EXECUTIONER
#99: CODE OF DISHONOR
By
Don Pendleton (actually written by Mike McQuay)
Gold
Eagle Books March
1987; 250 pages
ISBN
0-373-61099-8
In his second time at bat with Mack Bolan, Mike McQuay knocks one
out of the park. CODE OF DISHONOR is a kick-ass book that plays
out on many levels. The action rocks, the plot rolls.
Bolan is sent by Hal Brognola, his contact at the Justice Department,
on a mission to Japan to uncover a drug smuggling operation called
Operation Snowflake involving a team of corrupt Air Force men.
The action kicks into gear as Bolan and his contact are attacked
in a pachinko parlor by Sonnojoi, those who "repel the barbarians
and revere the Emperor." The Sonnojoi are opposed to anything
American and use terrorism to try to take their country and their
honor back. The parlor blows up killing innocent people. Bolan
barely escapes with his life only to find himself at the mercy of
some Air Force goons who were sent to kill him.
Bolan is rescued by a Japanese cop named Ichiro, but this is a dubious
rescue since Ichiro arrests him and, of course, Bolan has no rights
under Japanese law.
Ichiro finds out who Bolan really is. While he respects Bolan and
all he has done to stop terrorism, Bolan is still a wanted man and
is destined for prison. Under different circumstances, they could
be allies, but duty and honor are different things--something the
Executioner learns through the course of the novel.
When Bolan is taken, he assumes, to the prison, the van doesn't
go where he expects. Instead, he is taken to a house and set free.
The officers tell him that his questions will be answered at 7:00.
And Bolan asks what happens if he's not there, but the officers
only smile and tell him to do as he wishes.
Bolan decides to play the game and when 7:00 comes around, he captures
the individual sent to pick him up, only to discover that the individual
is a woman. She is there to take Bolan to her father, a great businessman
who has arranged for Bolan's freedom and wants to offer the ronin
a worthy master.
On the ride over, however, Bolan and Junko, the woman, are attacked
by the motorcycle riding, leather clad Sonnojoi. A wild action
sequence plays out on the streets of Tokyo with crashing cars and
bullets that will leave you breathless as you read.
Bolan and the woman escape.
Ichiro, meanwhile, finds out that Bolan was freed and determines
to capture him.
Bolan meets Junko's father Hashimoto, known as Hashi-san, who relates
to him the story of the 47 Ronin. They find that they respect each
other greatly and Hashi-san begins to help Mack in his mission.
Hashi-san has followed the Bushido code rigidly for years--pretty
much since he walked away from Nagasaki right before the bomb was
dropped and felt so guilty for not dying with his family. He used
business to rebuild Japan, but after his son died, he knew he didn't
have anyone to carry on his line. He sees in Bolan, a chance not
only to give a ronin a home, but to also give his daughter a husband.
It certainly helps that Junko and Bolan fall in love. Yes, folks,
the Executioner even gets laid in this one.
As Bolan works to find a way to stop Operation Snowflake, we meet
a wide variety of memorable characters from the Air Force bad guys
to a scientist dying of radiation poisoning. There's even an Aussie
who explains how you can tell a great deal about a country from
its sports:
"America has football, mean and aggressive, but with a lot
of laws and rules. In England it's cricket, civilized and boring.
Latin countries have soccer to cool their hot blood. Australians
play rugby. It's untamed and without rules, like the outback.
In Japan, it's sumo wrestling, a sport of ceremony, no action, internal."
Bolan finds that in Japan, everything takes place under the surface.
Face must be maintained, honor upheld. It isn't so much what you
do, but how you do it.
Bolan realizes that he's been concentrating on what was happening
on a surface level, while the answers he seeks lie on a deeper internal
plane. This scene concludes with a great bit where Mack Bolan leads
a bar full of Japanese in a rendition of "Take Me Out to the
Ball Game" to help cover his escape from the police.
The action escalates and we have a wonderful showdown in an underground
hangar full of old Japanese Zeroes and an emotional scene where
Bolan faces the woman he loves in something right out of a John
Woo flick with the lovers pointing guns at each other. Powerful
stuff.
This is a fine example of why action books are so much fun to read,
but it has an additional kicker in that it is also a damn good book
no matter how you look at it. Great writing, killer action, awesome
story. What more can you ask for?
If you know someone who generally turns up their nose at a series
action book, have them read this one; it could very well get them
to change their mind.
Grade:
A+
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