Page 74 of Nighthawk (NUMA Files 14)
Hiram pulled his glasses off, cleaned them with a soft cloth and put them back on. âTheyâre very similar. Almost identical.â
âThe only real difference is size,â she said. âIf we scale an original set of plans up, they match. Same engine, same navigation system, same wing design, same heat shield. In fact, aside from a coating of stealth material that burns off on reentry, the heat shield is not much different than the tile system used on the space shuttle since the eighties.â
âSo much for the technological leap forward they keep claiming,â Hiram said. âItâs little more than an updated version of an older vehicle.â
He stood up and addressed Max. âAre you sure weâre looking at the correct plans?â
âAffirmative,â Max replied.
âHow certain are you?â
âThereâs a 99.98 percent probability that the plans youâre looking at match the vehicle that was launched and is now being sought in South America.â
âThatâs pretty certain,â Priya said.
Hiram agreed. âIt doesnât make sense. The Russians took an immense risk to grab it. They exposed their secret Typhoon submarine, in an attempt to retrieve the wreckage from where they thought it had crashed, and both they and the Chinese seem willing to risk a war to find it.â
âWith the attempts on Kurt and Ms. Townsend so far, Iâd say a skirmish has already begun,â Priya added.
Hiram nodded. He looked over the plans once again, double-checking the propulsion specifications and the structural blueprints. âIf it isnât the machine that matters, then it has to be something else. Something related to the mission.â
âPerhaps it collected one of our spy satellites. Or one of theirs.â
âMaybe one of each,â Hiram said. âThat would get them hot under the collar.â
âIf we knew where it went, we might learn more,â she suggested.
âMax, what can you tell me about the Nighthawkâs mission profile?â
The computer voice responded instantly. âThe NSA launches the Nighthawk out of Vandenberg on a modified Titan booster. The vehicle inserts into a polar orbit and stays aloft for extensive periods of time. Seventy-five days on the first launch, eight hundred and fifty-one days on this latest mission.â
âAnd yet,â Hiram said, scanning through the page count, âwe seem to have far more data from the first mission than the second. Are you holding something back on us?â
âMission 1 was a test mission,â Max said. âData from all phases of the mission was freely shared with NASA. Mission 2 was an operational event. Fully classified. Only prelaunch data and orbital track information was provided.â
âCan you match up the Nighthawkâs orbital track with known satellites?â
; There was a slight pauseâunusual for Max, considering how fast her processing speeds were. âThe Nighthawk made 14,625 complete orbits and one partial orbit before reentry. At no time did its path intersect with the position of any known satellite. Available data suggests the Nighthawk maneuvered specifically to avoid any orbital convergence.â
âAnything else unusual about the path?â
âFor ninety-one percent of its time in space, the Nighthawk remained in the Earthâs shadow.â
âSo the Nighthawk was staying out of sight,â Hiram said. âCanât hijack another satellite when youâre hiding in the dark and avoiding them like the plague.â
âIâm not sure it could retrieve something if it wanted to,â Priya said. âLook at this. On the initial blueprints, the cargo bay is an empty space, just like the cargo bay on the shuttle. But on the last set of prelaunch schematics, the entire bay has been filled with equipment.â
Hiramâs curiosity grew, he pulled up a chair and settled in beside her. âWhat kind of equipment?â
âCryogenic storage containers, advanced lithium batteries and a bank of devices called Penning trapsâwhich must use powerful magnets because the control center and the propulsion bay have been electromagnetically shielded to prevent magnetic interference.â
âPenning traps,â Hiram said, trying to remember where heâd heard that term before.
âAccording to the schematic, they take up the whole bay.â
Hiram nodded. He was suddenly very grim. The truth was coming to him and he didnât like it one bit. âMax, can you correlate the Nighthawkâs orbit with evidence of the northern lights?â