
LEGENDS OF THE GOLDEN AGE
featuring
THE BLACK TERROR
and
DAREDEVIL
* * * *
GOOD GUYS WEAR BLACK ... by
Wayne Skiver
During the Golden Age of
comics, especially in the early years of World War Two,
the comic book industry exploded. There were more
publishing houses than a reader could keep track of and
nearly all of them had their own stable of colorful
costumed heroes. Many have been re-vamped and
resurrected through the years, never to be forgotten.
The Black Terror is such a character.
The Black Terror is, in
reality, pharmacist Bob Benton. Having created a tonic
from the formic acid of red ants, he inhaled its vapors,
or as he called them, "formic ethers", and gained steel
hard skin and strength to match. Basically the Terror
was the Superman of his universe. Nedor comics (also
known as both "Better" and "Standard") was the
publishing venture of Ned Pines and was one of the
bigger comic producers of the Golden Age. Through it all
The black garbed, skull and cross-bones wearing hero was
one of their most popular characters.
The Terror first appeared in
Exciting Comics #9 in 1941, the cover and that story
are reproduced in this very volume. He also appeared
with many other heroes from the Better/Nedor/Standard
stable such as Pyroman, Doc Strange, the Fighting Yank,
and Miss Masque in America's Best Comics as well
as having his own title, the first issue of which is
also reprinted in this volume for your enjoyment sans
the back-up feature.
The Black Terror is a favorite
of comic historians and collectors largely due to his
striking costume design. It's fairly simple yet there is
no denying it has a great amount of eye appeal. Like
most Golden Age heroes. the Terror's powers were often
portrayed a bit inconsistently. One issue he may have
bullets bouncing off of his skin harmlessly as he tosses
a car through the air, the next he is tied to a post
with a simple rope which he can't break free from. He
and his equally-powered boy sidekick also seem to have a
talent for being knocked out with blows to the head ...
a lot. Such is the charm of those classic stories and an
often rotating stable of writers and ghost-writers.
This, of course, brings us to the subject of the Black
Terror's boy sidekick.
When you think of Super Hero
sidekicks what names come to mind? Robin, Toro, Bucky,
Dyna-Mite, Kid Flash, Aqualad perhaps? How about one
simply named ... Tim? Yes, the Black Terror, "America's
Fighting Nemesis of Crime" was assisted by a kid who in
real life was named Tim Roland, yet when evil reared its
head, he donned similar garb as his mentor and became,
uh ... "Tim". Alright, "Bucky" isn't that great a name
either, I admit.
In the origin story it is not
really clarified if Tim is an orphan or not, or was
simply taking a nap on the sidewalk. In any case, Bob
Benton gives him a job working in his pharmacy and, in
fact, a mistake made by the boy actually inspires the
creation of the formic ether formula. Together the two
are referred to as "The Terror Twins" and through dozens
of adventures we now look back and wonder if that kid
had any parents or if he just always seemed to be at
work for Bob. That slave driver! In later stories, Tim
is finally referenced as Bob's ward, but the first few
years are rather ambiguous.
The Terror and the rest of the
Better/Nedor/Standard heroes vanished by the end of the
1940's to be replaced by stories of Jungle Lords and
Cowboys. Eventually they lapsed into public domain. This
basically means that literally anyone or any publisher
can use the characters if they so wish. Many have over
the years, re-vamping and re-designing to their hearts
content, trying to make some, such as the Terror, into
"dark" heroes or anti-heroes. Bill Black, known for his
love of classic characters, has lovingly reprinted many
of the original stories over the years as well as using
a re-vamped "modern" version of the character. Alan
Moore and Alex Ross have put their spin on him as well.
Some of our writers on this
volume have put a slightly different take on things in
each of their new and exciting stories, but stayed with
the Golden Age version as the root basis of a great
American hero. From a story that would have been right
at home in the pages of Exciting comics, to a more
"pulp" version, even a fantastic story that delves a bit
deeper into the psyche of being a hero, each author has
penned a Black Terror tale guaranteed to entertain and
keep you turning the page.
Now get ready for EXCITEMENT,
THRILLS, and FUN with the one and only ... BLACK TERROR!
--Wayne Skiver
Associate Editor, Wild Cat
Books
* * * *
TERRORS by Barry Reese
The formic ethers enveloped Bob
Benton's face, seeping into his lungs and quickly
dispersing their incredible effects throughout his body.
They smelled like warm cinnamon, a scent that tended to
cling to him even when he wasn't dressed in his black
attire with its famous skull and crossbones chest piece.
Without the ethers, he was
merely an unassuming appearing pharmacist. With them, he
gained enhanced strength and skin so tough that bullets
bounced harmlessly off of it.
Bob closed his eyes for a
moment, breathing deeply. When the last of the ethers
had been expended, he turned his steely gaze over the
fields surrounding him. He was in full uniform,
including mask, which marked the final transformation
from Bob Benton to the Black Terror. Normally he would
have been accompanied by his young partner, Tim Roland,
but the youngster was still in the states right now,
keeping beautiful Jean Starr company. Bob missed the
boy's infectious optimism but he was secretly glad that
Tim wasn't in the middle of this.
The Black Terror was deep
within enemy lines, trudging through the German
countryside with two United States soldiers at his back.
The three of them had been traveling thus for nearly
three days, so long that the Terror had been forced to
re-expose himself to the ethers twice to keep his
vitality up. The soldiers, in excellent physical shape,
were beginning to lag behind ... Bob actually considered
sharing the vaporous solution with them but he was down
to just a handful of capsules and feared he might need
them himself. Besides, the only other person with whom
he'd conducted experiments was Tim, which meant that the
ethers might still have side effects on others.
The sun was low in the western
sky, giving the tall grasses a strange sickly color.
Overhead, a few birds flew lazily past. Through the
fading odor of warm cinnamon, the Black Terror thought
he could detect the small of food: a meat stew of some
kind, he mused.
"Think we oughtta call back to
Eagle-1?" asked the stockier of the soldiers, a young
man named Wendell. He hailed from New York City and had
that region's accent. Eagle-1 was the codename for the
plane that had snuck the group inside German territory.
The second soldier, a tanned
fellow with dark hair and a short beard, was in his late
thirties. He moved with the tired vigilance of a man who
had seen far too much war in his time. Named Vincent, he
was a quiet fellow that had quickly won the Black
Terror's favor, coming across as dependable and capable.
"Not yet," Vincent muttered. "We're too close to the
Krauts. If any of them heard us, we'd be in a world of
trouble."
"But how far are we from the
base?" Wendell asked, looking around at the rapidly
setting sun and looking just as young as his nineteen
years would allow. "I mean, shouldn't we have found it
by now?"
The Black Terror came to a
stop, holding up a black gloved hand. "Hush," he warned.
At the hero's word, both
soldiers fell into step beside him and grew silent. From
just over the next hill, the sounds of men speaking in
German could faintly be heard.
The Black Terror led the way
forward, crouching low in the tall grasses when they
reached the peak. He looked over the edge and saw a
small military complex that had been set up around a
country house. From the looks of things, there could be
as many as two dozen soldiers and scientists camped
there.
"I want the two of you to stay
here while I go in to check things out," the Terror
whispered.
Vincent shook his head quickly.
"Too dangerous. We were told to stick close to you at
all times."
"Vincent, I appreciate the
offer. But I'm far more capable of taking care of things
than the two of you. Having you along would only slow me
down."
"The Brass is worried you might
be compromised," the wily vet declared. His words struck
at the Black Terror's heart because he'd known they
would come eventually.
The U.S. government had come to
the Black Terror with reports that the Germans were
working on their own class of superhumans. These men
were said to have strength and durability greater than
the Terror's ... but with a peculiar kind of madness
that drove them over the edge within weeks of their
empowerment. Several of the killers had been captured by
the Americans, with exhaustive testing following. What
they had found had been disturbing at the very least....
These men had toxicology
results that were almost identical to those of the Black
Terror, leading everyone to assume that the Germans had
somehow created their own versions of the formic ethers.
Bob had studied the results himself and come to the same
conclusion. Furthermore, he'd been able to locate the
source of the German solution's defect: they were
missing a critical component that made his own version
of the ethers safe to use.
The Black Terror had been
furious to discover that his work had been perverted in
this fashion. It was inevitable that someone would
eventually stumble onto his secret, though he wasn't at
all sure how it had been done. But to see it destroying
lives and being used by the enemy....!
"Are you trying to tell me that
some people believe I'm collaborating with them?" he
asked Vincent, keeping his tone even.
"Not at all!" the army grunt
hurriedly replied. "It's just that if the Germans have
managed to create a variant of your formula, they might
have some means of combating it ... or even controlling
you."
Bob pondered that. There had
been some clues that the men the Germans were using as
test subjects might not be soldiers, but rather
political prisoners of some sort. The fact that they
willingly aided their captors after their transformation
did seem to imply that there was some method of mind
control involved. "Fair enough," he relented. "But stay
close to me."
Both Vincent and Wendell nodded
their assurances and soon the trio was creeping towards
the buildings below. The sun had continued to dip out of
sight, leaving everything in a twilight gloom. There was
a guard patrolling the perimeter as they approached but
he was quickly silenced as the Black Terror sprang up
behind him and gave him a firm tap to the head. Bob
wasn't against killing when necessary--especially in a
case like this, which was part of a war--but the chemist
was not a violent man by nature. As such, he left the
Nazi alive, but he wouldn't be waking up for quite some
time.
Vincent and Wendell took up
positions along the opposite edges of one of the main
building's wall, each keeping an eye out for approaching
Germans. The Black Terror crept towards a window,
peering inside. The room was illuminated by a number of
strong lights, making it easy to see everything in the
room.
There was a scientist present,
recognizable by his long white lab coat and thick
glasses. He was in his late fifties, with messy gray
hair and a disheveled nature. With him were two female
nurses, both pretty young things, and three men. The men
were shirtless and wearing loose-fitting slacks and
combat boots. Each of the men was standing stock-still,
their glassy eyes staring off into space.
Before Bob's horrified eyes,
the scientist raised a small red capsule under the
nostrils of one of the men, cracking it open easily. The
scientist and the nurses were both wearing nose filters,
he noticed. They were small devices that could be
slipped into the nasal cavity to filter out certain
elements from the air. They were not nearly as effective
as traditional gas masks but they were effective against
some things ... like the etherous vapors being
unleashed.
The bare-chested figure inhaled
deeply, his eyes widening as the drugs flooded his
system. Bob remembered the first time he'd taken the
substance, the rush of energy and power it had given
him. He'd immediately feared the potentially addictive
effects the fumes might have ... but he had tinkered
with the formula as much as possible to limit that
danger. There was still the chance of a psychological
addiction, of course, but both himself and Tim were
strong enough to avoid that.
The scientist stepped back and
spoke to the drug-enhanced man in German. "How do you
feel?"
The fellow's voice was somewhat
slurred and monotone. "I feel ... powerful."
"What are they saying?" Wendell
asked, distracting the Black Terror.
The hero waved him to silence
and pressed his ear against the window. Bob could speak
German fluently but their words were so muffled by the
wall between them that he found it difficult to make it
all out.
Inside the room, the scientist
was holding out his hand to one of the nurses. The
pretty young blonde handed him a Luger pistol. Before
the Black Terror's narrowed eyes, the scientist put the
gun point-blank against the other man's chest. Bob could
barely believe his eyes--though his own formula made him
bullet proof, at that range it would still hurt badly.
The scientist fired, the noise
making both Vincent and Wendell jump in alarm. The
bullet bounced harmlessly off the test subject's body,
though it left a red welt that looked like it would
bruise horribly.
"A definite success!" someone
boomed from the doorway to the laboratory. The Black
Terror watched as the scientist turned in surprise, his
face quickly dissolving into an emotionless mask. For
just a moment, though, Bob was sure that he'd detected
not only distaste but fear.
The newcomer wore a crisp black
S.S. uniform and was very fit. He had short-cropped
black hair and dark eyes, which gazed out from a
handsome if somewhat cruel looking face.
"Colonel Schmidt," the
scientist said, offering up the stiff armed salute that
had become infamous throughout the world. "We didn't
expect you until the morning."
The Colonel smiled coolly.
"That's why I'm here tonight, Herr Clarke. Your
experiments have caught the full attention of the
Fuehrer. He wishes me to bring back three of your
Übermenschen for his inspection."
"But ... we are not yet
finished with the tests!"
The Colonel approached the test
subject and jabbed at him with a finger. The shirtless
man did not even flinch. "You haven't yet mastered the
ability to keep them alive for more than a few days or
weeks?"
"I think we have," the
scientist stammered. "As you can see, we have enhanced
our control of their actions. They will accept basic
commands but for the most part they are incapable of
raising up arms against any of us."
Colonel Schmidt studied the
scientist with a threatening air. "Then why do you think
he is not ready to be shown off to our leader?"
Clarke hesitated before finally
answering. "The mind control process is still unstable.
While we are able to fully control his actions for the
most part there are still times when he can break free
and--"
A sudden sound from outside
made everyone in the room turn towards the window where
the Black Terror was in full view. He let out a curse,
whirling about to see what had happened.
Wendell had allowed his guard
to lapse and now a German soldier was grappling with
him, shouting for others to assist.
Vincent ran towards his friend,
pointing his gun towards the scene. He did not fire for
fear of striking Wendell.
The Black Terror heard the
sounds of other men approaching and felt a nag of
irritation that Wendell and Vincent had insisted on
coming along. Before anyone else could move, the
black-garbed hero burst forward, grabbing hold of the
struggling Nazi and lifting him off the ground. This
allowed Vincent to fall free.
"Get out of here! Both of you!"
the Black Terror commanded. This time, the men listened
to him, taking off for the hills as fast as they could.
The Black Terror was left alone
to face a base full of Nazis....
* * * *
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