“Explain, please.”
“The lead pilot said the pilot of the A330 was gesturing and acting like he was going to follow their orders, but the aircraft never altered course. He said there were others in the cockpit when he first flew alongside, but they beat a hasty exit. Logically, if the pilot won’t follow the F-15s, even though he’s signaling that he intends to, that might indicate that he can’t follow.”
“In other words, intimidation. Did the rest of the aircraft look normal? Did the fighter report on that?
“Yes, sir. There are lights throughout the cabin, and faces visible in most of the cabin windows.”
“Where are they?”
“Southeast bound over the English Channel headed for France. The French are already scrambling fighters to intercept.”
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Cockpit, Pangia 10 (2245 Zulu)
“Jerry, I’ve got a GPS lock.”
“On your iPad?”
“Yes. My personal one.”
“I thought you needed an Internet signal?”
“I remembered an aviation program I downloaded that has a stored map… wait… okay, we’re about…”
“What? What are you showing?”
“Jeez! This can’t be right!”
Dan peered at the small screen again, blinking and refocusing to make sure he was interpreting the map correctly.
“Where the hell are we?” Jerry insisted.
“Jerry, hold on.”
“Where, dammit?”
“Not over the Atlantic, that’s for sure! According to this thing, we’re over France and aiming straight for Paris from maybe a hundred miles northwest.”
“No shit?” Jerry’s voice had almost a whining tone.
“Looks like we just passed over the channel south of London.”
“France? Seriously?”
“That’s what it says, man, but I’m a little short on believing computers about now.”
There was silence from the captain for a few seconds before Jerry sighed heavily and replied, almost under his breath. “I hope it is Paris ahead.”
Dan looked up, puzzled. “Why?”
“Paris would be a perfect place for an emergency landing… provided we could get control of this beast.”
Jerry turned to his left, looking outside where one of the F-15s had been up until minutes before.
“He’s gone.”
“I figured. The one on the right is gone, too. If we’re really over France now, they’ll send up a couple of Mirages.”
“Dan, they wouldn’t shoot us down, would they?”
“You’re the ex-military guy, Jerry. You tell me!”
“I just flew Tomcats off a carrier. I never got involved in diplomatic stuff, and that was decades ago anyway.”
“Okay, look, I do happen to know this. The French are diffident friends at times, but, no, they won’t shoot us.”
“I hope you’re right.”
“But we can’t fly this heading forever without running into some people who might.”
“Meaning?”
“I don’t know, man. I… haven’t projected this heading, but it probably takes us over the Middle East and some places we don’t want to be.”
Jerry was shaking his head in apparent disgust, and somehow Dan knew what was coming.
“I can’t believe you saw the compass showing the wrong heading and you didn’t… recognize it!”
Okay, so let’s play “shift the blame!” Dan thought. A good pilot with the right stuff and a modest bank account would never make that mistake, right Jere?
An appropriate retort had formed in his mind, but he forced it back. They were in the middle of a real emergency, and an internecine dual wasn’t going to help regain control.
“Okay, okay…” Jerry was continuing, “the main thing is, we’ve got to get communication back! The factory where they hatched this airplane isn’t that far. Toulouse. Maybe someone down there knows how to regain control.”
Dan’s head snapped up from the iPad as he released his seatbelt and motored the copilot’s seat back on the rails, then sideways. He swiveled around to face the captain, fixing Jerry with a steady stare and an index finger held high.
“Okay, listen. We’ve got to regain control of this ship, and we have to realize those F-15 pilots are going to report that we refused their orders, and the only reason we would do that is… is…”
“If we were being forced to, or we’re deviating on our own.”
“Chicago won’t believe we’ve gone nuts. I wouldn’t if I were them.”
“So… we’re hijacked in their view? What does that do to us?”
Dan sighed deeply, looking at the floor for a second before meeting Jerry’s rather feral gaze again. “I don’t know, but… they’ll keep everyone out of our way, I guess.” His eyes suddenly shot down to the transponder control head. “We are squawking radio failure, right? The 7600 code, not the 7500 hijack code?”
“Right.”
“Good.”
“But someone could be forcing us to do that. That’s what they’ll conclude. I remember reading about the Soviets shooting down a Korean Air 747 back in the eighties.”
Dan was waving away the thought. “That risk is a long ways off. Right now, Captain, we need to prioritize.”
Dan noticed that his use of Jerry’s title seemed to have an impact. Almost imperceptibly, the left-seater sat up a bit, looking around as if suddenly realizing he was the one in charge.
“I was going to say the same thing,” Jerry began, a slightly defensive tone overlaying the barely-contained panic both of them were feeling.
“I recommend,” Dan said, watching the captain for any sign he was pushing too far, “…that our first move should be to find a radio or a cell phone or something we can use to talk to the guys who built this jet and get some help on how to get its goddamned attention!”
Jerry Tollefson nodded. “Yeah, agreed.” He started to punch the PA button on his interphone panel, but Dan stopped him.
“Wait! Let’s stay coordinated. What do you want to ask them?”
“What you said. A usable cell phone or a radio of some sort.”
“That means we’ve got to fess up to what’s happening.”
Jerry nodded. “Yeah, I get that.”
Dan hesitated, wondering if Jerry could pull it together enough to not panic the passengers and gauging whether an offer from the copilot to do the deed would be resented.
Whatever, he concluded. “Want me to do it, Jerry?”
The captain started nodding in obvious relief. “Go ahead. No, wait! I’m the captain… I should.”
“Go for it, then. Hurry.”
Jerry punched the appropriate button and adjusted his headset microphone, activating the PA. He sat in silence for a few seconds, collecting his thoughts and trying to imagine the best way to break the news that everyone aboard was being flown by an electronic ghost.
“Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain… Captain Tollefson. I need you to listen very carefully. As some of you had already noticed, we have reversed course and are, at this moment, about a hundred miles northwest of Paris, France. We have experienced a very unusual failure in our autoflight system, and although we are in no present danger with plenty of fuel, many of you also noticed that we were intercepted by US Air Force jet fighters a while ago. The reason is that we have lost all of our radios… not just the satellite system for Internet and phone calls. And, we have been unable to get the system back, so we can’t talk to air traffic control, even though they know who and where we are. I now need to enlist your help. If there is anyone aboard who has a radio capable of transmitting and receiving aircraft frequencies, please ring your flight attendant call chime immediately. For those of you with cell phones that work in Europe, I ask you to take them out now and turn them on, and if you have a steady signal and can reach anyone below, we need to borrow that phone in the cockpit immediately. For anyone with a handheld satellite phone, we also need to know if you have a lock-on signal. Anyone who can assist, please immediately ring your call chime.”