
Wainwright cut him off. “For twenty-two years I and others like me have been planning for their return,
Captain. President Truman empowered a group of us to investigate UFO sightings with the express
purpose of learning as much as we could about them and formulating a defense against them. It was a
top-secret program called Project Sign.”
The haunted look returned to the man’s eyes as he recalled memories from long ago. “The things we
discovered were staggering. We were being observed almost constantly. We investigated sightings and
some of them did prove to be false. But others, many others, were very true. We compiled thousands of
pages of information during the first year alone.”
He was staring into the room’s lone lightbulb as he continued. “We obtained evidence of their presence,
Captain. We captured crashed ships and retrieved alien beings, living and dead. When we started
studying their technology, we realized just how out-classed we truly were.”
Shaking his head, Christopher said, “This is unbelievable.”
“Others thought the same way. Project Sign evolved over the years and its purpose along with it. Soon,
our directive was to ensure that any sightings of UFOs were suppressed. We kept amassing the
information, but our reports never saw the light of day.”
Wainwright was pacing again, talking more to himself than to Christopher. The pilot could see anger
welling up in the other man as he weaved the story. He couldn’t begin to guess whether the man was
constructing his tale from tortured memories or thin air. Wainwright looked to him to be an unhappy man,
a man who had seen his share of adversity and injustice, and who was now summoning some final shred
of will and purpose in order to try for success one last time.
Either that, or he was stark raving mad.
“Our work was hushed up deliberately, with misleading reports forwarded up to the president. The
people running the project wanted UFOs to disappear. They considered the whole thing to be a
nuisance.” He snorted and shook his head. “Fools, all of them. They had no idea. But the public wasn’t
stupid. They knew something was up, and they knew the government was trying to sweep it under the
rug. They kept protesting, demanding more results. The program finally evolved into Project Blue Book
in the early fifties, and for the first time I thought we’d finally get the support we needed.”
Wainwright’s anxiety was climbing steadily, and Christopher was almost certain the man had forgotten
he was even talking to the pilot. He’d unbuttoned his suit jacket and Christopher caught a fleeting glance
of a pistol in a shoulder holster under Wainwright’s arm.
The pilot stole a look toward the door. Who or what was on the other side? It didn’t matter, he
decided. He’d take his chances, given the opportunity. All he had to do was get past Wainwright, who
seemed to be growing more unbalanced by the minute.
Stalling for time, Christopher asked, “So, what happened?”
“Those idiots!” Wainwright exploded. “The same story all over again, only this time they wanted to take
care of this ‘UFO craze’ once and for all. Evidence was destroyed. Witnesses were forced into silence,
bought off, or suffered ‘sudden disappearances’ or ‘mysterious accidents.’ The people in charge, the
same people I trusted, turned their backs on me. People I called close friends shunned me in hopes of
preserving their own pathetic careers.”