Baltimore Trackdown
shots too long, Jo Jo. You’ve forgotten how to roll with the punches.”
    Bolan put the Beretta away. He lifted the pool cue and held it in both hands.
    “On your feet, scumbag.”
    Jo Jo shook his head to clear it as he began to struggle up. When he straightened, a wicked-looking blade materialized in his fist. He lunged at Bolan, snarling.
    Bolan used the stick to parry the thrust, then feinted forward with the tapered end. Jo Jo Albergetti tried to step back, but was blocked by the billiard table.
    Bolan used the opening he sought and brought the tip of the cue down with lightning speed. The wooden lance pierced the mafioso’s chest, entering his heart. Bolan’s two hundred pounds of might powered it forward. The Mafia lieutenant was dead within ten seconds.
    Bolan left him where he fell, the cue sticking out of his chest straight into the air. He dropped a marksman’s badge on Jo Jo and checked the far door. It led to a hall toward the rear of the building. A few moments later he found a back door into the alley and went out.
    He was at his car before anyone noticed Jo Jo’s absence.
    It was nearly an hour later when a waitress went into the private room and found Jo Jo.
    * * *
    Don Carlo Nazarione sat at the big desk in his office on the third floor of his mansion and shook his head.
    “How many men we lost on the Chief Smith hit? Ten? Are all of them dead?”
    The other man in the room, Ardly Scimone, his second in command, stared at the godfather.
    “I’m afraid so, Don Nazarione. Five shot, the others dead from hand-grenade fragments, and the fires. It has to be the Executioner again.”
    “He’s cutting us into hash! Why can’t we stop him?”
    “We could call for help from the commission.”
    “Hell, yes, but by the time reinforcements get here we’ll all be dead. How many men did we lose on that try against Jansen?”
    “Four.”
    The tall man stood and walked around the putting green, elevated to allow for the holes with their small flags.
    “Well, we missed him, but there’s a chance that they got the head man, Smith.”
    “If that’s so, then one of our men could move into the chair.” Pacing, he lit a cigar and puffed.
    “We’ve still got the resources and the men to pull off the grab. We’ll continue. Keep everything on schedule. We’ve got the two inspectors and the two city councilmen on the payroll. They’ll do what we tell them. And we have a hand-picked candidate for the new chief when we need one. Yes!” Nazarione smiled.
    “So keep everything moving. We’re going ahead. Ard, let me know of any problems. We have two more days. Let’s hope nothing else goes wrong.”
    Nazarione saw Ardly out and descended in his private elevator to the “home” apartment on the second floor. This was sacred territory. No stairs led here, only the private elevator. Here Carlo Nazarione became a family man.
    His wife, Sydney, smiled at him. She was his rock. Here he was totally away from business. None of the hardmen ever came here. They were not allowed. Only personal servants — and just three of them — were admitted. It was essential to him to keep his family and business separated.
    Tall and blond, Sydney was not the good Italian girl he was supposed to marry. But she had been good for him, good to him and never thought about another man. Their two children, fourteen and sixteen, were away at school.
    “Hard day? “she asked.
    “Seems they’ve all been hard lately. But I want to forget that. What are we doing tonight?”
    “A movie, the one everyone’s been talking about — I got a video cassette of it. We can see it right here.”
    Carlo laughed. “You know just how to pick me up when I’m down. I hope it’ll always be this way.”
    “It will. Soon the kids will be grown and gone and you and I will be old and gray and we’ll sit on the beach in Acapulco or maybe Greece.”
    He kissed her forehead and led her to a soft chair in the living room where an enormous TV screen

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