But now, finding the stealth fighter had taken on stakes far greater than a friendly wager she had made with the Master Chief.
“Captain, Combat,” came the voice over Net 15.
She set the mug down and lifted the handset to her lips and pressed the button to reply. “This is the captain. Go ahead.”
“New contact, Track Number One Eight Four Five, bearing zero zero five for eighty miles, altitude between ten and twenty thousand feet.” Lieutenant Schaeffer’s voice echoed the fear she felt but still sounded hopeful.
Beth plotted the contact on her chart, then turned to Ben. “That’s our target.”
“How do we know it’s him?”
“He’s in the heart of the missile test complex,” she said. “Other than Raptor Two Four, there have been no other aircraft in that airspace all day.”
“We can’t engage unless we’re certain.”
Even though his words echoed her own sentiment, she still resented the reminder. “Combat, how certain are we that this contact is our guy?”
“Fairly. The flight profile is too erratic for commercial traffic, and we are receiving jamming indications along that line of bearing. We only pick him up for a few seconds before losing him again, and it almost appears as if he’s jumping around.”
“Probably a result of the jamming,” Beth said. “Designate Track Number One Eight Four Five as the primary target.”
“Aye aye, ma’am,” the TAO replied.
Beth set the handheld radio down and turned to Ben. “I don’t like this. We need to find out what the hell is going on before that contact gets within range of—”
The TAO’s voice interrupted her. “Captain, Combat!”
She felt a chill running down her spine at the panicked voice of the normally unflappable lieutenant. “Go ahead.”
“We have two air contacts now, heading directly toward
“Slow down, Martin,” she said. “Give me details.”
“Second contact designated Track Number Two Four One Eight is in close proximity to the first contact,” Martin said.
“Designate Track Number Two Four One Eight as secondary target,” Beth said, leaning forward in her chair as Ben reached over his head and turned on the speaker to listen in as their sailors in the Combat Information Center tried reaching the aircraft over both UHF and VHF Guard frequencies.
“…thirty-three decimal seven three degrees north, one nineteen decimal five one degrees west, you are approaching a US Navy warship and will be fired upon. Fly north immediately and identify yourself.”
Beth furrowed her brow and held her breath as she waited for a response. Again, she reminded herself that they were off the coast of Southern California and not deployed downrange where the enemy probed the strike group’s defenses in hopes of catching them with their guard down. She shouldn’t have been in a position where she needed to employ her weapon system to defend the
Beth brought the handset to her mouth again, “Combat, did you say the two contacts were in close proximity to each other?”
He replied immediately. “Yes, ma’am. Their track numbers appeared to swap contacts, but one broke away and headed directly for
She didn’t like the sound of that, but she needed more information before she could act. As a cruiser skipper, she was intimately familiar with the errant shoot-down of Iran Air Flight 655 by the USS
Like the night before, she knew the burden fell on her to make the best possible decision to protect her crew and those aboard the
“Unknown rider, unknown rider at thirty-three decimal seven three degrees north, one nineteen decimal five one degrees west, you are approaching a US Navy warship and will be fired upon. Turn north immediately and identify yourself.”
She could hear the fear in the sailor’s voice and knew she was running out of time. If an enemy force had hijacked the test aircraft loaded with air-to-surface missiles designed to sink large ships, they were an imminent threat to the carrier. But now there were two jets instead of the one she had expected. Was one friendly? Were both hostile?