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DALE
BROWN’S
Dreamland
R EVOLUTION
DALE BROWN and JIM DEFELICE
Contents
Dreamland: Duty Roster
v
Prelude: Night Shivers
1
I
Medal of Honor
7
II
An Honor and Privilege
33
III
Killers of Children
117
IV
Burnt Wood and Flesh
187
V
Voyeurs at the Edge of Battle
255
VI
Fear of the Dead
329
VII
Flying Man
409
VIII
For Freedom
463
About the Author
Praise
Other Books by Dreamland Series
Cover
Copyright
About the Publisher
Dreamland: Duty Roster
Major General “Earthmover” Terrill
General Samson has been given a new portfolio by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff—turn Dreamland into the country’s top spec warfare command. He will do it—no matter how many eggheads he has to break in the process.
Lieutenant Colonel Tecumseh “Dog” Bastian Dreamland’s former commander finds himself in an uncomfortable position—under General Samson.
Major Jeffrey “Zen” Stockard
A top fighter pilot until a crash at Dreamland left him a paraplegic, Zen is in charge of the Flighthawks—while still looking for a cure for his paralysis.
Captain Brea
Zen’s wife has seen him through his injury and rehabilitation. But can she balance her love for her husband with the demands of her career … and ambitions?
Major Mack “the Knife” Smith
Mack Smith is the best pilot in the world—and he’ll tell you so himself. But getting ahead may mean taking a desk job … as Samson’s chief of staff.
vi
DREAMLAND: DUTY ROSTER
Captain Da
Da
Jed Barclay
The young deputy to the National Security Advisor is Dreamland’s link to the President. Barely old enough to shave, the former science whiz kid now struggles to master the intricacies of world politics.
Mark Stoner
A CIA officer who has worked with Dreamland before, Stoner has been sent to Romania on a special assignment—and now finds himself in the middle of much more than he bargained for.
Prelude:
Night Shivers
Air Force High Technology Advanced
Weapons Center (Dreamland)
22 January 1998
0250 (all times local)
BLACK SMOKE ENVELOPED THE FRONT OF THE MEGA-fortress, shrouding the aircraft in darkness. Wind howled through the open escape hatches.
Lt. Colonel Tecumseh “Dog” Bastian was alone on the flight deck. The rest of the crew had already ejected. Now it was too late for him to get out.
The plane’s electronic controls had been fried by an elec-tromagnetic pulse. Dog struggled to control it using the slug-gish hydraulic backups. The smoke was so thick he couldn’t even see the control panel immediately in front of him.
He pulled back on the stick, but the aircraft didn’t respond.
Instead, the right wing began tipping upward, threatening to throw the plane into a spin. Dog fought against it, struggling with the controls. Then suddenly the blackness cleared and he could see the aircraft carrier below.
It was on fire, but was going to still launch a plane.
The plane he had to stop.
He leaned on the stick, trying to muscle the nose of his aircraft toward his target. He was moving at over five hundred knots, and he was low, through a thousand feet, yet there was time to see each detail—the crew fueling the airplane, the sailors on the deck, the destroyer in the distance… .
I’m going to crash, he thought. This is it.
4
DALE BROWN’S DREAMLAND
* * *
COLONEL BASTIAN ROLLED OVER ONTO HIS BACK IN THE
bed, half awake, half still in the dream. His legs felt as if they had immense weights on them, pi
The dream had been a nightmare, but it was more memory than invention. Dog had barely survived a similar encounter with the Chinese navy a week before. He’d been moments away from crashing into a carrier’s flight deck to prevent the launch of a plane with a nuclear bomb when the Chinese finally stood down. He’d been flying the Megafortress on hydraulics, just like in the dream, and nearly lost control before pulling up so close he could have grabbed the ship’s arrestor cables if he’d had the gear.
But the dream wasn’t a perfect recreation of the incident either. It was better in some ways—less scary, not more. The billowing black smoke hadn’t gotten in his way. There’d been antiaircraft fire—a lot of it. He couldn’t see any people on the flight deck. And time certainly hadn’t slowed down.
No, if anything, time had moved considerably faster than normal. Things had crowded together as he pushed the plane toward what he was sure would be his last moment.
But there was one element of the dream that was far darker than reality. He hadn’t felt the fear he felt now, sitting up on the bed. He hadn’t been afraid at all—he’d been too focused to be afraid, too consumed by his duty.
If Dog’s girlfriend, Je
The shadows of the room played tricks on his eyes, and he thought for a second that Je
5
the threshold. But the shadows gave way to solid objects: her robe hanging over his on the hanger behind the door.
Dog pulled on his pants, then two sweatshirts, grabbed his boots and stepped outside in his socks.
The cold desert air smacked his face as he leaned up against the wall of the house to put on his boots. It was good to feel cold—he’d been in the tropics and the Middle East so long he forgot what fifty degrees felt like, let alone 34 degrees.
Had it been a little later, Dog might have gone for a run. But it was too early for that, and besides, he wanted to walk, not run. Something about walking helped make his brain work.
He took short, easy steps up the path. By habit, he turned right, heading for the Taj Mahal—the unofficial name of Dreamland’s command building—most of which was underground. After two steps he stopped, realizing he didn’t want to go in that direction.
Dog no longer had an office at the Taj. In fact, he had no office at all, anywhere. A week ago he’d been commander of Dreamland, responsible not just for the base and its people, but for its many missions and, ultimately, its myriad programs. Now he was just a lieutenant colonel looking for a job, replaced as commander by a highly co
The cold air nipped at him. Dog pulled the hood on his sweatshirt over his head and tightened the strings to choke off the chill as he headed in the direction of the old boneyard—the graveyard of experiments past, where old aircraft came to sit out their remaining days, oxidizing in the sun. The first he saw was his favorite—an F-105 Thunderchief, which had most likely flown in Vietnam, surviving untold trials before safely returning its pilot home.