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The MiG peeled off, spewing countermeasures out from its undercarriage, dancing around in the horizontal until it evaded the Sidewinder.

The Tomcat was feeling better now, slipping through the air with more authority, and I felt some control return to her. I breathed a sigh of relief, slowly eased back around, and stayed in level flight until I was back up to combat speed.

Tombstone had somehow managed to lure him into a vertical, although I don't know how. I thought the MiG driver was smarter than that, but evidently he'd slipped up somehow. I turned back into the fight, watched the horizontal tail chase edge-up into the vertical, then made my call.

"On the next down loop, Tombstone, break out hard to the left. I'm coming in after you."

"I can get him." Tombstone's words were hard and clipped, and I could hear him straining against the G forces of the climb. "Just stay back, Skeeter. This next circuit-"

I cut him off. "I'm right in on him, Tombstone. Do it smart, buddy.

ACM is a team sport, remember?"

Two long seconds, then two sharp clicks on Tombstone's mike acknowledged my last.

Five seconds later, Tombstone reached the top of his circuit, seemed to hang in midair for a second, then started the downward loop. The MiG turned inside, and began descending even closer in. I was inbound at the same time, trying to gauge the altitude, watching for the moment that I knew Tombstone would feel as well, exactly the right second, when he- There. Tombstone broke hard, and the MiG tried to follow, exposing for a few seconds those precious, precious tailpipes. "Fox one. Tombstone, head for the deck!"

The Tomcat was already plummeting out of the sky, headed for the black ocean below us. He was at twelve thousand feet, picking up speed now, approaching the ocean far too fast.

The Sidewinder streaked toward the MiG, who at the last second seemed to realize that he was in deep, deep shit. The MiG jerked violently, shuddered as the pilot tried to bring it out of the descent. It seemed like he might pull it off for a moment, then his luck ran out.

The MiG exploded into an ugly yellow ball of orange and yellow, gas and black smoke boiling out from it. I whooped a war cry, and heard Sheila chime in. Maybe she wasn't such a bad guy, after all. But where was Tombstone? I scanned the ocean, looking for that white-gray fuselage against the water. Finally, I spotted him. "You OK, man?" I said over tactical.

"I'm OK," his voice came back, steadier now that he was no longer fighting the G forces. "Thanks, Skeeter."

"How ' we head back to the boat, sir," I asked, the adrenaline still throbbing through my system. "Me, I'm so hungry I could even eat a couple of sliders." The sliders, the greasy flat hamburgers that seemed to be the mainstay of the late-night galley watch section, gave me my year's worth of grease and fat in one sitting.

"I like the sound of that. Wait for me there ― I'll climb back up and you can join." True to his word, Tombstone's Tomcat picked up altitude quickly, and soon I was smack-dab off his wing where I was supposed to be.

"What was that all about, sir?" I asked finally. "Why did they wait until we got out this far and then jump us?"

"I don't know for sure, Skeeter, but I've got some ideas on it. We'll talk about it when we're back on deck, OK?" It was clear from his tone of voice that the admiral was in no mood to answer questions. And now that we were out of the frenzy of the battle, we were no longer equals. No more shoving him around, telling him to break off and let me make the shot like I'd done with the last MiG. Not that that should have mattered, anyway.

The MiG was mine to start with. Three kills ― now, that was something.

Hell, I might even have two sliders.

"Tomcat flight, this is Home Plate. Be advised that we are red deck at this time. Repeat, red deck. Tanker support is on its way, guys." The operations specialist continued, and reeled off a vector to our airborne gas station. I clicked back over to Tombstone's circuit, and asked, "What's going on?"

The answer was slow in coming, and when it finally got there, it wasn't much help. "Jefferson's got a few more important things on her mind just now. So button up, let's get some gas, and we'll wait her out."

Great. Those sliders were getting farther away with every minute that passed.

15

Tuesday, 22 December
1600 Local (+3 GMT)
USS Jefferson
Off the northern coast of Russia
Commander Lab Rat Busby

I knew that Batman would rather have been down on the flight deck, standing on one of the catwalks that run just below it and supervising the whole evolution personally. Nevertheless, he was here, on the bridge. A gaggle of surface warfare officers and boatswain's mates were where he wanted to be, with another cluster on the elevator that had been lowered to the level of the hangar bay.

I would have rather been down closer to the action as well. After all, it was my plan.

And my career on the line if it failed.

But if the admiral felt that command leadership required him to be here on the bridge, calmly seated in his chair and watching the evolution from the top of a ten-story building, then the least I could do was keep him company. He had as much riding on the whole thing as I did.

The submarine had come shallow two hours earlier and poked her UHF antenna up above the surface. We had coordinated the entire evolution in short bursts of conversation, and so far it had gone well. We had slowed to two knots, bare steerageway. The submarine approached us from astern, since she was a little bit more maneuverable than we were. From there, it had gone like any standard underway replenishment operation, with the submarine maneuvering into position, then making her dash forward to come alongside us.

We couldn't stop, not completely. To do so would leave both ships at the mercy of the oceans, and the force of the water would eventually push us around to stay beam-on to the swells. Not too terribly troublesome for a carrier, but a real disaster for a round-hulled boat like a submarine.

As it was, we had planned to have her come onto our leeward side to shelter her a bit from the seas and the wind.

A sharp crack split the air, one we could hear even from the bridge.

The first shot line, the small cord tethered to a weight that was fired over to the carrier from the submarine. Attached to it were a heavier line, then another one, each one more substantial than the last. These would form the basis of the rig we would use to transfer a spare air compressor to the submarine, along with assorted other provisions and equipment.

It had been quite a chore, convincing the submarine's skipper that this was what he wanted to do. He hadn't initially, citing first the possibility of detection and later the dangers inherent in underway replenishment between a carrier and a submarine. The admiral had had to threaten to send them back to the States before the sub's skipper had capitulated.

So far, everything had run like we'd practiced this every day of the year. The high line was rigged, and the first transfer of loaded pallets was beginning.

With Tombstone and Skeeter safely back within the Aegis cruiser's air-protection envelope, at least one potential problem had been eliminated. But one of our biggest problems still remained ― the Russian submarines lurking somewhere below the surface of the ocean. Our last detection had been twelve hours ago, and at that time she'd been ten miles to the north. Too close for comfort, but perhaps far enough away that our submarine could sneak out of area and move alongside us without being detected. Just before we'd commenced the entire, tedious approach maneuver, Batman had launched tankers and S-3 Viking ASW aircraft. I thought about having them take along box lunches, just in case something went wrong.