THE MAN OF
BRONZE
A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson
(Originally published in "Doc
Savage" magazine March 1933.
Bantam Books reprint October 1964)
Chapter 1
THE SINISTER ONE
THERE was
death afoot in the darkness.
It crept furtively along a steel girder.
Hundreds of feet below yawned glass-and-brick-walled cracks - New York streets.
Down there, late workers scurried homeward. Most of them carried umbrellas, and
did not glance upward.
Even had they looked, they probably would have noticed nothing.
The night was black as a cave bat. Rain threshed down monotonously The clammy
sky was like an oppressive shroud wrapped around the tops of the tall buildings.
One skyscraper was under construction. It
had been completed to the eightieth floor. Some offices were in use.
Above the eightieth floor, an ornamental
observation tower jutted up a full hundred and fifty feet more. The metal work
of this was in place, but no masonry had been laid. Girders lifted a gigantic
steel skeleton. The naked beams were a sinister forest.
It was in this forest that Death prowled.
Death was a man.
He seemed to have the adroitness of a cat
at finding his way in the dark. Upward, he crept. The girders were slick with
rain, treacherous. The man's progress was gruesome in its vile purpose.
From time to time, he spat strange,
clucking words. A gibberish of hate!
A master of languages would have been
baffled trying to name the tongue the man spoke. A profound student might have
identified the dialect. The knowledge would be hard to believe, for the words
were of a lost race, the language of a civilization long vanished!
"He must die!" the man chanted
hoarsely in his strange lingo. "It is decreed by the Son of the Feathered
Serpent! To-night! To-night death shall strike!"
Each time he raved his paean of hate, the
man hugged an object he carried closer to his chest.
This object was a box, black,
leather-covered. It was about four inches deep and four feet long.
"This shall bring death to
him!" the man clucked, caressing the black case.
The rain beat him. Steel-fanged space
gaped below. One slip would be his death. He climbed upward yard after yard.
Most of the chimneys which New Yorkers
call office buildings had been emptied of their daily toilers. There were only
occasional pale eyes of light gleaming from their sides.
The labyrinth of girders baffled the
skulker a moment. He poked a flashlight beam inquisitively. The glow lasted a
bare instant, but it disclosed a remarkable thing about the man's hands.
The finger tips were a brilliant red!
They might have been dipped an inch of their length in a scarlet dye.
The red-fingered man scuttled onto a workmen's
platform. The planks were thick. The platform was near the outside of the
wilderness of steel.
The man lowered his black case. His inner
pocket disgorged compact, powerful binoculars.
ON the
lowermost floor of a skyscraper many blocks distant, the crimson-fingered man
focused his glasses. He started counting stories upward.
The building was one of the tallest in
New York. A gleaming spike of steel and brick, it rammed upward nearly a
hundred stories.
At the eighty-sixth floor, the sinister
man ceased to count. His glasses moved right and left until they found a
lighted window. This was at the west corner of the building.
Only slightly blurred by the rain, the
powerful binoculars disclosed what was in the room.
The broad, polished top of a massive and
exquisitely inlaid table stood directly before the window.
Beyond it was the bronze figure!
This looked like the head and shoulders
of a man, sculptured in hard bronze. It was a startling sight, that bronze
bust. The lines of the features, the unusually high forehead, the mobile and
muscular, but not too-full mouth, the lean cheeks, denoted a power of character
seldom seen.
The bronze of the hair was a little
darker than the bronze of the features. The hair was straight, and lay down
tightly as a metal skullcap. A genius at sculpture might have made it.
Most marvelous of all were the eyes. They
glittered like pools of flake gold when little lights from the table lamp
played on them. Even from that distance they seemed to exert a hypnotic
influence through the powerful binocular lenses, a quality that would cause the
most rash individual to hesitate.
The man with the scarlet-tipped fingers
shuddered.
"Death!" he croaked, as if
seeking to overcome the unnerving quality of those strange, golden eyes.
"The Son of the Feathered Serpent has commanded. It shall be death!"
He opened the black box. Faint metallic
clickings sounded as he fitted together parts of the thing it held. After that,
he ran his fingers lovingly over the object.
"The tool of the Son of the
Feathered Serpent!" he chortled. "It shall deliver death!"
Once more, he pressed the binoculars to
his eyes and focused them on the amazing bronze statue.
The bronze masterpiece opened its mouth, yawned - for it was no statue,
but a living man!
The bronze
man showed wide, very strong-looking teeth, in yawning. Seated there by the
immense desk, he did not seem to be a large man. An onlooker would have doubted
his six feet height - and would have been astounded to learn he weighed every
ounce of two hundred pounds.
The big bronze man was so well put
together that the impression was not of size, but of power. The bulk of his
great body was forgotten in the smooth symmetry of a build incredibly powerful.
This man was Clark Savage, Jr.
Doc Savage! The man whose name was
becoming a byword in the odd corners of the world!
Apparently no sound had entered the room.
But the big bronze man left his chair. He went to the door. The hand he opened
the door with was long-fingered, supple. Yet its enormous tendons were like
cables under a thin film of bronze lacquer.
Doc Savage's keenness of hearing was
vindicated. Five men were getting out of the elevator cage, which had come up
silently.
These men came toward Doc. There was wild
delight in their manner. But for some sober reason, they did not shout
boisterous greetings. It was as though Doc bore a great grief, and they
sympathized deeply with him, but didn't know what to say.
The first of the five men was a giant who
towered four inches over six feet. He weighed fully two fifty. His face was
severe, his mouth thin and grim, and compressed tightly, as though he had just
finished uttering a disapproving, "Tsk tsk!" sound. His features had
a most puritanical look.
This was "Renny," or Colonel
John Renwick. His arms were enormous, his fists bony monstrosities. His
favorite act was to slam his great fists through the solid panel of a heavy
door. He was known throughout the world for his engineering accomplishments,
also.
Behind Renny came William Harper
Littlejohn. Very tall, very gaunt Johnny wore glasses with a peculiarly thick
lens over the left eye. He looked like a half-starved, studious scientist. He
was probably one of the greatest living experts on geology and archaeology.
Next was Major Thomas I. Roberts, dubbed
"Long Tom". Long Tom was the physical weakling of the crowd, thin,
not very tall, and with a none-too-healthy-appearing skin. He was a wizard with
electricity.
"Ham" trailed Long Tom.
"Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks," Ham was designated on
formal occasions. Slender, waspy, quick-moving, Ham looked what he was - a
quick thinker and possibly the most astute lawyer Harvard ever turned out. He
carried a plain black cane - never went anywhere without it. This was, among
other things, a sword cane.
Last came the most remarkable character
of all. Only a few inches over five feet tall, he weighed better than two
hundred and sixty pounds. He had the build of a gorilla, arms six inches longer
than his legs, a chest thicker than it was wide. His eyes were so surrounded by
gristle as to resemble pleasant little stars twinkling in pits. He grinned with
a mouth so very big it looked like an accident.
"Monk!" No other name could fit
him!
He was Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett
Mayfair, but he heard the full name so seldom he had about forgotten what it
sounded like.
THE men
entered the sumptuously furnished reception room of the office suite. After the
first greeting, they were silent, uncomfortable. They didn't know what to say.
Doc Savage's father had died from a weird
cause since they last saw Doc.
The elder Savage had been known
throughout the world for his dominant bearing and his good work. Early in life,
he had amassed a tremendous fortune for one purpose.
That purpose was to go here and there,
from one end of the world to the other, looking for excitement and adventure,
striving to help those who needed help, punishing those who deserved it.
To that creed he had devoted his life.
His fortune had dwindled to practically
nothing. But as it shrank, his influence had increased. It was unbelievably
wide, a heritage befitting the man.
Greater even, though, was the heritage he
had given his son. Not in wealth, but in training to take up his career of
adventure and righting of wrongs where it left off.
Clark Savage, Jr., had been reared from
the cradle to become the supreme adventurer.
Hardly had Doc learned to walk, when his
father started him taking the routine of exercises to which he still adhered.
Two hours each day, Doc exercised intensively all his muscles, senses, and his
brain.
As a result of these exercises, Doc
possessed a strength superhuman. There was no magic about it, though. Doc had
simply built up muscle intensively all his life.
Doc's mental training had started with
medicine and surgery. It had branched out to include all arts and sciences.
Just as Doc could easily overpower the gorilla-like Monk in spite of his great
strength, so did Doc know more about chemistry. And that applied to Renny, the
engineer; Long Tom, the electrical wizard; Johnny, the geologist and archaeologist;
and Ham, the lawyer.
Doc had been well trained for his work.
Grief lay heavily upon Doc's five
friends. The elder Savage had been close to their hearts.
"Your father's death - was three
weeks ago," Renny said at last.
Doc nodded slowly. "So I learned
from the newspapers when I got back to-day."
Renny groped for words, said finally:
"We tried to get you in every way. But you were gone - as if you had been
off the face of the earth."
Doc looked at the window. There was grief
in his gold eyes.
Chapter 2
A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAD
FALLING
rain strewed the outer side of the windowpane with water. Far below, very
pallid in the soaking murk, were street lights. Over on the Hudson River, a
steamer was tooting a foghorn. The frightened, mooing horn was hardly audible
inside the room.
Some blocks away, the skyscraper under
construction loomed a darksome pile, crowned with a spidery labyrinth of steel
girders. Only the vaguest outlines of it were discernible.
Impossible, of course, to glimpse the
strange, crimson-fingered servant of death in that wilderness of metal!
Doc Savage said slowly: "I was far
away when my father died."
He did not explain where he had been, did
not mention his "Fortress of Solitude," his rendezvous built on a
rocky island deep in the arctic regions. He had been there.
It was to this spot that Doc retired
periodically to brush up on the newest developments in science, psychology,
medicine, engineering. This was the secret of his universal knowledge, for his
periods of concentration there were long and intense.
The Fortress of Solitude had been his
father's recommendation. And no one on earth knew the location of the retreat. Once
there, nothing could interrupt Doc's studies and experiments.
Without taking his golden eyes from the
wet window, Doc asked: "Was there anything strange about my father's
death?"
"'We're not certain," Renny
muttered, and set his thin lips in an expression of ominousness.
"I, for one, am certain!"
snapped Littlejohn. He settled more firmly on his nose the glasses which had
the extremely thick left lens.
"What do you mean, Johnny?" Doc
Savage asked.
"I am positive your father was
murdered!" Johnny's gauntness, his studious scientist look, gave him a
profoundly serious expression.
Doc Savage swung slowly from the window.
His bronze face had not changed expression. But under his brown business coat,
tensing muscles had made his arms inches farther around.
"Why do you say that, Johnny?"
Johnny hesitated. His right eye narrowed,
the left remaining wide and a little blank behind the thick spectacle lens. He
shrugged.
"Only a hunch," he admitted,
then added, almost shouting: "I'm right about it! I know I am!"
That was Johnny's way. He had absolute
faith in what he called his hunches. And nearly always he was right. On
occasions when he was wrong, though, he was very wrong indeed.
"Exactly what did the doctors say
caused death?" Doc asked. Doc's voice was low, pleasant, but a voice
capable of great volume and changing tone.
Renny answered that. Renny's voice was
like thunder gobbling out of a cave. "The doctors didn't know. It was a
new one on them. Your father broke out with queer circular red patches on his
neck. And he lasted only a couple of days."
"I ran all kinds of chemical tests,
trying to find if it was poison or germs or what it was caused the red
spots," Monk interposed, slowly opening and closing his huge, red-furred
fists. "I never found out a thing!"
Monk's looks were deceiving. His low
forehead apparently didn't contain room for a spoonful of brains. Actually,
Monk was in a way of being the most widely known chemist in America. He was a
Houdini of the test tubes.
"We have no facts upon which to base
suspicion!" clipped Ham, the waspish Harvard lawyer whose quick thinking
had earned him a brigadier generalship in the World War. "But we're
suspicious anyway."
Doc Savage moved abruptly across the room
to a steel safe. The safe was huge, reaching above his shoulders. He swung it
open.
It was instantly evident explosive had
torn the lock out of the safe door.
A long, surprised gasp swished around the
room.
"I found it broken into when I came
back," Doc explained. "Maybe that has a connection with my father's
death. Maybe not."
DOC'S
movements were rhythmic as he swung over and perched on a corner of the big,
inlaid table before the window. His eyes roved slowly over the beautifully
furnished office. There was another office adjoining, larger, which contained a
library of technical books that was priceless because of its completeness.
Adjoining that was the vast laboratory
room, replete with apparatus for chemical and electrical experiments.
This was about all the worldly goods the
elder Savage had left behind.
"What's eating you, Doc?" asked
the giant Renny. "We all got the word from you to show up here tonight.
Why?"
Doc Savage's strange golden eyes roved
over the assembled men; from Renny, whose knowledge of engineering in all its
branches was profound, to Long Tom, who was an electrical wizard, to Johnny,
whose fund of information on the structure of the earth and ancient races which
had inhabited it was extremely vast, to Ham, the clever Harvard lawyer and
quick thinker, and finally to Monk, who, in spite of his resemblance to a
gorilla, was a great chemist.
In these five men, Doc knew he had five
of the greatest brains ever to assemble in one group. Each was surpassed in his
field by only one human being - Doc Savage himself.
"I think you can guess why you are
here," Doc said. Monk rubbed his hairy hands together. Of the six men
present, Monk's skin alone bore scars. The skin of the others held no marks of
their adventurous past, thanks to Doc's uncanny skill in causing wounds to heal
without leaving scars.
But not Monk. His tough, rusty iron hide
was so marked with gray scars that it looked as if a flock of chickens with
gray-chalk feet had paraded on him. This was because Monk refused to let Doc
treat him. Monk gloried in his tough looks.
"Our big job is about to start,
huh?" said Monk, vast satisfaction in his mild voice.
Doc nodded. "The work to which we shall
devote the rest of our lives."
At that statement, great satisfaction
appeared upon the face of every man present. They showed eagerness for what was
to come.
Doc dangled a leg from the corner of the
table. Unwittingly - for he knew nothing of the red-fingered killer lurking in
the distant skyscraper that was under construction - Doc had placed his back
out of line with the window. In fact, since the men had entered, he had not
once been aligned with the window.
"We first got together back in the
War," he told the five slowly. "We all liked the big scrap. It got
into our blood. When we came back, the humdrum life of an ordinary man was not
suited to our natures. So we sought something else."
Doc held their absolute attention, as if
he had been hypnotized. Undeniably this golden-eyed man was the leader of the
group, as well as leader of anything he undertook. His very being denoted a
calm knowledge of all things, and an ability to handle himself under any
conditions.
"Moved by mutual admiration for my
father," Doc continued, "we decided to take up his work of good
wherever he was forced to leave off. We at once began training ourselves for
that purpose. It is the cause for which I had been reared from the cradle, but
you fellows, because of a love of excitement and adventure, wish to join
me."
Doc Savage paused. He looked over his
companions. One by one, in the soft light of the well-furnished office, one of
the few remaining evidences of the wealth that once belonged to his father.
"Tonight," he went on soberly,
"we begin carrying out the ideals of my father - to go here and there,
from one end of the world to the other, looking for excitement and adventure,
striving to help those who need help, and punishing those who deserve it."
THERE was
a somber silence after that immense pronunciation.
It was Monk, matter-of-fact person that
he was, who shattered the quiet.
"What flubdubs me is who broke into
that safe, and why?" he grumbled. "Doc, could it have any connection
with your father's death?"
"It could, of course," Doc
explained. "The contents of the safe had been rifled. I do not know
whether my father had anything of importance in it. But I suspect there
was."
Doc drew a folded paper from inside his
coat. The lower half of the paper had been burned away, it was evident from the
charred edges. Doc continued speaking.
"Finding this in a corner of the
safe leads me to that belief. The explosion which opened the safe obviously
destroyed the lower part of the paper. And the robber probably overlooked the
rest. Here, read it!"
He passed it to the five men. The paper
was covered with the fine, almost engraving-perfect writing of Doc's father.
They all recognized the penmanship instantly. They read:
CLARK: I have many things to tell you. In
your whole lifetime, there never was an occasion when I desired you here so
much as I do now. I need you, son, because many things have happened which
indicate to me that my last journey is at hand. You will find that I have
nothing much to leave you in the way of tangible wealth.
I have, however, the satisfaction of
knowing that in you I shall live. I have developed you from boyhood into the
sort of man you have become, and I have spared no time or expense to make you
just what I think you should be.
Everything I have done for you has been
with the purpose that you should find yourself capable of carrying on the work
which hopefully started, and which, in these last few years, has been almost
impossible to carry on.
If I do not see you again before this
letter is in your hands, I want to assure you that I appreciate the fact that
you have lacked nothing in the way of filial devotion. That you have been
absent so much of the time has been a secret source of gratification to me, for
your absence has, I know, made you self-reliant and able. It was all that I
hoped for you.
Now, as to the heritage which I am about
to leave you:
What I am passing along to you may be a
doubtful heritage. It may be a heritage of woe. It may even be a heritage of
destruction to you if you attempt to capitalize on it. On the other hand, it
may enable you to do many things for those who are not so fortunate as you
yourself, and will, in that way, be a boon for you in carrying on your work of
doing good to all.
Here is the general information
concerning it:
Some twenty years ago, in company with
Hubert Robertson, I went on an expedition to Hidalgo, in Central America, to
investigate the report of a prehistoric - "
There the
missive ended. Flames had consumed the rest.
"The thing to do is get hold of
Hubert Robertson!" clipped the quick-thinking Ham. Waspish, rapid-moving,
he swung over to the telephone, scooped it up. "I know Hubert Robertson's
phone number. He is connected with the Museum of Natural History."
"You won't get him!" Doc said
dryly.
"Why not?"
Doc got off the table and stood beside
the giant Renny. It was only then that one realized what a big man Doc was. Alongside
Renny, Doc was like dynamite alongside gunpowder.
"Hubert Robertson is dead," Doc
explained. "He died from the same thing that killed my father - a weird
malady that started with a breaking out of red spots. And he died at about the
same time as my father."
RENNY'S
thin mouth pinched even tighter at that. Gloom seemed to settle on his long
face. He looked like a man disgusted enough with the evils of the world to cry.
Strangely enough, that somber look
denoted that Renny was beginning to take interest. The tougher the going got,
the better Renny functioned and the more puritanical he looked.
"That flooeys our chances of finding
out more about this heritage your father left you!" he rumbled.
"Not entirely," Doc corrected.
"Wait here a moment!"
He stepped
through another door, crossed the room banked with the volumes of his father's
great technical library. Through a second door, and he was in the laboratory.
Cases laden with chemicals stood thick as forest trees on the floor. There were
electrical coils, vacuum tubes, ray apparatus, microscopes, retorts, electric
furnaces, everything that could go into such a laboratory.
From a cabinet Doc lifted a metal box
closely resembling an old-fashioned magic lantern. The lens, instead of being
ordinary optical glass, as a very dark purple, almost black. There was a cord
for plugging into an electric-light socket.
Doc carried this into the room where his
five men waited, placed it on a stand, aiming the lens at the window. He
plugged the cord into an electric outlet. Before putting the thing in
operation, he lifted the metal lid and beckoned to Long Tom, the electrical
wizard.
"Know what this is?"
"Of course." Long Tom pulled
absently at an ear that was too big, too thin and too pale. "That is a
lamp for making ultra-violet rays, or what is commonly called black light. The
rays are invisible to the human eye, since they are shorter than ordinary
light, but many substances when placed in the black light will glow, or fluoresce
after the fashion of luminous paint on a watch dial. Examples of such
substances are ordinary Vaseline, guinine - "
"That's plenty," interposed
Doc. "Will you look at the window I've pointed this at. See anything
unusual about it?"
Johnny, the gaunt archaeologist and
geologist, advanced to the window, removing his glasses as he went. He held the
thick-lensed left glass before his right eye, inspecting the window.
In reality, the left side of Johnny's
glasses was an extremely powerful magnifying lens. His work often required a
magnifier, so he wore one over his left eye, which was virtually useless
because of an injury received in the World War.
"I can find nothing!" Johnny
declared. "There's nothing unusual about the window!"
"I hope you're wrong," Doc said, sobriety in his
wondrously modulated voice. "But you could not see the writing on that
window, should there be any. The substance my father perfected for leaving secret
messages was absolutely invisible. But it glows under ultra-violet light."
"You mean - " hairy Monk
rumbled.
"That my father and I often left
each other notes written on that window," Doc explained.
"Watch!"
Doc crossed the room, a big, dynamic man,
light on his feet as a kitten for all his size, and turned out the lights. He
came back to the black-light box. His hand, supple despite its enormous
tendons, clicked the switch that shot current into the apparatus.
Instantly, written words sprang out on
the darkened windowpane. Glowing with a dazzling, electric blue, the effect of
their sudden appearance was uncanny.
A split second later came a terrific
report! A bullet knocked the glass into hundreds of fragments, wiping out the
sparkling blue message before they could read it. The bullet passed entirely
through the steel-plate inner door of the safe! It embedded in the safe back.
THE room
reeked silence. One second, two! Nobody had moved.
And then a new sound was heard. It was a
low, mellow, trilling sound, like the song of some strange bird of the jungle,
or the sound of the wind filtering through a jungled forest. It was melodious,
though it had no tune; and it was inspiring, though it was not awesome.
The amazing sound had the peculiar
quality of seeming to come from everywhere within the room rather than from a
definite spot, as though permeated with an eerie essence of ventriloquism.
A purposeful calm settled over Doc
Savage's five men as they heard that sound. Their breathing became less rapid,
their brains more alert.
For this weird sound was part of Doc - a
small, unconscious thing which he did in moments of utter concentration. To his
friends it was both the cry of battle and the song of triumph. It would come upon
his lips when a plan of action was being arranged, precoursing a master stroke
which made all things certain.
It would come again in the midst of some
struggle, when the odds were all against his men, when everything seemed lost.
And with the sound, new strength would come to all, and the tide would always
turn.
And again, it might come when some
beleaguered member of the group, alone and attacked, had almost given up all
hope of survival. Then that sound would filter through, some way, and the
victim knew that help was at hand.
The whistling sound was a sign of Doc,
and of safety, of victory.
"Who got it?" asked Johnny, and
he could be heard settling his glasses more firmly on his bony nose.
"No one," said Doc. "Let
us crawl, brothers, crawl. That was no ordinary rifle bullet, from the sound of
it!"
At that instant, a second bullet crashed
into the room. It came, not through the window, but through some inches of
brick and mortar which comprised the wall! Plaster sprayed across the thick
carpet.
Chapter 3
THE ENEMY
DOC Savage
was the last of the six to enter the adjoining room. But he was inside the room
in less than ten seconds. They moved with amazing speed, these men.
Doc flashed across the big library. The
speed with which he traversed the darkness, never disturbing an article of
furniture, showed the marvelous development of his senses. No jungle cat could
have done better.
Expensive binoculars reposed in a desk
drawer, a highpower hunting rifle in a corner cabinet. In splits of seconds,
Doc had these, and was at the window.
He watched, waited. No more shots
followed the first two.
Four minutes, five, Doc bored into the
night with the binoculars. He peered into every office window within range, and
there were hundreds. He scrutinized the spidery framework of the observation
tower atop the skyscraper under construction. Darkness packed the labyrinth of
girders, and he could discern no trace of the bushwhacker.
"He's gone!" Doc concluded
aloud.
No sound of movement followed his words.
Then the window shade ran down loudly in the room where they had been shot at.
The five men stiffened, then relaxed at Doc's low call, Doc had moved
soundlessly to the shade and drawn it.
Doc was beside the safe, the lights
turned on, when they entered.
The window glass had been clouted
completely out of the sash. It lay in glistening chunks and spears on the
luxuriant carpet.
The glowing message which had been on it
seemed destroyed forever.
"Somebody was laying for me
outside," Doc said, no worry at all in his well-developed voice.
"They evidently couldn't get just the aim they wanted at me through the
window. When we turned out the light to look at the writing on the window, they
thought we were leaving the building. So they took a couple of shots for wild
luck."
"Next time, Doc, suppose we have
bulletproof glass in these windows!" Renny suggested, the humor in his
voice belying his dour look.
"Sure," said Doc. "Next
time! We're on the eighty-sixth floor, and it's quite common to be shot at
here!"
Ham interposed a sarcastic snort. He
bounced over, waspish, quick-moving, and nearly managed to thrust his slender
arm through the hole the bullet had tunneled in the brick wall.
"Even if you put in bulletproof
windows, you'd have to be blame careful to set in front of them!" he
clipped dryly.
Doc was studying the hole in the safe
door, noting particularly the angle at which the powerful bullet had entered. He
opened the safe. The big bullet, almost intact, was embedded in the safe rear
wall.
Renny ran a great arm into the safe,
grasped the bullet with his fingers. His giant arm muscles corded as he tried
to pull it out. The fist that could drive bodily through inch-thick planking
with perfect ease was defied by the embedded metal slug.
"Whew!" snorted Renny.
"That's a job for a drill and cold chisels."
Saying nothing, merely as if he wanted to
see if the bullet was stuck as tightly as Renny said, Doc reached into the
safe.
Great muscles popping up along his arm
suddenly split his coat sleeve wide open. He glanced at the ruined sleeve
ruefully, and brought his arm out of the safe. The bullet lay loosely in his
palm.
RENNY
could not have looked more astounded had a spike-tailed devil hopped out of the
safe. The expression on his puritanical face was ludicrous.
Doc weighed the bullet in his palm. The
lids were drawn over his golden eyes. He seemed to be giving his marvelous
brain every chance to work - and he was. He was guessing the weight of that
bullet within a few grains, almost as accurately as a chemist's scale could
weigh it.
"Seven hundred and fifty
grains," he decided, "That makes it a .577 caliber Nitro-Express
rifle. Probably the gun that fired that shot was a double-barreled rifle."
"How d'you figure that?" asked
Ham. Possibly the most astute of Doc's five friends, Doc's reasoning
nevertheless got away from even Ham.
"There were only two shots,"
Doc clarified. "Also, cartridges of this tremendous size are usually fired
from double-barreled elephant rifles."
"Let's do somethin' about
this!" boomed Monk. "The bushwhacker may get away while we're
jawin'!"
"He's probably fled already, since I could locate no trace
of him with the binoculars," Doc replied. "But we'll do something
about it, right enough!"
With exactly four terse sentences, one
each directed at Renny, Long Tom, Johnny, and Monk, Doc gave all the orders he
needed to. He did not explain in detail what they were to do. That wasn't
necessary. He merely gave them the idea of what he wanted, and they set to work
and got it in short order. They were clever, these men of Doc's.
Renny, the engineer, picked a slide rule
from the drawer of a desk, a pair of dividers, some paper, a length of string.
He probed the angle at which the bullet had passed through the inner safe door,
calculated expertly the slight amount the window had probably deflected it. In
less than a minute, he had his string aligned from the safe to a spot midway in
the window, and was sighting down it.
"Snap out of it, Long Tom!" he
called impatiently.
"Just keep your shirt on!" Long
Tom complained. He was doing his own share as rapidly as the engineer.
Long Tom had made a swift swing into the
library and laboratory, collecting odds and ends of electrical material. With a
couple of powerful light bulbs he unscrewed from sockets, some tin, a pocket
mirror he borrowed from - of all people - Monk, Long Tom rigged an apparatus to
project a thin, extremely powerful beam of light. He added a flashlight lens,
and borrowed the magnifying half of Johhny's glasses before he got just the
effect he desired.
Long Tom sighted his light beam down
Renny's string, thus locating precisely in the gloomy mass of skyscrapers, the
spot from whence the shots had come.
In the meantime, Johnny, with fingers and
eye made expert by years of assembling bits of pottery from ancient ruins, and
the bones of prehistoric monsters, was fitting the shattered windowpane
together. A task that would have taken a layman hours, Johnny accomplished in
minutes.
Johnny turned the black-light apparatus
on the glass. The message in glowing blue sprang out. Intact!
Monk came waddling in from the
laboratory. In the big furry hands that swung below his knees, he carried
several bottles, tightly corked. They held a fluid of villainous color.
Monk, from the wealth of chemical
formulas within his head, had compounded a gas with which to fight their
opponents, should they succeed in cornering whoever had fired that shot. It was
a gas that would instantly paralyze any one who inhaled it, but the effects
were only temporary, and not harmful.
THEY all
gathered around the table on which Johnny had assembled the fragments of glass.
All but Renny, who was still calculating his angles. And as Doc flashed the
light upon the glass, they read the message written there:
Important
papers back of the red brick -
Before the message could mean anything to
their minds, Renny shouted his discovery.
"It's from the observation tower, on
that unfinished skyscraper," he cried. "That's where the shot came
from - and the sharpshooter must still be somewhere up there!"
"Let's go!" Doc ordered, and
the men surged out into the massive, shining corridor of the building, straight
to the battery of elevators.
If they noticed that Doc tarried behind
several seconds, none of them remarked the fact. Doc was always doing little
things like that - little things that often turned out to have amazing
consequences later.
The men piled into the opened elevator
with a suddenness that startled the dozing operator. He wouldn't be able to
sleep on the job the rest of the night!
With a whine like a lost pup, the cage
sank.
Grimly silent, Doc and his five friends
were a remarkable collection of men. They so impressed the elevator operator
that he would have shot the lift past the first floor into the basement, had
Doc not dropped a bronze, long-fingered hand on the control.
Doc led out through the lobby at a trot.
A taxi was cocked in at the curb, driver dreaming over the wheel. Four of the
six men piled into the machine. Doc and Renny rode the running board.
"Do a Barney Oldfield!" Doc
directed the cab driver.
The hack jumped away from the curb as if
stung.
Rain sheeted against Doc's strong,
bronzed face, and his straight, close-lying bronze hair. An unusual fact was at
once evident. Doc's bronze skin and bronze hair had the strange quality of
seeming impervious to water. They didn't get appreciably wet; he shed water
like the proverbial duck's back.
The streets were virtually deserted in
this shopping region. Over toward the theater district, perhaps, there would be
a crowd.
Brakes giving one long squawk, the taxi
skidded sidewise to the curb and stopped. Doc and Renny were instantly running
for the entrance of the new skyscraper. The four passengers came out of the cab
door as if blown out. Ham still carried his plain black cane.
"My pay!" howled the taxi
driver.
"Wait for us!" Doc flung back
at him.
In the recently finished building lobby,
Doc yelled for the watchman. He got no answer. He was puzzled. There should be
one around.
They entered an elevator, sent it upward
to the topmost floor. Still no watchman! They sprang up a staircase to where
all construction but steel work ceased. There they found the watchmen.
The man, a big Irishman with cheeks so
plump and red they looked like the halves of Christmas apples, was bound and
gagged. He was indeed grateful when Doc turned him loose - but quite astounded.
For Doc, not bothering with the knots, simply freed the Irishman by snapping
the stout ropes with his fingers as easily as he would cords.
"Begorra, man!" muttered the
Irishman. "'Tis not human yez can be, with a strength like that!"
"Who tied you up?" Doc asked
compellingly. "What did he look like?"
"Faith, I dunno!" declared the
son of Erin. "'Twas not a single look or a smell I got of him, except for
one thing. The fingers of the man were red on the ends. Like he had dipped 'em
in blood!"
ON up into
the wilderness of steel girders, the six men climbed. They left the Irishman
behind, rubbing spots where the ropes had hurt him, and mumbling to himself
about a man who broke ropes with his fingers, and another man who had red
finger tips.
"This is about the right height!"
said the gaunt Johnny, bounding at Doc's heels. "He was shooting from
about here."
Johnny was hardly breathing rapidly. A
tall, poorly looking man, Johnny nevertheless exceeded all the others,
excepting Doc, in endurance. He had been known to go for three days and three
nights steadily with only a slice of bread and a canteen of water.
Doc veered right. He had taken a
flashlight from an inside pocket.
It was not like other flashlights, that
one of Doc's. It employed no battery. A tiny, powerful generator, built into
the handle and driven by a stout spring and clockwork, supplied the current.
One twist of the flash handle would wind the spring and furnish light current
for some minutes. A special receptacle held spare bulbs. There was not much
chance of Doc's light playing out.
The flash spiked a white rod of luminance
ahead. It picked up a workman's platform of heavy planks.
"The shot came from there!" Doc
vouchsafed.
A steel girder, a few inches wide,
slippery with moisture, offered a short cut to the platform. Doc ran along it,
surefooted as a bronze spider on a web thread. His five men, knowing they would
be flirting with death among the steel beams hundreds of feet below, decided to
go around, and did it very carefully.
Doc had picked two empty cartridges off the platform, and was
scrutinizing them when his five friends put relieved feet on the planks.
"A cannon!" Monk gulped, after
one look at the great size of the cartridges.
"Not quite," Doc replied.
"They are cartridges for the elephant rifle I told you about. And it was a
double-barreled rifle the sniper used."
"What makes you so sure, Doc?"
asked big, sober-faced Renny.
Doc pointed at the plank surface of the
platform. Barely visible were two tiny marks, side by side. Now that Doc had
called their attention to the marks, the others knew they had been made by the
muzzle of a double-barreled elephant rifle rested for a moment on the boards.
"He was a short man," Doc
added. "Shorter, even, than Long Tom, here. And much wider."
"Huh?" This was beyond even
quick-thinking Ham.
Seemingly unaware of their great height,
and the certain death the slightest misstep would bring, Doc swung around the
group and back the easy route they had come. He pointed to a girder which,
because of the roof effect of another girder above, was dry on one side. But
there was a damp smear on the dry steel.
"The sniper rubbed it with his
shoulder in passing," Doc explained. "That shows how tall he is. It
also shows he has wide shoulders, because only a wide-shouldered man would rub
the girder. Now - "
Doc fell suddenly silent. As rigid as if
he were the bard bronze he so resembled, he poised against the girder. His
glittering golden eyes seemed to grow luminous in the darkness.
"What is it, Doc?" asked Renny.
"Some one just struck a match - up
there in the room where we were shot at!" He interrupted himself with an
explosive sound. "There! He's lighted another!"
Doc instantly whipped the binoculars - he
had brought them along from the office - from his pocket. He aimed them at the
window.
He got but a fragmentary glimpse. The
match was about burned out. Only the tips of the prowler's fingers were clearly
lighted.
"His fingers - the ends are
red!" Doc voiced what he had seen.
Chapter 4
THE RED DEATH PROMISE
AN
interval of a dozen seconds, Doc waited.
"Let's go!" he breathed then.
"You fellows make for that room, quick!"
The five men spun, began descending from
the platform as swiftly as they dared. But it would take then minutes in the
darkness, and the jumble of girders, to reach the spot where the elevators
could carry them on.
"Where's Doc?" Monk rumbled
when they were down a couple of stories.
Doc was not with them, they now noted.
"He stayed behind!" snapped
waspish Ham. Then, as Monk accidentally nudged him in the dangerous murk:
"Listen, Monk, do you want me to kick you off here?"
Doc, however, had not exactly remained
behind. He had, with the uncanny nimbleness of a forest-dwelling monkey,
flashed across a precarious path of girders, until he reached the supply
elevators, erected by the workmen on the outside of the building for fetching
up materials.
The cages were hundreds of feet below, on
the ground, and there was no one to operate the controls. But Doc knew that. On
the lip of the elevator shaft, balanced by the grip of his powerful knees, he
shucked off his coat. He made it into a bundle in his hands.
The stout wire cables which lifted the
elevator cab were barely discernible. A full eight feet out over space they
hung. But with a gentle leap, Doc launched out and seized them. Using his coat
to protect his palms from the friction heat sure to be generated, he let
himself slide down the cables.
Air swished past his ears, plucked at his
trouser legs and shirt sleeves. The coat smoked, began to leave a trail of
sparks. Halfway down, Doc braked to a stop by tightening his powerful hands,
and changed to a fresh spot in the coat.
So it was that Doc had reached the street
even while thin, waspish Ham was threatening to kick the gigantic Monk off the
girder if Monk shoved him again.
It was imperative to get to the office
before the departure of the prowler who had lighted the match. Doc plunged into
the taxi he had left standing in front, rapped an order.
Doc's voice had a magical quality of
compelling sudden obedience to an order. With a squawl of clashing gears and a
whine of spinning tires, the taxi doubled around in the street. It covered the
several blocks in a fraction of a minute.
A bronze streak, Doc was out of the cab
and in the skyscraper lobby. He confronted the elevator operator.
"What sort of a looking man did you
take up to eighty-six a few minutes ago?"
"There ain't a soul come in this
building since you left!" said the elevator operator positively.
DOC'S
brain fought the problem an instant. He had naturally supposed the sniper had invaded
the room above. It seemed not.
"Get this!" he clipped at the
operator. "You wait here and be ready to sic my five men on anybody who
comes out of this building. My men will be here in a minute. I'm taking your
cage up!"
In the cage with the last word, Doc sent
it sighing upward a couple of city blocks. He stopped it one floor below the
eighty-sixth, quitted it there, crept furtively up the stairs and to the suite
of offices which had been his father's, but which was now Doc's own.
The suite door gaped ajar. Inside was
sepia blackness that might hold anything.
Doc popped the corridor lights off as a
matter of safety. He feared no encounter in the dark. He had trained his ears
by a system of scientific sound exercises which was a part of the two hours of
intensive physical and mental drill Doc gave himself daily. So powerful and
sensitive had his hearing become that he could detect sounds absolutely
inaudible to other people. And ears were all important in a scrimmage in the
dark.
But a quick round of the three rooms, a moment of listening in
each, convinced Doc the quarry had fled.
His men arrived in the corridor with a
great deal of racket. Doc lighted the offices, and watched them come in. Monk
was absent.
"Monk remained downstairs on
guard," Renny explained. Doc nodded, his golden eyes flickering at the
table. On that table, where none had been before, was propped a blood-red
envelope!
Crossing over quickly, Doc picked up a
book, opened it and used it like pincers to pick up the strange scarlet
missive. He carried it into the laboratory, and dunked it in a bath of
concentrated disinfectant fluid, stuff calculated to destroy every possible
germ.
"I've heard of murderers leaving
their victims an envelope full of the germs of some rare disease," he told
the others dryly. "And remember, it was a strange malady that seized my
father."
Carefully, he picked the crimson envelope
apart until he had disclosed the missive it held. Words were lettered on
scarlet paper with an odious black ink. They read:
SAVAGE:
Turn back from your quest, lest
the red death strike once again.
There was no signature.
A silent group, they went back to the
room where they had found the vermilion missive.
IT was Long
Tom who gave voice to a new discovery. He leveled a rather pale hand at the box
which held the ultraviolet light apparatus.
"That isn't sitting where we left
it!" he declared.
Doc nodded. He had already noticed that,
but he did not say so. He made it a policy never to disillusion one of his men
who thought he had been first to notice something or get an idea, although Doc
himself might have discovered it far earlier. It was this modesty of Doc's
which helped endear him to everybody he was associated with.
"The prowler who came in and left
the red note used the black-light apparatus," he told Long Torn.
"It's a safe guess that he inspected the window Johnny put together."
"Then he read the invisible writing
on the glass!" Renny rumbled.
"Very likely."
"Could he make heads or tails of
it?"
"I hope he could," Doc said
dryly.
They all betrayed surprise at that, but
Doc, turning away, indicated he wasn't ready to amplify on his strange
statement. Doc borrowed the magnifying glass Johnny wore in his left spectacle,
lens, and inspected the door for finger prints.
"We'll get whoever it was!" Ham
decided. The waspish lawyer made a wry smile. "One look at Monk's ugly
phiz and nobody would try to get out of here."
But at that instant the elevator doors
rolled back, out in the corridor.
Monk waddled from the lift like a huge
anthropoid.
"What d'you want?" he asked
them.
They stared at him, puzzled.
Monk's big mouth crooked a gigantic
scowl. "Didn't one of you phone downstairs for me to come right up?"
Doc shook his bronze head slowly.
"No."
Monk let out a bellow that would have
shamed the beast he resembled. He stamped up and down. He waved his huge,
corded arms that were inches longer than his legs.
"Somebody run a whizzer on me!"
he howled. "Whoever if was, I'll wring his neck! I'll pull off his ears!
I'll give - "
"You'll be in a cage at the zoo if
you don't learn the manners of a man!" waspish Ham said bitingly.
Monk promptly stopped his apelike
prancing and bellowing. He looked steadily at Ham, starring with Ham's
distinguished shock of prematurely gray hair, and running his little eyes
slowly down Ham's well-cared-for face, perfect business suit, and small shoes.
Suddenly Monk began to laugh. His mirth was a loud, hearty roar.
At the gusty laughter, Ham stiffened. His
face became very red with embarrassment.
For all Monk had to do to get Ham's goat
was laugh at him. It had all started back in the war, when Ham was Brigadier
General Theodore Marley Brooks. The brigadier general had been the moving
spirit in a little scheme to teach Monk certain French words which had a
meaning entirely different than Monk thought. As a result, Monk had spent a
session in the guardhouse for some things he had innocently called a French
general.
A few days after that, though, Brigadier
General Theodore Marley Brooks was suddenly hauled up before a courtmartial,
accused of stealing hams. And convicted! Somebody had expertly planted plenty
of evidence.
Ham got his name right there. And to this
day he had not been able to prove it was the homely Monk who framed him. That
rankled Ham's lawyer soul.
Unnoticed, Doc Savage had reached over
and turned on the ultra-violet-light apparatus. He focused it on the
pieced-together window, then called to the others: "Take a look!"
The message on the glass had been
changed!
THERE now
glowed with an eerie blue luminance exactly eight more words than had been in
the original message. The communication now read:
Important
papers back of the red brick
house at corner of Mountainair and
Farmwell Streets
"Hey!" exploded the giant
Renny. "How - "
With a lifted hand, a nod at the door,
Doc silenced Renny and sent them all piling into the corridor.
As the elevator rushed them downward, Doc
explained:
"Somebody
decoyed you upstairs so they could get away, Monk."
"Don't I know it!" Monk
mumbled. "But what I can't savvy is who added words to that message?"
"That was my doing," Doc
admitted. "I had a hunch the sniper might have seen us working with the
ultra-violet-light apparatus, and be smart enough to see what it was. I hoped
he'd try to read the message. So I changed it to lead him into a trap."
Monk popped the knuckles in hands that
were near as big as gallon pails. "Trap is right! Wait'll I get my lunch
shovels on that guy!"
Their taxi was still waiting outside. The
driver began a wailing: "Say - when am I gonna get paid? You gotta pay for
the time I been waitin' - "
Doc handed the man a bill that not only
silenced him, but nearly made his eyes jump out.
North on Fifth Avenue, the taxi raced.
Water whipped the windshield and washed the windows. Doc and Renny, riding
outside once more, were pelted with the moisture drops. Renny bent his face
away from the stinging drops, but Doc seemed no more affected than had he
really been of bronze. His hair and skin showed not the least wetness.
"This red brick house at the corner
of Mountainair and Farmwell Streets is deserted," Doc called once.
"That's why I gave that address in the addition to the note."
Inside the cab, Monk rumbled about what
he would do to whoever had tricked him.
A motorcycle cop fell in behind them, opened
his siren, and came up rapidly. But when he caught sight of Doc, like a
striking figure of bronze on the side of the taxi, the officer waved his hand
respectfully. Doc didn't even know the man. The officer must have been one who
knew and revered the elder Savage.
The cab reeled into a less frequented
street, slanting around corners. Rows of unlighted houses made the thoroughfare
like a black, ominous tunnel.
"Here we are!" Doc told their
driver at last,
GHOSTLY
described the neighborhood. The streets were narrow, the sidewalks narrower;
the cement of both was cracked and rutted and gone entirely in places.
Chugholes filled with water reached half to their knees.
"You each have one of Monk's gas
bombs?" Doc asked, just to be sure.
They had.
Doc breathed terse orders of campaign.
"Monk in front, Long Tom and Johnny on the right, Renny on the left. I'll
take the back. Ham, you stay off to one side as a sort of reserve if some quick
thinking and moving has to be done."
Doc gave them half a minute to place
themselves. Not long, but all the time they needed. He went forward himself.
The red brick house on the comer had two
ramshackle stories. It had been deserted a long time. Two of the three porch
posts canted crazily. Shingles still clung to the roof only in scabs. The
windows were planked up solid. And the brick looked rotten and soft.
The street lamp at the corner cast light
so pale as to be near nonexistent.
Doc encountered brush, eased into it with
a peculiar twisting, worming movement of his powerful, supple frame. He had
seen great jungle cats slide through dense leafage in that strangely noiseless
fashion, and had copied it himself. He made absolutely no sound.
And in a moment, he had raised his quarry.
The man was at the rear of the house,
going over the back yard a foot at a time, lighting matches in succession.
He was short, but perfectly formed, with
a smooth yellow skin, and a seeming plumpness that probably meant great
muscular development. His nose was curving, slightly hooked, his lips full, his
chin not particularly large. A man of a strange race.
The ends of his fingers were dyed a
brilliant scarlet.
Doc did not reveal himself at once, but
watched curiously.
The stocky, golden-skinned man seemed
very puzzled, as indeed he had reason to be, for what he sought was not there.
He muttered disgustedly in some strange clucking language.
Doc, when he heard the words, held back
even longer. He was astounded. He had never expected to hear a man speaking
that language as though it were his native tongue. For it was the lingo of a
lost civilization!
The stocky man showed signs of giving up
his search. He lit one more match, putting his box away as though he didn't
intend to ignite more. Then he stiffened.
Into the soaking night had permeated a
low, mellow, trilling sound like the song of some exotic bird. It seemed to
emanate from underfoot, overhead, to the sides, everywhere - and nowhere. The
stocky man was bewildered. The sound was startling, but not awesome.
Doc was telling his men to beware. There
might be more of the enemy about than this one fellow.
The stocky man half turned, searching the
darkness. He took a step toward a big, double-barreled elephant rifle that
leaned against a pile of scrap wood near him. It was of huge caliber, that
rifle, fitted with telescopic sights. The man's hand started to close over the
gun. And Doc had him! Doc's leap was
more expert even than the lunge of a jungle prowler, for the victim gave not
even a single bleat before he was pinned, helpless in arms that banded him like
steel, and a hand that cut off his wind as though his throat had been poured
full of lead.
SWIFTLY,
the others came up. They had found no one else about.
"I'd be glad to hold him for
you!" Monk suggested hopefully to Doc. His furry fingers opened and shut.
Doc shook his head and released the
prisoner. The man instantly started to run. But Doc's hand, floating out with
incredible speed, stopped the man with a snap that made his teeth pop together
like clapped hands.
"Why did you shoot at us?" Doc
demanded in English.
The stocky man spewed clucking gutturals,
highly excited.
Doc looked swiftly aside, at Johnny.
The gaunt archaeologist, who knew a great
deal about ancient races, was scratching his head with thick fingers. He took
off the glasses with the magnifying lens on the left side, then nervously put
them back on again.
"It's incredible!" he muttered.
"The language that fellow speaks - I think it is ancient Mayan. The lingo
of the tribe that built the great pyramids at Chichen Itza, then vanished. I
probably know as much about that language as anybody on earth. Wait a minute,
and I'll think of a few words."
But Doc was not waiting. To the squat
man, he spoke in ancient Mayan! Slowly, halting, having difficulty with the
syllables, it was true, but he spoke understandably.
And the squat man, more excited than
ever, spouted more gutturals.
Doc asked a question.
The man made a stubborn answer.
"He won't talk," Doc
complained. "All he will say is a lot of stuff about having to kill me to
save his people from something he calls the Red Death!"
Chapter 5
THE FLY THAT JUMPED
ASTOUNDED
silence gripped the group.
"You mean!" Johnny muttered,
blinking through his glasses, "You mean this fellow really speaks the
tongue of ancient Maya?"
Doc nodded. "He sure does."
"It's fantastic!" Johnny
grumbled. "Those people vanished hundreds of years ago. At least, all
those that comprised the highest civilization did. A few ignorant peons were
probably left. Even those survive to this day. But as for the higher-class
Mayan" - he made a gesture of something disappearing - "Poof! Nobody
knows for sure what became of them."
"They were a wonderful people,"
Doc said thoughtfully. "They had a civilization that probably surpassed
ancient Egypt."
"Ask him why he paints his fingers
red?" Monk requested, unfazed by talk of lost civilizations.
Doc put the query in the tongue-flapping
Mayan tongue. The stocky man gave a surly answer. "He says he's one of the
warrior sect," Doc translated.
"Only members of the warrior sect sport red finger tips."
"Well, I'll be dag-gone!" Monk
snorted.
"He won't talk any more," Doc
advised. Then he added grimly: "We'll take him down to the office, and see
if he won't change his mind?"
Searching the prisoner, Doc dug up a
remarkable knife. It had a blade of obsidian, a darksome, glasslike volcanic
rock, and the edge rivaled a razor in cutting qualities. The handle was simply
a leather thong wrapped around and around the upper end of the obsidian shaft.
This knife Doc appropriated. He picked up
the prisoner's double-barreled elephant rifle. The marvelous weapon was
manufactured by the Webley & Scott firm, of England.
Monk eagerly took charge of the captive,
booting him ungently out to the street and to their taxi.
Swishing downtown through the rain, Doc, speaking
through the taxi window, tried again to persuade the stocky prisoner to talk.
The fellow disclosed only one fact - and
Doc had already guessed that.
"He says he's really a Mayan!"
Doc translated for the others.
"Tell him I'll pull his ears off an'
feed 'em to him if he don't come clean!" Monk suggested.
Doc, anxious himself to note the effect
of torture threats on the Mayan, repeated Monk's remarks.
The Mayan shrugged, clucked in his native
tongue.
"He says," Doc explained,
"that the trees in his country are full of them like you, only smaller. He
means monkeys."
Ham let out a howl of laughter at that,
and Monk subsided.
RAIN was
threshing down less vigorously when they pulled up before the gleaming office
building that spiked up nearly a hundred stories. Entering, they rode the
elevator to the eighty-sixth floor.
The Mayan again refused to talk.
"If we just had some truth
serum!" suggested Long Tom, running pale fingers through his blond, Nordic
hair.
Renny held up a monster fist. "This
is all the truth serum we need! I'll show you how it works!"
Big, with sloping mountains of gristle
for shoulders, and long kegs of bone and tendon for arms, Renny slid over to
the library door. His fist came up.
Wham! Completely through the stout panel
Renny's fist pistoned, it seemed more than bone and tendon could stand. But
when Renny drew his knuckles Out of the wreckage and blew off the splinters,
they were unmarked.
Renny, having demonstrated what he could
do, came back and towered threateningly over their captive.
"Talk to him in that gobble he calls
a language, Doc! Tell him he's in for the same thing that door got if he don't
tell us whether your father was murdered, and if he was, who did it. And we
want to know why he tried to shoot us."
The prisoner only sat in stoical silence.
He was scared - but determined to suffer any violence rather than talk.
"Wait, Renny," Doc suggested.
"Let's try something more subtle."
"For instance?" Renny inquired.
"Hypnotism," said Doc. "If
this man is of a savage race, his mind is probably susceptible to hypnotic
influence. It's no secret that many savages hypnotize themselves to such an
extent that they think they see their pagan gods come and talk to them."
Positioned directly before the stocky
Mayan, Doc began to exert the power of his amazing golden eyes. They seemed to
turn into shifting, gleaning piles of the flaked yellow metal, holding the
prisoner's gaze inexorably, exerting a compelling, authoritative influence.
For a minute the squat Mayan was quiet,
except for his bulging eyes. He swayed a little in his chair. Then, with a
piercing yell in his native tongue, the prisoner lunged backward out of his
chair.
The Mayan's plunge carried him toward
Renny. But the big-fisted giant had been watching Doc so intently he must have
been a little hypnotized himself. He was slow breaking the spell. Reaching for
the Mayan, he missed.
Straight to the window, the squat Mayan
sped. A wild jump, and he shot head-first through it - to his death!
AWED
silence was in the room for a while.
"He realized he was going to be made
to talk," Ham clipped, whipping his waspish frame over to the window to
look callously down. "So he killed himself."
"Wonder what can be behind all
this!" Long Tom puzzled, absently inspecting his unhealthy-looking
features as reflected by the polished table top.
"Let's see if the message my father
left written on the window won't help," Doc suggested.
They followed Doc to the library in a
group. "Important papers back of the red brick," read the message in
invisible ink which could only be detected by ultra-violet light. They were all
curious to know where the papers were, anxious to see that they were intact.
Above all, they wanted to know the nature of these "important
papers."
Doc had the box which manufactured
ultra-violet rays, under his arm. On into the laboratory, he led the cavalcade.
Every one noticed instantly that the
laboratory floor was of brick, with a rubber matting scattered here and there.
Monk looked like he understood, then his
jaw fell. "Huh!"
The floor bricks were all red!
Doc plugged the ultra-violet apparatus
into a light socket. He switched off the laboratory lights. Deliberately, he
played the black-light rays across the brick floor. The darkness was intense.
And suddenly one brick was shining with
an unholy red luminance. The brick was the lid of a secret little cavity in the
floor, and the elder Savage had treated it with some substance that had the
property of glowing red under the black-light beams.
From the secret cavity, Doc lifted a
packet of papers wrapped securely in an oilskin cloth that looked like a
fragment of slicker. Ham clicked on the lights. They gathered around, eagerly
waiting.
Doc opened the papers. They were very
official looking, replete with gaudy seals. And they were printed in Spanish.
One at a time, as he finished glancing
over them, Doc passed the papers to Ham. The astute lawyer studied them with
great interest. At last Doc was completely through the papers. He looked at
Ham.
"These papers are a concession from
the government of Hidalgo," Ham declared. "They give to you several
hundred square miles of land in Hidalgo, providing you pay the government of
Hidalgo one hundred thousand dollars yearly and one fifth of everything you
remove from this land. And the concession holds for a period of ninety-nine
years."
Doc nodded. "Notice something else,
Ham! Those papers are made out to me. Me, mind you! Yet they were executed
twenty years ago. I was only a kid then."
"You know what I think?" Ham
demanded.
"Same thing I do, I'll bet!"
Doc replied. "These papers are the title to the legacy my father left me.
The legacy is something he discovered twenty years ago."
"But what is the legacy?" Monk
wanted to know. Doc shrugged. "I haven't the slightest idea, brothers. But
you can bet it's something well worth while. My father was never mixed up in
piker deals. I have heard him treat a million-dollar transaction as casually as
though he were buying a cigar."
Pausing, Doc looked steadily at each of
his men in turn. The flaky gold of his eyes shimmered strange lights. He seemed
to read the thoughts of each.
"I'm going after this heritage my
father left," he said at length. "I don't need to ask - you fellows
are with me!"
"And how!" grinned Renny. And
the others echoed his sentiment.
PLANTING
the papers securely in a chamois money
belt about his powerful waist, Doc walked back into the library, thence into
the other room.
"Did the Mayan race hang out in
Hidalgo?" Renny asked abruptly, eying his enormous fist.
Johnny, fiddling with his glasses that
had the magnifying lens, took it upon himself to answer.
"The Mayans were scattered over a
large part of Central America," he said. "But the Itzans, the clan
whose dialect our late prisoner spoke, were situated in Yucatan during the
height of their civilization. However, the republic of Hidalgo is not far away,
being situated among the rugged mountains farther inland."
"I'm betting this Mayan and Doc's
heritage are tied up somewhere," declared Long Tom, the electrical wizard.
Doc stood facing the window. With his
back to the light, his strong bronze face was not sharply outlined except when
he turned slightly to the right or left to speak. Then the light play seemed to
accentuate its remarkable qualities of character.
"The thing for us to do now is corner
the man who was giving the Mayan orders," he said slowly.
"Huh - you think there's more of
your enemies?" Renny demanded.
"The Mayan showed no signs of
understanding the English language," Doc elaborated. "Whoever left
the warning in this room wrote it in English, and was educated enough to
understand the ultra-violet apparatus. That man was in the building when the
shot was fired, because the elevator operator said no one came in between the
time we left and got back. Yes, brothers, I don't think we're out of the woods
yet."
Doc went over to the double-barreled
elephant rifle which had been in possession of the Mayan. He inspected the
manufacturer's number. He grasped the telephone.
"Get me the firearms manufacturing
firm of Webley & Scott, Birmingham, England." he told the phone
operator "Yes, of course - England! Where the Prince of Wales lives."
To his friends, Doc explained:
"Perhaps the firm that made the rifle will know to whom they sold
it."
"Somebody will cuss over in England
when he's called out of bed by long-distance phone from America," Renny
chuckled.
"You forget the five hours' time
difference," clipped waspish Ham. "It is now early morning in
England! They'll just be getting up."
Doc was facing the window again,
apparently lost in thought. Actually, while standing there a moment before, he
had felt vaguely that something was out of place about the window.
Then he got it! The mortar at one end of
the granite slab which formed the window sill was fresher than on the other
side. The strip of mortar was no wider than a pencil mark, yet Doc noticed it.
He leaned out the window.
A fine wire, escaping from the room
through the mortared crack, ran downward! It entered a window below.
Doc flashed back into the room. His
supple, sensitive, but steel-strong hands explored. He brought to light a tiny
microphone of the type radio announcers call lapel mikes.
"Somebody has been listening."
His powerful voice throbbed through the room. "In the room below! Let's
look into that!"
NO puff of
wind could have gone out of the room and down the stairs more speedily than Doc
made it. The distance was sixty feet, and Doc had covered it all before his men
were out of the upstairs room. And they had moved as quickly as they could.
Whipping over where the wall could
shelter him from ordinary bullets, Doc tried the doorknob. Locked! He exerted
what for him was a mild pressure. Wood splintered, brass mechanism of the lock
gritted and tore - and the door hopped ajar.
A pistol crashed in the room. The bullet
came close enough to Doc's bronzed features that he felt the cold stir of air.
A second lead missile followed. The powder noise was a great bawl of sound.
Both bullets chopped plaster off the elaborately decorated corridor wall.
Within the room, a door slammed.
Doc instantly slid inside. Sure enough,
his quarry had retreated to a connecting office.
All this had taken flash parts of a
second - Doc's men were only now clamoring at the door.
"Keep back!" Doc directed. He
liked to fight his own battles. And there seemed to be only one man opposing
him.
Doc crossed the office, treading
new-looking cheap carpet. He circled a second-hand oak desk with edges
blackened where cigarette stubs had been placed carelessly. He tried the
connecting door.
It was also locked - but gave like wet
cardboard before his powerful shove. Alert, almost certain a bullet would meet
him, he doubled down close to the floor. He knew he could bob into view and
back before the man inside could pull trigger.
But the place was empty!
Once, twice, three times, Doc counted his
own heartbeats. Then he saw the explanation.
A stout silken cord, with hardwood rods
about the size of fountain pens tied every foot or so for handholds, draped out
of the open window. The end of the cord was tied to a stout radiator leg. And a
tense jerking showed a man was going down it.
With a single leap, Doc was at the
window. He looked down.
Of the man descending the cord, little
could be told. In the streaming darkness he was no more than a black lump.
Doc drew back, whipped out his
flashlight. When he played it down the cord, the man was gone!
The fellow had ducked into a window.
The flash went into Doc's pocket. Doc
himself clambered over the window sill. Grasping the silken cord, he descended.
Thanks to the coordination of his great muscles, Doc negotiated the cord just
about as fast as a man could run.
He passed the first window. It was
closed, the office beyond darkened and deserted-looking.
Doc went on down. He had not seen what
window the quarry had disappeared into. The second window was also closed. And the
third! Doc knew then that he had passed the right window. The man could not
have gone this far down the cord.
It was typical of Doc that he did not
give even a glance to what was below - a sheer fall of hundreds of feet. So far
downward did the brick-and-glass wall extend that it seemed to narrow with
distance until it was only a yard or so across. And the street was wedge-shaped
at the bottom, as though cut with a great, sharp knife.
Doc had climbed a yard upward when the
silk cord gave a violent jerk. He looked up.
A window had opened. A man had shoved a
chair through it, and was pushing on the cord so as to swing Doc out away from
the building. The murk of the night hid the man's face. But it was obvious he
was Doc's quarry.
Like a rock on the end of the silken
rope, Doc was swung out several feet from the building. He would have to chance
to grab a window sill.
The man above flashed a hand for the
cord. A long knife glistened in the hand.
Chapter 6
WORKING PLANS
AT no time
had Doc Savage ever put his ability to think like chain lightning to better use
than he did now. In the fractional split of time that it took his golden eyes
to register the deadly menace of that knife, he formulated a plan of action.
He
simply let go completely of the silken cord!
This, in spite of the sheer fall of more
than eighty stories directly below him - with not a possible chance of saving
himself by clutching a projecting piece of masonry. This building was of the
modernistic architecture which does not go in for trick balconies and carved
ledges.
But Doc knew what he was doing. And it
was a thing that called for iron nerve and stupendous strength and quickness of
movement.
The silken cord, going abruptly slack
before the chair the man above pushed against it nearly caused the would-be
murderer to pitch headlong out of the window. The fellow dropped both the chair
and his knife and by a wild grab, saved himself from the fall he had meant for
Doc.
Doc, with a maneuver little short of
marvelous, caught the end of the silken cord as it snaked past. A drop of a few
feet, which his remarkable arm muscles easily cushioned, and he was swinging
close to a window sill, none the worse for his narrow escape.
Doc stepped easily to the window ledge.
Not a moment too soon! The man above had
recovered and, desperate, had employed a small penknife to cut the silken line.
It slithered down past Doc, writhing and twisting into fantastic shapes as it
dropped those eighty stories to the street.
The window on the ledge of which Doc
found himself was locked. He popped the pane inward, and sprang into the
office. He lunged across the room.
The door literally jumped out of its
casing, lock and all, when he took hold of it. He halted in the corridor,
stumped.
His attuned ear could detect the windy
noise of an elevator dropping downward. He knew it was his quarry in flight!
A couple of floors above, Renny was
yelling, his voice more than ever like thunder deep in a cave. "Doc -
what's become of you?"
Doc paid no attention. He ran across the
corridor to the elevator doors. So quickly that he seemed to spring directly to
it he found the cage shaft that was in operation. His fist came back, jumped
forward so swiftly as to defy the eye.
The sound as Doc's knuckles hit the
sheet-steel elevator door was like the boom of a hard-swung sledge. An onlooker
would have sworn the blow would shatter every bone in his fist. But Doc had
learned how to tighten the muscles and tendons in his hands until they were
like cushioned steel, capable of withstanding the most violent shock.
As a matter of fact, it was part of Doc's
daily two-hour routine of exercises to subject all parts of his great body to
terrific blows in order that he might be able always to steel himself against
them.
The sheet-metal elevator door caved in
like a kicked tin can. In a moment Doc had thrown the safety switch which the
door, closing, ordinarily operated. Such safety switches are a part of all
elevator doors, so the cage cannot move up or down and leave a door open for
some child or careless person to fall through into the shaft. They controlled
the motor current.
Many floors below, the elevator car
halted, motor circuit broken.
Doc thrust his head in and looked down
the shaft. He was disappointed. The elevator car was nearly at the street
level.
Five minutes elapsed before the
lackadaisical elevator operator got a cage up and ferried Doc and his friends
down to the street.
By that time, their quarry was hopelessly
gone.
The indifferent elevator chauffeur could
not even give them a description of the would-be killer who had fled the
building.
THERE was considerable
uproar around to the side of the skyscraper, when a sleepy pedestrian got the
shock of his life by failing over the body of the Mayan who had jumped from the
window.
Doc Savage told a straightforward story
to the police, explaining exactly how the Mayan had come to his death. And such
was the power of Doc, and the esteem in which his departed father was held,
that the New York police corninissioner gave instant orders that Doc be not
molested, and, moreover, that his connection with the suicide be not revealed
to the newspapers.
Doc was thus left free to depart for the
Central American republic of Hidalgo to investigate the mysterious legacy his
father had left him.
Back up in the eighty-sixth-floor lair,
Doc made plans and gave orders looking to their execution.
To waspish, quick-thinking Ham, he gave
certain of the papers which had been under the brick in the laboratory.
"Your career as a lawyer has given
you a wide acquaintance in Washington, Ham," Doc told him. "You're
intimate with all the high government officials. So you take care of the legal
angle of our trip to Hidalgo."
Ham picked back a cuff to look at an
expensive platinum wrist watch. "A passenger plane leaves New York for
Washington in four hours. I'll be on it." He twirled his black,
innocent-looking sword cane.
"Too long to wait," Doc told
him. "Take my auto-gyro. Fly it down yourself. We'll join you at about
nine this morning."
Ham nodded. He was an expert airplane
pilot. So were Renny, Long Tom, Johnny, and Monk. Doc Savage had taught them,
managing to imbue them with some of his own genius at the controls.
"Where is your autogyro?" Ham
inquired
"At North Beach airport out on Long
Island," Doc retorted.
Ham whipped out, in a hurry to get his
share done. "Renny," Doc directed, "whatever instruments you
need, take them. Dig up maps. You're our navigator. We are going to fly down,
of course."
"Righto, Doc," said Renny, his
utterly somber, puritanical look showing just how pleased he was.
For this thing promised action.
Excitement and adventure aplenty! And how these remarkable men were enamored of
that!
"Long Tom," said Doc Savage,
"yours is the electrical end. You know what we might need."
"Sure!" Long Tom's pale face
was flaming red with excitement.
Long Tom wasn't as unhealthy as he
looked. None of the others could remember his suffering a day of illness.
Unless the periodic rages, the wild tantrums of temper into which he flew,
could be called illness. Long Tom sometimes went months without a flare-up, but
when he did explode, he certainly made up for lost time.
His unhealthy look probably came from the
gloomy laboratory in which he conducted his endless electrical experiments. The
enormous gold tooth he sported directly in front helped, too.
Long Tom, like Ham, had earned his
nickname In France.
In a certain French village there had
been ensconced in the town park an old-fashioned cannon of the type used
centuries ago by rovers of the Spanish Main. In the heat of an enemy attack,
Major Thomas J. Roberts had loaded this ancient relic with a sackful of kitchen
cutlery and broken wine bottles, and wrought genuine havoc. And from that day,
he was Long Tom Roberts.
"Chemicals," Doc told Monk.
"Ok," grinned Monk. He sidled
out. It was remarkable that a man so homely could be one of the world's leading
chemists. But it was true. Monk had a great chemical laboratory of his own in a
penthouse atop an office building far downtown, only a short distance from Wall
Street. He was headed there now.
Only Johnny, the geologist and
archaeologist, remained with Doc.
"Johnny, your work is possibly the
most important." Doc's golden eyes were thoughtful as he looked out the
window. "Dig into your library for dope on Hidalgo. Also on the ancient
Mayan race."
"You think the Mayan angle is
important, Doc?"
"I sure do, Johnny."
The telephone bell jangled.
"That's my long-distance call to
England," Doc guessed. "They took their time getting it
through!"
Lifting the phone, he spoke, got an
answer, then rapidly gave the model of the double-barreled elephant rifle, and
the number of the weapon.
"Who was it sold to?" he asked.
In a few minutes, he got his answer.
Doc rung off. His bronze face was
inscrutable; golden gleamings were in his eyes.
"The English factory says they sold
that gun to the government of Hidalgo," Doc said thoughtfully. "It
was a part of a large lot of weapons sold to Hidalgo some months ago."
Johnny adjusted his glasses which had the
magnifying lens. "We've got to be careful, Doc," he said. "If
this enemy of ours persists in making trouble, he may try to tamper with our
plane."
"I have a scheme that will prevent danger
from that angle," Doc assured him.
Johnny blinked, then started to ask what
the scheme was. But he was too slow. Doc had already quitted the office.
With a grin, Johnny went about his own
part of the preparations. He felt supreme confidence in Doc Savage.
Whatever villainous moves the enemy made
against them, Doc was capable of checkmating. Already, Doc was undoubtedly
putting into operation some plan which would guarantee them safety in their
flight southward.
The plan to protect their plane would be
one worthy of Doc's vast ingenuity.
Chapter 7
DANGER TRAIL
THE rain
had stopped.
A bilious dawn, full of fog, shot through
with a chill wind, was crawling along the north shore of Long Island. The big
hangars at North Beach airport, just within the boundary line of New York City,
were like pale-gray, roundbacked boxes in the mist. Electric lights made a
futile effort to dispel the sodden gloom.
A giant tri-motored, all-metal plane
stood on the tarmac of the flying field near by. On the fuselage, just back of
the bow engine, was emblazoned in firm black letters:
Clark Savage, Jr.
One of
Doc's crates!
Airport attendants, in uniforms made very
untidy by mud, grease, and dampness, were busy transferring boxes from a truck
to the interior of the big plane. These boxes were of light, but stout,
construction, arid on each was imprinted, after the manner of exploration
expeditions, the words:
Clark
Savage, Jr., Hidalgo Expedition.
"What's a Hidalgo?" a
thick-necked mechanic wanted to know.
"Dunno - a country, I reckon,"
a companion greaseball told him.
The conversation was unimportant, except
in that it showed what a little-known country Hidalgo was. Yet the Central
American republic was of no inconsiderable size.
The last box was finally in the plane. An
airport worker closed the plane door. Because of the murky dawn and moisture on
the windows, it was impossible to see into the pilot's compartment of the great
tri-motor plane.
A mechanic climbed atop the tin pants
over the big wheels, and standing there, cranked the inertia starter of first
one motor, then the other. All three big radial engines thundered into life.
More than a thousand throbbing horsepower.
The big plane trembled to the tune of the
hammering exhaust stacks. It was not an especially new ship, being about five
years old.
Perhaps one or two attendants about the
tarmac heard the sound of another plane which had arrived overhead. Looking up,
maybe they saw a huge gray bat of a shape go slicing through the mist. But that
was all, and the noise of its great, muffled exhaust was hardly audible above
the bawl of the stacks of the old-fashioned tri-motor.
The tri-motor was moving now. The tail
was up, preliminary to taking off. Faster and faster it raced across the
tarmac. It slowly took the air.
Without banking to either side, climbing
gently, the big all-metal plane flew possibly a mile.
An astounding thing happened then.
The tri-motor ship seemed to turn
instantaneously into a gigantic sheet of white-hot flame. This resolved into a
monster ball of villainous smoke. Then flipped fragments of the plane and its
contents rained downward upon the roofs of Jackson Heights, a conservative
residential suburb of New York City.
So terrific was the explosion that
windows were broken in the houses underneath, and shingles even torn off roofs.
No piece more than a few yards in area
remained of the great plane. Indeed, the authorities could never have
identified it, had not the airport men known it had just taken off from there.
No human life could have survived aboard
the tri-motor aircraft.
DOC Savage
merely blinked his golden eyes once after the blinding flash which marked the
blast that annihilated the tri-motor ship.
"That was what I was afraid
of!" he said dryly.
The rush of air thrown by the explosion
caused his plane to reel. Doc stirred the controls expertly to right it.
For Doc and his men had not been in the
ill-fated tri-motor plane. They were in the other craft which had flown over
the airport a moment before the tri-motor took off. Indeed, Doc himself had
maneuvered the take-off of the tri-motor, using remote radio control to direct
it.
Doc's radio remote control apparatus was
exactly the same type used by the army and navy in extensive experiments,
employing changing frequencies and sensitive relays for its operation.
Doc did not know how their mysterious
enemy had managed to blow up the tri-motor. But thanks to his foresight, Doc's
men had escaped the devilish blast. Doc had used the tri-motor plane for a
decoy. It was one of his old ships, almost ready to be discarded, anyway.
"They must have managed to slip high
explosive into one of our boxes," Doc concluded aloud. "It is too bad
we lost the equipment in the destroyed plane. But we can get along without
it."
"What dizzies me," Renny
muttered, "is how they fixed their bomb to explode in the air, and not on
the ground."
Doc banked his plane, set a course
directly for the city of Washington, using not only the gyroscopic compass with
which the craft was fitted, but calculating wind drift expertly.
"How they made the bomb explode in
the air can be simply explained," he told Renny at last. "They
probably put an altimeter or barometer in the bomb. The altimeter would
register a change in height. All they had to do was fix an electrical contact
to be closed at a given height, and - bang!"
"Bang, is right!" Monk put in,
grinning.
Their plane flashed past the upraised arm
of the Statue of Liberty, and sang its song of speed southward over the Jersey
marshes.
Unlike the tri-motor which had been
destroyed, this plane was of the latest design. It was a tri-motor craft also,
but the great engines were in eggs built directly into the wings. It was what
pilots call a low-wing job, with the wings attached well down on the fuselage,
instead of at the top. The landing gear was retractible - folded up into the
wings so as not to offer a trace of wind resistance.
It was the ultra in an airman's steed,
this supercraft. And two hundred miles an hour was only its cruising speed.
No small point was the fact that the
cabin was soundproof, enabling Doc and his friends to converse in ordinary
tones.
The really essential portion of their
equipment was loaded into the rear of the speed-ship cabin. Packed compactly in
light metal containers, an alloy metal that was lighter even than wood, each
carton was fitted with straps for carrying.
In a surprisingly short time they picked
up the clustered buildings of Philadelphia. Doc whipped the plane past a little
east of the city hall - the center of the downtown business districts.
Onward they swept, to zoom down on an
airport at the outskirts of Washington.
THE
landing Doc made was feather-light, a sample of his wizardry with the controls.
He tailed the plane about with sharp whirls of the nose motor, and taxied for
the little airport administration office.
In vain did he look about for his
autogyro. Ham should have left the windmill plane here, had he already arrived.
But the whirligig ship was not in evidence.
An attendant, a spick-and-span dude in a
white uniform, ran out to meet them.
"Didn't Ham show up here?" Monk
demanded of the man.
"Who?"
"Brigadier General Theodore Marley
Brooks!" Monk explained.
The airport attendant registered shock,
then great embarrassment at the words. He opened his mouth to speak, but
instead, excitement made him merely stutter.
"What has happened?" Doc asked
in a gentle but powerful tone that compelled an instant answer.
"The airport manager is holding a
man over in the field office who says his name is Brigadier General Theodore
Marley Brooks," the attendant explained.
"Holding him - why?"
"The manager is also a deputy
sheriff. We got a call that this fellow had stolen an autogyro from a man named
Clark Savage. So we arrested him."
Doc nodded absently. He was clever, this
unknown enemy of theirs. He had decoyed Ham by a neat ruse.
"Where is the autogyro?" Doc
asked.
"Why, this Clark Savage who
telephoned the plane had been stolen asked us to send a man with it to bring
him here and confront the thief!"
Monk let out a loud snort. "You dumb
dude! You're talkin' to Clark Savage!"
The attendant stuttered again. "I
don't understand - "
"Some one foxed you," Doc said
without noticeable malice. "The pilot who flew that plane to get the fake
Clark Savage may be in danger. Do you know where he went?"
"The manager knows."
They hurried over to the administration
building. They found a Ham who was burning up. Ham could ordinarily talk
himself out of almost any situation, given a little time. But he hadn't made an
impression on the blond, bulletheaded airport manager.
Doc handed Ham a phone. "Get the
nearest army flying field, Ham. See if you can raise me a pursuit ship fitted
with machine guns. It's against regulations, but - "
"Hang regulations!" Ham
snapped, and seized the instrument.
From the blond airport manager Doc
learned where the autogyro had gone to meet the man who had put over the trick.
The spot was in New Jersey.
Doc located it on the map. It was in the
mountainous, or, rather, hilly, western portion of Jersey.
Ham cracked the telephone receiver onto
its hook. "They're warming up a pursuit job for you, Doc."
It required less than ten minutes for Doc
to ferry over to the army drome, plug his powerful frame into a cockpit, saw
the throttle back, and take off. He had a regulation war plane now.
FLYING
northward, Doc had a fair idea of the purpose of their enemy in decoying the
autogyro. The place was within motor distance of New York, so the villainous
unknown one would probably be on hand. He would destroy the autogyro, thus
hampering Doc and his friends all possible.
"Whoever it is, they're willing to
do anything to keep us from getting to that legacy of mine in Hidalgo!"
Doc concluded.
Over the Delaware River, Doc dived and
tested his machine guns by shooting at the shadow of his plane on the water.
Knobby green hills sprang up underneath.
Doc used a pair of binoculars to scrutinize the terrain.
Farmhouses were scattering, ramshackle.
Very few of the roads were paved.
Doc discovered his autogyro at last.
The windmill plane sat in a clearing.
Near by ran a paved road.
In the clearing with the plane was a
green coupe and two men. One of the men was holding a gun upon the other.
The gun wielder, Doc perceived when he
came nearer, was masked. The man discovered Doc's army pursuit plane, diving
with motor cans a-thunder. The fellow took fright.
Deserting the other man, who must be the
autogyro pilot, the masked fellow raced to the windmill plane. The gun in his
fist spat a bullet into the fuel tank of the plane. Gasoline ran out in two
pale strings. The masked man struck a match and tossed it into the fuel.
Instantly the autogyro was bundled in hot flame.
One thing Doc noted about the masked man
- the fellow's fingers were a deep scarlet hue for an inch of their length!
The man was also squat and wide. He ran
with shortlegged, pegging steps for the green coupe, dived into it. The green
car ran out of the field like a frightened bug.
Doc's cowl machine guns released a spray
of lead that forked up dust behind the coupe. The car skewered onto the road
and turned north.
Again Doc's Browning guns tore off their
ripping cackle of death. After the army fashion, every fifth bullet in the ammo
cans was a phosphorous-filled tracer. These burst with hot red blots directly
behind the green coupe.
Slowly, inexorably, the gray cobwebs of
tracer smoke climbed into the rear of the automobile.
With a wild swing, the green car suddenly
left the pavement. It vaulted a ditch, miraculously remaining upright, and
skewered to a stop amid tall bush that practically hid it.
Doc distinctly saw the passenger quit the
car and take to the concealment of the timber.
A couple of times Doc dived and let the
Browning guns spew their twelve hundred shots a minute into the timber. He did
it more to give the masked man one last scare than from any hope of bagging the
fellow. The timber offered perfect concealment.
Not a little disgusted, Doc landed and
launched a hunt afoot for the masked man. But it was too late.
The airport attendant who had flown the
autogyro here could give no worthwhile description of the masked man when Doc
consulted him. The fellow had merely sprung out of the green car with a gun.
Doc telephoned the authorities and had a
net spread for the masked man before he took off again for Washington. But he
was pretty certain the fellow would evade the Jersey officers. The man was smart,
as well as very dangerous.
Doc took the chagrined airport attendant
with him in the army pursuit plane back to Washington.
HAM and
the others were waiting when Doc arrived, after restoring the pursuit plane to
the army field.
"Have any trouble getting our papers
up?" Doc asked.
Ham tightened his mobile, orator's mouth.
"I did have a little trouble, Doc. It was strange, too. The Hidalgo consul
seemed very reluctant to O.K.. our papers. At first he wasn't going to do it.
In fact, I had to have our own secretary of state make some things very clear
to Mr. Consul before he gave us the official high sign."
"What's your guess, Ham?" Doc
asked. "Was the official directly interested in keeping us out of Hidalgo,
or had some one paid him money to make it tough for us?"
"He was paid!" Ham smiled
tightly. "He gave himself away when I accused him of accepting money to
refuse his O.K.. on our papers. But I was not able to learn who had put the
cash on the line."
"Somebody!" Renny rumbled, his
puritanical face very long. "Somebody is taking a lot of trouble to keep
us out of Hidalgo! Now, I wonder why?"
"I have a hunch!" Ham declared.
"Doc's mysterious heritage must be of fabulous value. Men are not killed
and diplomatic agents bribed without good reasons. That concession of several
hundred square miles of mountainous territory in Hidalgo is the explanation, of
course. Some one is trying to keep us away from it!"
"Does anybody know what they raise
down in that neck of the woods?" Monk inquired.
Long Tom hazarded a couple of guesses,
"Bananas, chicle for making chewing gum - "
"No plantations in the region Doc
seems to own," Johnny, the geologist, put in sharply. "I soaked up all
I could find on the precise region. And you'd be surprised how little it
was!"
"You mean there was not much
information available about it?" Ham prompted.
"You said it! To be exact, the whole
region is unexplored!"
"Unexplored!"
"Oh, the district is filled with
mountains on most maps," Johnny explained. "But on the really
accurate charts the truth comes out. There's a considerable stretch of country
no white men have penetrated. And Doc's strange heritage is located slap-dab in
the middle of it!"
"So we gotta play Columbus!"
Monk snorted.
"You'll think Columbus's trip across
the briny was a pipe when you see this Hidalgo country!" Johnny informed
him. "That region is unexplored for only one reason - white men can't get
into it!"
Doc had been standing by during the
exchange of words. But now his calm, powerful voice commanded quick attention.
"Is there any reason we can't be on
our way?" he asked dryly.
They took off at once in the monster,
low-wing speed plane. But before their departure, Doc telephoned long distance
to Miami, Florida, where he got in touch with an airplane-supplies concern. He
ordered pontoons for his plane, after determining the company kept them in
stock.
THE
approximately nine-hundred-mile flight to Miami they made in something more
than five hours, thanks to the tremendous cruising speed of Doc's superplane.
Working swiftly, with lifting cranes and
tools and mechanics supplied by the plane-parts concern, they installed the
pontoons before darkness flung its pall over the lower end of Florida.
Doc taxied the low-wing speed ship out
over Biscayne Bay a short distance, making sure the pontoons were seaworthy.
Back at the seaplane base he took on fuel and oil from a seagoing filling
station built on a barge.
To Cuba was not quite another three
hundred miles. They were circling over Havana before the night was many hours
old. Another landing for fuel, and off again.
Doc flew. He was tireless. Renny, huge
and elephantine, but without equal when it came to angles and maps and
navigation, checked their course periodically. Between times he slept.
Long Tom, Johnny, Monk, and Ham were
sleeping as soundly among the boxed supplies as they would have in sumptuous
hotel beds. A faint grin was on every slumbering face. This was the sort of
thing they considered real living. Action! Adventure!
Across the Caribbean to Belize, their
destination on the Central American mainland, was somewhat over five hundred
miles. It was an all-water hop.
To avoid a head wind for a while, Doc
flew quite near the sea, low enough that at times he sighted barracudas and
sharks. There was an island or two, flat, white beaches bared to the lambent
glory of a tropical moon that was like a huge disk of rich platinum.
So stunningly beautiful was the southern
sea that he awoke the others to observe the play of phosphorescent fire and the
manner in which the waves creamed in the moonlight, or were blown into faintly
jeweled spindrift.
They thundered across Ambergris Cay at a
thousand feet, and in no time at all were swinging wide over the flat, narrow
streets of Belize.
Chapter 8
PERSISTENT FOES
THE sun
was up, blazing with a wild revelry. Away inland, the jungle was lost in a
horizon infinitely blue.
Doc slanted the big plane down and patted
the pontoons against the small waves. Spray fanned up and roared against the
idling propellers. He taxied in toward the mud beach.
Renny stretched, yawned. The yawn gave his
extremely puritanical face a ludicrous aspect.
"I believe that in the old pirate
days they actually built a foundation for part of this town out of rum
bottles," Renny offered. "Ain't that right, Johnny?"
"I believe so," Johnny corroborated
from his wealth of historical lore.
Plink!
The sound was exactly like a boy shooting
at a tin can with a small air rifle.
Plink! It came again.
Then - bur-r-r-rip! One long roar!
"Well, for - " Monk swallowed
the rest and sat down heavily as Doc slammed the engine throttles wide open.
Engines thundering, props scooping up
water and turning it into a great funnel of mist behind the tail, the plane
lunged ahead - straight for the mud beach.
"What happened?" demanded Ham.
"Machine gun putting bullets through
our floats!" Doc said in a low voice. "Watch the shore! See if you
can get a glimpse of whoever it was!"
"For the love of mud!" muttered
Monk. "Ain't we never gonna get that red-fingered guy out of our hair?"
"No doubt he radioed ahead to some
one he knows here!" Doc offered.
Distinctly audible over the bawl of the
motors came two more metallic plinks. then a series. The unseen marksman was
doing his best to perforate the pontoons and sink the craft.
All five of Doc's men were staring
through the cabin windows, seeking trace of the one who was shooting.
Abruptly bullets began to whiz through
the plane fuselage itself. Renny clapped a hand to his monster left arm. But
the wound was no more than a shallow scrape. Another blob of lead wrought minor
havoc in the box that held Long Tom's electrical equipment.
It was Doc who saw the sniper ahead of
all the others, thanks to an eye of matchless keenness.
"Over behind that fallen palm!"
he said.
Then the rest perceived. The
sharpshooter's weapon projected over the bole of a fallen royal palm that was
like a pillar of dull silver.
Rifles leaped magically into the hands of
Doc's five men. A whistling salvo of lead pelted the palm log, preventing the
sniper from releasing further shots.
The plane dug its pontoons into the mud
beach at this point. It was not a moment too soon, either. They were filling
rapidly with water, for some of the bullets, striking slantwise, had opened sizable
rips. Indeed, the floats were hopelessly ruined!
SWIFTLY,
grim with purpose, three men bounded out of the plane. They were Doc, Renny,
and Monk. The other three, Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham, all excellent marksmen,
continued to put a barrage of rifle lead against the palm log.
The log lay on a finger of land which
reached out toward a very small cay, or island. Between cay and the land finger
stretched about fifty yards of water.
The sniper tried to reach the mainland,
only to shriek and drop flat as a bullet from the plane creased him. Meantime
Doc, Renny, and Monk had floundered to solid ground and doubled down in the
scrawny tropical growth. The smell of the beach was strong in their nostrils -
sea water, wet logs, soft-shell crabs, fish, kelp, and decaying vegetation
making a conglomerate odor.
To the right of the friends lay Belize,
with scraggly, narrow streets and romantic houses with protruding balconies,
brightly painted doorways, and every window as becrossed with iron bars as if
it were a jail.
The sniper knew they were coming upon
him. He tried again to escape. But he had not reckoned with the kind of
shooting that was coming from the plane. He couldn't make it to the mainland.
Desperately, the fellow worked out toward
the end of the land finger. Stunted mangroves offered puny shelter there. The
man shrieked again as he was creased.
In his circle of acquaintances, it must
have been customary to shoot prisoners - give no quarter - because he didn't
offer to surrender. Evidently he was out of ammunition.
Wild with terror, he leaped up and
plunged into the water. He was going to try to swim to the little island.
"Sharks!" grunted Renny.
"These waters are full of the things!"
But Doc Savage was already a dozen yards
ahead, leaping out on the land finger.
The sniper was a squat, dark-skinned
fellow - but his features did not resemble those of the Mayan who had committed
suicide in New York. He was a low specimen of the Central American half-breed.
He was not a good swimmer, either. He
splashed a great deal. Suddenly he let out a piercing squawl of terror. He had
seen a dark, sinister triangle of fin sizzling through the water toward him. He
tried to turn and come back. But so frightened was he that he hardly moved for
all his slamming of the water with his arms.
The shark was a gigantic man-eater. It
came straight for its prospective meal, not even circling to investigate. The
mouth of the monster thing was open, revealing the horrible array of teeth.
The unfortunate sniper let out a weak,
ghastly bleat. It seemed too late for anything to help the fellow. Renny, in
discussing the affair later, maintained Doc purposely waited until the last
minute so that terror would teach the sniper a lesson - show the man the fate
of an evil-doer. If true, Doc's lesson was mightily effective.
With a tremendous spring, Doc shot
outward and cleaved head-first into the water.
The dive was perfectly executed. And Doc,
curving his powerful bronze body at the instant of impact with the water,
seemed to hardly sink beneath the surface.
It looked like an impossible thing to do,
but Doc was beside the unfortunate man even as the big shark shot in with a
last burst of speed. Doc put himself between the shark's teeth and the sniper!
But the bronzed, powerful body was not
there when the needled teeth slashed. Doc was alongside the shark. His left arm
flipped with electric speed around the head of the thing, securing what a
wrestler would call a strangle hold.
Doc's legs kicked powerfully. For a
fractional moment he was able to lift the shark's head out of the water. In
that interval his free right fist traveled a terrific arc - and found the one
spot where his vast knowledge told him it was possible to stun the man-eater.
The shark became slack as a kayoed boxer.
Doc shoved the sniper ashore. The breed's
swarthy face was a study. He looked like some one had jerked the cover off hell
and let him see what awaited men of his ilk.
Now that the shark was atop the water,
where rifle bullets could reach it, Renny and Monk put the finishing touch to
the ugly monster.
"Why did you fire upon us?" Doc
asked the breed, couching the words in Spanish. Doc spoke Spanish fluently, as
he did many other tongues.
Almost eagerly, so grateful was he for
what Doc had done, the breed made answer:
"I was hired to do it, senor. Hired
by a man in Blanco Grande, the capital of Hidalgo. This man rushed me here
during the night in a blue airplane."
"What was your employer's
name?" Doc questioned.
"That I do not know, senor."
"Don't lie!"
"I am not lying to you, senor! Not
after what you did for me a while ago. Truly, I do not know this man." The
breed squirmed uneasily. "I have been a low mozo, hiring out for evil work
to whoever pays me, and asking no questions. I shall desert that manner of
living. I can take you to the spot where the blue airplane is hidden."
"Do that!" Doc directed.
They started off, reached the outskirts
of town. Doc prepared to hail a fotingo, or dilapidated flivver taxi. Then he
lifted his golden eyes to the heavens.
An airplane was droning in the hot copper
sky. It came into view, a brilliant blue, single-motor monoplane.
"That is the plane of the man who
hired me to shoot at you!" gasped the breed prisoner.
The gaudy blue craft whipped overhead,
engine stacks bawling, and sped directly for the mud beach.
Without a word, Doc spun and ran with
tremendous speed for the beach where Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham waited with his
own plane.
HALF-NAKED
children gaped at the blur of bronze Doc made in passing them. And women
muffled in rebozos, a combination shawl and scarf, scampered out and yanked
them clear of the thundering charge of Renny and Monk and the prisoner, coming
in Doc's wake.
On the beach a machine gun suddenly
cackled. Doc knew by the particularly rapid rate of its fire that it was one he
had brought along. His friends had set it up, were firing at the blue
monoplane.
The blue plane dipped back of the tufted
top of a royal palm, going down in a whistling dive. Then came a loud
explosion. A bomb!
Up above the palm fronds the blue plane
climbed. It was behaving erratically now. The pilot or some part of his azure
ship was hit.
Straight inland it flew. And it did not
come back.
Doc, reaching the beach, saw the bomb had
been so badly aimed as to miss his plane fully fifty yards. His three men were
sitting on the wing with the machine gun, grinning widely.
"We sure knocked the feathers off
that bluebird!" Long Tom chuckled.
"He won't be back!" Ham
decided, after squinting at the distant blue dot that was the receding aircraft.
"Who was it?"
"Obviously one of the gang trying to
prevent us reaching that land of mine in Hidalgo." Doc replied. "The
member of the gang in New York radioed to Blanco Grande, the capital of Hidalgo
that we were coming by plane. Right here is the logical place for us to refuel
after a flight across the Caribbean. So they set a trap here. They hired this
breed to machine-gun us, and when that didn't work, the pilot tried to bomb
us."
At that moment Renny and Monk came up.
They were both so big the breed looked like a little brown boy between them.
"What do we do with his nibs?"
Monk asked, shaking the breed.
Doc replied without hesitation:
"Free him."
The swarthy breed nearly broke down with
gratitude. Tears stood in his eyes. He blubbered profuse thanks. And before he
would depart, he came close to Doc and murmured an earnest question. The others
could not hear the breed's words.
"What did he ask you?" Monk
inquired after the breed had departed, with a strange new confidence in his
walk.
"Believe it or not," Doc
smiled, "he wanted to know how one went about entering a monastery. I
think there is one chap who will walk the straight and narrow in the
future."
"We better catch a shark and take
him along if a close look at one reforms our enemies like that!" Monk
laughed.
With ropes from a local warehouse, and
long, thin palms which Doc hired willing natives to cut, the plane was snaked
to dry land.
The news was bad. The floats were badly
torn. They didn't have material for patching. Nor was there any in Belize. To
save a great deal of work. Doc radioed to Miami for a fresh set. A transport
plane brought the pontoons down.
Altogether, four days were lost before
they got in shape for the air again.
NOT a
morning did Doc miss his exercises. From his youth, he had not neglected the
two-hour routine a single time. He did them, although he might have been on the
go for many hours previously.
His muscular exercises were similar to
ordinary setting-up movements, but infinitely harder, more violent. He took
them without apparatus. For instance, be would make certain muscles attempt to
lift his arm, while the other muscles strove to hold it down. That way he
furthered not only muscular tissue, but control over individual muscles as
well. Every part of his great, bronzed body he exercised in this manner.
From the case which held his equipment,
Doc took a pad and pencil and wrote a number of several figures. Eyes closed,
he extracted the square and cube root of this number in his head, carrying the
figures to many decimal places. He multiplied and divided and subtracted the
number with various figures. Next he did the same thing with a number of an
even dozen figures. This disciplined him in concentration.
Out of the case came an apparatus which
made sound waves of all tones, some of a wave length so short or so long as to
be inaudible to the normal ear. For several minutes Doc strained to detect
these waves inaudible to ordinary people. Years of this had enabled him to hear
many of these customarily unheard sounds.
His eyes shut, Doc rapidly identified by
the sense of smell several score of different odors, all very vague, each
contained in a small vial racked in the case.
The full two hours Doc worked at these
and other more intricate exercises.
THE
morning of the fifth day after arriving in Belize, they took the air for Blanco
Grande, capital of Hidalgo.
It was jungle country they flew over,
luxuriant, unhealthily rank trees in near solid masses. Lianas and grotesque
aerial roots tied these into a solid carpet.
Confident of his motors, Doc flew low
enough that they could see tiny parakeets and pairs of yellow-headed parrots
feeding off chichem berries that grew in abundance.
Some hours later they were over the
border of Hidalgo. It was a typical country of the southern republics. Wedged
in between two mighty mountains, traversed in its own right by a half dozen smaller
but even more rugged ranges, it was a perfect spot for those whose minds run to
revolutions and banditry.
In such localities governments are
unstable not so much because of their own lack of equilibrium, but more because
of the opportunities offered others, to gather in revolt.
Half of the little valleys of Hidalgo
were lost even to the bandits and revolutionists who were most familiar with
the terrain. The interior was inhabited by fierce tribes, remnants of once
powerful nations, each still a power in its own right, and often engaging in
conflict with its neighbors. Woe betide the defenseless white man who found
himself wandering about in the wilder part of Hidalgo.
The warlike tribes, the utter
inaccessibility of some of the rocky fastnesses, probably explained the large
unexplored area Renny had noted on the best maps of Hidalgo.
The capital city itself was a concoction
of little, crooked streets, balconied-and-barred houses, ramshackle mud huts,
and myriads of colored tile roofs, with the inevitable park for parading in the
center of town.
In this case the park was also occupied
by the presidential palace and administration buildings. They were imposing
structures which showed past governments had been free with the taxpayers'
money.
There was a small, shallow lake to the
north of town.
On this Doc Savage landed his plane.
Chapter 9
DOC'S WHISTLE
DOC gave
some necessary instructions at once. The work fell to Ham, whose understanding
of law made him eminently capable.
"Ham, you pay the local secretary of
state a visit and check up our rights in this land grant of mine," Doc
directed.
"Maybe somebody had better go along
to see he don't steal some hams, or something," Monk couldn't resist
putting in.
Ham bristled instantly.
"Why should I want a ham when I
associate with a crowd of them all the time?" he demanded.
"Monk, you'd better accompany Ham as
bodyguard," Doc suggested. "You two love each other so!"
As a matter of fact, despite the mutual
ribbing they were always handing each other, Monk and Ham made a good team of
quick thinking and brawn, and they got along perfectly, regardless of the fact
that to hear them talk, one would think violence was always impending.
Ham shaved and changed to a natty suit of
white flannels before departing. He was sartorial perfection in his white
shoes, panama, and innocent-looking black sword cane.
Monk, more to aggravate Ham than anything
else, didn't even wash his homely face. He cocked a battered hat over one eye,
and with pants seemingly on the point of dropping off his tapering hips, he
swaggered behind Ham.
It was later afternoon when they were
ushered into the presence of Don Rubio Gorro, Secretary of State of Hidalgo.
Don Rubio was rather short, well knit.
His face was entirely too handsome for a man's. His complexion was olive, his
lips thin, his nose straight and a bit too sharp. His eyes were dark and limpid
as a senorita's.
Don Rubio had ears exactly like those
artists put on pictures of the devil. They were very pointed.
Extreme politeness characterized the
welcome Don Rubio gave Ham, after the Latin fashion. Monk remained in the
background. He didn't think Don Rubio was so hot, taking snap judgment.
And Don Rubio lived up to Monk's
impression as soon as Ham made his business known.
"But my dear Senor Brooks,"
said Don Rubio smugly, "our official records contain nothing concerning
any concession giving any one named Clark Savage, Jr., even an acre of Hidalgo
land, much less some hundreds of square miles. I am very sorry, but that is the
fact."
Ham executed a twirl with his cane.
"Was the present government in power twenty years ago?"
"No. This government came into being
two years ago."
"The gang before you probably made
the concession grant." Don Rubio flushed slightly at the subtle inference
he was one of a gang.
"In that case!" he said
snappishly, "we have nothing to do with it. You're just out of luck."
"You mean we have no rights to this
land?"
"You most certainly have not!"
HAM'S cane
suddenly leveled at a spot directly between Don Rubio Gorro's devil-like ears.
"You've got another guess coming, my friend!"
Don Rubio began: "There is nothing
that - "
"Oh, yes, there is!" Ham poked
his cane for emphasis. "When this government came into power, it was
recognized by the United States only on condition that the new regime respect
property rights of American citizens in Hidalgo! That right?"
"Well - "
"You bet it's right! And do you know
what will happen if you don't live up to that agreement? The U. S. government
will sever relations and class you as a plain crowd of bandits. You couldn't
obtain credit to buy arms and machinery and other things you need to keep your
political opponents in check. Your export trade would be hurt. You would - But
you know all that would happen as well as I do. In six months your government
would be out, and a new one in.
"That's what it would mean if you
refuse to respect American property. And if this land concession isn't American
property, I'm a string on Nero's fiddle."
Don Rubio's swarthy face was flushed a
smudgy purple, even to his pointed ears. His hands trembled with rage - and
worry. He knew all Ham was telling him was true. Uncle Sam was not somebody to
be fooled with. He seized desperately at a straw.
"We cannot recognize your right
because there is no record in our archives!" he said wildly.
Ham slapped Doc's papers on the desk.
"These are record enough. Somebody has destroyed the others. I'll tell you
something else - there are some people who will go to any length to keep us
away from this land. They've made attacks on us - no doubt they destroyed the
papers."
As he made that statement, Ham watched
Don Rubio intently. He felt there was something behind Don Rubio's attitude,
had felt that from the first. Ham believed Don Rubio was either one of the gang
trying to keep Doc from his heritage, or had been hired by the gang. And Don
Rubio's agitation tended to corroborate Ham's suspicion.
"It's going to be just too bad for
whoever is causing the trouble!" Ham stated. "We'll get them in the
end."
Various emotions played on Don Rubio's
too-handsome, swarthy face. He was scared, worried. But gradually a desperate
determination came uppermost. He clipped his lips together, shot out his jaw,
and offered his final word.
"There is nothing more to be said!
You have no claim to that land. That's final!"
Ham twiddled his cane and smiled
ominously. "It will take me just about one hour to get a radio message to
Washington," he promised grimly. "Then, my friend, you'll see more
diplomatic lightning strike around you than you ever saw before!"
LEAVING
the government building, Ham and Monk ascertained the location of the radio
station and set a course for it. Darkness had arrived while they were talking
to Don Rubio. The city, quiet during the heat of the afternoon when they had
entered, was awakening. Carriages occupied by staid Castjiians, the blue blood
of these southern republics, clattered over the rough streets. Here and there
was an American car.
"You talked kinda tough to that Don
Rubio gink, didn't you?" Monk suggested. "I thought you was always
supposed to be polite to these Spaniards. Maybe if you'd handled him with
gloves on, you'd have got somewhere."
"Hur-r-rump!" said Ham in his
best courtroom manner. "I know how to handle men! That fellow Don Rubio
has no principles. I give politeness where politeness is due. And it is never
due a crook!"
"You said a mouthful!" rumbled
Monk, for once forgetting himself and agreeing with Ham.
They soon found the anglings and
meanderings of Blanco Grande streets most bewildering. They had been told the
radio station and message office was but a few hundred yards' walk. But when
they had covered that distance, there was no sign of any radio station.
"Fooey - we're lost!" Monk
grunted, and looked about for some one to accost regarding directions.
There was only one man in the street, a shabby side thoroughfare
in what, as they only now perceived, was a none-too-savory-looking part of
Blanco Grande. The sole pedestrian was ahead of them, loitering along as though
he had no place to go, and plenty of time to reach there.
He was a broad-backed fellow with a short
body and a block of a head. He wore dungarees, a bright-green calico shirt, and
no shoes. His head, ludicrously enough, was topped with a rusty black derby.
He had his hands in his pockets.
Ham and Monk overhauled the loafer.
"Can you direct us to the radio
station?" Ham asked in Spanish.
"Si, senor!" replied the
loafer. "Better yet, for a half a
peso I will guide you there myself."
Ham, baffled by the crookedness of the
Blanco Grande streets, thought it cheap at the price. He hired the native on
the spot.
Not once did the stocky, ill-clad fellow
take his hands out of his pockets. But Ham and Monk thought nothing of that,
passing it up as laziness on their guide's part.
If anything, the streets which they now
traversed became more offensive to the eye and nostril. Stale fruit odors came
from the darkened mud houses, mingling with the far from weak smell of unwashed
humanity.
"Strange district for a radio
station," Monk muttered, beginning at last to get suspicious.
"Only a little distance now,
senor!" murmured their guide.
Monk, studying the man's plumpness, his
curving nose, his prominent lips, was struck by something vaguely familiar. It
was as though he had known the guide, or one of his relatives. Monk cudgeled
his brains, trying to place the fellow.
And then the whole thing became
unpleasantly clear!
Their guide halted suddenly. He pulled
his hands from his pockets. The finger tips were stained red for an inch of
their length!
The fellow released a loud shout.
Instantly from every doorway and darkened cranny for yards around, shadowy
forms sprang.
They had been trapped!
MONK
emitted a great howl. Monk's fights were always noisy, unless there was reason
for them being quiet. Like a gladiator of old, Monk fought best when the racket
was loudest.
Knives glittered in the dark. Sandals,
made of tapir hide and held on with coarse henequin rope, slammed the cobbles.
Monk lunged and got the man who had been
their guide by the nape and the seat of his dungaree pants. As though he were a
straw, Monk whirled the man up and back, let him fly. The victim screamed in a
strange tongue. A clot of the attackers went down like ten-pins before his
hurtling body.
The scream, the ex-guide's red finger
tips, told Monk something. The man was a Mayan! The same race as the fellow who
had committed suicide in New York! That was why he seemed familiar.
Like the gigantic anthropoid he
resembled, Monk went into action. His first fist blow jammed a ratty,
dark-skinned man's jaw back under his ear. The fellow dropped, convulsively
throwing his knife high in the air.
Ham, dancing like a fencer, tapped a
swarthy skull with his sword cane. The cane looked very light, but the
tube-like case over the long, keen blade of steel was heavy. The blade itself
was by no means light.
As the first assailant went over
backward, Ham unsheathed his sword cane. He expertly skewered a fellow who
tried to stab him.
But where one besieger went down, a half
dozen took his place. The street was full of snarling, vicious devils. None of
these had red finger tips, or even resembled Mayans.
The one who was a Mayan, their late
guide, had regained his feet, dazed.
Men were clinging like leeches to Monk.
One sailed fully ten feet straight up when Monk threw him off. But suddenly,
weighted by hopeless odds, Monk went down.
Ham with his sword in another unlucky
one, was overcome an instant later.
A resounding blow delivered on the head
of each one rendered Monk and Ham senseless.
MONK'S
awakening was one long blaze of pain. He rolled his eyes. He was in a
mud-walled, mud-floored room. There was not a single window, and the one door
was low and narrow. Monk tried to sit up and found himself tied hand and foot -
not with rope, but with heavy wire.
Ham sprawled near by on his back. Ham was
also wired.
The red-fingered Mayan was bending over
Ham. He had just appropriated Ham's papers - Doc's sole documentary proof to
his ownership of the tract of land in interior Hidalgo.
Evidently he had been after these. He
hissed a number of words in Mayan, which neither Ham nor Monk understood. It
didn't sound complimentary, whatever it was.
The Mayan whipped a knife from inside his
bright-green shirt.
But even as his knife started up, he
seemed to get a more satisfactory thought. From within the capacious green
shirt he drew an evil-looking little statuette. The features carved on this
faintly resembled those of a human being, a tremendously long nose being most
notable. It was artfully sculptured out of a dark obsidian rock.
The Mayan mumbled words, and there had
suddenly come into his voice a religious fervor. Monk caught the name
"Kukulcan" a time or two, and recognized it as the name of an ancient
Mayan deity. The fellow was going to offer them as a sacrifice to his hideous
little idol!
Monk heaved against the wires, but only
bruised his huge muscles and started crimson running from torn skin. Numberless
turns of the wire held him.
The Mayan concluded his paean to the
idol. A wild light inflamed his nigrescent eyes. He was slavering like an
idiot.
Faint light scintillated from the knife
as it uplifted once more.
Monk shut his eyes. He opened them
instantly - it was all he could do to stem a yell of utter joy.
For into that unsavory room had
penetrated a low, mellow sound that trilled up and down the scale like the song
of some rare bird. It seemed to filter everywhere. The sound was strengthening,
inspiring.
The sound of Doc!
The Mayan was puzzled. He looked about,
saw nothing. The idol-worshiping fervor seized him again. The knife poised.
The blade rushed down.
But no more than a foot did it travel.
Out of the narrow black doorway flashed a gigantic figure of bronze. A Nemesis
of power and speed, Doc Savage descended upon the devilish but luckless Mayan.
Doc's hand seemed hardly to touch the
Mayan's knife arm before the bone snapped loudly and the knife gyrated away.
The Mayan twisted. With surprising
alacrity, his other hand darted inside his green shirt and came out with a
shiny pistol. He aimed at Ham, not Doc. Ham was handiest.
There was only one thing Doc could do to
save Ham. He did it - chopped a blow with the edge of his hand that snapped the
Mayan's neck instantly. The fellow died before he could pull trigger.
It took only a moment for Doc to free Ham
and Monk of the wires.
A swarthy native - one of the Mayan's
hirelings - popped through the door with a long-bladed knife that resembled
nothing so much as an ordinary corn knife. In fact, it was a corn knife, with
"Made in U.S. A." on the handle. But the native would have called it
a machete.
His precipitous arrival was just his hard
luck. A leap, a blow so swift the native probably never saw it, and the fellow
was flying head over heels back the way he came.
Doc guided Ham and Monk outside. They
turned left. Doc seized Ham and gave him a toss that lifted him to a low roof.
Monk managed the jump unassisted, and Doc followed. They leaped to another
roof, another.
On that one lay the silken folds of a
parachute.
"That's how I got here," Doc explained. "News of
that fight you had spread fast. I heard it and took off in the plane. Two
thousand feet up I touched off a parachute flare. That lighted the whole town.
I was lucky enough to see the gang haul you into that joint. So I simply jumped
down to help you."
"Sure!" Monk grinned.
"There wasn't nothin' to it, was there, Doc?"
Chapter 10
TROUBLE TRAIL
DOC, Ham,
and Monk strolled through the moonlight to the spot on the lake shore where they
had pitched camp. A crowd of curious natives were there inspecting the plane,
talking among themselves. Aircraft were still a novelty in this out-of-the-way
spot.
Doc, a bronze giant nearly twice as tall as
some of the swarthy fellows, mingled among them and asked questions in the
mixture of Spanish and Indian lingo they spoke. He wanted to know about the
blue plane which had attacked him at Belize
The blue plane had been seen a few times
by the natives. But they did not know from whence it came or where it went.
Doc noticed some of the swarthy little
men were very superstitious about the blue plane. These would give him little
information. In each case the features of such men showed they were of Mayan
ancestry.
Doc recalled then that blue was the
sacred color of the ancient Mayans. It only added to this mysterious thing
confronting him.
Renny and the others had erected a silken
tent. But they had also dug inside the tent a deep hole, sort of a dugout in
which to sleep. From the outside, the excavation would escape detection. They
were taking no chance on a sudden machine-gun burst in the night.
Monk and Ham, completely recovered from
their narrow brush with death, decided to sleep in the plane cabin, alternating
on keeping guard.
Doc himself set off alone through the
night. Thanks to the marvelous faculties he had developed by years of intensive
drill, he had little fear of his enemies attacking him successfully.
He went to the presidential palace. To
the servant who admitted him, Doc gave simply his name and a request to see the
President of Hidalgo.
In a surprisingly brief interval, the
flunky was back. Carlos Avispa, President of Hidalgo, would see Doc at once.
Doc was ushered into a great, sumptuously fitted room. The chamber
was in twilight, and a small motion-picture projector was throwing shifting
images onto a white screen. However, the film being run off was one concerning
military tactics instead of a mushy love drama.
Carlos Avispa came forward with a warmly
outstretched hand. He was a powerful man, a few inches shorter than Doc. His
upstanding shock of white hair lent him a distinguished aspect. His face was
lined with care, but intelligent and pleasant. He was near fifty.
"It is a great honor indeed to meet
the son of the great Senor Clark Savage," he said with genuine heartiness.
That surprised Doc. He was not aware his
father had known Carlos Avispa. But Doc's father had many friends of whom Doc
was not aware.
"You knew my father?" Doc
inquired.
Carlos Avispa bowed. There was genuine
esteem in his voice as he replied: "Your father saved my life with his
wonderful medical skill. That was twenty years ago, when I was but an unimportant
revolutionist hiding out in the mountains. You, I believe, are also a great
doctor and surgeon?"
Here was a break, Doc reflected. He
nodded that he was a doctor and surgeon. For that was the thing he knew more
about than all others.
In the course of a few minutes Doc had
told his story and mentioned that Don Rubio Gorro, the Secretary of State, had
refused to honor his grant to the territory in interior Hidalgo.
"I shall remedy that at once, Senor
Savage." declared President Carlos Avispa. "Anything I have, any
power I control, is yours."
AFTER he
had thanked the elderly, likable man properly, Doc inquired whether President
Avispa had any idea what made the tract of land so valuable that many men were
anxious to do murder to prevent him reaching it.
"I cannot imagine," was the
reply. "I do not know what your father found there. He was bound for the
interior of Hidalgo when he came upon me ill in camp twenty years ago. He saved
my life. And I never saw him again. As for the region, it is very near
impregnable, and the natives are so troublesome I have given up trying to send
soldiers to explore."
President Carlos Avispa reflected deeply,
then went on.
"It worries me, this action of my
Secretary of State, Don Rubio Gorro," he said. "Some sneak has
destroyed the records of this heritage your father left you. They should be in
our archives. But I cannot understand why Don Rubio should act as he did. Your
papers were enough, even though ours had vanished. He shall be punished for his
impertinence."
Doc was silent. The moving-picture
machine was still running off the reel of military maneuvers - the type of
picture shown at war colleges.
With a smile, President Avispa indicated
the cinema machine. "I must keep myself advised of the latest fighting
methods. It is indeed regrettable. But it seems we can never have peace here in
the south. There is always a revolution brewing.
"Just recently I have heard strong
rumors that an attempt is to be made to assassinate me and seize power. Many of
my people of Mayan ancestry are involved. But I do not know the ringleaders. I
understand they await only money to buy arms before making the attempt."
There came into the elderly chief
executive's eyes a fiery, warlike glint.
"If I could but find from what
source their money is expected to come, I would soon put a quietus on them.
And, best of all, it would be done without bloodshed!"
Doc conversed for a considerable time,
mostly about his great father. Politely declining an invitation to spend the
night at the presidential palace, he departed at a late hour.
Striding through Blanco Grande's sleepy
streets, Doc was thoughtful. Could it be that the money for the revolution against
President Carlos Avispa was tied up directly with his heritage? The fact that
Mayans were involved in both pointed that way. Maybe his enemies were trying to
rob him of his legacy; and use it to finance a revolution to overthrow
President Avispa!
The enemies had tried hard enough from the first to prevent him even
finding out about the legacy. Strange - the whole thing!
Then Doc stopped suddenly.
Before him on the dimly moonlit cobbles
lay a knife. It had an obsidian stone blade, a hilt of wound leather - exactly
such a knife as the Mayan in New York had carried.
Some fifteen minutes later, there was a
curious meeting in a top-floor room of Blanco Grande's one hotel modern enough
to be fitted with running water and a radio in every room. The hotel happened
to be the pride of all Hidalgo. Three stories high!
But the gentry meeting in the top-floor
room were easily the scourge of Hidalgo. They were the ringleaders of the
latest crop of revolutionists. These men were motivated by no high ideals of
freedom. If so, they wouldn't have been here, because no kinder or more upright
official ever administered a nation than elderly President Carlos Avispa.
Greed was behind every act of these men.
They wanted to overthrow President Avispa's honest, low-cost government, so
they could loot the public treasury, tax the citizens to bankruptcy for a year
or two, then skip to Paris and the fleshpots of Europe for a life of luxury on
the proceeds.
Eleven outlaws from the hills were congregated
on one side of the room. Shaggy, vicious fellows, every one of them was a
murderer many times over.
Before them was a curtain. Behind the
curtain was a door into an adjoining room. This door opened, and the assembled
bandits could hear a man enter. They grew tense, wary. But when the man spoke,
they relaxed.
For the man was their boss! The brains
behind the revolution! He was going to fill their pockets from the Hidalgo
treasury
"I am late!" said the
ringleader whom none of them could see - and, indeed, whom none of them even
knew! "I lost my sacred knife, and had to go back and hunt it."
"Did you find it?" interrupted
one of the bandits. "That thing is important. You need it to impress those
Mayans. They think only members of their warrior sect can have one and live. If
an ordinary man gets one, they think he will die. So you need it to make them
think you're the son of that god of theirs they call the Feathered
Serpent."
"I found it," said the man
behind the curtain. "Now, let's get down to business. This Savage person
has proved to be more of a menace than we ever dreamed."
The speaker paused, and when he
continued, there was a distinct twinge of fear in his voice. "Savage
visited President Avispa to-night, and Avispa O.K..'d everything. The old fool!
We shall soon be shut of him! But we must stop Savage! We must wipe him out,
and those five fighting devils with him!"
"Agreed," muttered a hairy
cutthroat. "They must not reach the Valley of the Vanished!"
"Why not let them go ahead into the
Valley of the Vanished?" growled another bandit. "That would be the
end of them. They'd never get out!"
Greater became the fear in the voice of
the revolution master mind. "You idiot! You do not know Savage! The man is
uncanny. I went to New York, but I failed to stop him. And I had with me two
members of that fanatical sect of warriors among the inhabitants of the Valley
of the Vanished. Those men are accomplished fighters. Their own people are in
terror of them. But Savage escaped!"
UNEASY was
the silence that impregnated the room.
"What if the members of this warrior
sect should find you are not one of them?" asked an outlaw. "You've
led them to believe you are the flesh-and-blood son of one of their old deities.
They worship you. But suppose they get wise that you are a faker?"
"They won't!" snapped the man
behind the curtain. "They won't, because I control the Red Death!"
"The Red Death! gulped one man.
Another breathed. "The Red Death -
what is it?"
Loud, ugly laughter came from the man
back of the curtain. "A drunken genius of a scientist sold the secret of
causing the Red Death, and curing it. He sold it to me! And then I killed him
so no one would ever get it - or, rather, the cure for it."
A nervous shifting passed over the
assembled bandits.
"If we could just solve the mystery
of that gold that comes out of the Valley of the Vanished," one mumbled.
"If we could find where they get it, we could forget this
revolution."
"We can't!" declared the man
back of the curtain. "I've tried and tried. Morning Breeze, the chief of
the warrior sect of which I have made myself head, does not know where it comes
from. Only old King Chaac, ruler of the Valley of the Vanished, knows. And you
couldn't torture it out of him."
"I'd like to take my men in there
with machine guns!" a bandit chieftain muttered angrily.
"You tried that once, didn't
you?" snapped the curtain speaker. "And you were nearly wiped out for
your pains. The Valley of the Vanished is impregnable. The best we can do is
get enough gold as offerings to finance this revolt."
"How do you get the gold?"
asked a robber, evidently not as well posted as the others.
Again the man laughed back of the
curtain. "I simply turn the Red Death loose on the tribe. Then they make a
big offering of gold which reaches my hands. Then I give them the cure for the
Red Death." He snorted mirthfully. "The ignorant dupes think their
deity sends the Red Death, and the gold offering appeases his wrath."
"Well, you had better turn the Red
Death loose soon," suggested a man. "We need an offering bad. If we
don't get it, we can't pay for those guns we must have to put over the
revolt."
"I will, very shortly. I have been
sending my blue plane over the Valley of the Vanished. That's a new idea of
mine. It impresses the inhabitants of the Valley a lot. Blue is their sacred
color. And they think the plane is a big winged god flying around."
There was a lot of evil laughter in
appreciation of their leader's cleverness.
"That Red Death is great
stuff!" grated the man behind the curtain. "It put old man Savage out
- "
The speaker suddenly emitted a frenzied
scream and sprang forward, taking the curtain with him. He plunged head over
heels across the floor.
The stunned bandits saw, towering in the
door back of the curtain, a great bronze, frightsome figure of a man.
"Doc Savage!" one squawked.
DOC Savage
it was, right enough. Doc, when he had seen that knife in the street, had a
moment later heard footsteps approaching. He had followed the man who had
picked up the knife to this hotel room.
Doc had heard the whole vile plot!
And for probably the first time in his
career, Doc had failed to get his man. Rage at the leader of the
revolutionists, the murderer of his father, had momentarily blinded Doc. A tiny
gasp had escaped from his great chest - and the man had heard.
A bandit drew a pistol. Another doused
the lights. Guns roared deafeningly. Blows smacked. Terrific blows that tore
flesh and bone! Blows such as only Doc Savage could deliver!
The window burst with a glassy rattle as
somebody leaped through, heedless of the fact that it was three floors to the
earth. A second man took the same leap.
The fight within the room was over in a
matter of thundering seconds.
Doc Savage turned on the lights. Ten
bandits in various stages of stupor and unconsciousness and even death, were
strewed on the floor. Three of them would never murder again. And the Blanco
Grande police, already clamoring in the corridor outside, would make short
shift of the rest.
To the window, Doc swept. Poising a
moment easily, he took the three-story drop as lightly as if he were leaping
off a table.
Under the window, he found another
cutthroat. The man had broken his neck in the plunge.
There was no trace of the leader. The man
had survived the jump and escaped.
Doc stood there, rage tingling all
through his powerful bronze frame. The murderer of his father! And he didn't
even know who the man was!
For Doc, in following the fellow to the
hotel, had not once been able to glimpse the master villain's face. Up there in
the room, the curtain had enveloped the fiend until the lights went out.
Doc slowly quitted the vicinity of the
hotel with its holocaust of death. In that hostelry room, he had left something
that would become a legend in Hidalgo. A dozen men whipped in a matter of
seconds!
For days, the Blanco Grande police
puzzled over what manner of fighter had overpowered these worst of Hidalgo's
bandits in a hand-to-hand fray.
Every cutthroat had a reward on his
unkempt head. The reward went unclaimed. Finally, by decree of President
Avispa, it was turned over to charity.
Doc Savage, with hardly a thought about what he had done, had
gone to his camp and to bed.
Chapter 11
VALLEY OF THE VANISHED
BY the
time the sun had crawled off one of Hidalgo's spike like mountaintops, Doc and
his men were ready for departure.
Doc had taken his usual two-hour exercise
long before dawn, while the others still slept.
After that, Doc had awakened his men, and
they had all seized brushes and quick-drying blue paint, and gone over their
entire plane. The ship was now blue, the sacred color of the Mayans!
"If the inhabitants of this
mysterious Valley of the Vanished think we're riding in a holy chariot,"
Doc had commented, "they may let us hang around long enough to make
friends."
Ham, waspish and debonair, carrying his
inevitable sword cane - for he had several of them - offered jocosely:
"And if they believe in evolution, we can arouse their interest by passing
Monk off as the missing link."
"Oh, yeah?" Monk grinned.
"Some day you're gonna find yourself in a pile that will pass for
hamburger steak, and you won't know any more about who done it than you do
about who framed that ham-stealing charge on you."
Red-necked, Ham twiddled his cane and had
nothing more to say.
Gasoline for twenty hours' flying reposed
in the tanks of the big tri-motor speed plane.
Doc, in the control bucket, turned the
radial motors over with the electro-inertia starting mechanism. He let the
cylinders warm so there would be no such unpleasantness as a cold motor
stopping at a critical moment in the take-off.
Out across the lake, Doc ruddered the
plane. He rocked the deperdussin type control wheel. The floats went on step -
skimming the lake surface. Then they were off. Doc banked about and headed
directly for the most rugged interior region of Hidalgo.
It was Doc's own idea, borne out by
Johnny's intensive study of the country's topography, to use pontoons instead
of landing wheels on the plane. Due to the wildly rank jungle and the unbelievably
craggy nature of the region, chances were one in a thousand of finding a
clearing large enough for a set-down.
On the other hand, Hidalgo was in a
sphere of great rainfall, of tropical downpours. The streams were small rivers,
and here and there in a mountain chasm lay a tiny lake. Hence the floats on the
plane.
While Doc lifted the plane to ten
thousand feet to find a favorable air current, and thus cut gasoline
consumption, his five friends used binoculars through the cabin windows.
They hoped to find trace of their enemy, the blue monoplane. But not a
glimpse of its hangar did they catch in the nodular, verdurous carpet of
jungle. It must be concealed, they reasoned, somewhere very near the capital
city of Blanco Grande. But they didn't sight it.
Below was an occasional patch of milpa,
or native corn, growing in jungle clearings. Through the glasses, they could
see natives carrying burdens in macapak, or netting bags suspended by a strap
about the forehead. These became scarcer. Where had once been milpa patches was
only a thick growth of uamiz bushes ten to twenty feet high. They were leaving
civilization behind. Hours passed.
Great barrancas, or gorges, began to
split the terrain. The earth seemed to tumble and writhe and pile atop itself
in inconceivable derangement. Mountains lurched up, gigantic, made black and
ominous by the jungle growth. From above, the flyers could look down into
canyons so deep their floors were nothing but gloomy space.
"There's not a level place down
there big enough to stick a stamp on!" Renny declared in an awed voice.
Johnny laughed. "I told Monk that
Columbus tackling the Atlantic Ocean had a pipe compared to this."
Monk snorted. "You're crazy. Us
settin' in comfortable seats in this plane, and you call it somethin' hard! I
don't see nothin' dangerous about it."
"You wouldn't!" Ham said dryly.
"If we should be forced down, you could take to the trees. The rest of us
would have to walk. And a half mile a day is good walking in that country under
us!"
Renny, up in the pilot's well with Doc,
called: "Heads up, you eggs! We're getting close!"
RENNY had
checked their course figures again and again. He had calculated angles and
inscribed lines on the map. And they were nearing their destination, the tract
of land that was Doc's legacy! It lay directly ahead.
And ahead was a mountain range more
nodular and sheer than any they had sighted yet. Its foothill peaks were like
stone needles. To the rampant sides of the mountains clung stringy patches of
jungle, fighting for existence.
The great speed plane bucked like a
plains cayuse as it encountered the tremendous air currents set up by the
precipitous wastes of stone below. This in spite of Doc's masterful hand at the
controls. An ordinary pilot would have succumbed to such treacherous currents,
or prudently turned back.
It was as though they were flying the
tumultuous heart of a vast cyclone.
Monk, hanging tightly to a wicker seat,
which was in turn strapped with metal to the plane fuselage, had become
somewhat green under his ruddy brick complexion. Plainly, he had changed his
ideas about the ease of their exploration method. Not that he was scared. But
he was about as seasick as man ever became.
"These devilish air currents explain
why this region has not been mapped by plane," Doc offered.
Four or five minutes later, he leveled an
arm. "Look! That canyon should lead to the center of this tract of land
we're hunting!"
The eyes, all of them, followed Doc's
pointing arm.
A narrow-walled gash that seemed to sink
a limitless depth into the mountain met their gaze. This cut was of bare stone,
too steep and too flintlike in hardness to support even a trace of green growth.
The plane careened closer.
So deep was the gash of a canyon that
twilight swathed the lower recesses. Renny, keen of eye and using binoculars,
advised: "There is quite a stream of water running in the bottom of the
canyon."
Fearlessly, Doc nosed the plane down.
Another pilot would have banked away in terror from those malicious air
currents. Doc, however, knew just how much his plane could stand. Although the
craft might be tossed about a great deal, they were all as yet quite safe - as long
as Doc's hand was on the controls.
Into the monster slash of a chasm, the
plane rumbled its way. The motor thunder was tossed back in waves from the
frowning walls. Suddenly air, cooled by the small river rushing through the cut
and thus contracting and forming a down current, seemed to suck the plane into
the depths. Wheeling, twisting, the speed ship plummeted among murky shadows.
Monk was now a striking example of the
contention that sudden danger will cure seasickness - for he was entirely normal
again.
Doc had the throttles against the
wide-open pins. The three radial motors moaned and labored, and the exhaust
pipes lipped blue flame.
The progress of the craft along the chasm
was a procession of leaps and drops and side-whippings, as though they were
riding an amusement-park jack rabbit, or roller coaster.
"It'll be a long old day before
another gang of white explorers penetrate into this place!" Renny
prophesied.
Doc's arm suddenly leveled like a bronze
bar.
"The Valley of the Vanished!"
he cried.
QUITE
suddenly, it had appeared before them - the Valley of the Vanished!
A widening in the strange, devilish chasm
formed it. The valley had roughly the shape of an egg. The floor was sloping,
of such a steepness that to land a wheel-equipped plane on it would be an
impossibility.
There was only one spot of comparative
levelness, and that was no greater than an acre or two in area.
It was on this level spot that the eyes
of Doc and his five men instantly focused. They stared, unbelieving.
"Good Heaven!" gasped Johnny,
the archaeologist.
From the little flat towered a pyramid!
It adhered in a general way to the architecture of the Egyptian type of
pyramids, but there were differences.
For one thing, the sides, instead of
drawing inward in a series of steplike shelves, were smoothed as glass from top
to bottom. Only in the front was there a flight of steps. Not more than twenty
feet wide was this flight, and the steps were less high and deep than those in
an American home. The stairway was like a ribbon up the glittering, sleek side
of the pyramid.
The top of the structure was flat, and on
this stood a sort of temple, a flat stone roof supported by square, wondrously
carved pillars. Except for the pillars, this was open at the sides, permitting
glimpses of fantastically wrought idols of stone.
Strangest of all, perhaps, was the color
of the pyramid. Of a grayish-brownstone, yet it glowed all over with a strange
yellow, metallic aurora of tiny lights caught and cast back.
"Priceless!" murmured Johnny,
the archaeologist.
"You said it!" grunted Renny,
the engineer.
"From a historical standpoint, I
mean!" corrected Johnny.
"I meant from a pocketbook
standpoint!" Renny snorted. "If I ever saw quartz absolutely full of
wire gold, I see it now. I'll bet the stone that pyramid is made of would mill
fifty thousand dollars to the ton in free gold!"
"Forget the gold!" snapped
Johnny. "Don't you realize you're looking at a rare sample of ancient
Mayan architecture? Something any archaeologist would give both hands and a leg
to inspect!"
As the plane dived closer, another thing
about the pyramid became noticeable. This was a sizable volume of water which
poured steadily down the pyramid side, coursing in a deep trough inlaid near
the steps.
This water came out of the pyramid top by
some artesian effect. Continuing away from the structure, it fed a long, narrow
lake. This body of water in turn emptied into the stream that ran down the
chasm up which Doc and his friends had flown.
Upon the sides of the egg-shaped valley,
not far from the pyramid, stood rows of impressive stone houses. These were
lavishly carved, strange of architecture. It was as though the flyers had
slipped back into an age before history.
There were people - many of them. They
were garbed weirdly.
Doc dropped the plane pontoons on the
narrow lake surface.
IT was an
awed group of men who peered from the plane as it grounded floats on the clean
white sand of the tiny beach.
The natives of this Valley of the
Vanished were running down the steep sides to meet them. It was difficult to
tell whether their reception was going to be warlike or not.
"Maybe we'd better unlimber a
machine gun?" Renny suggested. "I don't like the looks of that gang
getting together in front!"
"No!" Doc shook his head.
"After all, we haven't any moral right here. And I'll get out rather than
massacre some of them!"
Chapter 12
THE LEGACY
"BUT this land is all yours."
"In the eyes of civilized law,
probably so," Doc agreed. "But there's another way of looking at it.
It's a lousy trick for a government to take some poor savage's land away from
him and give it to a white man to exploit. Our own American Indians got that
kind of a deal, you know. Not that these people look so savage, though."
"They've got a pretty high type of
civilization, if you ask me!" Renny declared "That's the cleanest
little city I ever saw!"
The men fell to watching the on-coming
natives.
"They're every one a pure
Mayan!" Johnny declared. "No outside races have intermarried with
these people!"
The approaching Mayans were going through
a strange maneuver. The bulk of the populace was holding back to let a group of
men, all of whom were garbed alike, come ahead.
These men were slightly larger in
stature, more brute-like, of a thickness of shoulder and chest advertising powerful
muscles. They wore a short mantle over the shoulders, a network of leather
which had projecting ends rather like modern epaulets. They wore broad girdles
of a dark blue, the ends of these forming aprons to the front and rear. Each
man wore leggings not unlike football shin guards, and sandals which had
extremely high backs.
They carried spears and short clubs of
wood into which vicious-looking, razor-edged flakes of stone were fitted in the
manner of saw teeth. In addition, each had a knife with an obsidian blade, and
a hilt of wound leather.
Every one of these men also had his
linger tips dyed scarlet for an inch of their length! None of the other
tribesmen seemed to have the red fingers.
Suddenly the man who led this group
halted. Turning, he lifted his hands above his head and harangued his followers
in a voice of vast emotion and volume. This man was more stocky than the
others. Indeed, he had Monk's anthropoid build without Monk's gigantic size.
His face was dark and evil.
Doc listened with interest to the Mayan
dialect as shouted by the speaker.
"That fellow is Morning Breeze, and
the gang he is talking to are the sect of warriors, his followers!" Doc
translated for his men, giving his own accurate deductions rather than the gist
of Morning Breeze's speech.
"He looks more like an alley wind at
midnight to me!" Monk muttered. "What's he ribbin' 'em up to do,
Doc?"
Angry little lights danced in Doc
Savage's golden eyes. "He is telling them the blue plane is a holy bird."
"That's what we wanted them to
think!" said Renny. "So it's all right if - "
"It's not as right as you
think," Doc interposed. "Morning Breeze is telling his warriors we
are a human offering the holy blue bird has brought to be sacrificed."
"You mean - "
"They're going to kill us - if
Morning Breeze has his way!"
Monk instantly whirled for the plane,
rumbling: "I'm gonna meet 'em with a machine gun in each hand!"
But Doc's low voice stopped him.
"Wait," Doc suggested.
"Morning Breeze's warriors haven't worked up their nerve yet. I have a
scheme to try."
Doc stepped forward, advancing alone to
meet the belligerent fighting sect of this lost clan of the ancient Mayans.
There were fully a hundred red-fingered men in the conclave, every one armed to
the teeth.
Seized with the insane fervor which comes
upon addicts of exotic religions, they would be vicious customers in a fight.
But Doc stepped up to them as calmly as he would go before a chamber of commerce
luncheon gathering.
Morning Breeze stopped shouting at his
followers to watch Doc. The chief warrior's features were even less likeable at
close range. They were tattooed in colored designs, making them quite
repulsive. His little black eyes glittered like a pig's.
Doc dropped his right hand into his coat
pocket. Here reposed the obsidian knife he had taken from the Mayan who had
killed himself in New York. Doc knew, from what he had heard in the Blanco
Grande hotel room, that great significance attached to these knives.
With dignity, Doc elevated both bronze
hands high above his head. In doing so, he carefully kept the sacred obsidian
knife hidden from the Mayans. He had palmed it like a magician.
"Greetings, my children!" he
said in the best Mayan he could manage.
Then, with a quick flirt of his wrist, he
brought the knife into view. With such expert sleight-of-hand did he accomplish
this that it looked to the Mayans like the obsidian blade had materialized in
thin air.
The effect was noticeable. Red-fingered hands moved uncertainly.
Feet shod in high-backed sandals shifted about. A low murmur arose.
While the time was opportune, Doc's
powerful voice vibrated over the group.
"Myself and my friends come to speak
with King Chaac, your ruler!" he said.
Morning Breeze didn't like this at all. A
variety of emotions played on his unlovely face.
Watching the warrior chief, Doc
catalogued the man's character accurately. Morning Breeze was hungry for power
and glory. He wanted to be supreme among his people. And for that reason, he
was an enemy of King Chaac, the ruler. The darkening of Morning Breeze's
countenance at mention of King Chaac apprised Doc of this last state of
affairs.
"Tell me your business here!"
commanded Morning Breeze in substance, seeking to give his coarse voice a ring
of overbearing authority.
Doc, knowing that if he gave Morning
Breeze an inch of rope, the fellow would take the whole lasso, made his tone
more commanding.
"My business is not with underlings,
but with King Chaac himself!" he thundered.
This also had its effect. Both on Morning
Breeze, who turned purple with humiliation and rage, and on the other warriors,
who were plainly impressed. Doc could see they were of a mind to postpone the
sacrificing and take the white strangers to King Chaac.
Putting a volume of dignity and command
In his voice which few other men could have managed, Doc directed:
"Do not delay longer!"
Doc's sleight-of-hand with the knife, his
knowledge of their language, his dominant bearing, all worked triumphantly to
his advantage.
The phalanx of red-fingered men melted
away in the middle, forming an encircling group to escort Doc and his men to
King Chaac.
"That is what I call runnin' a
whizzer!" Monk grinned admiringly.
"Here's something to remember!"
Doc told him. "Anything that smacks of magic impresses these red-fingered
fighters. That's the principal thing that saved us a lot of trouble."
They left the plane on the narrow sand
beach, depending on superstitious fear to keep the Mayan populace away. The
yellow-skinned folk would hardly be irreligious enough to finger the holy blue
bird.
JUDGING from
their physical appearance, the other Mayans were an entirely sociable people.
They were not hard on the eyes, either, especially some of the young women.
Their clothing showed expert weaving and dyeing, and in some of it, fine wire
gold had been interwoven with luxuriant effect.
Their skins were a beautiful golden
color; absolutely without blemish.
"I don't believe I ever saw better
complexions in a race of people," Ham declared.
The young women and some of the younger
men wore high headdresses of gorgeous tropical flowers. Some had trains that
fell in graceful manner about their shoulders.
Monk remarked on the uniform beauty of
the Mayans, with the exception of the red-fingered warriors.
"Looks like they pick out the ugly
ducklings and make fighters of them!" he chuckled.
And they later found this very thing was
true. To become a warrior, a Mayan had to attain a certain degree of ugliness,
both physically and of mind. The Mayans had no prison system. When one of their
number committed a minor crime, he was sentenced, not to exile or prison, but
to become a fighting man - a protector of the tribe.
These red-fingered warriors fought off
invaders, and kept the Valley of the Vanished for the Mayans alone. Thus, many
of them were slain in battle, and hence actually punished.
They were the most ignorant and
superstitious in the Valley of the Vanished, these crimson-fingered fighting
men.
The cavalcade trod the streets of the the
Mayan city.
Johnny, with the excitement of a born
archaeologist making new discoveries of stupendous interest, could hardly be
kept in line.
"These buildings!" he gasped.
"They are erected exactly as in the great ruined city of Chichen Itza and
elsewhere. See, they never use the arch in construction of roofs or
doorways!"
One peculiarity about the buildings
struck the others, who, with the exception of Doc, did not know a great deal
about the Mayan type of architecture. The structures were replete with carvings
of animals, grotesque human figures and birds.
Not a square inch but was sculptured in
some likeness. The Mayans seemed to dislike leaving even a tiny bit of
unadorned space.
They came finally to a stone house larger
than the rest. It was lifted slightly above the others upon a foundation of
masonry.
They were ushered inside, into the
presence of King Chaac.
KING Chaac
was a distinct shock. But a pleasant one.
He was a tall, solid man, only a little
stooped with age. His hair was a snowy white, and his features were nearly as
perfect as Doc's own! Dressed in an evening suit, Chaac would have been a
distinct credit to any banquet table in New York. He wore a maxth, or broad
girdle, of red, with the ends forming an apron in front and back.
He was stationed in the middle of a large
room.
Beside him stood a young woman. She was
by a long stretch the most attractive of the Mayan girls they had seen. The
perfection of her features revealed instantly that she was King Chaac's
daughter. She was nearly as tail as her father. The exquisite fineness of her
beauty was like the work of some masterly craftsman in gold.
"A pippin!" gasped Monk.
"Not bad," admitted Renny, his
long, tight-lipped face losing a bit of its puritanical look.
Doc, in a low voice only the pair
discussing the girl could hear, said sharply: "Dry up, you gorillas! Can't
you see she understands English?"
Monk and Renny looked sharply at the girl
- and both instantly became red as well-cooked beets.
For it was evident the ravishing young
Mayan lady had heard their remarks and understood them. Her features were
flushed, and she was distinctly embarrassed.
Doc, in his halting Mayan, began to greet
King Chaac.
"You may speak your own
language," interposed King Chaac.
He spoke English that was fair enough!
For once, Doc was taken with surprise. It
was a long twenty seconds before he thought of something to say. Then he waved
an arm slowly to take in all his surroundings.
"I don't quite understand all
this," he murmured. "Here you are, obviously descendants of an
ancient civilization. You are in a valley practically impregnable to outsiders.
The rest of the world does not even dream you are here, You live exactly as
your ancestors did, hundreds of years ago. Yet you greet me in excellent
English!"
King Chaac bowed easily. "I can
dispel your curiosity, Mr. Clark Savage, Jr."
Had Doc been less of a man than he was,
that would have knocked him over.
He was
known here!
"Your esteemed father taught me the
English tongue," smiled King Chaac. "I recognize you as his son. You
resemble him."
Doc nodded slowly. He should have guessed
that. And it was very good to know his great father had been here. For wherever
Savage, Sr., had gone, he had made friends among all people who were worthy of
friendship.
The next few words exchanged had to do
with introductions. The ravishing young Mayan lady's name was Monja. She was,
as they had surmised, a princess; King Chaac's daughter.
The squat, surly chief of the
red-fingered warriors, Morning Breeze, was ordered outside by King Chaac. His
going was slinky, reluctant. And he paused in the door for a final, avid look
at Princess Monja.
That glance told Doc something else.
Morning Breeze had a crush on Monja. And judging from Monja's uplifted nose,
she didn't think much of the chief of fighting men.
"I don't blame her, either,"
Monk whispered to Ham, making very sure his voice was so low nobody else heard,
"Imagine having to stare at that phiz of his across the breakfast table
every morning!"
Ham looked at Monk - and released a loud
laugh. Monk's face was fully as homely as Morning Breeze's, although in a more
likable way.
DOC Savage
put the query that was uppermost in his mind. "How does it happen your
people are here - like this as they lived hundreds of years ago?"
King Chaac smiled benignly. "Because
we are satisfied with our way of living. We lead an ideal existence here. True,
we must fight to keep invaders away. But the warlike tribes surrounding this
mountain do most of that for us. They are our friends. It is only every year or
two that our red-fingered warriors must drive off some especially persistent
invader. Thanks to the impregnable nature of this valley, that is not
difficult."
"How long have you been here - when
did you settle here, I mean?" Doc asked.
"Hundreds of years ago - at the time
of the Spanish conquest of Mexico," explained the old Mayan. "My
ancestors who settled the valley were a clan of the highest class Mayans, the
royalty. They fled from the Spanish soldiers to this valley. We have been here
since, satisfied, as I said, to exist without the rest of the world."
Doc, reflecting on the turmoil and
bloodshed and greed that had racked the rest of the world in the interim, could
not but agree that the course these people had taken had its merits. They might
be without a few conveniences of modern homes, but they probably didn't miss
them.
Elderly King Chaac spoke up unexpectedly:
"I know why you are here, Mr. Savage."
"Eh?"
"Your father sent you. It was agreed
that upon the passage of twenty years, you were to come to me. And I was to be
the judge of whether or not to give you access to the gold which is of no value
to we of the Valley of the Vanished."
Lights of understanding flickered in
Doc's golden eyes. So this had been the text of the remainder of that letter,
the burned first portion of which he had found in his father's robbed safe!
It was all plain now. His father had
discovered this lost valley with its strange inhabitants and its fabulous hoard
of gold. He had decided to leave it as a legacy to his son. He had secured
possession of the land inclosing the Valley of the Vanished. And he had made
some arrangement with King Chaac. The thing to do was to find out what kind of
arrangements!
Doc put the inquiry: "What sort of
an agreement did my father have with you?"
"He did not tell you?" the old
Mayan asked in surprise.
Doc lowered his head. Slowly, he
explained his father had died suddenly. The elderly Mayan maintained a reverent
silence for a time after he heard the sad news. Then he outlined the business
aspects of the gold deal.
"You will necessarily give a certain
portion to the government of Hidalgo," he said.
Doc nodded. "The agreement is one
fifth to the government of Hidalgo. That is eminently fair. The President of
Hidalgo, Carlos Avispa, is a fine old gentleman."
"A third of all gold removed is to be
placed in a trust fund in the name of my people," explained King Chaac.
"You are to establish that fund and see that suitable honest
administrators are appointed. The other two thirds you are to have, not to
build up a personal fortune, but to spend as you see fit in furthering the work
in which your father was engaged - in righting wrongs, relieving the oppressed,
in benefiting mankind in every way possible."
"A third to your people don't seem
like a very big percentage," Doc suggested.
King Chaac smiled. "You will be
surprised at the sum it will come to. And we may never need it. This Valley of
the Vanished, you understand, remains just as it is - unknown to the world. And
the source of this gold will also be unknown to the world."
JOHNNY,
twiddling his glasses which had the magnifying lens on the left side, had been
an interested listener to all this. Now he broke in with a puzzled query.
"I noticed the nature of the rock
about here," he said. "And, although the pyramid is made of
high-grade gold ore, there is no sign of quantities of the rock near by. If
you're figuring on giving us the pyramid, will your people stand for it?"
"The pyramid remains
untouched!" There was a sharpness in King Chaac's voice. "That is our
shrine! It shall stand always!"
"Then where is the gold?"
King Chaac turned to Doc. "You will
be shown to it within thirty days - or sooner, if I decide it is time. But
until then, you will know no more."
"Why this condition?' Doc inquired.
There seemed the slightest of twinkles in
the old Mayan's eyes as he retorted: "That I do not care to
disclose."
Throughout the entire confab, pretty
Princess Monja had been standing to one side. And almost the whole time, she
had been watching Doc, a strange, veiled expression in her eyes.
"I wish she'd look at me like
that!" Monk confided to Ham.
King Chaac's declaration of the
thirty-day moratorium on all information concluded the interview. He gave
orders to his followers that Doc and his men should be treated with the best.
Doc and his men spent the remainder of
the day making friends with the Mayans. They did little tricks of magic that
highly entertained the simple people. Long Tom with an electrical shocking
apparatus he rigged up, and Monk with some chemical displays, were the
favorites.
Morning Breeze and his warriors, however,
kept severely aloof. They were often seen chatting in surly groups.
"They're gonna give us
trouble," Renny declared, playfully cracking soft rocks with his ironlike
fists to awe and amuse a young Mayan.
Doc agreed. "They're more ignorant
than the others. And this devil who is behind the Hidalgo revolution is a nabob
in the sect of fighting men. He's going to send the Red Death on the tribe before
long."
"Can't we stop it? That infernal Red
Death, I mean?"
"We can try," Doc said
seriously. "But I'm doubtful that we can do much until it strikes. We
don't even know how they spread it, much less what the cure is."
"Maybe if we got them the gold in
the form of a bribe so they wouldn't inflict this Red Death - "
"That would mean the success of the
Hidalgo revolt, and hundreds of people killed, Renny!"
"That's right," Renny muttered
soberly.
For sleeping quarters, they were allotted
a many-room house not a great distance from the gleaming golden pyramid.
They turned in early. The night gave
promise of not being as chilly as they had expected it to be up here in the
mountains.
Chapter 13
DEATH STALKS
THE
following day was devoted to nothing more glorious than killing time.
Exhibiting little tricks soon palled. So Doc and Renny set out to explore the
Valley of the Vanished.
They found it as much a prison as a fortress.
The narrowest of paths chiseled into the sheer gorge side was the only route
out, afoot. And by air, nothing except a seaplane could land. No dirigible
could withstand those terrific air currents.
The sides of the valley were in
cultivation, growing vegetables and many milpa patches. There was cotton, and
domesticated, long-haired goats, for clothing. Jungle growth was rank
everywhere else.
"They're pretty well fixed,"
Doc remarked. "Not fancy. But you couldn't want more."
Strolling back to the little city beside
the golden pyramid, Doc and Renny encountered the attractive Princess Monja.
Obviously, she had maneuvered this meeting. She was, it could plainly be seen,
greatly taken with the handsome Doc. This embarrassed Doc no little. He had
long ago made up his mind that women were to play no part in his career.
Anyway, his was not a nature to easily lend itself to domestication. So he
answered Princess Monja's eager patter in monosyllables, and carefully avoided
being led into discussions about how pretty American girls were in comparison
to, well - Monja, for instance.
It was not an easy course to take. Monja
was one of the most ravishing young women Doc had ever encountered.
Back at the city, they could not help but
notice a subtle change in the attitude of many of the Mayans. Even those who
were not of the red-fingered sect now looked at Doc and his friends with
unfriendly eyes.
The red-fingered warriors were mingling
with the populace, doing a lot of taking.
Doc chanced to overhear one of these
conversations. It told him what was happening. The red-fingered men were
poisoning the minds of the other Mayans against the whites. Doc and his men,
the warriors claimed, were pale-skinned devils that had ridden here like worms
in the innards of the great blue bird that landed on the water. And so, as
worms, they should be destroyed.
It was clever work on the part of the
red-fingered ones. Doc went away thoughtful.
That night, Doc and his five friends
turned in early again, largely because the Mayans seemed to go to roost with
the chickens. Whether it was the hardness of the stone benches that served
these golden-skinned folk for beds, or because of nervous excitement over their
position here in the Valley of the Vanished, they didn't sleep well.
LONG Tom,
occupying a large room with Johnny and Ham, stuck it out on his stone slab
exactly one hour. Then insomnia got the best of him. He yanked on his trousers
and took a stroll in the moonlight that penetrated faintly to the floor of the
great chasm of which the valley was a part.
For no particular reason, Long Tom's
footsteps took him toward the pyramid. The thing fascinated him - so rich was
the ore of which it was built that it was literally a mound of gold. What a
fabulous value it must have!
Long Tom hoped looking at such wealth
would make him sleepy.
It didn't. It cost him dearly.
For while he was having his first
eye-filling look at the golden pyramid with the stream of water running steadily
out of its top, a man sprang onto his back. A vile hand clapped over Long Tom's
mouth.
Long Tom might look none too healthy, but
under his sallow hide were some very ropy, powerful muscles. He couldn't have
stood the gaff with Doc's bunch without them. He could probably whip
ninety-nine out of every hundred men you meet on the street, and not shown
fatigue in doing it.
He angled both fists around, drove them
behind him. He hit nobody. He bit the unclean fingers that held his mouth. The
lingers jerked away. Long Tom started a yell. A hand, thoroughly protected by
cloth this time, stoppered his jaws.
Other attackers rushed in. They were
bounding dervishes in the moon glow. The red-fingered warriors!
Long Tom kicked mightily backward. He
peeled a shin. He and his assailants toppled among round rocks and soft dirt.
One of Long Tom's clawlike hands found a
rock. He popped it against a skull - knew by the feel of the blow that one of
the red-fingered fiends was through with this world.
Sheer weight of numbers mashed Long Tom
out before he could do more damage. He was securely bound at wrist and ankle
with stout cotton cords, then drawn into a helpless knot as his wrists and
ankles were tied in a single wad.
A red-fingered Mayan who had kept well
away from the fight, now came up. Long Tom recognized Morning Breeze, chief of
the fighting men.
Morning Breeze clucked a command in the
Mayan tongue, which Long Tom did not understand.
Lifting Long Torn, they bore him around to
the rear of the pyramid. They shoved through a high growth of brush, coming
then to a circular flooring of stone blocks. In the center of this gaped a
sinister, black, round aperture.
Long Tom was left in doubt as to what
this was for only a moment.
Morning Breeze picked up a pebble,
smirked evilly at Long Torn, then tossed the rock into the round opening.
One second dragged, another! The pebble
must have fallen two hundred feet! There was a loud clatter as it struck a rock
bottom. Then out of the ghastly hole came a bedlam of hissings and grisly,
slithering noises!
The hole was a sacrificial well! Long Tom
recalled reading how the ancient Mayans had tossed human offerings into such
wells. And the hissings and slitherings were snakes! Poisonous, beyond a doubt.
There must be hundreds of them in the well bottom!
Morning Breeze callously gave a command.
Long Tom suffered unutterable tortures as
he was lifted and tossed bodily into the awful black opening.
Morning Breeze listened. A moment later
came a horrible thump from the well bottom. The poisonous serpents hissed and
slithered.
Morning Breeze and his evil followers
turned away, highly pleased.
UNKNOWN to
Long Tom when he left the sleeping quarters, Ham had not been sleeping soundly.
One eye drowsily open, Ham had watched Long Tom pull on his trousers and go
out.
Ham drowsed a while after that. But Long
Tom's departure had done something to what little desire he had for sleep, so
it was not long before Ham also got up and pulled on his trousers. Thanks to
the balmy night, no more clothing was needed.
Ham took his sword cane along, although
for no particular reason. He just liked the feel of it in his hands.
Outside, he saw no sign of Long Tom. But
a little use of his keen brain told Ham where the electrical wizard would be
likely to stroll; the most fascinating spot in the Valley of the Vanished, if
one disregarded the really entrancing Mayan girls. The golden pyramid, of
course! Long Tom, like the rest of Doc's men, would not be wooing a Mayan
damsel at this hour. They were not interested in women, these supreme
adventurers.
Ham ambled toward the pyramid, breathing
in deeply of the lambent night air. He heard no sound, certainly nothing to
alarm him. He clipped the gaudy flower off a tropical vine with a jaunty swing
of his cane.
A split second later, Ham was buried
under an avalanche of red-fingered men!
No gallant of old ever bared his steel
quicker than Ham unsheathed his sword cane. He got it out in time to skewer two
of the devils who piled atop him!
Outnumbered hopelessly, Ham was bound and
gagged.
They carried Ham to the sacrificial well,
and without a word, threw him in.
Morning Breeze, poised on the well rim,
listened until he heard the loud smash come up from the pit floor two hundred
feet below. The snakes, disturbed, made enraged noises.
Morning Breeze nodded and clucked to
himself. Two of them gone! He gave another command.
The three red-fingered warriors who had
been killed by Long Tom and Ham were hauled up. One after the other, the dead
forms were pitched into the sacrificial well. Three loud thumps and snake
sounds arose.
Very elated indeed, Morning Breeze led
his followers to get further victims.
MONK had
been sleeping soundly, but the stone bed was hard, and Monk got a nightmare. In
the nightmare, he was fighting a million clawing, crimson-tipped fingers while
a beautiful Mayan princess looked on. Monk whipped all the red fingers in his
dream, but as he started toward the entrancing princess to claim his reward, a
man who looked suspiciously like Doc came up and took her away. That woke Monk
up.
He sat erect, then stood on his feet to
stretch. Looking about, he made a discovery that surprised him. Both Doc and
Renny should have been slumbering in this same room.
But their stone couches were unoccupied!
Monk thought a bit, concluded they were
out talking somewhere, and decided to join them. He started to put on his
trousers, then changed his mind. He had noted a maxtli, one of the broad
girdles the Mayan gentlemen wore. Evidently it had belonged to whoever gave up
the house for their comfort, since it hung on the wall.
Monk whipped the maxtli twice about his
middle in lieu of pants, and sauntered out. He had an idea he'd go swimming if
nothing better turned up.
Unable to locate either Doc or Renny,
Monk made for the lake shore. He was not worried about his two friends. That
anything could happen to them without an alarm being raised was hardly likely.
The lake was an appealing blue. Away from
the shore a few yards, were large rocks. Monk wended his good-natured way
through these.
Suddenly he got a tremendous start by
encountering pretty Princess Monja face to face. She was evidently out
strolling in the moonlight. Alone, too.
Monk felt a great deal of confusion. He
made a move to go back hastily the way he had been coming.
But Princess Monja smiled sweetly at
Monk's pleasantly ugly face, and requested: "Do not leave so quickly,
please! I wish to ask you a question."
Monk hesitated. He asked bluntly,
"What's the question?"
Princess Monja blushed prettily. For a moment
it looked like she was going to be too bashful to put the query. Then, out it
came.
It was: "What is there about myself
that your leader finds undesirable?"
"Huh?" Monk stuttered, at a
loss for an answer. "Oh, Doc likes you all right. He likes
everybody."
"I do not believe so," said the
entrancing Mayan. "He remains aloof."
"Well," floundered Monk,
"I guess that's just Doc's way."
"There is a girl - he is - ?"
"In love with anybody?" Monk
snorted. "Heck no! There ain't a girl livin' who could make Doc's heart -
"
Monk abruptly swallowed the rest. But it
was too late. He had said the wrong thing.
Princess Monja spun on her heel and
vanished among the large rocks. The trace of a sob lingered behind her.
MONK stood
there in the moonlight a while. Then he went back to his sleeping quarters. Doc
and Renny were still missing.
Just to ascertain that things were all
right, Monk stepped into the adjoining room where Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham
were supposed to be slumbering.
All three were gone!
Monk's huge fingers curled and uncurled.
He knew something was wrong now! All five of his friends would not be out
taking the night air at once
A giant, animal-like figure, Monk sprang
outside. His keen ears strained. They detected faint noises. To the right! He
made for them, his leaps enormous, bounding.
Quite a number of men seemed to be
receding furtively through the night. Monk put on a burst of speed to overhaul
them.
The golden pyramid came in view.
On the left of it, Monk discerned the men
he was following. Fully a dozen of them! They carried a limp, bound form in
their midst.
Monk had a technique for running in the
dark. His unnaturally long arms played an important part. He simply doubled
over and traveled by great bounds, balancing himself with his long arms when he
stumbled. He could make unbelievable speed.
He raced his best now. He tried
repeatedly to see who it was the men - they were red-fingered warriors - were
carrying.
Johnny! They had Johnny!
Monk did not know Long Tom and Ham had
already gone into the sacrificial well, or he would have been even more
horrified than he was.
The red-fingered men had seen him now.
They quickened their own pace, shedding caution. They ran out on the stone
pavement around the sacrificial well.
Still fifty feet from them, Monk saw them
lift Johnny's bound and gagged frame and toss him into the fiendish pit!
Monk heard the loud, heavy thump come up
from the well bottom!
That turned Monk into such a fighting
devil as he seldom became. His great hands scooped up two rocks. He hurled them
with the velocity of cannon balls.
Both rocks downed their men.
So sudden was the attack, so fearsome a
figure did Monk present that the red-fingered group turned to a man and fled
wildly into the brush. Monk overhauled one before they got away. He heaved the
loathsome creature up like a feather and dashed him against a tree. The
lifeless body bounced back almost to his feet, so terrific was the impact.
Into the undergrowth Monk dived. He
searched like a terrier after rats. But the warriors knew the vegetation. They
evaded him.
It was high tribute to the fright Monk inspired
that they did not even dare throw a knife or a spear at him, but crept away
like sneaking coyotes into the night.
Slowly, with his heart the heaviest it
had ever been, Monk went back to the sacrificial well. He had heard that thump
come up from the bottom - he knew the well must be at least two hundred feet
deep.
Poor Johnny! To meet a fate like that!
One of the most brilliant living geologists and archaeologists snuffed out at
the dawn of his career. It was awful.
Nearing the well, Monk could hear the
gruesome hissing and swishing of serpent bodies deep in the black Gehenna of a
pit. He recognized the noises for what they were. Johnny didn't stand a chance
of being alive! Salty tears came to Monk's eyes.
With an effort, he brought himself to
look over the rim of the sacrificial well.
Out of the pit came Ham's sarcastic
drawl.
"I ask you, brothers, did you ever
see an uglier face than that?"
Chapter 14
DOC PULLS A RESURRECTION
SO
astounded was Monk that he came within a hair of toppling head-first into the
sacrificial well. He hastily got away from the brink.
A sibilant "Sh-h-h!" came out
of the hole, warning silence.
Johnny then appeared, shoved from behind.
Johnny was a little scuffed and pale, but otherwise none the worse for his
grisly encounter. He kept low, behind the screen of bushes that surrounded the
sacrificial well.
Long Tom was helped out next. Then Ham.
They, too, were unharmed. And finally Renny.
At last, Doc himself appeared.
"You wait here," Doc whispered.
"I'm going to the plane to get some materials."
He vanished like a bronze ghost in the
moonlight.
"What happened to you birds?"
Monk demanded.
"The red-fingered rascals got us,
one at a time, bound and gagged us, and threw us in the well," Long Tom
explained.
"Aw-w-w! I mean, what saved
you?"
"How?"
"It beat anything you ever
saw," Long Tom murmured admiringly. "Doc and Renny were out prowling,
and saw the warriors grab me. Doc ran to the plane and got a stout silk rope,
or, rather, two of them." Long Tom pointed.
"There
they are!"
Monk looked, and perceived what he had
not before noted in the moonlight. The two ropes, thin but extremely strong,
were tied to a couple of the stout shrubs surrounding the paved circle. The
ends of the ropes dangled in the well. The Mayans, too, had missed seeing them.
"Doc and Renny slid down into the
well before the warriors got here," Long Tom continued. "Renny held a
big rock in his arms. He tied the rope end around his waist to support
him."
Long Tom laughed softly - but not very
heartily. "When the red-fingered men tossed me in, Renny dropped the rock
to make it sound like I had hit bottom. And - "
"And Doc simply swung out and caught
them, one at a time, as they came down," Renny chimed in. "Then they
clung to the sides of the well. That was not much of a job, because the sides
are very rough, some blocks sticking out enough for a man to sit on in
comfort."
"You looked like you were crying
when you stuck your mug into the pit," Johnny chided Monk. "Did you
really hate to see me go that much?"
"Aw-w, fooey on you!" Monk
grinned.
Doc came back, appearing with the silent
unexpectedness of an apparition.
"Why didn't you and Renny pitch in
and clean up on the warriors when you saw them grab Long Tom?" Monk asked.
"Because I reasoned he'd be thrown
into the sacrificial well alive," Doc replied. "That is the customary
manner of sacrificing offerings. And I wanted the red-fingered devils to think
Long Tom, Johnny, and Ham are dead. I've got an idea to pull."
"What?"
"The warriors are our immediate
trouble here," Doc explained. "If we can convince them we are really
supernatural beings, we'll have half the battle won. Then we can concentrate on
trapping this man who is behind the Hidalgo revolution scheme."
"Sure," Monk agreed. "But
how to convince them is the catch." He rubbed his big knuckles. "I'm
in favor of glomming onto Morning Breeze and the rest of them, and have an
old-fashioned lynching party. That'd fix it."
"And have the rest of the Mayans on
top of us," Doc pointed out. "No. I'm going to convince those
superstitious fighters I am an extra sort of a guy. I'll run such a whizzer on
them that they won't dare to listen to Morning Breeze telling them we're
ordinary men!"
Doc paused dramatically, then revealed
his plan. "I'm going to bring Long Tom, Johnny, and Ham to life for the
warrior sect's benefit!"
Monk digested that. "How?"
"Watch us," Doc suggested,
"and you'll catch on."
Working
rapidly, Doc pried up paving stones in a line to the thickest part of the
surrounding jungle. In the soft earth beneath, he dug a narrow trench.
He had brought with him from the plane a
coil of stout piano wire. No greater in diameter than a match, it had a
strength sufficient to support several men. This he laid in the trench,
afterward replacing the paving stones, careful no evidence remained of their
having been disturbed.
The end of the piano wire he ran into the
sacrificial well, and straight across and out the other side. To a
dead-man-stick anchor some yards beyond he secured the end, uprooting other
paving blocks and replacing them so the whole work would go unnoticed.
Directly below the well mouth he rigged a
sort of saddle on the wire.
"Catch on?" he asked.
Monk did. "Sure. I hide out there in
the brush and give the wire a big pull when you pass the word. Long Tom,
Johnny, and Ham take turns sitting in that saddle arrangement. When I pull the
wire tight, they will be tossed out of the well. Just like an arrow is thrown
from a bow."
"Or a rock from a kid's bean
shooter," Doc agreed. "One more little detail."
Inside the well, close to the anchored
end, Doc cut the wire. He tied the end in a loop. The other end he secured to
that in such a manner that, by yanking on an ordinary twine string which Doc
attached, the last man thrown out by the ingenious catapult could separate the
wire.
"And
you pull in the end, saddle and all," Doc pointed out to Monk. "That
gets rid of the evidence, in case anybody is suspicious enough to look into the
well."
Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham climbed down
into the well, to spend the rest of the night roosting on the jutting ends of
the huge rocks which formed the masonry walls.
"Don't get drowsy and fall
off!" Monk chided.
"Not much danger!" Long Tom
shuddered. "Just you don't let the end of that wire slip out of your hands
while I'm in the saddle!"
Monk
leered delightedly at his old roasting mate, Ham. "Now, there is an
idea!" he chuckled with mock threat. "I've got the ugliest face in
the world, have I?"
To which Ham grinned: "You're a
raving beauty until I get out of that saddle, Monk!"
A FAIR
degree of daylight came long before the sun actually could be seen from the
floor of the Valley of the Vanished, due to the tremendous depth of the chasm.
With the first flush of luminance, Doc
was in conference with old King Chaac, benign sovereign of the lost clan of
Maya.
The elderly ruler was very enraged when
he heard Morning Breeze and his red-fingered men had consigned three of Doc's
friends to the sacrificial well during the night.
Doc had neglected to mention that his
three men were still quite alive.
"The time has come for a firm
hand!" the Mayan chief said in his surprisingly good English. "In the
past the people have put the warrior sect in its place when their depredations
became unbearable.
"Morning Breeze has been working for
a long time, slowly undermining my authority. Not satisfied with being chief of
the fighting men, which is not such an honorable post, he desires to rule. It
is also no secret that he wishes my daughter in marriage! I shall call together
men and seize Morning Breeze and those next him in authority. They shall follow
your men into the sacrificial well!"
Likable old King Chaac, Doc reflected,
had waited a little too long before putting a firm hand upon Morning Breeze.
"Your people are under the spell of
Morning Breeze's eloquence," Doc pointed out. "To lay hands on him
would cause an uprising."
The Mayan winced a little at the blunt
statement that his power had ebbed. Reluctantly he agreed.
"I have let Morning Breeze go too
far, hoping to avert violence," he admitted. Then he looked wryly at Doc.
"I should have been more alert. Our warriors have never been considered
members of an honorable profession. It is not like your country, where soldiers
are fine men. We Mayans are by nature a peaceable folk. To us war is a low
thing."
He shrugged. "Those of our men who
are inclined to violence naturally turn to the warrior sect. Many lazy men join
the fighting group because the warriors do no labor. Too, petty criminals are
sentenced to join the red-fingered ones. The fighting guild are a class apart.
No upstanding Mayan would think of taking one of them into his home."
"But they seem to have more
influence than that now," Doc smiled.
"They do," King Chaac admitted.
"The red-fingered men fight off invaders from the Valley of the Vanished.
Otherwise their sect would have been abolished hundreds of years ago."
Doc now broached the subject of his
visit. "I have a plan which will dwarf the influence of the red-fingered sect."
Renewed energy flowed into the elderly
Mayan sovereign at Doc's statement. He looked at this bronze Apollo of a man
before him, and seemed to gather confidence.
"What is your plan?"
"I am going to bring my three
friends who were thrown in the sacrificial well back to life," Doc
disclosed.
This brought varied expressions to the
staid Mayan's face. Uppermost was skepticism.
"Your father spent some months in
this Valley of the Vanished," he told Doc. "He taught me many things
- the fallacy of belief in evil spirits and heathen deities. And along with the
rest he taught me that what you have just promised to do is impossible. If your
men were hurled into the sacrificial well, they are dead until judgment
day."
A faint smile warped Doc's strong bronze
lips; appreciation glowed in his flaky golden eyes. The Mayan sovereign was as
free of superstitious, heathen beliefs as any American. Probably more so than
many.
So Doc explained how he had caught his
friends as they were thrown into the fiendish sacrificial pit. A bystander
would have marveled how insignificant Doc made his feat sound.
Elderly King Chaac fell in heartily with
the resurrection scheme.
EVERY
community of human beings has certain individuals who are more addicted to
talking than others. These gossips no sooner get a morsel of news than they
start imparting it to every one they meet.
King Chaac, using his deep understanding
of his Mayan subjects, selected about fifty of these walking newspapers to
witness the reanimation of Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham. There was not room for
the whole tribe, which would have been the best audience. They would have
overflowed the stone paving about the sacrificial well and surely discovered
Monk hidden in the luxuriant tropical growth. And the whole resurrection
depended on Monk's tremendous strength to jerk the wire, the tightening of
which would fling Johnny, Long Tom, and Ham out of the well mouth.
Doc, since his knowledge of the Mayan
language was not sufficient to make a public speech, left the oratory to King
Chaac. The elderly Mayan was an eloquent speaker, his mellow voice making the
clattering gutturals of the language pleasantly liquid.
King Chaac told of the fate of Doc's
three friends during the night. He gave the impression, of course, they had
perished among the sharp rocks and poisonous serpents in the depths of the
sacrificial well.
Finally he announced Doc's act.
Truly impressive was the figure Doc Savage presented as he made dignified
progress to the gaping, evil mouth of the sacrificial well. His face was
serious; not the slightest humor flickered in his golden eyes.
The situation had little comedy. If his trick
failed, there would be serious consequences indeed. The crimson-fingered
warriors would brand him a faker, set upon him. The other Mayans wouldn't
object.
He glanced at the warriors. The entire
clique of fighting men stood to one side, varying expressions on their unlovely
faces - from frank unbelief to fear. They were all curious. And Morning Breeze
glared surly hate.
Doc brought his bronze arms out rigidly
before him. His fists were closed tightly, dramatically. In his left hand was a
quantity of ordinary flash powder, such as photographers use. In his right was
a cigarette lighter.
After what he considered the proper
amount of incantations and mysterious rigmarole, Doc stooped at the well mouth.
So none could see, he poured out a little pile of the flash powder. He touched
a lighter spark to it.
There was a flash, a great bloom of white
smoke. And when the smoke blew away a loud howl of surprise went up from the
red-fingered men.
For Long Tom stood upon the well lip!
The trick had worked perfectly.
Doc followed exactly the same procedure
and got Ham out of the sacrificial pit.
Immediately Morning Breeze tried to dash
up and look into the well. But Doc, with an ominous thunder in his voice,
informed Morning Breeze that powerful invisible spirits, great enemies of his,
were congregated about the sacrificial well mouth. And Morning Breeze
retreated, scared in spite of himself.
Johnny was resurrected next. As Johnny
came out of the pit, he jerked the trip string which separated the wire. And
Monk, concealed in the brush, drew wire and saddle out of the well.
When Doc turned after the last
reanimation and saw the effect on the red-fingered men, it was difficult not to
show his satisfaction. For every warrior was on his knees, arms upstretched.
Only Morning Breeze alone stood. And, after a compelling, hypnotic look from
Doc's golden eyes, even Morning Breeze slouched reluctantly to his knees along
with the rest.
It was a perfect victory. The lay
tribesmen present were as impressed as the red-fingered men. The news would
spread as though broadcast by radio. And to Doc would come the type of
superstitious power, but an infinitely greater amount, that Morning Breeze had
held.
Hearts were light as Doc and his five
friends and King Chaac and entrancing Princess Monja turned away.
BUT their
jubilation was short-lived.
With a piercing howl, Morning Breeze was
on his feet. He urged his satellites erect, even kicking some of the less
willing.
Shouting again in dramatic fashion,
Morning Breeze pointed at the lake shore.
All eyes followed his arm.
Doc's low-wing speed plane had floated
into view around a rocky headland. It was being pushed by a number of
red-fingered warriors who had not attended the session at the sacrificial well.
The plane was no longer blue!
It was daubed with a bilious, motley
assortment of grays and pallid yellows. And prominent upon the fuselage sides
were large red spots.
"The Red Death!" The words rose
in a low moan from the Mayans!
Morning Breeze was quick to seize his
advantage.
"Our gods are angered!" he
shrieked. "They have sent the Red Death upon the blue bird which brought
these whiteskinned devils!"
Renny knotted and unknotted his gigantic,
steel-hard fists.
"The whelp is clever! He repainted
our plane last night," Doc spoke in a voice so low it carried only to his
five friends. "Morning Breeze did not have the intelligence to think that
up, if I am any judge. Somebody is prompting him. And that somebody can only be
the murderer of my father, the fiend who is planning the Hidalgo
revolution."
"But how could that devil get in
touch with Morning Breeze so soon?"
"You forget the blue
monoplane," Doc pointed out. "The craft could have dropped him by
parachute in the Valley of the Vanished."
They ceased speaking to listen to Morning
Breeze harangue his uncertain followers.
"The gods are wroth that we permit
these white heretics in our midst!" was the gist of his exhorting.
"We must wipe them out!"
He was rapidly undoing the good work Doc
had accomplished.
King Chaac addressed Doc in a voice that
was strained but full of violent resolve. "I have never executed one of my
subjects during my entire reign, but I am going to execute one now - Morning
Breeze!"
But before things could progress further,
there came a new and startling interruption.
Chapter 15
THE BLUE BIRD BATTLE
MORNING
Breeze it was who called attention to the new development. And it was evident
from the way he did it that the whole thing was planned. More of the scheme to
discredit Doc which had started with the painting of Doc's plane!
Straight above his head Morning Breeze
pointed.
"Behold!" he shouted. "The
genuine holy blue bird has returned! The same holy blue bird of which we
obtained glimpses before these impostors arrived!"
Every one stared upward.
Perhaps five thousand feet above, a blue
plane was circling slowly. Doc's keen eyes ascertained instantly that it was
the monoplane which had attacked his expedition in Belize. The plane the
instigator of the Hidalgo revolt was using to impress the superstitious Mayans!
Loud gasps came from the assembled
people. The scarlet-fingered warriors recovered their punctured dignity and
cast ominous glances at Doc and his friends. It was plain the tide was turning
against the adventurers.
High overhead, the blue plane continued
to spiral. Its presence had a ghostly quality, for no sound of its motor
reached their ears. Doc, with all his keenness of hearing, could detect but the
faintest drone of the motor. But he knew the explanation. The terrific winds
that comprised the air currents over the chasm were sweeping the sound waves aside.
"I am worried!" benign King
Chaac confided in shaky tones. "My people and the warriors are being
whipped into a religious frenzy by Morning Breeze. I fear they will attack
you."
Doc nodded. He could see that very thing
impending. There was certain to be violence unless he did something to prevent
"The blue bird you see above is
supreme!" Morning Breeze was shrieking. "It is all-powerful. It is
the chosen of your gods! It has no white-skinned worms inside it! Therefore,
destroy these white worms in your midst!"
Doc reached a decision.
"Stand by your guns!" he
directed his men. "If you have to, shoot a few red-fingered men. But try
holding them off a while. Renny, you come with me!"
Doc's friends' whipped out automatic
pistols, which they had kept under their clothing. These automatics were fed by
sixty-cartridge magazines, curled in the shape of compact rams' horns below the
grips. The guns were what is known as continuously automatic in operation -
they fired steadily as long as the trigger was held back. Both guns and
magazines were of Doc's invention, infinitely more compact than ordinary
submachine guns.
At the display of firearms, excited cries
arose from the populace. Ample proof this, that they understood what guns were.
Doc and Renny sprinted for their plane.
AMID a
great splashing, Doc and Renny waded out to the low-wing craft and hoisted
themselves into the cabin. Doc planted his powerful frame in the pilot's
bucket.
"Now if the engines haven't been
tampered with!" Renny grated, anxiety on his long, puritanical face.
Doc stepped on the electro-inertia
starter buttons. The port motor popped black smoke out of the stacks, then
started turning over. Nose engine, starboard - both functioned.
Vastly relieved, Renny lunged back in the cabin. His monster,
flinty hands tore the top from a metal case as another man would open a
cigarette pack. Out of the case came the latest model of Browning machine gun,
airplane type. An ammo box gave way to his iron fingers. The cartridges were
already in long snakes of metal link belt.
The low-wing speed plane was going down
the narrow lake now. Renny threaded a belt into the Browning. The gun was
fitted with a rifle-like stock.
At the lake end, Doc jacked the ship
about with sharp bloops of the engines. The craft gathered speed, a run of the
whole lake length ahead of it. On step, it went. Then into the air.
With a touch little short of wizardry,
Doc banked the speedy plane before it shattered itself against the sheer stone
sides of the chasm. In tight, corkscrew turns, climbing, using all the power of
the motors, Doc mounted out of the great cut.
Overhead the blue monoplane still lurked.
The treacherous air currents seized Doc's
plane, worried it like a Kansas whirlwind would a piece of paper. Once, despite
his expertness, Doc found himself doing a complete wingover. He recovered,
continued to climb out of the Valley of the Vanished.
The air currents, after an interminable
battle, became less violent. Doc pointed the great ship's nose up more steeply.
Suddenly the blue monoplane came hoicking
down the sky lanes to the attack. Grayish wisps like spectral ropes suddenly
streaked past Doc's ship. Tracer bullets! The monoplane was evidently fitted
with a machine gun synchronized to shoot through the propeller blades!
Doc had not expected that - the blue
plane had not possessed such armament when it attacked him in Belize. But he
was not greatly perturbed. At his back was Renny, whose equal with a machine
gun would be hard to find. Renny knew just how to lean into the firing weapon
so as to withstand the recoil and still maintain an accurate aim.
Renny's Browning abruptly released a
long, ripping burst. The blue monoplane rolled wildly to get clear of the slugs
that searched horribly for its vitals.
"Good work!" Doc complimented
Renny.
Then it was Doc's turn to sideslip-skid
his ship out of the procession of slugs that were eating vicious holes in the
left wing end. The pilot of the blue plane was no tyro.
WARILY the
ships jockeyed. Doc's plane was infinitely the larger, but that was certainly
no advantage. And its control surfaces were not designed for combat flying. The
two crafts were nearly evenly matched, with Doc having the great edge in speed
on a straightaway. But this was no straightaway.
Lead from the other ship chewed at the
fuselage, well to the rear.
"Now, Renny!" Doc breathed -
and stood his ship on one wing tip.
Renny's Browning hammered and forked one long tongue of red from
the barrel.
The burst punctured the pilot of the blue
plane! The ship careened over, motor full on. It bored in a howling, unguided
dive for the craggy mountaintop.
Its antics were even wilder as the air
currents gripped it. Far to one side it skittered, then back. A gigantic
suction drew it down into the Valley of the Vanished.
Striking in the deeper part of the lake,
it raised a great geyser of foam.
By the time Doc had battled the rigorous
air down to the lake surface, not a trace of the blue monoplane was to be seen.
Doc taxied over to the beach below the
pyramid. He sprang ashore and ran up the sloping floor of the valley. Directly
for Morning Breeze Doc raced. Now was the time for slam-bang stuff!
Long Tom, Johnny, Ham, and Monk had not
been harmed as yet. But they were ringed around with agitated Mayans. The
Mayans seemed to want to attack the white men as Morning Breeze advised, but at
the same time were afraid of Doc's wrath. For the resurrection had given them
the idea Doc was a superior being. He had killed the blue bird, too.
Morning Breeze saw Doc bearing down on
him. Terror seized the squat, ugly-faced culprit. He shouted for his fellow
warriors to protect him. Four of these advanced. Two had short spears. Two had
the terrible clubs with razor-sharp flakes of obsidian embedded in the heads.
Emboldened by Morning Breeze's shrieked orders, they rushed Doc. And fully
fifteen more warriors, all armed, joined the attack.
What followed went into Mayan history.
Doc's bronzed body seemed to make a
single move - forward. His great, powerful arms did things with a blurred,
unbelievable speed.
The two spearsmen reeled away without
making a thrust. One had a face knocked almost flat by Doc's fist; the other's
right arm was broken and nearly jerked from his body.
The two club wielders found themselves
suddenly pushed forcibly together by two hands which apparently possessed the
power of a hundred ordinary hands. Their heads banged; they saw stars - and
nothing else.
Doc grasped each of these unconscious
warriors by the woven leather mantles they wore secured about their necks. He
slung them, blue girdles flopping, into the midst of the other attackers. A
full half dozen of these went down, mightily bruised and bewildered. The others
milled, all tangled up with each other.
Suddenly Doc was among them! Not
satisfied with overpowering the four, he pitched into the whole crew. Terrific
blows came from his flashing fists. Red-fingered men began to drop in the
milling, fighting mob. Piercing yells of pain arose.
As one, the mob of warriors fled! They
couldn't fight this bronze being who moved too quickly for them to land a
single blow.
Morning Breeze, tremendously chagrined, spun to flee with his
satellites. One leap, two, he took. Then Doc, with a great spring, had him by
the neck.
Doc took Morning Breeze's sacred knife,
his only weapon, away from him.
"Have you some place we can lock him
up so he won't give more trouble?" Doc asked King Chaac. Doc was not even
breathing heavily.
The Mayan sovereign was both amazed and
highly elated. "I have!" he declared.
To one side, entrancing Princess Monja of
the Mayans had been an admiring observer. Her dark eyes, as she watched Doc,
radiated a great deal of feeling.
MORNING
Breeze was cast into a dark, windowless stone dungeon of a room, the only
access to which was through a hole in the ceiling. Over this was fitted a stone
lid of a door which required the combined strength of four squat Mayans to
lift.
King Chaac was all for expelling the
troublesome chief warrior from the Valley of the Vanished. He saw the
undesirability of this, though, when Doc pointed out that Morning Breeze would
only disclose to the world the existence of the golden pyramid.
"Give
him a chance to cool off there in the cell," Doc suggested. "A chance
to think over the error of his way has done wonders for many a criminal."
The Mayan sovereign concluded to follow
that course.
Such was the simple temperament of these
golden-skinned Mayans that Doc and his friends now found themselves generally
accepted in defiance to the red-fingered men's solemn warnings. The influence
of the latter was deflated to such a degree that the other Mayans refused to
even listen to their sinister propaganda - for the warriors quickly tried to
talk themselves into power again.
"We're sitting pretty!" Monk
declared, rubbing his big, furry hands together.
"Knock on wood, you lunk!" Ham
muttered somberly. Monk grinned and tried to knock on Ham's head. "I
wonder why his nibs, the king, is making us wait a month before he concludes
arrangements about this gold?"
"I have no idea," Ham admitted.
"But you recall he mentioned it might not be thirty days."
Monk stretched and yawned tremendously.
"Well, this ain't a bad place to
spend a month's vacation," he decided. "It'll probably he quiet
around here now."
Chapter 16
CURSE OF THE GODS
THAT
night, in the Valley of the Vanished, darkness lay everywhere with the black
intensity of drawing ink. Impenetrable clouds massed above the great chasm
caused this. The air was a bit sultry. Even a novice forecaster could have told
one of the tropical downpours common to Hidalgo was on its way.
Doc and his friends took the precaution
of posting a guard and keeping a light burning. They alternated on guard, but
nothing eventful came to their notice.
At the stone hut where Morning Breeze was
incarcerated, two Mayan citizens kept alert vigil. From time to time the surly
Morning Breeze called them uncomplimentary names and promised them the wrath of
the gods if they didn't release him at once. But the watchmen had been promised
the wrath of Doc Savage if they let Morning Breeze escape, and they feared that
the greater. To them, also, the night gave nothing portentous.
In one spot in the Valley of the
Vanished, however, a devil's cauldron of evil simmered and stewed.
This was near the lower end of the
egg-shaped valley, where the stream cut through the great chasm. In a tiny pock
of a hole among the boulders had congregated most of the red-fingered warriors.
There they lighted a fire and offered a chant to the fire god, one of their
principal deities. There were also prayers to Quetzalcoal, the Sky God; and to
Kukulcan, the Feathered Serpent.
They seemed to be waiting for something,
these villainous ones, and killing the ensuing time with chants calculated to
redeem their sadly depreciated standing. They launched into a ritual devoted to
the Earth Monster, another pagan deity.
This was interrupted by a low rustling of
the leafage that edged the recess where the red-fingered men had gathered. An
amazing figure clambered down and joined them.
A man it was, but he wore a remarkable
masquerade. The body of the garment consisted of an enormous snakeskin, the
hide of a giant boa constrictor. The head of the reptile had been carefully skinned
out, and probably enlarged by some stretching process until it formed a
fantastic hood and mask for the one who wore it.
The man's arms and legs, projecting from
the masquerade garment, were painted a gaudy blue, the Mayan holy color.
Starting on the forehead and down the middle of the back, and nearly to the
dragging end of the snake tail, were feathers. They resembled the trains on the
feather headdress of an American Indian.
The newcomer was obviously made up in
some weird likeness of the Mayan god, Kukulcan, the Feathered Serpent.
The gathering of red-fingered warriors
were greatly impressed. To a man they sank upon their knees and kowtowed to the
hideous apparition in snakeskin and feathers. They undoubtedly knew there was a
man inside the rigmarole, but they were overawed anyway, such superstitious
souls did they possess.
HALTINGLY,
with the greatest of difficulty, the snake man began to speak Mayan. A large
proportion of his words were so poorly uttered as to convey no meaning to his
listeners. At such times the blank expression of the warriors warned him to go
back and repeat. The snake man was plainly an outsider.
But the red-fingered men were completely
under his sway.
"I am the son of Kukulcan, blood of
his blood, flesh of his flesh," the serpent one told his awed audience.
"Did you seize such of the white invaders as you could and throw them into
the sacrificial well? Did you change the color of the white devils' blue plane,
painting marks of the Red Death upon it? This I commanded. Did you do it?"
"We did," muttered a warrior.
The brain back of the snake mask sensed
something wrong. The hideous head jerked, surveying the assembled Mayans.
"Where is your commander, Morning Breeze?"
"He is imprisoned." The
information came reluctantly.
A great rage shook the masked figure.
"Then Savage and his men are still in the good graces of your
people?" he grated.
Slowly the serpent one extracted the
story of what had happened from the humiliated gathering. The information
seemed to stun him. He sat in morose silence, thinking.
A warrior, bolder than the rest,
inquired: "What, O master, became of the two of our number we sent with
you into the outer world to slay this Savage and his father?"
That disclosed who the snake man was. The murderer of Doc
Savage's father! The master of the Red Death! The brains behind the Hidalgo
revolution movement!
Words of answer were slow coming from the
evil mask. The fiendish brain was racing. It would not do to let these
red-fingered men know their two fellows had succumbed to the power of that
supreme adventurer, Doc Savage. It might wipe out some of their faith in the
impostor who was pretending to be the son of the sacred Feathered Serpent.
He needed all his power now, did the
snake man. His plane and pilot destroyed by Doc Savage! This was a blow! He had
intended to use that machine-gun-equipped plane in his revolution against
President Carlos Avispa's government of Hidalgo.
And Savage and his friends were soundly
intrenched in the Valley of the Vanished. Soon all chance to secure the vast
sum needed to finance the revolution would be gone.
"Has Savage gained access to the
gold?" asked the snake man.
"No," replied a well-posted
Mayan. "He does not know but what the pyramid contains all the yellow
metal in the Valley of the Vanished. King Chaac has not told him the truth
yet."
None of the red-fingered ones heard the
words next breathed into the serpent mask. They were: "Thank Heaven for
that!"
The collected warriors began to stir
uneasily. This son of the Feathered Serpent had been full of egoism and orders
on other occasions. Now he was silent. And he had not explained what had
happened to their two comrades. One Mayan repeated the question about their two
fellows.
"They are alive and well!" lied
the snake man. "Listen! Hear me well, my children, for here are my words
of wisdom."
The warriors came under the spell again.
"The Red Death shall strike very
soon!" rumbled the voice back of the serpent mask.
GENUINE
terror now seized upon the Mayans. They shuddered and drew together as if for
protection. Not a one voiced a word.
"The Red Death strikes soon!"
repeated the snake man. "It is the way of Kukulcan, the Feathered Serpent,
my father, to show you he will not have these white men in your midst. You have
sinned grievously in letting them stay. You were warned to destroy them. I, the
voice of my father, the Feathered Serpent, warned you."
A warrior began: "We tried - "
"No excuses!" commanded the
voice from the mask. "By doing two things only can you avert the Red
Death, or stop its progress after it has descended upon you. First, you must destroy
Savage and his men. Second, you must deliver to me, son of the Feathered
Serpent, as much gold as ten men can carry. I will see the gold gets to the
Feathered Serpent,"
The Mayans muttered, squirmed, shuddered.
"Destroy Savage - and bring me all
the gold ten men can carry!" repeated the one they feared. "Only that
will cause the Feathered Serpent to take back his Red Death! I have spoken.
Go."
With steps driven to haste by their
terror of this feathered snake of a thing, the red-fingered men took their
departure. They would sit in their huts and talk about it the rest of the
night. And the more they talked, the more likely they would be to do as they
had been commanded. For it is a strange fact that a crowd of men are less brave
in the face of threat than a single individual. They add to each other's fear.
The snake man did not linger after they
had gone. He quitted the rendezvous, walking furtively, wincing as his bare
feet were mauled by the sharp rocks.
Reaching a low bush, he drew from under
it two ordinary gallon fruit jars. One of these was filled with a red, viscous
fluid. The other contained a much thinner, paler fluid.
On one jar was written:
Germ
culture which causes Red Death
On the other was inscribed:
Cure
for Red Death
These the man in the serpent masquerade
carried most carefully as he made his way in stealth toward the gilded pyramid.
WITHOUT
being observed or arousing any slumbering Mayans, the snake man reached the
pyramid. As he came near the monster pile of fabulously rich gold ore, he could
not control his breathing, so strong was his lust for the yellow metal. The
noisy purling of the stream of water down the pyramid side eliminated any
chance of his being heard, though.
Up
the steps the man felt his way in the intense darkness. The water raced by at
his side. He reached the flattened top of the structure. There he felt about in
the sepia murk until he found what he sought - a small, tanklike pool.
It was this pool that fed the racing
brook down the pyramid side. Just how the pool was kept continuously supplied
with water, in spite of its position high atop the pyramid, the man did not
know or care.
He furtively lit a match.
The contents of the jar labeled Germ
culture which carries Red Death, he emptied into the pool.
From experience, the fiend in the serpent
mask knew the deadly germs would be fed down the pyramid water stream for about
two days. And the entire clan of Mayans obtained their drinking water from that
stream!
Two days and every person in the valley
would be a victim of the gruesome Red Death. Only one thing could save them -
treatment with the stuff in the other jar. Previously - for he had obtained
many offerings of gold from this valley - the man in the snake mask had
administered the cure exactly as he had the disease, by dumping it into the
Mayan water supply.
It was because he saw the end of the
golden offerings once Doc Savage appeared on the scene that the man had sought
to keep Doc from reaching the Valley of the Vanished.
Carrying the empty jar, and the full jar
of the cure, the man retreated down the pyramid. He made his way in silence to
the remote end of the valley, where he had his hiding place. It was here he had
concealed himself after his plane pilot had dropped him by parachute into the
valley the previous night.
En route, the man paused to smash the
empty jar.
The clatter of the breaking glass
instilled an ugly thought in his brain. He toyed with it.
"I will never learn the source of
this gold from old Chaac," he growled. "And no one else knows the
secret. So why should I trouble with curing them after they get sick?"
He made angry noises with his teeth.
"If all in the valley were dead, I could take my time hunting the gold.
And there is a fortune in that pyramid for the taking."
A mean grin crooked the lips back of the
snake-head mask. "They will make many gold offerings before they find out
I am not going to cure them!"
He had reached a decision that showed how
evil and cruel he was. He had no regard at all for human life.
He crashed the bottle of Red Death cure
against a rock, destroying it.
He intended to let the Mayans perish!
Chapter 17
THE BATTLE OF MERCY
DOC
Savage, up ahead of the sun, spent the usual time at the exercises which kept
his amazing bronze body the wonderful mental and physical thing it was. From
force of habit he liked to go through his ritual while alone. Bystanders were
always asking questions as to what this and that was intended to do, pestering
him.
Morning Breeze was still a prisoner. Doc
paid the cell hut a visit to be sure. The guards on duty eyed Doc's bronze form
in open wonder, marveling at its perfection. Doc had not as yet donned his
shirt.
Doc's bared arms looked like those of an
Atlas. The muscles, in repose, were not knotty. They were more like bundled
piano wires on which a thin bronze skin had been painted. And across his chest
and back great, supple cables of tendon lay layer upon layer. It was a rare
sight, that body of Doc's. The Mayans' eyes popped.
Some of the morning Doc spent in
conversation with King Chaac, considering the elderly sovereign had never heard
of a modern university, be had some remarkably accurate knowledge about the
universe.
Pretty Princess Monja, Doc discovered
also, would pass in any society as a well-educated young woman. All she lacked
was a course in the history of the rest of the world. It was amazing.
"We lead a life of leisure here in
the Valley of the Vanished," King Chaac explained. "We have much time
to think, to reason things out."
A little later King Chaac made an
unexpected - and pleasant - revelation.
"You may have wondered why I said I
would delay thirty days or possibly less before I disclosed to you the location
of the gold supply?" he asked.
Doc admitted he had.
"It was my agreement with your
father," smiled King Chaac. "I was to satisfy myself you were a man
of sufficient character to put this fabulous wealth to the use to which it
should be put."
"That was not a bad idea," Doc
agreed.
"I am satisfied," said King
Chaac in a pleased tone. "To- morrow I show you the gold. But first,
to-morrow morning you must be adopted into our Mayan clan. You and your men.
That is necessary. For centuries the word has come down that none but a Mayan
should ever remove the gold. Your adoption into the tribe will fulfill that
command."
Doc expressed the proper appreciation.
The conversation came around to how the gold was to be transported to
civilization.
"We can hardly take it in the plane,
due to the terrific air currents," Doc pointed out.
The elderly Mayan sovereign smiled.
"We have donkeys here in the Valley of the Vanished. I will simply have a
number of them loaded with gold and dispatched to your banker at Blanco
Grande."
Doc was surprised at the simplicity of
the scheme. "But the warlike natives in the surrounding mountains - they
will never let a pack train through."
"In that you are mistaken,"
chuckled King Chaac. "The natives are of Mayan ancestry. They know we are
here; they know why. And for centuries it has been their fighting which has
kept this valley lost to white men. Oh, yes, they will let the pack train
through. And no white man will ever know from whence it came. And they will let
others through as the years pass."
"Is there that much gold?" Doc
inquired.
But King Chaac only smiled secretively
and gave no other answer.
THE Red
Death struck in the middle of that afternoon. A cluster of excited Mayans about
a stone house drew Monk's curious attention. Monk looked inside.
A Mayan was sprawled on a stone bench.
His yellow skin was mottled, feverish, and he was calling for water.
On his neck were vile red patches.
"The Red Death!" Monk muttered
in a horror-filled voice. He ran for Doc, and found him politely listening to
attractive Princess Monja. The young lady had finally cornered Doc alone.
Doc raced to the plane, got his
instrument case.
Entering the Mayan's stone dwelling, Doc
became at once the thing for which he was eminently fitted above all others - a
great doctor and surgeon. From the highest credited medical universities and the
greatest hospitals in America, from the best that Europe had to offer, Doc
garnered his fabulous fund of knowledge of medicine and surgery. He had studied
with the master surgeons in the costliest clinics in the world. And he had
conducted unnumbered experiments of his own when he had advanced beyond the
greatest master's ability to teach.
With his instruments, his supersensitive
ear, his featherllght touch; Doc examined the Mayan.
"What ails him?" Monk wanted to
know.
"It escapes me as yet," Doc was
forced to admit. "Obviously it is the same thing that seized my father.
That means it was administered to this man in some fashion by that devil who is
behind all our troubles. Whoever he is, the fiend must be in the valley now. Probably
the blue airplane brought him and dropped him by parachute at night."
In that Doc's reasoning could not have
been more accurate had he witnessed the arrival of the enemy.
At this juncture Long Tom ran up.
"The Red Death!" he puffed.
"They're collapsing with it all over the city!"
Doc administered an opiate to the first
Mayan to be stricken to ease his pain, then visited a second sufferer. He
questioned each closely on where he had been, what he had eaten. Four more
Mayans he asked the same thing.
Deduction then told him how the Red Death
was being spread!
"The water supply!" he guessed
with exactness.
He showed Long Tom, Johnny, Ham, and
Renny how to administer the opiates that lessened suffering.
"Monk, your knowledge of chemistry
is going to be in need," he declared. "Come on."
Securing test tubes for obtaining samples
of the water, Doc and Monk hurried toward the gleaming yellow pyramid.
Although the epidemic of Red Death had
been under way less than an hour, the cult of red-fingered warriors had been
making full use of the panic it engendered. They were falling over themselves
to spread word that the disease was a punishment inflicted upon the Mayans for
permitting Doc and his friends to remain in the Valley of the Vanished.
Ominous mutterings were arising.
Blue-girdled men everywhere harangued madly, seeking to fan the flames of
hatred.
"And just when things were sailing
smooth for us!" Monk muttered.
DOC and
Monk reached the golden pyramid and started up. Instantly a loud roar of anger
lifted from a crowd of Mayans who had followed them. The crowd was composed of
about half red-fingered fighting men.
They made threatening gestures,
indicating Doc and Monk should not ascend the pyramid. It was an altar,
inviolate to their gods, they screamed. Only Mayans could ascend without
bringing bad luck.
It was the red-fingered men who howled
the loudest.
"We're going to have a fight on our
hands if we go up," Monk whispered.
It was Doc who solved the delicate
situation. He did it simply. He beckoned to attractive Princess Monja, gave her
the test tubes, and told her to dip water from whatever sort of a tank or pool
was on top of the pyramid.
The confidence the young woman showed Doc
did its bit to allay the anger of the Mayans.
Back at the stone house assigned himself
and his friends, Doc set to work.
He had brought a compact quantity of
apparatus. And Monk had his tiny, wonderfully efficient chemical laboratory.
Doc combined the two, went to work analyzing the water.
He had trouble with the Mayans before he
had hardly started. Two of the homeliest of the ugly, red-fingered gentry came
dancing and screaming into the place. They had rubbed some evil-smelling lotion
on themselves, and the odor angered Doc, who depended a great deal on his sense
of smell in his analyzing.
Doc kicked both warriors bodily outdoors.
For a moment it looked like the house was going into a state of siege. Hundreds
of Mayans shrieked and waved arms and weapons outside. It was astounding the
number of spears and terrible clubs they had unearthed.
But memory of what had happened to the
gang of warriors who had attacked Doc the day before made them hesitate.
"Monk," Doc questioned,
"did you bring that gas you made up in my laboratory in New York? The
stuff that paralyzes without harming, I mean."
"I sure did," Monk assured him.
"I'll go get it."
Doc heaved the heavy stone door shut and
continued his analyzing.
Rocks began to bounce against the stone
walls and the flat stone roof. A couple whizzed in the square window.
The yelling has risen to a bedlam.
Suddenly the note of the howling changed
from rage to fear. It diminished greatly in volume. Doc looked out the window
Monk had broken a bottle of his gas where
the wind carried it over the besieging Mayans. Fully half of the malefactors
were stiff and helpless on the earth. They would be thus for possibly two
hours, then the effects would wear off.
This eased the tension for a time,
enabling Doc to continue his work undisturbed.
Test after test he ran on the water. He
had very early isolated a tiny quantity of red, viscous fluid which he had
determined was some sort of germ culture. The question was to find out what
kind of germs.
There was not much time. His father had
succumbed less than three days after being stricken. Probably that was about
the time required for the ghastly disease to prove fatal.
An hour dragged past. Another. Doc worked
tirelessly, with every ounce of his enormous concentration.
The humor of the Mayans rapidly became
worse. Johnny, Ham, and Renny were driven to the stone house where Doc worked.
They were joined by elderly King Chaac and entrancing Princess Monja. Of all
the Mayans, the faith of these two in Doc remained utterly unshaken.
However, there were other Mayans who
remained aloft from the turmoil - people who would probably side with Doc when
the show-down came.
Doc worked without hardly lifting his
head all that afternoon. He labored the night straight through, his experiments
lighted by electric bulbs Long Tom fixed up.
ANOTHER
dawn had come before Doc straightened from the stone bench where he had placed
his apparatus.
"Long Tom!" he called.
Long Tom sprang to Doc's side and
listened to Doc explain what was wanted.
It was an intricate apparatus Long Tom
was to rig, a mechanism to create one of the newest and most marvelous healing
rays known to medical science. Long Tom, electrical wizard that he was, knew
pretty much how it should be made. Doc supplied such details as Long Tom was
not familiar with.
Then Doc quitted the stone building.
His friends flocked to the doors and
windows, armed with machine guns, Monk with his gas bombs. They were certain
Doc would be attacked by the Mayans, who had kept vigil outside all night.
But they witnessed something little short
of a miracle - Doc walked through the crowd untouched! Not a warrior dared lay
a hand upon him, such a hypnotic quality did his golden eyes contain. No doubt
his reputation of a superman in a fight helped.
Fifty or so Mayans trailed Doc. Afraid to
attack him, they nevertheless followed him. But not for far.
Doc reached the jungle-carpeted lower end
of the little valley. With a bound he lifted high from the earth and seized a
limb. A monkey-like flip put him atop it. He ran along it, balancing perfectly,
and sprang to another bough.
Then he was gone, silent as a bronze owl
flittiing along the jungle lanes.
The Mayans milled a while, then returned
to their city. They were met by a group of red-fingered fellows who upbraided
them fiendishly for permitting Doc to walk through their hands. The white man,
they screamed, must be slaughtered.
Somebody had freed squat, tattooed, ugly
Morning Breeze from his dungeon. He was rapidly whipping the Mayans into a
frenzy. He herded them toward the stone house where Doc's friends were
barricaded. Exerting all his powers of persuasion, Morning Breeze got them to
attack.
Monk promptly expended all his gas on the
assailants. They fled, such of them as could, repulsed. But they reunited at a
short distance, a great mob, and listened to the red-fingered men talk.
Now and then a Mayan would stumble off to
his stone home, seized with the horrible Red Death. Perhaps a fourth of the
tribe were already prostrate from the malady.
HALF the
morning had gone when Doc returned. He came via the roofs of the closely spaced
houses, crossing the narrow streets with gigantic leaps only he could manage.
He was inside the stone house with his besieged friends before the Mayans even
awakened to his nearness.
The natives sent up a rumble of anger,
but did not advance.
Doc had brought, tied with roots in a
great bundle, many types of jungle herbs.
With these he set to work. He boiled
some, cooked others, treated some with acids. Slowly he refined the product.
Noon came. The fourth of stricken Mayans
had risen to a third. And with the increased rate of collapse, the temper of
the besiegers was getting shorter. The red-fingered warriors had them believing
that the death of the white men would solve their problem, vanquish the malady.
"I think I've got it!" Doc said
at last. "The cure!"
"I'm out of gas," Monk
muttered. "How are we going to get out of here to treat them?"
For answer, Doc pocketed vials of the
thin pale fluid he had concocted. "Wait here," he directed.
He shoved the stone door ajar suddenly,
stepped inside. The Mayans saw him, rumbled. A couple of spears sped through
the air. But long before the obsidian spear tips shattered against the stone
house, Doc had vaulted to the roof and was gone.
Furtively he prowled through the strange
city. He found a Mayan who had been stricken and forcibly administered some of
the pale medicine. At another home he repeated the operation on an entire
family.
When molested by armed Mayans, he simply
evaded them. His bronzed form would flash around a corner - and all trace would
be gone when the Mayans reached the spot. Once, about mid-afternoon, he did
show resistance to three red-fingered man who happened upon him treating a
household of five Mayans. When Doc left the vicinity, all three warriors were
still unconscious from the blows he had delivered.
Thus, as furtively as though he were a
criminal instead of the angel of mercy he was in reality, he was forced to
skulk and give by main strength the treatment he had devised.
By nightfall, however, his persistence
began to tell. Word spread that the bronze god of a white man was curing the
Red Death!
Doc's concoction, thanks to its unique
medical skill, was proving effective.
By nine o'clock Long Tom could venture
forth without danger and treat unfortunates with his health-ray apparatus. This
had remarkable properties for healing tissue burned out by the ravages of the
Red Death.
"Doc says the Red Death is a rare
tropical fever," Long Tom explained to the greatly interested Princess
Monja. "Originally it must have been the malady of some jungle bird.
Probably similar to an epidemic known as 'parrot fever' which swept the United
States a year or two ago."
"Mr. Savage is a remarkable
man!" the young Mayan woman murmured.
Long Tom nodded soberly. "There is not a thing he can't do, I
reckon."
Chapter 18
FRIENDSHIP
A WEEK
passed. During that time, Doc Savage's position among the Mayans not only
returned to what it had been before the epidemic of the Red Death, but it far
surpassed that.
As man after man of the yellow-skinned
people recovered, a complete change of feeling came about. Doc was the hero of
every stone home. They followed him about in droves, admiring his tremendous
physique, imitating his little manners.
They even spied upon him taking his
inevitable exercise in the mornings. By the end of the week, half the Mayans in
the city were also taking exercises.
Renny, who never took any exercise except
to knock things to pieces with his great fists, thought it very funny.
"Exercise never hurt anybody, unless
they overdid it," Doc told him.
The red-fingered warriors were a
chagrined lot. In fact, Morning Breeze lost a large part of his following. His
erst while satellites scrubbed the red stain off their fingers, threw their
blue maxtli, or girdles, away, and forsook the fighting sect, with King Chaac's
consent.
Less than fifty of the most villainous
remained in Morning Breeze's fold. These were careful not to make themselves
noticed too much, because there was some talk among the upright Mayan citizens
of seeing if there wasn't enough warriors to fill the sacrificial well.
Things seemed to have come to an ideal pass.
Except, possibly, in the case of pretty Princess Monja. She was plainly
infatuated with Doc, but making no headway. She was, of course, well bred
enough not to show her feelings too openly. But all of Doc's friends could see
how it was.
Doc removed all firearms to their stone
headquarters house. He locked the weapons in a room. Long Tom installed a
simple electrical burglar alarm. Monk made up more of his paralyzing gas. He
stored this with the arms. In the face of the peace, such preparations seemed
unnecessary, though.
Every one noted Doc was inexplicably
missing from the city at times. These absences lasted several hours. Then Doc
would reappear. He offered no explanation. Actually, he had been ranging the
jungle sections of the Valley of the Vanished. He was seeking his father's
murderer. He traveled, apelike, among the trees, or silent as a bronze shadow
on the ground.
Near the lower end of the valley he found
what his keen senses told him was the camp of his quarry. But it was a cold
trail. The camp had been deserted some time. Doc tracked the killer a
considerable distance. The scent ended at the trail out of the valley.
THERE came
the day when elderly King Chaac decided things were normal enough to adopt Doc
and his men into the tribe. There was to be a great ceremony.
After they would be shown the gold
source.
The ceremony got under way at the
pyramid.
Since Doc and his friends were to become
honorary Mayans, it was needful that they don Mayan costume for the festivities.
King Chaac furnished the attire.
The garb consisted of short mantles of
stout fiber interwoven with wire gold, brilliant girdles, and high-backed
sandals. Each had a headdress to denote some animal. These towered high, and
interwoven trams of flowers fell down their backs.
Ham took one look at Monk in this
paraphernalia and burst into laughter. "If I just had a grind organ to go
with you!" he chuckled.
Because pistols did not harmonize with
this garb, they left them behind. No danger seemed to threaten, anyway.
The entire populace assembled at the
pyramid for the ceremony. The Mayan men wore the same costume as Doc and his
friends. In addition, some wore a cotton padlike armor, stuffed with sand.
These resembled baseball chest protectors. Those attired in the armor also
carried ceremonial spears and clubs.
Doc noted one thing a little off color.
Morning Breeze and his red-fingered
followers were nowhere about!
Doc gave some thought to that. But there
seemed no serious harm Morning Breeze could do. His fifty men were hopelessly
outnumbered in case they started trouble.
The rituals got under way.
Doc and his men first had their faces
daubed with sacred blue. Mystic designs in other colors were painted on their
arms.
They were next offered various viands to
which ceremonial significance was attached. They each drank honey - honey by
the strange bees of Central America which store it in liquid in the hive, not
in combs. Next was atole, a drink made from maize, and kept in most elaborate
and beautiful jars.
Atop the pyramid, native incense was now
burning in an immense quiche, or ceremonial burner. The fumes, sweeping down
the great golden pyramid in the calm, bracing air, were quite pleasant.
Seated in orderly rows about the pyramid
base, the entire Mayan populace kept up a low chanting. The sound was rhythmic,
certain musical words repeated over and over. There were a few musical
instruments, well handled.
The affair moved rapidly toward the
climax. This would be when Doc and his friends were led up the long flight of
steps bearing offerings of incense for the great burner and little stone images
of the god Kukulcan to place at the feet of the larger statue
It was necessary, King Chaac had
explained, to mount the steps only on their knees. To do otherwise would not be
according to Hoyle.
The Mayan women were taking an equal part
in the ritual with the men. Most of these were very attractive in their
shoulder mantles and knee-length girdles.
The time came when Doc and his friends
started up the long line of steps. It was tricky business balancing on their
knees. Around them, the Mayan chanting pulsed and throbbed with an exciting,
exotic quality.
Yard after yard the adventurers ascended.
Suddenly Morning Breeze appeared. Shrieking, he sprang through the hundreds of
Mayans ringed about the pyramid base.
THAT
halted everything.
It was an unheard-of thing. The ritual
was sacred. For one to interrupt was highest sacrilege.
Hundreds of angry Mayan eyes bore upon
the chief of the red-fingered fighting guild.
Morning Breeze commanded attention with
uplifted arms. "0 children!" he shrilled. "You cannot do this thing!
The gods forbid! They do not want these white men!"
At this juncture some Mayan muttered
loudly that the Mayans didn't want Morning Breeze, either.
Ignoring the hostility, the warrior
leader continued:
"Fearsome will be the fate to fall
upon you if you make these outsiders Mayans. It is forbidden!"
Doc Savage made no move. He saw in this
dramatic interruption a last wild bid by Morning Breeze. The fellow was
desperate. His hotly blazing eyes, the shaking in his 'arms, showed that.
Anyhow,
Doc wanted to see just how deeply the golden-skinned Mayans loved him. He had
confidence in them. They wouldn't listen to Morning Breeze lampoon the white
men for long.
And they didn't!
Dignified King Chaac called a sharp
command. Mayans - the fellows who wore the quilted armor and carried the
weapons - surged for Morning Breeze.
The warrior chief took fight. Like a jack
rabbit in spite of his short legs, the ugly fellow bounded away. At the crowd
skirts he halted.
He screamed: "You fools! For this
you must come to Morning Breeze with your noses in the dirt and beg his mercy!
Otherwise you die! All of you!"
With that proclamation he spun and fled.
Four or five well-cast javelins lent wings to his big, ungainly feet.
The dissenter disappeared in the jungle.
Doc was very thoughtful. He had learned
to judge by men's voices when they were bluffing. Morning Breeze sounded like a
man who had an ace in the hole.
What could it be? Doc pondered. He became
more uneasy. The fiend who had murdered the elder Savage was still at large.
That man was clever, capable of anything. Doc wished his men had their guns.
The ceremonials resumed where they had
left off. For four or five minutes the chanting continued. Bodies swayed
rhythmically. The savage cadence had a quality to arouse, incite strange
feelings.
Again Doc and his friends advanced up the
pyramid stairs, keeping balanced on their knees. The bundles of incense, and
the stone images they carried were getting burdensome.
All eyes were on Doc's magnificent frame.
Truly, thought the yellow-skinned people, here was a worthy addition to the
clan of Maya.
Doc and his five men were almost at the
top. King Chaac was before them, showing where the incense should be placed.
The final words of ritual were about to
be spoken by the sovereign of the Valley of the Vanished.
Then the holocaust broke.
SUDDEN
staccato reports rattled. Shots! They were so closely spaced as to be almost
one loud roar. Their noise beat against the great yellow pyramid in terrible
waves.
"Machine guns!" Renny barked.
Piercing screams, moans of agony, arose
from the assembled Mayans. Several had dropped from the murderous leaden hail!
There had apparently been four rapid-fire
guns. They were situated on the four sides of the pyramid. So well screened
were the weapons that no trace of them or the operators could be seen.
Doc shoved his friends, as well as King
Chaac and the Princess Monja, down in the shelter of the large images on the
pyramid top.
Not a moment too soon! Lead stormed the
spot where they had been. Rock chips showered off the images. One big,
long-nosed likeness even toppled over. Flattened bullets fell about them.
Doc picked up one of those lead blobs,
studied it. His brain, replete with ballistics lore, instantly catalogued the
bullet.
"This is not the caliber of our
guns!" he declared. "That means they haven't seized our weapons. So
some one has brought in machine guns from the outside!"
The adventurers looked at each other.
They knew the answer to the question. The murderer of Doc's father had brought
in the guns!
The hail of lead ceased.
To the right, on a low knoll backed by
brush, Morning Breeze made his appearance.
"You behold the fulfilling of my
prophecy!" he shouted. "Destroy these white men! Crawl to me and beg
for your lives! Acknowledge me as your ruler! Otherwise you shall all
die!"
Even from that distance they could see
Morning Breeze's wild look.
"He's insane," Monk muttered.
"Plumb dingy!"
A flight of spears gave Morning Breeze's
answer. With wild yells of anger, a group of the Mayan citizens attired in
quilted armor charged the warrior chief. A machine gun forced them back,
slaying several.
Then elderly King Chaac raised a great
shout. He called some command at his people. So rapidly did he speak that Doc's
knowledge of Mayan was not sufficient to follow him.
The Mayan people began to run up the
pyramid steps. They came with orderly speed, in a column the full twenty feet
wide.
Doc stared at them, not realizing what
they were intent on. The first of the yellow-skinned people passed him.
Doc now observed King Chaac had exerted
pressure on the large Kukulcan idol beside the water tank that was always
flowing. The idol had levered back. Revealed was a large cavity! Well-worn
stone steps stretched downward into darkness!
Into this opening the column of Mayans
dived. Like well-trained soldiers they sped up the side of the pyramid. But
they seemed as surprised as the white men at sight of the opening.
Doc glanced askance at the elderly Mayan
sovereign.
"Of all my people, only I knew of
this hidden door," explained King Chaac.
The machine guns of the red-fingered
warriors were silent. The orderly retreat up the pyramid side must have them
puzzled. And no doubt they thought they had wrought enough havoc with their
weapons to bring the Mayans to terms.
Doc watched the gun emplacements close -
his sharp eye had located each one. He saw the red-fingered devils show
themselves.
He saw one
other man - a fellow masquerading in a repulsive snakeskin costume. Colored
feathers were arrayed down the back of the hideous serpent outfit.
This revolting figure seemed to be
directing the whole thing. He even gave Morning Breeze orders. Doc, catching
the man's voice faintly, knew by the accent he was no Mayan.
Suddenly the machine guns went into
operation again.
But they had waited too long. Practically
all the Mayans were inside the pyramid. Even as the hail of metal started anew,
the last of the golden-skinned people ducked into the wide, secret door.
King Chaac and Princess Monja now
descended. Doc and his five friends followed.
The Mayan ruler showed them slits in the
masonry. Through these, it was possible to observe whether any one was coming
up the steps.
Even as they looked, some of the
red-fingered warriors ran to the foot of the pyramid and started up the stairs.
"If we just had our guns!"
Renny groaned, his puritanical face genuinely forlorn. But Doc and his men had
left their weapons in their store house.
"Watch!" commanded King Chaac.
He called a low order to some of his men far down the darkened passage into the
depths of the pyramid.
Great, round rocks were passed up and
chucked outside. The dornicks bounded down the steps. The warriors were
battered back. They picked themselves up and fled.
"They cannot get to us here,"
said King Chaac.
DOC Savage
listened to the shouting voice of the man in the snake masquerade. The tones
reached them faintly.
Doc identified the coarse voice! The
snake man was the slayer of the elder Savage, and the prime mover in the
planned Hidalgo revolution. It was the voice Doc had heard in that hotel room
in the Hidalgo capital city, Blanco Grande.
Doc knew now why he had found no trace of
the killer during the past week. The man had been away from the Valley of the
Vanished, getting the machine guns.
"How about food supplies?" Doc
asked.
Reluctantly, King Chaac admitted:
"There is no food."
"Then we're penned up," Doc
pointed out. "There is plenty of water, I presume?"
"Plenty. The stream that supplies
the pool atop the pyramid - we have access to it."
"That helps," Doc admitted.
"Your people may be able to hold out a few days. My men and myself,
accustomed to hardship, might beat that. But we've got to do something."
Suddenly Doc bounded upward to the lip of
the opening in the pyramid top. He glanced quickly about. He decided to take a
chance. It was a chance so slim only a man of Doc's unique powers could wrench
success from it.
"No one shall try to follow
me!" he warned.
Then, with a swift spring, he was out of
the passage that dived down into the innards of the golden pyramid.
So unexpected was Doc's appearance that a
moment elapsed before the clumsy red-fingered machine gunners could turn a
stream of lead on the pyramid top and the tiny temple there. By the time metal
did storm, Doc had bounded off the top.
He did not select the stairs. He had a
better means of descent. The steep, glass-smooth side of the pyramid! The
gold-bearing ore of which the great structure was made was hard. The ages it
had stood there had not weathered away enough of the soft gold to roughen the
original sleekness much.
Leaning well back, Doc coasted downward
on his heels. His leap had given him great momentum.
Twenty feet, and he spun over and over
expertly. Thus, he flashed to one side several yards. It was well he did.
Machine-gun bullets clouted into the course he had been following, and screamed
off into space.
Rich gold ore, broken loose, clattered
down the pyramid. But Doc left it far behind. Mere sliding speed was not
enough. He jumped outward, did it again, until he traveled faster than a
falling object.
He hit the foot of the pyramid at a speed
that would have shattered the body of an ordinary man. Tremendous muscles of
sprung steel cushioned Doc's landing. He never as much as lost his balance.
Like a whippet, he was away.
Into a low depression, he sank. Hungry
lead slugs rattled like hail - but always a yard or two behind Doc. The speed
of his movements was too tremendous for inexperienced marksmen. Even an expert
shot at moving objects would have had trouble getting a bead on that bronze,
corded form.
The depression let Doc into low bushes.
And from that moment he was lost to the murderers with the machine guns.
To the red-fingered warriors, it was
incredible! They clucked among themselves, and looked about wildly for the
flashing thing of bronze that was Doc. They did not find it.
Their leader, the repulsive figure
masqueraded in snakeskin and feathers, was more perturbed than the others. He
cowered among them. He kept very close to a machine gun, as though he expected
that great, bronzed Nemesis of his kind to spring upon him from thin air.
Great was the snake man's terror of Doc
Savage.
Chapter 19
THE BRONZE MASTER
DOC Savage
sped for the stone city. It lay only a few rods away. He haunted low tropical
vegetation to the first stone-paved street. Among the houses he glided.
So quiet was his going that wild tropical
birds perched on the projecting stone roofs of the houses were unfrightened by
his passage; no more scared than had he been the bronze reflection of some
cloud overhead.
Doc was making for the building which had
been his headquarters. In it, he had left his machine guns, rifles, pistols,
and the remarkable gas that was Monk's invention.
He wanted those weapons. With them, the
fifty or so warriors could be defeated in short order. Armed equally, the men
of Morning Breeze could not stand against Doc and his five veteran fighters. So
Doc had taken tremendous chances to get guns.
The headquarters house appeared ahead.
Low, replete with stone carving, it was no more elaborate than the other Mayan
homes. It seemed deserted.
The door, which could be closed solidly
with a pivoted stone slab, but which was ordinarily only curtained, gaped
invitingly. Doc paused and listened.
Back toward the pyramid, a machine gun
snarled out a dozen shots. He heard nothing else.
Doc pushed back the curtain and slid into
the stone house.
No enemies were there.
Doc went across the room, seeming to
glide on ice, so effortlessly did he move. He tried the door of the room in
which they had placed their arms.
He perceived suddenly that Long Tom's electric
burglar alarm had been expertly put out of commission.
No Mayan knew enough to do that!
"The man in the snakeskin!" Doc
decided. "He did it!"
The room door gave before a shove by a
great bronze arm. Doc had expected what he saw when he looked in.
The weapons were gone!
A faint sound came from the street.
Doc spun. Across the room he flashed -
not to the door, but to the window. His keen senses told him a trap was closing
upon him.
Before he reached the window, an object
flashed into it, thrown from the outside. The object - a bottle - broke on the
stone wall. It was filled with a vile-looking fluid. This sprayed over most of
the room.
Doc surmised what the stuff was. Monk's
gas!
His bronze features set with
determination, Doc continued for the window. But a gun muzzle snaked in. It
spat flame. Doc ducked clear of the screaming lead. Gas was everywhere in the
room.
There was no escape that way. He whirled
on the door. But the muzzles of two automatic pistols met him. They were the
guns he had invented. He knew just how fast they could deal death.
Then, slowly, Doc Savage collapsed.
He made a great bronze figure on the
stone floor.
"THE
gas got him!" snarled the man in the snake masquerade, appearing from a
haven of safety behind several red-fingered fighters.
Then, realizing he had spoken in a
language the Mayans could not understand, the man translated: "The
all-powerful breath of the Son of the Feathered Serpent has vanquished the
chief of our enemies."
"Indeed, your magic breath is
powerful!" muttered the warriors in great awe.
"Retreat from the doorway and
windows until the wind has time to sweep my magic breath away," commanded
the snake man.
A gentle breeze had sprung up, slightly
stronger in the streets of the Mayan city than elsewhere. In ten minutes, the
serpent man decided all the gas had been swept out of the stone house.
"Go in!" he directed.
"Seize the bronze devil and drag him to the street!"
His orders were complied with. It was,
however, with the greatest fear that the red-fingered ones laid hands upon the
magnificent bronze form of Doc Savage. Even though the great figure was still
and limp, they feared it.
In the street, they dropped the bronze
giant hastily.
"Cowards!" sneered the snake
man. He was quite brave now. "Can you not see he has succumbed to my
magic? He is helpless! Never again will he defy the son of Kukulcan, the
Feathered Serpent!"
The red-fingered Mayans did not look as
relieved as they might. All too well, they remembered an occasion when Doc had
brought three of his white companions out of the sacrificial well, very much
alive, when they should have been dead. Doc might do the same for himself, they
reasoned.
"Fetch tapir-hide thongs!"
commanded the snake man. "Bind him. Not with a few turns, but with many!
Tie him until he is a great bundle of tapir thongs!"
The warriors hurried to obey. They
returned, bearing long strings of the tough hide.
"Fear him not!" said the
serpent man. "My magic breath has stricken him, so that he will lie
helpless for two hours."
The fellow had profited by talking to the
victim of Monk's gas. He had learned about how long its effects lasted.
"I shall go now to send my magic
breath into the interior of the pyramid!" snarled the snake man. "Six
of you remain here and bind the bronze devil. Bind him well! Death shall strike
all six of you if he escapes! He is to be sacrificed to the Feathered Serpent."
With that warning, the fellow departed,
the long, feather-studded snake tail scraping behind him. He was even more
sinsiter than the reptilian monster after which he was disguised.
He moved from view.
The six evil Mayans seized their festoons
of tapir-hide thongs and leaned over to lay violent hands on Doc. They got the
shock of their lives.
STEEL
talons seemed to trap the throats of two. Another pair bounced away, driven by
pistoning bronze legs.
At no time had Doc Savage been
unconscious. Monk's remarkable gas depended for its action upon inhalation.
Unless some of it penetrated to the lungs, the stuff was quite ineffective.
Because of his conscientious exercises,
Doc had lungs of tremendous capacity. An ordinary man can, by straining himself,
usually hold his breath about a minute. Several minutes is not uncommon for
pearl divers in the South Seas. And Doc Savage, thanks to years of practice,
could hold his breath fully twice as long as the most expert pearl diver.
He had held his breath all the while the
snake man was waiting for the gas fumes to blow from the stone house.
By this ruse, which only he could manage,
Doc had escaped being shot on the spot.
Doc shook the two Mayans whose throats he
held. He brought their heads together, knocking their senses out. The other two
were tangled in the tapir-hide strands, trying to reach their obsidian knives.
Using the two men in his hands as human
clubs, Doc beat the others down. The two his powerful legs had knocked away had
collapsed where they fell.
A single piercing squawl of agony, one
warrior managed to emit. Then all six were sprawled unconscious in the
stone-paved street.
Doc straightened. Into the stone house be
leaped. He would only have a moment. That yell of the red-fingered man would
spread an alarm.
The metal case which contained Monk's
chemicals was not behind the stone bench where Monk had kept it.
Doc was disappointed. He had hoped to get
enough chemicals to rig up gas masks effective against Monk's remarkable vapor.
But the snake man had evidently appropriated the chemicals.
Out of the building, Doc ran. A machine
gun blasted at him from down the narrow street. But it was poorly aimed. The
slugs went wide.
Before the serpent-skin-clad man - it was
he who had fired - could correct his aim, Doc's metallic form had vanished like
smoke. It seemed to float to a building top.
To another roof, Doc leaped, thence
onward. Dropping down into a street, he ran several hundred feet.
There, he purposefully let the
red-fingered crew glimpse him. He disappeared with lightning speed before they
could fire. Howling like a wolf pack, they rushed the spot.
Dozens of them quitted the siege of the
pyramid to aid in the chase.
That was what Doc had maneuvered for. It
was imperative that he get back into the pyramid and devise something to defend
the Mayans against the gas now in the possession of the fiendish warrior sect.
Unseen by any, Doc raced for the
pyramid. So silently did he come, and
so swiftly, that he was gliding up the steps before they saw him. And then it
was too late.
A machine gun cackled angrily. Lead
ricocheted off the steps, or splattered like raindrops.
But Doc was already up the stairs and inside
the pyramid. Even Renny and the others were a little startled at the suddenness
of his appearance. They were awed, too. It was near unbelievable that even Doc
could go and come as he had, with four alert machine guns emplaced about the
pyramid.
"They have secured Monk's gas,"
Doc explained. "They'll try to toss bottles of it into the secret doorway
exposed by moving the idol."
"Then we'll move the idol
back!" Monk grunted.
Straightway, exerting his enormous
strength, Monk shifted the massive stone image of Kukulcan back.
A light sprang up below. One of the
Mayans had lighted a torch. This was composed of a bowl filled with animal oils
and equipped with a wick, not unlike an ordinary lamp. Evidently it had been
placed in this weird place for just such an emergency.
"Chink the cracks with mud,"
Doc directed. "They'll break the glass bottles of the liquid that makes
the gas, hoping it will seep inside."
"BUT
what about our peepholes!" Renny objected. "We can't see them if they
start up the stairs!"
For answer, Doc reached over and took off
Johnny's glasses which had the powerful magnifying lens on the left side.
"Use the right glass - the one that
does not magnify," he suggested. "Pack mud around it, and where could
you find a better porthole. It will keep the gas out."
"Dag-gone!" Monk grinned.
"I don't believe anything will ever stump Doc!"
The Mayans were string about below.
Hundreds of them had gone into the pyramid, Doc reflected. There must be
something in the nature of an underground room, or perhaps passages below.
"If they throw the gas
bottles," Doc told Renny, "they won't rush the steps until they know
the fumes have blown away. So when you see them coming, you'll know it is safe
to open the secret door and roll rocks down the stairs. You can tell the Mayans
to pass up rocks, using sign talk."
"Where you goin'?" Renny wanted
to know.
"To explore. I am very curious about
this place!"
Chapter 20
GOLDEN VAULTS
DOC Savage
took Johnny and Monk with him as he wended into the depths of the golden
pyramid.
He was surprised at the amount of wear
the steps underfoot showed. In spots, they were pitted to half their depth. It
must have taken thousands of human feet to do that.
The sovereign of the Mayans, King Chaac,
had said only he knew of the existence of this place. That meant it had not
been used extensively for generations - possibly not for hundreds of years. For
information about a place such as this would be handed down from father to son
for ages.
At a spot which Doc's expert sense of
distance told him was several feet below the surface of the surrounding ground,
they entered a large room.
Doc noted a cleverly constructed stone
pipe which bore the water that fed the pool on top of the pyramid. This crossed
the room and vanished into another, larger chamber beyond.
This latter was a gigantic hallway,
narrow and low of roof, but of unfathomable length. In fact, it was more of a
tremendous tunnel. It stretched some hundreds of yards, then was lost in a turn
upward.
Down the middle of it ran the finely
constructed stone conduit carrying water.
In this subterranean corridor, King Chaac
and pretty Princess Monja waited with their subjects.
The entrancing young Mayan princess had retained her nerve
remarkably well during the attack. Her golden skin was a trifle pale, but there
was no nervousness in her manner.
King Chaac was maintaining a mien
befitting a ruler.
Doc drew the aged Mayan sovereign aside.
"Would you care to guide Johnny and
Monk and myself into the depths of this cavern?"
The Mayan hesitated. "I would,
gladly! But my people - they might think I had deserted them in their
need."
That was good reasoning, Doc admitted. He
had about decided to go on alone with Monk and Johnny when King Chaac spoke
again.
"My daughter, Princess Monja, knows
as much of these underground passages as I do. She can guide you."
That was agreeable to Doc. It seemed very
welcome to Princess Monja, too.
They set off at once.
"This has the appearance of having
been built and used centuries ago," Doc offered.
Princess Monja nodded. "It was. When
the Mayan race was in its glory, rulers of all this great region, they built
this tunnel and the pyramid outside. A hundred thousand men were kept working
steadily through the span of many lifetimes, according to the history handed
down to my father and myself."
Johnny murmured wonderingly. Johnny had
been taking notes on bits of little-known Mayan lore, intending to write a book
if he ever got time. He probably never would.
Princess Monja continued. "This has
been a guarded secret for centuries. It has been handed down through the rulers
of the Mayans in the Valley of the Vanished. Only the rulers! Until a few
minutes ago, when the attack came, only my father and myself knew of it."
"But why all the secrecy?"
Johnny inquired.
"Because word of its existence might
reach the outer world."
"Huh?" Johnny was puzzled.
Princess Monja smiled slyly. "Wait.
I will show you why knowledge that this existed would inflame the outside
world."
They had reached the upswing in the
tunnel, having covered many hundred yards. Doc knew they were far under the wails
of the chasm that hid the Valley of the Vanished.
Suddenly Princess Monja halted. She
pointed and spoke in a voice low and husky.
"There is the reason! There is the
gold you are to have, Mr. Savage. The gold you are to expend in doing good throughout
the world!"
Johnny and Monk were staring. Their eyes
protruded. They were stunned until they could not even voice astonishment.
DOC Savage
himself, in spite of his marvelous self-control, felt his head swim.
It was unbelievable!
Before then, the corridor had widened. It became a vast room. Solid rock
made walls, floor, roof.
The rock showed veinings of gold! It was
the same kind of rock of which the pyramid was made!
But it was not this that stunned them.
It was the row after row of deep niches
cut into the walls. Literally hundreds
of thousands of the cupboardlike recesses.
In each was stacked golden vessels,
plaques, goblets, amulets. Everything the ancient Mayans had made of the precious
yellow metal could be seen.
"This is the storeroom," said
Princess Monja in a low voice. "Legend has it forty thousand artisans were
continuously employed making the articles, which were then stored here."
Doc, Monk, and Johnny hardly heard her.
Sight of this fabulous wealth had knocked them blind, deaf, and dumb to
everything else.
For the niches held only a fraction of
the hoard here! It lay on the floor in heaps. Great stacks of the raw, rich
gold! And the treasure cavern stretched far beyond the limits to which their
wick-in-a-bowl lamp projected light.
Doc shut his eyes tightly. His bronze
lips worked. He was experiencing one of the great moments of his life.
Here was wealth beyond dream. The ransom
of kings! But no king could ever pay a ransom such as this! It was enough to
buy and sell realms.
Doc's brain raced. This was the legacy
his father had left him. He was to use it in the cause to which his life was
dedicated - to go here and there, from one end of the world to the other,
looking for excitement and adventure; striving to help those who need help;
punishing those who deserve it.
To what better use could it be put?
Pretty Princess Monja, in whose life here
in the Valley of the Vanished, gold meant not a thing, spoke.
"The metal was taken from deeper
within the mountain. Much yet remains. Much more, indeed, than you see stacked
here."
Gradually, the three adventurers snapped
the trance which had seized them. They moved forward.
Ahead of them ran the stone pipe which
fed water to the pyramid pool.
Monk started to count his steps the
length of the treasure vault. He got to three hundred and lost track, his
faculties upset by looking at so much gold. The piles seemed to get higher.
Their route narrowed abruptly. The tunnel floor slanted upward
steeply. A couple of hundred feet, they nearly crawled. Then they came to a tiny lake, where the
stone pipe ended. This was in a small room.
The walls of this room had been but
partially hewn by human hands. Water had excavated a great deal. The stream ran
on the floor.
Ahead stretched the cavern. It seemed to
go on infinitely.
Doc now realized the cavern was partially
the work of the underground stream. It probably extended for miles. Originally,
the Mayans had found gold in the stream mouth. They had ventured into the
cavern, knowing it must have washed out of there.
And they had found this fabulous lode.
PRINCESS
Monja put a query. "Do you wish to go on?"
"Of course," Doc replied.
"We are seeking an outlet. Some manner in which the Mayans can escape
starvation or surrender."
They continued into the depths. The air
was quite cool. There was a wide path, hewn by human hands.
Sizable stalagmites, like icicles of
stone growing upward from the path's middle, showed convincingly that ages had
passed since feet had last trod here.
Often, great rocks near blocked the
trail. They had fallen from the ceiling. And everywhere, gold inlaid the stone
in an ore of fantastic richness.
Doc and his friends had lost interest in
the ore. After the vast riches in the storage cavern, nothing could excite them
much.
Upward wound the underground stream. Two
hours, they toiled ahead. By then, they had gotten beyond the area of gold ore.
There was no path now. No gold glistened in the stone.
The way grew more tortuous. The character
of the rock walls changed. Johnny stopped often to examine the formations. Monk
ranged off into every cranny they came to, hoping to find an exit.
"There is one, somewhere!" Doc
declared. "Not far off, either."
"How can you tell?" Princess
Monja wanted to know. Doc indicated the flame of their torch. It was blowing
about in a manner that showed a distinct breeze.
Johnny dropped behind as far as he could,
and still kept them in sight. In darkness as he was, he knew he would be more
liable to discover an opening into the outer sunlight.
For the same reason, Monk went ahead. The
hairy anthropoid of a fellow had more confidence in his ability to get over
unknown ground.
Doc was himself an interested observer of
the formations of rock through which they were now passing. A villainous,
yellowish-gray deposit attracted him. He scratched it with a thumbnail, and burned
a little in the torch flame. It was a sulphur deposit.
"Sulphur," he repeated aloud.
But no solution to their troubles presented.
They came soon to a rather large side
cavern. The formation was mostly limestone here.
While they waited, Johnny ventured up the
side cavern to explore for an opening. Five minutes passed. Ten.
Johnny returned, shaking his head.
"No luck!" He shrugged.
He was juggling a white, crystalline bit
of substance in a hand.
Doc looked at this. "let me inspect
that, Johnny!"
Johnny passed it over. Doc touched the
end to his tongue. It had a saline taste.
"Saltpeter," he said. "Not
pure, but pure enough."
"I don't understand," Johnny
murmured.
Doc recited a formula: "Saltpeter,
charcoal, and sulphur! I noticed the sulphur back a short distance. We can burn
wood and get the charcoal. What does that add up to?"
Johnny got it: "Gun powder!"
Even as he exclaimed the word, they
received fresh cause for elation.
Monk had gone ahead a hundred yards,
exploring. His howl of delight came to them.
"I see a hole - "
MONK'S
hole proved to be a rip in solid rock of considerable size. Sunlight blazed
through.
Doc, Princess Monja, Johnny, and Monk
clambered up to it. They found crude steps, proof the ancient Mayans had known
of this exit. They sidled cautiously outside, squinting in the sun glare.
They stood on a shelf. Above, to each
side, and below, stretched a sheer wall of rock. It looked almost vertical.
But a close inspection showed a procession of steps leading
downward. Only from close range could these be discovered. They offered a way
to safety, precarious though it might be.
Doc addressed his companions:
"Monk, you go back inside and start
work on that sulphur deposit. Get it out as rapidly as you can. Select the
purest stuff." He told Monk where he had noticed the sulphur.
"Johnny, you harvest a supply of the
saltpeter. Was there much of it?"
"Quite a little," Johnny
admitted.
"Dig it out. I think it is pure enough for our purpose.
Maybe we can refine it a little."
Doc turned to pretty Princess Monja. He
hesitated, then said: "Monja, you've been a brick."
"What's that?" she asked.
Evidently her supply of English slang was limited.
"A wonderful girl," Doc
grinned. "Now, will you do something else. It'll save time."
She smiled. "I will do anything you
say."
The unmistakable adoration in her voice
escaped Doc's notice.
He directed: "Return to the Mayans
gathered under the pyramid. Select the most powerful and active among the men,
and send them here, along with Long Tom, Renny, and Ham."
"I understand," she nodded.
"One thing more - send along a
number of those gold vases. Select those with thick walls, very heavy. Say
about fifty of them. Tell Renny, Long Tom, and Ham I want to make bombs out of
them. They will know which ones will serve best."
"Bombs of gold!" Monk gulped.
"The only thing handy," Doc
pointed out. "And when the men reach you fellows, load them up with the
saltpeter and sulphur."
Before departing, Johnny asked a
question. "Know where we are?"
Doc smiled and pointed. There was another
wall of rock opposite them a few hundred yards. A thousand feet or so below
poured a rushing stream.
"We're in the chasm. The Valley of
the Vanished is somewhere upstream. And it can't be very far."
"The entrance to the valley is
through the chasm, isn't it?" Monk queried.
"It is. Unless you count the new
entrance we've just found."
Johnny, impatient, said: "Come on,
Princess. Come on, Monk. Let's get going!"
WHEN the
three had left him, Doc made his way along the precarious steps to more level
footing. He found a patch of jungle. Gathering the proper woods, he selected a
spot for making his charcoal where the smoke not be noticed.
The charcoal oven he built of stone and
mortar. Two rocks flinty enough to spark a fire could not be located. So, with
a leather string from his mantle, and a curved stick, he made a fire bow. This
twirled a stick until friction started a tiny
glow. In a
moment he had a fire.
The charcoal-manufacturing process was
well under way when his friends appeared. They had about a hundred of the most
manly Mayan men. And from the way they were laden with golden jars, they might
have thought they would not have another chance at the fabulous wealth.
The making of the charcoal was tedious.
Work on the saltpeter and sulphur called for a great deal of Doc's vast
ingenuity and knowledge.
All that afternoon and through the night,
they prepared and mixed.
"We won't rush it," Doc
explained. "This time we want to settle this red-fingered warrior menace
for once and all."
He was ominously silent a bit, then
added. "And one in special - the man in the snake suit."
From time to time, runners dispatched
back through the long reaches of the cavern of treasure to its termination
beneath the Mayan pyramid reported the defenders holding out successfully.
"They have repulsed several
attacks," one messenger brought notice. "One of the fire-spitting
snakes the red-fingered men are using brought hurt to our ruler, King Chaac,
though."
"Is he hurt bad?" Doc demanded.
"In the leg only. He cannot walk
about. But otherwise, he is not in bad shape."
"Who has charge of the
defense?" Doc wanted to know.
"Princess Monja."
Monk, who had overheard, grinned from ear
to ear. "Now there is a girl!"
The bombs were rapidly pushed to completion.
Obsidian, glasslike rock flakes were placed in the gold jars. A quantity of the
powder was poured in to from a core. The gold, being pure and soft, permitted
the jars to be pounded together at the top. The pounding was done carefully.
Fuses offered a problem. Doc solved that
by selecting lengths of a tough tropical vine which had a soft core. Using
long, hardwood twigs, he poked out the core, leaving a hollow tube. One of
these he left extending down into the powder of each bomb.
Making use of his vast fund of knowledge,
Doc concocted a slow-burning variety of the gunpowder. He filled the improvised
fuses with this, after experiments to see what lengths were proper.
With the first silvery glow of dawn, Doc
led the attacking party on the march.
Some of the Mayans were familiar with the
trail into the Valley of the Vanished. It seemed these men had been outside a
time or two to further friendly relations with surrounding natives, who, though
not pure Mayans after the passage of these centuries, were of Mayan ancestry.
Hence the friendship with the lost clan.
Through the treacherous entrance to the
valley, the grim little cavalcade worked. There was no lookout posted at the
chasm path - the first time that had happened in centuries, a Mayan muttered.
Since the lookouts were usually
red-fingered warriors, Doc understood how the snake man had been able to come
and go, unnoticed.
Without revealing themselves to the
besieging warriors, they closed in. The Mayans understood how to light the
bombs. They carried smoldering pieces of punklike wood.
At Doc's signal, an even dozen bombs
rained upon the red-fingered killers.
Chapter 21
THE GOLDEN DEATH
THUNDEROUS
explosion of those twelve bombs was the first warning those of the warrior sect
had of the attack.
Doc had apportioned three explosive
missiles to each of the four emplaced machine guns. He had instructed his Mayan
followers in the art of hurling grenades. Just how well was instantly evident.
All four rapid-fire guns went out of
commission at once!
The devilish warriors, rent and torn by
the obsidian shrapnel, were tossed high into the air. Many perished instantly,
paying in a full measure for their murderous attack on the Mayan citizenry
during the ceremonials.
But plenty remained to put up a fierce
fight.
And some had the guns which had belonged
to Doc and his friends!
With piercing howls, the Mayans fell upon
the surviving rascals. They bombed them wherever four or five were together.
Monk had picked up two stout clubs en
route. One in either hand, he laid about with terrific results.
Renny needed no more than his great iron
fists. Long Tom, Ham, and Johnny stood off and pitched bombs wherever
opportunity presented.
Doc, his golden eyes throwing glances
seemingly everywhere at once, moved back and forth through the combat. Time
after time, red-fingered fiends dropped before his skill and strength without
even knowing what manner of blow had downed them.
The great stone likeness of Kukulcan atop
the pyramid gave a sudden lurch to one side, uncovering the secret entrance to
the mammoth treasure vault of ancient Maya.
Tribesmen poured out. Roaring for
vengeance on the red-fingered ones, they flooded down the pyramid stairs. Some
fell in their excitement. They bounded up unhurt. Rocks, sticks, anything
handy, they seized for the fray.
A spike of steel poked furtively out of a
clump of jungle shrubs. It was the snout of a machine gun. It snarled two
shots, four - bronze hand closed on the
warming barrel. A hand with the strength of alloy steel. It jerked. The gunman,
a finger unluckily hung in the trigger guard, was hauled out of the tropical
foliage.
A warrior! The man probably never saw for
sure it was Doc Savage who had seized the weapon. A block of bronze knuckles
belted the man's temple. He went to his spirit hunting grounds as suddenly as
Mayan man ever did.
Doc was disappointed. He had hoped to get
the snake man or Morning Breeze. The machine gun was one of Doc's own weapons.
He tossed it to Renny.
Rapidly, Doc glided among the combatants.
His attitude was detached, disinterested. He showed fight only when tackled.
Then the consequences were invariably disastrous.
Doc was hunting the man masquerading in
the serpent skin. He wanted Morning Breeze, too. Both had warranted his wrath.
DOC
perceived shortly that the snake man and Morning Breeze were not taking part in
the battle.
With this discovery, Doc slid over and
was swallowed by the luxuriant tropical leafage. He had an idea the two leaders
were skulking somewhere until they saw the outcome of the battle. Around the
scene of the engagement, Doc skirted. No one saw him.
Fully half of the red-fingered men had
now perished. The Mayan populace, terribly incensed, were giving no quarter.
The sect of warriors was being wiped out forever.
Nowhere about the battlefield could Doc
find the two he sought.
He began a second search - and found the
trail. The tracks of two men! The mark left by the dragging serpent tail
identified them with certainty.
Like a hound on a scent, Doc followed the
spoor. Most of the time the tracks were lost to the eye of an ordinary
observer. The snake man and Morning Breeze had taken the greatest care to
conceal them. They went down rocky gullies. They even waded a distance in the
lake edge.
It was plain the pair had fled the moment
they saw their cause was lost.
They were seeking to fly from the Valley
of the Vanished! Their course was set directly for the entrance trail in the
chasm.
Doc suddenly abandoned the tracking
process. He had been moving swiftly, but it was like the wind he now traveled.
He knew whence they were bound. Straight for the chasm exit, he sped.
The snake man and Morning Breeze beat him
there!
The villainous pair had been running.
They had perspired. They had left the smell of sweat on rocks they touched with
their hands. So precarious was the route that they were continually clutching
handholds.
Into the chasm, Doc swung. He traversed
fifty yards, then stopped to kick off his high-backed Mayan sandals. He needed
a delicate touch on this fearsome trail. The way slanted upward.
A few hundred feet below, the little
stream threshed and plunged. So tortuous was his channel that the water became
a great, snarling rope of white foam.
Doc caught sight of his quarry. The pair
were ahead. They looked back - discovered Doc about the same time he saw them.
Over the bawl of the water through the
chasm, Morning Breeze's scream of terror penetrated. It was a piping wail of
fear.
The snake man still wore his
paraphernalia. Probably there had not been time to take it off. He wheeled at
Morning Breeze's shriek.
Evidently they thought Doc had a gun.
Morning Breeze, cowardly soul that he
was, sought madly to get past the snake man. There was not room on the trail
for that.
Angered, the snake man slugged Morning
Breeze with his fist. The Mayan warrior chief fought back. The fellow in the
serpent garb struck again.
Morning Breeze was knocked off the trail.
OVER and
over spun the squat, vicious Mayan's body. It struck a rock spur. Morning
Breeze probably died then. If he did, he was saved the terror of watching the
rock-fanged bottom of the abyss reach for him. The foaming river was like
slaver on those ravenous stone teeth.
Thus, indirectly, did mere terror of Doc
bring death to Morning Breeze.
The snake man continued onward. He had
one of Doc's pistol like machine guns. It could be seen hanging at his belt.
But he did not try to use it. No doubt he thought he would let Doc get closer.
The chase resumed. Doc did not go as
swiftly now. He was unarmed. Wily, he was biding his time. His great brain
sought a plan.
A mile was traversed. Better than two
more! The chasm walls became a vague bit less steep. The stone was crisscrossed
with tiny weather cracks. Most of these were no wider than pencils.
Doc suddenly quitted the trail. He had
another plan. Upward, he worked. Where seemingly no possible foothold offered,
he clung like a fly. His steel fingers, his mobile and powerful feet,
materialized solid support where the eye said there was none.
Doc could make the barest projection
support his weight, thanks to his highly developed sense of balance.
The speed he made was astounding. Nearly
a thousand feet above the snake man, Doc passed the fellow. He went on. His
course was now downward, so as to intercept his quarry.
Doc found the sort of a spot he sought.
The trail rounded a sharp angle. A thousand feet below, hundreds above, was
almost vertical stone. Doc waited around the angle.
Before long, he heard the hard, rattling
breath of the snake man. The fellow was nearly exhausted.
The man was looking back as he came
around the angle in the trail, wondering if Doc had come closer.
Doc reached out a great, bronzed steel
hand. The long, powerful fingers closed over the snake man's gun belt. They
jerked downward. Like an aged string,
the gun belt snapped before that tremendous strength. Doc tossed gun and belt
into the abyss.
Only when he felt the terrific wrench
about his middle did the snake man turn his head and discover Doc. He had
thought his Nemesis was behind him.
The man had removed his serpent-head
mask. His features were disclosed.
THERE was
a terrible silence for a moment.
Then, coming from everywhere, and yet
nowhere, arose a low trilling sound. Like the song of some exotic bird it was,
or the sound of wind filtering through pinnacles of ice. It had an amazing
quality of ventriloquism.
Even looking directly at Doc's lips, one
would not realize from whence the sound emanated.
It was doubtful if Doc even knew he was
making the sound. For it was the small, unconscious thing he did in moments of
utter concentration. It could mean many things. Just now it was a sign of
victory.
The very calmness of the terrible quality
in that whistling sound made the snake man tremble from head to foot. The
fellow's mouth worked. But words would not come. He took a backward step.
Doc did not move. But his inexorable
golden eyes seemed to project themselves toward his quarry. They were
merciless. They chilled. They shriveled. They promised awful things.
Those eyes, far better than words could
have, told the snake man what he could expect.
He tried to speak again. He tried to make
his nerveless legs carry him in flight. He couldn't.
Finally, by a tremendous effort, he did
the one thing that could get him away from those terrifying eyes of Doc's.
The snake man jumped off the trail!
Slowly, his body spun on its way to
death. The face was a pale, grotesque.
It was the face of Don Rubio Gorro,
secretary of state of the republic of Hidalgo.
Chapter 22
TREASURE-TROVE
GREAT was
the jubilation when Doc Savage returned to his Mayan friends in the Valley of
the Vanished. Doc's five men gave him a tumultuous welcome. King Chaac's wound
proved to be minor.
"We cleaned the slate!" Monk
grinned. "Not a red-fingered warrior survived."
Elderly King Chaac put in with a firm
declaration. "The sect of red-fingered men will never be permitted to revive.
Henceforth, we shall punish minor criminals by making them mine the gold. The
most manly of our men will do whatever fighting has to be done."
So jovial did the Mayans feel that they
insisted the ceremony of inducting Doc and his friends into the clan be picked
up at once where it had been interrupted.
The rituals went through without a hitch.
"This makes us members of the
lodge," Ham chuckled, eying the gaudy Mayan trappings they wore. Fresh
clothing had been supplied.
Renny, whom Doc had dispatched to check
over their plane. returned.
"The ship is O.K..," he
reported. "And thanks to the big supply of gasoline we started out with,
there's plenty left to take us to Blanco Grande."
"You are not leaving so soon?"
King Chaac inquired sorrowfully.
And entrancing Princess Monja, standing
near, looked as disappointed as a pretty young lady could.
Doc did not answer immediately. It was
with genuine unwillingness that he had resolved to depart at once. This Valley
of the Vanished was an idyllic spot in which to tarry. One could not desire
more comforts than it offered.
"I would like to remain -
always," he smiled at the Mayan sovereign. "But there is the work to
which my life and the lives of my friends are dedicated. We must carry on,
regardless of personal desires."
"That is true," King Chaac
admitted slowly. "It is the cause to which goes the gold from the
treasure-trove of ancient Maya. Have you any further instructions about how the
wealth should be moved? We will send it by burro train to Blanco Grande - to
whoever you designate as your agent - "
"To Carlos Avispa, President of
Hidalgo," Doc supplied. "It would be difficult to find a more
honorable man than he. I shall designate him my agent."
"Very well," nodded the Mayan.
Doc repeated the other details. "A
third of the gold I shall use to establish a gigantic trust fund in America. It
shall be for the Mayan people, to be used should they ever have need of it. One
fifth goes to the government of Hidalgo. The rest is for my cause."
Preparations for departure now got under
way.
Long Tom, the electrical wizard, at Doc's
command, rigged a radio receiving set in the palace of the Mayan sovereign. The
current for this was supplied by a small generator and water wheel which Long
Tom installed beside the stream flowing from the pyramid top. He made the work
very solid. The set should function perfectly for years. He left spare tubes.
With longlasting ink, Doc made a mark on
the radio dial. This designated a certain wave length.
"Tune in at that spot every seventh
day," Doc commanded King Chaac. "Do so at the hour when the sun
stands directly above the Valley of the Vanished. You will hear my voice
sometimes. But not always, by any means. I shall broadcast to you at that hour
- but only when we are in need of more gold. Then you are to send a burro train
of the precious metal to me."
"It shall be done," agreed the
Mayan ruler.
PRETTY
princess Monja was a sensible girl. She saw bronze, handsome Doc Savage was not
for her. So she made the best of it. Bravely, she hid her disappointment within
her bosom.
She even discussed it philosophically
with homely Monk.
"I suppose he will find some
American girl," she finished, with a catch.
"Now you listen," Monk said
seriously. "There won't be any women in Doc's life. If there was, you'd be
the one. Doc has come nearer falling for you than for any other girl. And some
pippins have tried to snare Doc."
"Is that the truth?" Princess
Monja demanded coyly.
"So help my Aunt Hannah if it
ain't!" Monk declared.
Then Monk got the shock of his eventful
life. Princess Monja suddenly kissed him. Then she fled.
Monk stared after her, grinning from ear
to ear, carefully tasting the young Mayan princess's kiss on his lips.
"Gosh! What Doc is passin' up!"
he ejaculated.
Two days later, Doc Savage and his five
men took their departure. Their sturdy plane battled the air currents up out of
the Valley of the Vanished.
Their regret at leaving the idyllic
paradise was assuaged by the thought of what was ahead of them. The yearning
for adventure and excitement warmed them. Wealth untold was in their hands. It
was ample for even their great purpose in life.
Many parts of the world would see the
coming of this bronze man and his five friends of iron. Many a human fiend
would rue the day he pitted himself against them. Countless rightful causes
would receive help from their powerful hands and superbly trained minds.
Indeed, these men were destined hardly to
reach New York before new trouble struck them like lightning bolts.
The giant bronze man and his five friends
would confront undreamed perils as the very depths of hell itself crashed upon
their heads.
And through all that, the work of Savage
would go on!
THE END