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“You’d have to see what I saw, Deej, before you could ever know.”
“Wouldn’t it be hell,” DiGeorge said tiredly, “if Franky Lucky turns out to be this Bolan’s new face.”
Marasco lost his breath entirely. His face paled. “I wouldn’t go that far, Deej,” he puffed.
“I would,” DiGeorge stated matter-of-factly. “That’s why I’m the Capo, Philip Honey. I would. When is Victor Poppy due in?”
“L.A. International at two o’clock,” Marasco replied mechanically. “Franky might have lied a little, Deej. About shooting it up with Bolan. Just to get your attention.”
“I thought of that, too. I have to think of everything, Phil. Don’t worry, I’m thinking. I sure want to see this gift Victor’s bringing us.”
“I’d have to guess that Franky Lucky is straight, Deej,” Marasco stated, phrasing the strongest argument he dared.
“You do the guessing, Phil,” DiGeorge replied with a weary smile. “I’ll do the thinking.”
Bolan stopped at a secluded public telephone booth and gambled on finding Carl Lyons at the contact number. The gamble paid off. Lyons immediately asked, “What do you know about the events at Palm Village early this morning?”
“Enough,” Bolan said. “I’ll trade some intel with you.”
“No trades,” Lyons clipped back. “Tim Braddock’s at the point of death, and the most grisly damn piece of …”
“I know all about it, Lyons,” Bolan said humbly. “Will Braddock make it?”
“The doctors are hopeful. At the very best, though, he’ll be out of things for quite a while.”
“He’s a good cop,” Bolan said, genuinely regretful.
“Better than some I know,” Lyons replied in a faint self-mockery. “What’d you call about, Pointer?”
“My cover’s in danger. I need some intel.”
“Just a minute … Brognola’s here and frothing. He was doubling up between us and Braddock, and … just a minute, Pointer.”
Bolan heard a whispered consultation, then the light click of another receiver coming on the line.
“Okay,” Lyons said. “Brognola’s on with us. You give us some words first. Who made that hit up there this morning, besides Pena?”
“I don’t know all the names, but you can identify the remains,” Bolan replied. “You’ll find them scattered around the junction of the Palm Springs high and low roads. Six of them, including Pena.”
“All dead,” Brognola’s smooth voice stated.
“That’s right,” Bolan said. “Now can we talk about my problem?”
“Who killed them?” from Brognola.
“Call it a double contract,” Bolan said. “Julian DiGeorge got the idea that Pena has been informing. The other five boys were siding with Pena.”
“Then the rubout had no connection with the murders of the Conns and the plastic surgeon?” Brognola asked.
“I didn’t say that,” Bolan replied.
Lyons snarled. “This guy is playing games with you, Hal. Bolan, you executed those men, didn’t you!”
“Who’s he talking to?” Bolan asked Brognola.
“They found out that Brantzen had altered your face, and they went up there to wring something out of him! That much is obvious so save all of us the time and stop playing games. You happened along, saw what they’d done to your doctor friend, and went gunning for them. Now you’re saying that your cover is in jeopardy. What kind of information did Pena get back to the mob before you killed him, Bolan?”
“Just a moment, before you answer that, Mr. Pointer,” Brognola said. “Please don’t leave the line.”
Again the sounds of a muted, off-phone discussion came to Bolan’s ears. Then Brognola came back on. “Mr. Pointer,” he said, “we appreciate the work you’ve been doing for us, and we have no wish to compromise your position. You don’t have to say anything to incriminate yourself.”
“Fair enough,” Bolan replied.
“We are not questioning your identity. Just tell us this much. Were the murders at Palm Village this morning ordered by Julian DiGeorge?”
“No,” Bolan said. “It was all Pena’s idea.”
“I see. And now Pena and his squad are dead.”
“That’s right.”
“At DiGeorge’s orders?”
“There was a contract out on Pena.”
“I see,” Brognola replied with some confusion.
Bolan sighed. “Okay, Lyons,” he said. “I don’t want you people to start questioning my intel. You’re right, it’s no time for games. Besides, I’m about as incriminated as one person can get already. This is Bolan. I’ve penetrated the DiGeorge family, and I pulled off the hit on Pena this morning. I was acting purely for myself on that one, though. You saw, or heard, what they did to Brantzen.”
“Yeah,” Lyons said softly. “Braddock gave a pretty good description of the guy who helped him, Bolan. It fits a man who was sitting in my car the other night, in Redlands.”
“Yeah,” Bolan said. “About my problem.”
“Go ahead,” Lyons sighed.
“I hear that the Commissione employs a private staff of enforcers. I need to know who runs that show.”
“That’s your department, Hal,” Lyons said.
“Presently only ten bosses sit on the Commissione,” Brognola reported. He rattled off the names. “You’ll note that DiGeorge’s name is not present. He walked out in a huff two years ago over some dispute about the narcotics traffic. He sits in from time to time, though, when some subject important to him comes up for discussion. Technically, he still has a voice on that council.”
“But there are tensions?” Bolan asked interestedly.
“There are tensions,” Brognola assured him. “The council wanted to regulate prices. DiGeorge won’t go for it. He controls a big slice of their narcotic imports. He feels that the pricing is his affair, and he wholesales to the other families on his own terms. Yes, there are tensions.”
“Thanks,” Bolan said. “That gives me something to parlay. I’m especially interested in the council’s enforcers, though. What can you tell me about that?”
Brognola coughed and said, “The Talifero brothers, it is said, have the most feared crew of enforcers in the country. These brothers are loosely called ‘Pat and Mike.’ They are …”
“Okay, I’ve heard of Pat and Mike. What you say wraps it up. Maybe I can keep my neck out of…”
“Be careful, Pointer,” Brognola urged. “These Talifero boys are double trouble. It’s said that once they get their orders, they are like guided missiles, there’s no way of calling them back or scrubbing the hit. The triggermen in their crew are like an elite Gestapo, taking orders from no one but Pat and Mike. The brothers themselves operate directly out of the Commissione.”
“Exactly what I wanted,” Bolan commented. “I’d better bug off now.”
“Uh, Pointer …” Brognola said hurriedly.
“Yes?”
“I’m flying to Washington tonight. I’d like to make a representation on your behalf.”
“What sort of representation?”
“A sort of unofficial ‘forgive and forget’ representation. Do you follow me?”
“Who’s playing games now?” Bolan said, chuckling.
“He’s dead serious, Bolan,” Lyons broke in.
Brognola said, “Rather, uh, high offices have been apprised of your successes here. We’ve suspected your true identity and now that you’ve confirmed it … well… I’m not promising anything, but … I believe I can get you a portfolio—unofficially, you understand—if you’ll agree to continue on in your present role.”
“It is my intention to continue,” Bolan said. “Unless I die soon.”
“You aren’t going to die soon, are you?” Lyons said, chuckling.
“Not if I can help it.”
“Can we do anything to help?”
“I doubt it. I guess it’s my show—win, lose, or draw. Uh, you might look into the death of one Charl
es D’Agosta two years ago, age about 20, supposedly drowned on a boating accident off San Pedro.”
“Mafia rubout, Bolan?” Lyons asked.
“Let’s call him Pointer,” Brognola broke in nervously.
Bolan laughed and said, “The rubout is an outside chance. Look into it, will you?”
“I’ll do that,” Lyons assured him. “Anything else?”
“You might pray.”
Lyons and Brognola chuckled. Bolan said, “Well…”
“Braddock says thanks,” Lyons added hastily.
Bolan said, “Sure,” and broke the connection. He returned to the new Mercedes, checked his gunleather, and set off for the villa. Police-community relations had never seemed better for Mack Bolan. He wondered vaguely what was implied by acquiring a “portfolio.”
“Maybe it’s a license to kill,” he muttered to his Mercedes. “And then again,” he added thoughtfully, “maybe it’s a license to die.”
Either way, Mack Bolan was not too impressed with licenses. He had his rage to keep him warm.
Chapter Twenty-Two
THE ENFORCER
The gate guard grinned warmly and said, “Hi-ya, Franky. God, I heard about the fracture this morning. They say it was like a wild man. I wished I’d been with you.”
Bolan kept his face straight and said, “You might get a chance, Andrew Hardy.” He soberly winked one eye and eased on over to his usual parking place. He noted that the gate guard had trotted down to engage another guard in an animated conversation.
Benny Peaceful appeared as Bolan was leaving the Mercedes. He showed Bolan the peace sign and said, “Somebody has been waiting for you by the pool for a couple of hours. Somebody’s gonna be terrible disappointed if you don’t go in that way.”
Bolan acknowledged the message with a nod of his head. He paused to light a cigarette and said, “What’s rumbling, Benny?”
“The whole joint’s rocking over your work this morning,” the youth replied, laboring to maintain a sober visage. “Don’t surprise me none, of course. I knew what you could do, Franky.”
“I need your help, Benny Peaceful,” Bolan said, staring over the boy’s head. “I think I know what you can do, too.”
Benny seemed to grow an immediate inch. Following Bolan’s lead, he averted his eyes in a casual inspection of the sky. “You just say it, Franky Lucky,” he said solemnly.
“A boy like you can change his thinking when the right time comes,” Bolan suggested.
“You watch me.”
“Pat and Mike could use a boy like that.”
The youth’s breath hurriedly left him. He staggered slightly, regained his balance, and then gave way to the glowing smile that was fighting for control of his facial muscles. “God!” he exclaimed. “I knew you was something special.”
“A boy that knows when to keep quiet, and then when to come running at the right time—he can be a valuable boy,” Bolan pointed out.
“You just snap your fingers, Franky Lucky,” Benny assured him.
“Okay. You be ready for the snap.” Bolan tossed away the cigarette and entered the enclosed patio. Benny Peaceful came in several paces to the rear and took up station against the wall, his face glowing like the sunrise. Bolan went back to him and said, “Listen, I made a decision. You’re my second here. You know?”
The news was almost too much for Benny Peaceful. His lips trembled, he drew in a ragged breath, and he gasped. “I’m your boy, Franky. What’s going on?”
Bolan leaned closer. “I told you, Benny, a valuable boy has to change his thinking. Deej is out. Understand?”
The youth nodded his head in an uncoordinated jerk. “I been hearing,” he replied. “I been changing my thinking, since a long time back.”
“Okay, now you round up the other boys that’ve been thinking. We don’t want the good to go down with the bad, do we, Benny Peaceful? I’m making that your Number One job for right now. You mark the ones that are fit to save. You know?”
“God, I know, Franky.”
“Okay. You get these boys aside. Boys who have been thinking ought to know that what happened on the desert this morning was nothing but a prophecy of things to come. You know what I’m saying?”
“Screwy Looey had that coming,” Benny Peaceful agreed eagerly. “A lot of muscle around here has got it still coming.”
“It’ll get to ’em, don’t you worry,” Bolan declared somberly. “It’s up to you, Benny, to cull out the others so they don’t get hurt. I don’t have the time, so I’m depending on you. Now you get these boys aside and you tell ’em what’s what. And you tell ’em to wait for your fingers to snap.”
Benny Peaceful fought down another broad grin. “My fingers? Sure—sure, Franky.”
“Get your crew organized.”
“I’ll get right to work, Franky.”
The youth took off on a strangely hurried-casual gait, disappearing around the corner to the parking area. Bolan clucked his tongue and went on over to the pool and Andrea D’Agosta.
“What was all the chatter with Boy Blue?” she asked him.
“Got rid of him, didn’t I?” Bolan replied, smiling.
“Don’t look so happy,” she said. “I’ve been waiting out here for hours. I’m afraid your moment has almost arrived, whoever you are.”
Bolan leaned down and brushed her cheek with his lips. “Yeah?”
“No time for that,” Andrea fretted. “Victor Poppy is here with that man from Florida. They’re all in Poppa’s study right now.”
Bolan clung to his smile. “Did you get this man’s name?”
“I heard Victor call him Tony. That’s all I know. Little man, sallow, skinny, scared. About 40.”
Bolan sighed and said, “Thanks.”
“Don’t thank me, just get me out of here.”
“Are you ready to go right now?” Bolan asked her.
Her eyes flipped wide. “Are you serious?”
“I guess it’s now or never,” he told her. He looked her over and added, “You’re dressed fit to travel. Leave everything else behind. Do you know where you’re going?”
“A bee-line to Italy,” she said. “I’ll visit Momma for a while.”
“And you don’t care what becomes of your father?”
Andrea stared curiously at Bolan for a moment, then: “Poppa didn’t consult me when he went into this business.”
Bolan took it as a reply. He said, “Okay, come on, I’ll get you out of here. Then I have to …”
He had Andrea by the arm and was helping her out of the chair. Phil Marasco appeared in a doorway across the court and yelled at him. Bolan looked up and waved a greeting. “Deej is waiting for you,” Marasco called out. “Come on, he’s getting impatient.”
Bolan released the girl. “Sit tight,” he told her. “I’ll be back.”
“I wonder,” she murmured, and fell back into the chair with an unhappy sigh.
Bolan walked briskly across the patio and joined Marasco in the doorway. “What’s up?” he asked.
“I dunno,” Marasco replied nervously. “Th’ old man is sitting on needles, though, and he wants to see you in the worst way.”
They walked elbow-to-elbow along the corridor toward DiGeorge’s study. “I told him the order was filled,” Bolan growled. “What’s he worrying about?”
“He would have cancelled that hit if we could of got to you, Franky,” Marasco confided. “Don’t mention it, though, it’ll just make him nervouser.”
“You don’t cancel hits, Philip Honey,” Bolan snapped.
Marasco grunted and said, “Now you’re talking like a family man.”
“I like you, Phil,” Bolan said, slowing his pace. Marasco slowed to match him.
“That’s great, I like you too,” he said without embarrassment.
“You know, in the old days of Egypt and places, when a king died they buried all his household with him. Servants, slaves, and everything.”
“Yeah?”
“
Sure. Those Egyptians figured when the king stopped living, all his cadre had a right to stop living too. Stupid, huh?”
Marasco halted completely. “What’re you getting at, Franky?”
Bolan swung about to face him squarely. “Pat and Mike say a king has got to go, Philip Honey,” he said soberly.
The blood drained from Marasco’s face. He said, “Oh my God. I knew it was something like that.”
“I been hoping you ain’t no Egyptian, Philip Honey,” Bolan said.
Marasco snatched a cigarette from his pocket and thoughtfully placed it between his lips. Bolan lit it. He took a deep drag and puffed the smoke out in tight grunts. Presently he said, “I’m not no Egyptian, Franky Lucky.”
“I’m glad to hear that.” Bolan began moving slowly toward DiGeorge’s door. Marasco reached out and placed a restraining hand on his arm.
“Wait a minute,” Marasco said. “Before you go in there. They got a turkey in there waiting for you.”
“What kind of turkey?” Bolan asked casually.
“A guy says he knew you back when. But he says also you died in Vietnam, in the army. Is this guy part of your cover, Franky?”
“Maybe. What’s his name?”
“Tony Avina. He says you grew up on his block in Jersey City. Says you got drafted and got killed. Is this gonna embarrass you in front of Deej?”
“Is this guy in the organization?” Bolan asked.
“Naw. A nobody. Prison gray sunk in all over him.”
“Look, Phil,” Bolan said conspiratorially, “my name ain’t Frank Lambretta.”
“Yeah, I figured that about a minute ago,” Marasco replied. “So what’re you gonna do about this turkey?”
“I’m gonna scare the turkey-shit outta him, that’s what,” growled Franky Lucky Bolan. “Come on. Let’s go see what color he drops.”
Carl Lyons paced the floor excitedly, glaring at Howard Brognola. “But this could be dynamite, Hal, if we could just get it into Bolan’s hands!” he cried. “Somebody bought himself a coroner on this deal, and you know it as well as I. That inquest should have come out with murder written all over it.”
“I know, I know,” Brognola said gently. “But you have to remember, Carl, the name Lou Pena wasn’t half the flag two years ago that it is now. There was never any suggestion that this Louis Pena who was driving the motorboat was the same infamous Lou Pena of the roaring thirties, no suggestion at all. The coroner could have quite logically arrived at a valid decision when he ruled in favor of accidental death. The damages were settled out of court, no trial, no charges, no nothing, and everybody appeared satisfied all around.”

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