"Boomer Lead! This is Two, do you read me?" Captain Doug Simmons cried out. He just seen Boomer Lead disappear β after hitting a huge black "ship" of some sort β at 35,000 feet. "Lead, Two, come in..."
"Three, two. Did he eject? I didn't see any kind of impact?"
"Two, three, no, nothing..."
"Two nine Bravo," Courville said, breaking into the frantic conversation between the remaining F-35s. "SitRep, NOW!"
"Two to Two-nine Bravo. A ship of some sort just came out of that cloud, several blue spheres came out all around it. I had eyes on Lead β when β he appeared to collide with the ship."
"Two niner received. That cloud formation is collapsing, and just where's that ship now? I don't have anything on radar?"
"Two, it's not on low power radar, Bravo. I see it dead ahead, but there's nothing on screen and zero heat signature. Lead appeared to hit the ship, but there's no impact debris, no 'chute, just nothing!"
"Bravo, where is the Japanese strike?"
"Four, Bravo, we're about twenty miles north of the island; I'm about a mile behind them."
"Bravo to Boomer group, see if you can turn 'em back to Pearl, get em on the ground without dropping ordnance. If not, let 'em splash."
"Two received. Form up on me."
"Three received."
"Four received. Uh, Bravo, I'm picking up air-to-air radars now, two incoming tracks still in the cloud, range 1-8-0, flight level 4-5, heading 0-9-0, speed 850 knots."
Sinclair looked at the threat board, the incoming radar frequencies were skipping through random bands, and that could only mean... "Colonel, those radars are frequency agile..."
"Tu-160s?" Courville said, dread behind the question.
"That, or PAK-DAs."
"How many are there?"
"I'll have to go active to see that, Colonel," she said. "We'll be visible."
"No choice. Do it."
Sinclair activated all the B-2s sensors, then flipped on the main, very high powered search radar. The effect was instantaneous: the Russian bombers activated their ECM suites and every radar within five hundred miles filled with clutter. "Okay," Sinclair said, "got 'em."
"Tell 'em," Courville said.
"Two nine Bravo to Boomer Lead," Sinclair transmitted. "Flight one is 15, repeat 1-5 PAK-DAs. Flight two is 30, repeat 3-0 Tu-160s. Flight three is 10, repeat 1-0 Bear Golfs and two Mainstays, but they're falling behind rapidly..."
"Two received. Colonel, what's our play?"
"Kilo Echo doesn't have enough runway to get airborne, so we'll have to tank on the ground..."
"Bravo, by the time we make that evolution those strikes will be halfway to California. They don't have fighter cover, so maybe we can turn 'em back."
'Turn 'em back?' Courville thought. "Why are they attacking," he said out loud, and Sinclair looked at him.
"Maybe they're just as confused as we are...were. They probably don't know where they are, or for that matter, 'when' they are..."
"But that formation?" Courville mused. "That's an attack profile, right down to the Bears and Mainstays. That can only mean..."
"That somehow our histories have changed. That we're at war."
"We could plot their course, let em get halfway to the mainland then airburst a warhead overhead. The EMP alone would..."
"But it's 1941! That's 21st century hardware out there...they have to have been transported here just like we were! If we just changed history by stopping the attack...how could..."
"Sandusky..." Courville said, lost as a thought passed through his mind, just out of reach. "That ship appears, Sandusky hits it, then all hell breaks loose."
"Boomer Two to Bravo. You still there?"
"Bravo, Two. What's that ship doing now?"
"Stand-by one." Boomer two reefed into a tight right turn, but the ship was gone, nowhere to be seen. He rolled to the left, reversed his turn, and...still nothing...but the cloud was different. "Two, bravo, the ship is gone, but the cloud β it's changing..."
"Bravo, Two, I see it. Looks like it's forming a ring, a circle, around the islands..." Courville looked-on in awe as the cloud sculpted itself before his eyes. First it flattened, like ultra high atmospheric pressure was pushing the structure down into the sea; now he could see the outlines of new, smaller clouds as they raced out from the base β forming the circle as they spread. But not only that: the base was receding, yet as it grew in height the cloud was moving inward...
Sinclair was looking too, her face awash in confusion. "It's forming a sphere," she said at last. "At least, half a sphere..."
"That's not a cloud," he said, his voice subdued.
"But..."
"Bravo, Two, get those Japanese aircraft on the ground somewhere, then get your birds back to Hickam as soon as you can, but don't go into those clouds." Courville scanned his horizon: the base of the circle was now almost complete, more clouds were being sucked into the structure β and he could see the form of a sphere taking shape before his eyes...and the color was changing...growing almost pure white as he watched...
"Colonel, we'd better get out of here," Sinclair said, looking back over her right shoulder. "It's getting pretty close back there..."
He craned his head back to the left, then forward, looking up as much as he could, and clouds were forming everywhere but dead ahead, even overhead. He could just make out Diamond Head, even the faintest outline of Pearl Harbor in the distance, but it was getting dark out β fast β and suddenly very noisy. He looked at the mission clock, shook his head. "It's stopped!" he yelled, pointing at the clock. They'd been airborne for less than two hours, the sun was just now warming the air, and yet it was getting as dark as night...and impossible to hear anything but a howling roar. But time had β stopped.
In an instant, Spirit Two-nine Bravo was wrapped in blinding snow and he felt like he was falling. Training kicked in, he went "on instruments" as he pushed the nose over and advanced the throttles. He barely heard the engines spooling up as he fought for control in the suddenly fierce turbulence...
"Overspeed! Retardβretard!" Audible warnings sounded, then something slammed into the aircraft, pushing it down, and Courville looked at the Vertical Rate ribbon: 2500 FPM down, no...3500 down...then he felt his stomach rolling...now 1500 up, 4500 up...
"You're losing it!" Sinclair yelled, watching him struggle to get control...
Courville shook his head, took his hands off the stick. "I have no control, zero thrust authority..." he said as he looked over at Sinclair, ashamed at having failed. She was looking dead ahead, her face locked in a trance-like mask, tears running openly down her face...
He looked ahead, out through the windscreen, and his eyes went wide. The aircraft was tumbling slowly β wing over wing, but ahead, just ahead, he saw a huge white sphere hanging in a night sky β and he saw stars everywhere. As the left wing arced "down" he looked out the cockpit and saw the earth far below...details on the ocean below were hard to make out as the earth tumbled out of view. When the left wing arced "up" again he saw this new moon, only it was very white, and very close, and it felt like they were falling again...falling down...into an impossibly white moon
+++++
"What is it?"