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
A N 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
Janwillem van de Wetering