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Aggressors - The new hero pulp

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RETIREMENT DAY by Brad Mengel

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SOmething a little different here's a short story I wrote. I wanted to explore the notion of the vigilante both the Aggressors and the pulp heroes before them.


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RETIREMENT DAY

The party had been a surprise and Ben Hearne mentally berated himself as he packed his files into storage boxes. He should have seen the clues and figured that his co workers would do something like that, after all he’d been an FBI agent for over thirty years now. He never even gave the sight of his first supervisor, Val Kildare, in the office a second thought. Perhaps the grief of the loss of his wife had affected him far more than he realised.

Ben had joined the FBI in 1971, fresh out of college, where his psychology degree had kept him out of the Vietnam war. His father was disappointed when hadn’t gone into practice, Ben knew his father had been hoping that he would join him in practice and eventually take over, but Ben had found criminal psychology much more interesting and the FBI offered the best opportunity to study the criminal psyche.

He started in the fledgling profiling section under the legendary Val Kildare. Kildare had taken Ben under his wing and had been recommended him to the Vigilante task force after three years.

The taskforce had been established in the 1930’s to track the illegal activities on American soil of unique individuals who took the law into their own hands. During the 1950’s the group had virtually been disbanded but a new wave of vigilantes had swept across America in the late sixties and revitalised the force to its former glory.

When Ben joined he had been given the task of profiling many of these new vigilantes, he threw himself into the study of the first wave of these vigilantes. He’d read reports from assistant commissioners of police, Scotland Yard, state troopers and other Law enforcement agencies, and the colourful exploits of men labelled The Shadow, The Spider, Doc Savage, The Avenger, The Saint, The Toff, The Falcon, The Just Men, and many others had consumed his life for three months.

He’d examined the speculations contained the reports on true identities of some of these vigilantes. And began his profile based on these hints, he’d starting by profiling Richard Wentworth as reports on The Spider, The Shadow and The Whisperer had all suggested that he was the man behind the masks, in fact Commissioner James “Wildcat” Gordon had been most insistent on this point. He’d then looked at other individuals named in the files such as Lamont Cranston, Kent Allard, Jethro Dumont, Richard Curtis van Loan and found that in many cases the suspects were wealthy men who had served in World War I and returned to civilian life unable to settle down and possibly feeling guilt over how their families had gained their wealth sought to use their skills learnt in WWI to redeem themselves. Many of these men appeared to have adopted or at least studied Eastern religions again suggestive of this desire for redemption perhaps to control the darkness in their souls that the war had unleashed.

His superiors had been pleased with his evaluation and he had loaned to various subcommittees of the taskforce to study the new vigilantes that seemed to be appearing daily. Hal Brognola had been impressed with his analysis of Mack Bolan but sadly his recommendation that Bolan be offered an amnesty and his skills be turned to counter terrorism had never been actioned with Bolan refusing to surrender and dying in a blaze of glory. He’d then worked briefly for the Penetrator taskforce with Dan Griggs from the Department of Justice. But mostly he worked with the taskforce in Washington. No arrests were ever made on the men and women had his profiles had suggested and Ben occasionally thought that his colleagues were secretly helping these vigilantes.

Occasionally, the Vigilante taskforces investigations into actions against the Mob and other criminals had uncovered illegal operations run by the CIA and other agencies using mercenary forces. He’d prepared profiles of groups known as Z-Commando, Hard Corps, CURE and Deadly Force Inc. but pressure from the higher ups had stalled those investigations. It was an office joke that they’d dealt with more letters than the postal service.

Oddly, it was these frustrations that helped him to understand why these vigilantes had started their war on crime. But in his heart, Ben knew that he never really understood these men and their quest. He had interviewed Frank Castle, The Punisher during his short confinement but Castle’s insistence on name rank and serial number answers to all his questions had given him little to work with.

Over the nineties, the number of vigilante incidents had dwindled and the taskforce was scaled back. After a warning from NSA agent Remo Murphy-Sapir to back off his investigation, Hearne had been transferred to counter terrorism in 2000.

Now in 2004 he was retiring. One of his investigations had gotten too close to a domestic terror cell and they had planted a car bomb. It had missed its target and killed his wife as she borrowed his car to quickly run to the market for some bread. In his grief Hearne had gone crazy and upset several assistant and deputy directors with his allegations of a conspiracy within the FBI.

Thanks to a former partner, Hearne had received counselling and decided to jump before he was pushed out of the FBI. By retiring first, he was able to keep his pension and benefits and he had decided that in his retirement, he would write a book on the vigilante phenomenon.

Hearne finished packing his files and began to clear the items from his desk, carefully packing his mug, lamp, gun and photos into another box. A few of Hearne’s co-workers offered to help him carry the boxes to the car, which he readily accepted.

He discussed his retirement plans as with them as they walked to his car. All agreed that the book was a great idea and that he should start right away. Patting his desk box Hearne laughed and told them that he had some research to do before he could start.

Once the car was loaded, Hearne drove off to prepare for his empirical research.

WHAT IF #10 What if the Punisher's family hadn't been killed (1990) by Doug Murray, Rik Levins and Bob McLeodAGENT FOR COMINSEC #4 The Hellfire Conspiracy (1974) by Ralph Hayes

Comments

Anonymous 25. May 2006, 04:06

Glen Davis writes:

Sounds a lot like the Prince Zarkon series by Lin Carter. Very good neo pulp, but hard to find.

AggressorBrad 25. May 2006, 08:16

I have one of those books, it's going to be reviewed here at some point. I never realised just how hard it would be to pick and choose what to read and review and what background might be need to explain something.

Thanks for the comparison to Lin Carter.

Brad

Anonymous 3. June 2006, 05:08

bluetyson writes:

Hi Brad,

I have just gotten my hands on Myths for the Modern Age, when I saw your name listed, and realised I had seen this blog before, while browsing!

I have an interest in superhero type prose fiction, and had been making a list :- http://rnmscott.customer.netspace.net.au/ (if you have any thoughts, I would, of course, be happy to hear them).

A couple of questions - how many Executioner series and spinoffs are there?
In a second hand bookshop the other day I picked up a few that were not on the Executioner list, and appear to be from a Superbolan series.

Today, I wandered into another one and have a Stony Man - Blood Debt book, and a Gar Wilson Phoenix Force I think. This is starting to get slightly confusing.

Also, a fun looking book I bought at a salvos type op-shop.
Joe Hunter - Attack Force. The No. 4 - Vampire Mission, was what caught my eye :

"In the forbidding forests of Transylvania, deep in the disused salt mines, monstrous shapes were being built,,," from 1977, apparently. Ever come across these?

Cheers,

Richard (aussievamp2 atsomewherelike gmail.com)

AggressorBrad 3. June 2006, 13:26

Hi Richard,

Thanks for buying MYTHS, I hope you liked it.

Not a bad list you have there, I'd personally debate if some of the heroes you mention are superheroes, perhaps a paragraph defining what a superhero is to you. I'll have another look over the list for anything I think might stand to be added.

As for the Executioner, After the main series was taken over by Gold Eagle, starting with #39 The New War, two spinoff series were created Able Team and Phoenix Force. Able Team conisted of three characters who first appeared in Executioner #2 Death Squad. Phoenix force was based on original characters. Later Gold Eagle published a larger novel THE STONY MAN DOCTRINE, which served as both the first SuperBolan and first Stony Man novel. The Superbolan series featured larger Executioner novel and Stony Man featured all the Stony Man teams (Bolan, Able Team and Phoenix FOrce)

A debatable case can be made that the SOB Soldiers of Barrabas series is also a spinoff of the Executioner. Executioner #63 features a short story "Incident at Hoi Binh" which has Mack Bolan clearing Niles Barrabas of charges of massacring civilians. I'll have to double check but I think that it was published just before SOB #1 which had Niles Barrabas forming his own independent mercinary team. SOB #3 Butchers of Eden has Barrabas remembering another incident in Vietnam with Mack, although Barrabas calls Bolan, John Macklin Bolan.

Have a look at Alice in Stonyland's site listed in the links section, she has a very good list of which books belong in which series.

Joe Hunter - Attack force is a new series to me, but it certainly sound worth further investigation.

Thanks for writing
Brad

Anonymous 4. June 2006, 03:34

Blue Tyson writes:

Brad,

Thanks for the link tip. Yes, a very nebulous thing, certainly. I started out with 'had to have been in comics, or had a comic strip' as a major qualification, for things that were not one off type novels like Superfolks, Sturgeon, Stapledon, etc. and it broadened a bit from there, to include the odd occult detective, or super agent, with a few other suggestions by people. Not sure if I could write it down, as yet!

Stony Man Doctrine is one of the ones I picked up last week, so that is good news.

The SOB series I had not heard of.

Thanks,

Richard

AggressorBrad 4. June 2006, 04:19

Thanks Richard,

Works like these are always in progress - just as you think you have every single series you discover a new one.

Brad

Anonymous 6. June 2006, 04:35

Blue Tyson writes:

Absolutely. I saw this the other day too :-

http://thetrashcollector.bizland.com/pbmensadventure.chtml

A couple more in your 'Sexecutioner' type vein in there, among others. Check out 'The Big Brain'!

AggressorBrad 6. June 2006, 12:30

I have The Big brain #1 definately will be covered here at some point (so many books, so little time)

I guessing Dark Angel isn't Jessica Alba.

I am at least aware of maost of these series, Although Hawk Macrae and The Ms Squad are new to me.

Thanks for the link

Anonymous 8. June 2006, 11:08

Blue Tyson writes:

Yeah, bound to be more than even 2 series called Dark Angel, I'd be pretty sure!

Richard

AggressorBrad 8. June 2006, 20:38

Yep having seen 2 Kung Fu, 2 Revenger, 2 Mercinary, 4 Avenger, 2 Avengers series some names just seem to be reused.

Brad

Anonymous 9. June 2006, 03:06

Blue Tyson writes:

and as to books titled Dark Angel

probably 327 romance novels, for one. ;-)

Think one of Seabury Quinn's Jules de Grandin's is called that, too.

AggressorBrad 9. June 2006, 13:50

LOL. I thought (for a brief time) that Dark Angel was a retitling of Angel, with Angel going evil. There are over seven million hits on Google for the term Dark Angel.

Brad

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