"They're entirely practical for sneaking about," he replied.
I'll bet. Into your tent I'll creep, huh?"
Bolan was embarrassed, and he realized this with some surprise. "They, uh, really are very practical," he said. "The first time you try going over a fence or other obstacle in a baggy outfit you'll know what I mean."
"I know what you mean," she told him. She had threaded his legs into the costume to just above the knees. "I guess you'll have to manage the rest by yourself," she said. "I'll bet the eggs are burning up."
"You took 'em all the way off," Bolan observed pointedly. "Is there some reason why you can't put them all the way back on?"
"I said, the eggs are burning up." She went to the doorway, then threw him an impudent look. "Besides, I just skinned them off from beneath the covers and I didn't see a darned thing."
Bolan had his mouth open but she was already gone. He smiled and stood up and succeeded in finishing the job with his good hand. She was quite a gal, he was deciding, even if the unmistakable odor of burning eggs was drifting through the open doorway. Yeah, quite a gal.
The Sergio Frenchi home dominated the skyline of South Hills, the luxury suburb of Pittsfield. The site had been selected because of its resemblance to the Mediterranean coastline, though the ocean was hundreds of miles distant, and the house itself was of traditional Mediterranean architecture, stone and mortar and sweeping windows, varilevel porches and patios, the lower levels built into the hillside and exploiting the natural topography to the maximum. Shown a photo of the Frenchi estate, one would think the setting to be one of isolated seclusion; in reality it was the scene of an exclusive neighborhood of millionaires. Frenchi had merely gotten there first and carved out the large and commanding site; the others had followed.
One rumor had it that Frenchi had accumulated his fortune in the export-import business; another, that he had been a shipping magnate. The first story was closer to the truth-Frenchi's rise to riches had been chiefly through the international traffic in illegal drugs. He also had much reason to thank organized prostitution, bootlegging, gambling, and various other illegal American pastimes. In recent years, and especially in the impetus received during the Robert Kennedy Attorney-General days, Frenchi had been "legitimizing" his interests to every extent possible. He actually did own a small shipping line now, and his other latter-day interests included a string of loan companies and various small businesses, all lumped into the loose coagulation which was "Frenchi Enterprises."
First, last, and always, however, Sergio Frenchi was a "Family" man-the Mafia family. It was not a family one could disinherit or disclaim, even had he been so inclined. The family vows were a lifetime oath of primary allegiance, with all other considerations-including even marriage and fatherhood-falling into subservience to the higher obligation to the Mafia-God Himself and the church itself even stood in line behind the all-demanding sacred vows to the Mafia. Sergio Frenchi had been married to the same woman for 41 years, but it had been a barren marriage; there was no seed of Sergio Frenchi to immortalize this man. A warm and loving man, on his one side, Sergio filled this lack of his own loins with the products of other marriages close to him; he was "Uncle" Sergio to many, "Father" Sergio to a choice few -and Leopold Turrin was one of those latter. The Turrin children were as much at home in the sprawling Mediterranean villa as in their own residence; Angelina Turrin, orphaned at the age of ten, had actually come to think of Father Sergio as the grandfather of her children. Mother Frenchi had spent most of the past decade in traveling about the world; she was often present in the conversation of the Frenchi mansion but rarely seen in the flesh.
On this late morning of early September the Frenchi villa seemed much the same as always to Angelina Turrin, except that there were a few more cars in the drive than usual. The Turrin children leapt from the family convertible and raced excitedly up the stone steps to the sun deck in their usual display of animated greeting. Leo gave his wife's hand a comforting pat and left her standing beside the car; he followed a trail around to a rear stairway and disappeared from her view.
It was funny, she was thinking, how a person's world can change almost overnight. The big house she had loved so, for so many years, now seemed threatening and foreboding of evil. She wondered if she could go through the motions of warm cheer and happy association, just as though nothing at all had been changed in her life, just as though Father Sergio was still the warmly loving nonno of her earlier ignorance. She shivered, though the sun's rays were warm on her skin, and followed the children up the steps.
Her husband had come here to plot a man's death. He was sitting down in the midst of racketeers and murderers, while his children frolicked in the sunshine outside, to work out the grisly details for the entrapment and extinction of another human being. Angelina herself, of course, had come painfully close to snuffing out that very life, but for her it had been a wild panic of reaction to an impossible situation. She could still not remember actually pulling the trigger-thank God she had, of course, thank God for that panicky reaction. But to sit and plot... She shivered again and forced her legs to keep moving her up the steps. Perhaps reaction was a relative thing, she reasoned. Perhaps the reaction of these men was no different from hers-it was a matter of survival, and they were reacting in the only rational manner available to them. And perhaps some day she would forgive Leo for his underworld ties. And maybe -maybe she would end up like Mother Frenchi, moving aimlessly about the corners of the world to avoid the confrontation with reality in her own living room. What is the profit for a man to gain the world, only to lose...
She abruptly snapped off the chain of thought, blinked back the tears, and went in search of her children.
They had learned from the earlier experience. The meeting was being conducted behind drawn blinds. A security force of twenty men had been moved onto the property, and an additional dozen quietly patrolled the neighborhood.
"So our little Angelina very nearly did the job a small army could not do, eh?" Sergio said, his voice heavy with sarcasm. "With a little toy of a pop-pop gun-eh?" He laughed, and turned chiding eyes onto an uncomfortable Leo Turrin. "You married well, Leopold. You take good care of that little lady. She will make a man of you yet."
"I'm just glad she was there," Turrin muttered. "She saved my life. You ever feel the muzzle of cold steel against the back of your head? Hell, I'm just glad she was there."
"And you have no apologies," Sergio observed quietly.
"Hell, I told you how it happened. All of a sudden, blam, there he was. And I didn't call those cops. Hell, they were all around the place. I'm just surprised that Bolan got away from them. I'm telling you, they were all around the place. It was like a police ball, and they were holding it at my place.'
"I said you have no apologies. You know what I think?" The old eyes shifted about to take in the expectant stares lifted to him. "I think this guy is working with the cops. Not the locals-no, not the locals. He is an import-I think he's federal. Maybe he's CIA or something, with a license to kill. You know?"
A small man at the far end of the table shifted nervously, cleared his throat, and said: "Doesn't sound logical, Sergio. I'm sure I would have gotten wind of anything like that. Believe me, the department is going all out to get this guy."
Sergio fixed the speaker with a stern gaze. "And you would know about all these things, hah? You are too important to be bypassed on a hush-hush federal game, hah?"