Read The Black Sheep (A Learning Experience Book 3) Online

Authors: Christopher Nuttall

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #War, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #First Contact, #Galactic Empire, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine, #Space Opera

The Black Sheep (A Learning Experience Book 3) (43 page)

* * *

 

Eight of the Djinn had been turning, about to make another pass on the convoy, when the Vipers showed up. The scene below was flashing lights and flares, burning vehicles and explosions. Tracer fire and missiles going in and out; a blazing candyland of red, white, yellow and green flashing back and forth across the rolling battlefield.

It was a bright double-moonlit, starlit night, and the visual accentuators on O’Connor’s plane weren’t truly necessary; he could see everything, look up and see more flashing tracers as the squadron commander and his flight engaged the enemy high cover.

His problem, C Flight’s problem, was that they were outnumbered at dirt level by two to one.

Fuck that
, he thought. The thing to do when you were outnumbered was to reduce a few of the other side!

“Break right, Shaker. Watch his back, Meat,” said Mordar.

“Roger,” said O’Connor and Jamison.

Four of the Djinn were turning to react to the Vipers. The other four were opening fire on the convoy, cannon blazing and rockets blasting from wing pods.

“Rip through them,” said Jamison. “Take any shots you can but our job is to protect that damn convoy. We’re going after the ones going after
it
.”

Missile lock warning lit up. O’Connor banked right and accelerated, the Viper’s engines growling under him as he pushed the throttle forwards.

One of the Zinj planes attacking the convoy was about to be in his sights. He pushed the cannon trigger; sent a burst at where it would be.

Hit! Hit!
He clearly saw the shells spark off the Djinn, something on it exploding. The strafing aircraft turned to fight in the air, pushing for height and aiming.

Missile lock
, and his threat indicator beeped
hard
. An oncoming Djinn; O’Connor pulled the stick back and hit the throttle again. The Djinn’s missile fired, blazing a trail through the flame-lit semi-darkness, completely missed him.

Looking for Jamison – ah, there he was, higher up. O’Connor angled his jet back a bit more, going up to five thousand feet—

Missile lock.

Hit the chaff button, no idea where that Zinj was.

Cannon shells flashed past him. A Djinn was above him and on his six!

Well, he knew what to do in that case; throttle up, turning, evading. More cannon-shells flashed past. Another Djinn appeared ahead, turning; O’Connor aimed the plane slightly and opened fire. At least one of the cannon-shells struck. He banked left, aiming at the Djinn, firing more – and then a missile streaked into that plane, blew it apart in a blazing fireball.

“Looks like I just made ace,” Mordar remarked.

I
want to make ace!
thought O’Connor. But for now, as he turned his plane and opened up on another Djinn, the chaos below irrelevant now to the fight in the air – as his missile-lock indicator lit up again and more fire came through his general vicinity – he had to stay alive!

 

* * *

 

Idris turned, going for height, firing at a Viper that raced past him for a moment. The one he’d fired the missile at – ah,
there
he was, turning around to open fire on someone else.

He hit the rudder and ailerons, slowing his plane and turning tightly. Lined the infidel up in his sights and opened up—

 

* * *

 

Fire ripped into O’Connor’s Viper, damage lights blazing and audio warnings shrieking. The plane slowed perceptibly and something scored across the top of his canopy.
Fuck
.

Zinj – there the bastard was, on his six and slightly above. Firing again. O’Connor hit the throttle and turned upwards, vertical, looping back; the Zinj banked left.

Burning wreckage fell from the sky above them; someone in the high-cover fight had scored a kill. Although those fights were merging now; O’Connor had seen one of the A Flight planes not too far above him.

He looped around the Zinj, hoping for a missile lock, getting one for just a moment and hitting the button.

A Skyfire heatseeking missile lanced out from the right-side wing of his Viper aiming at the Zinj no more than a mile away—

 

* * *

 

Missile lock!
went the warning indicator and it was so close Idris could
see
it. He hit the flare button and slammed his throttle forwards, both of his supercharged turboprop engines going to maximum as he banked the Djinn into a hard right turn.

A second or two later the missile blew past, distracted by the flare Idris had released. He kept with his turn, bringing his plane toward the Viper, racing head-on with Idris slightly below. He opened up, both of his wing-mounted Gatling guns sending streams of red tracers at the underside of the Viper as it flashed over him. Sparks showed that something had hit and then the Viper was past him.

No big. Idris turned, wheeling his Djinn around, aiming to get on the Viper’s six – but where
was
the infidel?

 

* * *

 

O’Connor had aimed his plane up, hitting the afterburner. He couldn’t fly in as tight a circle as the Djinn, but he could apply more power and go faster. Now he looped down, firing for a moment at another Djinn that passed in front of him fighting someone else. Where was
his
one?

Ah. Turning upwards, in the lower right corner of O’Connor’s canopy view. He aimed down, hit the cannon—

 

* * *

 

Thirty-millimeter shells pounded into the left wing, its left engine and then the top of the fuselage of Idris’ plane. He didn’t need digital indicators to know it was bad, because his left engine was burning.

Frantically his right hand pounded on the fire extinguisher button, although that was supposed to work automatically. His left hand focused on the stick—

His left-side engine exploded. Feeding power to the right-side, but he’d taken hits on the rudder and the left-wing control planes—

A part of the Djinn’s left wing peeled away, no doubt damaged critically by the engine’s explosion.

Fuck. Fucking infidel
.

Idris hit the eject button.

 

* * *

 

“GOT HIM!” O’Connor exalted as the Zinj pilot ejected, a parachute opening above him. He took his right hand from the throttle for just a moment to pound a fist in the air, a broad grin on his face.

He could see the Zinj pilot only a few hundred yards away, a dark dot under the parachute. Didn’t want to fly too close, jet wash could mess with the parachute, but he aimed to within a couple of hundred yards, slowing the plane and waggling his wings a couple of times in salute.

“You flew well with what you had,” O’Connor said.

Missile lock
came the warning.

This fight wasn’t over. He hit afterburners, banked away from the defeated enemy warrior, went looking for the next Zinj.

 

* * *

 

‘Icefish’ Hauraki looked at his radar, filtered the chaos of radio communications for a moment to make sense of what had been happening here. The two fights had merged as the Zinj ground attackers had fought for height; the combat had disintegrated into a blazing twenty-plane furball.

But his Skulls had been more successful than not, so far. From what he could gather six – half – of the Zinj planes were down, for the loss of only one of his own.

Of course, one was too many. He hoped ‘Rumble’ Yoko had ejected successfully and would make it back somehow.

A Zinj crossed his sights about a mile away and he opened up, turning his plane and his cannon to aim the shells into the bastard’s flight path.

And it looked like they were running, exchanging height for eastwards speed and fleeing.

“Chase them?” asked Mordar. As she would. His indicators showed she was already turning—

One of the fleeing Zinj exploded. Somebody – Castle? – on the radio net cheered.

“No. We’ve got something on the ground. Let’s help those cavalry. Dollar, you and Junkie stay high cover in case they come back; Junkie’s wing lead. Sauron, I’m joining C Flight downstairs. Good job everyone, but this ain’t over – there’s a convoy on the ground that needs to make it home.”

 

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