He triggered the cannon. The tracers passed in front of the fighter’s nose, then in an eyeblink the fighter flew through the stream, which stitched him nose to tail. His nose dropped and his right wing kissed the earth.
Jake raised his nose a smidgen to ensure he didn’t share the same fate, banked and pulled.
If he could get around quickly enough, he would present the second fighter with a head-on shot, and if that guy had any sense he would refuse the invitation and pull up into the vertical, where Jake lacked the power to follow.
And that is what happened as the two planes flashed toward each other nose to nose. Jake wanted to take a snapshot but couldn’t get his nose up fast enough. He slammed it back down and was pulling hard to get the plane’s axis parallel to the canyon when he flashed over the rim. He let the plane descend on knife edge until the rock wall shielded him.
His heart was threatening to thud its way out of his chest. Talk about luck! Three mistakes, three dead men who would get no wiser.
But this last guy—he was no overeager green kid who thought he was bulletproof. He had pulled his nose up the instant he saw the head-on pass developing. This guy would take a lot of killing.
And Jake Grafton didn’t know if he had it in him. Somehow he got his visor up and swabbed away the sweat that poured into his eyes when he pulled Gs, this while he threaded his way up the valley and looked above and aft to see what the Russian was up to.
What would you do, Jake Grafton?
I’d slow down to almost coequal speed and follow along, getting lower and lower, and when my guns came to bear I’d take my shots. And he would fall.
Jake got a glimpse of his opponent. He was high up and well aft, on a parallel course, his nose down. He must have lost sight for a moment and allowed Jake to extend out. But now he was closing.
You’ve had a good life, Jake. You’ve known some fine men, loved a good woman, flown the hot jets. Maybe your life has made a difference to somebody. And now it’s over. That man up there is going to kill you. He’s going about it just right, slowly and methodically; he isn’t going to make any mistakes. And you are going to die.
The Russian was throttled back, coming down like the angel of doom.
What’s ahead? I’ll out-fly the bastard. I’ll fly that son of a bitch into the ground.
Even as the thought raced through his mind, he knew it wouldn’t work. This guy wasn’t going to make any mistakes unless Jake forced the action. If he were allowed to play his own game he would win.
Jake Grafton risked another over-the-shoulder glance to see if he had room. Maybe. It was going to be tight.
He kept the wings level and pulled the stick straight aft. The throttles were up against the stops. A nice four-G pull so he would have something left on top. If this guy were wise and had plenty of fuel, he would light his burners and climb, avoid the head-on that was developing. A head-on pass that gave each guy a fifty-fifty chance—that was the best Jake could play for when the other pilot had every performance edge.
But the Russian pilot accepted the challenge!
Upside down at the top of the loop, Jake fed in forward stick and placed the pipper in the reticle high to allow for the fall of his shells, then pulled the trigger. The Russian was already shooting. Strobing muzzle blasts enveloped the nose of the opposing fighter as Jake pulled his trigger.
Jake felt the trip-hammer impacts as cannon shells ripped into his plane. Then the Russian blew up.
Jake knifed through the falling debris and tried to right his machine. Fuel was boiling out the left wing and the left engine was unwinding. He shut it down. A big red light on the left side of the bombsight was illuminated—fire. He needed a lot of right rudder to control his plane.
Now he was level. And alive.
For how long?
That depended on the fire warning light. It flickered several times, then went out. Maybe he had a chance after all.
He glanced at the compass. He was heading east. He dropped the right wing into a gentle turn and let the nose drift down as he juggled the rudder to maintain balanced flight. He had to get low again, avoid the radar that was probing this sky.
He steadied up heading south, descending. One of the Russian’s cannon shells had impacted the second weapons pylon on the left wing, shattering it and twisting it so badly fuel was coming out of the wing. Even as Jake stared at the damaged pylon the last of the wing fuel rushed away into the slipstream. Primary hydraulic pressure was on its way to zero. If that was the primary system gauge.
The warning lights seemed predictable. The damaged engine hadn’t blown up—if it did there was nothing he could do but die. His heart was still beating, thud, thud, thud. He was still alive!
That Russian must have been low on fuel. In a hurry. Too bad for him.
Jack Yocke tapped aimlessly on his laptop computer and from time to time glanced at Toad Tarkington sitting in the big chair. Toad had a pistol in his hand and kept looking at it, turning it this way and that, wrapping his fist around the grip and hefting it.
Herb Tenney lay on the couch with his hands taped together behind his back, his ankles taped together, and a strip of tape over his mouth. Herb seemed calm.
Jack Yocke had done the taping with a roll from the first aid kit when Toad brought him into the room at gunpoint.
Now the three of them sat—Herb calm, Yocke full of questions, Toad playing with that goddamn pistol.
“Did he come willingly?” Jack asked, breaking the silence.
“Uh-huh.”
“Where did you find him?”
“In the cafeteria. Waited until he had finished his coffee and followed him out.”
“Would you have shot him if he didn’t come along?”
Toad merely glanced at Yocke, then turned his gaze back to the pistol in his hand. The reporter saw the same thing that Herb Tenney must have seen fifteen minutes ago. Toad would have pulled the trigger with all the remorse he would have had swatting a fly.
Jack Yocke had another question, but he didn’t ask it. Did Jake Grafton tell you to corral Tenney? Toad didn’t do anything unless Jake Grafton told him to, Yocke told himself, and once told, Toad would do literally anything. The asshole was like a Doberman, ready to rip the throat out of the first man his master sicced him on.
Yocke sighed and went back to tapping. He was listing what he knew about Nigel Keren, about the Mossad bribing Russians to get Jews out of the country and assassinating Russian politicians, about the KGB blowing up the Serdobsk reactor, about a hangarful of nuclear-armed mobile missiles and warheads that were going south into Iraq a planeload at a time. He was sitting on at least four huge stories, any one of which would win him a Pulitzer prize, and all he could do was tap on this frigging keyboard and pray that someday soon he could telephone something to the Post. If he still had a job!
He felt a little like the prospector who has spent his whole life looking for traces of color when he finally stumbles onto the mother lode. And doesn’t know where the vein leads.
All he really had were pieces of stories. Jack Yocke had spent five years chasing stories and he knew that he didn’t have all of any one of them. Oh, he had some great pieces, but he didn’t know where the roots led.
Jake Grafton knew. Of that he was convinced.
Damn, he was getting as goofy as Tarkington. Toad sat there playing with his pistol and if you asked, he would tell you that Jake Grafton knows everything. What’s your problem? Grafton will tell you what he wants you to know when he wants you to know it. If that time ever comes. And if it doesn’t, then you shouldn’t know.
Jack Yocke didn’t think Jake Grafton knew all the answers. He thought Jake was feeling his way along, examining the trees, trying to size up the forest. Jack Yocke didn’t have Toad’s faith.
The truth, he decided, was probably somewhere in the middle.
He jabbed the button to save what he had written and then turned off the computer. He closed the screen over the keyboard and pulled
the plug out.
“You done?” Toad asked.
“What’s it look like?” Yocke snarled. He was extremely frustrated, and Toad marching in a big CIA weenie at gunpoint hadn’t helped.
“Would you like to help me?”
“Do what?” Jack asked suspiciously.
“Well, you gotta sit here with this pistol and watch our boy Herb. I have an errand. If Herb twitches, blow his fucking head off. If anybody comes through that door besides me, blow their fucking head off. Think you can handle it?”
“No.”
“You ought to be the pro-choice poster child, Jack. If your mother only knew how you were going to turn out she would have grabbed a rusty old coat hanger and done it herself.”
“Any time you get the itch, Tarkington, you can kiss my rosy red ass. I am not about to get mixed up in the middle of a war or shoot anybody. And no more goddamn cracks about—”
Toad tossed the gun at him. Yocke snagged it to prevent it from hitting him in the face.
Toad stood up. He looked over the items from Herb’s pockets that were spread on the low coffee table and selected a ring of keys, then faced Yocke. “Anyone besides me comes through that door, they’ll kill you if you don’t kill them first. And you can bet your puny little dick that Herb would cheerfully do the job if he had his hands free. Think about it.”
With that Toad went to the door and carefully opened it. He looked out. Now he checked to ensure the door would lock behind him, passed through and pulled it closed.
Jack Yocke looked at Herb Tenney to see if he had any big ideas. Apparently not. He then examined the pistol in his hand. This thingy on the left side looked like the safety. Is it on? Yocke kept his finger well away from the trigger, just in case.
He had had a journalism professor who once told the class that the problem with the profession was the company a reporter had to keep to get his stories. Truer words were never spoken, Jack told himself ruefully.
“If I get out of this alive,” he informed Herb Tenney, “I’m going to get a job washing beer mugs in a bikers’ saloon. Associate with a better class of people. Keep better hours. Make more money. Get laid more.”
Out in the hallway Toad slowed to talk to the marine sergeant sitting at the head of the stairs with an M-16 across his knees. He also wore a pistol in a holster on a web belt around his middle. “Everything okay?”
“Yessir. Not a soul’s been around.”
Toad glanced down the hall at the marine on the other end, who was looking his way.
Satisfied, Toad said, “He’s in there with Jack Yocke. If he comes out shoot him in the legs. Whatever you do, don’t kill him.”
“Aye aye, sir.”
When he was inside Herb’s room, Toad scanned it, then went straight to the bathroom and Herb’s shaving kit above the sink. Yep, the shit still had that plastic pill bottle with the child-proof cap. Toad glanced at them to ensure they were what he wanted, then pocketed them. He considered taking Herb his toothbrush. Naw. His fucking teeth could just rot.
Out in the bedroom Toad got Herb’s suitcase and opened it. Well, ol’ Herb was a neat packer. His mother would be proud.
Toad dumped everything into a pile in the middle of the bed and examined the lining of the suitcase. He and Jake Grafton had been through Herb’s stuff once before, but it wouldn’t hurt to do it again. Carefully and thoroughly.
Underwear, socks, shirts, trousers, a sweater. A spare can of shaving cream. Toad squirted some onto the carpet. Yep, shaving cream.
The closet held several suits, ties, white shirts and a spare pair of shoes. Toad examined the shoes. He got out his penknife and pried off the heels. Nothing. He felt the suits carefully and threw them on the floor. Except for a spare pen and a pack of matches that Herb had overlooked, the pockets were empty.
Now he turned his attention to the room, systematically taking everything apart. As he worked he thought about Rita.
Pregnant. Refusing to stop flying.
If he were her, he would… But he wasn’t Rita. Rita was Rita and that was why he married her.
You just have to take women as they come. It’s hard to do at times, considering. Amazing that hormone chemistry could make such a big difference in the way men and women’s brains worked. It was like they were a different species, or creatures from another planet.
He threw himself into the chair and sat staring morosely at the mess in front of him. There was nothing here to be found, of that he was sure. So he thought some more about Rita in the cockpit of that jet, flying through a strange sky over a radioactive landscape, nursing the stick and throttles and dropping bombs and fighting the Gs.
There were so many things that could go wrong. And a Russian jet for chrissake, designed, built and maintained by a bunch of vodka-swilling sots.
She can handle it, he told himself, wanting to believe. She’ll get back all right. She’s with Jake Grafton. I mean, she’s good and he’s great. They’re a good team. They’ll make it.
Fuck, they’d better! He wasn’t up to losing Rita just now. She had damn near died in a crash a few years back—just the memory of those days made him nauseated.
And he didn’t want to lose Jake Grafton either. Grafton told him to snag Herb Tenney, and if Grafton didn’t come back, Toad was going to have to figure out what to do next. Not that he had a lot of options. One thing sure, though—Herb was going to be finishing off his supply of happy pills if Jake Grafton didn’t make it.
When he opened the door to the apartment, the first thing he saw was Jack Yocke’s pasty face, then the Browning Hi-Power which he held with both hands. It was pointed askew at nothing at all.
Toad locked the door behind him and took a look at Herb, who was pretending to sleep.
Yocke held the pistol out to Toad butt-first. Toad took it and stuffed it into his waistband. “Thanks,” he said. “I kept waiting to hear the shots.”
Yocke didn’t think that comment worth a reply.
“Would you have used this?” Toad wanted to know.
“I don’t know.”
After they had sat Herb Tenney on the ceramic convenience in the bathroom, then fixed a can of chili for lunch, Yocke asked, “How can you just walk around sticking pistols in people’s faces?”
Toad looked mildly surprised. “I’m in the military. Jake Grafton gives orders, I obey them.”
“This isn’t a movie, you know. That’s a real gun with real bullets.” Toad helped himself to another spoonful of chili. When it was on its way south he said, “You keep looking for moral absolutes, Jack. There aren’t any. Not in this life. All we can do is the best we can.”
“But how do you know you’re doing the right thing?”
“I don’t. But Jake Grafton does. It’s uncanny. He’ll do the right thing regardless of the consequences, regardless of how the chips fall. I’ll take that. I do what I’m told knowing that the CAG is trying to do right.” Even as he said it his mind jumped to Rita. He had bowed to Rita’s decision to fly while pregnant based on faith in her judgment. Now the chili made a lump in his stomach. He dropped the spoon into the bowl and shoved it away. “You gotta believe in people or you’re in a hell of a fix,” he said slowly.
“You answer a question, Toad, by evading it. What is right? Why do you think Grafton knows what right is?”
Toad was no longer paying attention. He was staring at his watch, watching the second hand sweep. They should be on the ground by now…if they were still alive. Why hadn’t they called? Did he really trust her judgment, or was he a coward not to assert himself? If anything happened to her…
Jake Grafton saw the smoke column twenty miles away. The black smoke towered like a giant chimney at least three thousand feet into the atmosphere. As he got closer he could see that the wind had tilted the column, which was visibly growing taller, mushrooming into the upper atmosphere.
Creeping up to two hundred feet to avoid the dust being sucked into the inferno raging at the base of the smoke, he bounced i
n turbulence even here on the up-wind side of the fire. The turbulence made his bowels feel watery: that damaged wing might have a broken spar. As the plane bucked the stick felt sloppy and the secondary hydraulic system pressure dropped. He must be oh so careful.
The hangar was ablaze. Rita.
Ten or fifteen minutes ago?
Something silver on the mat? A wing?
It couldn’t be a wing from Rita’s plane, could it? Could it?
He edged in for a closer look. No. It was a big wing, attached to a transport that was also on fire. She caught someone parked on the mat and shot them apart.
He turned away from the blaze and consulted his fuel gauge. Fuel would have been okay plus a bunch if he hadn’t spent all that time maneuvering at full throttle and let that jerk shoot up his plane. Going to be tight.
Right engine was still alive and pulling hard—no more warning lights. The slop in the controls when operating on the backup hydraulic system was acceptable as long as he didn’t have to defend himself, as long as the secondary pump held together, as long as he could make his aching right leg work. The plane flew okay on one engine if he held in forty pounds or so of right rudder. The rudder trim wasn’t working. Sorry about that!
He had about forty miles of radioactive terrain to cross before he could get out and walk. It was a little like flying over a shark-infested ocean—you prayed for the engine to keep running, counted every mile, watched the minute hand of the panel clock with intense interest.
Jake Grafton’s eyes scanned the vast distances between the horizon and the bottom of the cumulonimbus clouds. He gazed up into the gaps between the clouds, searched behind him and out to both sides. The sky appeared to be empty. Because he knew how difficult another aircraft was to spot in a huge, indefinite sky, he kept looking. And occasionally his eyes came inside to check the clock.
So she made it to here and took out the hangar and that transport on the mat. He hadn’t seen any craters on the mat that would mark misses. Apparently she put all her ordnance into the bucket, a neat, professional job.
Thank you, Rita, wherever you are.
He listened to the engine. He watched the clock hand sweep. He unhooked his oxygen mask and swabbed the sweat from his eyes.
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