by Craig Thomas
‘Hell - they’ll never make it!’ Seerbacker snapped, unable to bear the tension.
‘They will,’ Gant said calmly, his voice so level - almost a whisper - that Seerbacker looked at him curiously.
‘Man, but you’re cool…’
Gant smiled. ‘Somebody once told me I was dead - the flying corpse they called me in Vietnam,’ Gant said.
‘You minded?’
‘No.’ Gant replied, shaking his head slightly. ‘Most of the guys who used the name were dead before they pulled us out … missiles, AA guns, enemy planes.’
‘Yes,’ Seerbacker said softly. ‘Hell of a war…’
Peck, sweating, pale, angry and weary, came towards them. There remained only a hundred yards of runway left to clear. He said, towering over Gant: ‘We won’t make it, mister - if you don’t get that bird out of here before the Reds arrive, we’re all for the Lubyanka!’
Gant shook his head. ‘You have a minute in hand. Chief,’ he said. Peck stared at him, his mouth opening and closing, his eyes reflecting baffled incomprehension which changed slowly to conviction.
‘If you say so,’ he muttered and turned away, back towards the hoses, exhorting his men blasphemously.
‘You sure impress the hell out the Chief,’ Seerbacker said with a thin smile. ‘I just hope you don’t have to do it to the Russians.’
‘ETA two minutes and thirty seconds,’ Fleischer said. ‘He keeps asking for you, sir. He wants convincing - I don’t think I’ve done a very good job.’
‘To hell with that, Dick. Keep stalling him - does he look like surfacing? Has he asked any awkward questions?’
‘No, sir. He seems just naturally suspicious - not as if he’s looking for anything special.’
Powdery snow blew into Gant’s face. For a moment, distracted by the voices, he glanced up at the cloudy sky half-hidden by the shreds of mist. Then he realised - that it was the vanguard of Peck’s blizzard. The hosemen were still on schedule. He smiled to himself, and pulled off the parka. Peck’s men were forty yards away from the Firefox. The de-icing team trundled past him, and stopped to look enquiringly in his direction. He nodded at them, at which they seemed vastly relieved, and the giant garden-spray was wheeled speedily towards the Pequod, to be hauled aboard and stowed before the arrival of the Russians.
Gant waited, like a guest anxious to be gone, until Seerbacker had finished his conversation with his Exec. Seerbacker seemed surprised that he was stripped to his anti-G suit once more. He smiled awkwardly, ‘er, of course … ‘ he said.
‘So long, Seerbacker - and thanks.’
‘Get out of here, you bum!’ Seerbacker said with mock severity.
Gant nodded, and swung his foot to the lowest rung of the pilot’s ladder set in the fuselage. He climbed up, and slid feet first into the cockpit. There, he tugged on the integral helmet, plugged in the oxygen, the weapons-control jackplug, and the communications equipment. He needed first of all to taxi gently back to the southern extremity of the floe, where the snow had not, as yet, been cleared - it would be slowing, he knew, but he needed the maximum distance to the ridge. He went through the pre-start checks swiftly. He plugged in the anti-G suit automatically, even as he read off the dials and gauges that informed him of the condition of flaps, brakes and fuel. The fueltanks, he saw, smiling grimly, were satisfyingly full. It seemed aeons since there had been so much fuel in his universe. He pressed the hood control and it swung down, locked automatically, then he locked it manually. The handset issued him by Seerbacker was in the breast-pocket of the pressuresuit. He heard Fleischer’s voice, from a great distance, saying:
‘ETA one minute and thirty seconds.’
‘You hear that. Gant?’ Seerbacker’s voice chimed in. He continued, without waiting for a reply: ‘Good luck, fella. Got to get Mr. Peck’s suspicious hoses stowed now, so get out of here!’
Gant gang-loaded the ignition, switched on the starter motors, turned on the high-pressure cock. and pressed the button. He heard, with relief, the sound of a double explosion as the cartridge start functioned. There was the same rapid, mounting whirring that he had heard in the hangar at Bilyarsk, as the huge turbines began to build. He switched in the fuel-booster, and eased open the throttles, until the rpm gauges were steady at twenty-seven per cent. He paused for only a second, then pushed the throttles open, until he reached the fifty-five per cent rpm, then he released the brakes.
The Firefox did not move.
He hauled back the throttles, and applied the brakes again. Even though he knew instantly what it was, and knew that it could be cured, his own failure to anticipate it made him weak and chill with sweat.
He opened the hood, tugged open the facemask, and yelled into the handset: ‘Seerbacker - get those hoses over here - on the double!’
‘What in the hell is it, Gant - can’t you leave us…?’
‘Get over here! The wheels, they’ve frozen in!’
‘You’re stuck - with those engines, man?’
Already, even as Seerbacker apparently argued with him, he saw Peck and the others tugging the hoses towards the aircraft.
‘If I try and pull myself out, I’ll end up on my belly!’
Looking over the side of the cockpit, he saw Seerbacker’s face looking up at him. Seerbacker was openly grinning. Steam billowed around him, snow flew up around the cockpit of the Firefox as the superheated steam was played carefully over the embedded wheels. Gant had not needed to warn Peck that if he played too much steam onto the tyres, at too high a pressure, he would, literally, melt them.
Peck had understood. He emerged from beneath the fuselage, looked up at Gant, and said into his handset:
‘O.K., Major Gant - now, for God’s sake, get out of here!’
Gant signalled him with (he thumbs-up, closed the hood once more, checked the gauges, and opened the throttles, until the rpm gauge once more showed fifty-five per cent. He released the brakes, the aircraft jolted out of the pits which the wheels and the applied steam had made, and rolled forward. Peck, Seerbacker and the others were moving away swiftly, tugging the thick, snaking hoses after them. Already, men were emerging from the Pequod, dressed in civilian parkas, the decoy scientists and technicians who should, by virtue of Seerbacker’s ploy, occupy the floe when the Russians arrived. Gant turned the aircraft, and headed down the floe, directly in the line of the runway. He kept the Firefox completely straight on course. He would need his own tracks on his return.
The grey sea was ahead of him. He searched for any sign of the Russian submarine. There was nothing. Probably, the captain had decided not to surface until he arrived and stopped engines at the Pequod’s position, something to do with psychological surprise. Whatever it was, Gant was grateful on behalf of Seerbacker and his crew. No one would visually sight the Firefox.
He turned the plane in a semi-circle, lined up on his own tyre tracks in the surface snow, and opened the throttles. Almost immediately, he felt the restraint of the surface snow, the inability of the aircraft with normal take-off power to accelerate sufficiently. He could not use too much power. It would have the effect of digging in the nose, changing the relative airflow over the surfaces of the plane. He would, in fact, slow the plane if he used more power. There was little impression of speed until he passed over the spot on the ice where he had parked, and joined the smoothed, polished surface of the ice-runway blasted out for him by Peck and his men. Only now could he see the ridge, a tiny hump ahead of him. He could not see, in the poor visibility, the gap of thirty feet that had been carved in its face. The undercarriage shook free of the restraining snow, and he felt the plane lurch forward as if freed from glue or treacle. Now he was able to open the throttles, push up the rpm, and gather speed. The only impression of speed was from the crinkled, roughened edge of the runway as it flowed past him at an increasing rate. He had to be right in the centre of the crude runway because he couldn’t use the brakes to steer on the ice. They would have no effect. The rudder would not operate eff
ectively until he reached a speed of eighty-five knots. At that moment he was at a little more than fifty.
As his eyes strained into the shredding mist, he heard, coming from a great distance, but with utter clarity, Seerbacker’s voice.
‘Good luck, man. Can’t stop to talk, we’ve got visitors !’ The voice had come from the handset.
His body was chilled, but he sweated. The second it took for him to pass into that region of speed which returned the power of steering to him seemed like an age. Then his speed topped ninety knots, and he centred the Firefox smoothly on the runway. He eased open the throttles, and the rpm needle seemed to leap with a jerk across the face of the dial. He saw the gap rushing at him; now that his eyes had a point of focus in the diffused whiteness of the floe, he was suddenly aware of his speed, transferred from his dials to the landscape. In cold air, he recited to himself, he needed less distance for take off. He did not believe it, not for a splitsecond.
The gap leapt at him, the distance it had been from him eaten by the huge engines. He was through the gap at 150 knots, and 170 was his take-off speed. He shoved the throttles into reheat, and pulled back on the stick. He dare not now plough back into the soft surface snow where Peck had had no time to clear the runway.
He could see the snow - he swore that he could see it. the point where the runway of ice ended. It was impossible. It passed under the plane’s belly as he hauled back on the stick. He knew the undercarriage was clear of the floe, yet there was no impression of climbing. In the rear-view mirror. Cant saw a cloud of snow belly out behind him, caused by the sudden downthrust of the jets. The Firefox squatted, it seemed for an instant, nose-high, then, like a limb tearing itself free of restraining, glutinous mud, the aircraft pulled away from the floe. Gant trimmed flaps up, and retracted the undercarriage. The airspeed indicator nicked over, and he pushed the throttles forward. The plane kicked him in the back, and he felt the anti-G suit compensate for the sudden surge of acceleration. He checked the fuel flow, saw that all the needles were in the green, and hauled the aircraft into a vertical climb.
The climb towards the cloud took no more than a few seconds. As he entered the cloud, the Mach-meter crossed the figure 1 - then 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4… The Firefox burst out of the cloud at 22,000 feet, into dazzling sunlight, cloudless, vast blue.
He had taken off heading due north. Now he set his course, punching out the coordinates for his crossingpoint on the Finnish coast. He banked the plane round to a heading of 210 degrees, still climbing. The maximum altitude of which the Firefox was reputedly capable was in excess of 120,000 feet - more than twenty-five miles high. Gant intended to use as much of that staggering height as he could. It was unlikely, he knew, that he would be able to avoid infrared detection, even at that height. However, moving as fast as the aircraft was capable, in a vast leap over the Barents Sea, it would be impossible for any interception to take place. A little before he crossed the coast, he would descend to sea level, and begin his complicated, top-speed dash across Finland to the Gulf of Bothnia, and Stockholm.
There was no aircraft that could touch him, no missile that could home on him, at that height, that speed. He smiled to himself as the altimeter indicated 50,000 feet and still climbing. Now, he thought, now he could put the Firefox through its paces, really fly the great plane…
There was a fierce, cold joy in him, his closest approximation to an ecstatic emotion. There was nothing to compare, he knew, not with this.
He had read the army psychiatrist’s report in Saigon - he had broken into the records office, late at night. An emotional cripple, that’s what they had called him, though not in those words - an emotional cripple scarred for life by his early experiences. That Clarkville crap that he had fed the head-shrinker, he’d based his judgement on that, his judgement of a man who had flown more than fifty combat missions, who was the best, the judgement of a fat-assed head-shrinker hundreds of miles from the nearest ‘Cong soldier, or missile-launcher.
He canned the adrenalin that was beginning to course through his system. There was no point, he told himself, no point at all. He was the best. Buckholz knew it, knew it when he picked him. The Firefox climbed through 60,000 feet.
There was no thought for Upenskoy, for Baranovich, and Kreshin. and Semelovsky, and all the others: Since he had left Bilyarsk, they had dropped from his mind, gone more completely than faded, sepia photographs of the dead on wall and mantel.
Tretsov saw him punching through 60,000 feet, the vapour-trail ahead and below him was clear against the grey sea across a gap in the cloud. He knew it was Gant. There was infrared, but no radar image on his screen. It had to be the stolen Mig-31.
Tretsov’s mind worked like surgical steel. He knew what he had to do. He knew Gant’s file, knew his experience in combat. His own combat experience, in the old Mig-21, was limited to engagements with Israeli Phantoms in the Middle East as a very young pilot seconded to the Egyptian Air Force, one of a select few reinforcing the inedequate pilots the Red Air Force had trained. Gant was better than he was … on paper.
Gant had flown the Mig-31 for perhaps five hours less. Tretsov had flown the aircraft for upwards of two hundred hours. Gant wanted to complete his mission. Tretsov had Voskov to avenge. And fear - always, the fear. He would kill Gant. He had to.
He had to get into the tail-cone of the other Mig, so that the missiles would have the best chance of homing on the heatsource of the huge engines - and because Gant’s infrared would only pick him up when it was too late to do anything about it. At that moment, watching the Mig still climbing steadily, he knew that Gant was not aware of him, that crossing his path and being on Gant’s starboard flank, the infrared’s blind spot hid him temporarily. He would have to slot in swiftly behind the American, and then…
The Mig moved above him now, through his own cruising height of 70,000 feet, still climbing. He changed course, still holding a visual sighting on the contrail, confirming the information of his screen. He eased the Firefox PP 2 in behind the American until the bright orange blip on the screen was directly ahead of him, along the central ranging bar. The thoughtguided weapons system launched two of the Anab missiles and he watched them slide up the ranging bars, homing on the brighter blip of the American’s heatsource.
The ECM equipment bleeped horrendously in Gant’s earphones, tearing at his memory. He saw the two missiles, sliding up the ranging bars towards him. Impossible, but there … The mind deliberated, refused to comprehend, sought the source of the heatseeking missiles - even as the body responded, seized the electronic means of survival, reaching back into old patterns and grabbing at an old technique.
There was one, he knew, of avoiding infrared missiles - only one chance. It had been used by Israeli pilots in the Six-Day War, and by Americans in Vietnam. If he could change direction with sufficient suddenness, then the heatsource from his engines would be lost to the tracking sensors in the nose of the missiles and they would be unable to maintain or regain contact with the Firefox.
He chopped the throttles, pulled the stick back and over into a zoom climb, seeking to bend the plane’s course at an acute angle to his former course, removing the heatsource of his engines from the sensors of the closing missiles. He rolled the aircraft to the right at the same time, and allowed the nose to drop, following a curve which brought him under the line of the missile’s path. His vision tunnelled with the G-effect He stared at the G-meter, and saw that he was pulling plus 8-G. If his vision narrowed any more, he knew it would be the direct precursor of a black-out. Ten G, and he would black out for certain, and the plane could go out of control. All his vision now showed him was the ominous G-meter, the pressure suit a distant sensation as it clamped on his legs and stomach. He cursed the fact of finding himself with a lower Gtolerance at that critical moment in time.
The missiles, suddenly and violently altered in position on the screen, slid past him on their original course, past the point in space and time of expected impact. They had lost the
scent and would continue, vainly, until their fuel ran out and they dropped into the sea.
He eased back on the stick, and his vision opened. like blinds being drawn in a room. His speed was beginning to fall off, and he found himself sweating desperately. He had almost been taken; like an inexperienced boy. There was nothing on the screen. Tretsov though Gant did not know it, was still directly behind him and in the blind spot of the infrared detection. A sense of panic mounted in him. He had to find the enemy visually, or not at all. He was blind, a blind man in the same room as a psychopath. The cold fear trickled down his body, inside the pressuresuit He suspected the nature of the enemy, but would not admit it yet.
The pilot of the other plane - aircraft it had to be had obviously climbed to follow him, angry no doubt at his failure to press home the surprise, make the quick kill.
In the rear-view mirror, Gant caught a glint of sunlight off a metal surface. Still nothing on the radar. Now he knew for certain. Baranovich and Semelovsky had not immobilised the second Firefox by means of the hangar fire. Somehow, whatever damage that had been done had been repaired, and they had sent it after him.
Now he felt very cold. The rivulets of sweat beneath his arms chilled his sides, his waist. Beneath the pressuresuit, he could sense the clammy coldness of his vest. The other plane was the equal of his, the mirrorimage - and the pilot was vastly more experienced…
The mind proceeded, its infection of imagination unabated, raging in his system while the body calculated that if they continued on their climb turn, the Russian would intercept him. The eyes picked up the glint of light again in the mirror, the hands pushed open the throttles savagely, and the body was comforted by the release of energy from the huge turbines. The body was pressed back into the couch.
The body stopped the climb and pulled the Firefox even more sharply to the left. The Russian kept with him, coming inside him to the left, closing the range. Gant pulled even tighter to the left, then straightened out with a suddenness that caused the inertia of the head to bang the helmet against the cockpit. His hand operated the lever, and the couch dropped into its ‘battle position’, flattening the body almost to the horizontal.