American Sun

This is where to post any NFL or NCAA football franchises.
Post Reply
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 01 Dec 2025, 23:27

He Binds Every Soul

Laney rolled off him slow, her skin slick with sweat, and landed on her back beside him. The ceiling over Caine’s bed stared down flat and off-white, a faint water mark blurring one corner near the fan. The room still smelled like sex and laundry detergent, the air heavy and warm in the way it got when the sun had been leaning on the blinds for a while.

Caine dragged in a breath and pushed himself up, shoulders sliding against the wall at the head of the bed until he sat half propped. The sheets bunched at his waist. He scrubbed the back of his wrist across his forehead, catching the sweat there, then wiped his palm down his face once more.

His phone sat on the nightstand, screen dark. He leaned over her to reach it, careful not to plant his weight on her ribs. The cord of the charger brushed her shoulder. He thumbed the screen awake, glanced at the numbers, and huffed a quiet sound that wasn’t quite a laugh.

“You gonna be late,” he said.

Laney’s chest still rose and fell harder than usual, air moving through her in long pulls. She didn’t look at him yet. She just lifted one shoulder in a shrug, eyes on the ceiling.

“I know the boss,” she said. “She ain’t gon’ mind none.”

That pulled a laugh out of him, low in his throat. He dropped the phone back onto the nightstand, face down, and let his hand fall to his thigh.

“Yeah,” he said. “She gave me the mornin’ off ’cause she been workin’ me too hard.”

“Mm-hm.” Laney rolled toward him, turning onto her stomach. The sheet dragged with her, slipping down to the curve of her back. She slid up until she was stretched half across him, her chest pressed to his side, chin resting on the flat of his sternum. Her hair trailed over his skin, damp where it touched.

For a second she let herself just breathe there, feeling his heart knock slow under her jaw. Then she tipped her head back enough to see his face.

“I need to tell you somethin’,” she said.

His eyes dropped from the ceiling to her. One corner of his mouth pulled, not quite a smile.

“The last time a woman said some shit like that to me,” he answered, “I got told I was gonna be a father.”

Her mouth twitched. “Well, it’s a good thing you’ve done this before …”

The words slipped out light, teasing. A laugh bubbled up with them. She snorted once, shoulders shaking against his side.

“Man, watch out with that shit,” he said.

He didn’t sound mad, but he didn’t laugh with her either. Her laughter thinned out, then died. For a beat the room held only the buzz of the AC unit and the faint rush of a car passing on the street below.

Laney lowered her eyes, following the line of his chest, the rise and fall of it. Her fingers picked at a wrinkle in the sheet near his hip, smoothing it flat, then creasing it again.

“Blake told me the other day that he knows about us,” she said.

The words were plain, dropped between them without decoration.

Caine sucked his teeth once, quiet. His hand went up to his hair and pushed back through his dreads, palm dragging slow over his scalp. He stared past her toward the closet door for a second, then back down.

“What’d you tell him?” he asked.

“I lied,” she said. “Told him he was confused from all the drugs he does.”

Her voice stayed even, but her jaw worked once. She could still see Blake’s face by the van, the way his eyes had cut sharp over her being late, the way his words had hung between them like he’d already decided he was right.

“You think he’s gonna tell your husband?” Caine asked.

Laney nodded against his chest. “Yeah, he will,” she said. “He’s mad about some other shit, but he would’ve done it anyway, just ‘cause they don’t get along. ’Cause Tommy’s so much better off than him, you know?”

Caine blew out a breath. “I guess,” he said. “I ain’t got no siblings to be jealous.”

His fingers slid absently along the curve of her shoulder, not quite a touch, more a pass of his knuckles against her skin while he thought. His gaze dropped back to her face.

“So, this the end of this for real then?” he asked. “Between us?”

Laney’s eyes lifted to his. She watched his face for a long second, like she was weighing something she’d already decided on. Then she pushed herself up, palms pressing into his chest as she shifted.

She swung one leg over his, the mattress dipping under her knee until she straddled him, settling into the cradle of his hips. The sheet bunched between them. Her hands planted on either side of his shoulders, holding herself up so her face was inches from his, their breaths already mixing in the small space.

“No,” she said.

Her voice came low, steady now. Up this close he could see the faint flush still riding high on her cheeks, the damp at her hairline.

“Because if I’m fucked anyway,” she went on, “then I might as well keep doin’ what feels good till I cain’t anymore.”

Caine held her eyes. His hands slid to her thighs, fingers resting light against her skin.

“You the boss, boss lady,” he said.

That pulled a real smile out of her this time. It softened her mouth, reached the corners of her eyes. She let it sit there for a heartbeat, then leaned down, closing the last bit of space between them, and kissed him.

~~~

Trell stood on the sidewalk in front of the row of shotgun houses. The narrow fronts ran tight along the block, paint peeling in spots where the weather had gotten to it. The air carried that wet New Orleans chill that found its way through clothes instead of sitting neat on top of them.

Next door a small knot of dopeboys posted in front of a leaning porch, shoulders hunched in hoodies and bubble jackets. They watched the street with quick little sweeps of their heads, eyes moving from the corner where a cop car might slide up to the end of the block where the first fiend usually came shuffling through. A couple of them had styrofoam cups tucked in their palms. One shifted a weighty plastic grocery bag from one hand to the other, the sound of it crackling under his fingers.

They clocked Trell before he stepped off the curb. One by one they lifted their chins in the little nod. Trell answered with his own nod and cut across the patchy grass toward them, hands out of his pockets by the time he hit the bottom of the steps.

He dapped them up in a row, palms hitting, fingers snapping off. “Business good?” he asked.

The oldest of the group, a dude with a thin beard and bags under his eyes, glanced down the block once more before answering. “It’s straight this mornin’,” he said. “This cold got all the fiends stayin’ in them bandos right now.”

Trell gave a slow nod, eyes tracking the empty space where the usual traffic should have been. A car rolled past without slowing, music thudding low through the glass, then kept going. “Make sure y’all get off all that before y’all go lookin’ to re-up,” he said.

All of them nodded, a little wave that moved down the line. Trell clapped the oldest on the shoulder once, then turned away and headed for the house in the middle of the row.

Empty beer bottles lay along the bottom step, brown glass tagged with old labels. He stepped over them, shoes landing on the soft spot in the wood where it sagged. The front door had a crooked screen hanging open, one hinge barely holding on. He knocked once, knuckles rapping against the frame, then pushed the door in with his palm.

The smell hit first. Weed, sweat, fried food from some long-gone night, all settled into the sagging couch cushions and the thin carpet. The TV on the far wall played some daytime show muted, colors flickering across the room with no sound to match. The controller sat facedown on the floor.

On the couch Ant had a woman bent over the arm, his hands locked on her hips. Skin met skin in steady rhythm. The woman’s hair fell forward, hiding most of her face, but the sound of the door opening made her head jerk up. Her eyes went wide when she saw Trell in the doorway.

She shoved back against Ant’s chest with one hand, twisting away from him. “Shit,” she hissed, grabbing for her shorts where they hung off the back of the couch. She hopped on one foot, then the other as she yanked them up.

Trell turned his head toward the little end table by the door, hand reaching for the first thing on it. An old magazine lay there, cover curled at the corner. He picked it up and flipped it open without really seeing the pages, giving her his back.

Behind him Ant let out a breath like he couldn’t believe it. “I keep tellin’ your ass he don’t give a fuck about that, Naomi,” he said.

“That don’t mean you shouldn’t lock the fuckin’ door,” she shot back, voice sharp as she wrestled with her waistband.

Ant pulled his own shorts up, elastic snapping against his waist. “Just go wait in the bedroom,” he said, not looking at her.

Naomi sucked her teeth, the sound cutting through the muted TV light, and stalked toward the back of the house. Her bare feet slapped softly on the warped floorboards until a door opened and shut down the short hall.

Trell let the magazine fall closed and set it back on the table. He looked up, finally bringing his eyes back to Ant. “You really should lock the door though,” he said. “What if the jakes come here?”

Ant shook his head and pointed his chin toward the window that faced the next house. “The shit over there,” he said. “Ain’t nothin’ in here but dirty drawers and the game.”

A PS4 sat under the TV, light bar dark, wires snaking behind the stand. Trell glanced at it and shook his head. He dug into his pocket, fingers finding the roll of money he kept there. The rubber band dug into his fingertips when he peeled it off and slid a few hundreds free.

He held them out. “Go buy a fuckin’ PS5, man.”

Ant squinted at the bills for a half second, then grinned and took them. “You know, I don’t know shit about them new systems,” he said, even as he folded the money and tucked it into his pocket.

“You ain’t go lay down until after that shit came out,” Trell said.

Ant shrugged and dropped back onto the same threadbare couch he’d just had Naomi bent over. The springs squeaked under his weight. He leaned back, one arm thrown over the backrest, looking up at Trell. “That ain’t the same as knowin’ how to work it,” he said.

Trell let that slide. He shifted his weight, glancing once toward where Naomi had disappeared, then back. “Cass came to the crib the other day,” he said.

Ant’s eyebrow climbed. “Yeah?” he asked.

Trell sucked his teeth, cutting off whatever look Ant thought he was giving him. “With some business shit, nigga,” he added.

Ant’s gaze slid off him for a second as he reached for the coffee table. A half-burned joint sat in an ashtray surrounded by old roaches and gray ash. He picked it up, checked the tip, then sparked it with a lighter he pulled from his pocket. The first draw lit the cherry bright, smoke curling up between them before he let it out.

“What business shit?” he asked, smoke seeping from the corner of his mouth.

“She gon’ tell us where P used to get his guns,” Trell said. “Some crazy white boys out in the Everglades, but that’s all she told me.”

Ant took another drag and sat with that a second, eyes on Trell through the haze. “You want me to go get the names out of her?” he asked.

Trell waved the idea off with a flick of his wrist. “Nah,” he said. “She’ll give us the names. We just gotta bring her out there and give her a cut.”

Ant nodded slow, the joint hanging between his fingers. “You the boss,” he said. “When we goin’ out there?” He paused, then added, “Wherever there is.”

“Miami,” Trell said. “This weekend. Me and Cass gon’ fly. You drive with Boogie and Dez.”

Ant’s eyes narrowed a little. “You trust Dez on this?” he asked.

Trell shook his head once. “No,” he said. “But we’ll make sure we don’t get in a shootout with no crackers in the swamp. We don’t even do that shit here.”

Ant huffed a short laugh, smoke leaking out with it. “Alright,” he said. “Just let me know when to leave.”

Trell nodded and stepped closer, reaching out his hand. Ant sat forward enough to meet it, their palms slapping together in a firm dap before Trell turned toward the door.

“You know Cass probably let them white boys fuck to keep them copacetic?” Ant said behind him.

Trell looked back at him, then at the door, hand on the knob. A laugh slipped out of him, quick and rough. “Yeah,” he said. “I know.”

~~~

Ramon stepped through the doorway with Tyree and E.J. tight behind him, Kevin out front cutting a path through the heat and the stink. The flop house in the East had the curtains pulled half down and a sheet thumbtacked where a window used to be. Morning light pushed around the edges, thin and dirty, just enough to show bodies spread across the floor.

Someone snored in a broken recliner. Two men lay on the bare boards, one on his back with his arm thrown over his eyes, the other curled up, shoes still on, a glass pipe loose in his fingers. A woman in a torn hoodie sat wedged between the wall and the end of a busted couch, knees pulled up, head tipped back. The air was sour with smoke and sweat and whatever had been cooked in the kitchen days ago and never cleaned.

Kevin didn’t slow. “Watch your step,” he tossed over his shoulder, weaving between outstretched legs.

Ramon watched the corners while he walked, the weight of the bag in his hand dragging at his fingers. Tyree and E.J. moved single file, shoulders angled, eyes tracking everything without resting long on any of the bodies laid out around them.

Near the hallway, a woman on the floor rolled onto her side and retched. Vomit hit the boards in a wet splash and spread toward Tyree’s sneakers. He snapped his foot back fast and hissed air through his teeth.

“Fuck,” he muttered, lip curling.

She dragged air in, body hitching, then pushed herself halfway up on one elbow. Her hair hung in greasy ropes around her face. When she lifted her head, trying to catch her breath, Tyree’s eyes narrowed. He glanced from her to Ramon’s back.

“Ramon,” he called. “Ain’t this your sister?”

Ramon’s stride hitched for half a second. He turned his head just enough to look down at her. The woman blinked slow, eyes unfocused, spit and bile at the corner of her mouth. She wiped the back of her hand across her face and bent again, shoulders working as she kept dry heaving over the mess on the floor.

He faced forward again and kept walking.

Behind him, a sharp crack sounded as E.J.’s palm met the back of Tyree’s head.

“Man, shut the fuck up,” E.J. said.

Tyree’s mouth opened like he wanted to say more, but Kevin had already pushed through the kitchen and out the back door. The weak daylight from outside cut across the sticky linoleum, catching on empty bottles and a trash bag that never made it outside. Ramon followed it, stepping around another body stretched near the fridge, and shouldered through onto the small slab of concrete that passed for a back porch.

Out back, the air moved a little easier. Grass grew high and patchy at the edges of the yard, bottles half-buried in the dirt, a busted grill tipped over on its side. A weather-beaten shed leaned near the fence, padlock rusted and hanging open.

Kevin stopped just off the porch, close enough that the open back door could still swallow their voices. He leaned in toward Ramon.

“Sorry about Asia, bro,” he said, voice low. “I know you don’t like anyone selling to her, but we ain’t sell it to her.”

Ramon flicked his chin once and lifted the bag a little. “Few packs,” he said. “Just like you asked for.”

Kevin nodded. He jerked his head toward the shed and walked across the yard, stepping over a tangle of wire and an upside-down crate. The door creaked when he pulled it open. He slipped inside and pulled it shut behind him, the latch clacking.

Tyree shifted closer to Ramon, hands buried in his pockets. E.J. hung back a pace, eyes on the back of the house.

“Hey, my bad, big brudda,” Tyree said after a beat. “I ain’t mean to put your business out there like that.”

Ramon slid him a look. “What you bringing it up again for then?”

Tyree’s shoulders dipped. “You right,” he said. He looked over at E.J. “You sort out your white boy problem?” he asked.

E.J. sucked his teeth. “What you want me to do, off a cop?”

Tyree gave a small shrug. “You could.”

Ramon shook his head. “That white girl gon’ snitch on him immediately,” he said. “So he’d have to knock her ass off, too.”

E.J. waved his hand. “Nah,” he said. “She love me. He just some motherfucker her mama used to foster.”

Ramon’s mouth twisted. “You just some motherfucker her mama used to foster,” he said.

The shed door opened before E.J. could answer. Kevin stepped out with a brown paper bag rolled down neat at the top. He crossed the yard and held it out.

Ramon passed him the bag from his own hand. Kevin took it, gave it the same quick heft he always did, and tucked it against his thigh. Ramon opened the paper bag, pinched the top with two fingers, and peeled it back enough to see what sat inside. Stacks. Plastic. The count looked right.

He nodded once and rolled the top back down. “Hit me up next time you want a re-up,” he said.

Kevin gripped his hand, palm to palm, shoulders bumping in a short dap. “Bet,” he said, then turned back toward the shed.

Ramon stepped off the little porch and cut across the yard toward the side of the house. The back door to the flop house yawned open behind them, voices and the low drone of some TV spilling out. He glanced once toward it, then veered away.

“Nigga, where you going?” Tyree asked. “Door right there.”

“Going round,” Ramon said. “Too many cluckers in there.”

Tyree snorted but fell in beside him. E.J. came up on Ramon’s other side, tugging his shirt straight as they walked the narrow dirt path along the side of the house. The siding was stained and buckled, a busted window patched with cardboard and duct tape. A stray cat darted from under the steps ahead of them, tail puffed and slipped under the next house.

They hit the front yard a second later. The grass was more dirt than green, trampled flat into paths. Two other guys had just stepped out of a scratched-up sedan parked at the curb. One slammed the driver’s door with his hip, keys swinging from his finger. The other adjusted his belt, eyes on the front door.

All five of them stopped at once.

Ramon, Tyree, and E.J. on the patch of yard. The two new arrivals on the broken walk leading up to the porch. The space between them tightened. Hands hovered closer to waistbands. Faces shifted from blank to sharp.

The taller of the two newcomers squinted, head tipping just enough to show he knew exactly who stood in front of him. His lip curled.

“Fuck 3NG, nigga!” he barked, his hand dropping straight to his waistband.

Ramon moved before the last word finished. He closed the distance in a burst, shoulder slamming into the man’s middle. They went down hard, skidding across the packed dirt at the edge of the yard. The other man’s hand was already coming up, gun clearing his shirt.

A shot cracked the air, loud and close. The sound bounced off the shotgun houses up and down the block. The second guy jerked and dropped, screaming, fingers flying to his knee as blood spread warm under his palm.

Tyree had his gun out now, arm straight, barrel trained on the one on the ground. “Don’t fucking move,” he snapped, feet planted, body between the car and the man.

E.J. rushed toward Ramon and the first guy, trying to get a clear angle. On the ground, Ramon and the man twisted and rolled, each hand fighting for the gun caught between them. Dirt kicked up under their shoulders. The man cursed, teeth bared, trying to wrench the pistol free. Ramon drove his weight down, forearm across the other man’s chest, fingers clamped on his wrist.

Doors along the block cracked open. A shout went up from a yard across the way. Before anybody else could jump in, a group of men rushed over from the side, feet pounding against the packed earth. They yelled in Vietnamese, voices sharp and overlapping, crowding into the space.

Hands grabbed at shoulders and arms, pulling. One man hooked Ramon under the elbow, hauling him back off the guy on the ground. Another kicked the loose gun out of reach, sending it spinning toward the porch. The air filled with more Vietnamese, words firing back and forth, hard and fast.

Kevin pushed through them from the direction of the house, his face set. He shook his head once, tight.

He fired off a string of Vietnamese at the men around them, gestures slicing through the air, then switched to English long enough to cut at Ramon.

“Get the fuck out of here,” he said. “We’ll handle this.”

Ramon’s chest rose and fell under his shirt, but he didn’t argue. He backed away, snatching up the bag, eyes still on the two men from the car. Tyree eased his own gun down, stepping back in line with him. E.J. lingered a beat, jaw set, then turned too.

They jogged down the block toward Ramon’s car, shoes slapping against the cracked sidewalk. Ramon yanked the driver’s door open. Tyree piled into the passenger seat. E.J. tore the back door open and dove in, the whole car rocking once with his weight.

The engine caught on the first turn. Ramon dropped it into gear and pulled away from the curb, tires spitting gravel.

Behind them, the shouts in Vietnamese rose again, high and angry. Somewhere farther off, a siren wound up and cut through the air, the sound chasing them as they headed out of the East.

~~~

Mireya pushed through the heavy door of the hall. The sky hung low and gray over the quad. Students streamed past in clusters, backpacks bumping, someone’s speaker hissing out bass from inside a bag.

Trell’s car rolled up to the curb right as she stepped off the last stair. He had the window down, elbow resting on the frame, one hand on the wheel. His eyes slid over her slow, catching the fitted top and pants he had pulled off hangers for her, the clean lines of the jacket resting open over it. He clocked the belt, the shoes. All of it came from bags that had once been spread across his bed.

He gave a small nod, nothing else, and reached across to pop the lock.

Mireya yanked the strap of her bag higher on her shoulder and pulled the passenger door open. The air inside carried cologne and old smoke under the faint sweetness of the little tree hanging from the mirror. She dropped her bag at her feet and pulled the door shut, the sound clipping off the campus noise.

“You good?” Trell asked.

“Yeah,” she said.

He pulled off from the curb, easing the car into the slow crawl of traffic that circled the lot. The tires thumped over a pothole at the exit. Once they hit the street, he let the car stretch, sliding through yellow lights before they turned red.

He checked her again in his peripheral, the way the fabric sat on her, the way she held herself in it. Another short nod, satisfied, then his gaze went back to the road.

They passed the bookstore, the bus stop, the wide green where students cut across in crooked paths. Mireya watched all of it through the glass, elbow pressed to the door, wrist bent so her fingers could rest near her mouth.

“Where we going?” she asked, eyes still on the buildings falling back behind them.

“Westbank,” Trell said. “Just for a couple hours.”

She nodded once and settled deeper into the seat. The city shifted as they moved. Campus gave way to strip malls, tire shops, shotgun houses with front steps crowded in plastic chairs. Billboards stacked over the highway, preaching lawyers and Jesus with the same bold letters.

She turned her face toward the glass and let the motion blur lights and signs together. The hum of the tires under them and the low rush of other cars on the interstate filled the quiet.

For a while neither of them said anything. Trell tapped two fingers against the steering wheel in rhythm with a song only he could hear. Mireya counted exits without really meaning to, mouth pressed into a flat line.

“I need you to come to Miami with me this weekend,” Trell said finally. “Can you do that for me?”

The question dropped right into the middle of the noise. Mireya pulled her gaze from the window and looked over at him, caught the way he didn’t take his eyes off the road when he asked.

She shook her head. “No. I’m going to be in Georgia this weekend.”

His eyebrow rose, a small twitch. “Just cancel that shit and come to Miami,” he said. “You said you don’t be going to Atlanta. Where else could you be going in Georgia that’s even close to going to somewhere with beaches and shit?”

“I can’t cancel it,” she said.

“I’m gonna pay for everything while we in Miami,” he said, voice steady, like that should have closed it.

“I just can’t,” she answered.

Trell glanced at her, eyes cutting quick across her face, then back to the lane lines. He nodded slow, jaw flexing once. “Alright then.”

Silence pressed in again, heavier now. Mireya went back to the window, the glass cool against her temple when she leaned into it. Traffic tightened around them as they hit a merge. Horns sounded in short bursts, trucks rumbling low as they shifted lanes.

She let a few beats pass before she spoke again. “I’m bringing my daughter to see her father,” she said quietly. “That’s why I can’t cancel.”

Trell’s hand paused on the wheel for half a second before it kept moving. “You got a kid?” he asked.

Mireya nodded. “Yeah.”

He shrugged, taking the next exit ramp, shoulders lifting and dropping under his T-shirt. “Guess that’s why you got random hours you unavailable,” he said.

A short sound slipped out of her, halfway between a snort and a laugh.

“He locked up out there or something?” Trell asked.

She shook her head, eyes on the dash. “No, he goes to college in Statesboro near Savannah.”

Trell eased the car down as the light ahead flipped yellow and then red. He let it roll to a stop, one hand resting loose at the top of the wheel. He turned his head that time to look at her full on, then started laughing.

Mireya frowned. “What’s funny?”

“I just ain’t take you for the type to let some poindexter ass nigga put a baby in you,” he said.

She rolled her eyes and stared through the windshield. “I don’t think I’d call him that.”

The light flipped green. Trell drove them forward, lips still curved. “Makes sense why you keep running up to that campus trying to pretend like you not making hella bread already,” he said. “He know what you do?”

Mireya’s gaze stayed on the stretch of road ahead. “No,” she said.

“He wouldn’t respect the hustle,” Trell said. “A college nigga? I don’t blame you for not telling him. People in that world ain’t never gonna understand what we do. They gonna want some AKA bitch who spend half her life chasing 40 degrees. Not a money making bitch like you.”

Buildings grew shorter as they pushed farther from campus, the highway signs now pointing them toward the bridge.

Mireya didn’t respond. Her fingers traced an invisible line along the seam of the seat, nails catching on the stitching. The air vent blew against her knuckles, drying the faint sheen of sweat there.

“That’s why it’s a good thing you with me now, though,” Trell went on. “You a real ass bitch and you need a real ass nigga who ain’t gonna put you down for getting your bag.”

She kept her eyes forward, throat working once. “What did you need me in Miami for?” she asked.

“’Cause you my good luck charm,” Trell said. “I been up ever since I started fuckin’ with you.”

Mireya let that sit between them, weighing it.

“I can go in two weeks,” she said.

A small smirk tugged at Trell’s mouth. He cut his eyes toward her again, then back to the road. “Alright,” he said. “You go do the baby mama thing with that square ass nigga and we’ll hit the beach in a couple weeks.”

Mireya nodded and turned her face back to the window, letting him believe the picture he was painting of Caine.

~~~
Caine stepped off the field with the last stretch of practice heat still clinging to him. His jersey stuck to his back under the pads, breath fogging faint in the cooler air rolling across the grass. Javier jogged up beside him, bumping his shoulder hard enough to make him shift a step.

“Motherfucker, quit,” Caine said, but he was already smiling. “Before I bat the piss out your ass.”

Javier circled in front of him, feet light, hands up in a fake stance. “What’s up then?” he said, shadowboxing the space between them. “I ain’t swingin’ on you too hard. Know you a million dollar man and all.”

One of the linemen passing by barked out a laugh. Another slapped Caine’s shoulder pad as he headed toward the locker room.

Caine let the helmet hang from two fingers and stepped forward, closing the space. “Sounds like some bitch shit to me.”

Javier backed up with both palms out, grin wide. “Aight, aight. Wait till they bubble wrap you.”

They were still clowning when a voice cut across the field.

“Caine!”

He turned. One of the SIDs stood at the rope line in a navy polo, clipboard under one arm. Beside him, two camera crews had set up on the path. Tripods, lights, and long cords taped to the concrete.

The SID waved him over.

“Go on, superstar,” Javier called as he jogged away.

Caine jogged toward the path, cleats biting the edge of the turf before he stepped onto the concrete. As he approached, the older reporter extended his hand.

“Caine, good to meet you. Evan Lassiter, WSAV.”

Caine shook his hand, then moved to the next.

“Alex Tremaine, WJCL,” the younger one said, mic in his other hand.

Caine nodded at both, gave the cameraman the same quick handshake. He had done enough of these that his body moved on autopilot. Stand here, square the shoulders, helmet down by the thigh.

The SID clipped a small mic to the collar of his practice jersey and stepped back out of frame.

Evan took the lead, eyes flicking to the cameraman until he got the ready signal.

“Alright,” Evan said. “Y’all got a big game coming up this weekend against JMU. A win Saturday puts Georgia Southern in the driver’s seat for the Sun Belt title game. Any nerves?”

Caine shook his head. “Coach keeps us pretty focused from week to week. Ain’t nobody looking ahead or thinking about anything but JMU.”

The SID nodded once, pleased.

Alex stepped in for the next question, his yellow paper rattling once in his hand.

“The award watchlists drop next week,” he said. “And from what we’re hearing, you’re sitting second for the Shaun Alexander Award behind USF’s Cameron Dyer. You think your play justifies more praise than you’re getting?”

Caine let one shoulder rise and fall. “I don’t know. What you think?”

Alex blinked, then let out a short laugh. “Yeah, probably so.”

Caine nodded. “I’m just doing me out there. I ain’t worried about what people handing out awards think. That ain’t got nothing to do with us winning or losing. They can give it to ol’ boy as long as we finish the season twelve and one.”

The cameraman smothered a smile behind the lens.

Evan glanced at his notes, then raised his head.

“Speaking of how well you’re playing,” he said, “portal opens in a few weeks. The whole country’s asking: will Caine Guerra be hitting the transfer portal?”

For a heartbeat the field behind him faded. Markus’ warning cut through, sharp, unsoftened, the same tone he used on the call.

You can’t leave.

Caine didn’t let any of that touch his face.

He shook his head. “I know everyone gonna think I’m trying to be sneaky or something, but I’m just focused on Saturday. What happens in December is a December problem. We in November and I’m trying to win football games.”

Evan held his stare for another moment, then nodded and moved on. They spent another run of questions on JMU’s defense, on how the receivers looked this week, on how practice had changed since the bye. Caine kept it tight, credited the linemen, talked about the importance of stay disciplined.

By the time they wrapped, sweat had dried cool across Caine’s ribs and the stadium lights were beginning to hum overhead.

“Appreciate you, man,” Evan said, shaking his hand again.

“Good luck this weekend,” Alex added.

Caine gave both a quiet “Appreciate it,” and stepped back. The SID unclipped the mic from his jersey, rolled the wire in one practiced motion, and tucked it into his belt.

Caine started toward the facility doors. The concrete walkway carried the faint thump of music leaking from the locker room, bass pulses bouncing off the wall. Trainers pushed water coolers past. A couple of scout teamers sprinted by, helmets still on, trying to beat curfew to the showers.

The SID fell in beside him, matching his pace without looking directly at him.

“Good stuff,” he said under his breath. “Those answers were strong.”

Caine swung the helmet lightly at his side. They approached the double doors where warm air spilled from the gap at the bottom.

The SID waited until they were almost at the threshold before speaking again, voice dropping even lower.

“So,” he said, “between the two of us… you transferring?”

Caine kept his eyes forward, the shrug coming slow, measured, deliberate. He let the shoulder rise and fall, saying nothing, keeping every ounce of leverage he still had.

~~~

Laney sat on the back porch with her hands folded around her phone, the last of the dishwater still drying tight on her fingers. The air had cooled some since the afternoon, heading back to the chill of the morning. The kitchen light behind her threw a soft square across the porch boards, catching the edge of the chair she sat in and the rail in front of her.

The screen door stood cracked just enough that the hum of the refrigerator and the tick of the cooling stove drifted out. The smell of food lingered under the sharper note of bleach she had used on the counters. Her stomach gave a low, mean twist. She laid her palm over it for a second, thumb rubbing against the cotton of her shirt. Salad hadn’t done much more.

Out in the yard, the camper glowed at the edges. The little window over the sink held a square of yellow light. She could see Blake inside, arms moving big and wild, head bent toward Tommy. From the porch, their voices blurred into one low noise, but she could read the shape of Blake’s agitation in the way he paced that small space. Tommy stood near the far wall, shoulders set, arms crossed over his chest. He didn’t move much. Every now and then his head tipped, slow, like he was letting Blake say his piece.

Laney dropped her eyes to the phone and opened her messages. Her thumbs moved, tapping out a line to Caine. No hiding it now. She didn’t shift in her chair or turn away from the house. The porch light brushed across the back of her hand, catching on the tiny crack in the screen protector. She paused once, listening to the low rumble from the camper, then finished the thought and hit send.

A few beats later the phone buzzed against her palm. Caine’s name slid across the top of the screen. Her mouth twitched at the corner before she flattened it again. She read his reply, thumb hovering over the keys as she crafted the next one. The hunger in her stomach sat there, steady, but it wasn’t just about food.

Through the kitchen window she could still see the dark outline of the table she had wiped down, the chairs pushed in, the boys’ school papers stacked in a neat pile for the morning. She had scrubbed the grease from the skillet, stacked the plates in the rack, folded the dish towel back over the oven handle. There wasn’t anything left to do in there but wait until morning, so she stayed where she was, shoulders settled into the chair.

Out back, Blake threw his hands up, the gesture big enough to hit the top of the camper’s ceiling. Tommy’s head turned then. His mouth moved. Laney couldn’t hear the words, but she knew that tone, the way his lips pressed around them. Blake’s shoulders sagged. Tommy lifted his hand, palm out, the stop of it sharp even from a distance. Whatever Blake was saying died right there.

Tommy shifted toward the door. For a second he looked down, lips still moving, saying one last thing. Then he reached for the handle. The camper door opened, a slice of light cutting across the yard before it swung shut again behind him.

Laney watched him come. He stepped down from the camper and started across the backyard, boots quiet on the packed dirt path he had worn between the two doors. The security light over the back stoop came on as he hit the halfway point, washing him in pale yellow. He didn’t rush. His hands were empty. His mouth held that same flat line he wore when he was working something out in his head.

Her phone buzzed again. She glanced down, caught the new message from Caine, and started to type her answer. The porch boards creaked once when Tommy’s weight hit the bottom step. She felt it through the soles of her feet. She didn’t look up right away. Her thumbs kept moving, quick and familiar over the screen.

Tommy climbed the steps. The wood complained under each steady step. He stopped near her chair, shadow falling across her bare knees. She lifted her eyes from the screen and met his for a heartbeat, then dropped her gaze again to finish the sentence she was typing. Her thumb tapped send. The tiny whoosh in her hand sounded louder than it was.

He didn’t speak at first. The pause sat between them, the open door behind him framing his shoulder in warm kitchen light. Laney felt his eyes on her, on the way her fingers still cradled the phone, but she kept her face smooth.

“Have you done the laundry tonight?” he asked.

She nodded once, phone still in her hand. “Yes, I did,” she said, the words easy, worn into the shape of her tongue.

He shifted his weight, boot scraping against the board. “What about my–”

“On the hanger in the closet,” she cut in, voice even. “Already ironed.”

She looked down again as the phone buzzed in her palm. Caine’s name popped up. She opened the thread and started typing, the glow from the screen washing her features in a cooler light. Her thumbs moved steady.

“Who are you texting?” Tommy asked.

Laney lifted her eyes to him. Her expression didn’t change. “Taela,” she said. “’Bout the baby.”

His jaw worked once, a small clench that showed at the edge of his cheek. He held her gaze for a second, then turned without a word and stepped past her into the house. The screen door swung in and eased shut behind him with a soft click.

Laney sat there, the night pressing in at the edges of the porch light. Out in the yard, the camper door had cracked open again. Blake stood in the gap, one shoulder leaned against the frame, watching. The glow from inside cut across his face, catching on the set of his mouth and the narrowed eyes turned toward the house.

She let her gaze rest on him for a breath, then dropped it back to the phone in her hand. Her thumbs moved over the screen, picking the thread back up with Caine.


~~~

Mireya sank a little lower in the hot water, the bubbles licking at her shoulders. Steam curled up into the cool Northshore night, breaking against the high back of the stone jacuzzi. Beyond it, the dark shape of the house sat with most of its lights off, big and quiet in a way that said no one was home who mattered.

Alejandra tipped the wine bottle up, throat working as she took a long pull. The glass caught the glow from the pool lights set into the concrete, throwing it over her cheekbones. She smacked her lips once and passed the bottle toward Jaslene.

“Aquí,” she said, voice lazy. “Take it before I finish it, mami.”

Jaslene took it, fingers brushing Alejandra’s. Her nails were still done from the weekend, tiny rhinestones catching water and light. She lifted the bottle, drank, then set it on the wide tile ledge just within reach, water beading on her brown arms.

On the other side of Mireya, Hayley turned a strand of pearls over in her fingers. The necklace looked almost gray in the pool lighting until it flashed white when she moved it.

“Found this upstairs,” Hayley said. “Hung over her mirror like she ain’t touched it in months.”

Mireya watched the pearls drip. Water slid down Hayley’s wrist and fell back into the tub.

“His wife got more shit up there?” she asked.

Hayley didn’t look up from the necklace. “Yeah. Whole vanity full. But I don’t know what’s expensive and what’s not.”

Alejandra snorted. “Todo ello. It’s all expensive,” she said. “He got to buy it for her to make up for having stripper sugar babies.” The way she hit sugar babies came with a small eye roll, amused and sharp at the same time.

Hayley scoffed. “I don’t think you can call me a sugar baby if I gotta work for the money he gives me.”

Jaslene reached past Mireya for the bottle again, the movement brushing warm thigh against Mireya’s under the water.

“You don’t think the rest of them are getting fucked for it?” she said. “They working too.”

Mireya’s mouth pulled in a half smile. The pearls gleamed in Hayley’s hand, flashing once before her fingers closed around them.

“And you the only one with a key to his house,” Mireya said.

Hayley finally looked over, eyes cutting to her and then away. She rolled her eyes but the corner of her mouth curved, caught.

“Perks of good customer service,” she said, letting the necklace fall into her palm.

The jets hummed under them, pushing hot water around bare legs. Out past the fence, the dark line of trees edged the yard. A faint stretch of highway noise floated across from farther inland, cars whispering over concrete.

Mireya tipped her head back against the stone. “Y’all ever think about what’s after this?” she asked. “Like one day we gonna have to stop doing this, right?”

Alejandra barked out a laugh. “¡Ni por el putas!” she said. “When I’m too old and ugly, I’m going jump in the river like a witch.”

Hayley snickered. “Live fast, die young,” she said, lifting her free hand.

Alejandra slapped her palm against Hayley’s for the high five, water splashing their wrists. The bottle on the ledge rattled.

Jaslene watched them, mouth tilted up. She slid her eyes back to Mireya.

“You just thinking about that shit now that you got a man willing to take care of you,” she said.

Mireya sucked her teeth. “What man?” she asked, rolling her eyes, even as the picture of Trell’s chain, Trell’s car, Trell’s hand at the small of her back flickered through.

Hayley’s laugh rode the water. “Jas, you let someone take your girl?” she said.

Jaslene shook her head slow. Her hand reached up, fingers tracing along the back of Mireya’s neck, damp curls catching under her nails.

“No,” she said, voice lower. “I just let him borrow her.”

Mireya scoffed, but she didn’t move away from her touch. The heat from the water pressed against the soft drag of Jaslene’s fingers, a small steady line at the base of her skull.

“I’m serious though,” Mireya said. “Y’all have to have thought about it. Like for real.”

Jaslene’s fingers shifted, now brushing along her hairline, then back down. “I’m only thinking about tomorrow,” she said. “That’s enough.”

Alejandra tilted her head back against the lip of the tub, dark hair spreading out. “You want to quit, Mexicana? Already?” she asked.

Mireya opened her mouth. The first answer ready was yes, for a second, the idea of never having to do any of it again. She paused, swallowed.

She shook her head. “No,” she said. “I like the money. I don’t feel like I’m looking over my shoulder for the first time in my life. But I don’t want to keep my life a secret forever.”

Hayley let out a breath through her nose. “Then don’t,” she said, simple. She set the necklace on the ledge and watched a bead of water slide between two of the pearls.

Mireya lifted her shoulders out of the water and let them sink again. “I ain’t that comfortable with it yet,” she said. “With the dancing. With… everything. There’s no coming back from it.”

For a second, none of them talked. The pool filter hummed. Somewhere in the house, the air unit kicked on, a low thrum cutting under the night sounds.

Jaslene leaned in closer. Mireya felt her breath near her ear first, warm against the cooler air above the water.

“You gotta stop letting people get in your head, nena,” Jaslene murmured. “La única opinión que importa es la tuya.”

The words slid in soft. Mireya nodded slowly, trying to let them settle instead of bouncing off whatever worry still sat inside her. She focused on the ripples around their shoulders, the slick sound of water moving when someone shifted a foot.

Hayley suddenly pushed herself up, water streaming from her body. The air hit her skin and she shivered once, snatching a towel from a nearby chair and wrapping it around her.

“I’m going find more shit to take from his wife,” she said, already stepping out onto the cool concrete.

Alejandra made a face and then laughed, standing with a splash of her own. “Espérame,” she said. “You not leaving me nothing good.”

She hoisted herself out of the jacuzzi. Water dripped in a line behind her as she padded across the deck to catch up with Hayley, the two of them disappearing toward the back door of the house, voices overlapping, low and amused.

The yard got quieter without them. The trees swayed just enough to rustle. A bug buzzed near the pool light and tapped against the glass.

Jaslene and Mireya stayed where they were. Mireya let herself sink into the silence, thoughts moving but not making a sound she was ready to share. Jaslene’s hand never left her. Her fingers played with the hair at the base of Mireya’s neck, light and slow, turning small strands between them while the hot water held them both in place.

redsox907
Posts: 3083
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 02 Dec 2025, 02:24

is Tommy the cuck now?!?! Content to let his wife get reamed out by the college QB so long as his laundry is ironed and the kids taken care of :dead:

still needs to get slid on

so Asia is Ramon's sister, explains why he don't like pimps.

wonder if someone clocked the car leaving and that's going to get them caught up with Tessa's cop dude guy (I forgot his name and hope that's her name lol)

Trell want to fly Mireya out to Miami to have her give them boys the Cass special? she ain't even see it coming. thought for a minute she was going to fold and head out that weekend. Would have set up a great way for Caine to get suspicious, or take his chances with the portal regardless of what Markus said

Just like with the tommy being a woman beater, you keep saying Jas and Mireya ain't a thing, but ever their friends think its a thing. Maybe not an official this is my girlfriend thing, but definitely an emotional support relationship with sexual undertones since they are, ya know, fucking for money.

also: forgot to add

Trell building up Caine to be a bitch boy in his head is going to be hilarious when he founds out who Caine really is. I'm sure he's aware of the work he used to do since he's working with 3NG and more than likely knows about Tito's crew getting slid on
Last edited by redsox907 on 02 Dec 2025, 11:12, edited 1 time in total.

Soapy
Posts: 12889
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 02 Dec 2025, 07:49

Caesar wrote:
01 Dec 2025, 23:27
They gonna want some AKA bitch
watch your mouth nigga about Mel
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 02 Dec 2025, 16:37

redsox907 wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 02:24
is Tommy the cuck now?!?! Content to let his wife get reamed out by the college QB so long as his laundry is ironed and the kids taken care of :dead:

still needs to get slid on

so Asia is Ramon's sister, explains why he don't like pimps.

wonder if someone clocked the car leaving and that's going to get them caught up with Tessa's cop dude guy (I forgot his name and hope that's her name lol)

Trell want to fly Mireya out to Miami to have her give them boys the Cass special? she ain't even see it coming. thought for a minute she was going to fold and head out that weekend. Would have set up a great way for Caine to get suspicious, or take his chances with the portal regardless of what Markus said

Just like with the tommy being a woman beater, you keep saying Jas and Mireya ain't a thing, but ever their friends think its a thing. Maybe not an official this is my girlfriend thing, but definitely an emotional support relationship with sexual undertones since they are, ya know, fucking for money.

also: forgot to add

Trell building up Caine to be a bitch boy in his head is going to be hilarious when he founds out who Caine really is. I'm sure he's aware of the work he used to do since he's working with 3NG and more than likely knows about Tito's crew getting slid on
We might have to start a dialogue about how quickly yall throw around this cuck label. Nothing in that scene indicated he knew, believed or was okay with anything. :pgdead:

Just wait :curtain:

They were in the hood. Ain’t nobody worried about that car.

Mireya didn’t take a beating from Junebug just to turn around and randomly not show up for a game to make Caine suspicious.

Jaslene and Mireya are no different than Alejandra and Hayley if we keeping it a buck. Hell, Alejandra and Hayley live together. You ain’t calling them lesbians :druski:

One has to wonder if Trell and Caine shall ever meet. :hmm: but you right that some folks knew about the “Black Mexican” that Ramon, Tyree and E.J. run with. The issue is the most of those people are dead or are in prison (Dre).
Soapy wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 07:49
Caesar wrote:
01 Dec 2025, 23:27
They gonna want some AKA bitch
watch your mouth nigga about Mel
Mel like vanilla. We can say what we want about her ass.
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 02 Dec 2025, 23:44

He Brought Me Down

The field behind Pastor Hadden’s church was full enough that Caine felt it before he saw all of it. Voices layered over one another, kids yelling for nothing, somebody’s uncle laughing big from the direction of the grill line. The air smelled like fried fish, charcoal, kettle corn, and the faint sharp bite of hay where somebody had dragged bales into a crooked maze.

Mireya walked just ahead of him with Sara, the two of them shoulder to shoulder in the narrow lane between tents. The sun caught the bare length of Mireya’s legs, smooth above the sneakers, the hem of her shorts cut high on her thighs. Every step pulled the fabric against the curve of her, the muscle there working under skin. Sara’s hand moved when she talked, fingers flicking in little cuts Caine could read even if he didn’t catch every word.

They were deep in Spanish, voices low, almost lost under the noise of the festival. Every now and then Sara’s laugh cut up, quick and warm, and Mireya’s head tipped back for a second before she said something back that made Sara reach over and tap her arm.

Camila sat on Caine’s hip, damp curls sticking to her forehead, one fist hooked in the collar of his shirt. She twisted in his hold every few steps, pointing with her free hand.

“Daddy, look,” she said, eyes wide at the row of inflatables puffed up along the far fence. “Big house..”

He followed her finger. A bounce house leaned side to side with the weight of kids throwing themselves at the mesh. “Yeah, I see it, mamas,” he said. “We’ll go over there.”

She barely waited before finding something else. “Pumpkins,” she announced when they passed a table stacked with bright orange ones, small enough for little hands. “And candy. Mommy, look, candy.”

Mireya glanced back over her shoulder and smiled. “Después,” she called. “After you eat.”

Camila huffed, a tiny noise, but she settled when Caine kissed her temple. Her skin ran warm, sticky from sugar and sun and everything else kids got into.

“Yeah, I see it, mamas,” he said again when she pointed at a game stall where rings clinked against glass bottles. “You see everything, huh?”

She nodded hard like that was her job.

He let the noise of the festival wash over him. Someone called numbers over a crackling loudspeaker for the cake walk. Somewhere else, metal chairs scraped over concrete. A little boy in a bow tie ran in front of them and got snatched back by his mother before he hit Caine’s knee. Sara shifted a little closer to Mireya to let them pass, still talking, the motion easy and familiar.

Caine’s eyes dropped back to Mireya. To the way her shorts hugged her from the back, pockets barely visible. There was more curve, more definition in the backs of her legs, the kind of change you only saw if you’d been looking for a long time.

He let his gaze travel up slow, from calves to thighs to ass to the narrow set of her waist above the waistband, the shirt hanging soft over her. She tucked hair behind her ear as she walked, laughing at whatever Sara had just said.

As if she felt it, Mireya slowed and turned. The sunlight hit her face full when she looked back at him, eyes narrowing on instinct before they softened. She caught his gaze lifting from her legs to her face and one eyebrow went up.

“What?” she asked.

Caine shifted Camila a little higher on his hip, free hand steady on her back. “Nothing,” he said, mouth curving. “Just appreciating the view.”

Sara’s eyes cut from Mireya to him and back again. Her mouth pulled into a look that sat somewhere between amusement and warning. She shook her head once, hair brushing her cheek.

“That’s how y’all ended up with that one,” she said, pointing at Camila with two fingers.

Camila giggled like she knew she was the joke and hid her face against Caine’s neck for a second before popping back up to watch everything again.

“Nah,” Caine said, grin settling deeper as he looked at Mireya. “I ain’t really noticed it before, but whatever you doing, it’s working.”

Mireya’s laugh came out quick, a little breathless from the heat and the crowd. She shook her head, but she didn’t hide. Her eyes stayed on his a beat longer than they needed to before she turned back toward the stretch of tents.

“Dios mío,” Sara muttered. She stepped in closer to Camila and reached out. “Come on, mi amor. Let’s go find something to eat before your mama and papa make me go get a Bible for them.”

Camila tightened her fingers on Caine’s shirt. “No,” she said, lower lip poking out. “I stay with Daddy.”

Caine rubbed her back in a slow circle. “We’ll be right over here,” he told her. “You go with Abuela. Bring me back something good.”

Camila studied his face the way she did when he said goodbye on a screen. The music, the smell of food, the whole festival pressed in around them for that second. Then she nodded, decision made, and reached for Sara with both arms.

Sara took her, settling the weight against her own hip. “You heard him,” she said. “We’re gonna bring him a plate.”

Camila leaned over her shoulder as they started away, little hand lifted. “Bye, Daddy,” she called. “Bye, Mommy.”

“Bye, baby,” Mireya answered.

Caine watched them thread into the line of people moving toward the food tents. Sara’s bright top and Camila’s curls made them easy to track until the crowd folded over them.

He stepped in beside Mireya. The lane felt wider with just the two of them. He slipped his arm around her waist, fingers fitting at the curve where denim met skin. She glanced down at his hand and then up at him, but she didn’t move away.

“Me has dado ganas de hacer otro igual,” he said into the space between them.

Mireya rolled her eyes, but her mouth tugged up. “Not me,” she said. “This factory is shut down indefinitely.”

“Indefinitely don’t got a date,” he said. “That could change tomorrow.”

Now she shoved him off with the back of her hand against his chest, the push more playful than hard. “Since when you know what words like that mean?”

Caine held his free hand up like surrender, walking backward a few steps to stay in front of her before he turned again. “I’m in college, too, girl,” he said. “You ain’t the only one.”

Mireya laughed at the comment, shaking her head as the two of them kept walking.

~~~

The heat under the water tent hung thick enough to taste, even with the sun easing lower across the field. Laney had been on her feet since before lunch, arms already sore from hauling coolers and breaking down boxes, T-shirt damp down the spine from sweat the fan behind her pretended to move. People streamed past in steady waves, some stopping for water, some for small talk she didn’t have the patience for. The fall festival always drew a good crowd, and today it felt like every last one of them needed something from her.

“Here y’all go now,” she said, handing a cold bottle across the table to a woman fanning herself with a church bulletin. “Stay cool far as you can.”

The woman offered a grateful nod and shuffled off. Laney reached back into the cooler, ice biting at the underside of her wrist as she dug for more bottles. Behind her, Rylee sat in a folding chair that had been empty most of the day, phone in hand, legs kicked out like she didn’t have a single task in the world.

“You supposed to be helpin’, not scrollin’,” Laney muttered over her shoulder.

Rylee didn’t bother looking up. “You ain’t told me to do nothin’.”

“You know good and well what you s’posed to be doin’,” Laney said. “Ain’t but so much I can do from in front of this table.”

Rylee sighed loud enough to make her point but still didn’t stand. Laney shook her head and went back to stacking bottles near the front edge, her hands moving on their own.

She kept her face forward, but her attention drifted without her permission. Across the field, past the cotton-candy booth and the bounce house and the tables where kids were painting pumpkins, she caught sight of them again. Caine with Camila on his hip, the little girl jabbering’ away at him, curls bouncing every time she pointed at something new. Mireya walked beside him, sun catching on her bare legs and the edges of her shorts. Sara stayed close too, the four of them moving slow through the crowd.

Laney’s chest tightened in that sharp way she hated, jealousy slipping in before she could chase it off. Seeing Mireya there with him. But watching Caine with Camila—him soft with her, attentive, letting that little girl run the whole show—hit a different place entirely. One she didn’t have words for.

She forced her eyes back to the table when a group of teenagers wandered up, laughing among themselves. She handed out waters one by one, nodding through thank-yous and half-mumbled God bless yous.

Footsteps thudded behind the tent. Low voices followed.

“I’m tellin’ you that ain’t what he said,” Blake muttered, voice tightened like he was holding something back.

“And I’m telling you you heard it wrong,” Tommy answered, quieter but sharper.

They rounded the corner, each carrying two full cases of water balanced against their chests. Tommy’s face was set in that familiar way, jaw locked, eyes scanning everything at once. Blake’s shirt was already damp even though the sun had dipped.

Laney straightened. “Set ’em right here,” she said, tapping the ground beside the table. “I’ll break ’em down in a minute.”

Tommy dropped his cases with a thud. Blake set his down, rolled his shoulders, then beelined straight for the empty folding chair beside Rylee. He plopped into it, metal legs screeching against the ground, and draped his arm across the back of her chair like he had any right.

Rylee stared at his arm. “Move.”

Blake smirked. “Relax.”

She dragged her chair an entire foot away, Blake’s arm hanging in the air before dropping uselessly behind him. He snorted, but he didn’t try again.

Tommy didn’t spare them a glance. His eyes followed the direction Laney had been looking all afternoon. They landed on Caine and his family across the field.

“Ain’t that the kid y’all got working here for Bethel?” he asked.

Laney didn’t look up from the half-torn plastic she was peeling off a new case. “Mm-hm. That’s him.”

Tommy tipped his chin toward the group. “Who’s that with him?”

“His mama, his little girl, and his little girl’s mama,” she said, smooth as if she were reading a list off a clipboard.

Tommy grunted. His mouth twisted. “Teenage parents, huh? Seeing how she’s dressed, I can see why.”

Laney’s jaw tightened, but her face stayed neutral. She tore open the case the rest of the way, pulled out a handful of bottles, lined them in neat rows along the table. She didn’t glance toward him.

“How you know so much about him?” Tommy asked after a beat.

She lifted her head then, meeting his eyes only for a second before turning back to her work. “He’s been workin’ for me eight, nine months, Tommy. They come out here for every home game.”

The air between them went still. She could feel him staring at her, heavy and steady, the kind of look that waited for something to slip. She kept her hands moving, kept her breathing even, kept her back straight.

Tommy grunted again, low and unreadable, and stepped away from the table. He walked to where Blake and Rylee sat and planted himself beside them, arms folded across his chest, eyes hard on Laney now instead of the field.

Another small line formed in front of the tent. An elderly woman stepped up, her church dress swaying with each slow step, hat pinned low over her brow.

Laney reached for a bottle, the cold plastic slick in her palm. She set it gently into the woman’s waiting hand and offered her a small smile, her voice warm even with Tommy’s stare burning the side of her face.

“Thank you for comin’ out now.”

~~~

Trell stood at the window of the hotel room with one shoulder resting against the frame, the glass cool through his T-shirt. The W sat high enough over South Beach that the world below looked neat. Blue pool, white loungers, a line of sand, the ocean laid out past that in bands of color. Light hit the water and broke into a scatter of hard little flashes.

He raised the glass to his mouth and took another slow sip of whisky. It burned just enough on the way down to remind him it was good. Expensive. Something somebody else used to drink on TV while he sat on a busted couch and watched. He let the taste sit on his tongue and nodded to himself.

He had spent a long time picturing shit like this. Five star hotels with white robes in the closet and slippers in plastic on the floor. Views that didn’t stop at the next building. Trips where he didn’t have to check his account first. The bill downstairs already handled on a card with his name on it. No blinking, no flinch when they slid the folio across the counter.

The room behind him was all clean lines and soft edges. Big bed made tight by housekeeping. The desk under the TV with the bottle of whisky he had already put a dent in. Two glasses. One in his hand. One waiting.

A knock landed on the door. Firm, twice.

Trell pulled his eyes from the water. He swallowed the rest of what was in his glass in one pull and let the warmth spread through his chest. He set the glass down on the desk as he walked by, the heavy base hitting wood with a soft thump.

He checked the peephole out of habit, even this high up. Then he popped the lock and pulled the door open.

Cass stood in the hallway in a mesh cover up that showed damn near everything under it. The dark thong bikini cut high over her hips. Her skin still held a sheen, like she had just come from the pool. Sunglasses rested on top of her head, hair pulled back off her face. She didn’t wait on an invite. She stepped right past him into the room, the faint smell of chlorine and tropical lotion moving with her.

Trell let the door swing shut at his back and turned. Cass had already crossed to the desk. The bottle sat there next to the ice bucket. She reached for the other glass, fingers loose, nails done in a bright color. She poured herself a drink the way she had done a hundred times in worse rooms than this. No measuring. Just tilting the neck until the amber ran high in the glass.

“You call them white boys?” Trell asked.

Cass shook her head once, earrings catching the light. “They don’t answer phones. You gotta use Telegram or Signal.”

He watched her bring the glass to her lips and take a healthy sip before she set it back down. His eyebrow went up, a small reaction that didn’t need words.

Cass tipped the rim of the glass toward him. “Apps,” she said. “Shit like the government motherfuckers use so no one knows what they putting in the water to kill us.”

She rolled her wrist as she talked, glass hanging off her fingers. The ice tapped against the side.

Trell sucked his teeth and shook his head. “You always be on that conspiracy theory shit.”

He moved in closer, the space between them small now. He picked up the bottle from her side of the desk and tipped more whisky into his own glass. The smell rose up rich when it hit what was left of the ice. He set the bottle back down between them.

“Why ain’t you bring Ant out here?” Cass asked. “Ain’t he the nigga who make sure no one do you anything?”

Trell chuckled, low in his throat. “Something like that.”

He turned his glass in his hand, watching the light catch the liquid.

“You not worried about me trying to kill you?” Cass asked.

Trell scoffed. “For what?”

Cass shrugged, shoulder lifting under the thin strap of the cover up. She set her glass down on the desk with a small clink and walked toward the balcony. Her bare feet made almost no sound on the carpet. She slid the glass door open with one hand. Warm air rushed in, thick with salt and the faint echo of music from the pool deck below.

“You never know why someone wanna kill a motherfucker,” she said over her shoulder.

She stepped out onto the balcony. Trell followed a beat later. The floor out there was smooth under his sneakers, darker from where people had tracked water back and forth during the day. The railing cut the view at his waist. Up close the ocean looked busier. Boats moved through the chop in thin white trails. Voices floated up from the street far below, just noise, no words.

Cass bent forward at the rail. Her palms flattened on the metal, fingers spread. Her back arched deep for a moment, the mesh stretching over the curve of her spine, the high cut of the bikini showing the full line of her. For a few seconds she held herself there, letting the breeze roll over her skin, then she eased into a more natural lean, hip tipped against the rail.

Trell stood a step back, glass in hand. He took another swallow, the whisky going down smoother this time. “You real relaxed for a bitch supposed to be out here on business,” he said.

Cass looked over her shoulder at him, a small smirk at the corner of her mouth. “You in a rush to get back to Louisiana for something?”

Trell shook his head. The movement was slow. His gaze stayed on her, sliding from the turn of her face down the line of her neck, over the mesh and the dark straps, tracing the shape of her body against the bright wash of ocean behind her.

~~~

Caine stood off to the side of the field with a foam cup sweating in his hand, the noise of the fall festival sitting a little softer from this angle. Kids yelled from the bounce house, praise music drifted from the stage, and somewhere closer the fryer hissed steady. Out here, under the thin shade of a scraggly tree, the air still felt heavy on his skin, but at least nobody bumped into him every two seconds.

Sara stood beside him with her arms crossed loose, eyes tracking the crowd. A dusting of powdered sugar stained the front of her shirt from where Camila had leaned into her with a funnel cake earlier. The corner of her mouth pulled up a touch, but her gaze came back to him when he spoke.

“I called Markus last week,” Caine said.

Her eyebrows rose. “What’d he say?”

Caine shifted the cup from one hand to the other, condensation sticking to his fingers. He shook his head once. “He told me if I tried to transfer, they’d probably try to violate me and send me back to prison.”

The word sat between them, heavier than the music. Sara let out a slow breath and slipped her arm around his shoulders, pulling him in until his side leaned into hers. Her hand rubbed his arm in a steady line from elbow to shoulder, the way she used to when he was younger and came home angry from a day outside.

“Lo siento, mijo,” she said.

He shrugged under her arm, eyes sliding past the tents to nothing in particular. The field turned into a blur of colors and moving bodies for a moment.

“It is what it is, ain’t it?” he said. His voice stayed level. “Ain’t no one told me to run out there and do no dirt.”

Sara’s fingers pressed a little firmer into his sleeve. “That doesn’t mean you have to keep getting punished for it forever,” she said. “Eventually they gotta start letting you breathe and live your life like everyone else.”

Caine nodded, small, not trusting much else to come out of his mouth. He brought the cup up and took a sip. The punch inside had gone warm, but it kept his jaw moving on something that wasn’t anger.

Movement in his peripheral pulled his focus. Laney and Pastor Hadden crossed the grass toward them, weaving between lawn chairs and clusters of people. The pastor walked a step ahead, shoulders a little back, khakis neat, the pale skin at his neck already pinking under the sun. Laney trailed behind his right shoulder, hands folded low against her stomach, eyes dipped until they were close.

“Ms. Guerra?” Pastor Hadden said when they reached them, voice bright and friendly. “I’m Pastor Hadden. Caine’s been working with us here, and I wanted to meet the woman that raised him. He’s been a hard worker since he got to Statesboro.”

Sara straightened under Caine’s arm, the pride there so old it didn’t even need words. “He’s always been that way,” she said.

Hadden smiled, lines fanning from the corners of his eyes. “Well, as the Word says, it’s important to bring a child up in the training and instruction of the Lord,” he said. “And a studious man has done just that.”

Laney nodded almost automatically at the scripture, the tiny dip of her chin more reflex than thought. She stayed a little behind her father’s shoulder, quiet, weight tucked in.

Caine lifted his cup again, bringing it to his mouth. As he did, his eyes slid over the rim toward Laney. For a heartbeat they held each other’s gaze, something quick and familiar passing there. Laney’s chin tipped up just enough to meet it before she dropped her eyes back to the trampled grass. Sara caught the look from the corner of her vision, her hand still warm on Caine’s arm.

“Next time y’all are in Statesboro,” Pastor Hadden continued, turning his attention back to Sara, “please do stop by the church on Sunday for service. We make sure everyone’s cup runneth over.”

Sara shook her head, apology already softening her face. “Oh, I’m Catholic,” she said. “Mi mama would kill me if she knew I was going to a protestant church. I’m sorry.”

Hadden’s smile didn’t slip. He nodded slowly. “Well, I won’t take up too much more of your time,” he said. “Y’all enjoy the rest of the day.”

Sara dipped her chin in a small nod. “Thank you,” she said.

Caine gave a short nod beside her. Pastor Hadden offered them one more polite smile and turned away toward another cluster of festival-goers. Laney moved with him, her body angled toward his back. As they headed off, she glanced over her shoulder once, eyes finding Caine again for a brief moment before she turned back and matched her father’s path.

When they were clear enough that their voices would blend into the rest of the crowd, Sara’s hand slid from Caine’s arm. She stayed close, voice dropping as a group of church ladies passed nearby, laughing over raffle tickets and paper plates.

“Dime que no estás haciendo lo que creo que estás haciendo,” she said.

Caine blinked, head dipping down toward her. “¿Qué?”

Sara kept her eyes forward, following the spot where Laney had disappeared into the crowd. “¿La hija del pastor, Caine? ¿No había nadie más?”

He rolled one shoulder in a small shrug. “Her sister for a bit off and on,” he said.

Sara dropped her head into her palm, thumb pressing at her temple. “I’m gonna die at 45 y it’s going to be your fault, mijo.”

Caine lifted both hands in a small gesture of surrender, the foam cup caught between his fingers. His mouth pulled toward a guilty half-smile he didn’t quite let land, but he didn’t say anything. The sounds of the festival washed back over them, folding around the quiet pocket where they stood.

~~~

Mireya sat on the bench under the tree with her knees turned toward each other, one ankle crossed over the other, sneaker toe tracing a line through the thin layer of dust at her feet. The shade there was thin but better than nothing, leaves stirring just enough to break the worst of the afternoon sun. Past the tree, the church festival rolled on loud. Kids yelled from the bounce house. Somebody’s praise band covered a gospel song off beat on the little stage. The smell of fryer oil, hot dogs and sugar drifted across the field and settled in her hair.

Camila knelt a few feet away on a patch of dry grass, fingers busy with a small pile of leaves she’d dragged together. She crumbled them and stacked them, talking to herself in a soft stream that never quite formed full words. Every now and then she glanced up to make sure Mireya was still there, then went right back to whatever world she had going in the dirt.

Mireya’s phone buzzed in her hand. She’d been scrolling without really seeing anything, thumb dragging lazy over the glass. The notification slid down from the top. Trell, from earlier.

You still with that corny ass nigga?

She looked at the name, then clicked the screen off with her thumb and let the phone sit face down on her thigh for a second. Across the field, she could see the bright white of Caine’s T-shirt moving near the food line, Sara beside him. She didn’t lift the phone again yet.

Another buzz hit her palm. This time the name at the top read Jordan.

Can I see you this week?

Her mouth tugged before she could stop it. She shifted on the bench to cut the glare and typed out a quick reply.

maybe

She sent it, then flipped the camera, angled the screen up, and held the phone out. She tilted her chin, let her mouth curve, the tree branches framing the top of the shot, the bench in the corner, her collarbone and the edge of her tank visible. The shutter sound clicked. She checked it once, then hit send.

The reply came back almost right away. A row of out of breath emojis filled the screen. Mireya huffed out a quiet breath that was almost a laugh. She let herself look at them a second longer, thumb hovering over the keyboard, then slid her thumb up and swiped back to Trell’s unread text.

She opened his thread. The last thing she’d sent him was the flight info. His message sat under it.

You still with that corny ass nigga?

Her fingers moved.

I’m flying back later tonight.

She hit send. The three dots popped up almost immediately, blinking at the bottom of the screen. He sent back a picture. It filled the screen when she tapped it. A small stack of money spread on a bed, bands tight around it, edges fanned just enough to flex.

You could’ve been getting to the money with me on the beach instead of listening to some nigga talk about what his frat bros totally did yesterday.

Mireya rolled her eyes, even though there was no one watching her screen. She could hear his voice in it, the flat tease under the words. Her thumbs tapped out the only answer she felt like giving him right now.

next time

She sent it and locked the phone, letting it rest against her thigh again, the weight of it warm through the denim.

Someone moved into her peripheral on the bench. The faint slosh of liquid hit her ear as a hand clapped over the top of a paper cup. Blake eased down beside her, moving like he thought somebody was watching him. His eyes went around the field once before they dropped to her.

“You that dude Caine’s baby mama, right?” he asked.

Mireya turned her head just enough to look at him, face flat. “I’m Caine’s child’s mother,” she said.

Blake held his free hand up, the paper cup trapped against his chest with the other. “I’m Blake, I’m one of their in-laws.” He jerked his chin toward where the Haddens stood talking to another family near one of the tents.

Mireya followed the gesture and then let her gaze drift back to him. “Okay? What that gotta do with me?” she asked.

Blake leaned in a little, breath carrying sugar and something stale. “You’re okay with your baby daddy fucking other women?” he asked.

Mireya shrugged, shoulders loose. “I’m not with my child’s father,” she said. “He can do what he wants.”

Blake sat back for a moment, lips pressing together. Then he tipped his head toward her again. “Alright, that’s cool I guess,” he said. “Maybe y’all do shit different in New Orleans.”

In front of them, Camila glanced back. Her eyes moved from Blake to Mireya’s face, checking. Then she pushed herself up from her pile of leaves and ran over, small sneakers kicking up little bursts of dust. She grabbed onto Mireya’s leg, fingers curling into the fabric of her shorts.

Mireya’s hand dropped to Camila’s hair, smoothing it once. “Ve a buscar a tu papá y tu abuela para mamá, cariña,” she said.

Camila tipped her head back to look at her, then nodded and took off again, curls bouncing as she ran toward the corner of the field where Caine and Sara stood.

Blake watched her go and then turned back. “So, like what did Caine do to get probation?” he asked. “Was it like serious?”

Mireya shifted on the bench and turned fully toward him, leaning her shoulder against the backrest. “You know smell like shit?” she asked, lip curling up at the corner. “Like actual shit?”

Blake frowned. He lifted one arm and smelled under it, then did the same with the other. “I think I smell fine,” he said.

“You sound like someone who would talk to the police for a rock,” Mireya said.

Blake’s face wrinkled. “What?” he asked. He waved his hand like he could brush the words out of the air. “I don’t do that shit.”

“Why would you ask questions about another man’s papers?” she asked, her voice flat.

Blake shook his head, chin jutting. “I’m just curious,” he said. “Figured a baby mama he ain’t with would have enough of a reason not to like him.”

Mireya stood up. The bench creaked a little when her weight left it. She looked down at him, sun edging the line of her face. “Mind your fucking business,” she said. “That’s what you should do, Blake. La curiosidad mató al gato, ya sabes.”

Blake blinked up at her. “I don’t speak that shit,” he said.

But Mireya was already turning away. She walked off across the grass, phone buzzing again in her hand. She lifted it and glanced at the latest text Jordan had sent her, a small smile pulling at her mouth as she kept walking.

~~~

Caine pulled back into the church parking lot with the sun starting to drop behind the trees, the lot mostly empty now. The festival tents were gone, the grills cold, the bounce house deflated in a sad heap near the fence. A few paper cups rolled in the light wind. The quiet felt strange after the noise of the day.

He parked near the shed and stepped out, stretching once as the door clicked shut. The air still held the weight of the heat, heavy but softer than earlier. His shirt carried the faint smell of Camila’s hair from when he’d hugged her before they left for Savannah. He rubbed the heel of his hand across his face, exhaling through his nose.

Laney was the only person still out there.

She dragged one of the folding tables across the grass, metal legs scraping until she leaned it against a tree with the others. Her shoulders rose and fell with the effort. Dirt streaked the side of her jeans, and her ponytail had almost given up entirely, strands sticking to her neck.

Caine walked toward her, loud enough not to come up on her by accident.

“You should probably leave that for the motherfuckers who work in the morning,” he called.

Laney let out a short huff of laughter. “Why?” she asked. “When I could have a excuse to not run home?”

She bent by the spigot, filled a bucket halfway, and dropped a sponge inside. Water splashed against her wrist. She picked up the bucket and started toward the shed without checking if he followed, but he did, hands sliding into his pockets.

“He say anything yet?” Caine asked from behind her.

Laney shook her head, even though she kept her back to him. “I think he’s tryin’ to figure it out,” she said over her shoulder. “Put it together. He was askin’ ’bout you earlier.”

Caine’s steps didn’t break. “What about me?”

She didn’t answer until she reached the shed, nudged the door open with her hip, and stepped inside. The bucket hit the concrete floor with a dull thud. Laney tossed the sponge in. It splashed once, darkening the cuff of her jeans.

“’Bout your lil girl,” she said. “And her mama.”

Caine leaned against the frame of the doorway, arms loose at his sides. He nodded once, a quiet acknowledgment, but didn’t speak. The fading sunlight carved a thin strip across the floor between them.

Laney looked over her shoulder at him. Her voice stayed even, but her mouth curved just enough to show she meant the next part. “It’s a good thing he ain’t see how jealous I felt.”

Caine let out a small snort. “Jealous?”

She turned fully then, leaning her lower back against a metal shelf behind her. The shelf rattled under the shift of weight. Her hands braced at either side, fingers curling around the edge. “Yeah, jealous,” she said. “How soft you are with her without even knowin’ it. All of ’em. But her? You touch her like you think she’ll break if you press too hard.”

Caine raised his chin a little, eyes narrowing as he watched her. “You know me and Mireya ain’t together, right?”

Laney let a quiet breath out through her nose, a crooked smile tugging at one corner of her mouth. “I ain’t got no room to talk,” she said. She lifted her left hand and tapped her wedding band with her thumb. The metallic tick echoed faintly in the small space.

“Can’t argue there,” Caine said.

Laney’s fingers slid from the edge of the shelf. She shifted her weight, shoulder brushing the wall behind her. “But why I was really jealous,” she said, voice a little softer, “is ’cause I wanted you touchin’ me like that.”

The shed tightened around the words. Dust hung in the narrow beam from the open door. Outside, a car passed on the road, the sound fading into the stretch of early evening.

Caine stayed where he stood, head tilted just slightly as he looked at her. His voice came out low but sure. “I can do that.”

He reached for the shed door with one hand. The metal hinges creaked as he pulled it shut, blocking out the remaining light. Laney’s fingers moved to the button of her jeans, working it loose as the door clicked into place.
Image
Image
Image
Image

redsox907
Posts: 3083
Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40

American Sun

Post by redsox907 » 03 Dec 2025, 00:56

Roquan Barbers bitch ass at JMU :shifty:

see you took it easy on your boys lol

Blake and Tommy both poking around to see what they can find out. Almost looks like they're working together to get the info :hmm:

Took Sara one glance to peep it, thats a mom for you. Wonder if Mireya would pick up on it too if she saw, or if shes too wrapped up in her own game with Trell and Jordan.

also seems like Cass is trying to set up Trell hmmmm

lots of things about to come to a head

Soapy
Posts: 12889
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

American Sun

Post by Soapy » 03 Dec 2025, 06:42

Caesar wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 16:37
Mel like vanilla. We can say what we want about her ass.
what that make Caine?
Caesar wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 23:44
from calves to thighs to ass to the narrow set of her waist above the waistband, the shirt hanging soft over her.
that brother starving!

Like Redsox said, it feels like Blake and Tommy are loading up on ammo/info but I also don't think Tommy is the cerebral type either so I would think that if Blake did tell him, he wouldn't need much more than that to go upside her head.

unless, he also knew about the other times
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 03 Dec 2025, 23:28

redsox907 wrote:
03 Dec 2025, 00:56
Roquan Barbers bitch ass at JMU :shifty:

see you took it easy on your boys lol

Blake and Tommy both poking around to see what they can find out. Almost looks like they're working together to get the info :hmm:

Took Sara one glance to peep it, thats a mom for you. Wonder if Mireya would pick up on it too if she saw, or if shes too wrapped up in her own game with Trell and Jordan.

also seems like Cass is trying to set up Trell hmmmm

lots of things about to come to a head
Hey, not my fault they were moving the rock unlike previous opponents to keep Caine off the field :druski:

Could be working together or working toward the same end separately :hmm:

Mireya picked it up before it even started twice, the first time she met Laney and at Camila's birthday party (That was 10 nooticer points for Soapy back then). But I'm just gonna point out in the same chapter, Caine told her he wanted to knock her up again soooo... even knowing about Laney, she knows where she stands.

Could be trying to get her spot back. Gotta seduce the new king.
Soapy wrote:
03 Dec 2025, 06:42
Caesar wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 16:37
Mel like vanilla. We can say what we want about her ass.
what that make Caine?
Caesar wrote:
02 Dec 2025, 23:44
from calves to thighs to ass to the narrow set of her waist above the waistband, the shirt hanging soft over her.
that brother starving!

Like Redsox said, it feels like Blake and Tommy are loading up on ammo/info but I also don't think Tommy is the cerebral type either so I would think that if Blake did tell him, he wouldn't need much more than that to go upside her head.

unless, he also knew about the other times
A Black man with a wide palette that doesn't include problematic yts.

Caine can't admire his baby mama's ass after she's been doing strenuous exercise (pole dancing and stripping) for six, seven months????????????? He just saying she looking better than usual :smh:

Why y'all always jump to domestic violence :pgdead: No one considering the messenger. Y'all wouldn't immediately believe shit a drug addict told y'all either. Imagine a crackhead telling you your wife getting outside dick and you just walk up and beat her ass. Come to find out, the crackhead is a crackhead and was wrong. Now, you just beat your wife for nothing. Crazy work.

Hmmm :hmm:
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 03 Dec 2025, 23:29

1
User avatar

Topic author
Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
Posts: 12954
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 10:47

American Sun

Post by Caesar » 03 Dec 2025, 23:29

2
Post Reply