The Final Gauntlet Author Commentary continues this week with a look at the Daughters of Salem. SPOILER WARNING ahead.
The Daughters of Salem
As I discussed last week, I wanted witches in this book. That was one of my original notes when figuring out the threat for this closing installment of the Greystone-in-Training trilogy.
I wanted something fresh in the pages of Greystone. Instead of the physicality of the previous villains, (the Minotaur and Shiva) there was something intriguing about spellwork and witchcraft. A new image, a new language to discover, as well as a new writing challenge for me in how to depict that on the page.
Origins of the Daughters of Salem
Once I had witches locked in my brain, figuring out who they were and what their story was took hold. I considered other things, more foreign concepts, but quickly withdrew them.
Maybe it was the safe call on my part, or maybe it was a lack of imagination. I’ve always been fascinated by Salem and the witch trials.
My goal was to give these Daughters of Salem, these survivors of that tragedy, a layer of sympathy because of what they had to endure. I needed that level of temptation for Annabelle Waterhouse at the climax of the novel. There had to be that connection, that empathy, in order to really sell that maybe the Daughters weren’t the monsters they appeared to be.
I don’t know if I pulled it off. They were pretty much monsters throughout, but that was my approach when crafting their story.
Connecting to Evans and Portents
One of the things I love about Greystone is the building of the mythology of Portents. The Final Gauntlet is one of the first opportunities in a long time to really dig into what makes Portents such a unique and dangerous place.
Building up the story of Portents has always been one of my main goals. This novel opened the door for that with the inclusion of the Daughters of Salem.
When it came to crafting their backstory and using the Vertrum House as one of the main set pieces, I found a way to really connect the Daughters to William Rath (or as we know him, Nathaniel Evans). I could have written an entire book about their experiences, about what secrets they uncover.
That was one of the connections I wanted to put in the work. So that readers take those details and carry them over into the main series.
Because the Daughters will be back in one form or another. They have to be. That was another reason why they made the cut over other options. Their backstory played perfectly with what I needed, or will need going forward. Sometimes the connections come from NOT answering all the questions presented. I hope readers can understand that. It’s frustrating, I’m sure, but if a question comes up that isn’t addressed you can be sure that story is not over.
Not by a long shot.
Favorite moments with the Daughters of Salem
This is complete opinion on my part.
The entire Rose Riley Forest climax is one of my favorite action pieces from the entire series. I think it came together perfectly.
In terms of their characters, crafting Maggie is a personal favorite. I wanted a very unique visual for her, and stapling her mouth shut for the entire book and having her “scream” telepathically was such a fun way to bring out her madness.
Their deformities were fun to work out as the draft came together. That horror aspect will always be present in the series, but might have been lacking in the previous two books, so I wanted to focus on that more. Really amp up the creep factor with these three.
Next time:
Annabelle Waterhouse. Her origins and her potential future in the series.
Thanks for reading.