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Published: 2012-05-02 20:38:33 +0000 UTC; Views: 59295; Favourites: 692; Downloads: 0
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I started committing suicides. They were small at first, but more grandiose as the months passed.
At first, I came up with basics: wrist slashing, hanging, overdose, jumping off a building, and stepping off in front of bus. They were all very mundane, really, and if not done properly you just end up living very, very painfully. It was after those routine ways to snuff oneself that I began to get creative.
There was going into a biker bar nude and starting fights with drunk bikers. And when I say "fights", I mean with a knife in my hand. That was a fun night. Everyone was freaked out and angry at the same time. They all wanted to kill me, but they didn't want to touch me either. Eventually, though, they did.
Oh, another good one was sneaking into one of those giant dump trucks at a quarry and letting them dump tons of excavated rocks on me. The driver of the loader always sees you just as it's too late and tries to stop the load. His expression is priceless, and the pain lasts only seconds.
Most spectacular was riding a motorcycle full speed up Pennsylvania Avenue, dodging the cement stanchions in the ground that stop car traffic on the 1600 block and riding helmet-less right into the fence around the White House. That was damn spectacular. The President wasn't home that day, but I got a few of those Secret Service jockeys to wet their britches.
Those were some good times.
But the truth of it all was that no matter how many ways of shuffling off the mortal coil I committed myself to, none of them made me feel any better. In the end of each of those fantasies, I felt slightly sickened that this was what I fantasized about without any idea of why I did it.
So, much to my chagrin, my answer came to me in a cliché place: sitting, talking to a friend at coffee place. At least this place had outdoor seating on the sidewalk. If I'd been surrounded by baristas, earth-tone artwork and light jazz I think I would have died just on the inside.
We sat, Lenny and I, sipping hot cafe creations whose frou-frou names always slipped my mind, outside on a cold day and talked.
"Why do you want to be dead?" He always took me at the face value at which I presented myself to him. He never lost his cool or told me I was crazy- even when he would have been perfectly right to do so.
"I don't want to be dead."
"Okay, so this whole thing with the suicides..." he motioned for me to continue his sentence.
"...is wanting to die, but not to be dead."
He looked at me for a me for a minute, taking two sips of his ultrafrappachinomochalattewhatever, and then he spoke. "So, you want the experience of dying, but you don't want to be dead. Is that what you're saying?"
"Yeah, pretty much. That sums it up."
He put down his drink, folded his arms and rested them on the table, "Okay. I'll bite. Why?"
"Well, I figure that unless you've died, you can't really appreciate the value of life."
"Yeah, I guess that could be true. But isn't there some other way since, technically, your method is pretty much impossible?"
"Not entirely impossible. I could experience some kind of trauma, die on the operating table and be resuscitated." I took a sip of my drink since I was starting to feel cold.
"Yeah, but what a risk. Why not climb Everest or volunteer as Big Brother for an underprivileged youth?"
"It's not about achievement, Lenny. It's not about helping others. It's about me valuing my own existence and making the best of it for myself."
Lenny picked up his drink again, "Whatever you decide, you know? It's your life. I just think I'd rather not waste any time I have left in life trying to die. It's a sin in some religions."
"I'm not trying to die, Lenny, I'm trying to live."
It shouldn't have been a surprise to me, then, that I died later that day.
I had caught the subway out to where I lived and was walking up the sidewalk on 256th Street when I saw a guy on a bicycle heading towards me. He saw me and I saw him. I moved the right on sidewalk and he moved to his right. As he neared me, a sedan backed down a driveway seemingly out of nowhere. His bike impacted the sedan, and he came flying upside down and ass-first over the car's trunk at me. He was a big guy, and he came at me doing ten miles an hour or so. When my head hit sidewalk, it was a quick, hard fall.
When I woke up in the hospital, which is where it appeared to me that I was at that moment, Lenny was reading a paper in a chair near my bed. My head was fire, and I was bandaged and gowned.
He did not look up from the paper. "Three minutes, twenty two seconds of you being dead and they were ready to call it. Your head injury caused some sort of shock through your central nervous system and you eventually stopped breathing."
"So, I died?"
Lenny motioned around, "They tried one more time."
"I guess, wow," the pain in my head made me woozy for a moment, "I guess they were successful."
"So, how'd you do it this time? No one could figure it out."
Pain was still radiating out of the back of my skull. "Do what?"
"Try to kill yourself. The police, your parents, me: none of us can figure it out."
"My parents are here?"
"They were here for two weeks, but between the store and the ranch they couldn't stay more than that. I'm sure your mother will come back once she hears you've regained consciousness. The doctors told them it could be a week or it could be a month until you woke up. Guess they were right."
"How long?"
"Since they left? Eh, about eight or nine days."
"This still hurts."
"Well, you did fracture your skull. Nurse will be in soon. Once they notice that your vitals have changed at the nurses' station, they will come. So, before they do, tell me the truth."
"What?"
"No one knows how you did this to yourself." Lenny put down his paper and leaned forward in the vinyl guest chair, "You can tell me, no judgment. Did you just decide to fall over and land on your own head?"
"What? No, no, there was.. There was a guy on a bike on the sidewalk, and he was coming at me when a car backed out of a driveway and he hit it. He flew over the handle bars, over the trunk and into me. He took me down."
Lenny shifted back in his chair a bit, nodding his head slightly. "Okay, okay. Problem there is, Kyle, someone just found you there sprawled out on the sidewalk, bleeding. There was no cyclist, no bike and no car. And with the way you've been talkin', they wanted to see if this was some sort of attempt."
"You told them about what we talked about?"
Lenny leaned in again and whispered, "Kyle, this is me, I wouldn't do that. You must have said something to someone else. Maybe on Facebook or something?"
"No, no way." My head felt better when I held it, "At least, I don't think so. It hurts too much to think."
That's when the nurse and a doctor came in and my life became a series of tests, questions and few answers. Lenny slipped out when the medical exams began and returned with coffee later. The police came by later, and Lenny stayed while I gave my account of what happened. They showed me pictures of where I was found, taken by the crime scene photographer. I pointed excitedly at two of the pictures.
"That's the car that backed out! And in that picture, I think that's the cyclist!"
The two police officers told me that the worn out Dodge Dynasty that I pointed at had two flat tires and hadn't moved from that spot in years. The gentleman I had pointed out was actually one of the EMTs who had responded to the call when a passerby had seen me.
I had no other explanation to offer them, and the doctor who joined the conversation stated that it could very well be my subconscious mind incorporating items from the scene of the incident that I didn't consciously remember. Maybe another car had pulled in the driveway and that's what the cyclist had hit, but when I was lying on the ground I saw the old Dodge and got it in my head that it was the car. The doctor offered that the EMT's face was the first one I saw after the accident, so he put his face in place of a cyclist I never really saw all that well.
In the end, there was no evidence that I had tried to commit suicide, and nothing I could remember that would point the finger at the owner of the car or the real cyclist. The police were left with nothing, and so they left.
I was released two days later with a prescription for anti-inflammatories and pain-killers. I would keep going back for CT scans over the next few months and was instructed to call if I experienced dizziness or blackouts.
My mother did not fly out when I woke up. My parents called, but both their businesses were struggling and the two weeks that they had spent here already had been covered by friends and employees who couldn't spare any more time unless I was in a desperate situation.
I went back to work, but life as an insurance adjuster had become duller than before. I thought I would appreciate life more after what I experienced, but it seemed just the opposite. I felt like something had been stolen from me: my dreams of appreciating being alive, and several weeks of my time locked up in a hospital. When I was dealing with people who were trying to pad insurance claims, it just made me angry that people wasted energy and effort on deceiving others and trying to get ahead on false pretenses.
I drove by the accident scene. Sure enough, the Dodge Dynasty was in the driveway that I had sworn a car had pulled out of in front of me. The twenty year old sedan had two flats on the right side, and the dust and dirt on it showed no sign of having been disturbed in months. Knowing cars as well as an insurance adjuster should, I knew it was most likely a candidate for the junkyard since it probably suffered from a bad transmission. There were no dents in the rear fenders, and no other car could have pulled into the driveway with the Dynasty parked where it was.
I went over the firehouse to see if the EMT was there. I talked to him under the guise of wanting to thank him for helping save me, but the truth was I wanted a good look. His face was as I remembered it, but he obviously was the EMT on the scene. He recounted everything for me, and there was no way he hit me, biked over to the firehouse, changed clothes and responded to the alarm. He was too sincere, I could just tell.
Time was flat, and Lenny kept coming around to check on me. He kept reminding me I'd been given a great gift and that I should enjoy life again. We still met for coffee sometimes, but after a while I just wasn't into it.
I'd been proven wrong. A brush with death had not made me appreciate life more. It had made me realize how little everyone else appreciated it. I became disgusted with almost everyone around me.
I suppose me leaving the door to my apartment unlocked was a sign that maybe, maybe I wanted someone to catch me in the act. Lenny walked in just as I stepped off the stool and felt the clothesline tighten around my neck.
I struggled. He smiled. I gasped. He laughed.
I didn't die. He finally pulled me down.
He lead me to the couch and sat me down. He gave me a glass of water from my own kitchen.
"So, Kyle, I have to thank you." He stood a few feet from me.
"Why?" I rasped and then downed the rest of the water in the glass.
"The man upstairs and I had a bet going. You proved me right."
"You had a bet going with Mr. Harlan upstairs that I'd kill myself?" I was in fierce pain around my throat and befuddled how I'd botched my own hanging.
"Not Mr. Harlan. Think harder." Lenny shook his his head, "When the cyclist came at you, you didn't move even though you had time to do so. I contended that you stayed in place because you wanted to die and this was your version of suicide. The man upstairs contended that your death was accidental. I told him that I could prove you were truly suicidal and that you belonged with me and not up there with him."
"My death?" I was having tremors start in my hand, "In the hospital... you... you said they resuscitated me."
Lenny smiled at me and leaned in closer, his voice a bit more gravely. "First off, I said they tried one more time. You assumed that they'd been successful. Secondly," this was when he leaned in closer and whispered into my ear, "you now have an eternity to learn that I am the one being in this universe guaranteed to never tell you the whole truth ."
Related content
Comments: 368
enigmaticsmile In reply to MightyNugget [2012-11-09 03:41:58 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much. Might I also recommend my other DD, "Auditor of the Ashes"? [link]
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SyrenaEnchanted [2012-10-30 02:25:27 +0000 UTC]
I liked the twist at the end. I didn't see it coming.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to SyrenaEnchanted [2012-11-09 03:42:07 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much. Might I also recommend my other DD, "Auditor of the Ashes"? [link]
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
superkim111 [2012-10-30 02:17:21 +0000 UTC]
I don't know what I expected from the ending but this was certainly not it. And I'm okay with that.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to superkim111 [2012-11-09 03:42:36 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much. Might I also recommend my other DD, "Auditor of the Ashes"? [link]
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
superkim111 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-09 03:50:21 +0000 UTC]
Wow. Pardon my French but how the hell do you come up with these things?
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enigmaticsmile In reply to superkim111 [2012-11-09 03:52:59 +0000 UTC]
Hmmmm... to be honest, the first line just pops in my head while doing mundane tasks (putting laundry away, brushing my teeth, walking somewhere) and then I just go from there. That's just how my brain works.
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superkim111 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-09 04:11:44 +0000 UTC]
And so I repeat, wow.
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superkim111 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-09 23:18:25 +0000 UTC]
At the risk of sounding completely random do you know of Bleach or X-Men: Evolution?
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enigmaticsmile In reply to superkim111 [2012-11-10 00:06:36 +0000 UTC]
I don't think so... why?
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superkim111 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-10 01:51:23 +0000 UTC]
Just curious. I do a little writing myself and I was wondering if you could maybe check them out.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to superkim111 [2012-11-18 03:58:35 +0000 UTC]
I will stop by and take a read!
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QueenHalloween In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 02:05:33 +0000 UTC]
Mine = totally blown. Absolutely brilliant. Rereading this for the third time today.
Just wanna say that even though people are saying there are a lot of 'gaps' in the story, I really like it... It makes you think and use your imagination.
Not everything has to be literally spelled out, especially if its not vital to the story- like detailed character descriptions for instance. That would of taken away a bit in my opinion... Well done. (:
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enigmaticsmile In reply to QueenHalloween [2012-11-21 03:38:55 +0000 UTC]
Thank you so much!
If you liked this, you might enjoy my story "Auditor of the Ashes" as well.
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CountKristin In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 02:01:03 +0000 UTC]
Im not entirely sure but, is this about heaven and hell? guy upstairs being God, Lenny being the Devil, up there being Heaven and down here being Hell, or possibly Purgatory? Also, if it is, I'm not all that religious but Lenny never seemed all that bad to me. I don't know if that was purposeful or if I'm just a bad person or what? Anyways, I loved the story
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enigmaticsmile In reply to CountKristin [2012-11-21 03:39:32 +0000 UTC]
Yes, you are correct. It's about Heaven and Hell.
Thank you.
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Stickmen-Evolved In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 01:48:39 +0000 UTC]
Hmm, for a short story it's not that bad, and there are some glaring omissions in the writing but otherwise they add to the charm of the piece. By not describing Lenny or Kyle in the slightest, nor the setting, the reader is forced to fill in the gaps with their own interpretation; heck, before I knew that the narrator was called Kyle, I thought it was a woman. The lack of description of Lenny's appearance means that the reader places a good friend as the image, and the ending allows us to unexpectedly demonise him (if he had been described as having a goatee, the reader may have been a little suspicious from the beginning).
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enigmaticsmile In reply to Stickmen-Evolved [2012-11-21 03:41:38 +0000 UTC]
Thank you for the feedback.
I don't like describing a character's appearance unless it's critical to the story. If the readers fills in the appearance on their own, they are more likely to relate to the characters. Giving the characters little nuances (they way they dress, talk, eat or walk) provides more information about them than a physical description would).
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CountChristoph In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 01:29:09 +0000 UTC]
Though I did not find myself really liking the Narrator, his Story is quite an interesting one, and the Ending, though a Surprise, did not feel contrived. Retrospectively, it looks as though the State of the Car and the EMT indicate that the Narrator has been dead for some Time before he "awakens", though I find it rather unclear as to whether he has really somehow returned to his Life for a Time, or it is an Illusion caused by "Lenny" (which Name strikes me as interestingly unsymbolic).
Given the more colloquial Style, I might have expected more contracted Forms ("didn't" rather than "did not") since you have a speaker directly addressing the Audience; I also do not think it is generally a good Idea to make explicit Reference to the Names of Brands, Companies, and suchlike ("Facebook" and the Make of the Car being the best Examples in-Story) because it has the Potential to date your Story rather quickly, especially with the rapid Pace of Changes in Technology, unless you want to evoke a specific Period.
The Ending may also have some Problems: it is, despite the amusing Twist, not altogether satisfying — we see that "Lenny" is apparently Satan or some Analogue of him, and the Thought that one ought to be very careful jumping to Conclusions is indeed appropriate, though it raises some Questions left unanswered, but it may well have been your Intent to cast quite a lot of Doubt on the Veracity of what the Reader says and thinks. The biggest unanswered Question is, I suppose, that, if we have "Lenny", then where is "the Man Upstairs", and why does he seem so inactive in all this?
Overall, this is, if nothing else, interesting Material for Analysis (into which I seem to have slipped several Times — I hope you can pardon this); other People seem to have already pointed out most any other stylistic Issues there may have been, and I doubt you need them repeated.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to CountChristoph [2012-11-21 03:30:00 +0000 UTC]
Analysis is always welcome. You make some interesting points, and I will take them into consideration. Thank you for taking the time to read, review the comments and write your analysis.
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CountChristoph In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-21 05:19:41 +0000 UTC]
You're welcome; Truth be told, it was so long ago, I had forgotten...
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Puella-Sum-Dei In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 01:24:33 +0000 UTC]
My mouth dropped.
That.
T h a t
was absolutely, brilliantly, fantastically executed.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to Puella-Sum-Dei [2012-11-21 03:30:43 +0000 UTC]
Thank you, I very much appreciate your feedback.
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TheLunarDragons In reply to Puella-Sum-Dei [2012-10-30 01:44:40 +0000 UTC]
I HAD THE SAME REACTION! Also, I ADORE the first part of your signature!!!!
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Puella-Sum-Dei In reply to TheLunarDragons [2012-11-03 05:29:41 +0000 UTC]
N'aw, why thank you! c:
I love sharing similar interests <3
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TheLunarDragons In reply to Puella-Sum-Dei [2012-11-03 19:37:08 +0000 UTC]
Me too!!! Hmm... is it possible that you might be a brony as well?
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Puella-Sum-Dei In reply to TheLunarDragons [2012-11-03 20:45:10 +0000 UTC]
Alas, I am not. I do like Luna and Fluttershy though.
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TheLunarDragons In reply to Puella-Sum-Dei [2012-11-05 23:15:17 +0000 UTC]
LUNA IS MA FAVORITE!!! Well, her and Doctor Whooves because I love Doctor Who.
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Puella-Sum-Dei In reply to TheLunarDragons [2012-11-06 02:15:47 +0000 UTC]
Is Dr. Whooves actually a character, or is he like an adopted fan creation? .3.
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TheLunarDragons In reply to Puella-Sum-Dei [2012-11-06 03:26:18 +0000 UTC]
Well Doctor Whooves is an official character that appears quite a bit in the background and has a few lines. Most of his 'character' though is fan-in
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jennedy In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 01:24:03 +0000 UTC]
Whoa. I usually don't read stuff like this, but you hooked me with suicide and then blew my mind with Lenny. Fantastic job.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to jennedy [2012-11-21 03:27:18 +0000 UTC]
Thanks so much for the feedback!
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VelvetFish In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 00:58:46 +0000 UTC]
this is amazing. grats on the DD!
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JumpstyleSyrup In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 00:56:40 +0000 UTC]
Alright, I'm an idiot and didn't understand anything. So...why is it the person never died? (Amazing story by the way, I'm just a bit moronic when it comes to details...)
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enigmaticsmile In reply to JumpstyleSyrup [2012-11-21 03:33:49 +0000 UTC]
He did die. He just didn't realize it until the end.
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jagermonstar In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 00:39:42 +0000 UTC]
very nice reminds me of a story the nuns used to tell in school in columbia, never seemed to have a happy ending, it was supposed to get us kids to realize the virtues of life and to avoid the rebels nearby
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enigmaticsmile In reply to jagermonstar [2012-11-21 03:34:35 +0000 UTC]
Wow, they told a story like that? Interesting. Thank you for sharing.
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PhoenixWright1 In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 00:38:26 +0000 UTC]
PLEEEEASE PUBLISH IIIIIIIIIIT!
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enigmaticsmile In reply to PhoenixWright1 [2012-11-21 03:32:18 +0000 UTC]
If you have any suggestions as to where I can publish, I'm open. Thank you.
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PhoenixWright1 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-21 04:03:02 +0000 UTC]
I don't have any. I feel that your story belongs in the "New York Times" Bestselling section!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
enigmaticsmile In reply to PhoenixWright1 [2012-11-21 04:20:30 +0000 UTC]
Well, thank you very much!
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PhoenixWright1 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-21 04:31:07 +0000 UTC]
Welcome! How on earth did you get the idea to create this masterpiece?
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
enigmaticsmile In reply to PhoenixWright1 [2012-11-23 03:34:47 +0000 UTC]
I thought of the first line, and then I just wrote the rest of story from there.
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PhoenixWright1 In reply to enigmaticsmile [2012-11-23 19:40:27 +0000 UTC]
WOWOWOWOWOW! You have one hell of a talent!
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Graphospasm In reply to ??? [2012-10-30 00:38:03 +0000 UTC]
Great job with this story! As a fellow writer I always feel the need to give a critique. There are a few syntactical things that need some ironing out. For instance, the following sentence: "The police were left with nothing, and so they left." The repetition of the word "left" sort of throws the reader off; it threw me off, at least. I'd suggest incorporating more turns of phrase to keep the language fresh. There are more moments like this scattered throughout. Also, sometimes the dialogue can be a bit... well, unrealistic. Occasionally your characters speak more formally than perhaps they should or they throw information into speech that should be included in the descriptive prose--like they say stuff out loud that should already be implied to the characters, so the narrator seems like he's including information for the sake of the reader (this is a form of authorial interjection that can be quite jarring; know that your reader can usually pick up on subtle details without them being explicitly spelled out). Those moments shocked me out of the story a few times.
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enigmaticsmile In reply to Graphospasm [2012-11-21 03:33:04 +0000 UTC]
I will take all that into consideration, thank you!
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