Happy Valentine's Day. Hope its filled with love.
The “Itch” in The Seven Year Itch
When I first conceived the idea
for this FBI Espionage (really, counterespionage) series, I wanted to write a
heroine modeled after an African American agent with whom I worked at the FBI. She
was the only black woman serving as a supervisor in Russian
Counterintelligence/Espionage program and I wondered what drew her to a field
largely dominated by white males. She was an anomaly but darn good at her job. One
of the things I remembered about the agent is that I admired her because she had
an almost innate ability to walk into a room, command it, and then cut through
the BS. We worked on a task force together, and she waded through all the white
noise to get to the nitty gritty and take care of business almost immediately. She
wasn’t at all arrogant or bossy, just very no-nonsense, just-the-facts, Jack.
So, when creating the J.J. McCall
character, I wanted to somehow infuse J.J. with that same ability to cut
through the BS. I wanted her “gift” to be something of a superpower, but not
really a superpower because I don’t write paranormal, fantasy, or science
fiction. I don’t have the imagination to world-build to that degree.
I also wanted her “gift” to be
grounded in some reality.
Espionage, spying, and
intelligence collection is all smoke and mirrors. When I thought about the
major challenges counterintelligence agents face, one significant problem is attempting
to discern the truth from lies. When an FBI Agent pitches an officer in a
foreign intelligence service and he refuses to speak with the FBI, does he
really mean it? Or is he putting up a front because he’s afraid of getting
caught by his counterintelligence service? When a new Russian diplomat enters
the United States and claims he’s legitimate, is he “clean” or is he a spy on a
mission to steal U.S. secrets? From operational covers (or legends) to
targeting and recruitment, to intelligence collection, the human intelligence spy
world is built around lies. Counterintelligence is essentially the ability to use
a variety of investigative techniques to detect the truth and then use that
truth to neutralize your “enemies.” And you’d be surprised at the degree to
which even our so-called “friends” and “allies” target U.S. government
information.
So, just imagine a character who
could detect a lie in this world?
Pretty cool, right?
So, I created a character that
could mitigate the “lying” problem by detecting them. Then I immediately wondered
if I had made her job too easy. As writers, we can’t make anything easy on our
characters or it’s not fun for the reader. Readers like to see characters that
face challenges, that suffer before they succeed.
After some thought, I realized
such a gift was limited in its use. First, she couldn’t be everywhere at once
or listen to every conversation. Her gift would only be useful if she was
speaking to a bad guy at the time they were lying about something related to a
case or operation. Secondly, if you think about why people lie, we tell lies
for a multitude of reasons. In addition to attempting to deceive others, we
tell lies to protect other people’s feelings. We may lie to protect someone
else from harm. All sorts of reasons. So, even though J.J. can tell whether someone
is lying, she cannot answer the very important question of why without digging a little deeper. So this gives her an “edge” in
this spooky world but limits her ability to leverage it.
As for the “itch,” years ago I
took a class taught by an FBI agent, and he taught us methods to detect whether
someone might be engaging in deceptive behaviors during interviews. Sometimes
when people tell lies it makes them itch and they scratch. And I remember one
instance in which we were watch the video of a subject being interviewed and
the subject would scratch his nose only moments after telling a lie, but he was
oblivious to this twitch. So, I turned
that around and made J.J. itch whenever she heard
a lie. As a romantic comedy author in my other life, I thought it would lend
itself to some potentially very funny scenes. In addition, most people with
extrasensory gifts welcome them. But I thought
J.J. would reject this uncomfortable “gift” of an itch, which would add
to the tension when she dreaded the onset.
All that was left was to explain
how she got the “gift.” At first I was just going to play God and not explain
it, rather tell the reader, “This is the way it is, deal with it.” Well, as a
reader, I probably wouldn’t buy into that. So, I decided to explain it through
a little voodoo. I conducted some research and found out that people from
cultures around the world actually believe in the curse of the “The Evil Eye,”
that some “magic workers” could cast a bad luck curse on you through a
contemptuous gaze. So, I gave J.J. roots in the Louisiana where in certain
sects they believe in jadoo (magic workers) who actually do such things.
I wanted the curse to be
generational, so I started with J.J.’s great-great grandmother. After spinning the
idea around my head, I thought it would be an ironic twist for a jadoo worker
to curse someone with the ability to tell the truth because they got caught in
a lie—so being law enforcement minded, I thought “scam gone wrong.” The only
thing was, I didn’t know about scams back in the early 1900s. So I conducted
more research and found out about the “Spanish Prisoner” scam that crooks ran
on African Americans in the 1900s. Creole people were mixed race. They had such
light skin that they could pass for Spanish. As the scam went, the wife of the “Spanish
prisoner” would claim her husband got arrested on Jim Crow charges and beg for
bail money. If the victim helped her, they be rewarded with Spanish gold and
become rich. Of course in reality, the crooks took the money and ran. But the
harshness of the Jim Crow legislation apparently made a lot of African
Americans susceptible to the scam. There I had my scam.
So in the midst of all this
fiction, there is quite a bit of truth. Mix all the above ingredients together
and that’s how I came up with the “Itch” in The
Seven Year Itch.
BLURB:
Her
Family Was Vexed With a Generational Curse. Now for Lie Detecting FBI Spy
Catcher J.J. McCall, the Truth is in The Seven Year Itch.
FBI Special Agent J.J.
McCall is a born lie detector who recruits foreign spies to catch American
traitors. She and co-case agent Tony Donato have lost two of their most
critical Russian sources in the past two years, and they may lose another in
just a few short days if they don’t catch him, The ICE PHANTOM, a rumored
insider spy more insidious and elusive than Ames and Hanssen combined. They
suspect he might be burrowed deep inside FBI counterintelligence—and his body
count is going up.
Drawn into an
unsanctioned mole hunt, they have a week to catch him, save a key source’s
life—and their own. While J.J.’s lie detecting ability helps them narrow down
the list of suspects, the lie she tells to herself may help the ICE PHANTOM
defect to Moscow and get away with the murder of the man she loves.
Skye's debut FBI
Series, filled with mystery, espionage, romance, and suspense, will keep you
burning through the pages until J.J. catches the very last spy.
Excerpt:
Monday
Morning in Moscow…
Mikhail
Polyakov was murdered in a Solntsevskaya-owned cottage located in Lobnya, a
small village just outside Moscow. It was a Russian organized crime death
chamber. A hulking Mafioso known only as Maskov hovered over his mangled
corpse. The ax in his massive hand dripped with the blood of a traitor. He
would not live to betray his country another day. In the safe house basement,
he lay on the concrete floor. A pool of crimson surrounded him, and his flesh
had been gashed and hacked beyond visual recognition; death’s stench thickened
the air. In order to serve its only noble purpose, his right hand, which bore a
crescent-shaped birthmark, was left untouched.
A sliver
of light shone through an undersized window revealing the wicked grin that
parted the executioner’s cigarette blackened lips. Colonel Anatoliy Golikov. A
Russian intelligence officer, he was a member of a cadre of Russian Foreign
Intelligence Service—SVR officers—from the First Department. His professional mission
had been recruiting people who sold U.S. secrets, but his personal mission was
to kill anyone who betrayed the Motherland.
His skinny
eyes, slight frame, and borderline gaunt face colored him weak, but his
iron-fisted will and suffocating persona made him a man few crossed. Even fewer
had lived to brag about it if they had. The son of a former hardline KGB
General who executed Russians spying for the West, he’d filled his father’s
sadistic shoes well. Left nothing in his wake except a trail of dead American
sins against Russia.
Bio:
S.D.
Skye is a former FBI Russian Counterintelligence Program Intelligence Analyst
and supported several key cases during her 12-year tenure at the Bureau. She
has personally witnessed the blowback the Intelligence Community suffered due
to the most significant compromises in U.S. history, including the arrests of
former CIA Case Officer Aldrich Ames and two of the Bureau's own--FBI Agents
Earl Pitts and Robert Hanssen. She has spent 20 years supporting
counterintelligence, intelligence, and military missions in the U.S.
Intelligence Community.
An
award-winning author of romantic comedies in her other life, Skye is a member
of the Maryland Writer's Association, Romance Writers of America, and
International Thriller Writers. She's addicted to writing and chocolate--not
necessarily in that order--and currently lives in the Washington D.C. area with
her son. Skye is hard at work on the next installment of the series.
Buy
Links
Ebook
Paperback
S.D. will be awarding a Kindle Fire to a randomly drawn commenter at the end of the tour. (US/CANADA ONLY)
The tour dates can be found here:
12 comments:
Thank you so much Sandra for hosting this stop of my blog tour! If anyone has questions, please don't hesitate to ask. And as part of my 4th Annual E-Reader giveaway, in addition to the brand new Kindle Fire you will receive a $25 Kindle gift card to kick off your collection. So, the more stops you visit, the better your chances to win!
Great guest post! I like the idea of fashioning a character after someone who you actually got to see in action! Thanks for the excerpt - very descriptive and definitely intriguing, makes me want to know more.
maria63303 at gmail dot com
Thank you Maria! I think most of the characters I've written so far have been based loosely on people I know or have been acquainted with. I usually change the names to protect the innocent and the guilty... and avoid litigation. LOL
Thank you for hosting today.
I really enjoyed your guest post and where you got the inspiration for your characters. All the best in your tour!
carrie dot rogozinski at gmail.com
I really enjoyed your comments . Ireally enjoyed the excerpt.
The gift of detecting a lie would be pretty useful, though it might end up being hurtful in situations when it is more of a white lie. I like that is a realitic "superpower" for the main character, she sounds like a great role model
fencingromein at hotmail dot com
Thanks for stopping by Shannon, MomJane and Carrie. Yes, Shannon, I thought it would provide an interesting twist to the stories. So often we can only rely on words an actions to tell the story but in this series "reactions" will provide an added dimension and can turn the story any given way at any given time. Kinda cool.
Sounds like a nice series.
bn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
What an exciting book! Enjoyed the interview. Thanks for the giveaway.
bhometchk(at)hotmail(dot)com
Thanks for the chance to win!
hense1kk AT cmich DOT edu
Thanks for the guest post! J.J. Sounds like a tough but likeable character! I can't wait to "meet" her :)
andralynn7 At gmail DOT com
Post a Comment