RJ
Bailey is the pseudonym of a married writing duo. Their novel Safe From Harm is
their first collaborative effort. Here, one half of the pair describes how two
into one does go. Mostly.
We
are far from the first husband and wife team to write a novel together –
there’s Nicci French, Lars Kepler, Beth Ann Fennelly/Tom Franklin and there’s
even Charles Todd, a mother and son chimera. But I do think we are probably the
first ones to do it totally by accident, in that it wasn’t our intention to
co-author when we (or rather, I) set out.
I
had reached the natural end of a series of historical fiction novels when my
wife suggested I write something contemporary. With computers and mobile phones
and jet airliners and stuff. I must admit, I’d sometimes hankered after
technology to move my narratives along. On the other hand, plotting is so much
simpler when you don’t have to worry about your villain being caught on CCTV
footage or tracked by satellite. Swings and roundabouts, I suppose.
But
what sort of modern thriller? Psychological thrillers are still very much in
vogue, but I wasn’t sure I was up to the task of creating a believable domestic
noir. Not without booking an Uber to the divorce courts. Then again, the police
procedural is also an awfully crowded field, full of skilled practitioners.
Besides, did I want to invent a brilliant but flawed detective? I think there’s
of them enough out there to do a crime version of Stella Street, where every
house in a fictional village contains a maverick cop busy boozing themselves to
death while lamenting their father’s dementia, wife/husband’s infidelity, the
bastard/ignoramus of a superior officer, their failure to save a colleague,
wayward daughter etc. etc. Astonishingly, there are pleasingly fresh examples
of the genre that pop up every year. It was just I couldn’t think of anything
that hadn’t been done – better – before.
And
then, my wife, bored with the sound of my hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing,
walked into my office with a printout of an advertisement she had found on
Gumtree.
“We are looking for an experienced female
CPO/PPO/Driver OR an experienced Driver with a knowledge of security for our
clients in Westminster. (The candidate gender restriction is due to cultural
reasons.) You will be driving the new Rolls Royce Ghost and MUST have previous
experience driving luxury cars.
SIA accreditation essential.
You will be
driving a young family with three children who are all schooled in
London.
Your contracted hours are Monday-Friday 0730-1800 during school
term times, with alternate weekends (flexibility essential).
2-3 months
during the summer may be spent in Monte Carlo with possible short trips in the
winter months to St Moritz.
To apply for this role you must have a
London base and be flexible to adapt to the family and their needs.”
And
there, straight away, was a plot. Or, at least, the jumping off point for a
plot. And it was an area I hadn’t much read about in novels – a PPO/CPO is a
Personal or Close Protection Officer, i.e. bodyguard. And it hadn’t occurred to
me that someone might specify a female as a minder. Why? Well, as one of the
characters in the book says:
”Look, all over London there are oligarchs
and potentates with wives they don’t want to leave alone with a man, certainly
not a young, well-built guy who works out and looks after himself. Maybe
they’ve seen The Bodyguard musical. Maybe it’s a cultural thing.
Sometimes it’s jealous Russians with a beautiful wife who they know didn’t
marry them for their good looks and the size of their dicks. Sometimes it’s a
Saudi prince who doesn’t want any man with his wife and daughters. Maybe it’s
someone who appreciates there are situations where a woman is worth two men.
And there are even some male clients who prefer women PPOs. You tend to be much
less conspicuous than some bull-necked thug. Frankly, I don’t care what the
reason is. Right now female PPOs are a licence to print money.”
All
of which is true. Of course, there was one drawback - I knew nothing about the
body-guarding business. But, as always, the next best thing to knowing yourself
is to find someone who does know and interview them. So we tracked down a young
(early 30s) PPO called Lisa Baldwin, based in Dublin, who was willing to walk
us through the main points of The Circuit (as they call it) and discuss her
backstory and her take on the industry. It was gold dust. Our job then was to
smelt it into something we could use.
Which
is when I decided two things. One, the novel had to be written first person
female to give it an immediacy. And two, my wife would have to come on board as
a co-writer/editor/advisor. Because she’s a woman. And I’m not.
I
know, I’ve written about serial killers, spies and Antarctic explorers before
and I’m not one of those either, but I really wanted the
female-in-a-man’s-world side to ring true. I could manage the action scenes and
plotting, my wife, though, would breathe life into the character. For example,
it was she who insisted the PPO have a daughter to worry about (“Think of her as Modesty Blaise with
childcare issues,” she said). She advised on when the hero would or would
not be wearing matching underwear and how to relieve cystitis (I never envisioned
I’d write a book where a urinary infection was a major plot point).
We did
not write together in the same room, nor pen alternate chapters. I would write
the scene, she would make suggests or improvements, I would modify or argue the
point. I won some, lost others. I originally wanted the character to be
anonymous, as Len Deighton’s spy is in The
Ipcress File, Funeral in Berlin
etc. (he only became Harry Palmer for the movies), but was overruled. That’s
why you don’t discover the PPO’s name until the penultimate line of the book –
my version of sulking.
When
I had a first draft, I handed it over for a detailed critique. There was a
little booby trap in there. Chapter Seventeen just said: “This is the sex scene. There is only one in the book. Make it a good
one”.
So
if we are up for the Bad Sex award next year, you know who to blame.
Did
it work? When we sent a ‘partial’, i.e. an incomplete manuscript, to a
publisher, they tested it out around the office and seven out ten readers
thought the author was a woman. Close enough for jazz. The same publisher
bought the completed version. The pseudonym was simply to distance this new
series from my historical novels and to recognise that there were
(metaphorically) four hands on the keyboard (although why most pseudonyms have
to have a “J” in them is a mystery to me).
I
wouldn’t recommend this approach to everyone, and there have certainly been
some bumps in the road along the way, so fit run-flat tyres to your
relationship if you do decide to co-write with your partner, but we think RJ
Bailey has some life in him (or her) yet. At least, we’ve finished the sequel.
Safe From Harm (Simon & Schuster,
£7.99), featuring Sam Wylde, is out on January 12th.
You
try to hide. You try to run. But there is only one person who can keep you…
Safe From Harm.
“There is a man coming to hurt us. Probably
more than one man. Two or three, perhaps. Not four. They won’t need four to
deal with us. After all, we are trapped. There is no way out from this cold,
concrete shell. We are crouched in the dark, dozens of feet below ground. The
power to this level has been cut. There is no phone signal. Which is mostly
irrelevant because I don’t have a phone. But I do have two broken fingers on my
left hand and a knife wound to my ribs and the pain is making me sweat.”
London:
a city where the super-rich flock – and where their enemies follow. And in this
city of eight million people, where any stranger could be a threat, a close
protection operative is the must-have accessory for anyone who is anyone. But
not just any close protection officer. A female close protection officer. One
who can blend into the crowd, but who is tough enough to counter any threat
twitter: @robtryan
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