By Juliet
Rosetti
Published
by Loveswept
On Sale December
9, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-345-53431-6
Find The Escape Diaries on Goodreads
Introducing the hilarious new
heroine, Mazie Maguire, in Juliet Rosetti’s irresistible debut novel that
follows the outrageous adventure of a woman on the run.
Wrongly
convicted of killing her philandering husband, Mazie Maguire is three years
into her life sentence when fate intervenes—in the form of a tornado. Just like
that, she’s on the other side of the fence, running through swamps and
cornfields, big box stores and suburban subdivisions. Hoping to find out who
really murdered her husband, Mazie must stay a few steps ahead of both the law
and her mother-in-law, who would like nothing better than to personally
administer Mazie the death penalty via lethal snickerdoodle. With the Feds in
hot pursuit and the national media hyping her story, Mazie stumbles upon a vast
political conspiracy and a man who might just be worth a conjugal visit—if she
survives.
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(Excerpt)
The Escape Diaries : A Guide to
Breaking Out of Prison
Escape tip #1: Be prepared.
Actually I wasn’t
prepared at all. I just wanted to go to bed. I was tired and cranky, sweat was
puddling between my boobs, and my armpits smelled like sprouting onions.
Deodorant cost one ninety-five at the prison canteen, well beyond the means of
someone who earned ten cents an hour. Given a choice between M&Ms or
Mennen, I’d pick the sweet and live with the stink. Repulsive, yes—but
chocolate is what gets you through the day, and no one else smells any better.
If I’d stuck to
chocolate, things might have turned out differently. But I had a leftover cough
drop from a bout with bronchitis, and when my cellmate, Tina Sanchez, developed
a tickly throat, I gave her the cough drop. Just being a pal, right?
Wrong. You’re
supposed to return unused medications to the medical director. The staff tracks
pharmaceuticals the way the CIA tracks yellow cake in the Middle East. A
cellblock officer caught the menthol scent on Tina’s breath and wrote her up
for taking a nonprescription drug. Since I was the one who’d dished out the
illicit substance, I was written up, too. Along with a bunch of other drug
offenders—aspirin pushers, Alka- Seltzer peddlers, and Midol dealers—Tina and I
were sentenced to garden detail.
Not exactly the
Bataan death march in a suburban peas and petunias plot, but Taycheedah’s
gardens are a whole different chunk of real estate. Looking out over them is
like gazing at the Great Plains; you wouldn’t be surprised to see buffalo and
buzzards roaming around out there.
The first days of
September had been sunny and hot, and in the perverse way of growing things,
every tomato on six acres had ripened on the same day. Ten thousand of the
squishy red things, demanding to be handpicked before thunderstorms swept
through and turned them into salsa. We picked. And picked. And picked some
more. All morning, all afternoon, and into early evening. When it got to be
five o’clock I thought we’d be dismissed for dinner. But no-o. You do the
crime, you do the time: that was the warden’s motto. The kitchen staff sent
out sandwiches and bottles of water and we ate sitting cross- legged in the
dirt. Then we hauled ourselves to our feet and went back to work.
My spine was an
archipelago of ache, my skin felt scalded, and my teeth were filmed with bugs.
The rank, catnippy odor of tomatoes clung to my clothes. I straightened and
stretched at the end of my gazillionth row, rubbing my back and anxiously
scanning the sky to the west, which had turned the pus-yellow of a fading
bruise. The air was thick enough to stir with a spoon. Crickets chirped storm
warnings. Lightning flickered in a raft of distant clouds.
Lightning terrified
me. I glanced uneasily at the officer on duty, hoping she’d let the tomatoes go
to mush and order us back inside. She didn’t. She just yawned, leaning against
a tree, staring glassily into space. Obviously, distant lightning wasn’t high
on her list of concerns.
“Did you know that
lightning can strike as far as ten miles away?” I said to Tina, who was picking
on the opposite side of my row.
“So what?” Tina
scoffed. “Your chances of getting hit by lightning are less than winning the
Powerball.”
“You’ve got it
backward.” The heat was making me cranky. It was Tina’s fault I was on this
gulag detail in the first place. “The odds against winning the Powerball are
greater than your chances of being struck by lightning.”
“I ain’t never won
the lottery and I ain’t never got hit by lightning neither, so that proves my
point.”
Tina’s logic made my
brain hurt. I opened my mouth to explain her faulty reasoning, which would
probably have resulted in Tina’s giving me a mashed tomato facial, but at that
moment a siren began to wail. I nearly jumped out of my sweat-streaked skin.
Dropping my tomatoes, I clapped my hands over my ears.
“Is that the escape
siren?” I asked.
“No, you goober.
That’s the tornado siren.”
Tornado? My
stomach did a roller-coaster dip. Tornadoes scared me even worse
than lightning. What were you supposed to do? In grade school we’d
had to practice tornado drills, crouching under our desks with our arms over
our heads and our butts in the air. By the time the drill ended, our classroom
smelled like a cauliflower factory.
The guard snapped
out of her heat-induced stupor, blew a whistle, and bellowed, “All right,
everybody, form up in a line. We’re returning to the main unit. Inside, you
will proceed to your designated—”
A galloping wind
drowned out her voice, bowled over the tomato plants, and hurled leaves through
the air like green rain. The storm blitzed in faster than anyone could have
expected. Thunder shook the ground and a zag of lightning split the sky. The
mercury vapor lamps that lit the grounds exploded, plunging us into murky
gloom.
Disoriented, I
grabbed onto Tina and we bumbled around, tripping over vines, squishing tomato
guts underfoot, trying to catch our breaths against the scouring gale. The air
sizzled with electricity and my hair stood on end. The wind worked itself into
a tantrum and slammed us along, Tina’s long braid whipping against my face
until she was whirled one way and I was hurled another. I smacked up against
the wall of the greenhouse and stepped in a load of peat moss from an
overturned wheelbarrow.
Lightning flashed
again, turning the world muddy purple. The purple goop spat
hail. Split pea hail at first, that sounded like the first faint
pops of microwave popcorn, then fist-sized hail that smashed the greenhouse
panes and sent shards of glass geysering into the air. A 747 revved for takeoff
inside my skull. My ears popped, my hair tried to yank itself out by the
follicles, and what felt like a dozen Dustbusters sucked at my clothes. Tree
branches and gutter spouts hurtled through the air, outlined by strobes of
lightning. Something enormous somersaulted toward me, growing bigger and
bigger, blotting out the sky. I stared in disbelief. It was a house! An
enormous house was about to smack down and squash me like the Wicked Witch of
the East. When the rescue workers came around searching for bodies, they’d
discover my feet sticking out from beneath the foundation.
“She really needed a
pedicure,” they would say.
I was five years old
when I watched The Wizard of Oz for the first time. My parents were out
and my older brothers, who were supposed to be babysitting me, had abandoned
me. Alone in the house, I poured myself a glass of Kool-Aid, dribbled my way to
the TV, and popped a tape into the VCR. I couldn’t read yet, but the video
cover showed a girl in a blue dress, a scarecrow, a lion, and a shiny metal
man. I plopped down on the sofa, my legs so short they stuck straight out over
the edge of the cushions, and watched, entranced, as a girl named Dorothy
balanced along a fence, singing a song about a rainbow.
Then Almira Gulch
appeared. Eyes like Raisinettes, chin like an ax blade, mouth like a rat trap.
By the time she was pedaling her bike through the twister, cackling insanely
and transforming into the Wicked Witch of the East, I was petrified, sobbing,
and soaked.
My mother came home,
switched off the movie, changed my underpants, and put me to bed. I wasn’t
allowed to watch The Wizard of Oz again until I was nine years old, presumably
old enough to separate fantasy from reality, but even then I had to squeezemy
eyes shut when the winged monkeys flew out of the witch’s castle.
Crazy for You: Life
and Love on the Lam
By Juliet
Rosetti
Published
by Loveswept
On Sale
December 9, 2013
ISBN:
978-0-345-53432-3
Find Crazy
for You on Goodreads
In the tradition of Janet Evanovich
and Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Juliet Rosetti ups the ante in her laugh-out-loud
funny Escape Diaries series, as Mazie Maguire must use any means necessary to
keep her main squeeze out of the slammer.
Once you
escape from prison and ride off into the sunset with the gorgeous guy who
helped you nail a killer, you live happily ever after, right? Well, not
exactly—not if you’re Mazie Maguire, and the flow chart of your life looks like
a pinball machine. Mazie has broken up with her guy, Ben Labeck, she can’t pay
her rent, her car is infested with mice, and she’s working at a coffee shop
where the dress code is teddies, thongs, and toe-cleavage heels. Now Ben is the
chief suspect in a murder investigation, and Mazie’s tapping into her fugitive
wiles to keep him out of jail. Strictly as friends, she vows. No kissing, no
touching, no romance. But how is Mazie supposed to keep her thoughts platonic
when her “buddy” is giving her erotic back rubs, and a
make-believe-we’re-newlyweds charade puts her in the mood for a wedding night?
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CRAZY FOR YOU –
EXCERPT
When I’d escaped from prison, my mother-in-law had first tried to
kill me with a do-it-yourself home electrocution kit, then had attempted to
brain me with a laminated horse hock. Facing charges of attempted homicide,
she’d paid a psychiatrist to have herself declared non compos mentis and
get herself committed to a velvet-lined loony bin. Since she was immune from
legal proceedings as long as she was locked
in the Ralph Lauren Institute for the Rich and Deranged, I
couldn’t sue her to get my money back. But she couldn’t stay there forever.
Someday she’d be getting out. And I’d be ready with my pit bull lawyer.
Until then I was clipping coupons, mining my pockets for stray
pennies, and taking home doggie bags. Glancing at the Happy Soup wall clock, I
discovered that I was running late. Too bad about my leftover booyah, but a
doggie bag just never works on soup. I tossed my iPad into my purse and barged
out the door, failing to notice that someone else was entering while I was
exiting.
“Oops—sorry,” I said.
I looked up.
Shit!
Of all the booyah joints in all the world, why did he have to walk
into this one?
It was Labeck. He was holding open the door for the TV dodo behind
him, but he came to a jolting halt when he saw me. We stared at each other.
Well, not exactly stared, on my
part. Drank in, inhaled, devoured. He was wearing the aftershave I liked, the
one that smelled like cinnamon and wood smoke.
“Hi,” he said, looking as surprised as me.
“Hi,” I replied, as a hellish red tide swept from my hairline to my
clavicles.
“How’s Muffin?”
“Muffin? Muffin’s good.”
“That’s good.”
“How are you?” I could feel my brain cells committing suicide, one by one.
“Me? I’m good, too.”
Who knows how long this witty repartee might have continued, but the
Talent got tired of standing out in the cold and popped up beneath Labeck’s
outstretched arm, which had frozen on the door. Looking as though he wished he
could vanish beneath an invisibility cloak, Labeck said, “Mazie, this is Aspen
Lindgren. Aspen, Mazie Ma—”
“Oh, this little gal needs no introduction.” Aspen smiled a dazzling
high-definition-TV-just-out-of-the-box smile and stuck out her hand. We shook. “Maziemania, right? What a fantastic
survival story! It’s terrific that you were cleared of those charges that you
killed your husband.”
“Thanks.” For remembering to mention it.
To anyone watching, we were just two women making polite chitchat,
but we knew better. We were taking each other’s measure. I was the
ex-girlfriend and she was aiming for the new-girlfriend slot. Aspen was radiating, showing off for Labeck.
No one was going to outdo me at radiating, dammit! I wasn’t a former Miss Quail Hollow for
nothing! I squared my shoulders, lifted my chin, sucked in my gut, thrust out
my boobs, and turned up the wattage on my own smile. Labeck looked stunned, as
though he’d been hit with exploding estrogen bombs.
“I’ll be sure to watch for your reports from now on,” I said to
Aspen, still in the same overdosed-on-cotton-candy tones, resisting the urge to
shorten her name to Ass.
“So where do you work,
Mazie?” she asked.
“Cromwell Research Services.”
Aspen’s eyes lit up. “The website, right? They run tons of ads on
our station. The owner of your company¾Rhoda? Rhonda?—anyway, she invited me and some people
from our station to this party she’s throwing tomorrow night. I’m making Benny
take me, even though he’s a great big ol’ grouchy bear about parties.”
“Yes, I bet he is.” I bit down on a laugh, noting that a nerve in
Labeck’s jaw was twitching. How fascinating. I was almost enjoying this.
“I suppose we’ll see you there,” Aspen chirped.
“Probably.” My jaw muscles were getting sore from smiling.
“Super! Well, if you’ll excuse us, we’ve got to grab a bite and then
we’re off to the next crisis. Just rush-rush-rush, all day long, you know how
it is with us media folks.”
“Uh-huh. Nice meeting you.” I fled outdoors into the cold, clear
air. Tiny black specks boogied across my vision and I suddenly staggered,
overcome by dizziness. I was about to fall into the gutter and get run over by
a garbage truck.
Aspen would cover the story, of course. “And so ends the tragic
story of Mazie Maguire, the woman who murdered her husband in cold blood but
later beat the rap.”
I didn’t “beat the
rap.” I flushed out the guy who did the actual crime. Thanks mainly to Ben
Labeck, who’d hidden me in his apartment. He’d also arranged the setup that
nailed the scumbag, despite the fact that he could have been charged with
aiding and abetting a criminal. When I’d been released from prison, Labeck had
asked me to move in with him. We’d spent five blissful days together, most of
them in his bed.
And then, with dizzying suddenness, before I quite comprehended what
was happening, we’d broken up, Labeck spinning off to the wilds of Montana and
me to the urban wilderness of Brady Street. Six weeks had passed since then. I
hadn’t even known Labeck was back in town.
The dizziness passed. I pulled myself together and walked to my car.
Milwaukee wasn’t that large; sooner or later Labeck and I were bound to run
into each other. Now we’d both survived the encounter. We were getting on with
our lives, me with my canine companion, Muffin, and Labeck with his junior
Diane Sawyer.
I’m
over him, I told myself. I didn’t need Ben Labeck in my
life.
One of these days I might even start to believe that.
Juliet
Rosetti grew up on a Wisconsin farm. She has taught school in Milwaukee and in
Sydney, Australia, where her duties included coaching cricket and basketball.
Her work has appeared in The Milwaukee Journal, Chicago Tribune, and in many
other publications. She is a past winner of Wisconsin Magazine’s Wordsmith
Award for nonfiction. Currently she lives in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, with her
husband and son, teaches in the local public school system, and is writing the
next book in the Mazie Maguire series.
Connect with Juliet Rosetti
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Juliet Rosetti's CRAZY FOR YOU Tour
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