Operation Terror 
by William Fitzgerald Jenkins 
 
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Title: Operation Terror 
Author: William Fitzgerald Jenkins 
Release Date: February 27, 2006 [EBook #17870] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
OPERATION TERROR *** 
 
Produced by Greg Weeks, Geoffrey Kidd, Sankar Viswanathan, and the 
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
OPERATION TERROR 
Murray Leinster
CHAPTER 1 
On the morning the radar reported something odd out in space, Lockley 
awoke at about twenty minutes to eight. That was usual. He'd slept in a 
sleeping bag on a mountain-flank with other mountains all around. That 
was not unprecedented. He was there to make a base line measurement 
for a detailed map of the Boulder Lake National Park, whose facilities 
were now being built. Measuring a base line, even with the newest of 
electronic apparatus, was more or less a commonplace job for Lockley. 
This morning, though, he woke and realized gloomily that he'd 
dreamed about Jill Holmes again, which was becoming a habit he ought 
to break. He'd only met her four times and she was going to marry 
somebody else. He had to stop. 
He stirred, preparatory to getting up. At the same moment, certain 
things were happening in places far away from him. As yet, no unusual 
object in space had been observed. That would come later. But far 
away up at the Alaskan radar complex a man on duty watch was 
relieved by another. The relief man took over the monitoring of the 
giant, football-field-sized radar antenna that recorded its detections on 
magnetic tape. It happened that on this particular morning only one 
other radar watched the skies along a long stretch of the Pacific Coast 
There was the Alaskan installation, and the other was in Oregon. It was 
extremely unusual for only those two to be operating. The people who 
knew about it, or most of them, thought that official orders had 
somehow gone astray. Where the orders were issued, nothing out of the 
ordinary appeared. All was normal, for example, in the Military 
Information Center in Denver. The Survey saw nothing unusual in 
Lockley's being at his post, and other men at places corresponding to 
his in the area which was to become Boulder Lake National Park. It 
also seemed perfectly natural that there should be bulldozer operators, 
surveyors, steelworkers, concrete men and so on, all comfortably at 
breakfast in the construction camp for the project. Everything seemed 
normal everywhere. 
Up to the time the Alaskan installation reported something strange in
space, the state of things generally was neither alarming nor consoling. 
But at 8:02 A.M. Pacific time, the situation changed. At that time 
Alaska reported an unscheduled celestial object of considerable size, 
high out of atmosphere and moving with surprising slowness for a body 
in space. Its course was parabolic and it would probably land 
somewhere in South Dakota. It might be a bolide--a large, slow-moving 
meteorite. It wasn't likely, but the entire report was improbable. 
The message reached the Military Information Center in Denver at 8:05 
A.M. By 8:06 it had been relayed to Washington and every plane on 
the Pacific Coast was ordered aloft. The Oregon radar unit reported the 
same object at 8:07 A.M. It said the object was seven hundred fifty 
miles high, four hundred miles out at sea, and was headed toward the 
Oregon coastline, moving northwest to southeast. There was no major 
city in its line of travel. The impact point computed by the Oregon 
station was nowhere near South Dakota. As other computations 
followed other observations, a second place of fall was calculated, then 
a third. Then the Oregon radar unbelievably reported that the object 
was decelerating. Allowing for deceleration, three successive 
predictions of its landing point agreed. The object, said these 
calculations, would come to earth somewhere near Boulder Lake, 
Colorado, in what was to become a national park. Impact time should 
be approximately 8:14 A.M. 
These events followed Lockley's awakening in the wilds, but he knew 
nothing of any of them. He himself wasn't near the lake, which was to 
be the center of a vacation facility for people who liked the outdoors. 
The lake was almost circular and was a deep, rich blue. It occupied 
what had been the crater of a volcano millions of years ago. Already 
bulldozers had ploughed out roads to it through the forest. Men worked 
with graders and concrete mixers on highways and on bridges across 
small rushing streams. There was a camp for them. A    
    
		
	
	
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