Mack Maloney - Chopper Ops
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- Название:Chopper Ops
- Автор:
- Издательство:Berkley
- Жанр:
- Год:2011
- Город:Naples, FL
- ISBN:978-1-61232-148-6
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Chopper Ops: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Norton and the others were appraising this sudden crisis when another ominous noise was picked up by the Marines’ super-long-range eavesdropping devices. This was a low rumbling sound, mixed with the hum of generator-produced electrical energy. The Marines had heard this combination before. It was the sound of many heavy vehicles moving at once.
All NightScopes turned west, and sure enough, coming over the next hill were the lead elements of an Iraqi military column. With twenty-one T-72 tanks on flatbed trucks out front and dozens of troop trucks bringing up the rear, it was at least a battalion on the move. As the Americans watched helplessly, the column slowly approached the accident site. The lead truck nearly plowed into the wreck. This caused a series of bumper strikes and a storm of screeching brakes all along the convoy. In this manner, the column came to an abrupt stop.
That had been nearly thirty minutes ago, just as the sky was beginning to brighten. Now the highway was simply jammed with Iraqi military vehicles and their occupants, many of whom were out and walking around, trying to figure a way to dislodge the wrecked truck from the roadway.
But it was clear, even from a half mile away, that the Iraqis didn’t have a clue what to do. The crashed truck’s front half was wedged so firmly between the two rocks, no amount of pulling and pushing could budge it. The trailer itself was so deeply embedded into the macadam, even a hundred men could not move it either. And apparently there was no means to get one of the tanks off its flatbed to do the job.
So, short of turning the column around, the Iraqis were stuck.
All this put the Americans in a very precarious position. They had no fuel left in their choppers, and with no choppers they had no way to get off the cliff. If the Iraqis happened to spot them, it would be a bloodbath. Just the tanks alone carried enough firepower to take out the cave, the cliff, and everyone on it. And if that didn’t work, the column’s commanders could call in air strikes to finish the job.
What made the whole thing excruciating, though, was the fear that by some cruel miracle, Ricco and Gillis would finally show up. The irony of that possibility was as thick as the early morning mist now rising from the desert. If the tanker pilots didn’t return, that meant something catastrophic had happened to them and the unit was stranded. But if by some act of God they did appear, the unit’s position would undoubtedly be compromised—and they would be trapped and discovered.
Either way, it would be a disaster.
Of course, there was also the possibility of a third scenario.
“You know, those assholes Ricco and Gillis could have just cut out on us and landed somewhere friendly,” Delaney hissed over to Norton as they remained crouched in a hidden position along the cliff’s edge.
It was now nearly 0700 hours. The sun was almost up, it was even getting hot. The Hook was more than ninety minutes overdue. Norton was still scanning the highway. The Iraqis appeared to be getting a bit restless.
“If that’s what those two did, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t understand their temptation,” he told Delaney finally. “A few hundred miles in any direction and they’re out of this bad dream for good.”
Delaney just shook his head. “Think they’d have the balls to do it, Jazz? To just to leave us here?” he wondered.
Norton lowered his electronic spyglasses.
“Match it up with what Angel told us,” he said, his voice a whisper. “No one who cares knows where we are. If it all ends here for us, who will really give a fuck? In fact, it would be a big help for the people who put us in this wringer in the first place.”
Delaney gritted his teeth as he mulled over Norton’s grim words.
“I’ll haunt those bastards if they turned tail,” Delaney said finally. “Their families won’t know a minute of peace. I’ll be throwing pots around their kitchen; bleeding through their walls. I’ll scare the shit out of their kids on a daily basis. I’ll be one bad-ass ghost.”
“Well, if they did run away, it would actually be better for us than if they showed up now,” Norton said. “That looks like half the Iraqi Army out there.”
No sooner were those words out of Norton’s mouth when Chou ran up to their position, landing in a skid on his chest, knees, and stomach. He was out of breath, covered with dust, his face uncharacteristically dirty.
“My guys just spotted something on the big scope,” he gasped. “Sixty degrees east, twenty south… below two hundred feet.”
Norton put his glasses up and zeroed in on Chou’s coordinates. And that was when he saw it. A pinprick of light coming out of the early dawn clouds, heading straight for them.
“Damn… is it really… ?” Norton breathed.
It was the Hook. Even head-on, the huge chopper’s profile was unmistakable. But even from this distance it was obvious the chopper was in bad shape. It was trailing heavy smoke and barely flying no more than two hundred feet off the ground.
Even worse, it was heading right for the mountain in full view of the Iraqis on the highway.
Delaney grabbed the glasses and spotted the chopper as well.
“I’ll be damned,” he said. “Now those guys decide to be heroes?”
“Well, that’s the end of this ballgame,” Chou said. “You might as well get a neon sign and point it at us.”
He looked around. “Anyone have any bright ideas?” he asked.
No one said a word. There was nothing they could do.
“We’ve got to let them land,” Norton said finally. “If they don’t crash first.”
“Yeah, but if they set down here, we’ll have a thousand Gomers on top of us before we know it,” Delaney replied.
Chou lowered his glasses, turned, and yelled an order to his men. It sounded ominous, like “last-ditch defense posture,” or words to that effect. The Marines immediately snapped to. They jumped from their various hiding spots and clustered together, visors down, weapons ready, in a forward trench they’d dug previously along the edge of the cliff. They looked like doughboys awaiting an attack across the fields of the Somme.
“Man, this is getting a bit too dramatic for me,” Delaney whispered, checking his own M-16.
“Take notes then,” Norton told him. “It will make good copy for your memoirs.”
It took about another minute, but the Hook finally went right over the stalled Iraqi column, leaving behind a trail of sparks and very heavy smoke. It did a bone-charring turn to the right and fluttered its way towards the cliff.
While the others watched the stricken chopper, Norton kept his scope on the Iraqis on the highway. Those soldiers he could see looked absolutely baffled. To their eyes, they were looking at one of their own choppers in trouble. But how long would that incorrect assumption last?
When Norton looked up again, the Hook was only a hundred feet out from the cliff’s edge. It was obvious the refueler only had a few more seconds of flying left in it.
So in it came. One engine on fire, the other backfiring like a bad ’55 Chevy. It went into a brief hover just above the far lip of the cliff. There was so much smoke pouring out of the chopper, it created a huge black smoke screen that was blowing down with great force on all those waiting below.
“NBW masks!” Chou yelled, and quickly his men were pulling down their gas masks. But Norton and Delaney had no such protection. They were soon engulfed by the maelstrom of exhaust and smoke.
“Jeesuz!” Delaney yelled. “They’re still trying to kill us, those bastards!”
The Hook came crashing down a second later, not a hundred feet from the trench line. The entire mountain shook from the impact. Everyone hit the deck. The noise was unbearable. Screeching, grinding, the scream of metal twisting as the huge rotor buried itself deep into the hard rock of the cliff. This was all mixed with a bizarre sound similar to that of many huge waves hitting a beach in rapid succession. It was the gas inside the Hook’s fuel bags, dangerously sloshing about. Now the cliff was suddenly thick with gas fumes as well as smoke and exhaust.
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