After a few moments, a loud cheer broke out across the deck, audible even to Coyote high up the superstructure. He joined in. The sheer excitement and relief was almost overwhelming.
Finally a yellow shirt flight deck technician stepped out front of CAG’s aircraft and gave the hand signals to decrease power to the engines. The reasoning for standing in front of the aircraft was that the enlisted people were too smart to step in front of an aircraft if they weren’t absolutely convinced that the aircraft was securely trapped on deck. The yellow shirt was putting his life on the line if something went wrong as was the pilot who was cutting power.
The CAG let the Tomcat roll back slightly, neatly retracted the tailhook, and increased power slightly to taxi forward and follow the directions of the yellow shirt to a spot near the island. All around the perimeter of the marked off landing strip, technicians were clustered, cheering, shouting out greetings and congratulations. The CAG returned the waves as he taxied, and he pulled off his oxygen mask so that they could all see the broad grin on his face.
The Tomcat reached its appointed spot. Even before the CAG could pull back the canopy to egress, the aircraft was surrounded by hordes of cheering sailors wearing every possible color of jersey. No matter that there were other aircraft stacked up in a holding pattern, waiting their looks at the deck. For just this moment, the only thing that mattered was that they’d made it through the first trap, and an excellent trap it had been indeed.
Coyote had been leaning over the railing, his elbows resting on it, and now he straightened up to turn to his chief of staff. “One less thing to worry about.”
Ganner nodded. “For all our modern technology, sailors are still a damned suspicious bunch — superstitious, even.”
Just then, the young enlisted radioman walked out onto Vulture’s Row. He held a clipboard in his hand. “Good morning, Admiral. P4 message for you.”
The “personal for”, or P4, was a designator for communications between the Navy’s highest ranking officers. The messages required special handling, on the theory that that that would prevent the contents from being broadcast over the ship. It was not necessarily that the message itself contained classified material — it was just that the information was often sensitive, and best not shared with the entire fleet.
“Must be congratulations on our first trap,” Coyote remarked, as he took the clipboard. “But how did they get off so fast? AIRPAC must have had the message all written and waiting in the queue so—” He stopped abruptly as he began scanning the message.
It was short and to the point. The United States was directed to break off sea trials and immediately make best speed to Taiwan. She would be resupplied enroute, and the remainder of her air wing, qualified or not, was ordered to immediately embark.
Coyote passed the message to Ganner. “We ready for this?”
His chief of staff nodded. “Yes, Admiral. Not as ready as I’d like to be, but I moved up some of the provisioning schedules, and we should be able to make it.”
“We can do carrier quals on the way over there,” Coyote said.
Of course they could. It was done all the time. And there was no real reason not to sign off on this warship right now. No, they hadn’t completed every test. And in actual fact, it would take months before they really knew how she would hold up. It was one thing for everything to be working when they went to sea. It was another entirely to stand up to the endless day in and day out use that went with a deployment. Still, if he had to bet, Coyote would come down on the side of the United States.
“Get everybody in the conference room,” Coyote said. “Maybe we’re worried about Taiwan for no reason. There might be another explanation for this, a good one.”
“Maybe.” The chief of staff’s voice was doubtful.
As his chief of staff left, Coyote turned back to the flight deck. Pristine, unscarred — well, that would change. And sooner rather than later, it looked like.
“Admiral! Someone here to see you.” Ganner stepped aside to reveal Lab Rat standing at the hatch to Vulture’s Row.
“Hey! What the hell you doing out here? You’re supposed to be in Norfolk. You didn’t…?” Coyote glanced down at the Tomcat now being positioned just forward of the island.
“Yes, sir, I did indeed.” Lab Rat’s voice was calm. “I called in a few favors — nobody ever cares who’s in the back seat, do they?”
“I wouldn’t put it that way, buddy.” Coyote slung a companionable arm over Lab Rat’s shoulder. “But there’s times when it’s the most important thing in the world, and there’s times when it’s not.”
“This was a not, then,” Lab Rat said.
“So to what do we owe the honor?”
“I’ll get right to the point, Admiral. Right about now, you should be getting a—”
“A P4?” Coyote interrupted. “Yeah — just saw it. That your doing?”
“Some of it,” Lab Rat admitted. “But the thing is, you’re not completely manned up yet. And I’ve got my entire CVIC sitting ashore twiddling their thumbs. I was wondering—”
“Why, hell yes!” Coyote said. Lab Rat had forgotten that it was sometimes difficult to finish a sentence around the exuberant Texan. “You want to bring that whole little pack of yours on out here, you go right ahead. Save me having to break in a bunch of newcomers, right? And give your people something to do.”
A frown crossed the chief of staff’s face. “Admiral, with all due respect — Commander Busby’s people just came off cruise. I suspect they may need some down time, a chance to recharge. Isn’t that so, Commander?” He turned to the intelligence officer.
“I asked if they wanted to go — every single one of them volunteered, sir,” Lab Rat said. He appreciated Ganner’s concern, although he was slightly miffed at the implication that he himself hadn’t thought of that. “They want to be plankowners, sir. It’s not something they’ll get the chance too often to do in their careers.”
“Well, pack ’em up and bring ’em on out,” Coyote said. “COS here will take care of the details. Right, COS?” There was a slight challenge in Coyote’s eyes, and Lab Rat had his first hint that there might be some issues to work out between the new battle group commander and his chief of staff. “I mean, we got this sweetheart through precomm and sea trials, we ought to be able to handle wrangling Lab Rat’s boys and girls on out here, right?”
“Of course, Admiral,” the COS said smoothly. “I’ll make that happen.” He nodded to Lab Rat and then said, “With your permission, Admiral, I’ll get right on it.”
“Carry on, carry on,” the admiral said, waving him off. He watched the man go back into the interior of the ship before turning to Lab Rat. “Surface guy,” he said, his voice confiding. “You know them.” In Coyote’s view that said it all. The man was not an aviator — therefore, by definition, he sweated the small stuff, didn’t know the sheer joy of flying, and would tend to get his panties in a wad over things that might make a tremendous amount of difference to some paper pusher in DC but that Coyote didn’t give a rat’s ass about.
“Seems like a good fellow, though,” Lab Rat added tactfully. He could see the problem looming, and he had no intention of being part of a tiff between Admiral Grant and his chief of staff. “Got a sterling reputation.”
“Sure. You can’t believe everything you hear, though,” Coyote said, and for a moment his eyes looked bleak.