"Revenge is a dish best served cold." - Khan
Wolf Base B
The flash from the back side of the mountain lit up the sky and shocked them into action. The concussion didn't arrive for another few minutes, and by then the mushroom cloud was rising into the sky.
Four of the team fell to the ground right after the flash lit up the night sky like noontime, shifting to wolf form and howling their loss into the sky. Their mates and young were back in the caves and were now gone. Red, Joe, Mike and Billy would be useless for a few moments until the shock wore off.
"What the hell was that" yelled Renee at her second, Andy, as they dove for cover in the command trench. "It could have been a small nuke, but I can't see them using one on their own soil, so I bet it was a MOAB."
"MOAB?"
"Mother of All Bombs. It was designed back during the first Gulf War to take out underground command bunkers and storage facilities. It's the largest conventional bomb ever made. It's so big you have to use a..." He smacked the wall in frustration. "It's delivered by cargo plane, it's too big to drop from a bomber or fighter."
"Fuck... they went after our caves." Renee shuddered at the thought of what just happened.
A cry of "Jet coming from the East" got heads back in the game. They could see the single aircraft approaching supersonic at low altitude, it was an F-15E Strike Eagle. Renee jumped up on the nearby log and yelled, "The bastards are going after the survivors! Doug, Jerry- use the Stinger, shoot it right down his throat as it passes over. Everybody else, gear up and hide out until he passes. MOVE!"
Eagle 31 out of Cheyenne Air National Guard Base
Captain Gary Johnson's heart rate was elevated as he approached the northern Rocky Mountain area. The plan so far had gone perfectly, the massive bomb had been delivered within a hundred yards of the cave entrance and drone video showed massive devastation in the area. He and six other F-15E Strike Eagles were the next wave- going in fast and low, using their Forward Looking Infrared (FLIR) and laser guided bombs to find and eliminate any survivors. The intel they had did not disclose if there were any escape routes or other entrances to the cave system they had identified.
The job was a rush. Competition to get the Eagle was fierce, starting at the Air Force Academy and continuing through flight school, but he always got what he wanted. There was nothing in the world like doing MACH 1.2 just a few hundred feet off the top of the mountains. It was an adrenaline rush of major proportions. They could only do it in remote deserts and Were exclusion zones, and it scared the crap out of any living thing in the forests below.
His concentration was fully on the navigation and terrain avoidance portions of his Heads Up Display. Low altitude flight was dangerous, and the Were were known to have .50 cal machine
guns, so speed was safety. His focus was so strong on the maneuvers needed to avoid the next two mountains that he didn't notice the FLIR indications of a dozen or so spots of heat just below the top of the next foothill.
The missile DID get his attention as it launched at 10 o'clock low. He had less than two seconds to impact, and a second of that was wasted as he recognized that it was too late to do anything. His right engine exploded as he tried to bank away, and just before the jet rolled into the mountainside he pulled the eject lever and was launched into the night sky. He was knocked out before he cleared the fireball.
"I got you you bastard!!" Doug shouted as the plane exploded over him.
Debris scattered on the mountainside as the fuselage slammed into the hillside just to their north. Multiple fires started as the squad gathered whatever equipment they could carry. Everyone knew that the crash would bring all kinds of attention from planes, drones and troops. They needed to bug out quick. "Chute!" Andy pointed to the pilot just before his parachute caught in the trees just a hundred yards below their position.
A shout of "Medic up!" sent Ann over to check Joe. He was trapped below a thick branch, and it took three of them to free him. His leg was obviously broken, and she quickly applied a field splint and got Red to take him in a fireman's carry back to the rest of the squad.
Renee called everyone to form on her as they worked their way down to the chute. A captured pilot opened up all kinds of possibilities.
Two minutes later they had the pilot cut down, still unconscious. "Is he alive?" Renee asked. Ann quickly checked him over, finding no major injuries, but his pupils were not reactive indicating a concussion. "Strip him. He probably has homing devices on him." Another minute later and he was lying on the ground in his compression shorts.
"Boss, what do you want to do with him," asked Andy. "We've only got fifteen minutes or so before the rescue team shows up with all their air cover, maybe less for any other jets they have up there."
Renee thought about just killing him, but the intelligence and propaganda value of a pilot was too much to give up so easily. "Tie him up and put him on the field stretcher, we'll carry him out of here. If we get lucky we'll make the dense woods on the back side of this pass before the rescue helicopters make it." Jerry took off for his tent, it doubled as the medic shack and their only stretcher was there. "OK, everyone check each other for shrapnel and shout out if you are injured. Ann, how is Joe?"
"Broken left femur. I've got it splinted, but it's bleeding internally and moving him is a bad idea. Jerry and I can hide him and wait this out. I'll do what I can to make him comfortable, but without surgery he still might not make it until morning."
"No!" Joe lifted his head up and looked in Renee's eyes. "You're not risking two more people for me. My cubs and mate are gone. I have nothing left to go back for. You guys take off and I'll give you a little time to escape, and maybe I can get a little payback."
Renee thought about it, and a plan came to mind, but they had to hurry.
155th Air Force Pararescue Wing, Cheyenne Air National Guard Base
"GO GO GO! Aircraft down!"
Capt. Jay (JJ) Jennings did final checks for rollout of his HH-60G Pavehawk helicopter as his crew sprung into action. His bird was the lead of two "Ready 5" helicopters, able to take off within five minutes of notification of a downed pilot or medevac. The base was closest to the Were territory, so they had two helicopters ready anytime there were pilots in the air or troops in the exclusion zone. Saluting the ground crew, he released the brakes while pushing the collective lever down to send max power to the engines. "Pedro 155, ready for departure." Immediately Capt. Robinson in the second helo followed with "Pedro 162, ready for departure." The tower immediately responded with clearance to 10,000 feet heading 260 and they were off.
Each helicopter was designed and manned for one purpose- to get people out while under enemy fire. The two pilots commanded a crewmaster, two door gunners and two pararescue men. These pararescumen were elite, highly trained warriors capable of securing a landing zone under fire. They also were flight medics with advanced training and equipment. The Pedro's mission was to get people out, stabilized and into a field hospital within the "Golden Hour" after injury when the chances of survival are highest.
The pilots were updated on the emergency beacon location as they climbed to altitude. Both the pilot and the ejection seat had a radio beacon that activated with the ejection seat deployment. The satellite showed the pilot wasn't too far away, and not too deep into enemy territory; they had been through worse in the early days. The door gunners test fired their weapons and the medics prepped blood and IV's while the crewmaster tested the door winch. Ten minutes later, Capt. Jennings pointed at the fires from the wreckage were in sight and announced they had a visual on the beacon from the ejection seat.