Had he imagined it?
No way.
“
“We’re down one engine and about to lose another,” said Englehardt. “Try and get a location and pass it on. That’s the best we can do.”
The SA-2s were following them, but Englehardt thought they could outlast them as long as he held the Megafortress’s speed above 350 knots. They throttled engine four back but left it on line even though the instruments showed it running well into the yellow or caution area. Not only did he want all the thrust he could manage at the moment, but compensating for the loss of both engines on one side of the plane would cost even more speed.
He worked with Sullivan to trim the aircraft manually, hoping to squeeze a few more knots from it by pushing against the computer’s red line. The nose felt as if it was plowing sideways through the air, like the prow of a small canoe being pushed by the current in a direction its owner didn’t want it to go.
“Temperature on engine one is coming up,” warned Sullivan. That was the engine that had given them problems earlier in the flight.
“We’ll have to try backing it off a little,” said Englehardt.
“SA-2 is still tracking.”
Englehardt wanted to scream. Instead he took off power on engine one, then scrambled to adjust his trim as the aircraft bucked downward. One of the motors that moved the outboard slotted flap on the right wing had apparently been damaged by the missile strike, and now the control surface began to balk at moving further. Finally it stopped responding completely.
“SA-2 is still climbing,” said Sullivan. “On our left wing.”
If he looked over his shoulder, Englehardt thought, he’d see the big white lance as it spun in his direction. He kept his eyes glued straight ahead, trying to keep the Megafortress as level as possible. There was no question of evasive maneuvers; they’d never survive them.
They wouldn’t survive a missile strike either. Better to go out fighting, no?
“Hang on,” said Englehardt, and he pushed the stick down hard, diving toward the earth.
There was a buzz around her, lifting her in the air.
“What’s going on?” Jennifer asked. Her words morphed as they left her mouth, changing into the chirping of birds.
What was going on?
Danny Freah’s face appeared above hers.
“You’re gonna be OK, Jen,” he said. “All right?”
She understood the words, but they sounded odd. Then she realized he was singing.
Danny Freah, singing?
“You got shot. Your vest and helmet took most of the bullets, but one got your knee. We gave you morphine for the pain, all right? It shouldn’t hurt.”
“Shouldn’t hurt,” she said, her words once again changing, this time into the caw of a bird.
Danny watched the Marines secure Jennifer’s sling inside the Osprey. One bullet had gone in the side of her kneecap, exiting cleanly but doing a good deal of damage on its way. Though the other bullets hadn’t penetrated her body armor, she still had two cracked ribs and a good-sized concussion. The corpsman who treated her thought she’d be OK, as long as she got treatment soon.
Three Marines had been hurt during the operation. Two had relatively minor injuries to their legs, but the third had been hit in the face and lost a great deal of blood.
But it was Jennifer he worried about. He had to tell Dog — but he certainly didn’t relish the conversation.
He pressed the button on his helmet, then reconsidered. Better to wait until they were in the air.
“All right, let’s go,” Danny yelled. “Let’s get the hell out of here. Come on! Move it!”
The
The SA-2 that had been tracking them began to arc in pursuit, but there was no way it could turn quickly enough. Fuel gone, it flailed helplessly for a few more seconds before self-destructing several miles beyond the Megafortress.
Englehardt had avoided the missile, but now he and Sullivan had another fight on their hands. Giddy with the burst of speed, their racehorse didn’t want to come level, let alone slow down.
“Engine four is in the red,” said Sullivan.
“Take it offline,” said Englehardt.
“Shutting down four.”
Englehardt backed off engine one himself. That left him one good power plant.
“Unidentified aircraft coming from the west,” said Rager. “Two planes. Three hundred miles.”
Just what I need, thought Englehardt.
“Starship, we have two aircraft coming from the west.”
“On it,
“Feet are wet,” said Sergeant Daly at the surface radar, signaling that they were over water.
“Planes ID’d as Tomcats,” said Rager.
“Sullivan, contact those guys and let them know we’re on their side,” said Englehardt. “Then help me set up a course to the refuel. We’ve got a long way home.”
“Many of the circuits are burned out, General. I cannot make it work as it was designed to. I simply don’t know enough.”
Abtin Fars stood up slowly. He was a tall, thin man well into his fifties; he wore glasses but clearly needed better ones, for he was constantly fiddling with them as he examined things.
“You are an expert, Abtin,” General Sattari told him gently. “You can fix anything.”
“Some things. This is beyond me.”
Abtin seemed pensive, and Sattari feared that the true problem here was not his lack of knowledge but his conscience. The general worried that he was withholding his knowledge because he did not want to arm a nuclear weapon.
“The intention is to use it against Dreamland,” said Sattari. “The American force that killed our people at Anhik.”
Abtin had been friends with several of the engineers and technicians slaughtered at Anhik when the Americans raided the laser project Sattari had started there. But no emotion registered on his face.
“A difficult problem,” said the engineer finally, ducking back to look at the warhead.
Sattari watched him work with his various instruments and tools. The general himself knew nothing about how to make the weapon work. It had taken considerable trouble and expense to locate Abtin; finding a replacement would be very difficult.
He could put a gun to the man’s head and order him to fix the bomb, but how could he be sure it would explode?
He had to be patient, but that was nearly impossible.
“I could put in a very simple device,” said Abtin finally, still bent over the warhead. “It would allow the