Title:   THE SPOOK LEGION

Subject:  

Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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PDF Version:   1.2



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THE SPOOK LEGION

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE SPOOK LEGION......................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE FIRST SPOOK..............................................................................................................1

Chapter 2. NUT? ......................................................................................................................................6

Chapter 3. NO CHANCES....................................................................................................................14

Chapter 4. THE SNATCHING GHOST ................................................................................................19

Chapter 5. GIRL IN GREEN .................................................................................................................25

Chapter 6. PHANTOMS ........................................................................................................................32

Chapter 7. THE SPOOK AT THE AIRPORT .......................................................................................37

Chapter 8. TERROR AMONG ERMINES...........................................................................................48

Chapter 9. MARIKAN ...........................................................................................................................51

Chapter 10. INVISIBLE RAIDERS......................................................................................................59

Chapter 11. GHOST PRINTS ................................................................................................................64

Chapter 12. FUR FARM ........................................................................................................................67

Chapter 13. ALCHEMY........................................................................................................................72

Chapter 14. SPOOK WAR....................................................................................................................78

Chapter 15. THE LIFE OF A GHOST..................................................................................................83

Chapter 16. THE SPOOK DETECTOR................................................................................................89

Chapter 17. SEIZURE...........................................................................................................................92

Chapter 18. UNMAKER OF SPOOKS.................................................................................................97

Chapter 19. DEATH DEVICE .............................................................................................................103


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THE SPOOK LEGION

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE FIRST SPOOK 

Chapter 2. NUT? 

Chapter 3. NO CHANCES 

Chapter 4. THE SNATCHING GHOST 

Chapter 5. GIRL IN GREEN 

Chapter 6. PHANTOMS 

Chapter 7. THE SPOOK AT THE AIRPORT 

Chapter 8. TERROR AMONG ERMINES 

Chapter 9. MARIKAN 

Chapter 10. INVISIBLE RAIDERS 

Chapter 11. GHOST PRINTS 

Chapter 12. FUR FARM 

Chapter 13. ALCHEMY 

Chapter 14. SPOOK WAR 

Chapter 15. THE LIFE OF A GHOST 

Chapter 16. THE SPOOK DETECTOR 

Chapter 17. SEIZURE 

Chapter 18. UNMAKER OF SPOOKS 

Chapter 19. DEATH DEVICE  

Chapter 1. THE FIRST SPOOK

LEO BELL was a counter clerk in a Boston telegraph office. Leo was  levelheaded. He certainly did not

believe in spooks. At least, he did  not believe in spooks at precisely ten o'clock at night, as he moved  behind

the counter straightening the books of message blanks. 

At five minutes past ten Leo's disbelief in spooks received a rude  jarring. 

It happened that Leo Bell was an ambitious young man who had  studied the finer points of selling, so, of

course, he knew the  importance of making things convenient for a customer, even the small  things. It was

Leo's habit to place three or four books of message  blanks on the counter top so that prospective senders of

telegrams had  merely to step up and start writing. 

As he went along tidying the counter, Leo examined each of these  books, because careless customers

sometimes went off and left  scribbling on them. At this particular examination, all of the blanks  were clean

and fresh, showing unmarked sheets. Leo was sure of that. He  remembered it particularly. 

Leo stood at the end of the counter and waited for a customer. None  came in. Leo was positive of that, also. 

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No one even passed on the street outside. It was very quiet. 

Then the wastebasket upset. 

The wastebasket was not placed exactly where it should have been   near the writing table  but was out

about a yard from the table. It  upset noisily. Trash fell out. 

Leo Bell leaned over the counter and his eyes popped. He licked his  lips. Then he rubbed a hand over his

eyes. Finally, he walked around  the counter. He thought a cat or a dog might have gotten into the

wastebasket. But there was no cat or dog. 

Leo straightened the basket, then stood and scratched his head,  trying to decide what had overturned the

basket, and failing to reach  any satisfactory conclusion, he moved over to the counter. There, he  got his next

shock. 

The telegraph blanks there had borne no writing when he arranged  them a moment before. But one now bore

a message printed in heavy but  somewhat uncertain strokes. It read: 

DOC SAVAGE 

NEW YORK CITY 

MATTER OF VITAL DANGER TO THOUSANDS MERITS YOUR ATTENTION STOP  PLEASE

BOARD BOSTON TO NEW YORK PASSENGER PLANE OF EXCELSIOR AIRWAYS AT  NOON

TOMORROW STOP GET ABOARD IN BOSTON STOP SUGGEST YOU USE DISGUISE  AND BE

PREPARED FOR HIDEOUS AND AMAZING EXPERIENCE 

A N ONYMOUS 

(1440 Powder Road) 

Leo Bell stared at the message, noting that it was marked to be  sent collect at destination. He was

dumfounded. He felt as if cold  water had trickled unexpectedly down the back of his neck. He eyed the

address on the message and shook his head, because he knew, from past  experience, that a telegram

addressed to one man in a city as large as  New York had very little chance of being delivered. 

Leo carried the message back to the night manager. 

"I have here a straight telegram addressed to Doc Savage in New  York City," he told the night manager. "I

think we should get a better  address." 

"Where have you been all your life?" demanded the manager. 

"Huh?" Leo blinked. 

"I thought everybody had heard of Doc Savage," said the other. 

LEO asked, "Who is this Doc Savage?" 

The night manager opened his mouth as if to speak, but did not. 


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"Wait," he said. "I'll show you something." 

The night manager walked to his desk in the rear. The night manager  was a studious individual. There was a

large book open on his desk. The  counter clerk knew this book was a late work outlining in brief the

discoveries of scientists during the past ten years or so. The night  manager was interested in different

branches of science. He riffled  through the pages, and opened them to the section marked, "Light." 

"Read this," he advised, and pointed out a paragraph. 

Some to the most advanced study of the dispersion of doubly  refracting and naturally gyrating substances has

been conducted by  Clark Savage, Jr., (better known as Doc Savage). 

Leo Bell asked, "What are naturally gyrating and doubly refracting  substances?" 

"Never mind," said the night manager. 

He opened the book at another section marked, "Chemistry," and  said, "Read this." 

Great impetus has been given colorimetric analysis by recent work  of Doc Savage. 

Before Leo could speak, the night manager turned to another part of  the book marked, "Electricity," and

pointed out an item: 

To Doc Savage, the field of electric science is indebted for new  theories concerning velocity of propagation

of electromagnetic effects  through air. 

The night manager hurriedly shifted to a portion of the volume  designated as dealing with "Surgery." 

One of the greatest methods of recent years for the intravenous  administration of hypertonic solutions in

delicate brain operations is  credited to Doc Savage. 

Leo Bell exploded. 

"Whew!" he gulped. "That guy Doc Savage seems to be tops at  everything!" 

The night manager grinned. "There's a note at the front of this  book about him. It says that Doc Savage has

one of the most remarkable  brains of any man ever to live. It says he is a mental marvel." 

They both reread the telegram which had been found on the counter  blank. Leo Bell now broached the

subject of the upsetting wastebasket  and the mysterious appearance of the missive, but he spoke hesitantly,

and none too firmly, because the whole thing seemed ridiculous. 

The night manager laughed him down. 

"Somebody came in and left the message," he said. "Of course we'll  send it!" 

They sent it. 

HALF an hour later, the telephone rang, and Leo Bell answered it.  He heard the most striking voice to which

he had ever listened. It was  a man's voice, and even over the telephone it had impressive quality  and a tone of

great flexibility and power under careful restraint.  There was something compelling about the voice. 


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"This is Doc Savage speaking from New York City," the voice said.  "A telegram to me was filed from your

office tonight, was it not?" 

So gripping was the unusual voice that Leo Bell had to swallow  twice to loosen his own vocal cords. 

"Yes, sir," he said. 

"Will you describe the sender, please," Doc Savage requested over  the telephone. 

"I ccan't," Leo Bell stuttered. It was the first time he had  stuttered in years. 

"Why not?" queried the unusual voice. 

The mysterious circumstances surrounding the appearance of the  message then came out. Doc Savage heard

it through without comment,  then advised, "There is probably no A, N. Onymous listed in your  directory." 

Leo Bell looked in the directory. 

"No," he said. "There is not." 

"The name was the result of a trick writing of the word  'anonymous,'" Doc pointed out. "The dictionary

defines an anonymous  work as one of unknown authorship, which seems to fit this case. Was  there an address

of sender given on the message?" 

"There was." 

"What was it?" 

"1440 Powder Road," said Leo Bell, after consulting the message. 

"There is no such address in Boston," Doc Savage said, and hung up. 

Leo blinked dazedly after the connection was broken, wondering how  Doc Savage had known the address

was a fake  and it was indeed false.  Leo ascertained a moment later, upon consulting the street directory.

There was no such number on Powder Road. 

Leo wondered vaguely if Doc Savage did not know as much about  Boston as he did about the different

branches of science. Leo would  have been surprised. 

The two employees in the telegraph office discussed the happening  through the remainder of their tour of

duty. It seemed as if something  smacking of high adventure had touched them briefly, and they rather  liked

the manner in which it spiced their humdrum lives. 

They would have liked more of it. But this was, fortunately, or  unfortunately, as near as they were to come to

the chain of horror and  mystery which followed the sending of the strange message. 

The affair really got under way the next day at noon. 

THE Excelsior Airways was among the most modern lines serving the  east coast of the United States. Their

planes were huge trimotored  jobs carrying a pilot, copilot and a stewardess in the crew. 


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The seats were comfortable, and each bore a number, for it was  customary for passengers to make seat

reservations in advance. The  passengers who got aboard were prosperouslooking individuals, business

persons obviously  with one exception. 

The fat man was not the one exception. There was nothing  particularly outstanding about him. He was neither

larger nor smaller  than the average portly man. His gray suit was neat, welltailored. The  only thing which

characterized him at all was the black felt hat which  he wore, and his whitegoldrimmed spectacles which

he adjusted from  time to time as if they were not comfortable. 

This fat man presented two tickets. These called for seats located  one behind the other. The fat man walked

slowly down the aisle and took  the rearmost of the two seats which his tickets called for. 

If any one noticed there was something just a bit strange in that,  they gave no sign. 

And if there was nothing exceptional about the appearance of the  fat man, there was a great deal out of the

ordinary about the last  passenger to enter the ship. The size of this man was tremendous. He  had to bend over

much more than any one else as he came down the plane  aisle. 

Nor was his great size the least of the man's marked qualities. His  face was something with which to frighten

infants. It was scarred, in  fearsome fashion. The ears were thickened, tufted with welts. One of  the eyes

drooped almost shut. Over the brows, there were rolls of  gristle which might have been put there by much

pounding. When the man  opened his mouth, he showed numerous gold teeth. 

The passengers looked at him curiously. The mark of the man's trade  was unmistakable. He was a

prizefighter. 

The pugilisticappearing individual lurched down the aisle, came to  the vacant seat ahead of the fat man,

looked around, saw the closing of  the plane door to indicate no more passengers were expected, and  started to

take the empty seat. 

"No, no!" the fat man squawled. 

He leaped to his feet, gave the scarred giant a lusty shove, and  looked very belligerent. 

The other kept his balance with the ease of a man who might have  received many lusty belts in the squared

ring. 

"Whatsa idea?" he growled. 

He had a voice fully as pleasant as the sound of a heavy box being  dragged over a concrete floor. 

"I reserved this seat and paid for it!" snapped the fat man. 

The prizefighter scowled. His scarred face was terrible. He gave  the appearance of being but little less

dangerous than an angry lion,  and he seemed on the point of doing violence to the other. But finally,  when the

hostess approached and indicated the seat which he had paid  for was in the rear, but on the side of the plane

which would be in the  sun, he shrugged. 

"You needn't have been tough about it!" he rasped to the fat man,  and padded back to his rear seat. 


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The plane took off without more incident. To all appearances, there  was to be no more excitement during the

flight. But appearances are  deceptive. 

IT was near New York that one of the passengers forward reached up  and jerked open the window beside his

seat. No doubt he wanted to  thrust his head out and stare at the skyscrapers of Manhattan, which  were coming

into view ahead and below. 

As a result of the window being opened, a strong wind whipped into  the plane cabin. 

Swept by the gale, a square of paper appeared over the back of the  empty seat in front of the fat man. It

slapped into the face of the fat  man. Startled, he grabbed at it, and securing it, naturally glanced at  it. 

The results of that one look at the paper which had been blown over  the back of the empty chair were

surprising. The fat man lifted  slightly in his seat, as if his leg muscles had tensed. His mouth came  open and

round; his eyes grew equally round. He was naturally a florid  man, and it was distinctly noticeable that he

became pale. Suddenly he  sagged back in the chair as if some nerve cord had been cut. 

He sat there for some time. Then he reached under his coat, thrust  a hand beneath the left armpit and brought

out a stubby but  deadlylooking revolver. Simultaneously, he wrenched at his hip pocket  and produced a

handkerchief. He wrapped the handkerchief around the  muzzle of the gun as he stood up. 

He leaned over the back of the empty seat in front of him. There  was an expression of wild desperation on his

features. 

His gun went off three times, as rapidly as he could pull the  trigger. The reports were loud. 

In the middle of the shooting, a shriek piped out. It was an eerie,  hideous shriek, a sound which held the rasp

of death. 

The fat man sat down and wrapped both arms over his head and face.  The way he did this was very strange. 

Then the voice sounded. It was a strangled voice, one which was  labored, gurgling, and hardly

understandable. It said four words   really two pairs of words with a slight pause between the first pair  and

the second. Just where the words came from, it was impossible to  say. The fat man had his mouth covered

with his arms. The other  passengers were watching the fat man and not each other. But almost  every one

heard the words, which sounded above the uproar. 

"Doc Savage  be careful!" 

Chapter 2. NUT?

THE average American lives in a highpressure world where things  happen with rapidity. He is not inclined

to become wildly excited about  an occurrence which does not menace him directly. 

These plane passengers were no exceptions. They merely looked  around. Those farthest away stood up.

Nobody screamed. Nobody yelled. 

The stewardess went forward and said something to the two men in  the control compartment. The assistant

pilot left his seat, came back  and confronted the fat man with the revolver. 


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"What's the idea, brother?" he demanded. 

The man with the gun moistened his lips, then reached up and  absently adjusted his black felt hat. 

"I'm terribly sorry," he said. 

The copilot did not seem impressed, but repeated, "What was the  idea?" 

The plump man became glib. 

"I am an actor," he said. "I was mentally rehearsing a scene from  my new show. My enthusiasm got the better

of me, and before I realized  this was no place for such a thing, I had leaped up and reenacted a bit  from my

part." 

The fat man was still standing up, and he absently reached around  and stowed his handkerchief in a hip

pocket. The paper which had blown  over the back of the empty seat was still in the hand which held the

handkerchief. 

The man carefully stowed the paper in an inner pocket. 

The assistant pilot whipped out a hand suddenly and seized the  other's gun before he could resist. 

"You might have shot somebody," he said angrily. 

The portly man rolled his eyes, then fixed them downward at the  empty seat. Perspiration beads came out

from under the band of his  black hat. 

"I fired blank cartridges," he said. 

The associate pilot broke open the gun, ejected the cartridges, and  three empties and two slugs came out.

With a finger he indicated the  leaden pellets in the two unfired cartridges. 

"This don't look like it," he said. 

"The first three were blanks!" the plump man gulped. 

"Yeah?" The flier scowled. "I'll see about that. The bullets should  have hit somewhere." 

He leaned over, as if to get into the empty seat and hunt for  bullet holes. 

The fat man did a surprising thing. He leaped back, threw out his  arms dramatically and began to speak in a

stagelike voice. 

"The mortal moon hath her eclipse endured," he intoned. "And the  sad augurs mock their own presage.

Incertainties now crown themselves  assured, and peace  " 

The associate pilot straightened. 

"What the hell?" he demanded. 


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"Shakespeare," declared the plump man. "The supreme dramatist, my  good fellow. The supreme dramatist!

And a very good friend he was  indeed" The man winked and crossed two fingers. "He and I were like  that." 

The pilot smiled slightly and his weatherbeaten features assumed a  knowing look. He winked at the other

passengers, then dropped an arm  over the fat man's shoulder. 

"So you and Shakespeare were buddies," he said, with the manner of  one agreeing with a person he considers

insane. "Tell me about it,  mister. I've always wanted to meet someone who knew Shakespeare." 

"Shakespeare was the supreme dramatist," said the fat man. "Knowing  him was a pleasure, a supreme

pleasure. Indeed it was!" 

"Sure, sure," said the pilot. 

The aviator thrust the portly one down in his seat, then sat on the  chair arm and encouraged him to talk

ramblingly of Shakespeare, who had  been dead hundreds of years. The plane swung down toward the landing

field. 

The passengers had been interested in the little drama. Two or  three had crowded close, among these the big

fellow who looked like a  prizefighter. He had looked closely at the empty seat into which the  gun had been

discharged. 

There were no holes or tears in the seat where a bullet might have  struck. 

The prizefighter individual went back to his seat. Seated in such a  position that no one could see his hands, he

opened one hand and  examined the object which it held. This was the fat man's handkerchief,  the one which

had been wrapped around the gun muzzle. It had been  filched from the owner with consummate cleverness. 

There were holes in the handkerchief, undoubtedly holes made by  leaden bullets ripping through. 

THE plane landed without event, and the portly man arose to get his  baggage and disembark with the rest of

the passengers. But the copilot  grasped his arm firmly and requested, "Please wait." 

The plump man's next words were not nearly as inane as his earlier  ramblings. 

"What for?" he demanded. 

"Shakespeare wants to see you," said the flier. 

It looked as if the portly one was on the point of venting an  explosive, "Hell!" but he did not. Instead, he

stated, "Shakespeare has  been dead a long time." 

"Well, you'd better talk to this fellow who says he is  Shakespeare," said the assistant pilot, and went forward

to consult  with the airport operations manager. 

They discussed the fat man and the shots. 

"He's daffy," said the copilot. "Something ought to be done about  a guy like that running around with a gun.

He'll kill somebody." 

"Put him in a car and take him to the police station," suggested  the manager. 


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"Good idea," agreed the copilot. 

"The pilot will help you," added the manager. 

There were two observers to this conference, neither of whom was  close enough to overhear. The fat man

was one, standing and fumbling  his black hat uncertainly. The prizefighter individual was another,  although

he looked on in a fashion calculated not to arouse suspicion.  He was ostensibly fumbling over his baggage. 

The plane had emptied by now, and mechanics had appeared to wheel  it into a hangar. One of them drove a

small caterpillar tractor, which  was hitched to the ship and pulled it toward the hangar. 

The pilot and copilot approached the fat man. 

"We're going to take you to this guy who claims to be Shakespeare,"  said the pilot. 

The plump fellow put a very serious look under the black hat. 

"The man is an imposter!" he declared loudly. "He cannot be  Shakespeare, because I am Shakespeare!" 

The instant he got that out, the man spun and leaped wildly in the  direction of the operations office. The

abruptness of his move took the  pilot and his assistant by surprise. By the time they started in  pursuit, their

quarry was already passing through the operations office  door. He slammed the panel. The spring lock

clicked. 

Pilot and copilot hit the door with their shoulders. It held. They  bounced back, looked at each other. 

"He's sure bats!" said the pilot. 

Inside, the fat man made a silent snarl when he heard that. His  face had been benign, a bit vacuous. The snarl

turned it into the  visage of an animal. 

He fanned a glance around the room. There was a desk, a typewriter.  He leaped to the typewriter, seized it

and used it as a clumsy club,  and with one driving blow, smashed glass and metal crosspieces from a  window

in the rear wall. The aperture was hardly ample to pass his  plump frame, and he struck again, so violently that

his black hat fell  off. Then he started to jump through. 

His eyes lighted on a small group of men standing a short distance  away. He waved his arms and caught their

attention. 

The fat man now made a remarkable series of gestures with his  hands. These gestures were small  such

casual movements as might be  made unthinkingly by a man who was merely idling time away. He rubbed

thumb and forefinger together. He made various kinds of fists. He  drummed soundlessly with his fingers. 

All of these small gestures were made with lightning speed, and the  group of men whom the fat fellow had

sighted saw them, and when they  were finished, one went through the motion of adjusting his right coat

sleeve slightly. 

The fat man's manner showed that the sleeve adjusting was a signal  that his other pantomiming had been

understood. 


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The fat man now turned, picked up his black hat, put it on, went  over to a mirror and tried three or four grins

before he got one which  was particularly silly. With it fixed on his face, he opened the door  and admitted the

excited pilot and his assistant. 

"What on earth has so excited you fellows?" he demanded calmly. 

THE men to whom the fat individual had signaled were no longer  standing inactively. They had moved at a

fast walk toward the hangar  where the passenger plane had been hauled. The noisy little caterpillar  tractor

was still attached to the plane, and three field attendants  were assisting in storing the air giant. 

The attendants stared in surprise at the group to whom the fat man  had signaled. The men had stalked into the

hangar without speaking. 

There were six men in the group. They ranged from a young fellow  who looked as if he might be a high

school student to a whitehaired  individual who looked as if he were past sixty. None of them wore  flashy

clothing, but all were neat. Neither would any of them attract  attention because of their garb. They might

have been a party of  conservatively dressed business people. It was certain that all of  their faces were above

the average in intelligence. 

"What do you want?" demanded one of the airport flunkies. 

One of the six strangers coughed twice. It was obviously a signal   for all six men drew revolvers and pistols

of various sizes and  calibres. 

"Silence," said the one who had coughed. "We want a lot of it,  too!" 

The attendant stuttered, "Wwwhat's ttthe idea?" 

"Turn around," directed the spokesman. Stand with your backs to  us." 

The attendants complied, which was obviously the sensible thing to  do. 

Two of the six nice looking strangers kept the attendants covered  while the other four went to the plane,

opened the cabin door and  scrambled inside. The plane, being large and high, could not be  surveyed from the

level of the hangar floor. One of the attendants,  turning his head, could not see what the four in the ship were

doing. 

Another of the attendants did not waste more than a single glance  on the ship, then shifted his attention to a

row of oil drums a few  feet from where he stood, a row three drums thick and almost as high as  his own belt,

and extending several yards to a small side door used by  the mechanics. This door was open. 

One of the four strangers in the plane all but fell out of the  cabin door. He was highly perturbed. 

"It ain't here!" he said shrilly. 

"But did you look in the seat?" squawled the spokesman. 

"Yeah," said the other. "We went all over the ship. We even got  down on our hands and knees and felt

around." 


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The spokesman was the nicelooking old man with the white hair. He  began to curse. He stopped quickly,

however, and spun and grabbed one  of the attendants. 

"That plane door was closed when we got here," he snapped. "Was it  open at any time while you were

hauling the plane from in front of the  operations office?" 

"I ddon't kknow," stuttered the greasemonkey. 

One of the nicelooking men said, "Damn it, anyhow! The door was  open when the passengers got out. That

was enough!" 

At this point, the attendant who had been looking at the oil drums  decided this was his chance. He gave a

great leap, sailed over the  drums, landed in their shelter and scuttled for the door. 

The men with the guns yelled at him. They fired, but their bullets  only made oil leak from the drums. 

The attendant got outside through the door, slammed it, secured the  hasp fastening, then ran away as fast as

he could. 

THE shots threw the airport into an uproar. Two men loading mail  into a postal service truck drew their guns

and took shelter behind  their vehicle. 

The group of nicelooking men came racing from the hangar. The mail  guards yelled at them to stop, and

were promptly shot at. They fired  back. A pitched battle ensued, with the raiders retreating toward two  sedans

which were parked on the airport road. 

They reached the machines, dived inside and drove off at high  speed. The mail truck tried to pursue, but its

tires, were promptly  punctured with bullets. 

There was much running and shouting, but the pilot of the Boston  plane and his assistant kept a tight grip on

their fat prisoner. The  latter was now talking quite rationally and insisting he had never  claimed to be

Shakespeare. 

After some delay, a plane took the air to scout for the two fleeing  sedans. 

The burly individual who looked like a prizefighter  the same who  had been a passenger in the plane  was

still at the airport. As a  matter of fact, it was he who suggested that a plane be sent up in  search for the

sedans. 

He had been observing proceedings more closely than any one  suspected. But he remained in the background,

and no one paid him  particular attention, except to give his unusual appearance a second  scrutiny. 

Two other individuals were not receiving much attention. These  gentlemen had not even put themselves in

marked evidence. They were in  a car parked on the large lot reserved for spectators at the airport. 

The machine was small, unobtrusive. Only a very close scrutiny  would have shown that its motor was not the

one provided by the  manufacturer, but one with nearly three times as much power, and that  the windows were

of thick bulletproof glass and the body of armor  steel. 

The two men sat slumped down in their seats. From time to time they  pressed small but powerful binoculars

to their eyes. In each case, the  glasses were focused on the burly man who had the appearance of a  pugilist. 


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The pilot and his assistant were arguing with the fat man. 

"I certainly cannot recall insisting I was Shakespeare," asserted  the latter. "Nor do I remember firing a

revolver in your plane." 

"Maybe we're wrong," the pilot said. 

The fat man moistened his lips, looked indecisive, then shrugged  elaborately. 

"I guess I will have to tell you men my weakness," he said. 

The pilot looked interested. "What do you mean?" 

"I must have been airsick," said the fat man. "I have. a peculiar  ailment. When I become airsick or seasick, I

grow slightly demented.  Once, when crossing the Atlantic, I was unbalanced the whole way over." 

"Hmmm." The pilot did not seem very impressed. 

"I hope you two men are not going to embarrass me by turning me  over to the police," the plump man said

anxiously. 

With a noisy whoop from its exhaust stacks, the plane which had  taken off to search for the two sedans came

in and landed. The pilot  got out and reported that he had found the two cars, but that, by  flying, low, he had

peered inside and ascertained that they were  abandoned. The group of nicelooking men had escaped. 

The pilot of the Boston plane gave the fat man's arm a tug and  said, "Come on." 

"What are you going to do?" demanded the prisoner. 

"We're going to embarrass you," said the pilot, "by turning you  over to the police for observation." 

THE pilot used his own car, an open touring, and he got behind the  wheel, designating the task of guarding

the fat man to the assistant  pilot. The latter was husky, and he had a gun. 

"I thought for a while that you were nuts," he advised their guest.  "But now you seem all right. Just keep in

mind that if you try any  funny business I'm liable to blow holes in you." 

"Even riding in a car makes me airsick, or seasick, or landsick, or  whatever it is, sometimes," said the fat

man. 

"You'd better hope this is not one of the times," the other told  him. 

They drove out of the airport. 

The prizefighter individual had been loitering, but now he came to  life, striding out onto the gravel area

where the cars were parked. He  paused beside a machine which was empty. This was a coupé. The windows

were up. The man's hand made a series of lightningfast gestures, as if  he were writing on one of the

windows. 

There was, however, no visible mark on the window when he walked  on. 


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The pugilisticlooking one got into a roadster. This machine was  long, sombre, a vehicle designed to escape

notice, to merge  unobtrusively with other traffic. On this car, too, a close examination  would have shown

tires filled with particularly soft sponge rubber,  tires which could not be punctured readily with bullets, and

an  enormous motor, along with armor plate and glass which could not be  penetrated by ordinary bullets. 

The roadster raced out of the parking lot, the grind of its tires  on the gravel almost its only sound, and

speeded after the touring car  bearing the two fliers and the fat man who had fired the mysterious  shots in the

plane. 

The two men who had been waiting, and occasionally using the  binoculars, in the small car, now whipped

open a door of the machine  and alighted. 

The first to appear had an astounding physique. His height was  little greater than that of a boy in his early

teens, but he had  shoulders, arms, a bull neck that a professional wrestler would have  envied. His head was a

nubbin with an enormous slash for a mouth and  eyes like small, bright beads sunken in deep pits of gristle.

Reddish  hair only slightly less coarse than rusty shingle nails, covered his  frame. A stranger would not have

to encounter the man in a very dark  alley to think he had met a bull ape. 

The second man was slender, with lean hips and an hourglass waist.  His not unhandsome face was notable for

its large orator's mouth. The  man was attired to sartorial perfection, his frock coat, afternoon  trousers, gray

vest and silk topper left nothing to be desired. The  costume was set off perfectly by the slender black cane

which he  carried. 

The man who was a fashion plate wheeled to get a small leather case  from the car. 

"Hurry up, Ham," the apish individual urged. He had a tiny voice  which was reminiscent of a small child

talking. 

"Ham"  Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks  the dressedup  one, got the case. It was about the

size of those used to carry  homemovie cameras. He carried it as they ran to the coupé, on the  windows of

which the prizefighter individual had been seen to write   yet had left no visible traces of writing. 

"Hold the lantern case, Monk," directed the dapper man. 

The gorillalike "Monk"  Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair   took the leather case. Ham

manipulated the device which he had  extracted, an apparatus outwardly resembling a small, oldfashioned

magic lantern. He turned it on the coupé window, threw a switch on the  apparatus. 

The lantern itself threw no visible light. But upon the glass of  the car window lettering appeared. It was very

faint, almost  indistinguishable in the sunlight, a nebulous tracery of eerie,  electric blue. Not without some

squinting difficulty, Monk read it: 

Follow and keep out of sight. 

There was no signature, but the writing itself was so distinctive  that it needed no signature, it was

machineperfect. 

Neither Monk nor Ham commented on the manner in which the message  had been brought out. Ham

switched off the lantern  it was in reality  a projector of "black light," or ultraviolet light which was

invisible  to the naked eye, but which had the property of making certain  substances glow, or fluoresce. 


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The writing on the glass had been done with a chalk which left no  visible mark, but only a tracing which

would glow when subjected to the  ultraviolet beam 

"Things are looking up," grinned the smallvoiced Monk. 

"Come on you missing link!" Ham told him unkindly. The tone was  insulting but it seemed to make no

impression on the homely Monk. They  turned toward their car. 

From down the road came a series of distant rapping sounds. 

"Shots!" Monk squeaked. 

Chapter 3. NO CHANCES

THE dapper Ham seemed to be a little faster on his feet, although  the apish Monk moved with fantastic speed

for one of such grotesque  physique. Ham reached their car first, whipped open the door and dived  for the

wheel. 

Out of the car came a loud, displeased squeal. There was a flurry  of movement. A pig which had been in the

front seat shot over onto the  rear cushions. The pig had enormous ears, and as he jumped, the ears  had the

appearance of wings. The shote was longlegged, leanbodied,  incredibly ugly. 

Monk, rumbling angrily, sent out one huge hand and closed it about  the dapper Ham's throat. 

"You kicked Habeas Corpus!" he gritted. "I gotta notion to see how  easy your head comes off!" 

Ham made croakings past the fingers constricting his throat. He  tried to slug the apish Monk in the pit of the

stomach, and the sound  was much as if his knuckles had rapped a hard wall. He grimaced in  agony, and

fumbled at his black cane. The cane came apart near the  handle, revealing the fact that it housed a sword with

a long,  razorsharp blade. This blade was tipped for three or four inches with  a stickylooking substance. 

Monk released his throat grip before the menace of the sword cane  tip and dodged back. His movements were

so fast that they barely could  be followed with the eye. Ham swallowed twice, then snarled, "I didn't  kick that

hog, but sometime I'm gonna bob his tail off right next to  his ears!" 

The two looked at each other with what seemed genuine, utter hate. 

From down the road, the sound of more shots drifted. 

"Step on it you overdressed shyster," Monk growled 

Ham put the car in motion. His driving was expert. They were far  down the road before the last of the gravel

which their wheels kicked  up had fallen back to the airport parking lot. 

This was the same road which passed the airport, and from the city  out to the airport it was wide and well

paved, but here, beyond the  flying field, it was narrow, rutted, flanked by high weeds and  smalltrees. Side

roads, barely more than trails, branched off at  infrequent intervals toward scrawny shacks almost lost from

sight in  the shrubbery. 

The car rocketed around a curve. Ahead, another car was cocked over  into the ditch. It was the machine


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driven by the pilot and his  assistant. Three tires were flat. 

Both fliers stood alongside the machine, arms held up rigidly. 

Clustered about the car were the half dozen nicelooking men who  had raided the hangar. All were armed.

With them was the fat man whom  the two fliers had been taking to a police station. 

There was no sign of the roadster bearing the individual who  resembled a prizefighter. 

Ham bent over the wheel, clipped, "What'll we do?" 

"Barge right in!" Monk grunted. 

Ham put more weight on the accelerator. Monk grabbed door handles  and cranked. It became apparent that

the unusual car was fitted with  two sets of glass. The second had concealed panels, which now came into

view, were thicker and equipped with thin loophole slits reënforced  with steel bullet deflectors. 

When he had raised all of the shields, Monk dug a peculiar weapon  from an armpit holster. This gun

resembled an oversize automatic with a  drum magazine. Its mechanism looked intricate. 

Ham trod the brakes, jockeyed the wheel. Tires shrieked on the  roadway, the car rocked and finally came to a

stop not many yards from  the ditched touring car. 

Two of the nicelooking men broke for the brush along side the  road. 

"Hold it!" Monk commanded, his small voice suddenly a great howl.  "Get your hands up!" 

One of the men whipped up a revolver and blasted a bullet at the  homely Monk. 

THE slug hit the thick bulletproof glass shield with a noisy clank  and left a spider web of fine cracks. A

flattened blob, the lead fell  back to the road. 

The pilot leaped at the gunman, swung a fist from near his heels  and knocked the man flat on his back. 

"Get down!" Monk roared at him. "We can handle this!" 

Monk then shifted the muzzle of his unusual gun toward the fleeing  pair. The, weapon emitted an

earsplitting roar, a sound not unlike the  note of a gigantic bullfiddle. Beside the running pair, weeds and

small  shrubs upset as if cut off by an invisible scythe. 

Both fugitives stopped, stunned. They had not been touched by the  storm of bullets, but they were scared,

knowing the weapon was a  machine pistol of a type they had never before encountered. 

"Get 'em up, get 'em up!" Monk squawled. "All I gotta do is make  one pass and you guys are named mud!" 

It was not a situation which afforded opportunity for much debate.  Guns were dropped. An automatic

exploded from the shock of striking the  road, but its wild bullet hit no one. Hands went up. 

Monk and Ham both heaved out of the car. Monk's pet pig, Habeas  Corpus, followed them. 

The two airmen looked somewhat dazed. 


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"What in the devil is this all about?" the assistant pilot  demanded. 

Monk menaced carelessly the nicelooking men with his machine  pistol. 

"Maybe they didn't like the way you were treating their friend," he  said. 

"They were taking him from us" said the associate flier. "They shot  our tires to pieces, then jumped out in the

road when we stopped. We  didn't have a chance!" 

"Where were you taking the fat guy?" Monk demanded. 

"To a police station up this road," the other replied. "He's nuts!" 

"Nuts  hell!" the other aviator interjected. "I don't think he's  any more nuts than I am." 

Monk grunted, "Just what's behind this?" 

"Search me!" The pilot waved his arms angrily. "This fat guy ups in  our plane and shoots off a gun three

times into an empty seat. Then he  talked like he was bats, and knew Shakespeare. He even claimed he was

Shakespeare!" 

"What about the excitement in that hangar back at the airport" Ham  put in. 

The pilot gestured at the nicelooking men. "These guys raided the  hanger to look into our plane. They were

hunting for something that  they didn't find." 

"This fat man ordered them to search the plane, I think," Ham said. 

"Huh?" The pilot blinked. 

Ham explained: "The fat man made some kind of sign talk through the  back window of the operations office.

He probably told them to rescue  him, too." 

The fat man, unnoticed, had sidled to one of his men and was  surreptitiously dropping a hand into the fellow's

pocket. He brought  out a nickeled revolver. 

He did not use it. Instead, he yelled out in surprised pain and the  gun left his fingers. The weapon remained

suspended a few inches from  his hand. He grabbed at it. The gun, with absolutely nothing visible  sustaining

it, evaded his clutch. 

Monk gaped. 

"For the love of mud!" he gulped. "Spooks!" 

SO astounded was the homely fellow that the gang got their chance.  They moved swiftly. 

Monk started to swing his machine pistol around, but was tardy, and  was knocked down. A lusty kick sent the

superfirer into the ditch. 

Ham was also disarmed and, with the fliers, forced to put up his  hands. 


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The pig, Habeas Corpus, retreated hastily to the nearest brush  clump. 

"We'd better blow!" said the plump man. 

There was a noise in the brush beside the road, and a huge figure  appeared. It was the individual who looked

like a prizefighter. He held  a shiny revolver in one scarred lump of a fist. 

"I was just ready to help you birds," he said. "But I don't guess  you need me. Say, what happened to that

gun?" 

Instinctively all eyes sought the gun which had behaved so  mysteriously. It now lay in the ditch beside the

road, No one had  observed just how it got there. 

"Never mind the gun!" rapped the fat man. "We're leaving here!" 

"We might as well ride," said the prizefighter individual. 

He ran to the car in which Monk, Ham and the pig had arrived. This  was obviously the only machine

available for an escape, since the tires  of the aviators touring were flat. The man dived behind the wheel and

reached for the key. 

The fat man and the others were running toward the car, but were  not yet close enough to see the pugilist as

he grasped the key, and,  instead of turning it, pulled it out and palmed it. Then he got out. 

"Blast them birds!" he growled. 

"What's wrong?" demanded the fat man. 

"They took the key!" The fellow shrugged his huge shoulders. "We'll  have to leg it away from here." 

"Then what are we waiting on?" the fat man snapped. 

They all ran into the brush beside the road. 

They covered a hundred yards and got themselves organized so that  they traveled in a string, one behind the

other, taking turns at  leading the procession and opening a way through the thick tangle. The  plump leader

dropped back beside the prizefighter. 

"I never saw you before," he said. "We ought to know each other." 

"It might help," agreed the pugilist. 

"What's your name?" 

"Bull Retz, right now," said the scarred man. "Did you go to the  fights in the Boston Arena last night?" 

"I rarely go to fights," said the plump man. 

"Then you didn't see me," the pugilist muttered. "It's lust as  well. Boy, did I get bopped around!" 

"You lost, eh?" 


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"And how!" The man blew on a scarred fist. "There was a young punk,  and could he sling his dukes! Say,

that guy got red pepper on his  gloves somehow and after he started my eyes smarting, he hit me with

everything but the water bucket! If I ever meet that punk  " 

"Let it ride." The fat man adjusted his black hat. "Like I said, I  never saw you before. Why'd you help us?" 

"I was coming down the road," said the others. "It looked like you  guys were behind the eight ball." 

The eyes under the black hat brim were very curious. "And why did  you help us?" 

The man who said he was "Bull" Retz seemed to consider deeply. 

"You looked like right guys," he said. 

"Meaning what?" 

The huge shoulders shrugged. "The manager and training expenses ate  up the loser's share of last night's

purse. I'm flat. I mooched that  plane ticket off a newspaper lug who got it for nothing. So I saw you  guys, and

you looked like a right crowd who would return a favor." 

"I see." The plump man adjusted his hat again. "You thought we  would return a favor." 

"Why not?" The other squinted suddenly. "Or maybe I was mistaken?" 

"You don't need to beat around the bush, with me," the portly man  said dryly. 

"O. K." The scarred face warped into a grin. "I'm flat, like I  said. I thought maybe you could throw something

my way." 

"What are you good at?" 

The scarred grin widened. "Strongarm stuff. And I ain't too  particular." 

"I see," said the fat man. 

They went on, and the individual who looked like a prizefighter  began to register doubt and uneasiness;

finally, he turned and  confronted the fat man. 

"Say," he whined, "I ain't askin' much. I done you guys a turn,  see? Don't I get something out of it? I don't

mean that you have to pay  off. Just put me next to something. You know, something where a guy can  'make a

buck. How about it?" 

"Of course," said the fat man, "we'll put you next to something." 

"Something good?" 

"Very good!" 

They went on, and the fat man dropped back a pace, absently sinking  his hands into his pockets. He brought

one hand out slyly a moment  later. It held a shotfilled leather blackjack which he must have  secured earlier

from one of the other men. He swung the blackjack  suddenly, terrifically. 


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It seemed that the pugilist sensed the blow coming for he sank a  little, taking the swing across the top of his

head. But there was a  loud thud as the sap landed, and the scarred man sagged forward on his  face, quivered a

little, then became limp, unmoving. 

One of the nicelooking men eyed their fat chief. 

"The guy might have meant all right, Telegraph," he said. 

The fat "Telegraph" nodded peacefully and returned the sap to his  pocket. 

"We are not in a position to take chances with gentlemen whom we do  not know," he murmured. 

Chapter 4. THE SNATCHING GHOST

THEY did not leave the fallen form of the pugilist immediately.  Telegraph bent over and pinched him

soundly, but elicited no movement  which would indicate returning consciousness. Then he went through the

burly individual's pockets. 

He brought out letters addressed to Leopold Retz in Boston, and  read them, finding all had to do with matters

routine to a  prizefighter's training and search for further matches. There was also  a bundle of newspaper

clippings, which looked fresh. They were from  sporting pages, and, one was headed: 

A TAME BULL 

Bull Retz proved one thing conclusively in his match last night. As  a fighter, he makes an excellent doormat. 

Telegraph laughed, and went through the other clippings. 

"What a fight that must have been," he murmured. 

"This guy seems to have been genuine," said one of the others.  "Maybe we shouldn't have bopped him." 

"Why not?" Telegraph demanded. "He was a stranger, wasn't he? And  what saps we would be to take a

stranger in. This thing is too big for  mugs like this palooka." 

That seemed to settle the affair  and they went on, hurrying. One  of the party evidenced a knowledge of

their surroundings, and before  long they came out on a heavily traveled thoroughfare. They did not  advance

to the pavement itself, but paralleled the road for a quarter  of a mile until one of the men pointed and said, "I

knew it was around  here somewhere." 

The object he indicated was a telephone pole alongside of which  stood a small booth. It was one of the

telephones provided along the  highway for motorists who might need emergency aid. 

One of the men went to the telephone and made a call. 

"One of our cars will be out here for us in half an hour," he said. 

They retired into the brush to wait and to talk. 

"Give us the lowdown on what happened in that plane, Telegraph,"  one of the men requested. 


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Telegraph took off his black hat and began to turn it around on one  knee. 

"It seemed that everything was going perfectly," he said. "I got  two seats reserved in the plane, and took the

rear one. Then, when we  were nearing New York, some guy up in front opened a window to stick  his head

out and get a look or something. That made a draft, and a  paper blew out of the front seat  the seat right in

front of me, I  mean." 

One of the men lifted a hand. 

"Psst!" he warned "A guy is driving down the road in a cart. He  might hear us." 

They lifted up and made out the man in the cart  the cart was  rickety, laden with junk, and the man was a

shabby fellow whose garb  advertised his calling: a junk collector. 

Telegraph ceased speaking. But that did not mean his recital was  interrupted. He began to make the small,

unusual gestures with his  hands. The movements seemed to comprise a semaphore shorthand by which  rapid

communication was possible. They were certainly not the system of  alphabetical letters used by the deaf and

dumb. 

The communication in this strange fashion went on until the peddler  and his cart were out of hearing, after

which oral discussion resumed.  The recital seemed to have progressed a good deal during the period in  which

they had talked with signals. 

"And you say after you fired the shots, you heard a voice yell?"  asked one of the men." 

"Exactly!" said Telegraph. 

"Was it Easeman who yelled?" 

"Easeman?" Telegraph shook his head. "I don't know. I thought  Easeman was dead. By all the laws, he

should be dead." 

One of the men shrugged. "Well, I told you what we found when we  searched the plane. Exactly nothing!" 

Telegraph groaned and took his head in his hands. "It's all a  damned mess  and I haven't told you what really

worries me." 

"What?" demanded a man. 

"The words that were yelled out in the plane," said Telegraph. 

"What were they?" 

"Doc Savage  be careful!" announced Telegraph. 

FOR the space of a dozen seconds, no one said anything. Then one of  the men, a thin fellow who looked as if

his health were none too good,  leaned forward. He had become quite pale. 

"Listen," he gulped hoarsely, "did I get that right? Somebody  mentioned Doc Savage in that plane?" 


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Telegraph's nod was slow. "Exactly!" The frail man groaned audibly,  sank back and mumbled, "Now I

remember!" 

"You remember what?" Telegraph scowled. 

The frail man straightened up nervously. "Look! What do you know  about this Doc Savage?" 

"Just the stuff that's cropping up in the newspapers all of the  time," Telegraph said. "I don't pay much

attention. Doc Savage is  supposed to be a combination of muscular strength and mental skill  something out of

the ordinary." 

"But his profession," the man gasped. "You've heard of that?" 

"Maybe you'd call it a profession," Telegraph said dryly. "I don't.  The man goes around mixing in other

people's troubles." 

"He helps those whom he thinks deserve it," the other pointed out. 

"From what I've heard of him, he's a bigtime adventurer  a  soldier of fortune," Telegraph retorted. "But

what are you getting at?" 

"You've heard of his five assistants  I mean the five guys who  help Doc Savage?" asked the one who was

patently scared. 

Telegraph nodded impatiently. "I've read of them, too. Each one of  them is supposed to be a specialist in a

particular line. One is a  chemist, another a lawyer, another an engineer, one an electrical  expert and  " 

"Say!" interposed another of the group. "What has all of this got  to do with the fact that Doc Savage's name

was yelled out in that  plane? I've seen Doc Savage. I know him by sight. Once you see that  guy, you'll never

forget him. He wasn't on that plane." 

"Shut up!" snapped the frightened one. "I'm talking about his two  assistants named Monk and Ham. Monk is

the chemist in his lineup, and  Ham is the lawyer." 

"So what?" Telegraph asked wearily. 

"So didn't you ever hear of the pet pig named Habeas Corpus that  this chemist, Monk, carries around with

him?" demanded the other. 

"Pig!" Telegraph looked stunned. "Why  those two men back there   they had a pig!" 

"You said it!" the other told him. "The guy who looked like an ape  was Monk. The other one, the bird with

that black cane, was Ham. That's  a sword cane." 

Telegraph took his head in his hands. For a long minute, he said  nothing. 

"This is hell," he muttered finally. 

"It's a fair sample," the frail man said grimly. "But when this Doc  Savage catches up with us, we'll get the real

thing. I've heard things  about that guy." 


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THERE was silence while they said nothing and exchanged uneasy  glances. 

"Doc Savage has got a line on us," one said. "How did that happen?" 

Another reached out suddenly and gripped Telegraph's arm. 

"Was it Easeman who yelled out in the plane?" he demanded. 

"I don't know," Telegraph said wearily. "It was a strangled voice.  And I told you I thought Easeman was

dead." 

"How do you account for the note that blew into your face?" he was  asked. 

The man put his black hat on his head and unfolded the note under  discussion. 

"There were little boxes with writing paper, ink and a pen on the  backs of the seats," he said. "This is a sheet

of the paper. Here   look it over" 

The men crowded their heads together to read the note. Telegraph  stood up and moved away from them a few

paces and kept his eyes fixed  on the road. It was a busy highway. Cars passed at intervals. Telegraph  came

back when the men had finished reading. 

"That makes it pretty plain what has happened, does it not?" he  asked. "That's Easeman's handwriting, you

know." 

"But how'd he get the information?" one of the group questioned  vacantly. 

"By spying on: us!" Telegraph snapped. "That's the only way he  could have gotten it. Damn that fellow! He

wasn't as weak as we  thought. He was getting ready to gang up on us." He tapped the note  angrily. "This

proves it!" 

"Maybe Easeman rang in Doc Savage," some one suggested. 

"I've been thinking of that," Telegraph said. "It's not nice to  think about. Hell's bells! Just when we thought

we had things going  nicely!" 

"Maybe Easeman is dead after all," a man muttered hopefully. 

"That would help," Telegraph agreed. 

Telegraph was refolding the note slowly. Holding it between thumb  and forefinger, he prepared to stow it

back in his pocket. He never  completed the gesture. 

His mouth flew wide. A shriek ripped out. His pudgy frame  convulsed. His legs drew up and an uncanny

thing happened  for the  space of several seconds, he seemed to be suspended entirely in  midair, with

nothing whatever supporting him. Then he collapsed  heavily to the earth. 

The note came out of his pocket and fluttered up vertically to a  height of some six feet, opening as it arose,

then the breeze seemed to  catch it and the missive fluttered away, spinning over and over. 

Telegraph's face was a mask of horror. He fought to regain his  voice. 


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"Use your guns!" he shrieked. 

THE men had picked up their weapons on the road after the fellow  who looked like a pugilist had released

them. They whipped the guns  out, began shooting. Their firing was wild. They aimed at no target,  but it was

noticeable that they did not drive bullets into the air, or  into the earth. The slugs clipped leaves, chiseled bark

off trees. 

Telegraph scrambled to his feet. His features were flushed, his  eyes protruded. He stroked his neck. 

On his neck, long purple marks were visible. At one point, the skin  had been broken. Scarlet drops gathered

there, loosened from their  anchorage and chased each other down to stain his neat white collar. He  seemed to

recover his selfcontrol. 

"It's no use!" he yelled. "Stop shooting!" 

The thunder of guns ceased. 

"Where'd that note go?" Telegraph demanded. 

A man pointed: "Over that way. The wind blew it." 

"Get it!" Telegraph snapped. "Then we'll clear out of here." 

Their behavior was strange. They grouped together, back to back,  eyes, ears and guns alert, and moved for

the spot the breeze had  carried the bit of paper. Covering some yards, they began to look about  with

increasing anxiety. 

"It's gone!" Telegraph groaned. 

One of the men yelled, pointed. 

"Look!" he bawled. 

Fifty yards distant, a bush was swaying as if it had been  disturbed. There was, however, nothing visible in the

shrubbery. The  men advanced, guns ready, until one, eyeing the ground, made a hissing  sound and leveled an

arm. 

The earth was soft, and it bore tracks  footprints and such marks  as a man might make while crawling on the

ground. 

"Somebody was hanging around," Telegraph grated. 

They broke into a run, following the tracks. A moment later, they  caught sight of a flashing motion ahead. It

was a man, a giant of a  figure, lunging for the shelter of a clump of trees. They all saw him. 

"It's that damn prizefighter!" Telegraph snarled. "We should've  finished him off!" 

Two of them discharged bullets. Both, knowing they had missed,  cursed. 

"Spread out," commanded Telegraph. "We'll get that guy out of our  hair, anyhow!" 


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A thin wailing sound sprang up in the distance and grew perceptibly  louder. It had an unearthly quality.

Telegraph and his men exchanged  pained glances. 

"State troopers," Telegraph said. 

From near by on the road came the three musical notes of an  automobile air horn. Almost immediately, the

notes repeated. 

"That's our car," one volunteered. "We'd better blow." 

"Good idea," agreed Telegraph. 

They sprinted for the road. 

As they ran, the men whipped out handkerchiefs and carefully wiped  finger prints from their guns. Then they

threw the weapons away. They  had obviously experienced difficulty with the police before and knew of  the

regulations against carrying firearms. 

"Sure none of you left finger prints inside of your guns when you  oiled them last?" Telegraph puffed. "And

you wiped off the magazines of  the automatics before you clipped them in?" 

"Think we're amateurs?" some one grunted. 

They reached their car. It was a big sedan, neither too old nor too  new. A neatly dressed, pleasantfaced

young man was driving. He got the  doors open. 

"Cops must have heard your little war," he offered. "Where d'you  wanta go?" 

Telegraph was the last into the car. He leaned out to grasp the  door and close it. 

"We'll have a talk with Easeman's daughter," he said grimly. "You  know the address  Central Park West.

She may have a line on her old  man." 

He was facing the brush patch which they had just quitted when he  said that. 

The sedan door slammed shut. The driver let out the clutch and  clashed gears. The machine lunged away. It

gathered speed rapidly,  going in a direction opposite that from which came the siren noise of  the State police

car. 

The car was not yet out of sight, nor had the police machine put in  an appearance  there was a bend in the

highway which hid it from view   When there was a great crashing in the brush and Monk and Ham put in  an

appearance. They had been running, but neither breathed heavily, an  indication of good physical condition.

The afternoon garb of the  lawyer, Ham, was somewhat less immaculate than it had been before. He  still

carried his sword cane. The pig, Habeas Corpus, trailed them. 

It was the shote which first located the personage who resembled a  prizefighter. The latter was standing in a

brush clump, holding the  compact cylinder of a telescope. 

Monk and Ham ran to him. Both grinned widely, and the pig, Habeas  Corpus, bounced about as if delighted

beyond measure. 


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"Say, Doc, what's this all about?" Monk questioned. 

Chapter 5. GIRL IN GREEN

THE giant with the scars, the tufted ears, the nodular hands,  dropped the telescope in a pocket and wheeled

back into the brush. 

Out on the road, the State police car wailed along slowly, the two  uniformed occupants looking for the source

of the shots which must have  been heard some distance away. Possibly the yelling of Telegraph's men  had

also been heard, and some one had put in a call for the officers. 

"What about them cops?" Monk demanded 

"They would ask questions for an hour or so." The  pugilisticlooking man gestured in the direction of the

airport. "We  have places to go." 

They retreated, slowly at first, being careful to make no noise,  then more swiftly. The giant with the pugilistic

appearance had  undergone a series of striking changes. He had straightened his hunched  shoulders, and his

head, which had been carried drawn down so as to  thicken out the neck, was now carried normally. He

seemed fully a foot  taller than before. Gone also was the shuffling method of handling his  feet which is a

characteristic of many professional fighters. 

"What started the shooting back there, Doc?" Monk asked, when they  were beyond earshot of the road. 

The giant began working at one hand as he walked. The  hideouslooking knobs and scars peeled off. He

applied a fluid from a  small flask which he brought from a pocket, and the pallid texture of  his skin turned

into a grayish stain which he wiped off with a  handkerchief. The hand, finally denuded of its disguise, was

powerful  and corded with tendons of startling size. In color, the hand was an  unusual bronze hue, and the skin

had a remarkably fine texture. 

"The thing which started the shooting was very mysterious," the big  man said slowly. 

"Whatcha mean?" Monk queried 

The giant told briefly of the note, of the weird attack on  Telegraph, of the shooting, of the disappearance of

the note. His voice  had changed from the rasping tone of the pugilist whom he had been  portraying. It now

possessed remarkable quality and vibrant, restrained  power. 

"Blazes!" Monk exploded, when he had heard the recital. "That was a  spooky business! Didn't their

conversation explain it?" 

"They discussed a man named Easeman and were very concerned over  whether or not he was dead," said the

big man. "They also did some  conversing by a system of signaling on their hands. It must have been a  system

of their own, a sort of shorthand by gestures. There was not a  movement for each letter of the alphabet, but

motions which evidently  meant whole phrases or sentences. Unfortunately, I failed to make out  much of it." 

He had rid his other hand of its disguise, and now went to work on  his features. The malformities on his ears

proved to be moulded of a  rubberlike substance. Tiny metal forms spread its nostrils. Wax,  removed from his

cheeks, changed the whole contour of his features. 


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"What do you make of this whole thing, Doc?" Monk queried. 

The giant was slow in replying. 

"It is impossible to say," he stated finally. "I simply received  that telegram from Boston, requesting me to be

aboard the plane in  disguise. The telegram was signed with a trick name meaning nothing." 

He applied substance from the flask to his pale features, then  wiped it off, and the transformation was little

short of incredible.  His countenance became one of remarkable handsomeness. The skin was the  same

amazing bronze hue as his hands. His hair, rid of its dye by the  liquid in the flask, was of a bronze hue only

slightly darker than his  skin. 

Plane noise marked the position of the airport ahead. The bronze  giant veered off to the right, and shortly they

came to his roadster,  almost concealed in the clump of small trees into which he had driven  it while trailing

the fat Telegraph and the two fliers. 

Monk demanded, "But, Doc, what kind of a clue have we got to go  on?" 

"Telegraph told his driver to take them to the home of a man named  Easeman, who has a daughter," Doc

Savage explained. 

Ham ejaculated, "But how did you get close enough to overhear  " 

He did not finish. He had remembered their coming upon Doc Savage  in the act of using the telescope. The

bronze giant was an accomplished  lip reader, along with a myriad of other abilities. 

P. TREVE EASEMAN'S apartment was situated in one of the magnificent  structures facing Central Park

West. There were other Easemans listed  in the telephone directory which Doc Savage had consulted, but

none  resided on Central Park West. 

Doc parked in a side street adjacent to the apartment monolith and  with Monk and Ham advanced toward the

elaborate marquee entrance where  two doormen stood, caparisoned as elegantly as naval admirals. 

"Psst!" Monk hissed unexpectedly. "Lookit! Pullin' into the  curb!" 

Doc Savage said quietly, "Stopping to change clothing must have  delayed them." 

A dark sedan, large and expensivelooking, the chauffeur m rich  livery, was nosing at the curb, and the two

bedizened doormen clicked  off salutes and wrestled with the door handles. The file of men who got  out

looked very dignified, very respectable in their immaculate full  dress, complete, even to white gloves, silk

hats and shiny black  evening sticks. 

Telegraph led the parade. Four others followed him, all members of  his organization who had taken part in

the airport affair. 

A boy, a lad who was noisy and none too tidy, ran up to the party  alighting from the sedan. He waved

newspapers. 

"City's leading jeweler goes insane!" he bawled. "Wuxtra! Read  about it!" 

One of the doormen said, "You cannot sell papers here." 


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"Jeweler sees jewels fly away and goes insane!" howled the urchin.  "Wuxtra poiper! Read about it!" 

The doorman made an opening in one corner of his mouth and gritted,  "Git outa here, you brat, 'fore I put a

foot in your pants!" 

Telegraph crinkled his round face with a pleasant smile, advanced,  said, "A moment, please," and bought one

of the urchin's newspapers.  Then they entered the long, indirectly lighted lobby and confronted the

primlooking telephone operator. 

"Mr. Edmunds and party to see Miss Ada Easeman," Telegraph  announced. 

The operator announced them over the house phone, then advised,  "You are requested to go up." 

Telegraph let his companions glance over the newspaper headlines as  they were wafted upward on a silent

elevator. The news story seemed to  interest them greatly. 

JEWELER UNBALANCED 

TELLS WEIRD STORY 

W. Carlton SmytheVancell, leading New York City jeweler, has been  placed under the care of a

psychiatrist, it was learned this evening. 

SmytheVancell is reported to be suffering from the delusion that  he saw a tray of his firm's most valuable

jewels arise and float,  unaided, from the showroom. The jewels, valued at only slightly less  than a million

dollars, are said actually to be missing. Police are on  the case. 

Telegraph and his men showed by not the slightest flicker that the  item held interest for them, but when they

had alighted in a tower  corridor and the elevator had departed, one of the nattily clad group  laughed dryly. 

"A spook must have carried off those jewels," he chuckled. 

"Very possible," Telegraph agreed. Then he eyed the fellow who had  offered the remark about a spook.

"What were the jewels actually  worth?" 

"A cool two million," said the other. "A fence has already bid a  million, and he'll go even better." 

Telegraph said calmly, "You gentlemen realize, of course, that this  matter of the jewels was only what might

be called a test of the  efficiency of our discovery when directed along certain lines." 

"Certain lines is right!" chuckled one of the men. 

Telegraph stated with great satisfaction, "Gentlemen, we have the  world at our feet!" 

"It may take some convincing to make the world think so," offered  another. 

With a plump forefinger, Telegraph tapped the newspaper story about  the jeweler who was supposedly

demented. 

"This is the first step," he advised. "As soon as we dispose of the  matter of Easeman and Old Bonepicker, we

shall have money to operate on  a full scale." 


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The corridor down which they strode was one of tremendously rich  furnishings. Coming to a door, they rang,

and the panel was opened and  they entered boldly. It was gloomy inside. They blinked more when  blinding

white light filled the room. 

"Did you gentlemen ever see an automatic shotgun work at close  quarters?" a grimly determined feminine

voice asked. 

OBVIOUSLY, Telegraph and his neatly clad companions had control of  their nerves, for they merely looked

at the yawning snout of the  shotgun, and with the exception of one who lost a cigarette, hanging  from his lip,

none showed undue perturbation. 

A young woman held the shotgun, and her manner of holding it was  that of a trapshooter awaiting the rise of

a clay bird. It was an  action which showed she had handled a shotgun before. 

"You will each seize the brim of your hat and yank it down over  your eyes," she directed. "If you think I am

bluffing merely don't take  orders and see what happens!" 

She had a throaty, educated voice which, holding no tremors,  carried emphatic conviction. 

"Quick!" she snapped. "Get those hats down over your eyes and  blindfold yourselves!" 

Her nails were enameled an unusual emerald hue. This tint exactly  matched the lowbacked, more than snug

evening frock she wore. 

Telegraph and his men pulled their hats down over their eyes. Then  the girl ordered their hands up and moved

among them, searching with  deft fingers and removing guns from hip pockets and underarm holsters. 

As the young woman moved about, it became evident that she was no  ordinary bit of femininity. There was

feline smoothness in her  movements, along with the rippling play of more than ordinary muscular

development in her arms and shoulders. 

Telegraph spoke from under his hat, "My dear Miss Easeman, you are  making a mistake. We are detectives 

"  hired by my father as bodyguards before he disappeared," the  girl took him up. "So you told me on a

previous visit. And on that  occasion you deftly pumped me to ascertain just what I knew about my  father's

disappearance. I suppose you came back this time for the same  purpose?" 

Telegraph  began,  "But my  darling  girl  " 

"Rats!" said the young woman. "I found out who you are." 

She herded them into a large, sumptuously furnished library and  wrenched open the drawer of a massive

table. From this she extracted  two articles  a cocktail glass and a tiny camera which was composed  largely

of lens. 

"I tried to seem very dumb on your previous visit," she said. "That  was so I could get a chance to use this

camera, which will take  snapshots by ordinary electric light. And I also maneuvered you into  leaving finger

prints on this cocktail glass. I took the pictures and  the finger prints to the  police rogues gallery." 

This information caused Telegraph to sigh loudly. 


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"I must be slipping," he said. 

"You certainly haven't lived up to your reputation," the girl told  him. "A search of the rogues gallery showed

you to be 'Telegraph'  Edmunds, one of the smoothest swindlers and confidence men in the  country." 

"Preposterous!" Telegraph Edmunds sighed, halfheartedly. 

"You got the nickname of 'Telegraph' because of the system of  gestures which you use to communicate with

members of your gang," added  the young woman. 

This seemed to remind Telegraph Edmunds of something which he had  overlooked. He cleaned a finger nail

on his right hand with the thumb  nail of his left. He brushed an imaginary speck from his cuff. One of  the

other men pressed the thumb and forefinger of his left hand  together. 

"Stop it!" rapped the girl. "You're talking to each other with your  system of sign telegraphy!" 

"Preposterous!" Telegraph repeated, and shrugged. His hands did not  become still. They made more small

gestures, motions which, one not  suspecting, might have mistaken for minor nervousness but which the  girl

was sharp enough to recognize as more of the signals. 

Her shotgun went off with an earsplitting report. 

TELEGRAPH, screeched, fell to the floor. He tied himself into a  knot and groveled, and his groans were

hideous. 

"Get up!" the girl grated, and menaced every one with the shotgun.  "I fired over his head!" 

Telegraph continued to squirm and moan. His convulsions brought him  face upward, so that his countenance

was visible. His visage was now  drenched with red fluid. He moaned and scarlet bubbles puffed and burst  on

his full lips. 

The girl seemed stunned. She became slightly pale. Her shotgun  wavered. 

One of the immaculately dressed men slid a toe out, hooked it  behind a modernistic floor stand and kicked

the piece of furniture at  the girl. She sidestepped. 

One of the other men snatched off his silk topper and hurled at the  girl. The range was short; the hat slapped

her face hard. 

The next instant, they were upon her, wrestling for the shotgun,  which they got almost immediately. Three of

them devoted almost their  entire effort to holding the young woman. 

Telegraph got up from the floor, used a handkerchief on his face,  and picked up the broken parts of a fountain

pen which had been filled  with red ink. He pocketed the pen fragments. 

"A swell gag," he chuckled. "She was too busy watching everybody to  see me smear it on my face." 

Then he went to the outer door, opened it and listened for a long  time, after which he made a quick circuit of

the richly fitted  apartment. He placed a guard in the outer corridor. 


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"This place occupies the whole floor and is probably just about  soundproof," he decided. "Apparently nobody

is going to investigate  that shot." 

The girl demanded angrily, "What do you want here?" 

"My dear, we want to know where your father, P. Treve Easeman, can  be found," Telegraph imparted calmly. 

"I don't know where he is," the girl snapped. 

Telegraph smiled without enthusiasm. 

"You know, of course, what has happened to your father?" he stated. 

"I do not," said the young woman. "Suppose you tell me." 

Telegraph chuckled harshly. "That would be a bright move on my  part." 

Ada Easeman threw back her head. 

"My father disappeared," she said grimly. "Since then, some strange  things have happened. A large sum in

cash disappeared from a safe here  in the apartment, a safe to which only my father and myself had the

combination. My father's broker has advised me that father telephoned  him to sell certain bonds and stocks

for cash. The broker did so,  bringing the money to his office. The money disappeared mysteriously." 

"It would seem that your father has been raising cash," said  Telegraph. 

"Yes," the girl retorted, "and you probably know why!" 

"How much cash has he raised?" queried Telegraph 

"A great deal," Ada Easeman said coldly. "Somewhat over a million  dollars." 

Telegraph had been smiling, but it had not been a genuine smile.  The smile now became hearty, actually

joyful. 

"This makes it look as if old Easeman actually intended to comply  with our demands," he told his

companions. 

"But he was trying to fight us," one of them pointed out. 

"Naturally," chuckled Telegraph. "But he got the money ready, which  shows be intended to pay off if he had

to." 

The other grunted. "The thing to do is to whip Easeman in line  somehow  if he's still alive." 

"Still alive!" the girl cried out shrilly. "What do you mean?" 

Telegraph produced a handkerchief and calmly jammed it between her  jaws, doing it with the heel of his hand

so that she would not bite him  during the process. 

"I know how we can stop Easeman," he said. "We'll give this girl  the same thing we gave him." 


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"That should do it," the other agreed. "I hope you can straighten  out the rest of it just as easy." 

"What rest of it?" Telegraph demanded. 

"The Doc Savage angle," the man explained. 

Telegraph swore. 

"We'll talk that over with the big boss," he growled. "He's a match  for even this Doc Savage." 

A deep, youthful voice said calmly, "I do believe this is what one  would call a tableau!" 

TELEGRAPH EDMUNDS was holding his silk topper with both hands. He  dropped it, spun and faced the

door which led to the outer corridor.  His mouth became round with surprise. 

"Careful!" he gulped at his men. 

"Fitting advice, I call that," stated the deep, young voice. The  speaker stood squarely in the door. He was a

lean man of more than  average height and muscular build. Extremely black curly hair made him  look even

younger than he was; his pleasant features were tanned, and  he had, a waxed mustache which, in contrast

with the darkness of his  hair, was almost white. He looked efficient, worldly. 

Clasped closely to his chest with a left arm, he held the lookout  who had been posted in the outer corridor.

The latter was unconscious.  In his right hand, the young man with black hair and white mustache  held a

revolver, a large calibre gun built into a small frame. The  weapon gave the impression of being composed

mostly of barrel and  cylinder. 

"Have them yank their hats over their eyes so they can't see,  Russ," the girl, said, getting the gag out of her

mouth. "That's the  way I did." 

"Excellent idea, I call that," smiled the young man. 

Telegraph Edmunds made gritting noises with his teeth. 

"Who is this bird?" he demanded. 

One of Telegraph's gang answered the angry question. 

"His name is Russel Wray," he said. 

"I don't give a hoot what his name is," Telegraph growled. "Who is  he? What is he?" 

"He was Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt's bodyguard," advised the other. 

"I have never heard of Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt," said Telegraph,  pompous firmness in his manner. 

"A gorgeous lie, I must say," snapped whitemustached, blackhaired  Russel Wray. "Sawyer Linnett

Bonefelt has dropped out of sight just as  P. Treve Easeman did. And you birds know something about it!" 

Telegraph said smugly, "We are detectives hired by Easeman as  bodyguards, just as you yourself were hired

by Bonefelt. Our purpose  seems to be the same. We should work together." 


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"I'll work a few chunks of lead into your systems!" Russel Wray  threatened. 

"Watch them, Russ!" the girl gasped. "They're lying! They are  responsible for the disappearance of father and

Old Bonepicker." 

"Old Bonepicker?" Telegraph looked puzzled. 

"That's what they call Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt, and don't tell me  you didn't know it!" the girl snapped. 

Telegraph started to say something in reply, but held the words  back, and his jaw sagged, his plump hands

made a vague gesture as if  fending something off. He was watching the door. 

The door led to the corridor, and its knob was turning slowly. The  lock made a faint click as the bolt cleared

the recess in the jamb.  Then the panel opened slowly. 

A horrible expression overspread Telegraph Edmund's visage. 

"Watch out!" he screamed. "Watch out!" 

Chapter 6. PHANTOMS

THE apartment structure had a height of nearly forty stories, and  the P. Treve Easeman ménage was near the

top, in the tower section,  which was a smooth, chimneylike spire of masonry only a little less  smooth than

glass.  The apartment house was not constructed of  commonplace brick but of a polished gray native stone,

and the blocks  were set together without noticeable cracks. 

To eavesdrop at the Easeman apartment windows, a man would have to  scale the wall  and that was patently

impossible. But there was a  listenerin. 

The eavesdropper was not a human listenerin, but an especially  bulky contrivance of metal and wires and

insulating composition. This  was held to the window pane of the large library window by a rubber  suction

cup of the variety used to fasten ashtrays and other  accessories to automobile windshields. The faint thud as

this had been  swung across the pane some time before, had escaped notice. 

From the device, which an electrician would have recognized as a  highly sensitive microphone, wires led

upward, passed over the roof  coping and entered a box containing powerful audio amplifying  apparatus. The

sounds picked up by the window microphone finally  entered a set of three ordinary headphones. 

Doc Savage wore one headset. Monk and Ham wore the other two. They  were very silent, listening raptly to

what went on in the P. Treve  Easeman library. They had eavesdropped on practically all that had been  said

from the first. The highly sensitive microphone had missed very  little. They could hear Telegraph Edmunds

shouting. 

"Watchout!" he was screaming. "Be careful!" 

Monk, the apish chemist, pulled one headphone away from an ear as  if to hear himself talk and gulped,

amazement in his small voice, "I'm  a whatchacallit if I understand this!" 

Strange sounds came over the listening device. Certain thumps were  undoubtedly chairs upsetting; men

groaned and grunted, and feet tapped  parqueted flooring frantically. A vase or some other brittle  bricabrac


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broke with a jangle which edged teeth. A man shrieked. The  shriek was wordless, but it conveyed by its

quality an awful horror and  a mad fear. 

"Sounds like a regular jamboree," Monk grunted. 

"If you don't want a rib kicked in, shut up!" Ham told him shortly. 

Doc Savage said nothing. It was a characteristic of the bronze man  that he indulged in long periods of silence,

rarely speaking, and never  bandying idle conversation unless there was a purpose, some end to be  gained. 

Down in the Easeman apartment, a man wailed, "We can't whip the  thing! It'll kill us all!" 

"Don't call it a thing!" Telegraph Edmunds snarled. "You know what  it is!" 

There was more bedlam. Someone fired a gun. A splintery crash as a  chair shattered indicated some one had

swung with the piece of  furniture. 

"We haven't got a chance" Telegraph Edmunds yelled suddenly, "Out  of the apartment, everybody!" 

A man barked, "What about the girl and this Russel Wray chick?" 

"Let 'em stay here!" Telegraph rapped. "We gotta get to the big  boss and talk things over. C'mon! Clear out!" 

Sounds indicated the men were fighting their way toward the door. 

Doc Savage hauled the headset from his ears. 

"We're going down!" he said, and there was no trace of excitement  in his remarkable voice. 

Monk and Ham promptly charged for the hatch by which they had  gained access to the roof, Monk pausing

only long enough to grab up his  pig, Habeas Corpus, by one oversize ear. Habeas seemed accustomed to  this

method of transportation. 

Doc Savage tarried briefly. Beside the box containing the  listeningindevice amplifier stood a second case

of apparatus. He  connected the two devices with a pair of flexible wires. 

SINCE the P. Treve Easeman apartment was not far below the roof,  they used the stairs rather than await

arrival of an elevator. 

Monk rumbled as he bounded down steps. Monk always became noisy  when excited. His usually childlike

voice became a bull bellow, and he  had been known to stand in the middle of a fight, absolutely unhurt,  and

yell bloody murder merely for the sake of the noise. 

"Swell stuff!" Monk rumbled. "We snoop around and listen in on the  merrygoround down in that

apartment, and what does it get us? A  headache!" 

"Will you shut up?" Ham requested. 

Monk continued. "We gumshoe around and we ain't got no more idea of  what this is all about than when we

started! Now if that ain't  " 


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They reached the corridor of the Easeman floor. The Easeman door  was open. An airy rushing noise was

coming from one of the elevator  shafts. Otherwise, the hallway was extremely quiet. 

Doc Savage whipped to the door and lunged inside. The rug was  bunched, and scarlet smeared the floor. He

went on. The library was a  mess  furniture broken, askew, upset. 

"Miss Easeman!" Doc called. 

Silence answered. 

"Wray!" The bronze man's voice was a crash. 

There was more silence. Then a great smashing of glassware came  from the kitchen regions. Doc whipped for

the noise, came through a  door and saw Ada Easeman and Russel Wray standing in a glittering lake  of broken

glass. They had evidently tried to move a cabinet to  barricade the door and it had spilled its contents. 

The girl did not look as if she had been through anything more  strenuous than a débutante dance. Her emerald

frock was unruffled, her  hair undisturbed. 

Contrasting with her immaculateness, Russel Wray's black hair was  oozing red in two places, and a fist had

mashed one spike of his waxed  mustache into his lip, although the other spike stuck out straight and  alert. 

"What was the attacker?" Doc Savage asked. 

Both stared. Neither spoke. 

"What attacker?" Doc repeated, and there was in his unusual voice a  quality which rapped out a demand for

obedience. 

Russel Wray spat noisily to get the mashed spike of his moustache  away from his bruised lip. Then he spoke. 

"I think they were crazy!" he said. 

"What do you mean?" Doc demanded. 

"There wasn't anybody!" Wray's voice was unclear because of his  damaged lip. "The door opened. Then the

gang began to jump around and  yell and throw furniture. It was positively crazy!" 

"Wait here, you two!" Doc Savage directed. 

The bronze giant spun, crossed rooms, came out in the corridor and  found Monk and Ham jabbing elevator

buttons insistently. A moment  later, a cage sighed to a stop and the doors whispered open. The three  men

dived inside with a suddenness which caused the operator to emit a  frightened squawk. 

Doc Savage himself dropped the cage toward the street level. There  was excitement in the lobby. The

telephone girl was a pale, motionless  heap in her armchair, where she had fainted; the doorman was sitting

down, crimson leaking through the fingers of both hands, which he kept  pressed tightly over his face. 

Monk, still carrying the pig by one huge ear, dashed out onto the  street. He looked up and down the street. He

put the pig down on the  sidewalk. 


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"They got away," he said. 

DOC and his men did not give up the pursuit immediately, although  they would have profited as much to

have done so, for there proved to  be no substantial trail. Telegraph Edmunds and his men were a canny  crew.

They had not been picked up in flight by the same rich car in  which they had arrived, but by another and

much more shabby machine  which had been parked near by, attracting no attention. 

"Those birds are old heads," Monk offered. 

Ham flourished his sword cane irately. 

"The talk we overheard in that apartment didn't make sense," he  snapped. "P. Treve Easeman and another

man called Old Bonepicker have  disappeared. The Easeman girl and Wray are scrapping with Telegraph

Edmunds and his gang! Each accuses the other of knowing more than they  told." 

Monk picked up Habeas Corpus and scratched the bristles atop the  homely shote's head, as if to encourage a

thought process. "What gets  me," he said, "is that fight in the apartment. It sounded to me as if  there was

quite a scrap. But that bird Wray claimed there wasn't any  attacker." 

Both Monk and Ham eyed Doc Savage. 

"What do you make of it, Doc?" Monk asked. 

Instead of replying directly, the bronze man said, "We will talk  the affair over with Ada Easeman and Russel

Wray." 

They entered the apartment house again. 

An elevator operator, gapemouthed with unsatisfied curiosity, let  them out on the Easeman floor. They

could hear the other elevators  sighing in their shafts as they walked to the Easeman apartment. The  door was

closed. Doc tried it. 

"Locked," Monk hazarded aloud when the panel did not yield. 

The bronze man rapped. There was no response. 

"Jove," Ham murmured. "They were supposed to wait here." 

Monk squinted at the lock. "This baby is one of them new unpickable  kind." He straightened. "We'd better,

try to get a key from the super." 

Doc Savage moved a hand, not speaking, but the gesture indicating  that the others should wait; then he took

from his clothing a tiny case  which held an assortment of probes and picks, and with these he went to  work

on the lock. Seemingly, he was unhurried, but hardly more than a  minute elapsed before the elaborate

tumblers surrendered and the door  came open. 

They entered and moved through rooms, stepping erratically and  carefully that they might miss the crimson

puddles on the floor, and  from time to time calling out in a low voice. Not until they had gone  through the

entire apartment were they sure of the truth. 

"The girl and Wray cleared out," Monk growled. "Now, what was the  idea of that?" 


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"This don't look so good for Wray and the girl." Ham spun his sword  cane in a manner a juggler would have

envied. "They skipped, which  bally well makes it seem they were afraid to talk to us." 

Monk snorted loudly. "Then that yarn about nothing attacking  Telegraph Edmunds and his gang and scaring

them away was probably a  fake." 

Ham started a nod, then thought of something and almost dropped his  spinning sword cane. 

"A thought just came to me," he said. 

"Be kind to it," Monk snorted. "It's in a strange place." 

"Remember back in the woods by that road, after we followed  Telegraph and his gang from the airport?"

Ham demanded. "Telegraph and  his men acted strangely there, acted as if something had attacked them  

something that couldn't be seen." 

"Something invisible?" Monk demanded. 

"Quite right," Ham said. 

"Nuts!" Monk told him. 

Doc Savage said, "I suggest we go back to the, roof for a few  moments." 

MONK and Ham registered puzzlement as they followed the bronze man  up the stairway and out through the

roof hatch. They had been  associated with him long enough to know that he did not make idle  suggestions,

and they were puzzled to know what the roof could offer  them in the line of assistance. 

Catching sight of the listeningindevice, they seemed crestfallen,  thinking the bronze man had merely come

up to get the apparatus. 

Doc Savage bent over the two cases of mechanism and began doing  things with his sinewy fingers. 

"Hey!" Monk ejaculated. "What's that other jigger?" 

Instead of answering, Doc. Savage opened the lid that the homely  chemist might see the clockwork motor,

the gears, the cylindrical black  wax record and the voicerecording box which the case held. 

"Voice recorder!" Monk grunted. "You hooked it on the listening  device?" 

That hardly called for an answer, for the bronze man tilted the  recording box so that a playback needle was

brought in contact with  the record, then changed connections of the headsets so that the voice  line was picked

up, amplified, then hurled into the receivers with  remarkable intensity and fidelity of tone. 

They heard sounds  mad sounds they were  of men running wildly,  and realized these were the noises

made by Telegraph Edmunds and his  men in flight. Then there was an interval of silence, followed by the

sound of Doc Savage's unusual voice calling out, "Miss Easeman!"  "Wray!" Then there was the footstep

noise of the bronze man entering. 

So extremely sensitive was the pickup that most of what Doc Savage  and the girl and Wray said back in the

kitchen regions was not only  audible, but understandable. The record had caught the noise of Doc's  departure


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from the apartment. 

Silence followed. Then came a surprise. Footstep noises indicated  Wray and the girl had come back into the

library. 

"Who was that big bronze man?" asked a voice. 

The speaker was not Wray. It was a male voice, however, but one  which neither Doc Savage nor his men had

heard previously. There was a  strained, unnatural quality about the voice, a tang of unreality, and  it was very

coarse, an aged voice, querulous. 

Response to the words was startling. The girl shrieked softly. Wray  barked something surprised and

unintelligible. 

"Who was he?" the strange voice repeated. 

"Old Bonepicker!" the girl cried out in a shrill, amazed voice.  "What are you doing here?" 

"I followed that devil Telegraph Edmunds," said the voice. "I've  been following him ever since he arrived in a

plane this afternoon.  I've been hoping he would lead me to his boss, the master mind who is  behind what he is

doing. Now, who was that bronze than?" 

"Doc Savage," said the girl. 

"Hmmm," mumbled the strange voice. "Who brought him in?" 

"My father," said the girl. "Telegraph Edmunds had been holding my  father in Boston to keep him from

getting in touch with you. They did  not know that you had already started working together, through myself

and Russel Wray here. Father telegraphed Doc Savage to be on the Boston  plane by today." 

"Bad," said the voice which the girl had attributed to the  mysterious "Old Bonepicker." "Your father should

not have brought Doc  Savage into this. It will only excite these devils. They will start  operations on a large

scale. Left alone, your father and myself might  have accomplished something. If they get stirred up and really

cut  loose we'll be helpless. The world will be in a terrible shape, because  all of the policemen and all of the

armies and navies won't be able to  help a bit!" 

"I was afraid of the same thing," said the girl. 

"Something has happened to your father," said the querulous voice. 

The girl made a loud gasping sound of horror. 

"Now don't get hysterical," snapped Old Bonepicker. "You go out to  the airport and see what you can find.

You do that, see?" 

"We will," the girl agreed. 

Chapter 7. THE SPOOK AT THE AIRPORT

THAT was the end of the recorded sounds, and Doc Savage clicked off  the switches and hurriedly packed the


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apparatus for transportation.  Monk helped. Ham, who was no great mechanic, stood by and vouchsafed

remarks. 

"So the trail leads back to that airport!" he snorted. "I wonder  just what we missed out there!" 

Monk glanced at a window. 

"Gonna be dark before we get out there," he offered. 

Ham tilted his sword cane. "Are we going to the jolly airport?" 

Doc Savage said, "It is the best lead." 

Down on the street, they found traffic thick enough to hamper  progress, but there was a police siren under the

hood of Doc Savage's  car, and the license plates bore distinct numerals of very low  denomination, a

combination which enabled them to split traffic wide  open in the dash over the long elevated roadway to the

airport at which  the excitement had occurred earlier in the afternoon. 

Doc cut the headlights when they pulled off the main highway and  drove by the glow of the moon. He parked

before getting near enough  that the car might be heard, and they went on afoot. 

Monk, carrying Habeas by an ear, lifted on tiptoe to eye the black,  silent humps of the hangars, the regular

and brilliant white splash of  the beacon and the array of colored lights marking the tarmac confines. 

"Plumb peaceful," he offered. 

They did not approach the hangars by way of the main entrance, but  surmounted the high metal guard fence

some two hundred yards distant  and went forward, crouching in the concealment of an ornamental hedge

which paralleled the metal fence. It was with scarcely a sound that  they eased into the big hangar which held

the transport plane that had  arrived that afternoon from Boston. 

Monk breathed. "We look for a guy named P. Treve Easeman  is that  it?" 

Doc Savage was silent a moment. 

"You go over the plane interior, Monk," he directed. "Ham and I  will examine the hangar itself." 

Monk grunted, "But them birds this afternoon searched the plane." 

Doc Savage said nothing, and Monk, shrugging, got the cabin door  open and, still carrying his pig by an ear,

swung inside. He put the  shote down. 

"Go get 'em, Habeas," he directed. 

THE pig stood perfectly still. He sniffed. Bristles on his neck and  back hackled up, dogfashion. 

Monk, busy examining the cabin by the aid of a tiny flashlight  which had a spring generator instead of a

battery, missed the  significance of the shote's actions. Monk started with the pilot  compartment and worked

aft, examining each seat as he came to it. He  roved his flash beam over the cushions. 


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Well aft, he came to a seat, the cushion of which was stained in a  rather queer fashion. Monk scrutinized the

stain closely. It puzzled  him. He reached down and touched it. 

He nearly jumped out of his skin and dropped the flashlight, which  rolled under the seat. The cushion felt

wet. 

Monk hurriedly got down on all fours, retrieved the light, twisted  the lens head so that the beam was wider,

then turned the illumination  on the seat. He touched the stain again, felt a distinctly wet  sensation and eyed

his fingers, expecting to see something. There was  nothing. 

The fingers still felt wet, and he hastily wiped them on his  trouser leg. An instant later, it felt as if a wet

liquid, wiped from  his fingers, had soaked through the trouser fabric to the bare skin. 

Monk winked small eyes. The light went out and he rewound the  spring generator with wild haste. Then he

reached around to smooth down  certain hairs on the back of his neck, hairs which felt as if they were  standing

on end. 

He hesitated, then touched the cushion and transferred his finger  tips to his lips. He spat violently. There had

been a distinctly salty  taste. 

Forward in the cabin the pig, Habeas Corpus, squealed shrilly. 

Monk heaved up on his feet. The pig was back against a seat, tusks  bared. The animal looked scared. Monk

lunged down the aisle. 

Two steps, and he emitted a howl that could not have been louder  had he been unexpectedly stabbed. 

DOC SAVAGE and Ham were scrutinizing the far end of the hangar,  devoting more of their time in listening

than in searching, in hopes of  hearing either Wray or the girl. When Monk yelled, both spun sharply. 

"Monk!" Doc rapped. "What is it?" 

"Blazes!" Monk bawled. "There's somethin' screwy about this crate!" 

They could see the homely chemist through the plane windows. He was  crouched like a great ape, moving

forward cautiously, the flashlight  beam roving. Suddenly, Monk paused. He stared. His small eyes seemed to

swell in their sockets. 

One of the seat cushions in front of him was distinctly sinking. It  was as if a weight were bearing down on it.

But there was nothing to be  seen! 

Monk held his breath. The pig was tense. Forward in the cockpit, a  pair of clocks ticked in mechanical

concert. 

Then  and Monk afterward swore that it stood his hair permanently  on end  there was a groan. It was a

very distinct and awful groan. The  sound had such a hoarse quality that it was difficult to tell from  where it

came. 

Monk moved. He had to do something, if only jump. He drifted a hand  out to grasp a chair and help himself

in the direction of the door. He  never took hold of the chair. Instead, his fingers encountered  something

faintly warm  and wet. 


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Monk fell back into his habit of yelling when he was excited. 

"Whew!" he howled. "Blazes! For the love of mud!" 

At the other end of the hangar, Ham yelled, "Stop that noise, you  missing link!" 

"Spooks!" Monk bawled. "There's a danged spook in this sky  chariot!" 

Doc Savage and Ham both ran toward the plane. 

They did not reach the ship. One of the huge sliding hangar doors  came back with a whirring of track rollers.

Men popped through. They  wielded powerful hand searchlights and an assortment of submachine guns  and

ordinary pistols. 

Telegraph Edmunds led the rush. 

THE homely Monk, in the plane, forgot his spook troubles. He  snapped a redbristled hand to his armpit and

brought out one of the  compact supermachine pistols which resembled overgrown automatics. 

The plane windows were of nonshatter glass. He banged one out with  a fist, leveled the machine pistol and

tightened down on the trigger. A  whooping moan filled the great hangar. 

The gun was charged with mercy bullets, a type which did not kill  but produced unconsciousness in the

course of such a few seconds that  it seemed their effects were instantaneous. 

When Telegraph Edmunds did not go down immediately, Monk was not  surprised. But when the plump

Telegraph spun, dived for a pile of oil  drums and reached them without incident, Monk was somewhat

astonished.  He was even more surprised when Telegraph began to shoot deliberately  at him with an automatic

pistol. 

Then the explanation dawned on Monk. 

"Them guys have got bulletproof vests!" he howled. 

Then he ducked. The transport plane was no armored war craft.  Revolver bullets cut through it with invisible

viciousness. Monk dived  for the door, reached it, tumbled out and ran toward Doc Savage and  Ham. 

Ham had tucked his sword cane under an arm and unlimbered another  of the supermachine pistols. He fired,

and the slugs splashed their  chemical content on the oil drums behind which the assailants had taken  cover. A

foe cursed and his profanity smothered off in a way which  showed he had been hit effectively by one of the

mercy slugs. 

Telegraph Edmunds was grumbling orders and in a moment his men  began placing their flashlights on top of

the drum, so that the  blinding beams ranged the hangar, illuminating Doc Savage and his two  companions. 

Monk slapped prone on the floor. Shooting together, he and Ham  hurriedly wiped out the row of glittering

flashlight eyes. It was nice  marksmanship. 

Telegraph swore distinctly and feelingly. 

"Get to the damned plane!" he howled. "We want that spook the ape  of a guy was yelling about!" 


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Monk, scuttling swiftly, reached Doc Savage and Ham about the time  these words were shouted. The homely

chemist grunted unbelievingly, and  perhaps with some relief. 

"There was sure somethin' strange in that plane," he muttered. "I  tell you, I felt something salty and wet

where there wasn't anything!" 

"Hallucinations," said Ham. 

"Who?" Monk demanded, not catching the word. 

A bullet struck near by, scouring up concrete fragments, and Monk  and Ham hastily inched backward. Their

own lights were out now. It was  dark in the hangar, the only illumination being starlight which spilled  in

through the open sliding door. 

"Doc, what d'you reckon is in that plane?" Monk asked. 

There was no answer. 

"Doc," Monk repeated. 

Then he felt about. There was no trace of the bronze man. 

AT the moment that Monk was putting his question, Doc Savage was  working along the hangar wall some

yards distant. He traveled with the  silence of a phantom, but did not go far. He paused, observing that  there

was light enough ahead  the glow of moonbeams which came through  the door  to disclose his figure. 

The hangar was of rugged construction, sheet metal over large steel  beams, and the bronze man grasped one

of the latter and began to  ascend. It was no miraculous climb, but it was tedious, for only the  tight clamp of

his fingers on the vertical fins of the beams kept him  up. 

A man with an ordinary set of muscles would have mounted ten feet,  possibly fifteen if he were in good trim.

It was some forty feet to the  top, and after that, there was a labyrinth of beams to traverse in  intense

blackness, with a misstep meaning a death drop to the hard  concrete floor far below. 

The door tracks were high up, and by crouching to one side Doc  Savage managed to put sudden weight

against the panels and send them  whirring shut. The darkness which clamped down inside the hangar was

intensely black. 

Telegraph swore. So did some of his men. They shot at the door,  raking the panel, thinking some one had

reached it from the floor  level. 

Monk and Ham opened up with their superfirers. 

Telegraph cursed some more. The supermachine pistols had special  compensators built into the muzzles

which, in addition to balancing  recoil, digested muzzle flame so that it was difficult to spot the  little weapons. 

Doc Savage changed his position, having slow going in spite of his  tremendous muscular strength, and

reached another vertical girder. He  went down this, using only the grip of cabled hands, and touched the

floor, directly behind the oil drums which sheltered Telegraph and his  gang. 


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It is virtually impossible for a man to move in the darkness  without making at least some sound. The men

behind the oil drum  barricade might have heard the bronze giant descending had not they  been concentrating

on the fight. As it was, the sounds they were making  guided Doc in his attack. 

The first victim made a stifled mewing sound that might have come  from a very hungry cat. That much of a

noise squeezed past the  tremendous clutch of bronze fingers which fell upon his throat. 

Doc did not try to exert throttling pressure. Instead, he used upon  the man a device which he had discovered

the course of anatomical  research upon the human brain and which he had mastered by long  practice. He felt

about, located certain nerve centers with his finger  tips, and bore down with a sharp, paralyzing pressure

which rendered  the victim unable to move or speak for some time. 

One of the others heard the noise. He lunged, feeling with his  hands, and his clutching fingers encountered

Doc Savage. The next  instant the fellow was reeling backward from a tremendous blow in the  face. He

emitted a howl. 

Across the hangar, Monk and Ham heard the shout, guessed what had  caused it and began to yell and fire

their machine pistols. The  combination of noise and danger was too much for the hangar attackers. 

"This is too tough!" Telegraph grated. "Clear out!" 

They surged up in a wild charge for the door. The sliding panel had  secured itself in some fashion. It resisted.

Three of them got one  behind the other and hurled their combined weights against a sheet of  the metal hangar

covering. The sheet split and let them out into the  night. 

THE earlier quietness about the airport did not mean that it was  deserted, but only that the personnel were

having a slack hour, and  were gathered, talking, in the operations office. The shooting, the  yelling, had stirred

up a turmoil. The landing lights, tremendous flood  lenses spraying incandescence that was almost hot

daylight, had been  switched on. Some of the men were armed. Pilots carrying mail were  authorized to have

firearms. 

Members of the airport personnel yelled questions. Telegraph swore  and drove a flurry of bullets over their

heads. 

Instead of fleeing, the airport force scattered, cutting off flight  in the direction of the road. They began

shooting. One of Telegraph's  men bellowed and fell, clawing at the hole which a bullet had opened in  his leg. 

Telegraph glared at his party. They were not a mobile force, since  they were carrying those who had been

overcome by the mercy bullets in  the hangar, as well as the pair made unconscious by Doc Savage. 

Angrily, Telegraph jabbed a pudgy hand at the senseless burdens. 

"Can't leave 'em!" he groaned. "This Doc Savage will grab 'em and  make 'em talk!" 

"We can fix it so they can't talk," some one reminded. 

"Don't be a nut!" Telegraph grunted. "Good men are too scarce." 

One of the men yelled, sloped an arm. 

"Why not use that buggy?" he barked. 


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The "buggy" was a singlemotored cabin monoplane  a new ship if  its bright paint and shiny metal were any

indications. There was a neat  canvas jacket over the motor. 

The men ran toward the plane. One gave a leap, seizedthe canvas  cover and yanked it off, then ran around

and yanked at the door. It was  locked. He beat in a window with a pistol and got to the door and  unlatched it

from the inside. 

Telegraph Edmunds was hanging back, showing little enthusiasm for  the plane escape. 

"They'll takeoff in another ship and follow us!" he barked. 

"Sure!" snapped one of the others. "But we can't get to our car  carrying these birds." 

"The plane won't hold all of us," Telegraph shouted angrily. "Some  of you take the unconscious men and get

in the air. The rest of us will  make a try for the cars." 

They proceeded to carry this suggestion out. Telegraph and three  companions keeping a steady fire directed

at such men as exposed  themselves around the airport. The plane motor was equipped with a  starter; this

turned the motor smashing over noisily. The pilot  one  of the gang was a flier  gave the cylinders little time

to warm but  opened the throttle, and the plane kicked its tail up and scudded  across the tarmac. 

Telegraph and the others ran for the edge of the field, dropping  flat at intervals to shoot the floodlights out, so

that they were  enveloped in darkness. 

It became evident that they were going to make good their escape. 

DOC SAVAGE, Monk and Ham were doing about all they could do   striving to head off the escape. They

were handicapped. Telegraph and  his men seemed to have plenty of ammunition, and were not at all  reluctant

about expending it. Once, the airport attendants mistook them  for enemies and turned loose a storm of lead,

driving them to cover.  They shouted angrily, trying to convince the skeptical attendants they  were not foes.

By the time they succeeded, the plane bearing  Telegraph's men was in the air, and Telegraph Edmunds

himself was near  the field edge. 

Doc Savage and his men set out after the group fleeing on the  ground. 

An attendant ran to a powerful searchlight and turned it upon the  plane. The craft was circling, gaining

altitude, and evidently standing  by to offer aid, should necessity arise, to Telegraph himself. The ship  was a

glittering, buzzing monstrosity in the brilliant searchlight  glitter. 

Telegraph and his three companions scrambled wildly over the high  metal fence bounding the airport. He

paused, rested a gun on the fence  wire and fired, but his other men, clambering over, shook the fence  until the

bullets went wild. 

Doc Savage reached the fence a hundred yards distant. He did not  run to it and climb, but attacked the barrier

like a cat, with a  tremendous leap which lifted him nearly to the top. He landed lightly  on the other side. Then

he stood there, attention suddenly fixed on the  plane. 

Something was happening to the craft. It dipped, wabbled. It seemed  on the verge of cracking up. Then it

straightened out and, motor  ahowl, swooped upward. The searchlight followed it. 

Monk and Ham now stared at the plane. Its antics were fantastic. 


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"Hey!" Monk exploded. "Somebody threw a parachute overboard!" 

The small packet of the parachute was barely distinguishable in the  intense searchlight glitter. It descended

slowly, not turning over and  over as it fell, as might have been expected. Then something unexpected

occurred. 

"Blazes!" Monk gulped. "Look at that!" 

The parachute had opened, blossoming into a great mushroom of snowy  silk. It did not fall as loose cloth

might have. It held its belled  shape. Below it the shrouds stretched rigidly, as if supporting a  weight. But

there was nothing visible in the harness. 

"Observe the plane!" Ham snapped. 

The ship had resumed its antics. It nosed up too steeply, stalled,  slid off in a spin, and did not recover. The

motor mumbled at ordinary  speed, but the flying wires began to howl in a fashion that could be  heard a great

distance. 

The craft was probably traveling in excess of three hundred miles  an hour when it hit the ground. The

searchlight followed it to the  last. Flying earth and débris geysered upward. Then there was a sheet  of white

flame as if a photographers flash gun had gone off. This  lasted only momentarily, and left a bundling mass of

redder flames  which had enwrapped the whole craft. 

Doc Savage shifted his attention to the parachute. It was coming  down on the tarmac. The harness touched

the field. The night breeze  carried the big lobe over and it dragged the harness along. The harness  was not

touching the ground, but elevated nearly two feet. And below  the webbing straps there was a disturbance.

Dust stirred up. Clods of  earth were dislodged. Two shallow grooves appeared. They might have  been made

by a pair of heels. 

Monk bawled, "Does anybody else see what I see?" 

Ham still retained his sword cane. He fumbled it absently. 

"There is something on that 'chute!" he gulped. "Something you  can't see!" 

THE airport attendants, as stunned as any one, ran for the 'chute,  some for the crashed plane. 

Doc Savage said, "Telegraph Edmunds! We'll trail him!" 

The bronze man and his two aides ran in pursuit of Telegraph. The  latter, with his three companions, had

paused to witness the disaster  to the plane and the mysterious parachute descent, but now they began  running.

They were not far ahead, but were fast on their feet, for they  were scared. Gaining the edge of the flying field,

they turned sharply  to the left, diving into a brushy lane. A moment later, the motor of a  car they had

concealed there began to moan. 

The machine  a sedan  lumbered into view. Monk lifted his machine  pistol and drove a hooting volley of

slugs. They flattened on the sedan  windows. 

"Bulletproof!" Monk snorted. 


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The sedan windows, it developed, cranked aside enough to allow a  slit which would admit a gun muzzle.

Men began firing through these,  using submachine guns. Doc Savage and his two aides, possessed of no

quality which made them impervious to lead, sought the roadside ditch. 

The sedan betook itself noisily away. 

Doc Savage said, "Our own car!" 

They ran back to where they had parked their machine, entered it  and tramped the starter. Nothing happened.

Doc wrenched up the hood,  dashed a flash beam inside, then pointed. 

The wiring had been torn out. Stepping back, the bronze man  examined the soft earth around about, noting

the size of the impressed  tracks. Among other things, he had developed a facility for retaining  accurate

optical measurements in his memory; he could look at a print  and recognize instantly, hours later, another

print made by the same  shoe. He had seen Telegraph Edmunds's footprints during the afternoon. 

"These are Edmunds's tracks," he said quietly. "He disabled our  car." 

Over on the airport fence the pig, Habeas Corpus, was clambering up  the high barrier, having some difficulty

and squealing plaintively.  Monk helped the shote over. 

"We're getting nowhere fast," he complained. "Seems like things are  breaking so we can't learn a thing." 

"We know one thing!" Ham snapped. "There are invisible things of  some kind mixed up in this."  The homely

Monk scowled at the dapper  barrister. "I always did know you'd study law until you went nuts," he  said. 

Ham gritted, "Then how do you explain that parachute business? And  didn't you feel something in the plane

cabin?" 

Monk dangled Habeas by an ear, and, said nothing. His apish  features wore a baffled expression. 

They went back to the airport grounds to examine the wrecked plane.  There was a crowd. Two fire

extinguisher wagons had been run out and  were playing chemical streams on the wrecked plane. But they

were too  late. Flames had consumed most of the ship. 

It was doubtful if any of the bodies inside could be identified. 

DOC SAVAGE ferreted out the airport attendants who had been first  to reach the mysterious parachute and

questioned them, extracting  information which did nothing to explain what had occurred, for the  attendants

insisted there had been no one near the 'chute. 

Asked to explain the manner in which it had come down, they were  vague, and finally tried to laugh it off as

a freak occurrence. 

"It was screwy, though," one of them admitted. "After the 'chute  collapsed, the webbing harness jumped

around as if something were  getting out of it. Then it fell to the ground." 

Doc Savage said, "Let us examine the spot where the 'chute came  down. There may be marks on the ground." 

They might as well have saved their time. Excited persons going and  coming from the burning plane, had

stamped out whatever tracks there  might have been. 


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Police arrived, and made the mistake of devoting all of their  energy to clearing the crowd from about the

plane, extinguishing the  flames and extracting the charred bodies. It was some minutes before  they got

organized on the matter of the shooting. 

Doc Savage got his two aides aside. 

"We can answer police questions later," he said. "We will leave  now." 

That decision was a mistake, one of the few in judgment errors  which the bronze man had made. But,

remarkable as was his trained mind,  it had no powers of clairvoyance, and he could not see into the future. 

There was one more unexpected happening. It occurred as they left  the airport. 

"Over there!" the bronze man said suddenly, and pointed. 

His two assistants, following his indicating arm, saw the figures  of a man and a woman. They were walking

close together, staggering a  little. Their arms were out, but not around each other. Rather, the  arms seemed to

support something between them, something which, as far  as visual evidence went, was not there. 

The two forms came in range of automobile headlights. Their  identity was apparent. 

"The girl, Ada Easeman, and that guy, Russel Wray!" Monk roared. He  hurtled toward the pair. 

Ada Easeman and Russel Wray reached a car, an open touring which  had the top down. They seemed to have

some difficulty getting in, and  it seemed that they were helping their unseen burden. The girl got  behind the

wheel, and the machine, tires spouting gravel, rocketed away  long before Doc Savage, for all his sprinting

speed, was near enough to  stop them. 

"Seize a car!" Doc rapped. 

The nearest machine was a taxicab, which had evidently brought a  passenger out to the airport. The driver

had just gotten out and was  running toward the burning plane. All of his interest was on the  flaming ship. He

did not look back as Doc Savage, Monk and Ham entered  the cab, started the motor and drove in pursuit of

the girl and Wray. 

The hack was neither new nor in good mechanical shape; when weight  was put on the accelerator, a carbon

knock tinkled and a piston slap  made angrier accompaniment. The speedometer needle bogged before it

reached fifty. 

The touring car bearing the girl and Wray was probably doing eighty  when it went out of sight. 

DOC SAVAGE slowed down and the cab seemed to run even more noisily,  while an overheated smell came

from the motor. The wheel had a distinct  list to the right. 

"There oughta be a law against a heap like this" Monk grumbled.  "Boy, are we having tough luck!" 

The engine stopped suddenly. 

Doc Savage, at the wheel, remained as motionless as if graven in  the bronze metal which he resembled,

except for the slight shift of his  arms as he coasted the car to the edge of the pavement and put on the  brakes.

The brakes squealed like pigs. 


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"Hurrah!" Monk snorted. "Now we can walk back." 

Doc Savage's lips seemed scarcely to move as he spoke. 

"Look at the switch," he suggested. 

Monk squinted at the key. "Huh! It's off!" He moved to turn the key  on. 

"Wait!" Doc told him, and started to add something more, but the  pig, Habeas Corpus, emitted a series of

uneasy grunts. Monk frowned at  the shote, which was in the rear seat, and demanded, "What ails you?" 

Doc Savage's voice was emotionless as he spoke. 

"I think there is something in the car with us," he said.  "Something we cannot see. It turned the switch off!" 

Monk gulped, "Well, for  " and could think of no adequate  finishing phrase. 

They all eyed the switch which had turned off so strangely. It was  Doc Savage who saw the rear door

opening. He whipped open the door on  his side, dived out and flung for the other door. 

The door slammed just before he reached it. He clutched madly at  the air. Apparently he encountered

nothing, for he stood still and  seemed to listen. Then he leaped far to the left and clutched again. 

"No use," he said. His voice showed neither disgust nor excitement. 

The homely Monk demanded loudly, "Am I going nuts?" 

Ham clenched his sword cane tightly. 

"There was something in here," he said. "It got out, whatever it  was, after it turned the switch off." 

Doc Savage came back to the taxi, opened the rear door and got  inside slowly, his hands groping, searching,

but finding nothing. His  eyes, however, located something of interest, for he leaned down and  thumbed on a

flashlight. 

"Look here," he requested. 

The cab rear was lined with rather ancient leather. Some sharp  object  it was probably a screw which had

come loose from the meter  fastening and now lay on the floorboards  had scratched a number of  words in

the leather. They read: 

Savage: 

Go to opera tonight. 

There was no signature. 

Monk finished reading, drew back, absently started to scratch his  own head, then scratched the bristles atop

Habeas Corpus's nodular  skull instead. 

"They do say music uplifts the soul," he said. "Personally, I never  felt less like going to the opera." 


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Doc Savage consulted a wrist watch which had a jeweled, shockproof  movement. 

"The performance is already on," he said. "But we can make the end  of it." 

Ham sheathed and unsheathed his sword cane. 

"That invisible thing, whatever it was, must have been able to  write," he said slowly. 

Chapter 8. TERROR AMONG ERMINES

THE structure that is the center of operatic America, the citadel  which draws the crowned heads of the

profession for their finest  performances, is a building which outwardly resembles an enormous and  very

grimy warehouse. Viewed from the street, it offers nothing  impressive other than its size, except on opera

nights, when it takes  on a dignity and an aura of glittering impressiveness. 

Doc Savage, Monk and Ham left the Times Square subway station and  worked southward toward the opera

house. The bronze man rarely wore a  hat, but he had donned one now, yanked far down, and his coat collar

was turned up. He did not wish to be recognized. 

He was, against his own inclinations, a celebrity, thanks to the  industry of newspaper reporters. Should he be

recognized, a crowd of  curious individuals and autograph hunters was sure to collect. 

There was some delay at the opera house. None of the three wore  full dress, and they looked somewhat

disheveled. Nor did they have  tickets; and the house was sold out. Or so the young man at the ticket  window

said. 

Doc Savage made known his identity. 

"I beg your pardon," bowed the young man at the window. "I did not  recognize you. I will have an usher take

you to your box." 

Monk eyed Doc Savage as they were escorted inside. 

"How long has this been going on?" he wanted to know. 

"You mean the box? I have had that some time; in fact, my father  had it before me." 

Monk digested that, and wondered just how much the bronze man  contributed for use of the box. Plenty, no

doubt. Monk remembered that  there had been talk of an unnamed contributor who had lifted the  operatic

enterprise from its financial dilemma. The bronze man had a  habit of doing things like that. 

"Hey!" Monk barked. "Whatcha think you're doin'?" 

The usher had grasped Habeas Corpus by the scruff of the neck and  was preparing to take him away. 

"Animals not allowed," the usher explained. 

Ham indicated Monk with his sword cane and suggested, "The ape  falls in that class, too. Better take him." 

Monk, bristling indignantly, declared, "That hog is a wellbehaved  hog and he likes music. He stays here!" 


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There was more squabbling, but when the usher departed Habeas  remained behind, perched on the rail in

plain view of the audience,  ears distended to catch the booming of a dark and extremely fat basso. 

The performance had reached a point where the fat basso was  whooping and moaning in the throes of

indecision about whether to  surrender an equally plump prima donna to the arms of the rival who  sang tenor. 

"I guess it'll be over when he makes up his mind," muttered Monk,  who had no great appreciation of fine

music." That'll probably take  another five minutes." 

Over in the diamond horseshoe, a woman screamed suddenly and with a  volume that made the high note of

the prima donna on the stage seem  small in comparison. 

MONK said, "I knew that basso would drive somebody nuts!" Then he  stood up and stared. He shed his

wisecracking manner, howled, "Hey!  Lookit!" 

The woman who had shrieked was long and bony and much bejeweled. An  ermine wrap was in disarray

about her shoulders and she was clutching  madly with both hands. She shrieked again. 

The article at which she grabbed was a diamond pendant, a diamond  that was very large and caught subdued

fire from the lights on the  stage. It seemed suspended in midair, as if by an unseen string,  before the

woman's face. It moved as she snatched at it causing her to  miss. 

Then a jeweled band about the woman's hair seemed to jump from its  anchorage. The woman screamed as

her hair was yanked. The gaudy band  joined the pendant The woman continued to shriek. 

There was a smacking sound, loud enough that Doc Savage and his men  heard it distinctly over the squawling

of the woman, and she collapsed,  as if knocked out. 

"The invisible thing!" Monk rapped. 

Doc Savage was already out of the box. An ornamental rail ran along  the fronts of the boxes, joining them,

and the bronze man sprang upon  this, running along it. The main floor was more than a score of feet  below,

and a drop would have meant at least bad injury upon the seats. 

Farther down the row of boxes, another woman began to flounce about  and shriek. She seemed to be losing

large rings off her fingers. Almost  instantly there was a third disturbance. 

"The spooks are robbing these people!" Monk gulped. 

He got up on the rail with the idea of following the bronze man,  but took one look below and scrambled off

again. He charged out of the  box and through the aisles. 

Ham unsheathed his sword cane and followed the apish chemist,  making passes at apparently empty air with

the blade. 

"Careful!" he. rapped at Monk. "You cannot see the infernal  creatures." 

Monk heard, wheeled back and scooped up his pet pig. "Habeas seemed  to be able to smell them, or

something, before," he said; then to the  pig, "Do your stuff, hog!" 


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Doc Savage had reached the tall, bony woman who had shrieked first.  He drove bronze fingers about,

searching, but encountered nothing. The  jewels had seemed to drop down and had become lost in the gloom

of the  aisles. Best efforts of his flakegold eyes failed to locate them. 

There was a growing bruise on the woman's jaw, mark of the  mysterious blow which had knocked her

senseless. 

The bronze man rushed for the next victim. There, too, he found  nothing. Other women were howling as they

lost their jewels. Ushers  were rushing about. One tripped and fell down one of the sloping  aisles, and opera

patrons, leaving their seats madly, piled over him in  a mêlée. 

Doc Savage fanned a glance about and located a young woman who wore  a particularly expensivelooking

collection of jewels. He ran toward  her. Before he reached her, she ripped out a cry of horror and struck  at the

air before her. One of the invisible beings seemed to have  grabbed at her jewels, and she had avoided the

grasp. She spun and  fled, racing up the aisle toward a red light that marked an exit. 

Doc followed, tremendous leaps closing the gap between himself and  the fleeing woman. She dived into the

dark cavern under the scarlet  exit lamp. There the bronze man caught her. 

"Stand still!" he commanded. 

"Something touched me!" the woman gurgled. "Something which I could  not see  " 

There was a sudden ugly sound. It was a hollow report, very much as  if a hammer had hit some hard

substance. 

Doc Savage fell as if all of his giant sinews had been severed  simultaneously. 

THE woman with the jewels fell from a second, far less violent blow  a moment later. Her baubles left her

person and came together, making  clicking noises, as if they were being dropped in an absolutely  transparent

container. 

The nap of the carpet beside Doc Savage crushed down as if an  unseen weight were bearing upon it. One of

his hands lifted, but in a  strangely lifeless manner, and the bronze skin over one wrist acquired  a depression

that might have meant his pulse was being tested. 

There was a short peculiar whistling sound, the kind of a whistle  by which a man might summon a dog. 

From the darker recess down the fire escape corridor a metal tray  floated, an ordinary tray of the type used by

housewives to bake  muffins, divided off into ten cups. In each of these cups reposed  reddish, softlooking

wax. The tray came to a rest on the floor beside  Doc Savage's right hand. 

One by one, the bronze man's fingers were lifted and pressed into  the soft wax, making an impression in

which the whorls and lines of the  finger tips were distinct. The tray shifted to the other side, and the  same

thing happened to his left hand. 

The tray floated away and was lost in the darkness. 

The jewels had remained suspended in midair, but now they also  swung away without visible suspension;

the manner of their going  something to lift the hair of a superstitious observer, had there been  one. 


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Doc Savage remained, limp and unstirring, where he had been felled.  His features had slammed the floor

heavily when he went down; and small  crimson bubbles broke at his lips from time to time, showing that he

still breathed. 

The opera house was in an uproar, with women shrieking and men  bawling out in rage and fright, while down

on the stage, the fat basso  sang at the top of his voice, a lilting tune that was calculated to  quiet the clamor,

but which failed completely. 

Police whistles shrilled as an emergency squad bored into the opera  house. 

Chapter 9. MARIKAN

MONK beat an open newspaper with one hairy fist and said,  smallvoiced, "Look at this! Look at it!" 

Ham looked up wearily from his task of daubing a fresh supply of  chemical, intended to produce quick

unconsciousness, upon the tip of  his sword cane. 

"Will you stop ranting?" he requested. "This thing is crazy enough  without you adding your nickel's worth." 

It was cool in the gigantic laboratory with its labyrinth of  chemical and electrical apparatus. The coolness was

that of artificial  air conditioning. The huge windows were closed; they always remained  closed. They were of

bulletproof glass. 

Through the windows, the tallest of New York's skyscrapers could be  seen, for these windows were on the

eightysixth floor of the city's  most impressive cloudpiercer. Beyond the tips of the higher buildings,  the

city was a checkerboard of lights. It was an aërie of masterly  situation, this headquarters of Doc Savage. 

The bronze man himself was seated in the maze of an Xray machine,  employing mirrors and fluoroscopic

screens in such a manner that he  could examine his own head. He was kneading a spot over the temple. 

"The blow seems to have been delivered with something resembling a  blackjack," he offered quietly. "It did

no great damage." 

"Look at this paper!" Monk repeated. "It says that over four  hundred policemen got down to that opera house

before the excitement  subsided. They had bomb squads, detective squads and homicide squads.  They even

had the fire department." 

"We know all about that," Ham told him peevishly. "We were jolly  well there, weren't we?" 

"And the sum total of what all the cops found was just exactly  nothing," Monk continued, ignoring Ham.

"They won't even admit for  publication that invisible beings had something to do with the affair." 

Doc Savage put in, "It is rather a preposterous thing for a  hardheaded policeman to believe." 

Monk wrinkled his remarkably homely features in a scowl. 

"Whatever the robbers were, they sure made a cleanup of jewelry,"  he imparted. 

"Is an estimate of the amount given?" Doc asked. 


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"One paper says it will run as high as four or five millions," Monk  advised. "Can't tell much by newspaper

guesses, though." 

Doc Savage did not comment further, but seemed engaged in making a  complete examination of his own

person. He came around to his finger  tips and gave them a great deal of attention. He scraped a small  deposit

of reddish substance from under one of the nails, took it over  to a spectroscopic analyzing device and worked

over it. 

"What'd you find?" Monk queried. 

"A material which I have no recollection of touching," the bronze  man explained. 

"What is it?" 

"A form of modeling wax which is used when soft and later becomes  very hard," Doc announced. 

"Yeah?" Monk nudged the pig, Habeas, with a toe. "Where could you  have picked the wax up?" 

The bronze man seemed not to hear that. He switched off the  analyzing device, replaced slides and cover,

then started for the door,  indicating the others should follow. 

"Where to?" Ham questioned. 

"The name of Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt, or Old Bonepicker, has  cropped up a number of times," Doc Savage

reminded. "We will see what  we can learn about him." 

As they entered a specially constructed speed elevator, built for  Doc Savage's exclusive use, which dropped

them to a private garage in  the skyscraper basement, Monk mentioned a point upon which he evidently  had

decided convictions. 

"Whoever scratched that message in the hack, tellin' us to go to  the opera, knew in advance what was gonna

happen," he said. 

SAWYER LINNETT BONEFELT was listed in the local financial guides as  a private banker; a short history

of his career indicated he had  started as a pawnbroker and a vender of bail bonds, had branched and  grown,

and was now a financial, power. His specialty was buying up  defunct corporations and manufacturing

enterprises and breaking them  into parts and selling them for what usually amounted to a profit. This  had

earned him his soubriquet of "Old Bonepicker." His financial rating  was well up in the millions. 

"A buzzard's way of making a living," Monk opined, one small eye  cocked in Ham's direction. "Only worse

thing I can think of is bein' a  lawyer and livin' off people's troubles." 

Ham, who was one of the most astute and soughtafter attorneys in  the country, maintained a cold silence. 

The directory gave them Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt's address. This was  a doorway, a very decrepit doorway, in

a grimy and uninviting street in  that section of the city which welfare workers liked to call the worst  slum.

One peculiar thing they noted at once. The entire block of  buildings seemed to be unoccupied. The windows

bore the grime deposit  of months; some were boarded up. 

They examined the door, found no bell button, and knocked; but  there was no answer, nothing but the

bumping echoes, faintly audible,  of the knock inside. They waited for a time, then Doc Savage went to  work


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on the lock with his picking kit. It surrendered shortly. 

The hall beyond the door was bleak and uncarpeted, but clean.  Opening to the right was a bare, miserable

office, and on the left was  a bedroom, equally unprepossessing. 

Ham went over to the desk, opened the drawers and boldly riffled  papers inside. He examined some closely. 

"Jove!" he breathed in an awed tone. "These papers have to do with  the breaking up and selling of a

tenmilliondollar corporation.  Imagine a fellow who does business like that using this place for an  office!" 

Doc ran a finger over the desk, and noted the deposit of dust on  it. 

"The desk does not seem to have been used for"  he paused and  noted the tightness of the room against city

grime  "two or three  weeks." 

They examined the bedroom. Nothing was there. At the back of the  corridor, they found a door. Monk tried

it. 

"Feel's pretty solid," he offered. 

Doc Savage tapped the panel, tested it with one of the lockpicking  instruments which had a sharp point. 

"Of armor plate steel," he decided. 

MONK looked very surprised, said, "That's danged funny!" and  stepped aside so that Doc could go to work

on the lock. Once through  the door  and the lock did not surrender as easily as had the other   they were in

vastly different surroundings. 

Carpet on the floor seemed an inch deep, and was of an expensive  grade. The walls were paneled in walnut

and some other wood which was a  brilliant yellow in hue. The lighting was indirect, with no bulbs  visible. 

The homely Monk offered in a dry tone: "Old Bonepicker seems to be  sort of a Jekyll and Hyde guy. He kept

that miser's office and bedroom  outside to impress people, and probably lived back here." 

They advanced hurriedly toward the nearest door, only to stop as  the panel opened. 

"I beg pardon," said the man who had opened the door. "Just what  are your doing here?" 

He was rotund with a full, flushed face and hair which was rather  splotchily white. He wore a resplendent

butler's uniform. 

"I am Mr. Bonefelt's butler," he stated further. 

Doc Savage advanced. He rarely showed expression, except by design.  He was smiling now. 

The butler backed away, looking puzzled, and let them in, and under  the brighter light apparently recognized

the bronzed giant, for he  started violently. But by that time, Monk and Ham were also inside. The  servitor

started to close the door. 

"Wait." Doc Savage said. 


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The bronze man seized the door, which was almost closed, opened it  again and addressed the apparently

empty corridor. 

"Come on in, guys," he said, and his tone was one in which one  underworld denizen would address another. 

"O. K.," said a coarse voice from out of thin air. 

Monk and Ham were standing behind the butler, so that their starts  of surprise fortunately went unnoticed. An

instant later, they got  control of themselves, realizing that Doc Savage was playing a game and  using his

excellent ability as a ventriloquist. 

The butler was deceived completely. He jumped at conclusions of his  own. A gusty sigh of relief escaped

him. 

"So Doc Savage throwed in with you, eh, boys?" he chuckled at what  he apparently thought were invisible

companions of the bronze man.  "That's swell!" 

Monk nearly choked. 

"This guy knows something!" he howled. "Grab 'im!" 

The butler saw he had been tricked. He pitched backward. Both hands  fanned under his long, braided coat

tails and came out with a pair of  enormous army automatics. He did not use them. Doc Savage was upon him,

gripping his wrists. 

The guns whooped thunder, and their lead tore the rich carpet and  split hardwood floorboards underneath.

The man kicked, tried to bite.  Doc Savage lifted him bodily, upset him, banged him down on the floor,  and

such was the shock that the man lost his weapons. Monk sat upon  him. 

"Glory be!" grinned the simian chemist. "We finally got somebody we  can ask questions." 

Ham unsheathed his sword cane and let the butler look closely at  the long blade. He lifted a handkerchief

from the prisoner's pocket and  drew it across the blade: the linen square was cut through, a graphic

illustration of just how sharp the fine steel sword was. 

"Take his right ear first, Ham," Monk suggested. "I think it's a  little bigger than the left." 

Ham said, "An ear does not hurt. We will take an eye, because when  you pull an eyeball out and begin to cut

through the muscles behind it,  it feels as if the whole brain was being hauled out." 

"Aw, nuts!" said the prisoner. "I been through this third degree  stuff before!" 

DOC SAVAGE studied the man, then knelt and kneaded some of the  fellow's joints in a manner which

produced great pain. Doc noted the  results carefully. He shook his head. 

"Physical pain does not terrify this man," he said. "The fellow  knows he can take only so much, then he will

faint. Many criminals are  that way." 

Monk scowled. "Let's try it, anyhow." 


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Instead of replying, Doc Savage produced a small case little larger  than a cigarette lighter, and from it drew a

hypodermic needle with a  transparent barrel. He charged it with a brightgreen fluid, from a  magazine

contained in the tiny case. 

"Truth serum," he said. "The results are not always reliable, but  the man will talk; and in the course of time

we are certain to get at  least a line on what we want to know." 

The captive sneered. 

"Bulls tried that on me once," he growled. "They didn't get a  thing!" 

"They did not try this kind," Doc assured him. "It is a concoction  devised by myself and Monk, here." 

The captive screamed as the serum was administered. 

Monk bounced around on the prisoner's chest as the man sought  vainly to arise and flee. 

"How long?" the homely chemist queried. 

"Five minutes, perhaps," Doc replied. 

"The man's talk will be rambling, at times making no sense, but we  may be able to pick out  " 

THE bronze man hurtled to the left, then lunged wildly for the  south wall. His eyes were fixed on a spot in

the walnut paneling, a  place where what seemed to be a knot graining in the wood, had opened,  disclosing the

black maw of a concealed peephole. 

Red flame lashed out of the aperture. A lightning bolt seemed to  crack in the room, so loud was the shot. 

On the floor, the prisoner emitted a long, awful howl. 

Monk toppled off the captive, rolled wildly after Doc. He, too, had  seen the open peephole. The hidden gun

whacked thunder again. Monk  bawled, clawed at his chest. Mutilated lead, a bullet flattened against  a

bulletproof vest which Monk wore, fell to the carpet. Then Monk  gained the wall. 

Ham, moving as swiftly, was also against the wall, out of range. 

"Stay there!" Doc Savage rapped. 

The prisoner reared up on the floor. His chest was leaking a  pencilsized red stream. He groveled and tried to

insert a finger in  the bullet hole to plug it. 

"They're croakin' me to shut me up!" he wailed. 

Monk roared, "Now's your chance! Talk fast, guy!" 

The wounded man screamed, "Go to the Spook's Nest!" 

"The Spook's Nest?" Monk barked. "Where's that?" 

"Marikan!" the man gulped. It's Marikan's place in the country. Get  into the north tower and  " 


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The hidden gun banged again. The man's head jerked violently. The  bullet must have been a dumdum,

because bits of the head contents were  carried out as it passed through, and the man fell over, dead. 

Doc Savage was under the secret loophole now. It was of a size  little more than sufficient to pass a gun snout.

Doc thrust a hand into  a pocket. The object he brought out might have been a steel ball  bearing. He flipped it

through the hole. Then he sprang away. 

Monk and Ham lunged furiously to get clear. They had seen those  things which resembled ball bearings used

on other occasions. They were  tiny grenades, incredibly violent. 

There was a roar, a splintering of wood, a screeching of drawn  nails  and most of the wall about the

loophole caved in, admitting a  cloud of dust and débris. This flooded across the floor, almost  covering the

prisoner who had been shot through the chest, then through  the brain. 

Doc Savage waded through the wreckage while it was still settling.  He had covered his ears with his hands so

that the concussion would not  deafen him, and now he used both aural organs and eyes. He saw nothing.

There was nobody inside the other room, which was narrow and apparently  a bedroom. 

He did hear footsteps. They were rapid, and in the rear somewhere.  He raced in that direction. 

He came to a dining room. One of the chairs had been upset and was  still rocking on its rounded back portion.

Doc went on, tried the door  on the other side. It was locked. He crashed a fist against the panel.  It split. He

used a foot, and the panel fell out. He reached through  and found a key in the other side and unlocked the

door and passed  through. 

"You will explain yourself," said a deep, youthful voice. 

IT was gloomy in the passage  which led to the regions of the back  door  and a brief instant elapsed before

details became apparent. 

Russel Wray, dark hair and white mustache making him seem slightly  bizarre, was holding a longbarreled

revolver which, unlike the blunt  weapon he had wielded at the Easeman apartment, looked as long and lean

as the man who had it. 

Behind Wray stood Ada Easeman. In her capable right hand was Wray's  stubby gun, of large calibre on a

small frame. She still wore her  emerald evening frock. 

Doc Savage demanded, "Which one of you shot that man?" 

They looked surprised, then they glanced at each other and strange  expressions came upon their features. The

girl spoke first. 

"I didn't," she said. "We just came in and had separated to search  the house. Then the shooting started, and

that terrible explosion. We  met here." 

Doc Savage looked at Wray, said nothing. 

"I never shot any one!" Wray snapped. 

"Is there more than a back and a front door?" Dec asked. 


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"That is all," the girl said. 

Ham ran into the corridor. His sword cane was unsheathed, but he  showed no undue excitement. 

"Monk is watching the front door," he advised. 

"You take the back door," Doc told him. "We will search the house." 

Ada Easeman interjected, "Wait! Do you know what this is all  about?" 

Doc Savage eyed her. "We are beginning to get an idea." 

"Invisible men," she said. 

The bronze man nodded. "Who is the brain behind the thing?" 

The girl fingered the fabric of her evening gown absently. The tint  of her nails blended perfectly with the

emerald hue of the garment. 

"That is what we want to know," she stated. "My father, P. Treve  Easeman, and Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt

were seized and made invisible by  these men." 

Doc exhibited no surprise. "Why?" 

"Extortion," said the girl. "A flat sum of one million dollars in  cash was demanded to make each of them

visible again. Whatever the  infernal process is, it seems that a man can be made invisible, then  changed back

to visibility again." 

"Then what happened?" Doc Savage asked. 

"They took father to Boston to hold him while he was invisible, so  that he would be separated from Old

Bonepicker  I mean, Mr. Bonefelt,"  explained Ada Easeman. "But my father managed to evade his guard,

undiscovered, and telegraph you to get aboard the plane by which he was  to be brought to New York City the

next day." 

From the region of the front door, Monk called, "There ain't no  sign that the noise attracted any attention.

Some people came out and  looked, then went back in their houses. I guess nobody else lives in  this block." 

"Old Bonepicker owns the entire block and allows no one to live  here, so that it will be quiet," said Russel

Wray. 

Doc directed the girl: "Go ahead with what happened in the plane." 

"My father was writing a note on airplane stationery to get to you  when some one opened a window and the

note blew back and Telegraph  Edmunds got it," she elaborated. "Telegraph read it, and it made him so  mad

that he shot my father. Here; I have the note." 

She fished a folded paper from her gown and passed it over. 

DOC SAVAGE studied the missive without unfolding it. The paper was  soiled and about of the size of the

communication which Telegraph  Edmunds and his men had examined beside the road near the airport. It  was


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on Excelsior Airways stationery. 

The unfinished writing read: 

I, P. Treve Easeman, and another man, Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt, have  been seized and made invisible by a

gang of men. Telegraph Edmunds,  seated behind me, is a lieutenant of the gang, but not the chief. I do  not

know the latter's identity. 

This gang plans to extract a million dollars a piece from myself  and Bonefelt for making us visible again.

Then they are going to make  themselves invisible and start a campaign of gigantic robberies. Their  first

crime, planned for tonight, will be robbery of the audience at  the opera, and their second  

The writing ended there, evidently stopped when the gust of wind  had come through the opened plane

window. 

Doc Savage asked, "Can you explain what happened at the airport?" 

"I certainly can," the girl snapped. "My father had telephoned  Bonefelt that he had enlisted your aid. You see,

Bonefelt had escaped,  and was at the airport. During the excitement, he followed Telegraph  Edmunds and his

men. It was he who snatched this note back again." 

"Where was your father?" 

"Wounded," said the young woman. "He managed to get out of the  plane before telegraph's men searched it,

then crawled back inside and  lay in one of the seats, unable to move. Your man Monk found him. Then

Telegraph came, and during the fighting which followed, Russel here,  and myself, got my father away, aided

by Old Bonepicker. 

"Oh, yes, Old Bonepicker came to my apartment and got us. That was  right after you told us to wait. I was so

anxious to find my father  that I neglected to tell you where we had gone." 

The dapper Ham had heard the whole recital from where he was  guarding the rear door. Now he expressed an

opinion. 

"Thin," he said, "very thin." 

The girl and Russet Wray looked indignant. 

"Where is your father now?" Doc Savage asked. "Where is this Old  Bonepicker?" 

"In a limousine in a garage out back," said the girl. "Maybe  they're right here now, listening. You can't see

them." 

"We'll get them," Wray declared. "They can tell their own story." 

"Just a moment," Doc Savage put in. "Who is Marikan?" 

"Marikan?" the girl echoed blankly. 

"I never heard of any one named Marikan," said Wray. 


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Chapter 10. INVISIBLE RAIDERS

DOC SAVAGE withheld advice that the name Marikan had been uttered  by the man recently slain, although

both the girl and Wray showed  curiosity on that point; but the bronze man spoke before they got  around to

voicing an inquiry. 

"Go get the two invisible men, Easeman and Bonefelt," he suggested.  "Bring them here." 

"You might help us," Wray pointed out. 

Doc Savage appeared not to hear the words, and made no reply. Wray  frowned; his white mustache shifted as

he nipped his upper lip, then he  turned and walked past Ham and through the rear door. The girl  followed. 

Ham flicked his sword cane. "Should we watch them?" 

Doc Savage said, "That killer is still somewhere on the premises,  possibly" 

"Sure it wasn't Wray or the girl?" Ham queried. 

Again, Doc Savage did not answer. He moved back to the chamber  where the little grenade had exploded and

examined the dust which had  settled on the floor; but this bore no footprints. The slayer had fled  either before

or immediately after the blast. 

Doc gave attention to other doors and found some locked, others  unlocked. 

He was picking the lock on one of the doors when there was a sharp  outcry in a strange voice. 

"Help!" It was a man's voice. "She's killing me!" 

Ham yelled from the door, "Doc! Something is happening out behind  the house!" 

Doc Savage was already in motion. He flung down a corridor, whipped  past Ham, and was in a large garden

which ran the entire length of the  block. 

The garden was a remarkable thing for the slum district, an affair  of exquisite taste and beauty. The overhead

area was glassed in, the  transparent panels arranged so they could be swung back mechanically,  and there was

a hothouse system of steam pipes. There were many rare  tropical plants in bloom. 

"Help!" bawled the strange male voice  "Help!" The cries were  coming from the south end of the garden,

where there was an arched  door. The bronze man raced past a glass case in which orchids were  growing, and

reached the door and dived inside. 

"Help!" squalled the voice. 

The shouting man lay on his back. He was handcuffed wrist and  ankle. A swarthy man, he had big ears, a

tremendous nose, a small  mouth, and the rest of him was plump. His neat blue suit bulged a  little with fat. 

Over him crouched the girl, Ada Easeman. She was threatening him  with the stubby gun. The stare which she

directed at Doc Savage was  hard to fathom. 


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"It's a trick!" she snapped. "This man tried to seize me, even  though he is handcuffed." 

The dark man squawled, "What a liar she is! The hussy! It is ready  to kill me, she was!" 

"That is not true!" Ada Easeman gritted. 

"Who is he?" Doc. demanded. 

The girl shook her head. "I never saw him before." 

"The lying hussy!" the handcuffed man yelled. "She knows me well!" 

"Your name?" Doc said quietly. 

"Marikan," the man barked  "Angus Angelo Marikan!" 

RUSSEL WRAY appeared, racing from somewhere in the depths of the  building, flourishing his long gun,

demanding, "What on earth is  happening?" 

"Let me have your gun," Doc Savage requested. 

Wray puckered a frown around his white mustache and thought that  over. His facial expression was not hard

to read. He decided not to  surrender his weapon. 

Doc Savage seemed prepared for no sudden movement, but he changed  position, doing it so swiftly that his

motions were a trifle blurred.  Wray grunted loudly and tried to do something in defense with his gun,  but was

far too slow. Doc got one metallic hand on the long gun. They  scuffled. Wray barked once in pain, then spun

completely around and  upset. He had lost his gun. 

"Good, very good" Marikan clashed his manacle links together in  getting unsteadily erect. "They are working

together, these two." 

"He's crazy!" snapped Wray. "Loony!" 

Marikan tried to wave his arms, but the handcuffs prevented the  movement. 

"Half an hour ago they seize me, handcuff me and put rags and stuff  in my mouth!" he shouted. "They leave

me. They are crooks!" 

The girl jutted her stubby gun. 

"You stop those lies!" she rapped. 

She did not see Doc Savage until the bronze man was at her side.  Doc got the gun out of her fingers with a

deft whipping motion which  left her staring, surprised, at her empty hand. 

The bronze man now examined both the girl's gun and that of Wray's.  He broke them, scrutinized the

cartridges in the cylinders and found  both fully loaded, with no empty cartridges. Both barrels were clean,

oily. 

"That proves we did not, shoot the man inside!" the girl said  angrily. 


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Marikan rasped handcuff links and howled, "Nothing, it proves!  Nothing! The girl had another gun. I saw it, I

truly did. It was a big  gun, and she carried it in an emerald hand bag. You know  a hand bag  what is green." 

The girl whitened, and grated, "Everything he says is a lie!" 

"I see her hide something in the garden!" Marikan bellowed  triumphantly. "Maybe it was the gun! I show

you." 

Doc Savage studied the girl. "Did you have such a bag?" 

She hesitated, snapped, "You wouldn't believe me!" 

"I show you!" Marikan howled triumphantly. 

He led the way out in the garden, to a spot which was visible from  the door, and began to peer around. 

"It was here, somewhere," he said. "Truly, it was!" 

Doc Savage searched. Nowhere did the rich black earth in the plant  boxes show traces of recent disturbance.

Then he lifted a fallen  tropical leaf. He dug in. 

The gun which he brought out was blue, of large calibre, and the  discharged cartridges exactly matched in

number the shots which had  been fired inside the house. 

The weapon was encased in an evening bag, a large one, of an  emerald green hue which exactly matched the

color of the girl's evening  frock. 

"Your bag?" Doc asked. 

Her nod was sharp, enraged. "Yes." 

With a pocket lens, the bronze man studied the gun. He saw no  finger prints, but did discern smears which

indicated they had been  wiped off. 

Then, quite unexpectedly, the gun and bag were wrenched from his  hands. 

It was one of the rare occasions when the bronze man was taken  completely off guard. Such was the shock

that he stood a moment, held  stationary by surprise. 

"Look!" Marikan screamed. "The gun, it is floating in the air!" 

He sounded beside himself with horror. 

As if the shout had switched off the spell, Doc Savage lunged for  the gun. Both arms were out, clutching.

Then came a flash. Varicolored  lights exploded in his eyeballs. He had been struck a terrific blow in  the face. 

"Run for it!" said a voice. 

It was an invisible man, and Doc Savage had heard the voice before.  Coarse, aged, querulous! It had been on

the voice recorder planted in  the P. Treve Easeman apartment. Old Bonepicker speaking. 


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The venerable tones were deceptive as to source, but Doc Savage  lunged, still half blinded by the agony of

the smash in the face,  endeavoring to seize then unseen speaker. He encountered no one, and  was not greatly

surprised. 

The girl and Wray both whirled, ran. 

Doc Savage leaped to stop them. Something he could not see got  between his legs, and he tripped and went

down. There was the agony of  a second terrific smash on his head. Dazed for all of his fortitude, he  rolled to

one side. 

Marikan was jumping up and down, clashing his cuff links and  howling. 

"Crazy, I must be!" he screamed. "So the thing you no can see she  in here!" 

Then there was a smack; Marikan's nose flattened, then shaped out  again and began to stream scarlet as he

fell. The invisible attacker   attackers if there were more then one   had felled him. He groveled,  bellowing

incoherently in very erratic English. 

The girl and Wray were out of sight. Monk and Ham came charging  through the garden from the other part of

the slum labyrinth which  seemed to be Old Bonepicker's home. Both were excited, anxious for a  fight. 

The gun which had been seized from Doc, and the other guns, were  gone. Either the girl or Wray must have

borne them off in the  excitement. 

In the direction which the fugitives had taken, an automobile  engine began moaning. Doc Savage heaved up

and made for the sound. So  dazed was he by the blows that Monk and Ham kept up with him and even  drew

ahead, something they could not ordinarily have done. 

They entered a large garage which held an expensive limousine and  two large coupés; and over in the corner

a black, rich town car. The  door to the street was open. Doc lurched to it. 

A car  it looked like the same phaeton which the girl and Wray had  used at the airport, although the top was

now up  heeled around a  corner at the end of the block. Its roar receded. There was no other  vehicle in sight. 

Marikan came up howling. "They're the crooks, the whole lot!" 

DOC SAVAGE did not attempt to reach his own machine, knowing the  limitations of pursuit through the

gloomy city streets. He closed the  garage door, found there was a lock on the inside, and secured it. 

"They're the crooks!" Marikan howled. 

Monk scowled at him. "And who are you?" 

"Me?" Marikan tried to spread his hands, but was hampered by the  handcuffs. "Me? I am the chiropractor." 

"The what?" Monk's scowl darkened. 

"I doctor the chiropractor way," explained the other, and tried to  wave his arms. He almost lost his balance on

his linked ankles, and  barely missed upsetting. "When somebody, he feel the pain, I push and  pull the spine,

and he get well." He snapped fingers. "Just like that!" 


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Monk kept his scowl. "What are you doing here?" 

"This man, Sawyer Linnett Bonefelt, the one they call Old  Bonepicker, he have take treatments and owe me

the bill," explained  Marikan. "I come here to collect. Boy, do I get in mess! That girl in  green dress, and that

man with black hair and white mustache, they grab  me  " 

"Why?" Monk interjected. 

Marikan shrugged, almost fell again. 

"How I know?" he snorted. "They do not want me prowl around, I  guess." 

"How did you get in?" Monk quizzed. 

"A key, Old Bonepicker give to me," Marikan explained. He fished in  a pocket with some difficulty, and

brought out a rather massive key. 

"You see, it is often I come to treat Old Bonepicker," he  elaborated. "It is custom for me to just walk right

in." 

Monk glanced at Doc Savage. 

"What do you think, Doc?" questioned the homely chemist. "Did that  girl and Wray kill the man inside to

shut his mouth?" 

Ham clipped, "The dying man mentioned this fellow Marlkan, under  suspicious circumstances." 

"That's right!" Monk exploded. He glared at Marikan. "What's the  Spook's Nest?" 

Marikan blew on a wrist which the manacles had chafed. 

"It is my skunk farm you talk about, maybe?" he grunted. 

"Your what?" Monk gulped. 

"My place where the skunk, she is raise," Marikan replied. "You  know him, the fur farm. I raise skunks.

Nobody is ever come around  because the place, she smell bad. So I call her my Spook's Nest." 

"This thing sure has its angles," Monk grinned. 

Inside the house, a telephone started ringing. 

THE phone had hardly stopped ringing when Doc Savage was racing  toward the instrument. He found it in

one of the sumptuously furnished  rooms near where he had encountered the girl and Wray. He lifted the

receiver. 

It was with Old Bonepicker's aged, querulous tones that the bronze  man spoke, and in the exactness of the

imitation was an indication of  just how perfectly he had mastered the art of voice mimicry. 

The tone which came from the other end of the wire was harsh,  surprised, but identifiable. It was Telegraph

Edmunds. 


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"What the heck?" he rapped. "You there, Bonepicker?" 

"What do you think?" Doc parried in Old Bonepicker's voice. 

"Does Doc Savage suspect Ada Easeman and Wray being mixed in with  us?" Telegraph demanded. 

Doc replied, "That is hard to say." 

"Well, we oughta know, because the girl and Wray can do us a lot of  good if Doc Savage don't suspect them

and they can get to working with  him," Telegraph stated. "Now, about this Federated Payroll matter. It's  all

set for eight o'clock this morning." 

"What is the plan?" Doc asked in his assumed tone. 

"Just what we figured on," said Telegraph. "I just thought I'd give  you the lowdown. There ain't a chance of a

slip." Then he hung up. 

Monk and Ham came in, Marikan trailing them with a series of  awkward leaps that got him along at a fair

rate in spite of his  braceleted ankles. 

Doc Savage asked him, "Did Old Bonepicker ever go to your Spook's  Nest fur ranch?" 

Marikan nodded. "Sure, he did." 

"Why?" 

"Old Bonepicker, he help pay for her," Marikan explained. "Then the  old Shylock, he say he take it away

from me because I can no pay  interest." 

"We going out there?" Monk demanded. 

"Yes," Doc said. "But first, we are going to be on hand at the  Federated Payroll offices, where something

seems to be set for eight  o'clock." 

Chapter 11. GHOST PRINTS

FEDERATED PAYROLL was a product of the complexity of the modern  business world. They took

contracts from factories and large business  establishments, whereby they agreed to handle payrolls  getting

the  money, taking it to their offices having their own accountants  apportion it in small envelopes bearing the

names of workmen. Then  armored cars carried the envelopes to the respective places of  employment, where

armed attendants distributed the wages. 

The payrolls were made up in the morning, and it was not unusual  for a large sum of money to be on hand. 

The clock on the car dash stood a fractional bit back of eight when  Doc Savage, Monk, Ham and Marikan

pulled up before Federated Payroll.  The sun had brought a swelter of fog in rising, and the air felt damp  and

cloying, although sidewalks were dry. 

Two uniformed guards eyed closely Doc Savage's party as they  entered the establishment. They were to

remember that later. 


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There was a flight of stairs, closed at the bottom by iron gates  which were now open, and beside which other

guards stood. At the top of  the stairs was a waiting room enclosed by a metal grille, and beyond  that, the

enormous room in which the payrolls were made up. 

At each end of this room, high up, was an armor plate pillbox with  machine gunners posted inside. Federated

Payroll took few chances. 

Doc Savage stepped into the barred anteroom. It was like a signal   there came a howl from one of the

pillboxes. The next instant, a guard  toppled out. From that distance, it looked as if the entire top of his  head

had been caved in. 

Stenographers shrieked. A man sprang for an alarm button. There was  the noise of a blow, and he fell.

Tumult seized the room. The other  machine gunner toppled out of the other armored pillbox. 

A large pile of greenbacks slid off a table and piled up in midair  below, as if they had been scooped into an

invisible sack. 

"The invisible men!" Monk bawled. 

Another pile of greenbacks lifted, as if they had become lighter  than air, and drifted along an aisle. Two girls

looked at them and  fainted. 

Monk howled, "What'll we do?" 

"Block the exits, you missing link!" Ham told him. 

Doc Savage rapped, "Get under cover!" 

Monk eyed the bronze man. It was the first time he could recall  having seen his chief sidestep a fight. Monk

often suspected that Doc  liked a scrap better than any of them, and that sort of excitement was  the spice of

life to himself and Ham. 

"We've tried to fight these invisible men before with ordinary  methods, and had no luck," Doc said rapidly.

"The thing to do is play  safe until we can cope with them." 

Saying that, the bronze man swept Monk, Ham and Marikan back  through the door. 

Marikan jumped up and down and stuttered, "Awful, I call it!  Awful!" 

TWO or three of the head clerks were yelling commands and a guard  was dashing about waving his gun, but

their attempts to bring order  were completely lost in the chaos. Now and then, a clerk would fall to  the

accompaniment of a grisly blow. It was evident that some of these  men were being killed. 

Money was jumping off desks and out of sacks and strong boxes and  floating away. Seeing that, even the

men became hysterical. It was too  uncanny for quick comprehension. 

On the chief clerk's desk, a bottle of ink was upset by one of the  invisible beings. The clerk stared, eyes

popping, as he saw what looked  to him like a splash in the ink, as if a hand had dropped in it; then a  series of

black finger prints appeared on the desk. 


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The clerk could see the ink clinging to the invisible fingers. Then  the owner of the transparent fingers wiped

them on the desk blotter,  and threw the blotter at the clerk. The clerk shrieked as if the entire  earth had been

hurled at him. That gave him an idea. 

"Throw ink on the things!" he howled. 

No one heard him. The uproar was deafening. One of the guards had  turned loose senselessly with a machine

gun. 

Doc Savage and his party got to the foot of the stairs and closed  the barred gate. 

"Use tear gas," he ordered the guards there. 

But they wanted to know what was going on. The result was an  argument, and in the midst of it there was a

shout from a man around  the corner, on a side street. They ran out. The one who had shouted was  a

pedestrian. 

"Money!" he squawled. "A million dollars! It came out of that  window and went floating down the street!" 

Doc Savage glanced at the window. It gave admittance to the payroll  concern, and the bars had been shoved

aside. One of the invisible men  must have walked into the establishment earlier and loosened the rods. 

Trailed by his party, Doc ran in the direction which the money had  taken. He found nothing  which was

about what he had expected. There  were alleys, side streets and a score of doorways into which the  invisible

raiders could have ducked. 

"Most incredible thing I ever heard of!" Marikan gulped. "And you  think my polecat farm, she might have

something to do with her?" 

Monk roared, "It'd better have! If we don't stop these spook guys,  they'll rob the country blind! Man, they've

got the world by the tail!" 

Police sirens were howling. 

Doc said, "Come." 

"You go to my polecat farm?" Marikan demanded. 

"We do," said the bronze man. 

BACK in the offices of Federated Payroll, the excitement was  accentuated rather than calmed by the arrival

of squads of puzzled  policemen and detectives. These bustled about, few of them believing  what they were

told, despite the occurrence of a kindred calamity at  the opera the night before. 

Finger print experts arrived and went to work. They were not long  in finding the prints on the chief clerk's

desk, and they photographed  them from many angles. 

"Those are prints of one of the invisible men," the clerk insisted,  and told about the blotter being thrown at

him. 


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Within a quarter of an hour, the prints had been rushed to the  police department and identified. There was a

new burst of excitement.  Every one of the police broadcasting stations went into operation. 

Doc Savage had a radio in his car, and it was tuned to the police  band. He wanted news of the invisibleman

robber, and he got plenty. 

The police announcer was so excited he could hardly speak. 

"Urgent to all cars!" he said rapidly. "Finger print identification  of one of invisibleman robbers. Print was

found on desk in payroll  company office. It was traced. It is the print of Doc Savage, whose  prints were on

file in connection with a special commission which he  holds on New York police force. Arrest and hold this

man for  questioning. He was seen by Federated Payroll guards at the scene of  crime." 

"Ah," Monk said sourly. "Do we all stand up and cheer?" 

"Cheer!" Marikan stuttered. "Very extremely bad, I call it. You  should cheer, I ask you?" 

"That is just the missing link's way of saying he is dumfounded,"  Ham put in dryly. 

Monk was driving. He took his hands off the wheel to wave his arms. 

"But how'd Doc's prints get on a desk?" he yelled. "We weren't even  in the part of the office where the desks

are." 

Traveling near seventy, the car angled hungrily for the edge of the  pavement. 

"Watch your driving!" Ham screamed. 

When the machine was straightened out again, Doc Savage spoke. His  remarkable voice still maintained its

tranquillity, and he showed by no  visible mannerism that he had just heard anything of significance. 

"Remember when I was unconscious at the opera?" he asked. 

"Do I?" Monk snorted. 

"Examining my fingers later, I found traces of wax  as I told  you," Doc reminded. "That wax means my

finger print impressions were  taken. From those molds, it would be simple to make castings with some

flexible stuff which they then made invisible. With these, my finger  prints were planted on the desk." 

"Jove!" Ham bent his sword cane thoughtfully. "They have  confidence. They picked you for their fall guy, if I

may resort to  slang." 

Chapter 12. FUR FARM

MARIKAN'S rural establishment for the propagation of skunks proved  to be well down the New Jersey

coast, which was a help, since it was  situated in a different State. 

Nevertheless, Doc Savage carefully avoided the main highways, and  got out of sight below the doors when

they passed cars, especially  after he heard the stations of the Newark and Jersey City police  radioing his

description and a pickup order. 


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The police radio broadcast brought the information that no less  than seven persons had been killed by head

blows during the raid of the  invisible men upon the payroll firm. The license numerals of Doc  Savage's car

were given, together with a description of its body style  and color. 

"It'd be tough if we were picked up," Monk stated. "Maybe we'd  better change cars." 

"At least, we should change the identity of this one," Doc Savage  agreed. 

Monk stopped the car in a desertedlooking spot, and the bronze man  drew from the tool compartment an

extra set of license plates for each  of the States bounding New York. He selected a pair for New Jersey and

substituted them for the tabs which the car already bore. Out of the  tool compartment came a contrivance

which resembled an ordinary hand  sprayer. 

"Those Jersey tags under your name?" Monk questioned. 

"No," Doc told him. "They were issued to a secondhand car which  was run into the ocean after the new

plates were removed." 

The bronze man now turned the sprayer on the car and began working  the pump handle. This threw a cloud of

almost colorless material over  the machine. The stuff had a biting tang that set Monk and Ham  coughing. The

color of the car had been a somber black. Now it changed,  becoming a rather light and cheap gray tint. 

"Chemical bleach," the bronze man explained. "Much quicker than  repainting" 

The entire car had changed color when they again entered it and  drove on. 

An airplane droned in the sky in the direction of New York City.  Monk thrust his hand out, then yanked it

back, grunting, 

"That might be a police plane," and used the rearview mirror,  which he wrenched from its anchorage, to

observe the aircraft. 

"Funny," he said finally. 

"What is?" Ham snapped. 

"I'll swear that plane took a distinct swing to avoid passing  overhead," advised the homely chemist. 

"Imagination," Ham jeered. 

"Maybe," Monk admitted. "But it looked like they didn't want  anybody to look 'em over too closely." 

Doc Savage asked Marikan, "In just what direction does your fur  farm lie?" 

The bignosed man pointed. "There, long way." 

The bronze man watched the plane which Monk had observed, noting  particularly the direction which it took,

and the others in the car  caught the significance of what he was doing, and also scrutinized the  craft. It was a

seaplane, they noted. 

"Son of my gun!" Marikan exclaimed "That bird, she go over by  direction of my cat farm!" 


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THE fur farm was situated on marshland  rather, on a bit of  highland in a considerable area of marsh, and

there were no neighbors  within some two miles. 

"The swamp, she have no bottom," Marikan advised. "No can build her  a house on the mud or she jump right

up and sink out of sight." 

Cutting very close to the mound on which the fur farm stood was a  stream of no great depth but for some

width  a salt water tidal creek.  This chanced to run straight and closely resembled a canal  it  probably had

been dredged at some time in the past, for the banks gave  evidence of being somewhat higher, and supported

a growth of rather  stunted trees. 

On the stream, hidden by the trees, rested four seaplanes. They  were not large craft, all being singlemotored,

capable of carrying no  more than eight or ten persons at the most. Among them was the ship  which Monk had

observed. 

"I'm son of my gun!" gulped Marikan. "What all this stuff, she  mean?" 

"You sure you don't know?" Monk demanded sourly. 

Marikan waved his arms and looked vastly injured. 

"If I know something she is phony, would I bring you out?" he  asked. 

"Yeah," Monk agreed. "That's so, too." 

They had parked the car a long distance back, under a tree where it  was hidden from the air. They had gone

on foot, stooping low in the  salt grass, crawling at times, wading more often. When they made out  the planes,

Doc Savage stopped. 

"There is something going on," he said slowly. "Ham, you and  Marikan wait here. Monk and I will go on." 

"Can't we go together?" demanded Ham, who disliked to miss the  possible excitement. 

"No telling what will happen to us," Doc advised him. "Should it be  necessary, some one had best be in the

clear, to get hold of the other  members of our crowd and set them to work on the thing." 

Ham nodded. The other members of Doc Savage's organization   Colonel John "Renny" Renwick, a famous

engineer; William Harper  "Johnny" Littlejohn, a renowned archeologist, and Major Thomas J. "Long  Tom"

Roberts, an electrical engineer who was considered a wizard  were  not at present in New York, but

scattered, the engineer and the  electrical expert in Europe, and the archeologist in the western part  of the

United States, investigating a new cliff dwelling discovery. 

Doc Savage went on, Monk trailing him closely. Because they found  it was going to be necessary to wade a

small lake, they removed most of  their outer clothing. It was very chilly. The fog which had  characterized the

earlier morning hours had almost vanished. 

They reached a point where they could discern activity about the  planes. Men, welldressed,

intelligentlooking fellows who,  nevertheless, conveyed the impression of being hard and unscrupulous,

were transferring bags and satchels from the planes. 


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Numerous bags and satchels were coming out of the planes of their  own accord and floating ashore,

obviously carried by invisible men. 

"Their headquarters!" Monk whispered. 

The homely chemist wheeled and pushed his pet pig, Habeas Corpus,  down on his haunches, advising in a

whisper, "You stick here, Habeas." 

The shote obeyed like a welltrained dog. 

HAM, watching with binoculars, managed to keep fairly close track  of Doc and Monk. Marikan lay beside

Ham and muttered under his breath. 

"I like this a whole lot, you can say I don't," Marikan mumbled. 

"Be silent, please," Ham requested shortly. 

Marikan gave another opinion, but it was too low to be heard. Then  the man fell silent, and the only noise

was that of the breeze in the  marsh grass and an occasional cry from one of the gang unloading the  planes 

taking off the loot of their opera and payroll forays, no  doubt. Otherwise, there was very little sound. Then

Marikan grunted. 

Marikan's grunt was loud. It was also strange. Ham spun over  they  were lying prone  and eyed his

companion. Mankan was lying very  motionless, and his face was jammed into the soft swamp mire in such a

manner that it was doubtful if he was breathing. 

Ham opened his mouth. He did not intend to shout. Rather, the mouth  opening was a surprise reaction. Ham

regretted the unconscious act an  instant later. Something jammed into his gaping mouth. It felt like  cloth 

but it was invisible. 

Ham hacked, gagged. He reached for the unseen obstruction. His arms  were gripped by unseen forces. He

kicked. Ponderous, unseen weights  seemed to attach themselves to his legs. 

"Take her easy, dude," a voice advised. "You were suckers to think  you could walk up on this place. Why,

we've got invisible men standing  along all of the roads! We've got our men in the police stations,  listening to

every word that is said!" 

Ham threw back his head and made as loud a noise as he could  through his nose. His best effort might have

been heard a hundred yards  away. Doc Savage was already far beyond that distance. 

Croaking sounds of pain escaped Ham as something he could not see,  probably a finger, jabbed into his left

eye. 

"Keep quiet or you'll lose the lamp!" he was directed. 

Marikan now turned over, the grotesqueness of the motion showing  that the invisible men were doing the

shifting. His mouth came open and  swamp dirt jumped out, apparently under the prying of an unseen finger. 

"He's only unconscious," said another of the invisible men.  "What'll we do with them?" 


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"Hold them here a while, until Doc Savage and the other one are  taken," said another unseen speaker. "Then

we will see what reaction a  particle of lead of a predetermined size, say .38 calibre, has on their  mental

processes. It ought to be an interesting study." 

Ham said nothing. Ordinarily, he did not become scared or greatly  unnerved, but now he felt as if he were

being showered with dry ice and  was receiving a series of electrical shocks. It was his closest  encounter with

the invisible men, and the unearthly strangeness of it  was appalling. Moreover, the invisible men knew Doc

Savage and Monk had  gone on, and were probably closing in on the pair now. 

DOC SAVAGE and Monk were very close to the fur farm. The  establishment consisted of a battery of wire

pens with an unpleasant  odor, and two long, ramshackle stuccoed buildings, one of which was  open at the

sides and obviously intended for the harvesting of the  crop, the skinning of the animals and the curing of the

hides. There  was also a section devoted to the storing of food for the fur bearers. 

It was into the larger building, probably a dwelling, that the men  and their invisible associates were bearing

the loot. 

Monk said, "Maybe I oughta brought Habeas along. You know, he  " 

The pig trotted up. 

Monk scowled at the shote admonishingly. 

"I told you to stay behind," he breathed. "Haven't I got you  trained so  " 

He fell silent. His small eyes widened as they scrutinized the  homely porker. Habeas seemed uneasy.

Oversize ears were distended. He  roved his head from side to side. 

Monk looked at Doc Savage. "Invisible men!" he growled. 

"So it would seem," Doc whispered back. 

They were keeping their tones down so that they barely carried to  each other, and now Monk gave Habeas a

shove. 

"Where are they?" he whispered. "Smell 'em out, hog!" 

Not for nothing had Monk expended most of his spare time over a  period of years in training Habeas, who,

due to the hardships of a  youth spent in deserty Arabia, showed no signs of growing beyond the  stature of a

small pig. Habeas moved away slowly, plainly with  reluctance. A moment later, he was pointing, after the

fashion of a  hunting dog. 

"Swell!" Monk whispered. "An invisible man over there!" 

But Doc Savage shook his head, watching the pig. 

"Not so good," he said. "The invisible man seems to be following  our trail through the marsh grass." 

Monk gulped, "Blazes! How we gonna get the guy? We can't tell where  he is!" 


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Doc Savage did not reply, but watched Habeas Corpus instead. The  pig was now in something of a welter of

excitement. He pointed a  different direction, then shifted his attention. He crouched down and  scuttled back

to Doc and Monk, fear in his every movement. 

"Surrounded!" Doc Savage said grimly. "They have been watching us  the whole time!" 

Monk snaked a supermachine pistol from its holster. The mechanism  of the gun, the mercy bullets, were both

impervious to moisture. 

Doc Savage directed, "Get set! Things are going to break!" 

Monk gave Habeas a shove. 

"Beat it, hog," he directed. "This ain't gonna be no place for  you!" 

Chapter 13. ALCHEMY

DOC SAVAGE still wore a vest of peculiar construction. It consisted  of a bulletproof outer covering, and,

under that, numerous pockets,  padded and tailored in place so that, in wearing the vest, the bronze  man's

proportions were increased only slightly. 

The pockets held innumerable devices, the scientific gadgets with  which Doc Savage chose to fight, rather

than with more prosaic  firearms. 

The vest pockets yielded up several small grenades of varying  color. There were tiny detonating levers on

these. Doc actuated the  levers, then hurled the missiles away  one to the right, another to  the left, a third

behind them, and a series ahead, progressing toward  the two buildings. 

The grenades burst and spewed an astounding quantity of smoke that  looked some degrees blacker than

drawing ink. The pall spread. The  whole vicinity became blanketed with intense sepia. 

The pig, Habeas Corpus, ran away, grunting loudly and taking  tremendous leaps. 

Doc Savage said, "I'm down, Monk  out of your way!" 

Monk grunted and held his machine pistol to his side, latched the  firing lever back and pivoted, spraying a

storm of mercy bullets at the  height of an average man's waist. Pained howls indicated the barrage  had some

effect. 

Doc Savage clipped, "Enough!" and came to his feet when Monk ceased  firing. He was less than an arm's

length from the homely chemist, but  could not see him. He found Monk by touch. They retreated. 

Monk tried to make for the shed, but Doc guided him to the left,  toward the house. 

"But they're all in there," Monk gulped. 

Doc did not answer. He threw more of the smoke grenades. He added  four tear gas missiles, and others

containing a gas which produced  quick unconsciousness. He hurled these far enough away that they would

not affect himself and Monk, for they had no masks. 


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They reached the house. The smoke had penetrated the dwelling.  Inside was a black, howling bedlam. 

Telegraph Edmunds's voice was bawling orders. 

"Watch the marsh around the place," he squawled. "Watch it close!  They can't keep up this smoke very long.

Then we'll get them!" 

Doc Savage pushed Monk down. 

"Wait here," he breathed. 

The bronze man whipped in the direction of the creek where the  seaplanes were moored. He could hear others

running near by, obeyeing  Telegraph's orders, spreading to watch the marsh. 

The smoke pall did not extend as far as the planes, and Doc Savage,  peering through scrawny brush, could

see an armed man standing on a  pontoon, watching intently. Escape by that route was manifestly  impossible. 

"You in the black plane!" Doc called. 

There was only one black ship, the other three being a more common  yellow. The pilot was standing on the

left pontoon, holding a  submachine gun. He started at the sound of the voice. 

"Yeah, boss!" he replied. 

Doc Savage had used a tone, the inflection and delivery so closely  approximating the voice of Telegraph

Edmunds that only with the two  side by side, speaking alternately while being compared closely, could  a

difference have been detected. 

"Take your ship and fly back to the place where you picked up the  last load," Doc directed. 

It was a long chance. The pilot hesitated. 

"What about this mess here?" he demanded. 

"We'll handle it," Doc said in Telegraph Edmunds voice "You circle  around overhead until the smoke blows

away, and if you don't see them  running off over the marsh, go on away." 

That seemed rational to the flier. 

"O. K.," he agreed, and clambered into the cockpit. 

Doc Savage eased back and, a moment later, heard the plane engine  start and knew from the manner in which

the roar receded that the flier  had taxied down the creek and was taking to the air. 

DEPATURE of the plane brought fresh uproar from the fur farm.  Telegraph Edmunds dashed to the creek

bank, glared at the plane, which  was now in the air, and indulged in a species of spasm. His face was  blue

before he stopped cursing. 

"They got away in that plane!" he bawled.


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The plane came buzzing back, and was greeted with a fussillade of  bullets. The smoke had not yet dissipated

and the pilot made the  mistake of thinking Doc Savage and his men were doing the shooting. He  merely

banked farther away and circled lazily, watching the marsh to  see that no one fled. Thus, he was too distant to

make out the mad  armwaving of Telegraph Edmunds. 

It dawned on Telegraph that other planes were at hand for a  pursuit. He ordered them in the air. 

Running toward the ships, Telegraph's men came upon one of their  number  not an invisible man  lying

unconscious. He seemed to have  been hit on the jaw. His gun was gone. 

They reached the creek, stared at it, and Telegraph permitted  himself another fit of rage. Gasoline, glistening

in all the rainbow  hues, was covering the creek waters, leaking from the tanks of the  planes, through bullet

holes. 

Telegraph failed to even suspect that Doc Savage had seized the gun  and shot holes in the fuel tanks during

the firing at the ship which  was in the air, thus blocking pursuit. 

The breeze finally stirred the smoke and pushed it away, and since  the little grenades had ceased to pour out

the black pall, the air  cleared. 

Monk and Doc Savage were inside the house which was untenanted  except for themselves, excitement having

drawn all others outdoors. 

Monk was not exactly satisfied. 

"Wish we was in that, plane," he muttered. "They ain't gonna like  it when they find us in here." 

Belying the danger of their position, the apish chemist wore a  wide, somehow rather cherubic grin. The same

grin he had been known to  wear on certain other occasions when the chances of his living more  than a few

minutes had seemed negligible. Monk was a rare type of  individual. He seemed unable to conceive of such a

thing as danger. 

Doc Savage was glancing about the house. There was a bedroom,  dining room, living room and kitchen, all

poorly furnished. He opened  closet doors, looked in the cupboard. 

"That is strange," he said. 

"The whole thing is strange," Monk agreed. 

"The loot they were carrying in is nowhere in sight," Doc pointed  out. 

Monk lost his grin, began to circle the rooms and examine the walk.  He was very careful to keep out of range

of the windows. Telegraph  Edmunds and his crew thought Doc and Monk had escaped in the plane,  hence it

had not occurred to them to look inside. 

Doc Savage joined Monk in the hunt. The stove which stood in the  living room was a roundbellied affair on

a metal floor protector. 

Peering closely, the bronze man noted one leg of the stove seemed  brighter than the rest, as if from handling.

He grasped it. His fingers  found a catch concealed in the concave rear of the leg. He pressed the  catch. A

mechanism clicked, and stove and floor protector lifted and  swung to one side. 


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"Well, well," Monk breathed. "Secrets and everything!" 

THE hole they had exposed was large enough to pass a man  comfortably, and the ladder had wide rungs and

a hand rail. Doc Savage  scrutinized the top of the ladder. He did not descend on the rungs, but  swung and

dropped some ten feet to the floor of a concrete passage and  examined the foot of the ladder. There was no

hidden alarm wiring  guarding it. 

"All right," he whispered, and Monk came down. 

The mechanism for closing the unique stovetrapdoor was convenient  and easily solved. Darkness clamped

down when it was closed. Doc Savage  still carried the generatoroperated flashlights which they had

employed during the night; these, being waterproof, still functioned. 

Flash beams disclosed a sloping passage, which they traversed,  coming to a door of steel  sheeted on the

inside with lead, they  discovered in passing through. It was closed when they found it, so  they closed it

behind them. 

They were now in a room which hummed faintly, as if from machinery,  and where the air smelled somewhat

like that inside large generator  power plants. At intervals there was a burst of brittle crackling, as  if glass

were being broken by large pailfuls. The walls, floor and  ceiling were enameled a sanitary white. 

"Maybe there's a back door to this dump," Monk offered. 

Doc Savage made no comment, had no time to speak, in fact, before  they heard voices ahead, sounds which

indicated that men were  approaching. It was the first hint that the subterranean labyrinth was  tenanted. 

There was a door to the right, manifestly not the one through which  voices were coming, and Doc and Monk

whipped for it, got it open and  eased through into a passage. 

Opening off the passage were various small niches, some of which  held stores. Both men eased into a niche

which held barrels and a  tarpaulin covering. They sheltered themselves with the canvas. 

Before many moments, there was a bustle in the other rooms. Men  filed down from the surface, muttering

and excited. Then Telegraph  Edmunds put in an appearance, and his shouted orders were audible. 

"Snap it up!" he commanded. "We've got to change our schedule and  rush it through. This Doc Savage will

spread an alarm. We haven't much  time!" 

Monk sucked in breath as the door of their passage opened. Men  began to file through. The lights were not

turned on and they were  indistinct figures in the gloom. 

The first of the parade passed; then another and another. Their  breathing was noisy. That might indicate they

were worried. Almost a  dozen filed along. Then Telegraph Edmunds appeared at the entrance. 

"Hep, hep!" he barked. "Make it snappy! I'll take a flashlight and  go through these stores in this passage and

see if there's anything  that should be removed. Then I'll follow the rest of you. And you birds  be careful about

showing lights." 

Doc Savage and Monk exchanged nudges in the darkness. 

"We will have to take the chance," the bronze man decided. 


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They arose boldly and joined the procession. It was not an  especially courageous course, and it was not

remarkable that they did  it without being discovered. The men were going fast, crowding each  other, and it

was dark; Doc got into line ahead of Monk, and they went  forward rapidly. 

They came to a room in which there was considerable activity. Some  seconds elapsed before they realized

what was happening there. 

"Be sure to remove every stitch of clothing," said a voice. "That  includes wrist watches, rings  and false

teeth, if any. Remember that  the presence of the slightest bit of metal on the body is liable to  have fatal

consequences." 

Monk found Doc's ear  he could tell the finer texture of the  bronze man's skin by touch  and whispered,

"What do we do?" 

"Do as they do," Doc decided. "Shed your clothing." 

"I don't like this a lot," Monk advised, but complied with the  suggestion. 

Within a few moments, a peculiar prickling sensation became  noticeable. It made itself apparent, first, about

the eyes and nostrils  and other tender parts of the body, then spread all over. 

"Whew!" somebody complained. "I must have the itch!" 

The voice which had given orders said, "You are being exposed to  the first conditioning rays in this room.

This treatment brings about  an oxidizing reaction which is quite necessary." 

Some time passed, and it seemed that every one had removed  clothing, for the room was comparatively quiet

except for breathing and  the rasp of finger nails on skin as somebody scratched himself. 

"You have been here ten minutes," said the commanding voice. "You  will now file out the door to your left.

You have been instructed what  to do." 

MONK and Doc followed the crowd, jostled along, and found  themselves shoved through a small door. They

heard a series of long  brushing noises, but failed to recognize the significance of that until  they were

propelled by the crush of bodies behind over a small rise in  the floor. 

Beyond was a steeply sloping chute. They slammed headlong down this  and landed in a vat of some liquid

which felt smooth and creamy. They  made a large splash and men cursed them. 

"What is it?" demanded the voice of the director sharply. 

"Some fool fell down the chute," another replied. 

"That's all right," said the first. "Take long breaths and duck  below the surface. It is essential that this

compound cover every  exposed inch of your body." 

By the noises, Doc and Monk decided that the men were paddling  across the tank, whatever it was, and

clambering out on the opposite  side. They followed suit. 

They heard a man yell ahead. An instant later they knew the reason,  for a fine spray of some chemical

concoction struck their bodies, and  the effect was very much as if hot lead had been poured upon them. They


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followed the others and dashed through the spray with all speed  possible. 

The darkness was profound and showed no signs of abating. The voice  explained the reason for this. 

"It is essential that no light reach the optical nerves in your  eyes," he said. "Otherwise, you may find

yourselves irreparably blind." 

"What the heck are we getting into?" Monk gulped. 

"Whatcha say?" demanded a harsh voice at Monk's back. 

"I said you oughta brought a velocipede," Monk growled. 

"Yeah?" snarled the other. 

"Sure," Monk confided. "Then you wouldn't have to ride my heels  like you been doin'!" 

"That is the spirit," said the voice. "Keep up your nerve. There is  no danger." 

A moment afterward, they were precipitated into another chemical  tank. This one was the most unpleasant of

all. Clambering out, Monk  felt strange. All of his body seemed filled with unholy fire. 

A black room was next. It was long and narrow, and along one side  of it was what felt like a bench. 

The commanding voice said, "You will each stretch full length on  the conveyor and be perfectly quiet." 

The conveyor proved to be the benchlike affair, and Monk and Doc  reclined there with the others. The

frightful flame in their bodies  seemed to leap and surge and consume them, leaving only a sluggish hull  from

which the interior had been burned, with even their brains  enveloped. Monk realized this meant they were

approaching complete  unconsciousness. 

Unexpectedly, the conveyor began to move. 

WHAT followed was not so bad, largely because they were virtually  insensible. As they passed through a

chamber which was filled with an  intense blue haze, coldness followed the bodily fire. Next there was a  long

tube filled with a play of weirdly colored sparks which came in  crashing discharges  the sound which Doc

and Monk had heard on first  entering the weird place. 

Another liquid bath followed, after which there was a tube filled  with an even more blue haze, and frightful

pain. At that point,  something happened to their eyes, and they could see no more. Monk was  filled with an

apprehension that he was permanently blinded, and he  endeavored mightily to sit up, to move, to do

something, anything  but  he could not stir. 

He heard a voice. It was Telegraph Edmunds, the homely chemist  decided. 

"Some one had better go and get those fellows Ham and Marikan,"  Telegraph was saying "We will take care

of them next." 

Then Monk lost all comprehension of what went on around him. 


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Chapter 14. SPOOK WAR

HAM, lying where he had been held by the invisible men for almost  an hour, heard heavy footsteps

approaching from the direction of the  fur farm, saw the marsh grass bending, and observed deep prints appear

in the soft earth. He knew the invisible men had come for himself and  Marikan. 

Marikan also saw. 

"A crazy man, this will make me!" he wailed. 

"Pipe down!" said an invisible man roughly, and Ham and Marikan  were lifted and borne toward the fur

farm. 

Ham, being the lighter, was carried much the faster, and was soon  inside the house. He was handed down into

the first enameled room. This  was large. At first, he thought only Telegraph Edmunds was present,  then it

dawned on him that the room was literally crowded with  invisible men. 

A door opened and a stretcher seemed to float in, was lowered to  the floor and turned over, so that its burden

was deposited on the  floor. 

"How many more?" Telegraph Edmunds asked. 

"Two," replied a voice from an invisible source. "Then we will be  ready for you to go through." 

"All right," said Telegraph. I'll handle this other first." He went  out, was gone a few moments, and came back

with the invisible men  bearing Marikan. The latter seemed to be in the last stages of terror. 

Telegraph looked about the room, posing before the invisible  audience he knew was watching him, and

winked elaborately. 

"The invisible processing will work on dead as well as live  bodies," he said. "We will shoot this man

Marikan, and Ham, then put  them through and dump their bodies in the creek. Being invisible, the  corpses

will never be found." 

Marikan wailed, "No, no! Not to me, don't do it! Let me join you! I  can help! I am good chiropractor, and if

you a pain in the back get,  maybe I can  " 

"It's a pain in the neck, you are!" Telegraph snorted. "Tie him,  men." 

Ropes came snaking out of a pile in the corner and seemed to wrap  themselves about Marikan, after which

Telegraph seized him, drew a  revolver, spun the cylinder, and dragged Marikan into the passage which  led to

the first processing room. 

There was a moment of silence. Marikan began screaming, blubbering  pleas for mercy. A shot made an

earsplitting bang. After that there  was silence, until the pounding of Telegraph's feet broke it as he came

back. 

"Now the other one," he said. 

IT seemed that the shot sound still rang in the cavern. 


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At least, it seemed that the shot echoes still seeped about, as far  as Monk was concerned. The homely chemist

was vaguely aware that he was  experiencing something he had never expected to feel again:  consciousness.

The crash of the shot seemed to have revived him. He sat  up and looked around. 

He was in the whiteenameled room, and he saw Telegraph Edmunds  with the revolver in his hand still

curling a trace of smoke, and Ham,  who was being held, it seemed, by unseen hands. 

Monk sat up, tried to stand, and, much to his surprise, succeeded.  But he was not erect for long. A spasm of

dizziness seized him, got the  best of him and he fell heavily. 

Without looking around, Telegraph Edmunds said, "Do not try to move  around too much when you first

revive. It won't hurt you, but you'll be  pretty dizzy." 

That surprised Monk vastly. He brought his hands up to his head.  Then he discovered something, something

so uncanny that he distinctly  felt his eyes squeeze out of their sockets and a parade of cold chills  travel his

spine. He shook his arms to be sure. He even touched his own  nose. 

"Blazes!" he gurgled aloud. "I just ain't!" 

Monk had found himself to be invisible. 

He got up again, and this time managed to stand. He walked,  promptly stumbled over a prone figure, and

elicited a groan. The  stretcher came in again and deposited another invisible man. 

Telegraph Edmunds was examining his revolver. 

"This bird Ham will be next," he said. 

That wrenched Monk out of the horrified trance which his personal  fate had woven. He moved toward Ham,

dodging away from Telegraph  Edmunds and trying to keep behind him, until he realized that he could  not be

seen. Then he advanced boldly and crouched beside Ham, intending  to whisper in the dapper lawyer's ear. 

He never succeeded. A sudden, awful clutch laid hold of him. He was  yanked upright, and felt fingers racing

along the back of his neck.  That told him who his invisible assailant was. 

"Doc!" he squawked. 

"Monk!" came a voice out of thin air  the bronze man's voice.  "Break for it! I'll handle Ham!" 

Telegraph Edmunds, slackjawed with astonishment, roared, "What in  blue hades is going on here? 

He got his answer when there was a sudden, terrific scuffle around  Ham. Then Ham was lifted and borne with

astonishing speed toward the  door. 

TELEGRAPH EDMUNDS began to yell orders at the top of his voice. He  lifted his revolver. 

But Monk was ready for that. He had lunged to Telegraph's side, and  as the gun came up, he struck the man's

arm a terrific blow. Telegraph  not only howled and dropped his weapon, but fell down as well. 

Monk ran for the steps. He joined Doc Savage at the top, inside the  room of the furfarm house. 


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Escape, it developed, was far from complete, since other invisible  men were about outside. They came into

the room so silently that they  were not heard, and seized upon Ham. 

The fight was short. The attackers had not reckoned upon the  presence of Doc Savage and Monk, both

invisible. Ham, freed, stumbled  for the door. 

"Run for it!" Doc Savage told him. "Monk and I will follow you.  That way, we will not get lost from each

other." 

They followed that system, sprinting down the road at full speed  until they heard a shout behind them, then

ducking off into the marsh  grass. They made straight for the nearest road, a distance of fully two  miles, and

traveled it as swiftly as possible. 

A car came spinning along. Monk stood in the center of the road and  cartwheeled his arms only to realize at

the last instant that he could  not be seen. A wild leap got him clear. 

"Blazes!" he complained aloud. "This being invisible is going to  have its drawbacks!" 

Ham squinted at the sound of the homely chemist's voice. 

"You there, Monk?" he demanded. 

"Sure," Monk grunted. 

Ham smiled at the apparently empty space from which the childlike  voice came. 

"I must say that you look better than I ever expected you to look,"  he advised. 

"Yeah?" Monk growled. "Well, there's another car coming." 

Ham hailed that machine by lying prone in the road. The motorist,  driving a ramshackle touring car, stopped

and with great solicitude  helped Ham who was pretending unconsciousness, into the car. 

When the fellow drove off, Monk and Doc Savage were also in the  rear seat. 

Ham regained consciousness conveniently at the first filling  station, and contrived to alight. 

DOC SAVAGE went into the filling station, lifted the telephone  receiver and called the nearest State police

station. 

"You will find the headquarters of the invisible men on the fur  farm owned by Angus Angelo Marikan," Doc

announced, and gave the  location of the skunkraising establishment. 

He could tell by the burst of excitement that there would be  immediate and decisive action. 

"Take bloodhounds to trail the invisible men," Doc advised. 

"Who are you?" he was asked. 

Doc hung up. 


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Turning, he saw the filling station attendant in the door. The man  was starkly white and looked as if he were

in the throes of a great  terror. Hs throat muscles convulsed. His hands trembled. He must have  heard the

voice and seen the telephone receiver jump back on the hook,  apparently by its own accord. 

The man stumbled to a chair and sat down. He must have thought  himself demented, for a moment, then he

probably remembered the  invisible men incidents in New York City. 

"They're here!" he squawled. He dashed out through the door and ran  at full speed down the road, not looking

back. 

Doc Savage went outside. Ham had gotten rid of the motorist who had  picked him up, and was standing

beside a gasoline pump. He heard Doc's  footsteps, and knew the bronze man was near. 

"How were you made invisible?" he demanded. 

"I secured only a hazy idea of the process," Doc Savage explained.  "It has something to do with altering the,

electronic composition of  the body, securing an atomic motific status which results in complete  diaphaneity." 

"That," said Ham, "does not mean a lot to me." 

"Nor a great deal more to me," the bronze man  he was possessed of  neither form nor hue now, as far as

appearances went  admitted. "The  process was extremely involved. Monk and I lost consciousness before

we  were very far along. I do not know what happened after we were  senseless." 

Monk spoke up, causing Ham to start violently. 

"We'll solve the mystery when the raiders clean the gang out of  that skunk farm and we can examine the

apparatus," he said. 

Ham nodded. "Poor old Marikan. He was the goat all of the way  through. They used him as a dummy owner

of the farm, without his  knowledge. Then they killed him." 

Doc Savage started to comment, but withhold the words to listen to  the wail of distant sirens. A speck

appeared far down the road, grew  larger, and became a careening State police car. Another followed, and

another. In the last, there was a pack of bloodhounds. The noisy parade  made for the fur farm. 

At Doc's suggestion, Ham departed in the direction of New York  City, with the understanding that he was to

await Doc's appearance in  the skyscraper headquarters. 

Doc and Monk followed the New Jersey State troopers. 

THE troopers did their work efficiently. They deployed, circled the  farm, and advanced. They scattered the

bloodhounds so that an attack on  any part of the line would be scented. 

When they were still some distance from the farm buildings, the  earth jumped, shook itself and emitted a

great rumble. A cloud of  débris jumped up at the fur farm simultaneously. That was the first of  a series of

nearly a dozen explosions. 

The troopers broke into a run. Two were injured slightly when there  was another underground blast, and they

backed off to await quiet.  Reassured, they went forward. Their first inspection showed that little  of value

would be found. The blast had been terrific, and whatever  delicate machinery had been underground was now


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destroyed. 

Moreover, there was no sign of the invisible men. The bloodhounds  were put to work. The animals did much

sniffing, and followed many  trails to the edge of the creek. The troopers deployed, searched, and  thereby

discovered that there had been at least two boats concealed  some distance down the stream. These were gone

now, and the invisible  men with them. 

Doc Savage and Monk  they kept track of each other by observation  and by exchanging a word now and

then   watched the fiasco from a  distance. 

"Blast it!" Monk complained. "Now we are up in the air. We haven't  got another clue to go on!" 

He fell silent, watching a stirring in the grass near by, thinking  at first that it was a rabbit or other small

animal. Then the homely  chemist emitted a glad howl. 

"Habeas Corpus!" he exploded. 

The shote had come through the marsh grass, apparently having  scented Monk or heard his voice. He broke

into a gallop, approaching. 

"Habeas!" Monk chuckled, and advanced. 

Habeas stopped. His ears stood out straight, and the coarse hairs  on his nape hackled. He emitted a skeptical

grunt or two. 

"It's tough, hog, but you've now got a spook for an owner," Monk  said. 

Habeas made his ears stiffer. He grunted again, explosively. Then  he spun and fled, taking tremendous leaps

as if to take advantage of  the gliding power inherent in his enormous ears. 

"Hey, blast it," Monk called. "It ain't as bad as that!" 

The homely chemist set out in pursuit, but did not overhaul Habeas  until the latter was held up in swimming a

stretch of water which Monk  could wade. Monk grasped his porker by one flapping ear and carried  him, a

grunting, suspicious and disgusted shote, toward the road. 

HALF an hour later, a truck driver was surprised to discover a pig  with enormous ears riding in the rear of his

vehicle. The trek was  loaded with seed potatoes, and the driver threw one at the pig. 

His hair stood on end when a childlike voice out of thin air  advised him, "Hey, guy! That ain't no way to

act!" 

The driver was so doubtful of his own mental balance that he  alighted at the first roadside lunch stand and

took on the stimulation  of hot coffee. When he went out, the pig was gone. 

A taxi driver found the pig in the rear of his machine next, and  later, a motorist who had passed through the

Holland Tunnel under the  Hudson River also found the porker. The pig fled when a capture was  attempted.

None of these individuals suspected that two men, spectral  in that they were entirely invisible, were

accompanying the pig. They  did note that the pig seemed frightened and entirely disgusted with the  course

events were taking. 


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In getting uptown with the porker, Doc Savage and Monk experienced  some difficulty, but finally managed

by filching more rides in taxicabs  and other vehicles. There was a fruit stand near where they finally  alighted,

close to the skyscraper which housed Doc Savage's  headquarters. 

"I'm gonna try something," Monk decided. 

Several persons stared at the sound of the voice. The proprietor of  the fruit stand gaped as an apple left its

rack and began to separate  into goodsized bites, to the accompaniment of a juicy crunching. 

Monk, mouth full of apple, demanded, "Do you see the blame thing  after it's in my mouth, Doc?" 

"Yes," Doc advised him. "And you better get it out, or the crowd  will be chasing that piece of apple all over

town." 

Monk hastily spat the apple out. 

Chapter 15. THE LIFE OF A GHOST

EXCITEMENT was as real as a cloud over the skyscraper which housed  Doc Savage's headquarters. All of

the doors and the lowerfloor windows  had been closed by stout wire screens. Entrance and exit from the

lobby  was being accomplished by a revolving affair of wire netting which  resembled a revolving door, the

partitions only large enough to pass  one figure at a time. 

Policemen were everywhere, heavily armed. They felt carefully in  the rotating door affair to make sure no

invisible persons were getting  inside. 

"Blazes!" Monk breathed. "What's this mean?" 

They planted Habeas Corpus under a parked car where he would not  attract attention, and loitered about,

listening, stepping out of the  path of such pedestrians as came past. It was not long before they  heard an

enlightening conversation between two policemen. 

"You say they got one of Doc Savage's men in the can?" the first  cop asked. 

"The one called Ham," agreed the second officer. "He showed up here  and they nabbed him and took him

down to Centre Street." 

Doc Savage and Monk stood aside as several elderly, bespectacled  and scholarlylooking gentlemen got out

of a limousine and were passed  into the skyscraper by the officers. 

"Who are the great brains?" one of the cops asked when the party  was inside. 

"Scientists," replied the other. "They've found a lot of queer  instruments and apparatus in Doc Savage's

laboratory and they're going  over it to see if it isn't stuff he has used to make himself and his  gang invisible." 

Doc and Monk withdrew with that, and held a consultation. 

"The stupes!" Monk grumbled. "The only apparatus in the laboratory  is stuff that has been there some time,

and is probably too advanced  for the average expert to understand. It has nothing to do with  invisible men." 


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"Certainly not," Doc agreed; then added, "We had better get Ham out  of jail." 

They caught an elevated train down to Centre Street, the journey  being made interesting by the efforts of train

attendants to put the  pig, Habeas Corpus, off the train. Twice these gentlemen succeeded, and  Monk and Doc

merely caught following trains. 

They paused at a newsstand to read the latest headlines: 

INVISIBLE MAN CHIEF IDENTIFIED! 

HE IS DOC SAVAGE 

They went on without reading more. 

"That's a danged lie," Monk complained. 

"Some one is jumping at conclusions," Doc agreed. 

In order not to lose each other they linked hands when nearing  street corners, and, at other times, they merely

kept watch of the pig,  Habeas Corpus. The porker was proving convenient as a visible link by  which they

could keep track of each other. 

It was near the noon hour and they passed a group of chattering  office girls, out for lunch. 

"Whewl" Monk exploded, when the femininity was behind. "Is my face  red!" 

"Yes?" Doc prompted. 

"Do you realize," Monk asked, "that we're walking down the street  without a thing on?" 

EVIDENCE that the invisible man scare had settled heavily upon the  city could be seen frequently. Many

jewelry establishments were closed,  and others were fitted with little revolving doors of screened

construction. Banks were also equipped with the rotating doors, and  guards were feeling carefully to see that

only visible individuals were  admitted to the money houses. 

Newsboys were already hoarse from howling headlines, and were  vending their wares by waving them

wildly. There was little need for  salesmanship anyway, since each batch of extra papers was absorbed  almost

as soon as it was unloaded from the fast delivery trucks. 

Habeas Corpus stopped beside a newsstand, and Doc Savage knew Monk  must have paused to read more

headlines. When the pig went on, Doc also  trailed, and a moment later Monk found the bronze man. 

"This is a fine mess!" the homely chemist growled. "The newspapers  say there's already been more than fifty

robberies, all of them big  ones. Telegraph Edmunds and his invisible men are cleaning up." 

"We will try to get some line on them after we free Ham," Doc  replied. 

They had some little difficulty in locating Ham, but eventually  found him confined in what was supposed to

be an escape proof portion  of the jail. In freeing Ham, they found it necessary to overpower two  guards. 


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Doc Savage did this by exerting a pressure against spinal nerve  centers, a harmless process entailing no great

pain, which brought an  unconsciousness that would wear off shortly. Doc himself unlocked Ham's  cell. 

Ham backed away, put up his fists and refused to come out until Doc  spoke to him. 

"Oh!" Ham gulped. "I was afraid it was some of Telegraph's gang." 

Once clear of the station, they took a taxicab, Ham entering the  vehicle and giving directions to the driver.

They left the machine  uptown, mingled with the crowd, then caught another cab, left it after  a time, and

walked to the exclusive establishment where Ham, whose  legal career had been so honorable before he joined

Doc Savage,  maintained bachelor lodgings. 

The elevator operator had no idea that his car carried aloft any  one other than Ham and Habeas. The hallway

on Ham's floor was empty.  They walked toward his apartment. 

A peculiar thing had happened to the demeanor of Habeas Corpus. In  the past, the pig had never been known

to have anything to do with Ham.  Now he trailed along at Ham's heels, and seemed happy enough to do it.  He

only grunted disgustedly and sidled away violently when the  invisible Monk tried to pick him up. 

"I thought better of you, Habeas," Monk grunted. 

They entered Ham's apartment and the dapper lawyer went at once to  a case and lifted out a sword cane, an

exact duplicate of the one which  he had carried earlier and which had vanished somewhere in the previous

excitement. Ham kept an assortment of the canes. He flourished the  weapon. 

"Now I feel better," he announced. 

"Then maybe we can talk," suggested a high, querulous voice. 

HAM started violently. The voice did not belong to Doc or Monk. He  was sure of that. He promptly sidled

into a corner and unsheathed his  sword cane, prepared to put up a defense. There was an invisible man in  the

room! 

"All right," Ham snapped grimly. "Just what is the next move?" 

"Conversation, as I told you," said the squeaky voice of the  invisible man. 

Ham was an actor, and he showed by no glance that Doc and Monk were  also in the room. Too, he had

recognized the venerable voice. 

"Old Bonepicker," he said. 

"I believe people call me that," admitted the invisible man, who  had apparently been waiting in the

apartment. 

"What do you want?" Ham asked. 

"Doc Savage," said Old Bonepicker. "P. Treve Easeman and myself  wish to talk to him" 

"I have not seen Doc Savage for some time," Ham replied   truthfully. 


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The pig, Habeas, apparently baffled by the phenomena of so many  invisible men, grunted loudly and scuttled

under the most convenient  chair. 

Old Bonepicker began speaking rapidly, earnestly. 

"Easeman and myself have been doing some wondering," he said. "It  is strange that we were selected as the

first victims to be made  invisible, in the plot to extort money from us to make us visible  again. This is

especially inexplicable in view of the conduct of  Easeman's daughter and that Russel Wray, if you get my

meaning." 

Ham frowned and fingered his sword cane, still keeping the blade  alert. 

"You mean that you think the girl and Wray may be working with  Telegraph Edmunds and his gang?" he

demanded. 

"It is a thought which has occurred to us," said Old Bonepicker.  "There are other suspicious circumstances of

which you do not know.  Suppose you come with me to Easeman, and we will discuss them." 

"How is Easeman  recovering from the gun wounds he received in the  plane?" Ham asked. 

"Getting along nicely," Old Bonepicker answered. "Of course, it was  extremely difficult to dress a bullet

wound that cannot be seen in a  man who is also not apparent to the eye." 

"I will go with you," Ham decided. 

THREE quarters of an hour after the strange conference, Ham and  Habeas Corpus, apparently alone, strode

into an office suite in a  skyscraper just outside the Wall Street sector of downtown New York  City. There

was a name on the office door: 

EASEMAN ENTERPRISES, INC. 

P. Treve Easeman, Pres. 

"This is one of Easeman's offices," informed Old Bonepicker, who  was clinging to Ham's arm. 

Two pictures were prominent on the wall. One was of a  distinguished, stoutly built man; the other was a

slender, bony,  hawkfaced fellow. Both were middleaged men. 

"The pictures are myself and Easeman," Old Bonepicker offered. 

Ham surveyed the likenesses with interest, it being his first hint  of what the two actually looked like. 

"The slender one is you?" he asked. 

"On the contrary, I am the stout one." Old Bonepicker's chuckle was  a dry, ghostly rattle in the room. "My

voice is somewhat deceptive, I  am afraid." 

"You and Easeman are friends?" Ham asked. "I mean  you were  friends before this affair materialized?" 

"We were," said Old Bonepicker. "We had business dealings." 


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Ham nodded. "Where is Easeman?" 

"In the inner office." 

Ham himself closed the door, and surreptitiously operated the lock,  fixing it so that the door would not fasten.

The lawyer wanted the way  open for Doc Savage to enter, along with Monk, and overhear what was to  be

said. 

Ham was guided into the inner office, a rich room fitted with a  large desk, upholstered business chairs, filing

cabinets and a leather  divan. 

"Easeman is on the divan," Old Bonepicker advised. 

Ham looked at the divan and felt the short hairs on his nape stir,  simply because there was nothing whatever

on the divan but a dressing  such as might have been over a wound. This lay a little above the  leather of the

divan. It was altogether ghostly. 

Ham said, "Mr. Easeman, do you feel well enough to talk?" 

There was a loud bang from the outer room, as if the door had  slammed. 

Ham half turned. Then he watched the divan. A large and  businesslike revolver lifted from behind the couch

and pointed at Ham. 

"I am Easeman," a voice said from the divan. "You cannot see me,  but you can see this gun. You will stand

perfectly still." 

"A trick," Ham exploded. 

"Exactly!" said Old Bonepicker's voice. "I was surprised that you  fell for it." 

Ham snapped. "Why not? I wanted to find out what it was all about." 

"You damned well know what it is all about," said P. Treve  Easeman's voice. 

There were more sounds from the outer office. Then the voice of the  girl, Ada Easeman, called out. 

"Come and help us!" she appealed. "I think Doc Savage and another  man came inside after Ham. They are

invisible!" 

HAM stood perfectly still, for it seemed the best thing to do.  Easeman heaved up from the divan. A shaking

of the gun indicated the  man was enfeebled. 

"I will watch this lawyer," he said. "Bonepicker, you take care of  Doc Savage." 

Bonepicker backed away  crushing of the rug nap showed that  and  entered the outer office. Ada Easeman

was there, with a revolver.  Russel Wray was also present, and likewise armed. They had their backs  to the

door. Their eyes were fixed on the apparently empty office. 

"Where is Doc Savage and the other one?" Old Bonepicker asked. 


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"In here somewhere," the girl replied. 

Wray now removed the key from theouter door. He and the girl  separated, bent over and picked up corners

of the rug. It was obvious  that the room had been prepared beforehand for just such a procedure. 

Old Bonepicker slammed the door at his own back, closing the  office. 

The rug covered most of the floor area. It was lifted and, like a  huge net, brought forward. An instant later, it

was evident an  invisible man had been netted. 

Wray yelled, hurled the rug over the unseen one, and sprang atop  the squirming bulk. 

A pained howl came out of the rug. No one who had ever heard that  voice would have trouble identifying it

again. 

"It's the one called Monk!" barked Old Bonepicker. "Get him!" 

All three of them hurled upon Monk. In the terrific fight that  followed, the invisible Monk tore the rug and

nearly managed to escape. 

Wray hammered madly with his gun. It struck something that sounded  like wood. The struggles ceased. 

"Hit him on the head!" Wray rapped triumphantly. 

They got cords and proceeded to tie the unconscious Monk. Wray then  secured a bottle of ink and poured it

on the captive, thus making some  of his outlines visible. 

A search was pushed for Doc Savage. They lifted the rug in the  inner office and advanced carefully, as if

seining. The result was a  blank. 

"But he must have come in!" Old Bonepicker insisted querulously. 

They searched again. They went over the office with infinite care,  and even seined a small washroom which

adjoined the inner sanctum. They  lifted the washroom window and looked out, shaking their heads when  they

saw the sheer expanse of bricks outside. 

Ham watched them in noncommittal silence. When they entered the  washroom, he held his breath. He knew

something they did not suspect.  He had seen the washroom door open furtively and close with infinite

silence, after which he thought he had heard the window open and close.  Ham rather suspected that Doc

Savage had departed by that route. 

"What are you going to do with me?" Ham demanded. 

RUSSEL WRAY came over and glared at the dapper lawyer. Wray's face  was sullen, and his lip, which had

been injured in the brawling the  night before, had swollen, cocking his white mustache up. 

The girl came over and stood beside Wray. She was still garbed in  her emerald evening gown, but it was

showing the effects of strenuous  action. The wrinkled state of the frock seemed to detract no whit from  her

unquestionable beauty. 

"Doc Savage is the chief of the invisible horde," Wray said. 


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Ham snorted. "You are wasting your time trying to kid me. You are  mixed up in it yourself! That came out at

Old Bonepicker's house." 

"If you mean what the liar, Marikan, said, you are mistaken!" the  girl snapped. "We did not handcuff him." 

"Marikan is dead," Ham said. 

Wray sniffed unbelievingly. "Who killed him?" 

"Telegraph Edmunds," Ham advised. "No doubt you know that very  well." 

The girl and Wray exchanged glances. 

"He is lying, of course," the girl said. "Doc Savage is a  scientific wizard, and no doubt discovered bow to

make men invisible  and is now trying to cash in on it." 

The tones of P. Treve Easeman interrupted. "Well, question this  fellow and find out where Doc Savage has

his machine for making men  invisible." 

"Don't think we won't do that!" Wray said grimly. 

They grasped Ham and smashed him down on the leather divan and tied  him securely, then expended several

minutes in trying to catch the pig,  Habeas. The porker, however, proved so agile that they were forced to

permit him to remain at large. 

Old Bonepicker asked, "What will we do with this lawyer fellow if  he will not talk?" 

"The same thing that we will do with him in any event," said P.  Treve Easeman  "turn him over to the

police." 

Ham frowned. Suddenly he lifted his voice to its greatest volume,  which was surprising, for he had trained

himself to make his natural  voice carry to the limits of the largest courtrooms. 

"Doc!" he shouted. "They're going to turn me over to the police  when they are done! I believe they are

honestly trying to find the  chief of the invisible men!" 

Chapter 16. THE SPOOK DETECTOR

DOC SAVAGE heard the shout emitted by Ham, and understood the  words, a fact which influenced his

future procedure to a marked degree. 

The outside of the skyscraper was not as insurmountable as it had  appeared to the girl and Wray. One skilled

in the art of the socalled  "human fly," and possessed of nerve and unnaturally strong fingers, can  climb a

surface which would baffle the layman. It is the combination of  height and the fear of falling which defeats

them, rather than the lack  of finger purchases. 

The bronze man was near a window to which he had gone from time to  time to rest. Since he was invisible, it

was not necessary for him to  worry about being seen. He clambered to the window now. The office  beyond

was full of stenographers and clerks at work. 


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Doc Savage placed a palm against the pane and managed to shake the  window so that it made considerable

noise. This disgusted a clerk and  the fellow came over, lifted the window in an endeavor to see what was

wrong, and Doc Savage slipped inside. 

It was impossible to avoid brushing against the clerk, and this  startled the latter, although not to the point that

he realized what  had happened. 

An elevator operator answered what he must have concluded was a  fake call; and on the twelfth floor, where

there was another ring, a  woman got on with a dog, and the canine behaved very strangely going  down;

howling and barking, much to the mystification of its owner. 

Doc Savage experimented with the dog, bending over and touching it,  and it was evident that the animal

knew of his presence only because of  the sense of smell, and was unable to see him. 

Out on the street, the bronze man found the sidewalks completely  filled with noontime crowds. So thick was

the throng that he had  difficulty avoiding persons. This problem he solved by getting behind a  uniformed

policeman who seemed bent for some definite destination.  There was a cleared space for walking behind the

cop, due to the  instinct which makes people instinctively step wide of a policeman. 

Doc caused an uproar in the subway station, more from  absentmindedness than anything else. From force of

habit, in leaving  the station uptown, he passed out through one of the turnstiles. The  man in the ticket booth

saw the stile turn, and was quickwitted enough  to realize the truth. He emitted a series of howls which filled

the  station with uniformed officers, but not before Doc Savage was safely  on his way. 

On the street, he discovered it highly dangerous to jaywalk, and  but by the grace of an agile leap did he

escape the wheels of a  speeding motorist. He landed in a puddle of gutter water, and in  walking on, left a

procession of wet footprints. These were seen by a  woman who promptly fainted, and a bedlam of yelling

went up. 

Doc raced to the nearest newsstand and wiped his feet on newspapers  while the proprietor stood still and

yelled his terror. After that, no  tracks were deposited. 

Doc then clung to an open trolley car, stepped from there to a  taxicab fender without touching the ground,

and alighted when the taxi  turned onto another street, thus thwarting any endeavor to use  bloodhounds to trail

him. 

He finally reached the skyscraper which housed his headquarters. 

THE guards and netting turnstiles were still in place before the  doors, and only persons who could prove

occupancy of the building, and  those with urgent business, were being admitted. Doc Savage did not  attempt

to wrangle his way inside. 

He sought a marine store near by which sold yacht supplies, and  since attempting to purchase an article

would only have caused great  excitement, he appropriated a small grapple and a hank of stout line,  which he

would pay for later. He got these out through the rear door  without any one noticing that they were seemingly

floating in thin air. 

Alleyways, side doors, and even the ruse of holding the package so  close to the side of a pedestrian that it

would seem he was carrying  it, got Doc into a department store building across the street from the  skyscraper

which held his headquarters. He worked to the roof of this. 


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There were many offices unoccupied for the day in the skyscraper  across the street, due to the difficulty in

gaining admission and the  quite natural disinclination of persons to put themselves in proximity  with the

invisible menace. 

Doc selected a window which was open, waited until he was sure the  office behind it was not occupied, and

hurled the grapple, to one end  of which the line had been made fast. 

It was not a throw that required supernatural ability, but it did  take nice calculating, and Doc missed the first

time. The clang of the  hook drew people to windows, although Doc got hook and rope back before  they saw

it. He waited until they went away, then tried again, and  succeeded. 

The hook caught on the sill inside. He tested with a yank that put  far more strain than his weight on the rope.

Then he made the other end  of the line fast about a ventilator. 

In swinging out over the street, Doc kept a tight grip on the rope,  so that, should the grapple give, he would

be ready to cling to the  line and attempt to break his smashing swing against the other  building. But the

crossing was without such incident. 

He entered the office, let himself out, and rode an elevator  secretly to the eightysixth floor. The door of his

office was barred  with wire, and the corridor was filled with armed men. Doc withdrew to  the floor below,

where there was a secret door back of a fire cabinet  which gave to a ladder leading up to the laboratory room. 

A moment later, he was in the laboratory. 

SOME six men were present in the laboratory. None of them were  young, and they all had the appearance of

men who had devoted their  lives to learning. They were going over the apparatus in the  laboratory, handling

the contrivances delicately, congregating around  the more advanced devices, attempting to ascertain their

nature. 

"One of the most remarkable collections of scientific apparatus in  existence, no doubt," said the man, and

waved an arm to include all of  the great room. "You might say that here is concentrated the learning  of man

since the beginning of time. No wonder this man Savage is  considered to be something of a mental marvel" 

"I would give a good many years of my life for this laboratory,"  said another. "With it, marvels can be

accomplished, true enough. Take,  for instance, this device for light analysis of metals. In a few  minutes, it

can equal the work of hours by ordinary methods." 

Doc Savage advanced. He had come to the laboratory to get a  portable kit, property of the homely Monk,

which was probably one of  the most complete chemical analysis and compounding units of its size  in

existence. The bronze man took half a dozen steps, paused, and his  eyes rested steadily on a glass shelf. 

There was an ordinary electroscope on the shelf. Its leaves were  standing apart. 

Doc Savage retreated. The electroscope leaves came together  slightly. He advanced. The leaves flew apart. 

FOR a long time the invisible giant stood there, considering the  electroscope phenomena. The device was

affected, of course, by static  electricity, and would behave variously in the presence of radioactive  materials.

Obviously, the bronze man's body, in its invisible state,  was giving off an emanation, or perhaps was only

impregnated with a  static charge, which affected the electroscope. 


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Doc Savage tried various experiments, unnoticed by the scientists  who were going over the equipment. He

grounded his body. This seemed to  have no effect on the reaction of the electroscope. When he had  finished,

he knew that he had at hand a detector which would indicate  the presence of invisible men. 

There was more than one electroscope in the laboratory, and Doc  Savage gathered together a number of

these, using cotton to pad them,  and inserting them in a stout carton which he carried down into the  secret

entrance. 

Due to the necessity of accomplishing his mission without being  observed, he was delayed fully an hour. 

The line by which he had crossed the street was thin and up high,  and had escaped notice. Carrying the box of

electroscopes and Monk's  portable laboratory, which was contained in metal cases, Doc Savage was  almost

across the rope before he  the load, rather  was seen from the  street below. A cop, unusually alert, was the

discoverer. He cut loose  instantly with his gun. With mad haste, Doc swung the remaining  distance. 

Nor did he tarry in the department store. Racing down from the  roof, he ran to the elevators. The simple sight

of the metal boxes and  package floating into the elevator was enough to send all other  occupants fleeing. Doc

ran the cage down. 

Police guards were already at the street doors. Doc sought the  rear, found a window and managed to drop

through without damaging his  burden. There was a taxi stand at the corner, and one of the machines  was

unoccupied. 

Doc placed his burden in the driverless cab, then entered a cigar  store which had a telephone booth from

which the cab could be watched.  There was no one near the telephone. He dialed police headquarters. 

"This is Doc Savage," he said. "Ordinary electroscopes can be used  to detect the presence of the invisible

men. Issue them to your  policemen. Next to that, bloodhounds are your best bet." 

He pressed the hook down on a storm of excited questions. Next, he  looked up the number of P. Treve

Easeman's downtown office in the  directory, then dialed and got an answer. It was Old Bonepicker who

replied. 

"How are my assistants, Monk and Ham?" Doc asked. 

Old Bonepicker swore. 

"They haven't talked, and we are going to turn them over to the  police!" he squeaked. 

"Very well," Doc told him. "I merely wished to ascertain that they  were safe." 

Over the telephone, he heard Monk and Ham both yell out  simultaneously in perfectly healthy voices

apparently by way of showing  that they were not greatly damaged. 

The wire went dead as Old Bonepicker hung up. 

Chapter 17. SEIZURE

OLD BONEPICKER glared at the telephone angrily after he had cracked  the receiver back in place. 


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"The nerve of that big fellow!" He gritted. 

Attractive Ada Easeman, standing at Old Bonepicker's elbow, asked  doubtfully, "Could it be that Doc Savage

is not the head of this gang  after all?" 

"Bosh!" Old Bonepicker snorted. "You're letting his looks sway  you!" 

For that, the young woman sniffed at the spot where Old Bonepicker,  absolutely invisible, was standing. 

"What are you going to do?" she asked. 

"Call the police," said Old Bonepicker. "That's what we should have  done long ago." 

The telephone lifted from the desk in ghostly fashion as he picked  it up, the receiver jumped from the hook,

and he requested the number  of police headquarters. He seemed to have a good knowledge of who was  who

in the department, for he called for the detective bureau chief of  that district by name. 

"We are holding two of Doc Savage's men in the office of P. Treve  Easeman," he said, and gave the exact

location of the office. "We also  have some information that will help you. Better come at once." 

"Are these two Doc Savage assistants invisible?" asked the  detective. 

"One of them is," said Old Bonepicker. 

"Brother, we'll be right over!" the lawman roared, and slammed the  telephone down on the desk. 

The police detective upset his chair, such was his haste in  arising. There were buttons on his desk for

summoning subordinates. He  pounded these. 

"Two of Doc Savage's men being held!" he yelled. 

Then he gave the address of Easeman's office. 

The words were loud, calculated to carry to all of the policemen  rushing into the room in answer to the buzzer

summons. 

A fractional moment later, a wadded chunk of paper near the door  changed position, as if it had been kicked.

There was no one near. The  rear stairway had not been dusted recently, and fresh tracks appeared

mysteriously in the dust. That was all that indicated the movement of  an invisible man  until the door of a

parked sedan down the street  came open. 

"By hanging around the police department, I got a line on two of  Doc Savage's men, if not on Doc Savage

himself!" said the voice of  Telegraph Edmunds. "The two are being held in Easeman's office. Get  down there,

quick!" 

There was a driver in the seat of the car. His face was an unusual  brown color, and a close scrutiny would

have shown that it was not his  face at all which showed, but a covering of very thin rubber, a  hoodlike mask

which could be drawn on and taken off. He wore goggles to  disguise the empty holes that were his eyes, and

his hands were encased  in gloves. Only a more than casual inspection would have shown the  truth. 


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The sedan hurtled away from the curbing. Voices indicated at least  half a dozen men in the rear and possibly

some clinging to the running  boards, but those who looked into the car saw an apparently empty  machine. 

The party of invisible men got into the P. Treve Easeman office  building without attracting attention, and

filched rides on an  elevator. On the cage, they had a mishap. It chanced that all other  passengers alighted

before the Easeman floor was reached. 

"Twentyeight," said Telegraph Edmunds, thinking to deceive the  operator. 

But the operator looked around, saw the empty cage and let out a  screech, guessing instantly who his

passengers were. The unlucky  attendant was slugged, beaten into insensibility, and his car run on  up. 

TELEGRAPH EDMUNDS knocked boldly on the Easeman office door. 

"Who is it?" asked Ada Easeman. 

"Police!" boomed Telegraph. 

Ada Easeman unlocked the door. Instantly, Telegraph's invisible  companions hit it, battering it open. The girl

cried out, but she might  as well have saved her breath, for the unseen assailants flooded into  the offices. In a

moment they had found Old Bonepicker and Easeman,  simply because they wielded guns, hoping to see a

target, and the  weapons marked their positions so that they could be seized. 

Russel Wray was caught flatfooted and knocked down before he could  resist effectively. The girl was also

floored by main strength. 

"Beautiful!" chuckled Telegraph Edmunds. "Beautiful! It could not  have worked out better. Now we only

have to get Doc Savage." 

"Oh!" exclaimed Ada Easeman. "Then he is not working with you?" 

Telegraph snorted. "He's working on us!" 

No time was wasted. The prisoners, visible and invisible, were  bound and gagged, and the purloined elevator

was employed to carry  them, not to the lobby, but to the basement level, from whence they  were spirited, by

great good luck and much caution, out into the sedan.  They were forced to lie on the floor. 

As the sedan pulled away, police cars came down the street, sirens  screaming. There was an extremely large

force of officers, the  gathering of which probably accounted for the delay. They alighted, and  jointed hands in

a line across the front of the office building. Their  superiors went up, to have their confidence shattered when

they found  their birds had been removed. 

Half an hour later, the story was in the newspapers. In the  newspapers also was the matter of the telephone

call concerning the  electroscopes which Doc Savage had made. One tabloid had sent a squad  of reporters out

with an electroscope, and the leaves of the thing flew  apart when they neared the first bank, indicating an

invisible man. The  latter had escaped, however, but not until there had been quite an  uproar. 

The invisible man had no doubt been standing by, trying to figure  out a way of getting into the bank. The

bank promptly closed,  announcing it would do no more business until the invisible man menace  was

squashed. 


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The newsboys, such of them as had not already howled themselves  hoarse, ran about crying the new

developments. 

Doc Savage heard the shouting, and read the story over a fat man's  shoulder. The bronze man did the reading

by spurts, devoting most of  his attention to the sedan bearing Telegraph Edmunds and his prisoners. 

Doc had arrived at the Easeman office just in time to follow the  raiders and their captives down to the sedan.

Doc had ridden clinging  to the tire carrier. 

THE sedan was waiting before the entrance of a private garage in  the uptown section of the city, a rather

respectable residence  district, and one of the invisible men had no doubt gone inside to open  the door and

admit the car. 

Doc Savage waited. The street was quiet, although far from  deserted, and traffic rolled slowly. On the nearest

corner, three or  four houses away, there was a subway station, the entrance newly  constructed, but the entry

was boarded over. This was evidently a part  of the newly constructed subway system, not yet opened to the

public. 

The subway ventilating gratings were spaced along the sidewalk. Out  of these came the moan of a train. Doc

Savage, who knew the  subterranean tracks were not carrying passenger trains as yet, decided  it must be a

work train. 

The garage door opened, unlocked from the interior. Doc Savage  sidled up alongside the sedan as it began to

move. It was fortunate  that he had gone immediately to the Easeman office. 

The car passed into what seemed to be a very ordinary garage,  stopped, and the driver got out. He removed

the tight rubber facial  mask, which was probably uncomfortable and pulled off his chauffeur's  coat. He

discarded his hat. The result, a pair of shoes and trousers  parading about, was uncanny to a point where even

the invisible men  themselves were affected. 

"Be fish or fowl, guy!" a voice suggested. "Either get them pants  and shoes off, or put on some more clothes.

You give me the creeps!" 

The chauffeur chuckled and kicked off his trousers. They had  scarcely dropped to the garage floor when a

clock inside the house  struck twice. 

"Two o'clock," said Telegraph Edmunds. "We had better get inside.  Our men will be dropping in. They are all

to be here by four." 

"What's the idea?" some one asked. 

"Conference," said Telegraph. "We've got to plan tomorrow's work.  We'll operate in New York tomorrow,

then shift to Chicago. That way, no  extended preparations can be made for our capture. Two days in Chicago,

and we will shift to another town." 

A man announced, "Say, I'm hungry. How we gonna work this eating  business?" 

"Go ahead and eat, but lightly," Telegraph directed. "You'll find  that the food is visible in your mouth and

throat but after it gets  down, it almost instantly disappears. That is, unless you load up on  grub. Do not eat

much more than the equivalent of a sandwich." 


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"This being invisible is a funny business," another offered. "I'd  like to know more about it." 

"The big chief will show up at the four o'clock conference,"  Telegraph advised. "Ask him the questions. He's

the guy who discovered  the process." 

"You sure he's actually got a machine that will make us visible  again?" asked a skeptic. 

"Positive," said Telegraph. "I've been through it. The thing works  to perfection and only requires a few

moments." 

"That's swell," said the other. "I don't fancy this life of a spook  any too much. I don't think my girl friend

would like it." 

"You keep away from the girl friend," snapped Telegraph. 

"Don't worry," snorted the other, "she wouldn't stick around me  like I am now." 

The prisoners were being hauled out of the sedan. 

"What'll we do with these?" an invisible man asked. 

"Hold them until the chief gets here at four," directed Telegraph  Edmunds. 

A MAN asked, "What about the swag we've annexed?" 

"That is being concealed at various places, and the chief is  keeping a record on his person," Telegraph

explained. "We will divide  it up later." 

The captives were carried into a room, bare of furniture and dusty.  They were deposited roughly on the floor

and their bindings examined. 

Telegraph Edmunds called four names and the owners answered. 

"You four watch the prisoners," Telegraph directed. "I'll station  others about. We don't want them getting

away." 

"Listen," a man interrupted. "What about the bags for carrying the  loot? I didn't have any today, and a cop

damned near got me by shooting  at a necklace I had snatched off an old dame." 

"In the next room," Telegraph stated, "Come on and I will show them  to you." 

The showing process proved to be one of feeling rather. The  invisible men went to a corner and touched piles

of rough fabric which  felt not unlike chain mail, and which was absolutely invisible to the  naked eye. 

"Seems to be metal," some one grunted. 

"It is metal," Telegraph answered. "I know that much about it.  Seems that the boss tried lots of different

things, but decided on this  alloy because it was lighter and besides, could be made invisible  easier. It's just a

cloth woven out of flexible wires." 


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They left the pile after a time and went into another room, where  they spread themselves on chairs, quarreling

mildly when a man would  chance to select a chair in which another had already deposited  himself. 

However, some fifteen minutes later, a man did decide to go to the  pile of invisible loot containers and get

one, stating his purpose was  to handle the thing to get its feel, so that he could manipulate the  thing more

readily. 

"Get so I can find the mouth of the bag easy," he said. 

He was not an unusually discerning individual, hence his sense of  touch did not inform him that the pile of

bags was somewhat smaller  than it had been a few minutes earlier. 

Chapter 18. UNMAKER OF SPOOKS

THERE was much wonder on the part of the city when the depredations  of the invisible legion ceased shortly

before four o'clock that  afternoon, although it did not dawn immediately  except to the police  department,

who had been swamped by calls all day  that the  manipulations of the spook horde had stopped. The

policemen could not  understand it, and did little but snatch time for hurried sandwiches. 

In assembling at the uptown house where Monk, Ham and the other  prisoners had been taken, the invisible

men used more than average  caution, for not once was their presence detected. 

Nearly thirty of them gathered. It was not a large number,  considering the furor they had raised, but they were

not ordinary  criminals. They were clever, the pick of Telegraph Edmunds's large  acquaintance of confidence

men, swindlers and other crooks of more than  average ability. Any one could have donned suitable attire and

mingled  with the best society. There was not a mug among them. 

They were a happy crew, but they kept their spirits down until they  were inside the house, and even then, they

did not permit their  laughter to become too boisterous. 

As one put it: "We've got the world by the tail, as long as we can  keep from getting stepped on." 

A few seconds after four o'clock, there was something of a  commotion as an invisible man of more

importance than the others  arrived. 

"The big chief, the man with brains enough to work this all out,"  Telegraph Edmunds announced. 

The newcomer voiced no word. 

"Do you want to outline future plans, chief?" Telegraph asked.  Something was evidently whispered in

Telegraph's ear by the leader,  something none of the others heard, for Telegraph cleared his throat  and began

to speak rapidly. 

"Our operations so far have been highly profitable," he declared.  "We have gathered at a conservative

estimate some twenty millions of  dollars in the course of the day. The newspapers are claiming that it  is a

great deal more, but it is actually around that sum which,  however, may shrink somewhat before we turn it

into hard cash." 

Telegraph was somewhat of a politician and knew how to keep his men  happy, as well as encourage them to

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praise to the participants. The meeting was developing into a  regular conference. 

Voices were kept low. The house was gloomy, and seemingly  unoccupied, the doors being closed, the

lookouts  one at each door   did not stir about, or even peer out into the street. 

Perhaps that was a mistake. They would hardly have seen anything.  But they might have heard some slight,

although interesting sounds. 

Doc Savage, who had been away from the house until slightly after  four o'clock, was back again. 

THE bronze man had purloined a delivery truck  hardly theft,  because the vehicle belonged to a bakery

concern in which he had a  large interest. He had equipped himself with trousers, a ragged topcoat  and a hat,

and had walked boldly into a drug store and gotten grease  paint from the section devoted to the sale of

theatrical supplies. The  grease paint had outlined his features with passable distinctness. 

He had experienced more difficulty in getting what the truck held   coils of heavy insulated copper cable.

There was an alley near by, and  he parked the truck in this. No great labor was entailed in hoisting  the

insulated cable to the roof. 

Doc Savage worked swiftly. He located an electric power line and  hooked on to it with his cables, which

were in turn connected to  highfrequency spark coils. The latter, the bronze man had carried from  an

electrical supply house on lower Broadway. 

From the coils, the copper cables were conducted to doors and  windows of the house. There, the bronze man

operated more  painstakingly, employing a material which was as invisible as he  himself, for he had removed

clothing and grease paint. 

When he had finished, he had strung over the doors and windows  strands of the invisible metal fabric from

which the loot bags had been  woven. He went over all connections, making sure the insulated cables  were

connected to the invisible metal strands in the proper manner. 

He hurried to a telephone in a drug store and called the same  policeman to whom he had earlier given the

information regarding the  effectiveness of the electroscopes. He imparted the address of the  house in which

Telegraph Edmunds and the invisible legion were  gathered. 

"All of the invisible men are there," he advised. "Do not try to  raid the place. Block the adjacent streets and

rooftops with wovenwire  fencing. Allow no loopholes whatever. Station men with spray guns,  filled with

ink or paint. Assemble your dogs. Have tear gas and  laughing gas. In short, take every possible precaution." 

The police official was silent for a time. 

"This is not a gag?" he asked. "You know, your finger prints have  been found on the scene of crime after

crime which these invisible men  have committed." 

Doc Savage hurriedly explained about the finger tip impressions  taken while he was unconscious. 

"All right," said the officer. 

"How many men can you assemble?" Doc asked. 

"Five thousand," said the other. 


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"Not enough," Doc told him. "Call on the Brooklyn navy yard and  .the local army posts for reënforcements.

If this attempt to corner the  invisible men fails, there will probably never be another chance." 

The official debated again. "I will have plenty of men." 

Doc Savage hung up, went to a fire escape which he had lowered in  the alley, and climbed to the roof. He

walked through a cluster of  pigeons; they obviously did not see him, for they did not fly. 

There was a roof hatch, closed but not fastened. Doc Savage opened  it. 

A guard below heard the opening and growled, "What the hell?" 

"Careful!" Doc hissed. "I think Doc Savage is around here  somewhere." 

"Yeah?" rasped the other. "Where?" 

Doc had located the invisible man by his voice. He struck once,  then again, then lunged with open arms and

grasped the unconscious man  before he could fall. 

Doc descended stairs. 

TELEGRAPH EDMUNDS had finished the preliminaries of his talk, and  had neared the end of the plan to

raid Chicago. 

"Are there any questions?" he asked. 

"What about the prisoners?" some one demanded. 

"We might as well dispose of them," Telegraph said. "And that  reminds me: There's something I want to ask

Old Bonepicker." 

The captives were now ordered hauled into the room, and Telegraph  Edmunds found Old Bonepicker by the

simple expedient of kicking each of  the invisible prisoners and listening to them groan. He leaned over Old

Bonepicker. 

"Remember that fight at the airport, when I split my gang and part  of them took off in the plane?" he snapped.

"The plane got in the air,  and something happened to it. An invisible man came down in a  parachute. That

was you, wasn't it? You caused that plane to crash and  kill my men?" 

Old Bonepicker made a snarling sound. 

"They tried to kill me after they found me!" he grated. "Could I  help it if the pilot, the only flier aboard, got

knocked out in the  scrap, and I dived overboard with the only parachute?" "So that's the  way it was,"

Telegraph grunted. "You're going to pay for that!" 

If he expected a response from Old Bonepicker, he was disappointed.  The elderly financier returned only

silence. 

"Aw, blazes!" somebody said. "Let's get it over with." 

A man in the back of the room spoke up. 


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"One thing we ain't discussed," he said dryly. "And that's how  we're gonna make ourselves visible again.

Boy, that's an important  point as far as I'm concerned." 

"You said it," declared another. "If we have to stay invisible, a  fine chance we've got to enjoy the proceeds of

this little scheme. I'm  beginning to get a firstclass idea of why nobody ever heard of a  cheerful ghost." 

Telegraph Edmunds laughed. 

"Would you feel any better," he demanded, "if you saw the apparatus  which will make you visible again?" 

"I sure would!" the man said. 

"The door to the right," Telegraph directed. "Walk down the steps  you will find, and open the door at the

bottom." 

The command was complied with, the amount of scuffling, jostling  and growled comments indicating that

most of the invisible men were  going to see the device. They descended to a large basement room. 

In the center of the room stood a complicated affair, consisting,  at a first glance, of highvoltage

transformers, many coils, a long  cylinder, and numerous electrical valves of the type used to generate

Röntgen and other rays. 

Telegraph Edmunds advanced. 

"It is simple," he said. "All of the operations are synchronized.  You simply throw the switch and put yourself

in that cylinder and stay  there until you are visible again." Telegraph raised his voice  slightly. "Isn't that right

chief? You made the jigger." 

A voice replied, "That is right. And now, the prisoners should be  finished." 

They went back. The first man in the room where the captives should  have been emitted a violent yell. 

There was no trace of the prisoners, all of whom had been tightly  bound and gagged. 

TELEGRAPH EDMUNDS, at a hissed suggestion from the mysterious chief  of the raiders, dashed forward,

shouting commands to the door guards.  He had not taken many steps when there cracked out the sound of a

loud  blow. Telegraph fell heavily. He was not out, however. 

"Watch it!" he bellowed. 

The invisible men spread out. One cried out as he was slugged, and  flailed about. He hit some one, friend or

foe he knew not, and was  struck back in return. Twenty seconds of that saw the room in an  uproar. 

Doc Savage circled warily, lashing out with his fists. He knew Monk  and Old Bonepicker were somewhere in

the room. Doc had freed them while  the visibility device was being inspected. P. Treve Easeman, the girl  and

Russel Wray were in a stout closet, the door of which they had  secured on the inside, if they had followed

instructions. 

A chair lifted from the floor, swung and cracked down on an  invisible head. The rungs splintered. Monk

bawled out wrathfully as  some one hit him a blow. 


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Then an invisible man came charging from the direction of the door. 

"The place is surrounded!" he squalled. "Cops! Soldiers! Sailors! A  million of 'em! They've got woven wire

up in the streets and on the  buildings!" 

The fighting in the room stopped as if by magic, ample proof that  the invisible legion had been mauling each

other. 

"They're wise to this place!" Telegraph Edmunds yelled. "We'd  better blow!" 

A man wailed, "If they've got the place surrounded, how are we  gonna get out?" 

"Easy," said Telegraph. "We took care of that." 

Barking orders, Telegraph Edmunds now backed down the stairs to the  room which held the visibility

apparatus. There was a door across the  chamber, and he opened it. A sloping tunnel was disclosed. 

"Go down," he directed. 

One of the invisible men barked, "Can't we take that jigger along?" 

"What jigger?" 

"The contraption to make us visible again." 

"Not a chance," Telegraph advised. 

"But can another one be made?" the man wanted to know. 

"Of course," Telegraph retorted. "Just like we'll make another  machine to cause men to become invisible,

when we get around to it.  Isn't that right?" 

"Correct," said the voice of the leader. "Now, waste no more time.  I will remain here until the last. Then,

before I leave, I will smash  this visibility device, in order that it may not fall into the hands of  this Doc

Savage." 

The men began scrambling into the tunnel, feeling with their hands  to keep from trampling on each other.

Telegraph Edmunds waited until  the last. 

"That's all, chief," he informed. 

"Go yourself," directed the leader. "I will follow." 

Telegraph Edmunds grunted noisily as he wedged his plump bulk into  the rather narrow tunnel. 

A moment later, a large pipe wrench lifted from a bench which held  tools in the corner. It floated through the

air toward the delicate  mechanism in the center of the floor, then lifted as if to strike. But  it never fell. 

There was a stifled gasp, then a blow, and the wrench fell to the  floor. 

"Glory be!" Monk snorted. "Doc, I figured you were waiting for him  to do something to show where he was." 


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THE bronze man said rapidly, "I will follow them alone. They will  expect their chief, and if they challenge

me, I will try to imitate his  voice." 

"Swell," Monk replied. "And I'm gonna fix this baby so that he'll  sleep for a while." 

There was a robust whack, as if a fist had collided soundly with a  jaw, as Monk made sure their prisoner

would remain unconscious. 

Doc Savage entered the tunnel. He was forced to turn sidewise to  pass his shoulders through, and this made

progress somewhat difficult,  since the floor sloped steeply. He became conscious of a faint rumbling  sound.

Then he realized the cause. 

He came out in an arched cavern as wide as a city street and which  stretched away an infinite distance in

either direction. It was the  tunnel of the newly completed subway. 

Telegraph Edmunds hailed Doc Savage sharply: "That you, chief?" 

Doc assumed the voice he had heard. 

"Let's get going," he said shortly. 

"O. K.," said Telegraph. "I've started the boys out to the east." 

Doc Savage got in the middle of the tracks and ran. Ahead, the  tunnel sloped downward sharply, and the

bronze man knew that the  decline meant that it was leading under the river. Some three quarters  of a mile

ahead, the tunnel came up again and there was a station exit  by which the invisible men no doubt intended to

depart. 

Doc stopped abruptly. The roaring noise he had heard was growing  louder. It was a train, a work train

possibly, coming from behind. 

"Careful!" he called suddenly. "There is not much room in the  tunnel to let that train pass." 

Telegraph Edmunds swore harshly, then grated, "We'll fix that!" 

Stacked beside the tracks, and arrayed neatly between the supports  between the two lines of rails, were

numerous pieces of metal equipment   tools not yet hauled away by the subway contractor, Telegraph

Edmunds  howled orders, and these tools were seized and thrown upon the rails. 

Doc Savage started to order a stop, but held the words back,  realizing they would betray his presence. 

"Run!" Telegraph howled when he decided enough objects littered the  track to guarantee derailing the train.

"Get down the tunnel far enough  to be out of danger. And keep going!" 

The invisible men began running away. 

Doc Savage did not follow, but raced back and began throwing the  litter off the track. He slammed metal bars

against the third rail that  ordinarily conducted the electric power, but nothing happened. Current  had not yet

been turned on, and the approaching train was either  motorized or carried its own batteries. 


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The roaring of the train increased. Doc was already moving faster  than he could recall ever having moved

before. But there was a great  quantity of stuff on the tracks. 

The train's headlight spouted whitely. The train did not slacken  speed, the motorman evidently failing at first

to distinguish the  crowbars and pipes which composed most of the array on the rails. Then  he slammed on the

brakes. 

A tremendous shrieking of wheels on rails filled the tunnel. Doc  Savage saw he could not clear the stuff away

in time, and gave it up.  He sprinted madly, reached the hole which led to the tunnel through  which the

invisible men had come, and dived inside. 

The train moaned past. The bronze man scrambled with wild haste. 

Came a great crashing and rending from the tunnel. 

WHAT happened was a brand of justice, if harsh. The motorman did  not quite pay with his life for not seeing

the obstruction in time, but  it was weeks before he left a hospital. The locomotive jumped the  rails, angled

sidewise, hit the row of supports between the rails and  knocked these over like straws until, because the posts

were anchored  more solidly at the bottom than at the top, the locomotive climbed up  on its rear trucks and

poked its snout out through the street,  overturning two motor cars and vastly exciting policemen in the cordon

about the vicinity. 

The following cars of the train were loaded with steel rails. They  smashed forward with irresistible force.

Squeezing past the locomotive,  they piled crosswise of the tunnel, and due to their  tremendous power,

rammed through the tunnel's retaining walls. 

They hit a water main. It was a main some four feet in diameter,  carrying high pressure, and when it burst, a

Niagara was unleashed in  the tunnel. The water spouted, flooded, and since there was nowhere  else for it to

go, it ran down the sloping tunnel toward the river,  rising more than waist deep. 

Telegraph Edmunds and his invisible men heard it coming. They cried  out in horror. It was doubtful if any

one heard their screams, for the  flood made a deafening noise. 

It was even doubted in some quarters that the invisible men  perished; but that doubt subsided in the course of

two or three weeks,  when the tunnel was finally pumped dry. The bodies, after being in the  water that long,

were not exactly invisible, but rather looked somewhat  like large oceany jellyfish. 

Doc Savage, with a good idea of what would be found after he looked  into the tunnel and saw the water

spouting from the main, retreated to  the basement. 

Chapter 19. DEATH DEVICE

REACHING the subterranean room which held the apparatus for  bringing back visibility, Doc Savage

discovered the homely Monk as  large as life and perfectly visible. 

Monk, it appeared, had put himself through the machine. He was  drawing on a pair of trousers. 

"I found these in a closet," he advised, then grinned widely. "I  hereby resign from the spook legion. I don't

care for the life." 


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P. Treve Easeman and Old Bonepicker, it developed, had already been  through the apparatus, and had donned

clothing. Doc Savage, studying  the pair, saw that Old Bonepicker was indeed the plump, joviallooking

member of the pair, in spite of his aged voice. 

Doc Savage himself got into the machine. Monk threw the master  switch. The sensation of what happened

was somewhat blurred to the  bronze man, but he was conscious of much blue light and a tingling  which

suffused his whole body, at times, almost attaining the violence  of a pain. Then he began to see his own

contour. 

When he left the apparatus, he was normal again, although feeling  rather as if he had just experienced a

violent chill which had left  some fever. 

He found a pair of trousers in the pile which would serve, although  they terminated well above his ankles. 

Ada Easeman and Russel Wray appeared. They looked shaken, but  showed no signs of serious damage. 

Ham followed them a moment later. 

"Cops are outside!" he rapped. "I told them not to come in for a  while. Looks like they're convinced now that

you are not mixed up with  the invisible legion." 

Then he retreated. 

Monk said loudly, "And now I'm gonna put the guy who invented these  traps through his own mill, and see

what he looks like." 

The homely chemist felt about on thefloor, located the unconscious  chief of the invisible men, and with

some grunting and straining, got  the fellow into the apparatus. He stepped back and threw the switch.

Instantly, there was a great hissing and crackling and a play of  unearthly blue haze, interspersed with regular

stabs of orange and  green. 

In uncanny fashion, a human figure took shape before their eyes.  The master plotter who had perfected the

invisibility device! At first,  his features were not distinguishable. Then big ears, a tremendous nose  and a

small mouth took form. 

"Marikan!" the dapper Ham exploded, coming in from the front of the  house, where he had been scouting to

make sure no invisible men  remained. 

Monk gulped, "But they killed Marikan!" 

"Pretended to kill him, it would seem," Ham corrected. "Why  he  took us out to that skunk farm knowing he

was leading us into a trap!  He arranged the fake killing just so we wouldn't suspect him on the  long chance

that we should escape!" 

Monk and Ham fell silent, for Marikan was stirring, evidently  having been revived by the process of being

made visible again. He  opened his eyes. Then he lunged upright and tried to leap out of the  device. 

Results were disastrous. Marikan must have been dazed still, not  realizing exactly where he was. He crashed

into a glass tube which was  making the blue haze, and it broke explosively. Hot electric sparks  showered.

Marikan screamed, fell backward. His body crashed into  highfrequency current conductors and mashed

them together, and there  were more ripping sparks and showering glass. 


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Doc Savage dived for the switch. But it had happened too quickly. A  cloud of smoke and the tang of ozone

were rising from the apparatus.  Doc turned the current off and ran over, along with Monk and the  others. 

Monk surveyed the wreckage, the lifeless body of Marikan, and shook  his small head slowly. 

"That guy sure took all of his secrets with him," he said. 

MONK'S words proved a true prediction, for in the ensuing weeks,  Doc Savage conducted numerous

experiments to ascertain the secret of  invisibility, but with results which were scarcely phenomenal. Marikan,

he concluded, had worked along some line as yet entirely unfamiliar to  modern scientists. 

"The mystery will have to die with Marikan," the bronze man stated.  "How he did it is beyond my

knowledge." 

This statement was, in a sense, hardly the truth, because Doc  Savage, in the course of his investigation, did

come upon certain clues  which told along what lines Marikan had experimented to accomplish his  result.

These clues, Doc believed, could be developed by himself to  accomplish the same thing that Marikan had

succeeded in attaining. 

But he did not proceed. The process was complex. Ordinary  scientists would not stumble on it, perhaps for

centuries. And, judging  from what had already happened, it was a thing better left alone. 

There were other matters to occupy the bronze man's attention. In  Marikan's discarded clothes they found a

listing of the spots where the  loot of the invisible men had been cached, and, thanks to that list,  practically all

was recovered.  There was, also, the matter of The  Secret In The Sky, which was to be the next menace that

confronted Doc  Savage and his aides. The Secret In The Sky was something different,  something difficult for

men to comprehend; and because men, since time  immemorial, have feared what they cannot understand, it

brought terror.  A man was seized in San Francisco at noon. His dead body was found in  New York City

exactly three hours later. And because the dead man was a  friend, Doc Savage took a hand  and found

himself in the most  concentrated mêlée of terror, death and mystery which he had ever  confronted. 

There was also a matter that occupied the homely Monk's attention  in the days immediately following the

smashing of the menace of the  invisible legion. The matter was pretty Ada Easeman. Monk pursued her

industriously. It was something of a shock to him when, two days later,  she announced her engagement to

Russel Wray. 

Monk told Habeas Corpus confidentially of the only explanation he  could see. 

"I was handicapped by being a spook for a while," he grumbled. "Who  ever heard of a spook with a lady

friend?" 

THE END 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. THE SPOOK LEGION, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE FIRST SPOOK, page = 4

   5. Chapter 2. NUT?, page = 9

   6. Chapter 3. NO CHANCES, page = 17

   7. Chapter 4. THE SNATCHING GHOST, page = 22

   8. Chapter 5. GIRL IN GREEN, page = 28

   9. Chapter 6. PHANTOMS, page = 35

   10. Chapter 7. THE SPOOK AT THE AIRPORT, page = 40

   11. Chapter 8. TERROR AMONG ERMINES, page = 51

   12. Chapter 9. MARIKAN, page = 54

   13. Chapter 10. INVISIBLE RAIDERS, page = 62

   14. Chapter 11. GHOST PRINTS, page = 67

   15. Chapter 12. FUR FARM, page = 70

   16. Chapter 13. ALCHEMY, page = 75

   17. Chapter 14. SPOOK WAR, page = 81

   18. Chapter 15. THE LIFE OF A GHOST, page = 86

   19. Chapter 16. THE SPOOK DETECTOR, page = 92

   20. Chapter 17. SEIZURE, page = 95

   21. Chapter 18. UNMAKER OF SPOOKS, page = 100

   22. Chapter 19. DEATH DEVICE, page = 106