Title:   THE MONSTERS

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE MONSTERS

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE MONSTERS ...............................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE PINHEADS...................................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. TERROR................................................................................................................................7

Chapter 3. PLANE ACQUAINTANCE................................................................................................11

Chapter 4. THE KILLER .......................................................................................................................15

Chapter 5. THE CLIPPING...................................................................................................................18

Chapter 6. MYSTERY MANSE ............................................................................................................21

Chapter 7. THE ELECTRIFIED NET ...................................................................................................25

Chapter 8. THE EXLIONTAMER ....................................................................................................29

Chapter 9. THE MAN OF FAT.............................................................................................................32

Chapter 10. THE PRISONER ................................................................................................................37

Chapter 11. THE ULTRAVIOLET TRAIL........................................................................................41

Chapter 12. THE TUNNEL...................................................................................................................44

Chapter 13. THE MICHIGAN CLEW..................................................................................................50

Chapter 14. NORTHWARD ..................................................................................................................54

Chapter 15. NIGHT TERROR ...............................................................................................................58

Chapter 16. THE SUICIDE SLAYING .................................................................................................61

Chapter 17. RENNY's MYSTERY MISSION......................................................................................66

Chapter 18. THE TERROR THAT SWAM..........................................................................................72

Chapter 19. THE MONSTERS RAID ...................................................................................................75

Chapter 20. THE WINGED PERIL .......................................................................................................79

Chapter 21. THE SWIMMING GIANTS ..............................................................................................85

Chapter 22. THE AWFUL ISLE...........................................................................................................90

Chapter 23. ESCAPE AND CAPTURE................................................................................................96

Chapter 24. MASTER OF THE GIANTS...........................................................................................100

Chapter 25. DEATH MAGNIFIED .....................................................................................................105

Chapter 26. PERE TESTON'S END ....................................................................................................109


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THE MONSTERS

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE PINHEADS 

Chapter 2. TERROR 

Chapter 3. PLANE ACQUAINTANCE 

Chapter 4. THE KILLER 

Chapter 5. THE CLIPPING 

Chapter 6. MYSTERY MANSE 

Chapter 7. THE ELECTRIFIED NET 

Chapter 8. THE EXLIONTAMER 

Chapter 9. THE MAN OF FAT 

Chapter 10. THE PRISONER 

Chapter 11. THE ULTRAVIOLET TRAIL 

Chapter 12. THE TUNNEL 

Chapter 13. THE MICHIGAN CLEW 

Chapter 14. NORTHWARD 

Chapter 15. NIGHT TERROR 

Chapter 16. THE SUICIDE SLAYING 

Chapter 17. RENNY's MYSTERY MISSION 

Chapter 18. THE TERROR THAT SWAM 

Chapter 19. THE MONSTERS RAID 

Chapter 20. THE WINGED PERIL 

Chapter 21. THE SWIMMING GIANTS 

Chapter 22. THE AWFUL ISLE 

Chapter 23. ESCAPE AND CAPTURE 

Chapter 24. MASTER OF THE GIANTS 

Chapter 25. DEATH MAGNIFIED 

Chapter 26. PERE TESTON'S END  

Chapter 1. THE PINHEADS

ON THE fifteenth of the month, Bruno Hen did the thing which was  actually his first step toward disaster 

a disaster that was to  affect not only himself, but many others as well. 

Bruno Hen sold his furs on this date. 

Most of the pelts were muskrats, cunningly stolen from the trap  lines of Bruno Hen's neighbors, the chief

loser being big, honest,  slowwitted Carl MacBride. The thefts were slyly executed, for Bruno  Hen was as

foxy a halfbreed as the North Michigan woods held. 

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Oxlike Carl MacBride never suspected. 

Not that Carl MacBride liked Bruno Hen. One day big MacBride had  come upon Bruno Hen killing a chicken

for dinner. The breed had been  choking the chicken to death and taking great glee in prolonging the  fowl's

death agonies. After that, Carl MacBride held a suspicion that  no more cruel a breed than Bruno Hen ranged

North Michigan. 

The fur market was strong the day Bruno Hen sold. His pelts brought  more than he had expected. So he

decided to celebrate. 

This decision was his second step toward disaster. 

The Atlas Congress of Wonders was showing at Trapper Lake that day.  The Atlas did not amount to much as

a circus, being financially very  much down at the heel. But it was the best Trapper Lake offered. So, by  way

of celebrating, Bruno Hen went to the circus. 

That was his third step in the direction of disaster. The fourth  pace, taken all unknowingly, was when he

stopped in front of the freak  side show. 

"Ladies and gentlemen!" bawled the side show barker. "We have here  a stupendous, marvelous, awesome,

dumbfounding sight! We have here the  three most amazing beings ever to come from darkest Africa! Look

them  over, good people. Try to make yourselves realize that these  monstrosities are actually human. They are

called the pinhead men. They  are cannibal savages from darkest Africa!" 

The Atlas Congress of Wonders was not above faking an occasional  wild man or a cannibal, but it chanced

that these pinheads were the  genuine articles. They had been brought from Africa by a more affluent  circus,

which had then gone bankrupt. 

Bruno Hen moved close to the platform to stare at the three  pinheads. He had never seen such hideous

humans. 

The pinheads were squat, the tallest reaching barely to Bruno Hen's  topmost vest button. They were nearly as

broad as tall, and they were  as black as human skin could practically be. They might have been  oversize

monkeys, shaven bare of hair, dyed black, and given a high  polish. 

The contour of their heads was especially haunting. Instead of  being rounded in the fashion considered

normal, the skulls sloped  upward to a sharp point. The pinpointed heads were also very small in  proportion

to the rest of their gnarled black bodies. 

The pinheads had a trait of casting darting, animallike looks  about them. At times they jumped up and

down, after the fashion of  chimpanzees. They emitted caterwauling noises  apparently their way  of

conversing with each other. 

Trapper Lake citizens, looking on, probably thought this behavior  was part of the circus act. They were

mistaken. 

The poor pinheads were beings almost devoid of mentality. 

BRUNO HEN looked at the pinheads and grinned from ear to ear. The  idea of human beings so handicapped

by nature tickled him. He laughed  out loud.


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That laugh was his fifth step toward disaster. 

The pinheads stared at Bruno Hen, their attention drawn by the  laugh. Bruno Hen's smile was derisive, but

the pinheads did not have  the intelligence to realize that. They thought the grin friendly. They  smiled back,

jumped up and down, and beat their chests with nubbins of  fists. Back in the African bush, that was the way

one showed  hearttoheart friendship. 

Bruno Hen thundered another laugh. It was the same kind of a laugh  Carl MacBride had heard when he had

come upon the breed slowly  throttling a chicken to satisfy a lust for cruelty. 

The utter cruelty of that loud laugh caused the barker to end his  spiel abruptly and stare at Bruno Hen. The

barker ran his eyes up and  down the breed's person. 

In Bruno Hen he saw a bulky lout constructed on the lines of a  brown bologna. Bruno Hen's clothing was

frayed, greasy. It never had  fitted properly. He wore high deerskin moccasins, obviously made by  himself. He

wore a dazzling green hat and a blindingyellow necktie,  both new. 

The barker was a pleasantnatured soul. He did not like Bruno Hen's  laugh; it sent wintry chills along his

spine. He decided to bullyrag  Bruno Hen to persuade him to move on. 

The barker sprang to one of the three pinheads, and made an  elaborate pretense of listening to the

unintelligible cackle the fellow  was making. 

"Crowd right up, folks!" he yelled. "An amazing thing has happened!  These pinhead cannibals from darkest

Africa claim they have just  recognized a member of their tribe who was lost years ago!" 

The barker leveled an arm at Bruno Hen. "The pinheads claim this  man as their brother tribesman." 

The crowd roared its laughter. 

The pinheads hopped about, clucked and gobbled. They were just  happy. But it looked as if they were

agreeing with the barker.  Actually, they couldn't understand a word he said. 

Bruno Hen glowered. His fists made big knobs at his side. 

A grinning pinhead leveled an arm at the breed and spouted  gibberish. 

The barker yelled, "The gentleman from Africa declares that any one  can tell this man is his brother by

looking at that green hat and  yellow necktie." 

At this point, to the barker's relief, Bruno Hen stamped off. He  yanked his green hat over his eyes and

loosened his yellow necktie, as  if it were too tight 

Bruno Hen's swarthy neck was purple and he was muttering under his  breath. It was a tribute to his stupidity

that he thought the pinheads  had said what the barker declared they had. Accordingly, he was very  angry with

the pinheads. 

Farther down the midway was the strongman show. A fellow with  remarkable muscles stood on the

platform. 


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"We have one of the strongest men in the world!" the barker was  claiming raucously. "Only ten cents, a dime,

a tenth part of a dollar,  to see him perform. I might even say this man is the strongest in the  world. The only

other man who might be his equal is Doc Savage. But,  unfortunately, this Herculean gentleman and Doc

Savage have never  matched strength. We do not know who is actually the stronger." 

Bruno Hen scowled blackly. 

"You may never see Doc Savage, folks!" yelled the barker, "So step  in and see one of the strongest men in the

world!" 

Bruno Hen tried to remember who Doc Savage was. He seemed to have  heard the name before. 

Soon the breed came to a show featuring a mental marvel, a fellow  who claimed to be able to answer any

question asked of him without  consulting a reference book. The mental marvel was supposed to know all

things  or so the barker was saying. 

"The only living man who may possibly be a greater mental marvel  than this individual, is Doc Savage!"

extolled the barker. 

Bruno Hen scratched his head, trying to remember. 

"Doc Savage you may never meet, my good people," the barker howled.  "So pay a dime and see the mental

marvel who is almost his equal!" 

Abruptly, Bruno Hen remembered who Doc Savage was. He was an almost  legendary figure, a man of

mystery, who was reputed to be a superman in  strength and mental ability. Doc Savage resided in New York.

He  traveled to the ends of the earth, punishing wrongdoers and helping  others out of trouble. 

In Trapper Lake stores, Bruno Hen had heard traveling salesmen tell  of Doc Savage's fabulous feats. 

Little dreaming that Doc Savage  to whom amazing feats were  commonplace events  was to play an

important part in the future of  Trapper Lake, Bruno Hen walked on. He did not give a hoot about the  future of

Trapper Lake, anyway. 

WANDERING OVER the circus grounds, Bruno Hen soon found himself  back among the tents and wagons

which the performers used for living  quarters. 

He came to a stop; his porcine eyes glittered. He put a wide,  fatuous grin on his face. 

Coming toward him was a young woman with the most striking hair  Bruno Hen could recall having seen 

hair the exact shade of steel.  The young woman had it drawn like a tight steel skullcap, with  steellike knobs

over her ears. 

She wore boots, laced breeches, and a brilliant red jacket. The  garments set off a shapely figure to great

advantage. A shiny metal  revolver was belted about her waist, 

Bruno Hen was nothing if not bold. He prepared to accost the young  woman. 

The girl evidently knew the ways of such louts. She veered off and  avoided him. 


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Not daunted, Bruno Hen followed her. He stopped, however, when he  saw the young woman pick up a chair

and calmly climb into a cage with  several ferociouslooking maned beasts. These greeted her with ugly  roars. 

The steelhaired girl was a lion tamer. 

Standing back, marveling that the lions did not devour her  instantly, Bruno Hen watched the cage as it was

hauled into the Big  Top. 

Inside the Big Top, the ringmaster was bellowing, "And now we are  going to present that extravagant,

unparalleled exhibition of human  nerve!" He paused to get the proper drama. "Jean Morris, and her troop  of

bloodthirsty, untamed lions!" 

Bruno Hen loitered about in hopes of getting another glimpse of the  young woman with the amazing steel

hair. But she did not appear. He  concluded she must have left by another exit. 

He got to thinking of the pinheads again, and his rage arose. He  stalked off the circus grounds, bought some

groceries in Trapper Lake  and betook himself home. 

Bruno Hen had no idea that he had laid almost the full foundation  for future disaster. 

BRUNO HEN'S cabin was located not far from the shore of lake  Superior. The structure was a patchwork of

logs, cheap slab lumber and  tar paper. It had one room. An open fireplace served for both warmth  and

cooking. There was a window, and plenty of cracks for ventilation. 

Except for big, slowwitted Carl MacBride, who lived half a mile  down the lake shore, there were no near

neighbors, There was no  telephone, and Bruno Hen took no newspaper. 

Hence, when the Atlas Congress of Wonders went bankrupt in Trapper  Lake after counting the proceeds of

its last performance, Bruno Hen did  not learn of the fact immediately. 

The day following his experience at the circus, he expertly robbed  a gill net set by Carl MacBride. He took

only such fish as he wished to  eat; but instead of leaving the others in the net, he removed them and  tossed

them aside. He was not doing the fish a kindness, for he knocked  each finny specimen in the head before

discarding it. There was a  peculiar twist to Bruno Hen's brain which made him delight in cruelty. 

The pretty circus lion tamer haunted his thoughts somewhat. Memory  of her steelhued hair especially stuck

with him. 

The next few days Bruno spent in overhauling his canoe, replacing a  staved rib or two, and applying a coat of

varnish. The fishing season  was near. With the coming of summer, he usually traveled south to a  district more

inhabited, where he offered his services as a guide. 

It was a week to the day after his visit to the circus when Bruno  Hen took his next step toward disaster. 

He was getting a late supper when he heard a noise. He was frying  fish. Over the sputter of grease, he thought

he heard a low moan. 

With a quick gesture, he put out the light. Being of an evil nature  himself, Bruno always expected the worst

from others. His eyes became  accustomed to the murk. Although there was no moon, the sky was  cloudless

and the stars furnished fitful luminance. 


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The breed eyed the window. The pane needed washing, but he could  discern an object outside. His hair all

but stood on end. 

One frenzied leap took Bruno Hen across the cabin to his rifle. He  snatched it down, then dashed outside. 

The thing at the window had been a hideous apparition, yet vaguely  familiar. A cold dew stood on the breed's

skin as he squinted into the  night. 

"Hell!" he swore. 

The odious specter at the window had been one of the pinhead  cannibals. 

ALL THREE of the grotesque little black fellows huddled near the  window. They trembled after the manner

of frightened animals. 

Bruno Hen, seeing that they were very scared of him, felt more  bold. 

"What d'you want?" he demanded. 

The answer was a hooting, clucking conglomeration of sounds. Bruno  Hen could understand no word of it.

He could not tell that the  unfortunate pinheads, stranded when the circus went broke, were slowly  starving.

Unable to speak English, and lacking the intelligence to  convey their needs by making signs, the pinheads

were in a predicament. 

Bruno Hen scowled at them, thinking of the mortification they had  caused him at the circus. 

"Get outa here!" he snarled. 

The pinheads only waved their arms more vehemently and cackled  louder. They were desperate for food. One

kneeled, seeking to grasp  Bruno Hen's knees in supplication. 

Bruno Hen kicked the pinhead, sending the unfortunate fellow  sprawling away. 

Apparently pleased by the sound of his foot on human flesh, the  breed launched another kick. He struck with

his rifle barrel, with his  fists. 

The pinheads, weakened by lack of food, could evade only a few of  the blows. Mauled and bleeding, they

finally managed to drag themselves  away. 

"I'll do worse next time you show up!" Bruno Hen bawled after them. 

The pinheads disappeared in the timber to the southward. The breed  stood in the starlight until he could no

longer hear sounds of their  footsteps. Then, chuckling, he entered his cabin. 

It was possibly ten minutes later that he heard faint but terrible  human screams. 

These came from the direction the pinheads had taken. They lasted  only a moment, and ended with

unpleasant abruptness. 

"Probably two of 'em eatin' the third one," Bruno Hen snorted. 


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The breed did not know, but he had just taken his final step toward  disaster. 

Chapter 2. TERROR

MONTHS PASSED. 

Bruno Hen went southward during the fishing season. Pickings as a  guide, much to his disgust, proved

slender. Only two short engagements  did he obtain in some ten weeks. Finally, there was a third job. This  one

promised to pay well. 

Bruno Hen, however, made the mistake of trying to lift a fat wallet  which his temporary employer carried in a

hip pocket. Upon being  discovered, he narrowly missed getting shot. To evade jail, he was  forced to flee back

to the timber fastnesses out of which he had come. 

If stolid Carl MacBride was surprised at Bruno Hen's premature  return, he said nothing about it. MacBride's

fish traps had yielded a  more abundant catch during the past weeks, but he had failed to attach  the true

significance to this. 

If Carl MacBride was not surprised at Bruno Hen's early return, he  was surprised when the breed paid him a

visit a few nights later. 

Something was wrong. MacBride could see that as be admitted the  breed to his cabin. Bruno Hen's eyes

rolled. He perspired freely,  although the night was cool. 

There was a noticeable bulge in one of his coat pockets. 

"Did you hear anything a few minutes ago?" the breed asked bluntly. 

Carl MacBride shook his head. He never used a word where a gesture  would do. He had heard only the usual

night sounds  insects and  nocturnal birds. 

Bruno Hen's next question was more surprising. "What happens when a  man goes crazy?" 

MacBride did not laugh. "Search me. He has funny ideas, I guess." 

"He sees things, huh?" 

"I reckon." 

The visitor wiped his forehead with his palm, then swabbed the palm  on his corduroy pants. Abruptly, he

thrust a hand in his bulging coat  pocket. 

He brought out an enormous roll of greenbacks. 

"You're the only honest man I know, MacBride," he said. "Want you  to do me a favor." 

Carl MacBride was a great mountain of a man, reddened by many  winds, and with eyes as blue as Lake

Superior itself. He eyed the money  placidly. 

"Sure, I'll do you a favor," he rumbled. "But I ain't takin' pay  for it." 


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Bruno Hen placed the money on a table. 

"Take it," he directed. "If anything happens to me, use this kale  to hire the best detective in the world." 

Carl MacBride batted his lakeblue eyes. 

"I want the detective to investigate whatever happens to me," Bruno  Hen went on. "I want the best damn

detective there is anywhere! Plenty  of money here to pay his bill." 

MacBride eyed the currency. There were many thousands of dollars in  the bank roil. He knew it must be

Bruno Hen's life savings. 

"What's got into you?" MacBride rumbled. "This whole talk don't  make sense." 

Bruno Hen swallowed uneasily, squirming. A flush darkened his  swarthy skin. He seemed on the point of

answering. 

"Maybe it don't amount to nothin', after all," he mumbled. "But if  somethin' happens to me  hire the

detective." 

"I'll do that," MacBride agreed. 

Bruno Hen took his departure, ignoring the slow questions which  Carl MacBride asked. The breed carried a

flashlight, and kept this  blazing steadily as he made his way through the timber. He washed the  beam about

continuously, seeming to be in deathly fear of some habitant  of the darkness. 

From the door of his cabin, big Carl MacBride watched the  retreating breed. He shook his ponderous head

slowly. 

"Somethin' is sure wrong with that guy," he grunted. He fingered  the roll of money thoughtfully. "Bruno Hen

kinda acts like he'd seen  the devil." 

With that last statement, Carl MacBride came far nearer the truth  than he dreamed. 

HAVING REACHED his shack, Bruno Hen locked himself in. He tore up  parts of the floor and spiked the

rough plank across the windows.  Loading his rifle, he placed it on the table alongside a fresh box of

cartridges. He charged both barrels of his shotgun, and arranged a  little mound of shells. Loading his

revolver, he belted it on. 

He did not sleep at all that night; he scarcely sat down. Around  and around the hut he paced nervously,

stopping frequently to peer  outside through the cracks. 

There was a brilliant moon. In the surrounding timber there were no  stirrlngs except for the undulating of tree

boughs before a gentle  breeze. Out of the far distance came sometimes the squawling uproar of  fighting

lynxes; a lonely wolf howled mournfully. The odor of pine came  with the breeze. 

This peace of the woodland night seemed to soothe Bruno Hen not at  all. 

Strangely, the breed did not leave his cabin at all the following  day. Literally hundreds of times, he peered

outside as if in deadly  expectation. It was apparent that he had seen something  probably on  the night

before he visited Carl MacBride  which had frightened him.  The more he thought of what he had seen, the


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more terrified he seemed  to become. 

Toward noon, he slept a little. He did not sleep that night. The  following day, Carl MacBride came over. 

"Wondered how you was comin'," MacBride said. Bruno Hen peered out  at his neighbor through his barred

window. He did not invite MacBride  in. In fact, he said nothing. 

MacBride, big and slow moving, ambled around the shack. He noted  that the place had been turned into a

fortress. 

"Afraid of somebody?" he asked. 

The breed scowled. "You git! Tend to your own business." 

Not taken back, MacBride grinned pleasantly. "I've got your money,  if you want it back." 

"Keep that money. If somethin' happens to me, you hire the best  detective in the world, like I told you." 

"I been readin' in a magazine about a feller that makes a business  of helpin' other people out of trouble,"

MacBride offered. "Maybe he'd  do." 

"What's his name?" 

"Doc Savage." 

Bruno Hen recalled the flattering references which he had heard the  circus side show barkers make to Doc

Savage. A muscular Hercules and a  mental marvel, they had termed Doc Savage. 

"He'll do," growled the breed. 

"0. K.," said MacBride. "But listen, Bruno, what's ailin' you?" 

"Nothin'," snarled the breed. "You go 'way." 

"You must be nuts," opined Carl MacBride, and took his departure. 

By way of paying the goodnatured giant back for that last crack,  Bruno Hen left his cabin during the

afternoon and raided one of  MacBride's fish traps. He selected several choice walleyes, and turned  the rest of

the catch loose. The breed was thoughtful as he slunk back  toward his cabin. 

"I ought to have told MacBride about what I seen prowlin' around  here the other night," he said slowly. "Hell!

He would think I was  crazy." 

Reaching his shack, he fastened himself in securely. Exercise  seemed to have lulled his fears somewhat. 

He lay down and slept. 

The night was well along when Bruno Hen opened his eyes. He lay in  a sort of drawn rigidity, listening to

what had aroused him. 

It was a strange wind, which seemed to be blowing outside. This  came in puffs, regularly spaced. 


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The breed shivered from head to foot. The gusty sounds were too  peculiar to be made by a natural wind. 

Using extreme care to make no noise, Bruno got up. He gripped his  rifle in one hand, his shotgun in the other.

He crept to one of the  timbered windows and crammed an eye to the crack. 

What he saw caused him to shriek out in awful horror. 

Jumping back, he lifted his rifle. It was highpowered, intended  for bagging moose. He fired. The slug

slapped through the planks as if  they had been paper. Again the breed fired. He pumped jacketed lead  through

the wall until the magazine was empty. 

Plugging in fresh cartridges, he continued his wild firing. 

"It's worse'n it was before," he moaned, referring to the horror  outside. 

Over the whacking of the rifle and the breed's moaning there  sounded a tremendous rending and tearing. The

breed stared upward in  ghastly terror. 

Parts of the roof of his shack were being torn off. Stout boards  split apart or snapped off. Rafters buckled

under some cataclysmic  force. 

Still firing madly, Bruno retreated to the other side of the cabin. 

With a final squawling of withdrawn nails, and a cracking of wood,  a section of the roof came off. Something

extended through the  aperture. 

The breed emitted one squawling shriek after another. He dashed  from end to end of the cabin. He was like a

trapped rabbit. 

The breed's neighbor, Carl MacBride, unlike many big men, was a  light sleeper. He heard the yelling and

shooting coming from Bruno  Hen's cabin. Leaping up, he yanked on his pacs, grasped a rifle and ran  for the

uproar. 

Long before he reached the breed's cabin, MacBride heard Bruno  Hen's shrieking die. Its termination was a

piercing, bleating sound,  remindful of a mouse which had been stepped upon. 

Arriving at the shack, MacBride found an amazing sight. The  structure itself was little more than a great

shapeless wad of timber  and planks. 

Striking matches for light, he circled the spot. His gaze lighted  upon a timber as thick as his leg, and he

whistled softly in amazement;  for something snapped off that timber as if it were a match stick. 

MacBride stood still, straining his ears. There was an occasional  creak from the settling ruin of the cabin.

From out on the lake he  thought he heard faint splashing. This was very distant. 

No other sound came. The bedlam at the cabin had been so awesome  that the night birds, animals, and insects

had been frightened into  complete silence. 

MacBride now dug into the cabin wreckage. He found a gory wad of a  thing. He had to examine it for some

seconds before he would believe it  was the earthly remains of Bruno Hen. 


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Bruno Hen had been crushed to death in ghastly fashion! Carl  MacBride made a slow circle of the cabin and

the vicinity, searching.  Then he headed for his own cabin, running. 

"This is a job for that Doc Savage!" he muttered, 

Chapter 3. PLANE ACQUAINTANCE

MODERN PASSENGER planes are remarkably efficient creations. Not  only are they capable of great speed,

but the cabins are soundproofed  until it is possible to conduct a conversation in ordinary tones.  Pretty

hostesses serve coffee and sandwiches. 

Big Carl MacBride occupied a seat in one of these passenger ships,  as it rushed toward New York. He tried to

look nonchalant. He balanced  a cup of coffee clumsily on one calloused palm and held a tiny sandwich

between thumb and forefinger of his other hand. Between nibbles and  sips, he eyed the surrounding clouds. 

This was his first time in the air. From impressions gained in a  life spent on the ground, he had supposed

clouds were fairly solid  things; but he was discovering they were really of a very wispy nature,  with hardly

more body than widely diffused cigarette smoke. 

A fellow traveler interrupted the bulky woodsman's thoughts. 

"I see you like to read back issues of magazines," the fellow  remarked. 

Cart MacBride turned his head. He saw a tall man with a freckled  nose, reddish hair and a reddish mustache.

The latter was an  artistically waxed creation. The man was attired in a quiet business  suit, and looked

prosperous. 

The fellow had been perusing a newspaper. This was folded  carelessly, and an advertisement was uppermost.

It was a strange sort  of an ad. It consisted simply of large black type in the center of a  white space: 

BEWARE!  THE MONSTERS ARE COMING! 

This somewhat unusual advertisement was not in line with Carl  MacBride's gaze, however. He failed to see

it. 

The big woodsman had always associated freckles with friendly  individuals. He smiled, and said: "Sure  if

the magazine ain't too  old, I enjoy it just as much as a late one." 

"I notice you were reading about Doc Savage," said the freckled  man. 

"Yep." 

"My name is Caldwell," the fellow traveler introduced himself.  "Quite an interesting chap, this Doc Savage." 

"Do you know him?" Carl MacBride asked eagerly. 

"Oh, no, although I'd rather like to. I've read of his  accomplishments. I guess almost every one has heard of

him." 

"Yep. He's quite a detective, I reckon." 


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"Detective!" laughed Caldwell. "Doc Savage is not a detective." 

Carl MacBride's jaw fell. He was shocked. The article in the  magazine was all he knew of Doc Savage. He

had judged Doc Savage to be  a detective, for the story was one telling how Doc and a group of five  assistants

had ferreted out a gang of villains seeking to seize the  nitrate industry of the South American country of

Chile. 

Believing Doc Savage to be a detective, MacBride was now on his way  to ask him to investigate the death of

Bruno Hen. 

"Not a detective!" he gulped. 

"Not exactly," smiled Caldwell. "He is more in the nature of what  you would call a troublebuster. He goes

to the far corners of the  earth, metes out justice to evildoers, and helps those in trouble." 

Carl MacBride breathed a little bit easier. Doc Savage might be  interested in Bruno Hen's death, after all. 

"What do you know about Doc Savage?" MacBride asked. "This magazine  story didn't tell very much." 

"No one seems to know a great deal about Doc Savage," replied  Caldwell. "It is general knowledge, however,

that he is a man who has  been trained from the cradle for his present purpose in life. The  training was done

scientifically by his father, who is now dead. As a  result, Doc Savage is almost a superman, both in physical

capabilities  and in mentality." 

"How do you mean  physical capabilities and mentality?" Carl  MacBride asked vaguely, befuddled by the

to him  highsounding  phraseology. 

"They say that Doc Savage has developed his muscles until he is the  strongest man ever to live," Caidweil

explained. "He has also studied  intensively in every branch of science. He has become a mental marvel.  In

other words, he knows about everything." 

The plane dipped sharply. 

Caldwell looked over the side. "We're nearing New York City." 

Carl MacBride showed little interest in New York City, although he  had never seen that impressive

metropolis before.  "What else do you  know about Doc Savage?" he asked eagerly. 

"Well, not much more," Caldwell rejoined amiably. "Doc Savage has  five men who help him. Each one of

these is a worldfamous expert in  some line. One, according to what I've heard, is a chemist, another a

lawyer, and a third is an electrical expert of ability. Of the other  two, one is an engineer and the other a

geologist." 

"Sounds like some crew!" ejaculated the big woodsman. 

CaIdwell eyed Carl MacBride. "You seem rather interested in Doc  Savage?" 

"I am," MacBride grinned. "I'm on my way to see him." Caldwell  looked properly impressed at this, his

brows rising in astonishment. 

"Imagine!" be ejaculated. "Say, that is the most interesting thing  I've beard in a long time." 


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Carl MacBride expanded before the flattering tones. He wanted to  talk about the strange demise of Bruno

Hen, anyway. He proceeded to do  so. 

He told the story in detail. Drawing a newspaper  from his pocket,  he exhibited it. 

"I cut that from the Trapper Lake CIarion, as you can see by the  name at the top of the sheet," he explained. 

CaIdwell read the clipping. 

"It says here that a peculiar tornado dipped down and demolished  Bruno Hen's cabin, killing the breed," he

remarked. 

"That newspaper feller done some tall guessin'," MacBride said  confidentially. "My cabin ain't very far away

from the breed's place.  There weren't no daggone tornado. I'd have heard it. Anyway, the sky  was as clear as

crystal." 

Caldwell returned the clipping. "And You are going to New York to  get Doc Savage to investigate?" 

"That's right. Bruno Hen gave me the money to do it. It's only fair  that I should live up to the promise I made

him." 

"Quite true," Caldwell agreed; then broke off to watch a young  woman who came down the aisle from the

washroom. 

Carl MacBride also eyed the girl. She was a striking vision. She  had hair the exact hue of steel. Her traveling

costume, while neat, was  somewhat worn. MacBride's contact with pretty girls had been largely  from their

pictured faces in magazines. This young woman was as  entrancing as any photo he could recall having seen. 

The girl passed the two men without a glance. Her eyes were a steel  color that about matched her hair. She

took a seat forward. 

A battered traveling bag reposed on the floor beside the girl's  seat. Carl MacBride possessed eyesight an

Indian would have envied. He  read the writing on the tag appended to the young woman's bag: 

JEAN MORRIS  THE WORLD'S PREMIER WOMAN LION TAMER  THE ATLAS  CONGRESS OF

WONDERS 

"Atlas Congress of Wonders" had a line drawn through it.  Immediately below the circus name was written:

"New York City." 

Carl MacBride scratched his head. He remembered that the Atlas  Congress of Wonders was the circus which

had gone broke in Trapper Lake  many months before. 

MacBride recalled one particular morsel of gossip. There had been  three pinhead savages with the stranded

circus. These had wandered off  and mysteriously disappeared. 

"There's the New York airport," said Caldwell, interrupting the  woodsman's thoughts. 

IN THE excitement of disembarking, Carl MacBride lost track of his  friendly traveling acquaintance,

Caldwell. 


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Had he been able to watch Caldwell, he would have received a  surprise. Caldwell scuttled around to the

deserted side of the field  operations office. Hidden there, he opened a large bag which was his  only luggage.

He unearthed two large, blue automatics, and slung them  in bolsters under his armpits. Next came a hand

grenade of the small,  fluted type used in the world war. He pocketed this. 

The bag yielded a banjo. The round body and the neckpiece of the  musical instrument were in separate

sections which clamped together.  The banjo actually held an ingenious, silenced gun, which could be  fired

simply by plucking one of the banjo strings. 

One who knew how could aim this unusual weapon with accuracy,  without seeming to do so. 

Working rapidly, Caldwell combed out his waxed mustache. He applied  a chemical to it' and smeared more

of the same compound in his hair.  Mustache and hair turned black. He drew a ragged coat from the bag and

donned it. He sagged his shoulders as he walked. 

A stooped musician with a stringy black mustache and black hair got  in one of several cabs waiting near by. 

New York is a city harboring many curious people. The taxi driver  thought little of it when his face

querulously commanded him to wait a  few minutes before starting. 

Not until Carl MacBride had clambered into a cab and rolled in the  direction of the business district, did

Caldwell permit his machine to  move. Issuing terse orders, he contrived to follow the hulking woodsman

without calling his driver's attention to what he was doing. 

When they had traveled twenty or thirty blocks, Caldwell became  sure of their destination. It was Doc

Savage's office. He ordered his  conveyance to halt while he entered a telephone booth located in a  tobacco

shop. He got a number. 

CaIdwell and the party he was calling recognized each other's  voices. They exchanged no names. 

"Exactly what we were afraid of is happening, boss," Caldwell  informed the other. "This lunk of a

backwoodser is on his way to see  Doc Savage." 

"You sure?" asked the voice at the other end of the wire. "He don't  want to go to a lot of trouble taking care

of him, unless it's  necessary." 

"It's necessary, all right, boss," said Caldwell. "I pumped the guy  while we were on the plane. He never

suspected a thing. Came right out  and told me the whole story." 

"He told you he was on his way to get Doc Savage to investigate  what happened to Bruno Hen?" 

"That's exactly what he told me." 

The voice at the other end swore violently. "We've got to stop him  before he gets to Doc Savage." 

"I've got a grenade, my gat, and that silenced pistolandbanjo  contraption. I'll be able to stop him at Doc

Savage's office." 

"Nothing as reckless as that!" ordered the other. "Can you keep  MacBride in sight and nail him somewhere en

route?" 


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"He's headed straight for New York on the main road. Guess I can  overhaul him." 

"Do that. Get him on the road somewhere." Caldwell, his deadly  banjo tucked under an arm, dashed to his

cab. 

"Whoop it up, buddy!" be ordered the driver. "If you get me  downtown fast enough, there's an extra twenty in

it for you." 

"Get the twenty ready," retorted the driver, and they were off. 

Chapter 4. THE KILLER

CARL MACBRIDE had never before visited a city of any consequence.  So he stared with great interest as

they approached the cluster of  towering skyscrapers. The tremendous size of the structures caused a  feeling of

awe. 

One building in particular reared like a great thorn of gray  masonry and shining metal above the spiked tops

of the other  cloudpiercers. Not only was it among the tallest, but its simple,  modernistic lines made it far the

most impressive. 

Carl MacBride made a mental note that, before he left New York  City, he would go to the top of the

towering, modernistic structure to  have a look at the town. 

It had not occurred to the big woodsman that he might have  difficulty in locating Doc Savage. Up in his

woods country, one had  merely to walk into town and inquire for an individual and some one  would be able

to point him  out. Every one knew everybody else. 

It occurred to Carl MacBride that he had better ask where Doc  Savage resided. 

"How do you find anybody in this town, partner?" he asked the taxi  driver. 

"Look in the phone hook is one way," was the reply. 

"Maybe you know the feller I want to find  his name is Doc  Savage." 

The taxi driver turned to eye his fare, and almost ran off the  pavement. He straightened his machine out, then

pointed ahead to the  skyscraper which Carl MacBride had admired. 

"Everybody knows that guy. He hangs out on the eightysixth floor  of that building." 

The fact that the driver knew the whereabouts of Doc Savage's  headquarters did not impress earl MacBride as

much as it should have.  In New York, the average individual knows only his business  acquaintances and

immediate friends. 

"You got an appointment to see Doc Savage?" asked the driver,  taking advantage of the obvious amiability of

his fare to ask  questions. 

"No. Do I need one?" 

It had not occurred to the lumbering woodsman that an appointment  might be necessary. In the backwoods, a


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business appointment was a  rarity. There was time for everything. 

"I don't know Doc Savage personally," the taxi driver said.  "I've  seen him a time or two. He's a big shot, so

you'd better get an  appointment." 

"How'll I go about doing that?" 

"Phone him." 

"Stop off somewhere," Carl MacBride commanded. "Guess I'll call  him." 

The cab pulled up in a filling station which displayed a public  telephone booth sign. 

A NEWSBOY loitering at the filling station in hopes of making a  sale, ran out. 

"Read the latest mystery advertisement about the coming of the  monsters!" he shouted. 

Curious, Carl MacBride bought a paper. The "mystery" ad was in  black type in a square, white space. It read: 

WARNING!  WATCH OUT FOR THE MONSTERS! 

"What's this mean?" the woodsman asked. 

"Nobody knows," replied the newsboy. "Newspapers all over the  country been gettin' them advertisements in

the mail, along with money  to pay for their insertion. It may be a movie stunt  to get people  talkin' about

some picture that'll come out soon." 

Carl MacBride frowned and tucked the paper in a pocket. He entered  the booth and thumbed through the

directory until he found Doc Savage's  name. 

The telephone was a dial type. He was unfamiliar with the dial  device, and had some trouble with it.

Eventually, however, he got his  number. 

The voice which came to his ears was one so profoundly impressive  that he knew instinctively that the

speaker must be Doc Savage. The  tones were deep, vibrant with controlled power. MacBride had never

before heard a telephone receiver reproduce with such distinctness. 

"I want an appointment with you, Mr. Savage," said the woodsman.  "It's  something mighty important. My

name is MacBride. 

"You do not need an appointment," Doc informed him. "Feel perfectly  free to see me at any time." 

MacBride reflected that the driver had given him some bum advice. 

"I'll be right up," he said. 

"Is your business something you would care to discuss over the  telephone?" Doc Savage asked. 

MacBride was so impressed by the remarkable voice that he did not  answer for a moment. 

"I'd rather tell you in person," he said finally. 


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"Very well." 

The telephone conversation terminated. 

MacBride went to his cab. The machine moved toward the towering  skyscraper which was Doc Savage's

headquarters. 

Big Carl MacBride did not know it, but this chance pause to  telephone was instrumental in prolonging his

life. Caldwell had passed  without observing the big woodsman in the filling station phone booth.  Even now,

the murderous Caldwell was hugging his deathdealing banjo,  and cursing. 

"I've lost the big lunk somewhere," he gritted. "Well, hell! I'll  have to catch him at Doc Savage's office, after

all." 

CARL MACBRIDE was even more impressed by the big skyscraper which  housed Doc Savage's office,

when he alighted before it. Head back,  mouth open, MacBride peered upward When he entered the lobby, the

magnificence of the ornate place made him feel mouselike. 

His amazement at sight of the great building accounted for the big  man's failure to note a fellow with black

hair and black mustache who  carried a banjo and lurked in a corner of the lobby. MacBride lumbered  into an

elevator. 

"Doc Savage's office," he said. 

He was promptly rushed to the eightysixth floor. He found a door  which bore, in very small bronze letters,

the name: 

CLARK SAVAGE, JR. 

There was a button, but few persons had doorbells where Carl  MacBride came from. He rapped the door with

his knuckles in the good  oldfashioned way. 

The door opened. 

The unusual voice over the telephone had partially prepared Carl  MacBride for the sight of an unusual

personage when he confronted Doc  Savage. Even then, the bronze man was so far beyond expectations that

MacBride gaped in amazement. 

Doc Savage had evidently opened the door by some mechanical means.  He stood, not near the panel, but

some feet from it  in the middle of  a great office. This was fitted with a costly inlaid table, an enormous

safe, and a number of comfortable chairs. 

That the bronze man possessed amazing physical strength was evident  from the enormous tendons which

bundled his neck and cabled his hands.  He was a giant; but his proportions were symmetrical, and standing in

the massively furnished office, he seemed little larger than an  ordinary man. 

The mighty bronze man's eyes held Carl MacBride's attention. They  were strangely impressive, those eyes.

They had the appearance of tiny  pools of flake gold which eddied and whirled continuously. 

The bronze of Doc Savage's hair was somewhat darker than the bronze  of his skin. He was attired in quiet

business garb. 


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"Doc Savage?" asked Carl MacBride, although he knew he was  confronting the man he sought. 

"Right," confirmed the remarkable man of bronze. Carl MacBride took  a step into the office. 

An elevator door down the corridor opened. A man popped out He had  a black mustache, dark hair, and

carried a banjo. He raised the banjo  to the level of his eyes and gave one of the strings a forcible pluck. 

There was a chunging sound  it might have been a man emitting one  harsh cough. A tongue of flame

leaped from an almost indistinguishable  round hole in the side of the banjo. 

Carl MacBride opened his mouth wide, and a crimson flood came out.  His knees buckled. His hands clamped

to the back of his neck, where a  bullet from CaIdwell's deadly silenced gun had clubbed a hole. 

He slammed face down upon the floor. MacBride felt no pain from the  impact, for he was dead. 

Chapter 5. THE CLIPPING

CALDWELL, THE killer, was in a position where he could view Doc  Savage's office. He saw the giant

bronze man, got a most unnerving look  at the weird golden eyes. He realized that Doc, having witnessed the

killing, was a menace. 

Caldwell darted his banjo weapon m Doc Savage's direction and  plucked the triggerstring. The concealed

gun lipped powder flame and  slugs. 

Caldwell's eyes threatened to jump from their sockets. A weird  thing had happened to his bullet. It had

disintegrated in a grayish  lead puff in midair, some feet inside the door. 

He fired the hidden gun until it was empty. He wrenched out his two  automatics and squeezed the weapons at

the office door. They convulsed  thunderously, and spouted empty cartridges. 

To all of the bullets the same fantastic thing happened. They  splashed into innumerable fragments in midair

or became shapeless  blobs which fell back to the floor. 

Caldwell spun and fled. He dived into an elevator, menaced the  attendant with his gun and forced an instant

descent. 

As the cage sank, Caldwell heard a fragment of weird sound. The  note was not loud, yet it penetrated to the

descending elevator with  remarkable clarity. It seemed without definite source; it might have  been a product

of the movement of the very air itself past the sinking  cage. It was not a whistle, nor did it seem quite the

emanation of  vocal chords. A mellow trilling which defied description, the sound  trickled up and down the

musical scale. 

Caldwell, unable to define the note, dismissed it as a freakish  trick played by his own ears. 

He was wrong. The strange, undulating note was the sound of Doc  Savage. It was the small unconscious

thing which the bronze man did in  moments of stress  when thinking, or surprised, or contemplating some

unusual procedure. 

AN ONLOOKER, knowing Doc Savage, and cognizant of the mighty bronze  man's abilities, would have

expected pursuit of Caldwell. At Doc  Savage's disposal here on the eightysixth floor, was a highspeed


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elevator capable of dropping the bronze man to the lobby level before  Caldwell could arrive. 

Doc did not pursue the slayer. Instead, he moved into a room  adjoining the office. The walls of this chamber

were banked with book  shelves. Massive cases laden with ponderous tomes stood thickly on the  floor. It was

Doc Savage's library, and it held one of the most  complete collections of scientific works in existence. 

The bronze man seemed to be moving without hurry, but his speed was  surprising. 

Beyond the library was another vast room. This held glittering  arrays of bottled chemicals, banks of test

tubes, retorts and filtering  devices. Electric furnaces and costly metalworking tools occupied the  floor space. 

In the center of the great workshoplaboratory Doc Savage halted.  He stood before a paneled cabinet. A

microphone dangled in front of  this. Inset in the cabinet was a square panel that resembled frosted  glass. 

Doc spoke into the microphone. "Did you see what just happened in  the outer office?" 

From a loudspeaker, the grilled throat of which was almost  unnoticeable on the side of the cabinet, the reply

came. It was couched  in a tiny, almost babylike voice. 

"We did," said the small voice. "Ham and me both saw it. And we're  off." 

Doc Savage reached over and flicked a switch. Upon the panel of  frosted glass a picture appeared. It depicted

cold concrete floors,  wails, and an array of parked automobiles. There was a door in this  pictured room. Two

men were just diving through it, making a wild  departure from the place. 

Doc switched off the televisorphone with which he had communicated  with those two men. He returned to

the outer office. Here also, but  concealed cleverly in the wails, was another televisorphone. This one  had

transmitted an image of what had occurred in the office to the two  men to whom Doc had spoken. 

Doc Savage and his five men were accustomed to keep each other in  view with these devices whenever

convenient. Thus they could witness  danger which might threaten each other. 

They had many enemies. 

In approaching the lifeless body of Carl MacBride, Doc circled  widely to avoid the agency which had caused

Caldwell's bullets to  mushroom so mysteriously in midair. 

It was nothing more mysterious than an upright sheet of clear  bulletproof glass. 

Due to the fact that he had many enemies, it was Doc's custom to  first greet strangers from behind this

unnoticeable shield. 

THE GIANT man of bronze closed his office door to avoid the notice  of passersby in the corridor. Then he

examined the body of the  unfortunate Carl MacBride. 

The first thing Doc brought to light was that the enormous roll of  bills which Bruno Hen had given the big

woodsman. He. riffled through  the money. In the act of doing this, his nostrils quivered slightly. He  lifted the

bundle of currency and gave it an olfactory test. 

Doc Savage had a daily exercise routine of two hours which he had  taken unfailingly from childhood. The

exercises were scientifically  designed to develop his every sense 


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touch, hearing, sight, the sense of smell, and taste. His faculties  were far beyond those of an ordinary man. 

Doc identified the odor easily, faint though it was. The scent of  musk! 

Continuing his examination, he brought out a newspaper clipping   the one Carl MacBride had shown his

plane acquaintance, Caldwell. After  noting that it was from a Trapper Lake, Michigan, paper, Doc read it: 

TRAPPER LAKE MAN VICTIM OF WEIRD TORNADO 

Bruno Hen, trapper and fisherman residing near the lake shore five  miles north of Trapper Lake, met death

last night in what authorities  have decided was a freak cyclone. Hen was found crushed to death in his

demolished cabin by Carl MacBride, a neighbor. 

MacBride, it is reported, heard sounds from the direction of Bruno  Hen's cabin. Rushing to the spot, he found

his neighbor dead in the  wreckage of his home. 

MacBride reported that he saw no evidences of a tornado, and that  it was a moonlight night. 

The coroner and the sheriff, however, point out that a tornado is  the only explanation for the demolished

condition in which the cabin  was found. 

The tornado apparently dipped suddenly upon the exact spot where  the cabin stood. After annihilating the

building, the twister tore up  brush and smashed down small trees over a narrow path to the lake's  edge. The

storm evidently progressed out over Lake Superior without  doing more damage. 

Bruno Hen, it will be remembered, a few months ago sold the largest  collection of muskrat pelts trapped in

this vicinity in a long time. 

AFTER HE finished reading, Doc Savage's fantastic trilling sound  came into being. So low as to be scarcely

audible, it existed for three  or four seconds, then ebbed away. 

Bruno Hen had sold muskrat pelts. The scent on the roll of bills  was musk, such as would be put there by the

pawing of hands which had  skinned muskrats. 

Doc Savage carried the bills into the laboratory and used a  fingerprinting outfit upon them. He discovered a

few of Carl  MacBride's prints upon the bills, but the preponderance of handling had  been by another set of

fingers. 

Having found musk odor on bills which Carl MacBride  had hardly  touched, and which were thick with the

other finger prints, Doc felt  there was a likelihood that the money had originally been the property  of Bruno

Hen. 

The giant bronze man returned to his search of the body. The dated  stub of an airways ticket showed that Carl

MacBride had come to New  York by plane; that day. 

DOC BROUGHT out the newspaper which Carl MacBride had purchased in  the filling station. MacBride

was a laborious reader, and in perusing  the strange advertisement regarding the giants, had traced the words

with a finger nail. The indentations were plainly discernible: 

WARNING!  WATCH OUT FOR THE MONSTERS! 


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Doc Savage studied this with no little interest. Then he went to  the library, and came back bearing a tray. This

contained newspaper  clippings. 

One, from a Detroit paper, read: 

BEWARE!  THE MONSTERS BRING DEATH AND DESTRUCTION! 

Another, from a Chicago paper, stated: 

TERROR!  THAT IS WHAT THE MONSTERS BRING! 

There were numerous others, all in like vein. In no ease were the  advertisements signed. They came from

newspapers in Cleveland, St.  Louis  every city of consequence in the country. 

Doc Savage sorted over these thoughtfully. His fingers, sensitive  and possessed of a dazzling speed, for all

their superhuman strength,  turned to the clipping concerning the weird death of Bruno Hen. 

The giant man of bronze made it his business to keep tab on all  strange circumstances. Thus did he

sometimes see danger before it  struck. 

He had collected these "monster" clippings because their very  nature was sinister. Doc had newspaper

connections. 

Through them he had learned that no one actually knew what was  behind the "monster" advertisements. It

was no motion picture press  agent's buildup. 

The ads simply came in the mail, with money to pay for their  insertion. And in each case, the ads had been

mailed from Trapper Lake,  Michigan. 

Chapter 6. MYSTERY MANSE

IT WAS more than an hour later when the telephone buzzer whined and  Doc Savage picked up the

instrument. 

The tiny childlike voice which had spoken to him from the  televisorphone in the laboratory came over the

wire. 

"At the junction of Hill Road and the Hudson Turnpike, in New  Jersey," said the small tones. 

"Be right out"' Doc replied, and hung up. 

The bronze man took his private highspeed elevator to the  skyscraper basement. This lift was the product of

his inventive genius,  and operated at hairlifting speed. 

Stepping from the elevator, Doc entered his basement garage. This  was the chamber with the array of parked

cars which had appeared on the  scanning Screen of the televisorphone. 

For his immediate purpose Doc chose a long, somberly colored  roadster. This machine, as he wheeled it up to

the street, showed by  its acceleration that the hood housed a powerful engine. Wending  through traffic, it

attracted no attention, due to its quiet hue. 


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Not so the bronze man. Scarcely a glance rested upon him that did  not become a stare, so striking was the

picture he presented. 

The roadster swept over George Washington bridge, which connects  Manhattan Island with New Jersey.

When traffic thinned, the machine  increased speed. It traveled just within the bounds of safety. 

Several times, traffic policemen sprang into startled life as the  car moaned past; but they subsided upon

observing the occupant. The  greenest rookie knew there was an imperative order out to extend to  this man of

bronze. every possible cooperation. 

Hill Road ran east and west, and the Hudson Turnpike was a north  and south thoroughfare. The two

intersected in a nest of filling  stations and hotdog stands. 

Doc Savage pulled into a gasoline station at the intersection and  ordered fuel. 

A few yards distant, a crowd of excited children surrounded a man  whose appearance was nothing if not

startling. He came near bearing  more resemblance to an ape than to a man. His furry hands dangled on  beams

of arms well below his knees. He had a little nubbin of a head.  His hair grew back from his eyebrows. The

huge simian fellow's face was  likeable, although entirely homely. 

This pleasantly ugly personage was amusing the kids by calmly  folding pennies between a hairy thumb and

forefinger. The feat of  strength he performed without great exertion. 

The gorilla of a man hardly glanced in Doc's direction. He ceased  performing for the amusement of the

children and entered a large sedan  which stood near by. He drove westward along Hill Road. 

Doc Savage, having paid for his tank of fuel, also rolled westward  along Hill Road. He topped the first hill. In

the valley beyond, the  gorillalike man had stopped his car. 

Doc came to a halt alongside the simian one. "Where's Ham, Monk?"  he queried. 

Monk grinned, showing a tremendous array of large white teeth. His  head seemed to disappear entirely

behind the grin; certainly, there did  not seem to be room for much intelligence in his head. 

His looks belied the truth, however. He was Lieutenant Colonel  Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, whose ability as

an industrial chemist had  brought him worldwide fame and a fortune in money. 

MONK WAS one of a group of five who had associated themselves with  Doc Savage. These five men were

all capable of commanding high monetary  returns, had they chosen to exercise the professions at which they

were  skilled. But they loved adventure. Possessing ample wealth, they had  thrown in with Doc Savage in his

career of punishing evildoers in the  far corners of the earth. 

Monk pointed down Hill Road. "We trailed the killer to a kind of a  funnylookin' country estate. Ham's

watchin' the place. We better go on  afoot." 

Doc switched off the roadster motor. So silently had it operated at  idling speed that cessation of movement of

the ammeter needle was all  that showed the cylinders had ceased firing. 

The two men strode along Hill Road, leaving the cars drawn into  weeds beside the highway. 


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"We had the televisor from your office to the basement garage  turned on while we were working on a car,"

Monk said. "We thought you  might want us or something. It was lucky we did. We saw the killing,  and got a

good look at the guy who did it. We caught sight of him as he  left the building." 

Doc nodded. "I figured you would have the televisorphone turned  on." 

Monk was puzzled. He scratched his knob of a head and eyed the  giant bronze man curiously. "Wonder why

that guy.was killed," he  offered. 

"To shut his mouth, obviously," Doc Savage replied. "The killer may  have been a hired slayer. That's why I

allowed him to escape  so you  fellows could trail him to the man who hired him, if any." 

Monk nodded as he waddled along. His legs were so bowed that his  gait was grotesque; he seemed

momentarily on the verge of taking to all  fours. 

"Any idea what's behind it?" 

"Remember the mysterious advertisements which have been appearing  in newspapers recently?" Doc queried. 

"You mean that 'Beware the Monsters!' stuff?" 

"That's it. Those ads were mailed to newspapers all over the  country. They were postmarked, every one of

them, as being mailed from  Trapper Lake, Michigan." 

MONK SQUINTED his small eyes. He had known of the "monster"  advertisements, but had not been aware

that they had been mailed from  Trapper Lake. Doc, he realized, had unearthed this fact in the course  of his

usual checking on things which 'night be of sinister nature. 

"Why'd the murdered man want to see you, Doc?" 

"Possibly concerning the mysterious death of a trapper named Bruno  Hen, near Trapper Lake," Doc replied.

"He had a clipping concerning the  Bruno Hen death in his pocket." 

"What about Bruno Hen's death?" 

"'He perished, according to the report of the local officers, in a  mysterious tornado which struck on a

moonlight night, and did nothing  but demolish Bruno Hen's shack and tear a path to the nearby lake." 

"Queer tornado!" Monk grunted. 

"A neighbor claimed there was no tornado. His name was Carl  MacBride  the man who was killed at our

office door." 

"Huh! If not a tornado, what did he claim it was?" 

"The clipping didn't say." 

Monk squinted ahead. His small eyes in repose were nearly invisible  so deeply were they sunk in their pits of

gristle. 


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Hill Road at this point was seldom traveled, due probably to the  fact that its macadam surface was

uncomfortably roughened by the  weather. Untended brush made a wall on either side. 

"That shyster lawyer, Ham, should be waiting along here somewhere,"  Monk declared, his small voice

pitched even lower than usual. 

The gentleman to whom Monk referred in such undignified terms  promptly stepped out of the brush. He was

Brigadier General Theodore  Marley Brooks, one of the most astute lawyers ever to be graduated from

Harvard. 

"You homely missing link!" Ham whispered irately at Monk. "One of  these days I'm going to skin you and

make a red fur rug!" 

Ham was slender, slimwaisted, quickmoving. His clothing was  absolute sartorial perfection. He was a

tailor's dream. 

In his right hand Ham carried a black cane. Ham was rarely seen  without this. 

The unlovely Monk turned an innocent look on the enraged Ham. 

"Always threatenin' me!" he complained in low tones. "What's on  your mind now?" 

Ham shook his cane in the air and turned purple. He was not,  however, making undue noise with his

dramatics. 

"You left that infernal pig behind and had him follow me around!" 

Monk seemed grieved. 

"Habeas Corpus must be takin' a fancy to you," he groaned. "I never  thought that pig would stoop so low as

to associate with a shyster  lawyer." 

At this point, Habeas Corpus walked out of the brush. A more  astoundinglooking specimen of the pig

family than Habeas would be  difficult to find. The pig was undersized, razorbacked. He had the  legs of a

dog and ears so large as to resemble wings. 

Habeas eyed the dapper Ham, emitted a friendly grunt and ambled  toward the lawyer. Ham launched a

spiteful toe at the pig. In dodging  this, Habeas displayed an agility as surprising as his appearance. 

Habeas was Monk's pet. The homely chemist had trained the pig until  the porker seemed to possess a

nearhuman intelligence. 

Doc, lowvoiced, interrupted what amounted to a perpetual quarrel.  "Where's the killer, Ham?" he asked. 

"He went into a funnylooking place over the hill." Doc noted the  appellation, "funnylooking." Both Monk

and Ham had used it. 

"What do you mean  funnylooking?" 

Ham, like many orators, had a habit of making gestures when he  spoke. He gestured now, although his words

were whispered. 


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"We're in the country," he said. "There's no reason for anybody  having a high wall around his place. But

there's one around this joint.  It's at least forty feet high." 

"Forty!" 

"Every inch of that." Monk entered the conversation with his small  voice. "I ask you, Doc  what does any

one want with a fortyfoot wall  out here in the country?" 

"I walked around the place," Ham said, scowling at Habeas Corpus.  "There's only one entrance. That's

secured by the strongest steel gate  I have ever seen." 

Doc Savage did not comment on the somewhat startling revelations.  He went forward. 

Monk and Ham trailed him. They exchanged throatcutting looks.  Actually, either of them would have

sacrificed his life for the safety  of the other, should necessity for such an act materialize. 

The pig, flopping big ears at Monk's heels, grunted contentedly. 

"Put on the muffler, Habeas," Monk directed. 

Obediently, the pig fell silent. 

Chapter 7. THE ELECTRIFIED NET

AS DOC and his two aids topped the hill, the mysterious wall came  into view. 

"Some joint, eh?" Ham suggested. 

The wall was so high as to conceal whatever lay behind it. A somber  barrier of gray, it was altogether

forbidding. 

"Concrete," Ham offered softly. 

They left the road. The brush was high: it grew thickly. They eased  through the leafy maze with little sound,

and came to the gate in the  wall  the only gap, according to Monk and Ham. 

This gate was notable for its size, being fully fifteen feet Wide  and equally as high. 

Monk breathed, "Look at the size of the bars." 

Monk possessed furry wrists almost twice as thick as those of an  ordinary man. The gate bars were of a

diameter about equal to his  wrists. The gigantic gate was supported by a multiple array of  ponderous hinges.

Apparently, it opened and closed through the medium  of machinery. 

"They wouldn't need bars a fraction of that size to hold  elephants," Ham said. He ran a finger thoughtfully up

and down the  glistening black length of his cane. 

Doc Savage listened for a time, but detected no sound. He moved  along the wall, eyes ranging its towering

height.  When he had circled  the place completely, he had proven Monk and Ham's declaration that  there was

only one entrance. 


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The wall did not enclose much of an area. 

Doc Savage withdrew with his two men to a point remote from the  gate of giant bars. 

From within his clothing the bronze man produced a collapsible  metal grapple hook. To the shank of this was

secured a long silk cord.  He sprung the book open, then tossed it upward expertly. The grapple  fastened itself

somewhere on the opposite side of the wall. 

Doc mounted the thin cord with an amazing ease and speed. 

Nearing the crest, he slackened his pace. From a pocket came a tiny  periscopic device. This instrument he had

put to frequent use in the  past. Its barrel was little larger than a match; the average eye would  fail to detect its

projecting above the wall. Its tiny lenses were  finely ground; its functioning was almost equal to that of a

larger  instrument. 

Doc jutted the periscope above the wail, not showing himself. 

What he saw brought forth the weird trilling note which was  characteristic of the bronze man. 

He swung atop the wall. Crouching there, he gestured to Monk and  Ham, directing them to ascend the cord. 

Monk grasped the thin thread. The hairy chemist had bent copper  pennies quite easily for the amusement of

the children. Great as was  his strength, however, he could barely cope with the task of mounting  the silk

thread  a feat which Doc had accomplished with ease. Monk  was perspiring prodigiously from the effort

when he reached the top. 

Monk had buttoned the pig, Habeas Corpus, inside his coat. 

Ham struggled valiantly to mount the silk line. But his most  Herculean efforts got him less than ten feet from

the ground. His hands  became sweated and he slipped back. 

Doc made gestures indicating that the lawyer should tie the cord  under his arms. This done, Doc hauled him

upward. 

The three men surveyed the enclosure. 

"For the love of mud!" Monk gulped. "What kind of place is this,  anyway?" 

STRETCHED OVER the walled area was a huge, crisscrossed net of  copper cables. The cables were nearly

three inches in thickness. Their  mesh measured nearly a yard. 

"I don't 'understand this!" Ham muttered. The lawyer had retained a  grip on his cane as he was hauled up:

Now he gave the cane handle a  twist, and withdrew a long, slender blade of steel. 

Ham's innocentlooking black stick was a sword cane. 

"Notice that the cables are insulated from each other," Doc said. 

These insulators were substantial affairs of a brown dielectric  composition. 

"The cables are built to carry a highvoltage electric current,"  Monk decided. 


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"Don't touch them," Doc warned. "They may be charged." 

"What gets me, is the solidness of the construction," Ham mused. 

From the gigantic net, they dropped their attention to what lay  below. 

Beneath the net stood a house of native stone. It was vast;  undoubtedly old. Its state of repair was good. It

was two stories in  height, the roof top aimost reaching the thick cables. 

"I'll bet that place has fifty or sixty rooms," Monk muttered, and  held Habeas by an ear to keep him away

from the insulated copper  hawsers. 

Untended shrubbery surrounded the house. It was carelessly crushed  down at some points. Nowhere was

there sign of life. 

"We make swell targets up here," Ham said grimly. 

The grapple had hooked on the wall lip. Dangling it by the silk  cord, which was not a conductor of electricity,

Doc used the hook to  shortcircuit two of the crisscrossing cables. 

There was a crackle and a bluehot spark. The big net was  electrified! 

"Enough of a current to kill a man, if you ask me!" Monk grunted. 

"You fellows keep an eye on the place," Doc suggested. Monk and Ham  nodded. From their clothing they

drew weapons which resembled slightly  oversize automatic pistols. They were fitted with drum magazines,

and  the mechanism looked somewhat intricate. 

These were superfiring machine guns perfected by Doc. Their rate of  fire was so rapid that their roar was like

the hoarse song of a  gigantic bass fiddle. In addition, the slugs which they discharged did  not produce fatal

wounds, being "mercy bullets" charged with a drug  which brought only unconsciousness. 

Doc Savage calculated briefly, then sprang outward upon the  spreading copper net. He went forward in a

series of agile leaps,  maintaining perfect balance. 

His position was dangerous. Should he touch two of the metal  hawsers simultaneously, death by electrocution

would be almost certain.  He was safe as long as he poised on only one conductor at a time, just  as a bird can

perch, unharmed, on a high tension power line. 

Soon he was over the house roof. The net mesh was amply large to  permit him to drop through. He did so,

executing the move with a  batlike quietness. The roof shingles were very old. 

The bronze man listened for a time. His ears, attuned to the  keenness of a wild animal's, detected vague

stirrings. There was also  an odor  a beasty odor. 

Doc worked down the steep slope of the roof. From eaves to ground  was an appalling drop. He took it with

the casual ease of a great,  tawny cat. Leaves fluttered slightly as he landed in the shrubbery. 

Doc's two men still crouched on the wall, alert. Monk shook his  small head, indicating he had seen no danger

astir. 


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The shrubbery, unclipped for months, was over Doc's head at points. 

From the wall crest, Monk howled, '"Look  " 

A rifle sounded from a window of the house. 

To his remarkable vision, developed and kept sharp by scientific  methods, Doc owed his life. He saw the rifle

barrel even before Monk  perceived it and started his yell of warning. 

Doc saw the face behind the gun  the visage of the man who had  killed Carl MacBride. 

A split second before the gun discharged, Doc veered left.. The  bullet chopped shrilly at the space he had

vacated. Seeming not to  slacken his pace at a", the bronze man gained a sheltering corner of  the house. 

FROM THE top of the wall came an abrupt, almost deafening moan.  Monk and Ham had put their

supermachine pistols in action. 

The rifleman ducked from view so quickly, that he was unhit. 

Monk and Ham hastily made the grappling hook fast and slid down the  silk cord. They used care not to touch

the charged copper cables. Monk  had his pet pig under an arm. 

Ham came up, sword cane unsheathed. Monk lumbered on his heels. The  pig, Habeas, trailing Monk, was as

excited as the simian chemist. 

"We'd better get inside," Doc said crisply. " That fellow may try  to use his rifle from another window." 

The bronze man reached a window and gave the sash a rap with his  palm. Glass fell with a brittle clanging.

Doc crawled in through the  opening. 

Ham and Monk kept at his heels. The homely chemist grabbed Habeas  by an ear and hoisted him inside. 

The room in which they found themselves was large, apparently a  smoking room. The chairs were

upholstered in leather; the furniture was  massive, dark. A thick layer of dust reposed over everything.

Cigarette  stubs were scattered about with great carelessness for the wellbeing  of the furniture. 

Not for a long time had the place received a cleaning. 

Doc yanked open a door. It gave into a hallway. This, too, needed  cleaning. 

The men went down the hallway, making no attempt at silence, except  when pausing to use their ears. But no

sound did they hear; nor did  they see any one. 

They came to the room from which the rifle had been fired. An  empty, highpowered cartridge shell lay on

the floor. It reeked of  burned powder. 

The rifleman had fled. 

A scuffling sound led the trio toward the upstairs regions. They  mounted stairs which were carpeted. From

the carpet nap their feet  knocked up little puffs of dust. It had been long uncleaned. At the top  they found a

corridor lined with many doors. Passages branched off from  it. 


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"You'd think this place was a hotel," Monk breathed. 

To their left a door opened. The bright metal snout of a pistol  poked out. 

A determined feminine voice said, "Don't move!" 

Chapter 8. THE EXLIONTAMER

THE YOUNG woman was tall. A plain traveling frock set off the  enticing curves of her form almost as

effectively as would have an  evening dress. 

Her hair was her really striking feature. Young women with  attractive figures were fairly common. Not so

hair such as this. It was  the shade of steel. And the young woman's eyes were as metallic as her  hair. 

Doc acted while her command still echoed. His hand drifted with  blinding speed to Ham's sword cane.

Surprise had slackened the dapper  lawyer's clutch on the weapon. Doc swept it from his hand and flung it,

hilt first. 

The hilt hit the girl's gun hand. She squealed and dropped her gun,  then sought to recover it. 

Lunging, Doc scooped up the gun before she got it. His fingers  banded the young woman's wrist, not tightly

enough to inflict pain, but  with a firmness which prevented her flight. 

The girl threw back her head and shrieked. There was splintering  terror in her voice. 

"I'll do it!" she wailed. "I'll do it!" 

That she was genuinely frightened, Doc could tell by her trembling.  Her firm muscles quivered under his

clutch. 

"Where's the fellow who shot at us?" he demanded. The girl looked  surprised. Her struggling ceased. "What

what  " She seemed  bewildered. "You mean  you're not one of them?" 

"Who are you?" Doc asked her. 

The girl stared distrustfully. She seemed a bit more at ease when  Doc released her wrists. 

"My name is Jean Morris," she explained. 

The name meant nothing to Doc. This was the first time he had heard  it 

"I'm a circus liontamer by profession," Jean Morris elaborated.  "My last job was with the Atlas Congress of

Wonders. It went broke in  Michigan." 

"Not at Trapper Lake?" Doc asked sharply. 

"How did you know?" 

"Do you know a man named Carl MacBride?" Doc queried, instead of  answering her. 


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The girl's burnishedsteel head shook a negative. "No." 

Monk now addressed Habeas Corpus. "Go hunt 'em, Ha. beas. Hunt 'em  up!" 

The pig trotted off. 

The girl stared after the pig, surprised at the unlovely porker's  prompt obedience. 

"I got 'im trained until he's better'n a bloodhound," Monk grinned. 

Doc entered the room from which the young woman had accosted them.  It was a bedroom, bleakly furnished.

The mattress was missing from the  bed; there were no curtains at the windows. Long disuse was apparent

everywhere. 

Doc crossed to a windowly in need of washing. Looking out, he found  he could keep an eye on the gate. 

Monk stationed himself in the door, apparently waiting for the  return of his pig, Habeas Corpus. 

"How did you get here?" Doc asked the young woman. 

Her eyes snapped. "In answer to an ad in a circus trade journal   an ad offering a job to any one who could

speak the language of the  pinhead tribe of African natives." 

"You speak it?" 

"I do  a little. There were three pinheads with the Atlas  Congress of Wonders. They were pitiful little

fellows. They used to  follow me around like three black dogs. I learned to speak some of  their language." 

Doc Savage's features indicated neither belief nor disbelief. He  asked, "When did you come to New York?" 

"Today, by plane. I had been directed by telegram." She thrust her  fingers into a tiny pocket in her frock and

brought out a folded yellow  paper. "Here it is"  handing it to Doc. 

Doc accepted the wire, and read the contents. 

J MORRIS CARE OF GUIDE'S HOTEL TRAPPER LAKE MICHIGAN 

JOB YOURS STOP CATCH PLANE IMMEDIATELY FOR NEW YORK AND COME TO MY  HOME

ON HILL ROAD NORTH OF CITY GRISWOLD ROCK 

"Does Griswold Rock own this place?" asked Doc. 

"A taxi driver told me he did," the girl replied. 

Monk had been listening for the return of Habeas. Now he glanced at  the girl. 

"That name  Griswold Rock  sounds kinda familiar," he said. 

"Griswold Rock is president and chief stockholder of a small  railroad which serves northern Michigan," Doc

said. "He is well known." 


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"There are several men here," said the girl. "I don't think I saw  Griswold Rock, though." 

"You said there were three pinheads with the Atlas Congress of  Wonders," Doc reminded the young woman.

"What became of them?" 

"They disappeared. They wandered into the country, and that was the  last heard of them." 

"How long ago?" 

"Almost a year." 

"Then the circus did not go broke recently?" 

"Oh, no, it went on the rocks months ago. I have been working in  Trapper Lake as a waitress." 

With a slow gesture, Doc Savage indicated the high wall and the  mysterious net of copper hawsers. 

"Have you any idea about the meaning of all this?" 

"No," the girl shuddered, "the place gives me the jitters." 

"SOMETHING MUST'VE happened to Habeas Corpus," Monk groaned. 

"You three stay here," Doc directed. Then he was gone down the  stairway into the lower regions of the house. 

Reaching the library, he glanced about. The furnishings, while  oldfashioned, were not cheap. Condition

here, as elsewhere in the  house, indicated months of cleaning neglected. 

The library was empty of life. 

Doc crossed to a ponderous desk which' was something of an antique.  Letters littered the top of it. More

letters, obviously containing  advertising matter, had been flung upon the floor. 

Doc ran through the epistles. All were addressed to the same  individual: "Griswold Rock." 

Doc read several missives. They pertained to routine operation of  the railroad with which Griswold Rock was

associated. 

One thing was evident from the text of the missives. Griswold Rock  had been operating the railroad from

seclusion. It seemed that he had  not visited the offices during recent months, but had handled all  business by

letter, telephone and telegraph. Just why this somewhat  peculiar condition should exist, the communications

gave no hint, 

Doc left the library and continued his hunt. 

Monk's pet pig should have returned long ago. The fact that Habeas  had not appeared was ominous. 

Doc Savage examined a kitchen, a dining room, and a large pantry  without finding any one. He did, however,

note an enormous food supply.  This indicated some tremendous eaters were around. 


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Doc dropped to all fours and pressed an ear to the floor. The wood  brought faint noises from somewhere in

the house. But they were too  vague to be located. 

Glancing from a window, Doc noted ruts which seemed to be auto  truck tracks, swinging from the great

barred gate and terminating  against one wing of the house. This particular wing was windowless,  little more

than a great wooden box. 

The peculiarity of the construction was interesting. 

Doc Savage worked in that direction. His intention was to  investigate the box of a room. 

A door barred his progress. He tested it with his shoulder. Judging  from its solidity, the panel must be

armored on the other side with  sheet steel. 

There was no peering through the keyhole. It was covered on the  opposite side by a swinging shield. This

refused to move when Doc  probed it with a slender metal instrument which he extracted from a  pocket case. 

Doc worked at the lock with his metal probe. He threw the tumblers,  but the door still resisted. It must be

barred on the inside. 

Doc moved to a window, lifted it, poked his head out and surveyed  the surroundings. He was under no

delusions. Death was aprowl somewhere  in this fantastic place, for all of the quietness in the air. 

Doc saw no one. He clambered outside and, circling, he examined the  wing of the house which was like a

great box. At the end he found  ponderous doors, closed tightly. Nowhere was there a crack to permit

inspection of whatever was inside. 

Doc tried his giant muscles against the panels. The wood only  groaned. 

The sun was low. The huge copper net overhead made a barred shadow  pattern on the concrete walls, and on

the sides and roof of the house. 

Inside the house, Habeas Corpus began squealing terribly. 

Chapter 9. THE MAN OF FAT

DOC SAVAGED dived around the corner of the boxlike wing of the  house and reached the open window

through which he had come a few  minutes before. He pitched himself quickly inside. 

The pig was squealing somewhere in the basement regions. Doc  plunged through rooms, hunting the entrance

to the cellar. 

On the stairway which led down from the upper floors, Monk and Ham  created racket. They were

descending. Evidently they had left the girl  behind; the sound of her feet was not mingling with theirs. 

"Stay with the girl!" Doc yelled at them. 

Monk and Ham came to a stop on the stairs. From behind them came a  sudden awful sound. A board snapped

with a tremendous noise. Planks  broke, splintered. Nails pulled out of wood with shrieks like dying  things. 


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The bedlam drowned the squealing of Habeas Corpus. Monk and Ham  wheeled back up the stairs, reached

the top and pitched down the hall.  Aghast, they skidded to a halt. 

A fantastic thing was happening to the hall floor. It was heaving  upward, forced by some unearthly power

from beneath. Stringers were  crashing apart, planks rending and tearing. 

Beyond the point where the floor was upheaving they could see the  steelhaired girl. Then the buckling of

the floor blocked their view. 

The hallway was dimly lighted. Dust was arising. These two factors  joined to prevent Monk and Ham from

ascertaining the cause of the  fantastic destruction. 

The Thing was smashing up from the boxlike part of the house which  Doc Savage had sought to investigate. 

Doc Savage joined Monk and Ham. 

"It's something alive  a monster!" Monk gulped. "Hear it  breathin'?" 

The breath sounds were like great, windy rushes. Doc produced a  flashlight. It traced a beam like a whitehot

thread. This spiked out at  the boiling dust clouds, but could not penetrate deeply enough to show  anything. 

Behind them, in the lower regions, Habeas Corpus squealed  monotonously. 

Then the steelhaired girl cried out in an awful fear. Monk and Ham  held their tiny superfiring pistols. They

did not dare use them  blindly, for fear of hitting the girl. The slugs were not lethal, but  one in an eye could do

damage. 

The clouds of dust, swirling in the glittering crystal rods of the  flash beam, suddenly convulsed more

violently. Wreckage, splinters and  small planks flew toward them. 

"Back!" Doc rapped. "It's coming for us!" 

MONK AND Ham found their arms grasped by Doc's powerful hands. They  were all but carried down the

stairs. They had moved none too quickly.  The monster seemed to be trying to get to them. 

It was evidently baffled by the dust, and by the strength of the  timbers which composed the old house. It

seemed to turnback. 

The steelhaired girl, who had been briefly silent, began to shriek  again. But her yelling suddenly decreased

in loudness. It was as if she  had been dropped, still screaming, into a bottle, and the bottle  corked. 

"The thing yanked her down into the lower story," Doc said grimly. 

Monk wiped sweat off his simian features. 

"I've seen a lot of unearthly things in my time!" he gulped. "But  this takes the cake." 

In the basement, Habeas Corpus still squealed. 

"I'm gonna see what ails that pig!" Monk rapped, and plunged off. 


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Doc lunged toward a window. Before he reached it, a loud throbbing  roar arose. This came from the boxlike

room. It lifted to a great  syncopation of power. 

"A truck!" Ham yelled. 

There was a clanking of machinery; the great door in the end of the  house swung open. 

A motor van lumbered out. The thing was long, the great closed box  of a body rolling on a fourwheel truck

at the rear. This body was of  steel, and access was had by two doors at the rear. These were closed. 

The van driver was the man with the dyed black hair and mustache   he who had killed Carl MacBride. 

Ham flipped up his machine pistol. It bawled, ejector spraying  empty cartridges. But the bullets only turned

into chemicalandlead  smears on the windows of the van driver's cab. 

"Bulletproof glass," Ham growled disgustedly. 

Doc Savage plucked the little superfirer from Ham's clutch. The  bronze man's fingers worked on the weapon,

flipping the magazine drum  off. 

In the cartridge intake chute, Doc inserted several special shells  which he extracted from a pocket 

The great van had evidently run over a buried trip device in the  driveway. The gate of thick steel bars was

opening. 

Doc lifted the gun; his ability as a marksman was as accomplished  as his other capacities. Then the gun

blasted fire. On the sides of the  van appeared tiny, grayish puffs, as if snowballs had broken. Nothing  else

happened. 

The van rolled through the great gate and was gone. 

"Blast it!" yelled Ham. 

HAM REMEMBERED that ejaculation for a long time, due to what  immediately followed. For the floor

seemed to sink several inches under  their feet, then jump. The walls rocked. A terrific explosion all but

shattered their eardrums. 

Wreckage came spouting down the stairway which led to the second  story. Walls cracked open like overripe

fruit. The sides of the house  split, to let out spurts of smoke and flame. 

The roof over the boxlike room which had held the van spit in the  middle and folded outward like a double

lid. 

Smoke, flame and debris, propelled by the blast, spurted up through  the coarse net of copper cables. 

Doc and Ham were catapulted the length of the room in which they  stood. 

Their eardrums, strained by the first concussion of the explosion,  registered the crash, thump and bang of

wreckage falling back to earth. 


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Doc Savage glanced through the shattered rectangle of a window. The  explosion had practically annihilated

the mysterious wing of the house  which had harbored the big van. 

Overhead, boards and lath had fallen back upon the coarse net of  copper. Dust from the explosion whirled in

a great pall. 

"The girl!" Ham gulped. "She couldn't have lived through that  explosion!" 

The dust cloud, settling and rolling aside, partially dispersed.  Flames appeared  fire sweeping the wreckage

of the house wing.  Scattered tongues became scarlet bundles. They licked at the wood,  flared up and spread. 

"The explosion scattered an incendiary compound," Doc rapped out. 

The bronze giant and the slender lawyer flung out through the  window and ran toward the fire. Waves of heat

assailed them, searing as  they drew closer. Extinguishing such a blaze was beyond all  possibility. 

They circled the inferno, eyes searching. They discerned several  things of interest, the chief item being the

amount of broken glass in  and about the wreckage. 

Countless test tubes and bottles seemed to have been smashed. Here  and there lay pieces of shiny, intricate

apparatus, all battered beyond  recognition. 

"There was a laboratory of some kind here," Ham hazarded. 

Neither man mentioned the main fact that there was no sign of the  girl. Nor did they voice a hope both held

that the girl had been  carried away in the van. 

Monk had not put in his appearance. He had been absent since before  the blast, when he had started searching

for Habeas Corpus. 

"We gotta get him out," Ham wailed. 

There was genuine concern in Ham's voice  a marked change from  the sarcasm with which he addressed

Monk when they were face to face. 

THE TWO men reentered the house. They found, beyond a door which  opened off the kitchen, a stairway

leading to the cellar region. A  loud, thumping noise drew them to the right. 

The basement was filled with smoke. The fumes were blinding,  irritating to the lungs. Sounds of the fire

came to their ears, an  increasing roar. Mingling with this was a shrill whine  an electric  generator. 

Then they sighted Monk. The ungainly chemist was pitching himself  against a door  a panel which did not

bulge in the slightest under  his weight. 

There was a small, square opening in the door, apparently for  ventilation purposes. Through this came the

mournful squeal of Habeas  Corpus. Too, the generator whine emanated from here. 

"I don't seem to be able to do a thing toward bustin' this down,"  Monk groaned. 

Doc dabbed his flash beam through the hole in the door. Inside,  Habeas pranced about. It was a large, bare

concrete chamber. It held a  huge motorgenerator set, obviously employed to charge the overhead net  of


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copper cables with electricity. 

Doc gave the head of the flash a twist. This caused the beam to  widen, and illuminate the entire room more

effectively. 

"I'm a sonofagun!" Monk exploded. 

A man lay on his back in the middle of the floor, glassy eyes fixed  on the ceiling. He reposed near the big

motorgenerator. 

The man was short, very fat; his fat looked soft. His hands lay on  the floor in lumps, like a semimelted

formation of butter. He was  reposing face up, and his jowls hung down in buttery bags against his  ears. 

His business suit, while expensive, was wrinkled. His shirt was  soiled. He wore no necktie. The man did not

move, or even shut his  wideopen eyes. 

Doc thrust a hand in the door opening, and explored on the other  side. "It's sheeted with steel," he explained. 

The bronze man now examined the lock. It was of the key type, with  the lock mechanism on the other side.

Picking it would be slow work. 

Two small bottles appeared in Doc's fingers. Using a match stick,  he poked a pinch of powder from one of

the bottles into the keyhole. He  followed this with a bit of compound from the second bottle. 

"Back!" he said sharply. 

They retreated. 

There was a brilliant flash and a whooping roar! Splinters and torn  steel geysered from around the door lock.

Chemical reaction of the two  compounds which Doc had used, had caused the explosion. 

Doc shoved the door open. Squealing delightedly, Habeas Corpus  bounded for Monk. 

The man on the floor was stirring. He groaned; his eyes closed,  then opened again. He acted like one who had

been asleep, and was  awakened by the explosion. 

Doc grasped the fat man's arm; it was very soft, as if he had  clutched a partially deflated inner tube. 

Picking the fat man up bodily, Doc carried him out of the room. 

"Better get out of here," he called over his shoulder. "That fire  is spreading fast." 

Monk scooped up Habeas Corpus, and said, "I wonder how the pig got  in there?" 

Without replying, Doc Savage carried the fat man up the stairway  and outdoors, Monk and Ham following

him. 

They ran toward the gate, which still gaped open. With his sword  cane, Ham pointed at the net of electrified

cables above. Then he  indicated the high, forbidding walls. 

"If you ask me, this whole place is nothing but a gigantic cage!"  he declared. 


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"What I was thinking, too," Monk rumbled. "I wish I could get my  hands on this Griswold Rock, who owns

the place. I'd find out what it's  all about." 

The man Doc was carrying squirmed feebly. 

"I am Griswold Rock," he said. 

Chapter 10. THE PRISONER

THE BRONZE man and his two aids digested this surprising  information as they ran through the gate. 

Doc lowered the fat man. Then he left the spot, running. He  vouchsafed no information as to where he was

bound. 

"I wonder what Doc's up to now?" Monk muttered. "He put some  special kind of bullets in my gun and shot

at the departing truck," Ham  offered. "I don't know what the idea was. But he may be working on that  angle." 

Doc Savage topped the hill, descended into the valley beyond, and  reached the roadster. He had run a quarter

of a mile at a speed a  champion sprinter would have considered remarkable, yet his breathing  was hardly

hurried. 

Built into the roadster was a radiophone transmitter and receiver.  Doc switched this on. 

"Renny!" he called. 

Out of the radio loudspeaker came a roaring voice which might have  been owned by a disturbed lion. 

"On deck, Doc!" 

"Where are you, Renny?" 

"In your office. Just drifted in." 

"Long Tom and Johnny there?" 

"Sure. Right beside me." 

The men named were the other three members of Doc's group. The  bronze man issued rapid orders to the

men. 

"I want to locate a large vanbodied truck," he said. "It's painted  red." 

"There's only about a thousand red vans in New York," said the  lionvoiced "Renny." 

"Use the planes," Doc directed. "Fly over Hill Road, and over the  Hudson Turnpike. Look for red vans, large

ones. When you find them,  size them up with ultraviolet light and fluoroscopic spectacles." 

"I get you," said Renny. 

Doc switched off the apparatus and returned to the spot where he  had left Monk and Ham. 


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Great clouds of smoke were climbing above the high concrete wall.  Doc found the pleasantly ugly chemist

and the swordcanecarrying  lawyer eying plump Griswold Rock. 

The fat man was holding his head. From time to time, his fingers  explored in his hair. 

"Has he talked?" Doc asked, indicating Griswold Rock. 

Ham shook his head. 

"They made me drink something," Griswold Rock muttered. "That was  right after they saw you fellows on

the wall. I no more than drank the  stuff, then I passed out." 

"Where were you when that happened?" 

"Upstairs." 

Monk nodded, as if a point had been clarified. "They carried you  down to the basement, and Habeas Corpus

followed. That explains how  Habeas got locked up with you." 

"I don't remember what happened," Griswold Rock mumbled. 

Monk waved a hand at the concretewalled enclosure, from which  smoke poured as from a titanic chimney. 

"Is that your place?" he asked. 

The fat man nodded gloomily. "Yep. But it isn't like it used to be.  They made me build the wall." 

"Made you?" Ham asked. 

"Exactly," said Griswold Rock. "I've been held a prisoner for  almost a year. To preserve my life, I had to do

what I was told." 

"Who were your captors?" 

"Pere Teston was the head of the gang." 

"Pere Teston?" 

"He's a former employee of my railroad," explained the fat man. "He  worked in a Michigan division point.

He was discharged because he  failed to show much interest in his work." 

GRISWOLD ROCK poked a soft arm angrily at concrete wall and the  gate of metal bars. 

"They made me transact all my business by letter or telegraph, and  sometimes by telephone. One of stood at

my side with a gun," he grated. 

"You don't know the purpose of the wall and the electrified net of  copper cables?" Doc asked. 

"No. They made me buy motorgenerators to electrify the net. I  don't know why." 

"Ever see any kind of a monster around?" 


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"Monster!" muttered Griswold Rock. He shuddered. "Maybe that  explains the sounds I occasionally heard." 

"What sort of noises?" 

"It's hard to describe them. Pere Teston kept me in a windowless  room in the basement, but sometimes I

could hear things walking about.  Huge things!" 

"Ever hear anything about advertisements in newspapers?" 

Griswold Rock nodded vehemently. "Yes  I did. They were inserting  ads in every paper in the country. I

don't know what kind  or why." 

"Was Pere Teston a slender man with freckles and a mustache?" Doc  asked. 

The plump railroad magnate shook his head violently. 

"No. Pere Teston is a shriveled runt. The skin on his face is  white, deadlooking. Once you see him, you'll

never forget his skin"' 

The fire had progressed rapidly. A house wall collapsed, slapping a  great cloud of sparks above the concrete

enclosure. In the distance a  fire engine moaned. Some one had evidently telephoned an alarm to the  nearest

suburban station. 

Doc Savage went to the gate. From the recesses of his clothing came  an unbreakable tube. The powder this

contained, he sprinkled upon the  gate bars. Finger prints became visible. 

Doc Savage made no effort to photograph them. He merely studied  them, fixing the whorls indelibly in his

mind. Months could elapse  before the bronze man glimpsed like prints, yet he would still recall  their

configuration, to such retentiveness had he attuned his memory. 

Upon one particular set of prints, Doc bestowed a great deal of  attention. Then he joined the others. 

Griswold Rock was saying, "I am not a brave man. They kept me  terrified." 

"Didn't you make an effort to escape?" Monk queried. 

The fat man nodded. "Oh, yes  several times. But I do not seem to  be very ingenious. My attempts always

failed. Only yesterday, I managed  to get as far as the gate. I'd have gotten away, too, I believe, but  the

mechanical fastener defied me. I could not discover how it  operated, although I fumbled all over the gate." 

Doc Savage reached out abruptly and grasped Griswold Rock's fat  wrist. He turned the hands palm up so as

to inspect the finger tips.  His experienced eye appraised the whorls and rings. 

"You left your finger prints on the gate," he said dryly. 

Griswold Rock raised his eyebrows in surprise. 

"I just found the prints," Doc explained "We'd better clear out of  here now. Hear that fire apparatus?" 

Griswold Rock was eying Doc. He emitted a loud ejaculation. 


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"I know who you are!" he exclaimed. "You're Doc Savage, the fellow  who has become so famous as a

troublebuster." 

Doc waved the party in the direction of the car. Doc entered his  roadster. Monk, Ham, and Griswold Rock

and the pig got in the other  car. 

With its siren moaning, the fire engine approached on Hilt Road. 

Doc's party took the opposite direction. They got away without  being seen, thereby avoiding the necessity of

answering the questions  of curious firemen. 

NOR WAS the presence of Doc Savage ever connected with the  mysterious walled mansion which the fire

fighters found aflame. Never  afterward in public did Doc mention the place. He told no one, outside  of his

five aids and the others immediately concerned, of what had  occurred at the fantastic spot. He did not tell that

he had discovered  the enclosure to be a prison for the retention of some species of  fantastic monster. 

The monster angle, however, was unearthed by an aggressive  newspaper reporter who turned up on the scene.

This news hawk possessed  an imagination. He was employed by a tabloid which was not averse to  coloring

its news with a little invention. 

This journalist of wit, after studying the high concrete enclosure  with its overflung net of copper cables,

played havoc with the speed  laws in getting to the nearest telephone. The next edition of his paper  appeared

with tremendous black headlines. 

LAIR OF MONSTERS FOUND!  MYSTERY MANSE GOES UP  IN FLAMES. 

The story below was vague as to detail, but it made interesting  reading. It stated that the property was owned

by a railroad man named  Griswold Rock, and added further that Griswold Rock had not been in  evidence at

his New York club during recent months. 

It suggested that the police conduct a search for Griswold Rock;  and, climaxing the yarn, was a suggestion

that the mysterious "monster"  advertisements, which had been appearing in newspapers throughout the

United States, were connected with the unusual establishment which had  been found in flames. 

It happened that this tabloid newspaper was noted for the  scatterbrained quality of the reports it published,

and as a  consequence, its deductions were not taken seriously. 

Some of the more sedate metropolitan journals dispatched reporters  to the fire, and these later turned in

stories which were carried on  inside pages in small type. 

To the very fact that the tabloid newspaper first connected the  mystery mansion with the "monster"

advertisements, could be attributed  the small amount of real notice which the affair received. Nobody took

the tabloid seriously. 

Since the newspapers never connected the walled estate of Griswold  Rock with the hideous menace of the

monsters which was soon to cast its  grisly spell over the cities of the United States, they remained  blissfully

unaware that, in turning up their noses at the flamboyant  tabloid, they had passed up what might easily have

been the frontpage  story of all time. 

Furthermore, the tabloid itself failed to profit as much as it  might have, for its reporter lacked the detective

ability to follow up  the possibilities which his imagination had suggested; or maybe the  reporter did not


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believe what he wrote. He might merely have come  uncannily near the truth in conjuring an interesting yarn

out of his  fertile brain. 

At any rate, no one connected Doc Savage with the fire, least of  all the fire fighters who arrived too late to

witness the bronze's man  departure. While they were playing the first streams from their  chemical

extinguishers on the blaze, Doc Savage rolled along the  deserted road perhaps two miles distant. 

Chapter 11. THE ULTRAVIOLET TRAIL

DOC SAVAGE switched on the radio telephone. There came immediately  from the loudspeaker the sound

of static and, intermingling with these  cracklings, a manythroated drone. 

The droning, sent from other transmitters, was the sound of plane  motors. 

"You fellows sighted anything?" Doc asked. 

Out of the loudspeaker came a wellmodulated, cultured voice. This  belonged to "Johnny," who was known

to his learned associates as  William Harper Littlejohn. He had once been the head of the natural  science

research department of a famous university. 

"No," said Johnny. "Not a sign of them yet." 

Doc lifted his gaze. Flying low and to the southward, he could see  a plane. 

"Roll your bus, Johnny," he suggested. 

The distant ship spun over slowly in the sky. 

"0. K.," Doc said. "I've got you spotted." 

The bronze man halted his roadster. Monk was driving the other  machine. The pig, Habeas Corpus, was

perched on his lap. He drew to a  stop alongside Doc's car. The three men and the pig piled out. 

For the benefit of Griswold Rock, and for his men, who had not  heard the entire story, Doc Savage gave a

brief synopsis of all that  had occurred. While doing this, he spoke close to the microphone which  fed the

radio telephone transmitter, so that his men in the distant  plane would get the story clearly. 

Monk showed particular interest in the newspaper clipping  concerning the death of the halfbreed

woodsman, Bruno Hen. 

"Tornado  nothing!" he snorted. "I'll bet it was the monsters   whatever they are  that wrecked the

cabin." 

Griswold Rock shuddered violently. "The more I think of my last  months, the more terrible they become," he

moaned.  "My captors forced  me to sign so much stuff that they wouldn't let me read!" 

Doc Savage studied Griswold Rock. The plump fellow certainly had  not taken much exercise recently. He

was carrying some of the flabbiest  fat the bronze man had ever seen. 

"The Timberland is the name of your railroad, isn't it?" Doc asked. 


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Griswold Rock's fat jowls went through a convulsion which was  evidently a nod. "That is right." 

"And you direct the destinies of the railroad absolutely?" 

"Yes. I am not only president, but I also own much of the stock   that is, providing I didn't sign it away with

some of those papers they  made me put my John Henry on without reading." 

"Is the town of Trapper Lake on the Timberland Line?" 

"We have a station there. Not a very profitable one." 

THE SOUND of the plane became audible in the sky to the east; a  moment later the ship appeared. The craft

was of a type as yet rarely  seen in the air lanes. Its shape bore faint resemblance to the popular  autogyro.

Actually, it was a true gyro, another product of Doc  fabulous inventive skill. In making a takeoff, the ship

was capable of  rising vertically. 

The ship became stationary less than fifty feet above their heads.  The door of the closed cockpit opened; a

hand appeared. 

It was an enormous hand  fully a quart of bone and gristle  encased in a skin which resembled rhinoceros

hide. The owner of the big  hand thrust his head out. He had a long, horselike face which bore an  expression

of utter gloom. 

With his other hand, he threw a lever which turned the motor  exhaust into a muffler. The engine assumed a

surprising quietness. 

"We ain't having any luck yet," he called. His voice resembled the  roaring of a disturbed lion. 

This was Renny  Colonel John Renwick. The engineering profession  used his name in terms of highest

respect. His engineering feats had  given him a worldwide reputation and earned him a fortune. 

Renny permitted himself only one form of amusement. When the  opportunity offered, he liked to demonstrate

his ability to knock the  panel out of the strongest wooden door with one blow of his enormous  fists. 

"Long Tom is further west," Renny advised. "Guess you saw Johnny's  bus." 

He swung the gyro in the direction of the strange walled enclosure  with its grille of copper cables. From this,

great quantities of smoke  still poured. 

Renny circled the fire for a time. Then he returned, and hovered  "is craft in the air over Doc's head. 

The bigfisted engineer had an ejaculation which he used at every  opportunity. He employed it now. 

"Holy cow!" he boomed. "That's the dangedestlookin' place!" 

Then he climbed his plane, and followed Hill Road into the  distance. 

Griswold Rock had been an interested observer. He now addressed  Doc. 

"I believe the tales I've heard of you were to the effect that you  have five associates. Was that fellow with the

enormous hands one of  them?" 


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Doc nodded. "He's one of the greatest of engineers, when he chooses  to work at it." 

From the loudspeaker in Doc's roadster came the words which he had  been awaiting. 

"Here's the van, Doc," said a shrill voice. 

GRISWOLD ROCK started violent!y. Evidently the ramifications of  Doc's communication system were

beyond his comprehension. 

"Who was that?" he gulped. 

Instead of replying, Doc started the roadster engine. The giant  bronze man had a habit, somewhat

disconcerting to those who did not  know him well, of seeming not to hear questions which he did not wish  to

answer. 

Had he chosen, he could have taken time to explain that the voice  belonged to Major Thomas J. Roberts, an

electrical wizard whose  contributions to that science were among the greatest ever made. 

The public knew little of "Long Tom" Roberts' work, for the reason  that his discoveries were largely beyond

the understanding of the  average layman. Within fifty or sixty years, textbooks would no doubt  state that

Major Thomas J. Roberts had done important pioneering and  discovery work along many lines. 

"Where is the van, Long Tom?" Doc asked. 

"It's going north on Hudson Turnpike." 

"We'll see if we can overhaul it," Doc said grimly. 

Griswold Rock grimaced and became quite pale. "Can't you  can't  you let me out somewhere?" 

Doc and the others eyed Griswold Rock curiously. Most men, when  frightened, put up a front of exaggerated

bravado to hide their fears.  Not so this fat man. He was terrified, and not backward about asserting  the fact. 

"I'm an awful coward!" he wailed. "I'm especially scared of these  devils." 

"Do you want them punished?" Monk demanded. 

"Of course I do! But I don't care about going after them myself." 

Ham eyed his sword cane thoughtfully. Apparently he was wondering  how a man with such a marked lack of

physical courage had managed to  become manager and major owner of a railroad. Big business men, with

whom Ham had come in contact, had always been gogetters with plenty of  courage. 

"You go with us," Doc told Griswold Rock. "We'll keep you out of  danger." 

Often in the past, Monk and Ham had seen the remarkable voice of  the bronze man work miracles. Never had

it secured a more profound  effect than now. Griswold Rock seemed to draw courage from the powerful  tones. 

"I feel as safe with you as anywhere," he said, and got into the  roadster. 


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THE CAR hurtled forward in a fashion which caused Griswold Rock to  utter a terrified choking sound and

grasp the door. However, as he  observed the expertness with which Doc guided the machine, his  trepidation

subsided. Within a mile, he was resting easily on the  cushions, although seventies were dancing on the

speedometer. 

"Still got the man in sight?" Doc asked into the radio mike. 

"I'm cruising above it," came Long Tom's radioed reply. 

"Sure it's the right machine?" 

"Positive. The fluoroscopic glasses show the presence of the  chemical mixture you always use, Doc." 

Griswold Rock wrinkled his plump brow at these words. "You put  something on that van to identify it?" 

"Shot bullets laden with a chemical concoction at it," Doc replied.  "They splashed the chemicals on the sides

and roof of the van." 

The fat man waved his pursy hands. "For the life of me, I cannot  comprehend how that could help you." 

"To the naked eye the chemical mixture presents nothing  extraordinary. In fact, it's hardly noticeable. But the

stuff has the  property of fluorescing, or glowing, when exposed to ultraviolet  light. Ordinary vaseline, for

instance, has a similar property. This  stuff glows with a different color  a hue peculiar to itself." 

"But you speak of fluoroscopic eyeglasses." 

"The glowing marks are very small. Since it is now daylight,  special eyepieces are needed to make the glow

visible." 

There came an interruption, a sound like metal knocking rapidly on  wood. It emanated from the radio

loudspeaker. 

"Doc!" Long Tom's voice rapped excitedly from the instrument.  "They've got a machine gun  " 

The rapping grew louder, drowning out the electrical wizard's  tones. Then, with an ominous abruptness, the

racket ceased completely. 

"That clatter sounded like a machine gun!" Griswold Rock wailed. 

Doc Savage said nothing. He put weight on the gas accelerator.  Larger and larger speedometer figures

crawled past the dial marker. 

For a time, Griswold Rock failed to note the new pace at which they  were traveling. Then, chancing to look at

the speedometer, he turned  very white. 

Chapter 12. THE TUNNEL

LONG TOM Roberts had studied the red van intently through  binoculars, before dropping down close to it.

He had searched  particularly for possible loopholes, but had seen none. 


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Too late, he learned they had been covered by clever covers caps  disguised as the heads of rivets that held the

van body together. 

A procession of lead slugs, gnashing angrily at his left wing, was  his first warning of disaster. The leaden

stream made a quick march for  the cockpit. 

It was the hammer of these slugs which Doc Savage had heard over  the radio. 

Long Tom was not flying a gyro, but another of Doc Savage's ships   a rather nondescriptlooking biplane.

Doc used this type of craft  when not wishing to attract attention by being seen in his  distinctivelydesigned

speed ship, or the gyro. 

The crate heaved over on a wing tip as Long Tom trod the rudder and  cornered the stick. It got away from the

hungry lead. 

He jerked a lever in the cockpit. On the cowl, hatches rolled back;  a disappearing machine gun jumped into

view. This was synchronized to  fire through the prop. 

Out of the van top, more bullets climbed. Every third or fourth  slug seemed to be a tracer. The metallic

threads waved like a deadly,  windblown gray procession of raindrops. 

Long Tom's gun fired from Bowden controls on the stick. He ringed  the van in his sight; his hand clamped

the Bowden trip. The gun on the  cowl shook its iron back, and smoked. 

Like cobweb spun by an invisible spider, Long Tom's tracers ran  down through the late afternoon sunlight to

the van. Against the steel  van body, however, they only made splotches of chemical fire, or  spattered into

shapeless blobs. 

Long Tom felt his ship jar under him. The stick waggled in his hand  as bullets lashed at the control services.

He jockeyed the stick madly  to evade the fire. 

His plane had never been intended for combat It handled sluggishly.  A procession of slugs beat against the

engine. Their sound was like  rapid hammer blows. 

The engine stopped. 

Long Tom booted the ship into a flat glide, then looked overside.  What he saw made him grind his teeth. 

The only field suitable for a landing was one near the road. To  plant the plane anywhere else would mean an

almost certain crackup, for  all around were trees, rocks and abrupt hills. 

Long Tom slowed the plane by fishtailing. He threepointed  perfectly on the clearing. While the ship was

still rolling, he dived  out and ran for the nearest bush. 

He had hardly taken a dozen leaps when a machine gun stuttered  behind him. He saw hazy tracer lines near

his head. Dust gushed on a  hillside in front of him. A dozen feet to the left he saw a shallow  ditch. Long Tom

dived into it. 

The machine gun stilled its noisy chatter. 

"Take the guy alive if you can!" shouted a man. 


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Take him alive they did. The ditch was not deep enough to permit  Long Tom to crawl away. It chanced that

he was at the moment unarmed. 

Four men ran Up. They were unsavory fellows, men who had followed  the path of crime so long that it was

reflected in their voices and  actions. 

"Lamp the guy!" snorted one of the quartet. "He looks like a case  for the hospital!" 

This statement about Long Tom was caused by the electrical wizard's  unhealthy appearance. Long Tom was

slender and only fairly set up. He  was very pale, as if no sunlight had reached him for a long time. His

appearance, however, was deceptive. Few men were healthier than he. 

The four men pointed machine guns at Long Tom. These weapons were  an airplane type, firing fullsized

cartridges. Recoil was taken care  of by an elaborate bracing device, which each man wore harnessed about

his middle. 

Long Tom arose from the ditch. He was searched. 

"Who are you?" asked one of the gang. 

The electrical wizard ignored the query. A man lunged forward and  gave him a painful kick. 

"Maybe that'll give you a voice!" the fellow growled. 

The last word was still rattling his vocal cords when Long Tom's  fist collided with the point of his jaw. The

blow had the sound of a  loud handclap. The man's eyes rolled, showing the whites. He sagged to  hands and

knees and began shaking his head fish. 

"I ought to snuff your wick!" one of the other men snarled, and  jutted his rapidfirer at Long Tom. 

"Keep your shirt on!" growled a rednecked thug. "We'll drag him  along. The boss may want to juice him for

information. The punk had  some reason for taggin' us with the sky lizzie." 

"I'm in favor of giving him a lead pasting, Hack," grumbled the  bloodthirsty one. 

"Dummy up!" said Hack. "The big shot may not want him rubbed." 

They placed stout handcuffs on Long Tom's wrists and his ankles.  Then hurried him over to the big red van. 

A man stood beside the machine, dancing about in his impatience. He  was tall and waspish, and had freckles

and dark hair and a mustache. 

Doc's story, coming to Long Tom over the radio, had included a  description of this man. The fellow was the

murderer of Carl MacBride,  the electrical wizard realized. 

"Why didn't you smear him?" he yelled, indicating Long Tom. 

"We thought the big greezer might want to put the screws on him,  Caldwell," said the floridnecked Hack. 

Caldwell  he had evidently not troubled to give Carl MacBride a  fake name on the plane  considered

this. 


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"No good! Too risky. Croak 'im!" 

The men lifted submachine guns. For an instant Long Tom stared  death in the face. 

"Wait!" Caldwell rapped. "We'll plant 'im in the truck. That's  better." 

The van cab was commodious. It accommodated Long Tom and the four  men who had seized him. Caldwell

clambered into the rear. 

The engine started; the van swung into motion. It traveled swiftly,  taking tremendous runs at the hills. 

THE ELECTRICAL wizard listened. The monster, whatever it was, which  had broken through the floor of

Griswold Rock's house, must be in the  rear of the van. He hoped to ascertain, from some sound, what the

thing  might be. 

He heard nothing in the nature of a clew. 

Hunched down in the seat, Long Tom surveyed the heavens. Twice, he  saw planes. They were too distant for

him to tell whether they were  Doc's ships. 

The setting of the sun came about abruptly, due to the rising of a  bank of clouds in the west simultaneous

with the descent of the blazing  orb. 

"I don't think we're doin' the brainy thing!" said one of the men  in the cab. 

"Nobody asked you!" growled Hack. 

"Maybe not. But I don't get the idea of finishin' off the thing in  the truck. After all the trouble we've gone to!" 

"Shhh!" hissed Hack. "It might hear you. This one ain't workin'  so good. You know that. So the boss has

decided to get rid of it. We'll  bring up others for the big push on New York. Damn it! We'll have to  get

another headquarters." 

"I hope that explosion got the bronze guy!" growled another 

"Dummy up!" said Hack, scowling at Long Tom. "This guy's got his  ears unpinned." 

"0. K., 0. K.," the other muttered. "What are we gonna do after we  get rid of our load?" 

"Light out for the Trapper Lake country," replied rednecked Hack. 

Night clamped down blackly. Long Tom kept accurate check on their  progress, and their whereabouts. They

followed the State highway for a  time, then turned off. He could see the highway markers. 

Long Tom made no attempt at a break. His captors kept eyes upon him  all the time they were on the ferry.

Hands remained in gunbulged  pockets. His slightest move would have meant sudden death. 

The van rolled on  for hours, it seemed. The terrain became  hilly. At almost every brook they stopped and

added water to the  radiator. 

At last, the van halted. There was a stirring in the rear. Long Tom  peered through the window. 


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Caldwell appeared from the after regions of the van. Ahead of him  he propelled the steelhaired girl, Jean

Morris. 

Her wrists were handcuffed at her sides; adhesive tape crisscrossed  her lips. She could only glare rage with

her metallic eyes and make  angry noises through her nostrils. 

The pair were illuminated faintly by the backglow of the van's  headlights. 

Caldwell stared at Long Tom. He spat disgustedly. "Don't let this  guy get away!" he warned. "He's probably

been listening to you guys  talk, and knows plenty." 

"We ain't been talkin'," lied the rednecked Hack. Long Tom kept  his pale face expressionless. In his

listening, he had garnered one  really important morsel of information. This gang seemed to have a

headquarters in the vicinity of Trapper Lake, Michigan. 

"How do we dish it out to him?" asked Hack, 

"Just tie him in the van cab," said Caldwell. "Two of you birds  come along with me. The other two are

enough to do the job." 

"Sure," said Hack. "I know the spot. I was raised in this country.  The place is right ahead. It'll work swell." 

"It'd better," Caldwell said grimly. 

The van rolled ahead, leaving CaIdwell, the steelhaired girl, and  the two thugs behind. The ponderous

vehicle covered perhaps two hundred  yards, then angled into a disused side road. 

The headlights picked out a tunnellike hole which slanted down  into the side of a hill. Some time in the past,

an attempt at mining  had been made here. The tunnel was rather large  big enough for the  van to be driven

in. 

The mumble of the engine became terrific thunder as the van entered  the bore. 

For the first time, Long Tom detected the vibration of something of  great size moving in the van rear. The

monster was apparently disturbed  by the roar of the engine. 

"I hope the thing don't try to get out!" Hack muttered. 

"The van will hold it," grunted the other. 

Long Tom tested the handcuff links uneasily. He was stronger than  nine out of ten runofthestreet men.

His muscles, however, were  unequal to snapping the stout steel links. 

"Gettin' uneasy, eh?" jeered Hack 

The fellow drew another set of handcuffs from his pocket He grasped  Long Tom's leg. 

The electrical wizard kicked and pitched about violently. The  driver cursed. His attention was distracted; the

van crashed into the  tunnel wall and stopped. 


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Both men seized Long Tom. Clubbing him with pistols, straining,  grunting, they managed to link his ankle

manacles to the steeringpost 

"Let's go!" snapped Hack. 

They piled out of the cab. 

Long Tom heard scraping sounds, then saw the reddish flicker of  machete. He leaned out. Although his feet

were secured, he could see  the two men. They were applying a match to a fuse which led into a  large steel

tool locker slung under the van body. 

The fuse hissed, and spat sparks. The two men whirled and ran. 

THE VAN motor had killed itself when the machine collided with the  tunnel side, and inside the tunnel there

was comparative silence,  except for the noise of the running men. Somehow, to Long Tom, it was  as if the

receding steps were in actuality the departure of his own  lifeghost. 

He wrenched madly, fighting the handcuff links. The steel circiets  scraped skin off his wrists and ankles, cut

flesh, and rasped tendons.  And they held him. 

Back in the van interior, the monster stirred uneasily. On the  faint chance that he might arouse the thing and

cause it to break free,  and in some manner accomplish the saving of himself, Long Tom began to  yell. 

"Bust out!" he shrilled. "They're trying to kill us!" 

There was a violent stir, a terrific impact inside the van; then  great blows. 

The thing realized something sinister was under way. Either it had  understood Long Tom or had sensed the

danger. 

Long Tom peered out of the cab, stretching as far as the handcuff  links would permit. The sparking fire had

crawled along the fuse until  it was lost to view inside the box. 

The monster's struggles caused the van body to rock slightly on the  springs. 

Long Tom widened his mouth to yell again. The shout, however, never  came. Instead, he sealed his lips and

listened. 

He had caught a sound, a sound so weird as to defy description. A  fantastic trilling note  it might have

been the plaintive cry of some  exotic feathered thing lost in the umbrageous depths of the ancient  mine. 

It was the sound of Doc Savage. 

"Doc!" Long Tom yelled. 

The giant man of bronze came plunging down the declivitous mine  tunnel, flashlight in hand. He moved the

beam occasionally to avoid  larger lumps of rock which had fallen from the roof of the abandoned  diggings. 

The bronze man wrenched at the underslung tool locker into which  the fuse ran. It was of steel, heavily

constructed like the rest of the  van. Opening it was work for a key, or for a steelcutting torch. 


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Inside the van the monster struggled futilely. 

Doc Savage leaped to the rear. A huge padlock secured the doors,  too strong to break! He whipped to the cab

and grasped the stout  handcuff chain which linked Long Tom to the steering column. 

Long Tom had battled that chain futilely. His best efforts had not  even elongated the links. The chain parted

under Doc's fingers as if it  were cheap, soldered watch linkage. 

Long Tom was yanked out of the cab and borne toward the tunnel  mouth at a dizzy speed. 

Doc Savage's flashlight funneled white, and in the incandescence,  stony outthrusts of the tunnel walls cast

weird, squirming shadows. 

Here and there lay lumps of coal which had disintegrated from long  exposure to the air. Grayish shale floored

the tunnel, this still  bearing depressions left upon the removal of tramway ties. Through  these, the van tracks

rutted deeply. 

Long Tom gnawed his lips. He was holding his breath, unaware of  doing so. Would the explosion come

before they got out? 

It did not. Doc Savage dived through the entrance, and veered to  the right. In his haste he made some noise.

Rocks rolled; bushes  whipped. 

Drawn by these sounds, from a spot at least a hundred yards  distant, a powerful handsearchlight protruded a

white tongue. Doc and  Long Tom were embedded in the glare. From behind the light, angry yells  volleyed. 

"Hell  it's the bronze guy!" Hack howled. 

Two gun muzzles, lipping flame, became like winking red eyes above  the whitehot mouth of the hand

searchlight. The bullets passed Doc and  Long Tom so closely that the ugly sound was not the conventional

zing,  but more like the snap of glass rods. 

From the tunnel mouth came a great, whooping roar. The big hole  spat shale, dust, and lumps of old coal. 

It might have been the mouth of a gigantic cannon. 

Chapter 13. THE MICHIGAN CLEW

THE CONCUSSION of the explosive within the tunnel caused the earth  to quake until Doc all but lost his

balance, despite his tremendous  agility. 

Rubble was blown from the mouth of the tunnel with sufficient force  to carry many yards; the stuff blasted in

the direction of Hack and his  companions. 

As the hail of debris struck, the pair stopped shooting. Either a  rock broke their light, or they switched it off,

for its glitter  vanished. 

Doc Savage, with Long Tom's manacled frame across his tremendous  shoulders, pitched through the night.

The hill into which the tunnel  penetrated was steep. There was danger of the explosion sliding its top  down

upon them. 


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The cataclysmic force of the detonation seemed to lift the entire  hilltop. Great cracks split and gaped open.

Trees upset. Rocks and soil  spurted upward, as explosiongas escaped through the rents. 

The hilltop settled, causing great gushes of dust. The tunnel mouth  closed completely. The reverberations of

the blast whooped and thumped,  like unseen giants fighting each other, until they weakened away into

nothingness. 

The monster within the van, whatever might be its nature, certainly  had perished in that blast, buried under

hundreds of tons of stone,  shale and earth. 

A more effective tomb would be hard to conceive. 

Doc Savage lowered Long Tom. By way of proof that the bronze man's  earlier feat of snapping the handcuff

b.links was no freak. the linkage  securing Long Tom's wrists and ankles now parted easily under Doc's  great

corded hands. 

"How'd you get here, Doc?" Long Tom demanded. 

"Renny picked me up in the gyro," Doc explained. "Using the  ultraviolet light, we managed to locate the

van. We followed the  thing, and lost sight of it when it went into the tunnel. I dropped  down by parachute to

see what had happened." 

"The steelhaired girl was taken off the van a few hundred yards  back," Long Tom offered. 

With the ghostly abruptness as of a bronze specter, Doc Savage  vanished into the night. He made directly for

the spot from which the  shots had been fired. 

DUST ROLLED in choking waves. The cloud banks that had made the  sunset so abrupt had gorged the sky

with their sooty mass. Dust and  clouds, combined, made the night very dark. 

Far overhead, Doc could hear faint hissing noises. They might have  been made by the wind. Actually, they

were the sound of the silent  motors which propelled Renny's gyro and the larger speed plane in which  Johnny

and the others rode. Johnny had landed and picked up Monk, Ham,  and fat Griswold Rock. 

Griswold Rock had not been enthusiastic about taking to the air,  having admitted a fear of airplanes. 

Doc Savage, using his fabulously sensitive ears and nostrils,  ascertained that the gunmen had fled. He

increased his speed. The  fleeing pair had taken to the disused road which approached the mine  mouth. 

Doc, catching faint sounds of their flight, ran faster. His quarry  had turned off the road into a very level field.

Doc caught a faint  tang of gasoline. 

Out of his pocket came a small boxlike device. It was a radio  transmitterreceiver, designed for an ultra

degree in portability. He  clicked the switches. 

"Renny! Johnny!" he called. 

"I'm on," Renny's thumping tones replied 

"Me, too," added Johnny's more scholastic voice. 


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"Toss out flares," Doc commanded. "I think these fellows have a  plane waiting down here. There's a smell of

gasoline in the air." 

That this deduction was correct was quickly verified. A plane motor  whooped into life out on the level field. 

High overhead, almost against the black flanks of the clouds, a  light appeared. Rivaling the sun in brightness,

it bathed the earth in  glittering white, causing every grass blade to stand out. It was the  flare which Doc had

ordered. It sank slowly, lowered by a small  parachute. Its intensity seemed to increase as it eased down in the

sky. 

Doc caught sight of the plane. It was a lowwing cabin job, and it  looked fast. 

Caldwell himself was inside the glass enclosed cockpit, handling  the controls. 

GIVING HIS engine no time to warm up, Caldwell fed the cylinders  gas. The lowwinged ship picked up its

tail and scudded across the  field. 

In the calcium dare, Doc Savage discerned a feminine face jammed to  the cabin windows. The steelhaired

Jean Morris apparently was still a  prisoner. 

The plane vaulted off. 

Above, Renny's gyro and Johnny's speed ship came spiraling down to  attack. 

Doc, directing the affair by radio, commanded, "Watch it, you  fellows! The girl is in their plane." 

His warning was hardly necessary, however. Caldwell's plane climbed  with astonishing speed. To the west,

clouds hung very low. The craft  made for these. As it banked, Doc caught a glimpse of the license  numerals

in the flare glitter. He made note of the number, fixing the  figures in his retentive memory. 

It dived into the vapor bank and was lost to sight before it could  be overhauled. 

"Holy cow!" came Renny's disgusted ejaculation from the gyro. "We  haven't got a chance of trailing them

through these clouds." 

Renny's gyro and Johnny's faster bus swung in great circles,  searching. Johnny even climbed the ship above

the clouds, where there  was moonlight. No trace did they discern of Caldwell's aerial  conveyance. 

It had made an escape. 

Johnny tossed out another flare, banked down and leveled off. There  was some bouncing to his landing, but

considering the landing speed of  his ship, it was expert. 

Long Tom had joined Doc. He watched Johnny get out of the plane. 

"Johnny sure looks like the advance agent for a famine," the  electrical wizard remarked. 

This described Johnny's appearance accurately. He was extremely  tail, and thinner than it seemed possible for

any man to be. Dangling  by a ribbon from his left lapel was a monocle  actually a powerful  magnifier. 


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Griswold Rock scrambled out of the plane after the gaunt Johnny.  Rock's fatty face was white as dough, and

was dripping perspiration.  His hands trembled. 

"I hate airplanes!" he wailed. "They always scare me." 

So that only Doc could hear, Long Tom remarked, "Everything seems  to scare that guy!" 

Renny now dropped his gyro lightly upon the field. Alighting, he  fanned a huge fist in the general direction

of the sky. 

"Holy cow!" he rumbled. "How're we going to trail 'em?" 

"I can help out," Long Tom said shortly. "I overheard them talking.  They've got a hangout somewhere near

Trapper Lake, Michigan. They were  going to head for that spot." 

Griswold Rock held up plump, soft hands in a gesture of  incredulity. 

"Surely you're not going to follow them!" he ejaculated. "Don't you  see that they are too dangerous to

monkey with?" 

Bigfisted Renny answered this. "Cracking down on guys like them is  what we do for a living." 

GRISWOLD ROCK shuddered, and all of his fat jounced and shook. 

"I'm a coward!" he wailed. "Don't count on me. I wish I could go to  South America or some place until this is

all over." 

Doc Savage began outlining his intended course of action. 

"Renny," he addressed the bigfisted engineer, "your knowledge of  engineering includes dope on excavating

methods. You probably know  where machinery and men can be gotten in a hurry." 

Renny nodded and looked gloomy. The gloomy expression was  deceptive. The more somber Renny looked

the more he was probably  enjoying himself. 

"You will start excavation on the closed mine tunnel," Doc told  him. "Dig in and see what the monster was." 

"0. K.," Renny said. 

Doc Savage now addressed Ham, whose specialty was law. "You go over  the records and recent legal papers

of Mr. Rock's Timberland Line  railway. See if you can unearth anything of value. Mr. Rock will want  to

know what kind of papers he has been forced to sign recently,  anyway." 

Fat Griswold Rock suddenly shook his fist violently at the sky  where the plane of their enemies had lost

itself. Color came into his  flabby cheeks. 

"You don't need to look for the chief villain!" he yelled.  "It's  that chemist, Pere Teston." 

For the briefest moment it seemed that Doc Savage's weird trilling  note was audible. His five men showed

marked interest, for the sound  indicated that the big bronze man had just heard something which he

considered important. 


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"Chemist!" Doc repeated. "You neglected to state that he was a  chemist." 

"Did I?" Griswold Rock clucked regretfully. "I was excited. I  suppose I left out that detail. It's not important,

anyway. He was a  halfbaked chemist." 

"Halfbaked!" 

"I mean he had crackpot ideas. He was a nut on scientific farming.  He was always going around talking about

increasing the efficiency of  farm animals. He got so goofy about the idea that he was worthless to  my railroad

as an employee, so we fired him." 

"Along just what lines did he hope to increase the efficiency of  farm animals?" Doc asked pointedly. 

"I don't know." The fat man shrugged. "I didn't pay much attention  to that. He was just another employee.

Now, though, I wish I'd kept my  eye on him." 

Doc asked several other questions. These merely developed the fact  that Griswold Rock had no more

information of importance to divulge. 

"I don't want to go to Michigan with you!" said the fat man. 

"We have no intention of forcing you into danger," Doc told him.  "You can remain here in New York, if you

prefer." 

"The rest of us are going to Michigan?" Long Tom demanded. 

"We are," Doc told him. 

Chapter 14. NORTHWARD

THE REMAINDER of the night, and part of the following day, was  filled with fast, if unexciting, movement. 

Bigfisted Renny, calling on engineering acquaintances and  contractors, assembled steam shovels, a fleet of

dump trucks, and  workmen. He began operations on the cavedin mine, scooping his way in  to ascertain the

nature of the monster which Caldwell's gang had  buried. 

"This job is apt to take some little time," he reported. Ham, the  legal expert, set to work on the papers of the

Timberland Line,  Griswold Rock's railroad. Although the little railway operated in  Michigan, its main offices

were in New York. 

"I moved the headquarters down here," Griswold Rock explained. "I  never did like northern Michigan. It gets

too cold for me up there in  the winter." 

In his first few hours of searching, Ham unearthed several  noteworthy morsels of information. First, Griswold

Rock had signed  numerous checks under duress. They were large checks  they totaled  nearly a quarter of a

million dollars. Furthermore, it was evident that  Pere Teston had been the recipient of all of these sums. At

least, his  name was on the face of the checks, and on the back in endorsement. 

Fat Griswold Rock did not seem greatly concerned over the huge  inroad on his finances. Apparently he could

stand monetary loss, but  any threat of danger to his person drove him frantic. 


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"I got out of it lucky!" he said, and fingered his own fat bulges  lovingly. 

Another interesting detail turned up by Ham was the fact that the  Timberland Line had recently bought

tremendous quantities of food. This  stuff Tanged from some hundreds of sacks of flour,. to several carloads

of dressed beef. There were literally carloads of groceries. 

"The purchase orders for that junk must have been among the papers  I was forced to sign!" Griswold Rock

declared. "This is the first time  I've seen them. But they have my signature, all right." 

Ham traced down these food supplies. He learned the material had  been transferred to a barge in Lake

Superior, near Trapper Lake. No one  seemed to know what had happened after that. The barge had simply

gone  away late in the night, and had come back empty. 

"Oh, gracious!" ejaculated Griswold Rock. "They've bought enough  food for an army! What can it mean?" 

"It means that this is something gigantic and carefully planned,"  Ham decided. 

All of Griswold Rock's bulges shook as he shuddered. 

"I have an awful feeling," he moaned. "It is that some gigantic,  awful menace is hanging over us. I tell you

these devils must  contemplate something horrible. I've a notion to go to Europe until  it's over." 

"Suit yourself!" snapped Ham, somewhat disgusted by the fat man's  manifestations of profound cowardice.

"But before you sail, give me  legal authorization to go through the records of your railroad up in  Michigan. I

want to do some more checking there." 

"Very well," Griswold Rock agreed. 

He signed an authorization which Ham drew up. 

It was well past noon before Doc Savage took off in his largest  speed plane for Michigan. With him went

Ham, Monk, Johnny and Long Tom.  Each man carried such mechanical devices and supplies as he believed

he  might need. 

They left Renny behind, superintending the excavating of the buried  monster. 

"I'm going to Europe, or somewhere," said fat Griswold Rock, as he  saw them off. 

THE SPEED plane Doc was using for the Michigan trip, in addition to  being his largest, was his newest. It

was a gigantic thing, built to  the bronze man's personally drawn specifications  a ship which had  created a

small furor in the aeronautical world. It was nearly a  hundred miles an hour faster than anything approaching

it in size. 

The fast craft was volleying over the Trapper Lake region of  northern Michigan when sunset approached. 

Doc was handling the controls. He had not slept the previous night  nor that morning. Moreover, the giant

bronze man had that morning taken  the twohour routine of exercises which he never neglected. 

The exercises consisted of muscular exertions, performed so  strenuously that they spread a sheen of

perspiration over his great  frame. A series of sound waves above and below those audible to a  normal ear, he

had employed to attune his hearing. He tested an  assortment of odors, this sharpening his olfactory organs. 


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He read pages of Braille printing  the writing of the blind which  is a system of upraised dots on paper 

to make his sense of touch  more acute. 

There were scores of other angles to his routine, all intended to  develop mental and physical perfection. All

of the exercises were  scientific in nature, calculated to obtain the most pronounced results. 

Despite the exercises, intensive activity, and lack of sleep, Doc  Savage showed no signs of fatigue. His

companions did not regard this  as unusual. They had become accustomed to Doc's phenomenal powers. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, reposed On a Coat in the aisle. The air was  cooler in these northern regions. Ham,

carefully attired in tailored  outdoor garb, felt the chill and glanced about in search of his  topcoat. 

He saw Habeas. His eyes popped. His neck became purple. 

"Owww!" be shrieked. He made a pass at the pig with his cane. 

Habeas sought shelter under Monk's seat. Ham tried to reach him,  but was fended off by Monk's hairy hands.

Ham promptly belted Monk over  the head with his sword cane. 

"You fuzzy baboon!" he gritted. "You put that pig up to eating a  hole in my coat! He never chewed on things

before!" 

Monk looked at the overcoat on which Habeas had tried his teeth. It  was a strawcolored garment, the latest

in weave and cut. Monk lifted a  scornful lip. 

"if you'd wear clothes like other men wear, it wouldn't have  happened!" he snorted. "Habeas must've thought

that funnylookin' thing  was a new kind of fodder!" 

Ham's swing with his sword cane missed as the plane heeled over on  a wingtip, and he had to grab a seat to

maintain his balance. Doc was  circling Trapper Lake. 

TRAPPER LAKE was considered something of a metropolis in this  remote woods region. It boasted a

population of nearly seven hundred.  The largest building in town was the hotel, the Guide's House. The sign

on the Guide's House stood up as the most prominent object in town. 

The fact that many of the buildings were constructed of logs gave  the town an aspect somewhat out of place

in this modern age. 

The Timberland Line railway depot was a squatty red structure. 

No level ground suitable for a plane landing was discernible near  town. 

"We'll go on and land on the lake near Carl MacBride's cabin," Doc  offered. "We'll be on the spot then, ready

to look things over, when  daylight comes." 

Bony Johnny looked surprised. "How we going to find the cabin?" 

"That shouldn't be hard," Doc told him. "The newspaper clipping  gave its location in a general way." 

From their altitude, the shore of Lake Superior was visible to the  northward. Red lines, slanted across the lake

by the setting sun,  seemed to squirm with the undulations of the waves. 


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The few miles to the lake shore they covered in short order. Renny,  peering over the side, slanted a quart of

pointing knuckles. 

"There it is," he rumbled. 

He had discovered the wreck of Bruno Hen's cabin. Brush and timber  resembled a moss growth around the

demolished structure. The fragments  of the shack itself were not unlike a bunch of crushed and broken

matches. 

Doc's plane was an amphibian, capable of alighting on water or  land. The undercarriage wheels disappeared

into wells. 

The bronze man dropped the big ship expertly on the lake, then  taxied inshore. 

He did not beach the craft. Instead, he pressed a lever and a light  grappling anchor was lowered mechanically.

This caught and held on the  bottom. Collapsible boats came out of a locker and were planted on the  water.

They paddled ashore. 

A latecalling meadowlark made sound; a jaybird scolded them  angrily. Along the lake, leaping fish made

splashes. It was a peaceful  scene. 

They walked to the ruin of Bruno Hen's cabin. 

HAM, LEANING on his sword cane, studied the wreckage in the pale  gray light which was all that remained

of the day. The ruin had been  yanked apart by curious individuals. These persons had tracked down  whatever

sign the surroundings might have held. In addition, there had  been a heavy rain since the disaster. 

"We'll wait for daylight to hunt dews," Doc decided. They pitched  their tents on a bit of high ground near the

wreckage. While the others  did the actual erecting of the shelters, Doc paddled out to the plane  and made use

of a powerful radio set which it held. 

"Wonder what Doc's doing?" Long Tom pondered, battening down a tent  stake with a dead branch. 

The question was answered when Doc rejoined them. "Caldwell's plane  actually flew to this vicinity," Doc

announced. "Checking with the  airports between here and New York disclosed one which saw the ship  during

the night. The plane circled, but the pilot was evidently afraid  to land.  He went on." 

"How'd they come to notice it?" gaunt Johnny asked curiously. 

"There was an alarm out for a ship carrying the license numerals  which that one bore." 

The men showed surprise. They had not known that Doc had spread an  alarm for Caldwell's ship. 

"The license number should show who owned the craft," Johnny  exclaimed. 

"It was stolen a month ago from a commercial air transport company  in southern Michigan," Doc replied. "A

checkup revealed that." 

"Another crime to be charged against Caldwell, or Pere Teston, or  whoever is behind this," Johnny said

thoughtfully. 


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Complete darkness arrived. This night, like the previous one in New  York, was cloudy. 

"Kinda feels like a storm," Monk remarked. The homely chemist was  engaged in playfully upsetting Habeas

Corpus with a toe. The pig seemed  to like this. 

While they were cooking supper, cottontail rabbits occasionally  ventured into the zone of firelight, only to

flee as some one moved or  spoke. Owls hooted mournfully. Insects clattered high notes, and  bullfrogs

whooped in bass. 

It was a peaceful scene. They settled for the night in pneumatic  sleeping bags. All were tired; they soon

dropped off to sleep. 

Chapter 15. NIGHT TERROR

THUNDER WAS chuckling softly in the distance when Monk awakened,  Doc's hand upon his shoulder.

There was no lightning. Monk squirmed,  peered into the inky void, and gulped. "Hey, what the  " 

"Quiet!" Doc cautioned. "I think something's going to happen.', 

Monk bounced out of his bag, much to the disgust of Habeas, who had  been asleep on the foot. 

The pig grunted a few times in discontent, then with strange  abruptness it became silent. 

Monk fished out a match and thumbed it alight. He hid the tiny  flame in his cupped palm, so that only a spear

of light escaped and  fell upon the pig. 

Habeas was sniffing like a pointer. Coarse bristles along his back  were on end. Monk listened, and could hear

nothing. But the pig had  detected the presence of something. 

"Habeas has remarkably keen senses," Doc said softly. "The nearest  of the things must be at least a mile away

from us." 

"What things?" 

"Just a minute," Doc said, "I'll let you listen." The bronze giant  went to the other men and awakened them.

All moved to one side, a few  yards clear of the camp. 

A strangelooking bit of apparatus stood here. Doc had evidently  erected this after the others had gone to

sleep. Long Tom, the  electrical wizard, recognized it instantly. 

"A supersensitive listening device!" he said. 

The electrical expert did not trouble to explain further that the  thing utilized sensitive parabolic pickup

microphones and 'amplifiers  of great power, similar to those employed in radio sets. He presumed  that the

others knew this. 

Doc Savage flicked a switch which connected the loudspeaker to the  amplifier output. The sensitivity of the

listening device was at once  apparent. An owl hooted in the distance, and the sound poured out of  the

loudspeaker in a great bawl. Habeas Corpus grunted. That, too, was  magnified a thousand fold. 


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Suddenly there came from the loudspeaker noises foreign to the  other night sounds. These were watery

notes, a great splashing and  gurgling. Then came tremendous hissing noises, as of a monster breath  expelled. 

Doc switched off the listener. 

"Huh?" Monk gulped. "That sounds like something wading along the  edge of the lake." 

"There's another of the things in the opposite direction," Doc  advised. "As far as I can tell, there are only the

two of them. They're  approaching slowly." 

After a brief interval, the bronze man switched on the listening  device again. This time, the splashing sounds

were louder, and it was  evident that they came from both up and down the lake shore. 

"Do you reckon they're huntin' us?" Monk asked uneasily. "We'll  wait," Doc said. "We won't use this

listening device any more, either.  The things may hear the amplified sounds." 

The men waited, listening so hard that they could almost hear the  gurgle of blood in their own veins. 

NO LISTENING device was needed now. The noisy wading was becoming  louder as the fantastic waders of

the night approached. 

"I hope they meet each other and fight it out," Long Tom said  uneasily. "They sound as big as elephants." 

This proved a futile hope. The gigantic things prowling along the  lake shore apparently met. One of them

emitted sound, a roar which  terminated in a hacking and sputtering. 

"For the love of Mike!" Monk breathed. "First time I ever heard a  sound like that." 

There came a loud clank. It was like a tin can being kicked, only  infinitely louder. It was followed by another.

Metal crumpled noisily;  rivets shrieked; brace wires parted with loud dongings. 

"Our plane!" Monk growled. "They're tearing it up!" 

He started forward. 

"Wait!" Doc admonished sharply. "Those things may be dangerous." 

A tremendous splashing was accompanying the ruining of the plane.  This came nearer, as if the monsters

were pushing the plane to the  beach. 

"Ain't we gonna do something about this?" Long Tom asked  indignantly. 

"I planted a camera in the treetops, upon first hearing them," Doc  explained. "The things are almost in

position now to have their  pictures taken." 

From the ground beside the electrical listening device Doc picked a  metalliclooking object, slightly smaller

than a baseball. He threw  this in the direction of the beach. 

The thing detonated with a flash that stabbed at their eyeballs  like hot flame. It was powerful flashlight

powder which would expose  the plate of the camera. He had been able to plant the camera with  shutter open,

thanks to the murk of the night. 


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At the flash, both monsters came crashing through underbrush and  timber toward the camp. 

"They must have located our place by the camp fire earlier in the  night," Ham breathed grimly. 

"Scatter!" Doc ordered. "These things show signs of in telligence.  They're dangerous." 

Stealthily, the men parted.. 

Doc Savage remained where he was, except that he moved a few feet  to one side, stooped, and opened a bag.

This was part of their  equiprnent, all of which they had fortunately removed from the plane. 

Out of the bag Doc took two metallic containers, each of perhaps a  quart capacity. Balancing one of these in

either hand, he waited. They  were great teargas bombs. 

He delayed throwing until convinced one of the monsters was within  fifty feet. Then he hurled both gas

bombs. They landed, bursting with  loud whups. 

Then Doc dodged wildly. Something came at him  something thrown.  Whether by accident, or due to the

fact that the monsters had heard  some slight sound which Doc had made, the object was thrown accurately. 

It hit Doc. It was such a blow as he had never before fell. He was  propelled backward, crashed into a tree,

bounced from it to a smaller  sapllng, and dropped. He lay perfectly still after he fell. 

THE THROWN thing had not struck Doc Savage squarely, however. A  shift, executed almost as he felt the

thrown object, had put him  partially in the clear. He had an opportunity to tense his great  muscles to absorb

the shock. 

He lay in the soft weeds and dead leaves for only a moment, then  reared up. The monster was charging him. 

Doc glided to the side, one hand exploring the blackness for  saplings and trees, to avoid collision. With his

other hand he felt for  his flashlight. He found it  a shapeless mass of battered metal and  squashed glass. It

had come into contact with a tree and was useless. 

The monster missed Doc and ploughed on through the brush,  travelling blindly. Its coughing, hacking,

sputtering and other hideous  sounds indicated the effects of the tear gas. 

It veered toward the lake, its companion following. With a great  splashing, they fled into the night. They

traveled with amazing speed,  for their sounds were soon lost to the unaided ear. 

Doc started toward the beach, desirous of getting to his camera.  The plate should tell them the nature of the

monsters. But he  encountered the tear gas. The night breeze, which was very light, had  not yet pushed the

stuff out on the lake. 

Rather than trouble to dig a gas mask out of his duffle, Doc  decided to wait until the breeze dispersed the

vapor. That should not  take many minutes. 

His men came back to the camp 

"Have any of you got ideas about what the monsters were?" Doc asked  them. 


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None had. It seemed nobody had a flashlight in his possession  during the affair. This explained why no light

had been shown. 

Doc dug a flashlight from their luggage and swiveled the beam  about. He was searching for the thing that had

been thrown at him. It  took only a few minutes to ferret out the object. 

"Whewww!" Monk breathed. "Did one of them throw that?" 

That was a rock as large as a water bucket. 

Doc spattered the flash beam about. 

"Look here!" yelled the bony Johnny. "Tracks the things made!" 

The prints were roughly rectangular in shape, and outlined plainly  in the soft earth. 

"They're bigger than any man could make!" Monk muttered. 

This was no exaggeration, the prints measuring much longer than  Monk's feet, which were not small. 

The amazing thing, however, was that the prints were without  definite shape. 

Doc Savage, examining them, noticed that the earth was pressed  perfectly smooth where the weight of the

monsters had borne down. There  was no mark of hair or scales, nor were indentations of claws

distinguishable. 

"The prints don't give us much of an idea," Doc said. "Fortunately.  we have the camera. 

They spent several minutes inspecting the undergrowth, noting how  saplings were crushed down, and even

small trees bent aside and their  limbs torn off. 

"Those babies were really strong," Monk muttered. 

The gas had dispersed by now. 

"We should have a good flashlight photo of the things," Doc  declared, and led the way toward the beach. 

Once on the sandy strand, he stopped. He played his flashlight  beam. For a moment, the fantastic trilling note

which was part of this  remarkable man of bronze became audible. It seemed to have a slightly  disgusted

quality. 

"What is it, Doc?" Monk asked. 

"The monsters smashed into the tree that held the camera," Doc  advised. "Moreover, they seem to have been

lucky enough to walk on the  camera, There's hardly enough of it left to stuff a pipe." 

Chapter 16. THE SUICIDE SLAYING

THE STORM on the horizon threatened with hollow thunder for the  rest of the night, but did not materialize.

Morning sun brought silence  to the owls  they had not resumed their hooting for nearly an hour  after the


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visit of the monsters. Meadowlarks, bobolinks, and thrushes  greeted the dawn. The rays of the sun turned into

glistening jewels the  dew which dappled the leaves and grass. 

Doc and his men inspected the plane. It lay in shallow water, close  inshore. One wing was askew, almost

ripped off. The stout metal  fuselage was dented, crushed. Propellers were bent. 

"They sure wrecked the bus!" Monk exploded. 

Doc Savage went over the ship, seeking dews. But if there had been  signs of any, the lake water had removed

them. 

He studied the size of the holes which had been beaten in the  fuselage. They were nearly large enough to

permit a man to crawl  inside. The thin alloy metal had parted under the impact of great blows  as if it had been

paper. 

"The things have an almost fantastic strength," Doc commented. 

He gave his attention to the tracks which were imbedded in the  beach sand and in the softer woodland loam. 

"The prints seem to have been made with a substance as unyielding  as steel," he declared. "A

fleshandblood foot would show some change  in configuration." 

He went over the scene thoroughly. Deep in the tangled brush beyond  the camp, whence had charged the

monster which had flung the rock, Doc  found a clew. It proved that their visitants of the night had not been

metal robots of titanic proportions. 

The clew was a crimson fluid. The red stuff was spilled over  leaves, and across the grass for a short distance. 

The monster had apparently snagged itself on a limb. 

Doc Savage spent half the morning going over the vicinity.  Satisfied at last that he was going to unearth

nothing, he scrutinized  the remains of Bruno Hen's cabin. He spent an hour at that job, but  found nothing of

value. 

They visited Carl MacBride's cabin, and Doc went through MacBride's  belongings. The inspection revealed

that Carl MacBride had no near  relatives. 

"That's a relief." muttered homely Monk, who had entertained  visions of the unpleasant task of informing

some one close to Carl  MacBride that the man was dead. Such jobs usually fell upon Monk. 

Doc and his party went back to their campsite, packed their  equipment in tumpline rigs, and set out to walk

the five miles to  Trapper Lake. 

THEY COVERED half of the five miles, and came upon a grassy glade  surrounded by a dense growth of

conifers. The group were crossing this  when Doc flung himself face downward. 

"Drop!" he rapped. 

The others had only time to sag their jaws in astonishment before a  short, shrill whistle knifed at their

eardrums. 


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Every man flattened; they knew that sound. It meant the passage of  a highpowered rifle bullet. The grass

was almost kneehigh. Prone in  it, the men could not be seen at a distance of more than fifty feet. 

"Spread out, brothers," Doc directed. "He's liable to try random  shots into the grass." 

"How'd you locate him, Doc?" Monk called. 

Not getting an answer, Monk angled over to find Doc, with the  intention of putting the question again. But

the bronze man was not to  be found. 

Doc, at the moment, was scores of yards away, He traveled swiftly,  almost against the ground. 

Another bullet made a loud buzzing sound through the grass. 

Doc's discovery of the rifleman had been no accident. For the  previous mile of their progress, the bronze man

had noticed a marked  lack of bird life. To his trained eye, this indicated some one was  moving ahead of them

and had frightened the feathered creatures away.  Accordingly, he kept his eyes open. 

He had sighted the bushwhacker's rifle as the fellow aimed. 

The rifleman had a plain white handkerchief tied over his face. 

Doc gained the edge of the clearing. Not until he was well into the  conifers did he arise. A mighty Nemesis of

bronze, he circled to flank  the attacker. 

He was unsuccessful. The rifle wielder, suspecting his shots had  missed, had fled. He could be heard

plunging through the brush. 

Doc Savage, heading across to intercept the man, found his path  barred by a great thicket of brambles. Large

trees grew out of the  thorny maze. Their branches almost interlocked in spots. 

Scarcely slackening his running pace, the bronze man hurtled upward  in a great leap. His hands clamped a

low limb, and the momentum of his  leap carried him over. With an acrobatic agility he landed atop the  limb,

maintaining a perfect balance. 

He remained there so briefly, however, as to seem not to pause at  all. He swung up and out, caught another

limb, and repeated the process  until he stood among the topmost branches. 

He glided out on a bough and sprang into space. An onlooker, not  knowing the tremendous quality of the

bronze man's muscles, would have  felt he was committing suicide. Doc's hands found the branch of another

tree. He went on through the aerial lanes. 

His progress involved Herculean exertion, but he was probably  traveling as swiftly as the fleeing rifleman. 

Beyond the brambles, Doc dropped to the earth. He was on his  quarry's trail. His path lead through tangled

brush, through thickets  of stunted evergreen. 

They descended a sharp slope. A sluggish stream appeared, wide and  shallow. At one point, a log had fallen

across the water. The  bushwhacker's trail led directly to the log. 

Doc Savage reached the log and stopped. 


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The water beneath the log was only a few inches deep, and it  overlay pleasantlooking sand. This sand was

riled, disturbed. 

At one point, great bubbles were rising and bursting. 

QUICKSAND! AND the bubbles arising might mean some one had fallen  in. Or it might mean that Doc's

quarry had dropped a rock into the  treacherous sand, in an effort to pull a trick. 

Doc's eyes ranged the log. It was covered with a green moss. This  was undisturbed. The bushwhacker had not 

walked across; and nowhere was the quicksand stream narrow enough  to leap. 

Doc gazed around. There were no limbs to which the fugitive might  have sprung to hide his tracks. 

The opposite bank of the stream was a wall of brush and small  trees, and beyond lay thick timber. To gain

refuge, the bushwhacker  would have had to take wing. 

The fellow was in the quicksand. No doubt of it! From Doc's  clothing came the silken cord and grappling

hook which he so frequently  found of use. He doubled the cord twice, and took a loop around the  log. 

Monk and the others came up. They were scratched; their clothing  was torn. Ham's immaculate garb hung in

tatters. They had evidently had  a tough time with the brier thicket. 

"Hey, Doc!" Long Tom yelled in horror. "You ain't gonna go into  that stuff, J hope!" 

Doc did not reply. He knotted the ends of the silk cords around a  wrist and tied them securely, allowing just

enough line to prevent his  arm sinking below the surface. 

The giant bronze man dropped into the quicksand. As he had  expected, the stuff was very loose and liquid.

This accounted for the  quick disappearance of the bushwhacker. 

Doc churned about. He had no trouble sinking in the stuff. The  difficulties would come when he sought to

extricate himself. 

His feet soon found a yielding form. He worked at this, and got it  clamped between his knees. 

Then came the laborious job of hoisting himself. It was a terrific  task, even for Doc's matchless strength.

Very slowly his rising was  hardly perceptible to the eye  he lifted himself and his prize. 

Great tendons, which were normally part of the symmetrical mold of  his arms, stood out in tremendous

fashion. His arms might have been  corded with steel bars. Perspiration rivulets wriggled down his bronze

skin, and mixed with water which covered the quicksand. 

The sand made unlovely bubbling noises. Doc's men waited on the  bank above. Monk had to be restrained

from wading out into the  quicksand, with the idea that he might be of some assistance. 

At last, Doc lifted the bushwhacker free of the quicksand. He  carried the fellow out and laid him on the bank.

The man's handkerchief  mask was gone now. 

It was Caldwell, the slayer of Carl MacBride. A knife hilt stood  out from his chest. 


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IN A dazed fashion, the gaunt Johnny fumbled with his monocle  magnifier. 

"The knife  this fellow was murdered!" he gasped. "Is he the same  man who fired upon us?" 

"The same," Doc replied. "Weren't there any other tracks around?" 

Instead of replying, Doc stood erect and ran across the log which  spanned the quicksand. He entered the thick

bushes on the opposite  bank. There he found the explanation of the knife in CaIdwell's heart. 

Tracks! There was the print of a large foot encased in pactype  shoes. The maker of the print had stood for

some time. 

Doc followed the pac trail of Caldwell's killer. It was a short  procedure. A hundred yards to the right, the

quicksand brook joined a  larger stream. The murderer had entered a canoe. 

Doc worked up the stream, then down. He studied the fish, for the  water was clear, trying to ascertain in

which direction the finny  denizens had been frightened to cover by the passage of the canoe. It  was not this,

but the absence of turtles from logs, that gave him his  clew. The killer had. gone downstream. 

Doc set out in that direction.  A low poppoppop came from ahead   an outboard motor. 

Ten minutes later Doc gave it up. He could not hope to overhaul a  canoe fitted with an outboard. 

He rejoined his men. They had the contents of Caldwell's pockets  spread out on the grass. These consisted of

a penknife, cartridges for  a rifle, a case of cigarettes, and a sheet of yellow paper which had  evidently been

torn from a grocery wrapper. 

Three words were written on the paper: 

THE DEATH MILL 

"What in blazes do you reckon that means?" Monk demanded. 

They left the body of Caldwell where it lay. As a death shroud,  Monk and Ham contributed what the brier

thicket had left of their  coats. 

It did not take them long to reach Trapper Lake. 

"Not such a hotlookin' town," Monk decided. 

Changing the subject impolitely, Ham pondered aloud, "But why was  Caldwell murdered?" 

"Probably because we knew his identity," Doc replied. 

"But he was masked when he shot at us." 

"We saw his face when he killed Carl MacBride in New York," Doc  reminded. "That made him a liability to

his gang. He was a definite  individual for whom we could hunt." 

"Wonder if Pere Teston killed hi," pale Long Tom muttered  thoughtfully. 


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Doc did not reply. 

They worked their way through the business section of Trapper Lake.  This was spread along a single street. 

Doc entered a general store. In slightly over a minute, he was  outside again. 

"You fellows wait here," he directed. 

Ham waved his sword cane. "But what  " 

He withheld the rest. Doc Savage had already vaulted a wooden fence  and set out across lots. 

In the general store, Doc had asked about a spot called The Death  Mill. This place, it seemed, was an old grist

mill on the outskirts of  town. The ominous place had been deserted for years, it seemed, ever  since the former

owner had been caught in the grinding stone and  crushed to death. Hence the name  The Death Mill. 

Doc sighted the dilapidated structure. Mischievous boys had knocked  planks off the walls; the roof had shed

shingles, as if it had the  mange. 

Doc took to roadside brush as he drew near. He circled the mill  warily, for he could hear sounds from within

nervous pacing. 

A man came to the ramshackle door and stood looking out. It was fat  Griswold Rock, who had vowed he was

on his way to Europe when Doc had  last seen him! 

Chapter 17. RENNY's MYSTERY MISSION

DOC SAVAGE bobbed into view. 

For a fat man, Griswold Rock moved suddenly. He jumped at least a  foot in the air. He leaped backward, and

his head, due to his own  clumsiness, banged the ancient door jamb. He sank to his knees, half  stunned. 

He began to tremble. The trembling was an interesting phenomenon,  for it made all of his fatty bulges seem

to be tilled with kicking  frogs. It was almost a minute before he controlled himself. 

"I'm so ggglad you've come," he stuttered. 

Doc's bronze features exhibited no change of expression. "Your  tttelegram ssaid you'd be here abbout

this ttime," continued  Griswold Rock, still stuttering. 

"Telegram!" 

"The one you sent me in New York. I got it just as I was ready to  leave for Europe." 

"I sent you no telegram!" 

Griswold Rock had gotten to his feet At the words, his knees  buckled as if the tendons had been cut. In his

distress, his fingers  seemed to wriggle separately, like fat living strings. 

"The ttelegram ttold me to come here and wwait," he wailed. "It  was ssigned with your name. Do you


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think it was a ttrap to rnmurder  me?" 

Instead of answering, Doc Savage roved his gaze over the  surroundings. The weeds were very tall, the brush

rank; vines entwined  to make a labyrinth. Somewhat scrawnylooking walnut trees thrust above  the whole. It

was a macabre place, suggesting rattling chains and  ghostly cries. 

"There are no tenanted dwellings near by," Doc reminded. 

Griswold Rock tied his hands into a fatty lump. "They decoyed me  here. Maybe they planned to seize me

again. Worse still, they might  have intended to kill me." 

Doc Savage entered the abandoned mill and moved through its moldy  rooms. He even examined the cracked,

longdisused grinding stones in  which the former operator had met his death. 

Dust was thick. That made it simple  for the bronze man's trained  eyes  to ascertain that no one but

Griswold Rock had visited the  place recently. 

"Where is the telegram which you received?" Doc asked. 

"I took a room in the Guide's Hotel," explained Griswold Rock. "I  left the wire there." 

"Let's go have a look at it." 

The backwoods nature of Trapper Lake was evident as they made their  way through the streets. Wooden

planks were evidently cheaper than  concrete, and most of the sidewalks were composed of this material. 

The residents were robust, friendly souls. Although Doc 

Savage and Griswold Rock were strangers, they received 

pleasant greetings. 

The Guide's Hotel, in addition to being the largest building in  town, was the newest. It was entirely of frame

construction. 

The two men went directly to a room on the second floor. Griswold  Rock opened his suitcase. 

"Oh, my!" he wailed. "It's gone! Somebody's taken the telegram!" 

Doc Savage left the room and descended the stairs. He found the  hotel proprietor. 

"Have you noticed any one prowling around within the last few  hours?" he asked. 

"Within the last two hours," amended Griswold Rock, who had  followed Doc. "I just arrived here two hours

ago. I came most of the  distance from New York by plane." 

The Guide's Hotel proprietor was a grizzled man with humor in his  eyes. 

"'Sides you two," he declared, "only one stranger has been in this  here building today." 

"What did that one look like?" Doc asked. 


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"He was kinda tall, middlin' thin, and had one of them there movie  mustaches. Just looking at it made me

kinda want to reach out and jerk  it off." 

"Did the fellow have freckles?" 

"Yes siree. Come to think of it, he did." 

"Caldwell," said Doc. 

"It's his description," Griswold Rock agreed. "Pere Teston is a  wizened fellow, and no one would ever forget

his weird, deadlooking  face. So it wasn't Pere Teston." 

Doc made no comment on this. "They were afraid the telegram would  be evidence against them," Griswold

Rock continued after a brief  interval. "Caldwell came and got it. I tell you I'm worried! They're  after me and

they're clever." 

"Caldwell will not bother you," Doc advised. Griswold Rock looked  surprised; "But he is one of the gang." 

"He is also dead." With a few terse words, Doc described the demise  of Caldwell. 

"Caldwell was stuck with a thrown knife as he reached the log," Doc  finished. "He toppled to the quicksand.

The murderer escaped. There was  no clew to his identity." 

"What about the killer's tracks?" 

"They were made by extremely large pacs. The size indicated the  killer was wearing them over his shoes." 

"That sounds like Pere Teston!" Griswold Rock ejaculated. He  shuddered. "That shriveled fiend has small

feet." 

Doc's four men arrived at the hotel. It was decided to make the  hostelry their Trapper Lake headquarters. 

Doc Savage inquired for a long distance telephone connection with  New York City, and learned there were

no phone wires out of town. 

Doc set up his radio apparatus. Working through a station on Long  Island, which transposed his words from

the ether to landline, he got  in contact with Renny. 

"How's the excavating going forward?" he asked. "Better than  expected," Renny reported. "Doubled the

working crew this morning. I  located a hydraulicking outfit such as they use for gold mining in the  west, and

we're using powerful streams of water to wash the hill away." 

"Did you check up on the finger prints found on the gate of  Griswold Rock's estate?" 

MONK AND Ham exchanged glances which, for once, were surprised  instead of mutually insulting looks.

Here was an angle upon which they  had not known Doc was working. 

"I checked the prints," Renny reported. "The classifications were  broadcast to leading police departments." 

Renny paused at the other end to give an order to some one,  probably an associate in the excavating work. 


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"Here's a strange thing about the finger prints, Doc," he  continued. "They were all of men who have escaped

from prisons within  the last few months." 

"All from one particular prison?" Doc asked. 

"No. Several different States. One bunch got out of the Jefferson  City pen, in Missouri. Another broke out of

the Oklahoma hoosegow at  McAlester. All got outside aid in escaping." 

"This may be significant," Doc remarked. 

"Here's something else that may be, too," Renny reported. "The  police have a record on Caldwell. His picture

is in the rogue's  gallery. He has served two prison terms." 

"For what crimes?" 

"He's a crook who makes a specialty of getting other criminals out  of jail. He was caught doing this a couple

of times. That's how he  happened to go to the hoosegow." 

"Anything else?" Doc asked. 

"Nope." 

The radio and landline consultation ended with that Doc Savage  turned to his friends. They eyed him

expectantly. It was Doc's custom  to assign his associates work which fell in their respective lines. 

"Monk," Doc said, "you'll fix up chemical bombs. Make them strong  enough to knock out an elephant Use a

gas which produces  unconsciousness, rather than fatality." 

Monk nodded. The job was up his alley. 

Doc assigned work to Ham  the lawyer was to delve further into  the records of the Timberland Line

railroad, m an effort to see what he  could find. 

"If you wish, you can assist Ham in this matter," Doc told Griswold  Rock. 

The plump man trembled violently, but nodded. 

"Very well," he groaned. "It seems I had best help you fellows,  greatly as I am frightened. I will never feel at

ease until this devil,  Pere Teston, is brought to justice." 

Johnny, the bony geologist, whose learning naturally included an  understanding of earthquakes and the

seismographic method used to study  them, was to plant sensitive listening devices in the earth. Long Tom,

the electrical wizard, was to assist in this. 

"The idea is to trace the direction which the footsteps of these  prowling monsters take," Doc explained. 

The remainder of the afternoon was spent in following Doc Savage's  suggestions. 

The homely Monk possessed a remarkably compact portable chemical  laboratory which he always took upon

expeditions of this sort. Long  Tom, the electrical wizard, likewise carried an assortment of devices.  The two

experts utilized their equipment to carry out Doc's  suggestions. 


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Doc Savage spent some time working with devices which he himself  had brought. During this interval, he

secluded himself in a room of the  Guide's Hotel. 

When the bronze man appeared, some time later, he was placing in a  pocket objects which resembled

ordinary .410 gauge shotgun shells. 

Ham and Griswold Rock returned to the hotel near nightfall. 

"I talked to conductors on some of the Timberland Line passenger  trains," Ham reported. "They gave me

some interesting dope. It seems  that they have noted some very toughlooking passengers on their trains

during recent months. These fellows are obviously criminals. All of  them got off at Trapper Lake." 

Ham paused; he could not resist an urge for dramatics. "These  toughlooking fellows were always in the

company of a certain man!" 

"Don't beat around the bush!" growled Monk, who was listening. "Who  was the guy?" 

"Caldwell!" 

Griswold Rock wrung his fat hands in fright. "I cannot understand  this. Caldwell has been extricating

criminals from prisons and bringing  them to this vicinity. Why?" 

That was the mystery. 

It was deepened somewhat by information which Doc Savage secured by  radio, later in the day. A fresh crop

of "Beware the Monsters!"  advertisements had appeared in newspapers all over the country. These  had been

mailed from Trapper Lake. 

Doc consulted the Trapper Lake postmaster. The latter was reluctant  to speak at first, but Doc produced

credentials signed by the highest  of government officials. The postmaster turned into a fountain of

information. 

Yes, he had noted a man mailing many letters to newspapers all over  the United States. Yes, he could

describe the man. 

He described Caldwell. 

Monk, having completed his chemical bombs, did some prowling about  town. The homely chemist was an

excellent mixer. When he returned to  the Guide's Hotel he had some information. 

"Caldwell seems to have pulled one of his jail deliveries right  here in Trapper Lake," he declared. "The local

calaboose was broken  into about a year ago. A fellow called Nubby Bronson was taken out. The  man

suspected of engineering the jail delivery answers the description  of Caldwell." 

"Who was Nubby Bronson?" Doc asked. 

"A local bad man," Monk explained. "The fellow had served several  short prison terms for petty crimes." 

"Was he in for a serious offense when the jail delivery took  place?" 


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"That's the strange part. He was serving thirty days for stealing  traps. The jailer said he seemed satisfied with

his lot. They were  surprised when the break took place." 

Doc Savage considered this for a time. 

"The inference is that Nubby Bronson did not want to get out of  jail bad enough to hire his own delivery?" he

queried at last. 

"That's the idea," Monk agreed. 

Griswold Rock gestured astonishment with his fat hands. "But why  should Caldwell break into jail to free a

man who did not particularly  want to escape?" 

If Doc knew the answer to that question, he gave no indication of  the fact. He maintained silence. 

THE GUIDE'S Hotel, they discovered, set an excellent table.  Strangely enough, it was the thinnest man in the

party  skeletonlike  Johnny  who was the heaviest consumer of food. 

"I wonder where the stuff he eats goes to," pondered homely Monk  when Johnny, having eaten prodigiously,

arose from the table looking,  if anything, thinner than before. 

Ham scowled at the pleasantly ugly chemist. "One doesn't have to  wonder where your grub goes to. It's

converted into hair." 

Later, Doc employed his radio transmitter to obtain a connection  with New York City. He sought to locate

Renny. 

"Mr. Renwick left New York by plane about an hour ago," reported  one of the bigfisted engineer's

associates. 

"Left the city!" 

"That is correct." 

"Why?" 

"The excavators uncovered some object late this afternoon," the man  in New York explained. 

"What was it?" 

"No one but Mr. Renwick knows. It was he who found the thing. He  ordered all work to cease, and finished

the digging personally. He  wrapped his discovery in canvas and carried it away. I believe he took  it with him

in his plane." 

"In which direction did he head?" 

"There was something said about northern Michigan, I believe." 

Doc Savage broke the connection. 

"Renny found something important," he informed the others. "He is  rushing it up here by plane." 


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"Then we should hear from him before morning," Monk declared. 

Chapter 18. THE TERROR THAT SWAM

ALTHOUGH THERE were no long distance telephone lines, Trapper Lake  itself boasted a local phone

service. Rooms in the Guide's Hotel were  fitted with instruments. 

It was slightly past midnight when the bell in Doc's room snarled.  The bronze man scooped up the receiver. 

"They've attacked Renny!" yelled a shrill voice. 

"Who is this?" Doc countered. 

The voice was one he had never heard before. The words sounded as  if sawed out by a highpitched violin

string. 

"Renny is fighting a mob in a patch of woods about a mile north of  town," continued the shrill voice. 

"Who are you?" 

"Renny says he must have been unlucky. He landed right among the  gang. I'm calling from the edge of

town." 

"Are you going to identify yourself or not?" Doc demanded grimly. 

"I live in a cabin close to where Renny's having his fight," said  the informant excitedly. "He gave me fifty

dollars to come and call  you." 

Doc Savage started to ask questions. A click denoted the receiver  had been deposited on the hook at the other

end. 

"Ham  watch Griswold Rock," Doc ordered. 

The fat railroad man had retired to his room, but he now appeared  in the door. 

"That is very kind of you," he said earnestly. "I would be  terrified if one of you gentlemen was not near by

for protection." 

"Long Tom  Johnny," Doc asked. "Have you got your seismograph  devices all set?" 

"Sure." 

Homely Monk had been listening. A slow grin overspread his features  as he saw that he was to accompany

Doc. 

"Get your chemical bombs," Doc directed. "Better leave the pig." 

Down the street, Doc and Monk found Trapper Lake asleep. Street  lamps  they were electric bulbs which

dangled from wires spanning the  thoroughfares  had been extinguished long ago. A light burned in the

depot of the Timberland Line railroad. 


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The town had only one cab. Finding it at this hour was out of the  question. Doc and Monk headed north,

running. Monk, considering his  short, bowed legs, was capable of surprising speed. 

They were nearing the edge of town when sounds of shot came rapping  to their ears. 

"Rifles'." Monk ejaculated. "The fight!" 

A bullfiddle of a moan suddenly drowned the other gun noises. 

"It's Renny!" Monk howled. "That noise was made by one of our  machine pistols!" 

A  MOMENT later, Monk found himself running alone. The homely  chemist had thought he was running fast,

but Doc had left him behind so  suddenly that it seemed to Monk that he had turned around and traveled

backward. 

Until this moment, Doc had been skeptical of the phone call. It was  the sort of thing by which a trap would be

sprung. But hearing the moan  of the supermachine gun had alarmed him more than a little. The weapons  were

not public property. Doc manufactured them himself; the only ones  in existence were those in possession of

his men. 

For some distance, Doc followed the rutty roadway. This sloped  downward and became more rugged, the

wilderness on either side more  impenetrable. 

More rifle shots sounded, and the superfirer blared hoarsely. The  sounds came from the left. 

Doc veered over. He was forced to go slowly, for the darkness was  intense. 

He could hear Monk come thumping up. The homely chemist was trying  for speed rather than quietness. His

approach was anything but silent. 

From far down the road  from a point which Monk had passed  a  whistle shrilled. It was a blaring

whistle of the sort used by  policemen. Doc Savage jerked to a halt and listened. 

"Monk!" he yelled. "Duck under cover somewhere. Stay quiet." 

The bronze man's great voice reached the homely chemist and halted  him. Most convenient shelter was the

ditch beside the road. Monk  flopped into it. 

He listened. There was only the fluttering of leaves as they were  moved by the night breeze. Monk jammed

an ear to the ground. Borne by  the earth came thudding noises which might have been gigantic  footsteps. 

The thumpings approached. Then there was loud breathIng   tremendous breathing, such as they had heard

the night before on the  lake shore. 

Doc's powerful voice crashed, "The gas bombs, Monk!" 

Monk clawed at a pocket and brought out a gas mask of very compact  construction  merely a nose clip and

a mouthpiece. From the latter, a  tube led to a breathpurifier which was not as large as Monk's hand. 

Doc, Monk knew, would be donning a similar mask. The gorillalike  chemist stood erect, preparatory to

hurling his gas bomb. But he never  threw it.


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A rasping, metallic voice thundered out. In volume, it was  gigantic. 

"They've got gas!" it said. "Don't take chances. Beat it! Get  Griswold Rock!" 

The metallic nature of the huge voice indicated it was issuing from  a loudspeaker. And it was the voice of

the rednecked thug, Hack. 

Obeying the order, the monster wheeled and charged off in the  direction of town. It was followed by another,

then a third, and a  fourth. Monk's hair all but stood on end as he listened to the thunder  of Gargantuan

footsteps. 

But he was not too unnerved to whip out his flashlight and spray it  after the monsters. The things were

beyond thick brush. He saw nothing  to give a clew to their nature. 

Over where Doc Savage was positioned there sounded a sharp report,  and powder flame spurted. Doc was

shooting. 

Running, Monk joined Doc. He found the bronze man with an ordinary  4l0gauge shotgunlike pistol. As

Monk arrived, Doc again fired at the  sound of the fleeing monsters. 

The big bronze man was charging the weapon with the special  cartridges which he had manufactured during

the afternoon. 

Doc Savage fired his oversize pistol twice more from where he  stood. Then he ran to the road and sent more

of his special bullets  down it. 

"It was a trick to decoy us out of town," he said grimly. "They've  gotten one of our machine guns, somehow." 

"D'you reckon they got the weapon off Renny?" Monk asked uneasily. 

Doc did not answer this, for it was not the bronze man's  i habit  to hazard guesses. He headed in the direction

of town, running swiftly,  Monk lumbering along behind. 

They had covered scarcely a hundred yards when sudden, scalding  white light washed over them. The beam

came from some distance down the  road. 

Doc slammed against Monk. Together, they spun into the ditch. 

Machinegun lead moaned and ripped along the road. The volleying  metal scooped clods and kicked dust

into the ditch. The mingled buzz of  ricocheting slugs was like the droning of oversized bees. 

"This must be the guy who gave the command with the loudspeaker,"  Monk hazarded. 

The homely chemist was tugging to get his superfiring machine  pistol from its holster. 

"I was afraid this leadsprayer wouidn't stop the big babies," he  growled. "I'm sure gonna use it on this

cookie, though." 

He reared up on his knees. His gun howled, and the light promptly  went out. 


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"Got him!" Monk exclaimed, his usually small voice boisterous and  gleeful. He ran toward the machine

gunner. 

But he had not gotten the fellow. That slight error would have cost  him his life, had Doc not seized his leg

and yanked him down. As Monk  sprawled prone, a fresh storm of machinegun slugs swept the road. 

"Didn't you notice how steady the light was?" Doc inquired. "The  fellow laid it on something." 

While the machinegun slugs were gnashing at the opposite side of  the road, Doc Savage lifted for a quick

look. He could not detect the  muzzle flame of the weapon. 

"The gun must have a flamedigester on the muzzle," he said.  "Otherwise, we could spot it." 

The bronze man quitted the roadside ditch. Working to the right, he  reached a mass of vegetation. He worked

through this with a quietness  little short of uncanny. In developing his ability to move silently,  Doc Savage

had studied the ways of the masters of stealththe hunting  carnivora of the jungles. 

He listened, hoping to.locate his foe. 

But it was another sound which caught his attention. Shrieks!  Excited cries! Shots, the crashing of timber and

the squall of a fire  siren! The uproar came from the direction of Trapper Lake. 

The monsters had fallen upon the town. 

Chapter 19. THE MONSTERS RAID

THE MACHINE gunner menacing Doc Savage could be heard running. He  was making in the direction of

Trapper Lake. 

Doc plunged in pursuit. 

The fleeing gunner turned off the road. There came a squeak of  automobile springs, the metallic clank of a

slamming door. An engine  moaned and headlights came on' The car dived into the road and scooted  away. 

Doc Savage sprinted. Given a break, he might have overhauled the  machine before it gathered too much

speed. But the driver suddenly  sprayed machinegun bullets over his back trail, on the random chance  that he

might score a hit In addition, Monk started shooting from down  the road. 

To avoid being caught in the cross fire, Doc Savage was forced to  retreat. The car's headlights were lost in the

windings of the road. 

Monk came lumbering up. 

"Blast it!" he growled. "If there had been some kind of a target to  shoot at, I'd have bagged him." 

Falling silent, the homely chemist listened to the uproar from  Trapper Lake. Women were screaming now.

Pistols whacked; shotguns made  cannonlike bangings. Men howled and cursed. Wood splintered, and large

things upset with jangling noises. 

Doc and Monk headed toward town. 


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After a time, they were conscious that, from the sky, beginning in  the infinite distance and growing louder,

had come a drone. 

"A plane!" Monk ejaculated. "That'll be Rennyk!" Doc Savage drew  his flashlight and pointed it at the plane

sound. His thumb tapped the  button, and the lens spouted long and short bursts of light  the  telegraphic

code. 

A flashlight eye blinked answer from the plane. 

"It's Renny!" Monk grunted. "He seems to be flying the gyro.. 

With his light, Doc directed Renny to land on the road. "We'll  tackle this mess in Trapper Lake from the air,"

he advised Monk. 

The windmill ship spun down and hovered overhead. Hood lamps under  the wings spread a glare which

illuminated the road. Then it landed. 

Renny thrust his somber features into view. He cut the exhaust into  the muffler cans, and the motor became

silent enough to permit  conversation. 

"Got any flares?" Doc cabled to him. "Nope," Renny rumbled. "I  unloaded all extra equipment;; to lighten

this crate so it'd fly  faster." 

Doc and Monk piled into the gyro cabin. The ship, while not large,  would lift Doc and his five men. Doc took

the controls. 

"You just got in?" he demanded, as he guided the gyro into the air.  "Just got here," Renny agreed. 

"Was a supermachine gun stolen from you in New York?" Doc asked. 

"Yeah  how'd you guess it?" Renny boomed, surprise in his great  voice. "I left the thing in the car while I

was supervising the  excavating. Some one lifted it." 

"They were watching you!" Monk ejaculated. "Whoever stole the gun  probably came on by plane." 

"What did the digging in New York yield?" Doc asked. "The dangedest  thing!" Renny rumbled. "I'll show it

to you now." 

THE BIGFISTED engineer twisted and dropped an enormous hand to a  canvasswathed package reposing

on the floorboards in the rear of the  cabin of the plane. He began Unwrapping it. 

"Huh!" Monk muttered. "The darn thing, whatever it is, is almost as  big as a suitcase.!" 

"Get ready to have your hair stand on end," Renny boomed. 

He flung back the last thickness of canvas. 

Monk stared. His small eyes all but jumped from their  gristlewalled pits. His oversize mouth opened as

much as was possible. 

"Wheew!" he exclaimed. 


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Up until that moment, Renny had possessed the biggest hand Monk had  ever seen. Renny's paws were

tremendous. 

Yet, compared to this monster hand which had been swathed in  canvas, Renny's was as the hand of a baby

alongside that of a man. It  was natural in shape, but unearthly in its hugeness. 

Renny himself whistled in awe as he once more looked at it. 

"Holy cow!" he boomed. "The guy who owned that must have weighed a  ton." 

The bronze countenance of Doc Savage exhibited no marked change as  he inspected the titanic relic. It was as

if he had expected something  of the sort. 

"Is this the only part of the monster you uncovered?" he asked. 

"No," Renny said. "The rest of the body was there  the fragments  of it, that is. The thing was instantly

killed in the explosion." 

"For the love of mud!" Monk's tiny voice was wisplike. "So this  hand belonged to the baby who reared up

through the floor of Griswold  Rock's house." 

Doc Savage dropped the gyro down toward Trapper Lake. Their  discussion, and Renny's exhibition of the

colossal hand, had taken only  a moment 

At two or three points in Trapper Lake houses were bun}ing. These  scattered flickering red light over the rest

of the town. The  crimsonswathed scene was starkly fantastic. 

The giants  they were monster men  had already raided the  Guide's Hotel. 

They were now retreating, skulking among the houses. They were like  hideous men in a toy town. 

"Holy cowl" Renny boomed. "Any one of 'em would make two ordinary  men!" 

''The big babies are wearin' armor!" Monk breathed. 

Monk had hardly spoken when they were witness to a potent  demonstration of the effectiveness of the shiny

steel plates which  banded the giants' chests, heads, and legs  even their feet. 

A Trapper Lake citizen leaped out of his cabin. He held a rifle.  Taking deliberate aim, he fired. 

The bullet merely tilted a helmet over on the ear of a giant. This  particular giant was a big black fellow. His

head, judging from the  shape of his helmet, came to a conelike point, instead of being  rounded. 

"Remember the three pinhead savages from the circus?" Monk yelled.  "That must be one of them!" 

After adjusting his helmet, the pinhead giant charged the woodsman  who had fired. 

The rifleman ducked into his cabin, ran through it, popped out of  the front door and scuttled into the

concealment of high weed. 


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The pinhead thought the rifle wielder was still in the cabin. The  black monster lowered his head and

lumbered inside. A few moments  later, he apparently became tired of moving about the interior. 

A wall burst open and his tremendous shoulders and head appeared.  He wrenched his arms free. He tore thin

clapboard siding boards out  bodily and threw them away. Finally he extricated himself from the  ruined house. 

"They're tremendously strong, even for their size," Monk breathed.  "Dumb, too, or he wouldn't waste his

strength bustin' out through a  wall like that.'t 

The pinhead followed his fellow giants out of town. 

DOC SAVAGE tooled the gyro after the monster men. He kept fairly  high and switched on the brilliant

Landing lights. These illuminated  the giants. 

The monsters were running down the road which led to the lake  shore. 

Doc Savage advanced the gyro accelerator. The ship did not have a  conventional propeller. Its speed was

regulated by the inclination of  rudderlike vanes affixed to the tips of the rotating wings. Advancing  the

accelerator set these vanes to digging into the air at a greater  angle. 

Doc had discovered that the giants were following a car. The top of  the machine bore a cluster of four large

loudspeakers. 

"That's the guy who tried for us with the machine gun!"' Monk  declared. 

Doc sent the windmill plane toward the fleeing car. They Were close  to it when a man stuck his head out of

the rear door. 

It was Griswold Rock. The fat man flailed about with his pudgy  fists; he drove fierce blows back into the car

at a target which could  not be seen. He made imploring gestures with his arms, as if pleading  for help, then

was yanked back out of sight into the car. 

A man swung out, clinging to the running board of the automobile.  He held an aircrafttype machine gun

harnessed to a belt about his  waist. With one hand he elevated the weapon. Its muzzle flamed red  fire. 

The bullet stream  a reddish thread of tracer  missed the gyro  by fully a hundred feet, then sought the

target in wild sweeps. The  bouncing car was not a foundation conductive to marksmanship. 

"I'll fix that cookie!" Monk gritted, and leaned out with his  superfirer. 

Monk's gun hooted, and the man on the car sagged. Monk was a  remarkable shot when he could see his

target. Mercy bullets from his  rapidfirer had stricken the gunner with instant unconsciousness. 

Hands inside the car caught the senseless man, however, and hauled  him inside. 

"Now, if I can pot the driver through the top of the machine!" Monk  chortled. 

He never had a chance to try this. Doc suddenly whipped the gyro  away from the spot. 

"Hey!" Monk yelled. "We may be able to bag  " 


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Doc merely pointed at the fuel gauge. 

"I made it here nonstop from New York!" Renny groaned. "Fuel is  about gone." 

"We'd best get far enough away that the giants won't see us when we  make a landing," Doc offered. 

The engine died, fuel gone, as the bronze man was bringing the ship  down some miles to the north. He had

picked a spot near the lake shore. 

"What a break!" Monk groaned. 

Chapter 20. THE WINGED PERIL

DOC SAVAGE had selected an emergency landing spot near the lake  shore for a specific purpose. He dug

binoculars out of the cockpit  duffle pocket, then quitted the windmill plane. 

He ran for the beach. Here, as along most of this wilderness shore,  there was timber. Doc sought a large tree.

He did not use his  flashlight, but felt about ill the black night with his hands. 

Finding a towering pine, he mounted. Monk and Renny, puzzled,  clambered up after him. 

The monsters, from the direction they had taken, should have  reached the lake shore perhaps two miles away

to the westward. Doc  focused his binoculars in that direction. 

"What's the idea?" Renny asked. 

Doc passed the binoculars to him. "Take a look." 

Renny did so. In the jet night he could not see the giants. But he  did discern tiny spots which glowed with all

un earthly purple  luminance. 

"Say, what's them light patches?" he demanded. 

"A chemical compound akin to phosphorus," Doc explained. "The stuff  begins to glow after it is exposed to

the air half an hour or so." 

Monk, astride a limb below, emitted a knowing snow. "The dope was  in the shotgun slugs you plugged at the

giants!" 

"It was," Doc admitted. 

The bronze man fell to watching the luminous spots which marked the  position of the monsters. The glowing

patches moved out into the lake  and became stationary. 

The great loudspeaker voice of Hack, thundering out, carried over  the two miles with surprising volume. 

"Bring the speed boats!" Hack called. 

A moment later, in answer to the rednecked man's behest, marine  engines sputtered into life. Boats had been

waiting out in the take.  They sped for the shore. 


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"Three of them!" Monk decided, after counting the craft. The giants  went aboard the speed boats, and the

craft headed out into the lake. 

The glowing spots on the giants seemed to grow larger, although the  monsters were being carried away. 

"They're trying to rub the shiny stuff off," Renny thumped. '"Their  efforts just spread the dope." 

Doc Savage got careful bearings on the direction taken by the  launch. 

Distance finally swallowed the glowing smears on the giants. 

DOC AND his two men moved down the lake shore to the point where  the boats had been boarded. They

found the car with the loudspeaker  equipment. It was parked near the shore, deserted. 

Later, Doc traced the license number of the vehicle. The machine  had been purchased in Detroit a few weeks

before by a man giving his  name as Pere Teston, but who answered the description of the slain  Caldwell. 

On its side the car bore the advertising of a political party which  was now campaigning. It developed that the

car had no connection with  the political organization, however. 

"They put the sign on it so the loudspeaker wouldn't attract  suspicion," decided bigfisted Renny. 

The men returned to Trapper Lake. 

The town was m an uproar. Women still screamed, sobbed and had  hysterics. Men galloped about,

wildeyed, their persons bristling with  weapons. Almost every one was barefooted, having been routed out of

bed. A number of old fashioned male nightgowns were to be seen. 

The house into which the pinhead monster had crawled was a wreck. A  number of fences had been torn

down; gardens were trampled. The door of  the Guide's Hotel had been demolished. Shapeless tracks of the

big,  armored feet were thick. 

"One of the infernal giants just butted the door down and climbed  in," reported the dapper Ham. 

He indicated the hotel door with his sword cane. "I made a pass at  the brute. Then retreat looked good, so I

jumped from the handiest  window." 

"They came after Griswold Rock!" declared Long Tom. Doc and his men  scattered, and devoted themselves

to attending to the injured. 

The giants had seized four Trapper Lake men in the course of their  raid. Using only their leviathan hands,

they had crushed every vestige  of life from these victims. The bones of the unfortunates had been  broken,

limbs wrenched from their bodies, their skulls crushed. 

"I saw one of the men get killed!" wailed a Trapper Lake citizen.  "A giant just picked him up, took his head

in both hands, and mashed it  like you and me would bust an egg." 

HAVING STAYED awake the rest of the night, Trapper Lake looked  around in the morning and saw

something like fifty newspaper men. While  there were no long distance telephone lines out of town, telegraph

wires paralleled the Timberland Line railroad, and wires had conveyed  news to the outside world of the visit

of the giants. 


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The press took fire. Almost half the passengers on the next train  were newspaper reporters, and the other half

newspaper cameramen. 

More correspondents came by plane. A blimp flew up from Detroit,  carrying the reporters and cameramen of

a tabloid newspaper. 

It dawned on newspapers in every large city in the United States  that here was the explanation of the strange

"Beware the Monsters!"  advertisements which they had been publishing. 

A trimotored speed plane came in with the sound cameras of a  newsreel concern. Two enterprising

journalists brought their own radio  stations and operators. 

Before noon, Trapper Lake stood on the front pages of every  newspaper in the country m twoinch black

type, or larger. Pictures  were telephoned. Maps were drawn with X marking the spot where Trapper  Lake

stood. 

Some enterprising city editors, unable to get pictures, had their  artists draw giants. Exaggerated stories were

flying around, so the  artists drew their giants tossing houses around. 

The giants grew in size with every repetition of the tale. Trapper  Lake had its share of tall story tellers, and

these fellows outdid  themselves. The giants became bigger and bigger. 

Word got out that Doc Savage was on the scene. A wild rush to  interview the bronze man ensued. A New

York newspaper wired its  reporter, promising him a year's vacation in Europe, all expenses paid,  if he could

get a firstperson story from Doc. 

The reporter hunted like a wild man, but failed to earn the year in  Europe. 

Doc Savage, being possessed of a hearty disapproval of seeing his  name in public print, had withdrawn to the

seclusion of a clearing some  miles from town. Here he and his men discussed and consulted with each  other. 

They had done some sleuthing before the newspaper locust swarm had  arrived. 

"I checked on the finger prints of the giant's hand which Renny dug  up," Long Tom said. 

He mopped perspiration off his pale brow. "You remember that bird,  Nubby Bronson, who was taken from

the Trapper Lake jail?" 

"Sure," Monk grunted. 

"The finger prints of that big hand and Nubby Bronson's prints were  the same in design." 

"Well, I'm a sonofagun!" cried bony Johnny. "They grabbed Nubby  Bronson out of jail and made him

into a giant!" 

Ham, his sword cane tucked under an arm, came up. He had been  working with the portable radio. 

"I've broadcast a description of those giants, as you directed," he  told Doc. "They answer the description of

the criminals whom Caldwell  got out of jails all over the country." 


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"We know now why Caldwell was collecting them," said Monk. "He was  gathering them for Pere Teston to

make into giants." 

With that, Monk scratched the winglike ears of his pig, Habeas  Corpus. 

The dapper Ham scowled at the pleasantly ugly chemist and his  equally homely pet. 

"The pattern must have been mislaid the day you two were made!" he  snorted. 

Monk sighed, as if he had stood about as many jibes as he could  bear. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, was looking intently at Ham, as if he  resented the dapper lawyer's words. The pig

opened his mouth. 

The thing which happened then always drove Ham into a screaming  rage. The pig seemed to speak distinct

words: 

"I'm gettin' dang tired of the stuff this funnyfaced lawyer calls  humor." 

Ham purpled very indignantly. He gripped his sword cane. 

"Dramatics!" sneered the voice from the pig. "Ain't he a  funnylookin' snipe in them rags?" 

Ham was particularly touchy on the subject of his clothing. He  still wore the garb which had been ruined in

the bramble thicket,  although it was far from his liking. He slashed suddenly with his sword  cane. 

Monk dodged wildly to get clear. 

Monk had learned ventriloquism solely for the purpose of having  Habeas Corpus express scathing opinions of

Ham. The business of the  talking pig, although ridiculous to watch, invariably filled Ham with  rage. 

The conversation reverted to the giants. 

"But for what purpose did Pere Teston make the big fellows?" Renny  pondered. 

THE WORLD got the answer to that question that afternoon. To the  mayors of four great cities, the mail

brought letters. The cities were  Detroit, Cleveland, New York, arid Chicago. The letters bore Trapper  Lake

postmarks. 

They had been mailed during the visit of the giants! The four  mayors had read the newspapers, so they knew

what had happened in  Trapper Lake. They could not fail to know it  the news was in  scareheads all over

the front pages.. 

The four mayors opened the letters with curiosity. All four got the  shock of their lives. 

The Detroit mayor received his missive first. It read: 

YOUR HONOR: 

Have you read the "monster" advertisements in the newspapers  recently? Those were part of my campaign.

Possibly you have read of the  episode at Trapper Lake last night. If not, I advise you to do so. 


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My giants visited Trapper Lake for a reason other than the seizure  of Griswold Rock, although the latter was

necessary. I wanted the world  particularly Detroit, Cleveland, New York, Chicago  to realize the  power

of my giants. 

You will consult with leading bankers of your city, advising them  to assemble five million dollars. The sum

is to be in small, unmarked  bills. 

Tomorrow you will receive a letter of instruction about getting  the money into my hands. That letter has

been posted. 

If my terms are not complied with, my giants will visit your city.  They will not be in a pleasant mood. 

They will kill people, and wreak incalculable damage. One giant  will be designated to hunt you out

personally. 

You may think machine guns and gas will be effective against my  giants. Do not be fooled. They wear

bulletproof armor, and they have  special gas masks. 

I trust you will not make the mistake of thinking this is a crank's  letter. 

PERE TESTON. 

After reading that, the Detroit mayor tilted back in his chair and  had a good laugh. 

Then he sent out for the late newspapers and reread the Trapper  Lake story. When he finished, he was not

laughing. The story had made  detailed reference to the crushed condition of the Trapper Lake  victims. The

mayor called several leading bank presidents and showed  them the letter. 

"What is the police force for?" asked the bankers. 

So the mayor called the police chief, and the chief, in turn, had  his men oil their machine guns and break out

fresh gas bombs. Radio  squad cars were set to prowling roads around the city. Police boats  covered the lake

front. 

In Cleveland, New York, and Chicago, the reaction was about the  same, except that in New York City, naval

destroyers quietly took up  positions around Manhattan Island. They knew Doc Savage's reputation in  New

York, knew his name had been in the past associated with the  combating of perils before which police

departments were helpless. If  Doc Savage was involved in the matter of the giants, the thing was no  laughing

affair. 

Newspapers ate up this newest development. sheets that had red ink  ran it in their biggest headlines. Here was

the newspaper story of the  year. 

Pere Teston was investigated, and the facts unearthed added to the  general excitement. 

It was found that Pere Teston was a man who had dabbled in chemical  experiments since childhood. But he

had not made chemistry his  profession  it had been a hobby. 

Pere Teston, railroad men who had known him revealed, had for years  maintained that it was possible to

develop compounds to increase the  size of living beings. The friends had laughed; they thought this was  just

another crazy idea. 


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That day, several of Pere Teston's former acquaintances collected  large sums of money for telling their story

to the newspapermen. Pere  Teston, these men declared, had talked much of developing giant cows,  who

would give great quantities of milk. He had spoken of huge draft  horses, which would be a boon to the

farmer. 

No one could recall his having spoken of an army of giant men to  terrorize the world. 

"Probably he thought of that later," said one man who had known  Pere Teston. 

"When did he disappear?" asked a reporter. 

"A year or two ago, maybe," was the reply. The truth was that no  one seemed to be just Certain when Pere

Teston had dropped from sight. 

Before nightfall, almost five hundred more planes were enroute for  Trapper Lake, bearing correspondents and

photographers. 

BEFORE NIGHTFALL, too, Doc Savage and his men took off on a prowl  of their own. Doc entertained an

idea. 

"Everything points to these giants having their headquarters  somewhere in the lake," he pointed out. "Their

food supplies, brought  in on the Timberland Line, were transferred to barges on the lake." 

"But where can their hangout be?" pondered bigfisted Renny. 

"We got a line on their retreat last night," Doc said. " The gyro  fuel tanks were filled to the sloshover point

with fuel smuggled out  of Trapper Lake. They headed out into the lake. 

Half an hour's flying put them over an island. It was covered with  brush and rock, and certainly harbored no

giants. Doc continued onward. 

The previous night had been cloudy, extremely dark. This one  promised to be gloriously moonlit. They flew

high, dropping down when  they sighted islands. 

An hour passed; another. The fuel was holding out well. The gyro,  thanks to its hovering ability, enabled

them to scrutinize closely such  islands as they viewed. 

A half dozen specks of rock and soil they sighted without  discerning a sign of the giants. 

Another and somewhat larger island appeared. 

Ham eyed his watch. "Ten o'clock and all's well," he stated. 

He was wrong. Up from the isle ahead a plane came boring. 

When it was still some three hundred yards away, machinegun  muzzles flamed like tiny red eyes from its

cowl. Tracer bullets,  climbing past Doc's gyro, might have been red sparks. 

The attacking ship was a lowwing bus, very fast. "That's the crate  in which Caldwell and his gang hopped

from New York."' Long Tom yelled. 


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Doc climbed the gyro, jockeying to one side, then the other,  avoiding the machinegun slugs. As the

attacking ship slid past, Doc  heaved the gyro over on its side and flicked the landinglight switch. 

The illumination disclosed a face in the control cockpit of the  other plane. It was the steelhaired girl  the

exlion tamer, Jean  Morris. 

Chapter 21. THE SWIMMING GIANTS

LIKE A thing frightened by the glare of the landing lights, the  other plane scudded away. It banked and came

back. Again the  cowlmounted rapidfirers opened red eyes. 

Doc Savage hung the gyro motionless in the night sky and watched  the thread of tracer bullets warily,

prepared to maneuver the gyro  clear if it came too close. 

The sight of the steelhaired girl in the other plane had kept Doc  from driving bullets into the engine of the

enemy ship while the pilot  was blinded by the floodlight. 

"The hussy," Monk complained. "Who'd have thought this of her?" 

"You were making calf eyes at her in New York," Ham snorted. 

Monk grinned sheepishly. "I'd probably do it again, too. She's a  looker." 

The tracer bullets drew too near. Doc dropped the gyro straight  down. The move was so abrupt that the men

grabbed at their chairs. 

Tracers ran strings of phosphorus fire through the space they had  vacated. 

"What are we gonna do about this?" Monk pondered. 

Doc sank the gyro rapidly. The other ship followed them down in a  tight spiral. Doc flattened some fifty feet

above the lake surface.  Advancing the accelerator, he streaked along above the lake. 

It looked as if he had generously helped himself to suicide, for  the other plane swooped down upon their tail,

its two cowl guns lipping  flame. 

The lake surface was fairly calm, and the small geysers knocked up  by the bullets were visible ahead of Doc's

windmill. The tracers, as  they ricocheted, seemed to be sparks bouncing from the water. 

Doc waltzed the gyro right, then left. The other ship, attempting  to follow these maneuvers with its sight

rings, merely succeeded in  firing wide of the target. 

Renny used his enormous hands to mop perspiration off his forehead.  He knew the danger they were in. Even

Doc's consummate skill could not  avoid the pursuing bullets for long. 

Abruptly, for no visible reason, the plane behind gave up the  attack. It wobbled off to one side, careening in

the sky. 

The pilot seemed to control his craft with the greatest difficulty.  Trying to fishtail to reduce speed, the ship

nearly went into a spin.  Then it sought to land. 


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"Bet the gal don't know what happened to hen" Monk howled  gleefully. 

IF THE steelhaired girl was mystified, she was not the only one.  The dapper Ham was also puzzled. 

"What did happen?" 

Monk slapped his bulging chest with a furry fist' "Give me credit  for that." 

"I didn't see you do anything," Ham sneered. 

"Doc turned the stuff loose, of course," Monk admitted. "But I  mixed it before we took the air. it's gas. The

stuff is in a tank in  the back of the bus. Doc simply pulled a valve cord and released some  of it. In the

moonlight, our steelhaired lady friend didn't notice  it." 

Ham glanced at the other ship. "You can have the credit!" 

"Huh?" 

"The gas doesn't seem to have worked!" 

To their astonishment, they saw that the other craft had  straightened out and was climbing into the air. 

"The glass enclosed cabin of the crate!" Doc said. "Just enough of  the gas got in to. cause temporary

dizziness.'t 

The bronze man hurled the gyro toward the other ship. 

His metallic features were expressionless. He reached a corded hand  back into the cabin. 

"Your rapidfirer," he requested of Long Tom. 

The slender, unhealthylooking electrical wizard passed over his  compact little supermachine pistol. 

"Every third slug in the ammo drum is a tracer," he vouchsafed. 

The other ship, instead of turning back to give battle, was flying  a straight course not far above the water. 

"Givin' her head a chance to clear!" Renny boomed. Conversation was  possible inside the gyro because of the

unusual efficiency of the  silencer on the engine. The rotating wings had also been designed to  create a

minimum of windwhistle. 

Doc Savage drove after the other ship. It was flying slowly; he  overhauled it rapidly. 

"This is gonna be simple, after all," Monk said optimistically. 

The fight had drifted through the sky until they were now hardly  more than a mile from the island which they

had intended to  investigate. 

The isle seemed to be nothing more than an expanse of rock, spotted  here and there with stunted,

windtwisted trees. There were many large  boulders on it. 


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Doc Savage opened the cabin window. Air rushed in, together with  the loud hiss of the silenced motor. He

aimed with his machine pistol. 

But before he could fire, a tiny rip appeared in the fuselage of  the other plane. This had apparently been made

by a knife or an ax. 

The muzzle of a machine gun poked through the opening, its snout  slavering flame. The shooting was more

accurate than previously. 

Clattering, gnashing, lead chopped at the underside of the gyro.  Long rips opened in the fuselage. 

Monk's pig, Habeas, squealed in alarm. 

Doc juggled the controls with a dazzling speed to get away from the  deadly leaden hail eating at the fuselage.

He succeeded; then the lead  storm found them again. 

This time, the slugs snapped in the region of the gas tank. They  chattered with an appalling noise. 

Again Doc maneuvered clear. 

"Holy cowl" Renny thundered. "That last burst opened the fuel  tank!" 

An instant later, colorless gasoline washed over the floorboards.  It reeked in the cabin. 

The other pilot had been more fortunate than he knew. The fuel tank  of the gyro was coated thickly with a

fireproofing and extinguishing  compound  it was practically impossible for it to be fired by  incendiary

bullets. A burst must have struck, opening a leak through  the spongy protective coating. 

A stark grimness had settled on the faces of Doc's men. The sky  brawl had progressed to a point where

chivalry had somewhat lost its  appeal. 

The gyro flung in alongside the enemy ship. They made a discovery  which was nothing if not interesting. 

"Hey!" Monk howled. "The girl ain't flying that bus!" 

THE STEELHAIRED GIRL was lashed in one of the bucket seats in the  pilot's cockpit. They could see that

now, because she was pitching  about madly, and apparently was on the point of freeing herself. 

"I knew she was all right," Monk chortled. 

The actual pilot of the other plane was a squat fellow in a tan  blazer. Due to the shadows inside the plane,

they could not tell much  about him. 

"He ducked out of sight and flew blind whenever he was close to  us!" Monk decided, his usually small voice

a great yell. "That's why we  couldn't see him!" 

The other pilot discovered that the girl had loosened her bindings.  He flung himself toward her. Using the

machine gun, he clubbed at the  girl. 

The young woman threw herself from under the descending weapon,  then clutched its fluted barrel with both

hands. 


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Pitching about in the fight that followed, one or the other  disturbed the controls. The plane reeled over on a

wing tip, motor  bawling. 

The squat pilot saw his danger. He released the steel' haired girl.  Wildly, he battled the controls. But there

was insufficient time. 

The girl took one look at the water, then covered her head with her  hands to break the force of the crash. 

A wing tip knifed the water first. The wing crumpled. The plane hit  the water and jumped end over end. The

other wing left the fuselage as  if sliced off by an invisible razor. The battered hulk wallowed a few  yards and

came to a stop. It began to sink. 

DOC SAVAGE drove the gyro toward the wreck. The windmill plane  could land with equal facility on earth

or water. Doc, however, did not  intend to land. He hovered over the wrecked and sinking plane, the  water

some ten feet below. He turned the controls over to bigfisted  Renny. 

"See what you can do about that gasoline leak!" he directed. Then,  headfirst, he pitched overboard. 

Doc struck the water cleanly, with a minimum of splash. His  powerful frame curved expertly an instant after

the moment of impact,  and the result was a perfect shallow dive. He seemed scarcely to wet  his back. 

Doc stroked to the wreck. A hole gaped in the fuselage, He grasped  the edge of this, hauled himself up and

glanced into the cabin 

The body of the pilot was being tumbled about by the water that  poured into the cabin. There was a crease

nearly three inches deep  across the top of his skull, where he had smashed against a strut. 

A few feet from the dead flier, the steelhaired girl paddled  feebly. She was dazed, but seemed otherwise not

seriously damaged. 

DOC SAVAGE reached into the sinking plane and hauled the girl out.  He was none too soon, for the stricken

craft, weighted by its engine,  sank. The whirl drew Doc and his burden beneath the surface. powerful  stroking

on the bronze man's part brought them up again. 

Bubbles the size of water buckets arose from the sinking plane and,  bursting, made plopping noises. 

Doc glanced upward, then around. The gyro was on the lake surface!  It had settled there during the

momentary space when the bronze man was  under water. 

"You'll sink!" Doc shouted warningly. "Those bullets all but tore  the bottom out of the fuselage!" 

"The gas is gone  leaked out!" Renny boomed. "We couldn't plug  that hole. It was in an inaccessible

position." 

The men in the gyro were bringing out collapsible canvas boats.  They tossed these into the water, then flung

articles of equipment into  the little shells. 

The gyro settled, rocking a little. Doc's men voiced no more words;  the business of transferring their

paraphernalia to the boats was too  'urgent. 

Monk moved Habeas Corpus from the stricken plane. 


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They completed the shift with only fragments of seconds to spare,  and clambered hastily into the folding

boats, barely escaping from  under the great wings of the gyro as it went down. 

Doc Savage paddled to the nearest folding boat. He lifted the  steelhaired girl in; then, careful not to upset

the shell, clambered  aboard himself. 

The steelhaired girl, recovered now, stared at Doc in the  moonlight. She spoke, and her voice was calm for

all of the ripping  excitement of the last few minutes. 

"They tied me in the cockpit," she said. "They wanted you to think  I was your attacker." 

"We guessed that," Monk put in, anxious to get the favor of the  entrancing young woman. 

Doc seemed about to ask the steelhaired girl questions, but  withheld them. He leveled an arm. 

"Our trouble seems to be just starting!" 

The pig, Habeas, reared up from his position near Monk's feet. He  looked toward the island. His tremendous

ears shot straight in the air.  He emitted a procession of staccato, excited grunts. Then he ducked  below the

gunwales of the boat, as if to shut out the sight. 

In the direction of the island, three gigantic human heads  projected above the lake surface. Huge black arms

appeared and  disappeared in measured swimming stroke. 

"They're coming after us!" the girl shrilled. 

CLIPPED TO the light metal frame of the collapsible boats were  telescoping oars. The men hastily freed

these and began to paddle. 

"One consolation," said bony Johnny, "is that those freaks can't  swim as fast as we can row." 

They paddled briskly. All six were men of more than average  muscular development: The steelhaired girl,

insisting on wielding a  paddle, exhibited strength somewhat beyond the ordinary. The swimming  pinhead

giants dropped farther back. 

"They're not wearing their armor," Ham remarked. "If they come  close, we'll see how bullets affect 'em!" 

Without interrupting his paddling, Doc addressed the steel haired  girl. 

"me gang wanted you to teach them the pinhead Ianguage so they  could issue commands to those three black

fellows, didn't they?" 

She nodded. "Yes. They made me repeat numerous commands until they  understood how to issue them. I

found 

out why they were so anxious to be able to give them orders. It  seems that the blacks hated Bruno Hen. He

had done them some injury.  One night they escaped and murdered him. They wouldn't have done this,  had

their chief ordered them not to do so." 

"Why was the giant murdered in the New York mine tunnel?" Doc  questioned. "Or did you hear of it?" 


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"I heard," said the girl. "That particular giant had been stubborn  about taking orders from Pere Teston. They

were afraid of him." 

"Pere Teston!" Doc asked sharply. 

"He is the chief," the girl explained. "I did not see him. But his  name was mentioned numerous times." 

"What about Griswold Rock?" 

"He's on the island somewhere. I didn't see him." 

Monk put in, "What I fail to understand is why they seized Griswold  Rock the second time?" 

"I don't know why they grabbed him," the girl replied. 

"Do you know any of their plans?" Doc asked. 

"Only that Pere Teston intends to send his giants against Detroit  tomorrow night." 

To their ears came the mutter of a motor boat. It was a fast craft;  it appeared a moment later, scudding around

the end of the island. It  veered to One side in order to keep clear of any bullets they might  launch, and circled

to get ahead of them. 

"Holy cow!" Renny groaned. "That thing is making sixty an hour, at  least." 

The motor boat was soon ahead. A tripod, mounted on its bow  cowling, supported a machine gun. This went

into action, sending a  ribbon of lead across the lake surface. 

Doc's men tried returning the fire with their small supermachine  pistols. The range of the other weapon,

however, was too great. They  were driven to back water, their own bullets falling short. 

The swimming pinheads speedily overhauled them. 

Chapter 22. THE AWFUL ISLE

RENNY, WITH his huge, rocklike hands, was the most skilled marksman  of the party, excepting only Doc.

He lifted his supermachine gun and  fired. The bullets traced a foamy line across the water, a line that  sought

and found one of the swimming pinheads. 

The giant made a great gobbling sound of anger and dived beneath  the surface. He came up some yards

nearer. 

From the speed boat came a tremendous voice  words launched by a  loudspeaker of the highpowered

type sometimes mounted on the under  side of airplanes used ill delivering advertising talks from the sky. 

It was the voice of rednecked Hack. 

"Everybody come out here and help!" Hack called. 

Answering the summons, more giants appeared on the island. They  might have been hideous genii, conjured


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by the rubbing of a magic lamp,  for they sprang up from what had seemed a bleak, boulderstrewn hump of

rock. Amid a great splashing, they swam to aid the three black,  gigantic pinhe ads. 

"It's only a question of time till they nail us!" Renny said  glumly. 

The speed boat darted toward their little collapsible shells, and  its machine gun tossed salvos of sound over

the lake surface. The  bullets were carefully aimed. They herded Doc and his party toward the  swimming

monsters. 

Long Tom, on his knees in one of the little shells, opened a light  metal case. In this were racked objects

which resembled metal  cannisters holding movie film, These were ammo drums for the  supermachine pistols. 

"Some of these are explosive bullets," the electrical wizard  announced. 

The others had known this. Doc carried all types of cartridges   mercy slugs, tracers, incendiary bullets,

armor piercers, and  explosives. 

Renny clipped a drum of explosive ammo into his weapon. He aimed  carefully, after latching his gun into

singlefire position, and fired  once. 

There was a flash, a loud report, and the giant who was Renny's  target bawled loudly. The explosive slug had

opened a gaping pit in his  shoulder. 

Hack's coarse voice came from the loudspeaker on the speed boat.  "Don't kill the bronze man, or any of

those with him!" it commanded. 

Then the floridnecked Hack repeated the command in the hooting,  gobbling dialect of the pinheads. 

Doc's men swapped glances in the moonlight. Their features held  blank surprise. 

"Didja hear that?" Monk exclaimed. "Apparently they don't want to  kill us." 

"It may be a trick to get us to surrender!" the girl said wildly. 

Doc Savage selected a container of equipment and opened it. He  removed several of the compact devices

called "lungs" by divers. These  consisted of clips to close the nostrils, and mouthpieces  the latter  with

attached hoses which led to chemical breath purifiers. 

Doc and the others donned these lungs. The bronze man himself  showed the steelhaired girl how the

contrivance functioned. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, watched these preparations with a  beadyeyed intentness. His nearhuman

intelligence was exhibited when  he began squealing plaintively. 

"Blast it!" Monk groaned. "We're gonna have to let 'im take care of  himself." 

"Can he swim?" Ham asked. 

The dapper lawyer sounded anxious. Considering the desire he had  expressed on innumerable occasions to

slaughter Habeas, his present  concern was surprising. 


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"He's a swell swimmer," Monk grunted. 

The homely chemist lifted Habeas by the scruff of the neck and  pointed at the island. 

"We'll meet you there, buddy," he said optimistically. 

The pig plunged overboard and began swimming for the rocky  protuberance. 

Doc and the others slid into the water. Each carried a ease of  equipment, these serving as weights. They sank

beneath the surface. 

Doc switched on his flashlight when he touched the lake bottom. The  flash was waterproof. The others

gathered about the light. As soon as  they were together, they linked hands in a living chain. Doc switched  off

the light. He did not want the giants, swimming above, to spot the  glow. 

They moved along the lake bottom toward the island. 

DOC SAVAGE wore upon his right wrist a small, highly accurate  watch. This was made entirely of

nonmagnetic metal; and slung on a  jeweled bearing between the crystal and the hands, was a compass

needle. This was luminous; and since the watch case was waterproof, it  could be used under water. 

The water pressure was not especially disagreeable, the depth being  scarcely more than twenty feet.

Moonlight made a faint silvery haze  overhead. Waves suffused this with undulating shadows. On the bottom,

where they walked: it was very dark. 

That water transmits sound more effectively than the air was  demonstrated by the distinctness with which

they could hear the  slopping noises the swimming giants were making. 

Distinct also was the throb of the speed boat's motor. This latter  sound drew closer. 

Unexpectedly there came a terrific concussion. Invisible fingers  seemed to ram into the ears of Doc and his

aids and press against the  drums until the agony was intolerable. Their bodies felt the shock, a  distinct impact

from head to foot. 

Doc Savage knew what had happened. Their enemies had explosives in  the speed boat. They were dropping

the stuff into the lake. 

The first explosion, terrifying as were its effects, had occurred  some distance away. Other detonations,

occurring nearer, would bring  crushing death. 

Doc Savage dropped the case of apparatus which he was using for  weight, and stroked to the surface. His five

men and the girl followed. 

"Tough," he said grimly when they were all afloat. "But to stay  down there would have been suicide." 

MOUTHING TREMENDOUS sounds, the giants converged upon their quarry.  The manner of the monsters

was ferocious. They seemed possessed of a  killer lust. 

The huge loudspeaker on the speed boat blasted metallic words. 

"Do not harm them," Hack thundered. "We'll hold 'em until we hear  from the chief." 


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Lowvoiced, Doc addressed his five aids and the girl. 

"Take it easy. We haven't a chance. They really mean that stuff  about not harming us." 

A moment later, one of the swimming giants reached Doc Savage. The  monster chanced to be one of the

pinheads. 

Doc Savage, who towered in stature when beside ordinary mortals,  was dwarfed by the grotesque proportions

of the pinhead. A monster hand  clamped upon Doc's arm. Desirous of ascertaining what strength the  giants

possessed, Doc struggled. 

The result was astounding. For all of his fabulous muscular  ability, he might have been a child opposing a

mature man. Not wishing  to anger the pinhead monstrosity unnecessarily, Doc permitted himself  to be towed

shoreward. 

The girl, Monk, Ham, and the others were captured in like fashion  and dragged toward the island. 

Habeas Corpus had circled wide of the giants in swimming toward the  island. A tiny funnel of wake, barely

distinguishable in the moonlight,  marked his position. He reached shore and disappeared among the rocks,

much to Monk's relief. 

THE STONY isle, when they reached it, furnished a surprise. Its  height had been deceptive in the moonlight,

as had its formation.  Viewed from above, it had seemed covered with boulders. 

The largest of these huge rocks thrust up from the water near  shore. 

Closer inspection developed that the protuberances were, in many  cases, camouflaged buildings. 

In landing, the prisoners were towed close enough to these to  observe details of their construction. Metal

girders Composed the  framework. Over these were stretched stoutwoven wires, the netting of  which formed

foundations for a canvas covering, cleverly painted and  veined to resemble stone. The structures were

unexpectedly large. 

Each held a plane. These craft were large, trimotored amphibians. 

A light was turned on in one hangar, permitting a man to resume  work tuning a plane motor. This job must

have been interrupted by the  approach of Doc's gyro. Thanks to the light, and the fact that the  cabin door of

one of the planes was open, Doc's party got a glimpse of  the ship's interior. 

Wicker seats, usually a fitting of a plane's cabin, were missing. 

"Seats taken out," Monk muttered. 

"Holy cow!" Renny rumbled. "These planes are equipped to carry the  giants!" 

Monk surveyed their gigantic captors, as if calculating the weight  of the fellows. He nodded his bullet of a

head as if satisfied. 

"Yep," he said, smallvoiced. "They're too big for the seats, so  the seats were ripped out of the crates." 


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"Shut up, big hairy," growled the ruddynecked Hack, getting out of  the speed boat which bore the machine

gun and the loudspeakers. 

"I been wondering how you was gonna move your big partners around,"  Monk told him amiably.. 

"Shut up, I said," Hack gritted. 

Long Tom surveyed their captors  those who were of normal size. 

"Some of these are the birds who grabbed me near New York," he  offered. "You know  in that van." 

Hack yanked an automatic from an armpit holster. He waved it  meaningly to enforce his command for

silence. 

Four men of normal size appeared. These fellows were toughlooking  customers, swaggering and belligerent. 

Doc Savage, studying them, said nothing; but he glanced at Renny. 

The bigfisted engineer nodded. 

The nod informed Doc that all of their captors  the thugs of  normal size, as well as the giants  were

convicts taken from the  prisons of the United States by the illstarred Caldwell. 

Doc and the others were dragged inland. There was another captive  on the island. They discovered this a

moment later. 

This prisoner, Doc and the others did not glimpse fully. Hack and  another thug went ahead and removed this

mysterious captive from under  what seemed to be a great, flattopped rock. 

Black shadows lay among the great boulders. The pair moving the  mystery captive kept in these, either by

chance or through design,  which accounted for Doc's not being able to identify the bound form  which they

bore. 

"It's Griswold Rock!" guessed bigfisted Renny. Doc, the girl and  the five men were dragged toward the spot

from which the other prisoner  had been taken. 

What had seemed to be a huge flat rock proved to be a cshed. It was  of no inconsiderable size. This roofed

and concealed a deep pit. The  depression might have been a grave, except that it was considerably  larger. 

Doc and the others were searched to make sure they carried no  weapons. The steelhaired girl's frock, being

wet from her immersion in  the lake, clung to her shapely figure in such fashion as to make it  obvious that she

carried no weapons. 

All of them were forced to slide down a rope into the shedcovered  pit. The depth was surprising. 

They explored the stone floor and walls of the prison. The rock was  smooth, offering not the slightest

fingerhold. There was no fitting of  any kind in the welllike pit. 

"Holy cow!" Renny groaned. "We're sunk!" 


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"YOU SAID it, Bigfists," growled Hack's voice from the top. Renny  glared upward. It was very dark in the

depths, and little lighter  above, thanks to the shed. 

"0. K., 0. K.," Renny grumbled. "But your big scheme ain't gonna  work, fellah. The people in those cities,

Detroit, for instance, ain't  gonna kick in with such huge sums of money." 

"So you think," jeered the man above. "Listen, guy, them 'Beware  the Monsters!' newspaper advertisements

had the public stirred up and  curious. They furnished just the foundation we wanted. They showed the  public

that this giant business ain't no twobit scheme!" 

"If you think they'll lay down and give up their money, you're  crazy!" Renny shot back at him. 

"They may not, at first," agreed Hack ominously. "But tomorrow  night, we're gonna haul a load of the big

boys down to Detroit. They'll  wear armor that's proof against anything less than artillery, and  they'll wear gas

masks. What they will do to Detroit will be plenty.  The other towns will kick in after that." 

"Planes will bomb the giants!" 

"Oh, yeah? Not when the giants carry off the mayor and some others  for hostages." 

"What do the giants stand to make out of the whole thing?" Renny  asked curiously. "What good will money

do them? They're just  monstrosities. They can't enjoy themselves. They can't even talk  coherently." 

"After this is all over, they'll be returned to normal size," Hack  retorted triumphantly. 

'Can Pere Teston make them little again?" 

"You said it, Bigfists!" 

Doc Savage now entered the conversation, inquiring, "Are the giants  taking part in this devilish scheme

because they are under the  impression they can be returned to normal size?" 

"They don't think  they know!" Hack growled. Hack now gave orders  for two giants to station themselves

near by and watch the covered pit. 

"Have any of the giants been returned to normal size?" Doc Savage  called. 

"It can be done all right!" yelled Hack. "Pere Teston did it with  monkeys and guinea pigs. He even did it with

a cow." 

"But has he returned a man  to normal size?" Doc persisted. 

"Hell, not" Hack snarled. "There ain't been no need of it yet." 

"Are you sure that the animals, once reduced in size, enjoyed a  normal span of life?" Doc questioned. 

"What d'you mean, bronze guy?" 

"I mean that the shrinkage in size probably brought on almost  immediate death," Doc said quietly. 

This seemed to be somewhat of a shock to the man above. There was  silence. He swore softly. 


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"Hell, you're just tryin' to worry 'em! You know they're  listenin'." 

Hack now withdrew. 

"Was that a bluff, Doc?" Renny asked. "Can't they be returned to  normal size?" 

Doc Savage vouchsafed no reply. Instead, he made a silent round of  the pit, assembling his five men. 

Chapter 23. ESCAPE AND CAPTURE

DOC'S AIDS were puzzled at first, not realizing his purpose in  gathering them together. Then they

comprehended; and without Doc  issuing orders, they went into action. 

Renny braced his head and arms against the stone side of the pit.  With an agility befitting his apish build,

Monk bounded upon Renny's  shoulders and balanced there. Johnny topped Monk. Soon they had formed  a

human pyramid, reaching almost to the top of the pit. 

Up this living ladder Doc Savage clambered. Upright on the  shoulders of Long Tom, who was the lightest, he

could reach the rim. He  peered out. 

In the moonlight beyond the camouflaged shed he distinguished the  two guardian giants. One was to the

north. The other stood at the  south. All around the shed, the rocky isle was smooth. Chances of  crossing this

without being observed seemed nil. 

Over toward the other side of the island there was talk and  laughter  some of the mirth being expressed in'

thunderous howling  noises. This was evidently the only type of laughter permitted to the  afflicted giants'

vocal cords. Doc's dire prediction that they could  not be returned to normal size apparently had not been

taken seriously. 

Making no noise, Doc Savage clambered over the pit rim. It was then  that he caught a faint stir in the

darkness inside the shed. He poised,  listening, thinking perhaps that it 'night be Hack. But it was not. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, nosed against Doc, making another faint  stir as he did so. The homely shote had

managed to reach the shed  without being seen by the giants. 

Doc grasped the pig. Through the medium of signs and a gentle  shove, he made the intelligent porker

understand that he was to run  away from the shed. 

The pig galloped off. 

The giants saw him. So unusual was the appearance of the pig that  their attention was gripped. 

The running porker held their attention only a moment ]but that was  long enough for Doc to move,

unobserved, from the shed to the  sheltering maze of boulders. 

A bronze phantom who blended with the tawny hue of the rocks and  melted entirely into the shadows, Doc

Savage made directly for the edge  of the island. The huge camouflaged hangars jutted up darkly. He waded

past them, on out into the lake. 

Scarcely a splash marked his entrance into the water. He filled his  capacious lungs with air and submerged. 


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Doc was capable of swimming a tremendous distance under water. He  had acquired the ability to do this in

the manner that he learned all  things  by studying the methods of the masters. The fine points of

underwater work he had picked up from the skilled divers of the South  Seas. 

Coming to the surface at long intervals, projecting only his  nostrils to replenish his air supply, Doc stroked

into the lake. 

He reached the point where his aids, the steelhaired girl, and  himself had been forced to drop the containers

of equipment which they  had employed to hold themselves on the lake bottom. 

The bronze man had made careful note of the location of the spot at  the time of their capture by the giants. He

had done this  unobtrusively, and it had passed without being observed. 

DOC SAVAGE chanced lifting his eyes above the surface. By aligning  several of the larger boulders on the

island, he located the spot where  the equipment lay. 

So accurate were his calculations that he found the cases on his  third dive. 

His sensitive hands explored a container. He was familiar with the  boxes, having constructed them himself.

This was not the case he  wanted. He searched over the black depths of the lake bed until he  found others. Not

until he had identified the fourth container by  touch, did he seem satisfied. 

With the rather heavy box cradled under an arm, he stroked for the  surface. 

The return to the isle, swimming under water for the most part, was  by no means easy, the weight of the case

being a tremendous handicap. 

Realizing there might be watchmen near the hangars, Doc left the  water at the opposite side of the island. He

did not waste time  resting, once ashore. The effort of the return swim, great as it had  been, had tapped only

slightly his fabulous reservoir of vitality. 

Carrying the metal case of equipment which he had retrieved from  the lake, he crept inland. 

Toward the other end of the island, there was still noisy talk and  coarse laughter. Doc Savage approached the

spot. To no phantom in the  stories of mythology was ever attributed greater stealth. 

The mirth sounds were emanating from a large, camouflaged shack  which was evidently a bunk house. After

ascertaining the nature of this  structure, Doc did not approach too closely. He did not wish to risk  discovery. 

He began a footbyfoot search of the island. 

Near the boathouse he found a hidden building of some size. This  seemed to be a laboratory. Shelves of

rough, temporary construction  held a surprising array of chemicals. 

Doc examined the compounds, noting particularly their nature. For  light in viewing the container labels, he

employed matches from a box  which he found near a Bunsen burner. He kept the tiny flame carefully  cupped

in his palms. 

He found books on chemical treatises. The flyleaves of these bore  the scrawled name of Pere Teston. There

were also notebooks in the same  handwriting. 


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The notebooks contained data on experiments at increasing animal  growth. The cases described were

apparently Pere Teston's earlier  efforts. There was data on the abnormal growth of a cow. Pere Teston

seemed to consider this of great importance. He had written: 

"It will be noted that the mllkproducing capacity of the bovine  kept pace with the expansion in bone and

tissue. This means that my  process of size increase will result in the creation of more efficient  farm animals. 

"Particularly do I hope to be able to center the effects of my  compound to certain organs of the animal in

further experiments. This  would achieve, for instance, cattle with enormous milkproducing  capacities." 

There were more notes of this nature. One set had to do with the  growing of an enormous draft horse. 

In these earlier experiments, dating back several years, Pere  Teston had apparently entertained no idea of

creating giant men to be  used in terrorizing cities. 

Doc found no data covering work over the last few months. 

DOC SAVAGE left the laboratory and continued his search of the  island. He entered several buildings, only

to leave at once. They were  store rooms, holding immense quantities of food for the giants'  sustenance. 

Near the south end of the island Doc Savage came upon a small,  shedlike structure of metal and

camouflagedaubed canvas. 

Crosslegged before this, so huge and ugly as to give the appearance  of a grotesque, oriental idol, sat one of

the giants. He seemed to be  on guard. The fellow held a large pipe. 

The giant poured tobacco into the oversized bowl. His big, clumsy  fingers had trouble with matches.

Several broke; the night breeze blew  others out. 

The giant was fully occupied with his smoking difficulties. Doc  Savage circled and drifted, waithlike, toward

the shed. In negotiating  one narrow stretch of rock, he was completely exposed to the gaze of  the colossus.

Crossing this, Doc chose an instant when the giant was  carefully striking a match. 

Unseen, the bronze man reached the shed. 

The metal sides of this were open, the canvas cover having been  roiled up for ventilation. This sheathing

could be lowered if  necessary, making the shed seem from the air  or from a distance of a  few yards on the

island  nothing more interesting than an angular  rock. 

Doc Savage eased inside, curious to learn what the giant was  guarding. 

That mystery was soon clarified. 

A man reposed on the rocky shed floor. Darkness was complete where  he lay, so black as to seem solidified.

Doc Savage found the fellow  only by touch, and through use of his sensitive olfactory organs. 

Doc's bronze fingers explored, their skilled touch conveying  impressions of almost visual clarity. He got the

height of the  prisoner, his probable weight. He found stout handcuffs on wrists and  ankles. 

The man lay perfectly motionless; none of his muscles stirred. Yet  he was definitely alive. 


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Doc applied pressure on certain nerve centers, testing the reaction  of muscles to pain. Doc's knowledge of

drugs, their effects and their  symptoms, was profound. He came to the conclusion that the captor's  limbs were

under the influence of injections of some local anesthetic   some substance in the nature of the novocaine

which dentists use. 

Doc Savage examined the man's ankles again. The chain of the  manacles encircled the steel framework of the

camouflaged shed. Doc  tested the links. They were very strong. 

The bronze man began removing his shirt, it being his intention to  wrap the cloth around the manacles to

muffle the inevitable snap as he  broke them. 

Then the giant guard, probably with the idea of getting out of the  wind to light his big pipe, entered the shed. 

Doc Savage was under no delusions. The match flame was certain to  reveal his presence. He left the strange

captive and crept out silently  on the opposite side. 

For several minutes he loitered near by. But the giant showed no  sign of leaving the shed. 

DOC SAVAGE continued his search. He found more huts. All were  cleverly constructed to escape detection

from the air. At last he  located one of which he seemed to have been seeking. 

This structure was obviously the headquarters. It held maps. These  were marked with red lines to indicate the

intended curse of attack  upon Detroit and other cities. There was also a large safe in the  place. 

Here, when he was upon the island, the master mind of the giants  obviously made his headquarters. 

Doc Savage still carried the case of equipment which he had rescued  from the lake. Opening it, he removed

certain small boxes and coils of  wire. He concealed a tiny disc of a device overhead, where it was  unlikely to

be observed. The insulated wires leading from this were so  thin as to be unnoticeable to the eye. Doc carried

these down a metal  girder to a boxlike container of his apparatus, which he buried under  the dry sand floor. 

This done, Doc left the hut. 

At the other end of the island stood the log structure in which the  giants were quartered. Doc approached it

cautiously. 

At a concealed point only a few yards from this bunk house he  planted more of his apparatus, hiding it in

such a fashion that it was  practically certain to escape detection. 

Then he returned to the pit where his companions were imprisoned.  The pig, Habeas Corpus, was not in sight. 

Doc studied the giant guards intently. Then the bronze man's throat  muscles tensed in a peculiar fashion.

From the boulder some distance  away came a voice  a voice resembling that of the florid Hack. 

"Come over here a minute, you two big guys!" it directed. The  giants hesitated. They glanced at the shed.

"Hurry up!" rapped the  voice from the rocks. The giants were sure it was Hack's voice. They  lumbered

toward the sound. They had not taken a dozen steps when the  voice came again. 

"Never mind," it said, "I thought I heard a speed boat out on the  lake. But it was just a frog croaking." 

The giants returned to their position. Not overlybright fellows,  neither realized they had been tricked. 


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Doc Savage was an excellent ventriloquist and a master of voice  imitation. Throwing tones which were very

like those of Hack, he had  decoyed the giants, getting their attention. 

While the giants had looked away, Doc had crossed to the  roofedover pit. Here he found Habeas inside the

shed. He tucked the  pig under his arm and dropped into the pit. 

Doc's five men all but held their breaths, waiting for their bronze  chief to explain what he had been doing. No

explanation, however, was  forthcoming. 

Two or three times, the men imagined they heard faint whisperings.  These they dismissed as being gentle

sounds made by grams of sand swept  into the pit by the night breeze. 

They failed to realize that Doc had drawn the steelhaired girl  aside or that he was speaking to her in a wisp

of a whisper. 

Chapter 24. MASTER OF THE GIANTS

HACK, THE the thug with the neck which seemed perpetually flushed,  appeared at the top of the pit half an

hour later. He was excited; his  electric hand lantern blazed light downward with an angry suddenness. 

"What's been goin' on here?" he rapped. 

Doc Savage did not look upward. His manner was tranquil. He ignored  Hack's question. 

"You, big bronze guy  I asked you a question," Hack grated. 

"Yeah?"said homely Monk. 

"Don't get funny. I'm talkin' to your boss. What's been goin' on  here?" 

Doc Savage seemed to consider, as if debating what could possibly  be meant by the inquiry. 

"We've been talking," he replied. "And we're getting a bit hungry,  too. Suppose you produce some food." 

"I'll produce some trouble," Hack promised harshly. "The big  fellows say they heard my voice around here a

while ago. I wasn't here.  What did they hear?" 

"Can the giants talk?" Doc asked. "From the sounds they have made  in the past, I presumed their vocal cords

were affected by the  sizeincreasing process." 

"They can't talk, but they can write out their words. What've you  birds been up to?" 

Doc glanced at his fellow prisoners and asked, "What have we?" 

"Search me." Renny popped his huge fists together, and the impact  made a rocky sound. 

"You're givin' me a runaround!" Hack rasped. Then Hack discovered  Habeas Corpus. The sight of the pig

brought a cry of angry surprise. He  leaned over to see better, with the result that he nearly fell into the  pit. 

"Where'd that peewee edition of a hog come from?" he demanded, when  he had recovered his balance. 


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Monk held Habeas up. He spread the shote's enormous ears, and  asked, "D'you see these ears?" 

Hack only snarled. 

Monk, homely face serious, explained, "Habeas is a very special  kind of a pig. You'd be surprised at what he

can do. He uses his ears  for wings. He can fly like a bat. He flew down here." 

Hack made a choking sound of wrath. 

"Habeas can talk, too," Monk added. "Listen." 

He held the pig higher. Words seemed to come from the freakish  porker's mouth. 

"Say, Hack, when do we eat?" asked the voice. Hack maintained a  dumbfounded silence for a long min ute.

Then the explanation dawned on  him. 

"A ventriloquist!" he barked. Laughing heartily, he extinguished  his light. "That explains the voice they

heard." 

In a loud tone, Hack yelled for four additional giants. These  arrived, their heavy footfalls plainly audible to

the prisoners in the  pit. After ordering the newcomers to assist in guarding the captives,  Hack took his

departure. 

"Fat chance we've got of getting away, now," Re nny groaned. 

Monk moved close to Doc, and asked, "Did I do right   havin' the  pig talk to him?" 

"You could not have done better," Doc replied. 

THE HOURS which followed seemed interminably long. Monk prowled  around the pit walls like a caged

gorilla. Habeas grunted at his heels. 

"The sun must've forgotten to come up," Monk complained. Later, the  homely chemist was surprised to find

Doc sleeping in the center of the  pit. Reassured by the calmness with which the bronze man was taking  their

incarceration, Monk also tried to slumber. Failing even to keep  his eyes shut, however, he gave it up. 

He started a whispered consultation with the others by asking, "I  wonder what Doc found while he was

outside?" 

"Why don't you ask him?" inquired the steelhaired girl. 

"No use." 

"Why not?" 

"Doc's ways are kinda strange to those who don't know him," Monk  explained. "If he don't want to give

information, he won't." 

"But you haven't asked him what he found," Jean Morris retorted. 


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"The five of us know Doc as well as anybody knows him. We can tell  when he's got things to say, and when

he hasn't. When he kept silent  after returning, that was the tipoff. Right now, he's not talking." 

"Humph!" sniffed Jean Morris. 

To kill time, Monk managed to pry several small fragments of rock  from the pit bottom. He pegged these up

at the giants. 

The monsters retaliated by showering down great handfuls of fine  sand. The choking cloud produced great

discomfort. 

"Let them alone," advised Doc, who had been awakened by the sand.  'They have the upper hand now." 

Jean Morris decided to try her hand at persuading Doc to talk. 

"What did you find outside?" she asked. "And what did you do?" 

"That will be cleared up when the time comes," Doc answered. 

And this was all the information the steelhaired girl received,  although she put several more questions to the

bronze man. 

Disgusted, she flounced to the other side of the pit and tried to  get some sleep. 

Dawn came after what seemed an age. It gorged the top of the pit  with reddish light. The depths remained

gloomy. 

Doc Savage approached Jean Morris where she sat apart from the  others, and said something which the rest

did not catch. 

The young woman was apparently piqued by Doc's refusal to answer  her questions. Her voice was waspish. 

"I remember every word you told me last night," she said, "but you  might inform me of what you found

outside." 

"Not so loud," Doc admonished, and left her. 

The bronze man's aids exchanged surprised glances. This was their  first hint that Doc and the steelhaired

girl had held a consultation. 

"We heard whispers right after Doc got back," Monk said  thoughtfully. "He was talking to her then." 

The five men eyed Doc. Curiosity was consuming them, and their  expressions showed it. 

"Listen, Doc," Monk said hopefully, "what's the idea of keepin' us  in the dark?" 

"Psychology," Doc replied. 

"Huh?" 


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"If you fellows were told how our trouble here will work out  if  it goes according to my expectations 

your hopes would rise. You  might get the idea you were almost out of the mess." 

"And would that make us mad!" Monk snorted. 

"On the contrary, it would make you highly elated." 

"Spill it, Doc! After a night in this hole we need a pickup." 

"If the scheme goes wrong, you're going to be very disappointed,"  Doc remonstrated casually. "You will feel

much worse than you would if  you had known nothing of it. To save you that letdown is the reason I  did not

tell you." 

"Well, we're all stirred up now," Monk grinned. Doc studied them.  He apparently concluded the purpose of

his keeping silent had been  defeated. 

"All right, I'll tell you," he said. 

But he never did. 

PLANE NOISE came through the morning air. It started with a faint  drone, like that of a mosquito, and

loudened with surprising rapidity.  It stopped the discussion and gripped their attention. 

"Sounds like a fast bus," Renny offered, and eyed his huge fists in  the dusk of the pit bottom. 

The plane swooped overhead, so low that its propeller blast  fluttered the canvas shed covering. Fine sand was

blown into the pit. 

"It must be a friend of theirs," Monk grunted. "I don't hear any  sounds of excitement." 

"It's the boss!" came Hack's excited yell from somewhere on the  island. 

Once more, the plane crashed its exhaust stacks past overhead.  Then, with noisy backfiring, it landed. Motor

boat engines sputtered  and howled. They were evidently towing the plane into a camouflaged  hangar. 

The giants on guard at the pit made coughing and gobbling sounds at  each other. Delight was distinguishable

in the uncouth noises. 

"They seem glad to see the big shot," said Long Tom. "And no  wonder," Ham snapped. "He's the guy who

knows how to return them to  normal size. If something would happen to him, they'd be in a fine  pickle." 

The arrival of the plane had completely occupied the attention of  Doc's five men, so the bronze man was

given no opportunity to explain  his plans for their escape. 

Amid many glad cries from the giants, men approached the pit.  Hack's raucous tones became audible. He was

explaining things to his  chief. 

"We've got the whole Savage gang," be said. "They're in the pit. We  disarmed them. They're helpless." 

"Then why in hell didn't you rub them out at once?" The master  villain spoke these last words, there was no

doubt of it. Utter  arrogance crackled in the voice. The tones were hollowly froglike. 


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"Pere Teston!" Monk breathed. 

"It doesn't sound like a natural voice!" gasped Jean Morris. 

"Too hollow," Monk agreed. 

Doc Savage spoke. "The master mind seems to be speaking into a tube  to disguise his voice. Using a gas

pipe, or perhaps a cardboard mailing  tube." 

Hack's harsh tone said, "We kept 'em alive, boss, thinkin' you  might want to talk to 'em." 

"They can tell me nothing of importance," snarled the master of the  giants. 

"They might know how Detroit is fixin' to receive us," Hack whined.  He sounded servile, ingratiating. This

was A a marked change from his  usual overbearing manner. 

The master villain laughed harshly into the tube which he was using  to disguise his voice. 

"It makes no difference what Detroit does!" 

Hack wailed, "But if they use airplanes and bombs on  " 

"We're not attacking Detroit tonight," retorted the ruler of the  giants. "Instead, we'll give Milwaukee a

surprise." 

"Milwaukee  instead of Detroit?" Hack gulped. 

"HACK, MY friend, you are very dumb at times," said the cavernous  voice. You do not think that the few

giants we have here, even with  their armor, would stand any chance in attacking a city prepared to  receive

them." 

"They're mighty big  " 

"Size is not of supreme importance these days, my friend. It is  brains which count. Bombs and modern

machine guns would make short work  of our giants." 

"Then what are we gonna do?" Hack groaned. 

"Do not sound so disappointed," chuckled the hollow tones. "My plan  is based on psychology. II you had

read the newspapers today, you  would understand. The size of our giants has been exaggerated. Our  earlier

newspaper advertisements helped." 

"I don't get you." 

"The imaginative American public actually thinks we have monster  men a hundred feet high. We will make

our little foray upon Milwaukee,  first bombing the light plant so that the city will be in darkness. The  giants

will smash windows, and catch a few people and break their  necks. In the darkness few will see the big

fellows. After that, rumor  will have the giants infinitely larger than they are." 

Hack seemed to be digesting his chief's words. "You think we can  scare them towns into coughing up five

million apiece?" 


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"We can certainly try," chuckled the hollow voice. 

"But if he don't  " 

"Then there are many other crimes our giants can commit, my friend.  As you know, the compound which

made them large also made them very  bard to kill. Wounds which will overcome an ordinary man will not

even  faze these fellows." 

"You're right, at that," Hack agreed. 

Chapter 25. DEATH MAGNIFIED

NOTHING WAS said for some moments. The giants made hootings and  cluckings of a happy nature. The big

fellows apparently had not  relished attacking a city ready to receive them. The assault on  Milwaukee was

more appealing. 

In the pit there was stark silence. Renny perspired, and blocked  and unblocked his enormous fists. Monk,

homely face grim, absently  scratched Habeas Corpus behind the ears. The steelhaired girl was  rigid, pale.

The giant mail of bronze alone was devoid of emotion. 

They all knew that death crouched outside the pit 

Hack asked his chief, "But how're we gonna get the giants down to  Milwaukee?" 

"The planes," he was reminded. "I have marked the position of  lighting plants. We will bomb them. Then we

will land on the lake  front. From there, the giants can work into the heart of Milwaukee. In  the darkness, that

will not be difficult" 

"Swell idea," Hack agreed. 

"Dispose of the prisoners," snapped the master of the giants. 

"How?" Hack asked. 

"Use a machine gun. Then have the giants fill the pit with rocks." 

Hack loudly directed a human monster to bring him a rapidfirer.  This was done. There were clickings, as a

fully loaded ammo drum was  jacked into the mechanism. Hack appeared on the pit rim. 

He was going to do the wholesale murdering himself. Steelhaired  Jean Morris moaned and covered her eyes

with her hands. Monk made an  animal snarling noise, and crouched as if to leap up at the killer. 

Doc Savage rested his strange, flakegold eyes on Hack. "I left  this pit for a time last night," he said. "You

can't kid me!" Hack  sneered. "You're lyin'!" "The giants heard your voice from the rocks,"  Doc reminded

him. "The voice was thrown by ventriloquism, as you  guessed, but its purpose was to cause them to look

away, so that they  would not observe my return." 

This startled Hack. He blinked. The master of the giants had heard  the words. His Voice rattled from the

hollow tube he was using for a  disguise. 


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"What's this, Hack?" "He's kidding us," Hack growled. "I was never  more serious," Doc assured them. "me

giants heard a voice all right,"  Hack advised his chief. Then the scarletnecked thug glared down into  the pit.

"What'd you do when you was outside, bronze guy?" 

"When you learn that, it will be too late to help yourself," Doc  informed him without expression. 

"Whatya mean?" 

"Disaster will have overtaken you." 

The steelhaired girl suddenly removed her hands from her eyes. 

"I know what Doc Savage did!" she screamed. "It's something that  will destroy all of you. Take me out of

here, turn me loose and I'll  tell you what it is!" 

"You hussy!" Renny thundered, and reached hands for the girl. 

"GET BACK, you bigfisted hooligan!" Hack gritted from the pit top. 

The command was hardly necessary. Renny had already dropped his  arms. It had been his intention to clap a

palm over the girl's lips and  shut off her words. But it was now too late. 

The hollow voice of the leader of the giants joined the discussion.  The master villain, however, did not show

himself. 

"Take the girl out," he commanded. "We'll hear what she has to say.  We can't run any risks." 

"You've got to turn me loose in return for what I have to tell  you," Jean Morris wailed. "You've got to

promise that!" 

"It's a promise," boomed the czar of the giants. 

A rope dangled down into the pit like a bronze snake. Hack menaced  Doc and his men with the machine gun,

keeping them away from the hemp  strand. The girl knotted the rope under her arms and was hauled up. 

Doc Savage watched her as she reached the top of the pit When the  girl saw the mastersinister of the giants,

she started violently and  her hands made a fluttering gesture. "Oh  it's  " she began. 

"Shut up!" warned the man's sepulchral voice. 

The girl obediently controlled her surprise. Then she said, "What  I've got to tell you is in confidence. Have

you a place where we can  talk in private?" 

There was a pause, while the leader of the giants considered. "I've  got a shack I use for headquarters. That'll

do," he said. 

He and the girl moved away, and their footsteps were soon lost to  the ear. 

There was something bordering on agony in the looks which Doc's  five men exchanged. The perfidity of the

young woman had been a bitter  shock. 


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"I thought there was more to her than that!" Monk groaned, "After  all we've done for her! Imagine her givin'

us the doublecross!" 

"We haven't done so much for her," Renny retorted gloomily. "She  couldn't be much worse off than she was

down here in the pit" 

Long Tom, somewhat more pallid than usual, asked Doc curiously,  "Did you really tell her what preparations

you have made?" 

"I talked to her last night," Doc replied. 

Monk groaned and sat down on the pit floor. 

Comparative silence fell over the men. The six giants remained on  guard at the pit. Hack was also present, his

machine gun ready in his  hand. 

The minutes seemed much longer than usual. When voices suddenly  reached them, no more than five minutes

had elapsed, although it seemed  infinitely longer. 

The steelhaired girl and the master of the giants were speaking.  The voices obviously came from a

mechanical loudspeaker, for they were  metallic, although not loud. The leader of the giants was not

disguising his tones now  and they had a familiar ring! 

Doc's men registered astonishment. There was something about the  voice of the master mind that tickled their

memories. Monk opened his  cavernous mouth, as if to speak the name the voice brought to mind. 

But the import of the words which they overheard caused him to keep  silent. 

APPARENTLY THE conversation was occurring in the headquarters  shack, although the loudspeakers

were relaying it from the opposite  end of the island. 

"What did Doc Savage do last night?" the master of the giants  asked. 

"He arranged for the giants to learn something," Jean Morris  retorted. 

"Learn what?" 

"The truth about a point on which you had deceived them." 

"You're not talking sense!" 

"Oh, yes, I am! Savage arranged for the giants to learn that they  cannot be returned to normal size." 

"Hell! How'd he find that out?" 

"He went through your laboratory. He learned the method by which  the size of these men had been increased.

He has a vast knowledge of  chemistry, and realized instantly that you had been lying to the  giants. They

cannot be returned to normal size and remain alive for any  length of time." 

The master of the giants swore violently, bitterly. 


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"It's a good thing I talked to you, Sister," he snarled finally.  "II them big boys found out they can't be

reduced, they'd turn on me.  How was it arranged for 'em to find out the truth?" 

From the pit bottom, Doc Savage and his aids were watching Hack.  The thug's features had become slack,

astounded, as he listened to the  words relayed by the loudspeaker. These words were not loud enough to

reach back to the hut where the girl was being questioned. 

The giants on guard had fallen silent. Theirs was a grim,' ominous  quiet. They had heard every word that had

been said. 

The widest of grins suddenly overspread Monk's homely face. He  turned to Doc. "How'd you do it?" 

"There's a sensitive microphone planted in the headquarters shack,"  Doc explained. "It is connected to my

portable radiophone transmitter.  There's a receiver and a loudspeaker hidden near the bunk house  occupied by

the giants, It's that loudspeaker. you're listening to  now." 

"You concealed the apparatus last night!" Monk grunted. 

"Right." 

In his delight Monk bounced up and down, ape fashion. 

"I see it!" he howled. "me girl didn't doublecross us She decoyed  the master mind to his headquarters and

got 'im to spill the truth!" 

OUTSIDE THE pit things began to happen. The giants made hoarse,  violent sounds of rage. It had dawned on

them that they were doomed to  spend their natural lives as the monstrosities which they now were. 

Hack backed from the pit rim with his machine gun. He must have  decided to take sides with the giants.

Possibly their nearness and  their rage influenced this decision. 

"The big shot has been lyin' to us," he yelled. "What're we gonna  do about it?" 

His answer was a thunder of gigantic footsteps as the monsters  charged for the headquarters shack. 

"Wait!" Hack yelled, and ran after them. "My machine gun may come  in handy." 

From other sections of the island howls of the giants arose.  Although none of these unearthly sounds were

words, their portent was  clear. The giants had turned upon their master. 

"Make a pyramid," Doc directed. 

His men whipped into movement. Renny took up a crouching position  against the pit walls, and Monk sprang

atop his shoulders, then the  others mounted. As he had done the night before, Doc Savage clambered  up this

living pyramid to the pit rim and hauled himself outside. 

The monster men were converging on the headquarters shack. Some of  them had picked up boulders almost

as large as washtubs to use as  missiles, and these seemed as light as pebbles in their hands. One huge  fellow

wrenched the covering off a camouflaged shack and tore out a  section of iron framework as if it were of thin

lath construction.  Waving this, he charged with the others. 


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From the headquarters a machine gun clattered.. The master of the  giants was using it, and his slugs

pommeled one of the oncoming  monsters. 

The big fellow shook under the impact, but kept coming. The  vitality of the Gargantuan manthing was

astounding. Not until the  slugs battered his head almost out of shape did he sink, sprawling. 

Doc Savage glanced about. Near by lay the rope with which the girl  had been hauled from the pit. The bronze

man scooped this up and tossed  the end down to his comp anions. They climbed in. 

Within some thirty seconds all five stood at his side, Monk  carrying the excited Habeas by a leg. 

Chapter 26. PERE TESTON'S END

DOC SAVAGE and his men made no move to join the fray. They merely  looked on. In a fashion, this climax

was reminiscent of others which  they had witnessed Their policy was never to take human life directly,  no

matter how great the provocation, but their enemies had a  surprisingly regular 

habit of coming to an untimely end as a result of their own  machinations. And their foes were meeting such a

fate now. 

The master of the giants was a sly devil. He had evidently taken  precautions against the possibility that his

big fellows might turn  upon him. He had plenty of weapons handy. Another giant collapsed  before the

withering storm of machinegun lead. 

Hack opened up with his rapidfirer. In doing so he made a fatal  mistake, for he neglected to shelter himself

suffi ciently. 

Hack's late chief returned the fire. Hack suddenly dropped his  machine gun. He stood very straight and stiff

and turned slowly, while  a crimson flood began seeping from his body, as if it were sieved with  many holes.

His final collapse was abrupt, and marked the complete  departure of life. 

"Let's get out of range," Doc directed. "Over to the end of the  island will do." 

They worked across the rocky surface of the isle, pausing  frequently to watch the progress of the fight. They

saw that the  steelhaired girl had escaped from the headquarters shack, and was  retreating furtively. Her

course took her toward the same headland for  which Doc and his men were making. 

The master of the giants  he was far from being their master now   had not noticed her departure. He was

too busy dealing with his  erstwhile monster followers. 

"Got your eye on the girl?" Doc demanded of his men. "Sure," Monk  grunted. "The way she's going, she'll

join us at the end of the  island." 

"Keep her with you," Doc directed. Then the bronze man dropped  back. 

Monk also halted. He stared anxiously after Doc, then called. "Hey,  what 

Ham grasped the homely chemist's arm. "You're holding up our  stroll, you missing link. Come on.". 

They sprinted toward the farthermost end of the island. 


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DOUBLED LOW among the rocks, at times moving on all fours, Doc  Savage made himself as inconspicuous

as possible. He watched the giants  closely, in order to avoid coming too near them. 

Doc was making for the shack where he had found the strangely  immobile prisoner  the poor unfortunate

who was under the effect of  the drug. 

The bronze man could now see the shack among the boulders. He  circled warily, apparently oblivious to the

fighting off to his right. 

The monster man guarding the hut had not quitted his post. The big  fellow was bouncing about in impatience

and making rage sounds. 

The giant paced away uncertainly, as if to join the fight. Coming  to a pause, he lumbered around and glared at

the hut. He gibbered more  wrath. 

It was obvious that the stupid fellow considered the helpless man  inside responsible for the unpleasant things

which had befallen him.  Emitting a roar, the monster charged the shack. He crashed in the  covering with his

fist and began tearing the framework apart 

Doc Savage p;itched from cover. Swooping as he ran, he scooped up  two flinty, elongated pebbles, each

nearly the size of a man's fist. He  held one of these in either hand; they were his only weapons. 

The monster was on the point of forcing entry to the hut. Doc  yelled. The manmonstrosity wheeled,

attention attracted. He perceived  that Doc was going to attack. He hurriedly scrambled out of the hole he  had

opened in the hut wall. 

Doc did not pause in his rush. It seemed that he intended to come  to grips with the huge fellow. The monster

opened enormous hands,  spread his arms to receive the bronze man. 

Giant among ordinary men though Doc was, he seemed diminutive  alongside his huge foe. 

What occurred next surprised the monster. Doc folded down, almost  against the ground. The monster's hands

clutched empty air. 

There came two loud cracking noises. The manthing squawled in  agony. With the stones gripped in his fists,

Doc had struck each of the  fellow's kneecaps a hard blow. 

The bronze man sprang clear. He dropped his rocks and shoveled up  handfuls of the fine sand underfoot. 

The mangiant had grasped his kneecaps and was walling like a small  boy who had fallen down. 

Doc rushed him again. 

The monster straightened, bellowing, to meet him. 

Doc flung his fine sand into the big one's eyes. 

The gritty particles blinded the monster. It weaved In aimless  circles, howling, swinging random blows that

encountered nothing. 


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Doc Savage darted into the hut. He scopped up the drugged man who  lay there and bore him out. Carrying

the unfortunate, Doc ran to join  his companions. 

THE FIGHT between the giants and their late chief was rapidly  approaching its gory end. 

The master of the giants, keeping under cover, had not shown  himself to Doc and the others. They had not, as

yet, identified the  fellow by sight. 

The chief villain now began hur?ling small metal cannisters out of  his retreat. These burst with slightly more

noise than bad eggs, and  spewed a lemoncolored vapor. This fog spread rapidly. It swathed the  giants in a

citrous mantle. The monsters began to scream and stagger in  agony. 

Renny and the others, nearing the opposite side of the island,  could see the affair. 

"Poison gas!" Renny rumbled. 

There was a breeze across the isle. This swept such of the gas as  fell short directly toward the monster men.

Two of them turned to flee,  but were too late. The lemonhued cloud descended upon them. 

"Wheew!" breathed Renny. "me breeze is a lucky break for us." 

Not until much later did Renny realize that it was foresight  against just such a contingency which had moved

Doc to direct them  toward the side of the island where the wind would sweep the gas away  before it could

reach his companions. 

It became apparent that all of the attacking party  giants and  normal men alike  were certain to be

smitten by the poison vapor. 

The men of ordinary size dropped almost instantly after  encountering the fumes. The giants, with their

infinitely greater  vitality, survived some moments after the stuff swept over them. 

A strange vengeance befell the master of the giants. The fellow  had, no doubt, seized the three black pinhead

savages against their  will, and by feeding them his sinister concoction by force, had turned  them into giants. 

It was this seizure of the pinheads, indirectly, which had put Doc  Savage on the fantastic trail, for the

pinheads had escaped from the  island to wreak vengeance upon the man who had mistreated them  Bruno

Hen. The beating Bruno Hen had administered to the little black  fellows, when they came pleading for food,

had later been the cause of  his own death. 

And it was the three monster black pinheads who now wrought justice  upon the czar of the giants. They,

alone, did not swerve when the  poison gas bit them. Probably they did not know what the stuff was, did  not

realize they were doomed, for all of their great size. 

The three of them fell upon the headquarters shack. There was  reenacted much the same drama which must

have marked the demise of  Bruno Hen. The monster pinheads beat at the sides of the shack. They  flung

themselves headlong and crashed in its walls. 

Disappearing inside, they sought the man who had made them the  hideous things they were. An awful

screeching arose as their enormous  hands found their quarry. 


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They hauled the lifeless body from the shattered shack and tossed  it away as if it were an unclean thing. The

body fell at some distance,  and the pinheads started after it, as if to wreak further vengeance.  But the gas was

having its effect; 

They began to claw at their chests. They pawed at their great  mouths. They sank to their knees. After swaying

there for a moment they  toppled over, one at a time. 

These three black monsters were the last of all the giants to die. 

DOC SAVAGE joined his five men. Over one shoulder he carried the  figure of the man he had rescued. 

The steelhaired girl had joined the group. They all stared at  Doc's burden. They noted the wizened,

extremely pallid countenance of  it. 

The homely Monk scratched in the reddish bristles which furred the  nape of his neck. 

"This fellow answers the description of Pere Teston," he muttered. 

"No doubt we will find be is Pere Teston," Doc replied. 

It was some fifteen minutes before Doc's surmise was ver?ified.  There was still danger from the gas cloud

which covered the other end  of the island. While waiting for the wind to sweep it out over the  lake, Doc

Savage swam to the spot where they had dropped their  equipment. 

He dived until he found the box he desired. He brought it ashore.  The container held medical supplies,

restoratives, stimulants. 

Using these, Doc revived Pere Teston. Before long the man could  speak coherently. 

"You are Pere Teston?" Doc questioned. 

The wizened man nodded. "They have been holding me here for months   a prisoner." 

"Why?" 

"My chemical compound!" Pere Teston wailed. "I only intended to  develop super farm animals. But they

used it on men. They kept me here,  made me mix the stuff." 

Doc gestured toward the other side of the island. "How did the  master of the giants first find out about your

compound?" 

Pere Teston grimaced and shuddered. "I went to him, hoping he would  supply money to finance my

experiments." 

Doc straightened. He moistened a finger and held it up to judge the  strength of the breeze. 

"The gas has been swept away by now," he decided. "We could go over  and take a look at the fellow who

was behind all this." 

Monk and the others ran ahead, anxious to be first to view the  features of the master villain. 


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The steelhaired girl lingered behind. She kept her eyes on Doc.  "You have guessed who he is?" 

Doc Savage nodded. "When the giants made their raid on Trapper  Lake, it was clear who he was. The fellow

wanted to get away to  supervise personally the raid of his monster men. So he had his giants  come and get

him." 

Monk reached the spot where the czar of the giants lay. His loud  ejaculation as he glimpsed the lifeless

features carried distinctly. 

"Griswold Rock!" he squawked. "Griswold Rock was the guy behind all  this!" 

THE GROUP, which had gone to the body of Griswold Rock, came back.  Their return was slow, for they

angled right and left, inspecting the  gigantic hulks of the menmonsters and the bodies of the thugs of  normal

size. 

"The gang is all done for," Monk told Doc, when he had reached the  bronze man. 

Monk's words, in a sense, marked the end of the menace of the  monsters. 

It also signified the beginning of what, to the rest of the world,  became a profound mystery. Doc and his men

never told of the isle or of  what had happened there. 

Steelhaired Jean Morris, given her chance by a motionpicture  company, on Doc's recommendation,

became within a few months a star of  some magnitude. She never told of the isle, either. It was something  she

wanted to forget. 

Nor did Pere Teston talk. He followed a suggestion which Doc Savage  made. Questioning him, Doc learned

that Pere Teston was actually a man  of great mental ability. The bronze man placed a considerable sum of

money at Pere Teston's disposal for use in making scientific  experiments. But Pere Teston's future work had

nothing to do with  increasing the size of men or animals. 

"I'll never touch that stuff again," Pere Teston declared. 

Pere Teston's gratitude to Doc Savage was profound. Many times he  expressed his feelings. 

"Anything I can do to repay you," he said earnestly. "Anything." 

"Forget it," Doc advised. "Your payment will be your useful  scientific work in the future." 

Doc and his men buried the giants there on the island. They broke  up the camouflaged shacks and disposed of

them in the lake. The  laboratory, with its bottles of chemical compounds, they also cast into  the water. 

One bottle alone did Doc Savage salvage. This held the growth  compound which Pere Teston had developed.

Later, Doc tested the stuff. 

If the size of domestic animals could be increased to the benefit  of farmers, he intended to place this elixir in

the proper hands. He  made, however, a surprising discovery 

living things, after their size was increased, lived, as a rule,  less than two years. From a practical standpoint,

Pere Teston's  concoction was relatively valueless. 


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And in the meantime, the world was wondering what had happened to  the monsters who had raided Trapper

Lake. 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE MONSTERS, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE PINHEADS, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. TERROR, page = 10

   6. Chapter 3. PLANE ACQUAINTANCE, page = 14

   7. Chapter 4. THE KILLER, page = 18

   8. Chapter 5. THE CLIPPING, page = 21

   9. Chapter 6. MYSTERY MANSE, page = 24

   10. Chapter 7. THE ELECTRIFIED NET, page = 28

   11. Chapter 8. THE EX-LION-TAMER, page = 32

   12. Chapter 9. THE MAN OF FAT, page = 35

   13. Chapter 10. THE PRISONER, page = 40

   14. Chapter 11. THE ULTRA-VIOLET TRAIL, page = 44

   15. Chapter 12. THE TUNNEL, page = 47

   16. Chapter 13. THE MICHIGAN CLEW, page = 53

   17. Chapter 14. NORTHWARD, page = 57

   18. Chapter 15. NIGHT TERROR, page = 61

   19. Chapter 16. THE SUICIDE SLAYING, page = 64

   20. Chapter 17. RENNY's MYSTERY MISSION, page = 69

   21. Chapter 18. THE TERROR THAT SWAM, page = 75

   22. Chapter 19. THE MONSTERS RAID, page = 78

   23. Chapter 20. THE WINGED PERIL, page = 82

   24. Chapter 21. THE SWIMMING GIANTS, page = 88

   25. Chapter 22. THE AWFUL ISLE, page = 93

   26. Chapter 23. ESCAPE AND CAPTURE, page = 99

   27. Chapter 24. MASTER OF THE GIANTS, page = 103

   28. Chapter 25. DEATH MAGNIFIED, page = 108

   29. Chapter 26. PERE TESTON'S END, page = 112