Ntrp 3-22.2-fa18a-d May 2026

The vault was a concrete coffin deep inside the Nevada base. Vance swiped his palm, retina, and a voice print. The slate glowed to life.

The first page was a warning he’d never seen before: ntrp 3-22.2-fa18a-d

The Reflection does not fly the aircraft. The Reflection flies the space around the aircraft. It inserts itself into the pilot’s sensorium—radar, RWR, even the seat-of-the-pants feel. By the time you see it on your left wing, it has already rewritten your vestibular system. Your horizon is now its horizon. Your fear is its targeting data. The vault was a concrete coffin deep inside the Nevada base

Vance stared at the words. Then he looked at the date on the wall. Tomorrow morning at 0600, he was scheduled for a routine proficiency flight. In an F/A-18C. Solo. The first page was a warning he’d never

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.

Vance closed the slate. His hands were shaking. He’d flown Hornets for eighteen years, logged over 2,500 hours. And there was a mission—three years ago, over Syria—that he had never told anyone about. A solo night CAP. Bingo fuel. His wingman had turned back with a hung store. Vance was alone over the desert, the stars impossibly bright, his radio silent except for the occasional crackle of distant AWACS chatter.

He almost laughed. A prank. Someone had embedded a creepypasta into a military publication. But the authentication watermarks were real—NSA, Fleet Forces Command, and a third logo he didn’t recognize: a black key inside a white circle.