Easy Jobs: They Never Are

The best news for Burn and Bad Karma is that they rarely have to attend any staff meetings, and if they do, the group is usually new people.

Seriously, though, it can be complicated for them to get through a job that should have been straight forward, simple and over with. That would also make the stories both shorter than expected and it wouldn’t ring true to real life. At least for most of us.

Since Easy Jobs is already in the title, I’ll use it as an example of complicating things for the characters. There are spoilers ahead, so if you haven’t read Easy Jobs, maybe go read that one first (or listen to the audio book).

The first thing that happens is that Hitcher, who’s exiting the Holy Mexican Empire’s embassy in Atlanta, gets spotted and chased by security personnel. Prioritizing not ending up a prisoner of the Empire, he accidentally kills one of the security team, and hurts a few others. Between the data he took, and the death of one of their own, the Empire’s local leadership wants their data and to make an example of Hitcher, so they set up a bounty for him, employing their own assets and mercenary forces in the Southern States Union.

Next, we meet Burn and Bad Karma conducting a data theft in some corporate executive’s skyrise condo. They’re professionals. Highly skilled. They reconned the condo, checked schedules, and did all the right things. And, of course, there was an unknown occupant in the condo, who came out armed. Data theft escalated to a self defense shooting, followed by the pair having to rappel down the building, getting into a short gun fight with a security team on the ground before stealing a car.

Micky then calls in Burn and Bad Karma to get Hitcher to Pittsburg. This involves dodging mercenaries, disrupting a gang robbery in a fast food place, illegally crossing a border, and, finally, a show down with the Empire’s hirelings and their ringer and high level killer.

Does it seem convoluted? Because it does. However, for the story to feel real, and to give the characters changes to shine and do what they do best, I had to find ways to increase the intensity. Burn and Bad Karma were focusing on steal and speed to get Hitcher clear. But they’re too people against a group that national resources to leverage, even if they have to so in a hostile nation. And I don’t want the Empire to seem incompetent. They aren’t. In setting, the Holy Mexican Empire controls everything to real world Panama, and is doing well in battle in the former US states from California to Texas. If they were incompetent, Hitcher would have gotten away clean in the first place.

So, writers have to find ways to increase the intensity and concern for the main characters. Some times, its the bad guys getting players on the board and messing up the main characters’ plans. Other times, it’s a matter of dumb luck braking against the characters. The gas station fight in Easy Jobs was a combination. Hitcher stepped in front of some mercenaries that were looking for the bounty on his head.

When we do this right, readers get a fun story that rings true and keeps you turning pages. Not that I, or any writer, nails that every time.

But here’s the secret: if the story needs a kick, I can add that in re-writes. I don’t have to write a perfect story the first time out. I can write the first draft, and when I re-read it, I can make notes going “hey this is too easy. Give them a threat or problem.” If you’ve read Easy Jobs, they literally had to swim across a river to get from Kentucky to Ohio. Why? Because at that point in time, the fictional United States and Southern States Union had no open check points or crossings. Burn and Bad Karma had no way to scam IDs that would allow such a crossing at that time. So, they had to slog it across and work their way to a town so they could secure another ride.

Along with that, they discuss the issues with the amount of surveillance they needed to avoid, and how they would, along with the risks of dealing with law enforcement, and how they would approach that. None of that would allow them an easier delivery.

So, hopefully, this gives you the readers (and any writers out there) some insight on how the stakes get increased in a story, even when the task should be simple and straight forward, an easy job. And we writers how you enjoy these stories!

Motivation

Sometimes, that’s how it works.

Like many writers, I get asked how I keep coming up with ideas. The truth is that I have a lot of ideas. I don’t have enough time to write all the stories those ideas are connected with, but I do have a lot of ideas for stories. And sometimes, some event or comment or action I see gives me an idea for a story.

What I do with this ideas is make a note of them. So, it gets jotted down in a notebook, or texted to myself, or added to a page in my Notion pages. In some way, shape or manner, I document that idea.

If the idea is good, it will be there when I have time to develop it. If it’s great, I build a lot more base for it, so I can act on it when there’s time and not a dozen other deadlines and projects going. Some, sadly, go to the great note page in the sky.

One other interesting idea happens with a few of those idea, though. A rare few show up when I’m working on a story, and they fit. Not usually in the scene I’m writing, but somewhere in the story. So, I work it in.

That’s where Pheobe the Tank came from. Someone else had made a comment about sentient tank stories and I was working on Sandblaster at the time. Since there were already tanks in the story, it was fun to go back through and add a sentient tank to this cyberpunk mercenary story.

From there, I was invited to submit to the Worldbreaker anthology. Which lead to Amarillo by Fire Fight, where Phoebe the Tank catfishing an infantry soldier while in a rolling tank fight.

So, there you have it. Most of the writers I know don’t have a lack of ideas. We really don’t. We have capacity to work on one or two stories at a time, and not nearly enough hours in a day to write everything we want to, but we generally don’t seem to lack ideas.

Thanks for reading through this. I hope you enjoyed a glimpse into my process!

I Finished the Rough Draft of Corporals

I finished the rough draft of ‘Corporals’ the other day, and thought you all might enjoy a snippet of the story. In this story, Burn and Bad Karma are recruited into Rangers due to some issues that come up with Karma’s past.

Enjoy!

“Training under an identity we’re building for you. Makes it more complicated for politicians. Tossing people with no numbers under tank treads is easy. Soldiers and Department team members get ugly for them fast,” the sergeant major explained.

“We haven’t been a country long enough for politicians to be voted out,” Burn faced the soldier.

“Three politicians had tragic accidents,” the general noted, “And the investigations came up to purely accidental causes. Clearly.”

“Wasn’t me,” Bad Karma said.

“It wasn’t,” the sergeant major smiled, her cheeks rising as she spoke, “We checked.”

“What, exactly, are you trying to say?” Burn’s fingers pressed against the table, turning white.

“That it appears that trying to use the Ranger Department for political advantage can be detrimental to one’s health. Many veterans of the war are outspoken about using individuals as trading chips. The Department, of course, is absolutely loyal to the elected leaders of our nation and our constitution,” the sergeant major said.

Silence settled across the room. Burn noted the buzz of the white noise generator and that her comm systems were showing no signal.

“It appears we can trust you. So, why HALO jumping?”

“It’s the nearest start date we have for any training,” the general shrugged, “And I doubt you two would do well in Ranger School.”

“Why’s that?” Bad Karma asked.

“Ranger School lasts for three months. Freefall school is three weeks, and you don’t have to go in knowing military tactics,” the sergeant major noted, “First, you don’t want to be out of the loop in the dropped numbers world for three months. Second, you don’t need to go through the usual military training program. We just need you in a school to have your new core IDs solid. Third, the training will be useful to you and to us, as it opens some options when situations needing your skills come up.”

“New skills don’t hurt,” Karma shrugged.