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Staying low, the whole formation flew on out over the Bering Sea at four hundred and fifty knots.

CVN-76 USS Ronald Reagan, Southeast of Hokkaido, Japan
Ninety Minutes Later

Surrounded by six Arleigh Burke — class guided missile destroyers and two Ticonderoga-class cruisers, the huge Nimitz-class aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan turned smoothly into the wind. Under a cloudless sky, it was almost pitch-black. The waning quarter moon would not rise for another half hour or so. Despite the darkness, none of the nine American warships were lit up. They were operating under strict wartime conditions.

Suddenly several tiny points of light appeared, then immediately shot down along the carrier’s deck and screamed into the sky. It was an F/A-18E Super Hornet launched by one of the Reagan’s steam catapults. Seconds later, another Super Hornet streaked aloft, visible only by its position lights. Launch after launch followed at regular intervals, using three of the carrier’s four catapults. As soon as each aircraft cleared the deck and configured for cruise, its regular position lights went out, replaced by night-vision-friendly position lights.

Within fifteen minutes, twenty-four Super Hornets and two EA-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft were airborne. Those launched earlier in the cycle orbited some miles ahead of the carrier group, waiting for the rest to form up. With that accomplished, all twenty-six planes of the navy strike force turned and flew northwest toward Hokkaido.

Police Station, Imeni Poliny Osipenko, Khabarovsk Region, Russia
That Same Time

Imeni Poliny Osipenko was a rural village on the left bank of the Amgun River, about eighteen kilometers north of the boundary of the Oldjikan State Nature Reserve. On either side of a two-lane paved highway, red- and blue-roofed houses, barns, and sheds lined dirt roads. Behind each little cluster of buildings lay fields sown in barley and wheat.

Tired after a ten-hour drive from Komsomolsk-on-Amur’s Dzemgi Air Base, Russian Air Force Lieutenant Nikolay Khryukin parked his mud-spattered UAZ Hunter jeep and climbed out from behind the steering wheel. He looked around in bored disdain. Until now, the isolated hamlet’s only connection to the Russian Air Force was the fact that in 1939 it had been renamed after Major Polina Osipenko, holder of a women’s flight record and a Hero of the Soviet Union. What an honor, he thought cynically. It was probably just as well Osipenko had been killed in a plane crash before the politicians made her pay a visit to this one-tractor dump.

Although the sun had only gone down a couple of hours before, most of the locals already seemed to be in bed, with all their lights off. Peasant farmers need to be up early to care for their crops, I suppose, Khryukin decided. He stretched his sore back and neck muscles and wished with all his heart that the local yokels had stuck closer to their dull labors — instead of scaring themselves half to death with nonsense and then screaming for help from the military authorities.

Khryukin scowled. Apparently, a couple of days ago, some students and their teacher had stumbled back into town from a nature hike in the Oldjikan reserve with some lunatic story about finding evidence of a secret space alien landing. Their shrill request for an official investigation had been bucked up the chain to land on his commanding officer’s desk this morning. So naturally, Colonel Federov had picked his least favorite subordinate for this wild-goose chase… one Nikolay Khryukin. He was the 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment’s meteorology officer, not an Su-35S combat pilot, and Federov harbored an instinctive dislike for those he considered “pencil pushers in uniform.”

“Go up there and settle their nerves, Lieutenant,” the colonel had ordered offhandedly. “These so-called UFO objects are probably just the remains of a weather balloon, so you’re the expert. Besides, it won’t hurt the air force to build a little goodwill with the locals… and it won’t hurt you to get out and see more of this beautiful Motherland of ours.”

Well, from what Khryukin had seen on his long, tedious drive to Imeni Poliny Osipenko along crappy roads, this part of the beautiful Motherland was trees, a lot more trees, swamp, and even more damned trees. With an audible sigh, he settled his high-peaked officer’s cap more firmly on his head and strode toward the police station.

The sergeant on duty, a thickset man whose uniform was about a size too small for him, was only too happy to see him. “I know you think we’re probably crazy,” he confided eagerly as he led Khryukin down a narrow hall to a locked storage room. “I thought so, too, until I clapped my own eyes on what those kids found out in the middle of the forest.” He fumbled for his keys, opened the door, flipped on the overhead light, and then stepped aside. “But check it out for yourself, Lieutenant.”

For a long moment, Khryukin just stood and stared at the strange artifacts the students had dug up. The most easily recognizable was the bundled remains of a large red-and-white parachute. No mystery there, he thought slowly. But what should he make of the other odd items, which included a man-sized suit of some peculiar shiny metal fabric and a helmet with a clear visor? Or that even weirder conical two-meter-wide shell covered in scorched and seared cloth on one side and some elastic substance on the other?

And then the understanding of what he saw hit him with full force. He whirled on the police sergeant. “I need a phone connection to Dzemgi Air Base! Right now!”

“See?” the policeman said, sounding pleased. “I told you it was aliens.”

“It’s not aliens, you idiot!” Khryukin snarled at him. “Those things belong to an American astronaut!”

Wolf Six-Two, over the North Pacific
A Short Time Later

Nadia Rozek glanced out the right side of the Ranger’s cockpit. The quarter moon hung there, just above the horizon. Its pale silvery light danced across the undulating surface of the ocean. She frowned. The moonlight was beautiful. But it was also dangerous, since that faint glow made it a bit easier for the enemy to spot her small group of jet-black aircraft as they darted in low over the water. It would have been marginally safer to make this flight into Russian territory on a moonless night. Unfortunately, the next such period was still several days away… and Brad was running out of time.

A warning tone sounded in her headset. “Monolit-B surface search radar detected at one o’clock,” her computer reported. “Estimated range is one hundred miles and closing.”

She punched up a menu on her threat-warning display and read through it quickly. “Nothing for us to worry about,” she assured Vasey. “This radar is assigned to the Russian K-300P Bastion coastal antiship missile battery on Matua.”

Vasey nodded his understanding. The lethal, long-range supersonic ship-killing missiles of the Bastion battery they’d detected were intended for use against the U.S. Navy’s aircraft carriers and surface warships. They could not engage aircraft.

Still, picking up that active Russian radar was a sign that they were standing into danger. Twenty minutes ago, already seven hundred nautical miles from Attu, they had altered their heading by ninety degrees. Now they were flying northwest, on a course that would cross the volcanic Kuril island chain right at the midpoint between northern Japan and Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula.

For the past several years, Gryzlov had been strengthening his garrisons scattered among the Kuril chain’s fifty-six mountainous islands — installing antiship batteries and antiaircraft missiles and radars at various places. His strategic goal was to seal off the Sea of Okhotsk and most of the far east region’s coast against intrusion by America’s naval forces. Fortunately, there were still a few weak spots in this island fortress barrier, at least for a small handful of stealth aircraft. The most powerful air search radars and long-range SAM units were based on the northernmost and southernmost islands, where they could protect Russia’s twin Pacific Fleet bases at Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and Vladivostok respectively. With a bit of luck and some help, the XCV-62 and its little flock of accompanying drones should be able to slide through where the enemy’s radar coverage was weakest, trusting to their stealth characteristics and nap-of-the-earth flight to avoid detection.