“It’s our ass, sweetheart,” Lobo said, watching the radar, then looking over her shoulder and pulling the Tomcat into a hard climb. She spared a glance at the fuel indicator as well. Still okay, although that wouldn’t last long if she didn’t get off the afterburners.

“They got lock,” Handyman said, businesslike, although the alarm in Lobo’s helmet told her all she needed to know.

“Chaff,” she said, and felt the small bump as the foil bounced out of the Tomcat, hopefully to confuse the seeker head on the incoming missile. To increase the odds of that happening, Lobo changed the trajectory of her climb as well. A moment later, she felt the violent jolt of the shock wave coming after her.

“Nice job, but they’re closing,” Handyman said. “Good position, too.”

Meaning they were diving in on the Tomcat. “I don’t give a damn, I’m not going fishing anymore,” Lobo snarled.

“Okay by me.”

“Where the hell is my wingman?”

Hot Rock’s voice came over the radio, calm as the surface of the South China Sea. “I’m just a little busy at the moment, ma’am.”

Tomcat 306

Two Chinese fighters above him and on his tail, water less than a thousand feet below, no place to go, nowhere to run.

This was great.

They couldn’t get him. They scissored him, they bounced him, they tried to herd him into a pincher. He slipped out of everything. Wing-sweep control set to manual, he took precise command of his airframe, adjusting speed and balance with exquisite finesse. Cannon shells whipped all around him, but none touched.

The only problem, the only niggling uncertainty, came from the knowledge that his lead, Lobo, was also confronting multiple bogeys. She was a terrific pilot, of course, but she was also trying to get in a kill of her own. Generations of experience, not to mention the instructors in flight school, taught that the best defense was a good offense. Lobo flew that way.

And she expected her wingman to help, if he could.

But I can’t, he thought. I’m overloaded with bogeys, anybody can see that. I can’t help her at all.

Hornet 108

“Thor, break left,” a voice snapped over the headset.

Thor didn’t even think about it. He slammed the aircraft into a hard left turn. A moment later, he glimpsed a fierce explosion from the corner of his eye.

“Splash one Flanker,” Bird Dog said coldly. “You okay for the other, Thor?”

Thor looked back at the Flanker still hanging onto his ass. It was the same plane that had taken Reedy out. “You bet I am,” he said.

Tomcat 304

Bird Dog turned his attention away from Thor and focused it on the ACM farther down. He knew that his taking a Sparrow shot at one of the bogeys harassing Thor had been chancy from five miles out, but it had been the only assistance he could render from that distance. Fortunately the missile had functioned exactly as intended, and so had Thor.

Now for the real thing.

Bird Dog switched his attention to the low-altitude dogfights, and his weapons selector to “guns.”

Tomcat 302

Lobo kept trying to climb out, but the Flankers were faster than she was in the vertical mode. When flying one-against-two, the main goal of any fighter pilot was to keep both bogeys on the same side of your plane. To never get caught in the middle.

Easier said than done.

The intel was right about that, dammit. In fact, as she recalled, an SU-30 — cousin to the bogeys on her tail — had been the first jet aircraft to break the sound barrier in a vertical climb.

Still, she found this situation unbelievable. She was used to having the upper hand in any altitude battle; although the Tomcat wasn’t king of the sky in an angles fight, it had always ruled in the vertical plane. Always.

Until now.

Unfortunately, in the horizontal field things were even worse. The Flankers really were as nimble as Falcons. She had all she could do to keep them from boxing her in.

Looking to the left, she saw Hot Rock below her level, a pair of Flankers trying to get position on him. Still no help there.

After what happened the last time she was shot down, Lobo hadn’t been sure she’d be able to strap a Tomcat on again, far less fight. Time and hard work had put that fear to rest. In fact, she’d once again become convinced that she was invulnerable, too damned hot a pilot to be shot out of the sky again, ever.

Now she was beginning to wonder if that was true.

Flanker 67

Tai heard the radar-lock alarm in his helmet, but ignored it. Just one second more. One second more and his targeting pipper would close on the American jet. Just —

There was a terrific concussion, the rear of his plane leaping up, making him fight the stick. Hit? Had he been hit? Pivoting his head wildly, he saw the fireball behind him, and the F-14 behind that, and knew his wingman had been destroyed. The Tomcat was stooping on him at tremendous speed, taking full advantage of gravity and momentum.

From hunter to hunted in half a second. Tai jerked the stick left, then hard right, rolling out of the line of fire as tracers flickered past him, deceptively beautiful in the twilight.

Tomcat 302

“It’s Bird Dog!” Handyman cried. “He splashed one of our bogeys, Lobo!”

“Peachy,” Lobo said, hearing the anger in her voice and wondering at it. So someone had saved her butt, and that someone happened to be the ever-cocky Bird Dog. Was she so petty she’d begrudge him her thanks? Hell, her eternal gratitude?

Looking over her shoulder, she saw that the second Flanker that had been pursuing her was now busy evading Bird Dog. Good luck to him.

She turned her attention to her wingman, who had problems of his own.

Hornet 108

“Got you,” Thor said as his targeting pip centered between the Flanker’s vertical stabilizers. He triggered the cannon, and watched the metal spine of the Flanker split open as if torn by a can opener. Flames and debris gouted from the wound, and Thor banked away hard to avoid sucking any of it into his engines. At the same time, he saw the Flanker’s ejection seat shoot up.

“Long way down, bozo,” Thor said, and turned his own jet in that direction. Below, he could see the flicker and flash of jet exhausts against the dark water. Then he glanced at his fuel indicator, and cursed. He had no juice for more fighting. Not even close. Hell, he’d be lucky to reach the Texaco in time to keep from ditching the plane.

He radioed Homeplate, and was reassured by one bit of news: Four more good guys were bustering in, due in as many minutes.

“Godspeed,” he said to the fires below, and turned his tail to the setting sun.

Tomcat 304

The Flanker was a terrific airplane, no doubt about it. But it was dead meat, and Bird Dog Robinson was going to be the butcher. He had the speed, the trajectory, the weapons, and the experience. The Flanker was racing away at low altitude, undoubtedly fearing to take advantage of a marginal speed advantage for fear of simply moving out of gun range and into the grasp of a Sidewinder. Out of the frying pan, so to speak.

Of course, Bird Dog was more than happy to use the cannon on this guy. That would be just fine, and he matched the Flanker swoop for swoop, not allowing him to pop up, not allowing him to jink free. Cut left. Bird Dog followed. Cut right. Bird dog moved the stick that direction…

… and for once, his Tomcat didn’t turn. No, it turned, but much too slowly. The Flanker vanished off the

Вы читаете Typhoon Season
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×