DiGennaro and Parnam checked their authenticator codes, then switched to the discreet frequency.
“Pinwheel, Cobras up your freq,” DiGennaro radioed to the orbiting control aircraft.
“Cobras, listen up!” the new controller said in an emphatic, no-nonsense command voice. “Prepare to engage hostile aircraft. Prepare to attack Soviet aircraft. CINCTAC authorization. Acknowledge!”
DiGennaro was momentarily taken aback. His mind raced, trying to formulate a logical explanation for the startling order. Attack the Russians?
“Acknowledge, Cobras!” The AWACS controller was adamant.
“One, copy,” DiGennaro absently responded, distracted by the sudden turn of events.
“Dash Two with a copy,” Parnam said in a questioning voice.
The AWACS controller waited three seconds, then radioed further instructions to the F-15 pilots. “Cobras, come left zero-seven-zero, climb to angels four-seven. This is for real, boys. Play time is over.”
“Roger,” DiGennaro acknowledged for both pilots. He quickly glanced at Parnam’s F-15, then mentally prepared himself for aerial combat with the Russians.
“Report weapons hot,” the controller ordered. “You have bogies twelve o’clock for sixty nautical. You are cleared to engage the Soviet aircraft. Switch to Strike — my code eight.”
“Lead is hotel, switching Strike,” DiGennaro responded, checking his armament panel and radio switches.
“Two’s hot,” Parnam reported in a clipped manner, adrenaline surging through his body.
The AWACS combat controller keyed his microphone in answer. “Good hunting, Cobras.”
“You bet,” DiGennaro replied. “Where are the other flights?” DiGennaro could hear a lot of chatter on the radio.
The AWACS controller hesitated before responding. “Eleven Fifteens are closing from your ten o’clock, seventy out, and, we’ve got eight Tomcats and six Hornets about to intercept the tail end of the Soviet group, the same formation you are engaging.”
“We’ll be damned lucky if we don’t shoot each other down,” DiGennaro replied sarcastically, knowing the attack would be like a nighttime figure eight destruction derby.
DiGennaro again looked over at Parnam’s Eagle. “Cobra Two, let’s spread out. We’re going for the bombers first.”
“Roger, lead.”
The two F-15s slashed through the cold night sky, poised to assault the Soviet bomber group in less than three minutes. Both pilots remained silent, rehearsing the tactics they would use in the melee.
Suddenly two bright lights flashed off to the right, followed by a number of fiery red explosions.
“Fight’s on!” radioed one of the Navy Tomcat pilots.
The aircraft radios erupted like the fast-paced chatter of a dozen horse race announcers talking at the same time.
Total confusion reigned as the Arctic night turned a reddish yellow, reminding Parnam of a Fourth of July fireworks display. Only something was different. The rockets were not going upward, they were traveling horizontally.
DiGennaro and Parnam saw the lead group of Blackjack bombers at almost the same instant. Both pilots fired two AIM-7M Sparrow missiles and then pulled straight up, continuing over on their backs to prepare for another missile attack. Coming down the backside of the loop, DiGennaro and Parnam could see the aerial destruction mushrooming.
“Cobra One is going for the ‘Jack’ pulling up!” DiGennaro yelled to his wingman, hoping Parnam could hear him over the congested radios.
The two McDonnell Douglas F-15s bottomed out of the loop and almost collided with a MiG-29. DiGennaro yanked the fighter’s nose up, tracked the Blackjack for three seconds, then fired two AIM-9M Sidewinder missiles.
“Jesus, Joseph, and Mary,” DiGennaro said to himself, sucking oxygen in the high-G turn, “this is like kicking a gunnysack full of wildcats.”
DiGennaro rolled wings level, switched to guns, and placed the pipper on the Backfire bomber. A split second before he squeezed the firing button the Russian aircraft disintegrated in an arc of falling fire. The Navy F-18 that had bagged the Russian pulled straight into the vertical and disappeared.
The dully lighted sky was a chaotic jumble of aircraft traveling in every imaginable direction, some at supersonic speeds.
DiGennaro tried to block out the radio garble. He had already heard two calls of “Mayday,” and three “Eject.” DiGennaro eased the nose up, then rolled the Eagle to give himself a better view of the Soviet bombers. They were spread wide, some turning back toward their bases. The Soviet bomber group had been decimated.
DiGennaro found his next target, another Backfire, and wrapped the F–15 into a face-sagging 7½—G turn. Two MiG–29s and a Tomcat flashed in front of DiGennaro, causing him to yank the throttles to idle and deploy the speed brake for an instant to avoid a collision.
Streaks of red lightning crisscrossed the night sky in every direction as DiGennaro slammed the throttles forward again and retracted the speed brake. The powerful Pratt and Whitney F100 turbofans, blazing in afterburner, thrust the air-superiority fighter beyond five hundred miles an hour as DiGennaro set up a shot. He gently eased the pipper slightly ahead of the Backfire’s nose, then squeezed the trigger and rudder-walked the F-15’s cannon down the Russian’s fuselage.
A stream of molten lead erupted from the M61 cannon mounted in the starboard wing-root. DiGennaro held the trigger down for two seconds, spewing over one hundred rounds a second into the fast-approaching bomber.
“Come on,” DiGennaro said, triggering another two-second burst.
The Russian Backfire seemed to come apart in slow motion. First the left wing folded upward, then the nose dropped downward, followed by a roll to the left.
DiGennaro was watching the bomber’s descent when he felt the Eagle shudder. He checked his instruments and warning lights. Nothing appeared wrong.
Glancing over his left shoulder, DiGennaro saw the cause of the vibration — a MiG was spraying cannon fire into the aft fuselage of his F-15.
“Mother of …” DiGennaro groaned under the snap 8-G corkscrewing maneuver. He violently unloaded the F-15, going for speed and separation, then snatched the stick back and slammed it hard to the left.
“Pull … pull, burners lit, more G,” DiGennaro said to himself, straining to breathe. His chest felt crushed from the high-G loads. He looked back to the left, then slapped the stick hard to the right, snap-rolling the agile fighter into a tight turn to the right. “Where … is … that … sonofabitch?”
DiGennaro saw the MiG at the precise instant the Eagle’s canopy exploded.
The stunned pilot, his plane buffeting in the cold hurricaneforce wind, pulled the throttles to idle, trying to slow the F-15 in preparation for an ejection. The instrument panel was a dark blur of flickering warning lights.
DiGennaro looked to his right as the Fulcrum shot by, burners lit, going supersonic. He tried desperately to bring the Eagle’s nose around for a cannon shot at the MiG. But something was wrong, terribly wrong.
The F-15 wouldn’t respond. DiGennaro tried harder to grasp the control stick as the fighter slowly rolled to the left. His right hand felt completely numb and he couldn’t grip the stick. DiGennaro looked down, then recoiled in shock.
His right hand was almost severed, hanging limp from his wrist. DiGennaro moaned, then grasped the stick with his left hand. Feeling light-headed, he released the stick and raised his hand to his oxygen mask. It was secure, but he couldn’t breathe. He ran his hand down the connecting hose and discovered the problem. The hose had been ripped apart. He also felt the moistness of his chest wound.
DiGennaro, in desperation, shoved the nose over in a futile attempt to reach a lower altitude where he wouldn’t need the life-sustaining oxygen. He watched the altimeter rapidly unwind through thirty-two thousand feet, then drifted into unconsciousness.