My husband, Chuck, is much better at finding
things than most people. For example, a few years ago we were attending a
religious study class in a friend’s home. One woman had to leave early. A few
minutes after she left, she came back saying she’d misplaced her car keys.
Without looking up from his workbook, Chuck said, “They’re
on the floor under the bed where we put our coats.”
Sure enough, when she got down on her hands and
knees and peered under the bed, there was her key ring. When asked how he knew
where the keys were, my husband shrugged. He just knew.
Dowsers are paid to locate underground water and mineral
deposits. I know of a psychic who works with police who has located missing
persons using map dowsing with a pendulum.
These were the inspirations for my hero’s psychic
power in BLINDSIGHT, Book 1 of my Psychic Agents series. He is a Master Dowser.
He uses his Talent (aka superpower) to find anyone or anything, anywhere. Except…when
the villain has a minion with a Level 10 superpower that blocks other Talents
hiding his objective.
A young man who has a legendary superpower and
works for the FBI would be confident, right? Maybe even a little arrogant?
Who is the heroine that can take him down a notch?
A woman he sees as extremely vulnerable because
she is blind, when in fact she is gutsy, resourceful and dangerous. Enter the
heroine, a blind wedding singer with a Level 10 Talent she doesn’t understand
and can’t control. Every man she’s ever kissed has passed out. When she decides
to practice on the hero at the drug lord’s wedding, all hell breaks loose—after
which she rescues the hero from a torture chamber.
See how things evolved?
I realized I needed to do a lot of world building,
so I took a class and took the time to do so. This is vital to planning a superhero
series. You can’t just pull characters and powers out of thin air. There has to
be an underlying logic that supports the ‘laws of nature’ in your story world.
For example, in my story world super-characters
are born with a latent Talent that begins to manifest in childhood. Talents can
be anywhere on a continuum from very weak to very strong. Sometimes they seem
to cluster in families, but they are not “passed down” according to the known
laws of genetics. No lightning strikes or falling in a vat of chemicals here!
In the beginning of the series, scientists have not yet discovered why more and
more Talented people are being born—but I, as the author, must know from the
get-go in order to make the series work.
I’m working on character development for SIGHT
UNSEEN, Book 2 in the Psychic Agents series. I set up the potential romance at
the end of Book 1.
The heroine is a survivor with amnesia and no Talent, who
gave birth to a Talented child. The baby's father is a mystery.
The hero is the FBI Psychic
Agent who delivered her baby during the final battle in BLINDSIGHT. He is known as the
Forgettable Man. Unless he works hard to suppress his unique Talent and someone
spends a lot of time with him, their memories of him quickly fade. After a
sound sleep, they are gone. His Talent even clouds surveillance technology.
Hence the title, SIGHT UNSEEN.
Do you enjoy reading about people with superpowers? ~Sarah Raplee
4 comments:
Glad you are working on "Sight Unseen." Do you believe we can suppress a "talent" or if we acknowledge it we can enhance it with use? In this world I've seen people learn a skill some would call a super power or talent and use it outside the training the rest of their lives. And some only seem able to use it in the training and for a short period of time afterwards.
To answer your question, I DO like to read about people with Super Powers. I include in that Magical powers also. Great post and thanks for sharing about your up coming book. I read your book "Blindsight" and I really enjoyed it. Sometimes when an author writes about magical powers or super powers it isn't believable , but your book.
I think you are right, Judith. The expressions "Practice makes perfect" and "Use it or lose it come to mind."
Thank you for commenting, Diana. I'm glad you enjoyed Blindsight.
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