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Mud and Salt [Wannoshay Series #3] [MultiFormat]
eBook by Michael Jasper
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eBook Category: Science Fiction Writers of the Future Contest Finalist
eBook Description: Desperate for the reward money, three old friends from rural Nebraska embark on a hunt for a runaway alien, and in the course of one violent afternoon, they learn the true meaning of home and what it means to be alone.
eBook Publisher: Fictionwise.com, Published: Writers of the Future Volume XVI, ed. Algis Budrys, 2000
Fictionwise Release Date: May 2003
This eBook is part of the following series:
43 Reader Ratings:
Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: eReader (PDB) [27 KB]
, ePub (EPUB) [84 KB]
, Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [13 KB]
, Portable Document Format (PDF) [62 KB]
, Palm Doc (PDB) [14 KB]
, Microsoft Reader (LIT) [93 KB]
, Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [84 KB]
, hiebook (KML) [40 KB]
, Sony Reader (LRF) [37 KB]
, iSilo (PDB) [11 KB]
, Mobipocket (PRC) [15 KB]
, Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [42 KB]
, OEBFF Format (IMP) [22 KB]
Words: 4276 Reading time: 12-17 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Portable Document Format (PDF) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED

"Michael J. Jasper's story of Nebraska rednecks hunting an escaped alien refugee in the winter woods outside of Omaha is sadly heart-chilling. The backstory is familiar to anyone who ever saw Alien Nation, but Jasper takes us deep inside the idea. The author clearly understands Wittgenstein's famous observation about speaking lions, as the alien remains just that--alien. The hunters are all too familiar stand-ins for the reader and the values of our culture as a whole. Take your time with this one."--Jay Lake, Tangent Online (Learn more about Tangent Online, the Internet's leading SF&F short fiction review website)

Skin followed Georgie and Matt out of the pickup, his entire body shivering despite the three layers of clothing he wore. Outside the truck, the early-morning November air was crisp, with just a hint of wind that seeped through his camouflage jacket. Skin felt Matt watching him in the semi-darkness, making his shoulder blades itch until Georgie slapped him on the back and handed him a rifle. Once all three were armed, they stood in an empty field a mile from the abandoned Omaha Indian reservation. According to the guy in the bar last night, the alien had been seen in the area the previous afternoon. "If it gets any colder, my nuts are gonna flash and go south," Georgie said as he rubbed his dark, sleep-bent hair. A pink finger stuck out of a hole in his glove. "Thanks so much for sharing," Matt said, pulling a ragged scarf tighter around his thick neck. "At least you have nuts, unlike our buddy Skin here, who won't even protect his own woman." He pulled out his heat-sensitive field glasses and elbowed Skin in the ribs. Skin swallowed hard and checked his gun for the second time to make sure it was loaded. Sunlight crawled over the bluffs of the Missouri River to the east as Skin glanced at his old friends, his heartbeat thudding in his ears in anticipation of the hunt. He saw Georgie's boyish face slip into a grin, while Matt's chubby face frowned at the brown landscape from behind his glasses. All three men were in their mid-twenties, high school buddies from Fremont, Nebraska, class of '09. None of them had ever killed anything larger than a deer before. Georgie coughed and spit, breaking the sense of dread building in Skin. "Let's go." Skin and Matt moved at the same time, forming a wedge with Georgie in the lead. The dead, frozen ground crackled under their boots, and the tree branches above them rustled in a sudden breeze. Pulling his jacket tighter onto his wiry body, wishing he'd been able to buy a new coat this fall, Skin glanced at the forest again. The Indians had left the reservation over two years ago, heading farther south to put more distance between them and the detainment camps. The camps had been a good idea, he thought, even though it had driven the Indians away. "Don't drop that new gun, Skin," Matt said, his jaggedly-cut blonde hair flipping into his eyes. He adjusted his spectacles on his nose and lowered his voice. "Of course Georgie gives me the shitty one. I know it's hard for you to carry a conversation, much less heavy weaponry." "Shut up, Matt," Georgie whispered. "Someone's been through here recently." They slowed, Matt glaring at the back of Georgie's head. Georgie pointed at some thorn bushes and matted-down grass, but Skin couldn't see any difference in the brown undergrowth. He knew they weren't going to find anything out here, but he liked hunting with Georgie. After walking around all day, freezing their toes and fingers, they'd all end up at his house for home-brewed beer, chili, and the sports transmissions from the media satellite system that eastern Nebraska had finally had installed. They continued walking north at a slower pace, closer to the abandoned reservation. Skin had only seen blurry pictures of the aliens, and he wasn't sure if he wanted to run across one today in the single-digit cold. Ever since their arrival, followed by the accidents in the Dakotas and Minnesota, he'd envisioned them as big, monkey-like creatures from his childhood nightmares. The guys they drank with at the bar had a working list of insults and myths made up about the aliens, from "graymeat" to "hellspawn" to "dirteaters." The list grew nightly. Lisa, working as a nurse's aide at the Fremont hospital, had heard from other nurses who had been to one of the camps that the aliens carried diseases and were drug addicts, and they smelled terrible. He inhaled icy air and held back a cough. His legs were getting tired already.
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