Crossover (Daria and the AH novel "The Third World War" by Sir John Hackett) Night Witches

Chapter 1

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
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Chapter 1

Somewhere over North-Central New Mexico
0235 MST/0935 ZULU
Saturday, December 29th, 1984
F-111D 68-0807 of the 4427th Tactical Fighter Replacement Squadron

The twin turbofans of the twin TF-30P-9 engines roared through the night sky of the featureless New Mexican desert, the sound of the aircraft arriving before the aircraft did as it roared by, barely 200 to 300 feet off the ground, it’s Terrain Following Radar, or TFR for short, set to “hard” to get the maximum terrain masking effect. Hard referred to the ride the perceived ride would be, and the autopilot tied into the TFR did not disappoint.

In the cockpit, two professionals, barely out of their flight schools and on the cusp of their final exam reexamined their cockpit settings, while keeping one eye out for any unknown obstructions such as power lines that didn’t have a appreciable radar return. Many students had been killed over the years by what was euphemistically called by many in military aviation called CFIT, or Controlled Flight Into Terrain.

1st Lieutenant Daria Morgendorffer was simply trying to concentrate on flying the aircraft in the inky black, and hoping to Christ she didn’t experience the joys of CFIT, or more embarrassingly, having to recycle on their final exam. She chanced a glance at her WSO, or “wisso” as they were colloquially known, 1st Lieutenant Jane Lane and mused Two more unlikely Air Force officers are we. Ah shit, Morgendorffer, concentrate on flying the goddamned airplane.

Neither pilot nor WSO could see the other’s face, let alone their head underneath their helmets, oxygen masks and visors, and even if they could, it wouldn’t be something they’d be paying much attention to. Both pilot and WSO were coated in a slick sheen of sweat, and were so focused on their tasks, neither had had time for any sort of banter, let alone any kind of reminiscing about “good ol’ Lawndale”.

Daria was doing all she could not to grab the damn stick and climb for altitude, but the fact was, the autopilot was tied into the TFR, and it was giving them a ride reminiscent of a bucking bronco machine Daria had once encountered during her days at the ‘Springs. The tired old F-111 shimmied, groaned and some small bangs occasionally towards the rear of the aircraft. It had unnerved both pilot and WSO, and Daria had thrown up in her oxygen mask once during an earlier familiarization hop, thankfully while it was unhooked, but they were both used to it by now.

“Major terrain feature coming up fast at two ‘o clock, 3 miles” said Jane, laconically. Her eyes were split for attention, half the time, they were looking into the hooded display of the radar, and the other half of the time, they were looking up for short periods, in her sector of the aircraft making sure that they didn’t miss a powerline, or a terrain feature the TFR did miss. One thing about TFR flight, it wasn’t boring.

“Got it, shit, that was a bit close.”

Jane smiled to herself, unseen under her mask as they roared down towards their target, an oft-abused AAF airfield left over from WWII. It was now being used as a mock target for F-111 classes at Cannon AFB further south. The airfield had endured more mock nuclear attacks than Almorgordo had real tests. And now, it was Daria and Jane’s turn to execute a LABS or Low Altitude Bombing System attack utilizing a pair of B-61 nuclear bombs, set to 60 kilotons each.

The idea was to put one of the bombs at either end of the runway, but to be honest, if they got it with spitting range of the middle of the airfield, it would be good enough for the final exam. Another student F-111, coming in from a different approach was going to hit the airfield 2 minutes after the first attack with another 60-kiloton device to hit the other end of the airfield. The other practice bomb was there in case the first one missed, though Daria didn’t want to contemplate that. Scoring for their final was, well…. strict.

But there was one other consideration, Daria didn’t want to contemplate the embarrassment both she and Jane were going to have to deal with if she missed on the first go round. It was an unspoken article of faith among F-111 crews. To miss a target was simply not done, not even two rookies on their final exam to graduate the RTU and become an operational crew.

It had been a long strange trip for them both to the Air Force, someplace that if you had asked either of them, they both would have shrugged and simply said, “shit happens”. For Daria, it had all begun one fall day of her senior year of high school in 1977….


Interlude 1: Lightning Strikes

Daria had let herself in after school, and found a note on the table. She was used to this by now, with Quinn having Fashion Club, and her parents off god knew where, with, as Daria surmised, with god knew who?

She shuddered at that last bit, not that both of her parents were having affairs, but the very idea of her parents, well, doing that. Intellectually, she knew this was a silly thing to be grossed out about, I mean, how in the hell did Quinn and she get there if they didn’t? But the idea…well, it just didn’t sit well. Part of being an American teenager, I guess? But why the note? As she looked on, it was addressed to Quinn and Daria in her mother’s prim and proper handwriting.

Daria, Quinn;

We’ll be home late; we need to have a family meeting. We’ll get into why later.

Love,

Mom

Oh Damn, Daria’s mind reported, Quinn and her cohorts probably got themselves in some kind of jam and I have to play big sis to the rescue? Daria lunged for the phone and dialed a number she knew by heart. After two rings, a familiar and welcome voice picked up on the other end.

“Hello”

“It’s me, Jane, Quinn’s probably gone and done it again.”

“Oh crap, want me to come over?”

“If you want, seriously, why can’t we just drown her and get it over with, I mean, who’d miss her? The Fashion Club, the three Js? She really can’t be all that important to the future of humanity or something, can she?”

“One hopes not, Morgendorffer, but you know with your history where the cops will look first.”

“Only if you tell them Lane, only if you tell them.”

“Traitor” Daria barked with a chuckle.

“Hey, a girl has to think about her future. And if the cops offer a sweet deal…”

“Planned homicides aside, can you come over, I just got a bad feeling about this…”

“No problema, Amiga. Be over in a few.”

Daria gently hung up the phone in the kitchen and made her way upstairs. She was dreading the “family meeting” already.

Three Hours Later….

Daria and Jane had spent the time studying, and speculating whether or not the family meeting was sending Quinn away because she’d been caught in a cocaine fueled drug bust, or it was the long awaited announcement that the Morgendorffers were getting a divorce.

Nothing had prepared her for the surprise that had been waiting for her downstairs.

The kitchen was brighter than normal, with the light bouncing off of the beige linoleum countertops and white marble to create an environment that was almost blinding. But, somehow, Daria faked finding her way to the kitchen table. A forced smile at Quinn, and a less forced smile at her parents came next. God, whatever the hell this is going to be, please let it be quick and merciful.

“Girls, we have some bad news for you both. I wish it weren’t so, but some investments your father made didn’t exactly pan out.”

“Hey, I thought that beets as alternative fuel was a great idea! You seemed to think so too!” exclaimed Jake, his face turning red with a mixture of mortification and anger.

“Yes dear, I suppose you would think so. Mr. “I know so much better about money!” snapped Jane.

Quinn and Daria glanced looks at each other. The sisters had been close, once, before the pressures of high school had driven them apart, but now, that closeness was rediscovered. Was this it? Was a divorce finally coming?

“Girls, I’ll just come right out and say it. We had to use half of the college fund to pay down some debts, including the mortgage. We’re fine, but well, we can only afford to send one of you to college.”

Both Daria and Quinns jaws dropped. It was unthinkable that only one of them was going. How in the hell could Dad be so damn irresponsible? I mean, Dad was neurotic about money!

“I hate to do this, girls, but we as a family have to make a decision on which one goes to college, and which one may have to wait a few years.”

Daria looked about the table, her sister was crying, her dreams of a life at Fashion Institute of Technology and living in New York were dashed, at best. And Daria’s own dreams, of Boston College and being the writer she wanted to be, circling the metaphorical drain. It made her feel sick, and she could feel the bile rising in her throat like an unstoppable tide.

“Jesus!” Daria blurted out. She stood to her feet with a shot “So, what’s the plan then? Have us fight it out on the front lawn? Winner goes to college?” Her parents looked on in horror at Daria’s words and saw that she was holding back tears by force of will.

“Daria, no. You should go. I’m…I’m a bubblehead, you’re the smart one.” Quinn said softly, placing an hand on her arm.

“No, sis. There are options for me. This is your only shot. FIT is a bitch to get into, I looked it up for you.” Daria smiled weakly.

“What kind of options?” Helen inquired

“Well, there was a Air Force recruiter at school today…and he did say I had the grades to get into the Air Force Academy..and mom, you do know somebody on Representative Steer’s staff? Could he get me an academy appointment?”

“Daria, why the hell all the interest in the Air Force? The military ruined my Dad!” Jake exclaimed.

“Jake honey, it’s her life.” Helen said, placing his hand in hers.

“Mom, think about it, if I get it, it’s a chance for me to go to school on Uncle Sam, I serve my time, get out and do something else.” Daria suggested

“True kiddo, but your eyes. I mean, no offense, they aren’t that great.”

“Not that bad either dad, and it’s not like I want a flying job.” Daria explained.

“Let me call the good Congressman in the morning Daria, I am sure I can get you that appointment.” Jane smiled a knowing smile.

“Ok…” Daria looked on, knowing there was some history between Congressman Steers and her mother that she definitely did not want to know about…

************

Daria snapped back to the present. The rest was history. She’d discovered she LIKED flying, but with her vision and gender, the best she was going to manage was flying C-141s or KC-135s. Not exactly interesting flying, and not the kind of flying she wanted to do.

So, what happened? Fate struck again in Daria’s life in 1980. As she was home on Christmas break, she consulted her ophthalmologist. It turned out her initial diagnosis of near sightedness was mistaken. She had a simple problem that was easily corrected with a minor surgical procedure. Some time on her back during summer leave from the academy and a medical review board later, she had been cleared for flight status. But because she was a woman, there was still no prospect of any “real flying” as Daria had been informed.

But in 1981, a president Daria hadn’t even voted for changed her life forever. While Daria was sweating her junior year at the Air Force Academy, newly elected President Ronald Regan had his own issues. He wanted to expand the military, and that included the Air Force. But, the problem was simple. There was a shortage of potential qualified pilots. Several solutions were suggested, but all of them required lowering standards to levels neither the Air Force nor the DoD was really happy with. There was only one solution: Put women in the cockpit of combat aircraft. Reagan wasn’t happy with it. Neither was Weinberger, but as one White House aide put it “It will get some of the feminists in support of the defense buildup”. Thus, with one house bill which had bipartisan support, and guaranteed liberal support for much of the other Reagan defense initiatives, and as March 6th, 1981, women were now allowed to fly combat or man combat roles on board ships of the US Navy. They were still barred from most combat roles in the Army and the Marines, but the Military Police and some other Combat Support roles had been opened to them.

Daria had immediately run down to find her TAC at the academy, vision of being an F-15 driver dancing in her head. Her tactical officer had mournfully brought her back to earth with the words; “Nope, a lot of the women who are already in are going to beat you to the F-15 and F-16 slots. Just the way things are. But, there are plenty of openings in the F-4, F-111 and A-10 communities. Or you could try B-52s? But I think I know you well enough.”

Her TAC had said, “You want F-111s. They are big, fast, loud and you get to fly as low and as fast as you can. I drive F-111s, and I love every damn minute of it.”

One trip to Mountain Home AFB and a check ride in an F-111 that summer had sold it for her. It wasn’t sleek and hip like F-15s or F-16s, (but the F-111 had pretty nice lines for something that moved mud, and yeah, it was fast) but somehow, it suited the non-conformist in her. And the idea of sneaking around at night making things go boom then running like she’d stolen the aircraft made her smile. Screw them, fighters make headlines, we attack pilots make history.

“Hey, you with me, Daria?” Jane exclaimed. “We’re coming up on the IP”.

“Shit, sorry, just thinking how I got here.”

“Comeon, amiga. Head in the game. We got us and thirty million dollars worth of airplane here. I really want to bring it all back the same way we found it.”

“Right, ok, break out the Bomb Run (Nuclear) checklists and let’s do this” while reaching above her head, keeping her eyes on the world outside.

Just at that moment, the Radar Warning Receiver hooted a wailing noise and a diamond appeared on the display above the WSO’s station. It was a small, box like display, with the space around the aircraft displayed into quadrants. A diamond with a “6” appeared on the display, signifying a “Straight Flush” type radar, which was the acquisition and tracking unit for the SA-6 surface to air missile system had acquired the aircraft, and was seeking to lock onto and fire a missile. It wasn’t a real SA-6, though the radar was probably real, captured from god knew where, but for Daria’s purposes, it was real enough, as getting killed by a SAM would flunk them the exercise, and get them recycled, or repeating the course.

Daria’s blood went cold, but her training kicked in “Jane, chaff, jammers, now!”

Jane slammed her fist down on the countermeasures button and turned on their jammer pod under the right wing, She fell into formality and regulation, just as she had been trained “Pilot, SA-6 at 9 o’clock, 8 miles, hasn’t fired but she knows we’re here.”

“Pilot’s airplane!” Daria exclaimed as she took back the stick from the autopilot. It was somewhat risky what she was about to do, but she didn’t intend to wait until the SA-6 fired before trying to break the lock it had achieved.

“Lane, any significant terrain? I’m gonna take this thing down to 100 feet and run like hell, don’t want to blunder into a mountain!”

“Scope’s clear for the next six miles, only significant terrain is a minor feature at 11 o’clock, make it 9 miles.”

“Stats on the SA-6?”

“15 mile range, speed Mach 2.8, semi-active radar-homing seeker and a minimum attitude of 330 feet.”

Daria smiled and sucked in a bit of air noisily. “Shit, first piece of good news, ok, we stay low, pop up for the LABS toss, then kick in the burners and dump a ton of chaff. The target’s what, another 12 miles?”

Jane head nodded as she kept her attention riveted on her scope “Yep, but 100 feet? Jesus Daria, we’d better hope nobody put any power lines or simulated guns out there.”

Daria’s spine chilled at both thoughts. Simulated guns would “kill” them just as dead as the faux SA-6 out there. But the power lines? That would really make us dead. Bummer.

The time to the release point from the target passed quickly as Daria’s attention was fully focused on flying the aircraft. A F-111 100 feet off the ground going full military power left little, if any, margin for error and if Daria rose another 200 feet before she was ready to set up for the toss? Then there was a good chance the SA-6 would catch her and Jane.

“8 miles to target, its time, Daria”

Daria and Jane both reached over with their left hands to a keypad, and punched in a 15 digit code each to “unlock” the practice warheads in the bomb bay. The bombs weren’t really B-61s, just 12-pound dummies that were ballistically similar, but for purposes of the exam, everything was done, as it would have been for real.

“Code acknowledged” muttered Jane.

“Code acknowledged, we have nuclear consent.”

“Ok, 3, 2, 1. Weapons computer has the airplane. Wait for the cue. Opening bomb bay doors” Jane said tensely. The centerline bomb bay doors opened with a slight hydraulic whine.

The RWR hooted again, and this time, the diamond was with a “57” in the center, signifying there was a Fire Can type radar directing a 57mm battery against Daria’s airplane. It was close, looked about maybe 3 miles or so, at 12 o’ clock. She could only hope the exercise tracking equipment didn’t register a hit against the F-111 during the run, but she couldn’t worry too much about it.

“Run’s looking good, I have good return on the airfield. I can see the aiming point clearly” said Jane in a satisfied tone.

“PULL, PULL, PULL” intoned a mechanical, female sounding voice from the aircraft, and Daria, put the aircraft on it’s tail and advanced the throttle to it’s stops. The computer calculated the information from the radar return, calculated where the aircraft was and then automatically triggered the bomb release. Daria continued to pull the F-111 into a half loop, then at the apogee of the loop, turned the aircraft upright, and continued to accelerate away from the target at full afterburner, the blue flame shooting for at least six to eight feet away from the aircraft. A 60 kt nuclear weapon had a lethal radius to flying aircraft of about 3 miles.

“Tell me that hit, tell me that hit, amiga” Jane pleaded.

“Dunno, let’s just run like hell before they rule us dead from our own bomb? And don’t forget the chaff!”

A few beats passed, and the whine of the RWR turned off, and a voice crackled in Jane and Daria’s helmets.

“Rookie 07, this is range control. Ladies, good shack, I repeat, good shack. Comeon home. Watch for Rookie 05 making his own run. Out.”

“Yes!” Daria exclaimed, almost squealing.

“We did, amiga! We’re big bad fighter jocks now!”

“Me, big, bad? I don’t exactly look the part?”

“Ugh, Dammit Daria, It’s time to get some ego, girl. We are the new female paragdigm. We fly a 30 million dollar airplane, and we fling nuclear fireballs! We are the epitome of cool!”

“Um, Jane, don’t make me hurt you?”

“You won’t when you hear what I got planned with you, your Z-28 and our 30 days graduation leave!”

Daria put the aircraft in a gentle turn back towards Cannon and smiled, unhooking her oxygen mask. Jane aped her actions, and both of them smiled a knowing smile.

“Does it begin with Las and end with Vegas?”

“Yes, it does, Daria, I have been too good for two damn long, and so have you. I am in the mood for some sin, and where else but the place that specializes?”

“Ya know, I am getting to like this swagger thing. Didn’t think I would, but yeah. I do. Glad I have you to share it with, Jane.”

“Suits you Daria, hey, we’re fighter pilots, or well, pilot and WSO. But it doesn’t matter, we have a cool job! Eat your heart out Brittany!”
 
Chapter 2

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
Staff Member
Founder
Chapter 2
7 Months Later
Officers Club
RAF Lakenheath
Lakenheath, United Kingdom
Monday, July 22nd, 1985
1835 ZULU/1835 Local


Mondays were always dead days in the O-Club at Lakenheath, and tonight was no exception. But, as young officers found out, it was one of the more affordable options one had when deployed to the UK. So, on a whim, and armed with the fact neither of them was scheduled for the flight roster tomorrow, it seemed a pizza and a beer at the O'Club was in order.

Daria and Jane had arrived at Lakenheath in February, ferrying an F-111 from the depot that had been "zero-timed" or practically rebuilt. It had also been upgraded to an F model from it's previous D model and had been assigned, like Daria and Jane to the 492nd Tactical Fighter Squadron of the 49th Tactical Fighter Wing based at Lakenheath. It had been a somewhat leisurely flight, with plenty of time to talk, and reminisce. Of course, Jane had also taken the crew rest opportunity in Iceland to go nuts in the Reykjavík duty free store. I didn't think we could fit that much smoked fish and Stoly in the damn bomb bay! Miracle none of it broke. It was quite the introduction to their crew chief, who still complained to anyone who would listen he couldn't get the fishy smell out of that aircraft. Loudly.

What followed next was a hectic training schedule to learn the nuances of the F-111F versus the D they qualified on back at Mountain Home and Cannon. As of last week, they were fully qualified on the Pave Tack system in the aircraft. Pave Tack was an electro optic targeting pod that also had forward-looking infrared (FLIR) and laser targeting capabilities. Pave Tack was found on both the F-4 and the F-111. It was a big pod, and weighed almost 1400lbs and took up a good chunk of the bomb bay, but it allowed the F-111 to be an all-weather threat.

It had been a grueling time, and the two of them were wrung out between the ground school and the airborne training flights. But, as of last week, they were proclaimed, "qualified". Of course, that week, they had to sit "Victor" or nuclear alert, cut off from the world in the alert shed, hoping the nuclear klaxon never went off.

It was with the end of that that 1st Lieutenants Lane and Morgendorffer were given a rare week off. Priorities being priorities, they had managed to score some off base housing. A small cottage was for rent by an elderly English woman who normally didn't rent to pilots, but since "you're young girls", she figured it was ok. She was moving south to London to live with her daughter and son-in-law, who after their landlord's heart attack wanted her closer to something resembling a hospital, not "living out in the sticks next to an American air base with jets going all hours of the morning and night".

The rent was reasonable, and so was the cottage, which for its rustic appearance had all the modern conveniences. It was also a quarter mile to the Lakenheath main gate, which was a bonus. Next was well, getting to know people. Jane and Daria soon found out they were one of only two female crews in the entire wing, and the only one in the squadron. The other female crew, naturally, was looking for like gendered folks that wouldn't constantly see them as a dating opportunity. Though, Daria admitted, most folks had been way too busy around here to do any of that kind of thing.

So, on a rare day all four crews were off, it was a few phone calls, and off to the O'Club for Pizza, Beer and girl talk. The crew from the 494th was a study in contrasts. The pilot was a blonde, girl-next-door looking 1st Lieutenant from Midleville, MI named Lisa Cunningham. She was an AF brat whose father had been an F-105 driver over North Vietnam, and had thoroughly infected Lisa with the flying bug. Lisa had excelled in her AFROTC classes at Michigan State, and her proud father pinned on her wings, and attended her F-111 replacement unit graduation. Her call sign was "Pony Girl" due to her father revealing to her replacement instructors that she was, well, horse mad. She was a bit shy on the ground, but she flew the F-111 with precision, and sometimes made even the long serving pilots in the squadron feel a bit insecure.

The WSO, was a short, diminutive Asian-American 1st Lieutenant named Alice Kanagawa, she was third generation Japanese-American Yonsei and hailed from the most unlikely of places: Mobile, Alabama. She was nuts about the University of Alabama football team (Her brothers had played on it) and her call sign, "Crimson" was a reference to that. Her 'Bama accent sometimes seemed out of place with her ethnic origins, but as she put it "Shit, there's been Japanese in Mobile since the war." Her father was a shrimper who had worked hard to put her and her two brothers through school, but they'd all gotten ROTC scholarships, with her brother Tony a tank platoon leader in West Germany and her other brother a platoon leader with the 82nd Airborne. She took jokes about her height in stride, and many a male aircrew had asked Lisa "So, do you put a phonebook in the airplane for her?" Alice was the opposite of her pilot, she was the life of the party, and had made bringing Daria out her shell a joint project with Jane.

A baseball game between the Mets and Braves was on in the corner, on the TV, but none of the four were watching. All of them were laughing over the tale of just how much Jane had bought at the aforementioned duty-free store.

"You should have seen it, I had three or four shopping carts, and Daria here's sweating like she just got life in prison."

"Did not, I just mentioned what a spectacularly bad idea it was?"

"You'll thank me when you make Captain and we can have a proper wetting down party!"

"Trust me, Daria, you will" Lisa said with a knowing smile.

"Ahem, I am a well behaved Air Force Officer, not like you neanderthals!" Daria exclaimed.

"Uh, sure amiga, is that why you keep running into that F-15 driver from Soesterberg."

"I'll have you know it's the other way around, Jane, and he's getting on my last nerve. Jerk's just waiting to be collateral damage in a battle of wits anyhow."

"I think he's kinda nice" Jane said, a twinkle in her eyes.

"Comeon Daria, how bad could he be?" Alice drawled, "Shit, love or at least a good time is where you find it in the Air Force."

"Ugh, he's annoying, full of himself, and this 'accidental'" Daria waggled her fingers like quotation marks is beginning to piss me off."

"Funny, he says the misanthropic thing ticks him off too." Jane retorted.

"WHAT!" Daria exclaimed, her beer almost taking a tumble.

"Yeah, got his number, we supposedly have a date, but I think he's just using me to get to know you. I intend to play along, Daria."

Daria's face reddened, I am not going to be jealous. Hell, why am I jealous, he's just some arrogant F-15 jock who wants to score with the cute 'Vark driver and-

As Daria was about to complete that thought, a series of curses came from the bar. All four heads at the table turned as one to the TV. It was emblazoned with the words "ABC NEWS SPECIAL REPORT".

"Shit, probably Yugoslavia again, some reporter probably got into a shouting match with a Soviet paratrooper."

Yugoslavia had been in the news a lot, ever since civil war had broken out last month, and the Soviets had invaded two weeks ago. It wasn't long before President Reagan and the rest of NATO had demanded a Soviet withdrawal, which of course, had been denied. A US-led intervention had followed 24 hours later, centering on Rijeka and Ljubljana with more Italian, British and US troops arriving daily in the past two weeks. The alert levels had increased slightly at Lakenheath, but there wasn't too much out of the ordinary…but what the hell did this special report mean.

A voice cried out "Turn it up!"

The camera zoomed in on Peter Jennings, and he began with his clipped Canadian accent "Good afternoon from New York everyone, we apologize for interrupting your baseball game. I wish the news we had to report was better, but we have a confirmed report from the press pool with the Marines in Rijeka that there has been a battle between US Marines and Soviet troops. We're going to go live to CBS's Bob Simon, we apologize for the picture and audio quality in advance.."

"Oh Shit" was all Daria could manage to say.
‐---‐-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interlude 2
The White House
Washington, DC
Monday, July 22nd, 1985
1502 EDT/1902 ZULU


President Reagan sat behind his desk in the Oval Office, going over an update from EUCOM in Stuttgart. The Marines and Army Airborne who'd gone into Yugoslavia, along with British and Italian troops, had taken up defensive positions along the Slovenian-Croatian border. The local population-at least the non-Serbian elements, had been grateful to see NATO troops arriving to help defend their newly declared independence, despite the fact that Soviet troops were reportedly closing in on both Zagreb and Ljubljana. Still, the Rules of Engagement did allow for NATO forces to fire first if their positions were threatened, and so far, that seemed to working for the moment.

The President's biggest problem at the moment was domestic. A number of Democratic Congressmen and a couple of Senators had introduced a resolution invoking the War Powers Act, and had been publicly calling for the U.S., along with NATO, to withdraw from Yugoslavia.

This, despite the approval from the Democratic leadership on the Hill, just showed that some in the Democratic Party were still thinking that any intervention abroad was a repeat of Vietnam. Though the Democratic leadership, including both House Speaker Tip O'Neil and Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, had come out in favor of the intervention. Shaking his head, the President was about to go on to some pressing domestic policy papers when his Secretary buzzed. The National Security Advisor, Admiral John
Poindexter, had to see him at once. "Send him in," the President said.

Admiral Poindexter came into the Oval Office, a grim look on his face. "Mr. President,"

"What is it, Admiral?"

"Sir, there has been a shooting incident between our forces and the Soviets. Several, actually." Poindexter reported.

"How serious?" Reagan asked, standing up as he did so.

"Serious enough, Mr. President. The first reports, though those are likely to be wrong, indicate that the Soviets just rolled right up to a forward Marine position. They may have assumed the Marines were Croatians, because they opened fire on sight."

"Unless they had orders to fire on any NATO forces they encountered," commented the President.

"Possible,sir." Poindexter acknowledged. "At any rate, a company-sized Soviet force was pinned up near a village west of Zagreb-which the Soviets seem to have decided to bypass-and a number of Soviet tanks and armored personnel carriers were destroyed. Marine aircraft from Italy have also encountered MiGs while they were flying cover for our forces on the ground, and two MiG-23s tried to engage the Marine F-4s. They were destroyed, and a Soviet pilot was captured by Marines on the ground, along with a number of Soviet soldiers from the prior engagement."

Reagan paused for a few moments, clearly thinking over the situation. Though there had been encounters between American and Soviet forces in Korea, and Soviet attacks on American reconnaissance aircraft, those had been minor skirmishes. Now, Americans and Soviets were facing off on a real battlefield, and he knew full well that things were likely to go down a slippery slope that would likely lead to war. "Casualties on our side?"

"Some, sir. No hard numbers as yet," Poindexter said.

Nodding, Reagan picked up the phone on his desk and called his secretary. "I want the Secretaries of Defense and State here, along with the Vice-President, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, and the CIA Director here in an hour."

"Yes, Mr. President," his secretary replied.

"All right, John," Reagan asked his National Security Advisor, "What's next?"

Poindexter took a deep breath. "Mr. President, we'd better start thinking about implementing REFORGER, or at the very least, preparing to do so. The sooner we make that decision, the better. That means calling up the Civil Reserve Air Fleet, and getting NATO and other allied merchant ships into friendly ports to get convoys organized and loaded."

"And what else does that entail?"

"Mr. President, that means that the aircraft that take troops to Europe bring back military and embassy dependents, tourists, and so on."

Nodding, the President stood up and went to the window of the Oval Office. He looked out on the White House lawn, and gazed at the tourists on the sidewalk. "It's been forty years, John. It's happening again." Dear God, what will it be like?

Don Regan, the White House Chief of Staff, had heard, and he was coming into the Oval Office. "Mr. President, I've heard. The TV Networks have this story. They're all calling it 'First Clash,' and there's also video out."

The President turned to his Chief of Staff. "How'd they find out so fast?"

"Sir, after the controversy over the media blackout during the Grenada operation, DOD organized a National Media Pool, as you know." Seeing the President nod, Regan went on, "When the Marines went in, the Pool was activated and they went in a few hours later. CBS has the pool's TV crew, and the networks are sharing the report."

"Let's see it," the President ordered.

Nodding, Regan went to the bank of TV sets in the Oval Office, and turned one of them on-to the D.C. ABC affiliate. Peter Jennings was on, with the "Special Report" title at the bottom of screen, and there was Bob Simon, who was the CBS pool reporter, giving a description of the fighting.

"So far, Peter, the Marines here say that the Soviets just drove right up to their positions, and the Soviets just opened fire." The camera panned around, catching several wrecked BTR-70 APCs, a couple of BRDM reconnaissance vehicles on fire, and three burning T-72 tanks, and ominously, the body of a Soviet tank commander hanging halfway outside his hatch on one of the tanks.

"Right now, the Marine commander says he's staying right where he is, and if the Russians want this position, they'll have to fight for it."

"How about American casualties?" Jennings asked.

"There are some, Peter, but as to numbers, the Marines won't say just yet. And Soviet casualties? Just take a look around-that should tell you." And the camera did pan around again, focusing in on several wrecked BTRs and numerous dead Soviet soldiers, who had been cut down by small-arms and machine gun fire escaping from their vehicles. "And the Marines here say they do have some Soviet prisoners." The cameraman then focused on several bewildered young men in Soviet uniform, guarded by Marines. Then the camera focused on a nearby Marine M-60A1 tank, its turret swiveling, then a loud BOOM as the tank's cannon fired. On a nearby ridge, a fireball erupted, and a speck that must have been a vehicle of some sort began to burn.

"What happened?" Asked the ABC anchor.

"Well, Peter, the Marine commander says there's at least a battalion of Soviet troops to the east, and a company of them tried to come over that ridge just after the first encounter. They pulled back, but every so often, a Soviet vehicle and some infantrymen have come over the ridge top. The Soviets have pulled back each time, but they keep trying to come over that ridge. And Marine artillery fire has landed on them several times."

"Turn it off, Don," Reagan said.

"Yes, Mr. President," and Regan did so.

"All right, Admiral," the President said, turning to his National Security Advisor, "Who's your best Soviet expert, civilian-wise?"

"That would be Dr. Condi Rice, Mr. President."

"Get her. I want her in on this meeting as well. But how do you think the Soviets will take this?"

Poindexter paused, choosing his words carefully. "Sir, I really don't know, but my best guess is that they won't take this easily. The first real clash between American and Soviet forces, and they were seen to be on the run. It won't go down very well either in the Kremlin or in the Ministry of Defense."
‐‐---‐‐----------------------------‐------------------------------------------

"Shit, are we at war?" some unidentified denizen at the bar asked.

"No, we're not, not yet" a lanky older gentleman opined, twisting his cigar. He wore blue fatigues, and Warrant Officer bars, and looked like the old man of the sea. There was a knowing look in his eyes. "You youngins need to know it. We aren't at war yet. But we will be. The Russkies don't take shit like this lying down. And it won't be like some damn video game. Not by a long sight." He finished his drink and made for the door like a shot from a cannon.

Daria turned towards her companions "So, what now?"

Lisa opined "Let's assume 12 hour rule, head for your place, drink Coke and watch the news."

"And call our folks" Alice added.

"Sounds like a plan, I'll get our coats. Daria, pay the man." Jane added

Daria grimaced as she laid out the money, I think money's going to be the least of my concerns real soon.
 
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Chapter 3

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
Staff Member
Founder
8 miles SSE of RAF Scampton
F-111 s/n 72-1447
1420 ZULU/1420 Local
Tuesday, July 23rd, 1985


"Jane, tell me we lost him" Daria implored as she kept an eye on the terrain zipping by the aircraft.

The TFR was set to HARD and usually, the auto-pilot came through, but occasionally…terrain and aircraft did intersect, painfully.

"Dunno, TWR doesn't have him, but I bet the limey sonofabitch is back there." Jane intoned, then she glanced at the air speed indicator. "Watch the speed boss, we're gonna "boom" a village or two down there." Jane was referring to the fact that going supersonic so low over the peacetime UK was frowned upon by the locals. An F-111 at 300-500 feet going supersonic could break a lot of windows.

"I know, but this asshole's running me out of options." Daria exclaimed. "We at the IP yet?"

"Coming up on it…NOW!"

"Awesome, let's pull our checklists for Bomb Run (Conventional) and..." Daria said, when a horrible sound crackled in their ears on the GUARD frequency.

"TAKA TAKA TAKA. I am sorry ladies, but you are some dead sepos." the voice said.

"SHIT!" Daria exclaimed, she turned apologetically "Sorry Jane, we lost"

"Least it wasn't for real" Jane shrugged "We'll do better next time".

"Thunder Lead, this Tuna 2, nice work. How did you get us? We didn't pick you up on the threat receiver?"

"Lots of gritted teeth and damn near Mach 1 at low-level, I turned the radar off and went for a guns shot. God you bloody 'Vark drivers are fast! Hope the Fencer troops don't fly as well as you."

"Well, you got us, so you should be able to get them." Dara said, a resigned tone in her voice.

"Yes, but I suspect others of your flight got past us, coming up alongside you from your 6 o clock left."
Daria craned her neck around, and fought to see the old F-4M come ease up alongside the F-111, waggling it's wings.

"If you'll look to your left, dear madam?" Thunder Lead intoned.

There was a hand written sign on a pilot's kneeboard from the backseater. It was held up against the pilot's glass. Daria had to reach for her binoculars to read it. It said simply "NEXT TIME YOU LADIES GRACE CONNINGSBY, YOU'RE BUYING THE BITTER!" It also had a string of numbers that could only be a phone number.

Daria turned a shade of red that could be noticed even under her helmet and mask, with her visor being up. She turned to Jane as her peals of laughter could be heard through the intercom system.

"Jesus Daria, we're supposed to be working, not keeping up relations" as Jane said, struggling with her laughter.

"Hey, he hit on me!" Daria exclaimed "He's better about it than Mr. Soesterberg, god what a creep!"
Nicely done, Daria, cover the fact you just might like the moron, ok, he is an F-15 driver with an ego the size of Texas and…

"..anyhow Tuna 2, we're at bingo and it's time for us to head back to Conningsby, thanks for the lovely chase."

"Roger that Thunder Lead, hope we made a good tackling dummy" Daria said dryly.

"Eh Tuna 2? Ah, yes, American Football reference. Really, ours is so much more civilized."

"Really, riots and all? Nah, not much of a sports gal, Thunder Lead." Daria said with a giggle.

"That's the Yobs, and I suspect many of them are going to be learning a little discipline soon. They signed Queen's Order 2 last night. As I said though, we should be off, good flight back to Lakenheath."

With that, the Phantom tipped over on its wing, broke away sharply and rejoined its fellow, who holding off at a distance.

Daria turned to Jane, who was still giggling "Gee Daria, you have a way with fighter jocks, mind telling me your secret?"

"Screw you, gimme a heading back to Lakenheath, and what happened to callsigns in the air?"

"Sorry Butch," intoned Jane "So, shall it be direct or the scenic route?"

"Let's go scenic, we can practice a low level pass over Bentwaters and scare the shit out of those A-10 pukes They're practically committing incest with the Army anyhow, Sundance."

Jane smiled at the last idea "See, Butch, a little schadenfreude and you are right as rain."

Daria smiled at that last thought. "You think?"

"I know my best friend, Butch, and we are bad motherfucking fighter pilots, losing gracefully is not part of the program! Now, since we have a while before we have to check in with the ADIZ, what shall it be Butch? Journey or AC/DC? I am feeling a little Steve Perry myself."

"Sundance, give us a little Journey for our journey if you would?"

"On it, bosslady!" Jane said with a flourish as she produced a tape cassette from the arm pocker of her flight suit and popped it into a tape deck crudely velcroed to the top of the instrument panel next to the TWR. She popped in the tape, pressed play, and the song Don't Stop Believin kicked in, filling the cabin with the kind of tempo that helped Daria get into the rhythm of putting the aircraft through her paces as they made a turn towards the North Sea.

45 minutes later

As Daria and Jane neared the coast, they killed the music and Daria dropped the aircraft down to 1500 feet, the F-111's wings in full sweep and her two turbofans glowing like twin blue orbs against the afternoon sky.

"Damn" Jane mused, "the mix tape was just getting to Highway to Hell!"

"Wanna get another speech about how the plane "belongs to the taxpayers", Sundance?"

"Not really, but I get you, Butch. By the way, your temper is up? Wanna talk about it?" Jane intoned.

"Just pissed I got us whacked." Daria said ruefully.

"Hey, those Russians don't fly as well as the Brits do, comeon! You'll do better in the real thing. You always flubbed the practice SATs and then what happned, chica? You got an even 1650!"

"Guess you're right, just worried."

"And I appreciate it, Butch, but now's the time to fly casual, apply lessons learned and think on what we did wrong, and what we did right, ok? Anyhow, I'd like to cap this off by scaring those proto-Army guys at Bentwaters? Think we can do that. jefe?"

Daria nodded "Bentwaters Tower, this is Tuna 2, we're an F-111 from Lakenheath, requesting permission for a low level pass of the base from east to west, over."

The reply was short in coming

"Tuna 2, Bentwaters Tower, negative on your permission, climb to 3000 feet and continue on to Lakenheath at heading 250. Our pattern is full, over."

Daria tuned to Jane "This is new, Sundance."

"No shit. Wonder what's up."

"Damned if I know, let's do as the tower says, I really don't wanna piss off the tower today, Sundance."

"Got it, I'll watch for traffic."

"Thanks."

The sky was clear with barely a cloud in it up to ten thousand, so watching for traffic was easy, the troubling part was, is that there was so much of it.
Even a base like Bentwaters shouldn't have been that busy…

It was then Daria noticed something. She dove for the binoculars and trained them on the base. Where are all the A-10s? There's supposed to be A-10s here. And what are those F-4s doing on the ramp? Wait. did they send the A-10s on to Germany? Are things getting that bad?

'Butch, we got traffic at our 4 O'Clock low, coming up fast, looks small, wait, it's a pair of F-5s, shit, it's the aggressor guys, probably up to hassle us."

"Fuck, another bunch of fighter pilots giving us grief today?" Daria intoned.

"Looks like it Butch."

The two shapes resolved themselves into a pair of sleek, shark nosed F-5 Freedom Fighter IIs in Soviet style camouflage and "bort" numbers along the sides of the nose. These were aircraft from the 527th Tactical Fighter Training and Aggressor Squadron. Daria and Jane had had run ins with them before. They flew like Soviet and Warsaw Pact pilots and the F-5s simulated the MiG-21 quite well. Daria and Jane had been "killed" by them, a lot. It was a fate many an AF pilot had shared. In deflating egos amongst the rest of the Air Force, they had built theirs up.

But something was wrong with the F-5s as they pulled alongside. Daria couldn't place it at first, something just didn't seem right…but then it hit her like a damn thunderbolt from the heavens. It was the Sidewinders on the wingtip rails. Most of the time, the F-5s carried captive blue tipped exercise rounds on one tip, and a ACMI (Air Combat Maneuvering Instrumentation Pod) on the other, but this time, both tips had live, white tipped Sidewinders.

"Daria, are those live AIM-9s?"

"Hell yes!"

"Things are getting real, aren't they?"

"Damn straight."

As soon as the F-5s got a good look at the F-111, they both broke smartly away, lit their burners and dove back down to the deck.

"Guess they wanted to make sure we weren't Russians?"

"I hate to think what would have happened if we were, Sundance, I really do. Let's get the fuck out of here, gimme a steer for Lakenheath."

"I will, Butch, but let's fly casual along the heading they gave us, if the Aggressors are toting live warshots? No telling who else might be tight on the trigger around here."

Daria nodded, and both of them said little about it, or anything else beyond the minimum required the rest of the flight back to Lakenheath. It was as if both were lost in their own thoughts, and fears of the coming storm that now seemed to be becoming more inevitable by the day.

INTERLUDE 3
The White House, Washington, D.C.
1005 Hours EDT/1505 Hours GMT
Tuesday, July 23rd, 1985


President Reagan was in the Situation Room, meeting with the Vice Peresident and his National Security Advisers. Besides VP George Bush, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, and Admiral Poindexter, the National Security Advisor, Gen. John Vessey, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, CIA Director William Casey, Secretary of State George Schultz, and the National Security Council's top Soviet expert, Dr. Condelezza Rice, were all at the Cabinet table. They were going over developments in Europe, and the likely response.

"So far, Mr. President, Admiral Crowe at CINCSOUTH in Naples is reporting that the Soviets in Yugoslavia have halted-for the time being at least, in both Slovenia and in Croatia." General Vessey was telling the President. "However, there have been some air clashes, and we've lost a couple of Marine Phantoms. But, we've also destroyed several Soviet aircraft."

"And we've told the Soviets not to get within a certain distance of our forces, correct?" Asked the President.

"Yes, sir." General Vessey replied. "So far, their ground forces are doing that."

The President turned to his Secretary of State. "George, anything out of Dobrynin?" Anatoly Dobrynin was the longtime Soviet Ambassador to the U.S., and knew America probably better than anyone in the Soviet Foreign Ministry.

"No, Mr. President,. Not a word. My people say that the Soviet leadership may be keeping him in the dark deliberately."

"They don't trust him. He's 'gone native', in other words?" Dr. Rice asked.

"That's what my people tell me," Schultz replied.
The President sighed. "All right. I've sent that letter to Cherenenko, offering to meet with him anywhere, anytime, to settle this without any further bloodshed. Mutual withdrawal from Yugoslavia, under UN supervision, a referendum in each of the three breakaway states in Yugoslavia to confirm their desire for independence, all of it. If I don't hear from him by noon, I'll make it public."

Everyone understood the need to show the world that the U.S wasn't pushing the Soviets into a war; and that Reagan was willing to go the extra mile to seek a negotiated settlement. Whether or not the Russians would see that was another question.

Dr. Rice spoke up. "Sir, they'll read the letter. And they'll ignore it."

Heads turned to her. "What makes you say that?" Weinberger asked.

"Mr. Secretary, we're dealing with a Politburo that has an average age of 66. If what the British are saying after Gordievsky's defection is true-and there's no reason to doubt that, we've got a major problem."

"Could you explain further?" CIA Director Casey asked. He had gotten the MI-6 debrief of Gordievsky, and he'd nearly turned pale reading it.

"Of course. The Soviet leadership, apart from a few Candidate-or nonvoting-Members of the Politburo, is not just aging, but paranoid. That Able Archer exercise in 1983 scared them. They honestly believed that it was a cover for a real attack. Despite what their own intelligence sources-whether KGB, GRU, or Stasi-told them. They're living in the world of 1941, not 1985, and are convinced that the West plans to attack them at the earliest opportunity." Dr. Rice said.

"They're that paranoid?" Vice-President George Bush asked. A former Director of the CIA, he knew the intelligence business.

"They are. None of the Politburo members-other than Foreign Minister Gromyko-have been to the West, though a few of the Candidate members have, but they have no influence on policy. And since 1941, the Soviets have vowed never again to be caught napping by a surprise attack."

Digesting this, the President nodded. He turned to Director Casey. "Anything to add?"

"Mr. President, we can confirm a few things, though I do agree with Dr. Rice's assessment," Casey replied. First, the Soviets have not discharged their time-expired soldiers, either from Eastern Europe, or in the Western Military Districts. They've called up their new draftees, who normally would be coming into service anyway. Second, we're getting signs via overheads of movement of trains and rolling stock to the Baltics, Beylorussia, and the Ukraine."

"Right to Soviet Army garrisons, Bill?" Poindexter asked.

"That's correct, Admiral. They're getting ready to move large numbers of troops west." Casey responded.

"Didn't they just run a major exercise?" Secretary Schultz asked.

"Yes, Mr. Secretary, they did. And they even called up some reservists for that. But those men haven't been discharged, either. And there's also activity at key Soviet naval bases on the Kola Peninsula, as well as the Baltic, the Black Sea, and the Pacific. They're getting ready to surge subs into the sea lanes."

"Any signs of a Soviet strategic forces alert?" The President asked.

"No, sir. They do seem to be going out of their way to avoid that: their missile subs at sea are in their normal patrol patterns, and none of their SS-20s have moved out of their garrisons. Also, no unusual activity has been observed at their ICBM fields, nor their strategic bombers. There is a lot of activity at their theater bomber bases-the Badgers, Blinders, and Backfires, but none of the Bears assigned to intercontinental missions have been active, apart from routine training." Casey reported.

The President digested everything he'd heard. "Recommendations?"

"Mr. President," General Vessey said. "General Rogers at SHAPE has formally asked for REFORGER. If we're going to hold them conventionally, we need III Corps and the reinforcements for V and VII Corps."

"Approved," Reagan said at once. "You can call up the Civil Reserve Air Fleet, and start getting those convoys organized."

Vessey let out a invisible sigh of relief. "Yes, Mr. President."

"Mr. President," Weinberger added, "some units tagged for REFORGER are National Guard-"

"Cut the orders Federalizing them," Reagan directed. "I can call up to 100,000 without Congressional approval. That goes for any Air National Guard as well."

Secretary Weinberger nodded. "That includes evacuation of military dependents, and nonessential civilian DOD employees from Europe, you do realize?."

"Who comes out first?"

"Mr. President, the dependents in Germany and the Low Countries. That includes West Berlin. In fact, we'd better get them out first, in case the Soviets decide to seal off the air corridors." Weinberger paused, then went on, "Phase II is Britain, Iceland, Italy, Greece, and Spain."

"I'd like to include nonessential Embassy and Consulate staff, and all Foreign Service dependents as well," Secretary Schultz added.

"Granted," the President said at once. "And get as many Americans out of Europe as you can; expatriates, tourists, whatever. And what's in the first wave of REFORGER?"

"Yes, sir, on the evacuation. Now, the first group for REFORGER will be the 2nd Armored from III Corps along with Corps HQ, the 4th ID for V Corps, and the 1st Infantry, the Big Red One, for VII Corps. Then the rest of III Corps follows." Weinberger said. "That's 1st Cav, 5th ID, and 3rd ACR, along with Corps aviation, artillery, etc."

"Very well, and the Air Force as well?" Seeing Weinberger and Vessey nod, Reagan asked, "Anything else?"

"There's one other thing, Mr. President. Do you with to increase the DEFCON level?" Weinberger asked.
"Not now. I don't want to be seen as pushing the Soviets into a war. If they do something, then we'll do just that. Keep everyone at DEFCON 4.."

Neither Weinberger or Vessey liked that, but they knew the President had a point. "Yes, Mr. President."
 
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Chapter 4

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
Staff Member
Founder
Main Gate
RAF Lakenheath
Lakenheath, United Kingdom
Thursday, July 25th, 1985
0830 Local/0830 ZULU


Daria and Jane were fighting their lack of sleep with a mixture of willpower and coffee as they checked themselves over as they sat in the line of cars that had accumulated to enter the main gate at Lakenheath. They wore their flightsuts and sidecaps, with their aviator sunglasses hiding the bloodshot eyes and bags from having to stay up all night writing performance evaluations for their enlisted ground crew and then translate them into "Pentagon-ese." Today was the deadline for their submittal so they made the cutoff for promotion during this fiscal year. Ah the Air Force, Daria mused 20% flying, 80% paperwork.

There was also an AAR to go over with her flight leader on why they got tagged by that Brit F-4 and then the gripe sheet for the airplane to submit in triplicate, one copy to the crew chief, one to squadron maintenance and another to squadron operations. The F-111's air-conditioning was erratic and a couple of gauges kept giving false readings, nothing serious, but one of them was the fuel gauge and that could lead to some issues. It was only off by 250lbs and Jane and Daria had long known to correct for it, but better to get it get fixed now, with a potential war in the air. There also was the issue of the backup altimeter that had quit in the landing pattern. That had been a bit more serious.

And that's assuming any of the gripes get fixed before the end of the month. We're running up against a new fiscal year, so while Wing's looking for new ways to spend money? They're also looking for ways to save money. It's positively schizophrenic.

"Shit, amiga? What the hell is the holdup?" queried Jane.

Daria shrugged, but then it hit her. The usual security around the base was a few USAF Security Policemen, armed with their ubiquitous holstered .38s in near perfectly creased OG fatigues, boots and badges shined to a gleaming standard, standing by the main gate and checking IDs and giving razor sharp salutes, and giving the kids of base personnel more jaunty ones once they were satisfied with your bona fides. Not today.

Today the looks on the faces of the SP's were far grimmer, and there was RAF Regiment personnel in attendance as well, with their DPMs clashing with the SP OG uniforms as they were setting up sandbagged positions on either side of the road leading up to the main gate, all the SP's had M16s, and they were not slung. Not today. And every car was being given the once over, trunks opened, wheel wells checked with flashlights, and mirrors on poles run under the car. Daria also noticed there was a M-60 being setup within sight of the main gate in another position just inside the fence. There was also a pair of SPs, one with a military working dog going up and down the line of cars and letting the dog sniff the cars freely.

"Daria, what the hell is going on? We on alert?"

"I dunno. But some serious shit must have gone down overnight. Look, stay cool. It's just another day at work, right?" Daria said, a note of hope in her voice.

Both said little as Daria's black Camaro inched its way toward the main gate as the traffic slowly made its way on post. All the while, aircraft landed and took off, rattling the cars with the jetwash as it made its way towards the ground.

Daria decided to turn on the radio, pushing in the button on the car radio to both turn on the radio and set the tuner for the pre-set to Armed Forces Network, and she was greeted with the oddest thing she'd ever heard.

The radio had a single monotone voice that simply repeated "Execute Even Fox, Execute Even Fox." The voice repeated the phrase three times, and then without preamble, went right into the strains of the Beatles "Eleanor Rigby".

Daria and Jane looked at each other in bemusement and confusion. "What the hell is going on?" they both said to each other at once.

"Jinx!" both then said.

"Tie doesn't count." Daria said laconically.

"Damn well does, we owe each other." Jane said, shaking her head ruefully.

"Kinda defeats the purpose?"

"Daria, standards must be upheld, that is something you, of all people should be in favor of!" Jane said with a tone of mock rapprochement.

"Traitor"

"I'm sorry, I thought I heard you accuse your best friend of treason? That's a serious charge in these troubled times? I mean, Daria, why in the world would I betray us to the Russians? Not like they have much to offer me short of crushing poverty, government controlled art and really bad architecture." Jane said with a crooked smile.

Daria shrugged again "I suppose so, thanks for the bit of levity there."

Jane nodded "De Nada amiga, I'm scared too."

Daria looked Jane in the eyes. "Jane, if it comes, to, you know. Could we really do it?"

Jane nodded "Yeah, Daria, we could. Don't know whether to be proud of that or cry."

"How about both?"

After a seeming eternity, the car pulled even with the guard shack, which was now manned by one of those grim-faced SPs. The SP who approached the car was an impossibly young Airman 1st Class, who's most prominent facial feature was his adam's apple. His acne was only now fading and he was in full battle rattle, which made him look bigger than he probably was. He was covered by several of his fellows as well as a pair of "rockapes" from the RAF Regiment who held their FN-FALs at the low ready position, but they looked ready to raise them to their shoulders with the slightest excuse.

"Mam," he nodded at Daria, and then again at Jane "Mam, I have to ask you both to get out of the vehicle and please keep your hands in plain view, base commander's instituted a general search of all vehicles entering the base, no exceptions, mam." The SP shrugged with his rifle for emphasis, expressing his regret on having to do this.

Daria was shocked; she hoped it wasn't too obvious on her face. The sunglasses did a good job of hiding the eyes, but the rest of the face was probably turning white at this point. Probably a dead give away I'm not Spetsnaz.

Daria simply nodded and got out of the car, and stepped away from it a short distance, as Jane did the same from the other direction. Both were patted down by female SPs, who then gave a "thumbs up" to their opposite numbers. While that was going on, the car was searched, the glovebox was opened and rifled, the wheel wells were gone over with a flashlight, the trunk opened and it's contents gone through, nothing was left unsearched, even the bottom of the car was searched with a mirror on a pole.

"ID, mam? And could you remove your sunglasses, mam?" the female SP queried.

Daria fished for her wallet slowly. This many armed and nervous folks around, sudden movements were definitely a bad idea. She gingerly produced her green DoD issued ID card which made her look like an axe murderer and handed it to the SP, who looked both her and the picture up and down far more carefully than had been previously done. While she was giving Daria the once over, Daria removed her sunglasses, and winced at the sunlight that poured into her defenseless eyes.

Soon, the SP seemed satisfied with the nature of Daria's identity; she came to attention and snapped off a salute "Thank you, mam, you're clear to proceed. Have a good day!"

Daria returned the salute, muttering about mornings such as these, came to attention and returned the salute. Not her fault so I might as well be decent about it. As she made her way back to her car and got in about the same time as Jane, who was equally nonplussed, she put on a gritted smile and growled. "Shall we find some parking and head to work?"

"Might as well, things being on the verge of World War III, they might need some 'Vark drivers. Where the hell are they going to find those?" Jane said with a snarky smile on her face.

Daria simply shook her head as she put the Camaro into drive.

As the car cruised onto the base, both Daria and Jane drove slowly, taking the time to notice the various activities happening on the base. Security Police and RAF Regiment people were everywhere, either walking guard mounts, setting up machine gun positions, or in at least one case Daria noticed, the RAF was setting up a Rapier position overlooking the main runway.

And as for the main runway….it was a hive of activity, ungainly looking C-141s landing and taking off, and as she noticed the ramp, a C-9 parked on the far end of the ramp, along with 2 other aircraft, 767s from the look of them in United Airlines livery.

"Daria, what the hell is United Airlines doing here?"

"Somebody musta pushed the panic button and called up the CRAF, guess REFORGER's started."

REFORGER, or Return of Forces to Germany was an acronym meant to describe the crash deployment of US forces by air to meet up with pre-positioned equipment in Germany. It had been practiced every year as part of routine NATO exercises, but those NATO exercises had never involved cargo aircraft landing at Lakenheath. Considering also that REFORGER had concluded last month, there was only one conclusion: This was no exercise.

"Things must have gone from bad to worse in Yugoslavia." Jane mused

"God, I thought Reagan's offer last night would have calmed them down." Daria said as she shook her head.

"Guess not" Jane shrugged.

It wasn't long before Daria's Camaro cruised into it's usual parking space at her squadron area, and the two put on their "pillbox" covers and sunglasses, grabbed their flight bags (which had more uses than just being their flight equipment) and checked each over to make sure they were presentable.

Satisfied that they were, they made their way to the squadron offices, performing the military ritual of saluting and answering salutes. One thing neither of them could miss is nobody was doing the usual "movement with a purpose" today, but more walking briskly, or in some cases, outright running.

Daria looked at Jane in puzzlement after she noticed an Airman First Class with an armful of papers barely manage a salute to both of them as he attempted to become the first human to reach warp 2.

The unspoken question of them both: "How bad is it now?

As they reached the door to the squadron offices, they doffed their covers and sunglasses, pocketing both in their flightsuits, and as soon as they did…they saw the unbridled bedlam as opposed to the usual quiet competence the squadron administrative staff usually showed, one usually didn't hear much more than muted phone calls punctuated by brisk typing..not today.

Today, people were almost yelling into the phones, and admin staffs of all ranks were running about the office with arms stuffed with papers. They'd never seen the office like this.

Daria was determined to get to the bottom of this. She grabbed the first person she could find, an Tech Sergeant who had a 3 foot stack of folders stuffed with forms that he barely balanced in his arms.

"Shit, who the hell's grabbing…Oh, crap..sorry mam, it's all hit the fan today."

"What's going on, Sarge?" Daria asked

The tow-headed Tech Sergeant shook his head, his violet eyes bleary from too many hours on Air Force coffee alone and his OG uniform badly rumpled. He'd been at this for days. "The NCA's activated REFORGER, mam and the squadron staff's been busy all day with admin requests, maintenance requests, as well as coordinating the movement of munitions to the flight line."

Jane jumped in "Wait, they're moving live munitions to the flight line?"

"Right to the HAS's mam. The Russians increased the pace of their mobilization last night and word is, Chernenkyo's giving a speech today. I doubt the news will be good, mam. Oh, and I almost forgot, all unmarried pilots without dependants are to drop what they're doing and report to the ready room, immediately."

"Goodie, guess we're all on Victor alert now." Daria mused.

"Don't even joke about that, Daria."

"Who's joking?"

Thursday, 25 July 1985,
0700 EDT/1200 GMT (1800 Moscow Time)
The White House, Washington, DC

President Reagan and his National Security Team were meeting in the Situation Room, in what was becoming a daily routine. Just as JFK had in 1962, Reagan was having such meetings twice a day, as the Yugoslav Crisis seemed likely to escalate into a full-scale war between NATO and the Warsaw Pact. And the American public, thanks to the news footage shot by the DOD Media Pool, now felt themselves to be at war with the Soviet Union. So far, the shooting had been confined to Slovenia and Croatia, but that couldn't last forever.

The President asked Secretary of Defense Weinberger, "Cap, how's REFORGER going so far?"

"Mr. President, the lead elements of III Corps are on the ground in Germany and Holland. They're drawing their equipment from their POMCUS sites. Right now, III Corps HQ, lead elements of the 1st Cavalry Division, and additional elements of the 2nd Armored Division are on the ground. Also, the 4th ID for V Corps and the 1st ID for VII Corps are also arriving. And yes, dependents and all other nonessential Americans are coming out. Phase I of evacuation from Germany and the Low Countries is well underway, and we've begun Phase II from England, Italy, Greece, and Spain this morning."

"Good," the President said. He turned to the CIA Director, William Casey. "And the Soviets?"

"They're beginning to move what we believe is the 28th Army from Beylorussia. They're tagged for East Germany: most of their units are part of Group of Soviet Forces Germany in peacetime, but the Soviets are moving the rest in. We're also seeing movement in the Baltic MD, and it's expected the two Armies there will move through Poland and East Germany to attack Schlesweig-Holstein and Denmark." Casey reported.

"What about the Tank Army Groups, one each in Beylorussia and the Ukraine?" Admiral Poindexter, the NSA, asked.

"They're getting ready as well. Overheads show unit shakedowns, things like that. And their Air Force units in both Beylorussia and the Ukraine are getting ready to deploy forward."

"Thank you, Director," Reagan said.

"Mr. President," House Speaker Tip O'Neil said. He'd been asked to sit in on these meetings by the President, and O'Neil had made sure that whatever the President needed out of Congress to respond, he would get, and, if necessary run right over the anti-war members of the House in the process. "No formal response from Moscow to your letter?"

"No, Mr. Speaker, there hasn't," Reagan replied. "Nor have they responded to Waldheim's offer, or the Pope's, for that matter." He was referring to UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's offer of his "good offices" to mediate between the superpowers, even offering to host a summit at the UN's offices in Geneva. And Pope John Paul II had made a similar request, offering to host Reagan and Premier Cherenenko at the Vatican for a conference. The Soviets' silence had been ominous.

"Mr. President," Weinberger said. "The Navy reports that Strike Fleet Atlantic is forming off of Norfolk. That means a four-carrier battle group ready to go north to the Barents Sea, if necessary. That's Nimitz, Eisenhower, America, and Independence. Coral Sea is headed to the Med to back up John F. Kennedy and Forrestal, with Saratoga right behind her." He paused for a moment. "Enterprise is in the Indian Ocean, and..."

"Sorry to interrupt, Mr. Secretary," Dr. Condi Rice said. She had just taken a phone call. "NSA is reporting that Premier Cherenenko is about to give the speech before the Supreme Soviet. CNN is going to be carrying it, live. It should be on at any moment."

Reagan nodded to Don Regan, his Chief of Staff. "Let's see it."

Regan turned one of the TVs in the Sit Room to CNN, and the commentator was noting that every seat in the Supreme Soviet was full. Then the Premier came in, with Defense Minister Marshal Sergei Sokolov right behind him, and the KGB Chief, Viktor Chebrikov. Everyone watching noted the somber expressions on all three, and the Premier appeared exceptionally grim-faced. Chernenenko went to the podium and began to speak.

The translator was having a hard time keeping up, and for sure, the NSA would have a full transcript as soon as the speech was finished, but Cherenenko was lashing out at the West, denouncing the U.S., Britain, and Italy for "Blatantly interfering in the affairs of a fraternal socialist state, and the unprovoked aggression against the Soviet Armed Forces in Yugoslavia."

VP George Bush noted, "Nothing new there."

Reagan nodded as the Premier went on.

"When Soviet blood has been shed, there will be a response. That cowboy in the Oval Office, who thinks that nuclear missiles are six-shooters, and that tired old bitch in London, who follows him at every turn, they will discover the error of their ways. The same goes for Kohl, that fascist in Bonn, who longs for restoration of Germany's 1937 borders, and that 'sunshine socialist' in Paris, Mitterrand, who claims to be 'independent' of America, and yet, has followed her in Lebanon and elsewhere."

Reagan looked at Director Casey. "Has he lost it?"

"Looks that way, Mr. President,"

"As for that Nazi who calls himself 'Secretary-General', the USSR does not accept offers of so-called 'mediation' from a Fascist, nor does it do the same from a reactionary churchman whose aim is to undermine a fraternal socialist state,"

Cherenenko said, denouncing both Waldheim and the Pope. He went on. "For there to be a peaceful solution, NATO must withdraw its forces from Yugoslavia, pay compensation for all the damage it has inflicted, cancel all of the measures it has taken since its criminal attack on the Armed Forces of the USSR, and withdraw at once all tactical nuclear weapons from Europe. Only then will the USSR and the Fraternal Socialist Countries consider rescinding the measures they have taken in response. NATO's failure to do so can only have the gravest possible consequences. And the reactionary leaders in the West should know this: the patience of the Soviet Union and the Fraternal Socialist Countries is not unlimited."

Chernenenko then left the podium, and Marshal Sokolov spoke. He announced the call-up of reservists in European Russia, retention in service of those scheduled to be demobilized, and the cancellation of military leaves. All Soviet servicemen and -women were to report to their units, and Sokolov finished by calling on all members of the Soviet Armed Forces to "do their duty in defense of the Motherland."

Only after that did the Soviet TV feed stop, and CNN's anchor picked up his commentary. "Mother of God," Reagan said. "They really want it. They want a war."

"Yes, Sir," Secretary of State George Schultz said.

"There's no doubt. We're going to war. The only question is when."

"Concur," Casey said at once.

"General," Reagan turned to Gen. John Vessey, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. "How long to complete REFORGER?"

"Another week, sir. We're in Day Three right now."

Nodding, Reagan turned to Secretary Weinberger. "

Two days ago you and General Vessey wanted DEFCON 3?"

"Yes, Mr. President," Weinberger said.

The President looked at his National Security Team. Heads nodded. "Do it. All U.S. Forces worldwide to DEFCON 3, immediately."

492nd Squadron Ready Room
RAF Lakenheath
Thursday, July 25th 1985
1235 GMT/1235 Local

Daria Morgandorffer had seen a lot of crazy in her short life, especially when her dad was involved. But Cherenenko in full rant had beat him all hollow. She was simply shocked this was a man with his finger on the nuclear trigger. Even on the ancient 70s TV in the aircrew ready room, all those present had to strain to hear the bombast, but the room had been as quiet as a tomb during the speech.
Many of the pilots in the ready room had shared her reaction, with a lot of gasps and "oh shits" punctuating the broadcast of the speech. At least one pilot said after the speech. "Guess it's "So long, Mom, we're off to drop the bomb."

"Um, Jane?"

"Yeah Dar-?"

"We're going to war, aren't we?"

The door crashed open with a loud bang and the cry of "Ten-HUT!" and the pilots and WSOs rose to attention with a crash of feet, and all conversation and other noise ceased as the operations officer, Major James Killenger, a balding man of 35, with a large stature and a slight scar down his hairline, a memento of his ejection from a burning F-4 over North Vietnam in 1971. He'd spent the two subsequent years as a "guest" of the North Vietnamese. He strode to the lecturn and then waved everyone back into their seats as he began.

"Ok people, here's what is going on? The base is being cleared for war. That's where all the married personnel are, putting their wives and kids on the outgoing '141s. They're also clearing the base hospital. My advice? Don't kid yourself about any chances for peace after that little speech. After the married folks get back, we're going to pass out your day one, strike one target folders. Expect to be told to move onto the base shortly, as word is USAFE is we will probably be locking down the base at any time in the next twenty four hours.."

This was met with a lot of groans and "goddamits!"

"AT EASE!" Major Killenger bellowed. "We're at the brink of war people, and that's not all. Aircrews and groundcrews not on Victor alert will be sleeping in their HASes. Furthermore, within the next twenty-four hours, all aircrews and groundcrew will be issued sidearms. You WILL be expected to wear them at all times."

"Shit." Daria muttered under her breath.

"This is the real deal, people. The Soviets are mobilizing faster and faster, and now their Premier has gone berserk on the world stage. We're sending the families home as fast as we can get them out of Britain and Germany, and the old hands have assured me we didn't do this in either '62 or '73. The Soviets are only going to see this one way. Best get used to the idea, now, I am going to hand this over to the squadron intelligence officer as he gets you reacquainted with the threat board for East Germany and Poland…."
 
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Chapter 5 -Quinn's Story

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
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Chapter 5 – Quinn's Story

158 West 75th Street

Lobby of the Steadman Building

Friday, July 26th, 1985

1320 Local/1720 Zulu

Quinn Morgendorffer had seen a lot in her 24 years…or at least she thought she had. She'd never seen a major city in the throes of panic. New York City was in a collective nervous breakdown. As she waited on a cab to get her back to her apartment in Stuyversant Town, she took a breath and took it all in and wondered at a city in the grips of panic. A dusky skinned man ran by, a dark bag in his hands, he missed Quinn by inches and shouted out "Sorry miss!" as two cops in NYPD two tone blue were in hot pursuit, screaming "HALT! STOP! STOP OR WE SHOOT!" That last part jarred Quinn to the core. When did they start shooting robbery suspects?

Even at street level, she heard the sirens and smelled the smoke from uptown. Harlem and Bed-Stuy were burning. There had been riots since Chernenko's speech, mostly from people who were convinced it was all going to end "like in that TV show, the Day After, and their 'fill in the blank group' would be left to die." The NYPD had sent all it had north, with the FDNY right behind. Both had had their ranks thinned because of reservist call-ups. She'd heard rumors Governor Cuomo had begged President Reagan for use of the National Guard, but Reagan had refused, mainly due to the situation in Europe. There were also rumors of an impending curfew, of martial law being declared, and that there were Soviet commandos planning to hit Gracie Mansion or the tunnels. The rumor mills were running rife, and Quinn had heard them all. God I hope Daria's ok? Listen to me? I'm hoping my big sister is alright. Well, if things really get fucked up, she's going to war, not me. My entire fault, really. Didn't get into FIT anyhow. But I did pretty well at Columbia.

This was partly why Quinn was standing outside her former workplace, the contents of her desk in a cardboard box and a letter of termination sticking out of the box. Figures I lose my job because for the first time in my life, I do the right thing and stick up for my big sis..Oh well, I kinda hated that job anyhow…

4 hours earlier


Quinn entered the offices of Fierce magazine much as she had for the two years previously. She was dreading the day to come due to the fact that her boss, Mort Kauffman, a so-called "writer of young urban fashion" (a legend in his own mind, Quinn had often thought) and senior editor of the magazine, was planning on hosting a "dinner party for peace!" and expected his assistant, Quinn, to drop everything for a bunch of his superficial friends and coke addicted models to pretend they were somehow smarter than Regan and Chernenko while eating quiche.

Never mind Quinn and many of the staff were worried whether or not they would be here or part of the upper atmosphere from day to day at this point. None of that mattered to their superficial, idiot boss, who was still going on about his late trip to the Hamptons and how this "tiff" between the superpowers had everyone spooked for no good reason. Why, one of his wine and cheese parties and Reagan and Chernenko would be friends!

Or, at least Mort seemed to think so. "It's all the fault of those warmongers in the military, just like Vietnam," Mort would say. "We need a good protest by the youth, not those anti-nuclear fashion disasters, but some really good looking kids, something with some real kitsch!" The first time Mort said it, Quinn almost agreed with him, and then it hit her:

Daria and Jane were among those so-called "warmongers."

She knew them, she knew they didn't want a war, and they didn't want to die. She'd spoken to Daria over the phone last week. Looking forward to it was the last thing that could be said for Daria, or Jane. Daria's voice had been shaky, she was trying to stay brave for her sister, but she knew it was an act. Funny thing was? Daria's attempt made Quinn feel a bit braver too. For the first time ever? Quinn Morgendorffer was proud of her older sister, and woe to the SOB who felt otherwise.

And I work for this ass that disparages my sister. Why do I put up with this schmuck again? Oh yeah, because I want a job in fashion journalism. What the hell is so damn important about that anyhow? God, he's like a male version of Stacy. Quinn Morgendorffer, it is time to put Fashion Club where the hell it belongs: The damn wastebasket. You've ghost written articles for this putz when he is coked out of his damn mind, and does he even give you a byline? No. There's a national emergency happening, and he's worried about his trip to the goddamned Hamptons and wants the peace movement back so bell-bottoms and long hair makes a comeback, not because we might get cooked alive!

The thoughts made Quinn even madder than usual, and her gruff "hello" to the receptionist came out meaner than intended, not that the receptionist had much more going for her than "typing fast and running slow." Her neon-green hair and ever-present bubble gum didn't say much as to her situational awareness either. As Quinn made her way to her desk, she noticed Cynthia, her "girlfriend" and one of the junior photo editors was gone, and her desk suspiciously clean.

Where the hell is Cynthia? Mort didn't fire her, did she? I'll duck into Glaydis's office and ask. Glaydis was one of the assistant editors and hated Mort as much as Quinn did, and had a boy with the National Guard uptown who was due to ship out for Kentucky any day now. She had bigger things than whether or not Mort had some nutty fantasy going.

"Morning Glaydis? Where's Cynthia?"

Glaydis looked up from the stack of articles she'd been proofing, and bleeding all over with a red pen. Her brunette hair was clean, but disheveled, and her green eyes were bloodshot, like she'd been crying. She sniffed, and smiled a weak smile, for Quinn's benefit.

"Hi Quinn," she said in hushed tones. "Mort's gone nuts, I think he's high on something, which isn't new, but it's a hell of a time for that with the fall line issue due. Then again, there may not be a fall line if things keep going the way they are. Mort's not helping though. He fired Cynthia for having the nerve to take time off to get her kids to her parent's place in Maine."

Quinn's jaw dropped. "What? Why? She's just asking for some time to get her kids out of the bullseye!"

"I know that and so do you. But Mort just up and fired her for 'lack of dedication to the magazine.'" Glaydis replied, her fingers waggling for emphasis.

Quinn couldn't believe it. Here there was Armageddon staring them in the face and Mort was more worried about the magazine? Cynthia had three kids, was a single parent and the oldest of her kids was in the 4th grade. In short, she had a damn good reason wanting them the hell out of town and with her parents in Maine. But Mort fired her rather than do the right thing. It's not like Fierce lacked for photo editors.

"What now? Do we soldier on till the bombs come? Do we quit, or do we just not bother coming in?" Quinn asked with a pleading tone in her voice. I don't know what to do, I mean, nobody's telling us a thing right now, what do we do?

Gladys gave a gallic shrug. "How in the hell do I know, Quinn? Me, I got no man, no kids at home, and a housecat for company, I've been a New Yorker all my life and I am over 40. Dearie, if the bombs come, I intend to have some Bordeaux with a side of sleeping pills. Same for the cat. My little Sammie isn't dying like that. Dearie? My advice? Finish out today and quit. Assuming the nukes don't come, you can use me as a reference. And, if they do come? Well, you can be the generation that rebuilds from our screwups, either way, right now? Who the hell needs fashion journalists at a time like this? I've seen your stuff Quinn, it's good, really good. Go find somewhere where it will do some good, not here where you can listen to the coked-up ravings of a crazy-ass moron."

"Why wait Gladys? I should type up my resignation and just put it on his desk now. I've got you as a reference, right?"

Gladys simply nodded, then got up and came from around her desk; arms wide and the same weak smile on her face.

"To better times, toots." Gladys whispered as she hugged Quinn. "When you talk to that crazy fighter pilot of a sister you have, tell her to stay safe for me, ok?" She pulled back from Quinn as she smiled a bit more genuinely. "And you, I don't want to see you until this thing is over, one way or the other. Might be a good time for you to see your family. Aren't they 30 miles or so from Baltimore?"

Quinn nodded, but realized if Aberdeen Proving Ground or Fort Meade got hit, it might not make much of a difference.

It was at that moment that Quinn's reverie was broken by the nasaly, high-pitched voice that was, to most, like fingernails on a chalkboard, the fact that it was slurring and it took a few moment's to realize that someone was calling her name, and that someone happened to be her boss was equally troubling. God Mort, I know it may seem like the damn world's coming to an end, and it may very well be, but really, you have to be coked out of your mind during working hours? Shit, might as well get the day formally started.

Quinn and Gladys shared a knowing look and Quinn turned to leave, walking briskly towards Mort's office down the hall. Mort was still bellowing for her, although the bellowing sounded more like the bleating of a sick calf.

"Quinn, goddamit, where are you?" the voice bellowed from behind the door.

"Coming, Mr. Kauffman." Quinn said, her teeth gone past gritting and right onto grinding.

She entered Mort's office, which had a decent view of the southern Manhattan skyline, and right into lower New York harbor. The rest of the office's décor could best be described as "bad 70's porn film meets Andy Warhol."

Quinn could see a lot more ship traffic than was normal out Mort's window, a lot of it painted haze-grey rather than the standard mélange of merchant and local livery. What the hell is going on in the harbor?

"Hey, Red? Focus, I pay you to make me look good and smart!" Mort said, inches from her face, his alcohol breath wafting over Quinn and making her eyes water. "It's just those idiots in the Navy again, probably blowing the hell out of a whale!"

Quinn began to see red, I hate that nickname, and I hate that he's usually blasted out of his mind when he says it.

Mort then smiled and leaned back into his pleather office chair. He was wearing a fur lined sportcoat in the middle of July, and had glasses you could see yourself clearly in, not to mention the purple bell-bottoms and the ruffled shirt. It was all a sad testament to the fact Mort had not gotten with the times. He was stuck in the 70s where he ruled the Garment District and he didn't let a soul forget it. His hairline had rapidly receded, and the rug he called a toupee was barely covering the fact up. Completing the unattractive picture was his sweaty, meaty hands and his oversized gut. No, Mort Kauffman was a testament not just to a has-been but a never would be.

"Quinn. I need you to clear my calendar for today, call 'Tessa and call Studio 54 and get my usual table," Mort said with a bit of a toothy grin. "By the way, something that's occurred to me, Quinn."

Uh-oh. "And that is?" Quinn replied, the bile rising in her throat as she spoke.

"Every woman in this office I have had the pleasure of breaking in, shall we say. Not you. And hey, why not we make the two-backed monster while we can, before Ivan blows us to hell? Maybe we can even do some lines off of each other, to heighten the experience? Hmm?" Mort said, a greasy smile breaking the monotony of his face.

Quinn turned red at the suggestion. First, out of embarrassment. She wasn't the girl who led boys around by their emotions any more. She was a new, professional Quinn who took this demeaning job to get her big break in this town…and now this clown suggested she screw him because it was the apocalypse? No Mort, not even if you are the last man on Earth, god forbid.

Mort, much to Quinn's chagrin, didn't wait for an answer, and lept over the desk with an agility that Quinn didn't suspect he still had. Quinn, out of sheer surprise, stepped back and screamed. Quinn's actions caused Mort to misjudge the distance, and thus he fell short, banging his head on the floor of his office, which, while carpeted, was still hard enough to draw blood, thus slurring his voice even more prominently.

"YOU TURN ME DOWN! YOU, YOU NO TALENT ASSISTANT WHO COULDN'T GET WORK AT THE VILLAGE VOICE TURNED ME DOWN!" roared Mort.

Quinn trembled a bit at first, she was worried about keeping her job, but she soon realized, Why the hell do I have to take this? He's just a coked out jerk. No, it's time I told him to go to hell.

"Mort, with all due respect, and that means absolutely none." Quinn said in an icy tone,
"Screw you. I don't sleep with men whose equipment is made by ERTL. You know, just like the real thing, only smaller? And Mort? I. Don't. Need. You. I quit. You understand? I quit! If the nukes are coming? I want to die with my family. Not with a coke addicted narcissistic asshole! Oh, and one more thing Mort? The military you like to make jokes about so much? One of those people is my sister. She's in England, waiting for what comes next. I've been a shitty sister to her, at one point pretending she wasn't even my kin. But that changes, today! She'd have simply kicked your ass. I guess I am going to settle for telling you off. Bye Mort."

Quinn then turned on her heel, opened the door, and walked out, slamming the door as hard as she could behind her. What came next was a massive surprise.

She came out to applause. All 20 or so staff members of Fierce were there and they were clapping with yells of "Alright" and "Way to go Quinn!"

Glayds ran over and hugged her. "Quinn honey, let's you, me and some of the girls go take a long brunch. On his dime! Creep!" Gladys shouted the last in the direction of Mort's office.

Quinn looked at her quizzically.

"Dearie, Mel in accounting controls all the petty cash, and she's been waiting for a moment like this for eight years!"

Quinn nodded in understanding, then she threw back her head and laughed. What the hell? Things are insane enough already!

The Present

Quinn listened to the music of a city in the depths of apocalyptic panic. "Gee, the President calls for calm, and half the city thinks: 'Ok, let's panic! Somebody needs to pass the memo on what calm means '" she muttered under her breath.

On a good day it was tough trying to get a cab at the corner of her building, but today, it was as if half of New York's cabbies had called in sick, then again, so had a lot of other folks, the press was calling it the "nuke flu." Quinn shook her head, perhaps it was time to head south to her place on East 20th Street on foot, happily, all the danger was uptown, and most of the muggers were probably preoccupied with getting out of the Big Apple before the Russians caramelized it.

She sighed, and looked down at the Minolos she wore, They're my faves, but fact is, they won't hold up under a 30 block walk…and let's face it, what the hell can I trade them for at a time like this, can't eat them, and they won't get you out of town. Plus, they're a gift from Mort…Quinn shuddered at that last thought. Half of her current professional wardrobe was gifts from Mort. She resolved to leave it behind, considering NYC probably would be a heap of rubble before too long, what was the point of taking such impractical crap with her?

Quinn quickly went through her box, grabbing a six-pack of Tab and tossing it in her oversized purse. It ought to have some heft to club the crap out of a mugger anyhow now, learned that from that stupid prison movie my ex made me watch. Then again, there was something fishy about him. The good ones, they're always married or gay. Quinn shrugged as she rifled through her bag, throwing her office supplies and useless knickknacks back into the bag, and retaining only an extra set of hose, some handkerchiefs and a spare blouse, along with the aforementioned Tab, and a roll of subway tokens just in case she did manage to get to a station or find a southbound bus, the rest was put back into the box, and unceremoniously dumped into the wastebasket at the corner.

Quinn then smiled and rubbed her hands together, washing her hands of the past, and she mentally figured she could make it home by about 3 or 4. After that, pack what she could into one suitcase, and call a cab, negotiate a fare to get her across the river to Newark and catch a plane or train to Baltimore Penn Station or BWI, and rent a car home from there. That's of course hoping the authorities haven't limited all travel, or that there's even seats available. Quinn felt the nervous bile rising as she set out south, One step at a time Morgendorffer, One step at a-

It was then that Quinn's reverie was disrupted by a very loud horn, one that could only come from one of the older Checker cabs…and sure enough, one block away, off to the Quinn's right, was a Checker cab, with a very animated gentleman, his distinctive yellow hat perched on a head full of grey hair, and his glasses taking up much of his face, waving furiously at Quinn, as he hit the horn again!

"Hey Lady!" he screamed, "Get off the streets! Somebody will mug you or worse in times like these!" His accent was pure gravelly New York, and could only belong to somebody who'd been a hack all his life.

Quinn was bewildered, she pointed to herself in the classic "Who me?" gesture.

"Yeah you!" he replied. "Get in the cab before something happens to you!"

Quinn shrugged, then ran across the nearly empty intersection to 5th Avenue and got into the cab. A white and brown patch of living fur that purred contentedly immediately assaulted her and jumped in her lap.

The cabbie noticed Quinn's shock at being assaulted by the cat. "Oh crap, I'm sorry, that's Baron, he means well, he just forgets not everybody wants 20lbs of purring cat in their lap as a way of saying hello, then again, if he does that, it means he likes you. And Baron is an excellent judge of character." The driver wasted little time in pulling away from the curb and making his way in the direction of the West Side Highway.

Quinn smiled as she absentmindedly stroked Baron's fur behind the ear, to which Baron responded by purring even louder. "Yeah, he really likes you. Anyhow, my name is Murray Cohen. Been a cabbie for almost 40 years since the war ended. And god willing, there's gonna be a New York to come back to so I can drive for another ten or twenty years. But right now, I am getting the hell out of here. If it's the end, lady? I am going to meet it with my daughter and her family in Maryland."

Quinn's eyes lit up with joy at the good news in front of her. "Um, Mr. Cohen, I hate to ask, but where in Maryland are you headed?"

"What's it to ya?"

"I got family near Baltimore. I can pay!"

"Oh, well then in that case, guess I lucked out. We can work out a fare when we get down there; you got an apartment near here? Someplace you might wanna pack a few things?"

"I'm down on East 20th Street, 620 to be exact."

"Oh Thank God! I thought you were going to say some artsy fartsy place north of Harlem. I ain't going up there today."

"This is gonna sound silly, but can we even get out of New York?" Quinn asked

"We'll manage. The trick is, when we get to your place, you gotta pack fast, no more than two suitcases. We'll put em up front with me. As for getting out, we can roll the dice with the tunnels, it might be our best bet. Just so you know, we're not stopping for food till we get to Jersey. And if something happens, and I don't usually tell passengers this..but I got a .38 in the glovebox with a dozen extra shells."

Quinn's jaw dropped "Why are you telling me?"

"You're a nice lady, and there's been some real animals running around on the streets the last couple of days…a lot of cops are getting recalled into the Army."

"Shit. It's really hit the fan, huh? Quinn asked, her voice almost a whisper.

"Yeah, it has, young lady. And I know you're a member of the tribe, like me, and I am not leaving a fellow Jew to die here if I can help it. My Rachel, God Rest her Soul, would kick my ass if I did. You got any family in the military?"

"My Sister, she's a fighter pilot."

"No kidding, my son's some sort of intelligence guy in the army. Haven't heard a damn thing from him in the last two days. You hear a thing from your sister?"

Quinn shook her head vigorously no.

"Was afraid of that, when I was in the Army, they'd hold up the mail when something big was up. Lady, I think we're going to war, and I think those in the know are pretty convinced of it. Speaking of which, you mind if I put on the news?"

"Go ahead, doubt much has changed…"

"True, but it doesn't hurt." Murray offered.

The old radio went on with an audible click and came to life immediately.

"1010 WINS NEWSHOUR, The time is 1:20 and we'll give you the world! Our top story is the deteriorating situation between the superpowers." We go now to our Chief Washington Correspondent Bob Schaeffer,

"Good evening, Katie, In the morning press briefing at the White House, Spokesman Larry Speaks denied any rumors that the United States and NATO had forsworn further negotiation with the Soviet Union or the Warsaw Pact during today's Press Briefing:"

'The President has said, and we will reiterate, we are willing to negotiate, anytime, anywhere. But we cannot simply accept the terms laid out by the Soviets during the General Secretary's speech. Accepting those terms would be tantamount to the surrender of NATO and the free world.'

"Further comments by unnamed Pentagon and White House officials have stated little hope for a diplomatic solution, noting increasing signs that the Soviets have begun total mobilization of their armed forces, and while some hope this is simply brinkmanship, many are not very confident that this can be resolved short of armed conflict. Back to you in New York, Katie."

"We go now to CBS's Special Correspondent, Bob Simon, who is currently, somewhere in Germany"

"We've been asked not to mention where we are, as preparations for war are going on unabated here and nobody here wants to give Soviet intelligence any favors. I took a ride to the border with NATO troops, I can't say with whom exactly. They are backing up the West German border troops currently, and the feeling here is that war is pretty much inevitable, and more than one soldier here is feeling as if they'd rather get it over with than waiting, and worrying. One West German border police officer sticks out in my mind, when I asked him what would he do if and when the Russians came. He told me, 'Make their lives as miserable as we can.' He told me further that he hadn't seen any Russians, but he'd heard tank engines and helicopters across the border at night, and that his East German counterparts were taking up the border minefields. According to many I have spoken to, it's a sure sign that the Russians are coming. Back to you, Katie."

"In local news tonight, there is both calm and panic as the news becomes seemingly more grim by the hour, as just about every house of worship in town is full, with many parishioners praying for peace. The riots in Bedford-Stuyversant and Harlem continue tonight, with appeals for calm from the mayor and governor falling on deaf ears. Other protests have broken out at the UN and the headquarters of the Communist Party of the United States on 25th Street in the wake of an FBI raid. Almost all routes out of town are gridlocked, with traffic moving very slowly, officials are calling for patience, and stating that if matters continue, they will implement a system rationing travel outside the city."

"I want people to know the NYPD is doing all it can in this moment of crisis to help the citizens we protect. We have to do the job with a third of the officers we'd usually have, as many of my officers were reservists and they have been called up. We need you, the citizen, to stay calm, stay home except when necessary, and don't pass rumors. One of those rumors started the riot in Bed-Stuy right now. We're New Yorkers, we're better than this."

"That was NYPD Commissioner Ben Ward at the Mayor's press conference this morning. We'll stay with the top story 24 hours a day to keep you informed during this time of crisis. This is 1010 WINS, we're now taking a break for station identification…"

Quinn looked out the window as the cab made its way down the grey streets, the sky darkening as a portent of a summer thunderstorm, but also as a foreshadow of what was coming.

"Whole city's gone nuts, Well, At least those communists can't slink off in the middle of the night. Serves the bastards right." Murray intoned. "I remember listening to the radio and remembering how it sounded the last time."

"Was it anything like this?"

"This time is worse, I didn't grow up under the threat of being annihilated."

Neither said a word to the other till they got to Quinn's apartment on 20th Street. Only Baron's purring and the hard taps of a summer thunderstorm filled the taxi.
 
Chapter 6

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
Staff Member
Founder
US Mission, Berlin
CIA Deputy Station Chief's Office
West Berlin
August 2nd, 1985
0730 Local/0530 ZULU


Harrison Grey had had a lot of crappy duties to perform in his three years as part of US Mission Berlin (often called USBER), but this took the cake. Things had been tense in West Berlin as the superpowers seemed to inexorably slide towards war, the East German border guards at the Wall were a lot less friendly to him, and he'd gotten roughed up a few times, even with his diplomatic cover credentials.

The other intel the other assets in the Berlin area had developed was frightening. The US Military Liaison Mission or USMLM had reported the movement of 20-30 trainloads of Soviet troops overnight through the Berlin area, as well as the movement of large numbers of East German Volkspolizei or VoPo and Battalions of the Working Class units moving closer to the Wall from all directions. The land corridors had been cut last night, and word was, the air corridors were probably going to be cut this morning.

Yesterday's news about a Navy EP-3 being shot down 100 miles north of Kola by Soviet fighters and a West German Atlantique being gunned down by a MiG-23 over the Baltic hadn't improved the overall mood either.

And now, somebody, probably the East Germans, were performing low-level recon flights over West Berlin seemingly every few hours, low enough that the West Berlin police were getting some fierce complaints about more than a few broken windows. Finally, in the last six hours, the ABC news people in Berlin had confided in him that none of the news services had heard from any of their Eastern bloc based reporters for the last day and a half. Christ, they know what kind of intelligence indicators these all signify. They wouldn't do this unless…unless they were serious.

The East Germans, however, had pulled a new stunt in the last two hours that pretty much made up Langley's mind about it being time to get out of the pool. The trouble was, in Harrison's mind, who the hell was going to convince Amy Barksdale of this?

Meanwhile, Amy was simply concentrating on getting a few Z's. She had been running nonstop on coffee and nerves for the last 36 hours trying to get a coherent picture of what the hell was going on in Berlin. Her boss had simply vanished after getting word a high-ranking East German official had wanted to defect, the source was a local, who had provided good product in the past, and the fellow had been careful, and worked for money, rather than ideology, which all was good signs. Trouble was, Arthur had been gone for 12 hours now, and Amy's fitful sleep was a sign she was beginning to worry. It wasn't like Arthur not to check in, not after that long in the East.

She was just beginning to fall asleep when…there was an insistent knock at the door. Damn, just as I was getting some damn sleep. Turning 50 last month sucks. Why did I put in for Berlin? I could have taken that middle management training position back at Langley, but nooo, I had to go back to Berlin. I had to prove I still had it. Shit.

"ENTER!" Amy barked, the lack of sleep making it sound a lot meaner than she intended, as she vigorously rubbed the sleep from her eyes, while suppressing a yawn, and failing as it escaped in a muffled form.

Grey entered the office with a yellow message flimsy stamped multiple times FLASH in red. Such messages rarely failed to be important, nor were they ever good news. Amy shook her head, and wordlessly took the message flimsy from Grey. The message was short, and to the point, but said all it really needed to say:

FROM: LANGLEY CENTER
TO; CHIEF OF AGENCY MISSION, USBER
SUBJ; SECOND KNIGHT

UPON RECIEPT THIS MESSAGE, YOU ARE TO HEREBY EXECUTE SECOND KNIGHT NLT 1300 YOUR TIME TODAY. INTELLIGENCE HERE SUGGESTS WP INVASION FRG WILL COMMENCE SOMETIME IN THE NEXT 48-72 HOURS. ACK THIS MESSAGE IMMEDIATELY UPON RECIEPT.


Amy looked up in horror. "This for real? You know what this means, right?"

Grey nodded. "Yeah, I do. We ran it through the decoder twice, and asked for confirmation. It's
real."

SECOND KNIGHT's orders were simple, destroy all documents and sensitive equipment both in the CIA station, and as part of USBER, and then evacuate all CIA and State Department personnel from USBER via Gatow Airfield and report to Bonn for further orders. Some, the Special Activities Division paramilitaries, had their own orders, which even Amy didn't know, but they'd disappeared three days ago in some "sterile" Trabants with very heavy suitcases for parts unknown. Probably full of money and guns, but damned if I really want to know.

"There's more boss. Arthur got grabbed last night, all went down around 11:30 or so. The defector wasn't legit. One of my sources in the West Berlin Police said they saw half a dozen guys, Stasi from the looks of them. Well it looks like they grabbed him from a café on the west side of the Fredrichstrasse, maybe, three or four hundred meters from Checkpoint Charlie. They shot their way past the checkpoint with the East German border guards providing cover for the whole damn thing."

Amy couldn't believe it. The Stasi never did that. Grabbing people on the wrong side of the Wall was a good way to start a really nasty incident. But that wouldn't matter if the Soviets had already made the decision that the Warsaw Pact was going to war. And, they'd already had Arthur for two hours. At the end of six, we've got to assume he's spilled his guts. Who'd blame him really? She exhaled in frustration. There was only one reason to grab Arthur, war was coming, and they needed to know 1) Where in the building was the CIA offices so they could grab the intel first? 2) Who were the others they wanted to roll up in the East? 3) Who were the Americans they wanted to grab? It's time to go, Barksdale. Long past time.

"Grey, get the folks in the message center started on smashing the crypto machines and pull the extra shredder from storage, we'll need a bigger burn area, so grab a couple of the wheeled trash bins..and make sure we do a solid job. I don't want a shred of paper left for those Stasi bastards."

Grey nodded in understanding "And you?"

"I am going to put the recall order out to our boys and girls in the field, as well as our local assets, before they get rolled by the Stasi, assuming they get the message in time. After that, I am then going to do some therapeutic sledge hammering downstairs to help out the State Department guys with their crypto gear. By the way, isn't it your birthday today, Grey?"

Harrison nodded, "Some birthday gift, huh?"

"We're alive, and we're going to stay that way, Mr. Grey. Now, get the hell going, sooner we get this done, sooner we are on our way. Your go bag packed?"

"You know it is."

"Good, now scram!" Amy barked

As Grey ran out of the office, slamming the door behind him and raising a ruckus as he ran down to the crypto room, making sure everyone in the six person station knew to enact their portion of the destruction bill, Amy looked wistfully around at her office, full of mementos of a life of secrets and quiet service to her country. Crap, some Stasi or KGB jerk's going to take this all as a frigging trophy, ah hell can't be helped. We've got just enough time to smash and burn the important stuff! She did spy her prized "Caraville Hotel-Welcome to the Saigon Bar" emblazoned coaster…Screw you Ivan, you don't get that! She paused, and grabbed the small cork square, stuffing it awkwardly into a back pocket.

Amy shook her head as she reached into a side closet and fished out a 12lb sledge hammer, then turned to her left and made he way down the hall, shaking her head and hoping against hope that Langley's timetable was close to right. Yeah, they really got it right in Iran, didn't they?

Hotel Mercure Wien Westbahnhof
Vienna, Austria
August 2nd, 1985
0825 Local/0625 ZULU


Brittany Taylor was rather pleased with herself. She'd gotten pretty good grades for the first time in her life, while at Great Prairie State, she'd actually applied herself, and found that she had a talent for Sports Medicine of all things, and had graduated there with a 3.35 GPA, which had led her into pursing her Masters in the subject at USC. It had been a tough two years, but she'd managed to graduate with a 3.15 and a job as an assistant trainer with the Lakers Cheerleaders, of all things. Since she wasn't due to start for a few months, she'd turned to her housemates, whom had also graduated USC and had said, "Let's hike through Europe!"

The plan, of course, was modified a bit, hike through Italy, into Austria, and then take a Danube cruise into Germany and a flight home. One of the conditions of the trip? No listening to the news, something that had driven Allison, a small, perky girl of Italian extraction who had a job on the Hill waiting for her when they got back. She was the poly sci major and news junkie and the rule had driven her to absolute distraction. They were here to get away from it all, weren't they? Not obsess over something happening so far away, right?Thus, Brittany had come downstairs to avail herself of the free continental breakfast bar in the dining room.

Her roommates were still fast asleep, as they had checked into the hotel darn near close to midnight. Early bird gets something, right? Wasn't it a worm or something?..Jeez who the hell wants a worm? They're like gross! Now if they have cappuccinos like what we got in Italy? Now that's what mama needs right now.

Brittany walked on through the quiet hotel lobby towards the dining room, making as grand an entrance as an American girl, newly liberated from grad student status could afford to make, and then it hit her. There was practically nobody in the dining room, just an elderly hotel employee and a rather rotund, balding gentleman who was picking like a bird at his eggs benedict.

What in the world is going on? There's no line, no screaming kids. I should be fighting to get a plate like that place in Milan? Where are all the tourists? At that moment, a feeling like a cool breeze went up Brittany's spine, and she shuddered involuntarily. Something wasn't normal. Her friends were due to be down in 20 minutes, so she figured she'd grab an empty table and load up on breakfast rolls and a bit of coffee in the meanwhile and take in the Viennese ambiance, though she wasn't too sure what in the world was so great about that.

As she sat down, she smiled and made herself comfortable, flagging down a waiter and placing an order for scrambled eggs and coffee (to which the waiter almost rolled his eyes at how American it was) with the help of an English-German phrase book. Her accent was atrocious and it made it plainly obvious that she was an American. He told her in very good English that the kitchen was understaffed and it would take 10 minutes to fill her order, and inquired if she was checking out today?

"Why in the world we be checking out today, sir? We just got here." Brittany inquired.

The waiter turned a shade of deathly pale, and snapped his fingers to get the attention of the older hotel employee dining on some porridge two tables over. This also got the attention of the balding gentleman as well, who suddenly looked up with the rapidity of a prairie dog.

The elderly gentleman rose, and made his way far more quickly than his apparent age would have suggested. When he arrived he grabbed the waiter by the arm and a very animated discussion between the two in rapid-fire German ensued. Brittany was so captivated by what was going on, she missed the arrival of her friends in their pajamas and slippers; Did I do something that's going to get this fellow fired? Uh-Oh. The older gent also brushed himself off, and made his way into the conversation, as well, and soon all three were speaking very rapid-fire German, with the balding fellow being very insistent and pointing right at Brittany and her friends: Great, he hates Americans.

Finally, the participants of the conversation all turned to look at Brittany and her two friends, Michelle, who was a sports medicine major like Brittany, and Allison.

The balding gentleman spoke first, "Excuse me," he said, with a Bostonian accent "You three girls wouldn't happen to be Americans, would you?"

"Um, yes," Allison answered, while glaring at Brittany "Um, did Brittany do something to offend you, sir? We're willing to-"

The balding gentleman laughed, shook his head and muttered "There's always someone who doesn't get the word." He then looked at the girls again. "Ladies, my name is James Lettinger, and I work for the US Embassy here in Vienna, and you are all damn lucky I like this hotel's breakfast spread. Right now, Europe is on the edge of war and you people were ordered out days ago."

The girls looked at each other in shock, and all exploded with questions at once.

"Wait a sec, war?"

"You gotta be kidding-"

"How come we didn't hear a thing about this?"

Lettinger raised his hands and whistled, loud to bring some order to the chaos. "Ladies, I understand you have a ton of questions, but we don't have much time. Right now, there's probably a quarter-million Soviet and Hungarian troops right across the border, which incidentally is about fifty kilometers from here. Say, an hour's drive in real terms. And if and when it starts, we're already in range of their artillery. This will not be a safe place to be."

Brittany looked Lettinger in the eyes; history and political science were not her strong suits. Ask her to tape a knee; sure, she could handle that. But this? "Um, Mr. Lettinger, we'd still be safe here, I mean, we're Americans, right?"

Allison and Michelle replied to the question with mutual forehead slaps and groans.

Lettinger exhaled, and looked at the elderly hotel worker with a pleading look, who spoke excellent, if accented English.

"Ms. Taylor, I am Egon, the night manager here, I would not place much faith in that fact, First, your nation and the Soviets will be at war if that occurs, and Austria is going to be invaded simply because she is in the way. The last time, during the last war, when the Red Army came to Vienna, I was an Oberleutnantin the Wehrmacht, we resisted as long as we could, but when we surrendered, it was a damn ugly sight. I won't mince words, ladies. They killed people for no other reason than they wanted something; they raped girls and women from 8 to 80 and not just in groups of one or two, but in bands of at least 8-10 at a time. Each of you, as lovely as you are, would have an entire Soviet platoon to "entertain."

Brittany's stomach soon somersaulted at the very idea of being potentially raped by the Red Army, and her friends did not particularly love the idea either. Allison spoke up next. "Ok, we get it, war is coming and it's time to go. We can be packed in twenty minutes, but where in the hell are we going?"

Lettinger smiled "That I can help you with, Vienna's grounded all flights, and the river traffic north along the Danube's being heavily screened, but the last train to Geneva's leaving the train station here in a couple of hours. And yes, I will get you three on it. I do work for the State Department. Along with a letter of introduction to our embassy in Switzerland, you guys should be alright for the duration."

That seemed to calm down the trio, but Michelle asked Egon. "What will you do, Sir?"

"Once you leave, dear Fraulein, we are closing the hotel, not many employees left, most of them have been called up into the Army, and the guests have all left. So, I shall help close the hotel. Then, I am getting my old shotgun and wait here for the Russians. This time I do not intend to be a guest of the Soviet Union, 5 years in Siberia was bad enough."

Egon snapped his fingers again to break the spell,

"Meanwhile, ladies, let's get you upstairs and pack, and don't worry about the condition of the room. I doubt anyone's going to be here to give it much thought for a time to come."

As they all rose to get the girls on the train, a sound, not unlike thunder built in intensity from the south..it became a rising crescendo that swayed the chandeliers and made the wine glasses rattle as it became closer. The thunder soon gave way to an animal-like scream, as the unmistakable sound of a jet engine, from an aircraft that had to be very low, roared over the hotel and broke several of the glasses and caused at least one chandelier in the dining room to actually fall.

Allison ran out through the lobby, running outside into the street entrance of the hotel, the aircraft had by then, circled around for another run. This time it came head on towards the hotel, passing three hundred or so feet over Allison's head as she stood transfixed in the entryway. Oh My God, this is really happening. She ran inside, and grabbed her friends roughly towards the stairs. "No time guys, we need to leave, now."

Brittany was nonplussed "Why, what did you see?
Allison, stop spazzing and tell me what you saw?"

"The airplane, it had red stars on the damn wings…it had red stars."

Egon nodded "Reconnaissance flight most likely. This is just the preliminaries, you do not want to be here for the main event, ladies."

Four Hours Later

The trio had found little problem booking tickets to Geneva, it was the only open destination for trains leaving Vienna, and there were few foreigners left taking up seats on anything leaving anyhow. As it was, they were the last people buying tickets on the last train out. It was, suffice to say, quite dramatic.

"Brittany, next time you say 'no paying attention to the news on vacation!' I am gonna kill you." Allison complained.

"No shit, Brit, we're about to be in a war zone, if we don't get to Geneva!" Michelle added.

They entered their compartment and put their bags up, finding themselves in the typical European rail compartment, with an older couple already having made themselves comfortable. One could not help but overhear their conversation.

"Oh Georgine, why does this always happen to us when we go abroad?" the gentleman said in a distinctive Canadian accent?

"Alfie, we just have bad luck, I mean, you took that sales job in '75 in Beiruit, and we weren't in the country a year before we had to run like hell, same with Tehran in '79. Then there was our Caribbean vacation in Grenada two years ago. And now this, our retirement gift, I must say, we're just cursed with bad luck."

The girls listened in shock at the litany of this couple's close shaves. "Um, excuse me mam," Allison ventured, "You say you were in Lebanon in '75, Iran in '79 and Grenada two years ago?"

The couple looked at each other and laughed, then Alfred replied, "Oh yes young lady, those American Marines are so nice, I'd say for a war breaking out, we had a lovely vacation! Much better than the brochures said! And now, there is this for a retirement present? I tell you, Georgine and I are just feeling alive with excitement!"

All three of the girls looked at each other in shock,
Oh dear god, we're fleeing a potential Soviet invasion with a pair of certifiable lunatics.

492nd Tactical Fighter Squadron Ready Room
RAF Lakenheath
Lakenheath, England
August 2nd 1985
1437 Local/1437 ZULU


Daria and Jane had been sequestered onto the base since the 30th of July, along with all the other flight crews and just about everybody else. They'd also sealed off the base to just about everyone, and a incident where an RAF Regiment member had shot an overeager peace protester who had been attempting to break through the fence had made that point all too well.

Jesus, Daria's mind reported is this really happening? Thus far, there had been little to do by fly occasional training sorties, catch up on paperwork, memorize their target folders, and wait.

It was the waiting that was the worst. It allowed the mind to keep playing scenarios that could happen. Would they get off the ground? Would it go nuclear from the start? Would they even manage to get to the target? There were too many variables…and too much time to consider them. And all of them were Daria's responsibility as aircraft commander. All Jane had to do was know the steers to the target, the radar images, and what the bombing tables were. Daria had a lot more, what routes to take, and when? What were the defenses; both on the ingress and egress? And how alert was the target going to be? Shit, this is going to make all the stories the old-timers told us about Hanoi look like a damn picnic.

The TV had been on constantly, with the sound on low, but the words "ABC SPECIAL REPORT" flashed onto the screen on a black background. Somebody lunged for the TV; nobody had to scream, "Turn it up." As the news had gotten worse, the raucous atmosphere usually found in the squadron ready room had vanished faster than squirrels in the face of winter.

"Hello, this is Peter Jennings in New York, and we've got unconfirmed word that the Soviet delegation to what are some are calling "last ditch" talks in Geneva between Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and US Secretary of State George Schultz has walked out. I repeat, there is unconfirmed word that the Soviet delegation has walked out of the talks…Wait, I am getting word we are going live to a press conference being held by Secretary of State Schultz."

The screen quickly shifted to a view of an empty podium, where a face well known to just about everyone who followed politics soon strode to and adjusted the microphoneslightly. Schultz's forehead was a sheen of sweat, and his eyes were downcast, like a child who had just committed an unforgivable sin. The klieg lights made his drawn features look even moreso. He took a deep breath, "Ladies and gentlemen of the press, I have a short statement to make, I will not be accepting any questions afterwards, as I must immediately depart for Washington."


"I and my staff had come, with the hopes of the United States, and the Free World, to Geneva to see if, even if at this late hour, could somehow pull the dove of peace from the bloody jaws of war. I regret to report that this effort has failed. It has failed ladies and gentlemen, due to the singular intransigence and obstinacy of the Soviet Government, as personified by the Soviet Foreign Minister."

Schultz paused, took a drink of water, and then continued. "I came to Geneva, prepared to talk frankly, behind closed doors where we could both discuss a wide range of issues in a quiet and secluded environment. I came with no accusations, and no preconceptions. The Soviets, however, did not. Instead, I was treated to a twenty-minute tirade from the Mr. Gromyko over every perceived and actual failing of US foreign policy from the last 40 years. This then culminated with a series of demands that you are all familiar with, they are the same demands that the Soviets have repeatedly made in the wake of the General Secretary's speech of a week ago. The US position on those demands is well known, and I will not reiterate it here, except to say this; we will not repeat the mistakes of Munich."


"After I informed the Foreign Minister of this, and the stance of the US and her allies, he proceeded to refer to the President with a few words I won't repeat here, as well as to insult me personally, then he turned and walked out, his delegation right behind him. I do not know if the Foreign Minister has left Geneva, but we have been informed through a third party that there is no intention on the part of the Soviets to restart the talks. Therefore, I have felt it best to return to Washington. I am sorry, ladies and gentlemen, I have failed you and I wish I could say we managed to secure peace at a late hour. I cannot say that. What I will say is this. Sometimes, peace is tantamount to surrender. The peace that was demanded of me by the Soviet Foreign Minister was just that. It is not a peace that neither the United States, nor her NATO allies will ever agree to. I implore the Soviet Union and her Warsaw Pact allies to back away from the abyss, to reconsider the actions they are committing themselves to, and to come back to the table. Even now, it is not too late and we are willing to talk, frankly, honestly and earnestly. This concludes my remarks, thank you ladies and gentlemen."

The squadron ready room was as quiet as a pin. Daria and Jane looked at each other, the looks in their eyes said it, but Jane was the first to verbalize it.

"Game time."
 
Last edited:
Chapter 7

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
Staff Member
Founder
'Warsaw Pact attacks Allied Command Europe. Heavy conventional air and missile attack underway. Soviet ground forces have begun to cross Inner German and Czech borders. Situation confused. MFL.'

Communiqué from SACEUR HQ to news services and all commands, sent in the clear, issued 0401 Zulu, 4 August 1985

The White House
Washington, D.C.
3 August 1985
2140 Local/0340 Zulu


President Reagan was in the Situation Room again, in what had become a nightly ritual. Now, there were four meetings daily, more than JFK ever had during the Missiles of October, but then again, JFK didn't have to go to war. The President had known for over a week that NATO and the Warsaw Pact would be going to war, the only question was when.

Due to the deteriorating situation, the Secret Service had asked the President and the First Lady to move into the Presidential Emergency Facility next to the Situation Room, underground. Private quarters with bath and shower were available, and meals could still come down from the White House kitchen above. Concern that a Soviet agent, or a Spetsnatz sniper, might take a shot at the President in the Oval Office, or the Residence, had precipitated the move, though the President resolved that if events proved the concern unwarranted, he'd go back "above."

Now, his National Security Team was going over events world-wide. The Norwegians had reported that the Soviet Red Banner Northern Fleet had engaged in a major sortie, with surface ships and an amphibious force, and it was obvious that there would be an amphibious landing somewhere on the Norwegian coast. Just as worrisome, a report relayed from the Naval Attache in Stockholm reported a large Soviet-led amphibious force had left Baltic ports, headed west. They could only have one destination: Denmark, and an operation to force open the Baltic exits for the Soviet Baltic Fleet. Similar reports of Soviet naval movements were coming in from the Turks, and from both the Japanese and South Koreans: the Soviet Navy was coming out.

"Mr. President," Gen. John Vessey, the Chairman of the JCS was saying, "NATO forces-air and ground-are on full alert. All Allied forces are locked and cocked. They're as ready as they can be."

"And REFORGER?" The President asked.

"Nearly complete. Now, some service and support units for III Corps and V Corps haven't closed up yet, but other than that, all of REFORGER is in place. The Brits' II Corps is also in place, and the Canadians have brought a second brigade in-they now have a division in Germany, under VII Corps." Vessey reported.

Reagan nodded. "All right, best guess, General. What's your take on holding them conventionally?"
That was a question on everyone's mind. And the rest of the National Security Team turned to the Chairman.

"Mr. President, I can't give any guarantees-nobody can."

"Then what can you give?" Secretary of State Schultz asked.

"My best guess-and this is SACEUR's as well: seventy percent chance, we can do it. That includes chemicals if necessary," Vessey responded.

Reagan nodded. Then he turned to the CIA Director, Bill Casey. "Director?"

"CIA concurs on holding them conventionally, but our take is sixty-five percent, give or take. But yes, we can do it." Casey responded.

"When are they coming?" Don Regan, the White House Chief of Staff asked.

"Soon. Sometime in the next twenty-four to forty-eight hours," Casey responded.

Nodding the President went on. "Naval situation?"

"The CNO says that everything that can go to sea is at sea," Weinberger reported. "Strike Fleet Atlantic is four hundred miles south of Iceland, with the amphibious forces for Norway right behind them. Sixth Fleet in the Med is reporting heavy Soviet ECM activity, but Coral Sea has joined up with Forrestaland John F. Kennedy, with Saratoga a day out of Gibraltar. The French have Foch joining up with Coral Sea, and the Italians and Spanish have their ASW carriers also at sea. We're ready there. Enterprise is in the IO, and ready to pounce on the Soviet IO Squadron and then Aden, while Constellation left Subic Bay this morning, our time. She's getting in strike range of Cam Ranh Bay and the Minsk group. Midway has joined up with Ranger and Carl Vinson east of Japan, and Kitty Hawk has left Pearl Harbor."

"Good. The Air Force is ready in Europe-and in the Far East, correct?" Reagan asked, and he saw Vessey nod.

Weinberger nodded as well, then added. "Mr. President, CINC-SAC has been asking all day for permission to disperse his bombers and institute an airborne alert."

Reagan looked at his CIA director. "Any signs of a Soviet Strategic Forces alert?"

"No, Mr. President," Casey reported. "Some of their Bears appear to be on a ground alert status, but no sign of bombers moving to their Arctic Staging Bases. No SS-20s out of garrison, though they have put their missile subs into the bastions, as we expected."

"All right, then." Reagan looked at Weinberger. "Unless there's signs of a Soviet strategic alert, SAC stays as they are. Understood?"

"Understood, Mr. President."

"Good." Reagan looked at his advisors. "Now, it's been a long day. Unless something happens, I suggest you all go and get some rest. Be back here at 6:00 tomorrow morning." The President said as he got up to leave.

Heads nodded, and Regan said, "Yes, Mr. President."

The President had just gotten up when an aide picked up a teletype message. "Sir, this is from Embassy Bonn. They report air raid sirens sounding in the city."

"What?" Admiral John Poindexter, the National Security Advisor, said. "A false alarm?"

"Nothing further, Sir," the aide replied.

Another aide came into the room and handed another message to Secretary Schultz. "Mr. President, this is from Embassy Copenhagen. They report air raid sirens sounding, and explosions coming from the direction of the International Airport."

"Explosions, George?" A voice on a speakerphone said. That was Vice President Bush from Camp David. He had been sent there to ensure that at least one Presidential Successor was out of Washington at all times.

"That's what they're saying."

Then a military aide came into the room and handed a message to General Vessey. He showed it to Secretary Weinberger, who nodded. "Mr. President, FLASH traffic from SACEUR to all concerned. It's also going out over the wire services."

"Read it, General," Reagan said.

"Message reads: 'Warsaw Pact attacks Allied Command Europe. Heavy conventional air and missile attack underway. Soviet ground forces have begun to cross Inner German and Czech borders. Situation confused. MFL.'" Vessey paused. "Your orders, Mr. President?"

Reagan looked at the clock that showed GMT, or Zulu, Time. It read 0403. The clock for Moscow read 0603. "That's it, then. They're coming. All right, SAC and NORAD stay at DEFCON 3. Everyone else, all the way up to DEFCON 1. Full engagement permission for conventional forces worldwide."

Weinberger turned to Vessey and nodded. The CJCS picked up a phone and relayed the order….
The die had now been cast; it was all in SACEUR's hands now.

West Perimeter Fence
RAF Lakenheath
4 August 1985 0339 Local/0339 Zulu

Captain Marko Zlobiev was a six-year veteran of GRU Spetsnaz. He had movie star good looks, his chiseled face framed by frost blue eyes and dirty blond hair. But, his physique was seemingly average, though through his cover as an employee at the American Base PX as "George Bailford," he'd been able to get a pretty good idea as to the layout of Lakenheath.

He didn't trust the morons back at the Defense Ministry, their satellites and agent reports hadn't helped him at all back in Afghanistan against the dushmen in Afghanistan. Now, now he wasn't against some fucking tribesman with a battered Chinese-made AK. No, he was up against NATO, and he'd gotten his eleven men this far through two hours of painstaking infiltration through the RAF Regiment ground defense zone that extended 2 miles outward from the base. His men had had to kill three of the "rockapes" with knives, happily, they'd stayed quiet while dying, but every minute was another chance the bodies would be discovered and all hell broke loose.

And other than knowing where the fucking igloos are, I haven't a clue as to what the actual defenses of the base are. Sergeant Delkin didn't return from that reconnaissance two days ago, and the press is full of a "peace protester" being shot trying to enter the base. I can only assume that was Delkin.

Unlike most of his work since arriving in Britain, this time, they'd stopped to put their uniforms on. If they were to be captured, Zlobiev wanted his people treated like POWs, not shot out of hand if things went wrong, so here he was, wearing his KMLK green and olive camo suit over his khaki brown uniform, his Addidas sneakers being the only concession to his comfort, another habit Zlobiev had cultivated in Afghanistan.

He was crouching near the perimeter fence, facing outward towards the gloomy dark with his AKSU, while two of his eleven men carefully cut the fence, while holding the fence firmly to make sure the vibration either didn't make any noise, or set off any motion detectors.

So far, so good, but the fact remains, all it's going to take is one damn British soldier or American Security Policeman with a starlight scope, or just someone who manages to cry out before we slit his throat, and it will be all over. Ground's all wrong for this, no cover and it's too damn flat. Thank god it's so dark.

The mission of Zlobiev's team was simple, and stereotypical Spetsnaz mission, they were to gain access to the base, hit the "igloos" where the tactical nuclear weapons were stored, disable them by any means required, except their detonation or any method that resulted in a release of radioactivity, the orders had been very specific on that requirement. They were then to gain access to the "Victor Alert" area, kill as many aircrew and ground crew as possible, destroy or disable nuclear-armed aircraft and disable any onboard nuclear weapons. After that, they were to egress from the base as quickly as possible.

I doubt any of us will live long enough to egress, the Americans and British will be on us like flies on shit once the first gunshot or explosion occurs. After that, the rest will be academic. But, I have my duty, and I will do it.

It wasn't long before the fence was cut through enough for the team to proceed one at a time. It was time. Speed and silence was key. There was simply too much open ground around the airfield, especially around the igloos. Anything could blow the operation, anything.

There was no talking by the team; they'd rehearsed things on a mockup in the countryside, well away from anyone, using sticks for their weapons, but it wasn't much of a rehearsal, but Zlobiev had a good team, he knew them well, and they knew him. As they proceeded through the fence, each went prone, covering a sector on the far side of the fence. As the last man came through, he slapped Zlobiev's left sneaker, the minor sound booming like a cannon. Zlobiev knew this was just jitters, but sound was their enemy.

As soon as his sneaker was slapped, Zlobiev rose, and touched the shoulders of the two nearest men, who transmitted the gesture down the lines of their fellows in the semi-circle, rising to one knee as they did. They awaited Zlobiev to start moving, and as he did, they followed, at a brisk jog, each man watching a sector of the strangely quiet airbase.

Usually, the team would move by bounds in such a situation, but the terrain was such that it was probably best to sacrifice overwatch for speed. It had been figured out back at the team's hide that they probably had 2-3 minutes to hit their first target, another 90 seconds or so at the second and then had to be out in under a total of 4-5 minutes before the QRF (Quick Reaction Force) showed up and overwhelmed them. There just was not time for subtlety.

Slowly, the distance to the well-lit igloos in the distance shrank, 500 meters, 400, 300, 200, and then..it happened. Failure was given form in the shrill honk of a flock of angry geese. Oh fuck. Zlobiev's mind swore. NATO had been using geese in the anti-infiltrator role for a year, especially to protect nuclear facilities. It seemed their sense of smell and territorial nature made them better than guard dogs in certain roles…and one of his men some 30 meters to his left had just strolled through a gaggle of them, and the damned birds were pecking the hell out of him.

The team went prone as one, crawling towards each other to form a circle for an all-around defense. It wasn't long before the honking attracted attention. They heard the British soldiers before they saw them, muffled boot steps and shouted commands, with an occasional squelched response on a radio.

Zlobiev knew just by the number of voices it would be too many to kill silently. No, this would have to be done the hard way. He looked at the men nearest him. Their camouflaged faces belied their eyes, warring between fear and world-weariness. But they trusted Zlobiev. Those eyes said it all: We know we're fucked boss, but let's play this out, we've been in worse shit than this. Combat is a strange mélange of skill and luck, and for Spetsnaz team 1245, it seemed that luck had run out. But if you had asked any member of the team where would they rather be, the answer is with their comrades, even at a moment like this.

Zlobiev took a deep breath, sighted the AKSU in the general direction of the voices and footsteps, flicked off his safety on his weapon, and let the breath out slowly, squeezing the trigger….

Hardened Aircraft Shelter 2-North
RAF Lakenheath
4 August 1985
0341 Local/0341 Zulu


1st Lieutenant, Jane Lane, USAF, was not having a good sleep, she'd woken up at least three times that night, of course, sleeping in their flight gear on a cot in a damp, concrete aircraft shelter, one room away from their aircraft didn't help matters. Damn chill in the room, the issue blankets are more of a suggestion anyhow.

She rose and smiled wanly at the ceiling, exhaling in frustration of ever getting a decent night's sleep. "Might as well get the day started," she muttered. There was plenty of reports and requisitions to get done anyhow…having just gotten chewed out by the Squadron Ops Officer for having let my ground duties slip..he does realize we're on the damn brink of war, and the kids have gone home, so making sure all the Little League athletic equipment has been accounted for is a little insane, right?

She turned to look at Daria, or more correctly, her head just peaking out of the blanket she had buried herself into. Daria had a useful gift, she could sleep anywhere, anytime, something Jane simply had not mastered. She was practically cocooned in the issue blanket and all Jane could do was smile and shake her head. Ah, Daria, you aren't careful, somebody from a Mexican restaurant is going to serve you up for the breakfast crowd. Jane decided against waking Daria, as aircrew were, unless they were on Victor alert, under orders to get as much sleep as possible, and Jane figured. It's going to happen sooner or later, It just is. Might as well let her get as many Z's as she can.

Jane walked over to the open doors of the Hardened Aircraft Shelter, or HAS, as they were commonly called, she noticed their crew chief, Master Sergeant Jim Broadley. Jim was a "lifer" as many people remarked, with a lanky body and a craggy ebon face that had been in too many bar fights and other rough places. His once close-cropped hair was thinning rapidly, and graying in far too many places for his taste. He'd come up through the Security Forces in Vietnam, but after Tet, and a few close calls, decided fixing airplanes was far safer and smarter. Master Sergeant Broadley, for all of his "good ol boy" façade (which for a black man from rural Mississippi, was outright odd), was a proud graduate of Delta State University's Aviation Program, and had undergrad and graduate degrees to prove it. Right now, he was standing outside the red circle that denoted the area one wasn't supposed to have an open flame near the aircraft, enjoying a highly illegal, but wonderful Cuban cohiba. The curls of smoke were simply hypnotic to watch, and Jane had to keep blinking to keep from falling asleep on the open tarmac.

He noticed Jane's approach, and simply nodded, his rich Mississippi baritone booming out, even if he was just attempting to whisper "'Morning mam, I think today's the goddamned day."

Jane nodded in return, remaining silent as she noticed Broadley also had a slung M-16, and was wearing a cartridge belt, with ammunition pouches.

"Ya think, Master Sergeant? Where's the rest of the crew?"

"Half are sleeping on the other side of the shelter, the other half, getting themselves breakfast. I got them also picking it up for you and the other half of the ground crew. Don't worry mam, this ain't my first rodeo. You and Lieutenant Morgendorffer don't break my airplane," he said, pointing with the cigar at the F-111 for emphasis "Ya hear?"

Jane nodded. We'll do our best, Master Sergeant, but I think fate and Soviet Frontal Aviation get a vote.

"Don't worry mam, I pre-flighted her myself, all you got to do is get in, put your helmets on, and wait for the starter cart, then execute a crash start. You'll be gone inside of two minutes tops. That's assuming the runways don't get blocked up by somebody." Broadley drawled as he exhaled more cigar smoke.

Jane smiled. "Hope we don't have to."

"Amen to that, but when you been to one rodeo? You figure out when another one's coming."

It was just then that the two heard an unfamiliar high-pitched pop-crack in the distance, then a series of more familiar pop-cracks in return. Did somebody just take a damn shot at the rockapes? That wasn't smart! Then a loud WHUMPF threw both Broadley and Jane to the ground, That came from the main gate, what the hell is going on…wait, no, omigod, it's happening. The series of pop-cracks had escalated into a full-blown firefight, no, two firefights. Someone ran by screaming "Sappers in the Wire, Sappers in the Wire!" as he ran past, wearing a older-style steel pot, flak jacket and ALICE gear, carrying a M-16 at high port, running full out towards the main gate. Three others attired just as he was were close behind.

Seconds later, the ground defense alarm finally went off, and Jane was now shocked into action as Broadley ran to wake up his people, moving faster than his age would have suggested he was capable he was. He pulled Jane to her feet, "Time to go, Mam" he shouted, trying to be heard over the klaxon now mournfully announcing the war they'd all feared had come.

Daria had sprung awake already. She was sitting on her cot as she was throwing on her survival vest and slammed her .45 into the holster of the vest. As she rose to her feet, she screamed, "Damn you Lane and your prescience!" They then ran to their F-111, with Jane running around the nose of the aircraft to her position in the right seat.

Jane and Daria quickly strapped themselves into the aircraft with practiced ease. It was something they had done a million times before in practice scrambles, but this time, with the firefights ringing in their ears and now two klaxons, both the ground defense and the scramble horns going of, it was a horrible cacophony that brought it home to everyone. War had come, and it was time to do what they had trained for.

The starter cart sputtered to life, providing needed power to the F-111 to start the engines and with a flip of the switch on Daria's side of the instrument panel, they came alive with a rumble, it was a shallow one, indicating the fact that the engines did not have enough power to move the aircraft. Their helmets flooded to life with radio traffic from other F-111s relaying orders and announcing they were ready to taxi. But soon, a single message cut through the confusion.

ALL CALLSIGNS EXCEPT VICTOR CALLSIGNS, THIS IS LAKENHEATH TOWER; THIS IS A SCRAMBLE, SCRAMBLE, SCRAMBLE. THIS IS NOT AN EXERCISE. EXCECUTE INSTRUCTIONS IN YOUR TARGET FOLDERS. USE FIRST AVAILABLE RUNWAY FOR TAKEOFF. WINDS ARE OUT OF THE EAST AT 5. VISIBILITY IS 2/3rd TO FIFTY THOUSAND FEET. WATCH FOR OTHER TRAFFIC AND STRAY FIRE FROM THE FIREFIGHTS IN PROGRESS AROUND THE AIRFIELD. SQUAWK 1935 UNTIL CLEARED UK AIRSPACE. COMBAT DEPARTURES ARE AUTHORIZED; GROUND ABORTS CLEAR THE RUNWAY AS SOON AS YOU CAN AND TAXT TO THE EAST END OF THE FIELD. THERE IS AN ACTIVE MANPAD THREAT. GOOD LUCK AND GOD SPEED.

Daria and Jane grabbed their sides of the open canopy and closed them, shutting out all outside noises except the engines themselves. Broadley himself gingerly pulled the chocks, and gave a big thumbs up to both Daria and Jane.

Daria returned the gesture. They'd violated about a dozen safety regs getting the aircraft by Daria's own count getting the F-111 ready to taxi, but this was go time, and they didn't have time to make sure every last ribbon and pin was pulled from the aircraft. She turned to Jane. It was business time.
"Good engine start, prepare to taxi, Sundance, watch the right side for traffic."

"Roger that, let's do this." Jane said with a wan smile.

Both took a second to buckle on their oxygen masks and took test breaths to make sure the oxygen was flowing. It was. Broadley's pre-flight had been flawless.

Daria slowly applied power and taxied the aircraft gingerly out of the shelter, turning left to the active runway, where there was already a line of aircraft, two abreast waiting their turn to execute a minimum interval take off or MITO as it was known, with aircraft taking off two at a time, every twelve to fifteen seconds. The aircraft would actually be taking off from both sides of the runway, alternating which end would take off first, to say this was dangerous, well, that was an understatement. But, like the crash starts, it was something Daria and Jane had practiced many times.

As they taxied to the runway behind another pair taking off, Daria noticed one aircraft nearly get hit by a flash of moving light. Shit, MANPADS, her mind reported.

Daria looked at Jane and sucked in some air as it came to be their turn. "Here we go, 'Miga. Punch out a few flares as we go, if there's MANPADs out there…"

Jane nodded as she set up the flare program to punch out three flares 15 seconds from now.
"Pilot ready"

"WSO ready" Jane answered, both their voices muffled by their oxygen masks, now buckled tightly into their helmets, and against their faces.

Daria advanced the throttles to the stops, triggering the afterburner and the aircraft thundered to life. It rolled down the runway a little sluggish as the aircraft was loaded nearly to the gills with ordinance and fuel, but she didn't even reach the 2/3rds mark of the runway before she lept into the air, her engines thundering to life with flame extending well behind the aircraft as it chunked out a line of three protective flares. Daria then turned their F-111 towards the rally point, an arbitrary point on a map some 150km from the British coast over the North Sea.

Daria throttled back to full military power and climbed to 10,000 feet. The air traffic control frequencies were bedlam, and in any event, their mission had a script she intended to follow, as long as it didn't interfere with the safe operation of her aircraft and crew. Meanwhile, all she had to do was watch for traffic, friendly and enemy as well as watch her fuel state.

Meanwhile, the auxiliary radio receiver was tuned into the UK Air Defense frequency, and the picture it was painting was a fearsome one, as Daria and Jane groped their aircraft through the now-violent darkness, punctuated by the flashes of detonating missiles and bombs in the distance
.
FOXCHASE THREE-ZERO TO STARLIGHT 11, VECTOR TO RAID TWENTY? I LOST HIM IN THE CLOUDS TEN MILES SOUTH OF BIGGIN HILL…

CADILLAC 32, GOOD KILL, GOOD KILL!

THIS IS ARCHER 35, I AM ON FIRE, PUNCHING OUT NOW 25 MILES WEST SOUTH WEST OF DOVER, AND SOMEBODY CALL THE PJs.


And so it went, as men killed other men and sometimes women in the dark. Most of them never seeing the other, except as a blip on a radar screen.

The join-up with the rest of her flight was uneventful, Daria slid the aircraft flawlessly into the number 2 slot, left of her flight leader's aircraft, flashing her formation lights twice, then keeping them off. Any light in the pre-dawn skies over the North Sea was liable to have a missile launched at them on the simple principle of "better safe than sorry."

Daria's primary radio crackled to life, it was their flight lead. Major Allan Frampwell. Frampwell had been their flight leader since their arrival in England. He was competent, and while he'd missed Vietnam by a year as he was commissioned in 1974, he knew his trade and people trusted him. He was a tall, lanky fellow from Minnesota, who was married to a British girl he'd met on leave during his first tour at Lakenheath in 1979. Daria and Jane knew the kids equally well; they'd babysat for them on a number of occasions. Jane's cartoons adorned the kids' walls of the playroom their father had built for them.

But this night, it wasn't about any of that.

SLEDGEHAMMER LEAD TO ALL SLEDGEHAMMER CALLSIGNS, WE'VE PRACTISED THIS, WE KNOW WHAT WE'RE UP AGAINST, AND SLEDGEHAMMER TWO-THREE, YOU'VE DONE THIS BEFORE. YES, IT'S THE FIRST TEAM. GUESS WHAT, SO ARE WE. DO YOUR JOBS, REMEMBER YOUR TRAINING AND YOU'VE GOT A GOOD CHANCE OF LIVING TO BITCH ABOUT HOW BAD THE VA IS. LET'S GET IT DONE FOLKS.

Daria looked at Jane, all they could see was each other's eyes with the helmet and the oxygen masks blocking most of their faces.

"Miga, if we buy it…glad it was with you." Jane whispered.

"Thanks, but let's hope it's somebody else's night." Daria shrugged.

With that thought, Daria waited for the break call, and when it came, applied right aileron and dove for the deck, maintaining good formation all the way down.

Once they were down to 1000 feet over the North Sea, the flight of four aircraft went to full military power and turned to the northeast, towards Denmark, and the Baltic Sea.

Two Hours Later

It had been mostly a quiet ingress over Denmark and the Baltic, as both side's naval assets had been too busy shooting the hell out of each other, and the Danish Air Force was reportedly too busy shooting up a convoy of Soviet transports filled with paratroopers headed for Jutland. Radio's bedlam anyhow, I couldn't get a coherent picture if I tried.

Daria shook her head, the weight of the helmet she'd been wearing for hours, coupled with the intense concentration she'd had to exercise just to keep the aircraft from slamming into something some 300 feet off the deck was a bit tiring, to say the least. The sky to the east began to lighten ever so slightly as twilight peaked out from the cover of night. Daria prayed they'd get their run completed before the sun was up. Daylight bombing wasn't a fun prospect for anyone.

She suppressed a yawn and kept her eye on the formation low-light strips of the lead aircraft to her right, as well as constantly asking Jane for terrain updates. Jane herself was very busy, dividing her time between the RWR, the radar and checking her sector of the aircraft for traffic, enemy or otherwise.

She also took a quick glance at the altimeter, hoping the aircraft didn't fly itself into the water, or as they crossed the beach, the ground. Thankfully, the Baltic had very little of that, as well as northern East Germany, but complacency had killed it's measure of military aviators. If tonight's the night I die, I at least want to drop some bombs first? Daria's mind drolled on, her inner voice in a tone she hadn't heard come out of her mouth since high school. I guess being on the edge of death does make you blasé, eh?

The F-111's TFR was set on HARD and as usual, was living up to the billing, as it bucked Daria and Jane around like balls in a pinball machine while attempting to use what terrain it could find along the Baltic coast of East Germany for cover. Surprisingly, there has been little reaction from anyone on the ground as they crossed the coast, just some search pings from some air defense and guidance radars, and as time passed, this continued. It seemed the Soviets were content to not bother with them…or hopefully, their SAM and AAA guys think we're theirs. How they can with our IFF off is interesting, but why complain? Something's working in our favor.

The flight continued to be uneventful, one would be lulled into thinking it was another training exercise, if it wasn't for the distant flashes off to the right…signifying the sound and fury that had begun some 4 hours ago.

"How we doing on terrain?"

"Good, no terrain of any note, really, this part of Germany's pretty flat anyhow, and the only power lines we're supposed to run into is the ones coming off the target."

"Yeah…you might wanna remind me of those."

"Seriously, Butch, you forgot?" Jane said, a note of alarm in her voice.

"Um, we're deep in East Germany, about to drop the first bombs of the Third World War, wondering why one of the densest air defense systems in the world hasn't done a damn thing to us, except sweep us with radar, and you're worried about power lines?"

"Yeah, they can kill us just as dead!"

"Ok, ok, I get it, focus Morgendorffer."

Jane chuckled. "It's getting to me too, Daria."

"Time to IP"

"12 minutes, then we make the southwest turn, then after our run, we turn south and parallel the power lines for three miles to this little burg called Preistwitz, then dog leg to the north, follow the Elbe, try not to get shot down by every Russian mother's son with an AK or an SA-7 and egress out through the Kiel Canal over Hamburg and out into the the North Sea, where we rejoin the flight. Who the hell came up with this egress plan?" Jane intoned with a tone of mirth in her voice, knowing very well it was half her idea.

Daria chuckled softly, "The two trained monkeys flying this 30 million dollar piece of hardware?"

"Nervous?"

"Bet your ass, but I am mostly nervous about us missing the target, if you can believe it?"

Jane shrugged. "Me too."

The next twelve minutes vanished into routine, the night was still quiet as they passed to the east of Berlin, where it was lit up like a nightmarish Fourth of July display, with red and green tracer lighting the sky for miles around, and explosions flashing in the dark. But yet, even with being within 20 miles of the embattled city, nobody fired on the fourship of F-111s as they passed to the south. Their IP or Initial Point, where they began their bomb run, was over the small town of Schraden, which was of little significance to noone except the people who lived there, and the exasperated Soviet traffic controllers who were trying to direct elements of the Polish army which comprised the 2nd echelon of the Soviet advance into West Germany, the trouble was, unfamiliar routes, the crash call up the Polish army and the rest of the Warsaw Pact had endured, not to mention language difficulties and NATO "bandits" had done a good job of screwing up most of the highway signage in East Germany within 20 miles of the Polish border. There was now a 30 mile long traffic jam of three Polish divisions and the headquarters of 2nd Polish Army was caught in it while the Soviets and Poles argued which way the Poles were supposed to proceed. Such things attracted airstrikes, and a logjam this long was certainly going to get a visit from someone.

But none of this mattered to Daria and Jane; they had other things on their mind. The target for now was an airfield right on the outskirts of Grossenhain. It was seemingly unassuming, but the airfield was the home to the 497th Light Bomber Regiment, which flew SU-24s. They were the Soviet analogue of the F-111, and as such, had to be put out of action as long as possible. The idea of the strike was to pound the single runway with enough Durandals and CBUs to put the airfield out of action for 48-72 hours. To make sure of it, some RAF Tornados with JP-233 cratering munitions were 2 minutes behind Daria and Jane's flight, just to make sure of matters. Getting at the aircraft was unlikely, as they were either a) bombing NATO bases just like Daria and Jane were, or b) safely in their shelters, but if they couldn't get off the ground…

A pair of clicks came over the radio; it was the signal to make the turn for the final run. Wordlessly, each aircraft answered with a single click of their own on their mic, and then turned to line up individually for their run into the target. Once their bombs were dropped, they would each make their way out individually, on the theory you could only catch so many hares in one go. They were to meet up some 65 miles north northwest of Cuxhaven over the North Sea, meet a tanker there, who would refuel them for the trip back to Lakenheath. Two hours rest, and then do it all over again to someone else.

It was all business now. Jane wordlessly slid a transparency into her radar hood, flipped a few switches, and both pilot and WSO grabbed their Bomb Run (Conventional) checklists, going through the forty steps with practiced ease. The aircraft had a good radar return on the runway, visual bombing in the inky twilight would have been easier at night; visibility in the predawn skies was iffy at best. But the radar return was clear; Jane could easily make out the 2200-meter long runway.

"Acquired target, good return. Computer has it locked and we're good to go." Jane robotically intoned, her training kicking in.

Ten miles, eight miles, six miles. At four miles, Jane took a laser reading from the Pave Tack pod to get ranging for the computer. It fed the data in to improve the accuracy of when to calculate the release point. On the FLIR display in the center cockpit panel, the buildings of the Soviet airbase became clearer. It looked normal, it was blacked out, for sure, but there didn't seem to be any urgency below. Daria watched the airplane, being ready to take control of the airplane just in case anything went wrong, this part was mostly Jane's show now.

A "release" light came on, stating the computer had calculated a release point, and adjusted the aircraft's direction a few degrees to the left to ensure the bomb release was on target. Jane did a final radar check, adjusted the salvo controls to make sure all the bombs released, and then pressed a button, giving final release authority to the computer.

The F-111s approached the airfield line abreast. By this point, the Soviet traffic control and air defense radars had certainly noticed them, especially as they were neither swanking their IFF nor responding to calls from the tower.

The ring of SA-3 sites were too close to the NATO aircraft to do very much about them, and stood by impotently as the F-111s passed right over them, the first bombs being released over their heads and drifting towards the airfield, but the sirens rang out from Grossenhein, too late to do much more than give a few minutes time to find shelter from the oncoming storm.

"Ok, Sundance, begin the count."

Jane watched the bombing computer display, and kept one eye on the Pave Tack display as well, ready to take over with a manual run if the computer failed. "10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and HACK!"

As Jane shouted HACK, Daria smashed her thumb on the "pickle button" making sure that if the automatic release failed on the bombs, the manual release would surely trigger the bombs off the rail. But, this time, it was simply redundant. The aircraft rose a few feet as multiple THUMPS were heard, signifying the release of the Durandals being carried on the wings. As that happened, Daria took the aircraft to full military power and began to apply random left and right rudder to throw off any gunners who might now be racing for their guns.

The 36 BLU-107 Durandals fell in a line from northeast to southwest across the runway, each bomb sprouting a small parachute from the rear. When the angle of each bomb reached 50 degrees, a rocket motor fired, flinging the bomb like a spear into the surface of the runway. As soon as the bomb penetrated the surface of the runway, a 220lb charge detonated, which then forced a 33lb secondary charge deeper into the ground. Some of those detonated after a one second delay. Some had been set to delay going off for hours after the raid. This would complicate the Soviet efforts to repair both the grass and tarmac fields. Each detonation left a 6ft by 16ft crater and disturbed the concrete for as much as 50ft from the initial detonation, meaning that that concrete had to be dug up and replaced as well. But for all this, and for a RAF raid that was 2 minutes behind the F-111s that had just hit Grossenhein, it would only shut the base down for a 24-hour period as the Soviets had pre-positioned their engineering assets for just such an eventuality.

Meanwhile, the Soviets shook off their stupor within seconds of the bombs being released and the skies around Grossenhein lit up like the ninth circle of hell. Red balls of tracer leapt into the night sky, reaching out like fingers of death, seeking lives and airplanes to destroy.

Daria and Jane were buffeted around as the shells exploded and the deafening sound of the Soviet anti-aircraft fire roared out.

"Shit, their radar came on line." Jane exclaimed, "They won't be so blind now."

"Run the countermeasures program, hope that gets them shooting at the chaff instead of us."
Jane shrugged and flipped a switch, telling the aircraft to shovel chaff and flares out like hay, as there had to be somebody out there with a MANPADS.

Daria was about to tell Jane to hang on, as she was thinking of making the jinking harder to try and throw off the gunners aim some more, when a large flash and a loud bang off to the left buffeted the aircraft, tossing it around like a toy in a chid's bathtup for a few seconds.

"What the hell was that?" Jane intoned.

"Dunno, it was on my side of the aircraft though, call it 10:30 or so, at this point, who the hell cares, let's just get out of here."

The jinking and countermeasures seemed to work, as the fire lessened and then dropped off once they cleared the target.

"Well, here's to smooth sailing back to the North Sea?" Jane offered.

"From your mouth to God's ears, Sundance." Daria muttered.

25 minutes later, 8,000ft above the Elbe, east of Bittkau, DDR

Hauptmann Marcus Krenz, of the LSK's JG-9 was having a lousy war thus far. Though his MiG-23ML (known to NATO as a Flogger-G) was "supposedly" an improvement from the MiG-21 he used to fly, the fact was, the aircraft had done a level job of trying to kill him since he'd begun flying the type two years ago. He'd had to keep one eye firmly on the instruments, and another on the sky around him. One also had to remember what wing setting to keep the aircraft in, even with the improved engine and airframe, that particular problem had killed a lot of rookie MiG-23 pilots.

For Krenz, this was the least of his problems it seemed, the liberation of the West had begun and what was he doing? Flying up and down the goddamned Elbe looking for NATO aircraft trying to use it to make a run out of the DDR into the North Sea. He'd already missed being hit by his own side's missiles twice, probably SAMs from god knew where, and the last time, the aircraft had almost gone into an unrecoverable spin. His wingman had not been so lucky. The young man hadn't even seen the missile that had killed him. That alone had sent Krenz into a near fury.

Considering his father had been a 12-victory ace in the last war against the Americans over the vaterland, including several of the "Boeings" that had been laying waste to German cities by day. Nein, there was no threatening Dad's record this time around. He hadn't seen a single NATO aircraft below him, either on radar, or in the increasing light of the rising sun. It was simply frustrating, to say the least. And then there was the political officer who was sure to harangue him over the fact he was coming back with loaded missile racks and loaded charges of treason.

Kranz shook his head in frustration, and banked his jet to the right to get a better look at the Elbe below. There'd been a GCI (Ground Control Intercept) report of a low-level contact somewhere east of Stendal. Krenz had been running the river north to south according to instructions from GCI but had seen nothing on either his radar (which was an unreadable hash with all the damn jamming from both sides) and visually, which was still kind of murky, even with the improving morning light.

As he made to level out the aircraft, he took one last look, and there…there it was. It was moving fast against the terrain. Yes..it..it was. As Krenz continued to look, the shape took form. It was an American F-111 using the river valley as a highway out towards the North Sea. He was good, and used the cover of the valley well, but this would be a simple kill, the F-111 was only rated to 5Gs, she couldn't hope to maneuver with Krenz's MiG-23 and her rear visibility was non-existent. The American would never see him, he'd simply slip right in and put two R-60s up this American's ass and be home in time for breakfast. Kranz smiled as he adjusted the sweep of his wings and dove like a falcon spying a rodent for dinner.

Thus far, Daria and Jane's egress had been rather uneventful, they'd had to decoy a few SA-7s, and there had been some random fire at them, but nothing serious. Nothing to suggest there was a concerted effort at trying to kill them. It had gone, well, pretty much according to plan. Jane was busy figuring out their position along their strip map, along with estimating fuel states, while Daria flew the airplane.

Jane was reaching back to get her calculator stowed behind the seat and there it was, at 5 o'clock high. It was a glint of light on metal. Jane's blood went cold and she reached for the binoculars. She'd had some trouble focusing on the fast moving object, but one look was all she needed. "Daria, we gotta go, and go now! There's a Flogger on our ass, 5 o'clock high, call it 4 and a half miles and he's seen us!"

Daria muttered some curses as she advanced the throttles to full military power and ran like hell, while Jane ran the "panic" program they had in the countermeasures system that dumped every flare in the airplane so to interfere with IR missiles. The thinking was, if he had seen them far off enough to fire a radar-guided missile at them, the MiG would have done it by now. Daria also began her "Luke Skywalker" jinking and looking for something to throw this guy off. As Daria's maneuvers increased in intensity, the aircraft began to protest.

Meanwhile, sweat began to pour into her eyes and pool in her flight gloves. Don't let me overstress or CFIT the airplane now! Oh yeah, and don't let that MiG kill me either.

Jane continued to look for him, but lost him as he settled into the six o' clock position, high and behind the F-111.

Krenz was frustrated, the damned R-60 refused to lock on, distracted by the veritable hail of magnesium flares pouring from the rear of the F-111 in two second intervals. Verdamt NATO equipment, it's always better than ours! He quickly gave up on the idea and decided he'd try for a guns shot. It was risky, but the F-111 was too damn good to give him a decent missile shot. And that pilot's too damn smart, but I can still maneuver harder than he can.

He dove a bit lower and cut his throttle, then lined the F-111 up in the pipper of the gunsight..and he tightened his finger on the trigger, One second, one second is all I need you Ami bastard. But just as he squeezed the trigger, the aircraft had flown through the gunsight. Krenz in his frenzy for his first kill had forgotten to apply the lead on target. The shells behind and to the left of the F-111. Schiesse! He adjusted his lead and this time tightened on the trigger again, letting go a long burst…and missed again, this time the shells impacted in front of the F-111, as it banked hard to the right to avoid a tree lined island in the river.

Damn, I won't miss a third time, you bastard. Krenz's blood was up, and he didn't hear the aircraft's warning tones telling him he was low on fuel, and that he should pull up. Instead he roared, "Shut the hell up, bitch! I know how to fly an airplane!"

Daria was wringing the F-111 out, and her luck was probably running not too far behind, either she'd overstress the airplane or she'd fly into significant terrain. Daria also knew that Flogger driver wasn't going to miss a third time, either way, Daria did not fancy trying to eject from a F-111 going 650 miles an hour at 300 feet over the Elbe, even with an ejection capsule.

"Sundance, is there significant terrain we can loose this asshole?"

"Um, now that you mention it, yeah! There's a big, and I mean big bridge just north of us. Call it 2 miles or so. You thinking what I am thinking boss?"

"You gonna hate me?"

"Later, if we live. Get on that radar, and help me thread the needle."

Jane shook her head We're about to do something insane and stupid.

Daria kicked in her afterburners and made for the dubious safety of the bridge, hoping against hope they could pull this insane scheme off.

Krenz smiled. This will not help you, Ami. I can more than outrun you. He increased his own throttles to military power, and swept his wings back to full sweep. As soon as he increased power, the aircraft began to let go with a torrent of warnings in a female voice, too low, too fast, low fuel. All of it was getting very distracting. "Shut up you bitch, I know how to fly an airplane!" he roared. Krenz figured he could always put the aircraft down at the Soviet field at Stendal if he got short. That was assuming the borcht chewing bastards could tell him from a NATO aircraft. He'd been hearing radio calls all morning of friendly fire, with mostly Soviet units being responsible. Probably was a Russian SAM gunner who killed my wingman.

The F-111 kept going straight and level, it was almost too easy, but the suspension bridge that bridged the Elbe east of Stendal began to loom in his vision, and the closure rates began to become too fast. He'd have to pull up and try again, his professional side told him, but the personal side, the prideful side that had lost his wingman and hadn't scored a kill yet, it was in control, and it was going to kill this F-111. And in the end…it was that refusal to listen to his professional side that killed him. Suddenly, the F-111 chopped its power and flew under the bridge!

Krenz spent his last few moments frozen in shock..until the tail of his MiG-23 clipped the bridge at some 670 miles per hour, and ripped off of the airplane, then plowed like a missile into the water. Krenz didn't even have time to scream.

Daria advanced the throttle past the stops and increased altitude to 500 feet. She was drenched in sweat and her breathing was ragged. She tore off her oxygen mask, and smiled a wan smile of exhausted victory.

Jane turned to Daria with a smoldering look of anger in her eyes. "Butch. Never. Ever. Do. That. Again. I'd rather eject first."

Daria never took her eyes off the front of the airplane and flying, but she shrugged and said "Him or us, Sundance, him or us. Stupid bastard should have broke off when he had the chance. Either he did, and decided to call it a day, or he didn't and he's one with the Elbe right now. Either way, I don't give a damn. How much further to home?"

"Call it another half hour before we're over the North Sea, then 45 minutes flight time for the tanker."

"Might wanna run the fuel figures again. I am sure all that 'Death Star Trench' shit probably screwed around with the fuel state."

"Doing that now, looks as if we will get once chance at tanking, we screw that up, we're going to have just enough fuel to make Wilhelmshaven or Cuxhaven, with no reserve for a missed approach."
"Goody."

35 minutes later, 30,000 feet over the North Sea

Exxon station was little more than a random point on a map generated by a computer as a good place to have a KC-135 orbit to refuel strike aircraft on their way home from strikes on East Germany, and in some cases, Poland. Daria and Jane were no exception, as they were on fumes when they got there and linked up with their flight. They were the last to arrive, as the dots in the distance resolved themselves into the distinctive shapes of aircraft.

The F-15s escorting the tankers hailed from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico, they were part of the 49th Fighter Wing, and had forward deployed to England as the crisis deepened, and now, they were doing what F-15s were pretty much designed to do, kill MiGs. And, from the looks of the empty missile racks on some of the F-15s, they had been busy.

As Daria tuned into the tanker frequency to get clearance and instructions for refuel, her alternate radio receiver came to life.

VARK TO MY 9 O CLOCK, HOW IS IT OVER INDIAN COUNTRY? OVER?

Daria tuned into the GUARD channel and replied:
EAGLE ON MY 3 O CLOCK, THIS IS SLEDGEHAMMER TWO-TWO, IT'S AS BAD AS THEY TOLD US. WE HAD TO GET A MANUVERING KILL ON A FLOGGER JUST TO GET THE HELL OUT OF THERE. THEN THE WEST GERMANS ALMOST KILLED US OVER BREMERHAVEN. NOT FUN AT ALL, BUT THE RUSSIANS JUST GOT A CALLING CARD THEY WON'T SOON FORGET. BY THE WAY, NOTICED THE MISSILE RACKS, SEE YOU HAVE BEEN BUSY. OVER.

The radio crackled to life in return, and the voice replied.

ROGER THAT, SLEDGEHAMMER TWO-TWO, THIS IS CHEVY FOUR-SIX. NICE WORK ON THAT FLOGGER. I WILL REMIND SOME OF MY GUYS THAT VARKS CAN SCORE KILLS AS WELL AS EAGLES WHEN THEY HAVE A HOT STICK. AND YES, YES WE HAVE, I HAVE THREE RED STARS TO PAINT ON THE SIDE OF THE NOSE WHEN I LAND IN THREE MORE HOURS. THAT'S ASSUMING I AM NOT WINCHESTER FIRST. GOTTA GO, FOUR-SIX OUT.

Daria smiled in spite of herself, the flight back had been uneventful until they had run across Bremerhaven. It seemed the folks there had been unable to tell the difference between a F-111 and an SU-24 and had acted accordingly, lighting up the sky like the 4th of July. Happily, their aim was as bad as their recognition skills, but it had added a lively moment to the egress, not that Daria nor Jane had particularly needed it.

As she rendezvoused with her flight and prepared to check in with the flight lead, she noticed something. The flight lead's aircraft was missing. Why she had not noticed before was a bit disconcerting. Tired I guess. She tuned the radio to the flight frequency and chimed in:

SLEDGEHAMMER TWO-THREE, TWO-TWO HERE, WHERE'S LEAD, OVER?

TWO-THREE TO TWO-TWO. HE BOUGHT IT OVER THE TARGET. DIDN'T YOU SEE AN EXPLOSION TO YOUR TEN THIRTY, SAY ABOUT A MILE, MILE AND A HALF? OVER?

YEAH TWO-THREE, WE DID, ARE WE SURE IT WAS HIM? OVER?

TWO-TWO, IT WAS. HE CUT OFF IN MID-TRANSMISSION ABOUT A TRIPLE-A WARNING AND IT WAS HIM. NO BEEPER OR CHUTE FROM HIM OR HIS WSO. HE'S GONE TWO-TWO. WON'T BE THE LAST ONE WE LOSE. SEEN IT BEFORE. OUT.


Daria turned off the radio for a moment, and then stripped off her mask, slowly. She was in shock. It happened so quickly, no scream, no prayer, no nothing. Here one minute, gone the next.

"Butch? You ok?" Jane asked, a note of concern in her voice.

"Yeah," Daria exhaled "that explosion on the egress? That was lead."

Jane muttered softly "Shit. We babysat his kids, you know?"

"Yeah, I don't wanna think about that right now." Daria whispered.

"We painted their rooms! I mean, shit? Why him, or his WSO, he was engaged to some local girl and-" Jane babbled.

"Because I don't want to think about it! We have to tank, and then get the bird home! I can't think about it. We knew this could happen. We've lost friends before! So just shut up, OK?!"

Jane shut up; there was a pregnant silence in the aircraft. Daria had come down harder on Jane than she had wanted to, but from a professional standpoint, she was right. But she was also hiding the fact that, while she knew it intellectually, it was another thing to actually see someone disintegrate in front of you due to enemy fire. I'll mourn later. Daria resolved.

Daria turned the radio back on, and radioed the tanker:

COORS 34, THIS IS SLEDGEHAMMER TWO-TWO, WE ARE AT YOUR SEVEN-THIRTY, FIVE HUNDERED FEET BELOW, PERMISSION TO TANK, OVER…

On Final Approach to Runway 06
RAF Lakenheath
4 August 1985
0641 Local/0641 Zulu


"Roger tower, this is Sledgehammer 22, understand we are number four for landing, will watch right side of field and understand Runway 24 is shutdown for the next four hours. Thanks and good day, Out."

Daria looked over the field as they orbited in the downleg pattern of the final approach, awaiting their turn to land. She idly looked around, seeing smoke rising from some of the unhardened hangars, the admin and living blocks, as well as a couple of craters from Runway 24. It seemed there was also a wrecked Soviet aircraft right in the middle of Runway 24, burning brightly and occasionally cooking off. Looks like they had the same idea we did.

Jane had not said a word to Daria since their exchange over the loss of the flight lead, she had her binoculars out and was scanning the sky, making sure they didn't blunder into anyone, as well as one eye on the Radar Warning Receiver. The greeting the West Germans had given them had made her a little paranoid, and she sincerely hoped the Rockapes could tell an F-111 from a Sukhoi-24. But she was prepared in-case they didn't. As it was, the IFF was on, and she hoped it was squawking for all it was worth.

Daria flew casually, adjusting the throttle and stick more by feel than actual conscious thought, as she had done this landing hundreds of times. Her mind was mostly numb. Her first combat mission was something of a blur, a blur of sensations and impressions. She knew when she got the plane on the ground and taxied back to the HAS, it was going to be an effort to stay awake through the intelligence interrogation. All she wanted to do was catch an hour or an hour and a half's worth of sleep. The thought of going again in two hours seemed more than a little daunting. But, she had to act as if that wasn't the case. She was the aircraft commander, and as a wise man had once said, "Command is a very lonely affair." Her instructors had never told her just how lonely.

Jane was alone with her own thoughts, chewing her lip as they slowly orbited down to line up with the runway. There was a slight crosswind from the West, about 2-3 knots, and visibility was near perfect. It didn't get much better for a landing. You could see traffic for miles, and the tower was running like it was peacetime. Other than the occasional emergency call on the Guard channel, it really did seem like peacetime, like the combat mission was just a bad dream.

As Daria lined up the aircraft and she and Jane went through the landing checklist, they were both acting on simple training. The excitement and adrenalin was gone, and the reason for all the rote training was clear. The aircraft had come through with flying colors. No faults, no mechanical failures and no battle damage. All in all, they'd been lucky. Luckier than their flight lead. But now was about getting the airplane on the ground.

The aircraft drew nearer; with Daria using the throttle to control altitude, and the landing was gentle, almost textbook, except for a slight porpoise after the initial strike of the rear wheels. They announced contact with the runway with a loud squeal of the brakes, applied by Daria just in case something untoward happened. She applied full power to flare out, and the nose came down effortlessly. They were down. They were home. All that was required now was to get some breakfast, failing that, some coffee, talk to the intelligence guys, and then get some rest to prep to do it all again in two hours.

That first day, Daria and Jane flew four sorties.
 
Last edited:

CurtisLemay

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Just over the Inter-German Border

14 km South east of Fulda, FRG

27th Guards Motor Rifle Division Headquarters

4 August, 1985

1025 ZULU/1225 Local


Major General Alexandr Leontev, Soviet Army, was a very angry man. He was on a hill overlooking his engineers throwing a bridge over the Fulda River. It was three kilometers to the north of the embattled town, where the 900th Independent Air Assault Battalion was holding on against repeated American pressure by its very fingernails. They'd done a fine job of seizing the center of town, but the fact remained, if they weren't relieved by the end of the day, their position was hopeless. That was part of Leontev's job. But the going had been slow, and the American 11th Armored Cavalry (also known as the "Blackhorse") had sold themselves dearly to delay his advance. I was supposed to be in Fulda 8 hours ago!

So far, his war was one of frustration. His division, the 27th Guards Motor Rifles, was literally bleeding its way to the all-important town of Fulda, and in copious amounts. A good chunk of his division's reconnaissance battalion was burning wrecks, along with a 1/3rd of the division's advanced guard. He could still see the smashed and burning vehicles dotting the roads and dense woods, each one a grave for at least three of his men. What further fueled his frustration was that he'd seen precious few American or German wrecks or bodies in return.

There weren't enough good roads in this part of Germany, so the usual means of each regiment advancing on it's own axis of advance wasn't going to happen. No, those idiots at 8th Guards Army want to advance three divisions down a road network barely good enough for a fucking regiment! And what happened to Nastin over at 79th Guards Tank when he pointed it out? The chekists relieved him on the spot, shot him, and handed the division over to his deputy, who'd only been in the job a week, claiming he'd been spreading "defeatism." He'd known Igor Nastin for 30 years. Igor had been many things, defeatist? No. He was not a defeatist.

What disturbed Leontev the most was the sheer multitude of threats the Americans presented towards his tanks and armored vehicles. Everything from aircraft and attack helicopters, to artillery, to these "off route anti-tank mines" that had been responsible for the death of the commander of the division reconnaissance battalion. It was very difficult to counter all the threats the Americans were presenting. And Leontev was very sure this was just the tip of the iceberg.

Leontev heard a throat clear and a scuffing of feet. It was the divisional deputy commander, and the divisional intelligence officer. The deputy commander was a rat faced man by the name of Matroshkin. He was little more than a careerist who did not care one whit about the men, or the division. His time with the 27th was simply a stepping stone on the way to greater things, like a staff position at 8th Guards Army…or would have, had not the war inconvenienced his plans. Now we have a war, a real war, not chasing dushmen near Kandahar, Andrei Gerisomovich, will your careerism save you from an American anti-tank missile? For your sake, I do hope so.

The divisional intelligence officer, Chakovsky, was from an old military family. His blond hair was receding a bit, and he was greying at the temples, but the noble features of his line were still quite evident. His grandfather had served as an officer in the Czar's army, and then as a "military technician" for the Bolshiviks. His father had been a lieutenant in a rifle division when the purges began, and luckily for him, had only spent three years in a gulag before the Nazis came and he was hurriedly "rehabilitated" and sent to the front. The family, though, remained under suspicion until his father, then a colonel, died on the Seelow Heights in 1945, his rifle regiment breaking into the German defenses, and being posthumously decorated by Zhukov himself. His death, while unfortunate, made possible the younger Chakovsky to attend a Suvorov school, and then commissioning as a Tank officer. He'd had an average career, and a major, was filling a staff billet before being given a battalion. Leontev was seriously considering giving him the battered remains of the reconnaissance battalion and see what he could do with it.

"Comrade General, we have news about the 900th in Fulda." Chakovsky began, there was a sorrowful tone in his voice. "They're running low on ammunition, and expect to be overrun by the Americans in the next four to six hours."

Leontev swore softly. "And what of our comrades from Frontal Aviation? Haven't they found a way to keep the Americans back until we get there?"

"No, Comrade General, Frontal Aviation has done little more than embarrass itself over the battlefield. I personally have seen more NATO aircraft than our own."

"Damn," It seems I will have to give Chakovsky that command after all.

"Chakovsky, I want you to take command of the Divisional Reconnaissance Battalion, or what's left of it, reorganize it, and take under your command a company of tanks and motor rifles from the advanced guard, then find me a damned way into Fulda. I'll get you what support I can from here, but get it done, by nightfall, Comrade Major."

Chakovsky nodded, and made his way down the hill. Leontev looked after him, and wondered if Chakovsky would prove equal to the task. Matroshkin cleared his throat, and locked eyes with Leontev.

"Comrade General, he hasn't even attended Frunze! And he has is a tank officer who has had no idea how to coordinate with the divisional reconnaissance battalion."

Leontev gave Matroshkin a warning look. Matroshkin immediately clammed up as if he had been scalded. I am not in the mood for Matroshkin's whining. He will accept the actions I take, or he can deal with the chekists.

11km South East of Fulda

Tank D-55

Delta (Heavy) Troop, 1st Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment

4 August, 1985

1040 ZULU/1240 Local


1st Lieutenant Michael Jordan "Mack" McKenzie, United States Army, shook his head at the mess that had ensued thus far. His view from the tank commander's cupola was a weary one, and the weight of his CVC helmet had begun to tell.

Mack's war had begun at 0330 that morning, when he saw the entire eastern sky light up like a patch of day. The Soviet prep barrage had so many guns opening fire, that one really couldn't tell individual guns from each other. When the shells came to earth…that was a really unpleasant memory. Even though an M1 isn't an easy target to hit with a given artillery round, if the shell was big enough, and in the right place? It would code out an M1.

That's what happened to Captain Dalton, the troop commander. A 152mm shell, as near as anyone could figure, hit the front top of the turret and exploded. Though it was a high explosive, or HE round, it still had enough power to blow through the thin top turret armor. The shell killed the entire turret crew instantly, and left the driver a deaf, staggering shell of a man who had had to be evacuated as a psychological casualty. It left the tank a burning, shattered wreck, the vehicle needed a new turret for it to ever function again, and there was a premium on those right now.

. 2 hours later, they had engaged their first Russians, a BRM CFV which they had easily disposed of with a shot from their 105mm main gun. That was the beginning of at least 8 hours of continuous combat without resupply or relief. His men were tired, their MOPP suits were stained with mud, grease and in some cases blood. And all he could promise them was more of the same.

Mack was relieved that his wife, Jodie, was out of danger, as she and the kids had been evacuated by her employer when the President had ordered all American service dependents and tourists out of the then potential war zone. Well, I guess we got that one right in time, for a change. She had insisted on staying, as she was a cub reporter for the Baltimore Sun, operating out of the AP branch office in Bonn, but the editor back in Baltimore agreed, as Jodie had just delivered a baby six months ago, and thus, Jodie, reluctantly, evacuated along with the other service dependents.

Mack rubbed his bloodshot eyes and his ebon skin was dusky with exhaustion. They'd been dueling with the advanced guards of at least 2-3 Soviet divisions. It had been simple affair, with only another M1 immobilized, and forced to be abandoned. The crew hadn't been so lucky, as they had been machine gunned attempting to leave their broken down vehicle. The Soviets were nothing, if not relentless, and Mack hadn't seen any ammunition resupply all day, which concerned him, what with rumors of Soviet paratroopers in Fulda itself.

Mack had selected a series of low wooded hills that overlooked some broken ground for about 3000 meters until it led to a long tree line to the east. He'd hoped the thermal sights his M1s had would compensate for the depth of the forest to his front, but the Soviets would barely be stopped by a slightly understrength tank company with little if any support, and dwindling ammunition supplies. Where the fuck is First Sergeant Jimenez and the LOG detachment? Last he'd heard, "Top" and the LOG detachment was heading for the ASP (Ammunition Supply Point) that had been established near a town whose name escaped Mack for the time being. That had been four hours ago. For all I know, Soviet air or artillery got him. Mack and the rest of the company, now 10 tanks in all, had dug in as best as they could, but the scrapes they had managed to make weren't as good hull down positions as the ones a good bulldozer from the engineers could create. But, in the meantime, it would have to do.

The radio crackled with reports from the 4th Squadron's helicopters dueling with the Soviet divisions to Mack's front. As near as he could tell from the hash of voices and jamming, the Soviets were 2-3km away, and closing fast. The Soviets could arrive in minutes, and they weren't ready. They just weren't ready. My instructors in ROTC and AOBC never told me there'd be days like this. Fortunately, Mack and the rest of the 11th, wasn't supposed to stop the Soviets, just slow them down and bleed them long enough that when they handed the battle over to the rest of V Corps, that the Russian fangs had been well and truly pulled. Or, at least that's how it's supposed to work. For as bad as the fighting was here, he'd heard it was a real horror show up north, with the Brits and Germans under heavy pressure, and a Dutch division being destroyed piecemeal west of Bremen.

Mack's reverie was disturbed with a shout from the loader's hatch of his tank. "El-tee! We got a contact report from those choppers out front! Sounds like Ivan's headed our way, in force!" his loader, a tough kid from the Bronx named Crosetti exclaimed. Crosetti had joined the Army for the usual reasons, to get out of a bad neighborhood and he thought he was tough, the drill sergeants at Fort Knox disabused him of the latter however. But right now, SP4 Crosetti was as nervous as could be, he'd done a silly thing just before all had gone to hell in Jugoslavia. He'd fallen in love. And worse, it was a German girl from Fulda. Crosetti had been worrying himself sick about it, and his usual steady nature had become a jumpy and touchy nature.

"Coming Crosetti, tell those helo guys to wait one?" Mack exclaimed as he jogged the twenty feet to his tank at a dead run. He clambered onto the tank and scrambled up the turret face with practiced ease as Crosetti handed him the intercom cable to plug into his CVC.

As Mack did, the airwaves were chaos, with squeals and pops from jamming attempts from both sides, and a half dozen radio conversations bleeding into each other. Mack motioned to Crosetti to adjust the radio settings and he finally acquired the frequency for the 4th Squadron's helicopters in front of his position.

RAPIER SIX, THIS IS SADDLE TWO-ACTUAL, I HAVE A CONTACT REPORT FOR YOU. PERMISSION TO SEND, OVER?

Mack keyed the mike, SADDLE TWO, SEND YOUR TRAFFIC.

SIX, WE RAN INTO THE LEADING ELEMENTS OF AT LEAST TWO, REPEAT TWO MOTOR RIFLE DIVISIONS, WE ESTIMATE PROBABLY A SHORT REGIMENT, WITH A BATTALION ADVANCING ON BOTH ROAD AXES, YOU'VE GOT AT LEAST AN OVERSTRENGTH BATTALION HEADED YOUR WAY, OVER.

Mack sighed, Awesome, how in the hell am I supposed to stop an over strength Soviet battalion with 10 tanks? Not good, not good at all. He keyed the mike again. TWO, DID YOU GUYS SLOW THEM DOWN AT ALL, OVER?

SIX, WE SURE AS HELL TRIED. WE LOST TWO COBRAS FROM MY COMPANY TO ZSU FIRE, AND ANOTHER TO MANPADS. ESTIMATE WE GOT CLOSE TO A COMPANY OF IVANS THOUGH, SO WE DID HURT THEM, BUT EVEN SO, IT LOOKS LIKE THEY ARE GOING TO BYPASS YOU TO THE NORTH. SIX, I AM NOT YOU, BUT MY ADVICE IS TO GET THE HELL OUT OF THERE FOR YOUR NEXT SET OF POSITIONS BEFORE THEY CUT YOU OFF, OVER.

Mack's brows furrowed. Good advice, but I can't raise anyone at Squadron or Regiment at all. And I am not going to tuck tail and run without telling someone. Damned if I do, Damned if I don't. Sorry Jodie, you and Melanie are just going to have to understand. I have to stick it out here till someone relieves me, or tells me to haul ass out of here. 3rd Herd, where the hell are you?

TWO, CAN YOU RAISE ANY SHERIDAN OR SHERMAN CALLSIGNS? OVER?

NEGATIVE, SIX, I CAN'T GET ANYBODY BUT YOU AND A FEW OTHER GROUND CALLSIGNS, I CAN'T EVEN RAISE MY OWN SQUADRON CALLSIGNS. IT'S CHAOS OUT THERE. OVER?

TWO, IF YOU CAN TRY ONE MORE RUN ON IVAN FOR US, WE'D APPRECIATE IT. BE CAREFUL, OVER?

SIX, WE'LL GIVE IT THE OLD COLLEGE TRY, BUT JUST SO YOU KNOW, THIS MIGHT BE OUR LAST TRANSMISSION. BUT, I ALWAYS DID LIKE A FIGHT. OVER.

TWO, WE'LL KEEP THE LIGHT ON FOR YOU, GOOD LUCK AND GOOD HUNTING, OUT.

Mack turned to Crosetti, "Hollis and Washington ready?"

"Taking a nap boss, I was on radio watch." Crosetti responded.

"Ok, wake em, and close 'er up. We have company coming and I don't want to be unprepared for them. Clear?"

Crosetti nodded, then dropped down into the tank, nudging the tank's gunner, a small brown-haired fireplug of a man named Hollis awake. He awoke with a start, as he almost shouted as Mack clambered down into the turret, dogging the hatch behind him with a series of noisy clanks. "Good dream, Hollis?"

"Um, yeah, sir. Ivan coming?"

"Yeah, a battalion plus of him, I need you up in under a minute."

They say nothing focuses a man more than the idea of his hanging. Or, in Hollis's case, the news that there was a battalion of Soviet tanks headed for him and his tank, doing their level best to kill him. His fingers sprinted through the function checks for the gunfire control system and the test circuits for the main gun. All came back normal and ready to fight. "Gunner up, Boss!"

DRIVER UP, EL-TEE! Mack's headphones echoed. That was the driver, SP4 Darius Washington, a kid from Detroit on his first real assignment out of AIT. And he too was scared out of his mind. His father was a preacher, and he had called the Soviet prep barrage that had killed Captain Dalton a "glimpse of hell."

"Loader up!" Crosetti shouted. His tone was nervous tinged with excitement.

Mack keyed his mike and spoke over the freq to the troop. THIS IS SIX TO ALL RAPIER CALL SIGNS. STAND-TO, I SAY AGAIN, STAND-TO. THERE IS A SOVIET TANK BATTALION WITH RECON ASSETS APPROXIMATELY TWO THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED METERS TO OUR FRONT. ANNOUNCE WHEN YOUR TANKS ARE UP AND AS SOON AS THEY ARE, HEAD FOR YOUR POSITIONS. WE WILL OPEN FIRE AT SIXTEEN HUNDRED METERS. FIRE YOUR FIRST ROUND WHEN I DO. GET READY TO DISPLACE AS SOON AS YOU FIRE YOUR SECOND ROUND. GOOD LUCK TO US ALL, SIX OUT.

10 minutes later

Mack was sweating buckets due to a mix of nerves and the fact that his MOPP overgarment had a nasty ability to become little more than a sauna for the wearer. He thanked God that he didn't have to mask and put on his gloves, the heat would be unbearable then. He looked through his commander's sights, and began to see small columns of white smoke advancing through the small valleys and above the treetops. Each of those smoke columns was a Soviet tank. They were injecting fuel onto the engine manifold to make smoke to cover their advance. But, the M1 had an answer for that.

"Hollis, can we see those bastards on thermal?"

"Sure can, El-Tee, but the imagery kinda sucks, can't tell a T-72 from a BMP out there."

Mack cracked a feral smile. "Ok, lase somebody likely and give me the range."

"Gotcha boss"

Hollis lased a target that looked something like a tank in the green black world of the thermal sight. Thermal sights could see through a lot, as long as the target radiated heat. Trouble was, the resolution wasn't the best, and finer points of a target didn't resolve. There were rumors the British thermals were better, but sadly, Hollis didn't have those, so he'd have to work with what he had. He pushed a button on his firing grips, and this triggered the laser rangefinder, which measured the distance to the unknown target, which in this case, turned out to be a Soviet T-64, the laser beam struck the target on the front hull, and the return was noticed by the gunfire control system, which dutifully calculated the range at 1750 meters.

"1750 meters boss."

"Thanks Hollis, Corsetti, do we have AP up?"

Corsetti looked at the main gun indicator, and noting it said AP, turned back and nodded to Mack.

"Ok, steady guys…they'll be coming to us. Hollis, keep giving me ranging data every 10 seconds or so."

"Roger that, El-Tee." Hollis responded. "El-Tee?"

"Yeah Hollis?"

"Think we'll stop 'em, or is it going to take…?"

"Rather not think about that right now, Hollis. Get on your sight and range the bastards."

"1700"

"1680"

"1650"

"1625"

"Hollis, fire at will when they reach 1600 meters."

Hollis nodded, but his main attention was to his gunsight, where he tracked what he hoped was a Soviet tank. The turret smoothly slew in conjunction with his movements, whirring imperceptibly as it tracked the heat signature in Hollis's sight.

"1600! FIRE!" Hollis yelled

"GUN UP!" Crosetti replied

"ON THE WAY!" Hollis yelled and in one fluid moment, pulled the triggers on his firing grips, a WHAM reverberated through the tank as the 105mm main gun bucked and shook the tank with a considerable recoil. Hollis's sight went bright green for a moment, and then cleared. He was rewarded with an unmistakable image. A burning Soviet vehicle. The smoke from the now-dead vehicle streamed from the dead Soviet vehicle like water from a spigot. A secondary explosion glowed green in the sight as the turret flew off of the now dead vehicle, marking the dead vehicle unmistakeably as a tank.

As that occurred, the other nine tanks of Delta Troop fired as one, and six more Soviet vehicles fireballed in gouts of smoke and flame, in several cases, the T-64s had the turrets fly off after a series of explosions. One T-64 took a glancing hit from a 105mm on the glacis, and stopped, with the crew popping the hatches and abandoning their tank as fast as they could.

The Soviets, realizing they were in a kill zone, did the only thing they thought they could do, they increased speed to close with the unknown American force, and began to fire wildly on the move. The fire was inaccurate, but there was a lot of it, as geysers of sand and dirt erupted around Delta Troop's positions. As the Soviet vehicles increased speed, they quickly cleared the woodline, and became visible to the M1s optical sights. Mack grimaced, as this worked both ways, if he could see them, then the Soviets could see him. He grabbed the turret override handles and searched for a likely target, and he found one, a T-64 that was advancing head on.

"Gunner, Target, Tank, 11 O' Clock, Load Sabot."

Hollis responded "Identified" which mean he saw the target and was beginning the process of "engaging" it.

Crosetti reached back to the rear of the turret, grabbed a sabot round and wrestled it into the breach of the main gun. He then seated the round, and rammed the round home with his right arm, and swung the breach upward, while yelling "Up!"

Mack then shouted "Fire!"

Hollis responded with the words "On the way!" and pressed the triggers on his turret grips, which triggered the main gun with a loud report, just as the Soviet tank got a round off as well, The American round hit high on the left side of the turret, and the T-64 caught fire immediately, and quickly slew off to the left, quivering from the spontaneous detonation of multiple main gun rounds.

But the Soviet round also struck true, smashing into the main gun and knocking it out of battery. The turret shook like a bone in a terrier's mouth, and Crosetti fell onto the turret deck, breaking his right wrist.

"Washington, get us out of here, fall back to the alternate position by the road!" But Washington was was not answering to anyone, even Mack. More Soviet tanks were coming, and they were firing on the move, and with the M1 unable to move, sooner or later, one of those rounds was going to find a weak spot. The decision pained Mack, but he figured better to fight another day, than die with the tank at this point. "Everyone out, Hollis, check on Crosetti. Crosetti as soon as you can, help me rig the SOI to burn and then grab the small arms and other gear. We'll leave via the loader's hatch and make our way to the woodline off to the West, it was what, about 500 meters, Hollis?

"What about Washington? El-tee?" Hollis inquired.

"He's coming with us, dead or alive."

"El-Tee, if he's dead, we'd be better off leaving him..." Crosetti began, but trailed off after he saw the look on Mack's face.

After a few moments, they had grabbed all the gear they needed, left the SOI in torn sheets, ready to be burned by a thermite grenade, they had also left the ammunition storage door open, hoping the rounds would detonate from the fire, and render the tank unusable. Crosetti left first, with Mack next, and Hollis after him, Mack and Hollis clambered over the tank to the driver's hatch, and pried it open. Washington looked up neck was clearly broken, and his head had smashed against the instrument panel from the force of the main gun round hitting the tank. Mack looked at Crosetti and Hollis..they both shook their heads; We won't get far lugging his body with us.

Hollis muttered "Shit, El-Tee, we'd better get the hell out of here."

Mack reached down, and closed Washington's sightless eyes, he then yanked free Washington's dog tags, then clambered back up onto the turret deck, pulling the pin on a thermite grenade, which he then casually dropped down the open loader's hatch. Mack sincerely hoped the SOI and the tank burned nicely. "Let's get the hell out of here!" he barked.

The trio jumped down off the tank, and ran quickly, the Soviet tanks too busy to notice them as they drove westward. They were armed rather poorly, with an M3 Grease Gun and two .45 pistols between the three of them, but at least they were armed. Mack hoped they didn't run into a Soviet Motor Rifle squad, as any firefight would be rather one sided.

They made the woods without incident, and skidded down a culvert into a wooded and muddy ravine. They looked at each other, and nodded, they'd hug the ravine going west, and hope for the best. Mack knew from his own map that the ravine stretched for a good two miles, so assuming friendlies were not that far off, it was a doable exercise to make it out of the mess they found themselves in, Mack couldn't know two things. First, a Soviet Motor Rifle company was being brought in to clear the woods, and second, only six tanks of Delta Troop had survived the latest battle. But, they had destroyed half a Soviet battalion in the process and bought 3rd Armored Division another precious couple of hours.
 

CurtisLemay

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2-North

RAF Lakenheath

6 August 1985

0443 Local/0443 Zulu

Daria awoke from her Air Force issue cot for the fifth time that night, or as she glanced with a scowl on her face at her Timex watch, morning. Didn't Churchill once say? "Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result." He didn't mention the bad dreams, or the insomnia, or the feeling of pins in one's stomach. I wonder if that's why he drank so damn much.

Daria shook the cobwebs from her head, she figured she got some sleep, and neither of them were on the flight roster till 0730, when they were supposed take off to pay a visit to a rail yard near Karl Marx Stadt. I wonder if Ivan will be surprised when we show up in broad daylight. Somehow, I doubt he'll care. At least the attack was part of a four-ship, which from Daria's point of view, was better, more targets to shoot at.

She glanced over at Jane, and saw her sound asleep, her light snoring almost making it seem like there wasn't a war on. How the hell does she do it? My hands shake, I can't sleep, and I have been going on coffee and oxygen from the aircraft. She acts as if it's another day at the office? I envy you mi amiga, I really do.

As Daria made for her flight boots, there came a loud, insistent rapping at the metal personnel door leading to the outside. Daria grabbed her black, Air Force issue .38 and contemplated it. Would Spetsnaz bother knocking? Probably not. Then again…She quickly threw on her flight boots and hefted the revolver in her right hand, holding it behind her back as she quickly moved to the door, a lump in her throat as she opened the door slightly.

She opened the door a crack, and shoved the Model 10 revolver through the gap. "Password, you got one chance or I give you a third nostril!"

The response was a derisive snort. Followed by a gravelly voice that sounded like a mix from a boombox full of feedback and a cement mixer, "Lieutenant, I saw your last range scores, if I really was Spetsnaz, we wouldn't be having this conversation, anyhow, the password is GLASS, countersign?"

Daria sighed, it was Captain Folkes, the squadron assistant operations officer, and he was right, Daria had barely qualified with her revolver. "TOPHAT". She relaxed as she opened the door the rest of the way. Captain Marius Folkes had dark ebon skin, with eyes that belied a lively intelligence. He was a man who spoke four languages, Russian, Spanish, Polish and Hungarian, but he was a man afflicted by a minor malady that had gotten him much in the way of derision in the Air Force, at least at first. Marius was 5'5 and barely made the height requirements. He was competing with Crimson for shortest aircrew member in the wing. But he was whipsmart, and had been bucking for an Air Attaché job in the Eastern Bloc before the war. Now, that seemed to be all in a cocked hat.

"Morning Captain Folkes, what brings you by today, is it the ambiance of our shelter, or the fact Wing is driving you insane and you needed to get away for a while?"

Folkes smiled, and pointed to the shoulders of his flight suit. Instead of the silver railroad tracks one found with a captain, there resided the gold oak leaves one found with a Major's rank.

Daria's eyes went wide, "Sorry Maj-"

Folkes waved away her apology, and found an empty work bench to sit at. "Really did want to make Major, not like this though, and I am going to do a horrible thing to you too, Captain."

Daria's brow furrowed…Wait a sec, I am not a cap- Oh Christ, it's been that bad.

Folkes reached into a pocket of his flight suit, and produced a gaggle of white boxes, with items jangling in them, brand new captains bars.

He tossed them to Daria, who barely caught them, with her exhaustion and confusion at being promoted so fast warring in her skull.

"Casualties, I have two flight leaders to replace, and god knows, I have to merge what is left of your flight, with another flight. They have two birds and crews left, and those kids have less experience than you."

Daria shook her head Surely this was a mistake. Me, Captain, flight leader? Jesus this is all going very damned wrong. "Sir, what about Grady and Robinson, they did a damn good job on the first day, especially leading us out of Grossenhein, and Grady is a Vietnam vet?"

Folkes shook his head, "Grady bought it three hours ago, was trying to bring back a damaged aircraft, and well, the engines gave out 1000ft short of the runway. He and Robinson ejected, capsule chute deployed, sort of..landed hard. Robinson is just being sent home with a broken back. Grady didn't make it, broke his neck. Simply put, Morgendorffer, I gotta promote you and Lane, I need people who even resemble the qualifications for flight leader at this point. Wing has taken 30% losses in two days of fighting. This keeps up, we won't be around in 4 more days."

Daria sat down on her cot with a start. "It is worse than any of us thought?"

Folkes exhaled, "Seems to be that way for both sides, there is a permanent close range dogfight going on just over the damn FEBA, and both sides only have a general idea of what's in the air right now. I think the guys on the ground are just lighting anything up that flies right now".

Daria spread her hands in supplication "Karl Marx Stadt still on?"

Folkes shrugged again "Yep, that and three other just like it, The Pact is moving and we are barely holding the line, though we are backpedaling as much as we can, trying not to get smashed under the Sov sledgehammer. SACEUR is screaming at COMFACCE to shut down the Soviet logistical effort, so, yeah, if we are not doing counter-air, we are going to be blowing the crap out of rail lines and bridges for the foreseeable future."

Daria grimaced and her hands shook imperceptibly, how much more courage and luck do I have left? Will my flight trust me to get the job done? We trusted the last two flight leaders, and both of them are dead, very dead.

Morgendorffer Home

Lawndale, Maryland

6 August, 1985

0317 Local/0713 GMT

Quinn Morgendorffer looked over her luggage one more time. The military had told her to pack light, no more than two bags weighing 10lbs each. She had packed one, and it was mostly clothing Daria had left behind, including her Doc Martens, Is it a sad statement I don't have a damn bit of practical outdoor clothing?

The trip down from NYC had been slow, and taken almost 24 hours, with Murray driving like a madman the entire time. He had almost collapsed just past Philadelphia. At Quinn's insistence, she and Murray had tried to find a hotel for the night, but they were all full of people just trying to get away from what they were convinced was the certain nuclear attack. A test of the EBS in one hotel Murray and Quinn had tried had caused a near panic, and a riot broke out. The best Murray and Quinn could do was get the hell out of there before the cab got stolen.

So, they'd settled for sleeping in the cab in the parking lot of a shopping mall ten miles north of the Maryland state line. When it was Quinn's turn to stand watch, she had gripped the .38 for dear life. The next morning, the drive was somewhat easier, but it still took until almost seven that day to get home. On July 27th, at seven in the evening, a bedraggled Quinn dragged her two suitcases, lighter than they had ever been in her life, through the door of her family home, Murray, even the gentleman, had only asked her for gas money, stating "Good deeds are a good idea right now, we may all be meeting him shortly."

The ten days Quinn had been home was an eye opener on how her parents were handling the stress of both international crisis, and then war. Her father, Jake, was jumping from one task to another to prepare the house for "the Apocalypse" and had gone and spent a fortune on what appeared to be the necessities, at least, according to the civil defense pamphlet that had shown up at the doorstep on the 1st.

Her mother, Helen, was the picture of calm as she simply moved money around to cover Jake's panic fueled largesse. Quinn knew she was scared though, because she simply let Jake rant, about the Soviets, about his daughter in danger, and about the fact that the world could be ending. Normally, Helen would stomp down on Jake hard, but this time, she said nothing, and sat quietly, while her hands shook like leaves.

By the 1st, Quinn knew she could not just sit in her family home and wait for the end. An impromptu "Fashion Club Reunion" at a local bar had done nothing to improve Quinn's spirits, and she had cursed herself for having done such a thing. Sandi was a waitress at a local steakhouse, married to a guy who was more than happy to live off of her, and do nothing to take care of the kids. Stacy however, had opened her own garage, and was proving to be very skilled at it, she had in fact, covered dinner for all of them, as the reunion had been more her idea than anyone else's. As for Tiffany, she had not shown up, citing the fact that her husband, a successful CPA, had thought it best to get out of town with the impending international situation, at least Stacy had been fun to talk to.

The job search had gone worse, as nobody wanted fashion writers, they wanted news copy…serendipity happened on the 4th. As Quinn and the rest of her family sat on the edge of their seats, breathlessly watching NBC broadcast grainy images of Europe tearing itself apart for the third time in a century, the phone rang.

Helen and Jake both gave Quinn the "answer it" look. She knew why. They are hoping they see Daria alive in some of the news footage. What's the chance of that?

The voice on the other end was one she had not heard from since high school, Jodie Landon, now Jodie Landon-Mckenzie. Quinn had missed the wedding, much to her later regret, but why call now? And wasn't Jodie in Germany with Mack, no, wait, she was evacuated…

Jodie's voice sounded clear, and without static, like it was across town, not across the ocean. Where is she calling me from?

"Hey Quinn, you have a few minutes to talk, I have a potential job offer for you. It won't be fashion writing, but I need somebody who can write."

"Sure Jodie, it beats sitting at home, where are you, by the way, and have you heard from Mack?"

"I am in Baltimore, at the main offices of the Sun, haven't heard from Mack since the 3rd. Right now I am working 12 hour days so I don't think about him. But, that's not why I called, ok?"

Quinn sensed it was best to leave things alone from this point, "Ok, you have peaked my interest, what do you have in mind"?

Jodie exhaled sharply "Quinn, our guy covering the air war in England got badly hurt in the first round of airstrikes. He may not make it, and DOD authorized me to send a replacement…finally. Anyhow, I know you can write and take care of yourself."

Quinn blanched, Jodie is making me a big offer, but I don't have any experience like this, and what about Mom and Dad. Dad's losing it over Daria being in harm's way, me too? Might just kill him…but dammit, this is a chance to not be stuck in the Fierce rut for the rest of my career! "Jodie, the answer is yes, what do I have to do?"

"Military is insisting that all correspondents attend one of their courses held at various posts. Nearest one to you is Fort Meade. It's 5 days long, and then off you go into the war zone. They will fill you in there. Be there no later than the 6th of August at 0830 and bring ID. No more than two bags, 10lbs each, and dress practical. Rest will be done there. Good luck, Quinn!" and with that Jodie hung up.

It occurred to Quinn at that moment that she had forgotten to ask Jodie how much the position paid.

When she told her parents, Jake exploded, demanding Quinn call back and quit. Quinn said she would do no such thing. That had sparked a huge fight where Quinn marched upstairs and slammed the door, with Quinn raiding Daria's old wardrobe to find some practical clothing, as Quinn seemed to lack items along those lines.

Fast forward to Quinn, sitting on her couch, waiting for a cab at three in the morning to take her to Fort Meade. She had cried, she tried to write several notes to her parents. What did you say? I love you, but my career matters, and I am going to war, even though I don't have to.

Quinn hoped she would go where she could tell the story right, it was the least she could do for her sister, and her buddies. What if I wind up at Lakenheath? That will be kinda awkward….a noise then disturbed Quinn's reverie. It was the sound of light footsteps, that could only belong to her mother.

Helen slipped into the living room like a ghost, clad in a white terri-cloth bathrobe and her hair done up in a hairclip. She was not her usual sartorial best, but at three in the morning, who was?

"Quinn honey, can we talk"?

Quinn nodded "I am not changing my mind, mom."

Helen sat on a chez lounge opposite the couch. "Wouldn't dream of it dear. Look, your father, for all of his many faults, and there are many…loves us all very much. To him, his father, whom he will never forgive, bred true in Daria. He kind of hoped the military tradition, such as it was, ended with you. And now, while you're going as a member of the press, you are still going to war. He is scared, scared he might lose you both."

"Why the hell not just say that!"

"It's your father dear, he never does that, He can't decide whether he is going to go to pieces, or be John Wayne. Right now, they are warring for his soul."

"So what do I do?"

Helen smiled and nodded. "Let him cool off, I will help there, and when you are leaving for the war zone, call before you go. Speak to him then. He will come around. Quinn, you and your sister are both great writers. I wish Daria was telling the story as well, but maybe she will get that chance after the war. At least, I hope she does." Helen's famous reserve finally broke, and she broke down, sobbing. Quinn wordlessly crossed the distance, and held her for what seemed like hours. She almost missed her cab.

Rail terminal 10km SSW of Karl Marx Stadt

Karl Marx Stadt, East Germany

6 August, 1985

1030 Local/0830 GMT

It had been a long tiring flight for Daria and Jane, they had taken off at 0730, and tanked over the North Sea 20 minutes later, then going low level down the Elbe and hanging a left in a somewhat straight line at 300 feet for the rail yard. Flak and SAMs had been intermittent, but one of the flight of four had gotten temporarily lost as he had guided off the wrong landmark.

But something had alerted the defenses they were coming..and it seemed everything bigger than an AK-47 in the area was coming up to greet them. Green tracer ripped apart the morning sky, dirty back puffs of flak exploded mostly above the aircraft, and the RWR beeped almost incessantly as a series of SAM and fighter radars attempted to lock onto them. Daria executed a series of Doppler turns, designed to break the radar search beams, but when one lost them, another seemed to come looking. It was bedlam, sheer bedlam.

Ok, there is a series of power lines 2 miles off the target to the West, so watch for them after my run, flak seems to be heaviest to the north, just like the prestrike photos said it would.

"Hanging in there, Sundance?"

Jane simply nodded, she was too busy trying to pick up the radar return for the rail yard and lock it into the bombing computer. She managed to do it quickly, giving a thumbs up as that was their agreed upon signal to begin their Bomb Run (Conventional) checklists.

The strike was simple, the aircraft would go to full speed, pop up to 500 feet and release a lay down attack of 24 Mk 82 Snakeye 500lb bombs with fuse extenders. The aircraft began to buffet and buck between the low altitude turbulence and the flak exploding all around, a stream of 23mm whipping 50 feet in front of the nose. All Daria could so is concentrate and wait fore the signal from Jane to popup.

Three

Two

One


Daria jammed the throttles to their stops, and the engines screamed in protest, pressing both Jane and Daria into their seats. Jane managed to keep a grip on the radar hood, as Daria topped the airplane out at 500 feet. She was rewarded with a panoramic view of the rail yard stretching out before her. More tracers erupted from the ground, and an SA-7 vomited forth on a gout of smoke and flame, but missed, decoyed by the flare program triggered just before the popup.

The computer had the solution, as a light on the panel demonstrated, and Daria mashed the pickle button, with a series of thumps as the F-111 leapt higher, being relieved of the weight of its deadly cargo. The F-111 had been over the target a matter of three seconds at most. To Daria and Jane, it had felt like an eternity.

The 24 bombs each fell individually, in a line a quarter mile long. The fuse extenders were there to ensure that at the low altitude the bombs were being dropped, that indeed, they went off, as below 1000 feet, Mk 82s tended to have an iffy detonation rate, as the Argentinians had found out during the Falklands War. They detonated with the force of 192 lbs of explosive, and two had the misfortune to fall directly onto a Soviet ammunition train, which began a rather huge conflagration. The other three F-111s came from different directions of the compass, and at different drop heights to confuse the defenses. All of them used the burning ammunition train as an aiming point.

It was another day at the office for Daria and Jane.
 

CurtisLemay

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Situation Room, the White House

Washington DC

0700 Local/1100 GMT

8 August, 1985:

President Reagan and his National Security Team were assembled in the Situation Room, for the now-usual morning military briefing. After the confusion of the first couple of days after the outbreak of war, things in Washington had settled down, and the President and First Lady had moved back into the Residence, though they did have an augmented Secret Service detail, along with Marines on the perimeter from the Marine Barracks at Eighth and I Streets. Though concern remained about possible Soviet agents, especially after the defection of a husband-and-wife team of deep cover KGB illegals, all known Soviet assets in the D.C. area had been rolled up by the FBI.

As for the domestic situation, there had been some spontaneous evacuation of American cities in the first two days of the war, but now, things had calmed down, apart from the occasional anti-war protest in New York or San Francisco. Right now, the concern was Europe, and the war. So far, NATO was giving ground, grudgingly, but too much had already been lost.

Now, it was time for the morning situation brief, and the National Security Council was meeting in the Situation Room. The members had gathered as usual, but those who lived outside of D.C were forced to get through a huge barrier of security. All roads leading into Washington had roadblocks from the 29th Infantry Division, while a full battalion from the division guarded the Pentagon. A second battalion was guarding the National Mall, and a third was guarding Cabinet level offices. Once they got past that, there were Marines from the Marine Barracks guarding a full block perimeter around the White House, and the building proper was guarded by the Secret Service.

The principals were now in the Sit Room, and though the mood was serious, the usual chit-chat was going on, when the President entered the room. "Good morning, everyone,"

"Good morning, Mr. President," Don Regan, his Chief of Staff, said, and the others did the same.

Reagan nodded as he sat down at the head of the table in the Sit Room, and the others followed. The President nodded to a military briefer, a two-star AF General from the JCS Operations Section, the J-3. "All right, let's have it."

"Yes, sir," the general said. "First, domestically, we're assessing the Soviet SOF threat to CONUS as minimal, at least for now." He motioned to an aide, who put up a map on a viewgraph. "The red dots indicate Spetsnaz attacks in CONUS. Apart from Scott AFB in Illinois, which is HQ MAC, Langley AFB, which is HQ TAC, all have been against SAC assets. However, they've been going after soft targets instead of the bases themselves: off-base hangouts for base personnel have been most of the targets. The last one, near Minot AFB, targeted a local diner frequented by base personnel. A four-man Spetsnaz team attacked the diner with automatic-weapons fire, killing twelve people and wounding thirty. They were pursued and killed by local law enforcement. Another incident involved a pair of individuals caught attempting to lay an explosive device along the railway tracks under Manhattan that lead to the Bayonne Marine Terminal spur. NYPD exchanged fire with them, and they did find evidence that one of the perpetrators had been injured, but they have yet to find any bodies. They have their hands full up their putting down sporadic rioting."

President Reagan put up his hands in mock surrender "General, I have been on the phone with Mayor Koch of New York, Mayor Schaffer of Baltimore, Mayor Bradley in Los Angeles and Mayor Feinstein in San Francisco, all of them have begged me for elements of the National Guard to put down rioting by criminal elements," Reagan exhaled in frustration, "but I can't spare such units right now, as we need every serviceman and woman we can lay our hands on for Europe and god only knows where else. I have advised the mayors and governors of the states in question to call in the State Guard, but I have been informed that in many cases, contrary to the Department of Defense encouraging them to stand up the units in question, the units either do not exist or are not ready. Cap, find out what the hell is going on here."

Cap Weinberger, Secretary of Defense, nodded and whispered to an aide who was furiously writing an action item onto a large memo pad.

"And when we've found Spetsnaz, either bodies or live ones, Mr. President," William Webster, the FBI Director, said, "they wear civilian clothes on the outside, but are wearing articles of Soviet military uniforms underneath."

"So that if any are caught, they won't be considered as spies," Admiral Poindexter, the NSA, observed.

"That's correct, Admiral," Ed Meese, the Attorney General, replied. "I suggest considering them as POWs in that regard."

The President nodded. "All right, then, and what's happening in Europe?"

"Sir," the general nodded. A new map came up. "First, in Norway, the Soviets are bogged down in the area known as Fortress Norway. Their 6th Army got there yesterday, and they've run into terrain that's very favorable to the defender. The Soviet amphibious landing at Bodo, though it captured the port and airfield, hinged on the port facilities being taken intact. They were not. The follow-on forces, two Soviet Army motor-rifle divisions that have amphibious training, can't land their heavy equipment. And they're exposed to air attack from Strike Fleet Atlantic. Which is hitting them around the clock."

"And there's something else out of Norway," William Colby, the CIA Director, added. "Katarina Witt, the East German skater,"

"She won a gold medal in Sarajevo, right?" the President asked.

"She did, sir. She's now in a CIA safe house in Virginia. She defected while an East German athletic delegation was in Stockholm. Station Stockholm, with some help from Swedish intelligence, managed to get her to Oslo, and a ride on a C-141 back to the States. She's recording broadcasts for VOA and the BBC."

"I'd like to meet her, when this is all over," said the President. "Continue, please."

'Yes, Mr. President. The Swedes are reporting a number of Soviet air incursions into their airspace, and there's been a number of shooting incidents. The Finns are vacillating, as the Soviets are demanding passage through the country for Soviet supplies and reinforcements for Norway. The Finnish military wants to fight, but the government is divided, and we suspect the Soviets are encouraging that division". The general reported.

"CIA concurs in that," Colby said. "The Swedes are pressuring the Finns to resist, and may back that up with troops if necessary."

"All right," the President said. "The Central Front?"

The general nodded to his aide, and a new viewgraph came up. "Sir, the Soviets, along with some East German and Polish Forces, control most of Denmark. Soviet and Polish ground forces have control of southern Jutland, while Soviet, East German, and Polish amphibious and airborne forces control Zealand, including Copenhagen. Polish airborne troops have taken Bornholm Island and are now in firm control of the entire island.

"Moving south, the East German 5th Army has pushed into Bremen, and has given the I Netherlands Corps a serious mauling. One Dutch division, a reserve one, got taken apart, and the other two got roughly handled. One West German Panzer Division and 3rd Brigade of the 2nd Armored Division have bolstered the Dutch, and a British brigade from their II Corps is moving to assist as well. Further south, the West Germans managed to avoid an attempt at encirclement by 2nd Guards Tank Army and the East Germans, and are holding firm in front of Hannover. A Soviet air assault battalion took Hameln on the Weser, however, West German territorials and some British armor are moving to clean them out. As for the British I Corps, they're holding off 3rd Shock Army, though they've taken some punishment. Finally, in the I Belgian Corps area, they're fighting a tenacious mobile defense against 20th Guards Army, who we assess as being well behind the Soviets' schedule. They're being supported by III German Corps, which has forced 20th Guards to pull a division from the Belgians to watch their flanks."

"Where are the Soviet reserves?" Secretary of Defense Weinberger asked.

West of Magdeburg, Mr. Secretary," the briefer pointed. "That's the 4th Guards Tank Army from Poland, and it consists of two Soviet and two Polish tank divisions, for 1st Western Front. For 2nd Western Front, that's the 1st Guards Tank Army, and they're around Weimar, but haven't moved yet."

"Very well," Weinberger said. "And in CENTAG?" That was the Central Army Group, with III German and both V and VII US Corps. SOUTHAG, newly formed, had I and II French Corps, and II German Corps.

"III German Corps is helping the Belgians, as I've said, and is facing elements from the 8th Guards Army, though they're putting in their main effort against V Corps, which has been under pressure from both them and the East German 3rd Army. They're at their third line of defense, and so far, they're holding. VII Corps is also facing the East Germans, but they're also up against the 28th Army, which came through the Hof Gap. VII Corps is confident it can hold a line running from Schweinfurt to Bamberg, and Bayreuth, where the French are in position. The French have brought I French Corps from France, and have had II French Corps in Germany, and they've moved into the line between VII Corps and II German Corps. The enemy forces they're facing are the Central Front, the 41st Army in the North against both French Corps, and the 10th Army, against the West Germans, with 8th Guards Tank Army in reserve. And Mr. President, most of the divisions they're facing are Czech."

"How are they fighting?" Poindexter wanted to know.

"The Czechs aren't that willing to fight the French, or our people in VII Corps, but they are more than eager to fight West Germans, Admiral," Colby said.

"And Berlin?" The President asked.

"Mr. President," Weinberger said. "They were forced to surrender at 0430 this morning, their time. Ammunition, food, and medical supplies were all critical, and no hope of resupply or relief. They have since destroyed their communications gear and ciphers, so there really isn't any way to get in touch to find out what is happening".

"It was inevitable," Reagan noted. 'When this war's over, we can get the survivors back. Go on, General."

'Yes, Mr. President," the general said. "Austria: the Soviets have moved in the Carpathian Front, that's the 13th and 38th Armies from the Ukraine, and 13th Army is pushing up the Danube River Valley towards Linz and Salzburg. 38th Army, though, is in a fight for Vienna, as the Austrians put a division and a half's worth of troops in to defend it, and they were reinforced by, of all people, the French."

'The French?" Secretary of State Schultz asked.

"Yes, Mr. Secretary," the briefer nodded. "They were flown in on 3 August, and sent a Marine battalion, and two battalions of Foreign Legionnaires. The two Legion battalions fought at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, so they're used to this." He paused, then continued. A Hungarian Corps has moved into Graz, but has stopped. The Austrians, along with the Italian IV Alpine Corps, control the Alpine passes, sir. The V Italian Corps is firm near Ljubljana, and has linked up with the 6th Marines and the British.

"Moving on, Egyptian forces have consolidated their positions in Eastern Libya, and are preparing to move towards Qaddafi's hometown of Sirte, and then Tripoli. Sixth Fleet has conducted carrier air strikes against Soviet air and naval facilities at Lataka and Tartus in Syria, as has the Enterprise group against the Soviet Indian Ocean Squadron's base at Aden."

"Far East?" Vice President George Bush said via speakerphone. He was still at Camp David, to ensure that at least one Presidential successor was out of Washington at all times.

"Constellation battle group has eliminated the Soviet squadron at Cam Ranh Bay, and has also, along with the Australians, mounted air strikes to neutralize the base. Hanoi has since declared its neutrality. As for Korea, the North Korean advance has slowed, and they're trying to swing around Seoul from the east, but they're facing a buzz saw from the ROKs and our own forces. As for Alaska? There have been no Soviet moves there. No air strikes, missile attacks, or even SOF activity."

"All right, General. SAC?" The President asked.

"Still at DEFCON 3, as ordered, Mr. President," Secretary Weinberger said. "However, CINC-SAC has taken measures to increase the size of his alert force. Half of the bomber and tanker force is now on ground alert, and the full alert force can be launched within fifteen minutes. He's still asking for permission to disperse the rest, and institute an airborne alert."

"Not until we see signs of a Soviet Strategic Forces alert," The President ordered. "Make that clear to him."

"Yes, Mr. President."

"CIA shows no signs of a Soviet Strategic alert," Director Colby added.

"Let's hope it stays that way," the President said. "Get me SACEUR."

'Yes, Mr. President," one of the communications staff said. In a few minutes, the connection was made. "SACEUR on the line, sir."

General Bernard Rogers, SACEUR, came on the line. "Mr. President?"

"General, you're on a speaker. The rest of the National Security Council is with me. I need to know one thing: can you hold them conventionally?"

"Sir, Forty-eight hours ago, I was still confident at a seventy percent chance that we can do it. Now, after what happened to the Dutch, it's now sixty percent. I've had to weaken III Corps and II British Corps to shore them up. If you want to hold them conventionally, I need XI Corps."

"Bernie, its John," General John Vessey, the Chairman of the JCS, said. "CAVALRY is five days out. They left yesterday, and should be arriving at the French Channel ports by the 12th. CNO says that Strike Fleet Atlantic has a few surprises for the Backfires, and there's heavy ASW support for the convoys proper. Even if we lose one-third of each convoy, there's enough to fully equip the Corps."

There was an audible sigh over the speaker. "Mr. President? SACLANT told me the same thing a few hours ago. With that corps, my chances go up considerably."

"The air bridge is going well, and the troops are being flown over as we speak, Mr. President," General Vessey said. "We get them their equipment, and they can go to work."

The President nodded. "All right, General," he told SACEUR. "We'll get you those tools, to paraphrase Churchill, and you can finish the job. Now, I'm not like LBJ, who was calling Westmoreland several times a day, it seemed. I'll stay out of your hair. Good luck, and May God be with you and your entire command."

"Thank you, Mr. President," replied General Rogers.

After the line was cut, the President turned to his SECDEF and JCS Chairman. "What are the chances of a stalemate?"

"If we hold them, fairly good. Once they use up their prewar supply stocks, they have to pause to resupply,' Vessey said.

"All right, there are National Guard units not yet deployed, correct?" the President asked.

"There are, Mr. President," Weinberger noted, "Most are slated to go to Europe, with a few exceptions. would you like to make any changes to that?"

"No, Mr. Secretary, continue to follow the current warplan". Reagan then turned his attention to General Vessey. "Mr Chairman, is there anything else you need?"

Weinberger turned to General Vessey, who shook his head firmly "No, Mr. President," SECDEF replied.

Mall of the Millennium

Lawndale, Maryland

0930 Local/1330 GMT

8 August, 1985

Jake Morgendorffer was for once, relaxed about events. He sipped his coffee as he sat in the hard bench of the food court and nursed a stale bagel that the cream cheese made barely palatable. He examined the ten page proposal he had worked on all night last night at the office. Even with both of his daughters in harm's way, things were looking up, as every government agency out there wanted advertisers like Jake to develop civil defense campaigns, not to mention getting people to buy war bonds. Yeesh, War Bonds are coming back? Mad Dog would be laughing his ass off right now.

Jake had a 10 o'clock appointment with a FEMA rep to discuss a campaign to inform people on what to do in case the worst happened. It seemed FEMA was not as confident after all as to the quality of the presentation of their PSA announcements, nor their literature. The slogan they'd adapted from the British was horrible, "Survive and Thrive?" Who in the hell thought that one up?

Jake for all of his insecurities, was good at his job, he had managed to make a good living at it. He knew a challenge, and selling the post-apocalypse to ordinary Americans was, as far as he was concerned, the best he could do right now to do his part….even if his part did seem a bit morally dubious and a bit unrealistic. But FEMA was making a good offer, and they didn't seem to care right now whether you had a GSA number or not.

Jake had noticed a lot of military hanging around the food court, and unlike most times, they were in what the press called "BDUs" and they were more ominously, armed. They were being hustled through the food court like an assembly line to the loud exhortations of their sergeants. Jake didn't know where these young men were headed, but he sincerely hoped they didn't do more than get a lousy voyage across the Atlantic for their troubles.

He'd been watching the news, and the fighting look dreadful, even Helen was struck dumb as they watched a sequence of American troops launching a counterattack in a small German town, they were going house to house, firing all manner of weapons, their staccato beat making even shouting unintelligible. He saw at least three young men being carried back by their friends, one wrapped head to toe in his poncho. But it was nothing like Vietnam, this time, the face of the enemy was seen as the same footage showed 4 exhausted Soviet prisoners sitting by the side of the road under guard. Their American captors looked just as tired, and when the reporter tried to get a quote, one of the guards invited the reporter to perform an anatomically impossible act with himself.

Jake was in the zone, here he was ready to sell the contract of his life. 10 million dollars for six weeks of a campaign. Perhaps FEMA could get his GSA number for after the war, as there was always government work to be had, eh?

Captain of Spetsnaz Arkady Gulashin was trying not to be noticed too much as he lazily observed the food court, there were at least 2 platoons worth of Americans getting fed in said court, and they had sloppily not placed any guards of their own, relying on the local police to guard them. Gulashin bit back a chuckle. I have a marksman to deal with the police officers. Today, we are going to send the Americans a message. And I don't have to get my remaining men killed trying to pull it off.

His Spetsnaz team, SSD-4401, had had a very bad war thus far. He had begun the war with 12, and with two teams of six, they had tried to infiltrate the refinery at Marcus Hook, near Philadelphia. Needless to say, things went wrong, as the Philadelphia PD as well as the Pennsylvania State Police was guarding the refinery. 12 men wasn't enough to do real damage anyhow. As it was, they'd been made before the operation had gone off, with 8 men being killed or captured the minute they'd begun the assault, blundering right into the guns of the Pennsylvania State Police SWAT team.

Gushin had barely gotten four of his men out, and had decided they would set up outside one of the major American bases in Virginia and perform a strategic reconnaissance role. The trouble was, one of his team had been made to talk, and his likeness was being circulated by American law enforcement on a nationwide wanted poster.

Gushin knew it was a matter of time, he had discussed it with his men. To a man, none of them wanted to surrender. All of them wanted to strike some blow against the Yankees. This food court eatery, with these oblivious Americans, they had been observing them for days. Always lax security, always bunching up in the food court. It was a heaven sent opportunity for four men to cause damage all out of proportion with their numbers.

The plan was simple. One of his men had set up in the elevator with a .308 deer rifle, the rest were armed with Uzis, as all of the ammunition was easier to get, as well as spare parts.

Glushin gripped his APS Stechkin pistol tightly. The hard metal form of the pistol comforted him as it resided in the small of his back, covered by his tee shirt, and he slowly released the safety catch, he already had a round loaded already. Glushin left nothing to chance. This would not be another Marcus Hook. He planned to open the ambush with his pistol, his signal being when his marksman began to pick off officers and NCOs. His men were armed accordingly, as soon as they had expended the weapon they intended to open the ambush with, they were going to drop their book bags, fetch their Uzis and begin to hose down the crowd of American soldiers.

Glushin glanced at his watch, watching the hands count down, the red second hand ticking away like a metronome. Five, four, three, two, one…Glushin ducked and brought his pistol out from the small of his back. The county policemen made for their sidearms, but were shot dead within seconds, neither getting their service weapons clear of their holsters. The .308 made a throaty report that could not be mistaken for anything else, and the high velocity round made short work of the brand new body armor both officers were wearing. Shoppers screamed and cowered as the shots rang out, scattering in all directions. Glushin emptied his Stechkin into a small knot of American soldiers diving for cover, he heard screams come from one, a sure sign he had hit that man.

By this point, Metlev, his marksman, was moving on to other targets, shooting an Army 2nd Lieutenant though the temple and dropping him like a puppet with its strings cut while he was examining the possibilities of the salad bar. Two of Glushin's men had primed grenades, and they threw them into the mass confusion of the food court, both of them cut down a mixture of civilian and military personnel.

Screams and moans filled the air, competing in an awful symphony with various firearms and grenade reports providing the base tempo. The Americans were helpless. Regulations had stipulated no live ammunition off the trucks, and regulations had been followed for safety's sake. Nobody had been expecting any trouble till the men set sail for Europe. It was to be a tragic oversight.

Glushin was proud of his men, as they used available cover and made the food court into a kill sack, their Uzis burping death as they fired in short, sharp, bursts. The low wall around the location was now serving to make sure nobody got out, and men in BDUs fell like wheat before the thresher.

But Uzis, Stechkins and grenades are not the most accurate of weapons, for all of their concealability, they are inaccurate. Even with controlled bursts, Uzis and Stechkins make shooting less of an exercise in accuracy, and more of a "to whom it may concern".

Jake Moregendorffer was gripped in panic, he was pinned down under the table, with men and women dropping all around him, as he cowered crying under the table, He was completely out of his depth, he was an ad exec, not a soldier, and even the soldiers were dying, in droves. Completely in the grips of a situation he had no frame of reference for (military school does a great job of teaching Drill and Ceremony, but not how to act under fire, or even what to expect), Jake did what came naturally, he panicked, and got up as to make for a back door he'd seen once. As he got up to run, he was caught in the back by three 9mm ball rounds from an Uzi. The first round hit him low, in the liver, and would have condemned him to a lingering, painful death, but the second bullet spared him that. The second bullet smashed through his back, severing his spine, and ended up blowing a hole through his heart.

Jake Morgendorffer, 55, was dead before he hit the ground, the momentum of his body sliding forward in a bloody trail across the brown tile floor, as he came to rest in a bloody heap against the far wall near the bathrooms.

The shooting ended 2 minutes later, with the entire attack lasting only four minutes. Jake was one of 18 dead. Another 43 were wounded. The four Spetsnaz operatives tried to get away in a stolen brown panel van, but were shot to pieces not far outside the mall by a MP Jeep with an M60 machine gun that had been acting as a convoy guard, Glushin was the last to die, expiring in Johns Hopkins Hospital at 0300 the next morning.

Neither Daria nor Quinn would find out about their father for 36 hours.

Over Sperenberg, East Germany

Sperenberg Airfield, East Germany

2130 hrs Local/1930 hrs GMT

8 August, 1985

"..and bombs away" as multiple thumps reverberated throughout the aircraft as 144 Durandals released from the F-111 as it made a low level pass from east to west across Runway 8. Two Durandals caught an IL-76 on either wing and blew it apart, sending parts of the aircraft hundreds of feet away, and killing all aboard (a Soviet airborne company, reinforcing the airhead across the Weser).

Daria took the airplane as low as she could, as tracers ripped by the windscreen, and a SA-5 flashed across the flight path of the F-111, flying dumb as it's guidance system was hopelessly jammed. Daria smashed her right rudder with her foot to avoid the missile, fearing there might be another behind it.

Sperenberg was a massive Soviet airfield, near Berlin, that was meant to be the Soviet airfield to handle all of their heavy lift aircraft. There has been a constant stream of transports from the Soviet Union since the beginning of hostilities, and NATO had been putting a lot of effort into shutting it down to disrupt the overall Soviet logistical effort, but so far, it hadn't been successful. Daria's four ship attack was the 4th raid on Sperenberg,..she was hoping this might be the last visit for a while…as casualties had been heavy in every attack, they'd already lost one aircraft on the way in.

"Butch, I recommend we egress to the south east as planned, the Germans took out the Brno sector radar and we might not get picked up by the Czechs so readily."

"We got the fuel to do that, Sundance?"

"We do, Butch, we do, for once. Other than losing Wrench and Golie on the way in, this has been a fairly.." WHAM!

The F-111 bucked and half a dozen alarms went off: FIRE WARNING, MASTER ALARM..dozens of red lights came on and all of the gauges spun wildly.

"SHIT! Sundance, emergency checklist, we on fire?"

Jane leaned down and looked at the fire lights for the two turbofans, after a quick flash when the aircraft took the hit, they winked back out. "No, Butch, we are not on fire. That's the good news."

Daria opened the throttle and put as much distance as she could between her and Sperenberg, she climbed to 1000 feet and made some experimental control movements, the aircraft was climbing slowly, and bled off speed twice as fast as normal, and right aileron turns made the aircraft shake like a leaf.

"Sundance, gotta level with you. We gotta make an egress due West, and hope nobody shoots us. As it is, we might have to eject? You strapped in if it comes to that? I don't want to wind up like our last flight leader?"

Jane nodded. She checked her radar, it was a dark screen, and no amount of pushing buttons or flipping switches would make it come back. "Butch, we have a real problem, our radar is out, so going NOE ain't happening. I say we get as far west as we can, and then eject."

Daria nodded. Crap, I fly 12 missions already, and this is how Jane and I are going to buy it? Dammit! Daria's hands began to shake, and it was all she could do to concentrate and fly the airplane.

"Sundance, advise the rest of the flight, then put out a mayday call to Ringmaster," referring to the call sign of the E-3 controlling the airbattle over this part of East Germany, "..maybe we get lucky and they vector us some fighters and/or a diversionary field?" stated Daria, the concern in her voice being muffled by the oxygen mask.

Jackhammer Lead to all Jackhammers, DO NOT ANSWER, Jackhammer lead has been hit, and we are declaring a mayday, egress as per plan. We'll catch up, out.

Jane then switched the radio frequency to Ringmaster: RINGMASTER 202, THIS IS JACKHAMMER 11, WE ARE HIT, RADAR OUT AND HAVE A SLOW FUEL LEAK. AIRCRAFT PARTIALLY UNRESPONSIVE. WE NEED A VECTOR TO EITHER A BAILOUT AREA OR A DIVERT FIELD. WOULD ALSO APPRECIATE SOME FIGHTER ESCORT, OVER.

The voice of the fighter controller came through mushy, a consequence of all of the electronic jamming going on over the skies of Germany. JACKHAMMER 11, CAN YOU MAKE THE FRENCH BASE AT CONTREXVILLE? WE CAN WHISTLE UP SOME EAGLES FOR YOU COMING BACK FROM A FIGHTER SWEEP NEAR BERLIN, CALL SIGN IS TOYOTA FLIGHT, OVER?

RINGMASTER, JACKHAMMER, WAIT ONE WHILE WE RUN SOME NUMBERS.

Jane looked at the fuel gauge, then pulled a calculator from her flight suit. "Butch, we can make it, but it's gonna be close, we get one pass, then it's eject and hope for the damn best."

"Shit…."
 

CurtisLemay

Wargamer, Amateur Historian, Writer
Nuke Mod
Moderator
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Jackhammer 11

Over Central Germany

2150 Local/1950 GMT

8 August, 1985

I would like to take the time to give a mention to my writing partner, Matt Wiser. Matt lost his stepfather on October 24th, and I know it has been tough for him. Thank you Matt, for all you have done, and will do for Night Witches and may your stepfather rest in peace

I would also like to dedicate this chapter to the 129 lost in Paris last week. Je Suis Paris..


The German countryside looked forlorn and barren in the cold dark night, punctuated by flashes of explosions and artillery fire and fast moving shooting stars that punctuated the passing of a missile, or a jet fighter.

It was all Jane could do to remind herself that they had slowly climbed their F-111 up to 5,000 feet and were awaiting the fighter escort west. It wasn't as if they were at risk of outrunning it potentially, as they had slowed the F-111 to just above stall speed so as to stretch the remaining fuel out. Daria had already told Jane that if they saw any kind of threat, they were going to eject, no questions asked.

Both were hoping, in their own private way, that they could simply brazen it out and that nobody would pay attention to a slow moving object on the radar…or would just assume it was friendly.

God, it would suck to die just short of home due to our own side..Daria's mind raged. She had her hands full keeping the airplane in the air, as it wallowed like a drunk around the sky. She had achieved a delicate balance to keep the airplane in the air, but she had to make gradual control movements, otherwise, she might send the F-111 into an unrecoverable spin. She wasn't even sure they could make the decent safely, and worse, she had no idea as to the approach plate for this French airfield. Wasn't like we were planning on paying a visit?

"Butch, I got three sets of running lights,, 3 o' clock low, looks like our escort finally got here."

Daria merely grunted in acknowledgement. She was simply too busy flying the airplane.

The dark shapes soon resolved themselves out of the murk of the early evening, and became the sleek, angular shape of a trio of F-15 Eagles. Their ghost-grey paint scheme made them almost slide into the night, if it were not for the faint glow of their formation-keeping strips on the side of the aircraft.

The radio crackled to life in the headsets of both Daria and Jane, the message came through a bit mushy, even though the F-15s were but yards away, it was a testament to the intensity of the electronic battle going on in and around Germany.

JACKHAMMER 11, TOYOTA 22 HERE WITH A FLIGHT OF THREE EAGLES. RINGMASTER SAYS YOU HAVE A WOUNDED BIRD YOU ARE TRYING TO GET BACK TO THE BARN? JUST TO LET YOU KNOW, WE DON'T HAVE A LOT OF WEAPONS LEFT, ALL OF US ARE PRETTY CLOSE TO WINCHESTER AND BINGO,. WE HAD QUITE THE FIGHT OVER POTSDAM, LOST ONE OF US TO A MIG TWO-ONE THAT GOT LUCKY, WE CAN SEE YOU TO THE FRENCH BORDER. BUT THAT OUGHT TO GET YOU OUT OF TROUBLE? OVER?

TOYOTA 22, JACKHAMMER 11, ROGER WE WILL TAKE WHAT WE CAN GET, IF THERE IS A FIGHT, WE ARE GOING TO EJECT AND HOPE FOR THE BEST. VARKS ARE ONLY RATED FOR 5Gs AND THIS HURT BIRD, WE DON'T KNOW WHAT SHE MIGHT DO, OVER.

JACKHAMMER 11, TOYOTA 22, WE WILL HOLD YOU TO THAT, I WILL HAVE TOYOTA 24 RIDE SHOTGUN ON YOU WHILE WE RANGE FURTHER OUT. HE LOST HIS WINGIE SO I'D RATHER KEEP HIM CLOSE IN. TOYOTA 22 OUT.


With that, the trio of F-15s separated, two lit their afterburners, and arced into a slow climbing turn to the north, the remainder, slid in close on the F-111's right wing. The F-15 pilot was smart, and he kept some distance to give Daria some maneuvering room if she needed it.

JACKHAMMER 11, TOYOTA 24, CAN YOU SWITCH TO CHANNEL 106.63? OVER?

A look of bafflement crossed Daria's face that was evident even with most of it covered by both a flight helmet and an oxygen mask.

"What the hell, boss, I can watch the aux receiver, just in case anything happens." Jane quipped.

Daria shook her head in mock frustration: Really, we're miles from freindlies and some fighter jock thinks "Gee, what a great time to chat a girl up?"

"Butch, it's just conversation, not a dinner date, and the airplane is stable for now…we are at least half an hour from landing anywhere friendly."

Daria shrugged, and set the transmitter to the requested frequency.

TOYOTA 24, JACKHAMMER 11, SO, WHATs THE BIG SECRET?

JACKHAMMER 11, WOULD YOU HAPPEN TO BE 1ST LIEUTENANT DARIA MORGENDORFER, OR KNOW HER? I MET HER IN THE LAKENHEATH PX 10 DAYS BEFORE THE WAR STARTED AND WELL, I THOUGHT SHE WAS KINDA CUTE, IN BETWEEN ME BEING TOLD OFF. HELL, SHE WAS CUTE WHEN SHE WAS ANGRY! OVER?


The transmission ended with some muffled and distorted laughter that was unique to being constricted through an oxygen mask.

Daria could only turn beet red, and bristle. Oh dear god, we are getting escorted home by Mr. Soesterberg himself!

Jane smiled and leaned over as far as the restraints would let her. "Hey, Daria. What is the big deal? You're on a private frequency? He didn't immediately try to get into your pants, and let's be honest, he was kinda cute. A little harmless flirting that goes nowhere might be what the doctor ordered for our mental health."

"Stuff it Sundance!" Daria growled. "It's not playtime anymore."

"No, Butch, it's not, it's real bombs, real bullets, and real SAMs and real dying. So, I say, have what fun you can, when you can. If you're not going to answer him…"

TOYOTA 24, THIS IS JACKHAMMER 11 BRAVO, MY PILOT IS A BIT SHY, BUT SHE IS THE LADY YOU SEEK. BAD EXPERIENCES. BUT YOU SEEM NICE ENOUGH. GOT A NAME TOYOTA 24? OH, BY THE WAY, WE'RE CAPTAINS NOW. OVER?

There was a chuckle over the mic, then a crackle as the F-15 driver formulated a response. TOYOTA 24s NAME IS 1st LIEUTENANT ALEX ROTH, AND YEAH, BEEN A LOT OF THOSE PROMOTIONS GOING AROUND, MA'AM. ELEVEN BRAVO, COULD YOU TELL YOUR LEFT SEATER I WOULD LOVE TO HEAR FROM HER THOUGH? OVER.

TOYOTA 24, 11 BRAVO HERE, SHE IS THE COLOR OF A SOVIET FLAG RIGHT NOW. BUT YOU SEEM NICE. THOUGH, I WILL ADMIT, YOU SHOWING INTEREST DID IRK HER. SO, I GUESS WHY BE INTERESTED IN A GIRL WHO WON'T GIVE YOU THE TIME OF DAY? OVER?

11 BRAVO, 24, PLEASE TELL YOUR RIGHT SEATER THAT IT'S SIMPLE. I AM A GOOD JEWISH BOY LOOKING FOR A NICE JEWISH GIRL. WITH A NAME LIKE MORGENDORFFER? SHE'S GOT TO BE THE GENUINE ARTICLE. PLUS, ONE THAT SHARES MY PROFESSION? KISMIT I SAY. OVER.


At this point, all kinds of emotions were warring in Daria's head. Frustration, embarrassment, and not a little bit of surprise. He is looking for a nice Jewish girl in the Air Force? In the middle of a war? Really? God, he is as stupid as he looks. Oh well, Guess I shoot him down again.

24, 11 ACTUAL HERE, YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A NICE JEWISH GIRL IN THE AIR FORCE? YEAH, RIGHT. LOOK, I HAVE A DAMAGED AIRPLANE, AND I AM LOSING FUEL BY THE MINUTE, AND YOU'RE HITTING ON ME? WHAT KIND OF IDIOT ARE YOU? TWO-FOUR, I REALLY AM QUESTIONING YOUR JUDGEMENT HERE, OVER,

11, 24,. SORRY, I WILL SWITCH BACK TO THE MAIN FREQ, BUT BEFORE I DO THAT, I HEAR OUR SQUADRON IS BEING MOVED TO ENGLAND SOON. IF WE ARE, I WOULD LIKE PERMISSION TO LOOK YOU UP? STRICTLY COFFEE AND CHAT. HEY, I HAD TO GET YOUR NAME FROM YOUR WSO THAT DAY. I REALLY AM INTERESTED AND IN A NICE GUY WAY, ELEVEN.


Jane looked over at Daria "Butch, say yes. I am going to ask him out right now if you don't."

Dammit…I am a professional Air Force officer, not some fawning girl in high school with the brains of a manatee…but what did 'Bama say? "Love, or at least a good time, is where you find it in the Air Force."

I guess that's doubly true in case of war.

24, 11, IN THE INTERESTS OF ENDING THIS CONVERSATION, NOT TO MENTION OUR CURRENT SITUATION DEMANDS MY FULL ATTENTION, I SAY YES. PROVIDED YOU END THIS CONVERSATION RIGHT NOW, AND SWITCH BACK TO THE ASSIGNED FREQ, OUT.


"Lord, what an idiot." Daria exhaled.

"Hey, Butch, it is nice to know somebody cares right now. I ain't got anyone at home. My parents disappeared when I left for school, and nooone knows where the hell Trent is." Jane spoke, a tone of sorrow in her voice.

Daria nodded imperceptivity, Trent's disappearance four years before was a sore point for both women. While Trent had been known to vanish from time to time, the manner in which he had vanished, with Mystik Spiral on the verge of a big break with a 2nd tier record label. It wasn't the big time, but it was a lot closer to it than any of the band had been. Trent would not have bailed on that. The police had come, investigated, and found nothing, PIs had been hired, and had come up empty.

And we blamed each other for his going missing..God that was stupid. Daria's mind mused.

Enough wool-gathering, time to concentrate on flying the airplane…

45 Minutes Later

The French airfield of Contrexville loomed large in the windscreen as the ribbons of lights denoting the runways winked in the darkness, having been turned on to provide a reference point for the damaged F-111 now landing on their main runway..but it was risky, the lights told everyone around; We are open for business, come bomb us. Roth had broken for home some 15 minutes before. There was no one but Daria, Jane and those on the runway left to witness whether Daria succeeded or failed to bring the F-111 in.

Daria looked on with sweat slicking the palms of her hands beneath her flight gloves, and pouring down her forehead in rivulets. The red light of the cockpit night instrumentation bathed both Daria and Jane in an otherworldly glow.

And it is making me wonder if 'past is prologue' here? Daria mused.

The fact remained that even if this was landing an undamaged aircraft, Daria was landing near blind. She had instrumentation, but the aircraft itself was not answering well to climbs or right turns. She had absolutely no documentation on the airfield, especially no approach plates.. Daria thought she could use rudder and engine controls to being the airplane in, but she wasn't going to bet her lives on it. If the aircraft departed controlled flight in any way, she was going to eject her and Jane, and damn the consequences.

Daria looked at Jane, "Ok, Sundance, let's do this. Landing checklist."

The pair went through the landing checklist with ease, having done it so often flying together. The aircraft, for all of her battle damage, was flying somewhat sedately, when Daria brought down the landing gear and the flaps, they came down with no trouble, but there was two small issues, namely, what was the altimeter setting…and the recommended landing speed?

The tower didn't know, as the French didn't fly F-111s and had no real experience with them. They had sent the numbers the Mirage IV used for their approaches, which should be similar, but as with many things, the devil was in the details, wasn't it?

CONTREXVILLE TOWER, THIS IS JACKHAMMER 11, I AM A DAMAGED F-111 WITH TWO SOULS ABOARD. AM WINCHESTER AND BINGO. ENOUGH FUEL FOR SINGLE STRAIGHT IN PASS ONLY. I NEED CLEARANCE FOR A STRAIGHT IN PASS FOR RUNWAY 26 LEFT, OVER?

The mic clicked once then a response came over the receiver, strong, with a high pitched nasal accent that was accented, but otherwise perfect English.

CONTREXVILLE TOWER TO JACKHAMMER 11, YOU ARE CAVU AND WIND IS FROM THE SOUTHEAST AT 5 KNOTS., YOU HAVE PERMISSION FOR A STRAIGHT IN APPROACH TO RUNWAY 26 LEFT, ARE YOU DECLARING AN EMERGENCY? OVER?

TOWER, THIS IS 11, ROGER THAT, WE ARE DECLARING AN EMERGENCY, OVER.

TOWER UNDERSTANDS 11, COME STRAIGHT IN, WE HAVE EMERGENCY VEHICLES ON STANDY, AND ARE CLEARING YOUR CHOSEN RUNWAY. IF YOU HAVE TO EJECT, TRY TO MAKE FOR the SOUTH EDGE OF THE FIELD, THERE IS NOTHING BUT EMPTY FARMLAND THERE. BONNE CHANCE, JACKHAMMER 11. OVER?

JACKHAMMER 11 TO CONTREXVILLE TOWER, THANK YOU TOWER, WE APPRECIATE IT. SEE YOU ON THE GROUND, OUT.


Daria and Jane exchanged glances, they knew this could end badly, no matter what the stakes. Nothing more really needed to be said. A glance, a momentary clasped hand, theirs had been a friendship that had lasted longer than their time in the Air Force, and if this is how it ended for the both of them, then where else, but to die in each other's company?

"Ok, according to the information we got from the tower, ground speed is good, altimeter is set, gear is down and locked, and so are the flaps. We got radar or backup altimeter?" Daria queried.

"Backup, the radar altimeter gave out when the TFR went, hope this isn't a muggy night down there."

"Sundance, they say it's a 5000 foot runway down there, but I am going to dump the nose and hit the brakes as soon as I get her on the ground. I don't know the condition of the gear tires, and I really don't want to chance it. Listen, when the aircraft stops moving, do not wait for me, get out and run, do not look back, OK?"

Jane nodded, "I hear you, Butch..but I don't like it."

Daria muttered "You don't have to Sundance, just do it."

The aircraft slotted into the glide path with little trouble, with Daria gingerly manipulating the throttles and rudder to keep the aircraft on path for the runway. Good, good, ok, drifting a little left, power, ok, we're back..right rudder, ok..all good…

The F-111 slowly lowered itself onto the runway, and with a low whine from her engines, and a squeal from her tires, the rear landing gear touched the runway…and then disaster struck.

It began with a report like a rifle as the left rear gear tire blew, neither Daria nor Jane knew that some shrapnel from the SAM that had damaged the aircraft had damaged the tire, and with the abuse of landing, the tire gave out explosively, at 100 miles per hour.

The aircraft pulled into a left handed spin, pirouetting off the runway into a dirt strip between it and the nearest taxiway, as the wings crumpled like beer cans with the shriek of tortured metal. In the cockpit bot pilot and WSO were batted around like a cat's toy, first one way, then the other, as the scenery spun around at a dizzying speed. Then, with a loud snap, Daria's restraints failed, and she was flung, head first, into the instrument panel.

Jane looked on with horror, the G-forces and the restraints preventing her from doing little more than shrieking "Daria!" as her best friend slammed into the control panel head first, then bobbed back violently into her seat with a loud bang. She was mercifully unconscious after her impact with the control panel.

The aircraft began to slow it's rate of spin, first a little, than more gradually as it slid across a taxiway, and then onto the main apron, a shower of sparks stretching behind it where the wreckage met concrete. As the aircraft slowed to a stop, Jane's frantic gasps for air slowed. She was sure she might have joined Daria, except her restraints had held. Once the aircraft stopped entirely, she unbuckled herself quickly from her seat, and clambered over to Daria, her head lolling at an angle, but her chest was rising and falling. She took Daria's pulse at her neck, brushing aside her flight suit and G-collar. There was a pulse, it was a bit slow, and thread, but it was there.

Jane collapsed with exhaustion, taking in the sights of an airbase at war, and the cacophony of sirens as the French emergency vehicles made their way towards them. They say any landing you can walk away from. Please god. Let Daria walk away from this. "
 

CurtisLemay

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August 9th, 1985

0240 Local/1240 GMT

18,000 feet over the English Channel

USAF C-130 85-0042 Callsign LIBERTY 22


Daria awoke to an incessant droning that just would not go away, Jeez, what power tool is dad playing with now? She had a horrible dream she had been flying combat against the Russians, not home studying for 10th grade finals. But everything was murky, unclear, and her surroundings had a slight echo to them, like she was in a metallic cavern. Crap, what happened, where am I?

Awareness came swiftly at that point..Ok, it's coming back..I am Captain Daria Renee Morgendorffer, United States Air Force, and I fly F-111s out of Lakenheath with the 49th Tactical Fighter Wing. We are at war with the Warsaw Pact, and I was injured..a head injury to be exact, probably a concussion. At that moment, she felt a flash of fear, she realized she could not move her head, and that there was a wooden board directly below her. Oh crap, how badly was I hurt?

Daria began to do the only thing she could think of. She screamed. She screamed of fear, and pain and all the bottled up emotion that she had wrestled with in the late dark of night when she could not sleep, or when she dreamed about the demons that were sometimes given form over the skies of East Germany.

She heard the clatter of feet over the metaled deck, and muffled voices, as the drone of the engines of the C-130 and the gauze of the cervical collar interfered with her hearing. Her eyes were blurry with tears as a familiar shape resolved itself. Jane, oh thank god, it's you. Please, tell me straight, I'm paralyzed, aren't I?

"Hey Daria,-" Jane said with a cockeyed smile, the exhaustion plain on her face, her hair unkempt from many hours in a flight helmet, and her flightsuit stank of sweat, fear, and not a little bit of unburned jet fuel. "-had us all scared there! Listen, you got lucky, amiga. Could have been a lot worse. No spinal injury, just a good shot to the head. Maybe a moderate concussion, whatever the hell that means. You ought to see your flight helmet, though…damn thing looks like a pile driver hit it." Jane put her hand in Daria's. "I am not going anywhere, amiga. OK? We got lucky, we got real lucky."

Daria whispered "Yes, we did."

Jane smiled "Hey, we're going straight to Middenhall, then ambulance to Lakenheath. Doc at Contrexville said you should be OK with a day's rest once you came around. Hope he is right, but I am guessing Doc Cantrell will want a look at you."

"Jane, I gotta know, you sure about the paralysis, I am gonna be ok?" Daria croaked.

"I am sure Daria, was right there when the doctor checked your x-rays. You'll walk before you know it. Collar is just a precaution in case the spinal cord got bruised, now, is there anything I can get you?" Jane stated.

"Water?" Daria croaked again, this time, more plaintively.

Jane smiled and handed Daria a paper cup with a straw "Ok, short sips, don't take too much or you will choke and we cannot have that Daria. I don't know what I will tell your parents if that happened? M'kay?"

Daria nodded. "So, what's happened since I was out?"

Jane shrugged "Not too much, the C-130 came and got us before dawn. We are getting a flight back with a maintenance crew that got sent out to strip our bird of anything sensitive. Not much left of her by the way. French are going to scrap her, they said. Then, they bundled us aboard and off we went. Last I heard about the war? Russians still pushing forward against heavy resistance. All the newspapers they had were at best, three days old. Le Monde had a good article on an up and coming artist in Paris." Jane smiled.

Daria giggled, then it became a chorus of cries of pain as the laughter caused a headache. Her grimace told Jane all she needed to know.

"Hey, Senior Airman, I need you over here, you told me to let you know when she is in pain?"

Another clatter of feet came over that resolved itself as a painfully young black man in his twenties. His eyes were bigger than the rest of his face, but he had a caring visage, and his touch was strong, but gentle.

The flight medic surveyed his patient with a glance and reached into his medical kit "Hi mam, good to see you awake. That really is a good sign, but I don't think it is a good idea to push this. Um, I can't let you take any oral meds with the C-Spine on. But I am going to inject you with a low dose of Demerol. It should kill the pain, and will let you sleep. You need it, mam. Doc already x-rayed your head and said it was good to go, with the exception of a moderate concussion. We don't wanna push that too much, OK?"

Daria rasped "No swelling?"

The medic shook his head, a trace of Chicago in his voice. "No mam, that French doc was damn good, seems in civilian life, he was a neurosurgeon. You picked the right place to have your head meet the instrument panel, mam. Ok, mam, you are gonna feel a little pinch and you are going to be very drowsy in a minute or two. This stuff works fast."

Daria felt the pinch, and smiled a soporific smile "Amiga?"

"Be there when you wake up, Daria, I promise." Jane nodded.

A warm darkness soon claimed Daria.

August 9th, 1985

0530 Local/0930 GMT

Dover AFB, Delaware

USAF C-141B S/N 65-2281

We aren't even off the damn ground yet and already I am nauseous. Nobody had mentioned to her that since the aircraft was going to be packed to the gills with cargo, that the few passenger seats (mostly very tight lipped folks who looked like they could bench press Quinn with their pinky) were going to be facing backwards.

Who in the hell flies transatlantic backwards? Apparently, the Air Force does. Ok, look at the ceiling, no, wait, bay is spinning, and I am trussed up like a Thanksgiving turkey. God, I really do hope we don't crash.


Quinn decided it might then be best to break out her briefing book that the DoD had thoughtfully provided her on England in general, and Lakenheath in particular. The "Media Combat Survival Course" had been useful, especially the NBC part..Quinn shuddered at the idea of being exposed to nerve gas, the footage from Germany had been horrific. But it had been shown to make a point: Don't forget your mask.

Most of her classmates in the course were going straight to Germany, and more than a few had been in places like Lebanon, Cyprus, and the Falklands. Quinn was worried she might just freeze when the shooting started. Some new Quinn I would be then, huh? Worse yet, Daria would see it, and still think of me as the bimbo who never grew up.

So far, Quinn's trip had been a lot of "hurry up and wait". She had gotten to the base to travel what they called "space available". That had been five hours ago, and she had been bumped from two previous flights. I am beginning to miss the bench in the waiting area, however. This backwards crap is for the birds.

It was then that Quinn felt the aircraft begin to move, as it slowly began to taxi, with the aircraft making a series of turns. Suddenly, the whine of the engines increased in pitch, and the aircraft began to hurtle down the runway. Before too long, the C-141 struggled into the air, and the pitch continued to remain the same, loud and annoying. Now I understand why they handed us the earplugs. Quinn quickly got the earplugs out of their paper case, and popped them into her ears, firmly seating them as she had been instructed by the loadmaster before the flight. His pre-flight safety brief filled me with confidence…oh yeah, as it had been conducted with the usual gallows humor one finds in the military. Most of it basically stated the obvious: If the plane had to put down over water, they were more than likely dead.

Quinn decided to take in the atmosphere of the rapidly climbing aircraft, the smell was something between metallic, and an old sweat sock, and every metal surface was worn and scuffed, but clean. There were no windows, except for two small ones that were part of the emergency doors. The loadmaster had come by earlier, to let them know the flight would be six hours, with a layover in Iceland for refuel, crew rest and a box lunch consisting of an AAFES hot dog, a bag of potato chips, and a can of Coke. They had been most pointedly told NOT to wander around the cabin, as the aircraft might have to make "sudden control movements". Quinn shook her head. Well, it's getting me to the war zone, isn't it?

Well, maybe the loadmaster might doze off, if he does, and eventually, we are going to stop climbing. I can get some pictures and get enough to file a story out of this? Six hours? Ugh.


2 hours later

Sure enough, the C-141 had stopped climbing and the loadmaster had dozed off after checking the cargo a few times. Quinn looked over her restraint system, and it all seemed to link into a metal plate just above her chest, a good sharp press of the button here…and..voila! The button in question released the four belts that fed into the central metal piece and fell away like puppets with no strings.

Quinn gingerly made her way out of her seat. First thing is first, nausea bag. Then, a bathroom, I have been needing to pee for the last two hours. Then I want to take a look out that window.

She gingerly made her way around the aircraft, trying not to wake the now-snoring loadmaster. He'll be out for hours. She spied the sign that said "Lavatory" across the crowded cargo bay, but noticed a path had been left down the middle of the bay to allow people to get to either end of the filled aircraft. Pretty smart of the guys who loaded this thing. Or was that for our benefit?

Quinn quickly entered the lavatory and shut the door behind her, it was Spartan, with a metal sink barely 2 feet square and a chemical toilet that did little to mask the smell of urea. I gotta go so damn bad, does it really matter how nasty this bathroom is, Look at it this way, CBGB on a Friday night was worse, by far.

After Quinn had done her business (and had used an epic amount of toilet paper to cover the seat), she made her way towards the window on the left hand side of the aircraft. The view was spectacular, and also a bit ominous. There were transport aircraft as far as she could see. And they were flying really, really close together. Her own aircraft had a wingtip within 500 feet of a 747 painted in Pan Am colors.

Why the hell is everyone flying so damn close together?

It was then that Quinn felt the thump of a hand on her shoulder. Shit

She was turned around and grabbed by the shoulders. Sure enough, it was one of her fellow passengers, he was an AF Major in a flight suit, or so Quinn had been told. Why he wasn't flying a plane of his own over, Quinn had no idea. Would make a good question to ask.

The Major was trim, but muscular, with ebon skin and slightly receding hair. He was dressed in a worn, but well-maintained green AF flightsuit. But the most interesting thing on his flightsuit was the Strategic Air Command patch on the left breast. His leather name tag on his right breast had a pair of wings, with the following legend below, "MAJ RICE". His voice was deep baritone, but he had to should just to make himself heard over the din of the aircraft "So, you must be the reporter? Didn't you listen to the damn safety brief? Seriously, if we have to make a break turn in this thing, you'd be strawberry jam all over the opposite cabin wall? What the hell is wrong with you?"

"I was getting sick, and I had to take a powder, and I am a reporter, thought I would take a look. Why the hell are we so close together?"

Rice's face softened, "Ok, Ms. Baltimore Sun, I will tell you, but this is off the record. It's so the Russians can't get an accurate count of just how many given planes we are sending over at any one time. They've been having MiGs make dashes into the airbridge over England and France to try to shoot planes down, and they do get lucky from time to time."

"Christ, really?"

"Yeah, we may die within sight of England, to think, an AFEES box lunch might be our last meal?" the Major Rice shrugged.

"So, why no plane? You are in the Air Force, why aren't you in your own plane?" Quinn asked.

Rice grimaced, "I'm SAC, navigator on a B-52, or I was. I had to punch out of a B-52 that lost power on takeoff four months ago, screwed up my back. So, now I am on the planning staff at Omaha. Right now, well, all I can say is I am delivering some messages to some people that are too important to let the Russians hear."

Who am I on this plane with? "Sheesh, who are those other four guys? CIA?"

Rice broke into a winning smile "I could tell you, but then, Ms. Baltimore Sun, I would have to kill you, and you are much too pretty for me to have to do that, unless, of course, you're a Russian spy?"

Quinn giggled "Nope, not a Russian spy. Don't even know the language."

"I do, helps to know your enemy." Rice mused.

"Why the hell did this start? I mean, it can't have been just over Yugoslavia?" Quinn queried.

Rice hesitated, a lifetime of reticence around members of the press was hard to overcome, but he was too polite not to try to answer the lady's question. "Simple reason? Two big dogs finally decided the neighborhood wasn't big enough for the both of them. Guess it was bound to happen."

"Seriously, that simple? We were doomed to do this?" Quinn stated, incredulous.

Rice simply nodded.

"Shit..well, listen, hate to change the subject, what with the fabulous conversation we are already having, but where can a girl get a barf bag on this plane?"

Rice had a good chuckle "New to flying backwards? Yeah, one of the joys of flying on Uncle Sam's dime. I will have a word with the loadmaster and have him hunt one down for you, but let's get you back to your seat. Ok?"

Quinn nodded, what else could she do?

August 9th, 1985

1135 Local/0935 GMT

Office of the CIA Station Chief

US Embassy to West Germany

Bonn, West Germany

Amy Barksdale was bored out of her mind. Since she had been, along with most of the USBER staff, evacuated from West Berlin on the 3rd, she had had little to do but help out some of the more black propaganda efforts over at Radio Free Europe. Who knew I had a voice that was similar to a prominent East German State Radio news anchor?

But it was not what Amy had joined the "Company" to do. Her country was at war, and she was sidelined! Even Harrison had been sent on to another assignment, last she had heard, he was playing games with the KGB in Geneva. Am I finally to old to go into the field? Is that what everyone is afraid to tell me?

Amy paced the borrowed office, which had been converted from one of the larger closets at the Embassy, and pored over the latest reports coming out of Eastern Europe. The SAD and Special Forces folks were trying to whip up a resistance movement in the East, to varying success, with the best results occurring in Poland and Czechoslovakia, but the Stasi had rolled up most of the networks that the CIA had spent 40 some odd years establishing. Most of it had been wiped out within the first 72 hours of the war. God can only imagine what the Stasi will do to the folks they take alive. Amy let out an involuntary shudder at that last thought.

A cry however, pierced the din of the overcrowded Agency section of the Embassy, "Barksdale, you're needed in the Tank."

Amy's head perked up, the "Tank" was a room that had been built to be a secure as possible from any form of eavesdropping. It had special sound-absorbing foam in the walls, there was white noise generators built in, it had no windows…and the door was lined with RF defeating metal. In short, short of getting someone in to the "Tank", it would be difficult to tell what was going on in there. And only the most sensitive business went on in the "Tank". Every US Embassy had a version of this room.

Amy grabbed her coat, as the Tank was kept cold to keep the electronics running, and she always found it unpleasant to sit there for long periods of time without something to keep her warm. She bounded down the stairs, took the second right and flashed her badge to the Marine guard in front of the outside door to the Tank, she then was stopped again at the interior door, where another Marine searched her, politely, but thoroughly, finding nothing forbidden, he gave the thumbs up and held the door open for her. Even with the gravity of the situation, she found herself unable to stop smiling. Dammit, I am going back out! I get to cross swords with the KGB again!

She noticed there was only three people in the room, First, an unfamiliar gentleman, who was thin, and might have been muscular, but age was withering his carriage. He exuded a very strict bearing, probably ex military. Amy's mind reported. He was wearing a Saville Row suit, navy blue, with an ascot instead of a tie. British, has to be MI-6. Has that public school thing all over him. Lovely…now I get to hear how we suck at being spies from the damn Limeys. The other person in the room was also unfamiliar, he was wearing a Marine Service Uniform, with both USMC Combat Diver and Navy Jump Wings very prominent on the wearer's chest. Oh dear god, Marine Force Recon. Well, they are at least subtle compared to the Rangers. The final person in the room was Greg Hanson, her station chief, he was a portly man who was in Amy's opinion, way too genial for this business. But he's been crossing swords with the KGB for 20 plus years, so he must be doing something right.

Greg motioned Amy to sit in the empty chair that had been set up before a hastily setup folding screen that was in front of a overhead projector.

The suited gentleman walked over to Amy, stopping just steps away from her. "Ms. Barksdale, you come highly recommended from your superiors at Langley. I do hope you don't work out like the last two highly recommended individuals your Agency sent. It would be a tragedy." His accent was British, very public school, clipped, severe, with every word perfectly pronounced and annunciated. And said in a tone as cold as a blade to the heart.

After a short pause where the gentleman took a short sip from a glass of water. "So, let's get on with it. You are wondering what this is all about-" he then walked over with a deft motion to the projector and turned it on. "There is a friend of ours, he is stuck in Poland, and we need him to get out of Poland. We are a little busy, so we figured, why not ask our cousins?"

"Who is he?" Amy asked.

The gentleman smiled, "You might know him." as he slid the manila folder covering the overheads off of the plate on the projector. The picture was not the best, but the image was unmistakable. Amy's jaw dropped.

It was Lech Walesa.
 

Kujo

For the FEDCOM! For the Archon-Prince!
interesting story, do like the paraphrase from Red Dawn, good work keep it up! Thank you.
 

BF110C4

Well-known member
Frankly when I read this story I always think back of Tom Clancy's Red Book Rising since I read that book at the same time that Hackett's so I always catch myself wondering about the Iceland occupation and attacks against american convoys resupplying NATO.
 

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