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Smoke curled into the sky from the wreckage of a vehicle close beside the railroad tracks. To Jolly’s experienced eye, it looked like a ZSU with most of the broad, open turret peeled back like a steel-petaled flower. Nearby was the broken ruin of an SA-3 Goa launcher, the six-wheeled utility truck upended in the gravel and overturned by a near miss from an air-to-ground rocket. It was evident that Lucky Strike had passed through the area minutes before, smashing anything that looked like a SAM battery or antiaircraft vehicle.

Desert sped past on either side as the Intruder raced west. “Gold Strike Five-zero-zero, this is Five-one-one.” That was Coot Barswell, another member of VA-89.

“Copy, Coot. Go ahead.”

“We’re on your six, Jolly, range five miles. Save some of the good stuff for us, will ya?”

“Eat our dust, Coot!” He laughed. “No guarantees.” He switched to ICS, necessary for clarity even though his BN was sitting right beside him. “How we doin’, Chucker?”

“Range to primary, twelve miles,” Chucker replied. “I’m getting some ground radar now.”

“The primary” had been spotted by a recon satellite at dawn, an enormous ground convoy moving west along the highway toward Naya Chor. It had passed the village earlier that morning, and by now was well on the way to Hyderabad, where Indian and Pakistani forces were gearing up for a major battle. Much of the convoy had been hidden by clouds of dust, but the satellite’s infrared scanners had suggested that the convoy included as many as thirty or forty large trucks: huge Maz-537 flatbed trailers with tanks and heavy equipment, smaller trucks with ammunition and troops, and the all-important tankers carrying fuel or water.

The threat light blinked on, and Jolly heard the warning tone of an enemy lock-on.

“SAM!” Chucker warned. “I see it! Two o’clock low!”

Jolly glanced right and saw it, a white streak rising from the desert.

The Hornets could not possibly have suppressed all of the SAM sites and launchers.

He pressed the chaff button five times in rapid succession and eased the stick forward, letting the Intruder settle closer to the ground, but he kept the strike aircraft steadily on course. As the chaff clouds expanded above and behind the plane, the threat warning stopped its incessant chirping.

“I think we lost ‘em.” Jolly’s mouth was dry, his heart hammering against his seat harness. He kept one eye on the missile as it rose past the starboard wing, traveling at Mach 3 a mile away.

His BN was leaning forward now, his face buried in the hood that shrouded his radar scope. “I’ve got a lock. Solid return … some serious heavy metal up there. Looks like the convoy. Come left a bit … more … there! Hold it!”

Chucker flipped a switch and Jolly’s VDI screen shifted to Attack Mode.

Graphic symbols drifted across the display, outlining possible targets illuminated by the Intruder’s radar, showing position, drift angle, and steering corrections. Numbers flickered off the last few thousands of meters to the release point. Speed was 490 knots.

“Going up,” Jolly reported. He nudged the Intruder back up to five hundred feet, the minimum distance required for arming a Mark 82 General Purpose bomb.

“Gettin’ close,” Chucker reported. “Your pickle is hot.”

Jolly closed his thumb over the release switch, his eye on the targeting pipper on his VDI. The Intruder could be set to release its weapons load by computer, but in a case like this, when the target was strung out over a large area and of unknown composition, Jolly preferred to release manually. A surging, exultant excitement gripped him. Any second now … Suddenly, the empty desert below was transformed into a nightmare out of the Los Angeles Freeway. Trucks, half-tracks, troop carriers, and tanks were crowded on the road or parked alongside. Ahead, the girders of a bridge stretched above the banks of the Nara River.

“Gold Strike Five-double-oh!” Jolly cried. “Bombs away!”

The A-6 Intruder could carry a maximum ordnance load of 15,000 pounds — in this case thirty 500-lb Mark 82 GP bombs. It never failed to amaze Jolly that, during World War II, the immortal B-17 had carried a maximum bomb load of only 17,600 pounds … and that was only for extremely short-range missions. Typical mission ordnance loads for the old Flying Fortress were only 4000 pounds, less than a third of what the Intruder carried.

And the A-6 Intruder could place its high-explosive eggs with far greater precision than the B-17 ever could, and from an altitude of only a few hundred feet.

Thirty quarter-ton bombs spilled away from the Intruder’s hardpoints, a spray of deadly, finned cigars triggered to release in five groups of six along an elongated footprint across the center of the convoy. The retarder fins on each were designed to hold the bomb back just long enough to allow the A-6 to escape the fragments.

The bridge flashed below the A-6 as Jolly pulled back on the stick.

There was heavy congestion on the bridge itself, probably brought on by a breakdown or a traffic accident that had held up the whole column. He almost imagined he could hear the honking of horns, the curses of the drivers … The detonations were like the flashes of a string of Chinese firecrackers, but silent … at least at first. Then the sound caught up with the speeding Intruder, an avalanche of raw, searing, booming noise, thunderclap upon thunderclap rolling across the desert on shock waves that rippled out from the blasts, driving walls of swirling sand before them. Jolly watched the display in his rearview mirror, thirty blasts in the space of less than two seconds. Black smoke, boiling orange fireballs rising like deadly trees, a pall of burning clouds spreading across the desert in a suffocating blanket.

And the explosions continued. White streamers curled out from the epicenter of destruction, flares like Roman candles. An ammunition truck had been hit … and the explosion added to the devastation that was hurling entire trucks, flaming and tumbling end for end, into the sky.

“My God,” Jolly said, awe softening his voice. “My God …”

“Gold Strike Leader, this is Five-one-one. God, Jolly, what are you doing up there? Looks like you just trashed the whole Indian army.”

“Uh … rog, Coot.” He felt none of the earlier urge to banter. “Save your load for the bridge. It’s … easy pickings.”

“Copy that, Jolly. Thanks. Oh, God look at them burn!”

With the drag from the bomb load gone, the A-6 was racing now at almost 600 knots. Antiaircraft fire, scattered and ineffective, was reaching toward him from various sites among the marshes and canals that marked the western edge of the desert. A pair of ZSU-23s that had already crossed the river swung quad-mounted cannons toward the sky and stabbed at them as they hurtled past overhead.

“We’re outa here, Chucker,” he said. The elation he’d felt before was gone. “Job’s over. Let’s go home.”

The Intruder banked left, heading south once more.

1235 hours, 26 March
Tomcat 200

Tombstone broke left, bleeding speed with his air brakes until his F-14’s computer brought the swing wings forward. At less than two hundred fifty knots, he held the turn, left wing pointed at the blur of golden sand below, right wing pointed at the heavens.

“He’s still coming!” Hitman called. “Stoney, he’s still coming!”

Tombstone hadn’t gotten close enough to see the Mig-29’s number, but he had a strange feeling he was facing that same Indian pilot who had come close to killing him more than once already. It was a coincidence … but a small one. Good pilots survived longer than bad ones in the tangle of modern aerial combat … and good pilots tended to seek one another out in the closest thing the twentieth century had to a Medieval joust, knight against knight.