Выбрать главу

Thanks for your letter and keep them coming. Big morale boost. Fun and games today. All went well.

I can’t tell you how much I miss you and Robby. In my head, he’s up to my chest now. Though of course I know it’s only been three weeks and that makes him  — two months old!

Send me a new picture of him as soon as you can.

Send a picture of you, too.

Don’t let my mom drive you crazy. She does mean well.

I’m sorry this is so short. I confess to being tired. But happy with a job well done  — I have to get some sleep now, not overworking myself, I promise.

I’ll write tomorrow.

Love Jimmy.

kisses and hugs. Kiss Robby for me

He drew a succession of small hearts with arrows through them, then folded the paper. Impulsively, he wrote “I love you” on the back; before stuffing it into the envelope he wondered if it was too much: too sappy, or maybe too depressing. Too late, it was done. He sealed and addressed the envelope.

The second letter took much longer. It was similar to a letter he had written the day before, but it felt important to take a new shot every day.

Dear Kathy:

I know, hon, how terrible it will feel to read this. Seeing you in my mind at the kitchen table, unfolding the paper- I’m shaking. I think of poor Robby, crying, though he doesn’t know why.

I want you to remarry. Things are tough now. But I know you’ll pick up and go on. You’ve always been a survivor- you said that the first night we met.

Well, the second really.

See, even now you can smile.

I don’t want you to feel guilty about it. I trust you’ll do the best thing for our little sweet potato sonny boy.

I love you. I love you. I love you.

That’s why I want you to be happy.

The mission that I went on today, the reason you’re reading this, was an important one. The Iraqi radar site we bombed was in a location that made it difficult if not impossible for our special ops units to get deep into Iraq undetected. If it had been allowed to stay operating, pilots who were shot down would have no chance of being rescued. I’m sure that they gave you the old cliché about, “He died so others could live, etc., etc.” but in this case it was true.

I know, that’s really not much comfort.

The guys I flew with, no exceptions, are great pilots and good men. They did their best.

I’m sitting here thinking of the night in the hospital. God, I was scared. Rob, you looked like a Martian coming out of your mom, you really did. And when that nurse took you and everything started flying, it was crazy. But they pulled together and you pulled out and are fine. There were a few seconds there where I was holding your little hand, and I had mom’s little hand, and I didn’t know what was going to happen to you both. And I prayed in that instant, if you could both make it, I’d take anything else that came. God could have anything, me included, as long as he saved you both.

So I have no regrets.

I love you, Kath. I wish I could hold you and Robby one more time.

Think of me doing that, and I will

Jim

PART THREE

FIRE FOX HOG

CHAPTER 39

KING FAHD ROYAL AIRBASE
JANUARY 18 1991
0255

“Here’s my point,” said A-Bomb, trying to pinch his belly back far enough to pull the stiff charcoal flight suit over it, “What are the odds of getting scudded in a Hog? You think Saddam’s going to waste his chemicals on me?”

“Hell no,” said Doberman, already dressed in the protective undergear. “He’ll just poison your coffee.”

“That’s what I’m talking about,” said the pilot, struggling with the suit. He momentarily lost his balance and fell back against his locker. The rebound helped loosen the zipper. “Goddamn carpet makes it tough to take a leak.”

“I thought you never had to pee,” countered Doberman.

“Never say never.” A-Bomb paused in his struggle to get dressed, reaching over to his extra-large coffee sitting on the table. Steam poured from the Styrofoam cup, which had a large Dunkin’ Donuts logo on the side. “The secret to flying is to be prepared for any contingency. First flight instructor told me that.”

“Did he tell you to drink a gallon of coffee before you took off?”

“Shit, you wouldn’t believe what he drank before he took off.” A-Bomb took a slurp from the cup and went back to suiting up. “Guy was a barnstormer, that’s what I’m talking about. But man, he knew his shit.”

Dixon kept to himself as he put on his G suit across the room. With nearly everyone else in the squadron either sleeping or scrambling to get the Hogs ready for their mission, the three pilots had the shop completely to themselves.

The G suit wasn’t just an over-tailored air hose, designed to counter the effects of high-speed maneuvers. Its pockets were a pilot’s suitcase, stuffed with maps, survival gear, extra water and candy bars for energy. As he triple-checked his leg straps, Dixon ran his fingers over the breast pocket where he’d stuffed Lance Corporal Simmons’ letter. Sitting next to it was a set of rosary beads his mother had given him years before as good luck.

Not that he — or she, for that matter — was Catholic, but some things went beyond religious beliefs.

Dixon next pulled on his nylon mesh survival vest. This was more an excuse for pockets than a garment. It held his survival radio, compass, flares and a first aid kit, not to mention one of the sharpest knives he’d ever owned.

And ammo for his gun. Dixon had a standard-issue, old-style .38 caliber revolver that he had fired exactly once.

Over the vest came a parachute harness. This would be attached to the chute in the plane, where it was housed in the ejection seat.

“‘Gun, is that really Dunkin’ Donuts coffee?” asked Doberman.

A-Bomb just smiled.

“Let me smell it.”

“Hey, get your own,” said A-Bomb, grabbing the cup away. “Next you’re gonna be stealing my Tootsie Roll Pops.”

“You’re awful quiet this morning, Dixon,” said Doberman, looking over at him. “You awake?”

“Yeah,” he said, trying to force some of the adrenaline rampaging in his stomach up into his voice.

“What do you think, real Dunkin’ Donuts or what?”

“Probably real,” Dixon told Doberman. “He had a Big Mac last night.”

“Jesus, kid, thanks a lot,” A-Bomb barked in mock anger. “Why don’t you just tell the whole base? Dog man here would kill his own mother for Mickey D fries.”

“They weren’t real,” said Doberman.

“The hell it wasn’t,” said A-Bomb. He had finally managed to get his protective suit on and was pulling on his custom-designed G suit. It was the envy of the squadron, if not the entire Air Force. A-Bomb’s bulk made it possible to cram an incredible number of compartments into it, and every inch of real estate was packed with extra equipment — though a high proportion might be considered extra-military, if not downright bizarre. A lot of guys carried a Walkman with them on routine flights; A-Bomb had wired his suit for sound, with a CD changer somehow stored in one of the crannies. And he habitually carried more candy with him than a well-stocked vending machine.

“What’s today’s music?” Doberman asked.

“The Boss. *Darkness on the Edge of Town.’”

“Appropriate.”

“Plus Pearl Jam. Ever hear of them?”

“Rap?”

A-Bomb spit derisively. “Yeah, that’ll be the day. I also have Guns ‘n’ Roses. You really don’t want to fly without them.”