Upside Down
A cop. A hero. A wife.
Detective Cassie Quinn was all three, until a fiery automobile accident claimed her husband’s life, robbing Det. Quinn of her favorite title of all. But a year later, while investigating the murder of a dead prostitute, Det. Quinn is shaken to her core when a DNA analysis of skin tissue found under the prostitute’s finger nails came back with a positive match.
Her husband.
Throwing caution to the wind, Cassie stops at nothing to capture the murderer she once loved, leaving dead pimps, bikers, and crooked cops in her wake. However, as tension between Cassie and her boss reaches boiling point, discovery of the dead prostitute’s true identity turns her case, as well as her whole world, upside down.
Pieces
Comminuted fractures
From head to toe
Side to side
Nationwide epidemic
Disconnected with internet access
America in a little black dress
No longer the damsel in distress
Courtesy of the forgotten
Emerging from the shadows
With a ballot
Imploring for Justice
But no sound from the mallet
Also deaf and dumb
Blindness, a pre-existing condition
The fragmentation is too severe
Rivals and bandages
Will not adhere
A billionaire whispers
To the shadow
And the map
Turned red with anger
Then turned to a stranger
And with a tear
In her eye
The shadow asked
"Can you make me great again?"
Joy Writing
I scribble happiness with a mechanical pencil
And tattoo joy onto a blank sheet with ballpoints
Ink circulates my elation like oxygen
Through my blood stream
Can you feel it?
Inject it by virtue of pupils
Those that see and those in uniform
Spread the jubilation by word
Of mouth and fingertips
Until it is scattered across the globe
As bird seed for birds to feed
It is simple and plain
It is complex and deranged
We haven't created it
We only explain
How it makes us feel
How it makes us real, until
Happiness is born on the page
Ambitionz Az A Writah
As a kid, I always had dreams of becoming things that I now realize would have been impossible for me to be, given my talents and skill set. I remember being a nine year-old kid pretending to be Steve Young, throwing touchdown passes to Jerry Rice. There was a time when I even dreamed of becoming a cyborg killing machine like "The Terminator." But the first time I ever truly had a dream I felt I could actually accomplish was when my Uncle Jack told me that I was a good writer. He told me that I had a way with words that could truly move people, and that it should be a goal of mine to become a writer. I don't know if Uncle Jack remembers telling me this when I was seventeen, but since then I've basically put all my eggs into this one basket, and have never contemplated becoming anything else.
I've been a Tupac fan for as long as I could remember. I remember hearing "Brenda's Got A Baby" on 106.1 KMEL in Oakland when I was in elementary, and it became one of my favorite songs. Of course, when I was 15, Tupac was killed and it was said, except for when all his music kept coming out. Then when I was 21 a documentary film of Tupac's life called "Resurrection" came out, and I was one of the first people to go see it. It was amazing, but there was one part that really got me. He talked about writing movies, and reading a book by Syd Field that taught about writing screenplays. I bought that book and studied it the best I coould, wrote my own screenplay, and moved down to L.A. to try and sell it. I failed. I ended up moving back in with my parents, because I blew all my savings on that move to L.A.. Now, I find myself in the peculiar position of living with my uncle Jack again.
It's been 17 years since Uncle Jack told me I was a good writer. So far, I haven't been good enough at my craft to gain any recognition from the powers that be, but my ambition to become what I know I was born to be hasn't dwindled. No matter how many people tell me I need to be realistic.
2 years ago I promised myself I would never get another 9 to 5 job again, just to kind of push myself to reach my goal by any means. Sort of a "do or die" type of pact, but I think that my have been "unrealistic". Today, I'm searching online for jobs in Park City, while Uncle Jack tries to help me get back on my feet, and back in good standing with the church. I was a little hesitant with Uncle Jack offered to help me out, because I knew what it entailed. However, I thank God for bringing right back to the beginning, and reigniting my ambitions to become a writer.