(Silver Streak Comics 013, 1941)
Sin Khaii, a lama at the same monastery that Thun-Dohr was raised at, has been cast out for unspecified reasons. His reaction to being an outcast - to steal Pandora's Box and use it in a war on all humanity - would seem to retroactively justify the exile, however. Just why a Tibetan monastery would be the hiding place of Pandora's Box is likewise left unexplored.
Sin Kahii is able to use the Box to unleash fresh evils upon mankind, in the form of mosquito-like insects that are under his control. The first such is a plague called the Black Madness, which seems to act both as a traditional and deadly disease and as a vector for insanity, as seen above after Dr Benson Bell concocts a cure for it and his assistant is immediately driven to homicidal rage to keep it from being distributed.
No madness or madman is a match for the mystic might of Thun-Dohr, however. Sin Khaii's first plot is foiled with a sock to the jaw. Of Clavell, the madman. Sin Khaii remains unpunched.
Since regular humans have proved to be no match for his foe, Sin Khaii's next plan involves allying with someone more powerful, namely the ancient and evil Black Pharaoh (check in in a day or two for more on him). To that end, he levitates the Pharaoh's whole damn pyramid and moves it from Giza to the former site of the New York World's Fair (I was going to gripe about the comic missing an opportunity to feature the pyramid next to the Trylon and Perisphere but it seems like they were demolished with much more alacrity than I might have expected).
As will be discussed further in the Black Pharaoh's own entry, his imprisonment in the pyramid can only be ended when he and his servants' places are taken by other people. Sin Khaii facilitates this via another Pandora's Box bug, in this case "curiosity." Could one argue that curiosity is not one of the evils contained in the box since Pandora already had it her curiosity was in fact foundational to the whole myth? I think that one could, but of course if we're going to insist on mythic accuracy then Sin Khaii is going to have to be finding increasingly unlikely ways to weaponize hope, seeing as it's the only thing that's supposed to still be in the dang thing.
Once the Black Pharaoh is free, he and Sin Khaii plot to destroy the United States but are once again foiled by the flying fists of Thun-Dohr. The pyramid (and all of the sand in Egypt) is restored to its proper resting place and Sin Khaii, still at large, swears further vengeance. Sadly for us plot resolution fans out there, the "Thun-Dohr" feature never returned after this second instalment and Sin Khaii is presumably at large to this day.
Categorized in: Accessories (Pandora's Box), Day Jobs (Lamas), Powers (Various Magical)














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