1200 Local
TFCC, USS Jefferson
Rogov leveled his weapon at Tombstone. He took a deep breath, and when he started speaking, his voice was firm and forceful. “You will turn this aircraft carrier toward the west,” he ordered. “Due west. Heading for Petropavlovsk.”
“Petro?” Tombstone said, stunned. “Surely you don’t think you can force us to attack Petro.”
“It’s been in your war plans for twenty years, now, hasn’t it?” Rogov countered. “That was one premise of the entire Cold War scenario — that the Pacific Fleet would attack and capture the Soviet Union’s easternmost stronghold, containing the submarines there and destroying the amphibious forces and air-power. After so many years, I would hope you knew how to do that.” He stopped and considered Tombstone’s shocked look. “I will know how, at least. And with an operational American carrier under their control, no Cossack will ever have to curry favor with a foul Russian bastard.”
“You’d turn the Jefferson into a Cossack carrier?” Tombstone asked, dumbfounded at the idea.
“And why not? A cohort of Roman soldiers, a platoon of mounted Cossack — men of war have always had their methods of taking the war to their opponents. Today, the modern equivalent is the aircraft carrier. Who better to understand how to use this vessel? We’re not putting your own war plans to a real test. Instead, you will approach to thirty miles off the coast of Petro, and wait for further instructions.” He fixed Tombstone with a steely glare. “Do not test me on this, Admiral. If necessary, I can have two hundred more Spetsnaz on board within eight hours, more than enough to assist me in controlling your crew. Additionally, if you force me to such measures, we will begin executing one of your crew every five minutes until you agree to comply. We will begin with the women,” he ended, gesturing toward a woman dressed in a flight suit standing in the corner of TFCC. “With her, I think.”
Tombstone felt the blood drain from his face. He resisted the impulse to turn and look at that bright red hair on the diminutive form one last time. Tomboy had returned to the ship.
“I see I have your attention,” Rogov observed. He glanced from Tombstone to Tomboy, and then back at Tombstone. A careful, considering look crossed the Cossack’s face. “So it is like that, is it?” he murmured. “Guard him.” He pointed at two Spetsnaz.
The designated men swiveled around and trained their weapons on Tombstone. Rogov crossed the room quickly, grabbed Tomboy by her hair, and yanked her head back. He pulled her to a standing position and twisted his hands to turn her to face him. “So this is an American pilot,” he noted, touching the gold wings over her left breast.
“I’m not a pilot,” she said sharply. “I’m a naval flight officer — a radar intercept operator, if you must know.”
Rogov’s hand flashed out, and he smacked her across the face. “Then you have learned some bad habits, riding always in the backseat. While I am here, you will speak when spoken to, and at no other time. Is that clear?”
Tomboy stood mute, her face pale except for the red mark on her face where Rogov’s hand had landed. He jerked her up sharply by the hair, causing her to wince.
“Is that clear?” he repeated slowly.
“Yes,” Tomboy spat.
“Good.” Rogov shoved her back in her chair. “In my tribe, a woman is not permitted to wed until she has killed. A pity you have no such customs here.” He turned back to Tombstone. “And that you have so little control over your face and emotions, Admiral,” the Cossack sneered. “it is always dangerous to expose one’s weaknesses to an enemy, is it not?” Rogov turned back to his squad. “If the admiral does not order the ship to turn west in the next thirty seconds, you are to shoot her. Take her into the conference room, since I do not want a ricochet to damage the equipment.”
He turned back to Tombstone. “And I will ensure that you accompany them. I would not want you to miss the lesson especially arranged for you.”
Tombstone prayed that the fear and anger pounding through his body weren’t showing on his face. In his most impassive voice, he said, “She’s a naval officer, nothing more. You can’t force me to do anything by harming her.”
He felt Rogov’s gaze prying at the facade he carefully held in place. “Perhaps so,” the Cossack said finally. “Perhaps. Let me increase the stakes. Tell me, Admiral, have you been notified of a missing civilian vessel in the area? A large fishing vessel?”
Cold coursed through his body. “No, I haven’t,” he lied.
“I think you have. That fishing vessel was merely a demonstration of what one submarine can do to a ship. I believe you call the boat an Oscar.”
“I fail to see what that has to do with me,” Tombstone answered.
“That same submarine is now fifty miles astern of you. If you fail to comply with my orders, I will send every man and woman on your ship to the bottom of the ocean.”
CHAPTER 14
Friday, 30 December
1210 Local
Tomcat 201
“Get us back in the fight,” Bird Dog snapped. Every second of the last five minutes of tanking, he’d felt increasingly impatient. Somewhere not so far away, the Bear-J orbited menacingly, datalinking down to the submarine aft of the carrier. Eliminate the targeting information, and the submarine was less of a threat.
“Bear’s on three-one-zero true, range ninety-two miles,” Gator announced. “No LINK data from Jefferson, but I’m holding him bigger than shit.”
“He’s alone?”
“Looks to be. Shouldn’t be much of a knife fight.”
“He carries some self-defense missiles, but I can shoot from outside his engagement envelope,” Bird Dog answered. “Right?”
“I think so. Probably.”
“What kind of answer is that?”
“The best one I can give you,” Gator said, exasperated. “Look, I can read the latest Intel reports as well as the next guy, but are you willing to bet your ass — not to mention mine — on what they say? They’ve missed this whole skirmish developing, but you want me to tell you their offensive weapons data is the gospel? Sorry, Bird Dog. There’re not enough detections on Bear-J’s for me to be real happy about this.”
“They might have long-range air-to-air missiles? Hell.” Bird Dog slammed the Tomcat into a steep climb. “Nice of you to finally mention it. I think I’ll just grab a little airspace while I can. And I thought this was going to be like shooting fish in a barrel.”
“It probably will be,” Gator shot back. “I just don’t want you getting too complacent up there. Chances are that you can stand off at maximum range and blow his ass out of the air.”
“I’ll try the Sparrow first. Just inside thirty miles — no, let’s go on into twenty. That’ll give us a margin of safety.” The semiactive radar-homing AIM-7 missile used continuous wave or pulse-doppler radar for target illumination. It was more effective in a nonmaneuvering intercept than in a dogfight, as the Navy’s experience in Libya and Iran had proven. Later engagements during Desert Storm showed improved performance from the new solid-state electronics and better pilot training, but most pilots were still reluctant to count on it close in.
“Might as well,” Gator agreed. “if nothing else, you’ll dump some weight off the wings and improve our fuel figures. Be more maneuverable, too, since you’ll dump five hundred ten pounds per missile.”
“Like I need maneuverable against a Bear.”
“And like I said, there’s a chance he can fight back. You got missiles inbound, maneuverable’s a real good thing to be.”
“If he’s carrying long-range air-to-air missiles, that might explain why he’s out here without fighter protection,” Bird Dog said suddenly. “That’s been bothering me, trying to figure out why he’d be out here all alone.”
“It might at that,” Gator said, ending the sentence with a harsh grunt as the G-forces tugged at his guts. “That never did make much sense. The Russians aren’t ones for subtle, probing feints. They’d rather slam you wi
th three waves of Backfires and MiGs.”
“Okay, let’s assume he’s got something new on his wings. I think we have to, seeing as how we’re the only CAP out here. Is he going to let me get inside Sidewinder range?”
“Ten miles? Maybe. But remember, his exhaust isn’t going to be screaming out at the infrared homer like a jet on afterburner. You might want to get in closer. Besides, one hundred eighty-six pounds of Sidewinder’s not going to slow you down like a Sparrow still on the wings.”
“This is crazy,” Bird Dog said suddenly. “We’re talking about ACM with a Bear. Let’s get real.”
“Like you said, we’re the only friendlies out here. If that means we got to be a little more cautious than usual, then we live with it.”
“How far now?”
“He’s at forty miles,” Gator replied. “Still in a starboard turn — no, wait. He’s shedding some altitude. Now at fifteen thousand feet.”
“Okay with me. I’m going to get a broadside shot at him.”
“I don’t like it. What’s he doing at fifteen thousand? And still descending.”
“Where’s the sub?” Bird Dog asked.
“Twenty miles to the north. The Bear’s pattern’s been taking him almost directly overhead.”
“And that Oscar might have surface-to-air missiles on her, too. Just dandy.”
“Something to watch out for,” Gator agreed. “Range now thirty miles.”
“I’m ready. We’ll go in to twenty.”
The seconds clicked by too slowly. Bird Dog bit his lower lip, tried to will time to move faster. The selector switch was already toggled to the Sparrow, and his finger was poised to twitch. That’s all it would take — an almost infinitesimal movement of his finger, he’d take the easy shot at the Bear, and then they could — could what? With the carrier under the terrorists’ control, there was no assurance that they’d have anywhere to land. Adak was too far, and ditching in the hostile sea below was unthinkable.
“Now,” Gator snapped.
His finger moved of its own accord, toggling the weapon off the wing. The Tomcat jolted abruptly to the left as its center of gravity shifted.
“He’s still heading for the deck, increasing his rate of descent,” Gator reported. “Now passing through five thousand feet.”
“Sparrow’ll catch him,” Bird Dog said grimly, “Mach 4 ain’t peanuts.”
“Shit, he’s got almost zero speed over ground,” Gator muttered. “He must be damned near vertical.”
“Wouldn’t you be? His only chances are getting lost in sea clutter or having the Sparrow go tits up. I’ve still got a lock — let’s put the other one on his tail.”
“Now.”
“Fox Two.” The Tomcat rolled to the right as the other Sparrow leaped off the wing. “Now give me a vector up his ass. Next shot’s a Sidewinder right up his exhaust pipe.
“Intercept two miles behind — come right to zero-two-zero. Three minutes.”
Bird Dog twisted the Tomcat around in the air and put the aircraft into a steep rate of descent. “Got a visual,” he reported, staring at the tiny black spot against the sea. “On the missiles, too.”
“Tracking, tracking — aw, shit! Fucking sea clutter, shipmate. Lost lock on both missiles. You’re going to have to get him with the Sidewinder.”
“Sidewinder, my ass,” Bird Dog muttered. “I’ll ram this little bastard if I have to. No damned turboprop’s wiggling away from me. How the hell would I ever live it down in the Ready Room?”
“Altitude,” Gator warned. “Fly the aircraft first, shoot weapons second.”
Bird Dog eased the Tomcat out of the steep dive, letting his airspeed bleed off.
And still the Bear descended, finally arresting its dive just fifty feet above the water. He heard Gator mutter, “Jesus, even Bird Dog’s not that crazy.”
The massive command-and-control aircraft seemed to skim just above the tops of the waves, looking more like a hovercraft than an airplane. Bird Dog approached from the rear, still descending, hunting for the perfect altitude to allow the Sidewinder to lock onto the Bear’s exhaust. Finally, he heard the distinctive warble from the weapon, telling him it had acquired a targeting heat source.
“Got lock,” he announced, then thumbed the weapon off of the rail. The missile, carrying an annular blast warhead with perforated metal rods in it, barely twitched the Tomcat as it ignited.
Bird Dog watched the missile’s tail flare, quickly kicking the Sidewinder up to its Mach 2 terminal velocity. It warbled once, then headed straight for the Bear’s exhaust.
Then the unthinkable happened. The Bear, clearly aware that it was being targeted with a heat-seeking missile, dipped even lower toward the water. Bird Dog saw the pilot jerk the nose hard up, risking a stall but counting on ground effect to substitute for lift. As the nose came up, the rest of the aircraft teetered back down. The port engine and wing smashed through a wave, spewing black smoke instead of hot exhaust as it emerged.
The Sidewinder wobbled again, evidently confused by the loss of the infrared source it’d been homing on. The perturbation increased, and the flight path of the stark white missile wandered around the dark ocean below.
“The other engine, the other engine,” Bird Dog screamed. He started swearing.
“Come on, come on, baby,” he heard Gator crooning.
Neither threats nor encouragement worked. The starboard engine, still burning hot and bright, was hidden from the missile by the Bear’s wavering attitude. The Sidewinder fizzled, then wandered off toward the horizon, intrigued by the one decent heat source it could sense — the sun.
“You’ve got one left,” Gator said.
“Bastard’s too low,” Bird Dog said. “God, who would have thought? I’ve heard of a COD smashing through waves after a cat shot, but never anything as big as that Bear.”
“Take the shot,” Gator urged. “He can’t pull that stunt again — both port engines are out. He’ll never make it back to wherever he came from if he loses another one.”
“And we won’t make it if we run into something else up here,” Bird Dog pointed out. “He’s low and slow, Gator. I’m going to take him with guns.”
“And you’re not going to need those? Same principle applies.”
“Less likely to need them than that Sidewinder. Besides, he’s an easy target on two engines. His airspeed has already fallen off to three hundred knots.”
“Okay, okay,” Gator said. “I’m getting more and more nervous about being out here. Just get that bastard before his submarine buddy decides to have a go at the carrier.”
“Lining it up now.” Bird Dog brought the Tomcat around in a hard port turn, cutting away from and then back toward the Bear for a beam shot. The 675-round M61A1 20mm Vulcan multibarrel cannon — hell, it might not be as flashy as a Sidewinder, but one or two rounds into a critical hydraulics line or a fuel tank would work just as well.
Tomcat 201 bore down on the stricken Bear, and Bird Dog carefully lined up his shot, leading the Bear by a few hundred feet. Let the aircraft fly through the pattern, make him part of the firing solution. Slow and easy, slow and … “Break right, break right,” Gator howled over ICS. “Now!”
Bird Dog acted immediately, snapping the Tomcat into a hard roll away from the target before he’d even gotten off one short burst. “What, what?” he screamed.
“Submarine’s surfacing. Look over to your left. You recognize that cute little bit of gear on its sail?”
“Like I’ve got eyes on the tailpipes? Listen, I was a little busy up here-“
“And that’s why I was watching elsewhere. Since you cant see it now, let me describe it for you. A small radar unfolding from the sail, a black box just aft of it — sound familiar?”
Bird Dog felt cold. On his last cruise, he and Gator had almost been shot down by one of the first deployed antiair systems on a submarine. “And that Bear was leading us right into his kill zone, just like we were saying.”
“The o
nly thing good in the whole equation is that the Bear is too low to be holding radar contact on Jefferson. He can talk to that sewer pipe below him, but all he’s got is old info.”
“But that might be enough — hold on, I’m going back around for that Sidewinder shot. We don’t have a choice on this now, not a smart one.”
“Get low,” Gator suggested. “He’s not going to Pull that jet-ski impersonation on you again.”
“Concur.” Bird Dog descended back down to five hundred feet, carefully staying three miles away from the submarine. “He’s going to have to overfly, then come right or left to turn and come back over him.” Bird Dog kicked into afterburner range, felt the Tomcat leap forward and shove him back in the seat. “Suppose we just meet him down at the end of his racetrack?”
The Tomcat overshot his prey, then pulled up into a tight starboard orbit three miles in front of the Bear. Two minutes later, as the Bear started its turn back toward its guardian submarine, Bird Dog toggled the last Sidewinder off of the wing from an altitude of two hundred feet.
The missile had less than one mile to go to reach its target. Even if the Bear had had some other tactic in mind, there was no time. Bird Dog saw the Bear frantically ejecting flares and chaff, hoping to decoy the Sidewinder, but the missile flew a perfect profile straight into the engines beckoning so loudly in the infrared spectrum. Bird Dog yanked the Tomcat up just as the Bear disintegrated into a flaming mass of metal and machinery. “Scratch one Bear,” Gator said. “Good shot.”
“Do me a favor, Gator. Just one — I’ll never ask anything of you again.”
“What?”
“Let’s just tell the boat that the missiles fell off the damned wings or something. I’m never going to live it down if the skipper finds out I shot a full load at that damned Bear.”
“Let’s go find us some gas. I’ll think about it.”
Bird Dog groaned.
CHAPTER 15
Friday, 30 December
1230 Local
Arctic Fire c-9 Page 23