But they hadn’t. Lobo had waited for the shot, held Hot Rock in check, from what he’d been able to tell. They’d maneuvered the MiG out over open ocean and away from the harbor.

She used her good judgment — now you use yours.

“They’re not getting off scot-free, Stony,” Batman said out loud, his voice lost in the cacophony of the flight deck. “I can’t let that happen — you know that.”

I know. Rip ’em each a new asshole, nail them in their fitreps, give them every shitty little job you can think of. But keep them in the air. That’s where they belong.

Lobo’s Tomcat called the ball, indicating that the pilot had a visual on the meatball, the Fresnel lens located on the starboard side of the stern. Batman heard the voice of the LSO, the landing signals officer, chime in on the circuit.

“Tomcat 201, say needles.”

“Needles say on glide path,” Lobo replied.

“Roger, 201, fly needles,” the LSO concurred, indicating that he agreed with her instruments’ assessment of her approach on the carrier.

Lobo didn’t need instruments, Batman thought. She didn’t even need the LSO, not really. Rock steady on approach she held the Tomcat so steady in the air that you could almost believe it wasn’t flying at all, that it was a giant balloon being towed aft of the ship.

But a balloon wouldn’t make that much noise, wouldn’t be howling in toward the deck with low-throated thunder. It wouldn’t be getting larger every second until it looked so large that a civilian would have thought it impossible to fit that much aircraft onto the deck of the carrier.

Tomcat 201 slammed down on the deck with a squeal of tires and a puff of vaporized rubber. The engines howled as Lobo slammed the throttles forward to full military power, insurance against an arresting wire breaking or a kiddy trap when the tailhook appeared to catch and then skipped over the arresting wire. Without full military power, the heavy aircraft would lack sufficient speed to launch again off the forward end of the carrier and would simply dribble off the end of the ship and smash into the ocean. Missing the arresting wire and taking off again was called a bolter.

The tailhook caught the three wire neatly, pitching the nose down hard on the deck of the carrier. The arresting wire spun out against the hydraulic pressure with a harsh keening noise, slowing the Tomcat from landing speed to a dead stop. Lobo kept the Tomcat at full military power until a yellow shirt stepped out in front of her and signaled her to reduce power. No sane pilot reduced power until the technician in charge of that portion of the flight deck felt confident enough about the landing to stand in front of the aircraft himself.

The Tomcat backed down slightly, and at a signal from the yellow shirt, the tailhook lifted up and dropped the arresting wire. Lobo taxied forward confidently, following the flight deck technicians as they directed her aircraft to its spot.

Batman stood motionless, his hands on his hips, as he watched Lobo roll her bird to a gentle stop. Behind him, he could hear the next Tomcat approaching the stern, but his business was with Lobo. His anger rose as he watched the canopy slide back and saw the plane captain mount the boarding ladder to assist Lobo and her RIO in unstrapping their ejection harnesses. The plane captain signaled that the retaining pins had been placed in the ejection seat, rendering it inoperable. Only then did Lobo rise from her cockpit and swing one long leg down over the side of the aircraft, her foot finding the boarding ladder without even looking.

Slam! The deck under Batman’s feet quivered as Hot Rock’s Tomcat made the controlled crash that passed for a carrier landing.

Lobo stopped next to the aircraft and spoke with the plane captain, pointing back toward the right wing control surface. The plane captain nodded. Lobo started to lead him around to the far side of the aircraft when Batman saw the plane captain point in his direction.

Lobo looked over at him. Even from a distance, Batman could see the adrenaline tide surging in her face, the joyous look of a pilot who’s just done what she’s trained to do, done it very well, and then pulled off one hell of a three-wire trap just to top it off. It was a look that went past glee into something divine, invincible and holy.

And it was a look he was about to wipe off her face. For a moment he wondered whether he ought to wait, let her enjoy these few minutes when, orders or no orders, she was a hero.

No. He might let her continue to fly, but that was the most she could expect under the circumstances. It was time to get this show on the road.

He waited impassively as she approached, hands still on his hips. When she came up, she said, “Good afternoon, Admiral. I guess you want to talk to me.”

“Talk isn’t the word I would have used,” Batman said. “What the hell do you think you were doing up there? And don’t give me any shit about a communications problem. Just don’t even try.”

“Sir, that MiG — ”

“What were your orders, mister?” Batman snarled, completely oblivious to the gender question. “What the fuck did I tell you to do?”

“You told us not to engage the MiG, Admiral.”

“And what did you did?”

“Went after him sir. Over the water.”

“And do you see any little problem with that? Other than the fact that I told you not to?”

Lobo paused for a moment, clearly coming down from the adrenaline high. She must have known — how could she not? — that she was going to get her ass chewed for the stunt she’d pulled up there. But it always took a few moments for reality to seep back into a pilot’s brain. Batman waited until he saw the smug smile disappear from her face.

“You getting the picture now?” he continued. Over Lobo’s shoulder, he could see Hot Rock taxiing into his spot. Hot Rock was dividing his attention between the plane captain directing him and Lobo popped tall in front of her admiral. “You and that little shithead wingman of yours are in deep shit. Disobeying a direct order, endangering civilian lives unnecessarily, and I can think of about four other articles under the Uniform Code of Military Justice to charge you with, but that’s just for starters. A court-martial, at the very least a FNAEB — that’s what you’re looking at.”

Hot Rock was walking over toward them now, worry on his face. Batman pointed a finger at him and shouted, “Stay right there, asshole, until I’ve dealt with your lead.” Turning back to Lobo, Batman said, “You want to ruin your career, go ahead. But what you did also put his on the line. You think about that, if that’s the kind of officer you want to be. Now get out of here before I have your ass tossed into the brig to think this over.”

Batman waited for her to turn and leave, but to his surprise, Lobo stood rock steady in front of him. “Permission to speak, sir?”

“Hell, no. You heard me.”

Lobo ignored him. “If I let that MiG live, my career would have been over anyway, sir. I couldn’t walk away from it. You wouldn’t either, if you’d been the lead.” Lobo’s voice was calm but unrepentant. “If you ground me for that, I can live with it.” But not easily, the look of anguish on her face told him. “It’s the MiG that screwed up, sir. I saw people falling through the air — and parts of people. Some of them were on fire. I though — I thought I saw one of them screaming. I couldn’t walk away from that, Admiral. No fighter pilot worth his salt could.”

Hot Rock was out of earshot, braced at attention, the concern deepening on his face. Lobo was also standing stiffly at attention, her eyes focused on something no one else could see. Batman started to wonder what she saw, then forced himself back on track.

“Suppose you were right this time,” he said, his voice colder than an arctic sea. “Suppose you were. What about next time? You get away with this, you’ll think you’ve got a double-oh-seven license to kill in the sky. Wars aren’t fought like that, lady. And the sooner you figure that out, the sooner I’ll reconsider letting you fly off my carrier.”

“Sir — ” Lobo began. Batman cut her off.

“You and Hot Rock are grounded. Your RIOs too, for not having the good sense to talk you out of this. When you find a way to convince me to trust you again, I’ll reconsider.”

“But — ”

“Get the hell out of my sight, Commander. Now.” There was no mistaking the menace in Batman’s voice. “Do you have any idea how serious a situation we’re facing? Any idea of what happens outside your own little cockpits?

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