Now available for e-readers and in print, the newly edited
and formatted The Willow and the Stone is on sale at Amazon, Barnes and Noble,
Smashwords, and Create Space (print). An award winner in the best fiction and
novel categories at the Southeastern Writers Conference, this science fiction
adventure was my first novel. I am thrilled to have this version out and
available.
Get your e-copy now from Amazon,
Amazon
UK, and Smashwords. You can also buy it in paperback print. For Nook users, you can get a Nook-compatible copy from Smashwords. If you prefer to buy directly from Barnes & Noble, I am hoping it will be on their virtual shelves in a week or two. I will post that link when it comes available.
Four years ago, insectile aliens
arrived on Earth in great pyramid ships. Now mankind is reduced to a few
pockets of survivors, skulking in the shadows to elude the creatures that rule
the planet. Among those survivors are Carli Dixon and Renee Johnson, an
ill-matched pair thrown together through circumstance.
Battling their extraterrestrial enemy and the betrayal of their own kind, Carli and Renee struggle against impossible odds to find safety. Rescuing each other from certain death cements their friendship. But to survive and save others like themselves, they must risk everything … including each other.
Battling their extraterrestrial enemy and the betrayal of their own kind, Carli and Renee struggle against impossible odds to find safety. Rescuing each other from certain death cements their friendship. But to survive and save others like themselves, they must risk everything … including each other.
Chapter
1
Renee slapped her hand over her
companion’s mouth. The brunette manhandled the smaller woman into the shadows
beneath the stone bridge they’d just emerged from. Carli didn’t struggle
against Renee’s grip. Instead, she squealed a muffled cry of protest into the
stagnant West Virginia night air.
“Sssssshh!” Renee hissed, her grip
tightening. “Aliens!”
Carli froze against her for an instant
before breaking free. She slammed herself against the inside of the arch to
merge with the blackest of shadows. Renee crowded her, also sliding into the
dubious cover of darkness. The bridge, more picturesque than a bastion of
protection, was small with wooden beams buttressing the stones above. A perfect
spot for vacationing tourists to pose on for pictures to bore their co-workers
with, but a ridiculous spot to depend on for one’s life.
Two monstrous creatures glided into
view, their elongated insectoid figures silhouetted in the bright moonlight.
They stalked up to the bridge that spanned the dry, dusty creek bed and joined
the women in the darkness. Carli and Renee melted behind a support beam.
Trapped,
Carli’s frantic mind whispered. The monsters had them for sure this time. She
squeezed her eyes shut but couldn’t block out the aliens’ cricket speech. They
chirped and chittered, grating against her ears. She wished she could be struck
deaf. Sweat tickled its way down her spine.
Muscular Renee, who couldn’t begin to
approach the power of the spindly aliens, tensed beside her. The creatures came
abreast of the hidden women, chirping ear-bleeding conversation right in front
of them. Carli tried to shrink further back, mashing her backside into the
unyielding, unsympathetic stone. Renee crushed against her.
A pebble slid from under Carli’s foot
and clinked in protest as it dislodged and rolled down the slope. Her mouth
flew open to scream; surely the monsters heard the rock crash down. No whistle
of sound escaped her locked, straining throat, but her heart was a bass drum of
thunder booming through the night.
Her eyes screwed shut against the sight
of the looming predators, Carli waited for the bristle-haired mantis arms of an
alien to embrace her. She waited for its needle proboscis to slide into her
flesh and secrete its paralyzing poison. She waited to sag helpless in the grip
of the monster while it sipped the life from her veins. She waited to die a
slow, fading death. Her heart pounded louder than ever, as if to beat as hard
and fast as it could in its few remaining minutes.
The chittering aliens, intent on their
conversation, stalked past. Disbelieving, Carli’s eyes flew open. She watched
them pass from under the bridge. Motes of moon-glittering dust danced in the
wake of the monsters’ long, tapered legs.
She released the breath she’d been
holding in a rush and sucked it in again as one alien swiveled its head around.
It looked back at the bridge that hid the two women.
Carli’s stomach lurched at the pale orb
of the creature’s face glowing in the moonlight. Wispy tufts of hair sprang in
sparse bunches from its bullet-shaped head. Its proboscis writhed like a blind
worm where a nose and mouth would have been on a human. Its grayish flesh
seemed stretched too tight over its skull; there were no wrinkles, not even
creases on its face.
Its eyes shocked her the most. The
monster’s eyes were cold in intent but horribly human in appearance, almond
shaped and ringed with black lashes.
The creatures’ naked torsos were long
and smooth without benefit of hair, muscle tone, or even genitalia. Carli had
no idea if skin or a harder shell covered their bones. Happily she’d never been
in contact with one. Odds were she’d someday lose that joy.
The searching alien’s too-human eyes
slid over the women without alerting. Carli’s body sagged as the creature
turned away and stalked on with its companion.
The women huddled under the bridge
listening to the monsters’ conversation die away and smelling the sour tang of
their own sweat. Carli shuddered violently. She knew that Renee could feel her
quaking and didn’t care. Renee was probably shaking too. This had been their
closest call yet.
Frogs broke into chorus from their
shelters within the tall grass on the banks. Renee shook free of her paralysis,
grabbed Carli’s hand, and yanked her out into the open. Under the moon’s
accusing glare they sped away, tearing a path through the grass to escape the
creatures that had all but destroyed the human race.
Now available from Amazon, Amazon UK, Smashwords, and in print.
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