not climb upon the ice, so depleted was their strength.

Ben O'Gard was last to slip back to his death.

Monk let a long breath swish from his cavernous lungs.

'He'd better get plenty chilled, because it's mighty hot where he's goin'!' muttered the gorilla of a chemist. 'He paid a mighty high price tryin' to get the — '

Monk swallowed twice. His eyes stuck out. He whirled on Doc.

'Hey — what about the treasure?' he howled. 'Now we're in a nice fix! Everybody's dead who knows anything about it!'

Doc Savage was forced to postpone his answer for a time. Handling the under-the-ice submarine occupied his attention. The tanks had to be trimmed, the Diesels had to be started. He and his five men would have only moderate difficulty piloting the Helldiver southward, although they would be very short-handed.

Monk got his mind back on fifty millions in gold and diamonds.

'Say, Doc, we ain't goin' off an' leave all that money layin' around on that bleak land somewhere, are we?' he asked plaintively.

'Ben O'Gard and his gang moved the treasure from the strong room of the Oceanic when they mutinied more than fifteen years ago,' Doc said dryly. 'In other words, they filched it from their pals, headed by Keelhaul de Rosa, and cached it in a hiding place of their own.'

'Holy cow!' groaned Renny. 'Then we have no way of finding that hiding place! Ben O'Gard and his men are all dead.'

'We don't care about the hiding pace,' Doc assured him. 'Ben O'Gard and his gang had recovered the loot before they set out a few hours ago to commit wholesale slaughter on the lost liner.'

Monk emitted one of his best howls. 'You mean it's — '

'The whole business is aboard this submarine,' Doc told him. 'To be exact, it's piled some feet deep on the floor of your cabin, Monk!'

It was startling information to Monk. at the end of a most startling adventure. Out of the frozen grip of the North came a fortune in gold and diamonds, saved from the lost liner. But more than that — out of this thrilling adventure came the rescue of two precious lives, and the reunion of a family lost for many years.

To the blind violinist and his reunited family, this was the greatest thing that could have happened, and the battles of Doc and his companions were most marvelous.

But they did not know of the past of Doc and his friends; of the many narrow escapes, the thrilling exploits that were part of their lives.

Neither did they know of the future — the immediate future which held forth adventure and thrills some way connected with the Orient.

Doc himself did not know, and did not care. Somewhere some one else was in danger, some other person needed help. Whatever it was, wherever Doc was needed, there he would go, heedless of danger, conquering all obstacles. And his five companions, adventurers-in-arms, would follow their leader to still greater exploits.

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