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    Friday's Feast

    Friday's Feast

    by Don Pendleton


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    Don Pendleton (1927–1995) was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. He served in the US Navy during World War II and the Korean War. His first short story was published in 1957, but it was not until 1967, at the age of forty, that he left his career as an aerospace engineer and turned to writing full time. After producing a number of science fiction and mystery novels, in 1969 Pendleton launched his first book in the Executioner saga: War Against the Mafia. The series, starring Vietnam veteran Mack Bolan, was so successful that it inspired a new American literary genre, and Pendleton became known as the father of action-adventure.

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    Friday's Feast

    The Executioner, Book Thirty-seven


    By Don Pendleton

    OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

    Copyright © 1979 Don Pendleton
    All rights reserved.
    ISBN: 978-1-4976-8589-5


    CHAPTER 1

    BACK DOOR


    Leo Turrin was completing a hazardous personal contact with Mack Bolan, and was preparing to disembark from the latter's rolling command post, when Bolan's driver, the lovely April Rose, sent back a tense report.

    "I believe there's trouble at the back door," the girl called through the intercom.

    Bolan's eyes moved farther than his lips as he snapped back, "Read it!"

    "I read it one hundred yards to the rear and maintaining through the last three turns. Large sedan with at least two radiating bodies aboard. Unable refine beyond that."

    "Friend or Foe!" Bolan commanded.

    "Tried it already," April reported. "Negative. No transponder response."

    Turrin growled. "Dammit! They're on me! I'd have sworn I was clean! Dammit, I—"

    "Local cops, maybe," Bolan suggested tautly. "Let's try some ears." He quickly fired up the war room's communications console and brought a pair of scanners on the line, at the same moment calling forward to the con, "Give us some stretch, April."

    The big cruiser abruptly turned east into a subdivision and accelerated smoothly along a darkened residential street.

    "Read it!"

    "Target is slowing. Target is ... okay, right behind us again and now accelerating. The range is one-four-zero yards and closing fast."

    The radio scanners were revealing absolutely no activity on the police bands.

    A moment later, April reported, "Target resumed one hundred yards and maintaining. It's a glue job."

    Turrin muttered, "I told you it was pure paranoia out there. They must have tagged me at the airport. Now isn't this a hell of a mess."

    "Not yet," Bolan growled. He gave the girl some terse instructions, then told Turrin, "Stay with April, Leo. If the worse gets worse, you know what to do."

    Before the double-lifer from New York could even bat an eye in response to that, the big guy was at the door and the cruiser was in another abrupt turn, slowing momentarily. Then Bolan was out of there and instantly lost in the darkness outside.

    Turrin's heart was hammering at his ribs as he quickly went forward and took the con beside April Rose. Completely erased were all thoughts of identity games with this lady. She was slowly bringing the big rig to a halt and peering intently at a reddish—glowing electronic screen, which was mounted in the cockpit. "The famous suck play," she said in a hushed voice, eyes still on the screen. "They're slowing. They're stopping. Target is at rest. Okay. It's okay. He'll check it out. If they're clean ..."

    His consciousness was dividing, part of it admiring the cool professionalism of this woman, another part marveling once again at the sophisticated systems that were packed into this battleship-on-land, but most of him just worried as hell and feeling miserable about the jeopardy he'd brought here. Not that it was anything new. Extreme jeopardy had been a routine way of life for both men for as long as either could remember. Eyeball encounters such as this one could do nothing but compound the dangers. There were times, of course, when the advantages of a personal meeting were felt to outweigh the risk, and this had been one of those times.

    Hell ...

    The relationship with Bolan went back a long ways. And it had been a damned productive one, in many respects. Leo Turrin lived more than a double life. When Bolan had entered the picture, it had become a triple life—and there had been some outrageous times when "the life" seemed to expand into infinite partitions.

    Though a blood nephew to the late Sergio Frenchi, who was a founding father of La Cosa Nostra—and despite the fact he'd been a "made man" since early in his youth-Turrin had returned from military service in Vietnam determined to help break the invisible, but smothering grasp that organized crime was exerting on all of the nation's institutions. The federal authorities were naturally delighted to have such a well-placed convert. They had given him the code name "Sticker," a fitting tag since it was Turrin's assignment to rise as high as possible within the ranks of Mafia power, providing the government with as much intelligence as he could without compromising his position within the hierarchy. Which had not been an easy job, at the best of times. Then when Bolan came along ...

    Shi—i—i—t.

    Leo had been a lieutenant, or caporegime, in his Uncle Sergio's western Massachusetts crime family—in Bolan's home town of Pittsfield. He had actually played a part, though a small one, in the tragedy which struck the Bolan family and brought Sergeant Mack slamming home from Vietnam.

    That was when Leo Turrin's "life" had really become complicated.

    For a tense period, during that opening battle, Turrin had been one of Bolan's prime targets. He'd escaped with his life only after risking it all to reveal his true role to the rampaging jungle fighter.

    As a matter of historical record, Leo Turrin was the sole survivor of the Frenchi hierarchy, in the ashes left by Mack Bolan. For that matter, he was one of the few ranking men to ever survive an eye-to-eye confrontation with that guy. Moreover, it was another matter of historical record that the two men had worked together briefly in an open relationship during those incubatory days, before Bolan brought his war raging to the surface, and was meanwhile posing as a Mafia recruit in Turrin's cadre.

    Talk about complications ...

    Not only did the mob want Mack Bolan's head in a sack, but the entire police establishment, including Turrin's own feds, wanted his butt behind bars. And both sides had immediately begun looking to Leo Turrin as "the Bolan expert."

    Infinite lives, yeah.

    There had never been a moment, though, when Leo Turrin was confused about the direction of his loyalties. He very deftly fielded all the demands from both sides of his street while walking blithely down the middle, hand in glove with Mack Bolan. And it had proved to be a highly rewarding relationship, entirely symbiotic to both partners. Each owed much to the other. Neither would have come so far alone, and both knew and respected this truth.

    It had only been very recently that the official hand of Washington had reached down in forgiveness and recognition to surreptitiously stroke Mack Bolan's ruffled fur. The guy had, after all, broken just about every law in the book ... many times over. What the government belatedly began to realize, though, Leo had known in the gut almost from the start. This guy Bolan was something different, entirely different. The world had probably not seen his like since the age of chivalry. The motivations of this superb fighter had nothing to do with any vendetta or revenge mentality. Bolan's commitment was much too wide, and far too deep, to be powered by such shallow preoccupations. The family tragedy had served only as a sparking, as an awakening to truth. Bolan was, to put it as simply as possible, a guy who could not turn away from that truth. He'd broken the law, sure—but not out of any disrespect for that law.

    Indeed, Bolan had broken the law because he had seen no other way to preserve it for those who deserved its protections. Hell, the Mob was running high, wide and handsome—taking what they wanted when they wanted it. And he saw that "the law" would not or could not contain them.

    Well ... Bolan had an answer for the Mob.

    He perceived them as a nation within the nation, as an enemy nation bent on the destruction of all the noble American ideals. They were using our own noble rules against us—and winning—but here was a guy who would not sit still and let them win. In his own way, he reacted. It was not Leo's way. It was not a cop's way. Mack Bolan was a soldier, and a damned good one. He merely did what good soldiers do when their country is in jeopardy—he went to war. And whatever anyone else might call it, Leo Turrin knew that it was a glorious war, a worthy war, a damned deadly necessary war.

    And he was winning it, yes.

    Unless ...

    April Rose was fiddling with the console controls. She flashed a sympathetic glance at her passenger and murmured, "Don't blame yourself. These things happen, Sticker."

    "Not usually twice," the Sticker growled.

    She was refining the focus of the optics system and "augmenting" the infrared with laser pulses. Fantastic damned systems, yeah. A hellishly red image was beginning to flicker from the screen now, the picture somewhat like that of a film negative weirdly lit from behind by red lights. The outlines of an automobile glowed feebly within that image, behind which the brighter negatives of two men were framed in a tight two-shot from the shoulders up, both heads turned to the right as though peering through the window on the passenger side.

    This ghastly image had hardly resolved when bright red pencil-flashes erupted just beyond the window, two quick pulses which streaked across the viewscreen to terminate at each human skull, jerking both of them into a sudden displacement down and away.

    April's own head jerked slightly in empathetic reaction, and she let out a soft little sigh.

    Turrin squeezed the girl's shoulder, muttered, "Hang tough, kid," and went out of there.

    He met his pal the warrior at about the halfway mark along the dark street and told him, quite humbly, "I'm sorry, Sarge."

    "Not as sorry as them," Bolan replied in a matter-of-fact tone. He was removing a strange-looking silencer from his Beretta pistol—one of his own developments, no doubt.

    "Them who?"

    "Ike and Mike Baldaserra. What's their connection, these days?"

    Turrin whistled softly and said, "I dunno. Last I heard of those two, they were doing time in Atlanta."

    Bolan agreed with that. "That's my make, too. Maybe you could find out, very discreetly, who's sponsoring them and why they tailed you from New York."

    "Did they do that?" Turrin inquired with a sigh.

    "The airline stubs in Mike's pocket make it look that way. And the car is an airport Avis. That doesn't read like a direct local conection. Do you think?"

    Turrin shook his head and said, "Guess not. Damn. Well, maybe that's a blessing. Or maybe it's not."

    "Depends on what you like the best," Bolan agreed.

    "You're thinking maybe I've blown the cover?"

    Bolan shrugged. "Possibly. Maybe you should safe it, anyway. Check out, Leo."

    "No way," Turrin muttered.

    "Stubborn," Bolan said quietly. "The guy is just plain stubborn as a damned old mule."

    "Look who's talking stubborn," Turrin growled. "Second mile, for Christ's sake. Imagine that. A second goddam mile."

    Bolan grinned and said, "Watch the swinger, pal."

    "Same to you."

    "Need help with the garbage?"

    "I'll manage. Sarge ... dammit ... be careful. And sit tight till I hit your floater. Wait for me. Say you'll wait."

    "Let's say I'll try," Bolan replied soberly. His eyes flashed toward the death car. "Sometimes you just can't, you know."

    Turrin said, "Yeah. I know."

    Those eyes flashed something very intense from very deep inside, then the big guy spun on his toes and trotted softly up the street toward his cruiser.

    Some kind of damned guy, yeah.

    Turrin threw a kiss at the night, and went on to take care of his garbage detail. He would do what had to be done, then leave that vehicle within walking distance of his own rented wheels.

    "I know," he told the darkness. "Sometimes, yeah, you just can't wait."

    CHAPTER 2

    READINGS


    "Good work," Bolan said to April Rose as he joined her at the con.

    The girl accepted the quiet praise without comment. She turned the cruiser about and headed it toward the highway. The other vehicle had already departed the scene. When they reached Highway 2, Bolan growled, "Head north."

    By the time she executed the corner, Leo Turrin's confiscated wheels were far ahead. "Track or break?" she inquired softly.

    "Break," Bolan replied, sighing.

    The girl sighed also as she moved to break the electronic lock on the disappearing "target" vehicle. The big grim man beside her was, at his most talkative, not your standard conversational item. At times like this, he was a veritable Sphinx. April had always tried to respect his mental privacy, but it could be aggravating as hell, sometimes.

    After about six blocks of total silence, she quietly invaded that grim atmosphere. "Read it, soldier," she said, trying to mimic his command voice.

    Bolan's troubled gaze met hers in the mirror as he replied, "I'm trying."

    "Let's try together. Who got killed?"

    He lit a cigarette and responded in a musing tone. "Couple of old pros from Brooklyn. The Baldaserra brothers. Torture freaks, hit men. For pay."

    April made a face and said, "Ugh."

    "Yeah. They were originally made by the old Mavnarola family. That's also the family that brought us such stellar citizens as Augie Marinello and Freddie Gambella. The Baldaserras went free lance a few years ago ... I guess trying to revive a little Murder Incorporated shop for the New York territories. That was before I came onto the scene. By the time I first got to New York, the feds already had those boys on jury-tampering charges. We never met. Until just now."

    April was clearly impressed by Bolan's phenomenal memory. She asked, "How do you keep all this stuff in your head? You're saying you saw them for the first time, in the dark, just a quick glimpse ... and that was enough? You made them, then blew them away?" She snapped her fingers. "Just like that? What—from some dingy old mug shots in your hinky-dink machine?"

    She was referring to his microfilm library in the intelligence console, a thorough study of the denizens and habitats of the species Mafiosi carnivoris.

    "I keep it updated," he replied quietly. "I can tell you what those guys like for breakfast. And I'd recognize any of them in hell."

    The girl shivered slightly and wondered, in a lighter tone, "Are we away clean?"

    "I think so," Bolan replied soberly. "Rented car. No radio. It's unlikely that they could have flashed any reports without losing the track. No, I think it's clean. For us, anyway. Sticker, now, I don't ..."

    "He thinks he led them here."

    "He did. Which means that someone is beginning to wonder about Sticker."

    "Sticker is really Leopold Turrin, isn't he?" she quietly ventured.

    "Bite your lip," he said, just as quietly. "How'd you know?"

    She tossed her head and said, "I look at pictures, too, you know. And I had a special interest. He used to have the pussy franchise in Pittsfield."

    Bolan grinned, a bit self-consciously—his usual reaction to her use of vulgarisms. She knew that it both amused and slightly embarrassed him. Which was primarily why April did it.

    He told her, now, "Leo had a lot more than that in Pittsfield. He had the keys to the kingdom."

    "What happened to them?"

    "I guess I broke his lock."

    "I see." After a moment of silence, she prodded on. "I'm surprised you didn't break his head. Instead, you convinced him that he should come over with the good guys. I find it very strange." Another brief silence, then, "I've been doing some studying myself, the past couple of days. I've, uh, learned who Cindy is." She glanced at him. "The girl who sent you the annotated copy of Don Quixote when you were in Vietnam. With love forever. I was jealous of her. Well, just a bit. Then Mr. Brognola told me that Cindy was your kid sister, that she was dead now, and ... and all about that. That's why I find it so strange about Leopold Turrin. I mean, all that mess is what started you off. And Leopold Turrin was the man directly responsible for it. Why ... what ... how did you get so damned big-hearted as to let him off when ... when ... well, it's kind of weird and I guess I don't understand it. Everyone in Brognola's shop knows that you and Sticker are thicker than molasses. I just never would have dreamed that Sticker and Turrin are one and the same. I mean, of all people ..."

    Very quietly, Bolan told her, "You don't have all the facts, April. In the first place, I did not convert Leo to anything. He was 'Sticker' long before I came on the scene. And he was not responsible for what happened in Pittsfield. Actually he crutched the situation all he could. Took some great risks doing it, too. I didn't know about that, at first. Something else I did not know, then, was that Leo was covertly helping me all he could, too. All the while I was trying to whack the guy. Damned near did. If it hadn't been for ..." He took a deep breath. "We're thick, yeah. Leo is the best friend and the largest man I've ever known." He threw the girl an oblique glance. "Try to understand this: I'd die for that guy, with no regrets."

    She murmured, "I'll try to understand that."

    "And I'm very concerned about his present situation."

    "Exactly what is the situation?"

    "That's what I'm trying to read."

    "We were reading together. Remember?"

    Bolan gave her the information that Leo had brought from New York, concluding with, "So that's the way it lies at the moment, and I haven't the gleam of an idea as to what Leo is heading into. Hell of it is, neither does he."

    "Well, he's a good game player," she said, trying to sound reassuring.

    "Uh-huh."

    "What do you think he's heading into?"


    (Continues...)

    Excerpted from Friday's Feast by Don Pendleton. Copyright © 1979 Don Pendleton. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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    In Baltimore the Executioner prepares for his final showdown with the mob

    For four days Mack Bolan has carried the battle against organized crime all across the country in a take-no-prisoners firefight that’s hotter than any he’s ever fought. After crippling Mafia operations in Florida, he makes his way to Baltimore, home of the last great capo, where the minions of organized crime prepare to make their final stand. One way or another, the Executioner’s endless war is about to come to a close.
     
    With the help of his oldest ally, undercover cop Leo Turrin, Bolan infiltrates the establishment one last time. With Turrin feeding him information from the inner circles of Mafia power, it should be a cinch to crush this last outpost of mob resistance. But even a dying snake has venom in its fangs, and the ruthless killers of Baltimore will bring mortal danger to Bolan and his closest friend.

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