Chopper Ops

Chopper Ops by Mack Maloney Page B

Book: Chopper Ops by Mack Maloney Read Free Book Online
Authors: Mack Maloney
Tags: Fiction, Action & Adventure
Ads: Link
tearing holes in the dark sky; thunder rumbled, shaking the tarmac right down to its foundation. And the rain was coming down in torrents. Norton and Smitz ran through the deluge, heading for Hangar 2.
    "If you guys were so smart, you would have picked a better place to hide yourselves!" Norton yelled over at Smitz. "The weather here sucks!"
    "Who said we were smart?" Smitz yelled back without missing a beat.
    They finally reached the huge hangar and Smitz banged heavily on the front door. They could hear several techs struggling to open the big sliding piece of metal on the other side. Finally, the door was pulled back and the two men jumped inside.
    Norton yanked back his hood and wiped the rainwater from his eyes. When his vision cleared, he saw before him a very strange aircraft.
    Something ran through Norton at that moment; a jolt went from his head to his toes and back again. Was it adrenaline? A bit of lightning? Fear? He didn't know. But he staggered a bit, causing Smitz to reach out and catch him.
    "That's how I felt when I saw it too," Smitz said.
    Norton took a closer look. For a tiny instant, he thought he was looking at a jet aircraft here—an elderly A-6 Intruder, to be exact. Bathed in the weird greenish hue of the hangar's sodium lights, the snout of this odd aircraft, when viewed head-on, resembled the Intruder in a perverse way.
    But in the next blink Norton knew this was no A-6. He should be so lucky. No, this thing was a helicopter. The massive rotors were proof enough. But it was a copter that had wings as well. And the cockpit was actually a double-seat tandem setup—a place for a pilot in back and a gunner up front, with bug-eyed bubble glass all round. And the wheels, though looking like a fighter jets, were squat, their attending gear very heavy. And hanging off those stunted wings were multi-barreled guns and rocket dispensers. And hundreds of different attachments—antennas, speed vanes, gun muzzles, God knows what else—seemed to be poking out all over the fuselage.
    Norton blinked again. This thing was a beast—and it was staring right at him. And his first urge was to run, very fast and very far away.
    "Do you know what it is?" Smitz asked him.
    Yes, Norton replied. He knew exactly what it was.
    It was an Mi-24 Hind. A massive Russian-built helicopter gunship.
    "Where the fuck did you get this thing?" he asked Smitz incredulously.
    "I can't tell you that," Smitz replied. "The Russians built a couple thousand of these monsters. Let's just say we were able to procure a few."
    They walked further into the hangar. The techs who had spent all night putting the gunship together gave way with a nod from Smitz.
    "Grab some coffee, guys," he told them.
    Norton was simply awestruck by the size of the helicopter. It was huge. Much bigger than an Apache or a Cobra or any attack chopper of American design.
    "The Russians came up with this concept after studying our experience in Viet Nam," Smitz explained, "They saw the pickle we were in, landing troops into hot zones with only a few machine guns sticking out of our Hueys for cover. So they set out to build a combination gunship and troop carrier. That's why it's so big."
    They began walking around the machine.
    "It weighs 21,000 pounds empty," Smitz continued. "Got to be the weight of at least a couple Apaches."
    "At least," Norton said with a whistle.
    "Half inch of plating around the cockpit," Smitz went on, sounding not unlike a car salesman. "Protection for both gunner and pilot. The Russians were so afraid of getting their asses shot off in Afghanistan, they put the flight crew in steel bathtubs. Same thing for the engines and the guts. Supposedly you can take a 62-mm round in the power plants and keep flying."
    "Not bad," Norton mumbled.
    "Thick glass all round," Smitz continued. "Those windshields have more strength than the steel tub the crew sits in. They can stop a high-caliber bullet, maybe even a cannon round or two."
    "But this thing has

Similar Books

A Season of Hope

Christi Caldwell

Tangled

Emma Chase

The Struggle

L. J. Smith

Wide Awake

Shelly Crane

Georgia

Dawn Tripp

So Bad a Death

June Wright

Rafe

Amy Davies