Title:   The Pirate of the Pacific

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



Contents:

Page No 1

Page No 2

Page No 3

Page No 4

Page No 5

Page No 6

Page No 7

Page No 8

Page No 9

Page No 10

Page No 11

Page No 12

Page No 13

Page No 14

Page No 15

Page No 16

Page No 17

Page No 18

Page No 19

Page No 20

Page No 21

Page No 22

Page No 23

Page No 24

Page No 25

Page No 26

Page No 27

Page No 28

Page No 29

Page No 30

Page No 31

Page No 32

Page No 33

Page No 34

Page No 35

Page No 36

Page No 37

Page No 38

Page No 39

Page No 40

Page No 41

Page No 42

Page No 43

Page No 44

Page No 45

Page No 46

Page No 47

Page No 48

Page No 49

Page No 50

Page No 51

Page No 52

Page No 53

Page No 54

Page No 55

Page No 56

Page No 57

Page No 58

Page No 59

Page No 60

Page No 61

Page No 62

Page No 63

Page No 64

Page No 65

Page No 66

Page No 67

Page No 68

Page No 69

Page No 70

Page No 71

Page No 72

Page No 73

Page No 74

Page No 75

Page No 76

Page No 77

Page No 78

Page No 79

Page No 80

Page No 81

Page No 82

Page No 83

Page No 84

Page No 85

Page No 86

Page No 87

Page No 88

Page No 89

Page No 90

Page No 91

Page No 92

Page No 93

Page No 94

Page No 95

Page No 96

Page No 97

Page No 98

Page No 99

Page No 100

Page No 101

Page No 102

Page No 103

Page No 104

Page No 105

Page No 106

Page No 107

Page No 108

Page No 109

Page No 110

Page No 111

Page No 112

Page No 113

Page No 114

Page No 115

Page No 116

Page No 117

Bookmarks





Page No 1


The Pirate of the Pacific

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



Top




Page No 2


Table of Contents

The Pirate of the Pacific.....................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE YELLOW KILLERS .....................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM ....................................................................................................................5

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL.......................................................................................................10

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD...................................................................................................15

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL.......................................................................................................21

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS........................................................................................................26

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL ....................................................................................................................30

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY .....................................................................................................36

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF..........................................................................................................42

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL .........................................................................................................48

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER ....................................................................................................................53

Chapter 12. TREACHERY ....................................................................................................................59

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE ..............................................................................................................65

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN ..................................................................................................................70

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL ................................................................................................................75

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY ..........................................................................................80

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT....................................................................................................85

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE ...................................................................................................89

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR............................................................................................................95

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET ..................................................................................................99

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE....................................................................................................................107

Chapter 22. RED BLADE ....................................................................................................................111


The Pirate of the Pacific

i



Top




Page No 3


The Pirate of the Pacific

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE YELLOW KILLERS 

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS 

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT 

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR 

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE 

Chapter 22. RED BLADE  

Chapter 1. THE YELLOW KILLERS

THREE laundry trucks stopped in the moonlight near a large  commercial airport on Long Island. They made

little noise. The machines  bore the name of a New York City laundry firm. 

The drivers peered furtively up and down the road. They seemed  relieved that no one was in sight. Getting

out, they walked slowly  around the trucks, eyes probing everywhere, ears straining. 

They were stocky, yellowskinned, slanteyed men. Their faces were  broad and flat, their hair black and

coarse. They looked like  halfcastes. 

Satisfied, the three exchanged glances. They could see each other  distinctly in the moonlight. No word was

spoken. One driver lifted an  arm  a silent signal. 

Each Mongol dragged a dead man from the cab of his truck. All three  victims had been stabbed expertly

The Pirate of the Pacific 1



Top




Page No 4


through the heart. They wore the  white uniforms of laundry drivers, and on each uniform was embroidered

the same name the trucks bore. 

A roadside ditch received the three bodies. 

Rear doors of the trucks were now opened. Fully a dozen Mongols and  halfcastes crawled out of the

vehicles. They clustered beside the  road. 

Their faces were inscrutable; no muscle twitched, not a slant eye  wavered. They were like a collection of

placid, evil yellow images. 

No weapons were in sight. But their clothing bulged suspiciously. 

The first driver's arm elevated in another noiseless signal. The  fellow seemed to lie in charge. 

The whole crowd glided quietly down the side road that led to the  airport. 

Plane hangars were an orderly row of fat, drab humps ahead. Faint  strains of radio music came from one of

them. A high fence of heavy  woven wire encircled both hangars and plane runways. 

Near the main gate in the fence, a guard lounged. His only movement  was an occasional lusty swing at a

night insect. 

"These blasted mosquitoes are bigger'n hawks!" he grumbled,  speaking aloud for his own company. "They

must be flyin' over from the  Jersey marshes." 

The guard discerned a man approaching. He forgot his mosquitoes as  he peered into the darkness to see who

was approaching. When the man  came within a few yards, the guard was able to distinguish his  features. 

"Hy'ah, yellow boy!" he grinned. "You can't poke around here at  night. This is private property." 

The Mongol replied with a gibberish that was unintelligible to the  watchman. 

"No savvy!" said the g"guard. "Splickee English!" 

The Oriental came closer, gesturing earnestly with his hands. 

The unfortunate guard never saw another figure glide up in the  moonlight behind him. Moonlight flickered on

a thick, heavy object. The  weapon struck with a vicious, sidewise swipe. 

The sound, as it hit,  was like a loud, heavy thump. The guard  piled down on the ground, out in a second. 

THE other Mongols and halfcastes now came up. They strode past the  unconscious guard as though they

hadn't seen him, passed through the  gate in the high fence, and continued purposefully for the hangars. 

No commands had been spoken. They were functioning like a deadly  machine, following a deliberate plan. 

Music from the radio was thumping a more rapid tempo  the  musicians were working up to one of those

grand slam endings. The radio  instrument itself was a midget set, no larger than a shoe box. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

The Pirate of the Pacific 2



Top




Page No 5


Another night worker of the airport had plugged it into a power  outlet on a workbench in a corner of the

hangar. He lolled in the  cockpit of a plane and listened to the music. 

"Get hot!" he exhorted the radio, and beat time on the taut  fuselage fabric with his palms. 

Night traffic at this airport was negligible, and two men were the  extent of the airport staff  this man, and

the one at the gate. 

The radio music came to an end. The station announcer introduced  the next feature  a regular fifteenminute

news broadcast. 

The man scowled and slouched more lazily in the plane cockpit. He  was not enthusiastic about this particular

news broadcaster. The fellow  handled the news in too dignified and con ervative a fashion. He didn't  set

things afire. 

"Good evening." said the radio commentator. "Tonight, somewhere  out on long Island Sound, the

underthepolarice submarine, Helldiver,  is coming. The craft was sighted by an airplane pilot shortly

before  darkness. She was headed toward New York. 

"Arrival of the Helldiver in New York will bring to a close one of  the most weird and mystifying adventures

of modern days. The submarine  left the United States many weeks ago, and vanished into the arctic  regions.

Approximately forty persons started the trip. Yet the craft is  returning tonight with but six living men

aboard, the others having  perished in the polar wastes." 

The man listened with more attention. This was quite a change from  the news broadcaster's usual routine of

foreign and political stuff. 

Another fact made the news interesting and surprising to the  listener. This was the first he had heard of the

submarine Helldiver,  on an expedition into the arctic regions. About forty had started out.  and six were

coming back! 

Here was something worth listening to! Strange the papers had not  carried a lot of ballyhoo about the start of

the expedition! Explorers  were usually anxious to get their pictures on the front pages. 

The next words from the radio clarified this mystery. 

"From the beginning. this polar submarine expedition has been a  strangely secret affair," continued the

commentator. "Not a newspaper  carried a word of the sailing. Indeed, the world might still know  nothing of

the amazing feat, had several radio operators not tipped  newspaper reporters that messages were being sent

and received which  disclosed the submarine was in the vicinity of the north pole. This  information was

something of a shock to the newspapermen. It meant they  were losing out on one of the big news stories of

the year. They had  not even known the expedition was under way. 

"During the last few days, there has been a great rush among  newspapers striving to be first to carry a story of

the expedition.  They seem to be up against a blank wall. The men aboard the underseas  boat sent word by

radio that they wanted no publicity and that no story  of the trip would be given out. 

"Only two facts have been learned. The first is that but six men  out of approximately forty are returning. The

second bit of information  was that the expedition is commanded by one of the most mysterious and

remarkable men living in this day. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

The Pirate of the Pacific 3



Top




Page No 6


"That man is Doc Savage!" 

THE news broadcaster paused to give emphasis to the name he had  just pronounced. 

The listening man was leaning over the cockpit edge, all interest.  He did not see the yellow murder mask of a

face framed in a small, open  side door of the hangar. Nor did he see hands like bundles of yellowed  bones as

they silently lifted a strange death instrument and trained it  on him. 

"Doc Savage!" grunted the man. "Never heard of the guy!" 

The voice from the radio continued. "Doc Savage is a man  practically unknown to the public. Yet in scientific

circles, he has a  fame that is priceless. His name is something to conjure with. 

"Last night, I was fortunate enough to attend a banquet given by  scientific men here in New York. Many

learned men attended In the  course of the evening, I heard references to important discoveries made  by Doc

Savage. The really bewildering thing about these discoveries was  that they were made in widely different

fields, ranging from surgery,  chemistry, and electricity to the perfecting of a new, quickgrowing  species of

lumber tree. 

"Amazement seized me as I listened to eminent scientists discuss  Doc Savage, the man of mystery, in the

most glowing words. It seemed  impossible they could speak in such terms of one man without  exaggerating.

Yet these were men certainly not given to exaggeration. I  am going to give you a word picture of this man of

mystery of whom they  talked. 

"Doc Savage is, despite his amazing accomplishments, a young man.  He is a striking bronze giant of a figure.

His physical strength, my  informants assured me, is on a par with his mental ability. That means  he is a

marvel of muscular development. One of the scientists at the  banquet told me in entire seriousness that, were

Savage to enter  athletic competition, his name would leap to the headlines of every  paper in the country. 

"This man of mystery has been trained from the cradle, until now he  is almost a super being. This training,

given by his father, was to fit  Doc Savage for a definite purpose in life. 

"That purpose is to travel from one end of the world to the other,  striving to help those who need help,

punishing those who deserve  punishment. 

"Associated with Doc Savage are five men who love excitement and  adventure, and who have dedicated

themselves to their leader's creed of  benefiting humanity. 

"A strange and mysterious group of men. this! So unusual that the  hare facts I am telling you now cannot but

sound unreal and  farfetched. Yet I can assure you my information came from the most  conservative and

reliable sources." 

The listening man blinked as he digested the words that came to his  ears. "This Doc Savage must be quite a

guy," he grunted. 

Then the sneaking face was near. As unknowing as the watchman's  companion at the gate, the man in the

plane fell before the blow of the  weapon, crumpled in his seat, unconscious or dead  the attacker did  not

look to see. 

SLANTEYED men poured into the hangar. No orders were uttered. The  halfcaste Orientals were still

following their plan. Their efficiency  was terrible, deadly. The whole group worked as one unit, an expert


The Pirate of the Pacific

The Pirate of the Pacific 4



Top




Page No 7


killing machine. 

Two opened the hangar doors. Others busied themselves making four  pursuit planes ready for the air. These

ships were the most modern  craft. yet the sinister men showed familiarity with the mechanism. 

Three yellow raiders rushed up to the planes. carrying guns and  bombs. The guns were quickly attached. the

bombs were racked in clips  on the undersides of the planes. 

More men secured four parachutes from a locker room. No time was  wasted in scampering about the airport

hunting for things. They knew  exactly where everyt hing was located. 

The planes were strongarmed out of the hangars. Four Orientals dug  goggles and helmets out of their

clothing. The helmets were a brilliant  red color. 

The men cinched on the parachutes, then plugged into the cockpits.  The scarlet helmets made them resemble

a quartet of redheaded  woodpeckers. 

Exhaust thunder galloped across the tarmac as the motors started.  Propstreams tore dust from under the

ships and pushed it away in  squirming masses. 

The planes flung along the runway, vaulted off, and slanted up into  the now moonwhitened sky. 

The Orientals who had been left behind lost no time in quitting the  airport. Racing to the three laundry trucks,

they entered, and drove  hastily away. 

Three or four minutes after the planes departed, no one was left at  the airport. The two watchmen lay where

they had dropped, still  unconscious. In the ditch beside the road sprawled the three slain  drivers of the

laundry trucks. 

The adjacent countryside slept on peacefully. The four planes  booming overhead attracted no attention, since

night flying was not  unusual even at this quiet port. 

Within ten minutes, Long Island Sound was crawling under the craft.  The surface of the Sound was like a

faintly pitted silver plate,  shimmering in the brilliant moonlight. 

The planes spread out widely and flew low. Each Oriental pilot had  highmagnification binoculars jammed

to his eyes. With the same machine  thoroughness which bad stamped their bloody actions at the airport,  they

searched the Sound surface. 

It was not long before they found what they sought  a narrow craft  trailing across the Sound at the head of a

long wedge of foaming wake. 

The planes headed purposefully for this vessel. 

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM

THE quarry came rapidly closer. More details of the craft were  discernible. The halfcaste Mongol pilots

continued to use their  binoculars. They tilted their planes down in steep dives toward the  unusual vessel

below. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 5



Top




Page No 8


It was a submarine. It resembled a leanflanked, razorback whale  several hundred feet long. Big steel runners

extended from bow to  stern, sled fashion. Amidships, a sort of collapsible conning tower  reared. 

The underseas craft floated high. On the bows, a lettered name was  readable: 

HELLDIVER. 

It was this submarine which had been the subject of the radio news  commentator's broadcast. 

With deadly precision, the four planes roared down at the  submersible. The Orientals had discarded their

binoculars, and had  their eyes pasted to the bomb sights. Yellow hands were poised, muscles  drawn

wirehard, on bomb trips. 

A naval bombing expert, knowing all the facts, would have sworn the  submarine didn't have a chance of

escaping. It would be blown out of  the water by the bombs. 

The Mongol pilots were hoteyed, snarling  yellow faces no longer  inscrutable. They were about to

accomplish the purpose of their bloody  plot  the death of every one aboard the underthepolarice

submarine. 

They got a shock. 

From a dozen spots, the sub hull spewed smoke as black as drawing  ink. Heaving, squirming, the dense

smudge spread. It blotted the  underseas boat from view, and blanketed the surface of the Sound for  hundreds

of feet in every direction. 

With desperate haste, the Orientals deposited bombs in the center  of the smoke mushroom. These explosions

drove up treelike columns from  the black body of the smoke mass. It was impossible to tell whether the  sub

had been damaged. 

The four planes might have been angry, metallic bees droning over  some gigantic. strange, black blossom. as

they hovered watchfully. They  did not waste more bombs, since the smoke cloud was now half a mile  across.

In it, the sub was like a needle in a haystack. 

Several minutes passed. Suddenly, as one unit, the four planes  dived for the western edge of the heavy smoke

screen. 

Their sharp eyes had detected a long, slender mass moving some feet  beneath the surface. This was leaving a

creamy wake. 

In quick succession, the war planes struck downward at the object  under the water. Four bombs dropped. The

halfcaste Mongols knew their  business. Each bomb scored an almost perfect hit. 

Water rushed high. The sea heaved and boiled. The concussions  tossed the planes about like leaves. 

Swinging in a wide circle, the planes came back. The commotion in  the water had subsided. The pilots made

hissing sounds of delight. 

The long, slender mass was no longer to be seen. Oil filmed the  surface. Oil such as would come from the

ruptured entrails of a  submarine. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 6



Top




Page No 9


THE pursuit planes whirled a half dozen lazy spirals. Convinced the  deadly work was done, the leader of the

quartet angled for the shore,  four or five miles distant. Once over land, he dived out of the  cockpit. fell a

hundred feet, and opened his parachute. The plane  boomed away. Eventually, it would crash somewhere. 

Two other pilots followed their leader's example. 

The third lingered a bit above the grisly smear of oil on the Sound  surface. 

He chanced to notice a small object near the cloud of black smoke.  This seemed nothing more than a floating

box. It bobbed lightly on the  choppy waves. 

The flyer ignored the box. It looked harmless  a piece of  wreckage. A few moments later, he winged to

shore and quitted his plane  by parachute, as the others had done. 

The man might have saved himself a lot of trouble had he taken time  to investigate the floating box he had

'noted. Close scrutiny would  have shown the top and sides of the box were fitted with what resembled  large

camera lenses. 

Inside the box were other lenses, spinning disks perforated with  small holes, sensitive photoelectric cells  a

compact television  transmitter. Waterproofed electric wires led from this down into the  water. 

Long Island Sound was not deep at this point. The  underthepolarice submarine, Helldiver, rested on the

bottom. The  wires from the television box entered the undersea boat. 

Before the scanning disk of the television receiver in the sub, six  men stood. They were a remarkable group.i.

Six more unusual men than  these probably had never assembled. Each possessed a worldwide  reputation in

his chosen p profession. 

There was "Renny," a hulking six feet four and two hundred and  fifty pounds of him  with possibly fifty

pounds of that weight  concentrated in a pair of monster fists. Renny had a sober, puritanical  face. About the

only entertainment he permitted himself was knocking  panels out of doors with his huge fists  a stunt he

pulled at the most  unexpected moments. As Colonel John Renwick, the engineer, Renny was  known in many

nations, and drew down fabulous fees when he worked. 

There was "Long Tom," pale and none too healthy looking, the  weakling of the crowd in appearance. His

looks were deceptive, though,  as more than one big man had discovered. As Major Thomas G. Roberts,  the

electrical wizard, he had worked with the greatest electrical minds  of his day. 

"Johnny"  William Harper Littlejohn  was tall, gaunt, studious  and bespectacled. He seemed half starved,

with shoulders as bony as a  coat hanger. Once he bad headed the Natural Science department of a  famous

university. His knowledge of geology and archaeology was  profound. His books on these subjects were in

every worthwhile  library. 

Two individuals stood on the edge of the group and scowled at each  other like a cat and dog. They were

"Monk" and "Ham." They always  seemed on the point of flying at each other's throats. They swapped  insults

at every opportunity. Yet Ham had several times risked his life  to save Monk, and Monk had done the same

for Ham. 

They were as unlike as men could be. Monk was a hairy monster of  two hundred and sixty pounds, with arms

some inches longer than his  short legs, and a face incredibly homely. He was a human gorilla. The  world of

chemistry knew him as Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett  Mayfair, one of the most learned chemists alive.


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 7



Top




Page No 10


But he looked dumb as  an ox. 

Ham was slender, leanwaisted. His clothing was sartorial  perfection  tailors had been known to follow

Ham down streets, just to  see clothes being worn as they should be. His business cards read:  "Brigadier

General Theodore Marley Brooks;" and he was possibly the  most astute lawyer Harvard ever turned out. Ham

carried a black cane of  innocent aspect  a sword cane, in reality. He was never to be found  without it. 

The sixth member of the group was a mighty man of bronze  Doc  Savage. 

MAN of mystery, the radio commentator had labeled Doc Savage.  Wizard of science! Muscular marvel! 

The radio speaker had not exaggerated. Doc Savage was all of these  things. His mental powers and strength

were almost fantastic. He was  the product of intensive expert, scientific training that had started  the moment

he was born. 

Each day of his life, he had performed a twohour routine of  unusual exercise. Doc's powers might seem

unbelievable, but there was  really no magic about them. Rigid adherence to his exercise, coupled  with

profound study, was responsible. 

Doc was a big man, almost two hundred pounds  but the bulk of his  great form was forgotten in the smooth

symmetry of a build incredibly  powerful. The bronze of his hair was a little darker than that of his  features,

and the hair lay down tightly as a metal skullcap. 

Most striking of all were the bronze man's eyes. They glittered  like pools of flake gold when little lights from

the television  scanning disk played on them. They seemed to exert a hypnotic  influence. 

The lines of Doc's features, the unusually high forehead, the  mobile and muscular and nottoofull mouth,

the lean cheeks, denoted a  power of character seldom seen. 

"There goes the last of the flyers!" Doc said. 

Doc's voice, although low, held a remarkable quality of latent  power. It was an intensively trained voice 

everything about Doc had  been trained by his exercise routine. 

"They sure enough thought it was the sub they had bombed," grinned  Johnny, the bony archaeologist. He

adjusted the glasses he wore. These  spectacles had an extremely thick left lens which was actually a  powerful

magnifying glass. Johnny, having practically lost the use of  his left eye in the War, carried the magnifier there

for handiness. 

"Our contraption fooled them," Doc admitted. "But it might not have  worked so well in daytime. A close look

would have shown the thing was  only a strip of canvas painted the color of steel, and some oil  barrels, pulled

along under the surface by a torpedo mechanism." 

At the rear of the group, Monk stopped scowling at Ham long enough  to ask: "You made that torpedo

mechanism a couple of days ago  but  how'd you know that early that something like this would happen?" 

"I didn't know," Doc smiled faintly. "I only knew we were barging  into trouble  and made preparations to

meet it." 

"If you was to ask me, we didn't have to barge into it," Monk  grinned. "It came right out and grabbed us

around the neck. Who were  them guys who just tried to lay eggs on us?" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 8



Top




Page No 11


For answer, Doc Savage drew two radio messages from a pocket. 

"You all saw the first one of these when it came," he said. 

THE five men nodded. They had been far within the arctic regions  when the first message had reached them

by radio. It was very short,  reading: 

IN DESPERATE NEED OF YOUR HELP.  JUAN MINDORO. 

Doc Savage had promptly turned the submarine southward. There was  no need of lingering in the arctic,

anyway. They had just completed the  mission which had sent them into the polar regions  a desperate,

adventurous quest for a fiftymilliondollar treasure aboard a derelict  liner. 

That treasure now reposed in the submarine  a hoard of wealth that  had threatened to cost its weight in the

blood of men. 

Doc had not told his five men what meaning Juan Mindaro's  mysterious message might have. They had not

asked questions, knowing he  would tell them in good time. Doc was sometimes as much of a mystery to  his

five friends as he was to the rest of the world. 

They had guessed there was danger ahead, however. Several days ago,  Doc had hailed a liner they chanced to

pass, and had put aboard the  vessel three persons who were passengers on the submarine. These three  people

a famous violinist and his wife and daughter  were, with Doc  and his five men, the only survivors of the

grisly episode in the  arctic through which they had just passed. 

The radio commentator had not mentioned these three. He had not  known of them. Nor would he ever know,

for the polar episode was now a  closed book. 

The fact that Doc had transferred the three passengers to the  safety of a liner showed he wanted them out of

danger and told Doc's  men they were headed for more trouble. They didn't mind. It was the  thing they lived

for. They went to the far corners of the earth to find  it. 

But they had not known Doc had received a second message from the  same source. 

Doc extended the missive. "I copied this myself a few days ago.  Read it." 

Crowding about, the five men read: 

I HAVE BEEN FORCED TO GO INTO HIDING AT  THE HOME OF THE MAN WHO  WAS WITH ME

WHEN I LAST SAW YOU. MEET ME THERE UPON  YOUR ARRIVAL. AND  BE PREPARED FOR

ATTACKS ON YOUR LIFE.  JUAN MINDORO. 

"Huh!" ejaculated Monk, wrinkling his flat, apish nose. "That don't  tell us any more than the first one." 

"Exactly," Doc replied. "And that explains why I have not informed  you fellows what we're headed for. I

don't know myself   except that  it has something to do with the Orient. 

"Juan Mindoro is a political power in the Pacific island group  known as the Luzon Union. He is the most

influential man in the island.  And you know what recently happened to the Luzon Union." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM 9



Top




Page No 12


"They were given their independence," said Ham. "I remember now.  Juan Mindoro had a big hand in electing

the first president after the  island group became selfgoverning. But what could that have to do with  this?" 

Doc shrugged. "It is too early to say." 

He glanced at the television scanning disk . "The men who tried to  bomb us are gone. We might  as well get

under way. 

The submarine arose to the surface. The pall of black smoke still  hung over the Sound. 

Doc pulled in the television box which had been trailing he boat.  Then the sub put on speed. It ran low in the

water o escape attention  from passing boats. 

Once it dived to pass a launch loaded  with newspaper reporters. 

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL

PRACTICALLY every wharf in New York City was watched by newspaper  reporters that night. The return

of a submarine which had ventured  under the polar ice was big news. The fact that those aboard the

submarine wished no publicity made the story bigger. Each paper wanted  to be the first to carry it. 

Forty or so men had gone into the arctic  only six were coming  back. A whale of a yarn! City editors swore

over telephones at  reporters. Photographers dashed about, answering false alarms turned in  by news hawks

who had mistaken rowboats and mud scows for the sub.  Everybody lost a lot of sleep. 

In a remote corner of the harbor, a rusty old tramp steamer swung  at anchor. The captain of the ancient hulk,

who was also the owner,  happened to be an acquaintance of Doc Savage. 

Shortly after midnight, this captain turned all of his crew out of  their bunks. They fell to and made the

submarine Helldiver fast  alongside the tramp steamer. No one from and noted this incident. 

A launch now sped ashore. It bore a small fortune in gold and  diamonds  a load of the treasure Doc had

brought back from the arctic.  An armored car and a dozen guards with drawn guns met the launch and

received the wealth. This also escaped the notice of the reporters. 

The launch made more trips  until the whole treasure was on its  way to an allnight bank. 

Doc and his five men came ashore with the last load. Newspaper  reporters would discover the submarine tied

alongside the tramp steamer  in the morning, but the tramp captain would profess mystification as to  how it

got there. 

The whole arctic submarine expedition business was destined to be a  mystery the news hawks would never

solve. 

A taxicab took Doc and his five men uptown. Doc rode outside,  barehead. standing on the running board. He

habitually did that when  danger threatened. From this position, Doc's weird golden eyes missed  very little  a

sniper had hardly a chance of getting a shot at them  before he was discovered. 

The cab halted before the most impressive building in the city.  This skyscraper stabbed upward, a great white

thorn of brick and steel,  nearly a hundred stories. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 10



Top




Page No 13


Few people were on the sidewalk at this hour. But those who were,  stopped and openly stared, such a striking

figure did Doc Savage  present. The big bronze man was a sensation wherever he went. 

Doc and his five men rode an express elevator to the eightysixth  floor of the skyscraper. Here Doc had his

New York headquarters  a  richly furnished office, one of the most complete libraries of  technical and

scientific tomes in existence, and an elaborately  equipped chemical and electrical laboratory. 

Doc had a second headquarters, fitted with another library and  laboratory which were the most complete in

existence. This, however,  was at a spot he called his "Fortress of Solitude." No one knew its  whereabouts. To

this retreat Doc went at frequent intervals for the  periods of intense study to which he devoted himself. At

such times he  vanished as completely as though he had dropped from the earth. No one  could get in touch

with him. 

It was these periodic disappearances, as much as anything else,  which had given Doc repute as a man of

mystery. 

MONK planted his furry bulk on a costly inlaid table in the office  and began rolling himself a cigarette. 

"Did you make arrangements by radio about the treasure?" he asked  Doc. "I mean  about what the money is

to be used for." 

"That's all taken care of," the bronze man assured him. 

They knew what that meant. The money was to be spent enlarging a  weird institution which Doc maintained

in upstate New York  a place  where Doc sent all the criminals he captured. There, the lawbreakers

underwent an amazing treatment in which their brains were operated upon  and all memory of their past wiped

out. Then they received training  which turned them into useful citizens. 

This unusual institution was Doc's own idea. He never sent a  criminal to prison. They all went to the

institution, to be operated  upon by specialists whom Doc had trained. They were turned loose  entirely

reformed men  they didn't know they had ever been crooks. 

"It's a little stuffy in here," complained Ham. 

He crossed over and threw up the window. He stood there for a  moment, staring at the impressive panorama

of New York City spread out  below. Then he turned away. 

A moment later, a slatecolored pigeon fluttered up and landed on  the window ledge. Doc and his men paid

no particular heed. Pigeons were  plentiful around the skyscrapers. 

"What's our next move?" Ham wanted to know. 

"You fellows scatter and attend to such of your private business as  needs it," Doc suggested. "We've been

gone several weeks, and no  telling what we're headed for now. It may last longer." 

"I got a secretary who takes care of my business," homely Monk  grinned. "Better let me go with you, Doc." 

Monk was proud of his secretary, maintaining she was the prettiest  in New York. 

"Nothing doing," said Doc. "There's no need of any army of us  interviewing Juan Mindoro." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 11



Top




Page No 14


The slatehued pigeon on the window ledge had not moved. 

"You know where to find Juan Mindoro?" questioned Monk. 

"His wireless message said he had gone into hiding at the home of  the man who was with him when I saw

him last," Doc replied. "I last met  Juan Mindoro in Mantilla, the capital city of the Luzon Union. The man

with him at the time was Scott S. Osborn, who is a sugar importer doing  a large business in the Luzon Union

trade. Osborn has a home near the  north edge of the city. I'll go there." 

Johnny had been squinting owlishly through his glasses which had  the thick left lens  studying the pigeon.

He took off his spectacles.  As a matter of fact, he saw very well without them. 

"That's  what I call a sleepy pigeon!" he grunted. "It hasn't  moved." 

Doc glanced at the pigeon  his gaze became fixed. 

Suddenly, a weird sound permeated the interior of the office; a  trilling, mellow, subdued sound. It might have

been the dulcet note of  some exotic jungle bird, or the sylvan song of wind filtering through a  leafless forest. 

The strange trilling had the weird quality of seeming to come from  everywhere within the office. 

Electric tension seized Doc's five men They knew what that sound  meant. Danger! 

For the sound was part of Doc  a small, unconscious thing that he  did in moments of mental stress, or when

he had made some astounding  discovery, or when death threatened. 

The pigeon abruptly flipped backward off the window sill. 

Doc reached the window with flashing speed. The bird was some yards  away, flying sluggishly. Doc watched

until it was lost in the  moonlight. 

"That pigeon was where every word we spoke could reach it!" he said  dryly. 

"What if it was?" Monk snorted. "Pigeons can't tell what they  hear." 

"That one could." 

"Huh?" 

"It had a small microphone attached to its tail feathers." 

MONK gaped after the departing pigeon. "For the love of Mike! But  the thing flew away as though no wires

were attached!" 

"The wires were very small, about like silk threads," Doc declared.  "They had to be small, or we would have

seen them. A sharp jerk broke  them, and left the bird free." 

Leaning out of the window, Doc glanced up the sheer side of the  skyscraper, then down. Only darkened

windows met his gaze. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 12



Top




Page No 15


He examined the window ledge, noting bits of grayish powder. In a  crack, he discovered a particle of cracked

corn. 

"The bird has been fed on the ledge!" he declared. "Either the  office door was forced, or the grain was

lowered from above. That was  how it was taught to fly here." 

He spun from the window, crossed the office. The speed with which  his big bronze form moved was startling.

He entered the corridor,  glided down it to the end elevator. At his touch upon a secret button,  the elevator

door leafed back. 

So quickly had Doc moved that his five men were still in the  office. They piled out, bigfisted Renny in the

lead, and joined Doc in  the lift. 

The cage sank them. It was a special installation, used only by Doc  Savage, and geared at terrific speed. Such

was the pace of descent that  their feet were off the floor for the first sixty stories. Monk,  Johnny, and Long

Tom were wrenched to their knees by the shock of  stopping. 

"What I mean, that thing brings you down!" Monk grinned, getting up  from all fours. 

Monk had nearly worn out the highspeed elevator the first week  after Doc had it installed, riding it up and

down for the wallop he got  out of it. 

A cop was twiddling his nightstick out in front. 

"See any one leave this neighborhood in a hurry within the last few  minutes?" Doc demanded. 

"No, sor," said the cop. "Sure, an' the only lads I've seen come  out av a buildin' around here was two

slanteyed fellers. 'Twas in no  hurry they were." 

"Where'd they go?" 

"Took a taxi." 

Doc eyed his five friends. 

"They must have been the men who sent us the pigeon," he told them.  "They knew we'd discovered their

trick, and fled. We'd be wasting time  to hunt them." 

Doc whirled back into the skyscraper. 

His five men milled uncertainly, then trailed Doc. But the speed  elevator was already gone. They rode a

slower lift lip to the  eightysixth floor aerie, only to discover Doc had gotten whatever he  had wanted from

his laboratory, and had departed. 

THE home of Scott S. Osborn, sugar importer, was a castlelike stone  building perched atop a low hill in a

wooded section of Pelham, one of  the northern residential suburbs of New York City. The medieval castle

architecture was carried out in a waterfilled stone moat which  surrounded the walls. A replica of a

drawbridge, large enough for heavy  automobiles to be driven across, spanned the moat. 

Doc Savage arrived alone, driving a roadster which had the top  entirely removed. The car was a reserved gray

in color, but expensive,  sixteencylindered. On a straight road, the machine could better a  hundred and fifty


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 13



Top




Page No 16


an hour. 

Doc alighted, crossed the drawbridge, and rang the bell. 

No answer. An electric fixture cast pale light on the drawbridge. 

He thumbed the bell again, received no response. The vast castle of  a building was quiet as a tomb. The

gatelike door was locked. 

Doc returned to his roadster. got a black box somewhat larger than  a goodsized suitcase, and carried it into

the shrubbery near the  drawbridge. On one end. the mysterious box had a cameralike lens. He  pointed this at

the drawbridge entrance, then silently plucked enough  branches from nearby hushes to cover the box, hiding

it thoroughly. 

The moon shadows in the shrubbery swallowed his big bronze form. He  made practically no sound, no

stirring of leaves. 

He reappeared again near one 'vail of the castle. The masonry was  rough. He climbed to the top as easily as

an ordinary man would walk a  flat surface, although only the narrowest  of  ledges  offered  purchase  to  his

tempered fingers. 

For a moment, he poised at the top and reconnoitered. The same  deathly silence gripped the mansion. 

On either side were long, twostory buildings, their outer walls  formed by the castle walls. In the center was

a tiled court, a  fountain, shrubbery, flowers. None of the windows were lighted. 

Directly below Doc was a sheer drop of perhaps twenty five feet. He  sprang down  and so tremendously

powerful were his leg muscles that  the great leap hardly jarred him. 

Moving swiftly, Doc tried a door. Locked. He sought another, then  the rest, in quick succession. 

Every door facing the court was secured. 

Doc glided noiselessly into the shadows of the fountain. His  fingers touched a box of an affair strapped under

his coat. This was a  bit greater in size than a cigar box. A switch on it clicked at his  touch. 

Doc plucked back his left coat sleeve. The object thus revealed  looked at first glance like an enormous wrist

watch. Closer scrutiny  would have revealed a startling fact about the crystal of this watch.  It mirrored a very

pale moving picture! 

The scene was the drawbridge outside the castlelike dwelling of  Scott S. Osborn, friend of Juan Mindoro. A

shadowy figure stood on the  drawbridge. His arms windmilled, gesturing orders to other vague forms. 

The castle was being surrounded! 

The oversize edition of a wrist watch on Doc's wrist, together with  the box inside his coat, was a television

receiver of marvelous  compactness. It was tuned to the wavelength of a transmitter in the  black box he had

hidden under the brush outside the drawbridge. 

Doc continued to watch the apparatus on his wrist. More slanteyed  men joined the one on the drawbridge.

They carried revolvers, swords,  knives. Two had deadly submachine guns. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL 14



Top




Page No 17


One fitted a key in the lock of the gatelike door. 

The faint click of the lock operating reached Doc's sensitive ears. 

They must know he was inside. Probably they had seen him atop the  wall. They were coming in, the

murderous horde of them. 

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD

DOC SAVAGE quitted the murky vicinity of the fountain. He ran six  light, springy paces. His bronze form

shot upward in a tremendous leap.  His corded fingers grasped the sill of a window which was open several

inches. The window slid up. Doc slipped inside. 

The whole thing had taken no more than a dozen ticks of the clock. 

The drawbridge door opened. A group of halfcaste Mongols skulked  into the court, weapons bared for

action. 

The slanteyed men n poked about in the shrubbery until convinced  Doc was not there. They tried the

courtyard doors, and discovered them  all locked. 

"The bronze devil has gotten away!" one singsonged in his native  tongue. 

"That is impossible," replied the leader gravely. "Our lowly eyes  beheld him upon the wall even as we

arrived. He dropped inside." The  man scowled at the high rear wall. "I marvel that the neck of the

troublemaker was not broken." 

"Then, oh mighty LiangSun Chi, he must have entered the house." 

LiangSun Chi bent a bilious stare on the two sections of the  residence. 

"Is the bronze demon a magician, that he can go through locked  doors and windows  for we left them all

locked when we departed this  afternoon." 

"Only on the ground floor were they left locked, oh lord," answered  the other. He pointed. "See! There is one

second floor window open." 

The aperture the Mongol indicated was the identical window through  which Doc Savage had entered. And

Doc now stood in the darkened room  behind, listening to the talk. He understood the language  it was one  of

scores he could handle as fluently as he spoke English. 

"No kangaroo could leap that high, much less a man!" snorted  LiangSun Chi. "But we will search this place

well. It is said that the  greatest mysteries have the simplest explanations. Perhaps we left a  door open this

afternoon." 

He produced keys, unlocked one of the doors, and waved his men in.  They entered cautiously, jabbing

flashlight beams ahead. 

Doc retreated from the window out of which he had been watching. He  passed soundlessly through a door

into a corridor. At the second step,  his toe was stopped by a heavy object. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 15



Top




Page No 18


A flashlight came out of his pocket. It tossed a beam that was  hardly more than a white thread. 

The body of a man lay on the corridor floor. A sword slash had  cleaved into his heart. 

THE flash ray disclosed other details about the murder victim. He  was an elderly man, at least sixty. He wore

plumcolored knee breeches,  white stockings, a braided coat with long tails, a powdered white wig   a very

flashy butler's livery. 

Doc examined more closely. The flunky had been dead several hours  at least. 

The Orientals were making considerable noise downstairs. Draperies  ripped as they were torn down. Moving

furniture grated on waxed floors. 

"My sons,  it is a wise man who gets all his troubles in front of  him," called their leader, LiangSun Chi.

"Search the basement." 

LiangSun seemed to be something of a philosopher. 

Working w h silence and speed, floe searched the upper floors. He  found this side of the castle contained only

servant quarters,  gymnasium, indoor swimming pool, billiard rooms, and a few guest  chambers. 

Back at the open window. he glanced down. One of the guards left in  the court stood directly below. 

Doc returned to the secondfloor corridor. At one end of this he  had noted a suit of armor. The metal plates

of the gear were supported  on an iron framework. Inside the helmet was mounted a papiermache cast  of a

face. This did not differ greatly in color from Doc's tanned  features. 

There was no sound as Doc dislodged the armor from its pedestal. He  carried it to the open window. It

weighed fully a hundred pounds. 

He tossed it down on the Mongol guard. The fellow was knocked cold  and battered to the ground. The armor

clanked loudly on the court  tiles. 

Men poured into the court. Yelling excitedly, they pounced on the  armor. They thought Doc was inside. 

None of them heard the window at the opposite end of the building  lift, or saw a mighty bronze figure that

flitted, silent as a great  bat, across the court to the other house. 

They speared swords into cracks in the armor. Chopping furiously,  one halfcaste got the helmet severed. 

They saw they had been fooled. 

"We are but dumb dogs!" LiangSun squawked. "We have brought shame  to our ancestors! Continue the

search!" 

WHILE the Mongols pushed the murderous hunt a few yards away. Doc  Savage scrutinized the other half of

the vast mansion.  He found no  traces of Juan Mindoro, or Scott S. Osborn. In the library, however, he  noted

the floor cords had been wrenched from some of the reading lamps.  Evidently these had served to bind

prisoners. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 16



Top




Page No 19


Doc was now certain the Orientals had visited the castle some hours  earlier. They had slain the butler.

Probably they had made off with  Juan Mindoro and Scott S. Osborn. 

The Mongols finished with the other side of the house. They entered  the room below Doc. 

"It is said the lowly fly is never caught napping because he has  eyes that see in all directions," LiangSun

singsonged. "You will do  well to imitate the fly, my sons. Should this bronze devil escape, some  of us may

lose our heads." 

The flowery speech enlightened Doc on an important point. These  Mongols and halfcastes were serving

some master  a master who wielded  the power of life and death over them. 

Their chief might be one of the pair who had listened in on the  talk in Doc's office with the

microphonecarrying pigeon, or the gist  of the conversation might have been relayed to him. It was certain

the  talk the Mongols had overheard had brought them to Scott S. Osborn's  home  for Doc had said he was

coming here. 

Two slanteyed men mounted the stairs. 

Doc located a light switch, clicked it. The fixtures remained dark.  Doc recalled the wires torn from the

reading lamps  fuses must have  been blown when that was done. 

The pair coming up the stairs exchanged whining whispers. 

"Cold worms of fear are crawling up and down the spine of this  insignificant person," one complained. "We

have made many inquiries  about Doc Savage, since we were so fortunate as to learn Juan Mindoro  had

appealed to him for help. We heard everywhere that Doc Savage was a  mighty fighter. Aiee! But no one told

us he was a ghost. He must be  lurking in this place, yet we have heard no sound and saw no one 

"Swallow thy tongue, fool!" growled the other. "Only cowards talk  of fear!" 

"You are wrong. Only an idiot thinks not of danger 

The Orientals had reached the top of the stairs. Now, without  another word, one slowly lowered to his hands

and knees. A moment  later, he slouched prone on the hall carpet. 

The second man eyed him foolishly. His lips writhed apart, showing  teeth stained black from chewing betel

nut. He seemed to be trying to  cry out. Then he piled in a silent heap on the floor. 

A giant, ghostly bronze figure, Doc Savage loomed over the pair.  His fingers explored their clothing. He

found nothing to indicate who  their leader might be. 

Both men snored as though asleep. 

Doc retreated noiselessly down the secondfloor corridor. 

LiangSun droned words up from below. Receiving no answer from his  two men, he mounted the stairs,

flanked by three guardsmen and a  machine gunner. 

The outburst of cries as the two unconscious men were found sounded  like the clamor that comes when a

hawk flies into a flock of guineas. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 17



Top




Page No 20


A whispered consultation followed. Doc could not catch the words.  The Orientals retreated to the lower floor,

apparently to consider the  situation. 

"What manner of thing could have overcome our brothers?" LiangSun  repeated over and over. 

Suddenly, at the opposite end of the house, came a terrific uproar.  Furniture overturned. Men gasped, cackled

profanity. 

"The bronze devil! He is here!" a man sang excitedly. 

There was a loud clatter as the Mongols made for the noise. 

Doc was puzzled. But it was too good a chance to pass up. He eased  down a rear stairway, intent on quitting

the place. 

The stairs he chose let him into the lower floor library, a room  walled with bookcases and floored with rich

rugs. 

The moment he stepped into it, he knew he had made a mistake. A  dozen shadowy, slanteyed men flung

upon him. 

THE noise at the other end of the house had been a trick to draw  him down from upstairs. 

The first leaping Mongol seemed to meet a bronze wall in midair.  He was hurled back, and was impaled on

the blunt sword of one who  followed. 

A second slanteyed man got an openhanded slap that turned him  over in the air like a FourthofJuly

pinwheel. Another found himself  grasped about the chest. He shrieked, and the piercing shrillness of  his

voice was punctuated with the dull crack of breaking ribs. 

The Mongols had not expected an easy fight. But they had not  dreamed it would be like this. The giant

bronze man moved with a speed  that defied the eye. Sword slashes, delivered pointblank, sliced thin  air.

And when they did lay their hands on him, it was as if they had  grasped living steel. 

"He is not human!" wailed the man who had had his ribs broken. 

More Orientals joined the fray. They blocked the doors. Flashlights  came on. Time after time, light beams

found the bronze giant, only to  lose him. 

A machine gun opened up, making a deafening gobble of sound in the  room. 

"Idiot!" LiangSun howled at the gunner. "Stop shooting! Do you  want to kill us all?" 

It was LiangSun who put a finish to the fray. He caught a  momentary glimpse of Doc. The bronze man

stood in the center of a large  rug. Dropping swiftly, LiangSun seized the rug and yanked. Doc was  brought

down. 

LiangSun flung the rug over Doc in a big fold. 

"Are you snails that you cannot help me!" he squawled at his men. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 18



Top




Page No 21


A brisk twenty seconds followed  and they got Doc rolled up like a  mummy in the rug. They brought tire

chains from the garage and tied  them securely about the rug. 

LiangSun was proud of himself. He beat his chest with a fist. 

"Singlehanded, I did more than the rest of you dogs!" he boasted. 

He plucked open one end of the rug roll and threw his flash beam  inside. 

He could see Doc's face. The bronze features bore absolutely no  expression. But the cold fierceness in the

strange golden eyes made  LiangSun drop the rug folds and stand up hastily. 

"Half of you go outside, my sons," he commanded. "Should any one be  drawn here by sounds of the fighting,

kill them. This house stands  alone, and probably the sounds were not heard. But if any one comes,  show them

that curiosity is indeed a fatal disease." 

A part of the Orientals hurried out into the moonbathed court. 

"Watch the prisoner closely!" LiangSun directed the others. "If he  should escape, I can promise there will be

heads lopped off. I am going  to call the master to see what he wants to do with the bronze devil." 

LIANGSUN strode through rooms, playing his flash beam about, until  he located a telephone. He swept the

instrument up with a flourish. 

When the phone operator's voice came, LiangSun spoke in English.  He handled the language well enough,

except that, Chinese fashion, he  turned all the "R's" into "L's." 

"Give me numbel Ocean 0117," he requested. 

It was almost a minute before he got his party. He recognized the  singsong voice at the other end of the wire.

Without delay. he launched  rapid words in his native tongue. 

"We have secured the merchandise after which we came, oh lord," he  said. "We now have it rolled in a rug

and bound securely. This lowly  person wishes to know how you want it delivered." 

"In two pieces, dumb one!" rasped the voice in the receiver. Cut  the merchandise in two in the middle. Then

you may leave it there. I  have other work for you to do." 

"My understanding of your wishes is perfect. What is this other  wok?" 

"The sugar importer, Scott S. Osborn, has a brother who lives up on  Park Avenue. We are holding

merchandise which this brother might be  greatly interested in buying." 

"I understand, oh lord. No doubt, Scott S. Osborn's brother will  indeed want to purchase our merchandise." 

The two were speaking in vague terms, lest a phone operator be  listening. But they understood each other

perfectly. They had Scott S.  Osborn prisoner, and were going to try to ransom him to his brother. 

"This sale of merchandise is not extremely important," continued  the voice over the wire. "But since we are

holding the goods, we might  as well take a profit. You will visit the brother and seek the best  price you can

obtain." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 19



Top




Page No 22


"I comprehend most clearly, oh lord. Exactly where does Scott S.  Osborn's brother live, that I may find him

without trouble." 

"Get the address from the phone book, dumb one!" 

"I shall do that." 

"Returning to the subject of the merchandise you have wrapped in  the rug  you are perhaps aware there are

five others of a similar  pattern, although of lesser importance; We may find it desirable to  seek them also. But

I shall discuss that with you at a later time. Cut  the goods you have in two pieces. Do so at once." 

LiangSun singsonged that he understood. He hung up the receiver,  drew his sword, and swung into the room

where Doc Savage had been  captured. 

The rolled rug had not moved. The slanteyed guards sat about the  room, lost in the shadows. But their flash

beams blazed upon the rug. 

LiangSun sprang forward, sword uplifted. 

"Behold, dogs!" he shouted. "I will show you how a master swings  his blade." 

The sword hissed down. 

Rolled rug  the body within it  were chopped neatly in halves. 

A ghastly crimson flood spurted from the rug and washed over the  floor. 

LIANGSUN callously wiped his blade. "Never, my sons, will you see  a man cut in halves in more expert

fashion!" he addressed his men. 

He got no answer. 

The halfcaste leader stared about. He seemed to lose inches in  height. His eyes bloated out from behind their

sloping lids. 

"Have your tongues been eaten, that you do not answer?" he gulped. 

Leaping to the nearest Mongol, LiangSun shook him. The man toppled  out of his chair. LiangSun jumped

to another, a third, a fourth. 

All were unconscious! 

With mad haste, LiangSun shucked the rug off the head and  shoulders of the man he had cut in two. 

LiangSun's squawl of horrified surprise was like that of a cat  with its tail stepped on. 

The body in the rug was one of his own men! 

Terror laid hold of LiangSun, a fright such as he had never before  experienced. He dashed headlong out into

the court. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD 20



Top




Page No 23


"The bronze man is a devil!" he shrilled. "Flee, my sons!" 

The Orientals who had been on guard outside, needed no urging. They  battled each other to be first across the

drawbridge and into their  cars. They had their fill of fighting the bronze giant. 

They departed without knowing what had made their fellows  unconscious. A close inspection of the room

where the men slept would  have shown the remains of many thinwalled glass balls. Perhaps they  might have

guessed these had originally contained an anaesthetic gas  which made men unconscious the instant they

breathed it, yet which  became harmless after it had been in the air two or three minutes. 

These anaesthetic globes were Doc's invention. He always carried a  supply with him. 

Cars bearing the fleeing Mongols were not out of earshot when Doc  arose from the concealment of a divan

not six feet from the phone over  which LiangSun had talked to his chief. 

Doc had heard that conversation. 

Doc's escape from the tightly chained rug, so mystifying to  LiangSun, had not been difficult. Doc had

employed a simple trick used  by escape artists. He had tensed all his muscles when the rug was being  tied.

Relaxing later, he had plenty of room to crawl out after he had  reduced the guards to unconsciousness with

the anaesthetic. 

Doc had not been affected by the anaesthetic for the simple reason  that he could hold his breath during the

two or three minutes it was  effective. 

He sped out of the castle, with the idea of following LiangSun and  the others. But they had stolen his gray

roadster. 

Doc ran for the nearest boulevard. It was a quarter of a mile  distant. Had official timers held stop watches on

that quarter, the  time Doc did it in would have been good for a headline on any sport  page in the country. But

the only observer was a stray dog which sought  to overhaul the bronze man. 

On the boulevard, Doc hailed a taxi. 

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL

THE cab let Doc Savage out before an uptown New York police  station. He entered. The marked deference

of the cops, the celerity  with which they sprang to grant his wishes, showed they knew him as a  person of

power. The police commissioner himself would not have gotten  better service. 

A "back number" telephone directory was produced. This listed the  phone numbers, and the names to which

they belonged, rather than the  name followed by a number, as in an ordinary directory. 

Doc looked up the number LiangSun had called  Ocean 0117. It was  listed as the: 

DRAGON ORIENTAL GOODS CO. 

The address was on Broadway, far south of the theatrical portion of  the street known as the Great White Way. 

Doc took a cab downtown. The hack driver wondered all the way why  his passenger rode the running board


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 21



Top




Page No 24


of the taxi, rather than inside.  The hackman had never before had a thing like that happen. 

The building, housing the Dragon Oriental Goods Company, was a  shabby, tenstory structure. It was

decorated in the ornate fashion  popular thirty years ago. "The Far East Building," a sign said. 

Chinatown lay only a few blocks away. 

Directly across the street, a new fortystory skyscraper was going  up. The steel framework of this was

nearing completion. A night force  of men was pushing construction. Noise of riveting machines banged

hollowly against nearby structures and throbbed in the street. 

A dusty directory told Doc the Dragon concern occupied a  tenthfloor office. 

An elevator, driven by a man in greasy tan coveralls, was in  operation. The fellow's round moon of a face and

eyes sloping slightly  upward at the outer ends advertised that some of his recent ancestors  had come from the

Far East. 

This man never saw Doc enter. The bronze giant walked up. He did  not want to advertise his presence  the

elevator operator might get  word to whoever was leading the Mongol horde. 

The office of the Dragon Oriental Goods Company faced the front of  the building. The door lock yielded

readily to a thin steel hook of an  implement from Doc's pocket. He entered. 

No one was there. 

For furniture, the place had a couple of desks, worn chairs, filing  cabinets. Desk drawers and filing cabinets

were empty. There was not a  sheet of paper in the place. No finger prints were on the telephone,  desk;

window shade, or doorknob. 

The window was dirty. Across the street, the girders of the  building under construction made a pile like naked

brush. The drumdrum  of riveters was a somber song. 

The elevator operator did not see Doc quit the building. 

HALF an hour later, Doc entered his eightysixthfloor skyscraper  office uptown. 

He was surprised to find none of his five friends there. He  consulted one of the elevator boys. 

"They all five went out a few minutes ago to get something to eat,"  explained the youth. 

"When they come back, tell them I was here," Doc directed. 

He did not depart immediately, though. His next actions were  unusual. 

From a pocket, he took a bit of colorless substance shaped like a  crayon. He wrote rapidly on his office

window with this  putting down  a lengthy message. 

Yet when he finished, there was no trace of what he had written.  Even a magnifying glass would not have

disclosed the presence of the  writing. 

The elevator carried him down to the street. He walked away  rapidly. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 22



Top




Page No 25


Some ten minutes later, his five men returned. Their faces mirrored  the satisfaction of men who had just eaten

a hearty shore dinner after  some weeks of dining in the greasesoaked interior of a submarine. 

"I missed the pint of grease I've had to take with my meals  recently," Monk grunted contentedly. Then he

leered at Ham. "Them pigs'  knuckles and sauerkraut was swell!" 

The distinguished, snappily clad Ham scowled at hairy Monk. Any  mention of pigs that Monk made was sure

to aggravate Ham. This  hearkened back to a couple of incidents in the War. 

Ham had taught Monk certain highly insulting French words, and told  him they were just the thing to flatter a

French general with. Monk had  used themand landed in the guardhouse. 

Monk had barely been released when there occurred one of the most  embarrassing incidents of Ham's career.

He was hailed up on a charge of  stealing hams. somebody had framed him! 

To this day, Ham hadn't been able to prove the framing was Monk's  work. That rankled. Especially since

Ham had received his nickname from  the incident; a nickname he didn't care for in the least. 

"After the way you stuffed yourself, I have hopes!" Ham snapped. 

"Hopes of what?" Monk queried. 

"That you'll croak of indigestion!" 

The elevator operator spoke up eagerly when he saw them. 

"Mr. Savage was here, and has gone," he said. 

Doc's five men exchanged sharp glances. They lost no time getting  up to the eightysixth floor. 

LONG TOM, the scrawnylooking electrical wizard, hurried into the  laboratory. He came out with an

apparatus which might easily be  mistaken for an oldtime magic lantern. 

The lights were switched off. Long Tom flicked a switch on his  machine. He pointed at the window on which

Doc had written. 

Doc's message sprang out on the darkened windowpane. Glowing with a  dazzling electric blue, its

appearance was uncanny. 

Long Tom's apparatus was simply a lamp which projected strong  ultraviolet light rays. The substance with

which Doc had written on  the window, although invisible to the naked eye, would glow in eerie  fashion in the

ultraviolet light. 

It was by this method that Doc habitually left messages for his  men. 

The five read the communication. Doc's handwriting, machinelike in  its perfection, was as easy to read as

newsprint: 

Here is your job, Ham: The Mongols are holding Juan  Mindoro and  his friend, Scott S. Osborne. A

messenger  will visit Osborn's brother,  to demand a ransom. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 23



Top




Page No 26


Your work as a lawyer has probably brought you  in contact with the  family attorney of Osborn's  brother, so

you should be able to work  through him  and persuade them to pay the ransom demanded.  We will  then

follow the man to whom it is paid. 

But do not follow the messenger who demands it. 

"This will be a cinch," Ham declared, spinning his sword cane  adroitly. "I happen to be quite well acquainted

with that attorney.  Incidentally, he is the lawyer of both Scott S. Osborn and his  brother." 

"Shut up!" Monk grunted insultingly. "Don't you think we want to  read the rest?" 

They deciphered the remainder of the instructions in silence: 

Monk, Renny, Long Tom, and Johnny will go to Scott  S. Osborn's  home north of town. The place is built  like

a medieval castle. Inside  are perhaps a dozen  Mongols and halfcastes. You will ship them to our  institution,

then come back here and wait. 

"Holy cow!" Renny was bewailing.  "There won't be any excitement in  our part of it!" 

Monk's big grin was crowding his ears. 

"I got hopes, though!" he chuckled. "If Doc has bagged that many  men this early in the game, it shows we've

tackled something that is  plenty big. We may get our feet wet yet!" 

Monk was no prophet. His feet wet! He'd be deep enough in trouble  to drown, before long. But he had no

way of knowing that. 

HAM watched the others depart to ship the Orientals Doc had  captured to the upstate institution, where they

would receive the  effective, if unusual, treatment that would turn them into honest men. 

A telephone call put Ham in touch with the elderly lawyer who  served Scott S. Osborn and his brother. Ham

explained what he desired. 

"The family might hesitate about complying with the wishes of a  stranger," he finished. "It would help

greatly if you would sort of put  the O.K. on me. I am, of course, working for the interest of your  clients." 

"I'll do better than that!" declared the other attorney. "I shall  be at the home of Osborn's brother when you

arrive. When I advise them  of the situation, I am sure they will do as you desire." 

"That will be great," Ham assured him. 

Ham hurried to his bachelor quarters, in a club which was one of  the most luxurious in the city, although not

widely known. The members  were all wealthy men who wished to live quietly. 

A change of clothing was the object of Ham's visit. He donned  formal evening garb, secured a more

nattylooking sword cane from a  collection he kept on hand, and took a taxi to the home of Scott S.  Osborn's

brother. 

The dwelling was large. It might have been mistaken for a small  apartment building. 

Dismissing his taxi, Ham mounted the steps. He was about to ring  the bell when his hand froze. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 24



Top




Page No 27


A stream of scarlet was crawling slowly from under the door. 

Ham listened. He could hear nothing. He tried the knob. It turned,  but the door, after opening about two

inches, would go no farther. Ham  shoved. He could tell that he was pushing against a body lying on the  floor

inside. 

He got the panel half open, put his head in cautiously. The  vestibule was brilliantly lighted. No living person

was in sight. 

The body of the old lawyer whom Ham had called not many minutes  ago, had been blocking the door. The

elderly man had been stabbed at  least fifteen times. 

Ham, his sword cane ready, stepped inside. The weight of the dead  man against the door shoved it shut. The

lock clicked loudly. 

As though that were a signal, a man hurtled from a nearby door. 

The fellow was chunky, lemoncomplected, sloping of eye. His face  was a killer mask. He waved a sword. 

It was LiangSun, although Ham didn't know that, not having seen  him before. 

LiangSun got a shock when Ham unsheathed the slender, rippling  steel blade of his sword cane. Ham's

blade leaped out hungrily. 

With desperate haste, LiangSun parried. He was surprised, but  still confident. Among the fighting men of

Mongolia and China, he had  been considered quite a swordsman. 

Ten seconds later, LiangSun's confidence leaked out like water  from a gunnysack. The air before his face

had apparently turned into a  whistling hell of sharp steel. A chunk of his hat brim was sliced off  and fluttered

away. 

LiangSun felt like a man clubbing a swarm of hornets with a stick.  Backing up, he sought to haul a revolver

from his coat pocket with his  left hand. He hadn't wanted to use the gun before, because of the  noise. But he

would be glad to do so now. 

A dazzling slash of Ham's sword cut the whole skirt and pocket from  LiangSun's coat, and the revolver

bounced away. 

STEEL whined, clashed, rasped. Both fighters sought to get to the  revolver. Neither could quite do it. 

LiangSun felt a tickling sensation across his stomach. He looked  down and saw his clothing had been slit

wide. Another inch would have  finished him. 

He backed away swiftly, passing through the door from which he had  leaped. Ham followed, cutting and

parrying briskly. 

A man was sprawled across a table in the room. He had white hair,  ruddy features. He, too, had been stabbed

to death. 

Ham had seen the man once before, perhaps a year ago. It was the  brother of Scott S. Osborn. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL 25



Top




Page No 28


A wall safe gaped open. 

On the table with the dead man lay a heap of jewels, rings,  currency. 

This explained the situation to Ham. 

The Mongol messenger had come to demand ransom, had seen the money,  and decided a bird in hand was

better than one in the bush. He had  slain and robbed Osborn's brother, rather than bother with ransom. 

The poor old lawyer out by the door had been murdered when he  arrived. 

White with rage, Ham redoubled his sword play. LiangSun fairly ran  backward. A sudden spring put him

through a door. He slammed it. Ham  pitched against the panel. It resisted. 

Seizing a chair, Ham battered the door down. He ran across a dining  room, then a kitchen. A rear door gaped

open beyond. It let him into an  alleylike court. There was only one exit from this, a yawning space  between

two buildings, to the right. 

An indistinct, rapidly moving figure dived into this opening. 

Ham pursued. He pitched headlong between the buildings, came out on  the walk, and saw his quarry scuttle

under a street lamp at the corner. 

Ham set out after himonly to bring up sharp as a powerful voice  came to him from a nearby door recess. 

"I'll follow him, Ham!" the voice said. 

It was Doc Savage. 

Ham understood, then, why Doc had directed, in the message on the  skyscraper window, that the

ransomdemanding courier was not to be  followed. Doc intended to do the trailing, hoping to be led to the

master mind who was behind all this callous, inhuman bloodletting. 

In order not to make the fleeing Oriental suspicious, Ham continued  his chase. But at the first corner, he

deliberately took the wrong  turn. 

When he came back, there was no sign of Doc or the halfcaste  Mongol. 

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS

AT the precise moment Ham was wondering about them, Doc and  LiangSun were five blocks distant.

LiangSun was just climbing the  steps of a Third Avenue elevated station. 

The Mongol had lived much of his life in violence, and knew enough  to watch his back trail. He saw nothing

suspicious. He kept wary eyes  on the stairway until a train came in. Even after he boarded the almost  deserted

train, he watched the platform he had just quitted, as well as  the one on the other side of the tracks. He saw no

one  not a single  other passenger got aboard. 

He should have watched the rear platform. Doc was already ensconced  there. He had climbed a pillar of the

elevated a short distance above  the station and run down the tracks. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS 26



Top




Page No 29


The train clanked away southward, disgorging a few passengers at  each stop. 

At Chatham Square, very close to Chinatown, LiangSun alighted. To  make sure no one got off the train

after him who seemed in the least  suspicious, he waited on the platform until the cars pulled out.  Greatly

relieved, he finally descended. 

Doc Savage, having slid down a pillar of the elevated, was waiting  for him, seated in some one's parked car. 

LiangSun walked rapidly toward the Oriental section. He passed two  sidewalk peddlers who, even at this

late hour, were offering for sale  filthy trays of melon seeds and other celestial dainties. 

A moment later, Doc Savage also sauntered past the peddlers. 

Both venders of melon seeds and dainties shoved their trays of  merchandise in the handiest waste can and

followed Doc. Their hands,  folded across their stomachs, fingered large knives in their sleeves.  Their faces,

the color of old straw, were determined. 

Doc did not look back. Several times, he glanced down at his hands  swinging at his sides. In the palm of each

hand was a small mirror. 

The mirror showed him the two who haunted his trail. 

Doc's bronze features held no feeling as he watched. This master of  the Mongols was clever in having men

follow LiangSun to see that no  one dogged his tracks. 

Gone were any hopes Doc had of locating the master mind through  LiangSun  unless he could be induced

to talk by force. 

Doc's left hand wandered casually into his pocket, drew out four of  the glass balls filled with anaesthetic.

Holding his breath, Doc  dropped them. They shattered, releasing the colorless, odorless vapor. 

Doc strode on. 

Behind him, the two peddlers walked into the anaesthetic. They fell  forward on their faces, nearly together. 

LIANGSUN chanced to turn around at this moment. He saw Doc, saw  what had happened. His piping yell

of fright sounded like a rat squeal  in the dingy Chinatown street. He fled. 

A bronze blur of speed, Doc raced after him. 

LiangSun was fumbling inside the waistband of his trousers. He  brought out his sword. Evidently he carried

it in a sheath strapped  next to his leg. 

Doc overhauled him rapidly. The Mongol was only a hundred feet away   seventyfive  fifty. 

Then a big policeman, attracted by LiangSun's yell of fear, popped  around a corner. He stood directly in

LiangSun's path, revolver in  hand. 

The Mongol was desperate. He slashed his sword at the cop and the  cop shot him, killing him instantly. 

The policeman had acted instinctively in defense of his life. He  watched Doc come up. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS 27



Top




Page No 30


"Sure, an' this is the first man I ever killed. I hope he needed  it," the cop spoke. 

He eyed Doc suspiciously. He did not know the bronze giant. 

"Was ye chasin' this bird?" he demanded. 

"I was," Doc admitted. "And don't let the fact that you killed him  bother you. He is a murderer, probably

several times over. He killed a  man at the home of Scott S. Osborn tonight. And I think he must have

committed other crimes at the residence of Scott S. Osborn's brother  not very many minutes ago." 

Doc did not know what had happened in the dwelling of Scott S..  Osborn's brother. But the fact that Ham had

chased LiangSun out showed  something had gone wrong. 

The cop was suspicious of Doc. 

"Yez jest stick around here, me b'y!" he directed. "We'll want to  ask yez a lot av questions." 

Doc shrugged. 

The officer slapped big hands over Doc's person in search of a gun.  The fact that he did that was unfortunate.

He broke one of the  anaesthetic balls in Doc's pockets. 

A minute afterward, he was stretched on his back on the walk,  snoring loudly. 

Doc left the cop where he lay. The fellow would revive after a  time, none the worse for his slumber. 

From a nearby call box, Doc turned in an alarm to the police  station. He did not give his name. 

He hurried back to get the two peddlers who had been following him.  They should be asleep on the walk. 

But they weren't! Some denizen of Chinatown had moved them. Doc  knew it must have been the work of

some of the Mongol horde. 

Chinatown, despite all the fiction written about it, was actually  one of the quietest sections in the city. No

legitimate resident of the  district would court trouble by assisting the unconscious pair. 

A brief, but intensive search disclosed no sign of the vanished  two. 

HALF an hour later, Doc was in his skyscraper office uptown. None  of his five men had returned. 

With a chemical concoction from the laboratory, Doc erased the  invisible writing off the window. Then he

inscribed a fresh message  there. 

Swinging out into the corridor, he rode the button until an  elevator came up. The cage doors opened

noiselessly, let him in, and  closed. There was a windy sigh of a sound as the lift sank. 

Adjoining Doc's office was a suite which had been empty some  months. Rents were high up here in the

clouds, and times were tough, so  many of the more costly offices were without tenants. 

It would have taken a close examination to show the door of this  adjoining suite had been forced open. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS 28



Top




Page No 31


Inside, a man was just straightening from a large hole which had  been painstakingly cut in the wall of Doc's

office. The actual aperture  into Doc's sanctum was no larger than a pin head. But by pressing an  eye close, an

excellent view could be obtained. 

The watcher was a roundfaced, lemonskinned Oriental. He hurried  out and tried to force the door of Doc's

office. The lock defied him.  The door was of heavy steel  Doc had put that steel in to discourage  Renny's

joyful habit of knocking the panels out with his huge fists. 

Returning to the vacant suite, the Oriental set to work enlarging  his peephole. He used an ordinary pick. In

ten minutes, he had opened  an aperture in the plaster and building tile which would admit his  squat frame. 

He crawled in. First, he made sure the corridor door could be  locked from the inside. He left it slightly ajar. 

The window next received his attention. He had watched Doc write  upon it. Yet he could discern no trace of

an inscription. 

Working with great care, the Mongol removed the pane of glass. He  carried it outside. He was going to take it

to a place where some one  with an understanding of invisible inks could examine it. He rang for  the elevator. 

The elevator operator eyed him doubtfully as they rode down. 

"You work here?" he demanded. 

"Wolk this place allee time now," singsonged the Mongol. He  grinned, wiped his forehead. "Allee same wolk

velly much and get velly  little money. 

The operator was satisfied. He hadn't seen this man before. But who  would go to the trouble of stealing a

sheet of plate glass? 

The cage stopped at the ground floor. The Mongol bent over to pick  up his glass. 

What felt like a steel trap suddenly got his neck. 

THE slanteyed man struggled desperately. The hands on his throat  looked bigger than gallon buckets. 

They were Renny's hands  paws that could knock the panel out of  the heaviest wooden door. 

Monk, Long Tom and Johnny danced about excitedly outside the  elevator. They all had just come in. 

"Hey!" Monk barked. "How d'you know he's one of the gang?" 

They were nearly as surprised as the Mongol at Renny's sudden act. 

"He's got the window out of Doc's office, you homely goat!" Ham  snapped, after a glance into the elevator. 

"Yeah!" Monk bristled. "How can you tell one hunk of glass from  another?" 

"That is bulletproof glass," Ham retorted. "So far as I know, Doc  has the only office in this building with

bulletproof windows." 

Monk subsided. Ham was right. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS 29



Top




Page No 32


Renny and the Oriental were still fighting. The Oriental launched  frenzied blows, but he might as well have

battered a bull elephant, for  all the effect they had. 

Desperate, the Mongol clawed a knife out of a hidden sheath. 

"Look out, Renny!" Monk roared. 

But Renny had seen the knife menace. He hurled the slanteyed man  away. The fellow spun across the tiled

floor. He kept a grip on his  blade. 

Bounding to his feet, he drew back his arm to throw the knife. 

Wham! A gun had appeared magically in Long Tom's pale hand, and  loosed a clap of a report. 

The bullet caught the Mongol between the eye  and knocked him over  backward. His knife flew upward,

pointfirst, and embedded in the  ceiling. 

A cop, drawn by the shot, ran in, tweeting excitedly on his  whistle. 

There was no trouble over the killing, though. Long Tom, as well as  Monk, Renny, Ham and Johnny, held

high honorary commissions in the New  York police force. 

Within a quarter of an hour, the five were up in the eightysixth  floor office examining the pane of glass with

ultraviolet light. 

The message Doc had written upon it, flickered in weird bluish  curves and lines. They read: 

To RENNY: The chief of this Mongol gang  sometimes uses an office  Iisted under  the name of the Dragon

Oriental Goods Co.  It is the  center, front office on the tenth  floor of the Far East building on  lower  Broadway.

A new skyscraper is going  up across the street. 

Your engineering training will enable  you to get a structural  steelworker's job  on the new building, Renny.

Watch the office  of the  Dragon Oriental Goods Co., and trail  any one you see using it. 

With the chemical eraser, Monk carefully cleaned the glass plate.  They were taking no chances on the leader

of the Mongols getting hold  of it. Such a misfortune might mean Renny's finish. 

"We'll drop around sometime and watch you doing a little useful  labor on that building," Monk grinned at

Renny. 

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL

RENNY had been working as a structural steel man for half a day. He  was operating a riveting gun on what

would eventually be the tenth  floor of the new building. In his monster hands the pneumatic gun was a  toy. 

None of the other workers knew why he was here, not even the job  foreman. Renny had come with such

excellent references that he had been  given a job instantly. The quality of his work had already attracted

favorable attention. The crew foreman was proud of his new recruit. 

"Stick with us, buddy, and you'll get ahead," the foreman had told  Renny confidentially. "We can use men


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 30



Top




Page No 33


like you. I'll see that you get a  better job at the end of the week." 

"That'll be fine!" Renny replied. 

Not a muscle of Renny's sober, puritanical face changed during this  conversation. The crew foreman would

probably have fallen off the  girder on which he was standing, had he known Renny had handled  engineering

jobs for which he had been paid a sum sufficient to buy a  building such as this would be when finished. 

At lunch hour, most of the workers went to nearby restaurants to  eat. But Renny consumed a sandwich,

remaining near where he had been  working. 

Renny didn't want to lose sight, even for a short time, of the  office of the Dragon Oriental Goods Company.

And it was during the  lunch hour that his watch produced results. 

A lemonskinned fellow entered the tenthfloor office. His actions  were unusual. Producing a rag from his

clothing, the Oriental went over  every object in the room which might have been handled, polishing it

briskly. 

"Making doubly sure no finger prints were left behind!" Renny told  himself. "I'll just trail that bird." 

Throwing away the wrapper of the sandwich he had consumed, Renny  stretched lazily and remarked to

another steel worker smoking near by:  "Think I'll go get some hot coffee." 

He descended. 

Within ten minutes, the man who had been in the Dragon Oriental  Goods Company office put in his

appearance. A close look showed Renny  he was one of the halfcastes, an admixture of Mongol and some

other  race. 

The fellow boarded one of the open street cars which ran down  Broadway. This vehicle had no sides, only a

roof. Passengers simply  stepped aboard wherever was handiest. 

Renny followed in a taxi. He slouched low in his seat, hoping his  workstained clothing and greasy cap

would help him escape detection.  Renny had wiped off the motor of his automobile with the garments,  before

going to his new job. This gave them the proper coating of  grime. 

The quarry alighted near Chinatown. He soon passed a shabby  Celestial walking up and down the street with

a sign on his chest and  another on his back, advertising a chopsuey restaurant. 

No sign of recognition did Renny's quarry and the sandwich man  exchange, yet the sandwich man studied

Renny most intently  and was  very careful Renny did not notice. 

The fellow then scuttled down a side street. 

Renny continued his shadowing, unaware of this incident. 

THE halfcaste Mongol turned into a little shop which seemed to  sell everything from edible bamboo shoots

to cloisonne' vases. He  purchased a small package of something, then came out. He began to chew  some of

the package contents. 

He might have given a message to the shop proprietor, or received  one. Renny could not tell. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 31



Top




Page No 34


The Mongol breed's next move was to enter  of all things  a radio  store. 

Renny sauntered past the front. No one was visible within the  store; not even the proprietor. Renny hesitated,

decided to take a  chance, and entered. 

There was a door in the back. Listening, Renny heard nothing. He  opened and shut his enormous hands

uneasily. 

Finally, he shucked an unusual pistol from under one armpit. 

This gun was only slightly larger than an ordinary automatic, but  it was one of the most efficient killing

machines ever invented. Doc  had perfected the deadly weapon  an extremely compact machine gun. It  fired

sixty shots so rapidly it sounded like the bawl of a great bull  fiddle, and it could be reloaded in the time

required to snap a finger. 

Renny shoved the rear door open. A gloomy passage yawned beyond. He  stepped in. 

The door wrenched out of his hand and shut with a bang, actuated by  strong levers. The inner side of the door

was plated with sheet steel. 

Renny darted his machine gun at the panel, locked the trigger back,  and flipped the muzzle in a quick circle.

The gun made a deafening  moan; empty cartridge cases rained to the floor by scores. 

Renny snarled hoarsely. The bullets were barely burying themselves  in the steel. It was armor plate. 

Whirling, he plunged down the passage. Black murk lay before him.  He shoved out the machine gun, threw a

brief spray of lead. He was  taking no chances. 

Into another door, he crashed. It, too, had a skin of armor plate. 

Renny carried a small waterproof cigarette lighter, although he did  not smoke. It was handier than matches.

He brushed this aflame with his  thumb and held it high. 

Walls and floor were solid timbers. The ceiling was pierced with  slits. They were about two inches wide, and

ran the entire passage  length. 

An iron rod, more than an inch in diameter, delivered a terrific  slashing blow through one of these cracks.

Dodging, Renny barely got  clear. 

Crouched to one side, he heard the rod strike again and again. He  changed his position, thinking furiously. He

hosed bullets into the  cracks. 

A jeering cackle of laughter rattled through the slits. 

"You allee same waste plenty bullet, do no good!" intoned an  Oriental voice. 

With silence and speed, Renny slid out of his coat. He bundled it  about his right fist, making a thick pad.

Guessing where the iron rod  would strike next, he held out his fist to catch the blow. Three times,  he failed.

Then  thud! 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 32



Top




Page No 35


The impact was terrific. He was slammed to the passage end. The  coat pad saved bones in his enormous fist

from breakage. 

Slumping to the floor, Renny lay perfectly motionless. 

REDDISH light spurted down through the cracks. 

"The tiger sleeps," a man singsonged. "Seize him, my sons." 

The rear passage door opened with little noise. A band of Mongols  flung through and pounced upon Renny. 

With an angry roar, Renny heaved up. He spun a complete circle, the  machinegun muzzle blowing a red

flame from his big fist. 

Yells, screams, gasps made a grisly bedlam. Bodies fell. Wounded  men pitched about like beheaded

chickens. 

Renny hurtled out of the passage  and received a blow over the  head from one of the iron rods. He sagged

like a man stricken with  deathly illness. He lost his gun. 

He was buried by an avalanche of slanteyed men. His wrists and  ankles received numberless turns of

wirestrong silk cord. A huge  sponge was tamped between his jaws and cinched there with more silken  line. 

One man drove a toe into Renny's ribs. 

"The tiger devil has slain three of our brothers!" he snarled. "For  that, he should die slowly and in great pain.

Perhaps with the death of  a thousand cuts." 

"You have not forgotten, oh lord, that the master wants this white  man alive?" queried another. 

"I have not forgotten. The master is wise. This man is friend to  our great enemy, the bronze devil. Perhaps we

can persuade the bronze  one to bother us no more, lest we slay this friend." 

These words were exchanged in their cackling lingo. Renny  understood the language, and could speak it after

a fashion. He was no  little relieved. He had expected to be killed on the spot, probably  with fiendish torture. 

A large wooden packing case was now tumbled into the room. It was a  shipping crate for a radio, and was

marked with the name of an  advertised set. 

They shoved Renny into the box, packing excelsior around him  tightly, so he could hardly stir. The lid was

nailed on. Thin cracks  admitted air enough for breathing. 

At this point, a commotion arose out in front. A neighbor had heard  the shots and screams of dying men, and

had called a cop. 

"Velly solly!" a halfcaste Celestial told the officer smugly.  "Ladio, him makee noises." 

"A radio, huh?" grunted the policeman, not satisfied. "Reckon I'll  take a look around, anyway." 

In the rear of the establishment, Orientals worked swiftly. They  removed the dead and wounded. They threw

rugs over the bloodstained  floor and hung draperies over the bulletmarked armor plate on the  doors. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 33



Top




Page No 36


"Ladio makee noise," repeated the Oriental. "If you want takee  looksee, all lightee." 

The cop was conducted into the rear. He noted nothing peculiar  about the passage  the slits in the ceiling

had been closed. He saw  two blandlooklng, moonfaced men loading a large radio case onto a  truck behind

the store. The truck already bore other crates. 

"Me show how ladio makee lacket," said the Celestial. 

He turned on one of several radio sets which stood about.  Obviously, it was not working properly. Loud

scratchings and roarings  poured from it. The voice of a woman reading cooking recipes was a  procession of

deafening squawks. 

The cop was satisfied. 

"Reckon that's what the party who called me heard," he grunted.  "After this, don't turn that thing on so loud,

see! I ain't got no time  to go chasm' down false alarms." 

The officer departed. 

The proprietor of the radio store made sure the policeman was out  of sight, then he padded back to the truck. 

"Take our prisoner to the master, my sons," he commanded. 

THE truck rumbled away. It mingled with traffic that jammed the  narrow streets of Chinatown. The two

Orientals sat stolidly in the cab.  They did not look back once. 

Eventually, the truck rolled into a large warehouse. The packing  cases were all unloaded and shoved on a

freight elevator. The cage  lifted several floors. 

Renny was having difficulty breathing. The excelsior had worked up  around his nostrils. It scratched his eyes. 

He felt himself being tumbled end over end across floor. He could  barely hear his captors talking. 

"Go and tell the master we are here," one said, speaking their  native tongue. 

An Oriental padded off. In three or four minutes, he was back. 

With swift rendings, the lid was torn off Renny's prison. They  hauled him out and plucked the excelsior

away. 

He was in a large storeroom. A few boxes of merchandise were  scattered about. Judging from the tags, most

of it was from the Orient.  In addition to the elevator and a stairway door, there was an opening  to the right. 

A man grunting under the weight of Renny's shoulders, another  bearing his feet, they passed through the

opening. A flight of creaking  stairs was ascended. A trapdoor lifted, letting them out on a tarred  roof. 

An unusually high wall concealed them from other buildings near by.  Renny was carried over and flung

across a narrow gap to the roof of the  adjacent building. Next, he was carried to a large chimney. 

Reaching into the flue, an Oriental brought out a rope. This was  tied under Renny's arms. They lowered him.

He saw the interior of the  chimney was quite clean, fitted with a steel ladder. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 34



Top




Page No 37


He was handed down all of a hundred feet. Then half a dozen  clawlike hands seized him and yanked him

through an aperture in the  chimney. 

Renny gazed about in surprise. 

His surroundings were luxurious. Expensive tapestries draped the  walls; rugs, many more than an inch thick,

strewed the floor. A low  tabouret near one wall bore a steaming teapot, tiny cups and containers  of melon

seeds and other delicacies of the Far East. 

Mongols and halfcaste Chinese stood about. Each one was dressed  neatly and might have been an American

business man, except for their  inscrutable faces and the hate blazing in their dark eyes. Renny  counted seven

of them. 

Suddenly an eighth man appeared. He made a startling announcement. 

"The master has received important news!" he singsonged. "News  which makes it no longer necessary that

we refrain from taking the life  of this one who has hands the size of four ordinary men. He is to pay  for

slaying our fellows." 

RENNY felt as if he had been shoved into a refrigerator. The  Oriental's statement amounted to a

pronouncement of death. 

But it was more than that. It told Renny something terrible had  happened. They had intended to hold him as a

hostage to force Doc  Savage to leave them alone. Now they no longer needed him for that Had  they

succeeded in slaying Doc? 

"This man is to be administered the death of many cuts," continued  the slanteyed man. "Four of you bring

the other two prisoners here." 

Obeying the order, four men departed. They came back almost at once  bearing two bound and gagged

figures. 

Renny had no trouble guessing who they were. 

Juan Mindoro and Scott S. Osborn! 

Juan Mindoro was a slender, dynamic man. His high forehead and  clear eyes gave him a distinctive look.

Gray peppered his dark hair. A  gray mustache bristled over his gag. 

Scott S. Osborn, the sugar importer, was a guineapig fat man.  Ordinarily, his hair was stuck down with

grease, but now it was  disarrayed and hung in thin strings. His eyes were bubbly and running  tears. 

The spokesman of the yellow horde slanted an arm at Scott S.  Osborn. He spoke in snarling English. 

Scott S. Osborn's fat body convulsed. Tears fairly squirted from  his little, fatencircled eyes. His scream of

terror was a shrill  whinny through his nostrils. 

The Mongol wheeled on Mindoro. 

"You will watch!" he grated. "As you watch, you will do well to  think deeply, my fliend!" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL 35



Top




Page No 38


Juan Mindoro only glowered back at his tormentor. No quiver of fear  rippled his distinctive features. 

"You have lefused to give us the names of the men in the seclet  political society of the Luzon Union, which

you head," continued the  Mongol, only a few "R's" turned into "L's" marring his pronunciation of  the English

words. "We need those names." 

Dropping to a knee, the slanteyed man hastily removed Juan  Mindoro's gag. "Maybe so, you give us the

names now. In such case, we  would see fit not to halm these two men." 

"I am not fool enough to trust you!" Juan Mindoro said fiercely,  speaking crisp, Americanized English. "You

want the names of my friends  in the secret political society so you can slay them and get them out  of the way.

They would all be assassinated." 

"But, no," smirked the Mongol. "We would only lemove them fol a  sholt time. Kidnap them, pelhaps." 

"Kill them, you mean!" snapped Mindoro. "You won't get their names  from me. That's final!" Then, looking

at Renny, he added, as though to  explain his action, "The information they want would mean the death of

hundreds of innocent men. The decision I must make is a horrible one,  for it means my death as well as your

own. I think they will tell me  within a few hours." 

Renny shrugged  the only reply he could make. 

Snarling, the Mongol pointed at Renny. "Begin! Cut out his eyes to  stalt!" 

A yellow man flashed a needlebladed knife. He dropped on Renny,  put his knee on Renny's chest, grasped

the big man's hair with his left  fist. 

The knife lifted. Every eye in the room watched it. 

A Mongol over by the entrance to the chimney shrieked. He shot like  a living cannon ball across the room.

He struck the knifeman with a  shock that knocked them both unconscious. 

Wild stares centered on the chimney entrance. 

A giant man of bronze stood there! 

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY

FOR once, the yellow faces of the Mongols were not inscrutable.  They goggled like small boys seeing their

first lion. 

"Fools!" ripped their leader. "Kill this bronze devil!" 

A man darted a hand to his sleeve and forked out a kris with a  footlong serpentine blade. He drew back his

arm and flung the knife. 

What happened next was almost black magic. The kris was suddenly  protruding from the chest of the man

who had thrown it! It was as  though he had stabbed himself. 

Not one present could believe the mighty bronze man had plucked the  flashing blade out of midair and


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 36



Top




Page No 39


returned it so accurately and with  such blinding speed. No one, except Renny, who had seen Doc perform

such amazing feats before! 

Even while the dead man sloped backward to the floor like a falling  tree, Doc seized another Mongol. The

fellow seemed to become light as a  rag doll, and as helpless. His clubbed body bowled over a fifth  Oriental. 

Only three were now left. One of these drew a revolver, flung it  up, fired rapidly. But he did nothing, except

drive bullets into the  body of his fellow as it came hurtling toward him. The next instant, he  was smashed

down, to lose his senses when his head smacked the wall. 

The surviving pair spun and fled with grotesque leaps. They  squawked in terror at each jump. 

They dived through a door, but retained presence of mind enough to  slam and lock the panel. 

Doc struck it, found it was of armor plate, and did not waste more  time. 

Whirling back, he scooped up a knife and cut through the bonds of  the captives. 

Renny was hardly on his feet before Doc had entered the chimney. 

The hundred feet to the top, Doc climbed in almost no time. He ran  across the roof. 

Down in the street, the Orientals were piling into a sedan. The  machine hooted up the thoroughfare, skidded

around a corner, and was  gone. 

Doc knew any attempt to follow would be fruitless. He descended the  chimney, joining the others. 

"How'd you find us?" Renny wanted to know. 

"Through the police," Doc explained. "They had been telephoning me  news of every suspicious incident,

however unimportant, in this part of  town. I got word of the reported screams and shots in the radio store,  and

came to investigate. I heard the two truck drivers receive orders  to take their prisoner to their boss. It was a

simple matter to follow  them' here." 

Doc now shook hands with Juan Mindoro. 

DOC SAVAGE had once visited a number of islands in the Pacific,  studying tropical fevers and their cures. It

was on this trip that he  had first met Juan Mindoro. The meeting had come about through a  medical clinic

which Mindoro maintained. Mindoro was extremely wealthy,  expended tremendous sums on projects for the

general benefit of  humanity. The medical clinic, treating poor people without charge, was  only one of the

many philanthropies he indulged in. 

Doc had been impressed with the high character of Juan Mindoro. So  much so, indeed, that he had offered his

services to Mindoro, should  they ever be needed. 

"It is hopeless for me to try to express my thanks to you with mere  words," Juan Mindoro said, his orator's

voice husky with emotion. "They  would surely have killed me, those Mongol fiends." 

Doc now turned to Scott S. Osborn. He was surprised when Osborn  shrank away as if expecting a blow. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 37



Top




Page No 40


"You can't do anything to me!" Osborn shrieked hysterically. "I've  got money! I'll fight you through every

court in the land!" 

Puzzled, Doc turned to Juan Mindoro. "What does he mean?" 

Mindoro gave Osborn a scowl of scathing contempt. 

"I came to this man, thinking he was my friend," he said. "He  offered to hide me, and took me to his home.

Then he went to my  enemies. They paid him money to tell them where I was." 

"But they captured him at the same time they took you," Doc pointed  out. "And a moment ago, they were

going to kill him." 

Juan Mindoro's laugh was a dry rattle. "They doublecrossed him. He  was a fool. He thought they could be

trusted." 

Osborn wiped his bubbly eyes. His weak mouth made a trembling  sneer. 

"You can't do anything to me for selling you out!" he said shrilly.  "My money will see to that! I've still got

the dough they paid me for  telling where you were, Mindoro! Fifty thousand dollars! I'll spend  every cent of

it to fight you in court!" 

Mindoro suddenly picked up a gun one of the Mongols had dropped. He  fingered it slowly, gazing all the

while at Osborn. 

"I wish I were less of a civilized man!" be said coldly. "I would  shoot this dog!" 

Doc reached up and got the gun. Mindoro gave it up readily. 

"Osborn has been punished," Doc said grimly. "He became involved  with the Mongols through his own

greed. They murdered his brother last  night. Had he not gone to them, that would never have happened." 

Osborn's fat little face went starkly white. "What's this  this  about my brother?" 

"He was murdered last night." 

This was obviously Osborn's first knowledge of his brother's  slaughter. It hit him hard. He turned whiter and

whiter until his  repulsive little head became like a thing of bleached marble. He seemed  hardly to breathe.

Tears oozed from his small eyes, chased each other  down his puffy cheeks, and wetted his shirt front and

necktie. 

"My own brother  I just the same as murdered him!" he choked in a  voice so low the others hardly heard. 

Ignoring him, Doc indicated the doorway into the chimney. "I  suggest we get out of here." 

They turned toward the chimney. Then Renny yelped excitedly and  sprang for Osborn. 

He was too late. Osborn, crazed by the grief of his brother's  death, crumpled to the floor, his body falling

upon the upturned blade  held by one of the dead Mongols. 

THE body of the fat little man executed a few spasmodic jerks  before it became a spongy pile upon the floor. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 38



Top




Page No 41


Mindoro, gazing at the body religiously, said in solemn tones: "May  I be forgiven for speaking to him so

harshly. I did not know of his  brother's murder." 

"He had it coming!" grunted Renny, who was about as hard boiled as  they came. 

Doc Savage made no comment. 

They climbed the chimney, crossed the roof tops, and descended to  the street by the same route Renny had

been carried into this room. 

Doc telephoned the police a brief report of what had happened. He  ended with the request: "Keep my

connection with the affair secret from  the newspapers." 

"Of course, Mr. Savage!" said the police captain who was receiving  the news. "But can you give us a

description of the leader of this herd  of Mongols and halfcastes?" 

Doc turned to Juan Mindoro. "Who is behind this mess?" 

"A man known as Tom Too," replied Mindoro. 

"Can you describe him?" 

Mindoro shook his bead. "I have never seen the man. He did not show  himself to me, even when I was held

prisoner." 

"No description," Doc told the police official. 

They rode uptown in a taxi. Doc remained outside on the running  board for the first few blocks. Then, as the

machine slowed for a  traffic light, he dropped off. 

Even as Renny and Mindoro started to bark excited questions, the  giant bronze man vanished  lost himself

in the crowd that swarmed the  walks of Broadway. 

Mindoro wiped his high forehead in some bewilderment. 

"A remarkable man," he muttered. 

Renny grinned. "That ain't saying the half of it!" 

A couple of blocks farther on, Renny sobered abruptly. 

"Holy cow!" he ejaculated. "I forgot to tell Doc something! And I  dang well know it's important!" 

"What!" 

"When the Mongols first got me, they were going to keep me alive as  a hostage to make Doc behave. Then

they suddenly decided to kill me,  remarking that something had occurred which made it no longer necessary

to keep me alive. I thought at the time that maybe they had gotten Doc.  But that couldn't have been it." 

"Well?" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 39



Top




Page No 42


Renny knotted his enormous hands. "I wonder what made them decide  to kill me!" 

IT was fully an hour later when Doc Savage appeared at his  eightysixthfloor skyscraper retreat. 

Ham, Renny, and Mindoro were waiting for him. They were perspiring  and excited. 

Waving his sword cane, Ham yelled: "Doc! They've got Monk, Johnny,  and Long Tom!" 

A stranger watching Doc would not have dreamed the shock this news  conveyed. The bronze face remained

as devoid of expression as metal. No  change came into his eyes that were like pools of flake gold. 

"When?" he asked. His strange voice, although not lifted to speak  the single word, carried with the quality of

a great drum beat. 

"We were all going to meet here about noon," Ham explained. "I  stopped for a manicure and was late. When I

arrived, there was a lot of  excitement. Several of the Mongols had just herded Long Tom, Johnny,  and Monk

out at the point of guns. They rode off in waiting cars.  Nobody as much as got the license number of the

cars." 

Renny beat his big fists together savagely  the sound they made  was like steel blocks colliding. 

"Blast it, Doc!" he said sorrowfully. "I knew something was wrong  when the devils decided so suddenly to

croak me. But I forgot to tell  you  " 

"I heard their sudden change of intention," Doc replied. 

Renny looked vastly relieved. He had thought that his forgetfulness  was responsible for half an hour's delay

in Doc getting On the trail of  the captors of the trio. 

"Did you guess they had captured our three pals?" 

"The suspicion occurred to me," Doc admitted. "It became certain  when I dropped off the taxi and called the

manager of this building." 

"Then you've been on their trail!" Renny grinned. "Find anything?" 

"Nothing." 

Renny's sober face set in disconsolate lines. With the others, he  followed Doc back into the office. 

From a drawer, Doc took a box containing cigars  cigars so  expensive and carefully made that each was in

an individual vacuum  container. He offered these to the others, then held a light   Doc  never smoked himself. 

There was tranquility in the giant bronze man's manner, a  sphinxlike calmness that had the effect of quieting

Ham and Renny. Even  Juan Mindoro was noticeably eased. 

Doc's weird golden eyes came to rest on Juan Mindoro. 

"The master of the Mongol horde is a man named Tom Too, and they  are seeking to wipe out your secret

political society in the Luzon  Union," he said. "That is substantially all I know of this affair. Can  you

enlighten me further?" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 40



Top




Page No 43


"I certainly can!" Juan Mindoro clipped grimly. "This Tom Too is a  plain pirate!" 

"Pirate?" 

"Exactly! A buccaneer compared to whom Captain Kidd, Blackbeard,  and Sir Henry Morgan were petty

thieves!" 

DOC, Renny and Ham digested this. Renny had taken one of the  cigars, although he rarely smoked. The

weed looked like a brown  toothpick in his enormous fist. Ham was leaning forward in an attitude  of intense

concentration, the sword cane supporting his hands under his  jaw, his eyes staring at Mindoro. 

"Tom Too got his start with the pirates of the China seaboard,"  Mindoro continued. "As you know, the China

coast is the only part of  the world where piracy still flourishes to any extent." 

"Sure," Renny put in. "The steamers along the coast and on the  rivers carry soldiers and machine guns. Even

then, two to three hundred  craft a year are looted." 

"Tom Too became a power among the corsairs," Mindoro went on. "A  year or two ago, he moved inland. He

intended to set up an empire in  the interior of China. He established himself as a war lord. 

"But the armies of the Chinese republic drove him out. He moved  into Manchuria and sought to seize

territory and cities. But the  Japanese were too much for him." 

Renny twirled the cigar absently in his gigantic fingers. "This  sounds a little fantastic." 

"It is not fantastic  for the Orient," Doc Savage put in. "Many of  the socalled war lords of the Far East are

little better than  pirates." 

"Tom Too is the worst of the lot!" Mindoro interjected. "He is  considered a devil incarnate, even in the

Orient, where human life is  held so very cheaply." 

"You said you had never seen Tom Too," Doc suggested. "Yet you know  a great deal concerning his career." 

"What I am telling you is merely the talk of the cafes. It is  common knowledge. Concrete facts about Tom

Too are scarce. He keeps  himself in the background. Yet his followers number into the hundreds  of

thousands." 

"Huh?" Renny ejaculated. 

"I told you the pirates of the Spanish Main were petty crooks  compared to Tom Tool" Mindoro rapped. "It is

certain no buccaneer of  history ever contemplated a coup such as Tom Too plans. He is moving to  seize the

entire Luzon Union!" 

"How much has he accomplished?" Doc asked sharply. 

"A great deal. He has moved thousands of his men into the Luzon  Union." 

At this, Renny grunted explosively. "The newspapers have carried no  word of such an invasion!" 

"It has not been an armed invasion," Mindoro said grimly. "Tom Too  is too smart for that. He knows foreign

warships would take a hand. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TODAY 41



Top




Page No 44


"Tom Too's plan is much more subtle. He is placing his followers in  the army and navy of the Luzon Union,

in the police force, and  elsewhere. Thousands of them are masquerading as merchants and  laborers. When the

time comes, they will seize power suddenly. There  will be what the newspapers call a bloodless revolution. 

"Tom Too will establish what will seem to the rest of the world to  be a legitimate government. But every

governmental position will be  held by his men. Systematic looting will follow. They will take over  the banks

of the Union, the sugar plantations  the entire wealth of  the republic." 

"Where do you come in on this?" Renny wanted to know. 

Mindoro made a savage gesture. "Myself and my secret political  organization are all that stands in the way of

Tom Too!" 

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF

HAM had said nothing throughout the discussion. He maintained his  attitude of intense concentration. Ham

was a good listener on occasions  such as this. His keen brain had a remarkable capacity for grasping  details

and formulating courses of action. 

"Have you taken this matter up with the larger nations?" Ham asked  now. 

Mindoro nodded. "That was my first move." 

"Didn't you get any action?" 

"A lot of vague diplomatic talk was all!" Mindoro replied. "They  told me in so many words that they thought

I exaggerated the  situation." 

"Then no one will interfere, even if Tom Too seizes power with this  bloodless revolution he plans," Doc said.

His words were a statement of  fact. 

Tilting back in his char, Doc drew his sleeve off his left wrist. 

Mindoro stared curiously at the contrivance that looked like an  overgrown wrist watch. He did not know the

thing was the scanning lens  of Doc's amazingly compact television receiver. He seemed about to ask  what it

was, but the gravity of his own troubles dissuaded him  temporarily. 

"I will describe my secret political organization briefly, and show  how we are fighting Tom Too," Mindoro

stated. "In the secret group are  most of the prominent men of the Luzon Union, including the president,  his

cabinet and the more important officials. We have money and power.  We control the newspapers. We have

the confidence of the people. 

"Most important of all, we are sufficient in number to take up arms  and offer Tom Too very stiff opposition.

We already have the very  latest in machine guns and airplanes. We stand ready to fight the  instant Tom Too

comes into the open. 

"Tom Too has learned this. That alone is forcing him to postpone  his coup. He is seeking to learn our

identity. He captured me here in  New York and tried to force me to reveal the names of the secret  society

members. Once in possession of those names, he will remove  every man. Then he will seize power." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 42



Top




Page No 45


Doc put a hand inside his coat, where he wore the receiving  apparatus of his television receptor. A faint click

sounded. He glanced  at his wrist. 

A molten glow came into his golden eyes, a strange, hot luminance. 

"Isn't there something you can do toward rescuing your three  friends?" Mindoro asked Doc. 

"I'm doing it now," Doc told him. 

Mindoro was puzzled. "I don't understand." 

"Come here and look." Doc indicated the disk on his wrist. 

The others leaped to his side. 

"Holy cow!" Renny shouted out, "Why, there's Long Tom, Monk, and  Johnny!" 

FLICKERING on the crystallike lens of the telewatch was the  somewhat vague image of a dingy office

interior, The place held a pair  of desks, filing cabinets, and worn chairs. 

On three of the chairs sat Long Tom, Monk, and Johnny. They were  bound hand and foot, tied to the chairs,

and gagged. 

"I know that place," Renny ejaculated. "It's the office of the  Dragon Oriental Goods Company, across the

street from the skyscraper  under construction." 

"Our friends were just brought in," said Doc. 

Mindoro made bewildered gestures. 

"That is a television instrument, of course," he muttered. "But I  did not know they were made that small." 

"They re not, usually," Doc explained. "But this one is not  radically different from the larger sets. It is merely

reduced in size.  Being so small, it is effective for only a few miles." 

"Where is the transmitter?" Renny questioned, "In the Dragonboat?" 

"In the adjoining office. I installed it after leaving you and  Mindoro in the taxi. Other transmitters, operating

on slightly  different wave lengths, are at the radio store and at the spot where  Tom Too so nearly finished

you. This one got results first." 

Ham ran into the laboratory. He came out bearing several of the  compact little machine guns which were

Doc's own invention, gas masks,  gas bombs, and bulletproof vests. 

Riding down in the highspeed elevator, Ham, Renny, and Mindoro  donned the vests, belted on the machine

guns, and stuffed their pockets  with bombs. 

Mindoro, who was unfamiliar with Doc's workin" methods, showed  astonishment that the mighty bronze man

did not follow their example. 

"Aren't you going to carry at least one of these guns?" he queried. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 43



Top




Page No 46


Doc's bronze head shook a negative. "Rarely use them." 

"But why?" 

Doc was slow answering. He didn't like to talk about himself or his  way of operating. 

"The reasons I don't use a gun are largely psychological," he said.  "Put a gun in a man's hand, and he will use

it. Let him carry one and  he comes to depend upon it. Take it away from him, and he is lost   seized with a

feeling of helplessness. Therefore, since I carry no  firearms, none can be taken from me to leave the

resultant feeling of  helplessness." 

"But think of the handicap of not being armed!" Mindoro objected. 

Doc shrugged and dropped the subject. 

Ham and Renny grinned at this word play. Doc handicapped? Not much!  They had never seen mighty bronze

man in a spot yet where he didn't  have a ready way out. 

Doc rode the outside of the cab which whisked them down Broadway.  He watched the diallike lens of his

telewatch almost continuously. 

Several Mongols were now in the Dragon concern office. They moved  about, conversing. The image carried

to Doc by television was too  jittery and dim to permit him to read their lips. Indeed, he could not  even

identify the faces of the men in the room, beyond the fact that  they were lemonhued and slanteyed. 

Considering the compactness of Doc's tiny apparatus, how ever, the  transmitted image was remarkably clear.

An electrical engineer  interested in television would have gone into raptures over the  mechanism. It was

constructed with the precision of a lady's costly  wrist watch. 

An interesting bit of drama was now enacted on the telewatch lens. 

Monk, by squirming about in the chair in which he was bound, got  his toes on the floor. Hopping like a

grotesque, halfparalyzed frog,  he suddenly reached the grimy window. He fell against the pane. It  broke. 

Some glass fell inside the room; some dropped down into the street. 

A yellow man ran to Monk and delivered a terrific blow. Monk upset,  chair and all, onto the floor. He landed

on fragments of the window he  had broken. Doc watched Monk's hands intently after the fall. The  Mongols

peered anxiously out of the window. They drew back after a  time, satisfied the falling glass had alarmed no

one. 

Doc's view was now interrupted. 

A slanteyed man came and stood directly before the eye of the  hidden television transmitter. All the

apparatus registered was a  limited view of the fellow's back. 

Doc waited, golden eyes never leaving the telewatch dial. None of  his impatience showed on his bronze

features. Three minutes passed.  Four. Then the Mongol moved away from the television eye. 

The situation in the Dragon concern office was exactly as it had  been four minutes ago. The three forms

bound to chairs were quiet. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 44



Top




Page No 47


Doc's head shook slowly. 

"I don't like this," he told those inside the taxi. "Something  strange is happening in that office." 

Doc continued to watch the scanning lens. The three tied to the  chairs were motionless as dead men. He could

not see their faces. 

"We're almost there, Doc," Renny said from the cab interior. 

Doc directed the driver to stop the machine. They got out. 

"Let's rush 'em!" Renny suggested, his voice a rumble like thunder  in a barrel. 

"That is probably what they're hoping we'll do," Doc told him  dryly. 

Renny started. "You think this is a trick?" 

"Tom Too is clever enough to know you picked up the trail of his  man at the Dragon concern office. He must

surely know we are away  he  has been using the office. Yet he chanced discovery in bringing our  pals there,

or having his men bring them. He would not do that without  a reason." 

"But what  " 

"Wait here!" 

Leaving them behind, Doc moved down a side street. Two or three  pedestrians turned to stare after his

striking figure, startled by  sight of a physique such as they had not glimpsed before. 

SOME distance down the side street, a street huckster stood beside  a twowheeled hand cart piled high with

apples and oranges. This man  had but recently arrived from his native land in the south of Europe,  and he

spoke little English. 

He was surprised when a voice hailed him in his native tongue. He  was impressed by the appearance of the

bronze, goldeneyed man who had  accosted him. A short conversation ensued. Some money changed hands. 

The huckster wheeled his cart to a secluded spot. But he shortly  reappeared, pushing his vehicle toward

Broadway. He turned south on  Broadway, and was soon before the Far East Building, on the tenth floor  of

which was the office of the Dragon Oriental Goods Company. 

The door of the Far East Building was wide. The huckster calmly  wheeled his car inside an unheardof thing. 

The halfcaste elevator operator dashed forward angrily. Another  man was loitering in the lobby. His broad

face, prominent cheek bones  and almost entire absence of beard denoted, to an expert observer,  Mongol

blood. He joined the elevator operator. 

They proceeded to throw the fruit vender out bodily. It took both  of them. They wrestled the peddler clear to

the sidewalk and dumped him  into the gutter. Then they came back and shoved the cart out. 

Neither man noticed the fruit in the cart was not heaped as high as  it had been a moment before. 

The huckster wheeled his vehicle away, barking excitedly in his  native tongue. He disappeared. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 45



Top




Page No 48


Doc Savage had been hidden under the fruit. No one but the peddler  knew Doc was now in the Far East

Building  least of all the Mongol in  the lobby, who was obviously one of Tom Too's pirate horde. 

"Me think that velly stlange thing to happen," the Mongol told the  elevator operator. 

"Allee same lookee funny," agreed the operator. "Mebbe so that  fella wolk alongside blonze man?" 

The Mongol swore a cackling burst in his native tongue. "Me thinkee  good thing follow fluit fella! Alee same

cut thloat and play safe." 

With this, he felt a knife inside his sleeve and started out. He  reached the door. 

Splat! The sound was dull, mushy. It came from the side of the  door. Thin glass fragments of a hollow ball

tinkled on the floor  tiling. 

The Mongol went to sleep on his feet  fell without a sound. 

Doc had hurled one of his anaesthetic balls from the stairway. He  had not intended to reveal his presence. But

it was necessary that he  protect the innocent huckster whom he had bribed to bring him here. 

The elevator operator spun. He saw Doc. A screech of fright split  past his lips. He charged wildly for the

street door. 

The cloud of invisible, odorless anaesthetic had not yet become  ineffective. The man ran into it. He folded

down, and momentum tumbled  him head over heels across the walk. 

Doc stepped to the door. 

From two points  one up the street, one down it  machine guns  brayed a loud stream of reports. 

Doc had expected something like that. This was a trap, and Tom  Too's men were hardly fools enough to wait

for him on the upper floors  of the building, where their retreat would be cut off. 

He flashed backward in time to get in the clear. 

Fistfuls of stone powdered off the building entrance as jacketed  bullets stormed. Falling glass jangled loudly.

Ricocheting lead  squawled in the lobby. 

Doc glided to the stairs, mounted to the second floor and tried the  door of a front office. It chanced to be

locked. He pulled  not overly  hard, it seemed. The lock burst from its anchorage as though hitched to  a

tractor. 

Entering the office, Doc crossed to a window and glanced down. 

The machine guns had silenced. A gray sedan sped along the street,  slowing to permit the Mongols to dive

aboard. The car continued north.  It reached the first corner. 

Suddenly there was a series of sawing sounds, like the rasp of a  gigantic bull fiddle. 

Doc knew those noises instantly  the terrific fire of the compact  little machine guns he had invented. Renny,

Ham, and Mindoro had turned  loose on the Orientals. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 46



Top




Page No 49


The gray sedan careened to the left. It hurdled the curb. There was  a roar of rent wood and smashing glass as

it hit a display window. The  car passed entirely through the window. Wheels ripped off, fenders  crumpled,

top partially smashed in, it sledded across the floor of a  furniture store. 

Doc saw the attackers wade through the wreckage after the car.  Several times their little machine guns made

the awful bullfiddle  sawings. 

Then the three men came out and sped toward the Far East Building. 

Doc met them downstairs. 

"Three of the devils were in the car!" Renny grimaced.  "They're  all ready for the morgue." 

"What about our pals?" Ham demanded. He seized Doc's wrist and  stared at the telewatch dial. "Good!

They're still tied to those  chairs!" 

Doc said nothing. His golden eyes showed no elation. 

They rode up in the elevator. Renny raced down the tenthfloor  corridor. He did not wait to see whether the

Dragon concern office door  was locked. His keg of a fist whipped a terrific blow. The stout panel  jumped out

of the frame like match wood. 

Renny, continuing forward, tore the door from its hinges with his  great weight. 

Ham leaped to one of the bound figures, grasped it by the arm. Then  he emitted a squawk of horror. 

The arm of the form had come off in his hand! 

"THEY'RE dummies," Doc said. "The clothes worn by Monk, Long Tom,  and Johnny  stuffed with waste

paper, and fitted with the faces of  showwindow dummies." 

Ham shuddered violently. "But we saw Monk, Long Tom, and Johnny in  here! They were moving about, or

at least struggling against their  bonds." 

"They were here," Doc admitted. "But they were taken away and the  dummies substituted while one of the

Mongols stood in front of the  television transmitter, unless I'm mistaken." 

Renny's sober face was black with gloom. "Then they knew the  television sender was installed here!" 

"They were lucky enough to find it," Doc agreed. "So they brought  the three prisoners here, hoping we would

see them and come to the  rescue. They had the machinegun trap down in the street waiting for  us. That

explains the whole thing." 

Ham made a slashing gesture with his sword cane. "Blast it! We  haven't accomplished anything!" 

Doc swung over to the fragments of broken window lying on the  floor. One piece was about a foot square,

the others smaller. He began  gathering them. 

"What possible value can that glass have?" Mindoro questioned  curiously, still trembling a little from the

excitement of the recent  fight. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF 47



Top




Page No 50


"Monk broke this window and his captors knocked him over," Doc  replied. "He lay on top of the glass

fragments for a time, while the  Mongols looked down at the window to see if the breaking window had

caused alarm. They did not watch Monk at all for a few seconds. During  that time, I distinctly saw Monk

work a crayon of the invisiblewriting  chalk out of his pocket and write something on the glass." 

Renny lumbered for the door. "The ultraviolet apparatus is at the  office. We'll have to take the glass there." 

They left the Far East Building by a rear door, thus avoiding delay  while explanations were being furnished

the police. 

In Doc's eightysixthfloor retreat, they put the glass fragments  under the ultraviolet lamp. 

Monk's message confronted them, an unearthly bluish scrawl. It was  brief, but allimportant. 

Tom Too is scared and taking a runout powder.  He is going to  Frisco by plane and sailing for the  Luzon

Unlon on the liner Malay  Queen. He's  taking us three along as hostages to keep you  off his  neck. Give 'im

hell, Doc! 

"Good old Monk!" Ham grinned. "That homely ape does pull a fast one  once in a while. He's heard the gang

talking among themselves. Probably  they figured he couldn't understand their lingo." 

Mindoro had paled visibly. He strained his graying hair through  palsied fingers. 

"This means bloodshed!" he muttered thickly. "Tom Too has given up  trying to get the roster of my political

group. He will strike, and my  associates will fight him. Many will die." 

Doc Savage scooped up the phone. He gave a number  that of a Long  Island airport. 

"My plane!" he said crisply. "Have it ready in an hour." 

"You think we can overhaul them from the air?" Ham demanded. 

"Too risky for our three pals," Doc pointed out. 

"Then what  " 

"We're going to be on the liner Malay Queen when she sails from  Frisco!" 

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL

THE liner Malay Queen, steaming out through the Golden Gate, was an  impressive sight. No doubt many

persons on the San Francisco water  front paused to admire the majesty of the vessel. She was a bit over  seven

hundred feet long. In shipbuilding parlance, she displaced thirty  thousand tons. 

The hull was black, with a strip of red near the water line; the  superstructure was a striking white. The craft

had been built when  everybody had plenty of money to spend. All the luxuries had been put  into her

swimming pool, three dining saloons, two lounges, two smoking  rooms, writing room, library, and two bars.

She even carried a small  bank. 

Most of the passengers were on deck, getting their last look at the  Golden Gate. At Fort Point and Fort Baker,


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 48



Top




Page No 51


the nearest points of land  on either side, construction work on the new Golden Gate bridge was in  evidence 

a structure which would be nearly six and a half thousand  feet in length when completed. 

Among the passengers were some strange personages. 

Of exotic appearance, and smacking of the mystery of the Orient,  was the Hindu who stood on the boat deck.

Voluminous white robes  swathed this man from neck to ankles. Occasionally the breeze blew back  his robes

to disclose the brocaded sandals he wore. A jewel flamed in  his ample turban. 

Such of his hair as was visible had a jetblack color. His brown  face was plump and wellfed. Under one ear,

and reaching beneath his  chin to his other ear, was a horrible scar. It looked as though  somebody had once

tried to cut the Hindu's throat. He wore dark  glasses. 

Even more striking was the Hindu's gigantic black servant This  fellow wore baggy pantaloons. a flamboyant

silk sash, and sandals which  had toes that curled up and over. On each turnedover toe was a tiny  silver bell. 

This black man wore no shirt, but made up for it with a  barrelsized turban. He had thick lips, and nostrils

which. flared like  those of a hardrunning horse. 

Passengers on the Malay Queen had already noted that the Hindu and  his black man were never far apart. 

"A pair of bloomin' toughlookin' blokes, if yer asks me," remarked  a flashy cockney fellow, pointing at the

Hindu and the black. "Hi'd  bloody well 'ate to face 'em in a dark alley. Yer'd better lock up them  glass

marbles yer wearin', dearie." 

The cockney had addressed a stiffbacked, very fat dowager in this  familiar fashion.  They were perfect

strangers. The dowager gave the  cockney a look that would have made an Eskimo shiver. 

"Sir!" she said bitingly, then flounced off. 

The cockney leered after her. He was dressed in the height of bad  taste. The checks in his suit were big and

loud; his tie and shirt were  violently colored. He wore lowcut shoes that were neither tan nor  black, but a

bilious red hue. His hat was green. He smoked badsmelling  cigars, and was not in the least careful where he

knocked his ashes.  His face bore an unnatural paleness, as though he might have recently  served a long prison

term. 

The cockney did not glance again at the Hindu and the black man. 

The Hindu was Doc Savage. The black man was Renny. The cockney, he  of the loud clothes and bad

manners, was Ham  Ham, the one usually so  immaculately clad and so debonair of manner. The disguises

were  perfect, a tribute to Doc's intensive study of the makeup art. 

Down on the promenade deck, a steward was confronting one of the  steerage passengers who had wandered

into territory reserved for those  traveling first class. 

"You'll have to get back down where you belong!" growled the  steward, showing scant politeness. 

Courtesy did not seem to be due such a character as the steerage  passenger. The man was shabby, disheveled.

In age he seemed to be less  than thirty. But he looked like a feverridden tropical tramp. His skin  was light in

hue, and he was a pronounced blond. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 49



Top




Page No 52


A close observer might have noted his eyes were unusually dark for  one so faircomplected. 

This man was Juan Mindoro. 

Shortly afterward, Mindoro sought to reach the upper decks again.  This time he succeeded. He made his way

furtively to the royal suite,  the finest aboard. This was occupied by Doc and Renny  otherwise the  Hindu

and his black servant. 

Mindoro unlocked the royal suite with a key Doc had furnished,  entered, and wrote bnelly on the bathroom

mirror with a bit of  crayonlike substance he produced from a pocket. He wrote near the top. 

No stewards encountered the blowsylooking tropical tramp as he  returned to the steerage. 

Fifteen minutes after this incident, Ham also entered the royal  suite and left a message written near the

bottom of the mirror. 

The Malay Queen was some miles out to sea before the Hindu and his  black man stalked with great dignity to

their royal suite and locked  themselves in. 

Doc turned the ultraviolet lamp on the bathroom mirror. 

Mindoro's message read: 

The steerage is full of halfcastes Chinese,  Japanese, Malays. And  Mongols. But I have seen  nothing to show

Tom Too is aboard. 

Ham's communication was: 

No sign of Monk, Long Tom, or Johnny. And how  I hate these  clothes! 

Renny snorted at the reflection of his own black face in the  mirror. "Ham sure cuts a swath in his green hat

and bloodcolored  shoes. I'll bet he breaks the mirror in his cabin so he can't see  himself." 

Doc took off his turban. He had dyed his hair an extreme black. 

"Did you see any sign of Tom Too or his prisoners, Renny?" 

"Not a hair." Renny drew funnellike flaring tubes from his  nostrils. 

"They came from New York to San Francisco by plane, we know. We  located the aircraft they had chartered.

And the pilots told us they  had three prisoners along." 

"The big point is  did they sail on the Malay Queen?" 

"We have no proof they did. But Monk's message indicated they  intended to." 

Renny scowled at his sepia reflection in the mirror, apparently  trying to see how fierce he could look. The

result was a countenance  utterly villainous, especially when he replaced the tubes which  enlarged his nostrils. 

"Holy cow!" be grunted. "I wouldn't even know myself! I don't think  Tom Too will recognize us, Doc. That

gives us a few days in which to  work. That's a long time." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 50



Top




Page No 53


"We may need it. This Tom Too is as clever a devil as we've ever  gone up against." 

They were not tong in learning just how true Doc's statement was. 

HAM gave Doc Savage news of the first development. This occurred  the following day. 

Ham furnished Doc his information in a rather curious fashion. He  did it by smoking his vile cigar. He was

seated at one end of the  lounge. Doc was ostensibly reading a book at the other. 

Ham released short and long puffs of smoke from his lips. The short  puffs were dots, the long ones dashes.

Using them, Ham spelled out a  sentence. 

Have you heard the talk going over the  ship about the three  maniacs confined to a  stateroom on D deck? 

Tom Too or any of his men, were they in the lounge, would hardly  have dreamed the sillylooking cockney

was transmitting a message. And  Tom Too might very well be present  quite a few Orientals were  numbered

among the firstclass passengers sitting in the lounge. 

Doc shook a negative with his head, making it seem he was mentally  disagreeing with something he had read

in his book. 

The three madmen are in Stateroom Sixtysix.  Ham continued his  smoke transmission. 

Two Mongols are always on guard outside  the cabin. That's all I've  been able to find out. 

"And that's plenty," muttered Renny, who had also spelled out Ham's  smoke words. 

Shortly after this the Hindu and his giant black servant retired to  their royal suite. 

"That means they've got our buddies prisoners in the cabin!" Renny  declared. "They've given out the word

they're madmen to explain their  keeping out of sight. Probably they're strapped in straitjackets, and  gagged,

too." 

Doc nodded grimly. "You stay here, Renny. I'm going down and  investigate  alone." 

For the first time, passengers on the Malay Queen saw the  exoticlooking Hindu moving about without his

black man. Several eyes  followed him as he entered the elevator. 

"I wish to be let out on D deck," he told the elevator man,  speaking the precise English of one to whom the

tongue is not native. 

D deck, being the lowest on the ship, held the cheapest  accommodations. The staterooms were not perfectly

ventilated, and it  was necessary to keep the ports of the outside cabins closed much of  the time lest waves

slosh in and cause damage. 

Cabin No.66 was far forward. 

Sure enough, two slanteyed fellows lounged before the door. These  were not halfcastes, but of pure

Mongol strain. Both of them looked  fairly intelligent. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 51



Top




Page No 54


Blankeyed, they watched the robed Hindu approach. With each step  the Hindu's rich sandals appeared under

his robes. He came to a stop  within arm reach of the two Mongols. 

What followed next was forever a mystery to the Mongol pair. 

Two sharp cracks sounded. Each man dropped. 

Doc had struck with both fists simultaneously, before either victim  realized what he intended to do. Indeed,

neither Mongol as much as saw  Doc's whiteswathed arms start their movement. 

The stateroom door was locked. Doc exerted pressure. The door caved  in. Doc glided warily through. 

The stateroom was empty! 

Doc was not given long to digest this disappointing discovery. Two  shots crashed in the passage outside.

They came close together,  deafening roars. 

Doc whipped over to a berth, scooped up a pillow, and flashed it  briefly outside the door. More shots

thundered. Bullets tore a cloud of  feathers out of the pillow. 

With a gesture too quick for watching eyes to catch, Doc flicked a  glass ball of anaesthetic into the passage. 

He held his breath a full four minutes  not a difficult task,  considering Doc had practiced doing that very

thing every day of his  life since he had quitted the cradle. 

In the interim he heard excited shouts. Men ran up. But their  shouts ceased and they fell unconscious as the

gas got them. 

When he knew the anaesthetic vapor had become ineffective, Doc  stepped out. 

Only stewards and ship officers lay senseless in the passage. Of  the man who had fired the shots there was no

sign. 

Both of the Mongols had bullet holes through their brains. 

For the moment no other observers were in sight. Doc hurried past  the unconscious sailors and returned to the

royal suite. 

Renny was disappointed when Doc appeared without their three  friends. 

"What did you find?" he demanded. 

"That Tom Too is about as clever a snake as ever lived!" Doc  replied grimly. 

"What'd he do?" 

"Spread a false story about three madmen being in the cabin just on  the chance I was aboard. He figured that

if I was, I'd investigate.  Well, I accommodated him. And now he knows who I am." 

"A bad break!" Renny growled. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL 52



Top




Page No 55


"Tom Too is an utterly coldblooded killer. He sacrificed two of  his men, murdering them just so they would

not fall into my hands. No  doubt he feared they would be scared into betraying him." 

Renny jerked a cast of dental composition out of his mouth. It was  this which had thickened his lips. 

"No need of us wearing these disguises any longer!" he declared. 

"No," Doc agreed. "They'd just make us that much easier to find.  Ham and Mindoro are safe for the time

being in their disguises,  though." 

The two men busied themselves shedding their makeup. 

Remover used by theatrical players took the stain off their skin  and hair. Doc peeled his throat scar off as

though it were adhesive  tape. 

"This puts us in a tough spot," Renny rumbled as they returned  themselves to normal appearance. "They'll

spare no effort to put us out  of the way. And no telling how many of them are aboard." 

It was a vastly differentlooking pair of men who stepped out of  the royal suite. They were so changed an

approaching deck steward did  not recognize them. 

"Is the Hindu in?" questioned the steward. "I got a note for him." 

Doc plucked the note Out of the startled steward's fingers. 

It read: 

There is an ancient saying about the straw that  broke the back of  the camel. Your next move will  be the straw

needed to break my  patience. 

Your three friends are alive and well  as long as  my patience  remains intact. 

TOM TOO. 

"The brass of the guy!" gritted Renny. 

"Who gave you this?" Doc demanded of the steward. 

"I dunno," muttered the flunky. "I was walkin' along, an it dropped  at my feet. There was a fivedollar bill

clipped to it, together with a  note askin' me to deliver it. Somebody must 'a' throwed it." 

Doc's golden eyes bored into those of the steward until he was  convinced the man spoke the truth. 

"On what deck did that happen?" 

"On this one." 

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER

MORE questioning revealed that no one had been in sight when the  steward looked around after having the


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 53



Top




Page No 56


note drop at his feet. 

The steward departed, perspiring a little. That night he didn't  sleep well, what with dreaming of uncanny

golden eyes which had seemed  to suck the truth out of him like magnets, pulling at steel bars. 

In the royal suite, Renny made grim preparations. He donned a  bulletproof vest and harnessed two of Doc's

compact machine guns under  his arms, where they wouldn't bulge his coat too much. 

"Tom Too is not gonna set back and wait to see if we intend to lay  off him," he rumbled wrathfully. "We've

got to watch our step." 

"Not a bad idea," Doc agreed. "From now on we take no more meals in  the dining saloon." 

"I hope we ain't gonna fast," grunted Renny, who was a heavy eater. 

"Concentrated rations are in our baggage." 

"Any chance of a prowler poisoning the stuff?" 

"Very little. It would be next to impossible to get into the  containers without breaking the seals." 

Renny completed his grim preparations. He straightened his coat,  then surveyed himself in the mirror. His

garments had been tailored to  conceal guns worn in underarm holsters. The bulletproof vest was  inside,

worn as an undergarment. Renny did not look like a walking  fortress. 

"What are we going to do about Tom Too?" he asked. 

"We'll move slowly, for the time being. We don't want to get him  excited enough to kill our pals," Doc said.

"Our first move will be to  consult the captain of the ship." 

They found Captain Hickman, commander of the Malay Queen, on his  bridge. 

Captain Hickman was a shortlegged man with a body that was nearly  eggshaped. Sea gales and blistering

tropical suns had reddened his  face until it looked as if it had been soaked in beet juice. His  uniform was

resplendent. with gold braid and brass buttons. 

Four nattily clad apprentice officers stood on the bridge, keeping  watch over the instruments. 

The first mate strode sprucely back and forth, supervising the  apprentices and the general operation of the

liner. 

The first mate was somewhat of a fashion plate, his uniform being  impeccable. He was a slender, pliant man

with good shoulders and a  thinfeatured, not unhandsome face. His skin had a deeply tanned hue.  His eyes

were elevated a trifle at the outer corners, lending a  suspicion some of his ancestors had been Orientals. This

was not  unusual, considering the Malay Queen plied the Orient trade. 

Doc introduced himself to Captain Hickman. 

"Savage  Savage  hmmm!"  Captain  Hickman  murmured, stroking  his red jaw. "Your name sounds very

familiar, but I can't quite place  it." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 54



Top




Page No 57


The first mate came over, saying: "No doubt you saw this man's name  in the newspapers, captain. Doc

Savage conducted the mysterious  submarine expedition to the arctic regions. The papers were full of  it." 

"To be sure!" ejaculated Captain Hickman. Then he introduced the  first mate. "This is Mr. Jong, my first

officer." 

The impeccable first mate bowed, his polite smile increasing the  Oriental aspect of his features to a marked

degree. 

DOC SAVAGE and Renny went into consultation with Captain Hickman in  the latter's private sitting room. 

"We have reason to believe three of my friends are being held  prisoner somewhere aboard this liner," Doc

explained bluntly. "It is a  human impossibility for two men, or even three or four, to search a  boat this size.

The captives could easily be shifted to a portion of  the vessel which we had already searched, and we would

be none the  wiser. We therefore wish the aid of your crew, such of them as you  trust implicitly." 

Captain Hickman rubbed his brow. He seemed too surprised for words. 

"It is extremely important the search be conducted with the utmost  secrecy," Doc continued. "Any alarm will

mean the death of my friends." 

"This is highly irregular!" the commander objected. 

"Possibly." 

"Have you any authority to command such a search?" 

The flaky gold in Doc's eyes began to take on a molten aspect, an  indication of anger. 

"I had hoped you would cooperate freely in this matter." No wrath  was apparent in his powerful voice. 

At this point a radio operator entered the cabin, saluted briskly,  and presented Captain Hickman a message. 

The florid commander read it. His lips compressed; his eyes  hardened. 

"No search of this ship will be made!" he snapped. "And you two men  are under arrest!" 

Renny sprang to his feet, roaring: "What're you trying to pull on  us?" 

"Calm down," Doc told him mildly. Then he asked Captain Hickman:  "May I see that radiogram?" 

The skipper of the Malay Queen hesitated, then passed the wireless  missive over. It read: 

CAPTAIN HICKMAN  COMMANDER S S MALAY QUEEN  SEARCH YOUR SHIP FOR  MEN NAMED

CLARK SAVAGE JR  ALIAS DOC SAVAGE AND COLONEL JOHN RENWICK  ALIAS  RENNY

RENWICK STOP ARREST BOTH AND HOLD STOP  WANTED FOR  MURDERING SEVERAL

MONGOLIANS AND  CHINESE IN NEW YORK CITY STOP SAN  FRANCISCO  POLICE

DEPARTMENT 

"Holy cow!" Renny thundered his pet expletive. "How did they know  we were aboard?" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 55



Top




Page No 58


"They didn't," Doc said grimly. "This is Tom Too's work. Call that  radio operator in here, captain. We'll see if

he really received such a  message." 

"I'll do nothing of the sort!" snapped Captain Hickman.  "You two  are under arrest." 

With this statement the florid skipper wrenched open a drawer of  his desk. He grasped a revolver reposing

there. 

Doc's bronze hand floated out and came to rest on Captain Hickman's  right elbow. Tightening, the corded

bronze digits seemed to bury  themselves in the florid man's flesh. 

Captain Hickman's fingers splayed open and let the gun drop. He  spat a stifled cry of pain. 

Renny scooped up the fallen weapon. 

Jong, the first mate, pitched into the sitting room, drawn by his  skipper's cry. Renny let Jong look into the

noisy end of the revolver,  saying: "I wouldn't start anything, mister!" 

Doc released Captain Hickman's elbow. The skipper doubled over,  whining with agony, nursing his hurt

elbow against his egg of a  stomach. At the same time he goggled at Doc's metallic hand, as ?though  unable to

believe human fingers could have hurt him so. 

Jong stood with hands half uplifted, saying nothing. 

"We'll go interview the radio operator," Doc declared. 

THE radio installation on the Malay Queen consisted of a large  lobby equipped with a counter, where

messages were accepted, and two  inner rooms holding enormous banks of apparatus. 

"The message was genuine, all right!" insisted the radio operator.  He gave the call letters of the San Francisco

station which had  transmitted the missive. 

Seating himself at the semiautomatic "bug" which served in lieu of  a sending key, Doc called the shore

station and verified this fact. 

"Let's see your file of sent messages!" Doc directed the operator. 

A brief search turned up one which had been "marked off" as sent  not more than twenty minutes ago. It was

in code, the words  meaningless. 

"Who filed this?" 

"I don't know," insisted the radio man. "I discovered it lying on  the counter, together with the payment for

transmission and a swell  tip. Some one came in and left it without being observed." 

"This Tom Too must be half ghost!" Renny muttered. He still held  the captain's revolver, although neither the

skipper of the Malay Queen  nor First Mate Jong were offering resistance. 

Doc studied the cipher message. It read: 

JOHN DUCK  HOTEL KWANG SAN FRANCISCO  DTOSS EARVR AAGSE IAHBR OOAFR  ODIRDA 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 56



Top




Page No 59


There was no signature. Radiograms are often unsigned, which made  this fact nothing unusual. 

"Whew!" Renny grunted. "Can you make heads or tails of that mess of  letters, Doc? It seems to be a

fiveletter code of some kind." 

"The last word has six letters," Doc pointed out. "Let's see what a  little experimenting will do to it." 

Seating himself before a sheet of blank paper, a pencil in hand,  Doc went to work on the cipher. His pencil

flew swiftly, trying  different combinations of the letters. 

Five minutes later he got it. 

"The thing is simple, after all," he smiled. 

"Yeah?" Renny grunted doubtfully. 

"The first cipher letter is the first in the translated message,"  Doc said rapidly. "The second cipher letter is the

last in the message.  The third cipher letter is the second in the message; the fourth cipher  letter is next to the

last in the message, and so on. The letters are  merely scrambled systematically!" 

"Hey!" gasped Renny. "I'm dizzy already." 

"It sounds complicated until you get it down on paper. Here, I'll  show you." 

Doc put down the cipher as it stood. 

DTOSS EARYR AAGSE IAHBR OOAFR ODIRDA 

Under that he wrote the translation. 

DOCSAVAGEABOARDRADIOFORHISARREST 

Renny scowled at this. Then its meaning became clear  the words  were merely without spacing. 

"Doc Savage aboard. Radio for his arrest!" he read aloud. 

"The Instructions Tom Too sent to a confederate in San Francisco,"  Doc explained. "Evidently they had

agreed upon a course of action  should we be discovered aboard." 

POWERFUL equipment was a part of the installation aboard the Malay  Queen. Using this, it was possible for

passengers aboard to carry on a  telephone conversation with any one ashore, exactly as though there was  a

wire connection. 

Using this, Doc now proceeded to do some detective work. 

He called the Hotel Kwang in San Francisco. 

"Have you a guest registered under the name of John Duck?" he  asked. 

"John Duck checked out only a few moments ago," the hotel clerk  informed him. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 57



Top




Page No 60


Doc's second call was to the San Francisco police chief. He cut in  a loudspeaker so every one in the Malay

Queen radio room could hear  what the police chief had to say. 

"Have you received any request to arrest Doc Savage," Doc asked. 

"Certainly not!" replied the San Francisco official. "We have a  suggestion from the New York police that we

offer Savage every possible  cooperation." 

Doc rested his golden eyes on Captain Hickman. "You satisfied?" 

Captain Hickman's ruddy face glistened with perspiration. "I  er   yes, of course." 

Doc severed his radio connection with San Francisco. 

"I wish your cooperation," he told Captain Hickman. "Whether you  give it or not is up to you. But if you

refuse, you may rest assured  you will lose your command of this ship within thirty minutes." 

Captain Hickman mopped at his face. He was bewildered, angry, a  little scared. 

Doc noted his indecision. "Call your owners. Ask them about it." 

The Malay Queen commander hurriedly complied. He secured a  radiolandline connection with the

headquarters of his company in San  Francisco He gave a brief description of the situation. 

"What about this man Savage?" he finished. 

He was wearing earphones. The others did not hear what he was told. 

But Captain Hickman turned about as pale as his ruddy face  permitted. His hands shook as he placed the

headset on the table. He  stared at Doc as if wondering what manner of man the big bronze fellow  was. 

"I have been ordered to do anything you wish, even to turning my  command over to you," he said briskly. 

First Mate Jong stared as if this was hard to believe. Then he made  a gesture of agreement. "I will start an

immediate search of the ship.  And I can promise you it will be done so smoothly no one will as much  as

know it is going on." 

He hurried out. 

Doc and Renny returned to the royal suite. 

Renny eyed Doc curiously. "Just what kind of a pull have you got  with the company that owns this boat,

anyhow?" 

"Some months ago the concern got pinched for money," Doc said  slowly, reluctantly. "Had it ceased

operating, several thousand men  would have been out of jobs. A loan of mine tided them over." 

RENNY sank heavily into a chair. At times he felt a positive awe of  the mighty bronze man. This was one of

the occasions. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 11. PERIL LINER 58



Top




Page No 61


It was not the fact that Doc was wealthy enough to take an  important hand in a commercial project such as

this, that took Renny's  breath. It was the uncanny way such things as this turned up  the way  the bronze man

seemed to have a finger in affairs in every part of the  world. 

Renny knew Doc Possessed fabulous wealth, a golden treasure.trove  alongside which the proverbial ransom

of a king paled into  insignificance. Doc had a fortune great enough to buy and sell some  nations. 

Renny had seen that treasure. The sight of it had left him dazed  for weeks. It lay in the lost Valley of the

Vanished, a chasm in the  impenetrable mountains of the Central American republic of Hidalgo.  This strange

place was peopled by a goldenskinned folk, pureblooded  descendants of the ancient Mayan race. They

guarded the wealth. And  they sent burro trains of it to the outside world as Doc needed it. 

There was one string attached to the wealth  Doc was to use it  only in projects which would benefit

humanity. The Mayans had insisted  Upon that. It was to he used for the cause of right. 

Their insistence was hardly needed, for it would not have received  any other disposition at Doc's hands. Doc's

life was dedicated to that  same creed  to go here and there, from one end of the world to the  other, striving

to help those who needed help, punishing those who were  malefactors. 

This was the one thing that motivated Doc's every act. 

The same creed bound his five men to Doc.  That, and their love of  adventure, which was never satisfied. 

Chapter 12. TREACHERY

THE search for Monk, Long Tom, and Johnny drew a blank. 

"I can assure you we searched every stateroom aboard, and every box  and bale of the cargo!" declared

slanteyed First Mate Jong. "There was  no sign of three prisoners." 

"I don't  believe  they're  aboard!"  Captain Hickman Captain  Hickman had taken to speaking in a low voice

when in the presence of  the big bronze man. He was completely in awe of Doc, and his manner  showed it. 

"I'm still betting they're aboard!" Renny grunted. "Unless  " He  wet his lips. His enormous fists became

flinty blocks. It had just  occurred to him that Tom Too might have become alarmed and slain the  three

captives, shoving their bodies overboard. 

Renny's fears were dispelled by a plain white card they found under  the door of the royal suite the next day. It

said: 

The straw did not break the back of the  camel, you may be glad to  ]earn. But  it came very near. 

TOM TOO. 

"That snake is getting cocky!" Renny gritted. "How could the search  have missed our three pals, granting

they're aboard?" 

"No telling how many of the crew have been bribed," Doc pointed  out. 

THE Malay Queen stopped at Honolulu for a few hours. Doc had gotten  instructions to the flashy cockney


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 59



Top




Page No 62


and the disheveled tropical tramp,  otherwise Ham and Mindoro, and they all kept close watch on such

persons as went ashore. 

No sign of Long Tom, Monk, or Johnny was discovered in the close  inspection. 

Immediately after the Malay Queen put to sea again, Doc Savage  instituted a singlehanded search for his

three captive friends. Due to  the great size of the liner, the task was a nearly impossible one. 

A hundred of Tom Too's corsairs could conceivably have been aboard  without Doc being able to identify one

of them. Every Mongol, Jap,  Chinaman and halfcaste was a potential suspect. 

Doc began in the hold. He opened barrels, boxes, and bales of  cargo. He examined the freshwater tanks. The

Malay Queen was an oil  burner, and he scrutinized the fuel tanks. Then he began on the D deck  cabins and

worked up. 

It was on D deck, well toward the stern, that his hunt produced  first results. 

He found a stateroom which had been used, but which was now  unoccupied. 

The mirror was missing. 

On the floor was a small smudge. Analyzing this, Doc learned it was  the crayon he used for his invisible

writing. 

These discoveries told him a story. The prisoners were actually  aboard. They had been kept here for a time.

Monk had been caught trying  to leave a secret message on the mirror. The mirror had been removed  and

thrown overboard. Either Monk or his captors had destroyed the  crayon by stamping upon it. Probably that

was Monk's work, since Tom  Too's men would have wanted the crayon to learn its composition. 

Doc continued his prowling. It was an interminable task. The Malay  Queen had more than four hundred

cabins. While Doc searched, Tom Too  could easily move the prisoners to a stateroom Doc had already

scrutinized. 

DOC did not finish the hunting. Tom Too struck at their lives the  second night out of Honolulu. 

Doc and Renny had been ordering meals sent to their suite to keep  Tom Too from getting the idea they were

subsisting off rations carried  in their baggage. The meals which were brought in to them they chucked

overboard. This task usually fell to Renny, while Doc watched for  enemies. 

Gulls were following the Malay Queen. Swooping, the birds snatched  anything edible which was tossed

overside before the articles reached  the water. 

The birds bolted portions of the food Renny heaved over the rail. 

Two of the feathered scavengers did not fly fifty yards before  their wings collapsed and they plummeted into

the sea, lifeless. 

"Poison!" Renny grunted. 

The cook and steward who had come in contact with the meal put in  an uncomfortable half hour in front of

Doc's probing golden eyes. They  convinced the bronze giant they knew nothing of the poison. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 60



Top




Page No 63


Captain Hickman was perturbed when he heard of the attempt. He  acted as scared as though his own life had

beer attempted. 

First Mate Jong was also solicitous. "Do you wish me to make a  second search of the ship?" 

"It would be useless," Doc replied. 

Jong stiffened perceptibly. "I hope, sir, you do not distrust the  personnel of this craft!" 

"Not necessarily." 

Doc and Renny redoubled their caution. 

The next night they found poisoned needles concealed in their  pillows. 

A few minutes later, when Doc turned on the water in the bathroom,  a villainous, manylegged creature

hurtled out of the hotwater faucet. 

At this Renny's hair stood on end. He was in the habit of  carelessly thrusting his big hands under the faucet

when he washed. 

"I've seen those things before!" he gulped, pointing at the hideous  creature which some one had concealed in

the faucet. "It's a species of  jungle spider, the bite of which is fatal." 

"Tom Too must have gone ashore in Honolulu and loaded up with  deathdealing instruments," Doc

suggested dryly. "It looks as if we're  in for a brisk time." 

Shortly after midnight a bomb tore the royal suite almost  completely from the liner. Partitions were reduced

to kindling. The  beds were demolished, the bed clothing torn to ribbons. Two passengers  in nearby

accommodations were slightly injured. 

Doc's foresight saved him. He and Renny were bunking in with the  cockney who showed such bad taste in

clothes and manners  Ham. 

Renny started to race to the scene of the explosion. 

Doc stopped him. "Wait. Let Ham go and see how much damage was  done." 

Ham was not long on his mission. 

"A frightful explosion," he reported. "The sides and roof of the  royal suite were blown into the sea." 

"Good!" Doe smiled. 

"What's good about it?" Renny queried. 

"We'll hibernate in here and make it look like we were blown  overboard," Doc explained. "In the meantime,

Ham and Mindoro will keep  their eyes open." 

HAM and Mindoro kept their eyes open enough, but it netted them  exactly nothing. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 61



Top




Page No 64


The Malay Queen neared Mantilla, capital city of the Luzon Union.  Arrival time was set for high noon. 

Doc quitted Ham's cabin, descended to the lower deck, and  approached Mindoro. The wealthy Luzon Union

politician was more  blowsylooking than ever in his tropicaltramp disguise. 

"How much influence have you with the police chief of Mantilla and  the president of the Luzon Union," Doc

questioned. 

"I made them!" Mindoro said proudly. "They're honest men, and my  friends. I believe they would lay down

their lives for me to a man." 

"Then we will send some radio messages," Doc declared. 

"You mean you want the liner searched upon arrival?" 

"More than that. I want every person aboard questioned closely, and  those who cannot prove they have been

engaged in legitimate enterprises  for the past few years are to be thrown in jail. Can you swing  something

that radical?" 

"I can. And that should trap Tom Too." 

"It'll at least put a crimp in his style," Doc smiled. They  repaired at once to the presence of Captain Hickman.

The commander of  the Malay Queen expressed vast astonishment at sight of Doc. 

First Mate Jong, looking up from the binnacle, registered popeyed  surprise. 

"We wish to use the radio apparatus," Doe explained. "Perhaps you  had better come along, captain, in case

the radio operator should  object." 

Captain Hickman had suddenly started perspiring. The mere sight of  Doc seemed capable of making him

break out in a sweat. 

"Of course  of course!" he said jerkily. 

First Mate Jong left the bridge at this juncture. 

"Just a moment, please!" gulped Captain Hickman. "I must give an  order. Then we shall go to the radio

room." 

Crossing to one of the apprentice seamen always on duty on the  bridge, the commander spoke in a low voice.

The words continued for  fully a minute. Then Captain Hickman hurried back to Doc, apologizing  for the

delay. 

They moved toward the radio cabin. The door of the apparatus room  appeared before them. 

Renny started violently  for he was suddenly hearing a vague,  mellow, trilling sound that ran up and down

the musical scale in a  we[rdly tuneless fashion. It was a melodious, inspiring sound that  defied description.

And it persisted for only an instant. 

Renny knew what it was  Doc's tiny, unconscious sound, which he  made in his moments of greatest

concentration, or when he had come upon  a startling discovery, or as danger threatened. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 62



Top




Page No 65


Instinctively Renny looked around for the trouble. He saw it. Wisps  of smoke, yellowish, vile, were crawling

out of the wirelessroom door. 

Doc went ahead, a bronze flash of speed. He veered into the radio  room. Two operators manned the

instruments at this hour. Both sprawled  in puddles of scarlet. They had been stabbed to death. 

The wireless sets  both telephone and telegraph  had been  expertly wrecked. They were out of commission. 

Whoever had done the work was gone. 

RENNY flung into the radio room. "Now if this ain't a fine mess!"  he rasped hoarsely. 

Captain Hickman had not entered. 

Doc stepped to the door, looked out. 

Captain Hickman's revolver blazed in his face. 

Doc moved swiftly, as swiftly as he had ever moved before. Even his  incredible speed and agility would not

have gotten him in the clear had  he tried to jump back. But he did duck enough that the bullet only  scuffed

through his bronze hair. 

Before the treacherous skipper's gun could flame again, Doc was  back in the wireless cabin. 

Renny had whirled with the shot. "What is it, Doc?" 

"It's Captain Hickman!" the giant bronze man said with a sort of  blazing resonance in his voice. "He's on Tom

Too's pay roll!" 

Renny sprang to the door. The snout of a machine gun bristled from  either fist. He shoved one into the

corridor and let it drum briefly. 

A man shrieked, cursed  his profanity was singing Kwangtungese. 

"That wasn't the captain!" Renny rumbled. 

He listened. Speeding feet slippered in the corridor from both  directions. They were coming nearer. Shots

roared. 

"They're closing in on us, Doc!" 

Doc picked a glass globule of anaesthetic out of a pocket. But he  did not use it. Renny could not hold his

breath the three or four  minutes necessary for the air to neutralize the stuff. 

"Use the guns, Renny. Cut our way out of here!" 

Renny sprang to the wall. Beyond lay the deck. He shoved one of the  little machine guns out, tightened on

the trigger, and waved the muzzle  with a circular motion. 

The terrific speed of the shots made a deafening moan. The bullets  worked on the wall like a monster jig saw.

A segment larger than the  head of a barrel was cut almost completely out. Renny struck the  section with his


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 63



Top




Page No 66


fist. It flew outward. 

Renny and Doc pitched out on deck. Only a few startled passengers  were in sight. 

Doc sped to the nearest companionway. He reached the deck below in  a single prodigious leap. Renny

followed, waving the guns wildly for  balance as he negotiated with three jumps and a near headlong fall the

distance Doc had covered in one spring. 

Passengers saw the guns and ran shrieking for cover. 

HAM and Mindoro came up the grand staircase, shoulder to shoulder,  guns in hand. Ham had his sword cane. 

A bullet fired from the upper deck screamed past them. Somewhere in  the dining saloon the slug shattered

glassware. More lead followed. 

"Watch it, Doc!" Ham yelled. "A herd of the devils are coming up  from  below!" 

The words were hardly out his lips when snarling yellow faces  topped the grand staircase. 

Ham's gun hooted its awful song of death. The faces sank from view,  several spraying crimson. 

"I'm low on cartridges!" Renny boomed. "Ammunition goes through  these guns like sand through a funnel!" 

"My baggage is in the hold!" Doc said swiftly. "We'd better get to  it  There's two cases of cartridges in the

stuff." 

They raced forward along a passage, Doc in the lead. 

Slanteyed men suddenly blocked their way. Eight or ten of them!  They corked the passage. 

Hissing, one man struck at Doc with a short sword. But the blow  missed as Doc weaved aside. The force of

the swing spun the Oriental.  His sword chopped into the passage bulkhead and stuck there. 

Doc grasped the swordsman by the neck and one leg. Using the man as  a ram, he shot forward like a

projectile. Orientals upset, squawling  striking. Pistols flamed  nasty little spikesnouted automatics which

could drive a bullet a mile. 

Then Ham, Renny and Mindoro joined the fray. Their superfiring  machine guns made frightful bullfiddle

sawings. Before those terrific  blasts of lead, men fell. 

It was too much for the corsairs. Those able to do so, fled. 

Continuing on, Doc and his men descended a companionway to the  forward deck. Doc wrenched open a

hatch which gave access to the hold.  He descended. 

The Orientals caught sight of them. They fired a coughing volley.  Slivers jumped out of the deck. Slugs

tapped the iron hatch. A bullet  hit Ham's sword cane and sent it cartwheeling across the deck. 

Ham howled angrily, risked almost certain death to dive over and  retrieve his sword cane, then popped down

the hatch. By a miracle, he  was unscratched. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 12. TREACHERY 64



Top




Page No 67


"You lucky cuss!" Renny told him. 

"That's what comes of leading a righteous life!" Ham grinned. 

They were in the luggage room of the hold. Trunks and valises were  heaped about them. Doc dived into this

stuff, hunting his own luggage,  which had been put aboard in San Francisco. 

At the same time, Doc kept a watch on the hatch. 

Grimacing in aversion, Ham ripped off his flashy coat and vest. He  had already lost the villainous green hat.

He took off the  bloodcolored shoes and flung them out of the hatch. 

"I'll go barefooted before I'll wear them another minute!" he  snapped. 

Renny snorted mirthfully as, an instant later, the red shoes came  flying back down the hatch, hurled by some

Oriental. 

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE

SILENCE now fell. This was broken by singsonged orders. Ham and  Renny listened to these with interest.

The yellow men seemed to be  speaking a half dozen tongues from Hindustani, Mongol dialects, and

Mandarin, to Kwangtungese and pidgin English. 

"There must be riffraff from every country in the Far East up  there!" Renny boomed. 

"I'm surprised at that," Ham clipped "Tom Too's men in New York  were all Mongols or halfcastes with

Mongol blood." 

Mindoro explained this. "The rumors have it that Tom Too's most  trusted men are of Mongol strain. Those

were naturally the men he took  to New York." 

Doc Savage had found his trunks. He wrenched one open. Two cases of  the highpowered little cartridges for

the compact machine guns toppled  out. 

Doc grasped the edge of one box. He pulled. The wood tore away  under his steelthewed fingers as though it

were so much rotten cork. 

Mindoro, who was watching, drew in a gasp of wonder. He was still  subject to dumfoundment at the

incredible strength in those huge bronze  hands of Doc's. 

"Keep your eye peeled, Renny!" Doc warned. "They're talking about  throwing a hand grenade down that

hatch!" 

It was Renny's turn to be amazed. How Doc had managed to pick the  information out of the unintelligible

tumult overhead was beyond him. 

Renny strained his eyes upward until they ached. 

Sure enough, a hand grenade came sailing down the hatch. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 65



Top




Page No 68


Renny's machine gun blared. The burst of lead caught the grenade,  exploded it. Renny was probably one of

the most expert machine gunners  ever to hold back a trigger. The noisy little weapons of Doc's  invention, by

no means easy to hold upon a target while operating, were  steady as balanced pistols in his big paws. 

There was quite a concussion as the grenade detonated. It harmed  nobody, although a fragment hit Renny's

bulletproof vest so hard it  set him coughing. Doc, Ham, and Mindoro had dived to cover in the  baggage. 

"We can play that game with them!" Doc said dryly. He opened a  second trunk, took out iron grenades the

size of turkey eggs, and  flirted two up through the hatch. 

The twin roars brought a yowling, agonized burst of Oriental yells.  The attackers withdrew a short distance

and began pouring a steady  stream of bullets at the hatch. 

This continued some minutes. Then the hatch suddenly flopped shut.  Chains rattled. The links were being

employed to make the cover fast. 

A flashlight appeared in Doc's hand. It lanced the darkness which  now saturated the hold. Rapidly he tried all

the exits. 

"They've locked us in!" he told the others grimly. 

MINDORO, lapsing into Spanish in his excitement, babbled  expletives. "This is incredible!" he fumbled.

"Imagine such a thing as  this happening on one of the finest liners plying the Pacific! It feels  unnatural!" 

"I'll bet it feels natural to the pirates on deck," Renny grunted.  "This is the way they work it on the China

coast. The devils ship  aboard as passengers and in the crew, then take over the craft at a  signal." 

Comparative calm now settled upon the Malay Queen. The engines had  not stopped; they continued to throb.

They were modern and efficient,  those engines. Up on deck they could not be heard. Down here in the  hold

they were barely audible. 

"What are we going to do, Doc?" Ham wanted to know. 

"Wait." 

"What on? They've got us locked in." 

"Which is probably fortunate for  us," Doc pointed out. "We can  hardly take over the ship, even if we whipped

the whole gang. And  they're slightly too many for us. We'll wait for  well, anything." 

"But what about Monk, Long Tom, and Johnny?" 

Fully a minute ticked away before Doc answered. 

"We shall have to take the chance that they'll be kept alive as  long as I'm living  provided they haven't been

eliminated already." 

"I don't think they have been killed," Ham said optimistically.  "Tom Too is smart. He knows his three

prisoners will be the price of  his life should he fall into our hands. He won't throw away such a  valuable

prize." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 66



Top




Page No 69


"My thought, too," Doc admitted. 

Mindoro was moved to put a delicate question. Perhaps the strain  under which he was laboring made him

blunt, for he ordinarily would  have couched the query in the most diplomatic phraseology, or not have  asked

it at all. 

"Would you turn Tom Too loose to save your friends?" he quizzed. 

Doc's reply came with rapping swiftness. 

"I'd turn the devil loose to save those three men!" He was silent  the space of a dozen heartbeats, then added:

"And you can be sure that  when they joined me, they'd turn around and catch the devil again." 

The others were silent. Mindoro wished he hadn't asked the  question. There was something terrible about the

depth of concern the  big bronze man felt over the safety of his three friends  a concern  which had hardly

showed in his manner, but which was apparent here in  the darkness of the hold, where they could not see him,

but only hear  his vibrant voice. 

Minutes passed, swiftly at first, then slowly. They dragged into  hours. 

THE engines finally stopped. A rumble came from forward. 

"The anchor dropping!" Doc declared. 

"Any idea where we are?" Ham wanted to know. 

"We've about had time to reach the harbor of Mantilla." 

The four men listened. The great liner whispered with faint sound,  noises too vague for Ham, Renny, and

Mindoro to identify. But Doc's  highly tuned ears, his greater powers of concentration, fathomed the  meaning

of the murmurings. 

"They're lowering the boats." 

"But this craft was supposed to tie up at the wharf in Mantilla,"  said Mindoro. 

Silence fell. They continued to strain their eardrums until they  crackled protest. 

This continued fully half an hour. 

"The liner anchored in about seventy feet of water," Doc stated. 

"How can you tell?" Ham asked surprised. 

"By the  approximate number of anchorchain links that went  overboard. If you had listened carefully, you'd

have noted each link  made a jar as it went through the hawse hole. 

Ham grinned. He had not thought of that. He gave their flashlight a  fresh wind. This light used no battery,

current being supplied by a  springdriven generator within the handle. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 67



Top




Page No 70


"Things have sort of quieted down," murmured Renny, who had been  sitting with an ear pressed to a

bulkhead. 

Mounting the metal ladder to the hold hatch, he struck the lid  fiercely with his fist. Bullets instantly rattled

against it. A few,  driven by rifles, came inside. Renny descended hastily. 

"They haven't gone off and left us!" he grunted, "What d'you reckon  they're planning to do?" Ham

questioned. 

"Nothing pleasant, you may be assured," said Mindoro. 

Mindoro's nerve was holding up. He showed none of the hysteria  which comes of terror. His voice was not

even unduly strained. 

Faint sounds could now be heard on the deck immediately above.  Wrack their ears as they might, Doc and his

men could not tell what was  happening. 

"They're doing something!" Renny muttered, and that was as near as  they came to solving the mystery. 

The sounds ceased. 

Mindoro's anxiety moved him to speak. "Hadn't we better do  something?" 

"Let them make the first move," Doc replied. "We're in a position  down here to cope with any emergency." 

Mindoro had his doubts; it looked to him as if they were merely  trapped. But Ham and Renny understood

what Doc meant  in Doc's baggage  there was probably paraphernalia to meet any hostile gesture the  pirates

might make. 

"This waiting gets in my hair!" Renny thumped. "I wish something  would happen! Anything  " 

Whurrroom! 

The hull of the liner jumped inward, shoved by a monster sheet of  flame and expanding gases. 

The Orientals had lowered dynamite overside and exploded it below  the water line! 

TRUNKS and valises were shoveled to the opposite side of the hold  by the blast. Fortunately the liner hull

absorbed much of the explosion  force. 

Doc and his three companions extricated themselves from the mess of  baggage. 

A wall of water poured through the rent in the hull. It scooted  across the hold floor. A moaning, swirling

flood, it rose rapidly. 

Instinct sent Ham, Renny and Mindoro to the ladder that led to the  deck hatch. They mounted. 

"We can blow open the hatch with a grenade!" Ham clipped. 

"Not so fast!" Doc called from below. "You can bet the pirates will  be standing by with machine guns.

They'll let you have a flock of lead  the minute you show outside!" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 68



Top




Page No 71


A second explosion sounded, jarring the whole liner. This one  occurred back near the stern. 

"They're sinking the boat!" Mindoro shouted. "We'll be trapped in  here!" 

In his perturbation, he decided to ignore Doc's warning. He started  on up the ladder to the hatch. But Renny

flung up a big hand and held  him back. 

"Doc has got something up his sleeve!" Renny grunted, "so don't  worry!" 

Down in the hold, water sloshing to his waist, Doc was plucking out  the contents of another of his trunks. He

turned his flashlight on his  three companions, then flung something tip to them. He followed it with  another 

a third. 

Renny caught the first, passed it up to Mindoro, and rumbled: "Put  it on!" 

The objects consisted of helmetlike hoods which fitted over the  entire head and snugged with draw strings

around the neck. They were  equipped with gogglelike windows. 

They were compact little diving hoods. Air for breathing was taken  care of by artificial lungs carried in small

back packs. Respiration  was through a flexible hose and a mouthpiecenoseclip contrivance  inside the

mask. 

There were also lead bracelets fitting around their ankles, and  heavy enough to keep their feet down. 

Renny assisted Mindoro to don the diving hood, then put one on  himself. Ham's sharply cut, hawklike face

disappeared in another; he  took a fresh grasp on his sword came and waited. 

Doc, his bronze head already enveloped in one of the hoods, was  delving into other of his trunks, and making

bundles of objects which  he removed. 

The generatoroperated flashlights were waterproof. They furnished  a pale luminance in the rushing, greasy

floor that rapidly filled the  hold. 

THE liner sank. The boilers aft let go with hollow explosions.  Water whirled a maelstrom in the hold,

tumbling the four men and the  numerous pieces of baggage about. 

Water pressure increased as the vessel sought the depths. But at  seventy feet it was not dangerous. With a

surprisingly gentle jar, the  Malay Queen settled on the bottom. 

Locating etch other by the glowing flashlights, the four men got  together. Each carried a light. 

Doc had four bundles ready  one for each man. 

Thanks to the watertight hoods, it was not necessary to keep the  mouthpiece of the air hose between their

lips at all times. By jamming  their heads together, they could talk. 

"Each of you carry one of these bundles," Doc directed. "We'll  leave by the hole their dynamite opened 

provided the ship is not  resting so the sand has closed it." 

The hole was open. They clambered through, using care that razor  edges of the torn hull did not perforate the

waterproof hoods. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE 69



Top




Page No 72


The depths were chocolatecolored with mud raised by the sinking  Malay Queen. The men joined hands to

prevent being lost from each  other.  Doc leading, they churned through soft mud, away from the  illfated

liner. They were forced to lean far over, as though breasting  a stiff gale, to make progress. 

The water changed from chocolate hue to a straw tint, then to that  of grapefruit juice, as the mud became less

plentiful. Where the sea  was clear, Doc halted the procession. They held conclave, heads rammed  tightly

together. 

"Wait here," Doc directed. "If I'm not back in fifteen minutes,  head for shore." 

"How can we tell where shore is?" Mindoro demanded. 

Doc produced a small, watertight compass. He handed this to Ham. 

"Granting that they sank the liner in Mantilla bay, the town itself  will be due east. Head that direction." 

Doc now twisted a small valve on the "lung" apparatus of his diving  hood. This puffed out the slack lower

portion of the hood with air   gave him enough buoyancy to counteract the weight of the lead anklets.  He

lifted slowly, leaving his three companions behind on the bottom, an  anxious group. 

Nearing the surface  this was evidenced by the glow of sunlight   Doc adjusted another valve in the hood

until his weight equaled that of  the water he displaced, so that lie neither rose or sank. 

He paddled upward cautiously. If his guess was right, the pirates  would be standing by in small boats,

revolvers and machine guns in  hand. 

Doc wanted them to know he was alive. 

This was of vital importance. As long as Tom Too knew he faced the  menace of Doc Savage, he would not be

liable to slay Doc's three  friends, whom he held prisoner. Or were the three captives still alive? 

They were. The instant Doc's head topped the surface, he saw Monk,  Long Tom, and Johnny. 

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN

MONK, big and furry, clothes practically torn off, crouched in the  how of a nearby lifeboat. He was

shackled with heavy chains and metal  bands. 

The pale electrical wizard, Long Torn, and the bony, archaeologist,  Johnny, were seated on a thwart in front

of Monk. They were braceleted  with ordinary handcuffs. 

Other lifeboats and some launches swarmed the vicinity. Yellow men  gorged them to the gunwales. Gun

barrels bristIed over the boats like  naked brush. 

Every slant eye was fixed on the spot where the Malay Queen had  gone down. The sea still boiled there.

Wreckage drifted in confusion,  deck chairs, some lounge furniture, a hatch or two, and lesser objects  such as

shuffleboard cues and pingpong balls. A pall of steam from the  blown boilers hung above Mantilla Bay. 

Doc sank and stroked toward the small craft which held his three  friends. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 70



Top




Page No 73


He was hardly under the surface when a terrific explosion occurred  in the water near by. It smashed the sea

against his body with terrific  force. 

Swiftly he let all the air out of his diving hood. He scooted into  the depths. 

He knew what had happened. Some of the corsairs had glimpsed him  and hurled a grenade. 

Doc swam with grim, machinelike speed. Rifle bullets wouldn't reach  him below the surface. But the

grenades, detonating like depth bombs,  were a grisly menace. He'd have to give up the rescue of his three

men.  He had no way of getting them ashore. 

Chunng! 

Then a second grenade loosened. It couldn't have been many feet  away. The goggles of Doc's (living hood

were crushed inward. Gigantic  fists seemed to smash every inch of his bronze frame. 

Not missing a stroke in his swimming, Doc shook the glass goggle  fragments out of his eyes. No serious

damage had been done. He would  merely have to keep the mouthpiecenoseclip contrivance of the "lung"

between his lips as long as he was beneath the surface. 

His remarkable ability to maintain a sense of direction under all  circumstances enabled him to find the three

he had left beneath the  waters. 

Grenades were still exploding beneath the surface. But the blasts  were so distant now as to be harmless. 

Leaning far over against the water, the four men strode shoreward.  Coming to a clear patch of sand, Doc

halted, and, with a finger tip,  wrote one word. 

"Sharks!" 

Doc had seen a pilot fish of a sharkfollowing species. After that  warning they kept alert eyes roving the

surrounding depths.  Fortunately, however, they were not molested. 

The bottom slanted upward; the water became translucent with  sunlight. They were nearing shore. A roaring

commotion passed over  their heads, evidently a speed boat. 

Upright wooden columns appeared suddenly, thick as a forest, shaggy  with barnacles  the piling of a wharf. 

Doc led his men into the forest. They rose cautiously to the top. 

NO one observed them in the shadowy thicket of piling. 

Out on the bay, boats scurried every\where. Some were motor driven,  some propelled by stringy yellow

oarsmen. 

Doc removed his diving hood. The other three followed his example. 

"I know a spot ashore where we will be safe," Mindoro declared. "It  is one of the rendezvous used by my

secret political society." 

"Let's go," said Doc. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 71



Top




Page No 74


Shoving themselves from pile to pile, they reached a hawser end  which chanced to be dangling. Doc, tugging

it, found the upper terminus  solid. 

He mounted with simian speed and ease. The wharf was piled with  hemp bales. Near by yawned a narrow

street. 

Now the others climbed up. They sprinted for the street and  stopped. 

A squad of Mantilla police stood there. They held drawn guns. 

"Bueno!" exploded Mindoro in Spanish. "We are safe!" 

Ham and Renny scowled doubtfully. The police did not look friendly  to them. Their doubts were justified an

instant later. 

"Fire!" shrieked the officer in command of the squad. "Kill the  dogs!" 

Police pistols flung up  targeted on the vital organs of Doc and  his three companions. 

Ham, Renny, Mindoro  all three suddenly found themselves scooped  zip and swept to one side by Doc's

bronze right arm. 

Simultaneously a small cylinder in Doc's left hand spouted a  monster wad of black smoke. The cylinder, of

metal, had come from the  bundle Doc was carrying. The smoke pall spread with astonishing speed. 

Police guns clapped thunderously in the black smudge. Bullets  caromed off cobbles, off the building walls.

The treacherous officers  dashed about t, searching savagely. Some had presence of mind to run up  and down

the street until clear of the umbrageous vapor. They waited  there for the bronze giant and his companions to

appear. 

But they did not put in an appearance. 

Not until the smoke was dissipated by a breeze, fully ten minutes  later, did the wouldbe killers find an open

door in one of the  buildings walling the street. By that time Doc, Ham, Renny and Mindoro  were many

blocks away. 

MINDORO was white with rage. From time to time he shook his fists  in expressive Latin fashion. 

"That group of police was composed of Tom Too's men!" he hissed  wrathfully. "That explains their action.

The devil must have enough of  his followers, or men whom he has bribed, on the police force to take  over the

department when he decides to strike." 

Doc replied nothing. 

Ham and Renny exchanged doubtful glances. It looked as if they had  stepped from the frying pan into the

fire. Tom Too's plot was  tremendous in scope. If the police were under the domination of the  buccaneers,

Doc would be in for some tough sailing. 

They entered thickly crowded streets. The excitement in the bay  seemed to be attracting virtually every

inhabitant of Mantilla. Many,  curious, were making for the bay at a dead run. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 72



Top




Page No 75


A tight group, Doc and his men breasted this tide of humanity. They  avoided such of the Mantilla

constabulary as they saw. 

Mindoro soon led them into a small shop. The proprietor, a  benignlooking Chinese gentleman, smiled

widely at Mindoro. They  exchanged words in Mandarin. 

"To have you back is like seeing the sun rise after a long and dark  and horrible night," murmured the

Celestial. "This lowly person  presumes you wish to use the secret way." 

"Right," Mindoro told him. 

In a rear room a large brass gong hung. It was shaped like a  gigantic cymbal, such as drummers hammer. This

was moved aside, a  section of the wall behind opened, and Doc and his companions entered a  concealed

stairway. 

This twisted and angled, became a passage even more crooked, and  finally turned into another stair flight. 

They stepped into a windowless room. The air was perfumed faintly  with incense. Tapestries draped the

walls; thick rugs matted the floor;  comfortably upholstered furniture stood about. There was a cabinet  laden

with canned and preserved foods. A wellstocked bookcase stood  against one wall. 

A very modern radio set, equipped for long and shortwave reception,  completed the fittings. 

"This is one of several hidden retreats established by my secret  society," Mindoro explained. 

Ham had carried his sword cane throughout the excitement. He used  it to punch the soft upholstery of a chair,

as if estimating its  comfort. 

"How did you come to organize your political society in secrecy?"  he asked. "That has been puzzling me all

along. Did you expect a thing  like this Tom Too menace to turn up?" 

"Not exactly," replied Mindoro. "Secrecy is the way of the Orient.  We do not come out in the open and settle

things in a  knockdownanddragout fashion, as you Americans do. Of course, the  secrecy was

incorporated for our protection. The first move in seizing  power is naturally to wipe out those who are

running things. In the  Orient, secret societies are not regarded as the insidious thing you  Yanks consider

them." 

"Our first move is to find how things stand here," Doc put in. 

"I shall secure that information," Mindoro declared. "I intend to  depart at once." 

"Can you move about in safety?" 

"In perfect security. I will not go far  only to dispatch  messengers to my associates." 

Before departing, Mindoro showed Doc and the others three hidden  exits from the room for use in

emergency. 

"These walls are impervious to sound," Mindoro explained. "You can  play the radio. We have more than one

broadcasting station here in  Mantilla." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 73



Top




Page No 76


One of the concealed passages swallowed him. 

DOC clicked on the radio. It was powerful. He picked up broadcasts  from Australia, from China, from Japan,

as he ran down the dial. He  stopped on one of the local Mantilla stations. An announcer was  speaking in

English. 

"We interrupt our musical program to read a news bulletin issued by  the chief of police concerning the

sinking of the liner Malay Queen in  the Mantilla harbor not many minutes ago," said the radio announcer.  "It

seems that a group of four desperate criminals were trapped aboard  the liner. They resisted arrest. Although

many of the liner's  passengers joined in the attempt to capture them, the four criminals  took refuge in the

hold. There they exploded a bomb which sank the  vessel." 

"Holy Cow!" Renny burst forth. "They've explained the whole thing  with a slick bunch of lies!" 

"This Tom Too is smooth!" clipped Ham, with the grudging admiration  of one quick thinker for another.

Ham himself was probably as mentally  agile a lawyer as ever swayed a jury. 

"Due to the foresight of brave Captain Hickman of the Malay Queen,  the passengers were all taken ashore in

safety before the four  desperadoes exploded the bomb which sank the liner," continued the  voice from the

radio. "Several Mongols and halfcastes among the  passengers, who sought courageously to aid in subduing

the four bad  men, were slain." 

"They're even making Tom Too's gang out as heroes!" Renny groaned. 

"Flash!" suddenly exclaimed the radio announcer. "We have just been  asked to broadcast a warning that the

four killers reached shore from  the sinking Malay Queen! They are now somewhere in Mantilla. Their  names

are not known, but their descriptions follow." 

Next came an accurate delineation of how Doc, Ham, Renny, and  Mindoro looked. 

"These men are desperate characters," finished the radio announcer.  "The police have orders to shoot them on

sight. And Captain Hickman,  skipper of the illfated Malay Queen, is offering a reward of ten  thousand

dollars for the capture of each of these men, dead or alive,  preferably dead." 

Music now came from the radio. Doc turned over to the short wave  side and soon picked up the station of the

MantilIa police. Mantilla  seemed to have a very modern police department. The station was  repeating

descriptions of Doc and the others, with orders that they be  shot on sight. 

"It looks kinda tough," Renny suggested dryly. 

"Tough!" snorted Ham. "It's the dangedest jam we were ever in!" 

MINDORO was longfaced with worry when he returned. 

"The situation is indeed serious," he informed them. "My associates  succeeded in trapping one of Tom Too's

Mongols. They scared the fellow  into talking. The information they secured was most ominous. Tom Too is

ready to seize power!" 

"Exactly how is it to be managed!" Doc ('questioned. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN 74



Top




Page No 77


"The physicians who attend the president have been bribed," Mindoro  explained. "The president will be

poisoned, and the physicians will say  he died of heart failure. The moment this news gets out, rioting will

start. The rioters will be Tom Too's men, working under his orders. 

"Tom Too will step in and take charge of the police, many of whom  are his men, or in his service because of

bribes They will put down the  rioting with an iron hand  a simple matter since the rioting will be  staged

deliberately. Tom Too will be touted in newspapers and over the  radio as the iron man who took charge in the

crisis. He will ride into  power on a wave of public good will." 

"That is the sort of plan which will work in this day and age!" Ham  declared savagely. 

"It doesn't sound like pirate methods!" Renny grunted. 

"Tom Too is a modern edition of a pirate," Doc pointed out dryly.  "If he should sail into port with his

warships, as buccaneers did in  the old days, he wouldn't get to first base. For one thing, the Luzon  Union

army and navy would probably whip him. If they didn't, a few  dozen foreign warships would arrive, and that

would be his finish." 

A messenger, a husky patrolman on the Mantilla police force, whom  Mindoro trusted, arrived bearing a

change of garments for all four of  the refugees. 

Doc studied the patrolman with interest. The officer's uniform  consisted of khaki shorts which terminated

above the knees, blouse and  tunic of the same hue, and a white sun helmet. The man's brown feet and  legs

were bare of covering. 

"Have Tom Too's men sought to bribe you?" Doc asked. 

"All same many time," admitted the officer in beach English. "Me no  likee. Me say so." 

"They tell you who to see in case you changed your mind?" 

"They give me name fella come alongside if I want some Tom Too's  dolla'," was the reply. 

"They told you who to see if you wanted on Toni Too's pay roll,  eh?" Doc murmured. 

"Lightee." 

Doc's golden eyes roved over his fellows. 

"Brothers," he said softly, "I have an idea!" 

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL

SOME thirty minutes later, a husky Mantilla policeman could be seen  leaving the vicinity of the secret room

to which Juan Mindoro had led  Doc Savage, Ham, and Renny. 

The cop twiddled his long billy in indolent fashion, as though he  had no cares. Yet he covered ground swiftly

until he reached a sector  of Mantilla given over almost entirely to Chinese shops and dwellings. 

Here, he approached the driver of a small, horsedrawn conveyance  known as a caleso. The driver was


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 75



Top




Page No 78


leaning sleepily against his mangy  pony. The cop accosted him with an air of furtiveness. 

"Alee same come by change of mind." 

"No savvy," said the surly caleso driver. 

"Me likee many pesos," continued the cop patiently. "Tom Too got.  Me want. Me get idea come to you chop

chop. You likee." 

The caleso driver's evil face did not change. 

"Seat yourself in my lowly conveyance, oh lord," he said in flowery  Mandarin. 

The cop hopped into the vehicle with alacrity, crossed his bare  brown legs and settled back. 

The caleso clattered down many streets that would not pass as  decent American alleys. These were swarming

with people either coming  from the excitement at the bay front, or going. The inhabitants of  Mantilla were of

every conceivable nationality, not a few of them a  conglomerate of all the others. Mantilla seemed to be a

caldron in  which the bloods of all races were intermingled. 

Several times, policemen or other individuals cast knowing leers at  the big cop riding in the caleso. This was

evidence the driver of the  vehicle had corrupted more than one man. The mere fact that a cop was  riding in

this caleso was an indication he was en route to receive a  bribe from Tom Too's paymaster. 

The caleso halted before an ancient stone building. 

"Will you consent to alight, oh mighty one," said the driver in  Mandarin. The contempt in his beady, sloping

eyes belied his flowery  fashion of speech. 

The big policeman got out. He was conducted into a filthy room  where an old hag sat on the floor, cracking

nuts with a hammer and a  block of hardwood. 

Only a close observer would have recognized the three irregularly  spaced taps which the old crone gave a nut

as a signal. 

A door in the rear opened. The caleso driver herded the cop into a  passage. The place smelled of rats, incense,

and cooking opium. 

They reached a low, smoky room. Perhaps a dozen Orientals were  present, lounging about lazily. 

Three men were manacled in a single pile upon the floor   handcuffed ankle to ankle and wrist to wrist. 

They were Monk, Long Tom, and Johnny. 

The caleso driver shoved the big cop. 

"Step inside, oh resplendent one," he directed with a thinly veiled  sneer. "Tom Too is not here, but his

lieutenants are." 

The next instant the caleso driver smashed backward to the stone  wall. He was unconscious before he struck

it. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 76



Top




Page No 79


Some terrible, unseen force had struck his jaw, breaking it and all  but wiping it off his face. 

THE Orientals in the low room cackled like chickens disturbed on a  roost. The cackling became enraged

howling. 

Over the excited bedlam penetrated a sound more strange than any  ever heard in that illomened room. A

sound that defied description, it  seemed to trill from everywhere, like the song of a jungle bird. It was

musical, yet confined itself to no tune; it was inspiring, but not  awesome. 

The sound of Doc! 

The human pile that was Monk, Long Tom, and Johnny went through an  upheaval. 

"Doc!" Monk squawled. "By golly, he's found us!" 

The form in the airy garb of a Mantilla cop seemed to grow in size,  to expand. A giant literally materialized

before the eyes of those in  the room  a giant who was Doc Savage. 

Doc spat out bits of gum he had used to change the character of his  face. He whipped forward, and there was

such speed in his motion that  he seemed but a shadow cast across the gloomy den. 

The first Oriental in his path dodged wildly. The fellow apparently  got clear  the tips of Doc's sinewy bronze

fingers, now stained brown,  barely touched the man. Yet the slanteyed one dropped as though  stricken

through the heart. 

A Mongol plucked a revolver from the waistband of his slack  pantaloons. It tangled in the shirt tail which

hung outside his  trousers. He fought to free it. Then there was a sound like an ax  hitting a hollow tree, and he

fell. 

The heavy hardwood stub of the cop's club had knocked him  senseless. 

Another man was touched by the tips of Doc's fingers. Then two  more. The trio were hardly caressed before

they became slack, senseless  heaps upon the floor. 

"His touch is death!" shrieked a Mongol. 

That was exaggerated a little. Doc only wore metal thimbles upon  his finger tips, in each of which was a

needle containing a drug which  put a man to sleep instantly. And kept him asleep for hours! 

The thimbles were so cleverly constructed that only a close  examination would disclose their presence. 

Another Oriental went down before Doc's magic touch. 

Gun muzzles began lapping flame. Lead shattered the oil lamp which  furnished the only illumination. 

Putting out the light was a mistake. With the darkness came terror.  Yellow men imagined they felt the caress

of those terrible fingers.  They ducked madly, struck with fury, and sometimes hit each other. Two  or three

separate fights raged. Coughing guns continued to add to the  bedlam. 

Panic grew. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 77



Top




Page No 80


"The outer air is sweet, my brothers!" shrilled a voice in  Mandarin. 

No other impetus was needed. The Mongols headed for the door like  skyrockets. Reaching the street, each

vied with the other to be the  first around the nearest corner. 

The old hag lookout, who had made her nutcracking a signal, had  been bowled over in the rush. But now

she legged after them. 

MONK, Long Tom, and Johnny were scrambling about in their  excitement. 

"Hold still, you tramps!" Doc chuckled. 

Doc's casehardened bronze hands closed over Johnny's handcuffs.  They tightened, strained, wrenched  and

the links snapped. 

Johnny was not surprised. He had seen Doc do things like this on  other occasions. Long Tom's bracelets

succumbed to the bronze man's  herculean strength. 

Monk's irons, however, were a different matter. Monk himself  possessed strength far beyond the usual 

sufficient to break ordinary  handcuffs. His captors must have discovered that  the time he broke  loose to

write the message on the mirror  and decorated him with  heavier cuffs. The links that joined them were like

log chains. 

"They moved you to various parts of the liner, so I couldn't find  you, didn't they?" Doc asked. 

"We were changed to different staterooms half a dozen times," Monk  told him. "Doc, I don't see bow you

lived through that voyage.  Practically every man of the crew was on Tom Too's pay roll, to say  nothing of the

swarm of pirates that were among the passengers." 

Doc went to work on the locks of Monk's enormous leg and arm irons.  They were not difficult. Within thirty

seconds, they fell away,  expertly picked. 

"This place isn't healthy for us!" he warned. "TomToo's men will  swarm around here in a few minutes." 

Searching, they found a back exit. 

"This place was a sort of headquarters for Tom Too's organization  in Mantilla," said Johnny. 

Johnny seemed little the worse for his period of captivity. His  glasses, which had the magnifying lens on the

left side, were missing,  however. That was no hardship, since Johnny had nearly normal sight in  his right eye. 

The pale electrical wizard, Long Tom, had a black eye and a cut lip  as souvenirs. 

The furry Monk showed plenty of wear and tear. His clothes now  amounted to little more than a loin cloth.

His rusty red hide was cut,  scratched, bruised; his reddish fur was crusted with dried blood. 

"They pulled a slick one when they caught us in New York," Monk  rumbled. "One of them came staggering

into the skyscraper office with  red ink spilled all over him, pretending he'd been stabbed nearly to  death. He

got us all looking down in the street to see his assailant.  Then his pals walked in and covered us with guns." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 78



Top




Page No 81


Persons stared at the four men curiously. Thinking the cop bad  arrested the other three, some sought to

follow. But they were soon  outdistanced. Doc hurried the pace. 

They returned to Mindoro's hideout by a circuitous route. 

THERE was a hilarious reunion when they all met in the secret,  soundproofed room. Renny cuffed Johnny

and Long Tom about delightedly  with his huge paws, rumbling, "I'll teach you two guys to go and get

yourselves caught and cause us so much trouble!" 

Monk leered at his old sparring mate, Ham, rubbed his hairy paws in  anticipation, and started forward. 

Ham flourished his sword cane menacingly. "I'll pick your teeth  with this thing if you lay a hand on me, you

ugly missing link!" 

Mindoro stood to one side. He was smiling a little, the first time  his face had registered anything but gloom

for some days past. The fact  that this remarkable group of fighting men were together again had  heartened

him. 

"I had a lucky break in hunting them," Doc told Mindoro. "They were  being held at the place where I was

taken to be put on Tom Too's pay  roll. I expected a more difficult hunt." 

The big policeman with whom Doc had changed clothes was still  present. Doc gave him back his garments. 

The boisterous greeting subsided. Doc put questions to the three he  had rescued. 

"Did you overhear anything concerning Tom Too's plans?" he asked. 

It was Johnny, the bony archaeologist, who answered. "A little. For  instance, we learned how he is going to

take over the government of the  Luzon Union." 

Johnny's information jibed with that obtained by Mindoro, it  developed as he talked. 

"Tom Too's more villainous and ignorant followers are going to  stage the rioting," Johnny continued. "They

must be a mighty tough  crew, because he hasn't dared to let them come into Mantilla. They're  camped on a

small island to the north, the whole lot of them, waiting  for word which will bring them here." 

"He hasn't let them come into Mantilla because he's afraid they'd  start looting ahead of time," Long Tom put

in. "I don't think he has  any too strong a hold over the pirates camped on the island." 

"I know he hasn't!" interposed Monk. "I heard talk which revealed  the pirates on the island are tired of

waiting, and are on the point of  rebellion. They figure themselves as liable to get shot in the rioting,  so they're

not so hot about their part in the whole plot. There was  talk that they intended to make a raid of their own on

Mantilla, in the  oldfashioned pirate way." 

"They must be ignorant!" Ham snapped. "Otherwise, they'd know a  thing like that won't work in this day and

age." 

"Of course they're dumb," Monk grinned. "Tom Too went up there the  minute he landed. He knows he's got

to calm them down, or his scheme to  seize the Luzon Union is shot." 

Mindoro put in a sharp query. "What does Tom Too look like?" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL 79



Top




Page No 82


"We didn't see him," Monk said sorrowfully. "We've got no idea what  he looks like." 

"How did Tom Too go to the island?" Doc asked sharply. 

"By boat." 

"You sure?" 

"I sure am!" 

"That's swell." 

"Huh?" Monk grunted wonderingly. 

"We can get hold of a plane and beat him there," Doc said grimly.  "Provided you heard the name of the

island?" 

"Shark Head Island." 

"I can mark the spot on a map!" declared Mindoro eagerly. "The  place is an allnight run up the coast by

boat." 

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY

THAT night, a ceiling of black cloud hung at ten thousand feet.  Under this, darkness lurked, thick and

damply foul as the breath of  some carnivorous monster. 

The hour was early. Lights glowed through the open walls of huts.  Here and there a torch flared as some

native went about night duties. 

A mile high, just below the cloud ceiling, a plane boomed through  the night. Exhaust stacks of its two big

radial motors lipped blue  flame occasionally. The tips of the single farflung wing and the  spidery rudder

mechanism bore no distinguishing lights. The craft was  an amphibian  the landing wheels cranking up into

wells on the hull  when it was desired to make a landing in water. In a pinch, the craft  could carry sixteen

passengers. 

It carried only six now  Doc Savage and his five friends. 

Mindoro had remained behind in Mantilla. He had been unwilling to  be the stayathome, at first. But Doc

had pointed out it was highly  important that Mindoro assembled his loyal forces and prepare to resist  Tom

Too's coup. 

Mindoro's first move would be to throw a dependable guard around  the president of the Luzon Union, so

there would be no poisoning. The  doctors who had been bribed by Tom Too's men to proclaim the poison

death a case of heart failure, were to be disposed of. Doc hadn't  inquired just what the disposal would be. It

probably would not be  pleasant. 

It had been a simple matter for Mindoro to secure the plane for  Doc's use. 

Renny was navigating the plane. This was not an easy task, since  they could not see the heavens, or the


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 80



Top




Page No 83


contour of the land below.  Renny, thanks to his engineering training, was an expert at this sort  of thing. 

Doc handled the controls. Doc had studied flying just as  intensively as he had worked upon other things. He

had many thousands  of hours of flying time behind him, and it was evidenced in his uncanny  skill with the

controls. 

"No sign of a radio working on Tom Too's boat," Long Torn reported. 

The scrawnylooking electrical wizard had hoped to locate Tom Too  by radio compass. 

"That's too bad," he added. "If we could find him, we'd make short  work of him." 

Due to the darkness of the night, there was no hope of sighting the  craft bearing the pirate chief to such of his

followers as were camped  on Shark Head Island. 

"We're getting near the place!" Renny warned, after studying a  group of course figures he had scribbled. 

"Any chance the presence of a plane will make them suspicious?" Ham  wanted to know. 

"The Mantilla to Hong Kong air mail route is not far from here,"  Doc pointed out. "Probably they're

accustomed to hearing planes." 

Several minutes passed, the miles dropping behind, two to the  minute. 

"There we are!" Renny boomed. 

SCORES of camp fires had appeared a mile beneath the plane.  Distance made them seem small as sparks. 

Monk was using binoculars. "That's the layout, all right. I can see  some of them." 

"Take the controls," Doc directed Renny. 

Renny complied. He was an accomplished pilot, as were all of Doc's  companions. 

"All you fellows understand what you're to do," Doc told them. "Fly  on several miles, mounting into the

clouds, until you're sure the motor  sound has receded from the hearing of those below. Then you are to cut

the motors, swing back, and land secretly in the little bay on the  north end of the island." 

"We got it straight," said Renny. "The pirates are camped on the  larger bay at the south end." 

"You sure you want us to stay away from them?" Monk grumbled. 

"Until you hear from me," Doc replied. 

Doc already had a parachute strapped on. As casually as if he were  stepping out of the lobby of the New York

skyscraper which held his  headquarters, he lunged out of the plane. Safely clear, he plucked the  ripcord. 

With a swish like great wings unfolding, the silken 'chute folds  squirted out. The slight shock as it opened

completely bothered Doc not  at all. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 81



Top




Page No 84


Grasping the shrouds of the 'chute, he pulled them down on one  side, skidding the lobe in the direction he

wished to take. 

Marine charts of the thousands of large and small islands which  made up the Luzon Union group had held a

detailed map of Shark Head  Island. The bit of land was low, swampy, about a mile long and half as  wide. Its

name' came from the reefstudded bay at the lower end. This  was shaped something like the snaggletoothed

head of a shark. 

Doc landed on the rim of this bay, perhaps three hundred yards from  the pirate camp. 

The corsairs were making considerable noise. Tomtoms and wheezy  wind instruments made a savage

medley of sound. It was Chinese in  character. 

Doc got out of the 'chute harness and bundled it and the silk  mushroom under an arm. Searching through the

rank' jungle growth in the  direction of the buccaneer camp, his golden eyes discerned figures  gliding about

with the jittery motion common to action of the Oriental  stage. From time to time, these persons made

elaborate cutting motions  at each other with swords. 

They were entertaining themselves with some sort of a play. 

Doc moved out to the sandy portion of the beach. He scooped several  gallons of sand into the 'chute and tied

it there. Then he entered the  water, carrying the parachute and its burden. 

Doc's bronze skin was still dyed with the brown stain he had  applied when masquerading as the Mantilla

policeman. The stain would  not wash off. 

He swam out into the bay. Where the water was deep, he let the  'chute sink. It would never be found here. 

His mighty form cleaved forward with a speed that left a swirling  wake. Near the middle of the bay, he

headed directly for the grouped  camp fires. They were near the shore. 

A hundred yards from them, Doc lifted his voice in a shout. His  voice bad changed so as to be nearly

unrecognizable. It was high,  squeaky. It was the voice lie intended to use in his new character. 

"Hey, you fella!" he shrilled. "Me velly much all in! Bling help  alongside!" 

He got instant attention. The play acting stopped. Yellow men dived  for their arms. 

Simulating a man near exhaustion, Doc floundered toward the beach. 

A villainous horde bristling with weapons, the pirates surged down  to meet him. 

Doc hauled himself onto the sand. With fierce cries, a score of men  pounced upon him. They brandished

knives, a crookedbladed kris or two,  swords, pistols, rifles, even very modern submachine guns. 

DOC'S iron nerve control was never more evident than at that  instant. He lay like a man so tired as to be

incapable of another  movement, although it seemed certain death was upon him. 

"Allee same bling you fella big news!" he whined in his piping  voice. "Gimme dlink. Me one playedout

fella." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 82



Top




Page No 85


They hauled Doc roughly to the fires. They surrounded him, row  after row, those in front squatting so the

men behind could see. There  were Malays, Mongols, Japs, Chinese, white men, blacks  as  conglomerate a

racial collection as it would be possible to imagine.  Turbaned Hindus mingled with them. 

One thing they all had in common  lust and butchery, disease and  filth, greed and treachery was stamped

upon every countenance. 

Doc's jaws were pried apart. He was fed a revolting concoction of  kaoliang cooked with rice. It was a distinct

effort to choke the stuff  down. A spicy wine followed. Somebody went for more wine. Doc decided  it was

time to revive. 

"Me stalt out in chugchug boat," Doc explained. Strictly, this  wasn't a lie. They had ridden out to the

anchored seaplane in Mantilla  in a motor boat. 

"Him boat stop chugchug. Me swim. Get this place byby. Me plenty  much play out." 

"Do you speak Mandarin, oh friend who comes in the water?" asked a  man in Mandarin. 

"I do, oh mighty lord," Doc admitted in the same flamboyant lingo. 

"How did you pass the tigers who watch at the mouth of the bay, our  brothers who are upon guard?" 

"I saw no tigers, illustrious one," said Doc. That was no lie. He  hadn't seen the guards. 

"The guardian tigers shall have their tails twisted!" roared the  pirate. He whirled, snarling orders for some of

his followers to hurry  and relieve the guards. 

"What brings you here?" the corsair asked Doc. 

"It is said that man differs from sheep in that man knows when he  is to be slaughtered," Doc said in

longwinded fashion. 

"You are one of Tom Too's sons?" 

"I was. But no man wishes to be the son of a dog that would bite  off its tail that it might walk upon its rear

legs and be like a man." 

The buccaneer was perplexed. "What is this talk of slaughtered  sheep and dogs who wish to be men, oh

puzzling one?" 

DOC sat up. He did not lift his voice very much, for he was  supposed to be a man suffering from exhaustion,

a man who had come a  long distance with important news. Nevertheless, his low and powerful  tones carried

far enough that several hundred slanteyed and  pastyfaced fiends heard his words. 

"It is of Tom Too whom I speak, my brothers," he proclaimed. "The  man who is your leader has told you that

your share of his design upon  the Luzon Union is to play the part of looters, that he may be the hero  for

subduing you. 

"The real truth is that you will be shot down like wild ducks upon  the hunting preserve of a rich merchant.

Are you such fools as to  believe many of you will not die? Tom Too will not hesitate to  sacrifice you. He

considers you rabble. You are the dog tail which he  will cut off, and being rid of you, set himself up as a


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 83



Top




Page No 86


king. 

"Are you without sense, that you think he will divide so rich a  prize as you would the money box from a

looted junk?" 

"Such money as Tom Too draws from the Luzon Union must be taken  slowly, as a tapeworm sucks

nourishment from the stomach of a fat money  changer. There will not be great sums at one time. Do you

think he will  make you rich men, my brothers? If you do, you are but ostriches with  your heads in the sand!" 

"You have heard this is what Tom Too intends to do?" asked the  spokesman of the pirate men, speaking

furiously. "Does he intend to  slay us while he is making himself a hero?" 

"Why do you think I came here?" 

"Truly, that puzzles me." 

"I do not wish to see hundreds of our brotherhood meet death," Doc  replied gravely. "I have warned you." 

Doc had been speaking with all the firmness he could put into his  powerful voice. This had the desired

results. The pirates were  virtually convinced Tom Too intended to doublecross them. No doubt  they had

harbored such suspicions before, as evidenced by the  dissention which was bringing Tom Too here tonight. 

"Even now, Tom Too comes to speak honeyed words into your ears,"  Doc added loudly. "If you are but flies,

you will flock to the  sweetness of his speech. If you are men, you will mount Tom Too's head  upon a tall pole

in your camp, that the buzzards may look closely at  one of their kind." 

This was a bold speech. It would either sway the pirates from their  leader, or cause them to turn upon Doc. 

"We have indeed considered the head on the pole," smirked the  leader of the murderous horde, "and the

thought finds favor." 

Doc knew his propaganda had done its work. 

"Tom Too will arrive by boat," he declared. "Then is the time to  act  the instant he arrives." 

"Wise words, oh brother," was the reply. 

Excitement was mounting in the corsair encampment. Doc had spoken  throughout in Mandarin, the principal

tongue in China, and the one  which most of the men understood. But now such of them as did not  understand

Mandarin, were getting a secondhand version of Doc's speech. 

Doc listened, cold lights of humor in his golden eyes. The talk was  making Tom Too out as the blackest of

villains  which he certainly  was. 

"WHEN, oh one who brought important news, will Tom Too arrive?" a  slanteyed devil asked. 

"Near the hour when the sun smiles over the eastern horizon," was  Doc's wordy reply. 

It speedily developed that there would be no sleep in the buccaneer  encampment that night. From a score of

matting tents and thatched huts  came the steely rasp of swords and knives on whetstones. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY 84



Top




Page No 87


The variety of weapons possessed by the cutthroats was astounding.  Spears that were nothing but sharpened

sticks were being prepared by  having the points charred into hardness in the fires. 

One yellow man with a face half removed by some sword slash in the  past was carefully refurbishing a gun

consisting of a bamboo tube  mounted on a rough stock. This was charged with the crudest kind of  black

powder and a small fistful of round pebbles, and fired by  applying a bit of glowing punk to a touchhole. It

was such a gun as had  been used by the Chinese thousands of years ago. 

Contrasting greatly with these were a dozen or so late model Maxims  which could spew five hundred bullets

a minute. 

As their rage increased, the pirates snarled at each other like  mongrel dogs. One man struck down another

with a sword at some slight.  The corpse was ignored, as though it were so much discarded meat. 

Even Doc was appalled at the bloody savagery of these outcasts of  the Orient. 

Seven speedy launches were made ready. Doc gathered these were the  only fast craft in the pirate flotilla, the

other vessels being junks  and sampans and a few old schooners and weatherbeaten sloops. 

The corsair fleet was anchored in the bay. Due to the darkness, Doc  had not yet seen the vessels. They would

probably be a sight to  remember. 

The hours dragged. Doc mingled with the horde of butcherers, adding  a judicious word here and there. 

If he could get these human scourges to wipe out their leader, the  rest would be simple. Mindoro could

assemble a force able to deal with  them, even should a large proportion of the Luzon Union army and navy  be

under Tom Too's domination. 

Doc wondered briefly about his five men. He had not heard their  plane land. That was a good sign. The

pirates had been making a good  deal of noise, enough to cover the silent arrival of the plane at the  tiny bay

which the map showed at the other end of Shark Head Island. 

Dawn came up like a red fever in the east. It flushed the clouds  which still lowered overhead. It set the jungle

birds fluttering and  whistling and screaming. 

The yell of a lookout pealed, couched in pidgin English. 

"Tom Too! Him boat come!" 

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT

THE yellow horde surged for the boats. First arrivals got the  seats, to the howling disgust of those behind.

There followed a process  of natural selection which resulted in the strongest fighters manning  the boats. The

weaker ones were simply hauled out by the more husky. 

Every slanteyed devil was madly anxious to go along. TomToo was as  famous a pirate as ever scourged the

China coast. A hand in his slaying  would be something to brag to one's grandchildren about when one was an

old man and good for nothing but to sit in the shade of the village  market and chew betel nut. 

A toothless giant, great brass earrings banging against the corded  muscles of his neck, grabbed Doc and


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT 85



Top




Page No 88


sought to pluck him out of the  largest and fastest launch. The pirate never was quite positive what  then befell

him. But he staggered back with both hands over a jaw that  felt as though it had tried to chew a fistful of

dynamite which  exploded in the process. 

Doc had no intention of being left behind. He wanted to see that  Tom Too didn't talk the corsairs out of their

murderous intention. 

"Let us proceed, my sons!" shrieked one of the men. 

The launches rushed across the bay, keeping in a close group. 

Doc now had a chance to observe the remainder of the pirate fleet.  The vessels were anchored in the bay by

the score. The red flush of  dawn painted them with a lurid, sinister crimson glow, making them seem  craft

bathed in blood. 

Many were Chinese junks with bluff lines, high poops, and  overhanging stems. These were made to appear

topheavy by the high pole  masts and big sails with battens running entirely across. The steering  rudders,

sometimes nothing but a big oar, hung listless in the water. 

Many sampans mingled in the fleet, so small as to be little more  than skiffs. Some were propelled only with

oars, others with sails. All  had little mattingroofed cabins in the bows. 

The rest of the armada was comprised of sloops and schooners of  more prosaic description. 

"Tom Too boat, him come in bay chopchop!" sang a man in beach  English. 

Doc's golden eyes appraised Tom Too's craft. 

The vessel was as pretty a thing as ever graced a millionaire's  private wharf. It was a fiftyfoot, bridgedeck

yacht. Its hull shone  with the whiteness of scrubbed ivory. The mahogany of the  superstructure had a rich

sheen. Brasswork glistened. 

Several yellow men stood on the glassenclosed bridge deck. 

"We no waste time in talktalk!" shouted a pirate furiously. "All  same finish job damn quick!" 

The group of launches spread out in a half moon. They held their  fire until within less than two hundred feet

of the pretty yacht. 

THEN Maxim guns opened with a grisly roar. The weapons shook and  smoked, sucked in ammo belt and

spewed empty cartridges. A half dozen  slanteyed men clutched each weapon as though it were a mad dog,

to  keep recoil jar from throwing it off the target. 

Automatic pistols popped; rifles spoke with loud smashes. Doc saw  the ancient gun with a barrel of bamboo

spit its fistful of pebbles at  the yacht like a shower of rain. 

Glass enclosing the bridge deck of the yacht literally vanished in  the lead storm. The cutthroats inside, taken

by surprise, were all but  fused together in a bloody mass. 

"Sinkum boat!" howled a corsair. "Shoot hole in hull!" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT 86



Top




Page No 89


The guns were now turned at the yacht water line. The planking  splintered, disintegrated. Water poured in.

The yacht promptly listed. 

Suddenly there was a terrific blast in the yacht entrails. The hull  split wide. A bullet had reached explosive,

probably dynamite, carried  in the little hold. 

The cruiser sank with magical speed. A single yellow head appeared,  but the swimmer was callously

murdered. 

"Tom Too gone join his ancestors!" squawled the killers. Doc Savage  would have liked to inquire which of

the men in the cruiser cabin had  been Tom Too. But he couldn't do that, for he was supposed to have  known

the pirate king. 

The launchers now cruised about in hopes of picking up the body of  Tom Too. Many a slanteyed Jolly

Roger expressed a profane desire to  possess Tom Too's ears as a souvenir. Bandying ribald jokes as though

the whole affair were a lark, the pirates reached an agreement to smoke  Tom Too's head and mount it on a

pole for all to observe. His body  would be skinned, his hide tanned, and each man presented with a piece

large enough for a memento. Human fiends, these! 

There was much talk as to who had actually killed Tom Too. Many  claimed he had not appeared on deck at

all, but had remained below like  the hiding dog that he was, and had been slain by the explosion. 

They didn't find Tom Too's carcass. Disgusted somewhat, they headed  for camp to celebrate. 

Much strong Chinese wine would be consumed, pots of kaoliang cooked  with rice prepared, and those who

had opium would divide with those who  had none. It would be a jamboree to remember. 

Doc Savage ducked away from this uproar at the first opportunity.  His work here was done. He would join

his waiting friends. A quick  flight back to Mantilla, and they would assist Mindoro in setting up  machinery

which would make short shift of the leaderless pirates. 

Doc had not progressed fifty yards from camp when snarling, hissing  yellow men set upon him. 

THE slanteyed fellows attacked in silence. Pistols were thrust in  their belts. Pockets bulged with hand

grenades. Yet they used only the  crooked kris and short sword. 

It was obvious the assailants wanted to finish Doc without  attracting notice from the pirate camp. 

Doc sprang backward, at the same time scooping up a wristthick  bamboo pole which chanced to be

underfoot. With this, he delivered a  whack that bowled over the first swordsman. 

Since they wanted no noise, he decided to make some. 

"Help!" he piped in his shrill, assumed tone, "Help! Chopchop!" 

Instantly, pirates surged from the camp. 

Doc's assailants abandoned their effort at quiet. They plucked out  firearms. 

Bounding aside, Doc put himself behind the bole of an enormous  tree. Bullets jarred into the tree trunk. They

did no harm  the  attackers could not even see Doc behind the shelter. The tree was a  good five feet thick,


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT 87



Top




Page No 90


hiding Doc from view. 

The yellow men rushed the tree, came around it from either side. 

They stopped and goggled, eyes nearly hanging out. 

Their quarry had vanished as though by magic. For twoscore feet up  the tree trunk, no branches grew. The

possibility that their human game  had run up the tree, squirrel fashion, was slow occurring to them. 

When they did look up, the foliage at the top of the tree had  swallowed Doc. 

One of the gang hurled a grenade at the approaching pirates. The  explosion killed two men. A short, bloody

fight followed. No quarter  was given or expected. Four minutes later, not one of Doc's attackers  remained

alive. 

Doc slid down the tree. 

"These fella tly kill me," he explained. "Who these fella? How they  get this place?" 

He spoke in pidgin. The reply was couched in the same slattern  tongue. 

"These fella belong Tom Too's bodyguald!" 

Cold lights came into Doc's strange golden eyes. "How they get this  place?" 

"We not know." 

A short search was pushed in the immediately adjacent jungle, but  no skulkers were found. The pirates

repaired to their encampment. The  preparations for the celebration went forward, although not as  boisterously

as before. The buccaneers were wondering how the members  of Tom Too's personal bodyguard happened to

be upon Shark Head Island. 

Doc was doing some pondering also. The thoughts which came to him  were not pleasant. He had an awful

suspicion Tom Too was not dead,  after all. 

Within the hour, this suspicion crystallized into certainty. 

A WEAZENED little yellow man appeared before Doc. No other corsairs  were near. 

The shriveled fellow extended a bamboo cylinder. 

"This belong alongside you," he smirked. 

Doc took the bamboo tube. Inside was a rolled sheet of thick,  glossy Chinese paper. It bore writing: 

The fox is not trapped so easily, bronze man.  I had the foresight  to come ashore during the  night and send my

boat into the bay with  only  the crew aboard, for I did not trust the rabble  you have turned  against me. 

The gods were with me last night, for I came  upon a plane in the  bay at the north end of the  island. Five men

loitered near. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT 88



Top




Page No 91


And now, bronze man, I have five prisoners  instead of the three  whom I held for so long. 

Your life is the price which will buy theirs. But  I do not want  you to surrender. You are too  dangerous a

prisoner. 

You will commit suicide, take your own life, in  front of the  assembled men of the camp. I will  have observers

present. When they  bring me word  of your death, your five men will be released. 

No doubt you distrust my word. But I assure  you it will be kept  this once.  TOM TOO. 

Doc read this missive through with the cold expressionless of an  image of chilled steel. 

The shriveled messenger backed away. Doc let him go, apparently not  even glancing toward the fellow. 

The messenger mingled with the pirates, dodging about in the yellow  horde with great frequency. It was

apparent he was seeking to lose  himself. Several times, he glanced furtively in the direction of the  big brown

man to whom he had delivered the message tube. 

Doc seemed to be paying no attention. Finally, he entered a  convenient tent of poles and matting. 

The weazened messenger scuttled out of camp. He took to the jungle  undergrowth and traveled with extreme

caution. Each time he crossed a  clearing, he waited on the opposite side a while, watching his back  trail. He

discerned nothing to alarm. 

Nevertheless, the man was being followed. Doc Savage traveled much  of the time in the upper lanes of the

jungle, employing interlacing  branches and creepers for footholds and handgrips. His tremendous  strength,

his amazing agility, made the treacherous and difficult way  seem an easy one. 

The shrunken messenger quickened his pace. He had been promised a  reward for delivering the bamboo

message tube. Tom Too had told him  where it would be hidden, in a hollow tree not far ahead. 

He reached the tree, thrust an arm into a cavity in the trunk, and  brought cut a packet. It was several inches

square, very weighty. 

"Him heavy like velly many pesos inside!" chortled the man. 

Greedily, he tore off the wrappings. 

There was a redhot flash, a leviathan of flame that seemed to  swallow the man's body. A mushroom of

grayblack smoke spouted. Out of  this flew segments of the unfortunate one's carcass, as though the  fiery

leviathan were spitting it out. 

The package had contained a bomb. 

Tom Too had planned that this man should never lead any one who  followed him to the hiding place of the

master pirate. 

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE

DOC SAVAGE circled the spot where the weazened man had died. He  sought the trail left by the one who


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 89



Top




Page No 92


had placed the bomb. His golden  eyes missed nothing, for they had been trained through the years to  pick out

details such as went unnoticed to an ordinary observer. 

A vine which hung unnaturally, a bush which had been carefully bent  aside and then replaced, but which had

a single leaf wrong side up   these vague signs showed Doc the course taken by the bomb depositor.  The

fellow had come and gone by the same route. 

The trail turned out to be a blank. It terminated at the beach,  where a boat had landed the man and taken him

away. 

Taking to the trees for greater speed, Doc hurried to the bay at  the north end of the island. The plane was

there, anchored a few yards  offshore. 

There was no sign of life about, except the jungle birds which  twittered and screamed and fluttered the

foliage. 

Doc stood by a sluggish stream which emptied into the bay a few  yards from the plane. He decided to try

something. 

Moving a little more than a rod down the shore, he suddenly sped  into the open, crossed the narrow beach

and shot like an arrow into the  bay. He had appeared with blinding suddenness, and was in the water  almost

before an eye could bat. 

Hence it was that a watching machine gunner got into action too  late. A stream of bullets turned the water

into a leaping suds where  Doc had disappeared. 

The gobble of the rapid firer galloped over the bay surface like  satanic mirth. Then the noise stopped. 

The gunner ran into the open, the better to see his quarry upon  appearance. The man was stocky, broad, with

a head like a ball of  yellow cheese. He stood, gun ready perhaps a hundred yards from where  Doc had entered

the water. 

Minute after minute, he waited. An evil grin began to wrinkle his  moon of a face. He had killed the bronze

devil! 

He did not see the foliage part silently behind him. Nor did he  hear the mighty form of a man who glided up

to his back. 

Awful agony suddenly paralyzed the fellow's arms. He dropped his  machine gun. He groveled, struggled,

kicked. He was flung to the sand.  There he continued his fighting. But he might as well have tried to get  out

from under the Empire State Building. 

He could hardly believe his eyes when he saw the giant who held him  was the man he thought he had

murdered. 

Doc had simply swum under water into the sluggish creek, crawled  out and crept silently through the rank

undergrowth to the attack. 

WITHOUT voicing a word, Doc continued to hold his Victim helpless  for the space of some minutes. Doc

knew the psychology of fear. The  longer the wouldbe murderer felt the terrible clutch of those metallic

hands, the more terrified he would become. And the more frightened he  was, the sooner he would tell Doc


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 90



Top




Page No 93


some things he wanted to know. 

"Where is Tom Too?" Doc demanded. He spoke in his normal voice,  couching the words in English. 

"Me not know!" whined the captive in pidgin. 

Doc carried the man into the jungle, found a small clearing,  slammed the fellow on his back. The prisoner

tried to scream, thinking  he was to be slain. 

But Doc merely stared steadily into the man's eyes. The gunner  began to squirm. Doc's golden eyes had a

weird quality; they seemed to  burn into the soul of the captive, to reduce his brain to a beaten and  helpless

thing. 

The man tried to shut his eyes to shut out the terrible power of  those golden orbs. Doc held the man's eyelids

apart. 

Hypnotism was another art Doc had studied extensively. He had  drained the resources of America on the

subject, had studied under a  surgeon in Paris who was so accomplished a hypnotist that he used it  instead of

an anaesthetic when he operated upon patients. A sojourn in  mystic India had been added to Doc's perusal of

the art. And he had  conducted extensive experiments of his own. His knowledge was wide. 

The gunner was not long succumbing. He went into sort of a living  sleep. 

"Where is Tom Too?" Doc repeated his earlier query. 

"Me not know." 

"Why don't you?" 

"Me left at this place, watch canvas sky wagon. Tom Too no tell  place him go." 

Doc knew the man was telling the truth. The hypnotic spell was  seeing to that. 

"What about the five white men who were in the plane?" he demanded. 

The reply was three words that froze Doc's great body. 

"Him all dead." 

FOR a long minute and a half, Doc neither moved, spoke, or  breathed. The prisoner was not lying, not pulling

a trick. The news was  a ghastly shock. 

"How did it happen?" Doc asked, and his voice was a low moan of a  whisper that the gunner hardly heard. 

"Tom Too, him use poison gas. Five white men, him sit on canvas sky  wagon. Gas come. Five white men fall

off, sinkee like log." 

"Did you see this happen?" 

"Too dalk see. Me hear. Men scleam, make big splash." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 91



Top




Page No 94


Doc was done. He dropped a hand into a pocket, brought it out with  the needlecontaining metal thimbles

affixed to the finger tips. He  touched the gunner. The fellow promptly slept. 

Doc strode into the water and swam toward the plane. A few yards  from it, he suddenly put on a terrific burst

of speed. His corded arm  shot up, grasped a wing strut. He swung aboard not an instant too soon   a great,

slatecolored monster reached unsuccessfully for him,  tootharmored jaws gaping. 

A shark! Other triangular fins cut the nearby surface. 

Doc showed no perturbation over his narrow escape. But he felt  slightly sick. No need to hunt for the bodies

of his friends on the  bottom of the bay, not with these hideous sea scavengers around. 

Doc examined the fuel tanks of the plane, found them half full. He  gave brief attention to the feed lines, up

near the tanks. 

The contents of the plane had not been disturbed. Doc got certain  articles which he intended to use. They

made a bundle a foot through,  nearly four feet long. 

He reached shore by the simple expedient of lifting the anchor and  letting the breeze drift the amphibian to

the beach. 

Departing from the spot, he noted several birds lying dead in the  jungle. The feathered bodies bore no marks.

The gas released by Tom Too  had undoubtedly killed them. 

Doc did not attempt to search the island. It would have taken many  hours to do a thorough job. 

He headed for the pirate camp. He made speed, but he was careful of  the bundle he carried. 

The murderous horde were proceeding with their celebration over the  death of Tom Too. They did not yet

know he was not dead. The  festivities consisted exclusively of drinking, gorging with food,  smoking opium,

to say nothing of frequent fights arising over disputes  about whose bullet had actually slain Tom Too. 

Doc singled out a husky halfcaste who showed in the way he hogged  wine and food that he was of a greedy

nature. Several times, this  fellow filched a jar of the celebration wine and carried it to his  matting tent. 

Doc was there to meet him when he arrived with one of the jars. In  the seclusion of the tent, a lengthy

conversation occurred. Once, when  the halfcaste learned some surprising news, it seemed certain a fight  was

imminent. 

But a large roll of Luzon Union currency changed hands. After that,  the halfcaste became all smiles and

nods of agreement. 

The fellow belted on a big sword and went out to join the  celebrants. 

For upward of an hour, Doc worked furiously in the matting tent. 

Stepping outside, he got a barrel of the gasoline used in the  launches riches. This he placed, the bunghole

open, near the matting  tent. 

His powerful voice pealed across the pirate camp. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 92



Top




Page No 95


"I would speak with all you fella!" he said in beach jargon. "All  same come alongside plenty quick!" 

Yellow men swarmed over, curious to hear what this giant had to  say. They were puzzled about something

else, too  the big man's voice  had changed. It was no longer shrill, piping, but thunderous with  latent power. 

DOC surveyed the assemblage, standing just in front of the matting  tent. 

"I have made fools out of you!" he boomed in ordinary English,  which most of the corsairs could probably

understand. "I came here  deliberately to persuade you to turn upon Tom Too!" 

He went on, telling exactly what had happened. He informed them Tom  Too was still alive. He flung out the

note he had received, letting  them read it, such as could read. 

He carefully neglected any reference to his jaunt to the bay at the  north end of the island, or his grisly

discoveries there. 

"Tom Too is holding my five friends!" he continued. "If I kill  myself, he will release them. Therefore, I shall

pay that price, so my  friends may go free." 

A remarkable change had swept the pirate horde. They glowered at  Doc, muttering, fingering knives. The fact

that the big man had stated  he was going to kill himself to save his friends, made no good  impression upon

them. They were a callous lot. 

"I shall now shoot myself!" Doc shouted. "You will all see my act.  You can tell Tom Too." 

The situation struck some of the corsairs as ridiculous, as indeed  it was. The giant who had deceived them

was crazy. Did he think Tom Too  would release his five friends, once he was dead? Tom Too never kept  his

word, unless it was to his interest to do so. 

Suddenly a husky halfcaste sprang forward, waving his sword. It  was the same fellow with whom Doc had

conversed at length. The man's  pants pockets bulged with Doc's money. 

"Snakedog!" he shrieked. "You stand in flont of my tent and befoul  it! Fol that, I kill youl" 

He rushed forward angrily. 

Doc turned and dived into the tent, as though in flight. He seemed  to stumble just inside the door, and fall

fiat. 

Fully fifty pirates saw the halfcaste's sword strike. The  swordsman withdrew a blade that dripped red, and

stepped to the tent  door. 

"My tent is luined!" he howled. "It shall be destloyed with flame!" 

Whereupon, he kicked over the gasoline barrel. Fuel sloshed out.  The halfcaste struck a match and tossed it

into the petrol. Flame  instantly enveloped the tent. 

The halfcaste continued to dance around, as though in a great  rage. 

A close observer might have noticed three Mongols in the pirate  crowd who swiftly planted themselves

where they could watch all sides  of the burning tent. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 93



Top




Page No 96


The flaming matting popped and cracked. Vile yellow smoke poured  upward, mingling densely in the boughs

of trees which overhung the  spot. 

The three watching Mongols squatted low, so there would be no  chance of any one running away from the

blazing tent without being  discovered in the act. 

The fire raged fully thirty minutes. The tent had been erected upon  a foundation of hardwood poles, and these

gave off much heat. 

LONG before the fire had burned out, the yellow cutthroats gathered  in noisy groups to discuss the fact that

Tom Too was still alive, and  to ponder on what punishment would be theirs for turning against their  master. 

The three Mongols, however, took no part in this. They never  removed the stares of their slant eyes from the

conflagration. 

When the remains of the tent had become glowing coals, the trio  approached. With long poles, they knocked

the embers apart. 

They showed satisfaction at the sight of graywhite ash which was  unmistakably burned bones. One of them

raked out a partially consumed  piece of bone and pocketed it. 

To make certain, they dug into the earth upon which the tent had  stood. There was no tunnel. 

Throwing down the sticks, the three strode rapidly away. They did  not take particular pains not to be seen.

But they made sure none of  the other pirates followed them. 

The beach sand crunched softly under their bare feet. Birds  twittered in the jungle. The clouds had cleared

away overhead, and the  sun was slamming down a hot glare. 

"I did not think the bronze man would actually kill himself, oh  brothers," said one Mongol thoughtfully,

speaking his native tongue.  "But there is no doubt but that he did." 

"He did not kill himself," another pointed out. "He was speared by  the halfcaste." 

"And very well speared, too," chuckled the third. "And I have in my  pocket a burned piece of the bronze

man's bones. Tom Too should think  highly of that souvenir." 

"No doubt he will! Verily, this bronze devil has not been one thorn  in our sides  he has been a whole thicket

of them." 

The three Mongols stepped into a small sampan, shoved off and  paddled to the largest of the anchored junks. 

The interior of this craft proved to be fitted in lavish fashion,  with many tapestries, paintings done on silk and

featuring dragons,  rugs, and elaborately inlaid furniture. 

Near the high stern, they entered a room which contained a  modernlooking radio installation. One man

threw the switch which  started the motor generators, then seated himself at the key. 

The other two Mongols stood beside him. Apparently they thought  nothing of the incongruity of their

surroundings, the commingling of  the splendor of ancient China and the shiny copper wires, glistening  tubes,

and black insulation paneling of the radio transmitter. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE 94



Top




Page No 97


The Mongol Operator prepared to send. 

There was a flash, a loud fizzing of blue flame from the upright  instrument board. 

The operator leaped up and made an examination. He found a short  length of wire. This had shortcircuited

two important doublepole  switches. The man cursed in the Mongol dialect. 

"The apparatus is ruined!" he snarled. "It is strange the wire  should fall upon the switches! Where did it come

from?" 

"Where from, indeed?" muttered another. "It is not electrical wire.  It looks like a part of a small iron wire

cable." 

They discussed the mystery profanely for some minutes. "We cannot  send our news to Tom Too by radio,"

one complained. "We must now go to  him in person." 

They quitted the pirate junk. 

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR

THE Mongol trio now took considerably more pains to see that none  of the pirates had followed them.

Plunging into the jungle, they turned  northward. Occasionally they swore softly at noisy tropical birds; the

feathered songsters insisted on following them with many shrill  outcries. 

Midway up the island, on the east shore, was a tiny inlet. It was  not over a dozen feet wide and fifty deep.

Branches interlaced a mat  above it; creepers hung down into the water like drinking serpents. 

A sampan was concealed in this. The boat was about thirty feet  long, rather wide, and fitted with a mast. The

matting sail was down  and hanging carelessly over the little cabin in the bows. 

The sampan had a modern touch in a powerful outboard motor. 

The Mongol trio were about to step aboard when a startling  development occurred. 

A kris, sixteen inches of crooked, razorsharp steel, came hissing  out of the jungle. It missed one of the

Mongols by inches, and embedded  in a tree. 

"Some dog has followed us!" rasped one man. 

Drawing their own knives, as well as a spikesnouted pistol apiece,  they charged the spot from which the kris

had been thrown. Their stocky  bodies crashed noisily in the tangled plant growth. Birds fled with an  outburst

of noise fit to wake the dead. 

The knife thrower could not be found. There was no sign, not even a  track. 

"We will not waste more time, my sons," said a Mongol. 

They entered the sampan. The outboard motor was twisted into life.  The sampan went scooting out of the

inlet. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR 95



Top




Page No 98


The Mongols in their strange craft looked like a trio of innocent  fishermen, for the waters of the Luzon Union

swarmed with vessels such  as this. 

The tropical sun slanted down upon the waves with a glittering  splendor. Spray tossed from the bows of the

flying sampan scintillated  like jewel dust. The air was sweet with salt tang. A hideous slate  triangle of a shark

fin cut across the bows. 

Some four or five miles distant was another island, smaller than  Shark Head. Tall palms crowned it. Sand of

the beach was very white.  The whole islet was like a salad of luxurious green set upon a snowy  platter. It

fascinated the eyes with its beauty. As the sampan swished  close, the stench of the overripe vegetation of the

island was like the  sickening breath of a slaughterhouse. 

The sampan curved around the island, made directly for a part of  the beach which seemed a solid wall of

plant life, hit it  and shot  through into a pond of a harbor. 

With a belligerent bang or two, the outboard died. Momentum sent  the sampan gently aground. 

The three Mongols scrambled over the sail piled atop the little bow  cabin and leaped ashore. 

MORE flowering plants flourished upon this islet than upon Shark  Head. Their blooms were a carnival of

color. But the place smelled like  a swamp; foul, poisonous. 

The Mongols gained higher ground. Here stood a house. It was built  of hardwood, with the sides of

shutterlike panels which could be opened  to furnish relief from the heat. 

Some half dozen evillooking men sat in the main room of the house.  A strange tension was noticeable in

their attitude. They hardly moved a  muscle. And when they did stir, it was done slowly and carefully, as if

they were afraid of breaking something. They were like men in mortal  fear of an impending fate. 

The Mongols dashed in upon this solemn assemblage with loudly  boisterous cries of elation. 

"Where is Tom Too, oh brothers?" they demanded. "We have news for  the master. Great news!" 

In their excitement, the trio failed to note the air of terror  about those in the room. 

"Tom Too is not here," said one of the frightened men shrilly. 

"Where did he go?" 

"He did not say. He merely go." 

The three Mongols could not hold back their news. 

"The bronze devil is dead," one chortled. "The man did not have  great wisdom, as we had thought. He was a

fool. He thought he was  saving his five friends. He did not know that the five were dead from  the gas we

released. So he got up before the dogs who would turn  against Tom Too and made a speech, telling them who

he was, and saying  he was going to shoot himself. But one of the dogs cut off his head  with a sword and

burned his body in a tent. We watched flames consume  the body. And I carry in my pocket a bit of the bronze

man's bones,  which was not consumed. Tom Too will want that souvenir. Where is the  master?" 

"He go away!" insisted one of the listeners shrilly. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR 96



Top




Page No 99


The three Mongols suddenly perceived the tension in the room. They  were surprised. 

"What is wrong with you, oh trembling ones?" 

The reply to that came from a totally unexpected source. 

"They're afraid of gettin' pasted with lead!" boomed a slangy Yank  voice. 

A curtain across the end of the room suddenly snapped down. Five  men lounged there. Each held a terrible

little implement of death, a  compact machine gun that looked like an overgrown automatic. 

The five were Doc's friends  Monk, Renny, Long Tom, Ham, and  Johnny. 

THE three Mongols had been reared amid violence and death. They  knew these five men, knew them for

mortal enemies of their kind. They  tried to make a fight of it. 

Yellow hands sped for knives and pistols. 

The half dozen others, who had been sitting so fearfully because  they were covered by the guns of Doc's men,

decided to aid the Mongols.  They had been disarmed, but they dived for anything handy. Three got  chairs.

Two tore legs off a rickety table. Another seized a wine  bottle, broke it, and rushed with the jagged end held

like a dagger. 

The room went into pandemonium. Knives flashed. Fists swung.  Shillelahs whacked at heads. Guns bawled

thunder. 

The five white men concentrated on the three armed Mongols. Two  dropped before the bullfiddle roars of

the frightsome little machine  guns. Monk closed with the third. A slap of his hairy hand sent the gun  flying

from the man's hand. 

The Mongol struck with his knife. Monk evaded the blade with an  ease astounding for one of his bulk, then

pasted the yellow man with a  hirsute fist. So terrific was the blow that. the Mongol dropped his  knife and

staggered like a drunk, then fell. 

Ham closed with a slanteyed man who wielded a table leg. He fenced  briskly, warding off terrific blows

with deft parries of his bared  sword cane. An instant later the yellow man sprang back, the ligaments  in his

wrist severed. Squawling for mercy, he shrank into a corner. 

Renny pulped a nose with one of his monster fists. Long Tom and  Johnny closed with respective opponents.

They did not use their guns  again. Barehanded, they were more than a match for the pirates. 

The fray ended as suddenly as it had started. The corsairs lost  their nerve, shoved their arms in the air, and

joined Ham's victim in  screeching for quarter. 

"A fine gang of yallerhammers!" Monk complained. "Can't even fight  enough to get a man warmed up!" 

He picked up the Mongol he had struck. The fellow was the only one  of the three messengers now alive. 

"So you thought the gas got us, eh?" Monk growled. "Well, it  didn't! You turned the stuff loose in the jungle

so the wind would blow  it toward us. We heard birds dropping dead. That warned us. So we dived  overboard.

It was dark enough so that we didn't have no trouble gettin'  away! Then we hung around listenin' to you guys


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR 97



Top




Page No 100


talk." 

The Mongol only rolled his slitty eyes. 

"We heard enough talk to learn Tom Too was gonna hole up here!"  Monk continued fiercely. "So we made a

raft out of two logs and paddled  over. We been holdin' your pals here, hopin' Tom Too would turn up." 

Ham swung over, sword cane poised ominously. 

"This is the bird who bragged he was carrying a piece of Doc's  burned skeleton!" he said grimly. "Let's see

it!" 

Monk searched the prisoner and soon brought the charred bit of bone  to light. 

Johnny, the gaunt archaeologist, took one look at it  and laughed  loudly as he turned the bone in his hand. 

"That's a hunk of ordinary soup bone  off the leg of a cow!" 

Knowing bones was part of Johnny's business. He could look at a  skeleton from a prehistoric ruin and tell

some remarkable things about  the ancient to whom it originally belonged. 

"Then Doc ain't dead, after all!" Monk grinned. 

"That's fair guesswork," said Doc Savage from the doorway. 

A ROAR of pleasure greeted Doc's appearance. 

"How'd you work it?" Monk wanted to know. 

"Used the old magician's stunt with mirrors to make it seem that I  had been stabbed," Doc told him. "One of

the pirates was in on the  trick and swung the sword. I paid him plenty. The sword blade ran  through a wad of

cloth soaked with red ink instead of my body." 

"Hey!" Monk interrupted. "How'd you get out of the tent?" 

"The tent was set on fire. I had sprinkled chemicals on it so there  would be a great deal of smoke. Overhead

was a large tree branch. I had  previously rigged a silk cord, small enough not to be noticeable, over  the limb

so a stout wire could be drawn up. I climbed that, concealed  by the smoke, taking my mirrors along. It was

not hard to get to other  trees and away." 

Doc nodded at the survivor of the Mongol trio. "This chap and his  two companions went to a junk and

prepared to communicate with Tom Too  by radio. I broke off a bit of the wire cable with which I had climbed

the tree limb, tossed it onto a couple of switches without being  noticed, and put the apparatus out of

commission. I figured they'd go  to Toni Too in person. 

"It was necessary to throw a knife at them to decoy them away from  their sampan long enough for me to get

aboard and find a place to hide  under the sail." 

Doc fell silent and let his eyes rove over the room. It was not  often that he went into such detail in describing

his methods. But  finding his five friends alive had made him a bit talkative. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR 98



Top




Page No 101


Long Tom whipped aside the curtain behind which he and the others  had been concealed for a time. This

disclosed an army type portable  radio transmitter and receiver. 

"This is undoubtedly the set the Mongols intended to communicate  with from the junk," he declared. "But

where's Tom Too?" 

"Did he have a chance to dodge you?" Doc asked. 

Ham tapped his sword cane thoughtfully. "He might have. We met two  of the pirates on the bay shore, had a

little fight, and the others  came to see what it was about. Tom Too might have remained behind, seen  we had

cleaned up on his gang, then skipped out." 

"He hasn't had a chance to leave the island!" Monk grunted. "We  searched the shore line. There wasn't a boat

around. And one man  couldn't navigate by himself the log raft we came over on." 

Countless times Doc's ability to observe any movement about him,  however slight, had proved invaluable. It

served again now. 

His mighty form whipped aside and down, flaky golden eyes fixed on  the door. 

Lead shrieked through the space he had vacated. A pistol, firing  from the jungle, made stuttering clamor. 

"Tom Too!" Renny boomed. 

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET

THE shot echoes were still bumping around over the island when  Doc's five men turned loose with the little

machine guns. The weapons  poured bullet streams that were like rods of living metal. The slugs  razored off

leaves, twigs, branches the thickness of Monk's furry  wrist. 

After one volley they ceased firing. 

Loud crashings reached their ears over the caterwauling of  disturbed birds. 

"He's beating it!" Renny shouted. 

Doc and his men dived out of the room, leaving the cowering  prisoners to their own devices. They weren't

important game, anyway. 

"Did you get a look at Tom Too's face, Doc?" Ham demanded. 

"No. Only his gun shoving out through the leaves. I didn't even get  the color of his skin. He was wearing

gloves." 

They spread out in a line, in the order of their running ability.  Doc was far in the lead. Next was Johnny,

gaunt and bony, but a  firstclass foot racer. Monk and Renny, the two giants, trod Johnny's  heels. Ham and

Long Tom were last, pretty evenly matched, with Ham the  hindermost because he was trying to keep thorns

from tearing his  clothes. Ham was always jealous of his appearance. 

"He's heading for the sampan!" Doc called. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 99



Top




Page No 102


An instant later they heard the outboard motor on the sampan start. 

Doc reached the pondlike bay just in time to glimpse the stern of  the sampan vanishing beyond the curtain of

vines which screened the  tiny harbor from the sea. 

His men came up. They drove a few rasping volleys of lead at the  drapery of creepers. Then they ran around

the bay. This consumed much  precious time. 

The sampan was nearly three hundred yards distant, traveling like a  scared duck: 

If they had hoped to glimpse Tom Too's features, they were  disappointed. The pirate leader was not in sight. 

"Lying in the bottom of the boat to be out of the way of bullets!"  Renny said grimly, and took a careful bead

on the distant sampan. 

His gun moaned deafeningly. The others joined him. Their bullets  tore splinters off the sampan stern and

scraped the sea all about the  craft. But the range was long, even for a rifle, and they did not stop  the fleeing

boat. 

"Where is the raft you fellows came over on?" Doc demanded. 

"Up the beach!" rapped Ham, and led the way. 

The furry Monk lumbered alongside Ham. They came to a spot where  mud was underfoot, slimy and

malodorous. In the middle of this Ham  suddenly fell headlong. He floundered, then bounced up, smeared

with  the smelly goo from head to foot. He waved his sword cane wrathfully. 

"You tripped me, you hairy missing link!" he howled at Monk. "Bugs  to you!" leered Monk. "Can I help it if

you fall over your own feet?" 

However, Monk was careful to keep out of Ham's reach for the next  few minutes. 

Nobody had seen Monk do the tripping, but there was no doubt about  his guilt. He had done worse things to

Ham. And it was also certain  that Ham would return the favor with interest. The going seldom got so  hot that

these two forgot to carry on their goodnatured feud. 

They reached the raft. 

"IT'S a wonder the sharks didn't get you birds, riding that thing,"  said Doc, surveying the raft. 

Monk snorted. He was in high good humor, now that he was one up on  Ham. 

"This shyster lawyer here wanted to feed me to 'em, claimin' they'd  die of indigestion from eatin' me," he

chuckled with a sidelong look at  Ham. "Fallin' in the mud serves him right for makin' cracks like that." 

Ham only scowled through the mud on his face. 

The raft consisted of a pair of long logs, crumbling with rot,  secured in catamaran form with crosspieces and

flexible v]ines. 

Doc eyed the sticks which had served as oars. They were highly  inefficient. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 100



Top




Page No 103


"Put it in the water!" he directed. Then he vanished into the  jungle. 

The raft was hardly in the sea before Doc came back. He was  carrying an armload of planks ripped from the

house. These were much  more suitable as paddles. 

"What about the prisoners we left in the shack?" Renny demanded. 

"They were still there." Doc exhibited one of the fingertip  thimbles containing the drugladen needles 

thimbles which produced  longlasting unconsciousness. "They'll be there quite a while, too." 

They shoved off, taking positions on the shaky raft like a trained  rowing crew. In a moment the paddles were

dipping with machinelike  regularity, shoving the crude craft forward at a fair clip. 

Their eyes now sought the sampan bearing Torn Too. Doc had expected  Tom Too to head for the pirate

encampment on the south end of the  island. But the sampan was skipping for the northern extremity, where

the plane ]lay. 

"We're in luck!" Doc said softly. "Tom Too doesn't know the temper  of his cutthroats. He could dominate

them easily and send the whole  horde out to finish us. But he's afraid to go near them." 

"Yeah, but he's headin' for our plane!" Monk grunted. "And there's  bombs aboard it." 

"Oh, no, there's not!" Ham clipped. "I stayed behind a little while  last night after we heard the birds falling

off their roosts and knew  there was a gas cloud coming, long enough to chuck the bombs  overboard." 

The sampan swerved around the north end of Shark Head Island,  entered the little bay, and was lost to sight. 

Johnny spat a couple of words that would have shocked the natural  science class he used to teach, and

chopped at a cruising shark with  his paddle. After that every one was careful that his feet did not drag  in the

water. 

"Wilt they jump out of the water and grab a man?" Monk asked  doubtfully. 

"Probably not," said Johnny. 

They kept their eyes on the little bay at the north end of Shark  Head Island. The rattle of the outboard motor,

made wispy by distance,  had stopped. 

Suddenly a shower of what looked like sparks shot into the air  around the bay. The sparks were gaudily

colored tropical birds. A  moment later the froggy moan of plane motors wafted over the sea. It  was their

starting which had flushed up the birds. 

"Why didn't you think to take something off the motors so they  wouldn't run, wiseheimer?" Monk asked

Ham. 

Ham glared through his mud, said nothing. He did not dare dip up  water to wash his face, due to the sharks. 

Soon the plane skidded up into the sunlight. It wobbled, pitched,  in the bumpy air. It flew like a duck carrying

a load of buckshot. 

"He's a rotten flyer!" Johnny declared. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 101



Top




Page No 104


"A kiwi!" Monk agreed. 

The plane headed directly for the laboring raft. 

Monk reached up and clawed his hair down over his eyes to keep the  sun out. "I don't like this! That bird is

going to crawl up. He may be  the world's worst flyer, but I don't like it!" 

RENNY followed Monk's example in getting his hair down on his  forehead to shade his eyes from the sun. It

was the next best thing to  colored goggles. They'd have to look up to fight the plane. And gazing  into the

tropical sky was like looking into a whitehot bowl. 

"We left machine guns on the plane!" he muttered. "It's gonna be  tough on us?" 

Johnny poked another shark in its blunt, toothpegged snout. 

Doc Savage seemed unworried. He sat well forward, driving his  paddle with a force that made the stout wood

grunt and bend. So that  his mighty strokes would not throw the raft off course, he distributed  them on either

side with scarcely an interruption in their machinelike  precision. 

Renny shucked out his pistollike machine gun and rapped a fresh  cartridge clip in place. 

"You won't need it," Doc told him. 

"No?" Renny was surprised. 

"Watch the plane!" 

The amphibian came howling toward them. Tom Too was Dot trying for  altitude; he wanted to be low

enough to use his machine gun with effect   for no doubt he had found the rapid firers in the plane. His

altitude  was no more than five hundred feet. 

"It's about time it happened!" Doc said grimly. 

Doc's prediction was accurate. 

Both motors of the amphibian suddenly stopped. 

Tom Too acted swiftly. He kicked the plane around and headed it  back for Shark Head Island. His banking

about was sloppy;  the ship  sideslipped  as  though  the  air  were greased. 

"He can just fly, and that's all!" Monk grinned. "What stopped the  motors, Doc?" 

"I plugged the fuel lines close to the tanks," Doc replied. "The  carburetor and fuel pipes held enough gas to

take the craft upstairs,  but no more." 

The big bronze man neglected to add that it would have been simpler  to cut off the fuel at the carburetors, but

that this would not have  left enough gas available to get the plane off should circumstances  have sent them to

the craft in such a hurry that they would not have  had time to unplug the fuel lines. 

Tom Too was gliding the deadmotored plane at a very flat angle,  getting the maximum distance out of his

altitude. Probably this was by  accident rather than flying ability. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 102



Top




Page No 105


"Holy cow!" groaned Renny. "Is he gonna get back to Shark Head?" 

"He will come down about a hundred yards offshore," said Doc after  a glance of expert appraisal. 

The estimate was close. With a sudsy splash, the amphibian plunked  into the sea. It pushed ahead for a time

under its own weight. It  stopped a bit less than three hundred feet offshore. 

Then the ship began to move backward  blown by the offshore  breeze. 

"He'll be blown right into our hands!" Ham ejaculated. 

"Or he'll find the plugged fuel lines!" Monk pointed out. 

TOM Too wasted no time hunting for what had silenced the motors,  however. Probably he was no mechanic.

He appeared atop the amphibian  cabin. 

He was too distant for much to be told about his appearance. Even  Doc's sharp vision could not distinguish

the fellow's features. 

One thing they did note  Tom Too carried a large brief case. 

The pirate leader reached up and struck savagely at the plane wing.  There was a knife in his fist. 

"Hey!" squawled Monk. "He's lettin' the gas out of the tanks!" 

It was worse than that. Tom Too backed up, struck a match, and  flung the flame into the petrol drooling from

the punctured tanks. 

Flame gushed. It wrapped the amphibian until the craft was like a  toy done in red tissue paper. Yellow smoke

tossed away downwind,  convulsing and boiling in the breeze. 

Tom Too sprang into the sea. He swam madly for the shore of Shark  Head Island. 

Johnny gazed at the sharks cruising about the makeshift raft, then  at the distant splashes that marked Tom

Too's progress. 

"That guy has got nerve!" grunted Johnny. 

"Fooey!" said Monk. "A rat will fight a lion if he's cornered." 

Doc Savage was standing up, still paddling, the better to watch Tom  Too's progress. 

Renny also watched. His eyes were second in sharpness to Doc's. 

"There goes a shark for him!" Renny bawled suddenly. 

They all saw the triangle of leadhued shark fin cutting toward Tom  Too. 

"There ain't nothin' I like less than sharks!" Monk chuckled. "But  I'm gonna find it hard to begrudge that one

his meal!" 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 103



Top




Page No 106


Tom Too had;seen his danger. He swam desperately. But he did not  lose his head. He kept his eyes on the

approaching fin. It disappeared. 

Tom Too promptly stopped. Doc caught the faint glitter of a knife  in the pirate king's hand. 

"He's going to handle the shark native fashion!" Renny grunted. 

Distance hampered their view of what happened next. But they knew  enough shark lore to guess. Sharks do

not have to turn over to bite an  object in the depths, but commonly do so to seize a man swimming on the

surface. The pale bellies offer a warning flash, 

Tom Too disappeared from sight momentarily. There was a splashing  turmoil in the water. Tom Too's knife

struck repeatedly. 

The pirate leader appeared. He swam for shore with renewed energy. 

"He got the shark  daggone it!" Monk wailed. 

TOM Too reached the beach without further incident. He sprinted for  the jungle. 

Doc's sharp eyes noted something the others missed  Tom Too no  longer carried his brief case. Evidently he

had dropped it in his short  fight with the shark. 

The plane was burning briskly. Flame ate into the fuselage. A  Fourth of July uproar came as heat exploded

machinegun bullets in the  craft. 

The ship sank suddenly. 

Tom Too vanished into the jungle. 

Doc and his men continued to bend their paddles. 

They reached the spot where the plane had gone down. A score of  yards beyond, the shark Tom Too had slain

floated near the surface. The  water lashed in turmoil about the carcass  half a dozen other sharks  were

devouring it. 

"Whoa!" said Doc. 

Monk wore in his belt a knife he had picked up somewhere. It was a  serpentinebladed kris. 

Doc grasped the knife, clipped the blade between his strong teeth,  and dropped off the shaky raft. He

disappeared in the depths. 

"Jiminy!" Monk gulped. "With all these sharks around, Daniel in the  lions' den was a piker!" 

They waited anxiously. Bubbles gurgled up from the sunken plane. A  minute passed. Sixty feet away,

cannibal sharks fought with horrible  splashings. Another minute groped into eternity. 

Doc did not appear. 

On the shore, coarsevoiced tropical birds cried like hideous  harpies. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 104



Top




Page No 107


Three clapping shots interrupted the birds. Monk ducked as a bullet  made cold air kiss his furry neck, nearly

lost his balance on the  ramshackle raft, but recovered himself. 

Tom Too had fired at them  water does not wet the powder in modern  pistol cartridges. 

Doc's five men sprayed lead at the jungle. There was nothing to  show they hit Tom Too. But they kept him

from shooting again. 

Renny glanced at a waterproof wrist watch. He nearly screamed. 

Doc had been beneath the surface a full four minutes! 

Ten seconds later Doc's bronze head split the water beside the  raft. Doc's bronze hair and metallic skin had a

strange quality; it  seemed to shed water like the back of a duck; he could immerse himself,  and his skin and

hair would not seem wet when he reappeared. 

Doc's shirt front bulged more than his chest should have made it. 

Doc's five men wiped cold sweat off their foreheads. The fact that  Doc had remained under water so long was

not in itself alarming. They  had seen the giant bronze man stay below for incredible intervals. But  the sharks

made these waters reek death. 

"Have any trouble?" Monk asked. 

Doc shrugged. "Not much." 

At this point a second shark carcass appeared beside the first. The  hideous creature had been slain with a

single expert knife rip. Monk  and the others recognized Doc's handiwork. He had battled the monster  under

water and dismissed it as "not much." 

"Huh!" ejaculated Monk. "What were you doin' way over there? The  sunken plane is under us." 

"Tom Too had a brief case with him, but dropped it when the shark  tackled him," Doc replied. "I dived for it

from here, not wanting him  to know I was after it." 

"You get it?" 

The bulge in Doc's shirt front gave answer. 

THEY now paddled the raft to shore. Tom Too did not fire at them  again  a wise move on his part. 

"Make for the sampan!" Doc directed. 

They sped northward along the beach. 

Monk glanced over his shoulder. "Hey  lookit!" 

Wheeling, the rest saw Tom Too. The master pirate had come out on  the beach half a mile to the south. He

was running for dear life,  headed for the encampment of his yellow cutthroat horde. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 105



Top




Page No 108


"I'm in favor of going after him!" Renny boomed. Apparently it did  not occur to him that they might not be

able to whip several hundred  slanteyed pirates who had been fighters all their lives. 

"The sampan!" Doc said impatiently. "We'd better get it and clear  out of here." 

They resumed their sprint for the sampan, smashing their way  through the jungle growth in a short cut across

a little headland and  reached the beach in short order. 

"Good!" rapped Ham, catching sight of the sampan where Tom Too had  beached it. "I was afraid he might

have jabbed a hole in the bottom, or  something." 

Renny pointed at the outboard motor. 

"Look!" he roared. "The gasoline has been let out!" 

The valve of the fuel tank was located in such a position as to  spill the emptying fuel upon the sand, where it

was hopelessly lost. 

"This puts us in a swell mess!" Monk groaned. 

Four hardwood paddles reposed on the sampan floorboards. Doc  indicated them. "Grab 'em!" 

"We can't escape by paddling," Monk pointed out. "The pirates have  speed boats Tom Too will send them

after us." 

With a mighty shove, Doc sent the sampan into the water. 

"We'll get back to the other island!" he declared. 

There was no more argument. The sampan surged away from the beach,  propelled by lusty paddle strokes. 

Ham, between sweeps of his paddle, nodded at the bulging front of  Doc's shirt, which held the contents of

Tom Too's brief case. 

"Do you suppose there's anything worth while in there?" he asked. 

"We'll let that slip for a while and examine it later," Doc said,  then leveled an arm. "Tom Too didn't lose

much time!" 

They all followed Doc's gesture. Around the other end of the  island, a pair of junks appeared, together with

several speed boats.  More craft followed  junks, sampans, launches, and other boats. 

The hardwood paddles bent and creaked as Doc's men increased their  pace. Water split away from the

sampan bows with a steady, sobbing  noise. They were making good speed for the palmcrowned smaller

island. 

"We'll beat them to the island!" Ham decided aloud. 

"Yes  and then what?" snorted Monk. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET 106



Top




Page No 109


Doc's five men exchanged bleak looks. They were perfectly aware  they had never faced greater odds. They

were experienced fighting men,  and they knew a fight against these hundreds of pirates could be  nothing but

hopeless. 

A corsair machine gun dropped a shower of slugs some hundreds of  yards short. The spent bullets continued

to drop in the water, coming  closer and closer. But the little island was now but a few fathoms  distant away

from the men. 

The rasp of the sampan keel on the beach was a welcome sound. 

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE

DOC and his men piled out. A few rifle slugs made chopping noises  in the tangled jungle growth. Doc eyed

the belts and bulging pockets of  his men. 

"Got plenty of ammunition?" he questioned. 

Monk grinned wryly. "Not as much as I'd like to have. We've got a  couple or three hundred rounds apiece.

That was about all we could swim  with when we left the plane last night." 

"Latch the guns into singleshot fire," Doc directed. 

Each man flipped a small lever on his compact little machine gun.  The weapons now discharged only a single

bullet for each pull of the  trigger. 

Using a sampan paddle as a spade, Doc set to work digging a shallow  rifle pit. He located it slightly within

the jungle, so he could quit  it without being observed. 

The others followed his example, saying no word. 

Straight toward the beach plunged the pirate boats. The launches,  being more speedy, were far in the lead.

The pirates had erected small  shields of sheet steel in the craft  their usual precaution, no doubt,  when going

into battle. 

Prows scooping foam, they approached to within two hundred yards.  Then a hundred! Their speed did not

slacken. A machine gun in the bow  of one began to cough bullets through a slit in a metal shield. The  lead

hissed and screamed and tore in the jungle about Doc and his men. 

"Let the first one land!" Doc commanded. 

An instant later the leading speed boat hit the beach. It was  traveling fast enough to skid high and dry out of

the water. The  slanteyed killers, braced for the impact though they were,  nevertheless slammed against

thwarts and bulkheads. 

"Now!" Doc clipped. "Get 'em in the legs and arms!" 

His gun spat. The weapons of his men rapped a multiplied echo. They  were crack marksmen, these men.

They took their time and planted  bullets accurately. 

Two yellow men fell out of the launch almost together, bit in the  legs. Pain made them squall noisily. Others


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE 107



Top




Page No 110


cackled in agony as slugs,  placed with uncanny precision, took them in the hands and arms. 

There was psychology behind Doc's command not to kill. One wounded  Oriental, yelling bloody murder,

could do more to spread fear among his  fellows than three or four killed instantly. 

Bedlam seized the launch occupants. They could not even see Doc and  his men. A tight group, they sought to

charge. Those in the lead went  down, legs drilled. 

Howling, the gang ran back and tried to shove the launch into the  water. They were not sufficient in number

for the job. In remorseless  succession, these also fell. 

"Now  the other launches!" Doc ordered. 

The volley he and his men fired sounded ragged, scattered. But  hardly a bullet went wild. 

The nearer launches, four in number, could not hold up before  shooting like this. One careened about madly,

the helmsman pawing a  drilled shoulder, and barely missed crashing another craft. Then all  four sheered off,

the occupants expressing their opinion of Doc and his  men in assorted tongues. 

They were going to await the arrival of the heavier junks and  sampans. 

Monk, flattened in the pit he had scooped, asked Doc: 

"What now?" 

Doc's pit was in the jungle to the right. No answer came from the  spot. Puzzled, Monk squirmed up to look. 

Doc was gone. He had vanished silently the instant the fight was  over. 

NO more than a minute passed before Doc returned. He bore a bulky  object  the armytype portable radio

transmitter and receiver which  Tom Too had left in the island cabin. 

Doc gave a short gesture of command. The men plunged out of the  jungle and leaped for the speed boat

stranded on the beach. 

A wounded pirate shot at them, but he was wounded in the arm, and  missed. Doc fired a single bullet, and the

corsair shrieked as the lead  mangled his hand. The other yellow men fled, dragging themselves along  or

running furiously, depending on where they were hit. 

Doc and his five aids laid hands on the launch, strained, and ran  it back into the surf. 

Out to sea, the pirates suddenly saw the purpose of Doc's strategy  in permitting the most speedy craft to land.

He was seizing the fast  little vessel! 

The slanteyed buccaneers headed for the island again. 

Machine guns cackled from their boats, rifles whacked spitefully. 

Doc shoved the nose of their own launch around whi]e his men sprang  aboard. Renny worked over the motor.

The propellers had not been  damaged by the forcible beaching. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE 108



Top




Page No 111


Lead clanged on the sheetsteel shield, chewed splinters off the  gunwales, and, hitting in the water near by,

dashed spray over them. 

Doc and the others returned the fire with slow precision while  Renny fought the motor. The engine caught

with a blubbery roar. The  light hull surged forward, the propellers flinging water up behind the  stern. 

At the tiller, Doc sent the boat parallel to the beach. In a moment  they were sternon to their enemies,

rendering the steel bullet shield  useless. 

Doc wrenched the shield from its mounting. "Put it up in the  stern." 

Monk did that job. He howled wrathfully as lead hit the metal  plate, transferring a sting to his hands. Renny

lunged to help him,  then grunted loudly and clapped a hand to the upper part of his left  arm. He had been hit.

He tore off the sleeve of his shirt with a single  wrench. 

"Missed the bone an inch!" he decided. 

"We're going to make it!" Ham yelled. He was using the tip of his  sword cane to jam a wadded handkerchief

into a bullet hole in the  launch hull near the water line. 

Doc put the rudder hard over. The launch veered to the right  and  was suddenly sheltered by the tip of the

island. Bullets no longer came  near them. 

Setting a course toward the distant coast of one of the larger  islands of the Luzon Union, Doc held the throttle

wide. The boat,  traveling at tremendous speed, jarred violently as it slammed across  the tops of the choppy

waves. 

The corsair craft heaved around the end of the island. Once more  bullets whistled about them. But they had

gained considerably. Doc's  men did not waste lead returning the fire. 

Fifteen minutes of flight put them out of rifle shot. 

Doc cut their speed. 

"Hey!" Monk grunted. "We low on gas or somethin'? Those birds  aren't giving up the chase!" 

"Plenty of gas," Doc told him, and fell to watching their pursuers. 

IT was a weirdlooking flotilla which followed them. Behind the  fast launches were the sampans. Then came

the junks, such of them as  were fitted with engines in addition to sail power. They strung out for  miles. The

most sluggish of the sailboats were hardly outside the  corsair bay on Shark Head Island. 

One launch began to draw ahead of the others. 

Doc opened the throttle, spun their speed boat about, and raced for  the boat which had left the others behind.

But not a single bullet was  exchanged. Their quarry dropped back with the other pirates. 

Continuing their flight, Doc turned the controls over to Monk. 

Working swiftly, Doc tugged bundle after bundle of soggy papers,  looseleaf notebooks and cards from his

shirt front  the stuff Tom  Too's brief case had held! He studied it with much interest. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE 109



Top




Page No 112


"Anything worth while there,?" Ham asked. 

Elated little lights glowed in Doc's flaky golden eyes. 

"Tom Too's organization was too large to keep track of without  written records," he explained. "These are the

records." 

"A break, gettin' 'em, huh?" Monk grinned. 

Not answering, Doc bent over the portable radio apparatus. He  adjusted the dials. The tiny key was of the

variety known as a  sideswiper, requiring experience to manipulate. Doc fingered dots and  dashes out of it

with machinelike precision, then twirled the receiver  dials, the headset pressed over his ears. 

The noise of the launch motor prevented the others hearing what Doc  was sending and receiving, although

they were all expert operators.  However, Doc began to consult notebooks and papers which had come from

Tom Too's brief case. That explained what he was doing. 

"He's gotten hold of a Mantilla station and is giving them the  names of Tom Too's men in the city," Ham

decided. "That should enable  Juan Mindoro, with a handful of reliable police, to clean the pirates  out of

town." 

After a time Doc laid Tom Too's records aside. But he continued to  send and receive over the radio

instruments, evidently carrying on a  conversation with the distant station. Finally he ceased, and studied  his

men quietly. 

"Want to take a big risk on the chance of destroying this pirate  fleet?" he demanded. 

"Sure!" Monk said promptly. 

"Should the motor of this boat fail, it'd mean our finish!" Doc  warned the men. 

Monk made a gesture of patting the throbbing engine. "I'm willing  to take that chance." 

The others seemed of a like mind. 

Doc resumed transmitting over the radio, and sent rapidly for some  minutes. Then be deserted the apparatus

and took over the launch  controls. 

Their boat now dawdled along just out of rifle range of the  pursuers. Twice during the next two hours Doc

swerved back as though to  attack the leading launches of the yellow men. These retreated warily. 

The hazy bulk of one of the larger islands of the Luzon Union  heaved up ahead. Doc worked over the radio

set. He seemed satisfied  with the coded information which he had plucked out of the ether. 

Swinging a wide circle, Doc and his men turned back for Shark Head  Island. Like the tail on a slow comet,

the pirate fleet followed. 

Doc's boat was at least a dozen miles an hour faster than the  swiftest of their pursuers. Several times bullets

danced on the water  near them, but the yellow men did not get close enough for accurate  shooting. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 21. SEA CHASE 110



Top




Page No 113


The sun, which had blazed upon them with a heat that almost cooked,  balanced like a redhot stove lid above

the evening horizon. 

The corsair bay of Shark Head Island opened before the launch. The  entire fleet manned by the slanteyed

men had been left behind. 

Renny, standing erect to get the first glimpse into the bay,  groaned: "Aw  blazes!" 

On the shore of the little harbor stood a number of yellow  cutthroats. These were ill or wounded pirates who

had been left behind. 

"They won't give us much trouble!" Doc decided. 

Nor did they. Doc beached the launch some hundreds of yards from  the Orientals. He sent a few longrange

shots at the fellows to stop  their charge, then plunged, along with his men, into the jungle. 

With all sails set and engines laboring, the corsair vessels began  reentering the bay. Howling, brandishing

weapons, yellow men dived into  the jungle. They were highly elated. They couldn't understand why the  big

bronze man and his five aids had deliberately put themselves in a  trap, but they did not give that much

thought. 

There was one exception  the buccaneers aboard the largest of the  junks, the vessel which was fitted lavishly

with tapestries, paintings,  rich rugs, and inlaid furniture. In the hold of this craft was a  powerful engine. 

It bore Tom Too himself. The master pirate did not land. Instead,  after directing his men to pursue Doc, he

ordered his junk to stand out  to sea. 

The Oriental craft was plowing through the mouth of the bay when a  pair of speedy planes dropped out of the

evening sky. Without the  slightest hesitation, the aircraft loosened machine guns upon Tom Too's  vessel. 

Matting sails of the junk acquired great ragged rips. Splinters  flew from the decks and hulls. Several of the

crew dropped. Others  replied to the machinegun fire of the planes. A bomb, dropped by one  of the aircraft,

narrowly missed the junk, but made it roll  sickeningly. The junk put back into the bay. 

Out of the twilight haze that mantled the sea plunged several  slender, gray, grim vessels. These were

destroyers, little larger than  submarine chasers, of the type that served the Luzon Union as a navy.  Other

planes appeared  giant trimotored bombers and fast,  singleengined pursuit ships. 

The truth dawned on the yellow pirates. Instead of the bronze man  being trapped, they were themselves

cornered. 

Doc had summoned aid by radio! 

Chapter 22. RED BLADE

FROM the concealment of the jungle, Doc and his men watched  developments. 

"Juan Mindoro is aboard one of the planes," Doc declared. "At  least, he should be, according to the

information he gave me by radio." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 22. RED BLADE 111



Top




Page No 114


"Can he depend on the men manning the planes and destroyers?" Ham  questioned uneasily. "Tom Too may

have some of them on his pay roll." 

"He did have," Doc admitted. "But the records I got out of that  brief case gave their names, and I passed the

dope on to Mindoro. Tom  Too's hirelings are under arrest." 

Monk kneaded his enormous, furry hands. "How about us getting in  this scrape?" 

"We'll tackle that big junk," Doc agreed. "Tom Too is probably  aboard.'' 

The junk in question had hove to close to the beach. Yellow men  were dropping a light boat overside,

evidently to be used in ferrying  Tom Too ashore. A bomb exploded in the bay, and the wall of water it  flung

out smashed the small boat against the junk hull. 

Doc and his men ran for a sampan beached near by. They were fired  upon, and returned the lead. A plane

dived upon them, unable to  distinguish them from foes in the increasing darkness. Doc led the  others back

into the jungle to evade the searching machinegun metal.  There they encountered a gang of a dozen

desperate pirates. They  fought, skulking in the jungle, each party shooting at the gun flashes  of the other. 

Plane motors bawled overhead. The planes flew so low that prop  streams thrashed palm fronds. Detonating

bombs made such concussions  that the very island jumped and shuddered. Men yelled, cursed in an  assorted

score of dialects. Machine guns gobbled continuously. 

"Kinda like old times!" Renny rumbled in the gloom. 

Doc and his fellows rushed the yellow gang with whom they  skirmished. Doc used only his hands in the

scrap that followed. He  moved like a bronze phantom. Man after man fell before his fists, or  was rendered

helpless with wrenched and broken limps. The pirate group  broke and fled. 

"To the sampan!"  Doc's  powerful voice commanded. "We'll make  another try at reaching that big junk!" 

They ran out on the beach, found the sampan, and shoved off. 

Overhead, a plane dropped a parachute flare, then another. The  calcium glare whitened the entire island. 

The illumination showed Tom Too's junk trying to work out of the  bay. Destroyers, however, blocked its

escape. The hulking vessel turned  back. 

The flares sank fizzing into the sea and were extinguished. Bending  to the sampan paddles, Doc's party

headed for the junk. 

"They won't expect to be boarded from a small boat," Renny boomed  softly. 

Doc guided the sampan expertly. They came alongside the junk in the  gloom. A pirate saw them, hailed. Doc

answered in a disguised tone,  speaking the same dialect, telling the corsairs to hold their fire. 

The sampan gunwale rasped along the junk hull. All six leaping at  once, Doc's gang gained the deck of the

larger vessel. 

ANOTHER bomb,  exploding harmlessly  on  the distant beach, threw a  flash like pale lightning. It disclosed

Doc's identity. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 22. RED BLADE 112



Top




Page No 115


A yellow man howled and leaped, swinging a short sword. Doc twisted  from under the descending blade. His

darting fist seemed a part of the  same movement. The Oriental collapsed, his jaw hanging awry. 

Fighting spread swiftly from end to end of the junk as Doc's men  scattered. In the darkness, they could fight

best when separated. 

Doc himself made for the high, after part of the vessel, seeking  Tom Too. 

Below decks, the Orientals manning the engines became excited and  threw the craft into full speed ahead. It

plowed about aimlessly, no  hand at the tiller. 

Doc found a long bamboo pole, evidently a makeshift bat hook. He  converted it to a weapon of offense,

jabbing and swinging it in club  fashion. A corsair bounced off the pole end as if he were a billiard  ball, and

tangled with one of his fellows. 

The little machine guns had been latched back into rapidfire. Once  more they tore off series of reports so

rapid they resembled the sound  of coarse cloth tearing. 

"One!" Doc barked. 

"Two!" echoed Ren ny's strong voice. "Three!" said Long Tom. The  others called off in rapid succession 

four, five, six! 

This was a procedure they followed often when fighting in the  darkness. It not only showed the entire gang

was still up and going,  but also advised each mail where the others were located. 

Doc descended a carved companionway. He wanted to get the engines  stopped before the junk crashed into

some other craft. 

He found the engine room without difficulty. Only two Orientals  were there, huddling nervously under the

pale glow of an electric  lantern. They offered no fight at all, but threw down their weapons at  Doc's sharp

command. Doc shut off the motors. 

"Where is Tom Too?" Doc asked. 

The yellow men squirmed. They were seared. They had seen this giant  bronze man slain by the sword and his

body burned. Was he a devil, that  he could come to life again? 

One pointed toward the stern.  "Maybe Tom Too, he go that  dilection," he singsonged. 

Doc made for the spot  the richly fitted quarters which were no  doubt Tom Too's private rooms. Two

Orientals barred his way. He was  almost touching them before they were aware of his presence, so dark  was

the junk interior. 

Doc shoved them both violently, and while they stumbled about and  slashed viciously at black, empty air, he

eased past them. There was  movement ahead, and the glow of a flashlight. 

A faint rasping sounded  a windowlike porthole of the junk being  opened! It must be Tom Too, Doc knew.

And the man was in the act of  escaping from the junk into the waters of the bay. 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 22. RED BLADE 113



Top




Page No 116


Doc flung for the port  and had one of his narrowest escapes from  death. Tom Too was easing through the

porthole feet first. He turned  his flashlight on Doc and threw a knife. 

Doc saw the blade only when it glinted in the flash beam. He  dodged, got partially clear. The blade lodged

like a big steel thorn in  his side, outside the ribs. 

Tom Too dropped through the port. His madly splashing strokes  headed for shore. Suddenly the splashing

increased. A terrified scream  pealed out. 

Doc leaned from the porthole. 

Overhead, a plane dropped another aerial flare. The blinding  illumination it spread could not have been more

timely, for the  swimming f]gure of Tom Too was plainly disclosed. 

A small shark had seized the pirate leader. Tom Too had no knife  with which to defend himself this time  he

had expended that on Doc.  The corsair chief screeched and beat at the grisly monster which had  fastened

upon his leg. 

The shark was but little longer than Tom Too. For a moment it  seemed the pirate king would escape. Then a

larger sea killer closed  upon the human morsel. 

Tom Too's distorted face showed plainly before he was submerged to  his death. 

The features were those of slender, dapper First Mate Jong of the  illfated liner, Malay Queen. 

IT was dawn, and the sun blazed a flame of victory in the east. The  fighting was over. A cowed, frightened

cluster, the surviving pirates  had been herded upon the beach and were under  heavy  guard,  awaiting

consignment  to  a  penal colony. 

The planes had managed to land on a level portion of the beach.  Juan Mindoro had boarded the big junk. He

was striving to express his  gratitude to Doc Savage and the other five adventurers who had done so  much for

his native land. 

"I have just received a radio message from Mantilla," he said,  addres,ing Doc. "Thanks to the information in

Tom Too's records, which  you gave us, the pirates in Mantilla have been captured, almost to a  man. They

even got Captain Hickman, of the Malay Queen. There is only  one thing bothering me  are you certain Jong

was Tom Too?" 

"Positive," Doc told him. "The records disclosed that. Jong, or Tom  Too, undoubtedly bribed Captain

Hickman to sign him on the Malay Queen  as first mate." 

Mindoro ran a finger inside his collar and squirmed. "Words seem  very flat when I try to express my thanks

to you. I shall ask the Luzon  Union government to appropriate a reward for  " 

"Nix," Doc said. 

Mindoro smiled, went on:  "  a reward which I think you will  accept." 

Mindoro was right, for the reward was one Doc found entirely  satisfactory. It consisted of a simple bronze

plate bearing the plain  words, "The Savage Memorial Hospital." 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 22. RED BLADE 114



Top




Page No 117


The plate was embedded in the cornerstone of a structure that cost  millions. Other millions were placed in

trust to insure operation of  the hospital for years. The institution was to operate always under one  inflexible

rule  payment from no one but those who could afford it. 

The laying of the cornerstone was accomplished with ceremony before  Doc and his men left the Luzon

Union. 

Monk, uncouth in high hat and swallowtail coat, perspired under the  derisive gaze of the dapper Ham

throughout the ceremony. He was glad  when it was over and they got out of the admiring crowd. 

"Fooey!" snorted Monk, and made a present of his high silk hat to a  brownskinned, halfnaked street

urchin. "It'll take a good fight to  get me feelin' like a human being again!" 

Monk was going to get his fight, even if he didn't know it. 

THE END 


The Pirate of the Pacific

Chapter 22. RED BLADE 115



Top





Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. The Pirate of the Pacific, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE YELLOW KILLERS, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. SEA PHANTOM, page = 8

   6. Chapter 3. THE MONGOL PERIL, page = 13

   7. Chapter 4. THE DRIPPING SWORD, page = 18

   8. Chapter 5. THE DRAGON TRAIL, page = 24

   9. Chapter 6. THE STOLEN GLASS, page = 29

   10. Chapter 7. DEATH TRAIL, page = 33

   11. Chapter 8. A PIRATE OF TO-DAY, page = 39

   12. Chapter 9. HIS ARM FELL OFF, page = 45

   13. Chapter 10. THE LUZON TRAIL, page = 51

   14. Chapter 11. PERIL LINER, page = 56

   15. Chapter 12. TREACHERY, page = 62

   16. Chapter 13. WATER ESCAPE, page = 68

   17. Chapter 14. HUNTED MEN, page = 73

   18. Chapter 15. RESCUE TRAIL, page = 78

   19. Chapter 16. THE BUCCANEER MUTINY, page = 83

   20. Chapter 17. THE SUNKEN YACHT, page = 88

   21. Chapter 18. PAYMENT IN SUICIDE, page = 92

   22. Chapter 19. TOM TOO'S LAIR, page = 98

   23. Chapter 20. THE TIGHTENING NET, page = 102

   24. Chapter 21. SEA CHASE, page = 110

   25. Chapter 22. RED BLADE, page = 114