The telephone rang at 3:08 a.m.
The occupant of the house one mile from Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., got up out of his bed and answered the telephone in the kitchen of his house.
Once he answered, the caller hung up.
The occupant of the house hung up the phone, sighed, and went back to bed in the darkness of the house.
Five minutes later, someone knocked at the door.
The man got up out of bed and started to the door. He then went back to put on a bathrobe, since he slept naked.
The man turned on the porch light and opened his front door.
Standing outside the house was a young man dressed in the uniform of the U.S. Air Force. He wore two stripes to indicate that he was a corporal. A nondescript gray sedan was parked in his driveway behind his Cadillac convertible, its engine running and its headlights on.
"Dr. Manville?" said the private.
The corporal greeted a tall 30-year-old man, his dark hair askew. His blue eyes were clouded from the way he was awakened.
"What does the Air Force want at ... quarter after 3 in the morning?"
"This is for you, sir," said the corporal.
The corporal handed Manville an envelope on which the words DR. LANCE MANVILLE and EYES ONLY were printed.
Manville took the envelope and regarded the corporal. "I hope you're not expecting a tip."
"No, sir. Good night, sir." The corporal started to salute, stopped, then turned and left.
Manville stared at the envelope for a moment, then shut off the outside light and went back into his house.
Manville sat at the couch in his living room and opened the envelope. Inside was a letter:
TO: Dr. Lance Manville
FROM: Lt. Gen. R.J. Grover, USAF
SUBJECT: Instructions β TOP SECRET β EYES ONLY
(1) You are instructed to fly immediately to 37o14'06" N 115o48'40" E. A map to your destination will be provided at the airstrip.
(2) You will fly Air Force 55-3937.
(3) Your callsign will be Air Force 3937.
(4) When you reach the assigned coordinates you will tune your transponder to 453.85 MHZ and signal Sage Control. ATC will give you landing instructions.
(5) You will be meeting with myself and a group of civilians regarding a special assignment immediately upon arrival.
Manville sighed and walked toward his bathroom, needing a shower to wake up.
He put on his Air Force-issue olive green flight suit and boots. He grabbed his flight bag, not knowing if he'd need extra equipment once he got to Edwards since he didn't know what he was flying, or how long he'd be at Nellis.
Manville gazed longingly at his coffee pot as he walked through the kitchen on the way to his car port. He didn't have time for coffee, and he suspected he could get some when he got to Nevada, which was going to take only slightly longer than brewing a pot.
Manville opened the passenger door of the Cadillac and threw his flight suit on the seat. He went around to the driver's-side door, got in, started the car, and dropped the top, figuring the drive in the cold night desert air would wake him up.
Air Force 3937 turned out to be a North American F-86 Sabre fighter jet. Manville figured that Grover, just one state over, wanted to see him in one hell of a hurry. The Sabre had neither drop tanks nor rockets mounted on the underside of its wings.
"Where should I put this?" asked Manville, holding up his flight bag.
"I'll put it in the bomb bay, sir," said the private. "As long as you don't open the bomb bay doors, you'll be fine."
"Hope I'm not going into combat with this."
"Sir?"
"You didn't give me any rockets."
"I wasn't told to load them, sir."
"You also didn't give me any drop tanks."
"I wasn't told to ..."
"... load them, sir," interrupted Manville.
As he got into the Sabre, Manville noticed an envelope lying on the pilot's seat. He grabbed the envelope, got in, and then opened the envelope. It contained the map to where he was flying, with the location a red dot with a black circle in southern Nevada.
Manville went through the preflight checklist, then hit the starter switch. The whine of the starter gave way to the louder whine of the General Electric J73-GE-3 engine as its 9,250 pound-feet of thrust warmed up.
Manville's flight from California to Nevada was one of the more unusual flights he'd made. He got to the latitude and longitude, but from what he could see he appeared to be flying over nothing. Once he got past the lights of Las Vegas, the sky was as dark as the ground.
Nevertheless, he set the radio to the assigned frequency. "Sage Control, this is Air Force three-niner-three-seven. Sage Control, this is Air Force three-niner-three-seven. Request landing instructions."
Just before he was about to call again, the radio spoke. "Air Force three-niner-three-seven, turn left to three-six-zero and reduce altitude to five-zero-zero."
Manville turned to 360 degrees and dropped to 500 feet. Suddenly, below him the landing strip's lights lit up.
"Air Force three-seven, you are cleared to land."
Manville put the Sabre onto the tarmac at its maximum landing speed of 145 mph, having had seconds of notice of where the runway was. When his plane had nearly stopped, the landing lights went out again.
Ahead of him was two sets of orange beams, coming from the flashlights of a member of the ground crew. The crewman pointed Manville down a taxiway.