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The Annihilist
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Title: The Annihilist: A Doc Savage Adventure
Date of first publication: 1934
Author: Kenneth Robeson [Lester Bernard Dent] (1904-1959)
Date first posted: July 14, 2014
Date last updated: July 14, 2014
Faded Page eBook #20140717
This ebook was produced by: Alex White & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net
The Annihilist
A Doc Savage Adventure
by
Kenneth Robeson
First published DOC SAVAGE Magazine December 1934
Contents
1 THE POP-EYED DEAD
2 THE MYSTERY QUEST
3 THE BOKE MEETING
4 MORE POP-EYED
5 THE HAND OF SULTMAN
6 PAT HITS A SNAG
7 SURPRISE SHADOW
8 THE CRIME GLAND
9 BOKE’S TOUCH
10 TORTURE
11 TERROR OVER THE CITY
12 DEATH ON THE RIVER
13 ULTIMATUM
14 BOKE DECIDES
15 UPSTATE
16 DOUBLE TRAP
17 HARDBOILED’S MISTAKE
18 MONK TAKES HIS DAY
Chapter I
THE POP-EYED DEAD
John Henry Cowlton was the first pop-eyed dead one. Cowlton was a young man who had inherited money, and the newspaper reporters, writing his obituary the next morning, called him a Park Avenue playboy. Cowlton was found in his penthouse gymnasium, and because the gym windows were open and it had been a cold night, his body was frozen only slightly less hard than a rock. There was no mark on John Henry Cowlton’s athletic body. But there was a very peculiar thing wrong with his eyes.
John Henry Cowlton’s eyes were protruding completely from their sockets, and for no good reason that the coroner could find. They were quite horrible, those eyes.
Everett Buckett was the second pop-eyed dead one. They found him in his limousine, which he drove himself. Buckett was a Wall Street operator whose machinations had sometimes moved others to call him “Old Bucket of Blood.” He was worth upward of forty millions of dollars.
There was no mark on his body, but every one who saw his corpse noted the way the eyes stuck out. Not only was this horrible to look at, but it gave the undertaker considerable trouble.
Of course Everett Buckett’s death was connected with that of John Henry Cowlton, on account of the eyes. But the catch was that there was no other connection between the two men, as far as any one knew. They had not even been acquaintances.
And certainly no one could connect “Nutty” Olsen with Everett Buckett, Wall Street wolf, and John Henry Cowlton, Park Avenue socialite.
Nutty Olsen was the next victim, and they found him in his cheap, filthy room with his eyes all a-pop. Nutty had been in numerous jails and he had a long police record; he was known as an utterly bad character. It was even suspected that he had murdered his mother because the old lady had once turned him over to the police. This had never been proved.
All of these deaths were in Manhattan.
The next one was in the Bronx. By this time, newspapers had started putting the pop-eyed deaths on the front page, and people who had nothing else to do were wondering if some new and mysterious disease might not have sprung up.
The Bronx victim was a lawyer, noted as a very honest man. He had a large family. They heard him screaming in his room. When they reached him, he was spread out on the floor with his eyes sticking out.
The tabloid newspapers began to turn handsprings. They ran big headlines; and the more timid citizens of New York began to look into mirrors frequently to see if anything was wrong with their eyes.
The thing was not a joke. A fifth and sixth man were found dead—one a comfortably fixed insurance man, the other a down-and-out hanger-on in a pool hall—and their eyes were not pleasant things to look at. The seventh was a professor in the city’s largest university.
There was no conceivable connection between any of these men. But they all died with their eyes sticking out.
The police department, urged by the mayor, sent to Chicago for a specialist in strange diseases, for none of the victims showed the slightest mark on their bodies. The conservative New York papers became as wild as the tabloids. They did their best to worry every one.
Certain unnaturally timid persons began to go south to Florida earlier than they had intended. Others went to Europe. Those who had country homes paid them a visit. So far, it was only the timid who were worried. But before long, every one was to feel the terror of it.
They thought it was some new disease. They were wrong. Just how hideously wrong, no one had yet realized. The secret of the whole thing started coming out after what happened at the Association of Physical Health.
* * *
In the Association of Physical Health, there was a frosted glass inner-office door which bore the legend:
Dr. J. Sultman, President
Behind the door, a man yelled hoarsely, “I won’t do it! No!”
There were scuffling sounds and a thump as if a chair had been upset. Rattling of the doorknob indicated some one was trying to get out.
In the big outer office, stenographers stopped typing. The flashy blonde on the phone switchboard ceased chewing gum and opened her lips.
The small man sitting in one of the leather chairs reserved for customers lowered his newspaper against his chest and looked over it, then shifted the paper so that his hands were concealed between it and his chest. The small man had long, oily hair and bleak blue eyes. His clothing was extremely conservative.
“Let me out of here, you damned fiend!” roared the voice back of the door.
Then the frosted glass panel broke with a jangling explosion. The man on the other side was beating it out with his fists, and when he had a large opening, he threw a light-brown topcoat over the jagged edges and vaulted through. He did not bother to recover his coat, but plunged toward the elevators, breathing heavily, horror on his face.
The man did not look like one accustomed to violent physical action. He was portly, with ruddy cheeks, and his head was almost bald. He had long-fingered, capable hands, which were also unusually smooth-skinned.
The small man with the newspaper stood erect hastily, let the paper fall, and showed an automatic pistol which it had hidden.
“Wait, brother!” he said.
The portly man looked at the gun, veered sharply to the left and slammed himself down in the shelter of a long leather divan.
“Help!” he roared at the top of his voice. “Police! Help!”
The small man’s mouth twisted, giving his face a cast of extreme evil. He aimed at the divan and began shooting, the gun convulsing and jumping with each ear-shattering report.
Stenographers screamed; nurses began running; and the blonde telephone girl swallowed her gum and tried to crawl under her switchboard.
When the small man’s automatic was empty, he snapped a fresh cartridge clip into the magazine with the skill of an expert gunman. Then he ran around behind the divan.
T
he portly man was a limp heap, leaking crimson in several places, for the bullets had driven through the leather and upholstery of the divan.
The small man shot once more, deliberately, and his victim’s head jarred as a small blue hole appeared a little above the eyes. Then the killer ran for the stairway beside the elevators.
He reached the first stair landing. There he stopped, began to writhe about and shriek.
* * *
Between yells, the killer gnashed his own lips so that scarlet ran down over his chin and stained his necktie and shirt front. He doubled over as best he could, stamping his feet, slowly, then threw back his head.
When his head was back, the strange thing happening to his eyes first became apparent. It looked as if something behind the orbs was slowly forcing them out of their sockets.
The small man fell down on the landing and his gargling noises weakened until, before many seconds had passed, he was silent. He ceased to breathe, but his body still retained its grotesquely stiff posture.
His eyes were all but hanging out of their sockets.
There was only one flight of stairs to the street, and heavy feet pounded these, mounting. Two policemen appeared, hands on hip holsters, and saw the body of the man on the landing.
“I’ll be damned!” gasped one officer, impressed by the dead man’s popping eyes. “Whatcha know about that? The eighth one!”
They went on up the stairs and entered the big reception room of the Association of Physical Health. There was much excitement, one of the stenographers having fainted.
The two policemen shouted down every one, gave orders that nobody was to leave, and one took up a position at the elevators after ascertaining there was no back door. The other cop made a brief inspection of the portly man who had been shot to death behind the divan.
One of the dead man’s arms was outflung, and the wrist was encircled by a shiny metal band which the policeman at first mistook for a wrist watch, only to learn, on closer inspection, that it held in place a round metal disk which bore an inscription that read:
Should anything happen to this man, notify Doc Savage.
“Hell’s bells!” gulped the officer, and ran for a telephone.
The blonde operator was too nervous to put up a connection, so the policeman did it himself, fumbling clumsily with the board.
“Doc Savage speaking,” came over the wire.
The voice which had answered was one so unusual that the officer was startled into momentary silence. There was a remarkable depth and power to the voice, a quality of capability which even the shortcomings of telephonic reproduction did not mask.
“There’s a man dead here,” said the policeman. “On his wrist is an identification tag asking that you be called if anything should happen to him.”
“What is the number on the back of the tag?” Doc Savage asked.
The officer went over and examined the tag, finding a number he had overlooked the first time. Then he came back.
“Twenty-three,” he said.
The policeman waited for some comment—then a bewildered expression overspread his flushed features. He absently put a finger up and rubbed an ear, as if that organ were playing him tricks.
He was hearing one of the strangest sounds ever to come to his attention. It was a weird trilling, this note, having a fantastic rising and falling cadence, yet adhering to no definite tune. It might have been the product of a faint wind through the cold spiles of an ice field, or it might have been the sound of an exotic tropical bird. The note ebbed away as mysteriously as it had arisen.
“I shall be there shortly,” Doc Savage said, and there was no trace of emotion in his unusual voice.
The policeman hung up and breathed, “Whew! Something about that guy gets you, even over the telephone!”
* * *
The other cop, who had come over and heard the last of the conversation, demanded, “Who is this guy Doc Savage?”
The first officer looked dumfounded. “You ain’t kiddin’ me?”
“Oh, I’ve heard gossip about him,” said the other. “But nothing first hand. What’s the dope on him?”
“He’s probably the most unusual bird alive,” said the first officer. “He’s the biggest and strongest man you ever saw. And he’s a whiz! He can do anything. Electricity, chemistry, engineering, he knows all about ’em all.”
“What’s his business?” demanded the other.
The first policeman shrugged. “High adventure, I guess. He likes excitement. And he goes around getting people out of trouble. But what I mean, he tackles things on a big scale. He saves thrones for kings and stops wars. That’s his calibre.”
The cop who was asking questions said, “He has five birds who help him, hasn’t he?”
“Yeah. Scientists, electricians and so on. Each one of the five is a topnotch specialist in some line.”
The other policeman nodded at the body, then at the telephone. “How come you called him?”
“That identification disk——”
“I know. But that’s business for Inspector Hardboiled Humbolt. He won’t like it, your calling this Doc Savage.”
“I don’t give a damn,” said the other officer. “This Doc Savage has done more good for the world than any other ten living men you can name. Yeah—any fifty you can name.”
“Hardboiled Humbolt is gonna lay an egg because you called Savage,” grunted the first cop. “You could call the president and the governor and the marines, and Hardboiled would still kick. He likes to run things.”
“Let him lay the egg,” snorted the other policeman.
They went out to stand guard. Down in the street, the caterwauling of a police siren was becoming louder.
* * *
The roadster had a long wheelbase, but it was not flashy and there was nothing particularly outstanding about its appearance. Only close inspection would have shown that the body was moulded of armor plate and the tires were filled with sponge rubber which would not be affected greatly by bullets. The glasswork was also of bulletproof construction, and the machine was fitted with apparatus for laying either smoke or gas screens.
Under the hood, a siren whined softly.
It was hard to say whether it was the whining of the siren or the appearance of the remarkable bronze man at the wheel which caused traffic to be parted with alacrity. The siren was the type reserved for police squad cars. Furthermore, the license plate consisted simply of three letters and a number—DOC 1.
More than a few persons on the streets recognized the bronze man. His picture was often in the newspapers; his name was mentioned even more frequently in the prints.
“Doc Savage,” some one said, and there was a small stampede for the curb to get a glimpse of the bronze man.
The roadster was a large one, a car in which an ordinary large man would have seemed small. But the bronze man had the build of a giant, even in the open machine. Tremendous muscular strength was apparent in his cabled hands and in the vertical muscles in his neck, which were like hawsers coated with a veneer of bronze.
This bronze hue was the giant’s motif throughout, his unusually fine-textured skin having a metallic hue imparted by long exposure to intense sunlight; his hair, straight and fitting like a metal skullcap, was of a bronze only slightly darker; the quiet brown of his business suit added to the symphony in metal.
Perhaps the eyes of the bronze man were the most impressive thing about him. They were weird, almost fantastic eyes, like nothing so much as pools of fine golden flakes continuously stirred by tiny winds. In them was a hypnotic, compelling quality.
The bronze man wore no head covering, and his eyes roved ceaselessly, seeming never to devote attention to the driving but rather to the streets through which the roadster passed. In spite of the seeming inattention, there was an expert ease about the way he drove.
He reached the building which housed the Association of Physical Health, drew to the curb and switched off the engine. Little more than the
sudden death of the ammeter needle indicated the motor had stopped, so silently had it operated.
The bronze man drifted a metallic, muscle-cabled hand under the dash and touched a switch. Soft static crackle began coming from a radio loud-speaker. He brought a hand microphone to view.
“Monk—Ham,” he said into the mike.
A voice that might have belonged to a small child came from the radio speaker.
“We’re only a few blocks away, Doc,” said this small tone.
“Ham with you?” Doc questioned.
“The shyster? Sure. He’s along.”
“Watch the outside of the building.” Doc Savage directed quietly.
“Sure,” said the child-voiced “Monk.” “What do you know about this Association of Physical Health?”
“It is a concern which makes a business of giving physical examinations,” the bronze man replied. “A physician named Janko Sultman is the president and principal owner.”
Monk asked, “Any idea what this means, Doc?”
“None whatever,” said the bronze giant, and switched off the radio transmitter-receiver equipment.
He could hear the murmur of puzzled voices as soon as he entered the building. A police medical examiner was inspecting the body of the man who had died, pop-eyed, on the stair landing. He bowed with marked deference when he saw Doc Savage.
“What killed him?” Doc Savage queried.
“I haven’t the slightest idea,” the medical examiner said promptly. “It has me stumped. But he’s like the other seven.”
* * *
The bronze man said nothing, but knelt beside the dead man, his intention obviously being to make an examination.
There was a pounding of feet on the stairs, coming down from the second floor above. Doc Savage did not look around.
The newcomer was a burly man almost as large as Doc Savage. He had very large feet which were encased in canvas sneakers, and he walked as if his feet hurt him. His face gave the impression of being composed mostly of jaw.