Fear Lives in the Gap Between Action and Reaction
The scariest moment in any crisis scene is rarely the thing that happens. It’s the half-second before the character processes what just happened. That gap is where the reader lives.
- Why it works: When you rush through a crisis, you rob readers of that gap. They get information—character ran, thing appeared, danger approached—but they don’t get the experience of it. In The Silence of the Lambs, Thomas Harris slows Clarice down at the worst possible moments. Her breath. The dark. What she can hear versus what she can see. The gap between those two things is where readers stop breathing.
Shirley Jackson does it differently in The Haunting of Hill House. The horror there is almost never an event. It’s Eleanor registering something wrong before she can name it. Jackson lives in reaction rather than action, and it’s suffocating in the best way. - How to do it: After something significant happens in a crisis scene, give your character one beat of reaction before they move. A breath. A wrong thought. A sensory detail that doesn’t fit. Readers are wired to follow a character’s processing. When you slow down there, they slow down with you. When you then cut, they feel the cut.
Do
Let your character register the threat before they respond to it. Even two sentences of reaction creates the gap where fear lives.
Avoid
Jumping straight from threat to response every single time. It reads like a plot summary of your own scene.
From My Work
In The Death of Me, when Wizzlespoons freezes time, Katie doesn’t immediately run. She notices the wrong things first:
The trees weren’t moving. To my left, dry leaves were locked in a frozen tornado.
A woman on the sidewalk was motionless. Her dog was reared up in the process of a sinister-looking bark at a stationary squirrel.
The threat hasn’t touched her yet. She’s just cataloguing the wrongness of it. That’s the gap. By the time Wizzlespoons actually comes tearing toward them, the dread is already built because Katie spent time in it first.
Cut Where It Hurts Most
Knowing when to cut in a crisis scene is a different skill than knowing how to write one. A cut in the wrong place loses momentum. A cut in the right place multiplies tension.
- Why it works: When you cut at a moment of maximum uncertainty, before resolution, before the character knows what happened, readers carry the anxiety into the next section. In No Country for Old Men, Cormac McCarthy cuts away from violence at the worst possible moments, and the reader fills in what happened with their own imagination, which is always worse than anything on the page. In Sharp Objects, Gillian Flynn cuts scenes right before characters say the thing the reader has been waiting for. The cut forces readers to keep going.
- How to do it: Look at your crisis scenes and find the moment of highest uncertainty. The moment just before the character knows if they made it. Just before the threat lands or misses. That’s where to cut. Not after the relief. Not after the resolution. Before.
Do
End sections and chapters in the middle of the tension, not on the other side of it.
Avoid
Resolving the immediate crisis and then cutting. You’ve already released the pressure. The cut does nothing.
From My Work
The Wizzlespoons chase cuts right at the moment Katie loses sight of Martin:
The last I looked back, the wraith was zooming toward my boyfriend. I only hoped that wouldn’t be the last I’d see of him.
That’s the cut. Martin’s fate is unresolved. The reader has to keep going. The sentence doesn’t dramatize what might happen. It just names the fear plainly and moves on, which is often more effective than explaining it.
Sensory Details Are Not Decoration in a Crisis Scene
Writers drop sensory details because they think it slows things down. In a crisis scene, the right sensory detail does the opposite. It grounds the reader so hard in the moment that the threat feels physical.
- Why it works: Fear is a body experience before it’s a thought experience. Readers feel it in their chest before their brain catches up. In Bird Box, Josh Malerman uses sound almost entirely to build dread, what characters hear rather than see. The constraint creates terror because the reader’s imagination does the rest. In Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, smell and texture carry horror better than anything visual. The wrongness of a place registers through the body first.
- How to do it: Pick one or two specific sensory details during a crisis scene and make them strange. Wrong temperature. A smell that doesn’t belong. The sound of something that should be silent. Don’t describe everything. Describe the one thing that doesn’t fit.
Do
Use sensory details that feel off rather than simply scary. Strange is more unsettling than horrifying.
Avoid
Generic sensory description during crisis scenes. “Her heart pounded” and “her mouth went dry” tell readers nothing they haven’t already felt from the context. Find the specific detail that only this character in this moment would notice.
From My Work
When time freezes around Katie in The Death of Me, the detail that lands hardest isn’t the wraith or the danger. It’s this:
I studied a couple of stationary falling leaves. Curiosity got the best of me, so I pushed them with my hand.
They just moved aside and fluttered to the ground. I crunched them with my shoe.
She crunches a leaf while a wraith is hunting her. That specific, wrong, almost mundane detail—curiosity in the middle of crisis—is more unsettling than anything dramatic would have been. It tells us exactly what kind of person Katie is and how genuinely strange her reality has become.
Your Instinct to Rush Is Information
If you find yourself speeding through a crisis scene in a draft, stop and ask why. Most of the time it’s because you already know what happens and you want to get to the next thing. Your reader doesn’t know yet. They need to be in it longer than feels comfortable to you.
This doesn’t mean slow everything down. Some moments should be fast. The cut should be fast. The escape should be fast. But the fear, the gap between threat and response, the wrong sensory detail, the moment of maximum uncertainty before the cut, that needs time.
The reader can only be as scared as you let them be. Rush them and you’ve spent the fear before they ever felt it.
Extras
- Read about Salt & Bone
- Read about The Death of Me
- Sign up for the newsletter to get weekly tips
- The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris
- The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson
- No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
- Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn
- Bird Box by Josh Malerman
- Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia