I’m
often asked where I get my inspiration from, and although I do sometimes have a
neat little anecdote, more often the truth is a messy, complicated mix of
experiences I’ve had, places I’ve visited, books I’ve loved, and a large
proportion of stuff that’s just plain old mysterious to me. Often, for the
purposes of interview, I whittle it down to one single element of that. The
Woman in Cabin 10, for example, when I’m asked about its genesis, I often tell
a story about the first scene that came to me. I was home alone one night, in
that state halfway between waking and sleeping, and I heard a noise, loud
enough to make me wake up fully with my heart thumping, wondering if I was
being burgled.
I
wasn’t, but later a scene closely based on that moment came to me - another
woman, waking in the middle of the night on a ship, her heart thumping with
adrenaline, certain that she’s heard a sound. Only in her case it wasn’t the
thump of her drunk neighbour slamming his front door, but a splash. A loud
splash. The kind of splash made by a body.
In
my imagination the woman runs to the veranda of her cabin and peers over the
balcony ledge to see what looks like a woman’s body disappearing beneath the
waves. Is she correct? Why did she jump to the worst case scenario when she
heard that sound? What will happen if she’s right and is trapped on the boat
with a killer?
The
questions forming in my head told me that this was a book I wanted to write -
and in the process of answering them, I formed some of the bones of the
plot. But
the book also contains many other elements - news stories I had encountered, my
frustration with the he said / she said cases that seemed to dominate the media
in the year I was writing the book, my discovery of an odd quirk of law
surrounding deaths at sea, and of course my fascination with Agatha Christie
and her quirky, luxurious settings.
The
Death of Mrs Westaway is similar - except that I don’t have an anecdote about
when the
idea came to me, because I truthfully can’t remember when I began to
imagine a dilapidated house on a Cornish peninsular, and a bitter old woman
drafting a vengeful will. But what I can tell you is something about where the
character of my protagonist, Hal, came from. The
seed of the character who became Hal was sown when I began to plan book four,
and realised that all three of my previous crime books centred on basically
innocent women who had been swept up in events beyond their control. Sometimes
they make questionable decisions, but at their core they are normal people who
simply fall, though no fault of their own, into extraordinary situations.
For
my fourth book I decided I wanted to do something different. I wanted to create
a character who sets out to commit a crime, and in doing so, brings the extraordinary
events of the plot down upon herself.
I
began to think about the anti heroes and heroines in fiction that I loved. Tom
Ripley, who lies and cheats and steals his way into a fortune. Richard Papin
who spends a novel defending his decision to cover up a murder. Brat Farrar who
sets out to claim an inheritance that isn’t his.
And
I decided to create a character in that mould. Someone who lies and cheats and
deceives their way through the book. And
so I created Hal. Someone who sets out to commit a crime - claiming an
inheritance she knows full well is not intended for her - and in doing so sets
in motion all the events of the plot.
I
wanted her to be someone comfortable about reading others, and about using her
knowledge of them to decipher what they want to hear. So I decided to make her
a tarot reader - but a cynical one, one who relies on not on the messages in
the cards, but in her powers of observation and guesswork to claim a psychic
insight she does not have.
But
I found myself liking Hal rather too much. I began to make excuses for her. I
made her very young - just 21 at the beginning of the book. I took away her
friends and family in order to leave her as destitute as possible and I put her
in physical danger from a loan shark. By the time I sat down to write, I knew
that Hal was not going to be the heartless manipulator I had intended when I
began to think about the book. But when I came to write the first chapter, I
did something I was not intending on doing. I gave her a code of ethics - and
in doing so I made the entire enterprise, Hal’s whole, complicated con scheme,
immensely more complicated. For now Hal was not just in conflict with the dark,
dysfunctional family she sets out to defraud, but with herself too.
Conflict,
we are often told, is the root of a compelling scene. On that basis Mrs
Westaway should be a very compelling book indeed, since Hal is at war with most
of the characters in it, including herself. I won’t presume to judge on that
score, but it was certainly great fun to write.
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