And for a brief moment, so did everyone on board.… The aircraft sat at the far edge of the tarmac, its white fuselage stained faintly by decades of high-altitude exhaust and hurried maintenance cycles. The stenciled name—Lucky Lady—was peeling. It was an Boeing RC-135, one of the last airframes still traceable to the early Boeing 707 lineage. Officially, this particular variant—an RC-135A—had long ago been repurposed, upgraded, stripped, and rebuilt so many times that even its designation felt like a historical artifact rather than a technical description. Inside, analog ghosts still lived alongside modern racks of signals intelligence hardware. “Why is the floor wet?” the maintenance chief snapped, stepping into the cockpit. “And who left this empty bottle here? Clean it up—now.” Staff Sergeant Arai moved quickly, grabbing the crumpled Coca-Cola bottle. The cockpit smelled faintly of hydraulic fluid and ozone—an old smell, th...