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LIEUTENANT J/G HARRIS CONOVER watched his radar screen as his jet approached the target. He had slowed to two hundred knots and, as a result, he was having to fly at a high angle of attack in the swept-wing aircraft, making visual contact with the light airplane difficult.
Then, suddenly in his peripheral vision, the lights of a small airplane appeared, navs and strobes. He saw it for only a moment as he swept past the target, flying at least fifty knots faster than the light airplane.
“Navy, do you read me?” a voice said in his headset.
“I read you, and I have a visual,” Conover said, though that was no longer true. “Wingman, left one-eighty.” He banked the jet sharply and started back.
“I’m afraid I can’t fly back with you, and it would be best if you stay well clear of me.”
Conover was flying a reciprocal course now, and he saw the airplane again. This time its landing and taxi lights were on, too. “Don’t worry, little guy, I’m not going to bump into you. Wingman, ninety right.” He started the turn. He had orders to make his run from the landward side of the light aircraft, so that any stray rounds would land at sea.
“That’s not what I mean,” Ted said. He started a turn to the right. “Just stay well clear.” He looked down at the coast as he crossed it. A tailwind was moving him rapidly out over the water. He reached into the duffel next to him and took out a package about the size of a hardcover book.
Conover still had the airplane on radar, and it had made a turn from its prescribed course. “Listen to me, pal. You’re off course, and you’d better make a left turn right now. I’m locked and loaded.”
“I’m sure you are,” Ted responded. “Good night and good luck.” He turned a timer switch on the object in his hand and set it at thirty seconds. There was nothing to think about now. He punched the autopilot on. He thought about his wife.
“Jesus!” Conover screamed as the fireball flared in front of him. “Break right!” He started the turn. “Billy, did you fire?”
“Not me, Harry,” his wingman said. “I think the guy did the firing himself.”
Conover held the turn until he had made a three-sixty, then he banked left for a view below him.
Small, burning pieces of the Cessna were striking the water. “Okay, Billy, let’s go home.” He swung on course for Brunswick and changed frequencies. “ Brunswick, this is hardhat one.”
“Hardhat one, Brunswick.”
“Wingman and I are returning to base.”
“What was your result?”
“Tell the old man we didn’t have to fire. The guy pulled the plug himself. Big explosion.”
“Roger that, hardhat one. You’re cleared to land on two.”
“Wilco.”
THE BEDSIDE PHONE RANG, and he picked it up. “Will Lee.”
“Mr. President, this is Captain Mason, CNO’s office, the Pentagon.”
“Yes, Captain.”
“Our aircraft made contact with the Cessna and instructed him to turn for Brunswick and land. The pilot declined to do so. Our pilot warned him to land or be shot down, and he declined again, but he turned on all his lights and his transponder. Our pilots were lining up for a shot when the Cessna exploded.”
“You mean the man committed suicide?”
“It would appear so, Mr. President. He headed his airplane out to sea, and our pilots saw the burning wreckage fall into the water.”
“I see.”
“Is this what you anticipated, sir?”
“No, but the man saved us a lot of trouble. Please phone Coast Guard command for me, give them the coordinates of the crash, and tell them I want a search for wreckage and a body to commence at dawn.”
“Yes, Mr. President. Is there anything else I can do for you?”
“No, thank you, Captain. Good night.” Will hung up and punched another line for an operator.
“Yes, Mr. President?”
“Please get me Deputy Director Ki
“Yes, sir. Please hold.”
KINNEY WAS STANDING in the living room of Teddy Fay’s house when his cell phone vibrated in his pocket. He dug it out and opened it. “This is Bob Ki
“Hold for the president, please.”
“Hello, Bob?”
“Yes, Mr. President.”
“The CNO’s office just called. The Brunswick jets intercepted Fay’s airplane. After some conversation back and forth, he turned on the airplane’s lights and transponder, then blew himself up over the water.”
“Holy shit,” Ki
“I had pretty much the same reaction,” the president said. “Bob, you’ve done a fine job in impossible circumstances, and I won’t forget it.”
“Thank you, Mr. President, but it was Rawls’s tip that made a resolution possible.”
“Yes, I guess he’s earned his pardon. Well, I’ll leave it to you to wrap this thing up. Don’t make any a
“Thank you, sir.”
“It’s snowing in Washington, Bob, the first of the season. Looks like we might have a white Christmas.”
“I like the snow, sir. I’ll look forward to seeing it.”
“Good night, Bob. I hope you can get some sleep on the way home.”
“Good night, Mr. President.” Ki
“With the director?” Smith asked.
“I don’t think he’ll be there,” Ki
61
KINNEY AND SMITH stood at the president’s side in the White House press briefing room and waited for the clock to show 12:01 p.m., which was when control rooms all over the country would insert the live press conference into their noon news.
The press secretary stepped to the microphone fifteen seconds before that. “The president will have a statement, and he will not take questions at this time. A later briefing, to be a
The president stepped to the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen, my fellow Americans, I have an a
“On my orders, two jet fighters were scrambled from the Brunswick, Maine, Naval Air Station, and these aircraft intercepted the smaller airplane, with orders to force it to land or to shoot it down. Mr. Fay refused to follow their instructions, but before the Navy aircraft could position themselves to fire, Mr. Fay caused his own airplane to explode. The wreckage landed in the sea, between Ke
“Less than an hour ago, the commandant of the Coast Guard informed me that wreckage of an aircraft bearing the registration number of Mr. Fay’s airplane had been found, and they hope to find remains soon.
“I want to express my personal gratitude to Deputy Director Robert Ki