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The situation-map board was a magnet that drew everyone’s attention. A board poster had only to move toward it and the room went silent in anticipation. The latest plot showed the ships moving inside forty miles…

Jack leaned close to Waters. “We’re going to try corridor tactics, Colonel, go at them with a series of punches at the same spot and try to blast into their center — go after the landing ships. But we’re running out of Mavericks. And it seems they’ve armed their patrol boats with some new type of Strela” — Jack, who got his information from the crews, shared their mistaken impression that the Stingers the PSI were using against them were a much improved Strela. “We’re going to try using AIM-4 Sparrows on them. I don’t see a lot of difference between a fast-moving patrol boat and a slow-moving plane. Maybe a radar missile can keep their heads down.”

The board posters started to mark up launch times as eighteen Phantoms headed toward the ships. Shaw pulled a chair next to Waters and watched the board rapidly fill with takeoff times. “MAC has been ordered to start a full-blown airlift to get you out of here,” Shaw said. “There’ll be a steady stream of C-141s and C-5s into Dhahran starting in about seven hours, and six more C-130s should be here in about ten hours. MAC has gone to a full wartime footing and lifted all peacetime restrictions but one: they won’t risk C-141s or C-5s coming in here if the base is under attack.”

“I see. Well, we need to talk to Rup,” Waters said, picking up a phone that patched into the bunker. The colonel would have preferred to talk face-to-face with Stansell but didn’t want to leave the Command Post or pull Stansell away from the bunker. “How many can you have out of here by morning?” Waters asked him.

Stansell ran the numbers for him. “I’ve sent seven loads out with seven hundred and thirty people. A shuttle takes about two hours, and with sunrise at 5:30 we’ll get four more shuttles out of the two C-130s. That’s about eight hundred more. Should have about sixteen hundred out by morning. We could sure use another Hercules or a C-141, Colonel.”

“Sorry, Rup, this is all we’re getting for a while.” He hung up and turned to Shaw, who had been listening on an extension. He pointed to the situation board and the constantly advancing ships. “If we don’t get those mothers turned around, they’ll be on us in a few hours… ”

Time dragged as the birds checked in and landed. The landing squares on the launch-and-recovery board filled, until three remained open. Waters looked across the board, checking the names of the missing crews, each name a hot iron in his gut. “Battle damage?” he asked, keeping his voice a monotone.

Three birds had taken hits and looked bad. Two others had minor damage and would be turned in a few hours. Two pilots and one wizzo had been wounded and were on the way to the hospital. “John,” he said to Shaw, “I came in here with one hundred and eight crews and seventy-two F-4s. I’ve got seventy-six crews left and thirty-seven effective aircraft, maybe thirty-nine. I’m going to draw down to forty crews and get the rest of them out of here.”

Shaw couldn’t argue with it. The returning crews from the attack reported encountering two more frigate-type ships that put up a wall of fire and had to be avoided. Word went out for volunteers for a third attack that Waters wanted to throw against the ships, and sixty-eight crews packed into the COIC asking for the assignment. The room quieted when Waters walked in. He looked around, taking in each face. “You know what our situation is,” he said. “We’re fighting a rear-guard action until we can get the wing out. We’ve got to keep those ships away from the shore… ”

Before he could go on they heard a distant whistle followed by an explosion. “Artillery,” Waters called out, and sent the crews running for bunkers. He went for the Command Post as they heard another loud explosion out to sea, followed by a brief flash that settled into a glow.

The frigate Sabalan had made a run at flank-speed past Ras Assanya, throwing a 4.5-inch high-explosive shell at the base. But shallow water had forced the ship to keep well out to sea, and so the shell had been for ranging. Before the frigate’s fire-control system could adjust and lay the next round, the ship struck one of the mines that Chief Hartley had seeded around the approaches to the base. The following explosion ripped a forty-foot gash in the frigate’s skin, and the ship now lay dead in the water as fire spread through its mid-section.

A reprieve.

Shortly after two A.M. four Phantoms taxied onto the runway. The control tower had been abandoned and the controllers moved to a small bunker at the southern edge of the runway. One of them held up an Aldis Lamp, flashed the Phantoms a green light. The F-4s took off to the south, arcing out to sea as they sucked up their gear and flaps and armed their weapons. When they turned north they were less than two minutes flying time from the ships. After talking to the crews, Jack suggested they start a series of sorties directed at the edge of the fleet, throwing a stream of attacks against them, though not trying to penetrate, just whittling away at them with constant pressure. The four planes split and started to range around the ships. Within minutes the ships had started to move together, reducing their perimeter, a wagon train circled by Indians.

In the light of a rising quarter-moon one of the circling Phantom pilots caught an unusual movement at the nose of one of the ships and maneuvered until he could better make out what was happening, disregarding the streams of tracers that engulfed him. He dropped his bird onto the deck and retreated when he felt two thumps. Once he was clear of the ships he slowed down and climbed to six hundred feet, calling the command post. “Rats Ass Control, this is Wolf One-Four. Be advised the landing ships have their ramps down and landing craft are in the water. Also, Mayday, I’ve got two fire lights.” He then pointed the Phantom toward the shore and within a minute was flying parallel to the beach on the east side of the runway. His wizzo pulled the ejection handle between his legs and they ejected, landing in the water two hundred feet off-shore inside the shark net, and waded ashore.

Broz watched Wolf One-Four’s Phantom start to burn when he made the call to the command post. “Hey, Ambler,” he said to his wizzo, “see those puppies heading for shore?”

“Roger on the puppies, Broz,” the wizzo replied, “let’s nail ’em.”

“We’re in.” The pilot selected guns and dialed thirty-nine into the mil depression on his gun-sight for a ten-degree strafing run. “You don’t happen to remember the max speed for using the gun, do you?”

“No, but make this one quick,” Ambler told him.

Broz rolled in, jinking back and forth as his wizzo jabbed at the chaff-and-flare button while they bore down on the landing-craft heading ashore. A curtain of bullets and missiles rose in front of them as the pilot walked his pipper across three low silhouettes in the water. And then they were off, twisting and turning as they ran for safety. “By damn,” Ambler shouted, “I do believe we’re still alive.”

“You’re right, but we have got one sick bird.” Broz keyed the radio, sending out a Mayday. Four minutes later the Phantom’s hook snagged the cable stretched across the approach end of the runway, dragging the bird to a halt.

Blind luck, Broz sighed. Next time…?

* * *

The SAS team leader watched the F-4 strafe the boats before he motioned his twenty-eight blackened-faced men toward the beach. Silently, with an ease gained from repeated training sessions, they took out the advance party as it came ashore, making sure no warning messages were transmitted. The rising moon helped to light the approaching landing craft. While twenty-four of his men rushed to seed the beach with land mines, he called his four squad leaders together. “Look,” he told them in a clipped British accent, “no heroics. Do it as planned and withdraw immediately. The clock starts running when the first boat runs aground. Do it bloody right.”