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How many of them were there? He tore his eyes away from the actual island, and tried to take a quick count. Thirty, maybe forty.

They were turning now, flying back toward the island of Hawaii. Another bombing run? Or was it simply a mad dash back to the safety of their waterborne airfield, getting within range so that their ship’s automatic weapons defense systems could help protect them.

Or were they after Jefferson? The thought made his blood run cold. No matter that they would be able to land on Hawaii if they had to, the audacity of anyone trying to take a shot at his carrier blinded him with rage in a way that the hard evidence of an attack against the ground had not.

Hot Rock pulled up and away from Lobo, throttles jammed full forward and he arrowed up toward the heavens. The enemy aircraft were just nearing the edge of the island now, and he was losing their silhouettes against the night-darkened land. Not that he had to have a visual, no, not with the array of sensors feeding data to him via the HUD and not with a RIO in the backseat making sure he didn’t miss a damned trick.

Below him, Lobo’s aircraft was boring in toward the island. There’d been a time when Hot Rock would have been silently howling his anguish and fear, a time when he’d thought — no, he’d known — that he just didn’t have what it took. Sure, he could fly the aircraft, and do it better than most. But when he compared his own courage with that of the other pilots, he’d found himself sorely lacking.

That is, until last cruise. Now he knew he could be part of the team, that he wouldn’t let his wingman down. MiG pilots had had to die to confirm that.

“Got a lock,” Lobo announced, indicating that her AMRAAMM had acquired one of the enemy fighters and was ready to launch. “Waiting for it, waiting for it — ”

“Weapons tight!” a familiar voice commanded over tactical. “Goddammit, weapons tight!”

“What the hell —?” Hot Rock’s RIO asked. “Admiral Wayne lost it?”

“Sir, I got him.” Lobo’s voice was angry and anguished. “I let him go now, I’ll just have to deal with him later.”

“No. Weapons tight, damn you!” Hot Rock heard Batman say. “Think, you idiot. Think. He’s right over downtown!”

Cold horror swept through Hot Rock as he realized the choice Batman had been forced to make. The fighters, still wing-heavy with weapons, were in transit over a densely populated civilian area. Tourist, natives, locals, all crowded together in the lush, teaming city. If they took the shot, nailed the bastards — and they would, Hot Rock had no doubt about that — they’d spatter flaming aircraft, fuel, and weapons all over the innocent bystanders. Collateral damage, the military had tried calling it, trying to de-emphasize the fact that it meant civilian deaths.

But the alternative — how much worse would it be for the countless military personnel and their families currently on the base? Was it fair that Batman was choosing to allow the fighters to proceed inbound on military targets in order to spare the civilians outside the gates?

But the military men and women knew the risks, didn’t they? And while an attack on Pearl Harbor might not have been the first one they’d be worried about, it was all part of what you signed on for.

And their families, too?

No, not the families. They were no different than the men and women outside the gates.

Yet given the two alternatives, Batman had chosen to engage the fighters on their way out, after they’d dropped the munitions.

They’d be harder targets, too, once they’d stripped off the extra weight of armament and some fuel. Lighter, more maneuverable — were they carrying air-to-air weapons? Or had they been wing-heavy with ground ordnance, certain that they wouldn’t encounter any air threats this close to American soil? If so, they’d pay for that overconfidence now, and pay heavily.

“Hot Rock, on me,” Lobo commanded. “We’re going to take the west side of the island, wait for them to start their egress. Let them get over water first.”

“Roger,” he answered, already pulling around smoothly to maintain his position. On his HUD, he could see the other fighting pairs breaking off to cover the rest of the sectors, with the majority of the fighters positioning themselves between the island and the carrier.

“Should be ninety seconds or less,” his RIO announced. If they’re headed to the base, was the unspoken qualification.

“I want weapons assigned to every little bastard,” Hot Rock growled. “This isn’t going to happen again — not on my watch.”

But yet, despite his bravado, it did. He watched, his stomach turning violently over and over as though he were caught in an uncontrolled spin, staring at the HUD then focusing past it on the actual land. The HUD and the radar showed the inching progress of the enemy shapes across the land, the moment when they passed over American coast. The blips suddenly veered off their track and increased speed. His nausea increased to the point that he thought he would puke. To stay up here, wings fully loaded, and watch it happen was the worst experience he’d ever had.

Then past the arcane symbols on the HUD, down on the actual land depicted in dotted green lines, the sudden blossoming of light. Almost pretty, in a way, unless you knew what it really was. Ground attack weapons, meeting dirt, gouting huge fireballs into the air, consuming flesh and metal and wood and brick. What didn’t burn was blasted apart into fragments and flung into the air.

Smoke billowed up in ugly black smears of dark against the darker land.

THREE

Hawaii
0700 local (GMT –10)

Rear Admiral “Tombstone” Magruder slung one arm around his wife’s shoulder and stared down at her fondly. “This enough like a honeymoon for you?”

Commander Joyce “Tomboy” Flynn Magruder stared up at him, a rapt expression on her face. “It ought to be — we’ve been waiting long enough for it.”

“Two years.” He pulled her close and turned to face her. “But I’m planning on making up for lost time on this trip.”

She nuzzled up against him. “Two years. I can’t believe it.” She pulled away slightly and smacked him lightly on the chest. “What would you say if one of your staff officers told you he made his wife wait that long for a honeymoon?”

He sighed and pulled her back in close to him. “I’d say he was a damned fool, if his bride was anything like you. But then, most women aren’t.”

“Aren’t what?”

“Like you.”

“Hmmm.”

Tombstone knew immediately he’d struck the wrong note, and tried to make up for it. “And there were a few other things that interfered as well, if you’ll recall. Blame the Chinese and the Russians, not me. You were there — you know what we were facing.”

He felt her head nod against his chest, her breath ruffling the hair on his chest. “Some things I won’t ever forgive them for.”

“And it’s not like we had much of a choice, did we?” he continued. “I mean, you understand what being an officer is all about. That’s one way you’re different.”

“From Pamela, you mean?”

“Among other people, yes. Pamela would be a very good example of what I’m talking about.”

“Pamela.” This time she did pull back, and Tombstone could see the storm clouds gathering on her face. “Let me get this straight. We’re on our honeymoon, said honeymoon having been delayed for two years — six months longer than a normal command tour — we’re in Hawaii, at perhaps the world’s most romantic tropical resort. You would agree with those facts?”