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"Strangled By a Puppet's Strings"

3/22/1945

I.

In a guest room of Drum's house on Bleecker Street, Chen Lee-Sun stretched out on the bed, took deep slow breaths and was fast asleep at once. Leaving the door open a crack, Mark Drum smiled at his young guest and went down the long hallway to his den. Here, still in an overstuffed easy chair, sat the Sting.

"That's a neat trick your partner picked up," Drum said as he crossed over to sit down facing the masked man. "No matter what the situation, he can drop off to dreamland in a few seconds."

The Sting grunted. "Yes. I've often envied him that. Chen has mostly studied his peoples' fighting styles, what he calls 'gung fu,' but he's also dabbled in some yoga and Tai Chi. We often go for days without sleeping, so he grabs a nap whenever he can."

Loosening his tie and unfastening the top button of his light blue dress shirt, Drum sighed wearily and closed his eyes. "It still bothers me to see you like this, Robert. I've tried all my Blue Guide techniques but nothing heals your legs. There's not even any physical damage I can find."

"Don't take it too hard," said the Sting. "I've been to dozens of doctors. Also to some old white-bearded sifus that Chen knows. It's Dim Mak, the Death Touch. No one has a way to restore use of my legs. Of course I'm not happy about it but at least it doesn't hurt."

Drum was a tall, sturdily built man in his thirties. Unruly black hair contrasted with deep pale grey eyes in a craggy face that was more stern than goodlooking. Faint echoes of his childhood in the Highlands had never left his voice entirely. "Even so, you've continued your work. You have quite a record cleaning up this town, Robert. Racketeers, black marketers, Axis spies, Fifth Columnists... you've been busy."

Lifting his head, the Sting revealed a full-face black cotton mask with only eyeholes showing any expression. Even here with one of the few men who knew his secret, Robert Hawk concealed his face. He was starting to feel as if the mask WAS his face. He certainly found he could think more quickly and decisively when masked, for whatever reason. "I like to think I've made a difference. It's certainly been nerve-wracking!"

"Posing as a free-lance criminal yourself so you can infiltrate mobs and turn them against each other. Damn. How do you keep all the double-crosses and lies and turnarounds straight?"

"Oh, I've screwed up a few times, believe me. It's like dancing on quicksand. Mark, we've been sitting here for what feels like forever. How much longer do we have to wait before we head out?"

"The third member of our team should come roaring in any minute now," the Blue Guide responded. "We'll need his good right arm. Up against the spymaster Puppeteer! What a devil that man is. Manhattan tonight is crowded with G-Men and men from Army Intelligence and every New York cop that could be called in. And none of them are making any more progress than we are, sad to say."

On a cabinet top near at hand sat two identical telephones. Concealed until needed, a powerful shortwave receiver could be slid out from within the cabinet to receive orders from the War Department. One of the phones rang shrill and Drum stretched out an arm to snatch up the instrument. He listened briefly, then spoke only "I understand, sir."

The Sting did not have to prompt his colleague for explanation. Drum hung up the phone, frowning with his eyebrows lowered. "That was Lieutenant-Colonel Collins of the OSS again. Overseas, he's been working under the alias 'Colonel Savage,' which I find a bit too melodramatic. He had no new information, he only wants to nag us to catch the Puppeteer for him so he can run back to occupied territory."

"Lucky him. Maybe he'll be in Berlin when our boys come marching in."

"Nothing would make him happier..." Drum broke off, swinging around in his chair. "That lifeforce at the door. It's like a bonfire. Sulak is here at last."

As he finished the last word, a massive form loomed up in the doorway. "I let myself in, Mark. Thanks for the key. Tonight's the night!"

Taller than even Drum and much brawnier, Sulak was intimidating merely filling the doorway. The huge Melgar was wrapped in a white trenchcoat which could not conceal how broad his shoulders were. Setting down a valise, he took off a fedora which badly needed blocking. A shaggy head of jet-black hair left long by contemporary standard framed a face marked with bright blue eyes and a lantern jaw. "Try to tell me you two have not been impatiently waiting for me."

"Like you would believe that," Drum responded as he rose. "I take it our informant came through? What's in that briefcase?"

"Hopefully what we need, and hopefully it's worth the cost!" Sulak said. "That little weasel won't have to get a job for a year with what he was paid."

"It's the War Department money, not ours. Our tax dollars at work!" scoffed Drm.

Still seated, leaning back, the Sting did not try to match their positive attitude. "Against this Puppeteer... I don't know. I'd be happier if we had more definite information. Reconnaisance. A "B" plan if things go south."

Sulak waved a dismissing hand. "Look at the four of us, Robert. Great strength, fighting skill, Tel Shai magic and shrewd craftiness. When we bring all these together, how can anything survive our attack?"

"Let's have a look at the papers before we hurt our arms patting ourselves on the back," grumbled the masked man.

Bringing the valise over to the cabinet between their chairs, the Melgar champion tapped the keyhole in its lid. "Locked," he smiled as he ripped the tough leather side of the case apart without any seeming effort. They had seen him peel apart steel plate as easily.

"If I ever need a jar of pickles opened, I know who to call..." Mark Drum scoffed.
Inside was a single thick manila envelope, its flap sealed with red wax. The Blue Guide lifted it appraisingly, then handed it over to the Sting. "Robert, this is definitely your area of expertise."

"Oh, yes, codes and cryptology are my meat," said the masked man. With gloved hands, he opened the envelope and slid out a sheaf of stiff yellow-tinged paper. "German manufacture, see the watermark? Up in the right hand corner, 'Page One of Fourteen Pages, initialed by two different people. Definitely classified, I might even say High Command material."

"My German is not what it should been even after four years of this war," admitted Sulak. "Read it to me."

"Ah, it's in code of course. This might take a while, old fellow. We're not supposed to have access to the Enigma findings but, you know, generals tend to give us some privileges." The Sting riffled through the parchment-like pages. "Mark, we will need some pencils and lots of paper. Black coffee wouldn't hurt either."

Peering over the Sting's shoulder, Sulak grumbled, "I don't suppose I can be of any use?"

"Afraid not," said the masked man. "This is where Mark and I have put in years of hard study. When it's time to shrug off bullets on your chest or bend machine gun barrels into pretzels, that's when you will be more valuable than a squad of Marines. Look here, Mark, I think this word in bigger numbers stands for 'Berlin,' it appears five times on the first page. Now, if that gives us the number 12 for the letter E, we can start to make some progress."

"Maybe. See, there's a few examples of two 12s next to each other, very likely a vowel in any case if not E. Could be O. We're starting with the premise that this is a basic transposition of course..."

After a few minutes of Drum and the Sting ignoring him while they scribbled and mumbled, Sulak turned away. The giant warrior swung on one heel and strode sullenly out of the den. Drum's modernistic kitchen was down the hall, all Art Deco chromium and aluminum tubing. Even the four-burner gas stove was sleek and streamlined. Drum had already taken the coffee pot with a few mugs on a tray back to the den.

Drum had long ago given the three members of their informal team full use of the icebox. Sulak began hauling out a stack of sliced roast beef, Swiss cheese, mustard, some lettuce. A fresh loaf of pumpernickel bread sat on a sideboard with a knife alongside. Fine. He might as well enjoy himself while he waited. The superhuman Melgar constructed a pair of bulging sandwiches that would put most people into a gorged stupor after eating, popped open three bottles of beer and sat down at the round table in the corner. His time to shine would come, he reassured himself. While he ate, just down the hall two of the sharpest minds in the Midnight War tackled a code that was constructed to not be broken.

the rest of the story )
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"Spirits of Steel"

9/18-9/21/1942

I.

"I never thought it would come to this," Robert Hawk said from the back seat.

Chen pulled their leased Lincoln four-door sedan off the side road and turned off the engine. He stared at the scene without comment, then just as silently slid out from behind the wheel.

In the late afternoon sunlight, they saw that every window of the little white bungalow had been smashed. The wooden picket fence had been bodily torn out of the ground and scattered over the closely-trimmed lawn. Hanging by one hinge, the front door had the words REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR crudely daubed in red paint. In front of the house was a tin sign which read SOLD - VALLEY REALTY.

Chen Lee-Sun was wearing a standard chaffeur uniform with its button-flap jacket, thin leather gloves and peaked cap. He was young and fit, hopping out of the sedan and swinging around to the other side where his partner had just stood up. Robert Hawk had reached his mid-forties, with a narrow alert face marked by years of stress and tension. At five feet eight, he was not much taller than Chen but wider than the wiry Chinese man. Hawk wore a tailored business suit of fine dark brown material, with a white topcoat over it and a crisp fedora. He raised one hand in reaction at the sight of the vandalized cottage but let it fall again.

"I had heard about the forced relocation, of course," Hawk said. "But somehow, to actually see it..."

"Ahhh," Chen made a disgusted noise which suggested he wanted to spit on the ground. "If you ask me, America has finally learned what China has always known through bitter experience. The Japanese are no good! I hope this country kills as many of them as possible."

Hawk waited a few seconds before responding. "Daijiro is an American citizen, Chen. He was born in Oakland, he grew up here. I've known him for years. I would trust him with my life."

"Come now. I have told you what happened to my family three years ago. The same day that your Pearl Harbor was attacked, the Japs rampaged through Hong Kong. They're a living plague, they leave nothing but death and horror wherever they set foot." He turned to study his partner's face. "But I do not wish for us to argue, boss. Our work is more important than our personal feelings."

"I wouldn't dismiss your grievances," Hawk said. "Or your loss. But finding Daijiro is urgent."

Chen Lee-Sun tilted his cap back on his head. He was a good-looking young man with a square-jawed face and intense dark eyes that had a single fold. "The Sting, the Dragon of Midnight...they have come to mean hope and justice to many who have otherwise lost hope."

"Let's roll then. From what the War Department told me, the nearest relocation camp is in Gloverton, maybe an hour north of here." Hawk shook his head again. "Daijiro never married. At least he has no wife or children to go through this with him."

When they were back in the Lincoln, Chen started it up and swung around on the road to go in the direction from which they had come. "Wish we had the Dragonwing," he said.

"Oh, I was thinking the same thing," Hawk replied. "Flying out here in a rush. Only being able to bring a few of our gimmicks and gadgets hidden in the luggage. I would rather be riding in the Dragonwing with its armor panels and bullet-proof glass and gas nozzles. But we'll have to get by on quick thinking this time."

"Boss, I've been meaning to tell you. I don't think I will be using the ultra-violet goggles any more. They actually reduce my night vision now."

"Really. I've seen the changes that Dragon Pendant is making in you." Hawk dug through a satchel on the seat beside him. "Let's see. Roast beef, ham and Swiss, tuna fish..."

"I'd like the ham and cheese, if you don't mind."

"Sure, here you go. Plenty of mustard," Hawk passed the wax paper-wrapped sandwich up to his partner. "Looks like a bag of maybe a dozen hard-boiled eggs, too. So, Chen, how well can you see in the dark now?"

Finishing a bite before answering, the Dragon of Midnight said, "Almost as good in darkness as in daylight. Colors are washed out. Everything looks grey or white. I'm developing some sort of, I don't know the English word... extra sense to tell when something is next to me."

"Proximity."

"That's it. When I'm wearing the Pendant, I can mov through rooms I've never been in before and not bump into anything." Chen sighed. "I wish I had a wise old Sifu to explain all this. I am learning by experiment."

Finishing his sandwich, Robert Hawk wiped his mouth with a paper napkin and put the satchel back down on the car floor by his feet. "Hah. Well, I wish there were two of those pendants you won from the Brumal. Being able to walk through walls seems like a useful ability for the Sting to possess."

"We turn up here, right? Heading north?" Chen asked.

"Yes. I wrote down directions when Major Kadish phoned, but of course I had to burn them after we both got a look. Only a few of the top Army brass know they have two New York mystery men working for them now. As long as we can keep our double lives secret, we definitely should."

After a few minutes of silence, Chen Lee-Sun asked, "You want the radio on?"

"Eh? Oh, no thanks, Chen." Hawk was leaned back in the deep plush seats, rubbing his chin. "I'm thinking about our assignment. We know the underworld back home. We understand the local mobsters and the occasional lone wolf crook. But out here, we have no connections. I'm worried we may be out of our depth, Chen."

The Dragon scoffed. "I think our record speaks for itself, boss. Right now, any spies or saboteurs in Northern California have just felt a chill run up their spines without knowing why."

the rest of the story )

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