Wish me luck. By the way, if by chance--da-da-de-dum--drumroll, please, I
get scarfed up by the authorities, you have a copy of the tape and the letter,
and also I've enclosed a key to my apartment.
Thanks.
All of my love, all of my kisses!
Johnny
Kelly didn't need to check the calendar. The ninth was this evening. She
gathered the tape out of her stereo and took it, along with the letters, to her
desk. Then she used the key around her neck to open the file drawer. She
withdrew a file labeled "Nellis" and laid it on the desktop.
Flipping it open, she saw that the first document inside was a typed letter on
official Air Force stationery. The signature block at the bottom indicated it
was from the Public Affairs Officer at the base: Major Prague.
"Asshole," Kelly muttered as she remembered the man. She place Johnny
Simmons's letter and the tape inside, then replaced the folder in the drawer and
locked it. The surface of the desk was clear, except for a silver-framed black-
and-white photo of a young man dressed in khaki. He wore a black beret, and a
Sten gun was slung over his shoulder.
She was thoughtful as she kicked back in her chair and considered the photo.
"Sounds like Johnny has nibbled at the hook, Dad." She tapped a pencil against
her lip, then sighed. "Damn you, Johnny. You're always causing trouble, but this
time I think you may have gone too far."
NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE RANGE,
VICINITY GROOM LAKE
T-144 HOURS
"Wait here," Franklin ordered as he braked the battered Bronco II to a halt.
There was no flash of brake lights. He had pulled the fuse for them prior to
turning onto this dirt road. Johnny Simmons leaned forward in the passenger
seat and squinted into the darkness. He had to assume that Franklin was so
familiar with the road that he was able to drive it without headlights. Although
the road did stand out as a lighter straight line on the otherwise dark ground,
the trip through the dark was unnerving.
Simmons rubbed his forehead. They were up several thousand feet in
altitude and he felt a bit of a headache from the thinner air. He was a tall,
thin man, his pale skin liberally sprinkled with freckles. Simmons appeared to
be much younger than his thirty-eight years and his disheveled mane of bright
red hair only added to the youthful image.
Franklin walked to one side of the road and disappeared into the darker
countryside for a few minutes, then his shadow crossed the road and was gone for
a few more minutes. When he returned, he was holding four short green plastic
rods in his hands.
"Antennas for the sensors," he explained. "I found the sensors last month.
I wondered why the camo dudes were always onto me so quick. They'd show up
within twenty minutes of me hitting this road. Then they'd call in the sheriff
and it was just a plain hassle."
"How'd you find the detectors?" Simmons asked, covertly making sure the
voice-activated microcassette recorder in his jacket pocket was turned on.
"I used a receiver that scanned the band lengths. I drove around and
stopped when I picked up something transmitting," Franklin said. "Right at
495.45 megahertz."
"Why four antennas?" Simmons asked. "Wouldn't two do?"
Franklin shook his head. "They're deployed in pairs on either side of the
road. That way they can tell which way you're going by the order they're tripped
in." Franklin talked quickly, eager to impress Simmons with his knowledge.