So I recently started a short story, and I\'ve become stuck with it. I know where I want it to end (though, I gave it to one of my friends to critique, and he gave me something that might point it somewhere else entirely – somewhere longer – if I chose to take it there) and more or less how Im going to get there, but I\'d reeeeeally appreciate if yall could give me some feedback in the interrim, maybe take it somewhere else.
Tell me what you think? Correct grammar, spelling, punctuation. Let me know if something bugs you about the characters (what little of them is here, anyway). Absolutely anything! Absolutely EVERYTHING! If you just straight up hate it, I want to know!
Angel (working/stupid title)
“I used to be an angel,” said the girl sitting next to me, in the dust by the side of the road.
“Huh?” I had been looking at the sky; the stars that came out as pinpricks in the blue-blackness of it. Sparks from the fading fire of the sunset over the desert. It was getting cold. Her voice distracted me; like the jingle of glass flowers – but glass that had been fired poorly. Carelessly scratched, or warped with time. It wasn’t unpleasant, just…different. She hadn’t spoken to me since she’d sat down next to me, hours ago. She just smoked, and watched the road, and kept my left side warm. I hadn’t minded; I liked the company – even if she was a stranger – but I liked the quiet more.
“An Angel,” she repeated. Her face was lit only by the glowing tip of her latest cigarette, fiercely orange in the gathering dark.
“Yeah?” I said. I wasn’t sure why she’d sat down next to me. Didn’t much care, either, truth be told. I watched her now, however, wary. Religious freaks weren’t my first choice in traveling companion. She didn’t look the type, though. I would’ve pegged her for a skinhead, because of the shaved head, but she didn’t seem like that type either. She didn’t look like any type, really. Nothing I’d seen before. . These roads were lonely, and she hadn’t tried to knife me yet, so I decided to push my luck.
“From that alt-porn site?” I tried to keep the cynical note of hope from my voice; keep the keel even, find out what I could before I decided to make camp farther down the road, even if it meant leaving the first of the traffic to her. I could tell she was attractive, even under the baggy flannel shirt; unbuttoned, but voluminous enough to conceal her form. Her fingers were long and slim, and – though her nails were bitten tweaker-short – they didn’t shake, even as she lit cigarette after cigarette.
She shook her head. She still hadn’t looked at me, “No,” she said, “Of the Lord.” There was no emotion in those words. No zealous joy, no bitter hatred. Just…nothing.
“Really,” I shifted slightly, beginning to feel the stiffness in my joints. Maybe there was a story in this, after all. Or maybe this was another bust; another crock of bullshit from another piece of roadside trash (like I wasn’t one of them, now, too. Like this book was ever going to get written. Like my editor even had my phone number any more. Like I hadn’t dropped out of school to find the American Dream and found myself part of my country’s invisible demographic.)
“Really,” she confirmed impassively, and looked at me for the first time. The light of her cigarette phosphouresced off the surface of her eyes, and I shivered as they fixed on me. “ The Power sends one of us to this plane every thousand years. For one day, that Angel is mortal. They take on mortal flesh, and, for that day, they are alive. When that day closes, they return to the place where first they touched terra firma, and they die.” She inhaled from her cigarette, causing the light to flare. Something in those oddly luminous eyes disturbed me, and my gaze slid downwards, as if in shame, “I was not able to return to that place.” Turned slightly toward me as she was, the flannel shirt fell open slightly, and I saw, rising above the top of her thin tank top (much too flimsy for the growing chill, though her skin remained smooth, and free of goosebumps) a wavering line of inexpert sutures; holding together the edges of a cut traveling from just below her collarbone to the center of her chest.
I could feel her watching my face, and the slight discomfort on it. I had seen wounds before, but this was different; unsettling in its elusive familiarity. But she was watching me, so I spoke, and tore my eyes away from the wound – caught now, in her story – though I knew it to be false. “Why?” I asked.
She lit another cigarette from the glowing tip of her last, and inhaled deeply, “I was caught,” she said, “Somehow, your people learned of the ritual. They waited for me, out in the desert. Like serpents, with their guns, and their lights, and their pain.” Her eyes focused on the vast expanse of cracked Earth across the road. “I had never felt pain before.” An idle comment, which held the most inflection I’d heard yet. Otherwise, her broken-glass voice was eerie in its monotony.
“They took me away before the appointed time. I did not die. I did not transcend. But no longer was I mortal, either, but something else, something in-between. When they strapped me to the table and cut me open, I did not bleed, nor could their drugs kill my senses. My heart was dead. I could not fill my lungs to scream. But somehow, still, there was pain.” I shuddered again. Suddenly, I knew why that wound had seemed familiar; I did not need to see the identical cut on her other side, nor the incision that split her down the center, sprouting from their apex.
“They shaved my head,” she went on, “And I knew shame.”
(fin. for now)