The Wingman Adventures Volume One

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The Wingman Adventures Volume One Page 82

by Mack Maloney


  He walked into the bridge, where Yaz sat, going over sea and weather charts with O’Brien’s second-in-command.

  “We could be in Malta in forty-eight hours, Major,” Yaz told him. “Currents here are still running against us, but O’Brien says he can put on an auxiliary tug or two.”

  “God knows what it’s like in Malta these days,” Hunter said.

  Yaz nodded. “It’s anyone’s guess,” he said. “When we were holed up in Algiers, we heard some pretty wild stories about the place. Still, Sir Neil had scheduled it as our first resupply stop. He felt confident at the time that we could get gassed up there.”

  Suddenly a loud, howling scream split the night.

  “What the fuck was that!” Yaz yelled.

  Hunter picked up on the last tones of the scream and determined it was coming from below, in the general area of the sick bay. “Sounds like it came from Sir Neil’s room,” he said, running out of the bridge, with Yaz and two SAS men in tow.

  They reached the sick bay to find two more SAS men and a couple of Gurkhas in the process of battering down the hatch door that led to Sir Neil’s recovery room. Another scream pierced the night.

  “Bloody door’s locked from the inside,” one of the SAS men grunted as they pounded away at the hatch handle. Finally it gave, and those on the outside rushed in just as another scream was heard.

  When Hunter got inside, he was relieved to see Sir Neil, awake and relatively safe, though looking quite confused. Clara, the Madam who had taken a liking to the British commander, was at his side, stark naked. She looked absolutely petrified. She had done the screaming.

  It was almost completely dark inside the room and it was oddly cold. Someone tried the light switch, but it didn’t work. Still, Hunter could see that Clara was pointing to the far corner. He whirled around and saw a figure sitting there, hunched low, groaning and shaking.

  It was Peter …

  No one dared approach him. And for good reason. The strange man had raised his head and Hunter saw a sight he would never forget. The man’s eyes were glowing. Glowing the color of red. Hunter shut his own and quickly opened them again, just to check and make sure it wasn’t him. It wasn’t. Nor was it some freak reflection. The man’s eyes were actually burning red. It looked like a special effect from a cheap sci-fi movie. But in real life, it was extremely chilling.

  “He came out of nowhere!” Clara screamed. “One moment there was no one there, the next he was there. And he’s making such an awful, dreadful sounds. And those eyes—”

  She screamed once again, causing everyone in the room to jump. Hunter gave the thumb to two SAS guys and they quickly picked her up and literally carried her outside the room.

  Then the cabin became very hot.

  “Peter … ” Hunter said, daring to take a step toward the man.

  Suddenly, a strange laughter filled the room. Peter’s mouth was open, and the deep, booming laughter was coming from it. But it was not Peter’s voice …

  “You fools!” the echoing, graveled voice said, gurgling in mocking laughter. “You should know better than to dare attack me!”

  At that point, the normally unruffled Gurkhas left. A suspicious lot, they had had enough. Hunter could hear one of them vomiting outside the room.

  Goddamn, this is spooky, Hunter thought, taking another step toward the man.

  “Don’t you dare come any closer to me,” the voice said “You! Hunter! I won’t rest until I see you dead!”

  At that point, all the electrical systems on the ship went out. Hunter knew because the distinctive sounds of the gas-powered generators located in the ship’s hold had suddenly ceased.

  “Jesus Christ,” one of the SAS men swore. “He’s knocked out the blooming power.”

  Hunter had experienced some pretty strange things before, but nothing as strange as this.

  Still, he drew yet another step closer to the man.

  “Peter,” he said, loudly. “Snap out of it—”

  The voice roared. “Don’t you dare come near me!” With that, a great glob of green, stinking mass came spraying out of Peter’s mouth. Hunter deftly moved to the side just in time to avoid the disgusting spit.

  Hunter gulped, then in a voice as strong as he could muster, he yelled: “Fuck you!”

  A terrifying scream filled the cabin. The sickly Sir Neil put his hands to his ears, as did the two remaining SAS men. Another glob of smelly mess—this one blood red—came spitting from Peter’s mouth. Hunter was also able to dodge this.

  “So who the fuck are you?” Hunter yelled defiantly, stepping a little closer towards Peter. “That coward, Lucifer?”

  “I am your worst nightmare, Hunter,” the deep voice gurgled with ear-splitting volume. “I am in this wretch’s body only to curse you. To condemn you! You fools!”

  Hunter was now three steps away from Peter. His eyes were glowing even more intensely. His beard was covered with the repulsive, sticky vomit. Hunter had to do something. The room smelled worse than anything he’d ever imagined.

  “Stay away!” the voice from within Peter screamed. “Stay away from me!”

  Hunter then quickly moved two steps and planted his boot right against Peter’s chest. He pressed hard. Another blood-curdling scream came out of the man’s mouth, so intense Hunter could feel the vibrations right through his boot.

  He leaned over and with a balled fist laid a strong punch on Peter’s left jaw. Another scream. But this one was cut short by a left uppercup from Hunter. Peter’s body was lifted up and flung back against the wall, where his eyes went wide. In a microsecond, they changed back to a normal human color. Then they closed and the man slumped to the floor.

  A few seconds later, the lights came back on …

  Chapter 25

  THE NEXT DAY DAWNED cold and stormy. The seas were rougher than at anytime in the voyage and the crews of the Saratoga flotilla witnessed the beginning of a savage mid-morning thunder and lightning storm. It was as if Hunter’s punches, thrown the night before to break Peter’s spell, had dented some fragile fabric of Nature. Now Nature would seek its revenge …

  The sudden bad weather—none of which had shown up on the carrier’s fairly sophisticated meteorological hardware—forced the towing operation to stop. The risk of damage to both the carrier and the precious tugboats was too great to attempt pushing on in the wind-swept seas. Reluctantly, Heath, acting as temporary commander of the operation in Sir Neil’s incapacity, asked Yaz to order the carrier’s anchor dropped. The other ships in the fleet did likewise.

  Hunter was still mystified by the bizarre happenings of the night before. No one could figure out how Peter had gotten inside Sir Neil’s room—his SAS guards once again had left him heavily sedated in his box-bed, and they swore they hadn’t left his cabin’s door for a moment. Clara, who had been sleeping with Sir Neil, said she simply woke up and Peter was there, crouched in the corner, the frightening glow coming from his eyes. Peter himself would provide no clues either; he was heavily sedated. The SAS guard watching over him was increased again to four.

  The whole day was a series of storms, thunder, lightning, and waves so high they crashed regularly on to the Saratoga’s deck. One gigantic wave hit the stern of the flattop and carried away a frigate helicopter with it, although the chopper was triple-fastened to the deck. While the Norwegian frigates, the Moroccan troopship, the oiler, and the tugs were rugged enough to ride out the weather, the storms were especially destructive to the smaller boats of the Freedom Navy. Several had already sunk—though the loss of life was slight due to heroic efforts of the Norwegians, who managed to pluck many of the hapless sailors out of the rough seas.

  Hunter spent most of the day in the CIC. The radio-intercept operations were at a standstill too. But his major concern—next to being thrown around due to the violent up-and-down motion of the carrier—was to maintain some sort of defensive perimeter around the fleet despite the storm.

  Around mid-afternoon, Hunter was trying to d
rink a cup of coffee in the mess when Yaz came in.

  “Well, it’s official,” the American sailor told him. “We are in the middle of an authentic hurricane.”

  “I didn’t think they had hurricanes in the Mediterranean,” Hunter replied.

  “They don’t. But the winds are strong enough to qualify it as one,” Yaz said, trying to drink some coffee himself.

  “Any sign of it letting up?” Hunter asked.

  “None that we can see,” Yaz said. “Of course, it really snuck up on us. Maybe it will go away just as quickly.”

  At that moment, the ship went through a particularly violent shudder, caused by a gigantic wave hitting it broadside. The lights blinked a couple times, then stayed on, though noticeably dimmer.

  “Those poor generators,” Yaz said. “If they hold out through this, I want to buy stock in the company that made them.”

  Hunter spent several more hours in the CIC, then went up to see Sir Neil.

  “Recovered from last night?” Hunter asked, slipping the British Commander a small flask filled with wine.

  “Aye, just barely,” Sir Neil said, keeping an eye on the Italian doctor on watch and taking a quick swig of the vino when he was sure the physician wasn’t looking.

  “Looked like a bad scene from a bad movie, no?” Hunter asked.

  “I’ll tell you, major,” Sir Neil said, “I’ve heard Lucifer had such powers, but I never believed until now. It really shows you what we are up against.”

  “Well, if he orchestrated that little spook show last night, he is quite an opponent,” Hunter agreed. “But I guess I should be used to it. He pulled some pretty unworldly things back during The Circle War too.”

  “One thing is for certain,” Sir Neil said, struggling a bit to sit up in his bed. “He wants to stop us from accomplishing our mission at all costs. In my mind, that should give us even more reason to push on.”

  “Hear, hear!” Hunter said, smiling.

  Sir Neil feigned a slight cough, expertly sneaking another swig of wine. “What shape are the airplanes in, Hunter?”

  “They’re in fine condition,” the pilot told him. “We’re keeping the Tornados, the Jags, and the Viggens secured until we get to the Canal, or unless we need them sooner. The Harriers are always on standby. They’re goddamn tough airplanes. The S-3A still needs some armament work, and its engine is just a little cranky.

  “But your monkeys are good. They’re smart and they know their way around a jet engine, whether it be British, Swedish, or made in the USA. When the time comes, we’ll be close to ninety-five percent available. And we’ll have plenty of ammo to strap under their wings, thanks to the haul from Sardinia.”

  “That’s all we want,” Sir Neil said, resting back down into his bed. “I’m just sorry that I’m laying here, all busted up. Goddamn Sardinians. The hedonistic bastards. Why wasn’t that bloke with the machine gun out getting laid or pissed like everyone else on the whole shitting island?”

  Hunter eyed a woman’s nightgown hanging from a hook near Sir Neil’s bed. It was obviously Clara’s.

  “Well, I see you’ve at least been making the best of the time you’ve spent here,” he said.

  Sir Neil caught his drift. “Aye. Clara.” He sighed. “She’s a sweetie, to come and comfort an old goat like me, especially with all these bandages and things.”

  “Well,” Hunter said, getting up to go, “if you’re bedridden anyway, what the hell?”

  Suddenly Sir Neil was sitting up again. “Hunter,” he said, extending his hand, “thanks, me boy.”

  Hunter took the man’s hand and shook it.

  “Heath is a good lad and doing well in my stead—but he’s following orders because he’s RAF to the end,” Sir Neil said. “But I know you don’t have to be doing this. I feel sometimes like I’ve gotten you in to one hell of a mess. Mixed up in some fool’s cockamamy idea of a crusade to save the world. I just wanted to let you know I appreciate it.”

  Hunter became very serious. He could see in the man’s eyes the look one has when a dream is in danger of being lost. The worst fear in the world. The fear of the unfulfilled.

  He gripped Sir Neil’s hand harder. “Don’t worry, sir,” The Wingman said. “You can count on me … ”

  The storm continued unabated into the night. If anything, the seas got rougher. There was no need to calculate where the center of the storm was—the simultaneous crack of lightning and boom of thunder proved it was directly over the Saratoga.

  Once again, Hunter tried to sleep, but found it impossible. He had checked with the CIC one last time, and everything was normal—or as normal as they could be in the middle of a hurricane. Yet something was still gnawing at him—the anticipation of trouble ahead, compounded by the spooky trip the night before. His own fairly extensive extrasensory abilities were buzzing. Would he ever reach a point where he wouldn’t have to worry about such things again?

  The answer was no …

  He lay on his bunk and had just closed his eyes when the feeling washing over him.

  “Oh no,” he thought, immediately jumping up from the bunk. “Here we go again … ”

  He was up and running toward the deck in a moment, pausing only to put on his flight helmet and grab his M-16. He was working totally on instinct now—a nether region so baffling for him that in some cases he couldn’t explain his actions even after the crisis was over.

  He reached the deck and went out into the night. The wind was howling ferociously. Lightning was splitting the sky every other second. The thunder was so loud, his ears began to hurt. Waves the size of buildings were crashing against the side of the carrier. At some points, the frigate nearest the Saratoga looked higher in elevation than the carrier itself.

  Yet out there, somewhere, he knew enemy aircraft were coming …

  Suddenly the battle stations’ klaxon went off, even though the howling wind and the booming thunder nearly drowned it out. Yaz emerged from the conning tower and, spotting him on the deck, screamed at the top of his lungs, “They’re coming, Hawk! The flying boats! There’s at least eighty of them!”

  Hunter didn’t even bother to ask Yaz how he knew this. It simply confirmed what Hunter had been feeling in his bones all along.

  “Those crazy bastards,” he thought. “Who the hell would come out in a hurricane to pull a mid-sea air strike? And at night?”

  Immediately, he saw the Spanish Rocketeers and the French Legion soldiers appear on the deck. Hunter grabbed the Spaniards’ group leader.

  “We’re about to be attacked,” he yelled to the man, trying to be heard over the pandemonium of noise. “Get your guys to their positions and tell them to strap themselves in. Tell them to use belts, ropes, wire, whatever. But get them secured so no one goes overboard!”

  The Spaniard nodded, saluted, and ran off into the night. Meanwhile, Hunter sought out the French antiship company leader. He found the man at the carrier’s forward Phalanx gun position.

  “We are about to be attacked by aircraft,” he explained to the man. “Seaplanes like the ones that attacked the Freedom Navy. Do you understand?”

  “Oui, monsieur,” the man yelled back.

  “Can your guns work against slow-moving aircraft?”

  The Frenchmen mustered up a smile. “We certainly will find out, monsieur.”

  Hunter had to smile too. Talk about esprit de corps. He patted the man on the back, yelled, “Go get ’em!” and was off.

  That’s when he heard the sound of approaching aircraft …

  He ran towards the front of the ship again, noting that all the carrier’s guns were manned and that the Spanish rocketeers were in position. Even the Australians and the Gurkhas were huddled in doorways and bulkheads, ready if needed.

  Hunter reached the front of the ship and stared out into the stormy night. His extraordinary eyes picked out first one, then two, then a half-dozen red and white lights coming directly towards him.

  “Those crazy bastards … ” he whispered
once again. Although his eyes confirmed it, his mind was having a hard time believing it. “Here they come … ”

  Not ten seconds later one of the huge Soviet-built Beriev-12 flying boats roared between the carrier and the frigate on its port side. It was traveling so slow, Hunter could see dozens of faces peering out of the double line of gun portholes on the side of the Beriev. The huge airplane seemed to hang in the air for a moment then it was gone—disappearing into the storm.

  Next a smaller sea-jet came through, its nose spitting cannon fire, which Hunter heard pinging off the hull of the ship. This airplane banked to the right and as it passed, Hunter saw a weapon strapped under its wing that sent a chill through him.

  “Jezzuz!” he said to himself. “That was a goddamn Exocet!”

  Another Beriev came in. This time every gun was aimed at the carrier and firing. Hunter hit the deck, though the spray from the sea was hard to distinguish from metal splinters flying around because of the vicious barrage from the flying boat.

  He was quickly back on his feet. He could see through the rain and sea spray that the attackers were buzzing all over the fleet on both sides of the carrier. He could also see streaks of light piercing the foul night as the flying boats pounded the storm-tossed ships.

  “If this isn’t the craziest thing,” he thought, his uniform and every inch of his body soaking wet. “Battling a bunch of crazy fuckers in seaplanes in the middle of the night in the middle of a typhoon!”

  Another Beriev came roaring in, its howitzer pumping out shells that were just screaming over the deck and crashing to the sea on the other side. Still no one on the Saratoga, or on the other attending ships that he could see, was firing back.

  “Well, fuck this,” Hunter said, his temper getting the better of him. Someone had to fight back! He ran up to the edge of the ship, cocked his M-16, and started firing. He could see some of his tracer bullets bouncing off the side of the flying boat, but others were penetrating. He shot out at least one gun port window before the huge plane roared off.

 

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