
A lot of people said that the
Blood Sword series would make great novels, so in 1997 I took the plunge and revisited the gamebooks in order to convert them into regular fiction. If I'd anticipated the writing being a cakewalk - just a cut-n-paste job, right? - it only took a few days to demolish that notion. I needed to add a
lot of text, for one thing, because in between the options in a gamebook there's an implied train of thought process and action that is left entirely to the reader's (ie player's) imagination. For a novel all that has to go onto the page.
And then there was the little question of a protagonist - or two. I rejected having a complete party of adventurers. I didn't want it to feel like a game write-up, for one thing. These were supposed to be proper novels, and having too many characters tends to throw a story out of focus. You've seen
X-Men: The Last Stand, you know what I'm talking about. In the end I imported my own character Caelestis, a
Vancean rogue who had appeared briefly in Tim Harford's Legend campaign, but on realizing that he was too much of a reprobate to serve as standalone lead in a middle grade series I created a "warrior monk" character (a sort of
Capellar-in-training, I guess) called Altor who could come out with all the traditionally heroic lines.
A few weeks into the writing, I accepted Ian Livingstone's offer of a job as game designer at Domark (later Eidos Interactive) which made writing the
Chronicles of the Magi trilogy a bit of a juggling act. I enjoyed it, though. Solving problems is my thing, and every scene threw up plenty of those. For instance, to get around the way the first Blood Sword book was really detached from the rest, being effectively a gameplay tutorial, I moved the opening scene of
The Kingdom of Wyrd to the start of the first
Chronicles novel. That got us right into the quest - though with rather more plot-twists along the way than the gamebooks needed to have. Here's (almost) the moment our two heroes first meet:
Altor reached for the banner, but just then there came
a loud outcry from the far side of the square. He looked up to see the young
dandy he had encountered earlier. His cloak swept out behind him like a bat’s
wings as he ran, and hot on his heels were several guardsmen of the night
watch.
‘Stop that thief!’ bawled the irate
sergeant of the guards as the young man came racing past the booth.
Altor stepped forward without
thinking and put out one arm. The dandy skidded to a halt in front of him and
glanced up in surprise. For an instant their eyes locked, and Altor saw a look
not of panic but of agile cunning. Then the young man ducked under his outstretched
arm and reached for the last pennant. Altor lunged for it too. They both
gripped the shaft at the same time.
The guardsmen pounded to a halt and
began to fan out. ‘So, villain,’ gasped the sergeant, ‘will you come quietly?’
The dandy looked at him in disdain.
‘Villain, you say? I am Caelestis, the champion of Magus... of Magus...’
He turned to Altor who, although
bewildered by the turn of events, found himself saying, ‘Magus Balhazar.’
‘Champion?’ The sergeant tucked his
thumbs in his belt and rocked with breathless laughter. ‘You’re no champion,
lad. You’re just a pickpocket and I’m taking you in.’
Caelestis stared back at him
defiantly. The other guards hefted their cudgels and stood glowering. For a
moment there was a tense silence, then the steward cleared his throat. ‘The
youngster’s right. You can’t arrest him now he’s taken Magus Balhazar’s
banner.’
Altor suddenly realized what was
happening. Tugging the banner away from Caelestis, he said, ‘I was here first.
Rightfully it is I who should be Magus Balhazar’s champion.’
‘Aha!’ cried the sergeant in triumph.
‘As I thought. Arrest him.’
Two of the guardsmen stepped closer.
Caelestis wove away from them and snatched back the banner. ‘Not so fast. The
banner is mine. How can this oaf be the magus’s champion? He doesn’t even have
a weapon.’
It was true. Altor had left his sword
buried in Magus Byl’s black heart. Rather than go into that now, he simply
planted himself in a solid stance with his big arms folded across his chest. ‘I
need no weapons. The monks of my order are trained to fight with empty hands if
need be.’
‘Indeed?’ Caelestis cocked an
eyebrow. ‘I doubt whether Magus Balhazar will be impressed.’
Altor snorted in derision. ‘Do you
think he’ll be impressed by having a pickpocket as his champion?’
The sergeant flung up his arms in
exasperation. ‘Enough!’ He turned to the steward. ‘What is the law? Are both
these youths now employed by Magus Balhazar? Frankly I’d be happy to arrest the
pair of them.’
‘I have committed no crime!’ protested
Altor.
‘And I myself am merely a suspect,’ added
Caelestis, ‘until my case comes to trial.’
The steward leaned on the rail in
front of his booth and stroked his beard thoughtfully. ‘Both took the banner at
the same time, so both are eligible to serve the magus. Consequently they are
immune from prosecution.’
At this the guards gave sighs of
disappointment and started to wander off. The sergeant spat on the ground to
show his opinion of the steward’s judgement. Fixing Caelestis with a beady
stare, he said, ‘Just you wait, lad. I’ll be waiting outside the Battlepits for
you, and if you fail then you won’t be able to count on the magus’ protection.’
‘If he fails,’ said the steward
laconically, ‘then he’ll be past caring about the laws of mortal men.’

The
Chronicles of the Magi books are due to be republished on Kindle by Fabled Lands LLP at the end of the month and you can pre-order them now at a special introductory price:
The Sword of Life
Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon Spain
The Kingdom of Dreams
Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon Spain
The City of Stars
Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon Spain