Threat Level Black

Threat Level Black by Jim DeFelice Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Threat Level Black by Jim DeFelice Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jim DeFelice
Flight Hawk One, Hawk Two, Guard Sixteen, we have additional data on the intercepted flight,” said the ground controller before the F-16 jock could respond. “Pilot is a thirty-four-year-old male, one passenger, ten-year-old girl, his daughter.”
    “Shit,” said Storey.
    “All right, let’s think on this a second,” said Howe. “How many terrorists are going to take their daughters with them on their final flight?”
    “How do we know that’s really who they are?” responded Guard Sixteen.
    “The person in the first officer’s seat is pretty small,” said Howe. “Yeah, it’s definitely a girl. She’s got long hair.”
    Howe slid closer, riding inside twenty yards, ten, worried that the turbulence off his aircraft might upset the plane. He didn’t need the high-tech AMV system any more: He could see the girl pretty clearly through the large window in the relatively new plane. He tried to signal for her to speak, but she didn’t seem to have a headset. He tried a few times to mime that she should take her father’s, but he knew that wasn’t likely to help much. Whatever happened in the movies, in real life the odds of talking a ten-year-old into a safe landing had to be a million to one.
    “How much fuel does he have left?” Storey asked.
    One of the ground controllers thought he was talking to him and replied that, if the flight plan was correct, he ought to be able to fly for another half hour or so. Howe thought the estimate fairly accurate based on the scan, though it was difficult to tell without more details about the airplane and its engine.
    “That should take it out of the restricted area,” said Storey.
    “Then what happens?” said the ANG pilot.
    “I think it’s a Cirrus SR22,” said Storey.
    “And?”
    “If that’s a Cirrus SR22, it has a parachute,” explained Storey. “All we have to do is get the kid to pull it when she’s clear of the capital.”
    The controller confirmed that the plane was designed to carry a parachute—but added that there was no way to know if it had one.
    “Where is it located?” asked Howe.
    “Behind the cabin area,” said Storey, describing the compartment.
    “It’s there,” said Howe. “I say we give it a shot,” said Howe. “Better than shooting down a ten-year-old kid over the Potomac.”
    “Stand by,” said the ground controller.
    The Capitol building loomed ahead. Two more interceptors were flying up from the southeast, along with a police helicopter.
    “We have a company representative on the line,” said the controller finally. “We think it might work. Can you hang with them?”
    “Not a problem,” replied Howe, exhaling slowly into his oxygen mask.
    “Good advertisement for the I-MAN system,” said Storey.
    I-MAN was an emergency piloting system that would allow the controls for a private plane to be taken over in an emergency such as this. It was another NADT project. Until this moment he hadn’t thought that much about it—and certainly hadn’t seen it as important or even worthwhile.
    But it might be. If he took the job, he could find out. He could help all sorts of people, not just the Air Force, not just the military. It was an important job.
    Just not his.
    “You have to get that passenger on the radio,” said the controller, explaining that they would need to instruct her to kill the engine and then deploy the chute. Howe acknowledged, then closed in.
    “Radio,” he said, miming how she should take the headset from her father and put it on. It took several tries before she finally got it. But she still didn’t acknowledge the broadcasts.
    “Wave your hand if you hear us,” said Howe.
    She did.
    “Okay, ground,” said Howe. “For some reason she’s not transmitting, but she can definitely hear. Do we have an easy place to land ahead somewhere?”
    The controller mapped a spot in Virginia. They were a good ten minutes from it when the aircraft’s engine began to cough. That at least solved one problem:

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