How to Write Sneaky Characters

My advice on characters today concerns how to write sneaky characters. I had to create one in my second novel, A Storm of Doubts, and he proved to be a challenge.

What Do I Mean by Sneaky Characters?

Since I write mysteries, of course the guilty party is always sneaky because he or she has to cover their tracks after committing the crime. But for this post, I’m referring to characters who are sneaky by nature. The weaselly police informant who will tell the cops anything for a price, making his information suspect. The high school girl who is so sweet to everyone’s face and yet anyone who associates with her is always caught up in some kind of drama.

These are characters whose actions, words, and expressions mask their real thoughts and feelings. A writer can approach this character one of two ways–either, the main character (MC) is completely taken in by the performance and the revelation of sneaky character’s true intentions is a big plot twist. Or the MC is suspicious of the sneaky character to begin with or soon after meeting him but has trouble deciding if the character is a sneak or trustworthy.

By the way, if you want your MC to be the sneaky character, you are allowed. Just remember–most readers enjoy a book because the MC is someone they want to spend time with. A sneaky MC could get very old, very fast.

Creating a Sneaky Character

In A Storm of Doubts, I adopted the second way of developing a sneaky character. Rae’s Uncle Troy returns to Marlin County, Ohio, where he grew up. Everyone there knows he’s a grifter, so Rae, my MC, is suspicious of him from the start.

I’ve read a lot about grifters and realized Troy would never be aggressive or combative in any situation. Grifters don’t want to bully you into doing what they want. They want to entice and manipulate you. This is harder to write than a blunt bully. A bully’s intentions are obvious and therefore easy to convey to the reader. Showing Troy entice and manipulate Rae was much harder because I had to write him in subtle lines.

What helped me was to realize Troy would agree to anything anyone said if it gave him an advantage. Unlike a lot of characters, who would take offense at being criticized, Troy goes along with the criticism because agreeing with someone puts him in a position to get closer to them. He’s like a snake who can pivot and twist in any direction he thinks necessary.

In this scene, Rae’s dad, the sheriff, is questioning Troy.

“You need to come up with better excuses.” Dad put away his notepad. “You made a mistake two years ago, and I got jumped. You made a mistake today and put my daughter in danger. You can’t keep saying you make mistakes, Troy. You’re forty-three. Not fourteen.” 

Tory sighed, his tiny mouth drooping. “I’m just not as smart as you are. “

I also use several two-person scene between Rae and Troy so I have the time to describe in more details his expressions and mannerisms and how Rae analyzes them to figure out what her uncle’s true intentions are.

Have you tried to write a sneaky character? What helped you to write them? Who is a convincing sneaky characters in a book or show?

Hey, My Book’s a Finalist!

Very excited to let you know that A Storm of Doubts is a finalist in the YA novel category for the Selah Awards, which is handed out at the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference! My Christmas mystery short story, “A Rose from the Ashes”, which started my Rae Riley mystery series, was a finalist in the short story category in 2020. So I’m thrilled to be nominated for a novel this time. The winners will be announced at the conference at the end of May. I’m hoping to attend

A Storm of Doubts is my second novel. If you’d like to read the series in order, here’s the list.

#1 “A Rose from the Ashes” in Christmas fiction off the beaten path

Nineteen-year-old Rae Riley knows she needs to fulfill her late mother’s dying wish. But she needs even more to find her father. And the man who attacked her mother twenty years ago on Christmas Eve and left her to burn in an abandoned building. And if her father and the attacker are one and the same.

#2 A Shadow on the Snow

Nineteen-year-old Rae Riley can barely believe her gamble paid off. After spending seven months investigating the identity of her father and whether he tried to murder her mother, Rae has been accepted by her dad, Sheriff Walter “Mal” Malinowski IV, and his immediate family with open hearts. And for the first time in her life, Rae is making friends, jamming with three cute cops who play outlaw country music.But someone is leaving Rae threatening notes, reminding her of her late mother’s notorious past when Bella Rydell wrecked homes and lives during the few years she lived in rural Marlin County, Ohio. Fearing the threats will make Mal and his family reject her, Rae investigates the mystery on her own. But her amateur sleuthing may cost her the father she’s always wanted when the stalker changes targets and takes dead aim at Mal.

#3 A Storm of Doubts

Her dad said nothing could change their relationship. But what if he wasn’t her dad?

Summer gets off to a rocky start for twenty-year-old Rae Riley when the ex-wife of family friend Jason Carlisle claims their youngest child isn’t his and Rae’s con man uncle Troy returns to Marlin County, Ohio. Rae is already at odds with her father, Sheriff Walter “Mal” Malinowski, over her desire to help people in trouble. When she extends that help to Uncle Troy and Jason’s ex-wife, she and Mal clash even more.

Then the ex-wife disappears, and Jason and his brother Rick are two of the main suspects. As Rae and her Aunt Carrie, a private investigator hired to protect Jason’s kids, work to discover what really happened, Rae wrestles with Troy’s insinuations that she may be calling the wrong Malinowski “Dad.”

Bonus Story: “Bovine” in Ohio Trail Mix: Adventures and Inspiration along the Ohio Literary Trail

This story isn’t exactly part of the Rae Riley series because Rae only plays a minor role in it. But other members of her family take center stage when an elitist author comes to a backwater Ohio county, thinking he’s found the perfect setting for the perfect crime.

Inspiration for Plot in A Storm of Doubts

So what could I possibly have in common with the Queen of Mystery, Agatha Christie? Well, aside from the fact that I inhaled her books in high school and still like to escape into them, one of my favorite lines in all crime fiction provided inspiration for plot in A Storm of Doubts.

In Murder on the Orient Express, the great detective Hercule Poirot is dining in the restaurant car of the train when an American, Mr. Ratchett, sits himself in an empty chair as his table. He tells Poirot that he wants to hire him as a bodyguard because he has received threatening letters. Poirot declines, no matter what amount the man offers. Ratchett says,

“What’s wrong with the proposition?”

Poirot rose.

“If you will forgive me for being personal–I do not like your face, M. Ratchett,” he said.

And with that he left the restaurant car.

Murder on the Orient Express

When Mr. Ratchett is found stabbed in his bed, few readers will be surprised because Ms. Christie does such a wonderful job of foreshadowing the fate of the sinister character.

When I wrote a pivotal scene in Storm where my amateur sleuth Rae Riley is confronted with a request from the ex-wife of a family friend, I decided to flip the quote above on its head. The ex-wife, Ashely, who doesn’t know Rae at all, except that she’s seen her speaking to her ex-husband Jason twice, wants Rae to tell Jason to unblock her number. Rae hesitates.

She grabbed my arms again. “Just tell me you’ll talk to Jason. Please. You have a kind face.”

I liked the idea of Rae’s kind face appealing to this woman. I also can use it in future stories. Some people just look friendly, or helpful, or commanding, and I can use Rae’s face to involve her in other people’s troubles.

And I enjoy being able to tie my book, however lightly, to a classic from the Queen of Mystery.

Just Show Up

If you’d like to know about the torturous process it took to get A Storm of Doubts into the world, please read my guest blog “Just Show Up” on American Christian Fiction Writers’s site.

Here’s the opening:

“I thought nothing could be more difficult than writing a novel during a pandemic. Trying to make sense of the world at that time dried up most of my creative juices. And what little that was left was consumed by becoming a teacher to my children.

“Was I ever wrong.”

To read the whole post, click here.

Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑