The Avenger 16 - The Hate Master

BOOK: The Avenger 16 - The Hate Master
5.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Also In This Series

By Kenneth Robeson

#1: J
USTICE
, I
NC
.
#2: T
HE
Y
ELLOW
H
OARD
#3: T
HE
S
KY
W
ALKER
#4: T
HE
D
EVIL

S
H
ORNS
#5: T
HE
F
ROSTED
D
EATH
#6: T
HE
B
LOOD
R
ING
#7: S
TOCKHOLDERS
IN
D
EATH
#8: T
HE
G
LASS
M
OUNTAIN
#9: T
UNED
F
OR
M
URDER
#10: T
HE
S
MILING
D
OGS
#11: R
IVER
OF
I
CE
#12: T
HE
F
LAME
B
REATHERS
#13: M
URDER
ON
W
HEELS
#14: T
HREE
G
OLD
C
ROWNS
#15: H
OUSE
OF
D
EATH

WARNER PAPERBACK LIBRARY

WARNER PAPERBACK LIBRARY EDITION
F
IRST
P
RINTING
: S
EPTEMBER
, 1973

C
OPYRIGHT
© 1941
BY
S
TREET
& S
MITH
P
UBLICATIONS
, I
NC
.
C
OPYRIGHT
R
ENEWED
1969
BY
T
HE
C
ONDÉ
N
EST
P
UBLICATIONS
, I
NC
.
A
LL
R
IGHTS
R
ESERVED

T
HIS
W
ARNER
P
APERBACK
L
IBRARY
E
DITION
IS
P
UBLISHED
BY
A
RRANGEMENT
W
ITH
T
HE
C
ONDÉ
N
EST
P
UBLICATIONS
. I
NC
.

C
OVER
I
LLUSTRATION
BY
G
EORGE
G
ROSS

W
ARNER
P
APERBACK
L
IBRARY
IS A
D
IVISION
OF
W
ARNER
B
OOKS,
75 R
OCKERFELLER
P
LAZA
, N.Y. 10019.

A Warner Communications Company
ISBN: 0-446-74-262-7

Printed in the United States of America

CONTENTS

THE HATE MASTER

CHAPTER I: Red As Rubies

CHAPTER II: The Search

CHAPTER III: The Furious Rabbits

CHAPTER IV: The Dog’s Owner

CHAPTER V: Winged Madness

CHAPTER VI: The Red Pool

CHAPTER VII: Motor Meeting

CHAPTER VIII: The Devil’s Mask

CHAPTER IX: Death in the Sky

CHAPTER X: Strange Call

CHAPTER XI: Into the Trap

CHAPTER XII: The Mob

CHAPTER XIII: Dollar War

CHAPTER XIV: The “Peacemaker”

CHAPTER XV: Killer Wilson!

CHAPTER XVI: Death for President!

CHAPTER XVII: Hide-Out

CHAPTER XVIII: The Hate Master

THE
HATE MASTER

CHAPTER I
Red As Rubies

Death was there. And worse than death. For death can be clean—a crisp break from living, a straight road into oblivion.

This was a grim and foul thing, to leave its loathsome mark in red-dripping letters over a page in American history better hidden than read.

The place in which this thing was born was secretive, hidden, a perfect spot for unnamable births.

All around, for over four miles in any direction, were thick woods, almost as gloomy and impenetrable as the Black Forests of Europe. Then there was a clearing half as large as a football field. Around the clearing, with trees and underbrush crowding right up to the thick-mesh wire, was a high fence with barbed-wire strands slanting outward at the top.

The wire of the fence was electrified; it carried a load that would bring sure death to any small animal and a severe shock to a human.

In the center of the clearing was the building. It was a one-story structure, looking like a small factory. It was about fifty feet square, with windows from ground to roof along all the walls but one corner. The windows in the corner were average size and had curtains at them, indicating that this corner of the place was for living space. Evidently, some woman was around to make that space as cozy as possible.

The building was not a factory; it was a laboratory. And few in the country were more complete. It belonged to Arthur Morel.

Arthur Morel was a name to conjure with in chemical and biological research circles. The world knew and profited by many of his great inventions.

But the world knew nothing of the one on which he was working, now.

Morel, at half past twelve in the evening, was at a small bench at the far end of his barnlike laboratory. There was little equipment on this bench. It was the space he used when an experiment was almost concluded. And this one was.

Almost, but not quite!

Before Morel there was a tiny scale which could measure a human hair with exactitude. There was also a rack in which a little vial now rested.

The vial was no larger than a man’s thumb. In it was a syrupy-looking liquid, remarkable chiefly for its color. It was as red as blood; as red and sparkling with evil life as if made of liquefied rubies.

Morel stared at this vial, his hands idle for the moment. On his face was a look of impatience, frustration—and hope. And for a little while there was silence in the place, save for the chittering of a cageful of guinea pigs at the opposite end of the lab.

Daylight bulbs cast a white light over the chamber that never varied day or night. But this white light was stained ghastly red where it passed through the small, sinister vial. The red bar of light struck Morel on the left cheekbone, and the sight was so eerie that a stifled scream sounded as a girl came from the corner of the building with the curtained windows and saw the man at the small bench.

Morel turned swiftly, and the girl started walking again and came up to him.

Lila Morel was about twenty-one, tall, full-formed, dressed in gray slacks, but looking extremely feminine in spite of shirt and pants. She was dark-eyed and black-haired, whereas Morel was blue of eyes and gray-blond of hair; but you’d know her as Arthur Morel’s daughter because the cast of their features was the same.

“Sorry I yelled, Dad,” she said. “But you should have seen yourself as I came in! There was a red slash of light across your face that made it look as if a saber had just slashed you and almost taken the top of your head off.”

She shuddered a little, her shapely shoulders quivering.

“You don’t suppose that was in the nature of an evil prophecy, do you?” she said, words light but tone not quite so casual.

Morel smiled a little, though his face was still drawn in the impatient, frustrated lines.

“As a scientist, I can hardly believe in omens,” he said. “As a scientist’s daughter, you ought to be free of superstitions, too.”

“If you could have seen yourself—” Lila began. Then she flung out her hands and words came in a torrent.

“Dad, how long are we going to stay up here in the Maine woods? We’re buried here. It’s a wilderness. Why, all we ever hear is the howling of wolves and the occasional hum of a plane motor!”

She paused, and as if to punctuate her words, there sounded in the distance a long drawn-out wail.

“Wolves! I wouldn’t have thought there was a place left in the United States where you’d hear wolves like that.”

“There are many such places,” Morel said absently.

He was looking at the little vial that seemed filled with liquid rubies.

“Are you coming to bed now?” said Lila. “It’s getting on toward one o’clock in the morning.”

“I’ll be in soon,” said Morel, as if he had scarcely heard her.

“Packer has some milk and a sandwich ready for you,” said Lila, “though you ought not to eat just before going to bed.”

“I’ll be in in a minute,” Morel repeated.

Lila saw that he hardly knew what he was saying. He was already back in his scientific universe, staring at the evil-looking red liquid in the small vial.

She turned slowly and went back to the four-room living quarters in the corner of the building. Morel studied the red stuff, then picked it up together with a small hypodermic needle and walked back toward the guinea pigs.

Time passed, the night deepened. The howl of the wolves gradually died out and there was such silence as is only found in thick woods just before dawn.

Then Morel’s head jerked up, and his light-blue eyes narrowed.

He thought he had heard a sound in the clearing outside that had nothing to do with wolves or other children of nature.

A sound hinting at human origin!

Now, this was impossible. That high fence, with its deadly charge of electricity, saw to that. There was a gate, but the gate was closed; and, when it was closed, it completed the electrical circuit so that it was no easier to climb than the fence itself.

Morel shook his head and turned back to his work. Rather, he started to turn. Then he listened again. And this time he could have sworn he heard a sound at one of the floor-to-ceiling windows, as if someone out there were trying to look in.

The windows were opaque, frosted glass with wire through them. No one could look in. But that sound—

BOOK: The Avenger 16 - The Hate Master
5.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Night Gallery 1 by Rod Serling
An Antic Disposition by Alan Gordon
Love Me for Me by Laurens, Kate
Love Under Two Cowboys by Covington, Cara
The Amber Knight by Katherine John
Black Water by Louise Doughty
Flynn's World by Gregory McDonald
The Wolf Within by Cynthia Eden
Dragon's Lair by Denise Lynn