Sci Fi & Fantasy / the still room

The muffled thump of metal on metal. Again. A third time and the door buckles, a piece of the lock flying off and hitting an overturned chair. A final blow and the thick metal door breaks from its hinges, falling into the room with a crash.

Hard white light streams in through the doorway, silhouetting an enormous figure in a radiation suit carrying a heavy steel battering ram. The figure steps back, disappearing into the glare of the spotlights.

A second figure, also wearing one of the bulky suits steps into the light. He holds a small terminal out in front of him, scans the room. A panel on the terminal flashes; bright green light reflects from his visor, illuminating the grizzled, bearded face of the man within. The terminal beeps twice and the man enters the room, the thick rubber souls of his boots squeaking on polished tiles.

Inside is a large console, covered in buttons, switches and lifeless LEDs. He flicks a switch marked ‘open’. Nothing happens.

Behind the console are two bodies. The first is a middle-aged man, dressed in a light-grey uniform, an insignia on his shirt collar identifying him as a captain in the US Air Force. The back of the captain’s has been caved in by a falling roof beam—blood, brain and skull pieces decorate the floor around him.

The second body is that of a young blonde woman, dressed in a blue skirt and a lab coat, she lays face-down in a congealed lake of her own blood. He uses his boot to turn her over. She flops back, revealing a ruined throat. Bloody hand-prints and drag marks lead back to a smashed glass tube, smeared in blood.

The tube is one of three lined up on the back wall—each is large enough for a man to fit inside. Thick cables lead from the tubes to the control panel. He leans closer, but cannot see in through the smoked glass.

A steel latch on the side holds the door of the tube closed. He tugs at it with his thick gloves until it releases with a pop. The warm air of the room hisses into the partial vacuum within and forming a light mist of condensation where it hits the cold internal workings.

The man swings the door open and smiles, seeing the prize.

It is a little larger than a football, white, its surface smooth except for three ridges on the top and a long tail at the back. Bundles of wires are attached to the tail. He un-clips these and lifts it from its cradle.

He turns and leaves, taking unit #335-07 with him.

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chelly avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

chelly

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
chelly reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

Loose his footing should be lose.

I would say you have an interesting piece and this small beginning has my attention and curiousity as to what this guy is looking for. My problem here is that I feel the man should be introduced in this chapter. Like name him in the beginning. Also, even though I am interested in what he is looking for I can’t really get into this because it feels like just a narrative. This guy is, what on a deserted planet? Earth before it’s demise? Whatever it is you haven’t written any emotion like how he feels as he mounts the wreckage and looks out at the world beyond him. Is he in awe? Disgusted with what has happened? A little bit scared? what is he thinking as he is looking for this object? More indepth feelings help a reader get “into” the story. Good luck!

Potatopirate avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

Potatopirate

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
Potatopirate reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

Firstly, may I say I am no great Sci-Fi fan, yet I found this very enjoyable to read, so well done!

However, it seems very ‘choppy’, rather than flowing. I feel this is at least partially caused by very little description. ‘A figure mounts the wreckage.’ What does this wreckage look like? You say it is a ‘hole in the earth that was once a power station’, but would it be possible to expand on this? The same applies to the protective suit and the drone.

You also refer to ‘the terminal’ a lot, which does begin to get a little repetitive. Perhaps you could change a couple of uses of ‘the terminal’ to something else?

In answer to your questions:

Yes it is clear what happens, although the mention of the man’s companions confused me a little, as I was unaware of there being others until then.

At the end of the piece, I was left wanting to know more about the object he finds, and more about the man himself.

And does it make me want to read on? YES!!

caravans avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

caravans

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
caravans reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

All very clear and interesting. Yes, I want to continue reading. But the pace is a little slow.  Why tell us about beeps that don’t interest the man, because, hearing that, they don’t interest me either.
I don’t think you need so much about the cumbersome suit (makes movement difficult, has to turn his whole body, clumsy pushing of buttons) We get the picture the first time. Think of other things to create mood, like intense heat coming through the thick soles of his boot, or whatever.

death2thepelican avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

death2thepelican

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
death2thepelican reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

-Good second sentence. I want to keep reading. However I feel that the first sentence is a little to vague. First sentences are those things that hook a reader. When I read it I almost skipped those five words because I had no idea what they meant. Although, yes, the second and third sentences clarify, I feel that maybe the second can somehow become the first. Know what I mean?

-It makes sense what happens. I think. I have a bright and colorful picture in my head.
-You say “At first he sees it” and “then he sees it”.  I think that this is repetetive.
-After having read the whole thing, I am left confused. What is it that the robot extracted? I am left wanting to read more, because I want to find out what it is.

Marvin avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

Marvin Prolific-icon-medium

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
Marvin reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

Interesting start that does indeed grab my attention.  ”Man mounts wreckage.”  This is good.  Wake of a disaster.

So far, it reads a bit stiff, and by stiff, i mean almost robotic.  if this was your intent, then kudos.  Examples: The man stops, the man turns, the man kneels- these are fine but…it reads rigid.

“He watches the drone’s manipulator arms extend.”—why not simply, “the drone’s manipulator arms extend?”  the writing is fine and the description is sound, but at times like this i feel like i’m being forced to look at things through the narrator’s eyes.  it’s a sensation i don’t entirely enjoy.

“The man leans over a little and looks down into the hole the done has made.”—This is getting closer to where it should be.  Instead of rigid stop and start action, this line moves better, incorporating a better synthesis of what’s actually happening.  But how about “leans slightly” or doing away with the leaning all together?  ”the man looks” might be just as effective, and it would hasten the action.

“hard shadows”- i liked this description.

Ok…it does in fact make me curious to see what’s next. and, yes, it is quite clear what is happening.  My major criticism is the forced point of view.  I’m trapped in “the man’s” head and it makes me claustrophobic.  Perhaps try to pull out more, let things unfold on their own, instead of “the man sees, the man thinks, the man does this, the man does that”.  sure, the story is moving forward, but as a reader, i feel like i’m not invited to look around on my own.  

it’s certainly got potential.  good luck with it.  thanks for sharing.

PenelopeMV avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

PenelopeMV

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
PenelopeMV reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

- It is clear.
- questions  What was the object and why is it so important?
-  read on- Yes. Parts to complain about: just a bit more description where he’s working on getting the thing out.
Nice writing. More detail.

Souldierpoet avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

Souldierpoet

REVIEW QUALITY: 0.0%(2 votes ) personal info reviewer stats
Souldierpoet reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

I liked this story.  Flowed smoothly.  Although the drone bit kind of confused me on where you’d go with it.  The # also confused me, seemed like for idea breaks they’d be further apart.  But what do I know, i liked it.

DCWriter_30 avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

DCWriter_30

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
DCWriter_30 reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

It was a bit confusing at first.  Specifically when I was trying to figure out what the terminal was.  But, once you began the meat of the story it became clearer.  The story was discriptive and I was certainly interested in what it was they were searching for and why?  I would be interested in reading more…

napalmwriter avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

napalmwriter

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
napalmwriter reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

Good story, but so-so delivery. The story is not as strong as it could be. I am left wondering not only what he found, but what his name is. It’s clear, but I would need more to want to continue reading.

It is not very compelling. Spend more time describing the scene and the actions and less explaining the character’s motivations. Show, don’t tell.

I applaud the attempt at brevity in the first sentence, but it’s vague. What does the figure look like? What kind of wreckage?

You don’t have to describe every motion he makes in detail, unless it is relevant. Ex: Do we need to know that he has to turn his entire upper body to see clearly? Or could you say something like “he struggled against his bulky suit to turn”?

Lots of exposition. Ex: “The air is choked with radioactive dust.” Consider something that shows rather than tells. Like, “The geiger counter in his suit clicked in his ear like a rabid cricket.” It gives the reader a sound to experience, rather than just being told there was radioactive dust. Again, show, don’t tell.

Sentence structure is repetitive. Try some compound sentences to break up the tone.

“These signals do not interest the man.” This is passive voice, and exposition to boot. Sentences like this are weak. Try having the character do something to express his disinterest. Maybe something simple as having him tell the terminal to “Shut up.” Active is better than passive in most cases.

“this way and that” is cliche. Consider revising.

“He ignores his comrade’s communications, pleading for his return.” Since this scene is mostly just the man (whoever he is), this would be a good opportunity for some dialogue. Have his companion say something over the communicator, etc. Show how he ignores it, etc. Break up the exposition.

A good start, but it needs polishing.

cavscoutgh75 avatar General Stranger

August 13, 2008

cavscoutgh75

REVIEW QUALITY: 100.0%(1 vote ) personal info reviewer stats
cavscoutgh75 reviewed Version 1 - Read 100% of the Item

This idea is great.  I really like the way you keep the reader in suspense while the character moves through to his goal.  You even keep that goal in suspense.
The events were clearly set in place.  There were no questions on where the guy was in relation to the setting, etc.
I found myself wanting to know more.  Questions like “What was that object?  Who was that man?  What happened that there was so much radioactive material around?”  
Another question is, “What significance does this object have for the storyline?

The last was hinted at but the reason the plant went up is more the detail that was needed in my mind.

Overall I really liked this and would love to read more of it.

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trismugistus avatar

trismugistus Prolific-icon-medium

Age: 32
Loc: United Kingdom
Gen: M
Last Login: November 20
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