Today's Reading

CHAPTER ONE

In fair Verona, where we lay our scene

My name is Rosie, Rosaline if I'm in trouble, and I'm the daughter of Romeo and Juliet.

Yes, that Romeo and Juliet.

No, they didn't die in the tomb. Brace yourself for a recap, and don't worry, it's interesting in a My God, are you kidding me? sort of way.

My mom was a Capulet. My dad is a Montague. For some reason lost in the mists of time, their families were deadly enemies. Yet my folks met at a party, instantly fell in love—nothing bad ever came of love at first sight, right?—and secretly got married. That very afternoon, Dad killed Mom's cousin in a sword fight, then Mom hated Dad for about five really loud, lamenting moments, then she equally loudly forgave him. They fell into bed and as I heard it, spent the night doing the horizontal bassa danza. Papà went into exile because of the killing (in the next town a few hours' gallop away), and Mamma went into a decline. To cheer her up, my grandparents decided she needed to get married. Because in my world, all a woman needs is a husband to be happy.

Has anybody in Verona ever once looked around at the state of the marriages in this town?

With typical Juliet melodrama, Mom decided she had to kill herself. The family confessor convinced her to take a drug that put her into a sleep that presented itself as death.

I know, you're thinking—C'mon! There's no such drug!

I promise there is. I work with Friar Laurence, the Franciscan monk and apothecary who mixed it for her. More about that later.

Mom took the sleeping draught, fell into a death-like state, had a terrific funeral with all the weeping and wailing her family is capable of—and let me tell you, that's some impressive weeping and wailing—and was placed in the Capulet family tomb.

She was thirteen years old and to all accounts a great-looking corpse.

While in exile, Dad got the news his new wife had suddenly and inexplicably taken the long dirt nap. Being of equally dramatic stock, he obtained real poison, raced back to fair Verona, broke into the tomb, killed Mom's fiancé—my father's an impressive swordsman, which is a good thing considering how many people he can insult in a day—flung himself on Mom's body, and took the real poison because his life wasn't worth living without her.

He was all of sixteen years old and in my observations, sixteen-year-old boys are idiots or worse. But again, what do I know?

So Dad is draped all over Mom's supposed corpse, to all appearances dead, and she wakes up and sees him. Can you imagine the theatrical potential here?

I can't. Unless there's someone watching, there's no point in getting all worked up.

But I stray from the story, which I've heard countless times in my life in breathless breakfast table recountings.

Mom grabbed Dad's knife out of the sheath and stabbed herself. There was a lot of blood, and she fainted, but essentially she stabbed that gold pendant necklace her family buried her with, the knife skidded sideways, and she slashed her own chest. She still has the scar, which, when I'm rolling my eyes, she insists on showing me.

What with all that blood, she fainted. When she came to, still very much alive, she crawled back up on the tomb, sobbed again all over Dad's body, and got wound up for a second self-stabbing. It was at this point Dad sat up, leaned over, and vomited all over the floor.

It's a well-known fact you can never trust an unfamiliar apothecary to deliver a reliable dose of poison.

Mom simultaneously realized two things: Dad was alive, and he was tossing his lasagna all over the place. In a frenzy of joy and fellowship, she brought up whatever meager foods were in her stomach.

An argument could be made that she was retching because vomiting is contagious... or it could be said I was announcing myself to the world. Because nine months later, I made my appearance into the Montague household.

Did you follow all that? I know, I know. But honest to God, strip away the melodrama and that's what happened.
...

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Today's Reading

CHAPTER ONE

In fair Verona, where we lay our scene

My name is Rosie, Rosaline if I'm in trouble, and I'm the daughter of Romeo and Juliet.

Yes, that Romeo and Juliet.

No, they didn't die in the tomb. Brace yourself for a recap, and don't worry, it's interesting in a My God, are you kidding me? sort of way.

My mom was a Capulet. My dad is a Montague. For some reason lost in the mists of time, their families were deadly enemies. Yet my folks met at a party, instantly fell in love—nothing bad ever came of love at first sight, right?—and secretly got married. That very afternoon, Dad killed Mom's cousin in a sword fight, then Mom hated Dad for about five really loud, lamenting moments, then she equally loudly forgave him. They fell into bed and as I heard it, spent the night doing the horizontal bassa danza. Papà went into exile because of the killing (in the next town a few hours' gallop away), and Mamma went into a decline. To cheer her up, my grandparents decided she needed to get married. Because in my world, all a woman needs is a husband to be happy.

Has anybody in Verona ever once looked around at the state of the marriages in this town?

With typical Juliet melodrama, Mom decided she had to kill herself. The family confessor convinced her to take a drug that put her into a sleep that presented itself as death.

I know, you're thinking—C'mon! There's no such drug!

I promise there is. I work with Friar Laurence, the Franciscan monk and apothecary who mixed it for her. More about that later.

Mom took the sleeping draught, fell into a death-like state, had a terrific funeral with all the weeping and wailing her family is capable of—and let me tell you, that's some impressive weeping and wailing—and was placed in the Capulet family tomb.

She was thirteen years old and to all accounts a great-looking corpse.

While in exile, Dad got the news his new wife had suddenly and inexplicably taken the long dirt nap. Being of equally dramatic stock, he obtained real poison, raced back to fair Verona, broke into the tomb, killed Mom's fiancé—my father's an impressive swordsman, which is a good thing considering how many people he can insult in a day—flung himself on Mom's body, and took the real poison because his life wasn't worth living without her.

He was all of sixteen years old and in my observations, sixteen-year-old boys are idiots or worse. But again, what do I know?

So Dad is draped all over Mom's supposed corpse, to all appearances dead, and she wakes up and sees him. Can you imagine the theatrical potential here?

I can't. Unless there's someone watching, there's no point in getting all worked up.

But I stray from the story, which I've heard countless times in my life in breathless breakfast table recountings.

Mom grabbed Dad's knife out of the sheath and stabbed herself. There was a lot of blood, and she fainted, but essentially she stabbed that gold pendant necklace her family buried her with, the knife skidded sideways, and she slashed her own chest. She still has the scar, which, when I'm rolling my eyes, she insists on showing me.

What with all that blood, she fainted. When she came to, still very much alive, she crawled back up on the tomb, sobbed again all over Dad's body, and got wound up for a second self-stabbing. It was at this point Dad sat up, leaned over, and vomited all over the floor.

It's a well-known fact you can never trust an unfamiliar apothecary to deliver a reliable dose of poison.

Mom simultaneously realized two things: Dad was alive, and he was tossing his lasagna all over the place. In a frenzy of joy and fellowship, she brought up whatever meager foods were in her stomach.

An argument could be made that she was retching because vomiting is contagious... or it could be said I was announcing myself to the world. Because nine months later, I made my appearance into the Montague household.

Did you follow all that? I know, I know. But honest to God, strip away the melodrama and that's what happened.
...

Join the Library's Online Book Clubs and start receiving chapters from popular books in your daily email. Every day, Monday through Friday, we'll send you a portion of a book that takes only five minutes to read. Each Monday we begin a new book and by Friday you will have the chance to read 2 or 3 chapters, enough to know if it's a book you want to finish. You can read a wide variety of books including fiction, nonfiction, romance, business, teen and mystery books. Just give us your email address and five minutes a day, and we'll give you an exciting world of reading.

What our readers think...