The beginning, which seemed so long ago…
…
So, I have to decide on the genre. Well, that’s easy, espionage. I look up at my shelves and I can see at least six authors’ novels staring me in the face, and between them over a hundred stories.
I should get started reading, to see what it is that makes them eminently readable.
Oh, been there and done that. in fact, of a library of around three thousand books of various genres, I have read over three-quarters of them.
That includes the classics, like Dickens, Hemingway, Tolstoy and my hero Alistair Maclean.
So, where do I start…
An unassuming main protagonist, the quintessential spy who looks like anything but what he is. He’s a loner, doesn’t trust anyone, and works alone, though perhaps it’s time to throw him a partner and tell him the world is changing and not for the better.
He needs a handler who is old, crusty, never wrong, dresses impeccably, doesn’t have a life, works in a dusty dungeon, and is very, very ruthless.
Will it be a choice of saving the day or saving the girl?
Is he invincible or vulnerable?
Does he have a whiny mother, demanding girlfriend, odd friends, and even odder work colleagues?
Does he talk the talk, talk in riddles, or multi-syllable words that no one can make sense of?
And what is his real job?
…
What are my ideas for this story? I generally write spy stories or thrillers, so I’m thinking that I need to put together the typical James Bond start, where you are hanging on for dear life and not knowing where it’s going to end up.
I have one: waking up in a hotel room in the Middle East, a fan above our spy turning slowly, churning the already hot air in the room. It’s the sound of the blades turning so slowly, with a creak or groan somewhere in the revolution, that wakes him, soaked in sweat and with a horrible taste in his mouth.
The attempt to drain the bar below of cold bottled beer didn’t go so well. There’s a headache to go with that, and it was all he could manage to get to the small refrigerator where he’d put a half dozen bottles of Perrier water the afternoon before.
The first went down his throat very quickly. The second helped the two painkillers go down though for a moment it felt like they’d stuck in his throat. A monetary shudder as the pills started to dissolve.
A knock on the door has him instantly alert and hand on the gun under the pillow.
“Who is it?” He yells out, not exactly the done thing in a hotel, but the last seven days of endless heat had finally taken a toll.
And today was going to be no different. The gun slipped in his wet hand, a sign that he was not sure if he would make the shot without missing by a yard or two.
“Room service.”
“I didn’t order room service.”
Silence, and then an envelope was shoved under the door.
…
Ever woken up in another part of the world in a strange bed, in a hotel or guest house, and wondered where you are? It seems that would happen a lot if you were a road warrior.
I’m not but I still have those moments even at home in my own bed.
Is it the dreams we have that disorient us? Like mine because they take me to different places, and different situations, and above all, it takes me out of my mundane and boring existence.
It’s time to immerse myself in a more vicarious existence.
The world of a spy.
I think an action start might work better than just introducing the main character.
The last time we visited him in a hotel room, very hot, very hungover, and not very ready to work.
Why is he there?
Most espionage works during meetings with sources, informants, and important people who defect with a bag full of state secrets.
For wads of money, of course.
Where is he, right now? Perhaps it could be said he was not in a good place. A very tough few years, in the firing line, and the loss of colleagues begins to make him question everything and everyone.
There is going to be a last straw, you know, that one that breaks the camel’s back.
I’m working on his background story, a legend if you like, so I’m more acquainted with the character. I want to be able to slip into his character and be him. It makes it easier to write when you know everything about him or her.
And, yes, there will be a her.
And yes, jaded, world-weary or not, he’s not quite done with the bad guys yet.
It’s just he wishes the moments of self-doubt would get less rather than more.
…
How did it end up?
You’ll have to read the book