Actions and Subtexting
by Randy Ingermanson
Advanced Fiction Writing
In the last article, I showed an extended example of subtexting in dialogue, taken from Robert Ludlum's novel THE MATARESE CIRCLE. When I wrote that column, I reread the entire 500+ page novel looking for the best example of subtexting I could find. While reading it, I also found a terrific example of using actions to add a subtext to dialogue. This month, I want to show you that example. Most of us have heard the cliche that "actions speak louder than words." Usually, it's understood that the actions are subconscious giveaways that undermine the speaker's words. In the example I'll show, the actions are very consciously chosen to negate the speaker's words. Why would Robert Ludlum want to do that? You'll see... Some background on the scene is in order. KGB agent Vasili Taleniekov is a man on the run. He's searching for information on a shadowy international organization called the "Matarese" which is trying to destabilize the world using terrorists as pawns. Taleniekov is on his way to visit an old girlfriend in Leningrad on a brutally cold winter day. He hasn't seen her in years, and he knows that if he's being followed, he'll endanger her, but he must take that risk. Her name is Lodzia Kronescha and she can help him find the truth. He expects that she'll be asleep when he arrives. It doesn't occur to him that the Matarese might already know about her. Here's the passage we'll analyze: He knocked on her door. Within seconds he heard the footsteps beyond, the sound of leather heels against hard wood. Oddly, she had not been in bed. The door opened halfway and Lodzia Kronescha stood there fully clothed -- strangely clothed -- in a bright-colored cotton dress, a summer dress, her light-brown hair falling over her shoulders, her sharp aquiline face set in a rigid expression, her hazel-green eyes staring at him -- staring at him -- as if his sudden appearance after so long were not so much unexpected as it was an intrusion. "How nice of you to drop by, old friend," she said without a trace of an inflection. She was telling him something. There was someone inside with her. Someone waiting for him. "It's good to see you again, old friend," said Taleniekov, nodding in acknowledgment, studying the crack between the door and the frame. He could see the cloth of a jacket, the brown fabric of a pair of trousers. There was only one man, she was telling him that, too. He pulled out his Graz-Burya, holding up his left hand, three fingers extended, gesturing to his left. On the third nod of his head, she was to drive to her right; her eyes told him she understood. "It's been many months," he continued casually. "I was in the district, so I thought I would..." He gave the third nod; she lunged to her right. Vasili crashed his shoulder into the door -- into the left panel, so the arc would be clean, the impact total -- then battered it again, crushing the figure behind it into the wall. Randy sez: Let's separate out the dialogue first and see what it's saying on the surface: "How nice of you to drop by, old friend," she said. "It's good to see you again, old friend," said Taleniekov. "It's been many months. I was in the district, so I thought I would..." Randy sez: This dialogue is so banal, it hurts to look at it. This is the sort of dialogue your high school creative writing teacher told you NEVER to write. But the actions that come with the dialogue completely subvert the words. And both Lodzia and Taleniekov intend them to do exactly that. We need a little backstory here. Lodzia has been visited by an agent of the Matarese and questioned about Taleniekov. The agent expects that Taleniekov may come visit her, and if so, he tells her that she should welcome him without revealing that she's not alone. The agent intends to kill Taleniekov. So Lodzia has consciously prepared herself to tip off Taleniekov with actions -- actions that the Matarese agent won't know are abnormal. Let's spell out those actions in detail and see what makes them work. * Lodzia is wearing leather shoes at an hour when she should be asleep in bed. Even before she opens the door, she is communicating by her heel-clacking to Taleniekov that something is wrong. The message that she communicates to the Matarese agent is different -- he assumes that she has put on her shoes because she's EXPECTING Taleniekov. * Lodzia has put on a dress, even though it's bedtime. And it's a summer dress, even though it's winter. The visual message she is sending to Taleniekov is that "something is wrong." Once again, the Matarese agent gets a different message. The fact that she puts on a dress tells him that she is planning on receiving a guest. The fact that it's a summer dress, rather than appropriate winter wear, escapes him, as it would escape most men. (Lodzia tells Taleniekov this after the big fight.) * When Lodzia put on her dress, the Matarese agent insisted on watching. She put up no protest, sending him the message that she's a floozy sort of woman who is planning on entertaining her gentleman friend. (Lodzia explains all this to Taleniekov a bit later in the scene.) * When Lodzia opens the door for Taleniekov, she shows no surprise at seeing him for the first time in five years. Instead, her face is set in a rigid expression and her eyes stare at him. This tells Taleniekov, once again, that something is horribly wrong. The Matarese agent, hidden behind the door, probably can't see her face and eyes, but even if he could, they would tell him only that she's expecting Taleniekov. * When Lodzia speaks, her voice is flat and expressionless, belying her words, which would normally be spoken in a warm greeting. In technical terms, Lodzia is using "paralanguage" to transmit a different message than the words convey. The Matarese agent, as it happens, is an Englishman with poor Russian, and it's possible that he's not able to detect this disconnect. But Taleniekov, a native Russian and a long-time friend of Lodzia, picks it up instantly. Lodzia is communicating with numerous actions that something is very wrong. Yet her words themselves don't communicate that. The only possible conclusion is that a stranger is in the room who can hear Lodzia's words but who can't decipher her strange actions as well as Taleniekov can. Taleniekov is the best agent in the KGB, and he instantly reads this message and spots the stranger through the crack in the door. He deduces that there is only one man in the room with Lodzia. Ludlum doesn't explain this deduction. He simply asserts that she is telling him this. I'm not entirely sure how she's doing so. Taleniekov then does a bit of non-verbal communication of his own, entirely at odds with his words, which are just a repetition of Lodzia's own very prosaic words. He pulls out a gun, which communicates to Lodzia that he intends to fight. He shows her three fingers and nods his head to his left to communicate what actions she should take. These are pretty vague actions, but Lodzia communicates back through her eyes that she gets it. Ludlum doesn't quite explain how this works, relying on the fact that Lodzia knows Taleniekov pretty well and she's a KGB agent herself, so she should just know what to do. In my view, the scene works pretty well. There are a couple of unexplained points that are just glossed over, but overall, the reader buys into it. Robert Ludlum specialized in superclever agents who could read great significance into the smallest details and instantly respond to the gravest danger. In this case, he gave us a nice example of using actions to add subtext to a lethally boring dialogue.