Pirates of the Pacific: A Doc Savage Adventure Read online




  * A Distributed Proofreaders Canada eBook *

  This eBook is made available at no cost and with very few restrictions. These restrictions apply only if (1) you make a change in the eBook (other than alteration for different display devices), or (2) you are making commercial use of the eBook. If either of these conditions applies, please contact a https://www.fadedpage.com administrator before proceeding. Thousands more FREE eBooks are available at https://www.fadedpage.com.

  This work is in the Canadian public domain, but may be under copyright in some countries. If you live outside Canada, check your country's copyright laws. IF THE BOOK IS UNDER COPYRIGHT IN YOUR COUNTRY, DO NOT DOWNLOAD OR REDISTRIBUTE THIS FILE.

  Title: Pirate of the Pacific

  Date of first publication: 1933

  Author: Lester Dent (as Kenneth Robeson) (1904-1959)

  Date first posted: Dec. 15, 2019

  Date last updated: Dec. 15, 2019

  Faded Page eBook #20191234

  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 THOUSAND-HEADED MAN

  METEOR MENACE

  THE POLAR TREASURE

  BRAND OF THE WEREWOLF

  THE LOST OASIS

  THE MONSTERS

  THE LAND OF TERROR

  THE MYSTIC MULLAH

  THE PHANTOM CITY

  FEAR CAY

  QUEST OF QUI

  LAND OF ALWAYS-NIGHT

  FANTASTIC ISLAND

  MURDER MELODY

  THE SPOOK LEGION

  THE RED SKULL

  THE SARGASSO OGRE

  PIRATE OF

  THE PACIFIC

  A DOC SAVAGE ADVENTURE

  BY KENNETH ROBESON

  PIRATE OF THE PACIFIC

  Originally published in DOC SAVAGE MAGAZINE July 1933

  Copyright © 1933 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.

  CONTENTS

  Chapter Page

  1. The Yellow Killers 1

  2. Sea Phantom 6

  3. The Mongol Peril 12

  4. The Dripping Sword 18

  5. The Dragon Trail 26

  6. The Stolen Glass 32

  7. Death Trail 37

  8. A Pirate of To-day 44

  9. His Arm Fell Off 50

  10. The Luzon Trail 58

  11. Peril Liner 64

  12. Treachery 71

  13. Water Escape 78

  14. Hunted Men 84

  15. Rescue Trail 90

  16. The Buccaneer Mutiny 95

  17. The Sunken Yacht 102

  18. Payment in Suicide 107

  19. Tom Too’s Lair 113

  20. The Tightening Net 118

  21. Sea Chase 127

  22. Red Blade 132

  Chapter 1

  THE YELLOW KILLERS

  Three laundry trucks stopped in the moonlight near a large commercial airport on Long Island. They made little noise. The machines bore the name of a New York City laundry firm.

  The drivers peered furtively up and down the road. They seemed relieved that no one was in sight. Getting out, they walked slowly around the trucks, eyes probing everywhere, ears straining.

  They were stocky, yellow-skinned, slant-eyed men. Their faces were broad and flat, their hair black and coarse. They looked like half-castes.

  Satisfied, the three exchanged glances. They could see each other distinctly in the moonlight. No word was spoken. One driver lifted an arm—a silent signal.

  Each Mongol dragged a dead man from the cab of his truck. All three victims had been stabbed expertly through the heart. They wore the white uniforms of laundry drivers, and on each uniform was embroidered the same name the trucks bore.

  A roadside ditch received the three bodies.

  Rear doors of the trucks were now opened. Fully a dozen Mongols and half-castes crawled out of the vehicles. They clustered beside the road.

  Their faces were inscrutable; no muscle twitched, not a slant eye wavered. They were like a collection of placid, evil yellow images.

  No weapons were in sight. But their clothing bulged suspiciously.

  The first driver’s arm elevated in another noiseless signal. The fellow seemed to be in charge.

  The whole crowd glided quietly down the side road that led to the airport.

  Plane hangars were an orderly row of fat, drab humps ahead. Faint strains of radio music came from one of them. A high fence of heavy woven wire encircled both hangars and plane runways.

  Near the main gate in the fence, a guard lounged. His only movement was an occasional lusty swing at a night insect.

  “These blasted mosquitoes are bigger’n hawks!” he grumbled, speaking aloud for his own company. “They must be flyin’ over from the Jersey marshes.”

  The guard discerned a man approaching. He forgot his mosquitoes as he peered into the darkness to see who was approaching. When the man came within a few yards, the guard was able to distinguish his features.

  “Hy’ah, yellow boy!” he grinned. “You can’t poke around here at night. This is private property.”

  The Mongol replied with a gibberish that was unintelligible to the watchman.

  “No savvy!” said the guard. “Splickee English!”

  The Oriental came closer, gesturing earnestly with his hands.

  The unfortunate guard never saw another figure glide up in the moonlight behind him. Moonlight flickered on a thick, heavy object. The weapon struck with a vicious, sidewise swipe.

  The sound, as it hit, was like a loud, heavy thump. The guard piled down on the ground, out in a second.

  * * *

  The other Mongols and half-castes now came up. They strode past the unconscious guard as though they hadn’t seen him, passed through the gate in the high fence, and continued purposefully for the hangars.

  No commands had been spoken. They were functioning like a deadly machine, following a deliberate plan.

  Music from the radio was thumping a more rapid tempo—the musicians were working up to one of those grand slam endings. The radio instrument itself was a midget set, no larger than a shoe box.

  Another night worker of the airport had plugged it into a power outlet on a workbench in a corner of the hangar. He lolled in the cockpit of a plane and listened to the music.

  “Get hot!” he exhorted the radio, and beat time on the taut fuselage fabric with his palms.

  Night traffic at this airport was negligible, and two men were the extent of the airport staff—this man, and the one at the gate.

  The radio music came to an end. The station announcer introduced the next feature—a regular fifteen-minute news broadcast.

  The man scowl
ed and slouched more lazily in the plane cockpit. He was not enthusiastic about this particular news broadcaster. The fellow handled the news in too dignified and conservative a fashion. He didn’t set things afire.

  “Good evening,” said the radio commentator. “To-night, somewhere out on Long Island Sound, the under-the-polar-ice submarine, Helldiver, is coming. The craft was sighted by an airplane pilot shortly before darkness. She was headed toward New York.

  “Arrival of the Helldiver in New York will bring to a close one of the most weird and mystifying adventures of modern days. The submarine left the United States many weeks ago, and vanished into the arctic regions. Approximately forty persons started the trip. Yet the craft is returning to-night with but six living men aboard, the others having perished in the polar wastes.”

  The man listened with more attention. This was quite a change from the news broadcaster’s usual routine of foreign and political stuff.

  Another fact made the news interesting and surprising to the listener. This was the first he had heard of the submarine Helldiver, on an expedition into the arctic regions. About forty had started out, and six were coming back!

  Here was something worth listening to! Strange the papers had not carried a lot of ballyhoo about the start of the expedition! Explorers were usually anxious to get their pictures on the front pages.

  The next words from the radio clarified this mystery.

  “From the beginning, this polar submarine expedition has been a strangely secret affair,” continued the commentator. “Not a newspaper carried a word of the sailing. Indeed, the world might still know nothing of the amazing feat, had several radio operators not tipped newspaper reporters that messages were being sent and received which disclosed the submarine was in the vicinity of the north pole. This information was something of a shock to the newspapermen. It meant they were losing out on one of the big news stories of the year. They had not even known the expedition was under way.

  “During the last few days, there has been a great rush among newspapers striving to be first to carry a story of the expedition. They seem to be up against a blank wall. The men aboard the underseas boat sent word by radio that they wanted no publicity and that no story of the trip would be given out.

  “Only two facts have been learned. The first is that but six men out of approximately forty are returning. The second bit of information was that the expedition is commanded by one of the most mysterious and remarkable men living in this day.

  “That man is Doc Savage!”

  * * *

  The news broadcaster paused to give emphasis to the name he had just pronounced.

  The listening man was leaning over the cockpit edge, all interest. He did not see the yellow murder mask of a face framed in a small, open side door of the hangar. Nor did he see hands like bundles of yellowed bones as they silently lifted a strange death instrument and trained it on him.

  “Doc Savage!” grunted the man. “Never heard of the guy!”

  The voice from the radio continued. “Doc Savage is a man practically unknown to the public. Yet in scientific circles, he has a fame that is priceless. His name is something to conjure with.

  “Last night, I was fortunate enough to attend a banquet given by scientific men here in New York. Many learned men attended. In the course of the evening, I heard references to important discoveries made by Doc Savage. The really bewildering thing about these discoveries was that they were made in widely different fields, ranging from surgery, chemistry, and electricity to the perfecting of a new, quick-growing species of lumber tree.

  “Amazement seized me as I listened to eminent scientists discuss Doc Savage, the man of mystery, in the most glowing words. It seemed impossible they could speak in such terms of one man without exaggerating. Yet these were men certainly not given to exaggeration. I am going to give you a word picture of this man of mystery of whom they talked.

  “Doc Savage is, despite his amazing accomplishments, a young man. He is a striking bronze giant of a figure. His physical strength, my informants assured me, is on a par with his mental ability. That means he is a marvel of muscular development. One of the scientists at the banquet told me in entire seriousness that, were Savage to enter athletic competition, his name would leap to the headlines of every paper in the country.

  “This man of mystery has been trained from the cradle, until now he is almost a super being. This training, given by his father, was to fit Doc Savage for a definite purpose in life.

  “That purpose is to travel from one end of the world to the other, striving to help those who need help, punishing those who deserve punishment.

  “Associated with Doc Savage are five men who love excitement and adventure, and who have dedicated themselves to their leader’s creed of benefiting humanity.

  “A strange and mysterious group of men, this! So unusual that the bare facts I am telling you now cannot but sound unreal and far-fetched. Yet I can assure you my information came from the most conservative and reliable sources.”

  The listening man blinked as he digested the words that came to his ears. “This Doc Savage must be quite a guy,” he grunted.

  Then the sneaking face was near. As unknowing as the watchman’s companion at the gate, the man in the plane fell before the blow of the weapon, crumpled in his seat, unconscious or dead—the attacker did not look to see.

  * * *

  Slant-eyed men poured into the hangar. No orders were uttered. The half-caste Orientals were still following their plan. Their efficiency was terrible, deadly. The whole group worked as one unit, an expert killing machine.

  Two opened the hangar doors. Others busied themselves making four pursuit planes ready for the air. These ships were the most modern craft, yet the sinister men showed familiarity with the mechanism.

  Three yellow raiders rushed up to the planes, carrying guns and bombs. The guns were quickly attached; the bombs were racked in clips on the undersides of the planes.

  More men secured four parachutes from a locker room.

  No time was wasted in scampering about the airport hunting for things. They knew exactly where everything was located.

  The planes were strong-armed out of the hangars. Four Orientals dug goggles and helmets out of their clothing. The helmets were a brilliant red color.

  The men cinched on the parachutes, then plugged into the cockpits. The scarlet helmets made them resemble a quartet of red-headed woodpeckers.

  Exhaust thunder galloped across the tarmac as the motors started. Prop-streams tore dust from under the ships and pushed it away in squirming masses.

  The planes flung along the runway, vaulted off, and slanted up into the now moon-whitened sky.

  The Orientals who had been left behind lost no time in quitting the airport. Racing to the three laundry trucks, they entered, and drove hastily away.

  Three or four minutes after the planes departed, no one was left at the airport. The two watchmen lay where they had dropped, still unconscious. In the ditch beside the road sprawled the three slain drivers of the laundry trucks.

  The adjacent countryside slept on peacefully. The four planes booming overhead attracted no attention, since night flying was not unusual even at this quiet port.

  Within ten minutes, Long Island Sound was crawling under the craft. The surface of the Sound was like a faintly pitted silver plate, shimmering in the brilliant moonlight.

  The planes spread out widely and flew low. Each Oriental pilot had high-magnification binoculars jammed to his eyes. With the same machine thoroughness which had stamped their bloody actions at the airport, they searched the Sound surface.

  It was not long before they found what they sought—a narrow craft trailing across the Sound at the head of a long wedge of foaming wake.

  The planes headed purposefully for this vessel.

  Chapter 2

  SEA PHANTOM

  The quarry came rapidly closer. More details of the craft were discernible. The half-caste Mongol pilots
continued to use their binoculars. They tilted their planes down in steep dives toward the unusual vessel below.

  It was a submarine. It resembled a lean-flanked, razorback whale several hundred feet long. Big steel runners extended from bow to stern, sled fashion. Amidships, a sort of collapsible conning tower reared.

  The underseas craft floated high. On the bows, a lettered name was readable:

  HELLDIVER.

  It was this submarine which had been the subject of the radio news commentator’s broadcast.

  With deadly precision, the four planes roared down at the submersible. The Orientals had discarded their binoculars, and had their eyes pasted to the bomb sights. Yellow hands were poised, muscles drawn wire-hard, on bomb trips.

  A naval bombing expert, knowing all the facts, would have sworn the submarine didn’t have a chance of escaping. It would be blown out of the water by the bombs.

  The Mongol pilots were hot-eyed, snarling—yellow faces no longer inscrutable. They were about to accomplish the purpose of their bloody plot—the death of every one aboard the under-the-polar-ice submarine.

  They got a shock.

  From a dozen spots, the sub hull spewed smoke as black as drawing ink. Heaving, squirming, the dense smudge spread. It blotted the underseas boat from view, and blanketed the surface of the Sound for hundreds of feet in every direction.

  With desperate haste, the Orientals deposited bombs in the center of the smoke mushroom. These explosions drove up treelike columns from the black body of the smoke mass. It was impossible to tell whether the sub had been damaged.

  The four planes might have been angry, metallic bees droning over some gigantic, strange, black blossom, as they hovered watchfully. They did not waste more bombs, since the smoke cloud was now half a mile across. In it, the sub was like a needle in a haystack.