Book Read Free

Tin Man

Page 46

by Dale Brown


  road and away from the river just as the torrent

  raged over everything in its path.

  WATT AVENUE AND ELKHORN BOULEVARD,

  SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA

  A SHORT TIME LATER

  What we're looking at, ladies and gentlemen," said

  the radio announcer, "is a terrorist disaster of

  monumental proportions. Four of the eight gates of

  Folsom Dam have apparently been blown apart by

  terrorists. Here's what we know so far: Police and

  FBI were at Folsom Dam after receiving information

  about possible sabotage of the dam. This is linked to

  the shoot-outs reported out at Mather Field earlier

  today. Sheriff's-department bomb squads removed

  several explosives from the dam but were not able

  to reach all of them before the remaining charges

  were detonated, apparently by a timer or by remote

  control. Eyewitnesses at the dam saw several explosions

  ; some described them as demolition charges.

  The dam has all but ruptured at this point. We repeat

  , Folsom Dam has suffered a major accident and

  has ruptured. Outflow from the dam is in excess of

  one hundred and fifty thousand cubic feet per second

  , over twenty times the normal outflow, and is

  spilling over the banks of the American River Canyon

  .

  "All residents living within two miles north and

  south of the American River are being ordered by

  the state Office of Emergency Services to evacuate

  the area immediately," the announcer went on.

  "This includes all residents of the cities of Folsom,

  Rancho Cordova, Fair Oaks, Gold River, Carmichael

  , and West Sacramento. In the city of Sacramento

  , evacuations are being ordered for all areas

  south of Arden Way east of the Capitol City Freeway

  , and south of El Camino Boulevard west of the

  Capitol City Freeway. In addition, all residents in

  areas north of Kiefer Boulevard, north of Fourteenth

  Avenue to Highway 99, and the entire downtown

  district north of Broadway are ordered to evacuate.

  "At this time the flood surge has reached the

  western edge of the city of Folsom and is now approaching

  the Gold River and eastern portions of

  Rancho Cordova. It is spilling over Nimbus Dam

  and the flsh hatchery. The Rainbow Bridge in Folsom

  has collapsed, and the Negro Bar and Hazel Avenue

  bridges are threatening to weaken or even

  collapse. In Folsom, all areas north of the river appear

  safe so far, but south of the river in low-lying

  areas the destruction is extensive. Old Folsom and

  indeed all areas south of the river and north of Blue

  Ravine Road are under at least four feet of water.

  We do not have any estimates of loss of life at this

  time, but the explosions came with no warning.

  The Aerojet-General rocket plant is underwater,

  and the safety and environmental hazards are very

  great. There are reports that tanks of rocket fuel and

  propane gas are adrift in the floodwaters and could

  present a highly dangerous explosion hazard.

  "The flood surge is moving at a rate of approximately

  five miles an hour, and is expected to reach

  the city less than three hours from now. Evacuation

  orders are mandatory and will be enforced by California

  National Guard troops. Highway 50 and Folsom

  Boulevard have been closed east of Watt

  Avenue, so everyone should travel either north or

  south on major surface streets away from the American

  River and stay off Highway 50 and. Folsom Boulevard

  . California National Guard units will be

  blocking off the freeway to aid in evacuations, so

  please do not use these thoroughfares. We repeat, all

  residents of flood-prone low-lying areas within two

  miles of the American River are ordered to evacuate

  immediately, and residents within five miles of the

  river are urged to evacuate as a precaution."

  The passenger in the front seat of the California

  National Guard Humvee turned off the radio as the

  vehicle approached the Elkhorn Boulevard gate of

  McClellan Air Force Base in the north part of the

  city of Sacramento. Three more Humvees followed.

  The gate was a madhouse as security guards scrambled

  to keep track of the vehicles streaming in and

  out. The four Humvees took their place in a long

  line of military and civilian trucks trying to enter

  the base. Under the press of traffic, the security

  guards began waving all military vehicles through

  with cursory checks of ID cards, and the Humvees

  entered without difficulty.

  One of them split off and headed east on the base,

  stopping at the security headquarters and the central

  communications facility, then going around the

  west side of the base to the power transformer farm

  near Roseville Road. The others headed north

  around the runways toward the hangars on the

  northwest side. Again, one split off, dropping off

  four soldiers in full-camouflage battle-dress uniforms

  and combat gear at strategic locations on the

  access roads leading to the hangars. There was virtually

  no security anywhere on the base except for

  the southeast side, where air rescue and relief activities

  were beginning to gear up in response to the

  rupture of the dam and the anticipated flooding of

  the city of Sacramento.

  Gregory Townsend and eighteen of his soldiers

  dismounted from the remaining vehicles and ran to

  the edge of the security fence around the four target

  hangars. When all his units were in position,

  Townsend issued the order to go. Explosions destroyed

  the base's central communications facility,

  and more explosions at the power transformer farm

  on Roseville Road cut off power to most of the base.

  This did not affect power inside the target hangars,

  but it deactivated the security systems surrounding

  them, slowing down any response from elsewhere

  on the base. Then he blew open the security gates

  and headed for the hangars.

  There were eight of them, but Townsend had

  targeted only the four on the west side and assigned

  four soldiers to each hangar. On his signal, they entered

  the hangars simultaneously by blowing open

  the outer doors, then rushing inside, neutralizing

  the Air Force guards, and mopping up the remaining

  armed resistance.

  The guards in the hangars had managed to sound

  the alarm, but the base's central communications

  system and security-police headquarters never received

  it. Still, Townsend knew that before long

  someone would realize they were missing a scheduled

  security report or check-in, and there'd be

  some form of response. But with the frantic preparations

  for coping with the flood rapidly approaching

  Sacramento, he calculated he had at least an hour's

  leeway. His men could easily deal with any roving

  or curious security-police unit that happened by
in

  the meantime, and an hour was all he needed. His

  men set to work on their final objective.

  The complex on the northwest side of McClellan

  Air Force Base had changed hands many times over

  the years. Back in the 1950's and '60's, the area had

  been used to decontaminate spy planes that were

  flowd over American, French, Russian, and Chinese

  aboveground nuclear-weapons explosions. In more

  recent years, flight-test squadrons built and tested

  new air weapon systems there, such as the ,700pound

  GBU-28 "bunker-buster" bomb used to try to

  kill Saddam Hussein as he hid in his deep underground

  shelters in the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

  In addition to the classified weapon and flighttest

  work done there, the complex had another secret

  activity: It contained a small but full-scale nuclear

  reactor, which produced gamma rays used for

  NDI, or nondestructive inspection, of military aircraft

  . Although magnetic eddy current fields, X

  rays, lasers, radar, and plain old eyeballs were still

  useful in detecting cracks and fatigue in aircraft

  structures, they weren't reliable or adequate for the

  new crop of composite "stealth" aircraft, so gammaray

  inspections were developed to check these

  planes without having to disassemble them first.

  Fifteen years ago, McClellan Air Force Base had

  been the first aircraft-maintenance depot in the

  world to use gamma rays for aircraft NDI, and it

  was still the main nuclear NDI facility in the free

  world.

  And the latest clients ready for their annual nuclear

  NDI inspection were sitting right there before

  Gregory Townsend and his soldiers: four F-117A

  Night Hawk stealth fighter-bombers. All four of

  these odd-looking planes, with their multifaceted,

  pyramid-shaped fuselages, short pointed wings, and

  thin, highly swept tails, were Gulf War veterans,

  each having performed more than thirty missions in

  the heart of stiff Iraqi air defenses without a single

  casualty. Although they could carry only five thousand

  pounds of ordnance-usually two twothousand-pound

  laser-guided bombs-and were

  more than fifteen years old, they were still in good

  condition. And because they were virtually invisible

  on radar and invulnerable to most modern air

  defense systems, they were four of the deadliest

  warplanes on earth . . .. . . and they now belonged to Gregory Townsend

  While several of his soldiers began to refuel the

  planes and brought over ground power "start carts,"

  Townsend and three of his other men, all trained

  combat pilots, stepped up the special access ladders

  designed for the F-117 stealth fighters, opened up

  the cockpit canopies, and got to work preflighting

  their aircraft. The preflight checks went quickly.

  Because the Night Hawks' cockpits were so

  cramped and uncomfortable, they were designed

  from the outset to be highly automated, relegating

  the human on board to being a system monitor

  rather than a pilot.

  Besides, these pilots were not concerned about

  getting the planes ready to go to war. They simply

  had to make sure they had enough gas to fly a few

  hundred miles to an isolated airstrip in southwestern

  Nevada, where more fuel was waiting. A thousand

  miles at a time, and the aircraft would

  eventually end up in South America, where eager

  international arms merchants and foreign countries

  were waiting to start the bidding on the auction of

  the century.

  On a signal from Townsend, all four F- 117 engines

  were started inside the hangars themselves, in

  preparation for taxiing. There was no concern about

  the exhaust damage-it didn't matter what the hangars

  looked like after they left-and none of them

  bothered with flight-control or engine checks. The

  F-117 Night Hawk stealth fighter was inherently

  unstable in all flight axes-there was no such thing

  as "dead-sticking" an F- 117 to an emergency landing

  . The aircraft needed at least one flight-control

  computer and one engine to fly. If it lost more than

  that, the pilot had a single option: eject. But a foreign

  government such as Libya, Iran, Iraq, or China

  would still pay hundreds of millions of dollars for

  an F-117 stealth fighter even with only one engine

  or one flight-control computer.

  "Report ready to taxi," Townsend ordered. When

  the other three pilots reported, the four hangar

  doors were manually opened. Guards stationed

  themselves in front of the hangars and along the

  taxi route, prepared to repel any security forces that

  might come along. Each was armed with an M-16

  assault rifle fitted with an M-206 grenade launcher

  for fighting off heavy response vehicles or trucks.

  "Release brakes now," Townsend ordered.

  At that moment, the pilot of the number four

  F-117 moving from the westernmost hangar saw a

  blur of motion off to his right. A soldier in full combat

  gear and helmet appeared out of nowhere directly

  in front of his hangar, carrying what looked

  like two large duffel bags. He dropped both bags on

  the tarmac, then reached down with his left hand

  and threw one of them under the nose gear of the

  aircraft. "Nein!" the pilot shouted. "What are you

  doing? Clear the way!"

  Then the pilot looked again and realized that

  these were not duffel bags being thrown under

  his wheels-they were bodies! Soldiers' bodies.

  This . . . this stranger was throwing bodies under

  the wheels to prevent him from taxiing! "Warning!

  Intruder alert!" he called. "I am stopped! I can't

  move!"

  "Unit four, go to full power!" ordered Townsend,

  who could not see what was happening from his

  cockpit. "Taxi immediately! All other units taxi at

  maximum speed!"

  The number four pilot shoved his throttles up to

  full military power, trying to taxi over the bodies of

  his dead comrades. But the intruder had disappeared

  under the nose of the F- 117 and seconds later the

  pilot felt four hard bangs. The aircraft shuddered

  and dropped. Before the pilot's stunned eyes the in-

  truder reappeared, one of the dead soldiers' sidearms

  in his hands. He had shot out several of the tires.

  The pilot pulled the throttles to idle, opened his

  canopy, and jumped out of the plane. He watched as

  the intruder calmly walked over to the number

  three aircraft. Then he crouched down to get the

  M-16 assault rifle slung across the body of the soldier

  under his left main gear, checked it, loaded a

  fresh magazine, and fired from a range of fifteen meters

  . There was no way he could miss-yet the man

  did not go down. He turned around to look at the

  pilot even as the shots struck him, then continued

  on his way.

  It was him, the pilot realized.
The Tin Man. He

  was alive! He had been killed in the dam explosion

  but he was alive!

  The Tin Man reached the number three F- 117

  and fired several rounds into the left main landinggear

  wheel. The outside tire popped, but the inner

  tire kept the plane moving. As the plane's pilot

  watched in astonishment, he saw the helmeted figure

  leap fifteen meters across his windshield and

  land on his left wing.

  Atop the engine inlets were blow-in doors, which

  provided additional inlet air to compensate for the

  reduced airflow through the large main inlets

  caused by the radar-absorbing mesh screen covering

  them. Before the pilot's eyes, the Tin Man dropped

  the empty pistol into one of the open blow-in doors

  on the left engine. Sucked into the engine, it shredded

  the first-stage compressor blades in a matter of

  seconds, and the disintegrating remnants shot out

  in all directions, puncturing fuel and hydraulic lines

  and blasting apart the entire engine and part of the

  left fuselage.

  The number one and two F-117's were taxiing

  away fast. The Tin Man sped down the right wing of

  the stricken number three, jumped onto the ground,

  ran toward the taxiing fighters, then leaped as soon

  as his thrusters were recharged. He landed right on

  the canopy of number two, but with nothing to

  grasp and the groundspeed building up rapidly, he

  beat on the glass canopy panels. His left fist broke

  through a side panel with ease. The glass of the forward

  panels was much thicker and stronger, but

  several crushing blows broke it too. He reached in,

  shattered the heads-up display atop the instrument

  panel, then grabbed for the pilot. "He is on my aircraft

  !" the pilot shrieked into his radio, evading the

  grasping arm.

  Unable to reach the pilot to disable him, the Tin

  Man grabbed the overhead curtain ejection handle

  on the ACES II ejection seat, then hit his thrusters

  to blow himself clear of the plane. The pilot shot up

  through the broken canopy on a column of fire from

  the rockets in his ejection seat. He was blasted 150

  feet into the night sky. His parachute fully deployed

  , but there was time only for one swing under

  it before he hit the taxiway. The plane continued

  straight ahead. But starting the ejection sequence

 

‹ Prev