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    Day of the Cheetah

    Page 32
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      of support you can give them. They'll want to know their hus-

      bands or friends or sons or daughters didn't die for nothing.

      218 DALE BROWN

      Elliott turned to Briggs. "How the hell did you get so smart?"

      "Watchin' you, General. I-- Briggs stopped and listened

      intently on his communications earpiece. "Message coming in

      from the Joint Chiefs. AWACS and the Mexican government are

      reporting another unauthorized airspace intrusion by Powell and

      McLanahan in Storm Zero One. JCS want you to stand by for a

      secure video conference at five past the hour.

      "Here's where it hits the fan, Hal," Elliott said. "The Pen-

      tagon probably thinks I've flipped out, they'll relieve me from

      command--

      :'There was nothing you could have done-"

      'There was everything I could have done. Like I could have

      screened our test pilots better, I could have secured the flight

      line better, I could have forbidden Ormack to engage DreamStar.

      It'll probably turn out I never should have let Cheetah go after

      DreamStar.

      "They can't hang you for something you had no control over.

      Elliott sat quietly for a few moments, then: "As long as I've

      got control, I'm going to use it." He picked up the direct line

      to the command post controller. "It's something I should have

      done from the beginning."

      :'You're going to recall McLanahan and Powell?"

      'I've made too many mistakes. I've got a responsibility here,

      and I'm taking charge right now."

      Powell had taken Cheetah down from forty thousand feet

      to one thousand feet and just below the speed of sound as they

      approached the area where DreamStar's data-signal indicated its

      position.

      . "Showing thirty miles to intercept," McLanahan said, read-

      ing the telemetry data being received from DreamStar's auto-

      matic encoders. "Still showing him on the ground but with

      engines running."

      :'Can you get a fix on his position?"

      'Already got it," McLanahan said. "I don't show any Mex-

      ican airfields on my charts, but there're probably a lot of them

      around here. He . . . goddamn, just lost the data-signal."

      "Which means he's got help," said. "Someone must

      have deactivated the data-transmitter for him." JC. took a firm

      grip on his stick and throttles, experimentally shaking the stick

      to help himself concentrate-he was amazed at the extra amount

      of agility Cheetah demonstrated without the heavy camera on

      the spine. "Twenty miles. Stand by. Throttles coming to eighty

      percent. " Slowly Powell brought the throttles out of military

      power and to the lower power setting.

      "Give me a good clearing turn in each direction so I can get

      a look," Patrick said. "I'll call the target, then we'll come back

      around and try for a strafing run."

      "Guns coming on," said He hit the voice-recognition

      computer button: "Arm cannon."

      "Warning, cannon armed, Ax hundred rounds remaining,

      the computer replied.

      "Set attack mode strafe," ordered.

      "Strafe mode enabled. " A laser-drawn crosshair reticle ap-

      peared on 's windscreen, and weapon- and altitude-waming

      readouts appeared near the reticle. Adjusted for airspeed, winds

      and drift by the computer and attack radar, the reticle would

      position itself where the bullets from Cheetah's cannon would

      impact, no matter how Cheetah moved through the air. In strafe

      mode could select a ground target and the computer would

      direct the pilot which way to fly to keep the reticle centered on

      the target. It would also warn of terrain or other obstacles and

      warn when the ammunition count was getting low.

      "Cannon's on-line," told McLanahan.

      "Ten miles out." McLanahan now began to transition to vi-

      sual, looking out the canopy as he could, scanning the rocks and

      scrub-forested hills ahead for an airfield. The inertial navigator

      and flight director could fly Cheetah to within sixty feet of a

      waypoint, but if the airstrip's coordinates in the database were

      not perfect they could miss the field. And in this dense, hilly

      terrain it was very possible to fly as close as a few hundred yards

      of the airstrip and not see it.

      "Five miles." made S-tums around the flight path, bank-

      ing sharply up without turning so Patrick and he could get a

      clear look all around the aircraft for the airfield, including under

      the belly. There were lots of clearings, even several that looked

      like airstrips, but in the few moments they had at each, they saw

      no aircraft.

      "DreamStar could be hidden," said. "They've had

      time-"

      "We'll find it."

      220 DALE BROWN

      "We'll be able to loiter only a few minutes before we have to

      start back-"

      'Just look for the damned-there it is, eleven o'clock low ...

      Cheetah was in a steep left bank when Patrick called the air-

      strip. Powell saw it immediately. It was a narrow clearing on

      top of a small plateau, but it was wide enough through the trees

      so that the edges of the tarmac could be seen. It was also difficult

      to miss the huge black-and-green helicopter sitting in the middle

      of the clearing.

      "A chopper. They brought in a chopper," McLanahan called

      out. "If we can hit that Chinook, keep it from taking off-

      Hang on." pulled hard, using Cheetah's large canards

      to pull the nose hard-left over to the helicopter in the clearing.

      Target lock." The aiming reticle began to rotate. As the heli-

      copter moved into the center of the reticle Powell said --now!"

      to complete the command.

      "Target locked, " the computer answered. A small square ap-

      peared in the center of the reticle indicating that the firing com-

      puter was now aimed and locked onto the helicopter, and a large

      cross, resembling the glideslope-azimuth flight director of an

      instrument landing system, interposed itself on the screen. "Fif-

      teen seconds tofiring range, six hundred rounds remaining . . .

      caution, search radar, twelve o'clock. "

      " DreamStar," Powell said. "His search radar." As he fin-

      ished saying it the search symbol on the widescreen changed to

      a batwing symbol.

      "Warning, radar weapon track, twelve o'clock, " the com-

      puter announced.

      "He's got us," McLanahan said. "But we got him first .

      "Disconnect." The computer-synthesized voice of Maraklov

      boomed in Kramer's headset. "Clear the area. We've been spot-

      ted. Aircraft to the east!"

      Kramer, still standing on top of the crew ladder during the

      refueling and rearming procedure, turned and searched the ho-

      rizon behind him. He saw it immediately, bearing down on them.

      A single F-15 fighter, dark gray, larger than DreamStar. Even

      from this distance he could see the missiles hanging on the wings.

      "Skaryehyeh, " Kramer shouted to the ground crewmen.

      Disconnect the fuel lines, move that fuel truck aside, launch

      the helicopter, move." He jumped off the ladder, pulled it free

      and threw it into the bushes beside the air
    strip. The canopy

      closed with a bang. A crewman had disconnected the fuel line from the single-point refueling receptacle before the truck's pump was shut off, and a geyser of jet fuel erupted near DreamStar's

      front landing gear.

      Cheetah. As Maraklov issued the mental command to begin

      the start-sequence and prepare DreamStar for flight he knew it

      had to be Cheetah. He didn't need to analyze the radar emissions

      or flight parameters. He could even guess who was on board:

      Powell and McLanahan. Only those two would be crazy enough

      to go on a search-and-destroy mission alone-but that matched

      Powell's cowboy attitude and McLanahan's emotional approach.

      They should have brought a dozen F-15 Strike Eagles or FB-111

      bombers along for ground attack and carpet-bomb the area, plus

      another dozen fighters for backup. They were probably acting

      against orders-hell, they might be in as much trouble right now

      as he was. But he still had a chance to escape if he could get off

      the ground in time.

      Maraklov closed the service panel and began to retract the

      cannon back into its bay at the same time that he activated the

      cannon and checked the system. The Soviet-make ammunition

      fed through the chamber-then suddenly jammed. It might have

      been the same caliber ammunition but the feed mechanisms were

      barely compatible. Immediately the cannon performed an auto-

      clear, which reversed the belt feed, ejected the cartridges where

      the jam had occurred and re-fed the belt, and this time the one-

      inch-diameter cartridges fed properly.

      One last check as the engines quickly revved to full power.

      Two hundred rounds of ammunition had been loaded. They also

      had managed to onload full fuel in the body tanks and three-

      quarter fuel in the wings, about forty thousand pounds of it. It

      was enough for the seven-hundred-mile flight to Nicaragua at

      normal cruise speeds but not enough if he had to mix it up with

      Cheetah. This was not the time or place to make a stand-the

      order of the day was Run Like Hell Fight Only If Cornered . . .

      The huge blades of the supply helicopter began to turn just as

      several loud sharp cracks reverberated off the canopy. Dust and

      concrete flew near the aft-empennage of the chopper, and smoke

      began to billow out of the aft rotor. But the main rotor continued

      to spool up. The fuel truck originally high-tailing it for the cargo

      222 DALE BROWN

      ramp was waved aside and ordered into the tree line out of the

      way.

      Maraklov set DreamStar's wings to their maximum high-lift

      then had the computers check the takeoff performance. Barel;

      enough. The computer said two thousand three hundred feet to

      clear the seventy-foot trees; there were only about fifteen hun-

      dred available. Maraklov activated the UHF radio on the discrete

      KGB frequency: "Kramer, this is DreamStar. Order your men

      to clear those buildings off the end of the airstrip. I need more

      runway for takeoff."

      There was no reply, but soon several soldiers ran out of the

      chopper's cargo bay toward the end of the airstrip and a few

      moments later the fuel truck followed. They used the fuel truck

      to push the burned-out buildings into the tree line. Several of

      the Soviet soldiers fell, and others began firing into the trees-

      apparently there were still Mexican villagers in the forest sur-

      rounding the airstrip. The KGB soldiers would take care of

      them . . .

      "Five hundred fifty rounds remaining, " the computer an-

      nounced. Cheetah swooped over the trees, so close Patrick

      thought they had flown between a few of them. "Low altitude t

      warning . . . "

      Thanks for nothing, thought. I only had the shot for a

      few seconds.

      "Looks like that Chinook has some heavy guns on the side,"

      McLanahan said. "Better hit 'em from a different angle."

      banked sharply left, started a hard left turn, steering to

      put himself at a ninety-degree angle to his first strafing run to

      hit the helicopter from the tail. "Did you see DreamStar?"

      "Behind the helicopter about a hundred yards," McLanahan

      said. "'He's right at the north end of the airstrip, almost under

      the trees."

      "Had a fifty-fifty chance and blew it," said angrily. "I

      won't be able to hit him from this direction but if I can get

      another good shot at that helicopter while it's on the ground it

      at least should block the runway enough to keep DreamStar from

      lifting off.

      Powell shallowed out his bank angle to allow himself more

      time to extend his distance from the airstrip. But by the time he

      had rolled out on the flight director they saw a dark, massive

      apparition slowly rise out of the trees, trailing thick clouds of

      smoke.

      "It's the damn helicopter-"

      hit the voice-command button, forced his voice to be

      steady: "Set attack mode infrared missile. Arm one missile."

      The Sidewinder missile's aiming reticle appeared on the wind-

      screen centered on the slow-moving helicopter, and almost im-

      mediately the missile signaled that its infrared seeker-head had

      locked onto the helicopter's huge jet engines. Before the com-

      puter could acknowledge his commands Powell had punched the

      missile-launch button on his control stick.

      "Infrared missile launch. " Less than three miles away, the

      Sidewinder could hardly miss . . . the entire rotor and top half

      of the huge helicopter disappeared in a cloud of smoke and fire

      as the hulking machine rolled hard to the left and dropped into

      the trees. Powell and McLanahan were so close to the helicopter

      on impact that they could see the men inside . . .

      But the helicopter crashed clear of the tiny airstrip. The run-

      way was open.

      "Damn it. Set attack mode strafe. Arm cannon." McLanahan

      grabbed hold of the handlebars as rolled Cheetah hard up

      and right, struggling to get back into firing position. They rolled

      into a wings-level steep descent on the attack flight director,

      which was still locked in strafing mode onto the spot where

      DreamStar had been parked. It took a few precious seconds for

      Powell to readjust his eyes. When he did he saw DreamStar

      rolling down the runway. He tried to push Cheetah's nose down

      and get off a few quick bursts, but his rate of descent was too

      steep and the flight director was ordering him to climb before

      he got too low. The few rounds he did get off impacted on the

      spot DreamStar had vacated just seconds earlier.

      "I missed, he's getting away."

      The instant the hulking transport helicopter lifted off, Maraklov

      forgot about the fuel truck, the buildings on the runway, every-

      thing except the takeoff. He saw the Sidewinder plow into the

      chopper, saw the machine explode and crash into the forest. But

      his attention was on the takeoff-until he saw Cheetah bearing

      traight down at him, the F- 15 fighter so large it cast a shadow

      on Maraklov's cockpit. How could he miss?

      The feeling of imminent death was so strong that the AN-

      224
    DALE BROWN

      TARES interface almost shut down out of sheer panic. But Mar-

      aklov's last commands were executed, and DreamStAr's turbofan

      engine was at full afterburning thrust and the brakes were off.

      He expected the rounds from Cheetah's M61B2 gun to tear

      through his canopy any second-then, almost as quickly, he re-

      alized that Cheetah had overshot. His guns were firing but his

      nose was coming up too fast and so the shells were hitting be-

      hind him. He also caught a glimpse of KGB soldiers firing into

      the sky, futilely trying to shoot down Cheetah with AK-47 rifles.

      Maraklov considered using the same takeoff trick he had used back

      at Dreamland, but the wings would not respond to the wingtip back-

      twisting that had worked, so well before. The pile of broken and

      burning buildings at the end of the runway rushed forward. Smoke

      from the destroyed cargo helicopter obscured his vision, so that he

      could not watch the wall of green heading straight at him ...

      . . .DreaniStar's landing gear left the runway less than a hun-

      dred feet from the hastily cleared end of the runway, and the

      wheels were just tucking themselves into their wells when

      DreamStar cleared the trees. Airborne once again, Maraklov

      made a hard turn to the southeast, stayed in full afterburner,

      pushed DreamStar's nose down to build airspeed and hugged the

      rugged mountain ridges as close as possible. ANTARES had

      computed several attack scenarios, but Maraklov overrode all of

      them. For now escape was his best defense.

      McLanahan was holding onto the canopy sill, straining against

      the crushing G-forces to look between Cheetah's twin vertical

      stabilizers.

      "I see him, " he called out. "He made it off, he's staying low .

      Powell continued his hard turn, executing a one-hundred-

      eighty-degree turn and thrusting his nose toward the rugged

      mountain foothills. Once they were rolled in McLanahan checked

      his radar screen. "Radar contact, JC., twelve o'clock low-I've

      got radar lock. Get him!"

      Powell hit the voice-recognition computer-button. "Set attack

      mode radar missile. Arm one radar missile."

     


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