Friday, October 12, 2007

Friday Snippets: She Deals in Lead

This week's Friday Snippet picks up, again where we left off two weeks ago. Dell, after escaping the nuclear wasteland of Columbia, has headed toward the little town of Mexico. She still deals with her choice to leave Roy, the man who loves her more than life. On her journey, she has been clotheslined by two brothers on a back country road for the gas in her motorcycle. We left her last week, under the gun of the younger brother.

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Copyrighted, do not reproduce, material liable to change. Etc.
Dell stared down the barrel of the gun, down into the darkness of her own death and she did not look away. The boy was terrified. Dell eased the hammer down on her shotgun and stepped back, easing away from him. The boy was sobbing and the pistol wavered in his hand, bobbing like a cork. It was hard to breathe. She swung her leg over her bike, revving it to life. His voice wavered through the cool of the night.

"Where are you going, man?" he asked. "Are you just gonna leave us here?" His voice cracked. His face had twisted into something ugly, changed by the realization of what he was doing. The gun vomited flame. Dell threw herself low over the lines of the bike, hugging herself to its frame.

She could have, should have killed him, should have slid the bike around, ridden it to the ground and unloaded the shotgun into his chest. But then she thought of what his brother would see when he woke. She couldn't bring herself to do it. She hated herself for it, but she could pray that the boy missed.

She hunched low as the night winds pulled at her coat. She was sure that at any moment she would feel the white hot slug between her shoulder blades, feel her own lukewarm blood on her jersey. Bullets whined past her ear and then her arm bloomed in a sunburst of pain. Blood splattered across the right lens of her gas mask. She didn't stop.

"She was sure that at any moment she would feel the white hot slug between her shoulder blades, feel her own lukewarm blood on her jersey.

Bullets whined past her ear and then her arm bloomed in a sunburst of pain. Blood splattered across the right lens of her gas mask."

It wasn't until she saw the shadow of the brothers' truck against the ridgeline that she slowed and allowed herself to breath. The air was stale and thick inside the gasmask and she ripped it off. Sweat flattened her curls to her head and burned her eyes. Her face was extremely pale and her hands shook violently as she brought the bike to a stop beside the truck. The smell of blood was almost overwhelming. The fuel gage on her bike hovered above empty.

Dell swung off the bike and slumped down beside the truck, easing her arm out of her coat. She cut the hem off of her jeans and tightened it in a tourniquet around her upper arm. For a moment, she let herself breath.

After she forced a hose down into the truck's tank, she cradled her arm in the curve of her body and with her teeth, tore open one of the Snickers Roy had packed. Swallowing down the chocolate, she cringed at the prospect of siphoning. Gas welled up in her mouth and she spat it out. She paused, her hackles rising. Someone was nearby. She was certain. She let the gas drain off into the bike's tank and pulled her shotgun into the shadow of her body.


So say we all.
Bri

11 comments:

Unknown said...

Still love the post-apoc chick lit. Dell is one tough girl.

IanT said...

Good stuff.

Couple of minor things:
"allowed herself to breath" should be "allowed herself to breathe"

I'm not sure about the "Her face was extremely pale" - there's no-one around to see that, and she can't see her own face. Everything else has pretty much been Dell's PoV.


Love the new goggles picture!


I'm about to move to (sort of) post-apoc for my upcoming project, too. :-)

Anonymous said...

I was going to point out the same line as Ian but for a different reason: that para seems sort of weighty with adverbs and almosts. *shrug* Otherwise, it reads cleanly. Still like what you're doing with the story.

Crystal said...

Great pacing!!! She is a tough chick! There are zombies in this story somewhere, aren't there? Or am I crazy in thinking that...if so, can't wait till we get to the flesh eating monsters. :)

Anonymous said...

Hi, Bri. Wonderful, edge-of-my-seat action.

-TimK

Joely Sue Burkhart said...

If they had gas in their truck, why did they try to take hers? I suppose they're scavenging all the time--it's not like they can just pull into a gas station. :-) I just adore Dell, and I love what you've done with this project!

Anonymous said...

I'm liking Dell more and more. She doesn't take the easy way out for anything!

Gabriele Campbell said...

You don't give your characters a moment rest, you evil writer. *grin*

I'm with the others on the pale face, it jars out of POV. Else the snip is fine.

Kait Nolan said...

Wonderful as usual. My only beef...if she's not looking in any kind of mirror, she doesn't know that her face is very pale. That's an observation someone else would make looking at her, and since we're in her head, we don't know that.

qualcosa di bello said...

i held my breath the entire time i read this. it is so very easy to be in this scene...well done!

Joy Renee said...

i keep missing your friday snippets, coming in too early or something. today i'm having a hard time finding anybody with a new one up. including you. but i couldn't leave without going into archives to look for any of Dell and Iris snips I might have missed.

i'm so loving this story.

i do have one question. why would she risk wasting the nutrition value of that candy bar by eating it just before sucking gas into her mouth which might have triggered retching and will rob her of the pleasure of the flavor. i could see if if it was a matter of urgency, to stave off shock say, but since you didn't say so i can't assume it and i'm just left with this yucky taste of gasoline in my mouth until i read the next scene.