Author: Michele Riccio
Release Date: July 30th, 2013
Genre: Romance/Chick Lit
Publisher: GMTA Publishing LLC
SYNOPSIS
Jane
Tynan wants to be happy. Her needs are simple: a satisfying job, a quiet home,
and the man she loves.
But since she testified against her ex-husband, what she has is: an assumed name, a crap job, an apartment upstairs from the world's loudest sex addict, and no man at all. Unless you count the cute-but-suspicious deputy investigating her neighbor's disappearance, the Ski-Mask Wearing man camping in her yard, and the dentist she "accidentally" assaulted before her root canal.
Faced with dental bills rivaling the national debt, the revelation of her past to the police, and zits Jane figures she's hit bottom. Then her ex-husband turns up looking for payback. Jane must decide between running away and calling in a favor from the man she loves, but can't have.
But since she testified against her ex-husband, what she has is: an assumed name, a crap job, an apartment upstairs from the world's loudest sex addict, and no man at all. Unless you count the cute-but-suspicious deputy investigating her neighbor's disappearance, the Ski-Mask Wearing man camping in her yard, and the dentist she "accidentally" assaulted before her root canal.
Faced with dental bills rivaling the national debt, the revelation of her past to the police, and zits Jane figures she's hit bottom. Then her ex-husband turns up looking for payback. Jane must decide between running away and calling in a favor from the man she loves, but can't have.
EXCERPT
Chapter One
Postcard
C–
Another
year and I thought maybe I should do something, commemorate it somehow.
So this is it. Seems lacking, huh? I would have called, but then you'd find me
and it's better this way. Better for me at least.
Hope
you are well
J–
There's probably nothing so annoying as waking up alone on
your fortieth birthday to the sound of your twenty-five year old neighbor
having sex.
And yet, there I was, listening to my twenty-five year old
neighbor having sex. On my fortieth birthday. Alone.
The two-story building where we lived was old, drafty, and
obviously needed quite a bit more insulation between floors since I could hear
his groans and her sighs as if they might be doing it under my bed, not a floor
below.
“Laurence, you are such a pain in my ass.” I opened my eyes.
Enough light played in through the windows to read the book titles on my
nightstand. Behind the stack I could see 6:5 on the digital clock. The last
numeral hid behind a corner of Consequences. “I take one day off and you
decide on a sunrise reenactment of the bounciest bits of the Kama Sutra.”
I wondered if it was the same girl as last time. The one who
complained, loudly, after sex. I woke up that time too. Unlike a soldier in a
war zone, I could not accustom myself to the sound and fury well enough to
sleep through it.
Maybe I should have joined the military, picked up some
useful skills like hand-to-hand combat and the ability to tune out the nearly
continuous din from below.
My phone rang.
“Are you kidding?” I said to the ceiling.
The ceiling declined to answer, either me or the phone. I
dragged the lime-green (got it on sale) quilt along with me and shuffled out of
my off-white painted bedroom and into the 70's fake-wood paneled parlor. The
metronomic thuds of the bed downstairs were overcome by the syncopation of the
phone. It was a grand conspiracy to keep me from sleeping-in.
I grabbed the handset, silencing the rings. Would that
Laurence could be so easily dealt with. “Hello?”
“Jane?”
No, you have the wrong number. I am someone else. “Hi, Mrs.
Petit.”
“Oh, it is you Jane.”
“Yup.” I flopped on the sagging tweedy couch and dragged the
quilt up over my feet, covering my mismatched socks. “Is there a problem?” I
asked.
“No, why would you say that?”
Because there ought to be a huge, massive,
has-its-own-gravity-well-of-a-problem for you, my landlady, to be calling me
this soon after sunrise. “It's a little early.” I pushed the speakerphone
button and stood the handset on the coffee table.
“Oh, but you're up. I just wondered if you could check to see
if Laurence's car is in the drive? I called, but he didn't answer his phone.”
“He's home,” I said. Too bad his home is here and not still
with you and his father.
“Then why isn't he answering his phone? He has caller ID.”
Frost bloomed in her voice, as if I had insinuated her darling son might wish
to avoid her.
“Maybe he's asleep.” It was a broad hint, but she didn't pick
up on it. I'd be more pointed in my comments if I had some degree of assurance
Mrs. Petit wouldn’t raise my rent in a fit of pique.
“Well, see if the car is in the drive,” she said, tacking on
a belated, “please.”
Through the wooden floor I could hear a faint shrill voice
raised in anger. The dear boy must have finished too soon. Again.
Part of me wondered what I had done to deserve knowing this
much about my neighbor's sex life. Surely karma could not rate my crimes as
being this bad.
Laurence's paramour continued her rant, now accompanied by
the sound of winter boots clomping on his wooden floor. “He's up now,” I said,
“I can hear him moving around.”
“And the car? It is all right?”
Obsessed much? “Let me check.” The porch door slammed as I
grabbed the phone and lurched from couch to window. Outside I saw a young
woman, with a bad case of bed-head, storming up the semi-frozen ruts of the
driveway. Her puffy white coat slumped down her arms and her pink scarf
fluttered behind, as if trying to escape.
The same battered maroon compact I had seen a few days ago
waited at the end of the drive. Damn it. If I had been going to work I would
have been stuck behind her piss-poor parking job. And I was pretty sure that
the lovebirds would have let me hang until they were finished. Or, until he
finished and she flounced off in a huff.
OK, this early it wouldn't have been an issue. But if I had
been going to work, I promise you Laurence would have waited until later to
disappoint his girl.
“Car's here.” I propped the phone on the windowsill.
Laurence's disappointed friend revved her engine and reversed
onto the lawn. It was too cold for her to tear up the ground much, but she made
a fair attempt, spinning her wheels and dislodging some clumps. The tires
squealed like angry pigs.
“What is that noise?” Mrs. Petit said. I could almost see her
thin face pruning up into disgusted-mode. A look I was reasonably familiar
with. “What are you doing?”
Me? “That was someone outside.” Hint, hint, if you
can hear that through the phone perhaps it is time replace the windows? “Looks
like your son had company last night.”
The ass in question slammed the front door, rattling the
entire structure. He marched across the lawn in jeans and a wife-beater,
looking like he was on his way to a photo shoot for Red Neck Monthly.
She gunned the engine again and he screamed obscenities.
Class act, that boy.
“Looks like they're saying goodbye.” Or good riddance.
“Oh, well,” Mrs. Petit huffed, “my poor boy, he has so many
social obligations.”
“Shall I tell him you called?” I said, in a pleasant
secretary voice.
“No, I was,” she paused, “I heard on the radio, there was an
accident near Millbridge. A green SUV, like the one Laurence drives. I just
wanted to make sure he got home safely last night, and when he didn't answer
his phone… .”
He didn't get home last night. He got home at four this
morning, stormed up the stairs like a herd of wildebeest, then lulled me into a
false sense of quiet for a few hours before he started banging the bed against
the wall. You, on the other hand, were courteous enough to wait until (I
checked the clock did some half-assed math) 6:58 to call and ask if his car was
intact. “Seems fine,” I said, still channeling the pleasant secretary voice.
“I'm sorry, I shouldn't be keeping you. Don't you have work
today? I'll phone Laurence later on, when he's had his rest.”
“OK, have a good day,” I said and hung up before she decided
I should go downstairs and make Laurence breakfast because her poor boy
had been socially obligated to get up so early.
No one seemed to care that I was forced to be up early.
Prince Charming would have cared. If he wasn't off caring for
his wife. A wife who was not me. And there's the rub, as Hamlet once (sort of)
said. My Prince belonged to someone else. I needed to get over him and move on.
I shed the quilt and started the water boiling for chai.
Happy birthday to me.
This isn't where I expected to be at forty. I had envisioned
a home of my own, a loving husband, maybe kids. I thought my family would be
there for me.
That was before I found out my husband was an evil bastard.
Before the divorce and exile from home. Before Prince Charming lost a leg –
before Reg died.
Instead I was living upstairs from Noise Boy (who, I was
beginning to suspect, had a sex addiction), alone, no family, and working, not
as in the promised position of Librarian at the J. Regina School for Boys, but
as a humble library clerk. The salary even more humble than the position.
Had I been capable of performing all of my job-ly duties, I
might have cause for complaint. But I still struggled to comprehend the
accounting system, let along master it.
Downstairs the stereo boomed on and the windows shivered to
the beat. Baump, baump, baump, ba-baump. Terrific. I could feel the music; a
huge pulsating heart beneath the floorboards. Poe's homicidal narrator would
love this place.
I found my battered deck shoes, which I wore in lieu of
slippers, and waited for the kettle to wail. The baump, baump, baump, ba-baump
continued to thrum. The powdered chai shimmied in my insulated travel mug.
“Fine, be that way. See if I care that you are a slave to the beat.” It was
criminal, the way Laurence subjugated my morning beverage of choice.
If only I had a tiny bit more gumption I could rid the world
of this menace to decent music. Except, if I killed Laurence, his mother would
probably kick me out. Even his father, who had just last month needed to evict
the raccoons let in via Laurence's carelessness with the basement door, would
probably not want to rent an apartment to me.
I poured boiling water into the mug. It too danced in
reaction to the bass beat.
Screw this.
I stomped down the back stairs and pounded on Laurence's
kitchen door.
“Yeah?” he said, still dressed in the thin undershirt and
jeans.
“The music. It's too loud.”
He looked at me as if I had spoken some strange language he'd
never encountered before.
“Turn it down, please,” I said.
“My girlfriend left me.” He showed no hint of emotion. Only a
blank stare; probably caused by a hangover or lack of sleep. Or total absence
of brain cells.
“So sad,” not. “But, the music is still too loud.”
“I thought you were at work.” His eyes seemed to be focused
on my chin. Odd, but better than his usual chest-centered gaze.
“Obviously not.”
“Too loud?” he asked, as if I had not already stated this
very thing. “I'll turn it down.”
With that he shut the door. “Bye,” I said to the wood panel a
few inches from my nose. “Have a great day. Moron.”
As I headed back upstairs the noise level decreased. Why was
that so hard?
Well, because it was Laurence, that's why.
I locked my door behind me and headed to the bathroom to tend
to practical needs. The face in the mirror didn't look forty, but that may have
been a by-product of the zit. The monstrous incipient zit on my chin. Which had
so fascinated Laurence. No wonder he had been dumbfounded.
Damn it, I was supposed to have wrinkles, not acne. OK, to be
truthful, I did have wrinkles – wrinkles that were apparently housing zits like
some sort of bizarre condo of the epidermis. What next? Puberty reversed? I
shuddered. No, next was menopause (pause, like the body would regain youthful
fecundity after a short break) and then death.
Laurence's music was now just above audible. A monotonous
rumble almost more aggravating than full volume. I grabbed a pen and a postcard
from the bunch on the counter and eased out the door.
New England March is not usually considered warm. March in
Maine could be downright cold.
But it was quieter outside. And I had a Navy surplus pea
coat, heavy enough to use as an anchor and warm enough, if I curled my feet up
under me, to avoid frostbite. The sun had worked its way around to illuminate
one corner of the long bench on my porch. I sat and let it illuminate me as
well.
I didn't go in for journals. Too risky. Secrets weren't
secret if you wrote them down. But if something happened, if Prince Charming
showed up – I wanted him to know… something. I just wasn't sure what.
C-
You didn't send me a card. I'd be disappointed, but if you
had an address, I'd have to move. And I'm tired of moving. I want to be still.
You'd like it here, near the ocean. Lot's of fish.
If I have candles on the cake, I'll make a wish.
J-
The back door slammed. The porch railing wobbled and I felt
the earth move, but not in a good way. Laurence's SUV, in need of a muffler,
growled and complained as he headed down the nearly naked drive. It used to be
covered in gravel, but someone had a tendency to peal out, scattering
the stones in plume-like formations along the side of the house.
The ricochets could travel an impressive distance.
I heard the lurch and squeak of an abused suspension hitting
the edge of the drive then the engine roar fading into the distance. He was
gone. To find another bimbo. Or buy bigger speakers. Or, the long shot, go to
work.
Not that ringing up movie rentals was work. He mostly sat on
a stool and played video games with the few lucky students who had gotten
day-passes from the J. Regina School for Boys. But, it was my day off, I did
not have to think about the school or the boys. And I had been granted a
respite from Laurence and his noise.
I sipped chai.
And immediately I wished I hadn't.
The hot sweet liquid sent shock waves of pain surging through
my molar and up my jaw toward my eye. I could feel my entire face as defined by
shrieking nerve endings. I put the mug down and tried to master the sensation.
It defeated me.
AUTHOR BIO
A native of Massachusetts, I've never mastered the art of writing about myself in third person. No idea if these facts are in any way linked.Back when I could still be trained to do such things, I avoided learning to type properly in an effort to ensure I never had to work in an office. These days, I work in an office and write novels on the side. Typing very poorly indeed.I read all sorts of books - but seem to be capable of writing only comedic novels with snarky heroines or the occasional re-telling of a fairy tale.
AUTHOR LINKS
A native of Massachusetts, I've never mastered the art of writing about myself in third person. No idea if these facts are in any way linked.Back when I could still be trained to do such things, I avoided learning to type properly in an effort to ensure I never had to work in an office. These days, I work in an office and write novels on the side. Typing very poorly indeed.I read all sorts of books - but seem to be capable of writing only comedic novels with snarky heroines or the occasional re-telling of a fairy tale.
INTERVIEW
When do you get your ideas? The Dollar Store - they
have a bin in the back room... oh, sorry When do I...
At the least convenient time possible. My current
work-in-progress hijacked my brain and threatened to sever ties between the
left and right hemispheres unless I dropped everything to write it.
Unfortunately, at the time I was desperately trying to finish editing a
completely different novel which about three-quarters of the way through the
critiquing process with my writing group (group plug: http://www.internetwritingworkshop.org/
great place to learn and get feedback). For two months I pretended to have a
dual personality, editing one novel while creating a first draft of another.
Also, for the past seven years I've participated in National
Novel Writing Month (http://nanowrimo.org/)
held in November. I can almost guarantee conceiving a plot idea in September or
March. But never the final week of October, when I could most use one.
Seeing as how you jumped the gun on where... : Not a
problem, I can elaborate. The ideas come from... from... Sorry. No idea.
Why do you write in a particular genre? Good question. For which I don't have a
good answer. I'm not even sure what genre I write in. I'm not good with labels
and pigeonholes (ick, pigeonholes – full of dirty feathers and guano...). I
write the sort of story I want to read. Somewhere between a comic-romance and a
cozy-mystery. But with more sarcasm per square-inch.
I've been told I 'write pain well' – which is, I think,
because I have taken painful moments from my own life and made them funny in
order to avoid alienating friends. I mean, if I whine to everyone about my
torturous root canal experience, eventually they lose interest and start
avoiding me. But, if I whine with the added bonus of making them laugh... they tend to stick around while I
complain. My protagonists tend to have much pain heaped upon them because I
have already vetted the jokes and don't like to waste humor.
What's next? Dunno, more coffee or lunch? I'm
thinking maybe wings – oh, next for the writing... (you could be more specific
in your questions). I'm still editing the novel which hijacked my brain. Unlike
my first two novels (I Do-Over and Sex Lives and Dental
Chairs – both available on Amazon.com, yes, that was a shameless plug)
my current work-in-progress is less slapstick/sarcastic – showing the parallel
occurrences of a woman's present and past. History doesn't so much repeat in a
loop, it spirals.
Seeing it written out like that – it bears a pathetic
resemblance to my final college essay, in which I postulate events in a
person's life don't repeat exactly, but spiral to incorporate growth and
experience. Look at me, art imitating life.
Why do you write? Short answer, the stories won't let me alone.
I've always told myself stories, as a kid it was a way to
get to sleep back when my bead-time was determined by someone else (I've always
been a night-owl, so early bedtimes were difficult). Later I started writing
for my own enjoyment and entertainment. Right before junior high I had a
traumatic experience with my English teacher, an in-class assignment
'describing a character', and a trip the the principal's office. I stopped
writing for several years, and I might never have started again, except the
showers at my college house were being abused by the entire campus (bad enough
they were in a creepy basement room – but after trekking down three flights of
stairs only to find a random creepy guy had used your shampoo and all the hot
water...) So, rather than complain and tick people off, I wrote a little fable
explaining the concerns of myself and my house-mates and put it in the school
newspaper.
People liked it. Better – they stopped using my shampoo.
After that I started writing again. Mostly very short (under
two pages) stories for my friends. Then an idea for a novel started kicking
around in my head... And I was back, baby.
Oftentimes creative works have 'Easter eggs' hidden in
them. Have you ever hidden an egg?
The minions put you up to this, didn't they?
Yes, I've tucked away references to authors I admire and
movies/shows I enjoy. Some of the in-jokes are really just for me – I don't
expect general recognition. Because a novel is a very private thing until it
goes public. I guess the hidden bits are there for the soul-mate-reader to find
and squwee! Over.
Well, it's been lovely interviewing you, we should do it
again sometime. Yes, it has
been fun. I'll call you when my next book comes out. Oh, by the way, we're out
of half-and-half. And bread. Someone needs to go food shopping instead of
playing computer games...
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