In my last
blog, I discussed how subplots could add depth to stories with simple, direct
plots. I also mentioned that subplot, just as central plots, must also run the gamut
of conflict, complication, crisis, and resolution.
I also
brought up the idea of thinking of subplots as a kind of braid where one
subplot comes into view and then disappears behind another only to come back
into view later. The problem with braided plots is that they can sometimes take
so many twists and turns that they begin to resemble tangled string. Make sure you tie up any loose ends in your
subplots. Make sure they reach resolution.
One example
of a story consisting of a few braided subplots is a novel called Undercover Cat. Disney based a movie on it
called That Darn Cat. For those who never saw the movie, it is the
story of a Siamese cat who becomes mixed up with a case of kidnapping and bank
robbery.
In the first
main scene, the cat is following a guy with a sack of salmon streaks he has just
purchased at the butcher shop. Soon they
come to an apartment where the cat slips in and the viewer discovers that the
guy and his buddy are bank robbers who have kidnapped a bank teller.
While the cat
is in the apartment, the bank teller gets the idea to scratch the word help on
the back of her wristwatch and replace the cat’s collar with it. However, she only gets the HEL on there before
one of the kidnappers yells for her to hurry up with dinner.
After the
cat is let out, it heads back for home where his owner, Patty, and her
boyfriend have just gotten back from a movie. A few pets later, he goes outside where
Patty’s sister is saying good night to her ride, Gregory, who is inviting her
to dine on duck the following evening with him and his mother.
The cat,
overhearing this, wastes no time going to Gregory’s to find the duck hanging on
the back porch where he devises a clever way to get it down. This of course alerts the dog who alerts
Gregory who chases the cat back to his house.
There Gregory confronts Patty and threatens to shoot the cat (DC) if he
ever comes around his house again.
Without
boring you with too many more details, Patty and DC proceed upstairs where
Patty finds the wristwatch around his neck.
When she sees the HEL on the back she is sure that someone is in
trouble. From there she goes to the FBI.
All of this
aside, my favorite subplot in this story begins back where Patty arrives home
with her boyfriend, Canoe. The old woman
next door is watching through her window and is appalled that Patty would let a
boy into her house while her parents are away.
The fun
really starts when the FBI agent sets up a tracking station for the cat in
Patty’s sister’s bedroom, which happens to be in the old lady’s view. In one scene, she even ties a microphone to
the end of some fishing line and casts it up toward the window in hopes of
hearing the conversation between the couple in the bedroom. In that scene her plan gets foiled by her
husband who is irritated at her voyeuristic tendencies and at the fact that she
has taken his hearing aids.
The old
lady’s insatiable need to know eventually leads her on a pursuit beyond her
front yard. At this point her husband
calls the police to report a man dressed as a woman prowling the neighborhood. And you can probably guess how she feels
about her husband by the time the police bring her home. In fact she tells the policeman to wait
because she is going in to murder someone.
Fortunately, her husband sees her coming and makes a break out the back
door.
In this
story, the subplots weave in and out in ways that help the story keep an
engaging pace. We aren’t left strictly
following a cat around.
But the cat
is nevertheless the glue that holds the subplots to the central plot. Without
the cat, Patty and the FBI agent’s silhouettes would not have been seen
together in the window of Patty’s sister’s bedroom, and the lady next door
wouldn’t have had anything to worry about beyond the boy walking into the front
door. Two other subplots owe their
existence to the presence of the FBI agent at the home of the feline
protagonist.
As with a
braid, each strand of subplot comes into view and then disappears behind
another but is not forgotten. In the end
they are all neatly tied together, all converging to bring about a satisfying
ending. In the end the cat becomes a
hero and all subplots reach a state of resolution.
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