Flight Of The Old Dog pm-1

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Flight Of The Old Dog pm-1 Page 43

by Dale Brown


  But the Scorpion that left the Old Dog's rail was an unguided bullet, not a sophisticated air-to-air missile. Without radar tracking and uplink from the Old Dog to guide it, the Scorpion relied on either an infrared signature or an anti-radar jamming signal to home in on. It had neither. The MiG had kept its radar and jammers off, presenting no heat signature at all so long as it was in its right turn.

  The Scorpion streaked forward, passing a hundred feet in front of the MiG.Ten seconds after it automatically armed its warhead after launch, the Scorpion's computer asked itself if it was tracking a target. The reply was no, and the Scorpion harmlessly detonate MiG-29.And its warhead almost two miles past the…

  Papendreyov saw the American bomber and the missile at the same time.

  There was no time to turn, to dive, or accelerate not even time for him to close his eyes and brace for the impact And then, just as quickly, the missile was gone. Yuri watched for a second missile-a B-52 bomber launching missiles? — but there was none.

  He continued his wide right-climbing turn, keeping a close watch on the B-52.which now was a serious adversary, not just a helpless whale resigned to its fate.

  He watched it far below him.making a left turn, heading east. With his own speed regained, it looked to Papendreyov as if the B -52 was almost hanging suspended in midair. Not dead, but an inviting target.

  He maneuvered behind it, stalking it, closing slowly for the kill.

  Noting the tail cannon sweeping back and forth in a rectangular pattern, he rolled out high and to the right of the bomber. The cannon continued its erratic box-pattern sweep occasionally seeming to be altogether out of control and useless… yes, it could launch missiles, but it had no way of guiding them.

  Yuri armed his GSh-23 cannon and maneuvered behind and slightly above the B-52, slowly closing the distance. He no longer considered trying to force the bomber to land-his gun's cameras would record his victory over the intruder.

  He edged closer to the bomber, then began his strafing run…

  "We've lost him. "Ormack was searching his side cockpit windows.

  "He's out there," McLanahan said, reengaging the terrain avoidance autopilot. "He can find us easy. We've got to find him before he gets a shot off Angelina watched her rocket-turret-position indicators as they oscillated in random sputters and jerks. The radar was Jammed, locking onto ghosts, starting and stopping, breaking lock.

  Frustrated, she turned the radar to STANDBY, waited a few moments, then turned it back to TRANSMIT…

  A large bright blip appeared on the upper left corner of her radarscope.

  She waited for it to disappear, just like all the rest of the electronic ghosts.but this one stayed.

  She stomped her foot on the interphone button. "Bandit five o'clock high, break right!"

  McLanahan swung the control yoke hard right.

  Ormack's head banged against the right cockpit window bi he pulled himself upright and scanned as far behind the bomber as he could "Pereira, five o'clock.one and a half miles, twenty degrees high and comin' down. Nail him.

  Yuri had the shot lined up perfectly.a textbook gun-pass. He had just squeezed the trigger on his control stick, squeezed off a hundred precious rounds.before realizing that the B-52 wasn't in his sights.

  It had moved. He tried to rudder-drag his sight around to the right but it wasn't enough and he was force to yank off power and roll with the B-52 to reacquire it.

  He was almost aligned again when a sharp white flash popped off his left side not a hundred meters away. He yanked his MiG into a hard right turn and accelerated away, saw another white flash and a cloud of sparkling shards of metal exploding above him. The B-52 was shooting at him, and that was no machine-gun round-the intruder had tail-firing rockets Yuri expertly rolled out of his turn, perpendicular to the bomber's flight path and out of range of the strange fl.

  missiles.

  A blinking warning light caught his attention.e was no, on emergency fuel-less than ten minutes time left and with no reserve. He didn't even have the time to set up another gun pass. He rearmed his last two remaining AA-8 missiles rechecked his infrared spotting scope and checked the location of the bomber.

  Time for one last pass.and it had to be perfect. At least lAA-8s had to have greater range than those tiny missiles. He would roll back in directly behind the B-52 and fire at maximum range when the AA-8s locked onto the bomber's engine-exhaust.

  He made a diving left-turn, staying about twelve kilometers behind the bomber. His infrared target-spotting scope with large supercooled eye locked onto the B-52 immediately and sent aiming information to the AA-8 missiles. The B-52 was making no evasive maneuvers. Slowly.the distance decreased to The American bomber, Yuri noted.had maneuvered itse onto a flat plateau just above Anadyr Airbase, heading east toward the Bering Strait. It had nowhere to hide, nowhere to evade. Yuri hoped it wouldn't smash into Anadyr. On the other hand, what better place to deposit the evidence of his victory?

  His vindication?

  The range continued to decrease. Yuri could see the B-52's tail now, and the missile-firing cannon, still pointing up and to the right, jammed in position. Yuri put his finger on the launch trigger, ready.

  A high-pitched beep sounded in his helmet-the AA-8's seeker heads had locked onto the B-52.Yuri checked his target once more, waited a few more seconds to close the distance fired. The green LOCK light stayed on STEADY as the two Mach-two missiles streaked from their rails..

  .

  Ormack searched the skies from the cockpit window. "I can't see him, I lost him.

  "Angie, can you see him?"

  "No, my radar's jammed. I can't see anything."

  4 The plateau dropped away into a wide frozen plain, Anadyr Airbase centered within the snow-covered valley McLanahan did not wait for the terrain-avoidance system to take the Old Dog down. He grabbed onto the yoke and pushed the Old Dog's nose down, then shoved all six operating engine throttles to full power.

  The Old Dog had only dropped about a hundred feet down into the valley when McLanahan suddenly realized the implications of what he was doing and used every ounce of strength left to pull back on the control column.

  "Patrick, what the hell are you doing?" Ormack shouted.

  "He's behind us," McLanahan told him. "He's gotta be behind us. If we dive into that valley we're dead meat."

  Shattered fibersteel from the Old Dog's damaged fuselage screamed in protest but somehow stayed together. The stall warning horn blared, but McLanahan still held the yoke back, forcing the Old Dog's nose skyward at a drastic angle.

  The AA-8 missiles, only a few hundred meters from impact, lost their lock-on to the engine's hot exhaust when the Old Dog nosed upward. The missiles then immediately reacquired a warm heat-source and readjusted to a new target-the base operation building and the vehicles parked near it at Anadyr Airbase, which was now manned by several squads of the Anadyr constabulary. Surrounded by a meter of unplowed snow in all directions, the halftracks and jeeps were the only hot objects for miles.

  Chief Constable Vjarelskiv, who had run from the hangar area to the flightline to watch the chase unfolding in the skies above Anadyr Airbase, now watched in horror as the missiles screamed directly at him.

  Before he could shout a warning, the missiles hitplowing into the wooden base operations building, the one finding an unoccupied truck with its hood open because of an overheated radiator. The twin explosions scattered troops in all directions.

  Properly enraged, Vjarelskiv pulled his nine-millimeter pistol from his holster and raised it toward the American B-52, then stopped, realizing how absurd he must look.

  Yuri had expected the American bomber to try to duck into the valley.

  Well, it would do him no good — actually it would improve the intruder's heat-signature.

  What he never expected was a climb… the B-52 appeared out of nowhere from behind the ridge, streaking skyward, its nose pointed straight up in the air.

  No missile, not ev
en the new AA-8s, could follow that.

  Yuri flicked on his cannon and managed a half-second burst, but his overtake speed was too great and he was forced to climb on the B-52.

  The huge black bomber had disappeared beneath him.

  He could only keep his throttles at max afterburner, try to come around and align himself once more for another cannon run before his fuel ran out.

  McLanahan was now fiercely pushing the control column, fighting the lumbering Old Dog. Its airspeed had bled off below two hundred knots.

  Over the blare of the stall-warn horn Ormack shouted to him that they had stalled and to get the nose down…

  McLanahan somehow did it. He had just leveled the Dog's nose on the horizon when a blur and a roar erupted outside his left window.

  The fighter had rushed past, its twin afterburners glowin.

  It was so close McLanahan felt the heat of its engines through broken glass and bullet holes. Then it began a shallow climb, arcing gracefully up and to the left.

  Ignoring the blaring stall-warning horn, McLanahan pulled back on the control column and pointed the Old Dog's nose skyward once again.

  But with the number-eight throttle at full power, the Old Dog began to slide to the left, its nose reaching a forty-degree angle, knifing skyward.

  "Patrick, release the controls, now McLanahan ignored Ormack's order, waited, bone-tired, wrestling with a hundred tons of near-uncontrollable machine.

  Then seconds before the MiG disappeared from sight, he ordered: "Angie, right pylon missile-FIRE."

  It took a few seconds, but with a screech and a long plume of fire the Scorpion missile sped free of its pylon rail and in the cold semi-darkness of the long Siberian night, with two bright turbofans in full afterburner dead-ahead, there was only one possible target.

  The missile plunged into the fighter, detonating as the hot afterburner exhaust hit the propellant. The entire aft section of the fighter + the twin-tailed MiG broke apart, shredding the nearly empty fuel tanks and adding thousands of cubic feet of fumes to the fury of the explosion.

  McLanahan watched the fireball fly on for several moments in a wide bright arc, before plunging into the snowy peaks of the Koraksko e Mountains below.

  Silence. No cheers. No gloating. And then the Old Dog turned eastward toward the Bering Strait-and home.

  SEWARD AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, NOME, ALASKA

  The hospital rooms were small and cold, the beds hard and narrow, and the food was just edible-but for the past week the crew of the Old Dog had felt like they had died and gone to heaven.

  For the first time since their arrival, and by accident, they were all together. When she was notified by a nurse General Elliott was accepting visitors, Angelina Pereira, only one of the crew not seriously injured, walked through frozen streets of the Nome Airport to the Air National Guard infirmary and General Elliott's guarded room.

  The entire crew was assembled.

  "Well, hello," she said, surprised but pleased. They were all there-John Ormack, sitting at a desk beside Elliott, head and shoulder heavily bandaged; Patrick McLanahan frostbite on his ears, hands and face; Wendy Tork, band ver parts of her face and forehead-, and General ER Angelina went over to his bedside.

  "How you doing Angie?"

  "Fine, sir… I'm I'm sorry about your leg.

  truly-" "Forget it, Angie," Elliott said, glancing at the folded bedspread where his right leg would have been. "Some of those doctors out at Bethesda already have me on the slate for a mechanical job, so I'll be up and making trouble before you know it. I'm not trying to be brave, I'm just damn glad to be alive actually I'm the one who should be making apologies. "He was thinking especially of Dave Luger.

  Angelina said: "I was proud to serve with you, sir, and proud of what we accomplished. I think I speak for everybody " Elliott looked at his assembled crew. "Thank you, I'm damn grateful to all of you. "He cleared his throat. "I think you'll be glad to know that I spoke with the President this morning. He congratulated every one of you. He also said that a new agreement has been reached… the Soviets have agreed not to rebuild the Kavaznya facility, and in return we've agreed not to launch another Ice Fortress.

  "He told me something else that will interest you. Our suspicions about a breach of security were on target. It seems a certain aide in CIA Director Kenneth Mitchell's office was passing information to the Soviets. I don't know if it was a birds-of-a-feather sort of thing, or money, or both. Whatever, if we hadn't faked that crash over Seattle, my guess is that the Russians would have been waiting for us with every fighter they could put in the air. As it was, we had our hands No one argued with that.

  Elliott motioned to Wendy, who had gotten a smuggled bottle of wine from the general's closet. She and Angelina poured for everyone as Elliott went on.

  "Of course the destruction of the Kavaznya laser and our new agreement doesn't nail down the lid on laser technology.

  It's probably only a matter of time before we develop laser systems equivalent to the Soviets'.What we've got to hope is that they'll neutralize each other Elliott raised his glass. "Well, to right now, and to the crew of the Old Dog. You guys broke the mold. "Angelina raised her glass. "And to Lewis Campos."

  McLanahan forced his voice to be steady. "To Dave Luger… " "To Dave Luger," Wendy added. "The one who really brought us home."

  They finished their wine in a strained silence. It was Angelina who finally spoke.

  "What will happen to the Old Dog, General?"

  "Well, as a matter of fact, it may be back in action-although I still think John here suffered a crack in the head he's not telling us about."

  Ormack shrugged. "With what it's been through, it doesn't seem right to let it be cut up for scrap metal. I'll super, some repairs and fly it back to Dreamland."

  McLanahan said, "I'm probably out of my mind, but I volunteered to go back with him.

  "Patrick seems to like the idea of hanging around with old coot like me," Elliott said, smiling. "He's accepted a working with me at Dreamland."

  Elliott nodded at Ormack, who reached into a duffel bag.

  saved this one for you, McLanahan," Ormack said, presented him with the pilot's control wheel."it popped r' off the Old Dog's left control column. I didn't have it cut ol anything. I guess the beast wanted you to have it.

  Wendy hung up the telephone at the nurse's station, turned to Patrick McLanahan sitting beside her.

  "Everything okay at home?" McLanahan asked.

  Fine. They were relieved to hear from me. They hahen't been able to get word-one out of the Air Force for the last two months.

  "My mom was worried too," McLanahan asked. "I had a good excuse, though.

  Told her I was busy bombing Russia."

  "You didn't-" "Sure, why not? She didn't believe a word I said."

  Wendy smiled, then turned serious. "Pat… that Catherine, you told me about. Did you call her too?"

  "Yes. We had a long talk. Very long. I told her the truth, told her I used to worry I wasn't making a difference being in the Air Force, that what I was doing wasn't adding up to anything. I said I didn't feel that way anymore, that I going to stay in. I think she understood. She wished me luc "Oh, well, that's good… I guess… And i you're off to Dreamland next month. "She fidgeted with her hands. "I'm sure you'll do… I'm glad things have worked out for you He stood up and looked down at her, into her eyes that refused to meet his. "Hey, it's just a thought, but… well, you know, Elliott could use a good electronic warfare officer at Dreamland. And I'd like it if… oh, to hell with it," an put his arms around her and drew her to him.

  "I want you to come with me. I want us to be together. How about it'?"

  Her arms tightened around him, and the kiss that followed gave him all the answer he needed.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

  DALE BROWN, a former United States Air Force Captain, served as a navigator from 1978 to 1986, logging thousands of hours aboard both B-52s and FB-111 bombers. During his service, he
participated in numerous strategic combat exercises designed to simulate an actual strategic war. He is the recipient of the Air Force Commendation Medal, the Air Force Achievement Medal and the Combat Crew Award, among others.

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