and owed him a tweaking or two.

“Tex Woods and I go way back,” Samson told Catsman.

“Disturbing his sleep would be one of life’s little pleasures.”

Catsman gave him a tally of the warheads that had been recovered and a rundown on the overall situation; her briefing was, in fact, extremely thorough. And when she turned to tell a civilian at a console to make the connection to Bastian, the colonel came on almost instantaneously, his half-shaven face filling the main screen.

“General, I need to update you on a serious situation,” said the colonel from the cockpit of his Megafortress.

“Very good, Colonel. Fire away,” said Samson, noting the serious and, he thought, slightly subservient tone. Bastian was getting the message.

“We’ve engaged Chinese fighters,” Dog told him.

Samson felt his jaw lock as Colonel Bastian continued, explaining everything that had happened. The engagement surely was necessary — the alternative was to be shot down — but as Colonel Bastian freely admitted, it went against the standing orders not to engage the Chinese.

And then Bastian told him about the incident at the Pakistani farmhouse.

“Jesus, Bastian! What are your people trying to do?” bellowed the general. “Do you know how that’s going to look? Can you imagine when the media gets hold of this? My God!”

Dog explained that they had video of the incident that would back them up. Samson felt as if a sinkhole had opened beneath his feet.

“Admiral Woods knows about the incident,” Dog added. “He’s ordered our men back to Base Camp One. But I needed one to help check the lake where the warhead is.”

At least it’s not just my orders he disregards, Samson thought.

“That’s our situation,” said Dog. “Things are a little busy here, General. If you don’t mind I’m going to get back to work.”

“Yes,” said Samson, not sure what else to say.

“Admiral Woods for you, General,” said Catsman as the screen changed back to a large-scale situation map. “He’s a little piqued at being woken. I told him you wanted to give him an important update.”

“I might as well talk to him now,” said Samson sarcastically. “While he’s in a good mood.”

Aboard Dreamland Bennett, over Pakistan 2357

Starship took two quick passes over the group at the lake to get an idea of how many men were there and what other surprises they might have.

There were nine. He could see Kalashnikovs and one grenade launcher, but no more Stinger missiles. Two or three pack animals — from the air they looked like camels, though the pilot suspected they were donkeys — were tied together a short distance away.

Starship pushed the Flighthawk closer to the earth as he widened his orbit, trying to find supporting units that might be hiding in the jagged rocks nearby. There were no roads that he could see, and if there was a warm body in the neighborhood, the infrared scan couldn’t find it.

The mountains were as desolate as anyplace on earth, emptier even than the desert where most of the warheads had landed. The nearest village looked to be a collection of hovels pushed against a ravine about five miles to the east. A road twisted about a mile below the settlement; Starship spotted two paths connecting them but found no one on them.

“Should I take these guys out, Colonel, or what?”

“Let’s wait until the Osprey is a little closer,” Dog told him. “They may pull the warhead from the lake and save us some work.”

“Roger that.”

* * *

Dog decided it was prudent to keep the Bennett well above the ground, establishing an orbit around the area at 40,000 feet, high enough that the black Megafortress could neither be seen nor heard from the ground. With the Osprey still about an hour away, he had the two radar operators take short breaks, sending Sullivan back to monitor their equipment while they got some coffee and relaxed for a few minutes. It wasn’t much of a break, but it relieved the monotony a bit and let them know he was thinking of them. They were warming to him slightly, but he still wouldn’t have gotten many votes for commander of the month.

The Dreamland Command channel buzzed with an incoming message from General Samson.

“Colonel Bastian, good morning again.”

“It’s just about midnight here, General.”

“Woods is not particularly pleased, but I think he’ll accept the fact that you had no choice but to shoot down the Chinese. What the hell are they up to?”

“I’m not sure. I haven’t spoken to Jed Barclay about it. He may have an opinion.”

“Jed Barclay?”

Dog explained who Jed Barclay was and how he liaisoned with the different agencies involved in operations.

“Well, I’ll see what he knows,” said Samson.

“There’s one other thing,” said Dog, sensing that Samson was about to sign off.

“Well?”

“We still have two crewmen missing. The Navy has been doing the search but—”

“Where are they missing?”

“The mid-Indian coast. I’d like to supplement that. I’d like to dedicate one of our radar surveillance planes full-time to the mission.”

“Recovering the warheads takes precedence. The President wants that done. That’s where your efforts have to be concentrated.”

“They’re our people, sir. No offense meant to the Navy.”

Samson frowned. “I’ll talk to Woods. We’ll get a better effort out of them.”

“I don’t mean that they’re doing a bad job,” said Dog. “Just that we can help them do a better one.”

“I told you I’ll take care of it,” said Samson. “Keep me updated.”

The screen blanked.

“Nice to talk to you too,” said Dog.

Aboard Marine Osprey Angry Bear One, over western Pakistan 0130, 18 January 1998

Jennifer Gleason balanced the laptop between her legs, squinting at the close-set type as she continued her doctorate-level briefing in rocket science.

Or more specifically, rocket-guidance electronics, and how they interacted with T waves.

While the T-Rays had fried most of the missile’s circuitry, one of the solenoid valves and two electronic level sensors — parts used in the rocket motor itself — had apparently escaped damage. The experts at Dreamland theorized that something had inadvertently shielded these pieces. Jennifer hadn’t spotted any sign of deliberate shielding, she could not see a difference between the unaffected solenoid valve and another unit that had failed.

The first reaction at Dreamland was that she must have missed something, and they forwarded her reams of technical data. Having now read six different papers explaining how the systems worked, she had enough background to be as confused as the experts.

One of the T-Ray experts believed that whatever had shielded the parts simply vaporized during the crash. This seemed plausible, especially if what shielded the components had actually been part of something else, such as a temperature monitor for one of the fuel tanks. The shields used by the Megafortresses were not thick pieces of lead or other heavy metal, but a thin mesh of wires that ran current when the T-Rays hit. The shields were “tuned” to catch the radiation in the way a sound-canceling machine “caught” or neutralized sound; the shield’s trough effectively neutralized the T-Ray’s mountain peak. A thin-wire temperature sensor, or perhaps a radio antenna, might have accidentally provided a partial shield.

Jennifer thought it more likely that there wasn’t enough information about how the T-Rays worked, and that

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