"A piece moved!"
"Show me,Father."
"See,Sister.I'm old,not senile"
"A pawn...that's all?"
"He,was once a pawn too you know,"he said,gesturing to a crucifix on a nearby wall.
"The board is your responsibility,Father....what do you see?"
"The pawn...it's grown! It's larger than the other pawns.The silver.It's cleaner,less corrupted...and she's moving.Here.Soon."
"She? How does it,become she?", the sister asked,pointing to the pawn.
[This message has been edited by SimonSays (edited March 21, 2006).]
A few lines of exposition mixed in here will go a long way toward making this palatable.
All we know is there seems to be a family talking about how a chess peice is changing that that Jesus was a chess peice too. I need a little more connection to what's happening before I'd read much beyond those first few lines. A bit more information about what is happening would probably make the dialog very compelling though.
The opening to Ender's Game is a good example of this. It's all spoken dialog, it shows a decision being made, one which brings about the rest of the story, and the characters are a couple of military officers deciding whether to draft a kid.
This opening isn't so good. You're describing action, you're also having the characters describe action, but we're not sure which actions are real and which aren't. It also seems that the action matters more than the dialog, in which case I'd rather you showed the action rather than letting the characters narrate it. Leaving aside the fact that I don't know how reliable either character is.
The dialogue is a bit choppy, and without cushioning, it's more blatantly so. Father says he saw a piece move, Sister asks him to show her, and then he claims how he's old, not senile... but Sister had never said anything that would hint to her thinking that. I know that these characters have a story-life before the story actually begins, but since we don't know anything about these characters (you're keeping all information about them a secret) a line like "I'm old, not senile" seems out of place.
Punctuation is still a problem:
"A piece moved!"
"Show me,Father."
[Should be "Show me, Father."]
"See,Sister.I'm old,not senile"
["See, Sister. I'm old, not senile."]
"A pawn...that's all?"
["A pawn... that's all?"]
"He,was once a pawn too you know,"he said,gesturing to a crucifix on a nearby wall.
["He was once a pawn, too, you know," he said, gesturing to a crucifix on a nearby wall.]
"The board is your responsibility,Father....what do you see?"
["The board is your responsibility, Father... what do you see?"]
"The pawn...it's grown! It's larger than the other pawns.The silver.It's cleaner,less corrupted...and she's moving.Here.Soon."
["The pawn... it's grown! It's larger than the other pawns. The silver. It's cleaner, less corrupted... and she's moving. Here. Soon."]
"She? How does it,become she?", the sister asked,pointing to the pawn.
["She? How does it become (a) she?" the sister asked, pointing to the pawn.]
Commas and periods do not replace spaces. Ellipses (...) come in sets of three.
Cheers,
Cassie