I tentatively agree that @MonkeyZues provided a good solution, but it was not as straight forward as implied.
First, the installed drip cap is mechanically held in place by a lip that tucks under the siding above (see example below): simply removing nails was not sufficient to slide it out. To extract all of drip cap, I had to remove either the siding above or window header below. On top of that, the size of this OEM drip cap is no long stock material at home supply or moulding centers (local or online). What is available is the right shape, but not the right size. For my 100+ year old house, to replicate the OEM drip cap (which had disintegrated its extraction), it had to be fabricated from scratch.
While I was able to make a replacement part, install by removing the window header, and consider it a "proper" solution,...I would NOT recommend it as a "preferred" solution if the drip cap can be repaired.
In this specific case, @MonkeyZues is right, the drip cap was in terrible shape and needed to be replaced, but it came with the risk of having to remove and reinstall 20ft span of siding, which is not manageable with one person and one ladder. Which is why on another less rotted drip cap, I simply restored with rotted-wood restorer and wood filler and many new coats of paint.