Title:   THE TALKING DEVIL

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Author:   A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

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THE TALKING DEVIL

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson



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Table of Contents

THE TALKING DEVIL .....................................................................................................................................1

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

Chapter 1. THE DEVIL AND COMPANY............................................................................................1

Chapter II. THE GREAT MISTAKE......................................................................................................7

Chapter III. A PLAN ROLLING ...........................................................................................................11

Chapter IV. THE INDIGNANT MAN..................................................................................................13

Chapter V. MURDER AND KANSAS CITY .......................................................................................18

Chapter VI. DEATH IN THE SKY.......................................................................................................22

Chapter VII. MIDWEST TRAIL ...........................................................................................................27

Chapter VIII. MAN LOST .....................................................................................................................31

Chapter IX. RIVER FIGHT ...................................................................................................................39

Chapter X. THE DEMENTED TRAIL.................................................................................................44

Chapter XI. THE DEVIL'S WORK .......................................................................................................51

Chapter XII. MANTHEFT..................................................................................................................55

Chapter XIII. KILL ORDER.................................................................................................................63

Chapter XIV. KING AND JOKER ........................................................................................................68

Chapter XV. SATAN'S RANCH ...........................................................................................................74

Chapter XVI. TRUTH AND VARNISH ...............................................................................................79


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THE TALKING DEVIL

A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson

Chapter 1. THE DEVIL AND COMPANY 

Chapter II. THE GREAT MISTAKE 

Chapter III. A PLAN ROLLING 

Chapter IV. THE INDIGNANT MAN 

Chapter V. MURDER AND KANSAS CITY 

Chapter VI. DEATH IN THE SKY 

Chapter VII. MIDWEST TRAIL 

Chapter VIII. MAN LOST 

Chapter IX. RIVER FIGHT 

Chapter X. THE DEMENTED TRAIL 

Chapter XI. THE DEVIL'S WORK 

Chapter XII. MANTHEFT 

Chapter XIII. KILL ORDER 

Chapter XIV. KING AND JOKER 

Chapter XV. SATAN'S RANCH 

Chapter XVI. TRUTH AND VARNISH  

Chapter 1. THE DEVIL AND COMPANY

RENNY Renwick, the engineer, and Long Tom Roberts, the electrical  expert, were on hand to meet Doc

Savage when he brought his plane down  on the Hudson River. Doc taxied the craft, managing it expertly on

the  windwhipped river surface, into the big hangar which was disguised as  a warehouse on the river front,

almost in the shadow of New York's  midtown skyscrapers. Renny and Long Tom were a little breathless as

they met Doc Savage. 

"It's a devil," said Renny. 

"It talks," said Long Tom. 

"A little statuette of a satan, or a devil, not much more than a  foot high," Renny said. "It is made out of

bronze or brass or some  similar metal." 

"It has a deep voice," Long Tom said. 

"But only one man hears it talk." 

"One man. Nobody else." 

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"His name is Joseph. Sam Joseph." 

"The man who hears it, we mean," Long Tom explained. 

Doc Savage listened to them patiently. Patience was one of Doc  Savage's accomplishments, being one of the

things that had been  hammered into him as a part of the strange training which he had  received in his youth 

when, at diaper age, he had been placed in the  hands of scientists to be subjected, over a course of almost

twenty  years, to an intensive program which was intended to fit him for one  specific and rather strange

career. Unlike many persons given an  arbitrary training before they were old enough to know what it was all

about, or speak for themselves, he had elected to follow the career for  which he had been trained. It was an

unusual career. It consisted,  literally, of making other people's business his own. Or at least their  troubles. 

For some time now, Doc Savage had been taking it on himself to  right wrongs and punish evildoers, traveling

to the far corners of the  earth to do so. He had five associates who worked with him. Renny  Renwick and

Long Tom Roberts were two members of this group of five. 

"A devil," Doc Savage said, getting it straight. "And it talks. But  only one man can hear it.,' 

"That's right," Long Tom said. "Sam Joseph." 

"There are more details," Renny said. 

"But they won't make it sound less silly," Long Tom declared. Renny  took Doc's arm. "Come on," he said.

"We will take you to talk to  Montague Ogden." 

"Who is Montague Ogden?" 

"He hasn't any connection at all with the devil, or so he claims,"  said Renny Renwick. "But he is the

employer of Sam Joseph, the man who  has been hearing the devil speak." 

THE impressive Ogden building was new, just barely prewar, and the  lobby was all black and gold and

apparently designed by an architect  who had fallen on his head when small. But it was utterly expensive.  The

elevators were gold and black and also utterly expensive, and the  elevator operators were girls with shapes

that also looked expensive. 

"I would like to have the money it cost to think about building  this place," said Renny Renwick, who was an

engineer and knew what it  had cost. 

"I would rather have the elevator operators," said Monk Mayfair.  Monk was a remarkably homely fellow

with a remarkable eye for a  wellturned ankle. 

The elevator let them out in a corridor which was ankledeep in  rich carpet. Office building halls are

ordinarily not even carpeted. 

"What kind of a place is this?" remarked Monk. 

"Wait," said Renny Renwick, "until you see the master of the  establishment." 

They walked into a reception room that might have been lifted from  a spectacular motion picture. The carpet

was even deeper, the colors  even richer, the furniture more extreme. The blonde at the desk looked  as if she

had been manufactured with a magazine cover in mind. 


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"Mr. Ogden," she told them, bells in her voice, "is expecting you. 

Then they walked into a log cabin. Or so it would have seemed, had  not the big glass windows offered views

of some of the financial  district's more impressive buildings. Everything was rustic, extremely  rustic, even to

the logs blazing in the fieldstone fireplace and the  two large dogs lying on the hearth. The dogs lifted their

heads and  barked. 

"I am Montague Ogden," the man behind the desk said. He sounded as  if he was accustomed to the name

meaning something. 

He was smooth. That was the first impression you got of him. As  smooth as a polished rock. He was

fortyfive or fifty years old,  wellpreserved, and he was dressed in country tweeds and moccasins, so  that he

blended with his logcabin inner office. 

The general effect of Montague Ogden was a little ridiculous.  Unless, of course, you were impressed by the

obvious evidences of  money. 

There were conversational preliminaries, introductions mostly. Then  Montague Ogden got around to making

what he evidently intended to be  the outstanding statement of the conference. 

"I am a very wealthy man," he said. 

DOC Savage, with just a trace of the general feeling of distaste  that the overly flamboyant office building,

this office suite and the  spectacle effect of the man himself had aroused, said, "At the moment  we are more

interested in a man named Sam Joseph, who is said to be  hearing a small statue of the devil speak aloud to

him." 

"Exactly," said Montague Ogden. "Exactly." 

"I understand you can supply details." 

"Exactly,"said Montague Ogden. "I am a very wealthy man, and I want  nothing spared to straighten out poor

Sam. Poor Sam is my office  manager, my trusted employee. He is even, I may say, more than that. He  is the

real working head, the manager, of my rather wide enterprises. I  owe Sam a great deal. Sam is paid an

excellent salary, it is true, but  his value to me extends far beyond that. Sam is. . . is. . . " He  groped for words,

found them. "Sam is like a part of my own heart," he  finished. 

Doc Savage asked quietly, "What do you mean by straightening out  poor Sam?" 

Montague Ogden blinked. He had blue eyes, very paleblue eyes. 

"Why, find out his trouble," he said. 

"Just what has happened?" Doc Savage asked patiently. 

Ogden spread his hands with the palms up. "Poor Sam has this statue  of a devil  " 

"Where did he get it?" 

"I gave it to him," Montague Ogden said. "I frankly admit that." 


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"Where did you get the statue?" Doc asked. 

"From a Chinaman," Ogden explained. "From an old Chinaman named Chi  Sui. Poor Chi Sui was a very

elderly Oriental who for a long time had  operated a shop in Mott Street dealing in knickknacks, the trash that

tourists buy in Chinatown. But old Chi Sui wanted to close up his  business and go to China to help Chiang

against the Japanese, and he  had very little money, but he did have this statue, which was  realistic. I bought it

from Chi Sui  in spite of the rather  hairlifting story he told me about it." 

Doc said, "So the former owner of the devil Statue had a story to  tell about it?" 

"Yes." 

"What was the nature of the story?" 

Montague Ogden blinked, smiled sheepishly, said, "A ridiculous  story, of course. One in which I placed no

stock. Not a bit of belief,  not for a minute." 

"Suppose you tell it to us, anyway," Doc invited. 

Ogden nodded. "It was a rather simple story. It seems that this  Chinese statue was molded by Co Suan, a

friend of the original Buddha,  and that the spirit of. Buddha captured a portion of the spirit of the  King of

Evil, and imprisoned it in this statuette. That was to give the  little statue life, because Co Suan, the sculptor,

was a great friend  of Buddha, and the AllMighty One wished to give his friend fame and  fortune deserving

of such a kind and goodly fellow. Therefore Buddha  imprisoned the spirit of the devil in the statue in order to

give the  little thing of brass a life and realism which no other sculptor could  ever equal." 

"That is all of the story?" 

"Yes. It's ridiculous, of course." Montague Ogden smiled at them.  "I want you to understand, of course, that I

do not credit for a minute  the belief that the statue is actually talking to poor Sam Joseph." 

"You have not heard the statue speak?" Doc asked. 

"No." 

"Anyone but Sam Joseph heard it?" 

"No." 

"What else do you know?" Doc Savage asked. 

"Nothing. Nothing more." 

"In that case," Doc Savage said, "we had better see Sam Joseph." 

THEY surrounded Sam Joseph where he lay on a bed, a great  chromiumandgreen bed, in the penthouse on

top of the flamboyant Ogden  building. The decorating theme of the penthouse was chromium and other

colors, broken up with large and vital flowers of bright coloration.  The penthouse was not in quite as bad

taste as the rest of the  building. 

"My personal apartment," said Montague Ogden of the penthouse  layout. "I had poor Sam brought here." 


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Sam Joseph was obviously not himself. He was a man large enough to  make quite a hump on the bed, under

the silken covers. He had gray  hair, a not inconsiderable shock of it, and an angelic, peaceful,  completely

honestlooking face. 

Sam Joseph had the kind of a face you would expect a manangel to  have. It was so entirely benign and

innocent. 

"Good evening, gentlemen," he said. "Or, rather, good afternoon. It  is afternoon, isn't it?" 

"Don't you know whether or not it is afternoon?" Doc Savage asked. 

Sam Joseph seemed somewhat confused. "I guess so," he said. "That  is, I was watching the snow, and the

bluebirds singing in the snow. It  only snows in the afternoon, does it not, or is it only on Wednesday,  the first

of June?" 

Doc Savage asked Montague Ogden, "How long has he been talking like  that?" 

"Gracious, I never heard him speak like that before," Montague  Ogden said. "I really haven't." 

"His conversation hitherto has been rational?" 

"Oh, yes. It really has." 

Sam Joseph said, "I came out of the hill and it was very dark, but  there was the fish in the sand, with the ice

all around it. We sat down  there, the fish and I, and we had fine steaks and caviar, but the fish  wouldn't eat

the caviar because he was not a cannibal, he told me. When  the fish said he was not a cannibal he had a very

deep voice." 

Monk Mayfair, Doc Savage's assistant, looked at Doc thoughtfully.  Monk put the end of a forefinger against

his own right temple and made  a motion as if he was winding up something. 

"Like the things you pull corks with," Monk said. 

Doc Savage studied Sam Joseph for a while. The man was smiling, but  it was a vacantly empty smile, a smile

without intelligence or even  much feeling behind it. 

Doc turned back to Montague Ogden again. 

"The devil statue," Doc said. "Where is it?" 

Montague Ogden seemed startled. "Oh, the devil. It is around  somewhere, I suppose." 

"Get it." 

"But now you can see that poor Sam Joseph is  " 

"The devil," Doc said. "The devil that talked. We want to see it.', 

Montague Ogden now seemed distressed, and also his brow wrinkled as  if he was trying to think where the

statue was, and he scratched his  head. 


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"Oh, how silly of me," he said. "How really silly. Of course, I  remember now. In my den. I'll get it. I placed

the statue in my den and  I will get it now." 

He turned away. 

Doc said, "Monk, go with him." 

"Me?" Monk was surprised. 

"Yes, you," Doc said. 

"But  " 

Monk stopped, and turned and followed Montague Ogden. Monk had  remembered that when you argued with

Doc you usually found yourself  exceedingly in the wrong. 

THEY walked down corridors, Monk and Montague Ogden. And Ogden  examined Monk out of the corner of

his eye, as if amazed at Monk's  homeliness, and amused by it. 

Monk's homeliness had amazed and amused many people, but he was not  ashamed of it. There was a

pleasantness about his homeliness and a  fascination. Monk would not have to be seen in a very thick fog to be

mistaken for something just out of the ape house in the zoo. His arms  were as long as his legs, and he was

coated with reddish hair that was  close cousin to rusted shingle nails. Monk was even rather pleased with  his

clockstopping looks because he had found that they exerted a  hypnotic power over girls, and the prettier the

girl, the greater the  hypnotic capacity. 

Montague Ogden opened a door, said, "This is my den, Mr. Mayfair." 

The den was inhabited by the stuffed heads of animals, at least  half a hundred of them, which hung on the

walls and leered, stared,  snarled, or showed gapfanged jaws at anyone in the den. 

There was a man already in the den. 

"Aren't you afraid of staying in here?" Monk asked the man. He was  a timidlooking young man, quite pale

and lean and soft. The very  picture of a timid soul. 

"Beg pardon?" the man said. He sounded frightened, nervous,  embarrassed. 

"This is Butch," said Montague Ogden. 

"Butch, eh?" Monk said, and tried not to grin at the timid soul.  Montague Ogden remarked, "Butch, we have

come after the devil statue." 

"Oh," Butch said. He looked scared. "Oh! I haven't  that is   well, it's over there, but  " 

"Never mind," Montague Ogden told him. "We'll take it with us. You  can go ahead with your work, Butch." 

Montague Ogden picked up the devil statue. 

The statue was about what Monk expected to see, being not much over  a foot high, rather fat, and made of

brass that was tarnished, or  bronze, wearing some sort of ceremonial robe, and holding a sword in  one hand.


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This devil had a pronounced Chinese cast on his evil little  face. 

"I'll carry it," Monk said. 

"But  " 

"I'll carry it," Monk repeated. 

Montague Ogden smiled and his, "Very well, if you wish," was the  soul of politeness. 

They left the den and Monk was glad to get out of sight of all the  leering, staring or snarling stuffed animals.

He wondered how Butch  managed to stand it in there with all those manhungrylooking  trophies, and he

wondered if that was what was making Butch look  frightened. 

"Who's Butch?" Monk asked. "What's he do, I mean?" 

"His work?" 

"Yes." 

"Butch is my biggame hunting guide and my jujitsu instructor,"  Montague Ogden explained. "He also

teaches me wrestling and the art of  knifethrowing, in which I am interested as a hobby." 

Monk laughed. He thought he was being kidded. 

They went down a hall that was majestic in a futuristic modern  fashion, with high walls and great pictures in

gaunt plain frames, and  lighting that was so subdued that it was difficult to tell from where  it came. 

Monk walked along thinking of the timid soul who was named Butch,  and how funny it was that Ogden had

jokingly said Butch was his hunting  guide and instructor in the more robust manly arts. Ordinarily that  would

not have been funny, but after you had seen, Butch, it was quite  humorous. 

"We can go through this way," Montague Ogden said. "It is shorter." 

He turned to the left and opened a door and went through it. 

Monk was following behind Ogden and watching Ogden's back when  something hit Monk's head. It hit hard,

whatever it was, and there was  only a slight sound, a slight grinding, just before the impact landed.  It took

Monk on top of the head, slightly to the righthand side, so  that there was the grisly sensation of the blow

sliding down toward the  right ear and taking off the whole side of his head as it went. In the  middle of this

awful feeling it got very black and remained that way. 

Chapter II. THE GREAT MISTAKE

MONK accomplished the feat of opening his eyes, but did it with  some difficulty, after which he stared at

Montague Ogden. Monk had the  feeling that some time had passed, and did not dare move his body for  fear

his head would fall off it. There was a gouging pain in the small  of his back. 

Soon his ears recovered their ability to hear. 


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"That nasty picture!" Montague Ogden was saying. "Oh, that nasty  picture! I told the interior decorator when

he hung it over the door  that something like this would happen! I told him it would be just my  luck to have

the picture fall down and brain somebody sometime." 

Monk tried out his voice with a groan and found his vocal chords  satisfactory. "I'm brained, all right," he said. 

"Oh!" gasped Ogden. "He's conscious! He has recovered!" 

Monk felt a hell of a long way from complete recovery and said so.  "What hit me?" he demanded. 

"A picture hanging over the door fell down as you went through,"  explained Montague Ogden. "It was one of

those freak accidents." 

Monk grimaced at Ogden. 

"It's a good thing you were walking ahead of me when it happened,"  Monk said. "Or I would have thought

you beaned me. 

Montague Ogden laughed deprecatingly. Doc Savage, Renny Renwick and  Long Tom Roberts were standing

around Monk, looking relieved that he  had recovered. Monk wondered if he had recovered, or if there was

going  to be complications. 

The gouging pain in the small of his back was awful. He  investigated and found it to be the devil statuette. 

"I must have fallen on the thing," Monk complained. "I wonder how  many ribs it broke." 

"That the devil statue which speaks?" Doc Savage asked. 

"That's it," Monk said. 

Montague Ogden said uncomfortably, "Of course, you gentlemen do not  for a minute believe that the statue

can speak?" 

Doc Savage made no comment. He suggested that Renny Renwick find  the building superintendent, and

obtain a hacksaw and a cold chisel and  hammer, in order that they might perform a dissection on the brass

devil. 

Fifteen minutes later they had the devil lying in half a dozen  pieces on a table, and there was obviously

nothing inside it but brass. 

"That is that," Doc admitted. "The thing hardly seemed to have a  conversational nature." 

"Of course you knew it hadn't," Montague Ogden said. Monk Mayfair  explained to Ogden, "'When you've

been in the kind of a business we're  in for a while, you get so you don't go around taking things at face

value." 

Doc Savage said, "We will examine Sam Joseph now." The bronze man  spent nearly an hour with Sam

Joseph, doing the things a doctor does. 

"According to all indications," Doc said, "the man has an advanced  cerebral fibroma." 


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The bronze man then asked Monk to telephone the hospital and  arrange for reception of the patient. 

Doc told Montague Ogden, "I am going to call in other brain  specialists for consultation. Do you have any

particular doctors you  would like to have pass an opinion?" 

Ogden stared. 

"I thought you were supposed to be the world's leading brain  surgeon," he said. 

Doc passed up the compliment, explained, "In a matter as serious as  this we prefer to have a consensus of

opinion." 

Montague Ogden nodded. He seemed to be surprised, but to consider  the matter reasonable now that he

thought of it. 

"Could I bring in Dr. Nedden?" he asked. "He is my private  surgeon." 

Doc Savage nodded. He had not heard of Dr. Nedden, but that did not  mean the man could not be good. 

"Certainly," the bronze man said. "Call Dr. Nedden." They  transferred Sam Joseph to the hospital, a small but

wonderfully  equipped hospital uptown, which specialized in brain cases, and which  was largely supported by

Doc Savage. He did most of his work there. Doc  did not, as a matter of fact, do a great deal of surgery for

surgery's  sake, his specialty being stubborn  and unusual cases upon which he  could apply new and

experimental technique. 

Dr. Nedden appeared. He was a stocky man, face reddened by the  outdoors sun, clothes immaculate, who

seemed to know what he was doing. 

"I have examined the patient previously," he explained. "The  unusual cerebropsychosis aroused my interest,

and I was fairly sure it  was cerebral fibroma. I made a thorough examination with a cerebroscope  and found

nothing to support any other diagnosis." 

Doc Savage called in two more specialists, and their diagnosis was  the same. 

"Cerebral fibroma." 

Monk asked, "'What the heck's a cerebral fibroma, anyway?" 

"A brain tumor. A fibrous type. That makes it very difficult to  remove," Doc Savage explained. 

"'Why don't doctors use words you can understand?" Monk wanted to  know. 

"For the same reason that chemists do not use small ones," Doc told  him. 

Monk had to grin at that. There was nothing more incomprehensible  to a layman than a chemical formula,

even when you simplified it and  used the symbols. But if you took one of those chemicals and tried to  explain

what it was by using small words, it would run into an  afternoon's work. 

Doc Savage found Montague Ogden. 

"Your office manager, Sam Joseph, has a brain tumor," Doc told  Ogden. "An operation is the only answer." 


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"He will not die?" 

"There is no such thing as a minor or a completely safe operation,"  Doc told him frankly. "But he should pull

through." 

"Oh, I want him to. Sam means a lot to me. He has always  practically run everything for me." 

Doc said, "Dr. C. B. Sticken would be a good man to do the  surgery." 

"Yes, I  " Ogden's eyes flew wide. "What did you say?" 

"I recommend C. B. Sticken for the surgery." 

Montague Ogden looked as if he was going to faint. 

"But you must do it!" he gasped. 

Doc Savage explained patiently, "This is not a sufficiently unusual  or difficult case to warrant my doing the

surgery, and, furthermore,  Dr. Sticken is fully qualified." 

Montague Ogden seemed horrified at the idea. 

"I insist on you doing it!" he cried. "Why, I wouldn't think of  anyone else! I'll pay any fee." 

"It just happens," Doc Savage said, "that I do not work for a fee." 

"What? Oh, yes, I remember. You get your funds from some unknown  source. Well, then, I'll donate any sum

you name to any organization  you wish if you will do the operation." * 

"That will not be necessary. Dr. Sticken is capable  " 

"I'll donate a hundred thousand dollars," said Montague Ogden, "if  you will do this operation." 

Doc Savage studied the man. "That is not necessary." 

"I mean it. A hundred thousand, Mr. Savage. To any charity, or army  or navy relief group you care to name."

The man was so earnest he was  pale. 

"All right," Doc Savage said finally. 

DOC Savage did the operation in the special amphitheater pit at the  brain clinic. It was a cupshaped arena

surrounded by the most  transparent type of glass. Beyond the glass were seats for witnessing  surgeons. The

lighting was fluorescent and brilliant. 

As was always the case when Doc Savage was operating, the  amphitheater was crowded. There were very

few students among the  witnesses, the majority being brain surgeons of established name and  reputation,

some of them men who had hurriedly caught airplanes and  flown halfway across the continent in order to

watch a master at work. 

Doc Savage made the scalp incision, laid back the scalp, then used  a special electrical bone knife of his own

invention, a device which  would cut without shock, having the property of rendering bone and  nerve more


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insensible to shock in the area near the cutting head. 

The operation progressed with brilliance up to the point where Doc  reached the spot where the tumor should

be. 

There was no tumor. 

The thing was so astounding that Doc was stunned. He stood there  rigid and speechless, then after a few

moments made the small trilling  sound which was his unconscious habit in moments of intense mental  stress.

The trilling was low, exotic, might have been the product of an  eerie wayward breeze in a naked forest. It had

a ventriloqual quality,  seeming to come from everywhere rather than any definite spot in the  operating room. 

There was certainly no tumor, either a fibroma or otherwise. There  was only one thing Doc could say, and he

said it. "I have made a  mistake," he said. 

  * Doc Savage's mysterious source of fabulous  wealth is located in a remote lost

valley in Central America, an  enormous golden treasure guarded over by a clan of descendants of  ancient

Maya.   

Chapter III. A PLAN ROLLING

DR. NEDDEN, the man who had been introduced into the case as  Montague Ogden's private doctor, was one

of the spectators in the arena  above the operating pit. 

He got out of there in a hurry. 

He found a cab. "Across town," he ordered. "And hurry!" 

Dr. Nedden leaned back in the cab. He seemed to have been holding  himself in, and now he relaxed. As men

sometimes do after they have  been under terrific strain and try to relax, he started going to  pieces. 

He trembled and twitched. He pounded his knees wildly with his  fists. 

"Hurry, you fool!" he screamed at the driver. 

He got out at an ordinarylooking brick apartment house west of  Central Park and stumbled inside. He was

so weak he had to hold to the  hand rail in the elevator while riding up. 

in the sixteenthfloor hall a man met him. The man who met him was  the timidlooking soul called Butch. 

"Goodness, doctor," Butch said. "What is wrong?" 

"Nothing's wrong," said Dr. Nedden. "I'm just having a nervous  reaction, that's all. I'll be all right as soon as I

can take a  sedative." 

Butch nodded. "Here," he said. He handed Dr. Nedden a bundle. "Put  these on." Butch had an identical

bundle. "We can put them on in the  inner reception room," he added. 

They went to a door. 


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A legend on the door, in discreet lettering, said: 

DR. MORGAN  PRIVATE HOSPITAL 

They tried the door. It was locked. 

"One of the others in there masking," Butch said. "Let's try  another room." 

There were half a dozen doors in the hall, all bearing the same  legend. They found one which was unlocked

and it admitted them to a  bare room fitted with two white chairs, a white desk, a stool behind  the desk, and a

telephone on the desk itself. 

Dr. Nedden and Butch unwrapped their bundles, which proved to hold  ordinary white surgical robes, surgical

hoods, and the gauze antiseptic  masks which operatingroom personnel wear. 

When they had donned these their identities were thoroughly  concealed. 

Dr. Nedden led the way into another and much larger room after  unlocking the hall door of the room where

they had dressed. 

There were seven men already seated in the room. All were enveloped  in the surgical robes and masks. 

Dr. Nedden was still shaking. Butch had had to tie the strings of  Nedden's robe. 

Nedden hurried to a cabinet containing medicines, got out a few  pills out of a bottle, and swallowed them

with water. 

The other masked men watched him intently. 

Dr. Nedden faced them. 

"Gentlemen," he said. "It worked. Doc Savage is trapped." 

DR. NEDDEN then sat down and explained, "I am suffering from  nervous shock. The Strain has been very

great on me, gentlemen. If you  will wait a few minutes, please." 

They waited patiently. Judging from the eyes visible above the  surgical masks, all of them were vastly

relieved. Even elated. 

The sedative took effect on Dr. Nedden. His agitation subsided and  he arose and drank more water. He added

a hooker of whiskey. 

He faced the men. 

"It was an incredibly difficult and ticklish business," he said.  "Doc Savage is unquestionably the world's

greatest general surgeon, and  probably the greatest brain surgeon. To pull this, we had to deceive  him at his

own business. 

"Fortunately, mental difficulties are the most uncertain to  diagnose," continued Dr. Nedden. "By the use of

drugs, largely types of  barbiturates in overdoses, I was able to produce fake mental symptoms  in Sam Joseph.

A number of very cunning devices were resorted to in  order to deceive Doc Savage, but I will not take up


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your time  describing them, and you would not understand them anyway, not being  doctors yourselves." 

A man interrupted, "What about the devilstatue mixup?" 

Dr. Nedden shrugged. 

"We had a narrow escape there," he said. "A devil statue containing  a small loudspeaker and radio had been

used to fool Sam Joseph into  thinking the little statue was talking to him. Through an oversight,  this statue

was still in Montague Ogden's den when Doc Savage wished to  see it." 

"I heard," said the other, "that you had to knock out one of Doc  Savage's men, that fellow they call Monk,

and swap a harmless statue  for the trick one." 

"We did that," admitted Dr. Nedden. "We pulled it without a hitch." 

Butch said, "I pulled it. I popped him one on the head. Then Ogden  made him think a picture had fallen off

the wall just as he was going  under it, and conked him." 

"That was a goofy explanation to give him." 

"Its goofiness made it good," Butch declared. 

They seemed satisfied. 

One said, "That fixes everything so we can go ahead with the next  step of the plan." 

"Not everything," reminded Dr. Nedden. "There is still the Harrison  matter." 

A man growled, "I'd call it the Duster Jones matter." 

Butch spoke up smugly. 

"That will be taken care of," he said. "The thing to do is let this  operation have its repercussions." 

"Savage may think there is something strange about it." 

"It's too late now, if he does." 

"All right, but murder isn't something to make mistakes," one of  the men said. 

Chapter IV. THE INDIGNANT MAN

IT was a bright crisp morning, the sunlight crisp out of an utterly  clear sky, and the air a thing like wine

which you noticed in a way  that you do not ordinarily notice air, when Ham Brooks came into Doc  Savage's

offices in a midtown skyscraper. 

Ham looked concerned. Ham was another Doc Savage assistant, another  member of the group of five. He was

a man of medium height with good  shoulders and a thin waist, and clothing which had made him notable as

one of the country's bestdressed men. He was the law expert of the  group. 


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"Doc," Ham said, "I'm worried about something." 

"Yes?" 

"You know that operation on Sam Joseph?" 

"What about it?" 

"The news is all over town, in the surgical profession, that you  pulled a bloomer. You operated on a man who

did not have the slightest  trace of what you were operating for." 

Doc Savage was not worried. "Just gossip within the profession," he  said. "Maybe it is not very nice of us,

but it is a very human trait to  get a kick out of seeing a big shot make a mistake. We all make them.  It just

goes to prove he is human, and that we are human to talk about  it." 

Ham shook his head. "I know. I discounted it at first, thinking it  was that kind of talk. But it's more." 

"What more?" 

"There is some ugly talk about malpractice." 

"That is ridiculous  " 

"The definition of malpractice," Ham said, "is wrong or injurious  treatment. At least that's the way the

medical dictionaries give it." 

"You need not have gone to the bother of looking it up," Doc told  him. "This is just gossip. I have it coming

to me because I did make a  mistake." 

"All right," Ham said. "I just wanted to mention it and tell you  that, legally, no one can hang anything on

you." 

Doc Savage smiled. "That is fine, Ham. But you are making a  mountain out of a molehill." 

"I hope so," Ham said. "But I don't like the way this malpractice  talk is going around through the profession.

It looks as if someone  might be spreading it." 

MR. MONTAGUE Ogden was more blunt about it. He came into Doc  Savage's headquarters with his jaw out

and his hands made into fists,  and he was accompanied by two gentlemen who carried brief cases and  looked

like bulldogs. 

"Mr. Savage," Ogden said, "I am not at all satisfied with the thing  you did to poor Sam Joseph." 

"Just what do you mean, Ogden?" Doc Savage asked. 

"Why did you perform that brain operation on Sam Joseph?" 

"For the same reason that you operate for an appendix," Doc said.  "It seemed to be the thing to do. The man's

symptoms indicated brain  tumor." 

"So you said." 


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The most outstanding of Doc Savage's features was probably his  unusual eyes, like pools of flake gold always

stirred by tiny winds.  These took on a rather cold light now. 

"You will recall," he said, "that Dr. Nedden and two other brain  specialists agreed with me on the diagnosis." 

Montague Ogden drew himself up. 

"They have admitted," he snapped, "that they took your word for it.  As a matter of truth they were so

overawed by yourahreputation that  they did not wish to disagree with you." 

Doc decided this was rather unprofessional behavior on the part of  the three doctors, but he made no

comment on that, saying instead: 

"I am sorry it happened," he said. "There is no denying I made a  mistake." 

"Sorry," said Ogden, "isn't enough." 

"What do you mean?" 

"I demand," snapped Ogden, "that you make a cash settlement of five  hundred thousand dollars on Sam

Joseph by way of reimbursing him for  the peril to which you subjected his life. I also demand that you

publish a halfpage advertisement in all New York newspapers admitting  that you made an error in

diagnosis." 

Ham Brooks, who was present, jumped to his feet. 

Doc waved Ham back. He digested Montague Ogden's demand. 

"That is ridiculous, of course," he said. 

"I'll show you how ridiculous it is!" Montague Ogden bellowed. He  waved to his two bulldogfaced

companions. "These are my lawyers, Flack  and Morrow. They'll show you how ridiculous it is." 

This was too much for Ham. He shot to his feet. 

"Get out of here!" Ham yelled. "I know these two shysters, Flack  and Morrow. They're crooks of the first

water. The only thing different  about them is that they are big thieves!" 

"We'll sue you for slander!" bellowed a lawyer. 

"Who ever heard of one lawyer calling another lawyer a crook being  slander?" Ham snarled. 

Ham habitually carried an innocentlooking black cane, and almost  everyone in the legal profession knew

this was a sword cane, the tip of  which was coated with a chemical producing quick unconsciousness. 

"Get out of here!" Ham roared, and flourished his cane as he made a  rush for Ogden and his lawyers. 

Ogden and his attorneys took flight. 

As he ran, Ogden shouted, "You can't shut us up this way!  We're  going to get at the truth about your strange

brain operations! We'll  unmask your devilish scheme!" 


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Then they ran for their lives from Ham, got into the elevator and  escaped. 

"Doc," Ham said, "something isn't upandup about this." 

THE fight on the speaker's platform at the big Army Relief rally at  Madison Square Garden got a great deal

more publicity. 

It was not much of a fight. Montague Ogden merely popped out of the  crowd, dashed across the speaker's

platform in full view of the  audience of many thousands and tried to assault Doc Savage with his  fists. 

The police soon hauled Ogden away. 

But everyone in the audience heard the words Montague Ogden  shrieked at the bronze man. The

publicaddress microphones picked them  up and made them loud in the great auditorium. 

"There's something devilish behind your brain operations!"*  Ogden  screamed. "What are you doing to those

men? You're a monster!" 

The thing got in the newspapers. Montague Ogden was reputedly one  of the rich men of the nation, and Doc

Savage had a worldwide name. So  it could hardly have kept out of the newspapers. 

Also, Doc Savage was not a man who sought publicity, and items  about him were scarce, so, accordingly,

their news value was greater. 

Doc Savage, as a matter of fact, had antagonized some of the  newspapers at various times by refusing to give

out information  concerning his activities. One paper in particular, the Morning Blade,  a blaring tabloid which

featured a stable of columnists who were  unreliable sensationalists, did not have a great love for Doc Savage. 

It was the Morning Blade in which the blacktype editorial said: 

We know all about the laws of libel and  slander. Sometimes we  wonder if these laws  don't protect people

who shouldn't be protected. 

Is it libel and slander to ask some questions? 

Question one: Why is this fellow Doc Savage  so secretive about  himself that he is known  as the Man of

Mystery? What has he to hide? 

Question two: What does Doc Savage do with the  men he seizes, the  men he says are criminals.  (He alone

says they are criminals; isn't it  the  right of our courts to judge those things?)  What happens to these  men?

They disappear.  Their old friends never see them again. 

Question three: What is this mysterious "college"  which Doc Savage  maintains, of which rumors  are

sometimes heard? Has it horrors to  hide? 

Ham Brooks came in with this in his hands, a scowl on his face, and  said, "Blast them! I think we could stick

them for libel and slander on  the strength of that. Doc, shall we try it?" 

Doc Savage shook his head, but he was thoughtful. On the big inlaid  table which was one of the principal

articles of furniture in the  reception room of his eightysixth floor headquarters, lay the other  metropolitan

newspapers, all of which contained items about what had  happened last night at Madison Square Garden. 


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"Ham," Doc said quietly, "it seems I made two mistakes." 

"One of them when you operated on Sam Joseph?" 

"Yes." 

"What was the other one?" 

"When I overlooked your suggestion that something might not be on  the upandup about this thing," Doc

said. 

Ham grinned. "We better get to looking into it, eh?" 

Doc nodded. 

"We better," he said. 

Another interested reader of the newspapers that day was Butch, the  timidlooking soul. He read them and

rubbed his hands together in glee. 

He carried his newspapers and his delight to Dr. Nedden. "It's  beginning to roll," Butch said. "You think we

ought to have another  meeting?" 

Dr. Nedden was worried. He had not been sleeping well and was  losing weight. He was getting peevish. 

"Call a meeting?" he said, and sneered. "Are you forgetting it is  the man we work for who calls the

meetings?" 

Butch grinned. "That's right. 0. K., then. I just got too happy  over this. But it's sure rolling now, ain't h?" 

Dr. Nedden looked at the newspapers, wet his lips and admitted,  "It's rolling, all right." 

"What are you afraid of, doctor? You look like a singed cat." 

"It's trying to perpetrate a thing like this on a man like Doc  Savage," muttered Dr. Nedden. 

"Hell, it's so big it can't fail." 

"Savage will start investigating before long." 

"It'll be built up too much for him to stop it by then. And he  doesn't know what is behind it. He'll never guess.

The thing is so  unexpected that it would be the last thing in the world he would look  for." 

Dr. Nedden nodded. "The murder doesn't help my sleep." he  confessed. 

"Murder? Oh, that." Butch laughed. "Didn't you know the Harrisons  were going to be taken care of tonight?" 

"More murders?" 

Butch grinned. "Ever hear of fighting fire with fire, doctor?" 


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"Where will it be done?" 

"Kansas City," Butch told him. "Our man is waiting at the airport  there now." 

 

*Early in his career. Doc Savage recognized the need of some  permanently effective, but at the same time

humane method of treatment  for criminals which he captured. The numbers of these criminals as time  went

on would he considerable. So. out of his skill as a brain surgeon,  and his understanding of human psychology.

Doc evolved a method of  permanently curing criminals of crime. He established an institution in  a remote

Section of upstate New York, the mountainous area which is  surprisingly one of the most deserted sections of

the United States.  Here he installed brain specialists which he had trained. When he sent  a criminal to the

"College," the routine does not vary greatly. First  the "student" undergoes a brain operation which Doc

perfected, and  which wires out all memory of past. The criminal, having lost all  vicious effects of

environment, is then 'training to make a useful and  comfortable living at some worthy occupation. The results

of Doc's  experiment have been remarkable. It was his dream. and still is. to  have such a method of criminal

treatment widely accepted and practiced.  for he feels it is one of the few sure cures for habitual criminality.

However, the treatment is far too drastic for public acceptance. It is  a hundred or two hundred years ahead of

its time, probably, like other  things which the bronze man uses regularly. 

 

Chapter V. MURDER AND KANSAS CITY

R. J. HARRISON had been christened Ranzo John Harrison in his  cradle, and he had come to hate the name

"Ranzo" and the nickname  "Randy" so thoroughly that he never told anyone his two christened  names if he

could help it. He was now called, and had been called for  years, Rotary Harrison. Strangely enough, he did

not object to Rotary.  He was even proud of it. 

The name came from the socalled rotary method of drilling oil  wells, as opposed to the cable tool method.

Rotary Harrison had been a  pioneer in the midcontinent oil fields in the use of rotary drilling. 

Rotary Harrison was a big man physically, a hardhammered giant of  a fellow, now a little more thin than he

had once been, but with the  hard, solid look of a frontiersman in his blue eyes and the same  quality in his

fists. 

He had made and lost ten or a dozen fortunes, and they had been  oilmen's fortunes. Anything less than five or

ten million dollars is  not considered much of a fortune in the oil business. The fortunes  Rotary Harrison had

made and lost had been big ones. He had another big  one now, and again he was on the verge of losing  it. 

He was a spectacular old reprobate. His private airplanes, for  example, were always the fastest and most

luxurious. 

The one he was flying now was a sample. 

His daughter, Sister Harrison, was sitting back in the cabin. 

Sis was holding a .250/3O00caliber rifle equipped with a  telescopic sight. 

Sis was on the spectacular side herself, being a long blond girl  who won tennis cups, prizes for riding horses


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in rodeos, and once, a  complimentary squib from a Broadway columnist for knocking a leering  stew bum into

the middle of next week with a left. These were  accomplishments enough, but she was also with mentality, as

the saying  goes, being the possessor of various scholarship keys which were not  given for having oil millions,

as well as two hooks and a play she had  written, and clippings of many pointed letters she had sent the Tulsa

World, her favorite newspaper, concerning what she thought about the  oil situation, and its probable effect on

the national economy.  Assuredly with brains. 

Rotary Harrison said, "Sis, there's a river down there. I think  it's the Kaw." 

"In that case we may make it," Sis said. 

"Maybe so. We should hit the Kaw close to Kansas City." 

Sis put down the rifle and picked up a pair of good binoculars. She  focused these on the sky behind the ship

and searched intently for a  while. 

She eventually located the winged speck that was the plane  following them. It was about where it had been

during most of the trip. 

"We still got our gadfly?" asked Rotary. 

"Still got it," Sis agreed. 

"Yonder's Kansas City," said Rotary Harrison. "When we get there  we'll see what luck we have pulling a

shenanigan." 

THE plane which had followed the Harrisons had, they believed,  picked up their trail sometime after they left

the municipal airport at  Tulsa. Because no plane had followed them off the municipal airport at  Tulsa, they

surmised the other ship had been at another airport nearby  and had been notified when they left the ground. 

They knew the other plane was following them. They had made sure of  that by detouring slightly in the

direction of Oil Hill, Kansas, where  Rotary Harrison had once opened a field of gushers  that was his third

fortune in the making  and the plane behind had trailed them on the  detour. The other ship had always

remained some miles back, practically  out of sight in the distance. 

Rotary Harrison's face had become rocklike when he knew they were  being followed. 

"Poor old Duster Jones," he said once. 

Then Rotary had leaned back, letting the plane fly herself, and had  remembered Duster Jones. 

Duster Jones had come out of Ohio or Pennsylvania or some such  place forty years ago and he had brought

his hard luck with him. It had  been a kind of inexhaustible hard luck, good for all the years of  Duster Jones'

life. Fate was particularly cruel, because she hit her  blows of hard luck with platinum and diamond hammers.

He made such  ungodly rich strikes and he always lost them. Duster Jones had the  golden touch of Midas, but

his hands were greased. He never quite got  hold of the riches, but always it was almost. Duster Jones became

a  legend in the oil fields. 

Duster Jones liked Rotary Harrison. They were opposites, in a way,  because it seemed that Rotary had only to

turn a hand to make a  fortune, while Duster could turn handsprings and wind up as poor as a  mouse. 


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They had been very, very close friends for years. Neither of them  ever did a thing, ever had hardly a thought,

that the other did not  know about. 

Rotary believed he knew why Duster Jones had been shot between the  eyes with a .22caliber bullet. 

Rotary Harrison set his plane down at the Kansas City airport. He  taxied back along the edge of the runway

toward the office and hangars,  letting the ship move slowly. 

He watched the other plane, the ship that had been following him,  come out of the southwest. 

He was not surprised when it did not land. Nor was he puzzled when  the craft roared overhead and dropped

first one wing then the other in  a series of measured maneuvers. 

"Signal," he said. "They got somebody here at the airport waitin'  for us." 

He looked back at his daughter then. He was oppressed by the  feeling of danger around them, of poor old

Duster Jones' death, and of  mystery. He studied Sis' face. They had been through a lot together,  through more

than most fathers and daughters. But he found himself  wishing, suddenly, that Sis was somewhere where it

was safe. 

"Scared, Sis?" he asked. 

"Sure," she admitted. "But don't let it bother you." 

Rotary grinned. "Nothing is gonna bother us. We're gonna do the  bothering." 

He parked his plane on the line where civilian aircraft were  supposed to park. He went into the office and

filled out the arrival  forms and applied for the permission which the army required civilians  to obtain before

they could fly on to New York. 

"Want to leave in about half an hour," he said. "See that my plane  is refueled." 

"Half an hour?" the C. A. A. man said. "Be night before you get  into New York. You experienced in night

flying?" 

"Sure," said Rotary. "Here's my license with instrument rating." 

Rotary and Sis got a cab, acting as if nothing out of the way was  transpiring, except that Sis carried the rifle,

which made her a  slightly odd spectacle. 

When the cab was crossing the Missouri River bridge into Kansas  City, Rotary asked, "Got him spotted?" 

"Second cab back of us," Sis said. 

"Little man, dark hair, dark skin, blue pinstripe Suit?" 

"That's the one," Sis agreed. 

"All right," Rotary said. "Pretty soon we surprise him." They  rolled down off the bridge through the shabby

commercial district, then  started to climb the hill. They topped the rise and rolled down Grand  Avenue.

Traffic was thick around them now. 


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Their cab halted for a red light, a big truck on their right. "Pull  in ahead of that truck a little," Rotary ordered.

Their driver obeyed. 

Rotary got out. The truck screened him from the machine behind. 

"Go right ahead," he told Sis. 

The pursuing cab drew alongside the truck, passing it. 

Rotary Harrison jumped out from around the side of the truck. He  got an arm around the door post of the cab

its windows were down   drenched the cab door open and was inside. 

Rotary showed the occupant of the cab the sixshooter he had  inherited from his Indianfighting dad. 

"DON'T jump, hop, skip or reach," Rotary said. "Just sit." He used  the kind of a tone he used when he had

just lost a string of tools in a  sixthousandfoot oil well. It was a tone that would curl wire. 

"Follow that second cab ahead," he told the driver. The driver  looked around He seemed undecided. Rotary

showed him the sixgun and  said, "When I shoot a rabbit with this thing, all they generally find  is one ear. 

The driver followed orders. 

They turned left and found a street where there was no traffic. Sis  got out of the cab ahead and came back. 

"Got him, eh?" She examined the man. "Never saw him before." 

The man would have looked suave enough ordinarily perhaps, but now  he was scared. 

"Go back to the airport," Rotary told their driver. 

The cab chauffeur, more than anxious to get rid of his passengers  and wash his hands of the whole thing, lost

no time in driving back  across the river to the airport. 

Rotary told his prisoner, "You know what happened to Duster Jones?" 

The man said nothing, but more fear swam in his eyes. He knew what  had happened to Duster Jones, all right,

and apparently that was the  big thing now in his mind. 

"The same thing will happen to you;" Rotary told him, "if you make  one bleat or one jump." 

They got out at the airport. The Harrison plane was refueled, ready  for the air. 

Rotary put the captive in the cabin, indicating that Sis should  watch the fellow. 

"I'll go get my papers for the New York flight," Rotary explained.  "Getting papers every time you turn around

in an airplane is a danged  nuisance, but on account of the war I guess you gotta do it." 

He went away and came back. "All set," he explained. He took over  the controls, started the motor and

warmed it, checked both magnetos,  then swung the tail around, got out on the runway and fed it the gun  when

he got the 0. K. from the control tower. 


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The plane was soon slanting up into the sky. 

Rotary Harrison turned to their captive. 

"I didn't include you in my cargo when I checked out," he said.  "You know what that means?" 

The man got white. 

"That's right," Rotary told him. "I can't have you along when we  land." He turned to his daughter. "Sis, plot a

course that will take us  over one of the Great Lakes. And haven't we got a fishing tool back in  the cabin that

will do as a sinker for this hombre's body?" 

Chapter VI. DEATH IN THE SKY

THEY flew north, left the Missouri River behind, climbed until the  concrete ribbon of Highway 69 was a

vague thread below and behind.  Rotary turned the controls over to Sis, whispering, "Don't get excited,  but

you can act as if you are. I'm fooling about killing this bird." 

"I knew you were," Sis said. 

Rotary went back. He stood looking at the prisoner, who was  sprawled in a seat and gripping the seat arms. 

"Got a name?" Rotary asked. 

"Smith," the man said. 

"John Smith?" asked Rotary. 

"Yeah." 

Rotary hit him, drove two quick blows like lightning. The man  lifted up in the seat, then flopped back. He

turned slightly blue and  his tongue stuck out and he breathed noisily. 

"That's for John Smithing me," said Rotary. "I don't guess there's  any need of fooling with you. 

Rotary then fell upon the man, yanked him into the aisle, hit him  again. That blow produced

unconsciousness, but it was brief. 

When the man awakened it was in time to find Rotary just finishing  tying his ankles to his wrists, and both of

these to an oilwell  fishing tool, a piece of steel which weighed possibly forty pounds. 

Rotary noted the man was awake. He made a gesture as if to hit him  again, then changed his mind. 

"What the hell," Rotary said. "What yelling you do on the way down  won't hurt anything." 

Rotary dragged him to the plane door and forced the door open  against the propeller wash. 

"See, we're over the Missouri River," Rotary pointed out. "changed  our minds about the Great Lakes. Too far

away. 


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Rotary then picked the man up, and  the fellow struggled horribly  but ineffectively  heaved him out of the

plane door. 

The man's screams were ghastly. 

Rotary seemed to encounter an accident. The loose end of the rope   it was a cowboy lariat  with which the

man was fled, became tangled,  apparently, with one of the seat supports. The man was stopped and  dangled

helplessly just outside the plane door.  "Danged rope got  caught!" Rotary bellowed. 

He fought as if to free the rope. He did not succeed. 

"Got a knife, Sis?" he yelled. "Gotta cut this hombre loose." 

The screaming of the man dangling outside the plane, the propeller  wash smashing against him with cold

horror, became articulate words. 

"Please!" he screeched. "Don't! I'll do anything! Anything!"  Rotary sneered at him. 

"Brother, you'd just tell me more lies," he said. "Sis, hand me  that knife." 

The man blubbered and screeched that he hoped to die if he was  lying. He was about as scared as a man could

become and remain  rational. 

"Oh, all right," Rotary said with seeming reluctance. 

He yanked the prisoner back inside. 

"Just one little fib and out you go," he warned the man. 

The plot  the terrorized captive told Rotary Harrison  was a  large thing, and it probably extended into

foreign countries. There  were millions of dollars involved, and there had been one murder  executed and

others were planned. 

"The killing of Old Duster Jones was that murder?" asked Rotary  grimly. 

It was. But that one had been done by a man called Butch, who had  been sent out from New York City for the

job. Butch was a fellow who  looked as meek as a rabbit, a regular milksop man in appearance, but a  fiend

who had the bloodthirsty instincts of a weasel. 

"Why was Duster killed?" asked Rotary fiercely. 

"He found out too much," the man explained. "Or at least I gathered  that was what it was. It seems Duster

was in a honkatonk one night and  heard two men talking. He bought the men drinks and got them tight. He

got their tongues loose and went riding with them in the night, and at  the end of the ride he had learned

enough to be dangerous to the plan." 

Rotary scowled and demanded, "Why are they trying to knock off me  and Sis?" 

"Because," the man explained, "they are afraid you know too much." 

"What makes them think that?" 


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"Your decision to go to New York." 

Rotary Harrison was astonished. He was going to New York, as a  matter of truth, on what he believed in his

heart would be a fruitless  attempt to raise money. He had to have the money, because without it  the whole

structure of his oil enterprises would collapse. 

"Why am I going to New York, do they think?" he asked the prisoner. 

"To see Doc Savage. To tell him what you know." 

Rotary hid his amazement. "So they think that," he said. 

He had nearly asked who Doc Savage was, but he caught himself in  time. And now, probing in his mind, he

decided who Doc Savage must be.  He had heard of a rather mysterious man with headquarters in New York

by that name. For some reason or other, Rotary recalled, many men in  the oil fields had heard of Savage, but

he did not know exactly why. He  did remember that crooks were supposed to be afraid of Savage, if that

meant anything. 

Rotary listened to the prisoner talk. The man was getting sickly  worried as he watched the hard look on

Rotary's face. 

He was really a small fry, the prisoner explained. Just a hired  hand. He had been dishonorably discharged

from the army for assaulting  an officer, had served a term in Leavenworth, and had lately been  released from

prison. He was under bond in a theft case in Missouri,  and had sought to pick himself up a bit of lawyer

money by taking on  this job. A friend, another crook, had recommended him for the job. He  had been ordered

to seize Rotary and Sis, and hold or kill them,  whichever was convenient. 

"I don't even know who the head guys are," he insisted. 

"But you know some of the small fry?" 

"Yes. That Butch, and three or four others." 

Rotary asked ominously, "What about Doc Savage?" 

The man knew something about that. Evidently he and Butch, or  someone else, had talked about it. 

"They have a big scheme whereby Doc Savage is going to be made to  take the blame for the whole thing,"

the prisoner explained. 

"Why pick on Savage?" 

The man said, "That's the first question that occurred to me, too.  But Savage is made for the part. He is a

mysterious figure. Then,  there's all these brain operations he has performed, and the men who  disappear after

he gets his hands on them." 

"Men who disappear when Savage gets hold of them?" Rotary echoed,  and his surprise got in his voice. 

"Crooks." 

THE thing as a whole did not make much sense to Rotary Harrison. 


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He didn't have the real explanation behind it all, he felt. 

He was convinced, though, that this hireling he had captured did  not know the real answer. 

Rotary sank in the seat beside Sis. He told her, pretty much as the  prisoner had given it, what he had learned.

"Make sense to you?" he  finished. 

Sis was thoughtful. "Looks to me as if our trouble is just part and  parcel of a great mess of trouble that's

cooking for a lot of folks,"  she decided. 

"Sis," said Rotary, "this makes me look at our own trouble in a new  light." 

"Just how?" 

"This is our situation: Six months ago we borrowed a mess of money  from a New York outfit owned by a

man named Montague Ogden. But Ogden  himself didn't handle the deal. It was handled by Sam Joseph, who

was  Ogden's office manager, and seemed to run everything for Ogden." 

Rotary Harrison made a grim jaw for a moment. 

"Our deal with Sam Joseph was witnessed by Duster Jones," he  continued. "The deal included an agreement

that the loan was to be  renewed on our request in six months, and it was a written agreement.  Duster Jones

witnessed it. We had a copy, and Sam Joseph had a copy." 

His scowl darkened. 

"Now Sam Joseph wires us there was no such agreement," he growled.  "Our copy of it disappeared  stolen

probably. And poor Duster Jones,  the only man who could prove there was an agreement for me, is killed.

That means this Sam Joseph can demand full payment of the loan in three  weeks. I haven't got the money. I

have got no more chance than a rabbit  of getting it. He'll foreclose, ruin me, and grab control of my  company.

As soon as word gets around I can't meet my obligation  and  he'll see that the word gets around  the stock

of my company will go  to hell for cheap." 

Sis was also grim. 

She said, "Dad, I wonder if they could have killed Duster Jones  because he witnessed that agreement." 

"Probably," Rotary agreed. 

"What about this Doc Savage, the man they're trying to hang it all  onto?" Sis asked. 

"He might want to know what's goin' on," Rotary said. "So we better  hightail it into New York and give him

the news." 

Rotary went back and tied the prisoner in a somewhat more  comfortable position. He talked with the man for

some time and the  fellow poured out all he knew with frightened eagerness, but it was  nothing more than he

had already said. 

"Ever hear of a man named Sam Joseph?" Rotary demanded. 

The prisoner had. 


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"He the big boss?" Rotary asked. 

The other didn't know. The killer named Butch had just mentioned  Sam Joseph, but the prisoner couldn't

remember in what connection. 

In order to fly over the Missouri River and frighten the prisoner,  they had flown south from the route laid out

for them as a permissible  course by the army authorities. Sis turned the plane north and got on  the course

again. It was the regular airways route, Kansas City to  Chicago, part of the distance. 

Rotary consulted the map. "Here's a place named Millard," he said.  "There's a civil airways radio station

there." 

He got out a notebook and scribbled on it, tore out the page on  which he had written, and folded it around a

fivedollar bill. Then he  tied them both around a monkey wrench with a piece of string. 

Rotary said, "0. K., fly low over the radio station. Make the  engine sound as if we're in trouble." 

Sis followed instructions. A man, probably an operator, came out  and stood watching them. 

Rotary tossed the paper and the bill, tied to the monkey wrench,  overside. The man below began walking

toward the falling object. 

"What was the idea?" Sis asked. 

"Just a piece of insurance," Rotary explained. "Cautious in my old  age. That's me." 

IT could not have been more than three minutes later when a plane  came piling out of a cloud a little ahead of

them. It was fast. It  bored toward them. 

"Look," Sis gasped. "That's the same plane that followed us from  Tulsa to Kansas City!" 

"This is the regular route the army assigns to civilian planes,"  Rotary said grimly. "So he just flew up here

and waited around for us.  Where's that rifle?" 

He yanked open the cabin windows. Motor thunder and inrushing wind  was a roar. 

"Careful of the propeller!" Sis warned. 

The plane ahead was coming at them straighton now. The pilot must  know they couldn't shoot through the

propeller, and was keeping ahead  of it. 

Sis said, "I'll do a flat skid to the right. Be ready." 

She sent the plane into the skid, presenting Rotary with the other  ship as a target. But the plane ahead was

ready for that. It skidded  also. 

Rotary's rifle banged. Then there was a terrific racket, thudding  jars, as machinegun bullets stormed into

their ship.The metal framing  was hit at least a dozen times. Bullets slashed their fuel tank. The  tank was

located between the cockpit and the engine, and suddenly  highoctane gas was flooding back into the cockpit

and cabin. 


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The planes thundered past each other and apart. 

Rotary growled, "Must be losin' my eye." He hadn't, as far as he  could tell, hit anything effectively. 

"See if you can keep them back," Sis said. She hauled the hand  throttle as far open as it would go. 

Rotary nodded. He climbed back into the cabin, noting that their  prisoner was whitefaced, but apparently

unhurt as yet. "Your pals!"  Rotary told him. "Maybe you'd been better off if I had tossed you  overboard." 

He leaned out of the cabin window from time to time, aiming  carefully with his rifle and firing. He was not a

particularly good  shot. Not expert as modern marksmen go, although he could hold his own  with any man on

a quail hunt, or shooting jackrabbits from a moving  car. He emptied the clip. He had no idea a plane would be

so hard to  bring down. 

The other ship gained on them rapidly and flew below and behind so  that it was almost impossible for him to

hit it or even catch sight of  it. Time seemed to go swiftly. But actually only twenty minutes had  passed. 

Because the Mississippi River, broad and darkly turgid in the  afternoon sun, was below them when they

caught fire. The leaking gas  tank did it, of course. They were tempting providence to try to fly.  But there had

been no place where they could land, and still protect  themselves after they were down. And, suddenly, Sis

screamed, and the  plane was full of bundling flames. 

They were low, trying to get the plane behind them out of the blind  spot. The river was snaking below no

more than two hundred feet. 

"We'll have to take to the water," Sis said. She had cut the motor  and her voice was astonishingly loud. 

They hit almost at once. There was not much of it. Not much more  roughness than a seaplane landing. 

Rotary slashed their prisoner loose. Then he went out through the  plane cabin door. Sis was ahead of him.

Water was pouring in, their  ship beginning to stand on its nose as it sank. 

Rotary and Sis swam clear. The water was fairly cold. Fifty yards  away, low and glistening in the sun, was a

sandbar. It was more than  half 'a mile long, looked smooth, and was completely bare of  vegetation. The plane

which had brought them down was floating in for a  landing on the sandbar. Everywhere else, it seemed to

them, there was  water. 

"They got us," Rotary Harrison said. 

Chapter VII. MIDWEST TRAIL

THE telegram had just come. Doc Savage gave it a second reading. 

"Renny," Doc said. 

Renny Renwick appeared. 

Doc handed him the telegram, explaining, "It just came." 

Renny examined the message, then turned it thoughtfully in his big  hands. "I telephoned to Kirksville,


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Missouri, from a place called  Millard, Missouri, where there is an airways radio station," he said  gravely.

"Operator of the airways radio says a plane flew over,  apparently with engine trouble, and dropped a message

to be telegraphed  to you." 

"Notice the content of the message," Doc said. 

"'You are being framed to take the rap in scheme involving murder  and no telling what else. Coming to give

you story.' And it's signed by  Rotary Harrison. Do you know a Rotary Harrison?" 

"The name is not familiar," Doc admitted. "Get copies of national  business directories and Who's Who, and

see if we find anything." 

Renny's search got results. 

"Holy cow!" he said, his great, rumbling voice fully impressed.  "Rotary Harrison is an oil man. Got a

financial record like a  jackinthebox. Up and down. Right now, seems to be up, but in a shaky  way. Like a

man sitting on a stack of packing cases." 

Doc Savage said, "Check on this plane Rotary Harrison was flying.  Get Monk and Ham to help you, and

Long Tom. Keep track of the ship,  once you find it." 

Renny got on a telephone. 

Ham Brooks came in, said, "Doc, this thing isn't shaping up so good  from a legal angle." 

"You mean that Montague Ogden is still threatening to sue me  because of the error in operating on Sam

Joseph?" 

"He's more than threatening. He's filed suit." Ham spread his  hands. "Ogden claims that he has lost the

services of Sam Joseph and is  therefore entitled to damages." 

"That is a fragile basis for a lawsuit." 

Ham shrugged. "Ordinarily, yes. But the letter of the written law  is not always the law that prevails. Other

connected circumstances are  usually taken into consideration, whether they should be or not." 

"You mean, Ham, that the unpleasant publicity we are getting in the  newspapers will weight the scales

against us?" 

"That," Ham said, "is what I mean." 

"I see." 

"And, furthermore, I think somebody is behind that publicity;  campaign against you." 

"Our investigation has not turned up a deliberate plot," Doc  reminded. 

"They're too slick. Too smooth to be caught." 

Doc said, "Montague Ogden is certainly doing all he can to  discredit me. But you can say one thing about

Ogden  he stands right  out in the open and beats his drum." 


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Ham admitted, "He does that," grudgingly. "But the thing is  spreading like wildfire. I don't see how one man

could stir up all that  stink." 

Renny came in to report on the results of his search for the plane  of Rotary' Harrison. 

"The ship is down somewhere," Renny said. "Here's a report from a  place called Keokak, on the Mississippi

River right at the border of  Missouri and Iowa. A plane answering the description of Rotary  Harrison's ship

passed over that town closely pursued by another plane  about two hours ago. That would make it right after

the telegram was  sent from Millard." 

Doc Savage nodded. "Are you getting one of our planes ready?" 

"It'll be fueled by the time we get there," Renny said. "Monk and  Ham are down there now." 

DOC Savage did not take off for the Midwest immediately. He got  Long Tom and Renny aside. 

"You two stay here," Doc directed, "and begin a general  investigation of the situation." 

"Just what," asked Renny, "would you suggest was a general  investigation?" 

"Go to a lot of trouble," Doc said, "to find out whether this  campaign against us is the work of an

organization." 

"I see. Apparently it is the work of Montague Ogden. But you want  to know whether there is a gang behind

it." 

"Another thing," Doc said, "is an investigation of Montague Ogden.  I want the history of the man, a complete

picture of his life from the  beginning up to now." 

"Montague's life story. 0. K." 

"I want a complete report on his financial condition." 

"The lowdown on Montague Ogden. Right." 

"I want a full report on Dr. Nedden." 

"The lowdown on the Ogden private physician." 

"He thoroughly agreed with me that a cerebral fibroma was Sam  Joseph's trouble," Doc said. 

"So did two other doctors," Renny reminded. 

"I want the lowdown on them, too." 

Renny nodded. "All right. We'll do the best we can. 

"Good. We will return as soon as we look into this matter of a man  named Rotary Harrison, who has

disappeared in the Midwest." 

"I take it," Renny said, "that you know how serious this thing can  get." 


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"I have an inkling." 

"I'm talking about our college," Renny said. 

Doc Savage's face was suddenly solemn, with a trace of strain.  Plainly, Renny had touched on the worry

uppermost in his mind. 

"I think you have hit the nail on the head." 

"I thought I had," Renny said. 

"If the public gets one single inkling of the kind of an  institution we maintain up there, there will be a terrific

uproar. 

Renny nodded. "We'll be lucky if they only hang us." 

"You understand everything you are to do?" 

"I'm to get all the dope possible on Montague Ogden and his  business interests, find out if there is an

organization behind this  newspaper campaign against us, and check up on Dr. Nedden and the other  doctors

who concurred in the diagnosis which said Sam Joseph had a  cerebral fibroma. Is that all?" 

"Add Sam Joseph to your list. Find out all about him." 

"Sure," Renny said. "I can see where Long Tom and I are going to be  as busy as onearmed paperhangers." 

"You better hire two or three good detective agencies to help you. 

"That wouldn't be a bad idea," Renny agreed. "We'll handle it, Doc.  Are you leaving for the Midwest now?" 

"Right away." 

"I hope you find Rotary Harrison," Renny said. "I have a hunch he  is the first proof we've had that this thing

is a lot bigger than  anybody dreamed." 

Doc Savage took off from the Hudson River with Monk and Ham. They  used one of Doc's small planes, a

craft which could handle five  passengers at the very most, a ship which was mostly motor. It was an

experimental army pursuittype job which had been constructed on Doc's  specifications, and which had

proved too "hot" to be handled by the  average run of pursuit pilots. Considering how "hot" the pursuit ships

now used by the army were, this plane became something of a freak. It  held a little over four hours' gas

supply, and they had to detour by  St. Louis to find a runway long enough to accommodate them. But the  trip

required very little time. Monk insisted he hardly had time to  spit. 

They were in the air again when Ham, who was wearing the telephone  headset, said, "Here is Renny in New

York on the air. Voice. He wants  you." 

Doc plugged in his headset, picked up the microphone, said, "Yes?" 

Renny's deep voice said, "Another telegram just came in from that  place in Missouri, Millard. You want it?" 

"Go ahead," Doc said. 


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"It says that Rotary Harrison's plane has landed there and that he  and his daughter are waiting to see you if

you can fly there to meet  them," Renny explained. 

"All right," Doc said. "Thanks." He consulted a chart and the  windvelocity information he had gotten from

the St. Louis airport. He  changed his course. 

Alarmed, Ham Brooks consulted the logged data concerning the  Millard field, the runway length. "They've

got a hardsurfaced runway  north and south," he said. "The wind is north and fairly strong. We may  be able

to set this bumblebee down there." 

Monk Mayfair was less concerned about their landing. 

"Rotary Harrison and daughter, eh?" he remarked. "I wonder what  kind of a daughter." 

Ham frowned. "L thought you were cured?" 

"Cured of what?" 

"Making a yassack out of yourself every time a pretty girl goes  past." 

Monk grinned. "The only time I feel like a fool," he said, "is when  I let one get past me. 

Doc Savage said, "Millard Field coming up." 

"In this thing," Ham said, "you no more than put your finger on a  place than you are there." 

They made the usual traffic circle of the field, came in low over  the fence and already stalling. The airspeed

indicator when they  touched said better than a hundred and fifty miles an hour. That was  plenty "hot," and as

the ship slowed so that the abbreviated control  surfaces no longer had much effect, it took expert brake

controlling to  keep them on the runway and out of the fence at the other end. 

'When their ground speed was down to twenty miles an hour, Doc  braked the right wheel, sent the ship

toward the small cottage of an  airways radio station with its windmilllike tower for the anemometer  and

wind sock. 

They were not fifty yards from the cottage when a storm of lead hit  their ship. 

All of the bullets  and no one but Doc noticed this, and he  certainly did not discuss it then  hit back in the

cabin section where  Monk and Ham were riding. None of them hit near the cockpit where Doc  was seated in

plain view. 

Chapter VIII. MAN LOST

IT was a machine gun. A heavy militarytype gun operating on a  tripod. It had been set up on the ground and

covered with a large  canvas, and gun and canvas had been behind a car where it had not been  noticed  or

more probably the setting up of it had not been noticed by  the operators in the radio station. The car drove

forward a few yards,  the canvas was yanked away, and the gun began shaking a redlipped  snout. 

The effect on Doc's ship was terrific. The machinegun bullets,  .30caliber with a hitting energy of around

twentynine hundred  footpounds, seemed about to turn the plane over. They raked the ship  from stern to


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propeller and took about a fourth off one propeller  blade, so that vibration of the unbalanced prop helped

shake the ship. 

Then everything was silent. The motor had stopped. 

Finally Monk spoke. 

"That's a nice Missouri reception," he said. "What if this hadn't  been an army experimental job with an

armored cabin?" 

A man appeared in the radio cottage door. One of the operators.  Someone shot at him. He jumped, high and

wide, and began to run. He did  not jump back into the cottage, which would have seemed natural, but  took

out across the field toward some orange hangars, labeled as the  property of a flying service, on the other side

of the field. He was a  long thin man who ran as probably he had never run before. 

"He's a little excited," Monk said mildly. 

The words were hardly out of Monk's mouth when a grenade exploded  directly under their ship. It might have

been a homemade bomb of  dynamite. It lifted the plane, Monk said forty feet but ten was  probably closer,

and snapped off both wings, ripped open the armored  cabin compartment, and dumped the wreckage over on

its side. 

Monk, always ready with a wisecrack, for once was speechless. They  were dazed. Their ears had stopped

working for the moment. 

Doc Savage dug into his clothing. When he was operating, his  clothes were invariably a mine of gadgets. He

came up with a smoke  bomb, a little egg of a thing, which he flipped toward the machine gun. 

The smoke bomb hit the ground, ripened, made a cloud of smoke so  black that it looked solid like a large and

spreading mushroom of tar.  It shut off view of car and machine gun. 

"Run!" Doc rapped. "They may use another bomb." 

Ham piled out of a rip in the cabin. Doc followed, then Monk. Doc  and Ham ran, heading for the radio shack,

which had a good concrete  foundation that should stop lead. 

Monk was bellowing. He liked to bellow in a fight, and he jumped  around, half of a mind to rush through the

smoke and try his luck on  the gun crew behind it. 

Then an object came gyrating out of the smoke, hit the ground,  rolled and stopped near Monk's feet. It was

another bomb, homemade,  fifteen or so sticks of dynamite and a fizzing, smoking fuse. Monk  popped his

eyes at it. He let out a howl much louder than any previous  effort and started running, not seeming to touch

the ground. 

Doc Savage scooped up the bomb and threw it back into the smoke on  the theory that he could get it away

from them faster than they could  get away from it. Monk had often claimed that Doc Savage had a mind

which could stop and reason such things out under such circumstances.  Monk maintained this put Doc on a

practically abnormal plane. 

The bomb made a noise that a Fourth of July never heard and  immediately there was some satisfactory

howling. 


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"RUN," Doc said. 

They followed Monk, who already had reached the radio cottage. Monk  went inside, through the open door

where the operator had been standing  when shot at. 

Doc and Ham followed, except that they did not go inside, but  circled the end of the building and went down

behind the foundation.  "Keep down!" Doc warned. He had seen that the explosion had merely  ruffled their

enemies. 

There seemed to be at least five of the foe, two handling the  machine gun the others with rifles. 

The rifles began making me crisp, violent reports that gelatined  nitrocellulose powders make, and the bullets

went entirely through the  radio cottage in most cases. A few were stopped by generators and other  solid

apparatus inside. 

Monk came out through a window, landed beside them. He had  discovered bullets would go through the

cottage. 

"Why don't somebody tell me them things," he complained. 

Doc Savage stepped back a few paces, threw another smoke grenade.  Then another, and a third. He was

spacing them carefully. They made the  noises of firecrackers that had fizzled. 

To Monk and Ham, Doc said, "Pay no attention to the yelling I do  now." 

In a much louder voice, a bellow, Doc howled, "Monk, Ham, make a  break for it! Run! We've got to get

away. We want to reach the  Harrisons. Let these fellows go!" 

He waited for that to soak in. Then he repeated it, almost exactly  the same words. 

After which he dashed out around the corner of the radio cottage,  back toward his mangled plane. The smoke

pall had now spread enough to  envelop the entire vicinity. He could hear the assailants saying  things, mostly

profanity, in the pall. Doc got into the hulk of his  plane largely by the sense of touch and found an equipment

case. This  was intact and he got it open, took out two metal flasks. 

He returned with both flasks to Monk. He gave one to the homely  chemist. 

"They have a plane," Doc said. "It is undoubtedly over by the  hangars, so get over there and put this stuff in

the fuel tank." 

Monk knew what was in the flasks. He had helped concoct the stuff. 

"Sure," he said. 

Doc made his voice loud again and bellowed, "Get away! Don't take  any chances on being shot. Our job is to

get the Harrisons!" 

Then the bronze man ran back into the smoke pall again. He went  cautiously now. He heard a man swearing

and made for the fellow, found  him and struck with a fist, simultaneously grabbing the man by the  throat to

throttle an outcry. The fist blow he sent to the stomach. It  was not very successful for the man was wearing an

armored vest. One of  the platetype commercial armored vests which sell for about  seventyfive dollars. It


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stopped most of the effect of Doc's fist blow.  The man squirmed, fought. Doc hit him again and the fellow

subsided. 

Doc took the man's coat and hat. Strangely, the hat was harder to  remove than the coat; the man had yanked it

down over his ears so he  wouldn't lose it in the uproar. 

"Use gas on them!" Doc shouted, using his own voice and making it  loud. 

HE then hauled on the coat, which fit him better than expected, and  yanked the hat over his own ears,

splitting it at the band in the  operation. 

He found the criminals' car. There was no one behind the wheel. He  got in, started the motor, made it moan

and race. 

Thrusting his head out of the car, he yelled, imitating one of the  voices which he had heard, "Gas!  Gas!

Come on! Let's get out of  here!" 

There was no gas, of course. But the black stuff thrown off by the  smoke bombs had an acrid odor that was

distinctive enough to give the  imagination a good start. 

They thought there was gas. They were not prepared with masks  evidently. And the roaring, racing car engine

was like a magnet. None  of them wanted to be left behind. They converged on the machine in a  wild rush. 

Doc added to the confusion  it was intensely black there in the  smoke pall, impossible to see an arm length 

by honking the car horn  steadily and bellowing, "Come on! Gas! Gas!" 

When he knew they were aboard he meshed gears, let out the clutch  and gave the machine plenty of gas. He

drove blindly until he was out  of the smoke. Then he wheeled to the right, went over a driveway  curbing with

a flying bump and out through the airport gate onto a  graveled road. 

Doc drove fast. The men in the car leaned out of windows and fired  back into the smoke cloud. Two were

clinging to the outside, and one of  these tried to fire, but almost fell off and lost his rifle. 

So far the hat and coat Doc was wearing had fooled them. 

But he did not want to get them too far away from the airport. Not  so far away but that they would try to go

back and get their plane. 

He went over a railroad crossing. It was rough, so rough that only  the solid top of the car kept some of them

from flying out. 

Then there was a sharp turn Onto another highway, a concrete one,  and that did not ease the situation. 

Doc Savage drove two hundred yards more, saw a cornfield at the  roadside. The growing corn was about the

right height for his purpose. 

He jammed on the brakes hard, gave the wheel just the right  treatment and got the car on its side in the ditch

in a cloud of dust,  the door on his side open. 

He got out, feet pounding in grass, went over a low barbedwire  fence into the corn. By stooping, the corn

tassels were well over his  head. The corn, fortunately, had not been checkplanted, so that its  rows ran in


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only one direction, which was parallel to the road. They  could not look down a corn row and see him. 

"That ain't Bill!" one of the men bellowed. 

There was some more shooting then, but not as bad as it had been  back at the radio cottage. 

DOC Savage kept going and circled widely, coming back to the road.  Once there he was very cautious once

more. But it was not needed. 

The men had deserted their car. They had crossed the railroad and  were running across the airport toward the

hangars on the opposite  side. They all were there except the one Doc had slugged. That one had  recovered his

senses and was sprinting across the field, also headed  for the hangars. 

Ham Brooks, at the radio shack, began shooting. Ham seemed to have  found a doublebarreled shotgun

inside the radio cottage. He unloaded  both barrels with a terrific report. He was kicked backward through the

radioshack door. The running man only ran faster. 

Doc went to the railroad tracks. There was a culvert close by, a  small one, and he sat down there. He waited

calmly. 

He was pleased; His plan was working as smoothly as if it had been  rehearsed. They did not always go this

well. 

The running men, just crossing the airport, were staggering with  fatigue. They did some wild shooting at the

hangars, the bullets  causing a general rush for cover on the part of a number of young men,  evidently Civilian

Pilot Training students. 

The plane setting in front of the hangars was a black cabin job,  one large motor, lowwing. One of the

expensive ships built for the  rich private trade before the war, and not taken over by the government  because

of an overly large number of hours on motor and ship. But  airworthy and fast. A ship large enough to take all

the men off the  ground. 

They piled into the craft. It had an electric starter, and this  whipped the prop over. Dust picked up behind the

ship and whirled away  in clouds. 

The plane tore across the airport, ignoring the paved runway,  quartering into the wind. It got its wheels off,

and immediately the  pilot began to slip a little into the wind to keep away from the fence  corners. 

A small man, a very indignant small man, came Out of one of the  hangars and began to pop away with a

revolver at the fleeing plane.  Monk appeared hastily, said something to the small man. He stopped  shooting,

then he and Monk ran into the hangar. 

The plane with the criminals in it got a hundred and fifty feet of  altitude, banked quickly, came back. It was

obvious they were after  Ham, at the radio shack. And maybe the radio shack, too, if they had  more of those

dynamite bombs. 

Doc Savage showed himself. He made as much of a spectacle as he  could, jumping around and waving his

arms, seizing a short piece of  plank and going through the motions of aiming it, as if it was a gun. 

The plane wheeled, came boring toward him. Out of the cabin  windows, came fire and noise. 


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Doc went into the culvert. The machinegun bullets jarred the  ground around the mouth of the culvert. The

plane whooped overhead. Doc  waited. Soon there was a terrific concussion and sticks, dust and  leaves flew

into the culvert. They'd had another dynamite bomb, all  right. 

Doc waited awhile, crawled out. He looked around for another bomb  instantly, but located none. Then he

eyed the plane. It was heading  into the east. It had the purposeful aim of a definite place to go. 

Doc ran across the field to the hangars. 

MONK and the small man  latter was swearing really wonderful  profanity and not asking questions  were

wheeling a neatlooking blue  biplane out of the big hangar. 

Monk said, "I knew you'd want to follow them right away, Doc." 

Doc Savage glanced over the ship. It was faster than the cabin job  which had just left the field. 

Ham had appeared at the radio shack again, was doing something  around the wreckage of their bombripped

plane. 

Doc made a hand funnel, yelled, "Get the scanner!" 

Ham, shouting back faintly, said, "I'm getting it." 

He disappeared into the plane ruin, came out and ran toward them.  He had a case about the size of a

typewriter case, and a longer and  heavier box of metal. 

Doc climbed into the biplane. It was an opencockpit job. 

The small man stopped swearing long enough to say, "That's my C. P.  T. advanced trainer. You guys bust up

that ship and it won't be healthy  for you. They're getting hard to get." 

Monk said, "Keep your shirt on. Has anybody some goggles?" Two  young men, wearing the C. P. T. wing

emblems on their blouses, had  goggles. They parted with them for about twice what they were worth,  cash. 

Ham arrived. 

"You and Monk ride in the back," Doc said, "with the gadget." Ham  said, "It'll be a trial riding with that

goon." He got in the cockpit  with the homely Monk and the two cases. They were very crowded. And  they

were quarreling when Doc gave the hand throttle a steady pull and  sent the ship across the tarmac. 

Doc lifted the ship off and sent it into the east on the trail of  the other plane. The latter was now out of sight,

had been out of sight  for some minutes. 

The plane, being a trainer, was equipped with gosports, the  speakingtubeheadset device used in training

student fliers. Doc  indicated Monk should put on the headset, said, "Get the scanner  working." 

Monk nodded violently and went to work with the apparatus. 

Ham watched, puzzled. He understood only part of this. Doc's  unorthodox conduct of the fight back at the

airport had been aimed at  scaring the enemy into flight, or, more specifically, into flight to  wherever they

were holding the Harrisons. 


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Also, the fight had been arranged so that Monk could introduce  something into the gas tank of the plane

ahead. Some chemical, Ham  surmised. 

"What kind of mumbojumbo is this?" Ham yelled at Monk. 

"Keep your hair on," Monk shouted back, "until I get this thing  percolating." 

OF the two parts of the apparatus, the metal case seemed to contain  a large collection of batteries of the "B"

radio type, batteries  delivering a sizable voltage. In addition there were coils and vacuum  tubes, arranged so

that they did not make sense to Ham. But it was  certainly not a radio. 

The second box contained a device into which Monk proceeded to  thrust his face, after plugging it into the

other apparatus. The thing  was about a foot and a half long. At the end opposite from Monk's  facewas a large

lens, and Monk stared at the surrounding sky through  this. 

"North, Doc," Monk shouted. "They swung north right ahead. Guess  they figured they were out of sight of

the airport. And they're  climbing fast." 

Ham bellowed, "How do you know where that other plane went?" 

"Look," Monk said. He thrust the gadget into Ham's hands. "Look  through it." 

Ham stared into the thing. At first he saw nothing but a  deeppurple darkness and he said so. 

"Look to the north you overdressed shyster," Monk ordered. 

Ham did so. Immediately and astonishingly he saw a faintly  silvercolored thread of what looked like smoke.

Smoke from a tracer  bullet, but very vague. He told Monk what he saw. 

"That's it," Monk said. "That's the trail of the other plane." 

Ham jerked the thing away from his eyes. "You're crazy!" 

"You're the crazy one!" Monk roared at him. "Doc and I have worked  for months on this thing." 

"How does it work?" 

"Simple, like all great things," Monk snapped. "You introduce a  chemical in the gasoline which a plane

burns. After it burns and passes  out of the exhaust stacks, it is a vapor that hangs quiescent in the  air. It will

hang there for hours. Of course it drifts with the wind  Currents, but it's there anyway, marking a plain trail." 

Ham objected, "But I can't see it with the naked eye." 

"That's what makes it good," Monk assured him. "You can only see it  with this gadget here." 

"How does it work?" 

"That would take two hours to explain, plus about four years of  chemical education for you so you would

know enough to understand the  explanation," Monk assured him. "But it works with both ultraviolet and

infrared wave lengths of light from both ends of the socalled visible  spectrum. "* 


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"All right, all right, you don't have to be sarcastic, you ape,"  Ham said. 

He was satisfied. 

THE plane flew north, got above an extended bank of clouds. Then it  turned east again. And, eventually,

when the cloud bank widened it  angled southward. Compared to the terrific speed of the plane in which  they

had come out from New York, they seemed to be crawling. 

Ham had been silent, thinking about the gadget they were using. He  was fascinated. He began to see

possibilities in the thing. 

"Say," Ham yelled. The roar of air in the open cockpit made it hard  to talk. "Say, why wouldn't this be a good

gadget for the American army  or navy to use on the enemy?" 

Monk sneered at him. "What do you think we developed it for?" 

"Has it already been tried?" 

"Europe and Asia," Monk said, "are full of English and American  agents busy introducing quantities of that

chemical into the gasoline  supplies of the enemy." 

"Is there any way of them licking it?" 

"Sure. They can work out some chemical to nullify the effect of  this stuff. But that will lake weeks or months,

and in the meantime  their planes can be tracked back to their airdromes by our ships. There  won't be any such

thing as a concealed enemy airdrome." 

Ham grinned. Particularly in crowded Europe did bombers operate  from secret bases. This trailing method

would be death on such bases.  You would follow the trail, and if there was wind, allow for wind  drift. On

stillair days, the stuff should be marvelous. 

As time went on Ham was beginning to understand why both the army  and navy had refused active service to

Doc Savage and his associates as  well. The explanation then had been that they could do more good for  the

war effort by going on as they had been. That had seemed a thin  argument to Doc and the rest of them at the

time. Certainly it was not  satisfactory. 

Because in the final analysis their main thirst was for excitement  and adventure, and that even included Doc

himself. The war was a great  show, probably the greatest show of the century, and they hated to miss  it. Or at

least fool around in the cheering section, only now and then  getting a finger into it. But the army and navy

simply wouldn't have  them. They had been tossed out on their collective ears. Not once,  either. Just about

weekly. 

  *Doc Savage's researches into light have  been extensive, his employment of it

varied. As regular readers of Doc  Savage magazine will surely have noticed, in almost every new  adventure.

Doc Savage manages to introduce one or more surprises in the  share of a scientific gadget. What readers of a

scientific bent will  also have noted is that it is the policy of she author of the Doc  Savage material to have

Doc employ only methods and devices which have  been developed, or which other scientists have

accomplished at least on  a laboratory scale. Since the first Doc Savage novel appeared in 1933,  many of the

mechanical devices employed by Doc Savage. which seemed  completely fantastic at the time, have been

placed in everyday use.  These range from simple devices, such as a generatoroperated type of  flashlight,

which are now so common they can he bought in toy store for  children or in expensive deluxe models for


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blackout use, to the method  lately employed of introducing a gas into the fuel tasks of military  pursuit planes

to make the gasoline vapor nonexplosive when the tanks  are hit by the incendiary' bullets from enemy guns.

This, however, is  the first time the device for trailing planes has been employed by Doc.

 

Chapter IX. RIVER FIGHT

DOC Savage's voice was quiet in the gosport when he said, "All  right, there they are!" 

The river was a width of gray corduroy below them, and in it lay  the white scar of a long sandbar. At the

north end the bar thrust an  arm out toward the shore, and the water there seemed to be wading depth  mostly,

except for a narrow channel. In fact, at the far side of the  channel, very near to the river bank, was a

paddlewheel steamer which  was obviously a derelict, a hulk which had been there many years. 

On the sandbar, however, and in motion, was the black plane which  they had followed from the Millard

airport. The pilot had seen them,  was taking off. 

Tiny figures were sprinting along the sandbar toward the derelict  steamer. Doc counted them. Four. That

meant the pilot was alone in the  craft that was leaving the bar. 

That plane and this one were so closely matched in climbing rate  and maneuverability that the presence of

even one added passenger would  be too much of a handicap. 

Doc said, "Two of us have to go over." 

There were two chutes in the plane. They were regulation parachutes  for the C. P. T. students, so they would

be all right. Seatpack type. 

Ham said, "I'll fly her. I'm the lightest one, anyway. 

There was no argument. He was right. And Ham was a good combat  pilot. 

Doc directed, "Dive her. Get her about a hundred yards north of the  old boat." 

Ham nodded. 

To Monk, Doc said, "Hold off cracking your 'chute until you're  almost in the trees  " 

"You're telling me," Monk yelled. "I hope none of those guys are  wing shots." 

Doc watched the river surface, the position of the plane, judging  the wind velocity  which would influence

their parachute drift very  little, but nevertheless somewhat  from the condition of the river  waves. 

Direction of the wind, of course, was easy to judge from the  unruffled surface of the water next to the bank

over which the wind was  blowing. 

He went over. He got a bad start, slipping on the cockpit rim, and  began to turn over and over. He stopped

that by violent kicking at the  right moments. The earth came rushing up at him. He kept his eyes on  it. A long

fall and a breakout of the 'chute as low as he intended to  crack this one was not something to fool with. You

fell fifty feet in  no time at all; fifty feet misjudgment could kill you. 


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He was being shot at. He could hear the fiddlestringbreak sounds  of the bullets passing. He did not take his

eyes off the ground, which  was magnifying enormously. He hauled on the ripcord. 

He was a little ashamed of what he did then. He threw the steel  ripcord away in his excitement, something

parachute jumpers in the army  and navy were taught never to do. The ripcords cost nearly five dollars  apiece. 

THE next instant he was jarred solidly, then he was in trees. The  trees were willows and they cushioned his

fall, tore clothing, took off  hide, planted a few splinters. 

With a flourishing of willows and a painful grunting, Monk was down  a moment later. He was not over fifty

feet away. Doc got out of the  harness, left the chute there, and ran to Monk. 

Monk said, "These danged willows ain't as soft as they look from  the air." He was not seriously damaged. 

"Come on," Doc said. "They must have the Harrisons on that old  boat." 

They ran toward the boat. The ruin of it projected above the  willows, higher than would have been possible if

the old derelict was  resting in the water. It must be grounded, planted high and dry by some  flood years ago,

perhaps far out of the river channel, and now the  river had channeled almost to the boat. 

Doc saw water through the willows, slowed his pace, and located the  sandbar. The four running men were off

the big bar, were in the deeper  channel which separated it from the grounded derelict. Two of them were

wading while the other two were swimming, making slightly better time. 

Doc drew back, made for the boat. Monk was close behind him. Monk  had picked up a club, a small oak

fence post, a most impressive  shillalah. "An Irishman's toothpick," Monk explained, waving the post. 

Doc picked up two tomato cans as he ran. Fishermen must have  brought them here to carry worms; now they

were full of sand, and made  good missiles. 

Feet had trampled the bank near the old boat. There was a crude  gangplank, a tree trunk which had been

felled from the bank to the  derelict. 

A man was coming down the gangplank, walking sidewise, using his  rifle for a balancing stick. He must have

seen the two parachutes come  down, had decided to get ashore and do his fighting bushwhack style. 

Doc threw one of the sandfilled tomato cans. 

The man on the log squawked, lost his rifle, fell down and wrapped  his arms around the log. He remained

there, dazed. 

Doc pegged a smoke bomb onto the deck of the sidewheeler, let it  burst, then went out on the log. He ran

lightly, hardly seeming to  slacken speed while on the log. 

Monk followed but paused to give the man clinging to the log a  wallop with his club, with the result that he

nearly fell off the log.  The clinging man, stunned still more, lost his grip with his legs. But  he still hung to the

log by his hands. Monk trampled on his fingers for  a while, poked with the club. The man remained there,

crying, "I can't  swim!" in an awful voice. 

"You've got a fine chance to learn," Monk assured him, and kicked  him loose. 


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It was about fifteen feet down to the water, and the water was not  waistdeep. 

Monk ran on, entered the smoke from Doc's grenade, which was  spreading. 

"Monk," said Doc's voice in the black pall. 

"Yeah?" 

"You've got to be less reckless," Doc warned. "You take too many  chances." 

"0. K.," Monk agreed, and grinned. A fight, he figured, was the  place to be reckless. 

The men fording across from the sandbar were shouting excitedly,  howling warnings about the parachutes to

the boat. 

Overhead there was tense moaning from the two airplanes. 

Doc lifted his voice, shouted, "Harrison! Rotary Harrison! This is  Doc Savage. Where are you?" 

Over the planemotor noise, over the yelling of the men coming from  the bar, and the anxious squalling of

the man Monk had kicked off the  log and who was trying to drown in waistdeep water, there was an  answer.

It was a response in a bellowing voice. From the boat  somewhere. Deep inside; The voice made no words,

just anger and noise. 

Monk said, "That sounds about like I figured Rotary Harrison would  sound." 

"Monk, come on," Doc said. "We have got to find the Harrisons and  get them out of here, safely. That is the

first job." 

Monk thought of the four men in the river and decided to  misunderstand Doc's order. Now and then Monk

permitted himself to do  something like that, usually when to follow instructions meant missing  a fight. 

"Sure, I'll get 'em, Doc," Monk yelled, and made off up the deck. 

There was enough noise, what with the planes and the yelling, that  he figured he could get away with that. 

He wanted a fight. The men trying to board the derelict would be  just about what he considered suitable odds. 

He made for the bow, which was where he surmised the men would try  to board the old beat. Almost at once

he fell through to his armpits in  a hole in the deck. The boards did not seem to be rotten; someone had  merely

removed them. 

He got out of the smoke, made better time. He reached the rail,  heard the men splashing alongside. He put his

head over the rail  quickly. 

The men, waistdeep in mud and sand, were working along the side of  the derelict. Their heads were not

more than six feet below. Wonderful  targets for Monk's long club, he decided. Like playing golf. 

He drew back quickly, got a grip on the very end of the club. He  leaned over the rail. 


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Two of the men below were ready. They had an old piece of rusted  wire hawser about a dozen feet long. Each

had an end. 

They came up and over with the hawser, swinging it as if it was a  skip rope. It came down on the back of

Monk's neck. They yanked. Monk  did a oneandahalf turn over the rail and lit standing up in the mud

beside them. 

It occurred to Monk, a little too late, that they could have seen  his shadow when he appeared at the rail the

first time. 

They were on him instantly, all of them. And Monk had his fight. He  knew immediately it was the nastiest

fight he had ever had, which was  saying a great deal. Two of them had double fistfuls of mud, which they  at

once slapped into his eyes. 

Someone hit him with something a little later. It felt like a rifle  stock when he clutched it helplessly, going

down. He was dazed. 

They got on him with their feet, trampled him deep into the mud. 

He never heard one of them say, "Don't do him clear in! We can use  one of them alive, the big boss says." 

DOC Savage crouched at the edge of a hatch, listening. The voice  that undoubtedly belonged to Rotary

Harrison was howling steadily  below. It was close. 

Overhead, the two planes were circling, sparring. From time to time  gun clatter joined the noise of their

motors. Ham seemed to be the  better flier. At least he was holding his own. But the other pilot had  an

automatic rifle. And Ham, who was used to a ship with an armored  cockpit, with fuel tanks treated so they

would not leak, was  handicapped. Like Monk, he was inclined to be reckless, too. 

Doc looked down into the hatch. The hold planking had long ago been  ripped out; there were only the naked

beams of the old sidewheeler's  internal frame. 

But there was, lurking down there somewhere, a guard. Probably a  man with a gun. It was tobacco smoke that

told the bronze man this, not  the smoke itself, but the pungent odor from the clothes of a man who  smoked a

pipe a great deal. 

Doc picked up a long stick, a fragment of fishpole someone had left  on deck, and sent it away from him like a

spear. The pole hit,  skittered down through another hatch, made a clatter. 

Instantly, Doc swung down through the hatch where he was crouching.  He landed on a crosspiece, leaped to

the right, got behind a timber. 

At one time the hold of the derelict had drifted full of mud and  sand. But of late years the hull at the stern 

Doc was now near the  stern  had fallen apart, and the mud and sand had washed out again  when the river

was at flood stage. So the central section of the  derelict was still piled high with a sandbank. 

Doc searched carefully, located the guard. The man was standing  behind a timber himself, only the muzzle of

his gun showing. 

Doc worked toward him and managed to get closer and closer. The two  figures lying bound on the sandbank

did not stir and made no sound. A  man and a girl. The girl even turned once, quickly, as if she heard  some


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small sound in the direction opposite Doc, which was clever. 

Doc got the guard, reaching around the beam to take him. He tried  to make the fellow unconscious silently.

He did that all right, but the  man's gun was on cock, and it exploded, the blast earrending in the  confines of

the place. Immediately another guard, one stationed farther  toward the bow, but inside the boat, howled an

alarmed demand. 

Not knowing how many more there were, Doc shouted, "Run! The place  is full of cops!" 

The cavelike acoustics of the place, he hoped, would make his voice  sound like anybody's voice. 

He dropped the guard, ran to the Harrisons and freed them, slashing  with a knife at their ropes. 

"Run," he ordered. "Get ashore!" 

They had been tied too long and couldn't run. The effort they made  was agonizing. 

Doc gathered them up, one with each arm, and carried them. 

THE guard toward the bow hadn't been fooled. He was coming back,  and cautiously. Once he fired at them,

the bullet scooping rotten wood  off a timber. 

Carrying the Harrisons, Doc got to a burst hull planking, and  worked through it. They fell out into river mud.

Carrying two people  was incredibly difficult in the stuff. But he worked toward the bank,  which was steep,

and got up onto the sunbaked mud, then climbed more  rapidly. He piled into the willows that furred the top

without being  shot in the back. 

He dropped the Harrisons. 

"Keep crawling away from here," he said. 

The noise of the planes overhead had changed. He looked up. It was  bad news. The motor of Ham's plane had

gone dead and he was slanting  off to the east for a motoroff landing somewhere. He evidently figured  he

was high enough to reach some of the oatstubble fields that were  back half a mile or so from the river. 

The second plane, for some reason or other, the pilot was not  pursuing Ham to finish him off  was spiraling

down toward the sandbar. 

The ship landed on the sandbar. 

There was some shouting when the plane stopped. Doc moved to a  position where he could see the ship. 

Three men were hauling a fourth toward the plane. The man they  hauled was Monk. Monk seemed to be

unconscious. 

Then, three more men appeared, wading to the sandbar. They were the  two guards who had been in the

derelict, and the man Monk had kicked  off the log gangplank. 

Monk was dumped into the plane. The others climbed in. The plane  went flogging down the long sandbar.

The sand seemed to be packed as  hard as a runway, otherwise the ship would never have taken the air  with

that load. 


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But it got off. 

They flew straight up the river, slowly gathering altitude. The  plane was hardly above the level of the

riverbank treetops when it was  out of sight and out of sound.. 

"Harrison!" Doc called. 

Rotary Harrison and the girl appeared, coated with mud and dust,  twigs and grass, from head to foot. They

walked stiffly, staggering  because of stiffened muscles. 

"This is my daughter, Sis," Rotary Harrison said quietly. "They got  away, huh?" 

Doc Savage nodded. 

"They not only got away," he said grimly. "They escaped with one of  my best men." 

DOC Savage went back aboard the derelict river steamer alone. He  searched the ruin from stem to rudder

post, from keel to passenger  deck. 

There was nothing to show that the men had used the wreck for  anything but a very temporary hideout. 

Doc spent some time measuring footprints, storing the measurements  in his mind, using a mentalimpression

memory system which he had  developed.* 

He decided that the river steamer had been wrecked here originally  through the misfortune of having its

boilers blow up. 

But there was nothing of real value. 

After a while, Ham Brooks came stumbling through the willow  thickets. 

"A blasted lucky shot brought me down," he complained. "The only  bullet that hit the plane, I think. It

shorted out one mag, and the  other was out of order. Just one of those freaks." 

Doc Savage said, "They got away with Monk." 

Ham did not say anything. But his face was fixed, and afterward it  lost color. He could not have been tortured

into admitting it, but Monk  was probably closer to Ham than any other person. 

  * The remarkable memory ability which Doc Savage  possesses is not, as his other

traits are not, particularly freakish.  Really amazing memories, as experts on psychology know, are usually the

result of the use, consciously or subconsciously, of various system  association or otherwise, of filing a fact in

the brain tissue along  with various labels by which it can be found.   

Chapter X. THE DEMENTED TRAIL

IT was not yet daylight the next morning when Doc Savage walked  into his headquarters with Rotary

Harrison and Sis. 

Renny Renwick and Long Tom Roberts were at work, surrounded with  telephones, scratch pads, pencils, and


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halfconsumed sandwiches. 

The bigfisted engineer, Renny, said, "Holy cow! where's Ham? Monk  was seized by those guys; we knew

that. But where is Ham?" 

Doc explained, "Ham stayed behind to look for Monk." 

"He got any clues?" 

"Only that the black plane which carried Monk away was a type of  ship which probably did not have a large

fuel capacity, and therefore  it had to land three or four hundred miles from where they got Monk." 

Renny nodded. "Long Tom and I have been as busy as jumping beans.  But we've checked up on Montague

Ogden and his company. We've looked  into that newspaper campaign against you, and we've checked up on

the  doctors who concurred in the diagnosis which led to the operation on  Sam Joseph. And we have looked

up Sam Joseph." 

"Take the last first," Doc Savage suggested, "and begin with Sam  Joseph." 

Rotary Harrison and Sis crowded close. "Yeah," said Rotary. "I  think I got me a big personal interest in that

hombre." 

"This is Miss Sister Harrison, and her father, Mr. Ranzo John  Harrison," Doc Savage explained. "Colonel

John Renwick and  Major  Thomas J. Roberts. Better known as Renny and Long Tom." 

"Call me Sis," Sis said, smiling. 

"And call me Rotary," Rotary Harrison rumbled, "if you want me to  be happy." 

Renny nodded. 

"Here's the report on Sam Joseph," the bigfisted engineer rumbled.  "Birthplace, parents, nationality, early

environment unknown." 

Renny stopped speaking, looked at them expectantly. 

"Unknown?" said Doc. "What do you mean, unknown?" 

"Sam Joseph," said Renny, "is a victim of permanent early amnesia,  or so he claims. He knows nothing about

what happened to him before he  was about twentyfive years old. He claims that he is one of those men  who

wake up in hospitals, not knowing who he is. He claims he still  does not know." 

"what about the rest of his life?" 

"His business career has been about the usual career of an  executive in a business organization. He has

worked for three different  firms, a bond house, a mailorder concern, and the Ogden outfit. Good  record." 

"You mean he ain't a crook?" Rotary demanded, disgusted. 

"There is no evidence of his being crooked," Renny said. 


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"He's just too slick for you then. He's got it all covered up." 

"If he covered anything up, he is slick," Renny rumbled. "We've  done everything but look at the roots of his

teeth. No, we even did  that! One of the detectives we hired brought in Xray films of Sam  Joseph's teeth. Got

them from his dentist." 

Rotary Harrison smashed a fist into a palm. "Sam Joseph is a  crook!" he declared. "And I think he's a

murderer, too, or at least  hired murder done." 

Renny was interested. "What makes you say a thing like that? That's  a pretty harsh statement." 

"Six months ago I borrowed a large sum of money from Sam Joseph and  we signed an agreement to renew

the loan in six months. Now I can't  pay. Somebody stole the written agreement to renew, and Sam Joseph say

there wasn't any. The only witness I had to the agreement was an old  friend, Duster Jones. He was murdered.

A man named Butch killed him." 

Renny jumped. "Butch! There's a man working for Montague Ogden  named Butch." 

"Working for Sam Joseph, you mean, don't you?" demanded Rotary. 

"No, for Odgen. But maybe  " Renny scratched his head. 

Doc said, "The thing to do seems to be to talk to Sam Joseph.  Renny, do you know where we can find him?" 

"He's back at Montague Ogden's place, as far as we know." 

THEY rode downtown in a black limousine which was large but  subdued, discreet, ordinary, giving no hint

that it was actually a  rolling fortress of armor plate and special bullet resistant glass and  as formidable as a

tank. Long Tom had remained behind to continue the  investigation to which he and Renny had been assigned. 

"Doc," Renny said thoughtfully. 

"Yes?" 

"You remember that thing which first got me and Long Tom so excited  about this case?" 

"The talking devil, you mean?" 

"Yes." 

"What about it?" 

"It keeps cropping up in my thoughts. You suppose it had any  peculiar significance?" 

Doc Savage said, "The thing possibly was not what it seemed."  Rotary Harrison demanded, "what's this stuff

about a talking devil?" 

Renny gave him the story about Sam Joseph apparently hearing the  small devil image speak. It was plain

from the way Renny told the story  that he had been giving it a good deal of thought and was still much

intrigued by it, as well as far from convinced that the speaking satan  was a figment of a disordered mind. 


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Sis Harrison also listened to the story, and she watched Doc  Savage. She seemed to be noting the physical

qualities of the bronze  man and seemed quite impressed. 

Sis said unexpectedly, "This whole thing hasn't made much sense so  far, has it? If it is just a plot to steal the

oil interests which dad  and I have built up, it seems rather elaborate." 

"My guess," Doc Savage told them, "is that we will find that a  great deal more is involved. what happened in

the Midwest shows we are  up against a big organization." 

"A cultus bunch of hombres," Rotary put in. "And they won't stop at  nothin'." 

A MAN in a butler's livery tried to prevent them entering the  fantastically modernistic Ogden penthouse on

top of the Ogden building.  Rotary Harrison lost no time in elbowing the butler out  of the way.  Rotary had

risen to a rage as he looked at the fabulous richness of the  Ogden building, and had growled, "Probably got

the dough for this by  robbing other guys like me! Well, I'll put a quietus on that!" He  slammed the butler one

on the chest and said, "Don't argue with us,  fancy britches!" 

Dr. Nedden met them at the door of the room where Sam Joseph lay on  a bed. 

Dr. Nedden's manner was cold as he eyed Doc Savage. His greeting  was brusque. "You are fully aware the

patient should not have visitors  yet," he snapped. 

Doc made no comment on that. Instead, he said, "Dr. Nedden, is it  true that you have stated that you did not

actually diagnose Sam  Joseph's trouble as cerebral fibroma?" 

Dr. Nedden's face tightened. "I refuse to discuss the case with  you. 

"But you have so stated to the newspapers, have you not?" 

"when as a matter of truth you told me in plain words that you  agreed your diagnosis was cerebral fibroma,"

Doc added. 

Dr. Nedden swallowed. 

"You can't see the patient," he snapped. 

Rotary Harrison said, "Brother, where's your riot squad? You better  have one when you tell us what we can't

do." 

Dr. Nedden backed away indignantly. "Remember," he snapped. "I  haven't given my permission. This is on

your own initiative, and  against a surgeon's advice." 

He wheeled and went away. 

Rotary Harrison looked after Dr. Nedden and said, "when I was a kid  I used to think I had a strange power

where snakes were concerned. I  thought I could feel when a snake was around me. Maybe it was  imagination

then. But I feel that way about that guy. 

They went into the room. 

Sam Joseph smiled at them pleasantly from the bed. 


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His color was good, although his head was swathed in bandages, and  he was obviously quite weak. His voice,

when he spoke, was low but  healthy, quiet and quite sanesounding. 

"Good morning," he said. "I am very sorry to be the cause of all  this trouble." 

Rotary Harrison roared, "Good morning  hell! Listen, you ditty,  blackfaced crook, yo  " 

"Hold it, hold it," Doc Savage said. Although Doc did not lift his  voice, Harrison went silent. 

Sam Joseph examined Rotary Harrison, asked, "who is this man? He  seems familiar  " 

"You oughta remember me, you snipe," said Rotary. "I'm Rotary  Harrison." 

"Oh, yes. Yes, indeed," said Sam Joseph. "I do remember you now.  But you have changed a little." 

"You loaned me a hundred and eighty thousand dollars," snapped  Rotary. 

"Yes, I recall. On your oil interests." 

"And you signed an agreement to renew the loan in six months." 

"I am sure you are mistaken," Sam Joseph said. "I would have  remembered that. There was no such

agreement." 

"Why, yo  " 

Doc Savage got in front of Rotary, pushed him back. "You will have  to keep that for later," Doc said. "This

man underwent a major  operation three days ago." 

Sam Joseph smiled, said, "Thank you. But I am feeling better.  Except at times, when I seem to fade off

mentally and have rather  strange dreams." 

"what kind of dreams?" Doc inquired. 

"I never seem to be able to recall the details," Sam Joseph said.  "However, one strange thing happened. I

heard that little devil statue  speaking again." 

"You heard the devil talk again?" 

"Yes, I really heard it again." 

Sis Harrison blurted, "But I thought the devil was supposed to have  been destroy  " 

Doc, interrupting, asked, "where was the devil when it spoke?" 

"On the table there, beside my bed." 

The indicated table was a small modern metal one which bore a  rather expensivelooking bedside reading

lamp which gave a focused and  controlled beam that could be changed from a switch on the end of a  cord,

which an occupant of the bed could use. 


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"It was the little brass devil statue?" Doc asked. 

"Yes." 

"what did it say?" Doc inquired. "Or did you understand the words?" 

The bronze man's voice had not changed, had not taken on  excitement. But there was an intense activity in

his flakegold eyes  and tension in his jaw muscles. 

"I understood the words," said Sam Joseph. 

"What were they?" 

"The devil said, 'Hello, hello, hello. We have to see you. That  thing in Missouri turned out better than we

expected. We have the short  ugly one. What shall we do with him?'" 

Sam Joseph closed his eyes for a moment. "I am sure that is what  the devil said," he continued. "I made a

particular point to remember  it. It was a rather long speech, but I kept repeating it to myself. I  have a good

memory, really." 

Rotary Harrison growled, "if you have such a memory, it's funny  that agreement  " 

Doc interposed, "Mr. Joseph, had you been asleep just before you  heard the devil talk?" 

"Yes." 

"One of the sleepspells when you dream?" 

"Well, yes. But my head was quite clear when I heard the statue  talk."  Doc Savage nodded. 

"what became of the devil after it spoke?" he asked. 

"Oh, it disappeared. I don't know where it went." 

"Do you have a nurse?" 

"Only Dr. Nedden. He has been staying here day and night. He seems  very disturbed over what happened." 

"Dr. Nedden does not leave your side?" 

"Oh, I wouldn't say that. He goes away frequently, but for short  times only. Never for more than five minutes

at a time." 

That ended the discussion because Long Tom Roberts burst into the  place." 

"Get out of here, Doc!" Long Tom yelled. "The police are on their  way here to arrest you!" 

Long Tom did not get that excited without reason. Doc wheeled, made  for the door. The Harrisons, father and

daughter, seemed undecided,  then followed him, running. They lost no time getting into an elevator  and down

to the street. 


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Long Tom had a car waiting. They piled into that. Long Tom yanked  the machine into traffic, said, "You

better get down out of sight, Doc.  They'll have prowl cars looking for you. 

Rotary Harrison swore. 

"I thought you were a special policeman yourself," he said.* Doc  made no reply. 

Long Tom said, "Special commission or not, Doc, you are in plenty  of trouble." 

Doc said, "It must have developed suddenly." 

Long Tom popped a hand down on the steering wheel. 

"Like that!" he said. "Like lightning. Out of a clear sky. Bang!  But we should have seen it coming." 

Doc said, "It has been building up, all right." 

Long Tom, startled, eyed him and demanded, "You mean to say you  have seen it coming?" 

Doc nodded. 

"when did the police appear?" he asked. 

"Not very long after you left to come down to examine Sam Joseph,"  Long Tom explained. "The

commissioner himself came in, with the head of  the detective bureau, the head of the frauds investigation

bureau, and  some other big shots. So I knew it was bad. I tried to stall them. Said  I didn't know exactly where

you were, which was true in a way." 

"And then?" 

"They got a telephone call. It was a tipoff about where you were.  So they lit out. And I lit out faster, because

I beat them down here." 

Renny Renwick emitted a rumble of anger. "That Dr. Nedden! He  tipped them off!" 

The sound of a police siren came at them so suddenly that it was  surprising. The car, a white radio prowl,

whisked past with two grim  officers leaning forward on the seat. The machine was headed for the  Ogden

building. 

"I didn't beat them by much," Long Tom said. 

Rotary Harrison emitted a growl of disgust. "Do you guys do  everything backward?" 

"what you mean?" Long Tom asked. 

"What're they tryin' to arrest Savage for?" Rotary demanded. "Why?  You haven't said." 

Long Tom stared at him, then at Doc Savage. "Doc," Long Tom asked,  "do you want to discuss it in front of

these people?" 


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Doc Savage spoke then in Mayan. The language of ancient Maya was  one they had learned in the course of

their first really great  adventure together. Although simple, it was spoken, as far as they  knew, by no one in

the civilized world but themselves. 

"Has the existence and location of our College actually been  disclosed to the police?" Doc asked in Mayan. 

"Apparently not," Long Tom replied, also in Mayan. "But they are  convinced there is such a place." 

"Then, in our discussions, avoid admitting there is such a place,"  Doc directed. 

"O.K.," Long Tom said in English. He added, "what do you say we go  to my laboratory? The police don't

know where it is' and we'll be safe  there." 

Doc nodded. 

  * Doc Savage has held, through most of his  career, honorary police commissions,

usually of high ranking. From time  to time due to one misunderstanding or another arising out of the  bronze

man's unusual activities these have been revoked and restored.   

Chapter XI. THE DEVIL'S WORK

LONG Tom Roberts was a man who was noted for two things, the first  being his ability with electricity, for it

was conceded that he was one  of the great contemporary' men of electrical science; and, secondly, he  was

known for his ability to look as if he was so unhealthy that he was  going to collapse with his next step.

Undertakers invariably looked at  him with hope. Monk Mayfair claimed Long Tom's complexion was one a

mushroom would consider anemic. 

Long Tom had gotten the complexion by spending some time in his  laboratory, judging by the looks of the

place. It was in a basement, in  a neighborhood which was so tough that the cops walked in pairs in the  middle

of the street. There was no vestige of natural light in the  place, and apparently no fresh air ever entered either. 

But the array of electrical machinery was impressive, actually  frightening. 

"Great grief!" said Rotary Harrison in awe. 

Long Tom brushed pliers, wire and gadgets off chairs and seated  them. 

"Doc," he said, "you want to know the whole situation?" 

"All of it," the bronze man said. 

"All right," Long Tom told him. "First, I'll begin with this stuff  against you that appeared in the newspapers.

I'm talking about stories  like that one which appeared in the Morning Blade. That was a typical  example. Just

a lot of innuendo. That story in the Morning Blade was  typical, although some of the other newspapers were

not that blunt." 

Long Tom picked up a piece of copper wire and began to twist it  absentmindedly. 

"That newspaper campaign," he said, "was the work of an  organization." 


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Doc asked, "You are sure of that?" 

Long Tom shoved out his jaw and nodded. "That's the first real  piece of information Renny and I dug up. It

was a campaign, all right." 

"How was it managed?" Doc inquired. 

"In the crudest and most effective way. Money. Bribes. This thing  wasn't hatched in an evening over a glass

of beer. Whoever cooked it up  spent plenty of time and has plenty of money to back it and get it  going. But

the money that is spent will probably he only a sneeze in  the bucket to the final take." 

Doc said, "You were explaining how this newspaper campaign against  me was put in operation." 

"By bribing one or two guys on each paper," Long Tom said. "They  just bought off a reporter here and there.

Not on every paper, mind.  Just where they could find a soft man. We got this information from  reporters they

had planned to bribe and couldn't." 

"Did one man do the bribing?" 

"One man; that's right." 

"Who." Doc asked, "was he?" 

"Butch," Long Tom said. "The fellow they call Butch." 

Rotary Harrison, frowning heavily, said, "I don't see how newspaper  stories could start the police looking for

you. Or is there something  behind the stories?" 

"Yes, what is the rest of it?" Doc asked. 

"We," Long Tom said, "have investigated the Montague Ogden business  enterprises, and found the whole

institution about to collapse.  Accountants haven't finished going over the books yet  there hasn't  been time.

But it seems that Montague Ogden, who thought he was a rich  man, is without a cent, or maybe even in debt.

Suspicions are that the  firm has been looted. It has had the money sucked out of it like a  weasel sucks the

blood out of a chicken." 

"The weasel," bellowed Rotary, "was Sam Joseph, I bet." 

"Right," said Long Tom. "Sam Joseph, a man who  and mark this,  because it is the important part  a man

who does not have any memory  of his early life. A man who cannot recall where he spent his youth, or

anything about his early environment or existence." 

Doc Savage was suddenly showing the most intense interest. 

"Go on," he said. 

"Sam Joseph is No.1," Long Tom said. 

"Yes?" 


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"There are at least ten others." Long Tom looked at Doc gravely.  "And every one of them is a man who does

not remember what happened  during the early part of his life." 

Rotary Harrison frowned. "This is a crazy thing. First, a brass  devil that talks. Then men who have lost their

memories." 

"Not lost their memories," Long Tom corrected. "Men who have simply  had all memory of their early lives

erased from their brains." 

There was now the strangest expression on Doc Savage's metallic  features. 

"Name some of those men," he directed. 

Long Tom said, "Charles Moore, T. B. Moresco, Dan Taylor, Reynold  Rice Doyle  " 

"That is enough," Doc Savage said. 

The bronze man almost never showed emotion. But now there was stark  amazement on his face, shock and

stunned amazement. 

"What's the matter with you?" Rotary asked. 

Doc was silent. 

He could not very well answer. 

The men Long Tom had named were men who had once been criminals,  men whom Doc Savage had

captured in the course of his strange career of  righting wrongs and punishing evildoers! 

"Name the rest of them," Doc said suddenly. 

Long Tom named them. 

Doc nodded grimly. They were successful graduates of his College   all of them. 

"What have they done?" Doc asked. 

"Every one of those men," Long Tom said pointedly, "has become a  crook, robbed his concern of enormous

sums of money. 

DOC Savage stood erect slowly and walked into another room. He sank  in a chair and sat there. Long Tom

Roberts glanced at the Harrisons and  indicated they should remain where they were. Then Long Tom

followed  Doc. He closed the door behind him and stood studying the big bronze  man. He had never seen Doc

look as deeply affected. 

"It's an awful thing to happen, Doc," Long Tom said finally. 

"Very bad," Doc agreed. 

"I don't understand it at all. None of the graduates from our  College have ever turned back to crooked ways

before. How come a whole  bunch of them do it now, all at once?" 


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"Dirty work," Doc said. 

Long Tom rubbed his jaw thoughtfully. "It must be. You figure it is  all tied in with the talking devil and Sam

Joseph." 

"Apparently." 

"Sam Joseph was never in the College." 

"No. But all the others were." 

Doc Savage came up out of the chair. He seemed to have reached some  kind of a conclusion, a decision. 

He said, "The particularly terrible aspect of this thing is that  the whereabouts of our College, and proof that it

actually exists, may  get into the hands of the police and the public when they are  unfriendly. We have always

known that our method of treating criminals  is too drastic for the public to accept, and probably will be too

drastic for another fifty or a hundred years." He paused and shook his  head grimly. 

"I had hoped," Doc continued, "to keep the College in operation,  and perhaps in the future evolve some way

of quietly bringing the  method of treating criminals to the attention of the public. Present it  in a favorable

light, so that it would be seen as the only sure cure  for criminal minds. Then, with that accomplished, if we

could present a  sound groundwork of many cases of criminals cured and made into upright  citizens by our

treatment, we could get our method accepted. It would  mean the elimination of the most troublesome type of

criminal of all,  the confirmed criminal. 

"But," Doc concluded, "if our plans are wrecked now it can well  take another century or more for such a

thing to be developed and  accepted by the public. That is the really grim thing about this. You  and I believe

in this thing, and we know how it works, and what a  benefit it will be to mankind. We know how tragic

losing it would be." 

"Doc, there is one thing the police haven't been tipped. They  haven't been told where our College is located." 

"We have got to stop this thing before they are informed." 

"If we knew where to start," Long Tom complained. 

RENNY Renwick brought Doc Savage the newspaper. It was a copy of  the Morning Blade, the paper which

had attacked Doc Savage with the  greatest violence. 

"This Just went on sale on the streets," Renny said. "Take a look  at it." 

Red ink for headlines went out of fashion years ago, even for the  Blade. But this one was in red ink. 

DOC SAVAGE AID CONFESSES 

The following is a true, signed statement  made to representatives  of The Blade this morning  by Lieutenant

Colonel Andrew Blodgett Monk  Mayfair,  for a long tune aid and close confident of the  notorious and

monstrous Doc Savage. 

Editor, The Blade, 


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And Whom It May Concern: 

This is to inform you that I have  just discovered the real nature  of the incredible  thing which Doc Savage has

been doing to the  brains  of men. Accordingly, I have not only  severed all relations with Doc  Savage,  but I

shall do what I can to right this  horrendous wrong. 

I shall have in the hands of the Morning Blade,  and all other  newspapers and press associations,  in time for

publication tomorrow  morning, a full  and true signed statement concerning Doc Savage's  socalled College

and the hideous brain operations  conducted there.  My statement will include the  location of the College in

order that  the poor  wretches still there may be rescued. It will also  include a  full list of past graduates of the

place,  as nearly as my memory can  supply the names of  these poor victims.  (Signed) Monk Mayfair 

Renny rumbled, "Holy cow! That's Monk's signature, too. And the  document isn't a fake." 

That was also Doc's opinion. The letter from Monk, or the  statement, whichever it would he called, was not

printed, but was a  reproduction of a photograph of the letter itself. It was a good cut,  quite large, full of detail,

and there was no doubt that Monk had  signed it. Furthermore, Monk's fingerprints were affixed. 

Renny waved the paper angrily. 

"How'd this happen?" he bellowed. "It's incredible! What the blazes  has gotten into Monk?" 

"They've bought him off," said Rotary Harrison. 

Renny looked as if he was going to slam Harrison with one of his  big fists. 

"Don't be a fool," Renny growled. "They couldn't torture a thing  like that out of Monk. How'd they get it?" 

Then Renny stared at Doc Savage and his jaw fell, for the bronze  man's manner had changed. Doc looked

alert, even relieved. The bronze  man was on his feet. 

Doc indicated the newspaper. 

"They stubbed their toes," he said. "They went just one jump too  far and gave it all away. Now we can go

into action." 

"Action," Renny said, "is what we can use some of." 

"Get Ham Brooks," Doc Savage said. "Get him here at once." 

Chapter XII. MANTHEFT

HAM Brooks did not arrive at Long Tom Roberts' experimental  laboratory, which was serving as Doc's

headquarters, until early that  night. He came in looking haggard, pouches under his eyes, lips cracked  from

wind. 

"I got your message to come," he told Doc. "But I had a heck of a  time dodging police. Did you know there's

a police alarm all over the  United States for you?" 

Doc admitted he knew that, because he had been listening to  shortwave radio police broadcasts. He led Ham


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into a room where they  could be alone and closed the door. 

"That thing Monk had in the newspapers  that incredible thing!"  Ham exclaimed. "How'd they make Monk

sign a thing like that? He must  have been horribly tortured." 

Doc said quietly, "Do not worry about Monk. He probably is still  alive, and they probably have not tortured

him." 

"But  " 

Doc indicated a chair. "Sit down," he said. "I have a job for you.  It may be dangerous, but it is important. It

requires a man of your  build, a man who can act. That is why I called you in." 

"I'll do it," Ham said. "Calling me in was all right, too. I hadn't  found a single trace of poor Monk." 

"Lean back in this chair," Doc said. 

Twenty minutes later the bronze man opened the door and called in  Rotary and Sis Harrison, and Long Tom.

They came to the door and gasped  in astonishment. 

"Sam Joseph!" exclaimed Sis. "Where'd you get him? How  " 

"Does he look like Sam Joseph to you?" Doc asked. 

"Why, of course he does," Sis said. And Rotary nodded agreement. 

Long Tom Roberts, however, grinned and said, "So that's why you  wanted Ham. He does look a lot like Sam

Joseph, at that." 

The resemblance which Ham now bore to Sam Joseph, the victim of the  wrongly diagnosed brain operation,

was in fact startling. There had  been a physical resemblance to begin with, and the disguise work Doc  had

done had enhanced the likeness. 

Doc said, "All right, I just wanted to see how effective the  disguise was. Will you leave us alone now." 

"What's going on?" Rotary blurted. 

Sis took his arm, said, "Come on, dad. It looks to me like we're  going to get some action." 

They went out, leaving Doc and Ham alone. Doc said, "Ham, his voice  will be the tricky part. We are going

to work on that now. It may take  several hours; I will talk to you, using the nearest thing to Sam  Joseph's

voice and tone I can manage, and you will repeat the words  after me." 

THE truck was large, painted a silver gray, and had a body like a  metal box. It was labeled Depar:ment of

Sanitation, and it had the  usual mechanism at the rear into which the contents of an ash can could  be dumped

and loaded automatically into the dust and odorproof body.  There was nothing about it to indicate it was not

a city  sanitationdepartment truck of the type which called at downtown office  buildings each morning

before dawn for ashes and waste. 

It did arrive a little early. 


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It stopped at the service entrance of the towering modern Ogden  building, near the stack of ash cans which

the janitors had already  placed on the sidewalk, as was customary. 

Two men came out of the Ogden building. They wore janitor's  coveralls marked Ogden Bldg., but they did

not look like janitors, and  the bulges in their pockets near which they kept their hands were  obviously guns. 

They stood and watched, a pair of sinister figures, very alert, in  the rather thick gloom. 

Two men piled out of the truck and began loading ashes. They worked  methodically, as if they had done that

work for years. Only twice did  they seem to have a little trouble, grunting and banging large ash cans  against

the rear of the truck before they lowered them to the walk,  replaced the lids and took the cans back to stand

them along the wall  just inside the service entrance of the building. 

They got in the truck, drove to the next building and collected  more ashes. 

One of the two men wearing janitor coveralls laughed. "Some guys  make it the hard way, don't they." 

"We'd look more like janitors," said his companion, "if we got busy  and rolled these empty ash cans back into

the boiler room." 

"You gone crazy?" the other demanded. "Hell with it." 

They closed the service door, locked it, and walked away,  discussing a bottle and a card game they had been

forced to desert. 

It was quiet in the passageway for two or three minutes after they  had gone. 

Then lids came off two of the ash cans. Doc got out of one. Ham  Brooks, wearing his Sam Joseph disguise,

with coveralls and a  cellophanelike hood to protect his clothing and the bandages from ash  dust, appeared

from the other can. 

"Lucky we used a system to get in here," Ham said. "They've got the  place under guard, all right." 

Doc said, "Look for the stairway." 

THE only other guard they encountered was outside the door of  Montague Ogden's penthouse. He was

equipped with brush and pail, and  apparently it was his job to look innocent by scrubbing at the parquet  floor

when the occasion required. 

Doc used an anesthetic bomb on him. The bomb was about the size of  a bantam egg, consisted of a thin,

glasslike plastic shell containing  liquid. The shell burst when the bomb hit near the man, making hardly  any

noise, and the liquid splattered, evaporated. 

The guard seemed to go to sleep. Actually, that was about what it  amounted to. The anesthetic gas, one of the

most efficient gadgets ever  developed by Doc Savage, took effect without causing sensation, and the  man

would awaken as one awakens from sleep, after half an hour or so. 

Doc and Ham avoided effects of the gas by holding their breath.  After about a minute the stuff lost its

effectiveness, mingling with  the air. 

Doc carefully gathered up the glasslike plastic fragments and  pocketed them, so no trace would remain. 


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There were no servants in the elaborate penthouse layout, which Ham  considered a little strange. 

"And I wonder where Montague Ogden himself is?" he added,  whispering. 

In the bedroom where Sam Joseph lay, Dr. Nedden was sitting. Nedden  occupied a deep chair and he was

reading. He had the lights on very  bright, as if to keep himself awake. 

Doc Savage tossed another of the anesthetic grenades into the room,  after easing the door open a fraction of

an inch at a time. He and Ham  held their breath, until Dr. Nedden's head sagged forward, and the book

slipped out of his hands to the floor. 

Doc Savage picked up the book Dr. Nedden had been reading. It was a  technical tome, one on medinals, the

monosodium salts of  diethylbarbituric acid. 

The book title meant nothing to Ham, but he noted that Doc Savage  seemed to think it significant, for the

bronze man made, for a brief  moment, a tiny trilling sound, a note that was almost inaudible. And  yet it

sounded satisfied. 

Ham saw also that Doc picked up a small bottle on a table at Dr.  Nedden's elbow. Evidently the man had

been using the contents himself. 

"Something to keep him awake," Ham remarked. 

Sam Joseph was asleep. They awakened him. He knew them and smiled. 

"We are going to take you out of here for a while," Doc Savage told  him, "and leave Ham Brooks in your

place." 

"I do not see any sense in that," Sam Joseph said. 

"There will be sense to it, we hope," Doc said. 

The man seemed agreeable. 

Ham took Sam Joseph's place in the bed. 

"Be very careful," Doc warned him. 

Ham nodded. "How long will I have to do this, do you suppose?" 

"Let us hope, no longer than a few hours," Doc told him. "We will  put the genuine patient back as soon as

possible." 

Ham said, "O. K., I'm game." 

"There are some weapons you can use concealed in your head  bandage," Doc said, "if it comes to that." 

THE bronze man got Sam Joseph out of the building without  difficulty, without being discovered. He carried

the patient to a car  which Renny Renwick had waiting around the corner. 

"Feel all right?" Doc inquired. 


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"Oh, yes, excellent," Sam Joseph said. "You know, it is strange. I  feel very well at times, and then at other

times I go off into those  strange unconscious spells." 

Doc Savage made no comment. 

But Renny glanced at the patient, asked, "Heard that devil do any  more talking?" 

"No," Sam Joseph replied. "I guess you gentlemen think I am crazy,  don't you?" 

"Seen anything more of the devil?" 

"No. You do think I'm crazy, don't you?" 

Doc Savage said quietly, "You are as sane as any of the rest of us,  and you can rest assured of that." 

The bandages kept much expression from showing on Sam Joseph's  face, but into his voice came almost

pitiful relief when he spoke. 

"I am so glad to hear you say that," he said eagerly. "So much has  happened to make me doubt my  well 

rationality." 

"For example?" 

"Well, those periods of coma, of unconsciousness, when my senses  leave me  yet it is not sleep." Sam

Joseph opened and closed his hands  slowly, painfully. "That has been happening for many weeks, and always

there has been growing a kind of premonition of something terribly  wrong. 

Doc put a comforting hand on his arm. "You have a very strong  subconscious, Mr. Joseph." 

"You mean something is wrong?" 

"Very." 

Long Tom Roberts helped them carry Sam Joseph into the electrical  research laboratory in the dank basement

when they arrived. Long Tom  was somewhat sullen and scowled frequently at Rotary Harrison. 

"Something wrong?" Doc asked. 

"I don't see why the hell I can't get out and walk around the  town," Rotary snapped. "It's not me the police are

looking for." 

Long Tom said, "I told him your orders were for everybody to stay  out of sight, Doc. I practically had to hit

him over the head with a  chair to keep him here." 

Rotary growled, "You try kissing me with a chair and it'll be the  last guy you try it on." 

"Now, dad!" Sis said. "He's right. The police probably know we are  with Mr. Savage. We cannot do anyone

any good in jail." 

LONG Tom, Renny, Sis and Rotary watched with interest, but with no  immediate understanding, as Doc

Savage went to work on Sam Joseph. 


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It first appeared that the bronze man was going to do nothing but  give Sam Joseph another physical

examination, including various blood  tests. Then it was clear that the examination was of specialized  nature. 

Doc analyzed blood samples, tissue, saliva. It seemed to the others  that he was making every possible

analysis. 

He spent some four hours at it. 

Then he asked Sam Joseph questions. 

"These periods of coma, or unconsciousness, to which you refer,"  Doc said. "Did they come on regularly?" 

"No, not at all," Sam Joseph assured him. "There was an irregular  interval of time between each one." 

"I want you to think carefully,"' Doc said, "and tell me whether  some of them came on after meals." 

"Yes. Yes, after I had taken a cocktail sometimes. I thought it was  the cocktails causing it, and I even stopped

drinking." 

"Who was with you when you had the cocktails?" 

"Why . . . why, Dr. Nedden, now that I think of it." 

Doc Savage was pleased. 

"Have you ever heard of the monosodium salts of diethylbarbituric  acid?" the bronze man asked. 

Sam Joseph frowned. "No  except that I believe I have seen Dr.  Nedden reading a scientific text concerning

something like that." 

Doc nodded. 

"Your spells of coma," he said, "have been brought on by medinals  and other drugs. My analysis is not

complete, but there is unmistakable  evidence of the presence of medinals and their continued  administration." 

"What is a medinal?" 

"A hypnotic," Doc explained. 

Renny gave a violent jump. "Holy cow! Hypnotics! You mean there's a  drug that hypnotizes a perso  " 

"No, no," Doc corrected him. "The medical application of the term  hypnotic simply means an agent

producing sleep. But in the present case  other drugs have been added to the barbituric group to produce

physically a state of coma with apparently only the loss of the  facility of memory and initiative." 

Sam Joseph apparently understood it better than any of them. 

"They drugged me!" he ejaculated. "And then they made me do  whatever they wanted me to do, and I didn't

remember." 


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Rotary Harrison seemed astounded. "That's why you don't remember  the agreement you signed to renew my

loan!" 

"That must be it." 

DOC Savage confronted Renny Renwick and Long Tom Roberts. He said,  "There is one thing more we

should do to make sure about this thing.  That is to get hold of at least one of the graduates of our College

who, according to the police, have turned crooked." 

"Right now?" Renny asked. "Right now," Doc said.  Renny and Long  Tom left on the job. 

Doc Savage went back to work testing and analyzing blood specimens  from Sam Joseph. It was a job not

made any easier by the fact that Long  Tom's electrical laboratory was not equipped with medical type slides

for the microscopes, nor proper chemicals. There was, however, a  wonderful atomic microscope which made

up for much that was lacking. 

Sis Harrison waited patiently, employing her time in administering  little comforts to Sam Joseph. Sis, it was

evident, was admiring Doc  Savage more and more. 

"What will happen to Mr. Ham Brooks if they find he is not Sam  Joseph?" she asked. 

Doc said, "We had better cross our fingers and hope on that." An  hour later Renny and Long Tom came back.

They had a man named Charles  Moore, once a patient in the College. 

"We got him," Long Tom explained dryly, "by highjacking him away  from two police detectives who were

taking him to talk to the district  attorney." 

Charles Moore was a smooth, brown, capable man, a little taller  than the average, in good physical shape.

Clean living had made his  face pleasant, and there remained very little of the thin hardness that  had once been

there when he was a notorious criminal. He had once, as a  matter of fact, very nearly succeeded in murdering

Doc Savage. But that  was before he had been captured, subjected to a brain operation that  wiped out all

knowledge of past, and trained as an accountant. He had  been a successful, honest man in the field of

accountancy, having risen  to be vice president of his firm. 

"They had arrested me," Charles Moore said "I do not understand it  at all. They say I have robbed my

company of large sums of money. That  is ridiculous." 

He looked extremely worried. 

Doc Savage asked, "How do they claim the robberies were executed?" 

"As vice president of my concern, which deals in heavy industrial  and oilfield machinery, I handled a lot of

executive matters," Charles  Moore explained. "There are many occasions where I could sign the wrong  kind

of a bill of sale, or lease, or other document, and steal a large  sum. In the company files, they claim they have

found a lot of such  papers. One example is a bunch of receipts for money paid out, and no  merchandise was

received. The money went into my pocket, they claim. It  does look logical. But I'm no crook. I hate crooks." 

Doc Savage's voice was quiet, intended to restore the man's  confidence in himself. 

"How about those spells of coma, somewhat like sleep, from which  you have suffered?" Doc asked. 


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Charles Moore stared at him in astonishment. 

"How did you know about those?" 

"You have had them?" 

"Oh, yes." 

"Do you know a man named Dr. Nedden?" 

"Why, yes, I do." 

"And do you have a drink with Dr. Nedden now and then?" 

"Yes." 

Renny Renwick leaped up and slammed a fist into a palm, bellowing,  "This tears it! This tears it right up the

middle! I see the guts of  the thing now!" 

"Sit down or they'll hear you in China," Long Tom snapped. "We all  see it now." 

Renny subsided. Charles Moore didn't know that he had once been a  criminal; none of the graduates knew

that about themselves. Charles  Moore did not even know the purpose of the strange institution in  upstate New

York where he had received his training, nor did he know  its exact location. 

Charles Moore must not, Renny knew, be told of his past, or the  unorthodox method that had been used to

change him from a criminal to  an honest man. It would do Charles Moore no good, and it might saddle  his

mind with a worry that would hamper him through the rest of his  life. 

Doc Savage told Charles Moore, "The thing for you to do is go back  and give yourself up to the police. We

are going to do our best to  straighten out this mess." 

"Shall I tell them about this meeting with you?" 

Doc nodded. "It will do no harm. Yes, tell them. But do not tell  them where the interview took place." 

Charles Moore departed, not a little relieved. 

"A DEVILISH scheme," Renny said when they were alone. "That fiend,  Dr. Nedden, somehow learned the

identity of a group of the men. we have  made honest by brain operations. He worked on those men with

drugs, got  them to perpetrate crimes which they  did not know they were doing. And  now he is saddling the

whole thing on us." 

Long Tom looked at Doc, asked, "Doc, do you suppose Nedden is the  brains behind it." 

The bronze man did not seem to hear the question, which was a  rather aggravating eccentricity of his when he

did not wish to answer  an inquiry. Renny and Long Tom had seen him do it many times before.  They did not

put the question again, knowing it would get no response. 

Long Tom said finally, "We know how that letter from Monk came to  happen, anyway. They drugged him.

He signed it when he was drugged." 


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Renny nodded, agreed, "That is why they kept him alive." 

"What about Ham? When do we put Sam Joseph back in his place?" 

Doc Savage looked as if he was worried about Ham. 

Chapter XIII. KILL ORDER

HAM Brooks was a little worried about himself. He had played the  part of Sam Joseph, recuperating

operation victim, with complete  success for some hours now. The success was so complete that it was

contributing to Ham's worry. Nothing had happened so that he could  prove to himself that he could get away

with it. 

He did not like the looks of the medicine Dr. Nedden was mixing  either. Medicine was something Ham didn't

want. 

Dr. Nedden approached. "Here's your little tonic for the day," he  said. 

"I don't feel as if I need anything," Ham said hurriedly. 

"Oh, but you must build up your strength. This will just make you  rest comfortably and sleep a little." 

Ham felt more kindly toward the stuff. Sleep, eh? Well, if he was  asleep it would be that much easier to get

away with this thing. 

He drank the stuff. It tasted as if they had drowned a cat in it  about a month ago and forgot to remove the

remains. 

He was a little astonished at the speed with which he became  sleepy. It was sure potent stuff. Not unpleasant,

though. He remembered  thinking that, and then he was able to think of no more. 

Dr. Nedden bent over Ham and said, "Sam! Sam! Can you hear me?" 

There was no response from the figure on the bed. 

Dr. Nedden rolled back Ham's eyelids and examined the reaction of  the eyes to the beam of a small flashlight

which he splashed into them.  He seemed satisfied. 

"Fully under," he remarked. 

Dr. Nedden then went into the kitchen of the elaborate penthouse  layout, and from there into an excellent 

and bizarre, considering  that it was on top of a skyscraper  imitation of a French wine cellar.  This was well

stocked with imported wines and champagnes. 

Selecting a wickercovered jug labeled as a wine, Dr. Nedden  separated this. The gut had been cut in the

middle, the two halves  fitting together inside the wicker covering. 

He took a brass devil image out of this. 

Having carried the thing back to the room where Ham lay, Dr. Nedden  placed the image on the table, and


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turned on a thermal switch by  holding a lighted match against the devil's left ear. The switch  evidently

operated as a thermostat functions. 

There was a click and a radio apparatus began humming as it warmed  up inside the thing. 

Dr. Nedden took hold of the thing, pressed on a spot where there  was a concealed button, said, "All right.

You can come up now. And  bring the papers." 

"Be right up," the devil said, but with the voice of Butch, the  meeklooking man. 

Butch came in looking very subdued and sheeplike in blue suit,  black shoes and a stiff collar. He had a brief

case under an arm, and  wore a pair of rimless spectacles. He was altogether benign. 

"Good afternoon," he said gently. "You need new batteries in that  devil, doctor. Your signal comes in very

weak. You may want to contact  someone at the other end of the city sometime, and they will not be  able to

hear you. 

"Thanks," said Dr. Nedden shortly. 

"Furthermore, I would suggest you dispose of the devil," added  Butch. "The thing nearly got us into trouble

once, when you insisted on  having it talk to poor Sam Joseph to further con"'vince him he was  mentally

unbalanced and needed a brain operation. Suppose Doc Savage  had gotten the real statue containing the

transceiver that day instead  of the fake one which he did finally get? Savage's suspicions would  have been

aroused." 

"Oh, stop harping on it," Dr. Nedden snapped. "Savage didn't get  the real one, and he operated on Sam

Joseph, and all those witnessing  doctors saw that he had made a mistake, and that gave us the foothold  we

needed to start accusing him." 

BUTCH shrugged and placed his brief case on the table. He removed  several documents, together with a

fountain pen. "Here they are", he  said. 

"That the last of them?" Dr. Nedden demanded. 

"Sure. This finishes up cleaning out Montague Ogden. These papers  prove that Sam Joseph bought, or rather

pretended to buy, a large  quantity of stock, which he proceeded to carry on the books of the  concern. The

stock, being actually nonexistent, will prove Sam Joseph  shystered his boss out of a fortune. The checks, of

course, have  already been signed by Sam Joseph two weeks ago, when he was under the  effects of the drug,

and cashed. The boss has the money. All we need  now is these few papers to help clinch the blame on Sam." 

Dr. Nedden grinned, waved an arm. "There he is. Go to it." 

Butch seated himself beside the bed. It was obvious that he had  gone through the routine many times before,

because he leaned forward,  took Ham's hand and said, "Sam, Sam, hear me? Sam, do as you are told.  Here is

a fountain pen. Take it and hold it. Take the pen, Sam." 

Ham's hand then moved vaguely, finally grasped the pen in writing  position. 

Butch said, "Write! Write, Sam. Sign your name. Sign it. Sam  Joseph. Sam Joseph." 

Ham wrote the signature. 


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Butch repeated this painstakingly with the other documents, got all  of them signed. 

"Fine," he said. "Now you won't need to dope him up any more. We're  all shaped up." 

Dr. Nedden looked much relieved. "You think everything is fine  then?" 

Butch nodded. "Sure. All hunky. Savage hasn't made any progress  whatever. We just hit him with everything

and hit him so fast that he  hasn't been able to get his head above water. He was tricked into that  operation.

That stunned him. We had him framed before he knew it." 

Dr. Nedden said, "That operation on Sam Joseph here was risky. I  still don't think it was worth the risk." 

"You don't? Why, dammit, that was the crowning touch. That was what  will convict Doc Savage. That's what

they'll electrocute him for." 

"I don't understand." 

Butch whipped out a paper which bore typed lines. "Look, here is  what the morning newspapers will carry." 

The typing said: 

WHY DID SAVAGE OPERATE  ON SAM JOSEPH? 

Sam Joseph is a man who was formerly an  amnesia victim. He is a  man who has no idea  who he was in his

youth. All the embezzlers  in  this case are the same. None of them  remember back past a certain day.  Did Doc

Savage operate on the brains  of all these men? Did he make  them crooks?  Did he take their loot from them?

Did  they work for him?  Did Savage operate  on Sam Joseph in an attempt to  hide the crime he  had committed

in  operating on the man's brain? 

Dr. Nedden laughed and said, "I see it now. The operation is the  one thing that implicates Doc Savage

directly in the affair." 

"Sure." 

Butch, very satisfied with himself and the world, started to fold  the documents which Ham had just signed,

and place them with other  papers in the brief case. 

He froze. He eyed the papers. His eyes came out of their sockets a  little. 

"Look!" he croaked. "The signature ain't his!" 

"What?" 

"This signature ain't Sam Joseph's signature!" Butch yelled. Dr.  Nedden leaped to the bed and rubbed Ham's

face vigorously, dislodging  some of the wax makeup which Doc had applied as disguise. 

"It's not Sam!" he gasped. 

"It's Ham Brooks!" Butch said. 


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DR. NEDDEN nearly went to pieces then. He wrung his hands, seemed  wildly baffled, then suddenly

snatched up his hat and headed for the  door in frenzied flight. 

Butch said, "None of that!" and produced a gun. Dr. Nedden came  back. Butch ordered, "Help me take this

guy along." 

"But what  " 

"Don't ask baboon questions!" Butch snarled. "Grab him!  We've got  to get out of here with him. We may

need a hostage, somebody we can  knock off if they don't stay off our trail." 

They got out of the building a great deal faster than it seemed  possible they could have managed it. Butch

warned the rest of the gang,  the minor members, who served as guards around the place. All of them  piled

into cars from a nearby parking lot. 

They went to the ordinarylooking brick apartment house west of  Central Park. Butch ordered all of the men

to wait outside, preferably  in nearby bars, and to respond to a signal comprised of two short, one  long and

two short blasts of an automobile horn. 

Butch and Dr. Nedden carried Ham, who was still unconscious, into  the elevator. At the sixteenth floor they

got out and packed Ham  through one of the numerous doors marked: 

DR. MORGAN  PRIVATE HOSPITAL 

Two men only were there, and they were minor members of the gang,  wearing white malenurse suits  and

at the moment in a fright, and  carrying towels wrapped around pistols. 

"Call a meeting!" Butch snarled at them. "Get everybody here!" This  seemed to be the general headquarters

of the gang, the spot where  conferences were held. And in ordering the summoning of everybody,  Butch

apparently meant only those who held positions of responsibility  in the organization. Men who considered it

important that the other  members did not become too familiar with their faces. 

They began arriving. They entered the outer reception rooms and  changed to the surgical robes and masks

which were their conference  disguises. 

Butch was impatient with this mumbojumbo. 

"Rome is burning!" he snarled. "And you guys fiddle with your  faces!" 

The group was eventually gathered. Butch counted. Seven of them. 

"And the boss makes eight," Butch said. "But the boss won't be  here." 

Butch produced the little statue of a devil, a devil with Chinese  characteristics, and placed it on a white

operating table. He switched  the thing on, let the tubes warm, said into the microphone: 

"Boss, come in. This is important." 

He got no answer. 

"That's what I was afraid of," he said. "And that doesn't make it  look any better." 


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BUTCH apparently held no more position of authority than any of the  others because a man growled, "Where

do you get off, calling a meeting  and giving orders?" 

"Oh, shut up," Butch said. "Something has gone wrong." 

He told them about the finding of Ham Brooks in place of Sam  Joseph, and pointed out Ham's unconscious

body as proof of the story. 

He informed them he did not know just what the unexpected discovery  might mean. But it was sure to be

nothing healthy for them. It meant at  the least that Doc Savage was a lot closer to arriving at the truth  than

any of them expected. 

The boss, he reminded them, had made a provision for a case like  this. 

"If anything serious went wrong," he told them "we were to make a  break for the boss' southwestern ranch

and stay there until the hounds  quit howling. Until things blew over." 

Butch tried to get an answer out of the radio transceiver concealed  in the devil statue and failed. 

"Get going," he directed. "You," he told Dr. Nedden, "will light  out first with Ham Brooks here. We're taking

him along as a hostage if  we need him. Also, when he comes out from under the effect of that  hypnotic, we're

damned sure going to find out how much Doc Savage  knows." 

Dr. Nedden nodded. He and another man got a stretcher on which they  placed Ham. They carried him to the

elevator and rode down. They were  alone, the other men being busy getting rid of their masks and surgical

robes. 

At the lobby floor they bent to pick up the stretcher. 

"Oh!" gasped Dr. Nedden. His eyes got wide. 

Montague Ogden was standing there. Ogden's feet were well apart,  and his eyes narrow. He wore a topcoat,

and from the way his hands  rested in the pockets it was obvious they held guns. 

"Oh!" repeated Dr. Nedden. "Uh  hello, boss!" 

Montague Ogden said, "So you know who you take orders from?" 

"I  yes, yes, of course." Dr. Nedden was uncomfortable. "After all  it isn't much of a secret. And ...... your

ranch, of course. We all  know about that. Know we are to go there and keep out of sight if the  breaks get too

tough." 

"I see," Montague Ogden said. He did not seem angry. "And where are  you going now?" 

"To the ranch." 

"Who gave those orders?" 

"Butch," said Nedden maliciously. "Butch gave them. He's becoming  very officious. 


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"I see. Officious, eh." Montague Ogden looked fierce. "Well, we'll  see about that. Is everyone going to the

ranch?" 

"Yes. Everyone. Monk Mayfair is already being held there, of  course. And we're taking this other fellow,

Ham Brooks, as a hostage if  we need one." 

"Then what?" 

"Then, if we don't need Monk or Ham, they can be killed." Montague  Ogden seemed to give the situation

thought. "You two will go with me  and bring Ham," he said. "We will take my private plane. You can fly,

can you not, Dr. Nedden?" 

"Yes, I can fly." 

"And you know where the ranch is?" 

"Yes, yes, of course." 

"Then get going," Montague Ogden snapped. "We will go together   you two, Ham Brooks and myself." 

They got going. For a man who was in command of a situation,  Montague Ogden seemed very strained, and

he took only one or the other  of his hands from his pockets at a time, never removing both hands. 

Chapter XIV. KING AND JOKER

DOC Savage drove his ambulance with care and concentration. On the  seat beside him, Sis Harrison sat and

watched with admiration. 

"You mean to tell me," she said, "that you built a radio set small  enough to enclose in the bandages on Ham's

head?" 

From the back of the ambulance, Long Tom said, "Drive north awhile,  Doc. And better put on more speed.

The signal isn't too good." 

Doc said, "Not a radio set. Just a transmitter. A little oscillator  powered with concentrated flashlight batteries

which puts out a simple  wave that can be traced with a direction finder." 

"It's marvelous!" Sis exclaimed. 

The ambulance was one belonging to the hospital which Doc Savage  controlled, the one which he had

employed in performing the unfortunate  brain operation on Sam Joseph. 

Sam Joseph was now back in that hospital to recuperate under an  assumed name. 

"We have used the device before," Doc said. "There is nothing  stupendous about it. It will only work for a

few hours. Not over a day.  It is only good for horizon distance because the wave length is so  short. It has

several drawbacks." 

"I think it's marvelous," Sis said. 


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Long Tom said, "Go east again, Doc. We're getting a little closer  to it." 

Rotary Harrison bellowed, "I hope we catch up with him soon! I'm  getting tired of this chasing around. I want

to get my hands on  somebody. I want my hands on a throat." 

"Quit bawling like a bull," Long Tom said. "You are worse than  Monk." 

Doc asked, "Long Tom, are you still in contact with Renny?" 

"Yes. I can hear his carrier wave. 

"Tell him to keep somewhere above us. But plenty high. High enough  that he'll not be noticed." 

"0. K. Renny is bothered. He says what if the Civil Air Patrol or  an army plane orders him down?" 

"That is a chance we have to take," Doc said. "A plane is the only  way of following if they take Ham away in

a plane." 

Sis saw that the bronze man was under an intense strain. She  understood his feelings. It was at his suggestion

that Ham Brooks had  undertaken the job of pretending to be Sam Joseph. Now Ham was in  trouble, or

everything pointed to it. 

As soon as Ham had been moved  as indicated by the shift of the  little radio transmitter  they had hurried

to follow. They had gotten  uptown a little too late to intercept Ham at the time he was  stationary, somewhere

near Central Park, and now they were trying to  catch him. 

Feeling a change of subject would do Doc good, Sis said, "You have  five assistants, have you not? There are

only four  Monk, Ham, Renny  and Long Tom  working with you this time. But don't you have five?" 

"Yes, five," Doc Savage said. "The other is Johnny  William Harper  Littlejohn, the archaeologist and

geologist. He is in Alaska, where he  is preparing some specimens." 

Long Tom yelled in the back, "Doc! I think they've got Ham in a  plane! I think they're just taking the air!" 

The plane was a bright cabin job. They saw it flash overhead,  climbing steeply, and caught a faint trace of its

strong motor roar. 

Doc Savage rapped, "Long Tom! Call Renny down with our plane.  Quick!" 

"I've already called him down," Long Tom said. 

Doc Savage tramped on the brake, wheeled the car to the right, up a  steep, rutted road into a field. The field

was large and flat, a  meadow. Nearby was a hangar, and a car parked in front of it. An  elderly man in

coveralls stood in front of the hangar, rolling a  cigarette. 

Doc braked the car to a halt before the man, demanded, "Who owns  the field?" 

"Reckon it's me," the man said easily. He looked honest. 

"Whose plane just took off?" 


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"Private ship. Belongs to Montague Ogden, the financier. Keeps it  here. Had three friends with him, one of

them so sick he was on a  stretcher. Head all bandaged." 

"Know any of the friends?" 

"One. Feller named Dr. Nedden. Family physician of Ogden's, I  think." 

Renny was down on the field now. He was flying a fast cabin plane  that was far from being the freak of speed

in which they had made their  earlier flight into the Midwest. This ship could hold its own with  Ogden's plane,

however. 

Renny taxied up in the ship. They loaded in. Renny fed the  cylinders gas and they took off. 

Long Tom had brought his direction finder and he was feverishly  setting it up. This was the critical period

and his manner showed it.  The little transmitter concealed on Ham was weak, and if it got out of  range now

they were lost. 

When he picked up the signal his yell of delight startled everyone. 

"Got it!" he bellowed. "Head more south, Renny." 

And fifteen minutes later Renny was saying, "I can see the ship  now. What do we do? Overtake them?" 

"Keep back far enough not to be seen," Doc Savage said. "We might  as well find out where they are going." 

Rotary Harrison looked disgusted at that. "Always followin'!" he  snapped. "About time we was gettin' our

hands on some necks, ain't it?" 

Doc made no comment. 

Long Tom remarked, "There is an old Chinese proverb that says:  'Snake is small because he suck egg; fox is

big because he wait and  catch grown bird.'" 

"What kind of an answer is that?" Rotary snarled. 

IT got dark and they followed the other plane several hours by  radio alone, after which the other ship landed.

They saw its landing  lights streak out beams and these picked up a smooth field, and came to  a stop on it. 

"Over Georgia somewhere," Long Tom said. "Near the coast." 

Doc Savage watched the plane lights below for a moment. 

"Parachutes," he said. "One man with me. Either one of you." 

Renny said, "Match you," to Long Tom. And then lost. 

They went over the side together and cracked open their 'chutes at  once. It was very dark, clouds above, and

small chance of their being  seen. And probably their plane motor had not been heard because they  could see

that the engine of the ship below was still idling over, and  that would drown any sound from above. 

Doc called softly, "Get out of the harness." 


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"Sure," Long Tom said. 

They squirmed and strained and unfastened the parachute harness  snaps. These were 'chutes from Doc's

plane, so they were equipped with  a gadget which Renny Renwick had worked out for use by American

parachute troopers, a gadget for releasing themselves quickly from the  encumbrance of a parachute harness. 

So, when they hit the ground, they were instantly free and running. 

They separated. 

Luck was with them. The engine of Ogden's plane was still turning  and its coughing had covered the noise of

their hitting the earth. 

Ogden and two men were standing in the glare of the plane landing  light. 

Ogden had a gun in each hand. The two men  one of them Dr. Nedden   slowly put up their hands. 

Doc Savage did not carry a gun, never carried one if he could avoid  it, believing to carry one made you rely

too much on a firearm, and be  lost without it. He waited. Long Tom had a gun, a small machine pistol  with a

tremendous rate of fire. 

Long Tom walked into the glare of landing lights, presented the  muzzle of his machine pistol, said, "This

little gun puts out a million  bullets a minute." 

Montague Ogden turned slowly. He looked at Long Tom. He inspected  Doc Savage. 

"I've been a hell of a fool," Ogden said. He tossed his guns on the  ground. 

"And I'm a very puzzled man," he added. 

Doc said, "Puzzled?" 

Ogden nodded. "For some reason or other, these three men seem to  think I am their leader. I am nothing of

the sort. It puzzles me. 

No one said anything. 

Finally, Ogden added, "I tricked them into bringing me down here  from New York, thinking they would lead

me to their headquarters." 

He stared at them. 

"I became scared," he finished. "I am very glad you came along." 

WHILE Renny landed the plane containing Rotary and Sis Harrison,  Doc Savage tied Dr. Nedden and the

other man. Then Doc examined Ham and  found him unharmed but very groggy, able to mutter only that they

had  given him some kind of a damned shot of something. He sounded weakly  indignant. 

They listened to Ogden's story. 


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It was the story of a man who had been duped. A man who had  inherited his wealth and had always had other

men manage it for him. A  man who knew little or nothing about business, but who liked to put on  a big show,

liked to impress people with his wealth. The flamboyant  Ogden building was an example. 

A man of close loyalties, of intense friendships. A man who would  sacrifice for his friends, and liked to fight

for them. 

"I was intensely worried about Sam Joseph's mental troubles," said  Montague Ogden. "It was Dr. Nedden, I

realize now, who convinced me you  would be the man to operate. And then you did operate, and there was no

brain tumor. How did that happen, anyway?" 

.Doc Savage was uncomfortable in the darkness. 

"I was outsmarted," Doc confessed, "at my own game. They had  imitated the symptoms of cerebral fibroma

so skillfully that I was  completely taken in." 

"That must have taken a clever doctor," Ogden said. 

"It did. Nedden is clever. I think we will find he has other clever  doctors working with him." 

Montague Ogden sighed explosively. 

"They are all clever," he said. "So much smarter than I am. But I  became suspicious finally. Who wouldn't,

after I found that Sam Joseph  apparently had been looting my company. I knew Sam would not do a thing

like that. My true friends do not doublecross me. That is one  wonderful fact I have learned about human

nature. 

"I became suspicious too late. My indignation, and it was righteous  indignation I assure you, even if egged on

by Dr. Nedden, about the  operation mistake had already touched off the newspaper publicity. I  made a

terrible fool of myself there. But you must understand I did  that because I thought Sam Joseph, my closest

friend, had been  wronged." 

Doc Savage said, "You made that clear enough, and it was  understandable under the circumstances." 

Montague Ogden sounded grateful. 

"I have been shadowing them," he explained. "Following them around.  And that was how I happened to track

them to an apartment house near  Central Park. I was waiting downstairs, not knowing what to do, when  Dr.

Nedden and this man came out with the stretcher and what I thought  was poor Sam Joseph on the stretcher. I

confronted them. Imagine my  astonishment when I found they thought I was their leader." 

He sounded bewildered. 

"They said they were going to my ranch," he said. "I haven't got a  ranch. I own lots of things, but no place

like that. But they landed  here and I didn't know what to do. And then you landed and I'm glad." 

He groaned. 

"I imagine you thought I was the leader, too," he concluded. "You  must have thought I was the king. And

now you find I'm only a silly,  gullible pawn, the joker. You are probably disgusted." 


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DOC Savage asked, "The ranch is near here?" 

"Yes. I don't know exactly where, though." 

"Is this the ranch flying field?" 

"No," Montague Ogden said. "But there is one. I made Dr. Nedden  land on this meadow, telling him I did not

want the others to know we  were here. I told him I wanted to sneak up on Butch, who has been  becoming too

officious." 

"Nedden knows where the flying field and the ranch is?" 

"Yes." 

Without exchanging a word, Renny and Long Tom fell on Dr. Nedden,  clubbed him to the ground and

announced they were going to dispose of  him then and there if he did not tell them where the ranch was

located.  There was nothing ridiculous about their performance, although they  admitted later it should have

been. They sounded so utterly convincing.  They sold a bill of goods. 

"Please!" Nedden gasped. "I'll tell you." 

The ranch was about two miles and a half distant, along a country  road which bordered one edge of this

meadow. 

"Far enough that they didn't hear us land, probably," Sis Harrison  said with relief. 

Rotary Harrison growled, "Let's get going! I want my hands on  somebody's neck, and quick!" 

"Just a moment," Doc Savage said. 

The bronze man went to their plane, his own ship, the one which  Renny had just landed. In the cabin there

were equipment cases in  special racks, and he selected one of these.' 

He carried the case to the others. 

He exhibited the contents. 

"A new type of grenade," he explained. "A new gas, one against  which no mask is effective. Extremely

potent. Acting almost  instantaneously." 

Renny looked at the grenades and seemed startled. 

"Holy cow, Doc, but  " 

"We are each going to take some," Doc explained, interrupting  quickly. "Here, we will divide them." 

"How d'you work the gadgets?" Rotary asked. "Pull this key out?" 

"Twist the key," Doc Savage corrected. "You will find that it seems  to wind like an alarm clock. Twist it up

tight then get rid of it.  Throw it as you would an ordinary grenade." 


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"What's the idea of the winding?" 

"The peculiar internal construction which was necessary." 

"Oh," Rotary said. "I see. Another one of your gadgets." 

Chapter XV. SATAN'S RANCH

THEY left Dr. Nedden, Montague Ogden and the other crook behind.  Doc Savage used a hypodermic needle

on them and they were almost  immediately asleep. They would remain that way for some time until noon  the

following day, at the least. Renny dragged them off in the tall  weeds where they would not be likely to be

found before then. 

Montague Ogden did not object to being drugged and left behind. "I  expect you to suspect me," he said. "I

see how you could not conceive  of a man being as big a fool as I've been." 

Walking away, Long Tom remarked, "You know, I halfway think he's  innocent." 

"Oh, hell!" snorted Rotary Harrison. "Next thing you'll be thinking  toads have wings." 

Ham Brooks went with them. He was rapidly regaining his  equilibrium. He stripped off his bandages, which

contained the little  radiowave transmitter, and had salvaged the gadget. When Sis insisted  she would like to

have it as a souvenir of an incredibly fantastic  adventure, Ham gave it to her, which somewhat irritated Long

Tom. It  was Long Tom's device. 

Having covered about a mile, they heard a series of three planes  approach from the north and land in the night

far ahead of them. They  saw, by looking up, the faint glow of landing lights reflected against  the very low

clouds. 

"The gang arriving," Renny rumbled. "The way I understand it, the  whole kit and kaboodle will be there.

What a chance to make a roundup!" 

They pushed forward more rapidly. Dust was thick on the country  road, a soft pad for their footfalls. 

Light appeared ahead. Electric glow around low buildings. The  structures seemed to be made of logs and

slabs, in keeping with the  piny woods around them. And there was the excited barking of dogs which  seemed

to be confined to a fenced enclosure. 

Doc Savage said, "We had better close in immediately while the dogs  are still barking. Otherwise, the

animals might give an alarm." 

"Good idea," Rotary agreed. "What's the plan of campaign?" 

"We will get a little closer," Doc said, "and look over the place." 

Rotary stopped. 

"Sis," he said, "you go back." 

"But dad!" Sis objected. "I may be able to help." 


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"You're a girl, an  " 

"But I'm not scared. At least I'm not going to go to piece  "  Rotary was suddenly harsh. "You go back," he

said. "I'm not going to  have a daughter of mine mixed up in the kind of a thing this is going  to be." 

"I  " 

"Better go back, Sis," Doc said. "Someone should be free and clear  to go for help if we fail." 

Sis finally consented. "All right, if you insist," she agreed. 

They left her in the darkness and went on, moving with increasing  care. Sis had been so disappointed at being

left behind that they were  silent. 

They were quite close to the ranch buildings when Long Tom spoke in  a whisper. 

"Sis sure hated to miss out on this," he said. Doc said, "It was  necessary. 

Rotary Harrison was suddenly confronting them.  "You bet it was  necessary," he snarled. 

He had a gun and a flashlight. He menaced them with the gun. 

"Wouldn't do for her to know what a hell cat her old man is,"  Rotary said. 

He splashed glare from the flashlight on them. Men came running  from the ranch. 

"Get Butch!" Rotary snarled at the man. "I don't want no more  mistakes about who's boss of this thing!" 

THEY took Doc Savage, Renny and Long Tom and Ham into a long low  room with beamed ceilings and

native fieldstone fireplaces at each end.  A room where saddles and bridles hung, ropes and spurs, steer horns

and  buffalo horns. All the stuff that goes into a phony ranch setup. 

"Get back, get back!" Rotary Harrison kept snarling at his men.  "Don't get close to these hombres. No tellin'

what they'll pull." 

He pushed back his men bodily, and they made a large circle around  the prisoners. 

"Careful; they got more tricks than a centipede has legs," he  warned. He bellowed out a laugh. "I oughta

know. I been their shadow  for two days." 

Doc Savage said, "You went to a lot of trouble, Rotary." 

Rotary Harrison laughed. 

"Hell, yes, and why not?" he asked. "I've spent the best months of  my life, to say nothing of what money I

had left in the world, working  this out. It was complete." He waved an arm, added, "It was complete,  even to

this little hideout here, which I bought and recorded in  Montague Ogden's name." 

Doc said, "And while you were committing the robberies, you  included yourself?" 

"What could have been finer? Who would suspect a robbed man?" 


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"Particularly," Doc Savage said, "one who came to me for help." 

"That's the idea." 

"And one who has an innocent daughter," Doc suggested. 

That hit Rotary Harrison where it hurt. The smirk slid off his  face, the lips off his teeth. 

"She don't know about it," he said. "That's why I didn't want her  to come along." 

It was still in the room. Light in the place came from electric  bulbs in oxyoke and oldfashioned lantern

devices, and from a few  false candles. The men stood tense. None of them looked at ease. 

Running his gaze over them, Doc Savage picked out two men who were  doctors. He knew they were doctors

without recalling their names, but  he'd seen their faces before. They were cerebrologists, or specialists  on the

human brain. They were not prominent men, yet skilled enough to  help in perpetrating the gigantic hoax that

had been pulled. They were  crooks, certainly. 

Doc looked at their leader, Rotary Harrison, said, "You could have  saved a lot of your elaborate scheming." 

Rotary stared. "Huh?" 

"It was needless smoke screen," Doc said. 

"What the hell do you mean? Mean you were wise to me?" 

Doc said, "You made a few mistakes. First, when you were captured  on the Mississippi River, you were not

killed. You were kept alive.  There was no reason whatever for you being kept alive, particularly  when you

insisted your friend, Duster Jones, had been killed because he  knew too much. You had yourself seized to

arouse my interest, and it  did arouse my interest, particularly in the phony aspect of it. 

"Again, your business of a loan renewal agreement with Sam Joseph  was a false note. Sam Joseph recognized

you, but he did not make any  loanrenewal agreement with you in talking to you, which you said he  did. 

"And also," Doc continued, "you were in a position to know about  all the companies and concerns which

were robbed in the course of this  thing. All of them were companies with which you would be familiar.

Charles Moore's oilfield machinery concern, for example. You are an  oilman. You would naturally know

more about how to rob an oilfield  machinery concern. And the same thing applied to the rest of your

victims. There was too much coincidence." 

Rotary grinned. 

"So there was too much coincidence. So what?" 

"So we were able to beat you at your own game. 

"Game?" 

"Deceit," Doc Savage said. 

"What kind of nutty talk is that you  " 


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Doc Savage jumped then. He moved with abrupt violence, taking the  two men holding him completely by

surprise. He was not able to seize a  weapon, but he was able to get free, to leap and reach a stairway that

seemed to go down into a cellar. A window was near, but he ignored  that, hit on his stomach, slid to the

stairs, went down them. 

Renny, Long Tom and Ham began struggling violently, but with no  effect. 

Rotary Harrison bellowed, "He's in the cellar! There's no way out!  Give me one of those grenades!" 

He meant the trick grenades which Doc Savage had so carefully  distributed, with explanations about their

deadly gas contents, before  the raid on the ranch. 

Rotary grabbed up one of the grenades. He ran to the cellar  opening. 

"Get ready to slam the door shut after I throw this egg down  there," he snarled. 

"Ready," one of his men said, seizing the door. 

For the benefit of Doc Savage, down below, Rotary bellowed, "You  said wind the key like an alarm clock,

didn't you?" 

He wound the key. 

Instantly, there were explosions all over the room, all through the  ranchhouse  wherever the trick grenades

happened to be  all coming  together. They 'were not loud reports, but there was a guttural  violence about the

way they let go, and the gas they spewed was  sickening, paralyzing, blinding  if you inhaled it. 

Doc Savage came up out of the cellar. 

"Let's finish this job," he said. 

WHAT Rotary and none of his men knew, and what none of them ever  did find out, was that by winding the

key on the grenades, you wound a  powerful little generator the size of a watch, and the current from  this,

through vacuum tubes not as large as a peanut, was amplified and  put out in an impulse that would effect tiny

receivers and these would  explode the grenades. Each grenade contained receiver and transmitter,  but they

were not complicated, because they employed the same circuit.  Wind the key in one grenade and they would

all explode. 

As soon as Rotary Harrison had wound the key, Renny and Long Tom  and Ham, knowing all the grenades

would let go now, began to fight. 

The gas was not effective unless breathed. So they held their  breathing back. Renny and Long Tom did it

very successfully. But Ham  almost immediately got hit in the stomach. 

The blow to Ham's middle was terrific, and it opened up his mouth,  and he had gascharged air into his lungs

before he could help himself.  He began to yell in pain with the other men, and fell to the floor. 

There was nothing deadly about the gas, but it was very painful and  brought quick unconsciousness. Not that

it did the recipient any  benefit. 

Doc heard Monk. 


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Monk's bellowing, even when he was gagged, was distinctive. Doc  located the. sound, headed for it. Through

a door, across a room,  through another door. There was a small tight shed stacked high with  litter, old camp

stools and tent poles mostly. And Monk floundering  around in the middle of it. 

Monk was doing his bellowing entirely through his nose, which was  remarkable. He was making about the

same amount of noise as a good  trumpet, although it was hardly musical. 

Doc stopped, slashed his bindings. 

Monk bolted to his feet. Evidently he had been kicking around  enough that his muscles were not stiff because

he was up and out of the  door in a streak. Still making nasal noise of remarkable quantity. 

Doc went back into the connecting room, found a window. 

He remembered to yell, "Anaesthetic gas!" at Monk by way of  warning. 

Then Doc smashed open the window, thrust out his head and got fresh  air into his lungs. Then he turned and

met Rotary Harrison. 

In some fashion  astonishment must have stopped the man's  breathing until he realized what had happened 

Rotary had escaped the  gas. His face was purple, bloated, from holding his breath. 

Doc tried to belt the wind out of Harrison so he would have to  breathe. It was not a success. Rotary piled out

into the night. 

Doc followed, caught him. They went to the ground. Rotary was  strong and desperate. He was not a young

man, but the iron of his  muscle was astonishing. 

Monk Mayfair, entering the big room, saw no one in motion, only men  motionless on the floor. He knew

there was gas, he could feel the  slight sting of the stuff against his eyes. He saw Ham and he was  horrified

until he discovered Ham merely seemed to be gassed. 

Monk went on. He could hear fighting, a few shots, well in the rear  of the house. He headed for the spot. 

"Hey!" somebody said. "Rotary!" 

It was dark in the hall. Monk stopped. He recognized the voice.  Butch. 

"Yeah?" Monk said. 

"This way. We can get to a plane." 

"Sure," Monk said. 

He moved rapidly and pushed along behind the other man until they  came to a lighted room. It was Butch, all

right. Butch, slim and pale  and delicatelooking. The meekly helplesslooking person. 

Monk took Butch by the neck. 

"It's a shame to waste time on a spindlin' little guy like you,  Monk said. "You oughta  ow! Ow!" 


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Monk's greatest pride was what he could do in a handtohand fight.  He liked to brawl,

knockdowndragout, anything goes, biteanear,  gougeaneye. He had never confessed to anyone, but

he took regular  lessons in rough and tumble, in jujitsu, and had even hired an  osteopath doctor to teach him

how to twist bones so as to hurt the  most. He thought he was very good. 

He began to get an education. He was hit twice; he didn't know  exactly where. But the agony was awful.

Stars exploded. Pain made his  toes feel as if they were falling off. 

He managed, and he thought he was lucky to do that, to fall on  Butch. 

They went over and over. Bones cracked, muscles popped, joints  cracked. "Ow!" Monk bawled.

"Owwww!" He felt sure he was rapidly  being separated from arms, legs, ears, hair, nose. 

Somewhere in the back of the house, Renny Renwick yelled, "A gang  of them are killing Monk! Come on!" 

But when Renny appeared in the door he stopped. He began to grin  uncontrollably, then to knot up with

laughter. Long Tom joined him. He,  too, thought it was funny. 

"Get Ham Brooks!" Renny gurgled. "Pour water on Ham or something to  wake him up. Ham can't miss this!

Ham would give years off his life to  see this." 

Monk and his tiny opponent went through a convulsion. Monk emitted  fresh bellows of pain He was

suddenly not enjoying the fight. He had  often, in the past, tackled a dozen men who were fighting men, and

howled in glee through the whole fray. Now he was suddenly out of glee. 

"Oh! Oh! Oh!" Monk squalled. 

"We better stop it," Renny said, "before he eats Monk alive." He  went over and tapped Butch on the head

with a revolver barrel. Butch  collapsed. 

Monk rolled feebly, crawling away from the senseless Butch as if  the latter was a tarantula. Monk tried to get

to his feet, failed,  collapsed, sat there foolishly. 

Monk stared at the feeblelooking Butch. 

"My, my," Monk said. "And to think there's only one of him." 

Chapter XVI. TRUTH AND VARNISH

THE head of the New York State police and the district attorney  from New York City who had been assigned

to the case arrived a few  hours after daylight. 

Explanations and arguments, pro and con, and the taking of  statements, occupied about three hours. 

The D. A. made the speech of summary: 

"Officially," he said, "there has been no proof presented that Mr.  Savage maintains any kind of an institution

where criminal brains are  operated upon. Whatever our personal opinions may be, they probably  will remain

officially inactive because of lack of such proof.  Personally, the idea of treating criminals in that way seems a

good  idea to me. 


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Ham Brooks asked, "What about all this stink in the newspapers?" 

Doc explained, "When it is proven that the whole thing was simply a  cleverly thoughtout and executed

scheme to pick a bunch of men who had  been  ah  amnesia victims in the past, and drug them and force

them  to commit crimes while drugged, then lay it all on to me  when that is  all proven, the newspapers will

drop their campaign. And apologize, no  doubt." 

Ham said, "They better apologize, or there'll be the fattest goblin  of a lawsuit after each one of them." 

The New York district attorney checked over a list of prisoners. 

"We have checked and rechecked the list of prisoners," he said,  "and from the statements of the other

prisoners, we seem to be one  short. The man who was the ringleader. A man by the name of Rotary

Harrison." 

Doc Savage spoke quietly. 

"Rotary Harrison," the bronze man said, "was badly injured. He was  sent to a private hospital." 

"Can you turn him over to us when he is fit?" 

Doc nodded. 

"Yes," he said. "But Rotary Harrison will not be proven the  criminal leader, I am afraid." 

"What do you mean?" 

"It will probably develop," Doc Savage said quietly, "that Rotary  Harrison was just another one of the list of

victims who, like myself,  were framed to be the goats." 

"But all the stolen money and property is in his name," the D A.  pointed out. 

Doc shook his head. "Rotary Harrison is turning all the property  back to the rightful owners." 

The D. A. watched the bronze man for a while. Then he grinned.  ''Well, that fellow Butch will make a good

master mind," he said.  "We'll hang it onto him." 

He got his papers together and went outside to watch the prisoners  being loaded into cars. 

THE moment Doc was alone with Monk and the others, the bronze man  said, "Monk, get to our plane. Get

your portable chemical lab." 

"What's the idea?" 

"Rotary Harrison," Doc explained, "is going to our upstate place  for an operation that will wipe out all his

memory of the past. I want  you to mix an anaesthetic that will keep him unconscious during the  trip." 

"Yes, I know that," Monk said. "But what was the idea of telling  the D. A. that Rotary was just another victim

of the plot when you know  perfectly well he was the brains behind the whole thing." 


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"That's right," Doc said. "And that's principally the reason I want  to send him to the College. You see, Rotary

planned this master crime  himself and he hired all the others. He was not only plotting to steal  several million

dollars but he was going to discredit us and our life  work with the public. 

"The first thing he did was to get hold of Dr. Nedden and that  young fellow, Butch. The two of them traced

down some of our graduates,  drugged them, stole all the money from the firms they worked for, and  when the

big blowup came, they were going to say that we were  responsible for the crimes because we had performed

brain operations on  them. The big scheme behind Rotary's mind was that he would have us  trapped and then

he could force us to pay blackmail or see the work of  our College destroyed." 

Monk grunted. "Blackmail, eh? I guess he was figuring to cut  himself a big slice of our Central American

gold supply." 

Doc nodded. "Yes. That was his plan. He was so clever about it that  only one man in the organization knew

who their leader really was. That  man was Butch. He was the one who hired all the others, including Dr.

Nedden, and they all got their instructions through that little devil  statue which, in reality, was only a tiny

transmitting and receiving  set." 

"Where is Rotary now?" Renny asked. 

"Out in the bush, where I hid him," Doc explained. 

Monk looked puzzled. "I still don't understand why you're covering  Rotary up from the police. I think  " 

Renny gave Monk a kick and said, "Come on, you dope." 

Monk followed Renny outside. "What's got into Doc?" he said.  "Rotary was the leader, and  " 

"Possibly," Renny suggested dryly, "Doc is suffering from a slight  attack of your chronic trouble." 

"Huh?" 

"Sis Harrison," Renny said. "In other words, she doesn't know her  dad was the kingfish in this affair." 

"Oh, oh," Monk grinned. "Now I've run across something I can  understand." 

THE END 


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2. THE TALKING DEVIL, page = 4

   3. A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson, page = 4

   4. Chapter 1. THE DEVIL AND COMPANY, page = 4

   5. Chapter II. THE GREAT MISTAKE, page = 10

   6. Chapter III. A PLAN ROLLING, page = 14

   7. Chapter IV. THE INDIGNANT MAN, page = 16

   8. Chapter V. MURDER AND KANSAS CITY, page = 21

   9. Chapter VI. DEATH IN THE SKY, page = 25

   10. Chapter VII. MIDWEST TRAIL, page = 30

   11. Chapter VIII. MAN LOST, page = 34

   12. Chapter IX. RIVER FIGHT, page = 42

   13. Chapter X. THE DEMENTED TRAIL, page = 47

   14. Chapter XI. THE DEVIL'S WORK, page = 54

   15. Chapter XII. MAN-THEFT, page = 58

   16. Chapter XIII. KILL ORDER, page = 66

   17. Chapter XIV. KING AND JOKER, page = 71

   18. Chapter XV. SATAN'S RANCH, page = 77

   19. Chapter XVI. TRUTH AND VARNISH, page = 82