152 Czech Hunter <SAFE - 2027>

The designation didn't make sense to anyone except the old man who painted it on the fuselage.

One night over the Tatra Mountains, radar picked up a stolen Antonov An-2—a "crop duster" from hell—carrying enough smuggled weapons to start a civil war. The Hunter rose from a hidden highway strip, running dark. 152 czech hunter

The NATO pilots who saw the blur on their radar screens called it a ghost. The official reports listed it as an unidentified subsonic contact over the Carpathian basin. But to the few who knew the truth, it was simply The One-Fifty-Two —a customized Czechoslovakian Let L-159 ALCA, built not for a war that existed, but for a hunt that had no borders. The designation didn't make sense to anyone except

The Czech government, bound by peacetime treaties, couldn't scramble MiGs for every blip. So they unofficially commissioned one man: a former test pilot from Vodochody, a hunter by hobby and a tactician by instinct. They gave him one aircraft, tail number 152. The NATO pilots who saw the blur on

Its pilot was not a soldier. He was a gamekeeper.