I'm approximately three-quarters of the way through the third draft of MAGE STORM. I'm trying to make the situation worse for my characters. In this case, they're not going to get away from an unexpected adventure scot free. One of them is going to be hurt. How is the question. It has to be bad enough to at least slightly incapacitate him, without requiring that they stop and get assistance (like someone to set a broken bone).
I've already sprained my MC twice--his wrist once and then his ankle. I really just can't have him sprain something again.
The situation:
Two boys, ages about 15 and 13, are going downriver in a small boat (think skinny row boat), fleeing the villain, who will kill them if he catches them. R knows how to handle the boat. D doesn't. Due to the interference of a water dragon, R falls forward just as the boat is pitching upward and hurts himself.
Like I said, it can't be a sprain. They can't stop to have a broken bone set because that would leave a trail for T (the bad guy). The best I've been able to come up with so far is that he misses his attempt to brace himself with his hand and falls against the side of the boat, perhaps cracking a rib.
I've never cracked a rib, but from what I can tell there's no bonesetting involved, just rest until it knits. Probably enough to keep him from rowing, so the younger boy who doesn't know how would have to take over. And painful.
Any other ideas?
you could even have the water dragon bite/burn/freeze what even your dragons do to one of them if its a less than friendly beastie.
or even have the boat smashed while it puts your chars up the creek leaving them soaked and lost some provisions it could also give them a bit of an out from the villain. they stay in the water quite while longer and head further down river than the wrecked up boat the villain will start searching the shores near wreck and give them a little more distance.
[This message has been edited by eyegore242 (edited November 22, 2010).]
What about a deep bruise, maybe even a bruised kidney? (I figure he can get twisted in the fall.)
Or a broken finger or two might be easy enough to splint on the run.
I broke a toe in Tae Kwon Do class, and wasn't even sure it was broken until I get the x-ray. Once I did, it was confirmed broken, the doctor basically said "What do you want me to do about it?" Meaning, there is not much to do except let it mend naturally.
Maybe as R falls he hits his foot on a bench or the edge of the boat or something.
Maybe with all the physical trauma they've experienced, it would be nice variety to have someone instead get sick with some sort of infection.
But you did say cracked ribs. That might be something entirely different.
The really issue is the level of tolerance to pain your character can take. Football players have played with broken bones before (D. McNabb, for example, broke his ankle and had one of his best days as a QB), while I've known a person or two squeal as if they were impaled with a rusty sword when they get a sliver. It depends on your character. How heroric do youwant them to be?
How 'bout a concussion? A good slam to the head could stun someone for awhile without necessarily knocking him out...
dislocates a joint and it has to be pushed back into place, will be sore for a while.
hair gets caught around something - some is ripped out. ouch.
Blooded nose was good.
banged up knees from the fall.
banged up arm/arms from trying to catch the edge.
Bruised ribs was good, not cracked. Cracked is more for heroic moments.
Maybe a combination would give it a more realistic feel. Because when falling you rarely injure one part of your body alone. It will depend on how he falls - forward, backward, side?
Hope it helps Mer,
W.
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You could also go with a wound that gets infected. Fevers are a result of bacterial or viral infection and getting cold or wet in of itself will not cause a fever, though some argue it makes you more susceptible to catching a fever by stressing your body and weakening the immune system. You can create all sorts of complications from a wound; secondary infection causing a fever, gangrene, etc... Might even be interesting to create a situation where they'd need some kind of herbal remedy but can't stop to look for it. It would be a way to pull in the 'ticking time bomb' mechanic into your plot, if you are so inclined.
Yes, I know. But if he falls into a river, he could swallow or inhale, well, all kinds of things that wouldn't necessarily be good for him.
I think I know where they'll get their herbal remedies . . . and who will supply them.
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Row boats and water dragons? What have you done to your story Meredith?
Expanded it. It's a (middle-grade) novel, now. This is all happening about 200 pages in. Can't just all be the same old storms all the way through, now can it?
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Bruised ribs was good, not cracked. Cracked is more for heroic moments.
Far as I can tell from a little bit of research, it's a matter of degree--and how much pain the character would be in. Fractured would definitely be worst, cracked, painful but not as bad, and bruised probably more bearable. Since he won't be getting an x-ray in this world, I think I'll just leave it as an injury to his ribs and not worry over the specifics.
[This message has been edited by Meredith (edited November 22, 2010).]
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Split his chin. It'll bleed something fierce for a while, he'll need to lie still and apply pressure to stop the bleeding. Maybe he'll feel dizzy or faint from it.
LOL. You mean give him a scar like mine? I had stitches in my chin, just underneath, when I was about three or four.
True story: My brother and I have matching scars. He got his trying to play baseball on a pogo stick. (Tells you something about my brother, doesn't it?) I got mine by cracking my chin on the edge of the sink, falling off the toilet seat, where I'd been standing so I could watch Dad shave.
Mike = daredevil
Meredith = clumsy
Still true to this day. Or it would be if Mike hadn't wrecked himself.
[This message has been edited by Meredith (edited November 23, 2010).]
Or, more simply, what if they lose some of their supplies that include warmer clothes, and the weather gets bad, and they suffer from exposure (extreme heat or cold)? Even heavy rain in moderate temperatures is bad if they stay wet long enough to lose significant body heat.
[This message has been edited by sojoyful (edited November 23, 2010).]
W.
Torture your characters.