Mussolini. That had been a nice  job.

Gonnerman had not appeared in the news papers in connection with  the affair, because it was Gonnerman's

business not to appear in any  newspapers at all. 

They didn't look like the hard, scheming, unbelievably adept  fellows they really were, Doc Savage reflected'

Von Zett didn't look  old, nor did Gonnerman. Neither seemed as tough, even, as a regular  soldier. They

weren't suave slickers, either. They were just nice,  healthy looking guys with whom you'd like to have a

poker game or a  round of golf. Which proved that you shouldn't look at a package and be  too sure of what

was inside it. 

Mr. Dilling  who was a more remarkable fellow than any of the  others, Doc knew  finished the

introductions. 

"Here is the situation," Mr. Dilling said. 

Doc Savage listened, and his stomach wanted to crawl. Mr. Dilling  didn't make a long speech. He tied a great

deal up in a small  matteroffact package of words and delivered it 

The war was near its end in Europe, and one of the Axis leaders was  fleeing his nation. The man who was

taking fight happened to be the  only leader remaining with any great power. He was one of the most

villainous of the lot The man must be caught and punished. 

"This information," Mr. Dilling explained, "came to us through  various sources, and is absolutely true. We

are sure of the facts." 

Mr. Dilling took a large dossier of papers out of a briefcase.  "Here are the reports," he said, "to substantiate

what I have just told  you. And there are other reports to substantiate what I am going to  tell you next." 

He seemed to deviate, because he began to talk about the state of  the war. He sounded, for a moment, like a

lecturer who had gotten his  material from the newspapers, then he began to give facts and figures  and names. 

Germany was coming apart at the seams. The Nazis had been pounded  until, like a great concrete block

beaten with sledges, it had cracked  in innumerable places. 

"Their leader, as everybody knows, is a fanatic," Mr. Dilling said.  "whether or not he is crazy is a question.

But one thing is sure  he  is perfectly willing for every last German to die for Nazi plans." 

Mr. Dilling scowled at his dossier of papers. 

"The man has put a double in his place," he said. "He has  disappeared, and left the double. Over a period of

years, before the  war even began, there was talk of the man using doubles. to take his  place. There was some

truth in the talk. He had, however only one  double, a former shoe merchant named' Ludorff, frorn Minden,

who  resembles him closely in appearance and voice. 

"The double is going to be assassinated, so that the Nazi chief  will appear to have died a martyr. You men

know the German temperament,  so you know what will happen if the man appears to die a martyr.  Germany

will become solid again. The cracks in that shattering concrete  block will be cemented together. The cement

tying it together will be  the supposed martyrdom of the Nazi leader. 


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"The assassination of their leader, and the job is to be done so  that it will appear to be the work of Allied

agents, will prolong the  war. As to how many lives that will cost, your guess is as good as  mine. Thousands,

at least 

"And there is another hellish probability: Nazism will be glorified  in the minds of the German people, by the

death of the leader. It will  live. And in time  twenty years, people are always saying  we will  have this

mess again." 

Mr. Dilling had finished. He said, "All right Questions." 

"What ideas," Doc asked, "have you about where he might be?" 

"Not a damned one." 

"Eh?" 

"The fellow has disappeared absolutely. We can't give you the least  idea of where he is." 

One of the other menit was Francis Gonnerman, of the Italian  coupsaid gravely, "The thing has us

grayheaded. The basic problem is  simple: Catch this fellow and show the German people the ratty trick he

was pulling in skipping out and leaving a double to be murdered in his  place." 

Doc asked, "How much time have we?" 

"Before they assassinate the double? Two days. We are sure that we  have two days. And I'm telling you, that

isn't much time." 

"As soon as we catch the real leader, and broadcast the fact, they  won't assassinate the double." 

"No. There would be no point" 

Doc Savage frowned. "The man has changed his appearance, probably." 

"No doubt." 

"Have you his fingerprints?" 

Gonnerman smiled grimly. "We have the only set in existence, as far  as we know. They were taken by a

police sergeant named Moestez in  Munich following the wellknown beer hall putsch. Later, after the  Nazis

came into power, he had all his police records destroyed, with  particular attention to fingerprints. But

Moestez kept these prints as  a souvenir, and we have them." 

"You are certain they are genuine?" 

"Quite." Gonnennan indicated the dossier which Mr. Dilling was  holding. "You will find a copy in there." 

Doc Savage nodded. He had, now that he had heard the assignment, a  heavier feeling than before about the

thing. The fear was still with  him, the same fear that had started to plague him on the fight across  the

Atlantic, when he'd had too much time to think. Out of this talk he  had gotten a definite, bitter feeling of

hopelessness. 


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Two days, he thought. Two days wasn't much time, and the immensity  of the job was terrifying. He wished,

with sharp aching violence, that  the infernally crazy world would finally come to its senses and things  like

this would no longer be happening. 

It was a mad, wild thing that one fanatic expaperhanger could  cause so much terror and suffering, and this

present thing of taking  fight and leaving a double to be murdered and martyred was as wild as  anything

before. 

Thinking how hairbrained it is doesn't help, he reflected wryly. 

He looked up, and began to describe the redheaded man. He gave a  complete word picture of the man, then

asked, "Know him, any of you?" 

"His name, I think, is Hans Berkshire. No record." 

"He got on my trail," Doc said. "I thought he might be a Nazi agent  assigned to the job of finding out just

why I was in Lisbon. So I  caught him, let him find out I was here to catch a man, and turned him  loose." 

Mr. Dilling didn't like that "I don't understand why you would do  such a thing!" 

"It was an idea." 

Dilling frowned. "I don't get it." 

Doc leaned forward. "We have no idea where our man is to be found.  We might waste months hunting him." 

"Yes, but  " 

"My idea is to draw attention to myself, disclose that I am after  the Nazi leader. That was my purpose in

handling the redheaded man as   " 

"My God, you'll pull them down on your head!" Dilling said  violently. "They'll try to wipe you out! The

minute they learn that you  are on the job, they'll drop everything and try to get rid of you. And  don't think

they won't! Don't underestimate the effect you'll have on  those fellows, Mr. Savage." 

Doc said, "The attack on me will perhaps be made by someone in the  confidence of the Nazi leader." 

"Of course it will. They wouldn't take a chance of bringing in an  outsider on a thing like this. The Nazi chief

just took a few choice  scamps into his confidence in this thing. We know that." 

"Then whoever jumps me will probably know where the Fuehrer is." 

"Yes, but  " Mr. Dilling squinted thoughtfully at Savage. "Well,  now  I think I begin to get your

thought." 

"It might work." 

"If it does, it'll definitely be a shortcut," Dilling said. He  began to show some enthusiasm. 'You might get on

their trail  immediately. You might, at that" 

"I hope so." 


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"Can we help you?" 

"When I get something definite in the way of information," Doc told  him, "you'll know it immediately, if

possible. I have no intention of  trying to wade through a thing as big as this singlehanded." 

Mr. Dilling looked relieved. "I was worried about that," he said.  "I had heard that you preferred to work

alone." 

"Only when it seems better," Doc said. "where can I go over the  reports in your dossier?" 

"There is a private room in the back." 

Doc Savage made a rather queer request before he parted from Monk,  Ham and Pat. "Pat," he said, "would

you do me a favor?" 

"Eh?" 

"Loan me your sixshooter." 

"You could get hold of a lot better shooting iron," Pat said.  "After all, this was made before the day of Jesse

James." 

"But would you loan it to me?" 

"Sure," Pat said. 

She was puzzled. Since Doc had made an issue of having the gun, she  had a suspicion it had somehow

become important. 

IV

MONK and Ham and Pat had a conference. They held it in the back of  the room, where they were by

themselves, and Ham began it by remarking  that he was impressed by the kind of men who were here. "The

more you  think about it, the more it begins to stand your hair on end," he said. 

Pat leaned forward and whispered nervously, "I'm not enthusiastic  about this." 

Monk was surprised. "what's the matter with you, Pat? There'll be  some helltearing excitement before this is

over with, and that's what  you were interested in." 

Pat shook her head. "I didn't mean that." 

"No?" 

"Listen, the Nazis and everyone else has known for months that  Germany is licked. So this scheme probably

wasn't hatched up on the  spur of the moment." 

Ham said, "You have something, I would say. Take the matter of the  fingerprints He had all his finger prints

collected years ago, which  would indicate something like this has been in the back of his mind a  long time." 


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Pat nodded. "All right, the thing is well prepared. That's a safe  bet. Therefore they've got a tight, vicious little

group which is  prepared to do anything to put this over. 

Ham began to get the drift of Pat's thinking. He said, "More than  that, they can call on the whole German

secret police service, the  Gestapo and everything else, in an emergency." 

"That's right" 

Monk muttered gloomily, "Doc surely knows what he's doing. He  thought of all that before he decided to pull

them down on his head." 

"That's right," Pat agreed. "But he should have consulted us about  it" 

"I don't see why  " 

"Look, fellows, I don't know how it hits you, but it strikes me  that Doc shouldn't be taking that risk himself." 

Ham admitted, "That worried me." 

"Yes, and me, too. Let's not kid ourselves. Ham, you and Monk both  are pretty good when you get mixed up

in trouble, but I'm not trying to  belittle you when I say that you're not as good as Doc." 

Ham said, "Don't worry about hurting our feelings on that score."  He gestured at the men who had been

present at the meeting. "Do you  think guys of that calibre would turn out in force to confer with 'is?  Fat

chance. They're here to meet Doc Savage. If you noticed carefully;  You could see that every one of them was

in awe of Doc." 

Pouncing on that point, Pat said, "If Doc takes this risk of  drawing an attack on himself, and loses, they'll kill

him. And that  would mean more than Doc losing his life. It would mean the Nazi leader  will probably get

away with this final, dirty trick." 

Ham frowned. "What're you getting at?" 

"Suppose we serve as the bait, not Doc," Pat said grimly. 

IT took five minutes of soberfaced mumbling for them to decide to  follow Pat's suggestion. The telling

would have to be done later,  because Doc was sure to veto the idea now. They would have to tell Doc,  of

course, and preferably before the Nazi group pounced on the "bait" 

"When will we do this?" Monk asked. 

"What's the matter with right now?" Pat demanded. They went into  the inner room, looking innocent, where

Doc Savage was seated at a desk  going through Mr. Dilling's dossier on the case. 

"Anything we can do to help?" Ham asked. 

Doc shook his head. ""There seems to be a great deal of detail  here, but it doesn't add anything to the basic

fact that the Nazi chief  has disappeared and left a double in his place, and the double is to be  murdered in

order to solidify the spirit of the Germans."


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Doc separated several sheets from the dossier. "However, you will  want to go over these," he added. "Here

are descriptions of the Nazi  agents involved intimately in the plot with the Fuehrer. You will want  to

memorize the data. You'll find photographs and fingerprints. I  suggest you get off by yourselves and hold a

memorizing session." Monk  took the identification sheets, asked, "Any objections to our going  back to the

hotel to study these?" 

"Better not," Doc said. "If that redheaded fellow passes the word  around, they will be watching the hotel." 

Pat said, "We'll go somewhere. We'll call you in an hour or so." 

"All right," They left the building, Monk with the identification  sheets in his pocket They found a cab. 

Pat told the cab driver, "The Hotel Chiaro di Luna." 

"Hey, Doc said not to go there," Monk exclaimed. "We didn't say we  wouldn't," Pat reminded him. 

Monk hesitated, finally grinned without much genuine glee, and sank  back on the cushions. "I guess if we're

to take over that bait job  ourselves, now is as good a time as any,"he said. 

Ham frowned, not pleased and not approving. He had gone against  Doc's wishes before, and usually he

landed in trouble. He scowled at  Monk. Monk was a precipitous fellow who liked to tear directly into an

obstacle, preferably without any preliminary beating together of  brains. 

Toward the end of the ride to the hotel, Ham got a wry expression,  for it dawned on him that Pat had sucked

them into one of her wild  schemes. The whole idea of their being the bait, instead of Doc, was  Pat's notion.

She had hatched it, and she had sold it to them. 

"Pat," Ham said. 

"Yes?" 

"I can see why Doc hated to have you turn up in this affair." 

"Says which?" 

"You're a doubtful influence. You're a shot of wild juice. In other  words, you just sold us a bill of goods." 

"I sold you nothing!" Pat said cheerfully. "I just had a good idea,  and you thought it was good, and so here we

are." 

"Such innocence," Ham muttered, "will no doubt get us all in a  mess." 

They alighted from the cab in front of the Hotel Chiaro di Luna,  discovered the fare was ten escudos, and had

a row with the pirate  driver. None of them could speak Portuguese to any extent, and in the  middle of the fuss

they got some volunteer help. The volunteer was a  lean, blond younglooking man who grinned at Pat and

said, "I know some  words for this fellow." 

His words made the hack driver decide that one escudo, which was  about one dollar American, was nearer

the correct fee. 

"Thanks," Pat said. 


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"My name is Carter," the blond young man said, "Well, thank you  again," Pat told him. 

The young man didn't take leave of them. Instead, he accompanied  them into the hotel, crowded into the

small antique elevator with them,  and got out on the same floor. He was following them. 

Monk lost his patience. "Look, blondy, what goes On?" he demanded,  "You forming an attachment, o?

something?" 

The blond young man grinned. "I wanted to talk to you about  Berkshire." 

"Eh?" 

"Berkshire. Not very tall, redheaded, some freckles, weight about  one sixty, big grin and a fund of corny

jokes. Hans Berkshire," 

"Oh!" Monk said' 

"Mr. Carter," Pat said, "you are perfectly welcome to trail right  along with us, but keep making words." 

Carter smiled, examined Pat again and said, "You are lovely, if I  may insert such a statement at this point." 

Monk had been examining Mr. Carter doubtfully, and finally came to  the conclusion that he didn't think a lot

of the guy. 

"So your name is Carter," Monk said, "Carter what?" 

"Just Carter," Carter told him. "My name actually isn't Carter, so  Carter will do as good as any for a

designation. A name is but a handle  on a man, as the Romans say." 

They reached the ornate, slightly sinful plushlined suites of  rooms which Monk and Ham had taken, Monk

looked in the closets and  behind things, found no one, turned and asked Carter, "Any microphones  hidden

around here?" 

"Just one," Carter said' 

"Where?" 

Carter moved a chair under the light fixture which dangled from the  ceiling, climbed on to it, and unscrewed

one of the light bulbs from  the fixture. He passed the bulb down, saying, "It isn't made of glass  at all, you'll

find, and the bulb serves as a diaphragm for the  microphone. To install the thing, they had to rewire the

lighting  circuit. But the idea is rather clever. You'd think it was merely a  burned out bulb. You would

unscrew it and throw it away without  noticing the difference, probably."  Monk scowled. "How come you

knew  it was there?" 

"I'll get to that in a minute," the blond young man said. He got  out a cigarette and a long amber holder and got

the cigarette going.  "I'm going to review the situation," he said. "To put it briefly, the  Nazi leader has fled,

leaving behind a double who is to be killed so  that it will seem the leader died a martyr's death. The object in

doing  this is twofold. First, the martyred death of the Nazi chief will  probably pull the German people

together and make them fight a while  longer  " 

"Will it?" Monk interrupted. "Haven't they got more sense?" 


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"It'll pull the Germans together the way Pearl Harbor united the  Americans," Carter said. 

"You seem pretty sure." 

"I should be. I'm a German." 

"You don't look it!" Monk said suspiciously. 

"Es steht bei Ihnen," Carter told him. "Warum nicht? All  upperclass Europeans, as a matter of fact, look

pretty much alike. I  am German, all right. I was lecturer in psychology, specializing in  isolates, at the new

university in Dresden." 

Monk scowled. "Brother, you don't even have a Fritz accent" 

"I hope not. I went to Oxford, old fellow, and if they don't take  an accent out of you at Oxford, it can't be

done. Just take it from me,  my boy. I'm a genuine German, one of the educated, intelligent ones, if  you are

willing to admit there could be such a German." 

Monk wasn't convinced, but he could see nothing to hang an argument  on. "What gives you a claim to being

intelligent, you figure?" 

Carter leaned forward. "If the Fuehrer gets away with this trick   if he makes the German people believe he

died a martyr  the whole  creed of Nazism, of National Socialism and all that goes with it, will  live. You

may defeat it now, but it will live. It will become a faith,  something like religion, something you can't stamp

out" 

Carter paused to stare at them. He looked grim, hardlipped,  emphatic. 

"I wouldn't like that," he said. "I belong to a group who wouldn't  like it. I and the men associated with me are

trying to stop it,  because we don't want Germany to be reborn after this war with Nazism  in its soul." Some of

the violence left him, and he looked at them  again. "On that I base my claim for being an intelligent German." 

"That shuts me up," Monk admitted. "What about this redheaded  Berkshire?" 

Carter smiled slightly and said, "It would be better if you would  let me talk to him." 

"Huh?" 

"Talk to Berkshire, the redheaded man," Carter said patiently. 

"Just what," Monk asked, "gives you the idea we would do that?" 

"Didn't you capture him?" 

"When was that?" 

"I wish you didn't feel you had to be so innocent with me," Carter  said. "As a matter of fact, we know that

Miss Patricia Savage  blackjacked Berkshire in the park a couple of blocks from here. Then  you carried him

off in a cab. So I presume you have him safe." 

"So you knew that!" 


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Carter laughed, and the mirth sounded hearty and genuine. "I  imagine Berkshire has told you quite a

remarkable Story, hasn't he?" 

"How do you mean?" 

Carter lost his mirthful expression, and finally frowned. "Look  here, why are you beating around the bush?" 

"Brother, you're a great one to accuse us of bush beating," Monk  told him violently. "You've been talking a

blue streak since you came  up here, and the total of what you've said is practically nothing. Now  what do you

want, anyway?" 

"I want Berkshire!" Carter said bluntly. 

"Why?" 

"Because I want him. Is that reason enough?" 

"Tough, eh?" Monk said. 

The blond man took a hand out of his hat  he had been holding the  hat in his hands  and the hat

contained a shiny gun. "Or would you  prefer a reason of this sort?" he demanded. 

Monk stared at the gun, and he had a queer feeling in the region  back of his second vest button, not because

he was afraid of guns, but  because he saw they had been taken in. He didn't fear guns, but he  respected them.

This one was a Walther Model PP, known as the  presentation model because of the flossy engraving, gold

plating and  ivory grips. It wasn't a bad gun. German made. 

Monk indicated the weapon  careful to make no sudden moves  and  asked, "You in earnest with that

thing?" 

"I would regret killing all three of you," Carter said in a flat  meaningful way. "But I would do it" 

Pat said, "Monk, he means it." 

Monk wasn't sure. He didn't care to find out. He said, "At finding  Berkshire you are out of luck. We had him.

He's gone. He got away. 

"Wie schade!" Carter said, and Monk was suddenly sure the young man  was German. He hadn't been certain

of it before. But now Carter's  speech had taken on a guttural quality that was completely Teutonic. 

"Mr. Carter," Pat said. 

"Ja, Fraulein?" 

"If you are a German patriot working against the Fuehrer, who does  that make Mr. Berkshire?" Pat asked. 

Carter smiled thinly, thoughtfully. "You really do not know who  this Berkshire is?" 

"Should we?" 

"You are much less efficient than your reputations claim you to be  if you don't know who he is." 


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Pat said, "Oh, nuts! Talk, talk, and it gets us nowhere." 

"You want action?" 

"It would be a change." 

Carter moved his gun menacingly. "All right We'll have some action.  Your hands up, please. I am going to

search you." He went over them,  one at a time, with quick efficiency. He discovered that Monk and Ham

were wearing bulletproof vests, and made them remove these. 

He said, "Get over there in the corner." When they were in the  corner, he demanded of Pat, "Where is that

gun of yours?" 

"What gun?" 

"That howitzer I hear you pack," Carter said. "1 want it." 

"Why?" 

He stared at Pat, and Pat suddenly had an unnerving feeling that  the man wanted her gun more than he

wanted anything. 

"I haven't got it," Pat said. 

He stared at her a while longer. 

"That's good," he said. "I wouldn't want to be shot with such a  thing as I hear it is." 

But he didn't sound satisfied, or pleased. He went to the window.  He took a yellow handkerchief out of his

pocket, tucked it in the  pullcord of the window shade, and let it hang there, where it could be  seen from the

side street which the window faced. 

"It will take my friends a few minutes to get here;" he remarked. 

Monk and the others said nothing. "I wish you knew where Berkshire  is," Carter said gloomily. "We want

that fellow very badly indeed." 

"Wish we could help you," Pat said dryly. 

Carter stared at her. 

"By the way," he said, "where is your oldfashioned, western  sixshooter? I want that, too." 

"I haven't got it," Pat said. 

Carter developed a strange sick look. 

V

CARTER'S friends were half a dozen blocky gentlemen who looked as  if they were without souls. They


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knocked on the door, then came in when  Carter invited them, and each gave Carter a heel click and a

pokerfaced expression that could mean anything. They were, Monk  reflected, as slabfaced a group as he

had ever seen. 

"The butcher's halfdozen," Pat whispered. 

"Somebody has been feeding them on crows, from their looks," Monk  agreed. 

Carter told the newcomers m German, "They say they do not know  where Berkshire is. They may be lying. I

do not think so, because I  gave them a very good story about being a patriotic German who wanted  to thwart

the plan." 

Monk said, "Speak English, dammit. We don't understand German." 

Which was a lie, because they could at least under stand German.  And it didn't fool Carter. 

"You have a slopping acquaintance with German and about twenty  other languages) and you know it," Carter

said. 

Monk demanded, "Aren't you a German patriot?" 

"Very," Carter said. 

Monk didn't agree. "You're a damned liar!" 

"I'm a damned liar," Carter said. 

Carter then turned to the six newcomers again, and told them in  German that Monk, Ham and Pat must be

taken from the hotel without  attracting notice. If notice was attracted, Carter told them, they  might as well

make a good job of it and shoot Monk and Ham and Pat on  the spot, and shoot anyone else whom they cared

to. The blankfaced  gentlemen soaked this in with hairraising solemnity. 

One of the blankfaces asked, in excellent English, "Why bother  with them!" 

"We don't intend to bother too much," Carter said, also in English.  "1 hope they understand that." He turned

to the prisoners. "Do you?" 

"You keep on, and you'll scare us," Monk muttered. 

"You will link arms with three of my friends," Carter told them.  "The other three friends and myself will

accompany you." 

"Your three friends look like zombies," Pat told him. One of the  zombies gave a coldblooded laugh and

gripped Pat's wrist She suddenly  discovered there was a handcuff around her wrist. She was fastened to  the

man. 

She looked up at the man, and the fellow's expres sion gave her a  fright The feeling she got was sudden and

so clammy that she tried  instinctively to jerk away. She had the feeling, abruptly, of being  close to something

that was pretty awfuL It was about the same  sensation that contact with a corpse would give her. 


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Her face must have mirrored her feelings; because Ham Brooks said,  "Grab the handlebars, Pat Don't get to

reeling." 

"I wish I was back in New York," Pat said, then realized that what  she had said, and her tone, sounded like a

scared child. "I wonder why  he wanted my sixshooter so bad?" she asked. 

The blankfaced man jerked at her wrist, tugging her out into the  corridor. She had, with growing intensity, a

feeling of repellence, a  sensation of being actually attached to a cadaver. She was suddenly  convinced that the

men would not hesitate to kill her. 

The front entrance of the hotel consisted of two doors, one on each  side of a center post. Both doors were

open, and Pat noticed that part  of the group ahead went out through one door and the rest through the  other.

Monk through the right side, and Ham through the left It gave  her an idea. 

She pushed against her captor  with the feeling she was against a  corpse  and persuaded him to go

through the righthand door. She was  on his left, attached to his left wrist with about six inches of  handcuff

linkage. 

At the last minute, Pat stepped left, went through the left side of  the door, reached out and gave the open door

a quick jerk shut 

She was on one side of the center post, her captor on the other,  when the heavy door slapped shut, against the

handcuff linkage. 

Pat did a good job in acting startled. She gave a violent jump   which was designed to wedge the handcuff

chain inextricably. It  succeeded fairly well. The chain was thin, the door didn't fit too  well, and Pat's yank put

considerable force on the thing. 

"We're caught!" Pat said innocently. "Get me loose!" 

Carter came back to her and said malevolently, "You did that on  purpose!" But he didn't sound as if he was

sure. 

At this point, the zombie on the other side of the door got panicky  and gave the door a kick, trying to force it

open. As a result, the  door wedged solid. 

Carter cursed the blankfaced man's stupidity. 

Monk, out on the sidewalk, said loudly, "Look at the cops coming!" 

"So'derbarerweise!" Carter blurted, and jumped back to take a look  down the street. "Es ist!" 

He was German all right, Pat decided, because that was the language  he went back to when he was excited. 

The men coming down the street were not city policemen. They were  military shore patrol, armbanded and

on duty, which was worse. 

Carter said, "Get them in the car!" 

Monk and Ham were bustled into a long, swanky looking touring car  which was parked at the curbing. 


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Carter gave the door a couple of angry kicks. On the other side,  the zombie was fighting the wedged panel.

Pat, figuring Carter was the  most likely to get it open, managed to make a showing of helping  and  get in

Carter's way so he couldn't kick the door effectively. 

Carter went around to the other side of the door. 

"I am going to kick your brains out," he told the blankfaced man. 

And he kicked the zombie in the pants. It was the first time Pat  had ever seen a kick in the stem that didn't

strike her as funny. There  is something, comedians know, infallibly funny about a kick in the  rear. But this

one raised Pat's hair. If a kick could have killed the  man, Carter would have done it The kicked man made a

hoarse  dampsounding croak of agony. 

"I trust you have a happy time of it," Carter told the blank man. 

Then Carter hurried to the car, got in and the car drove away. 

PAT started to shriek an alarm. She changed her mind, convinced  that if trouble started, Monk and Ham

would be shot immediately. 

The shore police came abreast. 

"Do you speak English?" Pat asked, smiling. 

"Yes, Miss," one of the soldiers said. 

"I am a detective," Pat said, lying convincingly. "I was taking my  prisoner out of the hotel, and he managed

to get us jammed in this  door. Will you help me?" 

The soldiers grinned. They were delighted by such a pretty girl. 

"We certainly will help," one assured Pat. 

They began laboring with the wedged door. Two of them, by shoving,  managed to get the door free. 

Pat stared at the blankfaced man, wondering why he was taking  this. He could understand English, she

knew. But he was doing nothing  but stand there and look like a crook, a part he was naturally equipped  for. 

He's got a gun, of course, Pat thought 

"Will you search him for me, please?" Pat asked one of the helpful  soldiers. "I am just wondering if one of

his friends could have slipped  him a gun." 

"Of a certainty," said a soldier gallantly. 

He searched. Pat's eyes popped. The blankfaced man was unarmed. He  didn't have a thing in the way of a

weapon. He'd had a gun. How in the  dickens, Pat pondered, did he make away with the weapon? 

The mystery dumfounded her for a minute. Then she sank to a knee,  made a pretense of adjusting her slipper

tie, and raked the floor with  her eyes. 


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"Excuse me," she said. 

She went over to a divan and got the man's pistol from under the  divan, where he had scooted it without her

noticing. The gun was  another Walther, this one black and ugly. 

Pat came back blithely and said, "I tossed my gun away when we got  hung up. I was afraid he would get it" 

The military police laughed. They were all young men, and they  thought she was cute. They said so. They

told her she was too pretty to  be a detective. Pat asked them to get her a taxicab. They did. One of  them got

her telephone number. 

Pat waved at them as the cab drove off. She was pleased with  herself. Her prisoner, the blankfaced man,

was sitting sidewise on the  seat to favor the place where Carter had kicked him. 

Pat said, "It was a shame the way he kicked you. You should pay him  back for that" 

"In what way?" 

'You could tell us where the Fuehrer is." 

The man didn't change expression. 'when we get kicked, we have it  coming to us. Anyway, I can kick

someone of less rank than myself." 

"You pass those things along, eh?" 

"That's right" 

"Are you going to tell me where the Nazi chief is?" 

"No." 

"Want to bet you don't?" Pat asked. 

She was going to take the man to Doc Savage. Doc would get  information out of him. Doc was by profession

a surgeon and physician,  and he had a combination of lie detectors and truth serum which he used  on fellows

like this one, and it was almost infallible. 

Pat hadn't noticed much about the driver, except that the driver  was very young. 

"Boy!" she called to the driver. "Take the Rue Augusta, and I will  tell you when to turn." 

The driver wasn't a boy. It was a girl, redheaded, and nice. She  pulled over to the curb, stopped, and said,

"I'm sorry, Miss, but I am  not too familiar with the city yet Would you show me on the map?" 

Pat said, "Okay. where's your map?" And the driver leaned back over  the front seat with a map. Pat eyed the

map, and was putting her finger  on the Rue Augusta when the driver moved quickly. She snatched Pat's  gun. 

The redheaded girl got the gun and jerked back. She let Pat look  at the business end of the thing. "You know

whether it's loaded, or  not" 


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PAT, dumfounded, had a silly moment and said, "I wouldn't know a  thing about what's in the gun. Ask old

deadface, here." 

The zombie said, "It is not loaded." 

He said It with a fiat matteroffactness that was utterly  convincing. And thento Patthe unexpected

happened. The redheaded  girl was taken in. She jacked the slide of the automatic back to look  in the

chamber. 

The blankfaced man lunged, got hold of the gun' 

"Watch him!" Pat shrieked. She was much more afraid of the man than  of the girl. She dived for the gun

herself. 

For what seemed minutes, six hands fought for possession of the  gun. The expressionless man struggled

without words or excitement,  coldly and viciously, and Pat got the sick feeling that he would begin  shooting

if he got the weapon. 

Finally, to keep anyone from getting possof the Walther, Pat began  beating the cluster of hands against the

edge of the window. 

The gun flew out into the street 

The blankfaced man jerked away and piled out the other door of the  cab. He ran for the nearest side street 

Pat scrambled out to get the gun. She scooped it up, worried with  the safety a moment, and leveled the

weapon. When she had what she  hoped was a bead on the runner's legs, she fired. 

The street became full of gunthunder. The weapon was loaded, all  right It was full. Eight cartridges. Pat

fired them all. 

She apparently didn't scratch the zombie, and he popped into the  side street 

Pat pointed the empty gun at the redheaded girl and screamed,  "Chase him! Run him down with the car!" 

The redheaded girl scrambled behind the wheel. The old car jumped  violently  and stopped. The engine

roared. Nothing happened. 

"The gears are stripped!" the redheaded girl gasped. 

Pat said, "Don't pull that on me!" She shoved the other girl over  angrily, and tried the gears herself. Nothing

happened. Something had  broken. 

Pat got out and ran to the side street. But the blankfaced man was  gone. The redheaded girl followed Pat,

and Pat demanded, "Shall we  follow him? Hunt for him, I mean." 

"I didn't like his looks," the redheaded girl said. 

"I didn't either," Pat admitted. "Let's get out of here." 


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WHEN they had walked four blocks, each block in a different  direction, the redhaired girl said, "My knees

have got the shakes.  Can't we stop somewhere?' 

"It's a good idea," Pat agreed. "Here's a place." She indicated a  sidewalk cafe which seemed placid enough.

They got a table behind a  cluster of phonylooking potted bushes, and sank into chairs. 

"Whew!" Pat exclaimed. "Things got to going too fast for me." 

The redheaded girl said, "I'm Barni Cuadrado. You do not know me,  of course." 

A waiter came. Pat ordered coffee and hot milk, half and half,  stumbling with the Portuguese words, until the

other girl helped her  out. The waiter went away. 

"All right, Barni," Pat said grimly. "Who the dickens are you? And  what were you trying to do?" 

Barni Cuadrado asked, "Aren't you Patricia Savage?" 

"Yes." 

"Then I bungled what I was trying to do." 

"Which was what?" 

The redheaded girl hesitated, frowning. "It's so simple to  explain, but I don't know exactly how to start.

Suppose I begin this  way: Something very big is happening, something so important that whole  nations and

even the war itself are involved." She bogged down, looking  dissatisfied with her words. 

"That's too general, isn't it?" she continued. "The truth is this:  The Fuehrer is fleeing Germany. He has left a

double behind, who is to  be murdered so that the Fuehrer will appear to have died a hero. You  have to know

the German people to realize how horrible the plan is, how  it will unite them and prolong a hopeless war,

how it will glorify the  Nazi National Socialist ideology in the minds of the German people  until they will

never forget it.  In other words, how it will be the  seed for another war in the future.Ó 

ÒThatÕs amazing!Ó  Pat exclaimed, pretending she hadnÕt known a  thing about it. 

Barni Cuadrado nodded.  ÒIt is terrible.  But thereÕs at least one  organized group of Germans who know it.

And they are out to thwart the  plan, to stop it.Ó 

She looked at Pat steadily. 

ÒMy cousin, Hans Berkshire, is head of the group trying to stop the  thing,Ó she said.  ÒIÕm helping him.Ó 

Pat hoped she didnÕt look as amazed as she felt.  She said nothing. 

Barni continued, ÒBerkshire heard that the Allied intelligence had  heard of the FuehrerÕs plan, and that they

had called in Doc Savage to  stop the thing. Berkshire wishes to work with Mr. Savage.Ó 

ÒHoly smoke!Ó  Pat said softly.  Doc, she thought, had made a bum  guess.  Doc had thought the redheaded

Berkshire was one of the  FuehrerÕs men. 


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ÒThings have gotten into a mess,Ó Barni said.  ÒBerkshire knew  somehow that Mr. Savage was coming by

plane, so he watched all the  planes, and he saw a man he thought was Mr. Savage.  He tried to trail  Mr.

Savage, but Mr. Savage laid some kind of trap, and grabbed  Berkshire.  The unfortunate part of this was that

Berkshire wasnÕt  actually sure the man was Mr. Savage  the thing that got him to  doubting was the way

the man he supposed was Mr. Savage gave away the  fact that he was in Europe to find the German leader.

Berkshire didnÕt  think Mr. Savage would be so careless.  Anyway, Berkshire escaped.Ó 

ÒWhere is he now?Ó Pat demanded. 

ÒHiding,Ó Barni explained.  ÒHe sent me to the hotel where you had  been staying. My job was to get you

and find out if Doc Savage was  really in  y Portugal." 

"That's why you were so handy outside the hotel then?" 

"Yes. I was pretending to be a taxi driver. It was just luck that  the soldiers called me to pick up you and that

fellow." 

"Did you know that soberfaced fellow?" 

"No." 

"Was he one of the NaA outfit?" 

"I don't know. He could be." 

Pat frowned. "Does this Berkshire know anything that would help Doc  Savage?" 

"He thinks he does." Barni nodded earnestly. "I should think he  would. He has an amazing fund of inside

knowledge." 

"Let's get him," Pat said, "and take him to Doc." 

Barni stood up eagerly. "That's exactly what he wants." 

VI

A WAITER came to them. He looked upset, almost sick. He said in  Portuguese, "You must go, immediately." 

Pat didn't understand him, and asked him what he'd said. The waiter  twisted his napkin in his hands, got as

red as a firecracker, and began  to pop like one when he spoke. Pat couldn't get Portuguese spoken so  fast. But

she saw Barni show shock. 

"What is it?" Pat demanded. 

"He was offered a thousand marks, German, to put something in our  coffee," Barni explained. 

"Let's get out of here," Pat said quickly. 

They paid the check, and Pat gave the waiter some money, not quite  a thousand marks, but all she could

afford, for his trouble. She wanted  his address so she could pay him more, but he wouldn't give it to her. 


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Barni gripped Pat's arm uneasily. "I'm scared all over again," she  said. "They must have found out where we

were. Do you suppose it was  poison he asked the waiter to put in our coffee?" 

"What else could it have been?" Pat was nervous herself. She walked  rapidly. 

She wasn't much inclined to remember statistical facts, but one  popped into her thoughts: Fear, the dictionary

says, is the painful  emotion characteristic of the apprehension of evil. That's what I've  got, Pat reflected. 

"Barni, we even forgot to ask the waiter what the man looked like." 

Barni nodded. "All I could think of was getting out of there." 

"We've got to get Berkshire, then find Doc Savage," Pat said. "And  quick. How long will it take us to find

Berkshire?" 

"An hour, probably." 

"Oh Lord, that's too long!" Pat gasped. "We'll go to Doc first I've  got to tell him that Monk and Ham are in

trouble." 

"Where is he?" 

That, Pat thought, is a slight problem. She had seen enough of the  Allied Intelligence Headquarters north of

Black Horse Square to know  that it was very hushhush. A man as important as Mr. Dilling, who was  in

charge of the Allied side of the affair, couldn't afford to draw  public attention. She could imagine Mr.

Dilling's exasperation if she  walked in with a strange girl she had picked up, even if the girl did  have an

interesting story. 

"We'll find Doc," Pat said, and began to wonder how. 

They walked north, then turned west It was late afternoon, past the  lazy siesta hour, but not early enough for

the promenade crowds. The  sidewalks were moderately crowded. 

Barni glanced behind frequently, and finally she said, 'Tat, I  think we're being followed." 

Pat discovered that her mouth had gone suddenly dry. She had to  swallow before she could say, "What does

he look like? And where is  he?" 

"A man in a black suit," Barni said. "He's on the other side of the  street" 

Pat had to swallow again before she could say, "All right, let's  stop and admire this window, and I'll take a

look." 

She had no trouble locating the shadow. Black suits were not  plentiful on Lisbon streets at this hour. 

She saw the man, and her flesh seemed to crawl on her bones. 

"It's one of the deadfaced men!" she gasped. Fear came into their  hearts then. Pat, who didn't scare easily,

was not proud of the way she  began feeling. Fear had never bothered her much. She had even boasted a  few

times that she enjoyed the sensation, that it was a thrill of a  certain sort, something that she looked back on

with appreciation. She  wouldn't look back on the way she felt now. Never. The feeling was like  worms. 


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It was the blankfaced man, of course. Not just that one in the  black suit following them. There was another.

She saw him a moment  later, looking out of a passing car. 

"They're all around us!" she told Barni, and her voice had a wooden  coffin sound to her ears. 

They walked rapidly, and Barni said, "I hope we find a policeman."  But they did not find a policeman. There

was not a uniform in sight. 

Pat said, "Let's stay on the main streets. I think this one has  more of a crowd." 

She started to turn. Then Barni screamed, snatched at Pat's arms  and jerked her back. As dark and silent as

death coming in sleep, a  black limousine slipped through the spot Pat would have occupied if  Barni hadn't

stopped her. 

Pat shrank back. She was certain her face had the color of a peeled  banana. She was certain there was another

of the zombies in the car. 

"They're trying to kill us," Barni said. 

Pat said, "Come on!" 

"What are you going to do?" 

"Run. At least that will confuse them. And it's what I feel like  doing." 

So they ran. They got in the middle of the sidewalk, glued their  elbows to their sides, and ran. It had no

dignity, but it covered  ground. 

Running built up their fright. Pat felt panic growing, but didn't  know why. Then she knew that the running

was feeding the fright, but  she didn't have the nerve to stop. 

Suddenly Pat wheeled around, making a Uturn, not slackening speed. 

"In here!" she gasped.  "What luck!" 

She had discovered they were on the Terrefro do Paco, and passing  the wine shop where Doc had gone to get

his directions to the meeting  with Mr. Dilling and his group. 

The same two middleaged clerks were on duty. They gaped at Pat. 

"They're trying to kill us!" Pat gasped. "Watch the door!" 

The mildlooking old clerks acted confused. "Senorita, it is the  police you should see," one told her. 

Pat was in no mood for innocence. One of the middleaged men wore a  regimental necktie, somewhat on the

gaudy side. Pat got hold of the tie  suddenly, jerked the gentleman forward across the counter. 

"You get hold of Doc Savage  and quick!" she said grimly. "Tell  him Pat is in a mess, and scared stiff." 

The old fellow looked at her. 


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"Go into the back room," he said. "And wait" 

THE back room proved to be an office, ancient and genteel and  subdued. Just like the libraries in the

detective stories where they  find the bodies, Pat thought. One of the elderly clerks closed the door  on them.

Pat went over to the door quickly. It was locked. 

"Are they all right?" Barni asked nervously. 

"I think so," Pat said, then added uneasily, "On second thought, I  don't know." 

"What will we do?" 

"Wait, I guess." 

Barni nodded. She looked frightened. After a few minutes, as if to  fight the silence in the room, she began

talking.  "I am not used to  this sort of thing," She said. "I am Swiss. In Switzerland, your folks  do not bring

you up for such things as this." 

"I've been to Switzerland," Pat said. "I liked it" 

Barni nodded. "I was born in Interlaken, which is a little town  that all the tourists know. My father was a

woodcarver, or rather he  had a shop employing several woodcarvers who made those little  gimcracks the

tourists buy. It was a very pleasant existence, but I  didn't like it. Interlaken is a little town, and I resented it,

the way  so many girls resent the small towns in which they grow up." She looked  at Pat wryly. "1 wish I was

back there." 

"Have you been away long?" Pat asked. 

"Oh, no. I'm not an adventuress. Don't get that idea. I have been  in Paris and Rome, but that was when I was a

young girl, before the war  began. Actually, this is the first time I've been out of Switzerland in  nearly five

years." 

"Is your cousin, Berkshire, from Switzerland?" 

"Oh, no," Barni said hastily. "Our family is of German descent, or  rather Austrian. My father was born in

Innsbruck, of a big family. He  had five brothers and three sisters. He left Innsbruck and came to  Interlaken

when he was out of school. Berkshire is the son of my  father's sister, who married a Berlin German who was

a politician, a  customs employee. Hans is their only child. He grew up in Germany." 

Barni smiled, "I'm rambling, aren't I? I guess the words come out  of me because I'm nervous. 

"How did you get mixed up in this?" Pat asked curiously. 

"Oh, I wrote an article for a Swiss magazine, a sort of antiNazi  article, and Hans saw it in Berlin," Barni

explained. "He wrote me. We  corresponded. Then Hans came to see me, and it developed that he wanted  me

to help out in an antiNazi organization. He wanted a Swiss  clearinghouse for his group. I hate Nazis. So I

was willing." 

"Was it interesting?" 


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"In a way. Not exciting. Men and women would come to me, and leave  packages or messages or money, and

others would pick them up. I was  sort of a middleman." 

"There's nothing dull about the present situation," Pat reminded  her. 

"No. This just started four days ago. Hans arrived in Switzerland  in a wild state of nerves, and wanted me to

come to Portugal and help  him on this affair. I did." 

"And that's all?" 

"That's all. The first real work I did for Hans was tonight, when  he sent me to learn whether Doc Savage was

really Doc Savage. I was  doing that when I met you, as I told you." 

Barni got up and went to the door. She tried it.  She pounded on it  with her fists, quick nervous beating that

got no answer. She was much  paler when she came back. 

The two girls sat in silence. Each minute, Pat had supposed, and  hoped, that she wouldn't get more scared.

She was wrong. Her nerves  were crawling. She would think of the blankfaced men, and stifle an  impulse to

be sick. 

Barni asked, "What about you? You must lead an awfully exciting  life, associated with Doc Savage." 

"I'm not associated with him," Pat explained wryly. "I just barge  in on his cases once in a while. I'm only his

third or fourth cousin,  not very closely related, although we have the same coloring." 

"I supposed you were his sister, possibly." 

"No, no, I was even born in Canada. Doc is from the States. I lived  out in the wild west, what time I wasn't

being educated to the  eyebrows. My parents are dead. I met Doc when he was in Canada on one  of his wild

cases, and he sort of took me under his wing. I own a  beauty shop in New York now." 

Barni asked, "What about Doc Savage? Tell me a little about him?  I've heard of him frequently. He must be a

remarkable man." 

"He is," Pat said. "Amazing. He had a most peculiar youth.  Something or other happened to Doc's father

when Doc was a baby  I  don't think even Doc knows what it was that happened. Anyway, it gave  the elder

Savage a peculiar fixation  that he must raise a son who  would be a modernized Sir Galahad, going into

the far corners of the  earth to right wrongs and aid the oppressed. Sounds silly, doesn't it?" 

"A bit unusual." 

"Darned unusual. His father got a bunch of scientists to take over  the kid's training. He didn't have a normal

youth at all. A bunch of  scientific experimenters had him from threecorneredpants age up until  he was old

enough for college. They did their best to make a physical  giant, a mental marvel, and a scientific genius out

of Doc." 

Pat grinned faintly. 

"The funny part is that they succeeded to some extent. You'd think  a goofy training like that would have

turned out a freak. It didn't. Or  at least he's not so much freak. He has his freakish moments, though." 


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"I've seen his pictures. He is very handsome." 

"Save your time," Pat said. 

"Why?" 

"He's a womanpersecutor," Pat explained. 

"What do you mean by that?" 

"He doesn't understand them, and so he's scared of them, as nearly  as I can figure it out, he has a

longwinded explanation of his  attitude. He says that he cannot afford a close tie with any female  because the

first thing an enemy would do would be to strike at him  through her. That's just talk. The real reason is that

he's so darned  scientific he expects to understand how things tick, and he doesn't  understand how women

tick, so he's afraid of them." 

"Maybe the right one hasn't come along." 

Pat shrugged. "Several have been past. And some of them were pretty  capable hussies." 

Barni smiled faintly. "I think you are prejudiced." 

"At least I've got you cheered up," Pat told her. Then Pat lost  color  she felt as if she was losing nerves,

control, courage,  everything  and leaped to her feet. The door was being unlocked. 

VII

DOC Savage came into the dignified old office asking, "Now what  have you gotten into, Pat? Where's Monk

and Ham?" 

Relief hit Pat such a pleasantly stunning blow that she was  speechless. 

"You big ox!" she said, when she had words. "Why didn't you knock,  or something, to let us know who you

were. I like to died. They had us  locked up in here." 

Doc nodded. "Yes. To keep you safe." 

"Monk and Ham are in a jam," Pat said, rushing into explanations.  "They've been seized." 

She poured out the story of how she and Monk and Ham had gone to  the hotel, had encountered Carter, and

how Carter had called in the  blankfaced men. She explained how they had been taken from the hotel,  and

how she had jammed the handcuff links holding her to one of the  blank men in the hotel door. She dramatized

this somewhat to favor  herself. Then she described the meeting with Barni, the escape of the  zombie, and

their ensuing troubles. 

The thing Pat carefully omitted was any reference to the fact that  she had talked Monk and Ham into going to

the hotel in the first place,  having sold them the idea of jumping in ahead of Doc and offering  themselves as

bait. 

She tried to get on to the subject of Barni before Doc could notice  that they might not have had any business


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going to the hotel in the  first place. 

Doc interrupted her with, "Why did the three of you go back to the  hotel?" 

"Why," Pat said, "it seemed a natural thing to do." 

"What was natural about it?" 

"Well  " 

"You knew the place would be watched." 

"But  " 

"Was it because you knew the hotel would be watched that you went  back?" 

Pat fell back on her usual methods when she was caught She had  found she could head Doc off by yelling at

him. So she did some  screaming. 

"Don't browbeat me!" she shrieked. "I'm doing my best to tell you  what happened." 

"Mr. Savage," Barni interrupted. "You shouldn't bulldoze Patricia.  She has just had a terrible experience." 

"Not as terrible as she had coming," Doc said sourly. "What are you  two doing  sticking together against

me?" 

"Who's against you?" 

"The Lord  I sometimes think  when he got that rib and made  women," Doc said. 

"Shut up, Barni," Pat said. "You get him stirred up, and he'll go  to any length to get even." 

Barni sniffed. "Mr. Savage, we are dealing with a situation in  which a great deal is involved. I think I have

some important  information. Do you want to hear it?" 

"Pat, who is this girl?" Doc asked. 

"I was trying to tell you," Pat explained, and went ahead to  describe who Barni was.  "Barni had better tell

you the rest herself." 

Barni Cuadrado told, while Doc Savage listened intently,  substantially the same story which she had told Pat

It had somewhat  more detail. She repeated her own family history, giving that no more  detail than she had

given when she told it to Pat 

But of Hans Berkshire, she told more, particularly of how her  cousin Hans had looked her up after reading

her antiNazi article in  the Swiss publication. The enthusiasm of Hans, she said, had been  intense and

contagious. He was bitterly antiNazi, with a subdued  emotion and intensity that one could not encounter

without being  impressed and fired. 

Pat, listening to Barni talk about Hans Berkshire, decided she  would be impressed herself by Berkshire. 


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"Mr. Savage, I am sure that Berkshire can help you," Barni said  earnestly. "Will you see him?" 

Doc nodded. "Naturally. With the greatest of eagerness." He looked  uncomfortable for a moment "Is there a

chance you would accept an  apology for the brusqueness a few minutes ago?" 

Barni smiled. "Of course." 

"When can we see Berkshire?" 

"At once, if you will go with me. He is waiting." 

Doc said, "All right. But will you two wait here while I explain to  Mr. Dilling that there is no immediate

danger." 

"Will it take long?" 

"Only a few minutes." 

DOC left the dignified old office, closing the door behind him. The  two elderly clerks were waiting outside,

and he told them, "See that  the girls stay in here." 

The elder of the clerks nodded. 

"Are they all here?" Doc asked. 

"Up two flights of stairs. The second door to your left." 

The stairway was ancient, with the dignity of another age. The  second door in the second hallway had the

same massive, timeless  appearance. 

Monk Mayfair and Ham Brooks were in the room behind the door. The  blond man, Carter, was there. So

were his friends, the men with the  blank faces. 

Monk asked, "How did it work, Doc?" 

"Pat is scared." 

"She should be scared," Monk said. He indicated the blankfaced  men. "Our friends here are good. They

even had me about halfscared." 

Ham laughed. "Half? Boy, you were certain you were going to be a  casualty." 

The blankfaced man whose stern Carter had kicked rubbed the spot  which had been kicked. "I was the

casualty, if there was one." 

Carter told him,."Sorry about that kick, Nick, I overdid it." 

"It was a good touch," Nick said amiably. "That kick built you up  as a Nazi tough boy, which was the part

you were playing." 

Mr. Dilling came into the room saying, "Sorry I am late. Did  something go wrong?" 


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"The contrary," Doc told him. "We involuntarily netted a very  pretty redheaded girl with an interesting

story." 

"Did we properly scare Miss Patricia?" 

"I think so." Doc eyed the men with the expressionless faces. "You  were fortunate to have such perfect talent

on hand for a quick call." 

Mr. Dilling chuckled. "Oh, they are quite an asset We've been using  them for a long time to frighten Nazis.

Our bugaboos, we call them. We  keep them on tap to scare Axis agents, and they have done several fine  jobs

for us. 

The blankfaced man who had been kicked said, "This was one of our  less skillful efforts. We had rather

short notice, very little time to  plan those pretended efforts to take Miss Patricia's life." 

"It's a good thing she didn't question the waiter in the sidewalk  cafe closely," another zombie said. "The

fellow wasn't any too bright,  and he wouldn't have fooled Miss Savage long if she had waited to grill  him." 

Another blankfaced man said, "And I was very stupid, the way I let  her get my handcuff chain wedged in

the hotel door." 

Monk said, "That wasn't your fault. Pat thinks fast" 

"The point is," interrupted Mr. Dilling, "did we frighten Miss  Savage into going back to New York?" 

"With another little push," Doc said, "she might do it." 

"I'll help you give the push," Mr. Dilling offered. "This thing is  really too dangerous for a young woman. 

"I'll let you push her," Doc told him. "But first, there is a  redheaded girl named Barni Cuadrado who has a

story." 

He told them Barni Cuadrado's story, using his own words to shorten  the story, but managing to omit no

details. 

Mr. Dilling was excited. "Jove! We'd better move quickly on that." 

Doc indicated Monk and Ham and the blankfaced men, "These fellows  will have to keep out of sight. Monk

and Ham are supposed to be  kidnapped. And these other fellows are supposed to be their  kidnappers." 

Monk showed alarm. 

"Now wait a minute!" the homely chemist exploded. "If you think Ham  and I are going back to New York

with Pat  " 

"Wait a minute," Doc interposed. "Nobody said anything about your  going back to New York. What I want

you to do is this: Follow me out to  the place where we are to meet this Hans Berkshire. Keep out of sight.  But

be ready to help." 

Monk was relieved. "Sure." 


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Carter asked, "Does that include us?" 

"Better not," Doc said, "for more than one reason. First, a few of  us may be able to do more than many.

Second, since you fellows have  been scaring Nazis, some of the Nazis may know who you are. Third,  there

may be a chance of making the Fuehrer's gang of insiders think  you are a mysterious unattached group of

enemies. In that last role,  you may be very useful later." 

"That's logical," Mr. Dilling said. "Carter, you and your friends  keep out of it" He turned to Doc. "Mr.

Savage, you and your two men  will proceed alone. Is that it?" 

"Yes." 

"Good." 

"Would you care to throw a final scare into Pat now?" Doc asked. 

"Just watch me," Mr. Dilling said. 

DOC Savage would have sworn Mr. Dilling's face was pale when they  went in to confront Pat and Barni. Mr.

Dilling was a marvelous actor. 

He began telling Pat how lucky she had been to escape alive. The  tone he used, and his concern, his intensity,

was calculated to cause a  bad case of cold chills. It did. 

"For some reason, they have marked you particularly for death," Mr.  Dilling told Pat "Can you think of any

reason? Any particular reason?" 

Pat couldn't. 

"They must think you have stumbled on to some very vital fact," Mr.  Dilling continued. "Think. Wrack your

brain. Can't you think of  anything?" 

"Not a thing," Pat said. "I've told Doc everything." 

"Well, they must believe you have discovered something you haven't" 

"That could be." 

Mr. Dilling did some alarmed clucking. Then he proceeded to tell  Pat that the blankfaced men were a very

tough, clever and sinister  group. Mysterious fellows. Mr. Dilling gave the impression plainly that  he could

not assume to protect Pat 

Doc became alarmed, because Mr. Dilling was piling it on with a  shovel. 

"Here is what we will do to get them off your frail," Mr. Dilling  told Pat. "We will put you aboard a Clipper

plane leaving immediately  for North Africa. At the first stop, you will get off, ride back, and  we will meet

you to be sure they are no longer on your trail." 

Pat surprised Doc by not objecting. He could see that she was  scared. He wished that he had Mr. Dilling's

ability to tell such  baldfaced lies in such alarming fashion. 


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They loaded into automobiles which Mr. Dilling had conveniently on  hand. 

Doc told Barni, "We will get Pat aboard this plane. Then I will go  with you. 

Barni agreed. 

They drove to the Clipper landing station, found a ship with the  motors running and the attendants waiting

impatiently. 

Pat was rushed down the gangplank, flanked by an impressive armed  guard, and popped into the plane. 

"Oh, Doc," she wailed. "That old gun of mine  I hate to be  foolish about it, but I wish you'd look for ft.

Will you, or send  someone to search for it?" 

"Sure," Doc said. 

The plane took off. 

Monk asked curiously, "Doc, what became of her artillery?" 

"In my pocket." 

"Then why didn't you give  " 

Doc glanced at Monk queerly. "Monk, don't tell anyone I have that  gun. And tip Ham off not to tell anyone." 

Monk was puzzled. "Sure. But what bearing could that old gun have  on anything?" 

Doc hesitated, started to speak, then said hastily, "I'll tell you  later. Here comes Dilling." 

Mr. Dilling arrived wiping his face with a handkerchief and asking,  "How did you like that for a sendoff?" 

"Africa is hardly more than an hour or two flying  " 

"She isn't going to Africa, because the plane isn't going to  Africa," said Mr. Dilling smugly. 

"No?" 

"No indeed. That plane Is headed for New York, and the pilot, who  is incidentally a tough cookie, was

informed that all kinds of hell  would break around his ears if the young lady didn't make the full trip  to New

York." 

"Then you think Pat is on her way to New York, willing or no?" 

"I know so," said Mr. Dilling emphatically. 

"And I hope so," Doc told him. 

"Would you mind telling me," said Mr. Dilling, "whether you usually  have this much trouble discouraging

her when she makes up her mind to  enlist as one of your assistants?" 


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"This," Doc assured him, "was one of the milder instances." 

Doc moved toward the street. He took off his hat and examined it  intently, then put it back on  this being

an old signal meaning that  his aides should let him know, but not too obviously, whether they were  around.

Shortly he saw Monk show himself, Monk and Ham were keeping  track of him, but in the background, as

instructed. 

Mr. Dilling said, "You can use this roadster." 

The car was an old Italian one, good as automobiles went in Europe  these days. Doc loaded Barni into  it. 

"All right, now we can see Berkshire," he told her. 

VIII

IT did not take Doc many blocks of driving to realize that he still  had uneasiness about Pat. It was a sullen,

vague un sureness, and he  finally decided it was spawned by a doubt that Pat had been taken in by  Mr.

Dilling's baldfaced lying. He put the uneasiness away, stopped  letting it plague him. What if Pat did

discover Mr. Dilling had been  telling whoppers? There was nothing she could do about it. Or was  there? 

"You have," said Barni Cuadrado, "the expression of a man about to  eat a grasshopper." 

"That," Doc admitted, "paints a good word picture." 

"You were thinking of Patricia?" 

"Yes." 

"She will be safe now. 

"That wasn't the point What was bothering me was whether I could  depend on being safe from her." 

Barni glanced at him pleasantly and said, "You shouldn't abuse Pat.  She thinks you're wonderful" 

"I think she's wonderful, too," Doc said. "She can get my plans  balled up worse in five minutes than most

people can in a week.  Frequently she makes things come out all right, which is bad. If she  were dumb, and

nothing she did worked, it wouldn't be so disconcerting.  Anyway, she is safer out of this thing. This is a very

big thing.  Somebody will probably get hart before it is over. It is nothing for a  woman. Which brings me

around to the fact that we are going to put you  someplace where it is safe as soon as I talk to Berkshire." 

'You expect me to object to that, don't you?" 

"Well, I wouldn't say, because I don't know you very well." 

"I'm going to surprise you. I won't object. I'm scared stiff, and I  don't like it. The sooner I'm out of it, the

better." 

"Where do we turn?" 

"Several blocks on," she said. 


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He drove rapidly enough to give the appearance of being in a hurry,  but doing some unnecessary gear shifting

and getting caught in traffic  jams wherever he could, in order to give Monk and Ham an easier time of

following him. There was a gray car trailing him. He hoped it carried  Monk and Ham. 

She was pretty. Barni Cuadrado  she didn't look Spanish or  Italian, but the name was one or the other.

Swiss, of German stock, she  was supposed to be. The red hair looked amply Nordic, and so did her  features.

Her features were very fine, her eyes a cerulean blue that  made him think of the Gulf Stream off Bimini. 

She was wearing, he realized with surprise, no makeup that he could  detect He had never seen a girl quite so

plain darned pretty without  makeup. 

Boy, she looked like a million in shining pennies. 

And boy, he'd better get his mind on something else. He'd better  turn his little cart around and hike. 

"I wish you weren't as pretty as Christmas morning," he said. 

She laughed. "I'll try not to live up to it But you're not exactly  something to scare babies, yourself." 

He grinned. He felt foolish  which meant, he suspected,that he  was a damned fool, because this was a time

for dignity. This was a time  when the fate of the world was at stake. It was a time when he should  have his

teeth clenched and his jaw shoved out, instead of wearing a  simple grin. 

He made a mental note to turn her over to Monk and Ham as soon as  possible. 

Monk and Ham were terrific chasers. He suspected they frequently  saved him from making a lout of himself. 

The house was on the strip of coast west of Oeiras, below Cape  Roca. The region was possibly one of the

most beautiful in Portugal,  comparing favorably with the Riviera. It was a highly developed  section, with fine

villas, hotels and gardenparks, with the inevitable  fine richlooking casinos where the food was excellent,

the music good,  and the gambling on the hairraising order. 

The house itself had Moorish lines. It was rambling, beginning at  the edge of a road and going up a hill in

steps with terraces and  patios that overlooked the sea. 

It was not a small house. It was not exactly what Doc had expected,  or rather it was definitely not what he

had expected. This was rich. It  was comfortable with that dignified extreme of comfort to which the  rich, but

only those who have been rich for a long time, become  accustomed. 

"You say Berkshire is a rich man?" Doc asked. "I didn't say  anything of the sort, because he isn't," Barni

replied. "Why do you  ask?"A man who has been very rich for several years comes to value  certain things and

care less for others, so that you get some idea of  the man from his surroundings." 

"You sound like Sherlock Holmes," Barni said. Doc looked over the  house. "Is there an army of retainers, or

do we walk right in?" 

"We'll find out," Barni said. "I have never seen anyone but  Berkshire and a couple of old servants around." 

"Does he own or rent the place?" 

"I thought he  I don't know," Barni confessed. "Is it important?" 


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"Probably not," Doc said. But a thing which arouses curiosity, he  thought, is always important. 

He saw no sign of Monk and Ham as he parked his car down the road a  short distance and helped Barni out.

But the two were probably in the  neighborhood. They would know, from the way he had been driving that he

was close to Berkshire's house, which would be their cue to be  particularly unnoticeable. 

Barni led the way to a small, iron gate in a stone wall. The gate,  Doc noted, whether by accident or not could

hardly have been built with  more strength, and the wall was unscalable. 

If you had a suspicious mind, he thought, it would be easy to  conclude this place was a fort. 

HANS Berkshire came through the gate grabbing at Barni Cuadrado  with emotion somewhat more than

cousinly. He hugged her and said, "I  have been frightfully worried about you!" He managed to repeat that he

had been worried about her four or five times in as many consecutive  sentences. 

Doc sized Berkshire up during this display. Berkshire was older  than Doc had thought He was, in fact,

middleaged, the appearance of  youth being given by his athletic body and the way he wore his hair,  his

clothing. The flaming red hair helped the effect of electric  energy. 

He was very tweedy. His suit cloth was brown and coarse. His cane  was a heavy knobbed affair this time, and

his gloves rough and brown. 

The man was dynamite. He was pulsing energy and vital  aggressiveness. 

A fanatical antiNazi, Barni had called him. This man would be  fanatical at anything he did. 

Hans Berkshire swung to Doc Savage, saying, "Pardon me, sir, but  you are Doc Savage, I presume? I was

very worried about Barni. I should  never have sent her on such a dangerous mission," He reached for Doc's

hand. "But you are Doc Savage? I'm glad to meet you." 

"We met before," Doc reminded him. 

"I've been worried about Barni. I've been at my wits end, although  I probably didn't have far to go," Berkshire

said. 

He said it, Doc thought, as if it were a little joke he had  learned. 

"We met previously," Doc repeated. 

"So we did," Berkshire agreed. "What became of the young lady who  whanged me over the head?" 

Barni put in, "That was Patricia Savage, Hans. She is on a plane  for New York, for safety's sake." Barni

sighed. "Patricia was very  clever. She has brains enough for two people." 

"That," said Berkshire, "is the kind of a girl I should marry. 

This, Doc reflected, sounds like a brokendown vaudeville act. 

He said, "Berkshire, I understand you wanted to see me." 


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Hans Berkshire smiled, looked a;s if he were trying to think of  another gag, and couldn't. He said, "Have you

any remote idea who I  am?" 

Barni said, "Hans, I told him who you are  that you are my  cousin, that you are connected with a German

underground group which is  trying to keep Germany from being duped again by Hitler." Berkshire  looked

relieved. "Mr. Savage, is there anything else you would like to  know about me?" Quite a few things, Doc

reflected. He selected one at  random. 

"Just why," he asked, "are you calling on me for assistance?" 

"Isn't it logical?" 

"You belong to an underground group, as I understand it. Aren't  they functioning?" 

Berkshire leaned forward suddenly, dramatically. "Let me give you  an American example: If a show was

being produced in a New York theater  with Benny Zilch for leading man, Benny Zilch being an actor of

medium  ability and no reputation, and someone like Bing Crosby turned up in  town looking for a part in the

same show  wouldn't the producers be  fools if they didn't grab Crosby for leading man in place of Zilch?" 

"Is that the situation?" 

"Roughly." 

"Who are the producers of the show, in this case? You, I take it,  are Zilch. Who are the producers? Who

wants to substitute me for you?" 

"My organization," said Berkshire, "is a democratic organization.  They all want you. If you are asking, do I

resent your taking the lead,  the answer is God, no! I am so relieved and pleased I could cry. 

He looked as if he could shed tears. He hadn't looked that way a  moment ago. 

Doc said, "Where is this organization? I want to meet it." 

"You will." 

Doc, letting some unpleasantness get in his voice, said, "Now, I  want to meet it now. 

Berkshire grimaced. "I can't They're not here." 

"Where are they?" 

"They are working." 

Doc made an impatient gesture. "You had better tell me the whole  story without forgetting anything." 

Hans Berkshire was angry. His rage showed in the guttural German  accent that got into his speech now.

Earlier his talk had been slangy,  almost American. 

But he talked freely and rapidly. He described his organization,  how it was made up of scholars and scientists

for the most part. The  type of people who hadn't been popular with the Nazis. 


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Berkshire deviated to dwell for a while on the subject of why his  comrades had not been popular. They were

brainy, thinking men, but  their brains hadn't been the reason for their being in bad grace. The  Nazis admired

brains. The world might think not, but they did. It was  because his friends had the ability to think for

themselves that had  put them in the doghouse, or was the reason for their going into the  doghouse willingly.

They had ideals. That was it. They had definite  humanitarian ideals, and because of them they couldn't

stomach the  Nazis. 

The organization, as an organization, had been in existence a long  time. It had started as far back as 1936, in

an informal way. Gradually  the group had become a definite unit They had started functioning in  1939, more

as an organizing unit than as a working machine. They didn't  actually do the work themselves, but

masterminded it An example,  Berkshire said, was the underground they had set up for getting Allied  fliers

back to England. None of the group personally met and helped  Allied aviators, but they had organized  and

financed  an  underground setup which did. They had gone about it scientifically,  taking their time and

thoroughly testing the first underground, then  when it was right, organizing others like it, profiting from

experience. 

Promoters was probably the best word. Getting down to the present  situation, the group had been rather

fortunate in learning of Hitler's  plans for himself in case Germany lost the war. They had naturally  developed

excellent pipelines into Hitler's private life. 

How had Allied Intelligence learned of the Fuehrer's scheme to  plant a double, flee, have the double

murdered to make himself a martyr  and enrage Germany into a last spurt against the Allies? 

Berkshire's group had slipped Allied Intelligence the information.  That was how. 

Now Berkshire's group believed they knew where the Fuehrer was  personally hiding. 

He could be captured, but the group hadn't done it The group hadn't  done it, because they had a better plan. 

If some British or American personality of great importance could  do the actual seizing, the world would

believe the genuine Hitler had  been taken, and not some phony. 

"The Germans," said Berkshire intensely, "have got to be convinced  their leader was pulling a snide trick;

They have got to believe it" 

He leveled an arm at Doc Savage dramatically. 

"If you take the Fuehrer," he said, "Germans will believe it." 

Doc Savage was more fascinated than he wanted to be. He discovered  that he was actually aflame with

impatience and excitement, that he was  filled with a rattlebrained ardor of the sort he usually managed to

avoid. This Hans Berkshire was a hypnotic speaker. 

Doc, trying to be coldblooded and careful, asked, "What about this  house?" 

"In what way?" 

"Who does it belong to?" 

"Me," Berkshire said. "I have owned it for about three years." He  paused and looked deliberately shamefaced.

"I bought it in a moment of  fear that I  would be found out and have to flee Germany. It was to be  my retreat" 


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That was so logical that Doc lost all ability to be hardheaded. 

"There is no point in wasting more time," he said. "Why don't we  get going?" 

Berkshire asked, "You accept our proposition?" 

"Naturally." 

Relief made Berkshire's reddish eyebrows bunch together like  pleased mice. 

"That's fine." Berkshire consulted a platinum jeweled watch, an  outlandishiy expensive piece.  "It is now ten

o'clock. Dark. We will  send a signal." 

He went on to the highest terrace of the rambling house, where he  placed a chair as if for reading, then put a

floor lamp near the chair.  He switched  the lamp on, and it was a fluorescent lamp giving a bright

daylightblue light. He switched the light off after he consulted his  watch counting seconds  fortyone

seconds. He switched it on again  for nine seconds, then off, then on again and left it on. 

"That will bring us an airplane," he said. "A seaplane, I imagine."  He glanced at the sea. "Yes, it is a calm

night, so it will be a  seaplane, probably." 

This was the first concrete evidence  other than the man's fluent  talk  that Berkshire was part of a group.

The idea that he could give  a signal as simply as flashing a floor lamp was something Doc found  creepy. 

Doc pondered the signaling for a while. His guess was that they  used number signals, and that the duration of

the flashes  fortyone  and nine in his case  was a transmission of the numbers. He asked  Hans Berkshire

about it, and Berkshire stated he was correct. 

"How long will we have to wait  " 

"That is very difficult to say," Berkshire said. "Some hours, I am  afraid." 

Doc stood up. "I am going to look over the neighborhood." 

Berkshire nodded. "A good plan." 

IX

DOC Savage left by going over a side wall  he checked carefully  and found a metal rail along the top,

supported on insulators, but it  was not electrified, and he was careful not to touch it anyway. He  looked back

and saw the light on the balcony go out, saw the shadowy  figures of Hans Berkshire and Barni Cuadrado go

into the house. He went  on. 

Stillness was all about for a while after Doc Savage left. The  quiet of night and the odor of flowers in the

darkness, the drowsy  whispering of the sea swell on the rocks below. The sky had a dappling  of clouds and

the sea was slick and silvery into the distance. 

There a part of the darkness stirred and became a figure which  joined another figure, 

"Did he really go?" the first figure asked. 


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"Over the wall," said the second. "It would have been easy, so  easy, to close the switch and throw power into

the wall as he went  over. That would have finished him." 

"You cannot be sure of that." 

"There is enough voltage  " 

"He would not go over the wall without testing to see if the thing  was electrified. He probably tested, And

then he didn't touch the metal  rail." 

"Well, I didn't do it, anyway. Where did he go?" 

"To find his two friends, I suspect." 

"Monk Mayfair and Ham Brooks?" 

"Probably." 

The two had been speaking German, or rather whispering German.  There was more excitement in the

sibilance of the whispers than in the  text of the words, by a great deal. 

"It would be so damned easy to kill him now, immediately," one said  fiercely. 

"That would leave Monk Mayfair and Ham Brooks." 

"Well, we could get them later." 

"Savage will bring them here, perhaps. Then it will be simpler." 

"If he doesn't?" 

"It will have to be arranged so that he will." 

"We just wait, then?" 

"Not exactly. You do not, anyway." 

"Eh?" 

"You will proceed immediately to Vimeiro, and get aboard our power  launch. The password is April

Seventeenth. You will pick up Patricia  Savage." 

"So they got her?" 

"They are getting her," the other said. "You had better be moving." 

The two figures separated. One left the house furtively. 

THE Clipper had been flying less than an hour, and Pat had  discovered that it wasn't headed for America, and

asked the pilot what  was what. The pilot told her to go back and sit down, which was the  wrong thing to tell

Pat, particularly in a smug, you'vebeenslicked  tone. 


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"I've been flimflammed!" Pat said grimly. 

"You're just being taken to New York, is all." 

"At whose orders?" 

"Doc Savage's." 

Pat did some thinking, a quick adding of two and two, and decided  that she had been elaborately taken in. It

was characteristic of Pat  that once she smelled one rat, everything and everybody looked like  rats. 

She concluded the blankfaced men had been working for Doc, the  attempts on her life had been fakes, and

for good measure she decided  Barni Cuadrado was probably a stooge of Doc's. She remembered how  scared

she had been, and she pulled out the cork and said what she  thought There was no one to say it to but the

clipper pilot, who was a  freckled young man who seemed to enjoy seeing a pretty girl get mad. 

Pat didn't use anything that was profanity, technically, but she  got enough words out of the dictionary to

make her feelings plain. She  included an opinion of the freckled pilot's character and antecedents. 

'That's great," said the pilot "That's as expertly as I ever heard  nice words used to remove hide and feathers.

Now do you feel better?" 

Pat went back and sat down. She would probably wind up in New York,  and there was nothing she could do

about it. 

She became downcast. Probably, she thought, she should be ashamed  of herself for causing Doc Savage so

much trouble. She had not helped  Doc's effort by getting, or trying to get, into the excitement The only  result

had been that Doc had been forced to take time off to trick her  into going back to New York. 

I'm a miserable nuisance, she reflected. I don't help. I make Doc  mad. I take up his time. I don't do a bit of

good. I should stick with  the beauty shop business. 

She was in this sour mental state, and was as near making a  decision to forget excitement as she had ever

been, when a shuddering,  not too violent, seized the plane for a moment 

She looked about, and discovered two of the passengers staring in  horror at one of the wings. They were

looking at a series of ragged  bullet holes. 

Pat, alarmed, made a rush for the control compartment, demanding,  "What's happening?" 

The pilot was busy swiveling his neck to look at the sky and he  said, apparently not having heard her, "Here

he comes again!" 

Pat followed his eyes, and discovered another plane. The plane  looked distant, small and black. She had never

been in an air dogfight,  so she didn't realize how an attacking plane would look. This one  seemed far off and

harmless. 

But the other plane came down the sky like a black wasp on a  string, having more than twice the airspeed of

the Clipper, apparently.  Red fires appeared briefly along its wing edges. The tracer sparks  floated past in

front of the Clipper. 


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The copilot suddenly clapped his palms against the radio  headphones. "You hear that? Hell, he's speaking

English." 

The pilot nodded. "We better do it," he said. 

"Do what?" Pat screamed at them. 

"Land. Get back in your seat," the pilot said. 

She had no intention of going back to her seat, but the copilot  turned and shoved her out of the control

compartment, yanked the door  shut and latched it 

Pat went back and sat down. She saw the dark ship flash past, and  got a look at the cross on its fuselage. Nazi.

A Blohm and Voss HA 140,  she decided. It didn't have twice the speed of the Clipper, after all.  But it had

enough. 

She watched the Nazi ship roll and come back, a nasty streamlined  thing with its twin rudder fins. 

Then the copilot was at Pat's elbow. "We've got a little choice  for you to make," he said. His face was gray

and sick. 

Pat stared at him. She suddenly felt gray herself. "They want you,"  the copilot said. 

"Me?" 

"Yes. Here's the situation. They tell us over the radio if we'll  land and put you aboard their ship, they'll let us

go. If not, they'll  shoot us down." 

Pat saw what he meant There were about fifteen other passengers  aboard the Clipper, four of them women. It

was one or fifteen. 

"I'll get off," she said. "And don't look so whitefaced about it." 

The copilot swallowed a couple of times. He muttered, "Sorry I  shoved you around a while ago. I'll go tell

the pilot" 

The Clipper began a slow spiral toward the sea. 

Pat, looking down anxiously, decided that the sea was smooth enough  that the Clipper could land and take off

safely. In fact, the sea was  remarkably without its usual squirming swell. There were waves, but  they were

small, like the waves on a pond. 

She couldn't see the HA 140, but she knew it must be circling  above. 

The Clipper pilot made a good landing. There was some shock and  splash. 

Pat went forward. 

The radioman put his head out of his cubby and said, "I slammed  plenty of power into the radio during the

talk with the Fritzes. The  mainland probably picked it up. It may not do any good." 


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"Thanks," Pat said. 

The pilot and copilot were tussling with a bulky bundle. 

"Liferaft," the pilot explained. "We're supposed to put you afloat  on it, and leave you. You and your

baggage." 

'That's a great future," Pat said, and then won dered how she could  say something that silly when she was so

scared. 

The pilot told her, "We'll circle back past here in half an hour or  so, and if they're not around, we'll pick you

up. Or do you want us  to?" 

"You're darn right I want you to," Pat told him fervently. 

"Okay. I didn't know what was going on here." 

"Neither do I," Pat said. 

They put the raft into the water, and helped Pat into the thing. It  was a conventional life raft carried by planes

at sea. 

The copilot showed her a container of small packages. "Sea trace,"  he explained. "Colors the water, so

another plane can see you from the  air. Use it if you're here when we come back." 

"Thanks." 

"And if they start machinegunning you, just stick below the  surface and stay down. Bullets won't go far into

the water, and they  can only fire bursts that are short. In one dive, they won't be able to  shoot at you for more

than twenty seconds, probably. You can stay under  that long." 

Pat watched them climb back into the Clipper, watched the Clipper,  looking as big as a house and as safe as

home and mother, move away,  gather speed, take off. She gave her attention to the Nazi. 

The HA 140 was orbiting slowly in the sky above. The pilot waited  all of five minutes, until the Clipper, as

large as it was, became  nothing but a sound as faint as a memory in the distance. 

Then the Fritz came downstairs, squared off, cocked his nose up and  set down. The ship taxied over to Pat's

vicinity. 

A bullethead popped out and screamed, "Konnen sie hier herkommen?" 

"I guess I can," Pat said. They wanted to know if she could come  there. She began to paddle with the folding

oar that had been in the  raft. 

The man in charge of the torpedo bomber was a hard brown fellow  with fox ears, moist eyes and the most

polite manner Pat had  encountered in a long time. 

"Wie g'eht es Ihnen, fraulein," he said. 


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And when Pat said, "How about some English?" he smiled and said,  "Ach, I vill do mine pest, but I ham not

goot." 

He certainly wasn't goot. He sounded like a Katzenjammer Kid. He  had more braid on him than an admiral

Pat stared, and her eyes  popped. He was an Admiral! 

Shades of little fishes, Pat thought, an Admiral. The first real  live Admiral I ever met, come to think of it, and

that is something,  even if he is a Fritz Admiral. 

"You are goot enough, Admiral," she told him. "Now what goes on?" 

He said, with great politeness, "I vas to get you, fraulein. Beyond  dot, I know nottings. Is dot all your

baggage?' 

Brother, that accent is precious, Pat nearly said. But she kept the  words back. "That's all my baggage  a

handbag." 

The HA 140 bounced around on what swell there was, and did a none  too good job of getting off. The sea is

not the best landing for a  seaplane even on the calmest of days, and the smaller the plane the  worse the

prospects. This one, although it wasn't exactly small, was  none too stable on its streamlined floats. Pat knew

enough about flying  to nearly bite through her lower lip during the takeoff. 

The Admiral was worried, too. She saw him wipe perspiration off his  forehead. But once airborne, the plane

climbed with a roaring abandon. 

There was not much room in the Blohm and Voss. There is never much  room in bombers, no matter how

large the craft, and this was no  exception. Pat had a small round iron stool on which to sit, and  nothing to lean

against The only part of the outer world she could see  was a small swatch of sky across which a cloud

occasionally moved, and  once the moon. 

She sat there. They switched off the lights, except the infrareds  which lighted the fluorescent figures on the

instrument panels. The two  motors drummed with a heavy force, as if they were under the floor  somewhere

instead of out on the wings. There was not much vibration and  only a little lunging in air currents. 

Pat began to get a small feeling. Impressed, was another way of  putting it The Admiral did that for her,

because, no doubt, he was her  first Admiral. He wasn't a full Admiral, but he was part of a one, and  even

partAdmirals didn't go around personally forcing down passenger  planes and taking off single passengers,

unless it was pretty important 

She remembered that they hadn't searched her. Not even her handbag. 

Hardly was that thought in her mind when the Admiral pointed at her  handbag. 

"You vill let me see dot, nein?" he said. 

Pat let him see it He went through the purse. He did it rapidly,  and Pat could tell that he was looking for

something, and that he  didn't find it 

He looked up at her. 

"You haff gun?" he asked. 


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"I haff not," Pat said sourly. 

"Where is dot gun?" 

"What gun?" 

"Dot gross vun." 

"Says which?" 

"Big gun." He illustrated the approximate size of Pat's western  type sixshooter with his hands. "Where is?" 

"You want to know where my pistol is?" Pat demanded. 

"Ja." 

"A little rabbit ate it," Pat said. 

She spent the next hour wondering why in the dickens her  sixshooter had become so important 

THE ship was flying very high at the end of the hour. They came  back and gave Pat a German altitude

oxygen mask and showed her how to  use it She was slightly altitude sick anyway when the pilot throttled  the

motors down to idling, pulled on his heat, and began to glide. 

They glided for a long time. The pilot, the Admiral, the other two  Nazis in the crew were tight and nervous,

watching whatever was below. 

The change in altitude made Pat's ears hurt. She swallowed  repeatedly, tried yawning. 

Then, unexpectedly, the plane was on the sea again. It floated  there, the motors still idling. Pilot and crew still

had their tension.  The pilot punched at a switch. Signaling, Pat decided, with his  navigation lights. 

The Admiral came back to Pat, squirming through the thicket of  mechanism that filled the bomber interior. 

"Where is dot sixshooter?" he asked. 

"How bad do you want to know?" Pat demanded. 

The German was no fool. He shrugged. "Dot is too bad," he said. He  went away again. 

Pat heard a motor. A boat. It came closer, drew alongside. 

She was transferred from the plane to a snaky launch large enough  to be seagoing, but built for speed of

around fifty miles an hour. 

The officer in the launch wasn't as polite. He was brisk with her. 

"Where is your baggage?" he demanded, speaking good English. 

"This is it," Pat said, exhibiting her handbag. 


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"You cross the Atlantic with only that?" 

"I left in a hurry," Pat said. 

"Where is the sixshooter?" 

"Oh, nuts!" Pat said. 

The officer demanded again that she produce the pistol, and she  ignored him. The officer then went on deck,

and shouted at the Admiral,  in German. 

Pat could speak and understand German, although she preferred not  to use it. She was not particularly fluent,

but she got what was going  on outside. 

The officer in the boat and the Admiral in the plane were  quarreling about the gun. They were saying things

to each other that  weren't polite. Pat's first impression of the man in the boat was that  he was a tough top

sergeant  or whatever the equivalent would be on a  boat  with no manners. But listening to him fuss

with the Admiral,  she changed her ideas. No sergeant would talk that way to an admiral. 

The Admiral was supposed to have gotten the sixshooter and he  hadn't, and he was being criticized. The two

men finished off by giving  each other a roundhouse cussing, then the boat got under way, and the  plane took

off. 

The tough guy put his head down the hatch to glare at Pat 

"You are in bad trouble," he said, 

Then he switched out the lights, and went to the wheel. The boat  stuck its nose up, climbed half out of the

water, and made knots. 

X

THERE was some trace of daylight in the eastern sky when the  speedboat snugged up against the old truck

tires which served as  fenders on a float in a small bay. 

Pat was bustled off the craft A man seized each of her arms.  Another man was all ready with wide adhesive

tape and he clapped it  over her mouth before she knew what was going to happen. After that,  the best noise

she could make was a loud buzz through her nostrils. 

The two who had her arms ran her up a path that twisted up the face  of a near cliff. The tough fellow trotted

behind her with her handbag. 

At the hilltop, she changed hands again. 

This time, she nearly shrieked with relief. 

"Mr. Carter!" she nearly cried. 

But Mr. Carter caught her eye and made, with seeming casualness, a  gesture of dragging at the cigarette he

was smoking. And when he did  that, he laid a finger across his lips signaling for silence. 


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Mr. Carter also demanded the sixshooter. He did it even more  angrily than the tough guy on the boat had

demanded it of the Admiral,  and the outcome was about the same. The two fell to swearing at each  other in

German. 

The parting of the two groups was extremely ill tempered. 

The tough man went back to the speedboat. Pat heard the speedboat  leave the bay. 

Mr. Carter told Pat sharply, "Get moving. You will go with us! And  if you try to make a noise around that

gag, it will be bad." 

Pat had nearly forgotten the gag, which would have prevented her  crying out Mr. Carter's name. He must

have known that. So he had  signaled her to admonish her not to let on that she recognized him. 

They began walking. Mr. Carter and Pat alone at first Then they  were joined by three armed men. 

Two of the newcomers were some of Mr. Carter's blankfaced men, and  the third was a shouldersback

young man who was obviously another Nazi  officer. 

They did not walk far, less than a kilometer, which brought them to  a stone house, a pleasant place covered

with vines and with bright blue  shutters. Pat was taken into a large room which had a fireplace and  pleasant

furniture. 

"I will question the fraulein," Mr. Carter told the others. "Leave  us alone. Go outside and keep a sharp

lookout" 

The others left. 

When they were alone, Mr. Carter dropped his voice and said  urgently, "You mustn't let on that you know

me. Keep on pretending, as  you have been. It is very important." 

Pat gurgled, pulled at the tape on her lips. Mr. Carter helped her  undo it, warning, "Very quiet, please!"

Getting the tape off was  agonizing. 

"What on earth are you doing here?" Pat gasped, when she could  speak. 

"I am very sorry I did not take you and Mr. Savage into my  confidence before," Mr. Carter said' "As a matter

of fact, I am  supposed to be a German agent" 

"But you  Mr. Dilling said you and those  those men with the  blank faces  were working for him." 

"That's my real job." 

"I don't  " 

"It's a bit confusing," said Mr. Carter. "First, let me say that I  am a Dane by nationality, and I do not like

Nazis. There was a time  when I was not intelligent enough to realize what Nazis were, and at  that time I

started doing spying work for them. My profession in  Denmark was that of private detective, and at first the

Nazis were just  other clients for me. Later, I realized the kind of fellows they were,  and I wanted to quit, but I

was too smart to tell them I wanted to." 


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He sighed, as if the complexities of his past life distressed him. 

"I came to Portugal to escape working for them," he said. "But it  didn't work. They approached me here in

Portugal, and told me to work  for them, and threatened my relatives in Denmark if I didn't That made  me

very angry, I assure you. So I went to work for them. But I also  went to work for Mr. Dilling, who is an

Allied Intelligence official." 

"I knew that about Mr. Dilling," Pat said. "But what are you doing  here?" 

"I am supposed to get that sixshooter from you." 

"Holy cow!" Pat said. "That sixshooter again. Why is it so  important?" 

"I don't know," said Mr. Carter bitterly. "I wish I did. Can you  tell me?" 

"I have no idea," Pat assured him. "It mystifies me." 

"Where is it?" 

"What?" 

"The sixshooter. Where is it?" 

"The Admiral got it," Pat lied. 

Mr. Carter seemed stupefied with astonishment "What did you say?" 

"That German Admiral on the plane, the very polite one. He got it,"  Pat said. 

"Why did he do that?" 

"Darned if I know," Pat said. 

Mr. Carter sat down in a chair. His knees seemed to be weak. "This  complicates things," he said. He took his

head in his hands as if there  was an ache inside his skull. He sat there looking at nothing, and  saying nothing.

although his lips moved frequently without sound. Pat  decided he was swearing to himself. 

"That damned Admiral," Mr. Carter said finally, "must have taken a  notion to look out for number one. 

"Why would he do that?" Pat demanded. "German Admirals, like German  Generals and bigwig Nazis," said

Mr. Carter, "are going to have  troubles ahead of them, and they can see it. Germany has lost the war.  There

are going to be war atrocity trials. A German Admiral will need  influence. This one may figure he can buy

influence with that gun." 

"But why in the dickens is the gun so in demand?" 

"I wish I knew, I sure do," said Mr. Carter fervently. 

"What is going to happen to me?" 


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"We'll watch out for you, my dear," Mr. Carter assured her. "You  will be safe. I will take care of you. I am

supposed to get the  whereabouts of the gun out of you, by force, if necessary. 

"Who is giving you your orders?" 

Mr. Carter grimaced. "I think they come straight from the biggest  Nazi of them all." 

"Where is he?" 

"I wish I knew that, more than anything," Mr. Carter said  fervently. 

"Does Doc Savage know you are pretending to be a Nazi agent?" 

"Not yet." Mr. Carter grimaced again. "You may have to vouch for me  to him, if he catches me in what seems

to be a compromising position." 

"Where is Doc?" 

"He's with that fellow, Hans Berkshire." 

"And Monk and Ham?" 

"They're with Doc Savage, I think." 

"All with Berkshire?" 

"Yes." 

"And who is Berkshire?" 

"Oh, he's really what he says he is, a German who is connected with  a patriotic group of German antiNazis,"

Mr. Carter said sourly. 

"You don't sound as if you liked Berkshire." 

"I've never met him personally. He is bungling around in this  thing, complicating it. But he may actually

know where Hitler is.  There's always that chance." 

Mr. Carter lapsed into another spell of staring at nothing, holding  his head, and muttering bad words in a low

voice. Pat heard some of the  words, and they were Danish. The Danish language seemed to have a very

picturesque vocabulary of profanity. 

Then Mr. Carter stood up. 

"I must report on my attempt to question you," he said. "I will put  the gag back on you. You must continue to

look very scared." 

"You going to tell them the Admiral got the sixshooter?" Pat asked. 

"Oh, no indeed." 


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"why not?" 

"Because they might order me to kill you," said Mr. Carter  seriously. "But as long as they think you may

know where the gun is, my  surmise is that they will have you kept alive." 

He sounded as if he wanted to shiver. Pat felt that way, too. She  watched Mr. Carter leave. 

Mr. Carter closed the door carefully, after smiling at her, and  locked it 

He met one of the blankfaced men outside. 

"Go back and watch that female wildcat," he told the blankfaced  man. "And expect anything. She is a very

smart girl." 

"Yes, sir," the man said. 

They had spoken German. 

Mr. Carter took a flowerbordered winding path to another house, a  smaller one, about a hundred yards

distant Here there were three more  of the expressionless men, one of whom was working on a portable radio.

The other two were sharing a bottle at a table. 

Mr. Carter poured himself a drink. 

"That girl lied to me," he said sourly. "I know in my bones she  lied to me, yet she did it so earnestly that I

can't be sure." 

"What was her lie?" one of the others inquired. 

"That Admiral Gruehuntz took the sixshooter away from her and kept  it for himself. As you know very well,

that is a lie. Gruehuntz would  not do that" 

"Why wouldn't he?" 

Mr. Carter made faces over his drink. "That is the hell of it, why  wouldn't he? That is why I am not happy at

all." 

"You think Admiral Gruehuntz maybe did take the gun?" 

"It is possible I am not thinking at all," Mr. Carter said  bitterly. "Otherwise I would make more progress. 

"Does the girl think you are really not a Nazi agent?" 

"If she lied to me, why should she? That scares me. 

"Did you tell her we were not Nazi agents either, but just  pretending to be?" 

"Yes, of course," Mr. Carter said, unable to remember whether he  had told Pat that or not. "Yes, you will be

as safe as I am, should Doc  Savage catch us all." 

"You think that will happen?" the other demanded, alarmed. 


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Mr. Carter swore philosophically. "I think it is impossible.  Absolutely impossible," he said. "But here is the

sensible other side  of it Doc Savage just possibly could come out on top." 

He leaned forward and deepened his voice dramatically to emphasize  that he was merely speculating. 

"Mr. Savage has an international reputation, and a man does not get  an international reputation for doing the

things Mr. Savage does  without having a certain ability," he said. "The point I am trying to  make is this:

Doubtless many other men have thought they had Savage in  a spot where he could not possibly succeed

against them. But he did. So  let's not be complete optimists." 

"When will Savage be finished?" 

Mr. Carter said, "Savage and Berkshire and Savage's two aides, Monk  and Ham, will probably start out to

grab the Fuehrer very shortly. They  have certain clues which will lead them, granting the devil sits with  us,

into complete extermination." 

"What about the girl?" 

"Her lease on life," Mr. Carter told the man, "is hanging by two  threads. The sixshooter, and the fact that

Doc Savage is still among  us. She is also in the unenviable position that one thread will not  support her

continued mortality." 

He was pleased with himself at waxing oratorical. The other man   they were speaking German  was a

little confused. He was silent a  while. 

"If Savage is killed," he said patiently, wanting to get everything  clear, "Miss Patricia will also be killed." 

"Immediately." 

'Would the other two, Monk and Ham  " 

"Oh, they would have to be included in the slaughter," Carter said. 

"And it will happen soon?" 

"That's right." 

The blankfaced man sighed. He had just one more question, and he  put it plaintively, in a tone that had in it

a little of  youhavedugawaythemolehillbutwhataboutthemountain? 

"Who has got the sixshooter?" he asked. 

Mr. Carter swore at him unhappily. 

XI

DOC Savage had made his second trip away from Hans Berkshire's  house. On his other trip into the night, he

had found Monk and Ham, and  told them to conduct a brief general investigation along any lines that

occurred to them. Now he wanted to see what they had learned. 


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He found Monk and Ham under a tree, making a breakfast on sweet  rolls and milk which they must have

bought in the village. 

Monk said, "I didn't find out too much. It's hard to find anybody  to talk to that early in the morning, though,

and everybody wants to  talk Portuguese." 

"You should have tried someone besides barmaids in the allnight  joints," Ham suggested. 

"That's a lie!" 

"Well, who did you try?" 

Monk said sheepishly, "Okay, okay, but it was only one barmaid, and  a good idea, because they get all the

gossip. I found out that  Berkshire has owned the house three years or so, that he doesn't mix  very much, but is

a nice guy and fairly wellliked for a foreigner. He  kicks in regularly to the local charities. His servants are

local  people, and he pays them well. He isn't here much. He is supposed to be  a Holland Dutchman with a

business in Lisbon that makes him travel a  lot." Monk grimaced. "Fairly innocent picture, isn't it?" 

Doc turned to Ham. "What did you dig up?" 

"It was a little more scientific than my homely friend here," Ham  said. "I got the names of Berkshire's

servants, and worked on them.  They're a nice grade of servants, chosen for their ability as such.  Most of them

have been with Berkshire steadily since he bought the  house, about three years ago. Berkshire is not there

much of the time,  only at intervals, and then for not much more than a week at the most." 

"What about Berkshire's habits?" Doc asked. 

"Okay, as far as I could learn. He speaks English, French and  Spanish fluently, and Italian less fluently. He

seems to have quite a  bit of money, but he does not throw it around by giving large parties.  In fact, there are

very few friends as visitors at the house. The  servants like him." 

Ham frowned, digging in his recollection for other facts.  "Berkshire likes American movies, and he has a

sound projector in the  house. He gets American sound films from Lisbon and has private  showings of them.

He runs the machine himself, and will run the  American films over and over. 

Monk said, "That doesn't sound so tough. The guy probably has  movies for a hobby." 

Ham nodded. "Well, there wasn't much more. The servants are all for  him, as I said, but they don't actually

know much about him. With a  fine house like that, they feel he should get married and settle down.  when

Barni Cuadrado came to visit the place, they were as pleased as  the dickens because they thought it might be

a match, Berkshire about  to get a wife. And that's about where the situation stands now   except that the

servants think there's a little scandal around the  house now, because Berkshire gave them, beginning

yesterday, a week's  vacation with pay, and told them not to come around the place." 

"Is that the first time anything of the sort has happened?" 

That seemed to be the extent of the news Monk and Ham had gathered.  Doc told them to keep a sharp

lookout, and be ready to trail him, or to  give him some help if he needed it Then he walked back to

Berkshire's  house. 

Barni Cuadrado came flying down the path, her hair tousled, her  eyes wild. 


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"Mr. Savage!" she cried. "A terrible thing has happened!" 

She took him inside to listen to the radio. It was a good radio,  and she had it tuned to the shortwave program

which was being beamed  to Spain and Portugal at this hour. 

"He will be on again with the news in a few minutes," she said. 

A moment later, the announcer in New York came on, giving the news  in English. He talked about the gains

in Europe, the progress in the  Pacific, and some political stuff. 

Then came the news that Pat had been removed from the Clipper  enroute from Lisbon to New York. 

The news seemed to freeze everything inside Doc for a moment. Then  he broke the shock, faced Berkshire

and demanded', "Where is your  telephone?" 

He got a man named Lander at the American embassy, and he didn't  know Lander. But Lander must have

been expecting his call' because he  had information ready. He was able to tell Doc, in full detail, how Pat  had

been taken from the Clipper by a German bomber. 

Lander said, "I am instructed to tell you that the Germans were  very insistent that Miss Savage bring all her

baggage with her when she  changed planes." 

"It was not just a routine request?" 

"No, it was extremely insistent. They seemed to want Miss Savage's  baggage as much as they wanted her." 

"Which would make it appear they thought she was carrying something  they wanted?" 

"That would be a good deduction." 

The embassy had no more information, so Doc broke the connection.  He faced Berkshire and said grimly,

"Look here, what are we waiting on?  Why are we sitting here in this house doing nothing?" 

Berkshire said, "We can go now. 

"Why didn't you say so?" 

"Intended to," Berkshire said mildly. 'As a matter of fact, the  messenger is just coming, so I could hardly have

told you before." 

He indicated the nearest window. 

Doc Savage, gripping at his nerves, putting down rage and  impatience and fear, went to the window. A man

was coming. A young man,  darkhaired and smoothcheeked, wearing shorts and a light sweater.  Berkshire

introduced him to Doc Savage as Kinder. It was a nickname,  obviously. The word Kinder meant child, so it

was another way of  calling the boy Kid. He looked like a soft, gentle, sweet character. 

"The plane is waiting," the boy said. 

IT was a small plane as the world was in the habit of thinking of  planes. This one was no bomber that had

cost a million nor a transport  that had cost hundreds of thousands. This one had cost not more than  ten


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thousand dollars. It could carry a pilot and three passengers. 

Berkshire explained, "It belongs to the boy, to Kinder. He does a  little commercial flying from Switzerland,

and is a great help to us. 

The plane had floats. It was on a flat stretch of the river inland  from Lisbon. 

Doc asked, "Where are we going?" 

"Switzerland." 

"Exactly where in Switzerland?" 

"Interlaken." 

"Which lake?" 

"The lower one, Thun. Or rather, the arm of it called Untersee,  nearest Interlaken." 

Doc nodded. "All right, one more question," he said. "Why are we  being followed?" 

Berkshire jumped violently, said, "Gott!" in a  frightened voice.  Barni Cuadrado jumped visibly. The

darkhaired smoothcheeked boy  became very still and looked at Doc Savage speculatively. 

"I think we were followed. I could be wrong," Doc said. 

"We'd better look into that," Berkshire muttered. 

Doc said, "You three stay here. Better get out of sight and keep  your eyes open. 

He could tell they were scared. He knew that they had not known  anyone was trailing them. 

Undergrowth around about was fairly thick. Doc walked into it,  going southwest, but immediately changed

his course when he was out of  sight, and went northeast. He walked carefully, silently, and shortly  he found

Monk. 

Monk was leaning against a small tree, grinning.  "They didn't see  us, did they?" 

"Apparently not," Doc said. "Were you two in that dilapidated  Austin car?" 

"That's right." 

"Where is Ham?" 

"He is down getting a photograph of the plane. We didn't know what  might come up, and a picture could be

handy." 

Doc said, "Get hold of a plane. You had better get to Mr. Dilling  in a hurry, because probably he can supply

you with a plane. If you do  it quick enough, and get a fastenough plane, you can beat us to  Switzerland." 

Monk nodded. "Okay. where in Switzerland?" 


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"Interlaken. Thun lake, the end nearest Interlaken. The neck of the  lake is called Untersee." 

"Anything more definite?" 

"No." 

"We'll get there," Monk said. 

XII

IT was a typical Swiss afternoon when they spiraled down to Lake  Thun. At high altitude, they were able to

see the perpetual glaciers  and snow on Monch, Elger and the Jungfrau, beyond the chasm that was  the valley

of Lauterbrunen. The clouds hung in layers against the peaks  close to Interlaken, the lake water was crinkling

and blue. 

Barni Cuadrado gripped Doc's arm and said, "This is what I call  God's country." 

Relief was a tinkling in her voice. The redheaded girl was glad to  get home. Doc studied her curiously,

asked, "Your home is near here,  isn't it?" 

She tried to point, then said the hills hid her home. It was on the  mountain above Interlaken, she said, on the

north side of the stream. 

The darkhaired boy was a good flier. He had army habits, and they  were German army habits. The boy was

Luftwaffe trained. He made a fine  landing, shut off the motor and let the wind sail the plane backward  toward

a dock. 

"Ever in the German air force?" Doc Savage asked the boy. 

The boy thought about it for a while. Evidently he concluded that  his Luftwaffe training had been evident

"Yes," he said. "I was in it I  deserted. How did you know?" 

"Every army trains its fliers a little differently," Doc told him.  "You show Luftwaffe traits." 

"I'm not proud of them," the boy said. 

He climbed out and jumped to the dock and fended the plane away  while they got ashore. The spot where

they had landed was a little  boatlanding typical of the Swiss lakes. Nearby was a settlement, not  large

enough to be a village, three or four houses and a chapel and a  general store selling everything from fine lace

handkerchiefs to  packsacks, woodensoled shoes and cowbells of many sizes. 

The scene was placid, rural, picturesque. The air was cool,  pleasant, but chilly with a little of the zip of the

glaciers on  Jungfrau. There was the sound of running water somewhere. 

The pilot extended a hand solemnly to Berkshire, said, "Good luck,"  in fair English. Then he did the same

with Barni, with Doc Savage. His  young face was solemnly inscrutable. Doc gathered he wasn't going  along. 

They started walking along a little road that was more of a path. 

"The pilot know what's up?" Doc asked. 


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Berkshire shook his head. "No. He knows I am with an antiGerman  underground group, but that is all he

does know." 

"Where are we going?" 

"There is an inn near. A car will come for us there. They will have  seen the plane arrive, and send the car." 

Doc frowned. "How much more of this running around is there to be  done?" 

"Very little," Berkshire said grimly. 

THE inn was made of logs and native stone. They had dark coffee and  rich cakes on the terrace. Berkshire

seemed nervous, expectant, while  Barni was less uneasy now. 

Without being too obvious about it, Doc scrutinized the lake for  some sign of a plane in which Monk and

Ham might have come. He didn't  see one, and he was depressed more than was reasonably necessary. The

lake was big, and a plane could be anywhere in a score of coves. Or the  plane might have put Monk and Ham

ashore, then gotten out of there,  which would be more logical. But Doc was beaten down, a sign his nerves

were on edge. 

He was, he decided, aggravated with the way things were moving.  Walk and talk' walk and talk. And all the

while was the feeling that a  lot of things were going on that were secret, mysterious. 

Pat, for instance. How the devil had they known he was on the  Clipper for New York? Going over that in his

thoughts) Doc was sure  that no one but Mr. Dilling and Carter and a few of their men, a very  few, had known

Pat was on the Clipper. Had the Nazis gotten the  information from Dilling or Carter? Which one? Or had the

Nazis seen  Pat being put on the plane? 

And why had they wanted Pat so badly that they, had sent a bomber  to intercept the Clipper? The Germans

weren't in the habit of going  after commercial planes on the New YorktoPortugal service in that  fashion.

For one thing, the Portuguese would raise billyhell about it.  There had been a day when Portugal wouldn't

have meant much to the  Nazis, but that day was gone. 

Why had the Nazis particularly wanted Pat's baggage? 

"Berkshire," Doc said. 

"Yes." 

"You have agents here in Switzerland, haven't you?" 

"Yes." 

"Then why," Doc asked, "go to all this trouble to have me grab the  Fuehrer?" 

"It may be a mighty tough job," Berkshire said. 

"You men aren't afraid of tough jobs. Not if you've gone this far  with the thing." 

Berkshire nodded. "That's right." 


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"Then why me?" 

"I told you that before," Berkshire said. "The man who takes the  Fuehrer must be an important man, a man

the German people will believe.  You are such a man. You, in fact, are the only one we could think of,  who

had enough stature. Just anyone could not do this, not  effectively." 

Barni Cuadrado said, ''Hans is right, Mr. Savage. At first one  would think that just anybody who captured the

German leader would be  effective. But this is a particular situation. The Germans must know we  have the

genuine man, in order to discredit the double who is now in  Berlin." 

Doc nodded gloomily. That was logical. And they'd told it to him  before. 

He shook his head at Barni Cuadrado. 

"You don't intend to follow this to the end, I hope," he said. 

"Why not?" 

'Too dangerous." 

She smiled somewhat thinly. "You haven't much of an opinion of my  ability, have you?" 

"I didn't say that  " 

"Or are you just lowrating women in general?" she asked. 

He was angry, and about to let her know he was angry, when a  middleaged man with a beard joined them

and said, in German, "Das  auto. Werden sie gleich fertig sein?" 

The car was ready. 

The machine was an old touring with the top down. Berkshire, with a  violence that was unexpected, berated

the old man for a fool and told  him to get the top up and the curtains on. They lost time doing that 

Doc watched Berkshire, and saw perspiration on the man's neck, on  his wrists above his gloves. The man,

Doc thought, seems never to be  without gloves and cane and that intense animalaliveness. But the

animalaliveness was growing now, so they must be getting near the end  of the trail. 

"Is this going to be rough?" Doc asked. 

"Probably very rough." 

"Then Barni drops out now," Doc said. 

"I think she'd better," Berkshire agreed. 

"But Hans  " 

Berkshire gestured impatiently, interrupted, "Do not argue, please.  You will leave us and go home. It is close

enough to walk, is it not?" 


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She tried to argue. "But I've worked for this moment  " 

"Please do as I say!" There was an unexpected quality of authority  in Berkshire's voice now, the tone and

manner, somehow, of a man who  had given many orders and had them obeyed. 

Barni said angrily, "Hans, I am going to hate you for this!" 

Berkshire shrugged. "I would hate myself if you got your pretty  face shot off." 

Barni gave up. She turned to Doc.  "I don't know whether I will see  you again." 

"You'll see him again," Berkshire said. "We will have a great  celebration together when this is finished." 

"All right." Barni extended her hand. "Until we celebrate, then.  And good luck." She shook hands with Doc. 

She did not leave, but stood there until the top was up on the car  and the side curtains were in place, until the

car got moving with Doc  Savage and Berkshire and turned a bend in the road. She stood there  until its sound

had died below the tinkling of a small stream somewhere  in the woods nearby. 

Then she began walking. Her home was not much more than two  kilometers distant, a little over a mile. 

She did not walk far. 

A man with a face as blank and expressionless as a cadaver came out  of the brush beside the path. 

"You will not shriek or otherwise cause a commotion," he said. 

Barni stared at him in horror, because he was one of the men who  had so terrified Pat and herself in Lisbon. 

He shoved her a gun, cocked. 

"Very still," he said, in German this time. 

Another man came out of the shrubbery. He walked behind Barni and  suddenly gripped her arms. A third

man appeared, and slapped his hands  over her person, yanked her handbag out of her fingers. 

"You had better gag her," the first man said. 

They gagged her. They put a roll of gauze in her mouth, a large  roll which filled her mouth completely. Then,

to keep her from getting  rid of it, they tied more gauze under her jaw and over the top of her  head. The man

in charge approved the job. "It looks as if she had a  bandaged jaw," he said. 

Then he indicated the way the car had gone. 

"We walk that way," he said. 

Barni stared at him in horror. 

"They are going into a trap," he told her gleefully. "A most clever  trap." 


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They began to walk, holding each of her arms, one waling ahead.  They walked steadily, purposefully, and

Barni's heart seemed to stop  within her and terror moved through her body making her fingers cold  and the

world like a dream to her mind. The walk was worse than she had  imagined an experience could be. 

The three deadfaced men stalked in silence, and she wondered what  was the matter with their faces, what

thing could be wrong that made  them look as they looked. 

But then they met a man and a woman walking arm in arm, the man  swinging one of those steelpointed

canes which the vacationists buy to  attach the little metal tabs they have purchased stamped with the names

of the places they have visited. This cane had fifteen or twenty tabs,  all new. 

Barni's captors underwent an astounding change. They burst out in  the expressions of men who were

enjoying themselves completely, smiles,  laughter, glad little gestures. And song. They sang a little song,

kidding Barni's bandaged jaw. 

Something about: "And she fell down, and she broke her crown  " 

The two vacationists went on. The singers stopped. The deadpan  looks went back on their faces. 

Fear made Barni's nerves threads of ice, because now she knew the  men weren't freaks. They weren't fellows

with something wrong with  their faces, and they weren't stupid. They were coldblooded, clever  devils, They

were actors. Their minds were as quick as dynamite. 

She was having difficulty walking. She had never imagined she could  become that terrorstricken.' 

She did not know, at first, what stopped them. It was some kind of  a signal, something they must have heard.

They halted, waited, and Mr.  Carter came down the path. 

Barni felt a surge of relief at discovering the blond,  capablelooking Mr. Carter. He was supposed to be an

employee of the  Allied intelligence. Surely he was alright. 

He disillusioned her in a hurry. 

"You're a damned nuisance," he told her sourly. He wheeled on the  blankfaced men. "You got here with her

all right? You didn't attract  any attention?" 

They said they had met only a man and a woman, vacationists, and  had fooled them all right. 

"Come on," Carter said. 

They didn't walk far. Half a kilometer, the last third of it along  a stony path, through a large stone gate. 

Barni thought: I know this place. It Is the old Basel family  estate, and the last Basel, Joaquil, died four years

ago. The place was  sold three years ago to  her thoughts froze. 

The estate  about twenty hectares in area, a lodge house, a  little lake, a mansion of great size dating back

beyond the Napoleonic  war days  had been purchased by a rather mysterious person known as  Mr. Fruice,

an Austrian. A rumor had gotten around that Mr. Fruice was  a different man one time than another  in

other words, more than one  man had introduced himself as Mr. Fruice. There was a little mystery  about it.

Nothing exciting. Just mild curiosity and gossip. 


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Mr. Fruice, decided Barni, was the German leader. Certainty poured  into her mind. Everything checked.  This

was the hideout which had been  purchased  against the day when Germany would be defeated. 

It gave her the distinct feeling of having walked out into an  abyss. 

THEY took her into the lodge house, which was a smaller building  for the servants. 

Patricia Savage occupied a chair in the large room. She looked  neat, unruffled, composed, but there was a

washed grayness about her  face and a tightness around her eyes. 

"So they dragged you Into the show, too," Pat said. 

Mr. Carter removed the gag from Barni's mouth. He said, "Screaming  won't do you a bit of good. And it

might aggravate us. Our nerves are  somewhat on edge, anyway." 

"Pat!" Barni gasped. "Why did they go to all the trouble of taking  you off the plane?" 

"So you heard about that?" 

"It was broadcast on the radio." 

"Oh." Pat was surprised. "Does Doc know about it?" 

"Yes." 

Pat grimaced. "I can imagine what he thought when he found out I  was back in trouble again." She glanced

up. "Where is Doc?" 

Barni started to answer, didn't, and looked meaningly at the men to  show why she didn't 

"I get it," Pat said. "Well, they haven't got their hands on Doc,  at least." 

Mr. Carter laughed. "Just give us a few more minutes, my dear." 

Pat frowned at him. "You want to hear a little story?" 

"Of what nature?" 

"A story," Pat said, "about a mean little boy named Stinky. He  liked to smash up things. He used to get boxes

of things out of the  house and hit them with the axe to hear the noise and see things break.  One day he got a

box out of the back yard, got all set with his axe,  and hit a lick. Only this time the box was a hive full of bees,

and the  bees were all over Stinky in a minute. Get the moral?" 

Carter, in a tone uglier than any he had used so far, said,  'Believe me, I am not in the mood for cleverness."

He turned and  stalked off. 

Pat glanced at Barni. "Did you get asked about the sixshooter?" 

"The what?" 


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"The piece of artillery that my grandfather used to fight Indians  with," Pat said. "It sounds ridiculous, but

somehow or other the fate  of Germany seems to hinge on the thing." 

XIII

DOC Savage waited with Berkshire while the middleaged man with the  beard disappeared along a

shrubberybordered walk' was gone a few  minutes, and came back. 

"The way is clear," the man said. 

They went forward. They were in the grounds of a sizable estate.  Below and to the left, Doc Savage could see

a colored rooftop, and  Berkshire had told him it was the lodgehouse of the estate. But it was  the house for

which they were headed. 

Berkshire said, "'I.his estate was originally owned by a native  family named Basel, but the last Basel died

about four years ago. A  year later the place was sold to a man using the name of Fruice. This  Fruice was not

Hitler, but a Hitler agent, his closest friend, and a  man who is on this present plot with him. Another place,

adjoining, was  acquired for Hitler. He is there now." 

Berkshire pointed. 

"Just over the stone fence yonder," he said. "So you see, we are  getting close." 

The man with the beard took a dark pistol out of his clothing. He  glanced at them after he did that, and his

eyes looked wide, wild. 

That fellow, Doc thought, won't be dependable in a tight spot 

He put the thought aside. It was not very important, put alongside  the other things he had in his mind. He was

tight, tense, with much the  feelings of a man who had been hunting tigers, and now had come face to  face

with a sound in a bush that he knew was the tiger. 

It wasn't any feeling of getting any nearer the Fuehrer, either. He  didn't believe he was any nearer. Not a bit

nearer than he had been in  Lisbon, probably. 

Rather, his tension, which was drawing and knotting until it was  actually a pain, came from the certainty that

his suspicions were true.  He had told no one his real ideas about this thing, had given no hint  as to what those

ideas were. He had been secretive. He had pretended to  be moderately gulli ble, not enough of a sucker to

make it too obvious  that he was pretending, and had gone along letting people think they  had tricked him 

probably some of them actually had fooled him, too   while he waited for the right moment There would be

a time, he  believed, when things would cage themselves for a moment and a quick  act on his part would slam

the cage door. 

It was nasty for the nerves, waiting. Man was made for action, and  patience was not given to him in large

quantities. 

And it was particularly bad now that he was fairly sure what was  what Violence would come soon if his

deductions were correct. They had,  he suspected, a little more stagesetting, and then they would try to  snap

the trap on him. 


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He gave them credit for a great deal of cleverness. They were, if  he had them figured right, going to chop just

once and let that do the  job. Which was good planning. One quick, complete massacre was a lot  safer than a

series of bushwhackings. 

The old man with the beard went ahead again. He came back. He  whispered to Berkshire. Doc got some of

what the old man was saying by  watching his lips. The old man was speaking German, and saying that  they

had better wait in the house a few minutes. But that everything  was set 

"We had better wait In the house a few minutes; he says," Berkshire  told Doc. 

THE house was majestic. It had been built back in the days when  grandeur was man's god. But the furniture

was poor, shabby. They  scuffled across the hall and into a walnutpaneled place with a  fireplace nearly as big

as the room. 

Berkshire got out his handkerchief and wiped the back of his neck  again, his wrists above his gloves. He

looked as if he would have liked  to give one long, loud scream. 

The old man with the beard arranged chairs for them. He moved  casually, as if they were just visitors and this

was any ordinary day.  But his old skin was the color of a lead bullet and his eyes as wild as  those of an

animal. 

They sat down. The old man was still there when Mr. Carter came in. 

Mr. Carter was already making shushing motions with his hands, and  he gave them a bigtoothed

haveconfidenceinme smile. 

"I'm the last man you expected to see, I know," he said rapidly.  "Now take it easy. Don't get excited. Let me

do some explaining." 

"How the dickens did you get here?" Doc demanded. 

Carter grimaced. 

"I'm afraid," he said, "that Mr. Dilling lost his nerve. By that, I  mean that he became afraid you couldn't

handle this alone. So he  assigned me." 

"But how did you get here?" 

"Clues. Luck. I'll give you all the details later, if you wish. But  right now Berkshire was looking wildly

concerned. "Who is this man, Mr.  Savage?" 

Doc said sourly, "He's a slick customer who has been working for  Allied Intelligence for two or three years

and hoping they won't find  out he's really a Nazi man." 

Carter looked hurt. "Really, Mr. Savage, that's not in the least  kind." 

"You're not a Nazi?" 

"No." 

"Want to bet?" Doc said skeptically. Then he added, "Or better  still, want to look at something?" 


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Doc Savage fished under his coat and brought out an object wrapped  in cloth. He unwrapped it' and disclosed

Pat's ornate old singleaction  sixshooter. 

Mr. Carter stared at the sixshooter. He lost color and his face  lost shape. 

Then he began screaming. He screamed, "Jon, Panke, Jacke! Come  here!" 

Then he made a convulsive gesture, evidently his idea of a very  smooth way to draw a gun and make

someone think he wasn't drawing a  gun. "You mustn't move," he told Doc Savage. 

Three men, probably Jon, Panke and Jacke, came galloping into the  room, prepared for the worst. They were

more of the men who could wear  expressionless faces. They wore neat civilian.an[ clothes, to which  they had

added steel helmets  German army  and bulletproof vests   German Luftwaffe  and cartridge belts

and grenade pouches. They  looked, with all the regalia, ridiculous. 

Once the three were in the room, they didn't seem to know what to  do with themselves. 

Doc Savage was in a leather chair. Alongside him, but a little  ahead of him, Berkshire was sitting on a

straightbacked chair,  crouched now, gloved hands fastened so tightly to his cane that the  gloveleather

looked tight. The man's hands had sweated so profusely  from nervousness that the gloves were showing

damp stains. 

Suddenly Berkshire started to get up. 

Doc said sharply, "Stay there, Berkshire! This is no time to move  around!" 

Carter said, "Savage, give me that sixgun." 

Doc looked at Carter. "It's loaded," he told Carter.  "Five  bullets. Fortyfour calibre. Enough to blow a man to

pieces." 

He continued to stare at Carter, scowling, puzzled by his feelings.  Fear  or whatever emotion lastditch

danger gave you  should be his  biggest emotion right now. It wasn't. 

His strongest feeling was one of elation at finally seeing through  many things, at finally understanding what

was going on and why.  Actually, it wasn't exactly understanding. He'd had suspicions. before.  Now they'd

checked out. His guesses had been right. 

He had gone, he thought grimly, a little far into the thing before  finally deciding that his ideas were correct.

Perhaps too far. The next  few minutes would tell that. 

Still he could not, he thought quietly, have been sure earlier. The  whole thing was a very cleverly woven net,

with few things being what  they seemed to be, and in a thing of this kind, he had to be certain.  He was sure

now. It was worth having to go so far into danger, to be  sure. Even if he didn't come out of it, it would be

worth it. 

It was a difficult matter to sit down and decide you would give  your life for something. He had never,

honestly to himself, made such a  decision. He didn't know whether he could. He doubted it. When a man  was

dealing with his own life, there were mental forces which were so  practical that they transcended anything

else. 


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"Sit still," he told Berkshire. "This isn't a time to move without  thinking." 

"Give me that sixshooter," Carter rasped. 

Doc Savage didn't give him the sixgun. 

He said, "Let me tell you two or three things, Carter. First, I am  wearing a bulletproof vest. You will have to

shoot me in the head when  you shoot. You aren't sighting that gun at me, and shooting from the  hip there is

an excellent chance of your missing. If you miss, you know  who I will kill." He frowned.  "If you start to lift

that gun to aim  it, I am going to shoot." 

Carter sat very still. 

"They say you've never shot a man," he said. 

"Could you think of a better time for me to begin?" 

Carter said nothing. He looked sick. 

Doc Savage, in a flat emotionless voice completely apart from his  more deadly occupation of watching Carter

and the three men, said, "I  had a hunch what Pat's gun meant, but I was not sure of it until she  was taken off

the plane and there was that report of her being ordered  to bring all her baggage." 

"Those attacks on Pat and Barni," Doc continued, "were a lot too  realistic, the way Pat described them, to be

an act. Pat is not  inexperienced. And you knew too much about Berkshire, here, when you  talked to Monk

and Ham and Pat in the hotel room prior to the  kidnapping which you were to stage. And the obvious effort to

get the  sixshooter from Pat  all of those things were noticeable when the  story was told to me later. They

didn't stand out But they were in the  story, and put together they had a meaning. Then, of course, when Pat

was taken off the Clipper, the thing was obvious. You wanted the gun." 

Carter said nothing some more. His eyes were small, crowded by the  nervous bunching of his eyebrows and

the knotting of his jaw muscles.  He seemed to be completely uncertain as to what he was to do. 

Doc asked, "Is this boring you?" 

"Yes," Carter said. "But go ahead. It's giving me time." 

Doc said, "Time is not going to help you. When you make up your  mind to act, the thing is going to happen.

Somebody is going to get  shot, Europe will lose its bad boy, and Germany its leader. Or that  will not happen.

Depending on how the dice fall." 

Carter's tongue made a pass at dry lips. "Go ahead and talk." 

Doc said, "There isn't much more. It was an accident, Pat's  sixshooter becoming so important. A freakish

accident, one that might  never have happened. But it came out the way it did. And so you had to  have the

gun." 

Carter frowned silently. 

"What," Doc asked, "was the purpose of your elaborate business of  decoying me to Switzerland?" 


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Carter said, "I am going to yell." 

"You know the situation," Doc told him coldly, holding Pat's  sixshooter In his right hand. "Do whatever you

feel it is smart to  do." 

Carter shouted, "Kohl, bring in the other prisoners. But bring them  in carefully." 

THE bringingin was done most carefully. First came Barni Cuadrado,  battered somewhat, her frock torn,

with fright on her face. Then Monk  and Ham. Monk was in bad shape, although probably not as battered as

he  looked. Ham was less mauled physically, but he looked as if he was in  more of a mental turmoil. Pat was

last. She was the most animated of  the lot She said angrily, "Doc, they're after that sixshooter of mine!  Don't

tell them  " And then she saw the gun in Doc's hands. "Oh, you   that isn't my gun, Doc! You shouldn't

try to fool them with a  different gun!" 

It was quick thinking on Pat's part It sounded perfectly truthful  when she said the gun wasn't the one,

although it was a complete lie. 

Doc shook his head. "Easy does it, Pat," he said. "We have another  hole card." 

Carter said coldly, bitterly, "Savage, you miss the point. I'm  going to tell my men to kill your aids and you if

you don't lay that  gun down." 

As coldly, Doc said, "Go ahead." Carter blinked. 

"Go ahead," Doc repeated. "And I'll shoot your Fuehrer. I'll shoot  him dead, and quick." 

Doc's feelings got away for a moment His own tension, mixed with  contempt and hate  and an actual

bloodthirsty murderous desire to  kill  boiled up in him. For a few seconds, words and wildness came  out of

him without any real wish on his part. 

"I'll kill him!" he repeated. "I'll make him dead, so much deader  than any of the millions of people he's been

responsible for killing."  He added, between his teeth, in a voice he hardly recognized, "It'll be  the most

Godgiven pleasure I ever had!" 

Carter looked completely ill. 

Monk Mayfair became bugeyed and asked, "You mean he's right here  now?" 

"Yes," Doc said. 

The identity could belong to only one man in the room, and all eyes  centered upon him as if drawn by a

horrible magnet. 

Much the same thought must have been in all their minds. There was  no small fanatical man with a trick

moustache in the room; no one  resembled the man who had been born Adolfus Schickelgruber, son of an

illegitmate father, in the Hotel zum Pommer in Braunau, Austria, at  half past six in the evening of April

20,1889. 

Monk said, "But he speaks English. Hitler doesn't speak English." 

He said it flatly, wonderingly. 


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Doc Savage  never taking his eyes from Carter or the others who  were armed  said, "Didn't it ever strike

you as strange that the  German chief of state always made quite a public show of not being able  to speak

English?" 

Monk blinked. "You mean  maybe he did?" 

"What do you think?" 

'My God!" Monk breathed. "It could be a disguise. But his red hair   " 

Barni Cuadrado came to her feet then, as if something had taken her  by the hair. 

"Hans!" she said, and her appearance, expression and voice got  sicker and sicker. "Hans, you are not what

they say! Tell them!" 

The man they had known as Berkshire sat very still. They could see  that he had the build of the eccentric,

screaming demagogue who had set  Europe and the world afire. They could see that he had the facial

contours, the round ghoulish eyes. And the intensity, most of all, the  intensity. 

Barni brought both hands slowly to her cheeks, fingers doubled, and  the fingers dug into her cheeks while her

eyes became awful. "Hans!  Mother of God Merciful, this mustn't be  " 

Doc said, "He fooled you. But he has fooled the whole world at one  time or another  " 

Pat  women are essentially more brutal to other women than man is  to man  demanded, "Barni, you said

he was your cousin from Berlin." 

Barni, around hands digging at her cheeks, said, "He  he said he   was." 

"Didn't you ever demand proof?" 

"No, because he talked of our uncles and our family so naturally."  Barni's voice was going down into an ill

soundlessness. "Oh God, how  could such a thing happen to anyone!" 

Doc Savage, in a cold intent voice that brought sanity into the  situation, said, "I am going to shoot the

Fuehrer if anyone makes a  move!" 

No one moved for a while. Then Barni Cuadrado made a low sickly  noise like air blown into water through a

straw, and slid down to the  floor and lay there without moving. 

"Poor kid," Pat said hoarsely. Poor thing." 

Ham Brooks said, "Doc, Hitler used the name of Berkshire and bought  the house in Lisbon as a hideout." 

"This place here is probably a second hideout," Doc said. He  glanced at Carter. "Or is it yours?" 

"Mine." Carter's face was yellow. 

"Just who are you?" Doc asked Carter. 


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Carter swallowed. "I managed the thing for him. I am his closest  friend." He didn't sound as if he knew why

he was talking. 

Doc said, "Let's get the rest of it straightened out. The Allied  Intelligence found out about this plot They sent

for me. Carter was  doubling as an Allied agent, so he was able to pass the information  along. 

"Berkshire  to use the name we know him by  decided to handle  the thing personally. He would meet

me. He would make me think he was a  German patriot  or kill me, if he had to. 

"The first mishap was when he left his fingerprints on Pat's  sixshooter. That was why he wore gloves all the

time. He must have  been afraid that, somewhere, someone would have a copy of his  fingerprints." 

Monk said, "Remember what Dilling told us? That Hitler had gone to  a lot of trouble to have copies of his

fingerprints destroyed in  Germany as far back as four years ago? The guy had the fingerprint  heebygeebies." 

"Great grief!" Pat muttered. "Monk took his gloves off, and he  grabbed up my sixgun without thinking and

left his fingerprints on it!  That's why all the fuss over the gun!" 

"There were no prints on the gun," Doc said. "None you could  identify. A gun almost never receives legible

fingerprints, regardless  of what detective books say." 

"But they thought prints were on it" 

"That's right  " 

Carter tried his trick then. Carter started to turn away from them,  then whirled back with his gun, his intention

being to shoot Doc  Savage. But Monk had been watching him. Monk was leaning against a  chair, braced, set

to throw the chair. He threw it with remarkable  speed. 

Carter cried out as the chair hit him, and upset Monk went over,  not seeming in a hurry at all, and stamped

once hard on Carter's gun  wrist. They could hear the wrist bones break. Monk picked up the gun.  What

happened then could not have been expected to happen anywhere  under any other conditions  uniess the

man who was the leader of  German National Socialism was in the same room. 

Ham took advantage of the situation. 

Ham put back his head and bellowed. "Don't shoot! Don't anybody  shoot! You want to kill the Fuehrer?" 

Monk calmly clubbed Carter over the head, making him shapeless on  the floor. 

Doc had hold of Berkshire by now. He didn't fool around with  gentleness. He struck Berkshire, dazing him.

Then he hauled Berkshire  in front of him and jumped to a position in front of Pat and Barni,  using the man as

a shield. 

Until now, during these first few seconds of it, it had been as if  they were acting against drugged men, as if

their opposition had no  ability to think. 

This changed suddenly. Someone said, in German, to throw down the  guns, to take Doc and Monk and the

others barehanded. The command was  followed. 


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The room suddenly filled with flying figures, blow sounds,  gaspings, scufflings, tearing of cloth, and the

mewing noises men make  when they are in a fight and being hurt. Monk and Ham were good at this  sort of

thing, and they went into it with heart and vigor. Doc Savage,  after he had clubbed Berkshire, and slammed

him down on the floor, told  Pat, "Get hold of him! Hang on to him for us!" 

Pat grabbed Berkshire and said, "You really mean this guy is  Hitler?" 

"He seems to be," Doc said. 

Pat said, "This is the height of something or other," and she  kicked Berkshire where it would hurt him the

most. Berkshire screamed,  and that helped to worry his men. 

Carter was conscious, but in agony. He got an idea. "Get outside,"  he screamed. "We have them cornered!

Keep them in this room?" 

Why he could have them cornered any more with his men outside than  he had now was a fine point. Probably

his pain was such that his only  thought was getting out of there. 

The Nazis began going out. 

Monk got a grenade bag away from one of them. 

After about seven of them had gone out through the door, Monk  hooked the firing pin out of one of the

grenades. 

Monk was at his best in a handtohand fight. He looked at Ham now,  holding the grenade in his hand, and

asked, "How long you hold these  things before you throw them?" 

Ham screamed, "Throw it, you fool!" 

Monk tossed that grenade through the door. He flung three others as  rapidly as he could pull pins and heave

them. 

The resulting devastation and uproar practically ended the fight. 

Pat and Ham got Berkshire to his feet The man was loosebodied,  without fire or spirit or will to do anything. 

Somewhere in the confusion Monk said, "Ugh!" in a queer voice. 

"What's wrong?" Ham shouted. "Are you hurt?" 

"Carter. I started to pick him up," Monk said hoarsely. "His head   half of that last grenade must have gone

through it" 

"Let's go," Doc said. 

They made it with an ease that was, considering the magnitude of  the whole affair, an anticlimax. A

letdown. 

MR. DILLING, the chief of Allied Intelligence im mediately in  charge of the Hitlerescapingandleaving

affair, did some headshaking  in the little hotel overlooking the river in Interlaken that evening. 


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"It's God's wonder you didn't get slaughtered," he told them. "But  what happened was undoubtedly this: The

German Fuehrer was in that  room, and his presence so overawed them that they couldn't fight." 

"Couldn't fight  hell!" Monk told him. "You weren't there. They  put up quite a scrap." 

"But there were nine of them," Dilling said. "How you licked nine  picked Nazi toughies in splitseconds, I

can't imagine, unless it was  that they were afraid to use their guns and grenades for fear of  killing their

leader." 

"You're the guy," Monk told Dilling, "who put that Carter bird in  our hair." 

"I'll probably never live that down," Dilling muttered. 

"You're danged right you won't," Monk said. "Didn't you know he was  the Fuehrer's right hand boy?" 

"Lord, no!" Dilling looked pained. "You sound pretty hot about it." 

Monk grinned. "I'll cool down eventually. It came out all right'  anyhow." 

Doc Savage came into the room and asked, "Dilling, how is the  international part of the mess coming now?" 

"The Swiss?" Mr. Dilling grinned. "Oh, they are in an embarrassing  spot. But they're going officially to know

nothing whatever about it.  In other words, if we get Hitler out of Switzerland and to England or  America in a

hurry, they will be very innocent. Nothing happened here,  as far as they know." 

Doc nodded. "You think the assassination of the double will come  off in Berlin now?" 

"Not a chance." Mr. Dilling grinned again. "In fact, we are sure of  it Word has come out by the grapevine that

the killing is off." 

Doc Savage was thoughtful for a while. He examined the floor, his  own hands, feeling selfconscious and

unnatural, tasting and feeling of  an uncertainty which was still with him. The whole thing had been  somewhat

unreal. There were so many factors involved that he had not  seen, that he did not understand, that he probably

would never see or  understand. 

"Mr. Dilling," Doc said suddenly. 

"Yes?" 

"Is that man  that Berkshire  really Adolf Hitler?" Doc asked. 

Mr. Dilling got a funny look. "It's strange, when things get so  fantastic, how a man would give anything for

one single truth to hang  his hat on, isn't it?" 

Doc nodded vaguely, as if the answer didn't exactly make sense. He  said, "The girl, Barni Cuadrado, is going

to need something like that,  something solid enough to cling to until the shock wears off." 

"How is she taking it?" 

"Hard"' Doc said soberly. "She is pretty much in pieces over the  part she unwittingly played." 


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"You are serving as her doctor, aren't you?" 

"Yes." 

"You'll probably put her back together again," Mr. Dilling said.  Mr. Dilling grinned slightly. "It should be a

pleasant job." 

Doc had an idea he was looking sheepish again. 

THE  END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE HATE GENIUS, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. I, page = 4

   5. II, page = 9

   6. III, page = 16

   7. IV, page = 22

   8. V, page = 28

   9. VI, page = 35

   10. VII, page = 40

   11. VIII, page = 46

   12. IX, page = 51

   13. X, page = 58

   14. XI, page = 63

   15. XII, page = 67

   16. XIII, page = 73