...author of science-fiction romance that's just a bit alien
Welcome to the excerpts page! I'm excited to be participating in Voirey Linger's Summer Reading Trail. You'll find the first excerpt from Undercover Alien below, with more to follow in the coming months.
“Mr.
Smith?”
The
fifty-something man who answered the door had bitten his nails to the quick. “Yes?”
“I’m
Hannah Morgan, from IREAL.”
He
stared over her shoulder at her van, as if to reassure himself it bore no
telltale sign of her profession. Then he
gave her the same perusal, only shorter.
She
stood patiently, ignoring the trickle of sweat making its way down her spine. She knew what he would see. She had selected her khakis, tucked camp
shirt, and scuffed briefcase to arouse little curiosity, and she didn’t wear
makeup. It was a waste of time to enhance
features with nothing interesting to highlight.
With her brown eyes and hair, the latter pulled ruthlessly back in a
plain clip, she looked absolutely uninteresting. Any nosy neighbors would think she was
soliciting donations or converts, and hide behind their curtains.
Apparently
satisfied, Mr. Smith ushered her inside, leading the way down a short hall. An air-conditioner already hard at work for
the year drowned out the muffled thud of sneakers on carpet. The hallway ended in a tiny office where she
had to pick her way through stacks of papers and books. Her host waved toward a wooden chair wearing
a film of dust. Hannah sat. After several hours of driving through the
desert, with the windows rolled down in her un-air-conditioned van, she was
probably a little dusty, too.
For himself, he selected a worn
leather chair positioned in front of an overflowing roll-top desk, and fidgeted
for a moment before giving her an apologetic look. “My name isn’t really Smith.”
“That’s all right. I get a lot of ‘Smiths’ in my profession.” She smiled to soften the comment. “It’s ‘Doctor’ Smith anyway, isn’t it?”
He flushed, something she suspected he
did about as often as he fidgeted. “Um,
yes. I’m a professor at a university in
“I didn’t. I was guessing.” He’d now told her more about his brother than
he had about himself, but over the past four years, she had learned to read
between the lines. Not that it took a
genius to figure out he was terrified one of his colleagues might discover he’d
met with a member of IREAL.
“Do I have to tell you my real name?”
“Not
if you don’t want to. The information
you give me today will be entered into a research database under an assumed
name. Your real name will never be used.”
“But wasn’t there something in one of
those supermarket tabloids a couple of years ago? Didn’t somebody’s name get out?”
“That was a mistake in procedure which
has since been corrected.” A muscle
spasmed in her neck, a familiar pain, and she willed her shoulders to relax. Better than anyone, she knew the article to
which he was referring. “Only pseudonyms
are used and it’s been IREAL’s policy since that incident to decline interviews
with the news media unless the journalist is verifiably credible.” And my personal policy to avoid any kind of
reporters, credible or otherwise.
The professor must have found
something in their conversation reassuring, because he leaned back in his chair
with a sigh. “All right. How do we do this?”
She set the tape recorder on the only
clear spot on the desk. “I ask you
questions and you respond. That’s about
all there is to it. Do I have your
permission to record?”
He nodded and she turned on the
recorder, briefly entering the day, time, and her own identification. She was sure before the end of the interview
she’d know his name. She usually did.
For the present she would go with the
obvious. “This is the interview of
subject John Smith, not his real name. Tell
me, Mr. Smith. When did you first
suspect you had been abducted by aliens?”
#
Three hours later, the interview was
complete. The sun had dropped behind the
It had gone well. Despite being visibly rattled, the professor
had provided several useful observations to add to the database. She told as much to the mini-recorder on the
seat at her side. She liked to get her
impressions down while they were still fresh.
It also helped to pass the time, which she would have a lot of tonight. There were four hundred miles of sparsely populated
desert and plains between
After
the interview tomorrow, she’d finish up a few reports and spend a second night
in
Hannah
was rubbing at a persistent muscle ache in one shoulder when her cell phone
rang. She glanced at the caller ID.
“Hi,
Sid.”
“Am I interrupting?”
“No, it’s done.” She filled him in on the interview. Sid Eisler was her boss, the founder of
IREAL, the Institute for Research into Encounters with Alien Life, and one of
the few people she considered a friend. “How
are things in
There was a pause from the other end
of the line. “Which do you want first,
good news or bad?”
She tried rolling her shoulder, and
winced. “Good.”
“Stuart called again today.”
Hannah jerked, causing the van to
lurch as it picked up speed. She eased
back on the gas. “I thought you were
going to give me the good news.”
“It is good news. He complimented you on the articles you’ve
written lately and asked where you were.
I told him to go butt a stump. Enjoyed
it, too.”
Her lying ex-fiancé and the tabloid
newspaper he wrote for had almost taken down IREAL. Only Sid was able to joke about it. “Is that all?”
“Well, he didn’t offer cash this time,
or I might have been tempted. Seriously,
stop worrying. It was a fishing
expedition.”
The tension in her neck shot a sharp
pain across her shoulder. Donations had
not been the same since Stuart’s damaging article in The Undercover Reporter. It was tough enough for a non-profit to make
it at all when it straddled the line where science met speculation. One whiff of a scandal and donors could
disappear for years. “How low are we?”
“So low I’m still working on where to
get the payroll after next month. That’s
the bad news. We don’t have the money to
reimburse you for your conference fee.”
Grimacing, she mentally reviewed her
checking account balance. “Don’t worry
about it. I’ll pay for it myself.” She might not eat much while she was there,
but she would get to attend. She always
enjoyed the SETI conference and she needed the break, no matter what it did to
her meager emergency fund.
“Thanks, Hannah. You guys work for next to nothing already. I feel like a heel when we can’t at least pay
for a few perks.”
"It’s okay.” The bigger worry was what they were going to
do in a few weeks.
It
was as if he’d read her mind. “Don’t
give up on the future just yet. I’m
trying to wheedle extra funds from the usual sources. You’re taking some time off to visit your
father over the weekend, right? How’s he
doing?”
Keeping
an eye on the empty road, she rolled her head from side to side. It seemed to help. “He’s fine.” Hopefully, she wouldn’t arrive to find her
father’s mind slipping further away. Sid
didn’t know the details, because she’d always kept her private life private. At the height of her idiocy, she’d come
dangerously close to introducing Stuart to her father. What a catastrophe that would have been
To
forestall further questions, she asked about a potential subject who had
contacted IREAL the previous week. “She’s
not thirty minutes down the road from Dad’s place. Do you want me to see her while I’m there?”
“She’s
still not sure about talking to us. I
told her to call when she’s ready.”
He
fell silent, probably thinking the same thing she was, that the woman might not
have an IREAL to listen to her story if she didn’t decide to share it soon. It would be hard to leave IREAL. Hannah could find other work; she had a
college degree in psychology and another in sociology. It was unlikely to be in the UFO-studies
field, though. Sid and IREAL might have
forgiven her, and the general public might have forgotten she’d nearly made a
mess of her professional credibility two years ago, but she doubted a potential
employer would miss it. And she couldn’t
help but feel that for her father’s sake, she needed to stay right where she
was.
After
Sid filled her in on the status of some of their other projects and ended the
call, Hannah removed the earpiece and returned both hands to the steering wheel. Night had fallen and she turned on the headlights
as she climbed the five thousand feet toward Guadalupe Pass. The section of road directly ahead was always
tricky. The wind racing through the pass
had a habit of catching the side of her top-heavy vehicle and urging it toward
the edge.
She’d
just entered the pass, concentrating on the curve of the road ahead, when a
flash of light nearly blinded her.
“What
the . . .?”
Overcompensating,
the van gave a sickening swerve. She
braked, barely maintaining control. Going
too fast, she pulled headfirst into the emergency lane. The tires skidded to a stop and the van’s
engine died.
In
the sudden silence, her heart beat in her ears.
Inches beyond her hood, the rocky mountainside dropped sharply to the
desert below. Further out, faint lights
glowed from a few buildings huddled along the Interstate. The security lights of a lone ranger station
gleamed off the road to the left, and there were no lights coming up the road
toward her. A glance backward revealed
no red taillights disappearing through the pass, either. The other vehicle had to have been traveling
well in excess of the speed limit, to vanish so fast. From her perspective, it had seemed like the
speed of light.
Feeling foolish, she looked up, but saw nothing. Shaking her head, she started the van and pulled back onto the highway. Good thing she was a scientist. Someone else might have been sure she’d just encountered a UFO.