January 2, 2022

Today’s Update: Signs of Life – Part 20

You Might Have Missed

Patreon Updates


Continue reading

This entry is part 20 of 41 in the Flash Fiction: Signs of Life

Written in 65 minutes. Went a bit over, sorry. Ending is a bit awkward, lol, but didn’t want to take another 20 minutes.


Quartermaine Estate: AJ & Carly’s Room

AJ flipped his cell phone closed as he entered the room, finding his wife standing at the window. “The PCPD served a search warrant at the penthouse and the studio.”

Carly turned, her eyes narrowed. “And?”

“And nothing. No arrests.” That didn’t matter to AJ. He’d encouraged her to call, had sat next to her while she’d made her report. He’d grimaced, listening to her depict visiting Jason at the studio and seeing the bullet wound. She’d even thrown her own mother and Elizabeth under the bus, claiming them as witnesses.

While AJ regretted to the risk to Elizabeth and Bobbie, he had more respect for Jason’s way of life. No arrests had been made, and AJ’s source suggested something had gone wrong in the search at the penthouse that had scuttled the case but no one was sure quite what. Either way, Jason and the new wife didn’t look like they were in danger, and Bobbie wasn’t even on the table.

Not that it would matter. Carly had betrayed Jason once again, and this time, AJ hoped like hell his brother would get the picture. Carly didn’t give a damn about anyone but herself and wasn’t worth caring about.

Carly’s lips thinned. “I don’t understand—”

“You threw a grenade at Jason, thinking he’d jump to protect himself, Elizabeth, and Bobbie.” AJ smirked “He did—just not the way you hoped.”

“Shut up—”

“Did you really think the PCPD would be able to do anything with your statement?” AJ leaned against the closed door, amused. “Your word with no evidence?”

“Jason would have a scar—”

“Sure. If they could get a physical examination,” AJ replied. “Sounds like they didn’t. Your word means nothing, Carly. Without evidence to back it up, no district attorney is going to put you on the stand as a credible witness.”

Carly fisted her hands at her side. “So what was this? A test?” she demanded. “Making me choose between my son and Michael?”

“No, this was me showing Jason one last time who you are.”

“And you’re married to me,” she spat. “What does that say about you?”

“You’re what I deserve,” he said simply. “I killed my brother and destroyed my family. Even if I never take another drink again, there’s no redemption for that, Carly.”

“I am nobody’s punishment! I deserve more than that!”

“No, you don’t.” AJ pushed away from the door and approached her, her eyes, damp and furious, focused on him. “Neither of us deserve more than we’ve got, Carlybabes, so maybe you suck it up. I married you, I gave you all the money you wanted, and we’ve got a beautiful son. I’ve got my job at ELQ. What do you really have to complain about? That you don’t have the man you really love?”

Carly hissed, then looked away. “You don’t love me, either.”

“No, I don’t.” He tipped his head. “So what’s it gonna be? Are you going to keep fighting this and planning your escape? Or are you ready to be realistic?”

She narrowed her eyes. “What does that mean?”

“I mean—” AJ tipped her chin up and nodded to the bed behind them. “New start, Carly. And last chance.”

She pursed her lips, glancing at the bed, her eyes calculating when she looked back at him. Then she pushed him hard so that he sprawled across the bed. She crawled across him and ripped his shirt open.

“Could be worse,” she said with a shrug. “You could be ugly.”

AJ smirked, hooked a hand around her neck and dragged her down to him for a kiss. And when in a few weeks she announced she was pregnant, he’d let her believed she’d beaten him.

It might even be fun.

Morgan Penthouse: Living Room

Jason grimaced as he inspected the leather sofa, sliding his fingers down the split in the cushion, revealing the padding underneath. “Alexis took pictures of this, too?” he asked Sonny as his partner came back in, scowling at the broken items scattered around the downstairs. Jason didn’t have a lot of possession, but what he had—

Glasses and mugs had been thrown around the kitchen, plates were shattered on the floor. The leather sofa hadn’t been the only furniture casualty—the coffee table had one its legs broken—the shelf of travel books had been scattered and some of the cover torn from being stepped on.

“Yeah, yeah. She took everything.” Sonny looked around. “I’m sorry about this, man—”

“I can buy a new sofa,” Jason muttered. And a table. Travel books. Plates and mugs. All of these things were replaceable.

“Not about any of this,” Sonny said, drawing Jason’s attention. “It sucks, but Alexis is right. This looks vindicative and destructive. If they’d left it at this downstairs—”

Most of the destruction had happened on their way out of the apartment—the officers forced to vacate before the search had finished. Capelli hadn’t been the only asshole on the force.

“But they didn’t,” Jason finished. He rubbed the back of his neck. “Listen, can you get some guys to clear this? I don’t want her to deal with—”

“Already on that. And they never got to the studio,” Sonny told Jason who exhaled in relief. “Taggert wanted to search both personally, but he called it off. It’s all tainted.” He glanced up to the second floor. “She okay?”

Jason opened his mouth because Elizabeth had said she was fine and she’d looked fine, but he wasn’t sure if that was true. She didn’t always say what she meant, and he knew she didn’t want to worry him. “I don’t know.”

“Yeah, the painting put it over the top,” Sonny muttered. “Could have fixed the dress maybe, but I know she takes her art seriously.” He rubbed his hands together. “I’ll go check on the clean up crew. We’ll get the furniture replaced—”

“Yeah, yeah. That’s fine. I just—” Jason started for the stairs. “I’ll get her out of here for a few hours or something.”

“Good, good. Let me make my calls and I’ll check in with Alexis. If we’re right—if this puts Carly’s story dead in the water—” Sonny nodded. “That would be good. Then we can just focus on getting rid of Sorel.”

He left, and Jason went upstairs, returning to the bedroom where he’d left Elizabeth earlier to deal with the dressers and closets that the PCPD had emptied.

“Hey.” Elizabeth dumped a pile of clothing in the laundry hamper next to the bathroom. “I’m almost done.” She made a face. “How does it look downstairs?”

“Not great,” Jason admitted. “They broke a lot of things and ripped the sofa.” He frowned when he saw the dress still laid out on the bed, the ripped strap and torn bodice evident—and now he saw the dark footprint across the skirt. “I didn’t—”

Her mouth pinched as she crossed to the bed, picking it up. “I think that’s what made me the most angry,” she murmured, sliding her fingers over the dirt and mud specks. Capelli had worn heavy boots and walked through the snow and dirt mixed out out front. “It wasn’t enough to tear it off the hanger—he threw it on the floor—” Elizabeth shook her head. “I’m sorry. I know I wasn’t supposed to do anything. I really just wanted to supervise, and it’s not like—I mean—” Her voice faltered and she sank onto the bed. “It’s not like it really matters,” she said softly.

Unsure, Jason sat down on the other side of the dress. “Why doesn’t it matter? It’s your dress—”

She bit her lip, her eyes trained on the white fabric “It’s my wedding dress,” she said, her voice barely audible. “Alexis brought me a few of them, and I got to pick it. Like I was really—like it was real.”

“It was—” Jason reached for her hand, laying it flat over the dress. He could feel the ring he’d placed on her finger only the day before cool against his skin. “It was real,” he finished. “Wasn’t it?”

“Yeah, but—” She met his eyes. “I mean, it’s not like we—” Elizabeth’s cheeks flushed.

“We got married,” Jason reminded her. He raised her hand, his fingers twisted her wedding ring. “This is real, Elizabeth.”

She managed a smile and reached for his other hand where she’d given him a ring, too. “I know. But it’s still just a dress at the end of the day, I guess. It’s not worth getting arrested over. Not really. But I just—I—” Her eyes met his again and her tongue darted out to lick the corner of her mouth. His body tightened. “It’s not just I wore it in the church yesterday. It’s—I wore it last night.”

Last night. When she’d stood in front of the mirror and he’d stood behind her, unfastening each button—

“And Capelli was—he wasn’t just searching. Or being rough or rude.” Elizabeth released his hands and looked over at the painting, once again propped up against the wall. “Alexis was right, and I knew what he was doing. He dumped out my underwear drawer so I’d feel violated.”

Jason clenched his jaw. “I—”

“And when I tried to stop him from ruining the dress, he stomped on it, ground his foot in—I didn’t say that earlier,” Elizabeth admitted. “I was afraid if I did—”

Jason would have rearranged his face and been arrested. “I’m sorry—”

Elizabeth sighed, shaking her head. “You have nothing to apologize for.” She rose to her feet and went to pick up the painting, her fingers tracing the rip in the canvas. “Capelli was angry from the moment I was involved in the case. The first time he questioned me, he was the one asking the inappropriate questions. I don’t feel like it was personal, either,” she admitted. “It wasn’t that it was me. Not like Taggert. He’s disappointed in me, but Capelli—I’m just an obstacle.”

“Elizabeth—” Jason got to his feet.

“Capelli wanted me to feel like I’d done something wrong. Like I’d committed a crime—and I did, I know that, but—” Elizabeth sighed. “For all they talk about the violence you and Sonny are capable of—” she jerked a shoulder and turned away, setting the painting against the wall again.

Jason waited a moment. “I am violent,” he said in a low voice, unsure why he was saying it only that he needed her to hear it. To know it. “I’ve done worse things than what happened here today.”

Elizabeth faced him, her face unreadable. Then she tipped her head to the side. “To women like me?”

“What?”

“You’ve intentionally humiliated and violated a woman for not doing what you wanted? For not acting the way you expected”

“No, of course not, but—” Jason stumbled to a stop, squinting. “But—”

“But you have a gun and you’ve used it,” she said plainly. “And you have hands. You’ve used those. There are people who aren’t breathing because you still are. You’re capable of violence, Jason. Did you think I didn’t know that?”

“No, but—”

“Your world is violent,” Elizabeth continued, and he just stared at her. “It is. And people like to act like there’s something unique about what you and Sonny do. If you were out of business tomorrow, would things really change? Would there be less violence?”

He had no idea how to answer that. How to react. “Elizabeth—”

“Would I be safe in the park?”

“I—”

“This world isn’t safe for women, Jason. Look at what happened to me here today.” She held out her wrist and for the time he realized it was darkening into a bruise. “A cop did this to me in my own home because I didn’t want him to destroy my wedding dress out of spite and vindictiveness. Capelli will say it’s because I’m with you, and I deserve it because of who you are. But what happened today has nothing to do with any of that. It’s who he is. And it would have happened to any woman he didn’t respect.”

“I guess, but—”

“If you’re waiting for my face to change,” Elizabeth said, turning away and shoving another pile of clothes into the laundry basket. “You’re going to be disappointed. The night we met, you nearly tore the arm off the guy bothering me and never broke a sweat.”

He cleared his throat. “I don’t know what to say to any of that,” Jason finally admitted.

“The world you live in,” Elizabeth replied, meeting his eyes in the mirror over the dresser. “It does scare me. I know it’s dangerous. I know that the bullet you got in December wasn’t the first and probably won’t be the last. I don’t want to lose you that way, but I’m working on accepting it as a possibility.”

“And that’s okay with you?” Jason wanted to know. He stepped up behind her, his fingers lightly brushing her shoulder.

“I’m safe with you,” Elizabeth said softly. “And that’s all that matters to me.”

Updates between August 22 – Dec 31 happened, lol, I just haven’t updated this page. I’ll get to it eventually.


August 22, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 13
August 15, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 12

July 11, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 11
July 9, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars – Part 6
July 7, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 10
July 6, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars – Part 5
July 4, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 9
July 2, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars – Part 4

June 29, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars – Part 3
June 23, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life – Part 8
June 22, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars – Part 2
June 20, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life, Part 7
June 18, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Scars, Part 1
June 16, 2021 Updated Flash Fiction: Signs of Life, Part 6
June 14, 2021 Completed Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapters 35-38
June 13, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapters 31-34
June 10, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 30
June 7, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 29
June 3, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 28

May 31, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 27
May 27, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 26
May 24, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1:Ricochet, Chapter 25
May 20, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 24
May 17, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 23
May 13. 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 22
May 10, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 21
May 9, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When – Part 16
May 2, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When – Part 16

April 18, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When – Part 14
April 11, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When – Part 13
April 10, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 20
April 8, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 19
April 6, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 18
April 4, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When – Part 12
April 3, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 17
April 1, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 16

March 9, 2021Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 7

March 30, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 15
March 28, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 27
March 27, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 14
March 26, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 26
March 25, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 13
March 23, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 12
March 21, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 25
March 20, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 11
March 19, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 24
March 18, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 10
March 16, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 9
March 13, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 8
March 12, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 23
March 9, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 6
March 6, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 5
March 5, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 22
March 4, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 4
March 2, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 3

February 26 , 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command Part 21
February 25, 2021 Updated Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 2
February 23, 2021 Added Fool Me Twice, Book 1: Ricochet, Chapter 1
February 21, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 20
February 19, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 19
February 13, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When, Part 11
February 7, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 18
Febeuary 6, 2021 Flash Fiction: Not Knowing When, Part 10
February 5, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 17

January 31, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 16
January 29, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 15
January 24, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 18 (now completed)
January 23, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 14
January 22, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 17
January 17, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 16
January 16, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 13
January 15, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 15
January 10, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 14
January 9, 2021 Flash Fiction: A King’s Command, Part 12
January 8, 2021 Flash Fiction: A Shot in the Dark, Part 13

December 31, 2021

Update Link – Karma, Part 2

With this posted, the first half of the assignment is done. The mystery is afoot 😛 Please check it out, let me know what you think, and make some guesses as to the murderer! Part 3 will be posted next Friday, on January 7.

As for this site, I’ll be back on Sunday with the new schedule and return of flash fiction beginning with Signs of the Life. I should be able to wrap that up sometime in March, then we’ll do Scars. For more information about my 2022 schedule, check out the Status post or the Production Schedule.

December 30, 2021

As always, these posts will be divided into parts. Please feel free to skip around to what you’re interested in. Thanks so much for your support and attention this year. It’s been a crazy one, and I have a really awesome community here. I’ve taken in the lessons of 2020 and 2021, and I’m looking forward to a safer and healthier year in 2022.

Note: I’ll be discontinuing the monthly status updates. Any changes to what’s going on will be on the Production Schedule and I’ll mention them in weekly Flash Fiction posts. So this post goes deep in depth because I won’t be really talking at length like this in the future.

ICYMI: Karma, Part 1 went live at The Liason Haven. Part 2 goes up tomorrow morning. You’ll have a week to guess who committed the murder, then I’ll post Part 3 on January 7 and Part 4 on January 8.

Topics

  • General Status
  • Site & Channel
  • Writing
  • Patreon

Continue reading

Your Update Link: Karma – Part 1

Good morning! I hope you guys are having a great holiday season! I am sooooo excited to be posting this story. I’ve worked super hard on it over the last five months, and I’m really proud of it. The posting schedule is Parts 1 & 2 December 30/31, then a week for everyone to get a chance to read and make guesses as to who the murderer is, then I’ll post 3/4 on January 7/8.

I’ll be back today with another post talking about plans for the new year and the posting schedule. Love you guys! Please join the Liason Haven and reply there or post your thoughts here! The story won’t be posted on Crimson Glass until at least April.

I will make a post here every time I update there. See you later!

December 22, 2021

Hey, so if you just want to vote on the poll, I’ll put it up top. If you want to read the long explanation on why these are the options, you can click the read more option.

Which option do you prefer to start 2022?

  • Pause one Flash Fiction, concentrate on one and work on. May not affect release. Mad World (60%, 39 Votes)
  • Get Flash Fiction whenever, but it may delay work on Mad World (22%, 14 Votes)
  • Pause Flash Fiction until Mad World Book is edited (18%, 12 Votes)

Total Voters: 65

Loading ... Loading ...

Continue reading

This entry is part 19 of 41 in the Flash Fiction: Signs of Life

Written in 57 minutes.


Morgan Penthouse: Living Room

Jason immediately reached for his pants, yanking them back up as Elizabeth went straight for the phone. He heard her greet Alexis by name as the pounding on the door continued.  He just shook his head, tugging his shirt on. She kept surprising him with her instincts—he hadn’t even had to say anything about calling his lawyer.

“She’ll be right up,” Elizabeth told him, cradling the phone on her shoulder. Jason nodded, then flipped the lock and pulled the door open, forcing his face into a blank expression even though he wanted to growl at the detectives on his doorstep.

“Took you long enough,” Taggert sneered as he sauntered past Jason, slapping a piece of a paper against him. He held out a second piece to Elizabeth. “I brought a second copy for the wife,” he drawled, his tone setting Jason on edge. “I know how you want to make sure everything is legal.”

Elizabeth rolled her eyes but accepted the warrant, scanning the opening lines. Her eyes widened slightly, but that was the only change in her expression. Jason dropped his gaze to the copy in his hands—

They were looking for evidence that Jason had been shot a month earlier—blood-stained, bullet holes — he gritted his teeth. There was nothing to find of course. He’d never stepped foot in the penthouse until he’d nearly recovered, and there was nothing at the studio either. He’d made sure of that after Carly had made her threats—

But they knew he’d been shot which meant Carly had called their bluff.

“We’ll get started down here,” Taggert told the officers who came in after him. He nodded to Capelli. “You take a few uniforms upstairs.”

“I want to go,” Elizabeth said immediately. “I’m allowed,” she added when Capelli just glared at her. “I’m setting up my studio and there are chemicals, okay?”

“Fine,” Taggert retorted before Capelli could protest. Jason wasn’t wild about Elizabeth going upstairs alone to supervise. He had confidence in her, but he knew Capelli was the wild card. New to the PCPD, he was hot-headed and wouldn’t have even the basic respect Taggert did for Elizabeth.

“I don’t know what the hell you did to convince her to do this,” Taggert told Jason, “but you should be god damned ashamed yourself. She’s a kid—”

Jason said nothing. He knew Elizabeth was only eighteen, but why didn’t anyone ever stop to remember that he had no memories older than three years? Why didn’t that count for anything?

“Where’s the warrant?” Alexis demanded, appearing in the doorway, her cheeks flushed. Sonny was just over her shoulder. “What the hell is the basis for this search?” Jason handed her the paperwork. “Where’s Elizabeth?”

“Supervising the search upstairs—” Jason turned when he heard something rip—then saw one of the officers slicing down the cushion of the sofa. “What the—”

“Hey!” Alexis strode forward only to be waylaid by Taggert. “They’re looking for clothing,” she spat. “How the hell—”

“We can do a reasonable—” Taggert began but then there was a cry from the upstairs.

“Stop! Don’t—” Then Elizabeth’s voice went quiet. Even before her voice had faded, Jason had lunged towards the stairs.

Morgan Penthouse: Master Bedroom

 

Alexis and Sonny had followed Taggert and Jason, but by the time they caught up with them, Alexis thought she might be defending Jason on an assault charge.

Capelli had Elizabeth shoved up against the wall—one hand on her head, the other holding her hands together behind her back. On the ground, between the closet and the bed was a pile of white fabric and nearby, a painting neatly wrapped in brown packaging — with a foot-shaped hole through the middle of it.

Jason lunged forward but Sonny grabbed his partner’s arm at the same time Taggert hauled Capelli away from Elizabeth who was crying, her cheeks flushed.

“What the hell is going on?” he demanded of the other cop. “What the—”

“She interfered with my search,” Capelli snarled, “and was resisting arrest—”

“Interfered—” Elizabeth’s words were choppy as she forced herself to take a breath. Jason shoved off Sonny’s hand and went to her, framing her face with his hands. “I didn’t—I wasn’t—”

Alexis took another sweep of the room and her stomach pitched. They were searching for clothing, but the only clothing she could see was Elizabeth’s. The dresser drawers that had been dumped out onto the floor were hers, based on the feminine undergarments strewn in front of the dresser. Dresses and shirts and other pieces clothing had been ripped from hangers—

And the pile of white fabric, Alexis realized now, was Elizabeth’s wedding dress.

“I came in and he was throwing my clothes around,” Elizabeth tried to say. She cleared her throat, looked at Jason. “I tried to tell him where your things were because he was in the closet—and—”

“I can search everything in the damn room,” Capelli retorted, lifting his chin, but even Taggert was glaring at him. “What if he’d hidden evidence—”

“How did the dress get on the floor?” Taggert asked quietly. He went over to the garment bag that had, until the search, been neatly zipped and hanging outside the closet. The zipper was broken off as if it had been forcibly ripped open.

“He tore—” Elizabeth closed her eyes. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry, it’s stupid. It’s just a dress. He’s right. He tore my dress, and I got upset. I grabbed his arm—”

Wordlessly, Sonny went to the dress and lifted it up by the bodice. One of the straps was ripped and there was a tear in the delicate bodice. He held it up by the one intact strap, then arched a brow at Capelli. “You think some bloodstained clothing was hiding inside this scrap of lace and tulle?”

Capelli pressed his lips together. “I have every right—”

Taggert knelt down and turned over the painting. He looked at the foot-shaped hole, then at Capelli’s feet. “What happened to the painting?”

“It was on the floor—”

“When I grabbed his arm, he shoved me back,” Elizabeth interrupted. “And then he grabbed that—it was leaning against the wall—” she looked at Jason. “I brought it upstairs yesterday, remember? Before I—”

“I remember,” Jason said flatly. “It was leaning against the wall by the closet. And it was in one piece.”

“He did it on purpose—and then he shoved me against the wall—” Elizabeth closed her eyes. “I’m sorry. I should have just let him—”

“Don’t be sorry,” Jason cut in sharply, and she flinched. “You did nothing wrong.” He fisted his hands at his side. “Or do you want to arrest her for interfering?” he demanded of Taggert who slowly got to his feet.

“You could try it,” Alexis said with a dangerous smile. “But then I’ll explain that Capelli clearly targeted Elizabeth’s possessions in this rooms. Jason’s dresser—untouched. His clothing? Not on the floor. And you went for a wedding dress knowing she only got married yesterday—and this—” She took the painting from Taggert. “This tips it over into destruction.”

“I have every right—”

“Shut your goddamned mouth,” Taggert threw at Capelli who growled. “She’s right. You’ve been pissed ever since you found out about the wedding—”

“He married a witness—”

“And if you think that’s true,” Alexis said pleasantly, “what you’ve done today is nothing more than witness intimidation. You destroyed my client’s possessions and did irrefutable damage to her wedding dress and her painting — these are irreplaceable and I will be filing suit against the department.”

“Get down stairs.” Taggert grabbed Capelli and shoved him towards the door. “And get out of here. We’ll talk back at the station—”

“I can do whatever I want—”

“Like hell you can. Not on my cases.” Taggert swept his eyes over the room, over the other uniforms. “This search is over. We’re leaving.” When they hesitated, he narrowed his eyes. “Now—”

He turned back to Elizabeth who refused to look at him. Regret was etched into his expression, but Taggert said nothing, then left.

“I’ll make sure they all get out,” Sonny said, shoving his hands in his pockets and shaking his head. “And they call us the criminals.” He gently laid the damaged wedding dress on the bed. “I’ll be downstairs if you need anything.”

“I’m sorry,” Elizabeth said again as she was left alone with Jason and Alexis. “I didn’t mean—”

“Actually,” Alexis said with a half smile. “You might have done us a favor. Capelli has just tainted this entire search warrant. I can make a good case that he was engaging in witness intimidation—he was angry that you were supervising the search,” she added, “and that you’d removed yourself from being interrogated through marriage.” She looked around the room, then at the painting she held. “So he decided to punish you.”

“And that helps us?” Jason asked skeptically.

“They clearly got this warrant based on Carly’s statement,” Alexis said. “The only way to give her statement any corroboration was to find some evidence backing it up. They can’t search now, and I assume even if they searched the studio, there’d be nothing to find.” She shrugged. “They can’t question Elizabeth now because of the intimidation. I won’t let you answer questions under any circumstances,” she said. “No lawyer would. Their case is dead in the water. Without any other evidence.”

“Oh.” Elizabeth rubbed her arms restlessly. “I guess that’s good, then. I wasn’t—”

“Capelli did this to himself,” Alexis assured her. “No one is going to say you were wrong to react when he went after your personal possessions. There’s not a woman in the world who wouldn’t have been upset to have their wedding dress destroyed in front of them—”

She shrugged, and set the painting down. “You reacted naturally, Elizabeth. I’ll put in a call to Mac and put together paperwork. We won’t actually file, but it’ll be enough to hold it over his head.”

She left them alone then, and Jason didn’t know what to say. Carly had followed through with her threats, and Elizabeth had been the one hurt. The painting—

Elizabeth went over to it, tearing away the last of the brown packaging, sighing as she ran her hands over the familiar jumble of colors he remembered from a few weeks earlier. The canvas had been framed with a light wood and looked like it was ready to be hung—

Except for the Capelli-shaped foot in the middle of the ferris wheel.

“I thought it might be nice to hang it in here,” Elizabeth said, numbly, running her fingers over the rips in the canvas.

“Can it be fixed?” Jason asked, his chest squeezing. She’d painted the wind and then she’d made him see it. Because of him, it had been ruined—

“Probably not, but I’ll try, I guess.” Elizabeth set it back down and looked at him. “It’s okay. I’ll put everything back. You should go talk to Sonny and Alexis.”

He shoved his hands in his pockets, feeling uncomfortable. “Okay. If you’re sure.”

“I am.” She forced a smile and it made him feel worse. “I’ll be down in a little bit. We’ll get something to eat.”

“Okay.” He went to the door, looked over his shoulder, still unsure, but then left her to clean up the mess the PCPD had left behind.

December 11, 2021

Hey! I’ve been thinking about making a change for a few weeks, and this last week has definitely given me ideas how to adjust my writing schedule to update Flash Fiction and have time/energy to write/edit other projects. I’ve been doing Flash Fiction on the weekends thinking that was the best idea, but I’ve found that diving into a story for an hour in the morning and then going into another story in the afternoon isn’t really working for me at the moment. Since weekends are my best opportunity to get a lot of writing done, and I’m not doing much writing during the week anyway, I’m going to move Flash Fiction to week days and leave weekends completely for my ongoing editing and drafting.

Scars is being moved to Tuesdays/Wednesdays and Signs of Life will be Thursdays/Fridays. I’m not updating all four of those days, but I’ll give myself the space to update either of those days so that you’re getting two updates a week even if they’re not quite regular, then writing/editing on Saturdays & Sundays. I can manage an hour of writing at least twice during the week which is all Flash Fiction needs, but it’s been harder to get the energy together for my longer projects.

I hope that makes sense, lol. It’s all about finding the right schedule that works best for me and still lets me write.  I’ll have the first update for you on Tuesday, I think, based on looking at my schedule (I have an after school meeting that may or may not change that) and definitely something on Thursday since I’m not going to be working that day.

Here’s what the next six weeks or so looks like.

December

  • Flash Fiction moving to week days.
  • December 31 – Karma, Part 1 gets posted at The Liason Haven.
  • Editing Mad World, Book 1 – ebook for rerelease
  • Editing Mad World, Book 4 – still in the reread, it’s a massive project and it’s been slowed down by IRL. hoping to get my notes and whatnot done by the end of the month.
  • Writing Smoke & Mirrors. Got slowed down on that but getting back into it this week and next. Plan is to finish up the first novella in the project by end of the month.

January

  • January 7 & 8 – Karma, Parts 2 & 3 posted at Liason Haven. Exclusive to that platform until at least April or May.
  • Diving into editing Mad World, Book 4.
  • Editing Mad World, Book 2 ebook for re-release
  • Re-releasing Book 1 as an ebook.
  • Fool Me Twice discovery

So you’re going to get some ebook re-releases since I’m cleaning up typos of Mad World and working on formatting. Book 1 — will be January, Book 2 – Feb, Book 3 – March, and then I’ll be releasing Book 4 in April. We’re still on track with that.

Still working on a full status update of everything, but here you go. You’re still getting an entire novella at the end of the year, so new content is coming 🙂