I'm just a man in his lair with a painting of a pear.... follow me on twitter @patrickpeay
Friday, March 11, 2016
I been getting my DJ on as well yo...
Check out DJ Queasy Li channel on youtube. It's hard to believe I find time in the day to do all that I do ya know...
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
I have no recollection what this story was supposed to be about, but this is as far as I got with a screenplay script I was working on many years ago...like 2008-ish
ACT ONE
Ext. White Sandy Beach @ Coast
We see in PANORAMIC VIEW, small wild birds scurrying for
midday meals in shallow water on a bright and sunny day, cloudless day. This sky is so blue.
CUT TO CLOSE UP of birds feeding (low shot)
Enter 2 tan, smooth, and femininely alluring feet with
perfect toes and ankles in shot. A
tribal tattoo is around her left ankle.
ANGLE UP Slowly to reveal her whole body. Decked in tribal garbs with tan, toned muscle
structure, her beauty is uncanny. Her
long, ebony, and curly hair is blown by the balmy breeze as she gazes silently
at the sea. A dolphin performs an aerial
stunt before a loud booming voice draws her attention off screen.
KING FITZ
(Voice Over)
Ariel! Ariel!
Ariel! My dear, I know you can
hear me.
(Ariel finally turns
to look in his direction.)
Gleemoura expects you
in the village soon. Do not keep her
waiting.
Enter KING FITZ, the epiphany of a powerful and confident
ruler. He’s the King of the island
villagers.
ARIEL
I know father.
(She sighs)
KING FITZ
What troubles you, my
dear? I can hear the anguish in your
voice.
ARIEL
It’s nothing,
Father. I just….Never you mind. It’s not important. I must get to the village right away to see
Gleemoura. I don’t want to leave her
waiting.
CUT TO
Int. Gleemoura’s Office Hut
At first glance, the hut appears cluttered and
unorganized. Bones and plants hang from
the ceiling. Piles of rags and leather
hides litter the floor. GLEEMOURA is
lying in a makeshift hammock in the corner smoking a long wooden pipe. She is silent and content, but the wailing
cries of a young girl at the threshold of her hut stirs GLEEMOURA.
ENTER ARIEL carrying a female toddler no more than three or
four years old in her arms. The kid is
weeping uncontrollably.
ARIEL
Shhh, boo boo…shh
(She pats kid on back
to try and sooth her, but to no avail)
GLEEMOURA
(Approaches and
speaks)
What is wrong with
the little one?
(She strokes the
girl’s hair and the full weep recedes to mild whimper)
ARIEL
I am not certain,
Gleemoura. I stumbled upon her on my way
here from the coast. Literally, I fell
to the ground. I was in a full sprint
through the brush, and I tripped over her.
I pray I am not the cause of her affliction.
GLEEMOURA
Let me see her.
(She takes toddler
and sets her on a small stool)
No, this is not your
fault, dearest Ariel. Look here at the
bottom of her heel. These two pricks
here, snake bits.
(long pause. Gleemoura takes a deep breath that makes her
nostrils flare and eyes widen, then she whispers)
Snake bite, a cobra.
ARIEL
Is it a lethal bite?
GLEEMOURA
(Snaps back to
reality and springs into action)
Of course not, I can
handle this right away
(She pulls a leaf
from one of her plants and rubs it on the tots wound. Then she dumps the contest of her pipe in a
bowl of water before putting it in a guaze to wrap around the little girl’s
heel.)
That ought to do
it. Are you better now, little one?
(The girl nods.)
ARIEL
I don’t want to get
sidetracked, Gleemoura, but I’d like to walk the little one home and assure her
parents are at ease.
GLEEMOURA
Fair enough,
Princess. I’ve seen this girl before
around the village. Her name is Tink,
daughter of Sheena and Phellepe the fisherman.
ARIEL
(looking down at
girl)
Is what she says
true?
(girl nods)
Very well, off we
go. I’ll be back soon, Gleemoura.
GLEEMOURA
There’s no need to
rush. My business with you today is not
urgent, no matter what your father says.
His Highness has always had melodramatic tendencies since his early
adolescent years.
(She chuckles.)
ARIEL leaves GLEEMOURA alone in her hut. After taking a deep breath, she sprawls her
arms out to her sides with her palms facing upwards.
GLEEMOURA
Oh, omnipotentness,
Mighty Delphonte, your prophecies are finally coming to fruition. The time is upon us. May Runyan and Vexton help us and protect
us. Fleestour, give and power, and may
Delphonte’s blessings pour over us.
Sheevam.
CUT TO
Int. Royal Quarters
A large and extravagant by comparison, yet modest and quaint
clay/mud and stone structure serves as the royal palace for the King and Queen
of the Chromitians. It is divided into 6
sections or rooms, and it also houses their daughter, one servant, and one
elderly spider monkey named Lava along with a jaguar named Jackie, the royal
pets. King Fitz and Queen Ellesta sit
alone in the dining area eating a small salad composed of berries, vegetables,
and nuts. They join hands for a quick,
silent prayer before digging into their meal with hand made wooden utensils.
ELLESTA
Fitz, darling what’s
with that stern look on your face?
You’re on the verge of running my appetite.
(Fitz doesn’t
respond, but continues to devour his meal.)
Hmm, there’s nothing
that can quill your appetite as usual.
FITZ
As King, I must eat
right so I can sleep right, and wake up in the morning daily to preside and
rule this land accordingly.
ELLESTA
(in a mocking tone)
“rule this land
accordingly.” There’s more to this
monarchy than ruling. I’ve expressed my
concerns regarding our daughter, Ariel, and the Arzink prophecies.
FITZ
And I’ve done what I
can to dispel those concerns. I sent
Ariel to speak with Gleemoura.
ELLESTA
You can’t delegate
every delicate family affair to Gleemoura and depend on her to deal with
them. She’s a medicine woman, not a
therapist.
FITZ
Therapist, village
healer, they’re one in the same as far as I’m concerned.
ELLESTA
Are you concerned at
all about Ariel at least?
FITZ
My daughter, my
precious princess Ariel. She is my heart
and soul, so “concern” is a gross understatement. She is the rightful heir, and maybe someday
she will find a man worth and capable of presiding and ruling over this land
accordingly.
CUT TO
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
Chapter 1 of my romance novel "Fetishes Fantasies Fatalities" is about 70% complete. Check it out.
As a ten year veteran
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Gary Black was accustomed to, but not
desensitized by the amount of death he was exposed to in the field as a special
agent. There he stood on the edge of a
grassy marsh in Middleburg, Florida. The
weather was muggy, but not near the unbearable extremes one can come to
experience at the end of a summer in North Florida. Yet another corpse was sprawled out before
Gary and his partner Rhonda Banks. The
decomposition of the dead body was obviously advanced by the humidity of the
First Coast Region. Rhonda surveyed the
scene with a stern look of concentration on a face filled with such delicate
and attractive features while Gary stood in silence for a moment. He found himself drifting off into a daydream
themed with an all too familiar forbidden fantasy.
Gary worked closely and
in conjunction with Rhonda for the past six years. All the while, he tried his best to conceal
his secret admiration for her. What
started as an innocent crush turned into a lurid obsession and even he was
ashamed to admit that to himself, so he kept these desires for her pent up
inside him as best he could. Everything
about Rhonda was so alluring and attractive to Gary. She was brilliant, beautiful, and something
about her attitude and the way she carried herself was irresistible to
Gary. He wondered if she ever noticed
his longing stares. He had the
impression that Rhonda could be a subtle seductress if she wanted to be. That desire to throw caution to the wind and
conventional wisdom always festered inside Gary. Everyone knows how complicated feelings like
this could complicate work relationships.
Still, sometimes Gary wanted to hold Rhonda. He wanted to caress her. He wanted to sensually kiss her and explore
her whole body with his tongue. He
typically didn’t see Rhonda out of her stark professional attire, but Gary
imagined she would look absolutely stunning in lacey lingerie.
Rhonda was keenly
focused during the initial phases of a murder investigation. Gary was in a tantric trance. Even at this early stage of investigation, Rhonda
could sense that this current case would be of the atypical variety. Rhonda’s sudden and curt remark snapped Gary
out of his mesmeric daze.
“This is a new one for
me, a dead and ball-gagged gimp in a swamp,” Rhonda said.
“Damn, Agent Banks, it
smells like day-old cabbage stewed with rancid road kill out here,” Gary
remarked.
“I
won’t even ask how you know what that smells like, Agent Black,” Rhonda
commented.
Gary
and Rhonda worked closely as partners for six years. Gary was strapping and brawny man with a
thick southern drawl. He was raised in
Moultrie, a small rural town in Georgia.
His humble upbringing on a farm was a stark contrast to the way Rhonda
was raised. She got used to that
ephemeral and transplanting lifestyle that came along with being in a military
family. She couldn’t count how many
times she was uprooted and had to pack up to move when her father was
transferred to another Naval Base. More
times than not, they were coastal cities, so Rhonda grew up loving the beach. Still, the country boy Gary and the beach
girl Rhonda, although an odd pairing, worked well as a cohesive investigational
unit. They got on each other’s nerves
sometimes and clashed on occasion, but they truly trusted and respected one
another.
The
crime scene in Middleburg was cordoned off. It was a muddy and wooded area not far from
the northern flowing St. John’s River south of Jacksonville off US Highway
17. The Clay County Sherriff’s Office,
the local authorities, alerted the FBI.
Gary and Rhonda weren’t too far away in Daytona Beach investigating a
high profile missing person’s case, so they were immediately summoned to the
crime scene. A week prior, Blake Adams, the
eldest son of a prominent United States Congressman named Bill Adams from
Miami, vanished without a trace. Blake
had travelled to Jacksonville from his home in Miami to attend the first road
game of the Miami Dolphins’ 2014 National Football League regular season versus
the perennially lousy Jacksonville Jaguars at Ever Bank Stadium. Blake’s father Bill happened to also be in
town at the time accompanying his wife Linda Adams, a published and renowned
self-help author that had a scheduled speaking arrangement at a women’s
empowerment conference at the Morocco Shrine Auditorium off Jefferson Street in
downtown Jacksonville. Reportedly, Blake
hade made his way to Daytona Beach south of Jacksonville after the football
game to celebrate the Dolphins’ thrilling 26 to 20 overtime victory over the
Jaguars. Bill travelled in a convoy with some of the Dolphins’ players he was
acquainted with. Blake was last seen
leaving an upscale gentlemen’s club called Emperors’ off the strip in Daytona
Beach with an unidentified woman.
Back
in Middleburg, Special Agent Banks and Special Agent Black surveyed the area
with local cops and crime scene technicians.
They examined the dead body which was dressed up in a full-body leather
BDSM gimp suit, complete with mask and ball-gag strapped in his mouth. There wasn’t an apparent cause of death that
they could see. The ankles were bound
with chains, and the wrists were handcuffed behind his back. There was a not lot of blood, and it wasn’t
immediately evident whether or not part of an attack occurred on the scene, or
elsewhere, or if the man was assaulted violently, and dumped severely injured
to expire alone in the swamp.
“Can
somebody please remove that ball-gag from his mouth and take off that mask?”
Rhonda asked.
One
of the CSI’s obliged Rhonda’s request, then Gary said, “Holy honeycombs! That’s our guy. That’s definitely Blake Adams.”
This
is was no longer a missing person’s case for Rhonda and Gary. It was a homicide, and a weird one at
that. The uniqueness of this murder was
evident.
“Who
discovered the body?” Gary asked.
One
of the police officers answered, “A man was walking his dog on a nearby trail
when his dog got loose from the leash and ran into the woods. The man gave chase then stumbled across
this. He phoned us right away.”
“Where
is this man now?” Rhonda asked.
“Right
over there,” the cop pointed.
“Officer,
we are gonna need you to escort that man to the station to get a detailed
statement from him,” Gary said. “Have
your people finish securing the scene and take as many pictures as possible. Collect and document as much trace evidence
as you can. Then, carefully bag up the
body, and take it to the coroner, so they can conduct a detailed medical
examination and autopsy.”
“Officer
Williams,” Rhonda read the name above his badge. “We appreciate the assistance and cooperation
of the Clay County Sheriffs’ Office.
Now, my partner and I must go to Jacksonville to give the victim’s
parents the bad news. Try to keep the
press suppressed, and don’t give any official statements to the media until
tomorrow. We may have to handle that.”
Alerting
the next of kin: this was always a difficult and uncomfortable
undertaking. Bill and Linda Adams were
still checked in at the Hyatt Hotel on Market Street near the St. Johns River
in downtown Jacksonville. Needless to
say, they were absolutely distraught and grief stricken when Special Agent
Black and Special Agent Banks delivered the about their son’s peculiar and
violent death in person. Gary and Rhonda
expressed their sympathies and assured the Adams family that the Federal Bureau
of Investigations would find whoever was responsible for such horrible
atrocities and use all the resources at their disposal to bring the perpetrator
of such an awful and inexplicable crime to justice. After delivering the devastatingly horrible
bad news, Gary and Rhonda stood on the Riverwalk outside the Hyatt. Gary could see the anguish in Rhonda’s face.
He wanted to comfort and console her.
“Ronnie,
we are going to catch this guy,” Gary assured her. “We always do.”
“I
know, Gary,” Rhonda replied.
Then,
Gary made a suggestion, “Let me tell you what I like to do once I get to the
meat and potatoes of a big murder case like this one here.”
Rhonda
asked him, “What’s that, Gary?”
He
explained, “You already know my routine.
It’s kind of a superstition.
After I find a body and have to alert the next of kin, I like to go to a
Burger King drive thru to get a spicy chicken sandwich with tomatoes and a nice
milk shake to wash it down. Tomatoes are
brain food ya know. I vacationed in
Jacksonville with my brother once. I’m
going to take you to that Burger King at the St. John’s Town Center on the
south side of town to have some lunch and milkshake with me, my treat. After that we can go to Massage Soleil at the
Town Center. According to Blake Adam’s
itinerary he got a massage there Sunday morning. We need to question the staff and review
their surveillance footage.”
Rhonda
just nodded. She had learned long ago
not to reject Gary’s insistences. He was
very persistent and persuasive person, and sometimes he knew what was best for
Rhonda. That’s why they worked so well
together. Besides his primal physical
attraction to Rhonda, Gary cared deeply about her physical and mental well
being. He vowed to always have her back
and protect her in the field. He hated
to see her stressed out by all the rigors they encountered with their ever
growing caseloads, and Gary always did his best to do things with Rhonda to help
her decompress.
The
Massage Soleil spa was a great place to decompress and relieve stress. Benjamin Hudson could have definitely used
their services after nerve-racking day he was having. He spent most of the morning arguing with Crystal
who was the mother of his two year old daughter Destiny. Things didn’t work out for Ben and Crystal as
a couple and they had been separated for many months, but shared custody of
their daughter. Ben went to Crystal’s
house to pick up his daughter, but Crystal informed him that their daughter was
spending time with her grandmother for a few days. Ben was upset and this led to a pretty heated
argument. Ben eventually stormed out of Crystal’s
place before things escalated, but he was so distracted that he backed right
into a passing and unsuspecting motorist as he reversed out of Crystal’s
driveway.
“Shit,”
Ben cursed and punched his steering wheel.
Behind
the wheel of the car Ben backed into sat Cynthia Stone. She was struck by Ben, literally and
physically. As Ben stepped out of his
car to assess the damage and check to see if she was okay, Cynthia marveled at
his toned physique and dashing good looks.
Handsome younger men like Ben always peaked her interest. The minor collision was the least of
Cynthia’s concerns. After one look at
Ben, the wheels in her head began to spin.
At her age of 45, the prospect of seducing a handsome and stylish
younger man always aroused Cynthia. Her guess that Ben must be in his mid
twenties was correct. He had celebrated
his 25th birthday only two weeks prior. Cynthia had immediately made up her mind and
was intent on seducing Benjamin no matter what it took. Unaware of this fact, Ben approached
Cynthia’s driver side window and gave it a light rap with his knuckles.
“I’m
so sorry ma’am. I totally spaced out and
wasn’t paying attention. Are you okay?”
Ben asked after Cynthia rolled down her window.
“Oh,
it’s just a minor fender bender. I’m all
right, thank you,” Cynthia said as she stepped out of her car.
“You
shouldn’t thank me. This is completely
my fault. I feel horrible,” Ben said.
“Seriously,
it’s okay. There’s not much damage as
far as I can tell,” Cynthia said.
“Still,
right about now is when we should exchange insurance information or something. Maybe we should call the cops to make an
accident report.” Ben explained. “Lord
knows I can’t really afford a hike in my premium, but I was in the wrong
here. I wanna do right by this whole
unfortunate situation. Hell, the old me
would have just bolted on you honestly, but I’m not like that anymore.”
“Well,
I certainly appreciate your honesty.
Such upstanding character in young men is so rare these days,” Cynthia
said.
“So,
my insurance card is in my glove box. I’m
just gonna grab it real quick,” Ben stated.
“No. Please, don’t bother,” Cynthia insisted. “There’s no need to get insurance companies
or the police involved.”
“Well
I don’t know any other way to resolve this.
I mean, you’re gonna need some bodywork at least, and those type of
repairs aren’t cheap. I’ve got decent
collision coverage,” Ben said.
“Oh,
I’m not too worried about that. I can
send it to an old friend of mine who will fix it right up, no problem. And he’ll give me a good deal.”Cynthia
responded.
“But
it won’t be free, will it?” Ben asked. “I
still feel obliged to make sure you get reimbursed for the costs. And where are my manners? I’ve just crashed into your nice Lexus. You are being so cool about this, and I haven’t
even introduced myself. My name is Ben,
by the way.”
“Oh,
short for Benjamin. I like that name,”
Cynthia admitted to Ben. “Benjamin was
my second ex-husband’s name. My name is
Cynthia Stone.”
“It’s
nice to meet you, Miss Stone,” Ben shook her hand gently.
“The
pleasure is all mine, Benjamin,” Cynthia blushed, “and please call me Cynthia.”
“Okay,
Cynthia. You seem intent on giving me a
pass for smashing your ride, but I wanna take some responsibility in this
matter,” Ben said. “I’d fix it myself,
but I’m just a lowly plumber by trade.
There aren’t any pipes or drains in cars I can fix.”
“Ah,
a plumber how interesting,” Cynthia said.
“Not
as interesting as you think,” Ben said. “I
learned the trade from my father and then took the family business over once he
fell ill a year ago. Cancer, but he’s doing
better now. The plumbing business
though, isn’t as lucrative as I hoped it would be.”
“Nonetheless,
it’s good that you have a trade, and take it from me, running a small business
is all about hills and valleys. Things
will get better for you soon I’m sure,” Cynthia said.
“I
hope so,” Ben said. “You say you run a
small business too?” What is it that you
do?”
“Well,
I own a couple of small novelty shops.
One is in Daytona and the other is in Savanah. I’m thinking about expanding again and
opening a third location in Jacksonville.
I’m actually on my way to check out a commercial lease property that’s
near a place where I like to get a massage when I’m in Jacksonville,” Cynthia
told Ben.
“See
Cynthia, now I feel worse,” Ben said. “You
were on your way to handle some important business until I backed into you.”
“I
told you already it’s no big deal, Benjamin.
I’m fine. My car will be fine,
but if you want to repay me some way for the damage, I may have an idea,”
Cynthia said.
“What
might that be?” Ben questioned.
“You
say you’re a plumber, and I just happen to be having a problem with the some pipe
leakage in the master bathroom at my home in Daytona,” Cynthia explained.
“Ah,
I think I see what you are getting at,” Ben understood. “I can come down to Daytona and make those
repairs for you, and we can call it even.
That sounds like a good idea to me, Cynthia. I can live with that if you can.”
“Most
definitely. Here, Benjamin, take one of
my cards,” Cynthia handed it to Ben. “At
the moment, I must run along so I’m not late for my meeting with that
landlord. Give me a call in a couple of
hours, and we can hash out the details.”
“Cool,”
Ben took Cynthia’s card as he returned to her Lexus and drove off with a
flirtatious wave in parting.
Ben
smiled politely and waved back at Cynthia.
Then he looked down and read her card:
DTRT Novelties
2323 Jordan Dr. Daytona
Beach FL, 32116
(386) 555-0107
Cynthia Stone, Owner
Here's another preview from my spy novel "The Smartest Phone". This project is an old favorite of mine, but it's on the back burner for now. I'm eyeing an early 2017 release for it direct to Kindle.
August 22, 2007-D.J.
Otto and I
sat next to each other in Dr. Mead’s (aka Bruin) class. He handed out syllabi and immediately started
discussing the first book on the list, Don
Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes. The
interested and open discussion lasted the entire class period. Afterwards, Bruin gave quite a quantity of
independent Quixote reading for our
first homework assignment.
”There will
be a quiz first thing Thursday morning,” Bruin warned.
I stayed
behind after all the other students left to discuss my mission with Bruin.
“So how are
things going?” he asked me.
“Okay, I
guess,” I replied. “I plan to put Otto
on the Animal House Party
Regimen. He’ll be so party pooped, he
won’t be able to pass gas or class.”
“Not a bad
idea,” Bruin noted, “but what’s your backup plan?”
“I…uh,” I
trailed off.
“The party plan was my idea,” FLIP
chimed in. “We are still keeping our options open in regards to formulating a
backup plan.”
“Yeah,
that’s right,” I said.
“Well, you
need to call Viper later today to talk to him about it,” Bruin said. “I can’t tell you how to do you job. You are the primary agent on this one. You call the shots, and you need to take
accountability for the success or failure of your mission. I’ll do all I can to help by giving your
class a rigorous course load.”
“It will not be too rigorous for me,”
FLIP gloated.
“I know
that, FLIP. Just make sure you call
Viper later,” Bruin repeated.
Obviously,
my next classes went as smooth as silk thanks to FLIP. I met up with Otto again in the cafeteria for
lunch. We saw Christian standing with a
friend by the desserts making a strawberry ice cream cone.
“That young lady with Christian is Tenisha
Hall,” FLIP spoke to me through my earpiece.
“How do you
know that?” I asked.
“What was
that, Trav?” Otto questioned.
“Oh, I’m on
the phone,” I pointed at my blue tooth headset.
“I was able to hack into the hardrive on
Christian’s phone and access her camera phone pictures,” FLIP revealed.
“Okay, I’ll
talk to you later. Bye,” I pretended to
end my pseudo phone conversation. “Otto,
let’s go see what Christian’s up to.”
“Hey guys!”
Christian always looked and spoke as if she was happy.
“Hello,”
Otto greeted.
“What’s
up?” I asked.
“Not much,”
Christian replied. “I want you guys to
meet my friend Tenisha.”
“Hey, my
name is Otto,” he introduced himself.
“And I’m
Travis,” I gently shook her hand.
“Nice to
meet you,” Tenisha smiled at Otto.
“You guys
got any plans for tonight?” Christian asked.
“Nothing
really,” I shrugged. “Why?”
“Tonight is
college night at Rack Em Up,” Christian said.
“What’s
that?” Otto asked.
“It’s a
pool hall and hooka lounge up the street,” Christian answered.
“It’s usually
packed. There will be drink specials and
a beer pong tournament,” Tenisha added.
“We’ll be
there,” Otto said.
“Yeah, it
sounds like a plan,” I agreed.
Otto and I
sat and ate with Christian and Tenisha.
I finished my meal quickly and excused myself. I phoned Viper on my way back to the dorms.
“Hey, how
are you, young Bat?” Viper asked me.
“I’m fine,”
I told him. “I wish I was on a cruise
like you.”
“It is
beautiful out here, but don’t get it twisted.
I’m on official ZOO business.”
“Damn, when
will I get to handle business like that?”
“Sooner
than you think, Bat. You’ve heard about
all those cruise ship high jackingers that have been seizing ships at sea this
past year, right?”
“Yeah, the
media dubbed them the New Age Pirates.”
“That’s
correct, and they’re still at large.
We’ve been assigned the daunting task stopping them. Right now, I’m undercover as Matt Valentine,
a billionaire casino tycoon.”
“Okay.”
“Oncilla
and Phoenix are
stationed about eight miles away from this cruise ship. I booked this cruise last week and let the
word get out that I’d be packing loads of cash, gold, and diamonds. Two suspicious passengers have been keeping a
close eye on me since I boarded the ship.
I presume they’re scouts for the N. A. Pirates. Now, I anticipate the rest of their crew is
poised and ready to strike in larger numbers than I expected. I need you to join Oncilla and Phoenix so we’ll have a
bit of back. If the New Age Pirates are
as thorough and ruthless as it’s rumored, we’ll need all the extra guns we can
get. We need FLIP here to with his
radars to watch for a scout ship they will likely send to scan the perimeter
and assure the coast is clear for their ambush.
We know they have a few small boats, some jet skiees, and one large ship
in their fleet and at their disposal, so they will likely coordinate their
attack accordingly.”
“What about
my mission here?”
“How are
things coming with Otto by the way?”
“My plan is
to get too caught up with partying, so he’ll fall behind on his class work and
flunk out.”
“And?”
“Bat and I are formulating some
contingency plans as well.”
“Alright. You two won’t be out here at sea long. I’ve got a hunch that these pirates will make
their move soon. The moon is new. Bruin will meet you at 5 AM tomorrow morning
to extradite you via helicopter at the practice football field.”
“I’ll be
ready.”
“Okay. Goodbye for now.”
“Right,
right., later Viper.”
“We’ll see you soon.”
My classes
were finished, so I got on the sticks to play a little bit of Madden 2007 until
Otto got back to the room. We played a
handful of games on our franchise and got high to pass the time until college
night started at Rack ‘Em Up.
“So what do
you think about Tenisha?” Otto asked me.
“She’s
fine, a dime piece in my book,” I was honest.
“See, what did I tell you about fish and bait, O?”
“You were
right, Travis.”
“I know I
was dammit.”
“Do you
think she likes me?”
“Well, she
was giving you the bedroom eyes in the caf.”
“Really,
you think so?”
“I know so,
bro.”
“Whoa! I might stand a chance with her, huh?”
“No doubt.”
Otto and I
finished playing video games. Then we
got fresh and clean to go out. We
arrived at Rack ‘Em up fashionably late in style riding in Otto’s customized
’68 Impala with gold spoke rims. I
admired his taste in cars, and was a little envious that my dad, wherever the
hell he was, didn’t have a bank roll like the Juan Olverado.
The crowd
inside the pool hall was thick. We
enjoyed ourselves. Otto got a chance to
talk to Tenisha and get to know her better.
From where I was watching, I swelled with pride because of the positive
progress he was making. Later, Oto and I
formed a tag team to enter the beer pong tournament. We faced off against a couple of goons in the
final round. The head goon in charge,
Maury Drew, was a complete cheese ball.
I watched Maury hate on Otto from afar all night. He even made a few futile cock-blocking moves
as if no one would notice. Other people
at the pool hall informed me that it was common knowledge that Maury had a
crush on Tenisha since their freshmen year at JU.
Otto and I
played like a well-oiled beer pong machine.
We dismantled and defeated the dorky duo with ease. It was a good thing I could read lips because
Maury whispered a derogatory comment in his partner’s ear when they lost.
“I can’t
believe that silly nigger and his spec buddy beat us. I want you to go and invite them back to our
apartment later to drink and party. I’ll
call Bruce and tell him to brew up some Purple Punch. I’ve got something devious in store for those
punks!”
We accepted
their invitation, and I pretended to be unaware of their true motives. I knew all about Purple Punch. The secret ingredient in this bright-colored
concoction was a potent date rape
drug. I suspected that Maury and his
crew of fools were going to dope us up and try to embarrass us with some kind
of prank. I had a fix for that.
On our way
back to campus, I told Otto to take me by CVS.
Thanks to my advanced pharmaceutical expertise, I knew that vitamin B-6
was a quick antic dote for most date rape drugs. I also picked up a prescription of Oxycotin
thanks to a phony script FLIP faxed to the pharmacy for me. I went back to the care and passed off a
vitamin to Otto as an Altoid.
“Yuck, this
is the nastiest mint I’ve ever tasted, Travis,” Otto said.
“It ain’t
that bad,” I said as I popped one in my mouth.
We parked
in front of Maury’s apartment building.
Otto went up to the second floor to join the party. I stayed in the care to roll a couple of
blunts. The first one was standard
spliff. For the next one, I crushed up
some Oxycotins and dusted it down thoroughly.
I emerged on the scene with a blunt behind each ear. The atmosphere was lively. Maury and his pals were already feeding Otto
shots of Purple Punch. An evil grin
stretched across my face.
“I brought
you a little something to show my gratitude for your hospitality,” I offered
Maury the dirty contaminated blunt.
“You’re too
kind,” he snatched it out of my hand.
After an
hour or so, Otto and I had single handedly downed the whole bowl of Purple
Punch. We were drunk, but unaltered by
the added date rape narcotics. Maury
looked baffled. He and his friend Black
retreated to the rear room. They locked
themselves inside. The feint smell of
cannabis in the air told me they had fired up my gift of ganja. Otto and I had already taken care of our
blunt earlier on the balcony. At that
moment, we were lounging on a couch with Christian, her boyfriend Eddie, and
Tenisha.
“So, do you
have a girlfriend, Otto?” Tenisha asked.
“Uh, no,”
Otto answered.
“Why not?”
she questioned.
“Well,”
Otto hesitated.
Christian
shot me a look that said, “They need a private moment.”
Eddie,
Christian, and I stepped out onto the stairwell. Eddie offered me a Marlboro Red. I accepted.
“Those
things are bad for you,” Christian cringed.
“I
know. I need to quit,” I said.
“I’ve never
been a quitter,” Eddie laughed.
“Whatever,
Eddie,” Christian said. “So, Travis, I
think Tenisha really likes your roommate.”
“Otto’s in
to here, too,” I admitted.
“They’d
make such a cute couple,” Christian said.
“Yeah,” I
agreed.
I left
Christian and Eddie alone in the stairwell.
Maury’s rear apartment window faced a small wooded area on campus. I shimmied up a tree and made a daring leap
from a sturdy branch onto the ledge of their balcony. I braced myself on the rail and removed my
belt. I fastened the end to one of the
loops on my pants and tied the other to the rail. The belt was my support line while I leaned
over to pry open Maury’s window. After I
unhooked the belt and pulled myself inside, I saw Blake and Maury passed out
cold on the floor.
“It worked
like a charm,” I smiled. “I’ll show
these bitches not to fuck with me and Otto.”
First, I
stripped Maury and Black down to their underwear. Next, I covered them from head to toe with
baby powder. Then, I set them on the bed
in a funny, provocative, and sexually precarious 69 position. Finally, I used FLIP’s camera to snap
pictures of the perverted pair and instructed FLIP to send copies to every
single student and staff member at JU through their school e-mail addresses.
“You are one demented individual,”
FLIP commented.
“I know,
but these goons deserve this,” I stated.
I crept
back out the window and lowered myself to the ground off the balcony. I’d had enough partying and troublemaking for
one night, so I went back to my dorm to play video games.
Sunday, February 28, 2016
There's still a lot of work to be done to extensively rewrite The ZOO and turn it into The Smartest Phone. I've got a lot of NSA research to do and tweak some of the characters and maybe change the POV to rework the plot. Still feel free to enjoy this rough draft of my spy novel.
Charles
Scott was my roommate at Wabash College in Illinois . We were the best of pals. After graduation in 1991, he enlisted in the
Air Force and intended to pursue a career with the FBI, and I followed my dream
to be a CIA agent. We kept in touch over
the years, and I even spent a few holidays with Charles and his family. He was a typical family man, a loving wife
and young daughter. Charles and Tracey
Scott wed back in 1992. I was the best
man. His daughter, Brenda, recently
celebrated her eleventh birthday.
During his
downtime, Charles resided with his wife and kid in his hometown, Danvers , Massachusetts . He always spoke highly of the small New England town when we were in college. I had a chance to enjoy the Danvers experience first hand a few times
since 1990. Charles always took me to
his watering hole, Ducky’s Pub.
It was NFL
playoff season. I thought I could find
Charles at Ducky’s watching his beloved New England Patriots on one of the flat
screen televisions. I was correct. He was at the bar drinking a bottle of
Heineken. I sat next to him and ordered
a Grey Goose vodka and Red Bull cocktail.
Charles did a double take when he noticed me.
“Holy
hell! Victor, is that you?” Charles
spoke with a heavy New England accent.
I nodded
and signaled to a booth where we could sit and have more privacy. When we sat down, I said, “Let me guess, you
thought I was dead, right?”
“Fuckin’
eh. We at the FBI even investigated that
fire you supposedly died in, but we did not discover any foul play. What’s the deal? Did the CIA fake your death for a special
mission or something? We do that at the
Bureau sometimes.”
“Not
quite. They actually sent an agent to
eliminate me.”
“What the
hell did you do to deserve that?”
“I didn’t
do anything. My boss’ wife came on to
me. I couldn’t help myself, Chuck.”
“Well, you
did help yourself, just like you helped yourself to our dean’s fiancé way back
when we were in school. You almost got
expelled.”
“These
dashing good looks are a curse.”
“So, what
have you been up to lately?”
“Jack
shit. I’ve been trying to keep a low key
and be discrete. I don’t want Paul to
find out I’m still breathing.”
“I
understand, but what brings you to my neck of the woods?”
“This kid
named Dewaun from Okeechobee I saw on MTV said something that blew my
mind. He gave me an idea.”
“Go on.”
“With you
help, we can start a private spy firm.”
“What?”
“Like
private eyes, man. A lot of agencies have
sanctions which don’t allow them to carry out certain missions. I know that the untouchable missions in the
CIA are dubbed black missions.”
“At the
FBI, we put cases lake that in our Z-Files.”
“Exactly,
and I’m sure Interpol, ISR, and the UN are the same. Imagine if we started a private firm that
they could contract to handle their dirty work.
We’d be soldiers of fortune and offer assistance to the highest bidders
when a plain old private eye won’t do.”
“I don’t
know, Victor.”
“What do
you mean, Chuck? We’ve got the knowledge
and expertise. We can find people to
recruit and train as well.”
“Maybe, but
this reminds me a lot of the ill-fated S.M.U.R.F.S. and the Grey Rangers’
fiasco.”
“Yeah, but
those guys were amateurs and poorly trained militias. We won’t be insane vigilantes, Chuck.”
“How do you
plan on competing with high-profile private investigators and agencies with
almost limitless resources. You’ll need
an edge.”
“I knew
you’d say that. A few days after I faked
my death in Japan ,
I was able to gain access to some privileged information from Imagine
Enterprises. Have you ever heard of
biological artificial intelligence?”
“Of
course. Who could forget the story of
ol’ Dr. Monkey’s Brain?”
“Right, Dr.
Malcolm Brain was one of the pioneers of biological artificial intelligence, a
real genius. Still, people laughed at
him when he said it might be possible to tap into unused potential energy of
the brain. He thought his concept could
harness brain impulses of paraplegics to power robotic prosthetics.”
“I
remember. That was back in 1995. People thought he was a mad scientist who
wanted to build cyborgs. The media
slaughtered him after a fire destroyed his lab in ’97. He kept saying, ‘The monkey’s brain did it’.”
“No one
believed him, and biological A.I. suffered serious setbacks, especially when
the phenom of the World Wide Web became mainstream at the turn of the
century. All the computer programmers
capable of designing a brain powered computer chip lost interest in Brain’s
research and shifted their focus to cash in on the internet boom.”
“Don’t
long-story this shit, Victor. I’m
missing half the fucking fourth quarter already.”
“Oh, excuse me, Chuck. I’m sorry, Chuck. I didn’t mean to babble on, Chuck. I forgot about your precious Pats,
Chuck. It’s the fucking fourth quarter,
Chuck.” My mock New England accent was
impressive.
“You’re a
fuckin’ asshole sometimes, Vick,” Chuck said and pretended he was more pissed
of than he actually was.
Charles
knew I was just fucking with him. We
stood up and stepped back to the bar where we could see his precious New
England Patriots on the big screen. We
ordered a pitcher of brew and watched the rest of the game. The home team was victorious, so that put
Charles in a good mood. We ordered
another pitcher and returned to your booth.
“How ‘bout
those Pats!” Charles beamed as we settled back into our seats.
“Yeah, the
pulled it out. Big whoop,” I joked. “Back to the story. Imagine Enterprises is trying to use Brain’s
technology in a cellular phone.”
“Like Rosie
Jetson, robot phone? Damn them.”
“More like
a super computer in a cell phone with A.I. powered by a human brain.”
“That
sounds like some Frankenstein shit, Victor.”
“Yeah, I
thought the same thing at first too.
It’s not a dead human’s brain though.
It’s got something to do with a computer chip implanted in the brain
that is powered by impulses, or something like that.”
“That’s
some heavy stuff.”
“The techs
at I.E. have been using Brain’s research to develop their first living
prototype, a cell phone with A.I. and capabilities far beyond any super
computer on Earth, The First Living Imagine Prototype. The project has stalled because Brain never
completed his research.”
“I know all
about F.L.I.P., Victor. I see where you’re
going with this, and I don’t like it.”
“Crazy ol’
Malcolm ‘Monkey’s’ Brain, I should I say crazy ol’ Harold Butts.”
“Ha ha ha,”
Charles laughed. “Harry Monkey’s Butts. Ha, he begged us a thousand times to change
his witness protection alias. The prick
even threatened to us for deformation until we reminded him that we were
responsible for protecting his sorry ass.”
“Even for a
snitch, he’s one dastardly bastard. I’ve
heard he’s a high-maintenance head case.
I don’t know how you guys put up with him.”
“Do you
think he has any clue of what the Japs are doing with his research?”
“You guys
made Malcolm Brain vanish off the face of the Earth after his eye witness
testimony sent Benny Banks’ baby boy Teddy up the river in ’98.”
“The wrong
place at the proverbially wrong time type of scenario.”
“Exactly,
now Imagine Enterprises is on the cusp of developing a new ground breaking type
of A.I. with Brain’s research, and he won’t get any of the credit.”
“That kind
of shit would devastate him if he ever found out, Victor.”
“Which is
why it’ll be so damn fun to burst his bubble.”
“Oh, hell
no. No, no, no! I know what you’re thinking, and it’s a
horrible idea.”
“You do get
my logic though, right Chuck?”
“No shit I
get your logic. I always get your
twisted ass logic. It’s just my
responsibility as the reasonable one to articulate the risks and such in all
your hair-brained schemes, Victor.”
“It’s more
like a crazy Monkey Brain scheme.”
“Very
funny. Did you stay up all night
thinking up that one?”
“Not
exactly, but I know you’re intrigued by all this. The F.L.I.P. will give us the edge we need.”
“Let’s
assume this is crazy enough to work.
Let’s assume putting the squeeze on Harry Butts, while he’s in federal
witness protection mind you, is a good idea.
What makes you think he’ll go along with this crazy shit.”
“Here’s the
simple answer, money.”
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Top secret and unauthorized sneak peek of Worth The Fight
Contractually, I'm not supposed to share this for free online, but I've always been a literary rebel. If you like what you see below and want to read more, check out www.channillo.com Serial Fiction can be fun. Subscribe to keep up with my MMA Web Series Thriller "Worth The Fight" by Patrick D. Peay. It is available on the site under the New and Notable tab. Thank you for your support. #indieauthors #writerslife
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Prolouge
Terrance
Q. Hyatt Federal Penitentiary in Northern California was the closest thing to
hell on earth for the 1500 inmates it housed.
T-Hy, as it was commonly known, was an infamous and dangerous maximum
security prison for the most hardened of criminals. The facility sat on 38 acres of land in the
middle of a redwood forest. It was
encased by a daunting 12-foot electrified fence topped by razor wire as well as
in impenetrable outlying 20-foot brick wall.
Prison guards escorted by trained and vicious German shepherds patrolled
T-Hy’s perimeter. An array of motion
detectors and cameras kept a watchful eye on all inmates, and remote-controlled
steel doors kept them confined. There
was no escaping T-Hy. As a prisoner at
T-Hy, if the confinement and ever hostile environment didn’t drive you mad, the
lack of central heat and air in most of the facilities could snap even the most
iron-clad psychos.
Abdullah
found solace in the Quran. The holy text
kept him sane. He was serving a life
sentence for a slew of charges including drug trafficking, extortion, and
capital murder. The year was 2013. Abdullah arrived at T-Hy in 2000 when he was
21 years old. On this particular day, Abdullah
sat alone in his cell reading scriptures.
Over the past 13 days, he got to enjoy a bit of extra alone time. Abdullah was assigned a new cell mate named
Trey Zack Li two weeks ago. Trey was the
target of endless and aggressive ridicule from the get-go. This problem was compounded by the fact he
gained his fame as a fighter. Trey Zack
Li was not just a fighter, but the most renowned martial artist of his
generation. There were plenty of egomaniacal
psychopaths in prison with nothing to lose that yearned to prove their toughness
by squaring off against someone who had to register his hands and feet as lethal
weapons every year like Trey.
Trey‘s first
physical confrontation occurred during his second day of incarceration at
T-Hy. The other inmates had been
clamoring about Trey Zack Li upon his arrival.
They dubbed him Mr. Mixed Martial because Trey had a prolific career as
a big ticket professional mixed martial artist.
However, the inmates made it clear that Trey’s prowess in the caged ring
as a prizefighter wouldn’t ensure his survival in the unforgiving and
unrelenting pen. Basically, Trey had a
huge target on his back, but he was used to that. The first bold prison contender to confront
Trey was Robert “Blobby” Jones, a 6’2 ” 271 pound monster of a man whose
aggression was fueled by his insatiable appetite and greed. Blobby accosted Trey in the mess hall after
lunch.
“Mr.
Mixed Martial, you owe me a tray a day or,” Blobby began to say.
“Or
what?” Trey quickly retorted.
“Or
you’re going to be in a world of p….gaaaaah!”
Blobby
violently gagged mid-sentence because Trey caught him with a swift crane punch
to the Adam’s apple followed by a thrusting right cross to the chest that he
put his hips into. The bruising blow
took Blobby’s breath away, made his heart skip a couple of beats, and broke his
sternum. Blobby collapsed in a heap on
the concreted floor. Trey mounted Blobby
in a ground-and-pound position that was all-too-familiar to him. Then Trey raised his left arm to deliver a
hammer punch, but a corrections officer named Griggs appeared and caught his
arm to mercifully prevent further damage similar to the way a referee would
intervene in the caged ring after a knockout during an MMA bout.
“God
dammit, Li. He’s had enough!” Griggs
cursed. He pulled Trey off Blobby and
said, “We were hoping you wouldn’t cause problems like this. You’re going straight to the hole, Karate
Man.”
So
that is what warranted Trey’s first 14-day stay in solitary confinement. Trey was whisked away to a 12 x 12 ft concrete
box in the basement of T-Hy on a long corridor that housed a dozen identical
cells. Trey was only permitted to leave
his cell to shower or phone his attorney, 23 hour lockdown. The monotony of solitary didn’t get to Trey
at first. A disciplined workout regimen
and meditation helped pass the time.
After the first six days, Trey decided to phone his attorney. Trey’s attorney was Chauncey Levin, an old
friend who was his roommate in college.
“Hello,”
Chauncey answered the phone.
“It’s
me, Zack” Trey said.
“I
know it’s you, Zack. The first hint was,
‘You have a collect call from a Federal Correctional Facility from Trey Li’,” Chauncey joked.
“That’s
funny,” Trey laughed at how Chauncey mimicked his voice. “I’m guessing you’ve heard about my little
spat here.”
“Spat? Is that what you call it? You damn near put that guy in cardiac arrest
and caught another serious charge. I’m
guessing you were trying to send a message.”
“Exactly.”
“Well,
how are things going besides that?”
“They
got me down here in the hole. I been
thinking about my daughter like crazy.
How is Faith?”
“She
misses you a lot, Zack, but she’s fine, a budding and bubbly four year old.”
“What
about Madison?”
“She’s
still a bitch.”
“Hey,
that’s still my wife, for now.”
“You
know I never liked that slut. She called
me to inform me that I should be receiving those divorce documents soon.”
“Yeah,
our relationship was doomed from the start.”
“You’ll
be better off without her. I’m filing
your appeal. I’ll do my best to get you
out of there ASAP.”
“Do
what you can. Keep me posted. My times about up on the phone. I’ll talk to you soon.”
“Okay,
Zack. Keep your head up. Bye, love ya bro.”
“I
love you too, Chance. Goodbye.”
Time
in solitary confinement lulled by for Trey.
Eventually, his time in the hole was up.
A guard came to release Trey.
Griggs told Trey that the warden wanted to see him, so Trey was escorted
to the warden’s office. He sat across
the desk from Dr. Nelson Norris. Dr.
Norris earned his doctorate in criminal psychology and was a widely respected
warden who was known for his unconventional methods.
“Good
afternoon, Mr. Li. Welcome,” Dr. Norris
greeted.
“Dr.
Norris,” Trey nodded.
“After
two weeks, I generally meet with new inmates to discuss how they are coping
with and adjusting to prison life.
However, it seems like a run-in with Big Robert Jones landed you in iso
for your first two weeks here at T-Hy.”
Trey
just grinned and shrugged his shoulders.
Then he said, “That run-in you speak of was fairly anti-climactic.”
“Regardless,
reports say you were the primary aggressor and instigator.”
“I
felt like I was provoked.”
“This
is prison, Mr. Li. Every gesture and
every word uttered is a provocation. Big
Blobby has quite a reputation on your cell block. He’s put his fair share of people in the
infirmary. It’s nice to see him get a
dose of his own medicine.
“I
only did it to prevent a problematic pattern from developing.”
“I’ve
been running this prison for a long time and studying criminal minds even
longer. I understand, Mr. Li. You are not the first professional fighter or
boxer to reside in T-Hy.”
Another
sly smirk ran across Trey’s face. This
time he simply smiled and nodded.
Dr.
Norris continued, “The inmates in here can be savages. Not only are you fresh meat, but you’re a
sultry piece of meat because of your reputation.”
“That’s
irrelevant. That’s not my fault,” Trey
stated.
“I
didn’t say it was. Nonetheless, my
responsibilities as warden entail providing a safe and structured environment
to rehabilitate hardened criminals into functional and productive members of
society.”
“I
know what a warden does, Dr. Norris.”
“You
must not consider yourself a hardened criminal.
Judging by your dossier, you’re definitely not a career criminal, but
you have this one serious man slaughter charge.
Still I can’t have you going Kung Fu on everybody that looks at you
funny.”
“I’m
willing to deal with the consequences of my actions, Dr. Norris.”
“I
can respect that, but I cannot keep you in solitary confinement for fifteen
years. Like most of America, I followed
your trial very closes because of your celebrity. In the interest of objectivity, I won’t
reveal whether or not I agreed with the verdict. When you were sentenced though, I was hoping
they would send you to my facility to serve your time, Mr. Li.”
“Why’s
that?”
“I’m
in the midst of developing a special and innovative work-release program that
would be perfect for you. I’ll go into
more depth about it with you at a later date.
There are still some details I have to hash out with my superiors.”
“Hmmm. Work release?
$1.10 an hour? Even after paying
all my legal bills and with my soon-to-be ex-wife’s spending habits, I haven’t
blown my whole fortune. I’d only
consider something like that if I could get time off my sentence,” Trey said.
“Of
course. That’s about all I have to
discuss with you for now. Try to stay
out of trouble.” Dr. Norris pressed the button for the intercom on his desk to
beacon the guard waiting outside and said, “Griggs you may take Mr. Li to his
cell.”
In
mere moments, Griggs had taken Trey to his cell block. Griggs called out a number which was followed
by a loud buzzing sound that triggered the automatic mechanism to unlock and
open the cell door. Abdullah was inside
sitting in his bed on the bottom bunk reading the Quran. He looked up briefly when Trey entered. This was nothing like two chummy college
roommates reuniting after spring break.
The two simply exchanged cordial nods before Abdullah refocused his
attention to the holy text.
Trey
took a seat in one of the cold metallic stools that sat across from one another
near a small table that was affixed to the cell wall. His personal affects were still sitting on
his side of the table where he placed them two weeks prior: a composition book,
bible, two pencils, a toothbrush, and a comb.
There were also four pieces of mail addressed to Trey Li that must have
arrived while he was in solitary confinement.
The first letter was from Kelly Lynch, a deranged groupie that stalked
Trey since 2001.
Hello my love. I want you to know that your incarceration
will not abate the feelings I have for you in my heart. I want to see you, so please make sure you
put my name on your visitation list. I
miss you so much. I often reminisce
about all the moments we shared.
Memories of those moments are what I think of when I lay in bed
pleasuring myself. In fact I’m
pleasuring myself as I write this letter.
Oh! Oh! Trey! Oh! I’m cumming!
Oooohhh! I will love you until the end
of time. Your’s forever, Kelly Lynch-Li
The
second letter was from Vinata Concord, Trey’s best friend and confidant. Vinata met Trey in 1985 when they were in
kindergarten at Bradley Elementary School in Trey’s hometown, Ponte Vedra
Beach, Florida. When they were in high
school, they both earned their lettermen as four year members of the varsity
wrestling team and Nease High School.
Surfing was another common hobby they shared. They caught countless waves together. Besides dating for a couple years in high
school their relationship remained mostly plutonic except for one night when
they hooked up in college at UCLA. They cared deeply for one another. Vinata’s
letter brought a smile to Trey’s face.
Zack, you can rest assured that this will be
the first of many letters I send you. I
will always be here for you and in your corner through thick and thin. I’ll come see you as soon as I can. You don’t deserve to be in there. I’ve started collecting signatures for a
petition that should help with your appeal according to Chauncey. Things aren’t the same without you
around. You’ve been missing some big
swells. The waves have been awesome
lately. I also want to thank you for
giving me the opportunity to oversee your companies while you are away. I never thought I was CEO material. Your record label is doing well. The Blazers will be going on a big national
tour next year, and I’m close to sealing the deal on a couple of big contracts
for the clothing line. Make sure you
take care in there. I’ll write you again
soon. Love, Vinata.
The
third letter was from Pedro Sanchez, commonly known as El Ladrillo (The Brick).
Pedro was the ruthless leader of a Mexican drug cartel. Pedro followed Trey’s career for many, many
years. He was really impressed when Trey
defeated Orlando Fernando, the pride of Mexico, in Trey’s first championship
pay-per-view fight. He also had to
respect the bravery of a man with morals who could turn down the enormous bribe
Pedro offered him to throw the fight.
Pedro was a bit of a bookworm who racked up several online degrees under
the guise of his aliases. He snorted and
smuggled copious amounts of cocaine, but he was a lonely and reclusive man for
obvious reasons. Pedro and Trey
eventually became friends through some extenuating circumstance.
Greetings, amigo. I was most disheartened to learn about the
unfortunate events that landed you in prison.
I recently received news from my cohorts behind bars about an
altercation you had in there. You need
not worry about anything like that in the future. Anyone who has a problem with Trey Zack Li
has a problem with El Ladrillo, and anyone with a problem with El Ladrillo as a
problem with LLH. I’ll make sure they
watch your back. If there’s anything you
need while you are locked down, let me know.
Best wishes, Dro.
The
last letter was from the Wrigley Publishing Company. It was concise and to the point. Wrigley wanted the rights to Trey’s life
story. They urged him to pen his memoirs
and promised him a hefty advance with respectably royalties for a complete
autobiographical manuscript. This offer
intrigued Trey. During his last session
of therapy before he reported to prison, his doctor told him that writing and
journaling would help him cope with being incarcerated. Trey decided to get started right away. He grabbed a pencil and opened his
composition book…
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