The Man of Bronze

The Man of Bronze by Kenneth Robeson

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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

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