I'm going to do something I've never done before. I'm going to pull back a corner of the curtain on what I am thinking of writing next. The key word is "thinking". There's not a word on a page, and won't be for months, if ever. I don't know if I can make a story out of this idea.
I'd been planning on finishing my boring novel before starting an entirely new story, and indeed, I spent three weeks in March revising what I'd written last year; giving a character more character, rearranging some incidents, and generally sprucing up all 35K words of it. But standing in the shower a week ago, I realized I was too bored with it to continue. I hadn't settled on an ending. All I could see was that it would drone on and then fizzle out. So much for embracing boredom. So I called it a day on that and instead I'm working on the second draft of the Poison-Pill Will and The Pawns' Game instead and thinking about what's next.
The idea I'm exploring began as a fantasy novel, since fantasies outsell science fiction like ten to one. But since I can't bring myself to write pure magic and dragons, it has to be one of my pseudo-fantasies, i.e. a fantasy because the narrator is unfamiliar with the technology of the lost advanced civilization that proceeded his present age. This still counts as a type of fantasy.
I had began exploring this story idea as I finished up the Poison-Pill Will, but decided to get back to my boring novel first. Thus I had the world - a moon, actually - already sketched out in my mind. It's base loosely on India under the British Rah, and the Grand Trunk Road (pictured above) that crossed it. I'd have an "empire" of consisting of many small, technologically backward, and deliberately isolated diverse states under the nominal rule of one central authority. All of these states are linked by a great road, and its offshoots. The narrator of the story would be a widely traveled young courier of the central authority.
In the foot hills above the central authorities' capital city stands a vast iron gate set into the stone of the mountain, which is understood to be the gateway to the largely mythical, and often considered supernatural world that this world is ruled from. It is know by the people running the empire that this is a real gateway to a greater empire, and there is a regulated amount of trade between their little empire, and this greater empire beyond the iron gate.
Now, our narrator would know that there is a real vast empire beyond the iron gate because he is part of the central administration, and his grandmother, the governor-general of this empire, actually arrived from beyond the iron gate. However, the true extent of what lays beyond it, is kept a secret, in part because of the treaty between the various throw-back, dissenting societies and the greater entity, the Unity, (if you know, you know) that created the rules for this "empire" 30,000 years ago. The dissenting societies wanted to keep themselves isolated from the Unity, and the Unity wanted to use that isolation to study the evolution of a great number and variety of human societies. And thus everyone is content to let what lays beyond the iron gates remain a myth.
Just because it seems like most fantasy stories involve wars, I am going to have my empire at peace for all 30,000 years. That's the way I roll. This means that my story will have to be another small, relatively low stakes one, i.e. the type I write.
My current story idea is that a very limited number of the best art that is created within these very unique and deliberately isolated societies is purchased by the Unity, which then it is sold beyond the iron gate, at vastly inflated prices to wealthy collectors throughout the Unity of the Nine Star Nebula. Only three or four pieces a year are purchased, and elaborately authenticated so that copies can be easily identified, making the art very scarce, and hence very valuable to collectors with the wealth to afford them. However, at a recent art auction of a wealthy family that faced an reverse of fortune, it was found that a dozen of the pieces of this type of art were both authentic and (nearly) properly authenticated, but they were not sold through the proper authority, i.e. that they had not only been somehow smuggled out, but they also had apparently been supplied with proper authentication as well, making them all but indistinguishable to anyone without the access to the complete list of items stretching back all those 30,000 years. And this smuggling appears to have been going on for thousands of years.
In response, the Unity sends a team to this moon to track down just how this is being done from ground zero; where the art is being created. The Unity team would consist of a Patrol officer, someone like Vaun Di Ai of the Nine Star Nebula Mystery/Adventure series, though a new character. The other would be an old spacer/enlisted man to act as her aide. Our narrator would then guide then to several of the throw-back societies of this moon to track down the smuggling ring. Adventures would ensue... Move along folks, there's no story here yet, just as premise.
But then I got an idea. What if I made the enlisted man Rafe d'Mere, the narrator of those Nine Star Nebula Mystery/Adventure stories? I could set this story a few years after he left the Alantzia System, with him having been roped back into the Patrol.
And yet again, what if I made him the narrator as well?
There are three pluses. The first being that I could then describe the world through his eyes, as someone new to it. This would make world building a lot less telling and more experiencing. Secondly, I like the character and could have fun with him. Third, I could toss in a few opening chapters about how Rafe gets snagged back into the Patrol by his admiral parents as he transits his home system. And I could use those chapters to set up the details of the smuggling activity by having Rafe investigate the trail of the smuggled artifacts from the moon, and then use his special info-system skills to get assigned investigation on the moon. In short I could set up the premise with action rather than all telling.
Alas, there are minuses as well. First, having him as the narrator would make this a science fiction book rather than a fantasy, since we'd be seeing it coming from my sf universe. And secondly, it would make this novel past of my Nine Star Nebula Adventure/Mystery series. I have said on several occasions that writing sequels is for chumps, and here I am again, writing yet another sequel, the fifth, in fact, rather than a new standalone novel, which is what I really wanted to do.
Of course, it may not matter. This is still all in my head, my dreaming up a story phase, and it is far from certain I'll come up with enough of a story to make it into one. I don't have enough yet. And if I do develop enough of a story to write, I won't be writing it for months. My plan has been to write a novel a year. I've been working ahead. I think I'm caught up to 2029, so I have no deadline to meet, and I'm going to write it as a novel, not like the novellas I've been doing recently, so it's likely going to take a while if, or when, I start. 2027 at the earliest.
We'll just have to see. What I can say is, don't hold your breath for that boring novel.

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