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The Mental Wizard: A Doc Savage Adventure
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Title: The Mental Wizard
Date of first publication: 1937
Author: Lester Dent (as Kenneth Robeson) (1904-1959)
Date first posted: Oct. 5, 2020
Date last updated: Oct. 5, 2020
Faded Page eBook #20201011
This eBook was produced by: Al Haines, Cindy Beyer & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
DOC SAVAGE’S AMAZING CREW
William Harper Littlejohn, the bespectacled scientist who was the world’s greatest living expert on geology and archæology.
Colonel John Renwick, “Renny,” his favorite sport was pounding his massive fists through heavy, paneled doors.
Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Blodgett Mayfair, “Monk,” only a few inches over five feet tall, and yet over 260 pounds. His brutish exterior concealed the mind of a great scientist.
Major Thomas J. Roberts, “Long Tom,” was the physical weakling of the crowd, but a genius at electricity.
Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks, slender and waspy, he was never without his ominous, black sword cane.
WITH THEIR LEADER, THEY WOULD GO ANYWHERE, FIGHT ANYONE, DARE EVERYTHING—SEEKING EXCITEMENT AND PERILOUS ADVENTURE!
Books by Kenneth Robeson
THE MAN OF BRONZE THE MYSTERY UNDER THE SEA
THE THOUSAND-HEADED MAN THE DEADLY DWARF
METEOR MENACE THE OTHER WORLD
THE POLAR TREASURE THE FLAMING FALCONS
BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF THE ANNIHILIST
THE LOST OASIS THE SQUEAKING GOBLINS
THE MONSTERS MAD EYES
THE LAND OF TERROR THE TERROR IN THE NAVY
THE MYSTIC MULLAH DUST OF DEATH
THE PHANTOM CITY RESURRECTION DAY
FEAR CAY HEX
QUEST OF QUI RED SNOW
LAND OF ALWAYS-NIGHT WORLD’S FAIR GOBLIN
FANTASTIC ISLAND THE DAGGER IN THE SKY
MURDER MELODY MERCHANTS OF DISASTER
THE SPOOK LEGION THE GOLD OGRE
THE RED SKULL THE MAN WHO SHOOK THE EARTH
THE SARGASSO OGRE THE SEA MAGICIAN
PIRATE OF THE PACIFIC THE MAN WHO SMILED NO MORE
THE SECRET IN THE SKY THE MIDAS MAN
COLD DEATH LAND OF LONG JUJU
THE CZAR OF FEAR THE FEATHERED OCTOPUS
FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE THE SEA ANGEL
THE GREEN EAGLE DEVIL ON THE MOON
THE DEVIL’S PLAYGROUND HAUNTED OCEAN
DEATH IN SILVER THE VANISHER
THE MENTAL WIZARD
THE MENTAL
WIZARD
A DOC SAVAGE ADVENTURE
BY KENNETH ROBESON
THE MENTAL WIZARD
Originally published in DOC SAVAGE Magazine March 1937
Copyright © 1937 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.
CONTENTS
Chapter Page
PROLOGUE 1
I THE WEIRD GIRL 3
II LAST TESTAMENT 10
III THE REMARKABLE TOURIST 17
IV AROUND THE DYING MAN 24
V SNAKES 34
VI SPELL! 42
VII EXPEDITION 47
VIII RAID 51
IX THE SECRET OF KLANTIC 59
X A JUNGLE AND FOUR PLANES 65
XI WHAT MONK SAW 76
XII TOO FAR IN! 83
XIII FEAR JUNGLE 91
XIV THE BIG MAN 99
XV PRISONER LEGION 103
XVI UPROAR 112
XVII SIEGE 117
XVIII THE KLANTIC 124
XIX THE GOLDEN KNOT 131
THE MENTAL WIZARD
PROLOGUE
Facts do not lie, the old saying goes. What follows, being in general excerpts from newspapers over the past few years may, therefore, be taken for what they are worth. The full items from the newspapers will not be reprinted here, for they have filled scores of news columns and many Sunday pages; and moreover, some of them would make uninteresting reading.
But the clippings and the story they tell, considered as a whole, are more than interesting. They are absorbing to a point where there is a hint of something incredible.
These newspaper clippings deal with one of the unexplored regions of the world, of which there are still a few. Rather, the news stories deal with men who went into the region during the past few years. Never have the news stories dealt with what happened to these men after they penetrated the region. No one knows about that. No one, that is, belonging to what is called the civilized world.
Some of the men went in by foot, with native porters. They never came back. In cases, some, but rarely all, of the natives turned up at distant points, and almost invariably they had strange stories to tell—stories so inarticulate and fantastic that they did not warrant belief from the level-headed managers of frontier trading posts who heard them.
Some of the lost men went by air, their planes equipped with the latest radio apparatus, burdened with plenty of rifles, ammunition and spare food. They have not been heard from.
Expeditions have gone in search of these men. In no case was a substantial trace found of the lost men. In an instance or two, the searchers were not heard from again.
The American Legion organization in the Panama Canal Zone recently sponsored, it is reported, a search for one of these lost men, an aviator. This aviator’s name was Redfern. Many attempts have been made to find another prominent individual who was lost, Fawcett by name.
In no case has a great deal of success greeted the searchers, for the region they had to penetrate is the terrible jungle country on certain headwater branches of the Amazon River in South America.
What is there in that particular jungle which has kept so many men from coming back?
Chapter I
THE WEIRD GIRL
Miracles do not occur too often. El Liberator “Amber” O’Neel very nearly fell over with surprise when one happened to him. But he lost no time in taking advantage of it.
It was, incidentally, a fact that if O’Neel had known what he was letting himself in for, he would probably have crawled under the roots of the nearest mangrove and let the miracle go moaning past.
Carl O’Neel, alias Amber O’Neel, alias El Liberator—he was El Liberator Amber O’Neel just now—was a brave Yankee, too, which was bad, because he was also crooked, cruel, without morals, and all other kinds of a rascal.
Bravery and such qualities are a rare mixture, and a bad one. But O’Neel did not crawl under a mangrove. Instead, he bellowed enthusiastic orders.
“Quick!” he squawled, in Spanish. “Get out there in the clearing! Line up and wave your arms!”
El Liberator Amber O’Neel had been standing at the edge of an open glade in the South American jungle, wishing that a plane would happen along. No sooner the wish, and presto! The sound of an airplane motor was approaching!
“Wave your arms, damn you!” O’Neel howled. “Get that plane down! Then see t
hat it does not get up again!”
Amber O’Neel was in great need of a plane, because the authorities of this South American country of Colombia were looking for him to stand him against a stone wall and see if he were bulletproof. This by way of proving that it is not wise to murder and rob under the guise of being a leader of a gang of patriots trying to make Colombia a land of the free. Colombia was already enough of a land of the free to satisfy almost every one.
“Wave, damn it!” bawled O’Neel. “Wave them arms!”
If he had a plane, Amber O’Neel reflected, he could scout for groups of Colombian soldiers or police, and there would be less likelihood of his raiding a trading post when authority was too near. He chuckled. He would claim the plane was his military air force.
“Get the pilot’s attention!” O’Neel yelled. “Make him think we’re in distress or something!”
The plane, thought O’Neel, would make a swell get-away vehicle when the going got too tough.
O’Neel’s patriots waved their arms as if their lives depended upon it. They were all for their chief, who was as swell a general as they had ever had. Of course, he flew into a rage and shot somebody now and then. But jungle life was cheap, and El Liberator O’Neel was a lad who raided where the raiding was good.
The patriots were a scurvy-looking bunch. Some were natives, jungle savages who looked as if they would be more at home drying human heads. Indeed, they had dried a few.
There were a couple of bums from up Nicaragua way, a bit of scum from Panama, Colombian riffraff. But no whites. O’Neel was white, and he didn’t like more of his own color. Sometimes a white man objected to some of the things O’Neel did.
But El Liberator Amber O’Neel’s rabble patriots were better trained than they looked. Six of them, indeed, were good military aviators, trained by Colombia and other South American republics at some expense.
They all waved their arms vigorously at the plane cruising overhead.
The plane was a model ten years old, and not a pilot in a thousand would have cared about being in it while it was over this kind of jungle. The ship had been flying north, so it must have left behind an unexplored stretch of jungle where, for all any one knew, landing grounds might be a hundred miles between. No place, certainly, for a bus as old as this one.
The pilot flew like a war-time kiwi—a kiwi being a bird with wings that can’t fly. He was going to land. He wabbled down. He tried to skid air speed away, narrowly missed scraping a wing, came down hard, bounced twenty feet straight up, came down on one wing, and the plane began to fall to pieces.
O’Neel cursed wildly. “Looks like that pilot deliberately wrecked his wagon!”
The propeller tied itself into a strange knot. The plane—what was left of it—turned over on its back, and a cloud of splinters and bits of fabric settled on it, and the episode was over. That plane would never take to the air again.
Amber O’Neel produced two long-barreled, small-bore pistols from holsters next to his sides, and he handled them as if each of his hands was a right hand. In fact, that was how Amber O’Neel had gotten one of his nicknames.
He was ambidextrous, could use both hands with equal ease. He boasted about his being ambidextrous. Men who couldn’t pronounce that word had taken to calling him “Amber.”
Amber O’Neel ran toward the plane. He planned to shoot the occupants, if still alive, and take whatever they had. He poked his head and his guns into the interior of the ship.
For some time, he remained in exactly that position.
When he withdrew his head, he looked wide-eyed, startled. His lips made words, but not sounds.
His patriots, who had drawn near, withdrew. Amber O’Neel was fat, innocent-looking. Just a benign, chubby gentleman to the eye. To look at him, you’d trust him with your bank roll. Those who knew him didn’t even want to be around him.
That look on Amber O’Neel’s face scared his patriots.
Amber O’Neel showed no signs of being aware of the flurry among his lovers of liberty—and loot. His guns hung limply in his hands. His mouth kept working, and he swallowed with a great deal of effort, as if trying to down half a banana without chewing it.
“Fever!” he exploded. “That’s what it is! Blast me, I’ve got it, and I’m delirious!”
Then he did something that would have made an onlooker laugh—but not to Amber O’Neel’s face.
He hit himself on the head with the barrels of both guns simultaneously, just hard enough to convince himself he was awake. He looked somewhat childishly pained, then shoved his head into the plane’s cabin again.
“At first, I figured I was seein’ things,” he said, sharply. “What’s the idea of the regalia, lady?”
The fantastically garbed young woman said nothing.
She was a fabulous creature.
Her hair, perhaps, was most striking of all. It was spun gold. Not the spun gold that the poets rhyme about. They mean their girls’ hair to be only like unto spun gold in color and texture. This girl’s hair was spun gold. At least, it had been treated with some gilt process.
She had an oval face with a tendency to length, and there was something absolutely aristocratic about the chiseling of her features. She was not the kind of a beauty every man would try to flirt with. They would hold their breath when she went by.
But it was her attire which held Amber O’Neel breathless. The garments were scanty, in a sense. First was an affair to take care of the upper body, leaving arms and shoulders bare.
It was something like the halter of a modernistic bathing suit. Only halters of modernistic bathing suits are not usually made of cloth composed of chain mesh of heavy gold.
The lower part of the strange ensemble was a pair of shorts of the same rich yellow material, and tall sandals of an unusual-looking leather, which was apparently very pliable.
“Hey!” Amber O’Neel barked. “You knocked speechless or something when the plane crashed?”
The strange-looking young woman pointed with an arm instead of answering. The pointing gesture focused O’Neel’s attention on a strange set of adornments on the exquisitely formed arm. Men’s wrist watches. Six of them, strung in two bracelets.
All seemed to be running, and keeping only slightly different time. They were not alike, and they were styles of different years, as well as having been manufactured in different countries.
Amber O’Neel took his eyes off the watches and stared at what the young woman’s arm was pointing. It was a man, the pilot of the plane, and the only other occupant.
The flier seemed to be senseless. There was a heavy copper ring—not gold, O’Neel made sure—around each ankle, and from the rings dangled a short length of chain. It looked as if the chain had once connected his legs, but he had managed to cut it so that he could run. He wore only a long leather skirt.
He looked like something out of a coffin, this pilot. There was almost seven feet of him, and in his day he had been very much a man, but now his bones might weigh a hundred pounds, the rest of him not nearly so much.
The pilot lay on his side. Amber O’Neel scowled. Obviously, the strange girl with the metallic hair wanted him helped.
O’Neel brought up his two guns. Help him? Sure! Help him keep his mouth shut!
But the gaunt pilot had not been senseless. He had been faking, as was evident when he spoke in a perfectly calm voice.
“If you’ve ever seen anybody shot with .45s, you’ll think again before you lift them things any higher,” he said.
Simultaneously, he rolled a trifle. A big army automatic showed. It looked rusty, but there is nothing to guarantee a rusty gun won’t go off. O’Neel stood very still.
O’Neel had shot men in his time, and knew what happened. They didn’t always die when they were supposed to do. There was a time in Rio when a man with three bullets as nearly in his heart as O’Neel had been able to put them had gotten up and chased O’Neel a block. This flier might pull the automatic trigger even after a bullet hi
t his brain.
Amber O’Neel put his hands up.
“Drop the guns!” ordered the wasted flier.
O’Neel dropped them, and said nothing.
“Head inland and run!” grated the aviator. “We’re going the other way, and it’ll be tough if you follow us!”
The flier paused. He seemed to have something else on his mind, and it did not sit pleasantly. His mouth became a grim line, and he shoved his head forward.
“I hope you go as far inland as I did!” he gritted. “And I hope you find what I found, and what a lot of others have found!”
O’Neel was wishing he had shot it out with the flier. He didn’t like the way the fellow’s gun hand shook.
“What’d they find?” he asked, trying to be sociable.
The pilot got up from the mangled floor of the plane.
“Never mind!” he barked shortly. “Forget it!”
“Who found what?” O’Neel asked, suddenly interested.
“Forget it, I said!” barked the aviator.
Amber O’Neel jerked his head toward the girl. “Did you find her inland somewhere?”
The emaciated flier said, in a disquietingly earnest tone, “I figure maybe I should shoot you because maybe I was excited a minute ago, and now you know too much!”
O’Neel had used that tone himself a time or two. He whirled, fled wildly. At every jump, he expected a shot, but none came. When he finally gained the jungle and flopped behind a tree, he caught his breath and made a resolution: More caution in the future.
That pilot must have seen him coming with his guns drawn and had faked senselessness until he had a chance to get the upper hand.
“I wonder,” muttered O’Neel, “what he meant by that stuff about finding something inland?”
He crawled cautiously for a spot where he could watch the clearing unobserved.
“Probably he found the dame inland,” he decided. “Some looker after her style, but I’ll take mine a little more baby-faced. But I could use some of the stuff her bathing suit was made out of—if the whole thing ain’t some phony set-up!”