“So . . . what did you do this weekend, Daddy?â€
“Well, you know what I did?â€
“What?â€
(leans in close, whispers) “I murdered a guy.â€
“What?â€
“I murdered someone.â€
“Really?â€
“Oh yeah. And you know something else? I’ve been planning it for years. I’ve been working up to it, thinking about it every day and I finally did it. And it felt great.â€
(silence, considering) “This is something from your book, isn’t it?â€
“Well, yeah, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.â€
“Who died?â€
“I killed the bad guy, the villain.â€
“How does he die?â€
“In a really bad way. In fact, I felt kind of bad for him.â€
“Why?â€
“It was sad. I felt sorry for him.â€
“But he’s the bad guy.â€
“Yeah, but that’s part of what made him a good villain — you kind of like him and feel sorry for him, too. But I killed him anyway.â€
(pause)
“Murderer.â€
(The above conversation took place with my daughter a couple of weeks back, as I was finishing up the first draft. I thought of it earlier this week as I killed off a really nasty witch in the second draft — didn’t feel bad about that one at all, felt just as good as it did when I killed her off in the first draft.)