[This message has been edited by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (edited November 24, 2009).]
There is also little to no flow between sentences/events. Seriously, this is very Un Chien Andalou.
1. A rat is tortured, then killed summarily.
2. I experience blinding pain and pass out.
3. I wake and everyone leaves the room inexplicably.
4. The door is closed and the lights go out.
5. I consider the consequences of my resistance (to what is my question. The narrator hasn't actually done anything).
6. I sleep. It is still dark.
7. I wake. It is still dark.
8. People reenter the room. My training (again, what training? Nothing has happened) begins again.
If you're trying to liken the experience of the rat to what your MC is experiencing, you're going to have to try again. This is a miss.
I was a prototype superclone. I was designed to outsmart, outmaneuver, and physically overwhelm opponents. They planned for me to enter enemy countries to assassinate leaders, kidnap scientists and businessmen, rescue hostages and dissenters, raid bank accounts, and steal inventions.
This was the original opener. But as I've seen with other posts, it's too much of a journalistic, biographical, infodump.
So I tried the torture scene. More personal. More action. More dramatic. Then let the superclone fill the reader in on who he is and why he started to resist.
Actually, this is was the original opening. Cliche #1: waking up. Cliche #2: men in lab coats.
“George,” Wilson said, “we will explain everything to you after you complete your training. What’s important now is that you stop interrupting your training and start obeying again. If you obey, everything will be OK.”
“No,” I said. “I want to know how I got here. I want to know who you are. I want to know why you’re training me. I want to know what’s beyond that door.”
“Dr. Philips,” he said into his handcom, “George has entered the stage where your services have become necessary.” A man I had never seen before entered the room. “This is Dr. Philips. He’s in charge of discipline. Pay careful attention, George. Something very important is about to happen to you and you should never forget it.”
[This message has been edited by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (edited November 24, 2009).]
My only suggestion: make this 13 somehow even MORE menacing. maybe trim some of the dialogue lines, so there is room for a line or two of description, where the MC notices some very menacing things hinting at the torture/surprise to come.
In the next paragraph, George notes that Dr. Philips doesn't say a word to him, doesn't even look at him. To be consistent, and to reinforce how indifferent and sinister Dr. Philips is, I should cut Dr. Wilson introducing Dr. Philips. Cut this line to make room for Dr. Philips sliting the rat's throat and throwing the body at George's feet.
Progress. Thanks everyone.