"Twenty-two hundred," Giordino droned as he read aloud the altitude in meters and the airspeed in knots. "Speed five-twenty."
The ocean was rising rapidly, the scattered whitecaps growing larger. They darted through a wisp of cloud. There was almost no sensation of speed except for the screaming engines that Pitt held on full power. It was next to impossible to judge 'height above water. Pitt put his faith in Giordino, who in turn relied on the instruments to warn him when to pull level.
"Where are they?" he asked into his microphone.
"This is Ray Simpson, Dirk," came the voice of the commander who had briefed them on the Ibis. "I'll talk you in."
"Where are they?" Pitt repeated.
"Thirty kilometers and closing fast."
"I'm not surprised," said Pitt. "They can't be more than a thousand knots faster than this bus."
"Fifteen hundred," read Giordino. "Speed five-ninety."
"I wish I'd read the flight manual," Pitt muttered under his breath.
"Twelve hundred meters. Speed six-fifty. Looking good."
"How do you know?"
"It seemed the thing to say." Giordino shrugged.
At that instant, an alarm gong began sounding in the cockpit. They had taken the aircraft beyond its safety limits into the realm of the unknown.
"One thousand meters. Speed seven-forty. Wings, don't fail us now."
Now within visible range, the lead Japanese aircraft's pilot centered the red dot that appeared in his targeting system's TV monitor on the diving tilt-turbine. The optical computer took over the firing sequence and launched the missile.
"Air-to-air missile on the way," Simpson warned them in an ominous voice.
"Alert me when it's closed to within one kilometer," ordered Pitt quickly.
"Six hundred meters," Giordino warned Pitt. "Speed eight hundred. Now is the time."
Pitt did not waste his breath on a reply but pulled back on the control column. The tilt-rotor responded as if it was a glider gripped by a giant hand. Smoothly, in a perfectly curved arc, it swooped into level flight perilously low, less than seventy meters above the water.
"Missile closing, three kilometers," Simpson said, his voice flat and empty.
"Al, begin maximum tilt to engines." Pitt hesitated.
Almost instantly, it seemed, Simpson called out, "One kilometer."
"Now."
Giordino shoved the levers that tilted the engines from horizontal to full vertical.
The aircraft seemed to shoot from level flight into a near ninety-degree angle upward. The tilt-turbine shuddered as everyone was thrown forward under the sudden change in momentum and the skyward pull of the engines still turning on full power.
The missile streaked beneath, missing the aircraft's belly by less than two meters. And then it was gone, flashing away and eventually falling into the sea.
"Nice work," complimented Simpson. "You're coming within range of our Vulcan. Try to stay low so we have an open field of fire above you."
"It'll take time to swing this bus back to level flight on the deck," Pitt told Simpson, frustration displayed on the furrowed lines of his face. "I've lost my airspeed."
Giordino returned the jet turbines to horizontal as Pitt nosed the aircraft over. It leveled and screamed a scant twenty meters over the water toward the looming outline of the ship. From Pitt's view, hurtling across the wave tops, it looked like a stationary paper ship on a plastic sea.
"Aircraft closing but no indication of a missile launch," came Simpson's anxious voice. "They're delaying until the last second to compensate for your next maneuver. You'd better hit the deck and damned fast."