Beginnings
Now that I’ve drafted the sequel to LILY OF THE NILE, it’s time to go back, smooth it out, make each chapter do more. I’ve never been in the position of trying to make a sequel stand on its own as a stand-alone book, so the beginning has really been a challenge for me. I’ve written a few different beginnings, and I was hoping you might offer your perspective on which one works best for you:
#1 — Sorceress, Seductress, Schemer
Sorceress, seductress and schemer. As Cleopatra’s daughter, I confess, I’ve been all these things, and more. I’ve kept secrets, betrayed vows, and broken faith even with the goddess whose words carve themselves in my flesh. And though you may have never heard my name spoken with the slightest censure, it’s only because I took a lesson from my mother’s defeat to safeguard my reputation above all.
As a prisoner of war, I learned to beg for my life. As a princess held hostage in the confines of the emperor’s household, I learned to mask my emotions so that our captors would never see my grief or my contempt. On the Palatine Hill, where our heritage was reviled and our faith suspected, I learned that to deceive was to survive.
The emperor’s wife said that by sparing me, he allowed a viper into the very heart of Rome. But it was the emperor who molded me into a creature who could strike when provoked. As one of his favorites—as his most unlikely apprentice—I learned that to win back my mother’s lost Egypt, I must manipulate and beguile. For when I was fourteen years old, it was Augustus who took me by the arms and confessed that, in me, he wanted a Cleopatra of his own.
#2 — Childhood Things
It was time to burn all childish things, for it was the night before my wedding, and this was the Roman custom. But what was I to surrender to the flames? My childhood ended that hot Egyptian day at the end of the war, when I carried a basket of figs to my mother, inside of which was hidden the deadly serpent she would use to deliver her to the afterlife. All my toys, the keepsakes of a little princess, had all been looted or left behind when I became a prisoner of war.
I was almost fifteen now, and as I rifled through my room for some symbolic offering, I could find nothing I was willing to part with. Not the filthy, tattered dress that I wore as a shackled prisoner in the emperor’s triumph, when he dragged me through the streets behind his chariot. It was covered with the blood of a prince who had spoken in our favor, though it cost him his life. I had kept it, a gristly souvenir of what my brothers and I had survived and now it was all that remained of the Prince of Emesa. I wouldn’t burn it.
Neither would I surrender the jade frog amulet that dangled from a chain at my throat. It was the last thing my mother had given to me, gleaming with the remains of her magic, a token to remind me that she had given me her Egyptian soul—her ba. And though it was carved with the words ‘The Resurrection’, they had let me keep it, for even Roman children wore bullas as a ward against evil.
#3 — Augustus
Augustus. You will have heard of him. In this River of Time, the whole world has. His statues—an idealized version of him to be sure—are ubiquitous throughout the empire. A month of summer is named after him. He has been immortalized in Virgil’s Aeneid, the propaganda he commissioned to celebrate his reign. A whole generation has lived without knowing a time when he was not the master of the world.
But I remember when he was only Octavian. He was my mother’s worst enemy, my father’s false friend, and he murdered my brother Caesarion—who was, in a fashion, his brother too. You may think I hate him, but I would deny it, and not even I would know whether or not I lied. For everything I learned about the art of deception, I learned at the emperor’s knee. He took everything from me—even my faith—then unwittingly gave it back again. But that is to get ahead of the story.
#4 — My Wedding Day Dawned
My wedding day dawned rosy as the blush on a maiden’s cheek. I watched the sun peek between pink clouds, and knew that today, I must also shine for Rome. It was early yet in the emperor’s household; only the slaves were awake, bustling about the courtyard, trimming shrubbery and hanging lanterns. Too busy to notice me beneath the overripe fig tree.
I pulled myself up into the branches, leaning back so that the smooth bark was against my neck, then peered over the wall to survey Rome’s seven hills. All the vainglorious villas and middling monuments stretching to the Tiber River beyond. And as morning broke over the sprawling city of tiled roofs, I tried to see this day with my mother’s eyes.
She was Cleopatra, Pharaoh of Egypt, a woman of limitless aspiration. And I was her only daughter. She had wanted a royal marriage for me. She may have even hoped my wedding would be celebrated here in Rome. But could she have conceived that such a thing would come to me through her bitterest enemy? In her wildest dreams, could she have imagined that the same man who drove her to suicide—the same man who took me prisoner and dragged me behind his chariot just four years ago—would now make me a queen?
Yes, I thought. She could have imagined it. Perhaps she had even planned it.
Getting the Jump on National Novel Writing Month (Nanowrimo)
November is a really idiotic month to write a novel. It’s clear to me that the people who started National Novel Writing Month were not married at the time, had no responsibilities whatsoever for the upcoming holidays, and were probably living in their mom’s basement.
However, complain as I might, November is the month, and the motivation that the group project provides is worth the trouble. But for an ESTJ, I can somehow be a big rule-breaker. I like to do things my way. Last year, I used Nanowrimo to finish Rites of Passage. (A big no-no according to the rules, but a smashing success for me.)
This time, I’ll be starting early. In addition to holiday insanity, I’ll be going on a cruise to the Western Carribean in November and though I’m contemplating bringing my laptop I don’t anticipate doing work. So, Nanowrimo starts for me, today. Here’s my progress so far on my new book, the working title of which is Primary Partners:
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981 / 50,000
(2.0%) |
If the Nanowrimo Police want to arrest me, I am my own lawyer.
National Novel Writing Month
For the past four or five years, I’ve wanted to join with other writers in the National Novel Writing Month contest, but I’ve always had other writing commitments. This year, I’m just as busy, but I really want to try out this method of writing.
I have a tendency to be a perfectionist and I’m often unable to put away my internal editor while in composition mode. The rules of the National Novel Writing Month contest, or NANOWRIMO, force a short deadline, and a wordcount upon you as an author. You don’t have time to edit. You only have time to compose.
I’ve never tried this method before, and I like to stretch myself and grow as a writer. So, this year, I’ve signed up. Fifty-thousand words by the end of November or bust.



