MASTERMIND
YA
Suspense
66,000
words
QUERY
Seventeen-year-old Dee is used to
solving crimes faster than the police. Unfortunately, the chief's inferiority
complex turns her sure-fire internship into an unfair ban from the police
station. Wallowing in self-pity isn't her style, though, so Dee decides to show
the chief exactly why he needs her on his side. She creates a perfect crime,
one she's sure only she can solve, and posts it online, claiming it's fiction.
Days later, someone actually commits Dee's complicated theft, and rewards her
with an anonymous envelope. It's stuffed with cash. That's when, through a
series of encoded emails, Dee starts to sell her "foolproof" plots.
Instead of calling Dee for help, the
chief gives the internship to Quincy Connors, Dee's college-bound rival who
sees connections between the recent cases. The closer Quincy gets to the truth,
the more risks Dee takes to keep his investigation at a distance, even as she
develops feelings for him.
Then Dee gets a note demanding she
join forces with “M” or have her scheme exposed. She brushes it off, but
"M" won't be ignored and bombs the chief's car. With all her leads
coming up dead ends, the only way to outsmart the bomber before someone gets
killed is to make an alliance with Quincy -- even though that means she has to
risk getting thrown behind bars by her own partner.
PAGE
I
caught the office door with my fingertips before it could close behind me. The
whole station would hear Chief Keane finally admit that I was the best choice for
that internship. I deserved it. After all, he'd basically made chief thanks to
my hard work. A debt like that doesn't get paid back easily, but I sat down
prepared to accept a public commendation.
He
reclined in the chair on the opposite side of his desk and steepled his
fingers, watching me over them. I'd seen the pose so many times in
interrogation that it had lost its effect. He seemed to forget that playing the
time-hardened gumshoe didn't work as well when he hadn't gotten his first
wrinkles yet.
It
took actual effort not to laugh. "Still working on that comic villain
impression, I see. Very nice." It was always like this. I'd make hilarious
comments; he'd pretend he didn't think they were funny. It was kind of our
thing.
In
typical chief fashion, he didn't crack a smile. "I think it's about time
you headed home," he said in his I'm-serious tone. "As a civilian,
having you look at cases is unethical." One hand reached up to rub circles
against the freshly buzzed stubble at his temple.
"Go on." I could already
feel the smirk coming. Filling out the paperwork for my internship was a
formality I'd gone along with for the sake of protocol. None of the other
applicants even came close to what I could do, and Keane knew as much.
This sounds like Veronica Mars goes rogue — and then finds herself in over her head. I can't wait to see it on bookshelves!
ReplyDeleteUm, I'ma need you to get this published, so I can read it. Kthnxbai.
ReplyDelete(No but really, this sounds AMAZING. Good luck!)
I've been looking for a good YA suspense, and I think I've found it. This sounds killer! Query pulled me right in and your 250 is spot on! Love it!!! Good luck!
ReplyDeleteI don't normally go for the cop/crime drama, but I have now scrolled back up and down hoping for more text to appear about 8 times. Didn't work. So get this published please. Also, Marieke, your 'kthnxbai' had me ROFL. :-)
ReplyDeleteDitto on the VM. Ditto on the published. Ditto on get on that.
ReplyDeleteEEEEEEEE!!
I love the suspense and I love the voice! Give me more to read! :)
ReplyDeleteI still love this concept, and the voice in the 250 words works perfect for it! I really want to read more to see Dee's reaction when the chief chooses someone else for her internship. ;)
ReplyDeleteGood luck!
I adore this!!! Seriously!! Want it now!
ReplyDeleteI think the query is killer. I love a teenage girl helping the local PD to solve crimes! But really sells me is the voice in the first 250. She cocky while still being likable which is hard to balance. Love this!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds great. I am happy to request it!
ReplyDelete-Mollie
I've been looking for a great YA suspense novel. I'd love to see it!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to see this!
ReplyDeleteThis is so intriguing -- I would love to see it!
ReplyDeleteMonika
Sure, I'll take a look. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteYou've been ninja'd! I would love to see a pitch, one-page synopsis, and the first fifty pages. Please send it as a word attachment to...(contact Monica/Brenda for further details!). Looking forward to reading your work :)
ReplyDelete--RED NINJA
So. A not-so-secret ninja agent requested this one by email!
ReplyDeleteIt's...
*drum roll*
The lovely Laura Bradford!!
YAY!!