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Wilson had worked under Hannon in Homicide, if he recalled correctly. And now he was in at the finish.

A finish for which warrior Bolan was at least partly responsible, yes.

Bolan moved toward Wilson, brushing past a pair of uniformed patrolmen. He passed the ambulance, refusing to look inside at the bloody shrouded figures.

At his approach, the captain turned, his reverie interrupted. He greeted the new arrival with a frown.

"Help you?"

Bolan waved the spurious credentials past his face and pocketed them again.

"Frank LaMancha, Justice."

Wilson's frown remained in place; if anything, it deepened.

"Bob Wilson, Metro," he replied. "Something here that interests you?"

"I caught the bulletin about your man."

When Wilson spoke again there was suppressed emotion in his voice.

"Not mine," he said at last. "He was retired."

"But working."

Wilson looked and sounded wary when he answered.

"Strictly private."

"Looks like someone made it public."

Wilson did not respond immediately. He was looking past Bolan now, back at the bullet-punctured car that had taken John Hannon on his last ride.

"I guess."

"You make the girl yet?" Bolan asked.

Wilson shook his head.

"Latino, probably a Cuban. Young. She had a gun, but no id. We're checking on it."

"Maybe you should try the federal building," Bolan told him.

The homicide detective raised an eyebrow. "Yeah? What was she, an informer?"

"It's not for me to say. I'd ask for SOG."

Wilson's stern face registered an immediate reaction, quickly covered by the frown. It was obvious to Bolan that the captain was familiar with the federal Sensitive Operations Group. Once headed by Hal Brognola, it was still closely supervised by the big Fed from Washington Wonderland, dealing in cases too sensitive for other federal agencies to handle comfortably.

"So," Wilson said, "it's like that, is it?"

Bolan kept it cryptic.

"Could be."

"Is that your interest?"

"Oh, I'm interested in a lot of things — like trucks and guns." He paused, letting that sink in before" he dropped the second shoe. "Like Jose 99."

Another reaction from Wilson, this one harder to conceal.

"You know the name?" Bolan prodded.

"I've heard it."

It was obvious to Bolan that the officer was holding something back.

"Know where I can find him?" he asked, probing.

Wilson made a disgusted face.

"If I did, he'd be downtown right now." He hesitated, clearly reluctant to say more, but finally continued, as if against his own better judgment. "The FBI says it has something on him from a routine wiretap on the Cuban embassy. He calls the cultural attache there from time to time. They haven't traced him yet."

"You tie him in with this?" Bolan asked.

"I wouldn't rule it out," the homicide detective answered. He cast an almost wistful glance in the direction of the ambulance. "It looks like John was really onto something after all."

"He never knew the half of it," the Executioner said.

"And you do?"

"I'm getting there."

But even as he spoke, Bolan knew he was no closer to solving the puzzle now than when he had first started. So far all he had were scattered, scrambled pieces of the puzzle, and collecting them had proved a very costly process. Someone would have to pay dearly for Bolan to break even.

And he was looking forward now to the collection of that debt.

"You ready to coordinate?" the homicide detective asked him, breaking in on Bolan's train of thought.

"It's premature," he answered.

"I see." Bob Wilson stared at Bolan. "I don't take well to being frozen out, LaMancha. This one cuts too close to home."

Mack Bolan read the emotion in his voice and realized that it was genuine.

"If I were you," he said, "I'd take a look at Tommy Drake."

"You're late," the officer replied. "He's history."

"He had connections," Bolan responded. "Some of them were interested in Hannon's work."

"I know about the Stomper," Wilson said.

"Then you know that he was acting under orders."

Wilson feigned incredulity.

"Really? What was your first clue?"

"No offense, Captain. It never pays to overlook the obvious."

"We won't be overlooking anything," Wilson answered, but his voice and face were softening already.

Bolan shifted gears, taking off along another tack.

"You know a Cuban activist named Raoul Ornelas?"

Wilson raised an eyebrow at the change of pace.

"Everybody knows Ornelas. He's Omega 7. Are you connecting him to this?"

Bolan shrugged again. "Omega 7 needs the hardware. Hannon might have been too close."

Wilson shook his head, a discouraging expression on his face. "You're drifting. First the Mob, then Cuban exiles. What's the angle?"

"Sacco and the exiles go way back together. You know that as well as I do. They could be hand in glove."

"I thought about that, yeah," the officer conceded. "But what does Sacco need with military weapons?"

"It might be a favor for a friend."

Bolan realized how hollow his explanation sounded.

Wilson's skeptical expression showed the soldier that his doubts were much the same.

"I doubt if Sacco knows exactly who his friends are today."

Bolan smiled thinly.

"It's an occupational hazard."

"I guess. Where can I get in touch with you?"

"I'm in and out," the warrior told him vaguely. "I'll call you tomorrow if my people turn up something you could use."

"Appreciate it."

But Bob Wilson's tone conveyed a different feeling. Clearly, the detective still thought he was being frozen out of some clandestine operation at the federal level. He might well make a call to check it out, start probing on his own but it was a risk Mack Bolan would have to live with. In any case the worst that could happen would be Wilson's discovery that he was not, in fact, employed by Justice.

There were a host of other problems, each more pressing, on the soldier's mind and he dismissed the risk as minimal. His cover was expendable; its violation would not put the Metro man one step closer to caging the Executioner. If anything, it would only serve to deepen the confusion he was operating under now.

They shook hands grimly, mourners parting at the funeral of a mutual friend. As Bolan made his way back to the dark unmarked sedan he could feel Wilson's eyes following him across the grassy shoulder of the road and past the bullet-riddled Chevy that had been a coffin for Hannon and Evangelina moments earlier. By the time he reached the car and risked a backward glance, however, Wilson was deep in conversation with some of his officers.

Bolan fired the engine, powered out of there with gravel spitting from his tires. He put a mile behind him before he permitted his mind to attack the question of who had killed John Hannon and the woman.

It was a question he would have to answer in his own best interests if he planned to keep on breathing long enough to finish what he had started in Miami. He owed that much to Hannon, to the woman, yes, and he would see through what the two of them had begun before he arrived.