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Post by Caesar » 15 Dec 2025, 22:08

Look What He Damned Me To

Sara had almost turned back twice on the walk from her car to the door.

Not because she was scared of him. Not because Devin had done anything wrong. It was the simple, stubborn discomfort of being seen in that place.

This restaurant didn’t have plastic menus with fingerprints on the sleeves. It had heavy paper that curled at the edges, a server in a black apron who moved quickly, and a host stand that looked polished enough to show her face if she leaned the wrong way. The air inside was cool, colder than the sidewalk outside, and it carried butter and garlic and something sweet under it, maybe wine.

Devin was already there.

He stood when he saw her, quick and practiced, and his smile hit like he’d been waiting for that moment in particular. He wore a jacket this time, not a button-down with rolled sleeves. He pulled out her chair before she could reach for it, hand on the back.

“Look at you,” he said. “You came on time.”

Sara’s mouth pulled into a half smile. “Don’t get used to it.”

He laughed, low, and leaned in just enough to catch her. “I had to upgrade on you,” he said, glancing around. “Figured you deserved better than last time.”

Sara slid into the chair and let her hands rest on the edge of the table. The surface was smooth and cold under her fingertips. Somewhere in the room, somebody’s laugh rose, then softened again. Silverware clinked. A glass touched down against another glass.

“You trying to make me feel bad?” she asked.

“I’m trying to impress you,” Devin said, easy. He sat across from her, posture open, shoulders relaxed like this was nothing for him. “It working?”

Sara lifted one shoulder.

“Depends,” she said. “You paying?”

He grinned. “Yes, ma’am.”

A server appeared and set down water without asking, condensation already gathering on the glass. Sara wrapped her fingers around it, letting the cold bite her palm for a second. Outside the window, the day was bright but thin. The city still sounded like itself even through the glass, a distant horn, the rush of tires on wet street.

Devin leaned forward a little. “So,” he said. “How was your trip to Georgia?”

“It was good,” she said. “But it’s always tough because my granddaughter gets so upset whenever she has to leave her daddy.”

Devin’s eyebrows lifted. “That little girl loves him like that?”

Sara’s laugh came out short. “That little girl is his shadow.”

He tipped his head. “Her mama doesn’t want to live in the same place as your boy?”

Sara shook her head. “I love her,” she said. “But that girl is stubborn as an ox. She’s not gonna follow him around like those girls on TV.”

Devin laughed. He lifted his water glass and took a sip, eyes still on her. “I guess that makes your job easier since you don’t have to worry about an angry baby mama coming to take all your son’s money.”

Sara’s laugh rolled out this time, fuller.

“Guess so,” she said.

The server came back to ask about drinks. Devin ordered something she didn’t recognize. Sara just asked for sweet tea. The server nodded, pencil moving fast, then slipped away again.

Devin folded his hands on the table. His watch flashed when he moved. “What about you?” he asked. “You could go live out there.”

Sara stared at him a beat.

Her tongue pressed against the back of her teeth. She let the silence sit long enough to be honest, then she shrugged.

“He’ll only be out there for a year or two more,” she said. “I’ve never lived anywhere other than New Orleans, though. And before this year, the only other places I’d been were Tegucigalpa a few times when I was a kid.”

Devin nodded slow. His eyes softened. “I’d like to take you to see the world then,” he said. “That’s the best part about my job, no set hours, no one making sure I’m at a desk. I go somewhere new at least once a month.”

Sara let out a laugh, shaking her head. “Well, your job might be like that but my two aren’t.”

Devin’s smile tilted. “Can I just say that working two jobs when your son is a football star is crazy?”

Sara’s eyes narrowed a little, not angry, just cautious.

“He doesn’t make money from that,” she said. “Not a lot.”

Devin lifted both hands, palms out, surrendering and teasing at the same time. “Yet.”

Sara only shrugged.

“Alright,” Devin said, letting the subject drop when he saw her face. “I won’t pry.” He leaned forward again, voice lighter. “Tell me where you’d go if you could leave right now. Anywhere in the world.”

The server returned with Sara’s tea and set it down, straw still in the wrapper. The glass sweated against the tablecloth. Sara peeled the paper off the straw in one smooth pull, the sound small and sharp in the quiet between them. She stirred the ice with it once, listening to the clink.

Where would she go.

She thought for a second then said it before she could talk herself out of it. “Finland.”

Devin laughed.

Sara reached across the table and swatted at his arm. “It’s not funny,” she said, but she had a smile on her face.

~~~

The grass was cold enough to bite through denim.

Caine felt it every time he shifted, damp seeping into the back of his thighs, into the thin place where his shirt had ridden up and the bark pressed his spine. The field behind the church sat wide and empty in the dark, nothing moving but the slow sway of weeds near the fence line and the occasional flash of a distant car cutting along the highway. The sanctuary lights were off. The daycare windows were black. No laughter. No doors slamming. No voices yet. Just the low hum of a town still sleeping, and the thin scrape of something small in the brush.

Laney lay between his legs with her back to his chest, tucked in like she’d been built to fit there. The tree was thick enough to hide them from anyone who might cut through the lot early. Her hair smelled like whatever she’d sprayed on herself before she left the house, sweet under the morning air, and when she breathed out, the warm puff of it hit his forearm where it was wrapped around her middle.

Caine kept his hand flat on her stomach, fingers spread. He could feel the rise and fall.

She shifted her shoulder, the movement small.

“What was it like?” she asked. Her voice came out quiet, drawn thin by the cold. “Bein’ in jail?”

Caine snorted a laugh, the sound dry. “You said that shit like I was up in Angola doing 25 to life. I was in juvenile lockup in the parish.”

Laney tipped her face up just enough to look back at him out of the corner of her eye. In the dark her expression was mostly shape and shine, but he could still read the stubbornness in it. “But that’s what you was lookin’ at, right? Life? I mean, it’s the same thing when you goin’ through it.”

He shrugged, the movement rolling through his shoulders and into her back. The bark scratched. “Yeah, you right on that. It was hell. Even with all the baby gangsters in there. Ain’t never knew when you were gonna have to fight ’cause someone wanted your ramen noodles or ’cause somebody tried to make you hold they fucking pocket.”

Laney went still. He felt it, the pause in her breathing, the way her fingers curled into the grass as if she could grab onto something there. She turned more this time, twisting at the waist so she could see his face better.

“That happens in juvie?”

Caine laughed again, softer. “It ain’t no different in there. Prison rules is prison rules.”

Laney’s mouth pulled tight. She looked forward again, back to the empty field. “That’s awful.”

He nodded once. “Ain’t help that I’m tall and kinda built. Every motherfucker in the car wanted to fight me to show they were tough.”

Laney’s shoulders lifted, then dropped. “How’d you survive?”

Caine let his head rest back against the tree. The morning smelled like wet dirt and old pine, and somewhere in the distance a dog barked twice and stopped. “Played by the rules. Cliqued up with some dudes and fought. Word got out what I was facing and ain’t nobody really mess with me after that ’cause I ain’t have nothing to lose. Kid doing a little 10, 15 days down on their ass not gonna fuck with the dude going to the Farm.”

Laney made a small sound in her throat, not quite a gasp, not quite a curse. He felt her swallow. She reached down and picked at a blade of grass, rolling it between her fingertips until it split.

For a moment neither of them spoke. The silence didn’t feel peaceful. It felt like the space right before a door opened.

Laney’s voice came again, lower. “Sometimes, I feel like I been in a prison for the last ten years. Not the same you went through, but a different battle.”

Caine’s grip tightened a notch on her stomach. Just enough to let her feel he heard her.

“You know you can just leave, right?” he said.

Laney let out a breath that turned into a small laugh that wasn’t funny. “Could’ve. Probably would’ve if not for my boys. Now? I don’t know.”

She shifted again, pressing her spine firmer into him.

“And he not gonna leave me. I think he tryin’ to make me lose my shit. Confess or somethin’. But I ain’t. So, we just gonna do this for however long.”

His throat worked once before he spoke again. “So you just stay stuck in this until you die?”

Laney didn’t answer right away. The pause stretched long enough that he started to think she might not. That she might tuck it back inside herself and pretend she’d never said any of it. Instead, she nodded once, a small dip of her chin he felt more than saw.

“Yeah,” she said. “I think so.”

~~~

Ramon pulled up short of the curb and coasted the last few feet, brakes squealing faint against the cold. The community center squatted at the edge of the block, its paint dulled by years of sun and rain. Kids still swarmed the front despite the season, bundled in hoodies and light jackets, breath puffing pale as they ran. One boy juked left with a ball tucked under his arm. A girl with beads clicking in her hair darted across the sidewalk, cutting too close to Ramon’s bumper before veering off.

Ramon leaned forward over the steering wheel, jaw tight, eyes tracking movement out of habit. He waited until the knot of kids cleared, then killed the engine. The sudden quiet inside the car felt sharp. He got out, the cold biting at his knuckles, and shut the door. His shoes hit the pavement and he stepped around a kid who skidded past his shin, laughing, already gone.

The air smelled clean and thin, winter-cut, with a trace of old fryer grease drifting out from somewhere inside the building. A box fan was jammed in the doorway anyway, rattling as it pushed stale air around. Ramon crossed the sidewalk and went in.

Inside, the community center was bright in a flat, institutional way. Fluorescents hummed overhead. A bulletin board sagged under too many flyers. Someone had put out a jar of candy with a handwritten sign asking for donations. Ramon didn’t slow. He followed voices toward the back, past a hallway that smelled faintly of cleaner and paper towels, past a room stacked with plastic chairs.

The larger room opened up ahead, stage at the far end, scuffed steps worn pale at the edges. Near it, Nina stood with a clipboard tucked against her ribs, talking to another worker. The other woman held a roll of tape, nodding as Nina spoke, her voice clipped and efficient. Nina was in work mode, posture straight, eyes focused.

Then she looked up.

Her gaze hit Ramon and slid away immediately. She turned her shoulder, angling her body so her back was mostly to him, attention snapping back to the other worker. The move was small but deliberate. Ramon felt it land anyway.

He stopped a few feet away and waited.

He didn’t pretend to read a flyer or check his phone. He just stood there, hands loose at his sides, weight shifting once as the cold crept up through the soles of his shoes. The seconds stretched. The other worker laughed at something Nina said, then peeled off toward a closet with the tape.

Nina moved to leave in the opposite direction, clipboard still in hand.

Ramon stepped in and caught her elbow.

“Nina, we gotta talk,” he said.

She didn’t look down at his hand. “I’m busy right now, Ramon.”

“You ain’t doing shit,” he said, voice low. “Stop playing.”

Her shoulders lifted with a breath she’d been holding. She pulled free, eyes flashing once. Then she sighed, heavy and tired, and walked toward the stage.

She set the clipboard carefully on the edge, then turned back. “Come on.”

She pushed through the back door and the cold hit hard, the kind that snapped at exposed skin. Ramon followed her out.

Nina stopped and turned, crossing her arms tight against her chest.

“What do you want?” she asked.

Ramon took a step closer, shoulders squared. “For you stop with this bullshit and let me come back to your crib. I get you still tore up about stuff, but c’mon. You gonna let that come between us?”

Nina’s laugh came out too loud, bouncing off brick. “You killed a man!”

Ramon’s head snapped slightly, eyes flicking toward the alley mouth. Nina caught herself too, breath hitching. She lowered her voice, but the words stayed sharp.

“You fucking killed a man, Ramon.”

He waved it off with a flick of his hand. “Don’t put that work on me. I ain’t do nothing. I know who did it, but I ain’t gonna say because I ain’t no snitch. But it wasn’t me. Like I told you.”

She stared at him, unblinking. “You were willing to and that’s close enough.”

“You were willing to let me do it,” Ramon shot back. “So, what that say about you?”

Nina looked away, jaw working. Her arms stayed crossed, but her fingers dug into her sleeves. “I’m still trying to figure that out,” she said, quieter.

Ramon stepped closer, cutting into her space. He put his hand at the small of her back, palm warm through her jacket, a familiar touch. She stiffened but didn’t move away.

“But what that gotta do with how you feel about me?” he said. “I ain’t do it. That’s facts.”

He leaned in, breath fogging faintly between them. “C’mon. I’m tired of sleeping on E.J. and Tyree couches. You know them niggas dirty.”

For a moment Nina said nothing. Her eyes slid past him, down the alley, toward the pale strip of sky overhead. The cold crept in around them, settling into concrete and bone.

“One night, Ramon,” she said finally. “You can come back for one night.”

“A week.”

“A night.”

He nodded fast. “Alright. But I ain’t sleeping on no couch.”

Nina rolled her eyes.

~~~

Mireya killed the engine and sat there for a second with both hands still on the wheel.

The street was quiet in that Bayou St. John way, the kind of quiet that still had movement under it. Water down the block, slow and dark. A car passing somewhere farther off, tires hissing on damp pavement. The air outside her window smelled like wet earth and old leaves and something sour off the bayou.

Her hair was still stiff at the roots from spray. Glitter clung where her collarbone met the neckline of her hoodie, stubborn flecks that didn’t come off no matter how many times she wiped. She rolled her shoulders once, trying to shake the night out of her muscles, then grabbed her keys and pushed the door open.

Cold hit her face. She locked the car and started up the walk, sneakers whispering over the concrete.

She knocked.

For a second, nothing. Then the lock turned and the door opened.

Trell filled the doorway, shirtless, tattoos cutting across his chest and shoulders. His joggers rode low on his hips, drawstrings hanging loose. The warm light from inside made his skin look even darker. He looked at her with that calm, lazy amusement that always made her feel like she was already a step behind.

“Come on,” he said, stepping aside.

Mireya walked in.

And then the island pulled her attention hard.

Boxes. Bags. Designer logos. Stacked and piled like somebody had dumped the inside of a high-end store right there and walked away.

Trell came up behind her and wrapped his arm around her waist.

“That’s all for you, baby,” he said, voice easy against her ear.

Mireya didn’t move right away. Her gaze stayed on the pile, on the rope handles and tissue paper. Her mouth went dry.

Then she looked at him over her shoulder. “After what you told me?”

The smirk showed slow. He let her go, not even bothered by the shift in her tone, and walked around the island like he was taking a casual tour of his own generosity. He reached into a box with Yves St. Laurent etched on it and pulled out a purse, lifting it by the strap.

He came back to her and held it out.

“We building something here, me and you,” he said. “Together. I just ain’t want you to lose sight of that.”

Mireya took it because it was right there and because her fingers didn’t know how to refuse things that nice, not immediately. The leather was smooth under her palm. The smell of it was clean and new. She held it by the strap and stared down at it like it might start talking.

“Lose sight of what?” she asked. Her voice came out sharper than she meant. “Being someone to fuck whoever you need?”

Trell’s hand rose and landed on the side of her neck. Not a squeeze. Not soft either. His fingers brushed the base of her skull, thumb resting along her jaw in a way that made her hold still without realizing she’d done it.

“Mireya,” he said, a warning and a compliment at the same time. “If I just needed someone to fuck people, I can get any bitch to do that.”

His eyes stayed on hers. Steady. Patient.

“The fact you standing here right now is why I want you near me,” he continued. “You don’t let shit get to you. You’re mentally strong. Smart as fuck. And you good at what you do.”

His fingers drifted a fraction higher, grazing her hairline.

“You make niggas fall in love with you in five minutes,” he said. “Any bitch can throw pussy at a nigga. They can’t control them like you can.”

Mireya’s mouth opened, ready to spit something back, ready to remind him what he’d said to her in that car, how he’d taken her pride and twisted it until it felt dirty. The words were right there.

But the purse sat heavy in her hand. The logo shone under the kitchen light. She looked down again, almost against her will.

Her grip loosened.

Trell’s arm looped back around her waist, drawing her, like he hadn’t just said what he said. He guided her toward the island with a steady pressure.

“Look at this shit I got you,” he said.

Mireya let the purse hang from her fingers and then set it down on the marble. Her hand stayed on it a beat too long before she pulled away.

She reached out instead, fingertips brushing the edge of a bag, the raised lettering of a logo. Tissue paper crinkled under her nails.

Trell tapped a box. Honey Birdette, printed bold across the lid.

“This shit right here was five hundred fucking dollars,” he said. “That’s for tonight.”

Mireya’s eyebrows lifted before she could stop them. She slid the lid off and stared.

Purple lingerie. Not the cheap, itchy kind. The fabric looked soft even in the box, lace clean and sharp, straps neat and thin.

Her mind jumped without permission.

Caine, the day before. Thoughtful. Trying. The way he always tried, even when they were broken. Jordan that morning with the Starbucks gift card.

And then this. Trell dropping five hundred plus the rest.

Her throat worked once. She didn’t say anything. She didn’t trust the sound of her own voice.

Trell watched her face the whole time.

“And I’m taking you out this weekend,” he said. “Whole day spending on you.”

Mireya blinked and forced herself back into the room. The house. The island. The boxes. The way her body still felt tired from the shift, legs sore in that dull way that made her want to be alone in her bed.

“I was gonna go out with my friends this weekend,” she said, and she hated how quiet it came out. Like she was asking permission.

Trell didn’t miss it. His smile stayed in place.

“Shit, I got them, too,” he said. “Unless you don’t want them to know you with a nigga like me.”

Mireya looked up at him. The line sounded light, but the hook under it was familiar. The same little test.

“They know,” she said. “I work with them.”

Trell nodded once, satisfied, as if she’d answered the right question.

“Smart to keep bitches around you who understand you and ain’t gonna judge your hustle,” he said. “You don’t need no bougie bitches dimming your light, baby.”

Mireya nodded without meaning to. Her hands kept moving, drifting from box to bag, pulling tissue aside, letting herself touch things. She opened another bag and slid a dress out partway, the fabric smooth and heavy, the cut daring even folded. Her brain did the math on instinct. Three nights, maybe more.

She stared at it a second too long.

Trell saw it. He always saw the moment she gave something away on her face, even when she tried to keep it locked.

A smile spread across his mouth, slow and pleased, and his hand slid up her back to her neck again.

Soapy
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American Sun

Post by Soapy » 16 Dec 2025, 06:57

look what that money make a bitch do (again x47)
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 16 Dec 2025, 14:16

Calling Mireya mentally strong is comedic, but what do I know?

redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 16 Dec 2025, 16:34

hmm I dunno how I feel about this Devin Sara dynamic yet. He seems like a try too hard. Boy gotta have something in his closet.

I get where Laney is coming from, but comparing being in a shitty loveless marriage to in the clink facing life is diabolical. Especially to the man that went through it :dead:

But I get where she coming from. Definitely looks like Tommy is going the route of disparaging her and her name.

Ramon weaseling his way back in :diabolical: but I think its not going to end well.

Trell got her. Hook, line, and sinker. And he knows it. She knows it. The fuckin YSL bag knows it. He may be more gentle with her for a bit, but she blooded in now.

Or dicked in. However you want to phrase it.
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Post by Caesar » 16 Dec 2025, 19:15

Soapy wrote:
16 Dec 2025, 06:57
look what that money make a bitch do (again x47)
People can't like receiving gifts around here :smh: Tough crowd.
Captain Canada wrote:
16 Dec 2025, 14:16
Calling Mireya mentally strong is comedic, but what do I know?
I mean, realistically, how is she not? She does all this shit to make ends meet without drugs, just straight willpower. A lot of folks would've folded by now.
redsox907 wrote:
16 Dec 2025, 16:34
hmm I dunno how I feel about this Devin Sara dynamic yet. He seems like a try too hard. Boy gotta have something in his closet.

I get where Laney is coming from, but comparing being in a shitty loveless marriage to in the clink facing life is diabolical. Especially to the man that went through it :dead:

But I get where she coming from. Definitely looks like Tommy is going the route of disparaging her and her name.

Ramon weaseling his way back in :diabolical: but I think its not going to end well.

Trell got her. Hook, line, and sinker. And he knows it. She knows it. The fuckin YSL bag knows it. He may be more gentle with her for a bit, but she blooded in now.

Or dicked in. However you want to phrase it.
We'll have to see if so :curtain:

Hey man. It be feeling like that :druski:

Tommy slicker than y'all thought!

She should've never put him out in the first place. He ain't do nothing!

Idk, you know Ms. Rosas is a stubborn chick. You think it's that easy?
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Post by Caesar » 16 Dec 2025, 23:17

Lift Up Sinful Hands

Caine stepped into Derrick McCray’s office and let the door shut behind him.

The room smelled faintly of lemon cleaner and new carpet, the kind of space that tried hard to feel neutral and important at the same time. A framed photo of Paulson Stadium under lights hung crooked by a degree on the wall. Morning sun came through the blinds in narrow bands, striping the desk and the floor in alternating light and shadow.

McCray didn’t wait.

He pushed up out of his chair the second he saw Caine and came around the desk fast, hand already out. The grip landed hard, palm to palm, fingers locking with intention. Before Caine could settle into it, McCray yanked him forward and wrapped an arm around his shoulders, pulling him into a hug that was more collision than embrace. His palm slapped Caine’s back twice, loud and solid.

“Boy,” McCray said, voice booming in the small office, “if I wouldn’t end up like Sherrone Moore, I’d kiss you right now.”

Caine leaned back out of it, a corner of his mouth lifting despite himself. He reset his feet and shook his shoulders once. “You doing a bit too much, big dog.”

McCray barked a laugh that filled the room and waved it off. He turned and went back around the desk, dropped into his chair, and motioned with an open hand toward the seat across from him.

“Sit down, sit down.”

Caine took the chair. The cushion gave just enough under his weight. He rested his forearms on his thighs, posture easy, eyes already scanning the desk.

McCray leaned back and spread his hands. “I’m not exaggerating when I say this,” he said. “We’ve gotten more donations in the last week than we have in the last five years combined. All because you led us to a fucking home playoff game.”

He said it with relish, like the words still surprised him when they came out of his mouth. His fingers drummed once on the arm of the chair, then stilled.

Caine lifted both hands, palms out, the gesture practiced. “Just doing what I can,” he said. He let the words sit a beat, then added, “You got something for me?”

That did it.

McCray slapped the desk, the sound sharp and final, and reached for the drawer at his side. He pulled out a folder thick enough to bow slightly under its own weight and slid it across the desk, stopping it right in front of Caine with two fingers.

“We got you up from one-fifty guaranteed to one-ninety-five guaranteed,” McCray said, leaning forward now. “Total package can hit two-fifty. That’s incentives, appearances, the whole thing.” He smiled, teeth flashing. “And we stuck some other perks in there. Furniture allowance. Little quality-of-life shit. Just to make you a little more comfortable.”

Caine drew the folder closer and opened it. The paper inside was crisp, edges clean. He flipped through slowly, eyes moving line by line, not rushing, not pretending to read faster than he was. Numbers settled into place. Terms. Timelines. He didn’t react, just absorbed.

After a moment, he looked up.

“I need a two-bedroom apartment,” he said. His voice stayed even. “For when my kid comes to town.”

McCray didn’t hesitate. He nodded once, already reaching for his phone before stopping himself. “Done,” he said. “We’ll contact housing today. Get you in there by the week after next.” He shrugged, a half-smile tugging at his mouth. “I’d say this upcoming week, but you know how it’ll be around here. Fucking Miami fans already starting to trickle in.”

“That’s fine,” Caine said. He closed the folder and slid it back into alignment with the edge of the desk. The decision had already settled in him. He nodded once.

He leaned back in the chair. “Got a pen?”

McCray reached into the cup on his desk, fished around for half a second, and then held one up between his fingers, smile wide and satisfied.

~~~

Laney pulled up to the house and cut the engine hard enough that the van rocked once on its shocks.

For a second she stayed in the driver’s seat with both hands on the wheel. The morning had already gone sideways. Late start, boys moving slow, shoes missing, somebody whining about a folder she swore she put in the backpack last night. She had still gotten them to school on time, barely, and the second she was clear of the drop-off line she’d realized what she’d forgotten.

She leaned across the console and started digging through the front seats again.

Her fingers slid between cushions, found lint and a cold quarter, a hair tie, nothing else. She popped the glove box and shoved aside receipts, a packet of napkins, a pen with the cap chewed. She checked the cup holders, then the door pocket, then the narrow space beside the seat where a paper could vanish flat against the plastic. She twisted around and reached into the back, dragging a backpack upright by its strap, tipping it to see if anything fell out. A lunchbox thunked against the floor. A pencil ...

Laney exhaled through her nose, tired of wasting seconds on an answer she already had. She opened the door and stepped out into air that was cool for now and already promising heat later. Gravel shifted under her shoes as she walked around the van, peered once through the back window, then shut the sliding door with the heel of her hand.

She headed for the side door and let herself in.

The kitchen hit her with its usual order. Counters wiped clean. The island bare. No mail. No cup left to dry. No dish towel tossed over the sink. The kind of clean that didn’t feel welcoming, just controlled.

She still looked.

She checked the edge of the sink, the stool tucked under the island, the little space beside the fruit bowl. Her fingers twitched to start opening cabinets, but she didn’t. Not yet this morning anyway.

Laney’s eyes moved from the counters to the island to the hook where keys sometimes hung, then to the spot by the microwave where someone might set a garment down for a second. She already knew it wouldn’t be there. Nothing stayed out in this house. She made sure of that. She started to step toward the drawers anyway, then stopped.

Then she heard Tommy’s voice outside.

It carried through the glass, low and steady, the sound of him talking to somebody without urgency. Laney stopped with her hand hovering near the faucet. She didn’t call out. She didn’t ask who it was. She only shifted forward and leaned to the window.

On the back patio, Tommy sat at the table.

Across from him sat a woman.

Laney recognized her immediately. Long blonde hair falling straight. Sharp blue eyes. The prim way she held herself in the chair, back straight, hands placed neatly, chin lifted as if she couldn’t help turning every moment into a presentation. Even from inside, Laney caught the stillness of her, the way she didn’t fidget or fold in. She looked planted.

Laney’s feet moved before her mind finished catching up. She crossed the kitchen, pushed the back door open, and stepped onto the patio.

The woman looked at her.

Tommy didn’t.

Laney stopped at the edge of the table. The boards under her shoes felt solid, sun not fully on them yet. She kept her face still and let her voice come out cold.

“Claire.”

The woman’s smile arrived quick, smooth, practiced. “Hello, Delaney.”

Laney didn’t answer the smile. She shifted her eyes to Tommy, waited for him to look up. He didn’t. His attention stayed angled toward the table, toward whatever he’d been saying before she walked out.

“Tommy,” Laney said, “you see where I bought that dress I repaired for Mrs. Johnson? And her brooch?”

Tommy lifted a hand and gestured over his shoulder without turning fully. “I hung the dress up in the laundry room.”

Laney held the pause a beat, jaw set. “You should’ve told me. I’m gonna be runnin’ late now.”

That got him.

Tommy turned his head back toward her, slow, and his eyes met hers as if he’d been waiting to do it on purpose. “Crazy, how that works, huh?”

Laney nodded once, short and tight. She bit her tongue hard enough to feel the sting. She didn’t give him anything else to chew on. Her hands stayed at her sides, fingers curled, nails pressing into her palms.

She turned on her heel and stalked back inside, kicking the door shut behind her.

The slam cracked through the kitchen. The clean room didn’t soften it. Laney didn’t stop to look at the counters again. She cut down the hall toward the laundry, steps clipped, breath quick but controlled.

The laundry room smelled of detergent and warm metal. The dryer sat under a shelf of folded towels stacked into strict squares. The dress hung over the dryer exactly where Tommy said it would be, draped careful, hanger hooked over the edge.

Laney reached for it and ripped it off the hanger in one hard pull. The empty hanger clacked against the dryer. She didn’t fix it. She turned back toward the door with the dress bunched in her fist, already moving, already late.

She cursed under her breath as she went, low and sharp, and headed out to leave.

~~~

The club closed around them the second they stepped inside.

Heat pressed in from every direction, already worked into the walls, already lived in. Bass traveled up through the floor and into Mireya’s calves, her thighs, her ribs, settling there with a steady insistence. Lights cut fast across the room, red to blue to white, catching glitter on eyelids, sweat at the hollow of throats, the sharp shine of bare shoulders brushing past one another.

For once, she wasn’t counting anything.

Not songs. Not minutes. Not how long she had before she needed to switch on.

Her skirt rode high on her legs, the top a thin band around her chest. She felt exposed and loose at the same time, the unfamiliar relief of being seen without being assessed. It changed the way she moved. Her hips rolled wider. Her shoulders dropped. Her arms lifted without calculation.

Jaslene danced close at her side, one arm up, wrist soft, body moving with a confidence that didn’t look for permission. Their shoulders brushed, then their hips, then stayed there, movement syncing without either of them saying a word. Jaslene’s mouth stayed in a grin, eyes bright, heat already slicking her skin.

Alejandra had peeled off almost immediately with Hayley, the two of them swallowed by the crowd, hair swinging, laughter carried off by the bass. Bianca and Liana stayed together, backs brushing as they danced, unbothered by the press of bodies around them.

Mireya let herself get lost in it.

The music stopped feeling like individual tracks and started feeling continuous, one long push that kept her moving even when she closed her eyes. Sweat gathered at her lower back, at the hollow of her neck, along the inside of her elbows. Someone bumped into her from behind. Another body slid past her hip. None of it mattered.

When they finally drifted off the floor, it wasn’t because the energy dropped. It was because their bodies needed a break.

The section opened up as they approached, Trell’s people shifting without being told. Space appeared where there hadn’t been any seconds earlier. Ice glimmered in metal buckets. Bottles sweated under the lights.

Trell sat in the middle of the U-shaped couch, posture relaxed, one arm stretched along the back, presence anchoring the space without effort. Ant stood instead of sitting, shoulders squared, eyes moving constantly. Dez leaned at the edge of the couch, half turned toward the floor, attention split. Yola hovered near the table with a drink in his hand, gaze already roaming openly.

Mireya dropped beside Trell, the cushion dipping under her weight. Her knees brushed his leg. Jaslene slid in on her other side, thigh pressing firm and familiar, grounding. Alejandra reappeared with Hayley, both of them flushed and smiling, and Bianca and Liana filled in along the curve of the couch.

The section buzzed with voices and laughter, the music pressing in around them.

Trell leaned close, his mouth near Mireya’s ear, voice low and steady. “You drunk yet?”

She shook her head once.

He didn’t comment. He reached forward, pulled the vodka bottle from the ice bucket, water running down the glass, and set it in her hand. His eyes stayed on her face while he did it.

Mireya held his gaze for a beat, searching, finding nothing she could grab onto. Then she tipped the bottle back and took several long gulps. The burn hit sharp and clean, her throat working as she swallowed. She didn’t look away until his eyes finally slid off her.

Trell turned then, motioning Ant closer. Their heads dipped together, voices low, swallowed by the bass.

Jaslene took the bottle from Mireya’s hand. “No te emborraches tanto que te dé panocha de whisky.”

Mireya shot her a look. “Que yo esté borracho no tiene nada que ver con tu lengua.”

Jaslene smiled wide, unapologetic, took a swig herself, then set the bottle back on the table. Her hand came to rest on Mireya’s thigh, thumb pressing slow and deliberate. Mireya didn’t move it away.

Hayley noticed.

She twisted where she sat, eyes catching the contact, then craned her neck toward the next section where Alejandra stood talking to a finance-bro white guy in a crisp shirt.

“Girl,” Hayley called, voice cutting through the music, “get your people.”

Alejandra didn’t even bother turning fully before shouting back, “No es ese tipo de club, putas!”

Jaslene laughed and tossed her a look. “Fuck off.” Her eyes stayed locked on Mireya’s, unbothered.

Mireya felt it before she saw it. The weight of Trell’s stare. She glanced over her shoulder and caught him watching her, expression calm, unreadable. She held it a moment, then leaned closer to Jaslene.

“¿No hay espectáculos gratuitos, eh?”

Jaslene nodded. “You right.” She kissed Mireya anyway, quick and sure, mouth warm, then slid off the couch. “Bathroom,” she said, already moving.

Mireya grabbed the vodka again, drinking slower this time, letting the warmth spread through her chest and down her arms. The section pulsed with bodies leaning in and out, laughter rising and falling.

One of the men she didn’t recognize leaned forward, voice loud enough to cut through the beat. “Luna. I got money, you know?”

Mireya lifted her chin. “Yeah?” she asked. “How much?”

Dez snapped immediately, sharp. “It’s her fucking birthday, man. Chill the fuck out.”

Mireya shrugged, loose, shoulders rolling with the rhythm, already swaying as Bianca and Liana reached for her arms, laughing, pulling her back toward the floor.

The bass swallowed them again as they disappeared into the crowd.

~~~

The bar stayed loud in the way places did when nobody wanted the night to end yet.

Music rattled out of speakers mounted too high to see clearly, bass vibrating through the sticky floor and the metal foot rail along the bar. The air smelled like beer that had been spilled and wiped up with the same rag too many times, sharp and sour underneath the sweetness of whatever cheap cologne had been sprayed earlier. The television over the bar showed a basketball game nobody was really watching anymore, bodies blocking half the screen, the volume turned down low enough that the crowd noise blended into the rest of the room.

Caine sat third from the end, elbow on the bar, bottle sweating against his palm. Dillon leaned in close on his left, already loud, already grinning. Terrell sat two seats down from him, shoulders back, jaw set like he had something to prove even when nobody was asking. Keanon and Dwight flanked the other side, both halfway turned toward each other, beers half gone.

“I can’t believe your bitch ass decided to enter the portal the week before we play the biggest game in the history of this motherfucker,” Dillon said, pointing the neck of his bottle at Terrell.

Terrell didn’t look at him right away. He took a long pull from his beer, swallowed, then wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. “Blame Caine’s ass,” he said, finally cutting his eyes sideways. “If he had just transferred, a nigga could’ve had a shot to start.”

Dwight laughed first. He reached out and clapped a hand on Terrell’s shoulder, friendly but firm. “You weren’t gonna start, bruh.”

Keanon snorted. Dillon barked out a laugh and leaned back, nearly tipping his stool before catching himself. Terrell shook his head, lips curling, but he didn’t push it. He just lifted his bottle again and drank.

Caine let it wash over him. He kept his posture loose, shoulders relaxed, eyes flicking once toward the television and then back to the bar top.

“I’m gonna go piss,” he said, pushing his stool back with his heel.

Dillon immediately leaned forward. “They probably gave him someone to hold it so he ain’t gotta do shit anymore.”

Keanon shook his head, laughing under his breath. “That was fucking crazy bro.”

Dwight lifted his eyebrows. “Yeah, pause.”

Caine threaded his way through bodies pressed too close together, shoulders brushing strangers, the floor tacky under his shoes. The hallway toward the bathrooms narrowed fast, light dimmer back there, the music dropping into a muffled thump.

The men’s room door stuck halfway open. Someone inside cursed when it caught.

Caine grabbed the edge and shoved. “Move the fuck out the way.”

The door swung wider and he stepped in.

The smell hit first. Stale piss, bleach, and something sweet that didn’t belong there. The frat boy stood near the sink, belt half buckled, hands fumbling. Rylee sat on the edge of the counter beside him, jeans and panties tugged slightly down, one sneaker hooked on the metal bar beneath the sink.

She looked at Caine and didn’t flinch.

Then she nodded toward the door. “Can you get out?”

Caine stopped just inside the room. He stared at her, then let his eyes flick to the frat boy and back. “In the fucking bathroom, Rylee? Really?”

The frat boy’s eyes widened. He lifted his hands instinctively, palms out, belt still loose.

Caine jabbed his thumb over his shoulder. “Get the fuck out.”

The frat boy moved fast, buckling as he went. “I ain’t know that was your girl, bro. My bad, 10.” He scurried past Caine, shoulder ducked and disappeared out the door.

The room went quieter when it shut behind him. The music from the bar pressed back in, dull and distant.

Rylee rolled her eyes. “You cain’t be runnin’ dudes off if you ain’t gonna fuck me, Caine.”

He shook his head once, sharp. “Get a fucking rose toy if you need it that bad. This some nasty work, though.”

She snorted. “Like you ain’t did worse.”

Caine shrugged. “That ain’t the point. At least go in the women’s bathroom instead of this pissy ass one.”

Rylee pushed off the counter and slid down, denim whispering as she tugged her jeans and underwear back up. “Well,” she said, “since you here. You wanna?”

“All I want to do is piss,” he said, flat. “So you gotta go unless you into some weird shit.”

She straightened and turned, walking past him toward the door. They held each other’s eyes the whole way, the space between them tight but uncharged.

“I think I know what’s been up with you lately,” she said, hand on the door.

“What?” he asked.

“You been fuckin’ that bitch Mackenzie,” she said, then smiled thin, “and you in love with some new twat.”

He sucked his teeth. “Ain’t even close. But stop doing this kinda shit. You gonna put your parents in an early grave.”

She waved him off, already halfway out. “They’ll be alright.”

The door shut behind her.

Caine stood there a beat longer, then shook his head and stepped over to the urinals.

~~~

The car hummed steady beneath them, tires eating up dark asphalt while the city thinned out into longer stretches of road and fewer lights.

Mireya sat in the back seat with Jaslene’s head tipped against her shoulder, warm and heavy with sleep. Jaslene’s hair brushed her neck every time the car shifted lanes. Mireya held herself still, careful not to jostle her awake, one arm angled awkwardly so Jaslene could stay where she was. Her phone rested low in her lap, screen dimmed, buzzing softly every few minutes.

The night still clung to her body. Sweat dried tacky along her ribs and under her chest. Her head swam in slow, gentle waves from all the alcohol she’d put away earlier, the club echoing faintly behind her eyes. Bass that wasn’t there anymore. Heat that hadn’t fully let go.

An hour earlier, Trell, Ant, and Yola had peeled off without ceremony, murmured words exchanged. Business, whatever that meant tonight. Dez had ended up behind the wheel instead, hands tight on it now, posture straighter than it used to be when he thought he was more than a driver.

Bounce music played low through the aux, not loud enough to draw attention, just enough to fill the quiet. Dez tapped his fingers against the steering wheel to the beat, unconscious, repetitive.

Mireya’s phone buzzed again.

Jordan.

She smiled without meaning to, just a little, the corner of her mouth lifting before she caught it. She typed back with her thumb, keeping the messages short but warm.

Every so often she glanced up and caught Dez’s eyes flicking toward the rearview mirror, then snapping back to the road. He did it quick, like he thought she wouldn’t notice. She noticed every time.

The green sign for Jaslene’s exit rose ahead of them, reflective paint catching the headlights. Mireya lifted her chin.

“Get off at the next exit,” she said. “Her apartment around there.”

Dez’s jaw tightened. “Trell said to bring you back to his place.”

“And I’m saying I’m staying at her place,” Mireya replied, voice even. “So get off at the next exit. He ain’t even gonna fucking be there.”

Dez exhaled hard through his nose, fingers drumming once more before he reached over and signaled. The car slid into the exit lane, tires humming louder as the road curved down.

They hit the red light at the bottom of the ramp and stopped. The car idled. The bounce track looped back on itself.

Dez’s fingers kept tapping. He glanced up again.

“What?” Mireya asked.

He hesitated, then said it anyway. “I ain’t know you was dyking.”

Mireya didn’t look up from her phone. Her thumb finished the message she was typing before she sent it. “I’m not. I’m straight.”

Dez shifted in his seat, lifting his hand and gesturing vaguely in the mirror, between Mireya and Jaslene. “Y’all be kissing and shit, though.”

Mireya finally raised her eyes. “You don’t kiss your homeboys, Dez?”

He barked out a short laugh. “Fuck no.”

She shrugged the shoulder Jaslene wasn’t using. “Well, I don’t know what to tell you. ’Cause I’m straight.”

The light turned green. Dez let it drop and rolled forward, turning onto the main road without pushing it further. Streetlights slid past in steady intervals. Mireya gave him directions, casual and precise, naming the complex and then the building number she knew was wrong. Close enough to look right. Far enough to matter.

She leaned closer to Jaslene and nudged her gently. “Estamos en tu casa.”

Jaslene stirred, groaned low, and rubbed at her eyes. She pushed herself upright, hair sticking out in uneven tufts, then reached for the door handle.

She slid out onto the sidewalk without fully waking, shoes scraping concrete. Dez leaned back slightly.

“Hold on, Mireya,” he said. “Let me holler at you for a minute.”

Mireya looked at Jaslene. Jaslene blinked at her, then shrugged, stepping clear of the door and starting toward the building.

Mireya leaned back against the seat. “Make it quick. I’m tired.”

Dez swallowed. “Why you do all this? You too good to be caught up in this life.”

She snorted once, short and sharp. “Dez, you didn’t even know my fucking name until a week ago. You don’t know shit about me.”

“I know,” he said quickly. “But that don’t mean a nigga can’t care about you on some shit.”

Mireya rolled her lips into her mouth, tasting vodka and restraint. “Because we fucked a few times?” she said. “That you paid me for?”

His mouth opened, closed. He rushed to fill the space. “I’m just saying. If you like boss niggas, I could be that. I don’t want nothing happening to you.”

She shook her head and scooted toward the door. “Good night, Dez.”

His hand shot back, fingers closing around her arm to stop her.

“Get your fucking hand off me,” she snapped.

He released her immediately, palms up. “Look, my bad and all. But don’t tell Trell, okay?”

She held his gaze a beat. “Fine.”

Mireya stepped out of the car and shut the door. Dez pulled away without another word.

Jaslene glanced back over her shoulder. “What was that about?”

Mireya shook her head. “Dumb ass motherfuckers.”

They turned and walked toward the right building.

~~~

Trell stepped onto the porch. Ant stayed tight on his right shoulder, head tipped down, eyes working the block anyway. Yola and Boogie came behind them in a loose line, the fifth man hanging back far enough to watch both directions at once.

The shotgun house looked abandoned the way a lot of places did when nobody wanted to argue with what it had become. Paint tired. Rail out front flaking. The kind of door that swelled in humidity and never sat right in its frame. The street out front stayed mostly still, a couple cars hugged to the curb with dust on their hoods, the air damp enough to stick to skin.

Trell pushed the door open.

The hinges didn’t scream, but they complained. The smell inside hit first. Old wood, mildew, and the thin sharp bite of something chemical that didn’t belong in a living room. The place had been cleared out to make it useful. No couch. No TV. No framed pictures left behind to tell a story. Just bare floorboards and the shapes where furniture used to sit.

One guy sat in the living room, bundled up like a homeless man posted there to keep watch. Layers on layers, hood up, shoulders slumped forward. He didn’t react when the door opened. Didn’t shift. Didn’t even lift his head.

Boogie paused half a step in, eyes cutting over the room first, then back to the man. Yola didn’t slow down. He walked right up and leaned in, pushing the man’s head with two fingers.

The head lolled to the side, heavy. His eyes stayed open.

Yola hovered his hand in front of the man’s mouth and held it there long enough to be sure. Then he straightened, turning his head toward Trell.

“He alive,” Yola said. “That fetty got him froze up.”

The man’s stare didn’t track. His chest rose shallow under all that cloth, slow enough you had to watch for it. Sweat shined on his upper lip even in the dim, and his jaw hung loose, like his face had forgotten what to do with itself.

Boogie shifted, pointing toward the back where the wall had been torn down. Plaster and lath lay busted on the floor, scattered and chalky. Above it, the ceiling sagged and hung in strips, beams exposed, wiring drooping.

Boogie clicked his tongue. “Guess whoever did all that shit thought he was dead.”

Trell didn’t answer right away. He took in the torn wall, the hanging ceiling, the way the room looked lighter without whatever had been hidden there. He looked down at the man again, eyes still open, body turned to stone.

Then Trell reached into his pocket and pulled out a fold of cash. He peeled bills off with his thumb, quick but controlled.

“Go ask Auntie next door who she saw coming in and out here tonight,” Trell said.

Boogie tucked the money without a word and headed for the door. Yola followed, already moving with purpose, both of them stepping out into the night.

When they were gone, the room went quieter again, the thin line of outside noise slipping in through the gap of the door. A distant car rolled by. Music leaked from somewhere down the block, bass low enough to feel more than hear.

Trell stayed in place, eyes still on the wreckage.

“Who you think it was?” he asked.

Ant’s answer came easy. “Could’ve been anyone,” he said. “That’s the problem with not being cliqued up, ain’t it?”

Trell nodded once, slow. “Yeah, but it had to be someone who knew we had shit here.”

Ant’s gaze slid toward the torn opening. “We been using this one since P was still alive.”

“Yeah,” Trell said. “I know.”

He took one last look at the space, at what was missing, then turned toward the door. At the threshold he paused and tipped his chin back at the man on the floor.

“Deal with that.”

Ant didn’t speak. He just nodded and walked over, steps quiet on the boards. He crouched near the man’s side.

Trell stepped out into the night air. The humidity grabbed him immediately, damp on his face and hands. The streetlight buzzed with a weak flicker. Somewhere nearby, a porch screen slapped once and went still.

He reached into his jacket and pulled out a blunt, already rolled. He sparked the lighter, flame bright against his knuckles, and lit it with a slow pull.

Behind him, inside the house, there was a brief scuffle. A scrape of cloth against floor. A short, low grunt that cut off. Something knocked softly, not loud enough to draw the block’s attention. Then the sound died down the same way it started, quick and contained.

Trell exhaled smoke and kept his eyes forward, listening anyway.

A moment later the door opened again. Ant stepped out, shutting it most of the way behind him. He wiped his hands on his jeans, palms dragging down denim. His face stayed flat.

Trell didn’t ask. Ant didn’t offer.

They started walking together toward the car, smoke trailing behind Trell in thin ribbons that disappeared into the dark.

Soapy
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American Sun

Post by Soapy » 17 Dec 2025, 06:50

Redsox was right all along about the lesbian angle :rockclap:

redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 17 Dec 2025, 11:22

#soxstradamous

Dez fucking retarded. The boss already had me stomped out and demoted me to driver after I was pillow talking to HIS bitch. But now he on some save a ho shit and is just going to get his ass beat more :smh:

Caine smart to get a bigger apartment :smart:

Tommy slowly driving Laney crazy. Who this Claire bitch tho. Old flame, or a lawyer? They clearly knew each other, but its a small town.

Thought Rylee was going to be getting raped for a second there, but nah. She just on the same messy shit.

if they were using that spot since P, Cass definitely knows about it. Getting hers back? :hmm:
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 17 Dec 2025, 12:29

Soapy wrote:
17 Dec 2025, 06:50
Redsox was right all along about the lesbian angle :rockclap:
redsox907 wrote:
17 Dec 2025, 11:22
soxstradamous
In the same chapter y’all are calling this woman a lesbian from, Mireya did something for a man without said man even saying a word, Mireya was at the club being funded by a man, Mireya was open to a random man’s proposition for sex, and was grinning and cheesing while texting a man. This is after a couple chapters back, pulling out stripper moves on her baby daddy just because she wanted to.

And most significantly, she said she was straight.

That woman is straight. There is no definition of lesbian you can apply to her :pgdead:
redsox907 wrote:
17 Dec 2025, 11:22

Dez fucking retarded. The boss already had me stomped out and demoted me to driver after I was pillow talking to HIS bitch. But now he on some save a ho shit and is just going to get his ass beat more :smh:

Caine smart to get a bigger apartment :smart:

Tommy slowly driving Laney crazy. Who this Claire bitch tho. Old flame, or a lawyer? They clearly knew each other, but its a small town.

Thought Rylee was going to be getting raped for a second there, but nah. She just on the same messy shit.

if they were using that spot since P, Cass definitely knows about it. Getting hers back? :hmm:
There’s a reason Dez was low man on the totem pole. Man said he in love with a stripper (T-Pain voice)

Beyond the obvious of not needing to sleep on an air mattress, I feel like you mean that for other reasons.

TBD in Season 4 :curtain:

Totes consensual. Nasty though.

Also TBD in Season 4 :curtain:
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Captain Canada
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Post by Captain Canada » 17 Dec 2025, 13:44

Dez gonna end up floating somewhere if he keeps playing with Trell behind his back. Mireya ain't to be trusted when it comes to him.

Someone needs to help Rylee fr. She's going to end up in a bad way soon.
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