Aloha,
A few weeks ago, Richard P. Hughes from Writing and Living wrote to ask if I was interested in guest posting about where I live.
It's for his new series 'Why I Like Where I
Live' and I follow a great interview by Tanya Reimer, who lives "on the prairies" in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Tanya also interviewed Richard, who hails from Florida.
So, if you're in the mood of discovering a little more about some Blogger buddies who live in three very different places, thank Richard (who writes under the pen name R. Patrick Hughes:)
###
In other fun news...
This little fellow, known by his Blogger nickname of No. 1 Son (I'm thinking of his teenage years) has grown from this:
To this in the last seven years...
Happy Birthday, Son!!
Monday, July 21, 2014
Guest Posts,
Richard P. Hughes
18
comments
Want more info about Hawaii? (& Happy Birthday, Son!
Friday, July 18, 2014
Book Launch,
Elizabeth Seckman
16
comments
"Bella's Point" by Liz Seckman Out Now! Blog Challenge!
Aloha,
I'm helping my friend, and e-sibling, Elizabeth Seckman, to celebrate the release of her new book, Bella's Point.
Liz is hosting a blog hop/challenge and all we, the entrants, have to do to participate (and possibly win stuff) is simply follow the numbered rules:
I call over a wandering uni.
“Where’s the husband? Bring him in here. I’ve a question.
###
I'm helping my friend, and e-sibling, Elizabeth Seckman, to celebrate the release of her new book, Bella's Point.
Liz is hosting a blog hop/challenge and all we, the entrants, have to do to participate (and possibly win stuff) is simply follow the numbered rules:
- Write something readers want to read. No word limit, no guidelines.Your only prompt is: The year was 1865.... (feel free to ignore the prompt, creative genius never bound by rules or prompts)
While I got a little stuck on Rule #1, I did finish, so here's my entrée:
The phone rings and I look at the
empty cradle.
“Jimmy. Over there,” shouts my
partner, Det. Sgt. John Smyth.
“Where?”
My eyes search the overflowing desks
and empty chairs of our squad room.
By the vending machine.”
I tip a hand to Smitty and grab the
cordless device from the coffee-stained table.
A blocked number - and it was 4:15 in
the morning. We’d caught a case.
“Honolulu Homicide. Gregson.”
“Dispatch. Uniforms request
assistance at a site of suspicious death. Female.”
I write the address down and nod
at my partner, who already has his jacket and smile on.
“Where we goin’?”
“Hawaii Kai.”
“Rich husband do his wife in again?”
“Dunno, Smitty. You wanna drive?”
“I’ll drive. Keeps my hands busy.”
“The patch not working then,” I ask,
as we hit the H1 freeway, which at this early time was empty. One of these
days, I’m going to take a picture. No one on the day shift believes me. Seventeen minutes later, I radioed
Dispatch. We were on scene.
As senior detective, Smitty takes
the lead, and as we walk to the front door, I wonder at the morbid neighbors
who wait behind the yellow tape, their bathrobe-covered arms wrapped around
themselves in fear and wanting. Why do they bother?
I’ve never answered that one. I nod
at Dave Grimes, the Medical Examiner, who asks if Mike Trout will finally be
the American League MVP. He’s a Dodgers fan, I’m an Angels’ fan and we both
work 2,500 miles from the nearest stadium. Misery loves company.
A uni directs me to an open floor
plan living room. Fake fireplace and granite mantelpiece
filled with odd-shaped family filled frames and a stuffed white polar bear in
the middle.
A 72-inch TV flat against the wall…
small cabinets below, a DVD player flashing the time. “16:53” It was three
minutes slow. Leather couches and recliners opposite the TV, big bay windows
behind… and I’m sure there’s a well-coiffed backyard with obligatory swimming
pool—even though we’re minutes from the ocean.
Except for a plastic wrapper and an
empty CD cover under the Samsung, the floor is tidy, no old nuts, crackers,
beer bottles, all clean—well, except for the dead body whose blood stains the
white carpet to a deep brown shade. A murder cop for six years, I’ve
learned never to assume anything at the crime scene, but something’s off here.
My partner sees the quizzical look.
“Yeah, my Smitty senses are
tingling. Let’s see. The deceased is Bella Hughes. Husband is,” Smitty checks
his notes and flips a page. “Bill. He called it in, saying the landscaper was
the one who found her. Why should the landscaper be in the house?”
Smitty points at the body sprawled
out in the living room. A coffee table, lamp and bookshelves bear witness to
the struggle that took a life.
“How’s he look for it?”
“The guy, a Phil Michel, yeah he
looks good. Long rap sheet. A history of violence. We’re holding him downtown
on an unpaid parking ticket, but he’s already lawyered up. We need to charge
him before he’s cut loose, but we haven’t found anything that sticks. Michel says
he only walked in because the front door was open.”
I lift one end of the white sheet to
gauge how Bella fell. On her stomach, right hand sticking out in front of her, like
Superwoman in flight. The sheet billows down and I push
off the white carpet with my knuckles, but as I stand, I know what’s bothering
me. The sheet is stretched too long. Bella’s bare feet lay uncovered. Lifting the sheet again, I look at
her right hand.
“Hey Grimsey, anyone moved the body?”
He shakes his head.
“Smitty.”
“What dya got, Jimmy?”
“Look at her right hand.”
Looks fine to me. She’s still got
her wedding ring on, and there doesn’t seem to be any cuts or abrasions.”
“Why is she pointing?”
The right index finger of Bella's Point
“It’s the way she fell?”
“No, look. She tried to crawl to…
where? The TV. The drawers?”
I look back from where Bella's Point.
A small smudge of black catches my eye.
“Yo, Grimesy, c’mere for a second.
Snap pictures of her hand. I want to open her palm. Something’s there.”
Grimesy takes his shots, and as I
gently pry open the fingers, Bella gives up her last secrets.
Scrawled on her hand in black
eyeliner is: “1865,” while a DVD remote control lays by her left shoulder.
1865 on her palm—and her finger
points at the TV.
Empty plastic wrap and DVD case…
I look and sure enough, there’s a DVD
loaded in the machine.
Why a remote under her body? I can
see two other black controllers sticking from a coffee table caddy.
Why?
“Smitty. Look where Bella's Point…”
“I don’t see it, Jimmy - and Jimmy, why do you keep saying 'Bella's Point.' Surely it's where 'Bella points.'"
I look around. No one's watching.
I throw Smitty against a wall.
I throw Smitty against a wall.
"Look, we're here to help a friend. Just be glad the book's not called 'Smitty's Point.' Now, stop asking grammar questions and let's solve this crime in the next 283 words."
I call over a wandering uni.
“Where’s the husband? Bring him in here. I’ve a question.
Bill Hughes walks in. Strong and
tall on a normal day, he looks weak and small. My gut: it’s not him, but I need
to find out fast.
“Mr. Hughes, were you or Mrs. Hughes
ever in the military, or did either of you grow up in Europe?”
“Not military, but Bella and her
sister, Mirjam, grew up in Belgium. Why?”
1865? Why did Bella write 1865?
I glance around the room, and my
eyes fall on the DVD player. It blinks 17:18.
1865? 18:65…? Doesn’t make sense…
18:65 would be 19:05—or 7:05.
7:05 p.m.
I look again. Bella’s Point.
The DVD plastic. An empty cover…
Hidden remote control…
“Mr. Hughes wait! You’ve no kids.” I
point to the mantelpiece. “There’s none in any of these pictures. Why do you
have a kids’ polar bear then?”
Smitty pulls his walkie talkie from
his belt.
“Jimmy…?”
“Stop Michel. Stop him from leaving.
Now.”
“On it. Dispatch…”
I turn to Bill Hughes.
“It’s a camera. One of those baby
monitor things. We bought it six months ago. Bella was worried about break-ins—especially
when we’re out of town.”
“It’s on a sensor, right?”
“Yes.”
“Smitty… do you have him?”
“Hang on Jimmy. Dispatch, this is
important… C’mon, I need confirmation…”
I zoned Smitty out, switch the TV
on, and click the DVD feed. Pressing play with the manual button
on the screen, the time stamp said it was 18:54. A shadow moves across the
Hughes’s empty room. I fast-forwarded until 7:00 and
Bella walks into the room.
“Smitty…?”
He shushed me with a hand and then
lets out a big, “Yes.”
“We got him Jimmy. For two more
hours.”
“Hughes?” I shake my head to one
side.
Smitty nods, escorts Mr. Hughes from
the room, and is soon back.
I press play and we watch as Bella
looks around the room. She’s indecisive. The room was too clean. There’s no
weapon—except there was, wasn’t there.
As expected, the killer showed up at exactly 7:05…and now I knew Paul Michel would pay for his crime—thanks to the final, brave actions of a smart woman who fought for justice until her last breath.
As expected, the killer showed up at exactly 7:05…and now I knew Paul Michel would pay for his crime—thanks to the final, brave actions of a smart woman who fought for justice until her last breath.
I will never forget Bella’s Point.
###
Contest link:
Want to join the challenge to win cash, prizes, and bragging rights? Sign up here:
The Blurb:
Isabella Troy Stanley is a divorced, slave freeing pariah surviving in the shattered post Civil War south the only way a fallen debutante knows how.
She heads to a Yankee prison and buys herself a husband.
Jack Byron is the former Troy plantation stable boy and object of young Bella's affection. He rejected her then, and he's still not sold on the idea of marrying her now.
It’s complicated.
Though to Bella, it’s simple: make Jack love her, marry her, and live happily ever after. The plan seems to work...at least until her secret is revealed.
Elizabeth is a wife, a mom, and a writer. She has four wonderful boys, one dusty house, and three published books to her credit. Feel free to check them out and buy them HERE! Erm, the books, not the kids or the house...though all things in life are negotiable ;)
Cover art by Sprinkles on Top Studios.
Friday, July 4, 2014
God Bless the USA.
10
comments
Dear America, happy birthday! Here's an idea - you're it :)
Aloha,
Eleven years ago - today - I woke up as an American citizen for the first time.
I was born in the land of the Leprechauns, so when I opened my front door and saw this last June, I laughed.
I knew it. There is treasure at the end of the rainbow :)
And that treasure is America.
In 2004, Bono, he of the Irish group, U2, gave the Commencement Address at the University of Pennsylvania and while there, he said something that I think is wonderful.
America isn't just a country - it's an idea.
Some the highlights of his speech include:
Happy Fourth of July to all who celebrate America's birthday, and if you live over the pond - or elsewhere - have a great Thursday, too :)
Eleven years ago - today - I woke up as an American citizen for the first time.
I was born in the land of the Leprechauns, so when I opened my front door and saw this last June, I laughed.
I knew it. There is treasure at the end of the rainbow :)
And that treasure is America.
In 2004, Bono, he of the Irish group, U2, gave the Commencement Address at the University of Pennsylvania and while there, he said something that I think is wonderful.
America isn't just a country - it's an idea.
Some the highlights of his speech include:
·
It's
not everywhere in fashion these days, Americanism. Not very big in Europe,
truth be told. No less on Ivy League college campuses. But it all depends on
your definition of Americanism.
·
Me,
I'm in love with this country called America. I'm a huge fan of America, I'm
one of those annoying fans, you know the ones that read the CD notes and follow
you into bathrooms and ask you all kinds of annoying questions about why you
didn't live up to that...
·
I'm
that kind of fan. I read the Declaration of Independence and I've read the
Constitution of the United States, and they are some liner notes, dude. As I
said yesterday I made my pilgrimage to Independence Hall, and I love America
because America is not just a country, it's an idea.
·
America
is an idea, but it's an idea that brings with it some baggage, like power
brings responsibility. It's an idea that brings with it equality, but equality
even though it's the highest calling, is the hardest to reach. The idea that
anything is possible, that's one of the reasons why I'm a fan of America. It's
like hey, look there's the moon up there, lets take a walk on it, bring back a
piece of it. That's the kind of America that I'm a fan of.
(Me, too:)Happy Fourth of July to all who celebrate America's birthday, and if you live over the pond - or elsewhere - have a great Thursday, too :)
Aloha,
As always, a huge thanks to Alex J. Cavanaugh for founding the Insecure Writers Support Group (IWSG).
The only thing bothering me this month (okay, there are many things on my insecure mind, but these posts are supposed to be 300 words or less!) is my personal decision to take down all my blog awards.
When I joined Blogger in September 2011, they seemed to be all the rage (remember the "Sunshine" or "Great Commenter" awards :) but for whatever reason (natural ebb and flow?) they seem to have mostly disappeared - at least from what I've seen (but then again, I ain't no proficient blogger these days, so what's do I know!)
I remain, however, a curious little guy: Have you kept or deleted yours?
As always, a huge thanks to Alex J. Cavanaugh for founding the Insecure Writers Support Group (IWSG).
The only thing bothering me this month (okay, there are many things on my insecure mind, but these posts are supposed to be 300 words or less!) is my personal decision to take down all my blog awards.
When I joined Blogger in September 2011, they seemed to be all the rage (remember the "Sunshine" or "Great Commenter" awards :) but for whatever reason (natural ebb and flow?) they seem to have mostly disappeared - at least from what I've seen (but then again, I ain't no proficient blogger these days, so what's do I know!)
I remain, however, a curious little guy: Have you kept or deleted yours?
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