Wingman

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by Maloney, Mack;


  His radio suddenly crackled. “Hunter! Come in!” Hunter recognized St. Louie’s voice.

  “Go ahead,” Hunter radioed back.

  “Hawk, we’re just about all in the stadium. Few stragglers. I wish the damn dome was working so we could close it up, but it’s been knocked out. Do we have two minutes?”

  “Just about,” he replied. “Then get ’em all down on the ground and covered up. And have them stay that way.”

  “Roger, Hawk,” St. Louie called back. “And when you finally come down from up there, will you please tell me how in hell you came up with a B-52 strike?”

  “When it’s over,” Hunter answered. “I’ll be glad to.

  The B-52s arrived over Football City two minutes later. Hunter counted down to the very last second, re-checked each of the 39 bombers’ individual coordinates, took a deep breath and radioed: “Bombs away? Now!”

  High above, the bombardiers started unleashing the strings of 1000-pounders onto the enemy-occupied streets around the Grand Stadium. Those huddling on the playing field inside instantly felt the ground begin to shake violently. Shock waves filled the air. The wind above them became hot and like a hurricane. The noise of the explosions around them were so loud, many found their ears bleeding. Most were too nervous to care or notice. They were too busy praying that a stray string of bombs wouldn’t come down on them.

  The enemy troops on the receiving end of the tremendous bombing never knew what happened. The B-52s were so high, they were no more than glints of white in the sky, followed by miles of contrails. The Family’s final drive was still inexplicably held up. At the moment the hundreds of 1000-pound bombs came crashing down on them, many of the Family troopers, smelling the bloody lust of victory, were griping that their commanders told them to halt their advance. The majority would never know why they were stopped just minutes away from total victory.

  The bombs continued to fall for five frightening minutes. The aftershocks of the strike were so powerful, portions of the stadium’s walls threatened to crumble. But the huge arena stayed together. Bits of debris and sparks rained down on the huddled defenders, starting several small fires. Few of the soldiers had ever heard anything so loud, so violent. The thundering roar of the bombing was to all who heard it, the very sound of death. The Free Forces’ soldiers just thanked the spirits that Hunter was above, watching over them.

  Then it was over. The last of the 1000-pound bombs exploded across the river. The reverberations echoed and died. The low, rumbling noise of the departing B-52 formation slowly faded away and then were gone completely. The soldiers inside the stadium cautiously dared to look up. Had they really made it? They listened. Something was strange. For the first time in what seemed like a century, Football City was quiet.

  One by one, the defenders rose to their feet. Was it really over? They wondered. Their officers told them to stay put for the moment. St. Louie, Dozer and several others headed for the massive gates which led into the Stadium and pushed them open.

  They were horrified. The entire section of the city from the Stadium to river—more than a mile of what was once urban sprawl—was completely obliterated. Flattened. Leveled down to the curbstones. There were few fires, some smoke, a million tons of rubble and a layer of dust hanging over everything. But beyond that, there was nothing over four feet standing.

  “My beautiful city. Now it’s Dresden,” St. Louie said, almost unconsciously recalling pictures of that battered German city after the Allied bombers had gotten through with it.

  “Worse,” Dozer said, taking in the massive destruction. “Hiroshima. Without the rads.” Even the battle-hardened Marine choked at the utter devastation.

  One by one, then in groups, the soldiers of the Free Forces wandered out of the Stadium, their mouths hanging in awe. There was no need to fear being shot at by the enemy. There simply was no more enemy. No one could have lived through the massive carpet bombing. Not unless they had a guardian angel.

  “Only Hunter could have directed a strike on a dime like this,” Dozer told St. Louie.

  They looked up and saw the F-16 high above them. It started to move among the fading white contrails of the now-long gone B-52 bombers. Carefully, the F-16 began spouting its own contrail. As the victorious survivors watched, the tiny jet carved out a miles-long letter “W” in the sky above Football City.

  The word flashed across the continent almost immediately: tiny Football City had actually defeated the once-powerful New Chicago Family. The free governments remaining on the continent—especially Texas—breathed a sigh of relief. Freedom-loving citizens everywhere had been rooting for Football City although the former super-resort city had definitely been tagged as the underdog.

  But sometimes, the underdogs win.

  No telling or retelling of the story would be complete without detailing the heroics of Hunter—“The Wingman”—who stole jets from the air pirates for Football City’s air force, then went on to bomb New Chicago, singlehandedly stop a 100-plane bombing raid against the Free Forces, then direct a B-52 strike to win the battle on the ground. It was the stuff of legends, and he had just become one. Soon, his name was on the lips of every fighter—friend and foe alike—across the land.

  Only three B-52s of the Northern Pacific and Southern California Strategic Air Company landed at the Football City airport after the bombing mission. The others linked up with their KC-135 flying tankers, refueled in the air, and headed back to the West Coast.

  Hunter was on hand at the airport when the three big jets came in. The lead jet pulled up and came to a rest. The first person to emerge from the escape hatch underneath the cockpit was no other than J. T. “Socket” Toomey. Sunglasses cemented to the bridge of his nose, not a hair out of place. Ben Wa climbed out next. The hula-hula boy was all smiles as usual. Hunter sprinted to the side of the plane to greet them.

  “You really ought to get out to the Coast, Hunter, my man,” J. T. told him, pumping his hand and surveying the battle-scarred conditions of the Football City airport. “I think you need a change of surroundings.

  “Great shooting, Hawk,” Ben Wa beamed. “Can’t do tricks without the Wingman.”

  Hunter shook his head and grinned. “Well, you guys provided me with the biggest surprise of my life when I heard friendly voices coming from those B-52s.”

  “Oh, you ain’t got the biggest surprise yet,” J. T. said, mysteriously. “Get a load of this.”

  He was pointing to a third figure emerging from the B-52’s escape hatch. The man was of thin, wiry build. A familiar hair and face. Even more familiar smile and voice. He walked forward, his hand extended. “Major Hunter, I presume?”

  Hunter almost dropped on the spot. It was the general.

  “General Jones,” the man said, shaking Hunter’s hand. “Davy Jones.”

  Hunter came speeding back to reality. “The general’s twin brother,” he said finally.

  “That’s right,” Jones said.

  Hunter had never known such identical-looking twins. It was spooky to stand and talk to a man that looked exactly like the one he had buried months before.

  “I’ve heard a lot about you, sir,” Hunter told him.

  “And I about you, Major,” Jones returned. Then he leaned in and whispered to Hunter. “I know Seth is dead. Even though I was out on the Coast, I knew—I felt—the exact second he died.”

  “He died a hero, sir,” Hunter said, a slight lump of emotion rising in his throat. “I was with him. He gave his life to ice a lot of Mid-Aks—Mid-Aks who would have been here, fighting us today—if it weren’t for him.”

  “I know,” Jones said sadly. “I just wanted to thank you, Major. My brother … he spoke of you highly and often.”

  The conversation could go no further. Both men were filled up with the memories of the late, great General Seth Jones. It was almost unbearably sad.

  St. Louie and Dozer saved the day. They arrived beside the big bomber, and Hunter broke the silence by introducing everyone
around.

  “You will stay for the victory celebration, won’t you?” St. Louie asked the B-52 airmen.

  “Wouldn’t miss it for the world,” the other general said, breaking into a wide, familiar grin.

  The people began returning to Football City the next day. After weeks of hiding in the hills, they were glad to reclaim their city, utterly devastated as it was. Food, medicine and other supplies started coming in via planes from Texas and Free Canada. Appropriately enough, the first plane in the Texas airlift was the huge C-5 Hunter had used in the early stages of rescuing the ZAP pilots.

  The next night they finally solved the mystery of why the Family commanders had halted their advance just as they were about to overwhelm the outnumbered Free Forces.

  “If you can believe it,” St. Louie told Hunter and Dozer over a round of drinks amidst the rubble that was once his government house and headquarters. “I still had two agents in New Chicago. They just got in. Took them two days to float down the river.

  “They said that right about the time we were about to be overrun, someone delivered an air strike on old Chicago.”

  “What?” Hunter had to hear it again to make sure it wasn’t the whiskey.

  “There’s more. Not only did they pull this in daylight. They managed to ice the Black Tower.”

  “Holy shit!” Dozer said. “The place must have been thick with SAMs.”

  “So that’s what happened,” Hunter said, the information starting to sink in. “They lost their central command. With the Black Tower knocked out, the front line commanders couldn’t take the initiative and move themselves.”

  “That’s a stupid way of doing things,” St. Louie laughed.

  “That’s also the Soviet way of doing things,” Hunter said. “No freedom of thought. No freedom of action. Feelings are repressed. Imagination stifled. The Family was foolish to listen to them.”

  “But,” Dozer said. “Who the hell did the air strike?”

  St. Louie smiled. “Can’t be certain,” he said with a wink. “But my guys said the attacking aircraft were F-105 Thunderchiefs.”

  “Fitzgerald!” Hunter yelled. “Why that old Irishman! Neutral, my ass. There’s never been an Irishman born who was neutral about anything!”

  Two hours later they were able to raise the Aerodrome on the Free Forces’ only working long-range radio transmitter.

  “We owe you one, Mike,” Hunter told him in all sincerity.

  “Don’t be foolish, Hawker, me boy,” Hunter heard the solid Irish brogue come back. “It was business. If the Family had won, they would have been sitting right in the middle of one of my most lucrative air routes. I couldn’t allow that, now could I?”

  “Sure,” Hunter said, going along with his friend. “And if you think I believe that, you can take my wings, too.”

  “I got some more news for you, Hawker,” Fitzgerald continued. “You might like to know that the Mid-Aks have regrouped. What’s left of them, that is. Some new people have taken over from the ’Ak old guard. They call themselves The Circle. Quite mysterious. Apparently they’ve got some allies, too. Pirates. A few Family members, those who were lucky enough not to be in Chicago. Possibly some Russians and even freaks from the Badlands. The whole bunch of them met for the first time a few days ago, my spies tell me. Somewhere in old Delaware. And the first thing they agreed on was to put a price on your head.”

  “How much?” Hunter had to ask. It wasn’t often a man got to know his true worth.

  “Are ye ready for this?” Fitz asked with a chuckle that could be heard through the crackle of the radio transmission. “One half billion dollars in gold!”

  “A half billion?” Hunter was shocked. He knew he had made some enemies. But a half billion dollars worth?

  “That’s correct, Hawker,” Fitz said back. “Five hundred million dollars. After you boys did a number on Boston, and with Baltimore gone, all the ’Aks have left is money—the gold from Knox. Now they’re willing to part with it just to get your head on a platter.”

  “I guess I should be flattered,” Hunter said.

  “Aye, you should,” Fitz said. “And you should also be keeping an eye out over your shoulder. There’s a lot of bums out there who’d be kings with a half billion in gold in their pockets.”

  Hunter turned serious. “Any other … news?” he asked.

  “About Dominique?” Fitz said. “No. Sorry. I sent three of my best men up to Montreal as you asked. They found nothing. The last time anyone saw her, she was getting off the Beechcraft Jones sent up. It’s like she disappeared into thin air, Hawker. Don’t worry, though. We’ll keep looking.”

  There was a brief silence. “Thanks, Mike,” Hunter finally said.

  “Well,” Fitzgerald radioed back. “I’ve always been a sucker for the good cause, be it blasting hoodlums or finding lost girlfriends.”

  The next day was the victory celebration. Those who survived gathered in and around the Grand Stadium. Huge barbecue pits were dug and tons of Texas beef cooked. The Canadians delivered a plane filled with cases of whiskey. The Coasters sent wine and fruit. Fitzgerald himself arrived with five 747s filled with more than 1000 of the best-looking B-girls the Aerodrome could offer. The day’s events included aerial demonstrations by the ex-ZAP pilots performing in the F-20s, and fly-bys by the surviving aircraft of the Free Forces air corps. Most of the pilots and all of the planes were in Football City to stay. In a matter of a few months, St. Louis had gone from no air corps to having the best equipped and manned on the continent.

  The party atmosphere enlivened throughout the day and carried over into the night. A huge makeshift stage had been set up and all the principals of the fight were seated there. The different groups of soldiers—from the Football City regulars to the Free Canadians and Texans to the volunteers—all stood in front of the stage. Citizens—nearly fifty thousand of them—filled out the rest of the crowd.

  Hunter looked at the soldiers on the stage. Sitting near him were the four pilots of the Ace Wrecking Company, next to them sat the Cobra Brothers. The former POW ZAP pilots and mechanics came next, along with Fitzgerald and the ground crew from the Aerodrome. Dozer’s officers were close by, their commander decked out in Marine dress blues and smiling from ear-to-ear.

  The members of the Sea Stallion assault team were seated directly to his right; General Davy Jones, three of his B-52 pilots, plus T.J. and Ben Wa, sat to his left.

  St. Louie was speaking to the crowd over a crude but effective public address system.

  “We owe our very lives to the men sitting on this stage and to the armies that stand before it,” he told the crowd, working the masses like a good politician. “It makes my heart feel good that there is still some humanity left on this continent.”

  The crowd greeted his words with thunderous applause. Many were holding candles or torches and many waved Football City flags.

  And then suddenly, St. Louie was saying: “And now I want you to meet a man who fought like a hundred—or even a thousand men. I’m sure there isn’t one among us who would disagree that without this man, it wouldn’t have worked out the way it did.

  “Ladies and gentlemen … Major Hawk Hunter!”

  The next thing Hunter knew, he was on. Standing before the microphones, looking out on the sea of faces and candles and flags. The applause and shouts of “Hunter! Hunter!” rivaled the racket of the B-52 strike.

  Hunter began slowly. “I didn’t do anything that any one of you out there wouldn’t have done if you had the chance.”

  His voice was echoing throughout the Grand Stadium. The eerie glow of the thousands of candles gave the ceremony a religious look.

  “People around the world—especially in occupied Europe—would like to think that we here have short memories,” he went on. “They would like to think that we have already forgotten about what this country was like before they betrayed us.

  “Well, I haven’t forgotten. Have you?”

  His answer came back, lou
d and strong, from the voices of nearly 70,000 patriots “No!”

  “I haven’t forgotten that once a man could walk just about anywhere in this country and be free. I haven’t forgotten that once a person could see what they wanted, hear what they wanted, read what they wanted, think what they wanted.

  “And I remember the time—and it wasn’t so long ago—when it was NOT against some law to mention the name of your own country. When you could fly its colors proudly. When you didn’t have to worry about who was looking over your shoulder, ready to pull a trigger when your back was turned.”

  The cheers from the crowd grew louder.

  “Well, I think this is as good a time as any to say that we just aren’t going to put up with those conditions any more!”

  More cheers.

  “We can all break the law tonight! Break the New Order! Smash it! It was bogus anyway!”

  More thunderous cheers.

  “Tonight. We can throw off the chains! We can send a message to those who would enslave us that we aren’t that easy. That we still pull together like the old days. Before the New Order. I say GODDAMN the New Order!”

  Deafening cheers rocked the stadium.

  “We can’t be afraid any more to say it! We should all say it. Together. We can break the spell. Break it now! Forever!”

  The cheering was monstrous, sustained.

  He reached into his breast pocket. The familiar shape of the flag was still there. His mind raced as he took it out and carefully unfolded it. The Thunderbirds. The space shuttle. The War. The trip back across the ocean. New York. The mountain. Jonesville. The ’Aks. Baltimore. A mountain in Vermont. The Aerodrome. The Pitts. Football City. In the air over New Chicago. The final battle.

 

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