American Sun

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Caesar
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American Sun

Post by Caesar » 26 Nov 2025, 12:53

Lose the Faith

Caine stepped into the meeting room and the cold air hit him in the face. The lights were dimmed down for the projector. A Georgia Southern logo sat in the corner of the screen over a slide full of numbers he couldn’t quite make out yet.

Derrick McCray and Erica Paulson were already on one side of the table with their laptops open, the university logo on the backs of both. Brandon Lytle sat a seat down from them, polo tucked, tablet in front of him, a pen rolling slow between his fingers. At the other end, near the screen, Coach Aplin leaned against the wall, arms folded, while Chris Davis, the athletic director, stood closer to the door like he’d just stepped out of another meeting and hadn’t decided yet if this one was worth being late to.

“Caine,” Derrick said, standing halfway and reaching across the table. “Good to see you, man.”

They went down the line. Quick handshakes. Erica’s bracelets clicked when she reached for him.

“You doing alright?” Brandon asked, that tone that always sat somewhere between coach and big cousin.

“I’m straight,” Caine said.

He dropped into the chair they’d left open at the head of the table. The leather creaked under his weight. From here the screen filled his vision. Big white letters over a dark background, his name in the top right corner. Somebody had gone to work on this.

Derrick didn’t waste time. “Alright, so we all know why we’re here,” he said, easing back into his seat. “Portal’s not open yet, but conversations are. You got people calling.”

Caine didn’t answer that. Everybody in the room knew who’d been circling.

Derrick clicked the remote. The first slide shifted to the next—a simple title across the top: WHAT GEORGIA SOUTHERN CAN AND CAN’T DO.

“Let me start with this,” Derrick said. “We’re all grown here. We don’t have to pretend a Sun Belt school can offer what an SEC or Big Ten school can. We can’t.” He shrugged once, easy. “The money’s different. The TV deals are different.”

He let that hang a second. The room hummed with the projector fan, a low steady whir. Caine watched the words on the screen.

“What we do have,” Derrick went on, “is something they can’t guarantee you. You stay here, you’re the starter. Period.”

Brandon cleared his throat, spinning the pen once between his fingers. “Provided Coach Aplin is happy with your play and effort in camp over the offseason,” he added. His mouth twitched like he knew he had to say it that way.

Erica leaned in, bangs falling forward. “Let’s not be silly now,” she said, eyes sliding to Caine. “It’s Caine’s job.”

Aplin pushed off the wall enough to come stand by the end of the table. “He knows what’s expected of him,” he said.

Caine nodded once.

Derrick hit the remote again. The next slide came up, a table with three columns, all numbers. The top line was highlighted.

“Like I told you before,” he said, “we’re not gonna sit here and pretend we can offer you seven figures. That’s not where we at. Here’s what we can do.”

He pointed at the highlighted line with the remote. “One fifty, up front. That’s yours. We’d structure it in ten installments across the year so everybody stays happy on the admin side, but that’s guaranteed. No bullshit.”

Caine’s eyes tracked the line. $150,000. Ten installments dropped under the main figure in smaller type.

Erica tapped her trackpad so a small list of logos popped up on the side—local car dealership, a regional grocery chain, a couple of smaller brands he recognized from billboards around town. “On top of that,” she said, “we’ve been talking with some local and regional partners. We’re looking at an extra fifty to seventy-five from brand deals depending on how you perform. Social, appearances, that kind of thing.”

Caine did the math in his head.

“So… two twenty-five at best?” he asked, voice low.

“Only schools paying this in our weight class are in the American, kid,” Aplin said. “And that’s still a maybe.”

Chris Davis spoke for the first time, his voice a little rough from whatever meeting he’d just come out of. “It’d be the most we’ve ever committed to one player here,” he said. “Ever.”

Caine nodded slowly, eyes still on the screen. “I ain’t gonna play in y’all face,” he said. “Can’t I go to a P4 school, sit on the bench, and make this too?”

The question came out steady. No apology in it. If anything, it sounded like he was just reading the numbers out loud.

Aplin didn’t look offended. If anything, his mouth twitched like he respected it. “You got too much talent to be sitting on somebody’s bench just because you want to put on an Alabama helmet and say you go there,” he said. “You know that.”

Erica clicked to the next slide. The header read TIMING MATTERS. Under it, two big boxes: TRANSFER NOW and TRANSFER LATER. Each one had dollar amounts underneath, arrows pointing forward.

“You probably could get more going P4 right away,” she said. “I won’t lie to you. Some of those schools will throw crazy numbers. But…”

She pointed at the TRANSFER NOW box. “You do that and don’t start? Your brand value drops. You’re behind whatever five-star they already promised the world. You’re a name on a depth chart. You can rebound from that, sure, but you’re running uphill. You lose money over the long run if you jump too fast.”

Caine leaned in, elbows on the table, looking at the numbers. The TRANSFER NOW box had a range under it: $300k–$500k. Under that, a smaller font line: IF YOU DON’T START - BACK IN PORTAL. The TRANSFER LATER side had a different range in thick bold: $8M–$10M. Underneath: TOP OF PORTAL, DAY ONE STARTER, ELITE P4.

Derrick stood up and walked toward the screen, remote in one hand, the other tapping the side of the TRANSFER NOW box. “This here is what the number guys came up with based on what’s out there right now. Recent reports, what we’re hearing from collectives, real deals being done. You leave after this season? Maybe you’re looking at five hundred if you land somewhere and start right away.”

He moved his hand down to the small print. “If you don’t? You go back in the portal trying to find somewhere like UL-Monroe to take you. That’s reality.”

He slid his hand across to the other box. “You stay here? Put up another season like you putting up right now?” He glanced back at Caine. “One, you’re probably the top quarterback in the portal. You can go anywhere you want for your last two years. Two, now you’re looking at eight to ten million, if not more, plus the two twenty-five from us. That’s millions of dollars guaranteed on the back end, instead of chasing half a million now and hoping it works out.”

Caine tapped his fingers against the table, a slow rhythm that kept his face even.

Aplin shifted his weight off the wall and stepped closer, hands loose at his sides. “I’m not asking you for an answer today,” he said. “You know when the portal opens. You know when you can enter. I’m just telling you that one fifty guaranteed, with you not fighting to even be in the building, is good money. For where you came from and where we’re trying to help you go.”

Caine let that sit. The room felt smaller with all those numbers bouncing around inside it.

“Y’all got any more slides?” he asked.

Erica’s mouth twitched into something like a smile. “We do,” she said. She clicked the remote, and the screen shifted again, fresh columns and bars loading in. More comparisons of his earning potential in each scenario filled the wall in front of him.

~~~

Ramon had the seat pushed back enough that his knee sat easy under the wheel. The car idled with a low shake.

Tyree lounged against the passenger seat, shoulder sunk into the backrest, one foot on the dashboard. Smoke curled out of his nose and drifted up toward the headliner. The blunt burned between his fingers, ash fat on the tip.

“When we going back to the A?” he asked, eyes on the front door instead of Ramon.

Ramon tapped his fingers against the wheel. “Duke hasn’t said shit about that in a little minute,” he said. “I know some of them G-Strip niggas were saying they got a plug up in Gary.”

Tyree coughed once. The sound snapped off the glass and had more in it than just the pull he’d taken. He leaned forward, hand out with the blunt. “Gary?” he said. “Like in fucking Indiana?”

Ramon took the blunt and tipped the ash out of the crack of the window. Tiny orange flecks fell and went out. He pulled, held it, exhaled slow into the heat. “Something about one of their mawmaws went up there in the forties or whatever,” he said. “They got cousins up there.”

Tyree laughed, the sound sharp in the small car. He sat back again, head bumping the headrest. “Who the fuck moving weight in Indiana?”

Ramon passed the blunt back across the console. “Probably some fucking hillbillies,” he said. “They better watch them boys up there. Niggas might be on some weird shit.”

The house stayed quiet. The curtains moved in Tessa’s front window, a little hand gripping the fabric and pulling it back for a second then letting go.

The door opened. E.J. stepped out first. Tessa came with him, bare legs catching a little of the glow. They stopped at the top of the steps. E.J. dipped his head and kissed her, one hand at her waist, the other dropping to her hip and holding. Whatever he said stayed between them and the screen door.

Tyree watched through the glass, then let his eyes roll. He held the blunt out toward Ramon again. “That nigga whipped behind some white pussy,” he said.

Ramon’s mouth pulled up. He took the handoff without looking away from the yard. “Couldn’t be me,” he said, smoke riding his words when he talked.

Tyree shifted in his seat, turning more toward Ramon now. “Ain’t you niggas fuck on some white bitches without me when y’all went kick it with Caine?” he asked. “Ain’t even let a nigga know y’all was doing that.”

Ramon sucked on his teeth. “Yeah,” he said. “Because you were playing school instead of putting in work, nigga.”

“A nigga can’t better himself,” Tyree said.

The front door thumped again. E.J. came down the steps, Tessa’s hand slipping out of his at the bottom. She stayed on the porch for a second, arms wrapping around herself, watching him walk away. He threw a last look over his shoulder and then crossed the yard.

He reached for the front passenger handle. Tyree’s hand lifted fast, two fingers snapping toward the back seat. “Nah, nigga,” he said. “Get in the back.”

E.J. paused, hand still on the handle. “Man, what?”

Ramon didn’t say anything, the blunt riding the corner of his mouth. He waited.

Tyree pointed again. “Get in the back,” he said.

E.J. sucked his teeth, but the fight in it was small. He let go of the front door, yanked the back one open, and climbed in, knee hitting the seat before he slumped down behind Tyree. The car rocked once with his weight.

“I thought you’d want to be driven around since you cultured,” Tyree said, eyes still on the house.

E.J. leaned forward between the seats, forearm on the back of Tyree’s headrest. His other hand reached past Tyree’s cheek and plucked the blunt from his fingers. He took a long pull, then blew the smoke toward the half-open window. “Nigga, shut yo goofy ass up,” he said.

Ramon put the car in gear. The gearshift clicked. He eased off the curb and pulled away from the house.

They didn’t get halfway down the block before light flared behind them. Red and blue lights going back and forth in the rearview. The chirp of a siren snapped at their rear bumper.

“Motherfucker,” E.J. said under his breath. His shoulders tensed where he leaned between the seats. He glanced back, saw the NOPD cruiser tucked up on their bumper, and sank back into the shadows of the back seat, jaw set.

Ramon’s eyes cut to the mirror, then to the speedometer. He clicked his tongue and eased them to the curb. Tires rolled against gravel and broken glass. The engine idled, rougher now that everything else had gone quiet.

The cruiser door opened. The street picked up the sound and gave it right back. A figure stepped out, walk steady, hand resting near his belt. Ramon watched him in the side mirror as he came up.

A knuckle rapped on the driver’s side window. Ramon rolled it down, slow enough to show he had time. As the glass dropped, he took the blunt from E.J.’s hand where it had drifted back up between the seats. The cherry glowed again even with the lights on them.

“Brent LaDoux, New Orleans police,” the cop said. His voice wore a tired kind of polite. “You know what I stopped you for?”

Ramon pulled, let the smoke sit, then let it slide out the side of his mouth and into the night between them. “No,” he said. “But this even your jurisdiction, officer?”

Brent’s eyes shifted past him into the car. Tyree slouched in the passenger seat, head turned toward the window, and E.J. in the back. His gaze caught on E.J. for a beat.

Brent gave a small nod in that direction. “Morning,” he said.

E.J. didn’t nod back. The most he gave him was the flat of his stare.

Brent looked at the burning tip between Ramon’s fingers. “Y’all got a card for that?” he asked.

Ramon’s hand left the wheel and dropped to the center console. He flipped it open, thumb brushing past registration and a tangle of receipts until he pulled out a worn medical marijuana card. He pinched it between two fingers and held it up without leaning, the blunt still resting in the crook of his other hand.

Tyree cleared his throat. “It’s for my cataracts,” he said, eyes still on the windshield.

The corner of Brent’s mouth ticked. He took the card, glanced at it in the wash of his headlights, then handed it back. “Mmhmm,” he said. “Y’all be safe out here.”

He started to turn away, then slowed and looked back into the car, this time straight at E.J. “I’ll let Belle Chasse know to be on the lookout for your type,” he said.

E.J.’s lip curled. His hand came up to rest on the back of Ramon’s seat, fingers spread. “They ain’t worried about your ass,” he said.

Brent let out a short laugh. “We’ll see,” he said, and then he stepped away from the car. On his way back to the cruiser, he angled his head toward Tessa’s block, eyes skimming in that direction before he opened his door and slid in.

The red and blue dropped a second later. The tires crunched over gravel as he pulled away.

Ramon rolled the window up halfway, the glass squeaking in the tracks. He looked into the rearview, met E.J.’s eyes there. “You need to handle that,” he said.

E.J. stared back at him a heartbeat, jaw bunched. “Nigga I know,” he said.

~~~

Sara pushed the restaurant door open with her shoulder and stepped into the cooled air. The noise from the street dulled behind her, traffic and a far-off horn pressed back by glass and brick. Inside, the place hummed in a quieter way. Forks hit plates. Somebody laughed under their breath. The air carried lemon, butter, and the fryer smell that clung to a New Orleans kitchen no matter what the menu said.

The host glanced up from the little screen in his hand. “Table for two?” he asked.

She nodded. “I’m meeting someone. Devin.” She added his last name, watched recognition flicker, and knew she was in the right place.

“Right this way,” he said.

He led her through the narrow aisle between tables. Chairs scraped against tile as people shifted. The hem of a server’s apron brushed her hip when they passed too close. Her sandals made a soft scuff on the floor. She had timed it so she wouldn’t be the one sitting alone waiting, and not so late that it looked like she didn’t care. This time, the text about running behind stayed in her drafts.

Devin stood when they reached the two-top by the window. The glass behind him caught the movement of cars and a bleached strip of sky. He stepped around his chair and pulled the other one out for her with an easy motion.

“Sara,” he said, smile quick and warm.

He was in a pressed button-down, sleeves rolled to his forearms, watch band snug at his wrist. Sara put her hand on the back of the chair and let herself sit.

“Hey,” she said. “Sorry again about being so busy and rescheduling on you a bunch of times.”

He pushed her chair in with one hand, then circled back to his side of the table. “It’s all good,” he said, giving a small dismissive wave as he sat. “We’re both adults. Stuff comes up.”

She let out a breath that had been sitting shallow in her chest and let it show as a faint smile. “You’re not wrong,” she said. “It doesn’t help that my son had a home game this weekend and I go to all of them with his daughter and her mom.”

A waiter slid up beside her and set down a sweating glass of water. The ice clinked once against the sides.

“For you,” he said.

“Thank you,” she answered, steadying the base with her fingers so it did not slide on the condensation.

Devin tipped his chin, studying her. “A grandma, huh?” he said. “We’ll have to get you one of those old blue hair wigs so you can fit in with the other ones.”

Sara shook her head, but the laugh still slipped out of her anyway.

“I don’t think that’s my color,” she said.

The waiter came back with menus and set one in front of each of them. Plastic sleeves caught the light from above. “I’ll give y’all a minute,” he said, and vanished into the swirl of other tables.

Devin flipped his menu open but his eyes didn’t drop right away. “So, your boy’s an athlete?” he asked. “Here I was thinking he was just a regular ol’ college student.”

Sara laid her palm flat on top of her menu instead of opening it. “No,” she said. “He plays football at Georgia Southern.”

The name landed and moved something in his face. Devin straightened a little. His eyebrows lifted, and the easy smile sharpened into recognition.

“Caine Guerra?” he said. “The one that they’ve been talking about for months? That’s your son.”

Heat moved through her chest, quick and contained. She thought of him in his jersey for a beat. The smile she gave Devin was small and proud and careful.

“Yep,” she said. “He’s mine.”

“Small world,” Devin said. He leaned back, shaking his head once. “I guess I never put it together. Kid named Guerra from New Orleans. Woman named Guerra from New Orleans. I guess there can’t be too many Guerras running around here.”

Sara lifted one shoulder, then let it fall. “Only ones I know I’m related to,” she said.

Behind them, a chair leg dragged across the floor. Somebody’s phone buzzed against a tabletop. Outside, a bus chuffed through a green light and rolled on. The city’s noise slipped in and out through the glass.

Devin finally looked down at his menu for a beat, then back up at her. “I’ll have to be on my A-game to impress a woman with a famous son then,” he said, grin creeping back in.

Sara’s mouth tugged up, amused and wary at once. “He’s hardly famous,” she said. The words came out with more truth than argument.

Devin shrugged, still smiling, eyes dropping to the list of entrees. “Just don’t let him do what Diego Pavia did last year,” he said. “You might break the internet.”

She raised an eyebrow over the top of her menu. “Who’s that?” she asked.

The waiter reappeared beside them with his pad out, timing it clean. “Y’all ready to order?” he asked.

Sara opened the menu for real, skimmed just enough to land on a grilled fish that wasn’t the most expensive thing on the page. Devin ordered something with chicken and vegetables, handed his menu back.

The waiter collected the menu, repeated their order back, and left with a soft promise that it wouldn’t be long.

Devin watched him go, then looked back at her. “We’ll save that for our next date,” he said. There was a little weight on next that he didn’t bother to hide. “For now, I want to know about you.”

Sara drew the water glass closer. The ice knocked gently against the side when she tilted it. She smiled, the expression settling easier on her face now, and took a sip from her water.

~~~

Mireya hit the brakes a little harder than she meant to and felt the seat belt catch against her chest. The red light held steady over the turn lane, hanging against a gray. Her engine ticked under the low hum of somebody’s truck’s bass two cars ahead. A professor’s voice droned out of her phone in the cup holder, talking about algebraic formulas.

She toed her sneakers off heel-first, one then the other, and caught them with her hand before they hit the floor. She tossed them onto the empty passenger side, rubber soles smacking against fast food napkins and an empty water bottle.

The light flipped green. A horn tapped behind her. Mireya slid her foot back onto the gas and eased the car through the intersection, taking the turn that her GPS had already told her to make. The buildings dropped lower the deeper she got into Marrero. Shotgun houses clustered together, then gave way to a squat brick apartment complex with a faded sign out front and patchy grass along the sidewalk. A couple of kids chased each other along the walk, one of them dragging a plastic sword.

Her phone buzzed once, the lecture shrinking down to a corner of the screen. Dez’s name sat over the last text, the address and building number sitting there waiting. She swiped the lecture away with her thumb and checked the numbers painted on the front of the building as she turned in. The car bumped over a dip in the driveway and rolled into the lot.

She pulled into a spot near the stairwell, and shifted into park. A family worked their way around the front of her car, parents carrying plastic grocery bags tight in their hands, two little girls balancing cereal boxes and a carton of eggs between them. Mireya watched them for a second, the way the mama tilted her head toward the girls, the way one of the bags stretched thin around a gallon of milk.

The lecture was still talking in the background when she reached into the backseat. She groped for the heels she kept there, fingers finding the thin straps and cool leather. She slipped them onto her feet, buckling the straps with quick, practiced motions. The angle shifted her calves, straightened her posture even sitting down.

She angled the rearview mirror and checked her face. She smoothed a thumb along one eyebrow and then peeled her jacket off her shoulders, tossing it onto the back seat. The tank top she had worn to class followed. The air inside the car brushed over her bare shoulders and sent a small chill over skin still damp from the day.

She grabbed the more revealing top from the back, one that was cut higher and lower at the same time. She tugged the neckline until it sat where she wanted it, cleavage set. The phone on the console kept talking about the formulas. She picked up a pen, flipped over an old gas station receipt, and scribbled down the one line that mattered for the final before it left her head.

When she finished the numbers, she clicked the pen closed, tucked the receipt into her backpack, and ended the lecture. The sudden quiet rang in her ears for half a heartbeat.

Mireya gathered her purse and stepped out, heels hitting the cracked pavement. The heat met her full on, pressing at the back of her knees and the hollow of her throat. She locked the car and headed toward the stairwell, following the peeling paint and spidered concrete up to the second floor. The metal rail felt sticky under her palm.

Halfway up, two men leaned against the railing, sharing a cigarette and talking low. Their conversation thinned when they saw her. Eyes slid over her legs, over the line of her shirt. Mireya let Luna sit over her skin and turned her mouth into a small, practiced smile. She met their eyes one at a time and winked, breezing past without breaking stride. Their soft chuckle followed her up the stairs.

She stopped in front of Dez’s door and checked the number against the text one more time. Then she shifted her weight onto one hip and knocked, knuckles quick against the wood. The jamb was warm under her shoulder when she leaned against it, phone held loose in her fingers.

A few moments later, the deadbolt clicked. The door opened on Dez. His T-shirt hung loose over his shorts, chain gone from his neck but the tan line still there. His gaze slid down and up, slow. She smiled at him, letting it reach her eyes.

“Ready for me, papi?” she asked.

His mouth pulled into a grin. He stepped back, opening the door wider.

“Been ready,” he said.



The room after was quiet except for his breathing and the buzz of the old window unit. Dez lay stretched between Mireya’s legs on top of the rumpled sheet, his head resting heavy on her stomach. His hair tickled the soft skin there each time he shifted. Sweat cooled in the line of her spine where it touched the wall. She had scooted up until her shoulders met the corner, pillows shoved out of the way so she could sit half upright.

Her phone sat in her hand again, screen lighting her face. Her thumbs moved quick as she tapped out a message to Boogie. Dez’s fingers drew slow lines up and down her side, the soft drag of his nails tracing the curve of her waist and the edge of her ribcage. Each pass mapped the same path, unhurried.

Mireya glanced down at him, the rise and fall of his back, the way his lashes rested against his cheeks. He watched her stomach instead of her face, eyes unfocused, breath easing out warm through his nose.

“You good, baby?” she asked.

Dez tipped his head enough to look up at her.

“I don’t know,” he said. “You in the life so you might get it, but you ever think about leaving all this shit behind?”

The words settled in the small room, over the smell of weed and cheap detergent and whatever cologne he had put on hours ago. Mireya shrugged, shoulder brushing the wall. She let her hand fall from the phone to his back, nails tracing light circles over warm skin.

“I like life like it is,” she said. “I get money. You get money, too, don’t you?”

Dez sucked his teeth, a small sound. His fingers paused at her hip, then kept moving.

“Yeah,” he said. “But like…”

He trailed off. The ceiling fan clicked through another slow turn overhead. Dez drew in a breath.

“Nevermind,” he said.

“You can tell me,” Mireya answered. Her circles on his back widened, slow and steady. “I’m not gonna tell anyone.”

He huffed, not quite a laugh.

“Nah, you Trell’s,” he said.

Her mouth curved. “I’m not a cow, papi. No one owns me. You can trust me. It’ll just be between us.”

He was quiet for a second, running his thumb along her thigh. Then he spoke into the hollow of her stomach, words brushing skin.

“I just feel like I could be getting money on my own and not having to worry about niggas shooting at me or me having to shoot niggas,” he said. “It’s plenty motherfuckers out there who got bread and don’t even be fighting. You know what I’m saying?”

Mireya nodded, though he couldn’t see it. Her hand kept moving on his back, a steady, comforting rhythm.

“Like I ain’t no killer or nothing,” Dez went on. “My homeboy’s uncle, Peanut, gave me the game. We wasn’t doing all this shit back then. Not until P got killed. He just wanted shit small, quiet, get this paper, party a little, go home.”

Mireya felt the way his shoulders tightened under her palm when he said killed. She let her fingers move higher, tracing slow circles between his shoulder blades.

“What changed?” she asked.

Dez lifted one hand and let it fall back to her waist, grip tightening for a second.

“Trell and Ant always said they ain’t like the small time shit,” he said. “Now they running the clique. Shit’s fucked up.”

She made a soft sound in her throat, nothing that picked a side. Her thumb smoothed over the dip in his spine. She hummed, noncommittal, letting his words hang in the air until they started to settle.

Her gaze dropped back to the screen. She brought it closer, thumb moving again. Her fingers never left his skin as she typed, telling Boogie to give her an hour.

~~~

Laney braced one knee in the grass and tugged the folded tent canvas toward her, fingers already gritty with red dirt. The field behind the church sat open and bright, the late afternoon sun coming down hard on the short grass and the tired line of the chain-link fence. Cardboard boxes, rolled banners, and stacks of metal poles lay scattered in rough rows where she had marked off the layout in her head.

“Lord, this is too much shit,” Rylee said behind her. The girl dragged one bundle of poles across the ground instead of lifting it, boots scuffing. “Daddy needs to start payin’ folks to do this mess.”

Jesse snorted and kicked at a tent stake half-buried in the dirt. “Yeah, he could at least hire the deacons or something,” he said. “Ain’t this what men’s groups supposed to do? Where’s Caleb?”

Laney didn’t look up. “Y’all could hush and hand me that pole,” she said.. “We got a week to get all this ready.”

Blake was a few yards away by the open trailer, sleeves pushed up, pulling another frame out from the jumble of metal. Sweat darkened his shirt between the shoulders. He hefted the bundle and walked it over, boots sinking a little where the soil turned soft. When he passed behind Rylee, his eyes dipped, a quick cut down her back as she bent to grab a tarp corner and stretched, T-shirt riding up a notch over her jeans.

Laney saw it. The glance, the little curl of Blake’s mouth before he flattened it back out. She didn’t say anything. She put it away, same place she stored everything else she didn’t have time to deal with. Later.

“Here,” Blake said, dropping the poles with a dull clatter beside her. “That all of ’em for this one?”

“For now,” Laney said. She caught one with her foot before it rolled, fingers wrapping around another, metal hot in her palms. “Rylee, get that end.”

Rylee huffed, but she stepped in, shoulders working as she lifted. “I’m tellin’ you,” she muttered, “they could at least get the kids out here. Ain’t fair we gotta do it all.”

Jesse picked up a crossbar and held it across his chest. “They just gonna stand around and talk anyway,” he said.

Laney started to thread the pole through the first set of loops on the canvas. The metal shifted with the weight and her grip slipped. The pole dipped hard. For a breath she thought it was gone.

“Whoa, Laney.” Rylee grabbed the far end before it thunked to the ground. She grinned, breathless. “You better get used to doin’ all this work yourself again since Caine’s gonna be transferin’.”

Laney’s hands went still on the pole. She lifted her head. “Caine’s transferin’?” The words came out even, though her chest pulled tight once and eased.

Rylee nodded, hair frizzing where the humidity had started to win against her ponytail. “He told me he’d basically already decided the other day,” she said. “Said he just gotta figure out when he’s gonna start tellin’ folks.”

Laney held her eyes for a beat, mind ticking backward, adding up where that “other day” was. Heat moved under her skin that had nothing to do with the Georgia sun.

She rolled the feeling down and away. She had been the one to end it. She reminded herself of that and turned back to the pole.

“That’s good,” she said, lining the metal up with the next ring. “Hope he land somewhere close to his little girl.” The words sat plain, nothing in her tone but effort and the strain of the weight.

Behind her, Blake’s voice cut in. “The kid you got workin’ here got a kid?” He sounded half curious, half offended, scratching at the back of his neck.

Laney glanced over her shoulder. Blake stood with his hands empty now, hat tipped back, watching her instead of the pile of poles still waiting. She nodded once.

Blake let his gaze travel from Laney to Jesse to Rylee and back again. “You and your daddy drag me through the mud for having a kid outta wedlock,” he said. “But I ain’t never heard no one talking bad about him.”

The air around them seemed to thicken. Jesse shifted his grip on the crossbar. Rylee’s eyes flicked from Blake to Laney, brow pulling in.

Laney set the pole down in its slot and straightened. She rested one hand on her hip, sweat dampening the fabric of her shirt at the small of her back. When she looked at Blake, her face stayed flat.

“That’s ‘cause he actually tries to see his child,” she said.

Blake’s jaw tightened. His eyes narrowed just a hair. For once, he didn’t say anything. He looked away, reached down, and grabbed another bundle of poles from the grass.

Jesse cleared his throat and broke the quiet. “I bet he’s gonna get a shit ton of NIL money,” he said, voice lighter, chasing a different track.

Blake snorted and moved in fast, looping an arm around Jesse’s neck, pulling him in against his side. The crossbar clanged to the ground as Jesse’s balance went. Blake held him there in a loose headlock, knuckles pressing into Jesse’s scalp.

“You’ll be gettin’ all that money and all the girls too once you get to college with that fastball, kid,” Blake said, shaking him once.

“Man, get off,” Jesse laughed, trying to pry Blake’s forearm away. “You messing up my hair.”

Rylee rolled her eyes, her mouth curving. “Jesse wishes girls wanted him like they want Caine,” she said, dragging the canvas farther so it would stretch clean.

Jesse shot her a look and pushed at Blake’s arm again. Blake let him go, finally, hand landing in a thud on Jesse’s shoulder before he stepped back.

Laney stayed out of the back-and-forth. She hooked the last ring over the pole, fingers working steady. The chatter and scuffle pressed around her, but she kept her eyes on the fabric, on threading the pole clean through the rings and making the line of the tent smooth and straight in the fading light.

redsox907
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Post by redsox907 » 26 Nov 2025, 19:31

they ain't wrong bout Caine making more money if he waits. But something tells me his QB sense are going off

bout time to get tf outta dodge

ol white boy cop getting mad his childhood crush getting reamed out by a brother huh? :smh:

I see what you trying to do with Sara and Devin, get us off the trail that she going lez :kghah:

BUT - if she is interested in Devin she could do worse than an established businessman

Dez fuckin retarded :dead: oh she just gave me the goods but I know she the bosses. But I'm going to go ahead and tell her that I want out so she can tell the boss. Mad dumb :smh:

Also, wonder if Mireya is going to put together the connection that P was the one standing in between Trell/Ant and wanting to get their way.

Laney getting flushed about Rylee getting her sloppy 3rds lmao I still think Blake knows more than he lets on.

Crackheads usually wait until the opportune moment to let the info they have fly, whenever it benefits them the best. My guess is when Laney finally tells Nevaeh to kick rocks something going to be unearthed

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Post by Soapy » 27 Nov 2025, 05:55

Caine gone lmao should have lied about the bread or sprinkled some crack in his locker
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Caesar
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Post by Caesar » 28 Nov 2025, 01:55

redsox907 wrote:
26 Nov 2025, 19:31
they ain't wrong bout Caine making more money if he waits. But something tells me his QB sense are going off

bout time to get tf outta dodge

ol white boy cop getting mad his childhood crush getting reamed out by a brother huh? :smh:

I see what you trying to do with Sara and Devin, get us off the trail that she going lez :kghah:

BUT - if she is interested in Devin she could do worse than an established businessman

Dez fuckin retarded :dead: oh she just gave me the goods but I know she the bosses. But I'm going to go ahead and tell her that I want out so she can tell the boss. Mad dumb :smh:

Also, wonder if Mireya is going to put together the connection that P was the one standing in between Trell/Ant and wanting to get their way.

Laney getting flushed about Rylee getting her sloppy 3rds lmao I still think Blake knows more than he lets on.

Crackheads usually wait until the opportune moment to let the info they have fly, whenever it benefits them the best. My guess is when Laney finally tells Nevaeh to kick rocks something going to be unearthed
You think he's trying to avoid being a part of the quadruple homicide-suicide at the Matthews'? :pgdead:

Technically his childhood crush has always been getting reamed out by a brother since E.J. has always been smashing Tessa.

I ain't trying to do nothing :smh:

Hey, man. No one has ever said Dez was built for this lifestyle.

:hmm:

Laney JUST ended things with that man. Cut her some slack.

We'll have to wait and see what happens with the crackheads and if they've connected any dots
Soapy wrote:
27 Nov 2025, 05:55
Caine gone lmao should have lied about the bread or sprinkled some crack in his locker
Not sprinkled crack in his locker :pgdead:
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Post by Caesar » 28 Nov 2025, 01:56

Stay Sinned Up

Laney set the last fork down on the napkin and wiped her hand on the dish towel hanging off her hip. The kitchen held the soft clatter of her moving between stove and counter. Grease still popped in the skillet behind her, low and tired.

Tommy stood at the table with his head bent, gear spread in a tight fan in front of him. Shells, a folded canvas vest, a knife in its sheath, the straps to his pack. One rifle already lay across the table, barrel pointed toward the window, stock toward his hand. Four others stood against the wall. His mouth moved now and then with a word she couldn’t hear, working through the list in his head for the trip with Blake, her daddy, Jesse, and their boys.

Laney spooned grits onto the plate, laid eggs beside them, and set two links of sausage on top. The heat from the food rose into her face. She wiped the rim clean with the side of her thumb, then crossed the floor, bare feet quiet on the worn vinyl.

She had to set the plate down somewhere. The rifle took up the space where his plate usually sat. She hooked three fingers under the stock and lifted it, careful not to jar the scope. Her eyes went to the length of the barrel. The metal held a dull haze instead of a clean shine. Dust skinned the edge where the barrel met the action. A faint smear of old oil ran thin under her thumb.

It needed to be stripped and oiled. She saw it in an instant, the way she saw a smudge on a window or a scuff on the church floor. The part of her that kept things right wanted to say something.

She looked up. Tommy’s attention never left the spread on the table. He shifted a box of rounds an inch, then straightened the folded vest. His jaw had that tight set it carried more days now that he was home. He didn’t look up to see her with his gun in her hands.

Laney set the rifle down again, bracing the butt against the table leg so it didn’t slide. She didn’t say a word. The argument sat right there. She let it go.

She slid the plate into the empty space he had cleared at the corner and smoothed the napkin beside it. Then she turned away and went back to the stove. The skillet hissed as she cut the burner. She shifted it off the eye, the metal handle hot through the thin towel.

The sink already held the boys’ cereal bowls. She twisted the faucet. Water hit metal and bounced, warm at first, then cooler against her fingers. She let pots and skillets crowd the basin, the sound of them stacking on one another sharp in the quiet.

Behind her, Tommy’s chair scraped. She heard the small pause before his voice found her.

“I told you I didn’t want that sausage.”

Laney kept her eyes on the sink for half a second. Then she turned her head enough that he could hear her clearly. “We ain’t got any porkchops.”

Her hands stayed in the sink. Soap slicked between her fingers. She didn’t bother to turn around all the way. He knew where she was.

“Have you not been going to the butcher?” he asked.

Her gaze stayed on the film of grease running in thin lines toward the drain. She shook her head once, even though his back was to her and he wouldn’t see it. “I ain’t had the time.”

“Seems like you’ve been slacking a lot lately.”

The fork in her hand paused over the suds. Laney glanced over her shoulder, just enough to see the set of his mouth, the way he studied the plate as if it had done something to him. Her voice came out flat. “I’m sorry. I been tied up with the fall festival. I’ll go to the butcher today.”

His eyes cut toward her, then past, taking in the counters, the sink, the stove that still carried a low heat. “Is that all?”

Laney shifted her focus to the clock over the table instead of his face. The glass caught his reflection in a small curve. It gave her enough, the line of his shoulders, the way he waited. Her throat worked once.

“Yes,” she said. “That’s all.”

He nodded, a short motion, and went back to his gear. Shells lined up in two neat rows. A rolled pair of socks tucked into the side pocket of his pack. The rifle still leaned against the table, dull along the barrel.

The house held that tight kind of silence that came right before a storm or right after one, when everything in it waited to see which way the wind would go. Laney turned back to the sink. She rinsed the fork and set it in the rack soft enough that it didn’t clink.

For a minute she thought maybe that was it. He would eat what she made or push it aside and they would sit in their separate quiet until he left.

Instead, Tommy reached for the plate. The scrape of ceramic on wood pulled her eyes up again. He didn’t take a bite. He held it out toward her hand, fingers wrapped around the rim.

“Go get one of the steaks out of the garage fridge and remake the grits and eggs with it.”

The food on the plate still steamed. The sausage grease had already started to pool around the eggs. It was breakfast that could’ve been eaten in ten minutes and forgotten. It was also, now, wrong.

Laney dried her hands on the towel, expression smoothing out. She crossed the kitchen, each step measured. She took the plate from him, her fingers brushing his knuckles for the briefest second. His hand didn’t flinch or hold. He just let go.

She turned to the trash can, lifted the lid with the back of her wrist, and tipped the plate. The food slid off in one heavy motion, a soft thud against coffee grounds and eggshells.

She eased the empty plate into the sink beside the others, setting it down so light it barely made a sound. No slam. No clatter for him to throw back at her later.

Laney wiped her palms down the front of her jeans. The towel hung crooked again at her hip.

She turned away from the kitchen, from the stove and the rifle and the man at the table. As she stepped into the hall, she lifted one hand to her hair, fingers combing through the strands, catching once at the roots before sliding to the ends while she walked toward the garage.

~~~

Trell stepped out of Ant’s car and let the door swing shut behind him. The gravel in the small yard popped under his shoes. Pines and cane fields sat back from the road, the space between them flat and open. The house itself was low and sagging, paint gone chalky from the sun, the porch rail half rotted.

Yola sat in a plastic chair near the porch, another one of Trell’s street soldiers next to him. Both of them had their guns across their laps, muzzles angled lazy toward the dirt. Sweat darkened the necklines of their shirts. A small blue cooler sat between their feet. The air held the wet heat that stuck to the back of the throat.

Trell walked up the narrow path, Ant a step behind him. He lifted his chin once. Yola straightened and stood, the other man following. They wiped their palms on their jeans before reaching for Trell.

Trell dapped both of them up. He looked toward the front door. “Boogie and Dez here?”

Yola nodded, mouth pulling in. “They in there.”

Trell gave one short nod and moved past them. Ant’s eyes skimmed across the yard, the ditch, the road. He didn’t say anything. The second man sat back down only after Ant and Trell had gone up the short set of steps.

Inside, the house held stale air and the faint sting of cleaner that never quite worked. The living room opened wide, furniture pushed back toward the walls. A couple of open duffel bags sat on the floor. Two of their younger guys knelt over them, hands moving steady through wrapped bricks. Dust from the insulation floated down in slow specks.

Boogie stood on a ladder near the middle of the room. Dez was on the floor beneath him, taking packages from the two on their knees and handing them up. Boogie pressed each one into the hole they had cut in the ceiling and smoothed the loose piece of drywall back over it with the flat of his thumb.

The ladder creaked when Boogie shifted his weight to look toward the doorway. He clocked Trell and Ant and lifted his chin.

“What’s good, boss?”

Trell shook his head once. “Ain’t nothing. I just wanted to come check on y’all.”

Boogie’s mouth curled. He tapped the ceiling with the heel of his hand, then pointed up. “We might have to get another stash spot ’cause business boomin’.”

One of the young ones snorted. Dez laughed louder than he needed to and nodded to them, dapping both of them in quick succession before turning back to the ladder. The sound caught in his throat on the last beat when his eyes cut past their shoulders to Ant and then to Trell. The laugh left a little hitch hanging in the air.

Ant walked around the group instead of cutting through them. He moved slow, looking down into the open bags, lips pressed together. The packages were stacked neat, plastic tight. He did his own count, gaze flicking to the ceiling and back to the floor, running the math without speaking on how much had already disappeared above their heads.

Trell stood in the open space and let the room move around him for a second. Then he cleared his throat once.

“I want the two of you to run to Jackson tonight. Bring our friends up there a couple birds.”

Boogie looked down from the ladder, knuckles braced on the drywall. “To that weird ass nigga Stevie?”

Trell raised an eyebrow, the look sharp enough on its own.

Boogie held his free hand up. “I mean, he do be fucking his cousins.”

Ant’s voice stayed flat. “That ain’t got nothing to do with business.”

Boogie nodded, that quick little dip that meant he heard it. “You right. Them bitches is fine, too.”

Dez shifted on his feet, reached for another package to pass up. “This mean we not going to Montgomery next week?”

Trell shook his head. “No, we’re going out there. Demontrae’s been avoiding my texts. We need to talk face to face.”

Dez’s fingers tightened on the brick in his hands. “What if he just don’t want to do business with us now that P gone?”

Ant took a step in toward him, closing the gap by inches. “Then we’ll do business with a new nigga and let that nigga know there could be another new nigga.”

Dez nodded, Adam’s apple pushing up and down. His eyes cut toward Ant and away again, catching the edge of the suggestion and letting it land. He slid the package into Boogie’s waiting hand without missing the move.

The only sounds for a moment were the soft thuds of plastic on wood and the faint traffic way off past the fields. Trell pulled one of his phones from his pocket and checked the screen. The light bounced off his face, then went dark again when he locked it.

He slid the phone back away and jerked his chin once toward Ant, then toward the door. “Hurry up with this shit. I don’t want y’all out here when the motherfuckers up the road start getting there for their football game. Go straight to Jackson from here. Don’t take 55.”

Boogie looked down from the ceiling hole, lips pulling into a smirk Dez couldn’t see. “We know the back way.”

Trell gave him a short nod, then let his gaze fall to Dez. He stayed on him a beat longer, eyes fixed steady on his face. Then he turned and walked out, Ant falling in behind him as they left the house.

~~~

Caine sat on the bench outside the hotel with his shoulders pressed into the slats, hoodie zipped up to his throat. The November air in New Braunfels didn’t bite the way it did in Statesboro when the wind cut through the trees. It settled on him instead, cool and thin after a day of buses and planes and waiting. His legs felt it more than his chest, a steady heaviness in his thighs from the long ride out across the country instead of the short hops to Jacksonville or Norfolk.

He rested his forearms on his knees and watched his breath move, faint and slow, in front of his mouth. Traffic on the main road rolled by in soft waves, headlights sliding past the low line of the hotel. Somewhere inside, a TV in the lobby bled crowd noise and commercials through the revolving door every time it turned.

His phone sat dull in his pocket. He didn’t reach for it. He let the quiet live instead, the kind that came when coaches ran out of things to say for the night and teammates scattered between rooms and vending machines.

After a minute he pushed off the bench. His knees straightened slower than he wanted. Hands sank into his pockets. He flipped his hood up and started down the walkway that wrapped the side of the hotel, sneakers scratching over the concrete. The motion loosened some of the stiffness.

The parking lot spread out in front of him, mostly empty. A few rental sedans sat crooked in their spots. A pickup with an out-of-state plate idled under a lamp, cab empty, exhaust ghosting up in a thin thread. The buses hunched behind the hotel, hulks of navy and gold with their logos turned toward the highway.

The lobby doors hissed open behind him. Caine heard the shift of air first, then the slap of something plastic swinging on a lanyard against a chest. Two men walked out in burnt orange polos, heads together, their laughter carrying too easy in the cooler air. One of them thumbed the unlock on a key fob. A white King Ranch lit up a few yards away, Texas decals bright on the back window even in the half-dark.

The one with the keys cut his eyes toward Caine and let his mouth open in a wide, bright grin that came on too fast. His finger lifted, pointed straight. Recognition spread over his face in a way that said he had practiced it.

Caine caught it and filed it. He didn’t give him anything back. He just let his steps slow on the path, hood still up, shoulders loose, as the man called out.

“Caine Guerra?”

The voice hit the space between them with a friendly drawl. Caine’s chin dipped once. “Yeah,” he said.

They angled off from the truck and headed toward him, both hands already out before they closed the distance. The key fob swung between two fingers. The other man’s polo pulled a little over a soft middle, watch glinting on his wrist.

“Jason Colton,” the one with the keys said when he got close enough. “You got a minute, son?”

Caine’s mouth twitched at the corner, there and gone.

“Yeah,” he said. “I got time.”

They each took his hand in turn. Solid grip. Too much eye contact. Colton’s palm ran warm and dry. The second man’s had the faint stick of someone who had been in hotel AC all day.

“Don Jones,” the second one said. “Son, I ain’t never seen a quarterback come outta nowhere like you. These days?” He shook his head once. “They got eyes on kids at fourteen, fifteen. Whole thing’s crazy.”

Caine didn’t answer.

Colton nodded like Jones had set him up. “I know the season’s almost over,” he said, “and y’all boys are playin’ some great football down there at Georgia Southern, so we don’t wanna take up too much of your time.” His smile edged wider. “You from Louisiana. We don’t have to sell you on the fact it don’t get no bigger than Texas football. And I don’t wanna hear about no LSU. They ain’t never had their own TV channel.”

Caine’s eyes slipped past their shoulders to the King Ranch for a second, to the decals and the empty bed. Then back.

Jones picked up the thread. “Arch gone to the League after this year,” he said. “We already know his uncles in his ear, keepin’ him on script. That means we need a quarterback. And we want that quarterback to be you.”

Colton’s gaze stayed steady on him, measuring. The wind tugged at the hem of his polo and let it fall again.

Caine shifted his weight on his heels. “Ain’t Texas got some five star kid coming in?” he asked. His voice stayed even. No challenge, no flinch. Just the question.

Colton waved a hand, flicking the thought away. “Won’t be ready year one,” he said. “We get you to the NFL in two years at Texas. He can wait his turn.”

The numbers the man wasn’t saying yet sat between them. Caine kept his face where it was.

“Y’all not the first school to come talk to me about this,” he said. “Lot of the big schools done already reached out.”

It wasn’t fully true. Georgia had called. Georgia Southern’s own people had sat him down earlier that week with slides and charts and neat little bullet points about what they could scrape together for him. That was it. But nobody out here needed that detail.

Jones nodded slow, smile pulling thin. “Not many of them gonna give you six-fifty to seven-fifty,” he said. “One-point-two, one-point-five the year after.”

The air around Caine seemed to press in closer. The numbers from the foundation’s PowerPoint flickered in the back of his head.

Next to this, it shrank.

He nodded once, slow. The gravel in the lot crunched under somebody’s tire out near the road. “Mm,” he said. “I hear you.”

Jones hooked his thumbs in his pockets, satisfied with the way the numbers had landed between them. Colton’s key fob stopped swinging. For a second none of them spoke.

The hotel doors opened again further down. Dwight and Donnie stepped out, both in gray team sweats, hoods down, lanyards hanging. Dwight’s voice carried first.

“Say, Caine, we ’bout to eat!”

Caine lifted his hand without looking away from the two men, palm up, quick acknowledgment that he’d heard. Then he eased a half-step back.

Colton reached into his pocket and pulled out a business card, edges sharp and white. He held it out between two fingers.

“Give us a call in a few weeks, son,” he said. “We’ll set you up for life and you’ll play for the biggest brand in college football.”

Caine took the card, eyes skimming the logo and the number without really reading it. He tucked it into the front pocket of his hoodie. “Alright,” he said, and shook each of their hands again, shorter this time.

He turned away and walked toward Dwight and Donnie, steps steady, shoulders relaxed. The night air moved across his face and brought the smell of whatever food spot lived down the street, grease and salt sitting on it.

Dwight watched the two boosters head back toward the King Ranch, then looked at Caine. “Damn, bruh,” he said. “They followin’ you everywhere, huh?”

Caine snorted, a short sound that came from low in his chest. “Worse than a bitch you give a bit of dick to and she fall in love,” he said.

~~~

Mireya turned the wheel with one hand, phone lit up in the cup holder, the glow catching the underside of her jaw. The GPS pin sat dead on the little blue roof on her map. The app had already told her she’d arrived, but she eased forward anyway, eyes on the house numbers stenciled on the curb.

The house in front of her sat big and neat, the yard edged clean, shrubs trimmed into tight shapes. A low fence marked off the property from the rest of the Bayou St. John block. The porch light threw a soft pool across the front steps.

She slipped the car into park and leaned toward the phone, squinting at the address Trell had sent.

Her mouth pulled, confusion knotting at her brow. She glanced back up at the house, then down at the screen again.

I’m here, she typed.

She hit send, watched the bubble float up into the thread, then grabbed her keys and pushed the door open.

The bayou smell rode under it, damp and a little sour, mixed with the faint clean of somebody’s dryer vent running nearby. The beep from her car lock sounded too loud in the quiet. No bass spilling from anywhere. No neighbors on their steps. Just the low rush from the water down the block and the high whine of insects in the dark.

Her sneakers scuffed on the walk as she headed up toward the porch. She checked the numbers on the column again, then the ones on her phone. They matched. Her fingers tightened around her keys anyway, threaded between her knuckles without her thinking about it.

The front door opened before she could knock.

Trell filled the doorway, bare chest, covered in tattoos, cut by the warm light from inside. He wore a pair of joggers hanging low on his hips, drawstrings swinging against his stomach. A short glass of whiskey sat in his hand, ice clinking once when he shifted.

Mireya’s eyes ran over him once before sliding past his shoulder. The entry behind him glowed soft and expensive. The floor under the light shone. The walls were clean and white, a framed print hanging straight over a narrow table.

He stepped back just enough to let her in. She brushed past him, shoulder catching the warmth off his arm, and crossed the threshold.

Cool air hit her, pulling some of the damp off her skin. The floor under her shoes was slick-smooth. The entry opened into a long space, kitchen and living room pulled together. Marble ran the length of the counters. The island sat wide and glossy in the center. The living room held a low gray couch, a glass coffee table, a TV mounted flush to the wall. No clutter.

She turned in a slow circle, looking up at the high ceiling, then back toward the wall of glass that ran along the back of the house. Beyond it, she could see the bright shape of an in-ground pool, water lit from underneath, and past that the dark strip of the bayou, still and wide.

“Is—” she started, the question catching. “Is this your—”

“My house?” Trell cut in. He stepped up behind her, his presence close. With his free hand he slid the strap of her purse off her shoulder. “Yeah, it is.”

He set the purse down on the table by the wall, next to an empty bowl that looked like nobody ever dropped keys in it.

Mireya snorted, head shaking. “No, it ain’t,” she said. “You’re fucking with me.”

Trell laughed, low and easy. He took a sip from his glass, ice bumping the side, then lifted his chin at her.

“I’m not,” he said. “Why would you think this wouldn’t be mine?”

She swept her arm out, taking the house in. The marble. The pool. The bayou beyond that. “I just never thought anyone selling drugs would have something like this,” she said. “No offense.”

“None taken,” he said. He stepped closer, stopping just off her shoulder. “That’s ‘cause most hood niggas think short term. They just want a few chains, some grills, rings, cars, clothes.”

His hand started at the outside of her hip and slid up, slow, palm molding to the curve of her side. Fingers pushed under the hem of her hoodie, the cotton giving way until his skin met hers. His hand stayed there, warm against her ribs as he talked.

“It ain’t worth looking like a freezer,” he said, “if you ain’t got nowhere to put the freezer.”

The line was stupid and sharp at the same time. The corner of her mouth twitched. Her body leaned into his palm, shoulder tipping a little toward him. The hoodie shifted around her, the fabric dragging against his wrist.

“I guess I just never really thought about it,” she said.

He gave a small shrug with the shoulder not holding her, like it wasn’t something worth arguing about.

“Thank you for getting Dez and Boogie to talk,” he said. The words dropped in easy, no extra emphasis, but they landed. “It’s good to know how they thinking.”

Her gaze had drifted back to the pool outside. At that, she turned her head to look up at him, cheek almost brushing his chest.

“How did Peanut get killed?” she asked.

His hand kept moving in small strokes, thumb tracing the edge of one rib, heat spreading where he touched. The glass in his other hand turned slow, ice sliding around the bottom.

“Someone shot him,” Trell said. “He liked to watch game shows. Family Feud, Jeopardy, all that kind of shit. He was watching his game shows and someone press that iron to the back of his head and splattered his shit on the wall.”

She watched his mouth while he spoke, the calm in his voice not matching the picture. For a second, the TV light in the living room reflected faint in the glass, reminding her this was a place where people sat and watched the same shows, where people could be hit that fast.

“You?” she asked.

He shook his head once, slow. “Nah,” he said. “Peanut was like a big brudda to me. Brought me and Ant up. Just two lil’ niggas slanging nickels and dimes on the corners in the Quarter, trying not to get caught by the jakes.”

Mireya held his eyes for a beat and then let it go. She dropped her gaze, watching the way his knuckles shifted against her skin.

“Come see,” Trell said. “I want to show you something.”

He let his hand fall from under her hoodie, palm passing over her hip on the way down. Then he brushed past her and moved down the hallway, bare feet quiet on the polished floor.

Mireya followed. The hallway narrowed the sound of their steps. Doors sat closed on either side, walls bare, corners sharp. The air smelled faintly of citrus cleaner, not bleach, no hint of weed or smoke clinging anywhere.

He stopped at a door near the back and pushed it open with his shoulder, flipping the light on.

The bedroom sat big but not empty. A bed centered against the far wall, headboard upholstered in dark gray, sheets pulled smooth. A dresser lined the opposite wall, nothing on top of it but a watch case and a small tray. No piles of clothes. No open drawers.

The bed itself was covered.

Shopping bags from high-end stores lay across the spread, heavy paper and rope handles crowding the foot of the mattress. Tissue paper stuck out here and there, already crumpled and pushed aside. A pair of heels still sat half-wrapped on the corner, the leather soft even from a few feet away.

Mireya stopped at the edge of the rug, looking at the bags, at the logos she knew from her phone screen and not her closet.

“You went shopping,” she said.

Trell stepped around the bed and reached into one of the bags. His fingers closed around something and tugged it free. A cropped jacket unfolded in his hands, structured and sharp, the kind of piece she’d only seen on music videos and red carpets.

“I like having you around, Mireya,” Trell said. He held the jacket up for a second, then let it hang from his fingers. “You got real ride or die bitch potential. I think you know that, though. But you gotta look the part.”

She walked closer until her thighs brushed the side of the mattress. The bags rustled under her hand when she pushed one aside to look into another. The clothes inside were all the same kind of high-end. Fabrics that didn’t come from the mall. Labels that might as well have been price tags by themselves.

“This is some expensive shit,” she said.

Trell nodded, then let the jacket slip from his hand. It hit the floor in a soft heap he didn’t bother to pick up.

“This is what you’re meant for,” he said. “It’s always been what you were meant for. That’s why you’re so good at it. Calm, controlled, not flinching. Even when you set that nigga Junebug up.”

Her head came up from the open bag. The light caught her face straight, catching the last faint shadows along her cheek.

“I didn’t,” she said. “He got mad because I wouldn’t fuck him.”

A smile pulled across Trell’s face, slow and sure. “That’s exactly what I’m talking about,” he said.

Mireya let her eyes drop back to the bags. Her fingers brushed the edge of a dress folded inside one, the fabric slipping under her touch.

“You know I’ve fucked guys that work for you,” she said. The words were flat.

Trell shrugged, closing the space between them until he stood right in front of her. His hand went back to the hem of her hoodie, knuckles denting the fabric.

“I fuck other bitches,” he said. “Number one is number one. I’m not competing with them niggas just like you not competing with those bitches.”

She didn’t answer. Her shoulders loosened. She lifted her arms over her head, elbows pointing up, exposing more skin to cool air.

Trell caught the hoodie at the bottom with both hands and tugged it up.

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Post by redsox907 » 28 Nov 2025, 03:09

Caesar wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 01:56
It needed to be stripped and oiled. She saw it in an instant, the way she saw a smudge on a window or a scuff on the church floor. The part of her that kept things right wanted to say something.
hmm...something for later? Lots of things can happen with an unclean firearm.

Trell sending Dez and Boogie away to get them dusted?

Caine ain't going to Texas imo

Trell softening Mireya up so that she never suspects shes actually being used. Like we said in the CB - she thinks she's in control of the situation, but Trell setting her up to be his honeypot to keep others happy. Sucks for Mireya, she thinks she found a guy that doesn't need her, but just wants her for her. Reality is, he's just going to use her to keep tensions low smh

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Post by Soapy » 28 Nov 2025, 08:02

so that opening scene was fucking weird lmao

surprised he's already rated high enough for Texas, this is going to be a bigger jump than i expected initially. thought he might do Georgia Southern - mid major - P4
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Post by Captain Canada » 28 Nov 2025, 11:46

I don't really understand Mireya's end game here. So is she fucking with Caine and Trell at the same time? Slowly moving on? I'm sure there's some nooticer shit I'm missing, but just seems like a recipe for disaster.

Clearly Laney just taking this pseudo-abuse as payback for her multiple affairs that Tommy knows about. Another messy situation.
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Post by Caesar » 28 Nov 2025, 21:44

redsox907 wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 03:09
Caesar wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 01:56
It needed to be stripped and oiled. She saw it in an instant, the way she saw a smudge on a window or a scuff on the church floor. The part of her that kept things right wanted to say something.
hmm...something for later? Lots of things can happen with an unclean firearm.

Trell sending Dez and Boogie away to get them dusted?

Caine ain't going to Texas imo

Trell softening Mireya up so that she never suspects shes actually being used. Like we said in the CB - she thinks she's in control of the situation, but Trell setting her up to be his honeypot to keep others happy. Sucks for Mireya, she thinks she found a guy that doesn't need her, but just wants her for her. Reality is, he's just going to use her to keep tensions low smh
:hmm:

Maybe so, maybe no.

Where ya think he going?

Mireya not peeping that Trell is more calculating than the average hood dude.
Soapy wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 08:02
so that opening scene was fucking weird lmao

surprised he's already rated high enough for Texas, this is going to be a bigger jump than i expected initially. thought he might do Georgia Southern - mid major - P4
It's just marital bliss, bro.

I been doing a lot of research on this bit of the arc. He's second in the Alexander Award vote (should be first but Cameron Dyer [IYKYK] is first because he has 300 more rushing yards and 3 more rushing TDs even though he has 1,000+ fewer passing yards and like 6 fewer passing TDs) and statistically one of the best QBs in the country with an insane completion percentage. This happening at Ga Southern is a knock for the big boys because of the talent gap, but he's a true freshman so they'd kick the tires anyway because worst case scenario, you redshirt him and you still got three years left. But with him completing 77% of his passes, even accounting for a regression for the talent jump, he's still completing 65-70% of his passes. According to Claude, he'd be a top 20 QB in the portal just behind the guys who are guaranteed elite starters, i.e. the Marcel Reeds of the world if they enter the portal. Someone they'd bring in to compete and if he wins the job, awesome. If he doesn't, oh well.

Now, for HIM, it probably makes more sense to do the GASO - American/low-level P4 - Elite P4 route to make sure he doesn't end up a backup. But then you got the money discussion. Why go to Wake Forest to make 175k and potentially suck because the team does when he can stay at Georgia Southern and make close to that or just go be a backup at Texas?

All that to say... We'll see what happens :curtain:
Captain Canada wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 11:46
I don't really understand Mireya's end game here. So is she fucking with Caine and Trell at the same time? Slowly moving on? I'm sure there's some nooticer shit I'm missing, but just seems like a recipe for disaster.

Clearly Laney just taking this pseudo-abuse as payback for her multiple affairs that Tommy knows about. Another messy situation.
Caine is her child's father. There is no moving on from him but she won't get back with him because he chose to leave over her dreams. But in terms of an active, named relationship then Trell would be her moving on to the extent that she will.

I don't know if that is pseudo :pgdead: Who says she's had multiple affairs? Also, she allows that because she was raised to allow it for the record. The husband is the head of the household and all that shit the Bible says
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Post by Caesar » 29 Nov 2025, 00:16

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