Title:   RED SNOW

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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RED SNOW

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

RED SNOW .........................................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. MYSTERY IN SCARLET .....................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. THE TRUNK SNATCHERS .................................................................................................4

Chapter 3. RED IN THE RING.............................................................................................................11

Chapter 4. THE FOUR PEDESTALS...................................................................................................20

Chapter 5. THE SURPRISE IN SKIRTS..............................................................................................30

Chapter 6. RED FLAKES AND DEATH ..............................................................................................40

Chapter 7. THE CORPSE OF DUST....................................................................................................44

Chapter 8. THE PATH TO MYSTERY................................................................................................52

Chapter 9. MYSTERIOUS ISLE ...........................................................................................................57

Chapter 10. IN AND OUT .....................................................................................................................65

Chapter 11. THE MEN OF DUST .........................................................................................................72

Chapter 12. THE TALKING BENEFIT ................................................................................................81

Chapter 13. RED ISLAND....................................................................................................................89

Chapter 14. DUCKWITHNOWINGS............................................................................................97

Chapter 15. THE CONQUEST PLAN................................................................................................103

Chapter 16. DEATH IN RED..............................................................................................................106


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RED SNOW

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. MYSTERY IN SCARLET 

Chapter 2. THE TRUNK SNATCHERS 

Chapter 3. RED IN THE RING 

Chapter 4. THE FOUR PEDESTALS 

Chapter 5. THE SURPRISE IN SKIRTS 

Chapter 6. RED FLAKES AND DEATH 

Chapter 7. THE CORPSE OF DUST 

Chapter 8. THE PATH TO MYSTERY 

Chapter 9. MYSTERIOUS ISLE 

Chapter 10. IN AND OUT 

Chapter 11. THE MEN OF DUST 

Chapter 12. THE TALKING BENEFIT 

Chapter 13. RED ISLAND 

Chapter 14. DUCKWITHNOWINGS 

Chapter 15. THE CONQUEST PLAN 

Chapter 16. DEATH IN RED  

Chapter 1. MYSTERY IN SCARLET

As far as was ever learned, a Seminole Indian alligator hunter  named DuckWithNoWings was the first to

see the Red Snow. The first  to see it, that is, and live to discuss it later. 

The Red Snow had appeared before, and had been seen, it developed  in the course of time, but the witnesses

had been victims of the  scarlet horror and had not been heard from again. Nor had their bodies  been found. It

was very fantastic and quite inexplicable. 

In the case witnessed by DuckWithNoWings, the victims were  riding in a canvas boat, one of the

collapsible kind which hunters  carry in their automobiles. DuckWithNoWings saw the boat pull across  an

open patch of water in the Everglades and into a black gullet of a  creek which ran under the interlacing mass

of swamp vegetation. 

The Seminole alligator hunter admired the boat. Then he noted that  the occupantsthey numbered

twoseemed to be in a great hurry. They  were stripped to underwear shortsexcept that one had a small

package  slung about his neck by a string. They were drenched with perspiration.  They looked back often. 

DuckWithNoWings knew the signs. He had seen before fugitives  from the law flee into the swamp, and

they had acted thus. The Seminole  drew back out of sight and watched the boat vanish into the swamp. 

Some five minutes later, DuckWithNoWings was looking at the  muddy trail of a bull 'gator when he gave

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a start which was very  violent, considering that he was a member of a people noted for their  command of

facial expression. He ensconced himself behind a cypress. 

The two halfnaked men had appeared again. They were running now,  sloughing madly through the morass,

struggling out their hearts in the  hopeless tangle. Then DuckWithNoWings saw an interesting thing. 

One of the fleeting men paused beside a tree which was dead, and  from which the bark was peeling. He

reached up and removed the small  package which was slung around his neck. This, he shoved under a scab  of

bark, concealing it. Then they ran on. 

DuckWithNoWings continued to watch. He saw no sign of pursuers.  But, not long afterward, he saw

something which caused him to drop his  rifle, his dearest possession, into the slime underfoot. And that

meant  he was very surprised. 

There was no cloud in the sky. It was a very warm December day in  Florida. Yet snow had started failing. 

This snow was not white. It was not even a dusty color. Its hue was  as red as blood. 

ALMOST any one would have been surprised, and DuckWithNoWings  was no exception. He stared

upward, his round copper face distorted  with amazement. There was nothing at all to show from whence the

Red  Snow came. It seemed to materialize in the thin, warm air of the swamp. 

The flakes were not falling on DuckWithNoWings, but they were  descending close enough that he could

clearly see that they were  flakes. He had seen snow, of course, and he had not the slightest doubt  that this

stuff was red snow. 

About that time, a series of awful screams began coming from the  spot whence had gone the two nearly

naked fugitives. Their squawling  was extremely hideous. 

The combination of red snow and fearful shrieks made  DuckWithNoWings decide he would rather be

elsewhere. But before he  fled, he ran over to the tree under the bark of which one of the men  had thrust a

package. 

DuckWithNoWings was an acquisitive soul. He drew out the  package. Then he ran with great speed and

did not stop until he was far  away in the swamp. After a due interval, he found time to examine the  package.

He expected to see money, or maybe jewelry. He was  disappointed, no little disgusted. 

There were many wrappings of oiled paper around the object in the  package. Removed, these disclosed a

cube, less than two inches in  diameter, of a substance the nature of which defied DuckWithNoWings.  It

was reda dull, unimpressive carmine. 

DuckWithNoWings had seen the sealing wax which they sometimes  put on letters at the Indian Agency,

and he at first decided this stuff  was sealing wax. Then he thought it over, and was not so sure. The man  who

had hidden the stuff had acted as if it were extremely valuable. 

DuckWithNoWings decided to keep the red substance and, if it was  valuable, market it. But he let the

marketing endeavors wait. He was  still a little terrified by the red snow which he had seen. He talked  about it

some, but after the other Seminoles began to ridicule him, he  kept silent. 

DuckWithNoWings sat much by himself, thinking of the day when he  would go to one of the white man's

towns and perhaps get much money  from the red lump which he now carried in the pouch around his own


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neck. It was nice to think of such things. 

THE police departments in various American cities were doing some  thinking about this time, too. In

Cleveland, they were thinking about  what could have happened to Valdemar Svelaska. 

Valdemar Svelaska was a plump, pleasantlooking man who, years ago,  had designed war planes for

Germany; but now he was an American  citizen, and perhaps the greatest designer of aircraft, as well as the

owner of a large plane factory. 

He had disappeared, had Valdemar Svelaska. His family insisted he  had gone rabbit hunting with his dog. He

had simply not been heard from  again. 

There was a farmer who told of seeing a cloud of what looked like  red snow fall upon the portion of his field

where it was thought  Valdemar Svelaska might have gone rabbit hunting. But this farmer was  known to be

something of a spiritualist, a fellow who frequently  claimed he had seen manifestations. No one gave his

story a great deal  of attention. 

It was thought that the famous airplane designer might have  suffered amnesia and wandered away. 

H. U. Summervane Lawmer was the next one to disappear. Lawmer was a  gentleman who had the right to

place numerous letters designating  university degrees after his name, and he had just been appointed to  the

chair of chemical research in one of the nations most erudite  universities. He was visiting in South Carolina. 

After taking off in his private plane, flying alone, H. U.  Summervane Lawmer was not seen again. 

A fisherman reported seeing a cloud of reddish substance in the  sky, and said this seemed to fall toward the

earth and disperse, as if  it were snow melting. 

Now it happened that this fisherman was a notorious liar who was  always seeing things, usually sea serpents.

No one credited his story. 

This was unfortunate. The other witness had been a farmer who saw  visions. The second witness was a

confirmed liar. So the significance  of their stories was entirely missed, and thereby was also missed a  clue

which might have saved the world much terror and grief. 

In the next week, five more men vanished. All were, colloquially  speaking, "big shots"; one was an

international banker, another a  famous mechanical engineer, the third a United States senator, the  fourth a

noted manufacturer of automobiles, and the fifth an extremely  brilliant young undersecretary in the United

States War Department. 

Such is the phlegmatic nature of the American public that these  disappearances did not gain a great deal of

attention. No one had seen  any more red snow. 

No one suspected there was a connection between the disappearances.  No one dreamed that the

disappearances had a profound importance, that  they were of a magnitude vital beyond any importance of the

separate  individuals themselves. 

And then Doc Savage came to Florida. 


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Chapter 2. THE TRUNK SNATCHERS

DOC SAVAGE saw the two fruit peddlers when they first drove up and  stopped before the Hotel

Biscayneville, the conservative and not overly  large hostelry where he had registered. It was some moments

before he  suspected anything. Then, when he did, it was just a little too late. 

The peddlers and their onehorse wagons were very ordinary looking;  scores like them ranged the streets of

Miami, peddling cocoanuts,  grapefruit, and oranges. Neither was it suspicious that the two drivers  should

advance and begin talking. They might have been disputing over  routes. 

They were not. But it was not immediately that Doc Savage became  aware of that. 

The two drivers were stocky black fellows. However, their lips were  not thick and both wore colored sun

glasses of the type not at all  uncommon in Florida. These latter two facts were destined to take on  much

significance. 

Doc Savage neglected to give the peddlers the attention they  deserved, because he was interested in a group

of half a dozen young  men who stood in front of the hotel. Two of these carried large press  cameras. The

others had pads of copy paper stuffed in their pockets.  They all looked indignant. 

They were newspaper reporters and photographers. From where he  stood in his room, behind a Venetian

blind, Doc Savage could not be  seen by the journalists. He did not want to be seen. He wished heartily  that

the newspaper reporters and photographers would go away. He wished  that they were not even aware he was

in Florida. 

Doc had tried hard enough to arrive in Miami unobtrusively, but an  attendant at the airport where he had left

his plane had tipped off the  gentlemen of the press, and they had descended like a locust swarm. 

The fact that Doc had insisted he was in Miami for nothing more  spectacular than to conduct scientific

experiments whereby it might be  possible to eliminate mosquitoes by spreading a peculiar insect disease  fatal

only to mosquitoes, had not satisfied the newspaper men. 

Doc Savage, rumor had it, was a man who walked always in the shadow  of peril and excitement, and the

reporters refused to believe he was in  Florida for anything so prosaic as scientific experiments. 

Doc Savage, the reporters knew, was a man who was devoting his life  to the often thankless, always

dangerous, and sometimes seemingly mad,  task of righting wrongs, of aiding the oppressed, and ofstrangely

enoughnot exactly punishing evildoers, but of causing things to happen  to them which not infrequently

moved them to change their ways. 

Furthermore, Doc Savage was supposed to be something of a miracle  man, a muscular marvel and a mental

wizard. Practically every act of  Doc's was supposed to be good newspaper copy. That was why the scribes

were indignant Doc had refused to interview them. 

Doc Savage did not like publicity. It was distasteful, for he was a  genuinely modest man. Sometimes, it was

dangerous. 

Doc Savage took his eyes from the newspaper men and glanced at the  two peddlers. His gaze became fixed.

Doc Savage had strange eyes that  were like pools of flakegold, and now tiny winds seemed to stir the  flakes

briskly. He whirled and leaped to his hand bag. He dug out a  pair of binoculars. Back at the window, he


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focused the lenses on the  conversing peddlers. 

By intensive study, Doc Savage had learned to do so many things,  that he was sometimes considered to have

slightly supernatural  capabilities. Among other things, he could read lips. He read them now  through the

powerful binoculars. 

The two peddlers were not speaking English, but a foreign dialect.  This tongue was one which required use of

the lips in forming many  words. Moreover, the language was one which Doc had studied. 

"The bronze man's baggage will be here soon," said one peddler. "We  will act then." 

DOC SAVAGE held no doubts about himself being the subject of  conversation. He gave the focus screw of

the binoculars a slight twist. 

"There must be no slip," said the second of the two peddlers,  speaking the same foreign tongue. "Our own

lives and the lives of many  others depend on the outcome of the next five minutes." 

"It is true," agreed the other. "It is even possible that the  destiny of much of the world rests with our success

or failure." 

Doc Savage did not move; his unusually regular bronze features did  not alter expression, but into the hotel

room there penetrated a weird  sound, a not unmusical trilling which ran up and down a vagrant scale,  a sound

distinctly inspiringunnatural, fantastic. It might have been  the filtering of a wind through a denuded forest,

or the call of an  exotic tropical bird. Perhaps the most startling feature was the way  the sound seemed to come

from everywhere in the room, yet from no  definite spot. 

This sound was a peculiar characteristic of Doc Savage, a thing he  did unconsciously when his thought

processes were particularly  agitated. Just now, it meant that he was surprised. He had encountered  many

fantastic situations. But this one was unique. 

Two shabby fruit peddlers talking as if the destiny of a good part  of the world depended on something they

were going to do. They were  quite sober about it, too. And they evidently thought no one was in  earshot, so

they could not be putting on a show. 

A little over a score of yards distant from the peddlers, the party  of newspaper men were still looking

disappointed and disgusted and the  cameramen were contenting themselves by taking pictures of the Hotel

Biscayneville. Traffic muttered on the street; an airplane made a  distant moan, and warm breezes rattled palm

fronds outside the hotel  window. It was a very peaceful scene. 

A truck rounded the nearest corner. It was not a large truck, nor a  richlooking one. Doc Savage watched it

closely. It was the vehicle  which he had hired to bring his trunks, shipped ahead by several days,  from the

station to the hotel. 

The truck pulled in to the curb and stopped, almost between the two  fruit peddlers' carts. Inside its large van

of a body, various  suitcases and large trunks could be seen. All the pieces of luggage  were plentifully

smeared with hotel and steamship stickers. 

Things began to happen. 

ONE of the peddlers barked something in his native language. He and  his fellow ran toward the truck. Both

drew, revolvers. There were two  men in the truck, the driver and an assistant to help him wrestle  baggage.


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Both looked at the two peddlers, then displayed excellent  sense by putting their hands up as quickly and as

high as they could. 

"Sit very still," directed one of the peddlers. 

Driver and assistant sat very still. 

Doc Savage whipped away from the shuttered window, ran to his hand  bagthe one from which he had taken

the binocularsand jerked up one of  the flaps which separated the container into halves. This revealed five

weapons which, one not knowing much about firearms, might have mistaken  for automatic pistols. 

Doc Savage removed one of these. Just ahead of the trigger guard,  he clipped a magazine which resembled

one of the reels on which film  for home movie cameras is put up. Lying beside the unique weapons were  five

cylinders somewhat over an inch and a half thick and nearly a foot  long. Doc affixed one of these to the

muzzle of the oversized  automatic device, by a patent coupling. 

Going to the window, he lifted it without much noise. The two  peddlers were searching truck driver and

assistant for weapons. Doc  Savage took a deliberate aim. 

There was a sound as if some one had whistled and then clapped  hands once in the distance. There was

almost no report from the unusual  gun; it was a machine pistol of Doc's own construction, the mechanism  so

fashioned that, unlike the ordinary type of automatic and submachine  gun, it could be operated with a

silencer. The whistle was made by the  bullet; the clap was the sound of the slug hitting one of the peddlers. 

The man who had been hit barked a surprise and jumped, slapping a  hand to his thigh. 

"What is it?" demanded his companion. Then there was another  whistle and clap, and he, too, started and

grabbed a portion of his  anatomy. 

The pair cackled at each other in their native speech. They stared  at small holes in their clothing, where the

bullets had entered.  Apparently this was their first experience with a silenced gun. 

Then they returned their attention to the truck driver and his  assistant, finished searching the pair. Finding no

weapons, they ran  around to the rear of the truck to tug at the gate fastening. 

They seemed to have a great deal of difficulty with the fastening.  Fumbling with it appeared to make them

tired. They leaned against the  gate. Both brushed hands over their eyes. Then they sat down behind the  truck.

Both sighed. Both fell over and to all appearances went to  sleep. 

Doc Savage knocked the Venetian blind aside and threw a leg over  the sill. His machine pistol was charged

with mercy bullets, thin metal  shells filled with a chemical concoction producing quick  unconsciousness.

They had been effective on the two strange peddlers. 

Down the street, the group of newspaper men had vanished as if some  one had waved a magic wand. They

had seen the peddlers' guns. Now that  the peddlers were down, the journalists thrust heads from behind palm

boles and parked cars; one fat fellow ceased trying to make a fire  hydrant serve as shelter. 

Doc Savage swung out on the window sill and prepared to drop the  two stories to the narrow lawn between

the hotel front and the  sidewalk. 


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The mounds of oranges, cocoanuts and grapefruit on the peddlers'  carts erupted like volcanoes. From each

cart, three men leaped. Their  faces were black, but they were obviously not Negroes; the blackness  had the

shine of grease paint. Each held a sawedoff automatic shotgun. 

As one man, all six leveled their shotguns at Doc Savage and began  shooting. 

ONCE each day since childhood, Doc Savage had forced himself to go  through a routine of exercises lasting

for two hoursexercises which  had not only given him an amazing physique and unusually sharp senses,  but

had developed his thinking processes as well. 

He had, for instance, made reels of motion pictures showing the  encroachment of danger in all the manners

he could conceive, as well as  men attacking him in various fashions. He made a practice of viewing  these

frequently, giving himself split parts of seconds to think of a  way out of whatever difficulty presented, and

striving to think of a  new way out each time he viewed the scenes. 

He always witnessed these films in private, because the procedure  usually struck others as somewhat silly.

But by this device, he had  schooled himself to think swiftly in pinches. 

Doc was hanging from the window sill by his hands. There was not  much room to swing back up. It would

take a moment. Dropping to the  ground would be even more foolhardy, for there was no shelter. 

But there was another window below, with a window box holding  flowering plants on the sill. Doc dropped. 

The window box broke under his weight, fell free, spilling rich  black dirt and plants. But it held the giant

bronze man for an instant,  long enough for him to bundle his arms about his face and dive through  the glass

panes into the hotel room. He landed ungracefully in a shower  of glass. 

Shotgun slugs clouted at what remained of the window panes. With a  loud ripping, lead came completely

through the thin wall of the hotel.  It was a frame building, lightly constructed, and the automatic  shotguns

seemed to be charged with two or three large lead slugs to the  cartridge. The guns were making thunder in the

street. 

Doc Savage came to his feet, ran to the door, found it locked, and  rammed it with a shoulder. The cheap

wood panel fell off its hinges and  let him through to his right. Outside, the shotguns still whooped. 

From the stairway came another uproar, a grunting and squealing  punctuated by irregular thumps and yells. 

A pig appeared, tumbling headlong down the steps, squealing with  every bump. This pig was a truly

remarkable specimen of the familia  suidae, having the legs of a dog, a scrawny body, a snout of incredible

length, and a pair of ears which might well have been meant for wings. 

A man followed the shote, head over heels, down the steps, yelling  painfully each time he collided with a

tread. The man had lean  shoulders and thin hips which gave him a waspish contour, and he was  attired in a

fashion that was sartorially perfectstriped trousers,  fawn vest and cutaway, and a dislodged silk hat kept

pace with his  progress down the stairs. Although it looked as if the man was being  jarred hard enough to

loosen his teeth, he still retained a tight grip  on a slender black cane. 

Pig and man slammed out on the floor at the bottom of the steps.  The man sat up dazedly, then struck

furiously at the pig with his cane.  The shote jumped at just the right instant. 


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The dapper man got up, gave his cane a wrench, and it came apart,  disclosing that it was a sword cane with a

thin, flexible blade. He  made purposefully for the strangelooking pig. 

A voice bawled from up the stairs, "You touch Habeas Corpus and  I'll tear an arm off you, Ham!" 

The dapper "Ham" yelled, "Monk, you come down here and you'll get  the same thing that your hog is going

to get!" 

This got a roar from upstairs. 

"You heard me!" squawled "Monk." "Lay off Habeas or I'll tie knots  in you!" 

"The infernal hog tripped me!" Ham shouted back up the stairs. "I  think my back is broken!" 

"You'll be positive it's broken if you touch that hog!" Mont  promised. "Anyhow, I saw what happened. You

kicked at Habeas and fell  down the stairs." 

Ham waved his sword cane and screamed, "Come down here, you missing  link, you awful mistake of nature!

I'll hollow you out and stuff you  with pork!" 

"Just as you say, brother!" Monk bellowed, and came bounding down  the stairs. 

The man was a physical freak with all the characteristics of a bull  ape, being hardly more than five feet in

height; almost equally as  wide, and with arms some inches longer than his legs. His pleasantly  homely face

was composed mostly of mouth. 

The only stitch of clothing he wore was a sheet, out of which he  had fashioned a loin cloth. Water dripped

from the rusty bristles which  studded his simian frame, indicating he had just jumped from a bathtub. 

Both Monk and Ham seemed to see Doc Savage for the first time. They  gaped at the bronze man. 

"What's the fireworks outside, Doc?" Monk demanded. 

DOC SAVAGE said, "That remains to be learned," and whipped toward  the lobby and the street door. 

Monk and Ham followed him, trailed by the pig, Habeas Corpus. Monk  was Lieutenant Colonel Andrew

Blodgett Mayfair, and although there did  not seem to be room for more than a spoonful of brains behind his

low  forehead, he was admittedly one of the greatest living industrial  chemists. Ham was Brigadier General

Theodore Marley Brooks, who was  perhaps the most astute lawyer ever to pass through the portals of

Harvard. 

They were always quarreling, these two; no one could recall one  having addressed a civil word to the other.

One not knowing them could  hardly conceive that they were the best of friends, that each had more  than once

risked his life to save the other. 

Associated with Doc Savage as assistants, bound, to the bronze man  by a common love of excitement, was a

group of five men. Monk and Ham  were two members of that group. 

Doc Savage, once inside the lobby, went flat on the floor as a  shotgun burst slapped glass out of the large

lobby window. Monk and Ham  slammed down beside him. A shotgun roared again. 


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They took a chance and looked outside. Three of the men who had  been under the fruit in the carts were using

shotguns. The other three  were clambering inside the baggage truck. 

"They're after your baggage, Doc!" Monk grunted. 

"So it seems," the bronze man admitted. 

"Why?" asked Monk, whose voice, in repose, was small and childlike. 

"I cannot imagine," Doc replied. 

Ham squinted at the bronze man. "You haven't been cooking something  up, Doc?" 

"Certainly not," Doc told him. "This came out of a clear sky. I  haven't the slightest idea of what it is about." 

Monk grunted noisily and fished inside the folds of the sheet from  which he had made his breech cloth. He

brought out two metallic eggs  which he had grabbed when he first heard the shooting. 

"I'll lay one of these out there and see what effect it has," he  said, smallvoiced. 

He sailed the grenade through a window from which the glass had  been shot, it hit a palm tree in just exactly

such a way that it  caromed under the rear of the baggage truck and burst. 

The gunmen with the black grease paint on their features promptly  whipped compact gas masks from under

their coats and donned them. 

"Hah!" Ham sneered at Monk. "A lot of good you did!" 

"Hah!" Monk jeered back at him. "Watch and see!" 

One of the truck attackers stepped boldly into the acrid cloud of  gas fumes, seemingly confident that his mask

would prove effective. He  got a surprise. He seemed to double up with a great sneeze which blew  the mask

mouthpiece out of his teeth. An instant laterand the other  two working in the truck rear began to sneeze and

reel about. In their  agony, they tore their masks off. 

"Hah!" Monk nudged Ham "What do you think of that? My own special  product, that gas. There isn't a mask

made that is effective against  it." 

"Rats," Ham said. "Look!" 

The truck attackers were running away. 

THREE attackers that were blinded were helped by the three that  were unaffected by Monk's gas, and these

six coöperated in carrying the  two who had been dropped by Doc Savage's mercy bullets. 

Monk, greatly excited, bounded out with some idea of making an  attack. The pig, Habeas Corpus, followed

him. 

The blackfaced men whirled suddenly, firing, and Monk flopped  back, but the pig Habeas, was not so lucky.

He spun over and over,  obviously hit by a bullet, and began squealing. 


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Monk emitted an angry roar, but could do nothing, not even reach  the pig. The blackfaced men had a

touring car waiting around the  corner. They reached it, and the machine moaned away. 

Still roaring, Monk lunged to his pig. He made a quick examination.  Great relief came over his simian face. 

"Leg nicked," he said. "Let's get them guys." 

Doc and his two men ran to the corner, stopped a car, ejected the  surprised driver, and gave chase. But an old

and entirely sufficient  dodge defeated them; those in the fleeing car opened a large carton of  bigheaded

roofing nails on the pavement, and these punctured all four  tires of the pursuing machine. 

Doc drove into a service station to have the tires replaced, and  they walked back to the hotel. 

"One thing sure," grumbled the smallvoiced Monk, "whatever they  were after, they didn't get it." 

Ham eyed Doc Savage. "Were those fellows Negroes, Doc?" 

"No," said the bronze man. "Neither were they Americans." 

"No?" Ham fingered his sword cane. 

"They all had high cheek bones and a certain set to their eyes,"  Doc reminded. "That would indicate they

were all of one nationality." 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, hobbled to meet them, and Monk, seizing  upon his pet, bore him off for

bandagingalso to dress himself, for,  robed in the sheet, he was the center of all eyes. 

The pig was trailed by a swarm of newspapermen and photographers,  and for the next five minutes, Doc

Savage was the center of a verbal  mêlée as the journalists tried to get stories for their papers. 

When Doc Savage explained that he had no idea who had made the  attack on the baggage truck, or why it

was made, they naturally did not  believe him. He tried to tell them that he had come to Florida to  perfect a

disease fatal to mosquitoes; but this only got a laugh. 

The police arrived, and Doc repeated to them the same story. He was  asked if his baggage held anything of

especial value, and he explained  that it had been packed in New York with scientific equipment and  shipped

some days before, and had been lying in a Miami station since.  He added that he was entirely at a loss to

explain the affair. 

This satisfied the police, for they had a healthy respect for the  man of bronze and his methods. 

The truck driver and his assistant, unharmed but shaky, carried the  trunks and bags inside the Biscayneville,

then departed, having had an  experience which would doubtless furnish them conversation for a long  time to

come. 

The newspapermen gave up questioning Doc Savage and went off to  turn their stories in. It was a good yarn. 

"There'll be more hot stuff, as long as this Doc Savage is in  town," one scribe told his fellows. "Trouble and

this Doc Savage have a  way of finding each other." 


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THE bronze man perched on one of the large trunks while a hotel  maid swept up glass which had been shot

out of the windows by the  mysterious raiders. Monk and Ham waited until the maid departed, Monk  had

rigged his pet pig up with bandages and tied him to the bed. Then  Doc Savage spoke. 

"There is something behind this," he said slowly. "Those men wanted  my baggage. I do not know why.

Perhaps, if we looked through the stuff,  a reason might suggest itself." 

"An idea," Monk grinned. 

The bronze man began shifting the trunks about, handling their not  inconsiderable weight with a casualness

which gave indication of the  tremendous strength in his great frame. He tipped one of the trunks on  end. He

became perfectly still, rigid. 

His strange trilling note, the fantastic sound that ran up and down  the musical scale without adhering to a tune

or without seeming to come  from any definite spot, came into being, persisted for a brief  interval, then betook

itself away into nothingness. 

He put a finger on the trunk end and said, "Look!" 

There was a round puncture through the metal ease of the trunk, and  through the wood reënforcing, a hole

perhaps threeeighths of an inch  across. 

"Bullet!" Monk breathed. 

"Must have been shot into the trunk when they were trying to get  the baggage," Ham added. 

Doc Savage eased the trunk down and fitted a key in the lid. 

"It is possible the raid was staged to fire this shotrather than  seize the baggage, as we concluded," he said. 

He opened the lid. 

"Blazes!" Monk exploded. 

There was a man inside the trunkthe body of a man, rather, for the  bullet had made a wound in the center of

the skull, which had not bled  extensively. 

Chapter 3. RED IN THE RING

THE dead man was tallthey removed him from the trunk to examine,  that they might be sure he was

deadand he wore clothes which were  wrinkled, yet tailored of expensive cloth and not badly worn. He had a

bald spot on the top of his head, back of where the bullet had entered;  there was a typical Florida tan on his

face, the tan of a native, and  over the bridge of his nose was a pale strip, while other pale streaks  ran directly

back from the corners of his eyes to his ears. 

"Wore shellrimmed glasses," Monk said slowly. "Wonder where they  are." 

The glasses, it developed, were inside the man's coat. in one of  his pockets was a small flashlight; in the other

pocket was a flat  bottle and an object wrapped in wax paper. 


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Doc Savage uncorked the bottle, tested it with his nostrils, and  said, "Water." He unwrapped the wax paper

and found a peanutbutter  sandwich. When they looked in the trunk under the body, they found  other wax

papers which had been around sandwiches. 

"The fellow has been in the trunk some time," Doc decided quietly.  "He entered prepared for a considerable

stay" 

The apish Monk scratched his bullet of a head. "But how did he get  in there? The lock was not broken." 

"Almost anyone can pick a trunk lock such as this," Doc reminded. 

"But he was locked in," Monk pointed out. 

"Which means some one helped him," Doc agreed. 

They rolled the dead man over in order to get to his hip pockets,  and as they did so, there was a clatter and an

object rolled across the  floor. Monk reached down to pick it up, then jerked his hand back  hastily. 

"His false teeth," he muttered. 

The dead man had worn a complete set of upper molars. Doc Savage  dropped a handkerchief over them,

lifted them, then indicated with a  finger. 

The portion of the plate fitting against the gums was covered with  what looked like a layer of red wax. This

did not cover the whole  formation of the false teeth, and looked as if it had been molded in  place with a

finger. 

"Guess they didn't fit him and he built them with sealing wax,"  Monk decided aloud. 

Doc Savage tucked the false teeth in the upper outside pocket of  the dead man's coat, the pocket commonly

reserved for ornamental  handkerchiefs. 

"Was he killed recently?" Ham asked. 

"Within the last half hour," Doc replied. "That means while the  raid was in progress on the truck, he was

shot." 

They continued examination of the dead man's pockets, and came  finally to the left hip pocket. It held a

billfold, and this, opened,  yielded one of the identification forms which are usually found in new  billfolds. It

had been filled out: 

Prof. Casson Adams, 

7242 Floral Cliff, 

Miami, Florida. 

Monk squinted small eyes at Doc Savage. "I'm going to ask a silly  question. Do we look into this, or do we?" 

"We do," Doc told him. 


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Monk sighed, as if a great load had tumbled off his shoulders. 

"I was afraid this Florida trip would really turn out with us  spending all of our time trying to give mosquitoes

the influenza or  something," he said. "Now it looks interesting!" 

Ham scowled at him and snapped, "I wonder where this Floral Cliff  is?" 

"A city realestate map should show us," Doc said. "We will rent a  car." 

"I guess I'll leave the hog here to convalesce," Monk decided. 

HALF an hour later, Monk was looking at Floral Cliff and relieving  himself of a loud snort. 

"Floral Cliff!" he grimaced. "They should call the place Aroma  Flats." 

He pinched his flattened, muchbroken nose between a furry thumb  and forefinger. 

There was odor in the air. It was a very distinctive scent. It was  remindful of a bonfire fed with old overshoes,

rags, and now and then a  fistful of sulphur. An added touch was a tang similar to cooking  cabbage. 

Sand was all about them, here, and there looking as if it had been  played on by a preposterously huge child

with a shovel, for there were  deep grooves, as well as mounds which bore no similarity in formation. 

Almost the only vegetation growing on the dunes was palmetto, and  this, in spots, was too thick to permit

convenient passage. But more  often, the sand was bare. 

The fantastic and unpleasant odor, while it was not strong, seemed  to have permeated everything in the

vicinity. 

The car which Doc Savage had rented, a small touring, attacked the  sand which the wind had heaped across

the beach trail. The exhaust  alternately pounded and sagged as if engaged in a terrific struggle,  then, with a

few violent jerks, the machine came to a stop half across  a sand drift. 

Monk got out and looked under the car and saw radius rods and front  axle buried in coral particles. 

"Looks like we ride shank's mare from here," he grunted. 

They got out and went on. There was a sharp wind off the sea; they  could hear the noise of waves breaking

and it was like a great mouse  playing in a box of loosely wadded paper. The wind buffeted their  ankles and

occasionally their hands and faces, with sand particles; it  pushed the weird odor into their nostrils, making the

aroma seem doubly  oppressive. 

"Two bits says we're on the wrong road," Monk complained. 

"Look!" Ham pointed. 

Barren as was the waste of sand, rather ancientlooking signs,  nailed to stakes, were sticking up at intervals.

These bore the names  of streets, streets which had existed only on the maps of imaginative  realestate

dealers. The legend on one said: 

7100 Block, 


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Floral Cliff. 

"The number we're hunting is 7242 floral Cliff," Ham added. "It is  probably over that next dune." 

Monk looked at the next dune, which was thick with palmetto, and  snorted, "A swell place for a house with a

number!" 

They continued advancing and Doc Savage, not speaking, however,  pointed out the fact that the barren road

had been used recently, for  there were footprints in the sand. Most of them were obliterated by  wind driftage,

although here and there they stood out plainly. At  points, there was evidence that wheeled conveyances used

the trail,  although infrequently. 

The men topped the dune and stopped. 

"What did I tell you?" Ham asked. 

They had come to a wall. Once it had been an impressive, carefully  constructed thing of stucco, but the

stucco had fallen away and the  bricks beneath had cracked their mortar and in places had fallen to the  sand.

The barrier had a height of eight or nine feet. 

Standing atop the dune, they could see a thicket of scrawny palms  inside the wall, and beyond that, what

seemed to be a once  prepossessing house which was now in a state of almost fantastic  disrepair. Gaping

holes, where the tiles of the roof had fallen in,  were visible, and stucco had scabbed off such of the walls as

they  could see. 

"Spookylooking joint," Monk muttered. "Built during the boom, then  left to go to seed." 

The trail through the dunes angled around and led them to a gate.  This was an affair of rusted iron bars which

formed an ornamental  grille that was not unimpressive, but boards had been nailed on the  inside. 

Monk tried to find a crack in the planking. He looked surprised. 

"What d'you know!" he breathed. 

Ham scowled at him. "What is it, you missing link?" 

"Canvas nailed on the inside," Monk muttered. "Looks as if we were  not supposed to see in." 

There was a bell cord hanging beside the gate, an iron handle  secured to its end, and Doc pulled this. The

cord broke and the handle  came away in his fingers; there was no sound but the rotten chug of the  cord

breaking. 

Monk took another look through the gate and added, "The canvas is  not new. Looks as if it had been there a

few weeks, anyway." 

Doc Savage called sharply, in a voice that carried far: "Hello  inside!" 

The silence which answered might have been that of death. 

DOC SAVAGE moved to the right, sank a little and leaped upward,  catching the crest of the wall. Bricks

loosened in rotten mortar, gate  way, and let him back to the sand. He tried again, and this time got on  top of


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the wall. 

He surveyed the interior for a moment, then helped Monk and Ham to  clamber upon the wall. They all

looked, over the interior. 

Palm trees and semitropical bushes had once been planted with some  adherence to a landscaping plan, but

had grown untended, interlacing  into a miserly jungle which straggled like a green festering around the

decrepit mansion, forming a setting which made the house somehow like  an animal, once healthy, but which

had strangled in the surrounding  canker. They began lowering themselves inside. 

There came a clatter from their left, near the foot of the wall. It  was a tiny sound. 

"Hey!" Monk grunted. "What was that?" 

Doc Savage shifted to the left, strange flakegold eyes downcast,  searching. He came to a small depression in

the soft sand. He  hesitated. Then he dipped bronze fingers into the sand and sifted,  exploring. 

The object which he brought out gave off brilliant reflections in  the Florida sunlight. 

Monk peered closely, then let a long breath of surprise make a  hissing through his teeth. 

"Boy, oh boy!" he gasped. "Did somebody throw that at us?" 

Doc Savage rolled the thing he had picked up in the cup of one  bronze palm. It was a ring, delicately

feminine. The band was of white  gold, the portion around the setting of platinum, and the stone itself  was a

bluewhite diamond something near the size of a pencil eraser. 

"Where'd it come from?" Monk's eyes started to range the decrepit  mansionthen, as Doc Savage made a

slight gesture, he fell to eyeing  the diamond ring again. 

Doc had turned the ring over so that the inner band, the portion  under the setting, was visible. 

The space between the gem and inner surface had been stuffed with a  substance which resembled red sealing

wax more than it resembled any  other common substance. A bit of tissue paper immediately under the

diamond kept the red material from showing through the facets of the  stone. 

"Hey!" Monk exploded. "That red stuffremember the false teeth of  the man who was killed in the trunk?" 

"There was some of this red material sticking to the inside of the  teeth!" Ham breathed. 

"It looked like the same thing," Monk amended. 

Doc Savage made no comment. The bronze man's weird flakegold eyes  were ranging over the pocked,

shabby walls of the strange abandoned  mansion in the sand dunes. 

So unexpectedly that it was startling, Doc's fantastic trilling  came into being. It had a hastened, imperative

quality, and might have  been the product of the wind which was sucking at the sand under their  feet. After an

excited moment, the sound was gone. 

"Get out of here!" Doc said grimly. "Do it as quickly as possible!" 


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Monk and Ham rolled their eyes to see what Doc had sighted. They  discerned nothing. 

"Run!" Doc said, and the word was an imperative command. 

Monk and Ham both received an impatient shove. They began to run,  not knowing why, but sure Doc had

heard or seen something. They  prepared to scramble wildly over the wall. 

Then they stopped suddenly. 

A MAN had appeared on the wall. He had come up from the other side,  silently, with an almost uncanny ease

and lack of noise. He was not  especially tall, and he was leanbodied, with thin arms and legs. His  thinness

was not that of emaciation, but rather that of a cat made lean  by much hunting. He wore golf knickers which

were very large and  ballooned out above his knees, making him look somewhat ridiculous. 

His striking characteristic, however, was his head. It was a head  large beyond normal proportions, with no

vestige of hair upon itno  mustache, eyebrows or lashes, the top entirely shiny and bald. 

The eyes were bulging under their lids, somehow like halves of ripe  blue plums stuck upon the face with a

narrow knife slit in each so that  the purplish meat of the fruit showed through beneath. The mouth was

unnaturally small, its slit seeming scarcely larger than one of the  eyes, and looking, too, a little like them. 

His skin was jet, amazingly black, except for the back of one thin  hand, where the black had been rubbed

away, showing that it was grease  paint covering skin of a definitely yellowish hue. 

In both hands, the newcomer held large electric light globes. These  were more than twothirds full of a liquid

which had the color and  consistency of coffee. Over the bottoms of the bulbs where the glass  point

projectedthey were of an oldfashioned typeadhesive tape had  been plastered. 

"You will each lie down on your backs," he said quietly. 

Monk dropped words from a corner of his oversize mouth. "Doc, this  bird wasn't with the gang who made the

trunk raid, was he?" 

"No," Doc Savage said. 

The weirdlooking man on the wall held out his two light globes. 

"Two of you understand something of chemistry," he murmured. "Look  at these closely." 

He spoke fluidly enough, but his voice was shrill, almost a flute  piping. 

Doc and his two companions eyed the liquid in the light bulbs. They  said nothing. 

"The bulbs are filled with chlorine," offered the man on the wall.  "Of course, you can see that it does not have

the true greenishyellow  color of chlorine, but that is because certain other chemicals have  been added to

make it more effective." 

Ham breathed, "Will chlorine hurt a man?" 

Monk said, "For a little while. Then you croak. Remember, they used  it in the War." 


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The man on the wall lifted his strange weapons. His weird, flute  voice was grim. 

"I trust you do not think I am being dramatic," he piped. "I can  hit you with these bulbs, and you will die. Or

you can lie down on your  backs." 

Monk began, "I can get to my machine pistol" 

"No," Doc told him. "Do as this fellow says. He's not bluffing." 

They lowered themselves to the sand, then lay down on their backs. 

"Now," piped the man on the wall, "you will each scoop up handfuls  of sand and pour it over your eyes. You

can shut your eyes first, of  course. I merely do not wish you to see what I am doing." 

Reluctantly, Doc and his men scooped up sand. 

DAME FORTUNE is a vagrant, unreliable hussy, and Doc Savage had  long ago ceased to rely upon her

entirely. But occasionally the wench  did make an offering which was not to be spurned. She made one now.

As  Doc dug down for sand, his finger tips encountered half a brick which  had evidently toppled from the wall

months ago. 

He dug up the brick, threw it. If he stopped to think, it was for  no appreciable interval. 

The blackfaced man on the wall was on his guard, but it did him  little good. The brick hit him in the face. In

throwing, Doc had  sacrificed force for accuracy, so the brick did not kill the man. It  did bowl him off the

wall, however. 

The fellow showed a remarkable presence of mind and threw both his  light bulbs inside the fence. Then he

fell in the other direction. 

The bulbs landed not more than a dozen feet from Doc and his two  men. They burst with squishy noises.

Greenishyellow vapor spread,  swirled in the wind, came toward Doc. 

Ham had bounded up from the sand. Monk followed him. But Monk was  howling angrily. He had piled sand

on his eyes before Doc threw the  brick fragment, and some of the particles had gotten under the lids. 

Doc seized his two aides and rushed them away from the spreading  chlorine. There was only one way for

them to gotoward the house. 

Ham started to bear toward the south end, the most convenient  corner. 

"The other one!" Doc rapped. "There is a man with a gun at one of  the windows on that side. Saw him just

before the other fellow appeared  on top of the fence. That is why I was in such a hurry to get out of  here." 

They sloped around the house cornerand were instantly the center  of a swirl of striking, swearing men. 

The attackersthey all had black grease paint on their faceswere  coming out of a side door. Nearly half a

dozen were at hand, and the  door was spitting more of them. They seemed confident of their numbers,  for

they piled upon Doc and his men, barehanded. 


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Nor was their confidence too greatly misplaced. Doc Savage went  down; even his tremendous strength was

not proof against four pairs of  arms leeching to his ankles. He began to club with his fists. Men  moaned,

screamed, fell away. 

The wind was carrying the cloud of chlorine toward them. 

Beyond the chlorine menace, the man with the big blackhead climbed  shakily back atop the wall. The half

brick had started his face leaking  red strings down over his shirt and golf trousers. 

He screamed something. It was in a foreign languagethe same tongue  spoken by the two fruit peddlers who

had led the raid upon the truck  bearing Doc Savage's baggage. Then the man changed to English. 

"Get the thing they picked up from the sand inside the wall!" he  fluted. 

HIS words seemed to redouble the violence of the fight as the  wearers of the black grease paint sought to

overcome Doc Savage, Monk  and Ham. Seven of them had set upon Doc now and, clawing and striking,

sought to hold him, only to succumb, in rapid succession, to blows  which they hardly saw at all, so swift was

the delivery. In no case did  the bronze giant hit a man twice. He picked his spots, and each  terrific fist impact

felled an assailant. 

"Use knives!" shrieked the man on the wall. He was pawing scarlet  off his hideous, hairless countenance.

"Shoot them!" 

One tried to take the leader's advice, and with a thin splinter of  steel in his fist, lunged in upon Doc Savage.

The bronze man did not  shift position, except to throw out an arm with a speed which made it  appear to

vanish in midair so that the hand, when it reappeared, was  fixed upon the knife wielder's wrist. 

The bronze man moved casually and the knife wielder shrieked as if  he were dying, instead of having his arm

merely disjointed. 

Ham still retained his sword cane, and was using it as briskly as  close quarters permitted. He made no attempt

to run his foes through,  or induce fatal wounds by slashing and cutting. Instead, he merely  pricked with the

tip of the blade, which was coated with a sticky  compound for the first six inches of its length. And after a

few  seconds, the men who had been pricked began to weave on their feet. 

"The blade is poisoned!" a man screamed. 

"Get the thing which they picked up inside the wall!" shrilled the  bald black man who had been hit with the

brick. 

Three greasepainted fellows hit Doc simultaneously. The sand gave  poor footing. He was upset. They

clawed at him. One, purely by  accident, tore open one of Doc's coat pockets, and it chanced that into  this

same pocket he had dropped the ring. The ring fell out. A  blackfaced man seized it. 

"It's the Space girl's diamond ring!" he yelled. 

"Run!" piped the man on the fence. "The chlorine!" 

The hideous chlorine was almost upon the men as they began to run.  They left Doc Savage and his two aides,

and seemed not to care what  happened to their own fellows who had been overcome in the fight. 


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MONK, still quite blind from the sand in his eyes, had been lunging  about, striking at random, and now he

accidentally hit Ham, knocking  the swordcanecarrying lawyer sprawling. 

"That was no accident!" Ham shrieked unreasonably. 

Doc shoved Monk, getting him in motion, and Monk struggled and  tried to strike back until it dawned on him

that he was being  manhandled by Doc. Ham also reared up on his feet. 

They headed to the left, toward the wall. There was no shooting.  For the moment, action had suspended while

every one escaped the  chlorine. 

As it developed, the recess was hardly necessary, for an air  current caught the chlorine as it piled along the

side of the house,  and the stuff backed up, was swept toward the roof and away,  dissipating itself in the

brilliant sunlight. 

The man with the big, hairless head had vanished from the wall  during the excitement. The others had

doubled back and entered the  house. 

Doc Savage reached the wall, gave his two aides a hand over, then  crossed over it himself. 

"The man with the big head dropped outside the wall," Ham rapped.  "Let's get him!" 

But Doc Savage was already whipping along the wall toward the spot  where the fellow in golf knickers must

be lurking. Ham followed. Monk,  eyes as yet not functioning properly, stumbled along clumsily. Ham came

back, grabbed Monk by the short hair on top of his head and guided him  roughly. 

"Ouch!" Monk groaned. 

"You will slough me by accident, will your Ham hissed. 

Ahead, Doc had reached the corner. He thrust his head around, ready  to draw back instantly; but the bald

quarry was not in sight.  Footprints in the sand showed where the fellow had run, in the opposite  direction,

along the wall. 

Doc followed them. Ham came in his wake, still leading Monk  urgently by the hair. 

They stopped when they heard a voice. It was the flutelike tone of  the bald man, calling to those inside the

wall. 

"Are you sure you got whatever it was they picked up?" he piped. 

"Sure!" some one bawled. "The ring" 

"I do not think it was the ring," called the shrill voice. "The  ring has no importance" 

"There's some stuff that looks like red wax under the diamond!" the  man inside yelled back. 

The chief piped shrill curses in his foreign tongue. 

"So that was it!" he trebled. "They have the secret and are trying  to pass it on to this Doc Savage!" 


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"It must have been the girl!" yelled the man inside. 

"Of course!" piped the other. "Go quickly and make sure she has not  freed herself." 

Ham came up alongside Doc Savage where the bronze man crouched  beside the wall. 

"This is getting involved," he breathed. "That red stuff seems to  be the key to some mystery. And they're

holding a woman prisoner." 

Doc nodded slowly. "She must have seen us come over the wall and  threw the ring at us to get it in our

hands." 

Monk, making horrible grimaces, dug the last of the sand out of his  eyes. 

"Just what in blazes do you reckon we're gettin' into?" he asked  mildly. Then he shot a startled look at Doc.

"Say, that guy they killed  in the trunk was" 

"Was evidently trying to get to us secretly," Doc said, finishing  Monk's thought. 

"But how'd he know about the baggage at the depot?" Monk pondered.  "How'd he know about us at the hotel?

And why didn't he come himself,  instead of hiding in a trunk so he would be carried there?" 

"It looks as if some one has been keeping very close tab on our  movements," Doc said. 

They were creeping forward now, seeking their hairless quarry. 

Monk muttered, "Say, you remember that red stuff sticking to the  false teeth of the guy in the trunk? It looked

like the same material  that was in the ring. Now, I wonder" 

Whatever Monk wondered, it never became clear. They heard a  clatter, a scratching, and knew the man with

the monstrous head had  vaulted over the wall into the compound. 

Chapter 4. THE FOUR PEDESTALS

DOC SAVAGE whipped into violent motion, lunging upward and over the  wall, poising only an instant at

the top to note the lean figure of the  chief of the blackfaced men racing for the ruined mansion. The bronze

giant landed lightly on the other side of the wall. 

Monk and Ham came to life. Frantic, thinking the bronze man had  exposed himself to shots from the house,

they jumped up wildly and hung  half over the wall. Then they realized Doc had not acted without  thought.

There were scrubby palms near the wall here, and their  oversize boles furnished a shelter into which the

bronze giant had  already flung himself. 

"Cover me!" Doc called to Monk and Ham. 

Monk grunted understandingly and pawed a machine pistol out of a  special underarm holster which was

padded so that its presence under  his coat was hardly noticeable. He leveled the gun and pulled the  trigger. It

moaned; the ejector ran out brass empties. Bark and  miserable palm fronds showered onto the sand as the

mercy slugs  searched for the hairless man. 


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But the fugitive had gained a little headway, and he flung himself  prone, wriggled ahead, and was lost in the

tangle of untended tropical  shrubbery. 

Ham, retaining his grip on his sword cane, got a second machine  pistol into operation, directing the stream of

slugs first at one of  the mansion windows, then another. His gun, and the one wielded by  Monk, were

duplicates of the weapon to which Doc had attached a  silencer and dropped the two fake peddlers back at the

Hotel  Biscayneville. 

Doc Savage was working forward through the tangle of palms and  thorny shrubs. He could hear the bald man

ahead of him, scuttling fast. 

"Ark!" a voice called from the mansion. "The basement window!" 

"Those two devils on the fence?" questioned the flutelike voice of  the hairless man. 

"They can't hit it, Ark," said the voice. "But you better step!" 

Doc Savage put on speed. He came in sight of the basement window  just in time to see the golfhosed legs of

his quarry disappearing  inside. Then, in the basement, a man saw Doc and bellowed profanely. 

What might have been a thickwalled steel pipe of small diameter  jutted out of the window. Its tip acquired a

flickering red spearpoint  of flame. The weapon was an automatic rifle of military caliber and its  roar

volleyed through the compound. 

Doc Savage had rolled behind a palm which, after the fashion of  palms when stunted, was extremely wide

near the ground. The tree  shuddered, and dead leaves loosened and fluttered in the wind. A

copronickeljacketed slug came entirely through the bole. More  followed. The bole began to split. Sand

gushed and stung. The racket  was terrific. 

Moving very carefully, because he had to keep thoroughly sheltered,  Doc Savage removed a flat metal case

from beneath his coat. The velvet  interior of this was recessed for half a dozen objects which might have  been

pigeon eggs imitated in steel. Doc extracted an egg. There was a  tiny lever projecting from it, and he shifted

this with a thumb nail.  Then he flung the egglike objectnot directly at the basement window,  but at a spot

some twelve feet to the side. 

There was a flash, brilliant even in the intense Florida sunlight,  and a shock which convulsed the earth

noticeably. Sand bloomed up in a  vast mushroom. The near wall of the old mansion weaved. Great cracks  ran

up through the flying débris and sand. A portion of the wall fell  outward, showing the interior of a room. 

Fragments came showering down and the wind whipped the dust away;  bricks clattered and settled; more of

the house wall fell, together  with a portion of the ancient roof tiles. Then there was silence,  except for

swearing of the men inside the house. The basement window  was covered with a part of the ruptured brick

wall. 

Doc Savage ran forward, leaped mightily, and was inside the  fantastic old mansion among the sand dunes. 

PLASTER ground under the bronze man's feet as he lunged across the  room. Dust swirled in a stifling pall.

There had been an army of empty  packing cases along the outer wall and the explosion of the violent  little

grenade had heaped them against the opposite side of the room. 


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Doc shoved some of them aside and tried the door. It was unlocked  and he went through. There was a

hallway beyond. Down it, a voice came. 

"Get the damned girl!" said the voice. "Get them all together. If  this Doc Savage talks to them, it'll be just too

bad!" 

"She's upstairs," said another voice. "I'll bring her down." 

They were excited, maybe a little deafened by the explosion, and  did not realize how loud they were

speaking. 

Feet pattered on steps; a man. He sounded as if he were in a hurry,  and he was going up. 

Doc went forward to intercept the footstep sounds. He came through  a door into a hallway. Against a wall

stood open boxes which bore the  admonition, "GlassHandle With Care," but which held military automatic

rifles, fully assembled, and ammunition clips, loaded. 

The bronze man's eyes roved over the weapons; his characteristic  trilling came into being, ebbed and fell for

an instant, then sank into  inaudibility. 

The guns were not of American manufacture. 

There was a fumbling at a door to the rear. Doc managed to get  behind it before it opened, and the panel

shielded him as a man  appeared. Beyond a doubt, it was the fellow who had been dispatched for  the girl, and

he was cautious. Instead of dashing through the door, he  cannily shifted to the side and looked through the

crack by the hinges.  He saw Doc. 

"Look out!" he shrieked. "That bronze devil" 

Then Doc Savage got hold of the man's neck, and the fellow's voice  ended in a strange fashion, as if his vocal

apparatus were a  loudspeaker, electrically controlled, on which the volume knob had  been turned off

suddenly. The man became limp, yet his eyes were widely  open. He seemed to be paralyzed. 

Doc leaned down the stairs, and from his lips came a remarkably  perfect imitation of his victim's voice. 

"Look out!" he yelled. "That bronze devil is around somewhere!" 

The voice characterization held all the perfection Doc Savage had  been able to master by long and intensive

study. It fooled those below. 

"You're tellin' us he's around?" snarled one. "Go on and get the  girl, you dope!" 

Doc lifted his captive and bore him toward a stairway which led  upward. The size of the bronze man was

made startlingly apparent by  comparison with his prisoner. As he mounted the steps, he continued to  grope at

the back of the captive's neck with corded bronze fingers. 

He was doing something which had taken him, even with the profound  knowledge of surgery and anatomy, a

long time to perfect. He was  completing the induction of a state of paralysis, merely by exerting  pressure on

certain upper spinal nerve centers. 


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The captive was entirely helpless, when Doc Savage lowered him to  the secondfloor corridor, and would

remain so for some time. Doc  listened. 

Below, there was swearing, men moving about, and the flutelike  voice of the chief giving orders. A section of

wall, weakened by the  bomb blast, fell noisily. Monk and Ham had silenced their machine  pistols, and

probably were watching for targets. 

Doc began opening doorsand behind the third one, found the  girlthe Space girl she had been called, when

the blackfaced men were  shouting about the ring with the red substance under the diamond. 

SHE was a small girl, so small that at first glance she seemed to  be a child. It was not until she shifted

position, and the shadow of  the chain no longer fell across her face, that the maturity of her  features was

evident. At that, she could hardly be past twenty. 

She was a doll, exquisitely proportioned, with hair that was like  streaming honey, lips and eyes that would

have delighted an artist, and  a nose that had the slightest bit of retroussé. She moved again and the  chain

clinked metallically. 

There were really two chains. One, the lighter, was padlocked  around her slim waist, and its end was

padlocked into a larger chain  which ran up to a hole which had been torn in the ceiling, where it was  secured

around a beam. There was a window across the room, and by  stretching, she might have reached that. It was

open a trifle for  ventilation, and was not boarded up on the outside, as were most of the  windows. 

She stared at Doc and words came past her lips like frightened  things. 

"You got the ring I threw?" she demanded 

Doc moved to her side, and so silent were his motions that it  seemed he was not treading the floor at all. He

grasped the chain. It  was not a cheap chain, but an alloy, very strong. 

"They got it away from me again," he said. 

"But how could they?" the girl murmured. "You are Doc Savage?" 

"Do not be silly" Doc began to tug on the chain, and his arms  seemed to become tremendous beams, rigid and

metallic. "You seem to  have me overrated." 

The girl shuddered. "They are afraid of you, more afraid of you  than of any living man. I have heard them

talking. They have been  keeping track of you. They were scared when you came to Florida. They  did not

believe you came to exterminate mosquitoes, or whatever it was.  They were afraid that you had heard of them

and their plan." 

She had spoken rapidly. Doc Savage ceased tugging on the chain and,  reaching up, extracted a stiff steel

bobbie pin from her hair. He  inserted this in the padlock and began to probe. 

"I saw you through the window," the girl said. "I threw the ring. I  was afraid to cry out. One of them was

outside the door of this room." 

Doc said nothing. The bobbie pin gritted, scraped. 

"Where Is Cass?" asked the girl. "Didn't he come with you?" 


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The pin rasped in the lock, seeking the tumblers. 

"You mean Professor Casson Adams?" Doc asked. 

"Yes," she said. "He was going to try to reach you. He was going to  hide himself in one of your trunks. It was

the only way. They were  watching you. They had bribed the telephone operator in your hotel to  cut them in

on all calls you made. Cass thought the trunk was the only  way. He had heard that your trunks were here.

They knew that. The only  chance for a slip was that they might have been watching the trunks." 

The clipped rapidity of her speech made her long recitals seem  short. 

Doc withdrew the bobbie pin and carefully bent it. The padlock was  no ordinary variety, but one using a

machined key which entered from  the bottom. 

An automatic rifle racketed downstairs, the moan of one of the  mercybulletfiring machine pistols sawed

out like a titanic  bullfiddle. A man downstairs swore, "Damned if they ain't makin'  loopholes in the wall!

Hey, you upstairs!" 

Doc again imitated the voice of the man who had been sent for the  girl, bellowing, "Aw, keep your shirt on!" 

"Shake it up!" roared the one below, deceived again. "Get that  twist down here!" 

The girl looked at Doc Savage, slowly, as if noting the absence of  wasteful gestures in his movements, and

the metallic repose of his  features. He had not looked at the door since entering and seemed  concerned with

but one thing: getting the padlock open. 

"I guess they were justified in being scared of you," she said.  "But you can't pick the padlock. It is pick proof.

They told me so." 

With a snicking of tumblers, the lock came open. Doc caught the  chain as it came loose from around her

slender waist and lowered it to  the floor so there was no rattle. 

"What is your name?" he asked. 

"Nona Space," she said. "Didn't Cass tell you?" 

Doc guided her toward the window. 

"We'll drop to the ground and run for it," he said. "I'll carry  you, because I am wearing a bulletproof vest and

that will shield you  somewhat. My two assistants will cover our break." 

She began struggling violently, not trying to get away so much as  trying to stop him, to keep him from the

vicinity of the window. 

"But what about the other two?" she demanded. 

ONE of her exquisitely small hands dipped toward the lower regions  of the old mansion as she said, "other

two" and Doc Savage stopped  suddenly. 

"Who are they?" he asked. 


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Her small mouth came roundly open. It was one of the few feminine  mouths which Doc had seen that

retained its attractiveness when open. 

"Didn't Cass tell you?" she asked. 

"Prisoners?" Doc questioned. 

"But Cass should have" 

Doc grasped her arms above the elbows and lifted her until only her  toes were on the floor, and the pressure

of his grip caused her to  grimace a little. 

"Professor Casson Adams was killed," he clipped. "They raided the  baggage truck carrying the trunk in which

he was hiding. They shot  through the trunk. Professor Adams had identification in his billfold  which gave

this as his address, and we came out to investigate. We did  not know what it was all about. We still do not

know. Who are these  other two persons you are talking about?" 

The girl's head went back and a stark whiteness crawled up from the  crumpled collar of her frock and flooded

her features; her lips moved,  but no sound came, and the moving lips did not form words with  sufficient

clarity to permit reading. 

There came a loud yell from below. It held impatience and rage. 

"What the hell, up there!" it howled. "You dead, or something?" 

Doc faked the voice of the man sent for the girl, and called, "Aw,  I had trouble with the lock!" 

But feet were clumpclumping the stair treads as one man came up to  see what was causing the delay. 

Doc Savage leaned close to the window. His lips moved, yet the  words he spoke did not seem to come from

his vocal cords, but rather  from a spot below in the palms which thicketed the yard. It was good

ventriloquism. The words were not English, but syllables of a guttural  tongue which would have baffled an

expert on languages. 

It was Mayan which he spoke, language of a lost civilization of  Central America which had rivaled that of

Egypt. Doc and his aides had  mastered the tongue for use in situations such as this; as far as they  knew, no

other individual in the socalled civilized world could  comprehend it. 

Monk answered, also speaking Mayan. 

Doc sent the girl toward the window. 

"My two men will cover your flight," he said. "Drop out of the  window and get over the wall. I'll find the

other two prisoners." 

Doc did not wait to see what she did, but spun toward the door. The  man coming up the stairs was near the

top. Doc scooped up a chair,  carried it with him. He reached the door and got it open just as the  man on the

stairs discovered the unconscious fellow who had been sent  for the girl. 

The man yelled. Doc threw the chair. The man's yelling turned to  screaming and he fell down the stairs,

making a good deal of noise.  From below, a bedlam of shouting went up. The man hit by the chair  piled up


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on the firstfloor landing and did not arise. 

At Doc's back, the girl cried out, "There's a back stairway! Maybe  we can reach the other two! I'll show you

where" 

Doc spun on her, and rapped, "I told you to" Instead of finishing,  he pitched back into the room. 

The hairless chief of the blackfaced menthe one addressed only as  Arkhad come through a door in the

rear of the room. He must have  mounted the back stairway of which the girl, Nona Space, had spoken. 

ARK was running a circle, so that he was between the girl and the  window. He held a revolver, an

extraordinary weapon with a remarkably  large barrel. The snout of the gun seemed nearly as large as a

.20gauge shotgun. 

He aimed the gun at Doc and it went off, making far less noise than  might have been expected, and kicking so

slightly that it barely jarred  his hand. 

There was a terrific crash against Doc's chest, and his giant  bronze frame was smashed backward as if it had

become suddenly fragile.  The simultaneous flash set his eyes aching. The concussion rendered his  ears

temporarily inactive. Coat and vest were torn completely from his  chest, coat sleeves had ruptured, and the

skin was slit. The underside  of his jaws felt as if they had been wiped clean of skin. He hit the  floor with

stunning force. 

Ark aimed again, deliberately. His gun was some special type not on  the market, firing explosive slugs. Only

the excellence of Doc's  bulletproof vest had saved him that first time. And now Ark was aiming  at his head. 

There was a worn rug underfoot. Doc clawed up bunches of it in his  hands, pulled. It was an old gag, and Ark

thwarted it by sprawling down  deliberately on the rug so that he would not be upset. But his next  shot was

delayed a moment. 

Doc lunged up with the rug and flung it forward like a sheet. At  the same time, he sloped aside. 

Ark fired. His slug blasted a hole in the wall that a man could  have crawled through. 

Ark was still between the girl and the window. She tried to run  around him. It looked as if he saw her under

the rug and threatened  her. Frightened, she retreated. She dived through the rear door. 

There was a descending flight of stairs, rather narrow and she ran  down them, looking over her shoulder,

calling out something. What she  called, Doc could not tell. He was still deaf from the concussion of  the

explosive bullet against his chest. 

The bronze man leaped for Ark, intending to trample him under the  rug. 

Men topped the main stairway, coming up from below. Ark started  shrilling muffled commands under the

rug. His satellites charged to his  aid. 

Doc Savage could hear only the loudest of sounds. He could barely  see, and only when the newcomers

actually appeared was he aware of  their arrival. The bronze man was not unduly reckless; he took terrific

chances, it might seemalthough to him, they were not chances, for he  knew his own ability, knew what he

could accomplish in the face of a  given set of circumstances. 


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Occasionally there was a slipas in this instance when Ark had been  wielding a pistol loaded with explosive

slugs. Nine hundred and  ninetynine out of another thousand times it would have been an  ordinary pistol, and

Doc could have gotten to him before Ark learned of  the bulletproof vest. A man shooting in haste rarely picks

a head for a  target. 

Doc retreated. He was in no condition for a fight against such  odds. He reached the rear door, got halfway

down the stairs in an  upright position, then because he was still dazed, upset and toppled  the rest of the way. 

At the foot of the stairs was a little square hallway with doors on  three sides. As Doc was heaving dizzily

erect, the farthest of these  doors popped open. 

Monk and Ham appeared. Each held his machine pistol with both  hands. The guns had a good deal of recoil

when firing freely. 

"The girl?" Doc asked, and his voice was strange. 

"Haven't seen her," Monk grunted. 

Doc Savage seemed not to hear. 

"The girl?" he repeated. "Where is she?" 

Monk realized then that something was wrong with the bronze man's  hearing. He shook his head violently to

indicate he had not seen a  girl. 

AN instant later, men began firing from the top of the stairs, and  Doc, seeing splinters fly, shoved his two

men outside into the  brilliant sunlight, following after them. 

Monk peered at Doc and muttered uneasily, "You hurt bad?" 

Doc was watching his lips and read the query. 

"Pain and shock is all," he said. "I am deaf as a rock. Cannot tell  how long it will last. The girl came down the

stairs. She must have  gone after the other two prisoners." 

"Other two?" Ham questioned. 

Doc was not looking at Ham. He did not get the interrogation. 

Ham got around in front of Doc, pointed at his lips and repeated,  "What other two?" 

"There seem to be two other prisoners," Doc advised. 

Ham hosed a stream of mercy bullets up the stairway, his manner as  casual as if he were presenting a point of

evidence to a jury in a  courtroom. He drew back and got Doc's attention to his lips again. 

"What's it all about?" he asked. 

"That," Doc told him, "is still a puzzle." 


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Somewhere in the house, a woman began screaming. Monk and Ham,  electrified, stared at Doc for

commands, then realized the bronze man  had not heard the shrieks. 

"Girlscreaming!" Ham gasped. 

"We will go in," Doc said. "But take it easy." 

The bronze man got out one of the tiny grenadesno shock could  explode them until the little detonating

lever was actuatedand tossed  one up the stairs. There was a roarand plaster, lath and splintered  timbers

came plummeting down the steps. 

"I didn't even hear that," Doc shouted. "Show me the spot where you  heard the girl screaming." 

"She's still screaming," Ham said, and plunged inside. 

Doc and Monk trailed the dapper lawyer. They tried one of the doors  at the left of the square rear hallway. It

was locked. Doc caved it in  by kicking it with one foot. 

The girl stopped screaming suddenly, as if she had been gagged, or  something worse. 

Monk and Ham could hear many sounds of rapid movement. Strangely,  the men with the black grease paint

on their faces seemed to be  concentrating in the basement. 

Doc broke open another door. A flight of stairs gaped below. They  were shot at. Monk and Ham streaked

mercy bullets back. Then two  explosive bullets from Ark's unusual gun ripped the stairs to  fragments. 

Doc Savage ran into another room and rolled one of his grenades out  on the floor. It exploded and ripped a

considerable cavity down into  the basement. Much dust was stirred up. Doc waited until it settled.  Then he

dropped down into the basement. 

The basement seemed to be divided off in rooms, and this one in  which they stood was clean and white with

new paint. But its neatness  was not the only interesting feature. 

There were four pedestals in the room, waisthigh affairs rigged of  stout timbers. There was something on

these pedestals, something almost  as large as small automobiles. The exact nature of the objects could  not be

ascertained, due to an enveloping canopy of canvas, which was  tied down with thin manila ropes. 

Doc Savage, crossing the room, veered toward the nearest of the  pedestals, as if to ascertain what the covered

objects were. But the  girl began to scream again, her voice farther away now, and Monk and  Ham grasped

Doc's arm and pointed imperatively. 

They ran on and shoved open a door. Ahead of them was an arched  opening which gave into a tiled passage

that sloped downward for a  short distance, then ran level. They followed it. 

The passage had been constructed a long time ago. It was not a  secret tunnel, or anything of the sort. Rather,

it was an idea of the  original builder of the strange mansion, a method of gaining easy  access to the beach for

swimming purposes, for they came out along the  water's edge, after following the mad clatter of fleeing feet

ahead for  some hundreds of feet. Brilliant sunlight and the moaning of two  automobile motors met them. 

The machines had been in a stuccoed structure once a bathing house,  as ancient as the mansion inshore

among the sand dunes. But both cars  had been pushed out of the building; one was just clearing the  structure,


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and the men were piling in it, as well as loading their  casualties of the recent fighting who had been carried

along 

"Hey!" Monk rapped. "There's the two, prisoners!" 

ONE of the captives was a lean tower of a man with flaming red hair  and an unnaturally pale

faceunnaturally pale for one dwelling in  Florida. He had, moreover, one distinguishing mark: a patch over

one  eye, a black flap held in place by a string or an elastic. 

The other man was young, lighthaired, robust; he had the  appearance of a college boy. He wore

shellrimmed spectacles and a  grimy polo shirt, slacks which had once been white. 

That the pair were captives was indicated positively by the  handcuffs which linked their wrists and by the

manner in which they  were bustled about. 

The girl was with them. In the fastmoving group, she appeared  smaller than ever. One of the blackfaced

men picked her up bodily and  hurtled, her into, the, car. She struggled. Then she caught sight of  Doc Savage

and his two companions. 

She lifted her voice in a frantic call. 

"Go back and search the house!" she called. "You will find their  secret." 

A man struck her. Then he yanked off his felt hat and jammed it  between her jaws. The man's hair, when he

took off the hat, was  straight and not kinky. 

The cars began to move. The last of the men was hauled inside. 

Monk and Ham knew the mercy bullet in their machine pistols would  not penetrate the bodies of the cars, for

the mercy bullets were  fragile shells loaded with the sleepinducing chemical. They dug into  their pockets

and brought out other ammo drums. These bore designating  marks. They selected drums holding solid metal

slugs, clipped them into  their machine pistols, and concentrated on the car tires. 

Bullets dug up sand, made dents in the cars, and tore the tires  visibly; but nothing happened to stem the mad

flight of the cars. 

"Their tires are filled with sponge rubber or something!" Monk  yelled. 

"The sedan bodies are bulletproofed, too!" Ham added. 

Doc Savage was running toward the converted bathing house. He had  sighted another car inside. It was a

shabbylooking machine, a roadster  of a vintage six years back, fitted with a truck body. 

They piled in and Doc trod the starter. The engine stuttered, died,  and finally fired with some semblance of

regularity. 

The beach was a white floor, packed by the waves, a miniature of  Daytona, Mecca of the automobile speed

kings. The delivery car sloughed  through the first few yards of soft sand, then got on the strip of  hardpacked

sand. It began to travel. 


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Monk looked at the speedometer and grinned doubtfully. It was  calibrated to sixty, and the needle was clear

over the mark. 

"I'll bet this bus is breaking its own record," he grunted. 

Fast as they traveled, however, the two cars ahead were leaving  them. They were black dots by now, at times

almost lost in the dancing  heat from the beach. 

Then the distant cars seemed to stop receding, and a third dot  appeared, this one on the sea, a short distance

offshore. 

"A boat," Ham breathed. 

"They're being picked up!" Monk yelled. 

The two sedans became more distinct. The boat took on shapeit was  a lean, black speedster, and it got up on

top of the water and ran away  across the sea almost as fast as the delivery truck was traveling on  the beach. 

Doc and his two men reached the sedans, which had been abandoned  near a mooring at which the speedboat

had been secured. Monk stood on  the beach and made growling noises while Doc examined the cars, noting

license numbers, then inspecting the engines and frames for numeral  identification. 

"Numbers been taken off," he said of the latter. 

"Chemical treatment will bring them out again," Monk offered. 

Doc shook a negative. "These fellows were clever. They used a twist  drill to take the numbers off, and the

drill probably disturbed the  metal fibers until a chemical treatment will have no effect in bringing  the

numbers back." 

The bronze man left the sedans and moved toward the delivery truck,  the engine of which was still running. 

"Where are we going?" Monk demanded. 

Doc, not looking for Monk's lips at the moment, failed to catch the  query and Monk got around in front of

him and repeated it. 

"Remember what the girl said?" Doc asked. 

Monk blinked. "Sureabout going back and searching the house? She  said something about finding their

secret." 

"Exactly," Doc said. 

Chapter 5. THE SURPRISE IN SKIRTS

THEY did not return by way of the tunnel to the dilapidated mansion  among the dunes, but left the truck on

the beach and walked over the  sand, wedged through palmetto clumps, and came out near the wall. They

scrambled over the barrier without much difficulty. 


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"What'll we look for first?" Monk wanted to know. 

Doc Savage caught the words; his ears seemed to be recovering from  the temporary deafness inflicted by the

explosion. 

"Remember those pedestals in the basement room?" he asked. "They  supported bulky objects covered with

canvas. We might as well examine  them first." 

Monk nodded his small head. "I been wonderin' what them things  were." 

They made a circuit of the mansion, hoping to find some of the  blackfaced men who had been overcome In

the fight, and who might have  been left behind. But they located no one. There was profound silence  from

within the house. 

They entered the building from the rear, coming into a kitchen.  Adjoining was a pantry, stocked with food.

Beyond was a larger room,  with an array of folding canvas cots and plain, coarse blankets. 

Ham counted the cots, absently numbering them off with his sword  cane. 

"More than a dozen men have been quartered here," he decided. "I  wonder what they've been up to." 

They found the basement stairs and went down. A moment later, they  were face to face with the stout

timbered pedestals which supported the  mysterious objects covered by canvas. There were electric lights in

the  cellar. Doc found a button, thumbed it, and the globes whitened. 

Above each of the pedestals, they now noted, there was a  funnelshaped affair of sheet metal, and from each

of these a pipe ran  outdoors; they might have been installed to conduct away rising fumes. 

Doc Savage stepped forward, untied the ropes securing one of the  canvas covers, and wrenched it clear. Then

he stood stockstill and  eyed what was revealed. His trilling came into existence momentarily,  but it had a

disgusted quality. 

He had uncovered nothing at all except a wood frame hastily thrown  together from shaggy, unpainted

timbersa frame obviously designed to  support only the canvas and make it seem that something was

beneath. 

They examined the other three pedestals hurriedly. All were duds. 

"Jove!" Ham murmured. "Looks as if they were trying to fool  somebody!" 

Doc Savage pointed out certain bolt holes in the pedestal  framework, together with indentations which had

obviously been made by  weighty machinery. 

"There was something on these supports," he said. 

AN hour later, they neared a filling station on the sandy,  littleused road which led toward the house among

the dunes. They had  searched the old mansion completely, but futilely, finding nothing, not  even an

indication of the name of those occupying the place. 

Doc Savage had repaired his own appearance to some extent, having  discarded his torn coat and shirt and

washed the gore from his  features. He was, however, still disheveled in appearance, and to avoid  arousing


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unnecessary curiosity, he rode in the rear of the touring car  they had rented to drive out to the old mansion,

and which they had  picked up again after searching the house. 

Monk, at the wheel, pulled into the filling station and a  pleasantfaced young man began filling the tank. He

proved to be a  conversational soul, either because he was lonesome, or because the  homelyfaced Monk was

an individual to whom people seemed to want to  talk. 

"Been to Hyman Space's place, I guess," the attendant hazarded  genially. 

"You mean the old house among the dunes? Monk asked. 

The attendant nodded, grinning. "Not thinking of buying land out  there, are you?" 

Monk snorted. "In that goat pasture? Not us!" 

The, attendant laughed. "So you got a whiff of the smell! That's  lucky! Some days, the smell ain't around." 

"Smell" Monk squinted, realizing he was uncovering something by  pure accident. "What do you figure it

is?" 

"Search me," said the filling station man. "But you see old Hyman  Space, Professor Casson Adams and Ray

Wood." 

"Who are Adams and Wood?" Monk put in. 

"Hyman Space's hired men," the attendant replied. "They're all  doing some kind of work down there. Nobody

knows what it is. You see,  that old place in the sand dunes was built during the boom and the  fellow who

built it died and nobody ever took it over until Hyman Space  bought it a couple of years ago. He told

somebody be wanted to work  where he wouldn't bother anybody.... How many gallons?" 

"Ten," Monk told him. "What was Space's racket?" 

The attendant began to run gasoline into the tank. 

"Search me," he said. "Hyman Space and the others are queer ducks.  Don't mix much. Lately, they've had a

lot of Negroes workin' around  there. They don't use this road since the sand drifted over it. They  drive along

the beach. So I don't know much about 'em." 

"There's a girl, isn't there?" Monk asked. 

"Old man Space's daughter." The attendant grinned. "A pippin!" 

Monk put more questions, but the attendant seemed to have told all  he knew. Monk drove out and headed the

truck toward Miami. 

Ham juggled his sword cane absently and complained. "We seem to be  stuck. There's something queer going

on, and we should do something  about it. That man in the trunk was murdered because he was trying to  reach

us, unless I miss my guess. But we're stuck." 

Monk started to nod in gloomy agreement, then started violently and  looked back at Doc Savage. 


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"Blazes!" he grunted. "Did I just have an original thought, or did  you think of it first?" 

"You mean about examining that red material on the false teeth of  the man who was killed in the trunk?" Doc

asked. 

Monk sighed. "I knew I hadn't thought of it first." 

THE Hotel Biscayneville had the air of a place where things were  happening. Two police cars stood in front

of the hostelry, along with  other machines bearing placards with the word, "Press." 

Uniformed policemen stood about, along with other individuals who  were unmistakably officers, although

not in uniform. 

Doc Savage, seeing evidence of excitement as Monk started to wheel  their rented car around the corner,

snapped orders to continue straight  ahead. Monk pulled in to the curb and parked near an alley which ran  past

the rear of the hotel. 

Doc got out, directed his two men to wait, and drifted down the  alley, concealed by a stuccoed fence and

numerous grapefruit and orange  trees. 

A policeman and a newspaperman were talking on the other side of  the fence. Doc got close enough to catch

their words. The bronze man's  ears were rapidly returning to normal. 

"it here from New York," the officer was saying. "It was a break  that we found it in his baggage, what I

mean. He probably figured on  getting rid of it tonight. But it just happened that the maid came in  to tidy up

the room and was moving the trunk and let it drop, and it  came open and she saw the body. 

"Boy, did she let out a bleat! She scared an old guy in the next  room who was shaving, and they had to take

him to the hospital to sew  up the cut he gave himself. How's that last for humaninterest angle,  huh?" 

"You think Doc Savage brought this boy from New York in the trunk?"  asked the newspaper reporter. 

"Sure!" said the cop. "But we'll know for certain when we find out  how long the guy had been dead!" 

"You are going to arrest Doc Savage?" questioned the journalist. 

"Boywatch us!" 

"Doc Savage has a reputation." 

"So what?" The officer laughed. "Doc Savage picked a wrong town to  pull something like this in. His rep will

make it just that much  tougher on him." 

"Meaning what?" 

"The chief of police is out for another term, and the district  attorney wants to build himself a name, so he can

take a whirl at the  governorship," the policeman explained. "They've both been looking for  something big.

They'll land on this Doc Savage hard. Orders are already  out to arrest him on sight. Why, we've got enough

evidence to hang the  guy right now." 

"Where is the body that was in the trunk?" the reporter asked. 


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"Down at the morgue," said the other. 

Doc Savage, not waiting to hear more, eased back to the car and  entered the driver's seat. He got the car in

motion before he spoke to  his two companions. Then he explained tersely what had happened. 

"So we're jammed up with the police here!" Monk groaned. "But  they'll find out the fellow was killed only

recently, and not in New  York." 

"Which will not clear us, necessarily," Doc replied. "We've got to  help ourselves." 

"Where is the body?" Ham asked. 

"In the morgue," Doc told him. 

"We'd better go there and see if we can get the false teeth with  that red stuff on them," Ham said. 

"That is our next move," Doc agreed. 

THE morgue, in keeping with the majority of Miami municipal  buildings, was a new structure, neat and with

just the proper touch of  architectural sobriety. It stood on a street which was comparatively  free of traffic. 

Doc Savage parked near the middle of the block, leaving the front  wheels of the touring car just the legal

distance from a fire hydrant,  a simple precaution for making sure the space ahead of the car would  remain

clear for a quick getaway. 

Before they got out of the machine they noted two policemen idling  in front of the morgue. 

"They'll recognize us if we try to walk in," Monk grumbled. 

"Wait here," Doc said, and got out of the machine. 

The bronze man kept parked cars between himself and the two  policemen on the morgue steps, and worked

down the street; then, when  the two officers were not looking in his direction, he angled swiftly  across the

sidewalk. The lee of a flowering hedge received him. There  was no activity around the rear of the morgue, no

sound except the  distant traffic noises and the nearer sound of insects. 

The rear windows of the morgue were tall, and barred, prison  fashion, with stout upright rods. Doc Savage

looked through the window.  Inside were portable slabs on rolling tables, around the wall an array  of

cubbyholes for the storage of bodies. There was no sign of life in  the room. 

Doc Savage brought a small metal tube from his pocket and unscrewed  the cap. There was a glass phial

inside. This was glassstoppered, and  to the stopper was affixed a glass rod. When he pulled the rod out, the

contents of the bottlea viscous, vilecolored liquid clung to the rod. 

The bronze man smeared the stuff in a ring around the bases of two  of the bars, making a thick deposit.

Clambering up on the sill as  quietly as possible, he coated a section near the tops of the same two  bars. After

that, he waited, listening. 

The stuff he had put on the bars was turning an intense black, and  giving off biliouslooking vapor. 


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Doc Savage's ears had regained most of their normal sensitivity,  and he could catch sounds inside the

morgue. They were small  noisesvoices, the click of instruments. No doubt the autopsy was in  progress. 

After waiting some moments, Doc Savage gripped one of the two bars  he had treated and gave it a yank. It

seemed to have rotted magically  where he had applied the stuff from the bottle. The bar broke with a  grating

noise. 

Doc listened intently, heard no indications of alarm, then yanked  the second bar. When both were broken off,

he dropped them on the  ground. The substance in the bottle had been a special acid preparation  of great

strength. 

The building was new and the window came up easily, noiselessly, at  his tugging. He dropped inside. The

composition floor made quiet easily  attained. Beyond was a corridor with doors opening off. It was from one

of these that came the voices, the sounds of instruments. 

Doc used a small periscope device, the barrel of which was somewhat  smaller than a lead pencil, and which

was not likely to be noticed. 

The body of Professor Casson Adams, entirely nude, was on an  operating table under the scrutiny of a

medical examiner and an  assistant. Three other bulky fellows standing by were evidently  policemen in plain

clothes. 

The dead man's garments were arrayed on a table near by, each  identified by a neat tag. 

DOC SAVAGE drew back and produced a flat case almost identical with  the one which had held the

explosive grenades. This one contained what  at first glance might have been mistaken for rather yellowish

glass  marbles; but these, closer inspection would have shown, were glass  bulbs filled with a liquid. 

Doc tossed two of them into the room where the examination was  taking place. 

The medical examiner heard the bulb strike and shatter. A dropped  bird's egg would have made a similar

noise. The man squinted, saw the  tiny cluster of gossamery glass, noted the liquid about it that seemed  to be

vanishing magically, and took a step forward. 

He seemed to become tired; he emitted a loud sigh and lay down  heavily on the floor. He began to snore. 

The other men in the room stared. Then they also laid down and  appeared to go soundly to sleep. 

The glass containers had held an anaesthetic gas which produced  quick but harmless unconsciousness. The

men would awaken in the course  of time, none the worse for their experience. 

Doc Savage entered the room hastily. He found the false teeth and  pocketed them. 

He found the bullet which had killed Professor Adams. He pocketed  that, too, after the briefest of hesitations.

Then he wheeled and  started for the door. 

A telephone on a small desk to one side of the room began ringing. 

Doc Savage veered for the instrument. If it kept on ringing some  one might come to see why it was not

answered. He picked up the  receiver and said, "Yes?" 


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"Is the medical examiner there?" asked a harsh voice. 

"He is out for the moment," Doc saidvery truthfully. 

"Okay," said the voice. "This is the skipper. We just found a gun  under the mattress in Doc Savage's hotel

room. We want to check it with  the bullet that killed that guy. We think it's the murder gun, and if  it is, we've

got Doc Savage clinched with this." 

"Did you look for Doc Savage's finger prints on the gun?" Doc  asked. 

"They had been wiped off," said the other. "And who the hell are  you to start telling the homicide bureau how

to run its business?" 

"I will take care of the bullet which killed the man," Doc said,  and hung up. 

THE bronze man removed the bullet from his coat pocket and  carefully inserted it in the watch pocket of his

trousers, where it was  not as likely to become lost. Then he eased out of the rear window of  the morgue,

pausing to dampen a cloth with chemical and remove his  finger prints from everything he had touched. 

The two policemen were matching pennies. Doc got into the car  without their taking note of it. Monk and

Ham looked questioningly. 

"Our blackfaced friends have been working," Doc advised. 

Monk wet the edges of his large mouth. "Yeah?" 

Doc told them about the gun. 

"Framing us!" Monk gritted. "They sent one of their gang back to  hide the murder gun in your room." 

"Obviously," Doc agreed. "But we have the murder bullet, so their  trickery will not do them much good." 

The bronze man leaned over to loosen the emergency brake. He rarely  showed surprise, but now he

straightened suddenly, and a strange  expression came over his metallic features. 

Monk let his jaw down until it threatened to come off his face. Ham  all but dropped his sword cane. 

A young woman was walking rapidly toward their car. When she saw  that they observed her, she made a

small gesture with one hand,  requesting that they wait. 

"Whew!" Monk breathed. "The last person I expected to see!" 

Without another word, he glanced at the policemen, saw they were  concerned only with each other's pennies,

then slid over into the rear  seat, making a place in the front seat beside Doc for the girl. 

The young woman got into the car. 

"Hurry!" she said. "I'll tell you where to drive." 

"Miss Space!" Monk exploded. "How did you get away from them?" 


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The girl seemed smaller than ever. She wrung her hands nervously,  her eyes remained widely open when they

were not blinking, and her  whole figure seemed drawn, tense. 

She did not answer, and Monk questioned her again: "That gang with  the black grease paint on their

faceshow did you escape?" 

The girl had a small hand bag. She held it tightly. 

"I jumped out of their car in front of a bank, and they were afraid  of the bank guard," she said rapidly. "Turn

to the right here. And  drive faster." 

Doc Savage looked at the clock on the instrument panel. Then he  absently dropped a hand into the pocket

where he had placed the false  teeth. 

"How did you know we were here?" he asked. 

"I did not know it," she said. "I came there to give the alarm to  the police. You see, the body of Professor

Adams"she paused,  shuddered, whitened a little"the body was to be taken from the  police." 

"Why?" Doc asked. 

"He is the third man who tried to get to you," the girl said  swiftly. "The other two tried it from the swamp.

They failed. They had  with them a small lump of substance which looks like red sealing wax.  They were

trying to get it to you. Professor Adams had some of the same  substance." 

"Huh!" Monk exploded. "The red stuff sticking to his false teeth!" 

"Then you got it!" gasped the girl. 

"Sure!" Monk told her. "Doc's got it in his pocket." 

DOC SAVAGE asked, "What is the red substance?" 

"Turn to the left here," directed the girl. "When you see a large  sandwich stand on the left, turn into the next

road branching off to  the north." 

Doc swung the car around the corner, said, "Answer my question,  please." 

"I do not know what the red material is," said the girl. 

Ham, his sword cane across his knees, rapped, "Young lady, you will  have to clarify that statement." 

The girl went through the gestures of wringing her hands, but still  kept a tight grip on the hand bag. 

"It's so fantastic," she said wildly. "You'll understand it all as  soon as I can get you to where my father and

Ray Wood are being held.  They'll explain. You see, if you have the red material, you'll have  something that

will enable you to solve the whole problem. They knew  that. That's why they've been trying to get it to you.

We all carry  some of it on our persons. I had some in my ring. Remember when I  threw, the ring at you?" 

"Yes," Doc said. "Your father and Ray Wood are the other two  prisoners you were talking about? Your father

has the patch over an  eye." 


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She nodded emphatically. "Of course. I tried to get to them back at  that house in the sand dunes, and I was

seized." 

"How many men holding them?" Monk asked. 

The girl seemed to hesitate. "Several," she admitted. "Have you got  guns with you?" 

Monk exhibited his superfirer. "Sure." 

"Oh!" The girl stared at the gun. "Those men who have the black  paint on their faces have been keeping close

check on you. I heard them  say they had doctored the ammunition drums in your baggage. You had  better

examine your guns." 

Monk frowned and clipped the magazine drum out of his supermachine  pistol. Ham, his expression worried,

followed suit. An instant later,  both were examining the cartridges. 

The girl slid over to the far side of the seat, away from Doc  Savage. She opened her bag with a snaky

swiftness and flashed a flat  automatic pistol into view. 

"Pull over to the side of the road and stop the car," she gritted.  "And don't make any funny moves!" 

Doc, his metallic features inscrutable, did as she directed. 

IN the rear, Monk and Ham showed the girl open, startled mouths,  then expressions of great disgust. In their

hands, the unloaded  superfirers were quite useless. 

"The hussy!" Monk growled. "She worked that like a charm." 

"Sit very still," the girl directed Doc Savage. 

Then she reached over and with great care, keeping the gun pointed  directly at his head, inserted a hand in his

coat pocket. She brought  out the false teeth in their wrapping of handkerchief, and unwound  enough of the

cloth to see the white artificial molars glinting through  a crack in the fabric. 

Doc moved slightly. 

"Don't make the mistake of thinking I won't shoot!" the girl said  wildly, and jutted her gun. 

"Careful Doc!" Ham gasped. 

The girl, without looking closer at the false teeth, but feeling  the outlines to make sure she had them, backed

out of the car, keeping  her gun ready, menacing. 

Down the road, several men had appeared. They were fellows of  average size, dressed in a manner designed

not to attract attention.  There was one exceptionthe man who led the party. He wore golf  knickers which

were tremendously full for his lean shanks, and he had a  head which was huge and entirely bare of hair. 

All of the men had black faces and hands 

With her automatic, the girl shot holes in the rear tires of the  car. They were standing on a dirt road, and the

bursting of the tires  stirred up clouds of dust. The girl whirled and ran, going to meet the  approaching party 


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Down the road, the blackfaced individuals were shouting. One voice  stood out: that of the leader. It was a

fluted piping. 

"The lying wench!" Monk rasped. "She was working with them all of  the time!" 

He clipped the ammo drum into his machine pistol, leaned out of the  car, but failed to shoot when a bullet,

fired by the blackfaced man,  ripped past his head. He blasted the car door open and landed in the  ditch,

where there was partial shelter. Doc Savage and Ham joined him  almost simultaneously. 

They could distinguish the words of the shrillvoiced, hairless  manArk, if that was his name. He was

criticizing the girl. 

"Why didn't you hold them until we got there, you fool?" he  shrilled. 

"I was afraid!" she shrieked back. 

Monk opened up with his machine pistol. Its bullfiddle blast  brought down two of the attacking party, and the

rest hastily took to  the ditch on the opposite side of the road. 

Not far away, down an adjacent road, a siren began wailing. Its  nature was unmistakable. A police car. A

prowling patrol car must have  heard the uproar and was coming to investigate. 

The blackfaced men showed no desire to mix it with the police.  They got out of their ditch, scuttled over

and got the two who had been  dropped by the mercy bullets, and retreated. Doc and his men tried to  delay

them. They could do little against the menace of bullets. 

The blackfaced ones had a car hidden down the road, in a clump of  frees. They got to it, and the machine

leaped away. 

An instant later, the patrol car, siren wailing, hove in sight and  coasted forward, the two occupants, guns in

hand, intent on learning  what had happened. 

"It's in the can for us if they pick us up," Monk muttered. 

"Exactly," Doc agreed, and led their retreat. Crawling through  weeds until they reached a grapefruit orchard,

then running. 

The two patrolmen in the car did not catch sight of them, and after  a quarter of an hour of running, they

slackened their pace slightly. 

"Is my face red!" Monk complained. "Think of that little doll of a  dame putting it over on us and getting the

teeth and that red stuff  away from us!" 

Doc Savage halted and began carefully turning his coat pocket  inside out. Before long, flakes of reddish

substance began coming to  light. 

"Blazes!" Monk exploded. "How did" 

"Remember when she said she escaped from them by jumping out of  their car in front of a bank guard?" Doc

asked. 


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"Sure. But what" 

"A little matter of time," Doc explained, "The banks closed about  the time we were at that old mansion

among the sand dunes. She could  not have found a bank open, and that made me suspicious. There was a  coin

in my pocket. I used it to scrape the red stuff, or rather, part  of it, off the teeth, just on the chance that she was

up to something." 

Monk grinned. "Then our next move is to analyze that stuff?" 

"It is." 

"How long do you think it'll take?" Monk asked. 

"Depends on just how simple a compound it is," Doc told him. 

Chapter 6. RED FLAKES AND DEATH

ON his person, Doc Savage had only such unusual gadgets as he  always carried when in actionnumerous

small contrivances which had  gotten him out of many jams, and enabled him to accomplish remarkable

results. He also carried a respectable sum of money. 

Ham for his part, had only his supermachine pistol, his sword cane,  and a phial of the drug which he put on

the tip of the sword cane to  make its touch conducive to instant unconsciousness. He had, too, a  small amount

of money. 

Monk had his machine pistol, but no money, for he discovered he had  lost his billfold somewhere. 

This comprised the extent of their equipment. 

"What're we gonna do for instruments, to analyze this red stuff  with?" Monk pondered aloud. 

That proved to be a problem. They visited furtively, the vicinity  of the Hotel Biscayneville and found that

their baggage had been  removed by the police to some unknown storage. Asking its return would  be futile

and foolhardy. They would be arrested on sight. 

Copies of the afternoon papers told them that. It was in twoinch  boldface on the front pages: "DOC

SAVAGE WANTED!" The famous man of  bronze, adventurer and philanthropist from New York had been

accused of  murdering Professor Casson Adams, noted physicist. 

Included in the story was a notation to the effect that Professor  Casson Adams, the murdered man, had been a

friend of H. U. Summervane  Lawmer, who had recently vanished after taking off in his private plane  in South

Carolina. 

The South Carolina police had been telegraphed to check up on the  possibility that Doc Savage might have

had a hand in the death of H. U.  Summervane Lawmer, too. 

"They're not overlooking any bets to get publicity," Ham said  grimly. 

"What're we gonna do for a laboratory to analyze this red stuff?"  Monk demanded. "Dang it! The cops have

got Habeas, I'll bet." 


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Doc Savage called, by telephone, the head of a concern engaged in  the manufacture of certain chemical

products. The concern was actually  one of a chain scattered over the country, and differed from most

industrial corporations in that the employees worked for a share in the  profits, rather than on salaries. 

The concern was owned by an individual who took as his return only  a share equal to the salary of the local

head. It chanced that the  owner had never visited the plant, but his identity was naturally not  unknown. 

Doc Savage requested use of the plant laboratory, and gave his  name. He received permission with alacrity, a

fact which did not come  entirely as a surprise, because it happened that he was the silent  owner. The public

did not know this fact. 

Doc and Monk went to work in the chemical concern laboratory. Monk,  although those who knew him freely

admitted he was one of the greatest  of industrial chemists, knew quite positively that he was not Doc  Savage's

equal. Doc had a manner of studying with incredible  concentration. And he had spent most of his life in

studying different  subjects. 

Ham stood by. He could do little more than go out occasionally,  taking care that he was not seen by

policemen, and get newspapers. Thus  the night progressed. 

THE nine o'clock editions of the newspapers that evening came out  with a new development. The story about

Doc Savage occupied first  place, but the other ran it a close second. 

Leslie Thorne had vanished. 

That was what the headlines said. At first glance, the name of  Leslie Thorne probably meant no more than

any other twelve letters in  boldface type to the majority of the citizens of Miami, and the winter  visitors.

Neither did it mean much to the newspaper editors and  writers, but it was featured because the police seemed

to be making an  effort to keep it quiet, and, furthermore, high government officials  were on their way from

Washington to investigate. No one, stated the  newspapers, would say who Leslie Thorne was. 

Leslie Thorne had been taking a walk just before sundown, and  several persons had seen something which

looked like a mild fall of red  snow down the beach. This was highly unusual. Many had hurried to

investigate. It was then that it had come out that Leslie Thorne had  walked behind a sand dune, and it was

behind this dune that the red  snowfall had centered. The red snow had melted almost instantly. 

Leslie Thorne had vanished. He was not behind the dune. Where he  had gone, no one knew. He had melted

into the air, it seemed. 

Leslie Thorne, according, to the newspapers, had registered at a  Miami hotel, giving Kirksville, Missouri, as

his home, and had remarked  to various individuals, including the hotel clerk, that he kept a shoe  store in the

Missouri town. 

Long distance calls by the newspapers had developed that Leslie  Thorne did have a shoe store in Kirksville,

but peculiarly enough, he  had been in Kirksville for only short intervals during the past few  years. A hired

manager ran the store. 

Ham read this through, then went into the room where Doc Savage and  Monk were working with grimeyed

concentration among test tubes and  other analyzing apparatus. 

"Know any one by the name of Leslie Thorne?" he asked. 


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Doc Savage looked at the front page. 

"No," he said, "I never heard of Leslie Thorne." 

"He must be some one of importance," Ham hazarded. "It says in the  papers that the government is sending

special investigators down from  Washington. And what about that red snow?" 

"Snowas hot as it has been here?" Monk snorted. "Don't be a  problem child." 

But Doc Savage said, "There was red snow, and Leslie Thorne  disappeared?" 

"Exactly," Ham said dryly. "Doc, do you suppose red snow has  anything to do with this red stuff you and

Monk are endeavoring to  analyze?" 

Doc Savage did not answer. Instead, he asked a question. 

"Have you been following the newspapers lately?" 

"No," said Ham. "I used to read the comic strips, but that was  before Monk came along." 

"Several prominent men have disappeared," Doc stated. "Their  disappearances were in widely separated

sections of the country. Two of  the stories, if I recall correctly, contained small references to  persons who

claimed they had seen red snow. These red snow stories were  not believed because those who saw them were

not persons noted for  their veracity." 

"Queer," Ham murmured. "Were these prominent men engaged in the  same lines?" 

"No," Doc replied. "And as far as is known, they were not even  acquainted with, each other." 

The midnight papers came out with a startling development on the  Leslie Thorne case. Leslie Thorne, official

Washington had admitted,  somewhat reluctantly, was just one of the names which the man used.

Furthermore, Leslie Thorne was one of the most dramatic figures on the  American scene, and at the same

time one of the least known. 

There was a story in itself back of the publishing of the story of  who Leslie Thorne was. It seemed a

congressman, a confirmed pacifist,  and a fellow who liked to see his name in print, knew who Leslie Thorne

was and had chosen this moment to spring it, along with some other  startling information. 

It had been long maintained that the United States had no organized  spy corps, or intelligence service, in

operation. The congressman  declared such a group had been in operation for some time. 

Leslie Thorne was the chief of this new United States intelligence  unit. 

DOC SAVAGE and Monk were still working when Ham brought in the  newspapers containing that story,

and they paused only to go over the  yarn briefly. 

"Looks like something big was underfoot," Ham offered. 

Doc said nothing. 

Monk growled, "But what's behind these killings? The victims have  no connection with each other." 


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"One was a United States senator, one an undersecretary in the war  department and this Leslie Thorne was

the chief of an intelligence unit  for the government," Doc said. "That makes the three of the men  connected

with the government." 

"Uhhuh" Monk scratched his bullet of a head. "But take the others.  One was an airplane manufacturer, one a

college professor, one a  banker, one a mechanical engineer. What do you make out of that list?" 

"A headache," Ham said. 

An hour later, Doc Savage went to the telephone and put in a long  distance call to New York City, requesting

the number which was listed  in the name of Patricia Savage, his cousin. 

There were three other members of the group of five remarkable  assistants which Doc Savage maintained, but

they were abroad at the  moment. All of the five were men famous in their particular lines. One  of the missing

trio was an electrical engineer, one a civil engineer,  and the third a famed archeologist and geologist. Their

work often took  them abroad. 

Patricia Savage was not exactly a member of Doc's group of five  aides. She would have liked to have been.

Pat loved excitement, danger  and the thrills attendant to an association with Doc Savage. But Doc  had turned

a thumb down on her joining his crew, maintaining the life  was too dangerous. However, when occasion

demanded, he did employ Pat's  efficient aid. 

Pat was voluble when he got her on the telephone. 

"I'm having my private plane tuned up at the airport," she said.  "I'll be down there before morning." 

"What's wrong?" Doc asked. 

"I've been reading the newspapers," Pat told him. "You're in a  mess, as usual. And I want some of it." 

"Nothing doing," Doc told her. "I want you to visit my laboratory  there in New York, and look through the

storeroom until you find a  large metal case marked AN32. Send it by air express to the Magnolia  Chemical

Products Company in Miami. I am speaking from there now. See  that it gets on a plane tonight." 

"I'll bring it down," Pat said. 

"You will not," Doc told her. 

"What a friend you are," Pat complained. "All right. I'll see that  it gets on a plane. What is it, anyway?" 

"Apparatus for advanced analysis," Doc said. "We have a substance  here and we want to know what it is.

With the apparatus here in the  chemical company laboratory, we cannot make sufficiently comprehensive

tests." 

"Behave yourself," Pat said, and that ended the conversation. 

Ham squinted at Doc Savage and Monk. 

"So you can't find out what that red stuff is?" he asked. 


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"Not with the apparatus available here," Doc said. "The compound  seems to be something of a highly unusual

nature." 

DOC SAVAGE and Monk busied themselves straightening out the  apparatus which they had used, and in

cleaning tubes and retorts. 

"What are we going to do now?" Ham wanted to know. 

"There is little we can do until the analytical apparatus comes  from New York and we find the nature of this

red substance," Doc Savage  explained. "No one knows we are here except the local head of the  chemical

concern, so we are comparatively safe from police  interference. It is just as well for us to stay here." 

They had not used more than a third of the red substance which had  been on Professor Casson Adams's

artificial teeth. That portion which  remained, Doc Savage inserted in a small glass bottle, which was in  turn

padded with cotton and encased in a wooden cylinder of the type  which sometimes encloses pill bottles. Doc

pocketed this. 

After that, they slept a littleDoc Savage soundly, Monk and Ham  not so soundly. There was a lagoon

somewhere near by, and frogs and  water insects kept up something of a clamor. It was very warm. For

perhaps an hour, thunder whooped and gobbled in the distance, far out  over the Atlantic, and at one time

distant lightning was prominent  enough to flicker redly on the laboratory walls. But the storm receded

without coming close enough to even affect the strong breeze which had  blown the day before and continued

to blow throughout the night. 

At dawn, Doc Savage arose, and without speaking, began to go  through the amazing routine of exercises

which he had not neglected  since childhood. The exercises were responsible for his amazing  physical

development and the sharpness of his senses. They consisted of  rituals for development of muscles, these not

differing greatly from  the accepted methods of physical culturists, except that they were done  without

apparatus, by a conscious tensing of one set of sinews against  another. 

Doc was near the end of his routine, when he broke it off abruptly.  He listened. 

"A visitor," he said. 

He whipped toward the door. But before he reached it, the panel  smacked open. 

A portly, redfaced man came inside with dramatic abruptness. He  had an upstanding shock of gray hair, a

smoothly shaven face. His mouth  was large, flexible, his eyes large and merry. His suit was gray,  neatly

pressed, and there were lodge buttons on both lapels. A large  gold chain spanned his vest, which was of a

lighter color than the gray  suit, and from it dangled three other lodge emblems. 

He held a gray derby in front of his round stomach with one hand.  He lowered the derby. It had concealed a

nickeled revolver. He waggled  the gun playfully. 

"The top of the morning, gentlemen, the top of the morning," he  said bombastically. "I trust you would not be

too surprised if you  found yourselves put under arrest." 

Chapter 7. THE CORPSE OF DUST

MONK said no word, but glided sidewise, making almost no noise for  all of his apish bulk, and looked


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through the window. Then he turned  around. 

"Noisy, here, seems to have come alone," he said. 

"A hundred and twenty million people dwell in these United States,  if we are to believe the estimate of

statisticians," murmured the  portly man who wore all of the lodge emblems. "A number of people so  vast as

to be almost beyond the grasp of any mind but one trained to  figures, a truly gargantuan population, living in

a civilization of  infinite complexity. 

"Yes, a remarkable hodgepodge, if I may say so. Aren't we like ants  in a hill so fast that it defies the

imaginationbig ants and little  ants, all engaged in tasks which seem to us important, but which, after  all,

may be of no more importance, as far as the fate of the universe  is concerned, than the machinations of the

formicadae, of which I just  spoke. Amazing, isn't it?" 

"What is remarkable?" Ham asked. 

"The fact that I was able to find you," smiled the newcomer. "But,  believe me, it was a task not without its

difficulties. But, you see, I  had my sources. Yes, my sources. It required some hours on the long  distance

telephonewhich, by the way, is a truly remarkable invention,  if I may say so. But, by telephoning, I learned

Doc Savage was the  angel, so to speak, behind this chemical company, and so I thought it  might be well if I

came out here. And it was well, as it has  developed." 

Monk rolled his small eyes and said, "Johnny Windbag is the name,  huh?" 

The other smiled, shook his head above the shiny revolver. 

"O. Garfew Beech is the name," he said with machine gun rapidity.  "Of the Arkansas Beeches, it gives me no

great pride to admit. You see,  my grandfather was hanged for, let us say, purloining a span of mules  which

were the legal appurtenances of a neighbor by the name of" 

"Cut it out!" Monk yelled suddenly. "You give me the big jeebies!" 

"O. Garfew Beech is the name," repeated the vociferous stranger.  "Call me Fluency Beech. My friends do." 

Ham asked, "Cop?" 

"Oh, no!" "Fluency" Beech lifted his brows and shook his head  violently. "My affiliations with the law are

spiritual only, as becomes  a righteous citizen who abides, or tries to abide with all of the  statutes which our

good, if sometimes impetuous legislators" 

"All right." Monk rolled his eyes again. "What do you want?" 

"Succor," said fluency Beech. 

Monk misunderstood. "Who's a sucker, you bag of wind?" 

"Succor," Beech spelled. "Aid, assistance, help, support,  coadjuvancy, defense" 

"Okay." Monk looked pained. "Then why the gun?" 


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"Precaution only, my good fellow." Fluency Beech stowed his shiny  revolver in a pocket. "I did not know

who I would find here, you  understand." 

"And why that crack about an arrest, when you came through the  door?" Monk growled. 

"A joke, merely," smirked Beech. "I am a great jokester. You will  have to get used to that, my good fellow." 

Doc Savage had taken no part in the conversationit was habitual  with the bronze man that he said little, for

he had long ago learned  that more information could be gained about an individual by  observation. Words in

the mouth of an expert liar can be very  convincing. But Doc spoke now. 

"What kind of help do you want from us?" he asked. 

"Help of the most personal kind," said fluency Beech. "I do not  want to die. Indeed, I abhor the thought of

death. I hope you will make  it unnecessary for me to die." 

MONK frowned at Beech and said, "See if you can put it in small  words, minus the lectures." 

Fluency Beech smiled. "Words are my weakness, my love, my  dissipation. If they gall you, I am sorry. You

see, words are also my  profession. I am a politician, although at present I might be  considered a benedict,

being divorced from the major parties of Florida  politics. To be more detailed, I have started my own

partythe National  Providence and Level Deal Party, the platform of which" 

"All right, all right!" Monk growled. "I'm sorry I mentioned it. Go  ahead." 

Fluency Beech whipped an envelope from inside his coat. 

"Here," he said. "Read." 

Doc Savage took the envelope, extracted a card which had been  folded once, so as to cover the writing inside.

There were only a few  words: 

My Dear Beech: 

You know what happened to Leslie Thorne. We want to talk to you  about that. You will meet our agent at the

corner of Little Palm Street  and Cuba Boulevard at seven o'clock in the morning. Or would you rather

experience the same thing that Leslie Thorne experienced? You will rub  a finger over the black skin of our

agent and make sure the black  grease paint smells of roses. 

Another Black Face 

"Melodramatic and slightly ridiculous, don't you think?" Fluency  Beech asked dryly. "Black paint that smells

of roses. Can you imagine?  Why, even the imagination of" 

"What do you know about Leslie Thorne's death?" Doc asked. 

Beech shivered. He took his gun out of his pocket again. 

"It was horrible," he said. "It was also impossible. I thought I  was going crazy." 

"Explain," Doc requested, and only the imperative rap of his  unusual voice conveyed his impatience. 


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"I chanced to be near this Leslie Thorne when the Red Snow fell,"  explained Beech. "After" 

"It was actually red snow?" Doc put in. 

"That describes it more accurately than anything else," said Beech.  "The stuff fell in flakes. I was not close

enough to touch any of the  flakes. But they melted when they hit the hot sand, or seemed to. Of  course, there

were queer aspects. The flakes did make a reddish liquid,  but that evaporated and did not leave the sand

stained. That is, this  is what happened as nearly as I could" 

"What about Leslie Thorne?" Doc interposed. 

"I heard him screaming," Beech elaborated. "You see, he was on the  other side of the dune, where the Red

Snow was falling thickest. And he  shrieked. He shrieked terribly. I was scared at first, but mustering my

courage, I dashed over the dune, and what do you think I saw?" 

"Will you get to the point, guy?" Monk growled. 

"I saw Leslie Thorne, or it must have been Leslie Thorne," Beech  went on, as longwindedly as before. "He

was standing there. Just  standing there. He was perfectly rigid. Thenyou may not believe this,  but I swear I

saw it, yes, sir, I swear I saw itone of Leslie Thorne's  arms fell off!" 

Fluency Beech paused for effect. 

"Then Leslie Thorne himself fell over," he continued. "The man just  upset, as if he were a stiff statue which

some one had given a shove.  And there was a puff of reddish material. It looked like dust, but I  don't really

know what it was. Well, believe me, I stood there, half  paralyzed with surprise, and stared. I believe any other

man would have  done the same thing in my shoes." 

"You took a good look," Monk said sourly. "Then what?" 

"I went, naturally, to investigate," Beech advised. "I must confess  that I did not rush in wildly. I was a bit, let

us say, jittery. All of  the time I was approaching, this reddish dust was blowing away. It  seemed to mix with

the air and vanish completely. And when I got to  where Leslie Thorne had fallenyou see, he was down

behind a small  ridge of sand where I could not see him after he fellwhat do you  think?" 

No one said anything. 

Beech shrugged. "Leslie Thorne was gone! There was nothing there.  Nothing! Absolutely nothing!" 

DOC SAVAGE said no word to thatand Monk and Ham, looking as if  they half expected the bronze man's

unusual trilling sound to come into  being, seemed disappointed and a little surprised when it did not. 

Monk moved a little, putting himself slightly behind Fluency Beech,  then lifted a hand as if to stroke the

short bristles on his head, but  instead, tapped his forehead significantly. 

"You told this to the newspapers?" Doc Savage asked Beech. 

"No," said the talkative man. "I did not. I am a student of human  nature, and a politician as well, and a

politician does not wish to be  ridiculed. I knew my story would be laughed at. I have been laughed at  before

in print, and I do not find the sensation pleasant. I simply  went home. An hour or two later, I found the letter I

have just shown  you. It was thrust under my door." 


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"Did you see the messenger?" Doc questioned. 

"Unfortunately, no." Beech looked from Doc's bronze face, which he  had apparently despaired of reading, to

Ham's features, then the simian  countenance of Monk. On the latter two, expression was more pronounced. 

"I see you think I am insane," Beech said. 

"Or you may be lying," Monk grunted. 

"I am not offended," Beech said dryly. "In fact, I don't blame you  a bit. I'll wager I do sound like an

unmitigated liar." 

"And so you want us to investigate?" Doc asked. 

"Exactly!" Beech nodded. "I saw the story of your troubles in the  newspapers and that gave me the idea of

locating you." 

"You thought this Red Snow thing might be connected with my  difficulties?" the bronze man questioned. 

"The thought entered my mind, naturally, but I had no proof," Beech  explained. "It is only because you are a

man noted for investigating  strange things which moved me to think the Red Snow and your presence  here

might be connected. If I may ask, is it?" 

Doc Savage did not answer. 

"We will look into this meeting at Little Palm Street and Cuba  Boulevard," he said. "It is now twenty minutes

until seven. The meeting  was to be at seven, was it not?" 

"Seven, yes," said Fluency Beech. 

A CLOCK bell struck six times in a peculiar fashionthe strokes  were in pairs, with a short interval between,

six strokes all told. 

"That clock is off," Ham mumbled, eyeing his own plainly expensive  wrist watch. "It's seven, not six." 

"Ship's bell, you dope," Monk said unkindly. "It starts with one  stroke at fourthirty, and strikes two at five

o'clock, strikes three  at fivethirty, strikes four at six .o'clock, strikes "  "Shut up!"  Ham said. "You're getting

as bad as that windbag, Beech." 

They fell silent. Doc Savage was a few yards away. A thicket of  shrubbery concealed them from the

intersection of Little Palm Street  and Cuba Boulevard, where Fluency Beech loitered, awaiting the

appearance of a man who would have black grease paint on his face,  paint which was to smell of roses. 

Doc Savage and his two men did not part the shrubbery to watch  Beech. Nothing so reckless as that. The

bronze man was using his tiny  periscope. 

Behind them, across a narrow parkway, was a narrow lagoon which  opened into Biscayne Bay, the harbor of

Miami, and in it were anchored  numerous yachts. The ship's bell had struck aboard one of these. They  could

hear others striking from time to time, their varied notes making  soft, not unappealing sounds. 


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Monk and Ham fell to watching Doc Savage; they saw the bronze man  make a small gesture, and moved to

his side. He turned the eyepiece of  the periscope over to them in turn. 

A figure had approached Beech, a stooped, blackfaced man carrying  a short, curved knife. They conversed.

Beech was a good actor. He did  not look in the direction of Doc Savage. 

A moment later, both turned their backs to the spot where Doc and  his two men lurked. 

"Clever of Beech," Monk grunted. "Now that guy won't be so likely  to notice us." 

It was clever of Beech, all right. But the blackfaced man who had  met him did not seem to appreciate it. 

"What the hell is the idea of askin' me to turn around?" he  demanded. 

"Doc Savage is, among other things, an expert lip reader," said  Fluency Beech. "He is among those bushes,

watching us." 

"Yeah?" growled the other. "Does he smell a rat?" 

"Not a very large one, at any rate," said Beech. "If he has some  slight aroma of rodent in his olfactory organs,

however, it is  extremely doubtful if he surmises anything near the truth, although it  might be" 

"You talk too much," snapped the blackfaced man. "Let's get this  over with." 

"Wait a moment," Beech told him. "That black paint is supposed to  smell of roses. I must rub some of it off

and smell of it." 

Beech now proceeded to stroke a finger over his companion's cheek,  and to make an elaborate pretense of

testing the grease paint thus  removed. He nodded as if well satisfied. 

"It was fortunate that Doc Savage had no opportunity to see a  sample of my handwriting," he said dryly.

"Otherwise, he might have  realized that the note which I showed him was my own handiwork. Very  careless,

that. It should have occurred to me to have some one else do  the writingyou for instance, my good fellow,

which would have been" 

"Let's get it over with!" the other gritted. "This Doc Savage guy  ain't smalltime stuff." 

"Patience is one of the great virtues," fluency Beech informed his  companion. "I might even say" 

"That gift of gab you've got ain't no virtue," snapped the  blackfaced man. "Get movin', before I bop you

one!" 

"Watch your tongue, fellow!" Beech's voice went suddenly hard. "I  take no such talk as that." 

"Okay," the other mumbled. 

"Everything is prepared?" Beech asked. 

"Sure." 

"Where?" 


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"We follow the path through the shrubbery along the edge of the  lagoon," said the blackfaced one. "It's

early, and there won't be  anybody on the path. Everything is set about two hundred yards down the  path. This

Doc Savage will follow us, won't he?" 

"It is to be hoped that he will," said Beech. "His two men will  accompany him, as well, if we are as fortunate

as I have reason to  believe we will be." 

The two now began moving, walking almost side by side, and turned  into the path, which at this point was

little more than a deep gash  through luxurious tropical vegetation. It was somewhat gloomy on the  path, but

not so gloomy that both men failed to see the giant man of  bronze who had unexpectedly confronted them. 

"Turning your backs was a little suspicious," Doc Savage said  dryly. "I moved around until I could see your

lips. Quite interesting,  that conversation." 

BEECH reacted strangely. He began to talk. 

"My dear man," he said, "a regrettable thing has happened, which no  doubt will require patient elaboration

and most profound" 

He was only talking. Making words. He acted while he talked. His  fat hand moved; it lashed for his pocket. It

got his shiny gun. He  yanked. Coat fabric tore. The whole pocket ripped, came loose, and the  gun appeared. 

Doc Savage was lunging in. He struck once, openhanded. The blow  took Beech in the face. The man upset,

became an animated ball of arms  and legs. His gun flew away, hit the top of a palm, stayed there among  the

bright green cocoanuts. Beech made bleatings. 

The other man began to hiss. He was like a snake. Rushing in close  to Doc Savage, he drew the curved knife

back. 

"Get 'em up!" he gritted. "I'd hate to kill you!" 

He must have read the flakegold eyes of the bronze man. Probably  he saw there no sign of surrender. 

"You asked for it!" he shrilled, and slashed with his scythelike  instrument. 

He did not stab, or try to get to the bronze man's throat. Instead,  he slashed downward, hooking, trying to get

the blade behind Doc's  heels. He wanted to hamstring the bronze man. 

Doc left the ground. He seemed to put forth no effort. The curved  blade went under his feet. It cut off the tops

of grass blades as if it  were a razor. 

Then Doc Savage got both hands on the blackfaced man and yanked  him forward. They came together with

an impact that could have been  heard hundreds of feet. The other was stunned. Doc put both hands  behind the

fellow's head. His corded bronze fingers convulsed. 

The giant of metal was doing something he had done once the night  beforeinflicting a form of paralysis

simply by exerting awful pressure  on certain nerve centers. The victim's struggles became weaker. His  mouth

fell open, as if the muscles operating it had been cut. 

Beech, when he had stopped rolling, had landed flat on his back,  and for a moment he lay there grotesquely,

looking very silly, with his  legs making running gestures in the air, and his arms paddling about.  Then the


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glaze went out of his eyes and he got up and ran down the path  as if his very life depended on his leaving the

vicinity at once. 

Doc's captive was now breathing noisily and staring straight ahead,  utter vacantness in his eyes. 

Monk and Ham came rushing up, excited, anxious for a fight, not  knowing what it was all about. 

"Watch this man!" Doc rapped, and dropped the blackfaced fellow. 

Beech was out of sight. Doc loped after him. Fleetness of the wind  was in the bronze man's legs. He angled

around a turn in the path,  gravel rolling a little under his feet. 

He saw Beech. The man was a good two hundred feet ahead. His head  was back, elbows close in, and he did

not wobble. In his youth, he must  have been a sprinter. He was not doing badly now. 

Doc had cut half of Beech's lead when he heard Monk roar out behind  him. There was something about that

roar. Monk's fighting roars were  different. They were joyful, excited, reckless. There was surprise in  this one,

amazement, and maybe a measure of fear. 

Doc stopped, spun about. His gaze lanced above the path, fixed  there. 

The brilliant morning sunlight seemed to have turned red in the one  spot he could see through the treesred

because scarlet flakes were  sifting down. 

It was the Red Snow! 

DOC heard a man scream. It was not Monk; not Ham. It must have been  the man with the black grease paint

on his face. Other sounds seemed to  indicate two men were running. Monk and Ham were fleeing, possibly. 

The sounds came as a type of muted accompaniment to the weird,  amazing phenomena of the Red Snow

falling in brilliant sunlight. 

Doc Savage stood with his attention riveted. Behind him, he heard  the fleeing Beech cry out something that

was not distinguishable. The  bronze man stepped to one side, getting a tree between himself and  Beech

without, however, looking around to see what Beech was doing, but  apprehensive lest the plump, talkative

man or some of his comrades  waiting down the trail, would use a gun. 

The Red Snowthe flakes certainly looked like snowceased to sift  down; and only then did Doc Savage

desert the shelter of the tree. He  looked back. 

Beech was not in sight. 

Doc went toward the Red Snow, went slowly, keeping under cover, not  knowing exactly what he would find,

guarding against all possible  contingencies. 

He could see the Red Snow through the trees, now. It was vanishing,  literally melting into nothingnessat

least, it seemed to make liquid  stains, and these faded away, leaving the fresh green of the foliage.  The red

flakes seemed to recede before him, and they were all gone when  he came in sight of the blackfaced man

who had met Beech. 

Monk and Ham were nowhere to be seen. 


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The blackfaced man had managed, by some overpowering of the  paralytic spell which had been laid upon

him, to regain his feet. He  stood rigidly, propped against a wooden frame which was around a small,  freshly

planted tree. There was an expression of hideous immobility on  his face. 

Doc stood there. Nothing moved. Even the wind seemed to have  stopped. That, of course, was only a freakish

coincidence. 

Monk and Ham, wherever they had gone, whatever had become of them,  gave no sign, made no sound. 

The bronze man advanced. He moved slowly, and his strange  flakegold eyes probed everywhere, missing

little. He came close to the  blackfaced man, kept his eyes fixed on the hideously upright figure,  and when he

was close, reached out a hand and put it on the man's  shoulders. 

There was a little weight in the hand. Not much. But it went down,  sinking into the shoulder of the upright

man, and a reddish powder  puffed, arose and spread in the air. The entire shoulder of the man  turned to the

reddish powder. 

Then a thing of seeming incredibility occurred, for theman seemed  to fall to pieces. His figure was like a

dried toadstool filled with  red spores, the retaining film of which had been broken, so that the  whole form

disintegrated into powder. He upset. 

The frame around the small tree, the dimunitive tree itself, also  upset, and all, hitting the ground, exploded

into the carmine powder.  No piece of metal, not even the man's belt buckle or the nails in the  frame around

the tree, resisted the fabulous phenomenon. 

A small breeze came sucking through the tropical vegetation and  picked up the powder, wafting it, lifting it;

and the vermilion stuff,  after it intermingled with the air seemed to become one with the air  itself, merging,

vanishing completely, so that it could no longer be  seen. 

In a space of time unbelievably short, the pile that had been the  body and the tree and its retaining guard were

all but gone, literally  vanishing into nothingness. 

From Monk and Ham, there came no sound, no indication to show that  they had not met a fatefantastic

though it appearedsimilar to the one  which had come upon the man with the black face. 

Chapter 8. THE PATH TO MYSTERY

DOC SAVAGE had pursued his strange and perilous career for a long  time, and because he was often

subjected to danger, to sudden  surprises, to inexplicable mysteries, to hideous happenings for which  there

was, at the moment, no explanation, he had become schooled and  hardened until he was rarely taken greatly

aback. 

Yet he stood now as if mesmerized; without knowing it, he hardly  breathed, and his eyes were pulled wide

with incredulity. He was  probably as surprised, as puzzled, as he had been in his eventful life. 

The air about him seemed to change vaguely, and he wheeled, not  sure there was danger, but fearing there

might be, and started to flee.  It was then that he saw his footsteps in the gravel walk. They were  pits from

which the fabulous reddish powder was blowing. 

The pits spread, the powder caught up by the wind, and the whole  sidewalk to a depth of four or five inches,


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well below the foundation  of courser stones, was pulled away in dust before Doc's eyes. Grass and  turf

followed, then limbs began to fall off the trees, to turn into  cerise particles. 

Doc Savage ran. He did not often run, even when the course seemed  the better part of valor, but he was

retreating now from something that  even he, with his fabulous knowledge, his wizardry of mind, did not

understand. 

He stopped some fifty yards distant, got hold of himself, came back  a little, and stood there. The wind was

stronger. It came in puffs,  rather violently. Great changing bulbs of red dust squirted up and  faded into

nothingness. 

Doc saw a limb fall off another tree; the top of a palm came down  with its load of green cocoanuts. Yet there

was no noise of falling,  not even the sluffing sound which might have been expected, seemingly,  if the red

stuff were actually so much dustwhich it did not seem to  be. 

Over toward the basin where the yachts were anchored, some sailor  or yachtsman, probably up early washing

down a deck, was calling out  loudly to know what was wrong. He must have heard Monk yell, or  possibly

had caught the scream of the man with the black face, the man  who was now dissolved into nothingness. 

Doc Savage looked closely at his shoes. There was, as far as he  could see, nothing wrong with them. He

stamped to see if they were  solid. They were. 

The bronze man went forward, returning to the spot where the Red  Snow had fallen. In a moment, he could

view it fully. It was a strange  scene. There was a great spot, absolutely bare, where trees and  sidewalk had

been. 

It was somewhat as if a monster blowtorch, one giving terrific  heat, heat such as astronomers say exists in the

sun, had struck over  the region. Yet it was not like that, either. A blowtorch, or terrific  heat of any kind,

would have charred, would have raised the temperature  of the neighborhood. 

The calling of the sailor had subsided on the yacht, and silence  fell, broken at intervals by the calls of birds,

seemingly undisturbed  by the sinister and eerie descent of the Red Snow. 

Doc Savage listened. He was hoping for any sound that might  indicate what really had happened, hoping,

most of all, for some  communication from Monk and Ham. 

Then, so unexpectedly that their appearance was like a visual  thunderclap, Monk and Ham walked out of the

shrubbery. The wild  expressions on their features showed that they had seen what had  happened. 

"We ran when we saw the stuff," Monk said hoarsely. 

A GREAT weight seemed to have been lifted from Doc Savage. He went  to work, scooping up samples of the

soilit was exposed down to the  black loamand stowing them in the envelopes which chanced to be in his

inner coat pocket. 

"Did you see what started thatthat red snow falling?" he asked.  "Was there anything in the air above you?" 

Monk and Ham shook a negative simultaneously. 

"If there was, we didn't see it." 


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Doc finished stowing away the envelopes of earth samples. "It may  help us if we analyze it when the

apparatus sent by Pat from New York  gets here," he said. 

Ham pointed with his sword cane. "Beechwhere did he go?" 

"He had more of his gang down the path," Doc said. "He yelled at  them. I could not make out what he said.

But we'll look for him now." 

They broke into a trot down the path, but did not follow it very  far, veering off into the shrubbery instead, so

that they were  concealed. Doc went a little ahead, warily, his superior senses  straining to detect any sounds of

danger. 

Monk and Ham said little. They did look back frequently, as if  still in the spell of what they had seen back

there when the Red Snow  fell. 

"In about an hour," Monk said thickly, "I'm goin' back there and  have a look, to see if I really dreamed what

happened." 

They had covered about two hundred yards, and Doc Savage stopped  abruptly; not turning, he motioned

backward with his hands, then began  to study the ground. 

Monk and Ham looked closely, then understood, but knew they would  have missed the faint sign had the

bronze man not called their  attention to it with his actions. 

Several men had waited along the path. They had been on both sides  of the path, it developed, when Doc

Savage crossed over and found on  the other side grass trampled down and dead leaves crushed where feet  had

pressed. 

"Nine men," Doc Savage said. 

Monk wet the edges of his big mouth. It could have been one man, or  nineteen, who had trampled the grass

and he could not have told,  although his small eyes were as keen, his perception as acute, as that  of any

ordinary man. But there was no doubt in his mind that Doc was  right. Doc could tell. The bronze man had

powers which quite often  struck Monk as being just a little beyond human. 

"Beech joined them," Doc continued. "Then they all fled." 

"We follow 'em, huh?" Monk asked. 

Doc answered by going forward. Monk and Ham trailed him, keeping  close to his heels, concentrating on

making as little noise as  possible, rather than looking about for danger. They depended on Doc's  developed

powers for that, knowing from past experience that they far  exceeded their own. 

Beech and his party had traveled at right angles from the trail and  Doc Savage, studying the length of the

footsteps, knew that they had  been running. But before long, the footsteps shortened, indicating the  men had

slackened speed. 

"Careful," Doc warned. "They may have stopped. They may be around  here anywhere." 

Monk complained, smallvoiced, "I wish my pet pig, Habeas, hadn't  got bunged up at the start of this, and

the cops hadn't taken him along  with our baggage. He could scout through this shrubbery. He's better  than a


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dog at that." 

Doc Savage had been to the left a few feet an instant before, and  Monk looked in that direction, as if hoping

the bronze man would agree.  Monk drew up very straight, and his small eyes grew round as marbles,  for Doc

Savage had eased away silently, was gone. 

Doc was a dozen yards away at the moment, bent over low, making no  sound, taking infinite pains to keep

himself hidden from a small, thick  bush off to the north. He circled, getting behind the bush, but found  it

flanked by a flowering shrub, the leaves of which were quite thick. 

He had seen movement in there, was convinced it harbored some one.  He came very close, approaching from

the rear, then tensed and shot  forward. As he had expected, he found a form crouched in the leafage. 

An instant later he dragged small, pretty Nona Space out of the  foliage. 

MONK and Ham had heard the flutter of the bush and came running up,  machine pistols ready, safeties

unlatched. They stopped, and had they  seen the blackfaced man who had turned so fantastically into dust

after the fall of red snow, they could not have looked more surprised. 

The girl struggled, not so much to get free as to slacken the  bronze man's grip, which was unconsciously

tight. 

"After all, I'm not shatterproof!" she gasped. 

Doc Savage looked at her, possibly surprised a little that she  should have used those words instead of more

prosaic ones although his  bronze features gave absolutely no indication of what he thought. 

Monk did his best to scowl darkly at her, then made a crooked grin,  consciously trying to keep the ends of his

mouth down while admiration  pulled them up. 

"You'll wish you were shatterproof before we get through with you,"  he advised. "Where's your pals?" 

"Around somewhere," said the girl frankly. "You'd better be  careful." 

Monk blinked. "Any idea exactly where?" 

"I haven't seen them." She shook her head. "I have an idea they  were here somewhere, because they were

shadowing those other men, the  ones working with that talkative, man called O. Garfew Beech, or  Fluency

Beech." 

Monk blinked again, incredulously. 

"I did not see themhonestly," the girl repeated. "I followed  Beech's men here, but I did not see the others,

the ones who wear black  grease paint on their faces." 

Monk rolled his eyes skyward. 

"This is making me very, very dizzy," he said. "To be quite frank,  I wouldn't be surprised if you were pulling

another fast one." 

"Listen to me," said the girl. "I'll go back to the very  beginning." 


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"Then it has a beginning," Monk said dryly. 

"Don't mind the ape," Ham put in. "Go ahead, young lady. We are  anxious to hear anything that will make

heads or tails of this. We're  even willing to hear lies, if they'll make the thing sound like there  was some logic

to it." 

"UP until two months ago, I lived in Atlanta, Georgia," said Nona  Space. "I worked in a lawyer's office. One

evening I was walking home  from work and four men with black grease paint on their faces pointed  guns at

me and got me in a car. I was forced to drink something bitter.  I awakened in Florida, out there in that old

house among the sand dunes  where you were yesterday afternoon." 

"It gets wilder and wilder," Monk grinned. "But go on." 

Doc Savage had moved a little away, where he could hear the girl's  story, and still keep his keen senses

focused on the more important,  for the moment, business of making sure they would not be taken by  surprise. 

"My stepfather, Hyman Space, was there," said the girl. "I was  permitted to" 

"Thought he was your father?" Monk interjected. 

"Stepfather," corrected the girl. "But I think just as much of him  as I would my father; I really do. Anyway, I

was permitted to see him  and was told he would be killed if I tried to escape, or tried to  notify the police. My

stepfather seemed very worried when they brought  him in to see me. I distinctly saw tears in his eyes, and his

face was  horrible." 

"What did you gather from the situation?" Doc Savage put in. 

"That they were using my welfare as a club to make my stepfather do  something for them," said the girl.

"That was borne out later, when  they kept me prisoner, and by the things I overheard." 

"What was their game?" Monk asked. 

"I don't know." 

Monk looked incredulous. "Yeah?" 

"I don't, really." She looked from one of their faces to another.  "I never got to talk to my stepfather, or he

would have told me, if he  knew. A week ago, my stepfather did manage to toss me some flexible red

substance like gum or wax, and told me to hide it in my ring, and if I  got a chance, to get it to you, Doc

Savage. 

"He said he and his two assistants were going to try to get to you  with some of the stuffone of the assistants,

Professor Casson Adams,  was going to hide himself in one of your trunks. You see, my father had

comparative libertymy stepfather, I mean. These men had simply  threatened to kill me if he did not do as he

was told." 

Monk began to look slightly less unbelieving. 

"Yesterday afternoon, you came," continued Nona Space. "The rescue  attempt did not turn out so well. The

men who wear black grease paint  on their faces went to the morgue to search the body of Professor  Casson

Adams. They must have scared my stepfather into telling them  Adams had taken some of the red material.


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They saw you. I was in the  car. They threatened to kill my stepfather if I did not approach you  and lead you

into their trap, so they could get the red material. They  reasoned you had gone to the morgue to get it." 

"And you succeeded pretty well," Monk grinned. "What next? How come  you're here?" 

"I overheard some talk which indicated my stepfather and his  assistant, Ray Wood, are to be killed very

soon," she explained, her  voice suddenly shriller. "It seems that whatever they have been doing  is completed.

They are to be killed. I was to be killed, too. So I  escaped. 

"I had overheard them talking about this man Fluency Beech, and  knew where his man could be found. They

knew Beech was working on you,  or with you, or something. They weren't quite sure. But I thought  Beech's

men would lead me to you. So I followed you and here I am." 

She stopped suddenly and pointed back in the direction of the spot  where the Red Snow had appeared. 

"What was that red material which looked like snow?" she asked. 

Monk gulped, "You don't know?" 

"I've told you everything I know," the girl said emphatically. 

"You don't know what these blackfaced birds are up to?" Monk asked  hopefully. 

"No." 

"And you don't know who Beech is or what he is trying to do?" 

"No." 

"Blazes!" Monk groaned. "This is as black a mystery as it ever  was." 

Chapter 9. MYSTERIOUS ISLE

DOC SAVAGE did not question the girl further at the moment, but  moved away, searching, eyes alert,

following the trail made by Fluency  Beech and his party. This came to a disappointing end. It terminated at  a

curving concrete boulevard. There were fresh drops of grease on the  cement, as if cars had stood there

recently. The machines were now  gone. 

Returning to the vicinity of the fantastic bare place where the Red  Snow had fallen, Doc Savage conducted an

extensive search for tracks.  He found some. 

The footprints had been made by four men, and they did not approach  within closer than a hundred feet of the

place where the Red Snow had  descended with such incredible results. The men who had made the tracks  had

retreated and had entered a car which had been pulled into a clump  of bushes a considerable distance down

the curving boulevard from where  Fluency Beech's men had parked their machine. 

Doc Savage read the slowly straightentering grass stems, the  drying juice which heavy feet had pressed

from weeds, as if they had  been lines on a printed page. 

"They fled about the same time that Fluency Beech's men departed,"  he advised. 


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"Then we're stumped," Monk muttered. 

Doc now devoted some time to questioning the young woman. She  answered all of his queries directly,

without hesitation, and not once  did she alter her story in any detail. Nor was she able to reveal  anything of

more bearing on the mystery than that which she had already  divulged. 

Monk drew Doc aside. "Do you think she's lying?" 

The bronze man said, "Monk, there is one subject which I gave up  studying a long time ago, simply because

it seemed impossible to get  the thing down to a point where it could be understood with any  reliability." 

"Women?" Monk asked. 

"Exactly," Doc told him "Personally, I never could even tell when  one was lying to me." 

The girl approached and said, "I haven't asked you many questions.  Just how much do you know about this

affair?" 

"Not a whole lot," Doc admitted. 

"Then you do not know how to get on the trail of the blackfaced  men?" 

"There is one possible plan," Doc said.  "What is it?" she asked.  "I thought of one, too. Maybe it is the same

one." 

"These fellows seem to know a great deal about what is going on,"  Doc told her. "They undoubtedly watch

the newspapers. We can run an  advertisement which will draw their attention, and possibly get in  touch with

them by that method." 

"Yes," said the girl. "If we can just draw their attention to us in  such a way that it will not be too dangerous. I

did not think of the  newspapers. What kind of an advertisement will you run?" 

"We'll insert it now," Doc said. "We'll compose it on the way to a  newspaper office." 

It proved something of a task to get the advertisement in the first  editions of the morning papers. The

advertising forms were closed the  day before, it was explained at the newspaper office. But Doc Savage,  by

taking half a page and paying a not unattractive bonus, overcame  this routine obstacle. 

The next edition carried the display: 

$1,000 REWARD 

FOR THE RETURN OF A SMALL ENVELOPE HOLDING SEVERAL FRAGMENTS OF A

SUBSTANCE WHICH MIGHT BE MISTAKEN FOR RED SEALING WAX. 

PHONE BEACH 0071. 

Monk narrowed his small eyes as he appraised the advertisement,  then demanded, "That should do the trick." 

He did not remark on the telephone number He had seen Doc Savage,  enroute to the newspaper office, stop at

a small allnight drug store  and enter the one telephone booth. 


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THEY went to the drug store, and the dapper Ham, at Doc's request,  entered and waited to take calls. To

account for his waiting in the  store, Ham used a simple ruse. He entered the booth, ostensibly  telephoned,

then came out and told the clerk that he was waiting for a  call, and that it might be some time. He made

himself agreeable with  the attendant, from time to time purchasing soft drinks. 

Ham was not entirely cheerful about his task. He had two reasons.  The first, it cut him off from possible

excitement, this serving as  bait. Secondly, he had discovered that he liked the dimunitive Nona  Space. He

found talking to her a pleasure, and he resented leaving her  in the company of the homely Monk, who,

despite his amazing homeliness,  had the knack of charming women. 

Times without number, Ham had wondered just how Monk got by with  it. Ham himself was more than

ordinarily handsome, he was the suavest  of talkers and he had a remarkable line of conversation. Yet he

found  Monk an aggravating competitor. Ham sometimes wondered if young women,  especially attractive

young women, did not feel sorry for Monk because  he was so utterly homely. 

The street fronting the drug store, like most of Miami's  thoroughfares, was bordered with shrubbery. A block

distant was a small  park. 

It was in the park that Doc Savage left Monk and Nona Space, an  arrangement entirely to Monk's satisfaction.

They were seated on a  bench, surrounded by dense shrubbery, and Doc advised them not to show  themselves

for any reason, but to keep an eye open to see that they,  themselves, were not discovered. 

Doc Savage himself departed without advising just what he intended  to do. 

Telephone wires along this thoroughfare were on poles, not in  underground conduits. 

A man in greasy coveralls, carrying a metal case, wearing a floppy  straw hat appeared shortly. He wore

lineman's climbing spurs. Around  his middle was one of the wide belts commonly worn by linemen, and

from  it dangled the usual profusion of tools. 

This man did not seem largeexcept when he was near some object to  which his size could be compared. His

skin was a pasty, rather  unhealthy hue. 

He climbed a pole near the drug store and busied himself with  pliers, wire and the inevitable test set. A

moment later, he was  clipped in on the line which led into the drug store. 

He heard a call from a housewife who wanted a quart of ice cream  delivered. He got off that wire, and

clipped onto another. There were  only two leading into the store. The second would be the one to the  booth. 

The man on the telephone pole seemed to be having a great deal of  difficulty. Finally, a call came to the

booth. The man on the pole  listened in. It was from a newspaper reporter who wanted to know what  kind of a

story was behind the wantad. 

Ham told the journalist that he would call him back later, then  hung up. The reporter called again

immediately and demanded the story  at once. Ham hung up again. 

A car passed on the street. The man on the telephone pole could not  see into the machine, but he kept an eye

on it and saw it swing around  the next block, turn in the middle of the street when it was out of  sight. It

repeated this after it had passed the drug store. 

The man on the pole rang the booth. Ham answered. 


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"Get out of the store, Ham," the man on the pole said. "There is a  car acting suspiciously. I think it is our

game." 

"Very well, Doc" Ham said. 

DOC SAVAGE waited until the car was out of sight again, then  climbed down from the telephone pole and

walked into a yard, then  stepped behind a shrub. He saw the car come back and stop a little  distance from the

drug store. 

A man got out. He had a black face and wore shabby clothes, but his  features were not those of a Negro. 

He entered the drug store, removing his hat as he did so. His hair  was black, curly, but the curls looked as if

they had been put in with  a waving iron. They were too regular, not kinky, artificial. 

Doc Savage crouched behind the shrubbery and removed his coveralls,  tools, the old hat, the spurs, and made

a bundle of them. Finding them  had been a lucky break. They had been in a lineman's car down the  street and

the bronze man had simply borrowed them. 

The blackfaced man came out of the drug store, looking  disappointed. 

Ham had not come into Doc Savage's range of vision, evidently  having left the drug store by a rear door. 

The man with the grease paint on his faceit was undoubtedly grease  paint, although proof of the fact could

not be detected from that  distancewent to the car. Three other men, disguised like himself  waited there.

They spoke and Doc, wrenching out his peculiar telescope,  got it in action in time to catch the conversation

by reading their  lips. 

The talk was not in English, but in the same foreign tongue which  had been spoken by the two peddlers

before Doc Savage's hotel. 

"There is no one but an attendant in the shop which sells drugs,"  he advised. 

One of those in the car must have asked a question, but Doc did not  see his lips move because the fellow had

his face averted. "I  questioned the attendant," said the one who had visited the drug store.  "He answered me

that a man had been there, greatly interested in the  telephone, but had lately left. He described this man as a

slender  fellow who carried a black cane." 

"The one of Doc Savage's men called Ham," said another of the trio  in the car. 

"Assuredly," agreed the first. "I questioned the attendant further,  and it seems that this Ham, before taking his

departure, requested that  the attendant answer the telephoneand if any one spoke concerning red  material in

an envelope they were to be asked to call again, for this  Ham would return." 

They seemed to talk this over. Part of the conversation Doc Savage  did not get, because they shifted about,

seeming nervous. 

"You will remain here on guard," the man who had entered the drug  store was told. "Two of us will remain

with you. Together, we should be  able to get this red material in the envelope when it is deliveredif  it is

delivered. And at the least, we should be able to dispose of this  Ham; and if we are fortunate, of Doc Savage,

and the other, Monk." 


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"And of the girl," added some one. "Yes, the girl," the man said,  and swore. 

Three of the party remained behind. One man drove the car away. 

AS Doc Savage suspected they would do, the three blackfaced men  chose the most convenient shelter,

which was the same yard in which he  himself crouched. They entered the shrubbery boldly, conversing in

low  voices, and their fate, when it overtook them, came as a complete  surprise. 

One man made a squawking sound and dropped. The heavy pliers which  Doc had thrown at his head glanced

from their mark and struck another  fellow, and he dodged so wildly that he fell down. 

Doc pitched out of concealment. The man on his feet saw the bronze  giant. He yelled something in his own

speech. His hand raced  pocketward. Too late, he saw it was hopeless. He tried to twist. Doc's  fist arched in. It

was like a maul of bronze. It slammed the man's jaw. 

The fellow's arms shot straight out, he lifted on tiptoe, his knees  bent forward, and his stomach went in and

he collapsed downward,  accordion fashion. 

The fellow who had been startled by the glancing pliers squared off  with a knife in his hands. He was scared

of the bronze man. It was in  his eyes. He slashed wildly, in great arcs; it was as if he wanted to  keep Doc off,

rather than do him actual damage. 

But the man might have been striking at a, particularly agile fly  with a baseball bat. He seemed to have no

chance. Doc drifted in, got  the knife arm and bent it. The man tried to scream, but Doc got a hand  over his

mouth and the fellow only made noise through his nose. Then  Doc hit him carefully, on the very tip of the

jaw, and the man went to  sleep. 

Ham came running, crashed through the shrubbery, his sword cane  unsheathed and out before him. 

"Well, well, well!" he said delightedly. "We now have us some  sources of information!" 

Doc bent over the man hit by the pliers. The fellow had been  knocked out.  Doc began picking up the

lineman's tools and restoring  them inside the coveralls. 

"Wait here," he advised Ham. "I'll send Monk and the girl." 

He drifted away, walking slowly when he was on the street, and came  to the park. He worked through the

green foliage until he found the  homely chemist and the attractive young woman. 

"Ham is watching three of the blackfaced gang," he advised. "He is  across from the drug store. Go and help

him take the prisoners to a  safe place. Bind and gag them; then question them, one at a time. Try  to find out" 

"What it's all about," Monk finished. "Sure, I know." 

Doc moved away, his motions swift. 

"What are you gonna do?" Monk called. 

"Try to follow that car with the other man in it," Doc replied. 

Monk's voice lifted. "But how are we gonna get in touch with you if  you follow that car?" 


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"Call the information operator at the telephone company and tell  her to direct any calls that may come for

Andy Blodge to a telephone  where you can hear them," Doc said. 

"Okay." Monk grinned. Andy Blodge was a contraction of his own  name, Andrew Blodgett Mayfair. 

Doc Savage ran toward the spot where they had parked their carit  was another rented machine. He started it,

headed in the direction  taken by the machine bearing the one blackfaced man, and drove fast. 

The road was straight and wide, with only smaller residential side  streets cutting in. Most of these were short,

for this boulevard thrust  out into swampland which had been but partially developedit was in  fact, almost a

narrow neck of dry land, with low ground and some water  on either side. 

Doc had known that. He had been fairly confident he would overhaul  the other machine. 

His confidence was justified when he caught sight of the vehicle  far ahead. He drove more slowly, and began

to shadow the other car. 

FORTYFIVE minutes later, Doc Savage was crawling through  palmettoes and sand. He had left the car

almost a quarter of a mile  back, having rolled it off the road where it would not be noticed. The  sand through

which he crawled was of peculiar formation, being composed  largely of very small seashells of an

innumerable variety of shapes.  The palmettoes were scrawny, the pointed leaves being particularly  vicious. 

Doc Savage knew his quarry was ahead somewhere. The man had parked  his car in an ancient shed beside the

road, closed the shed door and  walked around behind the building. Doc had been able to see that much  from

up the road. 

So far as he had been able to ascertain, the bronze man had himself  not been seen. 

With infinite caution, Doc lifted his head. He had heard a rasping  sound, as if some one had drawn a difficult

breath. He saw the source  of the sound. It was not anything as sinister as it had sounded. It was  simply the

scrape of a small dory keel on the sand as the blackfaced  man shoved the boat down toward the water. 

The craft had evidently been moored afloat by a long painter, but  the tide had gone out, leaving it high and

dry. 

The man got the dory into the water, sprang aboard, and standing  erect and using one oar, paddled away in a

manner which showed he had  not handled boats to any extent. 

Perhaps two or three hundred yards distant, there was an island. It  lay parallel with the shore, and was nearly

a quarter of a mile long.  There was nothing to indicate how wide it might be. 

In contrast to most low islands in the vicinity of Miami, this one  was covered by a luxuriant tangle of tropical

vegetation, literally a  jungle. There was no beach on the island, the mangroves growing out  into the water

itself, so that it seemed there was no land, only  vegetation. 

The man in the dory was paddling for the island. 

Doc Savage studied the shell beach on which the boat had been  lying. Crossing it without being observed was

a chance too great to  take, especially if there were unseen watchers on the island. 


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The bronze man squirmed backward through the sand and palmettoes  and turned north. Within a hundred

feet, he came upon a salt water  creek. The bank of this was steep, hard to climb, which perhaps  explained

why the dory had not been moored there. 

Doc selected the most advantageous spot, one where the bank would  slide less voluminously; he stripped off

his garments until he was clad  only in his silk shorts. He slid down the bank, a giant of a man with  muscles

and sinews which would have thrown a physical culture fan into  ecstasies, and entered the water. He carried

the tube of his periscope  device. 

He lengthened out and whipped soundlessly along the surface until,  he reached the mouth of the creek, then

went under without any of the  elaborate somersaulting usually resorted to. He had made no splashing. 

Once beneath the surface, he threw himself over and over several  times with quick gestures of his hands. He

had a deliberate reason for  that. Air bubbles might have remained in his ears, his nostrils, or  even in his

shorts, and coming up later and breaking on the surface,  would attract attention. He swam with long strokes,

in each of which  his muscles got full play. 

When his trained lungs felt the strainDoc had learned the trick of  staying under water from the pearl divers

of the South Seashe ceased  striking and worked with the periscope device. 

The lenses came off easily, and were stowed in the little clipbox  for that purpose, affixed to the side of the

telescoping tube. Then he  ran the tube up, fitted it between his teeth and arose until, with eyes  wide open, he

felt that it projected above water. He drank out the salt  water which filled it, then began to breathe easily

through the tube. 

He did not hurry the breathing. When he was about ready to go on,  he inhaled and exhaled several

tremendous breaths. This charged his  lungs with fresh oxygen. Then he took a normal breath, one which

could  be held without continual strain. 

This latter process was one of the South Seas tricks. The amateur  adds to his exhaustion by filling his lungs to

capacity, so that there  is a muscular strain from the expanded ribs. 

Doc Savage repeated this process a number of times. Then the water  seemed to grow dark, indicating the

mangrove branches were above him.  The next instant, he felt the tangled roots. With infinite caution, he

eased up among the stems. 

The dory was not in sight. Evidently it had been drawn in among the  mangroves. 

Doc crawled up out of the water. He stood for some moments on a  submerged root, with only his feet in the

water, letting his giant  frame drain so that there would be no splashing. Then he went forward. 

Almost at once, he heard voices. 

ONE of the speakers had a flutelike tone, and was unmistakably the  chief of the blackfaced men, the one

who had been called by the  somewhat strange cognomen of Ark. 

"You fool," he was saying. "You drove out without changing cars?" 

"Why change cars?" questioned another voice. "Nothing happened. No  one would have reason to trail me." 

The second speaker was undoubtedly the man Doc Savage had trailed  to the little islet. 


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"No one would have reason" Ark broke off and swore expressively in  his native tongue. "We have been

entirely too careless. First, it was  Doc Savage. Then it was this noise box, Beech. Next, it will be the  firing

squad for us." 

"They do not use firing squads in this country," murmured the  other. 

"What they do use will be just as effective," Ark snapped. "Use  more care hereafter." 

"I will," said the second man. "Are things progressing  satisfactorily here?" 

"They are," said Ark. "Come. I will show you." 

The two moved away, and Doc Savage trailed them, but not by sight.  He followed by sound. It was well that

he did, for he discovered there  were other of the blackfaced men, who had not spoken, and who had not

followed Ark and the newcomer. These were lookouts, posted at intervals  along the junglematted rim of the

island. 

Ark and his companion moved directly across the island, where the  growth was less thick and where a small

inlet seemed to snag into the  land in such a manner that its presence was hardly noticeable from the  seaward

side. 

There was a speedboat moored in the rather shapeless harbor, the  same craft in which the blackfaced men

had escaped when Doc and his  two companions pursued them from the old mansion among the sand dunes. 

Tied securely to the mangroves along the shore was a large,  dilapidated barge. The craft had seen much

usage. Yet closer inspection  showed that it was still usable, providing it was not subjected to seas  too

rigorous. Timbers slanted from the barge to the shore, and the  manner in which the jungle was broken down

around the spot showed some  heavy work had been done there. 

Ark and his companion passed the barge, went on. 

Doc Savage studied the marks where the craft had been unloaded.  Whatever had been taken off had been

heavy. The moving had been done by  rollers. 

ADVANCING, the bronze man came to a spot where one of the burdens  had slipped over a small

embankment and had been hoisted back, probably  by the use of a block and tackle. The foot of the

embankment still held  a fair impression of the base of the object. Doc surveyed the  impression closely. 

In size, in shape, it about coincided with the dimensions of the  pedestals erected in the basement of the house

among the sand dunesthe  pedestals which had been covered over with canvas, yet which had held  nothing. 

There seemed to be no lookouts along this side of the island. Doc  quickened his pace, coming up to where he

could hear Ark and his  follower talking as they moved along. 

"If any one should land on the island and see the trail made by the  moving," the follower was saying in the

foreign tongue, "they will be  suspicious. The island is supposed to be deserted." 

"We will make it seem that nothing has been moved," advised Ark. 

"That will take much work." 


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"We will do the work," Ark snapped. 

"It is safe here?" the other muttered uneasily. 

Ark said, "It is not all that we might desire, but we will use  care. Anyway, the major part of our work is

done." 

"The odorsthey may reach the shore," suggested the first. 

"We will work only when there is an offshore wind," Ark told him.  "When boats come near, fishing we will

shut down. This is not a  populous spot. It will not be difficult." 

"Let us hope that is true," his companion murmured. 

Doc Savage had discarded much of his caution. They were near the  center of the island, and it seemed a

reasonable supposition that no  lookout would be posted hereand if there were any, they would speak to  Ark

and his companion in passing, thus disclosing their location to  Doc. 

So, when a man eased around a tree within a dozen feet of Doc  Savage, the bronze man was, to his infinite

disgust, caught  flatfooted. 

The man was burly His clothing was fairly new and not cheap, but it  was wrinkled and there was mud to his

hips. His face was squarish,  grim. 

He gestured slightly with the sawed off shotgun which he held. The  gesture ordered Doc to stop. 

The man did not speak. 

Chapter 10. IN AND OUT

Doc SAVAGE stood perfectly still, so tense that the amazing cables  of muscle sheathing his great frame

ridged out distinctly. He put his  hands up slowly. It was the wise thing to do. He carried no weapon, no

gadgethe was clad only in shorts. 

The squarefaced man made a gesture with his shotgun again, and Doc  advanced slowly. He could hear Ark

and the other walking on; their  noise became fainter. 

Doc parted his lips as if to say something. 

"Shhhi" admonished the man with the shotgun. 

Doc made his voice very low. "Why the quiet? Who are you, anyway?" 

"Pipe down," the fellow said. He shifted the shotgun meaningly.  "Play safe and come along with me. I'm

taking you to the boss. Me,  myself, I don t know what to do with you. So I'II take you to him." 

"Who is your boss?" Doc demanded. 

The man said, "Don't ask goofy questions!" and nudged Doc with the  shotgun. 


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Doc began to walk. He had been guided to the right, so he went that  way. 

"If you've got sense, you won't make any noise," whispered the man. 

"Why not?" Doc questioned. 

"Oh, hell," said the other. "If you want to make a noise, go ahead  and make it, and the whole gang will be

down on our necks." 

Doc Savage surrendered for the moment, and went on, changing his  course as he was urged, crawling through

tangles of foliage, easing  around the boles of the palms, occasionally walking over tangled  mangrove roots.

There were insects in the jungle, hordes of them, and  they began to make existence miserable. 

The shotgun kept always against his back, or close to it, and the  squarefaced man seemed to be experienced

in this sort of thing, for  not once did Doc get an opportunity to turn upon him. 

They reached a particularly thick bit of growth, worked their way  inside, and found tracks in the soft muck

where one or more men had  stood. These prints, due to the dusk beneath the thick canopy of  leafage, were

indistinct. 

Doc Savage, who could look at footprints, and, because he had  studied the varied character of feet and

manners of walking, could not  infrequently tell whether he had seen them before, endeavored to  inspect the

prints, but the light was insufficient. He bent down with  the idea of getting a closer look, but the shotgun

muzzle urged him up  again. 

"Guess the boss moved," said the gun wielder. "He was here not long  ago. Well, we'll look around some." 

He had spoken in a very low voice and Doc Savage answered in the  same manner. His captor seemed to have

no desire that they be  discovered, and with this, Doc was in hearty accord. 

They headed toward the lower end of the island, which seemed to be  wider, somewhat higher, and even more

densely jungled. Eventually, they  heard sounds. They approached with great care. Doc's captor seemed to

want to hear what was going on. The bronze man was equally curious. 

Men, they discovered, were at work obliterating the marks made by  the heavy machinery. Doc's captor lifted

up and had a long look, then  lowered himself and would not let the bronze man make an inspection. 

"We've been wondering what they hauled ashore here," the fellow  breathed. "Danged if I don't find out." 

At the point of his gun, he guided Doc in a circle. They came to a  building, made of blocks of coral and

mortar and obviously built a long  time ago. The stocky man studied the place. 

"That's where they took whatever it was," he whispered. "Brother,  you're stayin' here while I have a look." 

"That may be dangerous," Doc warned. 

The other eyed the bronze man intently. 

"I wonder if we ain't made a mistake about you," he grunted. Then  he shrugged. "Well, I'll settle that later." 


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He produced two pairs of handcuffs. They had been wrapped in cloth  so that they would not clink together

and make a noise. He applied one  set of manacles to Doc's wrists, the other set to the bronze man's  ankles. 

"You just play like you were petrified, and I'll be back," he  whispered. 

"Careful," Doc repeated his admonition. 

"That's my middle name," grinned the other. 

He crawled through the high grass and covered fifty feet. Then a  bell rang loudly. From half a dozen points,

armed men popped into view. 

THERE must have been hairthin wires stretched through the grass,  wires painted green so that they would

not be noticed against the  verdant background, or gray so that they would be mistaken for cobwebs.  Breaking

them must have set off the alarm bell. 

The men who appeared were all armed. Some of them had the  inevitable black grease paint on their faces.

Others did not. 

Yelling gutturally, they charged the burly man who had been so  unfortunate as to set off the alarm. He reared

up on his feet, surveyed  the situation with one glance, and picked the nearest shelter. This  took him away

from Doc. Perhaps he was trying to distract attention  from the bronze man, as well as escape himself. 

A rifle whacked. The blocky man ducked slightly. He was not hit.  The bullet must have come close. He half

turned his body above the hips  as he ran. His shotgun launched thunder into the clearing. He aimed  without

using the sights; it was a pump gun and he jacked the slide  with his left hand. 

The shooting was little short of miraculous. Had the blocky man  been a trapshooting expert on an easy

range, breaking targets for the  sport of it, he could not have been more deadly. He did not shoot twice  at any

one man. He did not need to. Everyone of his charges dropped a  foe. 

More rifles were adding their vicious snap to the uproar. Pistols  made more hollow smashes. Men cursed,

screamed. One of the wounded was  crying out awfully. 

The blocky man with the shotgun went down. For an instant, he was  lost in the grass. Doc could hear him

swearing. The man's profanity was  like a pack of firecrackers going offexplosive, vituperative. 

He must have reloaded his shotgun while he lay there, for when he  got up, he was shooting again. Doc saw

one of the shotgun charges  strike an attacker full in the face. It made three round, distinct  holes. That

explained why the charges were so deadly. The cartridges  were loaded with big buckshots, slugs perhaps as

large as a woman's  finger nail. 

The fugitive dived into the growth. He had evidently not been  damaged badly by the bullet which had forced

him down. He disappeared.  His flight was a loud crashing. 

Doc Savage had not been lying quiescent. He was fighting the  handcuffs. It would have been simpler had he

possessed padding to shove  inside the rings. But there was nothing that would serve. He worked  with his

ankles, straining. The steel cut in. Crimson came. With his  hands, he added what strain he could. 

He had tried this thing of breaking handcuff lines before.  Sometimes he succeeded. Sometimes he did not.

There were handcuffs so  strong that it was a physical impossibility to break them. Those which  he wore now


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seemed to belong to the latter class. 

He had been seen. Men ran toward him. The foremost identified him,  whipped up an automatic rifle, took a

deliberate aim and fired. 

THE coördination of muscles and nerves with which nature has  endowed living creatures is a fabulous thing

when developed to its  fullest. It is said that the bird which hunters contemptuously call the  helldiver can, and

does, see the flash of the gun and dive before the  bullet arrivesat least, such is the explanation often brought

forward  to account for the difficulty in shooting the ungainly bird. 

What Doc Savage did was a shade less spectacular. He watched the  trigger finger of the gunman, saw it flex,

and whipped madly sidewise.  The bullet slashed grass where he had reposed. 

The rifleman swore, took a second deliberate aim. As his finger  flexed, Doc leaped, this time not quite sure

that he would get clear,  but striving, as wild instinct dictated, to maintain his life thread  unbroken as long as

possible. But nothing happened. The automatic rifle  was empty. 

Then Ark ran into the clearing. He was a grotesque figure with his  spindling limbs; he still wore golf

knickers, but they were a different  pair, these of an abominably green color. His hairless head resembled a

dark billiard ball. Branches had scraped the grease paint off in long  streaks. 

Ark took in the situation. He began to shriek in his native tongue. 

"Do not kill him!" he yelled. "There are things we should, ask  him!" 

By now, they had observed that Doc Savage was hampered by the  handcuffs, and two men ran up boldly.

They pounced on the bronze man.  There was a sudden struggle. Blows whacked. Both attackers came flying

out of the mêléeand one, hitting the ground hard, got up screaming and  drawing a knife. He rushed in again. 

"No, no!" Ark bawled; "He is handcuffed, you fools! Take him  alive!" 

Doc Savage suddenly ceased fighting. It was futile, dangerous. It  would only arouse his foes, and there was

no chance of his escaping,  anyway. 

He was seized unceremoniously. More men came running. The little  island seemed to be alive with them. 

Ark indicated Doc Savage. "Carry him inside. We will question him." 

"But what about the other one who ran?" asked one of the men. 

"Perhaps he will come to rescue his chief," Ark chuckled. "We will  search for him, too." 

"But the one who ran was not one of Doc Savage's men," corrected  the other. 

"What?" Ark made it shriek. 

"The other was a man whom none of us had ever seen before," said  one of the men. 

The words seemed to release an emotional brake in Ark. He bounced  around, spouting orders. Men ran off to

push a search. 


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Another pair of handcuffs were brought and clipped to Doc Savage's  ankles, reënforcing those which were

already there, and a pair was  added to his wrists. Then he was carried into the building of coral and  mortar. 

There was no roof over the room where he was deposited, and grass  and weeds grew from the stone floor. 

After a time, Ark came in. 

"At no time have we been introduced with the formality befitting  individuals of distinction," Ark said. He

clicked his heels, bobbed his  round, hairless head in a brisk bow. "I am the Baron Lang Ark. You have  heard

of me?" 

Doc Savage did not speak immediately, but studied the features of  the man before him, sometimes shifting

his gaze to two bodyguards who  had accompanied Ark into the roofless room. They were foreigners,  aliens

who might smuggle themselves into the United States. Immigration  officials were on the lookout for such.

Florida was one of the great  centers of the alien smuggling trade. Hence these men, noticed too  frequently,

would have attracted attention. 

Negroes were plentiful in Florida. These men could pass as such  with their skins properly darkened. Few

observers would note that they  lacked the lip contour, or observe their other tiny faults. 

The Baron Lang Ark looked impatient and repeated, "You have heard  of me?" 

"No," Doc told him. 

"Excellent!" The other laughed. "That is not my true name. Now, you  will answer my questions. First, who

was the other man?" 

"I do not know," Doc told him. 

"Who put the handcuffs on you?" 

"He did." 

Ark bowed shortly. "Then he is not a foe to be ignored. I gather  that you followed my man here?" 

Doc said nothing. 

"Did you?" Ark snapped. 

Doc held silence. 

"The man was killed by the one with the shotgun, so you need not  withhold the truth to prevent him being

punished," said the hairless  man. 

Doc said, "I followed him here." 

"How many came with you?" 

"No answer I could give to that would be believed," Doc stated  without emotion. 


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"True." Ark showed perfect white teeth in a smile. "We will go back  to that question later. Did this man with

the shotgun follow you here?" 

Doc said in entire truth, "I have not the slightest idea." 

"Why did he take you prisoner?" 

"That seems to be part of the mystery." 

Ark stood and thought that over. He produced cigaretteslong, thin,  blue cylinders with gold tips, and stuck

one in his small mouth. Both  his bodyguards hastened to strike matches. 

"This fellow with the shotgun must have followed some of my men  here," he said finally. "That is the only

way he could have found the  spot. None of my men have been seized and tortured. This man trailed  some

one. That means my men have been careless. Entirely too careless." 

There seemed to be no call for a reply, and Doc Savage said  nothing. 

"My men need an example to show that such carelessness is not  wise," Ark murmured. "I shall make one of

the fool who permitted you to  trail him here." 

Doc Savage showed no emotion. "You said that one was dead." 

"I am a famous man, not a gentleman nor a man with any honor," Ark  replied. "I lied to you." 

Doc Savage, made no answer. He was disgusted. Not often did he fail  to sift truth from untruth in a man's

speech. And this Lang Ark had  deceived him completely. The fellow was an accomplished hypocrite. 

ARK now cracked a command in his native tonguehe had been speaking  English of fair qualityand the

man whom Doc Savage had trailed to the  island was brought into the roofless enclosure. 

The fellow was scared; much of the black paint on his features had  been rubbed off, and his skin, thus

exposed, had a stark color. His  eyes were steadily wide, unblinking, as if the lids were permanently  wedged

apart. But there was no shaking in his limbs. 

"The bronze man followed you here," Ark told him. 

"If that is true," the man said hoarsely, "I deserve a great  punishment." 

Ark eyed him. "I am going to be very generous." 

The man seemed to know his chief very well. He did not appear  greatly relieved. He said nothing. 

"Release him," Ark commanded. 

The man was freed. Those who had brought him in stood aside. Still  the accused did not speak. 

"You may go," Ark told him. 

The man's mouth sagged. He seemed unable to believe what he heard. 


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"Youyou mean I canwalk out of here?" he stumbled. 

"Exactly," Ark said. 

A great gladness came over the man's face. The startling change in  his features was an indication of the

nature of punishment he had  expected. He seemed overjoyed at the leniency. 

"Go!" Ark directed. 

The man bowed deeply to Ark, then turned and walked toward the  door. 

Ark drew an automatic pistol and without displaying particular  emotion, shot the man in the back of the head. 

"He died happy," he said dryly," as the body was carried out. 

Doc Savage watched the man steadily. He knew that the slaying had  been, in part, to impress him, to weaken

his self control. But he had  schooled himself to keep such things from affecting him as they might  affect

another. There was a way of doing it. Concentration played a  large part. 

But the bronze man had seen blood shed in a cold fashion on other  occasions, yet never quite so callously as

this. He was seeing in this  Lang Ark a foe of more dangerous caliber than he had expected, or  thought. The

fellow seemed to have absolutely no nerves; he could tell  untruths as convincingly as he recited facts; he was

undoubtedly  ingenious as well as coldblooded, and, not the least important, there  was a certain something

about his manner, an air, in a sense, which  meant that he was motivated by some great purpose. It was the

same  manner that drives a painter to do a great canvas, or a writer to turn  out a classic. 

The Baron Lang Ark was out to accomplish something, and would stop  at nothing to succeed. 

Ark came over to Doc and said, "You will tell me where your two men  and the girl, Nona Space, can be

found." 

"Then what?" Doc asked. 

"They will be taken prisoner," Ark said. "They will be held,  unharmed, until certain things happen." 

"What things?" Doc asked. 

Ark laughed, and entirely ignored the last question. 

"Where are the two men and the girl?" he repeated. 

Doc replied, truthfully, "I do not know." 

Ark studied him for a long time. There was something hideous,  repulsive about Ark's hairless head. It was

somehow like the shiny body  of a spider, a body which had been stripped of all the legs but one,  that one

serving as a neck. The body was a little bloated, too. 

"I have various methods for making one talk," Ark said. "We will  try them." 

THEY lifted Doc Savage bodily and carried him through an arch in  the wall, an arch which looked as if it

were in constant danger of  falling down. They passed through a room where the floor had been  grubbed free


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of grass and weeds. Beyond was an open courtthis ruin of  coral had once been a dwelling of the Spanish

type, with a courtyard in  the center. 

In the court was a pit which had once been a fountain or a swimming  poolprobably the latter, because it was

deep, although the dimensions  were not large. 

Doc Savage was lowered to the bottom. One of the men brought a coil  of wire, and this was employed in

binding the bronze man, although  there was no likelihood of his breaking the handcuffs. 

When the wire was all used, he was little more than an elongated  bundle of gleaming metal. Some one

brought two iron rods, longer than  Doc was high, and immensely stiff, and these were wired to him, or he

was wired to the rods, so that he could not bend or flop about. 

Several sheetmetal drums were rolled up. These were larger than  ordinary barrels. They were arrayed

around the edge of the swimming  pool so that they projected slightly over the rim. 

A lighted lantern arrived. Ark himself removed the globe and placed  it, still burning, on the floor near Doc

Savage. In order to make sure  that he could not reach it, a stout iron pipe was driven through the  cracked

floor of the poolthe latter was of concreteand he was wired  to it. 

With a hammer and a pointed punch, Arkdrove a hole in the lower  edges of each of the drums. A dark fluid

ran out, splattered on the  pool floor, spread. Its odor identified it. Crude oil. 

"It is not highly explosive or extremely inflammable," Ark told Doc  Savage quietly. "But it will burn. It is the

same oil which is used in  Diesel engines. It makes a very hot fire. 

Doc said nothing. 

"This may seem like good old melodrama," Ark said, still without  particular emotion. "But I am not doing

this because I desire you to  meet a particularly horrible form of death. I want you to think. By  thinking, you

may conclude to answer my questions. You can watch the  level of the oil come up on the base of that burning

light. I do not  know just how high it will come before it does take fire. Perhaps it  will be soon, perhaps late.

That is for you to wonder about." 

Doc's interest seemed far away, where the sun was a brazen disk  high overhead. 

"In the meantime, my men may find your two aides, Monk and Ham,"  Ark said. 

Then he went away. 

Chapter 11. THE MEN OF DUST

MONK and Ham were having their troubles. 

Their carthey had rented a machinewas traveling something near  seventyfive miles an hour. The car had

a cutout; this was open. Monk  drove. Ham kept the tip of his sword cane on the horn button. It was a  special

type of horn, one which played cornetlike musical tones, and  its uproar added a unique touch to the general

bedlam of their hasty  progress. 

Nona Space rode in the back. She held a wrench which had been  taped, not too generously, with bicycle


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adhesive, and from time to time  she discouraged their three prisoners by tapping them ungently over the  head.

They were bound tightly and gagged, but they seemed anxious to  throw themselves out of the car, despite the

fact that, even lying on  the floorboards as they were, they should have been able to tell that  the machine was

traveling at a tremendous rate of speed. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, was in the rearHam positively refused to  sit in the front seat with him. Dog

fashion, the homely pig had his  head hanging out of a window. The rush of air kept his oversize ears

distended like wings. 

Habeas was the cause of their present jamHabeas, and Monk's  impetuousness. They had been driving

sedately through Miami, after  renting the car, hunting a secluded spot where they could question  their

prisoners without a likelihood of being interfered with. Monk had  sighted Habeas Corpus on a Miami street. 

"Lookout, you ape!" Ham shrilled. 

Monk gave the wheel a frantic twist, rubber shrieked, the machine  keeled up on two wheels without

slackening pace, and they rocketed out  into the highway again; Monk had mistaken a wide driveway for a

side  road. 

The car went on, its worn engine making a great uproar and giving  off an ominous smell of something

burning. Ham looked back anxiously,  diverting his attention only when jarring of the car as they crossed

bumps caused his sword cane to slide off the horn button. 

"You awful mistake!" he told Monk sourly. "You got us into this!" 

Ham gave thought to the immediate past. When Habeas Corpus had been  sighted sitting forlornly on the

sidewalk, Monk, in his excitement, had  not stopped to survey the surroundings closely. He had jumped out

and  run to get the pig. That action might have been very well in its place,  but Habeas chanced at the moment

to be in front of the Miami police  headquarters. A cop had sighted Monk, recognized him from the

description which had no doubt been broadcast. Monk was an individual  easily described. 

A squad car, loaded with policemen had taken after them. It was  still on their trail. 

"You missing link!" Ham howled. "Why don't you pick another road,  one that's crooked, and got trees along

it? They can see us for two  miles on this one!" 

The road they were traversing followed the bank of a river passing  frequent side roads which branched off

and crossed, via the inevitable  drawbridge, the river. 

Monk half lifted in his seat, squinting far ahead. There was a  bridge a quarter of a mile distantno other as far

as the eye could  see. 

"What I been lookin' for!" Monk grunted. 

He swung onto the bridge in a manner which caused Ham, whose nerves  were ordinarily excellent, to make

choking sounds and throw up his arms  as if expecting a crash. Halfway across the bridge, Monk put the

brakes  on, and the car did everything but swap ends or blow out tires. 

The square shack of the drawbridge operator stood on the opposite  side. The car stopped before that. Monk

piled out, dived for the shack. 


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A sleepy, mustached attendant appeared in the shack door. His mouth  hung open. 

"Can you swim?" Monk demanded. 

"Sure," said the attendant. "I'm a durn good swimmer, but what has  that got" 

He did not finish, because Monk had him by the shirt collar and  trousers seat. The homely chemist ran his

captive to the rail, lifted  him and calmly plunged him into the water a dozen feet below. The  fellow came up

and began to swim about, still not knowing what it was  all about. 

Monk was inside the shack. He found the levers which set the  drawbridge to lifting, and operated them.

Machinery started grinding. 

Ham stared in exaggerated amazement at Monk when the apish chemist  popped back into the car. 

"Could it be" he gasped, "that you have really got a brain?" 

The car rocketed on. Behind them, the drawbridge came up in time to  block the pursuing squad car. It would

take some minutes at the least  for a policeman to swim across, settle the span back in place, and then  get the

pursuit resumed. By that time, it was fairly certain to be too  late. 

MONK turned off into a side road through a series of neat  grapefruit groves, when the police car was out of

sight. He drove at a  more decorous pace, one which would not arouse suspicion. 

"That was what I call quick thinking," pretty Nona Space  complimented Monk. 

"Rats!" Ham told her. "He had read about that stunt somewhere. He  never had an original thought in his life." 

Which was hardly a statement to be construed as fact, since Monk  was rated, by those who should know, as

one of the brainiest and most  skilled chemists actively engaged in that profession. 

Their car came to a stretch of uncultivated land which was covered  by a growth of trees and brush. An

ancient lane penetrated this tangle.  Monk got out, made an examination to be sure the lane did not lead to a

house, then drove in until the car was out of sight. He went back with  a bough and switched out the car tracks

as best he could, especially in  the dust near the edge of the road. 

The three prisoners were now hauled out and, as a preliminary, the  black grease paint was removed from their

features. It was obvious that  all three belonged to the same foreign nationality. 

Monk frowned. "These eggs all comin' from one placewhat d'you  figure that means?" 

"It simply means that crows associate with crows and vultures with  vultures," Ham snapped. 

They now began to question the three prisoners. They had expected  to learn nothing at first, or without taking

drastic measures, but they  were a little surprised when all three of the captives professed not to  understand

English. 

It was the dapper Ham who had a remedy for that. Ham was something  of a linguist. He addressed the three

earnestly and to the point in  their native tongue, after which the trio exchanged furtive, uneasy  glances, a

tribute to the convincingness of what Ham had told them  concerning their future prospects. 


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But the three still gave no signs of intending to talk. 

Monk leered fiercely, leaned down, picked one up, and calmly began  to bend the fellow double. There was an

awful strength in Monk's simian  armsbending silver half dollars between thumb and forefinger and  tearing

books of fair thickness across with his naked hands were among  his parlor tricks. 

His victim began to scream. Monk desisted long enough to gather a  fistful of moss and employ it as a gag. 

Monk's first manipulations were executed with gusto. Then they  became more systematic. And Monk used a

beautiful judgment. Bones, he  did not quite break. Muscles, just on the point of tearing from their  moorings,

were eased of strain. 

The prisoner became so wet with perspiration that almost a steady  thread of drops ran from whatever portion

of his features that was  lowermost. 

Nona Space gasped and moved away, where she would not have the  spectacle before her eyes. From time to

time, Monk removed the moss gag  to give the man a chance to talk, but without results. 

Cars passed on the road. Ham, posting himself where he could watch,  observed that two of them were police

machines. In the brilliant sky to  the southward, an airplane droned. 

"You'd better cough up, guy," Monk told, his victim. "I want to  know what's behind all of this. But first and

foremost, I wanta know  what that red snow stuff was, and what actually happened to the guy who  was caught

in it." 

He got no answer. One of the other captives hissed something,  evidently an admonition to Monk's prisoner

not to talk. 

Monk scowled over at the one who had given a warning. "Save that!  When this guy wears out, it'll be your

turn!" 

The sound of the plane was coming closer. 

Monk discovered unexpectedly that his victim was thrown into  paroxysms by having the bottoms of his feet

tickled, and the homely  chemist fell to work with a coarse blade of grass. 

"Monk!" Ham yelled suddenly. "That plane!" 

Monk peered upward. "Police ship!" He flung off his prisoner. "Help  me yank off green branches and put 'em

over the top of the car, so they  can't see it." 

But it was apparent, even as they started, that they were too late.  The pilot of the plane saw them. He sent his

craft circling low. 

THE car which Monk and Ham had rented was a fairly distinctive,  lightgray machine. This had not been to

their liking, but it had been  the only fast vehicle available. The police plane, circling two hundred  feet up,

recognized the car. It was doubtful if those aboard saw Monk,  Ham, the girl or the prisoners. They were all

out of sight beneath  foliage. 

The ship swung away, and Monk had a false moment of relief in which  he muttered, "Well, they missed us." 


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Then the plane came swinging back. 

"You were too optimistic," Ham growled. 

The ship was directly above. Suddenly, one of the captives cried  out, and all three began to thresh about

violently, trying to get into  the open where they would be seen. One succeeded. The police plane  arched

down so close that its propeller blast stirred the leaves on the  trees. 

Then Monk and Ham gave tremendous starts as a thunderous voice  crashed out. 

"You are under arrest!" It said. "You will come out into the road  with your hands up and await the arrival of

squad cars!" 

The underportion of the plane was fitted with one of the huge  loudspeakers of the type sometimes used for

advertising from the  skies. 

"Sure, watch us do that," Monk gritted. "Ham, we'd better load  everybody in the car and make a run for it." 

"But they can follow us," Ham objected. 

"Yeah." Monk scratched in the short bristles atop his nubbin of a  head. "Well, I'll take the car by myself.

They'll think we're all in  it. I'll decoy 'em away and ditch 'em somehow. You take the three  prisoners and the

girl and skip out while they're shaggin' it after  me." 

The loudspeaker on the police plane thundered "Get out into the  road, you fellows! You are charged with

the murder of Professor Casson  Adams!" 

Monk got into the car, tramped the starter and backed the machine,  turning around. 

Those in the plane saw it move. The aircraft swooped. A uniformed  officer leaned over the side and tossed

out three objects nearly as  large as onegallon thermos jugs, and of somewhat the same shape. These  hit the

ground and began to spew vapor. All three landed close to Monk  and Ham and their companions. 

"Tear gas!" Monk howled. He tried wildly to get the car out of the  little patch of timber, but it was too late.

He crashed into a tree,  caromed off, and got the machine wedged where it would not move any  direction

under its own power. 

Monk scrambled out blindly, making disgusted noises. 

MONK was still making disgusted noises when police patrol cars,  half an hour later, arrived with sirens

wailing and radio loudspeakers  making uproar. The officers alighted and took charge of the prisoners. 

The captives were placed in two large phaetons, which started for  the Miami metropolitan district, running

one behind the other. Several  officers, using their strength, got Monk's rented car free of the  trees, and

another officer drove it in. 

Monk and Ham sat in gloomy silence. But the young woman was more  vociferous. She seemed to think she

could convince the police that they  had made a mistake. 

"I should have gone to the police before with the truth," she said  wildly "But I was afraid they could not find

my fathermy  stepfatherand Ray Wood, and I feared activity of the police would  hurry the slaying of the


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two. I thought Doc Savage would be my best  chance." 

"Doc is probably doing all right," Monk muttered. 

The police were letting them talk, and listening with interest for  what information they could pick up. 

"I can prove to the police that you did not murder Professor Casson  Adams," Nona Space Said eagerly. 

Ham, whose knowledge of the intricacies of the law was exceeded by  very few individuals, asked, "How can

you prove it?" 

"Why, I can tell them Adams went to see you, and that the  blackfaced men must have killed him," she

exclaimed. 

Ham shook his head wearily. 

"Policemen are very nice gentlemen who have long ago learned to  believe very little that they are told," he

assured her. "I am afraid  they will laugh at you." 

"I'm going to try it, anyway," the girl said firmly. 

"By all means," Ham agreed. "But save it for the chief of  detectives and the district attorney. Telling these

patrolmen will not  do much good." 

The police carsthe two phaetons were alone nowstopped for a  traffic light on the outskirts of Miami, and

an ambitious newsboy  approached the car, waving his, wares and crying the headlines. 

"Naval admiral lost in red snowstorm!" he yelled. 

"Huh!" grunted one of the cops. "What's this?" 

They bought several editions of the papers, and as the two phaetons  rolled along, read the story. 

Monk and Ham were both in a position where they could observe the  headlines and the story beneath. 

ADMIRAL MARVIN FOOTE SAMPSON LOST 

RED SNOW MYSTERY GROWS 

The Red Snow has struck again. At approximately eight o'clock this  morning a heavy fall was observed to

descend upon the yacht Voyager,  anchored off Miami Beach. The yacht was lost to view in the thick of  the

red flakes, and has not been found since. Police tend toward the  belief that the boat sank, but dragging parties

have not yet located  the craft. 

Aboard the yacht Voyager was Admiral Marvin Foote Sampson of the  United States navy, grand old tactician

and dean of instructors at the  U. S. War College. Admiral Sampson was vacationing in Florida. Also  aboard

the yacht were members of the crew and Admiral Sampson's  secretary. 

Police are also investigating another red snowfall which was  reported to have occurred early in the morning

near a lagoon, close to  the intersection of Little Palm Street and Cuba Boulevard. 


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There was more of it. But a policeman noted Monk's intense interest  in the story and shoved out a jaw at the

homely chemist. 

"You know anything about that?" he demanded. 

"Can't a guy read the news?" Monk countered. 

The cop put his jaw out farther. "You might be mixed up in this Red  Snow stuff, at that. Doc Savage is noted

for some queer things he's  done, ain't he?" 

"Search me," Monk said evasively. 

A moment later, he got time to slip a word in an aside to the  dapper Ham. 

"If they connect us with the Red Snow, they'll be putting up ice in  Hades before they turn us loose," he

muttered. 

What happened next came with entire unexpectedness. There was  considerable traffic on the boulevard. They

slowed up for an  intersection. Two cars which had been following from behind swung out  as if to pass them.

Both machines pulled in front of the police cars. 

There was crashing and rending of metal. Only one driver was in  each of the collision cars. One of these was

thrown completely out of  his machine. They saw him distinctly. He had a black face, but not the  features of a

Negro. 

POLICEMEN were yelling profanely. Then one turned his yell into a  howl of warning. 

"Lookit!" he squawled. "Damn it! Watch out!" 

A heavy truck had hauled out alongside the four smashedup cars. It  stopped, sliding on all four wheels. Men

dropped out, men with the  inevitable blackface disguise. They held automatic rifles. All wore  gas masks.

Two carried gas bombs. 

Occupants of the two police phaetons were caught flatfooted. One  cop shoved a riot gun across a door of the

phaeton. A greasy,  blackpainted finger snugged a trigger and an automatic rifle made a  hideous cackle. The

cop's blue coat became ragged and began to leak  crimson in half a dozen places, and he laid down on the

floorboards and  began to scream. 

That was all of that. The policemen were brave enough, but none of  them had a great desire to commit

suicide, and that was what resistance  would have meant. 

A blackfaced man slid behind the wheel of each police car, let in  the clutch and backed away from the

machines with which they had  collided. Other sepia attackers clambered into the back and freed the  three

whom Doc Savage had captured, and whom the police, disgusted  because the trio would not talk, had also

taken into custody. 

There was a delighted reunion, until some one remarked about what  Ark would probably have to say about

them letting themselves be  captured. 

The two police cars, trailed by the big truck, turned right at the  intersection. There was much excitement, the

shooting having attracted  many cars. The street, in fact, was blocked for a short distance, but  the obstacle was


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overcome by driving up on the most convenient lawn,  smashing down flower beds. 

A woman, evidently the owner of the flower beds, came screeching  from her home; she ran up to the car, still

shrieking because her  flowers were being ruined. 

One of the blackfaced men laughed and, opening the phaeton door,  gave the cop who had been shothe was

dead nowa shove. The body, with  its hideous drenching of red, landed at the angry woman's feet. She  took

one good look at it and fell over in a faint. 

The two phaetons and the truck turned again, and came into a narrow  lane which crossed an orchard. The

cavalcade stopped. The fellow who  seemed in charge of things gave orders in his foreign tongue. 

Monk, Ham and the girl were hauled out of the car. They were  already handcuffed. Without ceremony, they

were shoved into the truck.  The work was done with smooth precision, as if it were all something of  no great

magnitude, but merely a task to be gotten out of the way  quickly in order to reach more pleasant tasks. 

The policemen were ordered out. They were disarmed. One was knocked  unconscious when he tried to resist.

His senseless form was dumped back  into the phaeton. Once they were disarmed, the policemen were ordered

to get into the cars and lie down on the floorboards, and not to stir  for five minutes. 

Even the blackfaced men smiled when this last order was given.  There was nothing pleasant about the

smiles. 

The truck now rumbled and jolted along the road. A policeman stuck  his head out of one of the phaetons. A

rifle snapped. The policeman  seemed not to move; he remained with his head hung over the door,  staring

wideeyed, and a red ribbon seemed to well mysteriously out of  the middle of his forehead and spread

downward until it became a slow  scarlet flood. 

The truck stopped. There was a pause. Then more of the  blackfeatured men scrambled inside. There was

controlled excitement in  their manner. 

Monk listened intently. He could hear shouting in the distance.  There seemed to be a tremendous uproar at

the crossroads. It was only a  question of moments until pursuers caught up with the truck. A swarm of  police

cars, directed by radio, were almost sure to be on their way to  the spot, despite the few minutes which had

elapsed. 

Then Monk reared up and got a look through the back of the truck,  and he understood why the captors did not

seem to be greatly worried. 

Red snow was falling on the two police phaetons. 

THE snow was a roseate pall, like a great veil of red gauze. It did  not spread over a great area, nor did its

greatest height reach more  than two hundred feet above the tops of the orange trees in the  orchard. But it was

an awesome thing to watch, for the flakes seemed to  spawn suddenly out of nothing more substantial than the

brilliant  Florida sunlight. 

They materialized by the millions, small and red and scintillating,  and fell much as if they were spray of some

fantastic kind thrown up  from a titanic fountain. The effect of the whole was soon that of a  spongy red dome

towering two hundred feet in the air, a dome that was  alive and shifting continuously, a thing that appeared

from a distance  to be solid, yet which was composed only of red snow. 


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The truck drove away, and the two phaetons and the uncanny horror  which had enveloped them were lost to

sight before their fate became  evident. 

The truck evaded the police. The surprise caused by the Red Snow  made it easy. A canvas cover was

stretched over the vanlike body of the  machine, and the motor hood was tied open, changing the character of

the truck a treat deal. That helped, too. 

But what had happened to the two phaetons and the police they held  was told by the next extra editions of the

Miami newspapers. The extras  hit the streets in less than an hour. 

The driver of the van rubbed the black grease paint off his face.  It was startling what a difference this made.

He pulled up and bought a  newspaper from a vendor. This drew no suspicion. Every one was buying  them. 

RED SNOW KILLS COPS 

It was black and staring, that headline, and it crossed the entire  top of the page. The story was beneath, and

like many news yarns  hastily assembled about startling things, this one was amazingly  garbled. But it

conveyed in substance that the Red Snow had fallen, had  ceased to fall and had melted magically. Some one

had gone forward,  noting the policemen weirdly rigid in their cars, and the instant the  cars had been

disturbed, they had begun falling away in powder. 

So skeptical was the newspaper editorial force of this last that  they had a note parenthetically below: 

(There is some doubt about this falling away in dust, at least  until it is verified. We are merely giving our

readers the most  authentic reports we have available.) 

One of the blackfaced men laughed and said, "They do not believe  it did happen." 

"Before we are through, many things will have happened which they  probably would not have believed

possible," said another of the gang. 

The story of the Red Snow which had accompanied the disappearance  of the yacht Voyager with Admiral

Marvin Foote Sampson on board, was at  the bottom of the column. The men read that. One of them smiled

and  tapped the story with a finger. 

"That one was prominent on the list," he said. "Our men are doing  well." 

Monk heard that. 

"What's this list?" he demanded. "Say, what're you guys up to  anyway?" 

One of the men slapped Monk casually with the newspaper, saying  "Shut up!" 

Instead of complying, Monk demanded, "What are you gonna do with  us?" 

"You interest us," said the other. "We are going to keep you around  for entertainment." 

"You are not fooling any one," the dapper Ham put in. "You are  planning to hold us, hoping you can use us in

some way to get Doc  Savage." 

That brought a round gush of harsh laughter. 


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Ham, redfaced, snapped, "Doc will do all right for himself!" 

"I wish you could see him just now," the other said dryly. 

"So do I!" Monk grunted. 

Chapter 12. THE TALKING BENEFIT

MONK would have been shocked had he, by some legerdemain, been  granted his vehement wish. 

Doc Savage, by an infinite amount of muscular exertion, managed to  lift his head slightly, so that the oil did

not quite reach the corners  of his mouth. The liquidit was ordinary fuel oilwas inches deep over  the center

of the pool, which was lower than the edges. 

The bronze man lay in the center. Some ten feet away, the  chimneyless lantern still burned. It was due only to

the safety nature  of the fuel oil that there had not been an explosion and fire. The  flashpoint of the stuff was

all that had saved him thus far. 

At first, the guards had paced along the pool rim. But now they had  withdrawn, and only occasionally did one

dart forward, take a brief  look, then retreat. They were, obviously, momentarily expecting the oil  to take fire. 

Unexpectedly, Ark himself put in an appearance. He rattled orders.  Men came to the pit edge. Ark ordered

them down into the oilbut they  hesitated, horrified, until the hairless man drew his gun and rapped  threats.

Then they sprang down, and one, with trembling haste,  extinguished the burning lantern. 

Doc Savage was not untied. They lifted him bodily and tossed him,  with the iron rods to which he was bound,

up on the pool edge. He  landed almost beside a bound figure of another captive. 

Doc eyed the strange prisoner. The fellow was not exactly a  stranger. He was the same individual who had

made Doc a prisoner when  the bronze man first landed on the island, the fellow whom Ark's men  had been

seeking. He was not gagged. 

"They finally tracked me down," he said wryly. "Like a sap, I used  up all my shotgun shells when I was

getting away from them." 

"Who are you? Doc asked him. 

"One of Fluency Beech's men," said the other. "I should've given  you the lowdown earlier, but you see, we

figured you might be working  with this crowd. We made that mistake from the first. When Beech  trailed you

down and found you in that chemical laboratory, he wanted  to seize you, but knew he couldn't manage it

singlehanded. So he  rigged up that gag about somebody threatening him. There wasn't  anything to that. All

he wanted to do was get you where he could have a  gang tie into you. He'd heard about your tough

reputation." 

Ark discovered them talking, began cursing and hurried toward them. 

"What is Fluency Beech's connection with this?" Doc demanded. 

"Well, believe it or not, we are" 


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Ark, lunging, kicked the man in the face, stopping whatever he had  intended to say. The man tried to speak

again, and was once more kicked  terribly. Then, at Ark's orders, he was lifted and borne down into the  old

swimming pool. 

Ark ordered him tied, directed the chimneyless lantern to be  lighted again; then the men climbed hastily out

of the pit. 

"When you decide to tell us the whereabouts of this man Beech, you  can call old," Ark yelled down at the

captive. "And I would advise you  not to debate the matter too long. That oil is already quite high." 

Doc Savage was now picked up and carried away. 

Ark, walking alongside of him, said, "You will go back into that  pool later. At the moment, it is most urgent

that we find this man  Beech." 

DOC SAVAGE was deposited in a room of the old buildingrather, ruin  of a building. Its presence here was

not unduly strange, for there were  many such places in Florida, mansions built years before prior to the  great

hurricane and which, being destroyed, had not been rebuilt. 

That this was such a place, the bronze man did not doubt, but  neither did he give it more than passing

thought; he lay helpless, and  began to watch the single guard who was left with him. 

After a moment, when the guard was looking; Doc twisted his  features into a peculiar and terrible grimace; he

made a visage so  remarkable that the attention of the guard was seized, held. The fellow  opened his mouth as

if to ask what was wrong, but said nothing. He sat  there, not closing his mouth, his jaw hanging down, his

expression one  of vacant amazement. 

Doc did not hold the same hideous mask on his face. He changed it,  so slowly that it was a great labor which

brought perspiration out on  his features. This moistness added to the effect of grotesque torment.  The

emotion he put upon his face was something unearthly. It appalled. 

The guard closed his mouth, but it lagged open again as if the  muscles were loose, but he seemed not to

notice, all of his attention  being concentrated in watching. 

At first, it had been the bronze man's face alone which drew his  attention, but now Doc's eyes acquired a

growing quality of power They  widened, and the flakegold pools seemed to stir madly. Stronger and

stronger became the strange influence of the eyes, and the guard looked  and looked and did not pull up his

jaw. 

"Put the gun on the floor," Doc told him. 

The man did nothing, did not pull up his dangling jaw. 

"Put the gun down," Doc repeated. 

The man did it this time, not looking at the weapon and not taking  his eyes from Doc's features. 

"Untie me," Doc said. 

That order did not require repeating, and the man started plucking  at the wire which secured the bronze man.

It was slow work. Pliers had  been used to tie some of the wires. 


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Finally, Doc was free, but he managed only the most awkward of  movements, his limbs being no more proof

against stiffness than those  of another. He kept moving, however, and flexibility came into his  muscles. 

The guard was standing immobile, a peculiar staring expression in  his eyes. 

Doc Savage pointed toward the south end of the island. 

"You are seeing the bronze man running in that direction," he said  firmly. "He had gotten away. He is

running swiftly. You are after him.  You will call out for help. You will tell where the bronze man went.  You

saw him go south. You will hunt for him on the south end of the  island. From time to time, you will see him

and yell out an alarm." 

If he heard, or understood, the guard gave no sign, but Doc seemed  to expect no response. He knew the man's

condition. The fellow was  hypnotized. Inducing the hypnotic spell had been difficult, even with  what Doc

knew of the subject from months of study with men who were  peers at suchthe fakirs of India. 

With greater firmness, Doc Savage repeated the instructions. The  guard wheeled. Such were the peculiarities

of the hypnotic spell which  had been laid upon him that he would do exactly as he had been toldand  lead

pursuit away from Doc Savage. 

Doc went in the opposite directionnorth. 

THE guard began to cry out. Instantly, there was an uproar, the  hairless Ark and his followers racing to the

spot. 

Doc Savage ran only a short distance, then took to a tree, climbed  swiftly and waited, hidden in the branches.

The men ran on. The  shouting of the hypnotized guard led them toward the other end of the  island. 

Doc Savage descended from the tree. He worked toward the ruins of  the house, gained the edge of the

clearing and sank prone. The grass  was high enough to conceal him. 

A guard at the entrance made himself known by stepping outside and  cupping a hand to an ear, listening to

the noises the men were making  down on the south end of the island. Then he went back inside. 

Doc Savage shifted to the right, reached the crumbling wall, and  stood erect. 

From the bronze man's lips came a perfect imitation of Ark's shrill  voice. He spoke the foreign tongue. 

"You, guarddo not stay in the house!" he said. "Walk out to the  edge of the clearing on the south side and

stand guard there." 

The voice was ventriloquial in quality; it seemed to come from a  considerable distance. 

The guard hesitated, then called, "Very well!" and walked around  the house, heading for the south side of the

clearing. 

The instant he was out of sight, Doc Savage heaved up and raced  inside. He made straight for the old

swimming pool. The reek of oil was  strong. He looked into the pool. 

The burly man who had admitted he was working with talkative O.  Garfew Beech, was gone. The burning oil

lantern had been extinguished. 


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Doc retreated from the pool, went to a gaping aperture which had  once been a window, and eased inside. The

room was full of débris, was  overgrown with vegetation. No vestige of the roof remained. 

The bronze man made a little noise crossing the rubble. It was  impossible to go with absolute silence. He

came to a hallwayit had no  roofand began inspecting the penlike rooms. Somewhere in this  structure

would be the machineryor whatever it waswhich had been  brought from the old mansion among the sand

dunes, the devices which  had stood on the pedestals. 

Doc rounded a corner, stopped, eyed the floor. There were marks as  if heavy machinery had been moved. The

marks led to a dooran opening  in the wall, rather, now boarded up with twoinch planks and the small,  stout

doorway in the center. The door was secured with a padlock. 

Doc whipped to the door. 

The cracks had been battened on the inside. He could see nothing.  He grasped the padlock, picked up various

dried weed stems and tried to  pick it. He leaped up and saw that there was a roof over the room into  which

the machinery had been taken. He began trying more stiff weeds on  the lock. It was a task almost hopeless. 

A voice behind him said, "You will put your hands up!" 

THE bronze man lifted his hands, then turned, coming around slowly,  so as not to excite the other. 

Looking for the source of the unexpected command, he discerned only  a squarish aperture in the opposite

wall, a hole left when bricks had  fallen away. From the shadowy cavity beyond this, a metal

tubeundoubtedly a rifle barrelprojected. 

"Doc Savage!" a voice exploded beyond this hole. 

Relief in the tone told Doc that the speaker was no enemy. 

The bronze man lowered his hands, saying, "Come on out." 

"We cannot," gasped the other. "There is a chain and we are  fastened to it with handcuffs." 

Doc Savage whipped forward, rounded the angle in the corridor and  came upon a crude door. This was not

even locked. It squeaked  tremendously when he opened it. The room into which it gave still had  most of its

roof, upheld with great cypress beams, more than a foot  square. A chain had been linked around one of the

beams, the ends  padlocked together so that it dangled down in a loop. To this loop, two  men were manacled. 

The first was a lean tower of a man with flaming red hair and an  abnormally pail face, a face which was

almost untouched by sunburna  face which was also set off strikingly by a black patch over one eye, a  flap

held there by an elastic. 

The other man was young and hearty, with the appearance of a  college boy. He still wore shellrimmed

glasses, grimy polo shirt and  soiled slacks. 

These two were the same pair which Doc Savage had seen being forced  into the escape cars of the

blackfaced men back at the old mansion  among the sand dunes. The girl had identified them as her

stepfather,  Hyman Space, and his assistant, Ray Wood. 


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There was a man on the floor, one of the blackfaced men, but  without the black grease paint on his features.

He lay against one  wall, sprawled out grotesquely, and the side of his head was leaking  scarlet. 

Hyman Space gestured. It was he who held the rifle. He indicated  the unconscious man. 

"Guard," he explained cryptically. "The fellow miscalculated the  length of our chain and we got him. Took

his rifle. But that did not  help us much. He did not have the handcuff keys." 

Doc Savagehe still wore no garment but the shortsbent over and  examined Ray Wood's shellrimmed

spectacles closely. The rims alone  were shell; the hooks which ran back over the ears were of metal. 

"Have to wear the glasses?" Doc asked. 

"I can get along without them," Ray Wood replied. 

He had a robust voice in keeping with his appearance. It was not an  unpleasant voice. 

Doc Savage took the spectacles, broke off one of the ear hooks, and  used it to pick the handcuff locks. It

required him no more than three  minutes to free them both. Then he went over and examined the  unconscious

guard. The fellow was giving signs of reviving. Doc  adjusted his jaw to the proper position and swung a fist

against it.  The man quivered, went back into deeper senselessness. 

Hyman Space said urgently, "Doc Savage!" 

Doc eyed him. "Yes?" 

"Somewhere in this place, there are four large mechanical devices,"  Space said grimly. "We must destroy

them. Otherwise, the whole of  America is in danger." 

Doc moved for the door. "They are in a locked room opening off the  hall. We can pick the lock." 

But they had hardly stepped into the hallway when there was a  clatter of footsteps and men came into the

passage. Ark and some of his  companions! They had come back. 

DOC SAVAGE eased back into the chamber in which Hyman Space and Ray  Wood had been imprisoned.

There was nothing else to do. 

Ark stopped in the hallway. They could hear him distinctly. He was  angry, and berating the guard who had

moved away from the ruin, tricked  by Doc's ventriloquism. 

"You fool, you were told to stay inside!" Ark snarled. 

The guard, puzzled, muttered, "But I heard you call to me, telling  me to take the edge of the clearing." 

Ark swore in his native tongue. 

"That is impossible," he gritted. "I did not call. It must have  been some trickery on the part of that bronze

man. I cannot understand  how he escaped." 

"I thought he was somewhere at the south end of the island,"  grunted the guard. 


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"Three times, one of my men called out that he had seen the bronze  fellow," Ark rasped shrilly. "It was the

same man each time." 

"Which one?" 

"The one who was watching him when he escaped," Ark piped. "And  that is strange. There seems to be

something wrong with that man. He  acts strangely." 

"Perhaps he was bought off." 

Ark made a sound of disgust. "None of my men could be bought off. I  am sure of that." 

The other man said, "All of this trouble is interfering with our  plans." 

"It is" Ark agreed. "Let us tune in the news report on the radio  and see what we can pick up. One of the

Miami stations gives the news  at this time." 

The men changed their position, but did not go out of earshot; and  a moment later a radio speaker began to

rasp static. A station was  tuned in; the final jangle of an orchestra whooped out. Then there was  a station

announcement, and the preliminary announcement for a news  report sponsored by an afternoon newspaper. 

"Good afternoon," the news commentator came in. "We have a lot of  news today, folks. The whole town is in

an uproar. The police are going  around in circles. And the cause of it all is the mysterious Red Snow.  Just

what the Red Snow is, no one seems to know. But that it is  something utterly mysterious, every one will

agree. And it is further  apparent that some mysterious purpose is behind the affair, for the  appearance of the

Red Snow has usually marked the vanishing of some  prominent individual." 

A tremendous burst of static temporarily interrupted the flow of  words. 

"latest appearance of the Red Snow was not more than an hour ago,  on the outskirts of Miami," the

commentator a voice resumed after the  static faded. "Two police phaetons were held up by armed,

blackfaced  men in a truck and taken into an orchard, where the Red Snow fell, and  the cars, as well as the

policemen, disappeared. There is some  uncertainty as to whether the truck itself also vanished." 

There was a pause, while the commentator spoke in an aside to some  one. 

"Here is the latest," he continued. "Police have just released the  information that two aides of the famous Doc

Savage were in the police  phaetons which vanished. They are Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett  'Monk'

Mayfair and Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks, better  known as 'Ham.' With these two, and also a

police prisoner, was an  unidentified young woman and some mysterious blackfaced men." 

The talk continued, elaborating on the Red Snow development; Ark  and his comrades listened with interest,

chuckling among themselves  occasionally. It was fully ten minutes before the commentator got onto  other

subjects. 

"More details about the Red Snow later," the commentator said.  "Here is a bit of news of interest to

Floridians. The secretary of  state of the United States will arrive in Miami tonight for a short  vacation and

some deepsea fishing. His special train is due in Miami  shortly after ten o'clock. And now, time is up. Good

afternoon." 

Some one switched off the radio. There was silence. 


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"You got that last information?" Ark asked suddenly, shrilly. 

One of the men spoke in a hoarse voice, "You meanwe shall use the  Red Snowon the secretary of state's

special?" 

"We have been leading up to that," Ark piped. "It is an opportunity  we should not let pass." 

Then there were shocked grunts. Some one exploded a curse. There  was silence. Then came a new voice. 

"Well, well, well!" it said. "You boys are ambitious, are you not?  Yes, indeed! Much more ambitious than I

gave you credit for being." 

DOC SAVAGE looked at Hyman Space, at Ray Wood. Both wore blank  expressions It was evident they had

never heard the new voice before. 

"Who is it?" Hyman Space breathed. 

"A gentleman who prefers to be called Fluency Beech," Doc whispered  back. Then he went silent. 

Fluency Beech was talking. 

"I find it extremely difficult to believe the evidence given me by  my ears," he said elaborately. "And I do not

often doubt my ears. No,  sir. Tell me, that I may be sure. Is it true that you gentlemen hold  designs on the

secretary of state?" 

Ark said something profane in his foreign tongue. 

"It must be true, incredible as it seems," Beech said rapidly. "And  I will admit that I had held suspicions as to

your true purpose,  suspicions which are now verified to a great extent. May I compliment  you gentlemen.

You are as black a gang of devils as history ever saw,  and the fact that you may think you have a justification

for what you  are doing, that you may consider you are fulfilling an ordained task,  does not, as far as I am

concerned, and as far as the rest of the world  is concerned, I will wager, toothe fact that you may consider

yourselves honorable men does not lift you in my estimation." 

Doc Savage eased out of his concealment, advanced, and a moment  later caught sight of Fluency Beech. The

portly, man stood easily, a  submachine gun balanced in his hands. His head was capped by a steel  military

helmet. A bulky bulletproof vest had been strapped on the  outside of his clothing. A gas mask dangled around

his neck, ready for  quick use. 

Fluency Beech might have been standing before a drawingroom  gathering in the regalia, giving a lecture.

There was entire calmness  in his manner. 

"I am a man of curiosity," Beech announced further. "For instance,  I wonder greatly what this red snow is,

and I am curious to know if the  secret cannot be found in this place. As I approached, I noted a door  with a

padlock on it. Suppose we start our manipulations by examining  that room." 

Ark snarled, "You fat fool, my men will" 

"Be looking at a cold lifeless corpse who was the late Baron Lang  Ark," Beech finished. "That is, unless you

do as you are told. Another  thingyou have a man of mine, one who was so unlucky as to permit  himself to

be captured. I want him. Where is he?" 


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"I have seen no one," Lang Ark lied. 

"In that case, we'll take a look in that locker room," Beech told  him. 

There was cold fury in the portly man's tone; he was hardly the  bombastic soul he had been when Doc first

met him, although he still  talked much more than another would have under the same circumstances. 

Baron Lang Ark and the others backed into view, menaced by Beech's  submachine gun. They moved toward

the door which Doc had tried to open  by picking the padlock with stiff weed stems. Doc Savage watched

them,  parted lips as if to speak to Beechand did not. 

Loose bricks had been shoved to one side of the corridor floor. Doc  swooped, picked one of these up and

threw it hard without  straightening. 

The brick whizzed through a window and struck a man who was in the  act of leveling an automatic rifle. The

fellow had crept up, unnoticed  by Beech. 

THE rifle went off. The man yelled. 

Beech showed presence of mind. Without whirling, he leaped forward,  bowled Ark aside, and got Ark and

the others between himself and the  spot from which yell and shot had come. Then he looked. At first, he  saw

only Doc Savage. 

"Nitwit!" he yelled. "Why give an alarm?" 

Doc waved at the window. "If you have to wear a bullet proof vest,  put it under your clothes. That fellow was

aiming at the back of your  neck." 

Then Beech heard the man outside the window moaning. He kept Ark  and the others covered, ran to the

aperture and looked out. He drew  back, grinned. 

"That one won't bother us for a while," he said rapidly. "You  certainly damaged his face. You certainly did!" 

Doc said, "I want a look into that room," and whipped forward. He  still held the spectacle ear hook with

which he had picked the handcuff  locks. He went to work on the big padlock. It was modern. Picking it

would not be easy. 

Hyman Space and Ray Wood had come into sight by now, and Beech  stared at them intently. 

"Space and Wood?" he demanded. 

The pair nodded together. 

"Why in the hell didn't you two go to the United States government  with this in the first place?" Beech

demanded angrily. 

Space shrugged wearily. "We were afraid. We did try to send two men  out of the swamp, where these men

have" 

Ark screamed, "You speak another word and you will die instantly!" 


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"The same goes for you!" Beech yelled at him. 

Doc Savage got the padlock open. 

Ray Wood pointed at Beech and demanded, "Who are you, anyhow?" 

But Beech was looking at the door which Doc Savage was opening. 

"Let's have a look in there," he said. "Everything else can wait." 

Doc Savage looked into the room. He saw four machines, four  intricate masses of machinery, no one of

which resembled the other,  except that all were about equal in bulk. Two seemed to be electrical  in nature,

with many bulbs and glass tubes, but the other pair were  composed more of metal, with here and there a

curved glass tube or a  glasswalled tank. There were dozens of gauges. 

About the machines clung a strangely cloying odor, a scent which  was hardly pleasant. 

Beech eyed the devices, then glanced at Doc Savage. 

"What in Hades are they?" he demanded. 

Doc Savage advanced into the room. 

Outside, Hyman Space bawled shrilly, "Watch out! Here come Ark's  men! They heard that rifle!" 

Chapter 13. RED ISLAND

PORTLY Fluency Beech stuttered something profane and unintelligible  and backpedaled out of the room.

An instant later, his submachine gun  made a gobbling uproar. 

Shots answered him. Highpowered bullets began to snap and scream  in reply. 

Ark began to edge toward the nearest door. 

Beech hauled a pistol out of his hip pocket, flung it to Ray Wood,  and snapped, "Watch Ark!" 

Ray Wood caught the pistol. Before he could get it ready in his  hands, Ark had leaped upon him. They

struggled madly. Ark's men ran in  to help. 

Beech started to wheel, saw a man crossing the clearing, and turned  back to cut the fellow down with his

rapidfirer. Then there were two  sounds, one following the other, as if some one had whistled and struck  a

blow with a hammer. Beech fell over backward, losing his machine gun. 

Doc Savage was delaying to examine the machinery, his strange  flakegold eyes taking lightning glances of

appraisal. But he saw what  was happening outside in the hallway. He spun, sloped through the door. 

Oneeyed Hyman Space was racing for the fallen submachine gun. One  of Ark's men tripped him, jumped on

his back, then went on toward the  gun. 

Doc Savage, lunging with lightning speed, got to the submachine gun  first. Ark's man backpedaled. He was


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not swift enough. Doc's fist  caught him, changed the lines of his jaw, and the man went walking  backward,

stiffly, as if he were a big marionette with his legs worked  by strings. 

Ray Wood and his foes were still fighting over the pistol. Doc ran  over, clutched the gun, twisted it out of the

tangle of hands and  struck twice. 

Wood landed blows of his own. Then he got to his feet, leaving his  opponents sprawled out on the floor. 

In the clearing, men were yelling and shooting. 

Ark began piping shrilly. He used his native tongue, and his words  came with spouting rapidity. Doc ran at

him. Ark retreated madly,  heedless of the revolver which Doc held. He reached the door of the  room which

held the machinery, leaped inside and slammed the pane. His  movements were fast. 

Doc hit the door. It resisted. He knew why. There was a bar inside,  a ponderous affair, and Ark had been fast

enough to throw that. 

The bronze man wheeled back to the nearest opening from which he  could survey the clearing. Three men

were in sight, running forward  grimly. In the fashion of soldiers, they held their automatic rifles  level at their

hips. 

Doc hefted the gun briefly. It was a good weapon. He fired. The  right leg of one of the charging men broke

over between ankle and knee  and he went down. Doc shot again; once more. The other two fell, also  shot in

the legs. 

Beech was weaving up from the floor. He beat his chest, grimaced. 

"Bulletproof veststopped bullet!" he gulped. "But man, oh man, I  wouldrather be kicked by a mule!" 

He picked up his steel helmet, which had fallen off, and put it on. 

They could hear Ark's flutelike voice. He was piping frantically. 

"What's he saying?" Beech demanded. "I don't understand his  language." 

Doc Savage listened for a moment to Ark's shrilling. 

"He is telling his men to use the Red Snow," he said grimly. 

Shooting had stopped in the clearing. A man called out hoarsely,  answering Ark. 

Beech stared at Doc. "What are they talking about?" 

"The men object to taking Ark's life," Doc said. "They say Ark's  life is very valuable." 

Ark shouted some more. Doc translated. 

"Ark says that, although he invented, the Red Snow, his men now  know how it is made, and that therefore his

life is not so important,"  the bronze man said. "He says for them to go ahead." 

"He has nerve," Beech said. 


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HYMAN SPACE had heard, and now he yelled frantically, "We've got to  get out of here! That infernal red

horror will kill us all! Nothing is  proof against it." 

Doc rapped, "You know what it is?" 

Space shook a vehement negative. "The compound is too intricate for  my understanding. It works on the

molecular structure of matter,  changing its nature. I think it reduces or almost stops molecular  motion, thus

completely changing the nature of matter." 

"But the red material you tried to get to me?" Doc Demanded. 

"It is an ingredient of the Red Snowthe stuff itself near the  completed stage," Space said. "At least, that is

what I think. I hoped  that, by getting it to you, you could tell what the Red Snow is." 

Beech put in, "How did you learn that much?" 

Space shrugged. "I am a chemist interested in the production of new  types of radioactive paints. I use

considerable quantities of radium  in experimenting. Somehow, these men found this out. They needed

radium. So they seized me, got their supply through me." 

Doc waved an arm at the closed room. "What are those machines?" 

"Devices for making the Red Snow preparation," said Space. 

Beech roared, "Then we've got to destroy them!" 

"There is another set of machines," Space interjected. 

"Where?" 

"In the swamp." 

"The Everglades? Where?" 

Space shook his head so vehemently that the black eye patch  flapped. 

"I do not know," he said. "They took me there blindfolded, by  plane." 

Doc Savage peered through a window. There were no men in the  clearing. The silence was ominous. He

waited. 

Then he heard a sound. It was a strange sound, somewhat as if a man  had coughed, only deeper, more

penetrating. It came from the opposite  side of the ruins. 

Beech lunged to a door, took a chance and leaped through. He looked  upward. 

"The Red Snow!" he bawled. 

Doc Savage reached his side, glanced above. The sun was past  meridian, and it seemed to have taken on the

hue of blood, for a great  ball had appeared in the heavensor so it seemed, although it was not  more than two

hundred feet above. It spread, flowering. It seemed  something solid at first, then it took on a more nebulous


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appearance.  Red flakes appeared and began showering slowly downward. 

"We've got to make a run for it!" Doc rapped. 

Hyman Space and Ray Wood reached the bronze man's side. Doc wheeled  back, got the guns of the men they

had overpowered, and distributed  them. In a compact group, they pitched through the door. The lowermost  of

the red flakes was but a few feet above them. 

They ran furiously. Rifles began cracking. Beech lifted his  submachine gun as he ran, wiping the clearing

edge with a hail of lead.  He was either fortunate or an excellent shot, for two men, hit by the  bullets,

collapsed and threshed about. 

Others of the attackers were shrieking at Ark, yelling for him to  get out of the house, to make a break for his

life before the Red Snow  fell. 

Ark took the advice. He popped through the door. 

Ark himself was undoubtedly responsible for the saving of the life  of Doc Savage and those with him. The

attackers were not present in  great numbers, and they had scattered themselves around the clearing.  Beech,

with his submachine gun, had eliminated two directly ahead and  to the left. The ruin itself cut off the aims of

those behind. 

Ark, running wildly, thinking only of his own life, cut in between  the riflemen on the right. They could not

fire without danger of  winging their chief. 

Beech half turned, as if to use his machine gun on Ark, but he saw  the red flakes sifting down overhead,

changed his mind, and gave all of  his attention to getting out from under. 

Ray Wood ran like an athlete. Space was less agile. He was not  strong. His one eye must have been none too

efficient, for he almost  fell. Doc picked him up, carried him bodily. 

Beech went down, cursing, as rifles rattled. He got up, leaking a  little red from the left side, and ran as fast as

before. 

They reached the shelter of the jungle. 

THERE was a fascination about the Red Snow, which was now  descending upon the ruin. Beech paused,

wheeled, as if to watch it. He  saw Ark had reached safety. Then Doc Savage gave him a shove. 

"Our chance to get away from here!" the bronze man rapped. 

They ran on through the thick growth, and their enemies, a baying  pack, took up the pursuit. Doc set a course

for the spot where the  speedboat and the barge lay. 

Space, jouncing across Doc's shoulders, gasped, "My  stepdaughterNonado you think she is safe?" 

The bronze man did not answer. The girl had been safe for a time in  the hands of Monk and Ham. But

something had happened. The snatch given  by the news commentator over the radio indicated that. What had

become  of Monk, Ham and the girt was problematical. 


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The ruined house was not far from the little harbor on the seaward  side of the isle. They came out on the

shore. There was a dory tied up  to the barge. They piled in. 

By the time Doc Savage had the oars in the water, Beech had untied  the painter. They shoved off, and the

little craft lunged under the  bronze man's strokes. 

"I had a man with me," Beech grumbled. "They got him. I hate to  leave him, because he was a good man, an

excellent man, one who was"he  paused to drive a burst from the rapidfirer and drop a man who had

appeared down the shore"one who was always willing to obey orders. I  wonder if he is still alive?" 

"Hard to tell," Doc said shortly, and whipped the dory alongside  the speedboat. They scrambled aboard. 

Rifles were stabbing from the shore. Splinters climbed off the  mahogany coaming of the boat. 

"All get in the front seat," Doc directed. "That way, when we are  going away from them, the engine, will be

aft and shelter us somewhat." 

There was a starter button. Doc jammed weight on that, heard a  whine of gears from the mechanism; then the

motor howled out. Beech  leaned over and shot the mooring cable apart with his machine gun, then  looked

anxiously at the ammo drum, for it was almost empty. 

The speedboat heaved up, began to pound over the waves. Rifle  bullets were striking the craft but the engine

was large and those  aboard were down low, and the mass of metal protected them. 

"It looks like we are clear," Beech chuckled. "And I do not mind  telling you that was as brisk a bit of action

as I have taken part in,  in some time. Yes, sir, it was brisk. But it looks as if we no longer  had a great deal to

worry about, because I will get in touch with my  men and we will enlist the aid of the militia, or even the

army and  navy if necessary, and clean out this nest of infernal" 

He had started talking too soon. The engine stuttered, coughed.  They plainly felt the terrific speed slacken.

Then the engine died  completely and they were rolling helplessly. 

Doc Savage held the speed as best they could, and swung around the  end of the island, so that the shore was

to the left, but fully three  hundred yards distant. 

"One of their bullets must have cut the fuel line," Beech groaned. 

But Doc, scrambling back, got the cap off the gas tank and used the  barrel of the submachine gun as a

measuring stick. The tank was  shallow. The barrel touched bottom, came out perfectly dry. 

"No gas," Doc said. "Tank was empty when we got aboard." 

THE speedboat had turned broadside to the island, and rifle bullets  began to strike, passing completely

through the hull, opening small,  ugly rents. 

"Terrible!" Beech groaned. "We cannot remain aboard." He massaged  his side, where he had been hit by the

bullet. Evidently the wound was  slight. 

"Over the side," Doc directed. "We'll keep the motor between  ourselves and the island and try to paddle to the

mainland." 


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They popped overside as hurriedly as possible, Beech first snapping  a burst with his machine gun to drive

their foes under cover. The water  was chill at first contact, but seemed to become warm after they were  in for

a time. That was because they were hot from the action. 

Swimming and guiding the speedboat, they found, was going to be a  stiff task. There was a tide. It ripped

along between the island and  the shore and made a strong current fanning outward toward the open  sea. They

struggled furiously, and barely made headway. 

Beech, working forward, peered around the bows, then called  unpleasant news. 

"They had rowboats on shore," he barked. "Here they come." 

Doc said nothing. He had heard the boats being put into the water. 

Beech had placed his submachine gun atop the cowling. He got it,  and fired it around the stern of the craft,

then swam forward and shot  around the bows. He growled disgustedly when the gun clicked empty. 

"But I got one boat," he muttered. 

The shore still looked an infinite distance away. There was nothing  they could do to bring it closer more

swiftly. They had been swimming  with all of their strength before. 

They used the pistols as the rowboats came closer, and succeeded in  stopping one craft by putting the crew

out of commission. But there was  a third and it came on swiftly. 

Beech gripped Doc Savage's arm. "Listen, I've heard a lot about the  things you can do. Can you reach shore?

If you can, leave us. We're  sunk anyway." 

The bronze man nodded, said, "It is not a bad idea." 

Then he sank beneath the surface. 

IT was only a moment later that the rowboat rounded the bow of the  speedboat. Ark himself was, standing

erect in the stem, waving a rifle. 

"Where is Doc Savage?" he yelled, after staring at those in the  water. 

Beech stared levelly. "Gone," he said. "Drowned." 

Ark piped, "That would be too good to be true." 

He juggled his rifle absently, as if contemplating shooting those  in the water. He even lifted the gun to his

shoulder and rocked it from  side to side, as if trying to select the first to go. Then he  hesitated. 

"Have you made a report about what you have learned of me?" he  asked Beech. 

The portly man tried to grin. It was more of a grimace. He said  nothing. 

"It is likely that you have made a report," Ark told him savagely.  "It is essential, or at least convenient, that

your superiors receive  no information about me for a time. I will make you a bargain." 


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Beech wet his lips. "Shoot." 

"Your life," Ark said, in return for telling me how this report can  be intercepted before it reaches

Washington." 

Beech hesitated. He nodded at his two companions, Space and Wood. 

"How about these two?" he asked. 

"I will be generous," Ark told him. "I will lock them up with you  until this affair is settled. You will be

prisoners, honorable  captives. My word of honor on that." 

"Your word is worth about as much as a lead nickel," Beech growled. 

"At present, your life is worth less than that," Ark pointed out.  "What is your decision?" 

"No," Beech said hesitantly. "I do not trust" 

Ark leaned forward abruptly, aimed the rifle and pulled the  trigger. Beech screeched an instant before the

weapon exploded. He  thought he was going to be shot between the eyes. Actually, Ark was  firing a fraction

of an inch over his head, by way of scaring him. 

Whatever results Ark had expected, they were far different from  those the shot got. The dory in which he

stood was small and light. A  moment after the shot exploded, bronze hands appeared on the boat's  gunwale.

They yanked. The boat heeled, hesitated, and when Ark, off  balance and striving to stay aboard, stepped on

the gunwale, the craft  went completely over, precipitating those aboard into the sea. 

Beech stared. Then the truth dawned. 

"Savage!" he roared. "You didn't swim for it!" 

Doc Savage did not answer, being engaged in wrenching the rifle out  of Ark's hands. The bronze man had

been concealed under the stern of  the speedboat, hanging to the propellers, projecting his nostrils above  the

water to breathe. He had swum underwater to the dory an instant  before the shot. 

Hyman Space and Ray Wood came to life and joined the combat. There  were only four unwounded men in

the dory. Even numbers. Or hardly even,  considering the tremendous strength and agility of the man of

bronze. 

The water around the boat foamed under the beat of arms. Blows  smashed. A man yelled out in terror; the

yelling turned to hideous  bubbling as he was forced under. Doc struck Ark, and the man with the  hairless

head became limp. Doc lifted him, threw him across the launch  coaming. Men were shooting from shore, but

it was doing little good. 

Within the space of three or four minutes, Doc and the others had  overcome the occupants of the dory. 

"We certainly have our ups and downs," Beech grinned. 

Then he listened. There was motor sound in the air. Beech glanced  upward, thinking it was a plane, then

looked along the water and saw a  fast boat coming toward them, its bows a welter of foam. 


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"Some yachtsman who happened along," Beech grinned. "Now I guess  we'll get some help." 

He changed his mind when two men stood on the pitching forward deck  of the approaching boat and began to

shoot slowly and deliberately with  rifles. 

THAT the newcomers were more of Ark's crew was evident. Their boat  was fast. 

"We can't pull that upsetting gag again," Beech wailed. "Savage,  you'd better sure enough swim for it this

time." 

Doc said nothing. But once more, he sank beneath the surface. This  time he did not remain, but stroked with

all of his power, seeking to  cover as much distance as possible before he came up. 

When he did top the surface, it was suddenly, in the manner in  which a porpoise breaks, and he filled his

lungs with airnot slowly,  with several deep breaths and a normal one at the last, as he would  have desired,

but all at once, in a convulsive pump. 

After he was down again, he heard rifle bullets seeking him. They  made plunging noises in the water. He

swam for a long time, at an  angle, then broke water again, got down once more, then changed his  course, so

that they would not be able to calculate exactly where he  would appear. 

Fortune had been against him, but now it shifted a little, and he  came to the shore near the small creek on the

mainland by which he had  entered the water in swimming to the island. He broke the surface and  scrambled

madly up the steep bank. 

The men on the boat saw him. They were still offshore, having  tarried to pick up Ark and the others. They

fired hasty bullets, but  the pitching craft was no fit shooting platform, and the slugs did  nothing but throw

sand and cut weeds and brush. 

Doc Savage let them see him start running to the right, then  doubled back and sought the concealment of a

palmetto cluster, from  which he could survey the boat, and where he could get the clothing  which he had

stripped off before he swam to the island. 

It was not a large craft, despite its speed, and he could see into  the cockpit. He stood looking for a long time,

until the men saw him  and began shooting at his giant bronze form. Then he retreated, but not  far. 

He crouched in the beach growth, waiting for those in the boat to  land, hoping they would run the craft close

inshore. But they did  neither, and the little vessel swung away, ran out to the island and  vanished behind the

headland. 

Doc Savage moved away then. His metallic features rarely showed  expression, but they were grim now,

immobile. 

There had been prisoners in the boatthree of them. Monk, Ham and  the girl, Nona Space. They had been

bound and gagged, and that alone  was an indication that they were alive. 

Doc Savage reached the road and ran steadily; his stride did not  look particularly labored, but he covered

ground at a rate which would  have amazed a professional runner. He came finally to a house, was  permitted

use of a telephone. He got in touch with the Coast Guard. 


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The Coast Guard was efficient enough. But before they reached the  island, the birds had flown. There was no

sign of Ark and his menor of  Monk, Ham and Nona Space. Where the ruined house had been, there was

only an empty space, slightly depressed, with the bare coral formation  of the island showing. 

Doc Savage did not show himself to the Coast Guardsmen, nor tell  them anything except that the creators of

the Red Snow had been there,  for he was still wanted by the police for the charge of murdering, or  having

something to do with the murder of Professor Casson Adams, the  man who had been shot in the trunk. 

The Coast Guardsmen, knowing no more than they did, were vastly  puzzled by the bare pit on the island, and

only one officer hazarded a  guess which hit upon the true cause, and he was shrugged down. 

It was midafternoon when Doc Savage got a telephone connection by  long distance to Washington, D. C.

The bronze man had friends in  official circles, individuals who in many instances owed him a debt of

gratitude, and he eventually got a connection with the central office  of the secret service, the body responsible

for guarding the life of  the president. 

"I want," the bronze man said, "to speak to the chief." 

"He is not here," the voice from Washington replied. 

"Who is he?" Doc questioned. "Where can I get in touch with him?" 

"He is in Florida," said the other. "His name is O. Garfew Beech.  He likes to be called Fluency Beech." 

Chapter 14. DUCKWITHNOWINGS

Doc SAVAGE spoke for a long time with Washington. 

An hour later, he was at the offices of the chemical company of  which he was silent owner. He made

inquiries and received four metal  cases which had just arrived from New York by the fastest air express.  He

carried these to the laboratory and proceeded to open them, bringing  out a marvelously compact analytical

kit. 

The chemical company laboratory was complete as such installations  went, but it lacked certain highly

modern bits of apparatus which Doc,  through his cousin Pat Savage, had obtained from New York. There was

one device in particular, by which an analysis of matter could be  obtained in a few moments, even more

accurately than by hours of  working with ordinary laboratory methods. 

Doc produced the bits of the red compound which had been in his  clothing and set about ascertaining its

nature. He had more to go on  than beforeHyman Space had said one of the important basic ingredients  was

radium, or radioactive substances. 

Doc was locked in the laboratory as he worked. Only a few officials  in charge of the plant knew his identity,

or were aware of his  presence. These men saw that he received latest copies of the afternoon  newspapers.

One brought in a midget radio which would pick up, not only  the news broadcasts, but would get down on the

police station wave  lengths. 

With the radio and the newspapers, Doc Savage kept in touch with  developments in the matter of the Red

Snow. Most of what he heard and  read was a rehash of what had already happened, with here and there a  wild

rumor, or a guess made by some imaginative reporter. 


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There was a story to the effect that the party of the secretary of  state had changed plans and, instead of

arriving in Miami that night,  as expected, would be delayed until the following day. There was no

explanation for the interruption. For that matter, probably no more  than a half dozen persons knew the real

reason for the delaya  mysterious telephone call to Washington made by Doc Savage. 

Doc Savage seemed to complete his analysis about four o'clock. But  he did not leave the laboratory then.

Instead, he called the chemical  company officials into conference and made long explanations, the  result of

which was a hurried assembling of chemical ingredients, some  of them extremely rare. Fast planes were

dispatched to Atlanta, New  Orleans, Jacksonville and other southern cities. 

Borrowing two of the most skilled chemical engineers from the  laboratory force, Doc Savage went to work.

He was busy steadily though  the night. Food was sent in. The two assistants seemed vastly puzzled  at what

they were being directed to do, their features wearing the  expressions of men who are beyond their depth in a

morass of formulae  and details. 

DAWN came. There had been no word from Monk, Ham, Nona Space, or  the others. However, police had

found a cabin cruiser which had been  scuttled, and a newspaper carried a picture of it. Doc recognized the

boat as the one used by Ark's menthe craft in which he had seen Monk,  Ham and Nona Space. 

The day passed without particular event. Doc Savage and his two  chemists still worked furiously. The

assistants were becoming tired,  but there was something about the compelling power of Doc Savage which

kept them working on. 

The special train bearing the secretary of state and party was on  its way to Miami, the newspaper stated. It

would arrive that night. 

The late afternoon edition of the Globe came forth with an item  which interested Doc Savage. 

SEMINOLE INDIAN SAW 

RED SNOW 

Reports have reached the Globe which indicate that a Seminole  Indian alligator hunter named

DuckWithNoWings was first to see the  Red Snow, several days ago. A good deal of mystery attaches to

the  matter, the Seminole having been afraid to talk. It is understood by  the Globe, however, that this Indian

secured a lump of strange red  material at the time he saw the Red Snow, and that he has been trying  to sell

this. 

The Globe is sending a reporter to the village of  DuckWithNoWings, which is situated in the Everglades

thirty miles  southeast of Chokoloskee. The Globe is making every endeavor to solve  the Red Snow mystery. 

There was more, having to do with generalitiesthe nature of the  swamp where the village of

DuckWithNoWings lay, and the probable  character of the Seminole alligator hunter himself. This stuff

has no  doubt been dashed off by a rewrite man to give the item body, since it  was an exclusive story, carried

by none of the other newspapers. 

Indeed, the other newspapers completely ignored it. Rumors about  the Red Snow were coming from all over

the nation, and some of them  seemed more reasonable than the tale of the alligator hunter. 

But, within an hour, Doc Savage was in a plane. The craft had been  rented for him by one of the officials of

the chemical company. 


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Doc flew out over the Everglades, toward the village of  DuckWithNoWings. In the cabin behind him was

a metal case painted a  peculiar color, a case he had prepared in the laboratory. 

The bronze man was not interested alone in the lump of mysterious  red substance which had come into the

possession of DuckWithNoWings. 

Hyman Space had said Ark and his men had another headquarters out  here in the swamp. 

FROM a height of two thousand feet, Doc Savage looked down on the  Everglades. He flew with the ease of

an accomplished pilot, and from  time to time used binoculars to bring the terrain closer. 

The Everglades presented a vista that might have been disappointing  to one seeing them for the first time and

expecting a swamp in the  general sensea mat of luxuriant vegetation, of lianas and creepers, of  interlacing

trees draped with hanging moss. It was nothing like that. 

For miles, there stretched what, at first glance, might have been  mistaken for green meadow, absolutely level,

with here and there an  irregularly shaped pond or a wide, meandering creek. But seen through  the glasses, the

grass was rank, and rooted in shallow water more often  than in soil. Rarely was there a patch of dry ground. 

The plane was fast. As Doc drove it onward, the expanse below  changed a little. Clumps of gnarled jungle

appeared, marked by the  great, uprearing skeletons of trees which were dead, or nearly so. Off  to the north

stretched the dismal expanse of the Great Cypress Swamp,  with its occasional sawmill. 

It was a waste, this melancholy expanse below, a stretch of country  as impenetrable, to a man on foot, as any

in the country. It had, of  course, been seen from the air, but there were undoubtedly stretches,  by no means

small, which had been trod by no foot other than that of  the strange race which had sought sanctuary

therethe Seminoles. 

The Seminole villages themselves were picturesque. Doc picked up a  few along the gray ribbon of concrete

which was the Tamiami trail, then  left them behind as he swung southward. Consisting of thatched huts

inside a stockade, these villages might have been transplanted from  darkest Africa. 

The bronze man dropped the plane a little lower, and it, or its  shadow, frightened up clouds of birds.

Buzzards took flight from the  naked arms of dying trees and sailed up to hang motionless black specks  in the

late afternoon sunlight. 

Another plane ahead in the sky, looked like one of the buzzards at  first. It was a monoplane, a highwing job,

and it came out of the  infinite distance, a speck at first, then growing. It was  singlemotored and painted

brown. 

Doc Savage watched it closely. It altered its course slightly,  coming toward him, then swung to draw

alongside, as if to give those  aboard a chance to stare. On the flanks of the ship, a single word was  painted in

big letters: 

GLOBE 

This, then, would be the newspaper plane which the Miami newspaper  had dispatched into the swamp. 

The pilot, helmeted and goggled, gave close attention to his  flying. But in the passenger cabin, a man

wrenched one of the sliding  windows open, thrust his head outside and waved his arms wildly. He  seemed to

be trying to signal. From time to time, he pointed downward. 


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Doc looked below. His flakegold eyes distinguished nothing. 

The man in the plane cabin produced a flashlight from somewhere. He  began blinking it. Despite the brilliant

sunlight the faint wink of the  eye was discernible. It was a large light, of the searchlight type.  Letters came in

halting Morse. 

Man giving name Monk sig naled us for  help, the light spelled out. We

are unarmed Can you do  anything?" 

Doc Savage stood up in the cockpit and gave a vehement nod. That  seemed to be all the answer required. 

The man in the other plane cabin nodded also, and blinked his  flashlight again. 

"We will show you spot," he signaled. 

The other plane drew ahead, and Doc Savage fell in behind. It  seemed logical Monk might have been brought

into the swamp, to Ark's  other headquarters, and might have managed to free himself, to give a  signal.

Possibly he had used the same blinker code which this man was  employing. Doc followed close on the tail of

the other plane. From time  to time he shifted his glance downward, studying the swamp. That trifle  of

incaution was nearly responsible for his finish. 

He looked up, almost in front of the plane's snout, a great scarlet  mass was materializing. It was the Red

Snow. The other plane had  released the stuff. 

DOC stamped the rudder, rocked the stick. The plane reeled over.  Braces squealed, flying wires strummed

and struts groaned in their  sockets. 

With infinite slowness, it seemed, the ship banked over and down.  The screaming propeller seemed reluctant

to pull away from the red  horror that had bloomed out in the sunwhitened sky. 

Doc Savage knew planes. He realized that he was not going to get  clear. The ship was too sluggish on the

controls. 

Doc dived over the cockpit rim into space. He let himself fall, not  counting, but kicking his legs to prevent

any tendency to spin. He ran  his hands over the straps of his parachutehe never went aloft without  one, if it

could be helpedto make sure the straps were sitting  properly. 

Looking up, he saw the plane cleave into the cloud of red snow. It  went straight through, stirring up the

flakes, and came out on the  opposite side, apparently unharmed. The controls were not centralized,  so that it

reeled over and over in the sky, and traveled some distance. 

Then a wing fell off; the undercarriage came loose; the tail  detached itself. These parts did not fall far before

they themselves  disintegrated, turning into a grayishred powder which sifted down a  short distance and

seemed to be absorbed magically by the very air  itself. 

Doc glanced downward, saw the swamp close below, and gave the  ripcord of his chute a yank. The silk

blossomed out, yanked his fall  short, and let him down in a puddle beside a thicket of cypress. Water  birds,

frightened up, made a great roaring by beating their wings and  taking the air. 

The other plane came moaning down from above. The man in the cabin  had exchanged his flashlight for an

automatic rifle. He began shooting.  The bullets knocked drops of water high into the air. 


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Doc shed the chute harness and sprinted. He reached the edge of the  water. The mud was deep, impending.

Lead knocked the filth up into his  face. Then he got under the trees, ran a few yards, changed his course,  and

was temporarily safe. 

Crouching there, Doc Savage watched the Red Snow sift on downward.  It never reached the swamp, but

dissipated itself in the sunlight, an  indication that the stuff had to be released near the ground, or its  effects

would not touch the earth. 

The plane had not been disintegrated entirely by the Red Snow. The  central section of the motor and certain

cabin fittings had fallen into  the swamp. But the rest of the ship had disintegrated in the weird  fashion

peculiar to the Red Snow. 

Bullets began cutting into the scrawny foliage. Those in the plane  had seen the bronze man. 

Doc shifted his position. Thicker shelter lay to the south, but he  did not go in that direction. He went north,

carefully noting his  position by such dead trees as served as landmarks. He seemed to be  seeking something. 

The plane dived overhead. The staccato rap of the automatic rifle  was vicious over the motor rumble. The

sounds the bullets made hitting  into the swamp terrain, were infinitely more violent. 

Doc got under a mass of creepers, and the bullets failed to search  him out before the plane had to pull up and

circle for another attack.  By the time it got back, he had changed his position and the craft  failed to find him. 

A moment later, he found what he was seekingwhat remained of the  motor of the plane, and certain objects

which had been in the cabin.  The stuff was scattered over a radius of no great area. He searched  carefully. 

Not until he had found the metal case which had been in the cabin,  did he seem satisfied. 

THE case was bulky, unhandy to carry and at the same time remain  hidden from the plane above. The ship

circled, dived, and buzzed like  an angry hornet. The automatic rifle stuttered at intervals. 

Suddenly, those aboard the plane saw Doc Savage. With wild haste,  the pilot banked and came downward.

The bronze man was, for the moment,  in the open in tall grass which offered poor concealment. He got boldly

to his feet, ran and dived into a clump of brush, then carefully  writhed to one side, losing himself. 

In the plane above, the rifleman fired deliberately, raking the  brush clump from end to end. His lips writhed

as he cursed. Then he  stopped shooting and slid forward to bellow in the pilot's ear. 

"We will use the Red Snow again!" he shouted. "It is the only way!" 

"It would be better if we did not!" the pilot bellowed back. "We  have no great supply of the stuff, either

aboard or at the  headquarters! Ark's orders were to save it for emergencies, or to  eliminate those whom we

have listed to die!" 

"This" grated the other, "is an emergency! Fly close above the  brush." 

The pilot shrugged, banked his plane again and sent it back. Back  in the cabin, the passenger fumbled with a

long case and brought out  what resembled a grotesque air rifle. This had a barrel of moderate  size, but below

that was another cylinder of much greater diameter, the  latter fastened in place with setscrews and clamps. 


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The man removed a second of these cylinders from the case, and with  hasty fingers, began substituting it for

the first. 

"Circle once more," he howled at the pilot. "I have to put a fresh  charge of compressed air in this air gun!" 

Obediently, the pilot arched the craft around. 

The man preparing the Red Snow for discharge opened a second box,  one which was carefully padded, and

extracted what appeared to be an  ordinary rifle grenade, with a cylinder perhaps a bit larger than  ordinary.

The nose of this was tapered, to the other end was attached a  rod which exactly fitted the interior of the air

gun barrel. There was  a timing device to regulate detonation. 

The plane came back over the brush clump in which Doc Savage had  taken shelter. The pilot stared

downward. 

"There he is!" he bawled, and pointed. 

He had sighted Doc Savage. 

The man in the cabin leaned out, aimed and jerked the trigger of  the air gun. The device made a gusty grunt

of a noise. The grenade  portion was discharged, arched outward and exploded directly over the  brush. If there

was any noise, it was not audible over the moan of the  motor. Rather, the container of the Red Snow seemed

to disintegrate and  free the stuff. 

The red material boiled out, gaseous in nature at first, it seemed,  then crystallizing into flakes which fell

downward, directly upon the  brush patch. 

"That'll get him," the pilot yelled gleefully. 

THE flier was a cautious soul, and he did not venture too near the  Red Snow. He kept the plane in a gentle

bank, circling the vicinity at  a distance varying from one to three hundred yards. 

The man in the cabin discarded his air gun and clamped a pair of  glasses to his eyes. He studied the swamp

around the spot where the Red  Snow was falling. 

The red horror was down, now. It was going through its uncanny  melting process, being absorbed into the air.

And a moment later a  swamp breeze stirred the grass, the brush, and this vegetation began to  fall to pieces, to

crumble into powder. The wind swept up the powder,  seemed to swallow it, and a moment later, naked earth

became visible.  The denuded space increased in area, and a shallow depression appeared  as If by magic. 

Although the whole phenomenon appeared to take but short moments,  considerable time had actually

elapsed, as indicated by the number of  times the plane circled. 

Water began to run into the hollow where the brush had been, and  after a timepossibly half an hourthere

was only a small lake to show  where the growth had stood. During all of that time, the plane either  circled, or

swept back and forth in slow swings while those aboard  studied the surrounding swamp. The two in the ship

reached a  conclusion. 

"The bronze man could not have escaped," said the man in the cabin.  "I released the Red Snow directly upon

him." 


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"That," said the pilot, "is what these Americans call O.K." 

Chapter 15. THE CONQUEST PLAN

THE plane swung away, but flew just fast enough to keep its  altitude while those aboard studied the sky in

search of any other  ships which might be in sight. There were none. They circled, and came  down upon a

small lake in the swamp. 

The edges of this patch of water were studded with bare looking  trees, and to the right was a bit of high

groundhigh only in  comparison to the rest of the swamp, for it was merely prominent enough  to offer dry

footing. 

On the dry ground, almost hidden in a small jungle of trees, was a  Seminole village. A very small settlement,

it consisted of half a dozen  thatched huts erected on stilts and a stockade of stout sticks thatched  with palm

fronds. There was no sign of life. 

The plane landed on the lake. The pilot used great care in taxiing  inshore, to a spot where treesvery sizable

trees for this swamp  districtoverhung the water. The boughs of these, draped with moss,  hung down like a

curtain. 

When the plane was close in, what had seemed to be branches and  moss lifted like a curtain, disclosing a

long, camouflaged hangar. Some  of the boughs and moss was genuine, but most of it was cleverly done in

paint on canvas. 

There were two planes already in the hidden recess. Both were  small, but overmotored and capable of

carrying a heavy load at high  speed. 

Ark himself appeared. The black grease paint was gone from his  face, revealing a countenance of olive hue.

He looked considerably the  worse for wear. There was a purple splotch where Doc Savage's fist had  hit him. 

"Well?" he snapped. "Who was in that plane? You took long enough to  find out!" 

"Doc Savage," said the pilot. 

Ark blinked. He wet his lips, swallowed. 

"What did you do?" he asked. 

"We used the Red Snow," explained the other. "We had to employ it  twice. Once on the plane, when Doc

Savage escaped. The second time, we  got him." 

Ark made fists of his bony hands. "You are sure?" 

"Positive!" said the flier. 

"You used two charges of the Red Snow?" Ark asked. 

The man who had been in the plane cabin put in hastily, "it was  necessary. We tried to get him with the rifle,

but it was hopeless. We  had to use a second charge." 


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"That was undesirable," Ark said slowly. "We have no great quantity  of the Red Snow on hand. All of our

supply is here, and it may be some  time before we get more. The available quantity of the material is  limited

by the amount of radium which we can get, to work into the  ingredients." He fell silent, then shook his head.

"But it was worth  it. Come." 

They shoved the plane into the concealed recess behind the boughs,  and lowered the curtain. The latter was a

clumsy affair, and they had  to push outside afterward in a folding canvas boat and replace branches  and

pennants of moss which had fallen off during the lifting of the  curtain. 

They went, then, to the stockade, entered it and moved to one of  the larger huts. It was near sundown. Ark

ordered a gasoline lantern  lighted. Carrying it he went inside the hut. 

THE structure was erected on stilts, the floor being of poles laid  upon stringers. These poles were stout and

furnished excellent  anchorage for the prisoners which the shack held. 

The captives numbered ten. Their sprawled forms covered most of the  floor space. 

Monk, Ham and portly Fluency Beech were together at one side,  fastened more securely than the rest. Nona

Space and her stepfather,  Hyman Space, were near Ray Wood; and a few feet from them lay Beech's  aide, the

man who had seized Doc Savage on the island, only to himself  be captured later by Ark's crew. 

Off in a corner by themselves lay two strangers. One of them was a  young man in a baggy suit, who lay so

that his coat was open,  disclosing a bundle of rough copy paper in the pocket, the type of  paper used by

newspaper reporters. His companion still wore a flying  helmet, minus the goggles, and had the weathered

features of an airman. 

"What's this all about? the young man in the baggy suit demanded  angrily. "I land a dozen miles from here

and ask for  DuckWithNoWings, and you birds grab me and bring me here. You take  my plane. What's

the idea?" 

Ark told him, "You ask too many questions." 

"Listen," the young man gritted. "I'm a newspaper reporter and the  Globe will have some one out looking for

me before long." Ark leered at  him. "My dear friend, they will find you." 

The journalist did not like the tone. He moistened his lips. 

"What do you mean?" he demanded. 

"It will be very simple," Ark advised. "We will send the plane up.  You two had no parachutes. My man will

be aboard, but with a parachute.  He will step overboard, after breaking a control wire." 

The reporter tried to stutter something, failed and fell into a  horrified silence. 

Ark now gave his attention to Monk, Ham and the others. 

"I was keeping you alive, thinking you might be of some service to  me in trapping Doc Savage," he said.

"Doc Savage is now dead, which  eliminates my reasons for permitting you to exist longer." His strange  voice

became even shriller. "It will give me much satisfaction to  eliminate you." 


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There was an interruption, the guard at the door calling out softly  that men were approaching. A moment

later, these entered the stockade.  There were three of them. They had a captive, a bulky, sullen Seminole  clad

in a brilliant skirt affair and a gaudy shirt. They ushered him  into the large hut. 

"DuckWithNoWings," one announced. 

Ark piped, "Did you find the lump of basic ingredient?" 

"We did," one of the men said, and tossed a package wrapped in moss  to Ark. "We got the story out of this

guy, too. He saw two men running  through the swamp, and saw one of them hide something. He got it, after

he saw the Red Snow get the two men" 

Ark eyed Hyman Space. "The two men were your assistants who tried  to escape from here and get to Doc

Savage." 

Space said nothing. His one eye was hollow, staring. The black  patch had been shoved aside from the other,

revealing a gnarled cavity. 

A voice called from outside, "Radio message for you, chief." 

Ark went out. 

HE was back within less than five minutes, and there was a twisted  smile on his hairless face. He teetered on

his heels and scowled at  Monk and Ham. 

"That radio message was from one of my spies watching the secretary  of state's special train," he advised. "It

seems that your Doc Savage  was clever enough to learn that we planned a reception for the  government

official, and managed to convey a warning." 

Ark paused. Ham said a tightlipped nothing. For once he was  without his sword cane. Monk lay beside him,

tilted over on one side,  an eye pressed absently to one of the cracks in the pole floor. 

Monk could see his pig, Habeas Corpus, prowling around under the  shack. Ark's men had brought the pig

along, intrigued perhaps by his  intelligence and his unusual appearance; perhaps also they had wanted  the

pleasure of deviling Monk by promising to make bacon out of Habeas,  they having discovered that the

suggestion was the one thing which  would throw Monk into a futile rage. 

Ark continued, "It is indeed lucky that we had spies watching the  special train. They learned that the secretary

of state is not aboard.  He transferred, in imagined secrecy, to a plane, and will arrive in  Miami within the next

four hours." 

Ark paused, leered. "Correctly, I should say, he is expected to  arrive in Miami in the next four hours. Nothing

of the sort will  happen. I fear, instead, that his plane will be lost. Perhaps it will  be one of the great mysteries

of all time. But again, the Red Snow may  be seen, in which case the world will know the truth." 

Ham said quietly, "Will you answer one question?" 

Ark shrugged. "It depends." 

"You have killed a number of persons," Ham said. "One was an  airplane designer" 


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"A designer of war planes," Ark elaborated. 

"Yes," Ham growled. "Another was a professor in the chemical  research department of a famous university" 

"Your nation's greatest expert on poison gases," said Ark. 

Ham blinked. He seemed to begin to comprehend. 

"There was a mechanical engineer who" 

Ark interrupted him. "The mechanical engineer was the inventor of  remarkable war machines. There was a

United States senator who  possessed military information about my country. There was also an  automobile

manufacturer whose factories could be converted to hasty  manufacture of tanks. And another was an

undersecretary in your war  department, a man who was a master of military strategy. Do you begin  to

understand?" 

"I get it," Ham mumbled. 

"Of course you do," Ark piped gleefully. 

"So your country is getting reedy to start something?" Ham  surmised. 

Ark nodded. "Our fleet is not many hundreds of miles from your  coast, ostensibly holding maneuvers. The

assassination of your  secretary of state is the signal for a sudden declaration of war. Other  of your national

leaders are to be killed with the Red Snow. Your  country will be temporarily paralyzed. Before it can get

organized, it  will be too late." 

He paused, as if to hear Ham's reaction, but the dapper lawyerhe  was not so dapper nowsaid nothing, and

Ark continued: 

"It is unfortunate that we do not have more of the Red Snow," he  said. "It is a weapon such as mankind never

before saw. It is my own  product, an electrochemical solution which completely disrupts the  molecular

characteristics of matter. You know that radium has the  property of disintegrating, although the process is

infinitely slow?  Well, I discovered that, by employing this phenomena of radium and  adding certain chemical

and radioactive substances, treated in a  certain manner, I could cause almost instantaneous disintegration of

practically all known substances. 

"I do not destroy them. Nothing so drastic as that. I merely change  their nature, as water is turned into steam,

as wood is burned and  turned into smoke and ashes. In this case, there is no resulting heat.  The whole affair is

carried out through the medium of atomic  bombardment, secured through the medium of these radioactive

compounds  in combination with" 

A man outside emitted a terrific yell. 

"Doc Savage!" he bawled. "The bronze man is here!" 

Chapter 16. DEATH IN RED

HAD the world unexpectedly started coming to an end the surprise  could not have been more complete. Ark

stopped his boastful  explanations and dived for the door, knocking a man spinning out of his  path. 


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Monk came to life, reared up and tried to trip Ark. 

"Shoot him!" Ark yelled, and pointed at Monk. 

The guard lifted his gun, aimed it at Monk, but another crya  shriek of awful pain this timecaused him to

change his mind. He  followed Ark out through the door. 

There was a porchlike platform before the door, and the men stood  upon that, staring. They could see that the

stockade gate was open.  They saw a man sprawled in front of it. The fellow seemed to be alive,  but unable to

movegripped by a strange paralysis. There was no one  else in sight. 

Then men came running. They popped from the other huts. They came  from the direction of the hangar

hidden on the lake edge. All were  excited, puzzled. 

"Who saw Doc Savage?" Ark piped. "Who shouted?" 

At first no one answered, then a man said, "it must have been the  guard at the gate." 

"Scatter," Ark directed. "Hunt the bronze man." 

The Seminole village must have been abandoned when Ark and his men  took it over. The clearing was

overgrown with brush and grass. This had  not been cut, but was trampled down in spots. Elsewhere, it was

high  enough to offer shelter. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, appeared suddenly from under the shack  where Ark stood on the porchlike

projection. The shote began grunting  loudly and trotted across the compound, eyes fixed on some distant

spot. 

"Follow the pig!" Ark shrilled. "He sees the bronze man!" 

The men converged on the spot for which Habeas Corpus was heading. 

For a moment, the rear of the prison hut was unwatched, and there  came a soft crunching and rattling as the

thatching was torn aside. The  men were shouting. That covered the noise. 

Monk heard the first sound from the hut side. He stared, waiting.  His homely features were wet with

perspiration. The nearness, a moment  before, to death by shooting, had given him a sweating spell. 

An aperture opened in the thatched wall. A pair of bronze hands  appeared, enlarging the opening. 

"Doc!" Monk breathed. 

The bronze giant was inside an instant later. He carried in his  arms a large mass of what resembled a

yellowred cloth of considerable  weight. This, he deposited on the floor. He began freeing the captives.

Some of them were tied. He loosened those first. Others were  handcuffed. Doc examined the linkage. These

were cheaper handcuffs, not  like those which Fluency Beech's aide had used the day before. 

Doc grasped the leg manacles. He had purchase, for they were linked  around the floor poles. He yanked, and

the links snapped as if they had  become suddenly rotten. The depth to which they cut into the floor  poles,

however, showed the amount of strain which the bronze man's  muscles put upon them before they gave. 


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The men were shouting more loudly in the clearing. They were angry  now. 

"The infernal pig saw nothing!" one screeched. 

Monk squinted at Doc. "What'd you do? Send Habeas away to draw  their attention?" 

Doc nodded. 

"I am going to draw their attention," he said swiftly. "When they  are concentrating on me, you make a break.

Do not try to escape through  the swamp. They would overhaul you. Get to their planes and take off." 

"What about you?" Monk demanded. 

The bronze man did not answer. He gathered up the bundle of  yellowred cloth and eased out through the

hole by which he had entered  the hut. 

DOC SAVAGE worked close to the stockade edge. The construction of  this had once been secure enough,

but age had made it decrepit. He  found a spot where there was room to crawl through, to get outside into  the

jungle growth. Once concealed therein, he circled, using all of the  caution possible, until he had reached the

opposite end of the  clearing. 

Then he tried the stockade, found another openingit was not  difficultand crawled inside. Making his way

to the nearest hut, he  picked his chance and dived inside. 

The structure had been a living quarters. There were hammocks slung  from the roof poles, and various

suitcases. Too, there were cases  holding automatic rifles and ammunition. Doc dipped into one of these,  got a

gun and charged it with ammunition. 

He advanced to the door, aimed deliberately, and fired. Ark  screamed and leaped a foot into the air, fell flat,

then got up and  hopped to cover. He had been shot through one leg. 

Doc showed himself. He used nice judgment, giving the men long  enough to see him, but not long enough to

target him on their gun  sights. Then he lunged from the door, slammed flat and writhed through  the grass

until he was lying prone in a small ditch which had been dug  to drain the vicinity of the hut. 

He pulled up a large fistful of the rank swamp grass and held it so  as to mask his features while he looked

around. The grass, being of a  nature blending with the surroundings, made him less likely to be seen,

although a sharp eye would soon detect him. 

The bronze man had depended on the men pursuing him. Thus, they  would be drawn away from the hut

where the prisoners were, allowing the  latter a chance to escape. 

But nothing of the sort happened. The men were in a tight group  around Ark. 

One of them held an air rifle similar to the one employed by the  man in the plane. He was fitting one of the

Red Snow grenades into the  gun. 

"Use it!" Ark yelled. "We've got to get that infernal bronze devil  this time!" 

Doc Savage hastily lowered himself. He did not try to retreat. It  was not feasible. If he got erect, they would

see him and use their  rifles. If he crawled, he could not make sufficient time. 


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He still carried the bundle of peculiar yellowred material. He  opened it now. It proved to be a sack of an

affair with a drawstring  opening. It was almost six feet long, wide enough to contain his, giant  frame when he

eased inside. He drew in the mouth of the bag. 

The last glance he threw overhead showed the arching grenade,  showed it bloom suddenly into a spreading

shroud of red flakes which  sifted downward upon the spot where he lay. 

The bronze man worked frantically at the mouth of the container. It  must be more than airtight. It must be

sealed completely. In one of his  pockets was a case containing some of the peculiar metallic substance  with

which the cloth was impregnated, but it was in a paste state. He  smeared it on the bag mouth, clamped the

cloth together in his corded  hands. Then he waited. 

There was a peculiar hissing sound as the Red Snow descendeda  sound not loud, but distinctive. Doc

showed no particular interest. He  had heard it thus once beforeout in the swamp, when he had used this  bag

to escape the grenade fired from the plane. In that instance, he  had floundered clear in the bag, once he

thought the Red Snow had  dissipated its weird strength. 

The bag was the only defense he had been able to devise against the  Red Snow. He had analyzed the stuff in

the laboratory, secured a fair  knowledge of its nature, and made up this bag of metal which would not  be

affected by the stuff. The Red Snow was far from universally  effective. Many materials would resist it

partially or completely. 

When he guessed that the fall of Red Snow was at its height, he  drew himself up and began to roll backward,

so that he would leave the  cloud of red flakes on the side opposite Ark and his men. It was a  ticklish task. The

opening of even a single seam in the bagthey were  quadruple stitched and filled with the flexible sealing

cementwould  mean instant death, complete disintegration. 

Finally, when he was sure he was clear, and certain the Red Snow  would have dissipated, he freed himself of

the bag. 

What he saw was not pleasant. 

MONK, Ham and the others, true to orders, had sought to make a  break during the excitement. They had been

discovered, and had  sheltered themselves by flopping down inside the compound. 

Ark and his men were advancing on them, rifles ready. 

The man with the air rifle had fitted a second grenade into the  barrel of the pneumatic weapon. 

Doc stood up, shouted. He made no words, merely yelled. 

Ark and his men spun around, bewildered, stunned. Ark had seized a  stick and was employing it as a crutch.

He waved the one arm with which  he was not holding the crutch. 

"Use the Red Snow on him again!" he shrilled. "Then keep shooting  with rifles! Some of you have hand

grenades. Use them!" 

The man with the pneumatic rifle lifted his weapon. 

Over by the stockade gate, Monk stood up suddenly. He must have  crawled over there to get the weapon of

the guard whom Doc Savage had  knocked out in entering the compound. He held the weapon now. He


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whipped it up, snapped a shot. 

The man with the pneumatic rifle screeched and fell down. He  floundered about. 

Ark leaped for the fallen one, his idea obviously being to get the  air gun. But Ark was not accustomed to

using one leg, and he fell down. 

The wounded manhe might have, been dyingpulled the trigger of the  air gun and the grenade hit the

ground, disintegrated. There was a  spout of red flakes. 

Ark began screaming and tried to crawl away. He was not fast  enough, and the red particles enveloped him.

The breeze stirred them a  little, but not much, and they spread in all directions. 

There was a hut near by. The Red Snow reached that. The thatching  offered no resistance. 

Ark's men began running for safety. Monk howled at them, shot in  the air, but they paid no attention. 

The hut which the Red Snow had penetrated must have held the supply  of the stuff, and the disintegrating

effect actuated the detonating  devices, for there was a sudden, vast puff of the red stuff, and it  spread with

tremendous speed. 

One of Ark's men was overtaken, then another. Some of them, though,  must have gotten away, although as

far as Doc Savage was concerned,  there was never evidence of that. The men were not heard from again. 

Doc and his own party were running. They had a start on the red  terror, enough headway to get clear. 

Monk's pig, Habeas Corpus, appeared and showed an inclination to go  back and investigate the strange red

pall. Monk caught him, scooped him  up by one oversized ear and bore him away. 

"You must be losing your good judgment," Monk told the shote. 

THAT, as far as actual events were concerned, was the end of the  menace of the Red Snow. The entire supply

of the stuff had been  destroyed, and along with it, as far as any one knew, the man who knew  the secret of its

compounding. 

The building housing the equipment to make the Red Snow was  completely disintegrated by the Red Snow

itself. The other  machinerythe pedestals removed from the house on the dunes to the  islandhad been

previously destroyed on the island. 

DuckWithNoWings went back to his alligator hunting, still not  knowing exactly what it was all about.

The Globe reporter made all  haste to his newspaper, and wrote a story which he visioned as putting  him in the

front rank of journalists. He got quite a shock. It was not  published. 

The reporter roared his disappointment. The editor explained simply  that he had been requested to put the lid

on the affair, since it would  only stir up international complications, and possiblyindeed, quite

probablyprecipitate a war. 

There was no war. The battle fleet of a certain foreign power,  holding maneuvers near the American coast,

discovered itself virtually  surrounded by American warships, also using the all sufficient excuse  of battle

maneuvers. The foreign force betook itself home after a  decent interval. 


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The secretary of state and party reached Miami. The newspapers said  the government executive had had an

excellent fishing trip. 

O. Garfew Beech was not heard from again. In his capacity as head  of the secret service, he slid quietly out of

the picture, not wanting  publicity, and returned to Washington. His work was completed when the  plot of the

foreign power was nipped in the bud. 

Doc Savage faded out of the picture also, and the Miami police  dropped the murder charge against him as if it

were something hot. This  was after they had heard testimony offered by Hyman Space and others. 

It was to Doc Savage's liking, the manner in which he eased into  the background. There were plenty of others

who liked publicity, and he  was willing they should have it. He had come to Florida to work on a  method of

eradicating the mosquito pest. He went to work on that. 

He was not destined to finish the task, although that was a fact he  had no means of knowing. Trouble, danger,

excitement, had a way of  hunting the bronze man out. His reputation as a trouble smasher had  spread to the

corners of the earth, and it brought him strange  problems. 

From the Arctic wastes, the next call would come. But it was not  from the Arctic as civilized man knew it,

but from a fabulous domain in  the depths of the earththe Land of Always Nighta spot unknown to

civilization, yet populated by a race so advanced that the intricacies  of radio, of television, of surgery and

medicine, of electrochemistry,  were little more complicated than the problems which confront a small  child. 

A strange man covered with a growth of golden fur, a man of  mystery, of untold learning, was to be the

harbinger of the next  amazing adventure of this bronze man and his companions. 

Most remarkable of all would be the nature of the clue on which the  mystery seemed to hingea pair of

goggles with lenses so black that no  man could see through them. Goggles with a fantastic purpose! Goggles,

war for the possession of which launched a stream of horror such as Doc  Savage and his men had never

before encountered. 

But Doc Savage, having no inkling of all of that, set himself to  work trying to create a parasite which would

exterminate mosquitoes and  nothing else. 

Monk had a suggestion to offer, should they need a laboratory  subject, bearing similarity to a mosquito, upon

which to test the  efficacy of such an evolved parasite. 

"If we find the bug," he grinned, "we can try it out on Ham." 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. RED SNOW, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. MYSTERY IN SCARLET, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. THE TRUNK SNATCHERS, page = 7

   6. Chapter 3. RED IN THE RING, page = 14

   7. Chapter 4. THE FOUR PEDESTALS, page = 23

   8. Chapter 5. THE SURPRISE IN SKIRTS, page = 33

   9. Chapter 6. RED FLAKES AND DEATH, page = 43

   10. Chapter 7. THE CORPSE OF DUST, page = 47

   11. Chapter 8. THE PATH TO MYSTERY, page = 55

   12. Chapter 9. MYSTERIOUS ISLE, page = 60

   13. Chapter 10. IN AND OUT, page = 68

   14. Chapter 11. THE MEN OF DUST, page = 75

   15. Chapter 12. THE TALKING BENEFIT, page = 84

   16. Chapter 13. RED ISLAND, page = 92

   17. Chapter 14. DUCK-WITH-NO-WINGS, page = 100

   18. Chapter 15. THE CONQUEST PLAN, page = 106

   19. Chapter 16. DEATH IN RED, page = 109