
time!"
"What I am getting around to is this," continued Ham. "These marvelous discoveries are made by Doc
Savage during periods when he drops from sight. He simply vanishes. Nobody knows where he goes. Nobody
can get in touch with him. It is as though he had dropped from the earth."
"Then our trip to New York is for nothing!" Edna Danielsen said sharply. "Your Doc Savage is supposed to
devote his services to mankind, yet he goes off some place where he cannot be found when he is needed the
most!"
Edna was disappointed at not finding Doc Savage here, and with an unreasonableness not uncommon to the
fair sex, was inclined to blame Doc for not being there.
"Young lady," Ham said severely, "you do not realize that Doc Savage's benefactions to humanity extend
beyond helping every Tom, Dick, and Harry, or Mary, Jane, and Anne out of their private troubles. Doc Savage
has a great laboratory at some remote spot in the world, a laboratory that is unquestionably the finest in
existence. That is my opinion, although even I, one of his five best friends, am not sure. No doubt he has
retired there, and when he appears, he will be bearing some new contribution which will save thousands of
lives.
"That contribution may be a new method of curing some disease. It may be anything. But it will be of vastly
more importance than any personal misfortune you or anybody else might have met in the meantime!"
Ham had spoken with a passion to which he was seldom moved. At his words, the pretty young woman
looked very angry, then thoughtful, and, finally, contrite.
"I'm sorry," she murmured.
Ham bowed an apology. "Pardon my bluntness, if you will. I realize you were not fully aware of the amazing
character of Doc Savage."
Ham now conducted Big Eric and Edna through the rest of Doc Savage's skyscraper aërie.
In an adjoining room was one of the most complete scientific libraries to be found. Thousands of volumes
lined the walls and filled massive floor cases.
Next came the laboratory, a very large room, replete with benches of apparatus and case after case of rare
chemicals and metals. Efficient electric furnaces, mixing machines, exhausting machines, and equipment of
which no one but Doc Savage knew the use, were set on permanent bases here and there.
"The second most complete laboratory in existence," said Ham proudly. "The most complete is undoubtedly
the one which nobody but Doc has ever seen."
THEY returned to the outer office.
"Isn't there any possible way we can get hold of Doc Savage?" Big Eric asked desperately.
"Absolutely no way!" declared Ham. "He will appear here. Until he does, no one can get word to him. Doc
demands absolute solitude when he does his greatest work. It may be weeks before he returns. It may be
minutes."
"I've got millions of dollars," Big Eric muttered. "If money will—"
"It might interest you to know," Ham smiled dryly, "that during the past year Doc Savage has probably spent
on worthy causes more millions than you possess."
"Where'd he get his jack?" inquired Big Eric, with the natural curiosity of a man who has made a success
wishing to know how another man accomplished the same thing.
Ham ignored the question to make a statement.