I’ve taken a short break from typing and Creating Space this
week to write a quick short story, not my usual field at all but great fun. For
one thing, it was a delight to go back to the characters of Henry and Robert
who, rather like real children, have grown up far too fast. However my helpful
reader has suggested quite a few additions (I was trying hard to keep it to
2,000 so, although I have failed, it was very much pared down and apparently
some of the parings should have been left where they were). Once these are
done, I’ll think about how and where to make it available.
In the meantime I’m waiting for the excitement of receiving
the proof copy of Knowledge of Sins Past. When the Death in a Scarlet Gown one
came, the text was squint, but it was still one of the most exciting moments of
my life (not sure what that says about my life, mind you!). I’ve already
started preparing Service of the Heir and then it’s straight on to An Abandoned
Woman. I want to have them all out by September – not sure when Fellowship with
Demons is going to appear, as I’m still stuck for a cover. Swords? Demons?
Music? A soldier?
I’ve also been doing a bit of archaeological digging. For
years (well, since I was at school) I’ve kept a book called, unimaginatively,
the Blue Book (yes, it’s blue), in which I have written down the traditional
notes, observations and ideas that all writers really ought to write down. It’s
about the one good habit I’ve managed to maintain for xxxx years, that and
brushing my teeth. I noticed a reference in it to Blair, and it was a bit
earlier than I had expected, so I did some more digging and found this:
16th. June,
1987: The bumbling professor had been quiet for some time, happily sucking at
his mug of soup in the corner. There fell a pause in the conversation, which
after a moment he broke.
‘Those biscuits are
rather unexciting, aren’t they? Boring. They looked so nice in the shop, on
their little carousel, and I like a greedy old man bought up the lot, thinking
“Yum, yum!” But now they’re not very exciting.’ His voice sighed away.
I used this in An Abandoned Woman, having forgotten where it
had come from. But a professor? Then Blair developed into a more investigative
role:
1st.
October 1987: ‘The policemen (Blair and Ben, of course) ...’
A bit more investigation revealed that Ben was an even older
character, a kind of proto-Murray but a sidekick to a senior detective who had
originally been somewhat unoriginal, and had been called Thorne, I think. But
Blair obviously caught my imagination, and further entries show that he was
occasionally, at least, on my mind.
1st. May,
1988: ‘Blair bumbles, his eyes half-closed under an untidy heap of prematurely
white hair. He has shocking dress sense and a severe, shambling limp. He
regards his cases and their characters with a puzzled and almost saintly benevolence.
Sees a great deal without appearing to notice.’
11th. May,
1988: ‘Blair is Scottish, remember. Shamble, bumble, trundle, absent, vacant,
aloof, innocent.’
4th. May,
1989: ‘Blair bumbled around the room, and Ben saw that he wore a daisy chain,
like a parenthetic irrelevance, on one wrist.’
‘The carrier bag hung
forgotten from his hand like the pollen sac on a bee closed into a sunlit room.
He blundered, humming, from window to wall to door.’
13th. June,
1989: ‘Blair’s eyes bleared at him.’
7th. January,
1990: ‘I think Blair (or McAlester?) should talk more.’
18th.
November, 1993: ‘Blair doesn’t wear clothes, they happen to him.’
31st.
December, 1993: ‘Ben and Blair are characterised by their movements: Ben can
sit absolutely still, but Blair must always be moving, jigging or shuffling or
rocking.’
27th.
April, 1994: ‘Well, it’s just funny that she shouldn’t have known what time it
was. You see, she’s the kind of person who’s always looking at her watch.’
‘Perhaps,’ said Blair
meaningfully, ‘she’s the kind of person who is always looking at their watch
but never knows what time it is.’
The informer looked at
Ben in bewilderment.
This Blair was set firmly in the present day, I think as a
policeman in Edinburgh. By this stage I was living in Edinburgh and had at
least two plots squared out for him to investigate: one of them involved a huge
chart on my bedroom wall showing where each character was at any given time in
one week. They had their merits, and bits of them might resurface some day, but
without Blair now, of course. None of this could be usefully transferred to the
early 1800s:
29th.
August, 1994: ‘Every contact leaves a trace,’ Blair reminded him firmly. Then
he moved away, singing in a breathy whisper to the tune of The Archers,
“Every contact leaves
a trace,
Every cloth a fibre
...”’
30th.
October, 1994: ‘There was a soft wheeping noise, growing more insistent.
“One of us is
bleeping,” said Blair.
Ben thought about it.
“It’s not me, sir.”
The wheeps continued.’
Ben was an artist, I seem to remember, rather good at
watercolours and a dab hand with a fullbore rifle. But alas, he has never
escaped from the pages of the Blue Book – who knows, some time he might?
Ah, well, back to typing and drawing!
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