DonaldM39
08-01-2013, 10:57 PM
I'm writing a short western esque story set in the 1800s. what follows is the very first part of it. My plan is to have a website dedicated to this story as a short series. What I would like to know is a few things.
On a scale of 1-10 How interested are you in the setting?
On a scale of 1-10 how interested are you in the characters?
On a scale of 1-10 how interested are you in reading the rest of the story?
And finally on a scale of 1-10 how would you rate the quality of writing?
If you would like to give reasoning behind your feedback, I would love it.
Also if you completely loathe, please tell me! haha
Thanks in advance to anyone who takes the time to read this!
RAY HARDLY KNOWS
“You done good Ray... You done good. Kept your mouth shut, pulled the trigger. You did what you were damn s'posed to. Ain't know shame in that.”
Ray Hartley sat with a gun in his holster. The sweat beading into his eyes was stinging as the sun showed through the crack in the train car door. Ray and his brother were headed to South Carolina. Bills with presidents they didn't even know the names to laid in their clothes and in their bags. Ray twiddled his Colt Revolver in his hands. He began to spin its sleek danger around his index finger. His brother, James Hartley, flinched every time the barrel spun in his direction.
“Hold it Ray, let's not lose heads fore gettin' home.”
Ray wouldn't listen, which motivated James constant patronization. If anyone understood life, by his own admission, it was Ray. He spit tobacco on scrupulous land owners, on cheating women, on bank tellers.
“You know why life is so hard James?” Ray asked. “It's hard,cause ain't enough people on God's green earth trying to break the rules. It's them rules that make it so damned hard. Think about it. Fornicate with anyone you want, with no reckoning for vows, and you'd probably keep your member focused on the one you chose, because you know the one you chose was the one for you. The money gets low when she's got a baby slung under the arm, just make a withdrawal. No hours to turn in. And no property taken from you can affect it.”
“Yeah I reckon you're right about these things.” Said James.
Ray brushed off the condescension. He looked at his revolver, and quickly unloaded five bullets, leaving one. He spun the wheel and clicked it back in. Without a moments hesitation, he stuck the barrel in his mouth, and...
CLICK.
James winced, expecting this behavior. Ray pulled the barrel out of his mouth as the Train engine roared and looked up towards heaven, crossing himself and kissing a crucifix that hung around his neck. James then put his face up to the opening in the door and watched as the green trees whizzed by at a blinding blur.
That night they made it off the train and headed up the adjacent hills under the moonlight. An old cabin sat at the top, nested in the dense woods. It had been abandoned long before Ray twirled pistols. Dank and small, it was hidden perfectly in the shadows of the night. They creeped slowly up the inclined terrain, keeping their voices hushed. Upon entering, James lit the lantern that sat by the broken window.
They counted, and counted, until their skills in arithmetic began to suffer. Ray then raised his head and gave James the most satisfied smile he had given since the one night he spent with Rachel Sue in the town Brothel. Out of the darkness of the wood came the sound of a galloping horse. Ray's smile descended into a slackened straight face. He raised his finger to his lips, because James was usually too stubborn to listen to verbal orders. Ray got up and blew out the lantern, cloaking the room in the darkest pitch of black next to an ink well.
“You think it's them?” Whispered James.
“Ray raised his pistol, pulled the hammer. And peered through the cracked and dusty window.”
A night mist had rolled in. It had begun to be illuminated by the glow of many lanterns. A crescendoing thunder of hooves began to roll upwards like a massage up a tense neck, crackling the foliage underfoot. The first to break over the hills edge was a dark figure, with a tattered and bloody white shirt, sopping wet from the nearby river.
“****.. it's a nigger.” said James.
The horses finally showed their snorting faces over the hill and surrounded the man as their owners jeered and insulted. Many showed their faces, a couple of them had hoods. There were about eight of them, with torches in hand.
“Yeehaw, looks like we've got the som***** right in the palms boys!” Said a man with a lasso.
He swung it around his head and whipped it towards the Negro's neck, latching on to him like a calf.
“****, Ray... we bout to watch ourselves a lynching.” Said James
Ray just looked out the window and started counting out the men to himself. After adding up to eight, he looked towards James, and with a said.
“You can watch if you want... I ain't one for spectatin'.”
He then cracked the most devilish smile James had ever seen.
On a scale of 1-10 How interested are you in the setting?
On a scale of 1-10 how interested are you in the characters?
On a scale of 1-10 how interested are you in reading the rest of the story?
And finally on a scale of 1-10 how would you rate the quality of writing?
If you would like to give reasoning behind your feedback, I would love it.
Also if you completely loathe, please tell me! haha
Thanks in advance to anyone who takes the time to read this!
RAY HARDLY KNOWS
“You done good Ray... You done good. Kept your mouth shut, pulled the trigger. You did what you were damn s'posed to. Ain't know shame in that.”
Ray Hartley sat with a gun in his holster. The sweat beading into his eyes was stinging as the sun showed through the crack in the train car door. Ray and his brother were headed to South Carolina. Bills with presidents they didn't even know the names to laid in their clothes and in their bags. Ray twiddled his Colt Revolver in his hands. He began to spin its sleek danger around his index finger. His brother, James Hartley, flinched every time the barrel spun in his direction.
“Hold it Ray, let's not lose heads fore gettin' home.”
Ray wouldn't listen, which motivated James constant patronization. If anyone understood life, by his own admission, it was Ray. He spit tobacco on scrupulous land owners, on cheating women, on bank tellers.
“You know why life is so hard James?” Ray asked. “It's hard,cause ain't enough people on God's green earth trying to break the rules. It's them rules that make it so damned hard. Think about it. Fornicate with anyone you want, with no reckoning for vows, and you'd probably keep your member focused on the one you chose, because you know the one you chose was the one for you. The money gets low when she's got a baby slung under the arm, just make a withdrawal. No hours to turn in. And no property taken from you can affect it.”
“Yeah I reckon you're right about these things.” Said James.
Ray brushed off the condescension. He looked at his revolver, and quickly unloaded five bullets, leaving one. He spun the wheel and clicked it back in. Without a moments hesitation, he stuck the barrel in his mouth, and...
CLICK.
James winced, expecting this behavior. Ray pulled the barrel out of his mouth as the Train engine roared and looked up towards heaven, crossing himself and kissing a crucifix that hung around his neck. James then put his face up to the opening in the door and watched as the green trees whizzed by at a blinding blur.
That night they made it off the train and headed up the adjacent hills under the moonlight. An old cabin sat at the top, nested in the dense woods. It had been abandoned long before Ray twirled pistols. Dank and small, it was hidden perfectly in the shadows of the night. They creeped slowly up the inclined terrain, keeping their voices hushed. Upon entering, James lit the lantern that sat by the broken window.
They counted, and counted, until their skills in arithmetic began to suffer. Ray then raised his head and gave James the most satisfied smile he had given since the one night he spent with Rachel Sue in the town Brothel. Out of the darkness of the wood came the sound of a galloping horse. Ray's smile descended into a slackened straight face. He raised his finger to his lips, because James was usually too stubborn to listen to verbal orders. Ray got up and blew out the lantern, cloaking the room in the darkest pitch of black next to an ink well.
“You think it's them?” Whispered James.
“Ray raised his pistol, pulled the hammer. And peered through the cracked and dusty window.”
A night mist had rolled in. It had begun to be illuminated by the glow of many lanterns. A crescendoing thunder of hooves began to roll upwards like a massage up a tense neck, crackling the foliage underfoot. The first to break over the hills edge was a dark figure, with a tattered and bloody white shirt, sopping wet from the nearby river.
“****.. it's a nigger.” said James.
The horses finally showed their snorting faces over the hill and surrounded the man as their owners jeered and insulted. Many showed their faces, a couple of them had hoods. There were about eight of them, with torches in hand.
“Yeehaw, looks like we've got the som***** right in the palms boys!” Said a man with a lasso.
He swung it around his head and whipped it towards the Negro's neck, latching on to him like a calf.
“****, Ray... we bout to watch ourselves a lynching.” Said James
Ray just looked out the window and started counting out the men to himself. After adding up to eight, he looked towards James, and with a said.
“You can watch if you want... I ain't one for spectatin'.”
He then cracked the most devilish smile James had ever seen.