As I mentioned over on the main blog, my focus on writing has shifted a bit as a reaction to my mom’s health problems. But I’ve also realized, in just two days away from writing, that I have to keep doing this. I have to keep writing, if only to stay sane(ish). So this morning I’ve been working on the outline for Crusade, or at least the outline for act 1. Here’s what I have so far:
1: New Beginning
- Daniel at his family’s graves, refer to “bootcamp”
- Jack’s team tries take down a demon with an EMP, fails
2: The Man Who Would Be King
- Susan interviews US Senator Timothy Phillips from Texas
- Anti-demon hysteria, community witch hunts
3: Recovery
- Daniel helps Patrick heal up
- Jack confers with Uriel about the effect on public opinion
4: Impetus
- In Hell, Lucifer and Baal discuss out to turn the chaos outside to their advantage
- Phillips introduces legislation
5: Disintegration
- Team attacks a demon with acid, scars bystander
- Susan learns of the attack, what Daniel and Jack are up to, calls them out on TV
6: Malcontents
- Jack’s team reacts to being branded terrorists
- Phillips calls for people to assist in bringing demons to justice
7: Disruptions
- Patrick tries to hack the wireless communication between the nanites
- Susan chases Jack’s team
8: Intended Consequences
- Witch hunts intensify, increasing public panic (POV?)
- Susan is at odds with the network
9: Fallout
- Team attacks a demon hideout with a dirty bomb
10: Capitulation
- President is politically forced to admit that demons exist
I’m fond of the chapter titles, and I think I have some good stuff here. The hysteria gripping the country — it spreads worldwide in a big way in act 2 — builds slowly, an escalation on both sides. A lot of the characters have to deal with doubts about what they’re doing: Daniel has to deal with civilian collateral damage, Susan with the fear-mongering the network wants her to do, Jack with how ineffectual they are at fighting the immortals. I’m also pitting Susan against Jack and Daniel, at least for a while.
But it still seems like I’m missing something. In this phase of the story, the humans are proxies, or even pawns, in a war between the angels and demons. Each side of immortals thinks they have the upper hand and fundamentally misunderstands the nature of the conflict waged by the other side.
The demons think that they are close to winning the war once and for all, tipping the scales to chaos. While the revelation of their existence was unintentional, they now think it might be the best thing that ever happened to them, because the rampant fear can be manipulated to undermine all the structures of order. Governments and economies will crumble, setting humans against each other on a global scale. Demons are ultimately trying to improve the human race by making it stronger, weeding out the weak. And nothing does that better than a post-apocalyptic hellscape.
The angels, on the other hand, have stopped fighting the war of hearts and minds entirely. They’re no longer competing with the demons to see who can out-influence the humans. Instead, they’re using the humans as weapons with which to wipe the demons out directly. Once the tide turns, the angels will reveal themselves and enter combat. Until then, they’re giving the demons the illusion of getting what they want while they have the demons hunted down and destroyed. In the short term, demonic propensity for chaos will wipe the slate clean, allowing the angels to build an orderly utopia on the ashes later when the demons have been eliminated.
So in the first act of Crusade I need to lay the groundwork for all this, showing both the steady decline of social order and the ruthless efficiency of the angels in going after their opponents directly rather than by influencing humans. All of this subtext needs to be conveyed while still focusing on Jack, Daniel and Susan, seeing it all unfold through their eyes.
Which brings me back to the outline. I see two things wrong with it so far, two things that jump out at me.
- Where is Daniel in all this? He needs a bigger role.
- The angels need to be a stronger presence. So far we have one scene with Uriel in the whole first act. I need something to foreshadow Gabriel showing up in full powered armor in act 2.
I’m also not sure yet why the President of the United States is forced to admit that demons are real. I suspect that will be driven by the populist uprisings and the need to try to maintain peace and public safety, and to some degree an attempt to defuse Senator Phillips’s rhetoric. Josh says I need to have more “man in the street” scenes, some way to show how the rising panic is affecting everyday people. Need to think more on that one.
So what about you? Keeping in mind that this is just the first of three acts in the second book of a trilogy, what jumps out to you as missing or out of place?
UPDATE: Okay, here’s what I came up with over the afternoon.
1: New Beginning
- Daniel at his family’s graves, refer to “bootcamp”
- Jack’s team tries take down a demon with an EMP, fails
2: The Man Who Would Be King
- Susan interviews US Senator Timothy Phillips from Texas
- Anti-demon hysteria, community witch hunts
- Chaos vignette
3: Recovery
- Daniel helps Patrick heal up
- Jack confers with Uriel about the effect on public opinion
- Chaos vignette
4: Impetus
- In Hell, Lucifer and Baal discuss out to turn the chaos outside to their advantage
- Phillips introduces legislation
- Chaos vignette
5: Disintegration
- Team attacks a demon with acid, scars bystander
- Susan learns of the attack, what Daniel and Jack are up to, calls them out on TV
- Chaos vignette
6: Malcontents
- Team reacts to being branded terrorists
- Chaos vignette
- Phillips calls for people to assist in bringing demons to justice
7: Disruptions
- Chaos vignette
- Patrick tries to hack the wireless communication between the nanites
- Susan chases Jack’s team
8: Intended Consequences
- Chaos vignette
- Daniel conflicts with Jack
- Susan is at odds with the network
9: Fallout
- Team attacks a demon hideout with a dirty bomb
- Daniel rebels (this is where we see the beginnings of why Daniel ends up leading Jack in Jihad, that Daniel is more principled)
- Chaos vignette
10: Capitulation
- At a public protest, Baal shows up and reveals himself to the world, kills protestors
- Daniel “gets with the program,” is willing to keep going for the greater good
- President is politically forced to admit that demons exist
Lots of good changes here.
First, we have a defined character arc for Daniel, where he drifts away from Jack, rebelling at the violence and collateral damage, but is forced to come back at the end of the act.
Second, I have a series of vignettes planned, little one-shot “man on the street” pieces showing how the fear and chaos is affecting individuals. I see these as similar to the quick little one-off scenes Frank Miller did so well in The Dark Knight Returns to illustrate what that future Gotham City was like.
Third, we see that the demons force the government’s hand by “coming out” on their own, provoking an official response and ratcheting the terror still higher. This forces Daniel to overcome his doubts, forces Susan to get on board with the network’s fear mongering, and sets the stage for the angelic response from Gabriel in act 2.
The first 30,000 words or so of Crusade is starting to look very interesting.
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