Fatal Terrain

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Fatal Terrain Page 54

by Dale Brown

make it."

  "Well, we made it, and I'm ready to do some flying and

  serve up a heapin' helpin' of whup-ass," Luger said excitedly.

  "And I've been studying, too."

  :'Studying? The Megafortress?"

  'Damn right, bro," Luger said. "Ever since the Redtail

  Hawk rescue, and after finding out you guys were still together

  and still flying Megafortresses, I've been studying up on

  everything you've been doing. Hal and Paul and John Ormack

  and Angelina Pereira, before they died, were secretly giving

  me EB-52 tech orders for months, the latest stuff. I haven't

  seen a Screamer or a JSOW or a Wolverine, but I know how

  to load, program, and launch them and all the weapons we can

  carry on a Megafortress. I can sit in any seat and run the

  systems, and I could even fly the beast with a little help. So

  just tell me where in the hell we're going and I'll help you

  get us there!"

  Patrick McLanahan looked at his assembled circle of friends

  and comrades-in-arms, and felt the pride and happiness well

  up in his heart. They were all together once again: the crew

  of the original EB-52 Megafortress, the "Old Dog," minus its

  copilot John Ormack and its- gunner Angelina Pereira; Hal

  Briggs, his friend and fellow warrior; Paul White, his former

  instructor turned high-tech rescue expert; Jon Masters, the boy

  FATAL T ER RAI N 361

  genius whom Patrick had dragged out of the laboratories and

  corporate boardrooms to show him what defending your coun-

  try and risking your life in combat was really about; Nancy

  Cheshire, the smart-mouth hard-as-nails test pilot who had

  been in combat in the Megafortress even more times than Pat-

  rick McLanahan himself; and newcomer Chris Wohl, the

  brooding, powerful Marine who suffered himself to be around

  all these Air Force techno-soldiers and who had shown them

  all what it was like to kill while looking directly into the eyes

  of the enemy instead of from the sky.

  And, last but not least, they were all together with the beast

  that had started the whole thing ten years earlier-the modified

  B-52 strategic escort "battleship" they called the Old Dog.

  Over the past ten-plus years, they had done some incredible,

  Mystifying, unheard-of things in the strange pointed-nose, V-

  tailed, fibersteel-skinned demon.

  Now they were faced with their greatest challenge-to leave

  the protection and support of the United States military, fly to

  a strange new land, and attempt to turn the tables on a giant

  military superpower that was willing to risk a global thermo-

  nuclear holocaust to assert its domination. The odds seemed

  enormous.

  "Guys, listen up for a minute, all of you," Patrick Mc-

  Lanahan said. "I don't mean to insult any of you, but I'm

  going to remind you that what we have done and what we are

  about to do are probably among the most dangerous things

  you will ever do or ever contemplate doing. If we succeed,

  you will not be rewarded for a job well done-in fact, you

  might find yourself in federal prison for a long, long time. My

  child. .."

  "Your ... what, Muck?" David Luger asked incredulously.

  "Your child?"

  "Yes, my child-our child," Patrick said, reaching over to

  take Wendy's hand. "My child could grow up fatherless, or

  he could be born with his father in prison-in fact, he or she

  could be born in prison. And of course, we could all die suc-

  cessfully defending our country, and no one will thank us, or

  we could die in total obscurity, and it will be as if we never

  existed at all. I know we're not in this business to get thanks

  from anyone, but I do know that we fly for our country and

  to preserve our freedom. Well, our country's leaders don't

  want us to do what we're about to do.

  362 DALE BROWN

  "On the other hand, if we don't do this mission and if we

  turn ourselves in to Sky Masters, Inc.'s, lawyers in Washing-

  ton, we could have a pretty good chance of surviving lawsuits

  and court-martials and returning to our former lives with our

  fortunes and careers intact," Patrick went on. "I think Jon

  Masters and I have enough friends in high places, including

  the White House, to go to bat for us. Between our political

  pals and our lawyers, I feel pretty confident that if we stop

  now, our careers and our company can survive all that we've

  done up until now, even including taking this airfield. So you

  see, you've got nothing to gain and everything to lose if we

  go on."

  "So what else is new, Patrick?" Hal Briggs deadpanned.

  "If you're done talking, Colonel," Nancy Cheshire said, "I

  think we better get off this airpatch before someone happens

  by. Let's go."

  Patrick McLanahan searched the faces of all those surround-

  ing him-there was not one downturned eye, not one uncertain

  fidget, not one shred of doubt evident in any nuance or ex-

  pression. They were all ready to fight. "Very well, folks,"

  Patrick said. He turned to Brad Elliott and asked, "You feel

  up to doing some flying again, sir?"

  "You try to stop me, Muck," Elliott responded. The retired

  three-star looked at his young colleague and prot6g6 with great

  admiration, but said nothing else as he headed back to the

  hangar to get ready to load and launch his bomber.

  "Good speech, boss," Nancy Cheshire said as she followed.

  "Comy as hell, but very inspirational. Made me weepy all

  over the damn place."

  "Thanks, Nancy. High praise coming from you," he dead-

  panned. "And I'm not your boss."

  "Maybe you will be," Cheshire said. "You sure sound like

  a commander giving a pep talk to the troops before stepping."

  "It'll be all I can do to keep us out of prison, Nance,"

  Patrick said. "Try to keep the general straight."

  "No problem, Colonel," Nancy Cheshire said eagerly.

  "See you on the other side." She trotted off after Elliott.

  I "Dave, it's you and me in the back," Patrick said. "We'll

  do a little on-the-job training on the equipment." The eager-

  ness and excitement in Luger's eyes immediately took Patrick

  back to their heyday, winning trophies and building an un-

  matched reputation for themselves. Plus, they had a lot of

  FATAL TERRAI N 363

  damn fun-and, despite the danger they faced, it felt like it

  was going to be fun again. "Everyone else evacuates with

  Jon's DC-IO."

  "You still haven't told us where we're evacuating to, Pat-

  rick," Jon Masters pointed out.

  Patrick McLanahan smiled a mischievous grin that could

  have been directly cloned from Brad Elliott himself "I'll brief

  you just before we shoot the approach, Jon," he said. "You'd

  probably want to stay right here and take your chances with

  Commander Willis and the federal marshals if you knew where

  we were going or how we were going to get there."

  OVER THE PACIFIC OCEAN, TWENTY MILES

  SOUTHWEST OF HUALIEN,

  REPUBLIC OF CHINA (TAIWAN)

  JUST
8 EFORE DAYBREAK

  "Hualien approach, Military Flight One-One," Nancy Chesh-

  ire radioed. "Requesting GPS approach runway zero-three

  right."

  "Military One-One, Hualien approach, do not fly in the vi-

  cinity of the Republic of Taiwan or you may be fired on with-

  out further warning," the precise but heavily Chinese-accented

  English-speaking voice responded. "All airspace in and

  around the Republic of China is restricted due to the air de-

  fense emergency. Say your PPR number."

  Stand by." Cheshire referred to a Post-it note stuck on the

  center multifunction display on the forward instrument con-

  sole. "One-One has victor-alpha-one-seven-alpha-two-lima."

  A PPR, or Prior Permission Required, number was standard

  operating procedure for most military installations, even half-

  way around the world on the island of Formosa, just ninety

  miles east of the Asian mainland. Any aircraft attempting to

  land at a base without a PPR would certainly be detained and

  its crew arrested-or worse.

  "Hualien Approach understands," the Taiwanese approach

  controller replied after a long pause, repeating the code warily,

  as if there was something very wrong. Hualien Air Base in

  east-central Taiwan was the largest Taiwanese military base

  364 DALE BROWN

  on the east side of the island, the home of several Taiwanese

  Navy air and surface units as well as two Taiwan Air Force

  fighter-interceptor and fighter-bomber squadrons-at least it

  had been, until a nuclear-tipped Communist Chinese M-9 bal-

  listic missile destroyed most of the base. Now it was a flattened

  collection of burned-out foundations and scorched aircraft re-

  vetments, with large blackened piles of metal here and there

  the only evidence that several dozen aircraft once were based

  there. Just three miles to the west, the Chung Yang Shang

  mountain range rose precipitously right up to 10,000 feet

  above sea level in just a few miles.

  "Military Flight One-One, cancel GPS approach clear-

  ance," the approach controller said.

  Nancy Cheshire and Brad Elliott looked at one another in

  astonishment. "Say again, control?" Cheshire radioed. "Have

  we been cleared to land? Is there a problem?"

  "Cancel approach clearance," the controller repeated an-

  grily. "Contact the controller on security frequency channel

  one-one immediately or you will be considered a hostile

  intruder. Comply immediately!"

  Cheshire acknowledged the transmission and switched chan-

  nels, but she was totally confused. The weather was pretty

  good right now-scattered clouds, good visibility, some swirl-

  ing winds because of the mountains but not too bad. The run-

  way was in sight in the growing dawn. In the military world,

  the GPS, or Global Positioning System satellite navigation sys-

  tem, was far more accurate than any other kind of instrument

  approach. GPS signals in the civilian world were downgraded

  by the U. Department of Defense to prevent America's en-

  emies from using the system against America-not so on the

  EB-52 Megafortress. The EB-52's Global Positioning System

  was accurate to within six inches in both position and altitude,

  which made it hundreds of times more accurate than any other

  navigation instrument in existence.

  Cheshire quickly set up the primary radio for the next con-

  troller, who was on a special military frequency accessible

  only by planes using the HAVE QUICK secure radio system,

  which shifted frequencies for both air and ground units si-

  multaneously based on a computerized timing sequence. "But-

  ton one-one on radio one," the copilot announced. "Hualien

  approach on backup, Hualien ground on radio two with their

  FATAL TERRAIN 365

  command post on backup. I've got the GPS approach dialed

  in as a backup."

  Thanks," Brad Elliott responded. "I got the radios." He

  keyed the mike: "Hualien radar, Military Flight One-One with

  you, level five thousand, thirteen out for runway zero-three

  right."

  "Military Flight One-One, this is Hualien final controller,"

  a voice responded sternly, "execute all of my instructions im-

  mediately." The Megafortress pilots noted the extreme em-

  phasis on the words "all" and "immediately." "In case of

  loss of communications, immediately execute missed approach

  procedures. You must not delay any missed approach proce-

  dures. Do you copy?"

  "One-One copies."

  "Roger. Do not acknowledge further transmissions. De-

  scend to two thousand, turn left heading zero-eight-one. This

  will be a PAR approach to runway zero three right." Elliott

  and Cheshire dialed in the new heading and altitude, and the

  autopilot complied. "Five miles to final approach fix." The

  controller made the same reports-altitude, heading, and po-

  sition-every five seconds. For the EB-52's pilots, it was a

  complete no-brainer-simply dial in the numbers in the au-

  topilot and watch as they got closer to the runway. The ap-

  proach looked like a iniffor image approach to what the GPS

  was showing them, so the backup was working, too.

  "Maybe it's a local procedure-PAR approaches only, as a

  security measure," Cheshire offered. The PAR, or Precision

  Approach Radar, was a controller-operated instrument landing

  procedure where a radar controller guided the plane down to

  the runway by the use of two high-speed, high-resolution ra-

  dars-very accurate, but not as accurate as GPS and not nec-

  essary because they could see the runway. Elliott shrugged-

  it didn't matter now, because they were lined up for landing

  and they hadn't been shot down yet. They could see the run-

  way, the GPS was giving them good info along with the PAR

  controller-evetything was humming along OK.

  At the final approach fix, the beginning of the final segment

  to landing, Elliott called for the "Before Landing" checklist

  and lowered the landing gear. "Three green, no red," Cheshire

  announced, checking the gear-down lights. Elliott checked

  them as well. Everything going smoothly-PARs were so sim-

  ple, a monkey could do it, given enough bananas.

  366 DALE BROWN

  "Passing final approach fix," the controller reported.

  "Check gear down, heading zero-four-two, altitude one thou-

  sand two hundred, slow to final approach speed."

  "Military Flight One-One gear down," Elliott radioed-

  that was the only allowable radio call, done as a safety mea-

  sure. Cheshire began reading the portions of the "Before

  Landing" checklist not already accomplished-flaps, lights,

  starters, weapons stowed, radar standby, seat belts, shoulder

  harnesses, crew notified ...

  "Heading zero-three-one, five-hundred-feet-per-minute rate

  of descent, altitude seven hundred feet, three miles from touch-

  down," the controller intoned. "Heading zero-three-one, six

  hundred feet altitude, two miles from touchdown. Report run-

  way in sight."

  "Runway
in sight," the pilot responded-he had had it in

  sight for the past five minutes. He expected instructions to take

  over visually about half a mile from touchdown, when the

  PAR radar could not update fast enough to provide accurate

  course and glideslope data. One last check around the cockpit,

  check the gear, check ...

  "One-One, lights off," they heard the controller say. "Two

  miles to touchdown, heading zero-three-zero, altitude four

  hundred."

  "What did he say?" Elliott asked aloud.

  "He said turn the lights off," Cheshire replied. She reached

  up to the overhead switch panel. "Want 'em off?.

  Well, this was stupid, Elliott thought. But he had the runway

  made and most of the rest of the airfield in sight. -Okay@, lights

  off, but I don't know why the hell-"

  Just as Cheshire flicked the breaker switches, they heard,

  "Military One-One, turn left immediately, heading diree-zero-

  zero, descend to three hundred feet, maintain final approach

  speed! "

  I IWhat!" Elliott exclaimed. That was a ninety-degree turn

  to the west-directly toward the mountains! He crushed the

  mike switch: "Hualien, repeat that last!"

  "Military One-One, turn immediately!" the controller

  shouted. "Turn now or execute missed approach instruc-

  tions! "

  Elliott grabbed the control stick and power controller, pad-

  dled off die autopilot, and swung the EB-52 Megafortress hard

  onto the new heading. "Where the hell is the terrain? Lower

  T

  FATAL TERRAIN 367

  the radome." Cheshire hit a switch on the overhead panel, and

  the long, pointed SST-style nose of the Megafortress lowered

  several degrees to improve forward visibility.

  "Heading two-niner-eight, altitude two hundred feet, three

  miles to touchdown," the controller intoned. The vectors were

  coming in faster: "Heading three-zero-niner, altitude one-fifty,

  two point five miles to touchdown ... now heading three-four-

  nine, altitude two-twenty, two point two miles to

  touchdown . . . "

  "The son of a bitch! " Elliott shouted, making the sudden

  right turn with fifty degrees of bank, "He's vectored us right

  into the side of a mountain! What in hell is going on?"

 

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