I’ve talked about writing sex scenes before and my
issues with vulgarity, but today I’d like to focus on the sex scene’s annoying
younger brother, the ALMOST sex scene. Have you ever read a book or watched a
TV show and two characters are starting to go at it, and then somebody walks
in, or they have a change of heart, or break an aquarium (New Girl, anyone??), and for whatever reason, they don’t have sex? Well this is the scene
that I’m talking about, and in some ways, it can be trickier than the sex
scene. You don’t want to throw this scene just anywhere in the plot, and there
needs to be a reason for it.
I have written so many of these that it’s almost
painful. But there always seems to be a reason for it. In my fantasy YA novel,
both of my characters are in love with each other and just aren’t saying it,
and in a moment of extreme vulnerability they start to get physical, only for
one to realize that it would be wrong and they stop. I don’t think I had them
stop just because it was a YA novel and I wanted to keep it tame—I think the
moment brought the characters to a breaking point where they had to admit their
feelings or they couldn’t move forward. With my current WIP, the reasoning is a
lot easier—it’s illegal for my characters to have sex. But that doesn’t mean
that the scene itself is just thrown in there. Yes, you need a reason for them
to stop, but you also need a reason for the scene to exist in the first place.
So why would you want to include this sort of
scene? Why have your characters start to get intimate and then get interrupted
or decide not to?
I think the main goal in any scene like this is
frustration—for the characters and the readers. It’s pretty obvious why your
characters will be frustrated. You may be thinking that you never want to
frustrate your readers—but in this case, a little bit is ok. Frustration can
build suspense when it’s not overdone. If you tease the reader, then when the
sex scene actually happens it will be more satisfying than if it had happened
already. They will be on the edge of their seats waiting for it to finally happen. But it can be so easy to overdo it.
I used to watch soap operas. I know, I can hardly
believe it either. But I bring this up because I remember a couple on one who
kept almost doing the deed, over and
over again, but it never actually happened. And the tension was fine at
first—you know, the will they, won’t they? I would be very disappointed if
these characters weren’t in an episode. But after a while it just got silly.
The tension fizzled out. I didn’t care anymore. Then one of them died and the
show was cancelled two episodes later (I’m not kidding). And they never did it!
Forget about frustration, it just didn’t even seem realistic.
So I have a rule for the almost sex scene—you can
only have one. That’s it. Just one. What’s that? You want two? Well, you can’t.
Why? Because you want your readers to care.
I think one scene is all that your readers are
going to put up with. That’s not to say you can’t have several scenes with
sexual tension—that’s absolutely a must if you want your readers to believe
that your characters are attracted to each other. But if they actually make a
decision to get into bed and it doesn’t happen, the reader will be
disappointed. A little disappointment is ok—if the book was perfect and happy
then it wouldn’t be very interesting, would it? But if you offer the same exact
disappointment twice, the reader won’t trust you anymore. They might skip ahead
to find the juicy part, or, God forbid, stop reading altogether.
So if your characters are interrupted or change
their minds, if they end up in this situation again, they’d better go through
with it. You can only string along the reader for so long before the suspense
becomes disappointment.