Title: Busted
Author: Gina
Ciocca
Pub Date: January
2, 2017
ISBN: 9781492654292
Catching cheaters and liars is a lucrative hobby—until you fall for one of the suspects. Perfect for fans of Veronica Mars, this new novel from the author of Last Year’s Mistake will steal your heart!
Marisa never planned to be a snoop for hire. It wasn’t like she wanted to catch her best friend’s boyfriend making out with another girl. But as her reputation for sniffing out cheaters spreads all over school, Marisa finds herself the reluctant queen of busting two-timing boys.
And her next case? It’s for ex-frenemy Kendall. She’s convinced her boyfriend, TJ, has feelings for someone else and persuades Marissa to start spying on him. But the more Marisa gets to know sincere and artistic TJ, the more she starts to fall for him. Worse yet, the feelings seem to be mutual. Marisa knows she needs to give up her investigation—and the spoken-for guy who may just be the love of her life. Then she uncovers new secrets about Kendall and TJ, secrets that take “cheater” to a whole new level…
Gina Ciocca graduated from the University of Connecticut with a degree in English, but in her mind, she never left high school. She relocated from Connecticut to Georgia, where she lives with her husband and son. When she's not reading or writing, you can find her taking long walks around the lake in her neighborhood. Gina can also be found online at writersblog-gina.blogspot.com, on Instagram as gmciocca, and Twitter as gmc511.
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Marisa’s
Top 5 Tips For Sleuthing:
Hey
there. Marisa Palmera, Private Eye here. Okay, so I don’t actually call myself
that, and neither does anyone else. In fact, I never meant to become a
sleuth-for-hire. But spend one night scaling your best-friend’s boyfriend’s
house to take incriminating pictures, and suddenly everyone wants you to be
something you’re not…and when they’re willing to line your sadly lacking
pockets for it, it doesn’t sound like such a bad idea.
So,
should you find yourself an unwitting Girl Friday (or even a witting one... Is
“witting” a thing?) like I did, here are some tips that just may save your
butt:
1.
Always
have a camera handy. Whether it’s your cell phone, or
the fancy camera you borrowed from your school’s yearbook club, you never know
when you’ll need to snap an evidence shot. Just, um, make sure you turn off the
flash if said camera is aimed through a window into a dark living room. I may
have learned this the hard way.
2. Keep your friends close, but your
enemies closer. Sounds ominous and dramatic, I
know. But if someone gives you the vibe that they shouldn’t be let out of your
sight? GO WITH IT.
3. Think fast. Suck at lying? Me too. Get over it, because
you’ll be fudging the truth a lot.
4. But know when to say no. Weave enough
white lies, and suddenly they’re a sticky, tangled web with you trapped inside.
Know when it’s time to run, and do it like the flames of hell are licking your
feet.
5. Don’t fall for the person you’re
investigating. Yeah. You’re just gonna have to do as I say
and not as I do on this one. Oops.
EXCERPT
My
eyes darted from TJ’s dark, furrowed eyebrows to the logo on the left breast of
his shirt and I sat up straighter.
“Um,
where’d you get the Maple Acres shirt?”
His
expression didn’t change. “Maple Acres.”
I
fought the urge to roll my eyes. “Right. I meant, do you work there?”
“Yup.”
He sat back in his chair and pulled at the logo, stretching the white cotton
away from his chest before turning his attention back to the computer screen.
“Long time now.”
As
soon as he said it, my memory was triggered. I’d always thought he looked familiar
but could never quite place where I’d seen him. As I thought back to every trip
I’d taken to Maple Acres, twice a year since I was two years old, the image of
a boy with dark curls stuffed beneath a knit cap and a heavy flannel coat that
made him look like Paul Bunyan clicked into place. The farm stretched over two
hundred and fifty acres, selling pumpkins and cider and offering hayrides and a
corn maze in a fall, then Christmas trees that you cut down yourself in the
winter. The place had a storybook quality to it that I loved, and I couldn’t
believe it had taken me so long to figure out TJ was a part of it.
“We
go there for our tree every year. I think I’ve seen you.”
TJ
kept his eyes on the screen. “Probably. I’m usually bundling the trees or in the
checkout area. Sometimes I drive the tractor for the hayrides.” He glanced over
long enough to shoot me a half smile. “Maybe you’ve seen the back of my head.”
That
would’ve been an occasion I definitely hadn’t noticed him. The one and only
time I’d taken a hayride had been the lone trip I’d made without Charlie or my
dad, both of whom are allergic to hay. I’d gone with Jordan. Superman himself
could’ve been driving the tractor and I would’ve been too busy drooling over
Jordan in his plaid button-down with the sleeves rolled up around his gorgeous
forearms to notice.
Vom,
vom, vom. I pushed the chunks down and forged ahead. “So, that thing you didn’t
want to do the last time we talked, is that… still an issue?”
“Uh,
no. That fell through, so my article should be good to go on Monday.”
He’s not making this easy for me,
that’s for sure.
“Take
your time, really. I hope you didn’t cancel your plans because of me.”
He
glanced over and gave me a wry smile. “No.”
“So, um, the tree farm. I go all the time.” I
mentally slapped myself. Twice a year is
all the time? “Do you live nearby?”
“You
know the green colonial across the street behind the barn?”
“Uh
huh.”
He
smiled again. “That’s my house.”
“Wait,
I thought the owners lived there.”
“They
do. We have for my whole life.”
“Your
family owns Maple Acres?” I blinked a few times, dumbfounded by my own
dumbness.
“Well,
co-owns. Have you seen the guy with the white hair who sneaks free gourds to
all the little kids at Halloween? That’s my Uncle Roger. He’s there all the
time, but my dad does more of the financial stuff.”
My
face lit up. “That’s awesome! I love that place! I took a picture of the white
barn from the top of the hill once and tried to sketch it. All the trees had
snow on them, the sky was this amazing gray color and the pond was reflecting
it” – I remembered mid-babble that I’d veered off course and reigned myself
back in – “anyway, let’s just say it was magical, but drawing isn’t my strong
suit. So, um, if you didn’t move, then why did you switch schools?”
TJ’s
eyes slid back to the computer screen and his shoulder tensed ever so slightly,
as if I’d brought up something he didn’t really want to talk about. Now I was
getting somewhere.
“Our
property is right at the intersection of three town lines. Technically, I
could’ve gone to any one of the high schools.” He stabbed a few keys with his
pointer finger, eliciting three clipped clicks. Maybe my eyes were playing
tricks on me, but I swore his jaw tightened. “I left Templeton because it was
time for a change of scenery.”
“It
must’ve been hard, though, transferring for your senior year.” And pretty odd,
in my opinion. “I’m sure you had a lot of ties there.”
TJ’s
fingers paused in mid-air over the keyboard and he looked at me. “Not that
many.”
This
time when he turned his attention back to the screen, I knew our conversation
had ended. He ran a hand through his hair in a gesture that had a definite
undertone of irritation. Whether it related to my question or some memory
pertaining to the school, I couldn’t tell. But when I caught sight of the
leather bracelet on his wrist, my desire to exclaim OMG THAT’S GORGEOUS WHERE DID YOU GET IT almost overruled my desire
to ask what the hell his comment was supposed to mean. I’d been baiting him to
say, “Yeah, my girlfriend goes there.” He hadn’t. What did that mean?
Maybe
nothing.
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