Nothing.
Flight of F-5Es approaching from the east. FAB interceptors, Brazilian Air Force. Approximately fifty miles away, they were most likely patrolling the border, looking for smugglers. They weren’t quite on an intercept, but would draw within five miles in three minutes. Their APQ-153 radars could detect a standard fighter at about twenty miles; the Megafortress and her brood would be invisible to the radar until well within visual distance.
The 777, on the other hand, ought to be on their screens already.
“Rap, there’s a group of FAB F-5’s flying near their border to the east of us. They’re about fifty miles away. What do you think about hailing them to see if they’ve spotted Kevin?”
“Gal,” she snapped, still plenty pissed.
Breanna was right about the fuel. Maybe they could use the base of the F-5’s.
If Bastian approved. They’d have to get his okay. Breanna was right about that.
The Boeing flitted into the corner of the radar plot. He’d turned ten degrees north.
Where was he going?
BREANNA TOLD CHRIS TO GIVE THE FAB FLIGHT THE Boeing’s course even though they did not immediately acknowledge.
“Maybe they don’t speak English,” said Chris when they still didn’t respond.
“You speak Spanish?”
“Portuguese,” he said. “No. Hold on.” He leaned to one side, putting both hands over his helmet as if that might somehow make the transmission clearer. “Repeat?” he asked.
“What’s up?” Breanna asked.
“F-5’s are challenging us,” Chris told her. He turned toward the multi-use display at the far right of his dash. “Shit. They’re trying to tickle the ident gear.”
“Activate it. Standard mode,” said Breanna. The Megafortress’s friend-or-foe identifier could be manipulated from the dash. Standard mode presented Gal as a B-52G.
“Still not acknowledging. Ten miles off, nine, eight,” said Chris. “Should be within visual range, but I can’t pick up any lights.”
“Can they see us?” Breanna asked.
“I think it’d be kind of hard, even with this bright moon,” said Chris. “But they know we’re here. They’re correcting, maybe coming on our radio signal. I’m going to try and hail them again.”
Breanna started to answer, but Chris cut her off. “Shit—they’re charging their weapons. Shit—I think those idiots think we’re Hawkmother. They want to shoot us down.”
Aboard Hawkmother
Over Northwestern Brazil
7 March, 2220 local (1820 Dreamland)
“YOU WERE RIGHT, CAPTAIN,” THE F-5E PILOT TOLD Madrone. “We have the B-52 in range. He has two escorts.”
A B-52? The plane must actually be a Megafortress, with two Flighthawks.
So Jeff had finally shown his true colors.
“Shoot him down,” Madrone said. “Ignore the escorts—they are unarmed.”
“Captain?”
“Ignore them. They’ll flail at you but they won’t strike.”
“Understood.”
Aboard Galatica
7 March, 2223
ZEN SLAMMED THE FLIGHTHAWKS AROUND, CURSING himself for concentrating so hard on finding the Boeing that he had left their flanks uncovered. There was no reason for the damn Brazilians to attack—but here they were, pedals to the metal, slashing in.
He tucked Hawk Four into a dive as she came out of her turn, building back her momentum. C3 took Three in trail as he slammed forward, trying to get between the Tigers and Galatica. He had no shells in his cannon, but he activated the targeting radars anyway, figuring that even the limited avionics in the F-5Es would realize they were being cued for a shot.
Hopefully, that would make the pilots break off, or at least concentrate on the U/MFs.
Of course, it might only make them mad. The lead plane didn’t seem to be turning, even though Jeff was homing in on his nose.
THE NEED TO STAY CLOSE TO THE FLIGHTHAWKS CUT down on Breanna’s options, and her fuel situation would make a rip-roaring climb to sixty thousand feet a Pyrrhic victory. Besides, they’d never outrun the Brazilians’ missiles.
“Their weapons are charged!” warned Chris. “Still not acknowledging our hails.”
“Trying to wave them off,” said Zen.
“Hang with me, Hawk Leader,” she said, punching the plane into a sharp roll as the first two-ship of Tiger IIs came on.
“They’re going to send the second wave onto our tails as we turn,” warned Chris.
If Gal had been armed, that would have been fatal for the Tiger IIs—the Megafortress’s Stinger air mines would have turned them into flying spaghetti. But with no weapons and no diversionary flares, Breanna had only her wits and the EB-52’s ability to zig in the air going for her.
She flailed left as one of the Tiger IIs closed to range for a heat-seeker. The Megafortress wallowed a little, held back by the trim flaps that compensated for T/APY’s rotation momentum.
“Power down the T/APY,” she told Chris.
“Powering down.”
“Shit!”
Breanna looked up to see the nose of an F-5E looming in her windscreen. She plunged right, trying to swirl into a controlled roll, but briefly lost the plane as the wings inverted.
“Missiles in the air,” said Chris.
His voice was so calm she knew they were going to get hit.
IF EITHER OF THE HAWKS HAD BEEN CARRYING ammunition, Zen would have made short work of all four F-5’s. But the pilots seemed to know that he was unarmed, and paid no attention to him even as he dove for them. Hawk Three closed on one of the F-5Es as it spun toward the rear of the Megafortress. He saw its cannon begin to flash, and pushed Three close enough to break the cockpit glass in two, slamming his stick with a flare of body English to hold on to the Flighthawk. The Brazilian plane pirouetted away, breaking up: C3 said Hawk Three had not suffered any damage.
As he swung toward the F-5E’s wing mate, Zen was pitched sideways by gravity. Breanna swirled the EB-52 into a hard spin trying to escape a fresh attack.
“Tell them we’re not Madrone,” Zen said.
“I’m fucking trying,” said Chris.
Aboard Hawkmother
7 March, 2230
HAWK ONE’S SYNTHETIC RADAR FEED FILLED THE center of his mind. Madrone watched a God’s-eye view of the battle ten miles away from 65,000 feet.
He was a god, wasn’t he? That’s why they wanted to stop him.
Missiles flared toward the big black plane. It would be over soon.
Kevin felt a twinge in his stomach, then lost the vision, his body plummeting toward the mountains below. He’d slipped out of Theta.
Aboard Galatica
7 March, 2230
BREANNA PUSHED LEFT, THEN RIGHT, THEN LEFT, nearly warping the flaps and ailerons with her maneuvers. As she whipped back right she popped the leading-edge tabs, working them like air brakes to slam the big plane downward like a pregnant whale. Her wings flipped over, the stress on the spars so great the entire plane groaned. Rap cleaned the controls and grabbed the throttle, goosing it to the max a second before jerking the stick upward.
The acrobatics worked. The first missile sailed past, wide of its target. A second and third missile whipped past, the latter detonating on default about a hundred yards away.
A fourth was so thoroughly confused, it too exploded—unfortunately about twelve feet from the plane. Hot shards of metal ripped through Gal’s fuselage, shorting some of the electronics and damaging the control surfaces on the right wing.
But it was the cannonfire of the F-5E Rap had lost track of that almost did them in. The first she knew of the close-quarter attack was a low thump behind her. Then she felt like someone was hitting the seat with a baseball bat.