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Local Man Nabbed as Pimp

 

There are 70-plus females running around with them now,
Paul Sprewell's tattoos: God’s Toy. God’s Secret. God’s Boricua.
God’s Cherri, God's Bitch, God's Power, God's Virgin, God's Star.
The swirly dirt-gray script felt like a thousand stings across each neck.
God’s 4 Life, God's Love, God's Angel, God's Blessing, God's Jewel,

and God's Property. All of them worked for him, and he sent them out,
to cars, to motels that smelled of Band-Aids and mold, to sweaty strangers
who would steal their cellphones, reject the condoms, refuse to pay.
The girls called him God, his legal name. He got it from the bail jumpers
he caught, after washing out of the Reading Police Academy. They'd say

Oh God! because he's six-foot-five. Oh God give me another chance.
God don't take me now, I'll turn myself in tomorrow. So he changed it,
legally, even on the voter card, and the article read "God is a Registered
Republican," though the DMV fought back. Not Visa. He signed God
whenever he bought them tight jeans or extensions or manicures. 

Too bad if you hate the mug shot, the shit-eating grin, the brows rising
up at his joke, too clever to believe. Look closely and you'll see angry
scratches on both cheeks, defensive wounds, red screams branding him
with "No! I won't!" with “You ain’t God!” CashMoneyBrothers.com
is not an escort service, it's where men pay to rape women over and over,

young women, some children, females who truly would leave except
he would beat them, or he'd tell their families they were nothing but hoes,
or he'd beat their sisters, hunt them down and turn them out, too.
God's Brown Sugar said she wouldn't leave because he called her pretty
and bought her nice clothes and gold earrings, and said "I love you,"

and no daddy ever told her that before, only God Daddy,
which is what he made them all call him. So what would God,
true God, have to say? Aren't all women God's Diva? Isn't every woman
God's Precious? Aren't those lips for laughing, shouting, telling stories
Those hands, for creating and clapping? Isn't 25 to life too kind?


Tina Kelley’s Rise Wildly is forthcoming from CavanKerry Press, joining Abloom and Awry, Precise, and The Gospel of Galore, which won the Washington State Book Award. She co-authored Almost Home: Helping Kids Move from Homelessness to Hope, and shared in a Pulitzer covering 9/11 at The New York Times. She and her husband have two children and live in Maplewood, NJ.

 

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