My new book SPECTRE RISING made the front page of the Sunday edition of my hometown newspaper. Check it out!
Special thanks to Mr. Jim Butler of the Eunice News for running the article. Eunice News Official Website
Monday, November 4, 2013
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Spectre: Origins is now available!
Click Here For More Information!
SPECTRE: ORIGINS is now available for $0.99 in the Kindle store! This is a great companion to SPECTRE RISING if you've already read it, or a stand alone series of short stories.
Spectre: Origins is a prequel series for the new thriller SPECTRE RISING by C.W. LEMOINE. Each of six short stories gives a look into the lives of the main characters before the events of SPECTRE RISING.
- Sneak through the snow covered hills of Bosnia with Marine Sniper Marcus Anderson as he completes his final mission.
- Join TSgt Joe Carpenter as his convoy is ambushed on a highway in Afghanistan. Under heavy fire, he calls in airstrikes and rescue helicopters to save his disabled convoy.
- See promising young wingman 1LT Cal "Spectre" Martin in his first flight in the F-16 as a 39th Fighter Squadron "Gator" as he learns the art of dogfighting.
- Watch Cuban Intelligence agent Victor Alvarez infiltrate a major Federal Agency.
- Ride shotgun with Trooper Sean Baxter on the highways of East Texas as he uses his keen attention to detail to save a young child.
- Follow Capt Chloe "Eve" Moss as she struggles through her flight lead upgrade sortie in the F-16 during a 2 vs 1 engagement.
Plus an exclusive preview of the first three chapters of SPECTRE RISING (Available now!).
Friday, September 27, 2013
First Official Review of Spectre Rising is out!
The results are in, Spectre Rising has received its first official five star rating by Readers' Favorite. Check out the full review HERE
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Monday, September 23, 2013
Sunday, August 25, 2013
SPECTRE RISING - Chapter Two
R-2901
Four
Months Later
“Rattler 21, Thunder 11 checking in as fragged, ready for
words,” the metallic voice said over the Harris PRC-117F Manpack Radio. The dismounted radio, called a manpack,
served as a multi-band, multimode radio that covered the gamut of waveforms. Frequencies covered included VHF, UHF, and
UHF SATCOM radio. The unit was also
compatible with the Single Channel Ground and Airborne Radio System, an Army
system. It served as a lifeline for any
JTAC to support assets in the air.
“Roger
Thunder 11, Rattler has you loud and clear, situation is as follows: we have
several wounded friendly forces holed up in the urban village. They are unable to move at this time and are
surrounded by multiple hostiles in pickup trucks,” he replied looking up at the
jets circling over their position. From
his observation position, he could barely hear the two F-16s in a right hand
orbit high above, but with the overcast sky, he could clearly see two dark
specks speeding across the clouds like ants on a blanket.
The
two men were set up on the roof of a metal building overlooking a series of tin
buildings just a quarter mile away. The
terrain was relatively flat, and from atop the two-story building, they had a
relatively unobstructed view of the village.
Even for a village, it wasn’t much.
A dirt road running north from their observation position was split by
fifteen tin buildings before intersecting another dirt road that led out to a
narrow tree line.
“Do
you recognize the voice?” he asked, turning to the man standing next to
him. The man was about six feet tall
with a narrow frame and muscular build.
He wore khaki 5.11 Tactical pants with a black Survival Krav Maga
t-shirt. Oakley Half Jacket mirror
tinted sunglasses masked his deep set, blue-gray eyes, and a desert camouflage
boonie hat covered his light brown hair.
His square jaw clenched as he pondered the question.
“C’mon
Joe, you know I don’t fly with those assholes anymore,” the man replied with a
grin.
Tech Sergeant Joe
Carpenter laughed and turned back to his Toughbook Laptop and PRC-117
radio. He was wearing the standard issue
Air Force ABU digital camouflage uniform complete with flak vest and ballistic
helmet. A former Army Ranger, he had
been a JTAC for three years after going Green to Blue in search of a more aviation-oriented
career. Unable to fly because of a color
vision test, his search landed him right back with the Army, as an embedded
JTAC.
Perhaps
one of the most physically demanding jobs in the Air Force, JTACs were
frontline battlefield airmen. They were
embedded with ground forces to advise the ground commander on Air Force air
power capabilities, and in the heat of battle, to control aircraft during close
air support scenarios. Of course, it was
just Carpenter’s luck that he’d get out of the Army just to go right back in a
new uniform, but he didn’t mind, he was at the tip of the spear and he loved
it.
To
Carpenter, though, the best thing about working for Mother Blue was the
toys. He knew the Army had the same
technology and capabilities, but in the Air Force, he always seemed to have the
latest and greatest at his fingertips.
At the moment, the latest and greatest happened to be his Toughbook Laptop
equipped with the newest Precision Strike Suite for Special Operation Forces
software – PSS-SOF. With PSS-SOF, he
could pass airborne operators high fidelity GPS coordinates of his own position
or the enemy from the comfort of whatever foxhole he happened to be operating
out of.
“Damn
Spectre, still no love for the Gators?”
Carpenter asked sarcastically.
The Gators were the 39th Fighter Squadron stationed out of
Homestead Air Reserve Base in Southern Florida.
One of only two fighter squadrons remaining under the Air Force Reserve
Command, the Gators had been Spectre’s squadron until the aftermath of his
final flight that night in the skies over Iraq.
“None. Don’t you think you should pass them a nine
line and get this party started?” Spectre
was never known for his tact. It was one
of many reasons he and Carpenter got along so well.
Carpenter
nodded and keyed the microphone as he read from his Toughbook, “Thunder 41,
nine line is as follows: items one through three are NA, line four: one hundred
twenty feet, line five: group of trucks, line six: One Six Romeo Mike Lima Nine
Three Eight Four Four Eight Zero Six, line 7 NA, Line 8: five hundred meters
southeast, line 9 as required, remarks:
final attack heading 270 plus or minus 10 degrees. Call in with final attack heading and expect
clearance on final. Read back lines 4,
6, and restrictions.”
The
fighter repeated the 9-line perfectly as the F-16s maneuvered into position
overhead. By using the standard 9-Line
format, Carpenter had given the fighters all the information they needed to
take out the target, including elevation, coordinates formatted in Military
Grid Reference System, distance from friendly positions and restrictions on
attack direction.
“It’s
Magic,” Spectre muttered.
Carpenter
turned and gave Spectre a puzzled look.
“Magic? No man, it’s science. We give them the coordinates of the bad guys
with this fancy laptop, they plug it into their system, and the bad guys go boom.”
“No
shit smartass, I mean the guy flying.
It’s Magic Manny,” Spectre fired back.
Lt Col Steve “Magic” Manny was the Director of Operations for the
Gators.
Carpenter
picked up his binoculars with one hand and the handset of his radio in the
other as he watched the F-16 roll in on its target.
“Thunder
11, in heading 275,” announced the tinny voice of Magic over the PRC-117.
“You’re
cleared hot,” Carpenter replied, clearing the pilot to employ ordnance while
ensuring that the fighter’s nose was pointing at the right target.
Spectre
watched as the F-16 rolled in and hurled itself toward the ground. Seconds later, two objects fell as the jet
turned back skyward. He winced in
anticipation of the impact only to be greeted by two barely audible thuds.
“Good
hits! Good bombs!” Carpenter exclaimed on the radio.
“Inerts
are so anticlimactic,” Spectre sighed.
“What
do you expect? They drop two five
hundred pound pieces of concrete that are shaped to look like real bombs. It’s way better than when they roll in and
just ‘simulate’ without anything coming off the jet. Now that is boring.” Carpenter always had a way of putting a
positive spin on things.
Just
as Spectre was about to explain the merits of training without any ordnance on
the aircraft, his cell phone rang. It
was his boss.
“I
have to go Joe, thanks for letting me spot for you,” he said as he hung up the
phone.
Carpenter
gave him a nod and turned back to the target.
He had invited Spectre to make the drive from Homestead to Avon Park to
catch up and observe the Forward Air Controller side of Close Air Support. They had been friends since college, but
aside from an e-mail or phone call here and there, they rarely got to see each
other nearly ten years later.
Spectre
picked up his backpack and climbed down the connex container to begin the mile
hike back to his truck. His boss had
been brief but the sense of urgency was apparent in his voice. It was time to quit playing and get back to
the office – something new had come up.
With the boss as vague as
he was, Spectre was forced to wonder what could be going on until completing
the three-hour drive back to Homestead to find out. Was the store finally going to be bought
out by a bigger chain? Did some new,
rare find show up that needed an immediate appraisal? These were the new questions that weighed
heavily on his mind since his transition to civilian life.
It
wasn’t a very easy transition to make.
When Spectre was told by his superiors upon returning from Iraq that
he’d never fly an Air Force Reserve aircraft again, he refused the non-flying
staff job they tried to force on him.
For him, flying the F-16 hadn’t been about the adrenaline rush or the
need for speed. It was about serving a
higher purpose. In the current world
climate, that meant providing close air support for boots on the ground. When the powers that be decided he was no
longer fit to do that, he decided his services could be better used elsewhere.
Unfortunately
for Spectre, the economy he escaped to wasn’t conducive to his unique skill
sets. And after several rejected
applications to a myriad of three letter agencies and private contractors, he
found himself quickly burning through his savings.
That
was until he met Marcus Anderson. The
gruff Mr. Anderson had been a classmate of Spectre’s in their Survival Krav
Maga class. And although Marcus was
nearly twenty years his senior, the two became fierce sparring partners. The former Marine versus the former fighter
pilot, each did a good job of keeping the other on his toes. A black belt himself, Marcus had helped
Spectre earn his black belt in Krav Maga.
Through
their training and constant ribbing, the two became good friends. And when Marcus learned that Spectre was down
on his luck, he didn’t hesitate to bring him in on the family business.
Anderson
Police Supply in Florida City, FL was established in 1981 by the late John
Anderson. A former Miami-Dade County
detective, John Anderson had retired to the more rural Florida City to escape
the explosive expansion of Miami and Ft Lauderdale, while still being close
enough to visit. What originally started
as a hobby of collecting rare and unique guns soon became a fairly lucrative
business for John. His buddies from the
force appreciated the discounts on firearms and supplies, while the locals enjoyed
having a full service firearms dealer with a huge inventory right down the
street.
After
returning home a decorated Marine Recon Sniper in 1999, Marcus decided to leave
the Corps and join his father in running the store. By the time his father passed away in 2001,
Marcus had watched the store grow from the back corner of a bait and tackle
shop to a 20,000 square foot facility equipped with an indoor shooting range
and a fully configurable electronic shoot house.
When
Marcus learned that Spectre had a business degree and extensive web design
experience from college, he didn’t feel so bad about giving Spectre a
chance. And after only a year, Anderson
Police Supply had become one of the foremost online dealers for firearms and
tactical gear.
Spectre
arrived at the store well after business hours, but the parking lot was still
full. Something must really be going
on, he thought. He had spent the three-hour
drive going over the possibilities in his head, but none of them seemed likely
enough to cause Marcus to be so tight lipped.
He really had no idea what to expect.
He
swiped his access card and opened the heavy metal door as the lock clicked open. The access control system had been installed
shortly after the latest renovations, allowing better control and tracking of
those employees who were able to access the building after hours. He then proceeded inside the large showroom,
complete with multiple glass showcases. Handguns
of all calibers and types were proudly on display inside each case, organized
by manufacturer. Rifles of varying
calibers and sizes were mounted behind each of showcases on the wall. It was a gun lover’s heaven.
Specter
noticed the staff crowded around the range rental counter of the store. He could barely make out Marcus’ gray hair
standing behind it, apparently talking to the staff. He threw his backpack on one of the showcases
without slowing down and continued to where the others were gathered around.
“No,
it does not mean you’ll lose your job,” Marcus continued, apparently already
midway through his speech. He paused and
nodded as he noticed Spectre join the crowd.
“Then
what does it mean?” one of the junior
salesmen asked.
“Would
you let me finish? Do you think I won’t
tell you?” Marcus barked. The junior salesman retreated, his face
red. Spectre chuckled. That was Marcus. Patience and diplomacy would never be his
legacy.
“What’s
going on?” Spectre whispered to the girl
next to him. She was barely five feet
tall with long brown hair and bright blue eyes.
To Spectre, and most of the males in the store, she was probably the
most attractive girl there. Were it not
for his pending engagement, he might have made a move on her. Perhaps even more successfully than the
hundreds of guys that were being shot down on a daily basis.
“The
boss just announced that the store is downsizing,” she replied.
“Downsizing
how?”
She
replied with a finger to her mouth and pointed to Marcus who was still staring
down the junior salesman. Even at 5’9”
and just over 170 lbs, Marcus was an expert in creating the fear of God in just
about anyone.
“As
I was saying,” he continued, “we’re not downsizing staff for now. We’re going to move a lot of the floor
salesmen... err... salespeople to the corporate accounts, internet sales, and
range. We’re also going to be cutting
back on the store hours. I don’t want to
have to let people go, but you’re all going to have to work with me. This is the best I can do with the shit
sandwich we’ve been given.”
Marcus
made a point to make eye contact with every man and woman standing around that
counter as if he were readying the troops for a final charge into battle. To Marcus, that wasn’t that far from the
truth. For his business, this was do or
die time. They had to either pull themselves
out of the red and adapt to a changing economy, or face extinction.
“That’s
all I can say for now, folks. Just know
that we’re going to work together and pull this through. Cal, can I talk to you in private?”
Spectre
nodded and walked behind the counter. He
followed Marcus into his office and closed the door behind them. Marcus collapsed into his big leather chair
and rubbed his temples.
“Nice
speech, boss. The troops are ready for
war,” Spectre poked with a grin.
“War
is a lot easier than this shit. Way
easier. You have a target. You have an objective. You kill him.
This? This is a cluster fuck.”
“What’s
going on? When I left yesterday, things
weren’t so doom and gloom. Sure we had a
bad quarter, but nothing we haven’t seen before,” Spectre replied. He was referring to the quarterly financial
reports their accounting staff had put together the day prior. As expected, gun sales were down across the
board. The only thing doing well was the
internet sales department.
“We
were doing fine. Until this morning, and
I got this,” he said as he handed Spectre a letter.
Spectre
took the letter and started reading. He
couldn’t believe it. It was non-renewal
notice from the local Customs and Border Protection branch. One of their largest government contracts for
supplying firearms, ammunition, and tactical gear was being terminated.
“I’ve
got a buddy at CBP; I’ll ask what’s going on.”
“Don’t
bother, I already talked to the Air and Marine Branch Chief in Homestead,”
Marcus said, eyes closed as if what he was saying was also physically painful,
“the President has cut funding to all Customs Air and Marine branches
nationwide. He thinks this one might be
closing altogether.”
“It
can’t be! This is one of the busiest
branches in the country!” Spectre was
beside himself. The Homestead Air and
Marine Interdiction branch of CBP was the front line in the country’s battle
against smugglers, drug runners, illegals, and terrorists. With a fleet of Blackhawk helicopters, ASTARS
helicopters, Dash-8 surveillance aircraft, and trained interdiction agents, it
was second only to the Tucson branch in activity.
“I know. Fucking Democrats.” Marcus sighed.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Prequel Series - Victor Alvarez: "New Friends"
Miami, FL
2007
“You’re
much better than he is,” she said, rubbing his chest.
Victor Alvarez sat up and swung his feet over the side of
the bed. He looked over at her. She was laying there naked and sweating from
their second lovemaking session of the evening.
Her long, dark brown hair just barely covered her exposed breasts.
“We’ve got time for one more,” she said as she sat up and
kissed his neck.
Victor rubbed is hands through his jet black hair. These
women always seemed to get so clingy.
“What time will he be home?”
“It’s Thursday night.
Jay goes to the track on Thursday nights,” she said as she caressed his
back.
“There will be more time for us later,” he said as he
turned to kiss her. She grabbed his face
and kissed him sensually.
“When are we going to run away together like you
promised? I’ve already started talking
to divorce lawyers,” she said. Her brown
eyes were deep with concern. He had been
working her for the past two months.
“Soon, my love,” he said, kissing her forehead, “but for
now, I should go so as not to make a scene when he returns.”
Victor stood, grabbing his pants and shirt from the foot
of the bed. The woman crawled out of bed
behind him. He took a moment to take in
her toned body and caramel skin. He
loved this job so much.
“Give me a moment and I’ll walk you out,” she said as she
grabbed wrapped her robe around her.
Victor smiled as he continued putting on his
clothes. As she walked into the
bathroom, he slowly eased toward the dresser.
Next to it sat a dirty clothes bin.
When she was safely out of view, he carefully searched the drawers. Nothing. He looked into the dirty clothes and found a
pair of men’s slacks. He picked them up
and dug through the pockets, pulling out two pieces of paper.
Victor glanced back to the bathroom as he opened the two
crumpled pieces of paper. The first was
an ATM receipt. Nothing unusual - just a
one hundred dollar transfer. The second
was a betting slip for the Flagler Greyhound Track in Miami.
Victor smiled as he stuffed the papers back in the pants
and then put them back into the clothes bin.
He had what he needed.
*****
“Rubio says this guy is ten grand in the hole,” the man
said as he sat next to Alvarez. It was
Jose Herrera, his most trusted asset in Miami.
Jose was a native of Miami. His
parents had set their roots in Hialeah in the late sixties after fleeing Cuba,
and although he didn’t officially work for the Cuban DGI, he was very much on
their payrolls.
The Dirección General de Inteligencia was the main state
intelligence agency of Cuba. Since
opening for business in late 1961, the DGI had been involved in intelligence
and espionage operations across the globe.
They had been involved in aiding leftist revolutionary movements in
Africa, the Middle East, and mostly Latin America. In the United States, the DGI had been
heavily involved with international drug trade, assisting homegrown terrorist
cells, and intelligence gathering operations for third party countries.
“Total?” Alvarez asked as he watched the greyhounds speed
by on the track. He was wearing a white
button down shirt and straw fedora with khaki slacks.
“This month,” Jose replied.
Alvarez put down his binoculars and looked at Jose. He had been using them to search for his
target in the opposite stands. He knew
the man would be there. It was Thursday
night, after all.
“Rubio must appreciate that,” Victor replied. Juan Rubio was one of the most vicious
bookies in South Florida. He was known
for extracting money from his clients at any cost and with his ties to the Latin
Kings gang, he was immune from retribution or prosecution. No one dared to cross him.
“He already owes Rubio five grand,” Jose said, lowering
his voice, “he’s giving this guy just enough rope to hang himself.”
Alvarez chuckled as he went back to his binoculars. He scanned the crowd in the stands across
from them looking for his target.
“So he has the same plan we do,” Victor said as he
watched the man wearing shorts and a blue polo shirt. It was Special Agent Jay Leon, the new agent
assigned to the Foreign Intelligence/Espionage desk of the Miami Field Office
of the FBI.
Jose shrugged, “Do you want me to talk to him, boss?”
“See how much money it will take to buy him out,” Alvarez
responded. “I’m going to have a chat
with our new friend.”
*****
Victor Alvarez waited patiently in the dark corner of the
VIP room of the club. Strip clubs were
ideal for meetings like this, especially the VIP room. The loud music and dark rooms made it harder
for people to eavesdrop. People rarely
paid attention to anything but the girls, and no one gave a second glance to
suspicious activity.
But Victor’s target had no idea they were meeting. His presence in the corner of the little
strip club was the culmination of months of work spent selecting the target,
working his way in, and finding his leverage.
A mid-level agent in the DGI, Victor Alvarez had spent
his entire career working South Florida.
He had served his country through building a network of intelligence
assets throughout the local community.
If a foreign country had an operation in Miami, he was their man. He was proud of the work he had done and was
known as one of the agency’s most effective operatives, especially when it came
to developing assets in government organizations. His superiors were always impressed at how he
managed to turn even the most difficult targets into productive intelligence
assets.
Special Agent Jay Leon was a project Victor’s own
government had given him. They had
control of most of the local police departments, but their presence with the
local feds was minimalist at best. They
only had low level analysts who could feed them information if they happened
upon it. They needed someone with a
hand in it. The man would be their eyes
and ears, and if necessary, divert attention from whatever operations they were
working.
So when Victor learned that the Foreign Intelligence desk
of the FBI was going to a new transfer originally from the area, he knew he
would have his opportunity. Leon’s
father still lived in Cuba. He could be
used as leverage if necessary, Victor had thought.
It hadn’t been necessary.
Victor worked it the best way he knew how – in the bedroom. He watched Leon and his wife over the course of
several weeks. They had no kids. She was a bored housewife following her husband
from assignment to assignment. He could
work with that.
And he did. Over and over again. He promised her adventure and
excitement. He promised her a new life
and a romantic getaway. It was all a
lie, of course, but it had gotten him close enough to get the information he
needed. He didn’t feel bad. She could do better than Leon anyway. Leon apparently had a gambling problem, and
judging by his frequent trips to the establishment Victor was sitting in, a fidelity
problem as well.
Victor sat back as he watched a stripper guide Leon up
the stairs and onto one of the couches.
She kissed his cheek and walked away, promising that his girl would be
up shortly.
Leon looked around for a second, and then began to unzip
his pants.
“Keep your pants on,” Alvarez said from the corner.
Startled, Leon jumped up, holding his pants.
“Who the fuck are you?” he demanded. “Where’s Candy?”
“Prostitution is illegal in Florida, Mr. Leon,” Alvarez
said smoothly.
“I said who the fuck are you?” Leon demanded, zipping his
pants. “How do you know my name?”
“I know everything about you, Special Agent Leon. Please sit down. Let’s chat.”
Alvarez sat patiently as Leon approached. “That’s right, asshole. Special Agent. Now tell me what the fuck you’re doing here
before I arrest you.”
“If you want to continue being ‘Special Agent’ Leon, I
suggest you sit down, please,” Alvarez said.
“Does the Bureau know about your gambling problem?”
Leon stopped in his tracks as Alvarez tossed a set of
large photo prints on the table in front of him. “Look familiar?” Alvarez asked.
Leon picked up the pictures and studied them. They were pictures of him sitting in the
stands at the track.
“So what?” Leon asked indignantly. “Are you trying to blackmail me? Going to the track isn’t illegal.”
Alvarez said nothing as he tossed two more pictures on
the table. In them, Leon was giving cash
to Rubio.
“So tell on me, I don’t fucking care. They’ll slap me on the wrist and make me get
counseling. Big deal.” Leon was playing it off pretty well. Alvarez had to give it to him.
“I understand,” Alvarez said as he tossed two more
pictures on the table. This time, the
pictures were black and white and of him with a naked woman on top. “That doesn’t look like your wife.”
“I’m sure that bitch is cheating on me anyway, and you
can’t prove this is illegal,” Leon replied, tossing the pictures back at
Alvarez. “Now if you’ll get the fuck out
of here, I’ve got an appointment.”
Alvarez smiled as Leon mentioned his cheating wife. If he
only knew.
“About that gambling thing,” Alvarez said, pulling a
piece of paper out of his pocket. “Ten
thousand dollars in the hole this month.
Ten thousand last month. Five
thousand dollar debt to Juan Rubio at 60% interest. Twenty one hundred dollars left to your
name. I don’t think Mr. Rubio or his
associates will accept Gamblers Anonymous as payment, Agent Leon.”
Leon stumbled back and sat back down on the couch. “Who are you? What do you want?”
“My name is Victor,” Alvarez responded. “And I would like to make all your problems
go away.”
“I’m listening,” Leon said, cautiously leaning forward.
Alvarez tossed a black duffle bag to Leon’s feet. He waited as Leon unzipped the top and pulled
out a stack of neatly packaged $100 bills.
“There’s one hundred thousand dollars in cash in that
bag, Agent Leon,” Alvarez said as he sat back and crossed his legs. “You can use that to pay off your debt to Mr.
Rubio. After that, you are done with
that track. You will then receive ten
thousand dollars per month. All cash, of
course.”
“In exchange for what? Why would you do this?” Leon
asked, thumbing through the bills.
“Friendship.”
“Friendship?”
Alvarez stood and extended his hand to Leon. “I would like your friendship, Special
Agent. That is all.”
Leon stared at the outstretched hand. He considered it for a moment, and then
grabbed Victor’s hand, shaking it as he stood.
Alvarez seemed to tower over the short little man.
“To friendship,” Leon said with a crooked smile.
“You’ve made the right choice,” Alvarez responded,
patting Leon on the shoulder with his free hand.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Prequel Series - Spectre: "First Impressions"
Warning Area 465
Over the Atlantic Ocean
“Gator
11 is ready.”
“Gator
12 is ready.”
“Gators,
check forty five right.”
First Lieutenant Cal Martin’s heart was racing as he
maneuvered his F-16 into position behind his flight lead as they made a forty five degree check turn. It was his first flight with his new
squadron, and he wanted to make a good impression. A Reservist, Martin was the first Gator hired
off the street to make it through the training pipeline in over ten years. Aside from the active duty pilots assigned to
the 39th Fighter Squadron, Martin was the most inexperienced pilot
in a squadron full of thousand plus hour combat veterans.
“One point nine,” Martin called over the radio as he took
a radar lock. They were doing an
offensive 9K as part of his first Mission Qualification Training upgrade
flight. His flight lead would give him
the initial advantage from a perch setup and his job was to maneuver from a
mile and a half behind his flight lead into a position to get a guns kill.
His flight lead reversed the direction of the turn to set
up the appropriate aspect angle. With
perch setups, Martin had been taught that the initial parameters were the most
important. It was essential for both
aircraft to be at the same airspeed, altitude, and aspect angle to ensure the
right sight picture for follow on maneuvering.
It was part of a building block approach to move from canned, controlled
setups to more dynamic high aspect dogfighting where the student could then
apply the sight pictures he had seen before.
“One point eight,” Martin said as he watched the range
count down in his Head Up Display.
Martin was nervous. He was flying
with the squadron’s weapons officer, Major “Magic” Manny. A good gradesheet from Magic would set the
tone for the rest of his Mission Qualification Upgrade Training. A busted flight or “Below Average” would set
him up for more scrutiny from other Instructor Pilots. It was time to show off what he learned in
the F-16 Basic Course at Luke AFB.
“One point seven.”
He wiggled his fingers and toes, trying to relax and concentrate on
keeping his flight lead’s F-16 under the boresight cross in the HUD. At a range of a mile and a half, he was
starting the fight outside the other aircraft’s turn circle. He would have to roll out, recognize the turn
circle entry cues he had been taught, and then successfully enter the imaginary
turn circle the other aircraft traced across the sky. Enter too early, and his attacker would
create too many angles for him to solve and eventually neutralize him. Enter too late, and he would go from
offensive to neutral or even defensive as the attacker reversed.
“One point six.”
“Fight’s on!” Martin said as the range reached 1.5nm in
the HUD.
Martin rolled wings level and selected full afterburner
as he watched Magic’s F-16 enter its defensive break turn and pop out
flares. Martin drove straight ahead as
he looked for his turn circle entry cues –
at first Magic’s jet would look like it was just rotating in space, and
then it would suddenly go from rotational to translational motion as it zipped
past. Just before that, his instructors
had told him, he needed to be rolling and pulling while starting his Anti-G
Straining Maneuver.
As Martin neared that point, he cross checked his
airspeed. He was going way faster than
he wanted to. He had flown heavier F-16
Block 42s with smaller engines in school, but this Block 30 F-16 was a
hotrod. Its thrust to weight ratio
easily exceeded 1:1 in its current configuration, and the big General Electric
engine had no trouble accelerating the slick F-16 through 500 knots – way too
fast.
Martin tried cycling the throttle from full afterburner
back to military power, but it was too late.
He had to start his turn in that instant or he’d fly right out the back
of Magic’s turn circle and he’d be defensive.
Martin took a deep breath as he prepared for the onset of G-forces and
squeezed his abs and legs.
As Martin started his pull, the jet stabilized in the
turn at a sustained 9G pull. He was now
feeling the force of nine times his bodyweight pressing against him, pulling
the blood from his brain into his feet as his G-suit inflated against his legs
and torso. Martin strained against the
G-forces as he took short breaths every three seconds. If he exhaled completely, he wouldn’t be able
to get air back in his lungs, and would eventually starve of oxygen. He strained as hard as he could as the
G-forces caused his vision to tunnel slightly.
Magic reoriented from slightly nose low to a more oblique
turn as Martin continued his turn.
Martin tried to maintain his position of advantage as Magic spiraled
toward the crystal blue Atlantic Ocean below them in an attempt to shrink his
turn circle and keep Martin from being able to employ weapons.
As Magic neared their training floor of ten thousand
feet, Martin maintained an altitude advantage, waiting for Magic’s turn circle
to open back up as he could no longer go downhill. Once Martin had his attack cues, he traded
his altitude advantage and saddled in behind Magic. As they transitioned to the floor, the G-forces
subsided and Martin focused on his gun employment.
Martin pulled his nose around to put the computed gun
pipper on Magic. Seeing that Martin was
in a gun employment zone, Manny immediately rolled into a tuck under jink,
forcing Martin to reposition before he could saddle in and shoot. As Magic rolled out, Martin squeezed the
trigger and watched as the imaginary bullets went through the fuselage of
Magic’s aircraft.
“Gator 12, kill Viper left hand turn,” Martin said over
their fight frequency.
“Copy kill, Gators knock it off, Gator 11 knock it off,”
Magic replied, signaling that the set was over.
“Gator 12, knock it off,” Martin responded as he
repositioned his aircraft in a loose formation behind Magic.
As they climbed back up to their starting altitude for
the next set, Magic did a fuel check over the radio and set them up for another
fight.
“Not too bad,” Magic said, offering a real time
assessment of the previous set, “just a little slow to get to a guns track, and
a slightly late turn circle entry.”
“2,” Martin replied sharply. It was not a discussion.
“You’re going to want to get the quickest kill possible,
in case the bandit’s buddies are in the area,” Magic continued.
“2!”
“Let’s try it again, any questions?” Magic asked as he
gave Martin the visual signal to move out to a tactical formation.
“Negative,” Martin replied. He was determined to make it right. He had to show Magic that he could get the
quick kill. He wouldn’t screw it up this
time.
Once they reached the appropriate altitude, they each
called ready as before and Magic called the check turn. Magic reversed his turn as Martin started
calling down ranges.
“Fight’s on!” Martin called as he reached a mile and a
half. He lit the afterburner and rolled
out as he drove toward Magic’s turn circle, but this time he started a shallow
climb and checked away to slow his acceleration.
The sight picture was just different. As Magic continued his break turn, Martin
rolled into a descending turn and sliced back toward him. The visual cues were different than what he
was expecting, but almost immediately he saw what he thought to be attack cues
– Magic’s airplane was nearly as long as it was wide.
Martin continued to pull Magic’s F-16 toward his
HUD. It was going to be a high aspect
gun shot. He had one chance to get it
right before Magic could reverse, but with the higher aspect angle, Martin had
more of Magic’s aircraft available to shoot.
Martin pulled with everything he had and tried to
stabilize Magic in the HUD. He squeezed
the trigger, raking the pipper through Magic’s jet as it screamed by him. Once he let off the trigger, he tried to pull
up to maintain his advantage, but Magic had already capitalized and the two
were now side by side jockeying for position.
“Gator knock it off, Gator 11 knock it off,” Magic said
over the radio.
“Gator 12 knock it off,” Martin echoed.
“We can talk about that one on the ground, let’s move on
to the next set,” Magic said after confirming their fuel state. Martin’s face felt flush. He wasn’t sure if he had gotten enough of a
stable track to count as a kill, so he hadn’t called it. Either way, he was afraid Magic now thought
he was terrible for not maintaining the offensive. So much for making a good first impression.
******
“Questions on the brief?” Magic asked as he stood in
front of the white board in the small briefing room.
“None,” Martin responded.
“Questions on the motherhood?” Magic asked, referring to
the administrative portion of the mission getting to and from the airspace to
fight.
“No, sir,” Martin replied. He was still thinking about the first two
sets. He had done fine in the
subsequent short range 6K and 3K sets, but he feared that the first two would
be enough to give him his first bust as a Gator. Not a good way to shine as a new wingman.
Magic laughed. “Don’t
call me ‘Sir.’ This is a Reserve
squadron, we’re all bros here.”
“Yes, sir,” Martin replied. “Dammit, sorry!”
“Ok, let’s take a look at the tapes,” Magic said as he
pulled up the computer debriefing program.
The “tapes” had long since been replaced by Digital Video Recorders, but
years later, people were still calling them tapes.
As they watched the first set, Magic paused the DVR as he
watched Martin accelerate toward the turn circle. “You see your airspeed? You’re way too fast here. That’s why it takes so long. You’re not getting a good rate and your turn
circle is huge.”
Martin nodded and took notes as Magic hit PLAY again.
“And that’s why you’re sustaining 9Gs for so long. That had to hurt,” Magic said, wincing.
Martin looked at his forearms. The tiny ruptured capillaries, or G-easles as
they were known, that peppered his arm were evidence of that.
They continued watching the fight as Magic gave Martin
pointers on how to fix it properly.
“Any questions on that set?” Magic asked after confirming
that Martin’s guns track was valid and sufficient to call a kill.
“None.”
“Ok, let’s watch the second one,” Magic said with a
frown. He advanced the DVR to the start
of the second set.
“Your parameters look good at the start, but why the climb?” Magic said as he paused the DVR. The HUD showed Martin ten degrees nose high.
“I was afraid to get fast again, I wasn’t really
thinking,” Martin replied flatly. He
didn’t want to make excuses. Good
wingman didn’t make excuses or try to explain what they were thinking.
“Copy. Try
modulating the throttle or speedbrakes next time,” Magic said as he hit PLAY
again.
Magic let the DVR play through as Martin went from nose
high to slicing back down toward Magic’s jet.
As Martin pulled Magic’s jet into the HUD, Magic stopped the DVR.
“Straight to the HUD, huh? Did you have your attack cues met?” Magic
asked.
Martin shook his head without saying anything. It looked right in the air, but he couldn’t
say that. The book answer was that he
did not have the appropriate cues to execute an attack. The cues were specific and definable. Gut feelings were not.
“This will lead to the ninety-degree off overshoot and
subsequent reversal,” Magic said as he hit PLAY again.
They watched in silence as Martin stabilized Magic’s
aircraft in the HUD and the display showed the simulated bullets hitting
Magic’s aircraft.
“Wait, you tried to shoot here?” Magic said, pausing the
footage and rewinding.
Martin said nothing as Magic hit the rewind button. He stopped as the green dots simulating
bullets started to hit his fuselage, then started advancing the footage frame
by frame to count bullets.
As he reached twenty five, he stopped the DVR, staring at
it. Martin had more than exceeded the
required number of frames to call a kill.
“You gunned me off the perch in a 9K set,” Magic said,
stunned. “Wow, kid.”
Martin looked up from his notes. He had been wincing as Magic slowly went
through the gunshot. He knew that this
was a pretty big make or break moment for him.
“I’ve only known a few people that could pull that off,”
Magic said, “and none of them were brand new lieutenants.”
Martin tried not to smile as he realized the compliment. It was a pretty big deal to hear that from
the squadron weapons officer.
“Were you trying to do that?” Magic asked. “Or was it luck?”
“I guess it was just luck,” Martin said humbly, “I just
did what looked right.”
Magic considered the statement for a moment, creating an
uncomfortable silence as he seemed to look Martin up and down.
“Well, luck or not, it was a good shot. But I wouldn’t make a habit of it. We teach lag BFM for a reason. We want results you can replicate over and
over, not lucky shots. This is a bit too aggressive. If you miss a shot like
this in combat, you’re dead.”
Martin nodded.
After asking if Martin had any further questions, he
advanced to the next set. They
debriefed the final four shorter range sets the same as the first two, and then
Magic sat down across the debriefing table from Martin after recapping their
objectives.
“Overall, I’d say you did a good job today. Definitely above average,” Magic said leaning
back in the chair.
Martin exhaled as the words “Above Average” hung in the
air. He had been worried during the
entire debrief that he might have to refly the flight. He definitely wasn’t expecting such praise.
“You’ve got good hands and a good attitude. I saw your pilot training gradebooks. You’ve done well. You might be a little too aggressive, and
that could get you in trouble, but I can work with aggressive. It’s way easier to throttle someone back than
try to make them more aggressive.”
Martin nodded sheepishly.
He didn’t know how to respond to such high praise.
“Has the boss talked to you yet?”
“About what?” Martin asked, tilting his head to the side.
Magic looked at his watch and said, “About why it’s six o
clock and there’s no fucking popcorn yet.”
Martin’s faced reddened.
As the most junior guy in the squadron, his additional duty was to keep
the squadron bar cleaned and stocked with beer and snacks, and ensure fresh
jalapeno popcorn was ready every evening.
“No excuse,” Martin said stoically.
“I’m just giving
you shit!” Magic busted out laughing. “I
meant about the F-22 thing.”
Martin gave him a confused look.
“I guess not.
Well, don’t be surprised if the boss talks to you about it. I know you just got here and everything, but
the Reserves are standing up their F-22 associate program and looking for a
young wingman with good hands to be the first young Reserve guy in the
community. Think you might be
interested?”
“Hell yes!” Martin replied. His stoic demeanor was replaced by a childish
enthusiasm. He couldn’t contain himself.
“Keep doing what you’re doing, and you might just be that
guy,” Magic replied.
Martin was grinning ear to ear. This squadron was awesome. He couldn’t wait for his next flight.
“Now go make some popcorn!” Magic barked.
Friday, August 2, 2013
About SPECTRE RISING
ABOUT SPECTRE RISING
After being told he would never fly an F-16 again following a combat incident in Iraq, Captain Cal "Spectre" Martin made an abrupt transition to civilian life early in his career.
Years later, Spectre had finally adjusted to civilian life. He had found happiness despite losing his dream job. He had a stable civilian job and his fiancee, an F-16 pilot in the unit that had grounded him, was his best friend and lover. Spectre was finally happy again.
A sudden breakup thrusts Spectre's newfound happy life into chaos. His world is turned upside down. Two weeks later, his fiancee goes missing in an F-16 during a night training exercise off the Florida Coast.
Spectre Rising is the story of Spectre's search for answers. As Spectre digs deeper into the incident, he uncovers a deadly international conspiracy that leads him to a daring final mission.
Check out these sample chapters!
Monday, July 29, 2013
SPECTRE RISING - Chapter One
CHAPTER ONE
Homestead, FL
Victor
Alvarez stood alone in the grass parking lot.
It was still dark out, but the horizon glowed orange in the distance as
the sun began its upward trek. He hated
morning, especially South Florida mornings.
The air was almost completely saturated with moisture, and although it
was officially fall, it was still eighty degrees.
The parking
lot was relatively isolated. It had
taken him twenty minutes of driving down a dirt road to reach it. It had previously served as a parking lot for
field workers to drop off their vehicles, but with the recent recession and the
foreclosure of the landowner, it was now just a vacant lot. He was in an area known as the Redlands of
Homestead. Only minutes from the
Everglades, it was mostly open farmland with a few houses scattered here and
there. It was the perfect place to
escape the congestion of Miami, or the eyes of an unwelcome third party
observer.
Alvarez
leaned against his car as a lone pair of headlights approached from the
distance. It was almost six a.m.. He pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket
and wiped the sweat away from his brow.
Despite having spent his whole life in this climate, he had still never
fully embraced it.
The car
pulled to a stop next to his. The silver Honda Civic was much louder than he
expected. It must have had a broken
muffler or something, he reasoned. Not
quite what he was expecting from a man like the one he was about to meet, but
in this business, he had learned not to assume anything, especially not when
dealing with Americans.
Alvarez ran
his fingers through his jet black hair and casually approached the car. He was holding a small envelope in his left
hand and resting his hand on his holstered gun with his right. The man in the battered Civic was right on
time and at the right place, but that didn’t make him trust the stranger just
yet.
“Are you Victor?”
the man in the car asked. It was too
dark in the car to make out his face.
“Yes, do
you have the documents?” he replied with a thick Spanish accent.
“Here’s
everything you asked for, flying schedules, personnel files..everything,” the
man responded nervously, handing Alvarez a thick manila envelope through the
car’s window.
Alvarez
leaned on the roof of the car. He was a
tall man, and the low ride height of the car brought the window only up to
waist level. He took the envelope from
the man and put it on the roof of the car.
He handed the man the small envelope that he had been holding.
“These are
your instructions. The first of the
funds has already been transferred. The
rest will be delivered upon completion of this operation.“
“Oh…ok..
uh.. But no one knows my name right?
There’s nothing pointing to me when this is over, right? “ The man was
fidgeting in his seat. He was obviously
a first timer.
“Your
government will never find out,” Alvarez reassured him. “Don’t worry.”
Alvarez had
seen it many times before. He had been
an agent with the Cuban Directrio General de Inteligencia for ten years. He had spent most of them in South
Miami. It was easy to blend in
there. The majority of the population
was Cuban or Hispanic, and almost everyone spoke Spanish fluently. No one even raised an eyebrow. He had used Americans many times before. Occasionally it was for intel, but often it
was for assistance. They always tried to
justify what they were doing, whether it was for their families or some
political reason. Alvarez didn’t care,
but he didn’t respect them. He needed
them for his operations, but they were traitors to their country, plain and
simple.
Alvarez
watched as the man opened the envelope and read the instructions. He looked for any signs of hesitation or
weakness. He had been assured that his
new contact would follow through, but he was more than ready to terminate their
arrangement with a 9MM round to the man’s temple at the first sign of weakness.
“Do you
have any questions?” he asked with a toothy grin.
“No, I can
do it. “
“Good. Go. You’ll
be just fine.” Alvarez grabbed the files
off the roof of the car and pulled out his cell phone as he walked back toward
his car. The little Civic sounded like a
bumblebee as it sped off into the now rising sun. He dialed the number. It was time to check in.
“How did it
go?” the voice asked.
“It is
done. We have everything we need to
proceed.” Alvarez knew his cell phone
was probably being monitored. The
Dirección General de Inteligencia was the main state intelligence agency of
Cuba. Since opening for business in late
1961, the DGI had been involved in intelligence and espionage operations across
the globe. They had been involved in
aiding leftist revolutionary movements in Africa, the Middle East, and mostly
Latin America. In the United States, the
DGI had been heavily involved with international drug trade, assisting
homegrown terrorist cells, and intelligence gathering operations for third
party countries. The CIA, NSA, and FBI
all had them on their watch lists.
“Excellent. Select the target and do what is necessary.“
“Yes, jefe.
I will not fail.” He hung up the
phone and tossed the documents on the passenger seat of his car. This was the first operation he had
undertaken without the knowledge of his government. It was going to make him a hero, and wildly
rich. He had a lot of work ahead of him,
and a very short timeline.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)