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Sunday, July 5, 2015
ARCHANGEL FALLEN - Chapter One
ARCHANGEL FALLEN is currently available for preorder and will be released on July 14, 2015. Here's another sample chapter from my latest book!
ARCHANGEL FALLEN, Available now for preorder! |
Chapter One
NAS JRB New Orleans
0335L
M
|
ajor Jeff “Foxworthy” Vaughan cycled
his flight controls and checked his engine instruments one last time as he took
the runway in his F-15C. He looked over into his canopy mirror to see the taxi
light of his wingman three hundred feet behind him as Major Jake “Buzz” Bronson
followed him onto the runway.
It was dark out. The airfield was still closed, and other
than the ambient lighting from the city of New Orleans a few miles away, the
relatively clear skies were pitch black. The runway edges were barely
illuminated from the pilot controlled lighting that stayed on after field
hours.
With the tower closed, Foxworthy had contacted New Orleans
Approach for takeoff clearance and coordination for their scramble. It had only
been barely fifteen minutes since the klaxon had gone off, waking him from his
nap. He and his wingman had been scrambled to intercept an unknown aircraft
crossing the Air Defense Identification Zone out over the Gulf of Mexico
without talking to anyone.
Foxworthy lined his aircraft up on runway centerline for
Runway 22 after making the short taxi out from the alert hangars at the end of
the runway and lit the afterburners. He watched his engine instruments,
confirming the nozzle indicators showed “two good swings” as the afterburners
lit and rocketed his F-15 down the ten thousand foot runway. Seconds later,
Foxworthy’s wingman took the runway and followed suit as the two climbed out to
the southeast toward the target.
“WatchDog, Bayou Zero One airborne, passing
one-five-thousand,” Foxworthy said as he checked in with the military
controller that would be directing the intercept. He pulled out his Night
Vision Goggles from their case, clipped them to the bracket on his visor, and
flipped them down over his eyes. The green image changed the abyss of darkness
in front of him to a green monochrome presentation. The moonlight illumination
was low, and even with the goggles, there wasn’t much of a discernible horizon
or clear delineation between the dark, calm waters and the sky.
Foxworthy had flown the F-15 as an Air National Guard pilot
for nearly fifteen years. He had seen the unit transition from the F-15A to the
basic F-15C and finally to the upgraded F-15Cs with AESA radars. He had been
scrambled more times than he cared to count on varying targets from crop
dusters to helicopters to airliners.
Airliners scared Foxworthy. Since 9/11, the mission of the
alert pilot had changed significantly. Gone were the romantic musings of being
scrambled up against the hoard of MiG-29s invading the U. S. Mainland and
fighting to save the day. It had long since been replaced with the idea of
terrorists using passenger jets as weapons against critical infrastructure
targets. The harsh reality was that he might have to use one of the eight radar-guided
air to air missiles on his wing to shoot one down to prevent an even bigger
catastrophe. It was not a very palatable thought for the crusty Major.
But as Foxworthy looked over to see Buzz rejoin in a combat
spread formation a mile and a half off his left wing, he was confident that
tonight’s mission would be relatively benign. The initial Intel they had
received when they checked in with their Command Post for the tasking was that
it was a slow-moving aircraft located seventy miles southeast of New Orleans. The
aircraft was not responding to WatchDog’s repeated identification calls and
required a visual identification.
“Bayou Zero One, bogey BRAA one-zero-zero, fifty-nine, five
thousand, cold, maneuver,” the WatchDog controller responded, giving Foxworthy
the Bearing, Range, Altitude, and Aspect of the unknown aircraft. As they
cruised along at seventeen thousand feet and four hundred knots, the aircraft
was just under sixty nautical miles away from their current position.
“Sounds like he’s in WHODAT,” Buzz said over the auxiliary
radio. The WHODAT airspace was the name for the military working airspace they
used during training to practice their air-to-air tactics.
Foxworthy checked his radar. Seconds later, the Active
Electronically Scanned Array Radar had picked up the target and track file
indicated the radar was tracking the aircraft. He moved his cursors over it and
took a lock. The unknown aircraft was moving at just under ninety knots and had
appeared to be orbiting at five thousand feet.
“Bayou Zero One, radar contact,” Foxworthy said to alert the
controller that he was now tracking the unknown aircraft and required no
further point outs.
“WatchDog copies,” the controller responded. “No traffic
between you and the bogey, cleared to elevator at your discretion.”
“Bayou Zero One,” Foxworthy replied sharply. At almost four
in the morning, it was not surprising that the controller had given them
unrestricted ability to descend to the target’s altitude. Except for the cargo
air carriers, there were few aircraft out flying, which was the only thing that
bothered him about the aircraft they were intercepting. It was rare to get
scrambled so early in the morning on an “Unknown Rider” call.
“Two cleared wedge,” Foxworthy directed as he started his
descent down toward the aircraft. His wingman said nothing and collapsed from
his perfect line abreast formation to a fluid formation behind Foxworthy’s
aircraft.
Foxworthy watched the radar indication as the unknown
aircraft continued to orbit. He pulled up the Sniper Pod display above his right
knee and tried to get an infrared look at the target as they closed inside of
twenty miles.
Leveling off at ten thousand feet, the clear summer night’s
sky became even more difficult to discern from the calm waters below. They were
flying in an area peppered with oil rigs that stayed lit up twenty four hours a
day, making it easy to momentarily confuse up for down. Foxworthy remained
cautious as they sped toward the orbiting aircraft. He knew it might be easy to
get spatially disoriented if they weren’t careful.
“Two’s eyeball bogey,” Buzz said on their auxiliary radio,
indicating he had picked up a visual on the aircraft through his Sniper
Advanced Targeting Pod. “Looks like a multi-engine prop of some sort,” he
added.
“One copies,” Foxworthy replied. Seconds later, the
white-hot infrared image of his targeting pod showed the same thing. It
appeared to be a four engine propeller-driven aircraft with a twin boom tail
configuration. Although they were still too far out to get sufficient detail,
the initial image was confusing to Foxworthy. He couldn’t quite identify it.
Foxworthy checked his radar display again. They were nearing
fifteen miles. As he started his descent down to intercept the aircraft, the
radar suddenly broke lock and filled with chevrons, indicating it was receiving
electronic jamming.
As if on cue, Buzz piped up on the auxiliary radio, “Two’s
clean, strobes east.”
Foxworthy acknowledged and went back to his radar display,
trying to make sense of it. He had fought against jammers before in training,
but had never seen or heard of it happening on a real world alert scramble. It just didn’t make sense. He turned his
attention back to his targeting pod image. The aircraft had rolled out of its
orbit and appeared to be descending straight ahead. Foxworthy opted to continue
the intercept visually.
“One same,” Foxworthy finally responded on the radio. “Have
you ever seen anything like this, Buzz?” Although Buzz had spent time in the
Active Duty Air Force unlike Foxworthy, the two had been in the same squadron
together for nearly a decade.
“I was hoping it was just my radar,” Buzz admitted as
Foxworthy looked out and saw the surprisingly large aircraft flying slowly over
the water.
“Let’s set up an orbit here at seven thousand, I don’t know
what this guy is doing,” Foxworthy said as he leveled off. He could see the
aircraft through his NVGs, but the targeting pod image was fairly clear as they
leveled off and set up an orbit just outside of five miles. It was a large
cargo aircraft of some sort. Foxworthy wasn’t sure, but it looked Russian.
He looked back at his radar screen. Still jammed. As he looked back out at the aircraft through his
goggles, he noticed it getting lower and slower. It appeared to be completely
blacked out with no lights on at all. He tried picking it up using his naked
eyes, but all he could see were the lights from nearby oil rigs.
Foxworthy zoomed in using the targeting pod infrared image.
The aircraft’s flaps appeared to be down, but its gear was up. Seconds later,
the aircraft touched down on the calm waters. It landed! A float plane? Foxworthy’s mind was racing.
“Dude did you just see that?” Foxworthy yelled excitedly on
the auxiliary frequency.
“What’s a floatplane doing out here?” Buzz responded after a
pregnant pause.
“WatchDog, Bayou Zero One, the target aircraft appears to
have landed,” Foxworthy said to the controlling agency.
“Say again, Bayou,” the controller queried. It was obviously
not the response he had been expecting.
Foxworthy double-checked what he was seeing in his pod by
zooming in and out. The seaplane slowed to a crawl as it approached one of the
oil rigs.
“Bayou Zero One, I say again, the target aircraft has landed
and appears to be approaching one of the oil rigs out here,” Foxworthy repeated.
“WatchDog copies,” the controller responded. The confusion
was evident in his voice as well.
As Foxworthy continued watching the seaplane taxi up to the
oil rig, a low-pitched beeping caught his attention in his headset. He looked
up at his Radar Warning Receiver. The green circular display had just lit up as
the beeping intensified. He was being
targeted by a surface to air missile. Nothing made sense.
“Bayou Zero One, spiked,” Foxworthy announced over the interflight
frequency. His heart started racing. Is
it real? Or related to the jamming? The adrenaline began surging as the
indication grew stronger. He had never seen anything like it.
“Two same!” Buzz responded.
His Radar Warning Receiver was lit up like a Christmas tree,
indicating that a SAM’s target acquisition radar was locked to him.
“Bayou Zero One, WatchDog, I checked with the Director. The
aircraft is in international waters. You’re cleared to disengage and RTB at
this time,” the controller directed.
“Bayou Zero One is defensive!” Foxworthy responded as the
indication changed pitch and his RWR indicated that a target tracking radar was
engaging his aircraft. He knew he was just seconds away from a potential
missile launch.
“Bayou Zero One, you are directed to disengage, do you
copy?” the controller said firmly. “Vector two-seven-zero and RTB at this
time.”
Ignoring the call, Foxworthy lit the afterburners and
executed a break turn while expending chaff to attempt to break the lock of the
radar. His wingman followed suit in the opposite direction, using their
in-flight data link to keep track of each other.
“Bayou Zero One, WatchDog,” the controller attempted again.
“Standby,” Foxworthy replied as he strained under the
G-forces.
He continued maneuvering his aircraft away from the target aircraft’s
last known position. As they cleared ten miles, the Radar Warning Receiver
suddenly fell silent.
“One’s naked,” Foxworthy said on the auxiliary radio.
“Two same, I’m at your five o’clock and seven miles,” Buzz
replied.
“Cleared rejoin,” Foxworthy replied, trying to stay calm as
he turned back toward New Orleans.
“What the hell was that?”
“I have no idea,” Buzz replied, still breathing heavily.
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