throttle back to match speed while I call him on thirty-two eight.â
An interdiction display flickered up on the right-hand display. It showed the target aircraft and the interceptors. The fighters were covering the last mile to the Falcon now. No way it could escape the much faster, more maneuverable military jets.
âClosing ⦠closing ⦠youâre edging ahead, lose ten knots ⦠Yeah, that rattled his drawers. Okay, Hawk One is now going Christmas tree.â The same voice seemed to move about five feet, to directly above Danâs head; emerging from a different speaker, slower, speaking to someone who might not understand English well. âUnlighted aircraft bound three-zero-zero at 240 knots, approximately twenty-three degrees north, eighty-five degrees twenty minutes west. This is U.S. Air Force interceptor off your starboard wing. Over.â
They waited: Dan, Quintero, the pilots, the men and women around them at consoles. But no answer came.
âSettle back inâ¦,â the pilot was saying over his cockpit-to-cockpit, to his wingman.
âLight in the cockpit. Flashlight, looks like. Guyâs waving at us.â
At the same moment another speaker between Danâs and the admiralâs chairs hissed to life. âClear View, this is Hawk Two. Thatâs not the right tail number.â
âSay again?â
âWhatâs he mean by that?â Quintero snapped. âWhatâs he reading? Have him read back what heâs seeing.â
The tracker pilot read off six digits, using military phonetic code. Dan jotted HK 4016 on his palm with his ballpoint. On the command center floor an analyst called out, âHeâs right. Thatâs not Nuñezâs tail. I can go into the database here ⦠stand by.â
âWhat, heâs altered his tail number?â Dan asked Quintero. âRepainted it?â
âThe Viper has a spotlight on the port side of the nose,â someone put in. âHe can illuminate.â
âNot necessary,â Quintero said. âWho else is it going to be, flying dark out of Bucaramanga?â
âNegative radio contact,â said the flight leader. âAll right, blinking our lights, waggling our wings. As soon as he confirms, will commence a slow level turn to ⦠Holy shit!â
The controllerâs voice: âSay again?â
âOh my holy shit. He just fireballed ! Fuck, fuck, that hurts! Did you see that?⦠Clear View, this is Hawk flight leader, our A-toy just fireballed.â
Every head in the command center snapped around. The controller said, âFlight leader, say again your last.â
âHeâs going down now ⦠thereâs a tail surface coming off. Heâs on fire. Bright orange, fuel-type flame. Iâm turning to port to follow him down. Stay clear of me ⦠still falling.â
Quintero was on the circuit now, voice taut. âFlight leader, Clear View actual. Did you shoot him down?â
âNegative. Arming switches were off here. Confirmâoff. Frank, confirm you didnât fire.â
The wingman attested to it in a voice as shocked and puzzled as his flight leaderâs. Dan rubbed his mouth, shaken. If neither fighter had fired, who had? The only other aircraft on the plot was seventy miles away. Could a vortex from the fighters have jarred a fuel line loose? Struck a spark, where a spark could not be afforded?
âWe need more details here,â the command duty officer was telling the flight leader. Who was breathing hard, apparently in a tight turn.
âFrank, stay clear of me to the west.⦠You getting anything here?â
âNegative, flames too bright, blanked my display.â
âIâm following him down. Clear View, take a fix on my posit ⦠that will be crash datum. Doesnât look like thereâll be any survivors. Thereâs the wing ⦠a fuel tank or something.
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