“Did you see it?” Bird Dog asked, swiftly rolling back into the proper orientation.
“I didn’t see shit that looked like a Stinger.”
“You weren’t looking hard enough.”
“Hard enough to see that that looked like Navy uniforms they had on.”
“Bullshit. Just tan pants and shirts. And there was a guy in BDUs, too. Carrying a machine gun.”
“I didn’t see a machine gun, either,” Gator argued. “For all you know, that’s a charter out of the Officers’ Boat Club that got caught out on the harbor when it all went down. It could be that they’re trying to get back to Jefferson because that’s where they came from.
“Bullshit,” Bird Dog repeated. “By the time I come back around and get in position, they’re going to be at two miles.”
“I know. Okay, line up on them, but you’re still weapons tight, remember,” Gator said.
“Weapon’s tight my ass. Lobo wasn’t all that weapons tight the other day and she went after a MiG,” Bird Dog muttered.
“Oh, so that’s what this is about? Your girl chases a MiG, you gotta chase something?”
“No.”
“You happen to see Lobo’s name on the flight line when we launched?” Gator pressed. “Or Hot Rock? Or their RIOs?”
“No,” Bird Dog said, doubt in his voice now. As he talked, he put the Tomcat in a hard bank, crossed over the bumpy stream of his own exhaust, descended another hundred feet and lined up on the stern of the boat. He toggled off a short burst of gunfire, the rounds striking the water two hundred feet off the starboard side of the boat. Every tenth round was a tracer. Even if the boat had missed the sound of the Vulcan canon or the stitches of water, they would have seen the tracer rounds.
“Stop that right now,” Gator snapped.
“Just verifying that I’m mission capable, RIO,” Bird Dog said innocently. “What’s your problem?”
“The reason you don’t see them on the flight deck is because they’re grounded, asshole. Maybe permanently. And Batman didn’t take any prisoners — he grounded the fucking RIOs too, for not having the balls to keep their pilots under control. So hear me when I tell you this — you fire off one round, one single round, before you’re weapons free and I’m punching out. By myself. You can hightail it back to the carrier and explain to Batman and CAG why you came back without your RIO and your canopy, and why you fired on an unarmed civilian boat. You got that?”
“If I hit it, it’s because I’m weapons free and it’s inbound on the carrier,”
“Fine. Find yourself another RIO,” Gator snapped.
“You’re always threatening me like that, and you haven’t punched out yet,” Bird Dog observed. He was now barely a quarter mile astern of the boat. He jogged back slightly on the throttle and retrimmed the aircraft for level flight. “You don’t have the balls to do it. And there are sharks down there.”
“Sharks, hell. I’d rather face them than Batman if he’s pissed at you. I get a leg bit off, at least I’ll get a medical discharge instead of a court-martial.”
Bird Dog fell silent. The warm throb of the Tomcat’s engines wrapped around them like a muffling blanket. “Call Jefferson, ask them what the status is,” he said finally, a note of resignation in his voice.
Gator breathed a sigh of relief. He toggled over to Tactical and contacted the operations specialist who was acting as air intercept controller. “Interrogative the status of that boat inbound,” Gator asked.
“Check fire, all stations, all aircraft,” a new voice said over tactical. “This is TAO Jefferson — boat inbound on Jefferson is friendly, repeat, friendly. Check fire all stations, weapons tight.”
“Holy shit,” Gator breathed, “A friendly.”
“You copied that, Tomcat 201?”
“Roger, copy redesignated as friendly. Who the hell’s on that boat?”
“Admiral Tombstone Magruder and escort,” the AIC said promptly. He paused for a moment, then said, “TAO says for you to stay overhead and make sure no one bothers him on his way in. You copy? Escort duty, 201.”
“Roger, copy all,” Gator acknowledged. He switched his mike to ICS from Tactical. “Bird Dog, we’ve got five minutes to get our story straight. Start talking.”
Lucky Star
1100 local (GMT –10)
The ass end of the carrier loomed up out of the swells like an improbably massive cliff jutting up out of the middle of the ocean. Even though Tombstone had seen it many times from this aspect, mostly from liberty boats launching, the sheer size of the carrier always awed him. It seemed so small when you were airborne, vectoring in on final approach, your balls climbing up into your stomach every time as you wondered how in hell you were going to get sixty thousand pounds of Tomcat down onto a deck that looked like a postage stamp. It never got any bigger in the air, not unless you were unlucky enough to come in too low — unlucky or just plain not good enough, although they never thought of it in those terms. From the air, it was always too small, too far away, the gray tarmac rushing up to you at impossible speeds as you tried to maintain altitude, pitch, and orient on the center line and the three wire.
But here, looking up at the bulk of the ship jutting up from the sea, it was as though it were an entirely different ship.
“Big bastard, isn’t it?” the general asked.
Tombstone nodded. “She packs enough firepower to get the job done. No more.”
“Well, then.” The general moved over to the side of the small craft and started expertly handling the lines. A couple of the junior officers jumped to assist him, along with a Coast Guardsman. He accepted help from Captain Henry, but waved the others away. Tombstone watched his smooth, sure movements. “Done this before, I take it?”
“I’ve sailed all my life,” the general said.
“Maybe you joined the wrong service?”
The general shook his head. “Even if I thought that, it’s a little bit late in my career to be changing services, don’t you think?”
On board Jefferson, the fantail was flooded with sailors, all of them clad in safety gear. The controlled chaos took shape into a receiving party under the direction of a crusty old chief petty officer.
The Coasties edged the boat in, then tossed the lines to the waiting sailors. Soon the boat was snugged up against the bumpers, and the team prepared to depart.
“Right behind you, Admiral,” the general said, solving the delicate question of who was senior and who would debark first. Tombstone appreciated the courtesy, but reflected that they would have far too little time in the coming weeks to worry about seniority among admirals. Besides, once they were aboard Jefferson, it was all Batman’s show, anyway.
Tombstone climbed handily up the ladder, returned the salutes from the waiting officer, then said brusquely, “No bells. We’ve got work to do.”
The commander standing in front of him nodded. “If you’ll follow me, Admiral.” He saluted each of the more senior officers as they came aboard and then led them forward toward the interior of the ship.
Five minutes later, they stepped into the admiral’s conference room just off TFCC. A meeting was in progress, led by Batman.
“ — until we get some reinforcements,” Batman was saying, then broke off his sentence. He stood, rounded the table, and approached Tombstone, holding out his hand. “Good to see you again, Admiral. I understand you’ve come to help us out?”
Tombstone nodded. “Not that you need it.” He turned and introduced the rest of his team, following in his footsteps like a path of ducks.
Batman nodded. “Find a seat if you can.” He pointed to a ring of chairs around the outer bulkheads of the compartment. “We’re just going over the situation as it stands now. Just got some interesting news from the guys on the ground. There’s a SEAL team in there — you may have heard of them. Second squad from SEAL Team Seven.”
“Man, that was fast,” Tombstone said.
“Fast, no. They were up in the mountains doing
some cross-training with the British SAS when the world went to shit.”
Batman looked somber. “It’s a helluva thing, Stony. Who would have thought we’d see it in our day?”
“I’d have thought you already got the story from Tomboy.”
Batman nodded. “She briefed me as soon as she got onboard. But is there something more to it?”
Tombstone shook his head. “Surely you’re not accusing me of planning my honeymoon around national security, are you?”
“No, I guess not. Still, mighty odd coincidence.”
“That’s what it was — a coincidence.”
“Well, like I said — pull up a chair and let’s get started.”
Batman briefly filled in the newcomers on the situation in the air, ending with, “Hard as hell to do anything about it while they’re over the island. We run the risk of killing more Americans than they already have.”
“So I take it the SEALs have some plans?” the general said, the first words he’d spoken since his greetings to Admiral Wayne and his staff. “They usually do.”
“We’re talking to them on SINCGAAR, and comms have been good all day. They’re going in tonight to take care of the hostage situation at the Comm Center. I don’t expect to hear from them during the operation — they’re operating on red signature orders — but we may see some fireworks.”
“And then what?” the general asked, his voice almost demanding.
“There’s an amphibious task force sitting off the coast,” Batman said. “As soon as we get the go order, we’re in.”
“Without air superiority?” Tombstone asked sharply, visions of metal shards in the air, fragments of flesh burning as jet fuel exploded around him, companies strafed into oblivion as they made the beachhead filling his mind. “It’ll be a disaster if we do that.”
“I know. That’s what we’re talking over right now — how to take those damned skies back from those bastards. Any ideas you’ve got, speak up.”
“Let’s see what you’ve got so far,” Tombstone said. “Then we’ll talk.”
THIRTEEN
USS Centurion
1105 local (GMT –10)
A submariner from even five years earlier would not have recognized the periscope operations now under way on board Centurion. There was no black pipe protruding from the water, no telltale fan of disturbed seawater or rooster tail behind it. Instead, a tiny black bump barely marred the surface of the ocean, extending up only far enough to clear the tops of the waves.
The boat was equipped with the latest in fiber optics technology, and a single thin thread mounted on a stiffening support rod allowed complete flexibility in periscope operations. There was no more sluing the periscope stand around to take a three-hundred and sixty degree view, no manual changes of the resolution, and no switching between the search scope and the attack scope. Instead, the fiber optic line supplied a highly digitized picture that looked oddly clean to the team in the control room.
“At least we know where the good guys are now,” Captain Tran said. He tapped one slim finger on the profile of the USS Jefferson, now centered in the scope. “I don’t like being this close to her, but it’s not like we have much choice. Not with the other submarine in the area.” He glanced over at the sonar gang, his eyes asking the question he didn’t need to voice.
“Nothing yet, sir, but sooner or later she’s going to have to come up to snort,” the chief sonarman said. “Odds are she’ll run back away from the carrier to do that, and as soon as she does, she’s in our area.”
Tran nodded. The inherent limitations of the diesel submarine made her most vulnerable to detection and attack at nighttime. Still, they’d seen more than their share of unusual capabilities on this contact. And if it was really determined not to be detected, it might find a convenient hole to lie up somewhere for the night, running on minimum hotel power and conserving its batteries. Maybe stretch it to one, two days without snorkeling. More than enough time to creep silently through the clear waters and make a run on Jefferson. And if that happened…
No, it wouldn’t. Because he, Captain Franklin Tran, was going to shove a torpedo up its ass so hard and true that there’d be nothing left of the other submarine except some scattered fragments of metal on an ocean floor already littered with the remains of too many hulks.
Captain Tran was a second-generation American. His grandparents and parents had fled Vietnam during the war. Their first years in America had proved hard for all of them, with a society seething with prejudice and anti-war sentiments hardly the ideal culture to yield up such a warrior as he had become. Indeed, if he thought about it — which he didn’t — Tran would have wondered whether it was a wise decision at all on the part of his country.
But from his earliest years, Tran had known that he wanted to join the Navy. Join the Navy, and earn his way into the most elite fighting force the service had to offer. He’d been entranced with submarines from the very beginning, even as a child, marveling that so relatively small a ship could be such a potent force. During the Cold War, his admiration for the submarines increased as he understood the terrible pressures under which the captains and their crews operated.
His grandparents had been rabidly patriotic Americans, grateful for the chances their adopted country would give them and their progeny even as distant relatives and cousins who had not made it out were slaughtered in their homeland. His parents had been slightly less enthusiastic, deeply encultured in the anti-war sentiment that had sprung up during the Cold War. Their son’s preoccupation with entering the Silent Service had at first bemused and then irritated them.
Despite their efforts, he’d applied for and been accepted to the Naval Academy. He’d earned his class standing of three out of his graduating class by dint of sheer efforts. There were other Asians in his class — three, to be exact. They’d all majored in mathematics, but his closest racial counterparts had shown no interest in submarines. For the most part, they’d gone into staff positions rather than front-line warriors.
But Franklin Tran was a warrior. It was in his blood, rooted so deeply in his genes that he had been able to conceive of no other career in the United States Navy. He’d applied for, been accepted in, and survived his interview with Admiral Rickover with flying colors.
His early career had gone much as any junior officer’s would, marred by a few ugly racial incidents in the wardroom. Still, he had ignored the slights, seeing them as merely another obstacle he had to overcome to fulfill his dream — command of a United States Navy submarine.
Now, twenty years later, serving in a Navy in which the role of submarines had varied greatly over the decades, he had his own ship. He had been in command three months, just long enough to get her through workups and a nuclear reactor inspection, and they were just preparing for their first patrol when the orders had come. When the tragedy had occurred.
Even now, he was not entirely sure what had transpired ashore. He only knew that there was trouble, big trouble — and he was on scene.
“I want that submarine,” he said quietly, his voice carrying to the farthest reaches of the control room. “She’s got no business in our waters — no business at all.” He looked around to ensure they were paying attention. “We find her, we kill her. Any questions?”
“No, sir!” the chief of the boat, or COB, said enthusiastically. He thumped one of the sonarmen on the back. “And this here’s the guy who’s gonna do it for you, sir.” He turned back to the sonar screen, as if there were some way he could will the enemy into sight.
Heaven Can Wait
1115 local (GMT –10)
“There she is again,” Jack shouted. He reeled off a range and bearing, and Adele relayed the information to Lab Rat over the cell phone. “Turning to meet us, honey. Tell them I think — oh, shit.” In one quick motion, Jack bounded down the ladder and to the stern of the boat. He whipped out a knife and cut the mooring lines holding the lifeboat to the stern of the ship. It smacked down in the water wit
h a sharp smack.
“Jack, honey? What’s happening?”
“Stay at the stern,” Jack ordered. “Don’t leave here, okay? I’ll explain in just a minute.” His words drifted back to her as he darted back forward.
“I don’t know what’s happening,” Adele said to Lab Rat on the phone. “Jack’s got the dinghy in the water and he’s in a hurry. This might be — ” She broke off as she saw Jack anchor the wheel in place with two bungie cords and then slam the throttle all the way forward. Heaven Can Wait leaped forward.
A moment later, Jack was by her side. “Come on — we need to get to the lifeboat,” he said.
“Jack, exactly what is — ”
Adele never had time to finish the question. Just as she started speaking, her new husband shoved her overboard.
USS Centurion
1120 local (GMT –10)
“Torpedo in the water,” Jacobs sang out, his hands flying over his console. “Russian-made, acoustic and wake homer. Bearing one seven nine, range — sir. It’s headed away from us!”
“Away?” Tran asked. “You’re certain? The carrier the target?”
“Yes, sir. And from the looks of it, it’s going to be close.”
Close, hell. That bitch has all the maneuverability of a broached whale. By the time she gets up to speed, the torpedo will be on her.
Just as suddenly, a new acoustic signature arced across his green display. It showed a small propeller churning frantically as it headed at right angles to the torpedo’s path. It looked like —
Tran confirmed Jacobs’s suspicion a moment later. “She’s a decoy,” he said unbelievingly. “Her skipper’s got her cranked up loud enough that the torpedo is going to make a run on her instead of the carrier. If it works, it’s got to be one of the bravest things I’ve ever witnessed.”
They watched in silence, almost afraid to breathe, as though the sound might distract the valiant race to death being played out before them. The torpedo continued on its course, making one small turn as it evidently found the carrier’s wake. They all heard the seeker head come on then, the small targeting sonar filling the water with its chillingly high chirps.
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