She sat back on the couch in Jack’s apartment in the BOQ. The spicy omelets and wine had hit the spot, and to her relief, Jack had given up the game. She stretched and relaxed as he came out of the small kitchen after clearing up.
“I’ve got a fresh pot of coffee brewed,” he said.
She smiled, shook her head and raised her empty wine glass.
He returned carrying the half-empty wine bottle and a mug of coffee for himself. “Hope you don’t mind my drinking coffee, I’ve got a flight to the range tomorrow.” He sat down beside her.
“Sure. I’m just enjoying the peace and quiet.” The time with Jack had emphasized a loneliness that normally didn’t bother her. Probably it was because the afternoon had been so relaxing once he had given up trying to seduce her. Seduce… she liked the old-fashioned word. It had been months since she’d shared the company of a man who wasn’t just trying to get her into the sack. She studied his profile, remembering he was four years younger than she was, then tapped the cocktail table in front of them with her toe. “Is this the table of ambassador’s daughter fame?”
“You’ve read the report. I wish you hadn’t seen that. I can do dumb things… ”
“Join the club… ”
Encouraged, he began to move closer, reached out to her…
She gave a low laugh, realizing the game was on again. “Jack, I like you, but it’s late and I’ve really got to go.”
She left his BOQ, wondering how much longer she’d be able to resist. She was, damn it, good at her job, proud of being accepted as a team member. But she was also a woman…
Blevins listened to Lieutenant Jack Locke explain how the Martin-Baker Mark II ejection seat worked, annoyed that he’d been convinced by Waters to take this flight with Jack instead of writing his part of the report. At least Jack wasn’t using a lot of fighter pilot jargon, but he was upset to hear from the pilot that the Martin-Baker was made by an English company. “What’s a limey ejection seat doing in an American fighter?”
Jack explained that the Martin-Baker was the best seat available when the F-4 came on line and still compared favorably with more modern seats like the ACE’s II in the F-15. Blevins was skeptical but said no more as Jack fitted him with a helmet, G-suit and parachute harness, then took him out to a nearby F-4 and went through the strapping-in routine. Before buckling the lap-and-shoulder harness he showed the colonel how to attach the eleven other buckles and plugs that fastened him into the seat and to the airplane, finally showing how to lower and raise the canopy.
Instantly, a strong feeling of claustrophobia came over Blevins as the canopy descended into place. Only the lieutenant’s continued instructions over the intercom helped control his panic. “Colonel, we need to practice an emergency ground egress. We’ll simulate we’ve run off the runway and are on fire. When I say, ‘Egress over the right wing,’ you go through the actual routine of unstrapping and go out the correct side. Remember you’re sitting on an ejection seat. I’ve got it safety-pinned, but Murphy is still alive and well.”
“Is this necessary, Lieutenant?” Blevins rasped through his oxygen mask, irritation growing as the sweat poured off his body.
“Yes, sir, it is if you want to go for a ride in Big Ugly.” And, he added silently, if you can get your fat ass and belly over the canopy rails.
Blevins dug at the itching under the parachute harness.
“OK, you ready?” Without waiting for a reply, Jack shouted in a rapid staccato over the intercom: “This pig is on fire, egress over the right side.” The colonel started the ground-egress routine. Opening the canopy, he tried to stand up, only to be jerked back into the seat. Then he remembered to release his parachute riser-straps on his harness. Quickly he punched the clips on each shoulder and climbed out the left side. Locke yelled, “Your other right, Colonel.” But Blevins continued out over the left wing.
“So how was that, Lieutenant?”
“If this had been the real thing you would have burned to death. You went out the left.”
Blevins had never before been criticized by a junior officer. “And how in the hell are you going to know the fire’s on the left and not the right, Lieutenant?”
“By the fire lights, sir. There’s one for each engine. I’ll check them before we go out.”
“Rat shit. How often does this happen anyway?”
“It happened to me. You took over a minute. Too slow.”
“How fast can you do it?”
“My best time is eleven seconds,” he said as he turned and walked back into the squadron without waiting for the colonel.
Once in the squadron Blevins endured the detailed mission prebrief. Every aspect of the coming flight was covered. He and Locke were to be Mike Fairly’s wingmen in a formation takeoff followed by a tactical split at two hundred feet. They would then fly a low-level route to the initial point (the IP) onto the gunnery range, where they would do another split for the run-in. At two miles from the target they were to do a pop maneuver and drop a practice bomb. After that he would enter the pattern, drop five more bombs and return to base.
In the air-conditioned comfort of the briefing room it didn’t sound that complicated, and while Blevins didn’t like the idea of flying with this lieutenant, he decided the experience probably would reinforce the point he wanted to make in the report.
Twenty minutes later they were taxiing out to the runway. “What happened to the air conditioning?” Blevins growled, drenched in sweat. Jack explained that on the ground, the bleed air used for air conditioning was mostly directed to equipment that needed cooling. Human comfort was secondary.
As they continued to taxi out, Jack said, “Remember, your mike is always hot. If I’m transmitting on the radio, anything you say will go out.”
Fairly now called the tower for his takeoff clearance.
“Roger, Poppa Two-One,” the tower responded. “Taxi into position and hold.”
The two fighters moved onto the runway and lined up, their wing tips about fifteen feet apart.
“Poppa Two-One, cleared for takeoff,” came over the radio.
Fairly made a circular motion with his left forefinger, the sign for Jack to run up the engines. The noise was deafening as the big J-79 engines wound up, screaming their power. The lead snapped his head back against the headrest of his seat, then with an exaggerated forward nod, signaled Jack to release their brakes in unison. The planes started to roll when the pilots lit the afterburners. The sudden acceleration kicked Blevins back into his seat as the planes thundered down the runway. The angle of the F-4s rose as the nose gear came unglued from the ground at 140 knots. The colonel was breathing hard and his eyes were fixed on the lead aircraft. They seemed much too close. He was sure they were going to collide. But at 175 knots both aircraft lifted off together.
No sooner had the gear retracted than Jack jerked the Phantom into a hard, four-G turn to the left, and a jolt of fear hit the colonel as the ground filled the left side of the canopy. Just as abruptly Jack wrenched the F-4 to the right, and back on course.
“What was that?” Blevins gasped.
“A tactical split. We do it to take spacing. We’re now about two thousand feet apart.”
Blevins could barely read the big letters AX on the tail of the lead aircraft on their right. The two aircraft had leveled off at five hundred feet above the ground, and the airspeed indicator was locked on 480 knots as they sped toward the range.
“We’re flying this one high; it’s not as rough up here,” Jack said.
Blevins wondered how low “down there” would be but decided not to ask. They might show him.