"Boomer Five-oh-five, this is Two-nine Bravo," Colonel Tom Courville said into his mic, calling the lead F-35 as each approached Joint Base Pearl Harbor.
"Five-oh-five, go."
"We're only getting some low level VHF, commercial chatter. Nothing on UHF or Z-band, no VOR/TAC. We've got three very low level search radars targeted, but no long range stuff. You picking up anything?"
Lieutenant Bob Sandusky, leading the reconstituted VA-165 "Boomers" back to Pearl, was now about fifty miles north of Two-nine Bravo, directly over Honolulu. "Nothing except VHF, the radars are so low power they're barely registering."
"What does Pearl look like? Can you see anything?"
"Several ships in harbor, looks like a small carrier heading out. Uh, I'm gonna go down, make a high speed pass, see if I can get some eyeballs on the field...looks like some unusual traffic down there."
"Okay, Five-oh-five, we'll go active ECM and jam 'em from here." He looked to his co-pilot, saw her telling the EWO, the electronics warfare officer, to light up all the shoreside scanners, then he got back to Five-of-five: "Alright, we're active now. Start your run."
"Roger." Sandusky reefed the F-35 into a long, arcing descent, let his speed build up to mach 1.2 as he lined up on what he hoped would be PNL's runway 4. Ten miles out and two hundred feet above the ground, he flew straight for Hickam's tower, but as he flew by his stomach knotted. He kept flying right over the city and roared past Diamond Head before he went ballistic, the F-35 going straight up into the sky before leveling out at twenty thousand feet.
Sandusky shook his head, tried to come to terms with what he'd just seen, then he got on the radio. "Five-oh-five, Two-niner Bravo."
"Bravo, go."
"Uh, ramp at Hickam had a few B-17s, a couple of squadrons of P-40s, I think an old Brewster Buffalo, and a couple of float planes. Maybe they were called Kingfishers. Bunch of battleships are lined up in the harbor, and I saw nothing of PNL. No ramps, no runways, but I think I saw an old Pan Am Clipper coming in."
"Bravo received." Courville looked at Sinclair, then shook his head.
"Just like that old 80s movie, The Final Countdown," she said. "I used to have it on my phone."
"Yeah, right. What freq is Kilo Echo on?"
"243.3"
Courville dialed in the numbers, called the refueling tanker, told them what the F-35 had just reported and to pass it on the other F-35s and the Qantas jet, then he switched back to Five-oh-five's frequency. "Five-oh-five, can you estimate how much runway we've got?"
"I'd say five thousand max. Those B-17s used to eat up a bunch of concrete, but not like a 767 or that 380."
"Okay. I'm going to enter the pattern, uh, start our downwind out over Diamond Head. Why don't you hang around and show the flag, in case anyone wants to start shooting..."
"Roger that...uh...looks like two P-40s taking off now. I'll go down and keep 'em company now. Uh, you guy's carrying?"
"Yup, four B-85 warheads onboard. 200 megatons each."
"Swell."
"Starting our checklist now. Let me know if those -40s look like they're getting angry."
"Roger." Sandusky watched the Curtis P-40s retract their gears and start to climb as he came in behind them, and he dropped some flaps to help bleed off more speed. The P-40 pilots apparently had no idea he was behind them as he nudged his throttle and squeezed in between them, and the pilot on his left stared at him as he pulled alongside. Sandusky reached for the landing gear lever and flipped it down, dropping his landing gears in the universal "I'm not a threat" configuration, then the guy on his left indicated Sandusky should follow him down; Sandusky watched as the other P-40 fell in behind his aircraft, then he looked towards Diamond Head and saw the B-2 flip on it's landing lights.
"Okay, Bravo, I've put the gears down and am following their lead back around for final. I've got your lights and the pattern looks clear, as far as I can tell, anyway."
"Okay. I'm gonna head out west a little and extend our final. When you get down let 'em know they've got a lot of traffic coming in, including that heavy. Better warn their fire crews in case that runway isn't long enough."
"Roger that. Good luck, Bravo. I'll stay on this frequency until you're down."
"Roger, and you too, Amigo. See you in a few."
+++++
Todd Parks and Sara Goodman stood as if frozen beside their telescopes in the middle of an open courtyard; June, the almost blind seven year old girl, sat nearby on a vast tile floor, hyperventilating. It was dark outside, wherever it was they were, so it took a moment to orient themselves to this new space. As their eyes adapted to the dark, Sara walked over to what she thought was a wall, but she stopped suddenly and jumped back. "Whoa! We're up a few floors, and this is a low wall, so be careful."
Parks knelt beside June and held her; she was shivering now, plunging towards hysteria, and the little girl jumped when she felt Parks' hands on her shoulders. "What happened, Dr Todd?" was about all she managed to say...
"I don't know, darlin'. Something, uh, I don't know...strange happened, and we're not in the park anymore."
"Did we fall asleep?" the little girl whispered.
"Maybe, but I just don't know. I want you to sit right here...and don't move."
"Don't leave me, Dr Todd," she cried, "please, don't leave me!"
"Okay, put your arms around my neck," he said as he lifted her and held her close, then he stood and looked around the courtyard again -- and now he saw there was a man standing in a far corner -- looking at them. "Sara? Better come here."
"What is it?" she said, then she saw Todd pointing -- and she too saw the man in the corner.
The man took a few steps towards them, then stopped when he saw the computers on Parks' camp table; they were in 'night-vision mode' and so almost invisible, but Parks motioned to the man, in effect asked him to come closer. Much to Parks' surprise, the man did.
Both screens had immense star charts displayed and the old man leaned over and examined them, then grew almost enraptured, crying with effusive joy -- then an explosion of language burst forth from his lips at such speed both were left gasping.
"Is that Spanish?" Parks asked.
"I don't think so," Goodman said.