Oh, yeah, maybe I should do this . . . or maybe not.
Unless you are a writer slavishly following an outline while
wearing blinders, something will come to mind while merrily typing away that
could effect or improve the story, either to plot or character(s). Being a
seat-of-the-pants writer, I honestly never quite know where some of the story might
go. Oh, there is this vague target at the end of the journey, but unlike an
arrow that arcs straight for the target, my approach is more of a roller
coaster ride.
Case in point, in Order of the Brethren our hero (François
a.k.a. the pirate Dolphin) has become reunited with his ship and crew, escaped
San Borondón Island, and is happily sailing along when they are
becalmed—literally the calm before a storm, but that’s getting ahead of things.
It was while assembling this part of the story that it occurred I should expand
the events surrounding San Borondón and in doing so, have the opportunity to
enrich a support character—Sa’id, a helmsman.
During the first novel in this series (The Urchin Pirate) a
ruthless, Spaniard officer captures our hero. It is the slave, Sa’id, who is
instrumental in helping the Dolphin to escape and thus effect his own freedom. At
the conclusion of the book our hero returns home while Sa’id remains aboard the
Raven which continues under command of another important character,
Black Maggie. When the Dolphin arrives on San Borondón he finds Sa’id has been
faithful to his ship. This is where the thought to embellish this part of the
story came to mind because of an incident that I penned of events aboard ship
shortly after the recovery. As our hero is organizing the officer staff the men
tease Sa’id about having a girlfriend on the island, just something that came
out of the blue.
I already had a child who acts as servant/guide on the
island. With a slight modification he becomes Sa’id’s love
child although neither is not aware of the relationship. This will come into
play at the end of the novel and neatly conclude Sa'id's part in the
series with out killing him off.
A writer should expect afterthoughts as they put pixels to
screen, and not be afraid to retreat and re-write scenes that would add depth
and color to the overall plot. This is not editing. That comes once the draft
is done. The writer may or may not retain the material, or modify it further,
but at least it is there to pass judgment upon.
As for not using an outline, that can happen with any first
story, but if it develops into a series that story itself becomes an outline of
sorts dictating what follows. The overall series, A Pirate’s Legacy, occurs in
two time periods, 2000 and 1600 with intrinsic ties. One of those ties is a
hereditary villain, in this case a mafia-type family. The modern era series was
the start of the epoch and introduced the villain. His goals are 1) clear the
family’s name and re-establish its “honor”, 2) recover the treasures left
behind by our pirate hero as reparation for past insults, and 3) terminate the
hero’s genealogy. In The Urchin Pirate, there were too many things going on to
introduce how this hate began. That happens in The Brethren.
As the pirate
armada assembles and closes in for the confrontation, we learn that Lord Chudleigh, a secondary villain,
has an accomplice. He is the one behind the kidnapping of the wife and son of the
Dolphin’s cousin/mentor (Hogshead Shaver) and making war on pirates as an
attempt to destroy the Dolphin because of something that occurred in The Urchin
Pirate. (I just didn’t play it up at the time.)
While our hero merrily sails on, I break from the main
action to introduce this villain, following a style introduced in The Urchin
Pirate. In that story I could have ignored what happened to the Dolphin’s
family during his kidnapping, but his wife and family are important. How is his
wife going to cope with a burgeoning plantation? That is explained along with
expanding another character, the Arab boy Hassan, a setup for his role
in book 4 of the series, The Lions of el Bayadh. It's merely a setup technique. In The
Brethren, I break away from the main action at moments there is a lull in the
action to focus on the Dolphin’s wife thus
setting up the confrontation between the hero and villain, and start of the 400 year
animosity.
One method of making a statue is to create it with clay,
adding, and subtracting, and carving. When working in a museum prep lab a century back, I watched this fascinating process. The life-size figure of a caveman was spooky real, but the time came to say enough. Once cast in a solid medium little could be
altered. Writing is like that. The author is free to make whatever modifications
to the shape of the story he or she wants until published. Once that happens,
it is time to move on. If part of a series the writer is constrained by the
mold of the preceding books.
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