Balmaseda, Liz Sweet Mary: A Novel ISBN 13: 9781416542964

Sweet Mary: A Novel - Hardcover

9781416542964: Sweet Mary: A Novel
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In this mesmerizing debut novel by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Liz Balmaseda, one woman's hunger for justice becomes a journey into darkness -- and a punishing, soul-searching test of priorities.

Dulce Maria "Mary" Guevara is a woman with nothing left to lose. Wrongly accused of being a cocaine queen, she has lost her job, her reputation, and -- worst of all -- custody of her son. Even after the charges are dropped, suspicion lingers. Desperate to get it all back, she takes what she considers the only path open to her: She goes on a hunt for the real drug queen. Unfortunately, the one person she believes can help her is the last person she wants to see again: Joe Pratts, her ex-fiancé, a man whose connections to the drug world once ended their relationship.

Trying not to fall for Joe again is just the beginning of Mary's challenges, however. Her search leads her through the most deceiving of jungles: suburbia. There, she comes face-to-face with disturbing realities that challenge everything she thinks she knows about her formerly tranquil life. Mary's final dilemma hits closer to home than she ever imagined.

Sweet Mary is a gripping, heartrending story with a noir soul and plenty of surprising twists -- an assured debut from a writer with tremendous experience and talent.

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About the Author:
Liz Balmaseda (born January 17, 1959, Puerto Padre, Cuba) is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, a writer for The Palm Beach Post and a former columnist for The Miami Herald.  She was awarded her first Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 1993 for her writings on the plight of Haitian refugees and the Cuban-American population. She shared a second Pulitzer for breaking-news reporting in 2001, for the coverage of the federal raid to seize refugee EliÁn GonzÁlez.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
One

THE WORST WEEK of my life began like any other late summer week in Miami, stifling hot. The August steam rose from the Everglades and wrapped itself around the city with a vengeance. No ocean breeze or inland gust seemed strong enough to break its stranglehold. The steam became our second skin, a filmy, salty gauze impossible to wash off. I couldn't imagine being one of those plastic types who, despite the 95-degree swelter, insisted on her usual Miami corporate-level quantities of makeup -- the SPF, the primer, the base, the bronzer, the inner eye highlighter, the lip plumping gloss, all intended to create that "fresh from the beach" glow. To me, the thought of slipping into a business suit seemed punishing enough without the added torture of having to fabricate evidence of a nonexistent trip to the beach. Besides, who needs makeup when you can get second-degree sunburn from walking the dog for fifteen minutes?

I fool myself into thinking I can deflect the heat by wearing white. Of course, nothing deflects the kind of heat I'm talking about. But I wear white anyway because I like what it says about you. It says you're gutsy. It takes nerve to wear a narrow white skirt cut a few inches above the knee and a crisp white shirt unbuttoned to that exact place where your breasts just begin to rise from your ivory lace balconette. That's my no-fail outfit, the one I wear when I have a monumental deal I need to close pronto.

That's what I wore on the day I took the old cowboy out to the middle of the boonies to show him the Glades Terrace property. I piled this guy -- and his maroon-colored poly-blend suit, his diamante-encrusted boots, and his ruby-studded gold bracelet -- into my white BMW M6 and tore across westbound Tamiami Trail just before noon. He was a balding man of rugged complexion, Texan, about sixty years old, and he had an air about him I couldn't pinpoint, not at first. Then again, he once won the World Series of Poker, cashing in at $7.3 million, and I imagine one does not win that ungodly WSOP bracelet if one's intentions are easily read. He seemed charming enough, a soft-spoken sort. But I couldn't tell if he was quiet because he was wily, gullible, or even shy. I was hoping for door number two that morning. I needed gullible in a desperate way.

"Sub-Zero fridge. Antique walnut travertine bath. Turkish steam room. European touches. Garage capacity is four luxury-size cars. Or three Hummers..."

I glanced over at the cowboy to see if I had piqued his curiosity, but he was staring out the window at the dreary landscape of Australian pines and melaleucas and ALLIGATOR WRESTLING signs. In the southern distance, the skies had begun to darken into that deadly shade of charcoal silver that is the default backdrop of summer afternoons in South Florida, and I knew I'd better step on the gas if I wanted to outrun the tempest.

I amped up the pitch, too.

"The place has history, you know. I hear they busted Al Capone out there once," I said to him, but he didn't respond. "How about that for cocktail trivia?"

The cowboy was unfazed. He seemed perplexed by our approach into the western fringes of the county. He seemed lost in serious thought, something I couldn't afford as we headed for Glades Terrace. No, thinking is definitely not allowed when purchasing property at the precipitous edge of the Florida Everglades.

"It's also where they filmed parts of The Specialist. Stallone flick. Great sound track," I said, catching his eye at last.

He gave me a half smile but said nothing. Instead, his eyes traced the pearly buttons of my blouse like a slow bead of sweat, sending an unexpected shiver along the back of my arm. I tried to hide my uneasiness by smiling back, then glancing away as if I were trying to read the road signs. Sly devil, this one. I knew this sale -- if there was to be a sale -- would be no slam dunk. But it wasn't until I turned into the overgrown driveway and saw the monumental wreck that was the Glades Terrace property that I realized just how tough the sale would be. It was going to be brutal, even for me. I can sell just about anything. I once sold a 1982 Camaro Iron Duke, deemed to be one of the "50 Worst Cars of All Time" by Time magazine, for seven thousand bucks. I sold mangoes on eBay a few summers ago. I knocked them off the tree in my parents' back yard and gave them a sexy name: Mangoes from Paradise.

The product description went like this: "Kill the pill routine and have a mango! Would you rather choke back your daily dose of horse pills, the vitamin A, the vitamin E, the selenium, the iron, and the beta carotene? Or would you rather dig into a juicy, luscious mango from paradise? I thought so."

And just a few months ago, I sold my wedding dress. This may not seem like a big deal to anyone at first mention, but it was. This was one hideous wedding dress. It was a champagne, textured-taffeta, overly ruffled specimen handpicked by my quite misguided groom as the "something new" component of my wedding day. Now riddle me this: What kind of lunatic bride allows her fiancé to surprise her on the eve of their wedding with the Dress? The kind who deserves to wear it in front of her two hundred closest friends and relatives, as I did. But while my marriage met a crappy fate, my dress did not. It floated down the aisle at the Copacabana Banquet Hall in Hialeah Gardens on the curves of one brave Damaysi Yamisleidy Hernandez, a hairdresser newly arrived from Victoria de las Tunas, Cuba, who married the American boat captain who spirited her across the Straits of Florida. The captain was so smitten with her that he proposed on the sands of Hallandale Beach, moments after reaching dry land. Three days later he was scouring the online classifieds, hoping to find a fancy dress for his honey, and, boom, there it was, a dress that was more than fancy -- it was fancy on steroids.

The "Surprise Me" Wedding Dress.

"It's not a fairy-tale wedding without a surprise," went my product description. "Fellas, this is the dress every bride will dream about. Trust me. It was the biggest surprise of my life."

I sold it for one thousand seven hundred and fifty bucks. So, like I said, I can sell anything. This was my mantra at Glades Terrace that day.

"We're here," I said in the most upbeat voice I could muster as I pulled up in the shade of a knobby cypress tree. "Home sweet home."

"Home sweet home" was an abandoned ranch-style mansion haphazardly plopped in the Florida wilds. Weeds and muck filled the grounds where a landscaper had been commissioned once to re-create an island paradise in that extravagant, over-the-top style of the cocaine-era nouveau riche. To reach the front door, I had to step along a weed-choked path in Christian Louboutin high heels, past an algae-infested artificial pond, a rusty yacht trailer, armies of screeching crickets, and the carcass of a burned-out sports car of some indistinguishable make. I turned around to check on the cowboy -- the disturbed look on his face said it all.

"We'll clean it all up, plant a couple dozen royal palms. It'll be beautiful," I told him as I climbed the steps to the front door.

I braced for the worst, imagining the place crawling with swampland creatures. If that was the case, I fully deserved it for being so friggin' overeager. I had cajoled the listing from another agent, a sad sack named Brian, who had confided that he was taking a mental health day to go handle a domestic crisis. Word was he caught his wife in bed with their son's wrestling coach. I offered to help in any way I could -- like maybe show the Glades Terrace property. Brian puckered his face and thought about it for a long time.

"The place is a gold mine," he finally said.

"I don't know about that," I said. "But I'm glad to help out."

What I meant was this: "Go home to your slutty wife and let me make this sale already."

Brian gave my shoulder a brotherly squeeze.

"You are a good woman, Mary Guevara," he said. "I hope you sell the heck out of that place."

So there I was at the front door of the Glades Terrace property, trying to erase the Brian tangent from my head. Truth is I was haunted by this vision of him busting his PTA wife with some paunchy, middle-aged wrestler. I found the image more unsettling than the fact that I had swiped a sales lead from him. I have to confess I felt no guilt whatsoever about taking the lead. I couldn't afford to feel guilt. I knew this sale could hoist me over the three-mil mark, land me on the top-seller map, and bring me closer to the life I had visualized on those evening workouts at home, on nights when I lost count of levels climbed on the elliptical machine. I could taste it. I had worked so hard to shake off the debris of a bad divorce, make a decent home for myself and my son, and hit my stride in a brand-new career at a time when business was in the dumps. I mean, what kind of fool takes up real estate when everybody else is hanging it up? Only the queen of bad timing.

I gave the front door a good shove, hoping to scare off whatever lurked on the other side. But the door flung open with ease to reveal a stunning sight: a late-' 70s nightmare. Chrome glinted off every angle of the place. In a sepia haze of rising dust, the sunken living room seemed an ocean of browns, oranges, and burnt siennas. The glass shelves above the wet bar displayed a set of gold-leafed highball glasses and matching decanters. And, to boot, there was a disco ball. Let me put it this way: If those mirrored walls could talk, the stories would most likely involve powder-dusted hundred-dollar bills, a cache of automatic weapons, and a guy named El Gallo. Why Brian didn't stage this place, I'll never know. But who was I to tell any of this to a Texas millionaire scavenging the spoils of a trashed market?

"Note the hurricane-proof windows. Closed-circuit alarm system. Bullet-resistant doors all around. And there's a phenomenal media-slash-entertainment room just down the hall," is what I told him as I took command of the sordid mess. The client seemed to be taking in every detail of the tour: the trompe l'oeiled-out...

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  • PublisherAtria Books
  • Publication date2009
  • ISBN 10 1416542965
  • ISBN 13 9781416542964
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages256
  • Rating

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