Authors: Dale Brown
Aboard the
Shiva
,
in the northern Arabian Sea
0321
T
HE FIRST MISSILE LEFT THE
S
HIVA
WITH A THUNK AND HISS
, steam furrowing from the rear. Two more quickly followed. The missiles seemed to stutter in the sky, as if unsure of where they were going, but their noses straightened as they reached the black edge of the night beyond the darkened ship. All three were P-700 Granitsâknown to NATO as SS-N-19 Shipwrecks. The Russian-designed weapons were potent, long-range cruise missiles with thousand-kilogram explosive warheads.
Memon watched as their shadows disappeared, oblivious to the chaos behind him. The carrier was simultaneously maneuvering to launch another set of fighters and to fire a round of missiles. These were P-120 Malakhits, better known as SS-N-9 Sirens. The weapons required mid-course guidance to strike their target; this would be provided by a data link with a specially designated Su-33.
“The Chinese aircraft are attempting to lock their
weapons radars on us!” warned one of the officers on the bridge.
Memon felt himself strangely at peace. India's new age was beginning; the future held great promise.
Northern Arabian Sea,
offshore of the Karachi oil terminal
0323
C
APTAIN
S
ATTARI GRIPPED THE SEAT RESTRAINT AS THE SUBMARINE
sank. At every second, he expected an attack. The Parvaneh was not armored at all; a few bullets through the hull would cause serious damage.
“There are many aircraft above,” the submarine captain told him. “It may be difficult to take the course as planned.”
“What do you suggest?”
“We move farther offshore, and remain submerged for a few hours before proceeding. The nearby ships will launch a search, you see. The more we move, the easier we will be to find.”
The other submarines were already moving toward the rendezvous point. If they waited, they might miss them and the A-40 that was to pick them up in two days.
“No,” said Sattari. “The chaos will help us escape. The Indians and Chinese will be concerned with each other. Allah is with us. Let us place ourselves in His hands.”
Aboard the
Levitow
,
above the northern Arabian Sea
0325
M
ACK HAD TO SCRAMBLE TO STAY WITH THE
M
EGAFORTRESS
as it twisted back toward Karachi. A pair of Pakistani F-16s were flying out of the east on a collision course, but the J-13s targeting the Whiplash aircraft were his priority. He
pushed his nose down, accelerating as he aimed to get between the Chinese fighters and the Osprey.
“Fighters are still not acknowledging,” said Stewart over the interphone.
“Tell them I'm going to shoot them down if they fire on my people,” snapped Mack, jamming the throttle for more speed.
Aboard
Whiplash Osprey,
near Karachi
0326
D
ANNY
F
REAH FLEW AGAINST THE BULKHEAD TO THE COCKPIT
as the Osprey veered downward, trying to duck the Chinese fighters. The gyrations spun the Whiplash captain around like a pinball, slapping him against one of the benches and bouncing him back toward the cockpit. Danny grabbed for one of the strap handles near the opening, checking his momentum like a cowboy busting a bronc.
“Tell them we're Americans, damn it,” Danny said to the pilot.
“I keep trying, Captain. They're not listening.”
Flames leapt up in front of them.
“I'm going to stay near the fire,” said the pilot. “They won't be able to use their heat-seekers.”
“Don't burn us up in the meantime,” said Danny, nearly losing his balance as the Osprey veered hard to the left.
Aboard the
Deng Xiaoping,
in the northern Arabian Sea
0327
C
APTAIN
H
ONGWU COUNTED THE ENEMY
'
S MISSILE LAUNCHES
as they were announced, listening with a Buddhalike patience that would have impressed his ancestors, though
Hongwu himself did not put much stock in the religion's basic beliefs. He was surprised by the Indians' attack, but not caught off guard; tensions between the two countries had been increasing for years, and ships from the two nations had engaged in a bloody battle in the Pacific months before. The Chinese had not done particularly well in that battle, but Hongwu had carefully studied it, and planned now to apply its lessons.
He had another advantage besides knowledge: a considerably improved anti-cruise-missile system. The Pili, or Thunderbolt, had been developed from the LY-60 Falcon, with insights gained from the Italian Aspide. The weapon flew at Mach 4 and could strike a cruise missile at twenty kilometers.
Or so it had on the testing range. It was about to be put through a much more grueling trial.
Listening to the reports, Hongwu grasped the Indian commander's mistake; rather than concentrating his attack, he was launching small salvos against the entire fleet.
“Prepare to defend the ship,” said Captain Hongwu. “And then answer the attack. Have Squadron One attack the
Shiva.
Direct the others to attack any target they see south of us.”
“Any ship, Captain?”
“Any ship. There are only Indian warships south of our fleet.”
Northern Arabian Sea
0327
S
TARSHIP MISTOOK THE VESSEL THAT LOOMED AHEAD IN HIS
screen for the
Deng Xiaoping
, even though he knew from the sitrep that he should be at least five miles from the Chinese aircraft carrier. A flood of tracers erupted from mid-ships, a fountain of green sparks in the screen. He started to veer away before realizing the gunfire wasn't aimed at him;
it leapt far off to his left, extending toward a dark shadow that rose from the sea like a shark. Lightning flashed; the ship, fully illuminated for a moment, seemed to be pushed back in his screen. Another flood of tracers began firing, and a missile launched from the forward deck near the superstructure of the ship, which he now knew must be one of the Chinese destroyers.
Two seconds later there was another white flash, this one partially blocked by the ship. A geyser of light erupted near the destroyer's funnel. Two, three, fireballs rocketed above the ship.
“I see two missile strikes,” Starship told Eyes, “on the Chinese destroyerâit's UNK-C-1 on my screen,” he added, using the computer's designation for the contact.
“We see it. Good work. Get over to the carrier,” said Eyes.
“Working on it,” said Starship.
Aboard the
Levitow
,
above the northern Arabian Sea
0328
“
H
AWK
T
HREE
IS THIRTY SECONDS FROM THE INTERCEPT
,” Stewart told Breanna. “What do you want him to do?”
“He's going to shoot the Chinese planes down if they don't break off,” said Breanna.
Stewart nodded to herself. How could Breanna be so calm? All hell was breaking looseâbesides the two J-13s, another pair of jets had just taken off from the Chinese carrier and were turning in their direction. There were all sorts of missiles in the air, radars, aircraftâStewart couldn't keep track of any of it.
She had dealt with just this sort of chaos dozens of times in simulations. But this was exponentially different.
“Try the Chinese one more time,” said Breanna.
As Stewart went to push the communication button to broadcast simultaneously on all-known frequencies, she re
alized she already had set the unit to do so. “
Dreamland Levitow
to Chinese J-13s following the Osprey aircraftâthat's one of ours. He's on a rescue mission. Don't fire on him, damn you. Acknowledge. Or else we're shooting you down!”
She pressed the button on the next panel down, rebroadcasting the radio transmission in Chinese. Then, trying to anticipate what Bree would want to do, she went to the weapons screen and got ready to launch an AMRAAM-plus.
Â
M
ACK SAW THE
O
SPREY IN THE LONG
-
RANGE SCAN
,
DANCING
over the burning tank farm. The pilot seemed to be using the fire as a way to deke any missiles launched at him. It seemed like a good idea, though it sure looked dangerousâthe aircraft dipped and disappeared in the flames, bobbing upward only to zip down again.
The J-13 appeared on his screen, coming in from the right about three miles ahead of him. Mack began angling toward its tail, his heart starting to race as the targeting bar blinked yellow. He was going to nail this sucker, and it was going to feel good.
Just as the targeting bar began blinking red, the J-13 stretched in his screen. It was an optical illusionâthe plane was veering hard to the right. Mack hung with it; the bar went solid red.
“He's turning off, Mack,” said Breanna. “The Chinese aircraft is turning off.”
Too late, thought Mack. He's dead.
But he lifted his finger off the trigger.
Aboard the
Shiva
,
in the northern Arabian Sea
0335
T
HE GUNS IMMEDIATELY BELOW THE BRIDGE BEGAN TO FIRE
, their steady staccato the sound of a jackhammer tearing
through thin concrete. Memon stared in the direction of the steam of bullets but couldn't see their target. Then yellow light rose from below. Memon saw the shadow of a man loom before him, then heaved over, the deck suddenly cut away. He felt hot and wet, surrounded by screams, and a curtain of pain stunned his vision black.
Aboard the
Wisconsin,
in the northern Arabian Sea
0336
“T
WO
J-13
S HEADING IN THE DIRECTION OF THE
A
BNER
Read
,” T-Bone told Dog, reading the screens at his airborne radar station. “Twenty-five feet above sea level. Not clear that they have the ship ID'd as a target. Approximately twenty-five miles from the
Abner Read
. Computer says they have very large missiles aboard, ColonelâChinese variation of Styx, designation C-106.”
“Bay,” Dog told Jazz, changing course to intercept them.
The copilot acknowledged and the bomb bay door swung open.
“
Dreamland Wisconsin
to
Abner Read
. Two aircraft are heading in your direction. They appear equipped with versions of the Russian Styx.”
“Bastian, what do you have?” said Eyes.
“J-13s coming at you hot. Each has a Styx cruise missile. I can take them out, but you have to decide right now.”
“Stand by.”
The com line went silent. Almost a full minute passed before Storm came back on the line.
“They're homing in on our radar,” said Storm. “They may think we're one of the Indian screening ships. We've broadcast a warning and they haven't responded. If they don't turn back in sixty seconds, shoot them down.”
“Copy that.”
Aboard
Dreamland Osprey,
near Karachi
0336
A
WALL OF FLAMES APPEARED DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF THE
O
SPREY
. Before Danny could blink, they'd flown into them. The aircraft shot sideways, shimmying and shaking and jerking like a train that had suddenly come off its tracks. Finally, the nose moved upward in a gentle tilt and they climbed away from the raging fires.
Danny saw figures running along a pier near the northern side of the terminal. The water around them seemed to be on fire.
“Let's see if we can rescue them,” he told the pilot. “We'll break out the rescue basket and winch it down.”
“The whole place is on fire,” said the pilot.
“Which means we better hurry.”
Danny ran to the rear of the aircraft and told Boston and Pretty Boy that they were going to try and pull the people off the pier. As they pulled the stretcher basket out from its compartment below the web seats, Danny clicked back into the Dreamland command line.
“Whiplash leader to
Dreamland Levitow
âBree, you there?”
“Go ahead, Danny.”
“Listen, there are some people stranded on a pier here and we're going to try helping them. In the meantime, we saw a wake west of the oil farm about ten minutes ago. We didn't see anything on the surface, and then those fighters started chasing us. Maybe it's your submarine.”
“Roger that. Thanks.”
Aboard the
Shiva
,
in the northern Arabian Sea
0336
A
THOUSAND DEMONS ROARED IN
M
EMON
'
S EARS
,
CURSING
the sun, swearing that it would never rise again. Shiva, the Hindu god of war, leered before him. The god's tongue was pure fire; the flames licked at Memon's eyes, burning through the sockets.
Memon rolled away. He found himself facedown on the deck, hands so hot they seemed to be on fire. He pushed upright and struggled to his knees.
A man's body lay next to him. It seemed to have grown another arm in the middle of its chest, fingers curled around a knife. Memon struggled to comprehend what he was seeingâa sailor impaled by a huge piece of metal.
“Deputy Minister Memon! Help the deputy minister!”
Memon felt himself being pulled to his feet. A klaxon horn sounded nearby. There were shouts. Memon heard a sound like water running into a tub, then realized it was the whimper of a man dying nearby. His right arm had been sheered two-thirds off and he lay in a pool of blood.
Memon looked away. A hole had been blown in the side of the ship's island, and the compartment next to them obliterated. He could see stars in the distance, twinkling white above the red-tinged sea.
“The admiral is dead,” said a sailor.