The Captain Who Used Ice When The Air Force Reached For Fire-olive

The heat inside Hangar 7 had weight.

It sat on shoulders, crawled under collars, and turned every breath into work.

Under the corrugated roof, the Air Force’s newest test fighter sat in the center of the concrete floor with a man trapped inside it.

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The FX-9 Interceptor was supposed to be the future, but that afternoon it had become an oven.

Lieutenant Greg Davis was locked under the reinforced canopy, strapped into the cockpit after a routine ground test had gone wrong.

The jet’s computer believed it was in a chemical warfare emergency.

It had shut down external communications, sealed the canopy, cut life support to preserve battery, and driven six titanium bolts into the frame.

The men outside had been fighting it for nearly two hours.

Commander Ralph Bowman had sweat running down his jaw and anger burning through whatever calm he had left.

Colin Hayes, the biggest pilot in the hangar, leaned his full weight onto a crowbar wedged under the canopy lip.

David Miller stood beside the schematics tablet, reading warnings nobody wanted to hear.

Inside the cockpit, Greg had started out furious.

He had shouted through the glass until his voice went thin.

He had beaten his fists against the canopy until the skin split over his knuckles.

Now he was quiet.

His blond hair was pasted to his skull.

His face was too red, then too pale, then a sick color somewhere between the two.

His chest moved in short, shallow pulls.

Captain Nevada Young watched from an overturned munitions crate near the hangar doors.

She had coffee in one hand and six hours of flight fatigue sitting in her bones.

The coffee tasted like burned plastic, but she drank it anyway because it was the only thing in the room that did not demand an answer.

Her heel had a fresh blister, and every step inside her boot felt like a small wire cutting skin.

She wanted a shower and a bed, but instead she watched four decorated men try to beat physics with pride.

Bowman shouted, “Pry it again.”

Hayes leaned harder.

The crowbar slipped, and his elbow struck the fuselage with a sound that made everyone look away for half a second.

“It’s not giving,” Hayes said, breathing hard.

Miller wiped sweat from his forehead and pointed at the tablet.

“The spreader already warped the frame,” he said.

“Then bring the grinder,” Bowman snapped.

Miller’s face tightened.

“There is an ordnance line under the forward latch.”

Bowman turned on him.

“Then tell me what you want to do while he dies.”

That was when Nevada put her cup down.

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