Ntrp 3-22.2-fa18a-d ❲2024❳

We tried to burn every copy. But they want to be read. Don’t look left.

He’d chalked it up to a stuck gate in the radar’s signal processor.

But here it was. Codified. Procedure number: NTRP 3-22.2-FA18A-D. ntrp 3-22.2-fa18a-d

The manual had no title, only an alphanumeric ghost: . It arrived on a sealed, radiation-shielded data slate, hand-delivered by a two-star’s aide who refused to make eye contact. “Read this in the vault. No notes. No digital copies. Your eyes only. Then we burn it.”

And it only appeared when the pilot was alone. Emotionally isolated. The manual had a clinical term: Acoustic Cognitive Lacuna —a specific, measurable state where a pilot’s mind was so fatigued, so overtasked, that their brain’s natural threat-verification systems began to oscillate at 3.5 hertz. That frequency, the manual claimed, was a door. We tried to burn every copy

Reading this manual makes you visible to the Reflection for a period of not less than 72 hours. You are now a designated observer. Do not fly solo. Do not fly at night. Do not under any circumstances fly an F/A-18 A, B, C, or D model within the next three calendar days. If you have flown one in the past 30 days, report to psychological services immediately. Do not explain why. Say the words: “I need to update my will.” They will know what to do.

The next pages were worse. A pattern emerged across decades: Vietnam, the Gulf, Kosovo, Syria. The entity—the manual refused to call it an adversary, instead using the term Reflection —only appeared to single-seat aircraft. Never to two-seat Hornets or Super Hornets. Never to any other platform. Only the Legacy A through D models. He’d chalked it up to a stuck gate

Vance turned the page.