My next Hannibal Jones mystery is finished, and our content editor
is working it over right now. But I am always writing. So as soon as I sent my
Hannibal novel off to the editor I launched into the next project.
I’ve been asked about the next Stark & O’Brien thriller, and
there is interest in a sequel to Beyond Blue. Those were obvious choices. But a
writer has to follow his muse, and sometimes a character will call to you.
Three years ago, I wrote a short story called “One of Us” for the
anthology Insidious Assassins. The protagonist of that story was a Black female
professional killer named Skye. In those 5,000 words we didn’t need to learn a
great deal about Skye, not even a last name. But while I wrote two other novels
this character was calling to me, wanting to explain herself better. Who was
she? How had she become a stone-cold assassin? And how could she justify her
actions so as not to see herself as a villain?
So, this week, I begin a new novel telling Skye’s story. I have an
outline, but it is not nearly as detailed as mine usually are. Writing is
moving very slowly because I am learning about Skye as I write. The character
is deep, as they all are, but I have not seen the depth yet. What has surfaced
is a brother who died of a drug overdose and a mentor who showed her the
killing ropes.
Apparently murder-for-hire is a team sport. Just 4,000 words into the
story a driver, an accountant and a computer expert have surfaced. Oh, and Skye turns out to be in therapy. I can
see that’s going to be a complex situation, but the assassin has some
unresolved issues she needs to address.
So, this book is building more slowly than everything I’ve done in
the past, because while I know the general plot, how things will happen and how
Skye will react to the events I foresee are still in flux. It’s going to be an
interesting ride, which I look forward to sharing with you.