M.G. Herron writes science fiction novels for adrenaline junkies. With more than 12 books published, his spellbinding and action-packed stories explore new worlds, futuristic technologies, ancient mysteries, and the depths of the human experience. He lives in Austin, TX with his patient wife, ornery kids and loyal canine sidekick.

The Gunn Files Book 1: Culture Shock by M.G. Herron

Aliens are among us—Austin, Texas just got a whole lot weirder.

When down-on-his-luck bounty hunter Anderson Gunn snags his next job, he's just happy to get the gig.

The target he's chasing may be wanted for murder, but his debts won't pay themselves.

He should've been more selective. When Gunn finds his mark, the wanted man turns out to be no man at all. Gunn faces off against a tentacled creature out of Ridley Scott's worst nightmare—a mind-reading offworlder wearing his skip's skin like a onesie.

And that's just the first day.

Gunn's world turns upside down as he gets swept up in the hunt for an escaped alien convict.

Amidst the chaos, an otherworldly puppeteer pulls hidden strings, implicating a shadowy organization with designs on Earth that are as cryptic as they are deadly.

The Gunn Files is a gripping and fast-paced sci-fi mystery with a dash of humor and the gritty allure of noir detective fiction.

CURATOR'S NOTE

The Gunn Files is my love letter to the weirdness of Austin with a murder mystery flair. When bounty hunter Anderson Gunn stumbles into a hidden world of aliens living among us, his whole world turns upside down. Of all my characters, I get the most fan emails about this guy. Readers tell me they love the original plots and noir detective style, or that it feels like Men in Black meets The Maltese Falcon. – M.G. Herron

 

REVIEWS

  • "Freakin' urban PI sci-fi mashup perfection that is totally fun, and highly recommended."

    – Reader review
  • "The Gunn Files are a cross between The Stainless Steel Rat and Men in Black. I love the characters! I love the storyline."

    – Reader review
  • "The Gunn Files is true science fiction and very well written. The author has a fantastic imagination. I ended up staying awake a lot longer than usual because I had to know what was happening next. I highly recommend purchasing the series."

    – Reader review
 

BOOK PREVIEW

Excerpt

Paranoia's a survival trait in my line of work. If you don't watch your six, bad things can happen.

No surprise then that I'd been searching my rearview mirror for a white sedan since I started heading back to the office. It was difficult to tell the make and model of the cars behind me at night, but I didn't think I'd seen a white Mercedes—yet.

While I drove, I let my mind wander back over the details of my assignment.

Something didn't add up. I couldn't figure out why Georgia Kovak would think her husband was sleeping with Patricia Wallart if Wallart hadn't seen "Cam" for at least a year.

The problem was, my bullshit detector had been finely honed over a decade of skiptracing and I was ninety-nine percent sure Patricia Wallart was telling me the truth. There was always the chance she was an exceptional liar—I run into that sort of person on occasion, the type who could lie to my face without breaking a sweat. Typically, they were gamblers, drug dealers, or a person who'd developed lying as part of a survival skill set. But not the Patricia Wallarts of the world. I'd looked her straight in the eyes, and there had been no deception there. She had been genuinely surprised when I mentioned Kovak's name.

I didn't have a good answer, but I wasn't done with this lead. I knew better than to second guess Mrs. Kovak's intuition. Kovak was cheating with someone, Georgia just didn't know the mistress had changed. Count on a guy like Kovak to roll through more than one skank ho in a year. Many more, perhaps.

I guess I had my work cut out for me.

By the time I got back, east Sixth Street was already busy. The night crowd was making a strong showing and I had to park a few blocks away from the office. No big deal. After all that time in the truck, it was good to stretch my legs.

I relished the basso feel of drums rolling out the open window of a lively corner bar. The place was crowded and sweaty, filled with dolled-up girls in tight denim shorts and cowboy boots, and the desperate young men chasing them.

A block later, a bachelorette party of a dozen women wearing glittery black t-shirts and high heels, danced around and past me while singing pop songs and waving phallus-shaped balloons in the air. One of balloons drifted to the ground and fell victim to a spike heel. When it popped, the whole group erupted in a fit of senseless giggling.

I was still shaking my head when I opened the door to my office and discovered an unexpected visitor sitting behind my desk. I rocked back on my heels.

"Annabelle?" I said. "What are you doing here?"

Annabelle Summers was what any hormone-producing male would have called a blonde bombshell. A knockout. She wore thick horn-rimmed black glasses, a black blouse, and tight white cotton shorts. Even in those cork heels, she would only stand about six inches shorter than me. A pair of silver hoops dangled from her earlobes. My laptop was open on the desk and she was thumbing through some bills.

I averted my eyes when it began to feel like I was staring. My mother always said hoop earrings were trashy. I guess I thought trashy was sexy.

Her eyebrows shot up. "Hey, you! Sorry to drop in like this, but Alek said you asked for help with your bills. He thought you'd be out for a while."

I felt my face heat up. "Erm, he didn't have to do that."

"Oh, it's no problem. I'm more than happy to help. Would have been here earlier but, well, it's been a busy day. Alek was right to send me though. Payments on this business loan are way past due. Between interest and late fees, you're paying as much each month in administrative costs as you are on the principal. If you'd told me about this before, I could have helped you renegotiate payment terms… or… or something."

I grimaced, knowing she was merely speaking the truth I hadn't wanted to acknowledge this morning. I should have been offended that Alek had sent her to pry into my private business, but I wasn't. I only felt a sense of relief, mixed with the cold fire of shame.

Feigning nonchalance, I emptied my pockets onto an open corner of the desk—the only remaining flat surface not occupied in the tiny office—topping the pile with my handgun, still holstered. Then I grabbed a beer from the mini fridge and cracked it open, buying myself a second to think.

Finally, I said, "I just got a little behind on my payments, that's all. I can handle it."

Annabelle wasn't just a pretty face. She was also the accountant of record for all of Alek's business interests, and she was damn good at her job. As a result of Alek's friendship, she had given me some financial advice in the past, helped me set up some accounting software, that sort of thing. If I could have afforded to pay her what Alek did, I would have. And trust me, she was worth it. But that wasn't the only reason I hadn't asked for help. The idea of someone else rifling through my bank accounts and bills, digging up memories and dredging up all the difficult choices I'd had to make since mom's funeral put me on edge.

Still, the idea of working on my finances with this job on my hands nauseated me. If she wanted to help, and Alek was offering… what kind of ungrateful oaf would I be to refuse?

Something else occurred to me, like the snap of an unseen ship's sails passing in the night.

"Say, how did you get in here, anyway?"

"Alek gave me his spare key." She picked up a pewter bottle opener keychain from which a single key hung. Definitely Alek's. I'd given him a spare ages ago, just in case I ever got locked out. There has to be one person you trust to have your back. Him sending Anna without telling me was his gruff way of having my back in another way.

"But the door was unlocked," Annabelle added. "I thought you left it open for me because Alek told you I was coming."

"He didn't." I narrowed my eyes. "Are you sure it was unlocked?"

She glared at me from under one arched eyebrow. "I'm sure."

I glanced back at the door. "I locked it when I left."

"It was open when I got here." Annabelle shrugged, then shuffled the bills and typed something on the computer. Narrowing her eyes at the pile of things I'd placed on the desk, she lifted a crumpled piece of white paper from the pile and smoothed it out. My heart sank as I realized that it was the note from my landlord. I closed my eyes and drained half the beer.

"Aw, hell, Gunn," Annabelle said. "You should have said something sooner."

"It's not your responsibility," I said. "I told you, I just got a little behind. I can handle it. Once I find this Cameron Kovak, I'll be caught up in no time. More work will come in after that. It always does."

She set her jaw and started typing on the laptop. I waited, swinging the beer can between two fingers and tapping my foot.

"Your expenses have outpaced your income for months, Gunn," Anna finally said. "There was a windfall from a couple years ago—before we set up your accounting system, remember?—that was keeping you afloat. What happened to that?"

"It was a business loan," I said.

She looked around the tiny office, then quirked her eyebrows up ever so slightly.

"I took out a loan to expand the business, but I never got around to it. It was right around the time my mom died."

"Oh," she said. She went back to typing on the computer.

"Okay, now one more thing," I said. "How did you get that old thing working?"

"What old thing?"

"The laptop. It had that blue screen of death-thingie."

"It worked fine. Sometimes that just means you have to restart it." The way she laughed could have melted stone. "Did you try turning it off and on again?"

"Guess not."

A distracted look came into her eyes, as if she had suddenly lost interest in the conversation. As I came around the desk to see what she was doing, she tabbed away from a browser and back into the accounting system and pointed at it. "So, wait, where'd the money go?"

"What was that?"

"What? Nothing."

"Let me see," I leaned down over her shoulder and switched back to the browser.

Annabelle's cheeks heated up in a rosy blush.

"Huh," I said.

It was one of those web 1.0 sites, all black with flamboyantly colored fonts—greens, yellows, and neon blues. Flashy graphics. No cohesion at all.

A banner across the top read: Weirder Than Weird, and beneath that, "Marsha Marshall's investigations into, supernatural, paranormal, and unexplained phenomena."

It was the blog run by Austin's local investigator of weird, the blogger Marsha Marshall. Austin hosted its fair share of UFO enthusiasts and lovers of the occult, but Marsha was their patron queen. Most of the people I ran with, including Alek, thought she was a crackpot. I did too, most days, but I kept tabs on her like I keep tabs on all the odd things in this city. Never know when she might stumble on a strange fact that might help me out one day.

Marshall's writing covered things that many of the mainstream news sources ignored or laughed off as nothing more than kids' pranks. She had a flair for sensational headlines and was very passionate about conspiracy theories. There were reams of pages buried in the back of the site about Area 51, Roswell, and the supposed nuclear fallout shelter beneath the Denver airport. She'd mapped UFO sightings all across Texas.

Today, my assignment—and Detective Gonzalez's murder case—was being featured prominently. A distant and blurry photograph of the crater where Dale Edwards had died spanned the top fold of the page. Below that, a dizzying array of colorful headlines and other graphics.

I gave Annabelle a wry look out of the corner of my eye. She looked defensive for a moment, and then offended. "What?" she scoffed. "Don't tell me you've never read this blog. I saw the URL in your browser history, which is the only reason I clicked on it, to be honest."

"Uh huh."

Annabelle jutted her chin out. "Some of her ideas are really compelling. Take this thing today. That crater didn't just come out of nowhere. KVUE initially misreported it as 'ditch'. Then they said it was a hole dug to bury new power lines. First of all, the power lines there are strung overhead. Secondly, power lines, in a hole that deep? Come on."

I felt obligated to play devil's advocate. "Some of her explanations are compelling. That doesn't make them the truth."

"You think she's a liar?"

I shook my head, chuckling. "I didn't say that. I think Marsha Marshall believes every word she writes on this blog. But wishing it were so doesn't transform her wild theories into undeniable facts."

"You can't deny that something spooky is going on in this case. Kovak was a lineman—a power line worker, right? Since he went missing, there have been all sorts of brownouts and power outages in the city."

"That's because of the heat wave. Power outages are completely random, or at least correlated to specific problems the power lines in that area are having."

She crossed her arms. "Did someone at the power company tell you that?"

"Well, no, but—"

Both of her eyebrows shot up again. This girl could use those expressive eyebrows to tell a story without words. She shrugged again, as if to say, fine.

I knew what fine meant. Especially in that tone of shrug.

"I can appreciate some of Ms. Marshall's ideas," I said, trying to win Annabelle back over to my side, "but sometimes I think she goes a little too far."

Her brow furrowed. "What do you mean?"

"You remember last year when farms in Kyle started reporting an unexpected string of cattle deaths? The news said it was mad cow disease or something, but all anyone wanted to talk about is how Marsha Marshall thought it was chihuahuas."

"Chupacabras," Annabelle corrected me. "What's so crazy about that?"

"Well, for starters, these chahupacabras ain't real."

Annabelle gave me a look that told me she thought I was a simpleton. I could just imagine that she was thinking, Bless your heart. Instead, she said, "Do you believe in God, Anderson?"

"Of course. I'm a Texan."

"Have you ever seen God?" She looked at me like she'd just discovered a cure for cancer.

"Can't say I have."

"Just 'cause you ain't seen something, doesn't mean it don't exist. You know what does exist?" She lifted the stack of overdue bills and waved them at me, with the late rent reminder from my landlord on top.

I sighed and sat down on the desk next to her. "Okay. Just give it to me straight. How deep am I in the hole?"

We went through each of my bills and accounts together, checking my statements and doing cash projections and a bill payment schedule. She was a saint. Her expertise and cool depth of knowledge made me feel like I was back in math class in middle school, trying to wrap my head around basic variable equations that everyone else seemed to pick up on so much quicker than I had. Math was never my strong suit. But it did help to make me realize that it was possible to dig myself out of the hole. Even though I was tired from the evening's events, I couldn't help but feel a deep gratitude toward her.

When we reached the end of the pile, I drained the dregs of my beer, crushed the can, and pitched it into the little plastic trash can in the corner to join the other dead soldiers that had accumulated throughout the week.

"It's a good start," Annabelle said.

I nodded. "Thanks. I mean it."

"You bet."

The music outside had gotten louder. I tapped my foot to it as my mind wandered back to Kovak—or, more accurately, to the tag on his safe return. I had to find him if I wanted to keep the office—if I wanted to have a shot at hanging on in this business. The thought of going back to a normal nine-to-five put a sour taste in my mouth. I hadn't had one of those in over a decade, and I didn't plan to start now.

Annabelle stood, stretched her arms over her head. Her midriff peeked out just a bit, revealing a green, studded bellybutton ring. In the small, cramped office, my hands were only a few inches from the soft curves of her hips. Her white shorts barely went halfway down her milky thighs.

"Wanna grab something to eat?" Annabelle asked.

I cleared my throat and maneuvered up and away from Anna. "I really should pack for tomorrow. It's gonna be a long day."

She smiled with her lips pressed together, but I saw her shoulders slump, ever so slightly. I swallowed a curse. Talk about bad timing.

"Raincheck?"

A smile lit her face.

"I know the best pizza joint in town," I said. "My buddy owns it."

"I'd like that. You know, I—"

Just when I was ready to start panicking that I'd asked Alek's CPA on a date, the overhead lights in my office went dark, and there was loud pop just outside the office. Annabelle ducked, and I jumped to put my body between her and the window. Grabbing her wrist, I yanked us both down into a crouch.

Crawling to the wall, I peered through the grimy window pane. People poured out of the bars. Those immediately below me were protecting their heads with their arms as sparks from the blown streetlamp rained down. I scanned the street. Except for the headlights of cars, it was pitch black in both directions. Power must have gone out on the whole block.

"Are you going to tell me this is just another brownout?" Annabelle demanded.

On the street, a dark-haired figure sprinted into view, toward downtown. He ran with an awkward loping gait that looked more beastly than human. His clothes were ripped and ragged, the exposed skin on his forearms streaked with black marks—scars, or possibly exposed wounds. As he passed beneath my window, he turned and looked up at me.

"No way," I breathed.

I almost didn't recognize Cameron Kovak—it seemed like his skin was stretched over his frame. His mouth was spread into an unnaturally wide grin, pink gums glistening as if someone was pulling his lips apart with invisible fingers. But his hair was dirty blond, his ears overly large for his face, and he had the same birthmark at his temple that he had in the photograph Alek had given me—a splash of lighter-colored skin you couldn't mistake. I may not have been very good at math, but I had a damn fine memory for faces. Despite the lunatic-asylum-smile, that was him all right. Whatever had happened to the man, I was sure that was him.

"I knew you'd come around to my way of thinking," Annabelle said.

"No, it's not that, it's…"

There was another series of pops as more street lamps exploded in the direction Kovak had just passed. Someone let rip a sharp scream. The voices of those gathered below rose in a crescendo as confusion broke out along the street. Yet more people spilled from the bars. Sirens wailed in the distance, slowly converging on my street.

"Stay here," I said to Annabelle as I reached under the desk and laid my hands around the barrel of the 12-gauge shotgun. I kept it here, loaded with Taser XREP stun rounds in case of emergencies just like this.

"In your dreams," Annabelle said. "I'm coming with you."

"No, you're not. Kovak is too dangerous. Lock the door behind me."

I turned and ran from the office without waiting for her to reply.