26
4:14 a.m., Colorado Springs, Colorado
It took Rhonda a while to push through the heavy cobwebs of sleep and realize that a phone was ringing.
Suddenly wide awake, she sat up in bed and looked around the room, lit only by a tiny slice of light from under the bathroom door.
A hotel-room bathroom door. And not her hotel room.
A strong arm reached out and wrapped around her waist, pulling her back down beside him.
“Wake up—your phone’s ringing,” she said. When he cinched his arm tighter, she rolled away from him and out of bed. “Get the phone,” she repeated.
“Time is it?” he mumbled into his pillow.
She glanced at the bedside alarm. “Four fifteen.”
He rolled onto his back, then dragged his hands roughly over his face. “This can’t be good.”
He reached for his phone and, after some fumbling, turned on the bedside lamp. “’Lo,” he said softly as she scooped her nightgown off the floor and headed for the bathroom.
Once inside, she dragged on her shift, then stared at herself in the mirror.
Her hair was a mess. She still felt a little boneless. And she had . . . She squinted and leaned closer to the mirror to get a better look.
“Oh. My. God.”
A hickey on her left breast peeked above the top of her nightie. Heat flooded her face, and she closed her eyes. Unfortunately, she remembered asking him to give her one. Asking him to mark her in the heat of a very rowdy and arousing act that had apparently made her crazy.
“Rhonda.” His voice carried loud and clear through the bathroom door, and he sounded wide awake now. When she stepped out into the bedroom, he was already out of bed and stepping into his boxers. “You need to get dressed. Get your things together. We’re moving out.”
“What’s going on? Oh, God, did something happen with Eva?”
“No.” He glanced over his shoulder, then crossed the room to her. “This has nothing to do with what’s going on back at Langley.” He pulled her into his arms and lowered his cheek to the top of her head. “Eva’s fine. We’ve had a change in orders.”
“What kind of change?”
He stepped back and cupped her shoulders in his hands. “All I know is that we’re no longer going to Utah.”
“Where are we going?”
“I don’t know. I’ll tell you everything Nate told me on the way to the airport; right now, we need to boogie. We’re going wheels up at five fifteen.”
Then he kissed her. “Meet me here in half an hour.”
• • •
A U.S. Air Force pilot stood beside the open air door of a small business jet that was revved up and waiting for them. The pilot appeared to be in his early fifties, and, as expected from the Air Force, he was fit and trim in his flight suit.
“Captain Ramsey.” Coop extended a hand after reading the pilot’s nameplate on his breast pocket. He had to shout to be heard above the jet engine’s roar. “Cooper and Burns, reporting as instructed.”
“’Morning, sir, ma’am.” Ramsey returned Coop’s handshake, then shook Rhonda’s hand. “I’ll need to see some ID, please. Then we can get airborne.”
Coop dug into his hip pocket for his wallet and credentials, while Rhonda produced hers from her purse.
Ramsey looked them over, handed them back with a nod, and lifted his hand, inviting them to board. “I’ll take care of that luggage, sir, ma’am.”
They’d both traveled light, with only one bag apiece plus Rhonda’s tablet and purse, which had made for quick packing.
“I didn’t know that the Air Force flies private jets these days,” Coop said, fishing for information as Ramsey closed the air stairs behind them, shutting out the bulk of the engine noise.
“Some days we do, sir,” Ramsey replied without any inflection that might reveal if this was par for the course or as out of sync as it felt to Coop.
“First Lieutenant Baxter,” Ramsey said with a nod toward the cockpit, where the copilot sat.
Baxter was younger but no less professional than Ramsey, although he did execute a classic double take when he got an eyeful of the Bombshell. “Welcome aboard,” he said, then turned back to the instrument panel and his preflight checklist.
“If you’d be kind enough to buckle up,” Ramsey instructed, “we’ll get you to your destination.”
“And where exactly would that be?” Coop asked.
Ramsey slipped into the cockpit as if he hadn’t heard him and shut the door.
“The plot thickens,” Rhonda said dryly. “Did you notice the windows?”
Yeah. He had. They’d all been painted black—on the outside, to make certain no one inside could scrape it off. “I think this is what you call running blind,” he said.
“Ya think?” Her eyes were wide and more than a little nervous. “What’s going on?”
Coop lifted a shoulder as the Gulfstream eased forward and started taxiing down the runway. “Blackout measures are generally reserved for night ops, so the bad guys can’t see you coming. And Air Force personnel flying a civilian jet? I’ve got no explanation for that.”
“Does this happen often? Last-minute schedule changes, all this cloak-and-dagger?”
Thoughtful, he shook his head. “While it’s unusual to go into a job without being prepped, it isn’t unheard of. And the hush-hush nature of this reassignment tells me it’s something big.”
“What exactly did Nate say when he called?”
“Just that there’d been a change of plans. Something with higher priority had come up, and Utah was off the agenda. He said that at this point, information would be available on a need-to-know basis. Guess he feels we don’t need to know yet.”
He felt the g-force as the jet reached liftoff speed, and then they were airborne.
He glanced at Rhonda, who was gnawing on her lower lip but looking a little badass in spite of it. For a change, she actually looked the part of a commando. Well, sort of. She’d topped black boots and pants with a black sweater—another vintage angora—and a black wool scarf that she’d tucked into a black leather jacket. She could almost be his clone—except her sweater had much nicer bumps than his black T-shirt.
He had to quit thinking about how hot she was and about the ride she’d taken him on last night.
He got his head back in the game. “Look, Nate’s not sending you on any mission you’re not qualified to handle. We’re not going to be in any danger.”
“I hadn’t even thought of that,” she said. “I just don’t like going into an assignment unprepared. What if this is some kind of, I don’t know, baptism by fire? What if he’s setting me up to fail?”
“You’ve got a bit of a problem with paranoia, you know that?”
“Just exploring all the possibilities.”
“In the first place, Nate doesn’t operate that way. In the second, you’re an ace at what you do. This is no baptism by fire. This is not about you. So relax.”
“Right. I’ll just sit here and stare at the black window and think happy thoughts.”
He grinned. “Might be a better use of your time if you’d try to catch a few winks. We didn’t exactly sleep much last night.”
Her gaze shot to the cockpit door before she glared at him.
“They can’t hear us.” He grinned again.
“They can if the cabin’s bugged.”
“P. A. R. A. N. O.—”
“Stop it. I’m cautious. And I don’t like being kept in the dark. Surely you’ve got some idea about what’s going on.”
He shrugged. “If I were to hazard a guess, somebody—NSA, Homeland Security, whoever—picked up something out of the ordinary that concerns security at one of our top secret bases. So we’ve been rerouted to check it out.”
She mulled that over. “Okay. I can see that.”
“That’s just a best guess; I may be way off. So we should try to get some sleep.”
Then he closed his eyes and hoped she’d do the same.
• • •
Rhonda couldn’t sleep; she was too wired. When they touched down less than two hours later, she was the first one out of the jet. Cooper followed right behind her.
The sun burned bright, and a cold wind stung her face as she took in their surroundings. She’d never been to the proverbial middle of nowhere before, but this just might be it. The airstrip appeared to be at the bottom of a shallow crater or an empty lake bed.
She bundled her jacket tighter around her and squinted at the cold, barren landscape resembling the moon’s surface.
A handful of armed guards were positioned around the landing strip, and as she looked farther out, she spotted more uniformed men standing guard above them on the lip of the crater—or whatever it was they were in. Floodlights and air horns hung suspended from tall poles. And everywhere she looked, they were surrounded by tall, heavy-gauge chain-link and barbed-wire fencing.
“Holy crap,” Cooper muttered. “No wonder Nate wanted this hush-hush.”
She spun to face him. “You know where we are?”
“Indeed I do.” He turned in a slow circle, taking everything in. “It’s frickin’ Area Fifty-One.”
She stared at him for a long, doubtful moment before realizing that he was dead serious. “Area Fifty-One? As in flying saucers? Aliens? Roswell?”
“Add supersecret weapons and an aircraft research and testing facility, and you’ve got yourself a bingo.”
“Holy crap is right.”
While legends abounded regarding the alleged flying-saucer crash here in 1947 and the highly speculative government cover-up of the incident, the Area 51 military and research facility in Nevada was very real. Few people, however, ever got to see it up close and personal.
“Tell me what you think you know about the Groom Lake facility,” Cooper said.
It took her several moments to collect herself, then sift through the stockpile of intelligence she’d gathered during her years at the NSA. “It’s covered by approximately fifty square miles of restricted airspace, for starters. Originally, it was an extension of Edwards Air Force Base, and it shares a border with the Yucca Flat region of the Nevada Nuclear Test Site.”
“And,” he prompted.
“Well, it’s a salt flat that’s been used for runways for the Nellis Bombing Range Test Site. It was also a CIA test facility for several unsuccessful projects, and the government didn’t admit it even existed until the last decade. Supposedly, they only ’fessed up then because any top secret operation or developmental projects had been shut down. Oh, and when aircraft talk to the tower at the air base, the controllers ID themselves only as Dreamland. And once upon a time, the base housed the Air Force’s super-top-secret aeronautical facility,” she finished. “They invented much of our new avionics technology here.”
“Yup. There’s all kinds of technology that our enemies would kill to get their hands on.”
“If it were still developed here,” she said.
The look he gave her sent a chill down her spine. “Tell me something,” he said thoughtfully. “Where’s the best place to hide something?”
She immediately saw where he was going. “In plain sight.”
He nodded again.
“So . . . no matter what Uncle tells the world, you’re thinking . . .”
“Exactly what you’re thinking. That the basic mission here is still to support the development, testing, and training phases for new aircraft weapons systems or research projects, after they’ve been approved by the Pentagon.”
“But if that’s the case, why are we here? Why would they risk anyone outside their tightly vetted teams finding out that the facility is still in operation?”
His eyes met hers, leaving no doubt in her mind that he thought he had the answer.
Before he could share his thoughts, Ramsey joined them and handed them their luggage. Then he reached into a pocket in his flight suit, produced a small sealed envelope, and handed it to Cooper. “You’ll find your answers inside. Good luck.” Without another word of explanation, he climbed back up the air stairs and pulled them closed behind him.
“Why do I get the feeling something big is about to happen?” Rhonda asked as they watched the jet streak down the runway, then lift off.
Coop opened the envelope, then tipped it upside down. A zip drive fell into his cupped palm, followed by a sealed envelope addressed to the head of security.
And as a Humvee raced down the tarmac toward them, Rhonda said, “I’m starting to feel like I’m in a Tom Clancy novel.”