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Liam Tern rubbed his chest, feeling the sore spots where two .44 Magnum slugs had connected solidly with his rib cage, hammering him even through the Kevlar body armor he wore. Suddenly, he was glad to have been wearing the heavy vestments of his Jack the Ripper disguise. Its flapping folds had obscured his body, throwing off the shooter’s point of aim.
“How are Danny and Serge?” he asked, entering the improvised sick bay.
“Serge looks like he’s gonna lose his leg. Danny’s foot is a hell of a mess,” the old man said, stripping off his rubber gloves. He hobbled over to the sink and Tern glanced over to Serge, who was in a doped-out state on the table. His leg had been torn apart by a point-blank burst of autofire, the muscle shredded away to expose gleaming white bone, shattered by a single 9 mm slug.
Danny was sitting in the corner, looking at the table, his face gaunt, his eyes wide with fear. “If Serge is going to lose that leg—”
Tern shook his head.
“Take it easy, Danny. He’ll be looked after,” Tern cooed in reassurance. He smiled gently at the young man, giving his brush-short red hair a tousle.
Tern glanced back at the old man, who shrugged and turned his back.
The blade’s handle was in Tern’s palm, but the wounded young man heard the sound of para cord striking the professional’s grip. Danny’s forearm bore down hard across Tern’s, his hazel eyes going wide, seeing betrayal.
“You fucking liar!” the kid bellowed.
Tern swept his hand down into Danny’s face, plunging his thumb into his eye. There was a grunt and a grimace, but the youngest member of the Ripper crew wasn’t letting go. The kid wasn’t distracted by the attack. An eye gouge wasn’t like getting a belly full of steel. Tern didn’t blame the kid as he pushed to get his knife up and into Danny’s gut.
“Just relax and die, Danny,” Tern snarled.
“Oh for God’s sake,” the old man grumbled.
Danny’s forehead suddenly exploded, blood spraying across Tern’s features, stinging his eyes. Hazel eyes stared sightlessly, head lolling on the shoulders of the dead man.
Tern dumped Danny on the table against the wall and turned just in time to see the old man level his pistol and put a mercy shot into Serge’s forehead. Serge jerked with the single impact, then was still. He couldn’t feel any more pain.
The old man unscrewed the sound suppressor from his pistol and plopped it in his pocket, holstering the gun.
“De Simmones…” Tern began.
“Lift with your knees, not your back,” the old man said with a wink. “We’ll dispose of them later.”
Tern sighed and shoved his shoulder under Danny’s sternum, lifting him up and flopping him onto Serge’s corpse.
He regretted having to kill Danny and Serge. Having two injured men would have alerted the authorities. A man with a leg broken by a point-blank burst of submachine-gun fire would have made any hospital suspicious. Serge would have bled to death in the amount of time it would have taken to find a physician with the skill and facilities to save his life. The man’s bleeding and the loss of the limb were his doom anyway.
Danny, on the other hand, was an even greater risk. He hadn’t been prepared for resistance, and getting shot gave Tern an expectation of what the kid was going to be like. He’d signed onto the job easy enough, having cut his way through the ranks, proving his toughness against the untrained shit-kickers in Ireland.
It was one thing to handle disorganized protesters and terrorists who were more successful at blowing themselves up with their own bombs. Against a fighting man like the soldier they’d just faced, Tern had realized Danny folded. He’d seen a killing machine whirling in action. Two of them, when Tern counted himself. The display had unseated Danny. In the future, there would have been too much of a pause, that niggling panic waiting to flare up and slow down the young fighter.
Tern rolled Danny’s eyelids closed then wrapped both of the dead bodies in plastic tarp.
“De Simmones said you needed help,” Carlton said as he entered the room. He was much shorter than Tern, only five foot six, but his upper body was thick and broad. Forearm muscles were laid in thick, rippling sheets poking out from under rolled-up sleeves, and he hefted one end of the tarp-wrapped body pack as easily as he handled the monstrous recoil of a machine gun.
“Makes you wonder what’ll happen when it’s our time,” Tern said.
Carlton shrugged his blocky shoulders. “We may get lucky and go out fast. Frankly, I always save a bullet for myself, so I don’t end up suffering like Serge.”
Tern shook his head. Serge had been a member of their team for a while. He was a vetted, blooded soldier. Unlike Danny, Serge had been hardened against tough odds.
As depressing as it was for the new kid to turn out to be a failure, it was worse when a longtime partner was dropped, and so easily.
No, it wasn’t easy.
The man in black was a damned good fighter. And Serge’s mangled leg was the source of agony. Tern still felt the bruises on his forearm where his fingers had dug in.
Tern took the other end of the tarp and they carried it to the van. “We’ll take the bodies to an incinerator.”
Carlton nodded as he backed into the van, the doors being held open by De Simmones and Courtley, the driver.
Tern glanced at De Simmones who just smiled. The smile said everything that Tern suspected. He and his men were expendable, and De Simmones wasn’t afraid to put a bullet into any of their heads.
“Come on, we have a long day ahead of us,” De Simmones replied.
“What about the man in black?” Carlton asked.
“I’ve called up Ripper Two for this job,” Tern told him. “If there’s anything left of him when they’re done with him, we’ll get called in for the kill.”
“Right now, we need distance,” De Simmones stated. “We’re an organization. Let’s take advantage of our strength in numbers, all right?”
Tern smirked.
He was glad, for now, that he was counted as a useful number. He still intended to keep his guns close in case that ledger ever changed against him.
HAL BROGNOLA KNEW the mathematics of asset versus risk that Mack Bolan provided to the Stony Man Farm project. While he was a useful member in the program to keep America safe from threats foreign and domestic, there was also a factor of risk whenever the Executioner was involved.
At that moment, the only mental math he wanted to do was to add five hours to the time to figure out where his longtime friend was while he was stuck in the Farm’s War Room, keeping a close eye on a Phoenix Force mission.
“It’s almost six there, isn’t it?” Brognola asked.
“That’s right,” Bolan answered. “You’re burning the midnight oil.”
“What’s this about?” Brognola asked.
“I was on the way back to my place when I came on a murder scene, and the murderer,” Bolan explained. “He was wearing body armor and packing a machine pistol. And he is good.”
“‘Is,’ as in still running around?” Brognola inquired.
“Still driving around, with a van full of automatic weapons, two injured coworkers, and one of the best machine gunners I’ve ever run across,” Bolan said. “I’ve been cleaning up injuries from that fight for the past couple hours.”
“All this to murder some woman in…” Brognola began. “Whitechapel?”
“Yeah. The killer was dressed up as Jack the Ripper.”
“You’re joking with me, right?”
“Have I ever yanked your chain before, Hal?”
“Jack the Ripper–style killing, in Whitechapel, with a machine gunner for backup?”
Bolan grunted in affirmation. “At the very least. He had two more and a driver. But one suffered some severe injuries. He might not make it.”
Brognola picked up his coffee mug. “Nothing major is going on here that you have to attend to. It sounds like you should stay and see what’s behind this murder.”
“Thanks, Hal. Think you can get me some authorization?”
“For what?”
“I want to work with the local Ripper task force.”
“You think this guy’s been doing this for a while?” Brognola asked.
“I did some research. I ran across references to Ripper-style murders, and there have been nine in the past three years.”
“Any solved?”
“Only one. Scotland Yard couldn’t link the other eight to the guy they caught, so they think he was just a copycat,” Bolan answered. “I’m not much of a gambler, but I’m betting there was a very definite pattern on mutilation going on.” Bolan described the murder scene he’d stumbled across.
“The intestines were thrown over the right shoulder, just as in the original Ripper murders? Wasn’t that an execution according to Masonic ritual?” Brognola asked.
“No. When the Masons executed their victims, they removed the heart and threw it over the left shoulder,” Bolan answered. “There’s a belief that the ‘Juwes’ graffiti was meant to throw authorities off the trail.”
“I’ll make some calls to Scotland Yard,” Brognola said. “Maybe I can get you in on the investigation.”
“Even if I only touch base with them for a few hours, it’ll still give me some leads to go on. If I can’t, then I’ll do some bouncing around the underworld. Someone had to supply those guys with their hardware. Machine pistols might be easy to sell, but I took out one major dealer who sold squad automatic weapons. There can’t be many of those in England, let alone London.”
“Striker, just be careful. I’ll call you later. Get some rest, okay?” Brognola said.
“I’ll try,” Bolan answered over the phone link, before it died.
THE SUN’S RISING did nothing to lighten Inspector Melissa Dean’s mood as she got out of her car. Officers were surrounding the alley, and she had passed by the other street. It was cut off on both ends, the flickering lights atop police vehicles splashing the slick streets with reds and blues. She walked closer, knowing from the call what to expect.
It still wasn’t a pretty smell, the stench of a gutted body yet fresh in the air.
It also smelled like the aftermath of a fireworks display. She bent and picked up a piece of brass, rolling it between her fingertips. The bottom had no stamp of caliber or maker, let alone a lot number, and she frowned. From the look of it, it was a simple 9 mm case. She’d seen enough of them working homicide, but none so clean.
There was a polite cough and she looked up to see a tall Asian man standing nearby. She recognized his pale, round face instantly, his long black hair flowing in the wind.
Kevin Goh managed a weak smile as he walked over to her, holding a plastic evidence bag full of similar brass casings. On the ground, white tape marked where each cartridge had been found. More tape marks were on the walls, pointing out bullet impacts.
Dean started to count them as Goh walked with her, but the number of holes and casings was enormous.
“Sorry to ring you up so early,” Goh said, shrugging against the cold.
“A Ripper-style murder and a gunfight?” Dean asked, looking around.
“Yeah. At the other end of the alley, there’s disintegrating belt links as well as rifle ammunition. NATO caliber.”
“In English for those of us who don’t speak gun,” Dean said.
Goh smirked. “Someone used a full-blown machine gun, as well as at least three other weapons here last night.”
“Three weapons?”
“A pistol. And two different kinds of submachine gun. One was firing 9 mm shorts. One was firing 9 mm Luger rounds. And the pistol was a Magnum autoloader.”
Dean shook her head, running her fingers through her short blond hair. “Magnum.”
“Forty-four to be exact,” Goh told her.
Dean pursed her lips. “Someone with a Dirty Harry complex?”
“Someone took a big bite out of Sonny Westerbridge’s skull last night. And .44 Magnum and 9 mm machine pistol ammunition mixed in with what Sonny’s men had,” Goh replied. He plucked the casing from her fingertips and showed her the blank end stamp. “The Magnums were also unmarked.”
“But Sonny’s usually based out of Rotherhithe,” Dean said.
“Not anymore. He and nearly forty-five of his men are dead. Gunfire, explosions and one knifing.”
Dean shook her head. “I’m sure the knife job wasn’t like this.”
Not if it’s like our usual boy, she added mentally.
Goh looked at her for a moment, and Dean realized that the Asian detective was a recent addition to London’s finest. Homicides West, East and South, as well as the Serious and Organized Crime unit, were familiar with a pattern, over the years, of criminals and terrorists who came to brutal ends.
There were rumors that these were covert SAS operations, or even the work of men from overseas. When the homicide teams tried to come up with a clue, they were usually stonewalled. The stonewalling was frustrating, but since the victims were thugs and murderers themselves, the police reluctantly dropped the cases. One of these common links was the blank ammunition, and the predominant calibers used. Forty-four Magnum and 9 mm Luger.
They never had much more on this mystery force except that it was small, efficient and rarely brought harm to any bystanders. Dean decided to keep quiet about this, but she couldn’t help wonder if the death of Westerbridge and his men were related to this alley fight in any way other than the mystery fighter.
“Two sides shooting at each other and using the same kind of phantom ammo,” Dean said. “Any information on the victim?”
“No bullet holes in her, except for what looked like an old scar on a flap of her stomach,” Goh told her.
Dean walked toward the body, Goh on her heels. She knelt before the dead woman. The body had been disturbed, half pushed onto its side, probably by fighters bumping into her. The grime on the floor of the alley was scuffed with boot marks where big, heavy men had battled.
“Are we done taking pictures of the body?”
Goh nodded toward the crime-scene photographers. “They’ll be taking her to forensics in a few minutes.”
Dean sighed. “I’ll look around here and try to get a feel for the crime scene.”
Goh tilted his head. “You seem to have a feeling already, Melissa.”
Dean swept the alley, drifting off for a moment, looking at the pockmarks from weapons, smelling the stink of urban warfare and serial murder all sewn up into a tiny corridor of stone and garbage. It was a claustrophobic place where men had tried to kill each other, and one presumably innocent woman lost her life.
The vibes given by the scene were strange.
If enigmas had a scent, Melissa Dean now knew how to recognize it.
Sometimes, if you’ve been to enough murder scenes, you developed a taste for what it was all about. Some were madness. Some were fury. Fueled by jealousy, betrayal, loneliness—she’d had felt them all.
This was different. There was no emotion in this.
The body was too perfectly filleted, too neatly placed. Just how the other Ripper kills were set up.
But the addition of Westerbridge’s killer…that was a new twist.
How could it not be? The kind of firepower used doesn’t show up more than once a year in London’s back streets, she thought. Now twice in one night?
There’s no such thing as coincidence.
Dean shook her head. “Where are you heading now?”
“Back to the station. Need a lift?” Goh offered.
“I have my own wheels,” Dean replied. “But I’ll meet you there.”
The mental images of two horrors, one a century and a half old, and one thoroughly modern formed an amorphous blob of murder and mayhem in the middle of the city she was sworn to protect. The burden hung on her, troubling her on the drive back.
4
Try as he might to put aside his theories and memories about the previous night’s murder, Mack Bolan couldn’t shake them. But he wasn’t completely left cold.
As he showed up at the offices of London’s Metropolitan Police Homicide East unit, the Executioner felt the usual tingle he felt whenever he entered a police station while on a mission. Hal Brognola had arranged credentials that were so far above reproach they could bounce a small nuclear warhead. But none of that gave Bolan the impression that he was truly safe. The gulf that stood between the lone soldier and the forces of law enforcement was one that was hard to cross without the sense that he was walking a tightrope.
There were just too many variables for him to truly feel comfortable working inside a system—the possibility of dealing with corruption, of losing brave allies, of being too constrained by the rules and allowing his enemy to slip away to cost more lives…
Bolan took a deep breath. He had no patience for those who got away, literally, with murder. And so, he spoke to those killers in their own bloody language—regardless of laws.
He reached the watch commander, a sturdily built, square-shouldered, full-faced woman with long, once black hair shot through with streaks of silver. She was in her fifties, no longer the fresh-faced youthful beauty she had once been, but something shined through the crow’s-feet and smile lines. She had a sharp eye as keen and hardened as any beat cop. She looked down on him with a matronly glower.
“Can I help you, sir?” she asked.
“I’m here to see Detectives Dean and Goh, Homicide East.”
She pursed her full lips, studying him for a moment, disapproval crossing her face. She cleared her throat. “Their desks are on the second floor, in the Homicide East squad room. They’re expecting you, Detective Cooper.”
“Thank you,” Bolan replied.
He followed the desk sergeant’s directions and was soon at the desk of an unlikely couple of lawmen sitting at face-to-face desks, paperwork and foam cups littering them, computer screens displaying crime scene reports.
Goh looked up at Bolan, dark eyes taking him in with a single glance as his raven hair fell in sheets off his collar.
Dean had short blond hair that stopped at her collar and piercing, pale blue eyes that almost mirrored his own. She studied him as well, her gaze penetrating, trying to cut through the layers of pretense he was hiding behind. While Goh was offering his hand in greeting, she was holding back, tense and withdrawn, in observer mode.
Bolan took Goh’s hand.
“Matt Cooper,” Bolan offered.
“Kevin Goh.” The detective’s flawless East End accent indicated he was London born and raised, or at least raised. His grip was strong and firm. “This is Melissa Dean.”
“Pleasure,” she said, but making no effort to act like it was.
“Likewise,” he answered. He was sincere about it, but wondered how far behind he was on his rapport with these two.
“So you’re interested in the latest run of Ripper killings?” Goh asked.
“Yeah. I was interested in the case. Meredith Jones-Jakes, about five months ago, was the last one I’d heard about,” Bolan explained. “Then this morning, there was supposedly another one?”
“You seem to have learned about it pretty quickly,” Dean spoke up in a stinging broadside. “Coincidence?”
He met her gaze unflinchingly. “There’s no such thing as coincidence.”
“So what are you doing so far from the colonies?” Dean pressed.
“You have the paperwork sitting on your desk.”
Dean pushed it aside. “Administrative leave from the Boston Police Department. That’s the reason. What’s the story?”
“I’m set to testify in three months,” Bolan told her. “And I’m under a gag order about anything else.”
Dean’s eyes narrowed. “A mobster?”
“Make of it what you will.”
“That’s why you’re traipsing through a Met station packing a hand cannon under your jacket? The Mafia doesn’t have roving hit squads around the world, Detective.”
Bolan was tempted, for half a heartbeat, to tell her that she was wrong. Early on in his career, he’d run into more than enough heavily armed gangsters in Soho, giving him his first experiences with the awesome Weatherby Mark V and the efficient Uzi 9 mm submachine gun. And only a few hours previously, he could have shocked her with the level of hardware at Sonny Westerbridge’s Rotherhithe warehouse.
Instead, Bolan remained diplomatic. “It’s not a cannon. And it’s cleared.”
Dean’s jaw set firmly. “I just don’t want to see it unless we come under fire from the entire Peruvian Third Naval Commando unit, all right?”
Bolan took a notebook and pen from the pocket of his gray windbreaker. “Is that only the Peruvian Third Naval Commando unit, or is that indicative of the level of opposition?”
Dean sighed heavily. “We’re going to check out the body at the morgue, smart-ass. Are you going to join us, or are you going to try and join the cast of Dead Ringers?”
“Melissa, as much as I’d love to see you get into a catfight, I think you’d have to have it with a woman,” Goh said. “I’m sorry, Detective Cooper. She’s not usually like this.”
Bolan looked Dean over. “I’m not offended. If a foreigner was going to step into one of my cases, I’d be uptight too.”
Dean stood, grabbing her brown leather jacket, flipping it around her slender shoulders. Hard eyes met his. “Uptight? Try suspicious.”
The Executioner watched her as she was leaving the squad room. She stopped halfway to the door and glared back at Goh and him. “Are you two coming?”
Bolan looked to Goh, who could only shrug. “We’re coming, Melissa.”
The two men followed the detective.
AS THE IRATE Vincent Black strode to his car, his two men fell into step behind him. He spent a moment checking the .50-caliber Desert Eagle he had in a shoulder holster, then waited for Sal to open his door while Tony stepped around to the driver’s side.
Black ducked his head and got into the back seat.
The old man was a pain in his ass, calling him out on jobs whenever he felt like it, but in a way, that pain helped Black along.
After all, Black was in the business of hurting people.
And he was good at it.
“Just watch whoever’s going into the Met today,” De Simmones told him. “We’re looking for a tall man, six-three. Black hair, blue eyes. Someone who looks hard and businesslike.”
Black settled in comfortably for the surveillance. Being caught with an unlicensed handgun right in front of the police station would land him in more trouble than he was willing to pay his lawyers to get him out of. He shrugged, flattened his coat lapel with the palm of one hand, and watched from across the street.
It wasn’t long before the man matching the description De Simmones had given him drove into a parking garage next to the police station, then headed inside. Black checked the guy out.
He was big, but he was lean and proportional, moving with the facile grace of a panther. He also had confidence, layered under an alertness not based on paranoia, but on the kind of awareness you only got when you walked into some hard places nobody expected you to walk out of.
Black could identify with the guy. He’d been in a lot of traps, and he bore the knife scars and more than a couple of circular bullet scars from close encounters with men who had tried to be as bad as he was.
Black still walked. They didn’t. Some of them didn’t even smell fresh air anymore.
I’d like to see this big bloke in action, he thought. And when it’s all over, I’ll put a single .50-caliber slug into the middle of the stranger’s face and blow out his brains.
THOUGH HE COULD HARDLY be considered squeamish, the Executioner rarely went to a morgue. He rarely needed to, and he had seen enough of the people he loved and respected laid out under cold white sheets on flat metal tables. Too many soldiers on the same side, too many beloved, too many family members, all cold and on a slab, never to move again. Posing as a detective, though, he had no choice.
Bolan looked at the familiar face, staring up. Her eyes were still open, and he was tempted to ask why they had been left that way, but he knew particulate matter sometimes showed up on the cornea, which would provide some clues as to who killed her or how she died. It was often the little details solved a mystery. Sometimes looking into the eyes of a dead woman could give a moment of insight into her murder.
He was leaning over her, examining her more closely when the medical examiner, a balding man with a hooked nose and gunmetal gray hair, cleared his throat.
“Are you in any way a forensic technician, Detective Cooper?” the ME asked.
Bolan shook his head.
“Then kindly piss off.” The irate glower dissolved into a friendly wink. Bolan snorted, an abortive laugh in these dreary, desolate surroundings, but at least it was a moment of wry humor on the part of the examiner. “I’m Dr. Felix Randman.”
“Matt Cooper.”
“From New Hampshire, aren’t you?”
“You’re pretty good at catching accents,” Bolan said. However, for the purposes of his charade, for the purpose of working with the local British homicide cops, he was reverting to how he spoke when he grew up in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. For a long time, he had sublimated his accent, having learned to speak with a more anonymous tone, akin to the voice that the network news anchors called “Midwest neutral.”
“I spent a year at MGH,” Randman stated. He came around the table and looked down into the dead girl’s eyes.
Bolan looked serious. “One of the first graduates?” he asked.
Randman glanced up at Bolan, then grinned at the soldier. “You give as good as you get.”
“What’s that mean?” Dean asked.
“Massachusetts General Hospital is the third oldest hospital in North America,” Randman explained.
“So he called you a dried-up old fart?” Dean asked.
Randman narrowed his eyes at her. “Yes.”
“I may like you yet, Cooper,” she said with a hint of approval.
Bolan nodded. “Now that we’ve broken the ice, you were going to show us something about her eyes?”
“Yes. They were dilated prior to her demise. She was in a drugged state,” Randman said.
“Well, the insides of her thighs were a mass of track marks, according to your report,” Goh spoke up.
“Small problem. All the track marks were clean and uniform and about the same level of scarring, meaning they were almost the same age,” Randman explained.
“Was this the same as with the other women?” Bolan asked.
“You catch on quickly.”
“Someone wanted it to look like these girls were just off the street, full of smack and doing their tours,” Dean said, walking around.
“On top of that, she has none of the long-term effects of heroin abuse,” Randman stated. “Her legs show a lot of track marks. But she has no collapsed veins, no signs of bacterial infections or abscesses. The heart looks perfectly fine, uninfected and no damage to the valve or the lining. I’m betting that once I saw her skull open, I’m not going to find any neurological trauma.”
Bolan frowned. “And what is that circular scar on her stomach, just poking out of her navel, see it?”
Dean and Goh looked for it. Randman pointed it out with the tip of a probe. “You’ve got sharp eyes, Cooper.”
“It looks like someone performed laproscopic surgery on her,” Randman stated. “Something was inserted.”
“And that someone took it back,” Bolan answered. “The whole Ripper reenactment would just be a smoke screen.”
“It wouldn’t be the first time,” Goh answered. “Some historians believe that the Ripper murders weren’t so much a serial killer at work, but someone covering up a conspiracy.”
“There’s that,” Bolan replied. “William Gull was supposed to be the man responsible for hunting down and killing the five women who knew about Edward’s fathering a bastard child.”
“There is a problem with that theory, if you might recall,” Dean spoke up.
“You mean that whole thing with Gull being in his eighties, having suffered a stroke and a heart attack, and eviscerating his victims in a cab running through the middle of a crowded London neighborhood?” the Executioner asked.
“That’s the one,” Dean answered.
“No plan is perfect. But whatever went on, it certainly stirred up enough controversy over an entire century to keep the waters muddied,” Bolan said.
Goh shook his head. “So what was inserted into her?”
Randman shrugged. “I ran some X-rays to see if I could get an impression from what was left behind. When a knife is used against flesh or any other soft target, it leaves behind trace elements of metal. I have wear patterns and was hoping to find some trace of what was inserted into our poor girl.”
“How soon will it be done?” Dean asked.
“They’ve been having problems with the X-rays on her,” Randman stated. “The last shot of her was overexposed. We’re trying to fix the glitch now, and we’re not exactly on the priority to take her to the main hospital’s Radiology department.”
“Why’s that?” Bolan asked.
Randman looked crestfallen as he felt the sting in Bolan’s voice. “Because, Detective Cooper, even if she is the latest to bear the mark of Jack the Ripper’s rampage across the centuries, is not important. We don’t even have an identity for her.”
“Jane Doe. Another victim left to fall to the wayside because she isn’t strong or important enough, right?”
“That’s the way it goes, Detective. I don’t like it, but that’s the way it goes. It’s not a perfect world, and justice isn’t always done,” Randman stated.
“It may not be a perfect world, but I can sure as hell try for some justice,” Bolan replied.
AS SOON AS THE MAN in black went into the ME’s office, Vincent Black got out of the back seat of his car. Tony and Sal braced him on either side, obscuring him from casual observers on the street. In the trunk was a trio of sawed-off shotguns, blasters no longer than two feet. They kicked like hell, but they each held four shots, with one in the breech. They had enough firepower to take on any opposition short of encountering a small platoon of Bosnian guerrillas on an ethnic cleansing spree. If that wasn’t enough, Black had his Desert Eagle, and Sal and Tony were packing 9 mm Glocks.
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