Also, this stretches believability. The skull is thick and not something that can be penetrated with an ordinary shard of glass. Jackie’s hand would have bled significantly and it is sloppy to leave your blood at a crime scene. If you want to make it visceral, choose a specific entry point, such as the eye socket, or specifically mention Jackie targeting a fractured part of the skull.
eye, as stated.
or *temple*. Its an exceedingly weak spot on the human skull, and dished inwards making it susceptible.
the ear is great for things like an icepick or a large nail.
in the first chapter back when you posted it.
I found the generic "sxwitchblade" having been used to cut off the human head the protagonist threw at the one bad guy, to be... it took me out of it.
I skin and butcher deer, and we use powered saws to cut through the neck to toss the heads aside.
once when the morgue saw was out of commission, we have to use the hand powered hacksaw.
I've done it at home with a knife, but...
I would *not* wanna try it with the prototypical hollywood "switchblade"
A deer is amazingly similar to a human anatomy.
to decapitate with a knife?
you aren;t goping thru bone (spinal bones) just ain;t happening.
you have to circumscribe all the way around down to the spinal column first. and the trachaea is problematic.
Then you have to cut the strong tendons that string it together, they are *tough* and slippery.
finally, you have to snap these little keyways, best way to describe them.
then, you have to PRY to get to vertebrae apart, and really force the knife through to get the spinal column top give way.
if I tried it with a "switchblade", that's not a fixed blade. I'd expect it top break and go through my hand or wrist.
I'd want a fixed blade only.
and even then, solid tang only. strength.
the blade should be fairly thick and wide
watch the nick berg beheading video, you can see how its done.
with experience, decapitation can look quick and easy. and with the right blade.
at the deer processing place, we know all about knives, we sit around and have "knife conversations".
the ones there that are better at sharpening and honing, talk about that end.
if you want gritty realistic violence? stuff like this is the way to get it.
a killer that was capable of decapitation would, I think, be really in tune with his knife he chose for the task.
handle size/shape. handle overlay material.
full tang fixed blade only.
thick blade, wider than normal.
these are the things I'd want for field decapitation.
I'd practice on a deer first, until I thought I was ready for my first human.
if you want grit, there you go.