'That stupid Frankie, I — '
'No, not the dead, don't curse the dead boy, bad luck.'
'Bolan got him, too.'
'No, the commission took care of Frankie.'
'What! Goddam, Chief, you got me going in circles.'
'A good lesson you should learn.
'And Bolan? Just walked out?' Eddie buried his face in his hands, anguish like physical pain as he closed his eyes and thought of all the months of grinding hard work he'd put into training his soldiers, the arrangements, expenses, and now all gone, a fart in a whirlwind. Key-
Eddie became aware of Don Cafu's voice. He raised his face and looked at the old man. The don poured again. 'Here, more coffee, and now, hah? You want a slug of brandy?'
'Hell, yes!'
'Okay, help yourself,' and Eddie did as the don spoke. 'No, Bolan did not just walk out. Number one, he was shot to pieces, Naturally, we hoped he'd die. But one of our
Don Cafu raised a hand and pointed at Eddie The Champ. 'You
'Yeah, okay, I hear, Chief,' Eddie said, puzzled. 'So he's a real badass. What does it mean to us?'
'It means, you dumb shit, I've been telling you all this for a reason! You think I talk for my health, hah? For exercise? He's coming
'Shit, he ain't got a chance,' Eddie said. And to his astonishment, Don Cafu began laughing. But it was a bitter, anguished, coarsely grinding laugh, totally devoid of humor.
'Eddie, you a good boy. I like, I always liked you. But you keep thinking like that, and I don't like you no more so much, hah? No use liking a dead man.'
Stupefied, Eddie The Champ stared at his don.
Don Cafu rose to his feet and lumbered heavily on arthritic feet to a vast sideboard, found a glass, blew dust from it, returned to his chair and poured a generous slug of
'Yeah, Eddie, keep thinking this Bolan bastard ain't got a chance coming here!' The don slammed his fist down again. 'And I need a new house captain.'
Eddie raised his hands, 'But, Christ, boss. How? I mean, this guy's wanted everywhere. How the hell's he going to cross the goddam ocean, get through immigration and customs?'
'Goddam, you Eddie,' the don raged, 'get it through your head. This guy's got balls like a water buffalo, and he's
The don's voice suddenly quieted, became lethal in its toneless flat hissing. 'This guy you say ain't got a chance has already blown up more than a thousand soldiers. He went through Boston like a tank over a baby carriage, exposed a guy it took twelve years to plant in society and top-echelon government. He took over the Angeletti house in Philly. He
Don Cafu smashed his fist down on the table. 'You still think so, hah? He ain't got a chance, this Bolan bastard? Answer me, you idiot!'
'Okay, boss, okay,' Eddie The Champ said, bottom falling from his guts.
'Okay, okay, what, hah?' The don grabbed his glass and drained the last big gulp of grappa. 'Get your dumb ass outside and get to
9
Neapolitan nightmare
Mack Bolan knew that
The outcome of this mutually destructive warfare resulted in settling once and for all the question of Sicilian versus mainland Italian — particularly Neapolitan — dominance of the Italian-American underworld.
The emergence of two men as Number One and Number Two, Charley Lucky Luciano, a Sicilian, and Vito Genovese from Naples, allied and working together and ruling with steel-fisted discipline, ordered the traditional factions to stop feuding and fighting for dominance, and all come together into 'this thing of ours': the
For Mack Bolan, as for most people not members of a Family, the terms were, and are, interchangeable. Mafia ... Cosa Nostra.
And The Executioner did not deal in semantics, in vague shadings of word definitions. He had set out on another mission against the Mafia, this time to turn the Mafia's soldier training school into hell ground, and he was well on his way.
After Bolan shot the window out and the girl went, Captain Teaf shoved the nose down and put the chartered jet on the deck, calling a mayday. He wanted to turn back, but Bolan/Borzi refused.
'Christ, man,' Teaf shouted, 'we won't have ten minutes reserve fuel over the Azores. We miss one approach or have to hold, and we ditch, right into the drink!'
'Then you'd better not foul things up, huh? What do you think the bonus was for? You've got the uniform and the shoulder boards and big gold-plated wings, so let's see if you're a pilot!'
Teaf remembered that TWA had not thought so, and had dismissed him before his probationary period ended; that's how he ended up scrambling for nickles and dimes around dead-end country airports, until he'd smuggled in some 'items' and got a good payday which allowed him to finance himself and get his airline transport rating. Armed with the Big Ticket, he found better jobs easier to get, and now he held the best he'd ever have. If he lived.
Like most executive and airline pilots, Teaf privately admitted he was overpaid, most of the time. But things had a way of catching up, so about twice a year on the average a professional pilot found himself in a position where he would have been willing to trade places with almost any other man in the world. Even a convict serving tune could reasonably look forward to eventual freedom, and life.
Teaf looked at the big ice-eyed bastard sitting in the right seat and knew this one of those times when he