"Kenneth Robeson - Doc Savage 045 - Resurrection Day" - читать интересную книгу автора (Robeson Kenneth) RESURRECTION DAY
A Doc Savage Adventure by Kenneth Robeson This page copyright ┬й 2001 Blackmask Online. http://www.blackmask.com ? Chapter 1. THE COMING MIRACLE ? Chapter 2. THE MIRACLE WAS REAL! ? Chapter 3. SCHEMES ? Chapter 4. CARSON ALEXANDER OLMAN ? Chapter 5. MASTER PLOTTER ? Chapter 6. WISDOM ? Chapter 7. THE MUMMY SWAPPERS ? Chapter 8. RESURRECTION! ? Chapter 9. THE STRANGE MUMMY MAN ? Chapter 10. THE PIRATE PHARAOH ? Chapter 11. AIR FANGS ? Chapter 12. BLACK MOUNTAINS ? Chapter 13. THE DEVIL OF THE DESERT ? Chapter 14. CROOKED TWO ? Chapter 15. TOMB TRAP ? Chapter 16. THB SLY MUMMY MAN ? Chapter 17. THE FIGHT IN THE TOMB ? Chapter 18. WATER Chapter 1. THE COMING MIRACLE IT just happened that General Ino was the first man who saw a truckload of policemen stop in front of the skyscraper which housed Doc Savage's New York headqtiarters. The general would have read about it in his newspaper, along with the rest of the world, a bit later, no doubt. But by seeing the truckload of policemen arrive. he got in on the ground floor, in a manner of speaking. The general stopped to watch. He was interested in what the policemen had on their truck heavy lumber posts, barbed wire, and a keg of staples. The general had a vocational interest in policemen, anyway, having spent many of his waking hours, as well as manv hours taken from his sleeping time, in figuring out ways of keeping out of their clutches. The policemen began unloading their posts. timbers and barbed wire. The orncer in charge gestured and called orders. General Ino's jaw dropped in astonishment. The cops were going to build a barbed-wire barricade acrossone of the busiest streets in New York City! General Ino crowded around with some other curious people who had stopped. The general was not afraid of cops. Not for nothing had he stayed awake nights, for he could walk New York streets undisguised and - practically - unafraid. There was a commotion at the other end of the block, and another truckload of policemen and the makings of a barbed-wire barricade came to a stop near the giant skyscrapers. It was true that General Ino had thus far operated in Egypt, Italy, Japan and elsewhere. Places far from |
|
|