Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Day of the Cheetah

    Page 50
    Prev Next


      and my aircraft are concerned-"

      "Then it's no longer your aircraft. You're hereby relieved of

      command." Elliott seated himself in the commander's seat be-

      hind the main radar console Control One and the main defensive

      radar operator, Control Three; he had his own screen, Control

      Two, but he didn't know enough about the new system to use

      it. He would have to divide his attention between three screens

      to stay on top of this fight. Other radar operators, Controls Four

      through Eight, would scan the sky around the AWACS at long

      range for aircraft and ships as well as focus in on each friendly

      aircraft involved in the fight and warn him of enemy aircraft

      around him.

      He hit the shipwide intercom button. "Crew, this is S-Five,

      General Elliott. I am taking command of this aircraft. Crew,

      prepare for air-to-air engagement. " He unplugged his headset

      cord from the intercom box and plugged it into the commander's

      net. "Control Three, put Five-Seven on a high CAP over this

      aircraft. He's responsible for a fifty-mile diameter around us.

      Control Four, can Dragon Five-Eight and Five-Nine get a re-

      fueling before their ETA?-

      A pause while the radar operator took in the news about the

      sudden change. of'command, then another few moments to get

      his mind back to the fight around them. "Affirmative, sir, but

      they'd have to wait zer-o-three minutes for the rendezvous."

      "No good. Get Five-Eight and Nine in to relieve Six as fast

      as they can-he's gotta be low on fuel. Communications, contact

      Dragon Control in Georgetown and have them scramble a third

      flight ASAP.

      Roger.

      Elliott glanced at Marsch, who stood behind him clenching

      and unclenching his fists-obviously angry, but also surprised at

      how well this four-star walk-on was deploying his fighters.

      "I understand you have command responsibility for this mis-

      sion, General Elliott," Marsch said, phrasing his words for the

      running tape recorders on the control deck.

      Elliott did not take his eyes off the main screen. "Colonel, I

      want you on Control Two. I want you to watch that Russian

      346 DALE BROWN

      Ilyushin and track any aircraft that try to peel away from it. I

      want you to identify the XF-34 and track every move it makes.

      If it gets away I'll hang your ass." Marsch shut up and went to

      do as he was told.

      "Dragon Five-Six, bogey at your six o'clock, six miles, MiG-

      29," Control One reported.

      "Two fighters breaking off from the transport," Marsch called

      out. "Looks like they're maneuvering to engage."

      Elliott muttered to himself, "Now we are outnumbered. I

      hoped those two would stay with DreamStar and the Russian

      AWACS. " Without ready help, Dragon Five-Four and Five-

      Six, he thought grimly, we're going to have to get out of this

      jam by ourselves.

      Douglas aboard Dragon Five-Six yanked his control stick hard

      right as he heard the warning from his AWACS. Meanwhile

      Coursey had rolled inverted and had pointed his nose down to-

      ward the transport, searching for Douglas. He spotted him sec-

      onds later, the big MiG-29 dead on his tail. But instead of

      following Douglas in his hard break, the MiG was in a dive.

      "Five-Six, this is Five-Four, your MiG's going vertical.

      Punch your tank. Catch him on the climb."

      But by the time Douglas had jettisoned his fuel tank and com-

      pleted his ninety-degree break to get away from infrared missile

      firing range of the MiG, his pursuer had built up enough speed

      in his dive to turn hard right and zoom upward. With his nose

      high in the air, Douglas rolled out of his break directly in front

      of the MiG.

      "Reverse, " Coursey yelled.

      Douglas heard the warning and banged the stick hard left. It

      was the right decision-the MiG pilot was expecting another

      right break to preserve his energy, was not expecting the left

      turn. He tried a fast cannon burst as the F-16 crossed in front of

      him but had no time to line up.

      "Extend and get your speed up, Doug," Coursey ordered.

      Douglas checked the airspeed readout on his heads-up display-

      it was down nearly to three hundred knots. "He's coming around

      behind you again. He yo-yoed on you. Don't dick with this

      guy-he seems to know his shit. " Coursey pulled his nose down

      and aimed it at the MiG. "I'm on my way, Doug, but you be

      smart, play in the vertical. Don't let him drop down on you."

      JL

      'P-

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 347

      The F-16 regained its speed quickly but the twin turbofans of

      the MiG-29 had three times the power of the Falcon. In an in-

      stant the MiG was back on Douglas' tail.

      "Let's try to sandwich this guy," Coursey said after he finally

      got into position behind and above the MiG. "Break left."

      Douglas pulled into a hard left turn but was forced to release

      back pressure on the stick or risk stalling. The break was not as

      quick or as clean as it would have been, and he offered an en-

      ticing target for the MiG, which instead of dropping down into

      a low-speed yo-yo maneuver chose to turn with Douglas.

      Exactly as Coursey had hoped. With the MiG in a left turn,

      Coursey used his diving-speed advantage and pulled directly be-

      hind the MiG, then immediately went to an AIM-132B short-

      range infrared missile-and fired. The missile tracked perfectly,

      missing the fast-moving MiG by only a few feet, but the explo-

      sion of the missile's warhead damaged something vital. The MiG

      pilot nosed his fighter over, trailing a thick black cloud of smoke.

      "Splash two MiGs, " Coursey called over the radio. "Coming

      up on your right side, Doug."

      "Dragon Five-Four, two bogeys at your four o'clock, ten

      miles . . ." The warning had barely been received when Cour-

      sey's radar-threat warning receiver bleeped.

      "Five-Six, break left." Coursey could see chaff stream out

      of Five-Six's right ejector, and then the F-16 was gone in his

      hard defensive bank. Coursey broke right, pumping out chaff

      and flares from his left ejectors, and straining against the G-

      forces to scan out the top of his canopy for his attackers. He

      spotted one of the MiGs just in time to see its cannon flashing

      and tracers stream toward him-the missile had missed but the

      MiG had enough power to press the attack and go in with his

      twenty-three-millimeter gun.

      The MASTER CAUTION light snapped on and the HUD dis-

      played a WARNING message. Checking the caution panel on the

      right side, Coursey found a half-dozen cautions lights illumi-

      nated but nothing immediately serious-rudder, nozzle, fuel

      leaks. No fire lights. The shells had ripped across his tail from

      the top but missed the engine compartment. With the nozzle now

      stuck in the military position, engine perfon-nance in afterburner

      would probably be degraded, and with the rudder damaged,

      landing might be tricky or impossible-if he managed to make

      it to dry land with his fuel leak.

    &nb
    sp; -M

      348 DALE BROWN

      Such inflight emergencies ran through Coursey's mind, but he

      was able to dismiss them for now ... his engine was running,

      his wings were still attached and personally he was undamaged

      except for his pride. The one overriding thought that stuck in

      his mind was that the Russians had gotten a shot off at him and

      had hurt his Falcon. They'd pay for that.

      Coursey executed a nine-G turn to the right to pursue the

      MiGs that had passed behind him. They were in loose route

      formation, the double-leader formation that was very e ive in

      covering each other, and they were both going after Douglas

      again. Douglas tried some hard horizontal moves but the MiGs

      matched him every time.

      "Go over the top, Doug," Coursey told him. "Hard as you

      can. Now.

      Dragon Five-Six suddenly heeled, pointing itself straight up

      in the air in a sharp Immelmann maneuver, held it there for

      seconds, then rolled inverted and began a sharp descent.

      "I'm right under you, Doug," Coursey said as he approached

      the area where Five-Six had begun his climb. "Roll out." Five-

      Six rolled upright a thousand feet above Coursey and sped away

      behind his leader. Coursey selected his M61 cannon and fired as

      the descendin MiGs came into view.

      A head-on gunpass was not exactly a high-percentage attack,

      but for sheer visual impact it was hard to beat-and this time

      Coursey got a bonus. As the second MiG banked away from

      him, he could see dark bits of material peel off the upper surface

      of the lead MiG's wings. It seemed a few of the F-16's twenty-

      millimeter shells might have caught the MiG's extended spoilers

      or speedbrakes and chopped them off . . .

      This was turning into a battle of attrition, and Coursey knew

      at this rate he was going to lose it. These fighters had undoubt-

      edly refueled off their "-76 tanker before the fight began and

      had enough fuel for hours of dogfighting-Douglas in Dragon

      Five-Six had to be down to minimums for recovery at George-

      town, and Coursey was in danger of flaming out any minute.

      Something drastic was in order . . .

      Coursey saw it immediately, far below him and to the left-

      the Ilyushin-76 AWACS-tanker-transport plane. For some

      reason the II-76 pilot had driven right into the middle of the

      dogfight. Coursey selected a radar-guided Scorpion missile and

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 349

      activated his attack radar as he went over the top and aimed right

      for the forward cabin of the Russian AWACS.

      His intentions were noted. Both MiGs broke off their attacks

      against Douglas and changed directions, climbing to line up on

      Dragon Five-Four. Coursey could see the Ilyushin disgorge bun-

      dles of radar-reflecting chaff and infrared decoy flares as the

      Falcon's APG-88 radar locked onto the aircraft less than two

      miles away. The radar-lock tone was intermittent from the II-

      yushin's self-protection jamming, but the instant it steadied out

      Coursey hit the weapon-release button on the contml stick, rolled

      and turned away from a murderous gun-pass by one of the MiG-

      29s. But the Scorpion was a "launch-and-leave" missile-it

      needed no guidance from the carrier aircraft after launch.

      The missile hit the forward edge of the radome, chewing a

      large piece out of the circular device. The wind blast immedi-

      ately lifted the broken, jagged edge and ripped the forty-foot-

      diameter radome off its su rt legs and back into the II-76's

      ppo

      T-tail stabilizer. The entire horizontal portion and half of the

      thirty-foot vertical stabilizer broke free of the aircraft and tum-

      bled away. The Ilyushin transport skidded violently several

      times, heeling over so sharply that it appeared to be heading into

      a spin at any moment, but somehow its pilot managed to bring

      the one-hundred-seventy-ton aircraft under control. The trans-

      port made a wobbly turn and headed south, trailing a long line

      of thick black smoke from its aft section.

      Coursey watched as the huge aircraft swerved southward. But

      as he was searching the skies for the two MiGs, a warning beeped

      in his helmet. He was down to less than fifteen minutes of fuel,

      and with a fuel-tank leak, probably much less than that.

      "Barrier, Dragon Five-Four is bingo," he radioed as he started

      a turn to the right. "I'm heading north toward the margaritas.

      Don't forget to send someone to pick me up."

      "Roger, Five-Four, " the controller said. "Use channel Bravo

      for rescue. We will-"

      Coursey never heard the end of the transmission. The dam-

      aged MiG had missed his shot at Coursey during the attack on

      the Russian AWACS, but his wingman did not miss. The AA-

      I I Archer missile detonated on target, igniting the fuel vapors

      in the nearly empty tanks and creating a massive fireball in the

      crystal-blue Caribbean skies.

      350 DALE BROWN

      There was one thing that was hard to teach new pilots and even

      harder to reinforce in older pilots, Maraklov thought-discipline.

      The two young MiG pilots on the Ilyushin's wing forgot it, and

      they got themselves splashed. The second two, more experi-

      enced pilots flanking the XF-34 underneath the Ilyushin, also

      forgot it and it cost them the effective use of the Ilyushin.

      Maraklov considered himself very damn lucky to be alive.

      The impact of the missile on the 11yushin's radar dome had forced

      the transport's nose down several meters; only his computer-fast

      reactions saved him from crashing into the Ilyushin's belly. He

      had dodged aside just in time to avoid the wild seesawing action

      of the transport as the pilot fought for control. Now he was

      tucked back on the Ilyushin's left wing, relaying damage reports

      to Sebaco Airbase via satellite transceiver and kicking himself

      for not finding his own way out of Nicaragua.

      He activated his radar and picked up the two remaining MiG-

      29s and the one F-16 Falcon still in the fight. They were widely

      separated from each other, neither side anxious to mix it up

      again. He deactivated his radar, activated the tactical data-link,

      which gave him an image of what the E-5 AWACS was trans-

      mitting to the F-16s. The AWACS was still tracking all the So-

      viet aircraft but had not paired any fighters with them. The

      data-link was rescrambled in random periods, and without

      the scrambler's seed code it took a lengthy frequency-scan to

      reacquire it once it was lost, but when ANTARES was tied into

      the data-link it provided an excellent means to eavesdrop on the

      Americans and use their own radar plane to find them.

      "Escort Three and Four, this is Zavtra," Maraklov transmit-

      ted on the convo 's command-frequency in ANTARES's corn-

      puterized voice, using the Russian word for "tomorrow" as

      DreamStar's call sign. "Join on the transport immediately."

      "We will engage the last American fighter," Escort Three

      replied. He was the one with flight control damage, anxious to

      settle the score. A real fool.

    &n
    bsp; "I gave you an order, join on the transport!"

      "But the American fighter is retreating, we can catch

      him-"

      "He's trying to trap you," Maraklov said. Too bad AN-

      TARES only transmitted his voice at one volume and one tone,

      because mentally he was screaming at the two Soviet pilots.

      "They have two American fighters waiting to bushwhack you.

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 351

      Join on the transport's wing. " It was only a guess-the data-

      link picked up only the lone F-16 Falcon heading north toward

      Georgetown-but the American AWACS must have called in for

      more air cover as soon as they discovered the MiGs. Those

      fighters would be arriving any minute. Finally the warning sunk

      in, and a few minutes later Maraklov detected the two Soviet

      MiGs in tight fingertip formation just above and aft of the trans-

      port.

      "Escort Three, stay with the transport," Maraklov ordered.

      "Check your flight controls and fuel. Escort Four, you're use-

      less staying in tight formation. This isn't a damn air show. Take

      a position low and to the left, into the sun so you can watch the

      formation and we can watch you." These Soviet pilots were like

      rookies, Maraklov thought as the fighters deployed themselves.

      Lucky for them, their machines mostly made up for their care-

      lessness.

      "We can make it, Colonel," one of the MiG pilots said. "We

      could have broken you free past the Americans--

      "Don't tell me what we could have done. You ruined our

      chances by breaking away from the Ilyushin to begin with."

      "Our people were under attack, what was I supposed to do?"

      "Those fools in Escort One and Two should not have broken

      formation either," Maraklov said. "Their actions only provoked

      the Americans to attack. We must return to Sebaco and reorgan-

      ize . . . "

      Maraklov studied the data-link image just before it scrambled

      once again. The first F-16 was retreating north, but three more

      high-speed fighters were approaching. The reinforcements had

      arrived.

      If we can make it back before we are destroyed, Maraklov

      silently added.

      "Dragon Five-Seven, this is Barrier Command, you have the

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026