Tombstone was an old hand and a pro, with no need for an I'm-okay-you're-okay talk-down. The best I can do, Craig told himself, is keep quiet and let the man do his Shit! The Tomcat was low… way low! 'Power up,' he snapped into his microphone. His fingers tightened a bit around the control box in his hands, the 'pickle' which would light up the red wave-off display around the meatball and tell the pilot to go around for another try.

The roar of the Tomcat's engines rose in pitch and the aircraft's running lights seemed to float higher… higher…

No! Too high! Craig's finger closed on the pickle. 'Wave off! Wave off!'

1835 hours Tomcat 205

Tombstone swept in above the carrier's roundoff, knowing he'd missed. A circle of red lights flashed on, a ruby bulls-eye with the meatball in the center. 'Wave off!' the LSO shouted in his ear. 'Wave off!' His wheels hit the deck, but too far forward for the arrestor hook to snag any of the four cables stretched across his path.

Tombstone rammed the throttles forward, going to full burner as he fought to build up airspeed once more. For an instant he was aware of the carrier's deck lights on either side of his cockpit, of the shadowed island streaking past his right wing. Power roared, shoving him back in his seat.

Then he was in the open sky once more, the carrier's deck lights a dwindling glow on the black face of the sea behind him.

'Tomcat Two-oh-five, bolter,' he heard in his headset. There was nothing wrong with missing a trap, save the embarrassment and the ribbing he'd take from the other members of his squadron, but the extra stress on top of what he was feeling already rose like a storm cloud in Tombstone's mind.

He felt an odd sensation in his right hand, the hand holding the Tomcat's stick, and he looked down. His hand was trembling, shaking, and there was nothing in the world he could do about it.

1838 hours Landing Signals Officers Platform U.S.S. Thomas Jefferson

Craig chewed at the end of his mustache as he watched Tombstone's second approach shaping up. He wasn't so worried about the pilot's pride now as he was about simply getting the man and his RIO down intact.

He'd been aware of Tombstone's moodiness during the past few days, ever since Coyote and Mardi Gras had bought it. That sort of thing was especially hard when it was your buddy who cashed in. And now, with four more people in the drink this afternoon, plus French's crash-and-burn on the deck…

'Come on, Tombstone,' Craig said over the radio. He knew others were listening in, CAG and the Air Boss and anyone else tuned into the PLAT channel, but his words were for Tombstone alone. 'No sweat. Silky smooth, just like a virgin's ass.'

'I'm okay.' Tombstone sounded tight. His red and green navigation lights hovered off the stern of the carrier, three miles aft.

'Call it, son. Call the ball.'

'Tomcat Two-oh-five. Ball. Two-point-seven.'

'You're lined up great. Bring her on in!'

The lights descended, wavered, corrected. He held his breath as they began to drop. Too fast! Craig felt a sinking sensation in his gut. Again, he stabbed the switch.

1838 hours Tomcat 205

If he'd been embarrassed after his first bolter, Tombstone felt stark terror now. Jefferson's stern looked like it was all over the sky as he raced toward the carrier at 150 miles an hour. The red bulls-eye around the meatball lit up again and he heard the shouted command to abort. 'Wave off! Wave off!'

He rammed the throttles forward. With a shattering roar they skimmed above the flight deck, not even touching this time as they whipped past the island. Damn!

'Hey, Stoney, this isn't looking too good.'

Tombstone guided the Tomcat into a gentle left turn. 'You want to get out and walk? I can do without the backseat driving!'

The next several minutes passed in silence. Tombstone focused all his concentration on controlling the ship and himself as he circled a few times. Finally, he began circling back toward the break, lining up for another pass.

'Tomcat Two-oh-five, this is Two-three-two,' a familiar voice said. 'What's the story, Tombstone?'

'I keep missing the goddamned carrier.' He swallowed behind his mask, trying to control his twisting gut. 'I think they're moving the bastard on me.'

'Well, shitfire, you know what I think? I think you just don't want to face me tonight when I talk about my two kills. You don't want to admit that I'm the new hotdog of the squadron. What do you say to that, fella?'

He recognized the banter for what it was, an effort to break the tension, to get him to laugh at himself long enough to get the Tomcat down. As psychology it was a bit primitive, but Tombstone laughed. 'If I land this bitch, you'll eat your words, old son.'

'Okay, Tombstone,' Craig's voice said. 'Let's do it this time! Call the ball!'

Tombstone swallowed a hard, cold lump. The carrier's lights wavered in front of him, tiny in the dark and the distance. His hands were sweating. 'Two-oh-five. Tomcat ball,' he said mechanically. 'Two-point-one.' Another pass and he'd need to retank before trying again. Don't let me screw it up! Not again!

Not with Batman watching. Not with his uncle watching! He realized that the trembling, strength-sapping fear had been replaced by anger. This bitch isn't going to beat me! Not now! Not when I'm goddamned through!

The lights swelled in front of his cockpit. 'Real slick, man,' Snowball said, but Tombstone scarcely heard him. His hand was no longer shaking.

His wheels touched steel and he rammed the throttle to full power. There was an eye-rattling jolt as the hook grabbed wire, and the Tomcat slowed from one-fifty to zero in two seconds. For an instant, Tombstone hung suspended in his harness then he was throttling down, backing the aircraft to spit out the wire, following the waving yellow wands of a deck manager guiding him to a parking slot.

It's over! The thought was exultant. It's over!

Tombstone felt as though he'd never been so alive as he was at that moment.

DAY FOUR

CHAPTER 17

0005 hours Over the Yonghung Man

The SEAL team consisted of Lieutenant Brandon's thirteen men, operating under the call sign 'Bushmaster.' They sat crowded shoulder to shoulder on narrow seats, facing outward, bathed in a dim red glow barely sufficient to illuminate the helicopter's cabin. Anything like normal conversation was impossible under the hammering of the SH-3H Sea King's five-bladed rotors, so there was no talking. Each man, his face and hands heavily blackened, wore a wetsuit, life preserver and harness, and a face-mask. Each man held swimfins, letting them dangle between his knees. At his feet was a waterproof rucksack holding weapons and equipment.

They'd boarded the Sea King over an hour earlier, watched only by a few curious sailors on Jefferson's flight deck. Now they were approaching the Korean coast, skimming the waves at one hundred fifty miles per hour.

Several possible plans had been discussed for inserting the team. The most common means for getting SEALs ashore was to release them from the diving trunk of a submarine, but the nearest U.S. sub equipped for SEAL ops was still a day's sailing time away, and the shallow waters east of Wonsan were risky haunts for subs in any

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