Deleted Scene from A Riddle in the Lonesome October

Since Mondays are devoted to inspiration on JPC Allen Writes, I wanted to share some a delated scene from A Riddle in the Lonesome October and why it ended up being deleted. At the beginning of the novel, Rae’s uncle Hank has a riding accident and the family find him pinned under his horse in a creek. After they rescue Hank, Rae’s dad Mal holds the injured horse’s head out of water while they wait for the vet and the paramedics.

Here’s the scene:

The paramedics lifted the stretcher and carried it to the trail. Uncle Hank’s leg was wrapped in splints of some kind, and an oxygen mask was strapped to his face. He lay still. Absolutely still. That wasn’t normal for anybody, but it was even more awful for someone who got a such a high out of life like Uncle Hank.

My knees wanted to give up again.

“I’m fine, Jeanine. Go.” Wincing, Gram got to her feet. “Rae, can you stay with your dad until that nice Kincaid boy gets back?”

Dad said over his shoulder, “Ma, Rae needs to stay with the boys.” He stuttered each word.

Jeanine, Coral, and Mr. Norris disappeared down the trail with the stretcher.

I swung my flashlight around the pool. “Where is Chris?”

“He took the horses back to Jeanine’s place.” Gram’s sentence was little more than a grunt, and she leaned more heavily on the branch.

Had she thrown out her back leveraging Knight? 

I said, “Are you sure you want to take Coral to the hospital? I could.”

“Yes.” Pressing her lips thin, she looked to Dad. “I just hate to leave you, Mal, alone here when you’re…”

“Dad.” I stepped to the edge of the pool. “Let me hold Knight. I warmed up. It won’t be–“

“No.” He wagged his head. “Go back to the boys.”

The wind had picked up, making the branches creak, although the thick ring of trees around the trail and pool gave us a lot of protection from it.

The stallion hadn’t moved much since I’d come back with the wagon, but when we paused talking, his labored breathing was easy to hear. Laying on a side for so long, even without a badly broken leg, was dangerous for a horse.

“Gram, go ahead.” I rolled up my sweatpants and took off my tennis shoes, socks, coat, and sweatshirt. Tucking two towels and a knit hat under one arm, I stepped into the pool. Even knowing how cold the water was couldn’t prevent me from gasping.

“Rae, what are you doing?” Dad twisted as best he could to look at me.

I didn’t answer until I reached him. “Maybe this will warm you a little until Chris gets here.” I draped the towels around his shoulder and slipped the hat over his head. 

“Thanks, kiddo.” He tried to grin with bluish lips.

I kissed his cheek. It was cold like a window pane in winter. I bit my lip. I didn’t want to leave him either. But I couldn’t ditch my brothers.

“I’ll bring Doc Volmer.” I waded to the bank and climbed out. 

Then grabbing the wagon handle, I raced back to the house for the twenty-seventh time that day. Or night. How late was it? It felt like we’d been living beside the pool for a week.

I slowed down to pass Gram and then ran on.

*****

The reason I deleted it was because readers didn’t need all this detail. The scene was slowing the pace of the story, and not adding much in character development or plotting. So I cut it and jumped ahead in time. I end Chapter 5 with Rae guiding the paramedics and a deputy Chris, who is her friend, to the pool of water where her uncle fell.

We followed the creek through the drizzle. As soon as I saw a speck of light ahead, I shrugged off his coat. “Follow the creek to the light. I’m going back to help Amber and the boys get towels and clothes.”

“Don’t forget to dry yourself.” Chris peered at the pinprick of light along the creek. “You can keep my jacket.”

“I shook my head. “I’ll be dry in ten minutes. You’ll be out in the weather longer.”

“Reluctantly, he took the jacket from me, and reluctantly, I turned away from him and ran back along the trail.”

Then Chapter 6 begins:

“You should call Aunt Carrie for the latest details on Uncle Hank, Walter,” I told my great-grandfather, more than an hour later, on the landline.

I leave out Rae coming back to the pool with dry clothes and towels for the family members who stayed with Hank. Writers are told all the time to “show, don’t tell”, but in this instance, I have Rae tell her great-grandfather in a phone call what happened in the time I skipped, informing readers of what’s going without bogging down the pace with scenes that aren’t needed.

In most novels, you have to slip in a few “tells” rather than “shows” to keep the story moving.

Writers, are there times it’s better to tell not show? Readers, when did you read a passage that was a tell but it was done well? Here are more tips on writing scenes.

What Mystery Could Take Place Here?

What mystery could take place here? I’m using this photo for my first Monday Sparks this month because my theme is mysteries, and this building was the inspiration for the abandoned home in my latest Rae Riley mystery, A Riddle in the Lonesome October. At least, I think it is.

Let me explain. When I was learning to drive, my dad would often direct me to drive into the most rural parts of our county, Belmont County, Ohio. I remember on a spring evening seeing an abandoned building. My dad thought it was the county children’s home. In my mind, I always remembered that building sitting by itself in a lonely field.

Fast forward several decades. I used my memory of the home as a setting in my first Rae Riley mystery, “A Rose from the Ashes”. When I returned to Belmont County three years ago for a library program, I tried to find the abandoned children’s home. This building in the photo is not the way I remembered it. But as I drove the route Dad and I used to take, I didn’t find any other candidates. The building in reality sits much closer to the road and is much bigger than I remembered. So either my imagination changed the building, or I didn’t find the right one.

Either way, this building presents a lot of potential for crime fiction. What mystery could be take place here?

Here are more writing prompts for mysteries.

Join Blog Tour and Book Club for A Riddle in the Lonesome October

To celebrate the release of my third Rae Riley cozy mystery novel, I’m inviting you to join the blog tour and book club for A Riddle in the Lonesome October.

Join My Online Real Time Book Club on Facebook and Instagram

So what does a a real time book club mean? So glad you asked! I use a calendar to plot my novels so I can keep track of the action. I thought it would be fun for readers to read my novel in real time, in the same amount of time it unfolds for Rae. For example, chapters 1-8 take place on October 5. So I’ll post on that day and list the chapters. On the next day, I provide an insight or inspiration or background for those chapters and then announce that on October 6, you should read chapter 9-13. This all leads up to reading the chapter set on Halloween on that date.

There are a few rules for the book club.

  • NO SPOILERS!!!
  • Each time you comment on a book club post, you are entered into a drawing for previous books in my Rae Riley Mysteries series. I’ll announce the winners after Nov. 1
  • NO SPOILERS!!!

I always enjoy reading stories that have a strong sense of time in that particular time. So I read Christmas mysteries in December. A few of my favorite short stories are set in August, so I reread them then. I hope that the real time book club will make Riddle even more enjoyable, allowing readers to live the story with Rae. The schedule is below. Join me on Facebook and Instagram.

Book club for A Riddle in the Lonesome October

Blog Tour and Giveaway with Celebrate Lit

I’m also participating in a tour and giveaway for A Riddle in the Lonesome October with Celebrate Lit. Some of the sites have interviews with me, so you get some background into my life and my writing.

How to Write about Rivers in Our Stories

This is a repost for a few years ago. For the past nineteen years, we have lived across a road from a river and a creek that flows into it. The change that rivers bring to any locations make it a wonderful setting for almost any story. Below are some ideas and tips on how to write about rivers in our stories.

Crossing Rivers

Crossing rivers throughout history and literature is a sure sign of an irrevocable decision or event–Caesar crossing the Rubicon, the Israelites crossing the Jordan, the dead in Greek mythology crossing the River Styx. Once the river is crossed, there is no going back. (Fortunately, that hasn’t been the fate of my family. We cross back and forth all the time, but we’re not a future dictator, ancient Hebrews, or mythological characters.)

If a character is trying to leave the past behind, crossing a river can be sign of not looking back. Or the opposite can be true. A character crosses a river as a symbol of going to confront something from her past. 

A river can also be a symbol of an obstacle or barrier in the character’s life. When he crosses it, it means he can now conquer the situation.

Flowing Rivers

The flow of our river during different seasons brings all kinds of change with it. In the winter, when there’s a thaw, the river can rise many feet. In the summer, when it’s low, we never know what we might find. These changes can symbolize changes in the main character’s life. A suddenly high river or flooding river can symbolize danger or an overwhelming emotion. A low river can show that a character’s life is drying up, without vitality. 

I always find time spent on the river and creek, away from the routine demands of living, refreshing to my soul. So the river can be a refuge. When it isn’t flooding.

Rivers in Mysteries

A river is a very handy natural feature in mysteries. An unusually low river can reveal the body of a long-lost person. A fast river can sweep away evidence. In A Storm of Doubts, I used rising waters of a flooded creek to add drama to my climax and complicate a rescue.

.Here are more tips on how to explore settings in our stories.

How would you write about rivers in your stories? What book has used a river effectively?

What Questions Does This Setting Inspire?

When you first consider a setting for a story, it should prompt questions. That’s what I love about this photo prompt. What’s going on here? Has the room been ransacked in a search? It doesn’t look messy enough for that. But who would place papers all over the floor? Who is the woman? The owner? The ransacker? A neighbor concerned about the owner? Or a cop called to a strange crime scene? What questions does this setting inspire? And what are your answers?

Here are more photo prompt for writing settings.

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