Cover pencils by Mark Miraglia, inks by Dan Schaefer. Wolf Pack, script by James Van Hise, pencils by Kevin Tuma, inks by Barb Kaalberg; 2023: Paul Reid wants to know how Britt I dealt with having to kill a man early in his Green Hornet career (as detailed in the previous issue), but the man's journals hold no discussion of the aftermath. However, Ikano Kato's do. 1936: Britt's college roommate, Charles Binford, has written to the Daily Sentinel, asking for an investigation into strange happenings near his home in the Canadian hinterlands. Britt takes advantage of the opportunity to get away from the pressures of the paper, the city, and his double life, with Kato deciding to go along to keep an eye on his troubled friend. However, on the first morning, Nazi soldiers break into the cabin and capture the three men, marching them to a nearby location where they are to be slave labor, building a secret airstrip. Photographs of NOW's original Green Hornet artist Jeff Butler, Mr. T, NOW's frequent Green Hornet writer Ron Fortier and inker David Mowry, TV Green Hornet actor Van Williams, and fans Scott Heathcote and Michelle Latimer, costumed as Hornet II and Kato III, at various then-recent conventions.