Afterward Blevins sat quietly for a few moments, then nodded, got up to leave and was on his way to the door when Waters came in without knocking. At the sight of his old nemesis, Blevins’ cool began to evaporate. “Colonel, this is an investigation of serious misconduct on the part of your people. I am surprised that you seem to have lost control here,” and then he proceeded, with some obvious relish, to fill in Waters on what he had just heard.
Waters was stunned, as well as furious at Bryant and Locke, two of his favorites. “I would appreciate disciplining my own people,” he began. “And an investigation is always conducted through a wing commander… ”
“Waters, I don’t think you’re capable of such an investigation or the necessary disciplining. I don’t need to remind you that you are in my chain of command. Perhaps your problem, and theirs, is that you tend to become confused about that basic fact.”
“Ah, yes. That is a truism,” he smiled, infuriating the general. “But I do have one question, perhaps the most important question about the engagement with the Mirages.” Blevins waited, breathing heavily, his face flushed. Turning to Jack and Thunder, Waters deliberately hardened his voice, “Who won?”
The men could feel Blevins’ rage vibrate through the room as he fought for control of his temper. The general stormed out of the room.
“Well, Jack, you’ve opened the proverbial can of worms this time,” Waters said. “God, don’t you ever stop to think about the consequences of what you do? Don’t answer that; it’s obvious. You’re all stick and balls and no forehead. Okay, for now you two are going to have to sweat it out and let the system work you over. You’re also restricted to base until it’s finished. That’s for your own good. Who knows, you might figure to do a little freelance stint over Moscow… ”
Waters turned and left, worried about Jack’s future in the Air Force. Damn it, I need you, he raged to himself. Morgan and C.J. are not enough. Blowing the Mirages away proved how good you are, no matter how dumb it was to fly that engagement. The colonel’s natural optimism broke through his despair over the pilot. I hope what Thunder did will give you a second chance, he thought. By the time he left the squadron, his grin was back in place as he visualized Blevins’ reaction to the news.
Jack and Thunder made a sort of unspoken pact not to hash over what they’d done and to try to make the best of their base confinement. They called Gillian and Francine to meet them at the Officers’ Club, and during dinner Thunder loosed some thunder by announcing that he and Francine were getting married. It wasn’t exactly music to Jack’s ears, inasmuch as he felt even more on the spot about Gillian. When he asked Francine if it wasn’t sort of sudden, she smiled prettily, told him not really, but after their little vacation in France she thought maybe what Thunder needed was a little settling down. Jack immediately regretted the question, and even more the answer, and tried to change the subject. But no matter what they talked about for die rest of the evening the news hovered like a pall, at least as far as Jack was concerned.
The next evening, missing Gillian, Jack called her, asking her to dinner, and was told that she, all apologies, had another engagement. Another engagement, for Christ’s sake? What was going on?…
What was going on was that Gillian was being instructed by her friend Francine on how to force the issue…
“But it seems childish,” she said to Francine. “I don’t like playing games. Part of the best of what Jack and I have is the honesty between us—”
“Like what happened in Switzerland and France?” said Francine.
“We don’t discuss it… ”
“Damn right, you don’t. Because if you did that would probably be it… Look, honey, I agree, games can be foolish, but if they work?… ”
Gillian sighed, and decided to go along, or rather hold out, at least for the rest of the week.
The Third Air Force’s Judge Advocate had definite feelings about his coming meeting with General Blevins. Waiting, he again went over the way he was going to present the results of the pre-trial investigation. Impatiently he glanced at the clock, decided to walk over to the general’s office fifteen minutes early.
He found Blevins in his chair, waiting eagerly for the report, but after he got it the color had risen in his face and the judge advocate was afraid the man was going to have a heart attack.
“Do you mean to tell me” — Blevins tried to take a deep breath — “that they are going to get off on account of some damn technicality about evidence?”
Trying to keep his voice under control, the JAG answered: “Yes, sir, it comes down to that, you might say. It would also now be all but impossible to sustain a case against Locke and Bryant with the evidence available to us. It appears that neither the Arab prince nor the French pilot, Paul Rainey, will volunteer to testify at a court-martial, and it would be impossible to compel them to. The bottom line, sir, is that no lawyer would touch this case—”
“Are you positive about the technicality?” Blevins’ voice was subdued.
“Yes, sir, afraid so, sir. When you asked Bryant and Locke for their account of the incident without first reading them their rights against self-incrimination you ended for all practical purposes the chance of bringing them to a court-martial. The law is very clear, sir: because you are in the chain of command of the convening authority for the court-martial, evidence illegally obtained cannot be used… ”
“What the hell do you mean illegally? Anyway, I thought that stuff only applied to civilians.”
“Whatever made you think we lost our civil rights because we are in the Air Force? Let me explain further. Both Locke and Bryant acted as subordinate officers in answering your questions. As I understand it, Colonel Fairly tried to keep the men silent, thereby protecting you, but you overrode him. I’m sorry, sir,” he said, suppressing his pleasure, saluted and walked out.
When General Cunningham heard the news about Bryant and Locke getting off, he couldn’t help but be partially pleased, but he was also concerned about their reaction and what the result might mean for the consequent attitude of the men toward military authority, in particular their misunderstanding of just what had and hadn’t happened. He called in his aide Colonel Dick Stevens. Chewing furiously on an unlit cigar, Cunningham said, “Dick, I want you to get the word to Waters and those swingin’ dicks in the 45th — I’m pissed.”
Stevens raised an eyebrow.
“Locke and Bryant figure they’ve beaten the rap, right? That General Blevins is a pompous jerk and they could show him up. Right?”
Stevens said nothing. He knew better.
“Let me tell you something about Blevins. And get this to them. Blevins is a career officer. He’s given his life to the Air Force, to something real corny, like the defense of his country. He isn’t planning to get out next year and work for some damned defense contractor and make a bundle. He isn’t looking for a rich wife or membership in some fancy club or a chance to hit the lecture circuit and clean up at ten thousand a crack. No, he’s just a career officer, a guy who isn’t very popular, who cares a lot and can turn off almost anybody. But you get out this message — I’d rather have one Blevins than a hundred hotshot flyboys who think service is an extended vacation. They may be smarter and prettier and younger, but right now they’re nobody I want to depend on, the way they’re behaving. In fact right now, if I saw one of them, I’d likely throw up. So get that message to them too. Who knows, maybe it might even penetrate their thick heads after a few hundred hours. It better, is all I can say. It damn well better. That’s all.”