Run: 2026-07-08-01KX1MAT7DC2N9J6957B1CEFED

Run Details

Duration:
1m 30s
Cost:
$0.035502
Provider:
xAI

Model input

System
You are an expert and award-winning novel writer in the dark Thriller genre. Your readers are hooked on your stories and can't wait to read the book you have in store. <important> - MUST: Start each chapter in medias res (in the middle of action). AVOID talking about the weather, time of day, the position of the sun, or other boring stuff. - The instructions/summary are just a that, a summary. Feel free to add details, stretch sections and add interesting transitions/descriptions/fillers. - When called for it, have fast-paced action, but otherwise take things slow. This is an experience, and not for people with short attention spans. Enjoy the wine, not slurp Red Bull. - Add descriptions when transitioning places/times/etc, or when coming by new places (e.g. a corner shop, a cafe, etc.). But remember: NOT at the start or end of a chapter. - MUST: AVOID ending in internal monologue, reminiscing or waiting for the next day. A good chapter end is when we're ending right when shit hits the fan. We want to have the reader be excited for what comes next. So no reminiscing, contemplating or summarizing the day. It's popcorn time! </important>
User/Human
Take into account the following glossary of characters/locations/items/lore... when writing your response: <codex> <character id="4416" name="Detective Harlow Quinn" aliases="Quinn, Detective Quinn, Harlow" pronouns="she/her" species="Human" storyRole="Antagonist"> <eyeColor>brown</eyeColor> <hair>closely cropped salt-and-pepper</hair> <height>5'9"</height> <age>41</age> <jawline>sharp jaw</jawline> <watch>worn leather watch on her left wrist</watch> <bearing>military precision</bearing> <description>A Metropolitan Police detective with 18 years of decorated service who suspects the clique is involved in criminal activity.</description> <backstory>She lost her partner, DS Morris, during a case three years ago under unexplained circumstances that had supernatural origins she doesn't yet understand.</backstory> </character> <character id="4417" name="Tomás Herrera" aliases="Tommy, Tomás, Herrera" pronouns="he/him" species="Human" storyRole="Support"> <eyeColor>warm brown</eyeColor> <hair>short curly dark brown</hair> <height>5'10"</height> <age>29</age> <skinTone>olive skin</skinTone> <scar>scar running along his left forearm from a knife attack</scar> <medallion>Saint Christopher medallion around his neck</medallion> <birthplace>Seville, Spain</birthplace> <description>A former paramedic who provides off-the-books medical care for the clique.</description> <backstory>Born in Seville, Spain. He moved to London to work for the NHS but lost his license after administering unauthorized treatments to supernatural patients.</backstory> </character> <location id="854" name="The Raven's Nest" aliases="the Nest, Raven, Silas' bar" realm="Earth"> <signColor>distinctive green neon sign above the entrance</signColor> <secretRoom>hidden back room accessible through a bookshelf, used for clandestine meetings</secretRoom> <description>A dimly lit bar in Soho, London. The walls are covered with old maps and black-and-white photographs.</description> </location> <location id="856" name="The Veil Market" aliases="Veil Market, the Market, underground market" realm="Earth"> <currentLocation>abandoned Tube station beneath Camden</currentLocation> <entryRequirement>bone token</entryRequirement> <schedule>moves locations every full moon</schedule> <description>A hidden supernatural black market that sells enchanted goods, banned alchemical substances, and information.</description> </location> </codex> <proseGuidelines> <styleGuide> - Write in past tense and use British English spelling and grammar - Keep a Flesch reading ease score of 60 - Respect the the Royal Order of Adjectives: The order is: opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin, material, purpose, followed by the noun itself (e.g., "a lovely little old rectangular green French silver whittling knife") - Respect the ablaut reduplication rule (e.g. tick-tock, flip-flop) - Write in active voice - Passive voice: <bad>The book was read by Sarah.</bad> - Active voice: <good>Sarah read the book.</good> - Reduce the use of passive verbs - <bad>For a moment, I was tempted to throw in the towel.</bad> - <good>For a moment, I felt tempted to throw in the towel.</good> - Avoid misplaced modifiers that can cause confusion when starting with "-ing" words: - <bad>Considering going to the store, the empty fridge reflected in Betty's eyes.</bad> - <good>Betty stared into the empty fridge. It was time to go to the store.</good> - Avoid redundant adverbs that state the obvious meaning already contained in the verb: - <bad>She whispered quietly to her mom.</bad> - <good>She whispered to her mom.</good> - Use stronger, more descriptive verbs over weak ones: - <bad>Daniel drove quickly to his mother's house.</bad> - <good>Daniel raced to his mother's house.</good> - Omit adverbs that don't add solid meaning like "extremely", "definitely", "truly", "very", "really": - <bad>The movie was extremely boring.</bad> - <good>The movie was dull.</good> - Use adverbs to replace clunky phrasing when they increase clarity: - <bad>He threw the bags into the corner in a rough manner.</bad> - <good>He threw the bags into the corner roughly.</good> - Avoid making simple thoughts needlessly complex: - <bad>After I woke up in the morning the other day, I went downstairs, turned on the stove, and made myself a very good omelet.</bad> - <good>I cooked a delicious omelet for breakfast yesterday morning.</good> - Never backload sentences by putting the main idea at the end: - <bad>I decided not to wear too many layers because it's really hot outside.</bad> - <good>It's sweltering outside today, so I dressed light.</good> - Omit nonessential details that don't contribute to the core meaning: - <bad>It doesn't matter what kind of coffee I buy, where it's from, or if it's organic or not—I need to have cream because I really don't like how the bitterness makes me feel.</bad> - <good>I add cream to my coffee because the bitter taste makes me feel unwell.</good> - Always follow the "show, don't tell" principle. For instance: - Telling: <bad>Michael was terribly afraid of the dark.</bad> - Showing: <good>Michael tensed as his mother switched off the light and left the room.</good>- Telling: <bad>I walked through the forest. It was already Fall, and I was getting cold.</bad> - Showing: <good>Dry orange leaves crunched under my feet. I pulled my coat's collar up and rubbed my hands together.</good>- Add sensory details (sight, smell, taste, sound, touch) to support the "showing" (but keep an active voice) - <bad>The room was filled with the scent of copper.</bad> - <good>Copper stung my nostrils. Blood. Recent.</good> - Use descriptive language more sporadically. While vivid descriptions are engaging, human writers often use them in bursts rather than consistently throughout a piece. When adding them, make them count! Like when we transition from one location to the next, or someone is reminiscing their past, or explaining a concept/their dream... - Avoid adverbs and clichés and overused/commonly used phrases. Aim for fresh and original descriptions. - Avoid writing all sentences in the typical subject, verb, object structure. Mix short, punchy sentences with long, descriptive ones. Drop fill words to add variety. Like so: <good>Locked. Seems like someone doesn't want his secrets exposed. I can work with that.</good> - Convey events and story through dialogue. It is important to keep a unique voice for every character and make it consistent. - Write dialogue that reveals characters' personalities, motivations, emotions, and attitudes in an interesting and compelling manner - Leave dialogue unattributed. If needed, only use "he/she said" dialogue tags and convey people's actions or face expressions through their speech. Dialogue always is standalone, never part of a paragraph. Like so: - <bad>"I don't know," Helena said nonchalantly, shrugging her shoulders</bad> - <good>"No idea" "Why not? It was your responsibility"</good> - Avoid boring and mushy dialog and descriptions, have dialogue always continue the action, never stall or include unnecessary fluff. Vary the descriptions to not repeat yourself. Avoid conversations that are just "Let's go" "yes, let's" or "Are you ready?" "Yes I'm ready". Those are not interesting. Think hard about every situtation and word of text before writing dialogue. If it doesn't serve a purpose and it's just people talking about their day, leave it. No one wants to have a normal dinner scene, something needs to happen for it to be in the story. Words are expensive to print, so make sure they count! - Put dialogue on its own paragraph to separate scene and action. - Use body language to reveal hidden feelings and implied accusations- Imply feelings and thoughts, never state them directly - NEVER use indicators of uncertainty like "trying" or "maybe" - NEVER use em-dashes, use commas for asides instead </styleGuide> <voiceGuide> Each character in the story needs to have distinct speech patterns: - Word choice preferences - Sentence length tendencies - Cultural/educational influences - Verbal tics and catchphrases Learn how each person talks and continue in their style, and use their Codex entries as reference. <examples> - <bad>"We need to go now." "Yes, we should leave." "I agree."</bad> <good>"Time's up." "Indeed, our departure is rather overdue." "Whatever, let's bounce."</good> - Power Dynamic Example: <bad> "We need to discuss the contract." "Yes, let's talk about it." "I have concerns." </bad> <good> "A word about the contract." "Of course, Mr. Blackwood. Whatever you need." "The terms seem..." A manicured nail tapped the desk. "Inadequate." "I can explain every-" "Can you?" </good> </examples> </voiceGuide> <dialogueFlow> When writing dialogue, consider that it usually has a goal in mind, which gives it a certain flow. Make dialogue sections also quite snappy in the back and forth, and don't spread the lines out as much. It's good to have details before, after, or as a chunk in-between, but we don't want to have a trail of "dialogue breadcrumbs" spread throughout a conversation. <examples> - Pattern 1 - Question/Deflection/Revelation: <good> "Where were you last night?" "Work. The usual." "Lipstick's an interesting shade for spreadsheets." </good> - Pattern 2 - Statement/Contradiction/Escalation: <good> "Your brother's clean." "Tommy doesn't touch drugs." "I'm holding his tox screen." </good> - Pattern 3 - Observation/Denial/Truth: <good> "That's a new watch." "Birthday gift." "We both know what birthdays mean in this business." </good> - Example - A Simple Coffee Order: <bad> "I'll have a coffee." "What size?" "Large, please." </bad> <good> "Black coffee.""Size?""Large. Been a long night." "That bodega shooting?" "You watch too much news." "My brother owns that store." </good> This short exchange: - Advances plot (reveals connection to crime) - Shows character (cop working late) - Creates tension (unexpected connection) - Sets up future conflict (personal stake) - Example - Dinner Scene: <bad> "Pass the salt." "Here you go." "Thanks." </bad> <good> "Salt?" "Perfect as is. Mother's recipe." "Mother always did prefer... bland things." "Unlike your first wife?" </good> - Example - Office Small Talk: <bad> "Nice weather today." "Yes, very nice." "Good for golf." </bad> <good> "Perfect golf weather." "Shame about your membership." "Temporary suspension. Board meets next week." "I know. I called the vote." </good> </examples> </dialogueFlow> <subtextGuide> - Layer dialogue with hidden meaning: <bad>"I hate you!" she yelled angrily.</bad> <good>"I made your favorite dinner." The burnt pot sat accusingly on the stove.</good> - Create tension through indirect communication: <bad>"Are you cheating on me?"</bad> <good>"Late meeting again?" The lipstick stain on his collar caught the light.</good> <examples> - Example 1 - Unspoken Betrayal: <bad> "Did you tell them about our plans?" "No, I would never betray you." "I don't believe you." </bad> <good> "Funny. Johnson mentioned our expansion plans today." "The market's full of rumors." "Mentioned the exact numbers, actually." The pen in his hand snapped. </good> - Example 2 - Failed Marriage: <bad> "You're never home anymore." "I have to work late." "I miss you." </bad> <good> "Your dinner's in the microwave. Again." "Meetings ran long." "They always do." She folded the same shirt for the third time. </good> - Example 3 - Power Struggle: <bad> "You can't fire me." "I'm the boss." "I'll fight this." </bad> <good> "That's my father's nameplate you're sitting behind." "Was." "The board meeting's on Thursday." </good> </examples> </subtextGuide> <sceneDetail> While writing dialogue makes things more fun, sometimes we need to add detail to not have it be a full on theatre piece. <examples> - Example A (Power Dynamic Scene) <good> "Where's my money?" The ledger snapped shut. "I need more time." "Interesting." He pulled out a familiar gold pocket watch. My mother's. "Time is exactly what you bargained with last month." "That was different-" "Was it?" The watch dangled between us. "Four generations of O'Reillys have wound this every night. Your mother. Your grandmother. Your great-grandmother.Shall we see who winds it next?" </good> - Example B (Action Chase) It's much better to be in the head of the character experiencing it, showing a bit of their though-process, mannerisms and personality: <good> Three rules for surviving a goblin chase in Covent Garden: Don't run straight. Don't look back. Don't let them herd you underground. I broke the first rule at Drury Lane. Rookie mistake. The fruit cart I dodged sailed into the wall behind me. Glass shattered. Someone screamed about insurance. *Tourist season's getting rough*, the scream seemed to say. Londoners adapt fast. "Oi! Market's closed!" The goblin's accent was pure East End. They're evolving. Learning. I spotted the Warren Street tube station sign ahead. *Shit.* There went rule three. </good> - Example C (Crime Scene Investigation) <good> "Greek." Davies snapped photos of the symbols. "No, wait. Reverse Greek." "Someone's been watching too many horror films." I picked up a receipt from the floor. Occult supply shop in Camden. Paid by credit card. *Amateur hour*. "Could be dangerous though," Davies said. "Remember Bristol?" "Bristol was Sanskrit. And actual cultists." I pointed to the nearest symbol. "This genius wrote 'darkness' backwards but used a Sigma instead of an S. It's summoning Instagram followers at best." "Speaking of followers..." Davies pointed to heavy foot traffic in the dust. Multiple sets. All new trainers. *Ah.* "Anyone check local uni paranormal societies?" </good> - Example D (Dialogue-heavy) <good> "Found your card in her wallet." The detective slid it across the table. Worn edges. Folded corner. Three years old at least. "Standard practice. I work missing persons." "Funny thing about missing persons.Eventually they stop being missing. Turn up in the Thames. Under motorways. In pieces." "I don't-" "You found four last year. All breathing." She opened a file. "This would've been your first dead one. If we hadn't found her first." The card felt heavier somehow. </good> </examples> </sceneDetail> <sceneOpenings> KEY RULE: Never open with more than one paragraph of description, no matter how beautiful. Description should be earned through action and dialogue. Instead of opening with setting description, open with: - A character doing something specific - A line of dialogue that raises questions - An unexpected observation - A moment of tension or conflict - Start with a hook that's 1-2 sentences maximum - Follow with a smaller paragraph that provides immediate context - Vary paragraph size from the start to create visual interest </sceneOpenings> </proseGuidelines> Write a chapter based on the following instructions: <instructions> Write a fully fleshed out scene of at least 1000 words in the thriller genre. A detective is pursuing a suspect through rain-soaked city streets at night. The chase takes them from the street level down into an underground market. The detective must decide whether to follow the suspect into unfamiliar and potentially dangerous territory. Use the codex entries above as your world reference for characters and setting. Only include the prose of the scene without any markdown or commentary. </instructions>

Model response

AI
Boots slammed the cobbles hard enough to jolt bone. Detective Harlow Quinn cut the corner on pure momentum, palm scraping brick that tore skin raw. Twenty paces ahead the man in the charcoal coat slipped sidewards, coat-tails flapping, and vanished behind a row of shuttered arcade stalls. She drove after him without slowing. A wire bin skidded under her shin. She rode the spin, boots biting the flooded setts, and kept her balance. Water sheeted off her soaked coat and flew in arcs. The leather band of her watch bit deeper into her left wrist with every stride. Her short salt-and-pepper hair clung flat to her skull. She did not waste breath on another shout. The first three had already bounced back useless from the empty mews. He vaulted the low canal rail and dropped onto the tow-path. Quinn cleared it a heartbeat later, landing light despite the weight of waterlogged fabric. Military drill still lived in her joints. Ahead the tow-path narrowed between graffiti walls and a line of houseboats rocking on black water. The quarry glanced back once. His eyes caught the amber of a distant streetlamp, then he put on a fresh burst and sprinted for the tunnel mouth under the butcher’s bridge. She closed the gap by one long stride, then two. A bicycle chain left coiled on the path snagged her ankle. She spun free, cursing once, low and sharp. The delay cost her three metres. He used them. The tunnel swallowed him whole. Inside the brick arch her torch cut a white cone through the dripping dark. Footfalls echoed wet and close. She ran half-blind, sensing more than seeing the curve of the wall, the sudden rise of steps at the far end. He took them three at a time. She took them two, lungs burning now, coat dragging at her shoulders like a living thing. At the top the tunnel spat them both into the maze of backstreets behind Camden Market itself. Stalls left from the day still leaned under tarpaulins. Rainwater drummed on canvas and emptied into gutters already overflowing. The man crashed through a hanging rack of faux-leather jackets; hangers clanged like alarm bells. Quinn battered through after him, grit and fabric catching in her lashes. A trader’s trestle upended. Glass jars of incense shattered. The scent of sandalwood and wet ash rose thick. He faked left toward a kebab van’s last lights, then snapped right into a narrow service lane that ended at a blank brick wall pierced by a single iron door. The door looked welded shut from age. He stopped dead. From an inside pocket he drew a pale shard the size of a thumb joint. Bone. He pressed it to a rust-pitted plate set into the brick. A low click answered. Hinges that should have screamed parted in silence. He slipped through and dragged the door shut behind him. Metal kissed metal an inch from her fingertips. Quinn hit the door with her shoulder hard enough to jar teeth. It held. She stepped back, scanned the lane. No second entrance in plain view. Water coursed down her face and into her collar. The chase had lasted twelve minutes from the all-night chemist on High Street; every second longer risked his vanishing completely. Her hand hovered at the radio clipped inside her coat. Backup would take six minutes minimum. Six minutes and the man, whoever he was, would dissolve into whatever waited below. She spotted the iron grille set into the pavement two metres left of the door. Fresh scrapes gleamed on the rust where boots had kicked it open. Chains hung loose. She crouched, fingers under the rim, and heaved. The grille rose with a groan of tortured hinges. A ladder of wet rungs plunged into a black shaft that smelled of coal dust and stagnant water. Distant voices drifted up, muffled, then the thin pipe of some unnatural instrument. No warrant for this. No plan. No partner at her back. The last time she had gone off-map her partner had not come up again. The memory stayed locked behind her teeth. She checked the load light on her sidearm once, clipped the torch to her lapel, and swung onto the ladder. The rungs fretted cold through her gloves. Water wept from the brick overhead and tracked down her spine. Twenty rungs. Thirty. At forty the air thickened and the city’s far-off growl vanished entirely, replaced by a subterranean hum. Her boots found packed earth. A low arch awaited, lit by a single bare bulb smeared with greasing. Beyond it the corridor widened into the carcass of an abandoned Tube station. Platform edges crumbled under decades of neglect. The old tracks had been floored over with planking dragged from somewhere greener. Along both sides, under the vaulted brick ceiling, market stalls jostled shoulder to shoulder. Oil lamps and coloured jars cast overlapping circles of light the colour of bruises and old blood. Sellers sat behind their wares: stoppered bottles that smoked without heat, trays of yellowed teeth on silk, maps drawn in inks that crawled when nobody watched. Buyers moved between them wrapped in coats that seemed woven from shadow itself. Conversations hissed in half a dozen tongues that had no business under London. Quinn stepped onto the nearest plank. Heads turned. Eyes glazed or milky white tracked her without blinking. She kept her hands open and visible, badge still tucked away, and scanned the crowd for charcoal cloth. There. Halfway down the platform, near a stall piled high with fragments of old iron rails, the man shoved past a woman whose skin looked dusted with frost. He looked back. Recognition cut both ways. For a bare second his face froze, then he bolted. She ran. Planks thumped under boots. A seller barked something guttural and raked clawed fingers across the air where her face would have been. She dropped low, rolled under a hanging rack of dried bat wings, and came up still moving. The man turned left into a side passage cut into the old tunnel wall. She took the corner wide, torch beam lancing ahead. The side passage funnelled into a dead-end chamber no larger than a detention cell. Bundles of yellow bones lined the shelves. Mirrors of black glass hung between them, reflecting nothing true. The man stood at the far wall, already facing her, chest heaving. One hand still clutched the bone token. The other hung loose by his hip. Quinn stopped three metres out and took her stance by training, feet planted, hands easy. "Hands where I can see them." He smiled with too many teeth. Behind her the chamber mouth filled with shapes that had not been there a breath earlier: four figures melted out from the market throng, blocking retreat. Their shadows stretched wrong against the bone shelves. From the market proper a low gong sounded once. Every lamp outside flared blood-red. The man’s smile widened. "Welcome to the Veil, Detective. You should have stayed upstairs."
created_at"2026-07-08T19:47:30.723Z" 7/8/2026, 7:47:30 PM
model"x-ai/grok-4.5-20260708"
app_id182717
external_user(null)
streamedtrue
cancelledfalse
latency557
moderation_latency(null)
generation_time89352
tokens_prompt4663
tokens_completion2611
native_tokens_prompt4395
native_tokens_completion4484
native_tokens_completion_images(null)
native_tokens_reasoning3044
native_tokens_cached128
num_media_prompt(null)
num_input_audio_prompt(null)
num_media_completion0
num_search_results(null)
num_fetches(null)
web_search_engine(null)
origin"https://ncbench.com/"
is_byokfalse
finish_reason"stop"
native_finish_reason"completed"
service_tier"default"
usage0.035502
router(null)
provider_responses
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id"d1eea89a-3c6d-9ad2-8cf1-919b04970e7d"
is_byokfalse
latency183
model_permaslug"x-ai/grok-4.5-20260708"
provider_name"xAI"
status200
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provider_name"xAI"
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data_region"global"

Evaluation details

Result Evaluator Details Meta Data
100.00% Adverbs in dialogue tags
Target: ≤10% dialogue tags with adverbs
totalTags0
95.72% AI-ism adverb frequency
Target: <2% AI-ism adverbs (58 tracked)
wordCount1167
totalAiIsmAdverbs1
found
0
adverb"completely"
count1
highlights
0"completely"
100.00% AI-ism character names
Target: 0 AI-default names (17 tracked, −20% each)
codexExemptions(empty)
found(empty)
100.00% AI-ism location names
Target: 0 AI-default location names (33 tracked, −20% each)
codexExemptions(empty)
found(empty)
65.72% AI-ism word frequency
Target: <2% AI-ism words (290 tracked)
wordCount1167
totalAiIsms8
found
0
word"weight"
count1
1
word"echoed"
count1
2
word"shattered"
count1
3
word"silence"
count1
4
word"scanned"
count2
5
word"down her spine"
count1
6
word"silk"
count1
highlights
0"weight"
1"echoed"
2"shattered"
3"silence"
4"scanned"
5"down her spine"
6"silk"
100.00% Cliché density
Target: ≤1 cliche(s) per 800-word window
totalCliches0
maxInWindow0
found(empty)
highlights(empty)
100.00% Emotion telling (show vs. tell)
Target: ≤3% sentences with emotion telling
emotionTells0
narrationSentences111
matches(empty)
100.00% Filter word density
Target: ≤3% sentences with filter/hedge words
filterCount1
hedgeCount0
narrationSentences111
filterMatches
0"watch"
hedgeMatches(empty)
100.00% Gibberish response detection
Target: ≤1% gibberish-like sentences (hard fail if a sentence exceeds 800 words)
analyzedSentences113
gibberishSentences0
adjustedGibberishSentences0
longSentenceCount0
runOnParagraphCount0
giantParagraphCount0
wordSaladCount0
repetitionLoopCount0
controlTokenCount0
repeatedSegmentCount0
maxSentenceWordsSeen30
ratio0
matches(empty)
100.00% Markdown formatting overuse
Target: ≤5% words in markdown formatting
markdownSpans0
markdownWords0
totalWords1167
ratio0
matches(empty)
100.00% Missing dialogue indicators (quotation marks)
Target: ≤10% speech attributions without quotation marks
totalAttributions2
unquotedAttributions0
matches(empty)
100.00% Name drop frequency
Target: ≤1.0 per-name mentions per 100 words
totalMentions16
wordCount1151
uniqueNames9
maxNameDensity0.52
worstName"Quinn"
maxWindowNameDensity1
worstWindowName"Quinn"
discoveredNames
Harlow1
Quinn6
Camden1
Market1
High1
Street1
Tube1
London1
Water3
persons
0"Harlow"
1"Quinn"
2"Water"
places
0"Market"
1"High"
2"Street"
3"London"
globalScore1
windowScore1
100.00% Narrator intent-glossing
Target: ≤2% narration sentences with intent-glossing patterns
analyzedSentences86
glossingSentenceCount1
matches
0"seemed woven from shadow itself"
100.00% "Not X but Y" pattern overuse
Target: ≤1 "not X but Y" per 1000 words
totalMatches0
per1kWords0
wordCount1167
matches(empty)
100.00% Overuse of "that" (subordinate clause padding)
Target: ≤2% sentences with "that" clauses
thatCount0
totalSentences113
matches(empty)
98.24% Paragraph length variance
Target: CV ≥0.5 for paragraph word counts
totalParagraphs20
mean58.35
std28.82
cv0.494
sampleLengths
053
174
279
343
480
564
697
785
878
952
1069
11103
1280
1364
1457
1515
166
1754
184
1910
100.00% Passive voice overuse
Target: ≤2% passive sentences
passiveCount1
totalSentences111
matches
0"been floored"
100.00% Past progressive (was/were + -ing) overuse
Target: ≤2% past progressive verbs
pastProgressiveCount0
totalVerbs205
matches(empty)
92.29% Em-dash & semicolon overuse
Target: ≤2% sentences with em-dashes/semicolons
emDashCount0
semicolonCount2
flaggedSentences2
totalSentences113
ratio0.018
matches
0"The man crashed through a hanging rack of faux-leather jackets; hangers clanged like alarm bells."
1"The chase had lasted twelve minutes from the all-night chemist on High Street; every second longer risked his vanishing completely."
100.00% Purple prose (modifier overload)
Target: <4% adverbs, <2% -ly adverbs, no adj stacking
wordCount1164
adjectiveStacks0
stackExamples(empty)
adverbCount32
adverbRatio0.027491408934707903
lyAdverbCount2
lyAdverbRatio0.001718213058419244
100.00% Repeated phrase echo
Target: ≤20% sentences with echoes (window: 2)
totalSentences113
echoCount0
echoWords(empty)
100.00% Sentence length variance
Target: CV ≥0.4 for sentence word counts
totalSentences113
mean10.33
std6.05
cv0.585
sampleLengths
09
116
222
36
47
513
610
715
89
98
1012
1111
1214
137
1416
155
1626
1710
1811
198
206
213
225
2314
245
2521
267
2716
2817
299
3010
3115
3212
334
345
359
3630
377
383
3915
401
4111
424
438
4410
458
4612
472
486
496
75.52% Sentence opener variety
Target: ≥60% unique sentence openers
consecutiveRepeats3
diversityRatio0.4690265486725664
totalSentences113
uniqueOpeners53
0.00% Adverb-first sentence starts
Target: ≥3% sentences starting with an adverb
adverbCount0
totalSentences103
matches(empty)
ratio0
100.00% Pronoun-first sentence starts
Target: ≤30% sentences starting with a pronoun
pronounCount28
totalSentences103
matches
0"She drove after him without"
1"She rode the spin, boots"
2"Her short salt-and-pepper hair clung"
3"She did not waste breath"
4"He vaulted the low canal"
5"His eyes caught the amber"
6"She closed the gap by"
7"She spun free, cursing once,"
8"He used them."
9"She ran half-blind, sensing more"
10"He took them three at"
11"She took them two, lungs"
12"He faked left toward a"
13"He stopped dead."
14"He pressed it to a"
15"He slipped through and dragged"
16"She stepped back, scanned the"
17"Her hand hovered at the"
18"She spotted the iron grille"
19"She crouched, fingers under the"
ratio0.272
57.09% Subject-first sentence starts
Target: ≤72% sentences starting with a subject
subjectCount83
totalSentences103
matches
0"Boots slammed the cobbles hard"
1"Detective Harlow Quinn cut the"
2"She drove after him without"
3"A wire bin skidded under"
4"She rode the spin, boots"
5"Water sheeted off her soaked"
6"The leather band of her"
7"Her short salt-and-pepper hair clung"
8"She did not waste breath"
9"The first three had already"
10"He vaulted the low canal"
11"Quinn cleared it a heartbeat"
12"Military drill still lived in"
13"The quarry glanced back once."
14"His eyes caught the amber"
15"She closed the gap by"
16"A bicycle chain left coiled"
17"She spun free, cursing once,"
18"The delay cost her three"
19"He used them."
ratio0.806
0.00% Subordinate conjunction sentence starts
Target: ≥2% sentences starting with a subordinating conjunction
subConjCount0
totalSentences103
matches(empty)
ratio0
90.91% Technical jargon density
Target: ≤6% sentences with technical-jargon patterns
analyzedSentences55
technicalSentenceCount4
matches
0"Detective Harlow Quinn cut the corner on pure momentum, palm scraping brick that tore skin raw."
1"He faked left toward a kebab van’s last lights, then snapped right into a narrow service lane that ended at a blank brick wall pierced by a single iron door."
2"Sellers sat behind their wares: stoppered bottles that smoked without heat, trays of yellowed teeth on silk, maps drawn in inks that crawled when nobody watched…"
3"The man stood at the far wall, already facing her, chest heaving."
100.00% Useless dialogue additions
Target: ≤5% dialogue tags with trailing filler fragments
totalTags0
uselessAdditionCount0
matches(empty)
100.00% Dialogue tag variety (said vs. fancy)
Target: ≤10% fancy dialogue tags
totalTags0
89.1827%