Showing posts with label Hero for Hire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hero for Hire. Show all posts

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #14: "Retribution"

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #14
"Retribution"
October, 1973

Steve Englehart: Plotter/Co-Scripter
Billy Graham: Co-Scripter/Artist
Charlotte Jetter: Letterer
Petra Goldberg: Colorist
Roy Thomas: Editor

In the case of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth... we have...
"Retribution!"  In the course of his life, Luke Cage has swollen many
eyes... and taken many teeth.  His foes are many, and each of them await
the time for... Retribution!  Until this moment, none of them have
confronted the Hero For Hire... but his stroke of good fortune is over.
A quartet of his enemies are gathering together, with each of them
sharing the same thought... Retribution!

A fallen building is the site for Luke Cage's latest heroic deed, with
three construction workers being pulled from the rubble.  They had been
surprised  by the sudden fall, with the foreman at a loss as to what to
do, and the front office looking over a certain calling card -- with the
Hero For Hire making the rescue in record time.  Two other men are making
their own escape... from Seagate Prison, a place where only an inmate
known as Lucas made his own break for freedom.

The boat left by guards now serves the needs of the two escaped convicts
-- Comanche... and Shades.  Each of them can't wait to get their hands on
Rackham.  With the firing of the new warden, the prison guard took out
his rage on the two who had been friends with Lucas.  Someday...
someday... they would get Rackham.

While they came up with a plan of escape, the warden had returned to
Seagate, and the prison board fired Rackham for his brutal treatment of
the prisoners.  The loss of his job was nothing compared to the loss felt
by both Comanche and Shades.  Their lives were devoted to their escape
and freedom from a six-year stay in prison.  The following weeks found
them taking clothing, funds, and food as they trailed behind Rackham --
and retribution.  The long and winding trail for the prison guard has led
them to New York.

Rackham places an ad in the Daily Bugle for a job as a guard in a bank or
prison.  Phil Fox hears the words "Seagate" and "Rackham" from Sol, then
catches a cab after his quarry.  Among his many possessions is the diary
of Dr. Noah Burstein, which contains information about the experiment at
Seagate Prison -- and the escape of the man known as Luke Cage.

Being a Hero For Hire, there are many quiet periods between jobs.  At 3
A.M., Luke Cage mulls over the circumstances which have brought him to
the third floor walk-up office of his own.  As he catches the sights and
sounds of the city from his window, there is a visitor at the door.  Mrs.
Jenks has arrived in search of him, but Cage isn't in the mood to see
her.

She had a business date to settle the matters of her late husband, but
the attorney was more interested in giving her the business over dinner.
When the shyster came up with a certain line, she decided to walk out,
but the drunken man has been following her since 49th and Broadway.
Seeing how the Hero For Hire reacts to one of his old clients, Mrs. Jenks
isn't so sure that it was a good idea to come to the office.  CRUNCH!
The attorney has caught up with his client, as he breaks down the door,
and is determined on getting his money's worth from the woman.

CRRUNCH!  Taken by surprise, Luke Cage is tackled by the drunken man in
the purple suit, and slammed against the wall.  Big Ben Donovan weighs
three hundred and thirty pounds of solid muscle, and he is about to begin
his opening remarks.

Billy Bob Rackham was surprised when the reporter said that he wanted to
do a story about being a prison guard.  He savors the chance to tell his
side of the story, about as much as the drinks Phil Fox has been giving
him.  In the hotel room, the Daily Bugle reporter asks about the dead man
named Lucas, and pours Rackham another drink.  The prisoner wanted to
spend time in the library, but the guard put him in the hole, instead.
Phil Fox makes a mistake when he mentions Doc Burstein, and realizes this
when Rackham grabs him by the front of his shirt.  The booze hadn't
deadened his senses that much.

Fox isn't much of a fighter, and he tells Rackham about this "Lucas"
being the same guy as Luke Cage, Hero For Hire.  The diary described the
doctor's cell regeneration experiments, with Luke Cage being the only
survivor.  The prison guards had shot at the convict when he tried to
escape, but the reporter knows that he had survived.  It was Rackham
himself who was responsible for turning a prisoner into a Power Man.

The prison guard took advantage of the doctor's absence to tamper with
the controls, but Burstein had returned, and Lucas was transformed by
those runaway chemicals.  His very bones and flesh were changed.  As his
fists struck against metal, the machine exploded, and the test subject
was freed.

After making his way from Seagate, he turned up in New York, and met
Doctor Burstein once again.  For a moment, Rackham dreams about turning
Lucas in to the police, and get his old job back.  Phil Fox realizes the
futility of such a thing, and tells him about a much better plan.  They
could blackmail him, but Fox was thrown out by Cage when he first tried
it.  The former prison guard knows that they have to find his girlfriend,
and make him dance to their tune.  The reporter is starting to have
second thoughts, but Rackham's mind is made up.

Phil Fox has lent his car to his newfound partner, but as Rackham drives
along 42nd Street for the address of Claire Temple, he sees something
interesting playing outside the Gem Theatre.  As the Hero For Hire
escorts Mrs. Jenks to a waiting cab, the former prison guard recognizes
him as Lucas, and drives after the cab -- with the wrong woman.  Big Ben
Donovan is recovering, listening to Luke Cage telling him that the
punches were all pulled.

HRUMMF  A swift leap and the sly lawyer knocks Cage to the floor once
again.  WHUMP  He applies his steel-tipped boots to the side of the Hero
For Hire.

BLAM!  After grabbing onto Donovan's leg, Cage sends the lawyer for a
ride towards the nearest wall... KERRASH!  SMAK!  WHUNKF!  Big Ben's
boots aren't made for walking, when Luke Cage's fists are doing the
talking.  SOK!  BAM!  CRAK!  The lawyer is still up, but not quite out
yet.  The aches and pains get to him, with Big Ben Donovan throwing in
the towel.

Shades and Comanche have got plenty of money in their pockets.  Their
plans of leaving town have changed, with a perusal of the Daily Bugle's
advertising section.  The two escaped convicts don costumes so that the
former prison guard won't recognize them until it's too late.  Rackham
calls Fox from an apartment on 83rd, and tells him to come over quick.

Sunday morning finds the Daily Bugle reporter telling his new partner
that they've gotten the wrong woman.  He knows that Mrs. Jenks was a
former client of Cage, but Rackham is sure that Lucas will come acallin'
soon enough.  WHAM!  SMACK!  Soon, Phil Fox is trying to pull Billy Bob
Rackham away from the bound figure on the chair.  Claire Temple has just
come from the Gem Theatre, after learning from the ticket-seller that
Luke wasn't home, and that Mrs. Jenks was with him just before dawn.
This is why the young lady has found herself going up the front steps of
the apartment building on 83rd.

Claire is about to knock on the door of Mrs. Jenks's apartment when she
hears... SMAK!  SLAP!  Two male voices arguing with each other.  SLAP!
SLAP!  SLAP!  One of the voices tells the other how they'll send Cage a
picture of the woman's face when he's done with it... and a note...  Noah
Burstein's diary, which mentions the Hero For Hire being a wanted
criminal.  Claire Temple hears this coming from the other side of the
door, and as she tries to cope with this new piece of information...
BLAM! 

How many moments is it before the sounds of a struggle subside into
silence, and Claire gathers together her courage before entering through
the door.  She recognizes the figure on the floor as Phil Fox.  As she
kneels beside the dead body... her hand reaches out unconsciously for the
murder weapon.  This is when the police make their entrance, with guns
drawn, and tells Claire Temple that she's now under arrest for murder.

This story was reprinted in Giant-Size Power Man #1 (1975).

The splash page shows the angry Hero For Hire lashing out at an
unsuspecting wall.  KRATOOM!

The art by Billy Graham is very dramatic.  I can see the styles of
Severin, Ploog, and Cardy within various panels.

Comanche wears a native American headband, while Shades wears sunglasses
(even in the moonlight boat trip from Seagate).

Phil Fox wears a green shirt, purple tie, and brown pants.  Although the
Daily Bugle reporter is quick as a fox in catching up with Rackham, he is
most certainly not smart as a fox.

I'm guessing that Sol in advertising is a reference to Marvel's Sol
Brodsky from Steve Englehart.

Mrs. Jenks is a jinx for both Luke Cage, Phil Fox, and Claire Temple.

Whereas the Hulk wears purple pants, Big Ben Donovan prefers a purple
coat, a white tie, and a white shirt.  One wonders if Donovan's
performance in court mirrors his ability in courting the fairer sex.

Billy Bob Rackham swigs drinks as much as he swings his baton.

Another character who believed in 1970's fancy footwear was the
Tarantula.

The costumes worn by Shades and Comanche make them look like a gunslinger
and a dime store Indian.

With a cliffhanger like this, how could readers possibly pass up the next
issue?

Steve Chung
"Review"

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #15: "Retribution: Part II"

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #15
"Retribution: Part II"
November, 1973

Billy Graham: Co-Scripter/Artist
Tony Isabella: Co-Scripter
Steve Englehart: Camp Counsellor
S. Lefferman: Letterer
Stan Goldberg: Colorist
Roy Thomas: Editor

Luke Cage's past has returned to haunt him, and threatens to take away
all which is dear to him.  Billy Bob Rackham and Phil Fox have plans to
blackmail the Hero For Hire.  Shades and Comanche, the latest escapees
from Seagate Prison are anxious to repay outstanding debts with the
former prison guard.  Mrs. Jenks has been mistaken by Rackham for being
Cage's girl, and is now a prisoner in her own apartment.  Claire Temple
has come to visit Mrs. Jenks, only to find the body of the Daily Bugle
reporter on the floor of the apartment.  There is a storm gathering
around Luke Cage, and its name is "Retribution" Part II.

It is an angry Hero For Hire who leaves his office on a Sunday morning,
without stopping to open the door.  He has heard the news about Claire
Temple being arrested for the murder of Phil Fox.  As he races from the
third floor, he remembers his unspoken feelings for Claire, and the fact
that she had called him when she needed help -- and this is what has
caused his hasty departure.  Luke wonders if Fox told her about his time
at Seagate... but the woman wouldn't have killed the reporter over it.
The revenge of Shades and Comanche has taken a back seat, as the duo plan
to remain in New York, and begin making plans for a long stay.  Friedman
Liquors will provide them with the necessary funds to establish
themselves in the city.  As dawn arrives, Claire Temple is facing a
murder charge, and now has knowledge that the one she loves is an prison
escapee.  She is unable to prove the identity of Phil Fox's killer.  She
will maintain her silence for the sake of Luke, but will she lose her
life in the process?

The former prison guard has borrowed the late reporter's car, driving it
across the George Washington Bridge, on his way to New Jersey  to hide
out.  He hadn't intended to kill Fox, but the fool tried to grab the gun
from him.  The woman is the only one who can connect him to the murder,
and he can never let her go.  Rackham wonders if Lucas is coming after
him, then figures that with the diary in his possession, he will be the
one calling the shots.  When the Hero For Hire comes for him, he'll find
out what Ol' Rackham has got in store for him.  Comanche has removed the
basement grating, so he and Shades can enter the liquor store, and meet
with Friedman when he arrives to go over the books this morning.  They
will hit him up for protection money and return later -- with
reinforcements.  Each store owned by him will be hit, making them the
rulers of Harlem, and their first act will be getting their hands on
Rackham.

CRASH!  Luke Cage has arrived at police headquarters, demanding to see
Claire Temple, and throwing the door aside as if it were a leaf.  He had
been informed about the situation by the public defender, and is
convinced of her innocence.  The desk sergeant has heard about the Hero
For Hire.  He is impressed that the unlicensed detective cares about one
of his clients, and doesn't seem to be in for the money alone.  Cage is
told to get a license, and to expect a bill for the door.

He is now standing on the roof of the Crayton Building, across the street
from the Tombs.  There is a difference of four floors between the two
buildings -- and Luke Cage hopes that it will be enough.  He had glimpsed
the desk book placing Claire Temple on the sixth floor.  The old building
should be able to support his three hundred pounds.  If not, Luke Cage
will be dropping in on the cops literally.  After backing up, he runs
along the roof of the Crayton Building... leaping across the empty
avenue... from the sixteenth floor to the twelfth floor of the Tombs.
THU-BOOM!  The impact causes the roof to shake and to crack -- but it
holds.  To the occupants within the building, it sounds like a plane has
struck the roof, and the bomb squad are deployed to the roof.  The guards
are rounded up to prevent a possible jailbreak.

By the time they reach the roof, there is an immediate search of the
area, but no signs of the cause.  He is thankful that none of them have
thought to look over the edge, as he continues to climb down to Claire's
cell.  As he hopes that his weight will not pull out the bars from the
wall, Cage wonders how a certain wall-crawler is able to do this without
coughing up his webbing.  At the sixth floor, he finds Claire.

She is surprised to see him clinging to the bars outside of her window.
Since he can't hang around all day, he wants to know how she got herself
into this mess.  Claire asks if he's really an escaped criminal, having
heard this as she listened outside of Mrs. Jenks's apartment.  The Daily
Bugle reporter had been talking with someone who knew him from prison.
There had been an argument, sounds of a struggle, and then the sound of a
gun going off.  When she entered the apartment, Phil Fox was on the
floor, and she had picked up the murder weapon.  She hadn't seen the
other man, but had heard his southern accent, and believes that he had
left via the fire escape.  As far as he is concerned, Claire will not be
taking the rap for this, and he will find the murderer.  When she
mentions that the man knows who he is, Luke tells Claire that he's got a
friendly lawyer named "Big Ben" Donovan, and this will give him a chance
to prove himself.  The guard has heard the girl talking to someone, with
his sudden arrival causing the Hero For Hire to lose his grip on the
prison bars.

EEEEE  Sweet Sister!  Looks like Luke Cage's number is up.  He is hardly
in a position to help anyone, much less himself.   Then, he remembers
that he is no longer just an ordinary man...  He has become a super
hero... a Power Man, and will not end this way.  By this time, the
flagpole catches his attention.

The Hero For Hire reaches out for the flagpole to break his fall, only to
learn that it is not as sturdy as it should be.  CRACKK!  The fall
continues once more, with Luke Cage crashing through the roof of a parked
bus.  CRUNNCKK!  He can't believe that he has survived to reach his stop.
He is stronger than he had thought, and any other person would have not
been as fortunate.

He is on the trail of the man with the southern accent, pausing only to
place a call to "Big Ben" Donovan.  At Mrs. Jenks's apartment, he eyes
the fire escape, and wonders what the two men were doing there. Since Fox
had learned about Seagate, Luke decides to pay a call on Doc Burnstein,
and learns that the man's diary had been stolen.  The Hero For Hire
leaves the startled doctor with some advice... keep him out of any books
he's got in his head.  With the death of Phil Fox, the other man must
have the diary, and the time has come to talk to Flea.

The stoolie is actually pleased to see him, having heard about what has
happened to Claire Temple.  He also knows about Doc Burnstein and Seagate
Prison.  Luke Cage has heard enough, eager to have a chat, and Flea is
just as eager to show him what he knows.  The local liquor store is their
stop, where the Hero For Hire is reacquainted with two old friends.

This story was reprinted in Giant-Size Power Man #1 (1975).

I imagine that Part II had been edited since it's only eleven pages long.

I had the pleasure of meeting Tony Isabella at San Diego Comic-Con in
2003, and he was kind enough to sign this book for me.

Billy Graham is quite an artist, with the reader able to see each of the
characters' personalities by the way they stand.

When confronted with a desperate situation, Luke Cage does not believe in
wasting time, and is a firm believer in immediate action.

Shades and Comanche have their own dreams of starting new lives in New
York, but their methods at a liquor store are harder to swallow.

Claire Temple has learned the truth about the man she loves, but reserves
judgment before speaking with him.

Billy Bob Rackham looks so anxious, that he might use the steering wheel
as a baby uses a teething ring.

When is a door not a door?  When it's jarred free by the Hero For Hire.

A freelancer without a license is as plausible as a duly deputized
officer of the law.

You'll believe a Power Man can fly, or at least leap between tall
buildings in a single bound.

Luke Cage pulls his weight when it comes to seeing his woman in prison.

The Hero For Hire rallies around the flagpole, but it cracks under the
sudden pressure.

Luke Cage catches a bus the hard way.

In the previous issue, the doc's name was Burstein.  In this issue, his
name is Burnstein.  Is the second name an alias used by Noah?

I especially like how Billy Graham drew Flea, with inquisitive eyes, and
gesticulating fingers which beckon Lucas into an unfriendly reunion with
the Class of Seagate 1973.

This Review Is Dedicated To Tony "The Tiger" Isabella

Steve Chung
"Retribution Review: Part II"

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #16: "Shake Hands With Stiletto!"

Luke Cage, Hero For Hire #16
"Shake Hands With Stiletto!"
December, 1973

Tony Isabella: Writer
Billy Graham: Penciller
F. McLaughlin: Inker
Tom Orzechowski: Letterer
L. Lessman: Colorist
Roy Thomas: Editor
With Special Thanks To Len Wein And Marv Wolfman

The Hero For Hire has been having a rough time.  His girlfriend has been
charged with the murder of a Daily Bugle reporter.  Billy Bob Rackham has
got both Mrs. Jenks and a diary which reveals Luke Cage as being an
escaped prisoner.  The local stoolie has brought Cage to Shades and
Comanche, who were with him at Seagate Prison.  Like we said, a real
rough time.

He had been spending the morning in search of a way to clear Claire
Temple of the murder charge against her.  He is not in the mood to have
two runaway fugitives making more of a mess than it already is.  Since it
was Flea who brought him to the liquor store, it is up to him to explain
how things stand.  He had already "helped" Cage with the Suerte case, but
this time, the little bird is ready to sing.  Phil Fox's time as a
Broadway columnist was over and out, but he still had some influence with
Jameson at the Bugle.  It just so happens that the reporter and Flea had
met one another at a bar one night.

Fox needed some help to get home, and after the stoolie has brought him
to his residence, he became privy to the book which was in the reporter's
possession.  The Hero For Hire thinks this might be a sign of a
shakedown, but the unlicensed private detective doesn't make enough bread
for blackmailing purposes.  Flea would either lose a client or his own
life.  He, Shades, and Comanche have got a plan which would benefit them
all.  The stoolie had spotted them on the roof of the liquor store, and
overheard them mentioning the prison guard named Rackham. Since one of
them wore goggles and the other had a big "C" on his chest, Flea figured
them to be the Shades and Comanche from Doc Burstein's journal.  When
asked what he was doing on the rooftop, the stoolie chooses to remain
silent.

Since the three men escaped from Seagate, maybe the four of them could
come to an understanding, and Flea was quite a fast talker.  Shades and
Comanche want Lucas to join them, and as a member of their club, they
will help him save Claire.  The two escaped convicts are planning a
protection racket here in Harlem, but the stoolie had told them about a
man named Morgan who is running the business.  Once he is out of the way,
the Hero For Hire will protect their clients from criminal reprisals, but
not from them.

They can lead him to the murderer of Phil Fox, with Flea aware of his
whereabouts, and Shades dropping the name of Rackham.  The dreams of Luke
Cage have been shattered.  In order to save Claire Temple, he must make a
fateful decision, and pay the eventual price.

Rackham is the first order of business, and Luke must make a phone call
before anything else.  When asked by Comanche who he's gonna call, he
tells them it's to his lawyer about Claire's welfare.  If they only knew
why he was calling "Big Ben" Donovan, Shades and Comanche wouldn't be
okay with the idea.  As the four of them leave the liquor store, they are
unaware that their every movement is being watched from a neighboring
rooftop.  Just as he had told his father, a convict is always a convict,
no matter what.  The Hero For Hire and his crooked cronies will be taken
down by Stiletto -- one way or the other.

In the suburbs of New Jersey, a fateful showdown is about to take place.
Mrs. Jenks is amused by the sight of Rackham trembling each time he looks
out the window.  She tells the ex-prison guard how Luke Cage is able to
bend steel with his bare hands.  A sudden noise spooks Rackham, but as he
returns to the window, the ones he was expecting have entered by the back
door.

The ex-prison guard has got a gun to Mrs. Jenks's head, with Cage
striving to keep both Shades and Comanche back.  If anything happens to
Rackham and Mrs. Jenks, Claire will suffer the consequences.  Stiletto
has arrived, and after peering through the window, he sees that all of
the players are in one place.  After pressing a button on his belt, he
opens fire on the house.  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!

BA-THOOM!  The entire roof is collapsing upon them.

Luke is the first one to recover, with the stoolie sustaining not so much
as a scratch.  Although her hands are still tied behind her back, Mrs.
Jenks begins walking towards Cage.  Seeing that the woman is about to go
free, Rackham opens fire, and shoots at her three times.  BA-DOW  BA-DOW
BA-DOW  The shots fired also succeed in bringing more of the house down
on him.  CHOOM!  KRASH!

Flea is able to get Mrs. Jenks to safety, and urges the Hero For Hire to
save both Shades and Comanche.  It is a mystery why the place fell down
on them, just as why Lucas finds himself aiding the ones who could return
him to Seagate.  As he hauls them out of the wreckage, he muses on the
free samples he has given since starting his own business.  The woman
needs a doctor, but as Cage tells Flea to get an ambulance, another makes
his entrance.

Stiletto is determined to take Lucas in.  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!
THWIP!  THWIP!  After shielding Mrs. Jenks and Flea from the mini-knives,
Luke charges the shooter.

THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  THWIP!  Stiletto now directs his
line of fire at the ground, PA-DOOM!, causing the Hero For Hire to fall.
KRACKLE!  ZAPSST!  Now, Lucas is in for a shock, courtesy of Stiletto.

KA-Z-APST!  The convict will surrender or die.  Cage knows that he might
not be able to withstand another zap, and braces himself.  PA-ZAPST!  The
offensive weapon is torn from its wielder's grasp.

With the lives of two people hanging in the balance, the ones who can
clear the name of the one he loves, Luke Cage is in the mood for a fight.
Stiletto is unimpressed and deploys another of his weapons.  PLOOSH!
The gas attack catches the Hero For Hire off guard, but after using a
bush as a fan, he is able to breathe again.

SWAP!  Although he is pulling his punches, Luke is through dancing around
with Stiletto.  WHEEEEE  WHEEEEE  WHEEEEE  Rackham has extricated himself
from the wreckage, and hears the sounds of fast-approaching sirens.
WHEEEEE  WHEEEEE  He will not be taken back to a place like Seagate.  He
will not find himself in a cell with convicts, and guards who will beat
on him.  In a way, Billy Bob Rackham is about to get his wish.  THUD!
The ambulance has arrived.  SCREECH!  The ex-prison guard has his date
with destiny at long last.

The two attendants could not stop in time when he ran in front of them.
Rackham will never chase ambulances again.  While the Hero For Hire
continues to pull his punches, Stiletto reaches for a special cryogenic
weapon, and freezes Cage in place.  The round is over, with Stiletto
vowing to return.

Minutes pass, with Lucas wondering if he'll still be around for the
return match.  His phone call to Donovan had the authorities on his tail,
with both Shades and Comanche now under arrest.  He is in for a surprise
when the police congratulate him on the capture of the two escaped
convicts.  Since Lucas had saved their lives, Shades promises to keep his
secret, just before both he and Comanche are led away.  Both Rackham and
Mrs. Jenks are dead, but just before she died, she confessed to the
murder of Phil Fox.  "Big Ben" knows that she didn't do it, but the three
men agree that she was quite a woman.

After a morning of sadness, the afternoon is filled with happiness, as
Claire Temple is freed from prison.  The two police officers watch as the
woman kisses her savior, and both smile at the sight.  A frowning Flea
kicks a can, as he realizes that he will not make a dime from what has
happened today.  He could try to shake Lucas for some money, but then
he'd rather keep on breathin'.

This story was reprinted in Giant Size Power Man #1 (1975).

This concluding chapter of "Retribution" features the works of Tony
Isabella and Tom Orzechowski.

As seen on the splash page, Shades and Comanche are in for a surprise
from an angry Hero For Hire, and things aren't going to go as easy as
planned.

The reference to Luke Cage -- Hero For Hire #11 mentions Senor Suerte, a
character who managed to return from the dead after events in said issue.

In the panel where Phil Fox shows Flea his special book, we see the eyes
of the stoolie above the cover, and darned if he doesn't look like Eddie
Murphy.

Morgan, the then-current king of Harlem, was seen in the pages of Captain
America and the Falcon.

The panel which stands out for me is where Lucas is hanging down his
head, while the smug faces of Shades, Comanche, and Flea are viewing him
with smug satisfaction.

The aura of shock around his head looks almost like a halo, as if the
writer were telling the reader, "Hey Effendi! Don't worry... Luke will
get things right in the end."

I don't know if this was deliberate or not, or if it was due to Billy
Graham, but it was a nice touch.

If one studies the word balloons which introduce Stiletto, his true
identity, and relationship to Luke Cage isn't too hard to figure out.

It's far from being a "Sweet Christmas" when the entire place is coming
down on our cast of characters.  That Santa dude and his reindeer could
stand to lose some more weight.

The sound effects are greatly improved from the first installment of
"Retribution".

"Big Ben" and his dancing shoes going "CRUNCH" in every other panel
didn't quite do it for me.

Part II had the Hero For Hire throwing aside the precinct's door with a
"CRASH!" and leaping across tall buildings with a "THU-BOOM!"

A flagpole proves less than faithful when it goes "CRACKK!" and a falling
Hero For Hire goes "CRUNNCKK!" through the roof of a parked bus.

In Part III, there is no doubt where the "BA-THOOM!" is when the roof
starts to fall in on them.

Stiletto's weapons go "THWIP!", while Spidey's web-shooters go "THWIPP!"
A subtle difference, but a pleasant sound effect made possible courtesy
of Isabella and Orzechowski.

I'm guessing that Tony has a little more time to write Part III, compared
with Part II.

I'd like to ask the Tigerish One if it took long to figure out what the
sound effects would sound like, or for that matter, what takes the most
amount of time when you're writing up one of these stories against the
Dreaded Deadline Doom?

Was the creation of Stiletto influenced by the Silver Age Marvel villain
known as the Porcupine?

I wonder if Stiletto made the weapons himself or if they were built by
the Tinkerer?

It's too bad for Rackham that he's not as resilient with ambulances as
Lucas was with parked buses.

It's nice to see that there is some honor among thieves, as Shades and
Comanche promise to keep Cage's fugitive status a secret.

While Luke and Claire kiss and make up, Flea is kicking a can.

When Lively Len Wein would begin writing his issues of Power Man, the
stoolie would soon be kicking the bucket.

This Review Is Dedicated To Tony "The Tiger" Isabella and Tom "Wizard Of"
Orzechowski

Steve Chung
"Shake Hands With Review!"