They had to retrace part of their path, coming in on the route they had taken. Though risky by its nature — at least in theory someone who was trailing them would have the route covered — it had seemed the only way when they were laying out the plan back in D.C. Tyler had gone over it again before they kicked off; it was the only way to get across the mountains in that area while avoiding settlements and completely impassable terrain.
He second-guessed himself now, arguing that he should go a different way. Sweat poured from his neck as he walked, and by the time he finally reached the turnoff to the path beyond the pass, Tyler felt a wave of relief.
It was short-lived. They were just starting down the hill when the com system crackled with a warning: three vehicles approaching.
Silently the soldiers moved off the road.
“We can take them,” said Warrant Officer Chris Litchfield, who was fifty yards ahead on the other side of the road.
“No,” said Tyler.
Litchfield didn’t reply. The first of the trucks came into view. It was a large canvas-backed six-wheeler, probably older than its driver. The other two were close behind; none of the three trucks had their lights on.
Tyler watched through his night optical device, or NOD, as the trucks stopped. Men began piling out of the backs of all three. They were chattering. A dozen or so went to the side of the road, climbed down a short way.
It was a piss stop, nothing more. Just a stop so a few soldiers could relieve themselves midway through a long journey.
Of all the luck.
Tyler saw what would happen a few seconds before it did.
“Get the lead truck,” he managed to say before the first Korean shouted that there was someone on the hill.
Chapter 28
The RWR screamed at Howe as he threw the Berkut into a hard turn, trying to beam the interceptor’s radar. It was too late; the Korean had launched a pair of radar-guided missiles at him.
The weapons were R-77 air-to-air missiles, known to NATO as AA-12 Adders and sometimes called AMRAAMSKIs. The Russian-made air-to-air missiles were roughly comparable to American AIM-120 AMRAAMs.
Howe hit his electronic countermeasures, or ECMs, jinking back hard and then pushing the plane through a mountain pass that loomed to his left. It was a good move: Not only did he lose the missiles but the MiG that had launched them continued on its course blithely, flying away from him. But Howe was in no position to gloat: He had two more MiGs coming hot and heavy in his face.
Had he been sitting in an F/A-22 or an F-15 Eagle, both aircraft would be dead meat: He’d punch-button the bastards to death with a pair of AMRAAMs without losing a breath. But he wasn’t. He had only the cannon and its 150 shells. And he had only one engine to work with.
Three minutes to the coast. One hundred and eighty seconds.
Howe leaned the plane on its right wing, ducking through a second break in the mountains. He had someone on his tail; he sensed it before the RWR began shouting that a fresh radar was trying to lock him down.
The S-37/B had a small stock of chaff, metal shards that confused radars and made it hard to target an aircraft. As the MiG fired its weapons, Howe unleashed his tinsel and tossed the Berkut wildly left and right in a series of zigs and zags that were nearly as disorienting to him as to the weapons tracking him. Struggling to keep his head clear, he got a fresh warning — another MiG, this one coming from the south — and jagged back to the north.
One of the missiles exploded a half-mile away, its proximity fuse confused all to hell by his zigzags. It was one of the most beautiful sights Howe had ever seen.
“Missiles in the air!” warned Sky.
Jeez, no shit, thought Howe.
Howe yanked the stick and tried to head east, stomping on the throttle as he temporarily forgot he was on one engine. The Berkut didn’t complain, but she also didn’t move any faster.
Meanwhile an SA-2 battery began tracking him near the coast. The high-altitude, long-range missiles would be more an annoyance than anything else.
The Russian-made S-300s were another matter. Only a few months old, the missiles could be considered knockoffs of the American Patriot. A battery of four sat between him and the sea.
And their radar had just turned on, trying to track him.
One hundred and twenty seconds.
A mountain peak looked ahead. Howe pulled hard on his stick, just barely clearing the rocks. As he rose, his radar caught two contacts flying about three miles ahead. His first thought was that they were the F/A-22s, come to rescue him, but within a few seconds their speed gave them away as MiGs.
The enemy planes were not quite on a parallel course, seemingly unaware of where he was — or at least their radars hadn’t locked onto his plane. He could swing behind them as they passed, then shoot them down.
One at least.
But that wasn’t his job. His mission was to get his passenger out in one piece. Stopping to take potshots was more than foolish: It was a dereliction of duty.
Howe let them go, tucking south. He could see the glow of a city to his right, knew from the shadows that the water was just the head.
A launch warning: S-300s in the air.
He gave up the last of his chaff, hit the ECMs, and waited.
One of the missiles fell off but another dogged him. Howe started a turn south, desperate to do something.
The sky flashed above him. The missile had missed by a good distance.
A Korean MiG came up off the deck, then another: The two planes had been waiting for him out over the sea.
He cleared the coast at just over 5,000 feet.
Another pair of MiGs were running down at him from the north. They may have been the planes from before, since they didn’t seem to be carrying radar missiles. In any event they were trying to close, either for a shot with a short-range heat seeker or their cannon.
There was no question of running away. Howe jerked hard to the left, then back. The red oval of a fighter jet appeared ahead.
He pushed down on the trigger. The Russian cannon spit its big slugs out. A dozen, two dozen, hit the plane. The rear of the MiG — it turned out to be an older MiG-21, scrambled without missiles — caught fire and then unfolded, a yawning mouth of death. Howe pushed right, trying to get his gun on the flight leader, but as he did, tracer rounds flashed across his windscreen: The MiG was on his tail.
Howe tucked downward momentarily, half-rolling his wings and then cutting back, making the slinky Berkut into a skyborne corkscrew. The maneuvers were far tighter than anything the MiG — a decent knife fighter itself — could manage, and within a few seconds the plane appeared above and then beyond his canopy. The MiG driver pushed right, but Howe wasn’t about to let him turn inside him; he stayed glued to his tail.
If the North Korean had just put the pedal to the metal, he probably could have escaped. But he didn’t realize Howe was working with only one leg, and as he cut back to the left in a kind of modified scissors escape, the American pilot laid on the trigger. His first shots flew wide right, but he stayed with it, nudging his nose and the stream of bullets into the starboard wing of the enemy fighter. Something flashed, and then his target disappeared.
“You going to leave some for the rest of us?” asked one of the F/A-22 pilots, finally reaching the area.
“Only if I have to,” he answered.
“Ivan, be advised Koreans are turning south. You’re clear. You’re clear.”
“Ivan acknowledges,” said Howe. “Bring that tanker up. I’m getting mighty thirsty.”
Chapter 29