Now Begin To Cover It Up
Now Begin To Cover It Up
Time spent on this first step is worth it: a well-worked-out foundation here is where your story gains
its strength from later.
2. Now begin to cover it up.
What does your culprit do to hide his over her tracks? How is the crime itself concealed? What
attempts are made to deflect attention? Be convincing, but make sure you leave enough for step 3.
3. Leave three definite and accurate clues.
Work out for yourself which exact pieces of evidence are going to be left scattered around in various
ways to lead your detective to the real criminal. These clues have to be real and accurate, not tricks.
4. Develop at least three ‘red herrings’ or false clues.
Scatter these around in the same way that you do the real clues. These are the things which distract
and mislead the readers’ attention, the tricks and misdirections which engage readers but to a false
end.
Your actual story can open some time after the crime has been committed or just before. Your
detective usually fortuitously arrives on the scene or is present by accident or coincidence. A group of
people has gathered - on a train, on a boat, in a village, at a dinner, and so forth. The crime is revealed
and the detective sets about piecing things together. The reader, tracking along and observing the
same things as the detective, tries to ‘second-guess’ who the villain is. Everything is obscured and
muddled by the red herrings.
Sometimes, things are made even more confusing by additional crimes, which take place in an effort
by the real culprit to hide the initial crime. In the end, only the detective has been able to see through
the fog and spot the real bad guy.
Work this back and forth until you have mastered the sequence. It has laid and will lay the
groundwork for many an entertaining tale.
(Grant Hudson Enigma group)