Strike Zone. Dale Brown
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Stoner nodded. The scientists had emphasized earlier that massive amounts of data flowed back and forth very quickly between the Flighthawks and their mother ships. To be honest, Stoner didn’t completely get it – what was the big deal about some video and flying instructions? But it was enough to know that they said it was significant.
‘All of that is going to take custom-designed chips, both for the communications and for the onboard computer. Because it will have to have an onboard computer,’ said Rubeo. ‘That’s what you have to look for. That’s the defining characteristic’
‘Okay, so who could do that?’ said Stoner.
Rubeo shook his head. ‘Weren’t you paying attention? We can. The Japanese. The Chinese. Not the Russians.’
‘No one else?’
Rubeo fingered his earring again. ‘Maybe India. Some of the Europeans, possibly. There are good fab plants in Germany. They’ve done memory work there as well. The processor, though.’
Rubeo seemed to be having a conversation with himself that Stoner couldn’t hear. He segued into contract factories or fabs that fabricated chips for custom applications. A small number of concerns could manufacture specially designed chips. They needed special clean rooms and elaborate tools, but if there was enough money, existing machinery could be adapted.
‘What if I look for those?’ Stoner asked Rubeo.
‘You don’t really suppose they’re going to tell you what they’re doing, do you?’
‘I’m in the business of gathering information,’ said Stoner.
Rubeo made a noise that sounded a bit like the snort of a horse. ‘There are several facilities in America that could do the work. More than two dozen that I can think of off the top of my head. Any of them would be willing to design the proper chips for a foreign government if the price were right.’
‘I’ll check them first,’ said Stoner. ‘Unless they’re already doing work for us.’
‘Why would that be a limiting factor?’ said Rubeo, the cynical tone in his voice implying that greed would motivate any number of people to sell out their country.
Dreamland Ground Range Three 2100
Sergeant Ben ‘Boston’ Rockland got to his feet slowly. The rest of his team lay around him, officially ‘dead.’ Their objective – carrying a small amount of radioactive soil back from enemy lines for testing – had not been met.
Boston – as the nickname suggested, the sergeant was a Beantown native – picked up the ruck containing the soil. The desert before him was dotted with small rubber balls with nails sticking out from them – simulated cluster bomblets, representing air-dropped antipersonnel mines with proximity fuses. The little suckers worked too – as soon as you got within five feet, an ear-piercing siren sounded, and the range monitor proclaimed you were dead.
Not dead, actually. Just maimed. The range monitor seemed to take a perverse joy in announcing which particular body part it was that had been blown off.
There seemed to be no way across the minefield. Yet to get to the objective – a small orange cone about a quarter mile away – he had to cross it.
As Boston stared, he heard the roar of the returning Osprey gunship. Sergeant Liu had explained earlier that the aircraft was programmed to orbit the test range randomly. He’d also warned that the massive Gatlings were firing live ammunition.
The Osprey swung forward in a wide arc, hunting for a target. Boston had seen from the exercises earlier that it would home in on small reflectors that the people running the exercise had planted around the field. It wasn’t clear to him whether the red disks had some circuitry inside, or if the weapons directors on the M/V-22 could actually home in on the glints of light. Whichever it was, flinging the little disks drove the gear batty, as one of the Whiplash team members had proven yesterday when morale had started to sag.
Maybe he hadn’t flung the disk as a joke, thought Boston. Maybe he was hinting at the solution.
Boston threw himself back down as the Osprey approached. The computers controlling the guns were programmed to avoid hitting anyone, but they didn’t miss by much. As the guns began to fire, the tilt-rotor aircraft seemed to jump upward in the sky.
The burst lasted no more than three-quarters of a second. When it stopped, the Osprey settled back down and flew in a semicircle close to the ground.
Eight feet off the surface.
That wasn’t all that high.
Boston watched as the Osprey flew toward the hangar area, still skimming low over the terrain.
That was the solution. It had to be.
As soon as the tilt-rotor craft had gone, he began grabbing the disks.
Captain Danny Freah watched in amazement as the Osprey whirled around, hoodwinked by the flashing reflectors. It fired, then settled back down into a hover just at the edge of the minefield.
‘I think he figured out how to control it,’ said Liu, who was next to Danny.
‘Or at least confuse it,’ answered Danny.
‘If he uses the Osprey to blast a path through the minefield, the computer simulators won’t understand,’ said Liu. ‘He’ll still be blown up by the proximity fuses. But you’d have to give him points for figuring it out.’
‘Sure, but that’s not what he’s doing,’ said Danny as Boston began running toward the rear of the Osprey.
‘Holy shit,’ said Liu.
Boston leaped into the air and caught the rear tail of the variable-rotor aircraft. His legs pitched forward and his ruck hung off his back, but the sergeant managed to hang on.
Even though the massive rotors were locked above the aircraft, they still kicked up a hurricane around the aircraft. Boston shook like the last leaf on a maple tree in a nor’ easter blizzard as the aircraft pushed ahead toward the apron area beyond the minefield.
The trooper felt his fingers numbing as the MV-22 moved ahead. They were cold, frozen even – his right pinkie began to slip, then his ring finger, then his thumb.
He leaned his head down, trying to see exactly where he was.
Not even halfway across.
Hang on, he told himself.
The aircraft bucked upward. Boston realized he’d miscalculated about how close to the ground it flew once it cleared the minefield – from where he’d stood, it didn’t seem as if it rose at all, but now he realized it must go up at least a few feet, and a few feet were going to make a very big difference when he jumped.
He could get it to dip again by tossing one of the reflectors. But to toss one – he had two more in his pocket – he’d have to hold on with one hand.
Could he?
No.