Doctor Spechaug has always believed he stands above the provincial town that surrounds his small college. He lectures on hysteria and abnormal behavior with clinical detachment, certain that reason is his armor. But one violent morning leaves blood on his cuffs and missing minutes in his memory, and suddenly the man who studies the mind is no longer certain of his own.
In the shadowed woods beyond town, he meets Edith Bailey, a brilliant, unsettling student who has been watching him more closely than he realized. She shares his contempt for the dull rhythms of Glen Oaks—and she shares something else. As their conversations deepen, so do the signs that their private fears are not symptoms at all, but revelations. When the townspeople close in with rifles and hatred, Spechaug must decide whether to cling to the last fragile threads of academic explanation or accept the brutal clarity of instinct. In Glen Oaks, superstition may be closer to the truth than scholarship ever was.
Bryce Walton built a career on sharp psychological tension and stories that strip away polite surfaces. His work appeared in magazines such as Galaxy Science Fiction, Amazing Stories, and Fantastic Universe, where he blended speculative ideas with intimate human unease. Walton also wrote for television and produced a large body of short fiction that often explored identity under pressure. Strange Alliance is a striking example of his ability to place educated minds in situations where intellect offers no refuge and instinct becomes the only honest guide.























