Showing posts with label Flesheater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flesheater. Show all posts

Friday, July 23, 2021

BEWARE THE FLESHEATER

No, I’m not talking about zombies. I'm talking about this fierce looking combat knife called the Flesheater. 

It was designed by world renowned martial artist and retired USMC Master Sergeant AJ Advincula (my sensei), and custom made by knife maker Jim Hammond.

It's also the knife my alpha gladiators use in my sci-fi romance series, The Survival Race. We’re first introduced to the knife in book one, Captive: An Alien Abduction SciFi Romance, where broken-warrior Max uses it as he and his “mate,” Addy, escape from alien captivity.  

This 14 inch knife, with its nine inch re-curve blade, was designed for one thing: combat. And Max knows how to wield it in a fight. 

I own this knife (though my husband mistakenly believes it's his, but let's not open up that can of worms) and train with it. Let me tell you, it is one serious weapon. You can cut a limb off with this thing! 

Don't believe me? Watch the ten second video below from karate camp 2013. (Yeah, karate camp isn't your typical camp, folks).

Relax, no humans were hurt in the making of this video. We simply took a rolled up tatami mat and soaked it in lake water. This dense, waterlogged tatami is supposed to simulate the muscle of a human arm. If you wanted to simulate bone, you'd add a dowel to the center of the mat. Anyone can cut through tatami with a sword, but you need to have good technique with a short blade. Play the video clip and watch what this awesome knife can do. 

*Warning* Don't do this at home kids.


If Max could see me, I hope he'd be proud.

For specifics on the Flesheater knife, its history and design—including the unique four grip handle—I encourage you to click over to Custom Knife Maker Jim Hammond's website.

Here's an except from Renegade (book 3) in which Max teaches scientist Griffin (this book’s hero) how to use the Flesheater combat knife to slit a throat as Griffin will be competing in the Survival Race.

***

Dawn cracked the sky. Chirping birds took flight as Max and Griffin approached the tree line of Duncan’s house. Max thrust a dagger hilt into Griffin’s hand. “Slit his throat.”


“Whose throat?”


“The tree. Imagine it’s your opponent. Slit its throat.”


Griffin glanced up into the branches. “He’s a little tall—”


The whack upside his head came hard and fast. 
“Don’t be an idiot.” Max grabbed the knife, slunk behind the tree trunk—roughly the width of a human head—and wrapped an arm around it. You hold the man’s head snug against your shoulder and neck. This prohibits him from moving and exposes his throat. Then cut him.” He sliced the tree. “It’s as simple as that. Your turn.”
 

Feeling stupid, Griffin slit the tree’s throat a few times.


“Moving on.” From behind, Max’s hand clamped down on Griffin’s nose and mouth, suffocating him as his head jerked back against Max’s body. Back arched, he saw sky. 


Max stepped backward and Griffin, helpless, stumbled backward with him. Max jerked him left and Griffin stumbled left, trying to keep upright. He jerked right, and Griffin stumbled right. “See how your body follows wherever I move your head?”


See it? No. Feel it. Absolutely.


“Feeling vulnerable?” From the laughter in Max’s voice, he enjoyed having the upper hand. 


Vulnerable was an understatement. Griffin struggled to breathe beneath the strong hand crushing his nose and mouth.


Flailing his hands to hit Max’s face or poke his eyes didn’t work. His head tightly pinned, Griffin was helpless as Max dragged him in circles. Good thing he didn’t eat breakfast, or the dizziness would’ve made him vomit. When Max stopped, something sharp burned across his neck. 


Griffin crumpled to the ground, clawing at his throat. It wasn’t cut as he feared. It was scratched. 


“Fingernail,” Max said. “There’s no time to slice you open for real.” 


“Uh. Thank you?”


“Here.” He gave him a hand up off the forest floor. “You try.”


After a moment to regain breath and bearings, Griffin stood behind Max and snaked an arm around his face. 


In a quick motion, Max slipped the hold. A hand clamped over Griffin’s mouth and nose again. His head jerked backward. A fingernail sliced his throat. “Too slow. Do it again.” Max shoved him away. 


On the next try, forest and sky spun. The ground slammed into his back, knocking the wind out of him. 


“Take control or you’ll be thrown.”


He coughed and gasped until his breath finally normalized. “Can’t you stand still for a minute until I get the technique down?”


“Where’s the fun in that? Get up. Do it again.”


Each frustrating time Griffin tried, Max countered and simulated slicing his throat. His neck burned. Sweat dripped into the raw wounds and stung. 

And then it happened. 

Maybe Max had fatigued from two hours of training on an empty stomach or maybe Griffin finally learned, but with quick and controlled movements, he found himself slicing a thumbnail across Max’s neck.


Chin high, shoulders back, and chest expanded with a deep, satisfied breath, Griffin was ready to take on the world. 


“Took you long enough.” 


Yes, it did. But the fact was Griffin had done it. He’d learn how to slit a man’s throat. 


Why the hell did that make him proud?


***

Each book in the Survival Race series (CAPTIVE, FEARLESS, and RENEGADE) are stand-alone sci-fi romances in which each book's couple finds their happily ever after. No cheating. No cliff hangers. If you enjoy...

  • Alien abduction/ alien captive stories

  • Action adventure romance

  • Enemies to lovers

  • Dark, brooding alpha males

  • Strong, fiery females

  • Exciting scifi romances with a fresh twist

  • ...then buy a copy and enjoy the adventure and romance today!

 
Stay safe out there!
~K.M. Fawcett



Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Make It Work! Adjust, Adapt, and Overcome

Three little words my karate sensei AJ Advincula says is Make it work! This means that sometimes the student must adjust a technique, principle, or concept in order to execute a technique based on individual needs. For example, someone shorter than their attacker (like me) may be better off countering an attack with groin strike rather than a strike to the throat. Why would I reach up when my target of opportunity, the groin, is closer?

Adjusting, adapting, and overcoming—AKA making it work—applies in the martial arts, in life (as we've all been experiencing in the Covid-19 era), and in writing.

One time, when Sensei Advincula stayed at our house for a long weekend of karate training, he taught us knife-fighting techniques with the Flesheater, the combat knife he designed. This awesome knife, custom made by knife maker Jim Hammond, is featured in each book in the Survival Race series and can be seen on the spine as part of the series logo.

Something during our training session—perhaps the mention of reaming?—sparked a question about a technique I used in my book, CAPTIVE. When I asked Sensei about it, I learned I goofed up my sword fight choreography. That night, over a cup of tea at the kitchen table, I read the scene to him and learned something important about Claymores, the sword my hero wielded in the manuscript.

A Claymore is a long sword with a heavy, straight blade that was used in Scotland, especially in the Highlands, during the 15th - 17th centuries. The word Claymore was derived from a Celtic word meaning great sword. Its average length was 55 inches. Because of its weight (5 - 8 pounds), it had a long hilt for a two-handed grip. I'd learned all this from my research. However, I had imagined the hands were positioned one on top of the other like you'd hold a baseball bat. Sensei explained this wasn't the case. The hands are positioned further apart to give leverage to hold and maneuver the heavy weapon.

Hand position makes a difference when writing about how the weapon is used. Sensei explained Claymores were wielded mainly against multiple opponents with sweeping and slashing movements. The weight could penetrate armor. It was not typically used for thrusting or piercing or fighting one-on-one.

All of my fight choreography was based on a lighter weight sword with a different hand grip than what my characters were using. They fought one-on-one and also used thrusts. I didn’t want to keep these mistakes in the book, but I didn’t want to re-choreograph the entire sword fight either. Now what?

MAKE IT WORK!

Since I’m writing science fiction, I decided to create my own sword to do what I needed for the scene. This sword was made of Hyborean steel, a lightweight and incredibly strong material found on the planet in which this story is set. It can be wielded one or two handed. My new sword needed a name. I decided on Gladimort, a shortened form of the Latin words gladius mortis, which (according to Google translate) means Sword of Death.

Gladimorts are standard issued in the survival races, a blood sport where the last man alive wins. You’ll see more use of Gladimorts in book three, Renegade, as we venture back into the Survival Race arena! Newsletter subscribers got a sneak peek at Renegade’s cover last week, but today I’m revealing it to everyone.


The heroine, Katana, is a female gladiator. I think the cover designer (Karri Klawiter) did a great job making her look tough. I love the details of the multiple ear piercings and the shock collar necklace. The hero, Griffin, is a scientist. Note his telescope in the background. Griffin has his head in the stars. Katana has hers in the arena. Both must compete in the survival race to win their hearts desire. What do you think? Reply in the comments and let me know which Survival Race cover you like best: Captive, Fearless, or Renegade. (Covers for Captive and Fearless are at the right side of this blog.)

When a rebel scientist and a female gladiator team-up in the Survival Race—a blood sport where the last man alive wins—they unwittingly fall for each other. But the alien masters demand a single champion, and the rivals-turned-lovers are forced to choose between winning their freedom and losing more than their hearts.


RENEGADE (Survival Race #3)
Coming June 2020

~ K.M. Fawcett
Romance for the rebel heart
www.kmfawcett.com