The Hot Pilots

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The Hot Pilots Page 28

by T. E. Cruise


  Steve sprang up, scattering the palm fronds. The startled enemy soldier involuntarily stepped back. The rest of it happened in seeming slow motion. The soldier was bringing around his rifle as Steve lunged forward, blocking the rifle’s barrel with his left arm, almost dropping his radio in the process. He jammed the .38’s barrel deep into the fleshy area underneath the soldier’s jaw, and pulled the trigger. The .38 boomed, and blood, brains, hair, and bits of skull exited the top of the enemy soldier’s pith helmet. As the soldier twisted, the front blade sight on the revolver’s barrel caught in the man’s helmet chin strap. The gun was torn from Steve’s sweaty fingers as the dead soldier crumpled. The revolver tumbled, disappearing into some weeds.

  Got to have a gun, Steve thought. He scooped up the fallen AK rifle, slinging it over his shoulder as he ran.

  “Mountie—Four!” he screamed into his radio, digging into his pocket for his compass. “On my way! On my way!”

  “Rog, Four!” Mountie shouted back. “Chopper ETA ninety seconds!”

  Steve could hear shouts and gunfire coming from behind him. He didn’t look back, but just ran headlong through the jungle, his eyes on his compass, stumbling and staggering to keep his balance as he tripped over vines, ignoring the branches raising welts and cuts as they whipped across his face.

  He broke through the jungle and into the clearing. The air was filled with the sound of gunfire as enemy bullets coming from the jungle whizzed past. He zigzagged across the field, toward the green and tan mottled HH-3 chopper coming in low toward him.

  They’ve got to hit me anytime, Steve thought as he ran, but then the small-arms fire being directed at him was overwhelmed by the deep thunder of the Spad’s quartet of 20 millimeters. Steve glanced up over his shoulder to see Mountie in his blue and silver, prop-driven dive bomber racking his bird along the jungle’s edge, hosing down the trees to suppress the enemy.

  The camo-painted chopper was setting down about thirty yards away. The chopper looked bottom-heavy thanks to its auxiliary fuel tanks. Its rotor wash flattened the weeds and plants all around it.

  High in the sky Steve saw two Thuds orbiting on MIG-CAP cover. Flying much lower was Robbie’s Thud sweeping down over the two canvas-sided trucks barreling toward the chopper. The Thud’s Vulcan cannon began firing, and 20-millimeter tracer rounds began sending up geysers of dirt all around the trucks. The trucks’ windshields imploded under the cannon barrage. They swerved wildly, spilling men. One of the trucks turned over on its side. The other exploded as Robbie’s gun ignited its fuel tank.

  Steve was at the chopper now.

  “Let’s go, buddy!” yelled one of the chopper’s crew. He was wearing a drab green flight suit and matching helmet, and was waving frantically from the open bay door. Another crewman dressed similarly was firing a pedestal-mounted M-60 machine gun at the North Vietnamese soldiers advancing out of the jungle.

  “Hey, I know the meter’s running.” Steve laughed as he threw himself into the chopper.

  “Go!” the crewman yelled into the mike built into his helmet. The chopper began to lift off. The M-60 gunner kept up his lethal field of fire as the chopper swung free of the ground and began to veer away.

  Steve studied the AK rifle for a moment, then braced it against his shoulder, aiming at the line of enemy soldiers, and experimentally squeezed the trigger. The assault rifle bucked, its barrel climbing rapidly as he fired off several bursts of full automatic fire that quickly emptied the thirty-round banana clip. He tossed the AK out the chopper as the M-60 gunner retracted his weapon and slid the door closed. Several of the AK’s ejected shell casings were rattling around the chopper’s floor. He picked one up and put it in his pocket. Souvenir.

  The chopper gained altitude. As it left the vicinity the Spad pulled in close in order to fly escort.

  “We’re all right now,” the crewman shouted to Steve over the noise of the chopper’s eggbeaters. “You want any first aid for those cuts and scratches you got?”

  Steve shook his head. “I can wait until we land.” Exhausted, he curled up in a corner of the bay. “Could use a smoke, though. You got a smoke?”

  The crewman nodded, settling down beside Steve and handing him a package of Salems. “Hey, I hear you bagged a pair of MIGs before you went down.”

  “Yep.”

  “Far out.” The crewman grinned in admiration.

  Steve nodded. The menthol cigarette tasted great. Steve looked at the bug bites on the backs of his hands. No big deal, he thought, smiling. I made it. I’m out!

  “Bet you’re looking forward to a nice hot shower and a drink when you get back to base, Colonel,” the chopper crewman said, winking.

  “You read my mind,” Steve replied. And a steak, medium rare…

  (Seven)

  Muang Chi Air Force Base

  Thailand

  The steak came out of the kitchen somewhat well-done, but Steve Gold was in no mood to complain.

  He’d arrived back at Muang Chi about 7 P.M. Steve had showered and changed and gone to the infirmary, where the medics treated his bumps and bruises and then sent him on his way to debriefing. There, he was told that his two MIG kills had been confirmed, and that credit for them would be added to his record.

  Steve was glad to hear that, even as he waited apprehensively for the downside. It didn’t matter who held the higher rank on the ground. In the air, the flight leader was the boss. Rio flight’s lead, Major Wilson, had given Steve a direct order not to chase those MIGs, an order that Steve had disobeyed. When would the base commander get around to telling Steve what disciplinary action he faced?

  It turned out that nothing was said about his dereliction, for which Steve was thankful but mystified as he left Operations and headed on over to the mess. He had his steak and fries, and then went over to the perpetually twilight-lit officers’ club.

  “Monday, Monday” by the Mamas and the Papas was on the jukebox as Steve entered the crowded, smoky club. He looked around and spotted Robbie and Major Wilson having themselves a couple of beers at a table beneath a neon Coca-Cola sign.

  “Well, I’m glad to see your ugly face.” Robbie laughed, standing up to embrace Steve as he came over.

  “Roger that,” Major Wilson said as he stood up to shake Steve’s hand. Wilson was in his late thirties. He was clean-shaven, with thinning, curly auburn hair and light blue eyes. “Glad you made it back, Colonel.”

  “Thank you, Major. I owe it to my nephew here, and you, and Search and Rescue, of course,” Steve replied. “I wish I could personally thank Mountie …”

  “Spad drivers are like the Lone Ranger.” Wilson laughed. “They never hang around for thanks.”

  Steve nodded. “Uh, Major…” he began uneasily. “During debriefing I kept waiting for someone to say something about how I bugged out on you guys in order to go MIG hunting, but it was like the brass never heard that part of the story—”

  “Yes, well …” Wilson smiled thinly. “Let’s say that I forgot to mention that little item during my own debriefing. According to my report, you had my permission to chase those MIGs.”

  “Thanks, Major,” Steve said gratefully.

  Before the major could reply, Lieutenants Ritchie and To-back, two of the pilots from last night’s rap session, called out to Steve from the bar.

  “Congratulations, Colonel!” Toback shouted.

  “You sure showed ‘em, my man, Colonel, sir!” Ritchie was grinning. “Right on, brother!”

  “You see?” Wilson said quietly. “That’s why I left your insubordination out of my report. Your exploits today have already taken on legendary status. You bagged two MIGs and almost outran three SAMs. On account of you the Thud drivers around here are walking with their heads held high for the first time in months. And our pilots will make what you accomplished today even more wondrous as they retell it to the new guys as they rotate in.” Wilson shrugged. “You did us a big favor, Colonel. You did your job. You fired us up by setting an aggressive exampl
e.You’ve got the spirit, and you’ve instilled a bit of it into our guys. I didn’t want to cloud the issue by hauling you up on insubordination charges. We’ve already had more than enough of that sort of schizoid, Simon says bureaucratic, red-tape bullshit coming out of Saigon and Washington …”

  “Yeah, well, thanks again,” Steve said softly.

  “And your nephew here has made a pretty good reputation for himself in his own right,” Wilson added. “The way he hung in for you, and knocking out that SAM with a Sidewinder, and the way he took out those trucks … Well, he’s impressed a lot of important people by illustrating the proper, aggressive way to back up a fellow pilot. He’s being put in for the Silver Star, and I’d wager that he’s going to get it.”

  “Like I said,” Steve responded, smiling at Robbie, “I owe him my life.”

  “I’d say that you do.” Wilson nodded firmly, shaking Steve’s hand a final time before taking his leave. “I’d say that you do …”

  “There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for this kid …” Steve called out after Wilson as the major walked away.

  “Is that a fact, Uncle Steve?” Robbie asked innocently.

  Steve put his arm around his nephew. “That’s a fact. Anything you ever want from me, you just name it,” Steve fervently swore.

  “Far out,” Robbie enthused. “Hey, listen up, everybody!” he shouted. “My uncle’s going to war college!”

  “You little sonofabitch!” Steve gasped, looking around balefully at the other pilots, who were now all grinning at him, and applauding, for chrissakes. “Come on!” Steve hissed. “When I said anything, I didn’t mean—”

  “No way, Steve.” Robbie grinned devilishly. “I’m not letting you off the hook …”

  “Sonofabitch,” Steve grumbled. “You’re gonna be the death of me …”

  “Hey, you said yourself that I saved your life, right? You owe me, Uncle. Going to war college and doing your best is the way I expect to be repaid.”

  Steve stared darkly at his nephew.

  “You gonna back down, or you gonna keep your word, Uncle Steve?” Robbie demanded.

  Sonofabitch— “You want it,” Steve mumbled, pausing to take a deep breath. “You got it …”

  “What?” Robbie teased. “I couldn’t hear you?”

  “I said you want it, you got it!” Steve roared, feeling like a guy who just got roped into making a high dive into a very shallow pool … “Sonofabitch! I need a drink, and I mean a real drink, not one of those piss-assed beers—”

  “Colonel Gold?”

  Steve turned to see a young Air Force sergeant standing at attention. “What can I do for you?” he asked.

  “Orders for you just came into Operations,” the sergeant replied. “I was told to get them to you on the double, sir.”

  He handed Steve the sheaf of papers, which Steve quickly scanned.

  “Holy shit …” he murmured.

  “What’s up?” Robbie demanded.

  “I said I’d pay you back for saving me by going to war college, and I will,” Steve said. “But it’s going to have to wait a bit.”

  “How come?”

  “The rest of my tour here has been canceled,” Steve said. “I’m to get back to the States ASAP.” Perplexed, he stared at his nephew as he held up his orders. “Robbie, it says here I’m going to Israel …”

  CHAPTER 19

  * * *

  (One)

  Gold Aviation and Transport

  Burbank, California

  11 September 1966

  “This way, Steve,” Herman Gold said, leading his son out of the bright California sunshine into the cool, dark quiet of the deserted, unlit hangar.

  It was a Saturday afternoon. Gold was informally dressed in brown corduroy trousers, a moss green and white vertically striped shirt-jac (vertical stripes were supposedly good camouflage for a stout belly), tan loafers, and a loden green leather car coat. He’d grown a beard, which had come in crimson, and which he kept closely trimmed, like the short ruffle of red curls that now wreathed his ears. Erica had taken to calling him her “strawberry Falstaff.”

  Gold began flicking switches on the light panel near the door. One by one the fluorescent banks hanging from the steel ceiling rafters flickered to life above a large, sleek, jet airplane. The airplane was seventy-four feet long and seventeen feet high. She was painted ghost gray, with scarlet and turquoise detailing on her nose and tail. On her wings and rear fuselage were the Stars and Bars, and the X-prefix number that set her apart as a prototype.

  “There you are, Steve,” Gold said. “The GAT X-11 Super-BroadSword.”

  Steve whistled softly. “She’s a beauty, all right, Pop.”

  “Isn’t she, though …” Gold smiled. “You know, as far as I’m concerned there’s still nothing like the thrill of bringing a new airplane into the world.”

  He walked around to the stern, to point up toward the double tail pipes. “Those are twin turbofans, each rated at twelve thousand pounds of thrust. She’s got a seventeen hundred mile-per-hour top speed, and a service ceiling exceeding sixty thousand feet. Range exceeds thirty-five hundred miles on internal fuel, and that’s carrying up to fifteen tons of ordnance.”

  “Whoo-wee!” Steve exclaimed. “And I thought the Thud was a workhorse …”

  “The Thunderchief was, in her day,” Gold remarked. “But it’s a new day dawning. The day of the Super-BroadSword. The first airplanes off our production lines are being delivered to the Air Force this week. They’re calling her the F-110. We’ve got high hopes she’ll make a big difference to the war effort.”

  Gold watched his son slowly circle the aircraft. Steve was wearing wheat-colored jeans, black sneakers, a gray sweatshirt, an L.A. Dodgers baseball cap, and a battered leather A-2 flight jacket circa World War II, still emblazoned with Steve’s Pacific Theater squadron markings.

  “She’s got the same Vector-A system that you sent to Israel, isn’t that right?” Steve asked.

  “The Vector A is only one of the many aces up this airplane’s sleeve,” Gold said. “She’s loaded with innovations. First and foremost, she’s got variable sweep, swing wings. The pilot can electrically pivot the wings into swept forward position for takeoffs and low-speed ground support strafing runs, or he can sweep the wings back right up against the tail’s horizontal stabilizers, to form what in effect is a solid delta wing that is ideal for supersonic flight.”

  “So now the pilot’s got one more thing to think about,” Steve said. “I pity tomorrow’s fighter jocks; they’re gonna need three hands to deal with all the gizmos these birds carry.”

  “That’s why she’s a twin-seater,” Gold said. “She had to be. There’s just too much instrumentation. You need an electronics/weapons officer on board.”

  “A bear,” Steve mused.

  “Huh?”

  “That’s what the pilots call their backseaters in Vietnam, bears, as in trained bears.”

  “I see …” Gold nodded, trying hard not to react negatively to Steve’s attitude. “Well, the Super-BroadSword’s backseater will be sitting side by side with the pilot. We’ve gotten very good reaction on another innovation. In the event that the crew has to bail out the entire cockpit becomes an escape capsule. It lifts off by means of explosive charge, and even carries a chaff dispenser to help ward off enemy radar tracking. On the ground the cockpit can be used as an emergency shelter…”

  “That sounds cool, Pop,” Steve said softly.

  “And as I was saying before,” Gold pressed on. “She’s got a full complement of black-box technology. Enough, we hope, to take her well into the next decade of electronic warfare …”

  “Black boxes,” Steve scoffed. “What about guns? You were always a main advocate of guns on airplanes. The more guns the better, you always used to say.”

  “Oh, the Super-BroadSword will have a gun, don’t you worry. We’re not going to make the same mistake that Brower-Dunn made with the Sun Wolf jet fighter,” Gold added firm
ly, thinking back on how during its initial design phase Brower-Dunn had made provisions for its Sun Wolf to carry a gun, but then scraped the provision in favor of a fuller complement of short- and long-range air-to-air missiles. In Vietnam, however, Sun Wolf pilots learned just how handy a cannon could be during close-in dogfights, so now the Air Force was scrambling to retrofit their Sun Wolfs with external gun pods.

  “You know what, Pop?” Steve sighed. “Someday you guys are going to invent a black box to fly the airplane, and then what will happen to us pilots …?”

  “That will never happen,” Gold scoffed. “No machine will ever replace a good pilot.”

  “I don’t know…” Steve mused, more to himself than to Gold. “Those SAMs on my ass handled themselves pretty good …”

  The Vietnam thing again, Gold thought, frowning with concern. Steve was here on interim leave, staying with Gold and his wife at their Bel-Air home, so Gold was aware that his son was seriously troubled. Steve used to eat like a horse, but these days he picked at his food. He was drinking fairly heavily, as well, Gold knew, but what most concerned Gold was that Steve was having trouble sleeping because of nightmares.

  Gold had been putting off bringing up the subject of what was bothering Steve because he didn’t want his son to think he was prying. On the other hand, he knew Steve … His son wasn’t going to open up unless he received a little coaxing.

  “I guess you went through a pretty rough experience over in Vietnam,” Gold began. “Being shot down and all …”

  “Hell, I didn’t have it hard at all,” Steve replied, sounding almost pugnacious. “The pilots who go down and don’t get rescued are the ones who have it hard.”

  “Yes, I know that …” Gold said quietly, trying to defuse his son’s seeming hostility.

  Steve turned away from his examination of the Super-BroadSword to walk back toward Gold. “I’m sorry for my tone of voice, Pop.” He hesitated. “I guess I’ve been acting a little down in the dumps, huh?”

 

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