EndWar e-1 Read online

Page 7


  The communications screen indicated they had a link, and Chuck appeared, his silver hair expertly razored into a crew cut, his face barely wrinkled for a man pushing sixty. Stanton had already broken that barrier, and he wanted to believe he looked as good as Chuck. Aw, hell, who was he kidding?

  “Hey, Donny.”

  “Hey, Chuck. Listen, I just got an e-mail from American Eagle telling me we’ve got total control of the Iridium cell phone system. He wants us to reach out to your boy up north. I was just reading his record.”

  “Andreas is a pretty clever lad. Once he figures out the satellite is bent, he just might poke up his sail long enough to check for a text message. But how can I help?”

  “My techies tell me they need the phone numbers for every Iridium 9505A onboard Florida, plus we need something — something personal — that will convince Andreas that our text message is legit. I know how serious you guys are about the silent in silent service.”

  “I’ll get the squadron commander on the horn. Smitty keeps a roster of all the allocated 9505As, and next I’ll give Andreas’s wife a buzz. I’ll bet she can come up with something personal to authenticate with.”

  “Sounds like a plan, Chuck. My best to Jamie. Fifteen minutes?”

  “Back in fifteen, Admiral.”

  “Captain, we’ve covered—”

  “Hold on,” Commander Jonathan Andreas said, cutting off his communications officer. “Right now I want to hear Senior Chief Radioman Sheldon’s assessment of the situation.”

  “Captain, I’ve been over every inch of that gear. I even got Chief Electronics Technician Burgess to look over my shoulder. I swear that the ELF and satellite receivers are good to go.” His tone grew ominous. “There’s just no signal.”

  Andreas couldn’t estimate how much pride calling in another chief for help had cost his senior chief radioman.

  Andreas nodded, “Sheldon, that’s good enough for me.”

  Andreas returned to his quarters and sat on his bunk for almost ten minutes, allowing himself to work through the mystery, taking in each piece of evidence, examining it, probing it, trying to reach conclusions. Then he started down a new path, one in which they took action to get answers.

  He came up with two plans.

  Finally, he stood and purposefully stepped through the doorway into the head separating his stateroom from the XO’s. He knocked twice on the door in the opposite bulkhead, then stepped through to where the XO was reading something at his desk. He glanced up. “Sir?”

  Without preamble, Andreas said, “XO, I’m about to break a cardinal rule, and I want you to hear it.”

  “Skipper, are you sure?”

  “Yes, I am.” The first plan sounded even more logical to him as he voiced it rapid-fire. “I’m going to go deep, sprint thirty miles northwest, stick up the antenna, and ping the transponder on the satellite. The problem could still be ours, but right now it’s the next-to-last action we can take. What do you think?”

  “Skipper, with the shrouded propulsor, and at a depth of, say, eight hundred feet, we can do that.”

  “I just can’t wait around any longer.”

  “No doubt. We sprint at nearly thirty knots and find us a nice lonely spot out in the middle of the gulf.”

  “So it’s worth a try?”

  “It is, but I have to play devil’s advocate — what happens if we don’t trigger an answering ping from the transponder?”

  “I said this was my next-to-last plan, XO. If this doesn’t work, you won’t believe what I’ll do next.”

  THIRTEEN

  “Ghost Hawk, this is Siren. Contact is now three minutes out, over.”

  Major Stephanie Halverson, dressed like a praying mantis in her pressure suit and alien-like helmet with attached O2 line, took a deep breath and adjusted her grip on the stick.

  The F-35B Joint Strike Fighter’s electro-optical targeting system (EOTS) continued to feed her up-to-the-nanosecond images and data on the approaching targets, and her helmet-mounted display system had some of the best head-tracking hardware and software she had ever fielded, along with all the usual requirements like a binocular-wide field of view, day/night capability with sensor fusion, and a digital image source for helmet-displayed symbology — all of which was engineer-speak for some wicked cool battlefield capability.

  After an unusually long delay, her wingman, Captain Jake Boyd, finally replied with a curt “Roger that,” his own F-35B streaking over the frozen tundra just off Halverson’s right wing, its tail glowing faintly in the night.

  “Ghost Hawk, do you have a problem, over?”

  “Negative, Siren. Just shaking my head.”

  They had nearly forty Russian Ka-29s on the AN/ APG-81 AESA radar, the helos on a bearing due south across the Northwest Territories, maintaining an altitude of just one thousand feet.

  To say that Halverson and Boyd were surprised was an understatement.

  Operating out of a small JSF training base located approximately two hundred miles north of Yellowknife, the capital of the NWT, she and Boyd were on their third scheduled night flight of the F-35B Short Take-Off and Vertical Landing (STOVL) fighter used primarily by the United States Marine Corps and the Royal Navy.

  As JSF pilots and members of the Air Force, they were being cross-trained in the fighter so that its features could be exploited in non-carrier based operations located far inland and in more rugged terrain. The JSF had struck a deal with the commissioner of the NWT to use the largely unpopulated areas for tests.

  Halverson and Boyd had both hoped that after the fourteen-day training mission, they’d get a chance to take their state-of-the-art killing machines into Russia and show those vodka-soaked wolves what they could do.

  That the Russians would help by dropping in themselves was as exciting as it was troubling.

  Halverson maintained a video blog, Femme Fatale Fighter Pilot, and she couldn’t wait to share this with her readers, though she’d carefully dance around the classified details, and her face was always hidden behind her helmet.

  “All right, Ghost Hawk, two minutes now,” she reported. “Let’s hit the gas and ascend before they spot us.”

  “Roger that.”

  “Igloo Base, this is Siren, we’re climbing to fourteen thousand to hover and observe contact, over.”

  “Roger that, Siren. Igloo Base standing by.”

  She and Boyd climbed to fourteen thousand, then, with the targets about to pass below in thirty seconds, they prepared to hover.

  All right, baby, show me what you got.

  Instead of utilizing lift engines or rotating nozzles on the engine fan and exhaust like the old Harriers, Halverson’s F-35B employed a shift-driven lift fan, patented by Lockheed Martin and developed by Rolls-Royce.

  The contra-rotating fan was like a turboprop set into the fuselage, just behind the cockpit. Engine shaft power could be sent forward to it while bypass air from the cruise engine was sent to nozzles in the wings as the cruise nozzle at the tail vectored downward.

  Thus, under her command, panels opened over the lift fan behind her, and a column of cool air providing 20,000 pounds of lifting power vented from the bottom of the aircraft, holding her steady, a fighter plane seemingly locked in the air by an invisible tractor beam.

  Boyd was at Halverson’s wing, hovering as well.

  “Siren, this is Igloo Base.”

  “Go ahead, Igloo.”

  “We’ve received no response from your contact. You have authorization to fly by those helos, attempt once more to make contact yourselves. Instruct them to turn around — but do not engage unless fired upon, over.”

  “Roger that, Igloo Base. If they fail to comply, we’d like authorization to engage, over.”

  “Understood, Siren. Just let ’em know we’re here first.”

  “Roger that, Igloo Base, descending to intercept those helos. Ghost Hawk, you ready?”

  “Oh, yeah, Siren.”

  “Just follow me. This’ll be…
interesting.”

  With that, she broke from her hover, jamming the stick forward and diving, the Pratt & Whitney engine thundering behind her with a force that crept into her gut, energized her, made her feel powerful beyond measure.

  There was no darkness. Infrared peeled back the night to reveal the helicopters, flying in two clusters about three choppers abreast, spread far enough apart to be engaged individually.

  Halverson took her bird straight down toward the lead three helos, diving directly in front of them, just fifty meters ahead.

  She could only imagine the looks on those Russian pilots’ faces as their radars went wild, their canopies lit up, and they were suddenly buffeted by her jet wash—

  Only to be hit again two seconds later by Boyd’s exhaust.

  Screaming toward the mottled carpet of snow and trees below, Halverson pulled up and banked right, while instructing Boyd to bank left. They both came up, then suddenly went back to hover mode, floating there at one thousand feet, on either side of the column of Ka-29s as they advanced.

  “Russian helos, this is Joint Strike Force Fighter Siren, do you copy, over?

  Halverson’s pulse raced.

  “Here they come,” said Boyd.

  Tactical data links transmitted every reading from the instruments onboard their fighters back to Igloo Base and to every JSF tactical and strategic command post on the planet via the satellite links. At any time, any operations XO could tap in to her cockpit to see what she was doing.

  That Mr. Network-Centric Big Brother was always watching did unnerve Halverson, and there had been lots of talk among pilots of deliberately switching off certain systems at certain times. Since the war had broken out, the concept of network-centric operations (NCO) had proven a first step at dissipating some instances of the “fog of war,” in which communication breakdowns and poor information handling resulted in heavy losses. However, when misinformation did get into the system, it flowed like a virus and was hard to stop.

  For now, though, the information coming at Halverson was pretty damned obvious and accurate. The Russians had no intentions of stopping.

  “Russian helos, this is Joint Strike Force Fighter Siren. You have crossed into Canadian airspace and are instructed to turn back, over.”

  Halverson waited a moment, then repeated the same instructions in Russian. Her language skills weren’t great, but her pronunciation was clear enough for them to understand — if they were willing to listen.

  She also wondered about the Canadian response. They had adamantly maintained their neutrality in the war, though it wasn’t beyond imagination that they might court the Russians for some “diplomatic” purpose.

  For all Halverson knew, these helos could be en route to a southern location at the invitation of the Canadian government; if that were the case, it would have been nice to inform the JSF of their little visit.

  But what kind of drinking party were the Canadians throwing that required the Russians to come in forty helos? If crates of vodka and droves of loose women weren’t on the list, Halverson doubted they would attend.

  “Igloo Base, this is Siren, over.”

  “Go ahead, Siren.”

  “We buzzed the helos and are hovering at one thousand as they approach. No response to our requests, over.”

  “Roger that, Siren. Just maintain—”

  “Siren!” cried Boyd. “Rockets incoming. Jesus—”

  Out of the corner of her eye, Halverson caught the flash of a bright light, and just as she throttled up—

  More unguided rockets fired from the lead choppers tore through her wake.

  “Siren, this is Ghost Hawk! Jesus, damn it, I’m hit! I’m hit! Got a fire. Electrical failures. Damage to left wing. I saw the radar warning, and I just didn’t believe it! Losing control!”

  “Eject! Eject!”

  Halverson climbed over the swarm of choppers to look down upon the scene, spotting Boyd’s fighter beginning to drop like a rock, nose tipping down.

  “Boyd, get out of there!”

  He was at about one hundred and fifty knots when a tiny flash erupted, and the canopy tumbled away. Then the ejection seat fired, and out came Boyd, with approximately eight hundred feet between himself and the ground below.

  Halverson wished she had time to see if he was okay, but the rage inside — awakened by the audacity of these Russians — launched her into action. She wheeled around, brought the jet into another hover, pivoted toward the helos.

  Speed and maneuver. Speed and maneuver…

  She had missile lock. There was no thinking it over or calling to base for authorization. And there were no second thoughts.

  The two wingtip-mounted AIM-9X Sidewinder missiles exploded away from her jet, using a passive IR target acquisition system to home in on infrared emissions. They each raced toward a chopper in the lead group, leaving glowing white tendrils of smoke in their wake.

  “Igloo Base, this is Siren. Ghost Hawk has ejected! Can’t see if he’s on the ground yet! I’ve engaged the helos, over!”

  “Roger that, Siren.”

  Twin booms shone in her display, the fireballs expanding then plummeting toward the icy deck.

  Two Ka-29s down.

  Thirty-five? Thirty-six to go?

  She’d exhaust everything she had, she didn’t care.

  But first she had to find Boyd, see if he made it, and if he did, be sure those bastards weren’t trying to finish the job.

  His beacon shone in one of her displays, as the choppers below scattered like bees being swatted, spreading out, gaining altitude, while a few pilots descended even lower.

  Two of the choppers banked hard, coming around to engage her as she hovered above them.

  Rockets flashed from their underwing pods. She rolled to her left, even as she engaged her four-barreled GAU-22/A gun mounted in a teardrop pod along the jet’s aft center pylon, the four barrels bound in one spinning cylinder.

  Armor-piercing discarding sabot with tracer rounds leapt out ahead of her fighter at a rate of forty-two hundred per minute, chewing into the first chopper’s canopy amid a flurry of sparks and the laser-like streaks drawn by the tracers.

  She shifted fire to the next helo, more rounds drumming along its side as the pilot attempted to evade.

  The first chopper began to fall away, out of control, smoke pouring from the shattered cockpit. And suddenly, the second one joined the first, rolling away, trailing more smoke.

  She carried only two hundred and twenty rounds of ammo for the gun despite its cyclic rate of fire, and she had already blown through half. Damn it. The cost of being trigger-happy.

  There were two more Sidewinders in her internal bays, along with two AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapons for hitting hardened surface targets. She also had a pair of five-hundred-pound JDAM bombs under the wings, but they wouldn’t help unless those helos put down. Finally, she had a pair of laser-guided training rounds they were supposed to use in a couple of days.

  Boyd’s fighter had crashed just ahead, the flames still soaring skyward; he had drifted downwind about a half kilometer farther south.

  “Ghost Hawk, this is Siren, you copy, over?”

  No response.

  “Igloo Base, this is Siren. No contact from Ghost Hawk on the ground. Four choppers engaged and destroyed, over.”

  “Roger that, Siren. You’re ordered to return to base, over.”

  “Negative, Igloo Base. I’m not leaving until I can confirm if Ghost Hawk made it or not, over.”

  “Stand by, Siren…”

  Well, she’d stand by, all right, but not without unleashing her last two Sidewinders.

  The helos, now much more spread apart, maintained their southerly course, a speckled field of potential targets glowing on her display.

  “Here you go,” she whispered. “Eat this.”

  Dinner was, in fact, served, a late-night course of explosives delivered with blinding efficiency.

  The bay doors swung open, and the rockets spat f
rom the warplane’s belly, arrowing through the night.

  She throttled up once more, dove, and came in for a final run with guns—

  Even as the two Sidewinders slammed into their targets, sending debris and flaming bodies hurtling outward in all directions.

  Not liking her current angle, she drove the stick left, banking hard, the fighter riding the cold air as though racing on rails. She came back around, diving once more, and squeezed the trigger, targeting another chopper from behind until its engine flared and died.

  Then she ceased fire, lined up on the next bird and squeezed the trigger, more rounds streaking away.

  But in a few seconds, the gun went dead, out of ammo, and the chopper was still flying.

  “JSF fighter plane, this is American Eagle, over.”

  Halverson gasped. She knew that call sign but could hardly believe it. The President of the United States was on the radio.

  “American Eagle, this is Siren, go ahead, over.”

  “Major, what am I looking at here?”

  “Sir, those blips on the screen are approximately thirty to thirty-five Russian Ka-29 troop transport helos on a southerly heading. I’ve taken out seven of them, damaged an eighth, but I’ve exhausted my ammo. They fired upon us first, sir. I lost my wingman, who ejected, and I want to fly over the crash site and see if he made it.”

  “Can you do that without losing your bird?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Then you’ve got my permission. Major, you’re looking at them. What do you think they’re up to?”

  “Sir, I honestly have no idea. But I’d recommend calling the Canadians to get some people up here ASAP.”

  “Roger that, Major. Good work. I hope your wingman made it.”

  “Thank you, sir, Siren out.”

  She shuddered as she realized she had just had a conversation with the president! Damn, whatever was happening had to be huge.

  With a hard blink, she brought herself back to the moment. The enemy helos passed over the crash site and continued on as she descended behind them, homing in on Boyd’s beacon.

  She slowed as she got on top of the signal, spotted one chute, tangled and whipping in the breeze, still attached to the ejection seat. She wheeled around once more and slowed to a complete hover, keeping a wary eye on the radar while searching for Boyd and his chute.

 

    Changing of the Guard Read onlineChanging of the GuardClear and Present Danger Read onlineClear and Present DangerHounds of Rome Read onlineHounds of RomeBreaking Point Read onlineBreaking PointTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12 Read onlineTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12Full Force and Effect Read onlineFull Force and EffectThe Archimedes Effect Read onlineThe Archimedes EffectCombat Ops Read onlineCombat OpsInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq Read onlineInto the Storm: On the Ground in IraqUnder Fire Read onlineUnder FirePoint of Impact Read onlinePoint of ImpactRed Rabbit Read onlineRed RabbitRainbow Six Read onlineRainbow SixThe Hunt for Red October Read onlineThe Hunt for Red OctoberThe Teeth of the Tiger Read onlineThe Teeth of the TigerConviction (2009) Read onlineConviction (2009)Battle Ready Read onlineBattle ReadyPatriot Games Read onlinePatriot GamesThe Sum of All Fears Read onlineThe Sum of All FearsFallout (2007) Read onlineFallout (2007)Red Storm Rising Read onlineRed Storm RisingThe Cardinal of the Kremlin Read onlineThe Cardinal of the KremlinExecutive Orders Read onlineExecutive OrdersLincoln, the unknown Read onlineLincoln, the unknownThreat Vector Read onlineThreat VectorThe Hunted Read onlineThe HuntedShadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces Read onlineShadow Warriors: Inside the Special ForcesEnd Game Read onlineEnd GameSpecial Forces: A Guided Tour of U.S. Army Special Forces Read onlineSpecial Forces: A Guided Tour of U.S. Army Special ForcesLocked On Read onlineLocked OnLine of Sight Read onlineLine of SightTom Clancy Enemy Contact - Mike Maden Read onlineTom Clancy Enemy Contact - Mike MadenFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing Read onlineFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat WingSpringboard Read onlineSpringboardLine of Sight - Mike Maden Read onlineLine of Sight - Mike MadenEndWar Read onlineEndWarDead or Alive Read onlineDead or AliveTom Clancy Support and Defend Read onlineTom Clancy Support and DefendCheckmate Read onlineCheckmateCommand Authority Read onlineCommand AuthorityCarrier: A Guided Tour of an Aircraft Carrier Read onlineCarrier: A Guided Tour of an Aircraft CarrierBlacklist Aftermath Read onlineBlacklist AftermathMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit Read onlineMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary UnitCommander-In-Chief Read onlineCommander-In-ChiefArmored Cav: A Guided Tour of an Armored Cavalry Regiment Read onlineArmored Cav: A Guided Tour of an Armored Cavalry RegimentTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 1-6 Read onlineTom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 1-6The Ultimate Escape Read onlineThe Ultimate EscapeAirborne: A Guided Tour of an Airborne Task Force Read onlineAirborne: A Guided Tour of an Airborne Task ForceDebt of Honor Read onlineDebt of HonorCyberspy Read onlineCyberspyPoint of Contact Read onlinePoint of ContactOperation Barracuda (2005) Read onlineOperation Barracuda (2005)Choke Point Read onlineChoke PointPower and Empire Read onlinePower and EmpireEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign Read onlineEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air CampaignEndgame (1998) Read onlineEndgame (1998)EndWar: The Missing Read onlineEndWar: The MissingSplinter Cell (2004) Read onlineSplinter Cell (2004)The Great Race Read onlineThe Great RaceTrue Faith and Allegiance Read onlineTrue Faith and AllegianceDeathworld Read onlineDeathworldGhost Recon (2008) Read onlineGhost Recon (2008)Duel Identity Read onlineDuel IdentityLine of Control o-8 Read onlineLine of Control o-8The Hunt for Red October jr-3 Read onlineThe Hunt for Red October jr-3Hidden Agendas nf-2 Read onlineHidden Agendas nf-2Acts of War oc-4 Read onlineActs of War oc-4Ruthless.Com pp-2 Read onlineRuthless.Com pp-2Night Moves Read onlineNight MovesThe Hounds of Rome - Mystery of a Fugitive Priest Read onlineThe Hounds of Rome - Mystery of a Fugitive PriestInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq sic-1 Read onlineInto the Storm: On the Ground in Iraq sic-1Threat Vector jrj-4 Read onlineThreat Vector jrj-4Combat Ops gr-2 Read onlineCombat Ops gr-2Virtual Vandals nfe-1 Read onlineVirtual Vandals nfe-1Runaways nfe-16 Read onlineRunaways nfe-16Marine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit tcml-4 Read onlineMarine: A Guided Tour of a Marine Expeditionary Unit tcml-4Shadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces sic-3 Read onlineShadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces sic-3Jack Ryan Books 1-6 Read onlineJack Ryan Books 1-6Cold Case nfe-15 Read onlineCold Case nfe-15Changing of the Guard nf-8 Read onlineChanging of the Guard nf-8Splinter Cell sc-1 Read onlineSplinter Cell sc-1Battle Ready sic-4 Read onlineBattle Ready sic-4The Bear and the Dragon jrao-11 Read onlineThe Bear and the Dragon jrao-11Fighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing tcml-3 Read onlineFighter Wing: A Guided Tour of an Air Force Combat Wing tcml-3Patriot Games jr-1 Read onlinePatriot Games jr-1Jack Ryan Books 7-12 Read onlineJack Ryan Books 7-12Mission of Honor o-9 Read onlineMission of Honor o-9Private Lives nfe-9 Read onlinePrivate Lives nfe-9Operation Barracuda sc-2 Read onlineOperation Barracuda sc-2Cold War pp-5 Read onlineCold War pp-5Point of Impact nf-5 Read onlinePoint of Impact nf-5Red Rabbit jr-9 Read onlineRed Rabbit jr-9The Deadliest Game nfe-2 Read onlineThe Deadliest Game nfe-2Springboard nf-9 Read onlineSpringboard nf-9Safe House nfe-10 Read onlineSafe House nfe-10EndWar e-1 Read onlineEndWar e-1Duel Identity nfe-12 Read onlineDuel Identity nfe-12Deathworld nfe-13 Read onlineDeathworld nfe-13Politika pp-1 Read onlinePolitika pp-1Rainbow Six jr-9 Read onlineRainbow Six jr-9Tom Clancy's Power Plays 1 - 4 Read onlineTom Clancy's Power Plays 1 - 4Endgame sc-6 Read onlineEndgame sc-6Executive Orders jr-7 Read onlineExecutive Orders jr-7Net Force nf-1 Read onlineNet Force nf-1Call to Treason o-11 Read onlineCall to Treason o-11Locked On jrj-3 Read onlineLocked On jrj-3Against All Enemies Read onlineAgainst All EnemiesThe Sum of All Fears jr-7 Read onlineThe Sum of All Fears jr-7Sea of Fire o-10 Read onlineSea of Fire o-10Fallout sc-4 Read onlineFallout sc-4Balance of Power o-5 Read onlineBalance of Power o-5Shadow Watch pp-3 Read onlineShadow Watch pp-3State of War nf-7 Read onlineState of War nf-7Wild Card pp-8 Read onlineWild Card pp-8Games of State o-3 Read onlineGames of State o-3Death Match nfe-18 Read onlineDeath Match nfe-18Against All Enemies mm-1 Read onlineAgainst All Enemies mm-1Every Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign sic-2 Read onlineEvery Man a Tiger: The Gulf War Air Campaign sic-2Cybernation nf-6 Read onlineCybernation nf-6Support and Defend Read onlineSupport and DefendNight Moves nf-3 Read onlineNight Moves nf-3SSN Read onlineSSNCutting Edge pp-6 Read onlineCutting Edge pp-6The Cardinal of the Kremlin jrao-5 Read onlineThe Cardinal of the Kremlin jrao-5War of Eagles o-12 Read onlineWar of Eagles o-12Op-Center o-1 Read onlineOp-Center o-1Mirror Image o-2 Read onlineMirror Image o-2The Archimedes Effect nf-10 Read onlineThe Archimedes Effect nf-10Teeth of the Tiger jrj-1 Read onlineTeeth of the Tiger jrj-1Bio-Strike pp-4 Read onlineBio-Strike pp-4State of Siege o-6 Read onlineState of Siege o-6Debt of Honor jr-6 Read onlineDebt of Honor jr-6Zero Hour pp-7 Read onlineZero Hour pp-7Ghost Recon gr-1 Read onlineGhost Recon gr-1Command Authority jr-10 Read onlineCommand Authority jr-10Tom Clancy's Power Plays 5 - 8 Read onlineTom Clancy's Power Plays 5 - 8Checkmate sc-3 Read onlineCheckmate sc-3Breaking Point nf-4 Read onlineBreaking Point nf-4Gameprey nfe-11 Read onlineGameprey nfe-11The Hunted e-2 Read onlineThe Hunted e-2Hidden Agendas Read onlineHidden AgendasDivide and Conquer o-7 Read onlineDivide and Conquer o-7